Serving Central Oregon since1903 75g
THURSDAY April11,2013
oncern on ou
COllCLISSIOllS,':-'--:;, Tomorrow
HEALTH• D1
SUMMER GUIDE-
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
USFS proposes Ben water permit
Unmannedaircraft — These drones will study po-
By Hillary Borrud
tatoes in Eastern Oregon.C6
The Bulletin
Nutritlon —Weall know greens are good for us, but what are the five best and what
are some goodways to prepare them?D1
PiuS —Exploring tomatoes'
city's surface water supply system, which currently provides about half of Bend's drinking water, would be at risk of failure," according to the Forest Service report, called an environmental assessment. The agency reviewed the latest city proposal after the city last fall dropped a previous plan to take more water from Bridge Creek. A
The U.S. Forest Service, in a recently completed environmental report, is proposing to issue a permit for the city of Bend's $20 million Bridge Creek water pipeline and intake project. "If the Forest Service did not issue the proposed special use permit, the
federal judge in October issued an injunction on that plan until legal issues surrounding it were resolved. Rod Bonacker,special projects coordinator for the Bend-Fort Rock Ranger District, said Wednesday that as a result of the Bridge Creek project, "more water will stay in that upper 10 miles of (Tumalo) Creek." See Water /A5
raises i s Lll Ion
ercen
cancer-fighting chops.D3
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
The MaSterS —As golfers tee off today at Augusta, a reminder that even the best can falter there.C1
Shelter —An illegal structure near BlackCrater Lakeis unusual in its complexity.B1
Odituary —Robert Edwards, a British physiologist,
opened anewera inmedicine when he joined acolleague in developing in vitro fertilization.B5
in national news-
• It was a busy day in Washington, D.C. Here's whathappened andw hatitmeans
Reconstruction in Afghanistan an unfinished endeavor.
benddulletin.com/extras
IIIII
Adoostfordackgroundchecks ~
Firefighters taken hostage are freed.A2
And a Web exclusive-
IIIIIIIIIIIII
Wh at happened: Conservative senators from both parties announcedtheir support for expanding background checksfor gun buyers, giving a burst of momentum toadvocates of stronger restrictions. But big questions remain about whether the president can push significant gun
controls through Congress. .'~<™
The details:Wednesday's compromise betweenSens.Joe Manchin, D-WVa., and Patrick Toomey, R-Pa., boosted thechancesthat the Senatewill agree to broaden required backgroundchecks, astep guncontrol groups laud asaneffective way to keepweapons from criminals andthe mentally ill. Under theagreement: • Background checks would be expanded federally to all for-profit transactions,
including sales atgun showsandonline, with records of all sales subject to checks kept by licensed gundealers. Currently, the systemapplies only to sales bythe country's
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Civil War relic, once lost, recalls a grim era
5 5,000 federally licensed dealers, and only a handful of states (including Oregon)
Manch i n
require gun-show checks. • Exempted from checkswould be noncommercial transactions (such as betweenrelatives or neighbors).
Toom e y
• Several provisions expand rights. Gun owners could transport their weapons through states where their firearms
(such asassault weapons) areillegal. Sellers would beshielded from lawsuits if a buyer passed acheck but later useda firearm in a crime. Dealers could conduct business in states where they don't live.
There are nocurrent, definitive statistics on how manygun sales occur annually and what portion occurs without the checks. A study in the 1990s found that up to 40 percent of transactions involved no checks.
What's next:The agreementmakesit all but certain that the Senate will reject a filibuster and vote today to begin debate on legislation that would also toughen laws against illicit firearm sales and provide a small increase in school
security aid. TheManchin-Toomey proposal would bethe first amendment considered. Democratic leaders have also promised avote on anamendment to ban assault weapons. But guncontrol advocates still face an uphill battle,
Stanford Universityvia New York Times News Service
especially in the GOP-controlled House, and the NRA announced it opposed Wednesday's accord.
A new method of making the brain transparent preserves the biochemistry of the brain, allowing researchers to test it over and over again with chemicals that highlight specific structures and provide clues to past activity.
By Michael E. Ruane The Washington Post
Who knows how Pvt. Levi Schlegel lost his identity ring'?
The ring bearing his name, company and regiment — a Civil War version of a dog tag — was found near Fredericksburg, Va., a place Schlegel had only passed through on his way home a month after the war ended. Did he misplace it in camp there? Or discard it — divorcing himself at last from the butchery he witnessed in the closing weeks of the war? On Tuesday, 148 years after the war ended and 81 years after Schlegel died at the age of 91, the ring that married him to the conflict was returned to his family in a modest ceremony at his grave in Reading, Pa., where he had lived. It was handed over by John Blue, 40, a heavyequipment operatorand relic hunter from Manassas, Va., to Ernest Schlegel, 49, a candidate for Reading City Council, who believes he is a distant cousin. "To know what this person went through and get back here ... and to know what he went through in battle ... it's an amazing feeling to have this right here in my hand," Schlegel sard. See Civil War /A5
Central Oregon Community College students will see their tuition climb by just over 6 percent next year, though the school will remain one of Oregon's most inexpensive community colleges. On Wednesday night, the college board of directors agreed to raise the price of a single credithour from $82 to $87 for students who live within the COCC district, with proportional increases to the higher tuition rates paid by out-of-district students. According to college spokesman Ron Paradis, 87 percent of current COCC students pay in-district rates. The board also approved increases in room and board rates on Wednesday. The approximately 100 students who live in oncampus housing and utilize the school's meal service will see their total bill rise from $8,384to $8,641, an increase of 3.1percent. Once the new rates go into effect, COCC is expected to have the second-lowest tuition rates of Oregon's 17 community colleges. A student taking a full class load at COCC would pay $4,226 for a year's tuition and fees next year, just under $100 more than a student at Clackamas Community College, but nearly $1,000 less than a student at Southwestern Community College in Coos Bay. College President James Middleton acknowledged the increases are not ideal, but said COCC remains an excellent value. SeeCOCC/A5
Odama's dudgetplan
Saturdaymail delivery
What happened: PresidentBarackObama proposeda
What happened: Thefinancially beleaguered U.S.Postal Service backpedaled on its plan to end Saturday mail delivery, conceding I Iik on Wednesday
$3.8 trillion budget on Wednesday that would raise taxes on wealthy Americans and trim Social Security benefits for millions.
The10-year budget plan would cut spending by about $1.2 trillion
over that time to replace the indiscriminate across-the-board
Revenues Spending $3 trillion $3.8 trillion
that its gamble
cuts, known as sequestration, that took effect March1. The proposed
to force congressional app-
changes to Social Security and
roval of the switch had failed. As a way
Medicare were a first, as the
president cast his proposal as a compromise offer to Republicans. Readmore:For an agencyby-agency breakdown, go to H denddulletln.cam/extras.For an analysis of Obama's proposal,sea Page A4.
' I)
to save about $2 billion ayear, USPS had planned to switch to five-day-aweek deliveries beginning in August
for everything except packages. At issue: USPS, an independent
See full graphic on A4.
agency, is subject to congressional control. It lost nearly $16 billion last year. And in March, Congress
At issue:House Republicans and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., criticized the proposal. McConnell called the cuts to Social Security and Medicare too "modest" to justify Obama's bottom-line demand for nearly $700 billion in new taxes on the wealthy. Meanwhile, the compromise offers on Social Security and Medicare drew objections from Democrats.
passed a measure requiring USPS to continue delivery six days aweek. What's next:USPS likely will
consider raising mail prices and reopen negotiations with unions to lower labor costs. Even so, the
What's next:While the budget proposal will not prompt any immediate congressional action, it will probably surface this
summer whenRepublicans areexpected to demandadditional
board said it's not possible to meet its goals for reduced spending
reductions in the deficit in exchange for increasing the nation's borrowing authority.
schedule.
without altering the delivery
Sources: The Assoaated Press, New York Times News Service, NBCnews.com, The Washington Post
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 56, Low 28
Page B6
By James Gorman New York Times News Service
The visible brain has arrived — the consistency of Jell-O, as transparent and colorful as a child's model, but vastly more useful. Scientists at Stanford University reported Wednesday thatthey had made a whole mouse brain, and part of a human brain, transparent, so that networks of neurons that receive and send information can be highlighted in stunning color and viewed in all their three-dimensional complexity without slicing up the organ. Even more important, experts say, is that unlike earlier methods for making the tissue of brains and other organs transparent, the new process, called Clarity by its inventors, preserves the biochemistry of the brain so well that researchers can test it over and over again with chemicals that highlight specific structures within a brain and provide clues to its past activity. See Brain /A4
4 P We userecycled newsprint
INDEX D1-5 Obituaries Business/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope D6 Sports Classified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Lo c al/State B1-6 TV/Movies
Transparent brain may 0pen a new scientitic frontier
AnIndependent
B5 C1-4 D6
Vol. 110, No. 101,
s sections
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
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NATIoN 4% ORLD KOI'ea 'tenSien —U.S. andSouth Korean troops increased alert levels Wednesday asSouth Korea's foreign minister warned that North
irei e r os a es as unman i e
Korea could launch its medium-range Musudan missile "any time from now." Although North Korea has tested many of its short-range
Scud and medium-rangeRodong missiles, it has neverflight-tested the longer-distance Musudan, believed by experts to have a range of1,550 miles to 2,500 miles. A successful test of the missile would demonstrate the North's potential to hit not only South Korea but also all of Japan and targets as far away as the U.S. military bases on the Pacific island of Guam.
By Johnny Clark and Phillip Lucas The Associated Press
SUWANEE, Ga. — A n armed man who was having financial problems held four firefighters for hours in a suburban Atlanta home, demanding his cable and power be turned back on, before being shot dead when SWAT members stormed the house, authorities said Wednesday. The hostages had cuts and bruises from explosions that officers set off to distract the gunman before moving in, but they will be fine, a fire official said. Minutes before the police announcement on the resolution, a huge blast could be heard a q uarter-mile away from t h e home, shuddering through the
Suwanee neighborhood, setting off car alarms. E arlier W e dnesday, f i v e firefighters responded to what seemed like a routine medical call and were eventually taken hostage by an unidentified suspect inside the house, police said. The gunman released one of the firefighters to move a fire truck but held the other four. Dozens of police and rescue vehiclessurrounded the home and a negotiator was keeping in touch with the gunman, police said. The situation remained tense until the blast rocked the neighborhood of mostly twostory homes and w e ll-kept lawns. Residents unable to get intotheirneighborhoodbecause of the police cordon flinched
and recoiled as the enormous blast went off. Soon after the stun blast,
NeWtOWnmaSSaCre —Facing complaints that money raised in
officers exchanged gunfire
Conn., was not being distributed promptly to the families for whom
with the suspect and a SWAT member was shot in the hand or arm, but should be fine, said Gwinnett County Police Cpl. Edwin Ritter. Ritter would not say how the gunman was fatally shot, saying it was being investigated. "The explosion you heard was used to distract the suspect, to get into the house and take care of business," Ritter said in a news conferenceminutes after the resolution. He said the situation had gotten to the point where authorities believed the lives of the hostages were in "immediate danger."
it was intended, the foundation charged with distributing the largest pool of aid said this week that it would distribute $4 million to 40 fami-
the wake of the killings at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown,
lies directly affected by themassacre. Baby study —The leadinvestigators on a large study of the effects of oxygen levels onextremely premature babies failed to inform the infants' parents that the risks of participating could involve increased chances of blindness or death, the federal Department of Health
and HumanServices haswarned in a letter. The Office for Human Research Protections, which safeguards the people who participate in government-funded research, sent a letter to the University of Ala-
bama at Birmingham last month, detailing what it said wereviolations of patients' rights.
Afghan raid —A raid meantto disrupt a Taliban armsoperation in southern Afghanistan ended in the death of a man with family ties to the Afghan president's inner circle, officials say. The raid, a joint mis-
sion involving Afghancommandos and U.S.Special Forces advisers, happened Sunday night near the capital of Oruzgan province, Tirin Kot.
Cuba COOperatlen —A Florida couple accusedof kidnapping
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.Mccool ...........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ..................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa.........................541-383-0337
their two young boys after losing custody last week and then fleeing to Cuba were brought back to the United States on Wednesday and
RALLYING FOR IMMIGRATION REFORM
arrested in Tampa, arare moment of cooperation between two hostile countries, and one that sidestepped a possible international custody battle.
PakiStan attaCk —A gunmanshotand killed a policeman and wounded another Wednesday asthey provided security for a teamof polio eradication health workers in northwestern Pakistan, according
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to government officials. The gunman escaped. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, but the Pakistani Taliban have
repeatedly targeted health workers onanti-polio drives, accusing
HumanResources Traci Donaca......................541-383-0327
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a
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them of being spies.
Syria COnfliCt —A long-debated movebyWestern nations to expand support for Syria's opposition gained momentumWednesday,
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with the United States poised to increase its nonlethal aid to rebel
groups, and pressure building to lift a EuropeanUnion arms embargo on Syria.
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European meat SCandal —After disappearing briefly from public view, the scandal over horsemeat sold as beef re-emerged Wednesday with an alert on more than 50,000 tons of meat sold
across Europeandanearlier recall of a product in Britain containing a veterinary drug banned from the human food chain. The Dutch food safety authority said it was trying to trace meat sold to130 companies
in the Netherlands and370 in15 other countries, including France, Germany andSpain.
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day at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. Tens of thousands of immigrants and activists rallied nationwide
Wednesday in acoordinated set of protests aimed at pressing Congress to approve immigration measures that would grant11 million immigrants living here illegally a path toward citizenship.
Organizers said demonstrations were taking place in at least18 states as well as Washington, D.C. Senators writing a sweeping immigration bill have said they hope to
finish their work this week, opening what's sure to be araucous public debate over measures to secure the border, allow tens of thousands of
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
4oQ Qf Qas Q szQ saei The estimated jackpot is now $70 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are
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a ~ M
ONECONTINENTarATIME '
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"'. 2013NO RTHAIHERICAN
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millions living illegally in the United States. A person familiar with proposed bipartisan immigration legislation being written in the Senate said Wednesday the bill would require u
greatly expandedsurveillance of the U.S.border with Mexico andgreatly increased detention of border crossers in high-risk areas. Theperson provided the information on condition of anonymity because the delib-
erations were private. — The Associated Press
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— From wire reports
Charles Dbarapak/The Associated Press
Demonstrators participate in a rally for immigration reform Wednes-
Hermit living in Maine wild for 27yearsarrested By Glenn Adams The Associated Press
R OME, Maine — A m a n who lived like a hermit for decades in a makeshift camp in the woods and may be responsible for more than 1,000 burglaries for food and other staples has been caught in a surveillance trap at a camp he treated as a "Wal-Mart," authorities said Wednesday. Christopher Knight, 47, was arrested last week when he tripped a surveillance sensor set up by a game warden while stealing food from a camp for people with special needs in Rome, a town of about 1,000 w hose p o p ulation s w e l l s with the arrival of summer residents. Authorities o n Tu e sday found the campsite where they believed Knight, known as the North Pond Hermit in local lore, has lived for 27 years. Some residentssay they've been aware of the hermit for years, often in connection with break-ins that have occurred. He was so well known to some summer cottage owners that they left food out for him so he wouldn't break in during the colder months, state Trooper Diane Vance said. But others w er e h a r dly aware of th e h ermit l i ving within their midst without detection since 1986. "I was born in 1987. He was
there before I was," Rome resident Melissa Witham said outside her home. Paul Anderson, a selectman in the town about 20 miles northwest of A u g usta, acknowledged local talk about a man living alone in the woods. "I've lived in the town for 32 years, and I've never, ever met the guy," Anderson said. A ttempts t o r e ac h p e o ple who might b e K n ight's relatives were u nsuccessful Wednesday. Officials said they had no information on whether Knight has an attorney. A m essage could not be left after hours for officials at the Kennebec County Jail in Augusta, where Knight was being held. Knight's l i v in g q u a rters in the woods included a tent covered by tarps suspended between trees, a bed, propane cooking stoves and a batteryrun radio, which he used to keep up with the news and listen to talk radio and a rock station, authorities said. S ince vanishing from h i s Maine home for noapparent reason and setting up camp when he was about 19, Knight sustained himself on food stolen from dozens of cottages, but his favorite target was the Pine Tree Camp, where game warden Sgt. Terry Hughes, who's been trying to nab Knight for years, set up a surveillance alarm, authorities said.
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THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Thursday, April11, the 101st day of 2013. There are 264 days left in the year.
CULTURE
DISCOVERY
HAPPENINGS
e jn
Guns —Senate appears set to begin debate onguncontrol
e e j 5g/j
Q Q e Researchers identify new
gene tied to Alzheimer's
legislation.A1
Budget —Various Cabinet members testify before con-
gressional committees on President BarackObama's budget proposal.A1
Golf —The Masters get un-
O nOW SOme e jnj janS inAfrican-Americans How would you do'? "Something described as refulgent is: a) tending to
der way in Augusta, Ga.C1
move toward one point, b) demanding immediate action, c) rising from an
Medal of Honor — An
inferior state, d) giving out a bright light." Read the story to find the answer.
Army chaplain who died in a North Korean prison camp 62
years ago receives the U.S.
By Joseph White
military's top honor at the White House.
The Associated Press
HISTORY Highlight:In1913, Postmaster General Albert Burleson, during a meeting of President Wood-
row Wilson's Cabinet, proposed gradually segregating whites and blacks who worked for the
Railway Mail Service, apolicy which went into effect and
spread to other agencies. In1689, William III and Mary
II were crowned asjoint sovereigns of Britain. In1713,the Treaty of Utrecht was signed, ending the War of
the Spanish Succession. In1814, Napoleon Bonaparte abdicated as Emperor of the French and was banished to the island of Elba. In1921, lowa became the first
state to impose a cigarette tax, at 2 cents apackage. In1945, during World War II, American soldiers liberated the notorious Nazi concentration
camp Buchenwald inGermany. In1951,President Harry S.
Truman relievedGen. Douglas MacArthur of his commands in the Far East. In1953,Oveta Culp Hobby became the first Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare.
In1963, PopeJohn XXIII issued his final encyclical, "Pacem in Terris" — "Peace on Earth." In1970, Apollo13, with astronauts James A. Lovell, Fred W. Haise and Jack Swigert, blasted off on its ill-fated mission to the
moon. In1979, Idi Amin was deposed
as president of Ugandaas rebels and exiles backed byTanzanian forces seizedcontrol. In1983,attheAcademy Awards, "Gandhi" was named best picture; its star, Ben Kingsley, won best actor while Meryl Streep received the best actress
Oscar for "Sophie's Choice." In1988,"The Last Emperor" won best picture at the Acad-
emy Awards ceremony;Cher wonbestactress for"Moonstruck," Michael Douglas best actor for "Wall Street."
Ten yearsago:Tenofthe main suspects inthe2000bombing
W ASHINGTON — E v e r wonder if those spelling bee kids know the meanings of some of those big words? Now they'll have to prove that they
'll
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IIlIIIIIII!Ii»oI lll5llli-
lllll II)
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do. Organizers of the Scripps N ational Spelling B e e o n Tuesday announced a major change to the format, adding multiple-choice v o c abulary tests to the annual competition that crowns the English
language's spelling champ.
The Assoaated Press file photo
The changes make it easier to nail down the nine to 12 competitors who make it to the final round, which will look the same as it has for years to primetime TV viewers, with spellers taking turns until only the champion has avoided the familiar doomsday bell. The changes do add a wrinkle to the televised semifinals, however, as even the best on-stage spellers could find themselves eliminated from the finals if they perform poorly on the multiple-choice test. Executive Director Paige Kimble saidthe changes were driven by the desire to reinforce the competition's purpose — to encourage students to improve their spelling and broaden their knowledge of
the language. "What we know with the championship-level spellers is that theythink of their achievement in terms of spelling and vocabulary being two sides of the same coin," Kimble said. "These spellers will be excited at the opportunity to show off their vocabulary knowledge through competition." V ocabulary ha s b ee n a regularpart of the bee during its 87-year history, but it's always been the spellers asking for the definition to help them spell the word. N ow th e t a bles w il l b e turned, with the spellers taking a computer test that looks like something from the SAT. A sample question provided by the Spelling Bee reads as follows: "Something described as refulgent is: a) tending to move toward one point, b) demanding immediate action, c) rising
Contestants in the 2012 National Spelling Bee take a written exam before the oral competition begins. In future events, a multiplechoice vocabulary test will come before the oral competition. from an inferior state, d) giving out a bright light." The correct answer is d. The vocabulary tests will be done in private rooms and will not be part of the television broadcasts. While th e f i n als f o rmat remains unchanged, the televised semifinals will have a different payoff. Spellers will continue to be eliminated if they misspell on stage, but there will be only two semifinal rounds. The results of those rounds will be combined with the computerized spelling and vocabulary tests to select the finalists. The issue of determining the number of f inalists has been problematic in the past because of the need to fit the bee into its allotted broadcast slot. Parents and spellers were upset in 2010 when officials abruptly halted the semifinals in the middle of a round because spellers were being eliminated too quickly. The bee, working with its television partners, usually prefers to have nine to 12 spellers in the finals. That will be easier to accomplish now because the bee can take the spellers with the most points, with wiggle room to account for ties. "Previously, we just knew that we were going to spell until we h a d a r e asonable number of children to bring into the finals," Kimble said. "Now we have some definition around how that happens." Kimble said she's open to
the idea of having the vocabulary test take place onstage in future bees, but she wants to try the computer format first and see how it w orks. The change will no doubt create a sudden change in study habits for some of the 281 spellers who have qualified for this year's bee: They all qualified in regional bees that focused
only on spelling. "I think from now on there'll be more focus on the meaning" for aspiring bee competitors, said Srinivas Mahankali, w hose son, Arvind, will b e one of the favorites this year after finishing third the past two years. "Although from the beginning they've been emphasizing meaning. But I think they'll be more emphasis now." The bee will explain all of the changes to the spellers during aconference callWednesday. This year's bee takes place May 28-30 near Washington, giving competitors only a matter of weeks to prepare. "It's a short time, that's for sure," Mahankali said. "But the thing is everyone knows about it at the same time, so I think it's fair to everyone." Kimble said the national bee waited until all the regional bees were completed to make the announcement so that everyone would start on equal footing. She said the national bee will supply materials and suggestions to help local bees introduce a vocabulary test nextyear.
By Daniel Chang
for a n i n d i vidual's genetic make-up. U niversity o f Miam i For instance, the ABCA7 medicalschool researchers gene, which is found in people working w it h g e neticists of all races, is a greater risk and physicians from other factorfor Alzheimer's among institutions have identified African-Americans than it is a new gene associated with among non-Hispanic whites, Alzheimer's disease in Af- according to the study. "There are going to be a lot rican-Americans, a finding that doctors say could help of things that are similar across them prescribe more effec- different races, different ethnictive therapies and drugs ities," she said. "But there's also for patients affected by the goingto be some population difdisease. ferences. When it comes to the The collaborative study point where we can translate that ledresearchers from these discoveries into therapies UM and other universities and prevention, we will need to to identify the gene, called understand all these nuances in ABCA7, will be published order to find the right drug or Thursday in th e J ournal the right therapy for that indiof the American Medical vidual person." Association. Until this study, most clinical Dr. M argaret Pericak- research into the genetics of AlVance, director of UM's zheimer's involved patients of John P. Hussman Institute European descent, said Dr. Pasfor Human Genomics and cal Goldschmidt, dean of UM's one of the senior authors of Miller School of Medicine. the study, said the discovThe research project that ery of ABCA7 will allow led to the discovery of the new researchers to develop ther- gene is believed to be the largapies and drugs more spe- est genome-wide association cifically suited to African- study conducted on late-onset American patients affected Alzheimer's disease in Africanby Alzheimer's, a disease Americans. It included 1,968 for which there is no preven- cases and 3,928 controls coltion or cure. lected at multiple sites between While Alzheimer's oc1989 and 2011. c urs a s fr e q uently i n Goldschmidt said 21st cenA frican-Americans as tury medicine is heading in other p opulations, Peri- the direction of personalized cak-Vance said there are health care, and doctors will important differences in need to understand the genetic the molecular mechanisms differences among patients in of the disease among peo- order to maximize their care. ple ofdifferent races and ethnicities. Identifying these differences, she said, may help researchers develop treat541-548-2066 ments and drugs that are more likely to be effective Adjustable because they're tailor-made Beds The Miami Herald
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of the USS Cole escaped from prison in Yemen.
Five yearsago:Group of
STUDY
Seven financial officials meet-
ing in Washington pledgedto strengthen their regulation of banks and other financial insti-
tutions while anxiously hoping the credit crisis in the United States would be a short one.
French troops captured six pirates after the pirates released
30 hostages whowereaboard the French luxury yacht Le Ponant when it was seized off
Somalia's coast. One yearago:George Zimmerman, the Florida neighborhood watch volunteer who fatally shot17-year-old Trayvon Mar-
tin, was arrested andcharged with second-degreemurder. A California prison paneldenied parole to massmurderer Charles Manson in his 12th and probably final bid for free-
dom. A University of California taskforce said that UC Davis
police should not haveused pepper-spray onstudent demonstrators in an incident that
prompted national outrage.
BIRTHDAYS Ethel Kennedy is 85.
Songwriter-producer Daryl Simmons is 56. Singer Lisa Stansfield is 47. Actress Tricia
Helfer is 39. Singer Joss Stone is 26. — From wire reports
Wine-growing regions could shift By Mary MacVean
The researchers say they expected a "major global redistriThat bottle of Bordeaux you bution of suitability" for wine put aside may become even grape production regions. That rarerin the next few decades has significance for what hapas climatechange could reduce pens to water resources and wine grape production in tra- animal habitats, Lee Hannah, ditional parts of the world and an author of the study and senmove itelsewhere, researchers ior scientist for climate change say. Danish Cabernet, anyone? biology at Conservation InWine grape production's sen- ternational's new Betty and sitivityto climatemakesitagood Gordon Moore Center for Ecotest case for what could happen system Science, said at a news inthenext severaldecades.And conference on the paper. the land suitable for viticulture That could mean that wine in current major wine produc- grape production moves from ing regions could be reduced by regionssuch as Mediterranean 20 percent to 70 percent by 2050, France to higher latitudes, independing on the amount of cluding Northern Europe and greenhouse gases produced, the the western U.S. At present, researchers said this week in Mediterranean regions, with the Proceedings of the National dry and warm summers and Academy of Sciences. cooland wet winters, are espeAn i n creasingly a ff luent cially suitable. "The actual extent of those global population is likely to create more demand for wine redistributions will depend on and ensure that wine grapes market forces, available adapwill continue to be grown in tations options for vineyards, current areas as much as possi- and continued popularity of ble and be grown in new areas wine wit h c o nsumers," reas well, the researchers said. searchers said. Los Angeles Times
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 20'I3
Brain
AlVALYSIS:OBAMA'S BUDGET
ar etin socia ro rams rom t e e By Jackie Caimes New Yorh Times News Service
Breaking down Odama's2014dudget
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama's new budget has opened a debate over what it means to be a progressive Democrat in an age of austerity and defines him as a president willing to take on the two pillars of his party — Medicare and Social Security — created by Democratic presidents.
President Barack Obama's budget proposal of $3.8 trillion
By his gamble Wednesday in proposing budgetary concessions to Republicans on Social Security, the 1935 creation of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Medicare, the legacy of President Lyndon B. Johnson, Obamahasprovokedangrysupporters on his left to askwhether he is a progressive at all. AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, in a blistering statement, called the proposed benefit reductions "wrong and indefensible." An email from Rep. Alan Grayson, a liberal from Florida, was headlined "President's Budget Breaks Promise to Seniors." But to Obama, cost-saving changes in the nation's fastest-
projects a deficit below a trillion for the first time since 2008. It
again relies on the top-earning U.S. households for most of the tax increases.
Revenues Spending $3 trillion $3.8 trillion
l Payroll
34% Corporate income taxes
11%~~ taxes 3%
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17%
Note Figures do not total 100 percent due to rounding.
Highlights
$400 billion $200 billion in cuts for in cuts Medicare, to farm other health subsidies and care over federal retiree 10 years. programs.
$580 billion $50 billion increase in for infrastructure taxes over 10 investments to years forthe repair highways, wealthy by bridges, transit limiting their systems, airports. deductions © 2013 MCT
Sources:whse House, Ap
has long supported changes to benefit and premium changes. entitlement programs as part The budget's total 10-year growing domestic programs of a bipartisan deal to protect savings would r eplace the aremore progressivethan sim- other federal spending on, $1.2 trillion in indiscriminate ply allowing the entitlement for example, antipoverty proacross-the-board cuts, known programs forolder Americans grams, the nation's infrastruc- as sequestration, that took efto overwhelm the rest of the ture and education. fect March I after Obama and budget in future years. It has been evident from G OP leaders failed to agree on Even so, h e e m phasized the president's first months in deficit-reduction measures. that his support is contingent office that the pragmatist in A'third way'? on Republicans' agreeing to Obama has made him symhigher taxes from the wealthy pathetic to th e t h i nking of By this budget, Obama has and new spending, like for in- Greensteinand others.In 2009, forced the party's internal fisfrastructure, to create jobs. Obama considered proposing a cal debate to go public in a deThe president's views put much-discussed change in the gree unseen since President him at the head of a small but Social Security cost-of-living Bill Clinton in the 1990s pushed growing faction of liberals and formula until Democratic con- a liberal Democratic Party moderate Democrats who be- gressional leaders vetoed him. onto a centrist "third way." Ungan arguing several years ago But now in his fifth bud- til now, attention has focused that unless the party agrees to get and the first of his second on the Republican Party's postchanges in the entitlement pro- term, he ha s decided over election divisions over defining grams — which are growing some advisers' objections to conservatism. unsustainably as baby boom- make that proposal — and his Clinton's second-term efers ageand medical prices rise brand of pragmatic liberalism fort to address the long-term — the programs' costs will — official. finances of Medicare and Sooverwhelm all other domestic cial Security was aborted by spending to help the poor, the 'Chained CPI' his impeachment and then by working class and children. Under thepresident'sbudget, unexpected budget surpluses "The math on entitlements is the government would shift in that relieved the fiscal presjust not sustainable," said Sen. 2015 from the standard Con- sure to change the programs. Mark Warner of Virginia, one sumer PriceIndex — used to Ultimately, Clinton left office of the few Democrats to un- compute cost-of-living increas- better known for his policy of equivocally endorse Obama's es for Social Security and other "Save Social Security First"budget. "And if y o u're not benefits and to set income-tax that is, stockpile the surpluses finding ways to reform, where brackets — to what is called a to pay the approaching costs do you squeeze? Well,then "chained CPI." The new formu- of the baby boomers' retireyou squeeze early-childhood lation would slow the increase ment — not cutting taxes, as programs, you squeeze Head in benefits and raise income Republicans wanted. Start, you squeeze education tax revenues by putting some and veterans. taxpayers into higher brackets Salvos sooner, for a total savings of Even before the release of The basics $230 billion over 10 years. Obama's budget, liberal and The president's $3.77 trillion While many economists say labor groups mobilized in opbudget, with a mix of deficit re- the new formula is more accu- position, with activists protestduction through spending cuts rate, opponents say it does not ing outside the White House and tax increases and new adequately reflect the out-of- on Tuesday and, on Wednesspending to spur the economy, pocket health care expenses day, objectingon conference projects a $744 billion deficit that burden older Americans. calls with reporters. forfiscalyear 2014, which be- All Social Security benefiDemocratic congressional gins Oct. 1. That is down from ciaries would be affected, but leaders were muted in their the $973 billion shortfall pro- Obama proposes that at age 76 support for the president's plan jected for this fiscal year, after they would get gradual benefit and were troubled that Obama four years of post-recession increases to offset the deple- had made his fiscal overture to deficits exceeding $1 trillion. tion of their private assets or Republicans without any sign Nancy Pelosi, the H ouse pensions. that Republicans would comminority leader, has arranged In the president's bid to re- promise in turn. for House Democrats to hear a vive bipartisan talks, his budTheir p o l itical c o ncerns debate today on Obama's pro- get includes other proposals seemed to be validated when posed change in the cost-of- from his last compromise offer, Rep. Greg Walden of Oregon, living formula that determines made inDecember to Speaker the head of the House RepubSocial Security benefits. The John Boehnerbefore their pri- licans' campaign committee, debate will pit the AFL-CIO vate deficit-reduction negotia- said on CNN that the budget counsel, Damon Silvers, who tions collapsed. The president's was "a shocking attack on opposes the change in the for- budget would save $400 billion seniors." His words were inmula, against Robert Green- from Medicareover a decade, terpreted as a signal that in stein, executive director of mostly from reductions to hos- 2014 Republican candidates the liberal Center for Budget pitals and other health care will again accuse Democrats and Policy Priorities, which providers but a lso t h rough of trying to cut Medicare and
Social Security, even though congressional Republicans led by Boehner have demanded Social Security and Medicare cuts throughout budget talks of the past two years. But Boehner did temper his criticisms of O bama's budget before its release. He told reporters that Obama "does deserve some creditfor some i ncremental entitlement r eforms that he has outlined in his budget."
Taxes In a break from past budgets, Obama wants to reserve most business tax increases to pay for a cut in the corporate tax rate rather than designate the revenue for deficit reduction. New tax provisions scattered through the budget plan
accompany many repeated proposals that Obama h as made since 2009. The budget plan d oesn't specify all the tax breaks that would need to be eliminated or curtailed to meet those rate targets. The revenue target assumes — as does the House Republican budget — that tax breaks scheduledto expire at the end of 2013 would lapse as scheduled. That means extending any of them, such as the research and development tax credit, would need to be offset with savings elsewhere. The largest single tax increase in Obama's budget, raising $529 billion over 10 years, would set a 28 percent cap on the value of tax breaks such as the mortgage interest deduction, the exclusion for employer-provided healthinsurance and municipal bond interest. The cap would affect anyone in a m a r ginal ta x b r acket higherthan 28 percent,which ends at $223,050 of taxable income for married couples and $183,250 of taxable income for single taxpayers. — Bloomberg News contributed to this report.
Continued from A1 T he r e searchers s a y this process might help uncover the physical underpinnings of d evastating mental disorders like s chizophrenia, aut i s m , post-traumatic stress disorder and others. The w o r k , re p o r t ed Wednesday in the journal Nature, is not part of the Obama administration's recently announced initiative to probe the secrets of the brain, although the senior author on the paper, Dr. Karl D eisseroth at Stanford, was one of those involved in c r eati ng the initiative and i s involved in p l anning it s future. Dr. Thomas Insel, director of the National Institute of Mental Health, which helped fund the research, described the new work as helping to build an anatomical " f oundation" for the Obama initiative, which is meant to look at ongoing activity in the brain. I nsel added t ha t t h e technique works in a human brain that has been in formalin, a preservative, for years, which means that l o ng-saved h u man brains might be studied. "Frankly," he said, "that is spectacular." Kwanghun Chung, the p rimary a u thor o n t h e paper, a n d De i s seroth w orked with a t e a m a t Stanford for years to get the technique right. Deisseroth, known for developing another p owerful technique, called optogenetics, that allows the use of light to switch specific brain activity on and off, said Clarity c ould h ave a broader impact than optogenetics.
"It's really one of the most exciting things we've done," he said, with potential applications inneuroscience and
beyond. "I think it's great," said Dr. Clay Reid, a senior investigator at the Allen Institute for Brain Science in Seattle, who was not involved in the work. "One of t h e v er y d i f f i cult challenges has been making the brain, which is opaque, clear enough so that you can see deep into it." This technique, he s aid, makes b r a i ns "extremely clear"and preserves most of the brain chemistry. "It has it all," he said. In the mid-2000s Reid was part of a team led by Dr. Jeff L ichtman at H a r v ard t h at developed a process called Brainbow to breed mice that a re genetically a l tered t o make their b r ai n n e urons fluoresce in many different colors. The new t echnique would allow whole brains of those mice with their rainbow neurons to be preserved and studied. " I'm quite excited to t r y this," Lichtman said. Chung said he planned to start his own lab soon and to work on refining the technology. But he pointed out that it was already known that it works on all tissue, not just brains, and can be used to look for structures other than nerve cells. On his laboratory bench, he said, "I have a transparent liver, lungs and heart." R eid agreed t h a t C l a r ity had applications in many fields. "It could p ermeate biol-
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THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A S
COCC Continued from A1 "If someone is angry with these (prices) and wants to go someplaceelse,they can pay more," he said. A lso W e d nesday, t h e board approved new contracts with the unions representing instructional and classified staff. Instructors will see a n a v erage pay boost of 2 . 9 percent next year — up to 7.5 percent for some adjunct instructorswhile classified employees will receive a 3 percent pay increase. In a separate presentation to the COCC budget committee Wednesday, Middleton and associate chief financial officer David Dona laid out a preview of how the college intends to navigate the next few years.
Rapidly rising p ayroll expenses present a significant challenge for COCC, M iddleton said, i n l a r g e part driven by the cost of providing employee health care and retirement benefits under the Public Emp loyees Retirement S y s tem. Without PERS reform, a dditional s t at e f u n d i n g for c o m m unit y c o l l eges or some kind of control on health care c osts, COCC "can't continue" on its current course, he said. Middleton said that while those who drafted the proposed budget were careful not to "count our chickens
Water Continued from A1 A majority of the City Council wants to replace an aging 10mile pipeline that brings much of the city water supply from Bridge Creek, in the mountains west of Bend. City officials also want to replace old water intake equipment with technology that would allow the city to withdraw only as much water as it needs. Currently, the city continuously takes 18.2 cubic-feet-persecond of water from Bridge Creek regardless of demand, and returns excess water downstream to Tumalo Creek. City staff expect that infrastructure built in the project will remain in operation for a century. "The life of the pipe should be 100 years-plus," said Bridge Creek project manager Heidi Lansdowne. "It's being d esigned for that kind of l ongevity." Lansdowne said she expects delays to the project will likely increase the cost, although the city has not yet determined how much the price will increase. Bonacker said the 30-day public comment period on the environmental report began Wednesday, although the Forest Service posted the environmental report online "probably (Tuesday) evening." "I thinkthe bottom line is we can complete our administrative review and comment process and issue a final decision and the specialuse permit probably in mid- to late July," Bonacker said. Last year, a Forest Service review of the earlier Bridge Creek plan ran into opposition. The nonprofit Central Oregon LandWatch, in a federal lawsuit against the city and the Forest Service, alleged the agencies failed to adequately consider how the water project might impactfish andwetlands. LandWatch Executive Director Paul Dewey said Wednesday that he was not surprised at the Forest Service proposal to issue the permit. «I assumed that they would be saying that they were going to be issuing the special-use permit, and so we will be looking at it very carefully," Dewey said. The Forest Service reviewed two alternatives in this report, just as it did for the previous city plan: the city proposal to build a new pipeline and intake facility, and doing nothing. The agency also considered, but did not study in detail, replacement of the pipeline in its current location and two options to move the city water intake facility downstream, closer to the water storage facility. The city plan calls for much of the new pipeline to be installed under Skyliners Road. Replacing water pipelines in their current locations is problematic; the city would have to remove trees and disturb other wellestablished habitat, plus build temporary and permanent access roads on federal land, according to the report. The city would also have to periodically remove trees and vegetation
Civil War
COCC tuition increase
Continued from A1 Blue, who was wearing a ball cap and T-shirt bearing the name of White's Metal Detectors, said, "No matter where you walk, you could be walking on all kinds of history." Blue, who grew up in Manassas and learned relic hunting from his father and grandfather, said he found the ring in 2005 with a metal detector but didn't try in earnest to track down the soldier's relatives until recently. He succeeded with the help of a friend, Margaret Binning, who is a genealogist and volunteer at the Manassas Museum. She tracked Levi Schlegel to the Reading Public Library, where Ernest Schlegel is on the board, he said. Blue said he believes it may be the first time that such a recovered Civil War object has been returned to a soldier's
The Central Oregon Community College Board of Directors authorized an increase in the 2013-14 tuition and fee rates.
2 012-13 In-district $82 per credit Non-resident Veteran $95 Out-of-district $108 Border state Out-of-state
2013 - 14 $87 per credit $100 $113
$108 $220
Source. Central Oregon Community College
before they hatched," several matters before the Legislature provide reason for optimism. S ome c o m bination o f P ERS reform and ta x i n creases seems possible during this legislative session, Middleton said, and a push by community colleges to b oost state f u nding f r o m $428 million over the next two years to $453 million may be g a i ning t r action. However, the proposed budget is in balance while assuming none of these things happen, he said. "This budget does not include any ofthose chickens, but, I think one two or three of them will hatch," Middleton said. Notably, t h e p r o p osed budget includes a p r oject ion t h a t e n r o l l ment a t COCC will go into decline over the next three years, a reversalfrom recent history i n w h i c h e n r ollment
THREE SISTERS WILDERNESS
dangerous.
$113 $230 Greg Cross/The Bulletin
doubled over the last four years. The budget projects an enrollment decline of 2.5percent in each of the next two y ears, I percent in the third year, and then no changes over th e l a st two years of the five-year forecast. Paradis said COCC is already seeing some slight declines in enrollment, which it anecdotally attributes to an improvingeconomy. Students who enrolled in COCC facing poor employment prospects two years ago have graduated, Paradis said, while others in a similar position today may be more willing to test the waters of the job market. "We can't prove it, but we believe it's true," he said. The college must adopt its budget for the 2013-15 biennium by June 30,the end of the current fiscal year.
family.
"It's a great story for Reading, Berks County, Pennsylvania, and the Schlegel family all at the same time," Ernest Schlegel said. "Because when you read the kinds of battles that this man went through, and he came back and he lived a successful life ... it's amazing, absolutely amazing." Schlegel was 21 when he joined his first regiment, the 167th Pennsylvania, in 1862, Ernest Schlegel said. It was a nine-month outfit that disbanded in August 1863 without seeing too much action.
— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulleti n.com
a pinky finger. Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post
A Civil War-era ring is marked with the Levi Schlegel's name, company and regiment, information that could have been used to identify his body if he had died in battle. Schlegel, who was a c arpenter by trade, was out of the Army for a year. In September 1864, he signed up with the 198th Pennsylvania regiment, Company G, recruited in Berks County, Pa., where Reading is located. Many in the company, like Schlegel, were descendants of 18th-century German immigrants. Some of Schlegel's comrades were Reuben Reifsnyder, Alfred Seiple, Augustus Shupert, Annes Sicher and Gideon Staudt, according to a register at the website Pennsylvania Volunteers of the Civil War. The war at this stage was exceptionally grim. The main Union and Confederate armies were lockedin trench warfare around the city of Petersburg, Va. The Confederacy was in its death throes, but its Army of Northern Virginia was still
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The ring, which appears to be silver, was likely purchased by Schlegel, Blue said, and served as daily reminder of the prospect of death. Blue found it at a construction site where he was hunting for relics. Soldiers also could buy identity discs, which looked more like dog tags. And some, facing especially awful combat, simply wrote theirnames on pieces ofpaper that they pinned to their uniforms before battle. I f Schlegel was with h i s regiment throughout the final months of the war, he was lucky to have survived. The 198th saw a half-dozen savage battles, marched through dreadful weather, and saw comrades who had been stripped of their clothes and whose throats had been cut by partisans, according to a history of the regiment. At the Battle of Hatcher's Run in February 1865, brutal fighting broke out at night.
"The boys sprang upon
the foe with the bayonet," the regimental history states. "The struggle for a short time was hand-to-hand, muskets being clubbed and bayonets freely used."
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Blue said the identity ring was one of several ways Union soldiers had to make sure their bodies would be identified if they were killed in battle. The soldier's name, company and regiment were etched on the outside of the ring, which probably was worn, in this case, on
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around the pipelines, to prevent roots from growing into the pipes, and maintain access to them. Moving the water intake facility downstream would likely have benefits, including more water left in an upper section of Tumalo Creek and a significantly shorter pipeline, according to the Forest Service. However, the c it y w a t er source would no longer be in a protected watershed,and the city might need to build a more expensive water treatment facility. The area holds a higher risk of w i l dfires, and construction of a new intake facility would disturb undeveloped wildlife habitat on federal land, according to the Forest Service. It could also prove challenging for the city to transfer its water rights downstream, the Forest Service wrote. Bonacker said th e Forest Serviceused the same stream temperature model as in the previous environmental review, but recruited additional experts to work on temperature model-
ing for this assessment. "There were questions last time; people felt that because (a consultant to the city, HDR) did the bulk of the modeling for us last time, that the outcome was suspect," Bonacker said. "We just figured we'd beef up the validation this time." Lansdowne said the Forest Service may require the city to do the same type of work it previously proposed to offset the project's environmental impacts. For example, in both cases, the Forest Service asked the city to monitor the flow of water in Tumalo Creek and Bridge Creek after it installs the new pipeline, she said. "The only significant impact to the project is that in this supplemental (environmental assessment), we have limited our maximum diversion to exactly what we are diverting today," Lansdowne said. "They didn't detract from anything they had had in the previous (environmental assessment); they just clarified and added information to more clearly document
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what they were going to agree to let us do." Lansdowne said project delays will add to the total cost. "I believe just because we've missed a whole year, we're going to have some cost escalations," she said. Fuel and labor costs haveincreased, whichwill be reflected in the project cost, whether the city renegotiates a contract with the firm Mortenson Construction or goes out to bid again, she said. The city already purchased steel for a portion of the pipeline, but other
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pipe will be high-density polyethylene, a petroleum product that likely increased in price, Lansdowne said. The city already incurred costs when Mortenson mobilized to begin construction last fall, then demobilized when the judge issued an injunction on the project. Bonacker said the Forest Service may likely issue the citya 20-year special-use permit, the standard period.
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541-598-3955www.organicsleepproducts.com
A6 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5
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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
www.bendbulletin.com/local
LEGISLATURE
BRIEFING
nions i ei,c ariieswa o ems' an o raise axes •
Ways andMeans coming toBend The Oregon Legislature Joint Ways and
Means Committee is holding six public hearings, one in Bend, to
gather comments on the state budget. The committee, chaired by state Sen.
Richard Devlin, D-Tualatin, and state Rep. Peter Buckley, D-Ashland,
is coming to Bendon April 19. The hearing is scheduled for 4:306 p.m. at the William Healy Armory, 875 S.W.
Simpson Ave. The committee makes recommendations to the Legislature, which is constitutionally required to adopt a bal-
anced spending plan. Other sites where the committee intends to
By Lauren Dake The Bulletin
SALEM — Union members endorsed a plan by Democrats in the Oregon Legislature to raise taxes on the wealthy, while some charitable organizations Wednesday voiced concerns the hike could cut charitable giving and reduce their lifeline. This week, the Democrats — who control both legislative chambers — unveiled a plan to raise $275 million, primarily by raising taxes on high-income earners and increasing the corporate minimum tax. Most testimony Wednesday before the House Revenue Committee came in favor of House Bill 2456, touted as a fair way to funnel more money into public education.
InSide • The state Senate passes a bill that would allow Oregon schools to keep their Native
American mascots and logos if local tribes do not object,B3 Laurie Wimmer, a lobbyist for the Oregon Education Association, the state's largest teachers union, noted that public employees are facing likely cuts to their pensions.She said raising revenues from businessesand upper-income earners is a fair way to "share the sacrifice." This plan, she said, represents a "very modest, tiny contribution by those most capable of paying it, who have done well despite the downturn." Association Vice President Deborah Barnes saidshe represents thousands of
•
teachers in the state "who are begging" lawmakers to "reinvest in public education in this state." HB 2456, which details the tax plan, would reduce the amount of m oney high-income earners could claim in deductions. It would reduce the allowable deductions for individual taxpayers with incomes above $125,000 and for couples earning above $250,000. The proposal would also reduce or eliminate the same taxpayers' personal exemption credit. For corporations, Democrats want to increase the minimum tax for businesses earning more than $100 million, and close loopholesfor offshore corporate accounts. SeeTax plan/B2
meet include Eugene, Ashland, Hermiston,
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Photo courtesy Deachutea National Forest
A small log shelter found southwest of Sisters last month by U.S. Forest Service workers.
Officials baffled
by illegal shelter
Tillamook and Portland.
The committee plans a Capitol session, as well.
By Dylan J. Darling
— Bulletin staff report
The Bulletin
Streetsclosed-
During a back country patrol of snowy woods southwest of Sisters last month, U.S. Forest Service workers made an unusual discovery. Near Black Crater Lake and Whispering Pine Campground they found a small log shelter, complete with a metal roof and a metal box wood stove, said Kirk Flan-
/
• Northwest Crossing Drive from Mt.
Washington to Fort ~ Clatsop will close at 11 p.m. for Spring Fest.
• Fort Clatsop from -
I Ordway to the
• ii
~ business parking lot on the south side of Northwest Crossing Drive closes at 2 p.m. Friday.
nigan, rec-
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reationteam leaderforthe Sisters Ranger
In infn Anyone with information aboutthe
tional Forest.
