Bulletin Daily Paper 6-12-13

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 75$

WEDNESDAY june12, 2013

en cs' omeo ener oni

Hike withdad

SPORTS• C1

OUTDOORS• D1

bendbulletin.com

TODAY'S READERBOARD

FATAL HIT-AND-RUN

By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

Cougafs —In a conservation success story, the big cats

are making a comeback.A3 Plus: Chimps —Potential

A Bend man will serve 90 days in jail for fleeing the scene of the crash that killed Anthony "Tony" Martin 2'/t years ago. In a statement to the court

prior to sentencing on a charge of failure to perform the duties of a driver on Tuesday, Bret Biedscheid, 40, apologized to Martin's friends and family but provided no new details of the circumstancessurrounding the crash or his decision to

flee. He acknowledged his failure to perform what he called "my legal and moral obligation to a fellow human being," and said he will understand if Martin's loved ones are unwilling to forgive him. "I'm so deeply sorry and

wish I could do something to relieve your suffering," Biedscheid said. Biedscheid must check himself in to the Deschutes County jail by noon today. Deschutes County Deputy District Attorney Kari Ha-

thorn had requested a 16- to 18-month sentence, in line with state sentencing guidelines, while defense attorney Stephen Houze had requested a probationary sentence with no jail time. See Biedscheid/A5

reclassification of captive chim-

panzees asendangered could affect medical research.A4

IN D.C.

SignS Of life —Bend hous-

a rre in

ing construction halted by bust

nears completion.C6 In Local —Bend-La Pine Schools are adding moredays

~

to the school year.B1 1 ~

own i

Bill seeks to declassify surveillance court info

A tg

l

State neWS —Multnomah County is requiring newcounty buildings to offer gender-neutral bathrooms.B3

By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

ATVS —Should their drivers be licensed?B2

WASHINGTON — Led by Oregon's senators, a bipartisan group of eight senators introduced legislation Monday that would declassify opinions from the secret court that authorizes the collection of millions of Americans' phone data. The bill would compel the Justice Department to release opinions of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, or FISC. Under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 and later revisions, the government must obtain permission from the FISC before it monitors electronic communications of foreign

Plus: Deception Pass

— Island getaway is agemof Washington's state parks.D3

And a WebexclusiveDetroit's empty schools are finding a new life as churches,

substance abusecenters and even a movie theater. bendbnlletin.com/extras

EDITOR'SCHOICE

Oregon budget talks still at an impasse By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press

SALEM — The Oregon Senate delayed a vote on a $6.55 billion funding package for schools Tuesday because it was clear it wouldn't pass — the latest wrinkle in a budget impasse that shows no sign of

breaking. Three weeks before a deadline for lawmakers to

Inside

approve a

two-year • State worker spending negotiations p l a n, Re-

are also

agentssuspected ofspying

... an across e coun ABOVE: Bend mountain biker Kirt Vorheis makes his award-winning "best-styled jump" during the Blitz to the Barrel mountain bike race at Tetherow Golf Club Tuesday night. Bikers traveled from Wanoga Sno-park to 10 Barrel's brewpub in Bend. See more in Sports, C1.

grylllg

RIGHT: Bend High graduate Ryan Roemer, 18, is still trying to organize and pack for a cross-country move to start college in North Carolina. The journey will cover 3,000 miles in only about10 weeks. See more in Local, B1.

~~

y(

M4: -

publ i cans

deadlocked, a r e still deB3 manding tougher cuts in pensions for retired government workers, and Democrats still want to increase tax revenue. And both sides are still saying the other's demands are too steep. There have been no formal meetings between the governor and legislative leaders since two days of talks broke down a week

ago. Democratsare trying to shift the debate toward their comfort zone. House Speaker Tina Kotek, DPortland, told reporters this week that the discussion has been "out of balance" — focused too much on cuts in Public Employees Retirement System benefits and not enough on new revenue. See Budget/A5

Photos by Rob Kerr /The Bulletin

or terrorism. Last week, the British newspaper The Guardian published a FISC order ordering Verizon to turn over phone records of millions of American customers over a three-month period to the National Security Agency. Since then, there have been additional reports that Verizon and other telephone carriers routinely turn over metadata that includes the numbers called, the duration of the calls and the parties' geolocation to the NSA on a daily basis. Federalrecords from the FISC and Justice Department indicate that in its history, the FISC has denied government applications to collect information only 11 times out of almost 34,000 total. Since 9/11, the court has rejected 10 applications, nine (out of 14,353 total) under the Bush administration and one (out of 6,556 total) during the Obama administration. See Bill /A4

Behind a cryfor help from a Cbineselabor camp By Andrew Jacobs New York Times News Service

MASANJIA, China — The cry for help, a neatly folded letter stuffed inside a package of Halloween decorations sold at Kmart, traveled 5,000 miles from China into the hands of a mother of two in Oregon. Scrawling in wobbly English

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 66, Low 40

Page B6

on a sheet of onionskin paper, the writer said he was imprisoned at a labor camp in this northeastern Chinese town, where, he said, inmates toiled seven days a week, their 15hour days haunted by sadistic

guards. "Sir: lf you occasionally buy this product, please kindly

resend this letter to the World Human Right Organization," said the note, which was tucked between two ersatz tombstones and fell out when the woman, Julie Keith, opened the box in her living room. "Thousands people here who are under the persicution of the Chinese Communist Party

Government will thank and remember you forever." The letter drew attention to China's opaque system of "reeducation through labor," a collection of penal colonies where petty criminals, religious offenders and critics of the government can be given four-year sentences by the police without

trial. But the letter writer remained a mystery, the subject of speculationover whether he or she was a real inmate or a creative activist. Last month, though, a 47year-old former inmate at the Masanjia camp said he was the letter's author. See China/A5

The Bulletin

+ .4 We userecycled newsprint

INDEX Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope D 5 Outdoors Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 S o Classified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D5 Ob i tuaries B5 TV/Movies

D1- 5 C1-4 D5

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 110, No. 163, 30 pages, 5 sections

: IIIIIIIIIIIIII o

88 267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

The

NATION 4% ORLD

Bulletin How to reach Us

Military juStiCe —Ambitious legislation to stanch the growing number of sexual assaults in the armed forces by overhauling the military justice system faces anuncertain future due to vigorous objections from senior Defense Department leaders and keymembers of Congress who areconcerned the proposed changes gotoo far. One bill would remove commanders from the process of deciding whether serious crimes, including sexual misconduct cases, go to trial. That judgment would rest instead with seasoned trial lawyers

STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?

541-385-5800 Phone hours: 5:30 a.m.- 5 p.m. Monc-Pri., 6:30 a.m.-noon Sat.-Sun.

GENERAL INFORMATION

who have prosecutorial experience and hold the rank of colonel

or above. But some lawmakers, echoing fears voiced by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, believe that cutting commanders out of the legal

541 -382-1811 ONLINE

process would undermine their ability to enforce discipline within the ranks.

www.bendbulletin.com EMAIL

TalidaII demding —Within hours of the top U.N. official in

bulletin©bendbulletin.com

Afghanistan issuing a statement saying the Taliban had "signaled their willingness" to talk about reducing civilian casualties, militants set off a bomb that killed at least17 civilians and wounded 39 others, many of them critically, outside the capital's Supreme Court complex Tuesday. The powerful explosion, felt throughout central Kabul, destroyed three buses taking court workers home from their jobs, according to Gen. Dawood Amin, the deputy Kabul police chief. He said the death toll might rise beyond17, as authorities were still

N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS

541-383-0348 N EW S R O O M

FAX

541-385-5804 N EW S R O O M

searching for bodies.

EM A IL

Business ..... business©bendbulletin.com City Desk...........news©bendbulletin.com CommunityLife communitylife©bendbulletin.com Sporls..............sports©bendbulletin.com

Kostas Tsirohis/The Assowated Press

A protester tries to remain standing Tuesday as police fire a water cannon during clashes in Taksim Square in Istanbul. Hundreds of police in riot gear forced through barricades, pushing many of the protesters who had occupied the square for more than a week into a nearby park.

more than a strategic stronghold. It has left them with a battered spirit and deep frustration. Their lesson from the fight: No matter how hard they try, they run into a major wall — their weapons are

no match for the regime's. Desperate for successes, some inthe op-

OUR ADDRESS Street

Syrian rebelS —The Syrian rebels' defeat in Qusair cost them

f 777 S.W. Chandler Ave Bend, OR97702 P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

Llf IS F O eS efS

position are calling for changes in tactics, away from trying to hold untenable territory toward more radical operations, such as attacks

on military bases to seizeweapons or evenincreased suicide bombings against regime strongholds.

Morning-after pill —The Obamaadministration's appeal in the

CpIpmd0 Am.

e pimppop Am.

pccciiciccpm

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

DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising Jay Brandt..........................541-383-0370 CirculationandOperations Keith Foutz .........................541 -385-5805 FinanceHolly West ...........541 -383-0321 HumanResources

Traci Oonaca ......................

TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Doran..........541-383-0360 City Desk Joseph Oitzler.....541-383-0367 CommunityLife, Health Julie Johnson.....................541-383-0308 EditorialsRichard Coe......541 -383-0353 GO! Magazine Ben Salmon........................541-383-0377 Home, All Ages AlandraJohnson................541-617-7860 News EditorJan Jordan....541-383-0315 PhotosDeanGuernsey......541-383-0366 SporlsBill Bigelow.............541-383-0359 State Projects Lily Raff Mccaulou ............541-410-9207

REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226N.W.Sixth St. Redmond, OR97756 Mailing address....P.o.Box788 Redmond, OR97756 Phone.................................541-504-2336 Fax .....................................541 -548-3203

CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories are accurate. If you know ofan error in a story, call us at 541 -383-0358.

TO SUBSCRIBE

Home deliveryandE-Edltlon:

One mOnth: $1 7(Print oniy:Sfe>

By mail in DeschutesCounty: One month: $14.50 By mail outsideDeschutes County:Onemonth: $18 E-Edition only:Onemonth: $13 TO PLACE AN AD Classified...........................541-385-5809 Advertising fax ..................541-385-5802 Other information.............541-382-1 811

an 0 i ee CaS

legal fight over morning-after pills has been officially put on hold until

By Tim Arango,SebnemArsu

is suffering as the currency loses value and the cost of borrowing rises. Analysts now worry that Erdogan, instead of finding a way out of the crisis, has only made it worse by hardening divisions among his constituents, and by

the counter and without point-of-sale or age restrictions.

digging in. Three people have

logue in sixyears.

and Ceylan Yeginsu New Yorlz Times News Service

ISTANBUL Taksim Square erupted in chaos Tuesday night as riot police hit protesters with tear gas and water cannons, sending thousands

of people fleeing down side streets, and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey struggled to contain a political crisis that has threatened the nation's economy and paralyzed the government. For nearly two weeks, the prime minister has remained

largely defiant, demanding thatprotesters leave the square, placing heavily armed police on standby to sweep the area and insisting that the demons trations were nothing l i ke the Arab Spring protests that oustedentrenched leaders.But as Molotov cocktails and tear gas wafted through the city center for yet another day, it appeared that Erdogan and his supporters had miscalculated the tenacity and conviction of the opposition. "Thugs! Thugs!" a protester shouted at the police as she was shrouded in a cloud of tear gas. "Let God bring the end of you!" The demonstrations began over a plan to tear out the last green space in the center of the city, Gezi Park in Taksim Square, and to replace it with a mall designed like an Ottoman-era barracks. Erdogan, who once advised the Syrian president, Bashar Assad, to negotiate and compromise, sent out the police to clear the park. The tactic backfired, leading to large protests and exp ressions of f r u stration a t Erdogan's rising authoritarian

streak. Protesting environmentalists an d c o nservationists were joined by radical leftists and street hooligans. Erdogan pulled back the police, but for days Taksim has been a sprawling and eclectic hub of g rievance against him a n d his Justice and Development Party. He had offered to talk today — but then sent the police back to clear the square Tuesday. At first, the city center took on a movie-set feel: fireworks lit by protesters and nonlethal s ound bombs set off by t he police punctuated the chants of "Istanbul is ours! Taksim is ours!" For hours, police would advance, and then retreat to rest, mingle with onlookers, smoke a cigarette or buy a snack from a street vendor. The chaos was contained to pockets of the square,and short clashes followed intervals of calm, allowing onlookers and tourists to gather in relatively safe spots and watch the action unfurl, and then run down side streets when the gas became too thick. By night, though, the scenes turned more violent, as the police moved to decisively clear the square — and some demonstrators fought back while others called for peaceful civil disobedience. For Erdogan, the smoldering violence represents his worst political crisis since coming to power a decade ago. It also highlights the kind of class politics that have divided society, with his conservative religious followers strongly supporting his position. But his political base — a majority — has not protected the economy, which

a judge weighs anewplan to allow girls of all ages to buy the contraceptives without a prescription, according to agovernment letter filed Tuesday. Thegovernment had appealedthe judge's underlying April 5 ruling, which ordered emergency contraceptives based onthe hormone levonorgestrel be madeavailable without a prescription, over Korea talks —An agreement between North and South Koreato hold high-level government talks this week collapsed in a last-minute dispute over who should lead their delegations, South Korean officials

said Tuesday.South Koreasaid that the talks, planned for today, were canceled but that it was still open to dialogue with the North. The meeting in Seoul would have been the first senior inter-Korean dia-

been killed and at least 4,947 injured in the violence. POPe VS. 'gay lObby'. — Pope Francis lamented that a "gay "The leaders may be searchlobby" was at work at theVatican in private remarks to the leadership ing for a way out of the deadof a key Latin American church group — a stunning acknowledgment lock," wrote Melih Asik, a colthatappears to confirm earlier reports about corruption and dysfuncumnist in Milliyet, a centrist tion in the Holy See.The Latin American andCaribbean Confederanewspaper. " However, h as tion of Religious — the regional organization for priests and nuns of inciting one half of the people religious orders — confirmed Tuesday that its leaders had written a against the other half ever synthesis of Francis' remarks after their June 6audience. Thegroup been aremedy forovercoming said it was greatly distressed that the document had been published such a crisis? If limitless anger and apologized to the pope. does not give way to common — From wire reports sense, Turkey will have a very difficult job ahead." Where Buyers Erdogan, in rally after rally over the weekend, sought to enAnd Sellers Meet 1000's Of Ads Every Day ergizethe conservative masses who propelled him to power by ClassifA~ invoking his personal history as an Islamist leader opposed to the old secular state and its undemocratic nature. His supporters represent a social class Klevation Capital Strategies that was previously marginal400 SftyBtufy Drive Suite 101 Bend ized, and Erdogan has used his HOME INTERIORS Main: 541-728-0321 70 SW Century Dr. Suite145 Bend, OR 97702 speechestoplay on those class t' 541 322 1337 www.elevatfoncapftal.btz resentments. ccccccc c.complementphomecoom "The potato-head bloke, itching his belly — this was how they regarded us for decades," he said in a speech on Tuesday. Retail $399.95 buytoday for $99.95 2013 iHeater - Infrared Heater- 1500 sq.ft. "They think we do not know Digital Thermostat Maintains RoomTemp anything about politics, arts, theater, cinema, poetry, paint- 4ave up to 50% onHeating Billsings, aesthetics, architecture." iHeater, the leading brand of energy effiThough he i s d e mocrati- cient Infrared Heaters, is liquidating invencally elected, unlike the Arab tory below actual cost to make way for leaders he has counseled, com2014 models. Buy today and save,then mentators say he appears to save next winter on your heating bills. Healc have appropriated several tac-FREE SHIPPING-TODAYONLYtics of those ousted by popular uprisings. SS34 (Availablein Wood Grainor Black)

E LEVATIO N

mplements

1-888-552-4086

OTHER SERVICES Photo reprints....................541-383-0358 Obituaries..........................541-617-7825 Back issues .......................541 -385-5800 All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the

drop box atCity Hall.Check paymentsmay be converted to anelectronic funds transfer. The Bulletin, USPS ¹552-520, is published daily by WesternCommunications Inc., l777S.W.ChandlerAve.,Bend,OR 97702. Periodicals postage paid at Bend,OR.

Postmast er:SendaddresschangestoThe Bulletin orculation department, Po. Box6020, Bend, OR97708. TheBulletin retains ownership andcopyright protection of all staff -prepared news copy,advertising copy and news or ad illustrations. Theymaynot be reproducedwithout explicit pnor approval.

Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawn

Tuesday night are:

0®©0®©o ®~© The estimated jackpot is now $29 million.

Immigration debate moves aheadin Senate The Associated Press WASHINGTON — In Spanish and English, the Senate pushed contentious immigration legislation over early procedural hurdles with deceptive ease on Tuesday as President Barack Obama insisted the "moment is now" to give 1I million immigrants in the United States illegally a c hance at citizenship. Despite the lopsided votes, Republicans served notice they will seek to toughen the bill's bordersecurity provisions and impose tougherterms on those seeking to gain legal status. "This bill has serious flaws," said their party leader, Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, one of several who noted pointedly that the 60-vote majority they will demand for passage is hardly assured. Even before the first proposed changes were considered, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, a potential 2016 Republican presidential contender, outlined the complicated state of play for a measure that he helped draft as a member of the bipartisan

"Gang of Eight" and now seeks to alter. With changes to tighten control of th e U .S.-Mexican border, he said, about half of the Senate's 46 Republicans are preparedto vote to create the pathway to citizenship that is backed by most or all of the 54 lawmakers aligned with the Democratic majority. At its core, the bill sets out a 13-year journey to citizenship for the millions of immigrants who arrived i n t h e U n ited States illegally through the end of 2011 or who overstayed their visas. That journey would include paying fines and back taxes and o t her m easures. The bill also requires a tighter border. Other key provisions would create a new program for lowskilled workers to enter the country and expand the number of visas for high-skilled who are particularly in demand in technology firms. The bill also jettisons a decades-old system that favors family ties over education, job skills and other factors in prioritizing prospective legal immigrants.

Attend one of our free seminars to learn about Medicare Advantage Plans starting as low as $19. La Pine Friday, June 21, 10:30am at Best Western Newberry Station, 16515 Reed Road 541-241-692 6 www.Medicare. PacificSource.com

M edicareRSVPOPactfrcsource.com p 800-735-2900 (TTY)

aojf jospuyoe Medicare

For accommodation of persons with special needs at sales meetings call 541-241-6926 or 800-735-2900 TTY.PacificSource Community Health Plans, Inc. is a health plan with a Medicare contract. A sales person will be present with information and applications. Youmust continue to pay your Medicare Part B premium. Limitations, copays and restrictions may apply. Premiummay change onJanuary1 ofeach year. Seating is limited socall todayto learnmore aboutour Medicare Advantage andMedicare AdvantagePrescription Drug Plans, including HMOand PPOtypes of plans. Y0021 MRK1466 CMS Fil e and Use 09092012


WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Wednesday, June12, the 163rd day of 2013. There are 202 days left in the year.

PHENOMENON HAPPENINGS

I

Trial —The racketeering trial of reputed Boston mobster James (Whitey) Bulger is set to begin.

Turkey —Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoganwill meet with a selection of protesters, according to a government announcement.

HISTORY Highlight:In 1963, civil rights leader Medgar Evers, 37, was shot and killed outside his

home in Jackson, Miss. (In 1994, Byron De La Beckwith

was convicted of murdering Evers and sentenced to life in prison; he died in 2001.) In 1776, Virginia's colonial legislature became the first to adopta Bill of Rights.

In1898,Philippine nationalists declared independencefrom Spain. In1920, the Republican national

convention, meeting inChicago, nominated Warren G. Harding for president on the 10th ballot;

Calvin Coolidgewas nominated for vice president. In1939, the National Baseball

Hall of Fameand Museumwas dedicated in Cooperstown, N.Y. In 1942, Anne Frank, a German-born Jewish girl living in

Amsterdam, received adiary for her 13th birthday, less than

a month before sheandher family went into hiding from the Nazis. In1956, the Flag of the United States Army was officially ad-

opted under anexecutive order signed by President Dwight D.

Eisenhower. In 1963, one of Hollywood's

most notoriously expensive productions, "Cleopatra," starring Elizabeth Taylor, Richard

Burton and RexHarrison, opened in New York. In1967, the Supreme Court, in Loving v. Virginia, struck down state laws prohibiting interra-

cial marriages. In1982, a crowd estimated at up to1 million people gathered in New York's Central Park to

demand a superpower freeze on nuclear weapons. In1987, President Ronald Reagan, during a visit to the divided German city of Berlin,

publicly challenged Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to "tear down this wall." In1991, Russians went to the polls to elect Boris Yeltsin president of their republic.

In1994,Nicole Brown Simpson and RonaldGoldmanwere slashed to death outside her

Los Angeles home.(O.J. Simpson was later acquitted of the killings in a criminal trial, but

was eventually held liable in a civil action.) Ten years ago:U.S.fighter jets bombed a suspected terroristcamp and troops stormed through Sunni Muslim towns

in lraq, seeking SaddamHussein loyalists in one of the biggest American military as-

saults since thewar began. Five yearsago: In a stinging rebuke to President George W.

Bush's anti-terror policies, a deeply divided SupremeCourt ruled that foreign detainees

held for years at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba had the right to

appeal to U.S. civilian courts to challenge their indefinite imprisonment without charges. Three heavily armed robbers

stole two Pablo Picasso prints, "The Painter and the Model" and "Minotaur, Drinker and

Women," plus two paintings by other artists from a museum in

Sao Paulo, Brazil. (The works were later recovered.) One yearago:Attorney General Eric Holder fended off Republican demandsthathe appointa

special counsel outside of the Justice Department to look into national security leaks.

BIRTHDAYS Former President GeorgeH.W. Bush is 89. Sportscaster Marv Albert is 72. Actor Timothy Busfield is 56. Actress Frances

O'Connor is 46. Actor Dave

Franco is 28. — From wire reports

im i I n

Variously known as pumas, panthers, catamounts and mountain lions, cougars — solitary and elusive — had vanished from much of the country, but in recent decades the species has been making a

steers), cougars are regarded

comeback, fueling both fascination and fear. By Guy Gugliotta New York Times News Service

The great migration began perhaps 40 years ago. From s trongholds i n t h e R o c k y Mountains and Texas, young m ales headed east,seeking female companionship and new places to settle. The emigrants were about 7 feet long, nose to tail, and weighed up to 160 pounds. Given a dietary choice, they preferreddeer,but would eat almost anything that moved: elk, bighorn sheep, wild horses, beaver, even porcupines. Left free for an evening, they were capable of killing a dozen domestic sheep bef ore dawn, eating their f i l l and leaving the rest for the b uzzards. They w er e a l so known to attack humans on occasion. Long ago the Incas called them puma, but today — although they belong to only one species — they have many names. In Arizona they are known as mountain lions; in Florida they are panthers, and elsewhere in the South they are called p ainters. When they roamed New England, they were called catamounts. In much of the Midwest they are known as cougars, and that is th e n ame everyone understands. Until r e l atively r e cently, they were mainly a memory. All bu t e x t erminated east of the Rockies by 1900, they were treated as "varmints" in most Western states until the late '60s and could be shot on sight. In Maine, the last catamount was killed in 1938.

/i

'r,r"

' .

e

TheAssociated Press file photo

The cougar population reached its lowest point before the 1970s, and there's no reliable estimate of what exactly the low point was. Today there are believed to be more than 30,000 in North America. Cougar Network. Surveys he conducted in Illinois, North Dakota and Kentucky found "the public more supportive than I would have guessed." But as the big cats become more plentiful, he added, "attitudes are probably going to

change."

The center of cougar genetic diversity is in Brazil, but the Western Hemisphere has six robust subspecies in all. The Florida panther was listed as endangered in 1 995, when eight Texas female cougars were released in South Florida in a last effort to save them from extinction. It w o rked. The Florida panther, it turned out, is a North American cougar whose kinked tails, heart Successand concern defects, small litters and short But today Puma concolor is lives were consequences of back on the prowl. That is one prolonged inbreeding. From of the great success stories in fewer than 30 in 1995, the panwildlife c o n serther po p u lation vation but also a in s o uthwestern "It uSect tobe source of concern Florida has grown among biologists g y g rfty when a to more than 150. and other advoMelanie Culver, ain lion c ates, fo r t h e i r a wildlife genetiCl Up IA increasing n um S/ 1 OWB cist at the Univerbers make them sity o f A r i z ona, ri. It's harder to manage the c ougar routine says — and harder for appears to h a ve people to tolerate. flOW. e volved ab o u t No reliable esti300,000 years ago k Dowling, from a c h eetahmate exists for the cougar p opulalike cat that is now tion at its lowest extinct. When Europeans arrived in point, before the 1970s, but there are now be- the Americas, cougars were lieved to be more than 30,000 everywhere, but human prein North America. They have dation and the loss of habitat recolonized the Black Hills of to agriculture took a heavy South Dakota, the North Da- toll. kota Badlands and the Pine Nielsen said, "By 1900, we Ridge country of northwest- had basically killed them all ern Nebraska. off in the East and Midwest." Thereareincreasingreports Cougars are solitary predaof sightings in ll Midwestern tors whose hunting ground states, as well as in Arkansas can vary widely in size, deand Louisiana. A young male pending on a v ailable prey, tripped a trail camera in the water supply and cover. They Missouri Ozarks on Feb. 2, like woodland and high counand dogs treed one in Minne- try but can handle almost any sota in March. habitat that offers conceal"Every year we see more ment, including desert (Ariof them," said Mark Dowling, zona), swamp (Florida), praia founder of the Cougar Net- rie (Nebraska), temperate rain work, a n o nprofit research forest (Washington state) and group and a leading source the Pacific Coast. National of online information about Park Service biologists tagged cougars. "It used to be a rarity a pair of cougar kittens last when a mountain lion showed year near Malibu, Calif. up in Missouri. It's almost rouCougar offspring stay with tine now." their mothers up to two years. And as c ougars migrate After that the young males eastward, they are likely to t end to d i sperse, partly t o wear out their welcome. Peo- avoid other males in t h eir ple in states unaccustomed home territory and partly to to these outsize prowlers will lower the odds of inbreedhave to answer unpleasant ing. After cougars filled up questions: How m any l i v e- the mountain states and West stock and game animals are Texas, the young males began people willing to lose? How to travel east. (Females also dangerous are cougars to pets move but tend to stay closer to and children? How much dis- home.) ruption is a small community Cougars are no t c u ddly. willing to endure'? Jw Nuckolls, a r a ncher in "A lot of state conservation northeastern Wyoming, lost agencies are looking into how 15 sheep one night to a single to prepare for recolonization," cougar, and 32 to cougar presaid Clay Nielsen, a wildlife dation in two months in 2011. biologist at Southern Illinois During an aerial survey at University and th e d i rector the Kofa National W i ldlife of scientific research for the Refuge in southwestern Ari-

on animals up to seven times their ow n s i z e , i n c luding full-grown elk, h orses and

zona in 2000, "what looked like three golden retrievers" were spotted on a stone outcrop, recalled Susanna Hen-

ry, the refuge manager. They were cougars — probably mother and children. "In the following years the population of bighorn sheep at the refuge began to decline precipitously, from 800 at the

turn of the century to 620 in 2003 and 390 in 2006," Henry sa>d. Since then, the sheep count appears to have stabilized at a bit over 400.

Different from wolves Despite their propensity to wreak havoc on other wildlife and livestock (they will take

as a manageable nuisance by r anchers and offered a r espect that wolves, the West's other legendary marauders, can only dream about. There is no easy explanation for this. Nielsen noted that Europeans had no experience with big cats when t hey ar r ived i n t h e N e w World but had long vilified the "big bad wolf." Wolves, he said, "had a bad rap." Ogden Driskill, a northeast Wyoming cattle rancher, offered a simpler explanation. "Cougar are easier to hunt" than wolves "and easier to control," he said. Cougars run from wolves and will ru n f r o m b arking dogs. Hunters use hounds to tree them. They are predictable, while wolves are not. But if cougars are easier to control now, "things will change," said Harley Shaw, a retired wildlife biologist for the Arizona Game and Fish Department and an author of a cougar field guide now in its fourth printing. "That time may even be here now." Arizona and New Mexico deliberately cull cougars to protect their bighorn sheep, he said, and added: "Most desert bighorn r a nges are small and isolated under the best conditions. One or two lions can have a big impact."

save smart

Hass Avocados

Cherries

88,.

$398

Chicken Tenders

Bar S Jumbo Jumbos Beef Franks 3 lb pkg

Family Pack

-$ i98 Bone-In Pork Steak or Country Style Ribs

Red or Green Seedless Grapes

Family Pack

$i88

$i98 I

I

I

Russet Potatoes IO Ib bag

S.

2...4 Boneless Cross Rib Steak Family Pack

tNteE

g

I I I

I I I

I I

I

yurchase

' ,Shop Snnrt. ie

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I

I I I I I I I I I I I I I

I I I I I

j

I

I I I I

I

I

IIIIII III 00000 07810

Excludes purchases on alcohol,tobacco, service counter,gif t cards or any other item prohibited by I i law.Limit one coupon per household. Coupon effectiveJune 12-18,2013. Offer good at the I La Pine ShopSmart. 'CN I

$288

I

Sale Prices Good at the La Pine Shop Smart

I I I

I I I I I I i I

I I


A4 T H E BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

IN FOCUS: MEDICAL RESEARCH AND PROTECTED SPECIES

ro osesen an ere isin orca ivec im s

By Darryl Fears The Washington Post

WASHINGTON-

They can be bought and sold online for personal use like a pair of new sneakers. They can be leased to medical labs, where they are poked, prodded and injectedfor a range ofmedical research projects. But such practices may soon be on their way out. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced aproposal Tuesday to protect the great ape under the Endangered Species Act both in captivity and the wild.

