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TUESDAY June11,2013
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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Blitz to the Barrel —Big names,big moneyandbig beer in tonight's mountain biking race that finishes at10 Barrel.C1
Apple's updates —The
OSUplaysfor its 3rdCollegeWorld Seriestitle starting Saturday,C1 ~
tech company calls the coming changes the biggest update since the iPhone's launch in 2007.C6
Lawmakers
FATAL HIT-AND-RUN
Do it yourself —Howto
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change outyour cabinet hardware.D1
heathbi 's impications
Klamath water —The tribes are in the driver's seat on water rights, which the area's
ranchers say could bedevastating.B6
By Lauren Dake The Bulletin
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
HOW'Syaur air? — Volunteers with low-cost mobile sensors are testing pollution on the neighborhood level.A3
Plus: Seeingthe dentist — Every six months is best,
right? Actually, it depends, a new study says.A3
And a Web exclusivePolitical "super minorities."
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EDITOR'5CHOICE
What to
make of a plateau in warming By Justin Gillis New York Times News Service
As unlikely as this may sound, we have lucked out in recent years when it comes to global warming. The rise in the surface temperatureofEarth has been markedly slower over the last 15 years than in the 20 years before that. And that lull in warming has occurred even as greenhouse gases have accumulated in the atmosphere at a record pace. The slowdown is a bit of a mystery to climate scientists. True, the basic theory that predicts a warming of the planet in response to human emissions does not suggest that warming should be smooth and continuous. To the contrary, in a climate system still dominated by natural variability, there is every reason to think the warming will proceed in fits and starts. But given how much is riding on the scientific forecast, the practitioners of climate science would like to understand exactly what is going on. They admit that they do not, even though some potential mechanisms of the slowdown have been suggested. The situation highlights important gaps in our knowledge of the climate system, some of which cannot be closed until we get bettermeasurements from high in space and from deep in the ocean. See Climate/A6
For nearly 2'/2 years, the remains of Anthony "Tony" Martin have been in limbo, and the lives of his family and friends on hold. Since his death in a January 2011 hit-and-run crash on Third Street in Bend, Martin's family has held off on plans to scatter his ashes across his favorite fishing hole at Wickiup Reservoir. His sister, Terri Gibbs of Madras, said they wanted to wait until the legal issues surrounding Martin's death were resolved — criminal chargesagainst Bret Lee Biedscheid, the man accused of fleeing after striking Martin with his truck, and a civil suit seeking financial compensation for Martin's family. Today should be the final act in the process. Biedscheid, 40, is scheduled to enter a
SEEKING CLOSURE FORTONY MARTIN
y
/
guilty plea to a charge of failure to perform the duties of a driver this morning in Deschutes County Circuit Court, and the county District Attorney's Office will be recommending he serve 16 months in prison. Separately, Martin's family has nearly settled its civil action against Biedscheid in Deschutes County circuit court, said Martin family attorney Tom D'Amore of Portland. He said Biedscheid and his lawyer have tentatively agreed to a payment $525,000, much of which will be placed in a trust for Sadie, Martin's nearly 4-year-old daughter. "Its been a long, exhausting 2'/2 years," Gibbs said Monday. "A lot of guessing over the last 2'/2 years, a lot of waiting, a lot of wondering, a lot of crying, and I'm glad its finally coming to a closure." A message seeking comment left Monday with attorney Heidi L. Mandt of Lake Oswego, who represents Bied-
Andy Tuiiis i Ttte Bulletin
"lts been a long, exhausting 2V2years. A lot of guessing over the last 2V2 years, a lot of waiting, a lot of wondering, a lot of crying, and l'm glad its finally
coming to a closure." — Terri Gibbs, sister of Anthony "Tony" Martin
scheid in the civil case, was not returned by press time. Court records indicate the lawsuit is still pending. Biedscheid was originally charged with criminally negligent homicide, but the DA's Office agreed last month to drop the charge in exchange for a guilty plea on the charge of failure to perform the duties of a driver. He was not charged with driving under the influence of intoxicants, although D'Amore said a bartender provided him with an affidavit
stating Biedscheid had been drinking at the Black Horse Saloon prior to the crash. Gibbs said she'll be addressing the court today at Biedscheid's plea and sentencing hearing, and Martin's two adult daughters, both of whom live in Minnesota, may make statements by phone. Gibbs said she wants the judge to understand how much her brother's friends and family loved him, and their continued concern that Biedscheid has not been held accountable for his actions. Gibbs
said she's unsatisfied with the sentence requested by the DA, and is concerned Biedscheid may spend even less time in prison than proposed. She's also hoping to hear an apology from Biedscheid. Gibbs said she'd like to know what Biedscheid was thinking on the night he hit Martin, and why he decided to drive on rather than stop. But most importantly, she's hoping any statement Biedscheid chooses to make is sincere. See Biedscheid /A4
Fraud vs.seniorsoftenrouted throughbanks By Jessica Silver-Greenberg New York Times News Service
The pitch arrived, as so many do, with a friendly cold call. Bruno Koch, 83, told the telemarketer on the line that, yes,ofcourse he would like to update his Medicaid card. Then Koch, of Newport News, Va., slipped up: he divulged his bank account information. What happened next is all too familiar. Money was with-
TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 70, Low 36
Page B6
drawn from Koch's account for something that he now says he never authorized. The new insurance card never arrived. What is less familiar — and what federal authorities say occurs with alarming frequency — is that a reputable bank played a crucial role in parting Koch from his money. The bank was the 140-yearold Zions Bank of Salt Lake City. Despite spotting suspicious activity, Zions served as
a gateway between dubious Internet merchants and their marks — and made money for itself in the process, according to unsealed court documents reviewed by The New York Times. The Times reviewed hundreds of filings in connection with civil lawsuits brought by federal authorities and a consumer law firm against Zions and another regional bank that has drawn even more
SALEM — While considering how to overhaul the state's entire health care system, the conversation, Rep. Tim Freeman, R-Roseburg, told lawmakers on Monday, centered on how to get doctors and hospitals in one room. "We didn't contemplate ... what would happen if you had someone in the room not working well with others," Freeman sald. What could happen, some lawmakers said during a public hearing in the Ways and Means Subcommittee on Human Services, is the entire health caretransformation effort could unravel. The idea behind the health care overhaul was to provide better care to Oregon Health Plan patients at a lower cost. So the state gave local groups, known as coordinated care organizations or CCOs, control over how to spend their funds, including how much to pay hospitals, physicians and other providers. Now, some believe a fight over money in Marion County is threatening the entire system. SeeCCOs/A4
NSA leaks put focuson contractors By Robert O'Harrow Jr., Dana Priest and Marjorie Censer The Washington Post
The unprecedented leak of top-secret documents by National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden • Fresh raises far-
angerover reaching spying, q u e stions
scrutiny, First Bank of Delaware. Last November, First Delaware reached a $15 million settlement with the Justice Department after the bank was accused of allowing merchants to illegally debit accounts more than 2 million times and siphon more than $100 million. The documents, as well as interviews with state and federal officials, paint a troubling picture. See Fraud /A4
aboutthe government's rush to outsource intelligence work to contractors since the Sept. 11 2001 terrorist attacks. Never before have so many U.S. intelligence workers been hired so quickly, or been given access to secret government information through networked computers. See Contractors/A4
INDEX
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At Home 01- 6 C lassified Et -6 D ear Abby 06 Obituaries B 5 C1-4 Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope 06 Sports 06 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies
Vol. 110,No. 162, 30 pages,
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tentially including phone numbers, email, images, video and WASHINGTON The other online communications Obama administration faced transmitted through U.S. profresh anger Monday at home viders. The chief British diploand abroad over U.S. spy pro- mat felt it necessary to try to grams that track phone and assure Parliament that the spy Internetmessages around the programs do not encroach on world in the hope of thwarting U.K. privacy laws. terrorist threats. But a senior And in Washington, memintelligence official said there bers of Congress said they are no plans to end the secre- wouldtake anew lookat potentive surveillance systems. tial ways to keep the U.S. safe The programs causing the from terror attacks without global uproar were revealed giving up privacy protections by Edward Snowden, a 29- that critics charge are at risk year-oldemployee of govern- with the government's current ment contractor Booz Allen authority to broadly sweep up Hamilton. Snowden, whose personal communications. "There's very little trust in identity was revealed at his own request, has fled to Hong the government, and that's for Kong in hopes of escaping good reason," said Rep. Adam criminal charges. Sen. Dianne Schiff, D-Calif., who sits on the Feinstein of California, who House Intelligence Committee. heads the Senate Intelligence "We're our own worst enemy." Committee a n d su p p orts Independent Sen. A n g us the s u r veillance, a c cused King of Maine, who sits on the Snowden of committing an Senate Intelligence Commit"act of treason" and said he tee, said he was considering should be prosecuted. how Congress could limit the Coolly but firmly, officials amount of data spy agencies in Germany and the European seize from telephone and InUnion issued complaints over ternet companies — including two National Security Agency restricting t h e i n f o rmation programs that target suspi- to be released only on an asciousforeign messages — po- needed basis. The Associated Press
"It's a l i ttle unsettling to have this massive data in the government's pos s ession," King said. A senior U.S. intelligence official said there are no plans to scrap the programs that, despite the backlash, continue to receive widespread if cautious support within Congress. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive security issue. T he programs w er e r e v ealed last w eek b y Th e Guardian and The Washington Post newspapers. National Intelligence Director James Clapper has taken the unusual step of declassifying some of the previously top secret details to help the administration mount a public defense of the surveillance as a necessary step to protect Americans. One of the NSA programs gathers hundreds of millions of U.S. phone records to search for possible links to known terrorist targets abroad. The other allows the government to tap into nine U.S. Internet c ompanies and g a ther a l l communications to detect suspicious behavior that begins overseas.
rice and peanuts while making small cuts to food stamps. The bill passed on a bipartisan 66-27 vote. The legislation, which costs almost
$100 billion annually, also would eliminate subsidies that arepaid to farmers whether they farm or not. All told, it would save about $2.4 billion ayear on the farm and nutrition programs, including across-the-
board cuts that took effect earlier this year. Immigratian POliCy —TheSenate Judiciary Committee considered more than100 amendments to immigration legislation last month before sending it to the full Senate, which is expected to begin debate on the bill today. But even as they begin a floor fight that is likely to last
until the Fourth of July recess, senators from both parties arereadying dozens more amendments in an effort to shape the most significant overhaul of the nation's immigration laws in a generation.
Syria COnfliCt —The Obamaadministration began discussing Monday whether the Assad regime's rapid military advance across the
heart of Syria necessitates adrastic U.S. response,with officials saying a decision onarming beleaguered rebels could happenlater this week. Top aides from the State and Defense Departments, the CIA and other
agencies gathered fora"deputies meeting" at theWhite Houseon Monday afternoon.
CliIItOII OII TWitter —Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton joined Twitter on Monday, describing herself with a dash of humor as a "pantsuit aficionado" and a "hair icon." The former New York senator and first lady sent out her first tweet under the handle OHillaryClinton, thanking the creators of the popular online parodies called "Texts from Hillary" for their inspiration and saying, "I'll take it
from here." BraZil autO Safety —After a decadeof spiking fatalities from passenger carwrecks, the Brazilian government said Monday it plans to build its first auto crash test facility in an effort to improve the poor safety record of vehicles built and sold in the world's fourth-largest
automobile market. Thedecision comes amonth after The Associated Press published an investigation that showed many cars built by the world's biggest automakers and sold in Brazil had significantly fewer
safeguards thanthesame or similar models sold in the U.S. andEurope. Building COllapSe —Philadelphia's top prosecutor announced a grand jury wasbeing convened to investigate abuilding collapse that killed six people and injured13 others, including a woman who
on Mondaydescribed hearing the sound of falling bricks moments before the walls came crashing down around her. District Attorney Seth Williams said the scope and depth of the grand jury process will
help prosecutors, the city andothers to "completely andappropriately investigate" what happened.
AFGHAN ATTACKS SIGNAL AIM TO DISRUPT
Traci Donaca ......................
Madeff Civil CaSe —Peter Madoff, the imprisonedbrother of Ponzi schemer Bernard Madoff, is expected to appear as headline witness — via video link — in a London courtroom for what is the first
major civil trial to comeout of the massiveWall Street fraud. Thecase, which is scheduled to begin Wednesday in London's historic High Court, involves attempts by British bankruptcy experts — known as
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Farmbill —The Senateon Monday passed afive-year, half-trilliondollar farm bill that expandsgovernment subsidies for crop insurance,
K-
: .
liquidators — to recoupmillions of dollars from anumber of Bernard Madoff's associates.
I I • :
Army base shooting —An instructor at an Armymedical training
' IIEI I i l i ;
school at a military base in Texas was wounded Monday when a fellow service member shot her outside her office, authorities said. The
suspect later surrendered topolice, and authorities say noone else was
' '-:,- IINiI " Ili i l
-' ~I'II I
\
i
Chief William McManus told the San Antonio Express-News that the victim and shooter were involved in a relationship.
!Wrsusr
MBIIElele COIIditiOII —Former President Nelson Mandelaof South
keseus
'
,
any possible relationship betweenthe two. But SanAntonio Police
4%W Wql,l .
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ever in danger. Col. Jim Chevallier, vice commander of 502 Air Base Wing, would not give the identity of the shooter or victim or discuss
Africa was in intensive care Monday, the third day of his latest hospital-
ji
ization for a recurring lung infection, South African officials said. "His condition is unchanged," President Jacob Zuma said in a terse statement. Mandela, 94, was admitted Saturday morning. It was his fourth
hospitalization since late lastyear.
CORRECTIONS
WWII bomber —A British museumon Mondaysuccessfully recovered a Germanbomberthat had beenshot down over the English Chan-
The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories are accurate. If you know ofan error in a story, call us at 541 -383-0356.
Ahmad Jamshid/The Associated Press
nel during World War II. The aircraft, nicknamed the Luftwaffe's "flying
Home deliveryandE-Editian:
iban fighters attacked near theKabul airport.
office, wounding 19and killing a police officer before
pencil" because of its narrow fuselage,camedown off the coast of Kent county in southeastern Englandmorethan 70 years agoduring the
The Afghan insurgency sent13 suicide bombers to assault two high-profile government targets on
being killed by security forces. When the day's fighting was through, the Afghan
Battle of Britain. The rusty and damaged plane was lifted from depths of the channel with cables and is believed to be the most intact example
By mail in DeschutesCounty: One month: $14.50 By mail outsideDeschutes County:Onemonth: $18 E-Edition only:Onemonth: $13
Monday, one in thecapital and the other in asouthern
government arguably hadbeenleft with the better
of the GermanDornier Do17 bomber that hasever beenfound.
province, in a striking signal of its willingness to expend followers on missions that have relatively little
bragging rights: In both attacks, its security forces
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Afghan policemen stand in line Monday after Tal-
tacked the provincial council building and an election
military impact but commandheadlines.
responded quickly and relatively well, according to U.S. and Afghan officials.
Eg+'t Elem tellSIOIl —Egypt's president on Mondayhardened his stance against Ethiopia andits construction of a Nile dam,warning that
The first attack took place on the edge of Kabul International Airport, starting before dawn with explo-
But even though the militants caused relatively little damage or loss of life on Monday, they did dis-
"all options are open" in dealing with the project that threatens to leave
sions that shook the city awakeand forced air traffic
rupt the country's biggest airport and an important
to be rerouted, but left only the bombers dead after a four-hour firefight. The second was in the capital of
provincial capital, despite years of Western military effort in Afghanistan. — New York TimesNews Service
Zabul province, where bombers in two vehicles at-
Egypt with a dangerouswater shortage. Speaking in alive televised speech before hundreds of supporters, MohammedMorsi said Egypt is not calling for war, but it is willing to confront any threats to its water
security. — From wire reports
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Monday night are:
01401703004004604s The estimated jackpot is now $15.7 million.
In reversal,Obamato endeffort to restrict morning-after pill By Michael D. Shear and Pam Belluck
use. The Justice Department apNew York Times News Service pears to have concluded that WASHINGTON The it might lose its case with the O bama administration h a s appeals court and would have decided to stop trying to block to decide whether to appeal over-the-counter availability to the Supreme Court. That of the most popular morning- would drastically elevate the a fter contraceptive pill f o r debate over the politically deliall women and girls, a move cateissue for Obama. fraught with political reperWomen's r i ghts g r o ups, cussionsfor President Barack who had sued the government Obama. to clearthe way for broader The reversal by th e govdistribution of the drug cauernment means that anyone tiously hailed the decision as will soon be able to walk into a significant moment in the a drugstore and buy the pill, battle over reproductive rights Plan B One-Step, without a but said they remained skepprescription. tical until t hey saw details The Justice Department had about how the change will be been fighting to prevent that put into practice. outcome, but said late Monday The drug prevents concepafternoon that it would drop tion if taken within 72 hours its appeal of a judge's order to after sexual intercourse. "We will not rest in this fight make the drug more widely available. In a letter to Judge until the morning-after pill is Edward R. Korman of the U.S. made available without delay District Court for th e East- and obstruction," said Mara ern District of New York, the Verheyden-Hilliard, a lawyer administration said it would and the executive director of comply with his demands that the Partnership for Civil Justhe Food and Drug Adminis- tice Fund, which represented tration be allowed to certify the plaintiffs in the case. the drug fornonprescription The FDA issued a statement
Monday night saying that it planned to drop its appeal. "To comply with th e order, the FDA has asked the manufacturer of Plan B One-Step to submit a supplemental application seeking approval of the one-pill product to be made available OTC without any such restrictions," the statement said. "Once FDA receives that supplemental application, the FDA intends to approve it
promptly." The decision is certain to anger anti-abortion advocates,
who oppose letting young girls have access to the drug without the involvement of a parent or a doctor. For Obama, the decision could rekindle a highintensity, politically turbulent debate about contraceptives even as he is already dealing with a series of distracting scandals and national security leaks. Obama had expressed personal concern about making the drug more broadly available last year and offered support to Kathleen Sebelius, his secretary ofhealth and human services, when she blocked
a decision by the FDA that would have cleared the way for nonprescription distribution to all girls and women regardlessof age. The president said that as the father of two young girls, the idea of making the drug available to them without a prescription made him uncomfortable.
prescription. S cientists, i n cluding a n expert advisory panel to the FDA, gave early support to that request. But top agency officials rejected the application because, some said later, they worried they would be fired if they approved it. A lawsuit was filed in 2005. But a federal judge angrily In 2006 President George accused the a d ministration W. Bush's administration alof blocking the drug because lowed over-the-countersales of politics, not science, and of Plan B to women 18 and ordered Sebelius to reverse olderbut required a prescripher decision. Last week the tion for those 17 and younger. Court of Appeals for the 2nd In 2009, in an effort to expand Circuit in New York City par- access tothe drug incrementially refused the Justice De- tally, Korman directed that the partment'srequest for a delay pill be made available without in the judge's order while the a prescription for those 17 and government appealed. older. The fight to m ake emerI n A p r il , K o r ma n o n c e g ency c o ntraceptives u n i again orderedthe government versally available without a to make all morning-after pills prescription is more than a available without a prescripdecade old. Plan B, the trade tion and without any sales name for the morning-after restrictions. In a s t r i dently pill, was approved in 1999 as worded ruling, Korman wrote a prescription-only product. In that Sebelius' decision to over2001 the Center for Reproduc- rule the FDA "was politically tive Rights filed a citizens peti- motivated, scientifically unjustion for it to be made available tified, and contrary to agency over the counter or without a precedent."
TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
M ART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Tuesday, June11, the 162nd day of 2013. There are 203 days left in the year.
RESEARCH
DID YOU HEAR?
HAPPENINGS
Rethinking rote
EurOPe —Air traffic controllers in Francebegin three days of strikes, and their counter-
parts in several other European countries are expected to take
trips to the entist
more limited labor action this week, to protest a plan by the
European Commission to accelerate the integration of air traffic management systems.
By Catherine Saint Louis
China —Weather permitting, three Chinese astronauts take
off for space.
HISTORY Highlight:In1963, in one of
the most shocking imagesof the Vietnam War era, a Buddhist monk, Thich Quang Duc,
v
I
set himself afire on aSaigon street to protest the government of South Vietnamese
President Ngo Dinh Diem. (The scene was captured in a Pulit-
zer Prize-winning photograph taken by Malcolm Browneof The Associated Press.) In1509, England's King Henry Vlll married his first wife,
Catherine of Aragon. In1770, CaptainJamesCook, commander of the British ship Endeavour, discovered the Great Barrier Reef off Australia
by running onto it. In1776, the Continental Congress formed a committee to draft a Declaration of Indepen-
dence calling for freedom from Britain. In1919, Sir Barton won the Belmont Stakes, becoming horse racing's first Triple
Crown winner. In1938, Johnny Vander Meer pitched the first of two consecutive no-hitters as he led the Cincinnati Reds to a 3-0 victory over the Boston Bees. In1942, the United States and the Soviet Union signed
Caleb Ferguson / New YorkTimes News Service
Michael Heimbinder samples air under the Manhattan Bridge using a sensor and a smartphone app to create air quality maps in New York. A variety of new portable sensors allow users, often citizen scientists, to record minuscule fluctuations in air quality in a neighborhood.
ee azarOLlS air, one sOBCI lme Scientists struggling to understand exactly where and how we're exposed to air pollution are making use of the nuanced data captured by anyone with a low-cost mobile air sensor. By Peter Andrey Smith New York Times News Service
"I do believe in the power of the group to
change policy. If we're measuring air quality,
the Soviet war effort in World War II. In 1962, three prisoners at Alcatraz in San Francisco Bay
NEW YORK — Near the c orner of T i l l ar y a n d J a y Streets in Brooklyn, Michael H eimbinder stood n ea r a blue mailbox, head down, poking at h i s s m artphone.
stagedanescape,leavingthe
A graph appeared: a single
island on a makeshift raft; they
line plotting ambient carbon m onoxide exposure in t h e
a lend-lease agreement to aid
were never found or heard from again. In 1971, the year-and-a-half-
long occupation of Alcatraz Island in San Francisco Bay by American lndian activists
ended as federal officers evicted the remaining protest-
ers. In1977, Seattle Slew won the Belmont Stakes, capturing the Triple Crown.
In1987, Margaret Thatcher became the first British prime minister in160 years to win
a third consecutive term of office as herConservatives held onto a reduced majority in
Parliament. In1993,the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that people who commit "hate crimes" moti-
vated by bigotry may besentenced to extra punishment.
Ten years ago:A suicide bomber killed 16 victims in a Jerusalem bus blast; two
Israeli rocket strikes against Hamas fugitives killed 11 Pal-
estinians in GazaCity. Five yearsago:President George W.Bush, during a visit to Germany, raised the possibility of a military strike
to thwart Tehran's presumed nuclear weaponsambitions; Chancellor Angela Merkel
joined Bush in urging further sanctions against lran if it failed to suspend its nuclear
enrichment program. Oneyearago:Testimonybegan in the trial of former Penn State assistant football coach
Jerry Sandusky, accusing of sexually abusing 10 boysover 15 years. (Sandusky was later convicted and sentenced to at least 30 years in prison.)
BIRTHDAYS Actor Gene Wilder is 80. Rock
singer DonnieVanZant is 61. Pro Football Hall of Famer Joe Montana is 57. Actor Hugh
Laurie is 54. TVpersonality Mehmet Oz, M.D. ("Dr. Oz") is 53. Actor Peter Dinklage is 44.
Actor Joshua Jackson is 35. Actor Shia LaBeouf is 27. — From wire reports
The researchers said that even two visits a year might For d ecades, d entists not suffice to reduce tooth loss have urged all adults to in patients with multiple risk schedule preventive visits factors. "If you are high risk, it is every six months. But a new study finds that annual much more important for you cleanings may be adequate to be seen frequently, but for for adults without certain the low-risk people it's not," risk factors for periodontal said Dr. William Giannobile, disease while people with the study's lead author and the a high risk may need to go chairman of the department of more often. periodontics at the University Almost half of adults age of Michigan School of Dentist30 and older, about 65 mil- ry. "The take-away is not that lion, have a form of chronic you don't need to see the deninflammatory gum disease tist; it's that each patient needs that can u l timately lead to be treated in their own indito tooth loss. The study, vidual way." published Monday in The Two authors of the study own Journal of Dental Research, shares in Interleukin Genetics, suggeststhat the frequency the company that makes the of dental visits for clean- genotype test for interleukin-l. ings and other preventive The company helped finance services should be tailored the study along with the Nato eachperson's risk factors tional Institutes of Health. for periodontal disease. Genco calledthe paper "a "The findings suggest major advance in using risk that for low-risk patients, profiles to tailor-make a prea yearly prophylactic visit ventive regimen." does prevent tooth l o ss But Dr. Ray Williams, a periover a protracted period odontist and the dean of the of 16 years, and there's no School of Dental Medicine at significant difference in an Stony Brook University, faultadded visit," said Dr. Rob- ed the study for not directly ert Genco, a periodontist addressing the subjects' oral and SUNY distinguished hygiene, a significant factor professor of oral biology at in tooth loss. Nonetheless, he the University at Buffalo, praised the research because who was not involved in the it "sounds the signal that it is study. "They found if you time to make dentistry more had more than one risk fac- individual and more personaltor, that maybe two visits ized,"and added, "We ought to isn't optimal." be able to tailor the treatment Prevention reduces tooth to the need." loss, but there has been Dr. Paul Beirne, the lead little evidence to support a author of a 2007 review of pretwice-yearly visit to the den- ventive dental visits published tist for everyone. The new in The Cochrane Database of study looked at insurance Systematic Reviews and a denclaims data for 5,117 adults, tist, said that no conclusions primarily in M ichigan, to could be drawn from the new determine whether tooth study about the optimal freextraction was linked to a quency of dental visits for cavprevious history of one or ity management because risk two dental visits a year in factorsfor tooth decay were patients with varying risks not addressed. The findings forperiodontaldisease.The are not applicable to children, subjects were classified as he noted. high risk if t hey smoked Of the more than 25,000 or had diabetes or certain adults invited to participate, variations in the interleu- roughly 20 percent returned kin-1 gene, which some cheek swabs for the genetic studies have suggested may test. It is not known if there be linked to periodontal dis- were systematic differences ease in white people. Sub- between those who particijects were deemed low risk pated and those who declined, if they had none of those so results should be interpreted risks. cautiously, he said. R esearchers found n o Still, the new study provides s tatistical d i ff erence i n evidencethat a"one size fits all" tooth loss among low-risk preventive regimen is inappropatients whether they went priate, said Beirne, a lecturer for a checkup once or twice in epidemiology at University a year. But in the high-risk College Cork in Ireland. group, roughly 17 percent of patients who had had two visits a year had a tooth extracted, compared with roughly 22percent of those who had had just one a New York Times News Service
then we can say, 'Look, we have real evidence here.You have todo something.'" — Michael Heimbinder, Habitat Map
an urban environment. Particulates vary from neighborMinutes later, he ran over hood to neighborhood, even to an idling Honda Pilot and from one floor of a building to held a small, black sensor to another. its tailpipe. On his phone, carNow, scientists struggling bon monoxide levels, predict- to understand exactly where ably, jumped off the chart. A and how we're exposed to air woman opened the car door pollution are making use of and said, "Can I h elp y ou the nuanced data captured by out?" anyone with a low-cost mo"Just sampling air," Heimbile air sensor. The EPA plans binder said. He gave a quick to include "citizen-collected grin and dashed on to a wom- data" to supplement existing an with a lighted cigarette. monitoring stations. "We get inquiries from peoHeimbinder, 36, who lives i n Park Slope and r un s a ple all the time, and we'd love nonprofit organization called to make use of their data," Habitat Map, is a p ollution said Ron Williams, a research h unter. Armed with a p o r - chemist at the EPA. "These table sensor attached with technologies really have exVelcro to his biceps, he uses ploded in the last five years his smartphone to record — cellphone-based technolominuscule fluctuations in air gies, wirelessly transmitted quality. The system, known data — but we don't know as AirCasting, allows him to how well they're performing." createand share online colorWilliams recently ran nine coded maps of neighborhood sensors (including A i rCastair quality. (Hardware coming) through an Air Sensor ponents cost as little as $180 Evaluation and Collaboration — the whole thing is about the program to verify the data size of three smartphones.) quality. The agency is sharLooking f o r ha z a r dous ing the results with developair where federal authorities ers to help them f i ne-tune can't or don't, he's bicycled their sensors. The so-called "small s e nsor" m o v ement around Newtown Creek and t aken samples above t h e c ontinues to e x p and. T h e
neighborhood.
Brooklyn-Queens Express- Air Quality Egg released last way. "You're not going to be year and measures outdoor able to tell the difference between clean air and moderately unhealthy air," he said. "You can't see it." By at least one metric, the Global Burden of D i sease, outdoor particle pollution is among the top 10 risk factors a ffecting m o r t ality w o r l dw ide. Two-thirds o f t h o se deaths occur in Asia; 100,000 to 120,000 occur annually in the United States. The Environmental Protection Agency collects data on carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide, ozone, p articulate m atter, sulfur d i oxide and lead at 17 sites in New York City. The sites are part of a national network of 1,400 stations that monitor pollutants and help the agency issue air quality alerts. But air pollution, except for ozone, is not distributed uniformly across
carbon monoxide and nitrogen dioxide; users can buy a monitor rather than building it t hemselves. Researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder plan to deploy sensors around hydraulic fracturing wells to monitor airborne emissions. Others aredeveloping creative ways to display information. Last year, two graduate students, Xiaowei Wang and Deren Guler, flew kites fitted with m o nitors above Beijing, giving a r e a l-time readout of air pollution with flying, blinking LED lightsalmost like stars in the hazy night sky. Researchers say the data can drive changes in everyd ay behavior. Tw o y e a r s ago, William G r i swold, a c omputer scientist a t th e University of California, San
Diego, handed out portable CitiSense sensors to 16 commuters. A p aper p resented at Wireless Health 2012 reported that participants using the sensors found "urban valleys" where buildings trapped pollution. Bus riders, probably among the lowest contributors to air pollution, nonetheless received high exposures while waiting on busy streets, the sensors found. Passengers in public buses saw higher exposures, too, compared with those in automobiles. (Newer cars have cabin filters that remove ozone and nitrogen dioxide.) Once they saw the data, Griswold said, "many participants changed their habits. They started walking differe nt streets or d r iving w i t h windows rolled up." H eimbinder's group w i l l call on AirCasting users to assess air q u a lity a r o und Newtown Creek, the South Bronx and other areas crisscrossed w i t h high w a ys, waste transfer facilities, dry cleaners and other pollution sources that can't be detected in large-scale monitoring. Beyond prompting changes in daily commutes, Heimbinder said he e x pected environmental activists to take these observations to l a w makers and regulators. "I do believe in the power of the group to change policy," he said. "If we're measuring air quality, then we can say, 'Look, we have real evidence here. You have to do something.'"
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Back inside a jury-rigged c alibration lab at t h e N ew York City College of Technology, he listened as a student, Leroy Williams, explained a test of a new nitrogen dioxide sensor. Williams said the nitrogen dioxide levels had showed a sharp drop when he brought the sensor indoors. "That would m ak e sense," Heimbinder said. "You got two bridges out there." Until now, the plumes of exhaust billowing from the bridgesfrom 200,000 vehiclesa day — had been all but invisible.
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013
Contractors
Biedscheid
Continued from A1 In recent years, about one in four intelligence workers has been a contractor, and 70 percent ormore of the intelligence c o m munity's secret budget has gone to private firms. Booz A l len H a m ilton, which hired the 29-yearold Snowden three months ago to work at the NSA, has been a leader among more than 1,900 firms that have supplied tens of thousands of intelligence analysts in recent years, including technologists and field spies. But in the rush to fill jobs, the government has relied on faulty procedures to vet intelligence workers, documents and interviews show. At the same time, intelli-
Continued from A1 "It's gotta be heartfelt," she sa>d. At the time of his death, Martin was 48 and enrolled in the automotive program at Central Oregon Community College. He'd had several run-ins with
gence agencies have failed to hire enough in-house government workers to manage and oversee the contractors, contracting specialists said. On Monday, lawmakers said they would be examining Snowden's hiring and the growing use of private companies for intelligence work. "We'll be going over every inch of this," said Rep. Adam B. Schiff, D-Calif., a member of the House Intelligence Committee who expects confidential briefings on the leak in the next few days. Public hearings are likely as well, he said. Schiff said the committee long has worried about the cost of outsourcing but now would be examining the security risks more closely. "Now I think we'll be looking that through an entirely different lens," he said. Intelligence of f i c i als, government auditors and contracting specialists have warned for years that the vulnerability to spies and
breaches was rising, along with contracting fraud and abuses. "When you increase the volume of contractors exponentially but you don't invest in the personnel necessary to manage and oversee that workforce, your exposure increases," said Steven Schooner, co-director of the government p r ocurement law program a t G e orge Washington Uni v e rsity. "This is what happens when you have staggering numbers of peoplewith accessto this kind of information." The reliance on contractors reflects a massive shift toward outsourcing over the past 15 years, in part because of cutbacks in the government agencies and commitment to smaller government by the George W. Bush administration. Most of the work went to the largest contractors, including Booz Allen Hamilton, which had $5.8 billion in revenue last year. Almost all of Booz Allen's work was for the government, and nearly a quarter of that was for intelligence agencies. In the first few years after 2001, when the competition for qualified job candidates was the fiercest, it was not unusual for companies to
give signing bonuses of $30,000 or a new car for workers with top-secret security clearances. By 2010, the overall intel-
ligence budget had grown by 250 percent since 2000. Nowhere was the growth larger than at the NSA. The budget there doubled, as did the physical infrastructure. The hidden Fort M eade, Md., complex includes as much square footage as the Pentagon and is surrounded by 112 acres of parking lots, according to military construction documents filed with Howard County, Md. Ten thousand employees are to be added in the next 15 years, according to the plans. Many of the NSA's contractors are located in the 285-acre National Business Park, which is connected to the agency by a private road. Booz Allen shares the skyline there with other giants: L-3 Communications, Northrop Grumman and SAIC, to name a few. By the mid-2000s, all of the intelligence agencies had become dependent on privatecontractors such as Snowden — who says he made $200,000 a year — to perform everything from information technology installation and maintenance to intelligence analysis and agent protection.
vehicle. "If it had been my brother d riving that truck and M r . Biedscheid crossing the street, if the tables were turned, my brother would have stoppeddrinking or not — and given aid," she said. Gibbs said t h ough she's not had much contact with
Martin's youngest daughter or the girl's mother since the crash, she's drawn closer to her brother'sfriends, many of whom she expects tosee later this summer when they'll scatter his ashes at Wickiup Reservoir.She said she likes to imagine that if not for the crash, her brother would be
Medicare rates. Robin Henderson, execuContinued from A1 tive director of the Central What it does: Establishes "What really is going on, Oregon Health Council and a pilot project in Marion what is really more important director of government affairs and Polk counties to is thecoordinated care orgafor the St. Charles Health Sysallow coordinated care nizations are built on mutual tem, told lawmakers this bill organization's board to cooperation and trust," said would put the guillotine over petition the state to remove Sen. Ala n B a t es, D - Medtheir heads. and penalize aboard "We understand it applies ford, a doctor who sits on the member. committee, after the hearing to one region ... but, once Status:Pending Monday. you set a precedent, you can assignment Even though the dispute is expand it to everyone else," between Salem Hospital and Henderson said. the CCO in Marion and Polk Bates said he understands counties, and a b i ll, House CCOs to a s k t h e O r egon why hospitals are w orried. Bill 3309, addresses only that Health Authority to remove They don't want their reprearea, Central Oregon resisomeone f r o m t h e CC O sentative on the local CCO dents voiced concerns Monboard, on a two-thirds vote. board to be kicked from the day that the legislation could In its current form, members table and see a drastic cut in stymie efforts underway lowho were voted out could not their Medicaid rates. Mediccally as well. contract with th e CCO f or aid is a key part of a hospital's The bill would allow the five years and would see their revenue stream. Marion and Polk c ounties' payments cutto 58 percent of Bates said the legislation
will likely be kept alive and sit in a committee until the hospital and Salem CCO can mediate. If they can't, Bates said, he'll lobby for the bill's
CCOs
the law in the past — including a sixth DUII conviction that earned him a D-month stint in prison — but, friends and family said, the birth of his daughter had prompted him to try to turn his life around. Gibbs said she can't imagine Martin driving away had he struck someone with his
HouseBill 3309
enjoying some of t h e b e st years of his life today. "He'd probably already be a mechanic," she said. "Graduated, a certified mechanic, raising his daughter, living life, and visiting us on holidays. He'd be alive." — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com
the hospital's pre-CCO contract, or 64 percent of Medicare rates. The two sides have agreed to enter into mediation as of Monday. passage. D eschutes County C o m "This lawsuit puts the en- missioner T a mm y B a n ey, tire CCO movement at risk, who is also the chairwoman not just in this county, but po- of the Central Oregon Health tentially across the state," he Counsel, t estified a t the said Monday during the com- Capitol that she was embarmittee hearing. "If any large rassedforthe state.She spoke entity, a group of doctors, a against the l egislation. It's hospital, can sue a CCO, we important, she said, that the will be in big trouble." groups can work together and Salem Hospttal o f f tctals talk through tough decisions told The Bulletin earlier they without lawyers. "We can't legislate good felt they had no choice but to file a lawsuit. behavior," she said. "I would S alem Hospital and W i l love to come up with a policy lamette Valley C ommunity on common sense, but I have Health have not be able to yet to do so." agree if the hospital should be — Reporter: 541-554-1162, paid at 68 percent, which was ldahe@bendbulletin.com
Fraud
The money-go-round How internet merchants may use banks to gain access to people's money
Continued from A1 They outline how b a nks profit handsomely by collecting a variety of fees while ignoring warnings of potential fraud and, in some instances, enabling dubious merchants to prey on consumers. Anyone, young or old, can be targeted by unscrupulous marketers. But for a variety of reasons — financial worries,
Q A merchant obtains a consumer's
are particularly vulnerable to what is known as mass market fraud, deceptive pitches that arrive by telephone, mail and the Internet. The problems at Zions and F irst Delaware, where t h e banks became financial conduits and quiet enablers for questionable businesses, extend well beyond those two institutions, federal authorities say. Indeed, banks across the country, from some of the largest to smaller regional players, help facilitate billions of dollars of fraud each year, according to interviews with consumer lawyers and state and federal prosecutors. Officials at the Justice Department say they are taking aim at banks' role in giving predatory lenders and fraudulent merchants access to the U.S. financial system. The department is considering civil and criminal actions against a number of banks for allowi ng tainted money t o fl o w through branches, for failing to safeguard against suspicious merchants, and for originating transactions on behalf of businesses that they know make unauthorized w ith d r awals from customer accounts, according to people with direct knowledge of the matter. "You can't close your eyes anymore to the fraud that you are allowing to happen," said Michael Blume, the director of the consumer protection branch at the Justice Department. "Banks are in business to make a profit. Unfortunately, this is a moneymaking operation at consumers' expense."
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A cut of the fees Zions did not interact directly with the company that called Koch, National Health Net Online. What the bank did was establish a banking relationship with an intermediary, Modern Payments, that handled payments for National Health. Koch's account at a small Virginia bank was debited by National Health, which in turn paid Modern Payments for processing the transaction. Modern Payments gave its bank, Zions, a cut of its fee. In all, Zions in effect let roughly $39 million be withdrawn from hundreds of thousands ofaccounts from 2007 to 2009. Much of that money was ultimately transferred to bank accounts in Canada, India and the Caribbean, according to a Times review ofcourt records. Many of the Zions customers were older people and others on shaky f i nancial footing. But that, too, worked in Zions' favor: The withdrawals set off a cascade of insufficient fund fees for the bank — more than $20 million in all, court records show. "Zions takes seriously the need to prevent the banking system being used for fraudu-
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Bradley Swartz's money was withdrawn from his checking account at a rate of $19.95 a month until it was gone. The company responsible, National Health, a unit of NHS Systems Inc. of Collegeville, Pa., then referred Swartz to a debt-collector. Swartz says his credit was ruined. lent purposes; however, it is our general policy not to comment on pending legal m atters," said James Abbott, director of investor relations for Zions. "There is another side to this story, other than that told by the plaintiff. Our side of the story will be told at the appropriate time through the legal system." A spokesman for First Delaware declined to c omment. Neither National Health Online nor M o dern Payments responded to emails and telephone messages. Koch, a retired teacher, said that he was usually skeptical of telemarketers. But when his phone rang one afternoon in November 2007, he recalled, he listened as the caller identified himself as a Medicare official and suggested that Koch update his health insurance card. Koch, as requested, supplied his bank information. But instead of a new insurance card, he received notice that he had been enrolled in National Health Net Online's discount health plan. The company had withdrawn $299.95 from his bank account as payment, accordingto records reviewed by The Times. National Health, a unit of NHS Systems Inc. of Collegeville, Pa., has a troubled history. In April, the Federal Trade Commission per m a nently banned the company from telemarketing and ordered it to pay a $6.9 million fine after accusing NHS Systems of defrauding consumers. NHS Systems did not return mul-
tiple telephone calls seeking comment. "I was so angry," Koch recalled. He demanded a refund from NHS Systems but was not reimbursed. Between 2007 and 2009, tens of thousands of Americans, many of them over age 65, have lodged complaints with state attorneys general, banking regulators and the FTC, requesting refunds for bank charges that they say were unauthorized, according to court records. Lawyers at Langer, Grogan 8: Diver sued Zions, representing several hundred thousand consumers who said that NHS Systems and other telemarketers tookmoney from theiraccounts without authorization. The lawsuit, which is pending in a Pennsylvania federal court, claims that Zions effectively gave "fraudulent marketers direct access to every bank account in the United States."
Banks'knowledge According to internal emails and other documents filed in connection with that suit, Zions bankers recognized something was amiss early on. An outsizenumber of customers were disputing payments to certain processors. The rates of return — that is, the percentage of payments that are returned for insufficient funds and lack of authorizationstood out. "WOW," one Zions officer wrote in an email after seeing the numbers. Others inside Zions raised alarms, too. Zions executives
through "fraud, trickery and deceit." Like Zions, First Delaware dealt w i t h int e r mediaries rather than directly with the merchants. But as Zane David Memeger, the U.S. attorney in P h iladelphia, said in th e l awsuit against First Delaware, bad actors"must access the banking system to gain access to the consumer's money."
told colleagues that the high return rates were a troubling sign. In January 2007, one warned that the rates were "staggering." In 2 007, more than half of the payments that one Internet merchant was routing through Zions were bounced back — roughly 40 times the industry standard. Reviewing complaints about one Internet merchant, a Zions vice president wrote, "Every red flag possible went off in
my head." And yet the bank kept handling the transactions, court records show. Why? One payment processorexecutive suggested an answer: The business was a gold mine. "Turning them off and sending them somewhere else is not an option," this executive told Zions in an email in September 2007. Officials at the FTC, the Justice Department, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. say this is just the tip of the iceberg, according to people with knowledge of the matter. In a move that prosecutors say is a harbinger,the U.S. attorney in Philadelphia sued the First Bank of Delaware in November, claiming the bank effectively abetted "fraudulent Internet and telemarketer merchants," court records show. The bank, the lawsuit claims, stayed "willfully blind" to the fact that the merchants were illegally taking money from customers, including a disproportionate number of seniors,
At First Delaware, return rates for some merchants exceeded 80percent. Yetthe more questionable th e m e rchant, the more fees a bank stands to collect, prosecutors say. Every time victims flag an unauthorized charge and demand money back, banks collect fees to process the return. Those feesare far larger,according to banking documents, than the
ones charged for processing the original transactions. First Bank of Delaware anticipated that revenue from its processing business would swell by more than 1,300 percent, from $150,000 in 2010 to roughly $2 million a year later, court records show. Bradly Swartz, of Meshoppen, Pa., learned f irsthand how much such practices can cost consumers. Swartz, 59, was trying to stretch his retirement savings when a telemarketer called in 2007 with what sounded like good news: Swartz had won a prize. All he had to do to collect was fill out a money order. T hen, starting i n 20 0 7, Swartz said, a subsidiary of NHS Systems — the same company that Koch had dealt with — started withdrawing $19.95 a month from his checking account. After emptying the account, National Health referred him to a debt collector, Swartz said. Swartz said his credit was ruined. He now works part time at Wal-Mart to supplement his savings. "I have to work until the day I die, and these greedy banks just profit," he said. Federalofficials say banks not only m ust k no w t h eir customers, but also their customers'customers in order to ensure that consumers in general, and older Americans in particular, are not at risk. The First Delaware case, they say, is a warning to the industry. "Nothing sharpens the focus for bankslike an enforcement action," said Michael Bresnick, the director of President Barack O bama's F i nancial Fraud Enforcement unit.
TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A S
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 1'I, 2013
IN FOCUS:IMMIGRATION
o oin s a ensa
o or er ensions
By Fernanda Santos New York Times News Service
NOGALES, Ariz. — As rocks hurled from Mexico rained down on U.S. Border Patrol agents one night in October, at least one of the agents drew his gun and fired across the border, striking a teenager 11 times, seven times in the back. The boy, Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, 16, collapsed and died on a cracked sidewalk blocks from his home, under a sign that read "emergencias medicas." The police in Nogales, Mexico, reported that he had been carrying only a cellphone. The shooting was not an isolated case. He was one of at least 15 people killed by border agents in the Southwest since January 2010, their deaths a jolt to the careful balance of sovereignty and security that underlies a binational debate over immigration reform. = ' Those shootings — somem;l)q times during confrontations that began with assaults on agents, other times under less clear circumstances — have bolstered criticism of agents and customs officers who operate along the U.S.-Mexico border. Lawmakers, civil rights advocates and victims' families in both countries,concerned about what they view as a lack ai.'.. of oversight and accountability, have made angry demands for answers. Of the 15 victims, Jose Antonio was one of 10 who were Mexican citizens, six of whom died in Mexico, felled by bullets fired by agents in the United States. Since January 2010, not a single agent has been criminally charged in cases of lethal use of force, and the agency would not say whether Samantha Sais/ New YorkTimes NewsService disciplinary action had been Taide Elena, left, the grandmother of Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, 16, who was found dead from taken. gunshot wounds on the MexIcan sIde of the border fence, vIsits her grandson's makeshIft memorial In Scrutiny heightened lastyear Nogales, ArIz. RodrIguez was one of at least 15 people killed by border agents In the Southwest since when the Department of Home- January 2010. land Security's acting inspector general, Charles Edwards, began a review of policies gov- quire the Department of Home- families and their advocates, as allow them to defend themerningthe use of force by the land Security and the Justice well as the subject of sharp dis- selves," he said in an interview. Border Patrol's parent agency, Department's civil rights divi- cussions in Mexican diplomatic "When you look at the number Customs and Border Protec- sion to develop new policies on circles. of apprehensions we have evtion. He acted after 16 members how and when to report use-ofMany of the cases that re- ery year, the number of use-ofof Congress signed a letter criti- force actions, investigate com- sulted in a fatal shooting start- force incidents is minuscule." cizing the "appalling behavior" plaints and discipline agents, ed when rocks were thrown There were nearly 357,000 of agents in San Diego, where an effort to clarify and tighten at agents. In the year ending capturesof migrants atornear a man in their custody died in regulations. Often, the task of in September,the Border Pa- the border in 2012. 2010 after being stunned by a investigating agents' in such trolrecorded 249 rock attacks In a statement, the Mexican Taser severaltimes, his hands cases falls to the local police along the U.S.-Mexican border. Embassy in Washington critirestrained behind his back. The department. Agents working here, where "There have been some un- only a fence divides bustling signers questioned whether the episode was "partof a larger fortunate incidents in the past, city centers on either side, said cultural problem." and we want to make sure that police officers in Mexico often The review is still underway. we do everything we can as we did little to stop the rock-throwCustoms and Border Protec- enforce security to keep them ing or to catch the assailants. tion has also commissioned an from happening again," Sen. (Mexico does not have a boranalysis, looking at episodes Dick Durbin, D-IlL, who proder-patrol force.) in which its agents fired weap- posed Section 1111, said in an Shawn Moran, vice president ons or otherwise used force. A interview. at large of the National Border spokesman for the agency said The latest version of the bor- Patrol Council, the union that it was reviewing the findings, der protection agency's use-of- represents 17,000 Border Patrol which havenotyet been made force manual, from 2010, says, agents,said force was some"Only that force which is both times necessary. 4 public. "When their lives are threatOn a single page, the lengthy reasonable and necessary may immigration bill under debate be used in any given situation." ened, when their well-being is in the Senate provides the most The meaning of "reasonable," threatened, and when they're decisive response to concerns though, has been a point of in danger to suffer great bodily so far. Its Section 1111 would re- contention for shooting victims' harm, the use-of-force policies
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cized the shootings as "disproportionate deadly force," saying, "In recent years, the results of investigations have unfortunately not even resulted in the prosecution of the agents" who have engaged in fatal shootings "or even fired into Mexican territory." A spokesman for Customs and Border Protection said agents were permitted to use deadly force to counter threats from eitherside of the border.