~ • Northwest Crossing Drive from Fort Clatsop to Compass Park closes at10 p.m. Friday. • All roads reopen at 2 a.m. Monday.
Crater Lake
the shelter unusual was
call Central
541-416-
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( I IENO Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
Allie Hively, from left, holds a Red Ranger chick Wednesday as her 2-year-old daughter, Noey, pets it gently, and her mother Sandi Hofmann, all of Bend, looks on at High Desert Ranch 8 Home in Bend. Allie Hively, who raises chickens at their home, said "We are
STATE NEWS
checking out the variety of chicks available here."
storia
corvallis
Vale
• Corvallis:A teacher works where art meets
technology. • Vale:More people are asking permission to carry guns. • Astoria:Five menget haircuts, and acancer organization benefits. Stories on B3
Have astoryidea or submission? Contactus! The Bulletin Call a reporter: Bend................541-617-7829 Redmond ........541-54e-2186 Sisters.............541-548-2186 La Pine ........... 541-3e3-0367 Sunriver ......... 541-383-0367 Deschutes ..... 541-383-0376 Crook ............. 541-383-0367 Jefferson ....... 541-3e3-0367
Salem..............541-554-1162 D.C..................202-662-7456
Business........541-383-0360 Education ...... 541-3e3-0367 Health ..............541-383-0304 Public lands .....541-617-7e12 Public safety.....541-383-0387 Projects ..........541-617-7831
Plan to buildnew Prinevillehospital takes stepforward
BEND-LA PINE SCHOOLS
By Scott Hammers
By Megan Kehoe
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
Plans to build a new hospital in Prineville took a step forward Monday night, when the Pioneer Memorial Hospital membership voted to back a proposal by St. Charles Heath System to open a new $30 million facility by early 2015. Since 2008,the nonprofit Pioneer Memorial Hospital has leased its building and equipment to St. Charles Health System, which staffs and manages the hospital. With Monday's vote — supported by approximately 90 percent of the hospital's membership — the nonprofit will end the lease arrangement once the new hospital is opened, dissolve itself and contribute
approximately $1 million in remaining assets to establish a scholarship fund for Crook County students interested in medicine. Bob Gomes, CEO of Pioneer Memorial Hospital and St. Charles Redmond, said the proposal understandably did not receive unanimous support, given the emotional attachment many in Crook County have to the more than 60-year-old hospital. "They're afraid of being told what to do and what will happen," Gomes said. Today, two design firms that have been drawing up preliminary plans for the future hospital will present their proposals to a selection committee. SeeHospital/B2
Ex-home of behavioral programs will be sold along with the middle school program in fall 2008. The house had beThe Bend-La Pine School Board come too cramped forthe increasing voted unanimously Tuesday to de- number of students. "It was really small and it j u st clare a home that once housed a youth behavior program a surplus wasn't meshing for u s a nymore," property, and to put it up for sale. said Linda Bradetich, the special pro" We didn't f ind a n y grams records clerk for need for it within the disBend schools. "We just 't find outgrew it." trict," said Brad Henry, W B CACfrf chief operations and fi- p r i y r l e a d fpy The programs are now n ancial officer for t h e located in the Tamarack school d i s trict. "Ancl it Within t Building near U.S. Highthere's been a renewed di S triCt. way 20 on Bend's east interest in the property in side, in a building over — Brad «nry, 4,000 square feet that can the area." c"'e oPerations accommodate its 20-plus The Chamberlain and Riverbend p r o grams, students. Bradetich says Bend Bend-La Pine S chools many of the students in Schools the program come from programs for high school and middle school stuunstable homes, and the dents wit h b e havioral newer l o cation o f f ers and emotional problems, were based them expanded areas where they can in a three-story house located at 117 prepare meals, take showers, and get N.W. Chamberlain St. until 2008. The some peace and quiet. It also offers an school district bought the house for ideal location for students who strug$107,800 in 1996. In the years since gle in a larger classroom setting. then, the property has appreciated, The Chamberlain house has been and a recent market study suggested vacant for nearly five years. Despite the district list the home for $299,000. having to pay for building mainteThe high school behavioral pro- nance, the district has been reluctant gram, which was named after the to sell the property given the nature street on which the house is located, of the housing market. vacated the 2,352-square-foot house See House/B2
"It is against the law to construct a structure on national forest land unless you have a special-use permit or contract," Flannigan sa>d. Under Forest Service rules, the agency may fine the shelterbuilders $250 and require restitution for any damages to the land, Flannigan wrote in an email. It could also be considered a Class B misdemeanor, under which a judge could assess up to a $5,000 fine and order up to six months in jail. It's a mystery who made it and when. Whoever did "put a little bit of work" into it, Flannigan said. The structure was about half the size of typical wooden snow shelters on the Deschutes National Forest. Inside was a bench that could seat three adults. It appears the shelter was built from a kit, he said, with the logs hauled in rather than cut from the surrounding forest. They were then stacked, "like Lincoln Logs," Flannigan said. The Forest Service left a notice on the shelter for about a week, he said, asking whoever was using it or had built it to call. It received no response. Since then, the Forest Service had the shelter dismantled, hauling out the metal sections and burning the wood. SeeShelter/B2
Illegal shelter The U.S. Forest Service found an illegal wooden shelter, complete with a metal roof and a wood
stove, late last month near Black Crater Lake. It has since been dismantled and burned. Who built
the shelter is unknown. I
To Eugene, Salemg
f
To Redmond / -Black Sister Grater Lake,
I
'/J Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
E VENT TODAY GEAR SWAP: Bring climbing or mountaineering gear to sell, or purchase items; a portion of proceeds benefits Cascades Mountaineers Club; free; 6-8 p.m., item check-in 4-5:45 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-549-1028 or www.orcm.org. PLATEAU INDIANARTS PRESENTATION: Curator Steven L. Grafe explores the "Plateau Style: A History of Columbia River Beadwork"; registration requested; $3, free museum members; 6 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. "EXHIBITION: MANETPORTRAYINGLIFE":A screening of the documentary showcasing the Edouard Manet art exhibit at the Royal Academy of Arts in London; $12.50; 7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-3826347 or www.fathomevents.com. DAVID JACOBS-STRAIN:The Oregon bluesman performs; $12; 8 p.m.; The Belfry,302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122. MATT HOPPER: The rock artist performs, with Vandella; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand,507 N.W.Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. facebook.com/thehornedhand. THE AUTONOMICS: ThePortlandbased rock band performs, with The Hoons; $5;8 p.m .;SilverM oon Brewing 8 Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3888331. AFROMASSIVE:Funk-rock from Northern California; $8 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 9 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-6999.
FRIDAY LAST COMICSTANDING:Qualifying
NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 4:56 a.m. April 9, in the area of Northeast Robin Place. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at11 a.m. April 9, in the area of North Main Street. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at11:44 a.m. April 9, in the area of Northeast Third Street.
BEND FIRE RUNS Tuesday 8:43a.m. — Authorized controlled burning, 2805 N.E. Sandy Drive. 16 —Medical aid calls.
AL E N D A R round; comedians present comic acts and attempt to advance to the next round of competition; $5; 5-7 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.lastcomicstandingbend. com. BEND SPRING FESTIVAL: A celebration of the newseason with art, music and wine samples; free; 6-9 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives; www.nwxevents.com. LASAGNA BANQUET:A lasagna dinner recognizing the 2013Teacher of the Year, andPatriots Pen and Voice of Democracy competition winners; registration requested; $10; 7 p.m.; VFWHall, 1836 S.W.Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-548-4108. "CRAZY ABOUT ME": Stage Right Productions and SuzanNoyes presenta new romantic comedy play about moving aheadwith both feet firmly planted in the past; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. "LIFE OFPl": A screening of the PG-rated 2012 film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541475-3351 or www.jcld.org. COMEDY WITHCOREY MICHAELIS AND TOM HOWARD.: The comedians perform; $10 includes a drink; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; The Original Kayo's Dinner House and Lounge,415 N.E.Third St., Bend; 541-323-2520. THE SOLOSPEAK SESSIONS: Professional solo performers tell personal stories; $15 plus fees in advance; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 458-206-4895 or www. brownpapertickets.com. BROWNCHICKENBROWNCOW: A bluegrass string band with its roots in the mountains of West Virginia performs bluegrass, old-style country, gypsy-jazz, Irish and folk; $5; 8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing &
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvvvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Submitted photo
Molly Ringwald sings American standards and tells stories, with the Peter Smith Quartet at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend. Tickets are $35-$50 plus fees. To learn more, phone 541-317-0700or go to www.towertheatre.org. Taproom, 24 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend;541-388-8331. GET SHOT!:Sleazy punk rockfrom Sacramento, Calif., with No Cash Value and High Desert Hooligans; 8 p.m.; Big T's, 413 S.W.Glacier Ave., Redmond; 541-504-3864.
SATURDAY SPORTSMAN JAMBOREE COLLECTIBLESHOW: A show of guns, knives, coins and collectibles; food available; $5, $4 with a trade
Tax plan
Butte, said House Speaker Tina Kotek has polarized the Continued from B1 chamber. Republicans a r e Jim White, director of the still pushing for deeper cutsto Nonprofit Association of Or- the state's public pension sysegon, said he'sworried the bill tem, and with those cuts, he would discourage charitable said, taxes would need not be donations, reducing a n i m - raised. portant source of income for M cLane said K otek h a s nonprofits. turned the discussions over "The charitable de d uc- taxes and the Public Employtion has to be kept separate" ees Retirement System "into a from the ot h er ta x - raising partisan battle line, where she revenue measures, he urged drew the lines." lawmakers. During a ra d io in terview Roger Martin, a lobbyist for Wednesday,Gov. John Kitzthe Oregon Catholic Confer- haber, a Democrat, said he ence, was more blunt. believes a revenue package "Don't kid yourself that this will emerge that re flects a isn't going to have an effect on compromise between the two charitable contributions, be- parties. "I think people needto view cause I'm here to tell you, it will have an effect," he testified. it as the beginning of a longer J ared Ma s o n-Gere, a discussion," Kitzhaber said on spokesman for House Demo- Oregon Public Broadcasting's crats, said Democrats areopen Think Out Loud. to ideasfrom their Republican To ra ise ta xes, lawmakcolleagues. ers need a supermajority in "From the start, it's been a both chambers, meaning at conversation," he said. least two Republicans in both Democrats are open to ne- chambers would need to sign gotiating an a l ternative tax on to the plan. plan or an exemption for charLawmakers plan to listen to itable organizations, Mason- more testimony from the pubGere said. lic this morning on the revenue In apress conference after bill. Meanwhile, in the Senate, the committee hearing, House a vote is scheduled on Senate Republican leaders blasted the Bill 822, the Democrats' proDemocrats' plan. posal to trim PERS. House Republican Le ad— Reporter: 541-554-1162, er Mi ke M c L ane, R-Powell IdakeC<bendbulletin.com
For TheBulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin. com/officials.
CONGRESS U.S. Senate • Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone:202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W.Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. RonWyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 W eb: http://wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W.Hawthorne Ave., Suite 107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142
U.S. House ofRepresentatives • Rep. GregWalden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone:202-225-6730 Web: http:I/walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 N.W. BondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452
Shelter Continued from B1 The agency still has the roofand stove ifthe ow neris interested in claiming them. Each year forest workers find a couple of makeshift shelters, but Flannigan said they are usually much more
High School, 2855 N.W.Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-410-8451 or www. benddanceproject.org. "CRAZY ABOUT ME": Stage Right Productions and SuzanNoyes presenta new romantic comedy play about moving aheadwith both feet firmly planted in the past; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. COMEDY WITHCOREY MICHAELIS AND TOM HOWARD.: The comedians perform; $10 includes a drink; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; The Original Kayo's Dinner House and Lounge,415 N.E.Third St., Bend; 541-323-2520. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC — HIGHLANDQUARTET:String musicians play selections of chamber music; $35, $10 children and students; 7:30 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W.Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436, info© highdesertchambermusic.com or www.highdesertchambermusic.com.
rudimentary "shanties."This seemed built to last. He said it was likely being used by skiers orpeople doing some other snow sport. As executive director for the Oregon State Snowmo-
on the Sisters District. She was sad to hear it had been burned. "It is kind of a shame to burn down a perfectly good shelter," she said. "If you were a guy stranded you would be happy to seeit."
MOLLY RINGWALD: Theiconic actress sings American standards and tells stories, with the Peter Smith Quartet; $35-$50 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. THE SOLOSPEAK SESSIONS: Professional solo performers tell personal stories; $15 plus fees in advance; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 458-206-4895 or www. brownpapertickets.com. RUM REBELLION:The Portlandbased pirate-punk band performs, with High Desert Hooligans; 8 p.m.; Big T's,413S.W. GlacierAve., Redmond; 541-504-3864. TURNERMOOREBAND: The Oregon country act performs, with Blackstrap Bluegrass; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W.Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. facebook.com/thehornedhand.
bile Association,Peggy Spieger of La Pine said she hadn't heard of the rogue shelter
— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarli ng@bendbulleti n.com
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gun, free ages12 and younger with an adult; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; La Pine Event Center, 16405 First St.; 541536-2223. BEND SPRINGFESTIVAL:A celebration of the new season with art, live music and astreet chalk art competition; free;11 a.m.-10 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives; www.nwxevents.com. WALK TO CUREDIABETES:A 2.4-mile walk to raise awareness of diabetes; free, registration required; proceeds benefit diabetes
research; donations accepted; 11 a.m., check-in at10 a.m.; Riverbend Park, Southwest Columbia Street and Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 503-643-1995 or www. jdrforegon.org. WRITE NOW!:Brainstorm, play word games and more in acasual setting, to help creative writing; free; 1 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1081 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. A NOVELIDEA KICKOFF: An overview of events in the 2013 A Novel Idea .. ReadTogether program; with presentations by Stacey Donohue andHeather McNeil; free; 3 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. VFW DINNER:A French dip dinner, with karaoke; $7.50; 5 p.m.; VFW Hall,1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541389-0775. "THEVAGINA MONOLOGUES IN SPANISH":A Spanish version of author EveEnsler's production about female sexualityand domestic violence; free, donations accepted; 6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W.CollegeWay,Bend;541-3837412 or www.cocc.edu/. BEND GAME NIGHT:Play available board games or bring your own; free; 6 p.m.-midnight; East Bend Public Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; 541-318-8459. BEND COMMUNITY CONTRADANCE:Featuring caller Ron Bell-Roemer and music by The Eugene City Barnstormers; $7; 7 p.m. beginner's workshop, 7:30 p.m. dance; Boys 8 Girls Club of Bend, 500 N.W. Wall St.; 541-330-8943. POSTCARDS:Bend DanceProject presents an evening of danceand music inspired by images found on postcards, featuring Velocity Dance Theatre, Jazz DanceCollective, South County Hipsters and the Hokule'a Polynesian Dancers; $10 in advance, $12 at the door; 7 p.m.; Summit
House Continued from 61 "When it was vacated, we determined t hat it w a s t h e wrong time to se ll," Henry satd. With a promising uptick in the real estate market in recent months, the district decided in February to have the property appraised, and will select a real estate agent in the next month or soto sell it. The school district doesn't often sell properties, Henry
said, and they plan on interviewing several re al e state professionals before settling on one. Proceeds from the sale will go into the district's Land Reserve Fund, an allocation for future pr o perty p u r c hases. Right now, Henry says there's about $165,000in that fund. "Some properties sell in a day, others in a year," Henry said. "It will just depend on how robust the market is."
ly large to allow for f u ture expansion. Contlnued from 61 Gomes said ifthe process The preferred design will proceeds sm o o thly, c on be presented to the St. Charles s truction c r ew s c o ul d b e Health System board of direc- preparing the site of the futors on Apri119. ture hospital as early as this St. Charles Health System summer. has not selected a location for The current hospital would the proposed hospital, but has be sold oncethe new facility is been considering two si t es completed and open. near d owntown P r i neville, — Reporter: 541-383-0387, both of which are sufficientshammersCbendbulletin.com
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Hospital
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THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
eac er en sa , ec By Mike Mclnally
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Kevin Patton, an assistant professor of Music and Performance Technology at Oregon State University, poses with his sensoraugmented electric guitar.
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'
Corvallis Gazet te-Times
C ORVALLIS — I f K e v i n Patton's office i n a c o r n er o f Benton Hall o n t h e O r egon State University campus seems a little cluttered — a guitar over here, an electronic doodad rigged up by a student for aclass over there,a laptop humming away on the desk — there's good reason. This is what it looks like at the busy intersection of music and technology, and that's home territory for Patton, who is an assistant professor of music and performance technologies at OSU's School of Arts and Communication. In the midst of preparing to play a concert in Seattle last week, Patton talked about his work and passions — and the electric guitar in the office is a good place to start. It's a device he's b een working on for a decade, the TaurEx, a sensor extension for the electric guitar that tracks t he guitarist's motion a n d gestures inorder to provide real-time control of computer effects and sampling. So, for example, the guitarist could program the device to trigger any number of musical effects as he lifts the guitar.
Dipping the ax could trigger a differentset of effects or samples. He recently earned a grant from an Oregon State venture capital fund to develop the guitar into a marketable prototype. It's a logical project for Patton, who earned a degree in guitar from the University of North Texas in 2002. But that wasn't Patton's first major.
Algae fine —Oregon environmental officials have fined a U.S. Forest Service nursery that grows trees for national forests $8,800 for allowing a mat of algae toescapefrom a reservoir and pollute a
Andy Cripe Corvallis Gazette-Times
creek. The Medford Mail Tribune reported Wednesday that the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality levied the fine against the
J. Herbert Stone Nursery in Central Point. The state agencysays the nursery's seven-acre reservoir overflowed last July, and abright turquoise mat of algae went downstream into Jackson Creek. Although
the algae proved non-toxic, the DEQ says it still reduced oxygen levels for fish in the creek. The Forest Service had no immediate comment but told the agency it will appeal.
BBCk fO PriSOO — A Grants Pass mansent to prison a decade ago for stealing and crashing a pickup truck with a 2-year-old inside
has been sent back to prison on theft charges. TheGrants Pass Daily Courier reported Tuesdaythat 39-year-old Jayson Sauer was sentenced to eight years in prison for the 2003 kidnapping. Sauer
said later he hadn't realized the girl was in the idling pickup hestole.
via The Associated
Press
The girl was found traumatized but otherwise unhurt. During the kidnapping case, Sauer asked for treatment for methamphetamine
abuse. Twoyears ago, just out of prison, hewas convicted of meth possession. Last week, he pleaded guilty to a series of thefts, including 3,400 gallons of fuel, a truck and an ATV. Judge Lindi Baker sen-
tenced him to10 years in prison. "My very first major was physics," he said. "I've always been a little bit of a nerd." And combining that love with a love for music — and a passion for musicians who have carved out their ow n paths — led, more or less, to his current posting. Oregon State's School of Arts and Communication was looking for someone with experience in interactive multimedia. Patton thought the job might be a good fit — and it added to the appeal that the university was reorganizing its arts and communication school and that the Music Department is underneath that umbrella. "I address all of them," he said — arts, communication and music. The school also w a nted someone with s ome v isual a rts experience — i n p a r t , to add some visual pizazz to its musical productions. So, for example, Patton worked on the visuals for a recent lo-
cal production of "The Magic Flute." Next up: Working with his spouse, visual artist Maria del Carmen Montoya, and cinematographer Jonathan Jindra to provide visuals for an appearance by Oregon State choirs in May at t h e A l i ce Tully Hall in Lincoln Center in New York City. The visual work offers the same sort of opportunity to blend technology and arts. For example, Patton and his collaborators might use computer programming to listen to cues from the musicians to trigger certain sorts of visual effects. "It's very much a parallel to some of my scholarly work," he said. And there's a certain ethos that underlies all of his work: "It's just cool to mess with gear, taking stuff apart and making it do stuff I want to do. Failure is common. Dead ends are just another right turn. You just
keep plugging away."
It's the same ethos Patton tries to instill in his students. "We try t o c ombine this kind of p r actical hands-on learning with the core music education, with a r i g orous s cientific u n derpinning o f sound and technology," he sald. There's a future for s t udents with the ability to mix a nd match t h e a r t s w i t h technology. "If you can only do things that a machinecan do,"your job prospects might be limited, he said. But "If you can think of ways that you can combine different types of t echnologies and media, you'll be very useful. "My position here is a great example of this," he said. "The lines between the actual disciplines are blurring fast. The concept of this merging of arts and sciences is really exciting for everyone. The future is really bright for creative music here at OSU."
Hair Share —Five Clatsop County men made apact ayear-anda-half ago to grow out their hair and donate it to anAmerican Cancer Society program that makes wigs for cancer patients. If anyone cut their hair before the donation, he'd have to pay the others $50 apiece.
The Daily Astorian reports that all five kept the pact. And onSaturday they had their long locks cut down to about half an inch. Four went to an Astoria salon, Salon Boheme, and one who now lives in Southern
California was shorn in SanDiego. TSUll8ml dOdrIS. — The Parks and Recreation department says another piece of painted wood that mayhavereligious significance inJapan haswasheduponanOregonbeach.Thelatestobjectwas found Monday near Florence. It's similar to one found March 25 near
Oceanside. Thedepartment says it appears to be akasagi, the top, horizontal part of a torii, an arch marking the entrance to a sacred place. It's described as black and red, 14 feet long and 3 feet wide.
The agency says it moved the piecefor safekeeping and notified Japanese officials. It hasn't determined the origin of either piece and hasn't called them tsunami debris.
Tree prateSt —About a dozenpeople carried signs Tuesday in downtown Salem to protest the decision to allow a U.S. bank branch
to cut down five mature trees. Onedemonstrator, Mark Wigg, told the Statesman Journal that removing the trees would destroy what makes downtown Salem beautiful and unique. The city's Shade Tree
Advisory Committee approved apermit in January for the bank to remove the trees. The bank says they obscure sight lines of the building and their roots crack the sidewalk and clog storm water drains.
New pOliCe unit —About 50 Portland police officers have been selected for a new unit to respond to mental health crisis calls. Of-
ficers in the EnhancedCrisis lntervention Teamremain on patrol but
More seek
permission to PaCkgunS The Associated Press VALE — If you're looki ng to s t art c a r rying a concealed handgun in far southeastern Oregon, be prepared to wait. There's been a rush to ap-
ply for concealed carry permits at the Malheur County sheriff's office. Sign-ups that used to be available on a this-week-or-next basis aren't available until June. The Ontario Argus Observer reports the sheriff's office processed 398 applications for permits last
year. In the first three months of this year, it has already gotten 244 applications. A rising percentage are from women. Most applicants need a training session. The sheriff' s department and firearms trainer Jim Warner say people seeking permits are giving various reasons and aren't citing one particular cause.
will be trained as the go-to responders for calls involving the mentally ill. The Oregonian reports the new unit is one of the initiatives recom-
LEGISLATURE
mend by the Justice Department after it found last year that Portland officers used excessive force against people with mental illness.
Senate biII says mascotsOK if local tribes give approval
Helping fish —Students at Southern Oregon University are donating money to put water back in a Klamath Basin creek to help fish. Student activist Shaun Franks said Tuesday that about $60,000
from student fees dedicated to special projects known asthe Green Fund are going to the Bonneville Environmental Foundation to lease water rights from ranchers on Seven Mile Creek. The idea is to offset
the amount of water used ontheAshland campus by restoring an By Lauren Gambino
this is beyond-belief absurd." The Associated Press Kruse said that in his view, SALEM — A state policy mascots honor the state's Nathat requires schools to erase tive history. Native American logos from Less than a year ago, the uniforms, sports fields, trostate Board of Education imphy cases and other items p osed a statewide ban o n would be loosened under a bill Native American mascots in passed by the state Senate on schools. Wednesday. The board gave schools with Under the bill, schools could Native American mascots unkeep their Native American til July 2017 to change them, mascots if local tribes approve or risk losing state funding. of them. Fifteen Oregon high schools Critics of the mascots have use NativeAmerican mascots said they are racist. But sup- for their schools, with names porters of the mascots, includ- like the Banks Braves and the ing some tribal members, say Roseburg Indians. they are a source of pride. Reyn Leno, tribal council Sen. Jeff Kruse, a Roseburg chairman for the ConfederRepublican and the chief spon- ated Tribes of Grand Ronde, sor of the bill, said it should be said he i s l e s s c oncerned up to tribes to decide if a mas- about Native American mascot is discriminatory. c ots in schools than he i s "I'm a Roseburg Indian and about how his tribe's history I'm a proud Roseburg Indian," is taught. "People need to learn our he said Wednesday. "And that is a symbol of pride for me. To history," he said Wednesday. put a negative connotation on "Then maybe w e w o uldn't
have to deal with ... disrespectful school mascots." Leno said he doesn't find Native American school mascots offensive, but b elieves local tribes should be the decision makers on the matter. "The banned names — Indians, Braves, Warriors, and Chiefs — a r e i n spirational Native images and we do not view theiruse as derogatory," he said in earlier testimony. Susan Hansen, a resident of Mollala and a critic of the bill, said that she thinks the mascots reduce Native American traditions to cartoon figures, and also give students the idea that stereotyping is acceptable. In 2006, the education board recommended schools stop using Native American mascots. Some abided and c hanged their mascots and logos. But some small communities resisted, saying the nicknames are a source of pride.
"It'S a SPring Thing" ... I
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equal amount to the creek. The creek, which sometimes runs dry in summer from irrigation withdrawals, flows out of the Cascades into
Agency Lake, and is home to redband trout. VigilanCe praiSed —Policeare praising a citizen who thought the sight of people loading anairplane propeller into a pickup truck in a southeast Portland neighborhood was unusual enough to warrant a 911 call. Officers responding on Tuesday learned on their way that
nearby Troutdale police hadjust taken a report of a stolen airplane propeller. Sgt. Pete Simpson sayspolice stopped a Ford pickup, recovered two stolen propellers and tookthree people into custody for investigation of theft. The theft victim soon arrived andconfirmed the propellers were his so officers returned them to him. — Fromwirereports
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
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he Cathedral Rock Wilderness is a beautiful proposal with an ugly flaw: Extremely limited public access. The nearby landowners and Jefferson County officials need to come up with a solution. The latest suggested
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compromise only puts shine onthe ugly. Oregon Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, both Democrats, proposed a legislative package that includes expanding w i lderness protections to a number of areas in Oregon. It includes Cathedral Rock, an 8,686-acre wilderness area that would be mostly located in Jefferson County. There are many reasons why the Cathedral Rock proposal is attractive. It's a pristine area along the John Day River. The proposal includes land swaps with the two major nearby landowners that consolidate the checkerboard of privateand Bureau of Land Management land. The proposal also would create new camping options for rafters along four miles of the river. Thousands of people float that stretch of the river every year. But, as we said, there's also only limited public land access. That needs to be fixed. Under the Congressional proposal, people who float the river would be able to get in. And the two nearby landowners — Cherry Creek Ranch and Young Lifecan decidewho can get in by land and who can't. The boundaries were gerrymandered so there's a strip of private land between nearby rugged M uddy CreekRoad and the public
land. Why would Wyden and Merkley propose a w ilderness area without insisting on better public access? They pushed for more public access, but that was after they introduced their bills providing the extremely limited access. The landowners have made a new proposed compromise, similar to an older proposal. The idea is to have a trailhead and parking lot off the road that would be maintained by the county. Locals and emergencyagencies would get gate keys and year-round access — as long as their vehicles could make the trip on the challenging road.Other members of the public would get blocked gates on the road during the summer camping season and during fall hunting season. That's better access than no access. But as Jefferson County Commissioner Mike Ahern said, it misses the point. "The public wants to access that road," he said. The commission and the landowners should work out a better compromise. If they cannot, Wyden and Merkleyshould amend their legislative package to pull Cathedral Rock out, until a better solution is found.
Democrats backed themselves into a badspot
T
he big question about Gov. John K i tzhaber's budget plan was always if he could get the Legislature to go along with him. The answer is no. He wovetogethera budget plan that depended on three gambles. He would get some $11 billion in health care savings over the next 10 years. That may or may not still happen. Prison costs would be reduced by $600 million over the same period. Oregon sheriffs and others in the law enforcement community have balked at the plan. And there was going to be $865 million in savings in this biennium from the Public Employees Retirement System or PERS. Kitzhaber's own party has said no. So now the Democrats who control both houses of the Legislature are working on crafting their own budget solution. Their un-
willingness or fear to aggressively challenge public union retirement benefits meant they had to look for the money someplace else. They picked a bad place. They first came up with a solution that included eliminating tax breaks for nonprofits. That was a choice to go after money for the poor, the homeless, and the hungry — instead of a flawed retirement benefit. Democrats had the good sense to recognize that was not a good choice. They unveiled a revised bill pitched as targeting the wealthy and corporations with taxes and ending tax breaks. But one way the bill does that is reduce deductions for highincome filers. Once again, because Democrats declined to follow Kitzhaber's lead and challenge the state's public unions, they are going after charitable giving. They have backed themselves into a bad corner of public policy.
cs4s-So& M Nickel's Worth Multi-lane roundabouts preferred
That great American inventor, Thomas Edison (1847-1931), exclaimed "We are like tenant farmers chopping down the fence around our house for fuel when we should be using n a ture's inexhaustible sources of energy — sun, wind and tide. I'd put my money on the sun and solar energy. What a source of power! I hope we don't have to wait until oil and coal run out before we tackle that." As we approach Earth Day 2013, perhapswe couldchallengeourselves to pursue this goal using American ingenuity, our natural resources and our hard-working people. Robert Curr!e Bend
Roundabouts may seem daunting to folks who have never traveled to Mexico or Europe.But those who have most likely discovered that roundabouts consisting of m a ny lanes are the safest, most expedient, and thereforemost preferred method of traffic control in Mexico and many European countries. To mention our closest neighbor; just across the border in Mexicali, you will find many five- and six-lane traffic circles that accommodate huge semi-trucks and trailers, very large motor homes (mostly from the U.S.) and, more importantly, large emergency-type vehicles, all along with regular cars and trucks. Sometimes, more than one of these very large vehicles are using the circle at the same time. I agree with the letter writer who said "the roundabout is the more aesthetic of the two intersections" but it is also the safest and most efficient means of moving traffic. Now, if only Bend would install real roundabouts instead of these wannabes.
know and I will contact the biologist who is licensed to treat the eggs. The nestingpair willnotbeharmed. Please do not approach the nesting goose or the gander guarding his mate. Foster Fell Bend
Never enough taxation
President Obama admitted that he only came up with the sequester idea to scare the Republicans into compromising with Democrats on tax increases. He claims Republicans are protecting millionaires, billionaires and oil companies from paying "their fair share." The House Republicans came up with a budget thatwould eliminate manyloopholes Help identify goose nests for the rich. Sen. Harry Reid threw it in the trash. The law says the Senate Once again this spring, we ask must come up with a budget every the community to be on the lookout year. Reid and other senators broke for Canada goose nests. For three that law for four years. Apparently, years, the Bend Park & Recreation they're above the law. District has been humanely managThe Republicans caved in Januing goose populations and resolving ary and allowed tax increases they poop complaints through the exclu- didn't agree with, to show they were sive use of egg oiling and dog haz- willing to compromise. The immediing. In that time, no exterminations ateresponse from the White House have taken place. was to demand more tax increases. Diana Hopson One important aspect of this pro- There will never be enough taxation Bend gram is locating nests with the inten- to please the President or the Demotion of dipping the eggs in vegetable crats in Congress. Pursue solar energy oil to prevent hatching. Geese are The President is out campaigning social animals forming extended for Democrats in hopes of winning The opinion page of The Bulletin families that enjoy the presence of control of the House in 2014. He has is frequently peppered with attacks goslings. With fewer goslings the a job. We need tax reform. We need on the likes of socialist leaning lib- adults are less inclined to frequent a flat tax. We need to cut billions erals and fanatical environmental- the parksand are more susceptible to of dollars in g overnment waste. ists. They appear to be responsible being hazed. Cut duplicated programs, millions for all that ails us. For sure they are A mating pair will return to the of state employees duplicating the the reason for our economic woes. same nest year after year. Many same jobs. I'd be happy if Rand One wonders if the authors of such of these nestshave already been Paul, Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz, Paul opinions have ever met a liberal, or identified, but being the resourceful Ryan and all the other newly elected an environmentalist, let alone a so- animals they are, Canada geese con- young Republicans formed a third cialist. For the most part, these are stantly seek out new sites — often party. Then we could throw all the decent folks, who may share dif- in uncanny locations, such as pine other bums out! ferent world views, which surely needle-covered roofs. Maralyn Thoma doesn't make them evil. If you spot a nest, please let me Bend
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Government tax policy to blame for economic woes t
By Harrlett Helsey
and Thomsen. SB 594expands bonus depreciation tax breaks for businesses. There was no hearing, so the revenue loss unknown. The bill is sponsored by Sens. Olsen, cuses on funding options; e.g., changes Thomsen and Knopp. to PERS,targetingindividual taxbreaks SB 595 cuts the corporate miniand capping individual deductions. mum tax rate to $150 for certain "C" However, she does not mention corporations, regardless of size, and several tax-break bills exceeding decreasesthe corporate excise tax $275 million proposed by Republi- r ates. The current m inimum t ax can legislators. Two of the bills are is based on sales volume of up to estimated to cost up to $680 million $500,000 with incremental increases in tax breaks for corporations and up to sales volume of $100 million. No the wealthy. The other two await loss hearing has been held and revenue revenue analysis.Oregon is strug- loss is unknown. Sponsored by Sens. gling to fund K-12 schools and legis- Olsen, Thomsen and Knopp. lators bring tax-break bills? SB 671 raises the estate tax exempSB 593 cuts the capital gains tax tion from $1 million to $5 million. The rate in half to 4.5 to 5 percent. Esti- $7.5 million exemption for natural remated revenue loss is $432 million for sources, working farms and ranches the 2013-15 biennium and $480 mil- remains.This proposal was presented lion for the 2015-17 biennium. The bill as Ballot Measure 84 in the 2012 elecis sponsored by Sens. Olsen, Knopp tion and was defeated with 54 percent n regard to "Legislators brace for fight on taxes," in The Bulletin's edition of March 31: The reporter writing of Democratic plans to raise $275 million in taxes fo-
statewide. In 2011, 1,100 estate tax returns were filed, each with value of $1 million or less. An additional 65 estate returns of $5 million yl EW or morewere filed and subject totax. If SB 671passes, revenue loss is estimated between $100 million and $200 million per biennium and overturns the 2012 vote. Sponsored by Sen. Knopp, 10 additional senators and 22 representatives. All Republicans. HR 3352 is not a tax break bill, but benefits the bottom line of select companies. This bill exempts factory and manufacturing establishments from paying their employees overtime wages. Workers covered by a union contract are protected. At a t ime of h igh unemployment and stagnant wages, enacting such a draconian provision shows a callousness befitting 19th-century England. Sponsored by Reps. Johnson, Hicks, Smith and Thompson.
Oregon's 2011 median household income of $46,816 and a per capita income of $25,228 is evidence this is not a wealthy state. It is a state where residents care about their schools, the environment, infrastructure and living wage jobs. An Our Oregon website chart of tax giveaways for 2009-13 shows an increaseof 29 percent for that period. It is estimated the state will give away $36billion in taxbreaks this budget cycle. An OregonLive Internet post reported The Oregonian found 211 tax breaks on the books in Oregon. Analysis of 32 of the 211 showed "... 'tax expenditures' representing $13 billion in lost tax money and found about half went to the upper fifth of the income scale." All the while, Oregon facesovercrowded classrooms, shorter schoolyears and teacher layoffs. Lawmakers should carefully analyze tax-breakexpenditures and selectively eliminate. Shelve proposed tax-break legislation before reducing
PERS pensions, or removing individual tax deductions for medical, home mortgage and property tax expenses that will adversely impact median income folks. For 30years,government — at all levels — has functioned with "trickle down, starve government" economic directives: levy no new taxes; grant tax cuts, tax breaks and tax loopholes; legalize tax havens and permit additional tax benefits to companies moving operations and jobs offshore. Corporate subsidies, financial industry bailouts and mergers win approval. The resulting economic collapse has millions in distress, cities and states teetering on the brink of bankruptcy and a country falling into ruin. Undeterred, ideologues march ondemeaning unions, public sector employment, unemployment insurance, food stamps and Medicaid — then brazenly propose more tax breaks. — Harriett Hetsey lives in Bend.
THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
BS
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Bettie Louise Campbell, of Madras
Carlton (Carl) Combs, of Bend
Mar. 3, 1926 - April 7, 2013 Arrangements: Bel-Air Colonial Funeral Home, 541-475-2241 Services: Funeral Service and Burial will be held at the Milo Gard Cemetery on April 12, 2013 at 11:00 AM.
Aug. 13, 1938 - April 8, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at
Contributions may be made to:
American Cancer Society
Charles "Chuck" Clarence Easlon, of Redmond
www.niswonger-reynolds.com
541-382-2471 Services: A family gathering is planned at a later date.
Contributions may be made to:
National Audubon Society 225 Varick Street New York, NY10014
FEATURED OBITUARY
Edwards won Nobel for in vitro research By Maria Cheng The Associated Press
L ONDON — R obert E dwards, a Nobel laureate from Britain whose pioneering in Roscoe J. Loveland, of Nov. 18, 1933 - April 9, 2013 vitro fertilization research led Bend Arrangements: to the first test tube baby and Jan. 25, 1932 - April 8, 2013 Redmond Memorial has since brought m i llions Arrangements: Chapel 541-548-3219 of people into the world, died Rose City Cemetery 8 please sign our online Wednesday at age 87. Funeral Home, guestbook www.redmondmemorial.com 503-281-3821 T he University o f C a m bridge, where he was a profesServices: Services: Memorial service will be Memorial service at sor, said Edwards passed away held April 20, 2013 at 2:30P.M., Friday, April 12, peacefully in his sleep at his 11:00 am at Highland 2013, Rose City Funeral home just outside Cambridge. Baptist Church in Home, 5625 N.E. Together with Dr. Patrick Redmond, Oregon. Fremont Street, Portland, Steptoe, Edwards developed OR. in vitro fertilization, or IVF, Helen Clouser, of Bend which resulted in the birth in April 9, 1924 - April 8, 2013 1978 of the world's first test Arrangements: tube baby, Louise Brown. At Baird Funeral Home the time, the two were accused (541) 382-0903 Dec. 19, 1923 - March 5, 2013 www.bairdmortuaries.com of playing God and interfering T hor Joseph ' TJ ' L o n g - with nature. Services: ley, formerly of Redmond, A Grave Side Service will Since then, the European O R, passed from t h i s l i f e Society for Human Reproductake place in Tracy, on March 5, 2013. He was California, on Saturday, tion and Embryology estimates p receded in d e ath b y h i s April 13, 2013 at 11:00 that about 5 million babies have wife, Lynne (Daily) L ongAM. l ey; hi s p a r ents a n d h t s been born using the technique, Contributions may be made to: brother. S u r vivors are his which creates embryos in the Partners In Care, 2075 c hildren, T h o ma s S t r a d - laboratory before transferring NE Wyatt Court, Bend, f ord L o n g l e y o f W A , them into a woman. Oregon 97701, Charles Stephen L o n gley Edwards' "success in IVF www.partnersbend.org or o f CO, an d P a t r i cia A n n was one of the 20th century's Humane Society of Longley-Olson of MO. great medical feats, pursued at Central Oregon, 61170 There will be a memorial long odds and despite great opSE 27th Street, Bend, mass held Saturday, April probrium," International FederOregon 97702, 1 3, at 11 a.m., at St . E d www.hsco.org. w ards C a t h o li c C h u r c h , ation of Fertility Societies President Joe Leigh Simpson said. Sisters, OR. Leslie B. Millard, of "He laid the groundwork for Bend infertile couples worldwide to Oct. 9, 1947 - April 9, 2013 have children, with I to 4 perArrangements: cent of all babies in Europe, Baird Funeral Home Death Notices are free and North America and Australia (541) 382-0903 will be run for one day, but now born by assisted reprowww.bairdmortuaries.com specific guidelines must be ductive technologies started Services: followed. Local obituaries by Professor Edwards. He will A private ceremony will are paid advertisements be greatly missed." be held at a later date. submitted by families or Experts say about 350,000 Contributions may be made funeral homes.They may be babies are born by IVF every to: submitted by phone, mail, year, mostly to people with inPartners In Care email or fax. The Bulletin 2075 NE Wyatt Court fertilityproblems, single people Bend, Oregon 97701 reserves the right to edit all and gay and lesbian couples. www.partnersbend.org submissions. Please include "(Edwards) was an extraorcontact information in all dinary scientist," said Dr. PeMichael L. Mott, of correspondence. ter Braude, emeritus professor Bend For information on any of of obstetrics and gynecology Mar. 12, 1953 - April 5, 2013 these services orabout the at King's College London, who Arrangements: obituary policy, contact was at Cambridge when EdAutumn Funerals, Bend 541-617-7825. wards and Steptoe were devel541-318-0842 oping IVF. www.autumnfunerals.net Deadlines: Death Notices "There was such hysteria are accepted until noon Services: around the kind of work he was A Celebration of Mike's Monday through Friday Life will take place on doing," Braude said, noting that for next-day publication Saturday, June 15, 2013 Edwards stopped his research and by 4:30 p.m. Friday at 4:00 PM at Hollinshead for two years after he published for Sunday publication. Barn, located at 1235 NE details on how he had created Obituaries must be Jones Roadin Bend, received by 5 p.m. Monday embryos in the laboratory. "He Oregon. through Thursday for wanted to work out what the Contributions may be made right thing to do was, whether to: publication on the second Partners In Care Hospice day after submission, he should continue or whether 2075 NE Wyatt Court by1 p.m. Friday for he was out on a limb." Bend, Oregon 97701 Sunday publication, and by Braude said Edwards colwww.partnersbend.org 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday lected donor eggs from wompublication. Deadlines for en in Oldham, where Steptoe Stanton Fielding display ads vary; please call worked. Edwards then put Wiswell, of Bend for details. the eggs into test tubes which May 14, 1921 - April 8, 2013 he strapped to his legs to keep Phone: 541-617-7825 Arrangements: them warm before catching Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Autumn Funerals, Bend the train to Cambridge, where 541-318-0842 Fax: 541-322-7254 he would attempt to fertilize www.autumnfunerals.net Mail:Obituaries them in the laboratory. Services: P.O. Box 6020 A fter B r own w a s b o r n , No Services are planned Bend, OR 97708 at this time. Braude recalled a celebration at Cambridge, where scientists toasted Edwards and Steptoe's a chievement b y dri n k i n g DEATHS ELSEWHERE champagne out of plastic cups. Braude said public opinion Deaths of note from around Stan lsaacs, 82: Longtime has evolved considerably. "I think people now underthe world: sports reporter and columnist Marty Blake, 86: National for Newsday. Isaacs was stand that (Edwards) only had Basketball Association one of a group of young the best motivation," he said. "There are few biologists that executive and scout reporters in the 1960s, mainly extraordinaire famed for his in New York, who brought have done something so prackeen eye for talent, relentless irreverence and daring to tical and made a huge differappetite for scouring sports reporting. Isaacs ence for the entire world." remote gymnasiums and covered Roger Maris' recordI n 2 010, E d wards w a s encyclopedic memory — all breaking season with the awarded the Nobel prize in of which made him perhaps Yankees in 1961 and the early medicine or p hysiology for the most valuable scout in days of the New York Mets. the development of IVF. StepNBA history. Blake's career He wrote his last Newsday toe had already died; the Noin basketball lasted 60 years column in 1992 but was bel prizes are not awarded from the heyday Bob Cousy to most recently writing for the posthumously. the era of LeBron James. He website TheColumnists.com, I n 2 011, E d wards w a s became general manager of where his final column ran knighted by Queen Elizabeth II "for services to human rethe Milwaukee Hawks in 1954 April 1. Isaacs died the next and stayed with the franchise day In Haverford, Pa. productive biology." during its subsequent moves Ralph Sanchez, 64: CuOther scientists called Edto St. Louis in 1955 and ban-born businessman who wards a visionary who forever Atlanta in 1968. He formed his brought auto racing to the changed the lives of people own scouting service in 1970, streets of Miami, Fla., in the helped by IVF and the medical which eventually employed 1980s and later built and oper- community. "(Edwards') inspirational more than 60 scouts who ated the Homestead-Miami reported on hundreds of draft- Speedway. The track opened work in the early '60s led to eligible players. Among the in 1995 and hosts more than a breakthrough that has enplayers discovered by Blake at 280 events each year, includhanced the lives of millions of obscure colleges were future ing the season-ending Nascar people worldwide," said Mike NBA stars Dennis Rodman events. Died April I in Coral Macnamee, chiefexecutive of and Scottie Pippen. Died Gables, Fla. the IVF clinic that Edwards Sunday in Alpharetta, Ga. — From wire reports and Steptoe co-founded.
Thor Joseph 'TJ' Longley
Obituary policy
Troy Wayrynen /The Vancouver (Wash.) Columbian via TheAssociated Press
Thomas Cunningham,6,looks out a bedroom window as he is held by his m other,Becca Keen Cunningham, right, in their Vancouver, Wash., home. Thomas fell from a second-story window several years ago and was injured in the incident. The Cunningham family is advocating window safety during National Window Safety Week. Since the incident, the family has installed safety bars.
on'S a aS arentS ta in win owSae By Patty Hastings The Columbian
VANCOUVER, W a s h. — Becca and Jason Keen Cunningham are careful parents. They got Mr. Yuk stickers from th e Washington Poison Center and put t he m o n an y t h ing that might be p oisonous to drink, even though the cabinets are locked. They covered outlets, b ought side-impact car seats and installed mesh between the deck and its railing so their three young kids can't fall through. But in 2010, when then 3year-old Thomas fell out of his second-floor bedroom window, landed on concrete and cracked his skull, the couple realized they overlooked a critical safety device. Window guards. "It's a pretty sad irony," said Jason,who is a firefighter and EMT with the Portland Fire Bureau at Station 7. In observance of National Window Safety Week, the Keen C u nninghams a re helping s pread t h e word about what parents can do to prevent these falls — especially as the weather warms up.
'It's not enough' Thomas loved to sit in his window seat and was fascinated by the window blind cords. On Oct. 20, 2010, Jason wrapped up the cords, p utting them w h ere h e thought Thomas couldn't reach, and s tressed the
dangers of playing by the window; the screen keeps bugs out, but it doesn't keep kids in. Thomas seemed to comprehend what his father told him, at least, in the way that a 3-year-old can. "It's not enough," Becca said. "Kids don't understand danger. That's why it's our r esponsibility as parents to protect them." The next day, just six days shy of his fourth birth-
day, Thomas was playing quietly in his room while Becca was downstairs. She heard a moaning noise and went up to her son's room, where she found the blinds up and the screen pushed out. Outside, Jason and Becca found their son lying on the back patio semiconscious with a fractured skull. M edics rushed him t o Legacy Emanuel Medical Center in Portland. Thomas couldn't move or talk. "I remember asking the ambulance driver whether he was going to live or not," Becca said. She watched her son'seyes flutterclosed. The driver didn't know and neither did doctors as t hey performed an M R I and measured his innercranial pressure. Thomas spent his birthday in a medically induced coma and was paralyzed on his left side. For five weeks he did in-patient rehabilitation at Emanuel to regain mobility and spent another year out of the hospital doing occupational, speech, physical and vision
therapy. Today, he is proud to tell people he fell out of a window, was paralyzed and after a lot of hard work, got better. On the surface, he appears like an average, hyperactive 6-year-old, who loves to play and learn. However, he will never fullyrecover from his fracture. "That part of his brain is damaged forever," Becca said. "We'll never know what he would have been like. He's definitely altered." "I destroyed my son's potential life. It will scar me and it will scar him," Jason said. "I lie awake at night thinking how easily it could have been corrected." When Thomas hits adolescence, his frontal lobe and executive functions will fully develop. Until then, the Keen Cunninghams won't know if he's lost any abilities in that area of his brain. As a kindergartner at Hearthwood Elementary School, he performs well above grade level and attends an advanced reading class. Thomas can't play any contact sports, but regularly takes tennis lessons with his twin brother, Zane; the i n cident rate of concussion while playing tennis is very low. "We are very l u cky, but that's not the point," Becca said. " That's probably n o t what would happen to the next kid or the next." In the U.S., about 3,300 kids younger than 6 fall from windows each year, according to the STOP at 4 campaign; 70 percent of those falls are from second- and third-story wmdows. "Even falls from first-floor windows ca n p o s e s a fety r isks," s ai d A n n e Jo h n s ton, public h e alth n u r se and Safe Kids Clark County coordinator. So far this year, three children have fallen out of windows, including a I-year-old boy who fell last month from a second-story apartment window and landed on soil. The boy was crying and alert when emergency crews arrived. In 2012, at least seven children fell out of windows, Johnston said. Clark County Public Health is working with American Medical Response to gather data and follow trends on window falls. Children younger than 4 are most at risk because they're short and top heavy, said Sandy Nipper, registered nurse and Child Safety Coordinator
at Emanuel. Young children don't have well-developed impulse control and can't anticipate danger, she said. If a kid falls onto a bush, they may be able to walk away from a fall with just a scratch. But window falls can result in broken bones, traumatic brain injuries or even death, depending on how and where they fall. The STOP at 4 campaign was dedicated to Parker Reck, a 4-year-old Molalla, Ore., boy who died in 2009 after falling from a second-story window onto concrete.
