Bulletin Daily Paper 7-11-13

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75 $

THURSDAY july11,2013

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Skin cancer

SPORTS• C1

HEALTH• D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Redmondpudlic art — Which sculpture should the

city keep? Castyour vote. B1 By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

Balloonman —KentCouch says his flying days maybe over, at least in U.S. skies.B1

Goose roundup — Bend park district captures and moves goslings.B1

Voters in Bend will decide in November whetherto increase the hotel tax to pay for tourism marketing and arts and cultural programs to bring more visitors to Bend. The City Council voted 5-2

W ednesday evening to refer the hotel tax increase to voters, after months of heated

debateamong lodging and tourism businesses. The ballot measure councilors voted on is the result of a compromise. In late June, a hotel operator and members

of the tourism, arts and culture industries announced they had agreed on this proposal to raise the Bend hotel tax. The ballot measure calls for a 1.4 percentage point increase in the hotel tax, spread over two years: I per-

centage point in June 2014, and 0.4 percentage points in June 2015. The original proposal would have increased the hotel tax by 2 percentage points, from 9 percent to 11 percent. The city would use most of the revenue to pay for

FaSt fOOd —Where's the

tourism marketing outside of Oregon, to attract visitors during the offseason from October through May. Supporters of the compromise acknowledged it would raise less money and not everyone would like it. SeeHotel tax/A5

Walden brings back Bowman Dam bill

least-healthy meal?D3

MOTOR MAIDS'73RD CONVENTION Whole milk for kidsHarvard scientists challengethe idea of offering only low-fat.D1

By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

Smile for the tiger —ln

WASHINGTON — Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, reintroduced legislation Wednesday that would revise the rules for Bowman Dam, both by authorizing the releaseofmore water and moving a boundary line to enable hydropower development. The Central Oregon Jobs and Water Security Act is identical to a bill Walden introduced in 2011. The House of Representati ves passed that version by a voice vote in June 2012, but it was never taken up by the Senate, which failed to pass its own version introduced by Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. Walden's bill authorizes the release of 5,100 acre-feet of unallocated water behind the dam into the Crooked River, which would allow Prineville to seek permission from the state to pump more groundwater for its own use. It also moves the wild and scenic boundary line about a quarter-mile down the river, away from its current location in the center of Bowman Dam. See Bowman/A4

Russia, land of the risk taker, circuses routinely allow children to have their pictures taken

with dangerous animals.A6

ln national news — congressional Republicans remain split on immigration legislation.A2

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And a Wed exclusiveThe fading of a cultural touchstone: the Oval Office address.

bendbnlletin.com/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Boston

suspect linked to '11 killings By Serge F. Kovaleski and Richard A. Oppel Jr. New Yorh Times News Service

WALTHAM, Mass. — It was the most brazen crime in the memory of this Boston suburb: three men murdered with knife slashes to their throats in a second-floor apartment at 12 Harding Ave.; each corpse precisely positioned, stomach down, head turned a quarter to the right, marijuana sprinkled on top. The case has remained unsolved since the bodies were discovered • Brother on Sept. 12, pleads 2011 . It is not guilty no w b ack in Wednesday, the investiA2 gative spotlight as evidence mounts, according to law enforcement officials, that one of the suspects in the April 15 bombings at the Boston Marathon, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, participated in the killings. The emerging evidence against Tsarnaev, who died April 19 after a shootout with the police, has led some law enforcement authorities to contend that if the local murder investigation had been more vigorous it could have led to his apprehension well before the bombings left three dead and more than 260 wounded — in short, that the bombings might never have happened. SeeSuspect/A5

Photos by Andy Tuitis l The Bulletin

Margaret Wilson, 93, of Cedar Rapids, lowa, left, and Gloria Struck, 88, of Clifton, N.J., laugh Monday in Bend while telling stories about some of their past rides. Struck rode her motorcycle across the country to attend the Motor Maids' 73rd annual convention. Wilson, who has been with the Motor Maids for 67 years, was unable to ride to the convention this year after injuries but still attended.

By Branden Andersen The Bulletin

Gloria Struck was 16 years old when she first rode a motorcycle, a 1941 blue Indian Bonneville Scout. Her family owned a motorcycle shop next to their home in Clifton, N.J. and she was beginning to feel the pressure to try it. "I was nearly in tears," Struck said. "I never really wanted to ride." Her family eventually talked her into it, and in 1941 Struck experienced the thrill of riding a motorcycle. By 1946, Struck heard about Motor Maids Inc., North America's first women's motorcycle club. Shebecame a member of the group at a time she recalls having trouble as a woman motorcycle rider. "They saw I was a woman and wouldn't serve me gas at some places," she said. Struck, an American Motorcycle Association Hall of Fame nominee who just celebrated her 88th birthday Sunday, rode across the country

TODAY'S WEATHER Mainly sunny High 79, Low 48

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on The Bulletin's website:

bendbnlletin.cnm/motormaids

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The Motor Maids take off from the Riverhouse Convention Center for their parade through Bend Wednesday evening. on her 2004 Harley-Davidson Heritage Softail Classic to join the Motor Maids' 73rd annual convention, held this year in Bend. Although her motorcyclebroke down severaltimes during the trip, she made it the final length with her daughter, Lori Struck DeSilva. The Motor Maids, with just

See video coverage

under 300 members expected to attend this year's conference, has approximately 1,200members of allages across the U.S. and Canada. Conventions typically consist of executive board meetings, the skill-testing Dot Robinson Road Run and a downtown parade in full white vest and

white-gloved uniforms. The parade wound through Bend ?-8 p.m. Wednesday. Nancy Blakeney of Chewelah, Wash., the Northwest district director of the Motor Maids, said she wanted to bid for a convention in a city in Oregon. "We tryto stay out ofbig cities," she said. "And, we've never had a convention in Oregon before. Central Oregon has beautiful riding, so it was perfect." Motor Maid publicity officer Diane Rumbel of West Hazleton, Pa., said many Motor Maid members also enjoy quilting and are planning on making the trip up to Sisters for the annual Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show. But, overall, they look for motorcycle-friendly communities with scenic roads. See Motor Maids/A5

The Bulletin

INDEX D1-6 Obituaries Business/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health Calendar 82 Crosswords E4 H o roscope D6 Sports Classified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Lo c al/State 81-6 TV/Movies

85 C1-4 D6

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 110, No. 192, 30 pages, 5 sections

States trying health ads of all types By Sarah Kliff The Washington Post

In Connecticut, selhng the Affordable Care Act involves airplanes flying banners across beaches.

Oregon may reel in hipsters with branded coffee cups for their lattes. And in

neighboring Washington state, the effort could get quite intimate: The state is interested in sponsoring portable toilets at concerts. The advertisements, developed with political consultants and communications firms, illustrate the ability of the healthcare law's supporters to pinpoint the precise group they want to sign upyoung and healthy Americans who won't weigh down the system with high medical bills. See Health act/A4

+ .4 We userecycled newsprint

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murder trial. Prosecutors and defense attorneys planned to work out

the jury instructions before they present closing arguments today.

s i onimmi ra ion

Judge Debra Nelson said the case could be sent to the six jurors as early as Friday. Zimmerman never testified. But jurors saw repeated

By David Lightman, Anita Kumar and William Douglas

a step-by-step, common-sense approach to actually fix the

Plane crash landing —Federal safety officials say a pilot ini-

problem."

crash landed in SanFrancisco. The National Transportation Safety

to plan their approach now that the Senate has passed an immigration overhaul that includes a path to citizenship for those who are in the U.S.

McCtatchy Washington Bureau

EMAIL

r e mains

Zimmerman trial —After taking less than a weekto call18 witnesses, GeorgeZimmerman's defense attorneys rested their case Wednesday in the neighborhood watch volunteer's second-degree

WASHINGTON — Deeply divided, Republicans struggled withoutsuccess Wednesday to find common ground over how to deal with the estimated ll million immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally. Republicans in the House of Representatives emerged from a 2'/2hour closed-door meeting united in seeking tougher border security but with no solution for dealing with immigrants who already are here

video recordings of Zimmermantelling his side of the story to investigators. He claims that he shot Trayvon Martin, who was unarmed, in self-defense while the teen straddled and punched him.

tially told passengers not to evacuate an Asiana Airlines flight that

Just what the Republican alternative should be remains illegally. uncertain, and it was apparent House Speaker John Boeh- Wednesday that to ease GOP ner, R-Ohio, all but ruled out tension, "We need a couple the kind of compromise plan more conferences like this," that passed the Senate last said Rep. Raul Labrador, Rmonth, saying he'd allow the Idaho. Most lawmakers said House to vote only on a mea- that getting much done this sure that a majority of Repub- month seemed unlikely, as licans supported. The speaker they want to head home for "reassured people that, look, the five-week August recess we're not in a hurry here. We and talk to constituents. want to get something done Pressure to act i s b u i ld— we think it's very important ing from outside the Capitol, to have a bill that passes — but however, as Republican eswe're going to do it with a ma- tablishment figures and influjority of th e majority," said ential special-interest groups Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla. push hard for a legalization After the meeting, Republi- program. They see political can leaders issued a statement consequences: The Republithat asserted Americans "don't can presidential nominee got trust a Democratic-controlled 27 percent of the 2012 vote, W ashington, a n d the y ' r e and party officials fear they alarmed by the president's on- might lose even more supgoing insistence on enacting a port in the Latino community single, massive, Obamacare- if they appear intolerant or like bill rather than pursuing insensitive.

illegally. "We didn't decide anything," said Rep. John Fleming, R-La. "We aired out our feelings." The party schism pits establishment figures such as former President George W. Bush and possible White H ouse contender Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., on one side and the party's potent c onservative base on the other. The split was evident as the House Republicans huddle

Board said Wednesday that people did not begin fleeing the aircraft until 90 seconds later when a fire erupted. Officials say the delay occurred as the pilot checked with the tower at the airport. In addition, investigators said three flight attendants were flung from the plane during the landing. All three survived. They had said Tuesday that two

attendants were flung from the aircraft. Canada train —Canadian officials told distraught families Wednesday that 30 peoplestill missing after the fiery crash of arunawayoil train are all presumed dead. Along with 20 bodies found, that would put the death toll from Saturday's derailment and explosions in this lakeside

town at 50. Hoursbefore that somber meeting, theheadof the U.S. railway company whose train crashed made his first visit to Lac-Megantic since the disaster, amid jeers from residents and criticism from politi-

cians, including theQuebecpremier. Therail chief blamed the engineer for failing to set the brakes properly before the Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway train hurtled down a seven-mile incline, derailed and ignited.

All but one ofthe 73 carswas carrying oil, and at least five exploded. Randy TraViS Strake —Country music star Randy Travis is out of surgery but remains in critical condition after suffering a stroke while at a Texas hospital, the singer's publicist said late Wednesday. Kirt Webster, the publicist, said the 54-year-old Travis suffered the

stroke Wednesdaynight while he was being treated for congestive heart failure because of a viral illness. Travis underwent surgery to

relieve pressure on his brain.

Saudi princess charged —ASaudi princess wascharged Wednesday with human trafficking for allegedly holding a domestic

Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool...........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ..................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa.........................541-383-0337

worker against her will at anOrangeCounty condominium, prosecutors said. Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas identified 42-year-old Meshael Alayban as a Saudi princess who was

EGYPT ESCALATESCRACKDOWN

charged with one count of humantrafficking. If convicted, she faces up to12 years in prison.

DEPARTMENT HEADS

Japan nuclear plant —The stricken nuclear power plant at Fuku-

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shima has probably been leaking contaminated water into the ocean

for two years, ever since anearthquake andtsunami badly damaged the plant, Japan's chief nuclear regulator said Wednesday. In unusually candid comments, Shunichi Tanaka, the head of the Nuclear Regulation Authority, also said that neither his staff nor the plant's operator

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

knew exactly where the leakswerecoming from, or how to stop them.

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Chlna stnrms —Rainstorms that are said to be the worst in five decades haveflooded large areas of southwest China, washing out

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bridges, setting off a landslide that buried dozens of people and destroying a memorial to victims of the devastating 2008 earthquake

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in Sichuan province that flattened large parts of the samearea. The state news media reported Wednesday that heavy rains, which began last weekend, have killed more than 50 people across China and dis-

rupted 2 million lives. PriSOn prOteSt —Nearly 29,000 inmates in California state prisons refused meals for the third dayWednesday during a protest of prison conditions and rules. The protest extended to two-thirds of the 33 prisons across the state and all four private out-of-state facilities

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where California sends inmates, corrections officials said. Thepro-

h

test is centered on the state's aggressive solitary confinement prac-

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tices, but it appeared to haveattracted support from many prisoners with their own demandsfor changes in prison conditions.

Hussein Malla/The Assoaated Press

A supporter of ousted Egypt's President Moham-

med Morsi wears a Morsi maskWednesday during a demonstration in Cairo.

Leaders of the Brotherhood are believed to be taking refuge somewhere near a continuing sit-in

by its supporters at the Rabaahal-Adawiya Mosque

Missing child —A16-year-old family member hasbeenarrested on suspicion of murder in the case of amissing 11-year-old autistic

in eastern Cairo, but it is not clear if Badie also is there.

boy in Southern California, police said Wednesday. Menifee police Chief John Hill said at a news conference that a human body that

day, ordering the arrest of its revered leader in abid

The Brotherhood is outraged by theoverthrow of

matched the description of Terry DewayneSmith Jr. wasfound par-

to choke off the group's campaign to reinstate Morsi

Morsi, one of its own, and demands nothing less than his release from detention and his reinstatement as

tially exposed in a shallow grave on the family property.

president.

Police sex scandal —Authorities are investigating a widespread

Egypt's military-backed government tightened a crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood on Wednes-

one weekafter an army-led coup. The Brotherhood denouncedthewarrants for the

arrest of Mohammed Badie and nine other leading Security agencies havealready jailed five leaders of Islamists for inciting violence Monday that left dozens the Brotherhood, including Badie's powerful deputy, dead, saying "dictatorship is back" andvowing it will Khairat el-Shaiter, and shut down its media outlets. — The Associated Press never work with the interim rulers.

sex scandal involving nearly a dozen police officers in Lakeland, Fla., after a civilian crime analyst detailed trysts with the men in police and

fire stations, patrol cars, motels andeven in aparking lot after a memorial service for a slain officer. Sue Eberle, 37, has told officials that

she had consensual andsometimes coerced sexwith the officers and a firefighter, and that sheoncewas propositioned by acity worker in Lakeland. Eberle's accounts of the liaisons were largely corroborated by her sexual partners and others within the police department. — From wire reports

Bostonbombingsuspect pleadsnot guilty

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet By Richard A. Oppel Jr.

gasped and began to cry. Sev- naev, though some began to cry

and Jess Bidgood

eral other supporters in the courtroom whispered"yes" the first time he entered a plea of not guilty. One side of his face appeared injured or a l most frozen. He smiled at his sisters and made a kissing motion toward them when he left. William Weinreb, one of the assistant U.S. attorneys, told Bowler that he expected the trial to last three to four months and for 80 to 100 witnesses to be called. The judge set Sept. 23 asthe next court date.Tsarnaev, an ethnic Chechen, is a naturalized American citizen. The courtroom was hot and tightly packed, but none of the relatives or victims, some sitting just a few feet away, appeared to taunt or jeer at Tsar-

New York Times News Service

BOSTON — In his first appearance in public since he was captured hiding in a boat in a B oston suburb almost three months ago, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the surviving suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings, pleaded not guilty Wednesday to30 federalcharges, including use of a weapon of mass destruction, stemming from the deadly attacks. With his left forearm in a cast and with three dozen victims and survivors looking on, Tsarnaev stood before a U.S. magistrate judge, Marianne B. Bowler, and said "not guilty" when asked for his plea to seven diff erent batches ofcharges covering his alleged role in killing three people and wounding more than 260 near the finish line of the April 15 race. He has also been charged in the shooting death of a Massachusetts Institute of Technology police officer three nights after the attack. Most of the charges could carry the death penalty or life imprisonment if he is convicted. Tsarnaev, 19, wore an orange jumpsuit over a dark Tshirt and fidgeted as he stood to make his pleas during a hearing that lasted less than 10 minutes. When he entered the courtroom, his two sisters

as the hearing progressed. Several police officials involved in his apprehensionwere also in the courtroom, including Chief Edward Deveau of Watertown, Mass., where Tsarnaev was captured the evening of April 19. As he stood before Bowler, Tsarnaev wiped his mouth and his nose several times, rubbing the back of his neck and grabbing at his jumpsuit, his curly

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Aside from entering his pleas and saying a few brief words to his two lawyers, Judy Clarke and Miriam Conrad, he said nothing during the hearing. Federal marshals bound his hands as soon as the hearing was over and led him out.

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THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Thursday, July11, the 192nd day of 2013. There are 173 days left in the year.

DISCOVERIES HAPPENINGS

Month of conception is found to affect child health at birth

KOIBS — A group of factory

managers from South Korea plans to make a trip to the shuttered Kaesong inter-Ko-

7

J

rean factory park. Iil D.C. — The U.S. House Natural Resources subcommittee holds a hearing on wildfires and forest management.

By Melissa Pandika Los Angeles Times

HISTORY Highlight:In1533, Pope Clement Vll issued a bull of excom-

munication against England's King Henry Vlll for the annul-

ment of the king's marriage to Catherine of Aragon andsubsequent marriage to second wife Anne Boleyn. In 1767, John Quincy Adams, the sixth president of the United States, was born in Braintree, Mass. In1798, the U.S. Marine Corps was formally re-established by

E. JasonWambsgans/Ch>cago Tribune

A clay seal depicts beer drinking in a banquet scene dating from 2600-2350 B.C. from the Khafajah site in the Diyala region of Iraq. University of Chicago archaeologists are working with the Cleveland-based Great Lakes Brewery to recreate Sumerian beer based on a formula dating to the third millennium B.C.

ra rewin,

.S

a congressional act that also

University Of Chicago scholars on a quest to re-create Sumerian beer

created the U.S. Marine Band. In 1804, Vice President Aaron Burr mortally wounded former

are using what they hope are period-appropriate clay vessels and a list of

Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton during a pistol duel in Weehawken, N.J. In1859, Big Ben, the great bell inside the famous London

clock tower, chimed for the first time. In1922, the Hollywood Bowl officially opened with a pro-

gram called "Symphonies Under the Stars" with Alfred Hertz conducting the Los Angeles Philharmonic.

In1937,American composer and pianist GeorgeGershwin died at a Los Angeles hospital of a brain tumor; he was 38. In 1952, the Republican na-

tional convention, meeting in Chicago, nominated Dwight D. Eisenhower for president and Richard M. Nixon for vice president. In1960, the novel "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee was first published by J.B. Lip-

pincott and Co. In1973, a Varig 707 from

Brazil made anemergency crash-landing outside Paris after fire broke out on board, sending smoke into the cabin; 123 of the134 people on board

perished. In1979, the abandoned U.S.

space station Skylab madea spectacular return to Earth,

burning up in theatmosphere and showering debris over the Indian Ocean and Australia. In1988, nine people were killed when suspected Pal-

estinian gunmenattacked hundreds of tourists aboard a Greek cruise ship, the City of

Poros, which was steaming toward a marina in suburban Athens. In1995, the U.N.-designated

"safe haven" of Srebrenica in Bosnia-Herzegovina fell to Bosnian Serb forces, who then carried out the killings of 8,000

Muslim men andboys. Ten years ago:President George W.Bushput responsibility squarely on the CIA for

his disputed claim that lraq had tried to acquire nuclear material from Africa, prompt-

ing Director GeorgeTenet to publicly accept full blame for the miscue. The World

Trade Organization ruled that heavy duties on steel imports imposed by the United States

violated global trade rules. Five years ago:Oil prices reached a record high of $147.27 a barrel. IndyMac

Bank's assets were seizedby federal regulators. One year ago:Unflinching before a skeptical NAACP crowd in Houston, Republican Mitt

Romney declared he'd domore for African-Americans than Barack Obama, the nation's

first black president.

BIRTHDAYS Actor Bruce McGill is 63. Boxer Leon Spinks is 60. Actor Gred

Grunberg is 47.Wildlife expert Jeff Corwin is 46. Rapper Lil' Kim is 38. Actor David Henrie

is 24. Actor Connor Paolo is 23. — From wire reports

ingredientsinscribed 4,000 years ago. By Ron Grossman Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO — The mission of the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago is the study of v a n ished civilizations and dead languages. Its

"People ask me: 'Did the Sumerians invent beer?' I tell them: 'It invented itself.'" — Miguel Civil, professor emeritus, Oriental Institute

scholars generally consign to

It's still an old wives' tale that a woman can plan her child's sex by timing the month when she conceives, but a new study has found that babies conceived at certain times of the year may be predisposed to adverse health outcomes, such as premature birth. Princeton Univ e rsity health economists Janet Currie and Hannes Schwandt observed ashorter gestation time for infants conceived during the first half of the year, with a"sharp trough" in May, possibly reflecting the spike in seasonal flu cases the following January and February, when their mothers were nearing full term. The researchers saw the highest average weight for infants conceived in the summer, which maybe due to seasonal patterns in pregnancy weight gain, Currie said. P regnancy length a n d birth weight "are the most commonly examined measures of infant health at birth, and have been associated with child and adult health outcomes," Currie and Schwandt wrote in a report published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. For almosta century, researchers have investi gated the relationship between season of birth and such adult factors as body weight, IQ, mentalhealth, earnedincome and life expectancy. But these studies didn't control for maternal characteristics, such as socioeconomic background, that might be confused with the effects of seasonality, Currie said. For that reason, they couldn't definitively conclude that observed differences were caused by birth season alone. Currie an d S c hwandt addressed this l i m itation

race and marital status. Drawing from publicly available federal birth data, they compared siblings bornto 647,050mothers in New York City, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, representing more than 1.4 million births in all. The authors looked at conception month rather than birth month because the latter may obscure gestation length, an indicator of whether a mother carried her infant to term. For example, although most babies born in July were likely conceived nine months earlier — in November — it's possible that some were conceived in December or later and born prematurely. The study reported that average gestation time dropped relatively steadily each month between January and May, when it m easured almosta w eek shorter than that of infants conceived in January.Average gestati on lengths returned to January levels in June, where theyremained for the rest of the year. Infants conceivedin May had about a 13 percent higher rate of prematurity than those conceived in other months of the year. Since earlier research had linked flu infections to preterm births, Currie and Schwandt merged their birth data with influenza monitoring data collected by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from 1997 onward to find out whether the virus may be to blame for the shorter pregnancy times. Sure enough, Currie and Schwandt saw that mothers who conceived in the first five months of the year, especially May, were more likely to suffer flu symptoms during the month they gave birth, reflecting the start of the flu season in late August. Babies conceived in May were scheduled to be born in mid-February but tended to suffer a shortened gestation, with deliveries happening in l a te January and early February, at the height of flu season.

said. "They tell us that it was Sumerians are known to have brewed inpalaces and temples. possessed: dates, coriander, Ordinary people made small fennel and juniper berries. ars are engaged in a project batches, sort of a home brew." C onway reports that t h e something like that: re-creatSumerian is the name of current mixture of ingredients ing Sumerian beer. a language; the people who — cooked over dung, as might Some might see it as a quix- spoke it are unknown to us. have been done in a land where otic venture: trying to make a Unanswered too, is the ques- wood was scarce — produces potable brew according to a tion of where they came from a mildly sour taste, similar to a list of i n gredients inscribed and where they went. They Belgian beer. on a clay tablet 4,000 years appear on prehistory's stage But the cooking method, ago. Chicagoans will be able around the fifth millennium the ratio of water to solids, to judge the results for them- B.C. and disappear a few mil- and other key details are only s elves. The u n iversity w i l l lennia later. educated guesses. They're not It's not clear what they were mentioned in the tablets' most host an ancient beer tasting in August. up to when they first harvested comprehensive description of T his isn't th e f i r st t i m e cereal crops. By the time of Sumerian beer, "The Hymn to contemporaries have tried to written records, Sumerians Ninkasi." make Sumerian beer, noted were using a form of bread in A poetic invocation to the Tate Paulette, a U. of C. gradu- their fermentation process. Did deity who oversees beer-makate student, and point man on they brew beer and then real- ing, that piece reads in part like the current project. But previ- ize that a breadlike substance a modern advertising jingle. Hamm's beer was proclaimed ous attempts have used mod- could be eaten, or vice versa? "It's called the 'bread-versus- "From the Land of Sky Blue ern equipment, the shiny kettles and pipes to be seen in the beer controversy,' " a variation Waters." Th e 1 9 t h-century microbreweriesof hip, urban on the egg-and-chicken puzzle, B.C. hymn begins: "Born of the by comparing siblings conneighborhoods. Paulette said. flowing water." ceived by the same mother "I think the beer came first, The Sumerians knew how Civil translated the docuat different times throughlES SCHNIB to work metal, but they had but then I'm a brewer," Con- m ent in t h e 1 960s on t h e out the year, allowing them to reserve the product of their way said. "The artisanal baker scholarly equivalent of a dare, to control for differences furnaces and forges for weap- helping us with the Sumerian a German scholar having proamong mothers, including ons to use against marauding beer project is just as con- claimed it impenetrable. At the education level, smoking, nomads. vinced that bread was first." time, the Sumerian language So at the urging of Pat ConMiguel Civil, a p r ofessor wasn't fully understood. Call for your free home loan consultation "I published my translation way, a Cleveland brewer and emeritus at the Oriental Institheir partner in the project, tute whose translation of a key in a scholarly journal," Civil Oriental I n stitute s c holars document inspired the search said, "and there it rested in 541-280-2564 Ml 32I3-]0"' ' created clay vessels like those for neo-Sumerian beer,takes peace for 25 years." •) EVERGREEN g• presumably used by Sumerian a third position. He notes that Then he got a phone call ' ~ I I I I O 2013EvergreenHomeloans s a registeredtrade beer-makers. almost any organic product from Fritz Maytag, the washname ofEvergreenMoneysource Mortgage Company. Using the U. of C.'s clay ves- will turn to alcohol, if given i ng-machine heir. H e'd a c•> sels, Great Lakes Brewing Co. time. quired Anchor Brewing Co. g?lH "People ask me: 'Did the Suhas produced severalfacsimiin San Francisco and, interles of Sumerian beer, tweak- merians invent beer?'" Civil ested in the history of beer, had ing the recipe according to the said. "I tell them: 'It invented stumbled across Civil's scholprofessors'theories about the itself.'" arly article. It's known that the Sumeriancient brewmasters' craft. As Maytag's guest, Civil Conway will come to Chicago ans produced beer in various went to the brewery for an at6'~ c - c- g.C. to brew the final version for the flavors, much like the brands tempt to make Sumerian beer, I I I August tasting. on a liquor store's shelves. albeit with modern equipment. "The tablets speak of a gold"It tasted like cider," Civil A former U. of C. graduate s tudent, Conway took t i m e en beer, a dark beer, a reddish recalled. out on a sales trip to Chicago beer, a dark and sweet beer He awaits the results of the about a year ago to visit the and a filtered beer," Paulette current try with Sumerian-like institute's museum, where his said. equipment, but at 89 years old, k~g r -' ~ ~ . ' imagination was captured by What Sumerian brewers he probably won't attend the LQQ'~l ~ i~ the history of beer. used to produce those varieties forthcoming tasting. "I was fascinated that people isn't known, Paulette said. At a Paulette wouldn't miss it for were brewing beer for thou- recent archaeologicalconfer- the world — or his Ph.D., for sands of years before they ence, he presented a paper ti- that matter. Having neglected were writing," Conway said. tled "What Happens in Sumer, his dissertation on a n cient "The Sumerians were amaz- Stays in Sumer: The Archaeo- grain storage to work on Suing. They gave us law, math- logical Invisibility of Beer in merian beer, he has to finish ematics, cities, empires." Mesopotamia." this year or forfeit the degree. "Of course, I'll b e t h ere. Indeed, the Sumerians, who All he can do is suggest that lived in what is now Iraq, used the brewers at Conway's Great I love beer," Paulette said. those innovations to lift huLakes Brewing experiment "That's why I got involved in No shells or growth, just birds man society to the level of a with flavoring supplements the this crazy project." civilization for the first time, All theseedCentral Oregonbirds love, but with according to one school of no shells. No shells meansnomessbeneath thought. The Sumerians were the feeder,andthe shelledseedswil not grow! = one of the first peoples to realStop paying formessybirdseedthat grows! ize they could preserve their thoughts by setting them down in writing. Their version of w r i t ing, known as cuneiform and inAdvanced Technology• Best Prices• Personalized Service < scribed on clay tablets, has enabled modern scholars to unFREE Video EarExam • FREE Hearing Test Nature Shop derstand how the Sumerians Forum Center, Bend (Across from Barnes Ilt Noble) FREE Hearing Aid Demonstration felt about ethics, education, 541 • 617-8840 religion and beer. We Bill lnsurances• Workers Compensation• 0% Financing (withapprovedcredit) "Beer is mentioned repeatwww.wbu.com/bend 541-389-9690 • 141 SE 3rd St. • Bend • (Corner of 3rd & Davis) edly in the tablets," Paulette science fiction the notion of bringing the past back to life. But now some of those schol-

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

UPDATE: SYRIA

Health act

"You're talking about a high degree of skepticism," says Continued from A1 Michael Marchand, who runs However sophisticated, the communications for the WA outreach a ls o u n d erscores HealthPlanFinder, Washington how states have become will- state's marketplace. "There's a ing to try almost anything to lot of 'I don't understand what By Albert Aji and Diaa Hadid en, while in a refugee camp on just begging for scraps; it tears in the sprawling tent city home The Associated Press make their pitch in the face of this is and why it's important' the Jordanian border, Syrians the heart," said an activist in were homesick and miserable. "Carrying out the Ramadan a poorly informed and politi- or 'I d on't understand why DAMASCUS, Syria — As hounded by the desert heat and the rebel-held northern Syrian cally divided public. With 82 there'sa good return on investthe Muslim holy month of dust break their fast separated city of Maarat al-Numan. fast in this refugee camp is exdays left until the insurance ment when I could be getting Ramadan began Wednesday, from relatives back home. He said activists were us- tremely difficult in every way marketplaces open for busi- the nextRadiohead album off many Syrians who observe Reflecting the deprivation ing a communal kitchen to imaginable," said Abu Qusai, ness, public awareness re- iTunes.' It's totally understandthe daily dawn-to-dusk fast brought on by the war, the U.N distribute a simple Ramadan a 32-year-old c onstruction mains low. Most polling data able. I get that." that is broken with lavish fam- food agency said that 7 milevening meal of rice, vegetable worker from the restive southsuggest that few Americans Marchand has been thinkily meals are struggling to find lion people were now reliant stew and soup to some 400 of ern province of Daraa, where are aware of how the health- ing up all sorts of ways to make the usually festive mood and on food aid simply to eat. The the city's neediest families. He the Syrian uprising against care law works — or that it sure young people hear about holiday warmth as the coun- fighting that has destroyed identified himself only by his President Bashar Assad began try's bloody conflict rages for much of the country, combined nickname, Abu Anas, fearing in March 2011. "It is as dry as even exists. the new health program. Per"Without question, it's a haps in music-heavy Washingathird year. with prices that have soared in for his safety. a bone and the dust is kicking challenge," Anne Filipic, presi- ton state, it's no surprise that In one rebel-held city, resi- recent months, have left many In the Zaatari refugee camp up ... we're thirsty, dirty and dent of Enroll America, said of his thoughts have gravitated todents have resorted to begging Syrians struggling to get by. in the Jordanian desert, many very uncomfortable. We're fed "People come by the kitchen of the 120,000 Syrians that live Up. the outreach. "The folks we're ward outreach at concerts and for crumbs at a local soup kitchtrying to r each have some music festivals. "We've talked about everyskepticism from their past experience with the health-care thing we could use, even whethsystem." er we could do some branding to get it into markup later this said that although the provi- al strain on Prineville's water Adding to the urgency of the on porta-potties," he said. "I month." sion authorizing a dditional supply, and the city wants more state campaigns is the competi- want to sponsor charging staContinued from A1 When the House and Sen- drawdowns is not in Walden's to attract additional tech comtion: The law's supporters have tions, too. Talk about a captive The change would open the ate pass different versions of version of the bill, he remains panies to the area. been badly outspent by its op- audience. They're s t anding 240-foot-high dam to hydro- bills dealing with the same is- concerned it could end up in the P rineville M a yo r Be t t y ponents, who have poured five there, charging their iPhones." power development, which sue,any remaining diff erences final version signed into law. Roppe called Walden's bill a times as much cash into televiMarchand has also thought could bring as many as 50 new are worked out in conference Releasingtoo much water could balanced, responsible step tosion attack ads. about working w it h s p orts construction jobs over two con- made up of members from both make the reservoirunusable ward improving the social and By 2015, Kantor Media esti- teams, although he gravitates struction seasons, according to chambers. Walden acknowl- for boaters and flatwater fisher- environmental outlook for Cenmates that $1 billion will have more t oward m i n or-league Walden. edged that could happen with men, which would hurt the lo- tral Oregon. Crook County has been spent by both sides on baseball teams. Ticket prices Last year's Senate version this bill, and said he wanted cal recreati on-based economy, some of the worst unemployhealth care law advertising. In tend to be cheaper, which could had ahearingbefore the Senate to start with the version that hesaid. ment in the state, she said. "It would devastate not only "I think it's really vital to the the 16 states and the District make their stadiums a better Energy and Natural Resources passed the House without obof Columbia that are build- place to reach the lower-income Committee but never received jection. Some members of the the community, but the ecology economic development of our ing their ow n m a rketplaces Washingtonians who will be a vote from the full chamber. In House Natural Resources Com- of the lake," he said. community," she said. "We've — where people can shop for eligible for the new programs. addition to Walden's changes, mittee have concerns about The Bureau of Reclamation been working on this a very "We've been talking to the health coverage and, in some it would also authorize the Bu- mandating water releases in estimates 575,000 visitors use longtime." cases, get tax subsidies to cover Tacoma Rainiers here," Marchreau of Reclamation, which statutes, and whether that could the Prineville Reservoir and Crook County Judge Mike part of their bill — officials are and said. "They're a lot more controls the flow of water from set precedents that could affect surrounding area each year, McCabe added that everyone relying heavily on multimillion nimble, too, and willing to disthe dam, to release as much of other reservoirs, he said. producing $6.7 million in eco- stands to gain from Walden's dollar federal grants to fund cuss where you might want the roughly 80,000 unallocated Kimberley Priestley, senior nomicbenefits for the region. legislation, and at no additional their ads. signage, or if you want to have acre-feet — about half the water policyanalystwithWaterWatch Other parts of Walden's bill cost to taxpayers. "Everybody gets something Oregon will run a $2.9 mil- a family night." inthereservoir— as is deemed of Oregon, did not return a call aim to jumpstart restoration lion campaign leading up to the While Republicans objected necessaryto promote healthy requesting comment. Previ- efforts for McKay Creek by out of this. Certainly, they're October launch of the state's to th e f e deral g overnment fish and fisheries downstream. ously, she told The Bulletin that authorizing the Ochoco Irriga- better off than if we go back to marketplace,called Cover Or- working withthe National FootWalden said W ednesday the conservation organization tion District to provide water to the way it was. It doesn't cost egon. Ads went live Tuesday ball League, Marchand had a that he reintroduced his ver- opposes Walden's bill in part small farms on the upper part thetaxpayer anythingto supply on television and radio featur- slightly unique complaint about sion without incorporating any because it puts irrigation first in of the creek. this additional water for everying local musicians extolling similar proposals to work with of the Senate changes because line for access to the river's waThe bill would also allow one involved," he said. the benefits of enrolling "every the National Basketball Assohe wanted to get the legisla- ter and lacks any real benefits Prineville to provide water to Brian Barney, chairman of logger and lawyer and stay-at- ciation: Seattle lost its team to tiveprocess started. Congress for the salmon and steelhead in an additional 500 homes within the Ochoco Irrigation District, home dad" in health insurance Oklahoma City in 2008. takes along recess in August, the river. the city, Walden said. Because and Mike Kasberger, the dis"When I was talking to HHS coverage. and there are only nine legWaterWatch, Trout Unlim- of currentwater restrictions, trict manager, said the legislaThe state is finalizing plans about how they were looking at islative days scheduled for ited and American Rivers all some homes within city limits tion will provide certainty for for other kinds of outreach, doing something withthe NBA, September. supported lastyear's Senate do not get their water from the the district and allow it to re"The clock's been ticking; version. s uch as putting ads in b u s I was thinking, please don't do city. main financially viable as it has time's running out in legislashelters or producing branded it," Marchand said. "Affiliating Prineville resident Chuck The recent arrival to the area been for the last 50 years. coffee cups, said Amy Fauver, anything with the NBA here is tive terms," Walden said. "If we Lang, conservation director of of facilities for tech giants Apple — Reporter: 202-662-7456, chief communications officer pretty much a death wish." get it in now, we have a chance the Oregon Bass Federation, and Facebook has put additionaclevenger@bendbulletin.com at Oregon's marketplace. By year's end, Fauver's team wants • g • k • I • I • k 90 percentof Oregonians to be familiar with the name Cover Oregon, a dramaticincrease SPECIAL SPECIAL from the 10 percent who know • < EXTRA 50% OFF about it now. IZOD8 GOLF • > • > 25% OFF SHIRTS & SHORTS Nationally, a recent Kaiser SWIMWEAR Special $19-29.75. Family Foundation poll found SELECTIONS Reg. $38-59.50, Special 13.5042 percent of Americans were after special 26.6094.50. Reg./Orig.* uncertainwhether Obamacare 41.65. S-XXL $24$168, after Waists 30-44.* was still a law. Gallup found special $18-$126. Weblo 844916. last month that 56 percent of From Caribbean Joe and more. the uninsured were not aware Misses. Shown: of the law's requirement to buy top (+ Weblo health insurance coverage by 793570); 2014. bottom E~t ) AII 757484). Access Health CT, ConnectiREGULAR & SALE PRICES LOOK FOR THE SIGNS ON cut's marketplace, plans to head I SELECT ITEMSSTOREWIDE. to the beach this summer to promoteitsnew insurance marketplace. Officials will hand out sunscreen customized with a SPECIAL SPECIAL 19.99 SPECIAL SPECIAL 50% + SUMMER DRESSES "get covered" slogan and hire 2 FOR $30 60% OFF 10% OFF Reg. $49-$59, after special an airplane to fly over beaches BRA SELECTIONS MEN'S SHORTS DPESS SHIRTS 29.40-35.40. In the Mixing Reg. $32-$38 ea., after Special 17.60-19.80. Special 20.25-24.75. with a banner that advertises Room and from our Elementz special: buy 1, get 2nd at Reg. $44-49.50, Reg. $45-$55, the new agency. and Style 5 Co. 75% off. From Playtex', after speaal 34.99-38.99. after special $27-$33 From 'I "It's such a polarized enviMisses 8< petites. Bali' 8< Maidenform'. From GeoRrey Beene and Kenneth Cole Reaction', *WeblD 844836. ronment," said chief executive Shown: Playtex' our Altani 5 Club Room. Van Heusen 5 18-Hour Comfort Waists 30-44. our Club Room. Kevin Counihan. "When you *Weblo 454789. *Weblo 689350. mention Obamacare, you've Strap.*WeblD 560825. got people who will immediately be against it or for it, but noSPECIAL SPECIAL EXTRA SPECIAL EXTRA SPECIAL $99 DIAMOND body actually knows anything 10'/ OFF 40% OFF 40% OFF HOOPS about it. One of the jobs of the BLENDERS & FOOD FOR A TOTAL ALL VACUUMS Reg. $300, after PROCESSORS SAVINGS OF states is to fill that gap." Special 35.99-539.99. special $120. 1/4 ct. 55%-80% Special 23.99-257.99. Reg. 59.99-699.99, t.w.' white Connecticut also plans to SpeciaI 3.60-134.10. Reg. 39.99-429.99, after after special (+ Weblo launch retail stores across the Orig.* $20-$298, special 29.99-299.99. Shown: 39.99-599.99. 552102) or black after special state where consumers can get EuroPro Ninja blender, ¹NJ600 Shown: Dyson, diamond 4.20-156.45. (+ Weblo 551811) & Cuisimart ¹DC41AN. in-person assistance to sign up (+ 552103) earrings 7-cup food processor, Clearance handbags *Weblo 60431 5. in sterling silver. for healthinsurance coverage. 8< wallets. *Weblo 101927. By the end of June, it was the second state to launch a televiSPECIAL 39.99 SPECIAL 9.99 SPECIAL $199 SPECIAL $399 ALL 8-PC. BED BASICS TWIN SHEETSETS DIAMOND STUDS DIAMOND PENDANT sion advertising campaign, folENSEMBLES Reg. $25, after special Reg. $600, after special $336. 1/2 ct. t.w.' in Reg. $1000, after special lowing Colorado's $1.1 million Reg. $100, after special 19.99. Only at Macy's. 14k white gold.*WeblD 652521. $560. 1/2 ct. t.w.' ad buy in May. 200-thread count in 14k white gold. 59.99. Only atMacy' s. Counihan previously overBy FairField Square im prints or solid colors." *Weblo 426888. Cotton/polyester. saw marketing for MassachuShown: Norwood. Full-king. setts when the state launched Reg. $35-$55, after * Weblo 616368. its universal coverage effort in Twin also on special 29.99. 2006, where he set up partnerspecial ships with the Boston Red Sox and other groups. Outreach SPECIAL 50% OFF; SPECIAL 60/o + 10% OFF SPECIAL $399 SPECIAL $499 ALL MATTRESSPADS & ~ '( LUGGAGE CLOSEOUTS RUBY & DIAMOND RING DIAMOND RING this time is harder, he said, beg FEATHERBEDS Special 64.49-237.49. Orig.* $180-$660, Reg. $1000, after special Reg. $1200, after special cause of the political divisions Special 24.99-239.99. after special 71.99-263.99. $480. In 14k gold. $672. 1'/4 ct. t.w.~ over the federal law. Reg. $50-$480, after special 7 From Samsonite, *Weblo 641477. in sterling silver. "There was a broader sense 29.99-287.99:5hown: our~ ( Delsey, Revo, *Weblo 619547. Charter Club.' ( Victorinox Swiss back then of shared responsibil*vveblD 52962~8. Army 8< ity," he said. "It was easier to an

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THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Motor Maids Continued from A1 In order to be a Motor Maid, the clubrequires members to own or borrow a motorcycle from their family. Also, they are required to ride their motorcycles to events; only members with 50years' membership or more are exempt. Margaret Wilson, a 93-yearold member who has been with the Motor Maids for 67 years, was unable to ride to the convention this year after injuries. But she said she and her husband, 93-year-old Melbourne "Mike" Wilson, still find ways to make it over the road to conventions from their home in Iowa. "It's part of the experience,"

Hotel tax Continued from A1 Wayne Purcell, one of the owners of The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center, opposed the initial proposal for a tax increase and was a member of the negotiating team that crafted a compromise. "As I've said in the other forums, it's not a perfect deal," Purcellsaid Wednesday evening. "The concerns are still out there from the l odging community about the effects on the business." If voters approve the measure, the city should make sure it does not hurt business-

said Wilson, who was inducted into the AMA Hall of Fame in 2004. "You wouldn't want to miss all of the scenery." She said she and her husband frequently rode their motorcyclesaround the country, once spanning the continental 48 states and the 10 Canadian provinces in three months. "You're tired, exhausted, and your mind is tired," Wilson said. "But you enjoy it." Although the convention's purpose is to discuss changes to the club's rules or constitution, Rumbel said the convention also serves to reconnect friends who may have not seen each other for a year. "Ladies like to ride, no matter where you are," said Rumbel, who rode 3,353 miles to

get to this year's convention. " It makes the M otor M a id bond stronger." Struck said she can attest to the bond formed by the Motor Maids, recalling her husband's death three years ago. She said the club president heard about the death and called to express her sympathy. But, the president told Struck, she wanted her to go to that year's convention. Struck said she buried her husband on Wednesday, got

her gear ready on Thursday, and rolled out on Friday for a 2,200-mile trip. "The support I received from the club was worth it," Struck said. "It did me good. I can't describe what that meant to me." — Reporter: 541-383-0348, bandersen@bendbulletin.com

es, Purcell said. City Councilor Scott Ramsay voted against p l acing the measure on the ballot, saying voters do not have a stake in it because local residents will generally not pay a hotel tax. City Councilor Victor Chudowsky also voted "no" to asking voters whether to increase the tax. Chudowsky said that before he could support the proposal, he would l ike to see changes in t h e governance of V i si t B e nd. The agency will likely receive additional money fo r t o u rism marketing if voters pass the tax increase, and Chu-

dowsky said he would like Visit Bend's decision-making process to be more open and inclusive of the full range of Bend tourism businesses. City Councilor Doug Knight voted to send the issue to voters, but said he, too, hopes Visit Bend and members of the tourism community who complained about being left out of the discussion will continue to improve their relationship. "I'm delighted that the industry has come together, that the acrimony, the word I used before, the acrimony has been cured," Knight said.

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Suspect Continued from A1 Even before Ibragim Todashev, his friend and boxing partner, implicated himself and Tsarnaev prior to being killed during an FBI i nterrogation in late May, federal investigators had been building a case against Tsarnaev using "old-fashioned" police work, a senior law enforcem ent o f f i cial s a i d . T h e y "went through his phone, did interviews, got his contacts — a combination of all that." T hey believe the tw o m e n targeted the victims, one of whom was a close friend, in a drug-related robbery. Relatives and f r i ends of the Waltham murder victims — Brendan Mess, 25, Erik Weissman, 31, and Raphael Teken, 37 — have long contended that the authorities were too quick to wr ite off the murders asthe unfortunate outcome of a low-level drug dispute and that they failed to d o b asic policing work that could have solved the case. Mess, a popular m a r tial arts instructor, was believed t o have b ee n r u n n in g a drug-dealing operation from the apartment. W eissman, a chess player and Chinese food lover who was a found-

er of a glass pipe company and ha d b e e n t e m p orarily staying at the apartment, was working on a plea deal stemming f ro m a n e a r l ier drug arrest. Teken, known as Rafi, was a 1998 graduate of Brandeis University. T sarnaev, 26 , w a s , b y many accounts, one of Mess' closest friends and a frequent visitor to the Harding Avenue apartment. But three law enforcement officials familiar with the case said that Massachusetts state troopers and the Waltham police, working under the auspices of th e M i d d lesex C ounty District A t t o rney's O f f ice, never questioned him — either as a potential suspect or as someone who could provide v aluable i n f ormation about the victims. Several friends said in recent interviews that they told the police about Tsarnaev when they were questioned. "The police wanted to know who all the friends were in the group, and I t old them about Tamerlan," said one close friend of Mess, adding that at least three other friends gave the authorities Tsarnaev's name, as well. W hen Tsarnaev di d n o t show up at either Mess'funeral or m emorial service, the friendbecame uneasy. "We did mention Tamerlan again to the police after he was not there for Brendan's services," said t h e f r i e nd, who spoke on the condition o f anonymity b e cause o f the notoriety of the case. "I felt that the police were not really looking i n t h e r i g ht

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Police close off Harding Avenue in September 2011 after three men were found dead in a apartment frequented by Tamerlan Tsarnaev in Waltham, Mass. Emerging evidence against Tsarnaev, who died in April 2013 after a shootout with the police, has Ied some law enforcement authorities to contend that if a local murder investigation had been more vigorous it could have Ied to his apprehension well before the bombings. math of the murders, invest igators theorized that t h e killings had been the work of professionals, based on the savageness ofthe attacks on the three victims, at least two of whom were adept at martial arts, and the lack of evidence at the scene. One e arly theory wa s t hat t h e assailants might have been part of a "cartel" that felt betrayed by one of the men, according to two law enforcem ent o f f icials. T he y s a i d that at least two people had been at the apartment near the time of the deaths, that the killers most likely knew t heir victims, and that t h e homicides were not random. Since the bombings, some J ewish p u b l ications h a v e speculated that because the bodies were discovered the day after the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, that they could have been a hate crime, particularly since both Weissman and Teken were Jewish. "I t old th e p o l ice t hat t h e re w ere only t w o M u s l ims I knew of who hung around the group o f f r i e nds, and because of t h e 9 / 1 1 d ate, the fact that Tamerlan and Brendan's l a s t gi r l f r i end were Muslim stood out," the friend said. Weismann's mother, Bellie Hacker, recalled meeting with investigators about 10 days afterthe murders, describing them as "honest in their assessments, but passive and waiting." "The police told us, 'This is what we think may happ en.' That i n t h e f u t u r e , someone with i n f o rmation might come forward and admit it and seek a plea deal," Hacker said. Gerry Leone, who oversaw the Waltham i n vestigation as the district attorney until leaving his post in mid-April to join a law firm, declined to comment on the inquiry, as did a spokeswoman for the prosecutor's office and a spokesman for th e state police. One law enforcement official involved in the case d enied t ha t a n y on e s u g gested that they look at Tsar-

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naev in the aftermath of the killings: "Don't you think if someone had told us to take a look at him and that he had information, we would have talked to him?" One person whom invest igators di d i n t e rview o n several occasions was Mess' m ost r ecent g i r l f r iend, a Muslim like Tsarnaev. Some friends and relatives of the victims are suspicious of her, and in an interview for this article, she a c k nowledged that she had a fiery relationship with Mess at times and had once thrown a bottle of balsamic vinegar at him. The girlfriend, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because she did not want her name associated with the case, insisted that she had no part in the murders and had hoped to marry Mess, whom she started dating about nine months before his death. She said that she believes she told investigators that Tsarn aev, whom she k new a s "Tam," was a regular guest at the Waltham apartment, but that the authorities never followed up with her about him. She added that parts of her boyfriend's relationship with Tsarnaev were cloaked i n mystery, citing a s o n e example a conversation the two men had shortly before she left on a trip to M i ami the week before the killings. "Tam asked Brendan, 'Are we going to do that thing'?'" she recalled. "And I asked B rendan w h a t t h a t w a s , and he told me not to worry about it." A Massachusetts legislator who talked to neighbors the day the bodies were found and has closely followed the case, Rep. John Lawn, asserted that the investigation was "thoroughly done." Since there were no signs of forced entry, "it had to be someone they trusted to let them into that apartment," he said. But the lack of clues fueled what he called "the consensus" that d eveloped about the murders. "It was very p r ofessionally d o ne," he said.