The agency has a process for investigating complaints when deadly force is used against U.S. citizens, legal residents and visa holders at ports of entry. "We do not t olerate misconduct or abuse within our ranks," the spokesman said. Victims' f a milies s eldom learn the names of the agents involved in the deadly shootings, or the type of discipline they faced as a resultof deadly encounters. Relatives of Carlos La Madrid, 19, a U.S. citizen killed March 21, 2011, as he climbed a ladder propped against the border fence in Douglas while trying to cross into Mexico, had to get a court order to learn the name of the agent who shot him so they could serve the agent with legal papers, The Arizona Daily Star of Tucson reported. The authorities said that La Madrid was unarmed and that he had 48 pounds of marijuana
in his pickup truck. The inquiry is continuing. On Sept. 3, Guillermo Arevalo Pedroza, 36, was shot to death by an agent while attending a family barbecue along the Rio Grande in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico. The agent, chasing by boat a man who was trying to swim to the United States, said he had fired at people tossing rocks at him. The investigation is continuing. From her tidy mobile home here, Taide Elena, 63, waits for answers on the killing of her grandson, Jose Antonio. No investigator has come to talk to her,she said,so she ha stried to piecetogether what happened through police and autopsy reports. Elena, a legal U.S. residentwho cleans homes for a living, said she did not even know if one or more agents fired the bullets that killed her grandson. Agents and Nogales police officers said they had been chasingpeople they suspected of beingdrug dealers near the border fence when rocks were lobbed at them from Nogales, Mexico. There is no indication from the reports or witness accounts that Jose Antonio, who, his grandmother said, aspired to be a soldier, was involved. "Hewas carryingnothingbeyond the cellphone I had bought for him," Elena said. "I still can't believe theytook his life just because he was walking."
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Climate ContInued from A1 As yo u m i g h t i m a gine, those dismissive of climatechange concerns have made much of this w arming plateau. They t y pically a r gue that "global warming stopped 15 years ago" or some similar statement, and then assert that this disproves the whole notionthat greenhouse gases are causing warming. Rarely do they mention that most of the warmest years in the historical record have occurred r ecently. M o reover, their claim depends on careful selection of the starting and ending points. The starting point is almost always 1998, a particularly w a r m y e a r because of a strong El Nino weather pattern. S omebody w h o wa n t ed to sell you gold coins as an investment could make t he same kind of argument about the futility of putting your retirement funds into the stock market. If he picked the start date and the end date carefully enough, the gold salesman could make it look like the stock market did not go up for a decade or longer. But that does not really tell you what y o u r r e t irement money is going to do in the market over 30 or 40 years. It does not even tell you how you would have done over the cherry-picked decade, which would have depended on exactly when you got in and out of the market. Scientists and statisticians reject this sort of selective use of numbers, and when they calculate the long-term tem-
perature trends for the Earth, they conclude that it continues to warm through time. Despite the recent lull, it is an open question whether the pace of that warming has undergone any lasting shift. What to make of it all'? We certainly cannot conclude, as some people want to, that carbon dioxide is not actually a g r eenhouse gas. More than a century of r esearch thoroughly disproves that claim. In fact, scientists can calculate how much extra heat should be accumulating from the human-caused increases in greenhouse gases, and the energies involved are staggering. B y a co n s ervative estimate, current concentrations are trapping an extra amount of energy equivalent to 400,000 Hiroshima bombs exploding acrossthe face of the Earth every day. S o the r ea l q u estion i s where all that heat is going, if not to warm the surface. And a prime suspect is the deep ocean. Our measurements there are not good enough to confirm it absolutely, but a growing body of research suggests this may be an important part of the answer. Exactly wh y t h e o c e an would have started to draw down extra heat i n r e cent years is a mystery, and one we badly need to understand. But the main ideas have to do with possible shifts in winds and currents that are causing surface heat to be pulled down faster than before. The d eep-ocean t h eory is one of a h a l f-dozen explanations that h ave b een
proffered for th e w a r m ing plateau. Perhaps the answer will turn out to be some mix of all of them. And in a ny event, computer forecasts of climate change suggest that pauses in warming lasting a couple of decades should not surprise us. Now, here is a crucial piece of background: It turns out we had an earlier plateau in
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global warming, from roughly the 1950s to the 1970s, and scientists do not fully understand that one either. A lot of evidence suggests that sunlightblocking pollution from dirty factories may have played a role, as did natural variability in ocean circulation. The pollution was ultimately reduced by stronger clean-air laws in the West. Today, factory p o l lution from China and other developing countries could be playing a similar role in blocking some sunlight. We will not know for sure until we send up satellites that can make better measurements of particles in the air. What happened when the mid-20th-century lull came to an end'? You guessed it: an extremely rapid warming of the planet. So, if past is prologue, this c urrent plateau will end at some point, too, and a new era of rapid global warming will begin. That will put extra energy and moisture into the atmosphere that can fuel weather extremes, like heat waves and torrential rains. We might one day find ours elves looking back on t h e crazy weather of the 2010s with a deep yearning for those halcyon days.
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I I I
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4
Weather, B6
©
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013
BRIEFING
Car plungesoff parking garage A Powell Butte man was in critical condition
Monday evening at St. Charles Bend, after his car fell 15 feet from a
parking garage, according to police and hospital spokespeople. Richard T. Marsellos,
87, apparently suffered a medical emergency around 11:20 a.m. while
waiting in his parked 2010 Buick at The Center Orthopedic Neuro Care, 2200 N.E. Neff
issues ineoveras es os • Bendcompanyfacesa$4,500 penalty for remodelwork at RedmondHigh School By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality is fining a Bend abatement company forwhat the agency
says was improper handling of asbestos during the ongoing remodel of Redmond High School. Alpine Abatement Associ-
ates faces a $4,500 fine, according to the DEQ. The company has appealed the penalty. The DEQ requires that abatement workers dampen asbestos-ladendebris and seal it in thick plastic bags. Doing so keepsfragments of asbestos from becoming airborne, where they can be a danger to people. Frank Messina,
an air quality specialist with the agency in Bend, said he found four or five open bags of asbestos-containing material during a February inspection of the school. "When I was there, there wasn't enough water in the material I observed," he said. Jack Billings, president of Alpine Abatement Associates, disagrees. He contends that the company was using enough water in the cleanup. "All the air tests showed
therewere no fibers released," he said. The company has been in business in Bend for about 25 years, Billings said, and deals with asbestos almost every
record high. • Portland:A push to build a barrier on the city's "Suicide Bridge."
Stories on B3, B5
WHATEyER
•
Senate OKsbill regulating drones
O Tofollow the series, visit www.bendbulletin.com/updates.
BEND'S EFFORTS TO ADDRESSLOITERING
ro em ersiss ownown, ou i'sno a ci riori
reported. Marsellos was treated at the scene by
emergency medical personnel from the Bend Fire Department.
Prineville man ID'd in crash Oregon State Police have identified the
of Prineville.
Lamey was driving a 2002 Porsche 911con-
I
'I
lowing a vehicle driven by his son, according
Democratand asponsor of the bill. "That's why we need this drone legislation to provide citizens with modern
The car rolled several times off the
safeguards for due process and privacy rights. As drones becomemore
westbound shoulder of the highway, according to the OSP. Lamey was
ubiquitous in the future,
pronounced dead atthe scene. — From staff reports
Have a story idea or submission? Contactus! Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
Submissions: • Letters and opinions: Maii: My Nickei's Worth or inMyview P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.com
House Bill 2710
Chip Shields, a Portland
hisson ata highrate of speed at around 5:15 p.m. and apparently lost control of his car.
Business ...........541-ee3-0360 Education.......... 541-383-0367 Health..................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety........541-e83-0387 Special projects...541-617-7831
warrant or in emergency circumstances.
rant process," said Sen.
to the OSP. He passed
D.c.....................202-662-7456
using unmannedaerial vehicles to collect information except with a
shouldn't enable law enforcement with a tool to circumvent the war-
vertible eastbound near Powell Butte while fol-
Salem .........i.......541-554-1162
ment officers from
step in regulating the new technology and protecting citizens' privacy. "Drone technology
Sunday afternoon as John Gordon Lamey,75,
State projects ....541-410-9207
would bar law enforce-
Supporters said it was an important first
on U.S. Highway 26 late
Deschutes......... 541-383-0376 Crook................. 541-e83-0367 Jefferson........... 541-383-0367
Following several lengthy public debates over the use of domestic dronesin Oregon,the state Senate decided Monday to move forward with a plan that
passed on a23-5 vote.
victim in a fatal crash
La Pine...............541-383-0367 Sunriver.............541-383-0367
• JacksonCounty: Struggling county
Following up on Central Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to newsCibendbufletin.com.
according to Carney. It then accelerated for-
Sisters ........i.......541-548-2186
of Oregon student fees are set to reach a
revenue by leasing jail beds.
two parked vehicles,"
Bend ...................541-617-7829 Redmond ...........541-548-2186
Jackson County
hopes to bring in
ated backwards, striking
Call a reporter:
Eugene
• Eugene:University
Carney. His wife was
The Bulletin
Portland
Asbestos is a naturally occurring fibrous mineral that is durable and heat resistant, according to the DEQ. Those traits led to the use of asbestos in building materials throughout the 1900s. See Asbestos /B5
to Bend Police Lt. Chris
ward and went through a handrail and guardrail, falling about15 feet to the level below, police
STATE NEWS
day.
Road, Bend, according inside. "His vehicle acceler-
www.bendbulletin.conn/local
Personal items sit in a pile next to Riverfront Plaza in downtown Bend Friday afternoon. David Marchi, owner of Crow's Feet Commons, recently leased space in the plaza to use as a patio for serving coffee and food. "As much as there is an issue of homelessness in Bend, business owners don't want to take away from the success of their business because there's a panhandler right in front of their door," Marchi said.
• Business owners sayit impacts themnegatively; City Council is leery ofbeing a'trail blazer' on issue By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
Five years after Bend city councilors dropped a plan to ban panhandling, the city continues trying other ways to minimize loitering and other problems downtown. The latest idea is the brainchild of David Marchi, owner of Crow's Feet Commons, an outdoor store and cafe that servescoffee and beer.Marchi recently leased space on the Riverfront Plaza from the city and now servescustomers on a patio outside his business. Customers can order coffee and food from nearby restaurants, and Marchi plans to serve
beer outside as soon as he obtains a permit from the Oregon Liquor Control Commission. "We're still seeing quite a lot of loitering, but every day I remind them they can't be here (if they smoke)," Marchi said. The city designated Mirror Pond plaza a smoke-free campus, and since Crows Feet Commons moved into the historic city-owned Goodwillie-Allen-Rademacher House in the fall, Marchi and his employees have reminded people they cannot smoke in the area. That helps minimize the number of people who loiter. "As much as there is an issue of
homelessness in B e nd, b usiness owners don't want to take away from the successoftheirbusiness because there's a panhandler right in front of their door," Marchi said. Bend Police spokesman Lt. Chris Carney said that although some business owners and patrons might not feel comfortable around the groups of people who frequent the area, these
people are usually not doing anything illegaL Police visited the Mirror Pond plaza 187 times from Jan. 1, 2012, through June 3, 2013, Carney said. In most cases — 111 of the visits — police stopped by without a call for service. "Most of those obviously are coming from officers going down there and showing presence around that area," Carney said. See Loitering /B5
we will need to ensure that our legal protections keep pacewith the use of this technology." Sen. Jeff Kruse, a Roseburg Republican, emphasized in his floor speech that this proposal only laid the foundation. "This will be an issue that the Legislative As-
sembly will be dealing with probably for the
foreseeable future," said Kruse, who voted for the bill. He said future legislation could address
issues such asprivate drone use. Some opponents said there are privacy and legal issues the bill fails
to address. "I believe that there remain internalfatal flaws," said Sen. Betsy
Johnson, a Scappoose Democrat who voted against the measure. The bill now goes backto the House, which passed the original version and must
consider changes the Senate made. — From wire reports
• Civic Calendar notices: Email event information to news@bendbulletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" in the subject, and include acontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-3e3-0354
• School news andnotes: Email news itemsand notices of general interest to news©bendbulletin.com. Email announcementsof teens' academicachievements to youth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduations andreunion info to bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-3e3-035e
• Obituaries, Death Notices: Details on theObituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits©bendbuiietin.com
DeschutesCounty to enter into statewidee-permitting system By Shelby R. King The Bulletin
Building contractors in Deschutes County will soon be able to apply online for building permits once the county becomes part of Accela, the statewide e-permitting system introduced in late 2011. "The installation is beginning immediately, and the first program will go live in September," said Nick Lelack, director of the county Com-
munity Development Department. "It is a collaboration among Deschutes County, Sisters, Redmond and the state." Installation of the e-permitting program will benefit cus-
tomers by helping speed up the permitting process while also saving the county money. "The current software was developed in-house by county programmers, so we had to
pay licensing fees for maintenance," said Lori Furlong,
administrative supervisor with CDD. "With the new program we won't need to pay those fees." The program was introduced after the 2007 legislative session mandated the creation of a statewide building code system. Accela is the company the state chose to administer the program, and Oregon is the first state in the nation to develop and implement such a program. See Permits /B5
MARSHALL HIGH SCHOOL
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Marshall High School graduating seniors clap and cheer for the faculty and staff that helped them graduate during their commencement ceremony Mondayevening.
B2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013
E VENT
AL E N D A R
Theatrical Company's presentation of a comedy about the denizens of a private country club; champagne LUNCH ANDLECTURE: Learn about reception; $10 at the door starting Plateau Indian dressmaking and at 6:30 p.m; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood beadwork with Roberta Kirk; bring Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood a sack lunch; included in the price of Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 www.cascadestheatrical.org. and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages "THE ZOOSTORY":A one-actplay 4 and younger; noon; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, by Edward Albee about a chance encounter between a transient Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.high and a book publisher in New York desertmuseum.org. City's Central Park; $10; 7:30 p.m.; REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Free admission; 3-6 p.m.; Centennial Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881, Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen derek©volcanictheatrepub.com or Avenue; 541-550-0066 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. redmondfarmersmarket1©hotmail. "COMPANY": A timeless musical com. comedy by Stephen Sondheim about a single man in a seaof married couples; $21 adults, $18 WEDNESDAY students and seniors;8 p.m .;2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette BEND FARMERSMARKET: Free Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks www.2ndstreettheater.com. Alley, between Northwest THE CHANGINGCOLORS: The Franklin Avenue and Northwest Colorado folk band performs, with Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, Sam Eliot; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned bendfarmersmarket©gmail.com or Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., www.bendfarmersmarket.com. Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. "SPIRIT OFTHEMARATHONII": A facebook.com/thehornedhand. special showing of the documentary JAH SUN: TheCalifornia hip hopabout seven runners as they journey reggae-soul band performs, with to the 2012 Rome Marathon; $12.50; DUBTDNIC KRU;$7; 9:30 p.m., 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & doors open 9 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend. Bend; 541-382-6347. TANGO ALPHATANGO: The Portland Americana band performs; FRIDAY free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond FLAG DAYCELEBRATIONAND St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. DEDICATIONCEREMONY: Learn mcmenamins.com. why Flag Day is important and recognize the veteran service in our community; flagpole dedication ceremony at the front entryway; THURSDAY free; 9-9:30 a.m.; St. Charles Bend, JON WAYNE 8THEPAIN: The 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-706-3795 Midwest psychedelic reggae band or kejohnson@stcharleshealthcare. performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins OI'g. Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. SISTERSWINE 5 BREW Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or FESTIVAL: A gathering of wineries, www.mcmenamins.com. breweries, distilleries and more; "THE FOXON THE FAIRWAY": free admission, tokens required Preview night of Cascades for tastings; 2-9 p.m.; Village
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vtttvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. reverbnation.com. THE STRANGLEDDARLINGS: The Portland folk-country-jazz band performs; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3888331 or www.silvermoonbrewing. com.
TODAY
Submitted photo
Jon Wayne andThe Pain,the Midwest psychedelic reggae band, will perform at 7 p.m. Thursday at McMenamins Old St. Francis School. The show is free. Green Park, 335 S. Elm St.; 541549-6022 ext. 200 or www. sisterswineandbrew.com. SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park,W estCascade Avenue and Ash Street; www. sistersfarmersmarket.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Bend author Kim McCarrel talks about her book and presents a slideshow on "Riding Northwest Oregon Horse Trails"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Sisters author Jill Stanford talks about her book, "You Might Be aCowgirl If.."; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. "LES MISERABLES": A screening of the 2012 PG-13 film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541475-3351 or www.jcld.org. "THE FOXON THE FAIRWAY": CascadesTheatricalCompany's presentation of a comedy about the denizens of a private country club; $24, $18 seniors older than 60, $12
students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. "THE ZOOSTORY":A one-actplay by Edward Albee about a chance encounter between a transient and a book publisher in NewYork City's Central Park; $10; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881, derek@volcanictheatrepub.com or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. SONICVACATION CONCERT: A triple billing featuring There Is No Mountain, The Bottlecap Boys and Laurel Brauns; $14 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. "COMPANY": A timeless musical comedy by Stephen Sondheim about a single man in a seaof married couples; $21 adults, $18 students and seniors;8 p.m .;2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. KING GHIDORA: The McMinnville alternative, sonic surf rock band
Drive; 541-639-2655 or www. bendpaddleboardchal lenge.com. LET'S PULL TOGETHER:Features an event to eradicate noxious weeds followed by lunch, music, prizes and beverages; bring a weeding tool; check website for lunch and site location specific to Sisters; free; 9 a.m.-noon for weeding; noon at lunch locations; Sisters location; 541-610-3309 or www. letspulltogether.com. MADRAS SATURDAYMARKET: Freeadmission;9 a.m .-2 p.m.; SATURDAY Sahalee Park, B andSeventh streets; 541-489-4239. BUTTE BURNERCHARITY RUN/ WALK: Featuring a 5K, 10K, kids PORSCHE SHOW ANDSHINE:A fun run and 3:33 Challenge; aftershow of all years and models of race party with live music, food and Porsches; free, $20 to enter a car; 9 drinks; proceeds benefit Not Alone a.m.-1 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical and Pilot Butte Partners; $50 in Museum, 129 N.W. Idaho Ave., advance for 3:33 challenge, $35 in Bend; president@highdesertpca. advance for 5k and10k runs, add $5 com. after online registration closes; $10 DOG SHOW FUNMATCH: Featuring kids fun run; 7 a.m. and 9 a.m. race 4-H youth and their dogs; prizes; starts, 11 a.m. kids race start; Pilot raffle; free to public; $4 early Butte State Park, Northeast Pilot registration plus $1 per class for Butte Summit Drive, Bend; 800participant; $5 per person plus $2 551-6949 or www.butteburner.com. per class day of event; 9:30 a.m., SUMMER MOVINGSALE 8:30 a.m. registration and check-in; FUNDRAISER: Featuring natural Crook County Fairgrounds,1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-280-9674, wooden toys, art supplies, craft products, electronic parts and more donhamacds@gmail.com or www. from the school's classrooms and extension.oregonstate.edu/crook/4closets; fundraiser for the Waldorf h-dog-show-fun-match. School of Bend; free admission; "ARTS IN THEPARKS": Karuk 8 a.m.-1 p.m.; Waldorf School Indian basket weaver Wilverna of Bend, 19888 Rocking Horse Reece demonstrates her craft; free, Road; 541-330-8841 or www. $5 parking fee; 10 a.m.; Smith Rock bendwaldorf.com. State Park, 9241 N.E. Crooked River PRINEVILLEFARMERS MARKET: Drive, Terrebonne; 541-548-7501 or Free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; http://ofn.uoregon.edu/programsPrineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. projects/programs-2/arts-in-parks/. Third St.; 541-447-6217 or ALPACA FESTIVAL: Featuring a prinevillefarmersmarket©gmail. car and motorcycle show, chili com. cook-off, food, beverages and BEND PADDLEBOARD entertainment; proceeds benefit CHALLENGE:A World Paddle BrightSide Animal Center; free Association sanctioned paddleboard admission, $25 entry fees for races and paddling clinics; vendors; show and cook-off, $8 barbecue Hokulea Dancers perform opening adults, $5 barbecue children10 and ceremony; race participant lunch; under; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Crescent free, $33 for race participants; Moon Ranch,70397 Buckhorn 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Riverbend Park, Road, Terrebonne; 541-923Southwest Columbia Street 2285 or http://brightsideanimals. and Southwest Shevlin Hixon org/events/alpaca-festival/.
NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft — A theft was reported at 9:09a.m. May 30,in the 61400 block of U.S. Highway 97. DUII — Brandon Douglas Ralph, 26, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:53 p.m. June 5, in the area of Southeast Third Street and Southeast Reed Market Road. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 9:50 a.m. June 7, in the 2800 block of Jackdaw Drive. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at11:33 a.m.June 7,inthe 2500 block of Northeast Neff Road. Theft — A theft was reported at 11:50 a.m. June 7, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft — A theft was reported at 2:12 p.m. June 7, in the 20700 block of Boyd Court. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 1:49 a.m. June 8, in the 1200 block of Northeast Jones Road. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 11 a.m. June 8, in the1200 block of Northeast Purcell Boulevard. DUII — Rachel Lynn Moody, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:52 a.m. June 5, in the area of Northeast Third Street and Northeast Division Street. DUII — Jeremy Eugene Faircloth, 36, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:34 a.m. June 7, in the area of Northeast Hawthorne Avenue and Northeast Third Street. DUII — Joseph Anthony Horn, 23, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:19 a.m. June 8, in the 1000 block of Southeast Third Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:48 p.m. June 6, in the 61000 block of Brosterhous Road.
REDMOND POLICE DEPARTMENT Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 5:46 p.m. June 3, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 and Southwest Evergreen Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 8:33 p.m.June 3,inthe 300 block of Northwest Dak Tree Lane. Vehicle crash — An accident
was reported at 9:31 p.m. June 3, in the 900 block of Southwest Veterans Way. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 10:30 p.m. June 3, in the 2700 block of Southwest Umatilla Court. DUII — Brady W. Knowles, 24, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:31 a.m. June 4, in the area of Southwest Canal Boulevard and Southwest Obsidian Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 6:07 a.m. June 4, in the 2800 block of Southwest 13th Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 11:47 a.m. June 4, in the 400 block of Southwest Ninth Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at12:14 p.m. June 4, in the 700 block of Southwest Deschutes Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at1:26 p.m. June 4, in the 1300 block of Southwest Obsidian Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at1:31 p.m. June 4, in the1700 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at1:44 p.m. June 4, in the area of Southwest Seventh Street and Southwest Highland Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at3:25p.m. June 4,in the 600 block of Northwest 23rd Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 3:25 p.m. June 4, in the 3200 block of Southwest Pumice Place. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 3:54 p.m. June 4, in the 2400 block of Southwest Canal Boulevard. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 5:53 p.m. June 4, in the area of Southwest Highland Avenue and Southwest Rimrock Way. DUII — Bryce Richard Ashbaugh, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at I:36 p.m. June 5, in the area of Northwest Fourth Street and Northwest Maple Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 7:29 a.m. June 5, in the area of South U.S. Highway 97 and Southwest Odem Medo Road. Theft — A theft was reported at 7:50 a.m. June 5, in the 4500 block of Southwest Elkhorn Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief and a burglary were reported and an arrest made at 6:23 p.m. June 5, in the1900 block of Southwest Canyon Drive. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 3:42 p.m.June 6,in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane.
Theft — A theft was reported at 11 07 p m. June 6, in the 3800 block of Southwest Airport Way. DUII — Clinton James Low, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:13 a.m. June 7, in the 400 block of West Antler Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 4:37 a.m. June 7, in the 3300 block of Southwest Obsidian Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 5:09 a.m. June 7, in the 1400 block of Southwest 33rd Street. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at11:59 a.m.June 7,in the300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft — A theft was reported at 2:24p.m.June 7,in the 900 block of Southwest Veterans Way. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 8:52 p.m. June 7, in the 2100 block of Northeast Sixth Street. DUII — Jennifer Lynn Yeatman, 38, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:34 p.m. June 7, in the area of Southwest 31st Street and Southwest Highland Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 11:03 p.m. June 7, in the 3500 block of Northeast 21st Drive. DUII — Joseph Benjamin Simmons, 19, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 5:47 a.m. June 8, in the1200 block of Southwest Highland Avenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 8:09 a.m. June 8, in the 300 block of Northeast Hemlock Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 9:46 a.m.June 8,in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at12:27 p.m.June 8,inthe300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at1:40 p.m. June 8, in the 1300 block of Southwest Canal Boulevard. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at1:47 p.m. June 8, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at1:59 p.m. June 8, in the area of Southwest 27th Street and Southwest Glacier Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 2:20 p.m. June 8, in the 2400 block of Southwest 25th Street. DUII — Stanley Harry Daily Jr., 59, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:13 p.m. June 8, in the 1600 block of Southwest Ddem Medo Road. DUII — Guy Edward Hutchinson, 49, was arrested on suspicion
of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:37 p.m. June 8, in the 400 block of Southwest Rimrock Way. DUII — Alejandro L. Pena Garcia, 38, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:07 a.m. June 9, in the area of Southwest Seventh Street and Southwest Deschutes Avenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 1:10 a.m. June 9, in the 3600 block of Southwest Reindeer Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported at12:54 p.m. June 9, in the 3700 block of Southwest Ben Hogan Drive. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 2:38 p.m.June 9,in the 2200 block of Southwest 33rd Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 5:38 p.m. June 9, in the 4800 block of Southwest Xero Avenue.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft — A theft was reported at 6:20 p.m. June 7, in the area of Northwest Harwood Street. DUII — Bradley Smith, 46, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:03 a.m. June 8, in the area of Northwest Seventh Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 4:30 p.m. June 8, in the area of Northwest Fifth Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 5:30 p.m. June 8, in the area of Northwest Third Street. DUII — Carlos Ortiz, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:29 a.m. June 9, in the area of Northeast Mariposa Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 11:14 a.m. June 9, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 2:42 p.m. June 9, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Burglary — A burglary and an act of criminal mischief were reported at1:57 p.m. June 9, in the area of Southeast Fairview Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 7:50 p.m. June 9, in the area of Northeast Oregon Avenue.
Third Street and Northeast Butler Market Road in Bend. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 6:50 p.m. June 9, in the area of O'Neil Highway. DUII — Gale Brown, 53, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:02 p.m. June 9, in the area of West Tumalo Reservoir Road.
OREGON STATE POLICE Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 8:51 p.m. June 8, in the area of U.S. Highway 20 near milepost 92. DUII — Beau Douglas Gibney, 24, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:37 p.m. June 8, in the area of the Sisters Rodeo grounds. DUII — Devin Russell Namekawa, 34, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:44 a.m. June 9, in the area of Northeast
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JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 8:55 a.m. June 6, in the area of Second Street and C Street in Culver. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 5:58p.m.June 4,in the 300 block of Adams Avenue in Metolius.
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TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN B 3
REGON
s u en eescree The Associated Press EUGENE — Student fees at the University of Oregon will reach a record $560 a term over the new two years, but a top administrator said relief is on the horizon. The r i sing f ee s i n clude charges for remodeling the Student Recreation C enter and Erb Memorial Union, as well as health services, student clubs, bus passes and other services,the Register-Guard reported on Monday. In recent years, mandatory studentfeeshave ranged from $413 to $538 per student per
term, depending on what projectsand services are included. UO students have staged p rotests i n r e c ent w e e k s againsta 5.8 percent increase in tuition and fees proposed for fall term. The state Board of Higher Education is scheduled to vote on the increase on June 21. Robin Holmes, vice president of student affairs, said the university is adding fees for the recreation center this fall and the student union next fall. "We tried to stagger it," she said. "We didn't want to bring both on line at the same time."
Holmes said she is working on a three-year plan to boost the revenue of money-making venturessuch as summer camps or conferences to offset the costs. "We can't keep raising fees because we're going to price ourselves out of the market," she said. "A kid is not going to be ableto come toschool here,
er
AROUND THE STATE Capitel preteStS —The OregonSupreme Court will hear arguments this week about overnight protests on the front steps of the
state Capitol. TheSalemStatesman Journal reports the case arises
which opened in 1926. But in the 1930s, the editor of the campus newspaper, Richard Neuberger, reasoned that he shouldn't have to pay for activities he wasn't interested in, such as athletics. Neuberger, who later became a U.S. senator, went to court and won a ruling declaring the compulsory student
from the arrests of six people who held an overnight vigil in 2009 in protest of deploying National Guard troops to lraq and Afghanistan.
Legislative leaders hadbarred suchactivity between11 p.m. and7 a.m. The six werefound guilty of criminal trespass, carrying a $500 fine. One of the six argues the restriction violates Oregon's free speech
provisions. TheOregonCourt of Appeals rejected that argument. The others contend they should be allowed to question legislative leaders about enforcement of the restriction. The appeals court supported
them on that point. TheSupreme Court takes upthe case Thursday. S'tate treeper Sheetlng — A prosecutor says anOregon state trooper was justified in firing at a 27-year-old St. Helens manwho displayed a handgunafter a high-speedchase. Josiah Max Fischer
and they're going to go some- fees illegal. where else." Fees at the school have long history, dating to the 1920s when students approved a fee of $5 a term to build the basketball arena McArthur Court,
In 1947, the state Legislature voted to allow public colleges to collect mandatory fees for activities that are "advantageous to the cultural or physical development of students."
was killed May 3 after the brief chase that started near Scappoose.
Columbia County District Attorney R. StephenAtchison said Monday the trooper who fired, Justin Oxenrider, saw that Fischer had a gun and was "attempting to point the gun at him."
Rescue from durning car — Oregon state troopers say motorists kicked at the windows of a burning car and used a baseball bat to
smash a sunroof Monday, rescuing aWashington state woman from a vehicle that crashed on Interstate 84. Troopers say several people stopped after the wreck near Cascade Locks. The travelers couldn't
PORTLAND
itizens see arrier at' uici e Bri e'
By Steven Dubois The Associated Press
PORTLAND — On a sunny January afternoon, 12stories above a busy street, a newly engaged 19-year-old woman jumped to her death from a spectacular arch bridge west of downtown Portland. Last month, in the middle of the night, a 40-year-old man did the same. Last week, yet another person — a 15-year-old girl — plunged from the span. The deaths sadden but no l onger surprise those w h o live and work near the Vista Bridge, k n o w n col l o quially citywide as "The Suicide Bridge." They have come to expect such tragedies at the structure, from which there is a majestic vista of the city skyline; the opening shot of the TV series "Portlandia" was shot from the span. A ttorney K e nneth K a h n shares an office with his wife, a life coach, that sits almost directly underneath the bridge. Over the years he has heard the horrible slam of bodies on pavement and discoveredthe remains of eight strangers. "Just imagine a human being detonating," he said. Now the Kahns are leading a group, Friends of The Vista Bridge, that is pressing the city to install suicide-prevention barriers, a step taken at bridges throughout the world, from the Cold Spring Canyon Bridge in Santa Barbara, Calif., to the Bloor Street Viaduct in Toronto and El Viaducto de Segovia in Madrid. Jumping from a bridge is an impulsive act. A barrier, the group contends, introduces a pause that may make someone think twice. But the group, which formed afterthe January suicide,faces its own obstacle: money. City leaders, though receptive to the idea, are tackling a $20 million budget shortfall, and it is projected to cost $2.5 million to put architecturally appropriate barrierson the bridge, which is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. The city may seek a federal grant. "We certainly think of it as a high priority," City Commissioner Steve Novick said. "But there'sa whole mess of competing priorities and not much money." The group must also overcome the skepticism of those who believe that people who are determined to kill them-
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get to the woman bykicking outa window, so they rolled the car and one of them smashed the sunroof with a bat. He cut her safety belt, and they pulled her from the flames. State police say 60-year-old
Ketsy Roeder of Kennewick, Wash., wastreated at a Portland hospital, and her life is not in danger.
barrier is in place. In Oregon, 709 people killed themselves last year, mostly by shooting,
Cross durning — Portland police say somebody usedtrash and
hanging or poisoning them-
closure signs from the weekendGrand Floral Parade. Officers extin-
selves,so a barrier on the Vista is unlikely to make much of a dent in the overall state suicide rate. Eric Caine, director of the Injury Control Research Center for Suicide Prevention at the University of Rochester, said communities must decide whether thecost of such prevention methods is worth the
guished the fire Monday morning and said no buildings were threatened. They said there was no motive apparent for the act.
tree branches to form a 3-foot-tall cross on a downtown sidewalk, and then ignited it. The cross was amid traffic cones and street
Weed fire SpreadStO hame — Tualatin Valley Fire and Rescue says a manburning weedswith a propane torch accidentally set his home on fire. The torch touched off a pine tree next to the house Sunday and flames spread up the side of the house and into the attic. All the residents got out. Firefighters rescued the family dog. The
man had recognized the fire danger andwet down the tree, but it caught fire anyway. — From wire reports
payoff. Don Ryan /TheAssociated Press
Light rail and traffic pass under the Vista Bridge, known citywide as "The Suicide Bridge," in the Goose Hollow neighborhood west of downtown Portland. A group called Friends of the Vista Bridge is pressing the city to install suicide-prevention barriers. selves will find a way. There is no shortage of spans in this city known as "Bridgetown," and w i t hi n r e cent w e eks people have jumped to their deaths from the eighth floor of a homeless shelter and the rooftop bar of a d o wntown hotel. "I don't particularly feel that throwing money at an issue necessarily solves it, and altering the bridge because of a few people who want to end their life seems pointless," said Les Anderson, a magician who is among several who've voiced their opposition on the group's Facebook page. "You're not going to stop someone who wants to end their own life." At least 17people have killed themselves at the Vista Bridge in the past decade, although there is no reliable estimate for how many people have committed suicide there since it opened in 1926. Signs placed on the bridge last September promote a suicide-prevention hotline. Three callers have specifically referenced the sign when phoning for help, said David Westbrook of the nonprofit Lines for Life. Several studies have found a reduction or elimination in suicides from bridges with barriers. For example, the number of suicides off the Duke Ellington Bridge in Washington, D.C., went from an average of four a year before a fence was installed in 1986 to one in the five years following, with no corresponding increase at another nearby span. And a 2010 study found that suicides ceased at Toronto's Bloor Street Viaduct after con-
struction of a $5.5 million barrier there, although the city's overall rate of suicide by jumping didn't change. Barrier supporters also cite a 1978 study by psychologist Richard Seiden of the University of C alifornia, Berkeley, who found that less than 10 percent of the more than 500 people who were stopped from jumping off the Golden Gate Bridge between 1937 and 1971 eventually killed themselves. However, Garrett Glasgow, a political science professor at UC Santa Barbara, noted that the GoldenGate jumpers were stopped not by a barrier but by human intervention, which he calls a "more effective suicideprevention technique." There is no suicide barrier at the famous San Francisco landmark, from which more than 1,500 people have killed t hemselves. Of ficials h a v e approved a design for a $50 million net that would catch
"When a community has an iconic suicide site, and they know it, what do their values say about preventing suicide at that site, even if it's a small number overall?" he said.
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people who try jumping, but construction has not begun because officials are still hunting for funding. In a paper published in the Journal of Social Science and Medicine, Glasgow examined the relationship between suicide and bridges across more than 3,000 counties in the U.S. While jumping as a method of suicide increased in those places, he found that counties with unprotected bridges did not have higher overall suicide rates than counties without
suchbridges. G lasgow added t ha t n o study has shown a statistically significant drop in the regional suicide rate even when a
G RADUATION 20 1 3
C )W
HONORING OURLATEST HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES
One of life's greatest accomplishments, high school graduation, is celedrated in this annual pudlication. Every Central Oregon high school graduate is listed in this annual publication profiling each of the area's high school graduating classes. Graduates and parents alike look forward to this keepsake publication, which includes the names and photos of Central Oregon's newest graduates. Congratulations Graduates!
PubliShing Date: Wednesday, June12
Education chief a finalist to leadcollege By Jonathan J. Cooper
day. Kitzhaber asked to brief the Oregon Education InvestSALEM — Chief Education ment Board b ehind c losed Officer Rudy Crew could be doors Tuesday, Raphael said. "Ultimately the OEIB is Dr. leaving Oregon barelya year after the governor selected Crew's employer and this is a him to oversee the state's effort personnelissue,"Raphael said. to improve student achieveCrew is a former chancelment and streamline the edu- lor of New York City schools cationsystem from preschool and superintendent of Miamithrough college. Dade County Public Schools. City University of New York Kitzhaber introduced him as has announced that Crew is Oregon's first chief education one of three finalists for the officer on May 30, 2012, callpresidency at Medgar Evers ing him "the right leader at the college. right time for Oregon." Crew informed Gov. John The Legislature created the Kitzhaber last week that he chief education officer position was a candidate for the New in 2011 when lawmakers voted York job, Kitzhaber spokes- to approve Kitzhaber plan to man Tim Raphael said Mon- improve coordination among The Associated Press
110 WAYS TO DISCOVER CENTRAL OREGON NEED ANIDEA FOR HOW TO SPEND YOUR FREE TIME? THIS GUIDEHAS110 IDEAS. Presenting thearea's mostcomprehensive guide to places, eventsandactivities to keepyou entertained throughout theyear.
d isparate elements o f t h e education system. Crew has control over the leaders of the Department of Education, the university system, the community colleges commission and other state agencies. Among his first tasks, he
was charged with signing achievement compacts with schools, colleges and universities. He took a stand early, telling nearly a third of school districts to rewrite their academic goalsbecause they set the bar too low. Crew, w h ose t h r ee-year contract began July 1, makes $280,000 a year. He couldn't immediately be reached for comment.
W HEN TO LOOK FOR IT: publishing two editions a year Fall/Winter: October date to be announced
The Bulletin's 110 Ways to Discover Central Oregon is one of the most comprehensive visitors' guides in the tri-county area. This colorful, information-packed magazine can be found at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce and other key points of interest, including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offered to Deschutes County Expo Center visitors throughout the year.
B4
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Wildlife can agree on a plan to manage predatory
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wolves in this state. Key elements of that agreement are written into House Bill 3452, which cleared the House Thursday. Wolves' history in Oregon isn't a pretty one, at least since white settlers arrived here. The first bounty on them was established in 1843, some 16 years before Oregon became a state. The last wolf was killed near Crater Lake in 1947, and the hunter responsible collected $5 for his effort. From '47 until 1999, Oregon was wolf free. That year an animal crossed into the state from Idaho; it was rounded up and sent back. It wasn't until 2007, some 60 years after the state's last wolf died, that the largest member of the dog family came home to stay. Wolves cancause problems for ranchers. They are carnivores that hunt deer, elk and, unfortunately, sheep and cattle. Scientists say they tend to prey on the old, the ill and the very young, though that's small consolation to a rancher with newborn lambs. In May, wolves killedfour sheep and one young cow in northeastern Oregon.
Until the state Court of Appeals put a halt to the practice in late 2011, Oregon ranchers could kill marauding wolves. HB 3452 reflects the settlement of the lawsuit that prompted the appellate court's ruling. As is typical of compromises, no one got all he wanted out of
Budget-balancing solution
Ranchers did get the right to kill wolves, but only as a last resort. Wolves have to be caught in the act of biting, wounding, killing or chasing livestock or working dogs, for one thing. Too, a rancher must have tried to correct the problem by nonlethal means. He must receive permission from ODFW to proceed, and he must preserve the scene of a wolf killing for state police investigators. The compromise and the restrictions on wolf killing set out in HB 3452 are good ones. The measure passed the House overwhelmingly. It should get similar treatment in the Senate.
Degrees shouldn't trump ewly released figures show Oregon college enrollment rates are not just far below Gov. John Kitzhaber's goals, but also significantly below the national average. The National Student Clearinghouse reports that only 61 percent of students from Oregon's high school class of 2011 were enrolled in college or community college by the fall of 2012, according to a reportin The Oregonian. The national comparison is 68 percent. Kitzhaber has set a statewide goal to have 80 percent of Oregonians earn a post-secondary degree or certificate by 2025. If only 61 percent were even enrolled in 2012, the state has a long way to
rates often come from districts with more low-income students, the newspaper found exceptions. In the David Douglas district, for example, the student population is 73 percent low-income, but 62 percent enrolled in college or community college. Other districts with s imilar l ow-income populations had enrollment rates in the 40s. State schools chief Rob Saxton told The Oregonian that students need rigorous classwork, and districts must set expectations and provide practical advice to students with no family history of higher education. We fully support the idea of assuring every capable student the go. chance to get a post-secondary The new figures suggest the education, but a single focus on governorhas correctly targeted a the granting of degrees and certificritical state issue. We need to un- cates has risks as well. derstand why Oregon's enrollment First is the danger of dumbing rate lags the national average and down the degrees because the sysclose the gap. tem rewards the granting of them, In Central Oregon, rates ranged not the learning they represent. from 74 percent in Sisters to 42 It's also critical to assure that vopercent in Culver. Other districts' cational and apprenticeship pronumbers were 62 percent in Bend- grams get sufficient attention. La Pine,50 percent in Redmond The goal should be an approand Crook County, and 47 percent priate education for every student, in Jefferson County. which does not always involve a Although l ower e n r ollment post-secondary degree.
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budget lies in the county "putting its own employees on the job." I am T he federal g overnment h a s not sure that allowing the county to been trying to find ways to balemploy its own people to perform ance the budget. I have a solution the remodel allows for accountthat may help. It is my belief that ability. Forcing government to live federal g o vernment e m p loyees within its means through a balhave gasoline credit cards as well anced approach that protects key as free vehiclespaid for by "We priorities and ensures public funds The People" that are intended for are respected is an age-old probw ork-only use. Take away t h e lem. Who is watching our cookie cards and the cars, let them reach jar? The article states clearly that in their pockets and shell out $75 to "the scope of the job was too much $100 each time they fill up, then we for the county." At least with a priwill see if the politicians still want vate contractor, the overage would to hold hands with the big oil com- be regurgitated back into the local panies or are they finally willing economy. When a public entity exto do something about the outra- ceeds its spending limit, the public geous price of fuel. Until they have losestwice. Shame on — us? to decide, as we do, to either buy John Cook food or fuel, they are not going to Bend do anything to change it. The savings of paying for their own cars Voters OK taxes and fuel would most likely pay off they won't pay the national debt. Big oil is making record profits while we citizens are In regard to the front page headpaying theprice. Come on, Washline in the May 30 Bulletin, "Tax ington, for once do something to hikes may go before voters," this earn your checks. is a prime example of asking the Larry Pearce 99 percent to vote in taxes against LaPine the I percent. Of course it is going to get voted in. Remember, a couple Public loses twice of years ago the government asked all the renters to vote in taxes for in courtroom remodel the Deschutes County s h eriff's I am not completely convinced levy that would be paid by all the in letting our government manage homeowners. Of course the taxes public funds. In the May 28 Local got voted in; there are more renters section of The Bulletin, it was re- than owners. ported that the county was $110,000 But think about the long-term overbudget forthe courtroom re- effects of the unions eyeing the furbishment. Shocked at the title, I corporations for finding revenue read on. It turns out if the county solutions. There will be greater un"was not over their budget they employment as corporations fire would have been on their budget." employees to pay an increased tax I feel so much better now knowing load. There will be greater inflaour tax dollars are in intelligent tion as corporations are forced to hands. Moreover, the article stated, increase their prices to consum"We are being creative and effec- ers. Corporations will be fleeing tive with the use of our funds." My this country for other places with business could be creative with an less overbearing government taxextra $110,000! es, regulations and u n r elenting The problem is not a lack of cre- unions. ativity. The problem of being overOh, and I wish the unions would
stop playing the kid card. This is all about PERS, not K-12 classrooms. Jeff Erickson Sisters
Merkley's way would have prevented IRS mess In the May 31 issue, Jack Cook wrote a letter where he said there was "documented i nvolvement" by Sen. Jeff Merkley in the IRS targeting of conservative political groups. That's all wrong. Here's what actually happened: Merkley co-wrote a letter to the IRS asking it to close the loophole that allows purely political groups to claim they are "social welfare" charities for tax purposes. He asked the IRS to do w hat they should have done years ago — define what percentage of time 501(c)4 organizations can spend on activities that are not for social welfare. Right now, nobody knows what that percentage is — 25 percent, 49 percent, 99 percent? You tell us. Merkley also says these groups should tell the public exactly what their percentages are. Personally, we'd love to hear those numbers from organizations we give money to. H ere's where w e a g ree w i t h C ook: Nobody t h i nk s t h e I R S should be targeting conservative
(or liberal) groups more than anyone else when it comes to investigating who's following the rules — not us, not Cook and not Merkley either. Fact is, if th e IR S di d t h ings Merkley's way, we wouldn't have had this mess in the first place. All
these 501(c)4 groups would know what the rules were — and they'd either play by them or stop pretending to be charities. Who knows? We might even have a couple fewer negative ads on TV in 2016. John Marvin and Aiison Wells Bend
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Local papers were ahead of their times in photography trends By Conrad Weiier he Chicago Sun-Times laid off its entire 28-person photography staff, including Pulitzer Pr ize-winner J ohn W h i t e, in late May. The newspaper said it plans touse freelance reporters and
photographers. It is a local remembrance and story. I remember John Costa giving a brief pep talk to the assembled freelance community reporters and Diane Kulpinski distributing several 36-shot Kodachrome cassettes to photographers. each person. I can still remember Yes, times ar e c h anging, and her words, "shoot lots of pictures" business and technology are ri dand we'll pick out the best one for ing along. I have a personal story to your story. add. My first assignment was to cover In the mid-l990s, The Bulletin de- the "Store" in Camp Sherman. If veloped a community-based news you have visited the "Store," you sectionand had freelance reporters know the overwhelming number of in several local communities. I was picture possibilities. I'm pretty sure assigned the Camp Sherman sec- I used at least one 36-shot film cation and would submit local stories sette on that assignment. and photos with each story. About a year later, I was conI am not suggesting that my re- tacted by the Nugget newspaper in porting was in the class of the ChiSisters and asked if I would like to c ago Sun-Times reporters or m y freelance with that paper. So, after photography that o f t h e p a per's about one year with The Bulletin, I
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IN MY VIEW
and staff at the Nugget. Eric was publisher and a camera fan. He purchased one of the early Nikon digibegan freelancing with the Nugget. talcameras for use by his reporters. I ended up for the next several You would pick up the Nikon, get y ears freelancing only w i t h t h e the story and digital pictures and Nugget. Those w er e i n t eresting return the camera to the Nugget transition times. At first, we used office. One of the pictures usually small (10-15 shot) black-and-white turned up with the story. film cassettes and had them deI finally purchased my own Nikon veloped at the Sisters "Photos in a digital camera and used it on story Flash" store (no longer in business). assignments. As I remember, story After development, the prints would writers that needed help with picbe brought over to the Nugget office tures would have someone else do and a photo selection made for the the photography. This may be part story. of the Sun-Times plan. As an aside, I don't think there are So, in a sense, The Bulletin and any photo stores operating in Cen- the Nugget were ahead of t h eir tral Oregon today. Times do change, times. My opinion is that a reportand we have moved on from film to er can make good use of a camera digital photography. when covering a story. It's adding These were fun t i mes working pictures to words. with Eric Dolson and Jim Cornelius Today, we are seeing the transi-
tion from p oint-and-shoot digital cameras to smartphone cameras. Point-and-shoot camera sales are down 46 percent this year. Smartphones have built-in camera technology that is advancing rapidly. The Chicago Sun-Times is betting that their reporters will be able to add digital photos with their stories. Using smartphones also allows uploading pictures from the field with the story. Almost certainly, other newspapers will follow the Chicago SunTimes example. Today's digital technology has put a financial stress on many newspapers. The public can gather news information over Internet connections using smartphones, tablets, computers, etc. The above story is how I remember it. However, times are changing. — Conrad Weiier lives in Camp Sherman.
TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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OREGON NEWS
BITUARIES DEATH NOTIgES Frank E. Melton, of Bend Oct. 15, 1928 - June 6, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No Services will be held at this time.
Howard Westly Trowbridge, of Sisters Nov. 16, 1917 - June 8, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Funeral Service will take place on Thursday June 13, 2013 at 2 00 PM at Sisters Community Church, located at 1300 Old Mckenzie Hwy. in Sisters. A graveside service at Camp Polk Cemetery will immediately follow. Public visitation will be available from 1:00 — 2:00 PM at Sisters Community Church.
FEATURED OBITUARY
Scottish novelist lain Banks dies at 59 By Raphael Satter and Jill Lawless
The Associated Press MEDFORD — J ackson County in Southern Oregon would like to lease more jail beds to federal and other
provided office space for the sheriff's department. The jail makes up to 22 beds available to th e U .S. MarshalsService for$105 per agencies. bed per day when the service While the county has not needs them. It's negotiating a been struggling as much as contract for the federal govsome others to replace lost ernment to commit to lease federal timber revenues, it is the space full time. still looking for new sources A call to the Marshals Serof revenue to support the jail. vice office in Portland was Jackson County A d min- not immediately returned. istrator Danny Jordan told The county also is negotiThe Medford Mail Tribune ating with other unnamed, t hat leasing 5 5 j a i l b e d s nonfederal agencies to fill ancould bring in $2.2 million a other 33 beds. Josephine County Sheriff year, and net the county $1.5 million. Gil Gilbertson says his county The jail recently built 60 will compete to house federal more beds in an area that had inmates.
Voters in hi s county ref used to approve a tax i n crease for publicsafety, so as of July I, Gilbertson plans to cut patrol deputies from three to one. The jail has only enough money to keep 100 of its 262 beds open. Thirty-two of thoseare federal beds. He would like to get some more. "Jackson County charges a little bit more than we do," Gilbertson said. "We are hoping we can capture some that contract as well fo r l esser cost." Jackson County has proposed deep budget cuts for the next fiscal year, including a $250,000 cut to the Sheriff's Department.
The department already has 22 positions unfilled. Libraries are facing the prospect of total closure within two years if no new source of money is found. Jackson County S h eriff Mike Winters said federal agencies are eager to lease the beds becausethe federal court is located blocks from the jaiL The county is f orced to release severalinmates per week because of space restrictions. Winters said he expects the federal agencies to keep most of their allotted beds occupied, so it won't eliminate the majority of the county's early releases.
Asbestos
ment in Portland. "We (want) to make sure Continued from B1 that people know that there Exposure to asbestos fi- wasn't exposure to students bers may cause lung health or teachers," Root said. p roblems and i t s u s e i n R edmond High is in t h e buildingshas decreased sig- midst of a $9.3 million renificantly since the 1970s, model planned to put it on par according to DEQ. It often with Ridgeview High School, becomes an i s sue d u ring a new school that opened in a remodel, when it's some- Redmond at the start of the times uncovered. school year. The bags noted in the fine The remodel started this were in a sealed-off section past summer and covered of the school and weren't a two main phases over the health concern, said Jenny school year, said Kelly RichRoot, an environmental law a rd, spokeswoman for t h e specialist at the DEQ office Redmond School D i strict. of compliance and enforce- From the start of school un-
til the winter holiday break, half of Redmond High was closed whil e c o nstruction workers remodeledthe other half. Students and teachers then moved into the remodeled section of th e school while the construction workers overhauled the rest of the school. Alpine Abatement Associates was removing a fireproof coating that had been sprayed onto structural steel in the ceiling of the school, Richard said. The school was originally built in 1971. The asbestos-laden material came from classrooms
in the southeast corner of the school, Messina said. The DEQ sent a letter to Alpine A batement A s sociates o n May 9, informing the company of the fine. In his May 21 appeal to DEQ, Billings was brief. He said the company was requesting a c o ntested case hearing for the fine. He said he hadn't heard back from the DEQ yet as to when he'll have a hearing. Richard said th e school district still plans to use the company as a contractor.
Loitering
types of behaviors downtown or citywide is not a priority Continued from B1 for the current City Council, Eight of the calls in that which is more focused on time period were for a re- B end's infrastructure a n d ported dispute, such as an as- public safety needs. "Legal (staff) looked at it sault, he said. Drug activity is no more prevalent downtown and it would have been very than in other areas. difficult to enforce," Finestone "I know they've made ar- said of a city ban on sitting or rests down there before for lying on sidewalks. The city drugs, but we've done that in continues to monitor other the schools, we've done that municipalities in case they hit other places," Carney said. upon a solution, but Finestone In 2009, City Council con- said Bend officials do not sidered a law to ban panhan- want to spend the money on dling in Bend but dropped the legalcosts necessary to be a idea after learning it could ex- "trail blazer" on the issue. pose the city to a lawsuit from Still, Finestone acknowlfree-speech advocates. The edged, loitering and panhancity in 2010 also considered dling are issues that people a ban on sitting or lying on continue to raise. "Especially downtown sidewalks, after in the summer months, as merchants complained that more people are outside, the behavior hurt business. I think i t's something that City spokesman Justin Fine- might get brought up again," stone said that banning these he said.
The previous occupant of the Goodwillie-Allen-Rademacher House, the education nonprofit Arts Central, cited loitering and other problems when it terminated its lease with the c ity i n F e bruary 2012. Chuck Arnold, executive director of t h e D o wntown Bend Business Association, said the issue "comes and
Arnold said. Instead of giving money to panhandlers, Arnold suggested that people donate to local organizations that help people, such as a homeless shelter. Arnold said the Downtown Bend Business Association was involved in the decision by the city to lease space on the plaza to Crows Feet Commons, to expand their cafe outside during the summer. "That is a beautiful space with a m i l l ion-dollar view of North Sister and Mirror Pond," Arnold s aid. "The challengehas been we really needed somebody to h ave s ome ownership of i t . . . I think it will really come down to getting the space used and having positive activity on it will attract more positive activity."
Permits
around t o g e t e v erything they need taken care of," she said. "The program also has a great workflow notification feature socontractors won't have to call around and find out where they're at in the permittingprocess, because you can set it up to get emails sent when a piece is missing or something needs to be completed." Additionally, the new program will save the county money by allowing inspectors to streamline their duties
The Associated Press
LONDON — Scottish writer Iain Banks, who alternately wowed and disturbed readers with his dark jokes and narrative tricks, h as d i ed, h i s publisher said. He was 59. Banks, whose w riting took readers f r o m B an k s rural S c otland to the edge o f s p ace, announced in April that he was Ralph L. Garibay, of terminally ill with cancer and Bend that his soon-to-be released July 23, 1919 - June 6, 2013 novel, "The Quarry," would Arrangements: be his last. Niswonger-Reynolds is A message on a w ebsite honored to serve the set up t o p r o vide updates family. Please visit the online registry at to family, friends and fans www.niswonger-reynolds.com quoted his wife Adele as say541-382-2471. ing Banks died in the early Services: hours of Sunday. "His death A graveside service with was calm and without pain," military honors will be she said. held, Thursday, June 13, His publisher, Little Brown, 2013 at Deschutes s aid i n a sta t ement t h at Memorial Gardens, 63875 Banks' "ability t o c o mbine N. Highway 97, Bend. the most fertile of imaginations with h i s ow n h i g hly distinctive brand o f g o t hic humor made him unique. He Death Notices are free and is an irreplaceable part of the will be run for one day, but literary world." specific guidelines must be Banks had t w o p a r allel followed. Local obituaries literary careers: One as a are paid advertisements general fiction author whose submitted by families or twisted plots are sprinkled funeralhomes. They may be w ith b r u t ality, t h e o t h e r submitted by phone, mail, as a s cience-fiction w r iter email or fax. The Bulletin whose imaginative universes reserves the right to edit all spawned a fanzine and spun submissions. Please include out a devoted online followcontact information in all ing. He even had two names: correspondence. Iain Banks for th e general For information on any of fiction, Iain M. Banks, for the these services or about the sci-ft. obituary policy, contact Banks published his first 541-617-7825. novel, the dark an d f u nny Deadlines:Death Notices "The Wasp Factory" in 1984. are accepted until noon His first science fiction book, Monday through Friday "Consider Phlebas," was pubfor next-day publication lished three years later. and by 4:30 p.m. Friday His books were both critical for Sunday publication. and popular successes. "The Obituaries must be Crow Road" — which opens received by 5 p.m. Monday with the memorable line "It through Thursday for was the day my grandmother publication on the second exploded" — was adapted for day after submission, television in 1996. by1 p.m. Friday for He was cited as an inspiraSunday publication, and by tion by fellow writers in Scot9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday land and beyond. "Trainspotpublication. Deadlines for ting" author I r v ine W elsh display ads vary; please call called him"one of my all-time for details. literary heroes," and crime Phone: 541-617-7825 writer Ian R a nkin r ememEmail: obits©bendbulletin.com bered Banks' "great sense of fun, of excitement." Fax: 541-322-7254 "He was a great guy to hang Mail:Obituaries around with and somebody P.O. Box 6020 for whom life and the world Bend, OR 97708 were a f i c t i onal t e mplate for him to do as he pleased," Rankin said. Banks was also an expert DEATHS on Scotch whisky — writing a book on the subject — and ELSEWHERE was politically active, lending his name to left-wing causes Deaths of note from around including the anti-war movethe world: ment and the cultural boycott E dward Hotaling, 75: A of Israel. t elevision r e p orter w h o s e In 2008, he wa s n amed question about racial prog- one of the 50 greatest British ress ended the career of CBS writers since 1945 in a l i st sports commentator Jimmy compiled by Th e T i mes of "the Greek" Snyder in 1988, London. but who may have made a In April, Banks announced more lasting mark by docu- that he had been diagnosed menting the use of slave labor with gall bladder cancer and in building the nation's Capi- was "officially very poorly." tol. Died June 3 on Staten IsHe canceled all public apland. The cause was a heart pearances and married his long-term p a r t ner, A d e l e, attack. Bruno Bartoletti, 86:An Italsaying she had agreed to ian conductor wh o h e lped the honor of "becoming my transform the Lyric Opera of wtdow. Chicago into one of the most L ast month, h e s ai d h e respected and daring opera w as overwhelmed b y t h e companies of its kind. Died outpouring of affection and June 9 in Florence. praise his announcement had William L. Clayton, 83: An prompted. "It means a lot, almost more E.F. Hutton 8 C o . e x ecutive and board member who than I can say, and — whatevoversaw the brokerage's ad- er typeor size ofscreen Iread vertising campaigns, includ- the comments on — I come ing "When E.F. Hutton talks, away f ro m t h e c o m puter, people listen." Died on June laptop, iPad or phone with a 7 at his home in the Green happy smile on my face," he Village section of Chatham wrote. Township, N.J. He had ParBanks is survived by his kinson's diseasefor several wife. Details of f uneral aryears. rangements were not avail— From wire reports able Sunday.
Obituary policy
JacksonCounty trying to leasejail space
fective, cloud-based, customizable model that local govContinued from B1 ernments need." "Oregon has demonstrated By joining the program, the kind of vision, commit- Deschutes County, Redmond ment and i n novation that and Sistersreceive free of e-government is all about," charge the Web-based modDarrell Lewis, vice president ule for issuing building perof product management at mits. The county was also Accela, said in a p r epared able to purchase planning statement. "(The Oregon De- and code enforcement serpartment of Consumer and vices at a reduced cost, FurBusiness Services) is offer- long said. "Contractors will be able ing the intuitive, transparent services that business and the to apply for all permits onpublic want, and the cost-ef- line and won't have to run
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goes."
"It's really got to be about behaviors," Arnold said of efforts to manage the problem. "So we've been working really closely with (Bend police) to observe, manage and address the behaviors, and that's what has been an important part of the approach for us." The community also has to take responsibility for reporting incidents of possible illegal behavior to the police,
— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarli ngC<bendbulleti n.com
— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bentdbulletin.com
for the day. "It has a nice Geographical Imaging System component to it fo r i n spectors where they can map and download where they'll be going for the day and then use a tablet to post the results of their inspections i n r e a l t i m e," Furlong said. "We can even outfit them with a Bluetooth printer and they can print in the field. It's a really great program." — Reporter: 541-383-0376, shing®bendbultetin.com
THOMAS A. HERZOG Mr. Thomas A. Herzog expired on June L 2 0 13 in D urango, Colorado, aftera courageous duel against (AMLl Leukemia. A modern-day DaVinci, "Rasta Tom" arrived in Telluride at age 19, in 1983. He was revered for his extraordinary hand-crafted carpentry, his architectural design and CAD genius, as well as his deep, artistic talent which he used to create iron works and divine silver jewelry. A Renaissance Man with a quick, wry senseof humor and a legacy of selfless giving, his motto was "One Love". He last resided on his cherishedland in Dolores, CO where he built his workshop and cabin. His Harley often sat in the warmth of his solar-poweredliving room. Tom leaves behind his one true love, Diane Adelson of Cortez, who tenderly nursed him, in h o spital, and in he r h o me, fo r fourteen months. He l e a ves his be loved mother, i e anie E . Young (f. Herzog) of Bend, OR, his brother, John M. Herzog of Seattle,WA, and his sister, Kate S. Kiger (f. Herzog), also of Bend, OR; as well as his nieces and nephew, Petra, Scout and Jasper, of Seattle and Issaquah, WA,respectively. Additionally his sister-in- law, Heidi Herzog and hisfather William A. Herzog, both of Seattle,WA. He held close to his heart his Aunties, Uncles and Cousins, and histremendously dedicatedcommunity of friendsand "brothers fromanother mother", including Jay M. Simon and his son Eli of Boulder. Tom was 48years old. The family requests thatwe honor Tom's devotion to rescue catsby making donations of pet supplies, volunteerhours, or cash toThe Feral Cat Proj ect, For Pet' sSake, in Cortez,CO. They can be reached at970-525-7387. A celebration marking Tom's phenomenal life will beheld this summer on his land inDolores, CO.
B6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013
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Quebec 3'4 4 4"<66/5 3 8 dso
St.1'aul Green Ba ~xst/62 1
o+ ' + + ++ ++
Los Angel
o CD
75/54 •
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iiqii ~L ~ ~xx~~~x x~ ~ s Sp T hunderBayvhsssssxx s 73/54
+ x Billings 8 otlI oBismarck 75/56
Meacham, Ore.
4 57"
•
W,nn,peg
t o o v o « OO X + ++o . 1 8 - -++
,qrtland
Needles, Calif.
68 /SO
t ++ + 8
x'64/50
• 110'
F lonolulu ~
4
• 605
ii
1 11o
' He ahomaCity Nashvi little Roclc N 94/72 • ~ 9 3 /75rl- x 9 0 /72 • I • ~ i . 'Adanta
aaasl~
l~i ] 94/74 New Orleans
Tijuana 70/61
90s ' 94/75
HAWAI I
8 ' Orlando +, • 1/73
Houston EI
Chihuahua 93/68
• Miami 88/77
Sos 60s Anchorage 72/50
70s
a Paz 92/65 Juneau 72/49
O'A LA SKA
TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....7:07 a.m.....10:34 p.m. Venus......6:45 a.m.....10:19 p.m. Mars.......433 a.m...... 7:44 p.m. Jupiter......5 46 a.m...... 9 07 p.m. Satum......4:35 p.m...... 3:18 a.m. Uranus.....2:08 a.m...... 2:44 p.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 75/39 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Record high........ 91 m 1940 Month to date.......... 0.00" Recordlow......... 27in1946 Average monthtodate... 0.30" Average high.............. 71 Year to date............ 2.74" Averagelow ..............41 A verageyeartodate..... 5.32" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m29.80 Record 24 hours ...0.74in1969 *Melted liquid equivalent
FIRE INDEX W e d. Bend,westof Hwy97.. Mod H i /Lo/WBend,eastof Hwy.97....Mod.
WATER REPORT sisters......................... Mod
The following was compiled by the Central La Pine.............................Mod Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as Redmond/Madras........Low Prinevine........................Mod a service to irrigators and sportsmen. Mod = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme
Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 40,431...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 142,494..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 77,977.... . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 26,505 . . . . 47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 133,158..... 153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 407 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,590 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 84 LOW MEDIUM Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 144 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 116 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 2,145 Crooked RiverAbove Prinevige Res.. ... . . . . . 15 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 222 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 15.8 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 144 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM LOWI or go to www.wrd.state.or.us
To report a wildfire, call 911
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
IPOLLEN COUNT
Og%g
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
o www m ":: 64/62
PLANET WATCH
Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partisl clouds,c-clouds,h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
Yesterday's extremes
•
Astoria ........63/51/0.00....59/49/sh.....59/49/sh Baker City......79/40/0.00.....75/41/s.....71740/pc Brookings......59/48/0.00....65/48/pc.....65/48/pc Burns..........87/47/0.00.....79/39/s.....71/37/pc Eugene..... MM/MM/0.00....66/44/pc......66/45/c Klamath Falls .. 82/48/0 00 ....72/39/s ... 69/37/s Lakeview...... 84/52/0.00 ...74/46/pc.....71/41/pc La Pine.........82/32/NA.....66/32/s.....65/34/pc Medford.......84/50/0.00.....76/49/s.....74/48/pc Newport.......57/43/0.00....56/46/pc.....57/47/sh North Bend......64/52/NA....59/48/pc......60/49/c Ontario........92/62/0.00....87/56/pc.....83/55/pc Pendleton......79/43/0.00.....75/45/s......73/48/s Portland .......70/49/0.00....64/50/sh......65/50/c Prineville.......76/37/0.00.....72/37/s.....71/39/pc Redmond.......79/35/0.00.....70/33/s......68/39/s Roseburg.......78/53/0.00....71/48/pc......70/45/c Salem ....... 72/46/0 00 ...65/46/pc ...66/47/sh Sisters.........81/35/0.00.....67/33/s.....66/37/pc The Dages......78/53/0.00.....71/48/s.....71/53/pc
Nyssa
Silv e r
Port Orfor
d • Beach 60/50
74 48
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
Valeo
• Brothers 69/37
•
Chemult
71/48
o 58/48
HIGH LOW
70 46
Yesterday Tuesday Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W
Ontario
75/41
86/55
La Pine eeaz — Hampton 72/39
Roseburg
Unity
70/33
10/ 3 6
• • Crescento Crescent Lake
6i/47 •
15/41
• Mitchell 71/39
Oa k ridge
67/44 •
Baker City
Prinevill 72/37 Redmand • paulina n/36
61/33
Cottage
HIGH LOW
64 40
OREGON CITIES
EAST Sunny to partly cloudy skies.
68/35
•
Sunriver Bend
66/4 4
Coos Bay
Granite
•John
63/3
pleasant.
6 9 / 36
73142
•
70/39
,h
Yachat
osep
72/41 Unio~
72/42
COrValhS
HIGH LOW
•
•
La Grande•
ei43
Warm Springs •—•
2
64/3 8
Condon 71/42
Florence•
~
Partly cloudy
66 41
Sunsettoday.... 8 48 p,m F irst Ful l La s t Sunnsetomorrow 5 22 a m Sunset tomorrow... 8:49 p.m Moonrise today.... 8:14 a.m Moonsettoday ... 10:49 p.m June16 June 23 June 29 July 8
CENTRAL Mostly sunny and
esax
• Meacham
Ruggs
Willowdale
NeWPO,,~ s ' Albany~ ez/45,
Wa owa • Pendleton t,esns • Enterprise 75/45
oW asco
1
G overn ment 7 Camp 51/36
i '"
Lincoln CI i
n«s •
Sa n dy
x ' • 63 / 47
• HermiStun 17148
' Arlington »„,
Dalles 72147
'
Mostly sunny
HIGH LOW
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 5:22 a.m Moon phases
WEST Partly to mostly cloudy with show ers in the north
Asto r i a .xxxxxxxxxxx
xXX'VJ9/49XXX X X X X X X X X X
s easideo» »
Partly cloudy and cool
BEND ALMANAC
IFORECAST:5TATE
•g4
ge
Monterrey • HJB/75 •
Mazatlan 87775 x ++ + + + 8
CONDITIONS
FRONTS Cold
• +++Q
.++++ '
xr 4 4>
* * * * * * * ***+*
er 3 63 6
W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow
Ice
Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene TX......97/69/0 00..97/73/pc100/76/pc Grandilapids....75/63/0 11..80/64/pc...79/57/t RapidCity.......83/54/0.00...80/56/t. 77/56/pc Savannah...... 89/76/trace...90/73/t. 93/73/pc Akron ..........74/66/023..79/65/pc...81/63/t GreenBay.......78/56/000..81/58/pc. 74/57/pc Reno...........86/61/0 00..85/57/pc.. 83/53/s Seattle..........71/53/0 00..63/51/sh. 62/52/sh Albany..........65/54/0.43...72/55/r. 74/54/pc Greensboro......83/68/1.36...85/67/t. 91/70/pc Richmond.......82/73/0.20... 86/68/t. 92/72/pc Sioux Falls.......75/46/0.00... 83/65/t...77/58/t Albuquerque.....99/70/000...99/67/s.. 98/68/s Harssburg.......77/66/043...81/63/t. 83/63/pc Rochester, NY....72/62/0.07... 70/58/t. 76/59/pc Spokane........74/46/0.00... 73/44/s. 72/44/pc Anchorage ......74/53/0 00..72/50/pc.. 75/51/s Hartford CT.....73/58/0 14...74/59/t. 82/57/pc Sacramento......72/58/000...86/57/s .. 87/54/s Springfield, MO ..88/60/000 ..92/69/pc.. 91/71/s Atlanta .........80/69/0.81..88/74/pc...92/73/t Helena..........82/47/0.00...75/48/t...74/48/t St Louis.........81/64/013..95/74/pc.96/72/pc Tampa..........90/77/000...89/76/t...90/76/t Atlantic City.....72/62/0.28...80/66/t.76/63/pc Honolulu........85/74/0.00..89776/pc..90/77/s Salt Lake City...100/74/000 ..88/65/pc. 96765/pc Tucson.........107/73/000 ..106/74/s.107776/s Austin..........96/67/0.00..92/74/pc. 93/75/pc Houston ........93/70/0.00..93775/pc.94/75/pc 580Antonio.....94/72/000..91/74/pc.92/74pc Tulsa...........95/74/000..94/73/pc.94/73/pc Baltimore .......79/69/0.12...83/67/t. 87/69/pc Huntsville .......89/67/0.32..91/71/pc. 93/74/pc SanDiego.......68/59/0.00... 71/63/s.. 69/62/s Washington,DC.81/71/1.68... 84/68/t. 89/71/pc Billings.........78/50/000... 77/54/t...80/55/t Indianapolis.....75/63/047..85/71/pc. 89/68/pc SanFrancisco....70/57/000... 66/52/s.. 68/52/s Wichita.........96/65/000 ..99/74/pc. 96/71/pc Birmingham .. 88/69/040 ..94/74/pc. 95/75/pc Jackson,MS.... 90/69/000. 93/73/pc. 95/73/pc SanJose........75/56/000 .. 75/53/s 76/52/s Yakima.........81/45/000 ..73/44/pc. 70/49/pc Bismarck........82/56/002... 75/56/t. 75/56/pc Jacksonvile......90/73/0.00... 90/72/t...95/75/t SantaFe........98/60/000... 90/62/s .. 90/62/s Yuma..........l08/73/000 ..106/77/s. 106/73/s Boise...........91/61/000... 88/53/t...82/49/t Juneau..........71/43/000..72/49/pc. 69/49/pc INTERNATIONAL Boston..........68/59/002... 64/59/t. 79/57/pc Kansas City......86/58/0.00 ..92/74/pc. 91/69/pc Budgeport,CT....68/61/0.49... 80/61/t. 79/60/pc Lansing.........73/61/1.22..81/64/pc...78/57/t Amsterdam......59/48/000.. 70/51/s 71/59/c Mecca.........111/91/000 109/84/s.109/82/s Buffalo.........74/64/016... 70/59/t. 75/59/pc LasVegas......101/83/000 ..100/80/s. 103/79/s Athens..........81/73/000... 82/65/s. 81/66/sh MexicoCity .....77/54/000... 71/59/t .. 69/58/1 Burlington,VT....77/52/000...66/58/r. 69/54/sh Lexington.......78/64/1.09..83/68/pc...88/72/t Auckland........59/46/000..59/57/pc.60/49/pc Montreal........77/57/000...59/55/r.68/59/sh Caribou,ME.....77/42/0.00... 66/54r. 64/51/sh Lincoln..........84/49/0.00... 93/68/t. 85/65/pc Baghdad........87/60/0.00 ..102/84/s. 104/87/s Moscow........77/55/0.00 .. 82/58/sh. 70/48/pc Charleston, SC...88/77/000... 85/73/t. 90/74/pc Little Rock.......93/67/0.00 ..93/75/pc. 93/75/pc Bangkok........99/81/0.34... 92/77/t...94/77/t Nairobi.........73/59/0.00... 71/52/t...74/54/t Charlotte........83/70/062 ..88/68/pc.90/72/pc LosAngeles......73/63/0 00... 72/63/s .. 69/62/s Beiyng..........79/61/000... 83/65/s. 73/67/pc Nassau.........88/79/000... 83/76/t...80/77/t Chattasoogs.....86/69/089 ..87/70/pc. 92/71/pc Louisvile........78/66/0.13..88/74/pc. 91/74/pc Beirut..........81/73/000...81/71/s ..87/69/s New Delhi......l08/91/000 ..114/93/s. 105/80/t Cheyenne.......92/57/0.01 ...89/54/s .. 87/55/s Madison,Wl.....80/57/0.00 ..82/63/pc...TI59/t Berlin...........72/54/000..76/57/pc.78762/pc Osaka..........84/68/000..81/71/pc. 76/71/pc Chicago.........76/64/027 .88/67/pc...76/61/t Memphis....... 92/70/0 0094/75/pc.95/76/pc Bogota.........68/48/000 ..66/48/sh...71/44/t Oslo............66/46/000... 71/51/s. 67/50/pc Cincinnati.......78/64/042 ..84/68/pc. 90/69/pc Miami..........89/80/0.00..88/77/pc...89/78/t Budapest........81/55/015 ..76/58/pc.77/58/sh Ottawa.........79/52/000..61/55/sh. 68/55/sh Cleveland.......73/67/0.70 ..78/67/pc. 78/64/pc Milwaukee......70/57/0.01..81/58/pc...64/57/t BuenosAires.....63/54/015...66/54/s. 69/59/pc Paris............66/52/000...74/61/c..70/60/c ColoradoSpnngs.98/53/000..95/59/pc.. 90/59/s Minneapolis.....77/59/0 00 ..81/62/pc. 78/59/pc Cabo580Lucas ..90/73/0.00..95/72/pc .. 90/72/s Rio deJaneiro....86/66/0.00.. 76/65/pc.. 7I67/s Columbia,MO...81/62/002 ..95/71/pc...93/70/t Nashville........86/66/1 12..90/72/pc. 94/73/pc Cairo...........90/72/0.00.. 99/78/s. 100/68/s Rome...........72/61/0.00... 70/63/s.. 82/60/s Columbia,SC....82/73/067 ..92/71/pc. 94/73/pc New Orleans.....89/74/0.63..92/76/pc. 94/77/pc Calgary.........61/41/0.01.. 57/46/sh.. 68/46/s Santiago........73/41/0.00... 64/61/s. 63/58/pc Columbus, GA....82/71/016 ..92/74/pc.. 96/74/s New York.......70/64/095...81/63/t. 83/63/pc Cancun.........86/81/000..87/76/pc. 86/75/pc SaoPaulo.......77/61/000... 68/57/c. 74/60/sh ColumbusOH....79/66/072 ..84/68/pc...88/65/t Newark,Nl......72/65/070...83/63/t. 84/63/pc Dublin..........64/41/000..60/53/sh.. 63/50/c Sapporo ........79/57/000 .. 73/61/pc. 71/63/pc Concord,NH.....71/48/0.01... 61/55/r. 77/53/sh Norfolk, VA......85/72/0.94... 88/70/t. 91/73/pc Edinburgh.......57/48/000..65/55/sh. 57/46/sh Seoul...........90/66/000 ..67/64/sh. 75/63/sh Corpus Christi....94/77/000... 92/79/t...89/80/t OklahomaCity...94/67/0 00 ..94772/pc.. 95/72/s Geneva.........64/54/0.07 ..71/53/sh.. 72/55/c Shanghai........75/68/0.00... 74/62/c .. 72/62/c DallssFtWorth...97/70/000..94/75/pc. 96/76/pc Omaha.........79/58/000...91/71/t. 85/65/pc Harare..........63/48/000..67/45/pc. 68746/pc Singapore.......91/77/055... 91/82/t.. 91/80/c Dayton .........79/66/0.24 ..84/69/pc...88/67/t Orlando.........93/73/0.09... 91/73/t...93/74/t HongKong......91/77/124...84/76/t...82/77/t Stockholm.......61/48/000..67/49/sh. 70/56/pc Denver....... 99/68/000..94/60/pc.. 91/61/s Palmsprings....102/70/000..108/75/s.105/72/s Istanbul.........81/66/0.00... 87/65/s.74/67/sh Sydney..........70/50/0.00 .. 75/52/pc. 63/49/sh DesMoines......79/59/0.00..87/71/pc. 82/63/pc Peoria......... 79/60/trace..89/71/pc...90/64/t lerusalem.......81/63/0.00...81/68/s .. 92/66/s Taipei...........81/75/0.00..85/75/pc...86/75/t Detroit..........71/62/048..84/67/pc...77/60/t Philadelphia.....77/66/1 87...85/67/t. 84/65/pc Johannesburg....57/32/000...61/39/s .. 55/35/s Tel Aviv.........82/72/000... 88/69/s.. 99/68/s Duluth..........71/48/0 04 ..64/49/pc. 72/52/pc Phoesix........l09/82/0 00 ..109/82/s. 110/83/s Lima...........66/63/0.00 .. 71/61/pc.71/61/pc Tokyo...........77/68/0.00.. 73/68/sh. 79/70/sh El Paso.........l04/75/000 ..102/76/s. 102/77/s Pittsburgh.......75/66/005 ..75/63/pc...81/64/t Lisbon..........66/57/000..73/56/pc 80/59/s Toronto.........63/61/011 75/57/sh 77/57/pc Fairbanks........60/50/000...69/47/c .. 74/44/s Portland,ME.....65/52/000... 60/53/r. 74/52/sh London.........61/48/0.00 .. 72/59/pc.63/56/sh Vancouver.......64/48/0.00.. 64/52/sh. 63/52/sh Fargo...........75/48/000 ..78/58/pc.79/56/pc Providence......71/57/0 04... 74/59/t. 81/57/pc Madrid .........79/52/006..86/62/pc.. 92/66/s Vienna..........75/59/000 ..66/54/sh. 68/54/pc Flagstaff........85/50/0.00...83/45/s .. 85/47/s Raleigh.........85/70/0.66...87/69/t. 93/72/pc Manila..........91/82/0.00... 89/78/t...90/78/t Warsaw.........68/59/0.2975/57/pc. .. 74/55/pc
Klamath Tribes exercise
water rights amiddrought By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press
GRANTS PASS — Tens of thousands of acres in Oregon's drought-stricken Klamath Basin will have to go without irrigation water this summer after the Klamath Tribes and the federal government exercised newly confirmed powers that put the tribes in the driver's seat over water Use — a move that area ranchers have said couldhave disastrous effects. Klamath Tribes Chairman DOTTGentry and U.S. Bureau of Reclamation Commissioner Mike Connor said M onday t hey were making what i s known as a "call" on their water rights for rivers flowing into Upper Klamath Lake in Southern Oregon. The tribes are maintaining river flows for fish, while the bureau is using its water for the Klamath Reclamation Project, a federal irrigation project covering 225,000 acres along the Oregon-California border south of Klamath Falls. Wildliferefuges fed from the project are an important nesting and feeding area for migrating waterfowl. uOur water rights are essential to the protection of otfr treatyresources,"Gentry said in a statement. "I think everyone knows thetribes are committed to protecting our treaty fisheries, and this is an important step in that direction." The new powers were made possible by a March ruling of an administrative law judge confirming the tribes have the oldest water rights in the upper basin — and therefore have first say over controlling it. The calls authorized the local water master, who works for the Oregon Department of Water Resources, to start checking river flows and telling ranchers with junior rights to turn off pumps and shut headgates on diversion dams until enough water remains in the rivers to meet the bureau and tribes' rights. That process is likely to take several weeks. The action plays into a con-
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The Klamath Basin will be without irrigation water this summer after the Klamath Tribes made what's known as a "call" on their water rights for rivers flowing into Upper Klamath Lake. Klamath Falls is on the far side of the lake. tinuing political battle over removing three hydroelectric dams owned by Pacificorp on the Klamath River to allow salmon to return to the upper basin to spawn. Ranchers in the upper basin are split between those who support a companion settlement t h at would have eased water tensions, and those who bet on the legal process to give them senior water rights. Klamath County Commissioner Tom M a llams, himself an irrigator, has warned there could be violence. Cattle rancher Roger Nicholson has said shutting of f i r r i gation would be an economic disaster,because ranchers willhave nowhere else to f eed their herds. Gentry and Connor both said the calls highlighted the value of negotiated settlements that would make it unnecessary to go through the water rights process. The upper b asin c overs D8,000 acres around the communities of Fort Klamath, Chiloquin and Sprague River in the area ofthe tribes' former reservation, most of it irrigated pasturethat feeds more than 100,000 head of cattle. Though the federal government took away the reservation in the 1950s,courts have determined
the tribes retained their hunting, fishing and water rights, dating to time immemorial. The bureaLL's rights date to 1905, when the Klamath Reclamation Project started drawing water from the lake. The refuge water rights date between 1928 and 1964. The bureau has estimated the combined calls would require irrigation shutoffs to 58,000 acres. The region is struggling with drought after a dry winter left little snow in the mountains, which feeds the basin's rivers and the lake. The tribes are using their water to maintain flows in the Wood, Williamson, Sprague and Sycan rivers for fish. They include endangered suckers held sacred by the tribes, redband tout, and ultimately salmon, if dams on the Klamath River are removed. Even with the water resulting from the call, the bureau will have only two-thirds of the water it needs from the Klamath Project, leading to some cutbacks there. The actions reverse the roles from 2001, when the bureau had to shut off irrigation to most of the project to protect fish, but cattle ranchers in the upper basin still had water to irrigate their pastures.
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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 ML B , C3 Sports in brief, C2 NBA, C3 Prep sports, C2 Gol f, C4
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013
WCL BASEBALL
Elks earn sweep over Falcons KELOWNA, British Columbia — Four Bend pitchers limited host Kelowna to five hits Monday night as the Elks concluded
their three-gameseries against the Falcons with a 4-2 West Coast
League victory. Bend starter Scott
Kinzler was sharp early, allowing just two hits while striking out seven
over four innings. Jace Puckett earned the win
in relief, giving up one run on three hits in 3t/s
innings. Seth Spivey sparked Bend's offense from the leadoff spot in the
lineup, ending the game 4-for-5 with one run
scored and one RBI.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
eavson 0 ma a • Oregon Statehangsonto win the three-gameSuperRegional seriesoverICansasState andadvancesto the CollegeWorld Series By Grant Lucas The Bulletin
CORVALLIS — Bursts of fireworks echoed throughout Goss Stadium late Monday night, joining the roaring chants already consuming the cool, crisp Willamette Valley air: "0-ma-ha! 0-ma-ha! 0-ma-ha!" The Beaversare heading back to the College World Series. Oregon Statesurvived several late scares by Kansas State with clutch pitching and flawless defense, defeating the Wildcats 4-3 in the do-or-die third game of the NCAA baseball Corvallis Super Regional and reaching the CWS for the first time since winning its second straight national championship in 2007.
"'<es
"We were in the locker room at LSU last year (after losing in the Baton Rouge Regional)," Oregon State coach Pat Casey recalled, "and I looked at our club and said, 'I don't know when, but this team's going to the College World Series.'" The answer came sooner rather than later. Oregon State, playing as the visiting team, clung to a 4-3 lead heading into the bottom of the ninth inning, and suddenly, visions of Saturday's Game I — when Kansas State evened the score in the ninth en route to a 10-inning
e
g
win — appeared.
Greg Wahhstephens / The Associated Press
This time, however, the Beavers held their
ground. SeeBeavs/C4
Oregon State's Danny Hayes (9) celebrates his two-run home run hit against Kansas State with Dylan Davis (10) during the second inning of Monday night's Super Regional in Corvallis.
Kyle Giusti and Zach Close each went 2-for-
4 and scored a run for the Elks, who improved to 4-2 on the season with the three-game
SISTERS RODEO
i -time' itz'
sweep of the Falcons (0-6). The Elks are off today before hosting the Cowlitz Black Bears
toni t in Ben
c
on Wednesday nightin their home opener. — Bulletin staff report
Blitz to the Barrel attracts someof the region's bestpro mountain bikers
GOLF
Summit golfer falls in playoff
By Mark Morical
Bend'sMadison Odi-
The Bulletin
orne shot a blistering
The number of riders in tonight's Blitz to the Barrel is the only thing about the race that is small. Fewer than 40 invited mountain bikers will bomb down trails from Wanoga Sno-park southwest of Bend, through Tetherow Golf Club, then down to the finish at 10 Barrel Brew-
final-round 5-under-par 67 Sunday to reach a
playoff in the Centennial Junior, but she fell to West Linn's Sarah
Archuleta in a four-hole playoff. Odiorne, a juniorto-be at Summit High School and a two-time Class 5A state cham-
MOUNTAIN BIKING ing Company in west Bend. But everything else about the fourth annual race is big:
big names, big money, big prizes, big jumps, big beers,
and big arms. (After the men's and women's winners chug a 20-ounce craft brew at 10 Barrel, the competitors move on to the Blitz Arm Wrestling
Championship.) The Blitz to the Barrel's cash purse is $20,000, the second-biggest mountain bike race purse in the country, according to Blitz race promoter Erik Eastland. See Blitz/C4
pion, bounced back after shooting a 77 in the first round at
Locals look to break streak at DregonOpen
Centennial Golf Club in Medford that left her six shots back of first place.
Her final-round score set Centennial's course
record for women. The Centennial Junior featured many of the
More than 30golfers arevying to be the first Central Oregonwinner since 1990
top young golfers in the state. Bend's Declan Watts, who also plays at Summit, finished tied
The Bulletin
— Bulletin staff report Joe Kiine/The Bulletin
U.S. Openlooks to de a wet one
GOLF
By Zack Hall
for11th place in the boys open division. Sisters Rodeo Queen Whitney Richey helps corral a calf during the tie-down roping event on Sunday in Sisters.
ARDMORE, Pa.
— The most popular equipment at Merion was nota golf club buta
squeegee. More heavy rain at the U.S. Open flooded a bunker by the 11th green
The Oregon Open has not been that kind to Central
Oregon's golfers. This region has hosted the Oregon Open golf tournament for all but one year since 1982. Yet not since 1990 — when Pat Fitzsimons, then head pro at Prineville Golf and Country Club and a PGA Tour winner won at Sunriver Resort's Woodlands course — has a Central Oregon resident won
the tournament. So much forhome being an advantage. The 2013 Oregon Open — an annual major championship in the Pacific Northwest Section of the PGA of America — will tee off today at Juniper Golf Club in Redmond with a field of 184 of the top pro and amateur golfers from all corners of the Northwest. SeeOpen /C4
and filled fairways with large puddles and tiny
i (lII
stream. Thecourse was closed for four hours during the first full day of practice, and then
shut down for good later in the afternoon. Brandt Jobe played
• The duties of the SistersRodeoqueen havejust begun
three holes whenhe heard a horn to stop play. Jim Herman man-
aged to play onehole. Practice rounds are important becauseonly a dozen or so players have ever seen this100-
year-old course, which has not hosted aU.S. Open in 32years. Workers were busy running squeegees across the greensand fairways during the af-
ternoon before another downpour arrived. The forecast was for
mostly dry conditions Tuesday andWednesday, followed by a 40
percent chance of rain on Thursday for the
opening round. — The Associated Press
By Emily Oller
"I grew up coming to the Sisters RoThe Bulletin deo," Richey said, "and it's one of the bigA gleaming beacon of rhinestones and g est in the state. So that's why I came to silver embellishments stands out among t h e tryouts." the dusty cowboys and raging Richey has been traveling thou- ',t bulls. That beacon is, of course, sands of miles promoting the Sisthe rodeo queen, decked out from ters Rodeo since her coronation head to toe in fancy cowgirl garb. this past October. And her reign ~x during the 73rd annual Sisters But don't be fooled by the dazzling smile, the Stetson laden with Rodeo did not end with Sunday's a sparkling tiara, or the showy, Ri c hey fi nal e v ent. She will continue her color-coordinated chaps. Because travels through November's Cothe climb to becoming a rodeo queen l u m bia River Circuit Finals in Redmond. is a steep one, and it is not all glitz and O v er the summer, Richey is scheduled to glamour. ride among other rodeo queens from all This year'sSisters Rodeo Queen is over the state on her quarter horse mare, brown-haired, b r o wn-eyed W h i t ney R e m i , at the Crooked River Roundup in Richey. While the five other contestants P r i neville, the St. Paul Rodeo, the Desfor the Sisters crown were from Central c h u tes County Fair & Rodeo, the Chief Oregon, Richey, 23, is a resident of the J o seph Days Rodeo in Joseph, and the small town of Walterville, just east of P e n dletonRound-Up. Springfield. SeeQueen /C4
~A
m e ricanWest Banh
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C2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013
SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY BASEBALL College, Super Regional, North Carolina vs. South Carolina MLB, SanFrancisco at Pittsburgh MLB, Houston at Seattle SOCCER World Cup qualifier, Mexico vs. Costa Rica World Cup qualifier, United States vs. Panama BASKETBALL NBA Finals, Miami at SanAntonio
Time 9 a.m. 4 p.m. 7 p.m.
ESPNU MLB Root
4:30 p.m. 7 p.m. 6 p.m.
ESPN ESPN ABC
WEDNESDAY Time T l //Radio
BASEBALL MLB, Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs MLB,ClevelandatTexas MLB, Houston at Seattle BASKETBALL WNBA, Connecticut at Indiana HOCKEY NHL, Stanley Cup, Boston at Chicago
11 a.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
MLB ESPN Root
5 p.m.
ESP N2
5 p.m.
NBC
Listings arethemostaccurate available. The Bulletinis not responsib/e for late changesmade byN or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL Rear slapguts footdall
A police complaint says Jones, who vvasarrested Monday, ailegedly struck a 34-year-old
Star in jail —Former NFLand Oregon State star ChadJohnson vvas sentenced Monday to 30
Cincinnati woman shortly before midnight on June 5. The police
days in jail for a probation viola-
ently minor.
a no-jail plea deal after Johnson
playfully slapped his attorney on the backside in court. John-
BASKETBALL Pistons hireCheeksas
son had reached a deal with
neW COaCh — TheDetroit Pis-
prosecutors calling for community service and counseling
tons hired former 76ers and Trail
instead of jail. Brovvard County Circuit Judge Kathieen McHugh
The team announced the move Monday night. Detroit fired Law-
report listed the injury as appar-
tion in a domestic violence case by a judgevvhoangrily rejected
Blazers coachMaurice Cheeks.
said she would tack on anad-
rence Frank inApril, a dayafter
ditionai three months' probation becauseJohnson had failed to
the once-proud franchise finished 29-53. Frank vvas 54-94 in two
meet with his probation officer
seasons with the Pistons. Cheeks
during three previous months. It vvas aii set until Johnson, when asked by MCHugh if he was satisfied with his lawyer Adam Svvickle, gave the attorney a light
was 284-286 in the regular sea-
swat on the rear — asfootball players routinely do to each
Hollins out asMemphis
son and 5-11 intheplayoffs as coach of the Philadelphia 76ers
COaCh —The Memphis Grizzlies have decided to part with
room erupted in laughter andat
the vvinningest coach in the
that MCHugh said she wouldn't
franchise's history, telling Lionei Hoiiins they will not be renewing
meant nodisrespect.Johnson thenwas handcuffed and hauled
hiscontractasheadcoachcoming off their first trip to the West-
away to jail.
ern Conference finals. Hoiiins confirmed Monday night to The
Tedow tosignwith Patri-
Associated Press that he had been told his contract would not
OtS —Quarterback Tim Tebow
be renewed. Hehad nofurther
will be signing with the New England Patriots and joining their
comment.
minicamp today, aperson famii-
Three NBA teams fined
iar with the situation tells The
Associated Press. Theperson, speaking on condition of anonymity because no official an-
nouncement had beenmade,told the APon Monday thatTebow
vvas headedfor Foxborough.
fOr tamPering —The
Atlanta Hawks and tvvo other
teamshavebeenfinedanUndisclosed amount by the NBA
for tampering. A leaguespokesman says a memowas sent to
ESPN first reported that Tebovv
teams informing them of the penalties, but didn't say which
would sign with NewEngland.
clubs were punished or provide
Tebow will need to pass a physi-
the amount of the fines. Hovv-
cai before a contract becomes official. Evenwhen Tebovvsigns
ever, the Hawks say Monday they were one of them, saying
with the team, there is no guarantee he will make the Patriots.
that they "fully Understand and respect the NBA's decision."
'Pacman' Jonesarrested — Court documents show that
The team recently sent a letter to potential ticket-buyers pro-
moting its chances of signing Chris Paul and Dwight Howard,
Cincinnati Bengais cornerback n AdamnPacman Jones vvasarrested and jailed on onecount of assault after police say he
who will become free agents on July1. Teams are not allowed to
allegedly "knowingly attempted
who are Under contract to other
to cause physical harm" to a woman in Cincinnati last week.
PREPS
discuss their interest in players teams. — From wire reports
AU Times PDT
IN THE BLEACHERS
Softball In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Unrversar Ucrrck www.gocomics.com/inthebreachers
Class 5A 2013 AU-State teams Pitcher of theyear: SammieByron,jr., Sandy Co-players of the year: Chelsea Spanier, sr., Sandy;MeghanLeubbert,sr.,Sandy Coach ofthe year: KelieWilkerson,Sandy
1
Honorable mention Pitchers: SarahHarms,sr., Wilsonville; Teanna Gonzales, fr., EaglePoint. Catcher: Teresa Lehman,so., Ashland. Infielders: EvangelinOl a ivera,jr., Pendleton;Jordan Imes,fr.rRoosevelt; PaigeLeaper,fr., EaglePoint; KarlyTolen,jr., EagePoint. Outfielders: TiahGrass,so., Pendleton;Ashley Giesbers,fr., St. Helens;Jennifer Paxton,sr., Hermiston; Jenna Henninger, jr., Mt.View,McKennaRead, so, Ashland.
BASEBALL College NCAADivision I Super Regional All Times POT Best-of-3 x-if necessary At BoshamerStadium Chapel Hill, N.C. Saturday, June8 North Carolina6, South Carolina5 Sunday, June9: South Carobna6, North Caro ina0 Monday,June10: SouthCarolinavs. NorthCarolina, ppd., rain Today,June11: SouthCarolina(43-20)vs. North Carolina(56-10) 9am At Davenport Field Charlottesville, Va. Saturday, June8: Mississippi State11,Virginia 6 Sunday, June9: Mississippi State5, Virginia 3, 6t/t
innings,susp.,rain Monday, June10:Mississippi State6, Virginia 5 At GossStadium Corvaeis Saturday,June8: Kansas State 6, OregonState2,10 innings Sunday ,June9 OregonState12,KansasState4 Monday, June10 DregonState4,KansasState3 Advanced toCollege World Series LSU(57-9) UCLA (44-17) Indiana(48-14) Louisville(51-12) N.C.State(49-14) MississippiState(48-18) Oregon State(50-11) Corvaois SuperRegional, Game3 OregonState Kansas State
020 110 000 — 4 6 0 000 001 020 — 3 11 2
CorvagisKnights 2 Monday's Games Medford 5,Kitsap1 Cowlitz 8,Corvallis 7 Bend 4,Kelowna2 KlamathFalls7, Bellingham2 Today's Game MedfordatVictoria, 7.05p.m.