As a condition of any medical research permit, the requester must show it would benefit efforts to conserve apes. "Infecting a chimpanzee with hepatitis that only h umans would g e t w o u l d not reach that bar," Conlee said. "Does this enhance the species?" The National Institutes of Health, which has employed apes as test subjects for decades, has scaled back its use of the animals in recent years. According to its website, NIH owned and supported more than 650 chimpanzees in research facilities where they are subjected to experiments, and in sanctuaries where they are not as of October 2012. Housing the animals costs the agency about $12 million a year, according to information on the site. In 2000, Congress Gerald Herbert/The Associated Press file photo p rovided funds fo r C h i mp A mother chimp relaxes with her baby at Chimp Haven in KeithHaven, a Louisiana sanctuville, Le. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says it wants to protect ary. NIH has nearly reached chimpanzees as endangered both in captivity and in the wild. The the $30 million congressional action could affect the use of chimpanzees in medical research. spending limit for the 109 apes it housed there, and as of January sought to raise $5 million research. European nations use of chimpanzees for circus- to house more than 100 more. banned the practice years ago. es and Hollywood entertainHundreds of other chimAn endangered proposal, ment. That can be worked out panzees are in private hands, which must be submitted for in public comments, he said. available for lease to laboratomonths of public comment beConservationists want him ries for experiments. But those fore being finalized at the end to take a hard line. "There are facilities could suffer economiof the year, would criminalize breeders who breed them for cally if NIH continues to cut the trafficking of chimpanzees pets and the entertainment funding formedical research across state borders for pur- industry .. . d r essing them involving apes. "Things are moving down chase and sale, and it would up, and clothes makes people force research laboratories to think of them as not endan- a funnel, and what's going to request permits for tests that gered," said Kathleen Conlee, come out at the other end, we could harm apes. vice president for animal rethink, is the practical end of Ashe said he is not sure how search issues at the Humane chimpanzee use in invasive the proposal would impact the Society. research," said John Pippin,

C himpanzees in the w i l d were listed as endangered 13 years ago, but those in captivity were listed as threatened, largely to allow the trade and use in medical experiments to continue. It is the agency's only "split listing" for any endangered or threatened species, said Dan Ashe, the agency's director. Ashe said the split listing that allowed the commercial trade and use of chimpanzees in areas such as entertainment confused the general public into thinking that the animals are not threatened, when in reality they are struggling to survive. H uman e n croachment on their habitat and the hunting of apes for a delicacy called bushmeat has threatened them with extinction. "The most important thing about this is it brings attention to the plight of chimpanzees

in the wild," Ashe said. "It's an opportunity to talk to the public about the nature of the threat to chimps. They believe human use of these animals is not contributing to t heir endangerment." Fish and Wildlife's proposal is aresponse to a request for an endangerment listing submitted by groups such as the Humane Society of the United States, the Association of Zoos and Aquariums and the Jane Goodall Institute to improve the understanding and treatment of apes. The proposal dovetails with recent determinations by two federal research institutions that the use of chimpanzees for research relatedto neuroscience,infectious diseases and other ailments is unnecessary. The United States is the only nation in the developed world that continues to use apes for

Bill

"It is impossible for the American people to have an informed public debate about laws that are interpreted, enforced and adjudicated

Continued from A1 In December, Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., tried unsuccessfully to make declassification and disclosure of FISC opinions a condition of Congress' reauthorization of the law authorizing the surveillance of foreign suspects, but his amendment failed by a 33-54 vote. The new bill, co-sponsored by Sens. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.; Mike Lee, R-Utah; Patrick Leahy, D-vt.; Dean Heller, R-Nev.; Mark Begich, D-Alaska; Al Franken, D-Minn.; and Jon Tester, DMont., marks another effort to make the government's legal justification available to the

in complete secrecy." — Sen. Ron Wyden, D-ore.

given Clapper advance notice that the question was coming, and Wyden had offered Clapper the chance to amend his answer after the hearing, but he did not. "One of the most important responsibilities a senator has is oversight of the intelligence To'collect' c ommunity," W y de n s a i d . Last year, Merkley request- "This job cannot be done reed a classified briefing on the sponsibly if s enators aren't public. implementation of FISA and getting straight answers to di"Americans d e serve to the Patriot Act before he voted rect questions." know how much information on reauthorizing them. Last Also on Tuesday, the Ameriabout their private commu- week, he told The Bulletin he can Civil Liberties Union filed nications the government be- left that meeting with the ima lawsuit against Clapper and lieves it's allowed to take un- pression that the government other intelligence heads, allegder the law," Merkley said in was sweeping up information ing the NSA's widespread sura prepared statement."There broadly, in a manner inconsis- veillance of Americans under is plenty of room to have this tent with the plain language of FISA was u n constitutional. debate without compromising the law. The ACLU hadpreviously sued our surveillance sources or Earlier this year, Merkley, in 2008 under the Freedom of methods or tipping our hand Wyden, and Sens. Mark Udall, Information Act to gain access to our enemies. We can't have D-Colo.; and Dianne Feinstein, to the government's interprea serious debate about how D-Calif., wrote to the FISC, tation of its FISA authority, but much surveillance of Ameri- asking it to provide nonclas- the U.S. Supreme Court threw cans' communications should sified summaries of its legal out that case in February, rulbe permitted without ending opinions. In response, Judge ing 5-4 that the ACLU had secret law." Reggie Walton wrote that, in no standing since it could not Lee said t h e l e g islation almost every i n stance, the prove its communications had would establish a cautious and opinionswere based on classi- been monitored. "This dragnet program is reasonable process for declas- fied facts, so this would not be sification, consistent with the possible. surelyone of the largest surrule of law. "It will help ensure At a March hearing, withveillance efforts ever launched that the government makes out referring to any specific by a democratic government sensitive decisions related to program, Wyden asked Diagainst its own citizens," said surveillance by applying legal rector of National Intelligence ACLU deputy legal director standards that are known to James Clapper if the NSA was Jameel Jaffer in a prepared the public," he said. "Particu- collecting any type of data on statement. "It is the equivalent larly where our civil liberties millions or hundreds of milof requiringevery American are at stake, we must demand lions of Americans. Clapper to file a daily report with the no less of our government." said, "No, sir. ... There are government of e v ery l o caWyden, who as a member cases where they could inad- tion they visited, every person of the Senate Select Commit- vertently perhaps collect, but they talked to on the phone, tee on Intelligence was privy not wittingly." the time of each call and the to the collection of Americans' In an interview with NBC's length of every conversation. phone records under FISA be- Andrea Mitchell that a i red The program goes far beyond forelastweek's bombshell rev- Sunday, Clapper said he felt even the permissive limits set elations, has long warned that Wyden's question was not an- by the Patriot Act and reprethe American public would be swerable with a simple yes or sents a gross infringement of shocked when it learned how no. "So I responded in what I the freedom of association and the government was interpret- thought was the most truthful, the right to privacy." ing and implementing surveil- or least untruthful, manner by Alex Abdo, a staff attorney lance programs under classi- saying, 'No.'" for the ACLU's National Secufied portions of the law. Clapper's defense of his re- rity Project, added: "The crux " It i s i m possible for t h e sponse hinges in part on the of the government's justificaAmerican people to have an definition of "collect," which tion for the program is the informed public debate about he has maintained in intellichilling logic that it can collect laws that a r e i n t erpreted, gence usage means the analy- everyone's data now and ask enforced and adjudicated in sis of raw i n formation that questions later. The Constitucomplete secrecy," W y den translates it into a usable form, tion does not permit the suspisaid in a prepared statement. not the act of acquiring the cionless surveillance of every "When talking about the laws raw data. person in the country." governing intelligence operaIn a s t a tement r eleased — Reporter: 202-662-7456, tions, the process has little to Tuesday, Wyden said he had aclevengerC<bendbulletin.com

AZSTXmmg

Z)Q,

IBV27S e

I

I

Irf e t ya

II !

nline

bendbulletin.com

I ! I II I

Retire with us Today! 541-312-9690

Adout thedill A bill introduced in the U.S. Senate by Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley,

ee•

both D-Ore., and six others,

• aF C

• t,-r l

,:.g'g

n s sss ,I

Z e

e

t ss .

It • • I

Department to release opinions of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, or FISC. Opinions of the court are classified. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 and later

'S

I

revisions mandate

Bring this ad and receive a complimentary bottle of wine

and two keepsake glasses.

the government obtain permission from the FISC before it monitors electronic communications of foreign agents

Yachats, Oregon

OvERLEAF LoDGE s3PA

suspected of spying or terrorism.

800-338-0507 overleaflodge.com o verleafspa.com (Offer is good through June 27, 201 3 and Is not vatId with other offers.)

'I'

'

j~

i'

tr

,.-

g.

=

l

,9yp'g' ' p.

I I '

I '

'

'

s • '

I

I

'

s s

I

'

I

s

I I

Is

I

Fin It All

I

5pectacular Ocean Views From Every Room.

would compel the Justice no transparency. Declassifying FISA court opinions in a form thatdoes not put sources and methods at risk will give the American people insight into what government officials believe the law allows them to clo."

director of medical affairs for the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine. "They will quickly see there's no future in this, and they will get out of the business." But what NIH d ecides is still an open question. The agency maintains that medical research on chimpanzees has benefited humans. It led to vaccines for hepatitis A and B, now in use; the finding that elevated levels of salt in diets leads to high blood pressure; and the development of antibodies for treatments of certain cancers. A nd yet, a n N I H b o d y called the Council of Councils proposed new federal rules in January to severely restrict medical and behavioral research on the agency's chimpanzees that were available forresearch. A co-chairman of the panel, Daniel Geschwind, said "there is no compelling reason to maintain a l a rge research population" and recommended that most apes be retired. That recommendation, coupled with Tuesday's proposal by Fish and Wildlife, should cause chimpanzee research to "wither up and go away," Pippin said. "We will be the last country to get to that point, but better late than never."

I S ER V I N

G B KN D

I

I

SI N C S 1 9 9 2

I

t

I' I

t

I t

t

I II

i

I sl •

I

I


WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

China Continued from A1 The man, a Beijing resident and adherent of Falun Gong, the outlawed spiritual practice, said it was one of 20 such letters he secretly wrote over the course of two years. He said he stashed them inside products whose English-language

packaging, he said, made it likely they were destined for the West. "For a long time I would fantasize about some of the letters being discovered overseas, but over time I just gave up hope and forgot about them," said the man, who asked that only his last name, Zhang, be published for fear of reprisal. He knew well the practices of the camp in question, which were corroborated by other inmates, and he spoke as other inmates did of their work preparing mock tombstones, the purpose for which they were uncertain. Hi s h a n dwriting and modest knowledge of English matched those of the letter, although it was impossible to know for sure whether there were perhaps other letter writers, one of whose messages might have reached Oregon.

Life at Masanjia If Zhang's account truly explains the letter's origin, the feat represents one of the more successfulcampaigns by a follower of the Falun Gong movement, which is known for its high-profile attempts to embarrass the Chinese government after being labeled a cult and outlawed in 1999. Emboldened by an unusually open public debate in China that has broken out here in recent months over the future of re-education through labor, scores offormer inmates have come forward to tell their stories. In interviews with more than a dozen people who were imprisoned at Masanjia and other camps around the country, they described a catalog of horrific abuse, including frequent beatings, days of sleep

New York Times News Service

The administrative building of the Masanjia labor camp and other Chinese facilities is shown in Masanjia, China. deprivation a n d pr i s oners chained in painful positions for weeks on end. Several former inmates recounted the death of a fellow inmate, either from suicide or an illness that went untreated by prison officials. " Sometimes t h e gu a r d s would drag me around by my hair or apply electric batons to my skin for so long, the smell of burning flesh would fill the room," said Chen Shenchun, 55, who was given a two-year sentence for refusing to give up a petition campaign aimed at recovering unpaid wages from her accounting job at a state-owned factory. A ccording t o f o r mer i n mates, half of Masanjia's population is made up of Falun Gong practitioners or members of underground churches, with the rest a smattering of prostitutes, drug addicts and petitioners whose efforts to seek redress for perceived injustices had become an embarrassment for their hometown officials.AII agreed that the worstabuse was directed at Falun Gong members who refused t o r e n ounce t heir faith. In a ddition to g i ving the electric shocks, they said, guards would tie their limbs to four beds and gradually kick the beds fartherapart. Some inmates would be left that way for days, unfed and lying in

their own excrement. "I still can't forget the pleas and howling," said Liu Hua, 51, a petitioner who was imprisoned at Masanjia on three separate o ccasions. "That place is a living hell." Masanjia officials did not respond to faxes and phone calls requesting an interview. Approached one recent afternoon, a half-dozen guards on a cigarette break outside the women's work camp refused to answer q uestions. One guard, however, made a point of correcting the way a question was phrased. "There are no inmates here," she said sternly. "They are all students."

from Masanjia in 2010, Zhang, the man who said he wrote the letter, has vivid memories of producing the plastic foam headstones, which were made to look old by painting them with a sponge. "It was an especially difficult task," he said. "If the results were not to the liking of the guards, they would make us do them again." He estimated that inmates produced at least 1,000 heads tones during the y ear h e worked on them. Zhang's letter-writing subterfuge was complicated and risky. Barred f ro m h a ving pens and paper, Zhang said, he stole a set from a desk one day while cleaning a prison office. He worked while his cellmates slept, he said, taking care not to wake those inmates — often drug addicts or convicted thieves — whose job it was to keep the others in line. He would roll up the letter and hide it inside the hollow steelbars of his bunk bed, he said. There i t w o u l d r e m ain, sometimes for weeks, until a product designated for export

was ready for packing.

Last December, Keith, the woman who bought the product in 2011 but did not open it until the following year, sent the letter she found to the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, which Investigating forced labor said it would look into the matSears Holdings, the owner ter. An agency spokesman, of Kmart, declined to make citing protocol, said that he an executive available for an could not confirm whether an interview. But in a brief state- investigation was under way ment, acompany spokesman, but that such cases generally Howard Riefs, said an internal took a long time to pursue. investigation prompted by the For Keith, a manager at discovery of the letter uncov- Goodwill Industries, the expeered no violations of company rience has been sobering. She rules that bar the use of forced said she previously knew little labor. He declined to provide about China, except that most the name of the Chinese fac- of her household goods were tory that produced the item, made there. "When that note popped out a $29.99 set of H a l loween decorations called " T otally and my daughter picked it up, I Ghoul" that include plastic spi- was skeptical that it was real," ders, synthetic cobwebs and a she said. "But then I Googled "bloody cloth." Masanjia and realized, 'Whoa, Although he was released this is not a good place.'"

Budget

AS

taxes debate. A compromise could significantly i n crease the amount of money availabletospend on services,from both higher tax revenue and lower spending on employee pensions. A vote on the most closely watched budget — state aid for primary and secondary schools — was delayed until Monday. Democratic Sen. Chris Edwards o f E u gene joined all 14 Republicans in pledging to oppose it, denying the 16th vote that would be needed to a dvance the measure. Edwards said last week that he'd hold out for a betterdeal because the $6.55 billion spending plan would mean cuts to his home school district. The L egislature's budget committee on Wednesday will consider advancing a continuing resolution that would keep the government running temporarily if lawmakers fail to approve a budget by the end of the month. Democrats have emphasized the benefits that the additional revenue and pensions savings would potentially have: enough money for schools that nearly every school district could avoid cuts, and smaller tuition increases for colleges and universities. But Republicans are quick to point out that the Democrats are in charge and will take the blame if voters feel there wasn't enough pension savings. "In the end, one party runs the state of Oregon, and we're all going to live with the consequences of what the Democrats choose to do or choose not to do," saidRep. Mike McLane of Powell Butte, the House Republican leader.

Continued from A1 "Until we see a solid commitment from Republican leadership on new revenue to the tune of $275 million, I can't talk about any additional P ER S c h anges, because I think that's the stumbling block right now," Kotek said. Democratic Gov. John Kitzhaber m ade s i m ilar statements to the Oregonian editorial board on Friday. He's floated $5 billion in

long-term pension savings in exchange for $275 million in new revenue. Democrats have majorities in the House and Senate but need at least two Republican votes in each chamber to raise taxes. GOP leaders have maintained that they're willing to entertain tax increases in exchange for "serious" pension savings, but they say $5 billion in pension savings doesn't justify a t a x i n crease of the size Democrats are seeking. "There's no burning desire on the part of Republicans to have a chance to vote for new revenue," said Sen. Ted Ferrioli of John Day, the Republican leader. "Although w e're w i l l i ng to do that for a significant PERS reform." The pension system's unfunded liability is estimated to be about $14 billion, and contributions f ro m s t ate and local governments are set to rise precipitously in the coming years to help fill

the gap. Democrats voted earlier this year to reduce inflation adjustments for retirees, but Republicans chided the effortas anemic. Budgets for many state servicesare left in doubt until lawmakers come to a resolution on the pensions and

gure Coadk Co.

a~ B~ dU Bend Redmond

HIGH DESERT BANK

John Day • •

Burns Lakeview

'

Food. Home 8r Garden

Biedscheid

Martin's death, while characterizing the crash as an "unContinued from A1 avoidable accident" brought Under the sentence imposed on by Martin's intoxication. by Deschutes County District Tests performed after MarCourt Judge Roger DeHoog, tin was killed placed his blood Biedscheid will be on proba- alcohol level at an estimated tion for three years following .22, nearly three times the lehis release from jail, will have gal limit to drive, Houze said, his driver's license suspended and found evidence he'd infor fiveyears, and must per- gested methamphetamine and form 500 hours of community marijuana. People who had service. been with Martin prior to the Biedscheid had originally crash described him as "super been charged with criminally drunk," "incoherent" and "out negligent homicide, a charge of it," Houze said. prosecutorsagreed to dismiss Police crash reconstructionin exchange for the guilty plea ists estimated B iedscheid's for fail ure to perform the du- speed at 37 mph, just 2 mph ties of a driver. He was not above the speed limit at the charged with driving under crash site, Houze said, and the influence of intoxicants determined it was the dark— Tuesday, Houze acknowl- est section of Third Street. A edged Biedscheid had been northbound driver who heard drinking at the Black Horse t he crash behind her a n d Saloon prior to the crash, but stopped told investigators she hadn't seen the two men in the said he was not impaired. On Jan. 26, 2011, Biedscheid roadway, Houze said, though was driving south on Third they would have been near the Street when he struck Martin middle of the street just prior just north of Revere Avenue at to Biedscheid's truck striking around 11 p.m. Mattin, who Martin. was walking with a second Friends and family of both man while pushing his bicy- B iedscheid and M a rtin a d cle acrossthe street,suffered d ressed DeHoog p r io r t o multiple skull fractures and sentencing. broken bones and died at the D avid C r ouse, a cl o s e scene. friend of Martin's whose chilRecalling a s u r v eillance dren knew hi m a s " U n cle v ideo c aptured f r o m t h e Tony," said Martin was "an Albertsons across the street exceptional person," and defrom the collision, Hathorn scribed Biedscheid'sconduct described ho w B i e dscheid as "deplorable." Martin loved tapped his brakes briefly after everyone and was loved by striking Martin, then contin- everyone, Crouse said, and ued driving. A few days later, was always willing to help Houze contacted Bend Po- a friend regardless of the lice to turn over Biedscheid's consequences. "It could have been his 25th damaged truck, and officers conducted a search of Bieds- DUII, and h e w o ul d h a ve cheid's home. stopped, and now we're miUntil recently, computers nus one man like that in this seizedduring that search had world, and that's a loss, in my been off-limits to prosecutors, opinion," he said. as Houze had argued the comCrouse highlighted Biedsputers contained privileged cheid's position as director of attorney-client c o m munica- accounting for Les Schwab tions. On Tuesday, Hathorn Tire Centers, and suggested described some of what the h is status allowed hi m t o district attorney's office found avoid being held responsible on those computers, noting for his actions. "I would rather have a conthat while there was no additional information suggesting science than a get-out-of-jail Biedscheid was intoxicated, it free card because of corporate was clear he knew he had hit muscle andinfluence," Crouse and possibly seriously injured said. a pedestrian. Ann M a rie A n derson, a Hathorn said Biedscheid's neighbor of Biedscheid's famicomputer activity on the day ly, told the court how Bret and after the crash included de- his wife, Ellyn, were the first leting his Facebook account, people they met when they checking news reportsof the moved to Bend six years ago. crash, and searching for new Anderson said she regards vehicles and an auto body Biedscheid as "a hero," recallshop. ing the times he's come to her Houze acknowledged the family's aid. When her 4-year"incalculable loss" caused by daughter went missing, Bied-

scheid jumped in hi s t r uck and patrolled the neighborhood until he found her. He was the first person she called when her husband was in the intensive care unit following a serious ski accident, Anderson said, and when she went into labor at 4 a.m. and had to find someone to look after her daughter when she went to the hospital. "When we need to callon s omeone for h elp an d f o r hope, we call Bret," she said. "He is always there to lend a hand." In issuing the sentence, DeHoog said though it was clear to him that Biedscheid's decision to leave the scene was a "terrible lapse of judgment," he'd seen no evidence to suggest stopping to aid Martin would have saved his life. By failing to stop, however, Biedscheid made Martin's death m ore difficult for h i s f a m ily members, DeHoog said, as they may have been comforted knowing Biedscheid did what he could to help. Following the ruling, District A t torney Patrick F l aherty acknowledged the case had been difficult from the

•I

I II

Th e B ulletin

s. •

.

DeschutesCountyfairgrounds

IIme 13-16,ThIrs-SII All RVsDrastically Reduced

fgorImmediate S'ale! I

,'

''

kp I

I

8ggpl j ~pl

oig„'

IZKEZE6l

t. egon'

' Centra

.

ReIIlg~g]

-

;

:

-

'-

.

t

JT

very beginning. Flaherty said his office attempted to secure an indictment on a DUII charge, presenting the grand jury with t estimony from staff at t h e Black Horse Saloon about B iedscheid's dr i nking t h a t night. An e x pert estimated Biedscheid's BAC could have been near th e l egal l i m it, Flaherty said, but the grand jury chose not to return an indictment. Without a D U I I c h a rge, proving criminal negligence and in t ur n t h e c r i minally

negligent homicide charge was likely to be challenging, Flaherty said. However, given the possibility new evidence would emerge to support the criminally n e gligent h o micide, the district attorney's o ffice declined to drop t h e charge, he said. Houze said he had no complaints about th e sentence. Pointing to his client's past record of c o m munity s e rvice, Houze predicted local residents will once again hear good things about Biedscheid someday soon. "There's not a person on the planet who can't make a tragic error in judgment in a moment of confusion, shock and panic," Houze said. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammersCbendbulleti n.com

I gllANON6 lhlrs411

)

We'll Take

Anything In Trade!f-

IR~V,Super 5'ale!

Diesel Pushers! Motor Homes! 5th Wheels! Travel Trailers! Class C's! Toy Haulers! Truck Campers! Tent Trailers! l'I

I

- 2013 Clearance Models - Distressed - One-of-a-Kind - Discontinued Models - Quality Pre-Owned

HUGE SELECTION DISCOUNTED!

I

NEW 2014'S! I

I

I '

Sale Prices End June 16th No Exceptions!

DeschutesCounty Fairgrounds Redmond,OR / "-1

0ICHII BSCOUHTT NIIIIIUH

June 13-16

Expo '. CENiTIER'


A6

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

At Connect Hearing, we've learned that:

eri t earin ai isn't usta earin ai . sasa COAE78C 8 ai .

"In noisy environments, like Sunday meals with family, voices were blurry and I started missing things. It's like I was fading into the background. Connect Hearing gave me back my Sundays." Lisa, actual Connect Hearing customer 4

g

k

And a 45-DayMoneyBackGuarantee "Discount is off our list price ofanyset of premium hearing aids in the U.S.Connect Hearing lnc. B3 retail pricing levels. Any makeany model. Cannot becombined with any other discounts orprior purchases. Cannot becombined with insurance. Expires 6/30/13.

jim Leagjeld

ShowYourCard4 Save

Tricia Leagjeld

CALL NOW for your FREE hearing consultation.

~, ~o

It's as easy as Call. Come in. Customize.

Leagjeld Hearing Aid Center Convenient Bend and Redmond locations Member ofthe Connect HearingNetwork

www.BetterHearingStory.com

Connect Hearing


Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN e WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

©

www.bendbulletin.com/local

BRIEFING

Tumalo State Park wildfire contained A wind-pushed wildfire charred just more

than a quarter of anacre Tuesday at Tumalo State Park before firefighters stopped the blaze.

The brush fire between O.B. Riley Road and the Deschutes River

was reported at 2:14 p.m., according to the Bend Fire Department.

Nine firefighters, from

By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin

Bend-La Pine Schools will add two class days to its schoolyear afterthe school board unanimously approved its 2013-14 school year budget Tuesday. "We're back to having one of the longest school years in Oregon," said Julianne Repman, communications direc-

tor for the district. "It's what's best for students, so it's good news." Next year's approved budget will total $138 million, $5 million more than the budget for the past school year. The district will use the extra money to bring back the two school days it initially cut during the 2009-10 school year, restoring it to a full school

year. That means 175 days for high schools, 174 days for middle schools and 172 days for elementary schools in the district. "It shows that we're beginning to come out of the recession a bit," Repman said. "The state is beginning to reinvest in the future of education and our youth." The district also made

technology education a priority in next year's budget, reallocating a half-million dollars in funds for technology and digital textbooks, a decision that is part of a larger five-year digital conversion plan that would supply every third-through 12th-grade classroom with iPads and laptops. "Students are getting the

same material, it's just in a different format," Repman sa>d. More good news may be on the way for the school district depending on how the Oregon Legislature votes on the statewide budget Monday. The district may receive an extra $1 million to $2 million depending onthe outcome. SeeSchools /B5

the department and the

Oregon Department of Forestry, quickly contained the fire, which

was spreading rapidly due to high winds. Investigators determined the fire to be hu-

man-caused,according to the fire department, although the exact

cause was not determined. — Bulletin staff report

• Bend Highgrad will bike acrossthe U.S. toNorthCarolina

Well shot!

By Mark Morical

reader photos

Bend's Ryan Roemer plans to bike to his college classes this year. But Roemer's commute is not as simple as biking to Oregon State University-Cascades Campus, Central Oregon Community College, or even University of Oregon in Eugene or OSU in Corvallis. No, the 18-year-old plans to leave today to bike to Warren Wilson College in Asheville, N.C., some 3,000 miles away, where he plans to study creative writing and pre-law. Unlike most young adults, Roemer has chosen to embark on a journey of self-discovery before college, rather than after. And this is not the cozy, cliched backpacking trip through Europe — this is 60 miles a day on a touring bike with 300 pounds of gear over about 10 weeks. Save for a "shoebox full of stuff" that his parents will send him, Roemer says he is carryingeverything he needs for college on his bike.

• We want to seeyour best waterfall photos for another special version of Well shot! that will run

in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work at www.bendbnlletin

.cnm/waterfalls and we'll pick the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number.Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

Have a story idea or sudmission? Contact us! The Bulletin Call a reporter: Bend ...................541-617-7829 Redmond ...........541-548-2186 Sisters ................541-548-2186 La Pine...............541-383-0367 Sunriyer.............541-383-0367

Deschutes.........541-383-0376 Crook.................541-e83-0367 Jefferson...........541-383-0367 State projects....541-410-9207 Salem .................541-554-1162 D.c.....................202-662-7456 Business ...........541-383-C360 Education..........541-383-0367 Health..................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety........541-383-0387 Special projects...541-617-7831

Submissinns: • Letters and opinions: Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In My View P.O. B0X 6020

Bend, OR97708 DetailS on theEditOrialSPage

inside. Contact: 541-a83-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.com

• Civic Calendar notices: Email event information to newsC!bendbulletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" inthe subject, and include acontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

• School news andnotes: Email news items and notices of general interest to news@bendbulletip.com. Email announcementsof teens'ac ademicachievements to youthC!bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduations andreunion info to bulletin@bendbttlletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

• Community events: Email event information to communitylife©bend bulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www .bendbulletin.com. Allow atleast10days before the desired date of publication. Details: Thecalendar appears inside this section. Contact: 541-383-0351

• Births, engagements,

marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: Details: The Milestones page publishesSundayin Community Life. Contact: 541-383-0358

' n 'Nil

s

The Bulletin

j

r *

is

il V

s„, Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

R y an Roemer, 18, a Bend Highraduate, g grabs a pen and notebook to record the weight of a book, "Complete Poems of Keats and Shelley, " while packing for his bicycl e trip across the country to Warren Wilson College in North Carolina.

"My idea is after going for not require any sort of vehicle two and a half months with suppo r t. Much of his gear will barely anything, I won't really be c a rried in front and back need that much for the first term p a nniers. He plans to spend of school," says the soft-spoken m o s t of his money on food. Roemer, who gradHighlights along uated from Bend the trip will include High on Saturday. Yellowstone and Roemer, who Grand Teton nadecided last sumtional parks, the mer to make the Rocky Mountains, biketrip,isanhonor QUR 5( HQQLS

Across America Ryan Roemer's bike journey across the country will take him along the TransAmerica route about 3,000 miles from Bend to Asheville, N.C.

OREeptt

Bend

NONTANit

tortup

Wyottrl(NS

t h e GreatPlains

student who plays and the AppalaQUR STUDENTS chian Mountains thesaxophoneand "For me, personthe piano, composes Educational news and music, andenjoys ally, I've livedin activities, and local kids the same house I icaily commutes by and their achievements. was born in for 18 • School Notes and y ear s ," Roemer bike aroundtown. Roemer plans submission info, B2 s a ys. "I haven't to followthe Adreally gotten out venture Cycling Association's muc h . I've always wanted to TransAmerica Trail, which will t ra v el. I guess a part of it would takehim acrossOregon, Idaho, be adventure and seeing AmerMontana, Wyoming, Colorado, i c a . But I guess for me, what the Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Kenr e a l reason is ... is no reason at tucky, Virginia, Tennessee and a l l — just to do it. To experience North Carolina. He says he will l i f e and to enjoy it." camp nearly every night and See Roemer /B2

tbbiNOIS

KANsAs COLOitito0

ttEttTugtty

MISSOuttt

VtttNNtA ttgttTH TSttNESSEEM

. CAttgu

As eville

Source: Adventure Cycling Association Greg Cross/The Bulletin

Animal shelters seeing an influx of dogs and cats By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

Sunny days, the end of school and the start of summer vacation season may all be combining to cause an influx of dogs and cats into Central Oregon animal shelters, officials at shelters in Bend and Redmond say. "People are in and out of

the home, and doors get (left) open," said Lynne Ouchida, community outreachmanager at the Humane Society of Central Oregon in Bend. That is when the dogs and cats may sneak out and go missing, and might end up at a shelter. Over the weekend and start of this week, there was a rush of dogs and cats into the Humane Society of Central Oregon — 10 on Saturday and 30 on Monday.The animals

were a combination of strays and pets given up by their owners. On a typical day the shelter receives about a half dozen such animals. Now the shelter is close to full, and Ouchida said anyone who is missing a dog or cat should call, check the shelter's website or stop by to possibly find the missing pet. There is now also a crowd of dogs and cats at BrightSide Animal Center, which changed its name from the Humane Society of Redmond in January, saidChris Bauersfeld, executive director at the shelter. "This is the time of year that we expect it to be busy," she sa>d. As of Tuesday, the shelter in Redmond had 41 dogs and 78 cats, Bauersfeld said. It normally has 40 to 45 dogs and

about 70 cats. Warm weather plus kids being home from school adds up to more open homes and straying pets.

And many people go on vacation, leaving their pets in the care of sitters or friends. "Unfortunately the dogs and cats go missing while they are on vacation," she said. Pets may also disappear during summertime thunderstorms and Fourth of July fireworks. If a pet goes missing, Bauersfeld said, owners should put up fliers in their neighborhood and see if the animal is at their local shelter, as well as shelters in nearby towns. "Always check the shelters," she said, "and check daily." Bauersfeld and Ouchida

both recommended petowners have collars with identification tags on their animals and have identification microchips implanted into the dog or cat. Microchip implants cost from $20 to $35. Pet owners should also take pictures of their pet with their cellphones, so they have easily accessible photos of the ani-

mal if it goes missing. The crowded shelters make this a good time of year to adopt, the shelter officials said, with many animals available for adoption. "We have a great selection of cats, dogs, rabbits and other small animals that are just

waiting to be in (a new) home for the summer," Ouchida sard. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com

Central Oregon animal shelters Lostadog or cat? It might be at an animal shelter.

• Humane Society of Central Oregon, 61170SE 27th Street, Bend; 541382-3537; www.hsco.

org/strays. OpenMonday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; Saturday, 10 to

5 p.m. • BrightSide Animal Center, 1355 NE Hemlock Ave., Redmond; 541-9230882; www.brightside

animals.org/services/ lost-pe ts.OpenTuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m.

to 5 p.m.


B2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

E VENT

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

AL E N D A R TANGO ALPHATANGO: The Portland Americana band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com.

TODAY BEND FARMERSMARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@gmail.com or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. "SPIRIT OFTHEMARATHONII": A special showing of the documentary about seven runners as they journey to the 2012 Rome Marathon; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX,680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347.

THURSDAY COMMON GROUND YOUTHCHOIR CONCERT:Featuring the California high school touring church choir presenting "Bring It"; free, donations accepted; 7 p.m.; Nativity Lutheran Church, 60850 S.E. Brosterhous Road, Bend; 541-388-

0765 or www.nativityinbend.com. JON WAYNE &THE PAIN: The Midwest psychedelic reggae band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. "THE FOXON THE FAIRWAY": Preview night of Cascades Theatrical Company's presentation of a comedy about the denizens of a private country club; champagne reception; $10 at the door starting at 6:30 p.m; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org.

"THE ZOOSTORY":A one-actplay by Edward Albee about a chance encounter between a transient and a book publisher in NewYork City's Central Park; $10; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881, derek©volcanictheatrepub.com or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. "COMPANY": A timeless musical comedy by Stephen Sondheim about a single man in a seaof married couples; $21 adults, $18 students and seniors;8 p.m .;2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com.

NEWS OF RECORD

The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT

Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 7:38 Theft — A theft was reported at10:28 a.m. June10, in the area of Northeast a.m. May16, in the 20100 block of Third Street. Pinebrook Boulevard. Criminal mischief — Anact of Theft — A theft was reported at10:23 criminal mischief was reported at1:30 a.m. June1, in the area of Northeast p.m. June10, in the area ofNortheast Lotus Drive and Northeast Purcell Juniper Street. Boulevard. Criminal mischief — Anact of Theft — A theft was reported and an criminal mischief was reported at arrest made at 6:53 p.m. June 5, in the 10:00 a.m. June10, in the areaof 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Northeast Court Street. Theft — Atheft was reported at 5:10 Vehicle crash — Anaccident was p.m. June 6, in the 2600 block of reported at 4:57 p.m. June10, in the Northeast U.S. Highway 20. area of U.S. Highway26. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 2:46 a.m. June9, in the 3200 block of Northeast Spring BEND FIRE RUNS Creek Place. Friday Theft — A theft was reported at 4:15 20 — Medical aid calls. p.m. June 9, in the 61500 block of Saturday South U.S. Highway 97. 3:17 p.m.— Brush or brush-andTheft — A theft was reported at grass mixture fire, 61638 Somerset 6:57p.m.June9,inthe 800 blockof Drive. Southwest lndustrial Way. 23 — Medical aid calls. DUII — Ashley Marie Neptune, 28, Sunday was arrested on suspicion of driving 9:43 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, under the influence of intoxicants at 12:32 a.m. June10, in the 700 block of 21450 U.S. Highway 20. Northeast GreenwoodAvenue. 11:57 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 19083 Pumice Butte Road. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported andan 22 —Medical aid calls.