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

TODAY'SREAD: MOSCOW JOURNAL

IN FOCUS:WAR ON TERROR

S te ri tu , i s t e a r e Dronesin i erre ect re atorisrea or a oto anew ..a r oac By Eric Schmitt New York Times News Service

By Andrew E. Kramer New York Times News Service

MOSCOW — Th e f ather knelt b e side h i s h e s itant daughter and gently encouraged herto setaside her fears and take a seat. "Don't worry," he whispered in her ear during a family outing to the circus, "it's just a little kitty." But in fact, lounging on a low pedestal in the foyer of the Nikulin Circus in Moscow, and lazily twitching a long, tawny tail, the tigress named Chanel was no kitty at all. She was a fully grown Siberian tiger, whose trainers use her as a toothy prop in one of the more alarming rituals of the Russian circus: the practice of photographing small children with predators during breaks in the show. At intermission, she pads out onpaws the size ofsaucers and takes a seat. While children crowd around, the huge and iridescent pools of her yellow eyes gaze back, inscrutable and wild, and wholly mysterious onthe pressing question one concerned youngster had for her mother: "Do you think she is full?" When asked about the risk, Andrei Logulov, a thin, cleancut chemical engineer who was encouraging his daughter, 11-year-old Diana, to approach Chanel for a picture, shrugged like so many other Russians in so many other contexts. "Of course this is r i sky," Logulov said, "but risk is everywhere in life. A brick could fall on your head in the street, for example. And this is just a small risk." Placing children beside carnivorous beasts — even for a fleeting second as the trainer steps aside for a photographillustrates a deep-seated and widespread quality in Russian culture: This is a nation of inveterate risk takers. And "accidents" there have been. Last year a tiger with a traveling circus bit the head of a 2-year-old boy during a photo session in the Far East city of Blagoveshchensk; the boy survived, though the bite reportedly fractured his skull. Also in recent years, a snow leopard scratched a schoolgirl at a traveling tent circus outside Moscow, and a tiger bit a spectator in the Black Sea resort of Sochi. Yet, for the extra thrill and

NIAMEY, Niger — Nearly every day, and sometimes twice daily, an unarmed U.S. drone soars skyward from a secluded military airfield here, starting a surveillance mission of 10 hours or more to track fighters affiliated with al-Qaida and other militants in neighboring Mali. The two MQ-9 Reapers that are based here stream live video and data from other sensors to U.S. analysts working with French commanders, who say the aerial intelligence has been critical to their success over the past four months in driving jihadists from a vast desert refuge in northern Mali. James Hill / New York Times News Serwce

A father and son have their picture taken in June with a tiger at the Nikulin Circus in Moscow. In Russia, circuses routinely allow children to have their picture taken with dangerous animals. income, the roughly 100 circuses that privatized after the Soviet collapse routinely allow a relatively tame member of one of these species to stroll out into the entrance hall during breaks for photographs. At the Nikulin Circus a picture with a tiger costs $18, and one with a bear is $15. The approximately 70 circuses that are still run by the state have prohibited such practices since 2010. Boris Maikhrovsky, a deputy director in charge of animal acts at Rosgostsirk, the state circuscompany, and a trainer of sea lions and penguins, said putting children beside predators was inherently unsafe. It is, he said, not so much illustrative of Russian fatalism as a sign of the profit motive overwhelming common sense. Maikhrovsky is advocating in the Russian Senate for a law that would p r ohibit t a king children's pictures with predatory animals. "We have an order categori-

cally forbidding photographing with animals," he said in an interview. "Whoever does this knows it will end badly one day. We can never know what is in the head of an animal. Even a cat will scratch sometimes." Trainers sometimes drug big cats before such photo sessions, he said, though that does not always help. Maksim Nikulin, the director of the Nikulin Circus and the scion of a prominent family of circusperformers, defended the sessions as safe and a fine example of showmanship. Besides, he said, the appearance

The drone base, established in February and staffed by HiStOriC landing — The about 120 members of the U.S. Navyconducted ahisAir Force, is the latest indicatoric flight test Wednesday tion of the priority Africa has off the coast of Virginia become for the U.S. at a time when anexperimental batwhen it is winding down its winged dronemadean presence in Afghanistan and arrested landingaboard an President Barack Obama has aircraft carrier for the first set a goal of moving from a time. global war on terrorism toThe flight of the drone, ward a more targeted effort. dubbed X-47B "Salty Dog 502," could redefine naval It is part of a new model for counterterrorism, a strategy aviation. designed to help local forces Landing on anaircraft — and in this case a Eurocarrier as it plies the ocean pean ally — fight militants so and pitches with the waves U.S. troops do not have to. is considered anextremely But the approach has limidifficultfeat for even the tations on a continent as large most seasoned pilot. The X-47B wascontrolled alas Africa, where a shortage of resources is chronic and most entirely by computer. "By evolving and interegional partners are weak. A nd t h e i n t r oduction o f grating new technology drones, even unarmed ones, like the X-47B and the unruns the risk of creating the manned aircraft to follow, kind of backlash that has uncarriers will remain reldermined U.S. efforts in Pakievant throughout their 50stan and provoked anger in year lifespan," Secretary many parts of the world. of the Navy RayMabus The increase inthe numsaid in a statement. ber of potential threats in Relying on pinpoint the region was made clear to GPS coordinates andadObama during his visit to Afvanced avionics, the sleek rica last week. drone digitally commu"We need in Africa, not just nicated with the carrier's in Senegal but the whole of computers to determine Africa, to have the military speed, crosswinds and capacity to solve this problem, other data as it approachbut we need training, we need es from miles away. — Los Angeles Times materials, we need i ntelligence," President Macky Sall of Senegal told Reuters after meeting with Obama in Da- drones or turboprop planes kar todiscuss fears ofa grow- designed to look like civilian ing violent Islamist threat in aircraft. The challenge for the the Sahara. U.S., with little experience in The U.S. military, however, Africa, is a difficult one. "The U.S. is facing a securihas only one permanent base in Africa, in Djibouti, more ty environment in Africa that than 3,000 miles from Mali, as is increasingly more complex well as a constellation of small and therefore more dangerous," said Michael R. Shurkin, airstrips, including in Ethiopia and Burkina Faso, for sur- a former Central Intelligence veillance missions flown by Agency analyst who is now

of danger is integral to the circus arts. "The elements of surprise and danger make the spectacle," he said. "People go to the circus for adrenaline," he said. "If it appeared to be entirely safe it would not be interesting. You watch and you think, 'Oh, that man could be eaten right now,' or 'That gymnast could fall right now.'" Yes, but "Ooh, that tiger could bite my head off?" Chanel, Nikulin said, is an inherently calm tiger desensitized from an early age to the squeals of children and even the o ccasional i ll-advised pinch. He denied she is

drugged. Out on her stage during a recent intermission, Chanel gazed blankly at the crowd of children, and if she harbored a latent appetite for 5-year-olds, it was not obvious. Mikhail Zaretsky, her trainer, explained the safety precautions he takes, like feeding the animal a hearty meal of more than 10 pounds of raw beef before a photo session. He also distracts her by letting her lick his hand. As Diana took a seat, she stretchedherspindly arm over

Chanel's neck, petting her gently in a moment any cat lover would recognize and covet. In the crowd, some parents talked their skittish children into taking pictures, while others tried to talk their children out of it. One woman who has been working ata nearby ice cream stand foryears rolled her eyes and said, "Praise God, nothing bad has happened here."

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at the RAND Corp. "Effective responses, moreover, require excellent knowledge about local populations and their politics, the sort of understanding that too often eludes the U.S. government and military." And the threats facing Niger are typical of the ones that worry Sall. The government of President Mahamadou Issoufou is struggling to stem a flow of insurgents across lightly guarded borders with Mali, Nigeria and Libya. On May 23, terrorists using suicide car bombs attacked a Nigerien military compound in Agadez and a French-operated u r a n i um company in Arlit, both in the country's north. To experts on Africa, the possibilitythat the drones will yet cause a backlash remains real, especially if Islamic radicals make it an issue. "The concern would be that a lot of the blowback would be through channels we can't easilyperceive,such as Salafist mosques," said Alexis Arieff, an Africa analyst with the Congressional Research Service in Washington. The U.S. a cknowledged the drone deployment here in February — initially sending a single Predator aircraft and later faters, more capable Reapers — but since then it has released virtually no i n f ormation about their missions, presumably to avoid raising their public profile. The Pentagon denied a request by The New York Times to interview the Air Force flight crews, logistics and m aintenance specialists, and security personnel assigned here at a military airfield on the opposite side of the commercial airport in Niger's capital.


Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

www.bendbulletin.com/local

BRIEFING

Campfire starts small blaze Firefighters quickly snuffed an abandoned campfire Tuesdaynear Sisters. The fire burned less than a tenth of an acre

at a dispersed campsite on Forest Road1505 off Edgington Road,

said Jean Nelson-Dean, spokeswoman for the Deschutes National For-

orm anS a in S a e By Tyler Leeds

was built in 1967 and houses around 100 students. The new 325-beddorm isbeing designed with an eye toward fostering a higher quality of campus life, said COCC President Jim Middleton. The building, expected to be complete by 2015, will be broken into community sections with about 30 students and a resident assistant who share a common lounge. COCC

The Bulletin

As plans at Central Oregon Community College for a new $22 million dorm take shape, administrators are thinking of the community of students that will live there, and their relationship to the neighborhood around them. The campus currently has one dorm, Juniper Hall, which

According to COCC spokesman Ron Paradis, the college met with 18 neighbors who expressed concern about the origin of access roads to the dorm, the building's visibility and the noise caused by those

hopes touse income generated by the dorm's residents to extend library and athletic facility hours, said Middleton. "It would create more of a campus life," he said. "When you have a purely commuter campus, you don't have the same sense of vibrancy and the college experience you do if you have some resident students."

coming and going from the facility. Paradis said the college will continue to evaluate theseissues. SeeCOCC/B5

est. The fire wasabout a mile southwest of town. Fire danger at the

time was moderate around Sisters, she extreme in other parts of Central Oregon. Nel-

son-Dean said people leave campfires burning too often during fire

season. "I'd say it is a fairly regular occurrence, unfortunately," she said. The Black Butte Lookout spotted the fire

just before noon, said Kate Goossens, spokeswoman for the Central

icavo e

ivin

said, but high and even

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1C B1

• Which sculpture, currently on loanbythe artists, should be madea permanent fixture? The city wantsyour input.

Oregon Interagency Fire Dispatch Center.

Balloonman may retire lawn chair A Bend manwho made headlines with his numerous flights in

a lawn chair suspended

Thornburgh resort plans are on hold By Shelby R. King The Bulletin

Plans for the proposed Thornburgh Destination Resort east of Redmond are on hold after the property owner on July 3 withdrew two applications forextensions ofthe resort conceptual master plan. Loyal Land has been trying to develop the 1,350-acre property near Cline Buttes into a destination resort featuring 950 homes, 475 overnight lodging units and three golf courses since the company purchased the property from Thornburgh Resort Co. in an auction for $2 million in 2011. Deschutes County determined that Loyal Land was not at fault for not complying with the conceptual master plan within the allotted amount of time. Opponents of the development — neigh-

boring property owners

Where tolook

— took that decision to the Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals, which disagreed with the county. SeeResort /B5

See these five works of art in person — they're all located in Redmond's downtown core — then decide foryourself which should stay with the

city, which is planning to buy onepiecefor its permanent collection.

from party balloons said that between the

high price of helium and

Drake Park geese are driven south

a fine from the Federal Aviation Administration, Deschetes Ave

his flying days might be done — at least in the U.S.

g K

Gas station owner and craft beer seller Kent Couch said helium costs five times what it did when he made his first flight in 2006. And the FAA fined him $4,500 in February for his July14, 2012, tandem flight with Iraqi adventurer Fareed Lafta. "We need them,"

CO •

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.

By Dylan J. Darling Centennial Park

Couch said of the agen-

The Bulletin

I

Young geese once grazing in Drake Park have again gone south, but they didn't fly there. The Bend Park st Recreation District rounded up the goslings on June 18 and hauled them by truck 100 miles to the Summer Lake State Wildlife Area, Sasha Sulia, natural resources manager for the district, said Tuesday. Hatched this

•Evergreen Ave. ~

cy. "But they certainly

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dampened myspiritof flying."

DOWNTOWN REDMOND

No water woes at Crater Lake

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The superintendent

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of Crater Lake National

spring, the Canada geese

Park does not expect to have to truck in water this summer to augment supplies diminished by

d

had yet to grow flight feathers.

"(T)hey couldn't fly, so that is when you can capturethem," she said. "Otherwise they would just

droughtand senior water rights. Craig Ackerman told

Forest v

the Herald andNews

fly off."

newspaper that an

exemption granted by the OregonWater Resources Commission for cooking, drinking and sanitation should make such measures unnecessary. The park's drinking water comes from Annie Creek, a tributary

of the Wood River,

How tovote The city has posted a ballot on its website, at City Hall,

at the RedmondPublic Library and elsewherearound town. It asks Redmond residents to fill it out by July19 and mail it to: City of Redmond, 716 S.W. Evergreen Ave., Redmond, OR 97756. Findtheballotonlina:http//doC Ci redmond orus/ Community Development/Arts Commission/Ballot.pdf

which this year for the first time came under

What'snext

regulation of senior

The winning sculpture will be sold to the city. If you fill out a ballot, you

water rights held by the Klamath Tribes. That

has forced irrigation shutoffs in the upper Klamath Basin. — Staffand wire reports

to refuge

a

WHAT ABOUTTHE BIRD? "Grace," the heron statue onSixth Street, was a gallery piece but is now part of the city's collection.

can be there for the unveiling, too — just check the box to be added to the city's invitation list. For more information:Call the city at 541-923-7763.

The district has rounded up and moved geese for the past three years. This year it relocated 41 of the birds, which some people consider to be a nuisance at parks in Bend. Lured by lush lawns to munch on, the geese litter the parks with droppings. In 2012 the park district moved 65 geese, and in 2011 it moved 58. Separated from their parents, the geese have already found new families at the 19,000-acre refuge, and are just now starting

to fly, said refuge manager

Source' City of Redmond

Graphic by Greg Cross and David Wray/ Photos byAndy Tullis/The Bulletin

Marty St. Louis.

SeeGeese/B5

UPCOMING ROAD CLOSURES 2013 BendSummerFestival

Sisters Outdoorl}uilt Show CascadeAvenue in downtown Sisters will be closed to through traffic from 6 a.m. until 5 p.m. Saturday.Fordetour, follow signs to Locust Street and Barclay Drive. Parking for a freeshuttle bus is available at Sisters High School. Takedetour andcontinue on McKinley Butte Roadfor the shuttle. To Eugene,Salem

BarclayDrive

~ Road closed ~ Detour

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Third Street underpassproject ~ee~ > t o~

Artist booths

elong closedportion / of Wall Street

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Loca Stage

/

9 c~ /4

AvenueandWilson Avenue,

night from Sundayevening

qQ

through Friday morning. The city anticipates the project will wrap up by the beginning

eg~

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of September.

egop

Franklin Av .

from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. every

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Gre wood Ave

Third Street is closed at the underpass between Franklin

Main Stage

Court

• JP SISTERS

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To addressflooding issues,

Opell-air market

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8

cKlnley Butte Main Ave. ~ Cas cade Ave. Hood Ave. C3

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Gourmet food and wine

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Jazz stege

~ Roads and parking lot closed from10 p.m. Thursday ~ Roeds closed from10 p.m. Friday All roads reopen at 3 a.m. Monday

nA

R dM k t R d Graphics by Greg Cross/The Bulletin


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

E VENT TODAY GENDERBENDER: A six-day celebration of gender variance including discussions, parties, a makeover, a ball and a movie; $10 donation; July 9-13, see website for activities, times and locations; downtown Bend; 774-253-1538 or www.bendfest.com. SISTERSHOME & GARDEN TOUR: The Sisters Garden Club presents a tour of homes in and around Sisters; quilts will be on display; $15; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Sisters location; 541595-6389,leweyluv@yahoo.com or www.sistersgardenclub.com. STREAM STEWARDSHIPDAY: Featuring hands-on stewardship activities to enhance the health of the Deschutes River; learn about water quality, fish habitat and more; free; 10 a.m.-1 p.m.; Riverbend Park, Southwest Columbia Street and Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-382-6103 or www. restorethedeschutes.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Jane Kirkpatrick will present her newest historical novel "One Glorious Ambition"; free; 4 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. HoodAve., Sisters; 541-549-0866. HISTORY PUB:Loren Irving presents a talk on Fremont's Expedition through Central Oregon; hosted by the Jefferson County Historical Society; free; 5-7 p.m.; Great Earth Natural Foods, 46 S.W. D St., Madras; 541-475-5390 or www.greatearth.biz. MUNCH & MUSIC:The Motet kicks off the music series; with food, arts and crafts booths, children's area and more; dogs prohibited;

AL E N D A R free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; www. munchandmusic.com. FREAK MOUNTAINRAMBLERS: The Portland rock and bluegrass band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174. CROOKED RIVERROUNDUP HORSERACES:Features the annual equestrian event with gambling; $5; 7:15 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds,1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-4479 or www.crookedriverroundup.com. "AIN'TIN IT FOR MY HEALTH": A screening of director Jacob Hatley's documentary aboutLevon Helm after his comeback album, Dirt Farmer; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. JUNO WHAT?!:The electro-funk band from Denver performs, featuring members of The Motet; $7 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; 10 p.m., doors open at 9 p.m.; The Annex, 51 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329 or www. p44p.biz.

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

Submitted photo

The Freak Mountain Ramblers will perform at 7 tonightat McMenamins Old St. Francis School.

celebration of gender variance including discussions, parties, a makeover, a ball and a movie; $10 donation; July 9-13, see website for activities, times and locations; downtown Bend; 774-253-1538 or www.bendfest.com. GOLF TOURNAMENTAND FUNDRAISER:With prizes, FRIDAY luncheon, silent auction and raffle; CRAWFEST:A two-day camping proceeds benefit Rimrock Trails music festival featuring 20 bands, Adolescent Treatment Services; $12 food, fun stuff for kids and more; for luncheon and silent auction for $20 for two-day pass; July12-13, nongolfers, $85 per person for golf, starts 5 p.m. on July12 through $340 for team of four, registration midnight on July13, gates open at requested; 8 a.m.; Meadow Lakes 3 p.m.; 16065 S.W. Alfalfa Road, Golf Course, 300 S.W. Meadow Powell Butte; www.j.mp/crawfest12. Lakes Drive, Prineville; 541-447GENDERBENDER: A six-day 2631, peggy©rimrocktrailsats.org

or www.rimrocktrailsats.org/golftournament-2013.html. YARD SALEFUNDRAISER: Features gently used items for sale; proceeds benefit church missions; free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Community Presbyterian Church, 529 N.W.19th St., Redmond; 541-548-3367. SISTERSARTIST MARKETPLACE: Features arts, crafts and entertainment; free; 3-7 p.m.; Sisters School District Administration Building, 525 E. Cascade Ave.; 541-549-8905 or www.centraloregonshows.com. SISTERS FARMERSMARKET:3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park,W estCascade Avenue and Ash Street; www. sistersfarmersmarket.com.

AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Marie Bostwick will present her new book"Between Heaven andTexas"; free; 4 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. BEND SUMMERFESTIVALAND KQAK STREET BASH: The rock, jazz, blues and pop performer Edgar Winter kicks off Bend Summer Festival and the KQAKStreet Bash on Minnesota and Oregon; free; 5-1 I p.m.; downtown Bend; www. c3events.com. MUSIC IN THEPARK:Featuring Cassia Dawn and local artists; free; 6:30 p.m.; Sahalee Park, B and Seventh streets, Madras; www. centraloregonshowcase.com. PINK MARTINI:The cosmopolitan pop band performs; $35 or $65 reserved, plus fees; 6:30 p.m., gates open 5 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-318-5457 or www.bendconcerts.com. AN EVENINGOF MUSIC AND STORIESWITH JOE HAYES: The New Mexico storyteller presents traditional lore of the American Southwest and his own imagination; preceded by a performance by The Bend Ukulele Group; $10, limited seating; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Higher Ground, 2582 N.E. Daggett Lane, Bend; 541-389-1713 or bendstorytelling@gmail.com. CROOKED RIVERROUNDUP HORSERACES:Features the annual equestrian event with gambling; $5; 7:15 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-4479 or www.crookedriverroundup.com. "AIN'TIN IT FOR MY HEALTH": A

screening of director Jacob Hatley's documentary aboutLevon Helm after his comeback album, Dirt Farmer; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com.

1:22 p.m.— Brush or brushand-grass mixture fire, 10200 N.W. 43rd St. in Terrebonne. 6:33 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 3800 S.W. Airport Way in Redmond. 5 —Medical aid calls.

Saturday 6 — Medical aid calls. Sunday 9:38 p.m.— Smoke odor reported, 823 N.W. Negus Place in Redmond. 8 — Medical aid calls.

SATURDAY GENDERBENDER: A six-day celebration of gender variance including discussions, parties, a makeover, a ball and a movie; $10 donation; July 9-13, see website for activities, times and locations; downtown Bend; 774-253-1538 or www.bendfest.com. TOUR DESCHUTES: Multidistance social cycling event; post-ride party features live music, food and vendor village; proceeds benefit the St. Charles Cancer Survivorship Program and the Pediatric Foundation; $45, $20ages15 and younger,$100family;$55,$30 and $120 after July 6; 6 a.m.; High LakesElementary School,2500 N.W. High Lakes Loop, Bend; www. tourdeschutes.org. DESCHUTES DASH:A multisport event with triathlons, duathlons and more, followed by a race expo with food, beer and products; proceeds benefit The Center Foundation; free admission, check website for race participant cost; 8 a.m.; Riverbend Park, Southwest Columbia Street and Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www.deschutesdash.com. TUMALO PEDDLER'SFLEA MARKET:Freeadmission; 8 a.m.-3 p.m.; Tumalo FeedCo., 64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-306-8016 or copeddlersmarket@gmail.com.

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 Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9 p.m. June 30, in the 21200 block of Dove Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at10:55 p.m. June 30, in the 700 block of Northwest Harmon Boulevard. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at10:54 a.m. July 7, in the 100 block of Southeast Craven Road. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 3:28 p.m. July 7, in the 1600 block of Northeast Meerkat Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 8:42 a.m. June 8, in the 61200 block of Columbine Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:32 a.m. July 8, in the 700 block of Northeast Eighth Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:05 p.m. July 8, in the area of Ledgestone Court and Barton Crossing Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:44 p.m. July 8, in the 100 block of Southeast Cessna Drive. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 3:48 p.m. July 8, in the 63100 block of Via Toscana. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:49p.m.July 8,in the 20500 block of Sunderland Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:06 p.m. July 8, in the 600 block of Northwest Wall Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:07 p.m. June 25, in the 2900 block of Northeast Nikki Court. DUII —Brittany Madison, 61, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:58 p.m. July 7, in the 1000 block of Southeast 15th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:17 p.m. July 5, in the 2600 block of Northeast Forum Drive. DUII —Cary Adam Clark, 35, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:17 a.m. July 8, in the 2600 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:52 p.m. July 8, in the 62900 block of Bilyeu Way. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at12:02 p.m. July 9, in the 400 block of Northeast Windy Knolls Drive.

REDMOND POLICE DEPARTMENT Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at11:56 a.m. July 3, in the area of Southwest 35th Street and SouthwestHighland Avenue. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at12:06 p.m. July 3, in the area of Southwest

Fourth Street and Southwest Evergreen Avenue. Theft —A theft and burglary were reported and an arrest made at 2:02 p.m. July 3, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Unauthorizeduse —A vehicle was reported stolen at 6:14 p.m. July 3, in the 300 block of Southwest Sixth Street. DUII —Ronald Bryan Steele, 68, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:06 a.m. July 4, in the 600 block of Southwest Fifth Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 6 p.m. July 4, in the 100 block of Southwest Fourth Street. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 7:48 p.m. July 4, in the area of Southwest Fourth Street and West Antler Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 4:57 p.m. July 5, in the 1600 block of Southwest Odem Medo Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:43 p.m. July 5, in the 700 block of SouthwestDeschutes Avenue. Unauthorizeduse —A vehicle was reported stolen and an arrest made at12:52 p.m. July 6, in the 3100 block of Southwest Metolius Place. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:22 p.m. July 6, in the 1600 block of Northwest 22nd Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 11 a.m. July 7, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 4:15 p.m. July 7, in the 5000 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at11:22 p.m. July 7, in the 900 block of Northwest Spruce Avenue.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at1:40 p.m. July 8, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:49 p.m. July 8, in the area of Northwest 12th Street. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 2:38 p.m. July 9, in the area of North Main Street.

OREGON STATE POLICE Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 3:46 p.m. July 8, in the area of Empire Avenue and Sherman Road.

BEND FIRE RUNS July3 13 — Medical aid calls. Thursday 9:29a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 60570 Woodside Road. 10:22 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 20900 Cooley Road. 11:50 a.m.— Brush or brushand-grass mixture fire, 19375 lnnes Market Road. 3:32 p.m.— Brush or brushand-grass mixture fire, 60334 Woodside Loop.

5:08p.m.— Natural vegetation fire, 1201 N.W. Wall St. 7:23p.m.— Natural vegetation fire, 2599 N.E. Studio Road. 8:21 p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 923 N.E. 10th St. 8:51 p.m.— Brush or brushand-grass mixture fire, 1449 N.E. 10th Ave. 9:36 p.m.— Natural vegetation fire, area of Cottonwood Drive. 10:18 p.m.— Brush or brushand-grass mixture fire, area of Northeast 27th Street. 10:28 p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 1100 N.W. Harmon Blvd. 10:52 p.m.— Natural vegetation fire, 835 S.E. Centennial St. 10:58 p.m.— Brush or brushand-grass mixture fire, 63500 block of Vogt Road. 26 —Medical aid calls. Friday 5:26a.m. — Outside rubbish, trash or waste fire, 1989 N.E. Zachary Court. 8:36 a.m.— Natural vegetation fire, rear of 2065 N.E. Williamson Court. 8:51 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 64661 Wharton Ave. 4:01p.m.— Brush or brush-and-grass mixture fire, 61490 Ward Road. 22 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 5:15a.m.— Brush or brushand-grass mixture fire, area of Pilot Butte State Park. 6:57 a.m.— Building fire, 60190 Cinder Butte Road. 11:31 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 64955 U.S. Highway 20. 6:29 p.m.— Natural vegetation fire, 63459 North U.S. Highway 97. 17 —Medical aid calls. Sunday 22 —Medical aid calls. Monday 3:13 a.m.— Building fire, 63700 Crooked Rocks Road. 11:28 a.m.— Smoke odor reported, area of Pilot Butte State Park. 3:54 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 2780 N.E. Sandy Drive. 10:09 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 21720 U.S. Highway 20. 23 —Medical aid calls. Tuesday 2:16 p.m.— Smoke odor reported, 2926 N.E. Jill Ave. 16 —Medical aid calls.

REDMOND FIRE RUNS July1 5:34a.m.— Smoke odor reported, area of Cline Falls Highway in Redmond. 8:27 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 3546 N.E. 21st Drive in Redmond. 12 —Medical aid calls. July2 8:32 p.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, area of Southwest 27th Street in Redmond. 9:38 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 1200 Northwest 101st St. in Redmond

11 —Medical aid calls. July3 5:52p.m.— Brush or brushand-grass mixture fire, area of Southwest Highland Avenue in Redmond. 11 —Medical aid calls. Thursday 7 a.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 2925 South U.S. Highway 97 in Redmond. 4:41 p.m.— Smoke odor reported, 2795 South U.S. Highway 97 in Redmond. 7:24p.m.— Brush or brushand-grass mixture fire, 10087 N.E. Crooked River Drive in Terrebonne. 8:02p.m.— Smoke odor reported, area of South U.S. Highway 97 in Redmond. 11:58 p.m.— Smoke odor reported, area of Southwest Timber Avenue in Redmond. 7 — Medical aid calls. Friday 12:03a.m.— Dumpster or other outside trash receptacle fire, 1219 S.W. 16th St. in Redmond.

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THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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REGON AROUND THE STATE

Lawma ers ac i nettin

Jail time for Facedook threat —ASouthernOregonman who posted a school shooting threat on Facebook will be spending

a year in jail. TheNews-Review newspaper reports that 22-year-old By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press

SALEM — Gov. John Kitzhaber's effort to move commercial gillnet fishers off the C olumbia River took a b i g step forward in the final hours of Oregon's legislative session this week. R ecreational f i shers w i l l find higher prices for licenses to catch salmon and steelhead, along with an exclusion zone at a popular fishing spot near Astoria. L awmakers a p proved a surcharge of up to $9.75 per year to raise money for fisher-

ies enhancement. They also authorized an exclusion zone at the mouth of Youngs Bay, a popular fishing spot near Astoria. The measure lifts a decades-old ban on seine nets for commercial fishing and allocates $500,000 to mitigate the economic impacts of ending gillnet fishing on the main stem of the Columbia beginning in 2017. It was welcomed by sport-fishing interests and denounced by commercial gillnetters, who have ardently opposed Kitzhaber's effort to get them off the main stem.

"I think it really is a huge s tep into t hi s c entury f o r fishery m anagement," said Liz Hamilton, director of the N orthwest Sportfishing I n dustry Association. At Kitzhaber's request, the fish and wildlife commissions in Oregon and Washington voted earlier this year to restrict gillnets to side channels like Youngs Bay and release more hatchery fish in those areas to boost the number of salmon returning. The measure was approved Sunday in t h e S enate and Monday in th e H ouse, and

Kitzhaber is expected to sign it. It directs the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission to adopt an exclusion zone at the mouth of Youngs Bay by Feb. 1, 2014. The boundaries are undefined, and the fight over where to set them is likely to be yet another source of tension between the long-feuding commercial and recreational fishers. The mouth to Youngs Bay is a popular recreational fishing spot known as Buoy 10. The exclusion zone will be reviewed every three years and could be eliminated.

Wesley William Miller of Myrtle Creek got the sentence after plead-

ing no contest to a combination of drug counts and charges related to the threat. Family members reported to sheriff's deputies last February that Miller had posted on his Facebook page, "I'm the one

who's going to bring school shootings to Douglas County." A school went on lockdown, andpolice arrested Miller at his apartment. Miller is eligible to spend part of the sentence in a drug and mental health treatment center.

NySSa Water plant —An Eastern Oregon town plans to build a treatment plant to remove arsenic from its water supply. The Ontario

Argus Observer reports the arsenic level in Nyssa isabovethe federal standard. The City Council approved resolutions Tuesday authorizing contracts with the state for financing of the project: two grants total-

ing $2.7 million and up to$3.5 million in a low-interest loan. Theplant is to be constructed on city property on the east side of the Snake River. City officials said they didn't know yet how the project would

affect water rates in the town of more than3,000 people. Sheep On the lam —Two sheepthat were on the loose in Medford have beencaptured after nearlyayear on the lam. Thesheep had been crossing lnterstate 5 and interfering with traffic. They fled into a greenway and avoided capture until Monday night when they were

Hundreds turn out

cornered by police andvolunteers behind anapartment building. The Mail Tribune reports the goat-like Barbados sheep are now in the care

of the Sanctuary Oneanimal rescue operation. A manager, Sansa Collins, says one is afemale with an eartag andtrimmed horns that indicate it was once at a ranch. It was apparently pregnant when it

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escaped andgavebirth on the run becausethe other sheep is a male with no sign of humancare.

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UO gender diaS laWSuit —A federal court in Eugenehasset Nov.12 to hear the lawsuit of a former University of Oregon graduate student who accuses the university of gender bias. Monica Emeldi

says she wasblocked from earning a doctoral degree in retaliation for expressing her belief that faculty in the College of Education was biased against women. The university denies the claim and says

The Associated Press P ORTLAND — Hu n dreds of people attended hearings Tuesday in Hermiston and Portland on a proposalfor a coal transfer terminal on the Columbia River at Boardman, some arguing the project will be an economic plus and others arguing it would be an environmental minus. The Oregon Department of Environmental Q uality will consider the public comments as it considers a pplication fro m A m b r e Energy to move nearly 9 million tons of coal a year, The Oregonian reported. Ambre wants to b u ild the first port in the Northwest to export coal from Montana and Wyoming to Asia. The coal would arrive at Boardman by train and be moved downriver on barges to the Port of St. Helens where it would be loaded on ships. More than 500 people signed up to comment and about half of those actually spoke, said Joan StevensSchwenger, spokeswoman for the Department of Environmental Quality. S he emphasized t h e hearings were t o s o licit public comment about the technical aspects of the requested permits, and the department is required to grant permits if Ambre follows legal requirements. Proponents at the Portland hearing said the Am-

bre proposal would be good for communities along the Columbia River. "They're going to donate a percentage of coal to our schools," said Diane Pohl, mayor of Clatskanie in Columbia County. "They're trying to be good community partners." S ome said t hey w e r e w orried a bout t h e i m pact coal pollution could have on their children and grandchildren. "It's one world, folks, it goes round and round," said Chris Arthur, a retired psychiatrist and native of England who said she'd seen the impact of coal fields on a community's health. "We shouldn't be helping carbon emissions anywhere in the world. It will come back to bite us." Opponents said the department should expand its r eview o f po t e ntial health and environmental h azards. Jasmine Z i m mer-Stucky of the environmental g roup C o lumbia Riverkeeper said the hearings are too limited and that DEQ should extend its review of the project to include the Port of St. Helens. The company said countries including South Korea, Japan and China are clamoring for more coal to fuel growth and consumption. "It's unrealistic to expect if you say no to coal in Oregon, the demand is going

to go away," said spokeswoman Liz Fuller.

professors declined to advanceher five years ago because of her academic record. TheRegister-Guard reports the suit has attracted attention because it is the first time that a federal law banning discrimination in federally funded schools, known as Title IX, has been

used in anacademic setting rather than in athletics.

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ER nurSe arreSted —Portland police have arrested a 38-yearold registered nurse accused of sexually assaulting at least three women who sought treatmentat the Legacy Emanuel Medical Center emergency room when the man worked there. Police said Jeffrey Bruce Ely/The Oregonian

McAllister was arrested Wednesdayfor investigation of two counts of first-degree rapeandmultiple counts of sex abuse. — From wire reports

The urn carrying the ashes of West Linn native John Percln Jr., who waskilled last month fighting an Arizona wildfire, arrives at Portland International Airport on Wednesday.

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PeAuetm By Steven Dubois The Associated Press

L AKE OSW E G O — The a shes of a n O r e gon h i g h s chool graduate wh o w a s among 19 firefighters killed while battling a n A r i z ona wildfire have been returned home. The family o f J ohn Percin Jr. brought the m arble urn aboard a jet that landed Wednesday at Portland International Airport. An Oregon Department of Forestry truck then led a procession of fire trucks and police cars to the leafy suburb of Lake Oswego, stopping at a brick fire station a couple blocks from the family's church. The Department of Forestry truck parked just outside the station's flag-festooned driveway. As firefighters saluted, a member ofthe Oregon Fire Service honor guard, holding the urn, left the truck and slowly walked into the lobby. He placed the urn on a table, between a folded American

flag and a large photo of Percin. A 24-hour rotating watch of firefighters w il l r e m ain with the ashes until the family's private memorial service

on Friday. "They're coming from Portl and and all the way f r om R oseburg, people who a r e willing to help and feel it's an honor to watch John until his proper burial," said Gert Zoutendijk, the Lake Oswego fire marshal. Percin, 24, died June 30 when a wind-driven wildfire overran an elite firefighting crew as it tried to protect a small Arizona town. The 19 deaths represented the nation's biggest loss of wilderness firefighters in 80 years. Vice PresidentJoe Biden and thousands of firefighters and law e n f orcement o f f i cers were among those who paid respects to the men Tuesday at apacked memorial service in Prescott Valley, Ariz. Percin was raised in Oregon and graduated from West Linn High School, where he played basketball and football. He moved to Arizona almost three years ago. A few dozen people lined the sidewalk across the street fromthe fire station as the procession arrived Wednesday. Dressed in summer clothes, they placedtheir hands over

Rail cars rest on their sides after a 28-car derailment Wednesday

their hearts. Above them, a worker in a f i n ancial planner's office scrambled to put a large American flag in a window. Percin's family entered the fire station outside the view of television cameras and did not speak with r eporters. Chaplain Steve Brodehl consoled Percin's parents and two brothers during the brief ceremony that i ncluded no speeches. "I've been the chaplain almost 25 years and I still don't know (what to say); there are no words," Brodehl said. "I just looked at John Sr. and told him, as a dad, 'Oh my God. I can't even imagine. I can't imagine what your heart's feeling.' "Sometimes I think we try so hard to fill those spaces with words, when we really just need to stand beside them and be that officer of calm, so to speak, that place to lean." The public may pay tribute at the fire station from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Thursday. A public memorial service is planned at I p .m. Saturday at Rolling Hills Community Church in Tualatin.

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Train derails; leak called not hazardous

The Associated Press LA GRANDE — A s mall amount o f a cor r o s i ve chemical was released early W ednesday when a U n i o n Pacific freight train derailed in Eastern Oregon's Grande Ronde Valley. The railroad said it was a c hemical mixture, and t h e primary ingredient was sodium hydroxide, an industrial chemical known as lye. The State Police said in a

statement there was "no significant hazardous material leak." Workers at the scene southeast ofLa Grande described it as a drip from a valve, said Sgt. Kyle Hove. No one was hurt. The train westbound from Nebraska to the Portland area had a twomember crew and 82 cars. Union Pacific said 28 derailed, and six of those were on their sides.

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

AN LNDEPENDENT NEWSPAPEB

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he Oregon Health Policy Board must be careful to avoid two deadly policy sins: overtretch and churn. The board sets policy for the Oregon Health Authority and has also been asked by Gov. John Kitzhaber to develop new health reform policies for the state. The board's goals are unquestionably good ones. It aims for improved health care quality. It aims for better patient access to care. And another goal is to keep it all affordable. Oregon has already embarked on an ambitious health care transformation experiment to change the way careis delivered forMedicaid, through something called coordinated care organizations, or CCOs. The first quarterly report came out in May. "In summary, by looking at 2011 data from the organizations that preceded CCOs, this first quarterly report shows where we are starting from and where we need to go to get to better health, better care and lower costs,"the report says. In other words, it's hard to assess how well this is working, yet. There are many promising anecdotes. But it's hard to measure success when you just got started. It's also hard to know what needs to be tweaked, scrapped or pumped up. Now the board is trying to come up with all sorts of new policies. There's churn. Some expand what's already been done. For instance, Kitzhaber asked the board to enhance the government's role in setting rates for health care insurance.

Some new policies try to fix what may be problems. For instance, Kitzhaber wants to mitigate the effect that shifting health care costs have on providers and insurers. And there could very w ell be churn and overstretch in the board's exploration of new policies to encourage patient responsibility. It wants to find ways to encourage peoplemake good choices in diet, exercise and lifestyle and also make goodchoicesabout consuming health care. The board chewed over some dozen ways to do so at its meeting last week. But the board should take to heart what board member Dr. Carla McKelvey said. She's a pediatrician in private practice in Coos Bay. She has a patient who is unwilling to give up smoking, because it's that patient's only pleasure. She said she has a family in which the parents and the children have sleep problems. They are homeless. "This report puts a lot of responsibility on the health care system," she said, and there are things healthcareproviders cannot solve. We're not suggesting that the board stop what it's doing or tell the governor it's not going to do what he asked. But there is big pressure for the board and for reformers to demonstrate they are making a difference. Churn can make it look like health reform is happening. It doesn't make it happen.

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M Nickel's Worth Cell towers are needed to provide phone service

The right way to spend tobacco settlement money regon's anti-smoking advocates are poised to get something from the state Legislature that they've never received before. For the first time since Oregon began receiving money as part of the 1998 Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement, a portion will actually go to antismoking programs in the state. The money, $4 million of the $120 million the state will receive in the next two years, isn't much. It will, however, boost funds for antismoking efforts to $19 million from the current $15 million. One can argue withthe way Oregon has chosen to spend its tobacco settlement money, to be sure. While the settlement did not require that funds go to anti-smoking campaigns, there was a belief in some circles that it should be spent there. Instead, the remaining $116 million of Oregon's current $120 million chunk will go to other vital health initiatives in the state. That's not good enough for some anti-smoking advocates, unfortunately. They argue that it would take $86 million to run a really good anti-smoking campaign, according

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to The Oregonian newspaper. Even with far less money than they say they need, anti-smoking groups have made good progress in Oregon. Between 1996 and 2011, smoking among adults fell by 26 percent. More important, smoking among kids has declined by about half. If the fight against obesity were that successful, we'd all be jumping for joy. It doesn't mean the effort should stop, of course. Smokingkillspeople, and it costs the rest of us a bundle in the process. Spending money to get people to kickthe habit or never take it up in the first place makes sense. That said, simply t h rowing more money into anti-smoking efforts may not be the best way to use settlement money. Supporters of spending more must be able to demonstrate, with facts and figures, that more money means greater success and more important success than spending it on other health programs. Lawmakers, meanwhile, must continue to decide which of Oregon's health needs are the most critical and put money toward solving them. To date, that's just what they've done.

over the years celebrating special occasions, such as 4th of July, concerts, birthdays, weddings, anniversariesand other special events; not to mention just walking in the park with y our y oungsters, and even pushing babies in strollers or carrying them on your back while watching children playing on the l awn laughing. And h aving f u n while we enjoy their laughter and the beauty ofthe green grass,etc., in the park with Mirror Pond flowing so gently along. Kids love to fish in the river also. Without Mirror Pond, we would be just another city with a river running through it. We have something very unique, and to let it disappear, of our own doing, would truly be a shame. Anyone you know who has ever visited Bend will always have a comment about Drake Park and M irror Pond. Don't let it dr y u p and be just a river with marshland, weeds and mosquitoes. This would be a real disaster and would truly ruin our city and the unique beauty that it is known for.

Folks depend heavily on conveniences like cellphones, but certainly aren't willing to put up with cell towers that deliver the ability to use them nor the little scenery that might be lost. Do you know anyone who has gotten a call in the middle of the night informing them that t heir teenage offspring has been in a seriousaccident and they're needed at the hospital in case he doesn't make it? I have, and was surely glad to have phone service. Have you ever been trapped, sitting in a cold car, out of gas, the snow keeps falling, you can't get cell service and wish you hadn't been so adamant about not thinking about other people needing phone service'? You aren't the only human being who doesn't own the scenery around you, so you might consider a piece of property in the wilderness, where you could be the sole owner of what you want to see. No cell towers. Carol Hoffman Redmond

Joyce Scott Bend

Ban plastic bags

Save Mirror Pond

As an avid Smith Rock climber, I travel from Portland to enjoy the state park and its gorgeous wild scenery, most notably the Crooked River running through. We always make time to visit Bend and walk along the river path. However, it's a hard blow and an eyesore to see plastic bags, bottles and other plastics pollution along the shores and in the river. This pollution, including the 1.7 billion plastic bags that Oregonians use on average in one year, is forming a 100 million ton plastic garbage

We have lived in Bend for 46 years,and before that, as children, we visited Bend during the summer months to camp and fish. It was always a special treat to attend the river pageant, which was held on Mirror Pond each year. Mirror Pond is what makes Bend a place like no other. Mirror Pond and Drake Park are in the very heart of the city and r eflect its beauty. Many new- and old-timers have made wonderful memories

patch in the Pacific. Bend should be a leader in stopping this ocean pollution for Central Oregon and for the state by becoming the fourth city in Oregon to ban the bag. I urge Bend citizens to make their City Council aware of this growing problem. My fellow climbers, recreationalists and those living along the Deschutes I tm sure w o uld agree that the PCBs contained in

disposable plastic grocery bags should not be present in their river, nor off the coast of their beautiful state. Please, urge your representatives to pass an ordinance to ban the bag. Hannah Van Arsdell Gresham

Where is the grace and mercy? Why do we throw a beloved, selfmade woman likePaula Deen under the bus for a racial remark made in privateconversation over 20 years ago? She told the truth. Would it have been more acceptablefor her to lie? Probably, as we have become a nation of liars and responsibility evaders. Where is the grace and mercy we need to show to our own hard-working, responsible citizens, especially our seniors? We give plenty of it to the illegals, the people fleeing their countries, the murderers who have been on death row for decades, but where is it for the citizen who loves this country and resents all of the intrusions on our American way of life'? It is time for us to stand up for our constitution, our basic rights, realign our mercy for those who deserve to receive it.