VictoriaHarbourcats WenatcheeAppleSox WallaWallaSweets Bellingham Bels Ke owna Falcons SouthDivision BendElks CowlitzBlackBears MedfordRogues KlamathFalls Gems KitsapBlueJackets
4
Monday's Linescore
Elks 4, Falcons 2 Bend 000 040 000 — 4 12 1 Kelowna 100 010 000 — 2 5 5 Kinzler,Puckett(5), Highberger(8), Ring(9) and Benish,Wildung.Habeck,Gray(6), Myers(8) andLavalee .W Puckett.L Habeck.2B Bend: Ring, Giusti; Kelowna:Tracy,Andreychuk. HR— Bend Wildung.
BASKETBALL NBA NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times POT NBA FINALS San Antonio1, Miami1 Thursday,June6: SanAntonio 92, MiamiBB Sunday,June9 Miami103,SanAntonio 84 Today,June11: Miamiat SanAntonio 6p.m. Thursday,June13:Miami atSanAntonio, 6p.m. x-Sunday,June16:Miamiat SanAntonio,5 p.m. x-Tuesday, June18:SanAntonioat Miami, 6p.m. x-Thursday, June20: SanAntonio at Miami,6p.m.
WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION AU Times PDT
Monday's Games No games scheduled
Today's Game
SanAntonioatMinnesota, 5pm.
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEYLEAGUE AU TimesPDT STANLEY CUPFINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Boston vs. Chicago Wednesd ay,June12:BostonatChicago,5p.m. Saturday,June15:BostonatChicago,5 p.m. Monday, June17:ChicagoatBoston,5p.m. Wednesd ay,June19:ChicagoatBoston,5 p.m. x-Sat urday,June22:BostonatChicago,5p.m. x-Monday ,June24:ChicagoatBoston,5p.m. x-Wedne sday,June26:BostonatChicago,5p.m.
WCL
TENNIS Professional AEGONChampionships
W 3 2 2 3 0
Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague
Monday At The Oueen'sClub London Purse: $1.03 million (WT250) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles First Round Daniel Evans,Britain, def. GuidoPella, Argentina,
TORONTOBLUEJAYS Optioned RHP Brad Lincoln andRHPThad Weber to Bufalo (IL). Reinstated LHPDarrenOliver fromthe15-day DL. National League ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS— Recalled LHP Joe Patersonand RHPCharles BrewerfromReno (PCL). OptionedLHPTyler Skaggsto Reno.PlacedLHPMatt Reynoldsonthe15-day DL. CINCINNATI REDS—Agreedto termswith OFPhillip Ervin on aminor leaguecontract. LOS ANGELESDODGERS— Optioned RHP Matt DenisKudla,UnitedStates,def.Federico Delbonis, Magill to Albuquerque (PCL). Recalled INFJustin Argentina,6-0,6-3. Se lersfromAlbuquerque. BenoitPaire(9), France,def. JamieBaker, Britain, MIAMIMARLINS—Optioned1BJoeMahoneyand 7-5, 6-2. 2B Donovan Solanoto NewOrleans(PCL). MarinkoMatosevic,Australia,def.Frederik Nielsen, MILWAUKEE BREWERS— SentRHPHiram Burgos Denmark,7-5, 6-2. to Wisconsin(MWL)for arehabassignment. ThiemodeBakker,Netherlands, def. Ilija Bozoljac, SANDIEG OPADRES—Placed2BJeddGyorkoon Serbia,6-2,7-6(5). 15-dayDL.ReinstatedINFLoganForsytheIrom Ivan DodigCroati , a, def.JamesWard, Britain, 6-7 the the 60-dayDL. DesignatedCJohn Bakerfor assign(6) 7-6 (3),7-6(2) ment. Sergiy Stakhovsky,Ukraine,def. EdwardCorrie, BASKETBALL Britain,6-4,7-6(I). National Basketball Association Xavier Malisse,Belgium,def. GuilermoGarciaATLANTA HAWKS—NamedQuinSnyderassistant Lopez,Spain,6-4,5-7, 6-4. coach. Lleyton Hewitt, Australia, def. MichaelRussell, DETROITPISTONS Named Maurice Cheeks UnitedStates,4-6, 6-1, 6-3. Igor Sijsling,Netherlands,def.Tatsuma Ito, Japan, coach. SACRAMENTOKINGS— Named Chris Jent as6-3, 7-5. sistantcoach. EdouardRoger-Vasselin, France, def. Guilaume USA Basketball Rufin, France, 6-7(1), 7-5,7-6(5). —Named Jim Boeheim, TomThibodeau Grigor Dimitrov(10), Bulgaria,def. DudiSela, Is- andUSAB MontyWiliamsassistantcoachesof themen's rael, 4-6,6-2, 7-6(4). nationalteamfor 201316 FOOTBALL AEGONClassic National Football League Monday BUFFALO BILLS—ReleasedQBTarvaris Jackson. At EdgbastonPriory Club CHICAGOBEAR S—Signed WR Devin AroBirmingham,England mashodu,WRJerrell JacksonandFBTonyFiammetta. Purse: $236,000(Intl.) W aived WR D e me tri u s Fields, WRDale MossandFB Surface: Grass-Outdoor Evan Rodriguez. Singles MIAMIDOLPHINS—Signed CBWil Davis. First Round NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS Rel eased DL DeAjla Tomljanovic, Croatia, def. MelanieOudin, w ayne CherringtonandQBMike Kafka UnitedStates,6-3,6-1. NEW YOR K J E T S — N a me d R o d G ravessenior diTsvetanaPironkova, Bulgaria, def. LaurenDavis, rector of tootball administration;DavidBoller, Aaron UnitedStates,6-2,6-1. Glenn,David HinsonandChristopher Prescott area JamieHampton, UnitedStates,def. HsiehSu-wei, scouts; andRickCourtright nationalcollegescout. Taiwan,6-2,6-3. Matt Bazirganto assistant director of pro VesnaDolonc, Serbia, def. MariaJoao Koehler, Promoted personnel. Portugal,6-7(8),6-0,6-3. SANFRAN CISCO49ERS—SignedFBJasonScheAlisonRiske,UnitedStates,def.AnneKeothavong, pler to three-year a contract andLBCoreyLemonierto Britain, 7-5,6-2. a four-year contract. WaivedFBAlexDebniak. MirjanaLucic-Baroni, Croatia,def. Karolina PlisHOCKEY kova,CzechRepublic, 6-3, 6-2. NationalHockeyLeague MadisonKeys,UnitedStates, def. LesiaTsurenko, ANAHEIMDUCKS— Named Dwayne Roloson Ukraine,3-6, 6-3,7-6(3). Alison VanUytanck, Belgium, def. Ayumi Morita goaltendingconsultant. DALLASSTARS— Signed D SergeiGoncharto a (11),Japan,6-4,6-0 Bojana Jovanovski (I3), Serbia, def. Eugenie two yearcontract. EDMON TON OILER S—Named Dallas Eakins Bouchard,Canada,5-7,6-3, 6-2. Magdalena Rybarikova (16), Slovakia,def. Melanie coach. N ASHVILL E P R E D A T ORS— Signed D Roman Josi South,Britain,6-4, 6-2. contract. Alla Kudryavtseva, Russia, def. Kimiko Date- to a seven-year COLLEGE Krumm,Japan,6-4,7-6(3). SOUTHE ASTERN CO NFERENCE—Named Jake NadiyaKichenok,Ukraine,def. TimeaBabos, HunBe I coordinator ofmen's basketball officials. gary,6-3, 6-4. DUKE —Promoted Hernando Planells to women's Kristyna Pliskova, CzechRepublic, def. Coco assistantbasketball coach.Named Michele VanGorp Vandewe he, g UnitedStates, 6-7(5), 7-6(5), 7-5. director ofwomen's basketball recruitingoperations. MathildeJohansson, France,def. PetraCetkovska, GEOR GETOWN—Named Kevin Sutton men'sasCzechRepublic,7-5, 6-2 DonnaVekic,Croatia, def. Camila Giorgi, Italy,7-6 sistantbasketballcoach. NEBRA SKA—Named KenyaHunter mens' assistant (2), 6-3. MarinaErakovic,NewZealand, def.ElinaSvitolina, basketballcoach. Ukraine,6-0, 6-1. NORTH DAKOTA STATE—Suspended LB Travis Beck indefinitely fromthe football teamafter hewas Gerry WeberOpen chargedwith aggravatedassault stemmingfrom a weekend altercation. Monday NYU —Named Nelson Albino men'sassistant basAt Gerry WeberStadion Halle, Germany ketballcoach. Purse: $1.03 million (WT250)
Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles First Round Jan Hernych,CzechRepublic, def. Daniel Brands, Germany, 6-4,6-2. Mikhail Youzhny,Russia, def. Daniel GimenoTraver,Spain, 6-1,6-2. MischaZverev,Germany, def DavidGoffin, Begium, 1-6,6-4, 7-5.
FlorianMayer(8), Germany, def. MartinFischer,
Austria, 6-2,6-2.
6-3, 6-1. W 2 4
DEALS
Ciriacofor assignment. CLEVEL AND INDIANS—Acquired INFJohn McDonaldfromPittsburghfor a playerto be named or cashconsiderations. DETROITIG T ERS OptionedRHPJoseOrtegaand RHPJoseAlvarezto Toledo(IL). RecalledRHPEvan ReedfromToledo. SentOFAustin Jacksonto Toledo for a rehab assignment. HOUSTONASTROS— OptionedRHPBradPeacock to Oklahoma City (PCL). KANSAS CITYROYALS—Agreedto terms withSS HunterDozieronaminorleaguecontract. MINNESOTA TWINS— Pl aced OF Aaron Hickson the15-dayDL.Optioned OFChris Colabello toRochester (IL). Sent3BTrevor Plouffe to Rochesterfor a rehabassignment. TEXASRANGERS—Agreedtotermswith RHPAlex Rodriguez,SSTravis Demeritte, RHPAkeemBostick, OF Ryan Cordel, RHPDavid Gates andRHPJustin Sprengeronminor leaguecontracts.
WESTCOASTLEAGUE
Leaguestandings NorthDivision
Saturday's Games FC Dallas at Portland,2p.m. TorontoFCat D.C. United, 4p.m. Montrealat Columbus,4:30p.m. SanJoseatColorado, 6p.m. NewEnglandat Vancouver, 7p.m.
BOSTON RED SOX—Activated 3B Will Middlebrooks fromthe15-dayDL. DesignatedINFPedro
Second team Pitchers: MariahMulcahy,so., St. Helens;Julia Smith, Ir.,WestAlbany; PaigeLong,sr., Hermiston. Catchers: Rayne Spencer, sr., Pendleton;Katherine Kramer,sr., TheDales. Infielders:Kayla Starr, sr., Wilsonvile; Emily Rommel,jr., Cleveland;MarissaDuchi, sr., Redmond; KasideeLemberger, sr., Pendleton;SueSass, sr., St. Helens. Outfielders: Makenna Clizer, fr., Wilson;Ashley Wirth, sr.,WestAlbany; Katie Brown,jr, Bend;Brynn Lio, sr, Wilsonvile. Utility: StephaniSt eamnes, sr., Wilsonvile. Designated Player: Neeshaa Garcia-Patterson, so., Eagle Point. Third team Pitchers: MarissaJones,sr., Pendleton; Kayla Byers, jr., HoodRiver; McKenzee Merrill, sr., Eagle Point. Catchers:RebeccaOlison, sr., Wilsonvile; Sierra Cavanaugh, jr, Cleveland. Infielders: Kyllie Bellis, sr., WestAlbany; Beth AnneNeuschwander, lr., WestAlbany; EmilyReeves, sr., Wilson;ChristinaKuykendall, so., Ashland;Ellie Richards,fr., Pendleton. Outfielders: Abby Drotzman,so., Hermiston; JessicaWest,sr., Wilson;Reeghanl.ehnert, jr., Pendleton; EmilyJeffries,jr., EagePoint. Utility: AlexisMorrison,Ir., Pendleton. Designated Player: Cheyenne Baker, sr., Sandy..
DC P',
QLEt
First team Pitchers: SammieByron, lr., Sandy;AshleyPesek, sr., Redm ond; Kelsey Broatus, fr., WestAlbany. Catchers: RachelRutledge,jr., Sandy;LisaSylvester,lr., Bend. Infielders: ChelseaSpanier, sr., Sandy;Kendall Kramer,jr., Bend;Kelly Meeuwsen, so., Liberty; Darian Lindsey,so., Pendleton;AlyssaNitschelm, sr., Redmond. Outfielders: Meghan Luebbert, sr., Sandy;Molly Nutt, so.,Sandy;SheaLindsey, sr., Pendleton;Tenicia Winston,sr., Cleveland. Utility: MadiLostra,sr., Wilson. Designated Player: Awbrie-ElleKinkade,so., Bend.
and Portland Trail Blazers.
other on the field. The court-
accept the deal. Johnson, 35, tried to apologize andinsisted he
COREBOARD
T V / Radio
Aljaz Bedene,Slovenia, def. Paul-Henri Mathieu, France,7-6(5), 6-3. Santiago Giraldo, Colombia,def. JesseLevine, Canada,6-4,6-4.
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelheadandwi d steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiver damslast updatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 1,910 5 7 8 59 16 The DaUes 2,459 61 4 39 9 John Day 1,898 4 5 0 26 9 McNary 1,305 3 3 7 33 27 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 99,793 38,766 3,955 2,934 T he DaUes 80,227 34,985 1,031 3 9 1 J ohn Day 63,586 30,619 1,108 5 2 2 M cNary 53,481 22,616 1,633 7 3 0
PREP NOTEBOOK
ree ocasseed:e or re on Bulletin staff report Three Central Oregon seniorsRedmond pitcher J.D. Abbas, Bend High first baseman Jonah Koski and Mountain View outfielder John Carroll — have been chosen to play on the South squad in the three-game Oregon All-Star Baseball Series this weekend in Corvallis. The series, which showcases the top Class 6A and 5A seniors from around the state at Oregon State University's Goss Stadium, consists of a doubleheader on Saturday and a
games and make the 5A champion-
ship game. Carroll did not have the team success that Abbas and Koski achieved this year — Mountain View went just 5-17 — but the Cougars' three-sport standout hit .359 and posted an onbase percentage of .490. Coaching the South will be Bend High's Bret Bailey and Sheldon's Stan Manley. For more information on the Oregon All-Star Series, go to wwvv.oregonallstarseries.com.
single game on Sunday. Abbas, who led the Panthers to the Intermountain Conference championship this spring en route to the state semifinals, went 4-0 in league play this year with a L12 earned-run average and 32 strikeouts in 31 innings. He turned in a 10-inning, 162-pitch performance last week in Redmond's 5-4 semifinal loss to Sherwood that went 11 innings. Koski led the IMC in hitting this year, batting .555 in 54 at-bats. The Lava Bear senior also had a leaguehigh 21 RBIs and 30 hits before helping Bend win t h ree state playoff
Bears, Panthers earn aii-state honors Five Central Oregon softball players have been named to the Class 5A all-state softball first team. Bend's Lisa Sylvester (jr., catcher), Kendall
Kramer (jr., infielder) and Awbrie Elle Kinkade (so., designated player) received first-team honors, as did Redmond seniors A s hley P esek (pitcher) an d A l y ss a N i t schelm
(infield). The Panthers' Marissa Duchi (sr., infielder) and the Lava Bears' Katie Brown (jr., outfielder) were selected to the second team, and Mountain
View junior outfielder Jenna Henninger received honorable mention. F or a complete list o f t h e 5 A all-state teams, see Scoreboard, above. Bend's Mattox receives student-athlete scholarship Bend High senior Jenna Mattox has been awarded one ofeight Oregon Athletic Coaches Association student-athlete scholarships for the 2 012-13 school year. Mattox w as a three-sport athlete for the Lava Bears throughout high school, running track and cross-country as well as playing basketball. Last fall she finished 11th overall in the Class 5A girls state cross-country championships, and this past winter she helped Bend advance to the 5A girls basketball tournament. Locals named to aii-state 4A baseball teams Sisters junior Joey Morgan has been named the Class 4A baseball player of the year after leading the Outlaws to the state semifinals. One of six Outlaws to receive all-
- tar eries
state recognition, Morgan batted.624 and knocked in 41 runs in 29 games. A catcher for most of his high school career, Morgan also pitched for Sisters this season, going 9-1 with a 0.62 earned-run average. Sophomore shortstop Justin Harrer was named to the all-state first team, seniors Nicky Blumm (infielder) and Eli Boettner (outfielder) were selected to the second team, junior infielder Jardon Weems made the allstate third team, and senior infielder Sam Calarco received honorable mention. Madras senior Devin C eciliani was chosen to the all-state second team as an outfielder and Ridgeview sophomore TylerRoss received allstate third-team honors, also in the outfield. Raven catcher Collin Runger, a sophomore, received honorable mention. Outlaw b aseball c o ach S t eve Hodges was named 4A's coach of the year after guiding Sisters to a school-record 26 wins. The Sky-Em League champions won 24 consecutive games this spring, also a school record.
Madras, Sisters players to participate in 4A baseball series Madras' Devin Ceciliani and Sisters' Nicky Blumm have both been chosen to play in the Oregon 4A High School Baseball All-Star Series, which is scheduled for Saturday and Sunday. T he three-game series — o n e
nine-inning game will be played on Saturday and two seven-inning contests will take place on Sunday — will t ake place at Roseburg's L egion Field. Ceciliani w il l p l a y outfield for the North Team and Blumm will take the infield for the South Team. Admission is $5 for adults and $3 for children. Sisters High to host lacrosse
all-star game
The High Desert League all-star team, made up of Central and Eastern Oregon lacrosse players, will take on the North Valley Conference all-stars in an exhibition at Sisters High on Saturday, June 15. The North Valley Conference consists of high school teams from Salem, Corvallis and West Albany.
TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
C3
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL MARINERS HOLD OFF ASTROS
Standings All Times PDT
Boston
NewYork
Baltimore TampaBay Toronto Detroit Cleveland Kansas City
Chicago Minnesota Texas Oakland Seattle Los Angeles Houston
give Chicago avictory in a game
AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB 40 25 .615 37 26 587 2 36 28 .563 3r/t 34 29 540 5 27 36 .429 12
Central Division W L
35 27 30 33 29 32 28 34 27 33 West Division W L 38 25 38 27 28 37 27 37 22 43
RBls to overcome two home runs by Toronto's Jose Bautista and delayed1 hour, 10 minutes by fog. Dunn hit a three-run home run off
knuckleballer R.A. Dickey(5-8) in the fourth inning after he hit a solo shot in the third.
xv
Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi Mecarrlf 5 1 3 0 DeAzacf-If 5 0 2 2 Bautistrf 4 2 2 5 AIRmrzss 5 2 3 1 E ncmc1b 4 0 1 0 Riosrf 5010 Linddh 5 0 1 0 Konerk1b 4 1 1 1 RDavispr-dh 0 0 0 0 A.Dunndh 4 3 4 5 C IRsmscf 3 1 1 1 Viciedolf 4 0 1 0 Tholec 3 0 1 0 JrDnkscf 1 0 0 0 Arencii ph-c 2 0 0 0 Kppngr3b 4 1 1 0 Mlzturs3b 5 1 2 0 Bckhm2b 3 2 2 0 Bonif ac2b 4 0 0 0 Gimenzc 2 0 0 1 Kawskss 4 1 2 0 C.Weffspr 0 I 0 0 F lowrsc 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 9 6 136 Totals 3 7 101510 Toronto 2 00 310 000 — 6 Chicago 031 300 03x — 10 E—Encarnacion (5), Bonifacio (5). DP—Toronto I , Chicago1. LOB —Toronto12, Chicago8.28—Lind (13),AIRam irez(12),Viciedo(8). HR —Bautista2(14), Toronto
Pct GB
.565
.476 5r/t 475 5 1/2
452 7 .450 7
Pct GB .603 .585 1 .431 11 .422 I 1r/t
.338 17
Monday'sGames
Baltimore 4, I..A Angels3 Boston10,TampaBay8,14 innings Texas 6, Cleveland3 Kansas City3, Detroit 2 Chicago WhiteSox10, Toronto 6 Seattle 3,Houston2 Today's Games L.A. Angels(Vargas5-3) at Baltimore(Mig.Gonzalez 4:10 p.m.
L.A. Angelsat Baltimore,9:35 a.m. Detroit atKansasCity,1110a m. Boston atTampaBay,4:10p.m. Cleve landatTexas,5:05p.m.
NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Atlanta 39 25 Washington 31 31 Philadelphia 31 33 NewYork 23 35 Miami 18 45 Central Division W L St. Louis 41 22 Cincinnati 38 26 Pittsburgh 37 26 Milwaukee 26 37 Chicago 25 36 West Division W L Arizona 36 28 SanFrancisco 33 29 Colorado 34 30 SanDiego 30 34 Los Angeles 27 36
ElaineThompson /The Assomated Press
Seattle Mariners starting pitcher Hisashi Iwakuma throws against the Houston Astros in Monday night's game in Seattle. Iwakuma took his record to 7-1 and had eight strikeouts to lead the Mariners to a 3-2 victory over the Astros. while reducing his ERA to1.79,
second-lowest in the majors behind Boston right-hander Clay Buchholz (1.71). Houston
Philadelphiaat Minnesota, 5:10p.m. TorontoatChicagoWhite Sox,510p.m. N.Y.YankeesatOakland, 7:05p.m. Houston at Seatle, 7:10p.m.
Pct GB .609 .500 7 .484 8 .397 13 .286 20r/t
Pct GB 651 594 31/2
.587 4 .413 15 .410 15
Pct GB .563 .532 2 .531 2
.469 6 429 Bt/t
Monday's Games Milwaukee 6,Miami1 Cincinnati 6,ChicagoCubs2 Arizona5,L.A.Dodgers4 San Diego 7,Atanta6 Today's Games San Francisco (Lincecum4-5) at Pittsburgh(Cole00), 4.05p.m. Milwaukee (WPeralta4-7) at Miami(JaTurner 1-0), 4:10 p.m. St. Louis(Wacha0-0) atN.Y.Mets (Hefner 1-5), 4:10 p.m. Cincinnati(Cingrani2-0)at ChicagoCubs(Garza10), 5:05p.m. Philadelphia (Hamels 2-9)at Minnesota(Walters2-1), 5:10 p.m. Washington(Haren4-7) at Colorado(Chacin 3-3), 5:40 p.m. Arizona(Kennedy3-4) at LA.Dodgers(Greinke 3-1), 7:10 p.m. Atlanta (Hudson 4-5) at SanDiego (Cashner4-3), 7:10 p.m. Wednesday'sGames Cincinnati atChicagoCubs,11:20 a.m. Atlanta at SanDiego,1240 p.m. San Francisco at Pittsburgh,4:05p.m. Milwaukee atMiami, 4:10p.m. St. LouisatN.Y.Mets, 4:10p.m. Philadelphiaat Minnesota, 5:10p.m. Washington at Colorado,5 40p.m ArizonaatL.A.Dodgers,7:10 p.m.
American League
Mariners 3, Astros 2 SEATTLE — HisashiIw akuma
allowed an unearned run in seven innings and Seattle beat Houston, sending the Astros to their fifth straight defeat. Raul Ibanez hit his team-high12th
home run and Michael Morse had an RBI double for Seattle.
Iwakuma (7-1) gave up four hits, struck out eight and walked one
J.Uptonlf 5 0 2 0 Headly3b 4 0 0 1 F Frmn1b 2 0 0 0 Quentinlf 4 1 1 0
Mccnnc 3 0 0 0Stauff rp 0 0 0 0 Uggla2b 3 1 1 0 Thayerp 0 0 0 0
CJhnsn 3b 3 2 1 0 B anks 1b 3 1 1 0 B Uptoncf 4 0 2 0 Venalerf 3 2 2 3 Tehernp 2 0 0 1 Forsyth2b 2 2 2 1 J Schafrph I 0 0 0 Grandlc 3 0 1 1 Gearrinp 0 0 0 0 Marqusp 3 0 0 0 G attisph 1 1 1 3 Laynep 0 0 0 0 D enorfilf 0 0 0 0 T otals 3 4 6 9 6 Totals 3 07 8 6 Atlanta 0 00 010 014 — 6 San Diego 110 3 0 0 2 0x - 7 DP — Atlanta1, SanDiego 2. LOB—Atlanta6,San
Diego 0.2B—J.Upton (9), B.Upton (5), Venable(5). 38 —Amarista (1). HR—Heyward 2 (5), Gattis (14), Venable(8), Forsythe(1). Atlanta TeheranL,4-3
Gearrin San Diego
IP H R E R BB SO 6 6 5 5 0 3 2 2 2 2 1 1
MarquisW,8-2 7 2 - 3 5 2 2 5 1-3 0 0 0 0 Layne Stauffer 1-3 3 3 3 0 ThayerS,1-3 2-3 1 1 1 0 WP — Marquis. T—2:31. A—21,192(42,524).
4 I 0 1
Reds 6, Cubs2
Col.Rasmus(10), A.Dunn2(16). CS—AI.Ramirez(2). SFMimenez. Toronto IP H R E R BB SO CHICAGO — Brandon Phillips
3-2), 4 05p.m. Boston(Lester6-2)at TampaBay(Ro.Hernandez3-6),
Cleveland (Kluber 3-4)at Texas(D.Holland 5-2), 5:05 p.m. Detroit (Scherzer 8-0) at KansasCity (W.Davis 3-5), 5:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Hamels 2-9)at Minnesota(Walters2-1), 5:10 p.m. Toronto(Wang0-0) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Quintana 3-2), 5:10p.m. NY Yankees(Sabathia 6-4) at Oakland (Colon 7-2), 7:05 p.m. Houston(B.Norris 5-5)at Seatle (Harang2-6), 7:10 p.m. Wednesday'sGames
Smmnsss 5 0 0 0 Evcarrss 4 0 0 0 Heywrdrf 5 2 2 2 Amarstcf 4 1 1 0
Seattle
ab r hbi ab r hbi B Barnscf 4 0 0 0 Bayrf-If 4 1 I 0 Altuve2b 3 0 2 1 Seager3b 5 1 0 0 Jcastroc 4 0 1 0 KMorls1b 4 0 1 0 JMrtnzlf 4 1 1 0 Morsedh 4 0 1 1 C.Penadh 4 0 1 0 Frnklnpr-dh 0 0 0 0 CarterIb 3 0 0 0 Ibanezlf 4 I I I Pareds rf 3 0 0 0 MSndrscf 0 0 0 0 Corprnph 1 0 1 1 Shppchc 3 0 1 0 Dmngz 3b 4 0 0 0 Enchvz cf-rf 4 0 2 0 M Gnzzss 3 1 1 0 Ryanss 4 0 1 0 T riunfl2b 3 0 I 0 T otals 3 3 2 7 2 Totals 3 53 9 2 Houston 0 01 000 001 — 2 Seattle 000 110 10x — 3
ScheppersH,12 1 0 0 0 0 NathanS,20-21 I 0 0 0 0 Kazmipi r tchedto2 baters inthe7th. HBP —byPestano(Profar). WP—Hagadone. T—2:52.A—33,003(48,114).
1 I
Drioles 4, Angels 3 BALTIMORE — Adam Jones homered and drove in three runs as Baltimore beat Los Angeles in
a game marred by rain. Theteams played with wet baseballs on a muddy field and endured adelay of more than two hours before the final out was recorded shortly before midnight.
E—Ma.Gonzalez (6), Dominguez (7), Altuve(4), Los Angeles Baltimore Ryan (7). DP —Seattle 1. LOB —Houston 6, Seattle ab r hbi ab r hbi 11. 2B —Altuve(13), C.Pena(12), Morse(6), Shop- T routlf 4 1 1 1 McLothlf 4 1 1 0 pach(7),Ryan(5). HR Ibanez(12) SF Altuve. H amltnrf 5 I 2 2 Machd3b 4 I I 0 Houston IP H R E R BB SO Puiolsdh 4 0 1 0 Markksrf 3 1 1 0 KeuchelL,3-3 6 7 2 1 0 6 Trumo1b 3 0 1 0 A.Jonescf 3 1 1 3 LeBlanc 1 1 1 0 2 1 HKndrc2b 4 0 0 0 CDavis1b 3 0 0 0 Veras 1 1 0 0 0 2 Caff asp3b 4 0 0 0 Wietersc 3 0 2 0 Seattle Aybarss 4 0 1 0 Hardyss 3 0 1 0 Iwakuma W,7-1 7 4 1 0 I 8 lannettc 2 I 0 0 Dickrsndh 3 0 0 0 CappsH,6 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Congerph-c 1 0 0 0 Flahrty2b 3 0 0 0 FurbushH,5 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Bourios cf 4 0 2 0 WilhelmsenS,16-19 1 2 1 1 0 1 T otals 3 5 3 8 3 Totals 2 94 7 3 HBP—byKeuchel (Triunfel). WP—Ke uchel, IwaL os Angeles 0 0 1 0 0 1 100 — 3 kuma. Baltimore 000 2 0 2 0 0x — 4 T—3:02. A—12,811(47,476). E—Hamilton (4). DP—Los Angeles 1, Baltimore 1. LOB —Los Angeles 8, Baltimore 3 HR—Trout (11) Hamilton(9), A.Jones(13) SB—McLouth (22). S F — A. J ones. Rangers 6, Indians 3 LosAngeles IP H R ER BB SO WeaverL,1-2 Richards
ARLINGTON, Texas — Lance Berkman hit a tiebreaking, two-
52 - 3 6 4 4 I 21 3 1 0 0 0
3 0
6 2 2 1 Tom.HunterH,6 I I 1 I 2 O'DayH,10 1 1 0 0 0 Ji.Johnson S,22-26 I 0 0 0 0 T—2:23(Rain delay:2:14). A—15,514(45,971).
3 I 0 0
Baltimore FGarciaW,3-3 6
run homer in the seventh inning and TexasbeatCleveland to hand the Indians their eighth straight
loss. Berkman's homerwas his first since May 24 and extended Cleveland's road losing streak to
Red Sox10, Rays 8(14 innings)
12, its longest since a16-game skid that carried over from 2009 into the secondawaygameof
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Daniel Nava hita tiebreaking single in
2010. Texas ab r hbi ab r hbi Bourn cf 4 0 0 0 Andrusss 5 1 2 0 Kipnis2b 4 1 1 0 DvMrplf 3 0 0 0 Swisher rf 3 1 1 0 Brkmndh 4 I 2 2 Brantly lf 4 0 1 0 Beltre3b 3 1 0 0 CSantn1b 4 0 1 3 N.cruzrf 4 0 1 1 MrRynl3b 4 0 0 0 Przynsc 4 2 2 0 Giambi dh 2 0 0 0 JeBakrlb 2 I I 2 Raburn pr-dh 1 0 0 0 McGns 1b 1 0 0 0 YGomsc 4 0 0 0 Gentrycf 4 0 1 1 Aviles ss 3 1 1 0 Profar2b 3 0 1 0 T otals 3 3 3 5 3 Totals 3 3 6 106 Cleveland 0 03 000 000 — 3 Texas 010 200 30x — 6 E Mar.Reynolsd(7), Andrus(6) DP—Cleveland 1. LOB Cleveland5, Texas7. 2B C.Santana(17), Cleveland
the14th inning and Boston beat Tampa Bayafter squandering two late leads in atesty game that included a bench-clearing scrum. Red Sox starter John Lackey hit Matt Joyce in the back with a
pitch in the sixth inning. Joyce, who homered earlier, shouted at the pitcher but was restrained by Boston catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia as players from both teams streamed out of the dugouts.
Boston TampaBay N.cruz(10),Profar (2). HR ab r hbi ab r hbi —Berkman (5), Je.Baker Effsury cf 6 1 2 0 Joycerf-If 5 1 1 1 (9) IP H R E R BBSO Victorn rf 6 2 2 0 Zobrist2b-rl 7 1 5 1 Cleveland KazmirL,3-4 Hagadone Allen Pestano Texas Lindblom R.RossW3,-1
6 2-3 1-3 I 6 I
8 4 4 2 1 1 1 0 I 1 I I 0 0 0 0 5 3 3 1 0 0 0 1
5 0 0 1 6 3
Pedroia 2b 5 D.Ortiz dh 4 lglesiaspr-dh 0 Nava If-1b 6 Carp1b 5 JGoms ph-lf 2 Sltlmch c 7
2 1 2 KJhnsnIf-1b 6 0 1 1 1 0 0 Longori3b 7 1 2 1 1 0 0 Loney 1b 5 1 2 1 2 2 2 SRdrgzpr-1b 0 0 0 0 1 2 2 Fuldph-If 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 RRortsph-2b 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 Scottdh 7 0 0 1
DickeyL,5-8 Loup Oliver Delabar
5 1 1 1
10 2 0 3
7 0 0 3
7 0 0 0
1 0 1 0
Chicago Axelrod 4 8 6 6 4 N.JonesW,2-4 1 2 - 3 2 0 0 0 ThorntonH,13 2 - 3 0 0 0 0 LindstromH,9 1 - 3 1 0 0 2 11-3 2 0 0 0 Crain H,17 A.Reed 1 0 0 0 0 Axelrodpitchedto2baters inthe5th.
0 I 0 2 1
2 2 0 0 1
Mdlrks3b 7 0 1 1 DJnngscf 7 0 2 0 HBP —byDickey(Beckham,Konerko). D rewss 6 0 1 0 Loatonc 7 2 2 1 T—3:26.A—18,126 (40,615). YEscorss 5 2 2 0 Totals 5 4 101510 Totals 5 7 8 177 Boston 600 0 00 000 200 02 — 10 National League Tampa Bay 201 100 110 200 00 — 8 E—Loney (4). DP—Boston 2, TampaBay3. Diamondbacks 5, Dodgers 4 LOB Boston 10, TampaBay 13. 28 Victorino
(5), Nava(11), Saltalama cchia (17), Zobrist 2 (16), Y.Escobar(11). HR—Joyce (11), Longoria (11), LOS ANGELES — Willie Bloomquist drove in the goLoney(8), Lobaton(3). SB—Effsbury2 (26), Pedroia (9), De.Jennings (8). ahead run with a bases-loaded IP H R E R BB SO Boston two-run infield single in the 5 2-3 10 4 4 1 2 Lackey 1-3 0 0 0 0 I BreslowH,3 ninth inning against Los Angeles 2-3 1 1 1 -3 2 1 1 1 0 A.BaileyBS,2-8 1 2 2 Uehara 2 0 0 FMoralesW2-0 2 1 0
1 1 0 2 0 0
0 0 0 3 0 I
0 0 1 0 1 2
4 7 6 2 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 I 2-3 I 2 1 0 0 13 0 0
6 0 0 0 2 0 0
3 0 1 0 2 1 0
4 4 0 2 3 2 1
A.MifferH,5 Tazawa BS,3-3 1
Mortensen
TampaBay Cobb Al. Torres Jo Peralta McGee Rodney
J.Wright Farnsworth C.RamosL,1-2 3
5 2 2 1 I-IBP —byLackey(Joyce). WP—Tazawa, Cobb. T—5:24. A—15,477(34,078).
1
closer Brandon League, helping Arizona rally for a victory over the Dodgers. The D-backs closed to
3-2 on pinch-hitter Jason Kubel's
infield single to second base that scored Martin Prado, who singled with one out in the ninth. Gerardo
Parra doubled to deep center before Leaguewalked pinchhitter Didi Gregorius to load the
bases. Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi Poff ockcf 5 0 0 0 Puntoss 5 0 0 0 Blmqst2b 5 0 2 2 M.Elis2b 4 2 3 1 Arizona
Royals 3, Tigers 2 KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Jeremy Guthrie pitched impressively into the seventh inning, Salvador Perez hit a two-run triple and Kansas City got its sixth straight victory. Guthrie (7-3) limited the Tigers
to a two-run homer by Miguel Cabrera in 6/s innings in helping the Royals extend their longest
winning streak since they won
Gldsch1b 5 0 1 1 AdGnzl1b 5 0 1 0 C .Rosslf 5 1 3 0 Puigrf 4030 M Mntrc 4 0 1 1 HrstnJrlf 4 1 3 1 Prado3b 4 1 1 0 Leaguep 0 0 0 0 GParrarf 3 1 2 0 Moylanp 0 0 0 0 P nngtnss 3 0 0 0 Ethiercf 4 0 I 0 K ubelph 1 0 1 1 Uribe3b 4 1 2 2 JoWilsnpr 0 1 0 0 Fdrwczc 3 0 1 0 Bellp 0 0 0 0 VnSlykpr 0 0 0 0 Mileyp 2 0 0 0 Kershwp 2 0 0 0 Nievesph 0 0 0 0 Selersph 1 0 0 0 Brewerp 0 0 0 0 Jansenp 0 0 0 0 Sippp 0 0 0 0 Schmkrlf 0 0 0 0
hit a grand slam and matched
his career high with six RBls, and Cincinnati extended its dominance over Chicago with a win at foggy Wrigley Field. Phillips had an RBI single in the first inning, homered off Scott Feldman (5-5) in the third and
added a run-scoring groundout in the sixth for his fourth game with six RBls. Cincinnati Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi Choocf 3 0 0 0 DeJesscf 4 0 0 0 Cozartss 4 3 2 0 Valuen3b 3 1 1 0 V otto1b 3 1 1 0 Rizzo1b 3 0 0 0 P hiffips2b 4 1 2 6 ASorinlf 4 1 1 0 B ruce rf 4 0 0 0 Schrhltrf 4 0 2 0 P aullf 4 0 2 0 DNavrrc 3 0 0 0 Simonp 0 0 0 0 Scastross 4 0 1 1 Hannhn3b 4 0 1 0 Bamey2b 4 0 0 0 Hanignc 4 0 0 0Feldmnp 2 0 I 0 H Bailyp 3 1 1 0 Putnmp 0 0 0 0 Lutzph-If 1 0 0 0 Borbon ph 1 0 0 0 B Parkrp 0 0 0 0 Sweenyph 1 0 0 0 T otals 3 4 6 9 6 Totals 3 32 6 1 C incinnati 104 00 0 0 1 0 — 6 Chicago 0 00 001 001 — 2 E—Philips (4). DP—Chicago 2. LOB —Cincinnati 3,Chicago7.2B—Valbuena(8), Schierholtz(17),
SCastro(14) HR —Phillips (10) CS—Paul (I) Cincinnati IP H R E R BB SO HBaileyW44 Simon
8 I
4 2
1 0 2 I I I
8 0
FeldmanL,5-5 6 Putnam B.Parker
1 2
7 5 5 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 1
2 0 0
Chicago
HBP —byFeldman (Choo). WP—H.Bailey,B.Parker. T—3:02. A—28,052(41,019).
Brewers 6, Marlins1 MIAMI — YovaniGallardo threw eight scoreless innings, Jonathan Lucroy had four hits and Milwaukee beat Miami for its fourth consecutive victory. Carlos Gomez had three hits and two RBls, while Lucroy also drove in a pair of runs. Rickie Weeks homered among his three hits for
Gregrsph-ss 0 1 0 0 Totals 3 7 5 115 Totals 3 6 4 144 Arizona 0 10 000 004 — 5 L os Angeles 1 0 0 1 1 0 001 — 4 the Brewers. E—Prado (5). DP—Ari zona4, LosAngeles 1. three. LOB —Arizona 8, LosAngeles 8. 2B—C.Ross (7), Milwaukee Miami G.Parra2(21),Uribe(6), Federowicz(2). HR —M.Ellis Detroit KansasCity ab r hbi ab r hbi (3), Uribe (3). S—Schumaker. ab r hbi ab r hbi A okirf 3 2 2 0 Pierrelf 4 1 2 0 IP H R E R BB SO Segurass 5 0 1 0 Polanc3b 2 0 0 0 D irkslf 4 0 1 0 AGordnlf 4 0 0 0 Arizona Miley 6 9 3 3 2 4 TrHntrrf 4 1 2 0 Hosmer1b 4 1 1 0 CGomzcf 5 2 3 2 Lucasph-3b 2 0 0 1 I 2-3 3 0 0 0 I Brewer Micarr3b 4 1 1 2 S.Perezc 4 1 1 2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 ArRmr3b 4 0 0 0 Stantonrf 4 0 1 0 Sipp W,3-1 Fielder1b 4 0 0 0 BButlerdh 4 0 1 0 Bianc hiph-3b1 0 0 0 Ozunacf 3 0 0 0 1 2 1 1 0 1 V Mrtnzdh 4 0 0 0 Lcaincf 3 0 2 1 Bell S,12-14 Lucroyc 5 1 4 2 Morrsn1b 2 0 0 0 Los Angeles J hPerltss 2 0 I 0 Mostks3b 3 0 I 0 LSchfrlf 4 0 2 0 Dietrch2b 3 0 0 0 Kershaw 7 6 1 1 2 5 Weeks2b 5 1 3 1 Hchvrrss 3 0 0 0 A vilac 3 0 0 0 Loughrf 3 0 1 0 JansenH,16 1 0 0 0 0 1 J Frncslb 3 0 0 1 Brantlyc 2 0 0 0 I nfante2b 4 0 1 0 Getz2b 20 10 LeagueL,2-3 BS4-17 2-3 4 4 4 1 1 AGarci cf 4 0 1 0 AEscor ss 3 1 1 0 ardp 4 0 1 0 Webbp 0 0 0 0 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Gaff Moylan T otals 3 3 2 7 2 Totals 3 03 9 3 D .Handp 0 0 0 0 Olmosp 0 0 0 0 W P—Kershaw . Detroit 0 02 000 000 — 2 Dobbs ph 1 0 0 0 T 3:05 A 38,275(56,000). Kansas City 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0x — 3 DJnngs p 0 0 0 0 DP — Detroit 2, Kansas City 1. LOB—Detroit 8, N olasco p I 0 I 0 KansasCity4. 2B—TorHunter (17). 3B—SPerez(2). Padres 7, Braves 6 O livoc 2 0 1 0 HR Mi.cabrera(18).CS Getz(1). S Getz. Totals 3 9 6 166 Totals 2 9 1 5 1 IP H R E R BB SO Detroit M ilwaukee 211 0 0 0 2 0 0 — 6 SAN DIEGO — Logan Forsythe Fister L,5-4 8 9 3 3 0 3 Miami 0 00 000 001 — 1 Kansas City homered in his first at-bat of E—Brantly (4). DP—Milwaukee 3, Miami 3. GuthrieW,7-3 61 - 3 62 2 3 0 LOB — Mil w au ke e10, Mi ami2.2B—Aoki (10), Lucroy CrowH,10 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 the season, Will Venable added (6). 3B C.Gomez (6), Pierre(1). HR Weeks(5). Collins H,7 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 a three-run homer and Jason SB — C.Gomez(13), Pierre (17). SF—J.Francisco. K.HerreraH,6 13- 1 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee I P H R E R BB SO Marquis won his seventh straight G.Hoff andS,13-15 I 0 0 0 0 2 GaffardoW,5-6 8 4 0 0 1 4 HBP —byGuthrie (Dirks). decision to lead San Diego to a D.Hand 1 1 1 I 0 2 T—2:19. A—17,653(37,903). victory over Atlanta. Both homers Miami
seven straight in September 2011. He gaveup six hits and walked
White Sox10, Blue Jays6
came off rookie Julio Teheran
CHICAGO — Adam Dunn went
Atlanta
4 for 4 with two homers andfive
NolascoL,3-7 Webb Dlmos
(4-3). ab r hbi
San Diego ab r hbi
5 1 - 3 10 44 12-3 4 2 2 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0
Da.Jennings HBP —byNolasco (Aoki). T—2:49. A—13,259(37,442).
2 0 0 0
5 1 0 1
NBA FINALS
Satisie uts a en,S urs rin NBAFinas ome By Brian Mahoney The Associated Press
SAN ANTONIO — Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili sat in mostly stunned silence, all that
playoff experience not preparing them for how they felt after two games. They were satisfied, yet shaken. The San Antonio Spurs had taken home-court advantage away from the Miami Heat, but then the reigning champions took them apart. So as they prepared to bring the NBA Finals back home for the first time in seven years, the veterans struggled with how they were supposed to sum up their situation. Getting one in South Florida was an accomplishment, but nothing that provided them any momentum after the Heat's 103-84 victory Sunday in Game 2. "Not after tonight. I think they regained that," Duncan said. "Obviously we were glad to win a game here in Game l. Our goal was to get two. But they got the one tonight. We get to go back home. We got a game here. We have three at home, so we're excited
about that. But if we play like we did tonight, that's not going to matter." The teams took Monday off, with the series resuming tonight. The S purs will also host Game 4 o n Thursday and Game 5 on Sunday. The finals were once as much a part of June as the heat in this city deep in the heart of Texas. San Antonio won four titles in a nine-year span starting in 1999, but hasn't hosted a game in the NBA's championship round since the Spurs took a 2-0 lead over LeBron James and Cleveland in 2007. Here comes James again, needing to win one here — which hasn't been easy for Miami — and not concerned that the finals' 2-3-2 format now gives the advantage to the Spurs. "It doesn't matter," he said. "Two best teams in the NBA at this point. Both teams have won and can win on each other's floor. So it's not a
biggie." The Heat are just 3-22 in San Antonio, though they did win this year even while James, Dwyane Wade and Mario Chalmers sat out the lateseason meeting.
NBAFinals,Game3 Miami Heat at San Antonio Spurs
• When:Today, 6 p.m.• TV:ABC James had no cause for concern after Game 2, which validated his belief that he can depend on his teammates until he gets rolling, as he did late in the third quarter and well into the fourth. But a little doubt seemed to creep into the Spurs' Big Three, unusual for a group that has been there, done that. Duncan, Parker and Ginobiii have teamed for 99 postseason victories together, second-most in NBA history, a trio that is well aware of how quickly things can change in the
playoffs. They changed really quickly in this series, about the time it took James to turn Tiago Splitter's dunk attempt into a forever finals highlight with a blocked shot. "Of course if you look at the result, being 1-1, it's not bad. But you don't want to play like this in an NBA Finals," Ginobili said. "You don't want
to give them that much confidence, and you feeling bad about yourself." Duncan was a dmittedly awful in Game 2, shooting 3 of 13 for nine points. Parker offset his five baskets in 14 attempts with five turnovers, and Ginobili had three of the Spurs' 17 turnovers that led to 19 points. The Spurs, like every other team in the NBA, know that there's no way to beat the Heat with that kind of ball handling. "We have to play better. Definitely have to play better," Parker said. "You
know, we're playing the defending champs. They'rea great team. We knew they were going to come in and
play with a lot more energy and play harder. That's what they did tonight. "So it's always easy to bounce back after a loss, and now it's our turn to see how we're going to handle our loss and how we're going to
respond." Big Three against Big Three provided plenty of buildup to the series, and Ginobili said the Spurs stand little chance of winning if their trio
plays poorly. But James, having seen the Heat
not have enough when they were largely just he, Wade and Chris Bosh two years ago, insists his current team is deep enough to do big damage even when it doesn't come from the big names. "I think the supporting cast is really why both teams are here," James said. "They've been making an impact aii year iong, and they feei like their supporting cast is better. We feel like our supporting cast is better. It's who goes out and do it each and every night to help seal wins." The Spurs are shooting just 41percent and averaging 88 points in the series, perhaps lucky to not be down 2-0. Duncan, the three-time NBA Finais MVP who always seemed to be more reliable the later in the season it was, has made only 11-of-32 shots. "Obviously, t h e y'r e c o n tested shots, but they're the shots I feel I can make. So whether it be them or me or whatever it may be, I'm going to get back in the gym tomorrow and hopefully come out with a better stroke," he said. "But I'm getting the shots I want. I just have to knock them down."
C4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013
GOLF
Queen
Bend Ladiesto tee it up at invite Bulletin staff report Some of Central Oregon's top amateur women golfers will try to continue their hot streak this week at the 48th Bend Ladies Invitational. The t w o -day, 3 6 - hole stroke-play tournament begins today at Bend Golf and Country Club and includes a field of about 100 golfers in net and gross divisions. The tournament attracts a number of the best amateurs from around the state each year, but locals have won it each of the past five years.