REUNIONS Bend High School class of 1973 will hold a reunion Aug. 9-10; 5:30 p.m. Aug. 9 at Crux Fermentation Project, 50 S.W. Division St., Bend; free; 5:30 p.m. Aug. 10 at Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Dr.; $35, $40 after June 1; registration required; contact Jennifer Stenkamp, 541548-0711, Facebook page "Bend High School Class of1973" or https://reunionmanager.net/ reunion registration.php?class i

FRIDAY FLAG DAYCELEBRATIONAND

How to submit

Story ideas

Teen feats:Kids recognizedrecently for academic

School briefs: Items andannouncements of

achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or

general interest. Phone:541-633-2161

volunteer groups. (Pleasesubmit a photo.) Phone: 541-383-0358 Email: youth©bendbulletin.com Mail:P.O. Box 6020,Bend,OR 97708

Email: news©bendbulletin.com

Other schoolnotes: College announcements,

Student profiles: Know of a kid with a compelling story? Phone: 541-383-0354

military graduations or training completions,

Email: mkehoe@bendbulletin.com

reunion announcements.

d=142545&reunion=BEND+SE NIOR+HIGH+SCHOOL&class

Phone: 541-383-0358 Email: bulletin@bendbulletin.com

of=1973.

RedmondUnionHighSchool class of1938will hold a reunion Tuesday; Noon; Juniper Golf named to the spring 2013 dean's Club, 1938 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; free; spouses, escorts, list at Bellarmine University in wheelchairs and walkers welcome; Louisville, Ky. RSVP by June1 with number of The following local students have guests; contact Everett Endicott, been named to the spring 2013 541-548-4062 or jigger© dean's list at George Fox University bendbroadband.com. in Newberg:Anthooygeebartand Scott Stevens. following local students have COLLEGE NOTES The graduated from Pacific University CaseyMattox,ofBend,was in Forest Grove: AshlelNoble,

Roemer

rollment of just 1,000 students, is known for its curriculum of work, academics and service, called "the Triad," which requiresevery student to work an on-campus job, perform at least 100 hours of community service and complete his or

Continued from B1 Orientation at Warren Wilson is Aug. 20, so Roemer is hoping to arrive at least a few days before that. Warren Wilson, with an en-

'

Hanna Landrus,Kegie Lewis, Natalie Schroeder,Bend; Katherine Gglem, Alexandra Greenberg, Prineville; and Brfaoa Young, Sisters. KristynDeckard, of Bend, has graduated with a bachelor's degree in business administration from University of San Diego. AbigailAskreo,of Bend, was named to the spring 2013 dean's list at Northwest Nazarene

her academic course work in order to graduate. Roemer says he hopes to pursue environmental advocacy and possibly choose environmental law as a career path. "I enjoy putting myself out

University in Nampa, Idaho.

TEEN FEATS Mountain View high school studentDylan GiHospfoplaced second overall in the bass violin at the Oregon School Activities Association's solo music state championships last month at Lewis and Clark College.

there to learn," Roemer says. "Just learning is my passion." The young man w i ll n o doubt learn much about himself over 3,000 miles in the saddle. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbufletin.com

I

o g

DEDICATIONCEREMONY: Learn why Flag Day is important and recognize the veteran service in our community; flagpole dedication ceremony at the front entryway; free; 9-9:30 a.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-706-3795 or kejohnson©stcharleshealthcare. org. SISTERSWINE & BREW FESTIVAL: A gathering of wineries, breweries, distilleries and more; free admission, tokens required for tastings; 2-9 p.m.; Village Green Park, 335 S. Elm St.; 541549-6022 ext. 200 or www. sisterswineandbrew.com.

SCHOOL NOTES

arrest made at12:32a.m. June10, in the 700 block of Northeast Greenwood Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported and an arrest made at7:11p.m. June 7, in the1900 block of Bear Creek Road.

POLICE LOG

THE CHANGINGCOLORS: The Colorado folk band performs, with Sam Eliot; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. facebook.com/thehornedhand. JAH SUN: TheCalifornia hip hopreggae-soul band performs, with Dubtonic Kru; $7; 9:30 p.m., doors open 9 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; www. reverbnation.com

o

I /

I

• '

FdH

Ltc

thegarnergFOuP

<>~ll > >III gi l Ill

pssa "'

IIIIlliN j; I. 'I .

'

."'45 oghe'4" CENTRAL OREGON

Reach more than 70,000 adult readers in the officialTour of Homes™ Guide •

t l /

J g

8

Call your Bulletin sales representative today. Space is limited.

r

' ~ I /

ADVERTISING DEADLINE: FRIDAY, JUNE 28

P •

/

1- 82-1811

T h c Bullctin Serving Central Oregon since 1903


WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

MultnomahUnion ec ares im asse requiring unisex bathrooms By Steven Dubois The Associated Press

PORTLAND — O r egon's most populous county is requiring that g ender-neutral bathrooms be included whenever a county-owned building is constructed or remodeled,a move to accommodate transgender employees and visitors. Multnomah County board Chairman Jeff Cogen signed the executive order Tuesday. The Portland-based county is among the first local governments in the nation to have such a rule. It was patterned on legislation recently ap proved by the city of Philadelphia and was inspired by a local high school that earlier this year designated six single-occupancy restrooms as unisex. It's not known how many of the county's 4,500 employees are transgender. County officials, however, say it's not an insignificant number, and the directive will make life better for those who are uncomfortable using men's and women's restrooms. " What we h ave i s c o m plaints; people who just tell us their stories," said Kalissa Canyon-Scopes, policy director for the county's Office of Diversity and Equity. Those stories include transgender employees who rush home at lunch to use the bathroom, find a business with a single-occupancy toilet or hold it in all day. Addie Jones, program assistant at Sexual and Gender Minority Y o ut h R e s ource Center, said some transgender residents avoid eating and drinking to lessen their need to use a public bathroom. For them, Jones said, it is preferable to the intimidating looks and embarrassing questions ("Excuse me, don't you know you're in the wrong restroom?") they get w h en entering a bathroom assigned for people who don't look like them.

By Mary Clare Jalonick The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — According to the Centers for Disease C ontrol and Prevention, a n outbreak of hepatitis A linked t o a frozen berry mix p r o-

duced by an Oregon company and sold at Costco has grown to 87 people with illnesses in eight states. The CD C s ai d T u esday that illnesses have been reported in A r i zona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Washington. Townsend Farms of Fairview last week recalled its frozen Organic Antioxidant Blend, packaged under the T ownsend Farms l a bel a t Costco and under the Harris Teeterbrand at those stores. So far the illnesses have only been linked to the berries sold at Costco. Craig Wilson, director of food safety at Costco, said the store is providing vaccinations for people who ate the berries within the last two weeks and i s r e i mbursing others who have gotten the vaccine outside the store. The store has contacted about 240,000 people who p u rchased the berries at one of their stores, Wilson said. The company knows who bought the berries because purchases are linked to a membership card that customers present when they check out. The Food and Drug Administration is investigating the cause of the outbreak.

applied for the presidency at aNewYork City college at the request of "a

instate contractta s The Associated Press SALEM — With the Legislature and governor still negotiating over a b u dget, the union representing the largest share of Oregon state workers has declared an impasse in negotiations for a two-year contract. The state's bargainers say it can't make a firm offer until the Legislature passes a budget.That may nothappen for some weeks. A bargainer for Local 503 of the Service Employees International Union says the action doesn't mean a strike is imminent, but the action does set up deadlines, the Salem Statesman Journal reported Tuesday. Both sides have a week to submit a final offer and then

have a 30-day "cooling off" period before the union can strike and the state can unilaterally implement its final offer. "We think it's really important to protect our timeline," said Dan Smith, an Oregon State Hospital psychologist who leads the union's bar-

"The declaration came as a surprise," he said. Smith said the union and the management team have had the most trouble reaching anagreement on the economic package. That includes step increases, cost of living adjustments and possible fur-

gaining team.

Gov. John Kitzhaber has said he wanted to end furlough days for workers, who have taken them four years in a row. However, he didn't mention salaries or r a i ses in announcing hi s p r o posed

The current two-year contract ends at the end of the month. The two-year contracts match the state's bud-

get period. The union and state have been in mediation for several weeks, and during that time either side can declare impasse, said Matt Shelby, a spokesman for th e D e partment of Administrative Services.

dear friend." Crew told the Oregon Education Investment Board Tuesday that he has not committed to taking the job if it's offered at Medgar

Evers college inBrooklyn. Crewsays hedecided to take alook at the presidency because hehasstrong roots in New York, where hewas raised andwasalso chancellor of the public school system. Crew isone of three finalists for the MedgarEversjob. Hewashired last summerto oversee Gov. John Kitzhaber's efforts to improve student achievement

and streamline education from preschool through college. DefaZiO grOCery demOnStratian —Congressman Peter Defazio went shopping at a Winco grocery store in Springfield Monday

to show how little food stamps would buy for oneperson for one week. He set out to spend just $31.50, but exceeded that by more than a dollar and said, "That's not a lot of food." KVAL reports Defazio

lough days.

staged the shopping trip to protest farm bills that would cut the food program known as SNAP and provide big subsidies to farmers.

EBSiBN Or8gOll wlldflr8S —Lightning strikes have touched off wildfires in Eastern Oregon, including one that grew on Tuesday

to about 4,500 acres, or 7 square miles. TheU.S. Bureau of Land Management says the fire is burning in typical terrain for the region, amid grass and sagebrush. The largest of the fires is east of Stockade Mountain in central Malheur County, named the Crowley Fire. The

budget.

BLM says winds havepushedthe fires, and more firefighters and equipment havebeendispatched. The agency also reports five small

Smith said declaring impasse is not uncommon and happened during n egotiations four years ago, although it didn't in 2011.

fires totaling about1,500 acres on state land in Harney County near

the South Fork of the Malheur River. It said fire crews areholding the line there. The lightning struck Monday.

Umatilla dlaze —A fire in a neighborhood in the northeastern Oregon town of Umatilla that destroyed four houses was contained

Tuesday by regional fire crews. Therewere noreports of injuries and there was no immediate word about damageestimates. The East Oregonian reported that the Umatilla Fire Department began calling for backup from all regional departments at about 2:45 p.m. Fire depart-

ments from Umatilla, lrrigon, Boardman, Stanfield, Hermiston, Pendleton, Heppner, lone, Pilot Rock, Helix and Athena were on the scene. Crews battled the blaze in winds gusting up to 30 miles per hour.

Portland Meadows schedule —Live racing will return to

)

Portland Meadows next month, but with a reduced schedule and

no night racing. Track officials said Tuesdaythe meetwill start July 21 and finish in January. Races will be held on Sunday during the first few weeks of the season, and then Wednesday afternoon will

be added in mid-August. Portland Meadowsmoved to asummer

".d.

schedule in 2012, which put it in competition for horses with Seattle's

Emerald Downs. Track officials hope areduced schedule combined with richer purses for winning owners will boost field sizes andmake

rr

Portland Meadows races more attractive to handicappers at the track

and across the country. — From wire reports

6 A'uoiou%v

Weekly Arts Br Entertainment Inside hS L GILZINE

t

Salem Statesman Journal filephoto

Members of the Western River Conservancy and Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde walk in 2011 along the Chahalpam Property in Marion County, a 338 acre patch along the North Santiam River that features intact riparian forest. The groups are part of a coalition that purchased the property for a conservation project.

& HEARING AID CUNK

www,centraloregonaudiology.com Bend• Redmond• P-ville • Burns 541.647.2884

TheBulletin r-

-

I ,I

AND OLDER

Tri es, nonpro it acquirelan Mon-Wed. or ish, wil lieconservation ,'$ 00 By Zach Urness

spl'eBds

Education chief's jod application —RudyCrewsays he's not looking to leave his job as Oregon's first chief education officer but has

volved," said Siobhan Taylor, public affairs director for the STAYTON — The enthusi- Grand Ronde. "We envision asm was impossible to miss. the land as a wild and beautiAs members of the West- fulplace to be preserved and ern River Conservancy and protected." Confederated Tribes of the The tribe has 18 months to Grand Ronde bushwhacked develop amanagement plan, through a former farmstead open to public comment, that alongthe North Santiam Riv- will answer questions of haber, they used phrases such as itat stewardship and public "oasis," "ideal" and "the best access. The property is surfish and wildlife habitat in rounded by private farmland the Willamette Basin." and notaccessibleexcept by High praise indeed. reservation. T he groups are part of The tribe manages a numa coalition that purchased ber ofareas in the western this property southwest of Willamette Valley and Coast Stayton for a conservation Range for conservation. "What makes us uniquely project that hopes to improve salmon and steelhead runs qualified to manage these on the North Santiam River. lands is the marriage beThe property, which cost tween traditional and mod$3.5 million, includes two ern methods," said Michael miles of waterfront — one Karnosh, ceded lands promile of creeks and one along gram managerforthe Grand the North Santiam — and Ronde. "We have modern 338 total acres of forest, wet- resources — fire crews, bilands and old farmland. ologists and scientists — but "This farmstead has been we also have a traditional on our radar for a long time, knowledge of working with because we recognized the the land." remarkable c o n servation Funding for th e p r oject value," said Josh Kling, as- came from t h e B o n nevsistant p r ogram d i r ector ille Power A d ministration of the Portland nonprofit through t h e W il l a mette Western River Conservan- Wildlife Habitat Agreement. cy. "What makes it special, The 15-year agreement reand unique, is that half of quires BPA to provide stable the property is intact, func- funding for habitat acquisitioning habitat. tions in the Willamette Basin " The riparian f orest i s to offset the effect of federal largely intact; there's wetdams on the Willamette Rivlands and sloughs, and so er and its tributaries. many features that make it Western River has spotideal for fish and wildlife." lighted the property since The land will eventually 2009 because of its potential be transferred to the Grand to improve fish runs on the Ronde, who will serve as North Santiam, historically the site's long-term steward. one of the most productive They've renamed the area streams in the W i llamette C hahalpam ("place of t h e Basin. "The North Santiam has a Santiam Kalapuya people") in honor of having traditionlot of characteristics that fish al roots in the area. like, including cold w ater "Today, we're trying to re- and the right kind of gravel," insert ourselves into some of Oregon Department of Fish our traditional lands, so that and Wildlife biologist Laura was a big reason for being in- Tesler said. "This particuSalem Statesman Journal

Hepatitis outbreak

AROUND THE STATE

lar property is very biologically important. It has lots of nice side channels and places for spawning. There's a relatively intact flood plain forest that's important for nutrient exchange good for fish and wildlife." Along with improving fisheries, the surrounding forest attracts a collection of wildlife, including pileated woodpeckers,western pond turtles,red-

legged frogs, elk and deer.

I

e A

I

' ,WITH , 'CART

I

III

I I I I I II

Bring In This Ad For Either Offer

"There's such a mosaic of habitats here; it a ccommodates so much wildlife," Tesler said. "Getting this property took a lot of time and effort, but it was worth it. This is one of the highest-quality properties we've ever acquired."

Good Through June 30, 2013

JUNIPER GOLF COURSE Redmottd's Public Golf Course ' I

i

Four Mild Seasons Beautiful Peaks & Lush Green Valleys Fresh Air & Clean Water Friendly People No Sales Tax Cultural Arts, Fine Cuisine, and Recreation

I

I

I

I

•$g

Tuesday, June 25, 2013 10:00 a.m. Hilton Garden Inn 425 S.W. Bluff Drive Bend, Oregon Reservations are notrequired but are appreciated.

ND A

JOIN US FORA N INFORMATIONAL SEMINAR

(Formerly AmeriTel Inn)

'VE

I

PA


B4 T H E BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

AN LNDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

re on oesn' u re s em romises

BETsY McCooc

Chairaomnn

Gottoott Bcnctt

Palll&lter

Jotttt Cosmn

Fditur in-Clnrf Editor of Edttorials

RICHABD CoE

n na ~ W F m t n M

©lct-i2

I OLO

n' te sRVE KKR..

udy Crew, Oregon's education czar, has found another way to fail Oregon students. He's failed to show commitment to his job to transform Oregon's public education. His arrogant excuses are pure gamesmanship. Crew made a promise to Gov. John Kitzhaber that he'd stay in his job for three years through 2015. Now we learn from The Oregonian that Crew is one of three finalists to become president ofMedgar Evers College in Brooklyn. "Ihave no desire to leave.There is still a heck of a lot of this agenda to be done here," Crew said. If he has no desire to leave, how did he end up as a finalist'? Did the college just make him a finalist? No, Crew applied for the job. So how does he square that with, "I have no desire to leave"'? He explains that "it's not something I sought." The chancellor of that university system asked him to apply. He adds that "it's not my intent to leave." Uh huh. Crew must believe Oregonians are stupid to try to sell us such excuses. It's so bad it's too bad the people who hired him didn't see this coming.

But the Oregon Education Investment Board should have. He's done it before. "I really feel an obligation to getting on with business here," he told The News Tribune in Tacoma, Wash., in 1995. "I don't think you can do it and walk away from it in two years. I've really opted to see this one through." That's what he said just before he dumped that job for a job in New York City. Sound familiar'? Later, when he took the Oregon job, he wanted to continue as an adviser to a California company that offers test-prep services. He was also going to advise another California company that does grading. And he wantedto take on a teaching job at one of Oregon's colleges. It was just too much to ask for him to focus on the job Oregon was hiring him for and paying him $280,000 a year. Crew does have education reform skills. For Oregon's sake, we hope he takes them to Brooklyn. For Brooklyn's sake, we hope it won't be another short stop followed by a new round of old excuses.

Houseshouldsign off on immunization bill regon has a problem with immunizations that Senate Bill 132 could help solve. Passed by the Oregon Senate last week, the bill would force parents to confront the facts if they want their children exempted from school vaccination requirements for non-medical reasons. T he bill n o w g oes t o t h e House, where it deserves speedy approval. Our state currently has the highest rate in the nation of kindergartners who haven't had their shots. That leaves all students vulnerable, especially those who can't be immunized for medical reasons. Sadly, the cause is mostly the false belief that vaccinations cause medical problems instead of solve them. The proposed law would require parents who want to send their children to school without vaccinations to get an education on the subject from a medical professional or take an online interactive lesson. The bill passed in the Senate along a party-line vote, with Republicans objecting that it violates First Amendment rights, freedom of religion and citizens' right

O

to make their own health care decisions. In fact, it does none of those things. Under this bill, parents could still say no without explainingwhy. Theywould justhave to get an education on the subject first, to enhance the chance that they make an informed decision rather than one governed by mistaken reports and conspiracy theories. The proposal would have no impact on medically necessary exemptions. Low immunization rates threaten to undo decades of progress in conquering what were once routine and devastating childhood illnesses. And the risk is not just an abstraction. Resurgence of measles and pertussis have been reported in the last year. Also called whooping cough, pertussis can be fatal to infants too young to be immunized. Oregon's current law is far too lax, allowing parents to exempt their children by just checking a box. SB 132's education requirement is a modest step with the potential to cut the rate of exemptions and make our kids safer in the classroom.

SAoe

Snowden's betrayals are many F

rom what we know so far, Edward Snowden appears to be the ultimate unmediated man. Though obviously terrifically bright, he could not successfully work his way through the institution of high school. Then he failed to navigate his way through community college. According to T h e W ashington Post, he has not been a regular presence around his mother's house for years. When a neighbor in Hawaii tried to introduce himself, Snowden cut him off and made it clear he wanted no neighborly relationships. He went to work for Booz Allen Hamilton and the CIA, but he has separated himself from them, too. Though thoughtful, morally engaged and deeply committed to his beliefs, he appears to be a product of one ofthe more unfortunate trends of the age: the atomization of society, the loosening of social bonds, the apparently growing share of young men in their 20s who are living technological existences in the fuzzy land between their childhood institutions and adult family commitments. If you live a life unshaped by the mediating institutions of civil society,perhaps itm akes sense to see the world a certain way: Life is not embedded ina series ofgently gradated authoritative s t r uctures: f a m ily, neighborhood, religious group, state, nation and world. Instead, it's just the solitary naked individual and the gigantic and menacing state. This lens makes you more likely to share the distinct strands of libertarianism that are blossoming in this fragmenting age: the deep suspicion of authority, the strong belief that hierarchies and organizations are suspect, the fervent devotion to transparency, the assumption that individual preference should be supreme. You're more likely to donate

DAVID BROOKS

to the Ron Paul for president campaign, as Snowden did. It's logical, given this background and mindset, that Snowden would sacrifice his career to expose data mining procedures of the National Security Agency. Even if he has not been able to point to any specific abuses, he was bound to be horrified by the confidentiality endemic to military and intelligence activities. And, of course, he's right that the procedureshe's unveiled could lend themselves to abuse in the future. But Big Brother is not the only danger facing the country. Another is the rising tide of distrust, the corrosive spread of cynicism, the fraying of the social fabric and the rise of people who are so individualistic in their outlook that they have no real understanding of how to knit others together and look after the common

good. This is not a danger Snowden is addressing. In fact, he is making everything worse. For society to function well, there have to be basic levels of trust and cooperation, a respect for institutions and deference to common procedures. By deciding to unilaterally leak secret NSA documents, Snowden has betrayed all of these things. He betrayed honesty and integrity, the foundation of all cooperative activity. He made explicit and implicit oaths to respect the secrecy of the information with which he was entrusted. He betrayed his oaths. He betrayed his friends. Anybody who worked with him will be sus-

pect. Young people in positions like that will no longer be trusted with responsibility for fear that they will turn into another Snowden. He betrayed his employers. Booz Allen and the CIA took a high-school dropout and offered him positions with lavish salaries. He is violating the honor codes of all those who enabled him to rise. He betrayed the cause of open government. Every time there is a leak like this, the powers that be close the circle of trust a little tighter. They limit debate a little more. Snowden self-indulgently shortcircuited the democratic structures of accountability, putting his own preferencesabove everything else. Snowden faceda moral dilemma. On the one hand, hehad information about a program he thought was truly menacing. On the other hand, he had made certain commitments as a public servant, as a member of an organization, and a nation. Sometimes leakers have to leak. The information they possess is so grave that it demands they violate their oaths. But before they do, you hope they will interrogate themselves closely and force themselves toconfront various barriers of resistance. Is the information so grave that it's worth betraying an oath, circumventingthe established decision-making procedures, unilaterally exposing secrets that can never be reclassified. Judgingby his comments reported in the news media so far, Snowden was obsessed with the danger of data mining but completely oblivious to his betrayals and toward the damage he has done to social arrangements and the invisible bonds that hold them together.

— David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain

In My View submissions should be between 550 and 650 words,

no more than 250words and include

signed and include the writer's phone View and send, fax or email them to

the writer's signature, phone number and address for verification. We edit

number and address for verification. We edit submissions for brevity,

The Bulletin.

letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry,

grammar, taste and legal reasons.

P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804 Email: bulletin©bendbulletin.com

personal attacks, form letters, letters

We reject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in

submitted elsewhere andthose

the space below, alternating with

appropriate for other sections of The Bulletin. Writers are limited to one

national columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece

letter or Op-Edpieceevery 30 days.

every 30 days.

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or ln My

Write: My Nickel's Worth/In My View

Oregon must maintain edge in mobile innovation economy By Jonathan Spalter s the nation works to maintain our technological leader-

health care to personal finance and more. Americans love mobile apps, but ship globally, one bright spot Oregonians have an especially good has been the major mobile innova- reason to love them. As a leader in tions underway in Oregon — and the app economy, Oregonians not across the country — that are imonly benefit from th e i n novation proving our lives and transforming in wireless devices, but also from great ideas into whole new indus- the growing industry along the 1-5 tries. By 2015, our mobile devices corridor stimulating economic dewill be the primary way Americans velopment and job creation. Skyconnect to the Internet. That's quite rocketing demand for apps is creatthe sea-change given that the first ing an unstoppable economic force iPhone launched a mere six years enabled by smart devices and highago. speed modern networks. In 2007, U.S. wireless networks have ris- the app industry didn't exist. Within en to the challenge of this surge in nine months, one billion apps were connectivity. And consumers have downloaded. By the end of this year, benefited f ro m t h e m o d ern-day two billion apps will be downloaded equivalent of a Swiss Army knife on — every week. steroids — powerful, connected tools Many Web-enabled apps go far in the palms of our hands that help beyond entertainment value. Teleus navigate our lives from work to medicine and mHealth have given

IN MY VIEW

management, to creating sharable flashcards to determining if produce people more choices and greater is ripe. These students are discoverflexibility t o a ssess and improve ing the amazing potential for job optheir personal health. Just imagine portunities in the mobile economy. Hayward and Bowerman monitorIndeed, one student is paying off his ing heart rates the same way Sala- college loans early with the revenue zar can now with today's Duck run- from his 32 apps. ners. Physicians, too, are turning Oregon is well-positioned as a to these powerful tools. In fact, 80 leader in the fast-emerging mobile percent of U.S. doctors report using innovation economy. Maintaining their smartphones in a professional this competitive edge must be a key capacity — with 60 percent doing objective. To do that, elected leadso during patient visits, according ers at all levels of government must to health care technology company recognize t h a t fo r w a r d-looking Epocrates. leadership is a crucial force behind Young Oregon entrepreneurs are the growth in our tech sector and leading the way at innovation ineconomy overall. That will require cubators. At a recent app develop- constructive rules that help advance ment "hackathon" at Oregon State a rapidly evolving mobile market University, students built apps to driven, as it should be, by consumer help address day-to-day challenges demand and entrepreneurial knowin their campus lives — from time how. It is t hrough pro-innovation

policies that Oregonians can continue to embrace the wireless Internet and all the benefits that it brings — from improved health care and education to local job creation and economic growth. But it should remain our collective hope that mobile innovation's greatest days lie yet ahead. By encouraging private sector investment in networks and deployment of the latest technologies, we can continue to enjoy advancing technology that opens up new possibilities and opportunities for us all. — Jonathan Spalter, chairman of Mobile Future,has been founding cEO of leading technology, media, and research companies, including Public Insight, Snocap, and Atmedica Worldwide. He servedin the ClintonAdministration as a director on the National Security CounciL


WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

BS

OREGON NEWS

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES

Darwin R. Thies Nov. 21, 1944- June 2, 2013

Marilyn M. Ross, of Bend Sept. 8, 1925 - June 8, 2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, (541)382-5592;

www.deschutesmemorialchapetcom

Services: There will be no services for Mrs. Ross. Contributions may be made to:

East Bend Library, 62080 Dean Swift ¹170, Bend, OR 97701.

Brian A. Connolly, of Bend Aug. 1, 1946 - June 9, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private service for family and close friends will be held in Yellowstone National Park at a later date. Contributions may be made

Dorothy Annie Shumaker, of Madras Aug. 6, 1927 - June 5, 2013 Arrangements: Bel-Air Funeral Home, 541-475-2241 Services: Graveside services will be held on Thursday, June 'I 3, 2013 at 10:00 AM at Milo Gard Cemetery ( at the end of Fir Lane) in Madras, Oregon Contributions may be made to:

Arthritis Foundation

Betty-Marie Baker, of Bend June 8, 1930 - June 5, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds.com

541-382-2471. Services: At her request, no services will be held.

to:

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Greta Ann (Skjersaa) Cecil, of Crooked River Ranch, OR, and Cozumel, Mexico Aug. 15, 1943 - June 4, 2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorial chapel.com Services: Ann's visitation will be held from 9:00 am to 1:00 pm on Friday, June 14, 2013 at Deschutes Memorial Chapel. A celebration of her life will follow the next day, Saturday, June 15, 2013, at 3:00pm at Redmond Assembly of God, 1865 W. Antler Avenue, Redmond, OR. Contributions may be made to: Redmond Assembly of God Church Youth Programs, Partners in Care Hospice, or Caring Bridge (www.caringbridge.org) in Greta's name.

Barbara West Sept. 6, 1920 - May 30, 2013 B arbara wa s b o r n S e p tember 6, 1920, in Wheeler, O R, to L a r u s a n d C h r i s tine L i n d al , a n d p a s s ed away May 30, 2013. S he w a s pr e c e ded i n death by her sister, Sylvia Lindal Gray, in 2009. B arbara l e a ve s b e h i n d h er dau gh t e r and son-in-law, Ci n d y an d Ross Cady; grandchildren, M olly C a dy ; S a rah C a d y Sullivan ( Eric); Emi l y C ady Bu r g r a f (James); Adam C a d y (C h r i s t ina); great-grandchildren, L og an, Lu ke , J a ckson, a n d Paityn; br ot h e r - i n-law, A lvin G ra y a n d h i s c h i l dren, L a r r y , Ju l i e an d Robert. B arbara w o r ke d f o r 2 5 years at th e B end M e m orial Clinic. She was also a member of th e First Presbyterian Church where she sang in the choir. Barbara retired to Tigard and most r ecently resided at A r b o r Oaks Terrace in N e wberg O regon. W h il e i n T i g a r d B arbara w a s ac t i v e at Calvin Presbyterian Church and was active in P.E.O. Chapter C. Barbara and he r b e autiful smile will be missed by all who knew her.

Roberta Louise Donaghu, of Madras Aug. 10, 1943- June 6,2013 Arrangements: Bel-Air Funeral Home, 541-475-2241 Services: Graveside services will be held on Monday, June 17, 2013 at Mt. Jefferson Memorial Park in Madras, Oregon. Contributions may be made to:

American Diabetes Association.

Howard Davis Porter, of Prineville Nov. 18, 1931 - June 9, 2013 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, 541-447-6459 Services: A graveside service will be held at Juniper Haven Cemetery on Friday, June 14th at 2:00 PM in Prineville, Oregon.

Frank E. Melton Oct. 15, 1928 - June 6, 2013 Frank Eugene Melton, 84, of Bend, O r egon, p a ssed June 6, 2013, at St. Charles Medical Center, Redmond, Oregon. Born October 15, 1928 in Pomona, C a l i f o r nia , an o nly child t o D e l b ert E u g ene M e l to n a n d Is a b e l Pierce Melton. F rank m a r r ie d D a r l e n e Duffy-Woods on J un e 2 6, 1949. A long-term resident of Pomona, CA and Bend, O R, he r e t i red f r o m t h e City of Bend in 1990. Survivors inc l ude his w ife, d a u g h t ers , L in d a Melton, N a nc y C a s hwell, a nd C a ro l D u n b ar , s o n , Wayne Melton, 10 g r andchildren and 20 great-grandchildren. F rank wa s a n a v i d f o l l ower o f N A S C A R , f o r m erly a di r t - t r ack s t o c k c ar d r i ve r c o m p eting i n S outhern C a l i f o r nia . H e t reasured f i s h i ng , c a m p ing and water skimg. N otable f o r h i s e m b e l l ished tales and w i tt y r e marks which were never in s hort sup p l y , Fr an k ' s legacy will bear out his effortless and colorful yarns i n r e m embrance a s th e 'Master Storyteller.' B y his d evotion an d i n s piration, we h ave k n ow n h im; a hu s b a nd , f a t h er , g randfather an d a f r i e n d w ho w i l l b e m i s sed a n d treasured. A private family r emembrance will be held.

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They maybesubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.

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

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

A m e m o rial s e r v ice t o c elebrate the l if e o f D a r win R. T h ies, 68, of R edmond will b e h eld at 1:00 p.m., Saturday, June 15, at Grace Community Fellows hip, 98 9 C o u n tr y C l u b Road, Eugene, OR, w ith P a s t or S t e v e Hill officiating. Priv ate c r e mation rites and a rivate a mily i n Darwin Thies urnment w il l be held at a later date. Darwin was born in Cottage Grove, OR, N ov. 2 1, 1944, to Raymond M. Thies and Audrey May (Aubrey) Thies. He passed away on June 2, 2013, at his home in Redmond, OR. On N o v e mber 27, 1964, D arwin mar r i e d Dar l a Stalder in C o ttage Grove, OR; they later divorced in 1982. They had a daughter and a son in Cottage Grove a nd i n 1 9 7 6 t h e f a m i l y moved to Reedsport. In the early 1990s, he and h is second w i f e , D e l o r i s ( Dee) S a u n d er s m o v e d over t h e m ou n t a in s t o "God's country" and settled in Central Oregon. D arwin e n j o y e d ma n y h obbies, but h u n t ing a n d f ishing w it h h i s s o n w a s his favorite. He was a volunteer firefighter for many y ears. H e al s o en j o y e d golf, motorcycling trips on his G o l d w i ng , p h o t o graphy and his grandchildren. He worked for many years as an electrician and millw right i n t h e w o o d p r o d u cts industry un til h i s r e t irement i n 2 00 9. He e njoyed h e l p i n g ot h e r s with building projects and y ou could o f ten f i n d h i m h elping ou t a t a f r i e n d ' s gas station. Darwin is survived by his daughter, Denise Wilhams of Creswell, OR, and son, Daryl Thies of Lacey, WA; stepdaughter, Tammy Dist ifino o f B e a v erton, O R ; stepson, B r a n do n M ur d ock o f Th or n t o n , C O ; b rother, M a l c ol m Th i e s a nd sister, Barbara M u l l ins both of Cottage Grove; and his six grandchildren.

FEATURED OBITUARY

KlamathBasin irrigation shutoffscoming this week By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press

GRANTS PASS — Oregon state water officials figure they won't start shutting off irrigation i n t h e d r o ughtstricken upper Klamath Basin until later this week. D oug Woodcock of t h e state Water Resources Department s a i d Tu e s day that first they must caref ully measure the flow i n rivers and streams where the Klamath Tribes and the f ederal g overnment h a v e exercised their senior water rights on tens of thousands of acres. Then they will work through the various water rights in the area, to see how many junior rights must be shut off to fulfill the senior rights of the tribes and the government. The tribes are protecting flows for fish in rivers running through their f ormer reservation lands. The federal government issecuring water for a federal irrigation project and wildlife refuges downstream. They i s sued w h a t i s known as a call on Monday to fulfill their water rights, which were recognized by an administrative law judge last March afterdecades of litigation.