Jaci Johnson Bend

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GOP doesn't need to radically change its core message By David Blahnik h e new i m migration bill i s coming up for a vote. TV talking heads and politicians of both parties are adamant that the GOP must change its message toward Latinos in general and immigration in particular. If not, they are

litical groups from obtaining taxexempt status. Those tactics effectively muffled voices opposed to the Obama administration's policies. It was wrong when Nixon made enemy lists and sent the IRS after them and it is wrong when the IRS did it in support of Obama. The very fact in danger of losing every presiden- that such a powerful government tial election forever. This assertion entity would t arget one p olitical is FALSE! When the Democrats lost group over the other isshameful. their shirts in the 2010 midterm elec- The damage isdone and cannot rettions, the most significant party loss roactively be repaired. in more than 40 years, no one said What empirical evidence exists to Democrats had to make dramatic say that if the GOP becomes more changes to their core beliefs. lenient and pliable toward immigraIt is quite obvious what the Demo- tion that Latinos as a political bloc crats and the Obama administra- will tend to vote for them? None! tion did instead. Through the IRS, Since 1980, Latinos have n ever it very c l everly u ndermined the voted for Republicans in presidenability of conservative-leaning, po- tial elections in n umbers greater

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IN MY VIEW than 40 percent. Bob Dole, in 1996, received the lowest Latino support with 21 percent, and George Bush received the highest support with 40 percent. In 1986, President Reagan passed a b ipartisan im migration bill that effectively provided amnesty for about 3 million illegal immigrants. He received 37 percent of the Latino vote and earned a landslide victory. Two short years later, Bush 41 became president with 30 percent of the Latino vote. This is a clear indication that granting amnesty and relaxing immigration rules will not make the GOP more likable to the Latino population in general. My view is that since Obama won

a second term, the general electorate believes he won by such a big margin that he can do anything he wants and the GOP must accept. That is just nonsense. A closer look at the 2012 presidential election results tells a different story. The election was closer than it appears. President Obama won 332 electoral votes to Romney's 206. That is only a swing of 63 electoral votes. Look closer at the numbers and you discover that just five states — Florida, O hio, Colorado, Iowa an d N e w Hampshire, with 66 electoral votes — favored Obama by just over a half-million votes. A v e r y s m a ll change in v otes and Romney is president. In my view that is not sufficient cause for President Obama to feel he can run roughshod over his

political competition. In fact, almost 61 million voters said no to him. These facts suggest that the GOP does not need radical surgery to its core message. Once the GOP starts giving favors o r c o ncessions, it loses its soul. What the GOP needs to do instead is craft a nationwide campaign to take over the Senate from a veryvulnerable Democratic party. In 2014, the Democrats must defend 19 Senate seats, including five open seats; Republicans must d efend 12 seats, with t w o o p en seats. The GOP needs only a net gain of seven seats to take back the Senate as two independents caucus with the Democrats. That should end the nonsense we have experienced since 2008. — David Blahnik lives in Bend.


THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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OREGON NEWS

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Barbara E. Hutchins, of Madras

Robert "Bob" Barrett, of La Pine

July 20, 1928 - July 6, 2013 Arrangements: Bel-Air Funeral Home, 541-475-2241 Services: Memorial Services will be held on Thursday, July 11, 2013 at 11:00 AM at Free Methodist Church in Madras.

Mar. 24, 1935- July5, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private family gathering will take place at a later date.

Dorothy E. Garber, of La Pine

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, www.partnersbend.org

Aug. 26, 1915- July8, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Memorial Service will be held on Monday, July 15, 2013, at 4:30 pm at High Lakes Christian Church, located at 52620 Day Rd., in La Pine. Dorothy was laid to rest in a private interment at West Lawn Memorial Park in Eugene. Contributions may be made to:

Heart'n Home Hospice & Palliative Care, P.O. Box 1888, La Pine, OR 97739 or La Pine Senior Center, P.O. Box1279, La Pine, OR 97739.

Gordon Smith, of La Pine April 24, 1930 - July 2, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private service was held.

Hildegarde Johnson, of Madras April 3, 1922- July7, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Redmond, 541-504-9485, www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A memorial service to be held on Friday, July 12, 2013 at 3:00 PM at The Powell Butte Christian Church in the "old chapel"

James S. Eckerdt, of Bend Mar. 1, 1964- July6, 2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, (541)382-5592;

www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com

Services: 2:00 PM, Saturday, July 13, 2013 at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses, 63175 18th St. NE., A Service of Remembrance will be held for family and friends to remember James and celebrate his life.

William "Bill" C. Clark, of Bend Nov. 18, 1947- July7, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private gathering for family and close friends will be held at a later date.

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific g Uidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeralhomes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

Contributions may be made to:

Joan Joy Bates-Nichols, of Bend June 21, 1930 - June 4, 2013 Services: Services where private.

Hildegarde Pearl Johnson April 3, 1922 - July 7, 2013 " Hilde" pa s s e d away S unday, July 7 i n M a d r as at age 91. She was born in Redmond to W. D ean and Nettie P e ar l Cyr u s on April 3, 1922. She lived most of her life in Central Oregon i n cluding 12 years on the Cyrus h omestead at Grey Butte n ow C r o oked R i v e r N a tional Grasslands. She attended schools at the Rush home place, Culver, Terreb onne an d g r a d uated i n 1941 at Redmond. Hilde worked for years as a clerk:at Aunt Grace's hot el in S i sters, Piggly W i g g ly and S afeway i n R e d mond. In later years she b abysat many c h i ldren a t her home o n 1 7t h S t reet. She worked with preschool children at F o rest Avenue Baptist Church. In 1 9 46 H i l d e m a r r i e d Clarence Tippett who died in 1984. She later married Curtis "Grampa" J o hnson who passed in 2 0 04. H er b rother, W arr e n p r eceeded her in death. Hildegarde is survived by brothers, Thomas Cyrus of L ompoc, C a l i f orni a an d Raymond Cyrus of Terrebonne. She enjoyed a clan of many nieces and nephews. A Memorial Service wil l be held 3:00 p.m. F r iday, July 12 at Historic Chapel, P owell Bu t t e Ch r i s t i a n Church, 13720 Oregon 126, Powell Butte. A rrangements b y A u tumn Funerals-Redmond.

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld: Douglas J. Dayton,88:Helped expand his grandfather's Minneapolis dry goods business into a big-box boutique known for quality products, discount pricing and a f a k e F rench nickname — though most people just call it Target. In May 1961, a year before the first Target store opened in Roseville, Minn., Douglas told The Minneapolis Tribune that the company would "combinethe best of the fashion world with the best of the discount world, a quality store with quality merchandise at discount prices." Died Friday at his home in Wayzata, Minn. Norman Parish, 75:A painter who opened an art gallery in Washington that spotlighted African American artists at a time when few other galleries concentrated on showing their work. Over the years, Parish showed the work of more than 170 artists, including such well-known figures as Sam Gilliam, R i chard M a yhew, Lou Stovall, E.J. Montgomery and Wadsworth Jarrell. Died July 8 at his home in Germantown, Md. Austin Goodrich, 87: A U.S. spy who used credentials as a journalist to establish his cover during Cold War postings abroad. He set himself up as a freelance writerand reporter in Stockholm in 1949. At the same time, he was foraging among local Communists for dissatisfied party m e mbers and performing other clandestine tasks. Goodrich began contributingpieces to CBS as a stringer in the 1950s, and for a time the network brought him back to New York to serve as a news writer, but he was fired in 1954 after CBS learned of his connection to the CIA. Died June 9. — From wire reports

Hardesty, speechwriter

for Lyndon Johnson, dies at 82 By Emily Langer

South Korea to resumebuying wheat from Pacific Northwest The Associated Press PORTLAND — An Oregon Wheat Commission spokesman says South Korean flour mills will resume buying soft white wheat from th e Pacific Northwest and will not restrict purchases of wheat

egon field in May. The O r egonian r e ports that Taiwan resumed purchases earlier. Wheat Commission chief executive Blake Rowe says Korea will continue testing wheat shipments for the presgrown in Oregon. ence of transgenic material. Japan, Korea and Taiwan Korea and Japan use wheat suspended importsof Pacific from Oregon, Washington N orthwest w estern w h i t e and Idaho to make noodles, wheat after genetically modi- sponge cakes and crackers. fied wheat was discovered They are opposed to importgrowing in an Eastern Oring genetically modified food.

The U.S. Agriculture Department is investigating the discovery of the wheat, which is not approved for farming in the United States. The department has said it appears to be an isolated incident. Agriculture D e p artment officials have said the wheat is the same strain as a genetically modified wheat that was designed to be herbicide-resistant and was legally tested by seed giant Monsanto a decade ago but never approved.

COCC

On Tuesday, the board accepted that budget. A total of Continued from B1 $80,500 will be used to conOther C O C C pr o j ects struct projects that include are also advancing. Prior to a community garden and a its monthly board meeting site for memorials dedicated Tuesday, COCC hosted a con- to deceasedstudents and facstruction celebration at the ulty. Bicycle racks and water college's $8.3 million Tech- bottle-filling stations will also nology and Education Center be added across campus. in Redmond, where a foundaOf all the projects, Middletion and walls have begun to ton stressed the importance take shape. The building is of the new dorm to the college's mission. set for a fall 2014 opening. "A commute is either time, A $1.3 million renovation o f Grandview Hall on t h e gas or cost. Clearly, a real Bend Campus will bring the barrier to their attending. Lomath department under one cal housing has been key for roof while adding math labs. many students and continues COCC is also working with to be," Middleton said. "When BrightSide Animal C enter you look at trying to attract in Redmond in hopes of pur- students, you look at housing. chasing its event center to use That's part of what closes the for the college's veterinary deal for some students." program, said Paradis. Attracting students from Smaller ad d i t ions to o ut of C OCC's district i s COCC's campus are come specially i m p o rtant, a s ing from a p o t o f m o ney Middleton says the higher controlled by th e c ollege's tuition paid by these students student association. Accord- underwrites the tuition of ining to Dean of Enrollment district students as well as and Student Services Alisome of COCC's more unique cia Moore,$1.50 from every academic programs. " Our programs i n n o n credit payment is d i rected toward a fund controlled by d estructive testing and i n the student association. The spection, culinary arts and college's board approves the aviation have the ability to budget submitted by the stu- draw out-of-state students, dent association. and these students' higher tu-

ition allows us to offer these programs to local students," Middleton explained. Middleton also highlighted the diversity dorms facilitate. "One of the advantages of attracting out-of-district students is the diversity. And that diversity is not just ethnic, it's urban and rural, too. I think we have a richer learning environment if students in the classroom are not just seeing the students from their own high school or the school they played football against." Middleton also suggested that having a dorm will allow COCC to consider international recruitment, though he cautioned that such a move is "not certain." Middleton predicts the additional dorm space will allow COCC to benefit from the growth of Oregon State University-Cascades C a mpus, which will become a fouryear university in fall 2015. "I believe there will be some o ut-of-area s t udents w h o would eventually want to get a degree at OSU-Cascades but would be challenged by starting at t h e u n i versity. With a dorm, we can be a bridge there," Middleton said.

Geese

geese away with dogs. The nonlethal efforts come after the district's controversial killing of 109 adult geese in 2010. T he district k i l le d t h e geese by stuffing them into garbage-can like containers, which were then filled with carbon dioxide. The killing spurred protests and a candlelight vigil. While the district maintains a federal permit to kill geese, none have been killed since.

The Washington Post.

Robert Hardesty, a speechwriter for Lyndon B. Johnson who also shaped the president's legacy by assisting with his White House memoir, died July 8 in Austin, Texas. He was 82. His death, from congestive heart failure, was announced by t h e L BJ Pr e sidential Library. Hardesty pursued a wideranging c a r eer, i n c luding stints as press secretary to then-Texas Gov. Dolph Briscoe, president of what is now Texas State University and chairman of the U.S. Postal Service's board of governors. But he w a s p e rhaps best known as an aide to Johnson from 1965 until shortly before Johnson's death in 1973. Hardesty joined the White House after a stint as chief speechwriter for Postmaster General John Gronouski, a prominent Democratic official and campaigner who was reported to have averaged, at times, more than one speech a day. During the 1964 campaign, when Gronouski spoke widely on t h e c i vi l r i g hts movement, Hardesty w r ote many of his speeches. After Johnson's landslide election victory in 1964, Hardesty told the Miller Center at the University of Virginia, the White House asked the Democratic National Committee for the 50best campaign speeches written for Cabinet officials in the previous year or so. Forty of them were by Hardesty. He was hired, along with speechwriter Will Sparks from the officeofthe defense secretary. Hardesty recalled that, as far as Johnson was concerned, "brevity was the cardinal rule" for speechwriters. "'Four-letter words ... fourword sentences ... and foursentence paragraphs,'" he told author R obert S c hlesinger for the book "White House Ghosts: Presidents and Their Speechwriters." "You've got to write it so that the charwoman who cleans the building across the street can understand it." Johnson also d e manded that speeches make news. In 1966, with only a few hours of advance notice, Hardesty was assigned to write a speech for Johnson to deliver after being honored for his work on the space program. Johnson objected to the first draft, finding it insufficiently newsy. A fter c o n sultation w i t h space officials on the status of the Apollo program, Hardesty added a line: "We intend to land the first man on the surface of the moon and we intend to do it in this decade of the sixties." Hardesty assumed that the president would make sure the line — and its implicit commitment to beating the Soviets in a manned lunar landing — was fully accurate before delivering it. A fter th e s peech, a t o p space official called Hardesty and complained that he had thrown the space program into disarray. At the end of the day — which Hardesty assumed would be his last in the White House — he ran into Johnson. " That speech you w r o te for me t h i s m o r ning," the president said, according to "now S chlesinger's b o o k , that's what I call a news lead." Neil Armstrong did, in fact, become the first man to walk on the moon, in 1969. In the Miller Center oral history, H a rdesty r e c alled that Johnson once introduced him and Sparks to a prominent guest as "two of the best speech writers a p r esident ever had.... And then he defined what he considered the best speech writers a president ever had. They are not t emperamental, t he y d o n 't miss deadlines, they don't get drunk the night before a major speech."

Continued from B1 "They seem to be doing pretty good," he said. Of course, it is hard to tell which geese came from Bend a nd which are part of t h e 500-1,000 geese typically at the refuge in Lake County. "It is hard to know who is who," he said. "They all look the same." The district tried roundups and relocations of adult geese years ago, Sulia wrote in an email, but the birds flew back

Resort Continued from B1 Loyal Land then took the case to the Oregon Court of Appeals, which, on June 12, upheld the LUBA decision. "The significance of the court's decision is that, if the

(conceptual master plan) has been initiated, then the approval of the (plan) cannot expire," according to an update from county Development Department Director Nick Lelack. "Otherwise, if the CMP expires, then Thornburgh Destination Resort would need to start over." D eschutes County d e termined that Loyal Land had properly initiated the resort's conceptual master plan within the allowed time frame. Loyal Land then submitted the county statement to the Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals, which found insufficient evidence to support the county decision and overturned it. " Approval of r es o r t construction rests on the decision that has been remanded from the county back to LUBA," said Kevin Harrison, principal planner with the county Community Development Department. "They withdrew both extension requests because they didn't think they would be successfulthere." Oncethe county approves a conceptual master plan, the developers have two years to initiate the plan, or requestextensions. Former Thornburgh owner Kameron DeLashmutt filed the original master plan in 2005. The county approved a pre-

— Reporter,541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin

to Bend. The district launched its roundup this year w ithout announcement. "It was kind of last minute when we decided to do it," Sulia said. "And we just did it." J uvenile r o u ndups a r e one of a variety of nonlethal methods the district is employing to tr y t o l o w er the goose population at the parks. Other methods include smearing oil on goose eggs, which prevents them from hatching; and chasing

liminary plan, and opponents appealed it all the way to the state Supreme Court, which declinedto hear the case,according to The Bulletin's archives. The county cannot issue building permits for the property unless LUBA reverses its ruling and decides Loyal Land initiated the conceptual master plan within the allotted time, Harrison said. The responsibility now lies with Loyal Land to ask the county to revisit the case and submit more evidence to

— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com

LUBA demonstrating why they believe the conceptual master plan was initiated. "They haven't asked us to review the LUBA decision yet," Harrison said. "Once they ask the county to conduct a review, the county will have 90 days to complete it." Calls to Perkins Coie, the law firm representing Loyal Land, were not returned as of press time. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, shing@bendbulletin.com

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B6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

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• 35o

• 3.82 w Youngstown, Ohio

San Francisco Salt Lake 66/54 ~ 'y Las xL 96/70

xm Vegas

+

97/82 ~

77/64

o CD o

xr

OS ~

.

83/68

75/ 6 1: + N e w York .

.

• l.ouisvHle . +'rx W gton, D.C.

,

88/68 I e St. Loulst Q

+ 93/70 Oklahoma 'ty lp o+ x~ o o 97/74 Phoenix h o+x

Little Roctcl

95/70 r

~

8 2/6 w ; ++T oo ;+o• xL . + ++-

87771

Zlia r lotte

Nashvlt'~ .; j ~ I 86/62x'o o o+ tlanta

86/?2 • oallas ~j Btrm mghafnx + 1 01 /80 ~ 86/yt~~ New Orleans

<+XA'

Tijuana 72/63

'spS

• BuffatoL~"I'

80/59 t~o

81/ 1

S/66 ~~ ~

~ Kansas City

8 o+

Honolulutou, 89/74

~9 + x ~

' o' ' Denver x+ 95/64 o++

c' 5

L79/59 " ' )• ~ g

•+ t+

Halifax 76/63 ortland

'o

70s

'M reeneay 79/57

I

++ .

Quebec 4+ 72/5

Bismarck

Stanley, Idaho

~ I+ x++ + : + xt oo + 8 '

~

HAW Ai i

Flouston E

Chihuahua

Orlando +, • 1/73

93/70

Anchorage 70/52

HIGH LOW

85 54

89 56

a Paz 99/70

Juneau 61/50

O 'ALA S K A

Miami 89/78

Monterrey Mazatlan

90/73 •

8 6/79

FRONTS Cold

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 5:33 a.m Moon phases Sunsettoday.... 8 48 p.m First Full L a st Sunrise tomorrow .. 5:34a.m Sunset tomorrow... 8:48 p.m Moonrise today.... 9:06 a.m Moonsettoday ... 10:21 p.m July15 July22 July29 •

PLANET WATCH

TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5:35 a.m...... 8:02 p.m. Venus......7:54 a.m.....10:18 p.m. Mars.......3:54 a.m...... 7:25 p.m. Jupiter......418 a.m...... 739 p.m. Satum......2:34 p.m...... 1:18 a.m. Uranus....12:11 a.m.....12:49 p.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 93/59 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........97m1975 Monthtodate.......... 0.00" Record low......... 32 in 1950 Average month todate... 0.1 9"

Average high.............. 80 Year to date............ 3.1 9" Average low .............. 47 Average year to date..... 5.91" 6arometric pressureat 4 p.m29.91 Record 24 hours ...0.31 in1995 *Melted liquid equivalent

FIRE INDEX

WATER REPORT

Yesterday Thursday Friday Bend,westof Hwy 97....High Sisters.............................High The following was compiled by the Central Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend,eastofHwy.97.....High La Pine..............................High Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.

Astoria ........63/55/0.00....65/56/pc......67/55/c Baker City......88/47/0.00.....82/46/s......81/45/s Brookings......65/51/0.00.....66/50/s.....64/54/pc 6urns..........90/47/0.00.....86/47/s......85/45/s Eugene........88/55/0.00....79/50/pc.....78/51/pc Klamath Falls .. 88/50/000 ....83/46/s ... 83/47/s Lakeview...... 88/41/0.00 ....84/50/s..... 83/51/s La Pine........91/48/0.00.....81/40/s......79/40/s Medford.......99/65/0.00.....88/56/s......87/57/s Newport.......61/50/0.00....62/50/pc.....63/52/pc North Bend.....72/54/0.00....67/54/pc.....67/55/pc Ontario........96/60/0.00....92/65/pc......92/61/s Pendleton......95/61/0.00.....86/53/s......84/54/s Portland.......79757/0.00....75756/pc.....76/57/pc Prinevige....... 91/65/0.00....84/48/pc......80/47/s Redmond.......93/54/0.00.....81/44/s......79/45/s

Redmond/Madras....Mod.

Prinevine.........................High

Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme

a service to irrigators and sportsmen.

Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 30,949...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 111,482..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 74,350...... 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 21,712...... 47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 120,644.....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 ...... . 292 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,570 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ...... . 130 LOW MEDIUM HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 58.0 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 130 Deschutes RiverAt 6enham Falls ..... . . . . 2,133 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res..... . . . . . 10 Crooked RiverBelow PrineviHeRes. .... . . . . 216 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 17.9 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 58.0 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 LOWI or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

To report a wildfire, call 911

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

IPOLLEN COUNT

Oy MED Q~ IU

g% g

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

o www m •

HIGH LOW

79 49

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

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

Yesterday's extremes

HIGH LOW

Roseburg.......88/61/0.00....83/51/pc.....83/55/pc Salem ....... 86/57/000 ...77/53/pc ...77/53/pc Sisters.........96/53/0.00.....79/43/s......77/43/s The DaRes......92/66/0.00.....82/56/s......80/57/s

• 41'

Fields•

• Lakeview

shl a nd

' 66/50

'

79/37

83/siI 8

Port Orfor 67/54

Chemult

87/46+

• Fpn Rpck 84/dp •

78/36

72/40

Roseburg

65/53

Hamgton

La Pinesu40

zwso ~

Sunny and very warm

77 47

OREGON CITIES

EAST Partly to mostly sunny skies are in store. Day

Sisters'

Eugene •

• Bandon

sunshine today.

7 9 I46

82/48~

87/49

64/54

Coos Bay

CENTRAL Expect abundant

osep

Sunny and warmer

HIGH LOW

80/51 Unlo~

ondon 1MHpwdale

Yachats• ~

Florence•

76 /44

La Grande

CamP 64I46

77/53•

WEST Clouds and some fog will give way to sunny skies.

• Hermiston 89/55

,

'

Government• +

Salem

6iggs

Da Hes 83/56 ~dkrlington • oWasco 1 s z/52 RuggS Maupin I I • 84I50 85/52

• 75/55

McMinnville

89/55

Th

zsise

HigsbprpPOrtland L 76'50 • • Sand y

Taamook•

UmatiUa

Hood

Seasideo ii2/56 •oCannonPeach

65/54

r

As t oria

ge

Mostly sunny skies prevail

BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST:5TATE I,

Abundant sunshine

3

ge

CONDITIONS • +++Q

.++++ '

d4

4>

* * * * * * * ***+*

46 3 8 3 6

W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow

Ice

Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/LolW City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX......97/78/0.00 100/75/pc101/76/pc GrandRapids....84/75/0.00...79/54/s .. 80/59/s RapidCity.......88/55/004...95/67/s. 91/65/pc Savannah .......90/74/0.01...89/74/t...85/74/t Akron..........87/66/194..78/56/pc.. 79/57/s GreenBay.......78/69/000...79/57/s .. 82/61/s Reno...........92/60/0.00..91/60/pc. 92/61/pc Seattle..........71/57/0.00..72/56/pc. 73/56/pc Albany..........83/72/085... 80/60/t...79/60/t Greensboro......87/71/000...85/68/t...86/68/t Richmond.......89/75/1.22... 88/71/t. 87/67/pc SiouxFalls.......81/61/0.00...85/67/s.. 91/73/s Albuquerque.....94/73/000... 93/70/t. 91/71/pc Harnsburg.......88/71/0.00... 84/64/t. 83/65/pc Rochester, NY....86/71/0.00 .. 76/59/pc.77/57/pc Spokane ........92/60/0.00...82/53/s.. 80/53/s Anchorage......72/55/0.00 ..70/52/pc. 70/54/pc Hartford, CT.....86/73/0.53...82/67/t...80/65/t Sacramento......97/60/0.00... 93/59/s .. 93/60/s Springfield, MO ..93/71/0.73...87/65/s .. 88/64/s Atlanta.........87/72/000... 86/72/t...85/71/t Helena..........94/54/000 ..90757/pc.85/56/pc St. Louis.........87/7370.46... 86/64/s ..85/64/s Tampa..........88/73/0.26... 91/76/t...90/76/t Atlantic City.....87/73/000...87/69/t. 81/69lpc Honolulu........86/75/000...89/74/s .. 89/74/s Salt Lake City...102/717000..96/70/pc...90/67/t Tucson..........95/75/0.00... 95/76/t...97/77/t Austin..........99/71/000 101/75/pc103/75/pc Houston........95/75/000 ..96/76/pc. 99/77/pc SanAntonio.....97/78/0 00..99/747pc100/74/pc Tulsa..........100/78/0 00 .. 96/75/pc. 97/74/pc Baltimore .......88/75/0.00... 86/69/t. 86/68/pc Huntsville.......93/73/0.00... 89/66/t. 86/65/pcSanDiego.......71/69/000..74/67/pc. 73/67/pc Washington, DC..89/75/0.09... 87/71/t. 86/71Ipc 6itings.........93/57/000..99/64/pc. 92/62/pc Indianapolis.....85/70/0.05..81/59/pc.. 81/60/s SanFrancisco....68/53/0.00.. 71/55/pc.69/55/pc Wichita........1 00/75/0.01 .. 94/72/pc. 98/78/pc Birmingham .. 90/72/000... 86/71/t. 86/71/pc Jackson, MS.... 93/74/0.00. 92/72/t. 92/6$pc SanJose........77/57/000.. 81/57/s 79/57/s Yakima.........99/59/000 82/55/s .. 81/55/s Bismarck........81/49/000... 95/70/s...89/64/t Jacksonvile......90/70/0 00... 89/73/t...88/72/t SantaFe........91/62/000.. 87/63/pc. 84/63/pc Yuma..........l 02/82/0.00100/81/pc102/82/pc Boise...........99/69/000..93/57/pc.. 90/57/s Juneau..,...,...63/47/000..6U50/sh .. 61/51/c INTERNATIONAL Boston..........86/66/0.00... 83/68/t...75/62/t Kansas City......91/76/0.00 ..88/68/pc.. 90/70/s Bndgeport,CT....86/74/000... 82/69/t...81/67/t Lansing.........86/73/0 00..79/53/pc .. 79/57/s Amsterdam......68/55/000..70/54/pc 62/51/c Mecca.........108/91/000 104/83/5.105/81/s Buffalo.........81/70/0.00 ..75/61/pc.. 77/57/s LasVegas......109/88/0.00 ..97/82/pc...94/83/t Athens..........93/81/000..93/73/pc.. 90/74/s Mexico City .....75/57/000 . 68/52/t...71/56/t Burlington,VT....83/71/001 ... 82/60/t. 77/59/pc Lexington.......90/70/1.38 ..80/62/pc .. 82/63/s Auckland........54/46/000 ..53/47/sh. 56/41Ish Montreal........82/73/0.07... 76/59/t .. 79/61/s Caribou,ME.....74/63/000...76/57/t. 78/60/pc Lincoln..........86/68/000..86767/pc..93/73/s Baghdad.......113/86/0.00 ..113/91/s. 112/92/s Moscow ........75/57/0.00...82/60/s. 82/62/pc Charleston, SC...90/74/000...88/74/t...84/73/t Little Rock.......9$77/000 ..95770/pc.. 9U67/s Bangkok........90/77/1.37 ..84/78/sh.87/75/sh Hairobi.........79/54/0.00...69/52/c. 74/50/pc Charlotte........86/69/000... 85/69/t...85/68/t LosAngeles..... 77/66/trace ..77764/pc. 76/64/pc Beiyng..........79/72/0 09 ..86/75/pc. 92/73/pc Nassau .........88/79/0.03...86/78/t...sl/79/t Chattanooga.....91/74/003...86/67/t. 86/66/pc Louisville........91/71/048 ..82/64/pc.. 84/64/s Beir ut..........84/75/0.00...85/72/s.84/72/pc New Delhi.......93/77/0.0010378 5/sh 102/88/pc Cheyenne.......84/58/0.00 ..93/64/pc. 91/62/pc Madison,Wl.....78/71/0.00... 80/58/s .. 82/60/s Berlin...........73/55/000... 78/53/c.77756/pc Osaka..........93/81/0.00 ..87/75/pc. 86/74/sh Chicago...... 85/77/000...81/61/s. 81/63/s Memphis....... 95/79/00091/67/pc.. 87/67/s Bogota .........64/50/0.16...66/46lt...66/46/t Oslo............68/50/0.00 74/55/pc .. .. 78/55/s Cincinnati.......91/73/007 ..80/59/pc.. 80/62/s Miami..........87/73/018...89/78/t...89/78/t Budapest........86/5970.00 ..87/58/pc .. 80/58/s Ottawa.........84/70/0.11...75/57/s.. 79/61/s Cleveland.......87/70/0.69 ..76/59/pc.. 78/62/s Milwaukee......80/76/0.00...77/61/s .. 76/63/s Buenos Aires.....59/48/1.21 .. 59/48/sh.60/46/pc Paris............79/59/0.00... 80/51/s.76/53/pc ColoradoSpnngs.84/64/000..90/63/pc. 90/64/pc Minneapolis.....82/63/0 00... 84/65/s. 87/69/pc CaboSanLucas ..88/73/0 00.. 90/75/pc. BI75/pc Rio deJaneiro....77/59/0.00.. 71/57/pc.. 73/62/s Columbia,MO...88/73/0.67...86/63/s .. 86/64/s Nashvite........94/73/0.19..86/62/pc .. 85/63/s Cairo...........91/73/000.. 98/69/s 99/68/s Rome...........82/63/0.00... 80/69/s .. 85/69/s Columbia,SC....90/73/0.00... 88/72/t...86/71/t New Orleans.....92/76/0.00... 89/77/t...92/75/t Calgary.........81/54/0.00.. 75/45/pc.66/46/pc Santiago........57/45/0.00... 55/53/s .. 60/58/s Columbus, GA....90/73/2.10... 88/73/t...89/73/t New York.......85/75/0.00...85/71/t...84/69/t Cancun.........86/75/0.00... 88/77/t...88/78/t SaoPaulo.......72/59/0.00..68/52/pc.. 71/52/s Columbus OH....90/69/1 14..80/59/pc.. 80/62/s Newark Hl......90/74/000...87/69/t. 85/68/pc Dublin..........70/50/000 ..73/58/pc.77/56/pc Sapporo ........73/70/0.50 ..78/64/sh. 80/64/sh Concord,HH.....77/64/0.11... 84/64/t...78/60/t Norfolk, VA......91/75/0.00... 88/73/t...85/71/t Edinburgh.......63/54/0.00 .. 78/56/pc.. 76/54/c Seoul...........79/77/0.00... 83/71/r...75/69/r Corpus Christi....96/78/000 ..97/78/pc. 99/78/pc OklahomaCity ..102/76/0.00 ..97774/pc. 96/73/pc Geneva.........81/61/0.00... 82/57/s. 78/58/sh Shangha/.......1 02/82/000 ..86/75/pc. 83/74/pc DallasFtWorih..l00/82/000 101/80/pc100/79/pc Omaha.........84/69/0 00... 85/66/s.. 90/71/s Harare..........64/37/0 00 .. 64/44/pc. 64743/pc Singapore.......88/79/0.35 ..90780/sh. 90/80/sh Dayton .........90/68/006 ..78/57/pc.. 80/61/s Orlando.........91/75/001... 91/7371...92/74/t Hong Kong......88/81/1.18..85/80/pc. 86779/pc Stockholm.......63/55/000...70/517s.72/55/pc Denver....... 91/58/000 ..95/64/pc.95/65/pc PalmSprings.... 98/82/0.00 100/79/pc102/83/pc Istanbul.........86/73/0.00... 84/65/s ..82/70/s Sydney..........61/48/0.00 ..63/50/pc.. 64/50/c DesMoines......84/73/0.00...85/63/s .. 88/67/s Peoria..........87/76/0.00...82/59/s .. 82/61/s lerusalem.......79/64/0.00... 83/66/s .. 84/66/s Taipei...........91/79/000... 88/807s.86/80/pc Detroit..........88/73/002 ..79/59/pc.. 82/62/s Philadelphia.....89/77/005... 87/70/t. 87/67/pc Johannesburg....84/6670 00.. 59/38/pc. 58/38/pc Tel Aviv.........84/73/0.00 ..90/71/pc. 90/70/pc Duluth..........79/57/000... 79/515. 81/60/pc Phoenix........l02/86/0 00 ..100/85/t. 104/89/t Lima...........64/59/0 00 .. 69/59/pc. 69/59/pc Tokyo...........91/77/0.00 .. 87/75/sh.. 89/74/c El Paso..........97/76/000 ..98/78/pc100/78/pc Pittsburgh.......86/68/1.95..79/57/pc.. 81/59/s Lisbon..........93/64/000..81/63/pc 75/60/pc Toronto.........88/70/002 77/59/s 81/59/s Fairhanks........57/53/010 ..74/49/pc.. 80/51/s Portland,ME.....64/60/007...82/63/t...74/62/t London.........75/54/0.00... 79/54/s .. 79/58/c Vancouver.......73/57/000.. 68/52/pc. 66/55/sh Fargo...........81/55/000...87/69/s...88/69/t Providence......85/73/000... 85/69/t...79/64/t Madrid .........97/64/0.00... 99/67/s .. 96/70/s Vienna..........84/57/000 ..81/56/pc. 79/57/pc Flagstaff........86/57/0.60... 78/55/t...76/55/t Raleigh.........87/73/0.00...87/70/t...83770/t Manila..........90/77/0.58 ..92/79/sh.. 90/77/c Warsaw.........79/55/0.00... 75/59/c. 69/54/sh

WEST NEWS

Mountain ire near Vegas urns 6 ranchstructures

• •

By Ken Ritter The Associated Press

LAS VEGAS — A massive mountain wildfire that made Las Vegas smell like a campfire destroyed six structures at a desert ranch and left two of the more than a thousand firefighting staff members with minor injuries, officials said Wednesday. It wasn't immediately clear if any homes were destroyed on the ranch several miles from woodsy Mount Charleston hamletswhere crews were p rotecting m or e t h a n 4 0 0 homes, a canyon hotel and a Chase Stevens/Las Vegas Review-Journal scenic alpine lodge and cabins. A family visiting the Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area One of the buildings that takes photos as smoke from the Carpenter 1 fire rises over Mount burned in the Carpenter 1 fire Charleston near Las Vegas on Tuesday. was a commercial structure at Prospect Springs, U.S. Forest Service spokeswoman Suzanne Shelp said. More than 270 additional ARIZONA firefighters arrived Tuesday Residents were allowed to return Tuesday to about100 of the 200 to help battle the fire sparked homes evacuated due to a wildfire in Kearny, located 73 miles

• -

o • ee r

-

e

Excellent care does not have to be expensive...

Wildfire roundup

by lightning July 1, bringing

southeast of Phoenix. Officials reported 5 percent containment

to 1,077 the number of people fighting the blaze about 25 miles northwest of downtown Las Vegas. One firefighter injured a knee on Tuesday and another camp support staff member suffered heat illness, Shelp said. Crews setbackfires, cleared undergrowth and positioned more than 50 fire engines to protect homes in the Rainbow, Echo and Old Town areas in Kyle Canyon. But the fire grew about 9 square miles and overall containment dropped from 15 percent to 10 percent as erratic gusts of wind pushed flames up canyons, down the mountain and a cross state Route 157. The main highway in and out of t h e e v acuated Kyle Canyon area was briefly cut off,but crews bulldozed a fire line to protect the road, Shelp said. No homes in the canyon burned. Overnight mapping put the fireat 25,524 acres,or almost 40 square miles, Shelp said. "The big factor today will be

of the fire after it burned about 300 acres of dense vegetation and

one house since it was sparked by lightning on Monday. NORTHERN CALIFORNIA More than 800 firefighters battled a fire in the El Dorado National

Forest west of South LakeTahoethat spread to almost1 square mile but was about 80 percent contained. A shed and an outhouse burned, but no homes were threatened by the fire that may have

been sparked Monday by abroken axle from a motorhome towing a truck. All lanes along Highway 50 reopenedTuesday. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Cooler and calm weather helped slow an11-square-mile wildfire that destroyed at least100 buildings at a mountain camp near

Julian, 60 miles east of SanDiego. Theblazewas 40 percent contained Wednesday, and state fire spokesman Mike Mohler said a chance of thunderstorms later in the day could wet down

hol spots. Evacuation orders remained in effect for120 buildings, mostly empty vacation cabins, and campgrounds in the Cleveland National Forest remained closed.

SOUTHERN COLORADO The East Peak Fire was declared100 percent contained Tuesday. The lightning-sparked fire burned13 homes.

Full defails at: www.DrRow.com *Includes The Bulletin Interview with Dr. Row

what the wind will do, because we're still hot and dry, u she said Wednesday. The Federal E m ergency M anagement A g ency h a s promised to reimburse Nevada for 75 percent of the cost of the

fire, which was growing by more than $1 million a day. Fire officials said late Tuesday the amount topped $6.2 million. The wildfire near Las Vegas is the top firefighting priority in the West, fire officials said.

Or Ca//5 41-526- 0 0 1 9 850 SW 7thStreet,Redmond, Oregon 97756 Located next to Fred Meyerin Redmond


IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 ML B , C3 Sports in brief, C2 NBA, C3 Cycling, C2

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

SOFTBALL

NBA

Blazers' moves become official PORTLAND — The Portland Trail Blazers

formally signed free agent small forward Dorell Wright and

acquired center Robin Lopez and forward Thomas Robinson in trades, sealing three of several deals the team struck last week. The Blazers got Lopez in a three-team trade with New Orleans and Sacramento that

sent guard TyrekeEvans to the Pelicansand

guard Greivis Vasquez to the Kings. Lopez averaged 11.3 points, 5.6 rebounds and 1.56 blocked shots in 82 starts last season with the Pelicans. "Robin is a starting-

MLB ANALYSIS

Possible doping bans face lengthy

With World Cup,sport is making its Olympicpitch By Murray Evans

tional softball events before the International Olympic Committee meets in Buenos Aires, Argentina, from Sept. 7-10. During that meeting, either wrestling, squash or softball/baseball will be added tothe program for the 2020 Olympics. So is this week an opportunity to make a positive impression on the IOC voters? SeeSoftball /C4

The Associated Press

OKLAHOMA CITY — It's a pivotal time in the history of their sport, and the members of the U.S. team at the eighth World Cup of Softball are aware of that. The World Cup, which will begin today at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium, also will include teams from Canada, Australia, Japan and Puerto Rico. It will be one of the last major interna-

Nate Biljings/The Oklahoman via The Associated Press

Team USA players celebrate after winning the 2012 World Cup of Softball. The 2013 World Cup begins today.

HORSE RACING:CROOKED RIVER ROUNDUP

caliber center coming off the bestyear ofhis

career," Blazers general manager Neil Olshey said in a statement. "He fills a void at a position we made a priority this

I

offseason, and his size,

g

ability to protect the rim

and emerging offensive game are all keyelements in achieving our

goal of having more of a presence in the paint on both ends of the floor

this season." Portland also ac-

quired guard Terrel Harris from the Pelicans in exchange for the draft rights to Jeff Withey, future second-round draft

picks and cash. The Blazers obtained Robinson in a trade with Houston for the rights to Kostas Papnikolaou and Marko Todorovic, as well as two future

'c"

vl

/,

second-round picks. Robinson was the fifth overall pick in last year's draft by the Sacramento Kings but

he was dealt to Houston in a February trade. He played in 70 total games

battle By Ronald Blum The Associated Press

NEW YORKe may never know exactly what Alex Rodriguez and Ryan Braun are being accused of in Major League Baseball's Biogenesis investigation — if they beat the rap. That's because details likely will be caught in a tangle of legal gymnastics involving MLB, the players' union and probably an arbitrator, who could rule no discipline is warranted.

w

Lengthy proceedings make it nearly a certainty most, if not all, suspensions would be served in 2014. Among the early legal issues: Does the commissioner's office have the right to announce any suspensions before grievances are decided by an arbitrator? Can a player not previously disciplined under the drug agreement be suspended for more than 50 games because of multiple violations? Two people familiar with the investigation said if management and the union can't agree on the process, arbitrator Fredric Horowitz likely would be asked to decide. The people spoke on condition of anonymity because no public statements were authorized. SeeMLB/C4

Photos by Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Horses and riders head into the homestretch during the first race at the Crooked River Roundup in Prineville on Wednesday night.

COLLEGES

last season, averaging 4.5 points, 2.8 rebounds and 15.1 minutes.

Pac-12eyes games in China

Wright, a nine-year NBA veteran, averaged 9.2 points, 3.8 rebounds

and 1.9 assists off the bench for the Philadel-

phia 76ers last season. He reportedly signed a two-year contract worth $6 million. — The Associated Press

By Doug Feinberg The Associated Press

By Beau Eastes

WCL BASEBALL

The Bulletin

PRINEVILLE — Alfred "Beaver" Peone has spent most of his life racing and training horses. The 67-year-oldhorseman from Spokane, Wash., grew up riding his dad's Shetland ponies before his own professionalcareer as a jockey and trainer took off, taking him all over the Pacific Northwest and up and down the West Coast.

Late rally falls short for Elks The Bend Elks

nearly camebackfrom a seven-run deficit before falling to the Medford

Rogues 7-5 onWednesday night in a West

aving seen jus abou every di

Coast Leaguebaseball game at VinceGenna Stadium. The Elks (20-12 WCL)

trailed 7-0 before scoring their first two runs of the game in the fifth in-

ning. Bend plated three more runs in the eighth, thanks to a pair of walks and two hit batters by Medford pitchers in the inning. Bend put the

Five-year-old Pacey Jamison, of Prineville, cheers on his favorite horse during the second race of the Crooked River Roundup in Prineville on Wednesday night.

tying run on base inthe bottom of the ninth before the Rogues put the

O

For video coverage of theCrookedRiver Roundup, visit The Bulletin's Website: denddulletin.com/horserace

Roundup

track from Missoula to Grants Pass When:Through multiple times over, Peone — with a Saturday, races start wide grin — says the vibe in Prineat 7:15 p.m. ville sets it apart from the numerous other small-town tracks he visits Where:Crook County during the seven-month race season. Fairgrounds, Prineville " Everybody here l i ke s t o g e t Cost:Tickets are loose," Peone joked during the open$5 each night ing night of the 2013 Crooked River Roundup horse races. "And boy do they get loose. The beer garden always does good business here." Prineville's biggest party of the year kicked off Wednesday at the Crook County Fairgrounds with eight races staged on the first of four nights of racing. SeeRoundup/C4

Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott's expansion dreams aren't finished. No, the conference isn't trying to add another team. Scott is looking across the Pacific Ocean to China to help expand the conference's brand. This is the second year of Scott's long-term effort to increase the Pac-12's presence in Asia. This summer, four groups from the conference will — or have — made trips to China. A conference All-Star volleyball team was the first to take the journey, spending 13 days there. Scott said in a telephone interview Tuesday that he expected the Pac-12 to play regular season games in China within the next few years, and that he hoped the league's cablenetwork would someday be available there. SeePac-12/C4

game away. Medford (12-17 WCL) had 14 singles in

thegame againstBend pitchers. The Rogues sent Bend starter Clay

Gartner (4-1j to his first loss of the season. Turner Gill had a

double for Bend, which managed just five hits on the night. Chase

Fields, Tyler Servais and Grant Newton all had runs batted in for the Elks. Bend and Medford

play the second game of their three-gameset today at 6:35 p.m. — From wire reports

Couples ishoping hecanbreak through at U.S.Senior Open By Eric Olson

The Associated Press

OMAHA, Neb. — Fred Couples feels like he is overdue for a win. He has played seven events on the Champions Tour this year, has been in the top five in six of them and comes to the U.S. Senior Open today after posting three straight runner-up finishes. "I would like to win something," he said Wednesday, adding that he even came in second in a member-guest tournament in California last month. Couples' most recent victory was just under

On TV

PROFESSIONAL GOLF

The U.S. a year ago at the 2012 Senior British Open. He looked ready to win two weeks ago in the Senior Players Championship, but a back-nine collapse left him tied for second behind Kenny Perry. Couples said his bothersome back is feeling fine, so if the man nicknamed "Boom Boom" for his prodigious drives can find the fairway at Omaha Country Club, no one would be surprised if this is the week he breaks through.

SeeCouples/C4

Senior Open • TV: Thursday

and Friday on ESPN2

at1 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday Gene J.Puskar/The Associated Press

Despite solid finishes, Fred Couples is still looking for his first victory of the season.

on NBC

at noon


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY GOLF European Tour, Scottish Open LPGA Tour, Manulife Financial LPGA Classic

Time Tl//Radio 2 :30 a.m. 9 :30 a.m.

G olf G olf

PGATour, John DeereClassic Champions Tour, U.S.Senior Open

noon

Golf

1 p.m.

E S P N2

Web.com Tour, Utah Championship CYCLING

3 p.m.

Gol f

Tour de France,Stage12

5 a.m.

N B CSN

BASEBALL MLB, Chicago White Sox at Detroit MLB, Boston at Seattle MLB, Cincinnati at Atlanta SOFTBALL World Cup, Canada vs. United States BASKETBALL WNBA, Los Angeles at Tulsa

10 a.m. MLB 12:30 p.m. Root

4 p.m.

MLB

5 p.m.

ESP N

6 p.m.

E S P N2

FRIDAY GOLF European Tour, Scottish Open LPGA Tour, Manulife Financial LPGA Classic

Time T V/Radio 2 :30 a.m. G olf 9 :30 a.m. G olf

PGATour, John DeereClassic Champions Tour, U.S.Senior Open Web.com Tour, UtahChampionship

noon

Golf

1 p.m.

E S P N2

3 p.m.

Gol f

5 a.m.

N B CSN

CYCLING

Tour de France,Stage13 MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Camping World RV Sales 301, practice NASCAR, Nationwide, CNBC Prime the Profit 200, practice NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Camping World RV Sales 301, qualifying

9 a.m.

S p eed

10:30 a.m. Speed 12:30 p.m. Speed

IndyCar, Indy Lights Toronto IndyCar, Streets of Toronto, practice, qualifying BASEBALL MLB, Texas at Detroit MLB, Los Angeles Angels at Seattle SOFTBALL World Cup, Australia vs. United States SOCCER MLS, Chivas USA at Philadelphia BOXING

Chris Avalos vs. Drian Francisco

1:30 p.m. NBCSN 2:30 p.m. NBCSN 4 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB Root

5 p.m.

ESP N

5 p.m.

E S P N2

7 p.m.

E S P N2

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changesmade by TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF YOUTH SPORTS

BASKETBALL

Jefferson County Little

OleMisssuspends

trict 5's Jefferson County defeated Portland-based District

HenderSOn — Mississippi guard Marshall Henderson has been suspended indefinitely. In a releaseWednesday, the uni-

LeaguerS adVanCe —Dis2 on Wednesday by ascore of

7-5 to claim the championship in the Oregon Little League 50/70

versity announced the 6-foot-2

(Intermediate, ages11-13) state

a "violation of team rules," but it did not provide any details about

baseball tournament in Gold Hill.

As state champion, Jefferson advances to regional play set for

senior is suspendedbecauseof the violations. "Since the season

July19-26 in lrvine, Calif. In its

ended, we have talked a lot about Marshall taking a greater leader-

first game in thethree-team state tourney on Saturday,Jefferson

ship role with our team," Ole Miss coach AndyKennedy said

lost13-1 to District 2 (Portland,

in a statement. "With that comes

Powell andTaborvillaj. But Jefferson bouncedback onSunday

greater responsibility, and he

to beat District 8 (Central Point) 15-5 and stay alive in the doubleelimination event. In the semifi-

must do a better job of living up to the high standard vve expect

nal round, Jefferson facedDistrict 8 again onTuesday and vvon

from him and hedesires from himself." Henderson averaged 20.1 points per gamelast season and helped the Rebelswin the

14-2 to advance to Wednesday's championship, where the District

SEC tournament and advance to the NCAA tourney for the first

5 champs avengedtheir earlier

time since 2002.

defeat and claimed the state title.

SOCCER HOCKEY BrIiinS lOCk uPgaalie — Boston Bruins goalie Tuukka

Portland gets All-Star

game — Portland will host the 2014 Major League Soccer All-

Rask has signed aneight-year

Star game. MLSCommissioner contract to stay with Boston. The Don Garber, Portland Timbers Bruins say that the annual salary

owner Merritt Paulson and Portland Mayor Charlie Hales

cap charge onRask's contract is $7 million, but they didn't reveal

announced theeventatJeld-Wen

the total value of the deal. Rask was19-10-5 with a 2.00 goals

Field on Wednesday. In recent years, the MLS All-Stars have

againstaverage in the regular season. In the postseason, he had a1.88 goals against average, leading the Bruins to theStanley Cup finals.

played premier international teams. The MLS opponent for the match in Portland will be an-

nounced at alater date. — From staffand wire reports

COREBOARD CYCLING Tour de France Wednesday At Mont-Saint-Michel, France 11th Stage A 20.5-mile individual time trial from Avranches toMont-Saint-Michel 1. TonyMartin, Germ any, Omega Pharma-QuickStep, 36 minutes,29seconds. 2. ChrisFroome,England, SkyProcycling,12 seconds behind 3. Thomas DeGendt, Belgium, Vacansoleil-DCM,

OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Selected thecontract of RHPSonnyGrayfromSacramento (PCL) Dptioned RHPDanStrailyto Sacramento. TEXASRANGERS—Placed RHP YuDarvish on the15-dayDL,retroactive to July 6. National League LOSANG ELESDODGERS AnnouncedINFSkip Schumaker'stwo-gamesuspension for his actrons during theirgamewith ArizonaonJune11 wasup-

IN THE BLEAcHERs www gocomics.com/intheuleachers

(I

held byMLB. MILWAUKEE BREWERS— Optioned RHP Johnny

Hellwegto Wisconsin(MWL). PITTSBU RGHPIRATES—SignedINFErich Weiss to a minorleaguecontract.