Anderson and M orrison — who are both members at Bend Golf and Country Club — are scheduled to play again this year. Former Bend Ladies Invitational runnerup Rosie Cook, a member at Awbrey Glen in Bend, will also return this year. In addition to two rounds of stroke play, the tournament this year has added a first-round team component with a four-player best balL The Ladies I n vitational is hosted by Bend GSCC's Ladies Golf Association. ToBend's Tiffany Schoning day's first round begins with cruised to a s e ven-stroke a 9:30 a.m. shotgun start. win l as t y e ar , f o l lowing Wednesday's final round tees Bend golfers Amy Anderson off at 8:30 a.m. and is expect(2011), Kailin Downs (2010), ed to conclude at about 1 p.m. Schoning (2009) and Nettie The public is welcome to Morrison (2008). attend, and admission is free.
Open
all see each other that much, but we all get along well and Continued from C1 root for each other." More than 30 Central OreChris van der Velde, the gon golfers are in the field this managing partner at Tethyear, and most have hopes of erow Golf Club in Bend, has ending the streak. seen the same thing. "There is a lot of good talent But van der Velde adds that here, but for whatever reason playing at home is no great it just hasn't happened," says advantage, unless the tournaB randon Kearney, an a s - ment is being staged at a pro's sistant pro at Bend Golf and own home course. "For me, playing at TethCountry Club who tied for sixth place last year and may erow is an advantage, but I represent Central Oregon's don't play Juniper or Broken best chance to win this week Top but once or twice a year, at Juniper. if that much," van der Velde "I don't think there is any says. rhyme or reason to it, " he Kearney says that playing adds. "It just happens to be at home has at least one other that week of the year, some- disadvantage: Many of the body always seems to play local pros often have to work better." on the days they compete. The stakes are high. The Regardless, Kearney exprofessionals are vying for pects to compete and comshares of the tournament's pete well. But if he does not, $70,000 purse. The lowest will he root for another Cenprofessional will earn $7,000. tral Oregonian to win? It's not like Central Orego"Yeah, definitely," Kearney nians have not played well at says. "We like seeing (Central times inthis tournament. Last Oregon pros do welL) It's alyear, three Central Orego- ways the one major event that nians started the final round we havein Central Oregon." in the top D before WashingThe Oregon Open's 54-hole ton pro Brian Thornton pulled individual competition beaway with a final-round 65 gins today at 7:30 a.m., with to win at Bend's Broken Top tee times until 2:30 p.m.; the Club. schedule Wednesday will be Zach Lampert, the head the same. A 36-hole, best two pro at Meadow Lakes Golf of four-net team competition, Club in Prineville, contended a pro-pro four-ball and a prolast year for the first two am four-ball will also be part rounds of the 54-hole tourna- of the tournament. The secment before fading into a tie ond round will be followed for 30th place. by a cut and re-pairing of Playing in his first Oregon the low 70scores and ties for Open, Lampert noticed some- Thursday's final round. thing though — open support Spectators are welcome and admissionis free. from hisfellow area pros. "We're all pretty close," — Reporter: 541-617-7868, Lampert says. "We might not zhalllbendbulletin.com.
Blitz Continued from C1 Winners take home $3,000 each. The Whiskey Off R oad in Prescott, Ariz., features a $40,000 purse, of which $6,500 goes to each of the winners. "I want to move Blitz to the Barrel to be $40,000 next year," Eastland says. "I feel so bad for these guys, all this dedication and commitment, and a race is so hard, and they come backand they win about 839." Eastland is able to offer that kind of payout not from race entry fees, but from local
sponsors who love cycling. "I have to depend on ev-
eryone (cycling enthusiasts) in our community, who have been great," Eastland says. "The first year is hard. The second year wasn't that hard,
because people (sponsors) see it'sgood for the community and for their name. They appreciate doing it, and I think everyone knows what
they're growing here."
B end's Adam C r aig, a 2008 Olympian, has won the last two Blitzes. Other local contenders include Carl Decker and Ryan Trebon. Also expected to give Craig a challenge are Canadian Geoff Kabush, who finished eighth in the London Olympics, and Australian Josh Carlson, Craig's teammate on the Giant Factory OffRoad team. Women's favorites include Kelli Emmett, of Colorado
Blitz totheBarrel What:An invitation-only, mostly downhill 18-mile mountain bike race;
men's and women's races each include about 20 competitors. When:Tonight; women's race begins at 5:30,
followed by the men's race at 6:30; women's racers should arrive at Tetherow Golf Club by about 6:15 and finish at about 6:30; men should
arrive at Tetherow at about 7 o'clock and finish at about 7:15. Where:Starts at Wanoga
Sno-parkand finishes at10 Barrel Brewing Company in west Bend;
course includes jumps at Tetherow Golf Club; Blitz Arm Wrestling Championship starts at 8:30 p.m. at10 Barrel. Contact:Blitz to the
Continued from C1 She began riding horses at age 3, and her road to becoming a rodeo queen started not long thereafter. "When I was 5," Richey recalled in a recent interview, "I went to the Umpqua
L~~.
Valley Roundup (in Roseburg) and saw the queen with the beautiful chaps, and I knew I wanted to be that." Since then, Richey has devoted hours upon hours almost every week in a practice arena rehearsing pageant patterns. She isalso a former member of Desperado Drill team of Eugene, where she honed her drilling. During the pageant to select the 2013 SistersRodeo queen, Richey turned her distant memory of that Umpqua rodeo into a winning speech. But a memorized speech delivered to a panel of judges is just one component in the process of becoming the rodeo queen. According to Richey,selection procedures vary from rodeo to rodeo, but the Sisters Rodeo judges its queen candidates on their applications, interviews, speeches, appearance and — above all — horsemanship. "They (queen contestants) need to be able to assess quickly, think on their feet, and have a very good skill foundation to be able to adjust on the fly and get the desired results," noted Barb Carr, president of the Miss Rodeo Oregon Pageant, in reference to horsemanship skills. In the overall scores awarded to the contestants, riding skills carry the most weight among all the criteria — averaging 20 percentat each pageant — according to Richey. "Horsemanship is obviously the most important," Richey explained. "You're the face ofthe rodeo, so whatever you do, you reflect the rodeo and the community." According to Carr, the horsemanship stage of the competition is judged meticulously. Although every pageant presents different riding patterns — riding showmanship routines — that contestants must execute, all patterns reveal a contestant's skill level. "A rodeo queen must be an accomplished horsewoman," Carr explained. "A lot is going on in a rodeo arena, and anything can happen at any time. To be able to handle whatever may come at them requires a level head, being aware of their surroundings at all times, and knowing how to stay out of the way." Richey's riding skills and equine knowledge are top-notch. She was runner-up at the Eugene Pro Rodeo Pageant in 2011, and before that, in 2007, she was crowned
Beavers Continued from C1 "We didn't let ourselves let our guard down," OSU outfielder Michael Conforto said. "To beat a team like that, that fights to the very end — look at Saturday, down to their last strikeand they come back and beat us." Despite the Wildcats putting the tying ru n o n f i r st base with a single in their half of the ninth inning, Oregon State's Matt Boyd, two days after throwing 123 p itches in the series opener and in reliefof starter Ben Wetzler, induced a fly ball and a pop fly in foul territory to clamp down on K-State's last-ditch effort and send the Beavers to Omaha. Danny Hayes homered and drove in two runs to lead the Beavers (50-11), Kavin Keyes
logged a double and an RBI, and Wetzler put in a courageous outing — 7 /~ innings pitched, five strikeouts, three earned runs, all while staring down rally threats by Kansas State from the sixth inning on. "They pitched great," Kansas State coach Brad Hill said. "Their starting pitching just really held us down." For the W i ldcats (45-19), Blair DeBord led the way with a 2-for-4 performance and two RBIs, while Jared King knocked in a r u n an d R .J. Santigate went 3-for-4. Kansas State had multiple o pportunities t o s h i f t t h e tide — the Wildcats stranded nine base runners — but Oregon State'sdefense came up strong, making one crucial play after another. From in-
ning-ending double plays to left fielder Conforto gunning
Barrel on Facebook.com.
Joe Kline i The Bulletin
queen of the Yoncalla Rodeo in Douglas County. She has also ridden in numerous barrel racing and drill competitions. But, according to Richey, getting crowned queen ofthe Sisters Rodeo isthe accomplishment of which she is most proud. "I've queened in the past," Richey said, "but the Sisters Rodeo is obviously a huge one. So I'm pretty excited. I just enjoy riding and competing, so I set goals for my horse and I (to aim for)." Richey is unsure of her future in rodeo. While the maximum age for Miss Rodeo Oregon and Miss Rodeo America is 26, many rodeos' age cutoff stands at 24, according to Carr. "I decided to compete because I'm 23 going on 24 and I'm going to be too old to qualify for a lot of rodeos," Richey said. "So this is one of my last ones." Although her original plan was to make the Sisters Rodeo her final pageant, some arm-twisting — by her peers, and by past Sistersqueens urging her to compete for even higher-profile titles — has led her to reconsider. "There'sa lotofpressure on me because the last few Sisters queens have been Miss Northwest (Pro Rodeo)," Richey said. "So they want me to compete there." The 2013 Miss Northwest Pro Rodeo pageant will be held in conjunction with the Northwest Professional Rodeo Association (NPRA) Finals, set for Sept. 20-21 in Prineville. NPRA sanctions all rodeos in Oregon and Washington, along with several in Idaho, California and Nevada.
ter field for a two-run homer — the Beavers' fourth home run in the three-game series — that gave Oregon State a 2-0 advantage in the top of the
second inning. In the fourth, Keyes ripped a full-count offering off the right-field wall for a double, scoring Ryan Barnes, and a Kansas State error in the fifth allowed Jake Rodriguez to come across, upping the Beavers' lead to 4-0.
— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmoricalCibendbulletin.com.
— Reporter: 541-383-0307; glucaslbendbulletin.com. i/
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run double down the left-field line with two outs to bring the Wildcats within a run at 4-3. R.J. Santigate, the ensuing batter, poked a single to left field. Conforto dove for the ball but did not catch it cleanly. Conforto immediately hopped to his feet and threw out DeBord trying to score the game-tying run, ending the inning. " Great composure," H i l l said of Conforto's play. "Great composure. Threw a s t r ike right to home plate." F or the f i f t h t i m e e v er and the fourth t ime u nder Casey, Oregon State heads to Omaha. The Beavers will be searching for a third national championship, and it all starts with a matchup against Mississippi State at noon PST on Saturday. "They're taking me," Casey said. "I've been there before, so maybe that helps the players that haven't been there. But they're taking me."
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— Reporter: 541-383-0375, eoller@bendbulletin.com.
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Miss Northwest travels tothe NPRA-sanctioned rodeos, promoting the organization at every stop, according to Jean McPherson, marking director for Miss Northwest. As a rodeo queen, Richey serves as an ambassador for the sport and sometimes finds herself in the line of fire from the likes of animal-rights activists who object to rodeo's treatment of animals. Questions about the animal-rights issue were among those asked to Richey and other contestants during the interview portion of the Sisters Rodeo pageant. While Richey has yet to encounter prominent animal rights organizations like PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals), she has met individuals questioning rodeo practices. She recalled that during her reign as queen of the YoncallaRodeo, a man approached her with questions regarding what he believed was severe treatment of the rodeo bulls. "This guy had never been to a rodeo before," Richey said. "So I told him that those bulls are athletes, and if they are injured, they get the best treatment." Rodeo queens doface their challenges, that much is certain. But according to Richey, the title is a genuine honor and one that she relishes every time she rides out into the arena in front of thousands of exuberant rodeo fans. "It's an adrenaline rush," she admitted. "And I know there are a lot of young girls watching who look up to me."
Kansas State opened the bottom of the sixth with backt o-back singles with No . 3 hitter Shane Conlon coming CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. up. Wetzler induced a ground — Adam Frazier had two ball to second baseman Andy hits and two RBls and Peterson, who tagged out the Wes Rea hit a two-run base runner heading to sechome run andMississippi ond and threw on to first base State clinched aspot in to complete the double play. the College World Series Jared King brought the lead by winning the completion runner in with a single soon of asuspended game after, but the Wildcats' poten6-5 against Virginia on tial threat was averted as the Monday. Beavers escaped the inning with a three-run lead intact. The Bulldogs (48-18) K-State began the seventh in needed six outs to similar fashion, with consecucomplete thesweep,and tive singles putting runners on used reliever Jonathan first and second with nobody Holder to get them to out. Wetzler, however, trusted secure their ninth trip to the his defense. A slow chopper College World Series, and back to the mound allowed first since 2007. Wetzler to get the lead runner — The Associated Press at third base. The next Wildcat batter grounded to shortstop Smith, who fired to third base down th e p o tential g ame- to record the out. Then, with tying run at the plate in the the capacity crowd at Goss eighth inning, th e B eavers roaring, Wetzler induced a came through. third straight ground ball, this "I trust them every day," one to Smith, who threw on Wetzler said of his teammates. to first base to once again cut "They make plays every day. short a Wildcat rally. When in the eighth inning ... We preach pitching and defense and timely h itting. it appeared K-State would That's Oregon State's MO." fall short of yet another scoring opportunity, Blair DeBord Hayes drove a two-strike pitch over the 2007 national stepped up and laced a two-
•
Springs, Colo., New Zealand Olympian Rosara Joseph, Portland's Alice Pennington, and Bend's Serena Bishop Gordon. Tetherow is the best place for spectators,as lead cyclists will launch off a feature near the clubhouse called the "Blitz Banzai Death Drop." Says Eastland: "I have always looked at things like, if I want to do them, I want to do them big."
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Sisters Rodeo Queen Whitney Richey waves to the crowd while taking a lap around the arena to start the show on Sunday in Sisters.
MississippiState sweepsVirginia
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013 NASDAQ ~
+
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4 55
3,473.77
Toda+
1,68o
Tuesday,June 11, 2013
10 YR T NOTE 2.21%
1,642.81
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$138620 ~
S&P 500
Wall Street expects improved first-quarter earnings and revenue from Ulta Salon Cosmetics & Fragrance. The beauty products retailer, due to report financial results today, has
been adding stores and revamping its online business. That helped boost sales at stores open at least a year, a key metric for retailers. Investors will be watching how the rollout of new Clinique boutiques and other costs are affecting Ulta's balance sheet.
(ULTA'
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ALK 32.69 ~ The Commerce Department AVA 22 78 ~ reports today its latest tally of BAC 6. 9 0 ~ wholesalers' inventories. BBSI 19 30 — 0 Wholesalebusinesses stepped up BA 6903 ~ their restocking of supplies in March, CascadeBancorp CACB 4.23 ~ but their sales fell sharply. Inventory Columbia Bnkg CDLB 16.18 — 0 Columbia Sporlswear COLM 47.72 ~ rebuilding can be a positive for CostcoWholesale COST 87.25 ~ economic growth because it means Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5 62 ~ stronger production at the nation's 6y FLIR 17.99 factories. But increased restocking at FLIR Systems — 0 Hewlett Packard HPQ 11,35 a time of falling sales can signal Home Federal Bncp IDHOME 9.08 ~ 1 trouble for the economy. Intel Corp I NTC 19.23 ~ Keycorp K EY 7 . 00 — 0 Wholesale inventories Kroger Co KR 209 8 — 0 Seasonally adjuste month-to-month Lattice Semi LSCC 317 ~ percent change LA Pacific L PX 9 . 2 1 ~ I '13 MDU Resources M DU 19 . 59 ~ l 1.1 MentorGraphics M EN T 13,21 — o Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 — 0 O7 NKE 4 2 55 ~ 0.4 Nike Inc 8 NordstromInc JWN 47.04 ~ Nwst NatGas N WN 41.01 ~ -O.2 4).4 OfficeMax Inc DMX 3 . 62 ~ PaccarInc PCAR 35,21 — o PLNR 1.12 0 N D ,' J F M Planar Systms Plum Creek PCL 36.76 Prec Castparts PCP 150.53 — 0 Source. Facteet Safeway Inc SWY 14.73 Schnitzer Steel SCHN 22.78 Sherwin Wms SHW 122.79 Stancorp Fncl SFG 28.74 — 0 StarbucksCp SBUX 43,04 — 0 Break in the clouds? Triquint Semi TQNT 430 — 0 Overcapacity has weighed on prices UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11,17 — 0 for solar energy products, hurting US Bancorp USB 29.62 — 0 companies such as LDK Solar. WashingtonFedl WAFD 1 5.22 ~ 1 Wells Fargo &Co WFC 30.34 — 0 The Chinese solar equipment Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 0.06 ~ company makes a variety of
products, including wafers, cells and modules. But the decline in solar equipmentprices has squeezed LDK's bottom line. The company reported a loss for its fiscal fourth quarter after taking write-downs to cover weak prices for many of its products. The company reports results today for its first fiscal quarter
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Investors responded positively to news that B&G Foods is acquiring Robert's American Gourmet Food, which owns the Pirate's Booty brand of all-natural snack foods, for $195 million in cash. B&G Foods stock stock rose 7 percent Monday to close at $31.17. The stock is up 11 percent this year. B&G Foods owns product brands such as Cream ofWheat, Mrs. Dash and
B&G Foods(BGS) Monday's close:$31.17 Total return YTD: 11%
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Dividend Footnotes: 2 Extra - dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock 6 - Liquidating dividend. 6 - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, whnh was mcreased bymost recent dindend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends pnd after stock split, no regular rate. I - Sum of d67idends pnd Cns year. Most recent dnuend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pnd th>syear, a cumulative issue with dividends m arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. 7 - Declared or paid in precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, appro76matecash value on ex-distribution date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is 6 closed-end fund - no PiE ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months
Source: Facteet
NAME KandiTech
8 92 27.16 25,47 4.0 0 27.75 11.00 35 44 5 71 22.55 27.14 19,89 35.78 66 07 6 1.81 50.80 13.17 55,05 2.36 54.62 219.42 28.42 33.03 194.56 46.53 65.09 729 14,25 35.93 8.25 41.59 33.24
1.16 +.06 .08 .76 25
•
1Q '12 1 Q '13
Facebook S&P500ETF iShEMkts Cisco SPDR Fncl iShJapn Pfizer SiriusXM Merck
68.00 56.25 29 26 26.96 13.99 13.30 6282 60.74 1 02 59 102.24 7.18 5.72 22.41 22.33 62.99 60.97 115.7 7 11 0.31
TWI
Close:$17.89 V-2.82 or -13.6% A Jefferies analyst downgraded the wheel and tire supplier's stock to a "Hold" from "Buy," citing worries about profitability. $30
+
+.0040
1.3261
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 22.66 -.01 $-11.6 +21.5 $-14.4 $7.1 A A A BondA m 12.66 -.01 -1.3 + 1.5 + 4.8 +4.0 D D E CaplncBuA m 56.06 -.03 +7.2 +16.9 +12.1 +3.6 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 40.91 +.03 +10.4 +28.0 +13.3 +2.6 8 C C EurPacGrA m 43.45 +.06 $5.4 +24.3 +9.5 $1.1 D C A FnlnvA m 46.87 $-15.3 +29.3 $-16.1 $4.5 8 C D GrthAmA m 39.26 +.01 $-14.3 +28.4 $-15.2 $-4.4 A C D IncAmerA m 19.53 -.02 +9.1 +19.1 +13.7 +6.4 8 A A InvCoAmA m 34.54 -.01 +15.0 +26.0 +15.0 +5.3 D D C NewPerspA m34.75 +.04 +11.2 +27.6 +14.4 +4.8 8 8 8 WAMutlnvA m36.29 +.02 +16.9 +26.9 +17.9 +6.3 D A 8 Dodge &Cox Income 13.74 -.02 -0.1 +4.1 +5.6 +6.8 8 8 8 IntlStk 3 7.55 -.05 +8.4 +32.6 +11.0 +1.2 A 8 A Stock 1 44.17 +.03 $.18.8 +37.3 $.17.4 $.5.3 A A C Fidelity Contra 87.33 -.02 + 13.6 +21.0 +16.0 +5.8 C 8 8 GrowCo 107. 99 +.09+ 15.8 +24.0 +18.9 +7.6 8 A A LowPriStk d 46 .08 +.19+ 16.7 +32.5 +17.9 +8.8 B 8 A Fidelity Spartan 500l d xAdvtg 58 .42 -.02+16.3 +26.7 +17.2 +6.2 C A 8 FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 35 ... +6 .7 + 17.6 +11.7 +5.6 A A 8 IncomeA m 2.3 3 + .01 + 7.1 +18.4 +12.4 +6.2 A A B FrankTemp-Tem leton GIBondAdv 13.13 -.08 0.0 +12.6 +7.4 +9.8 A A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19. 73 - .01+13.7 +23.7 +15.2 +4.9 E C C RisDivB m 17 . 84 - .02+ 13.2 +22.5 +14.2 +3.9 E D D RisDivC m 17 . 76 - .01+ 13.3 +22.7 +14.4 +4.1 E D D SmMidValA m38.70 +.05 +19.4 +33.3 +13.7 +2.4 8 E E SmMidValBm 32.56 +.05+19.0 +32.3+12.8 +1.5 C E E PIMCO TotRetA m 10 . 97 -.03 -1.4 + 3 .2 + 5.5 +7.3 B B A T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 30.66 + .02+16.4 +30.3 +16.1 +6.4 C C 8 GrowStk 42.6 8 + .01+ 13.0 +20.3 +16.8 +6.5 D 8 B HealthSci 50.1 9 - . 03+ 21.8 +36.5 +28.1+16.0 8 A A Newlncome 9. 6 1 - .01 -1.3 + 2 .2 + 4.7 +6.1 C D C Vanguard 152.04 -.04 +16.3 +26.7 +17.2 +6.2 C A 8 500Adml 500lnv 152.00 -.05 +16.2 +26.6 +17.1 +6.1 C 8 8 CapDp 41.29 +.01 +22.8 +41.2 +16.8 +6.8 A 8 A Eqlnc 28.05 +.02 +16.9 +27.5 +19.5 +8.2 D A A StratgcEq 25.57 +.06 +19.2 +34.6 +19.7 +6.6 8 A C Tgtet2025 1 4 70 . . . + 8 2 +18.2 +12.0 +4.9 C 8 8 TotBdAdml 10.81 -.02 -1.3 +0.6 +4.4 +5.5 E D D Totlntl 15.42 +.01 +3.2 +23.2 +8.9 -1.0 D D C TotStlAdm 41.30 +.01 +16.4 +27.4 +17.5 +6.7 C A A TotStldx 41.28 +.01 +16.3 +27.2 +17.3 +6.5 C A A USGro 24.05 +.01 +13.1 +22.8 +16.4 +5.8 C 8 8 Welltn 37.26 -.01 +10.8 +19.9 +13.3 +7.0 A A A FAMILY
PCT 5.18 4.52 4.28 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market cests 1$paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption 4.07 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 3.92 redemption fee. Source: Mornngstar.
B&G Foods BGS Close:$31.17%1.99 or 6.8% The food maker said that it is buying Robert's American Gourmet Food, which owns the Pirate's Booty brand, for $195 million. $32
25
30
20
28
M
M
A
J
M
52-week range $16.86~
M
A
J
52-week range $27.12
$24.69 ~
$33.14
VolJ5.8m (7.0x avg.) P E: 12 . 4 Vold720.8k(2.2xavg.) PE: 2 5 .4 Mkt. Cap:$957.53 m Yi eld: 0.1% Mkt. Cap:$1.65 b Yiel d : 3. 7 %
Booz Allen Hamilton
52-WK RANGE eCLOSE YTD 1YR VOL TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG %CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
NAME
Spotlight on wholesale
+ -.26 '
Stock indexes were little changed Monday, as modest drops for consumer stocks and energy producers offset gains for telecommunications stocks. The Dow Jones industrial average rose modestly at the start of trading after the Standard 8 Poor's credit-rating agency raised its outlook for the U.S. But indexes dipped soon after and then bounced between small gains and losses throughout the day. S&P kept its credit rating on U.S. government debt steady but said that the likelihood of another downgrade is slimmer than before. It cut the U.S. from the top 6AAA 9 rating in August 2011, a move that sent stock markets careening. Titan International
LOW
HIGH
NYSE NASD
$95.77
StoryStocks
Clos e : 15,238.59
" j' ' "'" ' F M' ' ..J. 12 800 . .D ,
DDW DDW Trans. DDW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000
Vol. (in mil.) 2,865 1,682 Pvs. Volume 3,316 1,606 Advanced 1360 1589 Declined 1 703 8 9 0 New Highs 1 17 155 New Lows 94 32
.
•
1 0 DA Y S
1 360 ' D ' '
$21.92
Dow jones industrials
Close: 1,642.81
Good-looking quarter?
+ +.18
+ 3. 2 0
BAH
Close:$17.54 V-0.46 or -2.6% An employee of the consulting firm stepped forward as the person who leaked information about secret government surveillance programs. $20
Green Dot GDOT Close: $19.34 %1.77 or 10.1% The prepaid card issuer said in a regulatory filing that it is acquiring GE Bank's prepaid cards that have Walmart branding. $20 18
15
16
,4 A M J M A M J 52-week range 52-week range $11.85~ $19.23 $9.65~ $24.97 Vold1.3m (3.7x avg.) P E: 12 . 1 VolJ 572.3k (1.2x avg.) PE: 1 8 . 8 Mkt. Cap:$2.39 b Y ield : 2 . 3% Mkt. Cap:$623.15 m Yield :... M
Imax
IMAX Close:$27.49L0.78 or 2.9% An A B. Riley analyst upgraded shares of the big-movie screen company to a "Buy," saying that it expects it to increase its locations. $30
First Bancorp
FBP
Close:$6.96%0.62 or 9.8% A Sterne Agee analyst upgraded the bank's shares to a "Buy" rating, saying that it has made strides to restore profitability. $7.0 6.5 6.0
28 26
M
M
A
J
M
52-week range
M
A
J
52-week range
$18.85~
$28.99
Vold925.5k(1.3xavg.) Mkt. Cap: $1.84 b
PE: .. Yield: ..
$3.26
$6.96
VolJ 519.3k (1.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.42 b
P E: . . . Yield:...
AEPI Federal-Mogul FDML Close:$65.85 V-16.57 or -20.1% Close:$10.27%0.67 or 7.0% The plastic packaging maker said The auto supplier plans to refinance that its net income dropped during $3.05 billion in debt, and forecast its fiscal second quarter, hurt by inbetter-than-expected revenue for the creased expenses. quarter and the year. $90 $15 80 10
AEP Industries
70
A M J M A M J 52-week range 52-week range $4.86 ~ $11.79 $35.22~ $85.86 Vold179.9k(7.0x avg.) PE: 1 2 . 4 VolJ 372.1k (1.4x avg.) P E: . . . Mkt. Cap:$364.55 m Yield :... Mkt. Cap:$1.02 b Yield:... M
AP
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
L
w
.08 .13
L
T
.17
2-year T-note . 31 .30 +0 . 01 L L 5-year T-note 1 .12 1 .10 + 0.02 L L 10-year T-note 2.21 2.18 + 0.03 L L 30-year T-bond 3.37 3.34 +0.03 L L
L L L L
.27 .71 1.64 2.75
3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
The yield on the 1D-year Treasury note rose to 2.21 percent Monday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.
BONDS
. 0 4 .04 . 07 .07 .12 .12
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO IlTRAGO
Barclays Long T-Bdldx 3.10 3.05 +0.05 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.41 4.35 +0.06 Barclays USAggregate 2.13 2.09 +0.04 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.04 6.20 -0.16 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 4.19 4.10 +0.09 YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.35 1.31 +0.04 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays USCorp 3 .02 2.96 +0.06 1 YR AGO3.25 .13
Commodities Prices for commodities were mixed. Gold, platinum and other metals rose. Crude oil, natural gas and the wholesale price of gasoline fell. Corn and other agricultural commodities fell.
Foreign Exchange The dollar was mixed against other major currencies. It rose back above the 98 Japanese yen level, where it has spent much of the last month. It fell against the euro and British pound.
h5N4 QG
L L L L L L L
L L L L L L
L
L L L L L L L
2.47 4.41 2.03 7.91 3.71 .95 3 36 .
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 95.77 96.03 - 0.27 + 4 . 3 Ethanol (gal) 2.48 2.51 +0.20 +13.4 Heating Dil (gal) 2.88 2.89 -0.32 -5.3 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.80 3.83 -0.73 + 13.4 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.85 2.87 - 0.81 + 1 . 3 FUELS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 1386.20 1383.00 21.92 21.74 1506.90 1502.60 3.24 3.27 767.65 759.45
%CH. %YTD +0.23 -17.2 +0.85 -27.4 +0.29 -2.1 -0.83 -11.0 + 1.08 + 9 . 3
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -8.2 1.19 1.20 -0.77 1.29 1.27 +1.42 -10.5 -6.9 Corn (bu) 6.50 6.66 -2.44 Cotton (Ib) 0.87 0.85 +2.11 +15.3 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 308.30 308.90 -0.19 -17.5 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.52 1.51 +0.26 +30.8 Soybeans (bu) 15.12 15.28 - 1.08 + 6 .6 Wheat(bu) 6.90 6.96 -0.93 -11.3 AGRICULTURE
Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5584 +.0027 +.17% 1 .5462 C anadian Dollar 1.0 1 92 —.0023 —.23% 1.0293 USD per Euro 1.3261 +.0040 +.30% 1 . 2507 Japanese Yen 98.70 + 1 .27 +1.29% 7 9 . 48 Mexican Peso 12.8 518 + .0818 +.64% 13.9564 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6352 +.0233 +.64% 3.8762 Norwegian Krone 5 . 7 557 —.0219 —.38% 6.0572 South African Rand 10.1550 +.1787 +1.76% 8.3915 Swedish Krona 6.57 6 5 + . 0094 +.14% 7.1335 Swiss Franc .9329 —.0023 —.25% .9603 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0557 +.0022 +.21% 1 .0097 Chinese Yuan 6.1358 -.0022 -.04% 6.3731 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7636 +.0007 +.01% 7 .7578 Indian Rupee 58.155 +1.089 +1.87% 55.375 Singapore Dollar 1.2576 +.0090 +.72% 1 .2840 South Korean Won 1128.44 $-5.19 $-.46% 1173.02 Taiwan Dollar 29.98 + .24 +.80% 29 . 92
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013
BRIEFING L.A. flights
to begin Thursday Officials from the city of Redmond and Ameri-
can Airlines areexpected to gather at 7:15 a.m. Thursday at Redmond Airport to celebrate
S&P oosts outlook or U.S.
EXECUTIVE FILE What: KiteLine What it does:Sells kiteboarding
equipment, apparel and accessories Pictured:Michael Giebelhaus, owner of KiteLine Where:Bend
n
+
,G
Employees:Oneand multiple
American's inaugural flight to Los Angeles
private contractors Phone:541-815-3209
International Airport. The airline has
Website:www.kite-line.com
scheduled daily nonstop service from Redmond to L.A. on 50-passenger
By PaulWiseman The Associated Press
CJR-200 jets. The flight to L.A. is scheduled to leave Redmond daily at 8:10 a.m. The return flight is scheduled to
arrive in Redmondat 8:55 p.m., according to a news releasefrom the airport.
RedmondAirport boardingsdecline Passengerboardings at Redmond Airport last
month declined nearly 3 percent over May2012 boardings, according to information released
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
. Whatis
ro e
• yourfavorite part of owning and operating KiteLine? • Watching it
. growfrom a tiny seed into a
win
thriving tree. It's been a lot of work, but it's been my
work. I haven't had a boss in more
Friday by the airport. Last month, 18,398
passengers flew out of Redmond Airport, a decrease of 546 enplanements from May 2012. For the first five
months of this year, boardings havealso declined nearly 3 percent over the sameperiod lastyear, according to airport figures. — From staff reports
DEEDS Deschutes County
• Henry Armendarizand Gretia R. Capri to Cheri D. Nager, Poplar Park, Lot 32, $390,000 • Scott Barnes and Molly Arntz-Barnes to Patrick and Angalik Miller, Terrango GlenSouth, Lot 10, $226,000 • Hayden Homes LLCto Brian Wood, AspenRim, Lot 63, $209,143 • Todd R. Mundinger to Gorilla Capital Company 5 LLC, TheGreensat Redmond, Phases1 and2, Lot 134, $195,000 • Michael D. and Suzanne Lehne to Kevin R.Coombe DMD and Karin KovenzCoombe, trustees for Kevin R. CoombeDMD 401(k) Plan, Pioneer Park Industrial Condominiums, Units 103 and 105, $190,000 • Hendrickson Homesof Oregon LLC toDavid V. and Karen E Luke, trustees for David and Karen Luke Trust, RiverRim P.U.D., Phase 9, Lot 285, $367,000 • Pacwest II LLC to Christopher T.andJanette G. Neville, Julina Park, Lot 1, $210,000 • Gregory C. Horsley to Joel A. Horsley, Copperstone, Phases 2 and 3,Lot18, $350,000 • Stephen R. andChristel U. Cook, trustees for Stephen R. and Christel U. Cook Revocable Living Trust, to Albert N. and Ardith B. Younglove, Fairway Point, Village1, Lot25, Block2, $675,000 • Steven M. and Linda K. Reynolds to Denny and Teresa Fuller, Oregon Water Wonderland, Unit 2, Lot 25, Block 27, $225,000 • Ray E. and AnneB. Stewart, as tenants by the entirety, and Ray E. Stewart III to Ray E. Stewart IV, Mountain Village East 5, Lot 4, Block 36, $180,000 • John D. and Angela M. Anderson to Mark and Bonnie J. Howitson, trustees for Howitson 2001 Revocable Trust, Skypark II, Lot 8, $765,000 • Stephen T. andAudrey C. Bascom to JoshuaE and Calista M. Songstad, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase 6, Lot 26, Block 4, $522,000 • Valeria A. Shea,trustee for Valeria A. Shea Trust, to Laverda L.Gallagher, Mountain View Park, Phase 2, Lot 61, $189,000 • Secretary of Housing and Urban Development of Washington D.C. to Julie A. Carnagey, Kings Forest, First Addition, Lot13, Block 3, $203,000
than 20 years and
By Rachael Rees ~The Bulletin
really can't fathom it. There are lots of trade-offs to
About 14 years ago, Michael Giebelhaus scraped together enough funds to place his first order of kiteboarding equipment to sell out of a Bend skateboard
owning your own business — no paid vacation, no paid health care, no set hours, lots
and ski shop. Today, he's one of the leading retailers in the sport, he said, selling kites, boards, harnesses, appareland accessoriesto more than 15,000 customers all over the world. "People thought I was crazy for starting a kiteboarding e-commerce business because they didn't know what it was," he said referring to kiteboarding — a sport combining aspects of surfing, wakeboarding, windsurfing and paragliding. Giebelhaus first experienced kiteboarding on land — riding a wheeled board, pulled by a kite, in Southeast Oregon's Alvord Desert in 1999. From there, he started making his own kiteboarding equipment with friends to see how he could take the sport in new directions. "We were earlypioneers ofthe sportbefore there were that many brands of products out there," he said. "We would find old surf boards, mount bindings on them and take them to Wickiup Reservoir. In the winter we'd go out on skis with a kite." Because there were limited options to purchase gear, he decided to start his business. "KiteLine started with a $10,000
cash advancefrom a creditcard.1 took the risk but knew there was big potential in the sport," he said. "I got started with it when the sport was just beginning in Europe and barely here at all in the U.S." Today, he averages about $L5 million in sales annually. While Giebelhaus doesn't currently have any other employees, he said he hires independent contractors to help with marketing, advertising, Web development and shipping. Giebelhaus works out of his Bend office. Much of his time is spent as an online salesman, plowing though up to 150 emails a day, Skyping and answering phone calls about his products. The remainder is spent boxing up and shipping orders to places ranging from New Jersey to New Zealand. But he also gets to have some fun. "The best part of the job is getting to try all sorts of new gear and selling something that I'm passionate about," he said. "My job takes me tosome greatplaces where I can still operate the business while on vacation, thanks to the Internet, while surrounded by the sport, my family and my customers."
of personal time and investment — but I do have
many freedoms that others don't
have.
business in the
next five years? . Icansee • our sales growing steadily as it has in the past14 years. Kit-
ing is only getting easier and more accessible, and people are discovering how easy it is to travel with
... Personally, I'm at a point in the
business where I might be looking at my exit strategy so that I can focus
on some socialentrepreneurship ideas, but I won't
stop kiteboarding and living the lifestyle.
— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rreesC<bendbulletin.com
impression. Apple is redesigning all its applications
• Loria Romania to Julie A. Moe, Parks at BrokenTop, Phase 2, Lot 74, $399,000 • James E and Linda H. Norton, trustees for Norton Family Trust, to Lynda L. Wahlberg, Broken Top, Phase3F, Lot390, $355,000 • John D. and Elaine C. Field to Douglas L. and Caroline A. Matz, Crossroads, Third Addition, Lots188 and 189, $338,500 • Desiree D. Kelly, trustee for Maxine E.Gauthier Revocable Trust, to George L. andBarbara S. Edwards, trustees of the Edwards Revocable Trust, Skyliner Summit at Broken Top, Phase100, Lot 262, $501,000
and icons to conform to the new look, driven by longtime hardware design guru Jony Ive. The operating system will show up on most iPhones, iPad and iPod Touches this fall, the company said. The overhaul represents Ive's attempt to freshen the look of both the iPhone and iPad in hopes of deepening users' attachment to the trend-setting devices. It comes at a time when rivals
• Tracy J. and SuzanneM. Thompson to Brandon P. and Amy S. Ferris, Yardley Estates, Phase 2, Lot 48, $262,500 • Julie Elgin to Jamesand Roberta Hardcastle, Ridge at Eagle Crest19, Lot 78, $3 I7,500 • Linwood J. and Jane H. Killam to Freddie M. and Evelyn C. Light, Wildflower, Lot 22, $226,000 • Lambert Neighbour to Paul G. and Linda S. Martel, trustees for Paul G. Martel and Linda S.Martel Joint Trust, Northcrest, Lot 30, $217,472 • John A. Buchanan to David A. andGail L. Carnahan, DeerPark3, Lot
9, Block 20, $275,000 • Mark B. and Lucinda R. Johnson to Troy C.and Robin M. Bailey, Awbrey Park, Phase 2,Lot 48, $525,000 • Thomas J. andCarole A. Loving, trustees for Loving Living Trust to Donald A. and Colleen E Reese, Township16, Range12, Section 32, $499,500 • Charles M. and Arleen E. Vines to William L. Thomas, trustee for W.M. Lanier Thomas Living Trust, Conifer Estates, Lot 18, $242,500 • Willard R. Grace III, Richard T. andDorothy A. Grace to Robert and Karyne Kieta, Elkhorn Estates, Phases9and10,
gridlock. The credit rating service raised its outlook to "Stable" from "Negative," which means it's less likely to downgrade U.S. debt in the near future. S8 P had downgraded the U.S. government's long-term credit rating in 2011 after a standoff in Congress over whether to raise America's borrowing limit. Stan Collender, a budget expert with the Qorvis Communications consultancy, downplayed the significance of the move. S&P's downgrade two years ago had no lasting effect on U.S. interest rates, the stock market or the value of the dollar. Long-term U.S. interest rates remain historically lowevidence that global investors remain confident in the government's creditworthiness.
• Where do . youseethe
Apple updatesmobile software The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — Apple is throwing out most of the real-world graphical cues from its iPhone and iPad software, like the casino-green "felt" of its Game Center app, in what it calls the biggest update since the iPhone's launch in 2007. The new operating system, called iOS 7, strives for a clean, simple, translucent
WASHINGTON — Standard & Poor's Ratings Services upgraded its outlook Monday for the U.S. government's long-term debt. S&P cited the government's strengthened finances, a recovering U.S. economy and some easing of Washington's political
such as Samsung Electronics and Google are trying to get people to defect by developing their own lines of elegant and often less expensive products. The stiffer competition has slowed Apple's growth in the increasingly important mobile device market, contributing to a 38 percent decline in the company's stock price since the shares peaked at $705.07 in September.
Lot 124, $220,000 • Paul A. and JoanC.Craig, trustees for Craig Family Revocable Trust, to George A. and Kim M. Durkee, Broken Top,Phase2H, Lots 220-222, $178,000 • Ruth M. Koenig to Glora B. Janeck, trustee for Janeck Family Trust, Tanglewood, Phase 4, Lot 14, $290,000 • Donald E. Nevin to Judith A. Kei th,Sun Meadow, Lot 4, $290,000 • Bri-Lin Construction lnc. to Dyxeen J.VanBruggen and Jacqueline H.Castle, Ladera Ridge P.U.D., Lot4, $449,900 • Signature Homebuilders LLCto Teashia Nelson, Millbrook Estates, Lot13,
Expansion lasting longer than average Bloomberg News WASHINGTON — The modest pace of the U.S. economic recoveryhas a silver lining, as the expansion shows signs of lasting almost twice
as long as average. Four years into the upswing, the economy isn't seeing many of the excesses that often presagethe startofcontractions. Inflation is slowing, not quickening. Household debt is shrinking, not expanding. The labor market is slack, not tight. Pent-up demand also bodes well for the longevity of the recovery, which has averaged annual growth of about 2 percent since its start in June 2009. Confronted by elevated unemployment and a depressed housing market, Americans put off forming families, buying homes and acquiring cars. Now their be-
havior is changing. "The current expansion can continue another four to five years," said Robert Gordon, a professoratN orthwestern University in Evanston, Ill., who's a member of the National Bureau of Economic Research committee that determines when recessions begin and end. The average length of upswings since the end of World War II is just shy of five years, at 58 months.
$232,500 • Lorraine A. Mattos to Brian D. andSharon R. Bertossa, Forest Park 2, Lot 4, Block10, $230,000 • Eric D. and DanaVilarreal to Bradford and Becky R. Thiessen, CascadeVillage P.U.D., Lot 2, $249,900 • Gary M. and Janice R. Coxto Brentand Lindsey O'Neill, River Canyon Estates, Lot 79, $312,500 •RodneyG.and Michelle R. Hatchell, trustees for RodneyG.and Michelle Renee Hatchell Family Living Trust, to Steven J. and Terri E Ahlberg, Partition Plat 2006-64, Parcel1, $710,000 • OC Henkle Building LLC to Dietz Sweetz LLC,
Lots 11 and 12, Block 4, $ l,351,135 • William B. and Terri L. Dolf to J. Richard and Mary A. Hillman, Orion Estates, Lot18, Block15, $357,000 • Thomas R. and Constance G.Baty to 02C2 Bend LLC,Woodside Ranch, Phase 2, Lot 27, Block 6, $490,000 • Paul G. Bennett to Gabriel J. and Dayna M.Lanning, HiddenGlen,Phase 2,Lot 15, $177,000 • Michael and Brittney Hornbackto Daniel C. Gonzalez andLinda N. P. Buergi, RanchVillage, Lot 3, Block 3, $254,000 • Fred R. andDianna L. Ferguson to Young
BRIEFING
AdvancedEnergy renews lease Advanced Energy Industries, which is
moving its solar inverter manufacturing operations to Fort Collins,
Colo., has renewedthe lease on its building in northeast Bend,
Compass Commercial Real Estate Services announced Monday. The 105,000-squarefoot building at 20720 Brinson Boulevard was leased in 2008 by PV
Powered, which Advanced Energy bought in 2010. Going forward,
it will serve as asite for research anddevelopment and a location for spare products and service, according to a news release from Compass Commercial. The length of time for the lease was not listed,
and a representative from the real estate firm could not be reached.
Advanced Energy announced in April that it would consolidate its
Bend manufacturing with similar operations in Colorado. At the same
time, the companyannouncedit had bought
an inverter maker based in Germany. — From staff reports
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Membership101Driving YourMembership: RSVP required; free;10 a.m.; BendChamberof Commerce, 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 200; 541382-3221 or shelley© bendchamber.org. WEDNESDAY • BusinessSuccess Program —Working Together:Reservations recommended. Call 541382-3221 or visit www. bendchamber.org; free; 7:30 a.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-382-3221 or shelley@ bendchamber.org. JUNE18 • Visit Bendboard meeting:Reservations requested; free; 8 a.m.; Bend Visitor Center, 750 N.W. Lava Road; 541-3828048 or Valerie@visitbend. com. • BusinessAfter Hours — Fisher Nicholson Realty:Free; 4:30-5:30 p.m.; Fisher Nicholson Realty,1515 S.W.Reindeer Ave., Suite B, Redmond; 541-526-5513. • CrookedRiverRanchTerrebonneChamberof CommerceNetworking Social:Free; 5:30 p.m.; Opportunity Foundation of Central Oregon, 835 state Highway126, Redmond; 541-923-2679. JUNE19 • Howto Start a Business: Registration required; $15; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. • Network of Entrepreneurial Women meeting:registration required; $22 members, $27 nonmembers; 5-8 p.m.; St. Charles Bend conference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-382-4321.
For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbulletin.comlbizoal
Wooten and AmyWtlson, Amber Springs, Lot 33, $165,000 • Gregory L. and Sharree Strausbaughto Harvey and Nancy Breuer, Broken Top, Phases1Aand18, Lot 103, $189,500 • Gerald R. Propst and Nicelle K. West to Donna D. Hall, Williamsburg Park, Lot 5, $295,000 • Sila LLC to Michael P. and Jessica L. Patron, Brightenwood Estates, Phase5, Lot3, Blockl, $196,000 • David B. and TamiG. Larson to John L.and Katherine W.Wells, Ponderosa Estates, First Addition, Lot19, Block 3, $305,000
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013
O» www.bendbulletin.com/athome
AT THE MARKET A weekly look at produce atlocalfarmers markets.
1ve OU1 BooksforDad
.,iP)>" What:Fresh garlic
Season:Summer; dry garlic available yearround.
About:This particular garlic is a purple Italian variety, with purple striations throughout the bulb. Check at local farm
"THE 4-HOURCHEF"
stands for a widerange of varieties. Eachwill
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt,
• By Timothy Ferriss, $35, www.hmhbooks.com • No. 1 New York Times
offer a different flavor. Farm-fresh garlic is not store, which has been
best-selling author (and lifelong non-cook) Tim Ferriss takes you from
cured for monthslong storage. Freshgarlic is more perishable andalso tends to bemorevibrant
Manhattan to Okinawa and from Silicon Valley to Calcutta, unearthing the secrets of the world's
like the dry, papery kind you get at the grocery
fastest learners and greatest chefs. Ferriss uses
(or the stuff to makeit himself)
and varying in flavor. This variety has a bold,
spicy flavor to match its purple appearance. If you want to givenew garlic varieties a try, start looking now for choices.
cooking to explain "meta-
learning," a step-by-step process that can beusedto master anything, whether
By Alison Highberger • For The Bulletin
According to "The New
searing steak or shooting 3-pointers in basketball. That is the real recipe of "The 4-Hour Chef."
If your father is a foodie, then Father's
Food Lover's Companion" by Sharon Tyler Herbstand Ron Herbst,
Day gift giving is a piece of cake. There's an
you may want to give
infinite number of food-related gift options for
Source: www.hmhbooks com
garlic a shot for its purported health qualities. "Throughout the centuries, its medicinal claims have included cures for
987I
dads who like to cook, grill, eat, brew or just
,If ge
quaff a pint now and again.
toothaches,consumption, open woundsand evil demons." Preparation:This is
We checked in with four local food dudes to get some fun and interesting "eat, drink and be merry" ideas for Father's Day presents. Our experts are: Jaime Aguirre,
e'
»48
FOOD c o -owner of Ginger's Kitchenware; David Tou-
the fun part. When raw,
garlic has avery strong flavor, and alittle goes a long way.Oneclove can
vell, Chow chef; Matt Perry, co-owner of Savory Spice Shop; and Tyler Reichert, owner of Silver Moon Brewing 8c Taproom. Touvell also shared his favorite recipe for Caesar salad dressing that you can make for your dad on Father's Day
Photos by Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
flavor a salad's worth
All else fails, give him a growler, of course! Silver Moon Brewing's Tyler Reichert suggests that and a collection of beer mugs.
of vinaigrette or bowl of hummus. Oneway to mellow out the flavor
"ALTON BROWN'SGEAR FOR YOURKITCHEN" • $19.95, Stewart Tabori
(which is Sunday).
& Chang, www.abrams books.com
See Father /D2
• Dedicated viewers of Alton
is through roasting.