The Associated Press DEARBORN, M i c h. Two teens from a high school in Oregon beat teams from 49 other states Tuesday to win a national automotive skills competition at Ford Motor Co.'s world headquarters in Michigan. Cody Collins, 18, and Logan Boyle, 17, won the title of best student auto technicians at the competition in Dearborn. They represent Vale High School in Vale. "It's been pretty neat. It's all been a mind-blowing experience," Boyle told The Associated Press. Boyle, who just graduated from Vale High, is busy this summer, dividing his time among an internship at a General Motors Co. dealership, working at an auto

shop and fishing.

By Rene Lynch

Los Angeles Times

L OS A N GELES — A s an actor, Harry Lewis took second billing to the likes of H umphrey Bogart and E d ward G. Robinson, most notably in the 1948 film noir "Key Largo." But he found his own star-

ring role as a Los Angeles

The Associated Press

restaurateur who helped usher in the concept of the "gourmet burger" when he launched the ground-breaking Hamburger H amlet r e staurant c h a i n , among others. Hamburger H a m l et named after one of the signature items on the menu, as well as the role that beckons to actors of stage and film alikebecame that rare high-low hit. Among the restaurant's regulars: Ronald Reagan, Elizabeth Taylor, Sammy Davis Jr. and Tony Curtis — all Lewis' buddies from the film business. But it was also a place for Los Angeles families looking for a night out that included milkshakes.

EUGENE — The federal government has rejected a protest from one of the bidders on a contract to develop a medical clinic for veterans in Eugene, which c ould clear the way f o r construction. The Veterans A f f airs Department plans to lease the building from a private developer and said it has agreed to a lease with a Bakersfield, Calif., company that calls for an initial payment of $4.6 million a nd first-year rent of $4 million. The protest was filed by a company based in San Diego, Marcola Meadows. The Government Accountability Office rejected it, the Eugene Register-Guard reported Tuesday. Marcola Meadows argued that the site didn't meet the bid specifications and the selection process didn't give the company credit it was due for being a small business. But the GAO said in its decision that the contract officerwas "aware of the relative merits and costs of the competing proposals and reasonably determined that the protester's technical advantages did not w a rrant i t s h i g h er

ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld: Barbara Vucanovich, 9 1: A Nevada Republican who a t 61 won e lection to t h e U.S. House of R epresentatives with the slogan, "What Congress needs is a t ough grandmother," and became an advocate for breast-cancer awareness during seven terms in office. Died Monday in Reno, Nev. — From wire reports

and Klamath County Commissioner, said he would like to reach a settlement, but it would have to be something approved by Congress, and includeassurances ofwater, cheap power for irrigators, and changes to the Endangered Species Act. Mallams and others are counting on winning an appeal of th e a dministrative law judge's ruling that gave the tribes water rights dating to time immemorial on rivers flowing through their former reservation. Irrigators affiliated with are going. the Upper Klamath Water District Attorney Rob Pat- Users Association favor joinridge said he has established ing a t e ntative settlement contact with the tribes and agreement between farmers irrigators in hopes of avoid- on the Klamath Reclamation ing the kinds of tensions that Project, the tribes and othmarked the 2001 irrigation ers. It addresses water sups hutoff to f a rmers on t h e plies during times of shortKlamath Reclamation Proj- age, and provides funding ect, a federal irrigation proj- for watershed restoration. It ect straddling the Oregon- has languished in Congress, California border south of along with an agreement to Klamath Falls. remove four h y droelectric Meanwhile, the Klamath dams on the Klamath River Tribes have had some con- in Oregon and California. t act with i r r igators in t h e Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., upper basin exploring the is holding a Senate commitpotential for a s e t tlement tee hearing June 20 on the that could ease the water Klamath w a te r s i t u ation. tensions. But prospects for a Irrigators, t r i ba l o f f i cials deal appear dim. and others are expected to Tom Mallams, an irrigator testify.

Teens win national auto skills contest

Harry Lewis, actor and restaurateur Protest rejected in VA clinic bidding

DEATHS

F aced with no w ater to irrigate pastures t h r ough the dry summer, ranchers around Fort Klamath, Chiloquin, Sprague River, Bly and Beatty are scrambling to find feed for more than 70,000 cattle. Mindful of the potential for violence when people's livelihoods are at stake, watermasters aretaking precautions. Extra personnel have been sent in from Lakeview, Bend, Medford and Salem. Watermasters will travel in pairs, and notify the sheriff's office when and where they

price."

Logan Boyle, left, and Cody Collins, right, celebrate their win with instructor Drew Barnes at Ford World Headquarters in Dearborn, Mich. The Associated Press

The victory is a " d ream come true," Collins said. Boyle and Collins got a perfectscore on their effort to troubleshoot a deliberately defective 20D-model Ford E xplorer X LT, s aid A A A Michigan spo k e swoman Nancy Cain. "They had a perfect car," Cain said. The annual Ford/AAA Stu-

dent Auto Skills Competition has 100 students in pairs racing the clock to troubleshoot problems that are deliberately set for them. This year's competitors worked on 2013model Ford Explorer XLTs. Ford said the idea is to encourage students to continue their educations and pursue careers in the auto service industry.

Schools

grades as well. T he district w i l l k n o w whether it receives the additional funding on Monday if the vote is not delayed. At this stage, district officials are pleased to be able to restore schools to a full school year. "We're back to the level that we should be at," said Brad Henry, chief operations and financial officer for the school district. "It's been a long haul for the last five years, so this is exciting news."

Continued from B1 If the district receives an additional $1 million, it will use the money to hire 13 more teachers, which will go toward decreasingclass sizes inlower primary grades. The money would also go toward reinstating several assistant principals at elementary schools that have more than 650 students. If the district receives an additional $2 million, it plans to hire a total of 26 full-time teachers, which will help decrease class sizes in upper primary

— Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbultetin.com •

I

~ •

• •

s

s


B6

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013.

ll e Today: Mostly sunny and cool

Get localweather u dates

Tonight: Partly cloudy and cool

66

Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers

40

60I51

Umatilla

Hood

Seasideo 58/50 •oCannonPeach

River

67/51

62/5i

63/50

Lincoln City 58/50

Maupin zv<48

•John

65/36 6 4/34

66/ 4 0

Oa k ridge

Chemult

6 3/31

• Brookings

Riley 70/39

76/42

"I

Frenchglen 78/44

70/42

Fields•

• Lakeview

Falls I 8/37

71/44

63/48

Paisley

• Klamath

Yesterday's state extremes

Jordan Valley

65/37

Ashland

81/54

Chr i stmas Valley

Chiloquin

Medford

Juntura

• BurnS

McDermitt

8u47

71/43

84/44 ~

• 88' Ontario

Meacham

i L calgar r x SaekatOOn

YJ4/46xlx v x+ox'x 73/55 o o o 9+++ o o

ss Seattle 64/S1

(in the 48 contiguous states):

o„tland-~

+ ++O+ x + + + x

• 114'

RaPid City

• 33'

fx+ 'Cneyenne San Francisco 64/51

• 2.1 1

I

Pittsfield, Mass.

Salt Lake City Las Vegas 96/67 X 105/79I

Los Ange )DOS & 7 1/62 I

oO

H AW A I I

8

Detroit

,hsx s $x

73/59 +

~

gton, D.C.

louisvire V

96/72 •

II ~

93/75 P~

'

2/73

Nashville t 9 3 / 74

B irmingha 96/75

afias • 96/75 (~

100

94/76,,5 Charlotte

8

Little Rock

9 3 / 73

Qew Orleans Houston 8 93/77 94/75 o

OH

lando ~ . • 4/73 Miami 89/76

o o+t t + +

La Paz

6s

84/73

75/51

o

Juneau 70/49

7os

D

~A LAS KA

ew York

89/70

Chihuahua 90/73

Anchorage

6 6 /SO

iladelphia

, Columbus o.

93/65

100/7

l

Toronto orori o

'x

denver~ 8 4 / 6 1 ox, ~

112/84

Tijuana 73/57

nder Bay 73/48 ~

—.; ' P . 79/BO' o • - oo x 1 8 6/61 L

Bp g

pS Phoenixlg

HonoluluIob, 89/76

z

+goCh,' '

I

A l buquerqueOklahoma City

~

Quebec x'

606

I

75/55

' 7Q St paul

Death Valley, Calif Meacham, Ore.

™mpe9

ismarc 75/54

x ox Bilhngs o 82/54 o

I

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 64/52 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........96m1940 Monthtodate.......... 0.00" Recordlow......... 26in1947 Average monthtodate... 0.32" Average high.............. 71 Year to date............ 2.74" Averagelow ..............41 A verageyeartodate..... 5.34" 6arometric pressureat 4 p.m30.02 Record 24 hours ...0.44in1950 *Melted liquid equivalent

Redmond/Madras....Mod.

WATER REPORT sisters..............................Low The following was compiled by the Central La Pine.............................Mod. Prinevine........................Mod

Moa = Moderate;Exi. = Extreme

Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen.

Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 40,082...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 140,900..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 77,743.... . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 26,351......47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 132,653.....153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 407 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,590 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 84 LOW MEDIUM H IG Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 114 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 134 Deschutes RiverAt 6enham Falls ..... . . . . 2,127 Crooked RiverAbove Prinevige Res.. ... . . . . . 15 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 222 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 17.2 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 114 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM LOWI or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

To report a wildfire, call 911

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 7

IPOLLEN COUNT

Og%g

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

o www m svancouver

TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....7:09 a.m.....10:33 p.m. Venus......6:47 a.m.....10:20 p.m. Mars.......432 a.m......7:43 p.m. Jupiter......5 43 a.m...... 9 05 p.m. Satum......4:31 p.m...... 3:14 a.m. Uranus.....2:04 a.m...... 2:41 p.m.

Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds,h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

Yesterday's extremes

PLANET WATCH

FIRE INDEX

Roseburg.......68/53/0.00....68/50/pc......66/49/c Salem ....... 66/53/0 00 .66/50/pc ...65/48/sh Sisters.........75/37/0.00....65/36/pc.....65/35/pc The Dages......69/53/0.00....71/52/pc.....68/53/pc

• 33' ~

Astoria ........ 62/51/0.01 ....60/51/sh.....59/51 lsh Baker City...... 71/46/0.00....71 /42/pc.....64/38/pc Brookings......64/49/0.00....63/48/pc.....64/48lpc 6urns..........76/45/0.00....73/39/pc.....64/35/pc Eugene........67/51/0.00....67/49/pc.....67/46/sh Klamath Falls .. 71/44/000 ....68/37/s ... 64/36/s Lakeview.......75/48/0.00 ...71/43/pc.....65/42/pc La Pine........72/33/0.00....65/32/pc.....63/30/pc Medford.......70/54/0.00.....73/48/s.....71/49/pc Newport.......59/52/0.00.....57/49/c.....56/48/sh North Bend.....64/55/0.00....60/50/pc......59/49/c Ontario........88/63/0.00....83/55/pc.....76/50/pc Pendleton......71/53/0.00.....73/47/s.....70/48/pc Portland .......65/54/0.00....65/51/sh.....64/51/sh Prineville....... 66/41/0.00....68/40/pc.....67/39/pc Redmond.......65/36/0.00.....68/38/s.....66/37/pc

70/35

• 73/48

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.

Nyssa

l.ake rants Pass

EAST

83/55

• Brothers 69/37

Silv e r

Port Orfor 72/46

73 45

Yesterday Wednesday Thursday Bend,westofHwy97.. Mod Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend,eastof Hwy.97......Low

Valeo 82/54

• Fort Rock eao3

62/33

58/35

Roseburg ' 57/50

HIGH LOW

74 45

OREGON CITIES

Ontario

71/42

68/38

HamPton La Pineesaz— „„,

• • Crescento CreSCent Lake

60/49 •

Unity

Prinevill 68/40 Redmand • paulina n/39

Sunriver Bend

67/4 9

ee/48

HIGH LOW

70 42

Mostly sunny and cool. Sunny to partly cloudy and cool.

71/42

61/3

Eugene •

Coos Bay

Baker City

Sherman

Cottage

HIGH LOW

60/36

Partly cloudy

64 39

Sunsettoday.... 8 49 p.m F irst Ful l La s t Sunrise tomorrow .. 5:22 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 8:49 p.m Moonrise today.... 9:12 a.m Moonsettoday ... 11:20 p.m June16 June 23 June 29 July 8

CENTRAL

osep 6 8 /41

69/44

Granite

72/45

67/48

5 8/50 ~

6 2 / 38

70/44 Unio~

• Spra zo

Warm Springs •

I

La Grande•

66/43

71/43

ez/47•

I

• 68/45

Willowdale

Albany~

Florence•

Ruggs

Condon

66/50•

Newpo,rt

W allowa • Pendleton X,65I3ii • Enterprise 73/47 • Meacham ee/40

75/52

e /47

CamP 51/39

S~l~m

64I48

,

oWasco

Sa n dy

• Hermiston 75/52

Arlington

Da g es 71/52

Government

6iggs

Ii/52

HjgsboroPOrtland x65/51

• C McMinnville

76/51

Th

Partly cloudy

HIGH LOW

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 5:22 a.m Moon phases

WEST Partly to mostly cloudy with a chance of showers far north.

As t oria

Tigamook•

Mostly sunny

BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST:5TATE I,

•g4

ge

++, Monterrey 88/70ox + + + Mazatlan x t+ + + '+. ++o+x~+ -

CONDITIONS FRONTS Cold

:8+++ ++++ oo4

W a r m Stationary Showers T-storms

oO

*

* * * * * +

:38+

' ** * * *

+Xr+xr+ Rain F l urries Snow

3 44 4 x

Ice

YesterdayWednesdayThursday YesterdayWednesdayThursday YesterdayWednesdayThursday YesterdayWednesdayThursday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX......96/71/000 ..98/74/pc100/73/pc Grand lapids....81/59/0.00... 79/59/t. 76/58/pc Rapid City.......74/56/000 ..77/55/pc.82/59/pc Savannah .......92/71/0.00..94I75/pc...94I74/t Akron..........80/64/0.03... 81/67/t...74/55/t GreenBay.......82/57/0.00... 74/54/t .. 73/53/s Reno...........85/54/0.00...82/52/s.. 77/51/s Seattle..........68/50/0.00..64/51/sh. 63/50/sh Albany..........70/59/1.03...73/56/c...68/52/t Greensboro......84/66/0.01 ..92/70/pc...90/65/t Richmond.......88/72/0.00..93/71/pc...93/64/t SiouxFalls.......85/58/0.00... 76/56/t. 79/62/pc Albuquerque....101/68/000 ..100/71/s. 96/71/pc Harnsburg.......80/63/0.01 ..84/63/pc...77/59/t Rochester, NY....69/62/0.12..72/56/pc...72/56/t Spokane ........68/48/0.00...71/46/s. 69/43/sh Anchorage......74/52/000... 75/51/s.71/48/pc Hartford,CT.....74/60/1 27..74/53/pc...70/53/t Sacramento......83/54/0.00... 85/56/s .. 86/58/s Springfield, MO ..93/70/0.00..90/69/pc. 84/67/pc Atlanta.........90/71/0.00... 93/73/t.91/70/pc Helena..........68/55/0.11...74/48lt...69/45/t St. Louis.........92/64/0 00 .. 96/73/pc. 85/64/pc Tampa..........90/77/0.00...90/76/t...91/76/t AtlanticCity.....84/69/000..81/64/pc...75/60/t Honolulu........85/74/000..89/76/pc. 89/76/pcSalt Lake City....92/74/0.00 ..96/67/pc.. 91/57/s Tucson.........108/74/000..107/76ls.105/76/s Austin..........95/72/000 ..94/74/pc. 96/75/pc Houston........91/74/000 ..94/75/pc. 94/75/pc SanAntonio.....93/73/0.28..90/74lpc. 92/74/pc Tulsa ...........95/75/0.00..95/72/pc.93/74lpc Baltimore .......83/66/000 ..88/69/pc...84/63/t Huntsville.......96/72/0 00..93/74/pc. 84/65/pc SanDiego.......69/60/0.00... 69/62/s.. 70/62/s Washington, DC..85/68/0.00..89/70/pc...84/63/t 6itings.........79/56/000... 82/54/t...84/53/t Indianapolis.....83/61/000..90/68/pc. 79/60/pc SanFrancisco....67/55/0.00... 66/51ls .. 69/53/s Wichita .........97/71/000..99/70/pc. 91/73/pc Birmingham .. 92/73/0.00 ..96/75/pc. 92/71/pc Jackson,MS.... 91/73/0.00. 95/73/pc 95I73/pc SanJose........73/58/000 .. 76/51ls 76/54/s Yakima .........73/53/0 00 71/48/pc. 70/47/pc Bismarck........78/56/000 ..75/54/pc. 76/59/pc Jacksonvile......91/73/001..95/74/pc...94/75/t SantaFe........97/58/000... 90/65/s. 88/61lpc Yuma...........85/76/0.00..108/75/s. 105/73/s Boise...........85/60/000... 84/50/t. 73/46/pc Juneau..........75/45/000..70/49/pc.. 66/48/c INTERNATIONAL Boston..........64/55/1.34...68/53/c...65/52/t Kansascity......91/71/012..93/65/pc. 83/68/pc BndgeportCT....80/61/043 ..77/56/pc...67/55/t Lansing.........81/62/000... 76/58/t. 75/57/pc Amsterdam......70/50/000.. 69/58/c 62/51/c Mecca.........1 09/88/000 108/82/s. 113/81/s Buffalo.........71/60/019 ..73/59/pc...70/58/t LasVegas......103/74/000 ..105/79/s. 102/76/s Athens..........89/71/0 00 .. 87/65/sh. 77/64/pc Mexico City .....73/57/0.15... 71/58/t .. 68/56/t Burlington,VT....63/57/1.58 ..70/54/sh...69/52/t Lexington.......83/63/000... 90/72/t...80/61/t Auckland........61/46/0.00 ..61/55/pc.. 60/55/c Montreal........61/55/088.. 6I55/sh.. 73/57/s Caribou,ME.....64/54/000..67/44/sh. 72/46/pc Lincoln..........94/67/000 ..84/60/pc. 83/67/pc Baghdad........96/77/0.00 ..104/86/s. 108/88/s Moscow........75/61/0.07 .. 71/51/sh. 68/53/pc CharlestonSC...90/73/008..91/75/pc...95/74/t LittleRock.......94/72/000..93/75/pc.95/73/pc Bangkok........95/79/3.65... 94/77/t...85/77/t Nairobi.........72/61/0.00... 74/52/t. 75/57/pc Charlotte........87/68/000 ..92/73/pc...91/71/t LosAngeles......72/63/000...71/62/s .. 70/62/s Beiling..........79/63/0.00 ..77/59/pc...84/64/t Nassau.........86/81/0.00 ..86/77/pc...82J78/t Chattanooga.....91/71/0.17 ..93/72/pc. 90/66/pc Louisvile........87/65/0.00..94/76/pc. 83/63/pc Beirut..........81/72/0.00... 84/68/s.. 80/65/s New Delhi.......95/84/000 ..108/81/t...82/76/t Cheyenne.......92/54/000...86/56/s...88/57/t Madison W1.....83/58/000... 76/57/t. 75/56/pc Berlin...........72/48/000 ..79/63/sh.80/56/sh Osaka..........86/72/0.0078/71/pc. .. 87/73/pc Chicago...... 83/60/000...78/60/t. 69/59/pc Memphis....... 95/75/000 95/76/pc.92/70/pc Bogota.........68/48/0.00... 66/50/t...70/45lt Oslo............68/46/000 ..69/52/pc. 61/48/sh Cincinnati.......85/64/0.00... 92/72/t. 79/60/pc Miami..........88/79/0.00... 89/76/t...89/77/t Budapest........72/54/0 00.. 77/60/sh.82/63/pc Ottawa .........61/57/1.19..70/54/sh. 75/55/sh Cleveland.......79/64/0.00... 76/64/t. 72/57/pc Milwaukee......85/59/0.00... 67/55/t. 67/55/pc BuenosAires.....68/46/000..70/63/pc.6546/pc Paris............70/54/0.00...72/60/c. 61/46/sh ColoradoSpnngs.97/69/000..89/59/pc...90/62/t Minneapolis.....79/60/0 00..78/58/pc. 78/59/pc CaboSanLucas ..91/73/0 00.. 81/75/pc. 81/75/pc Rio deJaneiro....88/68/0.00...77/66ls. 76/66/sh Columbia,MO...92/64/000 ..93/68/pc. 83/65/pc Nashvite........93/69/0.00..93/74/pc. 87/64/pc Cairo...........95/70/0.00..101/66/s .. 92/67/s Rome...........73/55/0.00...77/67/s.. 84/61/s ColumbiaSC....91/70/000..96/75/pc...98/73/t NewOrleans.....91/78/000..93/77/pc. 93/78/pcCalgary.........55/43/0.04 .. 64/46/sh.63/46lsh Santiago........70/37/0.00...63/62/s.. 63/60/s Columbus, GA....92/72/000... 96/74/t. 95/74/pc New York.......80/64/0.08 ..79/61/pc...72/57lt Cancun.........88/81/0.00... 86I75/t. 86/75/pc SaoPaulo.......75/64/0 00..72/59lsh. 71/59/sh Columbus OH....84/64/000...89/70/t...77/59/t Newark Nl......82/67/004..79/61/pc. 73/57/shDublin..........64/50/1.07..62/52/sh. 63/52/pc Sapporo ........81/58/0.00..70/58/pc. 70/63/pc Concord,NH.....61/54/1.07..69/51/sh...62/50/t Norfolk,VA......85/71/000..93/73/pc...94/67lt Edinburgh.......59/43/0.00 .. 57/52/sh. 58/48/sh Seoul...........79/66/000..75/69/sh. 82/67/pc Corpus Christi....95/73/0.00... 90/80/t. 91/78/pc OklahomaCity...91/68/0.00 ..96/72/pc .. 96/73/s Geneva.........73/54/0.06 ..73/56/pc. 77/52/sh Shanghai........75/68/0.00...73/65/c. 74/70/pc DallasFtWorth...92/75/000..96/75/pc.99/77/pc Omaha.........87/68/000..84/61/pc.84/66/pc Harare..........59/46/000 ..67/46/pc.. 69/46/s Singapore.......90/77/015..91/81/pc...92/80/t Dayton .........85/62/0.00... 89/69/t...77/59/t Orlando.........91/73/0.09... 94/73/t...94/74/t HongKong......82/73/2.54... 82/78/t...82/77/t Stockholm.......66/48/0.00..75/52/pc. 65/54/sh Denver.........100/57/000..91/60/pc...93/64/t PalmSprings....107/69/000..107/72/s.104I71/s Istanbul.........88/66/0.00 79/65/pc. .. 75/66/pc Sydney..........68/50/0.00..66/52/sh.65/51/sh DesMoines......87/68/000... 86/61/t. 81/63/pc Peoria..........86/60/0.02..91/64/pc. 81/61/pc lerusalem.......82/61/0.00... 90/65/s .. 81/61/s Taipei...........84/73/0.00...86/76/t...81/78/t Detroit..........82/64/000... 79/60/t.77/58lpc Philadelphia.....84/70/0.00 ..84/65/pc...79/60/t Johannesburg....84/68/0.00...61/41/s.. 57/39/s TelAviv.........84/70/0.00...95/66/s..86/65ls Duluth..........82/59/000 ..72/53/pc. 69/50/pc Phoenix........109/81/0.00 ..112/84/s. 109/82/s Lima ...........70/63/0.00..71/61/pc.71/62/pc Tokyo...........72/68/0.00..79/70/sh.75/69/sh El Paso.........104/75/000 ..103/77/s.100/76ls Pittsburgh.......78/61/001...81/65/t...74/55/t Lisbon..........73/57/0 00 78/56/pc 76/56/pc Toronto.........73/61/1 02 72/55/sh 73/59/pc Fairbanks........67/42/000...73/46/s. 74/49/pc Portland,ME.....58/54/087..66/50/sh.. 66/50/c London .........64/48/0.00..62/55/sh. 64/47lpc Vancouver.......66/54/0.00..63/50/sh.66/54/sh Fargo...........82/57/000 ..78/54/pc.77/60/pc Providence......78/59/0 93...73/53lc...70/52lt Madrid .........86/55/0.00...91/66/s. 91/64/pc Vienna..........64/54/3.37...78/55/s. 78/60/pc Flagstaff........85/42/000...86/48/s .. 85/47/s Raleigh.........86/70/0.00..93/72/pc...94/66/t Manila..........90/79/0.08... 90/78/t...92/78/t Warsaw.........64/55/0.00...77/55/s. 81/61/pc

WEST NEWS

Wyoming governorvisits British Coum ia to talk coalexports By Bob Moen

leading coal-producing state, but state officials are conC HEYENNE, W y o . cerned about falling domestic Looking for ways to export demand as a result of global coal mined in Wyoming, Gov. warming concerns and new Matt Mead said he will tour federal regulations on coalport facilities in British Co- burning power plants. lumbia as part of a weeklong Some seethe need formore trade trip to Canada. power generation by growing Mead will meet with pro- Asian economies as an ideal v incial leaders and talk t o market for U.S. coal produccoal and rail representatives ers. But sending coal overseas during the v i sit b eginning requires West Coast ports. today. Mining companies want to Wyoming is t h e n a tion's ship coal through ports in OrThe Associated Press

egon and Washington. However, opponents of coal trains in that region have raised concerns about dust, congestion and climate change. British Columbia has ports that already ship U.S. coal, and Mead's trip sends a message that Wyoming is willing to look elsewhere to get its coal to other markets. "I'm not trying to play one region off another, but we have opportunities both within the United States, of course, and

Canada," Mead said. A port near Vancouver, British Columbia, expects to ship up to about 30 million tons of coal this year, according to its operator, Westshore Terminals Investment Corp. In 2011, about 8 million tons of U.S. coal was shipped through the port. Mead noted that residents in the Pacific Northwest and British Columbia have similar concerns about coal shipments. "I don't think we as a state

can just say those aren't legitim ate concerns," Mead said."I think we have to learn what those concerns are and try to address them the best way

revenues. But many opponents in the Northwest h ave e x pressed concern about heavy t r ain t raffic, coal dust f ro m t h e possible." trains, noise and other disturFive ports are being pro- bances, as well as emissions p osed in W a shington a n d from burning the coal. Oregon to ship as much as Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber 140 million tons of coal a year expressed reservations about from Montana and Wyoming's environmental impacts of coal Powder River basin. shipments and the effects on Proponents say the coal ex- global air quality and greenports will create jobs and gen- house gas production from erate millions of dollars in tax burning it.

,x

+

v

BG 55 HANDHELD BLOWER

4•

l49

Proven handheld blower at an affordable pnce

FS 40 C-E TRIMMER NOW JUST WAS

Optional vacuum and gutter kit attachments available

~169"

ot

11

,•o

SNW-SRP

At participating dealers whdesupplies last ,'

'I

e r.. l Ert . '; iW': ~o~"» x' fxepr 9 = ~ a ~e ' x IV

MS 170 CHAIN SAW

179 16" bar'

Lightweight saw for wood-cutting tasks around the home IntelliCarb™ compensating carburetor maintains RPM level

TRIMMER LINE I Eosy~Sfah 5TIHL'

WITHFS40C E PURCHASE A'13"SNW-SRPvalue. Free1/2Ib package of.080Ouiet Line"with purchaseotFS40C E Offergood through7/7/13at partiopating dealerswhile supplieslast.

CHAIN SAWS STARTING AT 179 I BLOWERS STARTING AT 149 I TRIMMERS STARTING AT81698 AB prices areSNWSRPAvailable at participating dealers while supplies last. 'Theactual listed guidebar length can vary fromthe effective cutting length based onwhich powerhead it is installed on. © 2013STIHLSNW134221098864

Bend

Redmond

Sisters

Stark Street Lawn & Garden 131 NE Greenwood Ave

Big R Stores

Sisters RentaI 506 N. Pine St.

541-382-6769

3141 South HWy 97 541-548-4095

StarkStreetLawn.us

Big ROregon.net

541-549-9631

ChainSawsatSistersRental.com

"Amajorityof STIHL productsarebuilt in theUnited Statesfrom domestic

=~

Selling Brandof Gasoline-Powered and foreignpartsand components Numberoneselling brand isbasedon HandheldOutdoorPowerEquipment syndicatedIrwinBrohResearch aswell asindependentconsumerresearch

" i nAmerica'

of 20092012U8 salesandmarket sharedatafor thegasoline powered handheldoutdoorpowerequipment categorycombinedsalesto consumers and comm ercial landscapers

I


IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2

ML B , C3

Sports in Brief, C2

N H L, C4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

GOLF

BASEBALL

Elks play home opener tonight Rolling after a

three-game sweepof the KelownaFalcons, the Bend Elks host the Cowlitz Black Bears tonight in their 2013 home opener. Game time at

Vince GennaStadium is 6:35 p.m. Bend and Cowlitz are tied atop the West Coast

League South Division standings with match-

ing 4-2 records. Having played their

first six games on the road, the Elks went1-2

against the WallaWalla Sweets last week before

taking all three games against the Falcons. General admission

PREP RODEO

re on e n iSa ami a air • Five teams of fathers andsonsare competing in Redmond By Zack Hall

ner at the Oregon Open — a major championship in the PGA of America's Pacific REDMOND — When Bend pro Andy Northwest Section — is his 21-year-old Heinly watched his playing partner miss son, Jesse. a 3-foot birdie putt on the 17th green, he The Oregon Open's format, which aside could not help but react. from the main 54-hole, stroke-play compe"I die," Heinly said Tuesday afternoon at tition features a 36-hole, four-person team Juniper Golf Club after the first round at game of two amateurs and two professionthe Oregon Open Invitational. "That's the als, provides a relatively rare opportunity for father and son to play together in a hardest part." Heinly i s n o t s om e u l t racompetitive high-level tournament. The only requiregolfer. In fact, these days the 57-year-old ment is that one member of the team must co-owner of Pro Golf of Bend rarely com- be a pro and the other an amateur. See Family /C3 petes at all. It's just that his playing partThe Bulletin

QppgppQppp Where:Juniper Golf Course, Redmond What:A PGA of America Pacific Northwest Section

major; 54-hole stroke play Today's second round: Tee times start at 7:30 a.m. and run through 2:40 p.m. Thursday:The field will be cut to 70 players for the final round

Admission:Free • Results, see Scoreboard,C2

tickets for tonight's

game are $5, andkids

set to host

state rodeo this week By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

Look at a list of last year's world rodeo champions and one common theme jumps off

the page. Saddle bronc rider Jesse Wright won two Utah high school state titles. Bull rider Cody Teel owns a pair of Texas high school state cham-

pionships. Team ropers Chad

MOUNTAIN BIKING

under12 get in free as

Prineville

Masters (Tennessee) and Jade Corkill (Nevada) combined to win eight different prep crowns. And tie-down roper Tuf Cooper is a former junior high and high school state champ. "We really are a steppingstone," says Bobbi Aldrich, secretaryofthe Oregon High School Rodeo Association, which stages its 2013 state championships today through Saturday at the Crook County Fairgrounds in Prineville. "Just look at the PRCA (Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association) standings. All those people from the Northwest, the majority of those guys are from

part of a seasonlong Wednesday promotion sponsored by AmericanWest Bank. For more information on the Bend Elks, go to

www.bendelks.com. — Bulletin staff report

GOLF

Local takes Bend Ladies invite lead Bend golfer Rosie

Cook shot an 8-overpar 80 Tuesday atBend Golf and Country Club to take the first-round lead in the Bend Ladies Invitational.

Oregon high school rodeo. Bobby Mote, Brian Bain, Steven Peebles, Brenda Mays, Charly Crawford, they were all members of the Oregon High School Rodeo Association." SeeRodeo /C4

On a windy Tuesday, Cook, a Bend resident,

was able to squeezeout a one-stroke leadover Portland's Mary Sias.

Cook, who has arunner-up finish at the Bend Ladies to her credit, is looking for her first win in the tournament.

NHL: STANLEY CUP FINALS

Amy Anderson, a former Weber State University golfer and for-

mer Bend Ladies champion, is two strokes behind andin atie for third place with Leilani Norman of Salem. The final round of the Bend Ladies Invitational is scheduled to tee off today at 8:30 a.m. — Bulletin staff report

Rob Kerr /The Bulletin

Crowds watch professional mountain biker Geoff Kabush as he leads the Blitz to the Barrel race through Tetherow Golf Club near Bend onTuesday night.Kabush won the men's division.