Trying to inform others While at Emanuel, the Keen C unninghams w er e i n t r o duced to window safety products at The Safety Store in the hospital's atrium. They bought a pair of KidCo window stops that prevent the window f r o m o p ening more than 4 inches. They also installed window guards on the twins' bedroom window; these metal bars prevent children from falling out and have q uick-release harnesses i n
case of emergency. "We take a lot of the fault for having not protected (Thomas)," Becca said. "Other people are still in the position where they can prevent it from happening. We can never erase our guilt and sadness and loss." At the time of the fall, Becca didn't know about w i ndow guards or stops. When she read the window locks section in Washington's Child Profile, she assumed her s tandard locks worked just fine. She suspects otherparents don't understand the difference between window locks and windows with after-market safety features. To help kids learn about window safety, Becca wrote a children's book. The book, written from Zane's perspect ive, talks about w hat t h e family could have had in the backyard to prevent Thomas from getting hurt. She got the ideas from her kids and their friends. While a bouncy house, a trampoline, an inflatable suit or a backyard full of peanut butter would be great, the book points out that's not real. Zane recognizes that his parents now know what to do and how to keep him safe. After finding someone to illustrate th e b o ok , B e cca plans to submit it to publishers,hoping there's a niche for this topic. She hasn't found a children's book that focuses on window safety.
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013.
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Today:1 Mostly sunny.
Tonlght:
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Partly cloudy and becoming breezy.
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snow.
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CHANNE KJJJZ.C JJM
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Albany~ Warm Springs • ewpo 58/35 53/22 • v Madra Con/alhs size 1 C p Sherman
Raker City 57130
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52/40
Florence• 5 4/40 ~
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54/25
54/23
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53/41 •
Lake
54/41
56/28
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Coos Bay v Bandon
Gold
• Beach
• pa lna ul
54/30
57/29
57/24
63139
62/32
seas
57/23
Silver I.ake
53I29
54/31
Frenchglen 60/31
Rome
58/27
rants~ Pass 63/36
• 69 0 Rome • 27 0 Burns
59/30
Paisley
Chiloquin
Yesterday's state extremes
Jordan Valley
Christmas valley
Chemult emu
61/39
Nyssa
Juntura
• Rul'ns
•
53/28
50/30
Roseburg
Ontario EAST 64/38 Partly cloudy skies Valev 65/38 • will be the rule.
• Brothers 56/25
La ine p 54/25— — Hampton 63/37 • RI Crescent • Fpn Rpck 57ae
Port Orfor3f
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Unity
Sunriver Itend
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51/38
63/34
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Arlington
Da g es Q/34
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62/34
Hjilsbprp POrtland • 56/39 C 55/35 • S nady 56/39 McMinnvige 55/36 v f Government
•
65/38
River Th 57134
53/37
WEST Partly cloudy skies across the north, wlth mostly sunny skies to the south.
Umatilla
HOOd
53/43 •vcannonPeach
Tigamook•
58/28
57/29
56/44 5
• Klamath
• Rrooktngs
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• Lakeview
Falls sw29
58/42
McDermitt
58I35
57/28
59/30
Yesterday's extremes
Quebec 37/2
30s
4"/kkyyq 43/21
36/14
Thunder Bay 34/19
55/41
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7/27
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Halifax 39/28 ort l and
Buff I ss ~ii 4
Port Isabel, Texas
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Yellowstone N.P., Wyo.
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San Francisco 66/50
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Phoenix 86/6
Honolulu ~ 84/70
Tijuana 66/55
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HA W A I I Chihuahua 77/50
Anchorage 28/9 sJ
HIGH LOW
44 27
45 28
a Paz 83/59 Juneau 39/30
O A L A SKA
Orleans 76/54
71/48 v
7/70
• Miami 80/75
Monterrey Mazatlan • 8 0/65 •
FRONTS Cold
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 628 a.m Moon phases Sunsettoday...... 7 45 p.m F irst Ful l La s t Sunrise tomorrow .. 6:27 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 7:46 p.m Moonrise today.... 7:00 a.m Moonsettoday .... 9:29 p.m Apdills Apnl25 May2 •
•
PLANET WATCH
TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5:47 a.m...... 5:30 p.m. Venus......6:42 a.m...... 8:03 p.m. Mars.......6:33 a.m...... 7:49 p.m. Jupiter......8:55 a.m.....12 09 a.m. Satum......855 pm...... 728 am. Uranus.....6:02 a.m...... 6:30 p.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 59/39 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........80m1985 Monthtodate.......... 0.02" Record low......... 17 in 1954 Average month todate... 0.25" Average high.............. 55 Year to date............ 2.29" Average low .............. 30 Average year to date..... 3.60" 6arometric pressureat 4 p.m30.12 Record 24 hours ...0.45 in1992 *Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
OREGON CITIES
S K IREPORT
The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing Yesterday Thursday F riday Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
for solar at noon.
Astoria ........54/50/0.48....52/39/pc.....53/43/sh Baker City......58/29/0.00....57/30/pc.....60/31/pc Brookings......55/45/0.00....58/42/pc.....57/45/pc 6urns..........64/27/0.00....56/27/pc.....59/30/pc Eugene........62/41/0.01....57/34lpc.....61/43lpc Klamath Falls .. 63/30/0 00 ....59/29/s ...62/33/pc Lakeview.......64/27/0.00 ...57/28/pc.....60/34/pc La Pine.........59/34/NA....54/25/pc.....60/30/pc Medford.......64/41/0.00.....64/38/s.....68/43/pc Newport.......52/46/0.26....51/38/pc.....52/43/sh North Bend......55/45/NA....53/41/pc.....54/44/sh Ontario........67/36/0.00....64/38/pc.....67/41/pc Pendleton......68/44/0.02....63/34/pc.....64/39/sh Portland .......59/52/0.14....56/39/pc......57/43/c PrineviRe.......59/38/0.08....58/27/pc......63/37/c Redmond.......62/38/0.01 ....58/26/pc.....61/35/pc Roseburg....... 61 /42/0.01 ....61 /39/pc.....63/41 Ish Salem ....... 61/48/014 ...57/36/pc ...59/42/pc Sisters.........65/38/0.00....54/25/pc.....59/33/pc The Dages......65/42/0.01 ....62/34/pc......63/39/c
Snow accumulation in inches
4 L OW ME D 0
2
Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . .107-139 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . 112 Mt. HoodSki6owl...........0.0......46-55 Timberline..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 -0 . . . . . . . 150
HIG H
4
6
8
10
ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key:TT. = Traction Tires.
Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Wigamette Pass ........ . . . . . 0.0...no report
Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... .. . Carry chains or T. Tires
Aspen, Colorado..... . . . . . . . . . 6 . . . . . . 46-50 Mammoth Mtn., California..... 0.0... . .68-180 ParkCity, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . .66-85 Squaw Valley, California..... . .0.0.. . . . .12-88
Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
o www m
• -6
HIGH LOW
48 29
Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .24-56 Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, NewMexico....... . . . . . 0.0...no report Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . . 5 . . . . . .44-46 For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: www.skicentral.com/oregon.html www.tripcheck.com or call 511 Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds, h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, sn-snow,i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
(in the 48 contiguous states):
HIGH LOW
59 36 BEND ALMANAC
IFORECAST:5TATE Seasidev'
HIGH LOW
75/55 •
CONDITIONS • +++Q
.++++ '
04
4>
* * * * * * * ***+*
xr JF J F
W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow
Ice
Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX......50/31/1.01...62/45/s .. 73/52/s Grand ilapids....42/39/0.36..42/34lsh..42/28/rs RapidCity.......25/16/018...33/21/c..42/23/rs Savannah.......82/56/0.00... 79/67/t...81/54/t Akron..........76/57/145... 69/49/t ..51/33/rs GreenBay.......36/31/0 98..35/30/sn. 36/21/sn Reno...........77/34/0.00..66/41/pc. 73/44lpc Seattle..........59/51/0.37 ..55/41/sh. 55/41/sh Albany..........59/45/0.70 ..46/37/sh...48/37/r Greensboro......85/60/0.00 ..80/64/pc...76/45/t Richmond.......91/65/0.00 ..85/64/pc...81/50/t SiouxFalls.......30/28/0.13.. 31/22/sn.. 32/I7/c Albuquerque.....48/37/001 ..63/44/pc.66/47/pc Harnsburg.......87/58/0.00... 77/55/t. 68/45/sh Rochester, NY....46/39/0.50 .. 3665/rs .. A4/38/I Spokane........60/43/0.07 56/31/pc. .. 56/37/sh Anchorage......23/12/0.01 ...28/9/pc.. 31/11/s Hartford, CT.....67/50/0.28..50/40/sh...48/41/r Sacramento......86/50/0.00... 77/50/s .. 81/50/s Springfield, MO ..70/42/1.58.. 50/30/pc. 52/32/pc Atlanta.........83/60/000...77/56/t.71148/pc Helena..........57/28/000..54/30lpc.54/35/pc St.Louis.........82/62/023...54/35/c.52/34lpc Tampa..........87/65/000... 87/70/t...83/68/t Atlantic City.....89/61/0.00... 58/49/t...60/46/t Honolulu........85/69/0.00...84/70ls .. 82/69/s Salt Lake City....54/30/0 00 .. 55/37/sh. 61/431pc Tucson..........69/46/000... 80152/s.83/54/pc Austin..........74/46/015... 71/47/s .. 78/50/s Houston........83/52/000 ..71/48/pc . 76153/s SanAntonio.....75/48/012... 74/49/s .. 79/53/s Tulsa.......... 44/37/0.61 ..55/30/pc. 59/40/pc Baltimore .......91/64/0.00 ..85/58/pc...77/53/t Huntsville.......86/60/0.00... 71/44/t .. 66/40/s SanDiego.......72/53/0.00... 66/59/s.. 66/58/s Washington, DC.91/63/000 ..85/61/pc...76/52/t 6illings.........48/15/0.00...53/33/c. 50/35/sh Indianapolis.....82/65/0.01... 65/39/t .. 48/34/c SanFrancisco....80/54/0.00... 65/50/s.. 66/49/s Wichita.........34/30/0.72 ..47/31/pc.. 55/34/c Birmingham .. 87/64/000... 74/47/t. 71/46/s Jackson, MS.... 84/70/0.00. 69/46/t .. 69/47/s SanJose........82/51/000...70/50/s.. 73/49/s Yakima.........68/44/000 63/33/pc.. 61/37/c Bismarck........38/24/000...37/22/c.. 46/25/c Jacksonvile......76/54/000...82/70/t...82/62/t SantaFe........48/27/0.00..54/37/pc.57/40lpc Yuma...........82/61/000...89/60/s. 89/60/pc Boise...........65/33/000 ..61/37/pc. 64/40/pc Juneau..........40/31/003 .. 39/30/rs...46/26/r INTERNATIONAL Boston..........54/45/005 ..48/37/sh...43/42/r Kansas City......47/39/0.79...43/30/c. 48/31/pc Bndgeport,CT....65/47/0.00..52/39/sh...50/41/r Lansing.........41/37/0.51... 41/33/t ..43/28/rs Amsterdam......46/34/0 01 .. 46/34/sh 53/42/sh Mecca..........97/73/000 .93/7lls.. 94/72/s Buffalo.........47/39/0.73 .. 40/37/rs ..A4/38/I Las Vegas.......74/51/0.00... 82/63/s. 80/60/pc Athens..........68/52/0.00...71/54/s. 69/57/pc Mexico City .....82/59/000 .80/47/pc.. 79/46/s BurlingtonVT....52/43/017...45/36/c..43/36/rs Lexington.......84/62/000... 73/44/t. 55/38/pc Auckland........68/52/0.00..67/61/sh.67/60lsh Montreal........48/41/0.01... 34/30/c. 34/32/sn Caribou,ME.....45/34/001 ..36/25/pc..37/31/rs Lincoln..........36/32/0 09 ..38/27/sh .. 42/29/c Baghdad........82/60/0.00..84/68/pc. 91l74lpc Moscow........45/25/0.00 ..43/28/pc. 35/28/pc Charleston, SC...82/56/0.00...77/66/t...80/57/t Little Rock.......81/55/0.31..62/41lpc.. 66144ls Bangkok........99/81/0.00 I00/82/pc. 99/81/sh Nairobi.........81/63/2.19 ..73/59/sh. 68/59/sh Charlotte........84/60/000... 78/63/t...77/46/t LosAngeles......74/53/0 00... 69/54/s .. 70/54/5 Beiling..........57/39/0.00... 60/40/s. 68/38/pc Nassau.........84/75/0.00 ..81/71/pc. 79/73/pc Chattanooga.....84/56/000... 77/52/t.69/44/pc Louisville........86/65/0 00...70/44/1.54/39/pc Beirut..........70161/000...66/55/c .. 67/57/s New Delhi.......97/77/000...97174ls .. 99/76/s Cheyenne........21/5/000...34/28/c. 44/28/sh Madison Wl......38/I/0 73 ..41/31/sh..38/25/is Berlin...........46137/000 .. 51/46/sh. 52141/sh Osaka..........57/50/0.00 54/42/sh. .. 55/50/sh Chicago.........41/37/031 ..53/38/sh. 47/34/sh Memphis....... 84/71/000 63/44/t. 66/46/pc Bogota.........70150/0.00... 70/48/t...70/48lt Oslo............37/18/000... 34/27lc .. 32/22/c Cincinnati.......83/60/0.00... 70/45/t. 53/36/pc Miami..........84/73/0.00 ..80/75/pc...82/74/t Budapest........57/36/004 ..64/46/pc.58148/sh Ottawa.........48/41/0.00...34/28lc. 34/28/sn Cleveland.......67/41/097... 57/43/t. 49/34/sh Milwaukee......37/34/0.50 ..41/34lsh..40/28/rs BuenosAires.....70/57/000..69/54/sh.64/43lpc Paris............$5/46/0.2160/42/sh. .. 56/42/sh Colorado Spnngs..35/8/000 ..51/30/pc. 49/28/pc Minneapol/s.....40/30/0.07 ..37/27lsn..37/22/rs CaboSanLucas ..77/63/0.00 ..80154/pc.. 81/48/s Rio deJaneiro....82/72/0.00.. 82/71/sh. 86/75/pc Columbia,MO...60/53/2.20...49/32/c. 49/31/pc Nashville........86/62/0.00... 69/44/t. 61/42/pc Cairo...........73/59/000 ..79/54/pc.. 81/53/s Rome...........64/50/0.00..61/54/pc.66/51/pc Columbia,SC....87/62/0.00... 82/65/t...80/48/t New Orleans.....83/72/0.00... 76/54/t .. 74/59/s Calgary.........50/28/0 00.. 41l21/rs .. 39/32/s Santiago........73/50/0.00... 68/53/s .. 75/58/s Columbus GA....86/58/000... 80/59/t. 75147/pc NewYork.......74/55/004..56/43/sh...55/44/r Cancun.........84/79/0.00..85/78/pc.. 85/77/c SaoPaulo.......73/64/000..77/64lsh. 80/69/sh Columbus, OH....82/64/0.22... 72/49/t. 55/36/sh Newark, Nl......74/55/0.00..56142/sh...57/43lr Dublin..........46/36/0 02 .. 43/38/sh. 49/40lsh Sapporo ........47/37/0.04 .. 37/30/rs. 40/38/sh Concord,NH.....60/43/033 ..49/30/sh..40/32/rs Norfolk, VA......89/66/0 00..83/64/pc...78/52/t Edinburgh.......43/32/0 00... 40/33/c. 43/39/sh Seoul...........48/30/0.00 .. 45/48/pc.. 49/35/s CorpusChristi....87/62/000...77/57/s.. 81/61/s OklahomaCity...39/32/1.34..55/35lpc. 59/42/pc Geneva.........59/45/0.18... 50/41/r. 45/35/sh Shanghai........64/48/000 ..60/48/pc. 60/54/pc DallasFtWprrh...74/40/014...63/44/s .. 70/49/s Omaha.........39/36/033 ..40/27/sh.. 41/28/c Harare..........82155/0.00..73/54lpc. 72/52/pc Singapore.......88/81/000 ..88/81/sh. 88/81/sh Dayton.........82/63/0.03... 68/4311 . 51/34/sh Orlando.........88/60/0.00... 87/70/t...87/69/1 Hong Kong......68/64/0.81..68/70/pc. 71/71/pc Stockholm.......41/19/0.00... 38/30/c .. 34/30/c Denver...........23/6/0.00 ..47/29/pc. 53/34/pc PalmSprings.... 87/60/0.00. 90/62/s .. 89/63/s Istanbul.........57/45/0.00..61/47/sh. 64/55/pc Sydney..........77/59/0.00..79/61/pc.78/60/pc DesMoines......43/41/1 08..44/30/sh .. 43/30/c Peoria ..........53/42/022..50/35/sh.. 45/32/c lerusalem.......59/50/0.07...67/50/c.. 68/49/s Taipei...........66/63/0.00..69/61/pc. 68/64/pc Detroit..........46/42/0.14... 42/35/t. 44/32/sh Philadelphia.....89/60/0.00... 68/50/t...66/48/t Johannesburg....84/69/0.00..61/51/sh.64/47/sh TelAviv.........70/59/0.00...72/54/c..74/54ls Duluth..........36/27/000..31/26/sn. 34/20/sn Phoenix.........76/53/000...86/62/s. 90/61/pc Lima ...........77/64/0.00..76/65/pc.76/65/pc Tokyo...........61/46/000..57/42/sh. 60/49/pc El Paso..........67/47/0.00... 72/50/s .. 78/54/s Pittsburgh.......81/62/0.06... 77/52/t. 56/37/pc Lisbon..........61/57/0 00 63/50/sh 65/50/pc Toronto.........45/41/0 92 32/32/i..39/30/rs Fairbanks.........13/2/000. 19/14/pc...21/8/s Portland,ME.....55/42/025...49/33/0 ..42/36/rs London .........50/37/000..48/42/sh. 53/41/sh Vancouver.......55/46/0.75..52/41/pc...52/43/r Fargo...........35/21/000..31/20/sn.37125/pc Prpvidence......67/46/015..51137/sh...46/41lr Madrid .........64/50/0.00...58/42/c. 65/45/pc Vienna..........59/37/0.06..66/51/pc.59/45/sh Flagstaff........49/27/000 ..60/28/pc.62129/pc Raleigh.........85/60/0.00..83/66lpc...78/47lt Manila..........93/81/000..95/78/pc. 94/77/pc Warsaw.........41/34/000..52/41/sh. 40/37/sh
WEST NEWS 4 ..tdl, ~ l
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Photos by Steve Bloom /The Olympian
LEFT: Joined in Olympia, Wash., by Gov. Jay Inslee, right, U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood emphasizes the need for funding commitment by the Washington Legislature regarding the Columbia River Crossing project to qualify for $850 million in federal aid. RIGHT: Opposing the project was state Sen. Don Benton, R-Vancouver, who said the proposed bridge is too Iow for river traffic, should not include a light rail line, and relies too much on tolls.
Find money for new bridge, transportation chief urges By Jonathan Kaminsky The Associated Press
OLYMPIA, Wash. — U.S. Secretary of T r ansportation Ray LaHood told Washington state lawmakers Wednesday that they must commit hundreds of millions of dollars toward the estimated $3.1 billion Columbia River Crossing project this year or risk losing up to $1.2 billion in federal sUpport. LaHood was in Washington state advocating for the project to replace the Interstate 5 bridge between Portland and Vancouver, Wash. uWe are ready to move this project along," LaHood told reporters after meeting with lawmakers. "We need the commitment of the Washington House and Senate to say that they're willing to put up several million dollars and commit to this project." Gov. Jay Inslee's office later clarified that the state must put up $450 million for the project,payable over several years, to continue to lay claim to up to $L2 billion in federal grants and low-interest loans, $850 million of which would go toward constructing lightrailservice across the span.
Oregon recently approved
$450 million toward the project, contingent on Washington state doing the same. Another roughly Sl billion would come from tolling. "It is now or never for building a bridge across the Columbia River," Inslee said. "We either take action this year or there will not be action for more than a decade across the Columbia River." Despite LaHood and Inslee's Urgings, some state lawmakersremained unmoved in their opposition to the project. With a large anti-Columbia River C rossing sticker affixed t o his lapel, Sen. Don Benton, RVancouver, told reporters that the proposed bridge is too low, should not include light rail and relies too much on tolls. In particular, Benton said, the bridge's planned clearance of 116 feet above the water likely would cost the state 4 ,000 m a nufacturing j o b s with three companies unable to move cargo and equipment under it. uWe all Want a neW bridge," Benton said. "That would be a bridge that is of a proper height, that won't affect river Users, and a bridge that won't haVe light rail On it.u Previously, the bridge was
planned to have a 95-foot clearance, but that was amended upward after the U.S. Coast Guard in O ctober said that was not h igh e nough. The Coast Guard is reviewing the current bridge plan and is expected to decide whether to grant a key permit by the end of September. LaHood stressed that the
tandard •
plan is unique among large transportation projects across the country in both its inclusion of transit as well its potential for spurring economic activity throughout the region. LaHood, a former Republican congressman from Illinois who has served in his current role since 2009, said the project is a top transportation priority for the Obama administration. "This is a project of national significance," LaHood s aid. "There is no other project like this in the country."
J
nzcno . MAY8,488 CE23IFIIER 2II] 3 For show information visit: www.centraloregonshow.com
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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 NB A , C3 Sports in brief, C2 MLB, C3 NHL, C2 Prep sports, C4
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
GOLF: PGA TOUR
GOLF
Bend's Vljarro at Canada Q-School
e astersnotawa s in to avorites
BEAUMONT, Calif. Andrew Vijarro, a 23-
year-old pro golfer from Bend, is in position to earn a spot on the 2013
PGA TourCanadaafter two rounds at the tour's
qualifying school. Vijarro is at 7 under par through 36 holes andin a tie for third
place out of 312 golfers in the field at Morongo Golf Club at Tukwet
Canyon, just one stroke out of second place. Jose Toledo, of Guate-
mala, is the leader at12 under. The second round did
not finish on Wednesday and will be completed today before the
third round begins.
On TV
By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press
AUGUSTA, Ga.— The first tee shot clattered through a pair of pines on the left side of the 13th fairway, finally landing on the wrong side of Rae's Creek. Tiger Woods tried again, and this wasn'tany better.Fans peered across the fairway and only heard the ball rifle through some bushes. "He's hitting another one," a man announced from the gallery. The third shot with a fairway metal caused them to retreat until it turned with a slight draw, clipping a pine branch and settling in the second cut of rough. Woods played nine holes Wednesday morning in his final tuneup for the Masters, and how he played was of little consequence. Even so, that snapshot from the 13th tee was another reminder how quickly the best plans can fall apart, even for the No. I player on top of his
The Masters, first round, today, coverage starts at
noon on ESPN • Tee times, Scoreboard,C2
game, especially at Augusta NationaL Think back to Woods at his absolute best. He won 10 times in 2000, including three majors, and finished no worse than fifth in 19 of his 22 tournaments worldwide. Going into the Masters, he either won or finished second in 10 of his previous 11 PGA Tour events. It felt as though everyone was playing for second at Augusta that year. What happened? Woods made a double bogey and a triple bogey in a span of three holes, shot 75 in the opening round and never caught up. See Masters/C4
Darron Cummings / The Associated Press
Keegan Bradley, left, talks to Tiger Woods on the17th fairway during a practice round for the Masters on Wednesday in Augusta, Ga.
Should Vijarro continue his solid start at
the event, he would earn at least some status on the Canadian tour. The
PREP SOFTBALL
PREP BASEBALL
top 20 finishers in the 72-hole event will earn exempt status for the
Summit
2013 PGATour Canada season. The next 20 placers and ties will
edges Bend for
earn conditional status. Making the PGA
Tour Canadacan be an important step to advancing in the ranks
of professional golf. The top five on the PGATour Canada order of merit earn cards for the 2014
IMC win
season on theWeb.com Tour, the PGATour's
main developmental tour. PGA Tour Canada,
formerly known as the Canadian Tour, tees n
off June 6 in Victoria, British Columbia, at the
Times Colonist Island Savings Open. — Bulletin staff report
Take the annual golf survey The Bulletin would like to know what golfers think about golfing
in Central Oregon.
~,
, -:.-attalarranarr„(
Go to www.bendbulletin.com/golfsurvey and take a few minutes
to complete our annual survey. Results will be published in our Central
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Mountain View's Hannah Clapp slides into second base as Ridgeview's Zoe Lash applies a tag during the first game of a doubleheader in Redmond on Wednesday.
Oregon Golf Preview on May12.
NBA
Heat top Wlzards, snag homecourt WASHINGTONRay Allen scored 23
points, LeBron James and DwyaneWade chilled at the end of the
bench, and the Miami Heat's B-squad gave the resting A-team
%%,$ $
the gift of home-court advantage throughout
the playoffs Wednesday night, clinching the best
I
p
record in the NBA with a 103-98 victory over the
t
rs
Washington Wizards. With James (right
hamstring) andWade (sprained ankle and bruised knee) looking like two guys sitting at
a bus stop, andChris Bosh at home with flu-
like symptoms, plus Udonis Haslem getting
Mountain View's Mackenzi Serbus waits to make the tag as Ridgeview's Mikia Bollinger slides into home plate during the first game of a doubleheader in Redmond on Wednesday.
the night offbecause
Bulletin staff report REDMOND — After completing a brutal preseason schedule, Mountain View won its first two softball games of the season Wednesday, sweeping Ridgeview in an Intermountain Hybrid doubleheader. The Cougars (2-10 overall) won a slugfest in the opener, topping the Ravens 10-8 in a game in which the two teams combined for 27 hits. Hannah Wicklund went three for five with one run batted in to lead Mountain View. Megan McCadden added a two-forfour performance that included a solo home run, and Quincy Mate and Jamie Withrow each knocked in a run. Wicklund pitched all seven innings, earning the win by striking out four while scattering 10 hits. Mountain View won the late game 4-3, again behind Wicklund. The Cougar sophomore earned the victory in relief by pitching a scoreless sixth and seventh inning while also going four for four at the plate. McCadden added two hits and an RBI. "We finally played a complete game," Mountain View coach Catherine Lowery said. "(The wins) are so huge for the girls, hopefully it lights a fire beneath them." The Cougars and the Ravens (8-3 overall) conclude their three-game series Friday at Mountain View.
Bulletin staff report With his team trailing 3-2 in the bottom of the sixth inning, Summit senior Austin Peters hit a two-out, two-run home run to propel the Storm to a 4-3 Intermountain Conference baseball victory over visiting Bend High on Wednesday. Peters, a 6-foot-3 lefthanded hitter, blasted a Duke DeGaetano inside fastball for his first and only hit of the game, helping Summit improve to 6-6 overall and 2-1 in Class 5A IMC play. "Duke had been pretty effective up to that point," Storm coach C.J. Colt said. "He made one mistake and left that ball high and in and'Wham!' Bye bye baseball." Tyler Mullen earned the win in relief for Summit, allowing just one hit and no runs over four innings. D.J. Wilson picked up the save for the Storm, who also defeated Bend on Monday, 17-6. "This sets us up so we can challenge for the IMC (title)," Colt said about Summit's two wins over the Lava Bears. Jonah Koski, Dalton Hurd and Kyle Bailey all doubled to lead the Bend offense. DeGaetano, Bailey and Tony Watters each batted in a run for the Bears (5-6 overall, 0-2 IMC). DeGaetano was tagged with the loss, despite allowing just four hits over six innings. The teams conclude their three-game series on Friday at Bend High.
Inside • Prep scoreboard,C2 • Prep roundup,C4
of a sore right ankle, the what-was-left-over of the Heat committed 25 turnovers but still
NHL
managed the win that assured they will finish better than the Western
Conference-leading San Antonio Spurs. The Heat, who have
Playoff system up for debate, and spotsstill up for grabs
won four straight, also set a franchise record
By Dan Gelston
Inside
But home ice is usually a nice
The Associated Press
• NHL roundup,C2
for victories with 62,
advantage during a rugged
The Pittsburgh Penguins won the Atlantic Division title, and the top spot in the East appears a formality. The Chicago Blackhawks have the Central Division championship and the No. I
seed in the West all within reach. Holding the top seeds entering the playoffs are no guarantee they will meet in the Stanley Cup finals, of course.
postseason. The top four teams in each conference deserve the appropriatereward fortheir consistency over a long — or lockout-shortened — season. But there's always one weird exception.
moving oneahead ofthe 1996-97 team.
They also improved to14-1 on the second night of back-to-backs. — The Associated Press
In the NHL, teams can get rewarded with home ice even with a worse record and fewer points than their opponent. Divisionwinners are seeded in the top three spots for the postseason ahead of teams with whopping point totals. In the East, that means Southeast
leader Washington (44 points) is placed ahead of Boston (56
points) and Toronto (49 points) in the standings through Wednesday night's action. If conference seeding was based solely on points, the playoff race would be a bit more fair. See NHL/C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
SPORTS ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY GOLF PGA Tour,TheMasters
Time
TV / r adto
Noon
ESP N
HOCKEY College, FrozenFour, UMass-Lowell vs. Yale 1:30 p.m. ESPN2 NHL, Pittsburgh at TampaBay 4:30 p.m. NBCSN C ollege, Frozen Four, Quinnipiac vs. St. Cloud St. 5 p.m.
ESP N 2
BASEBALL MLB, Baltimore at Boston MLB, Texas at Seattle
4 p.m. 7 p.m.
MLBN Root
BASKETBALL NBA, New York at Chicago NBA, Oklahoma City at Golden State
5 p.m. 7:30 p.m.
TNT TNT
SOFTBALL College, California at UCLA
8 p.m.
ESP N 2
Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by Nor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL Manning, Welkerwork
Olft —Peyton Manning threw his first passes to his newest
Broncos teammateWesWelker during a workout Wednesdayat Duke. Welker and Broncos re-
BASKETBALL Zeller turning proearly
— Indiana 7-footer CodyZeller and a pair of point guards were underclassmen to enter the NBAdraft. Joining Zeller were
Syracuse's Michael CarterWilliams and Missouri's Phil quarterback, working with Duke Pressey. Zeller, a sophomore coach David Cutcliffe, who was who led the Hoosiers in scoring Manning's quarterbacks coach (16.5 points) and rebounding at Tennesseeand oversaw much (8.1), was asecond-team Allof the quarterback's work when American and is projected to be he was recovering from his neck a top-10 pick in the Junedraft. and signed atwo-year, $12 million deal with the Broncos this
offseason.
is projected to be alottery pick. The 6-foot-6 Carter-Williams started all 40 games for the
Orange this season. He finished
— Texas Rangers openingday
fifth nationally in assist aver-
starter Matt Harrison is going on the disabled list after trying to pitch with soreness in his lower
age (7.3) and fourth in steals (2.78j among Division I players, and also averaged11.9 points
back. TheRangers saidWednesday that Harrison will be put on the15-day DL after an MRI
and a team-best 35.2 minutes.
Pressey, a 5-foot-11 guard whose father, Paul, played in the NBA, averaged 11.9 points, 7.1
revealed aninflamed nerve in his back. The left-hander will remain assists and1.8 steals in leading in Texas for treatment instead of the Tigers to an appearance in going with the team to Seattle,
in his back causing weakness in his left leg since late in spring training.
PREP SPORTS Tennis Girls
Nonconference Redmond 8,Sisters 0 At Redmond Singles — Marshall, R,d., Peasley,S, 6-0, 61; Brunot, R,d., Mapes,S,6-1,6-0; Steller, R, d., A. Spear,S,6-2,6-2; Murphy,R,d., Knoop,S,6-2, 6-1. Doubles — ChalkeriSchmidt,R,d., S. Speariconnonly ,S,6-1,6-1;James/Bailey,R,d.,Thompson/ Stuwe,S,6-2,6-1;SmitslWagner,R,d., FarrlRudinsky, S, 6-4, 2-6,10-6; HoffmaniGa speretti, R, d., Weemsi Tosego, S,6-4,6-0.
Baseball Bend Summit
NCAA ClearSTulSa —The
Class 4A
Sky-EmLeague Sisters La Pine
Tri-VaHeyConference (Five innings) Gladstone 100 00 — 1 6 5 Madras 410 15 — 11 13 0
Softball Wednesday's results Intermountain Hybrid First game
MOTOR SPORTS Jarrett headlines Hall
SecondGame
MountainView 000 211 0 — 4 11 1 Ridgeview 000 120 0 3 7 1
nOmineeS —NASCAR champion DaleJarrett headlined Wednesday for next year's Hall of Fame class — alist that finally Smith. Only five nomineesare new to the list, with the other
for sports betting violations allegedly committed by the school's
Joining Jarrett and Smith as
now-fired athletic director. The
thenew nomineeswereengine
school's athletic department
builder Maurice Petty, five-time NASCAR weekly series national
champion Larry Phillips and
1960 NASCAR champion Rex ing Ross Parmley.Tulsaalsosaid White. Five people will be selectthe NCAA determined that the ed for induction into the fifth Hall of Fame Class in May 22 voting school's swiftfiring of Parmley and enhancement of internal edu- by a 54-member panel. Jarrett
was NASCAR's1999champion,
was fired in December after being
and his 32 wins rank 21st alltime. Among those victories
named in afederal investigation
include threeDaytona 500s, two
of Teddy Mitchell, who is accused
Brickyard 400s and the CocaCola 600 at Charlotte. — From wire reports
NHL ROUNDUP
Bruins defeatDevils, regain first in Northeast The Associated Press Jersey, which has lost eight NEWARK, N.J. — Grego- straight (0-4-4) in seeing its ry Campbell scored twice in a three-goal first period and the Boston Bruins regained first place in the Northeast Division with a 5-4 victory over the reeling New Jersey Devils on Wednesday night. In winning for the fifth t ime i n s i x g a m es, t h e Bruins scored three times against M a r ti n Br o d eur in the opening 8:12, took a four-goal lead and then held on. Daniel Paiiie and Campbell capped th e o u tburst with short-handed goals in a 3:21 span. Zdeno Chara and Tyler S eguin also s c ored a n d backup goaltender A nton Khudobin made 24 saves as the Bruins (56 points) moved a point ahead of the Montreai Canadiens with nine games to play in the lockoutshortened season. Patrik Elias, Travis Zajac,Andy Greene and Matt D'Agostini scored for New
Summit Bend
20 carrying over from last year.
from the NCAA in the case involv-
of running agambling operation in OklahomaCity.
Summit Bend
includes track magnate Bruton
no punishment from theNCAA
cation policies regarding sports wagering wasenough. Parmley
140 105 I — 12 14 3 0 01 022 0 — 5 9 5
MountainView 301 041 I — 1017 4 Ridgeview 400 030 1 — 8 10 3
University of Tulsa says it faces
announced Wednesday itonly received asecondary violation
0 21 000 0 — 3 8 4 000 202 x 4 4 0
C rookcounty 0 1 0 011 0 — 5 6 7 Redmond 011 160 x — 1014 4
the 25 nominees announced
COLLEGES
Wednesday'sresults Class 5A IntermountainConference
Intermountain Hybrid Ridgeview 512 021 0 — 11 9 5 MountainView 100 420 0 — 7 10 4
the NCAA tournament.
where hewas scheduled to start tonight. Harrison (0-2, 8.44 ERA) has been dealing with stiffness
Friday Baseball: Summiatt Bend,4:30 p.m.; MountainView at Ridgeview, 4:30 p.m.; CottageGroveat Sisters, 4:30 p.m.;Culverat Country Christian,4:30p.m.; Redmond atCrookCounty, 4:30p.m.;Junction City at LaPine,4:30p.m.,MadrasatGladstone,5 p.m. SoflbaH: Bendat Summit, 4:30p.m.; Ridgeviewat MountainView,4:30p.mzMadrasatMolaga,4:30 p.mc Sistersat CotageGrove, 4.30p.m.; La Pine at JunctionCity,4:30p.m. Boys golf: Ridgeview,Mountain View,CrookCounty, BendatEagle CrestRidge Course,9a.m. Boys tennis: CrookCountyat TVCCTournament in Ontario,TBD;MadrasatRedmond, 4p.m. Girls tennis: CrookCountyat TVCCTournament in Dntario,TBD Boys lacrosse:SummitatThurston, 6p.m.; Bendat Sprague,7p.m.;Mountain ViewatSisters, 7 p.m.
He is the second Hoosiers star
to leave school early. OnTuesday, junior swingman Victor Oladipo announced he,too,was entering the NBA draft. He also
BASEBALL Rangers' Harrison toDL
Today Boys golf: RedmondSummit, MountainView,Bend at Eagle Point GolfClub(5Adistrict preview),noon; Sisters at HighDesertChallengeat EagleCrest, TBD; LaPineat DiamondWoods,TBD Girls golf: Bend, MountainVrew,Summit, Crook County,Redm ond, Ridgeview, Madrasat Meadow Lakes,11a.m. Track: Elmira, LaPineat Sisters, 4 p.m.; Mountain View,GilchristatSummit, 3:30p.m. Boys tennis: Ridgeview at CrookCounty 4 p.m., Summit at MountainView, 4 p.m.; Redm ond at Bend 4p.m. Girls tennis: MountainViewat Summ it, 4 p.m., Crook County at Ridgeview, 4 p.m.; Bend at Redmond, 4p.m. SoflbaH: CrookCountyatRedmond,4:30p.m.
among the latest standout
ceivers DemaryiusThomas and Eric Decker joined theveteran
surgeries. Welker left the Patriots
ON DECK
playoff hopes fade. The slide is its longest since 1985-86. Also on Wednesday: Rangers 3, Maple Leafs 2: NEW YORK — Mats Zuccarello scored the lone goal in the shootout, and New York overcame anothertwo-goal performance by T o ronto's Phil Kesseb A valanche 4, D u cks 1 : ANAHEIM, Calif. — Matt Duchene had a goal and an assist, and the NHL-worst Avalanche prevented Anaheim from clinching a playoff spot. Coyotes 3, Oilers 1: EDMONTON, Alberta — David Moss and Boyd Gordon each had a goal and an assist as the Coyotes stayed firmly in the playoff picture. Canucks 4, Flames1: CALGARY, Alberta — Roberto Luongo, in a surprise start, made 40 saves and Maxim L apierre scored t h e g o -
ahead goaL
La Pine Sisters
Class 5A IntermoentainConference First game (Six innings)
003 020 — 5 8 1 500 271 — 15 10 2
Secondgame 000 300 0 3 4 1 100 321 x — 7 9 2
Class 4A Sky-EmLeague (Five innings)
0 00 10 — 1 1 5 870 3x — 18 5 0
Tri-VaHeyConference Madras Estacada
1 20 014 0 — 8 7 2 3 10 200 0 — 6 6 3
Track B field Wednesday'sResults Boys Crook County361.5, Ridgeview252.5 At Ridgeview 400-meter relay — I, CrookCounty(Lopez, Woodward,Zemp,Santiago), 47.69. 2, CrookCounty, 52.61. 3, Ridgeview,53.53. 1,500 — 1, Pickhardt, CC, 5:02.29 2,Buckley-Noonan,RV,5:05.65. 3, Car-
mack,CC,5:14.92.3,000 —1, Patel, RV,11:55.09. 2, Glass,CC,1222.73.3, Lee,CC,123085. 100—1, l.opez,CC,11.56.2, Stevens,RV ,1163. 3,Shaw,RV, 11.98.400 — I, Rivera,CC,55.53. 2, Abrams,CC, 55.67. 3,Santiago,CC,55.74. 110h —1,Taylor, RV 1696. 2,Thurman,CC,19.08. 3, Abrams,CC,20.25 000 — I, Munn, CC,2:04.91.2, Prescott,RV,2:07.91. 3, Buckley-Noonan,RV,2:21.99. 200 — 1, Stevens, RV, 24.06. 2,Lopez,CC, 2450 3, Shaw,RV,24.63 300h — 1, Abrams,CC,45.30. 2, Thurman,CC, 46.89. 3,Taylor,RV,47.92.1,600 relay — 1,Crook
County(Abrams,Santiago, Rivera, Munn), 3:43.42. 2, Ridgevrew, 3:44.80. 3,CrookCounty, 4:01.80.
HJ — 1,Ronhaar,RV,5-08 T2,Lee,CC,5-00. T2, BarberCC,5 00.Discus —1,Sutfin, CC,12611.2, Johns,RV,121-01. 3, Smith,CC,116-10. PV— 1, Thurman,CC,11-06.2, Barber,CC,11-00.3, Ronhaar, RV,10-06.Shot — 1, Sutfin, CC,46-01.50. 2, Lund, RV, 42 01.50 3, Smith, CC,40-0150 Javelin 1, Lund,RV,149-07. 2, Mccreary, RV,148-07. 3, Sutfin, CC,131-05.TJ—1,Nosler,RV,35-06 2, Barber, CC, 34-01. 3,Robinson,RV ,32-07 LJ 1, Seyl, CC,18 09.2, Lopez, CC,18-00.3, Ronhaar, RV,17-08.
Redmond81, Bend64 At RedmondHigh 400-meter relay — 1, Bend (Beg, Neelon,Johnson, Fagen),45.51.2, Redmond, 45.55.1,500 — 1, Hoffmann,B,44170 2, Filmore,8, 4:54.40.3, Nor-
ris, 8,4:55.80.3,000— 1,Filmore,8,1029.70.2, Mccoy, 8,10:29.90. 3,Lelack, B,10.44.90.100 —1 Tinneg R 11.53. 2, Gonzales,R, 11.71. 3, Bell, B, 11.86.400 — I, Blake,8,55.49. 2,Jensen, 8,57.57. 3, Q.Johnson,R,59.27.110h — 1,Davis, R,17.13. 2, K Johnson,R,17.63 3, Simpson,R,1800 000 — I, Hoffmann,B,2:05.00. 2, Gunther,R,2:08.20. 3, DeLaTorre,R, 2:15.40. 200 — 1, Bell, B, 25.28. 2, Lake,R, 25.70.3, Vanasen, 8, 26.28. 300h—1, Hickey, R,43.00. 2, K. Johnson, R,44.54. 3, Davis, R, 46.98. 1,600 relay — 1, Redmond,3:59.80. 2, Redmond, 4:28.16. HJ 1,0uattlebum,R,6-02.2,Simpson,R,5-10 3, Meade,8,5-10. Discus — 1,Giacci, R,159-10. 2, Gonzales, R,127-02. 3, Hanson, B,125-02. PV—1, Johnson,8,13-00.2,Fagen,8,12-06.3,Stoddard,B, 12-00. Shot — I, Nieves,R, 46-02.50. 2, Giacci, R, 45-10. 3,Sigado,R,43-05.Javelin — 1,Johnson, 8, 149 03. 2,Sigado,142-02. 3,Doolin, R, 133-11 TJ — I,Simpson,R,41-01.2,Tinneg,R,39-11.50.3, Neelon, B, 39-02.50. LJ— 1,Tinneg, R,20-08.50. 2, Neelon,8,20-03.3, Wegn er, B,17-1050.
Girls
Rtdgevtew301, CrookCounty249 At Ridgeview 400-meter relay — 1, Crook County(Berlin, Bernard,Zirbel, Bernard), 54.01. 2, Ridgeview, 55.69. 3, Ridgeview,I:03.10. 1,500 — 1, Morgan, CC, 6:09.70.2, Leavitt, RV,6:15.89.3, Morales,CC,
6:1842 100 1, Steigman,RV,12.86. 2, Stroup, RV, 13.11. 3Berlin, CC,13.13.400 — I, Steen,RV, 1:04.70. 2,Bernard,CC,1:07.48. 3, Marchment, RV, 1:0780 100h 1, True,RV,1758 2, Prescott,RV, 19.14. 3,Mrchael,CC,19.35 800— 1,Bernard, RV, 2:56.27.2,Formen,RV,2.56.33. 3, Green,CC,2:57.00. 200 —1, Stroup,RV,27.10.2, Steigman,RV,27.97. 3,Zirbel,CC,28.97.300h — I,Steen,RV,48.99.2,
Berlin, CC,51.36. 3, Bennett, RV,57.80. 1,600 rela y 1, Ridgeview(Stroup, H Wilder, Marchment, Steen), 4:2685. 2, CrookCounty,4:51.57. 3, Ridgeview,4:52.44 HJ — 1, H.Wilder, RV5-00. T2, Prescott, RV,408.T2,Kaonis,CC,4-08.Discus— 1,Hidalgo,RV, 109-06. 2,Morgan,CC,9803 3, Viles, CC,93-05 PV — 1, Holand,RV,9-00. T2,Mrchae, CC,7-06. T2,Tugis,RV,7-06.Shot— 1,Troutman,CC,34-09. 2,Kaonis,CC,32-04.3,Stearns,RV,30-02.Javelin — 1, Troutman, CC,123-00. 2,Yeakey, RV,104-01. 3, Hidalgo,RV,9301.TJ 1, Troutman, CC,32-08. 2, Bernard,CC,28-10. 3, Fegmer, RV , 26-09. LJ— I, Berlin, CC,15-08.50. 2,True,RV,14-11. 3, Kimmel, CC, 14-00.
Bend 83,Redmond61 At RedmondHigh 400-meter relay —1,Redmond(Current,Conley, Sibley,Dchsner),52.77.1,500 — 1, Mitchell-Hoegh, R, 5:30.60; 2, Johnson, R,5:50.7; 3, Maxwell, B,
5:51.9. 3,000 — 1,Mattox, 8, 12:2230; 2,Andrews, 8, 12:41.10;3, King,B,12:48.80.100— 1,8urgess, 8,13.47; 2,Cunningham,B,13.74; 3,Conley,R,14.11. 400 — 1, Ochsner,R,65.31, 2, Burgess,B,3, Kirk, Redmond 69.48.100h— 1,Evert,8,52.37;2,Smith, R, 19.22; 3,Naugher,R, 19.46. 800 — 1, MitchellHoegh,R,2:37.90;2, Curran,8, 246.70; 3, Bruce,B, 24710.200 — 1, Pease, 8,2771;2, Cunningham,B, 28.20, 3,Conley,R,29.12. 300h— 1, Evert, B,52.37, 2, Naugher,8,52.38; 3,Smith, R,57.21. 1,600 relay
—1, Bend(Curran, Wheeler, Burgess, Cunningham),
4:20.55; 2,Redmond,4:21.64. HJ — 1, Curran,8, 5-0; 2, Kegey,8, 4-08.Discus — 1, Tinneg,R 79-04;2, Guerrero, R,62-0, 3, Wavers,B,58-04. PV 1 McGee,B,6-0;1, Wright, 8,6-0;1,Geddes,B,6-0 Shot — 1, Tinnell, R,3106.5; 2 Wright,8,28-08.75;3,Perkins,R,25-09. Javeli n— 1,Tinneg,R,94-05;2,Wavers,B,90-02; 3, Steelhame m r, B,89-00. TJ —1, Hale, R,28-11.5, 2,Mahaney, 8,27-07;3, Femald,B,26-03 LJ 1, Schneider,8,15-02; 2,Smith, R,14-01.5;3, Mahaney, 8,I3-02.5.
BASKETBALL NBA NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT Eastern Conference
z-Miami y-NewYork y-Indiana x-Brooklyn x-Chicago x-Atlanta x-Boston x-Milwaukee Philadelphia Toronto Washington Detroit Cleveland Orlando Charlotte
W L 62 16 51 26 49 29 46 32 42 35 43 36 40 38 37 41 31 47 30 48
29 50 27 52 24 54 20 59 18 60
Western Conference
x-Oklahoma City y-SanAntonio x-Denver y-L.A.Clippers x-Memphis x-GoldenState x-Houston L.A. Lakers Utah Dallas Portland Minnesota Sacramen to NewOrleans Phoenix x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division z-clinchedconference
W L 57 21 57 21 54 24
52 26 53 25 45 33 44 34
42 37 41 38 38 40 33 45 29 49
28 50 27 52 24 55
Pct GB 795 662 10'/z 628 13 590 16 545 19'/z 544 19'/z 513 22 474 25 397 31 385 32 367 33'/z 342 35'/z 308 38 253 42'/~ 231 44
Pct GB 731 731 692 3 667 5 679 4 577 12 564 13 532 15'/z 519 16'/z
487 19 423 24 372 28 359 29 342 30'/z 304 33'/z
Wednesday'sGames Detroit111,Cleveland104 Atlanta124,Philadelphia101 Orlando113 Milwaukee103,OT Miami103,Washington 98 Brooklyn101,Boston93 Phoenix102,Dallas91 L.A. Lakers113,Portland106 Sacramento121,NewOrleans110 L.A. Clippers111,Minnesota95 Denver96,SanAntonio 86
Today'sGames NewYorkatChicago,5p.m. Oklahoma City at GoldenState, 7:30p.m. Friday's Games Chicagoat Toronto, 4p.m. BrooklynatIndiana, 4p.m. PhiladelphiaatWashington, 4p.m. NewYorkatCleveland,4:30p.m.