Brown's acclaimed Food
Consider chopping the top off of the garlic, so
Network show "Good Eats"
knowofhis penchantfor using unusual equipment. He has smoked asalmonin
thata portion of each clove shows. Nowwrap the bulb in aluminum
HIMALAYAN
foil. Place ahalf-inch of
a cardboard box, roasted
SALT BRICKS
prime rib in a flowerpot and used aC-clamp asa
water into the bottom of a muffin tin and place the
nutcracker. Brown isn't
foil-covered bulb ontop (alternatively, youcan
interested in novelty; Shoetoe eebeie
he's just devoted to using the best — and simplest
skip the water and drizzle ' \I
some olive oil on topof
teuk PoikChop epioe
the garlic before wrap-
ping it). Roast in a400degree ovenfor about 40
— tool for the job. Brown's "Gear For Your Kitchen"
'".e RibRub
oe
to 50 minutes or until the garlic is soft and pliable
and not overly brown. Serve onwarm bread.
— Alandra Johnson
offers honest, practical advice on what's needed
Matt Perry — of Savory Spice Shop, which carries a variety ofspices and blends — suggests a "spice" you can cook on: a Himalayan salt brick (which is reusable), as well as ghost pepper salt and a barbecue spice blend.
For a splurge gift, Ginger's Kitchenware's Jaime Aguirre suggests a handmade pasta board for rolling out homemade noodles. A block of wood helps stabilize it on a countertop as the pasta is made.
and what isn't, what works and what doesn't. Source: www.abramsbooks.com
See Books/D2
Produce purchased from Agricultural Connections, which distributes goods from regional farms (www. agnculturalconnections.com).
TODAY'S RECIPES David Touvell's Mortar 8 Pestle CaesarSalad: use oneof your gifts for Dad to make him this salad dressing, courtesy of the chef at Chow.D2
HOME
GARDEN
Do it: Installing cabinet knobs A few'wow'flowers Editor's note: Check back everyotherweek fordo-ityourself projects.
sticklers for detail. Warning: If you
take on this DIY project, get ready for a lot of precise measuring and careful drilling. An error in com-
By Marielle Gallagher
By Alison Highberger
putation, or a slip of the hand, can
The Bulletin
For The Bulletin
cause a problem that's hard to fix.
lt would be nice if adding color to a Central Oregon garden were as simple as painting the roses red. In the High Desert, where bright, colorful blooming flowers don't emerge naturally from the native landscape, it takes some work to find big blooms that can survive cold nights and dry soiL A local landscape specialist and a nursery owner offered recommendations for hardy flowers that could offer bright color and still be drought- and deer-resistant. Nate O'Meara is the bed and color supervisor for Millsite Landscape Services, the company that plants and maintains the dramatic
Cabinet hardware is often
referred to as "jewelry" for a room. The knobsand pulls add an artistic, finishing touch to cabi-
nets. They also serve apractical purpose, protecting doors and Four ways tojazz upa salad: Citrus and carrots; marinated cucumber and chilies; corn andpeppers; and lots of strawberries — all of these ingredients, in different combinations, can make greens more interesting and delicious.D3
FOOD TIPS Cook Q&A: Should you worry about blue garlic cloves? How about fatty beef filets?D3
Ask Martha:Keeping your fruits and vegetables fresh sometimes meanskeepingthem separated.DS
forCentral Oregon
Time:A half or full day to complete a kitchen; about two to three hours for a bathroom. Difficulty: Moderate.
Cost:$50-$500, depending on
drawers from the dirt, grease and
the number and price of hardware
grime of fingerprints.
select ed,andassumingyoual-
Many new kitchen cabinets are plain, designed to work with or without knobs and pulls. But if you have those "naked" cabinets and
ready own a drill and screwdriver.
drawers and havealways wanted to add hardware, it's a good project to take on yourself.
Or maybe youhaveoutdated cabinet hardware that makesa room look old fogeyish. Installing
or replacing cabinet hardware is a satisfying do-it-yourself transformation for people whoare
Supplies: • Cabinet hardware: knobs for cabinet doors and pulls for drawers, with screws to match
• Cordless drill and drill bits •Screwdriver • Blue painter's tape
• Pencil • Measuring tape or ruler •Alignment guide or template,
optional (about $7) See Cabinets /D5
Submitted photo
A pink cosmo is one of the flowers blooming outside the Les Schwab Amphitheater. and colorful showcase of wildflowers that bloom from earlysummer through October near the Les Schwab Amphitheater. O'Meara shared the preparation and planting process so others can re-create the vivid wildflower display of pinks, reds, yellows and blues. See Blooms/D4
D2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013
Fooo Father
"They're made here in Bend by a retired Delta Airlines pilot with a Sc Pestle Caesar Salad passion for woodworking. I haven't Makes onesalad. beer opener ($12) (www.deschutes seen pasta boards like this even in brewery.com). Italy. They're pieces of furniture; "It's so easy to use and gets used they're gorgeous and weigh about 30 1 head Romaine lettuce, torn into bite-size pieces all the time. It seems necessary, in pounds. They come with a big roll1 garlic clove Bend, to have one in your kitchen. ingpin and a cleat that keeps it inpo/2 tsp kosher salt When it's wall-mounted, you never sition. They cost $350," Aguirre said. 2 farm-fresh egg yolks have to search for your opener; you Two cooking items came to chef Juice of 1 lemon know where it is," Perry said. Touvell's mind when we asked him 1 or 2 anchovies Jaime Aguirre, co-owner of Gin- for great gifts for dads who love to /2 C finely shredded Parmesan, ger's Kitchenware with his wife, spend time in the kitchen. Asiago or pecorino cheese Ginger, has a few suggestions for Touvell runs Chow i n B e n d, (a dry Argentinean jack cheese Father's Day gifts. which serves breakfast and lunch, is also delicious) Barware came to his mind first; along with his business partner ~/4 C extra virgin olive oil he recommends Silipint silicon Shawn Harvey. They also do a lot Salt and fresh ground pepper to taste drinkware. Silipints are BPA-free of private dinners and catering. "A truffle slicer. The metal ones and 100 percent food-grade silicon. "They come in pint glasses ($10), are the best. Stainless steel is prePut1 garlic clove in the mortar bowl with /2 teaspoon kosher salt and pound on the rocks ($8) and shot glasses ferred," he said. it into a paste with the pestle. Add two ($4). What's unique about the shot But how many dads who aren't eggyolksandsmashthem. Takeoutthe size is, since it's flexible, you can professional chefs cook with fresh pestle and, with a small whisk, add in the use it as a wine or bottle stopper, truffles? "They sliceris fun because you juice of one lemon, slowly. Add an an- too," Aguirre said. chovy or two to the mixture and usethe On the higher end, Aguirre likes can use it for anything: slicing artipestle to mash them up.Add the cheese the infrared thermometers that he chokes,sunchokes, potatoes,garlic, and grind it up, too. Add salt and pepper carries at Ginger's. apples. They're like a mini-mando"It's a product that grew out of lin," Touvell said. to taste, and feel free to addmore lemon juice, if desired. Whisk in the olive oil, the auto-racing industry. They use At Chow, Touvell uses sliced and it's ready to be tossed with a head of infrared censors to check the tem- truffles in sauces. He said he braistorn Romaine lettuce. peratures of engine manifolds and es food with them and adds them to — From David Touvell of Chouv, such. Our thermometers read the poached egg dishes and omelettes. "Truffles are quite delicious with 1100 N.ViiNewport Ave.,Bend,541-728-0256, surfacetemperature,and also have www.chorrbend.com a probe arm to check internal tem- eggs," he said. peratures ofmeat, casseroles and If you feel like splurging, order a such. It's great for pizza grilling. So truffle for dad, too. They're availriety of spices and spice blends. many peopleare making theirown able online from Earthy Delights Perry recommends "Best of BBQ" pizzas on a grill or pizza stone. (www.earthy.com). A 3-ounce Orgift set ($35), which includes six (4- You can get a reading and know egon white truffle is $60. ounce)jarsofspices,jerk m ixesand the grill is 500 degrees and ready Finally, Touvell told us a mortar rubs foruse on meats or vegetables to cook," Aguirre said. (The ther- and pestle is a great gift for a cook. It's essentially a bowl and a bat. (www.savoryspiceshop.com). mometers retail for about $100.) "What's nice about any of the Aguirre also likes the Soda- They come in many sizesand vablends, you can take any of the Stream home soda maker. rieties. Touvell prefers one with a "It's something the whole family smooth surface, which makes it meat-specific blends (like Team Sweet Mama's BBQ Chicken Rub, can enjoy. Take tap water and car- easier to clean. "The bigger the better, just beor Long's Peak Pork Chop Spice in bonate it. Many flavors are available, the BBQ set) and use them on vege- too. Our best seller is tonic and diet cause it makes it easier to grind stuff. tables, too. My wife is a vegetarian, tonic. We sell a lot of these to adults You can make dressings for salads, so we do a lot of veggie grilling," who enjoy their gin and tonics. Or, if sauces like aioli, pesto, romesco, and Perry said. you squeeze fresh lemon into plain grind fresh herbs," he said. It's a manly gift, too. Making If your dad loves spicy hot food, carbonated water, or other juice, consider ghost pepper salt ($5.50 for it's like an Orangina soda. You can food with a stone bowl and a grinda 2-ounce bottle). emulate that and avoid all the stuff ing rock has a real caveman vibe. "It's a blend of salt with ghost that's in canned beverages that some "It's the first Kitchenaid! That's pepper powder and a chocolate ex- of us are trying to avoid," Aguirre how people used to make chocolate, tract, but it doesn't taste like choco- said. (Various models, $80-$180.) grind beans, wheat," Touvell said. late. Ghost peppers are extremely Whether your dad is the caveman hot, with really good flavor. Some For the advanced foodie type, or more refined, we know he'll people use it as a finishing salt to For a big splurge for a dad, Agu- appreciate your encouragement of add some intense heat. Some peo- irre suggests a large, handmade his food, beverage and cooking inple use it on popcorn." pasta board for rolling out home- terests on Father's Day. For Father's Day, Perry also rec- made noodles. — Reporter: ahighbergerlmac.com
David Touvell's Mortar
Continued from D1 Touvell likes to make this Caesar dressing with his beloved mortar and pestle at home. It's one of the gifts he thinks your dad would enjoy, too. So, if you choose a mortar and pestle as a present, your dear old dad can make his own concoctions next time and think of you, his favorite child, while he's cooking.
For a beer lover Reichert,has a recording on his phone that says, "Hope your day is fullof good cheer and great beer." If that reminds you of your dad, how about a growler for a gift? A growler is a 64-ounce refillable glass container that you can have filled with fresh beer for Dad. The Silver Moon growler costs about $5, and a fill-up at the pub is $9. Growlettes are also available.
They are smaller (32-ounce) refillable containers. A collection of local brewerybeer mugs would please any beer-loving dad. Silver Moon carries logo pint glasses and 25-ounce mugs
(www.silvermoonbrewing.com). "The 25-ounce mugs are pretty sweet. They're kind of like a beer stein, except made of glass," Reichert said.
Spice it up for chef dad Next door to each other in the Old Mill District are the Savory Spice Shop and Ginger's Kitchenware (375 S.W. Powerhouse Drive). Both are full of gift possibilities for dads who love to mess around (and mess up) the kitchen. Perry is c o-owner of S avory Spice Shop with his wife, Betsy. He recommends their Himalayan salt bricks for an unusual gift. "You put them on the grill or in the oven, and they season your food. They're actual blocks of salt, so you can cook on them. They heat up andyou put meat or vegetables right on top and cook them that way. They lightly salt your food, just enough to taste amazing," Perry said. The salt bricks come in two sizes and rangeinprice from $34 to $54. Cleanup is easy: wash the salt off with a wet cloth when the cooking is done and then reuse. The shop also carries a wide va-
ommends something he owns that he told us he can't live without: a Deschutes Brewery wall-mounted
Books Continued from D1
"BEER:A GENUINE COLLECTION OF CANS" • By Dan Beckerand Lance Wilson, $19.95,
gg g g
Chron icle Books • Ever crack open acan of Chief Oshkosh of Wisconsin or sample Pabst's Big Cat Malt
I4tftLI4<f'
Liquor? Remember »
the original St. Pauli i .' ilbiVFiaii' -;... Girl, Tennent's bevy of
lager lovelies or Olde Frothingslosh ("the pale stale ale with the foam on the bottom")? Presented alphabetically by
brand, the nearly 500 canscollected herecome from 30 countries and run from the iconic to the obscure to the downright bizarre. Source: www.chroniclebooks.com
"EAT LIKEA MAN: THE ONLY COOKBOOK A MAN WILL EVERNEED" • Edited by Ryan EATttkea 1ICAN
O'Agostino, $30, Chronicle Books
• Most men who love food have aroasting pan and adecent ig)
-
"
spice rack, but they're still looking for that one book that has all the real food they
'
love to eat andwish they could cook. Esquire food editor Ryan O'Agostino is here to change that with his
unapologetically male-centric "Eat Like aMan" — a collection of 75 recipes and food writing for men who like to eat, cook and read about
great food. It's the Esquire man's repertoire of perfect recipes, essays onhowfood figures into the moments that define a man's life, and all the
useful kitchen points every manneeds to know. Source: www.chroniclebooks com
"INTHE KITCHEN WITH ALAIN PASSARD: INSIDE THEWORLD(ANOMIND) OFA MASTER CHEF" • By Christophe Blain, ALAIN PAssARD I $16 95 Chronicie I Books
"'
iit
• Available in English for the first time, "In the Kitchen with Alain Passard" is the first
graphic novel to enter the kitchen of a master chef. Over the course
of three years, illustrator Christophe Blain
trailed acclaimed chef Alain Passard through his kitchens and gardens. With simple yet sublime drawings and thousands of colorful
panels, this book gives the reader aninside,
20th An n i versary Membership Special
uncensored look at the world of Passard, who shocked the food universe in 2001 by removing
Kitchen trinkets for Dad> At Ginger's Kitchenware in Bend, Jaime Aguirre's suggestions for Father's Day gift ideas include:
meat from the menu athis celebrated Paris ~S t resm
I
i
4A pasta board
' I
LOBEL'SMEAT BIBLE:ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT MEATAND POULTRY FROM AMERICA'S MASTERBUTCHERS" • By Stanley, Evan, t'>i Mark and David Lobel, $40, Chronicle Books • For anyone whoever "
5~
3 Mortar and pestle
serving vegetables from his own organic farms. Source: www.chroniclebooks.com
1Asodastream soda maker 2A truffle slicer
restaurant, L'Arpege, and dedicating himself to
+Hi
QD +j
5 An infrared thermometer
ojEQu -
II~' <~]P
difference between Porterhouse and Chateaubriand, the Lobel family of master butchers has all the answers in the "Meat Bible." Covering every
imaginable meat — beef, veal, pork, lamb, Come see why 340 Members Come for the Golf, Stay for the Friendships.
If,.„.~+W~ —.
Your Journey Golf3fembership, the may you mant it! Frienck, Family, Golf, and 11fore.
Source: www.chroniclebooks.com
No Membership Feesfor a minimum of 12 months.
"YES,CHEF:A MEMOIR" • By Marcus Samuelsson, $16, „'Wjjpf-;~ + Ran dom House Trade Paperback, www. randomhouse.com
Choice oF. Golf Cart Lease, set of free irons,or $1,000 credit in the Restaurant. Other memberships options are available to fit your golfing and social desires.
Contact our Membership Department for more details: (541) 385-6011 ~Email: keith@awbreyglen.com
poultry, rabbit and more — the Lobels share their extensive knowledge of the differing tastes, textures, flavors, fat contents and uses for each cut of meat.
Rob Kerr The Bulletin
www.awbreyglen.com
• It begins with a simple
ritual: Every Saturday afternoon, a boywho loves to cookwalks to his grandmother's houseandhelps her prepare a roast chicken for dinner. Thegrandmother is Swedish. The
e
Secrets to a healthy advancemealplan The Washington Post Looking to get a bit healthier and lose a few pounds? One reader says hetries to cook something on Sunday or Monday that can be taken in his lunches all week but finds that doing this often makes him eat less healthfully. Things like casseroles are easy but seem cheesy and heavy, and it's hard to use fresh greens and have them stay
good all week.
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F ' U R N I T R"'2
Ct-n I-'o-~j- 4 Sj-gl'.e. .
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.
mplements 3 v'I I e v'i-tr v'5
Here's a few solutions. The hardest part about eating healthfully is the prep. If you take that out of it, it's much more enjoyable. Make large batches of grain-based salads that last all week — things like couscous- and quinoabased salads filled with fresh vegetables. Just leave them in the fridge or portion them out into smaller containers. Or, prepare tons of fresh vegetables all at one time (celery, carrots, cauliflower or whatever else you like) and put them in resealable bags. Then make a couple of healthy dips, ready for snacking.
Finally, if you like soup, try making a big pot of minestroneor summer vegetable soup orfresh pea soup that will last all week and is really healthful and full of vegetables.
boy is Ethiopian and adopted, and he will grow
up to becomethe world-renowned chef Marcus Samuelsson. This book is his loveletter to food and family in all its manifestations. "Yes"
chronicles Samuelsson's remarkable journey from Helga's humblekitchen to someof the most demanding and cutthroat restaurants in Switzerland and France, from his grueling stints
on cruise ships to his arrival in NewYork City, where his outsize talent and ambition finally
come together atAquavit, earning him acoveted New York Timesthree-star rating at age 24. "Plenty of celebrity chefs have a compelling story to tell," The Wall Street Journal wrote in its
review, "but none ofthemcan top (this) one." Source: www.barnesandnoble.com
RECIPE FINDER The Recipe Finder feature will return. If you are looking for a hard-to-find
recipe or cananswer arequest, write Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, The Baltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, or email
baltsunrecipefinder©gmail.com. Names must accompanyrecipes to bepublished.
FOO D
TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D 3
A few choice toppers change an "oh" to an "Oh!" at the mention of salad.
By Sharon K. Ghag The Modesto Bee
Turn an "oh" at the mention of salad into an "Oh!" with a little imagination and not much effort. Even t h e be s t -dressed l eaves can benefit from a sprinkling of nuts or seeds. Just add them right before serving so they stay nice and crunchy. Greens served naked or barelydressed in a splash of citrus and olive oil will gain greater appeal with a shake of dried fruit or a generous serving of fresh fruit. Sure, meat is a great salad topper, but d on't overlook beans, wheat germ, granola and canned tuna. Then there's diced or shaved cheese and green or black olives, marinated or stuffed. Dry ramen noodles sauteed in butter and sprinkled with the accompanying spice
package are a nice change of pace from croutons. Snipped herbs — chives, mint, parsley, dill come to mind — add bold notes. Leftover rice or lentils, meanwhile, can be added with abandon. Need more ideas? Pile on fresh or grilled vegetables. Onions are especially delicious. If going with fresh vegetables, shredding, chop-
ping, slicing and shaving will all add to the texture of the finished salad. And don't overlook sprouts and shoots. Finally, remember that it's no crime to double up on salad. Top greens with a creamy macaroni or potato salad and
forgo the dressing.
PhotosbySharon K.Ghag IM odesto Bee
A boring salad can be fixed with a little creativity and not much more work. Sweet oranges, carrots, tart cherries, cucumbers, red onions, sweet corn and strawberries — used in the combinations detailed in the accompanying recipes — will do the trick.
Carrot and Citrus Salad
Marinated Cucumber and Chili Salad
Makes 3 to 4 servings.
Makes 2 to 3 servings.
The recipe calls for grapefruits and pistachios, but orangesandraisins also
The longer the cucumbers marinate, the moretart the salad. Also, you can
make a delicious salad. Fresh limes are another good option when making
add other items, like cherries and sunflower seeds, to finish the salad.
barely dressedsalads. If peppery watercress isn't available, try spinach. /3 C shelled pistachios 2 grapefruits, segmented 1 Ig handful watercress 2 carrots, shaved on mandoline, placed in ice water 1 handful fresh cilantro leaves, picked and roughly torn or
DRESSING: 2 TBS grapefruit juice 1 TBS extra-virgin olive oil Small squeeze of agave nectar Pinch Maldon or other flaky salt Freshly ground black pepper to taste
chopped In a dry skillet over medium-low heat, toast pistachios until evenly browned, 3 to 4 minutes, stirring often. Remove from heat and set aside.
Combine grapefruits, watercress, carrots and cilantro in a bowl and
1 cucumber, seeded, quartered lengthwise and finely chopped /2 habanero (or any spicy chili), seeded, finely chopped /4 C finely chopped red onion
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet - • • Clas'sifte els •
•
1 TBS extra-virgin olive oil Squeeze of agave nectar Juice of 1 lemon Maldon or other flaky sea salt Freshly ground black pepper
Place the cucumber, chili and onion in aglass bowl. Toss with olive oil, agave nectar and lemon juice. Season with salt and pepper. Refrigerate from 1 hour to up to aday before serving. — From"Fr esh,Happy,Tasty:An Adventurein 100Recipes," by Jane Loxwell (William Morrow,$35)
Mixed Greens and Strawberry Salad
toss gently. Whisk the dressing ingredients in a small bowl. When ready to serve, add nuts and dressing to the salad. Makes 4 servings. — From "Fresh, Happy, Tasty: AnAdventurein 100Recipes," by Jane Loxwell (William Morrow,$35) 1 sm head butter lettuce and 3 to 4 oz mixed baby lettuces, all washed and chilled Green Salad With Corn, Peppers 2 C strawberries, washed, and Smoky Red Pepper Dressing hulled, sliced '/4 C slivered almonds Makes 4 to 8servings; dressing makes1 cup. You'll be amazed how half a grilled red pepper, with skin removed, and a Sea salt, black pepper
DRESSING: '/s C mayonnaise /2 C frozen OJ concentrate, thawed 1 TBS orange marmalade
M E R R IL L 0 S U L L I V A N L L P welcomes William A. Van Vactor as its newest team member. Will focuses his law practice on civil litigation, land use matters, and business and real estate transactions.
small handful of basil can produce an especially delicious dressing. In bowl, whisk together mayonnaiseandorangejuice concentrate. Add 8 C green lettuce, in bite-size
pieces 1 C fresh corn kernels 1 red bell pepper, small diced 1 yellow bell pepper, small diced 1 shallot, small diced
DRESSING: '/4 C olive oil, /8 C plus 1 TBS red wine vinegar 2 oz roasted red peppers
(packed in water, drained) 2 TBS fresh cilantro leaves 1 peeled garlic clove 1 tsp smoked paprika t/s tsp salt
In a blender, combinetheolive oil, vinegar, roasted peppers, cilantro, garlic, paprika and salt. Puree until the dressing is smooth. Pour into airtight
the marmalade and whisk again until combined. Refrigerate.
Reserve 4 large leaves for plating. Tear remaining leaves into bitesize pieces. Spoon1 tablespoon of dressing into the center of each of 4 serving plates. Place a whole large leaf of butter lettuce off-center on the plate. Scatter a handful of torn lettuce and a handful of baby greens over
the entire plate. Scatter /2 cup sliced strawberries and 1 tablespoon of sliced almonds over the greens. Drizzle each salad with additional tablespoon dressing and sprinkle
with salt and pepper. Serve immediately.
M E R R IL L 0 S U L L I V A N L L P Attorneys at law Providing exceptional legal services to Central Oregonians since 1974 www.merrill-osullivan.com
— From "TheArtist, the Cookand the Gardener Recipes Inspired byPainting and the Garden,"by Maryj oKoch(Andrews McMeel, $26.99)
container and refrigerate for up to five days. In a large bowl, combine the lettuce, corn, red and yellow peppers and shallot and toss to combine. Add /2
cup dressing andgently toss everything to coat. Serveimmediately. — From "Heather Christo's GenerousTable: Easyand Elegant Recipes Through theSeasons" (Kyle Books,$29.95)
COOK QSA
Save up to
Worrying about bluegarlic, fakefilets By Kathleen Purvis The Charlot te Observer
I made a batch of pickQ . .Ied dill beans. Instead of the regular garlic, I bought a head of garlic with big cloves. I had to cut the cloves in half. Now they've turned blue. Are the beans still safe to eat? • Blue garlic in green bean • pickles can l ook v e ry odd. But the garlic is fine and the green beans are still safe to eat. Garlic contains water-soluble pigments called anthocyanins, which turn blue in an acid solution. It u sually happens
A
when using very young garlic or when the garlic is exposed to copper, either in the water or in
cookware. In this case, though, it might have happened because you cut the garlic, releasing more of the pigments. The garlic f l avor should be unchanged even though it might look a little odd. is the description Q ..forWhat a beef filet'? I recently bought some filets and when I got home I had to trim quite a lot of fat and silver skin from them. Is this normal? . A true filet is a bone. Iess cut from the front end of th e beef tenderloin. It's very low in fat, which is why filet mignon is traditionally wrapped with a strip of bacon, and it is known for its
A
tenderness. So my first question is about all that fat you had to trim off. A true filet has marbling — wavy lines of fat distributed throughout the muscle — but it shouldn't have a rim of fat you could cut away. T he second q uestion i s whether it was tender. If it wasn't, I'd suspect you were sold a chunk tender, sometimes called fake filet. It has marbling, but it also has moreconnective tissue,so it's tougher than a true filet. It should be cheaper, too. A good filet costs more because it's worth more. — Emailquestions to kpurvis@charlotteobservercom
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D4 TH E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013
H OME 4 Bl™ Continued from D1 Additionally, Holly Shafer, owner of Whistle Stop Farm 8 Flowers,recommended four other hardy flowers that thrive in Central Oregon and provide
big color. O'Meara creates the wildflower seed mixture by combiningcosmo, godetia, African daisy, California poppy, sunflower and bachelor's button. This mixture achieves a few objectives: different heights of flowers (tall, medium and low), different peak blooming times and various levels of hardiness. "The godetia are nice because they're the last to stop blooming in October," said O'Meara.
How to plant wildflowers: • The ideal month to plant wildflowers i s Ma y , bu t O 'Meara says they can b e planted through June 15. • First prepare the soil for planting. "Success starts with aweed-free soil, whichyou can do with hoeing or spraying." O'Meara says he also adds about twoinches of weed-free soil over the existing soil. • Using a hard-tined rake, draw lines approximately '/4inch wide and '/4-inch deep across the planting area. •To create the seed mixture, first mix the flower seeds then add an inert ingredient (O'Meara uses vermiculite) in a 3 parts inert ingredient to I part seedsratio.The vermiculite helps ensure even distributionofthe seeds. "There would be too much competition for all those seeds to germinate in one area (without the vermiculite)," said O'Meara. • A slow-release fertilizer is also added to the soil during
seeding. • Spread the mixture using a hand spreader, or a rotary spreader for a big area, making sure to distribute the mixture in an even and consistent pattern. • When spreading is complete, use the backside of a leaf rake to lightly smooth the soil over the seeds. Because the seeds are so small, they won't germinate if they're too deep.
Weekly Arts 5
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"We usually over seed to factor in birds getting at the seeds, the wind blowing some away and some not getting covered completely," said O'Meara. • L ightly wa ter t h e a r e a two to three times every day to achieve germination. "The way we actually get them to germinate is through irrigation. We will irrigate lightly first to moisten the soil, and make sure the seeds don't wash away, then two to three times a day to keep the soil moist," said O'Meara. • If temperatures are warm, growth will be visible in about aweek. Once they are growing and have begun to root, watering can be reduced to a once daily morning application. • Watch for o ver-germination. If too many flowers are competing for space, thin the area. • Weed clover and grasses out of the flowers. • In the fall, use weed eaters to cut the flowers back. Breaking down the dried seed heads and leaving them will increase the odds that they'll reseed and germinate for the followingyear.
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• A hardy, drought-tolerant, deer-resistant perennial that has an elegant
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shape, "they look like they'd need alot of
of the four flowers that Holly Shafer, owner of Whistle Stop Farm & Flowers,
care, but they don't," said Shafer. "They're going to be hardy from Redmond to Bend
recommended for their hardiness.
and La Pineand Sunriver."
• The dwarf variety has fern-like foliage colors, including: pink, red or purple. Grows and grows to be about1-foot tall. The Old to be1-foot- to more-than-3-feet tall, Fashioned variety is bush-like and grows depending on the variety. to be about 2-feet tall. Both varieties have a • They like full sun or part shade. heart-shaped flower that drops down from • They bloom in summer, primarily July. the stem. • Plant them throughout spring and summer. • The flowers are available in different colors, including white and light pink. • Bee balm flowers are available in multiple
• They like full sun or part shade.
The Bulletin file
The Bulletin file
• Although these bloomsappear
papery and delicate, Oriental poppies are a hardy, drought-tolerant and deer-resistant perennial. • These showy blooms with black centers grow atop long, sturdy stems andare available in multiple colors, including Queen
Alexander (salmon), Beauty of Livermere (scarlet red), Prince of Orangeand Fruit Punch Mix (reds, pinks andpurples). •Theydoself-seedeasily,"whichcan bea blessing or a curse," said Shafer. "Wehave them in 4-inch and1-gallon pots." • They like full sun or part shade.
• Peonies do well without a lot of attention because they don't need a lot
of water and don't need to becovered in cold temperatures. "They're a great Central
Oregon plant. Theyare very hardy, the deer don't tend to eat them and they have to be cold in order to bloom," said Shafer. • The blooms are multi-layered and ruffled
and are available in multiple colors, including white, pink, red, yellow and
double-c olored blooms. "W ehavea new primavera variety, which is neat because it's yellow and you don't see that color a whole lot," said Shafer.
• They bloom in early summer.
• They like sun or part shade.
• They bloom in mid-spring through summer. • Plant them now and throughout the • Plant them throughout spring and summer. season.
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Stokes' asters have always been among my favorite native perennials, though I have typically only grown them in small drifts of five to seven plants. I've got more than a hundred. They are an absolute knockout, and the American lady butterflies are f i nding them to be a real feast. Striking blue flowers and fiery or-
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The sea of wildflowers that bloom from early spring through October near the Les Schwab Amphitheater is the work of Millsite Landscape Services. The wildflower mix is a combination of cosmo, godetia, African daisy, California poppy, sunflower and bachelor's button.
— Reporter: 541-383-0361or mgallagher@bendbulletini com
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ange butterflies is a combination that is hard to beat in any garden. The Stokes' aster is known botanically as Stokesia laevis and is native in the South, from Louisiana to North Carolina. Despite this Southern flavor, they ar e c old-hardy to zones 5 and 6 with a good layer of mulch. This means almost everyone can enjoy their exquisite blooms. The b l ooms a r e l a r g e, reaching 3 to 4 inches wide and almost as exotic looking as those ofthe passionflower. The blooms are heaviest in early summer, but the plants keep some producing for a long period. In our garden we have the typical skyblue, some deep dark blue and others that are a pristine white. You will find several great choices in named selections. The v i o let-colored P u r p le Parasols has performed wonderfully for me. Other varieties you may want to try are Blue Danube (lavender blue), Bluestone (blue), Klaus Jelitto ( light blu e ) a n d W yo m i ng (purple). But should generic be the only thing available, don't fret, they are still great plants fort helandscape. For the best show, plant them boldly in informal drifts. You can combine them inperennial gardens with coreopsts and rudbeckia for a wonderfully complementary color scheme. But Ihave also seen that some incredible partnerships can be made with SunPatiens. The shocking orange available in SunPatiens makes for a riotous, eye-catching companion with deep blue varieties.
The Stokes' aster is known botanically as Stokesia laevis andis native in the South, from Louisiana to North Carolina. Despite this Southern flavor, they are coldhardy to zones 5 and
6 with a good layer of mulch. This means almost everyone can enjoy their exquisite blooms.
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McClatcby-rribune News Service
Of course the pink SunPatiens would partner with all colors of Stokes' asters. I have also grown Purple Parasols with Stella d Or o d aylily w h ich makes a very nice companion planting both from a color and a perennial standpoint. Choose a site in f ull sun
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The blossoms of the Stokes' asters are among the most exoticlooking perennials for the garden and come in white and shades of blue and purple. The flower's a favorite of butterflies, too, providing nectar for a variety of species, including this American lady.
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18707 SW Century Dr., Ben
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for best blooms, but partial shade is tolerated much better than many other perennials. Make your beds well-drained by incorporating 3 to 4 inches of organic matter — like fine pine bark, humus or compost. W ell-drained acidic soil i s pretty much mandatory. Wet winter feet can spell doom. Till your bed to a depth of 8 to 10 inches and add 2 pounds of a slow-release, 12-6-6 fertilizer into the bed. Plant 6-inch, to gallon-sized plants now and set out at the same depth they
are growing in the container. The plants reach 18 inches in height. You will want to space them 15 to 18 inches apart. O ur Stokes' a sters h a d spread much more than desirable and even to the point that previous year's blooms had been sparse. We did a heavy thinning with the emergence of spring growth and now the blooms are amazing. You will notice your clumps too will become large when this happens just make sure you divide, it will be easy. When the stalks have finished blooming, promptly cut them back to the base, even with the plant. This will prolong your bloom production. You may also want to use them as cut flowers. You'll be pleasantly surprised how long they last in the vase. The color blue is much sought after in the garden. Partner this with exotic-looking blooms that attract butterflies and you've got a real winner. — Norman Winter is executive director of the Columbus Botanical Garden, Columbus, Ga., and author of"Tough- asNails Flowersfor the South" and "Captivating Combinations Color and Stylein the Garden."
TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
DS
ee in OLlr ro uce res, Ways to revent woo ec er nests owers a ive an i ea • Plus, the Presto Patchfor drywall, and Country Living's 'BigDecorating Ideas'
. MARTHA STEWART
By Mary Beth Breckenridge
i.'-
Ahron Beacon Journal
Q
A• greatfor buying fresh
and local produce — but their usual once-a-week schedule can require a little extra knowhow so that you can stock up w ithout f i nding y ou r f o o d Keep stone fruits like peaches separate from other produce; they wilted at the end of the week. emit ethylene gas, which can accelerate the aging of other fruits After bringing home your and vegetables. purchases, wash th e l e afy
To keep leafy greens like Swiss chard fresh, wash and dry right away, then wrap in paper towels and store in a resealable bag in your fridge.
greens thoroughly — being sure to rinse away all grit and dirt and any insects that might be hiding under the leaves of that head of lettuce. Dry the greens in a salad spinner. Then wrap them in dry paper towels and slide the bundles into resealable plastic bags. Close the bags, and store them in y ou r r e f rigerator's vegetable crisper.
To keep your greens and other produce as fresh as possible, separate them from certain fruits.
clude caryopteris, callicarpa, ford, N.Y., especially from May pyracantha, rhamnus and spi- through July, when it smothers rea. Most of these plants hail plants in the ornamental beds. from low-rainfall climates, so Instead of killing the plants they are used to drought and with chemicals or trying to cut high heat. In fact, they thrive them back, dig them out altoTo keep your greens and in such conditions. gether using a shoveL Mike o ther produce as f r esh a s Place the shrubs or flowers McGrath, agardening expert possible, separate them from in a spot that will give them and host of the public radio certain fruits, such as apples, partial shade during the hot- show "You Bet Your Garden," avocados, tomatoes, bananas, test part of the day, such as also suggests saturating the melons and stone fruits, which near a tree, in a shade gar- ground, wrapping your hands emit ethylene gas. Ethylene is den or close to a building that in garbage bags and pulling generated during the ripening blocks the sun. Even plants out the root system by hand; process and can accelerate the that come from a locale that aging of fruits and vegetables is hot and dry need relief from nearby. the heat. Remember to add mulch on W hat f l o w er s and top of the soil, or mix in organ. shrubs can handle the ic compost to boost the soil's heat and don't need much ability to retain water. When water? you water these plants, do so • C hoose a p l a nt t h a t in the morning; that way, the • is dr oug h t -resistant heat will dry the foliage by the and enjoys direct sunlight. If end of the day, and the plant you'rein the market for peren- will not contract one of the nials, try achillea, artemisia, m oisture-loving f ungal d i sdianthus, echinops, gaura or eases,like black spot on roses, sedum, suggests June Hus- during the night. ton,supervisor of the Kemper Home Demonstration G arHave you found a proddens at the Missouri Botani. uct that works well for New York Times NewsService photos cal Garden in St. Louis. If you killing poison ivy and poison Poison ivy (as well as poison want annuals, look for gail- oak? oak) can be removed without lardia, gazania or portulaca. • Poison ivy is very com- chemicals, but be careful about Flowering-shrub options in• mon at my home in Bed- rashes.
Q.
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when done, turn the bags inside out, over the poison ivy. Throw the plants directly in the trash. Wear g ardening gloves and protective clothing and shoes throughout to guard against allergenic urushiol oil. These extraction methods also work fo r p o ison oak, which is native to the Western United States; they ensure the plants are completely removed, not just dying. (Even dead poison ivy or poison oak plants can cause skin reactions on contact.) But given the risk of s ki n r ash even with precautions, if the plants aren't harming the garden (or near children or pets), it's best to leave them alone. If you do accidentally touch poison ivy or poison oak, act quickly — a rash will form in about 10 minutes. Thoroughly rinse the affected skin with cool water only, which removes the oil, unlike soap and other products. Don't use a washcloth; it may become a new home for the urushiol oil and spread the rash to other parts of your body. Make sure you wipe off everything you touched, and then wash your hands. — Questions of general interest can be emaiied to mslietters@ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.com.
A
. Last summer, birds . made about a 3-inch hole in my home's wood siding. I found someone to plug the hole, but this spring the birds made another hole in a different place for their babies. Isthere any remedy that you know of to stop this destruction? • Once the young birds • have left t h e n e st, plug the hole with wood putty. Then you can try one or a combination of deterrents to keep the birds from returning. Cornell Lab of Ornithology devotes a section of its website to woodpeckers and suggests a number of control methods. You can find the information online at w w w .birds.cornell.edu /wp about.
Figure out how manyknobsand pulls are needed,andthen do a recount to makesureyou haven't missed any cabinets or drawers. Select new hardware. Shop in big box home improvement stores or
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Country Living ideas
online (e.g., www.coolknobsand pulls.com, www.restoration Carefully measure from hardware.com, www.overstock. top or bottom of cabinet com, www.amazon.com, www. door or drawer front to knobsandhardware.com) Look for "value packs" at bargain prices. align holes for pulls. You maygetmoreknobsinavalue pack than you need,but they'll be much cheaper andyoucan Usethe extras in another room. If you're alignment guide at a hardware or replacing old knobs, take onewith home improvement store that will
match plumbing fixture finishes
help you mark where to mount the knobs and pulls, but Hess told us these gUides will not guarantee a perfect installation. "In a perfect world, everything is plumb and
or picking knobs andpulls that
level and the samedimension, but
you to the store to make sure the size of the new hardware matches.
Some interior designers recommendchoosinghardwareto
MCT
Fans of Country Living magazine will love "The Little Book of Big Decorating Ideas."
Cab etpull Hold the drill steady and level. The tape will help to start the bit through the wood without splintering or rolling off the mark. Greg Cross/The Bulleko
design," writes Lee Wallender on
www.about.com. Step 3:Drill and secure.
push the drill through the hole.
Sometimes, with hard wood, like
oak, you'll have to pull the drill out halfway through to remove the the wood, put asmall piece of blue wood bits from the bit. You don't painter's tape on the spot, and then want to blow the drill out the back measure andmarkyour drill locaof the drawer and have a big chip Before marking a drilling hole on
tion on the tape.Thetape helpsto
or splinter, making a holeyou
it's not a perfect world, and if you and drawers, but also complement use a template to put all the knobs
protect the finish. "Most cabinet
don't want to look at, or that won't accept the head of the screw,"
the countertop, floor color or apin the sameplace, and thecabinet doors are off a bit, one knob might pliances. If you've got stainless steel appliances, for example, you be a little bit higher," Hess said. can't go wrong with stainless steel So look at your cabinets care-
a smaller drill bit to start the hole, and the tape will help prevent the drill bit from slipping," Hess said. A3/16-inch drill bit is the standard size for this kind of Iob, Hess said. The screws that came with your
Hess said.
not only look good on the cabinets
or nickel hardware.
Step 2:Determine Placement. This is the tricky part. There's no hard and fast rule about where to place the hardware, although
fully and get someone to position
knobs at various spots while you scrutinize and test out the placement. Youcould makepaper cut-outs of your knobs and pulls
doors have alacquer finish. Use
Afteryou drill the hole, insert the screw. Follow the instructions
that came with your hardware and in place. Try out your handiwork
length to pass through the hole you drilled, but it doesn't hurt to
by opening and closing the cabinet with your wonderful new knob or
there are somegeneral gUidelines.
and tape them onthe cabinets to
"On top cabinet doors, they go in
see how they'll look. "Remember,
the lower inside corners, and on bottom doors, they're on the upper inside corners. Ondrawers, the knobs or pulls are centered," said Jim Hess, a licensedgeneral
in most cases you're not installing Empty drawers andcabinets just one cabinet pull, you're install- before you drill, to avoid a shower
pull. Now, do it again. Maybeyou should turn on somemusic, or the radio — you're going to repeat this process manymore times
ing a line of them: either a hori-
until you're done.
contractor in Bend with more than 30 years of homebuilding and
handyman experience. You can buy atemplate or
make sure bymeasuring the width of the cabinet wood. of sawdust on everything and the
"The Little Book of Big Decorating Ideas" is a compilation of photos from the magazine, representing its best tips and decorating advice. They include practically i n stantaneous transformations, such as clipping artwork to an oldfashioned drying rack or drawing chalk lines on a deck to create an outdoor c hess board, as well a s bigger undertakings such as hiding a T V a bove a fireplace or transforming a dresser with wallpaper. Garden ideas are included, too. Instructions areprovided
zontal row or avertical column. Note:Licensed general conpossibility of collectibles, glassSlavishly following measurements ware or valuable items being dam- tractor Jim Hess (541-480-0845) on a drawer-by-drawer or dooraged by the drilling vibrations. said he'd chargeabout $350 to by-door basis, without an eye toDrill the holes for the screws replace or install knobs andpulls ward the entire stretch of drawers slowly, precisely and perpendicu- in a standard-size kitchen. lar. "Let the drill do its work. Never or doors, is a recipe for badvisual — Reporter :ahighberger@mac.com
By Adrian Higgins The Washington Post
• Give tomato plants the elbow room they need to flourish. Even with stakes or cages to hold them up, indeterminate varieties should have 24 inches of room on each side to avoid crowding. Removing the
"suckers" that emerge in leaf crotches will limit the sideways sprawl of the vine. • Moonvines, or moonflowers, should be started from seed now for their spectacular and fragrant white trumpet blooms, which appear in late summer. The vines need
s turdy support and can b e used on railings, trellises and fences, in full su n o r l i g ht shade. Rub seeds against a metal file or soak them overnight before planting, to speed germination. • Sow bean seeds now for a July harvest. Bush beans are
easy and productive, and additional sowings over the next six weeks will provide a summer-long supply. Pole beans need a trellis but will y ield over a longerperiod. Scarlet runner beans should be sown in late July and August for a
fall crop.
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Thinksiock
DAP's new Presto Patch is a circle of half-inch-thick drywall with drywall tapingpaper attached. You cut out the damaged drywall using a template included with t h e p r oduct, insert the patch and adhere it with joint compound. The patch is intended for repairing drywall holes that are too big for simple spackling. It comes in tw o d i ameters, 3/s inches and 6/s inches. The suggested retail prices for PrestoPatch are $5.99 to $6.99 for the smaller size and $7.29 to $8.99 for the larger. DAP products ar e w i d ely available at hardware stores, h ome c enters a n d ma s s merchandisers.
Find It All
Online bendbulletin.com
BarkTurISo|l.com I
I
PROMPT DELIVERY
541-389-9663
NEED A %R\ÃD WITH YOUR TO-1)O LISTo gre rgo it nll ." g Wi||tl>~~ j ~ o of s
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Gardening tips: tomatoes,moonvines,beanseeds
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4 THE PROFESSIONAL HANDYMAN
attach the knob or pull. Tighten it with a screwdriver until it's firmly
hardware are probably the correct
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Woodpeckers should call trees their home, but they sometimes Among th e s u gges- hole up in your house's siding. tions are attaching items to the house that blow in the breeze and scare birds, for some of the projects to help such as strips of foil, wind- you act on your inspiration. socks and whirligigs. You The book is due out this can also purchase an elec- month from Hearst Books and tronic device that frightens sellsfor$24.95 in hardcover. the birds by broadcasting the sound of a woodpeckPfft er's distress call, followed by the sound of a predator. 832Z)DhZ9~ If the damage is under overhanging eaves, you can stretch bird netting from 8~/g' the eaves to the siding. The laboratory recommends against using sticky r epellents, b ecause t h e p roducts can get on t h e birds' plumage and affect MCT their ability to fly and stay DAP's new Presto Patch simpliwarm. The products can fies structurally sound drywall also darken or stain siding repairs. and attract dirt, it says.
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT TV TODAY
ruin,a ow ocrime ramas • Writers for 'Law 5Order' andits ilk maybe the latest victims in anever-changing society
"What's that, Lassie?" says Timmy. "You'll run six miles back to the house and bark at Dad in such a way that he realizes I've been chased up a tree by a bear? Why? I can just text him."
TV SPOTLIGHT
the culprit. If the real-life police are By Neil Genzlinger now taking cheek swabs and New Yorlz Times News Service matching suspects to a dataDo Anthony Kennedy, Clar- base only seconds after they ence Thomas, Stephen Breyer, are initially detained, those Samuel Alito and John Rob- hourlong shows become eighterts not own televisions? minute webisodes, and a lot of Those are t h e S u preme writers and actors are out of Court justices who made up work. the majority of last week's 5-4 The Supreme Court has not decision that gives the police merely changed the rules of broad power to grab a DNA crime-fighting; it has changed sample from asuspect in a se- the rules of television. rious crime. N ever mindthe issues ofun- The days of yore reasonable search and privacy You may already have an that the decision raises. What i nkling of w hat t his i s g oabout its effect on TV crime ing to mean, because you've shows? watched some old TV show Here is the plot of a generic that has been overtaken by hourlong police/court drama societalchange of one sort or in the mold of "Law 8r Order" another. Maybe the show used and its imitators from any time the classic setup in which a in the past two decades: minor car accident leads to a Minute I : A cri m e is head bump on the windshield, committed. followed by plot-propelling Minutes 2-5: A n o b vious amnesia. Watch such an show suspect is detained. today, and a part of your brain Minutes6-55:The suspect's involuntarily says: "Um, hello? lawyer and the authorities do Ever hear of seat belts and air a lengthy dance over DNA evi- bags'?" dence collection and admissiYour rational m in d t r i es bility, which eventually results to interject, "Well, back then, in thediscovery of a previous no, they hadn't ever heard of offense. seat belts and air bags," but it's Minutes 56-60:The suspect too late. The viewing experieither is convicted of the new ence has been destroyed by crime or he turns out to be a overthink. red herring, whereupon a miThe invention of the telenor characteris revealed to be phone back i n t h e 1 8 0 0s
A new kind of villain
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Yes, in a world well supplied with cellphones, Lassie is just another dog. And in a world of instant DNA swabbing and f d atabase matching, c r i m e shows lose options. We've already seen a good bit of this with the advent of DNA testing itself. How much of Columbo's ingenuity and intuition would have been needed if he had DNA technicians working his crime scenes'? NBC The more routine DNA colNBC's "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" has long aired episodes lection becomes and the bigripped straight from real-life headlines. The latest news from the ger the database grows, the Supreme Court — which has cleared the way for police to take DNA harder it will be to build an samples from all people arrested for serious crimes, a major step episode to a genetically based toward expanding a national database that will match new suspects eureka moment. to evidencefrom oldcrime scenes — may upend how such There will be many more police/court TV dramas can tell their stories. first-time offenders, whose DNA is not already in the database: the wife who has had gradually changed storytell- changed again. enough of her spouse's snoring, making it much harder The cellphone put a whole ing; the office underling who for writers to use distance new set of plot devices and needs to clearsomeone out as an excuse for characters' conceits in j e opardy. After of her career path. Perhaps not having a c o n versation around 1990, a "Gilligan's Is- more murders for hire,too, that needed having. Eventu- land" couldn't exist without to distance the mastermind's ally writers adapted, and the implausible excuses like poor DNA from the crime. Or a new phone became a major plot de- reception or dead batteries. breed of techno-criminals who vice, almost a character in and And what about that becan somehow alter their own of itself. Bob Newhart, Lily loved cliche of a s c ene in DNA to thwart the system. Tomlin and others built whole which Timmy and Lassie are Move over, Lassie; a lot of comic personas by interacting out in the woods and Timmy is old-school bad guys and gals with telephones. Then along chased up atree by abear? will need a spot in the unem"Woof," says Lassie. came cellphones, and the rules ployed actors' home.