Goalies for Boston and Chicago take center stage By Jay Cohen The Associated Press

SOCCER

U.S. wins inWorld Cup qualifying SEATTLE — Jozy Altidore continued his scoring blitz with a goal in his third straight

match, Eddie Johnson thrilled his home club fans with a goal in the 53rd minute, and the United States took over first place in its World

Cup qualifying group with a 2-0 win over

Panama onTuesday. Altidore scored in the 36th minute on a perfect

cross from FabianJohnson, moments after a potential penalty kick

for the Americans was denied. Eddie Johnson then

• Olympians from Canada and NewZealandwin the Blitz to the Barrelracesontrails nearBend; localsAdam Craig andSerenaBishopGordon earnthird-placefinishes By Mark Morical The Bulletin

Three-time Olympian Geoff Kabush rode into the 10 Barrel Brewing Company pub's parking lot Tuesday evening

and chugged an Apocalypse IPA. With that, the locals' reign of the men's Blitz to the Barrel mountain bike race was over. Kabush, a Canadian who f i nished eighth in the London Olympics last year, edged out second-place Josh Carlson, of Australia, and third-place Adam Craig, of Bend, to win the 18-mile race from Wanoga Sno-park to Bend. Craig, a 2008 Olympian who had won the past two Blitz to the Barrels, was not

surprised about the outcome. "He's been the best bike rider in North America for the last decade," Craig said of Kabush. The fourth annual race took men and women mountain bikers on the Funner, Storm King and C.O.D. singletrack trails before cutting through Tetherow Golf Club, where they launched off a 10-foot drop near the driving range in front of hundreds offans. From the club,racers sped down roads to the finish at 10 Barrel on Galveston Avenue. Racers had to drink a 16-ounce beer to officially finish the race. But that was no problem for Kabush.

"If it came down to the beer I was pretty confident," said Kabush, who hails from Vancouver Island in British Columbia. "This race has been on my radar for a bit. I have lots of great friends in Bend, but it's my first time in town riding the trails." On the upper section of C.O.D., Kabush got a gap on Carlson and maintained his lead all the way to 10 Barrel. Bend's Carl Decker, who won the inaugural race in 2010, was at the front in the early parts of the race, but said he was plagued by a mechanical issue. Rosara Joseph, a 2008 Olympian from New Zealand, won the women's Blitz to the Barrelahead of second-place Sue Butler, of Portland, and third-place Serena Bishop Gordon, of Bend. "I was terrible at the beer drinking," Joseph said with a big smile. "I luckily had a prettygood gap at the end, otherwise I would have been in trouble." SeeBlitz/C4

CHICAGO — Corey Crawford was in the stands when Patrick Kane slammed home the goal that secured the Stanley Cup for the Chicago Blackhawks in 2010. A year later, Tuukka Rask was just a practice player when Tim Thomas ledthe Boston Bruins to the title. Fast-forward to tonight at the United Center, and Crawford and Rask will be in goal when the Blackhawks host the Bruins in Game 1 of the

Cup finals. It's been a long road, but that little taste of the Stanley Cup turned into much more for two of the most important players for this series. Sure, it's nice to win a championship. It's just a little sweeter when you're on the ice at the very end. See Goalies /C4

gave the U.S.some cushion when hecollected Geoff Cameron's

pass over the top of Panama's defenseand

NBA FINALS

slid a left-footed shot

pastJaime Penedo less than10 minutes into the second half. The U.S. holds a two-

point lead over Costa Rica and Mexico in the

qualifying group in the 10-game final round of the North and Central

American andCaribbean region. They will host Honduras next Tuesday night in Sandy, Utah.

The U.S. improved to 9-1-2 all-time against Panama and is 22-0-2

in home qualifiers since losing to Honduras in September 2001. — The Associated Press

Spurs blow out Heat, leadseries2-1 By Brian Mahoney The Associated Press

S AN ANTONIO — From big 3s t o B i g Three, the Spurs had it all in the NBA Finals' raucous return to San Antonio. Danny Green made seven of the Spurs' finals-record 16 3-pointers, Tim Duncan had 12 points and 14 rebounds, and the Spurs clobbered the Miami Heat 113-77 on Tuesday night to take a 2-1 lead in the series. Green scored 27 points and Gary Neal made six 3-pointers while scoring 24 as San Antonio went 16 of 32 from behind the arc, rolling to the third-biggest victory in finals history. Duncan bounced back from his worst game ever in the finals, and the Spurs' combination

Nextup NBA Finals, Game 4, Miami Heatat San Antonio Spurs

• When:Thursday, 6 p.m. • TV:ABC • Radio:KICE-AM 940

of fresh faces and old reliables dominated the NBA's winningest team before an eager crowd that hadn't seen the finals here since 2007. "It shouldn't be a s u rprise," said Spurs coach Gregg Popovich. "These are the last Mike Ehrmann/The AssociatedPress, pool two teams standing. I don't think either one of Miami Heat's Chris Bosh (1) and San Antonio Spurs' Kawhi Leonthem is going to get down if they have a bad ard (center) battle for a rebound during the first half of Game 3 of night." the NBA Finals on Tuesday in San Antonio. The Spurs won the SeeSpurs/C4 game, 113-77.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY Time T V/Radio

BASEBALL MLB, Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs MLB,ClevelandatTexas MLB, Houston at Seattle BASKETBALL WNBA, Connecticut at indiana HOCKEY NHL, Stanley Cup, Boston at Chicago

11 a.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB ESPN Root

5 p.m.

ESP N 2

5 p.m.

NBC

THURSDAY Time 6 a.m. noon 2 p.m.

GOLF PGA Tour, U.S.Open PGA Tour, U.S.Open PGATour, U.S.Open BASEBALL MLB, Boston at Baltimore BASKETBALL NBA Finals, Miami at SanAntonio

T V / Radio ESPN NBC ESPN

4 p.m.

MLB

6 p.m.

ABC KICE-AM 940

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

SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL TedOW tO PatriOtS —Tim Tebow andTom Brady took turns, zipping passesover the middle and lofting tosses toward

the corner of the endzone. On

Nick Noonanwas recalled from Triple-A Fresno to take the World Series MVP's roster spot before the Giants played Pittsburgh.

Noonan wasoptioned to Fresno on Saturday after spending the entire season with the Giants.

his first day with the Patriots,

the New Englandnewcomer was just a backup quarterback, No. 5 on his helmet and number three on the depth chart. And when

HOCKEY Viewership doudles —The

practice endedTuesday, Tebow

NHL conference finals' television

talked — for all of 40 seconds. "First and foremost, I just want to thank the Patriots for giving me an opportunity," Tebow said. For now, that's all it is. No

viewership more than doubled from last year. With three large-

market teams andthree clubs with recent histories of luring audiences, the Blackhawks-

promises of trick plays. No huge Kings and Bruins-Penguins media circus. Not even aguaran- series averaged 2.65 million teed job. To coach Bill Belichick,

viewers on NBC and NBCSports

the focus is on football. And

Press that Tebowwas signed for two years but no assured money. Oneperson saysTebow will make theveteran's minimum

Network despite lasting only a combinedninegames.KingsCoyotes andDevils-Rangers averaged 1.25 million viewers last year over11 games. Helped by two double-overtime games, this year's series drew the most viewers for a conference finals in17 years, whengames onFox and ESPNaveraged 2.86 million

salary, $630,000 in 2013, with incentives. The Patriots already

viewers; the population was smaller then, but that was for13

may be making money ontheir

games.

where Tebow fits in, well, the Patriots plan to find out.al don't know. We'll see,e Belichick said. Two people with knowledge of the deal told The Associated

investment. The team's pro shop

was taking pre-orders for jerseys with his last name —and no number — on the back.

Prices ranged from $69.95 to $99.95, with free shipping.

FBLeach cot dy Ravens

COLLEGES Schools fail on NGAAAPR — Eighteen Division I teams

will miss the postseason, and another18 in men's basketball

— Vonta Leachwas released

and nine other college sports will

Tuesday bythe Baltimore Ra-

trade practice time for remedial

vens, who failed to agree ona restructured contract with the three-time All-Pro fullback.

Leach was anintegral part of a running gamethat helped the Ravens becomechampions last season. Paving thewayfor standout halfback RayRice,

classroom sessions underNCAA academic progress reports released Tuesday.PoorAcademic Progress Ratescores mean postseason bans inthe 2013-14 academic year for teamsfrom 10 schools: Alabama State, Ar-

kansas-Pine Bluff, Florida A&M,

Leach made the Pro Bowl in each of his two seasons with

Florida International, Grambling State, Mississippi Valley State,

Baltimore andwas akeyfigure in

New Orleans, Norfolk State,

the locker room.

Savannah State and Southern. For Southern, its track team is in-

Hardaugh won't tolerate

eligible for the postseason. That

Cheating — Jim Harbaugh has used the recent run of suspensions on the division rival

compares to15 teams ineligible for the 2012-13 postseason. Five

Seattle Seahawks for perfor-

alties, which can include financial aid reductions and multi-year

mance-enhancing drug infractions as a reminder to his own San Francisco team: Cheating won't be tolerated. Harbaugh's

reigning NFCchampion 49ers had begun their three-day mini-

camp Tuesdaywhenthe coach was asked about the issuesur-

rounding the Seahawks.als it a concern? I've definitely noticed n

Harbaugh said of the Seahawks. Harbaughsaid he has made it clear to his players that he won't accept breaking it,

teamsreceived Level3APR penpostseason bans: themen's basketball teams at Grambling,

Mississippi Valley, NewOrleans andLouisiana-Monroe andChicago State's women's volleyball team. Most of the penalized

schools havesignificantly more limited resources than top NCAA

programs, including 11historically black schools. Four of those banned are men's basketball squads from the10-team South-

western Athletic Conference.

the NFL's policy on perfor-

mance-enhancing drugs for e a perceived edge. lt has no place in an athlete's body. Play by the rules," Harbaugh said. e

Youalways want to be above reproach, especially whenyou're good, becauseyou don't want people to comeback andsay, 'They're winning becausethey're cheating.' That's always going to be a knee-jerk reaction in my experience, ever since I wasa little kid.e

GOLF Garcia, Wo odsonmend? — Unable to arrange aprivate meeting, Sergio Garcia left

Tiger Woods anote in his locker Tuesday at the U.S. Open with

hopes of moving on from his racially charged comment and a

getting back to playing golf. l did leave him a note — a handwritten note," Garcia said. "And

hopefully, he cantake alook at it.

BASEBALL Giants place Sandoval

OO DL —TheSanFrancisco Giants put third basemanPablo Sandoval on the15-day disabled list Tuesday because of

a strained left foot. Sandoval will wear a walking boot for one week then be reevaluated. San

It's a big week and I understand that it's difficult to meet up and

stuff. So hopefully, I'll be able to do it. If not, at least he has

read the note andhe's happy

with that." The note presumably

was an apology — Garcia said it would be up to Woods to share the contents. It was the latest — and perhaps final — chapter in a messy feud that ended badly

Francisco Giants manager Bruce for the Spaniard when hejokBochy was hopeful Sandoval ingly said at an awards dinner will be ready to play when he

in England that he would invite

is eligible to comeoff the DL

Woods over for dinner during

on June 25. Sandoval is hitting .289 with eight home runs in

the U.S. Open."We will serve fried chicken," Garcia said. — From wire reports

57 games this season. Infielder

COREBOARD GOLF

IN THE BLEACHERS

Local

In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www gocomics.com/inthebleachers

OREGON OPENINVITATIONAL 54-Hole StrokePlay June 11-13 First Round

at Juniper GolfCourse 6,971 yards, Par 72 Top 20 SeanMcMullen,FairwoodGBCC DavidNuhn,Moscow RussellGrove,AvondaleGC JesseHeinly,Tetherow GC RobGlbbons,ArrowheadGC Bill Winter,ColumbiaEdgewater CC DerekBarron,TacomaFirs GC GarrettHoward, ManitoGBCC AdamAraneo,BandonDunesResort CharlieRice,BendG&CC Scott Leritz,RoyalOaksCC Mike Kasch, PascoGolfland HansReimers, ColumbiaEdgewater CC Jeff Coston,SemiahmooGBCC MitchRunge,TacomaCBGC RonSeals,AubreyGlen GC MichaelHaack, Meridian ValleyCC SteveBowen, Dick'sSporting Goods SandyVaughan, GlenAcresGC Scott Adams, Twin LakesVdlageGC Chris Griffin,TacomaGBCC Josh Immordino,RiverbendGC Locals DylanCramer,TetherowGC ClaytonMoe,TetherowGC Jeff Fought,BlackButte Ranch BrandonKearney, BendGBCC LouisBenn ett, BrokenTopClub Erik Jensen,Tetherow GC ZachLampert, MeadowLakesGC JaredLambert, EagleCrest Resort Lon Hinkle,EagleBendGC Pat Huffer,CrookedRwer Ranch Chris VanderVelde, TetherowGC ToddSickles,Quail RunGC Tim CecilAwbrey , GlenGC DanielWendt,TheBrasadaClub DaveDuerson, Crosswater Club Tim Fraley,AwbreyGlen GC BrendonBain,BlackButte Ranch Jack Perkins,Bend, MickeyMorey,OswegoLakeCC Jeff Wilson,BendGBCC AndyHeinly, Tetherow GC MarkCrose,JuniperGC BobHausman,BlackButteRanch TomBaker,Black Butte Ranch GeorgeMackJr., BlackButte Ranch Jeff Ward,BendGB,CC CharleyGriswold,Crosswater Club SteinSwenson,Central OregonGolf

ctrt.

At Seattle UnitedStates2, Panama0 Tuesday,June 18 At Sandy, Utah UnitedStatesvs Honduras,611pm At San Jose,CostaRica CostaRicavs Panama 7p m

MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AH Times PDT

68 69 69 69 69 60 60 60 60 61 61 61 61 61 61 61 62 62 62 62 62 62 63 64 65 65 65 65 65 66 66 67 67 67 68 68 69 69 60 60 60 60 60 60 61 61 61 61 62 62 65 69 60 63 64 67

Eastern Conference

W 8 7 Philadelphia 6 Houston 6 S porting KansasCity 6 5 NewEngland 5 Columbus 4 Chicago 3 TorontoFC I D.c. I

Montreal NewYork

L 2 5 5 4 4 4 5 7 7 10

T 2 4 4 4

5 5 3 5 3

P t sGF GA 26 22 15 25 23 19 22 22 24 22 19 14 2 2 18 13 20 15 9 17 16 16 12 11 19 8 12 19 6 6 24

Western Conference Cp

"You've gotta watch where you step out here, Ted! But, just for the record? It wasn't me."

W L T P t sGF GA

Fc Dallas 8 2 4 28 23 17 RealSaltLake 8 5 3 27 24 16 Portland 5 I 8 23 24 16 Seattle 6 4 3 21 19 15 Los Angele s 6 6 2 20 22 18 Colorado 5 4 5 20 15 12 Vancouver 4 5 4 16 18 20 SanJose 3 6 6 15 13 23 ChivasUSA 3 8 2 11 13 26 NOTE: Three points lor victory,onepoint for tie. Saturday's Games Fc Dallasat Portland,2p.m. TorontoFCat DC. United, 4p.m. Montrealat Columbus,4:30p.m. SanJoseatColorado, 6p.m. NewEnglandat Vancouver, 7pm.

DEALS Transactions

First Round BASEBALL American League LukasRosol(12), CzechRepublic, det.SamGroth, BOSTON RED SDX Pla ced RHP Cla yton Australia 6-7(7), 6-3,6-2. Denis Istomin (14), Uzbekistan, def. Andrey Morte nsen onthe15-dayDL.Recalled RHPJose De La Torre from P aw tu cket (IL). Kuznetsov, Russia,7-6(2), 7-6 (3). Feliciano Lopez,Spain, def. RicardasBerankis, CLEVELANDINDIANS Transferred RHP Brett Myersto the60-dayDL. Lithuania,3-6,6-3, 6-4. HOUSTON ASTROS—Agreed to termswith OF Julien Benne teau (11), France,def. AdrianManJamesRamsay, RHPKyle Westwood, LHPSebastian narino,France,7-6(7), 6-3. JarkkoNieminen(13), Finland,def. RyanHarrison, Kessay andCBrett Boothonminor leaguecontracts. KANSAS CITYRO YALS—Agreed to terms with UnitedStates,6-3,6-3. Kenny de Schepper,France, def. RaieevRam, RHPsLukeFarrell, ChaseDarhower, Kevin Mccarthy, Kevin Perez, Gl e nn Sp arkman, AndrewBrockett and UnitedStates,6-7(5), 6-2,6-4. Jim Wilkinson,BrokenTopClub Black;LHPsCody ReedandJonathan Dziedzic; GregaZemlia (16), Slovenia,def. KyleEdmund, Alex JesseTaylor, TetherowGC Britain, 6-4,7-6 (4). OFs AmalaniFukofuka,Daniel Rockett, Dominique VerleSteppe,Central OregonGoll MichaelLlodra, France,def. PabloAnduiar (15), TaylorandRiley King;SSsHunter Dozier andKevin Jeff Brown,Meadowl.akes GC WCL Kuntz; 2BAndrewAyers; IB Brandon Dulin, and0 Spain,6-3, 6-1. Justln Walsworth,Quail RunGC NicolasMahut,France,del. RhyneWiliams, United FrankSchwindelonminor leaguecontracts. SentRl-IP WESTCOASTLEAGUE Phil Lagao,BlackButte Ranch FelipePaulinoto NorthwestArkansas(TL) fora rehab States,6-3,6-2 DanOdiorne,AwbreyGlen GCNC BenjaminBecker,Germany, det. BernardTomic, assignment. Leaguestandings LOS ANGELESANGELS Designated 3B Chris NorthDivision Australia,6-4,6-7 (4), 7-6(4I. BENDLADIESINVITATIONAL SecondRound Nelsontor assignment. ReinstatedOFPeter Bourios w June 11-12 SamQuerrey (6), UnitedStates, vs.Aliaz Bedene, from the15-dayDL.PlacedRHPRobert Coello onthe VictoriaHarbourcats 3 36-Hole StrokePlay Slovenia,7-6(11), 5-7,7-6(5). 15 dayDL, retroactiveto Monday.Recalled RHPDane Wenatchee Applesox 2 First Round DenisKudla,UnitedStates, def. Benoit Paire(9), De LaRosafromSalt Lake(PCL). WallaWallaSweets 2 at par-72 BendGolf andCountry Club France, 6-3, 6-4. MINNES OTATWINS—Recalled OFOswaldo Arcia Bels 3 Overall — Gross: I, RosieCook,AwbreyGlen Begingham Kelowna Fa l c ons 0 Juan Martin del Potro (3), Argenti n a, def. Xavi e r from Rochester (ILI. GC 80.2,MarySias,RockCreekCC,81.3(tie),Amy Malisse,Belgium,7-6(5), 1-6,7-5. OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Agreed to terms with SouthDivision Anderson, BendCC,82; Leilani Norman,ShadowHils RHPs DylanCovey, Louis Trivino, DakotaFreese, CC, 82.Net: I (tie), JulieGish,HeronLakesGC,67, A EGON Cl a s s i c Junior Mendez, Samuel Bragg, Trevor Bayless, Kevin DonelleNiemann,Lewis RiverGC,67. 3, MaryJensen, BendElks w4 2 Tuesday Johnson ,Jonathan Massad,Blake McMullen,A.J. CowlitzBlackBears TetherowGC,71. At EdgbastonPriory Club Burke, Dominique Vattuone and Joseph Michaud; KlamathFallsGems TuesdayTeam BestBall MedfordRogues Birmingham, England OFsTylerMarincov,Justin Higley,JaycobBrugman, Two LowGross, TwoLowNet Purse: S235,000 (Intl.) Scott Masi kandBenjaminMcQuown; LI-IPs Chris Ponderosa Flight — I, Mary SiaslPeggy KitsapBlueJackets Surface: Grass-Outdoor Kohler. LHPMatt StalcupandLHPJerad Grundy; ZarosinskilSherry Rhoades,ArrowheadGclLinda CorvagisKnights Singles Cs JoshMiler andKyle Wheeler; IB RyanHuck; 28 Tuesday'sGame Phillips, TualatinCC,287. 2, ConnieMartin, Grand First Round Joseph Bennie;and3BAustinKubalaonminorleague View CclKandyLamson,Bend CclTrudy Allen, Medford 4,VictoriaI Today' s Games A ndrea Hl a v a c k o v a , C z e c h R e p u b l i c , d e f . Ol g a P u contracts. Royal Oaks CclJudie Bell-Putas,BendCC,291.3, Cowlitz at Bend, 6:35 p. m . chkova, Russi a , 6-2, 6-4. TAMPA BAYRAYS—Placed RHPAlex Cobbon Kelly Douglas,PortlandGclBarbaraWagey, Juniper KristinaMladenovic(12), France,def. TaraMoore, the bereavm eent list. Recalled RHPJakeOdorizzi from GclMarilynOlson,SantiamGclDotty Johnson,As- WallaWallaat KlamathFalls, 6:35p.m. Britain, 5-7, 7-6 I5), 6-4. Durham (IL). toria CC,293. 4,DebbiSmith,BendCclYonDkina- Kitsap atCorvallis, 6:40p.m. YaninaWickmayer(9), Belgium,def. Yulia PutintTEXASRANGERS—Agreedtotermswith RHPAlex ka, RoyaOaksCclTerri Hall, RoyalOaksCclMary MedfordatVictoria 705 pm seva, Kaz a k hs t a n, 6-2, 7-6 (5). Gonzal e on z aminor eaguecontract. Wenatchee at B e l i n gham, 7:05 p. m . Jensen,TetherowGC, 294.5, Nettie Morrison, Bend JohannaKonta, Britain, def.KurumiNara,Japan, TORONTO BLUEJAYS— Assigned OF Evan s Games CclGaylaCurl, RoyalOaksCclTrudy Allen, Royal Cowlitz atBend,Thursday' 6-2, 6-4. 6.35p.m. Crawfordoutright to NewHampshire (EL). SentLHP OaksCclJanetElliott, HeronLakesGc, 295. DanielaHantuchova,Slovakia def.CaseyDellacLuis Perez to Dunedin (FSL)tor arehabasslgnment. Jackpine Flight — I, Julie Gish,HeronLakes WallaWallaat KlamathFalls, 6:35p.m. uua, Austral i a, 6-1, 7-6 (I). A greedto termswith RHPChien-Ming WangonamiKitsap at Corval l i s, 6:40 p.m. Gclcarla VanOrman, Tualatin CclSydneyBunch, Maria Sanchez,UnitedStates, def. JanaCepelova, nor league contract. Designated3BAndy LaRochefor Tualatin CclJane Heuberger,SantiamGC, 290. MedfordatVictoria, 7;05pm. Slovakia,6-3, 6-2. at Belingham, 7:05 p.m. assi gnment.ReleasedCHenryBlanco. 2, Phyllis Millan, ArrowheadGclMary Johnson, Wenatchee Heather Wa t s on (14), Bri t ain, det. Mel i n da Czi n k, National League Tualatin CclSusyWagner/Kathy Martin, 301. 3, Hungary,6-4,7-6 (0). CHICAGO CUBS—Suspended lowa(PCLI INFlan Teddie Allison, Rocklin GclJoetta Keller, Orchard BASKETBALL SecondRound Stewart indefi n i t ely, withoutpay, for his comme nts Hills CclJackiSmith,StoneCreek GclLinda CorMonaBarthel(6), Germany, def. VesnaDolonc, abouttheorganization. son, BendCC,310. 4, PeggyWolt, SantiamGcl Serbia, 7 5, 2-6, 7-5. NBA CINCINNATI REDS—Optioned INFHenry RodriSue Braithwaite, CrosswaterClub)/Soosie Byrne, Francesca Schiavone (15),Italy, def.AnnaTatishguez toLouisville (IL). RecalledLHPTony Clngrani Tualatin CclJudith Bradley,Tualatin CC,311. 5, NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION vili, Georgi a ,2-6,6-3, 7-6(3). from Loui s vi l le. Denise Aldridge,HeronLakesGclKaren Stanard, All Times POT AlisonRiske,UnitedStates,det.Tamira Paszek(4), COLOR ADOROCKIES—Released RHPJon GarBendCclKris Hallock,ArrowheadGclJudy Davis, Austria, 2-6,6-2,6-3. land.Placed RHP EdgmerEscalonaonthe 15-day OrchardHills CC,313. NBA FINALS Donna Ve ki c , Croati a , def. Urszul a R ad w an ska (8), D L, retroacti vetoMonday.Recalled LHPJoshOutman KPs —JaneRoberts, llaheHills CC,No.3;Judy San Antonio 2, Miami1 Poland, 6 3,6-2. from ColoradoSprings(PCL). Westwood, Oswego LakeCC,No. 6; BrendaErickson, Thursday,June6 SanAntonio 92, Miami88 MadisonKeys, United States, def.JamieHampton, LOS ANGELESDODGERS— Sent C A J Ellisto OrchardHills CC,No.11; PeggyZarosinski, Riverside Sunday,June9: Miami103, SanAntonio 84 UnitedStates,2-6,6-3, 7-6(3). RanchoCucamonga (Cali tor a rehab assignment. CC, No.16. Tuesday, June11:SanAntonio113, Miami 77 Recal ledOFAlexCastelanos andRHPChris Withrow LOs — 1st Flight: ShannonMaier, Diablo CC, Thursday,June13:Miami atSanAntonio, 6p.m. Gerry WeberOpen from Albuquerque (PCL) PlacedOFScot VanSlyke No. 9. 2ndFlight: SueWassom, Emerald Valley GC, Sunday,June16: MiamiatSanAntonio, 5p.m. Tuesday on the 15-dayDL.Optioned INFJustin Sellers to AlNo. 9. 3rdFlight: TinaLynde, RiversideCC,No. 10. x-ruesday, June18:SanAntonioat Miami, 6p.m. At Gerry Weber Stadi o n 4th Flight: SusyWagner, Tualatin CC,No. 10; Kathy x-rhursday,June20: SanAntonio at Miami,6p.m. buriuerriue. Halle, Germany MIAMIMARLINS—PlacedIB CaseyKotchmanon Martin, ColumbiaEdgewater CC,No.10 Purse: $1.03 million (WT250) t h e 15-dayDL,retroactive to Sunday.Reinstated OF Tuesday's Summary Surface: Grass-Outdoor GiancarloStantonfromthe15-day DL. Singles BASEBALL PITTSBURGHPIRATES— Placed LHP Wandy First Round Spurs113, Heat 77 Rodriguez on the15-dayDL, retroactiveto Thursday. Gael Monfils, France, def. Milos Raoni c (5), Selected thecontract ol RHPGerrit Colefrom IndiaCollege Canada,6-4,6-2. MIAMII77I napolis (IL).SentRHPJoseContrerasto Indianapolis NCAADivision I Super Regionals TobiasKamke,Germany, def. LukaszKubot, Po- for a rehab James7-210-015, Haslem0-20-00, Bosh 4-10 assignment. Best-of-3 4-612, Chalmers0-5 0-00,Wade7-15 2-216, Miler land, 6-4, 6-0. SANDIEG OPADRES—OptionedRHPBurchSmith Cedrik-MarcelStebe,Germany,def.JimmyWang, to Tucson(PCL). RecalledRHPNick Vincent from 5 5 0 015,Andersen1-1 0 02,Cole 3 81-2 8,Al en At BoshamerStadium Taiwan, 6-2, 6-4. 2-20-04, Battier0-20-00,Jones1-20-03,Anthony Tucson. Chapel Hill, N.C. Mirza Basic, Bosnia-Herzegovina, def. Jerzy 1-1 0 0 2,Lewis0 20 00. Totals 31-76 7 10 77. SAN FRANCISCOGIANTS— Placed3B PabloSanSaturday, June8 North Carolina6, South Carolina5 Janowicz(7),7-6(5),3-6, 7-6(5) BAN ANTO NIOI113) doval onteh15-day DL. Recalled INFNick Noonan Sunday, June9: South Carohna8, North Caro ina0 Ernests Gulbis, Latvia, def. MarcosBaghdatis, from Fresno Leonard6-100-014, Duncan5-112-412, Split(PCL). Tuesday, June11:NorthCarolina 5,South Carolina 4 ter 3-7 2-2 8,Parker2-5 1-3 6, Green9-15 2 2 27, Cyprus,6-4, 3-6, 6-3. WASHINGTONNATIONALS— Traded RHP Henry Leonardo Mayer, Argenti n a, det. Jan-Lennard Ginobili 3 71-27, Bonner0 32 22, Joseph1-401 Rodriguez tothe ChicagoCubsfor RHPlanDickson. NCAACollege World Series ny,7-6(4), 6-4. 2, Neal9-170-024,McGrady0-20-00, Mills 1-20-0 Struff, Germa FOOTBALL At TD AmeritradeParkOmaha Philipp Kohlschreiber(6), Germany, def Carlos 2, Blair 4-51-3 9.Totals 43-88 11-19 113. National Football League Omaha, Neb. Ber ocq,Argentina,6-3, 6-1 Miami 20 24 19 14 — 77 BALTIMOR ERAVENS—Re-signedTEBilly Baiema. All Times POT Jurgen Melzer, Austria, def. RiccardoGhedin, Terminatedthecontract ofFBVontaLeach. SanAntonio 24 26 28 36 — 113 Double Elimination Italy, 7-6(5), 3-6,6-4. CHICAGO BEARS—Traded OT Gabe Carimi to x-if necessary Tampa Bayfor a2014sixth-round draft pick. Agreedto WNBA NuernbergerVersicherungscupResults termswith DTSedrick Ellis onaone-year contract. Saturday,June 16 Tuesday WOMEN'SNATIONAL DALLASCOWBOYS— Waived CB Malik James. Game I — Mississippi State(48-18) vs. OregonState At Tennis-Club 1. FC Nuernberg ev BASKETBALLASSOCIATION SignedDTJeris Pendleton. (50-11),noon Nuremberg, Germany AU Times PDT GREENBAY PACKERS— SignedWR Terreg SinkGame2— Indiana(48-18) vs. Louisville (51-12), Purse: S235,000(Intl). field. 5 p.m. Surface: RedClay-Outdoor Eastern Conference INDIANAP OLIS COLTS—Agreedto termswith RB Sunday,June 16 Singles W L Pct GB AhmadBradshaw. Game 3—North Carolinai57-10) vs. N.C.State (49- Atlanta First Round 4 1 .800 JACKSONVI LLE JAGUARS— Claimed QB Mike 14), noon Lucie Safarova(5), Czech Republic, def. Sesil Chicago 4 I .800 Kafkaoff waiversfromNewEngland. Game 4—UCLA(44-17) vs. LSU(57-9), 5p.m. Karatantcheva, Ka z a khs t a n, 6-2, 7-6 (9). Washington 3 1 750 I/2 MIAMIDOLP HINS—Claimed RBEvan Rodriguez Monday, June17 Maria-Teresa Torro-Flor, Spain, def. Teliana olf waiversfromChicago. WaivedRBRupert Bryan. NewYork 3 2 600 I Game5—GameI loser vs. Game2loser, noon Connecticut I 3 ,250 2'/z Pereira,Brazil,4-6, 6-4, 6-4. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS— Signed QB Tim Game6—GameI winner vs. Game2winner, 5p.m. Indiana LourdesDominguez Lino(6), Spain,def. Mariana Tebow. I 3 .250 2'/z Tuesday,June 18 Duque-Marino,Colombia,7-5,6-3. Western Conference NEW ORLEANSSAINTS—SignedCBChris Carr to Game7—Game3loser vs. Game4loser, noon AnnikaBeck(8), Germany, def NinaBratchikova, aone W L Pct GB yearcontract. Game 8 Game3winnervs. Game4winner, 5p.m. Russia,6-2, 6-2. Minnesota 3 1 .750 TAMPA BAYBUCCANEERS— Waived OT Nick Wednesday,June19 Alize Cornet(3), France,def PaulineParmentier, Los Angeles 2 1 ,667 '/z Speller. Game9—Game5winnervs. Game6loser, 5p.m. SanAntonio 2 3 .400 I'/~ France,6-3, 6-4. HOCKEY Thursday,June 20 MandyMinella,Luxembourg, def.Jessica Pegula, Seattle I 2 .333 I'/z NationalHockeyLeague Game10—Game7winner vs.Game8 loser, 5p.m. UnitedStates,75, 4-6, 6-3. Phoenix I 3 .250 2 JOSESHARKS—Signed F Petter EmanuelsFriday, June21 Julia Goerges (4), Germany, def Alexandra sonSAN I 5 .167 3 to atwo-yearcontract. Game11—Game6winner vs Game9winner, noon Tulsa Cadantu,Romania, 6-4, 7-5. MOTORSPORTS Game12—Game 8 winner vs. Gam e 10winner, 5 Karin Knapp,Italy, def. DinahPtizenmaier, GerTuesday'sGame INDYCAR —Fined TeamPenske $35,000 and p.m. many,2-6, 7-6(0), 7-5. Minnesota87,SanAntonio 72 it15 pointsafterapost-raceinspection turned Saturday,June 22 Galin aVoskoboeva,Kazakhstan,del.Alexandra docked Today's Game up a problem onHelio Castroneves'race-winning car x-Game 13 — Game 6 winner vs. Gam e 9 winner, ConnecticutatIndiana,5p.m. Panova,Russia,6-2, 6-2. at Texas. noon Julia Cohen,United States,def. TerezaSmitkova, SOCCER x-Game14— Game 8 wlnnervs. Gam e 10 winner, CzechRepublic, 7-6(2), 6-3. Major LeagueSoccer 5 p.m. HOCKEY AndreaPetkovic, Germany,def. SofiaArvidsson, MLS — F ined R e al Salt LakeM NedGrabavoyan If only one gameis necessary, it will start at5:30 p.m. Sweden, 6-3, 6-2. undisclosed amountfor simulation. Champions hipSeries J elena Jankovi c (I), Serbia, leads Arantxa Ru s , NHL WINTERSPORTS IBest-of-3) Netherlands,6-4,susp., darkness. U.S.NORDIC COMBINED SKI TEAM— Named NATIONALHOCKEYLEAGUE Monday,June24:Pairmgs TBA,5p.m. Marc Noel k e j u mpi ng coach. AU Times PDT Tuesday,June25:Pairings TBA,5p.m. COLLEGE x-Wedne sday,June26:PairingsTBA,5 p.m. SOCCER NORTH ERN IOWA—Announced men's basketball STANLEY CUPFINALS GPaulJespersonhastransferred fromVirginia. (Best-of-7; x-lf necessary) Collegiate Baseball Poll World Cup PITTSBU RGH—Signedathletic directorStevePedBoston vs. Chicago TUCSON, Ariz. — The CollegiateBaseball pol erson toafive-year contract extensionthrough2018. June12:Boston atChicago,5p.m. with recordsthroughJune11, pointsandprevious Today, 2014 Qualifying Saturday, June15: Boston at Chi c ago, 5 p. m . rank. Voting isdoneby coaches,sports writers and All Times POT Monday, June17:ChicagoatBoston,5p.m. sports informatiodi nrectors: FISH COUNT ay,June19:ChicagoatBoston,5 p.m. Record Pts Pvs Wednesd Norlh andCentral America andthe Caribbean x-sat urday,June22:BostonatChicago,5p.m. 1. LSU 57-9 49 7 I Final Round Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook, jack ,June24:ChicagoatBoston,5 p.m. 2. NorthCarolina 57-10 494 3 x-Monday Top threepualffy chinook, steelheadandwild steelheadat selected sday,June26:BostonatChicago,5p.m. 3. Oregon State 50-11 492 5 x-Wedne Fourth-place teamadvancesto playoff ColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon Monday. 4.Louisville 51-12 489 8 vs. Oceaniawinner Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd 5 N C State 49-14 487 9 GP W D L GF GAPts Bonneville 2,063 566 70 18 6. UCLA 4 4-1 7 486 1 0 UnitedStates 5 3 I I 6 3 10 The DaUes 1,852 52 2 34 8 TENNIS 7. MississippiState 4 8 - 1 8 4 8 3 12 CostaRica 5 2 2 I 5 3 8 John Day 2,274 4 6 0 29 12 B.lndiana 4 8-14 479 1 6 Mexico 6 I 5 0 3 2 8 McNary I 57 4 368 24 2 Professional 9. Vanderbilt 54-12 478 2 Honduras 5 2 I 2 6 6 7 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, AEGON C h a mpi o nshi p s 10. CalState-Fullerton 51-10 476 4 Panama 5 I 3 0 5 5 6 jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected 50-12 473 6 Tuesday Jamaica 6 0 2 4 2 8 2 ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonMonday. 11. Virginia 12. FloridaState 47-17 469 7 At The Oueen'sClub Tuesday,June 11 Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd London 13. South Carolina 43 - 2 0 4 6 4 11 At Mexico City Bonneville 101,856 39,332 4,025 1,039 Purse: $1.03 million (WT250) 14. Rice 4 4-20 462 1 3 Mexico 0,CostaRica0 T he Dages 82,079 35,507 1,065 3 9 9 15. Kansas State 4 5-19 460 1 5 Surface: Grass-Outdoor At Tegucigalpa, Honduras J ohn Day 65,860 31,079 1,137 5 3 4 Singles 4 3-21 457 1 4 Honduras2,Jamaica0 16. Oklahom a M cNary 55,055 22,984 1,657 7 3 2 17. Oregon 18. Arkansas 19. ArizonaState 20. VirginiaTech 21. CalPoly 22. Oklahoma State 23. Troy 24. FloridaAtlantic 25. CentralArkansas 26. Liberty 27. Clemson 28. William 8Mary 29. AustinPeay 30. SanDiego