San Antonio Denver
Hawks124, 76ers101
Tuesday's Summaries
Lakers 113, Blazers106
PORTLAND (106)
Claver3-112-2 9,Aldridge 7-133-417, Leonard 2-4 0-0 4, Lillard 12-259-9 38, Barton4-12 1-29, Babbitt 4-5 0-012, Pavlovic3-71-1 8, Maynor3-8 2-29 Totals 38-0510-20106. L.A. Lakers 33 20 27 25 — 113 Portland 41 20 21 16 — 106 3-PointGoals—L.A.Lakers6-19 (Biake2-3, Meeks 1-2, Jamison1-3, Clark 1-3, Bryant1-5, Gasol0-1, World Peace 0-2), Portland 12-26(Lilard 5-11,Babbitt 4-5, Maynor1-2,Pavlovic1-3,Claver1-4, Barton 0-1). FouledOut—None. Rebounds—L.A. Lakers 45 (Howard10),Portland37(Aldridge16). Assists—L.A.
Lakers 19(Gasol 9), Portland24(Lilard 9). Total Fouls—LA. Lakers17, Portland24. TechnicalsBlake, L.A. Lakersdefensivethree second, Ligard. A—20,598(19,980).
Kings121, Hornets110 NEWORLE ANS(110) Aminu3-60-06, Davis 4-95-513, Lopez7-8 6-7 20, Vasquez2-60 04,Gordon8-164-723, Henry5-7 5-8 15, Anderson3-132-2 9, Roberts6-11 6-6 20, Miller 0-10-00,Amundson0-0 0-0 0,Harris 0-10-0 0 Totals 38-7828-35110. SACRAMENTO (121) Salmons7-10 6-8 22,Thompson8-12 4-6 20, Cousins4-103-311, I Thomas6-132-415, Evans4-7 0-08, Thornton8-130-020,Hayes2-30-04, Douglas 2-5 0-0 4,Outlaw4 60-0 9,Aldrich0-02 22, Fredete 2-6 0-0 6.TotaIs 47-8517-23 121. New Orleans 28 2 0 2537 —110 Sacramento 35 30 30 26 — 121
Clippers 111, Timberwotves95 MINNESOT A (95)
Kirilenko3-102-48 Williams3-126-613, Pekovic 7-136-720,Rubio2-82-26, Ridnour4-92-211, Shved 5-101-112,Budinger3 100 07, Stiemsma2 4 0 04, Barea5120012, Gelabale1-10 02, Johnson 0-1 0-00.Totals 35-9019-22 95. L.A. CLIPPERS (111) Butler 4-70-010, Griffin 9-13 1-319,Jordan5-6 0-010, Paul7-113-319, Green5-8 2-215, Crawford 4-12 0-0 11,Hollins1-3 4-4 6, Barnes6-9 2-2 14, Odom1-20-22, Bledsoe1-4 0-0 3,Turiaf 0-00-00, Wayns1-20-02. TotaIs 44-7712-16 111. Minnesota 20 26 26 23 — 95 L.A. Clippers 20 3 2 30 23 — 111
ltttlggets 96, Spurs 86 SAN ANTO NIO(86) Leonard4-100-08, Duncan7-14 3-4 17,Splitter
4-9 2-210, DeColo1-2 0-0 2, Green5-11 0-010, Bonner0-30-00,Joseph1-73-46 Neal6-152-317, Blair 5-7 2-312, Mills 1-7 0-1 2, Baynes1-2 0-02 Totals35-8712-1786.
DENVER (96)
Chandler11-204-4 29, Faried1-4 1-2 3,Koufos 1-5 0-02, AMiger4-8 4-612, Iguodala5-111-412, Brewer12-252-528,McGee1-40-02, Randolph1-1 0-02,Foumi er3-80-06 Totals39-8612-21 96.
TENNIS
a-amateur Thursday-Fnday — 5 a.m.-7:56a.m. SandyLyle,John Peterson,a-
Nets101, Celtics 93 BROOKLYN (101)
Wallace1-30-02,Evans0-01-41, Lopez8-145-5 21, D.Wiliams9-1810-1029, Johnson8-15 0-020, Humphries1-24-46, Watson 3-4 0-09, Blatche2-7 2-26, Brooks0-10-00, Stackhouse2-73-37, Joseph 010 00, Teletovicg-I 0 00 Tayor010 00. Totals 34-7425-28 101.
BOSTON (93) Green4-171-1 11,Bass5-110 010, Garnett5-11 1-1 11,Bradley1-3 002, Pierce7-11 6723, Lee3 5 0-0 7,Randolph1-20-02,Terry1-7 2-24,Wilcox3-4 0 06, TWigiams 3 42-48, Crawford3 51-2 7, White 1-10-02 Totals37-8113-1793. Brooklyn 22 31 26 22 — 101 Boston 21 22 26 24 — 93
Suns102, Mavericks 91 PHOENIX(102) Tucker6-92-217, MarkMorris 5-120-012, Scola 4-13 3-311, Dragic7-145-6 21,Johnson7-130-0 17, O'Neal2-120-04, Marc.Morris 0-30-00, Dudley 5-9 6-6 18,Marshall 1-3 0-0 2.Totals 37-00 1617102. DALLAS(91) Marion9-164-622, Nowrtziu6-18 7-721,Kaman 1-6002,MJames46009, Mayo210226, Collison 1-61-2 3,Wright3-80-06, Carter 6-123-418, Crowder1-20-0 2, B.James0 00-0 0,Akognon11 0-02, Morrow 0-00-00. Totals 34-0517-21 91. Phoenix 28 33 20 21 — 102 Dallas 21 30 20 20 — 91
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesPDT
Eastern Conference Atlantic Division GP W L OT y -Pittsburgh 40 30 10 0 N .Y. Islanders 40 20 16 4 N .Y. Rangers 40 20 16 4 NewJersey 40 15 15 10 P hiladelphia 39 17 19 3
L.A. LAKERS (113)
Clark1-3 0-0 3,Gasol11-151-2 23,Howard9-11 2-4 20,Blake3-40-0 8, Bryant14-2718-1847,World Peace 2 5 004, Jamison 2-50 05, Meeks1-3003. Totals 43-7321-24113.
x-LoyolaMarymountatUCLA, 6p.m. x=nonconference
ATLANTA(124) Professional Korver2-41-1 6,Smith11-185-5 28,Horford 8-13 0-016, Teague 6-130-013, Harris 2-63-48, StevenGrand PrixHassanII son 0-4 0-0 0,J.Jenkins8-132-221, Scott6-105-5 Wednesday At ComplexeSportrf al Amal 17,Johnson3-5 2-2 8,Tolliver0-00-0 0,Mack2-4 Casablanca, Morocco 0-05, Jones1-1 0-02 Totals 49-91 18-19124. Purse: $607,500(WT250) PHILADELPHIA(101) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Turner4-121-29, TYoung14-200-0 28 Hawes2Singles 60-05,JrHoliday4-143-312,Wilkins0-76-66,Ivey 0-1 0-00 Wright4-95-515,Allen0-30-00, Moultrie First Round 3-51-1 7, N.Young 6-94-519, Ju.Holiday0-20-00. RobinHaase(7), Netherlands, def.Roberto Bautista Agut, Spain,6-3,2-6, 7-5. Totals 37-80 20-22101. Kenny deSchepper,France,def. SteveDarcis, BelAtlanta 29 30 34 31 — 124 Philadelphia 27 2 422 20 — 101 gium, 6-3,6-4. SecondRound StanislasWawrinka (I), Switzerand,def. BlazKaHeat103, Wizards 98 vcic, Slovenia4-6, , 6-2, 6-1. Guigermo Garcia-Lopez, Spain, def. Edouard MIAMI (103) Roger-VasselinFrance, , 6-7(4), 7-6(3), 6-2. Lewis5-144 417, Battier 5 80 015, Anthony1-3 Benoit Paire(4), France,def. AljazBedene,Slove0-0 2, Chalmers 5-140-013, Miller 5-7 0-014, Alnia, 4-6, 6-4,6-3. len 8-186-723, Andersen0-38-88, Cole 3-52-48, TommyRobredo,Spain, def. TobiasKamke, GerJones1-30-0 3TotaIs 33-7520-23 103. many,6-4,7-5. WASHINGTO N(98) Webster 276812, Nene 6101-413, Dkafor36 U.S. Men'sClayCourt Championships 2-2 8, Wal7-18 l 3-317, Temple 3-10 0-08, SingleWednesday ton 0-1 0-0 0,Price8-122-2 23, Seraphin 4-81-2 At Btver OaksCountry Club 9, Martin 3-70-08, Vesely0-1 0-00. Totals 36-00 Houston 15-21 90. Purse: $519,775(WT250) Miami 25 21 23 34 — 103 Surface: Clay-Outdoor Washington 22 28 22 26 — 98 Singles First Round Ruben RamirezHidalgo,Spain,def.SomdevDevPistons111, Cavaliers104 varman,India,7-6(5), 6-0. Martin Alund,Argentinadef. Lleytonl-lewitt, AusDETROIT(111) Singler 1-75-6 7, Monroe10-183-5 23, Drum- tralia, 4-6,6-3,6-1. mond10-119-1729,Knight 2-113-37, Stuckey5-8 6-918, Jerebko2-51-2 5, Middleton3-6 0-06, VilSOCCER lanueva0-30-0 0, Bynum7-10 0-0 16,English0-1 0-0 0. Totals 40-0027-42111. MLS CLEVELAND(104) Gee2-60-04,Thompson8-133-619,Zeller4MAJORLEAGUESOCCER 9 0-0 8, Irving 7-1512-1327, Ellington4-5 0-0 9, AH TimesPDT Livingston2-31-25, Jones4-8 0-0 8, Speights1-4 2-2 4,Waiters5-121-1 11,Casspi 3-72-29. Totals Saturday's Games 40-82 21-26 104. Columbus at Montreal,11 a.m. Detroit 28 25 21 37 — 111 NewEnglandatSeattleFc, 1p.m. Cleveland 24 25 26 29 — 104 TorontoFCat Philadelphia,1 p.m. RealSaltLakeatVancouver,1p.m. NewYorkatD.C. United,4p.m. Magic 113, Bucks103 LosAngelesatFcDallas,4:30p.m. ColoradoatChivasUSA, 7:30p.m. MILWAUKEE (103) Sunday'sGames Daniels 6-120-0 14,Mbaha Moute0-2 0-0 0, Chicag oatHouston 2pm Sanders 2-91-25, Jennings1-20-03, Egis7-276-10 SanJoseat Portland, 7:30p.m. 21, Redick6-163-316,Henson7-173-517, Dunleavy 5-114-617, Ayon 4-40-08, Smith1-1 0-02. Totals 39-101 17-26103. GOLF ORLANDO (113) Harkless7-130-114, Harris13-201-330,Vucevic PGA Tour 14-26 2-330, Udrih6-220-013, Moore2-60-0 4, Nicholson1-50-0 2, O'Quinn2-6 0-1 4, Lamb6-10 The Masters 0-016, Jones 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 51-109 3-0113. Tee Times Milwaukee 1 6 2 9 21 29 8 — 103 At AugustaNational Golf Club Orlando 30 18 2 2 25 10 — 113 Augusta, Ga. AH TimesPDT
MilwaukeeatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. Charlotteat Detroit, 4:30p.m.
BostonatMiami,4:30 p.m. MemphisatHouston, 5 p.m L.A. ClippersatNewOreans,5p.m. DenveratDalas,5:30p.m. SacramentoatSanAntonio, 5:30p.m. Minnesota at Utah,6 p.m. OklahomaCity at Portland, 7p.m. GoldenStateat L.A. Lakers,7:30p.m.
18 19 26 23 — 86 11 27 31 27 — 96
Boston Montreal Toronto Ottawa Buffalo
PtsGF GA 6 0 132 98 4 4 117 120 4 4 99 96 40 96 111 3 7 107 122
Northeast Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA
3 9 26 9 4 5 6 113 85 39 25 9 5 55 122 94 4 0 22 13 5 4 9 123 112 3 9 19 14 6 4 4 96 88 4 0 16 18 6 3 8 106 122 Southeast Division GP W L OT PtsG F GA W ashington 40 21 17 2 4 4 120 112 W innipeg 4 1 2 0 1 9 2 4 2 102 121 T ampa Bay 39 17 20 2 3 6 124 116 C arolina 39 1 6 2 1 2 3 4 102 126 F lorrda 39 13 2 0 6 3 2 96 132
Western Conference Central Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA x Chicago 39 3 0 5 4 64 129 83
S t.Louis 38 2 2 1 4 2 4 6 107 98 D etroit 39 19 1 5 5 4 3 99 101 C olumbus 4 0 1 7 1 6 7 4 1 95 104 N ashville 41 1 5 1 8 8 3 8 96 110 Northwest Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA V ancouver 40 2 3 11 6 5 2 109 96 M innesota 39 2 2 15 2 4 6 103 98 E dmonton 4 0 1 6 1 7 7 3 9 102 111 C algary 39 14 2 1 4 3 2 103 138 C olorado 4 0 1 3 2 2 5 3 1 94 125 Pacific Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA Anaheim 4 1 2 7 9 5 59 124 103 L os Angeles 40 22 14 4 4 8 115 101 S an Jose 3 9 2 0 1 2 7 4 7 98 98 P hoenix 40 1 8 1 6 6 4 2 108 107 Dallas 3 9 19 17 3 4 1 109 118 NOTE:Twopoints for a win, onepoint tor overtime
loss. x-clinched playoffspot yclrnched drvrsron Wednesday'sGames N.Y.Rangers3,Toronto2, SO Boston5, NewJersey4 Vancouver4,CalgaryI Phoenix3, Edmonton1 Colorado 4, Anaheim1 Today'sGames N.Y.IslandersatBoston,4 p.m. Montrealat Buffalo,4 p.m. OttawaatPhiladelphia, 4 p.m. Carolinaat Washington, 4p.m. PittsburghatTampaBay, 4:30p.m. San Jose atDetroit, 4.30p.m. Florida atWinnipeg, 5pm. St. Louisat Minnesota, 5p.m. Color adoatLosAngeles,7:30p.m.
BASEBALL College Pac-12 Standings AH TimesPDT
Wednesday'sGame
x-ArizonaState11, UNL V3
Friday's Games Utah atOregonState, 3p.m. Washington atStanford, 5:30p.m. OregonatCalifornia, 6p.m. Arizonaat Washington State, 6p.m. ArizonaStateat Southern Cal, 6p.m.
Nathan Smith 5:11 a.m.-8:07a.m.—LarryMize,BrianGay, Russell Henley Woosnam,David Lynn, 5:22 aim.-818 a.m.— Ian KevinNa 5:33 a.m.-B:29a.m.— DavidToms RichardSterne, TedPotterJr. 5:44 a.m.-8:40a.m. — TomWatson, RyanMoore, KevinStreelman 5:55 a.m.-8:51a.m.— RobertGarrigus,Carl Pettersson, TimClark , Westwood, 6:06 a.m.-9:13a.m.— Mike WeirLee Jim Furyk 6:17 a.m.-9:24a.m.—BrandtSnedeker,RyoIshikawa, JustinRose ManaOlazabal,Marc 6:28 a.m.-9:35a.m. — Jose Leishman,a-TJ. Vogel artzel, WebbSimp6:39 a.m.-9:46a.m.—CharlSchw son, PeterHanson 6:50 a.m.-9:57a.m Zach Johnson, K.J. Choi, GraemeMcDowell lThompson,John 7:12 a.m.-1008a.m. — Michae Huh,JohnSenden — Stewart Cink, NicolasCol7:23 a.m.-10:19a.m. saerts,Thawom Wiratchant 7:34 a.m.-10:30a.m.— BubbaWatson, lan Poulter, a-StevenFox 7:45 a.m.-10:41a.m.— TigerWoods,LukeDonald, Scott Piercy 7:56 a.m.-10:52a.m. — JasonDay,Rickie Fowler, PadraigHarrington 8:07 a.m.— 5a.m.—JohnMerrick,Thorbjorn Dlesen, D.A. Points 8.18 a.m.-5:11a.m.— Craig Stadler,BenCurtis, aMichaelWeaver 8:29 a.m -5:22 a.m. — Mark O'Meara,Martin Laird, JamieDonaldson 8:40 a.m.-5:33a.m.— Paul LawrieThomas , Bjorn, GonzaloFernandez-Castano — Trevor Im m elm an , G e orge Coe8:51 a.m.-5:44a.m. tzee,a-Alan Dunbar 9:13 a.m.-5:55a.m Ernie Els, SteveStricker, Nick Watney 9:24 a.m.-6:06a.m.—BenCrenshaw,MatteoManassero,a-GuanTianlang Langer, LucasGlover, 935 am.-617am. —Bernhard HenrikStenson 9:46 a.m.-6:28a.m.—VijaySingh,BoVan Pelt, YE. Yang 9:57 a.m.-6:39a.m.—AngelCabrera,Sergio Garcia, AdamScott 10:08a.m.-6:50a.m.—FredCouples,Dustin Johnson, Branden Grace 10:19 am.-7:12a.m.— HunterMahan,Hiroyuki Fujita, Francesco Molinari 10:30a.m.-7:23a.m.— Phil Mickelson,Louis Dosthuizen,Martin Kaymer 10:41 a m.-7:34a.m. Rory Mcllroy, KeeganBradley, FreddieJacobson I0:52 a.m.-7:45a.m. —JasonDufner, Matt Kuchar, Bill Haas
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL American League BOSTON RED SOX—Acti
THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
C3
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings AH TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE
East Division
W L 5 3 4 4 4 4 4 5 3 5 Central Division W L Kansas City 6 3 Chicago 4 4 Detroit 4 4 Minnesota 4 5 Cleveland 3 5 West Division W L Oakland 7 2 Texas 6 3 Seattle 4 6 Houston 3 6 Los Angeles 2 6
Boston Baltimore NewYork TampaBay Toronto
Pct GB .625 .500 1 500 I .444 D/v .375 2
Pct GB .667 .500 1'/z .500 1'/z .444 2 .375 2'/z Pct GB 778 .667 1 400 31/2
.333 4 .250 4'/z
Wednesday'sGames
Toronto 8,Detroit 6 Tampa Bay2,Texas0 Washington 5, ChicagoWhite Sox2 N.Y.Yankeesat Cleveland, ppd., rain Baltimore 8, Boston5 Kansas City3, Minnesota0 Oakland11,L.A.Angels 5 Houston8,Seatle 3
with a win over LosAngeles. Tommy Milone (2-0) threw106
a.m. ChicagoWhite Sox (Axelrod 0-0) at Washington (Haren0-1), 4:05p.m. N.Y.Yankees (PHughes 0-1) at Cleveland(McAllister 0-1), 4:05p.m. Baltimore(Tilman0-0) at Boston(Aceves 0-0), 4:10
p.m. Oakland(Griffin 1-0) at L.A. Anges (Vargas0-0),
7:05 p.m. Texas(Grimm0-0) at Seatle (FHernandez1-1), 7:10 p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE
Atlanta Washington NewYork Philadelphia Miami Cincinnati St. Louis Chicago Pittsburgh Milwaukee Arizona SanFrancisco Los Angeles Colorado SanDiego
ANAHEIM, Calif.— Brandon Moss Bay 7,Texas10.28—Jennings(5), Zobrlst (3), Dav. tied a career high with five RBls, Murphy(1). SB—Gentry (3). CS—K.Johnson (1). including his second homer in two S—YEscobar. SF—Longoria. winning streak to seven games
Toronto(JoJohnson0-0) atDetroit (Fister1-0), 1005
W L 8 1 6 2 5 4 4 5 1 8 Central Division W L 5 4 5 4 3 5 3 6 2 6 West Division W L 6 3 6 3 5 3 5 4 2 6
T otals 3 1 2 6 2 Totals 2 90 5 0 T ampa Bay 0 0 1 0 1 0 000 — 2 Texas 0 00 000 000 — 0 E Beltre (2). DP TampaBay3. LOB Tampa
Athletics11, Angels 5
games, andOakland extendedits
Today'sGames
East Division
Houston 0 32 000 210 — 8 Tampa BaybeatTexas in the Seattle 0 01 011 000 — 3 5—FGutierrez (1). DP—Houston2. LOB—Hous- coldest day gameever at Rangers ton 7, Seattle 6. 28 —J.castro (2), C.Pena2 (3), Ballpark. It was only 39 degrees J.Martinez(1), Dominguez(2), Ibanez(2), Shoppach when the game started after a rain (1). HR —Carter (3), Ankiel (2), Ma.Gon zalez (2), FGutierrez(3), Shoppach(1). CS—Maxwell (1). delay of1 hour, 29 minutes. SF — J.Martinez. Houston IP H R E R 88 SO TampaBay Texas PeacockW,1-1 5 4 3 3 1 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi KeuchelH,1 2 0 0 0 2 1 Jnnngs cf 4 1 1 0 Kinsler 2b 4 0 0 0 R.cruz 1 1 0 0 1 0 SRdrgzlf 3 0 0 0 Andrusss 2 0 0 0 Veras I I 0 0 0 I F uldlt 0 0 0 0 Beltre3b 3 0 I 0 Seattle Longoridh 2 0 0 1 N.cruzdh 3 0 0 0 BeavanL,0-1 52 - 3 9 5 4 1 4 Z obristri 4 0 2 1 DvMrplf 4 0 2 0 12-3 5 3 3 0 2 Capps D uncan1b 4 0 1 0 JeBakrrf 1 0 0 0 Pryor 2 3 1 0 0 0 1 Loneylb 0 0 0 0 LMartnph-rf 1 0 0 0 LaFrombois e I 0 0 0 0 2 Y Escorss 3 0 0 0 Morlndlb 4 0 I 0 Peacock pitchedto 1baterin the6th. R Rorts3b 4 0 1 0 Sotoc 3000 HBP —byPeacock(Ackley). Loatonc 4 0 0 0 Przynsph 1 0 0 0 T—3:38. A—10,493(47,476). J Molinc 0 0 0 0 Gentrycf 3 0 1 0 KJhnsn 2b 3 1 1 0
Pct GB .889 .750 1'/~ 556 3 444 4 .111 7
Pct GB .556 .556 .375 D/v
.333 2 250 2'/z
Pct GB .667 667
.625 '/x .556 I .250 3'/v
Wednesday'sGames St. Louis10 Cincinnati0 Arizona10,Pittsburgh2 SanFrancisco10,Colorado0 Washington 5, ChicagoWhite Sox2 Philadelphia 7, N.Y.Mets3 Atlanta 8,Miaml0 Milwaukee atChicago, ppd., rain L.A. Dodgers 4,SanDiego3 Today's Games San Francisco(Vogelsong 0-1) at Chicago Cubs (Feldman 0-1),11:20 a.m. ChicagoWhite Sox (Axelrod 0-0) at Washington (Haren0-1), 4:05p.m. L.A. Dodgers(Greinke1-0) at SanDiego(Marquis 0-1), 7:10p.m.
American League
Astros 8, Mariners 3 SEATTLE — Rick Ankiel and Chris
Carter each hit a two-run homer to help Houston beat Seattle before the smallest crowd in Safeco Field history. Carlos Pena had three hits and scored twice for the Astros, who also got two RBls from J.D.
Martinez and alate home run by MarwinGonzalez.Brad Peacock earned first major league win since 2011. Kelly Shoppach had three hits for the Mariners,
including a homerun and anRBI double. Franklin Gutierrez hit his third homer in the sixth. Houston
Seattle ab r hbi ab r hbi Altuve2b 5 0 1 0 MSndrsrf 0 0 0 0 Maxwllct 5 0 2 0 Bay rf 4000 Jcastroc 5 2 1 0 FGtrrzcf 3111 Carterdh 5 2 3 2 KMorls dh 30 1 0 C.Pena 1b 5 2 3 1 IbanezIf 3010 JMrtnz If 3 0 1 2 Seager3b 4 0 0 0 Barnes If 1 0 0 0 Smoak1b 4 0 0 0 Ankiel rf 4 1 1 2 Ackley2b 3 1 0 0 Dmngz3b 4 0 1 0 Shppch c 3132 MGnzlzss 3 1 2 1 Ryan ss 4000 Totals 40 8 15 8 Totals 3 136 3
pitches over five innings, allowing four runs, seven hits and three walks while striking out five. Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi C rispcf 4 2 1 0 Troutlf 4 0 1 0 J aso c 6 2 2 1 Shucklf 1 0 0 0 Lowriess 4 2 I I Callasp3b 3 2 I 0 Parrinoss 1 0 0 0 Pujolsdh 4 2 4 0 Cespdsli 5 1 1 1 Congerph-dh1 0 1 1 M oss1b 4 2 3 5 Hamltnrf 3 0 1 1 CYoungrf 6 0 1 0 Rominess 1 0 0 0 S.Smithdh 4 0 3 2 Trumo lb-rf 5 0 I I Dnldsn3b 5 0 2 1 HKndrc2b 5 0 3 2 Sogard2b 5 2 2 0 Harrisss-1b 5 0 1 0 l annettc 3 0 0 0 Bourjos cf 5 1 I 0 Totals 4 4 111611 Totals 4 0 5 145 Oakland 103 015 100 — 11 L os Angeles 1 0 1 0 2 0 010 — 5 Oakland
Tampa Bay IP H MMooreW,2-0 5 1 -3 1 C.Ramos H,1 2-3 1 McGeeH,1 1 0 Jo.PeraltaH,2 1 2 RodneyS,1-2 1 1
Texas
D.HollandL,0-1 8
Scheppers I WP — M.Moore2. T—2:51.A—26,643(48,114).
R 0 0 0 0 0
4 0 0 1 0
4 0 0 1 0
3 0 0 I 0
5 0 2 I 0
BiantonL,0-2 5 10 6 M.Lowe 1-3 1 3 D.De La Rosa 2 - 3 2 1 Williams 2 2 1 Frieri 1 1 0 Blantonpitchedto1 batter inthe6th. T—3:47. A—36,011(45,483).
6 3 I 0 0
2 2 I 1 1
0 0 I 1 0
Resop
Blevins Neshek Scribner
Los Angeles
1 1 I 1
7 1 2 2 2
Blue Jays 8, Tigers 6 DETROIT — J.P. Arencibia hit a three-run double in the seventh inning and Toronto rallied from a five-run deficit to beat Detroit. Toronto
Detroit
ab r hbi ab r bbi Reyesss 5 0 1 0 AJcksncf 5 1 2 0 M ecarrli 4 2 2 0 TrHntrrf 5 1 1 1 Bautist rf 4 2 1 0 Micarr 3b 5 1 2 0 E ncrncdh 4 2 2 I Fielderlb 3 I I I Lind1b 2 0 0 0 VMrtnzdh 4 0 0 1 DeRosaph-1b2 1 1 3 Tuiassplf 2 1 0 0 Arenciic 5 0 2 3 Dirksph-lf 2 0 0 1 Rasms cf 5 1 1 0 JhPerlt ss 4 0 3 I M lzturs3b 3 0 I 0 Avilac 4000 Bonifac2b 4 0 1 1 infante2b 4 1 2 1 Totals 3 8 8 128 Totals 3 8 6 116 Toronto 0 00 013 400 — 8 Detroit 1 10 040 000 — 6 E— Bonifacio (4). DP —Toronto I, Detroit 1. LOB —Toronto 8 Detroit 9. 28—Encarnacion 2 (2),
0 0 0 0 0
6 1 1 0 0
5 0 1 0 1
5 2 2 3 1 0 0 0
4 0
Drioles 8, RedSox5 BOSTON — Manny Machado's
three-run homer capped fiave-run ninth inning andgaveBaltimore a win over Boston. The Red Sox had goneahead 5-3 in the sixth
on consecutive homers byDaniel Nava and Jarrod Saltalamacchia. But closer Joel Hanrahan couldn't hold the lead on a night when their
McLoth If 2 2 0 0 Ellsury cf 4 1 1 1 Machd 3b 5 1 1 3 Victorn rf 3 0 0 1 Markks rf 5 1 1 2 Pedroia 2b 3 0 0 0 A.Jonescf 4 1 1 0 Napoli1b 3 0 0 0 C.Davis1b 4 1 1 1 Mdlrks3b 4 0 0 0 W ietersc 4 0 1 0 Navadh 3 2 1 1 Hardyss 3 0 0 0 Sltlmchc 4 1 3 2 F lahrty2b 4 0 1 0 Drewss 4 0 0 0 A casillpr-2b 0 1 0 0 BrdlyJrlf 2 1 0 0 Reimld dh 3 0 0 0 Dickrsnpr-dh 0 1 0 0 T otals 3 4 8 6 6 Totals 3 05 5 5 B altimore 100 20 0 0 0 5 — 8 Boston 0 12 002 000 — 5
Detroit Porcello D.DownsH,3
41-3 7 6 5 2-3 1 0 1 2 0 I 1 0 I 0 0 0 0 5
0 0 0 0 0
2 2 0 0 0 0
8 4 4 0
11 - 3 2 1 VillarrealL,0-1 0 0 3 Dotel BS,1-1 12- 3 2 0 Coke 1 0 0 Porcellopitchedto 3baters in the6th. Villarrealpitchedto3 baters inthe7th. WP — Vilarreal. T—3.36. A—29,631(41,255).
I 3 0 0
1 3 1 0
Rays 2, Rangers 0
2 1 0 0 0 2 1
2 0 3 2
4 0 0 3 B.chenH,1 3 2 0 0 0 K.Herrera S,2-2 1 1 0 0 0 Duensingpitchedto 2baters in the7th.
6 2 3
HBP —byHendriks(Buter), byW.Davis (Florlmon). T—3:02. A—I0,069(37,903).
National League
Cardinals10, Reds 0 ST. LOUIS — Jake Westbrook pitched a five-hiter and St. Louis
backed him with four home runs in routing Cincinnati. Jon Jay, Carlos Beltran and Matt Adams homered
Royals 3, Twins 0
KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Wade Davis
pitched out of basesloadedjams Kansas City beat Minnesota to
Homer Bailey as the Cardinals took two of three from the NL Cincinnati
St. Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi Choocf 2 0 0 0 Jaycf 5111 DRonsncf 0 0 0 0 Mcrpnt2b 5 2 4 2 H eiseylf 4 0 0 0 Hollidylf 3 1 1 1 V otto1b 3 0 2 0 Wggntnlf 1 0 0 0 P hillips2b 4 0 I 0 Beltranrf 3 I I 2 Bruce rf 4 0 1 0 SRonsn pr-rf 1 1 0 0 F razier3b 4 0 0 0 YMolinc 5 1 1 0 Mesorcc 2 0 0 0 Freese3b 4 1 2 0 Clztursss 4 0 1 0 MAdms1b 3 1 2 3 HBailyp I 0 0 0 Kozmass 4 1 1 0 O ndrskp 0 0 0 0 Westrkp 2 0 1 1 Hannhn ph 1 0 0 0 Simonp 0 0 0 0 Totals 2 9 0 5 0 Totals 3 6101410 C incinnati OO O800 000 — 0 St. Louis 000 044 20x — 10 DP — Cincinnati 1, St. Louis 1. LOB—Cincinnati 8, St. Louis 7. 2B —Votto (1), M.carpenter(5),
Minnesota KansasCity ab r hbi ab r hbi Hickscf 5 0 0 0 Gordonlf 4 0 1 0 Mauerdh 5 0 2 0 AEscorss 4 0 1 1 W lnghlf 4 0 0 0 Butlerdh 3 1 1 1 Mornealb 4 0 I 0Mostks3b 3 0 0 0 Doumitc 3 0 0 0 S.Perezc 4 0 3 0 Plouife3b 4 0 1 0 Hosmer1b 4 0 0 0 P armelrf 4 0 2 0 Francrrf 4 1 1 1 D ozier2b 3 0 1 0 L.caincf 3 0 1 0 Flormnss 3 0 0 0 Getz2b 4 I I 0 T otals 3 5 0 7 0 Totals 3 33 9 3 M innesota 000 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 0 Kansas City 1 0 0 0 0 0 20x — 3
E—Dozier (1), AEscobar(1), L.cain (1). DP-
Simon
2
4 2 2 1
3
WestbrookW1-1 9 5 0 0 4 H.Baileypitchedto 3baters inthe6th.
3
St. Louis
HBP—byWestbrook(Choo). T—2:35. A—34882(43,975).
Giants10, Rockies 0 SAN FRANCISCO — Buster Posey drove in three runs while NBA star Kevin Durant cheered him from the stands, Barry Zito pitched another
gem andSanFranciscocompleted a three-gamesweep of Colorado. Staked to aquick lead, Zito (2-0) won his11th straight decision,
4 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 2
2 I I 2 1
Zito W,2-0 7 7 0 0 1 J.Lopez I 0 0 0 0 Gaudin 1 0 0 0 0 WP — Zito. T—3:08. A—41,606(41,915).
4 I I
Escalona Volstad Ogavino Brothers San Francisco
12- 3 7 2 13 1 12-3 7 1130 1 1
7 0 3 3 0 0
Diamondbacks10, Pirates 2 PHOENIX — A.J. Pollock homered twice, doubled and drove
in four runs asArizona salvaged the finale of its three-game series
Moore and four Rays relievers combined on afive-hitter and
HendnksL,0-1 5
the day in azero-for-14 rut.
Butler(2),Francoeur(1). CS—Dozier (1). Minnesota IP H R E R BB SO against Pittsburgh. Pollock began 4
an scores in a ers'vi o The Associated Press PORTLAND — I t d i d n 't matter that it was the Rose Garden. The "M-V-P!"chant for Kobe Bryant wa s l oud and clear. Bryant scored a s easonhigh 47 points and carried the Los Angeles Lakers closer to a playoff berth with a 113-106 victory over the short-handed but tenacious Portland Trail Blazers on Wednesday night. The Lakers moved a full game up on the Utah Jazz f or th e e i g ht h a n d f i n a l playoff spot in the Western Conference. "We've got n o b r eathing room at all," Bryant said. "I'm still on edge. We've got to win three more games and we're in." Portland, missing the playoffs for the second straight season, has lost nine straight, the most since an 11-game skid in the 2005-06 season. Rookie Damian Li llard l ed the Blazers with a c a reerhigh 38 points. Pau Gasol had 23 points, seven rebounds and nine assists, while Dwight Howard added 20 points and 10 rebounds for the Lakers. Bry-
35-25 and the Blazers went on to lead 41-33 at the end of the first, their most points in the opening quarter this season. ant was 18 of 18 from the free throw line and played the enThe Lakers chipped away tire game, determined to pull at the lead and Bryant's long out a win after trailing early. jumper on the baseline closed Gasol knotted the game at Los Angeles to 50-48. 96 with a layup and a jumper ers Wesley Matthews (ankle), The Blazers led 69-61 at with 7:09 left. After Lillard's J.J. Hickson (back) and Nico- the break, but t h e L a k ers 15-footer, Gasol added anoth- las Batum (right shoulder). opened the second half with a 10-0 run capped by Howard's er jumper to tie it again. His As a result, two-time All-Star layup gave the Lakers a 102- LaMarcus Aldridge was the hook shot to pull ahead 71-69, 100 edge before Bryant hit a o nly veteran starting w i t h their first lead of the game. pair of free throws and added rookie forward Victor Claver, Howard's layLtp extended the a 23-foot jump shot with 4:09 guards L i l l ar d a n d Wi l l lead to 78-7L left to make it 106-100. Barton, and center Meyers T he Blazers w er e h u r t Howard's alley-oop dunk Leonard. when Claver rolled his ankle from Gasol with 53 seconds Matthews injured his right late in the third quarter and left made it 110-104 and all ankle i n P o r t land's 96-91 retreated to the locker room, but sealed it. loss to D a llas o n S u nday, but they stayed on the LakFor much of the game, it while Batum was missing his ers' heels, coming within 86seemed like Bryant the veter- fourth straight game with a 85 on Eric Maynor's running an against Lillard the upstart sore shoulder. Hickson says jumper and pulling in front rookie. he's been dealing with a pain- on Luke Babbitt's 3 pointer. "He's spectacular ... really ful lower back for the past M aynor's f a deaway p u t fantastic," Bryant said of the several games. Portland Ltp 95-90. Blazers' five-time rookie of "It was a very good effort But the rookies got off to an the month. "A lot o f p l ay- astonishingly fast start, going by our t eam, but u n fortuup 17-8 on Lillard's fadeaway nately we couldn't pull it oLtt," ers get hot, but he's got the Blazers coach Terry Stotts moves, patience, intelligence, jumper. Lillard banked in a the balance on his jumpers. 3-pointer to extend the lead said. "A couple of plays down He's the real deal." to 22-12 and the Blazers made the stretch could have gone Lillard has grown up adeight of their first nine shots either way, a couple of shots miring Bryant. from the field. could have gone either way. "I got to guard him and he He hit another 3 to make it For the most part, I thought
NBA ROUNDUP
got to guard me," Lillard said. "I enjoyed the challenge. " The deck was stacked from the start against the Blazers, who startedfour rookies for the first time in the team's history. Portland was without start-
Miley W,2-0 Ziegler Putz
5 1 3
Arizona
62-3 5 2 2 3 1130 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0
HBP—byJ.Sanchez(A.Marte). WP—Putz. T—2:52.A—I 7,769 (48,633).
lanco(2),Valaika(2). HR —Gattis (3), J.Francisco(1). SB — J.Schater (I). S—Minor. SF—Simmons. Atlanta IP H R E R BB SO Minor W,2-0 52 - 3 5 Gearrin 1130 Varvaro 2 2 Miami SanabiaL,1-1 5 8 Webb 2 I M.Dunn 1 1 Maine 1 3 T—2;48. A—13,810(37,442).
0 0 I 0 0 1 0 0 0
4 2 0
6 6 3 I I 2
4 0
0 0 0 1 1 0
1 1
Dodgers 4, Padres 3 SAN DIEGO — Carl Crawford led off with an opposite-field homer and A.J. Ellis added a two-run shot to back Chad Billingsley's
strong season debut and lead Los Angeles over SanDiego. Billingsley (1-0) openedthe
bruising his right index finger during a bunting drill on March15. He held SanDiego to onerun and five hits in six innings. Los Angeles San Diego ab r hbi ab r hbi Crwfrdlf 4 2 2 1 Evcarrss 4 1 2 0 J ansenp 0 0 0 0 Venalerf 4 1 1 1 L eague p 0 0 0 0 Denortilt 5 0 2 I
Phillies 7, Mets 3
M.Ellis 2b 5 0 2 1 Also 1b2b3b2b4 0 2 0 Kempct 5 0 2 0 Gyorko3b2b3b4 0 0 0 AdGnzl1b 5 0 1 0 Amarst2b 3 0 0 0 Ethierrf 3 0 1 0 Kotsayph-1b 1 0 0 0
PHILADELPHIA — Domonic
Brown and ChaseUtley homered in a five-run first, Kyle Kendrick threw six effective innings and Philadelphia beat New York.
Pinch-hitter Laynce Nix also went deep for the Phillies, who took two straight from the Mets to earn their first series win of the Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r hbi Vldspncf 5 0 3 0 Reverecf 3 0 0 0 DnMrp2b 3 0 0 0 Rollinsss 4 1 2 0
DWrght3b 4 0 0 0 Utley2b 4 I I 2 I.Davis1b 4 0 0 0 Howard1b 4 1 2 0 Buckc 4 1 1 1 MYong3b 3 1 2 0 D udalf 4 2 3 2 Brown f 3 1 1 3 B axterrf 2 0 2 0 Mayrryrf 4 0 0 0 R icep 0 0 0 0 Kratzc 4 1 1 0 Niwnhsph 1 0 0 0 Kndrckp 2 0 0 0 P amellp 0 0 0 0 I.Nixph 1 1 1 2 R Teladss 4 0 2 0 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 Hefnerp 1 0 0 0 MAdmsp 0 0 0 0 Turnerph 1 0 0 0 Galvisph 1 0 0 0 E dginp 0 0 0 0 Papenp 0 0 0 0 Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 B yrdrf 2 0 0 0 Totals 3 5 3 113 Totals 3 3 7 107 N ew York 010 1 0 0 0 10 — 3 Philadelphia 5 0 0 0 0 2 OOx— 7 DP — Philadelphia 3. LOB—NewYork7, Philadel-
L.cruz3b 5 1 2 0 Maybinci 4 0 0 0 A .Ellisc 5 1 1 2 Hundlyc 4 1 4 0 S ellersss 3 0 2 0 Stultsp 0 0 0 0 Blngslyp 2 0 0 0 Ransmph 1 0 0 0 B elisarip 0 0 0 0 Bassp 00 0 0 Schmkrph-If 1 0 0 0 Guzmnph 1 0 0 0 B rach p 0 0 0 0 T htchr p 0 0 0 0 JoBakrph 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 8 4 134 Totals 3 63 112 L os Angeles 1 2 0 0 1 0 000 — 4 S an Diego 000 1 0 0 0 02 — 3 DP — Los Angeles 2. I.OB—Los Angeles 12,
San Diego 10. 28 —Denorfia (3), Hundley (2). 38 — C.crawford(I). HR—C.crawford(I), A.Ellis(I). S—Bilingsley,Stults. Los Angeles IP H R ER 8 8 SO BillingsleyW,1 0 6 BelisarioH,2 1 JansenH,3 1 LeagueS,3-3 1
1 0 0 1
3 0 0 0
3 2 1 1
Stults L,1-1 5 8 4 4 Bass 2 2 0 0 Brach 1 1 0 0 Thatcher 1 2 0 0 HBP —byThatcher (Ethrer). PB—A.EIIls. T—3:22. A—22,843(42,524).
0 3 0 0
4 3 1 0
San Diego
5 1 1 0 2 0 3 2
Interleague Nationals 5, White Sox 2
phia 5.28—Duda(2), Baxter (1), Rogins (5),MYoung (2). HR —Buck(5), Duda2 (3), Utley(2), Brown(2), WASHINGTON — Bryce Harper L.Nix (I). CS —Valdespin (I), Revere(I). New York IP H R E R BB SO homered,l an Desmond had three HefnerL,0-2 Edgin Hawkins Rice Parnell
Philadelphia
3 6 2 1 2-3 3 2 1130 1 0
K.KendrickW,l-l 6 Bastardo Mi.Adams
1 1 1
8 1 1 1
5 5 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2 4 0 1 2
2 0 1 0
6 0 3 1
2 0 1 0
2 0 0 0
Papebon WP — K.Kendrick. T—2:55(Rain delay. 0:27). A—38,715(43,651).
Braves 8, Marlins 0 MIAMI — Evan Gattis hit a threerun homer and Atlanta completed
reeling Miami Marlins. Mike Minor orado 7,SanFrancisco13. 28—E.Young(2), Tuowitzki (2),Cuddyer(I), Scutaro(I), Posey(2), Belt(2), (2-0) pitched 5/s innings for the Torres(2), B.crawford(3). 38—Posey (1). S—Zito. Braves, whose 8-1 record leads SF — Scutaro. Colorado IP H R E R BB SO the majors.
ARLINGTON, Texas — Matt
0
2 2 2
Totals 3 3 0 7 0 Totals 4 010169 its second consecutive threeColorado 0 00 000 000 — 0 San Francisco 260 021 Ogx — 10 game sweep when it beat the E Nelson(1). DP SanFrancisco1. LOB Col-
Minnesota 1. LOB —Minnesota 12, KansasCity 9 28 — Mauer (2), S.Perez(3). 38—Plouffe (1). HR4 1 I
JSanchezL,0-2 3 1-3 8 9 9 4 Leroux 22-3 2 1 1 4 J.Hughes 2 0 0 0 0
Holliday (3), Ma.Adam s (2), Kozma(3). HR—Jay (2), Mcarpenter(1), Beltran (1), Ma.Adams(2) CS — Bruce(1). S—HBaiey Westbrook. year. Cincinnati IP H R E R 88 SO H.BaileyL,1-1 5 9 7 7 3 2 New York Ondrusek 1 1 1 1 0 0
FrancisL,1-1
sweep the three-gameset.
Arizona Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi SMartelf-cf 4 0 2 1 GParrarf 5 1 1 0 Tabatarf 3 0 0 0 Pollockci 5 3 3 4 GJonesph-rf 1 0 0 0 Prado3b 4 1 1 0 Mcctchci 2 1 0 0 Gldsch1b 2 2 1 0 Sniderlt 1 0 0 0 Hinske1b 1 0 0 0 G Snchz1b 3 0 1 0 MMntrc 3 1 1 1 R Martnc 2 0 0 0 Nievesc 1 0 0 0 M cKnrc 2 1 1 0 AMartelf 3 1 2 1 JHrrsn3b 4 0 1 1 Pnngtnss 3 0 1 1 Barmes ss 4 0 0 0 JoWilsn 2b 2 1 0 1 J McDnl2b 3 0 0 0 Mileyp 3 0 0 1 J Snchzp I 0 0 0 Zleglerp 0 0 0 0 L erouxp 1 0 0 0 Putzp 0000 Walkerph 0 0 0 0 JHughsp 0 0 0 0 PAlvrzph I 0 0 0 Totals 3 2 2 5 2 Totals 3 210109 P ittsburgh 000 1 0 0 1 0 0 — 2 Arizona 330 400 Ogx — 10 E—J.Sanchez(1), J.Harnson(1). DP—Pittsburgh 1, Arizona 1.LOB —Pittsburgh 7, Arizona8. 28-
S.Marte(2), McKe nry (1), Pollock(2), A.Marte(2). HR Pollock 2 (2). SB Pollock(1) S Miley Pittsburgh IP H R E R BB SO season on the disabled list after
in a span of sevenat-bats off
E—Victorino (1), BradleyJr. (1). DP Baltimore1. dating to lastyear's postseason. LOB —Baltimore 4, Boston3 2B—Saltalamacchia 2 (3). 38—Ellsbury (2). HR—Machado (I), Markakis Colorado San Francisco (1), C.Davis(5), Nava(3), Saltalamacchia (1). SBab r hbi ab r hbi A.casilla(2).SF—Victorino. E Yongcf 4 0 1 0 Pagancf 3 2 1 0 Baltimore IP H R E R BB SO Rutledg2b 4 0 0 0 GBlancph-cf 1 0 0 0 Arrieta 5 3 3 3 4 2 CGnzlzlf 2 0 0 0 Scutaro2b 3 0 2 1 Tom.Hunter I 2 2 2 0 2 Brignclf 1 0 0 0 Noonan2b 1 0 0 0 Patton 1 0 0 0 0 0 T lwtzk ss 3 0 1 0 Posey c 5 2 3 3 O'DayW,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 2 Otta vinp 0 0 0 0 J.Lopezp 0 0 0 0 Ji.Johnson S,3-3 1 0 0 0 0 1 Fowlerph 1 0 0 0 Gaudin p 0 0 0 0 Boston Brothrs p 0 0 0 0 Pence rf 5 1 0 0 Dempster 5 3 3 I 2 7 C uddyrrf 4 0 1 0 Arias3b 4 0 1 1 uehara 1 0 0 0 0 1 R osarioc 4 0 1 0 Belt1b 5 12 0 TazawaH2 , 1 0 0 0 0 2 P achec1b 4 0 0 0 Torreslf 5 1 3 2 A.BaiieyH,4 1 0 0 0 1 2 N elson3b 3 0 2 0 Bcrwfrss 5 I 2 I HanrahanL,O-I BS,1-42-3 3 5 5 2 I Francisp 0 0 0 0 Zitop 32 2 1 AMiller 13 0 0 0 0 I Escalnp 1 0 0 0 Quirozc 0 0 0 0 WP —Dempster,Hanrahan Torrealph 1 0 1 0 T—2:53(Raindelay:0:43). A—30,862(37071). Volstad p 0 0 0 0 J Herrrss I 0 0 0
DeRosa (1), Arencibia(4), Bonifacio(3), Mi.cabrera in the first two innings, Billy Butler (2). SB —Reyes(4), Me.cabrera(1). Toronto IP H R E R 88 SO and Jeff Francoeur homeredand Buehrle Delabar LoupW,1-0 Cecii H,l OliverH,2 JanssenS,2-2 1
0 0 0
Fien Kansas City W.DavisW,1-0 5
Central champions. ER BB SO
nearly10-year homesellout streak E—Lowrie (3), Hamilton (1), Callaspo (1). DP —Oakland 1.LOB— Oakland 13, Los Angeles ended after two seasons in which 13. 28—Cespedes(1), S.Smith 2(4), Donaldson (2), Pujols 2(3),Hamilton (2),Trumbo(4). 38—Moss(1). they missed the playoffs. HR Moss(2).SB Crisp (2), CYoung(1), Trout(1). SF — Hamilton. Baltimore Boston Oakland IP H R E R 88 SO ab r hbi ab r hbi Milone W,2-0 5
1132 1 1 0 0 2 1 1 0 12-3 1 0 0 2
Roenicke Duensing
Atlanta
Miami ab r hbi ab r hbi S mmnsss 4 1 1 2 Pierrelf 4 0 0 0 Heywrdrf 4 1 0 0 Solano2b 4 0 1 0 J.uptonlf 4 0 0 0 Stantonrf 4 0 1 0 Gattisc 4 1 2 3 Polanc3b 4 0 2 0 Uggla2b 4 2 1 0 Ruggincf 4 0 1 0 J Frncs3b 4 1 3 2 Olivoc 3000 CJhnsn 1b 5 0 2 1 MDunn p 0 0 0 0 J Schaircf 5 2 4 0 Mainep 0 0 0 0 Minorp 2 0 0 0 Coghlnph 1 0 1 0 Gearrin p 0 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 4 0 0 0 RJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 Valaika1b 3 0 1 0 V arvarp 0 0 0 0 Sanaiap 1 0 0 0 Kearns ph 0 0 0 0 Webbp 0 000 Skpwrtph-c 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 7 8 138 Totals 3 3 0 7 0 Atlanta 0 00 081 001 — 8 Miami 0 00 000 000 — 0 E M Dunn(1), Valaika(1) DP Atlanta1,Miami 2. LOB —Atlanta9, Miami8. 28—J.Schafer (1), Po-
extra-base hits and Washington beat Chicago to stay unbeaten at home. In a game that began 16 minutes late because, the
Nationals explained, the umpires got stuck in traffic, Washington starter Jordan Zimmermann (2-0) limited the White Sox to two runs
and seven hits in seven innings. Both runs scored on groundouts. Chicago
Washington ab r hbi ab r hbi D eAzact 4 1 1 0 Spanct 4 0 I I K ppngr2b 4 1 1 0 Werthrf 4 1 1 0 R iosrf 4 0 2 1 Harperlf 4 1 2 1 A.Dunn f 4 0 0 1 Zmrmn3b 4 0 1 1 Konerk 1b 4 0 1 0 LaRoch 1b 4 0 1 0 AIRmrzss 4 0 1 0 Dsmndss 4 2 3 0 Gillaspi3b 4 0 2 0 Espinos2b 4 1 2 2 F lowrsc 3 0 0 0 KSuzukc I 0 0 0 F loydp 2 0 0 0 Zmrmnp 1 0 0 0 V ealp 0 0 0 0 Storenp 0 0 0 0 NJonesp 0 0 0 0 TMooreph 1 0 0 0 Wiseph 1 0 1 0 RSorinp 0 0 0 0 HSantgp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 4 2 9 2 Totals 3 15 115 Chicago 1 00 001 000 — 2 Washington 0 0 0 2 1 2 00x- 6 DP — Chicago2, Washington1. LOB —Chicago5, Washington7. 28—DeAza(3), Rios(1), Desmond 2
(4), Espinosa(4).38—Desmond (1). HR—Harper (4). SB — Wise(1). CS—Rios(I) S—Zimmermann2. Chicago IP H R E R BB SO 5 1-3 9 5 Floyd L,0-2 Veal 0 1 0 12-3 1 0 N.Jones HSantiago 1 0 0 Washington Zimmermann W,2-0 7 7 2 StorenH,3 1 1 0 R.SorianoS,4-5 1 1 0 Veal pitched to1 batterinthe 6th. WP —Floyd T—2;35. A—24,586(41,418).