' /Ij

1:01. 4. RichiePorte,Australia, SkyProcycling,1:21. 5. Michal Kwiatkowski, Poland, OmegaPharmaQuickStep,131 6. SvernTuft, Canada,OrrcaGreenEdge, 1:35. 7. SylvainChava nel, France,Omega Pharma-QuickStep, t:37 8. Jeremy Roy, France, FrancaisedesJeux,1:43. 9. Tom Dumoulin, Netherlands, TeamArgos-Shimano,

BASKETBALL

National Basketball Association

NBA —Announced the resignation of executive

yice president,teammarketing andbusinessoperations ChrrsGranger,to becomethe president of the SacramentoKings, effective Aug.1. Announcedthe resignationexecutivevicepresident, basketball operations,StuJackson. Named Rod Thorn president, basketbaloperati l ons. ATLANTA HAWKS Signed FPaul Millsap to a two-yearcontract. CHARLOTTEBOBCATS— Signed C AlJefferson and CCodyZeger Waived FTyrusThomas. CHICAGO BULLS—Signed G-F MikeDunleavy, GTonySnegandFErik Murphy. Waived GRichard Hamilton. DALLASMAVERICKS— Signed G Wayne Ellington. DETROIT PISTONS—Signed F Josh Smith to a four-yearcontract.

1'45.

10. Jonathan Castroviejo, Spain, Movistar,1:52. 11. BaukeMollema,Netherlands, Belkin ProCycling, 2.05. 12. AndrewTalansky, United States, Garmin-Sharp, 2'08. 1a Alejandro Valverde, Spain, Movistar,212. 14. LarsYtting Bak,Denmark, LottoBelisol,2:15. 15. AlbertoContador,Spain,TeamSaxo-Tinkoft, same time. 16.Roman Kreuziger,Czech Republic,Team SaxoTinkoff, 2:1 8.

17. PeterSagan,Slovakia, Cannondale, sametime. 18. MacieBodnar, j Poland,Cannondale,2:21. 19.Jean-ChristophePeraud,France,AG2R La Mondiale, 2:22. 20. MichaelRogers,Australia, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff, 2'26.

Also 21. CadelEvansAustralia, BMCRacing, 2:30. 22. Laurens tenDam,Netherlands, Belkin ProCycling, 2.32. 49. TejayVanGarderen, UnitedStates,BMCRacing, 3'19. 110.ThomasDanieison, UnitedStates, Garmin-Sharp 4:35. 141. BrentBookwalter, UnitedStates, BMCRacing, 5:06. Overall Standings (After 11 stages) 1. ChrisFroome,England, SkyProcycling, 42 hours, 29 minutes,24seconds. 2. AlejandroValverde,Spain, Movistar,3:25. 3. BaukeMollema,Netherlands, Belkin ProCycling, 3'37, 4. A bertoContador,Spain,TeamSaxo-Tinkoff, 3:54. 5. Roman Kreuziger, Czech Republic, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff, 3:57. 6. Laurens ten Dam, Netherlands, BelkinProCycling, 410. 7 Michal Kwiatkowski, Poland, OmegaPharmaQuickStep,4:44. 8. Nairo AlexanderQuintana,Colombia, Movistar, 5.18. 9. RuiCosta,Portugal, Movistar,5:37. 10.Jean-ChristophePeraud,France,AG2R La Mondrale,5:39 I1.JoaquinRodriguez,Spain,Katusha, 5:48. 12.JakobFuglsang,Denmark,Astana,sametime. 13 DanieMartin, l Ireland,Garmin-Sharp, 5:52. 14. CadelEvans, Australia, BMCRacing, 6:54. 15. MikelNieve,Spain,Euskaltel-Euskadi,8:04 16. MichaelRogers,Australia, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff, 8:28. 17. AndySchleck,Luxembourg, RadioShackLeopard, 8:32. 16 DanielMoreno,Spain, Katusha,9:34 19. MaximeMonfort, Belgium,RadioShackLeopard, 10:16. 20. Igor AntonHernandez, Spain, Euskaltel-Euskadi, 10:48. Also 24. AndrewTalansky, United States, Garmin-Sharp, 13:tt. 51. TejayVanGarderen, UnitedStates,BMCRacing, 38:08. 60. Thomas Danielson, UnitedStates, Garmin-Sharp, 46:27. 82. Brent Bookwalter,United States, BMCRacing, 1:00:2a

"Get the net, Hayes! I hooked a trophy wife!!"

RobertoBautistaAgut Spain, def. Martin Klizan (8), Slovakia6-7 , (3), 6-1, 6-4. Philipp Kohlschreiber (2), Germany,def. Nils Langer,Germany, 7-5, 6-2. Gael Monfils,France,def. FlorianMayer (6), Germany,6-3,6-0. Italiacom Open Wednesday At ASDCountry TimeClub Palermo, Sicily

Dentoni, Italy,7-5,6-1.

SaraErrani(1), Italy, def BarboraZahlavova Strycova,CzechRepublic, 6-3,6-2. Hungarian GrandPrix Wednesday At RomaiTennisAcademy Budapest, Hungary Purse: $235,000(Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles SecondRound AnnikaBeck(4), Germany, def. LucieHradecka, CzechRepublic,6-3, 6-3 YvonneMeusburger,Austria,def.JohannaLarsson (5), Sweden, 3-6, 6-4,6-4. TimeaBabos, Hungary,def. Maria-TeresaTorroFlor (7),Spain,1-6,6-4, 7-6(4). SimonaHalep (3), Romania,def. AgnesBukta, Hungary,6-1, 6-1.

BASEBALL

Professional Hall of Fame Tennis Championships Wednesday At The International TennisHall of Fame Newport, R.l. Purse: $51 B,yt5 (WT250) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles SecondRound Jan Hernych,CzechRepublic, def. Jack Sock,

UnitedStates,6-3,4-6,6-4. Ivo Karlovic,Croatia,def.VasekPospisil, Canada, 6-4, 1-6, 6wk Igor Sijsling (3), Netherlands,def. Yuichi Sugita, Japan,6-3,6-4. MichaelRussell, UnitedStates,def. AlexKuznetsov, UnitedStates,6-3,6-4. LleytonHewitt (4),Australia, def.PrakashAmritraj, India, 6-2,6-1. Michal Przysiezny,Poland,def. RajeevRam(8), UnitedStates,2-6,7-5,6-a John Isner(2), UnitedStates, def. AdrianManna-

rino,France,6-0,7-6(7). NicolasMahut, France,def. TimSmyczek, United States,6-2,6-4. Swedish Open Wednesday At BastadTennisBtadiun Bastad, Sweden Purse: $630,200(WT260) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles SecondRound JuanMonaco(3), Argentina,def. Henri Laaksonen, Switzerland,6-4,6-2. Albert Ramos,Spain, def. TommyRobredo (4), Spain,6-3, 6-4. Grigor Dimitrov (5), Bulgaria,det. FilippoVolandri, Ifaly, 2-6,6-1,6-4. CarlosBerlocq,Argentina,def. BlazKavcic, Slovenia, 7-5,6HL MercedesCup Wednesday At TC Weissenhof Stuttgart, Germany Purse: $600,000(WT260) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles SecondRound MichaelBerrer,Germany, def. JeremyChardy(3), France,6-2, 6-7(1), 6wk

WCL

Wal aWalaSweets Wenatchee AppleSox Begingham Begs VictoriaHarbourcats KelownaFalcons South Division

W 19 17 16 13 8 W 20 17 14 15 12 12

BendElks CorvagisKnights CowlitzBlackBears KlamathFals Gems MedfordRogues KitsapBlueJackets Wednesday'sGames Medtord7, Bend5 Cowgtz13,Kelowna3 Corvagis6, Wenatchee3 Kitsap2,Begingham1 WallaWala16,Victoria 5 Today's Games Medtor datBend,6:35 p.m. KitsapatKelowna,6.35p.m. WallaWallaatCorvagis, 6:40p.m.

L 11 13 13 13

22 L 12 13 13 15 17

21

Wednasday'sSummary

Rogues 7, Elks 5 Medford Bend

401 110 000 — 7 14 2 BBB 020 030 — 5 5 1

Hockin,Keene(7), Snyder(8), Lujan(8), Hardy (9) andPacheco. Gartner, Grantham(4), Booser(7), Jordan(8) andServais. W—Hockin. L— Gartner 2B —Bend:Gil.

NewYork

Washington Indiana Connecticut

W 10 9 6 6

L 2 4 7 7 7

Pct GB .833 .692 1'/z .462 4'/z ,462 4H 364 5'/~

3

8

273 6'/z

4

Western Conference

Los Angeles Phoenix Seattle SanAntonio Tulsa

W L 9 3 8 4 8 6 5 8 4 8 3 11

Pct GB .750 .667 1 .571 2 385 4'/z .333 5 .214 7

Wednasday'sGames Chicag o69,Washington85 SanAntonio88, Phoenix 80 Today's Games Minnesota at Indiana, 9a.m. LosAngelesatTulsa,6p.m.

SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT

Friday's Gama

ChivasUSAat Philadelphia, 4:30pm.

Saturday'sGames MontrealatNewYork,4 p.m. Housto natNew England,4:30 p.m. TorontoFCat Sporting KansasCity,5:30 p.m. RealSaltLakeatFCDallas,6 p.m. Seattle FC atSanJose, 7:30p.m. Los Angeleat s Portland, 8p.m. Snnday's Game Chicagoat Vancouver, 4p.m.

one-yearcontract. BOSTON BRUINS—Signed GTuukka Raskto an eight-yearcontract.

GOLF

CALGARY FLAMES Signed CMikael Backlund

to atwo-yearcontract. EDMON TON OILERS—Acquired F David Perron from St. Louisfor LWMagnus Paajarvi anda2014 STATISTICS second-round draft pick. Through June30 LOS ANGELESKINGS— Signed LW Maxim KitCharles SchwabCup syn to a three-year entry levelcontract andRWBrian 1, Kenny Perry,1,508 Points.2, DavidFrost,1,417. 3, FredCouples,1,301 4, Bemhard Langer,1,291. 5, O'Neill to aone-yearcontract. MONTREAL CANADIENS— Signed FGabrielDuDuffy Waldorf 982. 6, MichaelAllen, 856. 7, John a contract. Cook, 795.8,KohkiIdoki,756.9,Esteban Toledo, mont to two-year NEW JERSEY DEVILS—Re-signed D Marek 734.10,RussCochran,732. Zidlicky. Scoring Average NEWYOR KRANGERS—Agreed to termswith F 1, FredCouples,67.65. 2, BernhardLanger,69.13. 3, DavidFrost, 69.51.4, KennyPerry, 695a 5, Tom Carl HagelinandDJustin Falk. D TTAWA SEN ATORS Re-signed D MarkBorowl.ehman, 69.59. 6, DuffyWaldorf, 6994 7, TomPernice Jr.,69.97.8,Russ Cochran,70.06.9,Michael iecki to atwo-yearcontract andFDavid Dziurzynski to a one-yearcontract. Allen, 70.10.10,JayHaas, 70.1a PHOENIXCDYOTES NamedNeweg Brownassistant coach. PGA Tour PITTSBU RGH PENG UINS—Signed F Matt D'Agostini to one a -year contract. STATISTICS SAN JOSESHARKS— Named Joe Willgeneral Through July 7 managerof Worcester (AHL).PromotedJon GusFedExcupSeasonPoints tafson to vicepresidentof businessoperationsfor 1, Tiger Woods, 2,380.000. 2, Matt Kuchar, 1,963.500. 3, Brandt Snedeker,1,603357. 4, Phil Worcester.Re-signed GAlex Stalock and F Matt Mickeson, 1,517.500. 5, Billy Horschel, 1,459.289. Pelechtoaone-year contract. SignedDRob Davison 6, Justin Rose,1,357.713. 7, Bill Haas, 1,320083. and DAdamComrie to one-year contracts. WASHING TONCAPITALS—SignedDKarl Aizner 8, Kevin Streelman, 1,233.583. 9, Boo Weekley, to a four-yearcontract. Re-signedFPeter LeBlancto 1,154.467.10,JasonDay 1,148.476. aone-yearcontract. Scoring Average

Champions Tour

WESTCOAST LEAGUE

Leaguestandings North Division

Chicago

Minnesota

Purse: $235,000(Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Kristina Mladenovic(3), France,def. MariaJoao Koehler,Portugal,6-1,7-6(5). SecondRound Silvia Soler-Espinosa (7), Spain,def. Mirjanal.ucic-Baroni,Croatia,6-2, 1-0, retired. Dinah Pfizenmaier,Germany, det. AnabelMedina Garrigues,Spain, 6-1,6-1. RenataVoracova,CzechRepublic, def. Corinna

TENNIS

Atlanta

1, TigerWoods,69082.2, Justin Rose,69158. 3, Charl Schwartzel69.374. , 4, Sergio Garcia,69.545. 5,Adam Scott,69624.6,MattKuchar,69.652.7, LukeDonald,69.699. 8,FreddieJacobson,69.786.9, BrandtSnedeker,69.829.10, Phil Mickelson,69.877. Driving Distance 1, NicolasColsaerts,306.6. 2, Dustin Johnson, 304.9. 3,Luke l.ist,304.8.4 BubbaWatson,304.1. 5, GaryWoodland,303.6. 6, RobertGarrigus,303.5. 7, JasonKokrak,30a1. 8, KeeganBradley, 302.6. 9, RyanPalmer,301.7.10, GrahamDeLaet, 30t.t.

DEALS Transactions

BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION All Times PDT

Eastern Conference

GOLDEN STATEWARRIORS— Picked up the 2014-15optiononthecoachMarkJackson. INDIANAPACERS—Re-signed F David West. Signed GC.J. Watson. LOS ANGE LES CLIPPERS—Acquired G J.J. RedickfromMilwaukeeand sentGEric Bledsoeand FCaronButlerto Phoenix. LosAngeles receivedF-G JaredDudleytromPhoenix and Milwaukeereceived two futuresecond-rounddraft picks. Re-signedG Chris Paul to a five-year contract andF Matt Barnes and CRyanHogins. LOS ANGELESLAKERS— Re-signed C Robert Sacre MIAMIHEA T—Re-signed C-FChris Andersento aone-yearcontract. NEW ORLEANSPELICANS— Waived F Lance Thomas.Renouncedtheir rightsto FLouAmundson, G Xavier Henryand GRoger MasonJr Signed C GregStiemsm a NEW YORKKNICKS— Re-signed G Pablo Prigioni to amutiyear contract. PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS —Acquired F ThomasRobinsonfrom Houston for therights to F Kosta sPapnikolaouand F-C MarkoTodorovicand two future second-roundpicks. Signed F Doreg Wright. AcquiredCRobin Lopezand GTerrel Harris from New Drleansfor thedraft rightsto CJeff Withey, future second-rounddraft picks andcash. Senta 2016 second-andfuture second-round draft pickto Sacramento. SACRAM ENTO KINGS —Acquired G Greivis Vasquezfrom New Orleansfor GTyreke Evans TORONTORAPTORS— TradedCAndreaBargnani to theNewYork for FSteveNovak, CMarcusCamby, G-F QuentinRichardson,a2016first-round draft pick and second-rounddratt picks in2014and2017. UTAH JAZZ—Acquired 0Andris Biedrins, FRichard Jefferson,GBrandonRush, 2014and2017firstround draftpicksand2016and2017second-round picks fromGoldenStateand a 2018second-round prck and cashconsiderations fromDenver. Re-signed G RandyFoyeand traded him to Denverand sentG Kevin Murphy to GoldenState. GoldenStatereceived GAndreIguodalafrom Denver andsent theNuggets a2018second-rounddraft pick. WASHING TONWIZARDS SignedGEric Maynor. Re-signedGGarrett Temple andFMartegWebster. FOOTBALL National Football League DETROIT LIONS—SignedQBMatthewStaford to athree-yearcontract extensionto 2017. SAN FRANCI SCD 49ERS— Waived TE/LS Kyle Nelson. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague ANAHEIMDUCKS—Signed D Alex Grant to a

BASEBALL

American League

BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Reinstated LHPWei-Yin Chen from the15-day DL. Recalled RHPJosh Stinson fromNorfolk(IL). BOSTONRED SOX— Optioned RHP Allen Webster and RHPAlfredo Aceves to Pawtucket (IL). RecalledRHPStevenWright andRHPPedro Beato from Pawtucket.

COLLEGE MISSISSIPPI Suspended senior men'sbasketball GMarshall Hendersonindefinitely tor aviolation ofteamrules. SOUTHER N CAL—Named Chris Capkodirector of basketball operationsandKurtis Schultzstrength and conditioningcoachformen's basketball.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movem ent ot adult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 1,354 3 2 0 701 429 The Dages 963 310 306 150 John Day 81 8 209 164 67 McNary 1 ,148 1 6 5 129 36 Upstream year-to-date movement otadult chinook,

jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonTuesday.

Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 159,326 56473 11,727 4,396 The Dalles 137,560 49734 4,763 1,845 John Day I t 6,232 44,862 4,428 1,724 McNary 110,166 33,939 3,951 1,327

Froome second in time trial, increases lead at Tour de France By Jon Brand New York Times News Service

MONT-SAINT-MICHEL, F r ance — When he mountedan attack on the final climb of Stage 8 on Saturday, a move thatgave him a commanding lead inthe Tour de France, many of Christopher Froome's rivals were caught by surprise. It was too early in the three-week race, they thought, to take the yellow jersey. By the start of the individual time trial Wednesday, however, overall contenders had been given plenty of notice that Froome was planning to try and pad his lead. But no rival, no headwind, not even a strike from workers on Mont-Saint-Michel, where the 33-kilometer, or 20.5-mile, course concluded, could stop him. Hunched over his bike, his back almost parallel to the ground, the Team Sky captain ceded ground only to Tony Martin, the winner of Stage 11.

CYCLING Alberto Contador ofSaxo BankTinkoff, the two-time Tour winner? Almost 4 minutes back. Cadel Evans of BMC Racing, the 2011 champion'? Nearly 7 minutes off the pace. What of Alejandro Valverde, the Movistar captain, his nearest rival at the beginning of the day? The Spaniard is still in second,but 3 minutes and 25 seconds behind. "Ijust wantedto go as fast as I could and then I would look at the results tonight," Froome said. I n 1989, t h e A m e rican G r eg LeMond won the Tour over Laurent Fignon of France by 8 seconds, which remains the record for smallest margin of victory. In recent years, the average winning margin has been considerably greater than that, but the last time a rider won by more than 2

minutes was in 2009, when Contador beat Andy Schleck by 4 minutes and 11 seconds. Still, Froome would not entertain thoughts that he had won the Tour on Wednesday. The rest of this week will be relatively calm, with the stages today and Friday largely for the sprinters, but the 240-kilometer stage on Sunday, which ends on Mont Ventoux, is a reminder that crucial climb-

ing stages remain. "Far from it," Froome said of securing the yellow jersey. "Other teams are going to throw everything they've got at us." But most of his rivals were exposed

Wednesday, perhaps none more so than Contador. Although he won the Spanish Vuelta last autumn, beating Froome and Valverde, the Spaniard is clearly not the same rider who captured the Tour in 2009 and 2010, though the latter

title was stripped because of a positive drug test. Contador was the sixth-to-last rider to tackle the course Wednesday. In a format similar to the team time trial that took place July 2, racers set out one-by-one on the road from Avranches to Mont-Saint-Michel, home to the iconic monastery. At the start, Contador sat on his bike and crossed himself. Despite his proximity to the monks, it didn't help; he finished more than 2 minutes behind Martin, who had set the day's best time earlier in the afternoon. Contador remained convinced that a Tour victory could still be a possibility for him. Others, like Evans and Valverde, were more realistic. "There's Froome and then there's everyone else who's fighting for the podium," Valverde said in a French television interview. "I'm going to fight for the podium now. It's always the

goal to take back time, but to make up this difference, it's hard." For Martin, the world time trial champion, the victory Wednesday was well-earned. The German suffered a concussion and bruised a lung during the Tour's first stage in Corsica. Though he passed out on the bus after the race and was rushed to the hospital, the team cleared him to continue. "When the doctor said 'OK, the body's OK, you can continue the tour,' I was always focused on this day here," he said. "I put all my energy into this race today and, to be honest, anything else today would have been really disappointing for me." Martin's teammate Mark Cavendish was doused with urine during his ride, leading some in the peloton to speculate that it was retribution for the sprinter's actions at the end of Stage 10 on Tuesday, when he knocked ArgosShimano's Tom Veelers off his bike.


THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

NBA

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL All Times PDT

AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Boston 56 37 TampaBay 52 40 Baltimore 50 42 NewYork 49 42 Toronto 44 46 Central Division W L Detroit 50 40 47 44 Cleveland Kansas City 43 45 Minnesota 37 51 Chicago 35 53 West Division W L Oakland 54 38 Texas 53 38 Los Angeles 44 46 Seattle 40 51 Houston 32 59

Vincent Thatcher Brach

PAPI'S BIG HIT

Standings

1133 1 1 1-3 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 Gregerson 1 0 0 0 J.De La Rosapitchedto 2baters in the6th.

Pct GB .602 543 5

1/2

Pirates 5, Athletics 0

.538 6 .489 t 0'/x

PITTSBURGH — Francisco Liriano scattered four hits over seven innings, and Pittsburgh beat

Pct GB .556

516 3r/x

.489 6 .420 12 .398 14

Oakland after a rain delay of nearly three hours.

Pct GB 587 582 Vx .489 9 .440 I 3'/x

Oakland

.352 2tr/x

Today's Games Toronto(Dickey8-9) at Cleveland(Salazar 0-0), 9:05 a.m. Minnesota(Pelfrey4-6) atTampa Bay(M.Moore123), 9.10a.m. KansasCity(E.Santana 5-5) at N.Y.Yankees(Pettitte 6-6),10;05a.m. ChicagoWhite Sox(Sale5-8) at Detroit (Ani.Sanchez 7-5), 10:08a.m. Boston(Dempster 5-8) at Seattle (E.Ramirez 0-0), 12:40 p.m. Texas(Wolf 1-1) at Baltimore(Mig.Gonzalez 6-3), 4:05 p.m.

47 44 44 41

43 45 48 51

40 50

official

Interleague

.565 3'/x

Wednesday'sGames

Arizona Los Angeles Colorado SanDiego SanFrancisco

0 0 0 1

WP — Cashner. T—3.33.A—19,411(42,524).

NrY.Yankees8, KansasCity t Pittsburgh5, Oakand 0 Baltimore6, Texas1 Toronto5, Cleveland4 Detroit 8,ChicagoWhite Sox5 Tampa Bay4, Minnesota3,13 innings L.A. Ange s13, ChicagoCubs2 St. Louis 5,Houston4 Boston11,Seattle4

NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Atlanta 52 39 Washington 47 44 Philadelphia 45 47 NewYork 40 48 Miami 33 57 Central Division W L St. Louis 55 34 Pittsburgh 54 36 Cincinnati 51 40 Chicago 40 49 Milwaukee 37 53 West Division W L

2 0 I 0

Pct GB 571 .516 5 .489 7'/x .455 t 0'/x .367 t 8'/x

Pct GB 618 600 ti/x

560 5 .449 15 .411 t Br/x

Pct GB .522 .494 2'/z .478 4 446 7 .444 7

Wednesday'sGames

Miami 6,Atlanta2 Cincinnati 6,Milwaukee2 N.Y.Mets7, SanFrancisco 2 Pittsburgh5, Oakand 0 Washington 5, Philadelphia I L.A. Angels13,ChicagoCubs2 St. Louis 5,Houston4 L.A. Dodgers atArizona, late

Colorado 5, SanDiego4 Today's Games Washington (Zimmerm ann 12-3) at Philadelphia (K.Kendrick7-6) 4:05p.m. Cincinnati (Latos 82)at Atlanta(Hudson5-7), 4.10 p.m. St. Louis(Westbrook5-3) atChicago0ubs(E.Jackson 5-10), 5:05p.m. Milwaukee (Gallardo7-8) atArizona(Miley 5-7), 6:40 p.m. Colorado(Pomeranz0-2) at LA Dodgers (Capuano 2-6), 7:10p.m. SanFrancisco(Bumgarner9-5)atSanDiego(Marquis 9-4), 7:10p.m.

American League

Red Sox11, Mariners 4 SEATTLE — David Ortiz doubled in his first at-bat to become baseball's career leader in hits as a designated hitter and hit a

Ted S. Warren/The AssociatedPress

Boston's David Ortiz responds to the cheers of fans after he hit a double in the second inning of Wednesday night's game against the Seattle Mariners. With the hit, the1,689th in his MLB career, he passed the record held by Harold Baines for the most hits as a designated hitter in major league history. Baltimore W.chenW4-3 7 Tom.Hunter 2 WP — Lindblom Burns.

3 1 1 3 1 0 0 0

4 1

T 2:59. A 19,344(45,971).

Yankees 8, Royais1 NEW YORK — RobinsonCano hit

a three-run homer, LyleOverbay added a grand slamand NewYork snapped out of its offensive funk with a win over Kansas City. New York KansasCity ab r hbi ab r hbi AGordnlf 3 0 0 0 Gardnrcf 0 2 0 0 Dysoncf 0 0 0 0 AIGnzlzrf 0 0 0 0 AEscorss 3 1 0 0 ISuzukirf-cf 4 0 1 0 EJhnsnss 0 0 0 0 Cano2b 4 2 3 3 Hosmer1b 4 0 2 1 Hafnerdh 2 0 0 0

tvvo outs in the13th inning and Tampa Bay beat Minnesota to win its season-best seventh straight

game. Minnesota TampaBay ab r hbi ab r hbi Thomsrf 6 0 I I DJnngscf 7 0 2 0 C arroll2b 3 0 0 0 Scottdh 4 0 2 0 Parmelph 1 0 0 0 Zobrist2b 5 0 1 1 Dozier2b 2 0 0 0 Longori 3b 4 0 I 0 Mauerdh 5 0 3 0 Loney1b 6 1 1 0 M ornea1b 6 0 1 0 WMyrsrf 5 1 2 0 D oumitc 6 0 3 0 KJhnsnlt 5 I 2 2 Arcialf 6 0 0 0 SRdrgzph 0 0 0 0 Hicks cf 5 1 1 0 Fuld ph-If 1 0 0 0 E Escor3b 5 I 2 0 JMolinc 2 0 0 0 Flormn ss 5 1 1 2 Joyce ph 1 0 0 0 Loaton c 2 0 0 0 YEscorss 5 1 1 1 Totals 5 0 3 123 Totals 4 7 4 124 Minnesota 0 0 2 010 000 000 0 — 3 Tampa Bay 010 002 000 000 1 — 4 Twooutswhenwinning runscored. E Pressly (1). DP —Minnesota 1, TampaBay 1. LOB —Minnesota9, Tampa Bay15. 2B—Doumrt

WP — Ja.Turner. T—2:58. A—23,921(37,442).

Natioitals 5, Philties1 PHILADELPHIA — Gio Gonzalez tossed seven sharp innings, the

Nationals hit a pair of consecutive homers off Cliff Lee and Washington beat Philadelphia. Washington Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r hbi Spancf 5 0 0 1 Revereci 4 0 1 0 Dsmndss 4 0 2 0 Roginsss 4 0 0 0 H arperlf 5 0 1 0 Utley2b 4 0 1 0 Z mrmn3b 5 1 1 1 DBrwnli 4 0 0 0

Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi C rispcf 4 0 3 0 SMarteli 5 1 2 0 R eddck rf 0 0 0 0 Tabata rf 5 2 2 1 Lowriess 4 0 1 0 JGomzp 0 0 0 0 Dnldsn3b 3 0 0 0 Mcctchcf 3 1 2 1 Cespdslf 4 0 0 0 RMartnc 4 1 1 1 Freimntb 4 0 0 0 PAlvrz3b 4 0 2 2 CYoungrf-cf 3 0 1 0 GSnchz1b 2 0 0 0 DNorrsc 3 0 0 0 Mercer2b 4 0 1 0 GGreen2b 3 0 0 0 Barmesss 4 0 1 0 M ilonep I 0 0 0 Lirianop 3 0 I 0 Neshekp 0 0 0 0 JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 Blevinsp 0 0 0 0 Sniderph-rf 1 0 0 0 S.Smrthph I 0 0 0 Grayp 0000 Otero p 0 0 0 0 Jaso ph 1 0 0 0 Jchavz p 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 1 0 5 0 Totals 3 55 125 Oakland 0 00 000 000 — 0 Pittsburgh 003 2 0 0 Ogx — 6 E—G.Green (1), PAlvarez(16). DP—Pittsburgh 1. LOB —Oakland5, Pittsburgh9. 2B—S.Marte (17),

Tabata(9) CS —S.Marte (10). Oakland IP H R MiloneL,B-B 22 - 3 7 3 Neshek 1 3 2 1-3 1 0 Blevins Gray 2 1 0 Otero 1 0 0 J.chavez 1 0 0 Pittsburgh LirianoW9-3 7 4 0 Ju.Wilson 1 1 0 J.Gomez I 0 0 T—2.53.A—23,474 (38,362).

E R BB BO 3 2 2 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 1

0 1

6

0 0 0 0

1 I

Cardinals 5, Astros 4 ST. LOUIS — Matt Carpenter hit a two-run home run and Matt Holliday drove in two with a tvvo-out hit to help St. Louis beat

Houston.

Werthrf 3 1 2 1 MYong3b 4 0 1 0 A dl.Rc1b 4 0 0 0 DYongrf 3 0 0 0 Houston St. Louis Rendon2b 4 2 2 I Ruf 1b 3I I I ab r hbi ab r hbi WRamsc 4 I 2 1Ruizc 4 0 2 0 Elmoress 3 0 0 0 Mcrpnt2b 3112 G Gnzlzp 3 0 0 0 Leep 10 0 0 BButlerdh 4 0 I 0 VWegsph-dh 2 I 2 0 A tuve2b 5 1 2 0 Jaycf 4000 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 Frndsnph 1 0 1 0 M ostks3b 4 0 0 0 Almontlf 3 I 0 0 J castroc 5 1 1 0 Hollidylf 4 0 2 2 Tracyph 0 0 0 0 LuGarcp 0 0 0 0 L.caincf-rf 4 0 1 0 Overay1b 4 1 1 4 C arterlf 3 1 1 1 Craigrf 2 1 0 0 H airstnph I 0 0 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 Loughrf-If 4 0 0 0 Nunezss 4 0 1 0 Wagac1b 5 1 4 1 MAdms1b 4 0 2 1 (17), Hicks(10). HR —Florimon(4), K.Johnson(13). RSorinp 0 0 0 0 Diekmnp 0 0 0 0 G iavt82b 4 0 1 0 Lcruz3b 4 1 I 0 4 0 I I Freese3b 4 0 0 0 SB — De.Jennings (14), Longoria(1). S—J.Molina. T otals 3 8 5 105 Totals 3 2 1 7 1 JDMrtnrf K ottarsc 3 0 I 0 CStwrtc 4 0 0 0 B Barnscf 4 0 0 0 Muiicap 0 0 0 0 SF — Y.Escobar. W ashington 0 0 0 0 2 2 001 — 5 C.Penaph 1 0 0 0 Descalsss-3b 3 0 0 0 T otals 3 3 1 6 1 Totals 3 18 9 7 IP H R E R BB BO P hiladelphia 0 0 0 0 0 0 100 — 1 K ansasCity 0 0 0 0 0 0 010 — 1 Minnesota M Dmn3b 3 0 0 1 T.cruzc 3 2 1 0 Correia 51-3 5 3 3 5 6 E—Desmond (11), DeFratus (1), Diekman(1) New York 103 004 Ogx — 8 Lylesp 3 0 0 0 SMigerp 1 0 0 0 DP — Kansas City1. LOB—Kansas City 7, New Burton 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 DP — Washington 2, Philadelphia 2. LOB—Wash- Wrghtp 0 0 0 0 SRonsnph 1 1 1 0 I 0 0 0 1 2 ington 8,Philadelphia7. 2B—Desmond (24), Harper York 4. 2B—Hosmer (17), Cano(18). HR—Cano Thielbar 0 0 0 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Fien 1 0 0 0 0 1 (8), Rendon (21),Overbay(11).SB—Gardner(12), Cano (6). (12), M.Young(16). HR—Zimmerman Clemnsp I 0 I 0 YMolinph 1 0 0 0 22-3 3 0 0 0 4 (11), Werth(10), Ren Kansas City IP H R E R BB SO Swarzak don (4), W.Ramos (4), Rui(1). Kraussph Paredspr 0 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 I 1 0 0 1 1 S—Lee. W.DavisL,4-8 5 6 8 8 3 6 Duensing Cisnerop 0 0 0 0 Kozmass 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 1 1 1 Washing J.Gutierrez 2 3 0 0 0 0 PresslyL,2-1 ton I P H R E R BB SO T otals 3 7 4 104 Totals 3 0 5 7 5 G.Gonz alezW 7-3 7 6 1 I 2 5 Coleman 1 0 0 0 0 3 TampaBay 0 20 010 100 — 4 Hellickson 6 6 3 3 0 8 ClippardH,16 1 1 0 0 0 0 Houston New York Bt.Louis 010 020 20x — 6 1 0 0 0 0 3 RSoriano NovaW,4-2 8 5 1 1 2 6 McGee 1 0 0 0 0 0 E — D es cal s o (8), M Carpenter (11). DP—Hous1 0 0 0 0 2 Philadelphia Chamberlain I 1 0 0 0 0 Jo.Peralta ton I, St. Louis 2. LOB —Houston 12, St. Louis6. Rodney I 2 0 0 0 2 Lee L,10-3 W.Davispitchedto4 baters inthe6th. 7 9 4 4 0 6 28 — J. c astro (24), Hogi day(15). HR —Carter (18), HBP —byJ.Gutierrez(Gardner), byWDavis(Gardner). J.Wright 2 1 0 0 1 1 Lu.Garcia I 0 0 0 I I M.carpenter (9). SB Crai g (2). Farnsworth 11-3 1 0 0 0 2 De Fratus 0 1 1 0 0 0 WP W.Davis. Houston IP N R E R BB SO C.Ramos W,2-2 2- 3 2 0 0 0 I Diekman T—2:43. A—35,781(50,291). 1 0 0 0 1 2 61-3 6 4 4 2 2 Lyles Burtonpitchedto1 batter inthe7th. De Fratuspitchedto 2baters in the9th. WWrightL,0-3BS,3-3 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 T—4;47.A—12,757(34,078). WP — Lu.Garcia Clemens 13 0 0 0 0 0 Blue Jays 5, Indians 4 T—2:50. A—34,513(43,651). Cisnero 1 0 0 0 2 2 Bt. Louis National League CLEVELAND — Munenori S.Miger 5 5 3 3 5 5 Reds 6, Brewers 2 Kawasaki hit a tvvo-run single ManessW,5-1 2 2 I I I 3 R osenthal H,20 1 2 0 0 0 2 Mets 7, Giants 2 with the bases loaded in the ninth MILWAUKEE — Mike Leake MuiicaS,25-26 1 1 0 0 0 1

inning and Toronto beat Cleveland.

Toronto

Cleveland

SAN FRANCISCO — Former

Giants prospect ZackWheeler pitched sevensharp innings,

scattered four hits over 8/s

innings and Brandon Phillips had three RBls, lifting Cincinnati over

ab r hbi ab r hbi R eyesss 4 0 1 0 Bourncf 5 2 3 0 Milwaukee. Marlon Byrd homered and New Bautistrf 4 0 0 0 Acarerss 4 1 2 1 Encrnc1b 4 0 0 0 Kipnis2b 4 0 0 0 tvvo-run homer an inning later, York completed its first sweep in Cincinnati Milwaukee Linddh 4 1 1 0 Swisherlb 4 0 I 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi leading Boston to victory over San Francisco since 1994. CIRsms cf 3 1 1 0 Aviles pr 0 0 0 0 C hoocf 4 2 3 0 LSchfrrf 4 1 1 0 Seattle. Jacoby Ellsbury had three M lzturs3b 2 1 0 0 Brantlylf 4 1 1 1 Cozartss 4 2 0 0 Segurass 4 0 I 0 Tholec 2 0 0 0 CSantnc 3 0 1 0 New York Ban Francisco Votto1b 3 I 1 0 CGomzcf 2 0 0 I hits to extend his hitting streak Arencii ph-c 1 1 1 0 Giambi dh 3 0 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Phillips 2b 5 0 2 3 Lucroy c 3 0 1 0 to18 garne, currently the best in Bonitaclt 3 I I 2 Raburnph-dh 1 0 0 0 EYonglf 3 1 0 0 GBlanccf 3 0 0 0 Brucerf 4 1 2 2 Weeks2b 4 0 0 0 Kawsk2b 3 0 1 2 Chsnh83b 3 0 0 0 DnMrp2b 5 1 2 2 AnTrrsph-cf 1 0 0 0 baseball. Frazier3b 3 0 0 0 YBtncr1b 4 0 0 0 Stubbsrf 4 0 0 0 D Wrght3b 4 0 1 0 Tanaka f 4 0 1 0 P au If 3 0 1 0 Haltonlf 3 1 1 I T otals 3 0 5 6 4 Totals 3 54 9 3 I .Davis1b 4 2 1 0 Poseyc 4 0 I 0 DRonsnlf 0 0 0 0 Bianchi3b 1 0 0 0 Boston Seattle Toronto 0 00 000 203 — 5 Byrd rf 5 1 1 2 Sandovl3b 3 0 1 0 Mesorcc 3 0 0 1 Hegwgp 1 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi C leveland 010 00 0 0 1 2 — 4 N iwnhs cf 4 0 0 0 Pencerf 4 0 0 0 Leake p 3 0 0 0 D.Hand p 0 0 0 0 Ellsurycf 4 2 3 1 BMillerss-2b 4 0 1 0 E—Kawa saki(6), Bourn(2),Stubbs(3). DP— To- Buckc 4 I 2 2 BeltIb 2 2 I 0 Chpmnp 0 0 0 0 McGnzlp 0 0 0 0 Carpph-If 2 0 1 1 Ernkln2b 3 0 0 0 ronto 2, Cl e vel a nd 2. LO B —T o ronto 6, Cl e vel a nd 10 . Quntng ss 3 0 0 0 Abreu 2b 3 0 0 1 Badnhp p 0 0 0 0 Victornrf 4 I 2 2 Ryanss 2 I I 1 2B Lind(17),Col.Rasm us(17).SB Bourn(13). ZWhelrp 2 1 1 1 Bcrwfrss 4 0 2 1 JFrncs ph 1 0 0 0 B rdlyJrrf-cf 2 0 0 0 Ibanezlf 2 0 0 0 Toronto IP H R E R BB SO ABrwnph 1 0 0 0 M.cainp 0 0 0 0 K intzlrp 0 0 0 0 P edroia2b 3 1 0 0 Ackleylf 1 1 1 0 E.Rogers 6 4 1 1 3 7 Edginp 0 0 0 0 Kickhmp 2 0 0 0 T otals 3 2 6 9 6 Totals 2 72 4 2 BSnydr3b 2 0 0 0 KMorlsdh 4 1 1 1 McGowan H,1 1 0 0 0 1 1 Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 C incinnati 111 0 1 0 2 00 — 6 D.Ortizdh 3 2 2 3 Seager3b 4 0 I 0 Cecil BS,1-1 2-3 3 1 1 1 1 Noonan ph I 0 0 0 M ilwaukee 100 0 1 0 000 — 2 Lvrnwyph-dh1 0 0 0 Bayrf 4I 10 WagnerW,2-3 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 Affeldt p 0 0 0 0 E—Bianchi (3). DP—Cincinnati 1, Mrlwaukee2. Napoli1b 3 1 0 0 Smoak1b 4 0 1 1 JanssenH,l 2-3 2 2 I I 0 J.Lopezp 0 0 0 0 LOB—Cincinnati 8, Milwaukee 4 2B—Choo (21), Navalf-rf 2 1 1 0 MSndrscf 4 0 1 0 DelabarS,1-4 1 3- 0 0 0 0 0 Scutaro ph 1 0 0 0 Votto (17), L.Schafer(12). HR—Halton (1). SBSltlmchc 3 2 1 1 HBlancc 4 0 1 1 Cleveland T otals 3 5 7 8 7 Totals 3 22 6 2 C.Gomez(21). CS—Segura (4). S—Leake, D.Hand. Iglesiasss 3 0 1 1 Masterson 62-3 4 2 2 5 6 N ew York 300 0 2 2 0 00 — 7 SF Mesoraco,C.Gomez. Holt3b-2b 4 I 1 0 Guilmet 2-3 0 0 0 0 I S an Francisco 000 000 101 — 2 IP H R E R BBSO T otals 3 6 11129 Totals 3 6 4 9 4 Pestano 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 E—Posey (4), B.crawford(10). LOB —NewYork Cincinnati Boston 022 104 002 — 11 R.Hig L,0-1 2-3 0 1 1 1 1 8, San Francisco 7. 2B Dan.Murphy(22), Buck LeakeW,8-4 8 1 - 34 2 2 4 2 Seattle 0 00 000 130 — 4 J.Smith 0 2 2 1 1 0 (8), Z.Whee ler (I). 3B—Belt (I). HR—Byrd (15). Chapman 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 E—B.Miler (2). DP—Seattle 1. LOB—Boston Shaw 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 SB — E Y . ou ng (15). S — Z .W he eler. SF — A bre u. Milwaukee 10, Seattle7. 2B—Egsbury (21), D.ortiz(22),Ackley J.Smithpitchedto4 baters inthe9th. New York IP H R E R BB BO HellwegI.,0-3 4 1 - 34 4 4 5 1 (7), K.Morales(22), Bay(6), Smoak(12), M.Saunders HBP—byJ.Smith (Reyes). LWheeler W,3-1 7 3 1 1 3 5 D.Hand 2 3 2 2 I 0 (10). HR —D.Ortiz(19), Ryan(3). SF—D.Drtiz, Salta- T—3:17. A—14,134(42,241). Edgin 1 1 0 0 0 1 M ic.Go n z a l ez 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 lamacchiaIgl , esias. Hawkins 1 2 1 1 0 0 Badenhop 1 1 0 0 0 0 Boston IP H R E R BB SO San Francisco Kintzler 1 0 0 0 0 2 DoubrontW,6-3 7 5 1 1 2 6 Tigers 8, White Sox 5 M.cain L,5-6 2-3 2 3 3 3 1 HBP by Hegweg (Frazier). Workman 2 4 3 3 0 4 Kickham 5 1-3 5 4 4 3 6 T — 2:58. A — 35,239 (41, 900). Seattle DETROIT — Prince Fielder Kontos I 0 0 0 0 I Harangl.,4-8 5 8 7 7 3 0 Affeldt 1 0 0 0 0 1 hornere, Rick Porcello pitched Luetge 2-3 2 2 0 0 0 Rockies 5, Padres 4 J.Lopez 1 1 0 0 0 1 Capps 11-3 0 0 0 2 I six solid innings and Detroit WP — Z.Wheeler. O.Perez 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:55.A—41,679(41,915). bounced back with a victory over SAN DIEGO — Rockies starter Wilhelmsen 1 2 2 2 2 2 Harangpitchedto 2baters inthe6th. Chicago. The Tigers allowed 23 Jorge De La Rosa took a one-hit

HBP—byHarang(Nava), byCapps (Iglesias). WP Wilhelmsen. T—3:23.A—20,480(47,476).

hits in an11-4 loss to the White

Orioles 6, Rangers1

Chicago

Sox on Tuesday. Detroit

Marlins 6, Braves 2

MIAMI — Giancarlo Stanton hit a tvvo-run double to end a10-game RBI drought, and Miami broke a

shutout into the sixth inning and

Colorado held on to beatSan Diego.

HBP —byLyles (T.cruz). WP—Lyles. T—3:23.A—44,313(43,975).

Angels13, CUt)s 2 CHICAGO — Josh Hamilton hit two home runs, Albert Pujols also

connected and LosAngeles went deep a season-high five times in a rout of Chicago. Los Angeles Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi Aybar ss 4 1 2 1 Sappelt rf 4 0 1 0 Troutcf 4 2 3 I Ransm3b 4 2 2 I H awperf 1 0 0 0 Rizzo1b 4 0 1 1 P ujols1b 1 2 1 3 ASorinli 3 0 0 0 Cowgillrf-cf I 1 1 0 Valuen I 1 0 0 0 Hamltnlt 5 2 2 5 Stcastrss 3 0 0 0 DDLRsp 0 0 0 0 Barney2b 3 0 0 0 Bucknrp 0 0 0 0 Castigoc 3 0 0 0 C agasp3b 4 0 I 0 Borboncf 3 0 I 0 Trumorf-1b 5 1 1 1 Smrdzip 1 0 0 0 Congerc 4 1 1 0 HRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 B Harrs2b 5 2 1 2 Raleyp 2 0 0 0 CWilsnp 4 1 1 0 S hucklf 1 0 1 0 Totals 3 9 131513 Totals 3 1 2 5 2 Los Angeles 5 0 0 0 6 0 011 — 13 Chicago 0 00 100 001 — 2 DP Los Angeles1,Chicago2. LOB Los Ange-

les 7,Chicago2.28—Aybar (13), Trout2(29), Conger (6), Shuck (12), Ransom(7). 3B—Cowgig(1). HRPujols (15),Hamilton 2(14), Trumbo(20), B.Harris (4), Ransom (9). SB—Trout(21). SF—Aybar. LosAngeles IP H R ER BB BO C.WilsonW,9-6 7 DDe LaRosa 1 Buckner

I

4 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 I I 0

Chicago SamardziiaL,5 9 42-3 9 9 9 2 H.Rodriguez 0 3 2 2 2 Raley 41-3 3 2 2 3 H.Rodriguez pitched to5 baters inthe5th. WP — Samardzia. T—3:04.A—31,111(41,019).