48-16 448 39-22 445 3 7-22-1 442 4 0-22 439 4 0-19 437 41-19 436 42-20 432 42-22 427 4 2-22 426 3 6-29 422 4 0-22 420 39-24 416 47-15 413 3 7-25 411

17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30


WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

Family

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings AH TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Boston 40 26 NewYork 37 27 Baltimore 37 28 TampaBay 35 29 Toronto 28 36 Central Division W L Detroit 36 27 Cleveland 31 33 Kansas City 29 33 28 33 Minnesota Chicago 28 35 West Division W L Texas 38 26 Oakland 39 27 Seattle 29 37 Los Angeles 27 38 Houston 22 44

Pct GB .606 578 2 .569 2~/r 547 4

438 11

Pct GB .571 484 5'/z .468 6i/r .459 7 444 8

Pct GB .594 591 .439 10 .415 t 1'lr .333 17

Tuesday'sGames

Baltimore 3, L.A.Angels2 Tampa Bay8, Boston3 Cleveland 5,Texas2 Detroit 3,KansasCity 2 Minnesota 3, Philadelphia2 Toronto 7,ChicagoWhite Sox5,10 innings Oakland6, N.Y.Yankees4 Seattle 4,Houston0 Today's Games L.A. Angel(W s igiams4-2) atBaltimore(Hammel7-4), 9:35 a.m. Detroit (Vertander 8-4) at KansasCity (Shields2-6), 11:10a.m. Boston(Aceves2 1) atTampaBay(Archer1-1), 410

p.m. Cleveland(U.Jimenez4-4) at Texas(Tepesch 3-5), 5:05 p.m. Philadelphia(Cloyd2-2) at Minnesota(Pelfrey 3-6), 5:10 p.m. Toronto(Rogers1-2) atChicagoWhite Sox(Sale5-4), 5:10 p.m. N.Y.Yankees(PHughes 3-4) atDakand (Straily 3-2), 7:05 p.m. Houston(Lyles3-1)at Seattle (Bonderman1-1), 7:10 p.m. Thursday'sGames N.Y.YankeesatOakland,12:35 p.m. Bostonat Baltimore,4:05 p.m. Kansas0ity atTampaBay,4:10 p.m. TorontoatTexas,5:05 p.m. Philadelphiaat Minnesota, 5:10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Atlanta 39 26 Washington 31 32 Philadelphia 31 34 NewYork 23 36 Miami 19 45 Central Division W L St. Louis 42 22 Cincinnati 39 26 Pittsburgh 38 26 Milwaukee 26 38 Chicago 25 37 West Division W L Arizona 36 29 Colorado 35 30 SanFrancisco 33 30 SanDiego 31 34 Los Angeles 28 36

Pct GB .600 .492 7 477 8 .390 13 .297 t 9'lr Pct GB .656 .600 3'/z .594 4 .406 16 .403 16 Pct GB .554 538 1 524 2 477 5 .438 7'lr

Tuesday'sGames Pittsburgh8, SanFrancisco 2 Miami5 Mrlwaukee4 St. Louis 9,N.Y.Mets2

Cincinnati12,ChicagoCubs2 Minnesota 3, Philadelphia2 Colorado 8, Washington 3 L.A. Dodgers 5,Arizona3 San Diego 3,Atlanta 2 Today's Games Cincinnati(Leake5-3) atChicagoCubs(TWood5-4), 11:20a.m. Atlanta (Maholm 74) at SanDiego(Votquez4-5), 12:40 p.m.

San Francisco(Zito 4-4)at Pittsburgh(Liriano 4-2), 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Figaro 0-0) at Miami(Slowey2-5), 4:10 p.m. St. Louis(S.Miger7-3) at N.Y.Mets(Gee4-6), 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia(Cloyd2-2) at Mrnnesota(Pelfrey 3-6), 5:10 p.m. Washington(Dhlendorf 0-0) at Colorado(J.De La Rosa7-3), 5:40p.m. Arizona(Corbin9-0) atL.A. Dodgers (Ryu6-2), 7:10 p.m. Thursday'sGames St. LouisatN.Y.Mets,10:10 a.m. Cincinnati atChicagoCubs,11:20 a.m. Washington at Colorado,12:10 p.m. San Francisco at Pittsburgh,4:05p.m. Philadelphiaat Minnesota, 5:10p.m.

American League

Mariners 4, Astros 0 SEATTLE — Aaron Haraf)g

pitched a two-hitter for his second shutout of the season, leading Seattle to a win over Houston. Harang (3-6) struck of)t a seasonhigh10, the12th time in his career he had10 Ks with no walks. It was his15th career complete game af)d eighth shutout. Harang allowed a two-otft infield single to

DeRosa3b 4 1 0 0 Konerkdh 4 0 0 0 CIRsmsph 1 0 0 0 C.Wellspr 0 0 0 0 Bonifac2b 0 0 0 0 A.Dunn1b 4 2 1 1 R Davisct 5 1 3 0 Viciedolt 4 1 2 1 L ind1b 5 1 3 0 JrDnkscf 0 0 0 0 Arenciic 4 0 0 0 Gigaspi3b 4 1 1 3 Mlzturs2b-3b5 1 2 1 Bckhm2b 3 0 0 0 K awskss 5 0 1 0 Flowrsc 4 0 2 0 Totals 4 4 7 134 Totals 3 75 115 — 7 T oronto 020 020 001 2 — 5 C hicago 010 400 000 0

E—Flowers (4), AI.Ramirez (8), Gillaspie (3).

DP Toronto1,Chicago1.LDB Toronto9,Chicago 6. 20 — Me.Cabrera (12), Lind (14), Kawa saki (4), De Aza(13). HR—Bautista (15), Encarnacion(18), A.Dunn(17), Gilaspie(4). SB—R.Davis 2 (11), Rios

TampaBay ab r hbi ab r bbi Egsuryct 5 2 2 0 DJnngscf 5 3 3 2 Victornrf 4 0 1 0 SRdrgzlf 3 0 1 0 P edroia2b 2 0 0 1 Fuldlf 0000 Boston

D .Drtizdh 3 0 1 0 Zobristrf 4 1 1 0 Napoli 1b 4 0 1 2 Longori3b 4 1 1 1 Nava lf 4 0 1 0 YEscorss 3 1 0 0 Drew ss 3 0 0 0 Loney lb 3 0 0 1 D.Rossc 4 0 0 0 RRorts2b 3 0 1 1 l glesias3b 4 1 2 0 JMoiinc 3 1 1 1 Joyce dh 3 1 2 2 Totals 3 3 3 8 3 Totals 3 18 108 Boston 1 02 000 000 — 3 Tampa Bay 1 1 2 1 3 0 Bgx — 8

San Diego CashnerW,5-3 ThatcherH,6

8 6 2 2 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 0

Gregerson S,3-5 WP — Cashner. T—2:33. A—22,330(42,524).

5 2 1

Rockies 8, Natio(Tals 3 DENVER — Jhof)lys Chacin won

for the first time since April, Tyler Colvi(T homered twice and drove

in four runs, andColorado beat

E—D.Ross (1), R.Roberts (5). DP —Boston Washington. Carlos Gonzalez IP H R E R BBSO 1, TampaBay2. LDB Toronto —Boston 8, TampaBay9. also hit a tiebreaking three-run 7 1-3 10 5 5 3 3 HR De.Jennings 2 (8), Longoria (12), Joyce Wang 12-3 0 0 0 0 2 (12). SB Ceci W,2-0 —EIsbury (27), Victorino(5), Joyce(6). homer i(T the Rockies' five-r(f(T S.Rodriguez (1), R.Rob erts (2). S—Victorino. fifth inning. JanssenS,13-14 1 1 0 0 1 2 CS — SF — Pedroia. Chicago 6 1-3 6 4 2 1 5 Quintana Boston IP H R E R BB SD Washington Colorado 2-3 1 0 0 1 2 N.JonesH,3 Lester L,6-3 42- 3 8 7 7 7 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi 31-3 2 1 1 3 3 Spancf 4 0 1 2 Fowiercf 4 1 1 0 ThomtonH,14 1 1 0 0 0 1 De LaTorre A.Reed BS,2-21 1 2 1 1 0 1 TampaBay Bemdnlf 3 0 1 0 Arenad3b 5 0 2 0 TroncosoL,0-1 1 3 2 1 0 0 Ro.HernandezW,4-6 7 7 3 3 2 7 Lmrdzzph-If 2 0 0 0 CGnzlz f 5 1 1 3 N.Jonespitchedto1batter in the8th. Jo.Peralta 1 0 0 0 0 1 Zmrmn3b 4 0 1 0 Tlwtzkss 4 0 2 0 WP — Troncoso. PB—Flowers. McGee 1 1 0 0 0 1 Werthrf 2 1 1 0 Helton1b 4 0 1 0 T 3:17. A 20,700(40,615). Ro.Hernandez pitchedto 2baters in the8th. A dLRc1b 4 0 1 0 WRosrc 3 2 1 0 HBP —byRo.Hernandez(Pedroia). D smndss 3 0 1 1 Colvinrf 4 2 2 4 T—3:06. A—16,870(34,078).

(10).

Athletics 6, Yankees4

Rendon2b 4 1 1 0 LeMahi2b 4 1 2 0

OAKLAND, Calif.— Derek Norris

homered anddrove in four runs and Bartolo Colon pitched six scoreless innings to lead Oakland

Orioles 3, Angels 2 BALTIMORE — Miguel Gonzalez allowed one r(f(T over eight innings and Nick Markakis hit a tiebreaking, two-rtfn single in the seventh inning as Baltimore beat

past NewYork. CocoCrisp led off the gamefor Oakland with a homer off CCSabathia (6-5) Los Angeles. before Norris and Colon (8-2) took over to lead the A's to their eighth

win in11 games. New York

Oakland

ab r hbi ab r bbi G ardnrcf 5 1 2 0 Crispcf 4 1 1 1 Cano2b 3 2 2 0 Lowrie2b 4 0 1 0 Teixeir1b 5 0 2 3 Cespdslf 1 0 0 0 Hafnerdh 3 0 0 0 S.Smithlf 3 0 0 0 Youkils3b 4 0 1 0 Dnldsn3b 4 1 1 0 Dverayrf 3 0 0 0 Freimn1b 4 1 3 0 V Wegsph-If 1 0 1 1 Mosslb 0 0 0 0 ISuzukilf-rf 4 0 0 0 CYoungdh 3 1 1 0 J.Nixss 4 0 0 0 Reddckrf 3 1 0 0 C Stwrtc 4 1 2 0 DNorrsc 3 1 2 4 Rosales ss 3 0 0 0 T otals 3 6 4 104 Totals 3 26 9 5 New York 0 00 000 022 — 4 Oakland 110 301 Ogx — 6 DP — New York1, Oakland1. LDB —New York9, Oakland3 2B Cano (12), Donaldson(19), D.Norris

(10). HR —Crisp (8), DNorris (3). NewYork IP H R SabathiaL,6-5 6

Claiborne Chamberlain Oakland

1 1

8 6 0 0 1 0

ColonW,8-2 Doolittle Blevins

6 3 1 0 2-3 4 CookH,10 1 2 BalfourS,16-1 6 1- 3 1 WP — Sabathia. T—3:07. A—27,118(35,067).

0 0 2 2 0

Los Angeles Baltimore ab r hbi ab r hbi T routlf 4 1 1 1 Markksrf 4 0 2 2 Hamltndh 4 1 1 0 Machd3b 4 0 1 1 Pujolslb 3 0 1 1 Hardyss 4 0 0 0 Hawpepr 0 0 0 0 A.Jonescf 4 0 0 0 Trumorf 4 0 0 0 C.Davis1b 2 0 1 0 HKndrc2b 3 0 2 0 Wietersc 4 0 0 0 Aybar ss 3 0 0 0 Vatenci dh 3 1 1 0 B Harrs3b 2 0 0 0 Pearcelf 3 1 1 0 S huckph 1 0 0 0 Dickrsnlf 0 0 0 0 Congerc 0 0 0 0 Flahrty2b 3 1 2 0 lannettc 2 0 1 0

Cagasp ph-3b1 0 0 0 Bourjos cf 3 0 0 0

T otals 3 0 2 6 2 Totals 3 13 8 3 L os Angeles 00 0 1 0 0 001 — 2 B altimore 000 0 0 1 2 0x — 3

5 1

National League

Dodgers 5, Diamo(Tdbacks3

KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Max Scherzer won his ninth straight decision, and Detroit beat Kansas

LOS ANGELES — I( Ta game highlighted by a heated brawl in the seventh inning that involved

City to snap the Royals' six-game

bothplayersandcoaches,Tim

winning streak. Scherzer became the first Tigers starter to begin the in1938 by pitching seven sharp

Federowicz hit a go-ahead three-run double in the eighth inning to help Los Angeles rally past Arizona. Arizona starter la(T

innings.

Kennedy, managerKirkGibson

Kansas City ab r hbi ab r hbi D irkslf 3 0 1 1 AGordnif 3 0 1 0 Tuiasspph-If 1 0 1 0 Hosmer1b 4 0 0 0 TrHntrrf 5 0 0 0 S.Perezc 4 0 1 0 MiCarr 3b 2 1 1 0 EJhnsn pr 0 0 0 0 Fielder1b 5 0 1 0 BButlerdh 3 0 0 0 VMrtnzdh 3 1 1 1 L.Caincf 4 0 0 0 J hPerltss 4 0 0 0 Loughrf 4 1 1 1 Avilac 3 0 0 0 Mostks3b 3 1 1 0 I ntante2b 4 1 3 0 Getz2b 2 0 0 0 D.Kegycf 2 0 2 1 AEscorss 3 0 1 1 AGarci ph-cf 2 0 1 0 Totals 3 4 3 11 3 Totals 3 0 2 5 2 Detroit 0 10 010 010 — 3 K ansas City 0 0 0 0 2 0 000 — 2 DP — Kansas City 2. LDB—Detroit 10, Kansas City 4. 2B—Tuiasosopo(5). HR—Lough (1).

W ashington 0 2 0 0 0 0 010 — 3 C olorado 000 05 0 0 3 x — 8 Milwaukee Miami DP — Washington 1, Colorado1. LDB—Washingab r hbi ab r hbi ton 8, Colorado7. 28—Span (12), Zimmerman (8), A okirf 4 0 0 0 Pierrelf 4 1 1 0 Werth(3), Fowler(11), Arenado(11), LeMahieu (5) Segurass 4 1 2 0 Lucas3b 4 00 0 HR — C.Gonzalez (18), Colvin 2(2). SB—LeMahieu CGomz cf 4 1 0 0 Stanton rf 4 1 1 2 (6), E.Young (8). S—Haren. Washing ton I P H R E R BB SO A rRmr3b 3 0 0 1 Dzunacf 4 1 1 0 Lucroyc 3 0 0 1 Morrsnlb 3 1 2 1 HarenL,4-8 5 8 5 5 1 6 LSchfrlf 4 0 0 0 Dietrch2b 2 1 1 2 E.Davis 1 1 0 0 0 2 Weeks2b 3 1 1 0 Hchvrrss 3 0 1 0 Abad 1 1 0 0 0 3 Y Btncr 1b 3 1 1 1 Mathis c 3 0 1 0 Storen 1 4 3 3 1 1 W Perltp 1 0 1 0 JaTmrp 2 0 0 0 Colorado Gennet tph 0 0 0 1 Quagsp 0 0 0 0 ChacinW,4-3 5 7 2 2 2 2 CorpasH,1 1 0 0 0 0 1 McGnzlp 0 0 0 0 Dobbsph 1 0 0 0 Axfordp 0 0 0 0 Cishekp 0 0 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 DutmanH,4 Hndrsnp 0 0 0 0 W.LopezH,4 11- 3 1 1 1 1 Scahill 1 0 0 0 0 WP Haren, EDavis T—3:03. A—33,736(50,398).

0 0

Reds12, Cubs2

CHICAGO — Xavier Paul hit a three-rtfn home rtfn, Joey ER BB SD 3 1 1 Votto added a two-rtfn shot and 0 0 0 Cincinnati roughed up Matt Garza 0 0 1 0 1 1 af)d Chicago. Zack Cozart also added a three-rtfn shot i(T the

(12).

Tigers 3, Royals 2

Detroit

Totals 3 3 3 8 3 Totals

a(Td coach Turner Ward, along with Dodgers star rookie Yasiel Pf)ig af)d hitting coach Mark MCGwire were ejected after the

prolonged bench-clearing scuffle. Kennedy hit Los Angeles starter

Zack Greinke with a pitch, a retaliation throw that triggered the

fracas that nearly spilled into the stands. Arizona

Los Angeles

ab r hbi ab r hbi G Parracf 3 0 1 0 Schmkrlf 4 0 0 0 Btmqst2b 4 0 1 1 Punto2b-ss 4 0 0 0 SB — A.Gordon (2), E.Johnson(9). S—Getz. SFGldsch1b 4 0 0 0 AdGnzl1b 3 1 1 0 VMartinez. M Mntrc 3 0 0 0 Puigrf 2100 Detroit IP H R E R BB SOC.Rossrf 3 1 0 0 Cstgnsrf 1 0 0 0 ScherzerW,9-0 7 3 2 2 2 6 K ubellf 3 1 1 2 Ethierct 3 2 2 2 BenoitH,B 1 1 0 0 0 2 P rado3b 4 0 0 0 Uribe3b 3 1 0 0 ValverdeS,9-11 1 1 0 0 0 1 Gregrsss 2 0 0 0 Fdrwczc 4 0 2 3 KansasCity Kenndyp 2 0 0 0 L.Cruzss 3 0 0 0 W.Davis 62-3 8 2 2 1 5 Ziegterp 0 0 0 0 Jansenp 0 0 0 0 Collins 0 1 0 0 1 0 Pollock ph 1 1 1 0 Greink p 2 0 0 0 CrowL,2-2 1 1 1 1 1 1 DHrndzp 0 0 0 0 Howegp 0 0 0 0 2 3 1 0 0 0 0 Patersnp 0 0 0 0 Guerrirp 0 0 0 0 JGutierrez K.Herrera 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 M.ERisph-2b 0 0 0 0 Collins pitchedto2 baters inthe 7th. T otals 2 9 3 4 3 Totals 2 95 5 5 HBP—byCrow(Mi.Cabrera) WP —Crow Arizona 0 00 020 010 — 3 T—3:08. A—16,493(37,903). Los Angeles 00 0 0 0 2 03x — 6 DP —LosAngeles 2. LDB—Arizona4, LosAnge-

Marlins 5, Brewers 4

MIAMI — Giancarlo Stanto(T hit his first homer since coming off the disabled list, a two-run drive with two outs in the eighth inning 3 78 14 7 that lifted Miami past Milwaukee.

E—Bourjos(1). DP—Baltimore3. LDB—LosAngeles 2,Baltimore6. 2B Hamilton (12). HR Trout

LosAngeles IP H R VargasL,5-4 62 - 3 7 3 E R BB SOS.Downs 0 1 0 6 1 3 Kohn 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Jepsen 1 0 0 0 0 2 Baltimore Mig.GonzaieW4-2 z 8 4 1 1 1 0 4 3 Ji.Johnson S,23-27 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 1 S.Downs pitchedto1batter in the 7th. 2 0 0 T 2:42. A 22,834(45,971). 2 0 1 0 0 0

season 9-0 since VernKennedy

KSuzukc 4 1 0 0 Chacinp 1 0 0 0 Harenp 1 0 1 0 Pachecph 1 1 1 0 EDavisp 0 0 0 0 Corpasp 1 0 0 0 Koernsph 1 0 0 0 Dutmnp 0 0 0 0 Abad p 0 0 0 0 WLopez p 0 0 0 0 Storen p 0 0 0 0 EYong ph 1 0 1 0 Tracy ph 1 0 0 0 Scahill p 0 0 0 0

Hollidylf 5 3 3 1 Quntngss 4 1 1 1 Craigrf 4 1 2 3 DWrght3b 3 1 0 0 SRonsnrf 1 1 1 1 DnMrplb 4 0 1 0 MAdms1b 5 0 2 0Dudalf 3 0 0 0 F reese3b 4 0 2 0 Byrdrf 2001 J aycf 4 1 0 1 Burkep 0 0 0 0 K ozmass 4 1 1 0 Edginp 0 0 0 0 Wachap 3 0 0 1 JuTrnr2b 0 0 0 0 C hoatep 0 0 0 0 Buckc 3010 Wggntnph 1 0 0 0 Niwnhscf-rf 4 0 0 0 K Butlrp 0 0 0 0 Hefnerp 2 0 0 0 Lagarscf 1 0 0 0 T otals 4 0 9 128 Totals 3 0 2 5 2 St. Louis 0 00 160 201 — 9 New York 2 00 000 000 — 2 E—Kozma(3), Dan.Murphy(5), Nieuwenhuts (1). DP — St Louis1, NewYork1. LDB—St. Louis 7, New York 6. 2B —Ma.Adams(6), Kozma(11). HR —Craig (5), SRobinson(2), Quintanilla (2). SF—Byrd. St. Louis IP H R E R BB SD WachaW,1-0 6 5 2 2 3 4 Choate 1 0 0 0 0 1 K.Butler 2 0 0 0 1 2 New York HefnerL,1-6 6 8 6 1 1 2 Burke 2-3 2 2 0 1 1 Edgin 1 1 0 0 1 0 Aardsma 1131 1 1 0 2 T—2:53.A—21,581(41,922).

eighth and ToddFrazier hit a solo home r(fn in the second inning for the Reds. Cincinnati

Chicago

ab r hbi ab r hbi Choocf 5 1 1 0 Bamey2b 4 0 0 0 Partchp 0 0 0 0 Ransm3b 3 2 1 1 C ozartss 5 1 2 4 Rizzo1b 3 0 1 0 M Parrp 0 0 0 0 ASorinlt 3 0 0 1 DRonsncf 0 0 0 0 Hairstnrf 4 0 1 0 Vottotb 4 2 2 2 Castigoc 3 0 0 0 Clztursph-ss 1 0 1 0 SCastross 3 0 0 0 Phigips2b 4 1 1 0 Sweenycf 3 0 2 0 B rucerf 5 1 3 2 Garzap 1 0 0 0 F razier3b 4 2 1 1 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 P au If 4 1 2 3 Putnmp 0 0 0 0 L utzph-If 1 0 0 0 Viganvp 0 0 0 0 Hanignc 4 1 0 0 Borbonph 1 0 0 0 C ingrnp 2 1 2 0 BParkrp 0 0 0 0 Hannhnph-1b2 1 1 0 Totals 4 1 121612 Totals 2 8 2 5 2 Cincinnati 012 0 0 6 0 30 — 12 Chicago 0 00 101 000 — 2 E—Votto (7), Ransom3 (6), Hairston(1). DPCincinnati 2,Chicago2. LDB—Cincinnati 7, Chicago

T otals 2 9 4 5 4 Totals 3 05 8 5 M ilwaukee 000 1 0 1 200 — 4 Miami 030 000 02x — 5 E—Ja.Turner (1). DP—Milwaukee 2, Miami 1.

LDB —Mrlwaukee3, Mrami2. 2B—Morrison 2 (2). 3B YBetancourt(1).HR Stanton(4),Dietrich(6). SB — Segura2 (19). S—W.Peralta, Gennett. SF—LuCI'oy.

Milwaukee IP H W.Peralta 6 5 Mic.GonzaleH,6 z 1-3 1 2-3 0 0 Axford H,10 HendersonL,2-2 BS,1 1 2 Miami Ja.Turner 7 5 QuagsW,2-0 1 0 CishekS,7-9 1 0 WP—Ja.Turner 2. T 2'26. A 13,110(37,442).

R E R BB SD 3 3 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 2 0 3 4 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0

6 0 0

Interleague Twins 3, Phillies 2 MINNEAPOLIS — JL(sti(T Morf)ea(f

hit the go-ahead single in the eighth inning to cap a three-hit night a(Td carry Minnesota to a win over Philadelphia. Philadelphia Minnesota ab r hbi ab r hbi MYong3b 4 0 1 1 Carroll3b 3 1 2 0 R everecf 4 0 1 0 Mauerc 4 0 1 0 Roginsss 4 0 1 0 Doumitrf 4 0 0 0 H oward1b 4 0 2 1 Parmelrf 0 0 0 0 DBrwnlf 4 0 0 0 Wlnghdh 4 1 1 0 DYongdh 4 0 0 0 Mornea1b 4 1 3 2 M ayrryrf 4 1 1 0 Arcralf 4011 Galvis2b 3 0 0 0 Dozier2b 3 0 1 0

3. 2B —Choo(16), C.lzturis (2),Bruce(20), Paul(7) HR — Cozart (6), Vogo(11), Frazier (7), Paul(5), RanQuinterc 2 0 0 0 Thomscf 3 0 0 0 som (7).S—Choo, Cingrani, Garza.SF—A.Soriano. Cincinnati IP H R E R BB SD Frndsnph 1 1 1 0 Flormnss 3 0 0 0 L erudc 0 0 0 0 CrngraniW,3-0 7 4 2 2 1 5 T otals 3 4 2 7 2 Totals 3 23 9 3 M.Parra 1 1 0 0 0 0 Partch 1 0 0 0 1 1 P hiladelphia 0 0 1 0 0 0 010 — 2 Minnesota 000 2 0 0 0 1x — 3 Chicago E—Morneau (1). DP—Philadelphia 1. LDBGarzaL,l-l 5 9 9 9 2 3 H.Rondon 2 3 0 0 0 1 Philadelphia 6, Minnesota6. 2B—Mayberry (11), (11), Morneau(15), Arcia(6). SB CarPutnam 0 3 3 3 0 0 Wigingham Viganueva 1 1 0 0 0 1 roll (1). Philadelphia IP H R ER B B SD B.Parker 1 0 0 0 0 2 Hamels 6 7 2 2 0 5 Garzapitchedto 6 baters inthe6th. De Fratus 1 0 0 0 0 2 Putnampitchedto 3batters inthe 8th. Mi.AdamsL,1-4 2- 3 1 1 1 1 0 HBP —byGarza(Frazier). 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 T—3.18. A—30,937(41,019). Bastardo Minnesota Walters 7136 2 1 1 5 Pirates 8, Giants 2 DuensingW,1-1BS,2-32-3 1 0 0 0 1

PITTSBURGH — Gerrit Cole took a shutout into the seventh inning

of his major leaguedebut and hit a two-r(fn single i(T his first at-bat, leading Pittsburgh to a win over San Francisco. The top pick i(T the 2011 draft, Cole allowed two

PerkinsS,14-16 1 0 0 0 0 T—2:31.A—30,104 (39,021).