5 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
7 0 2 2
2 0 0 0 0 0
4 0 1
o ver azers ADELPHIA — J osh Smith h ad 28 points an d 1 2 r e bounds, John Jenkins added 21 points and Atlanta blitzed Philadelphia. Magic 113, Bucks 103: ORLANDO, Fla. — Nik Vucevic had a career-high 30 points and 20 rebounds, Tobias Harris added 30 points and 19 rebounds, and Orlando rallied for an overtime victory over Milwaukee. Pistons 111, Cavaliers 104: CLEVELAND Andre Washington (see story, C1). Drummond s cored a ca Nets 101, Celtics 93: BOS- reer-high 29 points and DeTON — DePork Williams had troit won a second straight 29 points and 12 assists to game for the first time in two lead Brooklyn over Boston. months. Kyrie Irving scored Brook Lopez scored 21 points 27 points for the Cavaliers. Kings 121, Hornets 110: and Joe Johnson added 20 for Brooklyn, which won for the SACRAMENTO, C a l if. 12th time in 18 games. John Salmons had 22 points, Suns 102, Mavericks 91: and Jason Thompson and DALLAS — P. J . T u Cker Marcus Thornton each added scored 17 points, including 20 to help Sacramento snap a two key baskets in the closing four-game losing streak. minutes, and Phoenix pushed Clippers 111, Timberwolves Dallas to the brink of playoff 95: LOS ANGELES — Blake elimination for the first time Griffin and Chris Paul led since 2000. The Suns blew a seven players in double fig14-point lead in the second Ures with 19 points apiece, q uarter and a l most di d i t and Los Angeles beat Minneagain in the fourth. sota for its franchise-record Hawks124, 76ers101: PHIL- 31st home win of the season. it was a w e ll-played game against a team that's pretty hungry to make the playoffs." Also on Wednesday: Nuggets 96, Spurs 86: DENVER — W i l so n C h andler scored 29 points and Corey Brewer had 2 8 a s D e nver o vercame a s lo w s t ar t t o post its franchise-record 21st straight home win. H eat 103, W i zards 9 8 : W ASHINGTON — Mi a m i clinched the best record in the NBA with a victory over
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
Masters Continued from C1 The hype over Woods is not that strong this year, though there is no doubt who is driving the conversation. Those who have played with him on the course or hit balls next to him on the range talked about how he never missed a shot. His putting has been pure since he got that tip from Steve Stricker last month at Doral. And it shows in the scores. Woods has won his past two tournaments, at Doral and Bay Hill, and neither was terribly close. When the Masters begins today, he is the odds-on favorite to end his five-year drought in the majors, and win a green jacket for the first time since 2005. Trouble is, Augusta National doesn't play favorites. "Obviously, Tiger i s T i ger," said Scott Piercy, who will play alongside Woods and Luke Donald in the opening two rounds. "He's always going to be that target. He knows it, and that's how he wants it. But there's a lot of
He might have been the only one who realized it. Johnson put the estimate at "0.5 percent" of those who could have pictured him in a green jacket. Then again, it's like that just about everywhere he goes. "The favorite is all media-driven, all publicdriven," Johnson said. "There are no surprises out there. There's probably 70 or 80 guys that you would not be surprised one bit if any of them won." Three-time Masters champion Nick Faldo didn't name them all, but his list kept growing when he talked about 20 players who could win the Masters, all from what he referred to as the second tier and described as "pretty
darn good." Justin Rose, Ian Poulter and Luke Donald. Brandt Snedeker and Bill Haas. Louis Oosthuizen and Schwartzel. "Yes, Tiger is the favorite," Faldo said. "He's strong. He's determined. We will see. But
he's going to be chased by a lot of really good players."
Robert Garrigusconsidered the past few weeks on the PGA Tour to illustrate how fickpeople getting closer. And the golfing gods, le this game can be. Martin Laird had missed or whatever you want to call them, have a lot the cut in half his tournaments and had yet to to do with winning. A bounce here, a bounce crack the top 30 when he closed with a 63 to there. A lip in, a lip out." win the Texas Open. D.A. Points had missed Angel Cabrera got one of those bounces off seven cuts in nine tournaments and had not a pine tree and back into the 18th fairway in finished in the top 60 when he won the Hous2009 that helped him save par and win a play- ton Open. "I saw the odds on Tiger last night and I off on the next hole. Sure, he was a former U.S. Open champion, but the big Argentine thought, 'Man, you just never know what's was No. 69 in the world that year, the lowest- going to happen,'" Garrigus said. "I saw I was ranked player to ever win the Masters. like 200-to-l, and thought if I could bet I might The hole got in the way twice for Charl throw a couple of hundred dollars on me." Schwartzel in 2011, once on a chip across the Woods is annoyed that seven Masters have first green that fell for birdie, another a shot come and gone since he last sat in Butler Cabfrom the third fairway that dropped for eagle. in with his green jacket, though he looks at He finished with four straight birdies to win. his record and isn't worried. He keeps giving It has been 11 years since the No. 1 player himselfchances, and he figures one of these in the world — Woods — won the Masters. years, everything will fall into place. There is always the usual assortment of It all starts today, with the biggest concern players who seem to contend every year for a weather system that was due to arrive bea green jacket. Phil Mickelson is a three-time fore the weekend and could alter the nature of Masters champion, his most recent in 2010 the course. It has been beautiful all week, the when he arrived at Augusta National with- kind of weather that allows officials to set the out having come close to winning that year. golf course for birdies or for pars, whatever Fred Couples was tied for the 36-hole lead last they choose. year at age 52. Rory Mcllroy has shown he All eyes will be on Woods, though this can play the course, at least on the weekdays. might require some patience. Woods has broLee Westwood has been among the top three ken 70 only once in the first round in his 16 twice since 2010. years at Augusta as a pro. His average score But for every Woods there is Zach John- is 71.9. "I think everybody has the same thought son. For every Mickelson there isTrevor Immelman. on Tiger: We'll worry about that Sunday afJohnson was just a normal guy from Cedar ternoon," Snedeker said. "I'm sure he's going Rapids, Iowa, who would not seem to fit the to be up there. I think everybody has a comprofile of a Masters champion. He wasn't very plete idea of knowing he's probably playing long, didn't hit the ball very high and didn't go the best golf in the world right now, hands for the green in two on any of the par 5s. He down. If I'm there Sunday afternoon with Tiwon by two shots in 2007. ger Woods at some point ... it's probably going "I thought I was playing good that week," to be a good week because he's going to be Johnson said. somewhere close."
The Masters,ata glance
Players towatch
Site:Augusta, Ga. Schedule:Thursday-Sunday.
Here are five players to watch at the Masters not
Gourse:AugUsta National Golf Club (7,435
yards, par 72). Purse:TBA($8 million in 2012). Winner's share: TBA ($1.44 million in 2012).
Television:ESPN(Thursday-Friday, noon-4:30 p.m., 5-8p.m.)andCBS (Saturday,noon-4 p.m.; Sunday, 11a.m-4 p.m.i. Last year:BubbaWatson won his first major title, beating South Africa's Louis Oosthuizen
with a par on thesecond hole of a playoff. Watson hooked agapwedgeoffpineneedles from155 yards to aboUt10 feet to set Up his
winning two-putt par. Last week:Scotland's Martin Laird won the
Texas Open,matching the course record with a 9-Under 63 to beat Rory Mcllroy by two strokes. Laird earned the last spot at Augusta.
Notes:Tiger Woods is coming off consecutive
named Tiger Woods: Rory Mcllroy:BoyWonder hasagedthis season after an equipment switch (or is it swoosh? and j
an embarrassing toothache-related tournament walk-off. To say the 23-year-old bomber has the
game to win is anextreme understatement, but is his mind sharp enough? Phil Mickelson:For Mickelson, the Masters is like Christmas Eve for Santa Claus: It's his time to shine. Lefty has won here three times since 2004, and he'll Use a new club this year — a low-running 3-wood/driver mash-up dubbed "X Hot Phrankenwood" by Callaway. Budda Watson:It's hard to envision the lefty
bomber will join Jack Nicklaus, Nick Faldoand Woods as repeat winners, but Bubba has the chops. He also has the motivation, given that
wife Angie andson Caleb will be here this time as witnesses.
Luke Donald:He hit 80.4 percent of his fairways lastyear at Augusta National but still didn't finish Cadillac Championship andArnold Palmer in the top 30. Donald's hope is that after falling Invitational, and also won the Farmers Insurance to No. 4 in the world, he'll have less pressure to Open in February. Heregained the top spot in justify the billing as the world's top player. the world ranking with his victory three weeks Guan Tianlang:What were you doing at14? at Bay Hill. Woods set the tournament record Probably not competing on theworld's biggest of18-under 270 in1997 and also won in 2001, victories in the World Golf Championships-
2002 and 2005. Hehas14 major victories, the lastin the 2008 U.S.Open,and 77 PGA Tour titles.... Phil Mickelson, the 2004 and 2010
champion, won the Phoenix Open inFebruary
stage. Officials groupedGuanwith Matteo
Manassero, the youngest to make a Masters cut
(at16), and BenCrenshaw, whose 2012 Masters drives averaged just 235.8 yards.
for his 40th PGA Tour title.
— From wire reports
PREP ROUNDUP
Redmondboys, Bendgirls triumph at dual trackmeet Bulletin staff report REDMOND — Gabe Giacci broke his personal best in the discus by 16 feet Wednesday, winning the event at the Bend-Redmond Intermountain Conference dual track and field meet with a t o ss of 159 feet, 10 inches to lead the Panther boys to an 81-64 victory. Giacci's throw, which bested teammate Anthony Gonz alez's runner-up mark o f 127-02 by more than 30 feet, is the farthest boys discus toss in the state so far this season, regardless of c l assification. Panther junior Kyle Tinnell added wins in the 100-meter dash (11.53 seconds) and long
feat the Gladiators 11-1 in five innings in a Tri-Valley Conference matchup.Robert Fine finished with a two-for-four day at the plate for Madras (75 overall, 1-2 TVC), and Andrew Fine was two for three with a double and a triple. SOFTBALL
Lava Bears sweep IMC twin
bill: Bend High responded to a Summit three-run fourth inning with three runs in the bottom half to take a 4-3 lead, followed by two runs in the fifth and another in the sixth to seal a 7-3 Intermountain C onference win a n d c o m plete the sweep of the visiting Storm. The Lava Bears defeated Summit 15-5 in six jump (20-08'/2). innings in t h e d oubleheadThe Lava Bears also had a er's opening game, as Bend's pair of multiple-event cham- Awbrie Elle K i nkade went pions. Freshman Caleb Hofftwo for three with four runs mann won the 800 (2:05) and batted in. Justine Freeman 1,500 (4:42.70) and Joel John- was two for three with two s on posted victories in t h e RBIs for the Lava Bears (5-6 pole vault (13-00) and javelin overall, 2-0 IMC). Jacqueline (149-03). Manley led Summit (1-10, 0Bend High won the girls 2) by going two for three with meet, 83-61. A lexa E v ert, a home run and four RBIs. a sophomore, recorded the In the second contest, Sumfastest times in the 100- and mit rode a two-run double by 300-meter hurdles to pace Aubrey Clemans to gain a 3Bend. Cheyenne Tinnell led 1 advantage in the top of the the Panthers with wins in the fourth inning, but the Lava discus, javelin and shot put. Bears answered with three of Redmond senior Tefna Mitch- their own in the bottom of the ell-Hoegh added victories in inning and regained control. Megan Berrigan gave Bend the 800 and 1,500. In other Wednesday action: some breathing room in the BASEBALL sixth with a pair of RBIs. Ridgeview 11 , M o u ntain Madras 8, Estacada 6: ESView 7: The visiting Ravens TACADA — The White Bufjumped out to a 5-0 lead after faloes fell behind 6-3 heading the top of the first inning and into the top of the fifth inning, used two runs in the fifth and b ut with a ru n i n t h e f i f t h another in the sixth to seal an and four more in the sixth, I ntermountain Hybrid w i n . Madras remained perfect in Dakota Schaumburg record- league play with the Tri-Valed three hits and two runs ley Conference win. Caitlin batted in for the Ravens (8-3 Hulsey paced the Buffs by overall), David Lacock added g oing two fo r f ou r w i t h a a pair of hits and two RBIs, double and three runs batted and Mitch Springer smacked in — two of which came in a home run to lead Ridgeview the pivotal sixth inning — as to victory. The Cougars (3-6) M adras i m proved t o 1 1 - 3 were paced by John Nieto's overalland 3-0 in conference three hits and an RBI. Kyler action. Sarah Brown was two Ayers chipped in with a solo for four with a d ouble and home run. three runs scored, and Inez Redmond 10, Crook County Jones went one for four with 5: The Panthers broke open a stolen base. a close game with six runs in Sisters 18, La Pine 1: SISthe fifth inning on their way TERS — The Outlaws imto an Intermountain Hybrid proved to 4 - 1 i n S k y - Em victory. Redmond (8-4 over- League play with th e f iveinning blowout against the all) held a 3-2 lead before its offense erupted in the fifth. Hawks. C assidy E d w ards Brayden Bordges led the Pan- earned the victory for Sisters thers with a triple, a sacrifice (10-2 overall) and hit a threefly and three runs batted in. run home ru n a n d s cored four runs. Taylor Nieri added Austin Ontjes doubled, singled and had two RBIs, while a double and scored three J.D. Abbas went two for four times. La Pine, which fell to with a triple and two stolen 0-10 overall and 0-5 in league bases. Charles Payne and play, issued 15 walks during Adam Rainville both doubled the game. BOYS TENNIS and singled for the Panthers, North Marion 4, Madras 4 and Cam Peters added two singles and two stolen bases. Dylan Wilson had two RBIs
to pace Crook County (4-7). Jeffrey Turbitt and Stetson Hall both doubled, and Brandon Alexander scored twice. Madras 11, Gladstone 1: MADRAS — Devin Ceciliani was three for four with two runs batted in, and the White Buffaloes scored five runs in the bottom of the fifth to de-
(North Marion wins in sets 98): MADRAS — The White Buffaloes took all four dou-
bles matchups after dropping each singles contest, but the Huskies from Aurora came out on top by winning nine sets, compared to M a dras' eight. Caleb Freshour and Alexsis Penaloza, Eliceo Garcia and Jordan Gemelas, and Oved Felix and Jered Pichette each won in straight sets. The decision came at No. 3 doubles, where Kody Turner and Colby Jack-Parks defeated North Marion's Tony Caballero and Klayton Pippert 3-6, 7-5, 6-4. By taking the first set, the Huskies were able to edge the Buffs 9-8 in sets. GIRLS TENNIS R edmond 8 , S i s ters 0 : REDMOND — The Panthers cruised in the nonleague dual match, dropping just one set to the Outlaws. Redmond's top two singles players, Kendall M arshall an d J e ssica Brunot, w er e p a r t i cularly dominant, as the two Panthers lost just two games between them. North Marion 4, Madras 4 (North Marion wins in s ets 9 -8): AURORA — M e g a n Foristall and I t zel R omero claimed wins at No. 2 and No. 4 singles, respectively, and the tandems of Kaitlyn Carter and Ivette Ruiz, and Diana Gonzalez and Jessica Gonzalez won their respective doubles matchups for the White Buffaloes. The host Huskies t ook the overall victory i n sets, though, winning ni ne compared to Madras' eight. TRACK AND FIELD Steen leads Ridgeview to win: REDMOND — C r o ok County's Hannah Troutman claimed victories in the shot put, javelin and triple jump, but behind D akota Steen's wins in th e 400-meter run and 300-meter hurdles,the Ravens defeated the Cowgirls 301-249. Steen also ran the anchor leg of the winning 1,600meter relay squad. For the boys, Crook County picked up wins in 11 of the 17 events, led by Chance Sutfin's victories in the shot put and discus, en route to 361'/~ points, besting Ridgeview's 252 '/~. Tanner Stevens and Phelan Lund paced the Ravens, with Stevens winning the 200-meter dash and placing second in the 100 and Lund taking the javelin and finishing runnerup in the shot put.
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t'REEN P R E V I E W
NHL
sions in the Eastern Conference, includingthe Red Wings Continued from C1 and BlueJackets moving over from the West. The Jets will The Capitals would be in t he mix w i t h O t t awa a n d now be part o f a W e stern the New York Islanders (44 Conference that's made up of points each) for the eighth two seven-team divisions. and final spot, playing down The new format also crethe stretchfor a postseason ates changes in determining berth, not l o o king t o ward the 16-team playoff field. The home ice. top three teams in each diviShould AlexOvechkin and sion will qualify for the postthe surging Capitals slip, Win- season. The next two teams nipeg could pounce and take with the best records in each advantage of the inane rule. c onference wil l t h e n e a r n The Jets trail Washington by wild-card berths. two points in the Southeast, That will make it more difeven though they are tied in ficult for teams to qualify in p oints with th e Ne w Y o r k the East, because it will have Rangers, who are eighth in two more clubs than the West the East. competing for eight berths. Problems for another year. The Jets-Capitals game on April 23 could be the differ- Right now, it's about getting ence in seed No. 3 or No. 8 in — any way you can. — or maybe no seed at all and Washington (five straight a date with the golf course. wins) and Winnipeg (two The NHL has this system straight) understand that, and because it wants to make di- they are playing like it. After vision races matter, and also all, the label of that No. 3 seed because of a n u n b alanced would allow one of them to schedule that is on it s l ast dodge a likely date with the days with realignment on the streaking Penguins in Round way. 1. The new format goes into Stay in third, and there's effect next season, and will a better chance of advancfeature two eight-team divi- i ng. T h e C a p i tals w o u l d
play Ottawa, a No. 6 seed, based on standings through Wednesday. But, once the playoffs start, often times that discrepancy in talent and point production filters out, regardless of seed. Last year, for instance, Florida snagged that No. 3 seed — and home ice — and still lost in the first round to No. 6 New Jersey. "I think anyone who's competitive, you might not watch it every day, but you kind of have a good feel for it," Penguins d efenseman B r ooks Orpik said of the race. "I think we've positioned ourselves now that we don't have to worry about trying to get every single little point to get in, which is good." Pittsburgh clinched the Atlantic Division title by beating the free-falling Carolina Hurricanes 5-3 Tuesday. The Penguins became the first team in the NHL to claim a division crown in this shortened season. The Blackhawks are close
to wrapping up a division crown, even as Anaheim is on the brink of clinching a playoff berth. Blackhawks goalie
Ray Emery k nows even if the seeds aren't n ecessarily fair for a couple of teams, the best ones can win out in t he playoffs no m atter t h e circumstances. " Obviously, i t' s n i c e t o have home ice throughout, but I think it's more important to be playing really well going in," said Emery, who w atched from a fa r a s t h e Kings — playing as the final seed in the West — won the Stanley Cup last June. "You look at past playoffs, where L.A. comes in at No. 8. So, I don't think the standings are necessarily as important as
2 0 1 3
On May 12, The Bulletin will drive headlong into the Central Oregon golf season with Tee to Green, our annual spring golf preview! This highly anticipated product will be packed with information on the courses that make this one of the finest golf destinations in the nation. Tee to Green will reach over 70,000 Bulletin print readers and thousands more online, making it the premier locals guide to golf in Central Oregon — and the best way to reach the local golfer with your marketing message!
FEATURES INCLUDE: • What's new in 2013 • Central Oregon course index • Comprehensive tournament schedule • Central Oregon junior Golf Association coverage ...and much more! A 2,500 copy over-run will be included with additional copies being distributed to all local coursesand advertisers in the preview.
playing well." Chicago an d P i t t sburgh can rest up over the final two weeks before th e p l ayoffs
begin April 30. They'll earn their spot as the top seeds. But perhaps the right idea is to seed teams Nos. 1-8 based on points. Some front office personnel say there has to be a reward for winning the division, making the current system the right one. There may not be a right a nswer — but i t c a n s u r e make for interesting postsea-
son hockey.
22
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Mountain Medical
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C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.comn/buiinss. Alsoseearecapin Sunday's Businesssection.
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
+
NASDAO
+128.78
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Toda+
+
Still in the black?
1,56o
Will Rite Aid make it two consecutive quarters in the black? The drugstore chain turned in its first quarterly profit in nearly five years in December, when it reported its fiscal third-quarter results. An influx of generic drugs helped boost earnings, while non-pharmaceutical product sales also increased. Rite Aid reports its latest quarterly results today.
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ALK 31.29 ~ A VA 22.78 ~ BAC 6 72 — BBSI 18 88 — BA 6 6 . 82 — Spotlight on Pier 1 CascadeBancorp C ACB 4.23 ~ Wall Street anticipates that Pier 1 Columbia Bnkg CDLB 16.18 Imports will report improved fiscal Columbia Sporlswear COLM 45,37 — fourth-quarter earnings today. CostcoWholesale COST 81.98 — Strong holiday customer traffic Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 and higher spending by shoppers FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 helpedthe home decor company Home Federal BncpID HOME 8.67 kick off the first month of the INTC 19.23 December-February period with an Intel Corp K EY 6 . 80 8.2 percent annual increase in sales Keycorp Kroger Co KR 2098 — at stores open at least a year. The LSCC 3.17 sales measure is a key indicator of a Lattice Semi LA Pacific L PX 7 . 81 retailer's financial performance. MDU Resources MDU 19.59 — Mentor Graphics MENT 12,85 — Microsoft Corp M SFT 26.26 ~ Nike Inc 8 NKE 42,55 — Nordstrom Inc JWN 46.27 ~ Nwst Nat Gas N WN 41.01 ~ Qll' OfficeMax Inc DMX 41 0 ~ PaccarInc PCAR 35,21 — • .4 Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 ~ Plum Creek PCL 35,43 — Prec Castparts PCP 150.53 ~ Safeway Inc SWY 14,73 — Schnitzer Steel S CHN 22.78 ~ Sherwin Wms SHW 108,96 — Stancorp Fncl SFG 28.74 — StarbucksCp SBUX 43.04 ~ Triquint Semi T QNT 43 0 ~
0 0 0
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USB 28.58 ~ WAFD 14.30 ~ 1 WFC 29.80 — 0 WY 1 8,60 — 0
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e d n esday's close: $48.77
Total return this year:37% 3-YR* : 44% April
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52-WEEK RANGE
1 0-YR *: 15%
~
~
~
$49
Market value: $8.9 billion
*annuallzed
FundFocus
SOURCE: FactSet
SelectedMutualFunds
This stock fund has a 5-star rating from Morningstar with gold-medal Marketsummary honors. Its 5- and 10-year records Most Active are among the best in the NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG large-cap blend category, and S&P500ETF 1184847 158.67 +1.92 porffolio turnover is kept low. 12.32 + . 07 30.28 + . 67 18.50 + . 25 22.26 + . 51 3 52 t I 5 10.09 + . 52 42.50 + . 41 27.57 + . 98 93.89 +1.67
Gainers
FMI Lgcap VALUE
FMIHX BL EN D
GR OWTH
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to
+67 . 1 +24 . 1 «C +23 . 5 $$ +17. 5 «C +16 . 3 $o + 1 5.4 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ +15 . 1 +14. 9 O e Fund target represents weighted +14. 7 average of stock holdings +14 . 6 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings
Losers NAME LAST S ynrgyPh 6. 0 1 H ltMgmt 10 . 5 3 SynrgyP wt 2. 85 TitanMach 2 2.45 HrvrdBio 4.84
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5
A. Veiga, J. Sohn • AP
+1. 3 4 +.56 +.39 t .35 +.59 +1 . 1 2 +.64 t .30 t .75 +.39
5-Y R*: 21%
Total returns through April 10
AP
Source: FactSet
3 .34 2 .88 2 .05 2 .35 4 .20 Tetraphase n 8.38 KiDR 4 .89 Chantic rs 2 .31 Pizzalnn 5 .85 Synacor 3 .06
t 19.6 ~ V
$19 ~
Price-earnings ratio (Based on past 12 months' results):26
L AST
+38.5 +6 7 .5 7 7 5 14 +13. 0 +1 1 .6 28 3 2 1 1 . 22f +6 1 +37 61 0 2813 47 0 0 4 + 48 5 + 15 8,0 1 1 4 2 9 0,5 2 +16.5 +22 .9 45 23 1 7 1 . 94f +4.5 +11. 7 7 50 w +19.0 -0.5 44 9 1 8 0 .40f L +10 5 +2 73 60 20 0 88 w + 7 . 1 + 2 9.6 163524 1 .10a
Constellation Brands capped its fiscal million, or 51 cents per share, in the year with a 21 percent drop in net income prior-year period. in the fourth quarter. The wine, beer and The current quarter included a $9.7 liquor company's results million loss on the write-off of financing COmPany were hurt by a write-off and costs and a $25.1 million income tax Spotligilt income tax costs. provision. The year-ago period included The company, whose a $22.5 million income tax benefit. Exbrands include Robert Mondavi, Clos du cluding the write-off and other items, Bois and Simi, earned $81.7 million, or 43 earnings were 47 cents per share. cents per share, for the three months Analysts polled by FactSet forecast ended Feb.28.That compares with $103 earnings of 45 cents per share.
Constellation Brands (STZ) w
330
NAME RoyaleEn InstFnMkts Cache rt S&W wtA WashFd wt
w V L L L V
Constellation Brands profit falls
est. 363
BkofAm 1028132 Microsoft 692857 SPDR Fncl 655350 Intel 655133 NokiaCp 643543 MicronT 489013 iShEMkts 469634 Facebook n 449924 iShR2K 434937
%CHG. wK Mo OTR YTD +0.88% L L +12.96% +1.79% +16.48% +0.76% +15.04% +1.11% L T +8.83% +1.83% +9.20% +1.22% tt1.33% +1.35% +1 2.60% +1.24% +11.67% +1.80% +11.39%
Dividend Footnotes:a - Extra dividends were paid, ttut are not included. tt - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, wh>cttwas mcreased bymost recent diwdend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends pad after stock split, no regular rate. I - Sum of nvidends pad tns year. Most recent awdend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pad tns year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. r - Declared or paid in precedmg t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, apprcx>matecash value on ex-distrittution date. FeFootnotes:q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - 8/6 exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last t2 months
390
29
A
CHG %CHG -1.23 -17.0 -2.06 -16.4 —.51 -15.2 -3.67 -14.0 -.76 -13.6
JKS
Close:$5.40 V-0.40 or -6.9% The Chinese solar products maker said that it took a bigger loss during its fourth quarter as prices remained weak. $10
CATEGORY Large Blend MORNINGSTAR
R ATING™ *** * *
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 21.92 +.16 +7 .9 +16.4 t11.1 +6.4 A A A BondA m 1 2.92 -.02 +0 .4 +4.2 +5.9 + 43 D D E CaplncBuA m 56.01+ .51 t 7 . 1 +16.3 +9.4 +36 A A C CpWldGrlA m 39.97+.52 +7.9 +20.6 +7.9 + 1.9 A C C EurPacGrA m 42.76+.60 +3.7 +14.8 +4.4 + 05 D C A FnlnvA m 4 4.63 +.52 +9.8 +19.8 +10.5 + 40 8 C D GrthAmA m 37. 5 5 +.45 +9.3 +19.2 +9.8 + 39 A C D IncAmerA m 19 .32+.17 t 7 . 9 +17.6 +11.0 t 59 A A A InvCoAmA m 33.34+.42 +11.0 +19.7 +9.9 + 45 8 D C NewPerspA m 33.46 +.46 +7.0 +17.6 +8.9 + 39 C 8 B WAMutlnvA m 34.55 +.35 t1 1.3 +20.1 +12.9 + 51 D A B Dodge &Cox Inc o me 1 3.88 -.02 +0.9 + 5 . 5 + 6.2 +6.9 C C 8 IntlStk 36.58 +.76 + 5 .6 + 20.4 +5.0 +0.9 A 8 A Stock 137.05+1.72 + 12.9 +27.5 +11.3 +4.3 A 8 C Fidelity Contra 84.39 +.99 +9.8 +13.5 +12.0 +5.7 C A 8 GrowCo 101.6 9+1.68 + 9 .1 + 10.5 +13.0 +7.0 D A A LowPriStk d 44 . 00 +.51+ 11.4 +20.8 +12.6 +8.3 C 8 A Fidelity Spartan 50 0ldxAdvtg 56 . 27 +.69+12.0 +19.5 +12.3 +5.4 B A B FrankTemp-Frankliln ncome A m 2.34 +.01+6.5 +17.4+10.3 +6.4 A A A Income C m 2.3 6 + .01 + 6 .3 + 16.6 +9.8 +5.8 A A 8 Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19.2 2 +.22 +10.8 +16.0 +10.9 +4.4 D C C RisDivB m 17.4 1 +.20 + 10.5 +15.0 +9.9 +3.5 E D D RisDivC m 17.3 2 +.20 + 10.5 +15.1 +10.0 +3.6 E D D SmMidValA m 36.75 +.43 +13.4 +19.5 +8.0 +1.8 D E E SmMidValB m 30.97 +.36 + 13.2 +18.5 +7.1 +1.0 E E E PIMCO TotRetA m 11.2 8 - .02 + 0 .9 + 7 . 1 + 6 .6 +7.3 8 8 A T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 29.57 +.32 t 1 2.3 + 23.5 t11.1 t5.2 A 8 8 40.93 +.59 +8.3 +1 0.7 +11.9+6.3 D 8 B GrowStk HealthSci 48.25 +.76 t 1 7.1 + 36.4 t21.8 t15.3 A A A Vanguard 500Adml 146.42+1.77 +12.0 +19.5 t12.3 t5.5 8 A 8 500lnv 146.42+1.78 +12.0 +19.4 t12.2 t5.4 8 A 8 CapDp 39.44 +.67 t17.3 +30.9 +10.6 +6.7 A C A Eqlnc 27.12 +.31 +13.0 +22.6 +15.1 +6.9 8 A A GNMAAdml 10.88 +.01 +0.4 +2.0 +5.2 +5.6 C A A STGradeAd 10.81 +0.5 t3.4 +3.4 +4.0 8 8 B StratgcEq 24.33 +.34 t13.4 +23.7 +14.3 +6.5 8 A C Tgtet2025 14.52 +.12 +6.8 +14.1 +8.9 +4.7 8 8 A TotBdAdml 11.03 -.03 +0.3 t3.3 +5.6 +5.5 D D D Totlntl 15.53 +.20 t3.9 +15.3 +3.9 -1.0 D D C TotStlAdm 39.79 +.50 t12.I +20.0 +12.5 +6.1 8 A A TotStldx 39.78 +.50 t12.I +19.9 +12.4 +6.0 8 A A USGro 23.43 +.33 +10.2 +13.4 +11.3 +6.0 C 8 8 Welltn 36.43 +.24 +8.3 +16.2 +10.2 +6.4 A A A FAMILY
FUND
ASSETS $7,210 million EXP RATIO 0.96% MANAGER Matthew Goetzinger SINCE 2009-01-30 RETURNS3-MD +9.5 Foreign Markets YTD +12.8 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +21.0 Paris t72.99 + 1.99 3,743.71 3-YR ANNL +11.0 London 6,390.82 t 77.61 t 1 . 2 3 5-YR-ANNL +7.6 Frankfurt 7,810.63 tt73.12 + 2 .27 Hong Kong 22,034.56 t t64.22 t .75 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico 44,386.65 t 413.47 t .9 4 Bank of New York Mellon Corp 5.57 Milan 15,928.64 t492.57 t 3 . 19 3M Co 5.38 Tokyo 13,288.13 + 95.78 + . 7 3 5.17 Stockholm 1,193.65 +18.03 +1.53 Berkshire Hathaway lnc Class 8 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption Sydney -6.52 -.13 Sysco Corporation 4.48 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 4,973.70 Zurich 7,771.37 t t17.42 t 1 . 5 3 TE Connectivity Ltd 4.32 redemption fee. Source: Morningstac
44
1.3058+
pp4g
MSC Industrial MSM Close:$79.89V-3.29 or -4.0% The distributor of industrial tools said that its second-quarter net income fell 7 percent, and posted a disappointing outlook. $90 80
J
F M 52-week range
$2.$$ ~
J
A
$10.07
Volc1.2m (3.2x avg.)
P E:.. Yield: ..
CarMax
64.55 59.7 0 +. 6 5 +1 .1 L L 28.05 27. 2 5 +. 1 9 +0.7 L L 1294 1232 + 0 7 +0 6 L L 5384 56 . 55 +3,31 +62 L L 87.49 87 .82 + . 61 +0.7 L L 7.18 6.54 +.03 +0 .5 L V 22.5 0 21.34 + .25 t 1 . 2 59,94 58.97 +.46 +0.8 L L 10 7 .75105.75 -.04 8.92 7.75 + .15 +2.0 27.16 26.00 +.32 +1.2 w 25.40 22.32 +.10 +0.5 L 14.00 12.13 +.08 +0.7 w L 29.27 22.26 + .51 $-2.3 L L 10.19 10 .03 +.18 +1.8 L L 33.28 32 .65 +.59 +1.8 L L 6 .58 5 . 4 4 + 15 + 2 8 L L 22.55 20 .00 -.52 -2.5 V V 25.00 24 .66 +.18 +0.7 L L 18.11 17 .58 +.14 +0.8 L L 32.89 30.2 8 +. 6 7 +2 .3 L L 60 25 60 .29 + . 40 +07 L L 5 8.44 55.8 1 +. 9 7 +1 .8 L L 50.80 45.3 4 +. 6 1 +1 .4 L L 1 492 1177 + 20 + 1 7 L w 51,38 50 .15 +1.15 +2,3 L W 23 .6 1.98 -.01 -0.5 L W 52 64 51 .80 +. 3 2 +0,6 L L 196. 0 0 18 7.30 +2.24 +1.2 L W 26,54 25 .92 + . 3 0 +1,2 L L 41.55 26.1 1 ... ... L w 17 2 ,41168.27 +1.93 +1,2 L V 43.02 41 .70 + . 6 1 +1.5 L w 62.00 57. 8 0 +. 3 9 + 0.7 V 6 14 5 2 0 + 21 + 42 L L
UMPQ 11.17 ~
Initial jobless claims In thousands, weekly total
22
M
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 Source FactSet AvistaCorp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co
15
CHG.
14826.66 14673.46 14802.24 +128.78 6184.08 6072.86 6181.33 +108.47 522.66 517.33 521.25 +3.92 9194.62 9111.62 9189.09 +100.71 3299.16 3245.80 3297.25 +59.39 1589.07 1568.61 1587.73 tt 9.12 1149.33 1133.82 1149.00 +15.28 16757.45 16540.58 16745.03 +204.45 946.99 931.31 946.09 tt 6.75
F
'
StoryStocks
Mkt. Cap:$119.8 m
based on past 12 months' results
8
D
+
The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose Wednesday for a third straight day, its longest winning streak in more than four weeks. Technology stocks led the way and helped push the S&P 5DD to a record high during the day's trading. The index had set a record high for its closing price last month, but Wednesday was the first time it topped the 1,576 level that it reached during the middle of trading on Oct. 11, 2007. Stocks in the health care and industrial sectors also had strong gains, and 26 of the 30 stocks in the Dow Jones industrial average rose for the day. The Nasdaq composite had the biggest gains among the market's big three indexes. JinkoSolar Holding
NorthwestStocks
Price-earnings ratio: Lost money
March
Close: 14,802.24
14,500
1,360
CRUDEDIL $94.64
23
Dow jones industrials
1,440
OPerating $0 18I EPS ~ $0 .0 0 4Q '11 4 Q '12
300
+
$27.64
15,000
NYSE NASD
360
.
14,360
1,520
' '13
The number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits has been mostly rising in recent weeks. The increase coincides with a sharp decline in job growth last month,when U.S. employers added only 88,000 jobs. That was the smallest gain in nine months. Economists expect that figures due out today will show unemployment benefit claims declined to 363,000 last week from 385,000 a week earlier.
SILVER
GOLD $1,558.30
' i)5
'
14 600
1,600
$1.79
Unemployment benefit claims
+
S&p 500 -
1.5
0.5
10 YR T NOTE
1,587.73
1,6oo
Thursday,Apnttt, 2013
RAD $2.0 '12
S&P 500
+ qg qp
5g 3g
KMX Close:$43.31 A1.63 or 3.9% The used car dealership chain's fourth-quarter profit rose 13 percent as improved inventory and financing offers drove up sales. $45
F M 52-week range
A
$$1.$$ ~
$$7.$2
VolJ 2.1m (5.3x avg.) P E: 19 . 3 Mkt. Cap:$3.86 b Yiel d : 1. 5 %
Pacific Sunwear
PSUN
Close:$2.42%0.17 or 7.6%
A Piper Jaffray analyst upgraded her rating on the retailer's stock, saying that its new lineup is a hit with teen-
agers. $3.0 2.5
40
2.0 J
F M 52-week range
$24.83 Vol.:3.7m (2.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$9.88 b
A
J
F M 52-wcek range
$43.42 $177 ~ P E: 23 .9 Vol.:699.6k (3.3x avg.) Yield: ... Mkt Cap $1655 m
Titan Machinery
A $2&3
P E: . . . Yield.
TITN Close:$22.45 V-3.67 or -14.0% The agricultural and construction equipment provider's fourth-quarter net income fell 12.5 percent as oper-
Fastenal FAST Close:$49.12 V-1.76 or -3.5% The industrial and construction supply company said that its first-quarter net income rose 9 percent as its
ating expenses rose.
gross margins rose. $55
$35 30-
50
25
J
F M 52-week range
A
J
F M 52-week range
$19.07~
$$$.92
$$7.$1 ~
Vol.:6.9m (15.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$472.51 m
PE: 1 0 .5 Vol.:4.9m (3.1x avg.) P E: 34 .6 Yield :... Mkt. Cap:$14.57 b Yiel d : 0. 8%
A $$3.$$
SeaChange Int'I
SEAC Littelfuse LFUS Close:$10.95 V-0.46 or -4.0% Close:$66.00 %2.86 or 4.5% The Acton, Mass.-based video softThanks to higher sales across its ware company posted a fiscal firstbusiness, the circuit protection prodquarter forecast that didn't meet Wall ucts provider is boosting its firstStreet expectations. quarter revenue forecast. $13 $70 12
65
J
F M 52-week range
$7.00~ Vol.:1.1m (4.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$353.59 m
A
$12.10 PE: .. Yield :..
J
F M 52-week range
$47.&$ ~
A $$$.99
Vol.:277.6k (3.5x avg.) PE: 1 9 .4 Mkt. Cap:$1.46 b Yiel d : 1. 2 % AP
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 1.80 percent Wednesday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.
. 06 .06 . 0 9 .09 .12 .12
...
w
V
V
V
W W T w
T .29 T .85 W 1.99 w 3.1 3
2 -year T-note . 2 3 .23 ... 5-year T-note . 73 .70 +0 . 0 3 L 10-year T-note 1.80 1.75 + 0.05 W 3 0-year T-bond 3.00 2.94 +0.06 w
BONDS
The wholesale price of gasoline slumped after a report showed that the amount of supplies in inventory rose last week. Gold and silver also fell, while crude oil and natural gas rose.
Foreign Exchange The dollar rose against the Japanese yen, continuing its months-long ascent. A dollar buys nearly 100 yen, a level it has not reached since April2009.
h5N4 QG
-
.18
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO
Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 2.72 2.66 +0.06 W BondBuyerMuni Idx 4.09 4.07 +0.02 W B arclays USAggregate 1.79 1.79 . . . W PRIME FED Barclay s US High Yield 5.59 5.63 -0.04 W RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.74 3.72 $0.02 w YEST 3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.02 .99 +0.03 w 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 2.67 2.67 ... w 1 YR AGO3.25 .13
Commodities
.08 .14
-
W W W L w
L L W W w
w w w w
2. 64 4. 55 2. 1 2 7 .38 3.91
1. 0 8 3.3 7
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 94.64 94.20 + 0.47 + 3 . 1 Ethanol (gal) 2.43 2.50 +0.12 +10.8 Heating Dil (gal) 2.95 2.96 -0.45 -3.2 Natural Gas (mm btu) 4.09 4.02 +1.69 +21.9 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.87 2.94 - 2.63 + 1 . 9 FUELS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 1558.30 1586.20 27.64 27.87 1529.20 1552.00 3.41 3.44 719.70 731.85
%CH. %YTD -1.76 -7.0 -0.81 -8.4 -1.47 -0.6 -0.70 -6.2 - 1.66 + 2 .4
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -3.6 1.25 1.27 -1.14 1.36 1.35 +0.48 -5.4 6.49 6.44 +0.74 -7.1 Corn (bu) Cotton (Ib) 0.85 0.85 +0.86 +13.6 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 372.20 375.40 -0.85 -0.5 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.46 1.48 -0.85 +26.2 Soybeans (bu) 13.93 13.96 -0.20 -1.8 Wheat(bu) 6.97 7.09 -1.69 -10.4 AGRICULTURE
Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5316 —.0019 —.12% 1.5858 C anadian Dollar 1.0 1 50 —.0000 —.00% 1.0039 USD per Euro 1.3058 —.0041 —.31% 1.3076 Japanese Yen 99.76 + . 4 8 + . 48% 80 . 79 Mexican Peso 12. 1 113 —.0117 —.10% 13.1546 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6393 +.0119 +.33% 3.7512 Norwegian Krone 5.7460 +.0382 +.66% 5.8155 South African Rand 8. 901 8 —. 0163 —. 18% 7.9986 6.3975 +.0133 +.21% 6.8094 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9332 +.0016 +.17% .9190 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar .9485 -.0036 -.38% . 9 755 Chinese Yuan 6.1963 -.0107 -.17% 6.3071 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7631 -.0008 -.01% 7.7651 Indian Rupee 54.530 +.049 +.09% 5 1.475 Singapore Dollar 1.2382 -.0005 -.04% 1.2624 South Korean Won 1130.20 -9.30 -.82% 1139.95 -.06 -.20% 2 9 .55 Taiwan Dollar 29.99
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
BRIEFING
ConsumerCellular seeks workers ConsumerCellular has scheduled a job fair Monday in Redmond.
The companyhasa workforce of more than 220 atitsRedmond con-
tact center, andplansto hire 60 newemployees per month to meet it's
goalof500employees by 2015, the company
announced in anews release. From 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
interested applicants may apply for customer service positions andbe interviewed at the contact center, 2999 S jy. Sixth St.
For more information go to www.consumer cellular.com/About/Careers
ConocoPhillips halts Arctic plans ConocoPhillips announced Tuesday that it
was suspending its plans
FOIleS wl By Tim Doran The Bulletin
Operators will soon begin flying remote-controlled aircraftover potato fields around Hermiston, taking pictures of the plants as part of a researcheffortto help farmers better manage their crops. The project, which involves Oregon State University, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Boeing and a Bend startup called Paradigm, has launched at a time when interest in unmanned aircraft has taken off around the state and nation. The two aircraft, weighing 6 and 8 pounds, respectively, will photograph the fields using various cameras, some of which can zoom in on a leaf, according to an OSU news release. Researchers from OSU and the USDA expect the images to serve asa typeofearlywarning systemthat will detect problems with the plants.
"The key is to pick up plants that are just beginning to show stress so you can find a solution quickly," Phil Hamm, director of the Hermiston Agricultural Research and Extension Center, said in the news release. The aircraft will fly several times per week throughout the season over about 50 acres at the research center and over about 1,000 acres at a private farm west of Boardman, Hamm said. Potatoes became the focus because the crop must be carefully managed and it's expensive to raise, Don Horneck, an agronomist with the OSU Extension Service, said in the news release. In dollar value, it ranked as the state's top vegetable in 2011 and seventh highest agricultural commodity overall, according to Oregon Department of Agriculture statistics. The Federal Aviation Ad-
The Hawkeye, one of the unmanned aerial vehicles to take part in agricultural research near Hermiston. Photo courtesy of Tetracam
By Daniel C. Vock Stateline.org
ministration has authorized the flights. The aircraft are not allowed to fly higher than 400 feet and must stay within sight of the operator, typically less than a mile away. That's where Paradigm comes in. A subsidiary of the Bend company n-Link, Paradigm obtains the FAA approval, identifies the aircraft and supplies the operators to help researchers and others obtain the information they need, said David Blair, the company's director of gov-
ernment and public relations. While somehave raised concerns about unmanned aerial systems violating privacy, the research over the potato fields continues the 102year efforts of the Hermiston research station: to help farmers grow crops, Hamm said. "These unmanned aircraft are foragricultural research only and will be used to do nothing more than that," he said in the news release. — Reporter: 541-383-0360 tdoran@bendbulletin.com
to drill in Alaskan Arctic waters in 2014 because
of uncertainties over federal regulatory and
its drilling operations
American adds more nonstop L.A. flights
in Alaska's Chukchi and Beaufort seas. Shell,
The Associated Press
permitting standards.