6 1 I

5 0 1

Leaders ThroughWednesday' sEarlyGames

ab r hbi ab r hbi AMERICANLEAGUE Colorado Ban Diego DeAzacf 3 I I 0 AJcksncf 5 0 2 I ab r hbi ab r hbi BATTING —Micabrera, Detroit, .366; DOrtiz, five-game losing streak by beating A IRmrzss 5 0 1 1 TrHntrrf 5 2 2 0 Boston,.331;Trout,LosAngeles,.320; ABeltre,Texas, Blckmncf 5 0 2 2 Evcarrss 5 2 2 0 Riosrf 4 0 0 0 Micarr3b 5 1 3 1 Atlanta. LeMahi2b 4 2 2 0 Denorfrcf 4 0 1 I .318; Pedroia, Boston, .318;Machado,Baltimore, A.Dunn1b 4 0 1 0 Fieldertb 4 2 3 3 CGnzlzlf 5 0 1 0 Headly3b 4 1 2 I .318; Mauer, Minnesota,.316. Kppngr dh 4 1 1 0 VMrtnz dh 4 1 3 I Atlanta Miami RUNS —Micabrera, Detroit, 70; CDavis, BaltiCuddyrrf 2 0 1 0 Quentinlf 5 1 1 2 Gigaspi3b 4 2 2 1 JhPerltss 3 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Helton1b 4 1 2 1 Guzmn1b 4 0 0 0 more, 63; Trout, LosAngeles, 63;Bautista, Toronto, V iciedoli 3 0 2 1 Dirkslf 4000 P strnckss 4 0 1 0 Rugginlf 3 1 0 0 run homer from NolanReimold A renad3b 5 0 1 0 Blanksrf 4 0 1 0 60;DeJennings,Tampa Bay,60;AJones,Baltimore, B ckhm2b 3 1 1 2 Avilac 4012 Heywrdrf 4 0 0 0 Lucas1b 5 2 2 0 Torrealc 5 0 2 0 Eorsyth2b 3 0 0 0 60; Egsbury,Boston,57. in a victory over Texas. Manny Flowrsc 3 0 0 0 RSantg2b 3 2 1 0 J.Uptonlf 3 0 0 0 Stantonrf 2 1 1 2 J Herrrss 4 I I I Hundlyc 2 0 0 0 HOME RUNS —CDavis, Baltimore, 33; MicaTekotteph 1 0 0 0 M achadohad threehits and an F Frmntb 4 1 1 0 Ozunacf 4 0 0 0 JDLRsp 2 0 0 0 Cashnrp 1 0 0 0 brera,Detroit,29;ADunn,Chicago,24; Encarnacion, Totals 3 4 5 9 5 Totals 3 78 158 CJhnsn3b 4 I 2I Polanc3b 5 I 3 3 Escalnp 0 0 0 0 Ciriacoph 1 0 0 0 Toronto, 23; Ncruz, Texas,22; Ibanez,Seatle, 22; RBI for the Orioles, who vvon for Chicago 0 10 200 200 — 5 uggla2b 3 0 1 1 DSolan2b 5 0 0 0 B elislep 0 0 0 0 Stauffrp 0 0 0 0 Cano,NewYork, 21. 212 003 Ogx — 8 only the third time in nine garne. Detroit BUptoncf 4 0 1 0 Hchvrrss 3 0 2 0 CDckrsph 1 1 1 0 Kotsayph 1 0 0 0 STOLENBASES— Egsbury,Boston,36;McLouth, DP — Chicago I, Detrort 1. LOB —Chrcago G .Laird c 3 0 0 0 Mathis c 4 0 I I Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 Vincentp 0 0 0 0 Baltimore,24;RDavis, Toronto,23; Altuve,Houston, 6, Detroit 7. 2B — AI.Ramirez (21), Viciedo (11). Mahlm p 2 0 0 0 JaTrnr p 3 0 1 0 Texas Baltimore R Btncrp 0 0 0 0 Thtchrp 0 0 0 0 21; Trout,LosAngeles, 21;Kipnis, Cleveland,20;Al3B — A.Jackson(2). HR —Gigaspie (7), Beckham(2), Dcrpntp 0 0 0 0 Quagsp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi B rachp 0 0 0 0 Ramirez, Chicago,19; Rios,Chicago,19. Fielder(16).CS—A.Jackson(2). SF—Beckham. K insler2b 3 1 0 0 McLothlf 4 1 1 0 T rdslvcph 1 0 0 0 Pierreph I I I 0 Grgrsnp 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BB SO Ayalap 0 0 0 0 Cishekp 0 0 0 0 Proiarli 4 0 0 0 Machd3b 5 1 3 1 Chicago Amarst ph 1 0 0 0 NATIONALLEAGUE AxelrodL,3-6 52- 3 11 7 7 2 3 Varvarp 0 0 0 0 N.cruzrf 4 0 1 0 Markksrf 5 0 1 0 T otals 3 7 5 134 Totals 3 54 7 4 BATTING —YMolina, St. Louis, .343; Cuddyer, Troncoso 1 -3 3 1 1 0 0 ABeltre 3b 4 0 1 1 A.Jones cf 4 0 2 0 Totals 3 2 2 6 2 Totals 3 56 116 Colorado 0 11 011 010 — 6 Coiorado,.337;Craig, St.Louis,.327; Mcarpenter,St. Purcey 1 0 0 0 0 1 Atlanta Przynsdh 4 0 2 0 C.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 001 000 — 2 B an Diego 000 0 0 2 101 — 4 Louis,.322;Segura,Milwaukee, 319;Votto, CincinSi.castro 1 1 0 0 0 1 Miami Andrusss 2 0 0 0 Wietersc 3 1 0 0 400 000 02x — 6 E — Ar enad o (6), Ev. c abrera (6). LOB — C olora do nati,.318;Posey,SanFrancisco,.316. Detroit Morlnd1b 3 0 0 0 Hardyss 2 1 0 0 E—C.Johnson (8). DP—Atlanta1. LOB —Atlanta 12, SanDiego9. 2B Torrealba(6), Ev.cabrera(13), RUNS —Mcarpenter, St. Louis, 70; CGonzalez, P orcego W ,6-6 6 7 3 3 0 6 G.Sotoc 3 0 0 0 BRorts2b 3 1 1 1 6, Miami12. 2B—EFreeman (18), C.Johnson(20), Blanks(13). 3B—Blackmon (1). HR Colorado,66;Holliday,St Louis, 64;Votto, Cincin—Quentin (11) B Rondon 1 2 2 2 1 1 EBeltrecf 3 0 0 0 Rermlddh 4 1 2 3 Uggla(8), Stanton(10), Polanco(9), Hechavarria (7) SB — Arenado(I), Ev.cabrera(32), Headley (6). CSnati, 62;Choo,Cincinnati, 59;SMarte, Pittsburgh,59; 1 0 0 0 0 1 3B — Totals 3 0 I 4 I Totals 33 6 I 0 5 SmylyH,10 Ja.Turner (I). LeMahieu(3). S—J.DeLaRosa.SF—J.Herrera. Goldschmidt,Arizona,57;JUpton, Atlanta, 57. 1 0 0 0 2 1 Atlanta Texas 0 00 001 000 — 1 BenoitS,BB IP H R E R BB BO Colorado IP H R E R BB BO HOME RUNS —CGonzalez, Colorado, 24; PAIWP — B .R on don 2. Baltimore 002 4 0 0 Ogx— 6 MaholmL,9 8 41 - 3 7 4 4 5 3 J.De La RosaW,9-5 5 2 2 2 4 4 varez, Pittsburgh, 23; DBrown, Philadelphia, 23; T — 3:06. A — 39,085 (41, 2 55). DP Baltimore 1. LDB Texas 5, Baltimore10. D.carpenter 12-3 0 0 0 I I EscalonaH,5 1 1 0 0 1 1 Goldschmidt, Arizona, 21; Beltran, St. Louis, 19; 28 — Pierzynski (13), A.Jones(23). 3B—Machado Ayala 11-3 3 2 2 0 0 Belisle H,12 1 2 1 I 0 2 Bruce,Cincinnati,18; Tulowitzki, Colorado,16;Uggla, Varvaro 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 Brothers H,B 1 0 0 0 0 1 Atlanta,16;JUpton Atlanta,16. (3). HR —Reimold(5). Rays 4, Twins 3 (13 innings) Texas IP H R E R BBBO Miami R.BetancourtS,13-14 1 2 1 1 0 0 STOLENBASES —Ecabrera, SanDiego, 32; LindblomL,1-3 5 1 - 3 9 6 6 4 1 Ja. TurnerW,3-1 7 4 2 2 3 5 Ban Diego SMarte,Pittsburgh,28, Segura, Milwaukee,27;CGoST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Ben Burns 12-3 1 0 0 3 1 QuagsH,6 1 0 0 0 0 2 CashnerL,5-5 5 8 3 2 2 5 mez, Milwaukee,21; Revere,Philadelphia, 21; McR.Ross 1 0 0 0 0 0 Zobrist hit an RBI single with Cishek I 2 0 0 0 2 Stauffer 1 2 1 I 0 I Cutchen,Prttsburgh,18; Pierre,Miami,18.

BALTIMORE — Wei-Yin Chen returned from the disabled list to pitch seven innings of three-hit ball, and Baltimore got a three-

Trades, contracts become By Brian Mahoney The Associated Press

Just about every NBA team would like D w ight Howard. Only the Houston Rockets could get him, and on Wednesday a couple of his other suitors announced their backup plans — while one lost out on another big target. Paul Millsap is headed to Atlanta. The Golden State Warriors acquired Andre Iguodala. But the Dallas Mavericks missed out on another center when And rew Bynum a greed to sign with t h e C l eveland Cavaliers. The Los Angeles Clippers never had to look beyond their top target, with Chris Paul committing to stay on the first day of free

agency. They also added Darren C o l lison, J a r ed Dudley and J.J. Redick to a team that won the Pacific Division last season, surpassing the Lakers as the best team in Los Angeles. "We're loaded at every position," said Matt Barnes, w ho re-signed with t h e Clippers. "Who d o esn't want to play with Chris? He's a rguably th e b e st point guard in the game. It just shows this organization has come a long way. They're making the right moves." It's hard to see anything changing in Los Angeles next season after Howard passed on re-signing with the Lakers and instead opted for the Rockets in a deal that still h adn't become official as of Wednesday night. That was the first day transactions could be completed and contacts signed following the completion of the NBA's moratorium period. The Rockets couldn't wait to talk about their AllStar center, getting fined $150,000 by the league on Tuesday fo r pr e m ature comments about Howard on TV and in social media. The rest ofthe league waited until rules allowed Wednesday. The Clippers held a press conference for Paul, the three new players and the re-signed Barnes and Ryan Hollins on what Paul called "one of the biggest days in franchise history." While they were celebrating, Bynum was meeting with D allas, another team that wanted Howard. But he went with a previous two-year offer f r om the Cavs, according to a person who spoke on condition of a n onymity b ecause the deal was not yet announced. Bynum was part of the four-team trade that sent Howard from Orlando to Los Angeles last summer, but never played a game for Philadelphia because of knee problems.

Charlotte got bigger by adding Utah center Al Jefferson, while his f ormer Jazz teammate Millsap is also bound for the Southe ast Division w i t h t h e Hawks. Atlanta missed out on Howard, and forward Josh Smith left for a $54 million, four-year deal with Detroit, but the H awks bounced

back by giving Millsap a two-year, $19 m i l lion contract. T he Jazz also got i n v olved in t h e d eal t h at landed Iguodala with the Warriors, who gave him a four-year, $48 million deal last week. Golden State cleared more than $24 million by sending Richard Jefferson, Andris Biedrins and Brandon Rush to the Jazz along with four draft picks and cash. Denver received guard Randy Foye from the Jazz. One of the biggest deals of the offseason, the trade sending Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce from Boston to Brooklyn, will be completed Friday.


C4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

Roundup

Softball

Continued from C1 O fficially s t arted i n 1 9 6 6 though locals will tell you there was plenty of racing here before thenthe horse races have grown to become one of Central Oregon's most popular summer events. More than 13,000 spectators are expected to attend at least one night of Crooked River Roundup racing this week. "I'm just an old Montana farm boy," said Terry Mero, 70, a Bend resident who was checking out the races for the first time with friend Bev Gordon, 71, also of Bend. "Last week we tookin the La Pine Rodeo. This is just like being back home." Run almost entirely by volunteers, the horse races rely on as many as 100 unpaid "employees" who take wagers at the betting window, water the racetrack,serve beer and do just about everything else in between. "I probably called about 175 people to help," said Celeste Wentzel, 35, a Prineville native who has been the races' pari-mutuel betting manager for the last three years. "We'll

Continued from C1 "I think we're always trying to show the world that softball is a great sport and deserves to be back in the Olympics," said U.S. infielder Lauren Chamberlain, who starred for Oklahoma during the Sooners' run to the NCAA title this spring. "We're just staying positive about the whole thing. There are a ton of little girls out there who want the same thing." Fellow infielder Lauren Gibson, the SoutheasternConference player of the year at Tennessee, echoed that sentiment. "It would be really good to get it back," said Gibson, who is starting her third year on the U.S. squad. "Obviously, we've all dreamed about being in the Olympics. That was one of our goals when we were little. We're just going to out and work hard and have fun and hopefully showcase softball so that people will want to put it back into the Olympics. That's what we're trying to do." Softball made its Olympic debut in 1996 in Atlanta. The U.S. won the gold medal that year, then again in 2000 inSydney and in 2004 in Athens. Japan beat the U.S. for the gold in 2008 in Beijing, after the IOC voted in July 2005 to drop softball (and baseball) from the Olympics. Ever since, efforts have been ongoing to have the IOC reconsider its decision. Most recently, softball and baseball international federations have paired together, figuring their sports stood a better chance of jointly regaining Olympic status instead of competing against each other. One by-product of the absence of softball from the Olympics is that international events like the World Cup — first held in 2005 — have gained an added importance in the sport. After finishing second behind Japan in 2005, the U.S. has won every World Cup played since. The Americans have posted a 394 record in World Cup play, losing only to Canada and Japan in 2005 and Canada in 2010 and 2011. But while the U.S. has the world's most consistent national team, it isn't invincible. In their last meeting during the 2012 World Championships, Japan beat the U.S. 2-1 in 10 innings for the title. "It's always gold or bust for us," said Valerie Arioto, a former California star also entering her third year on the U.S. squad. "We're always looking at the gold medaL Last year was a little disappointing, but I think the day after (the loss),

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Spectators gather to take a closer look at the horses in the paddock prior to the second race of the Crooked River Roundup in Prineville on Wednesday night. Thousands of spectators are expected over the course of the week.

beer," he said. "If you have nine races, that means you have eight intermissions. Eight halftimes." Of all the events he worked or atprobably have 40 people (working tended while in the beer business, the betting window) tonight. this is the only one that he keeps "I got suckered in," quipped working, I c hange kegs, move finding time for in retirement. "It's the people, the horses, just Wentzel, who sits on t h e C RR's canned beer," said Cyphers, 70, who board of d i rectors. "We used to worked in the beer industry before the whole event," Cyphers said. "It's come down here when w e w e re retiring seven years ago. mostly the people in Prineville. It's little. We'd go to the carnival that "And of course," he added to his just different and laid-back." used tobe next door and mom and list o f r e s p onsibilities, "quality Racing continues tonight, Friday dad would go to the races.... You control." and Saturday; first post time each can't get this anywhere else in CenCyphers, who is now retired, said evening is 7:15. Entry is $5 per spectral Oregon. It's just fun to be a part he has been coming to the CRR tator, and all ages are welcome. P9 — Reporter: 541-383-0305, of horse races for the past 27 years. "It's the perfect venue for selling While Wentzel is usually overseebeastesC<bendbulletin.com.

MLB Continued from C1 MLB has spent most of the year investigating about 20 players for their links to Biogenesis of America, including A-Rod and Braun, both former MVPs. Miami New Times reported in January that the closed Florida anti-aging clinic had distributed banned performance-enhancing drugs to major leaguers. Lawyers for the commissioner's office have been interviewing players and many, including Braun, have refused toanswer questions about their dealings with Biogenesis, the two people said. Braun was interviewed in late June, and Rodriguez is scheduled to be interviewed Friday. Braun and Rodriguez have said they didn't do anything that merits discipline.

ing the madness that is the betting window, longtime spectator/volunteer Bob Cyphers, of Bend, makes sure the beer flows like water at the Crook County Fairgrounds. "I make sure all t h e t aps are

The players' refusal to respond to MLB's questions were first reported by ESPN and the New York Daily News. MLB hopes to complete the player interviews in mid- July but is not sure whether it will meet that schedule. Management then will have to decide what discipline it intends to impose. Baseball's joint drug agreement calls for a 50-game suspension for a first offense, 100 games for a second and a lifetime ban for a third. Among the players linked to B i ogenesis, Toronto's Melky Cabrera, Oakland's Bartolo Colon and San Diego's Yasmani Grandalhave served 50-game penalties following positive testosterone tests. The drug agreement specifies that if a suspension for a first PED offense is challenged by the union, the violation is not made public unless

Couples

and hot," Perry said. "I got the hot part right, but it's the hilliContinued from C1 est golfcourse I've ever been "Fred still hits the ball a tre- on." Drives in the fairway will be mendous distance," Bernhard Langer said. "He hasn't lost at a premium with the rough any distance, maybe gained cut high and the greens small some wit h t h e e q u ipment and sloped. The 312-yard 13th and all that. He's capable of hole is drivable, but the course producing very low scores. features the second-longest Wherever he tees up, he's par-3 in U.S. Senior Open hisone of the main favorites, no tory in the 230-yard third hole doubt about it." and the third-longest par-4 in Couples, Perry, L a n ger, the 494-yard 10th. Tom Watson and David Frost The 53-year-old Couples' are among the top contend- scaled-back schedule begins ers at the 6,700-yard, par-70 to ramp up now. After the Omaha Country Club. U.S. Senior Open, he plays The fourth of the five sen- the British Open at Muirfield ior majors will be a test of and Senior British Open at stamina for the 50-and-over Royal Birkdale in consecutive golfers, especially with week- weeks - "which might be a end highs forecast in the low little much," he said. 90s with high humidity. The For a man with a n otoricourse is hilly, featuring el- ously bad back, the schedule evation an d t o p ographical is taxing, in n o small part changes that belie the popular because of the challenge the image of the central plains. Omaha Country Club pres"Nebraska, you'd think flat ents. Even in the best of cir-

the penalty is sustained in arbitration. However, discipline for second and third offenses are announced and served while the grievance is litigated. There also is a p r ovision stating "the commissioner's office may publicly announce the discipline of a player if the allegations relating to a player's violation of the program previously had been made public through a source other than t he commissioner's office or a club" or their employees. The sides or the arbitrator will have to decide whether the mediaaccounts ofBiogenesis are covered by that clause. Each player's case probably will be handled in a separate arbitration, which could slow down the process while the sides secure dates before Horowitz or agree to retain other arbitrators.

cumstances, golfers will find themselves with a good number of side-hill and downhill lies. And t hen t here's that

gnarly, 4-inch rough. "If I drive it in the rough and don't have a great lie, I'm not going to do too much out of it," Couples said. "I'll prob-

ably play it safe." Roger Chapman will try to become the first defending champion to repeat since Allen Doylein 2006. Chapman, who also won the Senior PGA Championship last year, has not been able to recapture his 2012 magic. He has one top-10 finish in 13 events. Notable first-time entrants are Colin Montgomerie, who turned 50 last month and tied for ninth in the Senior Players Championship; Rocco Mediate, who lost a playoff to Tiger Woods inthe classic 2008 U.S. Open at Torrey Pines; and Duffy Waldorf, who has six top-10s in 11 Champions

Tour events this year. Perry, the Charles Schwab Cup points leader, is looking for his second win of the year in a senior major. He shot three straight rounds in the 60s to win the Senior Players Championship by 2 shots over Couples and Waldorf in Pittsburgh. "Anything that has 'major' attached to it was always my one goal," Perry said. "Obviously, our majors out here probably are not looked upon like they are on the PGA Tour, but yet they're still a major. It still will be attached to your name." Playing on the regular tour last week in West Virginia, Perry was 3 shots off the lead after two rounds of the Greenbrier Classic before ballooning to 73 on Saturday and finishing tied for 41st. Watson shot in the 60s in three of hisfour rounds at the Greenbrier but tied for

we were ready to compete again and ready to get back at it and get

that gold medal. Nothing is going to stop us. We're a young team and that might work to our advantage. We have that drive and competitive nature we need to get the gold medal." Along with Japan and the U.S., Australia and Canada (third and fourth, respectively, at the World

Championships) have

c a pable

squads. The five teams will play a round-robin tournament from Wednesday through early S u nd ay afternoon. A f ter t h at , t h e fourth- and fifth-place teams will play, then that winner will play the third-place squad, followed by the top two finishers playing for the

championship. The U.S. team will be without college player of the year Keilani Ricketts. The ace pitcher and slugger, who led Oklahoma to the NCAA title, left the national squad a week ago. Ricketts played for the U.S. team the past two summers. The U.S. will play Canada today, Australia on Friday, Japan on Saturday and Puerto Rico on Sunday. U.S. coach Ken Eriksen deflected questions whether the tournament will be a s h owcase for softball heading into the IOC vote or if his team would like to gain a measure of revenge againstJapan after last year's loss. "We cannot worry about that kind of stuff," said Eriksen, the coach at South Florida. "We need to continue to get better today. Let the people handle what they've got to handle. My job is right here and that's what we're going to try to do. "If we play the game the right way, the long-term benefits are go-

ing to be really, really good for us." But there's no doubting his players understand the significance of the opportunity. Aimee Creger, who played at Mustang High School in suburban Oklahoma City, watched U.S. Olympic teams while growing up and dreamed ofthe chance to someday do what they did. The current University of Tulsa pitcher hopes to be a part of the generation that helps return softball to the

Olympics. "I really think us winning will help," Creger said. "I really want them to put it in the Olympics, just for the younger generations, and even for us. I want them to be able to have a goal to look forward to. If it's not there, some girls might not work for it. They might just quit at the college level, when you can go so much further."

38th after a 72 on Saturday. The 2014 Ryder Cup captain has two top-10 finishes in six Champions Tour events. "Hot an d c o ld," W atson said, describing his game this year. "I struggled yesterday and today in practice rounds here. Then I got on the practice tee, and at the end of the session I started hitting the ball w el l a g a in . W h e ther it's going to work on the golf course tomorrow is anybody's guess, but at least it's on the upswing. If I can keep the ball on the fairway and get there on Sunday, that's all I'm trying to get to." Langer, t h e C h a mpions Tour money leader, is trying to regain the form that helped him win twice in the spring. Langer, who won th e U . S. Senior Open in 2010 and tied

for second last year, limited his practice to two nine-hole rounds because of the heat and humidity. He said the rough is as thick as "anywhere in the world," and even if there's no wind a golfer could be in contention shooting par. "I can't see too many 64s, 65s out here," he said. "Even par is never a bad score in a U.S. Senior Open. If someone gets really hot, because the greens might not get to the speed where they want them because of th e h eat, there might be a chance a couple guys finish under par."

. 47" Auoio~ & HEARING AID CUNlc www.centraloregonaudiologycom

Pac-12 Continued from C1 "That's the next step," the Pac-12 commissioner s aid. "That's something we will be evaluating this summer. Taking the next step would be a regular season men's basketball game in China. Whether that's a nonconference game early in the season or during h oliday time. There's a r o bust fan base for basketball in China, 300 million basketball fans." Scott said the earliest such a game would happen would be the 2014-15 regular season. Arizona State's men's basketball team and Cal's women's basketball program will head across the Pacific next month to play a series of exhibition games against Chinese teams. UCLA went over to China last summer in the firststep of the conference's initiative. F inally, a d e l egation o f coaches — led by Oregon State men's basketball coach Craig Robinson — will conduct clinics for Chinese coaches in August. " The ultimate goal i s t o build the brand of the schools

in China and to develop other opportunities more broadly," the Pac-12 commissioner said. "That's tied to our p h ilosophy of universities. Schools are looking at that when they think about globalization." USC coach Mick Haley led the All-Star volleyball team on its trip earlier this month. The former U.S. national team coach loved the experience, returning to China for the first time in 15 years. " I was w o r ried t hat w e wouldn't b e co m p etitive," H aley s a i d. " They h a v e 100,000 club teams and the whole country u nderstands the game of volleyball. I was tremendously enc o u raged and surprised how well all the kids performed under pressure." While the A l l -Star team didn't win anymatches against the No. 1, 4 and 7 teams in the

— China vs the U.S." H aley said he w o uld b e "extremely interested and excited" to play a regular season match in Asia if the opportunity presented itself. "I like the idea. China is trying to copy our university system below the pro league. They are testing it out and see if they can move in that direction also. It would be great to have some sort of tournament with some of our teams and their teams playing each

going to help our game, be cutting edge. Larry Scott has visions greater than the visions what we see right now. We want to be the premier women's basketball program

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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

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A VA 22.78 ~ BAC 6 . 90 Spotlight on unemployment BBSI 19.99 claims BA 6 9 .03 Economists expect applications CascadeBancorp CACB 4.50 for unemployment aid fell last Columbia Bukg COLB 16.18 week, marking the third consecu- Columbia Sporlswear COLM 47.72 tive decline. CostcoWholesale COST 93.11 The number of Americans Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 applying for unemployment benFLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 efits fell 5,000 to 343,000 two Home Federal BucpID HOME 9.64 weeks ago. The latest figure, Intel Corp INTC 19.23 which serves as a proxy for layK EY 7 . 46 — 0 offs, is due out today. Last month Keycorp Kroger Co KR 2 0 98 — 0 employers added 195,000 jobs, LSCC 3.17 but unemployment remains high at Lattice Semi LA Pacific L PX 9 . 87 7.6 percent. MDU Resources MDU 19.59 — 0 Mentor Graphics MENT 13.21 — o tnfgsnae Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 ~ Nike Inc 8 NKE 4 4.83 ~ -I NordstromIuc JWN 49.40 — o Nwst NatGas NWN 41.01 ty — OfficeMax Iuc OMX 3 . 71 ~ PaccarIuc PCAR 35,21 — o Planar Systms P LNR 1.12 ~ Plum Creek PCL 39.17 ~ tyPrec Castparts PCP 150.53 Safeway Iuc S WY 14.73 ~ Schuitzer Steel SCHN 230 7 ~ 3 Sherwin Wms SHW 122.79 ~ Staucorp Fucl SFG 28.74 — 0 StarbucksCp SBUX 43,04 — 0 Triquiut Semi TQNT 4.30 ~ UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11,17 — 0 US Baucorp USB 30.96 — 0 Inflation check WashingtonFedl WAFD 15.22 Did the prices paid by U.S. Wells Fargo & Co WFC 31.25 — 0 importers continue to fall last Weyerhaeuser WY 2 1.99

month? Import prices declined three months in a row beginning in

March, pulled lower by a drop in oil imports. Falling import prices help keep inflation in check. The Labor Department reports its June index on import prices today. Economists have forecast that the latest reading will show no change from May. monthly percent change:

0.9 0 6'i 0.5 0.4 -0.1

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-0.4

Family Dollar Stores reported better-than-expected results for its fiscal third-quarter. For the period ended June 1, the discount retailer earned $120.9 million, or $1.05 pershare, down from $124.5 million, or

$1.06 per share, a year earlier. Analysts polled by FactSet forecast earnings of $1.03 per share. Revenue climbed 9 percent to $2.57 billion from $2.36 billion. That met Wall Street's expectations.

Total return YTD: 9% -0.8 F

M

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Source: FactSet

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165.19 + . 06 12.55 -.59 Legg Mason/WesternAggGrowA m 37.52 —.36 7.18 + . 12 VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH 20.02 -.12 2 3.25 4 . 1 2 cC o 3.59 —.01 $$ —.04 $o 11.54 ts Qo 17.66 -.18

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Losers NAME GTx lnc

LAST 5.20 NeoGenom 3.03 PingtanM 3.00 BS IBM96 29.15 Chanticleer 2.75

CHG %CHG -1.75 -25.2 —.67 -18.1 —.49 -14.0 -4.25 -12.7 -.30 -9.8

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CATEGORY Large Growth MORNINGSTAR RATING™ SHRAX

Ann. dividend: $1.04 Div. yield: 1.5%

Pric e -earnings ratio (trailing 12 months):19

Market value:$7.9 billion

5-Y R * :27%

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Shoppers have continued to patronize dollar stores since the recession as they continue to look for bargains on everyday goods and other items. The chain narrowed its full-year earnings forecast, raising the low-end of the range and cutting the high-end of the range. The company anticipates fiscal ~a 2013 earnings between $3.77 and $3.82 per share. Previously, it predicted earnings in a range of $3.73 and $3.93 per share.

52-WEEK RANGE

AP

S&P500ETF MicronT iShEMkts SprintNex SPDR Fncl Intel SjrjusXM iShJapan BariPVix rs

FDO Close:$68.50L4.55 or 7.1% The discount retailer said that its third-quarter net income fell 3 percent, but the earnings still topped analysts' expectations. $70

*annualized

Source: FactSet

SelectedMutualFunds PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 22.46 -.02 +11.1 +18.7 +14.2 +8.0 A A A BondA m 12.38 -.03 -3.3 -1.7 +3.6 +3.6 D C E CaplncBuA m 55.18 +.16 +6.4 +12.3 +10.9 +4.4 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 40.07 +.22 +9.3 +22.8 +11.6 +3.8 C C C EurPacGrA m 42.49 +.26 43.1 +18.7 +7.4 41.9 D D A FnlnyA m 46.82 +.04 415.5 +27.8 415.9 46.1 8 C D GrthAmA m 39.56 +.10 +15.2 +28.3 +15.5 +6.1 A C D IncAmerA m 19.33 +.03 +8.9 +16.1 +13.1 +7.3 8 A A InvCoAmA m 34.58 +.11 +15.6 +24.5 +14.9 +6.8 D D C NewPerspA m34.58 +.11 +10.6 +24.6 +13.4 +6.0 8 8 8 WAMutlnvA m36.36 -.02 +17.7 +24.9 +18.1 +8.2 D A 8 Dodge &Cox Income 13.43 -.01 - 1.7 + 1.2 + 4.6 +6.5 A 8 A IntlStk 37.20 +.10 +7.4 +28.7 +9.5 +2.6 A 8 A Stock 1 46.64 +.15 +21.3 +38.3 +18.8 +8.0 A A 8 Fidelity Contra 88.36 +.05 +15.0 +21.6 +16.5 +7.2 C C C GrowCo 109. 16 +.37+ 17.1 +24.7 +19.7 +8.6 8 A B LowPriStk d 46 .86 +.10+18.6 +31.2 +19.0+11.3 C 8 A Fidelity Spartan 500l d xAdvtg 58 .59 +.01+17.2 +25.9 +17.8 +8.1 C A 8 FrankTemp-Fraukliu Income C m 2. 31 ... +5 . 4 + 12.9 +10.5 +6.5 A A 8 IncomeA m 2.2 9 + .01 + 5.7 +13.6 +10.9 +7.1 A A A FrankTemp-TemletouGIBondAdv 12.94 -.04-1.1 + 7 .5 + 6 .4 +9.5 A A A Oppeuheimer RisDivA m 19. 79 +.01+14.4 +22.8 +15.4 +6.3 E D D RisDivB m 17 . 92 +.01 + 13.8 +21.7 +14.3 +5.4 E D E RisDivC m 17 . 83 +.01 + 13.9 +21.9 +14.5 +5.6 E D D SmMidValA m39.33 -.03 + 21.4 +37.0 +14.6 +5.0 A E E SmMidValBm 33.06 -.03+20.8 +35.8 +13.6 +4.2 A E E PIMCO TotRetA m 10 . 67 -.03 -4.0 -0.8 +4.0 +6.5 C C A T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 30.72 - . 03+17.2 +29.1 +16.7 +8.5 C C B GrowStk 43.5 8 + .10+ 15.4 +22.7 +18.1 +8.5 C A B Healthscj 51.7 5 + .59+25.5 +31.6 +29.8+16.7 C A A Newlncome 9 .37 -. 03 -3.6 - 1.5 +3.4 +5.3 D D C Vanguard 152.43 +.04 +17.2 +26.0+17.8 +8.1 C A 8 500Adml 500lnv 152.43 +.04 +17.1 +25.8 +17.6 +8.0 C 8 8 CapOp 41.99 +.22 +24.9 +40.8 +18.3 +9.2 A A A Eqlnc 28.17 +.02 +18.3 +26.3 419.9 49.9 D A A StratgcEq 26.00 -.01 +21.2 +34.4+21.1 +9.0 8 A C Tgtet2025 14.65 +.01 +7.8 +15.9 +11.7 +6.1 8 8 A TotBdAdml 10.59 -.02 -3.2 -2.2 +3.2 44.9 D D D Totlntl 14.91 +.06 +1.1 +17.2 +6.7 +0.1 E D C TotStlAdm 41.56 +.02 +17.7 +26.9 +18.2 +8.6 8 A A TotStldx 41.55 +.02 +17.6 +26.8 +18.1 +8.5 8 A A USGro 24.46 +.13 415.1 +24.8 417.5 47.4 8 8 8 Welltn 36.97 -.03 +10.6 +18.0 +12.9 +7.8 A A A FAMILY

ASSETS * * * isi s EXP RATIO 1.27% MANAGER Evan Bauman SINCE 2009-04-27 RETURNS3-MO $3,616 million Foreign Markets YTD +7.7 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +26.5 Paris -3.03 -.08 3,840.53 3-YR ANNL +37.0 —.12 London 6,504.96 -8.12 5-YR-ANNL +24.2 Frankfurt 8,066.48 + 8.73 + . 1 1 Hong Kong 20,904.56 4221.55 4 1.07 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico -.55 Biogen Idec Inc 39,999.02 -221.98 10.84 —.72 Milan 15,677.26 -113.29 roup Inc 7.1 Tokyo -56.30 —.39 UnitedHealth G 14,416.60 6.65 Stockholm 1,195.31 + .56 + . 0 5 Anadarko Petroleum Corp Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, oi redemption Sydney + 18.90 + . 3 9 Amgen lnc 6.16 fss. f - front load (satss charges). m - Multiple fees are charged, usually a marketing fss and either a sales oi 4,885.40 Zurich 7,971.62 4 27.43 4 . 3 5 Comcast Corp 6.06 redemption fee. Source: Moiningstac

Nu Skin Enterprises

80

60

60

A

M J 52-week range

$54.$6~

J $72.54

NUS

Close:$79.36%12.79 or19.2% The skin-care product and nutritional supplement seller raised its outlook for the year well above Wall Street expectations. $100

65

A

M J 52-week range

$32. 36

J $79. 70

Vol39.3m (6.6x avg.) P E: 18 . 8 VolJ 7.6m (8.2x avg.) P E: 21 .6 Mkt. Cap:$7.87 b Yiel d : 1 .5% Mkt. Cap:$4.64 b Yiel d : 1. 5 % NBR Close:$14.99 V-1.01 or -6.3% The drilling contractor said that its operating income will fall short of expectations because of weak results at its rig and completion units. $18

Hewlett-Packard HPQ Close:$25.93 %0.46 or 1.8% A Citi Investment Research analyst boosted the PC maker's stock rating to a "Buy" as its turnaround efforts begin to take hold. $30 25

52-week range 52-week range $i2&5~ $18.24 $ii.$5~ $2$& i Vold13.4m (3.3x avg.) PE: 23.1 VolJ 33.1m (1.8x avg.) P E: . . . Mkt. Cap:$4.35 b Yiel d : 1. 1 % Mkt. Cap:$50.01 b Yiel d : 2. 2%

Pandora Media

P

Close:$17.97 V-1.68 or -8.5% Shares of the Internet radio company continued to fall a day after reporting slowing growth on how long people listened to its music. $25 20

Open Table OPEN Close:$66.99%-0.92 or -1.4% A Citi analyst initiated coverage of the online restaurant reservation company's stock with a "Sell" rating citing growth concerns. $70 60

15 i•~

A

M J 52-week range

$$.$$~

J $$$.$4

Vold12.0m (1.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$3.13 b

P E: .. Yield: ..

A

M J 52-week range

$$3.$$ ~

J $72.4$

Vold1.2m (2.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.53 b

P E: 59 .3 Yield:...

Helen of Troy

HELE Pharmacyclics PCYC Close:$43.04%1.04 or 2.5% Close:$1 00.26%1 0.74 or 12.0% The personal care products maker's The drugmaker and Johnson & fiscal first-quarter net income fell 39 Johnson said that they filed for marpercent, but its adjusted results beat keting approval of their blood cancer expectations. drug ibrutinib. $45 $120 40 100 35

80

A

M J 52-week range

$2$.02~ Vold974.2k(6.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $1.36 b

J

A

M J 52-week range

$4$.$0 $44.91 ~ PE: 1 1 . 9 Vol0 2.4m (2.9x avg.) P Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$7.3 b

J

$i 02 .05 E: 5 89.8 Yield:... AP

SOURCE: Sungard

Company InterestRates

Family Dollar(FDO) Wednesday's close:$68.50

J

L +33 5 + 54 8 1 5 64 1 3 L +15.4 +7.1 295 20 1.2 2 L + 15.2 +79 . 510104531 0 . 0 4 L + 45. 8 + 1 51.0 2 7 31 0.52 L +40.0 +43 .9 3 7 99 2 0 1. 9 4 L +8.9 +17 . 0 14 45 L +39.4 + 39 .5 20 8 2 0 0. 4 0 L +19.7 +2 1 .2 64 21 0.88 L +15 1 +29 3 12 3 1 2 5 1 2 4f L +41.2 +12 . 0 43 L +29.5 +51 .9 75 2 1 9 0. 3 6f L + 82.0 +33 .9 32069 dd 0 .58f L +10.6 +4 3 .9 18 cc 0.2 4 a V + 12.8 -8.2 49058 12 0 .90 L +40.0 +5 8 .2 10076 13 0 .22f L + 43.5 +68 . 0 3 7 60 1 3 0. 6 0 V +26. 1 +3 3 .4 3 7 7 dd L -16.1 +39.7 4190 23 L +29.6 +28 .1 6 0 2 cc 0.6 9 L +18.9 +29 .6 5 0 7 2 2 0. 1 8 L +29.9 +17 .5 29206 18 0 . 9 2 V + 23. 3 +4 3 .4 2 4 93 2 4 0. 8 4 L +17.0 +23 . 4 1 3 13 1 7 1. 2 0 L -2.5 -5.3 114 2 0 1. 8 2 L +27.9 + 1 43.2 7 8 4 2 0.0 8 a L + 21. 1 +5 1 .2 1 018 19 0 .80a L +26.6 +12 . 6 15 dd L +6.9 +22. 9 58 9 3 3 1. 7 6f L +23.7 + 43 . 8 34 8 24 0.1 2 L +35.2 +47 .7 3 9 26 9 0.8 0 f L -18.7 -16.0 1 6 4 8 8 0. 7 5 L +20 2 +42 5 718 28 2 00 +42.2 43 9.3 27 9 1 5 0. 9 3f L +27. 0 +3 1 .6 4 010 3 5 0. 8 4 V +42.2 +26 . 5 1 5 27 d d L + 35.1 +2 5 .1 91 4 1 7 0. 6 0f L + 16.1 +19 .0 8 9 61 1 3 0 . 92f L +21.3 +28 .3 9 3 9 1 5 0. 3 6 +23.1 +31.4 24834 12 1 .20f +3.3 +31.0 3174 32 0.80f

Dividend Footnotes:s - Extra dividends were paid, ttut are not included. tt - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in tast12 months. f - Current annual rate, whtctt was mcieased by most recent dttndend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends patd after stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dtvtdends patd this year. Most recent ditndend was omitted oi deferred k - Declared or patd this year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which wss decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - tmtiat dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid in precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, apprcxtmate cash value on ex-dtstrtttutton date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no 8/5 ratio shown. cc - 8/6 exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last t2 months

Import price index

0.0

6800 57 54 +1 61 +2 9 L L 29.26 27.8 2 +. 1 7 +0 .6 L L 13.99 13 .37 -.16 -1.2 L L 62.82 55 .54 +.98 +1.8 ~ V 105.75 105.50 +.82 +0.8 L L 7.18 6 .8 2 + .15 +2.2 L L 25.55 25 .00 53 -2.1 V L 66.69 63 .86 14 -0.2 V L 115.77 113.65 + 30 +03 L L 9.25 9 .1 5 -.01 - 0.1 L L 28.96 28 .89 +.11 + 0.4 L L 25.87 25 .93 +.46 +1.8 L L 14.14 13 .75 -.02 -0.1 L L 26.90 23 .25 +.12 +0.5 V V 12.13 11 .79 -.09 -0.8 Y L 37.32 37 .34 +.19 +0.5 L L 5.71 5 .0 3 +.04 +0.8 Y L 22.55 16 .20 +.53 +3.4 L L 27.51 27 .53 +.10 +0.4 L L 20.08 20 .24 +.25 +1.3 L L 35.78 34.7 0 +.3 5 +1 .0 L V 66.07 6 3. 6 0 -.33 -0.5 V L 63.33 62 .59 -.08 -0.1 L L 50. 8 0 43 . 09 ... ... L L 13.17 1 1.0 2 -.17 -1.5 L L 55,27 54 .77 -.19 -0,3 L L 2.36 1.81 +.02 +1 . 1 L L 54.62 4 7.4 1 -.07 -0.1 L L 270.00 234.32 + . 39 +0 .2 Y L 28.42 2 4. 4 5 -.53 -2.1 L L 3 03 24.66 -.04 -0.2 L L 1 94.5 6 184.85 +114 +06 L L 51.89 52.14 +.39 +0.8 69,00 68.10 03 L L 7.29 6.87 +.04 +0.6 Y L 16,18 15.93 19 -1.2 V L 37.46 37.07 22 -0.6 L L 21.10 20.46 54 - 2.6 L 43.08 42.07 63 -1.5 33.24 28.74 +.01

EURO 1.2878

StoryStocks

Nabors Industries

52-WK RANGE oCLOSE Y TD 1Y R VO L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

2 ' g it)

Stock indexes were nearly flat Wednesday as investors parsed clues for how much longer the Federal Reserve will sustain its stimulus for the economy. The central bank released minutes from its latest meeting, held three weeks ago. Chairman Ben Bernanke said immediately after that meeting that the Fed could slow its $85 billion in monthly bond purchases later this year, as long as the economy continues to improve. The minutes showed that Fed members were divided on the timing of that, as well as when to halt the purchases altogether. About half the participants favored ending the bond purchases later this year, earlier than Bernanke has indicated.

417.71%

NorthwestStocks

-200

+

Family Dollar

Treasury budget in hiluons, not seasonally adjusted

CRUDEOIL $106.52

02

$1 9.15

Dow jones industrials

Close: 1,652.62

Dollars in, dollars out

SILVER

GOLD $1,247.40 ~

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.63 percent Wednesday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.

. 03 . 07 .11

.04 .07 .12

-0.01 V ... L -0.01 V

V V V

Y Y V

.09 .14 .18

2-year T-note . 3 5 .37 -0.02 V 5-year T-note 1 .46 1 .49 -0.03 L 10-year T-note 2.63 2.64 -0.01 L 3 0-year T-bond 3.65 3.65 ... L

L L L

L L L

.27 .62 1.50

L

L 2.60

BONDS

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO

Barclays Long T-Bdldx 3.46 3.40 +0.06 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.90 4.88 +0.02 Barclays USAggregate 2.45 2.47 -0.02 PRIME FED Barclays USHigh Yield 6.60 6.70 -0.10 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 4.37 4.36 40.01 YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.68 1.65 +0.03 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3 .38 3.42 -0.04 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

Commodities The price of crude oil settled above $106 per barrel for the first time since March 2012. A report showed that oil supplies in inventory were lower than expected last week.

L L L L L L

L L L

2.32 4.40 1.86

L

L

7.18

L L L L L L

L L L

3.47 .88 3 16 .

-

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Oil (bbl) 106.52 103.53 42.89 4 1 6 .0 Ethanol (gal) 2.45 2.43 40.37 4 1 1 .9 Heating Oil (gal) 3.00 2.99 +0.54 -1.4 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.68 3.66 + 0.63 + 9 . 8 Unleaded Gas(gal) 3.01 2.93 + 3.04 + 7 . 2 FUELS

METALS

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)

CLOSE PVS. 1247.40 1245.90 19.15 19.13 1368.10 1367.10 3.10 3.08 712.50 696.05

%CH. %YTD +0.12 -25.5 +0.14 -36.5 +0.07 -11.1 +0.81 -14.8 + 2.36 + 1 . 4

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -6.0 1.22 1.23 -0.53 1.21 1.22 -0.49 -15.5 7.10 Corn (bu) 7.04 + 0.82 + 1 . 7 Cotton (Ib) 0.87 0.84 +0.74 +16.2 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 308.50 306.00 +0.82 -17.5 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.37 1.39 -1.19 +18.1 Soybeans (bu) 15.92 16.13 -1.33 +12.2 Wheat(bu) 6.72 6.76 -0.52 -13.6 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

Foreign Exchange The dollar fell against the euro, Japanese yen and other currencies as investors handicapped the odds for how long the

Federal Reserve will continue its stimulus for the

economy.

h5N4 QG

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.4921 +.0052 +.35% 1 .5509 C anadian Dollar 1.0 5 09 —.0016 —.15% 1.0227 USD per Euro 1.2878 +.0089 +.69% 1 . 2254 —.73 —.73% 79.45 Japanese Yen 100.25 Mexican Peso 12.9 522 + .0694 +.54% 13.3332 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6376 —.0143 —.39% 3.9644 Norwegian Krone 6 . 1 235 —.0563 —.92% 6.1016 South African Rand 10.0325 +.0109 +.11% 8.2000 S wedish Krona 6.7 5 8 3 —.0293 —.43% 6.9798 0065 —. 67% Swiss Franc . 9658 —. .9801 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0978 + .0096 +.87% .9 8 15 Chinese Yuan 6.1365 +.0023 +.04% 6 .3667 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7570 +.0005 +.01% 7 .7541 Indian Rupee 59.895 -.255 -.43% 55.395 Singapore Dollar 1.2748 -.0030 -.24% 1.2687 South Korean Won 1135.70 -6.64 -.58% 1143.85 -.14 -.47% 2 9 .96 Taiwan Dollar 29.96


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

en ri e or ec,inves orsa s

BRIEFING

Median home price rises in Bend The median home price in Bend increased about8 percentfrom May to June, while Redmond's median dropped nearly 3 percent, according to a report released Wednesdayby the Bratton Appraisal

Group. In June, the median

price for a single-family home in Bendrose to $281,000, an increase of $21,000 over May's median price, according to the report. Last month, 228 single-fam-

By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

Dino Vendetti couldn't have imagined being a Bend-based venture capitalist just a decade

ago. But continuing technologicaladvancements could make Bend one of the smaller communities to ride the next wave of entrepreneurship. Bend is"becoming more and more of an option" for a new generation of innovators to call home, he told about 100 people Wednesday at the

ily homes sold in Bend, a 21-sale decline over May. The median price for

increased to 75 single-

family homes, 14more than in May. While median prices fluctuate from month to month, they have maintained an upward trend recently in both cities. — Bulletin staff report

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR FRIDAY • Workzone Flagger: Learn thebasicsof flagging and traffic safety; open-book test given at the endof class;upon successful completion, receive Oregon Department of Transportation credential for flaggers; registration required; $79; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. • Howto Starta Business: Registration required; $15; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E College Loop, Redmond; 54 I-383-7290. MONDAY • Allergy Safe Training, Spot Check: Training and certification program for frontand back of thehouse personnel whoprovide food service tothe public; fee includes required textbook andexam;classcontinues July16; registration required; $169; 9a.m.-2 p.m.;CascadeCulinary Institute, 2555 N.W. CampusVillageWay,Bend; 541-383-7270. TUESDAY • Project Management Professional certification meeting: Informational discussion on the Project Management Professional certification; coffee, pastries and networking start at 7:15 a.m.; to RSVP, email Jeff Busch at Busch@teleport.com; to learn more, visit www.pmi. org; free; 7:30-8:30 a.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. KansasAve., Bend; 541-385-6908. • Crooked River RanchTerrebonne Chamber of Commerce Networking Social: See thenewfire hall; refreshments and networking opportunities; call 541-923-2679; free; 5:30 p.m.; Crooked River Ranch Fire &Rescue, 6971 S.W.ShadRoad; 541-923-6776.

For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbultett'n.comlbizoal

0 ls

trepreneurial hub of San Francisco, but local startups can tap into the technology boom. Expanding Oregon State University-Cascades Campus into a four-year university, slated for 2015, should provide a boost as well, he said. Peter Ozolin, co-founder and CEO of Bend-based Manzama, built his company from a fledgling startup in 2010 to one with 17 employees providing an online information analysis platform to more than 125 law firms nationwide.