1

Leaders ThroughTuesday's Games

AMERICANLEAGUE BATTING —MiCabrera, Detroit, .363, CDavis, Baltimore, .335; JhPeralta, Detroit, .333; Mauer, Minnes ota,.330;Pedroia,Boston,.328;Donaidson, Oakland,.322;Loney,TampaBay,.322. runs and seven hits in 6Ya i n ni n gs RUNS —MiCabrera, Detroit, 51; Trout,LosAngeles 8. 2B —Pollock (18), Federowicz (3). HR —Kubel Indians 5, Rangers 2 after being called Lfp from Triple-A les, 47;CDavis Baltimore,45;AJones,Baltimore, 45; (4), Ethier(5) Pedroia,Boston,45; l.ongoria,Tampa Bay, 44; Crisp, Arizona IP H R E R BBSO Indianapolis earlier in the day. He ARLINGTON, Texas — Corcy Oakland,42. 61-3 4 2 2 2 6 Kennedy began his highly touted career RBI — MiCabrera, Detroit, 69; Encarnacion, To2-3 0 0 0 0 0 deep short by J.D. Martinez in the Kluber allowed one run over eight Ziegler ronto, 53;CDavis,Baltimore,52; Fielder,Detroit, 51; Hernandez L,2-3 BS,4 2-3 1 3 3 3 0 with a three-pitch strikeout. i n nings and Cl e vel a nd beat Texas Paterson 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Napo i, Boston, 49; DDrtiz,Boston,48; Trumbo,Los second inning. He then retired 16 Los Angeles Angeles,44. San Francisco Pit t sburgh of the (Text17 batters. Raul Ibanez to snap aneight-game losing HOME RUNS —CDavis Baltimore, 20; MiCaGreinke 7 2 2 2 2 5 ab r hbi ab r hbi streak. The lndians also ended a 1-3 1 1 1 1 0 G Blanccf 2 0 0 0 SMartelf 4 1 1 1 brera, Detroit, 18;Encarnacion,Toronto, 18; ADunn, hit his team-leading 13th home Howell 12-game road losing streak. C hicago, 17; Bauti sta,Toronto, 15;Cano,NewYork, GuerrierW,2-2 2 - 3 1 0 0 0 1 P igph 1 0 0 1 Sniderrf 5 0 1 0 r(J(T — his second in as many 15; NCruz,Texas,15 Trumbo,l.os Angeles,15. JansenS,3-4 1 0 0 0 0 2 Kontosp 0 0 0 0McCtchcf 3 2 2 0 nights — in the sixth inning. HBP—byKennedy(Puig, Greinke), by Paterson RRmrzp 0 0 0 0 GJones1b 3 1 1 0 STOLEN BASES — Ellsbury, Boston, 27; Cleveland Texas McLouth,Baltimore,22; Andrus,Texas,16, Kipnis, (M.Egis), by Greinke(C.Ross, MMontero). ab r hbi ab r hbi Noonanph 1 0 0 0 GSnchz1b 1 0 0 0 T—3;05. A—42,844 (56,000). Cleveland,14;Trout, LosAngeles,14; Crisp,Oakland, Houston Seattle Stubbs cf 5 1 1 2 Andrus ss 3 0 1 0 Scutaro2b 3 0 1 0 RMartnc 4 2 2 1 13; AIRamirez, Chicago,13. ab r hbi ab r hbi K ipnis2b 3 1 1 0 DvMrplf 4 0 1 1 J.Perezpr-cf 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz3b 3 2 3 3 PITCHING —Scherzer, Detroit, 9-0; Buchholz, BBarns cf 4 0 0 0 EnChvz rf 4 2 2 0 Swisher1b 5 0 1 1 Brkmndh 4 0 1 0 Poseyc 4 0 0 0 Walker2b 3 0 1 0 Padres 3, Braves 2 Boston, 9-0, Colon,Oakland,8-2, MMoore,Tampa J Castroc 4 0 0 0 Ryanss 4 0 0 0 R aburnrf 4 1 1 0 Beltre3b 4 0 0 0 Quirozc 0 0 0 0 Barmesss 4 0 0 0 Bay, 8-2; Vertander,Detroit, 8-4; Masterson, CleveAltuve2b 4 0 0 0 Seager3b 4 0 2 1 C Santndh 3 0 1 0 Przynsc 3 1 2 1 P encerf 4 0 1 0 Colep 30 12 SAN DIEGO — Andrew Cashf)er C .Pena1b 3 0 0 0 Ibanezlf 4 1 2 1 MrRynl3b 4 0 2 1 N.Cruzrf 3 0 1 0 Belt1b 4 0 0 0 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 land, 8-5 5tiedat 7. STRIKEOUTS —Darvish, Texas,118; Scherzer, Carterdh 3 0 0 0 Morsedh 3 0 0 0 JMcDnl3b 0 0 00 McGns1b 4 0 0 0 outdueled Tim Hudson, Chase AnTrrslf 4 1 2 0 Mazzarp 0 0 0 0 JMrtnzlf 3 0 2 0 Frnkn2b 2 1 1 0 B rantlylf 3 0 1 0 Gentrycf 2 0 0 0 Detroit, 106;FHernandez,Seatle, 102,AniSanchez, B Crwfrss 4 0 1 0 Ingeph 1 0 0 0 Headley homered and Sa(T Di e go Crowerf 3 0 0 0 MSndrscf 2 0 0 1 YGomsc 4 1 1 0 LMartnph-cf 2 0 0 0 Detroit, 98;Vertander,Detroit, 93; Masterson,CleveA rias3b 4 1 2 0 Morrisp 0 0 0 0 Dmngz3b 3 0 0 0 Shppchc 3 0 0 0 Aviles ss 4 1 2 0 LGarci 2b 1 0 0 0 land, 92;Iwakuma,Seatt e,87. beat Atlanta for the second Linccmp 1 0 0 0 R Cedenss 3 0 0 0 Liddi1b 3 0 0 0 Profar ph-2b 1 1 1 0 SAVES —Rivera, NewYork, 23; JiJohnson, BalMijares p 0 0 0 0 straight game.Cashner (5-3) T otals 3 0 0 2 0 Totals 2 94 7 3 Totals 3 5 5 11 4 Totals 3 1 2 7 2 timore,23;Nathan,Texas, 20; AReed, Chicago, 19; Abreuph-2b 2 0 1 1 Houston 0 00 000 000 — 0 C leveland 000 1 3 0 1 00 — 6 pitched a career-high eight Totals 3 4 2 8 2 Totals 3 48 127 Balfour,Oakland,16;Wilhelmsen,Seattle,16; Perkins, Seattle 110 001 01 x 4 Texas 0 00 000 011 — 2 Minnesota,14;Frieri, LosAngeles, 14. S an Francisco 000 000 200 — 2 E—R.Cedeno(9), Crowe(2), Ryan(8). DP—HousE—Andrus (7), D.Hogand(1). DP—Cleveland3, innings, allowing two runs on six NATIONALLEAGUE P ittsburgh 020 0 2 1 3 0 x — 8 ton1. LDB —Houston3, Seatle 3. 2B—En.Chavez2 Texas 3. LDB —Cleveland 7, Texas6. 2B—Raburn hits, striking out five and walking E—Pence (2). DP—San Francisco 1. LDB—San BATTING —Tuiowitzki, Coiorado,.353;YMolina, (5), Franklin(4). HR —Ibanez(13). SF—M.Saunders. (9), Dav.Murphy(11), N.Cruz(11). HR—Pierzynski one. At one point Cashner retired Francisco8, Pittsburgh8.2B—Abreu(1), McCutchen St. Louis,.351,Segura,Milwaukee,.340, Scutaro,San Houston IP H R E R BB SO (5). SB —Kipnis (14), Brantley (5),Aviles(5). (17). HR —S.Marte (6), PAlvarez(14). SB—S.Marte Francisco,.332;Votto, Cincinnati, .328;MCarpenter, B.Norris L,5-6 7 5 3 3 1 6 Cleveland IP H R E R BB SO 10 straight batters after giving Lfp St Louis, 327;GParra, Arizona,.318. (18) McCutchen (15). S—Lincecum. W.Wright 1 2 1 1 0 0 KluberW,4-4 8 6 1 1 3 3 one r(fn and three hits in the first RUNS —CGonzalez, Colorado,52; Votto, CincinSan Francisco I P H R ER BB SD Seattle J.Smith 1 1 1 1 1 2 LincecumL,46 4 2 3 7 4 2 2 4 nati, 52;MCarpenter, St.Louis,51; Holliday,St. Louis, inning. HarangW,3-6 9 2 0 0 0 10 Texas Mijares 11-3 1 1 1 0 1 48; Fowler,Colorado,46;Choo,Cincinnati,45; GoldWP — B.Norris. D.HogandL,5-3 4 1-3 9 4 4 1 4 Kontos 11-3 4 3 3 2 3 schmrdt,Arizona,43; JUpton,Atlanta,43. San Diego T—2:15.A—10,266 (47,476). McClegan 22-3 0 1 1 2 0 Atlanta RBI — Goldschmidt, Arizona,59; Philips, CincinR.Ramirez 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi 1 1 0 0 0 0 Cotts Pittsburgh nati, 52; CGon zalez, Colorado,51;Tulowitzki, ColoSmmnsss 4 1 1 0 EvCarrss 3 1 1 0 Frasor 1 1 0 0 0 3 ColeW,1-0 6 1-3 7 2 2 0 2 rado, 51;DBrown,Philadelphia, 47; Craig, St. Louis, BlueJays7,W hite Sox5 Heywrdrf 4 1 1 0 Venatecf-rf 3 0 0 0 HBP—by D.Holand (Kipnis). WP—Kluber, McClel1-3 0 0 0 0 0 47; Bruce,Cincinnati, 45. J.Uptonlf 4 0 1 0 Denorfrph-rf 1 0 0 0 WatsonH,10 lan. (10 innings) MazzaroH,3 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 HOME RUNS —DBrown, Philadelphia, 19; FFrmnlb 4 0 1 1 Headly3b 3 1 1 1 T—2:56. A 45,200 (48,114). Morris 2 1 0 0 0 4 CGonzalez,Colorado, 18;Tulowitzki, Colorado,16; McCnnc 4 0 2 0 Quentinlf 3 0 1 1 HBP — b y Linc ecum (P Al v arez), by K ontos (M cC ut c hGoldschmi d t, Ari z ona, 15, PAlvarez,Pittsburgh,14; CHICAGO — Jose Ba(ftista hit a (Jggla2b 4 0 0 0 Richrdpr 0 0 0 0 en), byWatson(Scutaro), byCole(G.Blanco). Beltran, St. Louis, 14; Gattis, Atlanta, 14; JUpton, Rays 8, RedSox3 B Uptoncf 2 0 0 0 Thtchrp 0 0 0 0 game-tying home run i(T the ninth T—3'00. A—30,614(38,362). Atlanta,14 R.Pena3b 3 0 0 0 Grgrsnp 0 0 0 0 inning and Rajai Davis scored on ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Matt STOLEN BASES—ECabrera, SanDiego, 29;SeTHudsnp 2 0 0 0 Blankslb 3 1 0 0 gura, Milwaukee,19; SMarte, Pittsburgh, 18, Pierre, A vilanp 0 0 0 0 Kotsayrf 3 0 0 0 a wild pitch in the10th to lead Cardinals 9, Mets 2 Joyce hit one of three homers off Miami,17; McCut chen,Pittsburgh,15;Revere, Phila0 0 0 0 Toronto past Chicago. Chien-Ming Jo(T Lester to help Tampa Bay beat Varvarp 0 0 0 0 Amarstcf delphia,14;CGomez, Mrlwaukee,13. Forsyth 2b 3 0 0 0 NEW YORK — Michael Wacha PITCHING —Corbin,Arizona,9-0; Wainwright,St. Wang made his first start of the Hundlyc 3 0 1 1 AL East-l eading Boston.Joyce, Louis, 9-3;Zimmermann,Washington, 9-3, Lynn,St. recovered from a wild start to Cashnrp 2 0 0 0 season after signing with the Louis, 8-1; Mi Atlanta,8-2; Marquis, SanDiego, one day after being hit by a pitch Guzmn ph-If 1 0 1 0 earn his first major league win and 8-2;Lee,Philadneor, injury-riddled Blue Jays, lasting lphia,7-2;JDe LaRosa Colorado, T otals 3 1 2 6 1 Totals 2 83 5 3 that sparked a bench-clearing 7-3; SMiger,St.Louis,7-3; Maholm, Atlanta, 74 Atlanta 1 00 001 000 — 2 Allen Craig hit a three-r(J(Thomer 7 Ys inningS While giVing Lfp fiVe STRIKEOUTS —AJBurnett, Pittsburgh,99; Sascrum, put the Rays up 7-3 o(T San Diego 111 0 0 0 Ogx— 3 for St. Louis in a victory over runs and 10 hits. DP — SanDiego1. LDB—Atlanta4, SanDiego 5 mardzija,Chicago,98,Kershaw,LosAngeles,96, Hara two-rtfn shot i(T the fifth that 28 — Ev.Cabrera (11), Hundley(11). HR—Headley staggering NewYork. vey, New York, 95; Wainwright, St. Louis, 91; HBailey, endedLester' s night.Desmond Toronto Chicago Cincinnati,83;Lee,Philadelphia, 83. (6). S —THudson,Ev.Cabrera. ab r hbi ab r hbi Atlanta IP H R E R BB SD St. Louis New York SAVES —Grigi, Pittsburgh,23; Kimbrel, Atlanta, Jennings homered twice, while MeCarr If 6 1 1 0 De Aza cf-If 4 0 1 0 T.HudsonL,4-6 7 1 - 3 5 3 3 1 7 ab r hbi ab r hbi 18, Mujica,St. Louis, 18,Chapm an, Cincinnati, 16; Evan Longoria also went deepfor Bautist rf 5 1 1 1 AIRmrz ss 5 0 1 0 Avilan 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 MCrpnt2b 4 1 0 0 Vtdspn2b 4 0 2 0 RSoriano,Washington, 16;Romo,SanFrancisco, 16; 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 Y Molrnc 5 1 1 1 Ardsmp 0 0 0 0 E ncrncdh 4 1 2 2 Riosrf 5 1 3 0 the Rays. Varvaro League,LosAngeles,13.

Continued from C1 Just days before Father's Day, the 192-player field for the 2013 Oregon Open is dotted with five father-son teams (in addition to two teams of brothers), including the Heinlys. "That's why I e n t ered into this tournament, so I can play and watch him (Jesse)," said Andy Heinly, whose son is a senior-to-be at Concordia University in Portland and among the elite amateurs in Oregon. "I can at least tag along ... and I contributed (on) a couple holes." John Shelden, a 55-yearold professional from La Quinta, Calif., taught his son the game and this past season coached 18-yearold Frank Shelden's high school golf team. But until Tuesday at Juniper, the Sheldens had never competed as team partners. Neither is in contention after the first round. But you would not have known it by talking to them after their rounds together. "It is kind of a fun graduation, before-college tournament for us to play together," said John Shelden of the reason they traveled from Southern California to Central Oregon. "It was a neat experience." "It's more laid-back I think," added Frank Shelden, who is headed to Texas Christian University in the fall to play golf. "It's not quite as competitive as a regular tournament." S eattle-area pro R y an Benzel, among the top club professionals in the Pacific Northwest, said he will ap-

proach the Oregon Open as he would any other tournament — evenifhis 63-yearo ld father, Bruce, is h i s teammate this time around. B ruce Benzel and h i s 34-year-old son have been t ogether plenty over t h e years: Dad served as caddie in the four PGA Championships his son has played in. But they rarely have competed together as partners, said Ryan Benzel, who said the Oregon Open is part of an effort to play golf more with his father. "We're going to play a little more and he is not going to caddie," said the younger Benzel, the only professional in the field this week who is playing with his amateur father. "We're going to change it up a little. "There is definitely more of a comfort level than if I was bringing an amateur partner who I have never played with or never partnered with." There could be something to that comfort. Teeing off in the morning's f irst g r oup, J esse Heinly shot a 3- u nderpar 69 in relatively calm first-round cond i t i ons that turned breezy for the groups teeing off in the afternoon. The round w as good enough to put Heinly in contention. Finding his name near the top of a leaderboard is not new for Heinly. But the atmosphere during his first round of the Oregon Open was most definitely an unfamiliar experience. His father admitted to being "a rabbit" of sorts, helping his son see the putting line by hitting his own putt first. And the camaraderie

was palpable, he added.

"It's nice and loose and more casual," said Jesse Heinly, who attributed the l ow-key a t mosphere o n Tuesday to the fact that he was playing with both his dad and a former Summit High S chool t e ammate, Dylan Cramer. "Yeah, it's a little different for me than playing with four random

guys."

The Heinlys then took a moment to verbally replay their rounds together, including s om e m i s sed opportunities and Andy's chipped-in birdie on 18. The patriarch took a moment to c ompliment his son's putting


C4

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

Rodeo Continued from C1 Boys and g i rl s c u tting c ompetitions kick of f t h e OHSRA state finals today at 10 a.m., and the first goround for all timed events is set for Thursday morning at 10 o'clock. The first r oughstock competition i s slated for 6 p.m. on Thursday during the first main performance.

"High school rodeo lays

the foundation for (cowboys and cowgirls) to go ahead," says Aldrich, herself a rodeo mom. Her d aughter KayLee Aldrich, a freshman at Culver High this past school year, rolls into the state finals ranked second in the girls all-round rookie standings.

"A large group of kids graduate out of high school rodeo into college rodeo," Aldrich adds. "In fact, quite a few kids that were competing at the OHSRA last year are at the College National Finals Rodeo this weekend

in (Casper, Wyo.)." Redmond cowboys and cowgirls lead the OHSRA

boys and girls all-around

Blitz

down roping (80 points), fourth in steer wrestling (53 points), and second in team

Redmond H ig h s o phomore Riley Rae Sappington cruises into Prineville with a c ommanding 1 12-point lead in the girls all-around

Continued from C1 Like Kabush, Joseph, 31, was racing in the Blitz to the Barrel for the first time. She said she was impressed with the race format and with the lively crowds at Tetherow and 10 Barrel. Joseph and Kabush each earned $3,000 for their efforts. "I think it's such a cool idea," Joseph said. "It's a fantastic atmosphereand a lovely course. It's by far the biggest prize money that I've ever won. I've just booked a trip to travel to France for some

standings. Sappington has

bike racing, and this is going to

totaled 273 points during the OHSRA regular season — second-place Kaci Kamm, of Stanfield, has 161 — by placing in the top six in bar-

pay for my trip." Joseph raved about the variety of terrain in the race, but said she was nervous about the massive drop at Tetherow. "I had a chance to practice it yesterday,and Iwas quite scared about it," she said. "It was definitely the biggest jump I've done."

roping (76 points). A.J. McCauley, whose 214.5 points put him well ahead of thirdplace Tyler Potter's 161 allaround points, is third in tie-

down roping (53 points), tied for second in steer wrestling (61 points), and first in team

r

roping (77 points).

V

rel racing (fifth, 57 points), breakaway (third, 53 points), goat tying (fifth, 57 points), and team roping (sixth, 61

points). Other Central Oregonians who lead event standings heading into the OHSRA finals are Powell Butte's Har-

ley Byram (barrel racing) and Jessie Loper (goat tying) and Prineville's Bailey Beall

(girls rookie all-around).

JA

Roh Kerr /The Bulletin

Rosara Joseph descends a big drop at Tetherow Golf Club during the Biltz to the Barrel mountain bike race Tuesday night. Joseph, an Olympian from New Zealand, won the women's division as Bend's Susan Bishop Gordon finished third.

Goalies

Cost:Admission is free to all spectators

Continued from C1 "Once you've seen it, and not being on the ice, I think everybody would like to have that chance someday," Rask said. "For me, it came pretty early after our win and I'm just trying to make the most out of it and enjoy myself." The rise of Rask and Crawford is a testament to the patience and steady approach of the Bruins and Blackhawks, and it's no coincidence that each team is seeking to become the first franchise with two Stanley Cups in the salary cap era. After a s low an d steady climb, Rask an d C r awford have beenthe best goaltenders in the league during this year's playoffs. Crawford leads the NHL with a 1.74 goals-against average, just ahead of Rask

Wed:www.ohsra.org

(1.75 GAA).

standings heading into this week's state finals. T.J. McCauley, of Redmond, is looking for his third consecutive Oregon a l l -around s t a te

The cowboys and cowgirls who finish in the top four of each state event qualify for the National High School Finals Rodeo next in Rock championship. M cCauley Springs, Wyo. Contestants has a state-leading total of who end the season between 249.5 points inthe all-around fifth and 15th place have the s tandings. H e is ho m e - option of competing at the schooled, as is his younger Silver State I n ternational brother A.J. McCauley, who Rodeo later this month in trails T.J. by 35 points. Winnemucca, Nev. — Reporter: 541-383-0305, T.J. McCauley ended the beastes@bendbldletin.com. regular season first in tie-

OHSRAChampionship State FinalsRodeo Where:Crook County Fairgrounds, Prineville

When: Today,10a.m.;Thursday,10a.m.(slack)and6 p.m.; Friday, 8 a.m. (rifle shoot at RedmondGunClub) and 6p.m.; Saturday, noon (final go-round)

Note:The OHSRA's scholarship auction is tonight at 7 o'clock at the fairgrounds' Carey Foster Hall

Spurs Continued from C1 The Spurs were as good as fans remembered in the o ld days, shutting d o w n L eBron James until t h ey had built a huge lead late in the third quarter. James finished with 15 points and 11 rebounds, but missed 11 of his first 13 shots against the excellent defense of Kawhi Leonard, who had 14 points and 12 rebounds. Game 4 is Thursday here, where the Heat are 3-22 in the regular season and so far zero wins and one really bad beating in the postseason. " We got w h a t w e d e served," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. "I didn't even recognize the team that was out there tonight." Duncan shot 3 of 13 for nine points, his worst performance ever in his 25 NBA Finals games, in the Heat's 103-84 victory Sunday. Tony Parker wasn't much better, shooting 5 of 14 and committing five turnovers, and Manu Ginobili admitted afterward the veteran trio had to play well for the Spurs to win. They were fine, but the lesser-knowns were better. Parker and Ginobili combined for 14 assists, but the

the fourth, Green's 3-pointer making it 91-63. "All of my teammates and Pop, they do a great job of encouraging me. They continue to tell me to shoot the ball. They continue to tell me whenever I'm open, to let it fly," Green said. The NBA hadn't made its way along San A n tonio's River Walk this late in the season since 2007, and fans couldn't wait t o h ave the

Spurs back. They sang and danced and clapped around the concourse and in their seats, as i f t h ei r f a vorite rock band had returned for a concert. And they were thrilled to see the Duncan they recognized from his first 24 finals

appearances.

He got right on the board in this one, with a s h ort jumper 20 seconds into the game. The Spurs, who had played from behind most of the series, had a 24-20 lead after making 11 of 18 shots in the first quarter. Duncan hit a pair of three throws and a n other basket, and after a jumper by Neal, he threw a long outlet to Leonard for a dunk that made it 40-30. Neal's 3 made it 43-32, but Miller hit a pair of 3-pointers in a 12-1 run that tied it bigger story was the guys at 44 with 37 seconds in the who had never played on half, the Heat appearing set this stage before. to go into the half with mo• Neal, who went undraft- mentum. But Parker drilled ed after playing for La Salle a 3 from thecorner, and afand Towson, then playing ter Green blocked James' overseas for three seasons shot, the Spurs rushed it up in Italy, Spain and Turkey. for a 3-pointer by Neal that • Green, who had been cut fell at the buzzer, the remultiple times — including serve guard pointing back by James' Cavaliers — and toward hi s d efenders benow has the shot to stick. forethe Spurs headed to the • Leonard, the draft-night locker room with a 5 0-44 trade acquisition from San advantage. Diego State who played the The party played on all NBA's four-time MVP to a right, with a huge roar when Tracy McGrady, a f ormer stalemate. M ike M i l le r m a d e a l l p erennial All-Star now i n five 3-pointersand scored his first finals appearance 15 points for the Heat, who as a member of the Spurs' broke open Sunday's game bench, checked in midway and seized momentum in through the fourth quarter. the series with a 33-5 run in He was scoreless with three the second half. assists. The Spurs seized it right James started 2 for D, back, improving to 18-7 in then made his f i nal f o ur the finals, the best winning shots of the third as the Heat percentage of any team with got within 13 before Ginobili 20 or more games. fired a nifty pass to Tiago A brief flurry by James Splitter under th e b asket had Miami within 15 after for a score with 0.1 seconds three quarters, but N e al, remaining, making it 78-63 Green and Leonard com- and setting the stage for the bined on a 13-0 run to open big fourth-quarter finish.

"It's a process for goalies, I think," said Blackhawks general manager Stan Bowman, one of Crawford's biggest supporters over the years. "We've always had confidence in his ability. I think it's just nice to see now him getting the recognition that he deserves. "The consistent play that we've hadgame in,game out, it's been that way from the beginning of the year. We know

we're going to get a great

performance from him every night." While C h i cago d r a f ted Crawford in the second round a decade ago, Rask was a firstround selection for the Toronto Maple Leafs in 2005. Boston got him in a trade for goalie Andrew Raycroft a year later. General manager Peter Chiarelli, who officially took over the team a couple weeks after the Rask deal, said it's his understanding that the Bruins decided they w anted Rask instead of center Jiri Tlusty in the deal. "There was alotof discussion at both ends about it," Chiarelli said. "It was decided that it would be Rask from Boston's end. I think they tried to come back and maybe flip that, consider the other guy, who is a good player in Carolina now. Eventually they said no and the deal was done." It certainly worked out for the Bruins. Rask took over after Thomas decidedto take a year off. Once the 26-year-old Finn got off to a great start, the mercurial Thomas was traded to the New York Islanders. The 6-foot-2 Rask helped the Bruins finish second in the Northeast Division, then raised his game to another

— Reporter: 541-383-0318; mmorical@bendbulletin.com.

Five things towatchintheStanleyCupfinals Hockey fans who endured another lockout are in for a treat that will cap a sprint of a season. The Chicago Blackhawks and Boston Bruins are set to compete for the Stanley Cup for the first time in the NHL's first final featuring Original Six teams since1979. There have been seven champions in the salary-cap era, and the team that hoists the Cup this month will become the league's only two-time winner of the new era. Here's a lookat five things to watch when the puck drops tonight in the Windy City for Game1 (5 p.m.,

NBC). SPEED VS. STRENGTH:Chicago has some of the drought in 2010, scoring seven goals and leading

fastest forwards anddefensemen onthe planet.

t h e team with 29 points.has Heto pick upthe pace

Boston, though, is the toughest team in hockey.

for the Blackhawks to win it all again. Chicago's

Something hasgot to give. Blackhawks superstar captain has only onegoal this postseason — rankPatrick Kanehada hat trick in his last game, the i n g 12th on the team —andhas tried to make up third goal 11:40 into double overtime eliminating

the defending champion LosAngeles Kings in Game 5 ofthe Western Conferencefinals. But if

for it with eight assists and leadership. COACHINGCOUNTS: JoelQuennevil leand

C l a ude Julien won't play shift,abut they decide

the cat-quick Kane runs into Bruins defenseman Zdeno Chara, he's in trouble. The 6-foot-9, 255-

wh o plays when, and their choices will make for a gam e within the game each night. Quenneville will

pound Chara isnearly afoot taller and morethan get to make the last change whenthe NHL'stop75 pounds heavier than Kane. Chara is also pretty

s e eded Blackhawks are at home for Games1 and 2

agile asheshowed,laying onhisstomachand and if necessary,Games5and7.Quennevillecan swatting away ashot with his left glove to seal a k eep Kane and Toewsawayfrom Chara andDennis sweep of Pittsburgh in the Eastern Conference finals.

Seid enberg when they're on the ice for at least the start of shifts. The adjustments both Cup-winning

BETWEEN THEPIPES: Chicago's Corey Craw- co a ches make on special teams will be pivotal. ford and Boston's Tuukka Rask are1-2 and 2-1 in

B o t h teams have scored a relatively modest seven

two key categories this postseason. Crawford has goals on the power play.Chicagohasbeenthe an NHL-low1.74 goals-against average, just ahead best when short-handed, killing 95 percent of its of Rask's1.75 GAA. The Bruins are still playing in

p e nalties.

large part becauseRaskleads the league with a X-FACTORS:Chicago'sBryan Bickelland .943 save percentageand likewise, Crawford has Boston's Nathan Horton havesetthemselves up kept the Blackhawks in it to win it by posting a.935 to cash in as free agents this summer. Bickell has

save percentage. scored eight times this postseason —tying PatSHINING STARS: David Krejci has beensimply r i ck Sharp for the team lead —and has produced sensational, leading the league with nine goals and 13 points after having just nine goals and 23 points

21 points this postseason. Whenthe Bruins won i n the 48-game regular season. Horton hasseven the Cup in 2011for the first time since1972, he led goals and17 points — five points shy of his total them with 23 points. Krejci is a versatile scorer, who can slap a shot into the net, flick a wrist shot

fro m the shortened season — to trail only Krejci i npostseason scoring in the entire league. The

in the blink of aneyeor hack at a loose puck in

under-the-radar player — Bickell or Horton — who

front of the net. Jonathan Toews was tough to stop can keep it up might help his team hoist the Cup. — The Associated Press whenChicagoendedits49-yearchampionship

level in the playoffs. He shut down high-scoring Pittsburgh in the Eastern Conference finals, allowing just two goals and recording a .985 save percentage in a sweep. The i m p ressive p e r formance against the Penguins included 53 saves in Game 3, giving Patrice Bergeron enough time to net the winning goal in the second overtime of a 2-1 victory. "He's just, I think, fundamentally a good goalie," Boston defenseman Andrew Ference said after the Bruins arrived in Chicago on Tuesday. "As far as positioning and his style, he has a very consistent style, so he doesn't really get himself into I think too many bad situations." Antti Niemi, another Finnish goalie who is good friends with Rask, was in net when the Blackhawks won the title in 2010. But he signed with San Jose in the ensuing offseason while Chicago worked through salary cap issues. T he B l a ckhawks th e n signed Marty Turco to start in goal, and planned to have

Crawford serve as the backup. Those plans eventually fell apart and Crawford earned the starting nod. He won at least 30 games in each of his first two seasons in a regular role, and then went 19-5 with a career-best 1.94 GAA this year. "He's had a lot to overcome," said defenseman Brent Seabrook, who was selected by Chicago in the first round of that same 2003 draft. "Whether it's been fighting for position, fighting for jobs, we brought some guys in, I think he's kept his composure. I think he's worked real hard." With Crawford in goal, the Blackhawks lost in the first round of the playoffs in each of the previous two seasons. Surrounded by the core of the Stanley Cup-winning team, the 28-year-old Crawford still had to learn about playing in

I

the postseason. He's come a long way. "I'd say I learned a lot, especially some of the goals I gave up last year I wasn't very happy with," Crawford said. "Just able to learn from that. Get over it, and move on. No matter what happens, there's always a next shot so you have to make sure you'rethere to save the next one."

. 47" P

Q II7

e

5 41-447-7 1 1 3

AHABOD M n ~e

(gy~e

n

MGxa%HEgrIRmxk 8nmKR OK~~

AEU

"Golf For Everyone!"

Widgi Creek G OL F C L U B

18707 SW Century Dr., Ben www.witjgbcom ~ (541) 382-4449


C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com/business. Alsoseearecapin Sunday's Businesssection.

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

N AsDAO ~ 3 6 6 2

Toda+

Fashion and finances

same quarter last year. Men's Wearhouse has been struggling with sluggish sales in recent quarters. That's one reason it has been exploring the possible sale of its weaker-performing K&G unit, which sells men's suits and accessories, in addition to women's clothing. $40

MW

$35.80 '13

'12

35

$29.12 30

S&P 500

s

1,620 "

Men's Wearhouse reports financial results for its first fiscal quarter today. The clothing store chain is expected to announce that its earnings and revenue rose from the

2.19%

1,626.13

1 680

Wednesday,June 12,2013

+ -.02 '

sar 500 ~ - 1 6 . 68

3,436.95

Change: -16.68 (-1.0%)

1,560 '

1 0 DA Y S

15 140

16,000

1,600

15,200 .

1,520

14,400

1,440

13,600

1 360

J

F

StocksRecap NYSE NASD

Vol. (in mil.) 3,320 1,555 Pvs. Volume 2,865 1,682 Advanced 4 18 6 5 0 Declined 2700 1834 New Highs 39 98 New Lows 283 39

M

.

A

DOW DOW Trans. DOW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

Close: 1 5,122.02

Change: -116.57 (-0.8%)

.

HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 15251.07 15086.09 1 5122.02 -116.57 6328.54 6234.28 6266.51 -63.97 485.93 480.73 482.15 -3.22 9324.34 9231.97 9255.48 -102.52 3466.57 3426.57 3436.95 -36.82 1640.13 1622.92 1626.13 -16.68 1177.74 1162.38 1167.29 -14.44 17330.91 17110.44 1 7148.04 -182.87 981.45 -11.22 988.85 976.37

M

J

%CHG. WK MO OTR YTD -0.77% L +15.40% -1.01% L +1 8.09% -0.66% T T +6 . 41% -1.10% L +9 . 62% -1.06% L +13.82% -1.02% L +1 4.02% -1.22% +14.39% -1.06% L +1 4.36% -1.13% t15.55%

NorthwestStocks $0.53

Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co

ALK 32.69 ~ AVA 22 78 ~ BAC 6. 9 0 ~ Price-earnings ratio: 14 based on past 12 months' results BBSI 19 30 — BA 69 . 03 ~ Dividend: $0.72 Div. Yield: 2.0% CascadeBancorp CACB 4.23 ~ Columbia Bukg COLB 16.18 — Source: Facteet Columbia Sporlswear COLM 47.72 CostcoWholesale COST 87.25 Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 PVH update FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 HPQ 11.35 — Clothing maker PVH completed its Hewlett Packard Bucp IDHOME 9.08 ~ 1 acquisition of rival Warnaco Group Home Federal Intel Corp INTC 19.23 ~ earlier this year in a deal worth Keycorp K EY 7 . 00 — about $2.9 billion. Kroger Co KR 209 8 — Wall Street will be listening today Lattice Semi LSCC 3.17 ~ when PVH, previously known as LA Pacific L PX 9 . 2 1 ~ Phillips-Van Heusen, reports its MDU Resources M DU 19 . 59 ~ latest quarterly earnings for details MentorGraphics M EN T 13,21 — on how PVH's efforts to integrate Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 — Warnaco arecoming along. Some Nike Iuc 8 NKE 4 2.55 ~ analysts are concerned the Nordstrom Iuc J WN 47.04 ~ company may befacing weak Nwst Net Gas NWN 41.01 ~ demand for denim clothing in Asia. OfficeMax Iuc OMX 3. 62 ~ PeccarIuc PCAR 35,21 — Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 ~ Plum Creek PCL 36.76 ~ Prec Cestperts PCP 150.53 — Sefeway Iuc SWY 14.73 ~ Schuitzer Steel S CHN 22.78 ~ Sherwin Wms SHW 122.79 ~ 1 Staucorp Fucl SFG 28.74 — SterbucksCp SBUX 43,04 — Triquiut Semi T QNT 430 ~ UmpqueHoldings UMPQ 11,17 — US Baucorp USB 29.62 — Eye on mortgages W A FD 15.22 ~ Has a recent increase in mortgage Washington Fedl WellsFargo8 Co WF C 3 0.34 — interest rates triggered a pickup in Weyerheeuser W Y 2 0.06 ~ home loan applications?