The decision had
been expected after last
month's announcement by the lnterior Department that Shell Oil Co. would have to provide a
detailed plan addressing numerous safety issues before it could resume
which has spent more than $4.5 billion on its
exploration program, also called off its 2013 drilling program. — From staff and wire reports
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Central Oregon Spring RVShowand Sale: Trailers, fifth wheels, campers, motor homes, trucks and towables; new and pre-owned Rvs; free; 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; through Sunday; Deschutes County Fair & ExpoCenter, 3800 S.W.Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711. FRIDAY • Central Oregon Spring RVShow and Sale: (See above) SATURDAY • 2013 Spring Sheep Producers Workshop — sheep dairytour andmanaging sheep parasites: Central Oregon sheep producers, in cooperation with Oregon State University Extension Service will present this three-part series designed to give all ages andlevels of sheep producers an opportunityto connect, observe and gain firsthand knowledgeabout lambing techniques, pasture management, sheep dairies andparasite control; all ages and experience levels; free; 8:30 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-4801340 or tcf@cbbmail.com. • Nonprofit board member training: Roger Lee, executive director of Economic Developmentfor Central Oregon, provides training for nonprofit organizations; with workshops; $75; 9 a.m.4 p.m.; MeadowLakes Restaurant, 300 Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; 541-929-9320 or www. nonprofitsteward.org. • Home remodeling workshop: Learn about bath and kitchen remodeling, countertops, floors and more; with a complimentary continental breakfast; 9:30 a.m.; Awbrey GlenGolf Club, 2500 N.W.Awbrey Glen Drive, Bend. • Central Oregon Spring RVShow and Sale: (See above)
To find freeincome tax preparation help,go to bendbulletirtcom/events.
For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's /3ulletin or visit bendbulletin.comrtrizcal
DALLAS — Redmond isn't the only airport being added to American Airlines' new nonstop flights from Los Angeles, where it's battling United, Southwest and other airlines for dominance. American said Wednesday that it will begin service to Eugene at the same time it adds Redmond on June 12. Other cities with new, nonstop service include Pittsburgh, Indianapolis, Columbus, Ohio; Hartford, Conn., and Bentonville, Ark. American began flights between Los Angeles and Raleigh-Durham, N.C., last week. American is also seeking government approval to fly between Los Angeles and Sao Paulo, Brazil, beginning in November. Los Angeles is one of American's five key markets in the U.S. It's trying to beef up ahead of its announced merger with US Airways Group Inc. American said the new service would give it 51 U.S. and international destinations from Los Angeles International Airport. "Our hub in Los Angeles will serve a key role in international routes, particularly as a gateway to Asian destinations," American's chief commercial officer, Virasb Vahidi, said in an interview. American and partner airlines, including Japan Airlines and Cathay Pacific, fly to Asia from Los Angeles International. Vahidi said adding service to cities like Pittsburgh from Los Angeles should also help American attract more business travelers. The new flights to Oregon will be operated by SkyWest Airlines, and the service to Arkansas will be flown by American's regional subsidiary, American Eagle.
States seek bonanza in online sales taxes
In to
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• Builders hope to avoid a crashin the condominium market
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Condo builders in Toronto are slowing development in a bid to avoid a crash after a decade-long boom led to 159 towers now under construction. By Katia Dmitrieva
the slowdown as buyers retreat amid tighter mortgage rules, a slowing economy and the T ORONTO — Toronto condo builders are bur d e nof record consumer debt. slowing development in a bid to avoid a crash The supply of new high-rise units reached a fter a decade-long boom led to 159 towers 21,2 6 2in February, 34 percent more than the now under construction. sameperiod a year ago and close to a record So far this year, they've announced 13 new 2 1 , 696 in October 2012, RealNet figures show. condominium projects, the fewAbout 61,000 units are currently est since the recession in 2009, under construction — the most ever — and a record 35,757 resiwhen there were just three over "MpSg the same period, figures from real dential units will come on stream deye/p erS estate researcher RealNet Canada next year, RealNet said. show. In the same period last year, haVe their Developer Concord Adex post29 new projects were announced, poned its previously announced 17 gifdS jfl fhejf. including TridelCorp.'s Ten York' Lumen this year, a 30-story buildpOCketS right the third-tallest residential tower ing in a cluster of condos near the in the country at 75 stories when it ifOtt/I/. Gardiner Expressway, a major was first marketed. highway that connects the west— Brad Lamb, ern suburbs with the city, accord"Most developers have their a developer ing to BuzzBuzzHome. hands in their pockets right now," and condo broker said Brad Lamb, president of Brad Menkes Development was one J. Lamb Realty, a developer and of the first to announce this year, the city's largest condominium putting its 29-story 365 Church broker. His firm, which is marketing more than d e v elopment on sale for purchase in March. 4 5 high-rise developments in the city, won't Due fo rcompletion in 2017, unit size starts at start a new project until 2014, said Lamb, who 32 3 squ are feet(30 square-meters),among the h as eight projects in Toronto and Ottawa "on smal l est in the city. "Condo prices are not going up now the way the drawing board." T he slowdown comes as a near-record they h ave been," said Finn Poschmann, vice s upply of condos comes to market in a city pres i dnt e of research at the C.D. Howe Institute w ith the most towers being constructed in in Tor onto."From the developers'side,they're the world, according to BuzzBuzzHome, a saying:'OK, enough is enough right now. We're T oronto-based real estate listings and rediges t i ng a shift in the market as it is and we re't need to be beat up more.' " search firm. Developers are trying to manage a l l y don Bloomberg News
The days of shopping online without paying sales taxes may be ending. States are cracking down, and a nationwide system for collecting sales tax on online sales may be coming soon. Several developments in recent weeks show how quickly the landscape is changing on what has long been an important but elusive goal for state officials: collecting sales tax from online retailers. States and localities could reap as much as $11 billion a year, according to one study. Internetshoppers are already supposed to pay the money on their own but rarely do. So state officials and local retailers cheered when New York state's "Amazon tax," designed to collect taxes on purchases at Amazon.com and similar sites, survived a challenge last month in the state's highest court. It was a significant victory, especially after courts struck down similar laws in Colorado, Illinois and North Carolina. Amazon itself is shifting strategies. Facing both pressurefrom statesand new business demands, the company is collecting sales taxes on sales to customers from nine states, and it will add another seven states this year. By 2014, it will collect sales tax from half of itscustomers. In many cases, Amazon agreed to collect taxes in states where it is building new facilities, and the agreements do not apply to other online retailers. Amazon is backing efforts to set up a national system for collecting online sales taxes, which could simplify the process for the company and ensure its competitors have to collect the taxes, too. Supportersofthe idea scored a major victory last month, whenthe U.S. Senate, in a 7524 advisory vote, backed a plan to let states collect sales taxes on online purchases. States have tried to collect sales taxes on online purchasessince the infancy ofthe Internet. But legal, logistical and political problems blocked their way. Well before the invention of the Internet, courts blocked state attempts to collect sales taxes on goods sold by outof-statevendors, because the Constitution says only Congress has the power to regulate interstate commerce. In a 1967 case dealing with mail-orderpurchases, the U.S. Supreme Court said companies had to have a physical presence in a state's borders for that state to impose taxes on its purchases. That rule remains in effect today. But it is still hotly debated. The New York Court of Appeals, the state's top court, ruled recently that the state's 2008 law requiring all online retailers to collect a sales tax stands. The court said New York could tax purchases from Amazon and Overstock, because both companies had in-state affiliates that they paid to promote their companies. Plus, the court added, Amazon and Overstock do not pay the taxes themselves, but their in-state customers do.
BUILDING PERMITS Cityof Bend •Alan Kissler,19490
SpencersCrossing,$349,891 • LeaderBuildersLLC,2322 N.W Floyd,$345,137 • ML BendUSALimited Partnership,20713 N.E Comet, $202,554 • ChambersCentral Oregon LLC,1501N.E.Medical Center,8225,000 • Bend MetroParkand
RecreationDistrict,250 N.W. Revere,$316,769 • MakenaCustomHomes Inc.,2487 N.W.Drouilard, $312,802 • BrookswoodBendLLC, 61150Snowbrush,$181,608 • Pahlisch HomesInc.,19127 N.W.Chiloquin,$254,138 • ML BendUSALimited Partnership,20773N.E. Comet,3167091
•Ben T.Chapman,2915 N.W. Horizon,$262,708 •NTC &Co.,20033 S.W. Millcrest, $197624 Cityof Redmond •OregonJoyLLC,3480W. Antler Ave., $107463 •OregonJoyLLC,234S.W. 35th St.,$190,500 •OregonJoyLLC,330S.W. 35tI1 St.,$198,647 •OregonJoyLLC,256S.W.
35tI1 St.,$120,508 • Don J.L. Lopez,1481N.W. 18tI1 St.,3183,981 Deschutes County •A. Philip McCage,7710 Angel FallsWay,Redmond,
$296,157.44 • Kenneth ESnow,16080 Foothill LoopNorth, Sisters, $502,772 •Jimmy D.andConnieA. JohnsonFamilyTrust,60678
River Bend Drive, Bend, $236,180.40 •DavidParsons,19021 Baker Road,Bend,3277,827 •TetherowGolfCourseLLC, 61380SkeneTrail, Bend, $2,500,000 • Rick B.West,70185 AppaloosaDrive,Sisters, $406,668.88 • DannieRasmussen,64810 BillMartin Road,Bend, $322,567.68
• StevenW. Lorensen,227 AngusCourt,Terrebonne, $296,959 • GaryArnett,1100 N.E Jordan Lane,Redmond, $593,869.84 • Pacwest II LLC,9475 12th Lane, Terrebonne, $255,684.96 • Peter Hammett,64880 Collins Road,Bend,$415,117 • Donald A.Aasland,19483 ApacheRoad,Bend,
$135,000 • Greg Welch,61480 Hackleman Court, Bend, $365,280.92 • CalderaSpringsVilageLLC, 56508 DancingRockLoop, Bend, $230,006.84 • TaraandLowell Lea,67107 Gist Road,Bend,$240,97612 •RobeftLJones,16796 Pony ExpressWay,Bend, $25084752
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Health Events, D2
Money, D2 Medicine, D5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
FITNESS
Bi woud
hep oca athetes ike Jenna By Anne Aurand The Bulletin
• Girls may suffer head trauma at a higher rate than boysin youth sports, locally and nationally By Anne Aurand The Bulletin
s sports medicine experts have researched and tracked concussions over the past decade, they found that brain injuries don't just afflict football players and boxers. Concussions also plague players of non-contact sports. It also appears that in some sports, girls get concussions at a higher rate than boys. Second only to boys' football, girls' soccer appears to be the leading documented source of concussions in youth, both locally and nationally. Concussions, a type of traumatic brain injury, come from blows to the head — falling on a hard surface, or colliding with another player or piece of equipment. The blow creates a rapid, jarring force to the brain, which temporarily changes how brain cells and signals function. The brain injuries typically can't be seen on neuroimaging tests and are often called "invisible."
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They are diagnosed by sometimes subtle symptoms including headaches, dizziness, confusion and nausea. Concussions can disturb memory and skew balance and coordination, sometimes long after the impact. Dr. Mark Belza, a local neurosurgeon, said youths between the ages of 12 and 18 seem the most vulnerable to concussions, at the time when their young brains are developing. Fortunately, with the growing awareness about concussions, there are a lot of people watching out for today's young athletes. But even the best of intentions and certain safety measures such as helmets can't protect every kid.
got them skiing, playing
Girls versusboys Up to 3.8 million concussions occur yearly in youth sports. SeeConcussions/D4
A bill to expand requirements for recognizing and responding to possible concussions has passed the Oregon Senate and awaits consideration in the House. If it passes, it will require all coaches of all sports to have some concussion education. It prohibits coaches and referees from allowing athletes to play when they have signs of a concussion. It would require concussed athletes to have medical releasesfrom doctors and an absence of symptoms before returning to play. Senate Bill 721 complements the 2009 Max's Law, which did virtually the same thing for most high school sports. This law encompasses all recreational leagues and clubs, and includes all sports, even lower-risk ones such as swimming or cross-country skiing. It also includes an elementof concussion education for parents and kids. It would be called Jenna's Law, according to attorney David Kracke, with Portland law firm Nichols and Associates, who is pushing the bill. The law would be named after a local girl who has sustained serious brain trauma from skiing and soccer. Jenna Sneva went through the Sisters School District, graduating from Sisters High School in 2009. She ski raced with Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation and played club soccer in Bend since she was little. She suffered so many blows to her head that she ended up with post-concussion syndrome — what it's called when symptoms and effectsfrom concussions last for more than six months. During her youth, Sneva experienced 12 concussions, half of which knocked her unconscious, she said. She
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Caryn Agnew, a17-year-old senior at Summit High School, doesn't remember most of the day of the ski crash that gave her a serious concussion last year. The brain trauma affected her ability to study and learn at school, and her personality for many weeks. Her recovery was long and slow and included some therapy. The experience has changed her approach to skiing and soccer.
soccer and other sports, and from one car accident. It was the last big one in 2010, from a ski crash, that triggered the avalanche of symptoms, Sneva said. SeeBill/D4
Spring aheadwith greens Complementing end-of-life care • Acupuncture, massage, other alternative therapiescanhelp easefinal days
By Nancy Churnin The Dallas Morning News
Nutritionists love the idea of going green, especially if you start with your diet. They might look as plain as Clark Kent, but green plants are packed with Superman strength that do everything from fight cancer to help maintain healthy blood pressure. W e culled a t o p five list after consult- N UTRITION ing with our experts: Nancy Ma s l onka, executive chef at Medical City Dallas Hospital and Medical City Children's Hospital; Tom Shroeder, executive chef at Baylor University Medical Center (working with Stephanie Dean, registered and licensed dietitian at Baylor Outpatient Nutrition Counseling); and Amber Odom, registeredand licensed dietitian at Cooper Clinic in Dallas. These foods are readily available in your local market, and they're good fresh or frozen. For those who want to grow them, start planting now or try in the fall. (Extreme summer heat is not
By Heidi Stevens Chicago Tribune
Of the countless painful decisions surrounding a loved one's end-of-life care, among the trickiest is how to provide physical comfort in a way that also provides a
Kye R. Lee i Dallas Morning News
Sesame-roastedbroccoli that Executive Chef Nancy Maslonka prepared at Medical City Dallas Hospital in Dallas. See this and other nutrient-dense green recipes on Page D3.
kind to greens.) Here's our list, along with our experts' tips on easy ways to slip them in your daily diet. SeeGreens /D3
Inside • Videos illuminate realities of
end-stage procedures,D5
est in complementary approaches in hospice settings," Briggs says, "and recognition by patients and dignified ending. "For end of life, the opioids are caregivers that some of these apvery im p o r tant proaches may be helpful in this for pain manage- MEPI( INF stage of life." m ent, bu t t h e y A comprehensive survey by the do leave people Centers for Disease Control and very sedated," said researcher and Prevention in 2007 found that 41 physician Josephine Briggs, who percent ofhospice care centers ofheads the National Institutes of fered complementary and alternaHealth's National Center for Com- tive therapies (CAT), had a CAT plementary and Alternative Medi- provider on staff or under contract, cine. "Some people are looking for or both. adjuncts to help with that." Those numbers have likely gone Increasingly, those adjuncts in- up, experts say. "It's certainly been gaining moclude acupuncture, massage and other complementary therapies. mentum in the past four of five "We're seeing increased inter- years," says Dr. Porter Storey, ex-
ecutive vice president of the American Academy of Hospiceand Palliative Medicine. " There are patients who a r e not getting adequate relief from usual medications," Storey said. "Sometimes it's people who don't tolerate medicine well or get bad side effects and still have the pain or nausea. And sometimes it's people who value mental clarity so much they would rather have the symptoms than any kind of drowsiness. "We tryreally hard to make sure whatever we're doing matches the patient's goals and desires and is most likely to provide the most relief with the fewest side effects."
Acupuncture and appetite Acupuncture proves particularly helpful with nausea, Briggs says. See Care/D5
D2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
HEALTH
MONEY
EVENTS HEALTHYBEGINNINGS SCREENINGS: Free health screenings for ages 0-5; Friday; Redmond; call for location, 541-383-6357. CARING FORA LOVED ONE WITH MEMORY CHALLENGES:Learnhow to care for a family member with dementia; registration required; free; light lunch provided; 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Friday; Home Instead Senior Care, 497 S.W. Century Drive, Suite102, Bend; 541-330-6400. LIVING WELLWITH CHRONIC CONDITIONS:Learn how to achieve a healthier way of living andovercome symptoms of chronic conditions; registration required; $10 for six classes; Mondays from 2-4:30 p.m. Monday through May 20; Deschutes County Health Department, Stan Owens Conference Room, 2577 N.E. Courtney Drive, Bend; www. livingwellco.org or 541-322-7430. NAMI EDUCATIONALMEETING: An overview of National Alliance on Mental lllness courses; 7-9 p.m. Tuesday; St. Charles Bend, Conference Room A,2500 N.E.Neff Road; www.namicentraloregon.org. DARKNESS TOLIGHT TRAINING: Three-hour interactive training to advise adults on how to protect children from sexual abuse; $20; 1:30-4:30 p.m. Wednesday; Oregon Department of Human Services Child Welfare Office, Madras Branch, 678 N.E. U.S. Highway 97, Suite C; 541-383-5958 or www. kidscenter.org.
How to submit Health Events:Email event information to healthevents@ bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days
before the desireddate of publication. Ongoing class listings must be updated
monthly and will appearat www.bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. People:Email info about local
people involved inhealth issues to healthevents© bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.
PEOPLE • Dr. Tina Busdy,of Mosaic Medical, andHealthy BegInnlngswere recently recogni zed bythe DeschutesCounty Behavioral and Public Health Advisory Boards as the2013 Health Heroes award winners. The individual award winner, Busby, advocates for mentally ill patients.Healthy Beglnnlngs, group health hero award winner, provides free health screenings to local children ages 5andyounger.
Many women live withmen first, marry later The Associated Press NEW YORK — Nearly half of young women say the first time they lived with a g uy, they weren't married. A survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention questioned more t h an 12,000 women younger than 45 from 2006 to 2010. The results are a marked changed from 1995 when only 34 percent said they moved in together. Now it is 48 percent. Back then, 39 percent said they married first, compared to 23 now.
MEDICARE
U.S. toraise, notcut, paymentsfor Medicare AdvantageProgram On Monday,theCenters for Medicare
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration reversed itself Monday,
— get their benefits throughtheprivate
and Medicaid Services announced that it
health insurers that make up the Medicare
was changing its method ofcalculating reimbursement rates. Instead ofcutting payments for MedicareAdvantageplans,
Advantageprogram, according to the nonpartisan KaiserFamily Foundation. The cut would havebeenoneof sev-
program. The insurance industry and more
it will increase them by 3.3 percent.
eral directed at the Medicare Advantage
than100 members of Congress had objected to the cut in the per capita
further the agency's goal of improving
scrapping plans to cut by 2.2 percent the rates paid to health insurers that take part in the Medicare Advantage
"Thepoliciesannouncedtoday
ance Plans, the industry's main trade group, praised the administration for
program. The plans still face payment
being "responsive to the morethan 160 members of Congress from both
reductions and a new tax under the 2010 health-care law.
parties who raised concerns about the
rate that will preserve choices and
She added, "CMS has taken an important step to help stabilize Medicare
growth rate, which was proposed in
payment accuracy in all our programs, while at the sametime ensuring pro-
February. They argued that the administration was using faulty methodol-
gram stability and preserving beneficiary choice," Jonathan Blum, the CMS's
ogy. The insurers mounted avigorous campaign, using television adsand phonebanks,topersuadelawmakersto oppose the reduction.
acting principal deputy administrator,
ensure continued access to top-notch
said in a statement.
quality and affordable care for benefi-
Twenty-sevenpercent of Medicare beneficiaries —about13 million people
R-Utah, said in a statement. In a statement, Karen Ignagni, president of America's Health Insur-
impact of the proposed payment rate on seniors."
"Today, CMSrightly acted to reverse course and implement a responsible
Advantage ata time whenthe program
ciaries enrolled in the popular Medicare Advantage program," Sen. Orrin Hatch,
is facing significant challenges." — Sandhya Somashekhar, The Washington Post
Health policy isinflux, andsoare mutual funds By Tim Gray New York Times News Service
The Affordable Care Act, aka "Obamacare," isn't the only upheaval in the health care sector lately. Health care mutual funds have experienced tumult, too. The two l a rgest such funds, Vanguard H ealth Care and T. Rowe Price Health Sciences, recently lost their longtime managers. Edward Owens, who ran the Vanguard fund for nearly 30 years, retired in December, and Kris Jenner quit T. Rowe Price in February. Two analysts who worked with Jenner left, too; the three are pursuing a new investment venture. For investors,the departures offer a chance to assess whether these funds can continue to put up good returns and whether they — or any other health care funds — have a place in an equity portfolio. Health care has long been considered a defensive investment because the sector accounts for about one-sixth of gross domestic product, and demand for it is fairly stable. People fall ill in good economic times and bad, and the U.S. population, like those throughout the devel-
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Research scientist Ling Xue works in a lab at Pharmacyclics, a drug research company and a top stock holding of the T. Rowe Price Health Sciences fund, in Sunnyvale, Calif. The two largest mutual funds specializing in health care — Vanguard and T. Rowe Price — have both recently undergone
management changes.
about $25 billion in assets, and T. Rowe Price's fund about $6 billion. Combined, they control more than the sum of the assets in all the other health funds tracked by Morningstar. Over the 15 years through March,theyalso outperformed many peers: Vanguard's fund returned 11.2 percent, anoped world, is aging. nualized, while the compaBut an investor with a rablefigure forT.Rowe Price's diversified portfolio — anfund, which Jenner took over chored, say, by a Standard in 2000, is 11.8 percent. That & Poor's 500 index fund, compares with8.3 percent for probably ha s e n ough the average health fund and health car e i n vestments 43 percent for the S8:P 500 already, sai d C a m pbell over the same period. R. Harvey, a professor of The two managers ran their international business at funds differently. Owens huntDuke University. ed for bargains and hung on "It is hard to make the to holdings for years; his turncase for an individual inover ratio was typically about vestor overweighting the 10 percent. Jenner was more health care sector," Harvey of a high-flier. He sleuthed said. If a nything, health among early-stage innovators, care growth may slow as especially biotech companies, the United States tries to and shied away from the big bring its higher-than-aver- drugmakers that are the bedage spending into line with rock of many health portfothat of o t her d eveloped lios. Thus, the T. Rowe Price countries. "The health fund did not have Johnson care industry will be under tL Johnson, Merck or Pfizer enormous pressure over among its recent top 10 holdthe next few years to reings, though these tend to be duce costs," he said. stalwarts in competing funds. T he Vanguard and T . Vanguard's fund, for example, Rowe Price funds l oom owned Merck, its top holding, large within t h i s n i che. and Pfizer. The two f unds' V anguard's f u n d h o l d s only common top-10 holdings
were the UnitedHealth Group and McKesson. Both Owens and J enner were replaced by colleagues. Wellington Management in Boston,which oversees investments for the Vanguard fund, promoted Jean Hynes. She had been associate manager since 2008 and an analyst on the fund for two decades. She declined to be interviewed for this article. T. Rowe Price named Taymour Tamaddon to replace Jenner. Tamaddon, an analyst on the fund for nine years, predicted no change in strategy. Todd Rosenbluth, director of exchange-traded and mutual fund research at SgcP Capital IQ, said investors typically should hold off buying into a fund during a managerial transition. Waiting gives time to observe strategy changes like, say, a reshuffling of a portfolio. But continuity seems likely at the Vanguard and T. Rowe Price funds, he said. Even so, both current and p rospective i n vestors w i l l want to monitor performance, he said. If they notice a sustained dip, they should check their fund's numbers against
those of competitors. "Does the fund lag for reasons that are hard to explain?" he asked. "If pharma does well and a fund lags, then you'd want to look more closely." As for the larger question of whether anyone needs a health care fund, Rosenbluth said S&P Capital IQ favors the sector. "If you're going to increase your bet toward defensive sectors,health care is the one we like the most," he said, because of its stability and growth. If you're considering such a m ove, first
determine how much health care you have among your existing investments. If you are already in a fund like the Vanguard 500 Index fund, he said, "you're getting 12 percent exposure, and you're getting Merck, Pfizer and Johnson 8 Johnson in heavy weightings." Managers of o t her w e llknown health care funds say that while domestic economic numbers matter, they aren't what determine the h ealth sector's promise for investors. Trends abroad, especially in emerging markets, are creating new opportunities. "The e merging m i d d l e classes are starting to want more health care," said Edd ie Yoon, manager of t h e Fidelity Select Health Care Portfolio. "That's a stable demand driver. In some of the emerging countries, there's policy that they want health care spending to grow — they want to take it from X percent of GDP to Y percent. China has said it wants to build 5,000 hospitals." U.S. companies should benefit, as they are seen worldwide as leaders and i n novators. "Health care is a big export industry for U.S. companies," Yoon said. "About half their sales are generated outside of the United States."
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A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-funded campaign
HEALTHSYSTEM
THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
D3
NU TRI TION GOOD EATS
Tomatoes canreducerisk of prostate cancer In a five-week series, The Bulletin will highlight simple "superfoods" that have known properties that help fight cancer and other health concerns. With information provided by Jill Souto-Maior, a registered dietitian from St. Charles Bend, we will tell you about foods you should incorporate into your diet. men who eat at least four servings of tomato
WEEK FIVE,FINAL INSTALLMENT: TOMATOES Many studies have found that people who eat a
diet rich in tomatoes appear to have alower risk of certain types of cancer, especially of the prostate, lung and stomach. One studyfound that American
products per weekhavea 40 percent lower risk of prostate cancer. Tomatoes provide vitamins C, A and K, potassium, molybdenum, manganese, fiber, vitamin B6
and folate. Tomatoesalso contain phytoene and
phytofluene, which are also thought to be helpful in cancer treatment and prevention. Botanically, tomatoes are a fruit. But due to a tariff dispute, the U.S. Supreme Court declared that tomatoes are a vegetable in 1893. — Anne Aurand, TheSulletin Thtnkstock
The power of tumeric
Greens Continued from D1
Spinach Popeye was wild about spinach for its iron; it turns out that's the least of what this nutrient-densegreen has to offer. It's a dizzying blend of: • Vitamin A, w h i ch h elps vision and skin, gene regulation, g r o w th , i m m u n ity against infection and nerve development. • Vitamin B, which aids in healthy skin, hair, eyes and liver, helps keep the body's nerve and blood cells healthy, and helps prevent birth defects. • Vitamin C for wound healing, prevention of scurvy and to aid iron absorption, and strong cartilage, bones and teeth. • Vitamin E, w h i ch h elps neutralize the harmful f r ee r adical molecules that c a n cause a variety of i l lnesses and diseases from heart disease and strokes to certain kinds of cancer. • Vitamin K, which helps in clotting and bone metabolism. All that and it has calcium, which contributes to healthy bones and teeth, muscle contraction, heart rhythm, blood coagulation, maintenance of cell membranes and h elps protect against high b l ood pressure; iron, which plays a key role in carrying oxygen to cells; lutein, which helps prevent age-related macular degeneration in the eyes; and magnesium, which promotes healthy brain f u nction and strong bones and muscles. Tips for using it:Mix it with the lettuce in your salad or substitute it for the lettuce in your sandwich. Puree and use it as a replacement for oil in brownie mixes or blend it in breakfast smoothies with bananas and blueberries or apples and p i neapple. For breakfast, try cooking it with scrambled eggs or toss it in an omelet with diced tomatoes and goat or feta cheese. For dinner, add it to your favorite soup or stew or layer it in lasa-
gna or a casserole.
North American Precis Syndicate
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6 fm 11I
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-- Lil- 4~'
Kye R. Lee / Dallas Morning News
Nancy Maslonka, executive chef of Medical City Dallas Hospital and Medical City Children's Hospital, prepares a nutrient-rich broccoli dish called sesame-roasted broccoli.
Sesame-roasted Broccoli Makes 4 servings 1 pound broccoli florets (or
broccolini)
Salt and pepper to taste
1 tsp sesame seeds t/4 tsp red pepper flakes
1 TBS olive oil s/4 TBS sesame oil
The advantage to getting vitamins and minerals in foods is that too much can
be toxic, and you rarely get
Preheat the oven to 400 F.Line asheet panwith parchment paper.
toxic amounts from foods. For instance, vitamin A
Toss the broccoli with the olive and sesame oils and season with salt
is crucial for cell develop-
and pepper. Spread in a single layer on prepared panand roast for 4 to 5 minutes, until the broccoli starts to turn golden brown on the florets.
Removefrom ovenandtosswithsesame seedsand red pepperflakes. Season to taste with salt and pepper. PER SERVING: Calories 80 (10 percent fat), fat 7 g (1 gsat), no cholesterol, sodium 25 mg, fiber 2 g, carbohydrates 5 g, protein 2 g Source: Nancy Maslonka, executive chef at Medical City Dallas Hospital and Medical City Children's Hospital
Kale Chips 1 TBS olive oil
1 J- 2IIIJ ™
tamin A may lead to a miscarriage or birth defects. In addition, the body seems to better utilize nutrients in their natural state than
== gp )$p~p
from supplements.
=
t/2 tsp kosher salt
the healthy functioning of smooth muscles in the heart and intestines can, in
Advanced Technology• Best Prices• Personalized Service ~
excess, lead to heart palpiPreheat oven to 400 F. Spray a baking sheet with olive oil. Wash and cut kale into 2- to 3-inch pieces.
Spread kale out on prepared baking sheet in asingle layer. Mist the kale with olive oil spray and lightly sprinkle with salt. Bake for 10 minutes, or until edges are crisp and begin to turn brown.
H e a ring Center
e ~ss4@I-'
normal blood pressure and
Makes 6 servings. 6 C fresh kale
ment, which can help pre-
vent an early miscarriage. However, anexcess of vi-
Similarly, potassium, which is so important in helping to maintain a
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Source: Stephanie Dean, Baylor Outpatient Nutrition Counseling
Be careful not to burn. PER SERVING: Calories 53 (41 percent fat), fat 3 g (trace satl, no cholesterol, sodium 186 mg, fiber 1 g, carbohydrates 7 g, protein 2 g Source: Amber Odom, registered and licensed dietitian at Cooper Clinic in Dallas
Kale If you really want to put some greens on your plate, you can't do better than colcannon, a dish of kale mixed with mashed potatoes. Kale is also packed with the vitamins A, B9, C and K, and calcium and lutein, plus a few more tasty nutrients including potassium, which is important in brain and nerve function, muscle contraction, p rotein utilization and water balance. Potassium also helps maintain a normal blood pressure, aids in the healthy functioning of the smooth muscles in your heart and intestines and helps preventmuscle soreness aftera workout. Tips for using it: Kids love kale chips, made from small p ieces baked i n t h e o v e n — much healthier than potato chips for lunches. It works well chopped and added to a slowcooking potato or vegetable soup, stew or chili. As with spinach, it's a good addition to omelets or stir-fry.
Foodsvs. supplements
function. Curcumin's multifaceted effects also include protecting against estrogenIt could be a healthy idea mimicking chemicals, protectto take a new look at an old ing against free radicals, and spice. promoting normal cell cycle Turmeric, a tropical root growth while effectively supand pungent spice used porting pancreatic health. in Indian and Southeast Unfortunately, c u r c umin A sian recipes to ad d a is poorly absorbed into the wonderfully nutty f l avor, bloodstream. it seems, can also deliver a To help, a patented formula smorgasbord of powerful has been developed that is abhealth benefits. The main sorbed up to seven times better bioactive compound in tur- than conventional curcumin. meric is called curcumin. This can be the most cost-efIt's impressing scientists fective way to supplement with around the world with its this critical nutrient. ability to ease inflammaOne 400-mg capsule a day tion, promote healthy cell of Super Bio-Curcumin turgrowth, protect against in- meric compound can provide fections and improve heart curcumin blood levels equal to health. ingesting 2,500 to 2,800 mg of M odern s c i ence h a s commercialcurcumin supplefound that curcumin has ments. In addition, the curremarkable propertiesfor cumin remains in the bloodimproving health. stream almost twice as long Studies suggest inflam- as conventional supplements. m ation results from t h e This e n hanced a bsorption overexpressionof a protein delivery c o mplex p r o vides molecule called n u clear other beneficial turmeric comfactor-kappa B ( N F-kap- pounds in addition to stanpaB). Curcumin has been dardized curcumin. found to inhibit NF-kappaB activation within the body. Clinical trials also show it Azsy"eytrwg can help maintain healthy l~s Io ="; bowel and joint functions D h t R t r e e I r fe w f e s and normal platelet funcRetire with us Today! tion and inhibit histamine. It may even contribute to 541-312-9690 supporting healthy brain
Spinach Smoothie Surprise Makes 2 servings. t/4 whole fresh pineapple (cored
and peeled) 2 whole carrots (each 5.5 inches long or 1.8 ounces) 2 stalks celery (each 7 inches long or 1.4 ounces)
"Most people d iagnosed with a serious illness like CanCe r
f e el scared and alone. As an
2 small apples (about 5.4-ounces
each,anytype,unpeeled,stem and seeds removed) 3 C fresh spinach (loosely
packed)
oncologtst, m y
m o s t i m p o rtant Iob ts
l etting t h e p a t i e n t k n o w I ' m o n t he i r
t/4 cilantro bunch
Put all ingredients in a juicer. (The sweetness of the fruit hides the spin-
ach flavor, so it's easier to get the nutritional benefits even if you don't care for the flavor of spinach.) PER SERVING:Calories 175 (7 percent fat), fat 1 g (trace sat), no cholesterol, sodium 120mg, fiber 1 g, carbohydrates 43 g, protein 4 g
S ide —
i ncludes
a n CI On t h e i r t e a m . T h i S t e a m
the
ent i r e B MC
onc o l o g y
d epartment, from th e receptionists to t h e
Source: Tom Shroeder, executive chef at Baylor Unwersity Medical Center
nurses, navigators, medical assistants and and nails healthy; and help form hormones, enzymes and immune system antibodies. Tips for using it: Slow-cook them Southern-style with a turkey leg or ham hock for added flavor. You can also steam them with carrots and zucchini and a little garlic or add them to soups and stews.
Collard greens
Swiss chard
If we d i dn't l ove collard greens for being a Southern comfort food, we would be sold on this cooking tip — use it as a wrap instead of tortillas! Collard greens are bursting with vitamins A, B, C and K, plus lutein and zeaxanthin, an antioxidant that, like lutein, is believed to slow macular d egeneration related to a g ing. It's one of the best plantbased sources of calcium and
This is a personal favorite of Dallas Morning News gardening editor Mariana Greene. She buys transplants in rainbow colors and plants them in large pots.Then she harvests the big leavesas desired and cuts them into long, thin strips to saute and mix with fresh spinach. Swiss chard is filled with vitamins A, C and K, calcium, iron, lutein, potassium and zeaxanthin.
sweet-and-sour with the addition of raisins and vinegar.
Broccoli These cute little miniature trees may not have been a favorite of President George H.W. Bush, but they have inspired many others, including Molly Katzen, who named one of her cookbooks "The Enchanted Broccoli Forest" (after her tastyrecipe fora casserole in which broccoli stands up just like little trees). Not only is broccoli full of vitamins A and B and calcium, but one cup contains 100 percent of the daily requirement of vitamins C and K. Tips for using it:This canbe a fun snack for kids who en-
joy dipping it in light cheese,
the professionals behind the scenes. Being a part of this caring and passionate group helPS me giVe eXCellent Care — anCI helPS
our patients know they
aren't alone." — Brian Erickson, MD, Oncology
WELCOME, DR. ERICICSON We are proud to welcome Oncologist Dr. Brian Erickson to the BMC team.
yogurt or other healthy dips. Add it to whatever you may be
a surprisingly high source of
Tipsfor using it:Trythe baby
steaming (topped with freshly
protein, which helps the body burn fat instead of muscle for healthier weight loss. Collards support the natural metabolism; aid in w ound healing; help keep hair, skin, bones
variety raw in a salad; mature Swiss chard is better suited to being sauteed with onions, garlicand seasonings,braised, or stewed low and slow. It can be slipped into lasagna or served
squeezed lemon juice) or stirfrying. You can also toss it in with whatever you're baking with a sprinkle of fresh Parmesan cheese in the final minutes.
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D4 TH E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 20'I3
FITNESS Concussions Continued from 01 According to a n 1 1 -year study of 12 sports in 12 high s chools, published i n T h e American Journal of Sports Medicine in 2011, girls' soccer ranked second only to football for the highest rates of incidence. The study followed six boys' sports — football, lacrosse, wrestling, soccer, basketball and baseball — and six girls' sports — field hockey, lacrosse, soccer,basketball, cheerleading and softball. ~ aa l h ak In sports that are played the f> same for boys and girls — soccer, basketball, baseball/softball — girls had roughly twice the concussion risk of boys. G irls' c o ncussions w e r e more associatedwith surface or ball c o ntact, compared to boys' concussions, which Andy Tulhs/The Bulletin were more frequently from Summit High School senior Caryn Agnew works on her homework at her home in Bend. player contact, according to the study's authors. And, concussion outcomes may also be worse in females than males, For another two weeks all she the study suggested. wanted to do was sleep. She Data suggests that girls are couldn't even watch TV. She didn't comb her hair, and unmore susceptible to the head injury, but no one can say with wittingly grew dreadlocks. "It changed my personality," certainty why, said Dr. Viviane Ugalde, medical director she said. "I was in slow motion for The Center Foundation's and just wanted to sleep. My concussion management promoods were really wacky." gram in Bend. It was months before she Some evidence suggests it was herself again, she said. might be that neck muscles, Treating concussions which tend to be stronger in Submitted photo by Dr. Ann C. McKee, VA Boston/Boston University School of Medicine boys, help control and lower Concussions gene r ally the forcesof movement of the heal.But every concussion is head, Ugalde said. Perhaps unique, and everyone heals at Chronic Traumatic Encepha- appears dark brown. (The thereare genetics orhormonal a differentpace, from weeks to lopathy (CTE) is aprogressive pictures underneaththe whole differences that affect susmonths. degenerative disease of the brain sections aremicroscopic ceptibility, but evidence is far To restorethe brain requires brain triggered by repetitive sections of the brain tissue.) from conclusive, she said. rest. That means absolutely no brain trauma, orevenasympLeft: Brain section from a65The brain and all its cells sports or activities. It probably tomatic subconcussive hits to year-old control. (No tauprotein and synapses are excruciatmeans a break from school the head. The trauma creates deposition.) ingly complex, making it difand studying. It ca n m ean
up." Uncontrolled swelling can be fatal. It appears that those who get one concussion have a greater chance of getting another, according to information from Boston Children's Hospital. The reason forthe increased risk is not known, but it's possible that some people are just born with a vulnerability for brain injury. It's also possible that a concussion could cause changes in the brain that increase further risk, according to Boston Children's Hospital. What is known is that over time, those who sustain several concussions might lose memory and their ability to think, concentrate and reason. They might be at a higher risk of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a pr o g ressive degenerative disease of the
brain triggered by repetitive brain trauma. Agnew said the ski accident is her only concussion that she is aware of, but she also played soccer since she was little and took a lot of bumps to the head. "I definitely have taken a lot of hits, running into c leats, heading the b a ll
playing soccer. I struggled
with migraines (long before the ski accident) and we stil l h a v en't r e ally found the cause of my migraines," she said. She was diagnosed with a brain injury rightbefore her sophomore year of high school, but isn't sure where it came from. When symptoms such as headaches, confusion, buildup of an abnormal protein Middle: Brain section from little to no television or texting nausea or fatigue continue called tau, a protein in the a former NFL player who died either. beyond two to three weeks, neurons in thecentral nervous at45 of an accidental gunshot Agnew felt he r r e covery there are a slew of therasystem. Taubuildup canlead wound. was more difficult than othpies — both mental and to brain degeneration, which is Right: Brain section from a ers she knows of. It took many physical — a patient might associated with memory loss, 73-year-old world champion months to readjust to school. consider, Belza said. Counconfusion, impaired judgment, boxer with severedementia. "I lost motivation in school. It seling might help a person It's well-established that a impulse control problems,agwas too hard," she said. "The from getting depressed. number of headinjuries can gression, depression, andproconcentration and m e mory Speech and eye therapy gressive dementia, according to result in CTE,said MarkBelza, part was really hard." may be necessary. Boston University. a local neurosurgeon, but not How a concussion is treated For months after her conThesephotosshow medial everyone isequally susceptible has considerableinfluence on cussion, Agnew had a lot of temporal lobe brain tissueof and not everyonewhowhacks future risks of problems, ac- cognitive therapy — basithree deceasedpeople. They their head will end up with it, he cording to experts. It's imporcally brain exercises. Her were stained so the tau protein and other brain experts say. tant not to let a second impact concussion also damaged happen before the first one is her optic nerve so she did fully resolved. If brain injueyetherapy. harder to draw out the details. I remember," said Agnew, a ries compound on each other, Now, school has gotten 17-year-old senior at Summit it can permanently alter the This could result in a higher easier, and she's cleared rate of concussion diagnosis in High School. brain. to ski and play soccer. But females, he speculated. Her friends later told her she Belza, the n eurosurgeon, she has a lot more fear aphad lain there for a minute af- said ifa person gets a second proaching a ski jump, and Aski crash ter she landed, but appeared head impact on top of an unsaid she doesn't head balls Ski-related con c ussions conscious the w h ole t i m e. healed previous injury, the in soccer anymore. aren't as well-documented as Then she stood up and said, brain can't control its blood "I think p eople think some of the more mainstream "Yea, I'm fine." Agnew took a flow. When that happens, the c oncussions aren't a b i g youth team sports, but it's a couple more runs before she sudden influx of blood in the deal because so many peopopular pastime in C entral started feeling nauseous. She brain causesedema, or swell- ple get them. They say, 'It's Oregon, and it has its victims. skied herself to the ski patrol ing, which leads to serious OK, I'll go on with life. But Caryn Agnew doesn't recenter. An ambulance took chronic symptoms. The brain's it gets worse if it doesn't get member most of the day of her to the emergency room. autonomic response to the first taken care of." her ski crash. About one year She remembers none of this. impact is milder. With the sec— Reporter: 541-383-0304, ago, Agnew was skiing with Apparently, someone in the ond, Belza said, "things blow aaurand@bendbulletin.com friends at Mt. Bachelor. ER told her, had she not been "All I remember was going wearing a helmet, she may off a jump and being in the have died. air and saying, 'Oh (expletive), Agnew lay in bed on morI'm done.' That's the last thing phine formore than a week.
What is ChronicTraumatic Encephalopathy?
ficult to determine whether there is a physiological difference between boys' and girls' brains that relates to concussion risk, said Belza. But there's a cultural difference that he believes is at play. For a concussion to be recognized, the player has to acknowledge the symptoms. Perhaps, he suggested, girls — and their mothers, he added — are more likely to be concerned with health and safety than winning games or scholarshipsand therefore report possible head injuries more. John Barresse, who coordinates The Center Foundation's concussion management program, is a certified athletic trainer at Sisters High School. He is one of many trainers around the region whose job it is to observe sports events, watch for potential injuries, perform field evaluations and make determinations about whether an athlete should return to play or seek medical
help. Berresse said, anecdotally, it seems that girls are more in touch with their symptoms and more easily talk about how they're feeling. With the male athletes, he said, it's a lot
Bill Continued from 01 She had frequent, severe migraines. After a history of academic success,she started failing classes. She lost her ability to memorize facts or understand science. She saw many doctors and had many misdiagnoses, she said. No amount of pain medications helped her migraines. Finally, Dr . J i m C h esnutt, Medical Director of the Oregon Health 8 Sci e nce S p orts Medicine Program, called it post-concussion s y n d rome. (Chesnutt has testified before a Senate committee in support of the Jenna's law bill.) Her l if e i s p e r m anently altered. Sneva endured nine months of intensive speech therapy, cognitive therapy, eye therapy and physical therapy. She still does neck stretches to help headaches, and brain exercises such as Sudoku puzzles and word searches to restore her brain function. "Going to school is cognitive therapy," she said. Sneva is a 22-year-old psychology student at O r egon State University in Corvallis. But sports are no longer an option for her, besides golf. "One more brain injury and I could end up in a coma," she said. She still has a lot of headaches. She's expecting early onset dementia. Her mom, Ronda Sneva, s aid her daughter still h as problems with her peripheral vision and short-term memory. "That won't change," she said. "Recovery would have
happened already." She also noted that it takes Jenna 15 hours to do what m ost people can do i n s i x hours. "It's a permanent brain injury that is preventable," Ronda Sneva said. Jenna has made concussion awareness a cause. Her motto, for kids: "It's not worth playing on a concussion. It's not worth hiding. You need medical help. You get a concussion, you're out three weeks. I'm out the rest of my life because I
didn't go get help."
She still encourages youthto participate in sports, she said. "There's such a social component. They bring out leaders, inspire teamwork, p roblem solving. I'd advocate sports. I'd also advocating sitting out." See, www.takingitheadon. com, formore about Sneva. — Reporter: 541-383-0304, aaurandNbendbulletin.com
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THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D S
MEDICINE STUDY
Post-partumstress cancontribute to OGD , study finds Shortly after Dr. Dana Gossett gave birth to her first daughter13
years ago, shebeganagonizing over worst-case scenarios familiar to any new mother. One of thosenaggingconcerns: What if I fall down the stairs while carrying the baby?
"It's notsomething youintend to do,
Thinkstock
Care
center of a new Northwestern Medicine study that shows postpartum
and germs.
mothers are nearly four times more
possible causes of the elevated
likely to grapple with obsessive-com-
anxiety, but Gossett offered her own
pulsive behavior than everyone else. "Are they really abnormal or a universal experience for all postpartum
explanation. "We know that stress of any na-
The study did not delve into the
referring to obsessive-compulsive
frankly surprised by the numbers."
disorder. "And we know that child birth and becoming a mother is enor-
it's not something you want to do, but it's a thought that comes unbidden into
Eleven percent of several hundred mothers surveyed at two and six
your mind," saidGossett, a physician at
weeks after giving birth reported obsessi ve-compulsivesymptoms,
Northwestern Memorial Hospital. Those persistent worries are at the
ture can trigger OCD," Gossett said,
mothers?" Gossett said. "We were
mously stressful." Although the fears arecommon,
such as worrying too much about dirt
Gossett said new mothers should think twice if their concerns are caus-
ing "significant emotional distress" or interfering with everyday life, like pre-
venting them from leaving the garage because theycannotstopchecking their child's car seat. The study, which Northwestern calls one of the first of its kind, could
help other researchers determine whether postpartum depression is a gloomy period or its own disease. Gossett is reserving judgment. "The jury is out," she said, "but it's a fascinating idea." — Patrick Svitek, Chicago Tribune
Videos illuminate realities of end-stageprocedures
Continued from D1 "The affectsofacupuncture on nausea are quite well-documented," she said. "If you've experienced something that made you sick to your stomach and you have smells or a place that reminds you of that experience, the nausea feeling can come back. Nausea of expectation is a real phenomenon, so some people are left with nausea or vomiting from chemotherapy or even
ing people should avoid proper pain management — the opioids, morphine, fentanyl.") But she encouragesfamilies to ask
after watching the videos, which
patient can also watch them with their families. Eventually, Volan-
means to understand. Doctors aren't always trained to have
How can watching the Q •.video help change a
range from 3 to 10minutes.
des hopes thevideoswill be avail-
these conversations.
patient's mind?
munity, despite expert advice
The 25 videos demonstrate
End-of-life choices and
able to people outside the medical
meanttoencouragecommunication, studies suggest. As aresult,
common end-of-life hospital pro- profession. "Thewhole point is to cedures, including CPR,breathchange theculture about howwe
many patients spend their final
ing machines, blood transfusions
have these conversations in our
days receiving invasive treat-
and bronchoscopies. Dr. Angelo Volandes, aninter-
society," he said. Below is an edited transcript
nist and researcher at Harvard
of our talk with him. Whyarethevideos • effective? . Pictures speak a thousand
ments that they might not have chosenifthey had known more about them.