Ozolin doesn't usually bother telling clients where the company is located. They aren't nearly as concerned about where Bend is as they are about the quality of his product. With online-based companies, "the users kind of exist virally," Ozolin said. Silicon Valley and New York City may offer more chances for networking, said Josh Bryant, co-founder and CEO of Droplr, an online filesharing company in Bend. But

aunc

0

a single-family home in Redmond last month

dropped to $177,000, a decline of $5,000 over May's median price. Sales in Redmond

Technology Forum at the Riverhouse Convention Center. Vendetti recently founded Seven Peaks Ventures, a $15 million Bendbased venture capital fund focused on investVendetti ing in Web and software companies, according to Vendetti and a Securities and Exchange Commission document. Central Oregon may be about 500 miles from the en-

• New plan will allow customers to upgrade phones twice in ayear

By Alana Semuels

- ~~A.

Los Angeles Times

I

NEW YORK — Apple Inc. conspired to raise the prices of e-books, a judge ruled Wednesday after a trial in which the Department of Justice accused the technology

By Anick Jesdanun The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Ever worry about buying a new phone, only to see a better one come out just two weeks later? Phone companies normally make you wait two years before upgrading to a new device. T-Mobile will now let you upgrade twice a year for just $10 a month. T-Mobile US Inc. had already broken industry convention by ditching twoyear service agreements and selling phones on installment plans. But T-Mobile's installment plans typically ran two years as well, so customers had to wait that long for a cost-effectiveupgrade. With the new Jump plan, T-Mobile customers will be able to have those remaining payments waived. The plan includesinsurance tocover lost or stolen phones, as well as damage. Think of the new Jump plan as extending the insurance to cover phone envy when something better comes out. "We're going to attack what I believe is the single and most offensive wireless practice head on," T-Mobile CEO John Legere said at Wednesday's announcement.

— Reporter: 541-617-7820 egluchlichC<bendbulletin.com

Judge rules against Apple in e-book trial

ein

0

technology has revolutionized how companies like his promote themselves and reach out to clients. Manzama, Droplr and others could help lure new entrepreneurs to the region, said Nishad Pai, a principal for strategic partnerships at Google. "You've got to have those companies that are leading the way, paving the path," Pai said.

giant of aggressively pressur-

Mary Altaffer / The Associated Press

T-MobileCEO John Legere introduces the company's new Jump plan ata news conference in New York on Wednesday. "Two years is too long to be locked into phones." In new television commercials, T-Mobile proclaims, "Upgrade when you want, not when you're told." T-Mobile, the No. 4 U.S. cellphone carrier, has been trying to differentiate itself

from bigger rivals by shattering longstanding industry practices. In March, T-Mobile dropped conventional twoyear service contracts in favor of selling phones with installment plans. It has made the change acenterpiece of its marketing, calling itself

the "Un-carrier." T-Mobile said the new Jump plan was part of phase 2 of Un-carrier. Also Wednesday, T-Mobile introduced new family plans without credit checks, so households without good credit ratings won't be charged more. The Jump plan will be available starting Sunday and will cost only a few dollars more a month than typical phone insurance plans, TMobile said. But under Jump, customers will still have to pay a deductible ranging from $20 to $170 if a phone is lost,

doesn't work, has water damage or has a cracked screen. In addition, customers who replace phones that aren't lost or damaged will still have to pay the usual price for the device, typically $100 up front and $20 a month for two years for high-end phones such as the iPhone 5 and the Galaxy S4.What Jump does is waive any remaining payments when someone decides to upgrade because a newer phone with better features is out. The customer does not get a refund on what was al-

ready paid.

ing publishers to raise prices and weaken Amazon.com Inc. More than two weeks after closing arguments, U.S. District Judge Denise Cote ruled that Apple is liable for civil antitrust violations. "The plaintiffs have shown that Apple conspired to raise the retail price of e-books and that they are entitled to injunctive relief. A trial on damages will follow," Cote wrote in her opinion. Five publishers accused of conspiring with Apple already settled with the government in the case. They are: Penguin, HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, Macmillan and Hachette Book Group. Apple said it would appeal the ruling, the Associated Press reported. In her ruling, Cote wrote that there is no doubt publishers conspired to raise the prices of e-books. They were afraid, she writes, that Amazon's $9.99 price point for best-sellers would completely upset their business model. But Apple was the ringleader; publishers had tried to get Amazon to raise prices previously and failed.

Senators wary of giant pork merger By Trevor Graff

and Shuanghui International Hold-

McClatchy Washington Bureau

ings, China's largest pork producer.

W ASHINGTON — A Se n a t e committee on Wednesday criticized a major merger of U.S. and Chinese agricultural interests, saying the combination of two major pork producers could have negative impacts on U.S. food and economic security. The hearing before the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition 8 Forestry was exploring the impact of a proposed merger between Smithfield Foods Inc., the leading pork producer in the U.S.,

The $7.1 billion acquisition is the largest purchase of a U.S. company by Chinese business interests. The merger sparked skepticism from committee members who were concerned about Smithfield's ability to maintain compliance with foodsafety standards expected in the U.S. "Smithfield might be the first acquisition of a major food and agricultural company by China, but I doubt it will be the last," said Sen. Debbie

Stabenow, D-Mich., the committee's chairwoman. "In the short term, I know this deal looks good to our producers. But this also has to be a good deal in the long term." Shuanghui intends to maintain Smithfield's management, existing plants and employees at its more than 400 hog farms. Smithfield's president and CEO, C. Larry Pope, said the merger represents a major opportunity for U.S farmers to access the growing Chinese market, in which pork is the leading protein.

J. Scott Applewhite/The Associated Press

Smithfield Foods CEO C. Larry Pope testifies before the Senate Agriculture Committee in Washingtonon Wednesday.

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IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Nutrition, D3 Fitness, D5

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

O www.bendbulletin.com/health

Hospitas as insurers: potentia,

and pitfa s By Sarah Kliff The Washington Post

In 2012, MedStar Health,

like many large employers, struggled to keep up with rapidly rising health care costs. For three years, the company held down premiums for its 19,000

employees by absorbing the increases itself. Most employers would have had no choice but to raise premi-

.u,

MONEQ ums — in

this case, by about$550

for a family — and cope

Joe Kline / The Bulletin

A group of kids and adults floats the Deschutes River through the Old Mill District in Bend over the July Fourth weekend. Highly reflective surfaces like water and snow increase the exposure to harmful ultraviolet radiation that has been linked with skin cancer.

• Oregon is among the states reporting high skin cancerrates, with DeschutesCounty amongthe worst By Markian Hawryluk~The Bulletin

with frustrated employees.MedStar, one ofthe Washington, D.C., area's largest health systems, saw another option. It would launch its own health insurance plan, offering it first to its employees. Patients would be limited to MedStar-affiliated providers, and as a result pay lower premiums. In time, MedStar could compete with the Aetnas and Blue Crosses of the world,offering insurance to the public. All of a sudden, the health system did not just send out insurance claims — it also received them. This was, for the health industry, revolutionary. See Hospitals/D2

he link between sun exposure and skin cancer is well-established. Yet a look at a map of melanoma rates

Whole milk

shines a light on an interesting conundrum. The 11 states with the highest rates of melanoma include the

healthier? For

sun-starved states of New Hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut, Minnesota, Idaho, Washington and Oregon.

kids, maybe

Meanwhile sun-baked states like Arizona, Louisiana and Mississippi have among the lowest rates. Researchers are still unclear what's behind the trend and why Northern states, which typically have lower ultraviolet index scores, have such high melanoma rates. "Why, when it's so rainy and it's in the Northern part, why is it so high?" said Dr. Sancy Leachman, chair of the Department of Dermatology at Oregon Health 8 Science University and director of the Melanoma Research Program at the OHSU Knight Cancer Institute. "There's a lot about the ultraviolet light that we don't know."

Explanations for risk Leachman offeredthree hypotheses that could explainthe phenomenon. It may be that residents of the Pacific Northwest aresun seekers.Because it's so cloudy during the wintertime, people may just crave that

aren't blocking the wavelengths of UV light that are mostly responsible for melanoma. "When you have clouds, the wavelength of light that is blocked the most is UVB, not UVA," she said. "It is still a partial medical mystery, as to whether or not it's the UVA, or UVB or both of those that are causing melanoma." UVB rays have been shown to play a large role in causing basal cell and squamous cell carcinoma, the more common forms of skin cancer. And there's a lot of laboratory data to suggest that UVA might be important for melanoma generation. SeeSkin/D4

sun once it appears and get overexposed. "When your skin has been protected all that time, the chances of you getting a burn are a lot higher," she said. "Hypothesis No. 1 is it's that acute injury, because people are actively seeking the sun and the skin isn't prepared for that sort of thing." The second theory is that Oregonians travel to warmer climates to escape the rainy weather. "Peoplechoose to take vacations from here to placesthat are sunny, where exactly the same thing happens," Leachman said. "They get burned." The third possibility, she said, is that clouds

I

i

'

I'

I

I'

,

i , l '

I

By Mary MacVean Los Angeles Times

Much of the recent debate over serving milk to children has concerned flavored milk. Should it be distributed in schools? Or should the

only

NUTRITION

children receive be the unflavored, reducedfat variety? Two Harvard scientists known for questioning conventional wisdom are challenging the idea of making lower-fat milk the only milk option available to children. In fact, their eyes are on one of the fattiest of them all: whole milk. See Milk/D3

PAID ADVERTISEMENT

T.J. Davenport pulls his way to the top of a 100-foot oak tree during a tree-climbing course.

Tree-cimbingaddsnew perspective to exercise By Markia A. Holt

4

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

ST. LOUIS — Tree-climbing is emerging as a recreational sport, similar to rock climbing. St. Louis instructor Guy Mott says treeclimbing builds muscles and can lead to improved fitness and weight loss. "If you engage in a tree climb, it is a fullbody workout. It is much more interactive and therapeutic to be outside as opposed to a gym," said Mott. "It

FITNE55

s

nity College. Each class is three hours. Students get

\ C

Photos hy Huy Mach SI. LOUIS

he l ps people to gain an ap-

preciation for nature." Because of the rope-andharness system, participants need only basic physical ability, such as being able to easily climb a flight of stairs, he said. Mott is a certified arborist who teaches a class in climbing that has been offered since last fall through St. Louis Commu-

s

Arika Neugent checks out the view from 70feetupa tree during a recreational climbing course at in Eureka, Mo.

Post-Dispatch

one hour of orientation during which they learn about trees, procedures to climb them and the gear that is required. With the help of a rope and a harness, participants spend the next two hours reaching great heights and accessing parts of the canopy typically unreachable. Heather Allen, 34, is a St. Louis Com-

munity College staff member who took the course in April. "We learned about tree biology, how to tie various types of rope knots and, of course, how to maneuver through the tree branches," said Allen. "With the help of the harness, we were able to get really high up in the trees. It was amazing." SeeClimbing/D5

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D2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

HEALTH EVENTS AUDIOLOGYAND HEARINGAID CLINIC: Central Oregon Audiology is offering care services through a mobile clinic today; call for pricing and appointment; Elks Lodge,151 N Main St., Prineville; 541-389-6669 or centraloregonaudiology.com.

How to submit Health Events:Email event information to healthevents@

bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of

publication. Ongoing class listings must beupdated monthly and will appear at www.bendbulletin.com/

healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358.

People:Emailinfo about local people involved in health

issues to healthevents© bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.

Unclean colonoscopy instruments:

3 in 20 have colon 'dirt' By Geoff reyMohan Los Angeles Times

Bits and pieces of "biological dirt" from inside people's colons are being left on three in 20 of the instruments inserted in people's rectums to examine their lower digestive tract, according to a study at five hospitals nationwide. "Three out of 20 is an unexpectedly high number of endoscopes failing a cleanliness criterion," said M arco Bommarito, an i n vestigator with 3M's infection prevention division, which conducted the study. "Clearly, we'd like no endoscopes to fail a cleanliness rating." Rates for biodirt were as high as30 percent forreusable endoscopes used for u pper gastrointestinal exams, a ccording to the study, presented at the annual conference for the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The study comes after thousands of patients in the last four years have had to undergo HIV and hepatitis testing after authorities uncovered

improper cleaning practices at hospitals, including several run by the Veterans Affairs Department. Since 2009, at least four patients at VA facilities have tested positive for the AIDS virus after undergoing colonoscopies at the federal facilitiesin Tennessee, Georgia and Florida. In May, an Atlanta outpatient surgery center sent letters to nearly 456 clients warning them they may have been exposed to HIV as well as hepatitis B and C. Another 60 clients were tested last year after undergoing the procedure at a hospital in Alamosa, Colo. About 50 m i llion A m ericans undergo colonoscopies each year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which issued new cleaning and sterilization guidelines in 2008. And while several cheaper and less invasive tests to screen for colon cancer are recommended a s eq u a l ly effective by the federal gove rnment's expert panel on preventivecare, according to The New York Times, colonoscopy has become the goto procedure in th e United States. Still, since 2008, more outbreaks have been linked to contaminated end o scopes than to any other medical device, the centers reported. The nature of the biological contamination was not specified. The test used in the study detects levels of a denosine triphosphate, or ATP, an enzyme present in living cells. It isconsidered a marker for contamination from organic matter.

MONEY Hospitals

ny's first clients. Since they the possibility of launching an cover differentparts of the insurance product. Continued from 01 city, the two are partnering to In the end, Inova settled on "By putting in t h e n ew launch a insurance product to- partnering with an existing health plan, we had the abiligether in 2014. health i n surance p r ovider, ty to give them an option that At first, they tried to engage Aetna, to build a h o spitalactually allowed savings," local health insurance plans. branded health plan. "We evaluated partnerships "We were not an insurance said Eric Wagner, a MedStar vice president. "People who with national health i nsur- company," Green told hunenrolled in MedStar Select ers in our local markets to dreds of hospital executives got a lower premium than see if we couldn't work closer attending her panel on hospithey had the year before." t ogether," WellStar chief f i tal and health insurer partnerInsurance plans and hosnancial officer Jim Budzinski ships."We needed to getcloser pitals are typically at loggersaid. "In our conversations, al- to being an insurance compaheads. They squabble over most all payers were not inter- ny, but we didn't need to reinclaims that the hospitals subLexey Swall / The Washington Post ested in having those kinds of vent that wheel ourselves." mit and insurers sometimes Evolent Health, a Virginia consulting company where employees relationships." Hospitals have especially deny. work in a place not unlike a call center, helps hospitals launch T ogether, Piedmont a n d worried about how patients "They make their money their own health insurance plans. WellStar could blanket most will react to a more limited by not paying for health care of the Atlanta region. They network. Many hospital-run to be delivered," Wagner said brought on Evolent to help them health plans folded in the midof health insurers. "We make ance company, however, is ing this work." handle the back end of running 1990s, when patients revolted our money by delivering no small task. It r equires University o f Pi t t sburgh a health insurance plan. against the bureaucracy and "You can have the r i ght care. There's always been a physical infrastructure, in- Medical Center's plan stood the special authorizations necnatural tension." cluding an army of call-cen- out. Launched in th e early strategy, but you also need the essary to see a specialist or go For years, hospitals have ter agents to handle claims 1990s, UPMC Health Plan is right tools," Budzinski said. outside the network. accepted that tension as a and replace lost insurance the n ation's second-largest "That's where Evolent comes At MedStar, Wagner accost of doing business. Insur- cards. It also demands the hospital-owned health plan. into play. We had a choice to knowledged those pressures ers have decades of experi- ability to predict the future: Perhaps most impressive, create our own infrastructure, but contended that his hospience in the complex work One of insurers' most crucial though, is its ability to hold hire staff and build out the sys- tal system would penalize paof setting premiums, which tasks is setting a monthly down medical costs. Among tem. That would take a longer tients only when they sought requires anticipating how premium that will cover sub- UPMC's employees, most of period of time and you'd have care that w asn't necessary much care patients will need scribers' costs. whom use the hospital-run more risk." or could have been provided in the coming year. If a health insurance plan health plan, the cost of mediThe new health plan will within the MedStar network. "You can'tignore them," he Now, a growing number sets its premiums too high, cal services has increased an- launch by year's end. Unlike of large hospital systems are the price tag may scare away nually by about 2 percent. The MedStar's, it will immediately said. "If you don't need to go betting that, with a little help, consumers. If it sets the price rest of the country, meanwhile, become available to the pub- to the emergency room, but they can do that just as well too low, it could come up typically sees increases of 5.5 lic and may soon be offered you go, and they send us a bill, — or even better. short, with revenue not cov- to 7 percent each year. on the Affordable Care Act's we're going to deny that bill. "These organizations be"This might sound munering the medical bills. health insurance exchanges. Every payer will, and we can't lieve that they're really good, At t h e t i m e , B l a ckley dane, but a lot of what this be diff erent from other payers. It's not good for your health to can capitalize on their brand didn't know much about comes down to is building the Successrate and get people to enroll in it," running a health insurance right technology," says Diane Not everyone is confident get your care through the emersaid Paul Ginsburg, presi- company. But he did know Holder, president and chief ex- that these hospitals will suc- gency room. That's part of the dent of the Center for Study- that a growing number of ecutive of UPMC Health Plan. ceed. Insurance plans are es- signal we need to send people." ing Health System Change. hospitals wanted to get into "The health care system is so pecially skepticalthat hospitals Overall, Wagner describes "They see a different way to the market. fragmented. Most of the time, have theknow-how to compete MedStar's experience working capture these gains." doctors don't k no w w h e re against plans that have been in with Evolent and launching a Seeing health insurance Affordable options their patients have been. We're thisbusiness fordecades. health plan as positive. While "I always take pause when it has only a small fraction of companies as the middleWith h e alth i n s urance in the hospitals, and we're able men, these hospitals are only premiums growing by 8 to 10 to follow patients." people talking about doing MedStar'semployees enrolled too eager tosqueeze them percent annually, employers Over two decades, UPMC something better that they've now, they'reexpecting higher out. have begun to look for less went from a tiny startup to the never done before," said Karen takeup in the open-enrollment To do so, hospitals are expensive options. Restrict- dominant health plan in west- Ignagni, president of Ameri- period this year. The plan may ca's Health Insurance Plans. soon sell to the public or enter turning to a small startup in ing patients' choice to a small ern Pennsylvania. It, in many "Maybe that's just the mother the new insurance marketplace Northern V i r ginia n amed number of providers affiliat- ways, proves that a hospital Evolent Health. It promises ed with one health system is can successfully launch it s in me." under the Affordable Care Act. "We're not going to do it in to teach them everything one way to bring down costs. own insurance product. Ignagni's t r ad e a s sociathey need to k now about President Barack Obama's U PMC Health Plan a n d tion includes hospital-owned January 2014 since the waters building a health insurance health care law h a s a l so Advisory Board co-founded health plans that successfully seem way too unsettled," Wagplan from the ground up. pushed large systems in this Evolent in 2011, investing $20 transitioned into a new busi- ner said. "We're continuing to direction. In 2011, it began million in the venture. UPMC ness segment. But she's also look at that. We've had some Leading the way funding "accountable care Health Plan had proprietary familiar with the hospitals that good discussions with MaryTwenty minutes outside organizations," in which a software that it could license have failed because they did land and D.C." Washington and across the bignetwork of doctors accept to other hospital-run plans, not set their premiums quite Evolent, meanwhile, is quickPotomac River, the Arling- a flatfee to care forMedicare alongside the infrastructure to right or have a big enough ly expanding. It expects to grow ton County offices of Evolent patients. run a health plan. network of doctors to meet pa- from 150 employees to 450 by year's end. One challenge Health could be a movie set If doctors do a good job of A dvisory B o a rd , m e a n- tients' needs. "There is a very significant Blackley expects to tackle is for a Silicon Valley startup managing care, the hospital while, worked with a network — the kind that starts with and the health insurer — in of potential customers. Over regulatory structure, and they how hospitals can communimillions in venture capital thiscase,Medicare — share the past two years, Evolent has have to meet all those require- cate to their employees, and the funding, not in a founder's the amount left over as prof- signed up 14 hospitals across ments," Ignagni said. "They public, as an insurer. "When everyone is buying grungy garage. it. More than 400 hospitals the country as clients. need to make sure that they are An i m m aculate m i crohave signed on as accountMedStar Health was one of ableto offeran arrayof services Blue Cross, they know what kitchen, stocked with sodas able care organizations, or the first clients and came on and have an adequate network. that is," he said. "This is a new and fruit, opens to a lounge ACOs. board afterexecutives took a How do you approach that in a concept and that tends to rewith a plush white couch and Hospitals such as MedStar trip to Pittsburgh to get a bet- provider-based system?" quire a huge communications big-screen TV. Two treadmill are pushing the model even ter sense of UPMC's plan. At a recent American Hos- effort." "We spent the whole day desks nearby are decked out further; some health care pital Association conference in Before it can take over the with laptop workstations. consultants describe these with the group there," Wag- Washington, Kylanne Green health insurance market, howOn a Wednesday mornhospitals as "ACOs on ste- ner recalled. "We left very echoed a similar sentiment. ever, Evolent needs to address ing, though, no employees roids." Instead of sharing the excited." As the chief executive of man- a more immediate concern: were using any o f t h e se profits with insurers, they Two hospital systems in At- aged-care services at Inova Taking over another floor of amenities. They were work- think they can run the plan lanta, Piedmont and WellStar, Health Systems in Northern its building, to make room for ing, many with headphones themselves and keep all the were alsoamong the compa- Virginia, she had also explored hundreds of new employees. on, at long rows of gleaming profits. "Some hospitals are saying metal desks. Evolent has no offices, not even for its top they don't see much upside in executives. Glass c o nfer- the ACO model," Ginsburg ence-room walls are covered said. "Instead, they're sayin scribbles from red, blue ing, let's create our own plan and green markers. where we have a much great"We wanted a sort of Steve er upside if we do a good job. Jobs feel," Evolent co-found- That's the big change, this big er and president Seth Black- opportunity for plans to be ley said, explaining the open built around a health system, landscape. that did not exist before." With F r a n k W il l i a ms In 2014, the health law will and Tom Peterson, Blackley create another big incentive launched the company two for hospitals to get into the years ago while they worked insurance business: Millions at the Advisory Board, a of Americans will begin buyhospital consulting firm. As ing health insurance coverlegislators on Capitol Hi ll age using federal tax credits. were debating health reform, Twenty-eight percent of Blackley was flying around hospitals expect to launch the country, hearing from their own health insurance hospitals what they thought p lan within th e next f i v e the future of medical care years, according to a survey would look like. conducted last month by the "I had spent a lot of time Advisory Board, a co-owner talking to health systems and of Evolent. Currently, 18 perIf you are feeling that your vision is not as clear as it could be, you may provider groups that were cent of hospitals own such looking at their role in the fu- insurance companies. have cataracts. At lnfocus Eye Care, we offer modern cataract surgery with "Particularly for hospitals ture, given the cost pressures of the health-reform law," he where the systems have a several different lens options that may help you to see near, far, and possibly said. prominent name and promiThat's where the idea of nent physicians working for in between. If you are interested in reducing your dependency on glasses helping h o spitals l a unch them, this will be attractive t heir o w n he a lt h p l a n s to them," Ginsburg said. started. If h ospitals could please see us at Infocus, andexplore all your options. Holding down costs collect premiums d i rectly from patients, the thinking Three years ago, Blackley went, they would have more was crisscrossing the counfreedom. try, looking at the handful "The biggest advantage of hospitals that ran health for hospitals is that they can plans successfully. "We w ent around a n d take all the premium dollars and invest them in the most s tudied a n u mber o f t h e eye care logical ways, instead of get- health delivery models that cataract • Iasik • vision ting paid for each claim by exist, from Kaiser Permanan insurer," Blackley said. ente in California to Univer"If they do this well, they're sity of Pittsburgh Medical going to stay viable and have Center," he recalls. "These a chance to deliver higher folks have taken on full risk, quality." meaning they have bigup• I • • • ' ' I Launching a health insur- side and downside for mak-

There is

Infocus

a difference

in Cataract Surgery


THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D 3

NUTRITION FOOD SAFETY

Mold in juice boxes — gross, yes, but dangerous? What's grosser than gross? Slimy green mold growing in kids' juice boxes. When the drinks are preservative-free, defects

in the packaging canallow oxygen in and fungus to grow. Moldy or fermented juice is not particu-

larly dangerous to drink, said pediatrician Dr. Kathleen Berchelmann of St. Louis

Children's Hospital. Oneconcerned parent

Berchelmann is taking the opportunity

diana State biology student recently found five types of fungus in Capri Sunpackaged drinks as part of a research project. Leah Horn spent her senior year using a

its cartons about tossing anydamaged or

of Pediatrics recommends kids eat whole fruits over fruit juice.

vacuum to filter the drinks and search for

The company states that the mold in Capri Sun is similar to that found on bread and

portunity to catch people's attention and talkabout that kids really shouldn't be

one each in the roaring waters and fruit

to advise parents against giving juice to

kids because of its sugar content and low nutritional value. TheAmerican Academy "For me as apediatrician, this is an op-

fungal microbes. Shefound three species of fungus in the tropical punch flavor and

leaking pouches, while acknowledging that

microscopic holes don't cause leaks but allow for mold to grow. cheese andother foods, adding: "And yes, it can be ugly, gross andtotally unappeal-

drinking their calories," Berchelmann said.

punch flavors. On its website, Kraft Foods answers

ing. It would be great if foods stayed fresh

recently tooka Juicy Juice box filled with mold to the St. Louis hospital; the juice was not past its expiration date, and the child

"Juice is not a health food." The problem is not just with Juicy Juice,

questions about mold found in Capri Sun

nature dictate that most foods eventually

who drank it had nosymptoms.

advertised as100 percent fruit juice. An In-

drinks, which are also free of preservatives. spoil and get moldy." Thecompany hasaddedadisclaimerto — St. Louis Post-Dispatch

FAST FOOD

Thinkstcck

Milk

o as e w ols mea? By Mary MacVean Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — The Center for Science in the Public Interest rarely makes friends in the nation's chain restaurants. The advocacy group frequently calls out foods it finds nutritionally objectionable. And last week, it put Long John Silver's Big Catch meal, with hush puppies and onion rings, in its spotlight, calling it the worst restaurant meal in America Center forScience tn the Public lnterest — even though plenty of other choices "(This) meal deserves to be have more calories. The CSPI says laboratory tests show buried 20,000 leagues under the Big Catch has 33 grams of trans fat, the sea." "the most powerful promoter of heart disease in the food supply," and an addi— Michael Jacobson, director, tional 19 grams of saturated fat and nearCenter for Science in the Public Interest ly 3,700 milligrams of sodium — more salt than is recommended for a day. The Big Catch has 1,320 calories. The dish, the Louisville-based company says, weight of the company's usual uncooked is a temporary menu addition it will offer whitefish, the company says. through July, "or while supplies last." The trans fat in the Big Catch, the CSPI Long John Silver's, which was founded says, comes from the partially hydrogein 1969, issued a statement in response to nated frying oil. The American Heart the CSPI's assertions, saying that at $4.99, Association recommends that people the Big Catch "delivers tremendous value consume no more than about 2 grams of to value hungry consumers." trans fat per day — which could be found Diners don't have to take the hush pup- naturally in milk and meat. "Long John Silver's Big Catch meal depies and onion rings, the company says. Other sidechoices include corn, green serves to be buried 20,000 leagues under beans, rice and cole slaw. The Big Catch the sea," said CSPI executive director Miis a wild-caught whitefish three times the chaelJacobson. And in another play on

words he added, "Instead of the Big Catch, I'd call it America's Deadliest Catch." Most major chains have stopped using partially hydrogenated oil altogether, in response to bad publicity, lawsuits and local government restrictions on its use, the CSPI says. "Trans fat from partially hydrogenated oil is a uniquely damaging substance that raises your bad cholesterol, lowers your good cholesterol, and harms the cells that line your blood vessels," Walter Willett, chair of the nutrition department at the Harvard School of Public Health, said in a statement. The CSPI also alleged that Long John Silver's website "greatly overstates" the amount of fish in the Big Catch, and understates the amounts of trans fat and sodium in the side orders. Long John Silver's says the fish is 7 to 8 ounces;the CSPI says it's 4' /z ounces, with the rest being breading or oil. "We stand behind our published food data and will review any requests from CSPI that raise questions about our data," the company's statement says. The CSPI said it asked the U.S. Food and Drug A d ministration to r e voke its approval of partially hydrogenated oil, and it said it would sue Long John Silver's if it continues to use that oil and "continues to misrepresent" ingredient information.

High-carb mealspiquecravingsfor more,study says By Melissa Healy

cortex that processes smell and taste, was significantly higher in those who'd consumed the high glycemic load meal than in subjects who'd consumed the lowglycemic-load meal. T he c o m bination o f plummeting b l o od-sugar levels, a greater sensation

Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — Tucking into a breakfast of buttermilk

pancakes and maple syrup, or a great bowl of white pasta for lunch, not only sends your

blood sugar soaring — and then, suddenly, plummeting. Four hours after you've put down your fork, such a meal makes you hungrier than if you'deaten one with more protein and fiber and fewer carbohydrates, a new study finds. The study also demonstrates that four hours later, the echo of that meal activates regions of the brain associated with craving and reward-seeking more powerfully than does a meal with a lower "glycemic load." The result: At your next opportunity to eat, you'll not only

forever. But the basic laws of scienceand

'

fi' I'

of hunger, and a memory of Thinkstock

When you eat high-carb meals — lots of pancakes, say, or pasta — your brain goes haywire and wants more of the same, even hours afterward, when you're hungry again.

a meal high on the glycemic index led to the researchers'conclusion: "This combination of p h ysiological events may foster food cravings with a s p e cial

preference for high (glyce-

Continued from 01

The reasoning T he scientists note t h at guidelines from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and many health organizations recommend limitingthe consumption of beverages that contain calories — such as soda and juice - "except reduced-fat milk, of which people in most

age groups are encouraged to consume three cups daily." David Ludwig and Walter Willett question "the scientific rationale for p r omoting reduced-fat milk consumption at these levels." T hey suggest t hat u n t i l there are additional studies, guidelines for milk consumption should designate a range of perhaps zero to three cups, avoid recommending low-fat over whole milk and focus on limiting consumption of flavored milks. One problem, they say, is that there have been few randomized trials of the effects on weight gain of reduced-fat milk compared with w hole m ilk and that current guidelines presume lower-fat milks will decrease total calorie intake. But studies show that a "primary focus on reducing fat intake does not facilitate weight loss compared with other dietary strategies," they wrote in last week's JAMA Pediatrics. That might seem counterintuitive at first. But the scientists explain with an example. What if a child who usually eats two 60-calorie cookies and drinks a cup of w h ole milk for a snack instead drinks skim milk? A cup of whole milk has around 150 calories, a cup of skim about 90. But if that child feels less full by consuming less fat and to compensate eatsanother cookie, Willett and Ludwig say, "this substitution of refined starch and sugar for fat might actually cause weight gain."

Obesity concerns The scientists said there's evidence that high-glycemicindex carbohydrates — such as refined grains, sugary beverages and desserts such as the cookies — are associated with weight gain while whole

Thinkstock

In any case, milk matters to a child's health: It and other dairy foods dairy foods have lots of calcium and other nutrients that make bones grow strong. milk is not. Much of the public conversation about milk, particularly in schools, has come in light of high rates of childhood obesity and efforts to improve the nutritional profiles of cafeteria foods. The debate over flavored milk often centers on the idea that kids don't like low-fat milks but will drink them if they're flavored with chocolate. But children generally like the taste of whole milk, which rarely is served in schools. One reason is that whole milk contains saturated fat, which raises what's called "bad" cholesterol, a risk factor for h e art d i sease. But Willett and Ludwig say the picture is more complicated when compared with refined carbohydrates. Reduced-fat chocolate milk reduces saturated fat by 3 grams but raises sugar by 13 grams per cup, the scientists wrote. In an email, Ludwig said 2 percent milk is "probably a reasonable compromise" between whole milk and I percent or nonfat. "The issue is not to focus single-mindedly on fat reduction, and then condone lots of added sugars, as in chocolate milk," he wrote. "The bottom line is that reducing fat has not proven tobe an effective approach to obesity, whereas there is very good evidence for the adverseeffectsof added sugars," especially for children.

tasty by subjects. But while the the rightnucleus accumbens mic-load) c a rbohydrates, high-glycemic-load meal con- and related reward circuitry, thereby propagating cycles tained such ingredients as corn as well as in the region of the of overeating." syrup and Lactaid milk, the low-glycemic-load meal contained corn syrup and regular low-fat milk. be hungrier; you'll be looking Over thenext several hours, for moreofthe same. the men not only had their The study, conducted by re- blood drawn to gauge their searchers from Harvard Med- m etabolic response t o t h e ical School and Boston Chil- meals; they also assessed their dren's Hospital, was published perceived degree of hunger, last week in t h e A m erican and underwent a scan focusJournal of Clinical Nutrition. ing on several nodes of their The team was led by Dr. Da- brain's reward circuitry in a vid Ludwig, director of Boston functional M a gnetic R esoChildren's Hospital Obesity nance Imager. Prevention Center and author While the two meals elicited of "Ending the Food Fight: very similar reactions from Guide Your Child to a Healthy subjects — they found both Weight in a Fast Food/Fake meals appealing — theirbrains Food World." and blood revealed dramatiAnd what's the result of re- cally contrasting responses. peating this cycle meal after Four hours later, those who'd meal? The Harvard research- consumed the high-glycemic ers surmise that the striatum, meal had lower blood-glucose BMC is expanding vascular care with the addition of Dr. Wayne Nelson. Dr. Nelson is a a key node in the brain's re- levels and said they felt hunhighly trained vascular specialist with expertise in Endovascular and Vascular Surgery and is ward circuitry, may lose its grier than those who'd had the low-glycemic meal. Activity in sensitivity to the neurotransdedicated to the care of disorders of the circulatory system including the arteries and veins. mitter dopamine, increasing a Vascular surgeons provide comprehensive vascular care from medical management to person'sdrive to eathigh-carb foods and disrupting his or her endovascular interventions to major open bypass surgery. Until now patients frequently Weekly Arts Sr ability to control that impulse. traveled across the mountains to receive the level of care Dr. Nelson brings to Central oregon. The team saw many of those Entertainment In p rocesses at work i n a l a b where on two separate occaWayne K. Nelson, MD graduated magna cum laude from Brigham Young University and attended sions, 12 overweight or obese Mayo Medical School in Rochester, MN. He completed a Surgery residency and an additional young men wereoffered one of fellowship in Endovascular and Vascular Surgery at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, two meals: one high inglycemic Texas. He is board-certified by the American Board of Surgery. load (including refined sugars or carbohydrates) and the other, a meal with a low-glycemic load. The meals were equal in To learn more about Vascular Surgery or make an appointment, calories, as well in their relative Bend Memorial Clinic ic call (541) 382-4900 or visit bendmemorialclinic.com protein, carbohydrate and fat content, and were rated equally

ADVANCED VASCULAR CARE

MAGAZINE •

TheBulletin

(8 bmC

TotalCare"


D4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

MEDICINE Skin Continued from D1 "If that's the case, then you can imagine that because it's cloudy, it's rainy, people aren't worried about putting on sunscreen," she said. It's the UVB rays that cause sunburns, and because that's being blocked by the clouds, people don't realize they're getting exposed to any U V radiation. "This what our r e search is going to try to investigate," Leachman said. "There's no better place than Oregon to try to figure this kind of thing out." There's also speculation that Northern states might have more fair-skinned individuals who are at higher risk for melanoma. Fair skin, red hair, freckles, blue orhazeleyes are all risk factors, as are a large number of moles, moles that are large in size or that are irregular in shape or color. "If you have even one atypical-looking mole that has a funny color to it, it isn't a melanoma but it looks funny, that alone is enough to increase your risk up to two- to fivefold," Leachman said. A dermatologist by trade, Leachman's area of specialty is the genetics of melanoma. Individuals with a family history are at higher risk, but researchers have also identified severalgenes that can increase the risk for melanoma. Approximately 20 to 40 percent of hereditary melanomas can be linked to a mutation in the p16 gene, the largest known genetic cause of melanoma. Individuals with that mutation tend to develop melanoma much earlier in life, at an av-

erageage of diagnosis of 35,

Skin cancer Skin cancer rates in Oregon are among the highest in the nation. t

• 2 3.1-32.6 Mont.

20.4-23

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Wyo. Calif. Nev.

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Mich Ind

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2012 Oregon melanoma of the skin cases per 100,000 C~asop Columbia 31 3-39 4

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2010 Oregon melanoma of the skin incidence rates per 100,000

by age and gender

compared to57 forthe general population. Living in the U.S., they have a 76 percent chance of developing melanoma by

200

age 80.

150

"If that same person spent their life in the United Kingdom, their risk is only 58 percent. If they spent their life in Australia, their risk is 91 percent," she said. "Different geographic locations have different penetrance, and we believe that has a lot to do with the sun exposure." The interplay between genetic risk, risky behaviors and environmental factors combine to put Oregon and other Northern states at the top of the melanoma risk. But how much each factorcontributes is still unclear. That could also explain why Central Oregon counties have even higher melanoma rates than in other parts of the state. The environmental risk factorsfor skin cancer read like a Central Oregon travel brochure — plenty of sun, outdoor recreation opportunities, high altitude and highly reflective surfaceslike snow and water. "Just like our environment," said Linyee Chang, director of the St. Charles Cancer Center in Bend. In Oregon, only D ouglas County has a higher incidence of melanoma than Deschutes and Jeffersoncounties.Crook County has a s i g nificantly higher rate than the national average, too. "I think it's all sun-related, our altitude and the outdoor lifestyle," Chang said. "People are out there and they're not using adequate sun protection for the length of time that they're out there."

Rate

2009 U.S. melanoma ofthe skin cases per 100,000

Male

Female

100

50

0-4 5-9 10- 15- 20- 25- 30 - 35 - 40- 45- 50- 55- 60- 65- 70- 75- 80- 85+ 1 4 1 9 2 4 29 34 39 44 49 54 59 64 69 7 4 79 84

studies suggest that individuals infected with HIV are at much higher risk for melanomas. Butwhilesunburnsareclearly bad, it's not as clear whether a tan increases or decreases your risk of melanoma. "This is an area that is still a mystery to us," Leachman said. "There's conflicting data." When someone tans, she explains, the tan is generated because the DNA in the melanocytes in the skin has been damaged. That triggers a selfprotectiveresponse to produce more melanin pigment, which darkens the skin. Both tanning and cancer are the result of DNA damage, and it's thought that the more DNA damage, the higher the risk for cancer. But studies also showthat individuals who tan, as opposed to those who simply burn, have a lower rate of melanoma. "Being able to tan," she said, "decreasesyour risk for melanoma but we don't understand Sun damage why. We don't know if that's Sunburns are particularly just because the people who worrisome, an obvious sign are able to tan are also the of UV radiation damage to the ones who inherentlyhave less skin. The damage prompts im- risk of melanoma. It's a very mune cells to race to the site of difficult question." the injured skin, dilating blood Both the American Acadv essels and p r oducing t h e emy of Dermatology and the classic red color, swelling and Skin Cancer Foundation dispain. According to the Skin count the notion that tanning Cancer Foundation, that DNA has a protective effect and disdamage is the first step toward courage protective tanning. "Overall, it's probably going skin cancer. A single bad burn is thought to increase your risk," Leachto be more closely linked to man said. "But I don't want to melanoma than chronic expo- leave the impression that there sure. One blistering sunburn in aren't nuances to that." childhood or adolescence douWhile there are no formal bles the risk of melanoma later guidelines for s k i n c a ncer in life. Five sunburns at any age screenings, doctors r ecomdoubles the risk as well. mend individuals who don't UV radiation also weakens fall into a higher risk category the immune system'sresponse, to take the time to look over allowing tumor cells to prolif- their skin, enlisting a spouse erate unchecked. Chang said or partner t o e x amine the that's why i m m unocompro- harder-to-see areas. "If there's anything that m ised individuals, such a s those who have undergone looks unusual, get it checked transplants, are more at-risk out," Chang said. "Then defor skin cancer than any other pending on your history, your type of cancer. And recent dermatologist will recommend

Age Greg Cross/The Bulletin

a schedule that's appropriate for you. If you're someone that has a bunch of precancerous lesions, your dermatologist is going to want very close followup with you." When lesions are f o und early, they can be removed before they become cancerous. Even once a cancer appears, the earlier it's treated, the better the outcome. Squamous cell and basal cell carcinomas have close to a 100 percent cure rate if caught early. Even melanoma, the most deadly form of skincancer, has better outcomes if treated earlier rather than later. "If you have a very large skin cancer, it's going to take much largersurgery to clear it. If it advances and it gets into your lymph nodes, then you need to see me," said Chang, a radiation oncologist. "And you don't really want to see me." In 2010, melanoma ranked as the f i f th-most prevalent form of cancer in the Oregon State Cancer Registry, trailing only lung, breast, prostate and colorectal cancer. That hasn't changed since 2002, when the

registry began collecting data. But while other cancers are showing a downward trend, melanoma is on the rise. Particularly t r o u blesome, said Patricia Schoonmaker, who leads the cancer control team for the state of Oregon, is the prevalence of melanoma in women younger than 45. In the 20- to 24-age group, women have twice the rate of melanoma than men,and in the 25to 29-age group, four times the rate than men. The male incidence rate in Oregon doesn't catch up with the female rate until age 45. Cancer experts believe that tanning beds have a lot to do with that difference. A ccording tothe Centers for Disease Control's 2011 Youth Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey, 21 percent of high school girls said they used an indoor tanning de-

vice,compared with 6 percent of high school boys. CDC data shows women in Oregon who are diagnosed with melanoma have ahigher death rate than women of any other state. "That gets our attention," Schoonmaker said. "That is one ofthe reasons the public health department went on record in support of the tanning bed legislation." Oregon lawmakers voted in June to ban minors from tanning salons, unless they had a note from their doctor,

and Gov. John Kitzhaber has signed the bill into law. Y ounger skin may b e a t most risk fo r U V d a m age. Skin tends to be thinner in children and teens, and thicker in adults, before thinning out again in old age. UV exposure is harmful at all ages, but particularly so for teens.

tion to 400 nanometers," Wang said. "This is the holy grail for the sunscreen industry." The agency is still debating whether to limit the SPF ratings that manufacturers put on their sunscreen to a maximum of 50. Accordingtothe Skin Cancer Foundation, many mistakenly believe that the SPF ratings are Protection a direct measure of sun protecLeachman said there are tion, that an SPF 30 gives twice three primary ways to protect as much protection as an SPF yourself against m elanoma 15. Lab tests show that SPF 15 and other skin cancers: cloth- sunscreens filter out 93 percent ing, avoidance and sunscreen. of UVB rates, SPF 30, 97 perParticularly o n l e s s sunny cent and SPF 50, 98 percent. days, covering up with longThe manufacturer's race to sleeved shirts, long pants and SPF 100 might not offer that a hat offers significant pro- much more meaningful differtection. Avoidance can mean ence in protection. Yet the averplanning outdoor a ctivities age consumer often equates the outside the peak sun hours of SPF number with the time he or 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., or watching she can safely spend outdoors. "So when you're having this a child's soccer game from under theshade of a tree rather SPF of 100, they think they can than out in the open. stay out as long as possible," She also recommends using Wang said. "Most people use a broad spectrum sunscreen sunscreen as the sole protecthat physically blocks the light tion when they're outdoors from hitting the skin, such as and there'sthis false sense of zinc oxide or titanium dioxide. security." "They're t he o nes t h a t On the other hand, Wang whiten skin," Leachman said. said, people generally use too "People don't like them, but little sunscreen, cutting the they're better." real protection provided. "Most consumers one use Not a l der m a tologists agree. Dr. Steven Wang, direc- one-third of the recommendtor of dermatologic surgery ed amount," he said. "So if and dermatology at Memorial you purchased a product that Sloan-Kettering Cancer Cen- contains SPF 30, realistically ter in New York, discounts the speaking, you're only getting distinction between physical an SPF 10." and chemicalblockers. Wang said he is frequently "They're all just chemicals," asked about expiration dates he said. on sunscreen, which underWang said there are only scores how little sunscreen is two sunscreeningredients ap- used with each application. proved in the U.S. that block The average bottle contains the harmful UVA r ays that 4 to 6 ounces of sunscreen, and have been linked t o m ela- it takes about 1.2 to 1.4 ounces noma: avobenzone and zinc to cover the entire body. "If you put the sunscreen on oxide. Many more UVA filters have been approved for sun- in the right dosage," he said, screens in Europe, but have "you should never run i nto been mired in the long approv- that problem." al process in the U.S. The public health message The Food and Drug Admin- for years has been to avoid istration released testing and sun, seek shade, wear prolabeling guidelines in 2011, es- tective clothing and use suntablishing a laboratory test to screen. But Wang said most measure how much ultraviolet Americans simply ignore the light products blocked. UVB first three.' "The reality is the public light travels in waves ranging from 290 to320 nanomebehavior pattern is completely ters, UVA in waves above 320 flipped," he said. "Most people nanometers. only use sunscreen as t he The FDA test measures how sole mode of protection when they're outdoors. Very few use much of that wavelength a sunscreen blocks, essentially clothing,very few seek shade, how big an umbrella it pro- virtually zero p r actice sun vides.Sunscreens that block avoidance." It's not that Americans don't wavelengths up to 370 nanometerscan be labeled as broad recognize the danger of sun spectrum. exposure, he said. Most do. "But they also have this The FDA guidelines went into effect in December 2012, cognitive dissonance," Wang although stores can still sell said. "They understand that off their existing inventory of excessive UV exposure will sunscreens. That means not be not healthy for their skin, all sunscreens that consum- so theyput on theirsunscreen ers buy today provide the full to alleviate some of the mental range of protection. concern." In 2009, Wang published a Continued next page study finding that only 68 percent ofsunscreens labeled as broad spectrum would have SAVE $50 or $100 per unit passed the FDA standard. on select motorized "Hopefully, in t h e f u ture, Hunter Douglas products moreinnovation cantakeplace, with PowerRise® which will extend this protec-

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THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DS

FITNESS ONE WOMAN'S STORY

Getting fit helpssolve a serioussleep problem The day Linda Balizer blacked out at work inspired her to become fitter than ever. The episode,

likely brought on by untreated sleepapnea, was pivotal for the Albuquerque, N.M., woman.

"The health issue did trigger my decision to get fit, which has become an exciting and fun adven-

ture," says Balizer, 72. About a yearago shepassed out at work. An

shortage and sleepdeprivation that can lead to more severe health issues. But Balizer credits dedicated nightly use of her

a continuous positive airway pressure orCPAP machine for the past year for keeping her alert and on her feet. She tried to use it before, but found it

uncomfortable and hadissues with sinus infec-

her illness and her life. "Getting fit affected my

ecstatic. This changeseverything for me."

health, energy, attitude and weight." Although she had always watched her diet and

Although she thought her diet was healthy, she became a vegan for a while to sort out what kinds

exercise, shewanted to jumpstart her effort and measure her progress toward her goals.

of foods were best for her. Shelost 21 pounds and

So Balizer trained for a triathlon. Even though she did the course with about10

dropped her total cholesterol 100 points: "I feel so much better. I still eat organic, but I'm no longer a

vegan." She joined agym, walks three miles afew

tions, she says. She struggled with the machine this time as well, but she persisted.

other people, shesays nothing waseasyabout it.

tests linked her sleepapnea, diagnosed about10

"I wouldn't want someone to think they can

years before, to the seizure. Losing weight and

totally control sleep apnea with physical fitness,"

her bike again to swim, she remembers thinking,

to have someone my own age to train with. I'd like

shesays."SinceIbeganusingtheCPAPmachine, "You have got to be kidding. But by then I was I have had nofurther episodes." sitting on the edge of the pool and I thought well,

people to know youdon'thavetobeingoodshape

ambulance ride to the hospital and batteries of

getting fit can help relieve sleepapnea, adisorder that causes one toquit breathing during sleep then wake for a breath, resulting in an oxygen

Physical fitness has unquestionably improved

times a week and does weight training.