Wi owworrieso a 2n rug eat Dear Abby:I have read your colnothing you can do will. There are umn for as long as I can remember. two things that are more important My husband died from a drug over- in your life than he is, and those are dose, and I am a widow at 32. He your two sons. A narcotics addict was a good man before the drugs, destroying his life is a very poor but he wouldn't stop and I was help- role model. less to intervene. I am now raising Your boys are old enough to our two sons alone. know how dangerous My problem is my drugs are and that brother i s h e aded they caused the preDEAR down the same road, mature death of their ABBY «~ a nd I d o n't k n o w father. Do not perhow to help him. I mit them to be in the don't have the money presence of anyone to send him to rehab, and he doesn't who is abusing drugs and spiraling think he has a problem. He has lost downward, or they will grow into his job, he has no vehicle and he is adolescence thinking it is normal. losing what friends he has left. Your brother is the only person I don't want to turn my back on who can help himself get back on him or lose him the way I lost my his feet, no matter how much you husband. I know he needs rehab or might wish it were otherwise. therapy, but I don't know where to Dear Abby:I don't understand diturn. Furthermore, how do I explain vorced women and the restrictions this to my 9- and 10-year-old sons? they put on their exes about what The most influential man in their they can and can't do with their life is setting a terrible example. children. ("You can't let him go to — Can'tTurn Away From My Brother the pool party; he might drown"; Dear Can't Turn Away:If seeing "She can't visit with your mother; your husband die from an over- she has a cat"; "Don't make him dose wasn't enough to convince rake leaves; that's YOUR job!") Inyour brother it was time to get into stead, they should be grateful these a substance abuse program, then fathers are active parts of their
children's lives. Too many fathers simply walk away. Unless the dad is actively harming the child, they have no right to dictate what their ex does with his kids on his time. Remember, ladies, you made a baby with him. He is their dad and he has everyright to parent as he sees fit, even if it differs from your own philosophy. And dads, don't let your ex try to tell you that you are a bad parent because you let your kid go roller skating and she broke her arm. It is not your fault. Things like that happen all the time, even to kids whose parents are still together. So stand up for your right to be a real dad! — Unsympathetic Mom fn Pennsylvania Dear Mom:IfIwereyou, I'dkeep my head down and notget caught in the crossfire. It's not that you lack sympathy, but you obviously don't relate to the women you hear complain. While some of t h em may seem controlling or hyperprotective, others may have valid concerns about their children's safety while they're with Dad. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069
This year you open up to many financial changes, and your instincts remain right-on. You will know what to do. You often find yourself caught in a tug-ofwar with others. Stars showthe kind Though some of dayyou'll have pe ople will tolerate ** * * * D ynamic this, many others ** * * P ositive wi l l not. If you ** * A verage are single, avoid ** So-so a major control * Difficult issue in a budding relationship. If you are attached, the only way to avoid a power play is not to get involved. CANCERcan be quite self-indulgent.
ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * You have the ability to see when a situation is heading south, but can you prevent it from happening? Your best bet is to step back and let those involved deal with the ramifications. A serious conversation with others simply will not work. Tonight: Nap and then decide.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * You are likely to respond instinctively to someone's flak. Be careful, as the nature of your response could define the outcome. At this moment, you might be more idealistic in your hope of havinga one-on-one discussion.Do not close doors, even if you want to. Tonight: Head home.
GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * O nward and upward is your attitude right now, despite what is going on around you. Howyou handle a personal matter could change. Lighten up about the different possibilities. Do not push others away — just continue to head
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueune Bigar
down your chosen path. Tonight: The later, the better.
CANCER (June21-July22)
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * * You could make many demands and end up in a strange situation. Stay on top of a personal matter. Return phone calls. A new responsibility could fall on your shoulders out of the blue. Remember, you do know how to say"no." Tonight: Take an overview of the situation.
** * * You might feel as if someone has SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21) ** * Know what you expect from a tossed a boomerang in your path. You financial partnership. You might wonder know how to jump right over it. Do not where the other party is coming from. make someone's interference out to be Just observe, and you will have your a bigger deal than it really is. Stay on the answers. You mightneed toadd in some same path. You need to follow your own creative thinking to make it all work. inner voice. Tonight: Out and about. Tonight: Relax more the later it gets.
LEO (Jnly23-Aug. 22)
** * You might decide to rearrange your CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) work schedule and make achange in your daily life. Wait a few days before making a bigannouncement,andtake some pressure off yourself. Schedule a weekend away in order to ease the tension. Tonight: Perk up with a fun activity.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * A i m for what you want. Your creativity soars, and it allows you to see many different avenues to the same end. A meeting could prove to be more interesting than you anticipated, and you might discover that others are of a like mind. Be positive. Tonight: Talk up a storm.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * * Y ou might want to understand what is happening within a friendship. Be aware of your options and the direction in which you are heading. Honor a family member's request, as you might not have a choice anyway. Listen to feedback. Tonight: Accept a surprise invitation.
** * You express an unusual intensity toward others, specifically one person. Do yourself a favor and take a good look at your behavior. You can change, and he or she might be more responsive as a result. Try not to get so hung up on living out your fantasies. Tonight: Let it happen.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fed.18) ** * Be direct in how you handle an issue that could affect your daily life. Check in with a dentist and doctor soon. When you're under stress, you need to remember to take care of your health. Follow your intuition on a money matter. Tonight: Choose to do something you enjoy.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * You might want to try having another conversation with a loved one. The problem could come from this person's interactions with others. You probably need to maintain some distance, especially if you are not directly involved. Tonight: Let your inner child out. © 2013 by King Features Syndicate
8 p.m. on FAM,"Pretty Little Liars" —In the season premiere, the girls turn to Mona (Janel Parrish) for answers about what "A" has planned for them in the aftermath of the lodge fire. Aria (Lucy Hale) finds it difficult to be around Ezra (lan Harding). Emily (Shay Mitchell) starts planning for life after high school. The contents of the trunk are revealed, and a shocking discovery rocks the town in "A Is for A-l-i-v-e." Ashley Benson and Troian Bellisario also star. 8 p.m. on MAX, Movie: "The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel" — Several British acting veterans — including Judi Dench, who was guided to her "Shakespeare in Love" Oscar by this film's director, John Madden — star in this engaging tale of several retirees who invest in a site in India where they intend to enjoy their retirement. Once there, they find the place isn't in quite the lavish condition promised. Maggie Smith, Bill Nighy and Tom Wilkinson also star. Dev Patel ("Slumdog Millionaire") is featured.
gp.m. onE3,"NCIS: Los Angeles"— Sam and Callen (LL Cool J, Chris O'Donnell) investigate when the widow of a Marine killed in battle suspects a possible cover-up. When Hetty (Linda Hunt) calls in operational psychologist Nate Getz (Peter Cambor), the team suspects another evaluation is imminent in "Paper Soldiers." Daniela Ruah and Eric Christian Olsen also star.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
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9 p.m. on FAM,"Twisted" — When 16-year-old Danny Desai (Avan Jogia) is released from juvenile detention after serving five years for the killing of his aunt, it rocks the community of Green Grove. But no two people are more shocked than his childhood friends Lacey and Jo (Kylie Bunbury, Maddie Hasson), who have tried to move on. Danny's attempts to fit in are derailed when a student is murdered, and he emerges as the prime suspect. Denise Richards also stars in this new drama series.
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • 42(PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 2:35, 6:10, 9:10 • AFTER EARTH (PG-13) Noon, 1, 3, 4:05, 6:40, 7:40, 9:20, IO:20 • EPIC(PG)11:50 a.m., 2:30, 6:05, 9:05 • EPIC 3-0(PG) 12:05, 3:05, 6:35, 9:25 • FASTS FURIOUS6(PG-13)I2:40,3:45,7:IO, IO:05 • THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6:15, 9:30 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 12:25, I: IO, 4:15, 7:30, 10:05 • ICE AGE:CONTINENTALDRIFT (PG) 10a.m. • THE INTERNSHIP (PG-13) 1:25, 3:25, 4:25, 6:20, 7:20, 9:15, 10:15 • IRON MAN 3(PG-13) I2:50, 3:55, 6:55, 9:55 • NOW YOUSEE ME (PG-I3)12:30,3:35,6:50,9:45 • OBLIVION(PG-13) 12:20, 3:15, 10:10 • THE PURGE (R) I:20, 4:30, 7:50, IO: IO • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) 11:45a.m., 2:50, 6:30, 9:35 • STARTREKINTODARKNESS IMAX3-D (PG-I3) 1215, 4,7,10 • THIS IS THE END(R) 7 • THETHREE STOOGES (PG)10 a.m. • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. I
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Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347 • DISCONNECT (R) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 • THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) Noon, 3, 6 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 1, 4, 7 • THE ICEMAN (R) 1:15, 4:15, 7 • MUD(PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15 • THE SAPPHIRES (PG-I3) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45 I
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR TUESDAY,JUNE11, 2013:
8 p.m. on E3, "NCIS" —As the team searches for a kidnapped teenage girl, Ziva and Abby (Cote de Pablo, Pauley Perrette) protect the victim's friend, who witnessed the abduction. Gibbs (Mark Harmon) seeks help from an old contact (Alex Kingston, "ER"). Tony (Michael Weatherly) haspangsofjealousy whenZiva makes plans with a mysterious man in "Gone." Sean Murray and David McCallum also star.
COVERINGS
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• ADMISSION(PG-13) 9:15 • OBLIVION (PG-13) 6 • After7 p.m., showsare2f and older only. Youngerthan 2f mayattend screenings before7 pm.ifaccompanied by a legalguardian.
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • FAST & FURIOUS 8 (PG-13) 3:30, 6:15, 9 • THE INTERNSHIP (PG-13) 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 • NOW YOUSEE ME (PG-13)2,4:30,7,9:30 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • THE INTERNSHIP (PG-13) 6:30 • MUD(PG-l3) 6 • NOW YOU SEEME(PG-13) 6: I5 • THIS IS THE END(R) 7
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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • AFTER EARTH (PG-l3) 6:15 • EPIC(LIPSTAIRS —PG)6:30 • Theupstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibi/ity.
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TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013
THE BULLETIN
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Senior Services: Grocery shopping Drugstore errands Housekeeping Light furniture moving Light maintenance
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ON PAGES 3&4. COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013
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cantact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
: Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Includeyour name, phone number and address
: Monday — Friday : 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
: Classified telephone hours:
Subscribe or manage your subscription
: Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
Place, cancel or extend an ad
T h e
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Pets 8 Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
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Computers
Heating 8 Stoves
Sales Northeast Bend
Irrigation Equipment
Horses & Equipment
Donate deposit bottles/ T HE B U LLETIN r e NOTICE TO For Sale 0.48 acre of ir- Tennessee Walker reg. cans to local all vol- A1 Washers&Dryers 1500 rnds of .556-.223 quires computer adADVERTISER ** FREE ** rigation right in T ugelding stable-mates: $150 ea. Full warunteer, non-profit resmalo Irrigation District. black, $3500; Sorrel $1000. 2900 rnds 22LR, vertisers with multiple Since September 29, Garage Sale Klt ranty. Free Del. Also cue, to h elp w /cat w ith b l a z e nos e $2200. 206-673-7876. $300. 140 rnds of 25-06, ad schedules or those 1991, advertising for Place an ad in The wanted, used W/D's spay/neuter vet bills. $2500. 541-317-8991. selling multiple sysused woodstoves has Bulletin for your ga$140. 541-647-8931 541-280-7355 Cans for Cats trailer is tems/ software, to dis- been limited to modrage sale and reat Bend PETCO (near 223 Remington, Federal close the name of the els which have been ceive a Garage Sale Hay, Grain & Feedg SOME Applebee's). Donate GENERATE AE 223, 55 grain, $15 business or the term c ertified by the O r - Kit FREE! Livestock & Equipmenti Mon-Fri at Smith Sign, EXCITEMENT in your box. 18 boxes total "dealer" in their ads. egon Department of 1st quality grass hay, Irg J Want to Buy or Rent neighborhood! Plan a 1515 NE 2nd; or at Paul, 541-241-0532 Private party advertis- Environmental QualKIT INCLUDES: 3'x3'x8' bales, approx CRAFT i n Tu m a lo garage sale and don't ity (DEQ) and the fed- • 4 Garage Sale Signs 750lbs ea. $240/ton, barn Replacement-quality Wanted: $Cash paid for anytime. 3 8 9 -8420. forget to advertise in 240 rnds of 30-30 ammo, ers are d efined as purebred y e arling those who sell one eral E n v ironmental • $2.00 Off Coupon To stored. Patterson Ranch, Angus heifers, Final vintage costume jew- For more i nfo/map, classified! $240. 650 rnds of 9mm computer. Protection A g e ncy Use Toward Your elry. Top dollar paid for visit www.craftcats.org 541-385-5809. Sisters, 541-549-3831 Answer and Danny $260. 541-647-8931 (EPA) as having met Next Ad Gold/Silver.l buy by the Boy bloodlines. Good • 10 Tips For "Garage smoke emission stanWanted: Irrigated farm disposition. Raised in Estate, Honest Artist Doxie Mini Long Haired Need to get an The Bulletin Misc. Items dards. A cer t ified Sale Success!" Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Male 7 weeks, has ground, under pivot ir- long-established herd. recommends extra ad in ASAP? w oodstove may b e first shots and dewrigation, i n C e n tral $1000 ea. Del. avail. o. -I You can place it Buying Diamonds identified by its certifiOR. 541-419-2713 ormed. $300. Mandy 541-480-8096 Madras PICK UP YOUR chasing products or • /Gold for Cash cation label, which is GARAGE SALE KIT at 541.306.7784 Pets & Supplies online at: services from out of I Saxon's Fine Jewelers permanently attached Want to b u y A l falfa, 1777 SW Chandler l the area. Sending l www.bendbulletin.com 541-389-6655 to the stove. The Bulgrass and grain hay, DO YOU HAVE Ave., Bend, OR 97702 • c ash, c h ecks, o r • Farmers Column The Bulletin recomstanding, in C entral will no t k n owSOMETHING TO People Lookfor Information letin l credit i n f o rmation mends extra caution ingly accept advertisOre. 541-419-2713 548 -385-5809 SELL 10X20 STORAGE may be subjected to About Products and when purc h asi ng for the s ale o f FOR $500 OR BUILDINGS l FRAUD. For more 500 rnds 40 S&W, $250. Services Every Day through uncertified ing products or serLESS? for protecting hay, information about an g 500 rnds of 38spl, $250. The Bulletin Classifieds vices from out of the woodstoves. Non-commercial Horses & Equipment~ firewood, livestock advertiser, you may I 541-647-8931 area. Sending cash, advertisers may BUYING 267 etc. $1496 Installed. checks, or credit inl call t h e Ore g onl place an ad with ' State Attor ney ' Bend local pays CASH!! Lionel/American Flyer 541-617-1133. f ormation may b e Fuel & Wood oul' trains, accessories. CCB ¹t 73684. subjected to fraud. l General's O f fi c e for all firearms & "QUICK CASH 541-408-2191. kfjbuilders@ykwc.net Consumer P r otec- • For more i nformaammo. 541-526-0617 All Year Dependable SPECIAL" 0 t ion ho t l in e at I tion about an adverBUYING & S E LLING Firewood: Seasoned 1 week 3 lines 12 0 CASH!! tiser, you may call l 1-877-877-9392. All gold jewelry, silver Lodgepole, Split, Del. or e~eeke eor For Sale, Lowline For Guns, Ammo 8 the O r egon State and gold coins, bars, Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 Ad must include Reloading Supplies. Angus and Dexter's rounds, wedding sets, Attorney General's for $335. Cash, Check of single item TACK & SADDLE 541-408-6900. Heifers. (pregnant or Office C o n sumer price class rings, sterling sil- or Credit Card OK. of $500 or less, or AUCTION with calf) NO steers ver, coin collect, vin- 541-420-3484. Protection hotline at multiple items Collection: Ammo incl. Sat. June 15, 7 p.m. available except for watches, dental 1-877-877-9392. whose total does REM M3 7 R a nge- tage Preview 5:30 p.m. 269 cow/calf pairs. gold. Bill Fl e ming, not exceed $500. master; Cimarron "Evil 541-382-9419. Liquidating 70 Grass fed/raised. Gardening Supplies Roy" 45LC; COLT OfFarm Equipment Ser rog Central Oregon rore 1903 Saddles + an entire Reasonable prices. Call Classifieds at & Equipment ficers .22; R u gers: BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS store's worth of inMust sell as & Machinery 541-385-5809 Antiques wanted: tools, Blackhawk Flattop 44; Search the area's most ventory at public I am retiring. Adopt a nice cat from www.bendbulletin.com furniture, marbles, beer Super Blackhawk 44; comprehensive listing of auction, regardless Leo 541-306-0357 Petco, PetSmart or BarkTurfSoil.com cans, early B/W pho1's i n 6 mm, 2 7 0 , of loss or cost. Top Tumalo s a n ctuary! classified advertising... tography, radios & 7mm. 541-389-1392 brand and custom Fixed, shots, ID chip, English Bulldog, beautireal estate to automotive, lighting. 541-389-1578 PROMPT D E LIVERY Wanted: Irrigated farm made Saddles, tested, more! Sancful white, female, 4 yrs merchandise tc sporting Custom-made beautiful goods. 54Z-389-9663 ground, under pivot irtuary open Sat/Sun old. spayed. Needs Bridles, Blankets, Bulletin Classifieds matching rifle r acks, appear every day in the rigation, i n C e n tral 1 -5, other days by too much to list. bulldog-knowledgable holds 6 (2), each Fresh strawberries! OR. 541-419-2713 appt. 6 5480 7 8 t h, family, air conditioned Everything used on print or on line. rifles/shotguns, both for Picked daily 7 days Bend. Photos, map at home, no small chilFor newspaper & around a horse! Call 541-385-5809 $150 541-410-1312 www.craftcats.org. delivery, call the week. Open Mon. dren. V er y a c t ive. Want to b u y A l falfa, Cash, Cards, NO www.bendbulletin.com 541-389-8420, or like $500. 541-350-1965. Sat., 9-7, Sun. 10-6 Circulation Dept. at grass and grain hay, CHECKS 10% BuyRevolver, .38 special, us on Facebook. 541-385-5800 Wholesale avail. Adstanding, in C entral ers Premium Just bought a new boat? Beautiful handundercover Charter Arms vance orders. Ore. 541-419-2713 To place an ad, call eerrmg Ce trel Oregonsince r903 Elks Lodge ¹. 1371 A pet sitter in NE Bend, Sell your old one in the with s p eed l o a ders, carved coffee table 541-385-5809 We pick or U-Pick e e e 63120 Boyd Acres warm and loving home classifieds! Ask about our shoulder holster, ammo Gas Grill with rotisserie, (44 x 19'/k x 17y2 ) K Family Farm or email Super Seller rates! Rd., Bend, OR with no cages, $25 day. and 2 matching end and more, $499. .30-.30 tank 8 cover included, classrfred@bendbulletrn.com Find exactly what 33427 Seven Mile (541) 362-1150 Linda at 541-647-7308 541-385-5809 Marlin lever action rifle, used 2 times, $150. tables (shown) 24'/4e Lane SE, Albany, OR. you are looking for in the e x 24~A". Built in Auctioneer 1949 heirloom, hunting/ x 15 firm. 541-312-2845 541-286-2164. Aussie/Maltese-cross senrotrneor er 0 egoo e ererkrke Mike Murphy CLASSIFIEDS saddle gun, $400. 18' Taiwan between Toy puppies (they look Terry trailer, great hunt- Wanted- paying cash 1940-1950, all glass e Aussie) 1 male $250, 1 ing rig, everything works, for Hi-fi audio & stu- L awn Hog 1 8 elect covered, in excelfemale $300. CASH. mower/mulcher $65 lent condition. $1600 new radials, $2000. Per- dio equip. Mclntosh, 541-546-7909 sonal fishing cataraft, J BL, Marantz, D y 541-420-2116 OBO. 541-382-6731 $400 OBO, with 2 oars. naco, Heathkit, SanA ussie Mix, (2), 1 s t E nglish Mastiff A K C SUPER TOP SOIL Mazda pickup, g reat sui, Carver, NAD, etc. shots, dew o rmed, puppies, dam & sire www.hershe soilandbark.com mileage, with gear/wood Call 541-261-1808 fully OFA tested, litter $150. 541-771-2606 Screened, soil & comrack, new studded snow is champion sired with post mi x ed , no tires, 1993 4 c y linder, WHEN YOU SEE THIS Australian Sh e pherd incredible pedigrees! Drtslg I rocks/clods. High hu$2500. Couch with 2 reMini pups, registered, S mall litter, only 5 Visit our HUGE mus level, exc. for cliners built-in, plus free family raised, bred for pups avail. $ 2 000. flower beds, lawns, home decor TV, 541-516-8985 (mestemperament and Chris, 503-577-7185. consignment store. gardens, straight sage) or 541-610-3578. agility. 541-389-7499 On a classified ad s creened to p s o il. New items Frenchie Faux puppies, go to Ruger 22 pistol, stain Bark. Clean fill. Dearrive daily! ,tkk BOXER AKC puppies, very coby, 8 wks, 1st www.bendbulletin.com less NIB 1980s lim liver/you haul. 930 SE Textron, reat litter, 1st shots, shots/dewormed, $600. to view additional i ted e d ition, r a r e 541-548-3949. Bend 541-318-1501 541-447-0210 700. 541-325-3376 photos of the item. www.redeuxbend.com $500 541-382-8973 German Shepherds AKC 270 r www.sherman-ranch.us The Bulletin reserves Ruger M77 MKII 223 BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS e Lost & Found 541-281-6829 Lam s tk , 6 x 1 8x50 Search the area's most V • the right to publish all $725; Brown- comprehensive listing of Found iPOD on Reed 'e r Lhasa Apso/Shih Tzu ads from The Bulletin scope, ing 325 WSM Abolt II classified advertising... pup. So adorable! $300. newspaper onto The Weaver scope, ammo, real estate to automotive, Market Road by Desc hutes R iver. C a l l 503-888-0800, Madras. Bulletin Internet webCavalier King Charles $625; Ruger M77 300 merchandise to sporting 541-740-5775. site. Win. m a g sc o p e, goods. Bulletin Classifieds tri pup male, $1500. AKC reg., house-bro$425; Mossberg 338 appear every day in the Lost wedding ring MeSererogCentral Oregon rrore retB morial weekend posmod. 1500 s c o pe print or on line. ken, crate- t r ained, sibly at Sugarloaf Mtn. shots an d w o r ming 4x12, $425; Sav. V24, Call 541-385-5809 Motel, High D e sert 2 23/20 g a . , $ 6 0 0 ; www.bendbulletin.com current 541-382-7614 Middle School, Pilot Taurus NlB 605-357 Malamute/wolf pup Butte o r Bo r d en's r blue, $500; Taurus PT USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! ierrreg Ce rrel Oregoorrore r903 9-week-old female. Corner. Cash reward. 1911 AR 45 ACP, 2 253-653-5296 $400. First shots. rl m ags, $500; W i n . Dcor-to-door selling with 263 541.241.4914 1917-300 Win. mag. Western Wear fast results! It's the easiest REMEMBER: Ifyou Tools scope, $325. 541-325 -Gently UsedQueenslandHeelers have lost an animal, Micro-chipped. way in the world to sell. -1324. 541-475-1202 * Double D Ranch don't forget to check Standard & Mini, $150 Sears Elite Series Gen* Patricia Wolf White with dark & up. 541-280-1537 The Humane Society The Bulletin Classified Ruger M77 rifle 25-06 erator, 7000 watts, new www.rightwayranch.wor * Boots in Bend 541-382-3537 Liberty mdl S N ¹ 2 9, in box, $895 new; sell brown markings 541-385-5809 * Turquoise dpress.com Redmond, exc. c ond., $ 5 00. $725. 541-306-0166. N~ 541-549-6950 541-923-0882 541-382-8973 Chihuahua male, 8 mo. Rodent control experts 265 Prineville, tooth. cream colored, very (barn cats) seek work 541 -447-71 78; Taurus 17HMR Tracker, Building Materials e s mart, $150. Cal l in exchange for safe OR Craft Cats, stainless, 6/2 barrel, as He ESCAPED from 541-270-8294 (no text) shelter, basic care. 541-389-8420. new, amazinq pistol tack Bend Habitat Fixed, shots. Will deKindred Spirit Pet drlyer, $500. RESTORE liver! 541-389-8420 541-420-3106 (2) Yakima LockJaw roofCare betWeen Bend 8 RedmOnd On May 7th.(He may Building Supply Resale Call a Pro Scottish Terrier p up- top bike mounts, $75 Quality at LOW still have a collar on from Kindred Spirit). He will only Wanted: Collector Whether you need a pies, AKC, born 4/2. each. Delta Stableloader PRICES r 1 seeks high quality COme to "BaCOn", "CheeSe"Or "COOkie" When shots 8 wormed, par- pickup bed bicycle mount fence fixed, hedges 740 NE 1st fishing items. ents on site, Ready for 2 bikes, $85. Call 541-312-6709 called. He js our disabled daughter's Service Dog. trimmed or a house 541-639-4048 Call 541-678-5753, or now! 541-317-5624. Chihuahuas, awesome Open to the public. PLEASE HELP BRING CHESTER HOME!!! 503-351-2746 built you'll find asst'd colors, all meds, Wolf-Husky-Malamute Sisters Habitat ReStore $250. 541-362-1977 professional help in pups, only 2 left! $300! • G o lf Equipment • Building Supply Resale The Bulletin's "Call a lf seen or found PLEASE CALL 541-977-7019 Cowboy Corgi puppies! Quality items. TV, Stereo 8 Videog any of these numbers, day or night! Service Professional" Ready for new homes Yorkie pups, AKC, big Golf cart, 2000 Yamaha LOW PRICES! 831-241-6458 • 831-241-4817 6/25/13. 4 males, 3 eyes, short-nosed, health gas, custom top, runs Stereo cabinet, hi-end 150 N. Fir. Directory 541-549-1621 females, $250 guar. Potty training; ready good. $1500 f i rm, s teel comp., must sell. 831-277-3918 • 619-871-7279 541-385-5809 541-792-0808 6/28. 541-777-7743 541-280-3780 Open to the public. $250. 541-410-1312
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E2 TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5500 pm Fri •
Tuesday•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mona Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon Tuess
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Redmond Homes
MOTEL - Housekeeping Supervisor 8 H o usekeeping staff, full-time. Apply in person at Sugarloaf Mountain Motel front desk, 62980 N. Highway 97, in Bend.
Plumbers, Journeymen needed for new construction. Start immediately! Call Gary, 541-410-1655
Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Receptionist - Full Time Long established fampractice seeks Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • ily full-time ReceptionHelp us provide Saturday • • • •. . . . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri. ist. the best care possible by adding your skills and • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • bi-lingual Sunday. • • • • prior exp with com-
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PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
Place aphotoin your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.
"UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days..................................
(call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
*Must state prices in ed
C®X
The Bulletin bendbulletimcom
is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
541-447-5643
required, clean r esponsible person. Apply in person, Furni-
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Call 54 l-385-5809
Q0~0 ~
**No Application Fee **
Warehouse po s ition, 2 bdrm, 1 bath, part-time, clean ODL, $530 8 $540 w/lease. heavy lifting, respon- Carports included! sible & h ardworking. puterized appointin person, 1735 FOX HOLLOW APTS. ment s c h eduling. Apply NE Hwy 20. (541) 383-3152 Pick up job packet Cascade Rental at office. Management. Co. Looking for your next MadrasMedical employee? Group TURN THE PAGE Place a Bulletin help 76 NE 12th St., wanted ad today and For More Ads Madras, OR. reach over 60,000 The Bulletin Remember.... readers each week. A dd your we b a d Your classified ad Call for Specials! dress to your ad and will also appear on Limited numbers avail. bendbulletin.com readers on The 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. which currently Bulletin' s web site W/D hookups, patios receives over 1.5 will be able to click or decks. million page views through automatically MOUNTAIN GLEN, every month at to your site. 541-383-9313 no extra cost. Professionally Sales Bulletin Classifieds managed by Norris & Furniture s alesperson Get Results! Stevens, Inc. needed full time, reCall 385-5809 tail exp. p r eferred. or place 648 Some heavy lifting reyour ad on-line at Houses for quired. Apply in perbendbulletin.com son at 2145 S. Hwy Rent General 97, Redmond, Oregon Tues - Sat., 10-6. Ask Call The Bulletin At Rent /Own 541-385-5809 for Stephen or fax re3 bdrm, 2 bath homes sume 541-923-6774. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail $2500 down, $750 mo. Great American At: www.bendbulletin.com OAC. J and M Homes
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 Furniture 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 Sales part-time position, will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. exp. helpful but not
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Truck Drivers with experience needed. Seeking dump truck, belly dump, flatbed, lowboy 8 c o n tainer d rivers. Local a n d 630 over the road positions. Must have 2 Rooms for Rent years experience and valid Class A CDL. Studios & Kitchenettes Wages based on ex- Furnished room, TV w/ perience. Benefits in- cable, micro & fridge. clude health i nsur- Utils & l inens. New ance, 401(k) p lan, owners. $145-$165/wk 541-382-1885 paid vacation, inspection bonus program. 634 Call Kenny, Western Heavy Haul, Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
Employment Opportunities
ture Outlet, 1735 NE Hwy 20, Bend..
Service Tech Immediate Job opportunity for qualified and trained person. See the display ad in our classified s ection today f o r more information. Hollingsworths' lnc. Burns, OR
DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW? Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day! 541-385-5809. VIEW the Classifieds at:
541-548-5511
Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will help them in someway.
PSMIIIIej
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This
Loans & Mortgages
advertising tip brought to youby
BANK TURNED YOU
The Bulletin
526
Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at
bendbulletin.com 775
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
Motorcycles & Accessoriesj HD Screaming Eagle Electra Glide 2005, 103" motor, two tone candy teal, new tires, 23K miles, CD player, hydraulic clutch, excellent condition. Highest offer takes it. 541-480-8080.
Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $6500 OBO. For m ore info. c a l l 541-647-4232
FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511
LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year conditional warranty. Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! Redmond, Oregon 541-548-5511 JandMHomes.com
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Yamaha Classic 1973 250 Eunduro. All original, street legal, 11K miles, $1195. 541-382-7515
ATvs Suzuki Ei er 2004 Quadrunner ATV, automatic, new tires, 2215 miles, covered dog carrier platform nylon dust cover, set of 4 snow chains. $2899. Contact Larry at 971-678-3196 or
nortonjack@comcast.net
Snowmobiles • Yamaha Banshee 2001, ( 2) 2000 A rctic C at custom built 350 motor, Z L580's EFI with n e w race-ready, lots of extras, covers, electric start w/ $4999/obo 541-647-8931 reverse, low miles, both excellent; with new 2009 Just too many Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, collectibles? drive off/on w/double tilt, lots of accys. Selling due to m e dical r e asons. Sell them in $6000 all. 541-536-8130 The Bulletin Classifieds Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, short track, variable 541-385-5809 exhaust valves, electric s t art, r e v erse, manuals, rec o rds, new spare belt, cover, Boats & Accessoriesj heated hand g rips, nice, fast, $999. Call
DOWN? Private party will loan on real es654 Domestic & tate equity. Credit, no Houses for Rent In-Home Positions problem, good equity SE Bend is all you need. Call Concrete Construction Landscaping/Yard Care Live-in, full time care for 541-573-7254 Oregon Land MortTom, 541-385-7932, bdrm, 1 bath w/gaelderly woman in LaPine www.bendbulletin.com gage 541-388-4200. 3 rage JJ & B Construction, on fenced .75 • Yamaha 750 1999 Nelson 14' 1982 Valco River area. Help with mobility, acre. Detached 24 x quality concrete work. Landscaping & Mountain Max, $1400 The Bulletin Sled, 70 h.p., Fishgrooming, meal preparaFood Service Bruno's 36 shop, greenhouse, Over 30 Years Exp. Get your • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 Finder. Older boat but Maintenance tion, t ran s portation,Grocery/U-bake is taking I Recommends extra close to High Desert Sidewalks; RV pads; Serving Central medications, some light apps for Cashier & Pizza caution when purbusiness EXT, $1000. price includes trailer, school. Pet friendly. Driveways; Color & • Zieman 4-place Oregon Since 2003 housekeeping, house3 wheels and tires. All products or I 1st, last & c leaning Stamp wor k a v a il. Residental/Commercial hold errands and com- Maker. Apply: 1709 NE chasing trailer, SOLD! services from out of ' for $15 0 0 ! Call deposit. $980/mo. Also Hardwood floorpanionship. Wages ne- 6th, Bend. No phone calls l the area. Sending a ROW I N G All in good condition. 541-416-8811 For address, call ing a t aff o rdable Sprinkler otiable and will include Housekeeping Located in La Pine. c ash, c hecks, o r 541-410-9064. prices. 541-279-3183 ActivationiRepair f ree rent. R e ferencesSeasonal Housekeep- l credit i n f o rmation Call 541-408-6149. with an ad in CCB¹190612 Back Flow Testing required. For interview ers N eeded. M u st l may be subjected to 671 660 call 916-216-0162. The Bulletin's work weekends and FRAUD. Mobile/Mfd. Maintenance "Call A Service Motorcycles &Accessories holidays. M i n imum For more i nformaBULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS .Thatch & Aerate for Rent wage while t raining tion about an adverWhere can you find a Search the area's most • Spring Clean up Professional" L-H then to p iece rate. l tiser, you may call comprehensive listing of •Weekly Mowing 14' a luminum helping hand? bo a t Directory 3 bdrm, 2 bath dbl. wide Must have r e liable the Oregon S tate classified advertising... w/trailer, 2009 Mercury & Edging From contractors to m fd in DRW o n 1 transportation, ODL, l Attorney General's real estate to automotive, • Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly 15hp motor, fish finder, pets ok. $1200 current Ins, over 18 yard care, it's all here Office C o n sumer I LOCAL MONEYrWebuy acre., merchandise to sporting Maintenance $2700. 541-815-8797 mo. Call after 10 a.m. secured trustdeeds 8 years of age. Please Protection hotline at I goods. Bulletin Classifieds •Bark, Rock, Etc. in The Bulletin's 541-617-0179 note,some hard money c all Car o l © I 1-877-877-9392. appear every day in the "Call A Service loans. Call Pat Kelley Harley Davidson Heri- 15' older Seaswirl, 541 -749-1 296; print or on line. ~Landsca in 541-382-3099 ext.13. tage Softail 2002, Fl, 35HP motor, cover, ie Bulletiy g Village Properties Professional" Directory LTl •Landscape emerald green 8 black, d epth finder, a s Call 541-385-5809 Sunriver 573 lots of chrome & extras, sorted live v e sts, www.bendbulletin.com Construction •Water Feature 9K, perfect cond. $9995 $1400. TRUCK DRIVERS 476 Business Opportunities OBO. 503-999-7356 (cell) Installation/Maint. Knight Transportation is 541-548-7645 or Employment •Pavers hiring! 48, 11W, NW FIGARO'S PIZZA FranHarley Davidson Soft- 541-408-3811. •Renovations Opportunities regional or dedicated chise and a t tached Tail Deluxe 20 0 7, •Irrigations Installation Debris Removal Canada Runs! FT/ PT Video Store for sale in white/cobalt, w / pasCLERICAL Medcor has an for drivers living in WA Burns, Oregon. This 15' older Seaswirl, senger kit, Vance & Senior Discounts DMV/Title Clerk exciting opportunity and OR. Ask about turn key business is JUNK BE GONE Hines muffler system 35HP motor, cover, Bonded & Insured needed, full-time, for for a Wellness $1000 bonus*! available immediately. 705 d epth f inder, a s I Haul Away FREE 8 kit, 1045 mi., exc. 541-815-4458 Bend location. Title 8 Coordinator in Bend. Contact Daisy or Successful business For Salvage. Also c ond, $16,9 9 9 , sorted live v e sts, LCB¹8759 Real Estate Services Registration e x p eri- This is a Full Time for 16+ years. Serisubmit application at 541-389-9188. $1400. OBO. Cleanups & Cleanouts NOTICE: Oregon Land- ence a must; RV/Auto opportunity working www.driveKnight.com ous inquiries only. Boise, ID Real Estate 541-548-7645 or Mel, 541-389-8107 scape Contractors Law Industry 8 Accounting Harley Heritage 32 hours a week. 503-405-1800 541-589-1550. 541-408-3811. For relocation info, (ORS 671) requires all experience preferred. Softail, 2003 Apply at call Mike Conklin businesses that ad- C ompetitive pa y 8 $5,000+ in extras, I Domestic Services www.medcor.com 208-941-8458 vertise t o pe r f orm benefits. Please send $2000 paint job, Web Developer resume' to Silvercreek Realty 30K mi. 1 owner, Landscape ConstrucWant a sparkling clean bcrvhireO mail.com Check out the For more information tion which includes: house? Give CJ's Are you a technical star who can also commu745 classifieds online decks , Fax: 541-330-2496, or please call Housecleaning a call, p lanting, nicate effectively with non-technical execu16' apply in person, 63500 O ld T o w n 541-385-8090 fences, arbors, N. Hwy 97, Bend, OR. www.aendaulletin.com tives and employees? Would you like to work Homes for Sale 541-604-1908. Over Camper C a n oe, or 209-605-5537 water-features, and in25 years experience! Updated daily hard, play hard in beautiful Bend, OR, the rec- 6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, exc. cond, $900. stallation, repair of irreation capital of the state? Then we'd like to rigation systems to be 541-312-8740 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, HDFatBO 1996 talk to you. Handyman licensed w i t h the > Home Delivery Advisor > view By owner ideal for Landscape Contracextended family. Our busy media company that publishes nu- $590,000. I DO THAT! tors Board. This 4-digit The Bulletin Circulation Department is 541-390-0886 17.5' Glastron 2002, merous web and mobile sites seeks an experiHome/Rental repairs number is to be i nseeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a Chevy eng., Volvo enced developer who is also a forward thinker, Small jobs to remodels cluded in all adver- full time position and consists of managing a NOTICE outdrive, open bow, creative problem solver, excellent communiHonest, guaranteed tisements which indi- delivery area and working with an adult carAll real estate adverstereo, sink/live well, cator, and self-motivated professional. We are work. CCB¹151573 cate the business has rier force to ensure our customers receive sutised here in is subw/glastron tr a i ler Completely redesigning all of our websites within the next a bond,insurance and perior service. Must be able to create and Dennis 541-317-9768 ject to t h e F e deral incl. b oa t c o v er, couple of years and want you in on the ground workers c ompensa- perform strategic plans to meet department F air H o using A c t , Rebuilt/Customized Like new, $ 8 500. 2012/2013 Award floor. tion for their employ- objectives such as increasing market share ERIC REEVE HANDY which makes it illegal 541-447-4876 Winner ees. For your protec- and route by route penetration. Ideal candito advertise any pref- Showroom SERVICES. Home & Condition Fluency withPHP, HTML5, CSS3, jQuery and tion call 503-378-5909 date will be a self-starter who can work both in Commercial Repairs, erence, limitation or JavaScript is a must. Experience integrating Many Extras or use our website: the office and in their assigned territory with discrimination based Carpentry-Painting, Low Miles. www.lcb.state.or.us to minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are third-party solutions and social media applicaPressure-washing, on race, color, relitions required. Desired experience includes: check license status necessary with company vehicle provided. $17,000 Honey Do's. On-time gion, sex, handicap, before contracting with Strong customer service skills and manageXML/JSON, MySQL, Joomla, Java, respon541-548-4807 familial status or napromise. Senior sive web design, Rails, WordPress. Top-notch business. Persons ment skills are necessary. Computer experitional origin, or intenDiscount. Work guar- the doing land s cape ence is helpful. We offer benefits including skills with user interface and graphic design an Look at: anteed. 541-389-3361 tion to make any such 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 maintenance do not added plus. medical, dental, 401(k), paid vacation and sick or 541-771-4463 preferences, l i mitaBendhomes.com Volvo Penta 270HP r equire an L C B Bonded & Insured time. We believe in promoting from within so tions or discrimination. for Complete Listings of low hrs., must see, cense. Background in the media industry desired but advancement within the company is available. We will not knowingly Area Real Estate for Sale $15,000, 541-330-3939 CCB¹181595 not required. This is a full-time position with Just bought a new boat? If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse accept any advertisbenefits. If you've got what it takes, e-mail a Sell your old one in the ing for r eal e state and you are energetic, have Landscaping/Yard Care classifieds! Ask about our backgrounds, cover letter, resume, and portfolio/work sample which is in violation of great organizational skills and interpersonal links a n d/or re p ository Super Seller rates! ( GitHub) t o this law. All persons communication skills, please fill out an appliresumeOwescompapers.com. 541-385-5809 are hereby informed cation at The Bulletin or send your resume to: that all dwellings adSPRING CLEAN-UP! Job Opening-Circulation This posting is also on the web at www.bendvertised are available Zodt'I,'4 Quadrdy Aeration/Dethatching c/o The Bulletin bulletin.com on an equal opportuWeekly/one-time service PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 Zau< gtat.e /', , avail. Bonded, insured. nity basis. The BulleOI' EOE/Drug Free Workplace More Than Service Free Estimates! tin Classified kfoutz@bendbulletin.com Peace Ol Mind COLLINS Lawn Maint. No phone calls, please. Ca/l 541-480-9714 I I t I The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace, EOE. Spring Clean Up ALLEN REINSCH •Leaves I , I Yard maintenance & •Cones clean-up, thatching, •Needles plugging 8 much more! •Debris Hauling Call 541-536-1 294
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Advertising Account Executive
The Bulletin is looking for a professional and driven Sales and Marketing person to help our customers grow their businesses with an Painting/Wall Covering expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full time position requires a Top Dressing background in consultative sales, territory WESTERN PAINTING CO. Richard Hayman, management and aggressive prospecting skills. Landscape a semi-retired paint- Two years of m edia sales experience is Maintenance ing contractor of 45 preferable, but we will train the right candidate. Full or Partial Service years. S m a l l J obs •Mowing ~Edging Welcome. Interior & The p o sition in c ludes a com p etitive • Pruning ~Weeding Exterior. c c b ¹ 5184. compensation package including benefits, and Sprinkler Adjustments 541-388-6910 rewards an aggressive, customer focused salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Fertilizer included BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS with monthly program Search the area's most Email your resume, cover letter comprehensive listing of Weekly, monthly and salary history to: classified advertising... or one time service. real estate to automotive, Jay Brandt, Advertising Director jbrandt@bendbulletin.com merchandise to sporting EXPERIENCED OI goods. Bulletin Classifieds Commercial drop off your resume in person at appear every day in the & Residential 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, DR 97702; print or on line. Dr mailto PD 8ox 6020, Bend, OR 97708; Call 541-385-5809 No phone inquiries please. www.bendbulletin.com Senior Discounts 541-390-1466 EOE I Drug Free Workplace
Lawn Renovation
Aeration - Dethatching Overseed Compost
Same Day Response
The Bulletin serwngcentral oagan vnre s03
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f Immediate job OPPOrtunity fOr Qualified and Trained Person It takes a special person to become a Home Instead CAREGiver™ not a special degree. Working with seniors in their homes can be challengingbut,atthe same time,tremendously rewarding. Enjoy training, support, flexible shifts thatfityour life,and a Iob thatnurtures the soul.
Service Technician:Must have pervious experience jn Ag Equipment. Resume with references required. Call Ron Weatherby, for appointment.
HOLLINGSWORTHS' INC. • No medical degree necessary ' Training and support provided Flexible shifts
, HOme nSfeag
Find out more at homeinsteadaend.com, I Become a CAREGiver link HRK~XIIKII' Call 54 I.330.6400
7wue zxi pawrzan/:
Each Home Instead semor care~ office is inde endene owned and o erated © 2013 Home Instead Inc.
Burns, Oregon (541-573-7254)
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Taking it easy By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services
" That C y i s s o la z y," R o se remarked to me, "if work was done in bed, he would sleep on the floor." Cy the Cynic is notorious for adopting easy, simple lines of play even if they're technically inferior. "Saves wear and tear on the brain," Cy shrugs. When Cy was declarerat today's slam, West led a trump. (With a heart lead, Cycould take the ace and ruff two clubs in dummy.) The Cynic won and cast his fate to finesses. He let the queen of hearts ride next, and East took the king and led another trump. Cy won in dummy and tried a club to his queen, but when West produced the king, Cy went two down.
heart, he bids one spade and you try INT. Partner then bids two clubs. What do you say? ANSWER: Partner is groping for a playable contract. He has 4-1-4-4 or 4 -0-5-4 pattern and m a y h a v e minimum values. Pass. A raise to three clubs is possible — you have a sound hand for your bidding — but your king of hearts looks wasted oppositepartner's shortness. South dealer Both sides vulnerable
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TROUBLE WEST EAST 432 Cy must have thought it was too 4 8 7 6 QK983 m uch t r ouble t o de v e lo p t h e 9 6 4 2 diamonds. He can takethe ace at C 63 0 KQ9 4 J 1098 Trick Two, ruff a diamond high, lead 4 K 6 5 3 2 a trump to dummy's jack and ruff a SOUTH diamond. 4AK Q 109 5 When diamonds break 3-2, Cy draws trumps and goes to the ace of QQJ10 04 h earts to d i scard o n t h e g o o d 4AQ7 d iamonds, making seven. If t h e diamonds broke 4-1, Cy would still South We s t Nor th Eas t have chances for 12 tricks. DAILY QUESTION
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06/11/13
THE I3L!LLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 11 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 !Boats & Accessories
Motor h omes
•
T r a vel Trailers •
885
932
932
Canopies & Campers
Antique & Classic Autos
Antique & Classic Autos
•
18.5' Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L Fleetwood D i s covery Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 40' 2003, diesel mo- Outdoors RV 29' hp Bowrider w/depth torhome Wind River 250 w/all finder, radio/ CD player, slide outs, RLSW 2011 rod holders, full canvas, options-3 2 TV's,W/D, EZ Loader trailer, exclnt satellite, One owner etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. cond, $11,500. Lightly used Wintered in h e ated 707-484-3518 (Bend) shop. $89,900 O.B.O. Perfect condi541-447-8664 tion Sleeps 6 Need help fixing stuff?
Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com 18.7' Sea Ray Monaco, 1984, 185hp, V6 MerCruiser, full canvas, life vests, bumpers, water skis, swim float, extra prop & more. EZ Loader trailer, never in saltwater, always garaged, very clean, all maint. records. $5500. 541-389-7329
1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored 8 Runs $9000. 541-369-8963
Canopy for long bed great c ond., w h ite w/tinted windows & slider window. $500. 541-580-7334
1952 Ford Customline Coupe, project car, flathead V-8, 3 spd extra parts, & materials, $2000 obo. 541-410-7473
$23,900 Lance Camper 1994, fits long bed crew cab, tv, a/c, loaded. $6200 OBO. 541-580-7334
541-317-3991 Jayco Seneca 34', 2007. 28K miles, 2 slides, Duramax diesel, 1 owner, excellent cond, $84,995; Trade? 541-546-6920
•
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED
975
•
Pickups
•
Vans
Automobiles
Ford 1-ton extended van, Ford Escape 2011 1995, 460 engine, set-up Limited 193k miles f or co n tractor wi t h ¹A92124 $2 3 , 495 shelves & bins, fold-down ladder rack, tow hitch, 180K miles, new tranny & Oregon Subaru Ba ja 20 0 5 , brakes; needs catalytic AuroSource converter & new windAWD, leather, b ed Mercedes 450SL, 1977, 541-598-3750 shield. $2200. 113K, 2nd owner, ga- liner, tow. aaaoregonautosource.com 541-220-7808 r aged, b o t h top s . Vin ¹103619 «wa I .! — g $10,900. 541-389-7596 $16,988. Ford Aerostar 1994
~
Eddie Bauer Edition Fully Loaded,
S U BA R U. BUBARUOPBEND COM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Mint Condition!