Medical SchoolandMassachusetts General Hospital and
However, there is aunique series of videos designed to shed co-founder of the nonprofit founlight on the reality of aggressive dation AdvanceCare Planning end-of-life treatments, which Decisions (acpdecisions.org),
(anticipating) chemotherapy, and there is very strong, very rigorous data showing that acupuncture tends to break that cycle." Acupuncture may also help with proper digestion, a process with which morphine and other pain medications can interfere. G rainne McKeown, a l i censed acupuncturetherapist, worked in a Nepalese clinic before opening her own practice in Chicago. She says she used acupuncture to help patients relieve constipation and vomiting. "I treated a woman who was in the late stages of HIV who had so much vomiting and nausea and kept getting skinnier and skinnier," McKeown said. "They would give her morphine for her pain, which made her constipated. I was able to give her acupuncture, and she was able to have regular bowel movements and help her digestion, which makes a huge d i fference at t h a t stage of life where the whole goal is just to keep someone comfortable." With a little training, some alternative therapies can be administered by a p a tient's family members, " Something t h a t' s v e r y helpful in many families is to incorporate some m a ssage therapies," Briggs said. "A massage therapist can help the family members learn some skills that involve touch that can help achieve relaxation and make the dying patient more comfortable." She emphasizesthe need for narcotics, particularly for pain m anagement. ("I w o uld b e very worried about suggest-
to comfort-based approaches
treatment decisions are rarely discussed in the medical com-
are often portrayed on television
explains why the educational
as being more successful than they are.
videos can supplement —but not supplant — patient-doctor
Studies using these simple but realistic videos have shown that patients with life-limiting illnesses are likely to change their pref-
relationships. The videos are only available
erences from invasive treatment
their physicians about incorporating alternative therapies to work alongside conventionalapproaches. " I think t u r ning t o y o u r hospice and asking for information about massage, music
to medical professionals, andpatients view them first with a doctor in a clinical setting. Later, the
Availability
The availability of complementary and alternative approaches varieswidely from facility to facility and region to region, and hospices are more likely to offer the therapies therapy and guided imagery is than hospitals. important and can really help A 2011 survey conducted by caregivers as well as patients," the American Hospital AssoBriggs said. ciation found that 42 percent Guided imagery is a system of U.S. hospitals offer one or of directing your t h oughts more CAT services, including a nd imagination toward a acupuncture, ho m e opathy, state of relaxation or focus. massage therapy and herbal WebMD cites a common ex- medicine. That statistic is up ample: "Imagine an orange or from 37 percent of hospitals in a lemon in great detail — the 2007. smell, the color, the texture of But if you're caring for a pathe peel. Continue to imagine tient at a hospital without CAT the smell of the lemon, and staffing on site, your options then see yourself taking a bite are likely slim. "Hospitals tightly c ontrol of the lemon and feel the juice squirting into y our m o uth. w ho p r actices t here w i t h Many people salivate when very restrictive credentialing they do this. This exercise requirements," Storey s aid. "This may limit their liability demonstrates how your body can respond to what you are for mishaps, but it severely reimagining." stricts access to complemen"One of th e good t hings tary and alternative medicine about many of the complemen- therapies. Even if you wanted tary approaches is they're gen- to pay privately for a compleerally so benign that people mentary or alternative thercan use them at any time, and apy you would likely not be they're one of the few things able to get it in a (restrictive) we can recommend to family hospital." members who are not under Families should be proactive our care,"Storey said. "Often- in broaching the topic though, times the wife of a patient who regardless of the setting, Stois anxious ordistressed can rey says. "Hospitals can get narrowly download some guided imagery files or listen to some medi- focused on surgery and intentative music and actually feel a sive care, as they should," he lot better." said. "But it's good for families
. Itgivesthepatients
Do the videos coerce • patients?
• greater understanding
Q.
that when they have a life-limiting illness, many interventions
• We ask patients whether • they were comfortable
watching the videos. In astudy
(such as CPR)don't have a great likelihood of success. Theythink,
published in the Journal of Clini-
"Why put my family through that
Q.
cal Oncology, 97 percent said they were. What's really remark-
when my chance of surviving is so low?" We don'tdoagoodjob
A . words. The videos speak hundreds of thousands of words.
able though is the finding in our studies that more than 95 per-
of explaining interventions and
cent of patients said they would
what happens whenyou have something like cancer. Most
We're a visually literate society, but we are still talking to patients
patients believe they will be back to normal. The videos help them
as Hippocrates did 2,000 years
recommend the video to other patients. That's the gold stan-
dard. If they're comfortable, find
understand what the procedures
ago. I always make it clear the
it helpful and would recommend it to others, that suggests it's fair
look like. They standardize the
videos are not meant to replace the patient-doctor relationship;
conversation and makesure you have the information you needto make decisions.
and impartial.
it's to reinforce it. It's about
empowering, giving patients the
to know what's available and ask for additional help, particularly in areas where we know alternative therapies are most effective." And if f a milies don't get anywhere in the hospital, they can consult with their dying loved one's doctor about a possible transition to hospice. The mind-body connection, after all, is a critical one to honor at the end of life. "There's so much anxiety, fear of what's coming next, possibly regrets about your life," McKeown said. "Anything that helps your body, not just for one hour, but to keep your mind and body in the presentand accept what's to come can really help people face those final days with more strength and peace and calm."
— Julie Oeardorff Chicago Tribune
NM f
o
t r al O r eg o n
NATIONAL ALLIANCE ON MENTAL ILLNESS —CENTRAL OREGON www.namicentraloregon.org
April 16th, 2013, Education Meeting OVERVIEW OF NAMI'S CLASSES R PROGRAMS; Family to Family, Peer to Peer ck Support Group Offerings Do you really know what NAMI Family to Family — Peer to Peer — Connections are au about?'??? Ever wondered if they are really helpful in dealing with yours or a loved one's mental illness struggles? Well, wonder no more!!! Come and get the answers directly from instructors and participants at our April 16th Educational meeting.
When: 3rd Tues. 4/16/13, 7-9 PM Where: St. Charles Medical Center-Bend Conference Room "A" Presenterrc
Christy Maciel & Kathryn Shreve- Family to Family instructors; Eileen White — Family Support Group facilitator; Laurie Lindsey-Peer to Peer instructor; Marcia Miller-Connections facilitator. In addition to the educational topic, attending helps you connect with others interested in supporting, educating and advocating for mental health in our community. Viewourwebsitewww.namicentraloregon.orgforinformation onclassesand supportgroups. Au our meetings and programs are free and open to au.
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
Aseria i ernow re are or TV inners TV SPOTLIGHT
Mads Mik-
w ith Lecter tending to t h e
kelsen por- high-flown ("Killing must feel "Hannibal" 10 tonight, NBC
trays Dr. Hannibal Lecter, the character made famous by Anthony Hopkins in the eponymous 2001film, in NBC's "Hannibal."
s.
By Mike Hale New Yorh Times News Service
There is one reason, and only one reason, that the name Hannibal has become synonymous with gleefully stomachchurning h o r ror: A n t h ony Hopkins'tour-de-force performance, both chilling and hilarious, in Jonathan Demme's 1991 film, "The Silence of the Lambs." Everything b efore and since — the four Hannibal Lecter novels by Thomas Harris, the four other films with or without Hopkins — has gone to the bank because of the wayhe wrapped his lips around "Good evening, Clarice." Hopkins i s n o t i n v olved with the latest Lecter project, so right away there's a problem. The titular cannibal is now played by th e D anish actor Mads Mikkelsen, who provides some a l l -purpose creepinessbut is so spectacularly inexpressive that he's practically the anti-Hopkins. The humor in his performance stems from that inscrutability. When he gazes at a victim, you're not sure whether he's debating saute versus roast or trying toremember where he parked. A larger problem is that the show is neither here nor there, caught between s erialized,
high-concept i d i osyncrasy — the specialty of its creator,
NBC via The Washington Post
Bryan Fuller ("Wonderfalls," "Pushing Daisies") — and the formulas of e pisodic crime drama. It's set up as a particular chapter in the Lecter story, a prequel to the first novel, "Red Dragon," which introduced him as an already convicted and imprisoned killer. ("Hannibal," the TV series, is not to be confused with the novel and film of the same title, which take place much later in the saga.) Knowing Lecter's future would seem to give the show an ordained path, but on the evidence of the early episodes it will travel from Point A to Point B while also trying to provide weekly mysteries.
So far that means that cases are rehashed, and possible killers are kept around like spare parts. Like "Red Dragon," "Hannibal"focuses equally on Lecter — here an eminent Baltimore psychiatrist apparently j u st adopting his sideline as a cannibal — and on the FBI profiler
Will Graham (Hugh Dancy), a damaged hero in the long line running from Tony Shalhoub's Monk to Kevin Bacon's Ryan Hardy in "The Following." (Dancy doesn't have much to play besides nervousness and exhaustion; the show's idea of character development is to make him a collector of stray
dogs.) Graham's talent is for an empathy with k i llers so complete that he can imagine and then relive their crimes, a tired idea that the show makes literal by r e winding scenes and having Dancy act out the murders. Graham is so delicate that he requires two therapists, a sympathetic FBI c onsultant named Dr. Bloom (Caroline Dhavernas) and the considerably chillier Lecter, who has an understandable interest in the profiler's psyche. Unfortunately much of the show is taken up by solemn, often u nintentionally c omic c o n versationsamong these three,
Don't seebeau in stretchedearlobes Dear Abby:I would like to know what the fascination is with putting plugs inone's earlobes. Ihave seen some as large as half dollar coins. W hat does the person do ifhe regrets having done this to his ears'? Can the holes be sur-
gically closed? — Unpierced in Scottsdale, Ariz.
Dear Unpierced: I
DEAR ABBY
spoke to James Wisniewski of the Body Electric Tattoo piercing studio in Los Angeles. He told me that, as with any type of body modification, the ear plugs are a matter of personal taste. The process is referred to as "stretching," and James has had his earlobes this way for the past 14 years. He says he is asked about the procedure on a daily basis. He is attracted to it for the aesthetics. The modification is a gradual process, with larger jewelry being inserted as thehole becomes larger. James recommends consulting a plasticsurgeon ifsomeone decides to havethe hole closed because new tissue is grown as a result of the earlobe stretching. The extra skin may have to be removed in the same way as after a major weight loss.
Dear Abby:I am 17 and I want to start writing a book about things I have been through in my life. My family is all for it, but my friends are against it. I am torn about what I should do. I feel if I write this book it will help kids my age who may have been through some of the same things I have. Should I go through with it or not because my friends think it's a stupid idea? I know I'm not exactly the smartest person and getting a publisher is difficult, but does that make it a stupid idea to try'? What should I do? — Conflicted in Indiana Dear Conflicted:Your reason for wanting to write a book is a valid one and you should proceed with it regardless of what your friends think. It will help you organize your thoughts, and if you show your chapters to your English teacher, you can effectively sharpen your writing skills. Worrying about a publisher now is putting the cart before the horse. While it might be helpful for other teens to read, I promise you that even if the book isn't published, it will become a treasured time cap-
sule containing the thoughts that were important to you during this formative period of your life. Some people your age start writing in diaries or journals and continue doing it throughout their lives. Dear Abby: What is the correct response when asked at a doctor's office or hospital if yo u d r ink? I drink socially, maybe once a month. Should I say yes? If I do, I'm afraid it will imply that I drink more often. I always end up feeling awkward and like I need to explain myself. I'm pretty proud telling them I don't smoke or do drugs, but the alcohol question always gets me. What do other people who drink on occasion usually say? — Filling Out the Forms in Ohio Dear Filling:In my doctor's office I was asked that question, and my response was, "Yes, OCCASIONALLY." At that point, the follow-up question was, "How many drinks do you have a week'?" Because this particular question makes you uncomfortable, mention to your physician that you indulge in alcohol only aboutonce a month — which
is practically negligible. — Write toDearAbbyatdearabbycom or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
good to God too; he does it all the time") and Bloom supplying more of a common touch ("Dogs keep a promise a per-
son can't"). Those who don't find "Hannibal" fatally slow and pretentious can stick around to enjoy the superior production values and the stylishness of the pilot, directed by David Slade with an ominous suggestiveness reminiscent of David Fincher. There are also w orthwhile performances by L a u rence Fishburne as Graham's FBI supervisor, exhibiting the energy and command he lacked in "CSI," and by Hettienne Park as a forensics tech, as sexy and sarcastic here as she was on Broadway in "Seminar." "Hannibal" i s pr o b ably meant to resonate in the public mind with shows like "The Following" and "The Walking Dead," which have been successful while pushing primetime boundaries of violence,
gore and unhappy endings for sympathetic characters. It has free-flowing blood and some startling images — a naked woman impaled on arack of antlers stands out — but the carnage is so heavily art-directed that it doesn't have that much impact. At this point the only thing that would make "Hannibal" memorable would be an Anthony Hopkins — someone who knows how to make a meal out of this kind of tripe.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 andIMAXmovies. • Movie times aresubject to changeafter press time. I
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • ADMISSION(PG-13) 12:50, 3:50, 6:35, 9:30 • THE CALL(R) 1:45, 4:45, 7:55, 10:20 • THE CROODS (PG) 12:05, 3:05, 6:05, 9:05 • THECROODS 3-0 (PG) l2:20,3:20,6:20,9:20 • EVIL DEAD (Rl 12:45, 3:45, 7:20, 10:05 • G.l. JOE:RETALIATION(PG-13) I:25, 4:25, 7:35, 10:20 • G.I. JOE:RETALIATION3-0 (PG-1311:30, 4:30, 7:40, 10:25 • THE HOST (PG-13) I2:35, 3:35, 6:30, 9:25 • IDENTITY THIEF(R) 1:40, 4:20, 9:50 • THEINCREDIBLE BURT WONDERSTONE (PG-I311:35, 4:40, 7:50, 10:30 • JACK THE GIANT SLAYER(PG-1314:15, 10:15 • JACK THE GIANT SLAYER3-0 (PG-I3) 1:15, 7:30 • JURASSICPARKiPG- I313:30 • JURASSICPARK3-0 (PG- I3) 12:30, 6:45, 9:45 • JURASSICPARKIMAX (PG-13) 1,4, 7, IO • MANET:PORTRAYINGLIFE (no MPAArating) 7:30 • OLYMPUSHASFALLEN(Rj 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 9:55 • OZTHE GREAT AND POWERFUL (PG)Noon,3,6,9 • 01THE GREAT AND POWERFUL 3-0(PGl12:10,3:15, 6:15, 9:I5 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. ' I r r I Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347 • EMPEROR (PG-131 1:15, 4:15, 6:45 • THE GATEKEEPERS (R) 12:30, 3:45, 6:05 • QUARTET (PG-1311, 4, 6:20 • SIDE EFFECTS (R) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15 • SILVER LININGSPLAYBOOK(Rj 12:45, 3:30, 6:30 • WEST OF MEMPHIS (R)Noon,3,6 I
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR THURSDAY, APRIL11, 2013:This
YOURHOROSCOPE
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
** * * You might want to try something different. You also might not be sure year you are unusually forthright and By Jacqueline Bigar dynamic. A partner could be quite the which way to go with a loved one. Please note your detachment. People certainly opposite. You might not be sure what to do. Listen to this person's woes, but don't will not react the same way they would if CANCER (June21-July22) enable him or her. you were your usual smiling self. Tonight: ** * * * Y ou might be questioning Stars showthe kind If you are single, what is happening within your immediate Go with a friend's suggestion. ofdayyou'llhave you become very circle. Friends surround you, and they SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21j ** * * * D ynamic possessive when seem to support you. A creative venture ** * * S tay level-headed and focused. ** * * P ositive re l ating to a specific or a matter involving a loved one could go You could beamazedatwhatyoucan ** * A verage per s on. Is ityou, south. Know that this, too, will change. accomplish while others dillydally around. ** So-so or is it the other Tonight: Where the fun is. Be more expressive and open with a * Difficult party? Remember, co-worker or close friend. You will see a you cannot change LEO (July23-Aug. 22) different side emerge in this person as a ** * * O t hers observe you a little too anyone. TAURUSis stubborn. result. Tonight: Squeeze in some exercise. closely for your comfort. You might ARIES (March 21-April19) CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) wonder if you could do something ** * * F ollow your intuition. A ** * * * Y our creativity emerges, and offbeatwithout being noticed. Let go moneymaking idea of yours might have it attracts many people. Your interest in a of a controlling situation. The only way tremendous value. Try it out on several situation allows greater give-and-take. If to win is to not play. Afamily member's trusted friends who will take turns playing a friend cops an attitude, ignore his or her negativity could irritate you. Tonight: A devil's advocate. You want their feedback, unpleasant mood. Share a great idea with force to be dealt with. even if it is negative. You can make a friend, get some feedback and then go adjustments later. Tonight: Indulge a little. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) for it. Tonight: Play the night away. ** * * K eep reaching out to someone TAURUS (April 20-May20) AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fed.18) ** * * * A friend who might be artistic at a distance — you need to speak to ** * I f you couldworkfromhome, would this person. Avoid all assumptions until or just unreliable might play a significant you? You just might getan opportunityto try. If you do.Someone could seem aloof, role in what goes on. Remain confident, you are OK having no one butyourself around, but this behavior is not intentional; he and don't lose sight of your goals. A it just might work. Aboss oranolder friend or she is preoccupied with something partner or an associate pushes you hard seems off-kilter. Reach out to this personto else. Tonight: Wherever there is good and could become controlling. Is this find out what's goingon.Tonight: Order in. music. jealousy? Tonight: You make the call.
GEMINI (May 21-June20)
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
** * Understand that something isgoing on behind the scenes.You might fear the worst, but try to remain optimistic. You easily can balance a situation. A partner might be uptight aboutmoney.A change in how youhandle funds could relaxthis person. Tonight: Getsome RandR.
** * * You discover the power of two. You often push very hard to achieve certain results. If you teamed up with someone,theprocess would be easier and just as successful, if not more successful. Use care with spending, and count your change. Tonight: Talk and visit with friends.
PISCES (Fed. 19-March20)
** * * M ake and return calls in the morning. A message initially could disappointyou, but in the long run, it will giveyouthespacetodo whatyouwant.A family member lets you know how much he or sheadoresyou.Enjoythem oment. Tonight: Out and about at a favorite haunt. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
TV TODAY 12 p.m. onESPN, "2013 Masters Toumament" —Golf's first major tournament of theyear, the Masters, returns to Georgia's Augusta National Golf Club asthe top players in thegamecompete for the coveted greenjacket anda place in golf history. TigerWoods, Rory Mcllroy, LukeDonald, Brandt Snedeker,Justin Rose, Louis Oosthuizen anddefending champion BubbaWatsonareamongthe favorites. 5 p.m. on TNT,nNBA Basketdalln — Conference rivalries abound in tonight's TNT doubleheader, which gets going at Chicago's United Center, where Luol Deng and the Bulls hope to improve on their postseason seeding in the East with a victory over Carmelo Anthony and the New York Knicks. Then it's a clash of West playoff hopefuls when Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors welcome in Kevin Durant and the Oklahoma City Thunder
8 p.m. on H f3, "Community" — Jason Alexander("Seinfeld") guest stars in this newepisodeasa mountain manwhomeets thestudy group memberswhentheir balloon ride endswith a crash inthe woods. 9p.m. onH A, "The Office" — When the elevator goes out, everyone has to takethe stairs, and consequently, everyone's cranky. Dwight (Rainn Wilson) forces Stanley (Leslie David Baker) to make an important sales call. Pam andJim (Jenna Fischer,John Krasinskil vent to Nellie andToby (Catherine Tate, Paul Lieberstein) about their marital problems. Roseanne Barr guest stars. 10 p.m. on ASE, "The Killer Speaks" —This chilling new series from the creators of "The First 48" gets the perspective of cold-blooded murderers on the crimes they committed. The premiere profiles the man who in 2005 killed two of his Missouri neighbors, then broke into a Texas farmhouse and murdered three of the four occupants. 10 p.m. on USA,"TheMoment" — Former NFLstar Kurt Warner hosts this uplifting new series that gives people asecond chanceto have their dream jobs, whether they want to be sports photographers, orchestra conductors, race-car drivers or inventors. After two weeks of intense training with a mentor, the hopefuls interview with a companythat could offer them the chance of alifetime. Even if a job is offered, the person still has to weigh the effect on his or her family before accepting it. ©Zap2it
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• G.l. JOE:RETALIATION(UPSTAIRS — PG-13) 6:30 • QUARTET (PG-13) 6: l5 • Theupstairs screeningroomhaslimited accessibility.
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ON PAGES 3&4. COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbLllletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013
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541-350-6822 541-385-5809 Claypool Estate Sale Huge 10-family sale. Sales Redmond Area i 419 NW Congress Fri-Sat-Sun, 8-4 Thurs. 4 p.m.-8 p.m., Call Classifieds at Garage & Gun Sale Over 70 years of good Fri. 8 Sat. 7 a.m. to 5 541-385-5809 Rifles, pistols, military, stuff. Linens, blankets, p m., 100's hand & www.bendbulletin.com ammo. 3340 NW mirrors, furniture, vinpower tools, toolbox Odem, in Terrebonne. tage clothing, hunting & workbenches, books, Fri-Sat, 9-5:30 collectibles, antiques, High Point 40 cal. auto fishing equipment, defabric, bikes, kayaks, HUGE GARAGE SALE pistol, w/holster, like coys, tempra-pedic hosnew, $ 500. T e r ry pital bed, lamps, kitchen womens/kids clothes, 6 880 N E 2 8 t h C t . , everything, and more. 19644 Clear N i ght Tools, old stuff, new 541-788-7884 541-647-8931 Drive. Take Century to stuff, collectibles, Estate Sale, Thurs., Fri. bought a new boat'? & S at . 9 a m -4pm. Mammoth to August to books & magazines, Devltzn 100 rds of 9mm factory Just Sell your old one in the Clear Night. Visit our HUGE Ford 4000 t r actor, a mmo, N l B , $5 0 . classifieds! Ask about our Guns, tools, sporting home decor 541-647-8931 1999 Saturn. Lots of goods, antique buffet, 286 208 Super Seller rates! consignment store. misc! Fri., Sat., Sun., Kincaid, dining table 8 Sales Northeast Bend 541-385-5809 Pets 8 Supplies 130 rnds of .270 ballistic New items 9-5, No early birds. c hairs, h utch, a n t ip am m o , $10 0 . La Pine Sportsman arrive daily! 0 tiques, vintage radio, 541-647-8931 Adopt a nice CRAFT cat 930 SE Textron, Jamboree Gun-Knife wing b ac k c h a irs, ** FREE ** from Tumalo sanctuary, Bend 541-318-1501 Archery-Fishing Treager smoker, 260 rnds of match grade Sales Other Areas PetSmart, o r Pe t c o! www.redeuxbend.com 165 gr. 30-06, ammo, Coin-Collectible Show! d resser, stand u p Garage Sale Klt Fixed, shots, ID chip, (Sponsored by La Pine Place an ad in The $190. 541-647-8931 f reezer, front l o a d Sisters Moving Sale! tested, more! Sanctuary Senior Activity Ctr & Bulletin for your ga- Sat-Sun, 10am-? 16056 washer & dryer set, GENERATE SOME exopen Sat/Sun 1-5, other La Pine Park & Rec Dist) 280 rnds of 30-06 in M1 rage sale and recitement i n your camping, sewing & Cattle Drive Rd. Furnidays by appt. 65480 Golden Retrievers oaded mags, $2 0 0 . Exhibits, Antique & c rafts, k i t chen & ceive a Garage Sale ture, foosball table, TVs, neighborhood! Plan a l541-647-8931 78th, Bend. Pho t os, Modern Firearms - Trade, 20+ year breeder, Kit FREE! h ousehold item s , patio, kitchen, clothes, garage sale and don't more at Swap, Sell or Buy! parents on site. I Want to Buy or Rent map, t ravel trailer & 5 t h fishing boat, kayaks, lots forget to advertise in www.craftcats.org or • Saturday 4/1 3, 10-5 Healthy, smart 8 KIT INCLUDES: Just too many of misc. Cash only! classified! wheel, & much more. 541-389-8420. • Sunday 4/14, 10-3 beautiful. Written • 4 Garage Sale Signs Wanted: $Cash paid for Like us on Facebook. 541-385-5809. collectibles? La Pine Parks&Rec Ctr. 3372 NW Montgomery • $2.00 Off Coupon To guarantee first shots. vintage costume jewDrive, Redmond. Where can you find a (corner 1st & Morson) Use Toward Your elry. Top dollar paid for Boxer X English Bulldog Taking deposits now, Washer/dryer matching Adults $5 ($4 w/trade gun) helping hand? Sell them in Next Ad ready 4/27. Gold/Silver.l buy by the pups, CK C re g 'd. Whirlpool, exc. $300 BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Children 12 & under free • 10 Tips For "Garage Only males$550. Estate, Honest Artist $800. 541-325-3376 From contractors to The Bulletin Classifieds obo, 541-815-8658 (wlth paying adult) Search the area's most Sale Success!" 541-420-5253 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Call Andi, 541-536-6237 yard care, it's all here comprehensive listing of USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! WANTED: Tobacco The Bulletin classified advertising... 541-385-5809 in The Bulletin's Labradoodles - Mini 8 Large Ammunition & pipes - Briars and real estate to automotive PICK UP YOUR e xtra "Call A Service Door-to-door selling with med size, several colors recommends Gun Sale, this week- merchandise to sporting smoking accessories. GARAGE SALE KIT at n • p. . l 541-504-2662 (4) AR-15 .223-.556 end, in Silver Lake, goods. Bulletin Classifieds Fair prices paid. fast results! It's the easiest Professional" Directory 1777 SW Chandler chasing products or x 30-rnd mags, $100. Oregon. 541-576-4213 www.alpen-rldge.com Call 541-390-7029 Ave., Bend, OR 97702 way in the world to sell. services from out of I appear every day in the 541-647-8931 between 10 am-3 pm. print or on line. Labrador, AKC black the area. Sending y I NOTICE Ruger LCP .380 pistol, The Bulletin Remember The Bulletin Classified male pup, 14 w ks, c ash, c hecks, o r • to remove Call 541-385-5809 NIB, $340. dewormed, 1st shots, i credit i n f o rmation Get your www.bendbulletin.com your Garage Sale signs 541-385-5809 541-771-5648 Items for Free $275. 541-508-0429 may be subjected to business (nails, staples, etc.) Sale! F ri-Sat, after For more The Bulletin Moving S8W M&P AR-15 .223your Sale event Free: Nice hay but has Dachs. AKC mini pups Labradors: AKC yellow lab i FRAUD. ur ng ceniral owgan ance ftlu 4/12-13, 9-5, 2416 NE about an s .556 rifle w/8 30-rnd mags is over! THANKS! dirt in bales. Approx. 1 www.bendweenies.com pups, CH lines, parents information Ocker Dr. Books, Christadvertiser, you may i GR O W I N G $145 0. 541-647-8931 High-end upscale fur- mas, lots of women's From The Bulletin ton. Smith Rock area. All colors. 541-508-4558 on site. 541-420-9474 I call t h e Ore g onI and your local utility nishings & antiques. clothes, household misc. 206-849-2528. Diamond Dog Food Walther P22, 3 mags, MiniDach. black/tan fe- ' State Att or n ey ' Sat-Sun, 9-3, 977 SW companies. with an ad in Lamb & Rice laser sight, threaded Vantage Point Way, MOVING SALE. Tools, FREE: Old reclining male free to gd home. i General's O f f i c e The Bulletin's 40 lbs. - $26.99 541-419-8188 Prlnevule barrel, $425. couch. You h a ul. Consumer Protec- • The Bulletin Bend. 541-350-7983 8 household items, ServingCentral Oregon nnce 1903 Quarry Ave. Hay & 541-525-2495 541-330-7369. "Call A Service ho t l in e at I etc. Sat. 4/13 S-noon. MiniDach. c ho c .tan t ion YARD 8 CRAFT SALE. Feed. 541-923-2400 2105 NE Kim Lane. www.bendbulletln.com male free to gd home. i 1-877-877-9392. Professional" Free young banty old www.quarryfeed.com 60979 Lodgepole What are you 541-419-8188 Prineville English game rooster, Directory Saturday, 9 a.m. te Bulle Mildred Ferguson //Forrest Vorce colorful. 541-322-6192 Donate deposit bottles/ w looking for? No early birds! cans to local all volNeed to get an MOVING SALE AK-47 underfolder, unBULLETINCLASSIFIEOS You'll find it in unteer, non-profit res282 ad in ASAP? fired, (2) 30-rnd mags, 1066 O'NeilHwy, Redmond Search the area's most cue, to h e l p w / cat bayonette, 1260 rnds still The Bulletin Classifieds Sales Northwest Bend You can place it comprehensive listing of spay/neuter vet bills. Antiques & Friday, April 12 • Saturday, April 13 in th e c a se. $ 1850. Cans for Cats trailer classified advertising... online at: Collectibles 541-410-3308 Father-In-Law Sale! (Take Hviyy97 north -go through Redmond on at Ray's Food, Sisreal estate to automotive, Household & shop 541-385-5809 the bypass to the north end and turn right at ters thru 4/29, then www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin reserves AMMO: 12ga $6, .308 merchandise to sporting items. Fri 8 Sat 9-2. the blinking light- onto O'Neil, follow about 1 Redmond (near $20, .357 $25, 9mm goods. Bulletin Classifieds Petco the right to publish all 65165 85th St (Tumalo) Wanted: Collector Wal-Mart) until 5/20. 541-385-5809 1/4 mile to the sale site.) appear every day in the ads from The Bulletin $12, 541-604-5115 seeks high quality D onate Mon-Fri @ SALE hours 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. print or on line. newspaper onto The fishing items. Smith Signs, 1515 NE POM-CHls 9 wks old .308, C M MG, Moving Sale! Crowd Control admittance numbers Bulletin Internet web- AR-10 Call 541-385-5809 16" Stainless barrel, Call 541-678-5753, or or a t C R A FT, 1 M, 1F • $200 each. 61427 Elder Ridge @ 8:00 a.m. Friday www.bendbulletin.com 2nd; site. 503-351-2746 T umalo a n y ti m e . 541-280-7474 20 round mag, NIB 4/13 and 4/14 Hide-a-bed & matching loveseat; Maytag 25 cu.ft. 541-389-8420; I nf o : $1795. 541-306-7750 7:30am-4pm refrigerator w/ bottom freezer; Sears washer & The Bulletin Bulletin Poodle at stud, AKC Irg The www.craftcats.org BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS unmg cenirai 0 eyonmw iee 5er ne central oregon s nce l903 dryer (older); Smaller china cabinet/bleached standard, apricot AR-15 556 S&W mil. po- Search the area's most wood; Dyno bicycle, like new mens; 3 recliners; 9' proven. 541-977-1415 lice Red Dot, 3 30-rnd comprehensive listing of USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! couch; Coffee 8 end tables; Dinette set with 4 DO YOU HAVE clips, $1850; Ruger .44 Pets 8 Supplies classified advertising... chairs; End tables; Pictures and prints; Kneehole SOMETHING TO Coins & Stamps Poodle pupsAKC toys. mag SPR RHK + hol- real estate to automotive, Door-to-door selling with two dressers; Modified sleigh bed-style SELL Loving, cuddly companster w/100 rds ammo, merchandise to sporting fast results! It's the easiest desk; queen size head and foot boards - no mattress; FOR $500 OR Private collector buying $900. 541-350-2993 ions. 541-475-3889 The Bulletin recomOlder TV; Glass gun cabinet; four oak chairs; goods. Bulletin Classifieds way in the world to sell. LESS? p ostage stamp a l mends extra caution Queensland Heelers Large oak bookcase; lots and lots of Electrical Non-commercial bums & c ollections, AR-15 Olympic Arms in appear every day in the when purc h asStandard 8, Mini, $150 appliances;Rainbow vacuum; Dishes, glasses; world-wide and U.S. great cond. Too many print or on line. advertisers may 1he Bulletin Classified ing products or ser& up. 541-280-1537 573-286-4343 (local, extras to list. $2000 obo. pots and pans; Canning items--jars and kettles; 8 place an ad with Call 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 vices from out of the www.rightwayranch.wor cell ¹) track stereo unit; small roll top desk; Wool blanouI' 541-419-6054 www.bendbulletin.com area. Sending cash, dpress.com kets; Quilts; 70 C.M. Russell prints; Old bamboo "QUICK CASH 284 checks, or credit inBend local pays CASH!! poles and other fishing gear; Linens, linens and SPECIAL" The Bulletin Call a Pro f ormation may b e for all firearms & Sales Southwest Bend more linens; books; magazines; Clothing and 1 week 3 lines 12 subjected to fraud. ammo. 541-526-0617 Whether you need a shoes; Small glass display cabinet; Three Weber 2~ k 20 ! Winchester 22LR hol- 60875 SW Garrison (off barbecues; Misc. tools and planters; some rocks; For more i nformaAd must include fence fixed, hedges CASH!! tion about an adverlow points, 500 rds, Brookswood in River Field fertilizer spreader; Old misc. farm items; price of single item trimmed or a house For Guns, Ammo & $70.541-647-8931 tiser, you may call Rim). Fri. & Sat., 8-2. Unique rolls of barb wire; Garden chemicals; old of $500 or less, or Reloading Supplies. the O r egon State built, you'll find Multi Family S a l e! stereo with 8 track and record player; records and multiple items Scottish fold kittens. 541-408-6900. 253 VCRs; Misc. dishes, food products; Christmas Attorney General's Formals, 1970 Cabwhose total does professional help in $200. 8 weeks old. Office C o n sumer not exceed $500. TV, Stereo & Video bage Patch d o lls, items; small tools; Canners and lots of canning Colt LE6920 M4 CarRedmond. The Bulletin's "Call a jars; Plasticware; Lotsand lots oi otheritems!!!! Protection hotline at Noritake China, anbine; 2013 C o nfig; 541-241-4914. 1-877-877-9392. Service Professional" New In Box; MagPul Panasonic projector 47" tique books, Casio pi- Handled by... Call Classifieds at Deedy's Estate Sales Co. 541-385-5809 IIYorkie Maltese pups rear sight and 30 rnd TV; 32" Sharp. Both ano, gam e s/toys, Directory The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com fem. $300;male $250 mag; $1,650. ood working cond. boys Karate Gi, col541-419-4742 days • 541-382-5950 eves 541-385-5809 CASH. 541-546-7909 300. 541-330-5995 lector Smurf figurines. www.deedysestatesales.com Call (458) 206-8721
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E2 THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 476
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
Employment Opportunities
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5500 pm Fri •
Tuesday•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mona Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon Tuess a
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Can be found on these pages: Alcohol & Drug Outpatient Counselor FINANCEAND BUSINESS f or teens i n B e n d . EMPLOYMENT Masters' level c lini- 410 - Private Instruction 507 - Real Estate Contracts cian preferred; mini- 421 - Schools andTraining 514 -Insurance m um CADC I I r e - 454- Looking for Employment 528 - Loans andMortgages 421 quired. 2 yrs exp in 470 - Domestic & In-HomePositions 543 - StocksandBonds Schools 8 Training the field of addictions 558 - Business Investments and mental h e alth, 476 - Employment Opportunities Oregon Medical Train573 - BusinessOpportunities incl group and indi- 486 - IndependentPositions ing PCS - Phlebotomy vidual work, and cliniclasses begin May 6, 476 476 cal d o c umentation. 2013. Registration now F ull-time, with b e nEmployment Employment P efits beginning 5/1. medicaltrainin .com Opportunities Opportunities T raining t o be g i n 541-343-31 00 ASAP. Salary DOE. Apply at Sales The Bulletin Find exactly what rimrocktrailsats.or We are looking for I Recommends extra you are looking for in the experienced Sales caution when purCLASSIFIEDS Auto professional to Join chasing products or I F&l Manager. Experi- Central O r e gon's services from out of enced with p r oven l argest ne w ca r I the area. Sending 470 526 track record manda- d ealer Subaru o f c ash, c hecks, o r Domestic 8 tory. Great pay plan Bend. Loans & Mortgages Offe r i ng I credit i n f o rmation In-Home Positions and benefits. Call for 401k, profit sharing, I may be subjected to confidential interview. medical plan, split WARNING FRAUD. Caregiver/CNA needed 541-420-9670. The Bulletin recoms hifts, a n d pa i d For more informafor woman with M.S. in mends you use cautraining. Please aption about an adverprivate home, Mon-Fri, Where can you find a tion when you proply at 2060 NE Hwy I tiser, you may call 40 hrs/week (8-4). Expevide personal 20, Bend. the Oregon State helping hand? rience, valid ODL 8 2 information to compaI Attorney General's references required. $14 From contractors to nies offering loans or Office Co n s umert per hr. Call only between yard care, it's all here Take care of credit, especially Protection hotline at t 9am-9pm, 541-318-1335. those asking for adI 1-877-877-9392. in The Bulletin's your investments Need female live-in carvance loan fees or "Call A Service with the help from ie Bulletin egiver, non-smoker in companies from out of good physical cond, to Professional" Directory state. If you have The Bulletin's help hemiplegic with concerns or ques"Call A Service Check out the light housekeeping & tions, we suggest you classifieds online meal prep. 541-382-5493 Dental Insurance consult your attorney Professional" Directory www.bendbulletin.com or call CONSUMER & Collections 476 Updated daily HOTLINE, Full-time position Special Education Employment 1-877-877-9392. Teacher with attractive TRUCK DRIVER Opportunities benefits package. wanted must have BANK TURNED YOU L ake County ESD i s Fun, family-like now accepting appli- doubles endorsement, DOWN? Private party CAUTION READERS: team. Musthave local run, call cations for a Special will loan on real es541-475-4221 dental experience Education T e acher. tate equity. Credit, no Ads published in "Emwith work referApplicants must have problem, good equity ployment OpportuniSay "goodbuy" or qualify for Oregon is all you need. Call ences to apply; t ies" i n c lude e m licensure as a Oregon Land MortDentrix helpful. to that unused ployee and Teacher with Handigage 541-388-4200. i ndependent po s i item by placing it in capped Learner EnFax resume to tions. Ads for posidorsement. This is a The Bulletin Classifieds tions that require a fee 541-475-6159 Want to impress the part-time (.5 FTE) poor upfront investment (Madras). sition with a s a lary relatives? Remodel must be stated. With range $ 1 6,565 541 -385-5809 your home with the any independent job $29,716 DOE, partial help of a professional opportunity, p l ease Need to get an benefits. Posi t i on from The Bulletin's investigate thorcloses 4/30/1 3. Looking for your next ad in ASAP? "Call A Service oughly. Submit application employee? You can place it online at Professional" Directory Place a Bulletin help Use extra caution when online at: www.edzapp.com wanted ad today and applying for jobs oninclude application, reach over 60,000 line and never pro- www.bendbulletin.com resume & cover letter LOCAL MONEyrWe buy readers each week. vide personal inforsecured trustdeeds & Your classified ad mation to any source 541-385-5809 note,some hard money FIND YOUR FUTURE will also appear on you may not have reloans. Call Pat Kelley bendbulletin.com HOME INTHE BULLETIN 541-382-3099 ext.13. searched and deemed which currently to be reputable. Use DO YOU NEED Your future is just a page receives over 1.5 extreme caution when A GREAT away. Whetheryou're looking million page views What are you r esponding to A N Y fora hat or a placeto hangit, EMPLOYEE every month at online e m p loyment RIGHT NOW? The Bulletin Classified is looking for? no extra cost. ad from out-of-state. your best source. Call The Bulletin Bulletin Classifieds You'll find it in before 11 a.m. and Get Results! Every daythousandsof We suggest you call get an ad in to pubCall 385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds buyers and sellers of goods the State of Oregon lish the next day! or place and services do business in Consumer Hotline at 541-385-5809. your ad on-line at these pages.They know 1-503-378-4320 bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809 VIEW the you can't beat The Bulletin Classifieds at: Classified Section for For Equal Opportunity www.bendbulletin.com selection and convenience L aws: Oregon B u- every item isjust a phone reau of Labor & Incall away. dustry, C i vil Rights Remember.... Division, A dd your web a d - The Classified Section is 971-673-0764 dress to your ad and easy to use. Every item readers on The is categorized andevery If you have any quesBulletin' s web site cartegory is indexed on the tions, concerns or will be able to click section's front page. comments, contact: through automatically Whether youarelooking for Classified Department to your site. a home or need aservice, The Bulletin • • I I • I t your future is in the pagesof 541-385-5809 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! The Bulletin Classified. Thank you St. Jude & St. Joseph & St. AnDoor-to-door selling with The Bulletin Sacred H e ar t of thony, thank you for fast results! It's the easiest Jesus. j.d. your intercessions!JNE Alcohol & Drug way in the world to sell.
Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Saturday • • • •. . . . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri. • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Sunday. • • • • Starting at 3 lines
"UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
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.
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The Bulletin bendbulletimcom
is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
267
Fuel & Wood
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PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based 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.
Computers
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7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00 *Must state prices in ed
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Place a photoin your private party ad for only$15.00 per week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
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Gardening Supplieel & E q uipment •
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EihuBeR B U LLETIN r e WHEN BUYING quires computer adSUPER TOP SOIL vertisers with multiple FIREWOOD... www.hershe soilandbariccom ad schedules or those Screened, soil 8 comTo avoid fraud, selling multiple syspost m i x ed , no The Bulletin tems/ software, to disrocks/clods. High hupayclose the name of the recommends m us level, exc. f o r ment for Firewood business or the term flower beds, lawns, only upon delivery "dealer" in their ads. gardens, straight and inspection. Private party advertis- • A cord is 128 cu. ft. s creened to p s o i l . Farm Equipment • & Machinery ers are defined as Bark. Clean fill. De4' x 4' x 8' those who sell one liver/you haul. • Receipts should 541-548-3949. One set of 4'x7" forklift computer. include name, forks, HD, like new phone, price and $145. 541-410-3425. kind of wood purMisc. Items chased. • Firewood ads Buying Diamonds FOUND a little all black Hay, Grain & Feed MUST include spespayed female cat, /Gotd for Cash cies and cost per yellow eyes, vicinity or 1st quality grass hay, Saxon's Fine Jewelers cord to better serve Tucson o r W i c hita 70-lb. bales, barn stored, 541-389-6655 our customers. W ay in N E B e n d . $250/ton. Also big bales! Good classified ads tell Patterson Ranch, The Bulletin 541-508-2250. the essential facts in an Sisters, 541-549-3831 interesting Manner. Write Get your Free: Nice hay but has from the readers view - not 1 cord dry, split Juniper, business dirt in bales. Approx. 1 the seller's. Convert the $190/cord. Multi-cord ton. Smith Rock area. facts into benefits. Show discounts, & t/a cords 206-849-2528. the reader how the item will available. Immediate a ROW I N G help them in someway. delivery! 541-408-6193 This Looking for your with an ad in All Year Dependable advertising tip next employee? Firewood: Seasoned The Bulletin's brought to youby Place a Bulletin Lodgepole, Split, Del. The Bulletin "Call A Service help wanted ad Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 The Bulletin for $335. Cash, Check Professional" today and or Credit Card OK. reach over Directory Outpatient A&D BUYING 541-420-3484. 60,000 readers Counselor Lionel/American Flyer The Bulletin Classified each week. for residential rehab. trains, accessories. Seasoned Juniper$150/ Found: Two bike hel541-385-5809 mets. around 17th 8 Your classified ad cord rounds; $170/ Weekend r e l ief/on541-408-2191. cord split. Delivered in Galveston. will also call. M a sters' level BUYING & SE L LING Central OR, since 541-382-1032. appear on clinician pr e f erred; All gold jewelry, silver 1970! Call eves, minimum CADC II re- Sales bendbulletin.com Call54I 3855809topramcte yourservice'Advertise for 28daysstarting at ' i4) lrtrr spec ialparkrger rarssilaile onourwebsirei Found unique woman's Territory Sales and gold coins, bars, 541-420-4379 quired. 2 yrs exp w/ which currently Hring. Identify before July rounds, wedding sets, Manager addictions, prior exp receives over 1, 2013. 541-536-4276, 268 class rings, sterling silworking with t e ens Harbor W h o lesale 1.5 million page ver, coin collect, vin- Trees, Plants & Flowers Joan Lee, 15543 EmerFoods, the leading Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care( (group and individual), convenience aldDr., La Pine, OR views every tage watches, dental store and c l inical d o c u97739 month at no gold. Bill Fl e ming, wholesale distribum entation. Sal a ry NOTICE: Oregon state 7 0% Of f T r e e Nelson 541-382-9419. extra cost. t or in th e NW , i s Good classified ads tell DOE. law req u ires anyLandscaping & Blow Out Sale Bulletin seeking a dynamic, App/y at: one who co n t racts the essential facts in an C emetery plot at T u on locally g rown Maintenance Classifieds experienced s ales Zor/dtz gaaErip rimrocktrailsats.or for construction work malo Cemetery, $450. trees; Canada Red interesting Manner. Write Serving Central Get Results! p erson t o gro w 541-848-7436 to be licensed with the Zacug gas.e, i,. from the readers view not Oregon Since 2003 Choke Ch e r ries, Harbor's business in Call 541-385-5809 Have an item to C onstruction Con - More ThanService the seller's. Convert the Blue Residental/Commercial the greater Bend, or place your ad People Look for Information Colorado tractors Board (CCB). facts into benefits. Show Peace Ol Mind Spruce, Engelman sell quick? Oregon area. A drive on-line at About Products and A n active lice n se Sprinkler Spruce, Au s t rian the reader how the item will to help c ustomers bendbulletin.com If it's under Services Every Daythrough means the contractor Spring Clean Up Activation/Repair Pines, P onderosa help them in someway. succeed and build i s bonded an d i n The Bulletin Classifieds Pine, Aspens, etc., Back Flow Testing '500 you can place it in •Leaves This relationships for the s ured. Ve r if y t h e all sizes. 4/1 3 & •Cones advertising tip future must be a priThe Bulletin contractor's CCB Maintenance Eddie Bauer wmns ski 4/14, 8 am - 4 pm. • Needles brought to youby ority with this perPoultry, Rabbits, • Thatch 8 Aerate jumpsuit sz 8, new w/ c ense through t h e Classifieds for: 6 4655 Ol d B e n d • Debris Hauling son. Fo r d e tailed tags $100. 541-678-5407 / Redmond CCB Cons u m er • Spring Clean up & Supplies Hwy . The Bulletin i nformation and t o •Weekly Mowing Website Follow signs. Call Weed free Bark '10 - 3 lines, 7 days apply; www.harbor- www.hirealicensedcontractor. FAST TREES, Potted 8 Edging R ock for info at 8 flower beds Grow 6-10 feet yearly! LOST Black Rabbit in F REE B arred wholesale.com com '16 3 lines, 14 days •Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly 10 mo,. not ag541-934-2423. $16-$22 delivered. NE Bend. $20 RE- rooster, EEOC or call 503-378-4621. Maintenance NO Early Birds! www.fasttrees.com WARD if found either gressive. 541-548-5516 (Private Party ads only) The Bulletin recom- Lawn Renovation •Bark, Rock, Etc. Aeration - Dethatching or 509-447-41 81 way. 541-382-4240 mends checking with 345 Overseed the CCB prior to conCall a Pro ~Landsca in Lost black & white tux- Livestock 8 Equipment Wanted- paying cash tracting with anyone. Compost A CUSTOMER SERVICE A •Landscape for Hi-fi audio 8 stu- Whether you need a edo female cat "Boots," Top Dressing Some other t r ades Construction Boyd Acres/Morningstar Fancy purebred yearREPRESENTATIVE dio equip. Mclntosh, fence fixed, hedges req u ire addi•Water Feature area, 4/2/13. $50 reward ling Angus heifers Immediate o p ening i n the Cir c ulation also J BL, Marantz, D y tional licenses and Landscape trimmed or a house Installation/Maint. to anyone finding her. department for a full time entry level Customer naco, Heathkit, San(20). Final A n s wer certifications. •Pavers Maintenance Call Fran, 541-390-4255, and Danny built, you'll find Service Representative. Looking for someone sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Boy Full or Partial Service •Renovations please leave message. Call 541-261-1808 bloodlines. Good dis- to assist our subscribers and delivery carriers professional help in • Irngations Installation •Mowing ~Edging Call a Pro with s u bscription t r ansactions, a c count Lost b rac e let w i t h p osition. Raised i n The Bulletin's "Call a • Pruning «Weeding WHEN YOU SEE THIS long-established herd. questions and delivery concerns. Essential: Whether you need a semi-precious stones Senior Discounts Sprinkler Adjustments Service Professional" Reward. 541-923-6635. Positive a t t itude, s t r on g se r v ice/team fence fixed, hedges $1000 ea. Del. avail. Bonded & Insured ~OO orientation, and problem solving skills. Must 541-480-8096 Madras Directory 541-815-4458 Fertilizer included LOST: Rx sunglasses in trimmed or a house have accurate t y ping, c o mputer e ntry LCB¹8759 MOre PiXatBeiidbiletii),COm 541-385-5809 with monthly program brown hard/soft glasses experience and phone skills. Most work is built, you'll find On a classified ad case. Please contact done via telephone so strong professional SPRING CLEAN-UP! go to professional help in Farmers Column • 269 Jerry, 541-408-7220. Weekly,monthly communication skills and the ability to multi Aeration/Dethatching www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin's "Call a or one time service. Weekly/one-time service Gardening Supplies Lost: silver lighter case task in a fast paced environment is a must. to view additional 10X20 STORAGE avail. Bonded, insured. Work shift hours are Tuesday thru Friday 8:00 Service Professional" off back of Harley btwn photos of the item. & Equipment BUILDINGS Free Estimates! EXPERIENCED a.m. to5:00 p.m., and Saturday 6:00 a.m. to Bend/Sisters. SentimenDirectory for protecting hay, COLLINS Lawn Maint noon with an occasional Sunday shift and Commercial tal va l ue ; rew a rd. 6hp PTO Troy-bilt firewood, livestock 541-385-5809 & Residential Ca/i 541-460-9714 541-549-8903 holidays required. Building Materials Rototiller, $500. etc. $1496 Installed. Send resume to: PO Box 6020, Bend OR, 541-815-8069 541-617-1133. REMEMBER: Ifyou 97708, attn: Circulation Customer Service Mgr. Just too many REDMOND Habitat Debris Removal CCB ¹173684. have lost an animal, Senior Discounts or e-mail to ahusted©bendbulletin.com RESTORE don't forget to check kfjbuilders@ykwc.net collectibles'? Need to get an ad EOE/Drug free workplace 541-390-1466 Building Supply Resale JUNK BE GONE The Humane Society Same Day Response Quality at in ASAP? in Bend 541-382-3537 I Haul Away FREE Sell them in Garage Sales LOW PRICES Redmond, For Salvage. Also N OTICE: O R E G O N The Bulletin Classifieds 1242 S. Hwy 97 541-923-0882 Landscape ContracCleanups 8 Cleanouts Garage Sales Fax it to 541-322-7253 541-548-1406 Prineville, Mel, 541-389-8107 tors Law (ORS 671) Open to the public. 541-447-7178; r equires a l l bu s i - 541-385-5809 Garage Sales Advertising Account Executive The Bulletin Classifieds OR Craft Cats, nesses that advertise Excavating • 541-389-8420. to p e r form L a n d- ALLEN REINSCH Find them The Bulletin is looking for a professional and Heating & Stoves scape C o nstruction Yard maintenance 8 Levi's Concrete & Dirt in driven Sales and Marketing person to help our BarkTurfSoil.com which incl u des: clean-up, thatching, Works - for all your dirt & customers grow their businesses with an NOTICE TO excavation needs. Conp lanting, deck s , The Bulletin 8 much more! expanding list of broad-reach and targeted ADVERTISER crete, Driveway Grading, fences, arbors, plugging PROMPT D E LIVERY Call 541-536-1 294 Classifieds products. This full time position requires a Augering. ccb¹ 194077 Since September 29, w ater-features, a n d 541-389-9663 G.W. AUCTION background in consultative sales, territory 541-639-5282 installation, repair of 1991, advertising for 541-385-5809 Estate Auction used woodstoves has management and aggressive prospecting skills. irrigation systems to Get your been limited to modbe licensed with the Two years of media sales experience is Handyman For newspaper Sat. April 13, business els which have been Rafter L F Ranch & Landscape Contracpreferable, but we will train the right candidate. delivery, call the Short Road c ertified by the O r Farm Svcs.- Custom t ors B o a rd . Th i s I DO THAT! Circulation Dept. at Klamath Falls, OR Haying 8 Field Work 4-digit number is to be egon Department of 541-385-5800 Home/Rental repairs The position includes a competitive Call Lee Fischer, Environmental Qualincluded in all adver- a ROW I N G Small jobs to remodels To place an ad, call John Deere 4x4 traccompensation package including benefits, and 541-410-4495 ity (DEQ) and the fedtor (less than 500 tisements which indi541-385-5809 Honest, guaranteed rewards an aggressive, customer focused with an ad in eral E n v i ronmental cate the business has hours); Implements; work. CCB¹151573 or email salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Protection A g e ncy classified@bendbulletimcom a bond, insurance and S prinkler pipe; 2 5 Dennis 541-317-9768 The Bulletin's Tick, Tock workers c ompensa(EPA) as having met pump; DR Tiller; "Call A Service Email your resume, cover letter and salary Bulletin HP smoke emission stan- The ERIC REEVE HANDY tion for their employservingcentral oreqon s>ncerate Riding Mower; Chain Tick, Tock... history to: Professional" dards. A cer t ified SERVICES. Home & ees. For your protecsaws; Guns, Ammo; Jay Brandt, Advertising Director w oodstove may b e Commercial Repairs, tion call 503-378-5909 Directory ...don't let time get Camp & Fish Items; jbrandt@bendbulletin.com identified by its certifiCarpentry-Painting, or use our website: Want to impress the Smoking pipe colaway. Hire a cation label, which is Pressure-washing, www.lcb.state.or.us to relatives? Remodel lection; Tob a cco or drop off your resume in person at Honey Do's. On-time check license status Painting/Wall Covering( permanently attached professional out your home with the collectibles; Guitars; to the stove. The Bul1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; promise. Senior before co n t racting of The Bulletin's help of a professional Amps; Beer signs; letin will no t k n owDiscount. Work guar- with t h e bu s iness. • Interior/Exterior Painting Or mail to PO Box6020, Bend, OR 97708; Etc. Etc! • Deck Refinishing from The Bulletin's "Call A Service ingly accept advertisanteed. 541-389-3361 Persons doing landNo phone inquines please. Services Photos & info at ing for the sale of or 541-771-4463 scape m aintenance • Handvman "Call A Service Professional" CCB¹t 639t4 uncertified Bonded & Insured do not require a LCB Sage Home Maintenance Professional" Directory www.777auction.com EOE / Drug Free Workplace Directory today! woodstoves. 541-479-5750 CCB¹181 595 license. Call 541-508-0673 •
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E4 THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
DAILY B R I D G E
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
NEw YORK TIMES CROSSwORD will shor tz
T h ursday,April 11,2013
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3o Western Sahara neighbor: Abbr. 3z Slumps 32 What honor students often have 3s Third base,in baseballlingo ... or a hint for answering eight other clues in this puzzle the economy 37 Means of 38 Plop preceder divination 39 Digital dough 39 Shem's eldest 23 So-called son "Wheat Capital 43 1960 chess of Oklahoma" champ 22 One "coming" 44 Debate position in a Three Dog 4SGeorgeTakei TV Night hit and film role 23 Big maker of 4e Formal "yes" power tools 4 s "Did I do ? " 24 European s2 Fraternity capital that's letters majority-Muslim s3 Fe i ld 2e Ex-Yankee Martinez s4 Slate, for one 2s Eisner's ss Frequent successor at abbr. in BBC Disney announcements
The name of the game By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services
In a matchpoint duplicate event, you open 1NT as South, and North, who likes the way you play 'em, raises to 3NT. West leads the jack of clubs. The contract is n ormal; every North-South will be at 3NT. Your matchpoint score will depend on how many tricks you take. Win the first club in dummy and lead a diamond to your queen — the best chance for five diamond tricks. You next take the ace and lose a diamond to the king. If East shifts to hearts, you will go down one, but you will have no regrets.
your partner responds two c l ubs (Stayman), you bid two diamonds and he tries two hearts. What do you say? "Standard" ANSWER: In methods, partner's sequence shows game interest but not enough strength to force. He has seven or eight points with a five-card heart suit. You have options depending on your strength and degree of heart support. Since you have maximum values but only two hearts, bid 3NT. South dealer N-S vulnerable
NORTH 4 K 10 8 9 975 2 O J74 AKQ7
NORMAL BREAKS Now say the game is Chicago. Making your contract is the goal; overtricks are not significant. You can develop nine tricks with normal breaks, but you don't want East to get in for a heart shift. Lead the jack of diamonds at Trick Two: king, ace, deuce. Go back to dummy and lead another diamond, covering East's six with the eight. West wins, but your king of hearts is safefrom attack.When you get back in, you have four diamonds, three clubs and two spades.