She says shewishes other people her age from the rack for the12-mile ride. After she racked would train with her: "No offense, but I would like She ran and walked the 5K and then took her bike

I'm jumping in anyway." When she finished, "I was

to start training. You just have to start." — AlbuquerqueJournal, N.M.

ave un, etsomesunwit t ew oe ami By Marjie Gilliam

What tewear andbring

Cox lvewspapers

DAYTON, Ohio — Jeff Alt has found hisexercise niche. A hiking expert and author of "Get Your Kids Hiking!" he has walked the 2,160-mile Appalachian Trail, the 218-mile John Muir Trail with his wife, and trekked acrossa 50-mile path of Ireland with his wife, young daughter and extended family. In his book, Alt shares some of his tips on how to help keep hiking a fun, safe family activity, with advice for how to include your child in all aspects of the experience.

Suit up in comfort, style and the latest technology. Footwear:Until your kids

are walking consistently on their own, fit them with a comfortable pair of water-

resistant shoes. Make sure the 3-and-older kids are wearing lightweight

trail shoes or boots with a sturdy sole, and noncotton, moisture-wicking,

synthetic or wool socks. Clothing:Dress for the weather. Jeff Alt suggests non-cotton synthetic,

Start'em young

wool and fleece clothing and dressing in layers so thatyou are prepared for varying conditions. Wear

Ergonomically de s i gned baby carriers make it s afe a nd easy to carry your i n fant or toddler with you when hiking. Walk to your favorite park or beach. Bring friends and family. Stop often and let your l i ttle one explore. Make your hike a fun adventure andlearning experience, something your kids will look forward to.

Getting your kids on the trail makes exercise a top priority. Hiking also gives families a chance to slow it down, literally and figuratively, and spend quality time with the kids.

Let the kids lead

Count down to the adventure

We live in such a fast-paced w orld. Hiking g ives you a chance to slow it down and spend quality time with your family. Play follow the leader, hiking at your child's pace and distance, and take the time to stop and explore that bug, leaf or rock with them. Tell them about th e a n i mals, r o cks, trees and flowers that are seen along the way. The journey is more important than getting to the destination when enjoy-

Psych the kids up with pictures, videos and highlights of the places they will go and the things they will see. Use books, magazines, maps and the Internet, especially park websites and videos showing the spectacular wildlife and locations they will see.

Thinkstock

young and middle-age adults, it's never too late to take care of your skin." And if it happens to reduce the incidence of m elanoma along the way, public health experts will take that, too. — Reporter: 541-617-7814, mhawryluk@bendbulletin.com

roll-up sleeves. Packa

waterproof breathable rain ing your hike, so find ways t o engage your child in t he experience.

Keep it safe Bring a cellphone. For extra safety, carry a GPS unit to m o nitor y o u r l o c ation,

and make sure to let someone know approximate time that youexpect to reach your destination. Broad-spectrum sunscreen, bug repellent and a first-aid kit that accommodates the whole group are must-haves.

... and fun L et y oung c h i l dren f i l l t heir adventure pack w i t h

a bug catcher, magnifying glass, binoculars, a camera, a map and compass, whistle or flashlight.

ln the book "Hiking is a great way to

From previous page Research has shown that regular sunscreen use can significantly reduce the risk of melanoma. I n 1992, A u stralian r e s earcher Adele G r een r e cruitedresidents of Nambour, a town on Australia's famed Sunshine Coast to test t he concept. The test subjects, age 25 to 75, were randomly assigned to put o n s unscreen either daily or at their discretion. Ten years later, researchers found that those in the discretionary group had twice as many melanomas of those in the daily sunscreen group. In June, Green reported the results of a second study that took molds of the back of test subjects' hands, then compared them to molds taken four-and-a-half years later. "Those who regularly applied sunscreen regularly to their skin had no detectable skin aging," Green said. "Indeed, they had 24 percent less aging of the skin, than those who used s unscreen only some of the time." Many sun safety experts believe stressing the anti-aging effects of r egular sunscreen use may go further in convincing people to protect t hemselves f r o m h a r m f u l UV radiation, than trying to warn people about the risks of cancer. "This is a good-news study," Green said. "Because for

multipurpose clothing like pants that zip off into shorts, or shirts with

Receiving a cancer diagnosis is difficult at any age. But the phrase "you have cancer"is never something you expect to hear at age 37. In August 2011, after a few strange, mild symptoms, Steffany Woolsey was diagnosed with an aggressive and malignant brain tumor. Although most of the tumor was removed through surgery, her physicians believe it will recur. And now,after different types of chemotherapy, infusions and radiation therapy, Steffany is out of medical treatment options. She spends each day with her young family focusing on what she can do — including eating well and exercising — and leans in to the faith that has carried her from the beginning of her cancer journey. Even if her journey ends tomorrow, Steffany says she has never felt fear. Her faith allows her to see clearly beyond the cancer diagnosis and be thankful for each memory and each moment. St. Charles Cancer Center, honored to be part of your story in the fight against the Big G.

ar es CANCER CENTER StCharlesHealthCare.org/cancer SB

parka, hat and gloves.

relax, connect with n ature, Packs:Get age- andsizeand enjoy time with your famappropriate backpacks that ily," Alt says on his website. fit each hiker comfortably. "Bringing your kids along can Trekking poles:Get be rewarding for you and for a pair of adjustable, them, but it can also add new collapsible poles with an challenges and concerns to ergonomically designed your trip." The book is loaded handle for each person. with everything you need to know to hit the trail with the Source: Jeff Alt kids. Specific tips offered in the book include: • Advice for hiking with a • More a ge- a ppropriate child who has special needs. "Get Your K i d s H i k i n g: ways to include your child in all aspects of the hike. How to Start Them Young • Checklists of what to pack and Keep it Fun!" which was for any type of hike. released this year, lists for • Kid-friendly menus. $13.95.

Climbing Continued from 01

Climbingbegins by carefully placing ropes over branches in tree crotches, providing strong anchor points. Each r op e g o es through a leather sleeve to protect the tree. Students then don a tree climber's saddle and helmet. Participants also have the option to wear gloves,

which improves grip and guards against rope burns. Mott has a lot of outdoor experienceand amaster'sof education degree in adventure learning from Clemson University. Through his business, Adventure Tree, he has been teaching tree climbing and orchestrating ground-based outings for five years. H e o r g anizes t e a m building activities for corporations, camps, schools and other groups. B ill Henske, 42, i s a teacher at M aplewood Richmond Heights School District whom Mott trained to work with his students. T ree-climbing, h e sa i d , "acts as a powerful metaphor teaching students to

conquer challenges and their fears." Mott also provides training to entry-level arborists. Mott started out as an electrical engineer but decided he wanted to direct his energy toward helping others directly. By teaching tree-climbing and being an advocate for exploring the outdoors, Mott aspires to be a positive influence. "My focus and mission is education and therapy," he said.


D6 TH E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

'Orange Is the New Black': Privilege, interrupted TV SPOTLIGHT

produce and c ocoa b utter. seems to f il l t h e e x pected Martha Stewart might as well role of the sassy, plus-sized "Orange Is the New Black" be sharing her cell. jokester — until she doesn't. It's not exactly "Midnight Netflix, available The other minorities at Listarting today Express" in L i t chfield, the tchfield will soon defy Chapshow's fictional penitentiary, m an's and ou r n o t ions of By Sara Smith but the show does expand on what put them there. The Kansas City Star Kerman's experiences, adding As the extroverted loudNancy Botwin, the pot-dealcharactersand levels of con- mouth Nicky, N atasha Lying single mom of Showtime's flict on both sides of the razor onne mines her own real-life "Weeds," changed the rules wire. troubles. A t a i nted h eroin "Every sentence is a story," needle led to a life-threatening for TV's female protagonists. Now her creator, Jenji Kohan, the show's posters declare. heart infection for both charis back with an even darker, And that's the rhythm "Oracter and actress, and Lyonne ange" dances to: one inmate shows offa scar that required funnier tale of another womCourtesy Netfsx an's brush w it h A m e rican Co-starring Kate Mulgrew, Natasha Lyonne, Pablo Schreiber, backstory per 50-minute epi- no makeup artistry. criminality. Danielle Brooks, Matt McGorry, Laverne Cox and Taryn Manning, sode, revealed in flashbacks Nicky is one of the show's "Orange is the New Black" "Orange Is the New Black" premieres its full 13-episode first seaand whispered rumors. unabashed "forever" lesbians " Weeds" fans will not b e is based on the memoir of son today on Netflix. — some just dabble until their Piper Kerman, whose postsurprised to hear that "Orrelease date — but a nyone ange" gets in our faces about hoping for s o me '70s-style collegephase as a courier for heroin dealers took a decade She leaves behind Alex (Laura juiceIcayenne pepper cleanse race, religion and class, not women-in-prison exploitation to catch up with her. Don't Prepon), the lover who introas a couple. Now, instead of to mention America's justice will probably be disappointed let the flippant title fool you: duced her to crime's adrena- having phone sex, Larry de- system. The male caretakers by that whole realism thing. "Orange" is scary, smart and line rush, for a future market- scribes heirloom tomatoes and and guards are a terrifying " Maxi p ads w i t h w i n g s relevant, and it will make you ing herb-scented soaps. bulk almonds from W h ole potpourri o f s e xual p r eda- are back in the commissary," wonder why no one thought to Instead of risking trial, she Foods. tors, hapless bureaucrats and a voice drones over the PA give the "Oz" formula a dose takes a deal for 15 months at T he scripts s muggle i n condescending s o c i opaths. system. The d eadpan bulof estrogen before now. Club Fed. It doesn't take long sharp-edged c o nsumer-cul- The worst of them, a guard letins about mealtimes and For N e tflix's s t r eaming- for herto freak out once she's ture referenceswith abandon. portrayed by Pablo Schreiber bad movies are a nod to the only series, Kerman has been on the inside. When Chapman is issued her of "The Wire," is just called announcements that tied to"I'm wearing granny pantrenamed Piper Chapman and institutional canvas slippers, "Pornstache," even in the end- gether the narrative threads of "M.A.S.H." brought to life by Taylor Schil- ies and I've only spoken to she lights up: "They're like ing credits. It's a good device for a show ling, who starred in the best- white people," she babbles at Toms!" She reads "Gone Girl" But L i t chfield's i n m ates forgotten N i cholas S p arks her fiance, Larry, on visiting in the yard and declares it "al- aren't j us t d i s enfranchised that will rotate directors, such flick "The Lucky One." Here, day. "And you're not supposed most good." mouthpieces designed to trig- as Jodie Foster, Andrew McIt's that precious, entitled at- ger middle-class guilt. (Well, Carthy and Matthew Penn, Schilling manages to stitch to- to eat the pudding because it's gether a likable fish-out-of-wa- been to Desert Storm." titude that keeps getting Chap- most of them aren't.) It's just and Netflix already has orter personafrom equal parts Not realizing that she's be- man in trouble with the other too bad we had to go to jail dered a second season for manic pixie, spoiled idealist ing hazed and starved, Larry inmates. They call her "Taylor with a pretty white girl to find 2014. After the success of and defiant survivor. (Jason Biggs) tries to cheer her Swift" and cut off locks of her this many good roles for wom- "House of Cards," "Orange is On the Brooklyn trust-fund up. "You look great. Your face hair to make extensions. en of varied colors, ages and the New Black" should estabcontinuum, Chapman is closer is all cheekbone-y." E ventually, Chapman r e shapes. lish Netflix as a destination for to yuppie than to hipster when We get to see happier times treats to her mattress, sobbing Taystee (Danielle Brooks), discerning viewers who want she is named a co-conspirator with Larry, back when they and making artisanal bath one of the first black inmates to binge-watch more g reat in an international heroin ring. were doing a weeklong lemon products f ro m c o n traband to interact wit h C h apman, shows on their own time.

Pot useclouding Iongtimefriendship

MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movietimesaresubject to changeafter presstime. I

Dear Abby: L egal m a r ijuana is making my best friend stupid, boring and insipid. "Susan" and I are in our 50s and have been best friends off and on since childhood. A decade ago, we started taking b etter care of o u r friendship b ecause so f e w l o n g t ime DEAR friends were still in ABBY our lives. Since then, I have been careful not to be judgmental or condescending because it was the source of past friction. Susan is a r egular marijuana user, which has sapped away all of her ambition and curiosity. Even when she isn't actually high, she lacks the cleverness and mental acuity I h av e always treasured about her. Otherwise, her life is functional. She's in a good marriage,loves her pets and enjoys her job. I think if I said anything, it would cause a major rift. Should I just limit our time together and accept this is how things are going to be from now on? I'm a widow who has lost my parents and others to illness. I have other friends and family, but I don't want to lose my old chum, even though being around her is starting to

make me sad. — Friendship Going To Pot Dear F.G.T.P.: As people grow older, long and well-established relationships become more precious. But much as we might wish otherwise, r e l ationships do not always remain the same. Because you are n o l o nger receiving what you need from your interactions with Susan, I agree you may need to see her less often. In light of your long relationship, I don't think it would be offensive to tell her you have noticed a change in her and you miss the person she used to be. However, are you absolutely certain that what you have observed is caused by marijuana? If you're not, then consider sharing your observation with Susan's husband, in case her lack of sharpness could be the result of another medication she's using or a neurological problem. Dear Abby: My husband and I have been married for one year. Yesterday I put all the pieces together and r e alized he's been cheating on me. I called the other woman, and

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR THURSDAY, JULY11, 2013: This

YOUR HOROSCOPE

year your temper could be an issue, as By Jacqueline Bigar you'll learn to express your feelings in a way that others can understand. If you are single, someone important could become CANCER (June21-July 22) a part of your life ** * You might be trying to get the best Stars show the kind history. If you are price possible for a particular item. Try of day you'll have a t tached, your to postpone your decision for a while, ** * * * D ynamic charisma increases because there could be a sale in the ** * * P ositive — and with it, near future. Communication picks up in ** * A verage you r attentiveness the afternoon; you'll like whatyou hear. ** S o-so to your sweetie. Tonight: Think "weekend." * Difficult VIRGO canbe LEO (Joly 23-Aug. 22) fussy and critical ** * Put the finishing touches ona at times. project. Move quickly and efficiently, as by ARIES (March 21-April 19) late afternoon, you might need to handle ** * * * Y ou might want to make a a financial situation or followthrough on a tremendous effort to complete a project hunch. Do not allow someone todistract that has been on the back burner for a you. Tonight: Takecare of an errand or two while. People sense your confidence, on the way home. and they will make the decision to go VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) along with your ideas. You finally feel supported! Tonight: Any reason works for ** * * You might be doing more than your usual amount of questioning. You celebration. have a drive to launch a project but, for TAURUS (April 20-May 20) whatever reason, you havedone little so ** * * You might not have to venture far. A meeting proves to bevery important. far. You could do your shopping via the You will feel a sense of camaraderie. Internet and enjoy the luxury of taking Tonight: Where your friends are. your time. Your creativity surges to an LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) unprecedented level. You feel good no ** * * Y ou could feel a little tired and matter whatyou do. Tonight: Totally in overworked. You have away of making the moment and ready for the weekend. your mark. Your insightfulness comes GEMINI (May 21-June20) from asking questions — just make sure ** * * You might need more feedback. they're the right ones. Your power of You know what you want, and you are observation will come through. Tonight: likely to pursue it impulsively, without All eyes turn to you. Now what are you thinking first. If someone points out a going to do? potential liability, listen carefully. You SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) will see the problem once it is identified. Tonight: All smiles, and happy to be home. ** * * D eal with a partner who is

aftershe regained her composure and heard she is a mistress, she told me everything.She gave me the answers I desperately needed, and I am thankful for her honesty and — surprisingly— her compassion. I am crushed, and even though he can'texplain why he cheated, I still want to know why. He says he's going to counseling, which is

something I have been begging him to do since I had a miscarriage last summer. Will he change? Or should I continue to pack the house and move on? — Crushed in Chicago Dear Crushed: Much depends upon the reason your husband started cheating. If it was a way to avoid experiencing the pain of the loss of the baby, it's possible that with counseling the two of you can get beyond this. I suggestyou askto be included in one or more ofthe counseling sessions. If he agrees, at least you will know he is seeing a therapist. If not, you will have to decide whether you have had enough loss in one year to last you a lifetime, and whether you still have a future together.

determined to share his or her viewpoint. Later, when you stop to ponder where this person was coming from, you will see the rationale behind his or her thoughts. Be sure to keep an open mind. Tonight: Consider a getaway this weekend or next.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** * O thers seekyou out. In order to accomplish whatyou desire, you might want to screen your calls. Listen well to a partner who can help you carry out a certain project much faster. This likely will be the only person you should open the door for. Tonight: Wind down with a friend.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * Dive into work; the grueling details of a meeting need to be handled quickly. By midafternoon, you will reach out to someone with whom you want to speak. Hopefully you have some extra time in your schedule. Tonight: Continue an important conversation over dinner.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fed. 18) ** * * When you defer to others, you seem to havebetter results. Push a creative conceptforward before lunch, if possible. Others will hear you better then, though it might take aday ortwo for them to make an assessment. Deal with a partner directly. Tonight: Spend time with a lovedone.

PISCES (Fed. 19-March 20) ** * Getting going might be difficult in regard to a personal situation. You might believe that you can handle it right now if you could stop and make the time. Tap into you creativity, and request the help of a close friend. This person's ideas could help. Tonight: Let more fun in. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

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Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E U.S.Highway 20, 541-382-6347 • BEFORE MIDNIGHT (Rl 1:15, 7 • THE EAST (PG-13) 1, 4, 7 •THE GREATGATSBY (PG-13l12:30,3:30,6:30 •THE LONERANGER lPG-13)Noon,3,6 • MAN OF STEEL (PG-13) I2:15, 3:15, 6: I5 • MUCH ADO ABOUTNOTHING lPG-13) 4:15 • MUD (PG- I3) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45 I

— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com

or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • DESPICABLE ME2 lPG)10:50 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 1:20, 2:50, 3:50, 6:15, 6:20, 9:15 • DESPICABLE ME3-D 2 (PG) Noon, 3:20, 6:45, 9:45 • GROWN UPS 2 (PG-13) 7 • THE HEAT (R) 11:20 a.m., 12:35, 2:35, 4:15, 6:40, 7:40, 9:30, 10:25 • THE LONE RANGERlPG-13) 11 a.m., 11:45 a.m., 2:20, 3:05, 6, 6:30, 9:20, 9:50 • MAN OF STEEL (PG-13) 6:25, 9:40 • MAN OF STEEL IMAX iPG-13) 2:30 • MAN OF STEEL IMAX 3-D lPG-13) 11:15 a.m., 6:30 • MONSTERS UNIVERSITY(G)10:45a.m.,1:25,4:05,6:45 • MONSTERS UNIVERSITY3-0 (G) 12:25, 3:10 • NOW YOU SEEMElPG- l3) 12:10, 3, 9:35 • PACIFIC RIM lPG-13) 10 • PACIFIC RIM 3-D (PG-13i 10 • PACIFIC RIM IMAX3-D iPG-13) 10 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESSlPG-13) 11:35 a.m., 6:50 • THIS IS THE END(R) 12:40, 4:20, 7:45, 10:20 • WHITE HOUSE DOWN(PG-13) 11:05 a.m., 12:15, 2:25, 6:05, 9:10 • WORLD WAR(PG-13) Z 11:55 a.m., 2:45, 7:20, 10:10 • WORLD WAR Z3-D(PG-13)3,9:55 • Accessibility devicesareavailable forsome movies.

TV TODAY 8 p.m. on USA,"Summer Camp" — "Survivor" meets s'mores in this new competition, in which contestants relive their summer camp years and engage in "battle of the sexes" challenges with a $25,000 cash prize awaiting the winner. A campsocial and a color war with canoes are the featured activities in the series premiere, "Welcome to Summer Camp." "American Idol" alum Matt Rogers hosts. 9 p.m. onH C), "Motive" — Flynn and Vega (Kristin Lehman, Louis Ferreira) investigate the death of a health food guru whose body was found in his hot tub. They follow a trail of clues to a young woman with a secret motive for murder in the new episode. 9p.m. onH C3, "The Winner Is..." — Starting its regular run here after a sneak peek last month, this unique combination of a singing contest and a game show pits two vocal acts against each other in front of an audience of101 music experts. After competing, each act has the opportunity to take a cash payout or stay in the gameand hope it's the one chosen to continue. Nick Lachey hosts. 9 p.m. on AII E,"Intervention" — Gina turned to heroin to escape the pain of being blamed byher domineering mother for having been raped. Nowshe risks losing her son if she doesn't get help for her addiction. Also in this new episode, viewers meet19-year-old Kaila, who developedanorexia in response to growing up in an image-conscious community where she wasteasedfor being overweight. Her doctors havetold her family to prepare for her death unless something is done soon. 10 p.m. onH f3, "Hollywood Game Night" — Charades with Chandler, anyone? In this new game show, average Joes and Janes join celebrities in a wild round of pop culture-based party games in hopes of winning a $25,000 grand prize. In the opener "The OneWith the Friends," Matthew Perry and Lisa Kudrow are among the celebrity competitors. Jane Lynch l"Glee") hosts. 10:01 p.m. onH El, "Rookie Blue" — Andy's iMissy Peregrym) plans for a weekend getaway hit a snag when sheand Gail (Charlotte Sullivan) discover a teenage boy bound and gagged in a car trunk during a routine traffic stop. Their investigation turns up a messy tale of young love that could end in tragedy. ©Zap2it

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ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013

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Ab Lounge Ultra Sport books, designer clothes, rage sale and rehold goods - new, more. 61351 Robin3pce headboard set, exercise chair w/box, exc DVDs, make-up, moving vintage & antique, hood Lane. ceive a Garage Sale $75. 541-280-3504 cond, $55. 541-508-3886 boxes 8 much more! from beautiful new Don't miss this one! 1812 Kit FREE! leather furniture to Refrig/frreezel side-byRichard Simmons NW Element Pl. (roundSales Redmond Area l old. Sale given by about Dream Stepper $45 KIT INCLUDES: s ide Whirlpool w i t h off College Way). Farmhouse • 4 Garage Sale Signs ice/water in door, 23 obo. 541-388-9270 Estate Sales. $2.00 Off Coupon To 1 Day Sale! Sat., 7/13, cu. ft. total, like new Saturday only Bam-1pm •Use 7am-4pm, 956 SW 13th Toward Your $350. 541-548-2849. Schwinn Airdyne exer- Pics & descriptions at Furniture, sporting c ise bi k e $12 5 . farmhocseestatesales.com St. Great vanety. No kids Next Ad goods, housewares, lots 541-389-4587 stuff, no clothes, no junk! • 10 Tips For "Garage WANTED: Chelsea Pine of kids stuff! 1172 NW Estate/ Moving Sale Sale Success! sideboard and/or table Constellation Drive 245 Fri.-Sat., 8-5 Find exactly what 8 chairs. 541-447-5562 1020 NE Sunrise St., Golf Equipment you are looking for in the Just bought a new boat? Prineville PICK UP YOUR Sell your old one in the The Bulletin CLASSIFIEDS Lighted oak china cabi- classifieds! SALE KIT at CHECK YOUR AD Ask about our GARAGE recommends extra 1777 SW Chandler n et, 5 0 s chr o me i Super Seller rates! I ca c • ca. p. table, leaf, 4 chairs, Ave., Bend, OR 97702 C hurch Parking L o t 541-385-5809 chasing products or • Sale: F r i . 8-4; Sat. sofa, recliner, vintage services from out of I 8-2:30. Quality, genbookcase, small 284 the area. Sending y tly used house wares, tables, oa k p a ntry cash, checks, or linens clothing colc abinet, desk, o n e Sales Southwest Bend Garage Sale- Saturday, lectibles, an t i ques, I credit i n f ormation on the first day it runs queen and two twin may be subjected to to make sure it isa corJuly 13th! Located off tools, hardware, garbeds, trea d m ill,Collectibles, Furniture, a I FRAUD. For more of Empire and Purcell dening items e l ecrect. Spellcheck and kitchen, g l assware; Furnishings sale: information about an s human errors do ocl awnmower, yar d Sat. 8-4. No early arriv- Blvd, the Lava Ridges tronics Christmas de208 advertiser, you may I cur. If this happens to tools, yard art, picnic als please! Venetian- residents will be par- cor 8 m u c h m ore. / call t h e Or e gon / your ad, please conticipating in a neigh- Community PresbytePets 8 Supplies table, bench and side Czeck-American ' State Att or n ey ' tact us ASAP so that table, hanging swing. blown glass. Over 70 borhood Garage Sale, rian Church, 529 NW 0 come and find your 19th St., Redmond I General's O f f ice corrections and any HEELER Female, 2 bikes, chest freezer, small oil lamps, rare Consumer Protec- • adjustments can be handicap equipment, pair of o p alescent- treasure! 7 years old, Large Yard Sale! Misc t ion ho t l in e at I made to your ad. man t e l currently in foster care. bbq. quality f i shing c ranberry, tools, household furniHuge Garage Sale, 541 -385-5809 lusters, glass canes, equipment, life jackWell trained, loving. I 1-877-877-9392. ture, clothes, bikes, AV children. The Bulletin Classified pottery, ir o n /glass, benefits Needs to be only ets, clothes, r eels, equipment, all kinds of Sat., July 13, 8-4, standing 3-way mirror, lures, anchors, camp dog in household. 63598 Hunters Circle. things! Fri-Sat, 8am-5pm, Several thousand clean Chihuahuas! 1 blue & 1 541-317-1463 ing gear, metal stor- w ood shelves a n d Many items, all excellent! 1075 SW 17th St. olf balls - 100 for armoire, art 8 photo black & tan, $250 age cabinets, ladders. 25. Make check to MOVING SALE! each. 541-362-1977 Lab Pups AKC, black & f rames, mt n bi k e , Moving Sale Sat.-Sun. I Want to Buy or Rent Humane Soc i e ty. c hop s a w , sh o p camping items, oak Fri. & Sat. 7/12-13, 8-4. yellow, Master Hunter 8-4. Bookcases, TVs, Antiques & h eater, small m e 541-383-2155. 1326 S W Ri m rock c ouch, b dr m s e t , Way Desert Lynx/Manx cross sired, performance pedichanical and wood- harvest table with 5" Wanted: 100-gallon Collectibles sports and yard gree, OFA cert hips & elc arved legs and 4 china hutch, m i sc. People Lookfor Information working tools, washer kitten. Only one fepropane tank. equip., tools, house541-771-2330 male left. F i rst shot bows, and dryer, q u ality chairs, BBQ w/burn- 20713 Justice Lane. 541-593-0309 About Products and www.kinnamanretrievere.cem Antiques wanted: tools, hold goods, clothes, ers, custom jewelry, household. Please and worming. Ready Services Every Day through furniture, marbles, beer MOVING SALE Wanted: $Cash paid for now. $100.00 Kelly at M ini Singer portable heavy Study desk, futon, tools, lo n g Hai r e d cans, early B/W phono early sales! The Bulletin Classifieds vintage costume jew- 541-604-0716 duty sewing machine, Wed., July 10th to Sat., microwave, dorm frig, or Dachshund p u p py. Nanette's Estate & tography, radios & July 13th, 10am to 6pm misc. Sat. 8-12. 2866 elry. Top dollar paid for 541-489-3237 digital camera and kit, Male, had first shots, Moving Sales lighting. 541-389-1578 248 Gold/Silver.l buy by the 6' iron wall t r ellis64734 Sylvan L o op, SW Bentwood Drive. dewormed, k e n nel Estate, Honest Artist Guns, Hunting w/attached p l anter.Boones Borough. Take trained, potty trained, Yard/Moving Sale Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Donate deposit bottles/ 61384 SW Campbell Deschutes Market Rd to 8 Fishing Sales Northwest Bend great with other dogs July 11th-14th cans to local all volDale Rd ; Da l e to Ct., take Century Dr. and kids, 11 weeks unteer, non-profit resMcGrath; r i g h t on 9am-3pm .22 cal Beretta Bobcat, past Bend A t hletic BARN SALE 8 BBQ old. $200.00 call or McGrath, immediate left cue, to h e l p w / cat 4800 S. Hwy 97 Items for Free Club, right on Camp- on Sylvan Loop; go ap21A, 3 c lips, in b ox, Sat., 9-3• Sun. 11-4 spay/neuter vet bills. text 541-306-7784 bell - follow signs. $300 541-788-4928 or 18849 Tumalo prox .6 mile on Sylvan to N BA G r aphic S l a m Cans for Cats trailer is Just bought a new boat? 541-480-1123 Reservoir Rd. house on left, green with Sales Other Areas Beautiful handbackboard, hoop, net, at Jake's Diner on Sell your old one in the Huge Orphanage Fund 3 houses, big treasures! white pillars on porch. carved coffee table Hwy. 20 at P urcell. classifieds! Ask about our Bend local pays CASH!! post. Sisters a rea. Raiser! Furniture, sports, Sporting equip, interior 2-Family Garage/MovD onate Mon-Fri a t (44a x 19'/4 a x 17'/2") for all firearms & 541-549-0935. Super Seller rates! antiques, electronics, design, tons of stuff... People Look for Information ing sale with 100's of and 2 matching end ammo. 541-526-0617 Smith Sign, 1515 NE 541-385-5809 Come join us for books 50e, household 208 34a About Products and items incl: p ortable 2nd; or at CRAFT in tables (shown) 24 galore! Fri-Sat, 8-6; a FUN sale! WALTHER Services Every Day through DVD player, speakPets 8 Supplies Tumalo anytime. 541- Pomeranian Pups FM 6 x 15 a x 24'/4". Built in BNIB 61243 SW Gorge View P99. QA, compact 9mm, Barn/Shop/Household ers, trampoline, misc. 389-8420. Info/map at wks, raised in our home, Taiwan between The Bulletin Classigeds box, paper work, and Sale! Fri. 8 -3, S at. St., off Holly Grape St. parents on site, very 1940-1950, all glass horse/tack, 8-pce pawww.craftcats.org extra clip. bought brand The Bulletin recomcute, ready now. $300. 8-noon. 20315 Bird- SAGEBRUSHERS Ga288 tio furniture with new covered, in excelnew, didn't like it. $500 Becca, 541-279-4838 mends extra caution song Lane, off Tulent condition. $1600 cushions/umbrella, rage Sale Fundraiser, Sales Southeast Bend obo. 541-977-1438. when purc h asmalo 8 Swalley Rds. large aquarium, tools, DO YOU HAVE OBO. 541-382-6731 S at. only. 9-2, 1 17 POODLE Toy pups & ing products or serSOMETHING TO CASH!! teens. Also, POMAPOOS ESTATE SALE. 1 3 99 SW Roosevelt Ave. Antiques! Dealers Wel- & m isc. h o usehold vices from out of the SELL For Guns, Ammo & City View Dr., Fri. 9-2, Lots of good stuff! come. Fri. & Sat. 9-2, items. Fri. & Sat. 7/12 Call 541-475-3889 area. Sending cash, Reloading Supplies. Sat. 9-12. Furn., art FOR $500 OR 61261 Ladera Road. & 13, 8:30-3:30 both checks, or credit in541-408-6900. LESS? Queensland Heelers 286 s upplies f o r kid s / H ousehold ite m s , d ays. 510 Sp r u c e f ormation may b e Non-commercial Street, Sisters. Standard & Mini, $150 Dgvlgn adults, yarn, kitchen, lawn equipment!. Sales Northeast Bend subjected to fraud. advertisers may & up. 541 -280-1537 D ON'T MI SS I HI S vac, recipe bks, misc. Visit our HUGE HUGE GARAGE SALE For more i nformaCommunity Yard Sale place an ad with www.rightwayranch.wor home decor Friday-Saturday, 9-5 Estate Sale: Sat. 7/13, tion about an adverGreat Multi-Family oui' at Bear Creek Village dpress.com consignment store. 838 SW Sunnyside Dr. House/Garage Sale! 8-2. F u rniture, t o ols, tiser, you may call "QUICK CASH Sat. 7/13, 9-3 © DO YOU HAVE New items in Madras (97741) Big variety - come on by! household, misc. 20932 155 NE Craven & Bear the O r egon State Rodent control experts SPECIAL" SOMETHING TO GREAT STUFF! arrive daily! Kodiak Ct. (Lava Ridges) Sat. 7/13 only, 8-2. Attorney General's (barn cats) seek work Creek Rd. SELL 930 SE Textron, 1064 Union St. Office Co n s umer in exchange for safe HUGE GARAGE SALE! ~ p k pp! FOR $500 OR Paul & Pearl Schultz shelter, basic care. Bend 541-318-1501 Protection hotline at Fri/Sat. 8 to 3, great Ad must include HUGE MULTI-FAMILY LESS? www.redeuxbend.com 1-877-877-9392. Fixed, shots. Will des tuff! 55877 W o o d price of single item GARAGE SALE! ESTATE SALE Non-commercial liver! 541-389-8420 Duck Drive. of $500 or less, or Sat. 8-2, Sun. 8-11 advertisers may 5768 NE Stalker Ct., Bend multiple items 2371 NW Labiche in Serving Central Oregon s<pca 1903 place an ad Manly Estate Sale! Scottish Terrier AKC Original Colliers Friday, July 12 • Saturday, July 13 whose total does NWX. Antiques, kids' with our 1909 Remington Tools, tools tools! pups, born 4/2. Shots not exceed $500. clothes 8 toys, furni9 a.m. to 5 p.m. "QUICK CASH Fri-Sat, 9-2. South 97 to 8 wormed, parents on Prints. Set of 8 Adopt a nice cat from ture, household items, (Take Revere St. East to 6th St., Go about 6 SPECIAL" Cottonwood Rd exit, take site, Ready now! prints in 4 frames Petco, PetSmart or Classifieds at framed art, a n tique blocks north on 6th Street to Stalker Ct.) E Cascade Rd to W Core 541-317-5624. with original portfo1 week3lines 12 Tumalo sa n ctuary! Call 541-385-5809 OI' Singer sewing m aCrowd control admittance numbers Rd, rt on Gray Birch Ct. Fixed, shots, ID chip, www.bendbullet!n.com lio case. $500. c hine, i n f an t lif e Shepherd/Lab mix, beau541-504-7711 issued af 8:00 a.m. (follow signs) in Sunriver. k ap! tested, more! Sanc~a tiful male, 90 Ibs, very jacket. Ad must tuary open Sat/Sun Four piece "plush crush" 1970's sofa, chair 8 ot- Powell Butte 8197 SW loving, good with kids/ 1-5, other days by include price of MOVING SALE 63274 toman, loveseat; Side by side refrigerator with ice Ridge Lane, off Riggs Just bought a new boat? a t $50 0 a ppt. 6 5 48 0 7 8 t h ,French B u lldog/Japa- dogs; NO cats. Free to Sell your old one in the Lavacrest St. S atur- and water; Dinette table with 6 chairs and one and So. Red Cloud. Bend. Photos, map at nese Chin cross pups good home. 541-410-7847 classifieds! Ask about our or less, or multiple day 7/13 9AM to 3PM. leaf; Kenmore washer & dryer; 16. cu. ft.. Sat. and Sun., 9-4. $175. Cash please. Just bought a new boat? www.craftcats.org. items whose total Freezer; Gen 3 Kirby vacuum; Nice buffet; Maple Downsizing, lots misc. Super Seller rates! Furniture, household, dry 541-389-8420, or like 541-447-0210 sink; Set of Hall China Autumn leaf; Two redoes not exceed Sell your old one in the 541-385-5809 sports equip. cliners; Rocker; Elna sewing machine (no cords); us on Facebook. $500. NOTICE classifieds! Ask about our Pre-70's vintage yellow Moving Sale! Furniture, M apledresser;Two queen beds; Lightoak round Remember to remove Super Seller rates! BOXER AKC puppies, German Shepherds, collectibles, hol i day, table; Glasses; mugs; electrical appliances; Steelcase 4-dr file cabiCall Classifieds at AKC, 10 yr. research 541-385-5809 Garage Sale signs reat litter, 1st shots, housewares, c l othing, kitchen tools; Pyrex ware; Stainles cannner; jars your 541-385-5809 breeding program, net, $595. 541-388-9270 (nails, staples, etc.) 700. 541-325-3376 camping, RV whl liners, and plastic ware; clothing and linens; CompresYorkie pups AKC, cute, www.bendbu!!et!n.com $1500-$2800. after your Sale event big eyes, short nosed, so- The Bulletin reserves fencing & other quality sor and tablesaw; some tools; lots of nuts and Just bought a new boat? 541-430-1026 is over! THANKS! Sell your old one in the www.trained-dogs.com cialized, health g uar., the right to publish all Glock 30, .45 cal auto, items. Fri-Sat, 9-3, 21115 bolts; Heavy work bench with carpenters vise atFrom The Bulletin ads from The Bulletin Limestone Ave., off Tu- tached; Red wagon, Capenters scribe table; Miclassifieds! Ask about our $650 & up. 541-777-7743 local utility Super Seller rates! newspaper onto The like new, fired twice. malo Rd/78th (see signs) ter box; Yard decor; shovels; lots of records; and and your companies. German Sh o r thairedJust bought a new boat? Bulletin Internet web- Original box/paperwork; 541-385-5809 much more. Pointer pups, AKC Reg. Sell your old one in the 2 clips & holster, 50-rnd MULTI-FAMILY SALE Handledby Deedy's Estate Sales Co. LLC Boxer Puppies - $700 The best in style, tem- classifieds! Ask about our site. box of ammo. Best offer 352 NW Drake Road. Serving Central Oregon s>pca 1903 541-419-4742 days • 541-382-5950 eves http://bit.ly/1b99PRI perament 8 natural abilSuper Seller rates! O VER $1000. Call n o Sunday only, 7/14. 541-595-8773 Serving Ceptrat Oregon since C903 texts: 541-318-3321 Bend from 9-3. Cash only! www.deeedysestatesales.com www.bendbulletln.com ity. $500. 541-410-2667 541-385-5809 GENERATE

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E2 THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 267

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

Fuel & Wood

All Year Dependable Firewood: Seasoned Lodgepole, Split, Del.

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

Monday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 : 0 0 pm Fri. Tuesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mon.

Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tuesa a

Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. Saturday • • • • 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri. Place a photoin your private party ad for only $15.00 per week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

"UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500in total merchandise

7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days..................................

(cell for commercial line ed rates)

*Must state prices in ed

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.

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CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

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- -NEW La k e City 5.56x45 NATO FMJ 62 grain SS109 M855 3025fps $70/100rnds 22lr Assorted $22/100rnds 541-848-2893-AMMO

PSE Carrera 50¹ 2 9" draw,no sights $150 Ike new.541-389-0826 Remington XR-100 204

w/Leupold 4.5x14 scope, $1200. 541-382-6721 Ruger GP100, .357 mag, 4" bbl, double action,

bendbulletin.com

ls located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

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257

Health 8 Beauty Items

Musical Instruments

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PROMPT D E LIVERY

542-389-9663

For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at

541-385-5800 To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 or email

Employment Opportunities CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment Opportunities" in clude employee and independent p o sitions. Ads fo r p o sitions that require a fee or upfront i nvestment must be stated. With any independentjob

Found: Black lab male, 7/4, SE Bend. Call to identify: 541-480-0031 Lost: Eyeglasses, lavender frames, 6/29, area 1 5th/Columbia Park i n Bend. 541-383-2161

REMEMBER: Ifyou have lost an animal, don't forget to check 541-382-3537

For Equal Opportunity Laws c ontact Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n dustry, Civil Rights Division, 971-673- 0764.

The Bulletin 541-385-5809

Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulletin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.

Redmond Cornet / Trumpet by F.E. Char-Broil Gas Grill, 541-923-0882 Find exactly what Olds & Son, 1940's, rare, hardly used, $100. Sunvision Pro 28LX tan- in original case. $495 Pr a l l a Call 541-383-3330 you are looking for in the ning bed, very little use! obo. 541-388-9270 sat-447-7179; $1200/obo. 541-385-9318 CLASSIFIEDS How to avoid scam or Craft Cats Yamaha Baby Grand 541-389-8420. and fraud attempts GH1B, polished Find exactly what Auto Internet Sales People Lookfor Information Experienced ebony, w/humidifier, ar'Beaware of internawith you are looking for in the tional fraud. Deal loAbout Products and pristine. $4500 OBO. proven track record a cally whenever posCLASSIFIEDS 541-322-6281 Services Every Day through plus. Great pay plan sible. The Bulletin Blassifieds and benefits. Call for ar'Watch for buyers confidential interview. 251 who offer more than Misc. Items 541-420-9670. Hot Tubs & Spas your asking price and who ask to have Bend Indoor Swap S outh Seas ho t t u b Meet - A Mini-Mall full money wired or BARTENDER handed back to them. w/cover 8 steps, seats 6, of Unique Treasures! An opportunity 44 jets, e x lnt c o nd, 3rd St. & Wilson Ave. Fake cashier checks tojoin the $3800. 970-629-1690 10-5 Thurs-Fri-Sat. and money orders

M & J Tavern!

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Irrigation Equipment FOR SALE 0.48 acre IRRIGATION RIGHT;

Part-time Bartenderneeded, Sunday-Monday days / fill-in.

Apply at the

M 8 J Tavern, Tumalo Irrigation Dist rict, $1500; I p a y 102 NW Greenwood Avenue,in Bend. fees. 206-673-7876 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

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541-385-5809

476

Employment Opportunities TRUCK DRIVER

Wilderness Garbage 8 Recycling, a well e stablished c o m any located in La ine, is looking for a route driver with a clean driving record. C DL r equired o r obtained within 60 days of hire. Must pass all ODOT drug and alcohol testing. Must be physically fit and able to lift 50 Ibs safely. Bene f its available. NO PHONE CALLS OR EMAILS WILL BE TAKEN.

Send resume to: Manager PO Box 2669, La Pine OR 97739

KO~O rj 528

Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recom-

mends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER

We are looking for a f ully s k i lled m i l l - Just bought a new boat? wright t o p e r form Sell your old one in the HOTLINE, preventative and classifieds! Ask about our 1-877-877-9392. breakdown mainteSuper Seller rates! nance at our Head541-385-5809 People Look for Information quarters location in About Products and M adras. W e ar e WASTEWATER l ooking for a t a l - Apollo, Inc. is seeking Services Every Day through ented individual who an experienced Assis- The Bulletin Classifieds c an d e velop t h e tant Project Manager with 5-10 years' water/ BANK TURNED YOU skills to become a standard work set up wastewater experience. DOWN? Private party auditor to a s s ure Job opportunity is lo- will loan on real esin Bend, Oregon, quality of m achine cated equity. Credit, no 2-3 years, with long-term tate set up and to deproblem, good equity opportunity with comvelop actual set up pany. Salary plus com- is all you need. Call skills to perform the Oregon Land Mortbenefit pkg. duties of an opera- petitiye Send resume "Attn. As- gage 541-388-4200. tor in the event an Project Manager operator is absent. sistant LOCAL MONEY:Webuy to: You should be able Position" secured trustdeeds & bidsOa ollo- c.com to work well indenote,some hard money or to PO Box 7305, pendently as well as Kennewick WA 99336. loans. Call Pat Kellev in a t e a m a t mo541-382-3099 ext.13. Equal Opportunity s phere. M u s t b e Employer willing to work any USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! shift. W age DOE. W e offer a s o l id Seekingexperienced Door-to-door selifng with benefits p a c kage WELDER fast results! It's the easiest including m e dical, dental, l i f e and way in the world to sell. anathavag ra ~ vision insurance as roduction weldin w ell a s a pro f it The Bulletin Classified xarianaa. a~ s haring plan. To 541-385-5809 be considered for Contact Buck at: this position please Newhouse apply in person in FIND YOUR FUTURE the Perso n nel Manufacturing HOME INTHE BULLETIN Department at 335 1048 N. 6th St. NW H e s s St., Redmond, OR Your future is just a page Madras OR 97741. 97756 away. Whetheryou're looking Pre emp l oyment Or call fora hat ora place to hang it, drug test required. The Bulletin Classified is 541-548-1055 Equal O p portunity your best source. Employer. Every day thousandsof buyers and sellers of goods Looking for your next and services do business in employee? these pages.Theyknow Place a Bulletin help you can't beat TheBulletin wanted ad today and Classified Section for reach over 60,000 chasing products or I selection apd convenience readers each week. services from out of - every item isjust a phone Your classified ad the area. Sending call away. will also appear on c ash, checks, o r bendbulletin.com The Classified Section is credit i n f o rmation which currently easy to use. Every item may be subjected to receives over 1.5 is categorized andevery FRAUD. million page views cartegory is indexed onthe For more informaevery month at section's front page. tion about an adverno extra cost. tiser, you may call Whether youare looking for Bulletin Classifieds the Oregon State a home or need aservice, Get Results! Attorney General's Call 385-5809 your future is in the pagesof Office C o n sumer s The Bulletin Classified. or place Protection hotline at I your ad on-line at 1-877-877-9392. bendbulletin.com The Bulletin

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Door-to-door selling with USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! i fast results! It's the easiest Door-to-door selling with i way in the world to sell. fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified

541-385-5809

476

MILLWRIGHT

at 1-503-378-4320

FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities

Employment Opportunities Fuel Truck Driver Cascade Petroleum Transportation Fuel Truck Drivers: Full time-November Tues-Sat 4am — 4pm One year of recent Class A driving Combination vehicles, requires an X endorsement. Must have a Transportation Workers Identification Credential (TWIC) card Clean MVR. To apply call Mike Knight 800-513-9669

opportunity, please i nvestigate thor oughly. Use e xtra ciassifiedC!bendbuiieitn com c aution when a p for jobs onThe Bulletin plying Sernng Centra( Oregnn trnre 1903 line and never provide personal inforSUPER TOP SOIL mation to any source www.harshe soffandbark.com may not have Screened, soil 8 com- you researched and post m i x ed , no deemed to be repurocks/clods. High hu- table. Use extreme mus level, exc. f or c aution when r e flower beds, lawns, s ponding t o A N Y gardens, straight online employment s creened to p s o i l. ad from out-of-state. Bark. Clean fill. De- We suggest you call liver/you haul. the State of Oregon 541-548-3949. Consumer H o tline

The Humane Society Bend

Misc. Items

Bug Zapper, new Cole- are common. give out perman, rechargable battery, VNever sonal financial inforComputers $30 obo. 541-388-9270 mation. S avage 7 m m M a g. Buying Diamonds YTrust your instincts Scope, Sling and car- HP Computer, almost /Gold for Cash and be wary of new, owner is dinosaur! rying case. Just 17 Saxon's Fine Jewelers someone using an rounds fired. $300. $195. 541-647-2621 541-389-6655 escrow service or Call 541-977-4884 T HE B U LLETIN r e agent to pick up your BUYING merchandise. Springfield XD-9, 9mm, quires computer ad- Lionel/American Flyer 2-16 rnd mags, 4-18 vertisers with multiple trains, accessories. The Bulletin rnd mags, Springer ad schedules or those 541-408-2191. selling multiple systrigger, Trijicon nite BUYING & SE L LING Nurse or Vet Tech sights, Fobus holster, tems/ software, to dis- All gold jewelry, silver Scrubs, size 2x & 3x, close the name of the $650,5414108680. business or the term and gold coins, bars, $4 each. 541-516-8225 rounds, wedding sets, "dealer" in their ads. Wanted: Collector Stetson Hat, 6 X's, 7'/4, Private party advertis- class rings, sterling sil- still in box, like new, It seeks high quality ver, coin collect, viners are defined as fishing items. tage watches, dental gray. $50. 541-923-0677 those who sell one Call 541-678-5753, or gold. Bill Fl e ming, Just bought a new boat? 503-351-2746 computer. 541-382-9419. Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 Wanted: 100-gallon propane tank. $475. 541-788-4928 or 541-480-1123

BarkTurfSoil.com

Can be found on these pages:

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions

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Gardening Supplies & Equipment

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541-420-3484.

Lost & Found

PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 for $335. Cash, Check or Credit Card OK.