Runs Excellent! $3000. 541-350-1201
Plymouth B a r racuda 935 1966, original car! 300 Sport Utility Vehicles hp, 360 V8, center-
Ford Taurus Wagon 2004, 120K miles, loaded, in nice s h ape, $ 4 200.
541-815-9939
Lexus RX 2010 450h 10,343 miles, truffle ¹414986. $42 , 995
lines, 541-593-2597
Buick Riviera 1991, classic low-mile car, driven PROJECT CARS: Chevy about 5K/year. Always 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & garaged & pampered, Chevy Coupe 1950 Lumina Van 1 99 5 , 0 0 , I non-smoker, exclnt cond, rolling chassis's $1750 X LNT c o n d., w e l l Aulogource ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, $4300 obo 541-389-0049 541-598-3750 complete car, $ 1949; Chevrolet Tr ailblazer cared for. $2000 obo. Chev Cheyenne 20 1972 Cadillac Series 61 1950, LS 2006, 4 X 4, 3 r d 541-382-9835. aaaoregonautosource.com Custom Camper, new Tar- 2 dr. hard top, complete row, power window, Just bought a new boat? etMaster eng., 1 owner, w /spare f r on t cl i p ., tow pkg, Sell your old one in the 1350 obo. 541-350-6235 $3950, 541-382-7391 Automobiles • Vin¹149659 classifieds! Ask about our $9888 Super Seller rates! Redmond: Monaco Windsor, 2001, Chevrolet Cameo 541-385-5809 541-548-5254 loaded! (was $234,000 Aircraft, Parts S UBA R U . A udi A 6 se d a n Pickup, 1957, new) Solid-surface Quattro 2003 4wd, & Service disassembled, frame 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, counters, convection/ Terry 27' 2004 like new, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. a/c, auto, tilt steer, Garage Sales powder coated, new 877-266-3821 inboard motor, g r eat micro, 4-dr, fridge, sun & moon roofs, rarely used, newer front sheet metal, cab Dlr ¹0354 cond, well maintained, washer/dryer, ceramic Garage Sales restored. $9995 firm. leather int, disc & tires & awning, A/C, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 tile & carpet, TV, DVD, tape, good to exc solar panels, 4-6volt Call for more info, T-BIRD 1988 S port satellite dish, leveling, Garage Sales 541-306-9958 (cell) cond, + 4 mounted batteries, large sliderure coupe, 34,400 orig. 8-airbags, power cord studs KBB $8200, mi., A/C, PW, PL, new o ut, $ 10,750 o b o . Find them reel, 2 full pass-thru 541-504-0049, ask $7500. tires/brakes/hoses/ trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 Call 541-385-5634 in 1/3 interest in Columbia belts & exhausts. Tan 18' Seaswirl 1984, 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 w/tan interior. or 541-420-2699. 400, $150,000 (located L~ open bow, V6, enl ip ' Diesel gen set. $85,000 The Bulletin @ Bend.) Also: SunriImmaculate! $4,995. gine & outdrive reobo. 541-233-7963 r Classifieds ver hangar available for Days 5 4 1-322-4843, GMC Yukon De n ali built, extras, $2495. 2004, 4x4, l o a d ed, Buick LeSabre Cussale at $155K, or lease, Eves 541-383- 5043 541-546-6920 third row, tow. Chevy C-20 Pickup tom 2004, rare 75k, 54 1 B385-5809 @ $400/mo. Vin¹163244 541-948-2963 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; $6000, worth way WEEKEND WARRIOR $11,988 auto 4-spd, 396, model more. leather, Toy hauler/travel trailer. Advertise your car! CST /all options, orig. S UBA R U . heated seats, nice 24' with 21' interior. Add A P>cture! owner, $19,950, wheels. Good tires, Reach thousands of readers! Sleeps 6. Self-con541-923-6049 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. NATIONAL DOLPHIN CaII 541-385-5809 30 mpg, white. tained. Systems/ 877-266-3821 37' 1997, loaded! 1 The Bulletin Classifieds Chevy 1955 PROJECT VW BUG 1972 rebuilt Convinced? Call Bob • appearancein good Dlr ¹0354 I slide, Corian surfaces, car. 2 door wgn, 350 19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, 541-318-9999 Nissan Sentra 2012 eng, new paint, tires, floors (kitchen), condition. Smoke-free. small block w/Weiand new upholstery, new elec- wood Tow with ~/2-ton. Strong Full warranty, 35mpg, dual quad tunnel ram chrome whls, 30 mpg, tronics, winch, much more. 2-dr fridge, convection suspension; can haul - ~ A s • Buick Century Limited 520 per tank, all power. microwave, Vizio TV & with 450 Holleys. T-10 $3800. 541-233-7272 $9500. 541-306-0280 2000, r un s g r e at, $13,500. 541-788-0427 ATVs snowmobiles, roof satellite, walk-in 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, beautiful car. $3400. 933 20' 1993 Sea Nympf Fish shower, new queen bed. even a small car! Great Weld Prostar wheels, 541-312-3085 price - $8900. & Ski, 50 hrs on new White leather hide-aextra rolling chassis + Pickups i Call 541-593-6266 1 /3 interest i n w e llCVB' engine, fish finder, chart bed & chair, all records, $6500 for all. equipped IFR Beech Bo- extras. plotter & VHF radio with no pets o r s moking. Porsche Caye n ne Buick LeSabre 1996. 541-389-7669. nanza A36, new 10-550/ antenna. Good shape, $28,450. Turbo 2005, t wi n Good condition, prop, located K BDN. full cover, heavy duty Call 541-771-4800 fpp ->» t urbo, l oaded, l o w 121,000 miles. $65,000. 541-419-9510 trailer, kicker and electric miles. Non-smoker Nissan Versa S Sedan motors. Vin¹A92123 RV $2200 OBO. 2011, well equipped, $7500 or best offer. $24,888 541-954-5193. CONSIGNMENTS Weekend Warrior Toy great gas mileage. 541-292-1834 WANTED Hauler 28' 2007,Gen, Dodge Dakota Quad Vin¹397958 S UBA R U . We Do The Work ... P l Pf P l Pl fuel station, exc cond. Chevy Wagon 1957, Cab SLT 2006, 4x 4 , $10,888 Buick Lucerne CXS You Keep The Cash! sleeps 8, black/gray bed liner, tow pkg., 4-dr., complete, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2006 sedan, V8, S UBA RU. On-site credit i nterior, u se d 3X , premium wheels. 877-266-3821 $7,000 OBO / trades. PUBARUOPBEND COM Northstar 4.6L enapproval team, 20.5' 2004 Bayliner Vin¹653072 $19,999 firm. Please call Dlr ¹0354 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 1/5th interest in 1973 gine, silver, black web site presence. 205 Run About, 220 541-389-9188 541-389-6998 $15,988 877-266-3821 Cessna 150 LLC leather, new $36,000; We Take Trade-Ins! HP, V8, open bow, Dlr ¹0354 92K miles, 18U wheels 150hp conversion, low Chrysler 300 C o upe S UBA R U . Say Ugoodbuy Free Advertising. exc. cond with very Looking for your time on air frame and & much more, best 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, BIG COUNTRY RV low hours, lots of to that unused next employee? offer over $7900. engine, hangared in auto. trans, ps, air, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Porsche Carrera 911 Bend: 541-330-2495 extras incl. tower, 877-266-3821 Place a Bulletin help Bend. Excellent perBob, 541-318-9999 2003 convertible with frame on rebuild, reitem by placing it in Redmond: Bimini & custom Dlr ¹0354 wanted ad today and hardtop. 50K miles, iormance & affordpainted original blue, 541-548-5254 trailer, $17,950. The Bulletin Classifieds new factory Porsche reach over 60,000 able flying! $6,500. original blue interior, 541-389-1413 motor 6 mos ago with readers each week. 541-382-6752 original hub caps, exc. Take care of 18 mo factory warYour classified ad chrome, asking $9000 5 41 -385-580 9 ranty remaining. your investments will also appear on or make offer. Chevy Malibu 2009 $37,500. bendbulletin.com 541-385-9350 43k miles, loaded, with the help from 541-322-6928 which currently restuds on nms/ The Bulletin's ceives over 1.5 milAsking $12,900, 20.5' Seaswirl Spylion page views ev541-610-6834. "Call A Service der 1989 H.O. 302, Southwind 35.5' Triton, ery month at no 285 hrs., exc. cond., 2008,V10, 2 slides, DuProfessional" Directory extra cost. Bulletin stored indoors for pont UV coat, 7500 mi. 1974 Bellanca Classifieds Get ReBought new at life $11,900 OBO. 1730A sults! Call 385-5809 Subaru Baja S p ort $132,913; 541-379-3530 asking $91,000. or place your ad FAST '66 Ranchero! 2005, AWD, leather, 2180 TT, 440 SMO, Subaru impreza M/RX Call 503-982-4745 on-line at loaded, 35k miles, $7500 invested, 21' Bluewater Mirage 180 mph, excellent STI 2005, 6 s p e ed, bendbulletin.com Vin¹101442 sell for $4500! Chrysler Sebring 2004 MUST SELL. Toyota / Winnebago condition, always power windows $18688 Call 541.382.9835 Worth $831584k, beautiful dark gray/ Warrior hangared, 1 owner power locks, Alloys. Ii!Mlif S UB A R U . Will sacrifice for brown, tan leather int., 1993. Very good for 35 years. $60K. Vin ¹506223 D odge R a m 250 0 $4,900 for quick sell. shape. 73,413 miles. • Fifth Wheels $21,488 Quad Cab SLT2005, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $5995 541-350-5373 To see video, go to: $11,500. In Madras, 4x4, auto trans, tow, 877-266-3821 www.u2pro.com/95 4 + S UPUBARUOPBEND B A RCOMU . (541) 495-2000. call 541-475-6302 bed liner. Dlr ¹0354 541-815-9981 Vin¹716973 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 21' Crownline 215 hp 877-266-3821 $15,988 Subaru Forester 2013 FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, Executive Hangar in/outboard e n g ine bl a c k Dlr ¹0354 door panels w/flowers 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 1 3,750 m i . , at Bend Airport (KBDN) 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin 877-266-3821 ¹407179 $24,995 60' wide x 50' deep, & hummingbirds, sleeps 2/3 p e ople, Dlr ¹0354 U w/55' wide x 17' high biwhite soft top & hard Toyota Camrys: My Little Red Corvette" portable toilet, exc. Winnebago Suncruiser34' fold dr. Natural gas heat, top. Just reduced to Keystone Montana Coupe,1996,350, 1984, SOLD; +8$5 SUBARU. cond. Asking $8,000. 2004, only 34K, loaded, offc, bathroom. Adjacent $3,750. 541-317-9319 2955 RL 2008, AutoSource auto, 26-34 mpg, 132K, 1985 SOLD; OBO. 541-388-8339 too much to list, ext'd to Frontage Rd; great or 541-647-8483 2 slides, arctic $12,500/offer. 541-598-3750 1986 parts car warr. thru 2014, $54,900 visibility for aviation busiinsulation, loaded, 541-923-1781 Ads published in the www. aaaoregonautoG MC S i erra S L T only one left! $500 excellent never used ness. Financing avail"Boats" classification Dennis, 541-589-3243 source.com 2006 - 1 500 Crew able. 541-948-2126 or Call for details, condition. $33,500 include: Speed, fish881 Cab 4x4, Z71, exc. email 1jetjock©q.com 541-548-6592 541-923-4707 ing, drift, canoe, cond., 82 k m i les, Travel Trailers house and sail boats. $19,900. For all other types of FIND ITT 541-408-0763 Find It in watercraft, please see Ford Galaxie 500 1963, SUY IT! 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, Class 875. The Bulletin Classifieds! SELL IT! CORVETTE COUPE 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds radio (orig),541-419-4989 Glasstop 2010 Toyota FJ Crui s er Grand Sport - 4 LT 2007, 6 speed, 4x4, WHEN YOU SEE THIS One Half Interest in Ford Mustang Coupe I nternational Fla t loaded, clear bra roof rack, tow, alloys. Fleetwood 31' WilderRV-9A for SALE 1966, original owner, Bed Pickup 1963, 1 hood & fenders. Vin¹056099 2005 Vans RV-9A, V8, automatic, great ton dually, 4 s p d. ~OO n ess Gl 1 9 99, 1 2 ' New Michelin Super $17,988 0-320, Dynon, GPS, slide, 2 4 ' aw n i ng, shape, $9000 OBO. trans., great MPG, Sports, G.S. floor ICOM's, KT-76C, queen bed, FSC, out530-515-8199 S UBA R U . could be exc. wood mats, 17,000 miles, On a classified ad side shower, E-Z lift Oxygen. Flies great, hauler, runs great, Crystal red. go to no damage history. stabilizer hitch, l i ke 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Ford Ranchero Komfort 2003 new brakes, $1950. $45,000. www.bendbulletin.com new, been stored. 300 plus Hours tach, 877-266-3821 6' Slideout, 13' aw1979 541-419-5480. 503-358-1164. to view additional Beautiful h o u seboat,$10,950. 707-688-4253 kept in Redmond C Dlr ¹0354 with 351 Cleveland $85,000. 541-390-4693 ning, A/C, large storphotos of the item. Hangar. Reduced to www.centraloregon age tanks, gas/ elecmodified engine. The Bulletin $35K, OBO: tric water heater, Body is in houseboat.com. To Subscribe call Dick Hansen, LED TV, DVD, frig/ excellent condition, 541-923-2318 541-385-5800 or go to GENERATE SOME exfreezer, microwave, $2500 obo. dkhansenObendcitement in your neig- www.bendbulletin.com 541-420-4677 pantry, extra counter broadband.com or borhood. Plan a gaspace, tub/ shower Tod, 541-350-6462 .¹ Nk rage sale and don't bathroom, Queen forget to advertise in bed, 2 skylights, ,. • a. classified! 385-5809. Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, ceiling fan, Clean, based in Madras, alGood Condition. ways hangared since $9500 servingcecppRI oregon ptncB1903 1000 541-325-2220 new. New annual, auto Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 pilot, IFR, one piece engine, power everyLegal Notices • L e g al Notices Legal Notices • Legal Notices Jayco Eagle windshield. Fastest Ar- thing, new paint, 54K Watercraft 26.6 ft long, 2000 cher around. 1750 to- original m i les, runs FORMuau NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. great, excellent condi2 Sea-Doo Waverunners: Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, 541-475-6947, ask for tion in & out. Asking AP DIEDMAB PoflhBB C U * R I AgenC y U B B heldOOJ OAPBEDPEBIPDDPMBICIPH B PDBCO OOIChamberS 710NWW B U SUBBPBendOregan ThePurPOSe 1998 GSX Limited Ediawning, Eaz-Lift C PPDMMPPUDE APOCAC PPPDBDUCUBPPOPlhBDiBDBiBI D UUBIP oC D B U J ly 1 , 2 C 13BPBPPPOPPC DPIDBBPCCUMPOR Bl AB ADCPB CUBICommtltBB AP M oPP D Rob Berg. $8,500. 541-480-3179 I P D CB P PMPAOPACDAIO ACODPOflhBDUCUBP BPB Pm & Dt BC P CN P HBP,PPDNWPPBUEBBBP BB C.O U ,D I B A C l hBDO PAOPBB m BBCBP tion w/new pump; and stabilizer bars, heat B d IX M I B CB P P * C T B • B CB I P P PBDBPBCOCRBBM M U Bth P • X PBAARMBBP d e e m PPDB ABEPD B UO T D A B CP M M P OPR NCPP P , P D BP OPCBBOBBABDCPBM BPPBCIC IhBD CBBPR N P A 2005 3D version. Also P ~ BD & air, queen MONTANA 3585 2008, 2008 2-place Zimmerwalk-around bed, Trucks & exc. cond., 3 slides, E mail MCB U D BDCC O D O man trailer with new Contact Mark CB II, CBR r Tele hOne 54O312-4902 very good condition, king bed, Irg LR, Heavy Equipment tires all for $4500. FINANCIAL SUMMARY - RESOURCES $10,000 obo. Arctic insulation, all TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS Actual Amount Adopted Budget Budget Comm ADD OPBC BUCgBI Call 541-408-6579 541-595-2003 Next Biennium 2013.2015 2009-20I I ThiS BiBOD<um 2011-20P3 options $35,000. 3 346 449 P 347 500 B D CiO Fund BBIBBCeJNBP WOUC CB PBI 5 689 317 Ads published in UWa541-420-3250 G K E A T PBCBPBI, StateB C AU Other GrantS 0 D 0 Ford Thunderbird ReVe UBUO EO CBBCCOP|MPDBDP 8 850 4,791 150 3,760,0CU tercraft" include: KayIDPPPMDC TranSferS 4,762 277 602,150 D 1955, new white soft Nuyra 297LK H itchaks, rafts and motorABOtherRBPOUUMRE»CBDPD PDOOP TBXE EDBOBILeVy 183 374 59 100 29 200 Hiker 2007,All sea- Hyster H25E, runs top, tonneau cover 2 243 000 ized personal RB B UB ROM D P O B OPPBR 3 387162 262I 813 0 0 ReVenue fram S i BI LB 3 941 085 sons, 3 s l ides, 32' and upholstery. New watercrafts. For well, 2982 Hours, Tatal RPMOUPCBB 17,972,065 11,420,662 x379,700 chrome. B e a utiful " boats" please s e e perfect for snow birds, $3500,call l eft k i t chen, re a r Car. $25, 0 0 0. FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS 8Y OeJECP CLASSIFICATION Class 870. 541-749-0724 0 0 Personnel Services 185 922 lounge, extras, must 541-548-1422 541-385-5809 MBPBCBIP BUC SP CBP 212 882 1 157 500 100 650 Keystone Sprinter see. $25,999 Prineville 2 768uo 464 775 0 CB PBIOUBB 10uo 039 7 843 088 4 958 650 541-447-5502 days & Debt EBPPEB 31', 2008 480 500 9 200 IUIBrfUDC PPB PPBM 695 049 541-447-1641 eves. King size walk0 COntD UDOUP 0 39Duo AP Other EP C t u BBRCd R UPUMBDPB D 0 0 around bed, electric UCB ro OBPBC EDdiC Fund BalanCeBUCRBPBr Pd fOr Future EX OCPUPB 0 1 084 100 2im 200 awning, (4) 6-volt TOPBI R UIPBMBDPR PB 560,444 11 A20 662 x379,700 batteries, plus many I Mo t o rhomes FINANCIAL SUMMARY-REQUIREMEMS AND FULL-TIMEeoUIVALEMEMPLOYEES EY ORGANIZATIONAL UNIT OR PROGRAM ' more extras, never Peterbilt 359 p o table Name ofOroBnipBPN AUBI U I or Ppoc a smoked in, first water t ruck, 1 9 90, GMC Veton 1971, Only 198830' Class A 4000 rrsforphBIUUpop PBm 461 OCO 0 Bend Urban Renewal AA en~oowDpowncoopNUAAUDFund 133 46I owners, $19,900. W gen., new fridge, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp $19,700! Original low 0 00 U PTE 000 0 00 wheelchair lift. Good p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, mile, exceptional, 3rd Bend Urban ReneWal BD D O Bto D DBblEBPPMB Fund I0 130 371 2 624 088 0 Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th PTE 000 0 00 0 00 camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000.owner. 951-699-7171 cond. $18,000 obo Call 541-410-5415 wheel, 1 s lide, AC, Di P PPPM B Construction Fund 3 725 754 4 936 774 3 792 500 BBMI Urban Rene Bl Agencc JU~ 541-820-3724 541-447-5504 1 OD 000 000 PTE TV,full awninq, excelMOVING - NO ROOM! 2 607 400 A19 155 2 uo 800 lent shape, $23,900. PTE D 00 0 DD 0 00 v 0 24D 200 525 600 541-350-8629 vj BBR e Urban RenewalARB BBC Murphy Croup~DDebt SBPPEeFund Utility Trailers • 000 0.00 PTE 000 We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
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D odge 22' 19 7 8 , class C, 67K mi.,
good cond.$3500. 541-389-4873
Fleetwood 31' T i o ga Class C 1997, 25.000 mi. V-10, Onan 4000 g enerator 275 h r s . No leaks. Excellent t ires. $25.00 0 541-447-3425
Orbit 21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual
batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $16,000 OBO. 541-382-9441
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
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E6 TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
1000
Legal Notices
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QUALITY LOA N LEGAL NOTICE SERVICE C O RPOForeclosure Notice RATION OF WASHBrosterhous Storage INGTON, the under61380 Brosterhous signed trustee will on Road, Bend 97702 9/23/2013 at the hour Notice of foreclosure of 1:00:00 PM, Stansale on Saturday dard of Time, as esJune 15th at 9:00 tablished by section AM to satisfy lien 187.110, Oregon Reagainst the vised Statues, At the following unit: front entrance to the Kara Borden (unit Deschutes C o u nty ¹123); Eli Johnson Courthouse, 1164 NW (unit ¹16) Bond St., Bend, OR LEGAL NOTICE 97701 County of DENotice of Withdrawn SCHUTES, State of Application Oregon, sell at public The City of Bend has auction to the highest formally withdrawn the bidder for cash the draft application that interest in th e s a id was submitted to the described real propFederal Energy erty which the grantor Regulatory Commis- had or had power to s ion (FERC). T h e convey at the time of draft application was the execution by him reviewed and com- of the said trust deed, mented by FERC in a together with any inletter dated February terest w h i c h the 24, 2012, signed by grantor or his succesWilliam Gu e y-Lee, sors in i nterest acChief, E n g ineering quired after the exResources B r a nch, ecution of said trust Division o f Hy d r o- deed, to satisfy the power Administration foregoing obligations and Compliance. At thereby secured and this time the City of t he costs and e x Bend will not be pur- penses of sale, insuing the c onstruc- cluding a reasonable tion of hydropower fa- charge by the trustee. cilities. I f yo u have Notice is further given any questions please t hat a n y per s o n contact Heidi Lansd- named i n Se c t ion owne, PE P r incipal 86.753 of Oregon ReEngineer, Pro j e ct vised Statutes has the Manager, hla n sd- right to have the foreowne@bendoregon.g closure p r oceeding ov. d ismissed and t h e LEGAL NOTICE trust deed reinstated TRUSTEE'S NOTICE b y payment to t h e beneficiary of the enOF SALE T S. No.: tire amount then due OR-13-546026-SH Reference is made to (other than such port hat c e rtain d e e d tion of said principal m ade b y ALIC E as would not then be PETERSON A ND due had no default CLIFFORD REITENoccurred), t o gether the cost s , B AUGH, A S TEN - w ith trustee's and ANTS BY THE ENTIRETY as Grantor to attorney's fees a nd PATRICK R. B ERG, curing any other deas trustee, in favor of fault complained of in MORTGAGE E L E C- the Notice of Default TRONIC REGISTRA- by tendering the perTION SYS T E MS, formance r e q uired under the obligation or INC., AS NOMINEE trust deed, at any time FOR FIRST MORTG AGE CO R P O R A - prior to five days beTION, A C A L IFOR- fore the date last set NIA CORPORATION, for sale. For Sale InCall: D/B/A FIRST MORT- formation G AGE CO R P O R A - 714-573-1965 or LoTION OF CALIFORgin to: www.priorityNIA, ITS posting.com In construing this notice, the SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS, as Benefi- masculine gender inciary, dated cludes the f eminine 12/18/2009, recorded and the neuter, the 12/29/2009, in official singular includes plurecords o f DES - ral, the word "grantor" CHUTES County, Or- includes any succesegon in book / reel / sor in interest to the grantor as well as any volume number fee / file / instrument / mi- other persons owing crofile / rec e ption a n o b ligation, t h e performance of which number 2009-54730„ covering the following is secured by s a id described real prop- trust deed, the words erty situated in said "trustee" and County and S t ate, 'beneficiary" i n clude to-wit: APN: 149081 their respective successors in interest, if LOT 12, BLOCK 12, NEWBERRY ESany. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale TATES P H A SE will not be deemed fiDESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. nal until the Trustee's Commonly known as: deed has been issued b y Q U A LITY 52674 A MMON L OAN SERV I C E ROAD, LA PINE, OR 97739 Both the ben- CORPORATION OF eficiary a n d the WASHINGTON. trustee have elected there are any irregularities dis c overed to sell the said real property to satisfy the within 10 days of the obligations secured by date of this sale, that said trust deed and t he trustee will r e scind the sale, return notice has been rethe buyer's money corded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of and take further acOregon Revised Stat- tion as necessary. If the sale is set aside utes: the default for which the foreclosure for any reason, inis made is the grant- cluding if the Trustee ors: The installments is unable to convey of principal and inter- title, the Purchaser at est which became due the sale shall be enon 10/1/2012, and all titled only to a return subsequent i n s tall- of the monies paid to ments of principal and the Trustee. This shall be the P u rchaser's interest through the date of this Notice, sole and e x clusive plus amounts that are r emedy. Th e p u r due for late charges, chaser shall have no recourse delinquent p r o perty further taxes, insurance pre- against the Trustor, miums, adv a nces the Trustee, the Benthe made on senior liens, eficiary, Beneficiary's Agent, taxes andlor i nsurance, trustee's fees, or the B eneficiary's and any attorney fees Attorney. If you have and court costs aris- previously been disthro u gh ing from or associ- c harged ated with the benefi- bankruptcy, you may ciaries e f forts to have been released of protect and preserve personal liability for i ts security, al l o f this loan i n w h i ch which must be paid as case this letter is intended to exercise the a condition of r einstatement, i ncluding note holders right's all sums that shall ac- against the real propcrue through r ein- erty only. THIS OFstatement or pay-ofL FICE IS ATTEMPTNothing in this notice ING TO COLLECT A shall be construed as DEBT AND ANY INOBa waiver of any fees FORMATION owing to the Benefi- TAINED W IL L B E ciary under the Deed U SED FO R T H A T P URPOSE. As r e of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan quired by law, you are documents. Monthly hereby notified that a Payment $ 1 ,290.00 negative credit report yo u r Monthly Late Charge r eflecting o n $64.50 By this reason credit record may be submitted to a credit of said default the b eneficiary has d e - report agency if you clared all obligations fail to fulfill the terms secured by said deed of your credit obligaDated: of trust immediately tions. due and payable, said 5/21/2013 Q UALITY L OAN SERV I C E sums being the foll owing, t o-wit: T h e C ORPORATION O F W ASHINGTON, as sum of $168,348.97 trustee Signature By: together with interest Michael Dowell, Asthereon at the rate of Secr etary 6.0000 per a n num sistant Quality Loan Service from 9/1/2012 u ntil paid; plus all accrued Corp. of Washington late charges thereon; c/o Quality Loan Serand all trustee's fees, vice Corp. 2141 5th foreclosure costs and Avenue San Diego, 921 0 1 For any sums advanced CA by th e b e n eficiary Non-Sale Information: LOA N pursuant to the terms QUALITY of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that
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SERVICE C O R PO- d eclared al l s u m s RATION OF WASH- owing on the obligaINGTON c/o Quality tion secured by said Loan Service Corp. trust deed i m medi2141 5th Avenue San ately due and payD iego, C A 921 0 1 able, said sums being 6 19-645-7711 Fa x : t he f o llowing: U N 619-645-7716 PAID PRI N C IPAL P1041570 5/28, 6/4, BALANCE OF 6/11, 06/18/2013 $ 227,955.28, P L US i nterest t hereon at LEGAL NOTICE 2.48% pe r a n n um TRUSTEE'S NOTICE rom 0 2 /06/1 1 t o OF SALE Pursuant to f12/04/1 1, 0% per anO.R.S. 86.705 et seq. num from 1 2/04/11 and O.R.S. 79.5010, et seq. Trustee's Sale until paid, t o gether e s c ro w adNo. 0 9 -XFH-124642 with N OTICE T O B O R - vances, f o reclosure costs, trustee fees, ROWER: YOU attorney fees, sums SHOULD BE AWARE required for the proTHAT THE UNDERS IGNED IS AT- tection of the property TEMPTING TO COL- and additional sums secured by the Deed LECT A DEBT AND THAT ANY I N FOR- of T r ust. W H EREFORE, notice hereby MATION OBTAINED is given that the unWILL BE USED FOR THAT PUR P O SE. dersigned trustee, will
Reference is made to
that certain Deed of Trust made by, CONN IE G. H l CKS, a s grantor, to FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INS URANCE CO., a s Trustee, in favor of GREATOR N ORTHW EST M O R T G AG E, INC., as beneficiary, dated 3/30/2005, recorded 4/6/2005, under Instrument No. 2005-20674, records of DESC H UTES County, O R E GON. The beneficial interest under said Trust Deed and the obliga-
tions secured thereby are presently held by F IRST HO RI Z O N HOME LOANS, A DIV ISION O F F I R ST TENNESSEE BANK N ATIONAL A S S O CIATION S U CCESSOR THRU MERGER WITH FIRST HORIZ ON HOME L O AN CORPORATION. Said Trust Deed encumbers the following described real property situated in said county an d s t a t e, to-wit: LOT 1, BLOCK 1, H A R RI S ESTATES, P H ASE DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON
The street address or other common designation, if any, of the r eal p r operty d e scribed above is purported to be: 150 NE Xenolith Street Terrebonne, OR 97760 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the above street a ddress o r oth e r common designation. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy th e o b ligations secured by said trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due, the following sums: Amount due as of May 8, 2013 Delinquent P a y ments from March 05, 2011 1 payments at $52.15 each $52.15 1 payments at $ 1 , 826.91 each $ 1 , 8 26.91 1
payments at 1,835.04 e a c h
$ $
1,835.04 1 payments at $1,843.56 each $ 1,843.56 1 payments
at $1,852.19 each $ 1,852.19 1 payments at $1,860.92 each $ 1,860.92 1 payments at $1,869.76 each $ 1,869.76 1 payments at $1,878.71 each $ 1,878.71 1 payments at $1,887.77 each $ 1,887.77 1 payments at $3,660.47 each $ 3,660.47 1 payments at $3,660.80 each $ 3,660.80 1 payments at $3,660.82 each $ 3,660.82 1 payments at $3,660.83 each $ 3,660.83 1 payments at $3,660.85 each $ 3,660.85 1 payments at $3,660.87 each $ 3,660.87 1 payments at $3,660.88 each $ 3 ,660.88 1 1 pay ments at $ 3 , 658.29 each $ 40,2 4 1.19 (03-05-11 thr o ugh 05-08-13) Late Charges: $ 40 0 . 00 B ENEFICIARY A D VANCES S uspense Credit: $0.00 TOTAL: $81,173.72 ALSO, if you have failed to pay taxes on the property, provide insurance on the property or pay other senior liens or encumbrances as required in the note and d eed of t r ust, t h e beneficiary may insist that you do so in order to reinstate your account i n goo d standing. The beneficiary may require as a c ondition t o rei n s tatement that y o u provide reliable written evidence that you have paid all senior l iens o r enc u m brances, pro p erty taxes, and hazard insurance p r emiums. These requirements for reinstatement should be confirmed by contacting the undersigned Trustee. By reason of said default, the beneficiary has
on September 10, 2013, at the hour of 11:00 AM, in accord with the standard of time established by O RS 1 8 7 .110, a t MAIN ENTRANCE TO THE D E S CHUTES COUNTY J U STICE CENTER, 1100 NW B OND STRE E T , BEND, County of DESCHUTES, State of OREGON, s el l at public auction to the h ighest bidder f o r cash, th e i n t erest n the said described p roperty which t h e grantor had, or had the power to convey, a t the t ime o f t h e execution by him of the said trust deed, t ogether w it h an y i nterest w h ic h t h e grantor or his successors in interest a cquired after t h e execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the cos t s and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given t hat a n y per s o n named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the t rust d eed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the e n tire a m o unt then due (other than s uch portion of t h e principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable o f being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or t rust deed, an d i n addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses a ctually incurred i n enforcing the obligation and t r ust deed, together with trustee's and a ttorney's fees n o t exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes the plural, t h e word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" "beneficiary" and include their respective successors i n interest, i f a n y . Anyone having any objection to the sale on a n y gro u nds w hatsoever will b e afforded an opportunity t o be heard as t o t h o se objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the same. N OTICE TO RE S I DENTIAL TENANTS:
The
property in which you are l i v in g is in foreclosure. A foreclosure sale is scheduled f or S eptember 1 0 , 2 013. U n less th e lender who is f oreclosing on t h i s property is paid, the f oreclosure wil l g o through and someone n ew will o w n t h i s property. The following information applies to you only if you occupy and rent t his property a s a residential d w e lling under a le g itimate rental agreement. The information does not apply to you if you own this property or if you a r e not a residential tenant. If the foreclosure goes through, the business or individual who buys this property at t he foreclosure sale has the right to r e quire you to move out. The buyer must first give you an eviction notice in wri t in g that specifies the date by which you must move out. The buyer may n ot give y o u t h i s
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Legal Notices
IT IS Trustee By: MELANIE l andlord and i s n o t RENT. responsible for UNLAWFUL FOR BEAMAN, maintaining the A NY PERSON T O AUTHORIZED p roperty o n y ou r TRY TO FORCE YOU AGENT 6 1 6 1st behalf and you must T O L E AV E Y O U R Avenue, Suite 500, move out by the date HOME WIT H OUT Seattle, W A 9 8 1 04 the buyer specifies in F IRST GOING T O Phone: (206) a notice to you. YOU COURT TO E V ICT 340-2550 Sale Information: any deposit or prepaid SHOULD CONTINUE Y OU. FOR M O R E rent you paid to your TO PAY RENT TO INFORMATION http://www.rtrustee.co A-4385812 l andlord. ABOU T YOUR L A N DLORD ABOUT YOUR m YOUR TEN A NCY UNTIL THE RIGHTS, YOU MAY 5/21/2013, 5/28/2013, AFTER THE PROPERTY IS SOLD WISH TO CONSULT 6/04/2013, 6/11/2013. FORECLOSURE TO ANOTH E R A LAWYER. If y o u SALE The business or BUSINESS OR believe you need legal individual who buys INDIVIDUAL OR assistance, c o ntact PROPERTY A S A this property at the UNTIL A COURT OR the Oregon State Bar RESIDENTIAL foreclosure sale may A L ENDER T ELLS at 800-452-7636 and DWELLING UNDER be willing to allow you YOU OTHERWISE. IF ask for lawyer referral A LEG IT I MATE to stay as a t enant YOU DO NOT PAY s ervice. Cont a ct RENTAL i nformation fo r t h e instead of r equiring RENT, YOU CAN BE AGREEMENT, you to move out. You EVICTED. AS Oregon State Bar is FEDERAL LAW s hould contact t h e EXPLAINED ABOVE, i ncluded w i t h th i s REQUIRES THE buyer to discuss that YOU MAY BE ABLE notice. If you do not B UYER T O GIV E possibility if you would TO APP L Y A have enough money Y OU N O TICE I N like to s tay. Under DEPOSIT YOU to pay a lawyer and Whether you're WRITING A CERTAIN state law, if the buyer MADE OR PREPAID are otherwise eligible, looking for a hat or a NUMBER OF DAYS accepts rent from you, R ENT YO U P A I D you may be able to place to hang it, BEFORE THE YOUR receive signs a new A GAINST legal your future is just BUYER CAN r esidential rent a l CURRENT REN T assistance for f r ee. a page away. R EQUIRE YOU T O agreement with you or OBLIGATION. BE I nformation abo u t M OVE OUT . T H E does not notify you in S URE T O KEE P whom to contact for FEDERAL LAW THAT writing within 30 days PROOF O F ANY free legal assistance REQUIRES THE after the date of the PAYMENTS YOU may b e obt a ined B UYER T O GIV E foreclosure sale that MAKE AND OF ANY t hrough Safenet a t YOU THIS NOTICE you must move out, NOTICE YOU GIVE 800-SAFENET. IS EFFECTIVE UNTIL the buyer becomes OR RECEIVE DATED: 5/ 8 / 2 013 Thousands of adsdaily DECEMBER 31, your new landlord and CONCERNING THE REGIONAL in print and online. 2012. Under federal m ust m a intain t h e A PPLICATION O F TRUSTEE law, the buyer must property. Otherwise, YOUR DEPOSIT OR SERVICES give you at least 90 the buyer is not your Y OUR PREP A I D CORPORATION days notice in writing before requiring you FORM LB-1 NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING to move out. If you are public meaunp ofIhe Bend Cily Coundlwill ba held on Juna 19, 2O13 al 7OO pm at C ly Hall in Ihs Co nal Chambers, 710 NWWall atreat. Band, Orepon The purpose of this renting this property maatnpislodisc sslheb dpetforthebwnnialb dpetp o d beg n p J l y 1 , 2013 * p p ~ by th C i t y of e d B d p t C o m ilte A • m msryoftheb dgel sprasenled A py a t h t d g t y b* p aM o bl d t c t y H* 11,710NWWallSlraet,eend.Orepon.betwee Ihehoua& 8 a . an d 5p oI t under a fi x ed-term b I bendorepon gov Yhis budpelisfor an ann u el X blennlslbudpet pehod Ths b dpet es prepared on a basls ofaccounlinp thalis X the samees dff e entthan u *d heprecednpbennium Ifdflerent,themajorchangessndthereffeclo th b dg t NIA lease (for example, a six-month or one-year
notice until after the foreclosure sale happens. If you do not l eave b e fore th e m ove-out date, t h e buyer can have the s heriff remove y o u from the property after a court hearing. You will receive notice of the c o urt h e a ring. FEDERAL LAW REQUIRES YOU TO BE NOTIFIED IF YOU ARE OC C U PYING AND RENTING THIS
l andlord. If y o u d o this, you must do so before the foreclosure sale. The business or individual who buys t his property at t he foreclosure sale is not responsible to you for
Where buyers meet sellers
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lease), you may stay until the end of your l ease term. I f t h e buyer wants to move i n and u se thi s property as the b uyer's prim a r y residence, the buyer can give you written notice and require you to move out after 90
days, even if you have a f ixed-term lease w ith more t han 9 0 days left. STATE LAW NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS: IF THE FEDERAL LAW DOES NOT APPLY,
STATE LAW STILL REQUIRES THE B UYER T O GI V E YOU N O T IC E IN WRITING BE FORE REQUIRING YOU TO MOVE OUT IF YOU ARE OC C U PYING AND RENTING THE PROPERTY A S
A
TENANT IN GOOD FAITH. EVEN IF THE FEDERAL LAW R EQUIREMENT
IS
NO LONGER EFFECTIVE AFTER DECEMBER 31, 2012,
THE
REQUIREMENT UNDER STATE LAW STILL APPLIES TO YOUR S ITUATION. Under state law, if you have a fix e d-term
lease (for example, a six-month or one-year lease), the buyer must give you at least 60 days notice in writing before requiring you
t o move out. If t h e buyer wants to move
i n and u s e thi s property a s the b uyer's prim a r y residence, the buyer can give you written notice and require you to move out after 30 days, even if you have a f ixed-term lease w ith more than 3 0 days left. If you are renting u n der a month-to-month or week-to-week rental agreement, the buyer must give you at least 3 0 days n otice i n writing before requiring you to move out. IMPORTANT: For the b uyer t o be required to give you notice under s t ate law, you must prove to the business or individual w h o is handling the foreclosure sale that you are o ccupying a nd r e n ting thi s property as a residential d w e lling under a le g itimate rental agreement. The name and address of the bu s iness or individual w h o is handling the f oreclosure sale i s shown on this notice under the h e ading "TRUSTEE". You must mail or deliver your proof not later than 8 / 9/2013 (30 days before the date first s e t for the f oreclosure sal e ) . Your proof must be in writing and should be a copy of your rental agreement or lease. If you do not have a written rental agreement or lease, you can provide other proof, s u c h as receipts for rent you paid. ABOUT YOUR SECURITY DEPOSIT Under state law, you m ay a p pl y yo u r security deposit and any rent you paid in advance against the current rent you owe your landlord. To do this, you must notify your l a n dlord in writing that you want to subtract the amount of y o u r sec u rity deposit or p r epaid rent from you r ent payment. You may do this only for the rent you owe you current
Co taa JmCh to . Ma o
Tele h one 541-3124902 E
TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS
a l cl t o
B dgetComm Appro ed8 dget Nea e e u 2 0 1 3-2015 97,522,800 125 175 400 26 234.266 81,983,500 92 349 724 14 9I I 581 49 058.4DO 487,235,671
Adopted B dget Th s B<e mu 2011-2013 68 520 578 106 831 810 30 397 505
A cIU IA o v I
2009-2011 51708 876 97 394,416 29 834 928 36 391 480 93 227 205 18 g66 147 41570 659 369,093 711
Begtnnng Fund Balsnce/Nel Wodang Cap lal F es,Lcenses,Permits,F s, Ass ts & Qlh se ce Cha es Fede al, State a d All Othe Grants, Gdts, Allocatons and Donsuons Re e uefo Bo dss dOths Debt I lew dT fem/ I t e a l s e ce R e b u m e e t s AIIOthe Rsso cesE ce t Cu«e lY es Po e T a es Cum tYea P o e n Ta»esEst atedlobeRece ed Total Resoulce5
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a be do u s
- ESOURCES
FINANCIAL SU
•
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77,163,900
78 712 596 14 84I 561 45 742 100 422,210,050
FINANCIAL SUMMARY REQUIREMENTS BY OBJECT CLASSIFICATION Pe sonnel Ser ces 93,228,613 104,449.819 Matenals and Servces 59,858,592 44.432,725 Ca 'nalO tla 37,4I x592 83,522,979 DeblSewice 31 19I280 34 922 900 Inlerfund Transfers 77,321711 74 354 197 Conun enaes 17 455 528 S eaafPa menls 774 300 Una ro atedEndn Bala ceandRese edfo FutueEx e dtum 62 297 602 Total ui r ements 299,011,788 422,210,050
'|14,142,378 48 532.772 137 048.500 30 797,850 87 782 260 26 140,709 42191202 4$7,235,671
FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS AND FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT EMPLOYEES FTE BY ORGANIZATIONAL UNIT OR PROGRAM ' NameofO~a zato alU l o P o g a F TEfo Ihalu l o « o a Access<b<litv Construa on Fund 3 43I,634 2.881.000 2,604,400 FTE 0.00 0.00 0 00 Affordable Hous na Fund 1 255 675 • 653 450 3an 800 FTE 0 53 A~rorl Fund 7 244 579 5,808 711 5,5I3,600 1 60 1 75 1 75 B tdingF nd 4 767 000 5 842 500 8,657 960 17.09 20 59 19 65 783 000 Bue essAd ocacvFund FTE 1 75 0 00 Cemetep Fund 486 238 179,800 267 300 0 34 0 34 0 66 Cemetew PermanenlMainlenanCeFund 120 600 676 645 700 FTE 0 00 0 00 0 00 Commumlv Develooment Block Grant Fund 3 490 479 3 163 06I 2 277 066 FTE 2 06 1 15 087 Do nto nParkngF nd I 166 21 • 2 664 304 2 473 5DO 0 63 053 Economic ImprovemenlDistria Fund 30I 12i 321 600 320 200 FTE 0 00 0 00 0.00 E e av ARRAGra t Fund 182 474 646 250 83 700 FTE 000 0 00 461 400 481 500 F<re StatlOn Debt Service Fund 3 250 074 0 00 0 00 Rre/EMS Ooerationm F nd 28 272 236 3I 906 600 36 070 1OO 89 75 87.50 85 50 Ge ewlFund SulbIzeton Fu d I 528 100 1 989 700 0 00 0 00 Geneml Obl ost<on Bond Debt Sarvics Fund 3 998 900 4 518 5DO FTE 0 00 0 00 0 OO General Oblcat<on Bond Construaion Fund 31 615 000 2O 325 1OO FTE 000 0 00 000 LID Construct>on Fund 532 527 582,200 0.00 O 00 0.00 LID Debt ser ice Fund 337 808 0 00 0 00 0 00 PERS Debt Ser es Fund 1 884 741 3 631 149 3 585 100 0 00 0 'I96 23I PISAnIng FUw 3,986 300 5 224 322 12 7I 11 91 12 63 0 00
49,600 0 00
613,700
625,000
0 00 776,400
0 00 340,500
7.i80 09I
8.011 100
13,827,400
3,686 682 9 33 I 9I1 890
8.894,450
9,172,600 9 71 2 327 700 0 00 17 077 600 0 00 20 57D 400 31 53 70 668200 33 53 115 306 950 42 40 11.174,240 32 56
Pol ce Grant Fund P ol ce Rese~s F
228.550 d 659 174
P ate Demlogment Enyne~enn Fund FTE Publ<cTa sl Gw t F n d
3 20
v243,050 0 00 • .321 267
Public T ansn Ooerauons Fund FTE SDC F nd StollllWate Fu d
Touhsm Fuhd
10 221 848 0 00 11 982 17i 28 33 34 263 361
T~ra s onalpn Constn clon Fund Tm~s nalOn~OratonsF nd
I tamalSen c eF nd-Admn&F a c e P o w FTE Adm P I temalSelVCeFund-CommunkmDev~
221,412 0 00
a
PKgram
ce F d -E
19 Oi1 425 32 91 72 197 850 34 80 59 908 150 42 ip 10,176,500 31.65
40 25 34 587 400 40 25 9,761 025
Water Redamation Fund
I te alS e
2 317 800 0 00 12 664 000
I te al se ce F nd - FadlaexProarsm
2,200,76I
3,238,400
10,534 259
16,155,372 3 27 4,951,372
•,700,181
IntemalServee Fu d - Leaal d Rek M a e m enl Proaram FTE I tamal Sefvice Fund -Publc Woas Laboaton P oaram FTE Intemal ServiceFund. Publc WoasAdmn S sProaram FTE Ge emlFund -Accees b I<IvProarsm
3 794,406 13 00 1g,223 924 0 00 74i 224 2 75 1 372,578
7 570 900 12 68 5 687,800
3 735 268 13 50
3 010 600
I.034,236
1 145,624
Ge emlFu d-Mu ooalCounPooram
8.498,50D 26 07 7.90I,730 3 32 5,I00,700 6 60 9.255,243 13 68 6.589,000
u221 000 3 7I 1.605 500
1,339,200 3 7I
2 033 100 6 00 2 864 700 8 69 498,311 1 30 1 226,136
8 91 42i,647
FTE
GeneralFu d.CodsE foce e t P o aram FTE GeneralF r u comm nily pr~ oects p« a
ulf e l llehts
Totsl FTE
273 l4g
•39 808 2 250 275
22 836
2 205 419 0 28 703 416
32 850 206 110.00 36 690,445
36 437 878 108 00 38,343,997
299 011 788 452.61
422 2IO 050 450.25
Genenll F nd - Pol ce Program
Total
205 802
22 000 0 00 39 229 446 110 00 38,626.584 0,00 i87 235 671
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PR DUCTS! I
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BEEF RIBEYE STEAK
GALA APPLES
Boneless
Washington Grown
LB
LB
BEEFBOTTOM ROUNDSTEAK Boneless
FRESH EXPRESS GARDENSALAD 12 Oz
18! GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS
SWEET ONIONS
58C
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LB
BEEF NEW YORK STEAK Boneless
$648
PEACHES California Grown
8 48
BEEF CHUCK STEAK
LB
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Boneless
$288
RED RIPE POLLOCK FILLETS
Your Locally Owned Ad Items Subject To Avoilobility
ROMA
TOMATOE S
Frozen
Best for Salsa!
LB
LB
PORK SPARERIBS
$)ss PRICES EFFECTIVE: I
1 2 13 14 1 5
$3455 Hwy. 97 N., Bend • 541-388-2100
16 17 18 FOOD 4 LESS - BEND I TUESDAY, JUN 11, 2013 I PAGE 1
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PAGE 2 I TUESDAY, JUN 11,2013 I FOOD 4 LESS - BEND
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FOOD 4 LESS - BEND I TUESDAY, JUN 11,2013 IPAGE 3
~usk e3nce 3qt. SPEC~liALS!
HASS AVOCADOS Make Fresh
Guacamole
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,I2 LEAF LETTUCE Red, Green & Romaine
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Send
$3455 Hwy. $7 N. 541-388-2100 PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, JUN 11,2013 I FOOD 4 LESS - BEND
• Food Stamps • W IC Vou c h e r s • M anu f a c t u r e r ' s We reserve the right te limit quantities
Coupons