DAILY QUESTION
WEST 4Q62 9 AQ6 C 92 4 J 10984
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Opening lead — 4 J Youhold: 4 A 7 3 9 K 4 0 AQ 85 3 4A 5 3. Y o uopen1NT, (C) 20I3 Tribune Media Services, lnc.
se Crusty rolls se Marathoner's asset ei Gird ez Study group e3 Real goodlooker e4 Showed off
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DOWN 32 33 34 z Snacks in the frozen food 35 36 aisle 2 "Rich gifts wax 37 38 39 40 41 42 poor when 43 44 45 givers prove unkind" speaker 46 47 48 4 9 50 51 52 3 Making the rent? 53 54 55 4Army 56 57 58 59 60 s Heads overseas? 61 62 e Hoover rival 63 64 7 Energy e Outer: Prefix 9 Certain kitchen PUZZLE BY JIM PAGE knife 34 Advanced deg. 41 Barnard grads, st Latin lover's zo John is a tests words e.g. common one 3e Spanish waves 42 Spicy pretzel zz Current events? s4 Subj. for recent ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE dlp 37 James Bond's i2 Lover of arrivals, maybe 43 It's hard to lover in "From R A F T G A B S SW I S H souped-up Russia With score E L L A OB O E C OR F U engines s7 Electric Love" 47 Blues vocalist A F A R H A S N O O O M P H z4 Jai Monica 38 Undemocratic ss "Riddle me, P A P A D O C T H R E A D S is "Well, yeah!" Parker tendency riddle me I M IJ S W ED 2o Plum brandy 49 Kettle sound 4o Thrusting T O O O N E S I D E D B E N 24 Beach sights suddenly so Put up eo Red fighter OZ A R K D E L S O L O zs "Dies T A K E S I T B L EW O F F For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit 27Workplace card, 1-800-814-5554. E WE S D A D T A L I A watchdog, in Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday D AN z o o o c c u p A N T brief crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. S E T S H A D 29 "The Hoax" star, AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nyiimes.com/mobilexword for more information. B I ST R O S ER EC T ED 2006 Online subscriptions; Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past I G LO O O W N E R H E R O 32 ". 'Clock puzzles, nyiimes.com/crosswords (S39.95 a year). L EO N I A E R O A R I Z scholar" Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. L T G E N MO S T D IC E Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords. 33 ... to skin .
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org.
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LOS ANGELES TIMESCROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
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By Marti DuGuay-Carpenter (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
04/1 1/1 3
THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY APRIL 11 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
~
s
I •
•
•
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
f •
•
•
e
:o.
650
750
Houses for Rent NE Bend
Redmond Homes
870
Boats & Accessories
Boats & Accessories
•
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers •
Fifth Wh e els
] Q4
oQ00
•
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
Q
870
t1''t
18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 Boat loader, elec. for Southwind 35.5' Triton, Luxury 2009 Prowler 2009 Extreme Carri-Lite Volvo Penta, 270HP, pickup canopy, extras, 2008,V10, 2 slides, Duby Carriage, 4 slides, E dition. Model 2 7 0 pont UV coat, 7500 mi. low hrs n must see, $450, 541-548-3711 inverter, satellite sys, RL, 2 slides, opposSnowmobiles Bought new at 2 flat screen $15,000, 541-330-3939 ing in living area, ent. fireplace, GENERATE SOME ex$132,913; TVs. $54,950 center, sep. bedroom, ( 2) 2000 A r ctic C a t 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, citement in your neigasking $91,000. 541-480-3923 2 new e x tra t i res, Z L580's EFI with n e w 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 borhood. Plan a gaCall 503-982-4745
covers, electric start w/ reverse, low miles, both excellent; with new 2009 Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, drive off/on w/double tilt, lots of accys. Selling due to m e dical r e asons.
The Bulletin
$36,300. 541-419-6176
541-390-1122
gennng Central Oregon since i903
skslraOmsn.com
875
$8000 all. 541-536-8130
• Yamaha 750 1999 Mountain Max, $1400. • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, $1000.
hitch, bars, sway bar Advertise your car! included. P r o-Pack, Add A Picture! anti-theft. Good cond, Reach thousands of readers! Call 541-385-5809 'til c lean. Re q . 4/20/15. 819 , 9 00. The Bulletin Classifieds
rage sale and don't forget to advertise in Sunseeker 24.5', 2004 classified! 385-5809. Class C, 1 slide, Ford 450 F10, 36K, new awnings,
hp Bowrider w/depth finder radio/CD player rod holders, full canvas, EZ Loader trailer, exclnt cond, $13,000. 707-484-3518 (Bend)
Watercraft
Ads published in aWaSuncruiser34' tercraft" include: Kay- Winnebago only 34K, loaded, aks, rafts and motor- 2004, too much to list, ext'd • Zieman 4-place Ized personal warr. thru 2014, $54,900 18' Larson C l assic trailer, SOLD! watercrafts. For Dennis, 541-589-3243 All in good condition. 1971 Tri- hull with 165 " boats" please s e e Located in La Pine. Chev/ Mercruiser, 4.5 Class 870. Need help fixing stuff? CalI 541-408-6149. HP outboard, dinette/ Call A Service Professional sleeper plus standup 541-385-5809 find the help you need. 860 canvas for camping. www.bendbulletin.com Fish f inder. Motorcycles & Accessories Eagle $2900 541-382-7515. •
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
,
The Bulletin
You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
880
Bid Now!
•
Motorhomes
www.sulletinsidnBuy.com
Tra v el Trailers
Bid Now!
www.BulletinsidnBuy.com
Buy New...Buy Local
You Can Bid On: $525 Certificate toward Powder Coating from Commerical Powder Coating (Bidding closes Tues., April 16, at 8:00 p.m.)
18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, g r eat cond, well maintained, $9995obo. 541-350-7755 2003 Fleetwood Dis-
u
.l~ )(I(
HeartlandBighorn 36'
4000 miles, 3 slide-outs, many extras, in great condition; stored inside. $32,000. 541-233-6819
Laredo 2009 30' with 2
slides, TV, A/C, table & c h airs, s a tellite, Arctic pkg., p o wer awning, Exc. cond!
$28,000. 541-419-3301
The Bulletin RV space avail. $400 To Subscribe call mo. includes.30 amp + w/s/g. Tumalo area. 541-385-5800 or go to 541-41 9-5060 www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting yourneeds.
covery 40' diesel motorhome w/all Buy New...Buy Local options-3 slide outs, You Can Bid On: MONTANA 3585 2008, parking, c l os e to satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, 2013 Retro Trailer Call on one of the exc. cond., 3 slides, shopping, $1250 waetc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. by Riverside, reach over 60,000 king bed, Irg LR, professionals today! ter incl. 541-610-5702. Wintered in h e ated Valued at $19,834. readers each week. Arctic insulation, all shop. $89,900 O.B.O. All Seasons RV Your classified ad 1996 Seaswirl 20.1 options $35,000. 630 8 Marine TURN THE PAGE will also appear on Cuddy, 5.0 Volvo, exc 541-447-8664 541-420-3250 (Bidding closes bendbulletin.com cond., full canvas, one Rooms for Rent 28' For More Ads FLEETWOOD Nuy!/a 29 7LK Hi t chTues., April 16, which currently reB MW K100 L T 1 9 8 7 owner, $6500 OBO. Coronada, Class A, T he Bu l l e t i n Hiker 2007, 3 slides, at 8:00 p.m.) ceives over Studios & Kitchenettes 52k miles, b r onze, 541-410-0755 runs beautifully, only 32' touring coach, left 1.5 million page Furnished room, TV w/ 61K mi. since new, extra windshield, r r r r r r r r r r kitchen, rear lounge, cable, micro 8 fridge. views every month trailer hitch, battery leveling jacks, Ig. Springdale 2005 27', 4' many extras, beautiful Utils 8 l i nens. New at no extra cost. slide in dining/living area, c ond. inside & o u t, charger, full luggage canopy, like new. owners. $145-$165/wk Bulletin Classifieds sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 $32 900 OBO Prinevhard bags, manuals 20.5' 2004 Bayliner C hevy V-8 , g e t s 541-382-1885 Get Results! obo. 541-408-3811 exc. mi. High ruband paperwork. Al- 205 Run About, 220 ille. 541-447-5502 days Call 385-5809 or ways garaged. $3200. ber. Drives absoHP, V8, open bow, & 541-447-1641 eves. Call The Bulletin At place your ad on-line lutely great. $8700. Don, 541-504-5989 exc. cond with very at 541-385-5809 541-306-3757 or Flagstaff 30' 2006, with low hours, lots of slide, custom interior, bendbulletin.com Harley Dyna 2000 conv. 541-420-8338. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail extras incl. tower, te.~st like new, S acrifice, 29k, harlaquin paint, Bimini 8 custom At: www.bendbulletin.com $17,500. 541-598-7546 new tires, many chrome Look at: trailer, $17,950. Weekend Warrior Toy 771 parts, very good cond. Bendhomes.com 541-389-1413 Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, 705 634 $10,500 209-770-0903 Lots for Complete Listings of Need to get an ad fuel station, exc cond. Pilgrim 27', 2007 5t h Apt./Multiplex NE Bend Real Estate Services Area Real Estate for Sale Harley Heritage sleeps 8, black/gray wheel, 1 s lide, AC, in ASAP? Softail, 2003 i nterior, u se d 3X , TV,full awning, excelBid Now! dump Into Spring! Boise, ID Real Estate www.BulletinBidnBuy.com $5,000+ in extras, $19,999 firm. lent shape, $23,900. For relocation info, 2 bdrm, 1 bath, $2000 paint job, 541-389-9188 Fax it to 541-322-7253 541-350-8629 20.5' Seaswirl Spycall Mike Conklin, $530 8 $540 w/lease. 30K mi. 1 owner, der 1989 H.O. 302, 32' Fleetwood Fiesta 208-941-8458 For more information Carports included! The Bulletin Classifieds 285 hrs., exc. cond., Silvercreek Realty 2003, no slide-out, Looking for your RV please call stored indoors for FOX HOLLOW APTS. .-. IIII, (i Triton engine, all next employee? CONSIGNMENTS 541-385-8090 life $11,900 OBO. amenities, 1 owner, Place a Bulletin help WANTED 745 or 209-605-5537 (541) 383-3152 541-379-3530 perfect, only 17K miles, wanted ad today and We Do The Work ... Cascade Rental Buy New...Buy Local Homes for Sale $22,000 firm! reach over 60,000 You Keep The Cash! Management. Co. You Can Bid On: 541-504-3253 r' 21' Crownline 215 hp readers each week. On-site credit 3bd/2bath, 1999 M fd. Lot 27 at Yarrow in/outboard e n g i ne Your classified ad approval team, 636 home i n C r e scent. in Madras, OR. 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin Four Winds Class will also appear on web site presence. E Valued at $17,500. Apt./Multiplex NW Bend Fenced, front 8 back sleeps 2/ 3 p e ople, A 3 2 ' Hu r r icane Fleetwood 31' W ilderbendbulletin.com We Take Trade-Ins! deck. Detached gaSun Forest portable toilet, exc. which currently reFree Advertising. 2007. CAN'T BEAT n ess Gl 1 9 99, 1 2 ' Construction Small studios close to li- rage with partial secHarley Limited 103 2011, cond. Asking $8,000. THIS! Look before BIG COUNTRY RV slide, 2 4 ' aw n ing, ceives over 1.5 miltion of the garage fin(Bidding closes brary, all util. paid. many extras, stage 1 8 air OBO. 541-388-8339 lion page views evBend: 541-330-2495 y ou b u y , b e l o w queen bed, FSC, outTues., April 16, $550 mo.w/ $525 dep. i shed. Sold a s i s . cushion seat. 18,123 mi, Redmond: market value! Size ery month at no side shower, E-Z lift MLS at 8:00 p.m.) Ads published in the $64,900 $495 mo.w/$470 dep $20,990. 541-306-0289 541-548-5254 & mileage DOES s tabilizer hitch, l i ke extra cost. Bulletin "Boats" classification 201209344 No pets/ no smoking. matter! 12,500 mi, Classifieds Get Renew, been stored. Cascade Realty, include: Speed, fish541-330- 9769 or all amenities, Ford sults! Call 385-5809 $10,950. 541-419-5060 FIND IT! Nice flat lot in Terreb541-480-7870 Dennis Haniford, ing, drift, canoe, I thr, c h erry, or place your ad onne, .56 a c r es, gtIV fy I Princ. Broker house and sail boats. V10, P ioneer 23 ' 19 0 F Q slides, like new! New on-line at p aved s t reet, a p 541-536-1731 For all other types of SELL IT! 648 low price, $54,900. 2006, EZ Lift, $9750. bendbulletin.com proved fo r c a p -fill watercraft, please see 541-548-5216 541-548-1096 The Bulletin Classifieds Houses for septic, utilities are at Class 875. Where can you find a t he lo t l i n e . M L S HD Fat Boy 1996 Rent General 541-385-5809 helping hand? ¹ 2012001172 Pa m Completely customized RV Tow car 2004 Lester, Principal BroMust see and hear to Honda Civic Si set up TegOn From contractors to PUBLISHER'S roun AD w!LL RECEIVE CLOSETo 2,000,000 appreciate. 2012 ker, Century 21 Gold for flat towing with NOTICE yard care, it's all here oassified EXPOSURES FORONLY $250! Country Realty, Inc. Award Winner. base plate and tow All real estate adverin The Bulletin's 541-504-1338 17,000 obo. brake, 35k mi, new tising in this newspaAdvertising 0 ZoeCiarafiriii r raraSNrneirsasr rcro/rhr0 Zoeirnrrpapc paurhrnirraoaaoa 541-548-4807 tires, great cond. "Call A Service per is subject to the Weekof April 8, 2013 Network $12,000. F air H o using A c t Professional" Directory 773 HD Screaming Eagle 541-288-1808 which makes it illegal Acreages Electra Glide 2005, to a d v ertise "any n 103 motor, two tone Beautiful h o u seboat, NOTICE preference, limitation Serving Central Oregon since 1903 candy teal, new tires, $85,000. 541-390-4693 or disc r imination All real estate adver- CHECK YOUR AD 23K miles, CD player www.centraloregon 541-385-5809 tised here in is subbased on race, color, check your ad hydraulic clutch, exhouseboat.com. religion, sex, handi- ject to t h e F e deral Please on the first day it runs cellent condition. cap, familial status, F air H o using A c t , to make sure it is corHighest offer takes it. Find It in marital status or na- which makes it illegal 541-480-8080. Jayco Seneca 34', 2007. Sometimes intional origin, or an in- to advertise any pref- srect. The Bulletin Classifiedsl 28K miles, 2 slides, DuDIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, tructions over t h e erence, limitation or tention to make any ramax diesel, 1 owner, 541-385-5809 are misundersupport, property and bills division. No court appearances. Divorced such pre f erence, discrimination based phone excellent cond, $94,500; and a n e r ror ATVs • in 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772-5295. www.paralegalalternatives.com limitation or discrimi- on race, color, reli- stood Trade? 541-546-6920 occurin your ad. divorce@usa.com nation." Familial sta- gion, sex, handicap, can If this happens to your tus includes children familial status or na- ad, please contact us ~ YOUR BOAT ... ~ under the age of 18 tional origin, or inten- the first day your ad with o u r spec i al living with parents or tion to make any such appears and we will rates for selling your I legal cust o dians, preferences, l i m ita- be happy to fix it as DRIVER - Two raises in first year. Qualify for any portion of $.03/mile ~ boat or watercraft! pregnant women, and tions or discrimination. s oon as w e c a n . quarterly bonus: $.01 Safety, $.01 Production, $.01 MPG. 3 months people securing cus- We will not knowingly Deadlines are: Week- Yamaha Banshee 2001 OTR experience. 800-414-9569 www.driveknight.com f Place an ad in The Monaco Dynasty 2004, tody of children under accept any advertis- days custom built 350 motor 11:00 noon for loaded, 3 slides, dieB ulletin w it h ou r 18. This newspaper ing for r ea l e s tate next day, race-ready, lots of extras Sat. 11:00 DRIVERS Get on the ROAD FAST! IMMEDIATE OPENINGS!! TOP PAY, sel, Reduced - now will not knowingly ac- which is in violation of a.m. for Sunday and $4999/obo 541-647-8931 f 3-month p ackage $119,000, 5 4 1-923FULL BENEFITS,CDL-A, Hazmat, Doubles Required! Haney Truck ( which includes: cept any advertising this law. All persons Monday. 8572 or 541-749-0037 for real estate which is are hereby informed Line, CALL NOW 1-888-414-4467. WWW.GOHANEY.com 870 541 -385-5809 *4 lines of text and in violation of the law. that all dwellings adThank you! Boats & Accessories a photo or up to 10 O ur r e a ders ar e vertised are available The Bulletin Classified JOHN DAVIS TRUCKING has openings for CDL-A Drivers and RV [ lines with no photo. hereby informed that on an equal opportuCONSIGNMENTS Maintenance Mechanics in Battle Mountain, NV. Wage is D.O.E. Call nity basis. The Bulle*Free online ad at all dwellings adverWANTED 866-635-2805 for application or www.jdt3d.net tin Classified I bendbulletin.com tised in this newspaWe Do The Work ... 775 14' 1982 Valco River *Free pick up into You Keep The Cash! per are available on GORDON TRUCKING-CDL-A Drivers Needed! Dedicated and OTR Sled, 70 h.p., Fish- ~ The Central Oregon ~ Manufactured/ an equal opportunity On-site credit Just too many Positions Now Open! $1,000 SIGN ON BONUS. Consistent Miles, Finder. Older boat but basis. To complain of approval team, f Nickel ads. Mobile Homes collectibles? Time Off! Full Benefits, 401k, EOE, Recruiters Available 7 days/week! price includes trailer, d iscrimination cal l web site presence. 3 wheels and tires. All I Rates start at $46. I HUD t o l l -free at We Take Trade-Ins! 866-435-8590 FACTORY SPECIAL for $1 5 00 ! Cal l Sell them in 1-800-877-0246. The Free Advertising. Call for details! New Home, 3 bdrm, 541-416-8811 toll f re e t e lephoneThe Bulletin Classifieds BIG COUNTRY RV I $46,500 finished 541-385-5809 Irrf number for the hearBend: 541-330-2495 on your site. 14' BOAT A ND ing im p aired is Redmond: J and M Homes DO YOU NEED extra income and consistent cash flow on the side? T RAILER $275. N o 541-385-5809 541-548-5254 1-800-927-9275. 541-548-5511 gThC Bullettftg Email cyndiwanghrm©gmail.com for more details. motor. 541-318-9954.
00000
1600 sq. ft., 3BR/2BA nice landscape, RV
Looking for your next
emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and
X'0000
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OOO
PRICFREMNI
The Bulletin
The BuHetin
f f [
ow ou r
u . e
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u .
In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds. Full Color Photos For an additional '15 per week * '40 for 4 weeks *
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,
('Special private party rates apply to merchandise and autOmOfit/e CategOrieS,)
We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for acaring home. Please call right away. $500.
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FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4,
and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!
s o r
c a l I 5 4 1-3 8 5 -5 8 0 9
E6 THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
• e •
•
•
e
Chevy 1955 PROJECT
•
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
Antique & Classic Autos
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
car. 2 door wgn, 350 small block w/Weiand dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Honeys. T-10 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar wheels, extra rolling chassis + extras. $6500 for all. 541-389-7669. ' wt~
932
933
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Ford Ranchero 1979
with 351 Cleveland modified engine. Body is in excellent condition, $2500 obo. 541-420-4677
.j j
Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs great, excellent condition in & out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179
Sport Utility Vehicles
FORD F150 CrewCab XLT Triton 2001 V-8, runs fantastic.
Autom o biles •
Automo b iles
"'"'"" .CERTIFIED
lur;Suur<r
Cars-Trucks-SUVs
$3485.
Call Peter at
BMW 740 IL 1998 orig.
562-659-4691, in
Ford Taurus wagon 2004, owner, exc. c o n d.very nice, pwr everything, 101k miles, new tires, 120K, FWD, good tires, loaded, sunroof. $4900 obo. 541-815-9939
Prineville.
$8,300. 541-706-1897
G MC Sierra S L T 2006 - 1500 Crew Cab 4x4, Z71, exc. cond., 82 k m i les, $19,900.
Toyota Highlander 2011 Limited AWD SUV, LOADED! ¹058474. $35,995 541-408-0763 Honda CRV SE 2005 ¹037597 $ 16,9 9 5 Cadillac Escalade ESV 2010 Nav-DVD-quads. ¹220339 $52, 9 95 I nternational Fla t Nissan Frontier 2006 Bed Pickup 1963, 1 King Cab XE 2WD ton dually, 4 s p d. ¹455979. $13, 9 9 5 trans., great MPG, Mazda Tribute 2005 S could be exc. wood ¹M05400. $11, 9 9 5 hauler, runs great, • AAA Oregon Auto new brakes, $1950. Source 541-598-3750 541-419-5480.
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MorePixatBendbulletin.com Wouldn't you really like to drive a Buick? Bob has two 75,000 mile Buicks, priced fair, $2,000-$6000. Remember, t h e se cars get 30mpg hwy! 541-318-9999
Hyundai Sonata 2007 GLS, 64,700 mi, excellent cond, good tires, non-smoker, new tags, $9500. 541-280-7352
Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, 908 $7,000 OBO, trades. Please call Aircraft, Parts Lexus HS 2010 250h 541-389-6998 Service & Accessories 8 Service black, 22,500 mi. 0D Chrysler 300 C o upe ¹012324 $28,995 Piper A rcher 1 9 80, 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, Bid Now! based in Madras, alauto. trans, ps, air, www.sulletinsidnsuy.com ways hangared since frame on rebuild, reOregon new. New annual, auto aaaoregonautosource.com painted original blue, AutoSource Buick Invicta1959! pilot, IFR, one piece original blue interior, 541-598-3750 2 door hardtop, 99.9 <% windshield. Fastest Aroriginal hub caps, exc. Call a Pro aaaoregonautosource.com complete in & out. cher around. 1750 tochrome, asking $9000 GMC 1966, too many Whether you need a $16,000. tal t i me. $68,500. extras to list, reduced to or make offer. Aircraft, Parts 541-504-3253 541-475-6947, ask for $7500 obo. Serious buy541-385-9350 fence fixed, hedges Buy New...Buy Local & Service ers only. 541-536-0123 Rob Berg. You Can Bid On: trimmed or a house Complete Window Buick LeSabre 1996 Ram 2500HD 2003 hemi, built, you'll find BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Tint Job, Good condition, 2WD, 135K, auto, CC, professional help in Search the area's most Valued at $399 121,000 miles. am/fm/cd. $7000 obo. Non-smoker Nissan Sentra 2012 comprehensive listing of Sounds Fast alfuy 541-680-9965 /390-1285 The Bunetin's "Call a Full warranty, 35mpg, classified advertising... (Bidding closes $2600 OBO. Service Professional" 520 per tank, an power. Tues., April 16, real estate to automotive, 541-954-5193. Directory $13,500. 541-788-0427 at 8:00 p.m.) 1/3 interest in Columbia merchandise to sporting FAST66 Ranchero! Titan 2 0 0 7 4x4 GMC Veton 1971, Only Off-Road, beautiful 400, $150,000 located goods. Bulletin Classifieds $7500 invested, 541-385-5809 $19,700! Original low Check out the © Sunriver. H o urly appear every day in the sell for $4500I inside and out, memile, exceptional, 3rd Get your Four 16" Volvo wheels classifieds online rental rate (based upon print or on line. tallic black/charcoal Call 541.382.9835 owner. 951-699-7171 e xc. c o nd., $ 1 7 5 approval) $775. Also: www.bendbuffeffn.com business leather, loaded, 69k • Call 541-385-5809 Vans S21 hangar avail. for www.bendbulletin.com 541-549-6034. mi., $19,995 obo. Updated daily Find exactly what sale, o r le a s e @ 541-410-6183. $15/day or $325/mo. you are looking for in the Cadillac Eldorado, 1991, a ROW I N G Chevy Astro S<r ng ce«r<r Oregon <w«<SOS 541-948-2963 a cream puff! Great paint, Antique & CLASSIFIEDS Cargo Van 2001, 935 upgraded stereo system, with an ad in Classic Autos pw, pdl, greatcond 916 good interior, runs great, Sport Utility Vehicles business car, well The Bulletin's FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, Trucks & + 4 extra studded tires. door panels w/flowers maint'd, regular oil 'Call A Service Call 541-536-2435 Heavy Equipment changes, $4500. & hummingbirds, ANTIQUE Professional" white soft top 8 hard Please call 1921 Model T 541-633-5149 Directory top. Just reduced to 1/3 interest i n w e l lDelivery Truck $3,750. 541-317-9319 Jeep Comanche, 1990, equipped IFR Beech Boor 541-647-8483 original owner, 167K, Restored & Runs Dodge van 1978 handiMalibu 2009 nanza A36, new 10-550/ 4WD, 5-spd, tags good Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, cap equipped with Chevy Porsche Carrera 911 $9000. 43k miles, loaded, prop, located KBDN. till 9/2015, $3900 obo. most options, new tires, wheelchair ramp and 2003 convertible with 541-369-6963 studs on rims/ $65,000. 541-419-9510 541-633-7761 hardtop. 50K miles, 159K miles, $3750. Call hand controls. In great Asking $12,900. D!amond Reo Dump new factory Porsche 541-233-8944 condition. $3,000 obo. 541-610-6834. Just bought a new boat? Truck 19 7 4, 12 -14 motor 6 mos ago with Call 541-420-3696 or Sell your old one in the yard box, runs good, 18 mo factory war541-526-5887 classifieds! Ask about our $6900, 541-548-6812 ranty remaining. Super Seller rates! Ford Ga!ax!e 5001963, $37,500. Ford 1-ton extended van, 1921 Model T 541-322-6928 541-385-5809 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, 1995, 460 engine, set-up ExK E A T 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & Delivery Truck f or c o n tractor w i t h Restored & Runs radio (orig),541-419-4989 Mercedes 450SL, 1977, shelves & bins, fold-down 113K, 2nd owner, gaHonda CRV 2004, ladder rack, tow hitch, Chrysler Sebring 2004 $9000. Toyota Camrysl Hysfer H25E, runs r aged, b o t h top s . $8,995. 180K miles, new tranny 8 84k, beautiful dark gray/ 541-369-6963 1984, SOLD; well, 2982 Hours, $11,900. 541-389-7596 Call 541-610-6150 or see brakes; needs catalytic brown, tan leather int., 1985 SOLD; $3500, call http://bend.craigslist.org converter 8 new wind- $5995 541-350-5373 1986 parts car 541-749-0724 /cto/3723855028.html shield. $2200. Chevrolet Cameo 541-220-7808 only one left! $500 1/5th interest in 1973 3 Pickup, 1957, Call for details, Ford Model A 1930, Cessna 150 LLC disassembled, frame 541-548-6592 Sports 150hp conversion, low Coupe. powder coated, new Rumble seat, H8 H time on air frame and ~1 front sheet metal, cab •xe rebuilt engine. W i ll Oldsmobile Alero 2004, engine, hangared in restored. $9995 firm. Toyota Corolla 2004, cruise at 55mph. Must classic 4-dr in showroom Bend. Excellent perCall for more info, auto., loaded, 204k formance 8 afford- Peterbilt 359 p o table 541-336-9958 (cell) see to believe. Abso- condition, leather, chrome Jeep Patriot 2 0 08 Little Red Corvette1996 miles. orig. owner, non lutely stunning condiable flying! $6,500. conv. 350 auto. wheels, 1 owner, low 4x4, 60k mi., single Lumina Va n 1 99 5 , water t ruck, 1 9 90, smoker, exc. c ond. tionl 541-382-6752 $17,500 owner, 5-spd, 30 mpg, XLNT c o nd., w e l l 132 K , 26-34 mpg. $6500 3200 gal. tank, 5hp miles. $7500. Prin e ville 541-410-0818 541-382-2452 pump, 4-3" h o ses, new tires, exc. cond. cared for. $2000 obo. $12,500 541-923-1781 503-358-8241 Executive Hangar camlocks, $ 2 5,000. Ford Mustang Coupe PROJECT CARS:Chevy $11,900 541-604-0862 541-382-9835. at Bend Airport (KBDN) 541-820-3724 WHEN YOU SEE THIS 1966, original owner, 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & 60' wide x 50' deep, Toyota 4Ru n ner Nissan Quest 2000, V8, automatic, great Chevy Coupe 1950 w/55' wide x 17' high bi931 7-passenger mini shape, $9000 OBO. rolling chassis's $1750 1 993, blue, 4 d r . , ws,w.~~.:-.;,.-~-:et w =wll fold dr. Natural gas heat, Automotive Parts, V6, 5 speed, van, red, new tires & 530-515-8199 Chevy C-20 Pickup offc, bathroom. Adjacent ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, 4WD, ow pkg., plus 4 license, decent On a classified ad to Frontage Rd; great Service & Accessories 1969, an orig. Turbo 44; People Look for Information complete car, $ 1949; tstuds cond., lowprice of tires on rims, auto 4-spd, 396, model Ford Focus 2012 SE visibility for aviation busiCadillac Series 61 1950, r uns g go to reat. W a s $2495.Check this About Products and ness. Financing avail- 4 studded tires, fit Toyota CST /an options, orig. 2 dr. hard top, complete Exc. cond. 12k miles www.bendbulletin.com one out. $ 5500, no w o n l y owner, $19,950, able. 541-948-2126 or Rav 4, $50. Services Every Daythrough w/spare f r on t cl i p ., to view additional silver, $15,500 obo $4000.541-659-1416 541-318-9999 541-923-6049 email 1jetjockoq.com 541-610-8797 541-306-3662. photos of the item. The Su!!efinC!ass!lfeds $3950, 541-382-7391 ,-
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Legal Notices
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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: H arder T . S . No. : 1306177OR R e f e rence is made to that
certain deed made by, Reference is made to t hat c e r tain d e e d m ade by, J O N M . HARDER AND KRISTIN P. HARDER, AS T ENANTS BY T H E
ENTIRETY as Grantor to AMERITITLE, AN O REGO N CORPORATION, as trustee, in favor of ROBERT W. CIHAK AND DIA NE M. CIHA K , HUSBAND A ND WIFE OR THE SURVIVOR THEREOF, as
B eneficiary, da t e d 8/7/2004, r e c orded 9/7/2004, i n o ff icial records of Deschutes C ounty, Oregon i n book/reel/volume No. XX at page No. XX, fee/fileiinstrumentlmicrofile/reception No. 2004-53619 (indicated which), covering the following described real property situated in said County an d S t a te, to-wit: APN: 186785 LOT FORTY ( 4 0), CROSSWATER P HASES 1 AN D 2 , DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: Lot 40 , C r osswater Phases 1 and 2, Deschutes County, Oregon Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been r ecorded pursuant to S ection 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: Installment of Principal and Interest p l u s imp ounds and/or a d v ances w hich b e came due on 9/7/2009, along with late charges, foreclosure fees and costs any legal fees or advances that have become due. Monthly Payment $ 1 ,816.67 Monthly Late Charge $$90.83 By this reason of said default the b eneficiary has d e clared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said
fore the date last set LEGAL NOTICE for sale. In construing TRUSTEE'S NOTICE this notice, the masOF SALE c uline g e nder i n - The Trustee under the cludes the f eminine terms of t h e T r ust and the neuter, the Deed desc r i bed singular includes plu- herein, at the direcral, the word "grantor" tion of the Beneficiary, includes any succes- hereby elects to sell sor in interest to the t he p r o perty de grantor as well as any scribed in the Trust other persons owing Deed to satisfy the a n o b ligation, t h e obligations s e c ured performance of which thereby. Pursuant to is secured by s a id ORS 86.745, the foltrust deed, the words lowing information is "trustee" and provided: 'beneficiary" i n clude 1.PARTIES: G r a ntor: their respective sucJAMES D. ATWOOD cessors in interest, if AND J IL L L . ATany. Dated: 3/15/2013 WOOD Trus t e e: First American Title FIRST A M E RICAN C ompany 3 Fir s t TITLE I NSURANCE American Way Santa C OMPANY OF O R Ana, California 92707 EGON. Su c cessor Signature By: Cindy T rustee: NANCY K . Engel, Authorized Si- CARY. B e neficiary: gnor P1028307 3/28, WASHINGTON FED4/4, 4/11, 04/18/2013 ERAL FKA W A SHINGTON F E DERAL LEGAL NOTICE SAVINGS 2. DEThe following units SCRIPTION OF will be sold at PubPROPERTY: The lic A u c t io n on real property is deThursday, April 18, scribed as follows: Lot 2013 at 11 a.m. at Seven (7), Block Two Bend Mini Storage, SUNDANCE (2), 1 00 S E 3 r d S t . , EAST PHASE I, reBend, OR 9 7 702. corded July 28, 1972, Unit ¹ C108 — Clifin Cabinet A, Page ford Stoner, Unit ¹ 569, Desch u tes C114 Matthew County, Oregon. 3. Day, Unit ¹ C126R ECORDING. T h e Jason Brown, Unit ¹ Trust Deed was reC163 — La Dawna corded a s f o l lows: Samples. Date Recorded: July 22, 2010. Recording LEGAL NOTICE No.: 2010-28433 OffiThe undersigned has cial Records of Desbeen appointed perchutes County, Orsonal representative egon. 4. D EFAULT. penses of sale, in- of the Estate of Della The Grantor or any cluding a reasonable Bernice Frasieur De- other p e rson o b l icharge by the trustee. ceased, by the Desgated on th e T rust Notice is further given chutes County Circuit Deed and Promissory t hat a n y per s o n Court of the State of Note secured thereby named i n Se c t ion Oregon, pro b a te is in default and the 86.753 of Oregon Re- number 1 3 PB0034. Beneficiary seeks to vised Statutes has the All persons having foreclose the T r ust right to have the fore- c laims against t h e Deed for f ailure to closure p r oceeding estate are required to pay: M o nthly payd ismissed an d t h e present the same with ments in the amount trust deed reinstated proper vouchers of $715.00 each, due b y payment to t h e within four (4) months t he f i rst o f eac h beneficiary of the en- after the date of first month, for the months tire amount then due publication to the uno f O c t obe r 201 2 (other than such por- dersigned or they may t hrough Janu a ry tion of said principal be barred. Additional 2013; pl u s late as would not then be i nformation may b e charges a n d addue had no d efault o btained f ro m t h e vances; plus any unoccurred), t o gether court records, the un- paid real p r operty w ith the cost s , dersigned or the attaxes or liens, plus trustee's and torney. Date first pub- interest. 5. AMOUNT a ttorney's fees a n d lished: April 11, 2013. DUE. T h e a m ount curing any other deDavid L . Fr a sieur, due on the Note which fault complained of in Personal Representa- i s secured by t h e the Notice of Default t ive c/o R o nald L . Trust Deed referred to by tendering the perBryant, Attorney at herein is: P r i ncipal formance r e q uired Law, Bryant Emerson balance in the amount under the obligation or & Fitch, LLP, PO Box of $77,985.29; plus trust deed, at any time 4 57, Redmond O R interest at the rate of 6.500% per a n num prior to five days be- 97756. sums being the foll owing, to-wit: T h e sum of $160,000.00 together with interest thereon at the rate of 8% per annum from until paid; plus all accrued late c harges thereon; a n d an trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the t erms of said deed of t r ust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that First American Title Company, the undersigned trustee will on 7/24/2013 at the hour of 1:00 PM, Standard of Time, as e stablished b y sec t i on 187.110, Oregon Revised Statutes, At the front entrance to the Deschutes C o u nty Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond St., Bend, OR County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell a t public auction t o the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said d e scribed real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with a n y int e rest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and ex-
f rom September 1, 2012; pl u s late charges of $166.40; plus advances and foreclosure a t torney f ees and c osts. 6 . S ALE O F PR O P ERTY. The Trustee hereby states that the property will be sold to satisfy the obligations secured by the Trust Deed. A Tr u stee's Notice of Default and Election to Sell Under Terms of Trust Deed has been recorded in the Official Records of Deschutes C o unty, Oregon. 7. TIME OF SALE. Date:June 13, 2013. Time:11:00
mers, Paralegal, (541)
686-0344 (TS ¹1 5148.30845). DATED: January 25, 2 013. /s/ Nancy K .
Cary. Nancy K. Cary, Successor T r u stee Hershner Hunter, LLP P.O. Box 1475, Eugene, OR 97440. LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-12-497814-SH Reference is made to t hat c e r tain d e e d made by G A BRIEL A BBOTT AND A M B ER A BBOTT, A S T ENANTS BY T H E ENTIRETY as Grantor to HACIENDA SERVICE COR P ORATION, A C A LIFORNIA CORPORATION, as trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE E L ECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYS T E MS,
a.m. Place: Deschutes County Courthouse, 1 1 6 4 NW Bond Street, Bend, Oregon. 8. RIGHT TO REINSTATE. Any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time that is not INC., ("MERS") AS later than five days NOMINEE FOR before th e T r ustee FIRST MORTGAGE conducts the sale, to CORPORATION, A have this foreclosure CALIFORNIA CORd ismissed an d t h e P ORATION, D / B / A Trust Deed reinstated FIRST MORTGAGE b y payment to t h e C ORPORATION O F Beneficiary of the en- CALIFORNIA, as tire amount then due, B eneficiary dat e d other than such por- 9/15/2009, recorded tion of the principal as 10/2/2009, in official would not then be due r ecords o f DES had no default ocCHUTES County, Orcurred, by curing any egon, in book / reel / other default that is volume number fee / c apable o f be i n g file / instrument / micured by tendering the crofile / rec e ption performance required number 2009-42439, under the obligation or covering the following Trust Deed and by described real proppaying an costs and erty situated in said expenses actually in- County and State, to curred in enforcing the wit: APN: 107523 LOT obligation and Trust 9, BLOCK QQ, DESCHUTES RIV ER Deed, together with t he t r u stee's a n d WOODS, DESa ttorney's fees n o t CHUTES C O UNTY, exceedingthe amount O REGON . Com provided i n ORS m only k nown a s : 8 6.753. Y o u ma y 19260 S HOSHONE reach th e O r e gon R OAD, BEND, O R State Bar's Lawyer 97702 Both the benReferral Service at eficiary a n d the 503-684-3763 or trustee have elected toll-free in Oregon at to sell the said real 800-452-7636 or you property to satisfy the may visit its website obligations secured by at: w w w .osbar.org. said trust deed and Legal assi stance may notice has been reb e available if y o u corded pursuant to have a low income Section 86.735(3) of and meet federal pov- Oregon Revised State rty guidelines. F o r utes: the default for more information and which the foreclosure a directory of legal aid is made is the grantprograms, g o to ors: The installments http://www.oregonof principal and interlawhelp.org. Any est which became due questions regarding on 11/1/2011, and an this matter should be subsequent i n s talldirected to Lisa Sum- ments of principal and ,
interest through the the said trust deed, date of t his N otice, together with any inplus amounts that are terest w h i c h the
due for late charges, delinquent p r o perty taxes, insurance premiums, adv a nces made on senior liens, taxes and/or i nsurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or a ssociated with the benefic iaries e f f orts to protect and preserve i ts security, a n o f which must be paid as a condition of r einstatement, i ncluding all sums that shall accrue t h rough r e instatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Monthly Payment $ 1 ,103.00 Monthly Late Charge $55.15 By this reason of said default the b eneficiary has d e clared an obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the foll owing, to w it : T h e sum of $153,672.54 together with interest thereon at the rate of 5.5000 pe r a n n um from 10/1/2011 until paid; plus an accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by th e b e n eficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, th e u n d ersigned trustee will on 7/26/2013 at the hour of 1:00:00 PM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statutes, At the front entrance to the Deschutes Co u n ty Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond St., Bend, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the i nterest in t h e s a id described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of execution by him of
grantor or his successors in i nterest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and t he costs an d e x penses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given t hat a n y per s o n named i n sec t ion 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure p r oceeding d ismissed an d t h e trust deed reinstated b y payment to t h e beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no d efault occurred), t o g ether w ith the cost s , trustee's and a ttorney's fees a n d curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance r e q uired under the obligation or trust deed at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call:
sary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purc haser at t h e s a l e shall be entitled only t o a r e turn o f t h e m onies paid to t h e Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shan have no further rec ourse against t h e Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's A gent, or the B eneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been disc harged thro u g h bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan i n w h i ch case this letter is intended to exercise the note holder's rights against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS A T TEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED W I L L BE U SED FO R TH A T
P URPOSE. As r e quired by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report r eflecting o n you r credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms 714-573-1965 or Loof your credit obligagin to: www.priorityDated: posting.com In con- tions. Qua l ity struing this notice, the 3/1 9/2013 Loan Service Corpomasculine gender includes the feminine ration of Washington, as Trustee Signature and the neuter, the singular includes plu- By: Tricia M o reno, ral, the word "grantor" Assistant S e cretary includes any succes- Quality Loan Service sor in interest to the Corp. of Washington grantor as well as any c/o Quality Loan Serother persons owing vice Corp. 2141 5th a n o b ligation, t h e Avenue San Diego, 921 0 1 For performance of which CA is secured by s a id Non-Sale Information: Quality Loan Service trust deed, the words "trustee" and "benefi- Corporation of WashQu a lity ciary" include their re- ington c/ o spective successors Loan Service Corp. in interest, if any. Pur- 2141 5th Avenue San 921 0 1 suant to Oregon Law, D iego, C A 6 19-645-7711 Fa x : this sale will not be deemed final until the 61 9-645-7716 P1028587 4/11, 4/18, T rustee's deed h a s been issued by Qual- 4/25, 05/2/2013 ity Loan Service Corporation of WashingSay ugoodbuy" ton. If there are any irregularities discovto that unused ered within 10 days of item by placing it in the date of this sale, that the trustee will The Bulletin Classifieds rescind the sale, return t h e buy e r 's money and take fur541-385-5809 ther action as neces-