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Hay, Grain 8 Feed Cabinet maker/Installer only need apply. I 1st quality grass hay, Irg Exp. Send resume to cabi3'x3'xa' bales, approx 541-593-0309 LTh t.; Bulletin g 750lbs ea. $240/ton, barn nets@qwestoffice.net call54I 3855809 to promoteyeur service Advertise far28 daysstarting at 'l40 llirts tpeggfftackgge0natgtgtlable00aurneigiel Wanted- paying cash stored. Patterson Ranch, or fax to 541-330-3958 for Hi-fi audio & stu- Sisters, 541-549-3831 Truck Drivers Wildland Firefighters Seeking dio equip. Mclntosh, 9-10-11 axle GRASS HAY To fight forest fires. J BL, Marantz, D y big lowboy driver for Must be 18 years old IBuilding/Contracting Landscaping/Yardcare Landscaping/Yardcare naco, Heathkit, San- 1st cutting, barn-stored, m oving heavy m a COLUMBIA STATEBANK 8 drug free. Apply sui, Carver, NAD, etc. standard sized bales, chinery. L o cal and in Sisters. $240/ton. between 9 a.m. to 3 NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land- Call 541-261-1808 over the road posiIf you are searching for a company where 541-588-6531 law r equires anyone scape Contractors Law p.m., Mon. thru Thurs. Must have 2 customers and employees are highly who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all W eber Genesis 3 1 0 Wanted: Irrigated farm Bring two forms of ID fill tions. lowboy experivalued, Columbia Bank is the place to ZooN z gaadrtI construction work to businesses that a d- bbq grill, hardly used, ground, under pivot ir- out Federal 1-9 form. years ence and valid Class work! We are always looking for high enbe licensed with the vertise t o pe r f orm like new with cover and rigation, i n Zaugr gaf e 3',0. C e n tral No ID =No Application. A CDL. Wages based $350. OR. 541-419-2713 ergy and fantastic employees to join our Construction Contrac- More Than Service Landscape Construc- tank. on experience. Bencustomer-focused Bank! tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: 541-923-5845. Peace Of Mind efits include health inactive license p lanting, deck s , WHEN YOU SEE THIS surance, 401(k) plan, Looking for your means the contractor fences, arbors, We arecurrently seeking a Flre Protectlon paid vacation, inspecnext employee? is bonded & insured. water-features, and inOO Branch Manager ~ P ATR l c K tion bonus program. Fuels Reduction Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irPlace a Bulletin Call Kenny, for our NE 3rd Street Bend location. •Tall Grass CCB li c ense at rigation systems to be M are P i X a t B e ljd b l j l e ti l j , CO m help wanted ad 1199 NE Hemlock, Western Heavy Haul, www.hirealicensed• Low Limbs licensed w i t h the On a classified ad today and Redmond, OR 541-447-5643 contractor.com •Brush and Debris Landscape ContracIf you are interested in applying for this go to reach over (541) 923-0703 or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit www.bendbulletin.com position, or seeing what else may be 60,000 readers The Bulletin recomn umber is to be i nProtect your home to view additional available in your area, please visit our each week. mends checking with with defensible space cluded in all adverphotos of the item. website and apply online at Your classified ad the CCB prior to contisements which indiSertrrng Central Oregon since 1903 www.columbiabank.com will also tracting with anyone. cate the business has Landscape appear on Some other t rades a bond,insurance and Tools • Digital Imaging Specialist Columbia Bankis proud tobe an Malntenance bendbulletin.com also req u ire addiworkers c o mpensaPart-time Position Available Equal Opportunity Employer. tional licenses and Full or Partial Service tion for their employ- 5' cross-cut saw, recently which currently • Mowing aEdging certifications. ees. For your protec- filed, w/handles sharp receives over The Bulletin is seeking an individual to work •Pruning Weeding tion call 503-378-5909 $100. 541-815-7330 1.5 million page AutoRenew Coordinator with the news and advertising departments to or use our website: USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Sprinkler Adjustments views every The Bulletin is seeking an individual to join our tone and process digital photos and scan www.lcb.state.or.us to Ladder, aluminum exmonth at no fast-paced Circulation team. We have a current images for use in print and on the web. This is Door-to-door selling with Fertilizer included check license status tension, 28', exc cond, extra cost. opening for an AutoRenew Coordinator. The a deadline-oriented position requiring detailed fast results! It's the easiest with monthly program before contracting with $125. 541-388-6795 ideal candidate will be extremely analytical and Bulletin work. Responsibilities also include uploading the business. Persons way in the world to sell. be able to focus on details. This position is in Classifieds photo and text content to The Bulletin web doing land scape the accounting field, requiring accuracy while Its not too late Get Results! s ite. Expert l evel P hotoshop skills a n d m aintenance do n ot Building Materials 1he Bulletin Classified following strict written procedures without fail. proficiency in color correction and toning images for a beautiful Call 541-385-5809 r equire an L C B 10-key experience helpful. Computer literacy is are a must; knowledge of Adobe InDesign and 541-385-5809 cense. or place your ad landscape Bend Habitat lllustrator is a p l us. Pre-employment drug required. Ability and willingness to cross train • Lawn Restoration on-line at RESTORE into other tasks also a plus. This full time posiALLEN REINSCH screen. The Bulletin is an equal opportunity •Weed Free beds Building Supply Resale bendbulletin.com Concrete Construction tion offers benefits including health, vacation, Yard maintenance 8 employer that provides competitive wages and •Bark Installation Quality at LOW and a 401-k plan. Compensation between clean-up, thatching, benefits. Send a resume with qualifications, PRICES JJ & B Construction, 341 $10-$11 per hour based upon experience with a plugging & much more! skills, experience and a past employment 740 NE 1st quality concrete work. EXPERIENCED monthly incentive program. This is a Monday Call 541-536-1294 Horses & Equipment history to: 541-312-6709 Over 30 Years Exp. Commercial through Friday, 8-5 position. For more informaOpen to the public. Sidewalks; RV pads; Maverick Landscaping & Residential tion, please send your resume Attn: Amy Work harnesses 8 bridles The Bulletin Driveways; Color & Mowing, weedeating, y d Senior Discounts Husted, Office Manager, c/o The Bulletin, PO Sisters Habitat ReStore for team of horses $100 Attn: James Baisinger Stamp wor k a v a il. detail., chain saw work, Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. 541-390-1466 Building Supply Resale obo. 541-504-9720 1777 SW Chandler Ave. Also Hardwood floor- Same Day Response bobcat excv., etc! LCB Quality items. PO Box 6020 ing a t aff o r dable ¹8671 541-923-4324 358 Single Copy District Representative LOW PRICES! Bend, OR 97708-6020 Nelson prices. 541-279-31 83 The Bulletin Circulation department is looking for 150 N. Fir. Farmers Column EOE / Drug-Free Workplace Villanueva Lawn Care. CCB¹190612 Landscaping & a District Representative to join our Single Copy 541-549-1 621 Maintenance,clean-up, Maintenance team. Overall focus is the representation, sales Open to the public. Wanted: Irrigated farm thatching + more! Debris Removal Serving Central and presentation of The Bulletin newspaper. ground, under pivot irFree estimates. Oregon Since 2003 rigation, i n C e n tral These apply to news rack locations, hotels, spe541-981-8386 Sertrtng Central Oregon since 1903 JUNK BE GONE Residental/Commercial OR. 541-419-2713 cial events and news dealer outlets. Daily reFuel & Wood Just bought a new boat? sponsibilities include driving a company vehicle I Haul Away FREE Advertising Account Executive Sprinkler Sell your old one in the 383 to service a defined district, ensuring newspaFor Salvage. Also Activation/Repair classifieds! Ask about our WHEN BUYING per locations are serviced and supplied, manCleanups & Cleanouts Produce & Food The Bulletin is looking for a professional and Super Seller rates! Back Flow Testing aging newspaper counts for the district, building FIREWOOD... Mel, 541-389-8107 driven Sales and Marketing person to help our 541-385-5809 relationships with our current news dealer locaTHOMAS ORCHARDS customers grow their businesses with an To avoid fraud, Maintenance tions and growing those locations with new outKimberly,Oregon Handyman expanding list of broad-reach and targeted .Thatch & Aerate The Bulletin Painting/Wall Covering lets. Position requires total ownership of and acU-pick products. This full time position requires a • Spring Clean up recommends paycountability of all single copy elements within I DO THAT! • Early semi cling background in consultative sales, territory •Weekly Mowing ment for Firewood WESTERN PAINTING that district. This full time position will become Home/Rental repairs management and a ggressive prospecting & Edging only upon delivery peaches Spring Crest CO. Richard Hayman, available late July as a long time employee will Small jobs to remodels •Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly skills. Two years of media sales experience is • Pie cherries and inspection. a semi-retired paintbe retiring. Work schedule will be Thursday Honest, guaranteed preferable, but w e w i l l t r ai n t h e r i g ht Maintenance • A cord is 128 cu. ft. (call for availability) ing contractor of 45 through Monday with Tuesday and Wednesday work. CCB¹151573 •Bark, Rock, Etc. 4' x 4' x 8' candidate. In c l udes a compe t itive Ready-picked years. S m all Jobs off. Requires good communication skills, a Dennis 541-317-9768 compensation package including benefits, and • Receipts should Welcome. Interior & • Sweet Cherries strong attention to detail, the ability to lift 45 rewards an aggressive, customer focused ~Landaaa tn Exterior. c c b ¹ 5184. include name, • Early semi-cling ERIC REEVE HANDY •Landscape pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to salesperson with unlimited earning potential. phone, price and 541-388-6910 SERVICES. Home 8 peaches multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong Construction kind of wood BRING CONTAINERS Commercial Repairs, •Water Feature service/team orientation, sales and problem Email your resume, cover letter purchased. for U-PICK Carpentry-Painting, solving skills. Send inquiries and resume to: Remodeling/Carpentry • Firewood ads Installation/Maint. and salary history to: Open 7 days week, 8 Pressure-washing, •Pavers circulation@bendbulletin.com Jay Brandt, Advertising Director MUST include a.m. to 6 p.m. ONLY! Honey Do's. On-time •Renovations SILVER LINING jbrandt@bendbulletin.com species 8 cost per 541-934-2870 promise. Senior Applications are available at the front desk. CONSTRUCTION •Irrigations Installation or drop off your resume in person at cord to better serve Discount. Work guarDrop off your resume in person at Residential const., Look for updates on 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; our customers. anteed. 541-389-3361 Senior Discounts remodels, maint. 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Facebook. Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; or 541-771-4463 No phone inquiries please. Bonded & Insured 8 repair. CCB ¹199645 We are at the Bend No phone inquiries please. The Bulletin Pre-employment drug testing required. Bonded 8 Insured 541-815-4458 Cody Aschenbrenner Farmers Market on Sererng Central Oregon since l903 EOE / Drug Free Workplace CCB¹181595 LCB¹8759 541-263-1268 Wednesdays, 3-7 p.m. EOE/Drug Free Workplace

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The Bulletin

The Bulletin



E4 THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DAILY BRI DG E C LU B

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Will Sh ortz

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33 It's for the birds e7World capital thats a settIng for three Bond films time voters es "See!" 4a Dante's es Doc Brown in "The Divine the "Back to Comedy," e.g. the Future" films 43 Return addressee? To Frosted Flakes mascot as Horse-drawn 44 Badlands sight Ta Clever vehicle 48 Teachers' comment ae Begin a journey union: Abbr. 2o Took care of 47 Del (fastbusiness DOWN food chain) 23 Shed item 3 PayPal funds, 22 Lines first used 49 Supermarket e.g. option on a pack of 2 Kinda Wrigley's gum: s3 Consist of 3Accesscard, Abbr. say ss Hoopster Ming 24 Word before 4 Modest kiss se " won't!" "happiness," s Lay off "majesty" se Faces 6 Escort to the and "fame" at sz Where dooi' the start of a something's 7 Some plugs Shelley poem always 2s Discovers 8 Santo Domingo brewing? is on one 29 They're taken ss Relax 9 Give rise to in hammocks 32 Ref. with ss Quarrel ... or a zo Continued more than feature of five zx Conquistador's 21/2 million answers in this quest puzzle quotations 32 Jai z3 Lopsided win ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE zs Early secondcentury year J IB S PER 0 T S HED E MU S ERI C H A E R O 2o Kit Carson, professionally T H E R E SNO T E L L I NG 23 Ltr. addenda S I N L EES DEE RES 28 Former POS I T S ONS White House T H AT S N OT T RUE nickname PA L A U H A R A U R A 27 Enlarge a hole AM O F GLA S S R EGS in RO L F UAL A G R E E 2e Lip 3o Big eater T I L L N EXT T I ME 31 Plant, maybe 0Y O NA T I P S 34 Marine eagle N OF U S G RAN SES 3s Rank T H E N E WT E S T A M E N T -Willow" W I NG HA N 0 I L E I A 37 " (song from T O N E 0 B E S E B ANG "The Mikado")

ACROSS

Utter confidence

i Lingo suffix 4 City down the river from Florence s "Seriously!" 34 Accepted defeat zs Explain in detail 37 A and others

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services

Cy the Cynic defines confidence as utter ignorance of the possibility of failure. That seems to fit the approach of today's declarer. East put up the king on the first spade, and South took the ace, led a heart to dummy and let the queen of clubsridewith serene confidence. He was shaken when West produced the king and led another spade. South won and cashed three clubs and two hearts, but East took the last four tricks with the ace of diamonds and good spades. Down one.

What do you say? ANSWER: You risked a l ight third-seat opening to direct a lead and make it harder for the opponents to come in, but now you must pass. Partner has five or more hearts, so the contract may be playable. If you act again, you will confirm a sound opening bid and may get your side too high. West dealer N-S vulnerable

NORTH 484 QAQ10 C J 985 oeoQ J 106

ERROR As faras I know, confidence never won a trick. South erred. Since East will have the ace of diamonds or king of clubs for his opening bid, South must lead a diamond from dummy at Trick Three. If East plays low, South scores the king, returns to dummy to finesse in clubs, and has nine tricks even if West holds the king. If West had the ace of diamonds, he could win and return a spade, but then South could finesse successfully in clubs, winning four clubs, two spades and three hearts.

WEST 4653 99763 2 0 74 4K52

EAST 4o K J 1092 Ivi 84

0 AQ 102 A73

SOUTH 4aAQ7 QKJ5 C K 63 4A984 West P ass P ass

DAILY QUESTION

No. 0606

North Pass 3 NT

East South 14 1 NT All Pa s s

Youhold: 4oKI 1 0 9 2 0 8 4 0 A Q 10 2 4 7 3. After two passes, Opening lead — 4a 3 you open one spade. Your partner bids two hearts. The opponents pass. (C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, luc.

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

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07/1 1/1 3


THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 11 2013 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space

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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719- Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 -Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land

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rfs, Perfect C.O. fishing boat!

14' Glastron tri-hull. 25hp 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, Beautiful h o u seboat D i s covery NATIONAL DOLPHIN Merc. Almost new elec inboard motor, g r eat $85,000. 541-390-4693 Fleetwood 40' 2003, diesel mo- 37' 1997, loaded! 1 trolling motor. Newer full cond, well maintained, www.centraloregon torhome w/all slide, Corian surfaces, Snowmobiles • canvas top. Many extras. $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 houseboat.com options-3 slide outs, wood floors (kitchen), $2700. 541-504-8645 GENERATE SOME ex- satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, 2-dr fridge, convection ( 2) 2000 A r ctic C a t Vizio TV & Z L580's EFI with n e w citement in your neig- etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. microwave, Wintered in h e ated roof satellite, walk-in covers, electric start w/ borhood. Plan a gashower, new queen bed. shop. $89,900 O.B.O. reverse, low miles, both rage sale and don't White leather hide-a541-447-8664 excellent; with new 2009 forget to advertise in bed & chair, all records, Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, re' classified! 385-5809. no pets or s moking. drive off/on w/double tilt, 14'8 e boat, 40hp Mer- 19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, $28,450. lots of accys. Selling due cury outboard (4-stroke, new upholstery, new elecSererng Central Oregon since tglB Call 541-771-4800 to m e dical r e asons.electric trim, EFI, less tronics, winch, much more. $6000 all. 541-536-8130 than 10 hrs) + electric $9500. 541-306-0280 Where can you find a Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, trolling motor, fish finder, Just bought a new boat? Watercraft Sell your old one in the helping hand? short track, variable $5000 obo. 541-548-2173 classifieds! Ask about our G ulfstream Su n exhaust valves, elecFrom contractors to Ads published in eWaSuper Seller rates! sport 30' Class A tric s t art, r e v erse, tercraft" include: Kay- 1988 ne w f r i dge, yard care, it's all here 541-385-5809 manuals, rec o rds, rafts and motor- TV, solar panel, new in The Bulletin's 20' 1993 Sea Nympf Fish aks, new spare belt, cover, Ized personal refrigerator, wheelheated hand g rips, & Ski, 50 hrs on new watercrafts. "Call A Service For chair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W engine, fish finder, chart "boats" please see nice, fast, $999. Call 14' Professional" Directory g enerator, G o o d a luminum bo a t plotter & VHF radio with Tom, 541-385-7932, condition! $18,000 w/trailer, 2009 Mercury antenna. Good shape, Class 870. • Yamaha 750 1999 541-385-5809 obo 541-447-5504 15hp motor, fish finder, full cover, heavy duty RV Mountain Max, $1400 $2500. 541-815-8797 trailer, kicker and electric CONSIGNMENTS • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 motors. WANTED Find exactly what EXT, $1000. $7500 or best offer. We Do The Work ... • Zieman 4-place 541-292-1834 Aluminum canoe, you are looking for in the You Keep The Cash! trailer, SOLD! good condition, $325. CLASSIFIEDS On-site credit All in good condition. 541-382-1838 approval team, Located in La Pine. web site presence. CalI 541-408-6149. 14' Seadoo 1997 boat, 20.5' 2004 Bayliner JAMEE 1982 20', We Take Trade-Ins! Motorhomes twin modified engines. 205 Run About, 220 low miles on it, 860 Free Advertising. 210hp/1200lbs, fast. 753 HP, V8, open bow, self-contained. Runs BIG COUNTRY RV Motorcycles & Accessories $5500. 541-390-7035 exc. cond with very Great, everything Bend: 541-330-2495 Sisters Homes low hours, lots of works. $3,000. Redmond: Harley Davidson 2009 extras incl. tower, 541-382-6494 541-548-5254 Squaw Creek Canyon Dyna Super Glide, Stage Bimini & custom Estates 70075 Sorrel 1 Screamin' Eagle pertrailer, $17,950. Dr. (corner of Sorrel 8 formance kit + many opWinnebago Outlook 541-389-1413 Mt. View) completely tions, 11,720 mi, asking Brougham 1978 motor Class C, 30', 2007, renovated over 3000 $10,900. 541-388-8939 home, Dodge chassis, 37,000 mi, extras, excel16t/g' Fisher, 40hp + trollsq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 full 17' coach, sleeps 4, lent cond, must see. bath home, new en- Harley Davidson Soft- ing, live well, annodized rear dining. $4500. Located at Western RecTail D e luxe 2 0 0 7, trlr. $5750. 541-771-5552 ergy eff. furnace & 705 541-602-8652. reation, top of grade 630 white/cobalt, w / pasheat pump, wide plank 20.5' Seaswirl Spyleaving Prineville; or Real Estate Services Rooms for Rent wood floors, walk-in senger kit, Vance & KOUNTRY AIRE der 1989 H.O. 302, call 541-447-9268. 1994 37.5' motorclosets and p antry, Hines muffler system 285 hrs., exc. cond., ng & kit, 1045 mi., exc. Room for rent, top-notch, Boise, ID Real Estate s tone fireplace w i th home, with awning, stored indoors for For relocation info, woodstove insert, 1s/g c ond, $16,9 9 9 , 16' and one slide-out, beautiful area! $500/ O ld T o w n life $11,900 OBO. call Mike Conklin, a month. 541-279-9538. acres, fenced, cov- 541-389-9188. Only 47k miles Camper c a n o e, I 541-379-3530 208-941-8458 ered decks, 2-car gaand good condition. exc. cond, $ 7 50. Silvercreek Realty rage, mtn. views. Just Alfa See Ya 200540' 632 $25,000. 541-312-8740 21' 2001 Skiers Choice excellent cond, 1 owner, reduced! $ 3 8 5,000. HDFaf Bo 1996 541-548-0318 732 Winnebago Suncruiser34' Apt./Multiplex General Moomba O u t back,4-dr frig w/icemaker, gas Call (503) 786-7835 (photo aboveis of a 2004, only 34K, loaded, Commercial/Investment (recording) 383 stroker engine, stove/oven, convection similar model & not the 17.5' Glastron 2002, too much to list, ext'd CHECK YOUR AD $8500 o r c o n sider oven, washer/dryer actual vehicle) Properties for Sale warr. thru 2014, $54,900 Chevy eng., Volvo trade for good vehicle combo, flatscreen TV, all 755 Dennis, 541-589-3243 outdrive, open bow, with low mileage. electronics, new tires, The Year of lots and Sunriver/La Pine Homes stereo, sink/live well, Call 541-604-1475 or many extras. 7.5 diesel USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! land. 1/2 Acre ComCompletely Check out the w/glastron tr a i ler, 541-604-1203 (leave gen, lots of storage, m ercial l ot , 1 7 3 3 3C rescent C r eek Rebuilt/Customized incl. boat c o v er, classifieds online msg if no answer) basement freezer, 350 Door-to-door selling with Spring River Dr., lo$159,500. 1716 sq. ft. 2012/2013 Award Like new, $ 8 500. Cat Freiqhtliner chassis. fast results! It's the easiest www.bendbuflefin.com on the first day it runs cated Southwest of nicely upgraded. High Winner 541-447-4876 Asking $86,500. See at Updated daily to make sure it is corSunriver. Great locaLakes Realty & Prop- Showroom Condition way in the world to sell. n n Crook County RV Park, rect. Spellcheck and tion for a variety of erty Man a gement Many Extras ¹43. 520-609-6372 human errors do ocuses. $100,000. 541-536- 0117 The Bulletin Classified Low Miles. cur. If this happens to Scott McLean, Travel Trailers 541-385-5809 $77,000 your ad, please conBOUNDER 1993 Principal Broker 762 541-548-4807 34.6', 43k miles, tact us ASAP so that 541-408-6908 21 ft. Crownline, 215 Homes with Acreage loaded, $13,900. corrections and any Realty Executives I= ... h.p. in/outboard enHD Screaming Eagle 18.5' Info - Call adjustments can be Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L gine 310 hrs, Cuddy 1984 Crescent Cut-Off. 541-536-8816. 745 Electra Glide 2005, made to your ad. n Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 C abin s l eeps 2 / 3 Gorgeous 2663 sq. ft. e iii 103 motor, two tone 541 -385-5809 Homes for Sale Bowrider w/depth people, portable toilet, on 5 acres. $289,000. candy teal, new tires, hp The Bulletin Classified finder, radio/ CD player, High Lakes Realty 8 23K miles, CD player, rod holders, full canvas, fishfinder, exc. cond. $219,500 Great Room cash, OBO. Monaco Windsor, 2001, Cougar 33 ff. 2006, Property Management hydraulic clutch, ex- EZ Loader trailer, exclnt $7,500 634 Design! 3 bdrms, 2.5 Call 541-388-8339 loaded! (was $234,000 541-536-0117 cellent condition. 14 ft. slide, awning, baths, great room with cond, $11,500. Apt./Multiplex NE Bend new) Solid-surface Highest offer takes it. Ads published in the easy lift, stability bar, 707-484-3518 (Bend) gas fire. High efficounters, convection/ 763 541-480-8080. "Boats" classification ** bumper extends for ciency furnace, cen**No Application Fee micro, 4-dr, fridge, 18.7' Sea Ray Monaco, include: Speed, fish- D odge 2 2' 19 7 8 Recreational Homes extra cargo, all actral AC. washer/dryer, ceramic 2 bdrm, 1 bath, 1984, 185hp, V6 Mering, drift, canoe, class C, 67K mi., cess. incl., like new Mike Everidge, Broker 8 Property tile & carpet, TV, DVD, $530 8 $540 w/lease. Cruiser, full canvas, life house and sail boats. good cond.$3500. condition, stored in 541-390-0098 or satellite dish, leveling, vests, bumpers, water Carports included! 541-389-4873 For all other types of RV barn, used less 541-388-0404 8-airbags, power cord 130339 Wild River Dr., skis, swim float, extra watercraft, please go t han 10 t i mes l o reel, 2 full pass-thru FOX HOLLOW APTS. Hunter Properties LLC Crescent. waterfront, prop 8 more. EZ Loader People Look for Information to Class 875. trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 c ally, no p ets o r log-sided, 3 bedroom, (541) 383-3152 About Products and Shadow/Aero trailer, never in saltwater, 541-385-5809 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 smoking. $20,000 2 bath with garden tub Honda Cascade Rental Find exactly what 750, 2007 Black, 11K always garaged, very Services Every Day through Diesel gen set. $85,000 obo. 541 -536-2709. Management. Co. clean, all maint. records. you are looking for in the in master, a d ream mi, 60 mpg, new deobo. 541-233-7963 TheBulletin Classifieds kitchen with Whirlpool $5500. 541-389-7329 tachable windshield, CLASSIFIEDS a ppliances, log a c648 Mustang seat & tires; cents throughout, firedetachable Paladin Houses for 6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, place, covered enterbackrest & luggage Rent General 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, taining d e ck , RV w/keylock.Vanceview. By owner, ideal for garage, graveled drive rack Hines pipes, great extended family. PUBLISHER'S and secluded on 4.52 sound. Cruise control, $590,000. 541-390-0886 NOTICE acre. Minutes f rom audible turn signals if<' All real estate adverlakes and Willamette for safety. $4495 obo. e NOTICE tising in this newspac,ajii egge Ski Pass. SnowmoJack, 541-549-4949 All real estate adver- bile from your front per is subject to the F air H o using A c t tised here in is sub- yard in the winter or which makes it illegal ject to t h e F e deral fish from the Little Deto a d v ertise "any F air H o using A c t , schutes in your back preference, limitation which makes it illegal yard. .c~tt~.. $225, 000/ or disc r imination to advertise any pref- MLS¹201304428. based on race, color, erence, limitation or Call Kerry at religion, sex, handi- discrimination based 541-81 5-0606. Victory TC 2002, cap, familial status, on race, color, relict s Cascade Realty, marital status or nagion, sex, handicap, runs great, many 541-536-1731 tional origin, or an in- familial status or naaccessories, new tional origin, or inten- 637 Acres with recretention to make any tires, under 40K i tion to make any such such pre f e rence, ation cabin and miles, well kept. ts f limitation or discrimi- preferences, l i mitastream. in forest, west $6000 or P artial nation." Familial sta- tions or discrimination. of Silver Lake, OR Trade/firearms tus includes children We will not knowingly .541-480-7215 541-647-4232 accept any advertisunder the age of 18 living with parents or ing for r eal e state 775 legal cus t o dians, which is in violation of 865 Manufactured/ pregnant women, and this law. All persons ATVs Mobile Homes are hereby informed people securing custody of children under that all dwellings ad18. This newspaper vertised are available FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, will not knowingly ac- on an equal opportuti e $46,500 finished t cept any advertising nity basis. The Bulleon your site. for real estate which is tin Classified J and M Homes in violation of the law. 746 541-548-5511 O ur r e a ders ar e Honda TRX 450R sport hereby informed that Northwest Bend Homes quad 2008, low hrs, new LOT MODEL all dwellings adverwheels & DNC perf. pipe LIQUIDATION tised in this newspa- 2812 NW Golf Course$4250. 541-647-8931 per are available on Immaculate & bright Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year 870 an equal opportunity townhome in River's conditional warranty. basis. To complain of Edge, $285,000. Boats & Accessories Finished on your site. discrimination cal l TEAM Birtola Garmyn ONLY 2 LEFT! HUD t o l l -free at High Desert Realty 12' SeaKing. great alum. Redmond, Oregon 1-800-877-0246. The 541-312-9449 fishing boat, 3 seats, 541-548-5511 toll f re e t e lephone www. BendOregon V-Hull l ight w e ight, JandMHomes.com RealEstate.com number for the hear$400. 541-388-2159 ing im p a ired is 1-800-927-9275. „

, .

The Bulletin

The Bulletin

50~0~XD~D ~

-.+w=p4-9;

1

The Bulletin

Rent /Own 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes $2500 down, $750 mo. OAC. J and M Homes 541-548-5511 687

Commercial for Rent/Lease 3000 sq ft @ 40C /sq ft, 3-phase pwr, fire sprinklers, approx 26' ceilings, 12x14 overhead door. Avail8/1. 530-305-0104

Where

buyers meet sellers Whether you're looking for a hat or a place to hang it, your future is just

a page away.

Classifieds Thousands ofadsdaily in print and online. •

' •

.

Xl »

regon Class>f<ed Advertising Network

YOURAD WILL RECEIYECLOSETo 2,000,000 EXPOSURES FORONLY$250! oegeaciaorfirssdcrraeag Ãrr rrt rs a srn cc afthr oegea grnpoprr pt blcshr s ssseoaae

Week of July 8, 2013

The Bulletin 541-385-5809

DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, support, property and bills division. No court appearances.Divorced in 1-5 weeks possible.503-772-5295. www.paralegalalternatives.com divorce©usa.com

GORDON TRUCKING-CDL-A Driers v Needed! Dedicated and OTR Positions Now Open! $1,000 SIGN ON BONUS. Consistent Miles, Time Off! Full Benefits, 401k, EOE, Recruiters Available 7 days/week! 866-435-8590 Drivers - We value our drivers as our most IMPORTANT ASSET!! YOLI make us successful!! Top Pay, Benefits Package! CDLA Required. Join our team NOW! 1-800-414-4467. www. GOHANEY.com.

Sales - EARN $500 A DAY: Insurance Agents Needed; Leads, No Cold Calls; Commissions Paid Daily; Lifetime Renewals; Complete Training; Health./Dental Insurance; Life License Required. Call 1-888-713-6020.

Add a photo to your Bulletin classified ad for just $15 per week.

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To placeyour photoad,visit us online at ww w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . c o m or call with questions, 5 41 -3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9


E6 THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 932

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

Antique & Classic Autos

Sport Utility Vehicles •

AUTOS 80TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts andService 916- Trucks andHeavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automodiles

805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - MotorcyclesAndAccessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats &Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies andCampers 890-RVsfor Rent

Fifth Wheels

0 0

Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390

engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs great, excellent condi-

0

541-410-2360

Al

$26,500

Call (206) 849-4513 in Bend.

Hyster H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, 541-749-0724

1995 14' box truck with lift gate, 184,000 miles, needs turbo seal. $3500 or best offer. 541-420-2323

400, $150,000 (located @ Bend.) Also: Sunriver hanqar available for sale at $155K, or lease, I $400/mo. 541-948-2963

Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, awning, Eaz-Lift stabilizer bars, heat

& air, queen walk-around bed, very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003

Fleetwood Prowler 32' 2001, many upgrade options, $14,500 obo. 541-480-1687, Dick.

Keystone Sprinter 31', 2008 King size walkaround bed, electric awning, (4) 6-volt batteries, plus many more extras, never smoked in, first owners, $19,900.

-

L

La Pine Address

J

1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963

1974 Belianca 1730A

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo.

Nuyya 297LK HitchHiker 20 07,All seasons, 3 s l ides, 32' perfect for snow birds, l eft k i t chen, re a r lounge, extras, must see. $25,999 Prineville 541-447-5502 days & 541-447-1641 eves.

What are you looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

I=~~e» 0

Redmond:

541-385-5809

g(

Pilgrim 27', 2007 5t h wheel, 1 s lide, AC, TV,full awning, excel-

lent shape, $23,900. 541-350-8629

Get your business

a ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

I w ~ ' sc' WEEKEND WARRIOR Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/

appearancein good condition. Smoke-free. Tow with 3/9-ton. Strong

suspension; can haul ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great price - $8900.

2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

541-420-3250

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

541-548-5254

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

+'

r~

IFR equipped

Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $7,000 OBO / trades. Please call 541-389-6998

For More Ads The Bulletin

541-385-5809

$28,500. 541-977-5358

Looking for your next employee? 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

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.

The Bulletin Classified

541-385-5809 L ance Squirelite 8 ' 6 n short bed, exc. cond. stored inside all but

one year. self-con-

tained, TV with built in DVD, queen bed runs

lengthwise. $5000. (503) 351- 9 621. 541-548-4632

1996, 350 auto, 132,000 miles. Non-ethanol fuel 8 synthetic oil only,

garaged, premium Bose stereo,

$11,000.

541-923-1781

battery, car and Mo n terey and seat covers, many extras. Rec e ntly senger, front & rear factory serviced. Garaged. Beautiful climate control, f ull power includes driver's car, Perfect cond. $29,700 seat, sound system in541-589-4047 cludes radio, cassette/ CD player and seperately controlled rear speakers, incl. trailer hitch. Asking $3,900. 975

Automobiles

Volkswagen Karmann Ghia 1970 convertible, very rare, new top & interior upholstery $9000 541-389-2636 WHEN YOU SEE THIS

541-589-4047

~Oo

MorePixatBendbuletin,com On a classified ad

2003 6 speed, X50

added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver,

gray leather interior, new quality t i res, and battery, Bose premium sound stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, perfect condition $59,700.

r----

The Bulletin recoml

mends extra caution I I when I p u rchasing I products or servicesI from out of the area. I S ending c ash ,I checks, or credit inI formation may be I

I subject toFRAUD. For more informaI tion about an advertiser, you may call I the Oregon State I I Attorney General's I Office C o n sumer I Protection hotline at

Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928

tg (ctti I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 s p d. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.

CORVETTE COUPE

RUN UNTIL SOLD For

only $99 or uP to 52 weeks -whichever comes first!

Fleetwood 31' Wilderness Gl 1999 12' slide, 24' awning, queen bed, FSC, outside shower, E-Z lift stabilizer hitch, like new, been stored. $10,950. 541-000-000

~

e

00V

Chevy Equinox LT Sport AWD 2010. Auto, 6-Spd w/Overdrive, 29 Hwy mpg, 41K miles, traction control, keyless entry, moonroof, air, power e v erything, X M S a tellite e n gaged, OnStar avail. MP3. $21,500. Call 541-419-0736.

Chevy Suburban 2003 3/9 ton 4WD,

white, 135k miles, immaculate. Have maint. records. $6,500. 541-280-7299.

I

1-877-877-9392.

I I

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since1903

Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

1000

I; '

Includes up to 40 words of text, up to 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold italic headline and price!* Plus the following publications:

The Bulletin daily publication with over 76,000 subscribers. TheCentral Oregon Marketplace weekly publication DELIVERED to over 31,000 non-subscriber households. The Central Oregon Nickel Ads weekly publication - 15,000 distribution throughout Central and Eastern Oregon.

*A $290 valuebased on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications.

*Private party merchandise ads only, excludes pets, real estate, rentals,

and garage sale categories.

Vf/B

e)q D>~O ' ~/ )t'te COlle ' Orcel 080 CTOr.al ~terr 8396~ es9ra ~6'rt 0/ty ' Orte @/ 8/rt/ S5~'>B/i/,„ . h4tt, 0

1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700

Toyota Yaris 2010 wonderful little car, 40 mpg on hwy, $8,500. 541-410-1078 I • 8 '~ » ~

541-350-4779.

x 68/g 8Tp5 • bra~'"'* 08O tTBh, . 555 Sl@

+ 4n

Porsche 911

Carrera 993 cou e

541-589-4047

CORVETTE Convertible 2005 Automatic LS2 high performance motor, only 29k miles, Sterling S ilver, b l ack leather interior, Bose premium sound stereo, new quality tires

ic ensinc.

Serving Central Ongon snce 1903

541-548-5886

go to

ver in an e

The Bulletin

or best offer.

www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

Vans Ford Aerostar 1994 Eddie Bauer Edition Fully Loaded, Mint Condition! Runs Excellent! $3000. 541-350-1201

Toyota Camrysl 1984, SOLD; 1985 SOLD; 1986 parts car only one left! $500 Call for details, 541-548-6592

Olds Aurora 1999, white 4-dr, 134K miles, front wheel drive, leather, air, CD/radio, excellent condition. $4000

Porsche 911 Turbo

m

Sport Utility Vehicles

Economical flying in your own

My little red Corvette" Coupe

Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport - 4 LT Buick LeSabre Custom 2004, rare 75k, loaded, clear bra seats, $2,600. hood & fenders. $6000, worth way Call for more info, New Michelin Super Rick. 541-633-7017 more. Ieather, Sports, G.S. floor heated seats, nice mats, 17,000 miles, wheels. Good tires, Crystal red. 30 mpg, white. $45,000. Convinced? Call Bob 503-358-1164. 541-318-9999 Buick Century Limited Ford Taurus 2003 SSE Ford F250 SuperCab 2000, r un s g r e at, s edan, e xc . c o n d 2001, Triton V8, May '15 beautiful car. $3400. 63,000 miles. $5,000 tags, ONLY 89K miles, 541-312-3085 541-389-9569 $6495 obo 541-610-6150

re '"

Superhavvk Ownership Share Available!

appear every day in the print or on line.

Lance Camper, 2011 ¹992, new cond, 2 slides, 2 awnings, built-in gen & AC, power jacks, wired for solar, tie-downs incl.

F ord F - 15 0 XL T 1992 4WD, s u per cab, long bed, 5.0 litre, 138k mi., power

935

www.bendbulletin.com

541-408-0273

2003 GMC Sierra SLT 2500 HD Ext. Cab 8.1 V8 with Allison Trans. 33,000 miles. Always garaged. $18 , 000. 541-504-7711.

:,<'gj@

'

In Madras, call 541-475-6302

Call 541-385-5809

Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, fuel station, exc cond. sleeps 8, black/gray i nterior, u se d 3X , $19,999 firm.

940

O

Mercury

Cessna 172/1 80 HP for only $13,500! New Chrysler 300 C o upe Garmin Touchscreen 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, Redmond: avionics center stack! auto. trans, ps, air, 541-548-5254 frame on rebuild, reExceptionally clean! Hangared at BDN. painted original blue, original blue interior, 885 Call 541-728-0773 original hub caps, exc. Canopies & Campers T-Hangar for rent chrome, asking $9000 at Bend airport. or make offer. Call 541-382-8998. 541-385-9350 Ford Mustang Coupe Need to get an 1966, original owner, VB, automatic, great ad in ASAP'? shape, $9000 OBO. Lance Camper 1994, You can place it 530-515-8199 fits long bed crew cab, online at: tv, a/c, loaded. $6200 www.bendbulletin.com TURN THE PAGE OBO. 541-580-7334

BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most Call The Bulletin At comprehensive listing of 541-385-5809 classified advertising... Place Your Ad Or E-Mail real estate to automotive, At: www.bendbulletin.com merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds 9

Oregon

AutoSouree 541-598-3750 wwwaaaoregonautosource.com

Toyota Avalon LX 2003, V6, 90K, exc cond, fully loaded, 1 owner, Michelin tires, new brakes. $8500 541 475 3647

2004 mini van, 4.2 L V-6 automatic, 7 pas-

1952 Ford Customline Coupe, project car, flathead V-8, 3 spd extra parts, & materials, $2000 obo. 541-410-7473

Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; auto 4-spd, 396, model Executive Hangar CST /all options, orig. at Bend Airport (KBDN) owner, $19,950, 60' wide x 50' d eep, 541-923-6049 w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, Chevy 1955 PROJECT offc, bathroom. Adjacent car. 2 door wgn, 350 to Frontage Rd; great small block w/Weiand visibility for aviation busi- dual quad tunnel ram ness. Financing avail- with 450 Holleys. T-10 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, able. 541-948-2126 or Weld Prostar wheels, email 1jetjock@q.com extra rolling chassis + Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, extras. $6500 for all. based in Madras, al- 541-389-7669. ways hangared since new. New annual, auto pilot, IFR, one piece windshield. Fastest Archer around. 1750 total t i me . $6 8 ,500. 541-475-6947, ask for Chevy Nova - 1976, Rob Berg. $3,400. Rebuilt 327 engine. Call Matt 541-280-9463

Call 541-593-6266

Iil

$19,700l Original low 541-598-3750 mile, exceptional, 3rd www.aaaoregonautoowner. 951-699-7171 source.com Merc Convertible 1948 Toyota Highlander Lim350 Chev crate motor, ited 2007 AWD. 31k $31,000. Call for de¹232014. $22,995 tails. 925-998-5552

l

MONTANA 3585 2008,

batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $16,000 OBO. 541-382-9441

541-598-3750 www. aaaoregonautosource.com

GMC svgton 1971, Only

+

Call 541-410-5415

Orbit 21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual

Oregon

Oregon

t

ways garaged, serious only $36,500.

AutoSource

Peterbilt 359 p o table 1/3 interest i n w e l l- water t ruck, 1 9 90, equipped IFR Beech Bo- 3200 gal. tank, 5hp nanza A36, new 10-550/ p ump, 4 - 3 e hoses, prop, located KBDN. camlocks, $ 2 5,000. IH $65,000. 541-419-9510 541-820-3724 Plymouth B a r racuda Keystone Montana 1966, original car! 300 2955 RL 2008, hp, 360 VB, centerAutomotive Parts, 2 slides, arctic lines, 541-593-2597 insulation, loaded, Service & Accessories PROJECT CARS: Chevy excellent never used 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & condition. $33,500 BMW 1800 transmis- Chevy Coupe 1950 541-923-4707 sion for sale, $100. rolling chassis's $1750 1/5th interest in 1973 541-389-0447 ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Cessna 150 LLC complete car, $ 1949; Montana 2006 3400 150hp conversion, low Cadillac Series 61 1950, RL, 37', 4 slides, ArAntique & time on air frame and 2 dr. hard top, complete I tic options, K/bed, I engine, hangared in Classic Autos w /spare f r on t cl i p ., w/d combo. M ust Bend. Excellent per$3950, 541-382-7391 l sell $22,990.OBO. iormance & affordCall f o r det a i ls able flying! $6,500. 805-844-3094 541-410-6007 Pickups

r-

Chevrolet Corvette Coupe 2007, 20,700 mi., beautiful cond. 3LT loaded, victory I'ed, two-tone leather, powerseats, with logos, memory, headsupdisplay, nav., XM, Bose, tilt, chrome wheels, upgraded drilled slotted b rake r o tors, extra insulation, al541-771-2852.

AutoSource

s Te

IHIH'IMISS IHIS

Mazda CX9 2009 AWD, Chrysler Newport DVD system. (2) 1962 4 door sedans, ¹175588. $21,995 $2500 and $5500. La Pine 541 602 8652

Mitsubishi Fuso

1/3 interest in Columbia

Honda CRV-EX 2005, 52k., a/c, moonroof. ¹050496 $ 16 , 9 95

541-548-1422

$3500 call

s

Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft Iong, 2000

Ford Thunderbird 1955, new white soft top, tonneau cover and upholstery. New chrome. B e a utiful Car. $25, 0 0 0.

• eeenm'

lcp n

One owner, Turbo Diesel, Eddie Bauer 4WD, 46,400 miles,

tion in & out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179

541-350-3393

on the first day it runs to make sure it ise corn rect. Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

541-815-9939

Ford Excursion 2004

Backhoe 2007 John Deere 310SG, cab 4x4, 4-in-1 bucket Extendahoe, hydraulic thumb, loaded, like new, 500 hours. New $105,000. Sell $75,000.

Automo b iles

Iifi,, 70

'Qij ij Creek Side 20' 2010, used 8 times, AC, flat screen TV, oven, microwave, tub/ shower, awning, been stored, non-smokers, no pets, 1 owner. $13,900 obo.

541-350-7176

,„ni,

I

CHECK YOUR AD

h eaders, roll b a r, hitch kit, good tires, straight body, runs $950. great,

with 351 Cleveland modified engine. Body is in excellent condition, $2500 obo. 541-420-4677

1987 Freightliner COE 3axle truck, Cummins engine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 obo. 541-419-2713

882

Travel Trailers

4 speed 4x4, 3 02 engine, low m iles,

Ford Ranchero 1979

Automobiles • -

Ford Bronco 1981 •

Aut o m obiles

~A-s+Ilt IIBuick Lucerne CXS 2006 Sports sedan, low miles, all the nice features you'll want, truly an exc. buy at $8000. Come & see no charge for looking. Ford Taurus Wagon 2004, 120K miles, loaded, in Ask Buick Bob, nice shape, $3,900. 541-318-9999

SSl 1C S www.bendbulletin.com

541-3S5-5S09

Legal Notices • LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R C UIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF DES C H UTES PROBATE DEPARTMENT. In the Matter of the Estate of EUG ENE FRED S M I -

LEY, Decedent. Case No. 13PC0081. NOTICE T O IN T E RESTED P E RSONS. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed p e r sonal representative. All persons having claims against the estate are required to p r esent them, with vouchers attached, to the undersigned p e rsonal representative at 70 SW Century Drive, Ste. 100-333, Bend, Oregon 97702, within four months after the date of first publication of this notice, or t he claims may b e barred. All p e rsons whose rights may be affected by the proceedings may obtain additional information from the records of the Court or the personal representative. Dated and first publ ished on J ul y 1 1 , 2013. David W. Smiley, Personal Representative, 7 0 SW C entury D r . , St e . 1 00-333, Bend, O R 97702, (541) 318-1288.

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE John A. Berge, Successor Trustee under the Trust Deed described below, hereby elects to sell, pursuant to O regon Revised Statutes Sections 86. 7 0 5 to 86.795, the real property described below at 1 0 0 0 a m . on September 16, 2013, at the offices of Bryant, Lovlien 8 Jarvis, 5 91 S W

M ill V iew

Legal Notices

C ounty, Oreg o n. These properties are commonly known as 16248 Dyke Road and 16260 Dyke Road, La Pine, Oregon 97739, respectively. DEF AULT: 1.Failure t o pay regular monthly payments from February 1 9, 2008 t hrough March 1 9 , 2013, l e s s pa r t ial payments made on July 24, 2011; February 1, 2012; March 12, 2012; April 19, 2012; May 22, 2012; and June 28, 2012, for total missed payments in the amount of $18,276.05; 2.Failure to maintain real property taxes for the tax year 2010 and the taxes due January 29, 2013, in the amount of $7,714.81; 3.0ther Trustee's Sale Guarantee: $200.00. SUM OWING ON OBLIGATION SECURED BY TRUST DEED: Principal b a l ance of $37,993.00 with accrued interest in the sum o f $ 1 6 ,415.52 t hrough J u n e 28 , 2012, together with interest on the principal sum of $37,993.00 at 12% per a nnum from June 29, 2012 u ntil paid. Notice i s given that any person named pursuant to Section 86.753, Oregon Revised Statutes, has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the t rust d eed reinstated by c uring the above-described defaults, by payment of the entire amount due (other than such portions of principal as would not then be due had no d efault o ccurred), an d b y paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and t r ust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale. JOHN A . B E R GE , OS B 871663, Successor Trustee, Bryant, Lovlien & J arvis, P.C., 5 91 SW M i l l V i e w Way, Bend, OR

Way, Bend, Oregon. All obligations of performance which are secured by the Trust Deed hereinafter described are in default for reasons set forth below and the benefic iary d e clares a l l sums due under the 97702. note secured by the trust deed described herein i m m ediately due an d p a y able. LEGAL NOTICE GRANTORS:Laura The following units S usan How e a n d will be sold at PubJames C . C h e rry. lic A u c tio n on BENEFICIARY:Mary Thursday July 18th, M. Myers. T RUST 2013 at 11 a.m. at DEED R ECORDED: Bend Mini Storage, August 17, 2005 at 1 00 SE 3 r d S t . , 2005-54344, O fficial Bend, OR 9 7 702. Records, Deschutes Unit ¹ A B — Kelly C ounty, Oreg o n. Orr, Unit ¹ B 7 2 P ROPERTY C O V - Jesse Hallam, Unit E RED B Y T R U S T ¹ C262 — Richard DEED:Lots 4 and 5 in Giffels, Unit ¹ C264 Block 1, Fourth Addi- — Douglas Clayborn, tion t o And e rson Unit ¹ D26 8 Acres, Des c hutes Timothy Woodruff.


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