New mortgage application figures due out today from the Mortgage Bankers Association will help answer that question. While mortgage interest rates remain near rock bottom, they have been rising. The past four weekly surveys by the MBA have shown banks have been receiving fewer requests for home loans.

MBA's weekly Mortgage Applications Survey Seasonally adjusted weekly percent change 7.0

1.8%

-7.3 -9.8 -8.8 -11.5

May 10 1 7

24

31

Source: FactSet

0

o 0 0

o 0

0

0

0 0 0 0 O

68.00 29 26 13.99 6282 1 02.95 7.18 22.41 62.99 115.77 8.92 27.16 25.47 4.0 0 27.75 11.06 35 44 5.71 22.55 27.14 19,95 35.78 66.07 61.81 50.80 13.17 55,05 2.36 54.62

58.27 + 82 ... T T T +3 0 . 6 + 6 2.0 8 8 3 1 3 28.85 11 -0.4 T T T + 11. 4 +7. 6 416 19 1.2 2 13.12 18 -1.4 T T L +1 3 . 0 + 7 6.510205331 0 . 0 4 68.88 +.14 +0.2 T +59.8 +203.6 2 4 34 0 5 .2 101.75 49 -0.5 T + 35.0 +48.8 3124 1 9 1 . 94 5.69 83 -0.5 T -9.1 -1.2 9 38 21 .89 -.44 -2.0 T L T +22.0 +2 5 .2 2 3 1 1 8 0. 4 0 60 .98 +.01 . . . L L L +14.3 +23 .5 29 8 2 0 0. 8 8 110.82 29 -0.3 T T L +11.4 $. 3 3.5 1 044 2 4 1 . 2 4f 7 .4 6 12 - 1.6 T T L +15.1 t f .f 23 24 .09 27 -1.1 T T T +7.9 +16. 7 74 0 16 0. 3 6f 24 .24 25 -1.0 T L L + 70.1 +12 .8 12246 dd 0 .58f 11.89 -.05 -0.4 T T T - 4.3 +30.9 5 cc 0 2 . 4a 2 4. 7 1 -.30 -1.2 L L L +19.8 -1.9 26194 12 0 .90 10 .74 -.25 -2.3 T L L +27.6 +53 .8 10633 12 0 .22f 34 .58 -.15 -0 4 L T L + 32 9 +63 , 6 2 8 33 1 2 0, 6 0 5.00 -.20 - 3.8 T L T +25. 3 +1 1. 3 7 0 3 d d 1 8.2 8 -.50 -3.0 T T T -15.8 +75.1 1920 23 2 5.3 1 -.13 -0.5 T L +19.2 +17 . 4 75 0 cc 0.6 9 19.30 -.54 -2,7 T L L +13,4 +3 9 ,1 74 7 2 1 0, 1 8 34 .84 -.83 -1.8 T L L +30.4 +22 .6 38115 18 0 . 9 2 6 2.1 5 -.89 - 1.4 T T L + 20. 4 +17 .5 2 540 2 5 0. 8 4 5 8. 9 6 -.46 -0.8 T T L +10.2 +2 4 .2 5 3 7 1 6 1. 2 0 4 2. 8 9 -.42 -1.0 T T T -3.0 - 4.3 11 2 2 0 1 . 82 11.17 06 -0.5 T L L +29.6 +1 86.6 1177 2 0. 0 8a 53.34 75 -1.4 T L L + 18. 0 +4 4 .2 8 6 5 1 9 0 . 80a 1.63 86 -3.6 T T T +14. 0 +1. 8 18 dd 47.52 19 - 0.4 T T T +7.1 +32. 3 86 1 3 3 1. 7 6f 22 0 .14219.32 -.19 -0.1 L L L +15.8 +33 .9 6 9 7 2 3 0. 1 2 28.42 23.31 +.28 +1.2 L T T +28.9 +30 .2 6 7 08 9 0.8 0 f 33.03 2 4.1 2 -.14 -0.6 L T T -20.5 -0.4 1 5 3 3 7 0. 7 5 94.5 6 18 1.44 2.43 -1.3 T T L +18.0 +4 1 .3 4 6 8 2 7 2. 0 0 46.79 45 .98 84 -14 T L L +25 4 $.35 2 111 14 0 93 f 66,31 65 .42 69 -1.0 L L L +22.0 +2 4 .9 3 8 62 3 3 0. 8 4 729 8 83 22 -3.1 T L L +41.4 + 29 .6 1 6 62 d d 14,34 14 .83 31 -2.2 T L L +19.0 +18 .4 7 7 3 1 5 0. 6 0f 36.00 35 .41 -.18 -0.5 T L L +10.9 + 20 .8 9 7 12 1 2 0. 7 8 18.25 1 8. 9 5 -.36 -2.1 T T T +0.5 +11 . 6 4 3 5 1 3 0 . 36f 41.69 48 .68 -.61 -1.5 T L L +19.0 +34 . 5 18232 12 1. 20f 33.24 2 8.6 9 -.41 - 1.4 T T T +3.1 +45. 7 4 6 14 3 2 0 . 80f

Dividend Footnotes: 2 Extra - dividends were paid, ttut are not included. tt - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. 8 - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was mcreasen bymost recent dividend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. l - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent awdend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pad tas year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. 7 - Declared or paid in precedmg t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock approx>matecash value on ex-distribution date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no PiE ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last t2 months

Dole soars onbuyout offer::.;;,;:" , Dole Food received a buyout offer that values the fruit-and-vegetable company at approximately $1.07 billion. The bid from the company's Chairman and C EO David Murdock and his family caused the stock to jump 22 percent Tuesday. Murdock and other family members are making an unsolicited offer of $12 per share for the shares of the company that they don't already own, an 18 percent 52-WEEK RANGE

premium to Dole's closing price Monday. Murdock ownsa 39.5 percent stake in the company which has about 89.5 million outstanding shares. Dole's board will be meeting over the next several days to create a special committee of independent directors to assess the bid. The company said it is only in the beginning stages of evaluating the offer and that the board has made nodecisions about the proposal. Ann. dividend:

StoryStocks

DOLE LDK Solar LDK Close:$12.46 A2.26 or 22.2% Close:$1.46 V-0.18 or -11.0% The fresh fruit and vegetable The Chinesesolarcompany said company's CEO and his family are that its first-quarter loss increased offering to buy it with a bid that valslightly, hurt by a nearly 50 percent drop in revenue. ues it at $1 07 billion $14 $2.5 12

2.0

10

1.5

M

A M 52-week range

$839 ~

J $16 79

VolJ21.3m (16.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $1.12 b

P E: . . Yield: ..

BNNY Close:$39.98 V-1.70 or -4.1% Shares of the natural and organic food maker fell even after saying that its fourth-quarter net income soared on improved sales. $42 40 38

36

~ M

A M 52-week range

$32.36~ VolJ671.5k (3.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$693.17 m

M

J

$6.71 ~

LULU Close:$67.85 V-14.43 or -17.5% The yoga clothing company said that CEO Christine Day will step down as head of the company after a succes-

sor is named. $90

FAMILY

P E: .. . Yield : ...

Navistar Int'I NAV Close:$31.20 %-3.11 or -9.1% The truck and engine maker posted a wider loss for its fiscal second quarter compared with a year ago as sales continued to fall. $40 35 30

M

A M 52-week range

J

20

70

15

A M 52-week range

$38.8 1

Diamond Foods DMND Close: $19.18 %1.64 or 9.4% The seller of Pop Secret popcorn reported a better-than-expected fiscal third quarter and appointed a new chief financial officer. $25

80

J

M

M

A

J

52-week range

$62.26~

$82.66

VolJ28.9m (8.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$9.81 b

P E: 42.2 Yield: ...

Corinthian Colleges

J $2.36

VolJ 3.2m (1.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$231.89 m

$48.87 $78.17 ~ PE : 1 53.8 VolJ 3.8m (2.9x avg.) Yield :... Mkt. Cap:$2.5 b

Lululemon

M

M

A

52-week range

$72.86~

$27.79

VolJ 3.9m (11.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$426.91 m

P E: .. . Yield : ...

C OC O Texas Instruments

Close:$2.46 V-0.33 or -11.8% The for-profit education company said that it is under investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission. $3.0 2.5 2.0

TXN Close:$35.26 V-1.36 or -3.7% The Dallas-based chipmaker said that it's cutting its net income and

revenue outlook for its second-quarter.

$38 36 34

M

A M 52-week range

$1.74~ VolJ3.9m (3.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$212.01 m

J

M

A M 52-week range

J

$3.44 $26.96 ~ $37.36 P E: 9 . 1 VolJ 9.8m (1.1x avg.) P E: 21 . 9 Yield :.. Mkt. Cap:$39.11 b Yiel d : 3. 2% AP

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.19 percent Tuesday. Yields affect interest rates on consumerloans.

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

. 0 4 .04 . 07 .07 .12 .12

2-year T-note

. 32

.31

5-year T-note 1.11 1.12 10-year T-note 2.19 2.21 30-year T-bond 3.32 3.37

BONDS

Price-earnings ratio

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 2 2.47 19 +10.6 +21.5 t14.0 t7.1 A A A BondA m 1 2.6 6 -1.3 tf.4 + 4.7 t 3 .9 D C E CaplncBuA m 55.75 31 +6.6 +16.7 +11.8 +3.7 8 A 0 CpWldGrlA m 40.57 34 t9 5 +28.0 +12.8 +2.7 8 C 0 SprintNex 1952470 7.35 + . 17 EurPacGrA m 43.14 31 t 4 . 7 + 24.3 +9.3 t f . f 0 0 A S&P500ETF 1407092 163.10 -1.70 FnlnvA m 4 6. 3 4 53 +14.0 +29.4 t15.4 t4.5 8 C D BkofAm 1020529 13.12 -.18 Acadian EmgMkts d AEMGX GrthAmA m 38.82 44 +13.0 +28.7 +14.6 +4.4 A C D iShJapn 970220 10.92 —.22 IncAmerA m 19.39 14 +83 +18.9 +13.3 +6.5 8 A A iShEMkts 877474 39.38 —.76 VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH InvCoAmA m 34.27 27 +14.1 +26.3 +14.4 +5.4 D D C Pfizer 776838 28.42 + . 05 NewPerspA m34.44 31 +10.2 +27.7 +14.0 +4.8 8 8 8 SPDR Fncl 692135 19.65 -.33 ocC BariPVix rs 573021 20.02 +1.24 63 WAMutlnvA m35.96 33 +15.8 +27.0 +17.4 +6.5 D A 8 Merck 539901 47.56 —.90 $o $L Dodge &Cox Income 13.73 -.01 -0.2 +3.8 +5.4 +6.8 8 8 8 Citigroup 504566 49.95 -1.98 IntlStk 3 7.12 -.43 +7.2 +32.6 +10.4 +1.3 A 8 A Stock 142.53 -1.64 $.17.4 + 37.9 $.16.6 t5.4 A A 0 Gainers Fidelity Contra 86.48 -.93 + 12.4 +21.2 +15.4 +5.8 0 8 8 GrowCo 106. 37 -1.62+ 14.1 +24.4 +17.8 +7.6 8 A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 45 .73 -.35+ 15.8 +33.5 +17.4 +9.0 8 A A SGOCO 2.30 +.93 + 6 7 .9 Fidelity Spartan 500l d xAdvtg 57 .83 -.59+15.1 +27.0 +16.6 +6.3 C A 8 CardioNet 4.99 +1.78 + 5 5 .5 «C PrognicsPh 4.82 +1.14 + 3 1.0 63 FrankTemp-Fraukliu Income C m 2. 33 - .02 +5.8 +16.6 +11.4 +5.6 A A 8 VandaPhm 12.56 +2.51 + 2 5 .0 «C IncomeA m 2.3 1 - . 02 + 6.1 +17.4 +12.1 +6.2 A A 8 DoleFood 12.46 +2.26 + 2 2 .2 FrankTemp-Tem letouGIBondAdv 13 . 08 -.13 -1.0 + 11.8 +6.9 +9.5 A A A 4o NoAmEn g 4.97 +.75 + 1 7 .8 RisDivA m 19. 53 - .28+12.6 +24.0 +14.6 +5.0 E C 0 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ Oppeuheimer Questcor 42.11 +5.40 + 1 4 .7 RisDivB m 17 . 67 - .17+ 12.1 +22.9 +13.6 +4.1 E D D UnivBusP 2.83 +.36 + 1 4 .7 O o Fund target represents weighted RisDivC m 17 . 58 - .18+ 12.2 +23.0 +13.8 +4.2 E D D PrUVxST rs 69.21 +8.15 + 1 3 .3 average of stock holdings SmMidyalA m38.27 -.43+18.1 +34.3 +13.0 +2.5 8 E E CmBklN 19.57 +2.12 + 1 2 .2 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings SmMidValB m32.19 -.37+17.6 + 33.1 +12.1 +1.7 B E E Losers CATEGORY Diversified Emerging PIMCO TotRetA m 1 8 . 97 .. . -1.4 + 3 .0 + 5.4 +7.2 B B A NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 30.34 - . 32+15.2 +30.6 +15.5 +6.5 C C 8 RATING™ ** * y y yy GrowStk 42.1 6 - . 52+ 11.6 +20.5 +16.0 +6.6 D 8 8 -1.21 -20.6 CstlCon grs 4.66 HealthSci 50.1 7 - . 02+ 21.7 +38.9 +27.6+16.4 8 A A lululemn gs 67.85 -14.43 -17.5 ASSETS $1,265 million -1.37 -14.9 Newlncome 9. 6 8 -. 01 - 1.4 +2.0 +4.6 +6.0 0 D C Symmetry 7.80 EXP RATIO Mkts GenMark 13.17 -1.96 -13.0 Vanguard 158.49 -1.55 +15.1 +27.0 +16.6 +6.4 C A 8 500Adml MANAGER 1.31% -3.64 -12.3 DBCmdDS 26.00 500lnv 150.46 -1.54 +15.0 +26.9 +16.5 +6.3 0 A 8 SINCE Asha Mehta CapOp 40.88 -.41 +21.6 +42.0 +16.2 +7.0 A 8 A -9 4 RETURNS 3-MO Foreign Markets Eqlnc 27.81 -.24 $.15.9 +27.7 +19.0 +8.3 D A A YTD -6.4 StratgcEq 25.27 -.38 +17.8 +35.9 +18.8 +6.7 A A 0 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +13 6 Tgtet2025 14.58 -.12 t 7 .3 +18.4 +11.5 +5.0 C 8 A Paris -53.80 -1.39 3,810.56 3-YR ANNL +6.1 TotBdAdml 10.82 +.01 -1.2 +0.5 +4.3 +5.5 E D D London 6,340.08 -60.37 —.94 5-YR-ANNL -2.5 Totlntl 15.22 -.28 +1.8 +22.9 +8.3 -1.0 D D C Frankfurt -85.23 -1.03 8,222.46 TotStlAdm 40.87 -.43 +15.2 +27.9 +16.8 +6.8 8 A A Hong Kong 21,354.66 -260.43 -1.20 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico TotStldx 40.85 -.43 +15.1 +27.7 +16.7 +6.7 0 A A 39,890.24 -831.11 -2.04 2009-12-31 Milan 16,286.60 -269.74 -1.63 USGro 23.82 -.23 +12.0 +23.3 +15.8 +6.0 0 8 8 Samsung Electronics Co Ltd 5.66 Tokyo -196.58 -1 .45 13,317.62 Welltn 37.04 -.22 +10.1 +20.0 +12.9 +7.0 A A A 2.27 Stockholm 1,184.62 -8.24 -.69 OAO Lukoil ADR Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption Sydney + 19.60 + . 4 1 Bank Of China Ltd. H Shares 2.18 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 4,748.90 Zurich 7,673.01 -117.54 -1.51 Fubon Financial Holdings Co., Ltd. 1.66 redemption fee. Source: Morningstat.

The fund has outperformed typical diversified emerging-markets Marketsummary funds over the last 10- and Most Active 15-year periods, according to NAME VOL (Dgs) LAST CHG Morningstar. A. Veiga, J. Sohn • AP

EURO +.0050 1.3311+

T L

T

+0 . 01 L L -0.01 L L -0.02 L L -0.05 L L

L L L L

Commodities Most commodity prices fell and natural gas dropped to its lowest level in nearly three months. Crude oil and the wholesale price of gasoline also fell, along with gold.

Foreign Exchange The Japanese yen climbed against the dollar after the Bank of Japan said it would hold steady on stimulus for its economy. Some investors expected it to expand its stimulus.

h5N4 QG

.08 .13 .17

.27 .68 1.59 2.71

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO

Barclays LoogT-Bdldx 3.06 3.10 -0.04 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.48 4.41 +0.07 ~ ~ ~ ~ 15 none (trailing 12 months):lost money Barclays USAggregate 2.16 2.13 +0.03 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.06 6.04 +0.02 3-YR*: 8% Total return YTD: 9% 1-YF D29% 2 -Y R*: -2% Market value: $1.1 billion RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 4.24 4.19 $0.05 *annualized AP total returns through June 11 Source: FactSet YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.35 1.35 . . . 8 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays USCorp 3 .05 3.02 +0.03 1 YR AGO3.25 .13 FundFocus SelectedMutualFunds

Dole Food(DOLE) Tuesday's close:$ 12.46 $ 6 BApril 26 3

0

-.39 '

Stock indexes fell Tuesday in concert with markets around the world. The weakness began in Asia, after the Bank of Japan said that it would hold steady on its stimulus for the world's third-largest economy. Some investors expected to see new stimulus measures, and Japan's Nikkei 225 index fell 1.5 percent. The weakness spread to Europe, where France's CAC 40 index lost 1.4 percent. Shortly after trading began in the United States, the Dow Jones industrial average lost as many as 152 points, but it pared its loss as the day progressed. It was the second drop in a row for the Dow and for the Standard 8 Poor's 500 index.

Annie's

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

NAME

2Q '12 2 Q '13

$95.38

Dole Food

25

Operating EPS

RUDE IL +

- .27

$21.65

1 0 DA Y S

" j' ' " ' 'F M ' " .J. 1 2 800 . .D .

+ D

14,840 '

1,680

ILVER+

- 9.20

Dow Jones industrials

Close: 1,626.13

"

$1,377.00+

L L L L L L L

L L L L L L

L

L L L L L L L

2.47 4.41 2.03 7.91 3.71 .94 3 36 .

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Oil (bbl) 95.38 95.77 - 0.41 + 3 . 9 Ethanol (gal) 2.44 2.48 +0.04 +11.4 Heating Oil (gal) 2.86 2.88 -0.91 -6.2 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.72 3.80 -2.00 + 11.1 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.82 2.85 - 0.88 + 0 . 4 FUELS

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. 1377.00 1386.20 21.65 21.92 1479.90 1506.90 3.19 3.24 750.75 767.65

%CH. %YTD -0.66 -17.8 -1.26 -28.3 -1.79 -3.8 -1.42 -12.3 - 2.20 + 6 . 9

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -7.4 1.20 1.19 +0.94 1.28 1.29 -0.82 -11.2 -5.6 Corn (bu) 6.60 6.50 +1.46 Cotton (Ib) 0.88 0.87 +1.63 +17.2 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 302.60 308.30 -1.85 -19.1 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.52 1.52 -0.03 +30.8 Soybeans (bu) 15.41 15.12 + 1.90 + 8 . 6 Wheat(bu) 6.97 6.90 +1.01 -10.4 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5641 +.0057 +.36% 1 .5498 C anadian Dollar 1.0 1 90 —.0002 —.02% 1.0305 USD per Euro 1.3311 +.0050 +.38% 1 . 2498 Japanese Yen 96.22 -2.48 -2.58% 7 9 .44 Mexican Peso 12. 7 968 —.0550 —.43% 14.0573 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6305 —.0047 —.13% 3.8835 Norwegian Krone 5 . 7 772 +.0215 +.37%6.0349 South African Rand 10.0422 -.1128 -1.12% 8.4612 S wedish Krona 6.5 5 0 4 —.0261 —.40% 7.1193 Swiss Franc .9245 —.0084 —.91% .9609 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0583 +.0026 +.25% 1 .0112 Chinese Yuan 6.1380 +.0022 +.04% 6 .3702 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7647 +.0011 +.01% 7 .7607 Indian Rupee 58.341 +.186 +.32% 5 5.695 Singapore Dollar 1.2528 -.0048 -.38% 1.2842 South Korean Won 1130.62 +2.18 +.19% 1170.68 -.10 -.33% 2 9 .93 Taiwan Dollar 29.88


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

BRIEFING

Brewery founder wins award Gary Fish, Deschutes Brewery founderand CEO,has beennamed Ernst & Young'sentrepreneur of theyear for the Pacific Northwest,

according to anewsrelease issuedTuesday. As a regional winner, Fish will advance to the national competition, which culminates in the

selection of winners in several national categories and the National

oo eas s o iscose a are ues s By Michael Liedtke

the attempt to pressure the U.S. Justice Department to loosen the legal muzzle that limits disclosures about government surveillance authorized by courts to protect national security. Google made its plea in a Tuesday letter to Attorney General Eric Holder and FBI Director Robert Mueller. Google is trying to debunk media reports that the company has created a way for the National Security Agency

The Associated Presss

SAN FRANCISCOGoogle is asking the Obama administration for permission to disclose more details about the U.S. government's demands for email and other personal information transmitted online in an effort to distance itself from an Internet dragnet. In a show of unity, Google rivals Microsoft Corp. and Facebook Inc. also supported

to gain access to large amounts of its users' online communications as part of a secret program code-named "PRISM." The reports surfaced last week after a government contractor leaked confidential documents revealing the NSA has been tapping into the computers of Google Inc. and many other Internet services to retrieve information about foreigners living outside the U.S.

Wate BCqulsltloll —Google announced Tuesdaythat it had closed its deal to buy Waze, a social mapping startup that features real-time traffic data provided by users to help drivers find the fastest route to a destination. Google did not disclose the purchase price in its blog post announcing the acquisition. But a person with knowledge of the transaction said it was $1.03 billion.

The acquisition highlights the increasing importance of location data in our on-the-go lives, whether it is in finding a place to eat or

navigating an unfamiliar road. Wazehas drawn a particularly passionate base of nearly 50 million users around theworld. In any given month, about one-third of them turn on the app to access

the company's directions. — New York TimesNews Service

Ernst & YoungEntrepreneur Of The Year Overall Award winner, on Nov.16

in Palm Springs, Calif. The award recognizes

Companies' hiring plans hold steady, survey finds

BEND HOUSING MARKET

the contributions of en-

trepreneurs whoinspire others with their vision,

leadership andachievement, according to Ernst & Young's website.

Walgreen to pay $80M in fines Walgreen, one of the

nation's biggest pharmacy operators, agreed Tuesday topay$80 million in fines to resolve

federal chargesthat it failed to properly control

thesales of narcotic painkillers at someof its outlets. Officials at the Drug Enforcement Administra-

tion describedthefine as the biggest ever paid

by a pharmacychain.As partofthe settlement, the license of a Florida facility used by Walgreen to

distribute opioid painkillers and other controlled

drugs wasrevokedfor two years. — Staffand wire reports

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • BusinessSuccess Program —Working Together:Reservations recommended.Call 541382-3221 or visit www. bendchamber.org; free; 7:30 a.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-382-3221 or shelley@ bendchamber.org. JUNE18 • Visit Bendboard meeting:Reservations requested; free; 8 a.m.; Bend Visitor Center, 750 N.W. Lava Road;541-3828048 or Valerie©visitbend. com. • BusinessAfter Hours — Fisher Nicholson Realty:Free; 4:30-5:30 p.m.; Fisher Nicholson Realty, 1515 S.W.Reindeer Ave., Suite B, Redmond; 541-526-5513. • CrookedRiver RanchTerrebonneChamber of CommerceNetworking Social: Free; 5:30 p.m.; Opportunity Foundation of Central Oregon, 835 state Highway126, Redmond; 541-923-2679. • Workshop on Wealth Transfer:Information about leaving money to heirs; reservations: call 541-382-1795; free; 6 p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union, 1386 N.E. Cushing Drive, Bend; 541-382-1795. JUNE19 • How toStart a Business: Registration required; $15; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. • Network of Entrepreneurial Women meeting:registration required; $22 members, $27 nonmembers; 5-8 p.m.; St. Charles Bend conference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-382-4321.

For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbulletin.comlbizcal

By Ruth Mantell

• Developer plans to complete final phase of OldMill townhomes

Marhetwatch

Y

c

appeared Tuesday,June 11, on PageC6,the model of the aircraft

was incorrect. The service has beenscheduled on the CRJ-200. The Bulletin regrets

the error.

e

ing to Manpower's employ-

By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

A Bend building company is set to start work on the final units of its riverfront townhome community, which was planned at the height of Central Oregon's housing frenzy and delayed when the market went bust. The cityof Bend issued seven building permits to Pahlisch Homes late last month to build seven townhomes in the Deschutes Landing subdivision, which overlooks the Deschutes River and Bend's Old Mill District. Deschutes Landing "started in some of the best times, and saw some of the worst, too," said Dan Pahlisch, the company's vice president of sales and marketing. Pahlisch Homes started building the townhome subdivision, located near the Reed Market Road and Bond Street roundabout, in 2006, envisioning 37 units, individually priced between $500,000 and $1.2 million. But development stopped with the 2008 market crash. Just eight permits were issued for Deschutes Landing between 2009 and 2011. Bend's building market sprang back to life last year, though, with home permits outpacing 2010 and 2011 combined.

vl//'aI/rng

vlorrl. flr C lf M k y C • JA;

Jl!.tl0

~j j j y ;,l I

Andy Tullis/The Bulletinfile photo

Construction at Deschutes Landing, seen here in 2011, should be wrapped up by early next year, its builder says. Work on the development, located on the Deschutes River overlooking the Old Mill District, began during the housing boom in 2006.

Simsonve. Colora oAve o mtiaS Reed MarketRa. q< 1

Bu I

DeschutesYx

Landing

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

The trend has continued this year, and Pahlisch's build-out plan for Deschutes Landing has mirrored the regionwide uptick. The contractorgot 10 permits forthe subdivision last year to go with the seven issued in May, making up nearly half of the 36-unit subdivision.

"We're very excited to be able to build it out," Pahlisch said. The plan is to finish the townhomes and sell them by early 2014. The townhomes will be about 2,300 square feet. Pahlisch is marketing the properties on its website as a "luxury townhome community," with units selling between $400,000 and $1 million. The improving home market in Bend and across the Northwest has lifted Pahlisch's bottom line considerably. The company was listed as contractor on 101 Bend homes last year, after building 38 in 2011 and 16 in 2010, a review of city building permits show. The company has recently

bought into neighborhoods in the Tri-Cities region in southeast Washington state, as well as Medford, tapping into new markets. Finding homebuyers and securing financing to build were big challenges for homebuilders like Pahlisch from 2009 to 2011. Now, Dan Pahlisch said, the biggest challenge is finding enough workers to meet demand. "There's a (construction) trade shortage. Central Oregon was hit so hard that a lot of folks left," Pahlisch said. "We need people, hands-on folks to get these homes built." — Reporter: 541-617-7820 egluclzlich@bendbulletin.com

ment-outlooksurvey released Tuesday. A seasonally adjusted net 12 percent of employers said they plan to add to their workforce in the third quarter, up I percentage point from both the secondand third quarters of 2012. "At a very slow pace, the labor market is improving and the intention to hire is improving as well," said Jonas Prising, president of ManpowerGroup, a Milwaukee-based staffing servicesfirm. Manpower's report paints a picture of a national labor market that is consistently adding jobs at a moderate pace. Last week the U.S. Department of Labor reported that the U.S. economy gained 175,000 nonfarm jobs in May. Over the quarter ending in May, there was an average monthly gain of 155,000 nonfarm jobs, slightly higher than a monthly average of 147,000 additional jobs for the quarter ending in May 2012. The Manpower report, based on interviews with more than 18,000 employers in the U.S., measures the percentage of firms planning to hire minus the percentage of those intend-

ing layoffs. The share expecting to increasestaffisata four-year

high. "This is just a further manifestation of an increase in employers' confidence in slow, measured, but steady growth, and they are adjusting their hiring intentions," Prising said.

Housing discrimination remains anissue, HUDsays By Suzanne Gamboa The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Minorityrenters and homebuyers deployed to test for housing discrimination did not run into the blatant discrimination of four decades ago, but were told about and shown fewer homes than their white counterparts with similar backgrounds, according to the results of a major federal housing study released Tuesday. The Department of Hous-

ing and Urban Development deployed pairs of testers — one white, one minority in each pair— to do more than 8,000testsseparately across 28 metropolitan areas in the $9 million, study the Obama administration conducted last year. Testers'were the same gender and age and presented themselves as equally qualified to rent or buy a unit in the study whose results were released Tuesday. The blatant discrimination

Correction In a Briefing item headlined "L.A. flights to begin Thursday," which

WASHINGTON — More employers are expecting to hire in the third quarter, with gains in all industries and across the country, accord-

of literally slamming doors in the face of minorities that was found in a similar 1977 HUD study was less evident: minorities usually were able to get appointments and see at least one unit last year. However, blacks and Asian-Americans were treated differently than white counterparts often given fewer options. Hispanics were also treated differently when renting, however, experienced about equal treatment as whites when

seeking to buy a home. "Unfortunately, our findings reveal a sad truth — that the

long struggle to end housing discrimination remains unfinished," HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan told reporters in a telephone news conference. In one case, an Asian tester was first to see an agent about a two-bedroom unit advertised for rent. She was told it was available and was able to see it, but no other units were made available to her. A

couple of hours later, a white tester saw the same agent and the same advertised unit, but she was told about four more two-bedroom units that were available in other places. "That's typical of the kind of unequal treatment we observedacross metropolitan housing markets nationwide," said Margery Turner, senior vicepresidentforprogram planning and management at the Washington-based Urban Institute.

BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed June 4 • Joesph W. Hall, 551 N.E. Basalt Ave., Terrebonne • Kaipo J. Dandurand, 2941 N.W. Wild Meadow Drive, Bend Filed June 5 • Phil L. Geiger, 61149S. U.S. Highway 97,tt146,

Bend • James K. Urbach, P.O. Box 362, Culver Filed June 6 • John B. Alexander, P.O. Box 98, Bend • Celeste N. Wentzel, P.O. Box1176, Prineville • Raymond R. Davies, 63324 Lavacrest St., Bend

• Marcy Garrard, 2853 S.W. Indian Ave.,Redmond

S.E. Soft Tail Loop, Bend • Gaila R. Wold-Adams, Filed June 7 2660 N.E U.S. Highway 20, Ste. 610-343, Bend • Skyler J. Auzenne, • Amberdon C. Brown, 3967 N.W. Walnut Ave., P.O. Box 5092, Bend Redmond • Carol Y. Peterson, 373 • Winegar-Hardin Eric, S.W. First St., Madras 21845 Boonesbourough Drive, Bend Filed June10 • Richard D. Williams, 319 • Rita M. L. Le, 61325

Sally Lane, ¹1, Bend • Nancy E. Sands,18270 Rock Springs Court, Bend • Jeniann C. Workman, 2360 N.E. Tennessee Lane, Prineville • Eric B. Wilkinson, P.O. Box131, Culver Filed on June11 • Cathy C. Denney,

5000 S.W. 58th Place, Redmond Chapter 11 Filed June 6 • Crossroad Station, LLC, 61295 Mountain Breezes Court, Bend Chapter 13 Filed June 5 • Gina C. Nichols, 21358

Starling Drive, Bend Filed June 6 • Joseph W. Farrell, 63139 Brookstone Lane,Bend Filed June 7 • James A. Burford, 8395 N.E. First St., Terrebonne • Daniel A. Valverde, 977 N.W. Westview Road, Prineville


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Sky Watch, D4 THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

O www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors

MOUNTAIN BIKE TRAIL GUIDE

SNOW REPORT For snow conditions at Oregon ski resorts,

seeE6

BRIEFING

Paddledoard event Saturday The third annual Bend Paddleboard Challenge will be from 9a.m. to

4 p.m. Saturday atRiverbend Park in Bend. The World Paddle

Association-sanctioned event will include

long and short course standup paddleboard races, and paddling clinics taught by the

Take a familiar trek for a loop • Swede Ridge Loopis aCentral Oregonclassic in both directions Editor's note:Mountain Bike Trail Guide, by Bulletin sports and outdoors writer Mark Morical, features various trails in Central Oregon and beyond. The trail guide appearsin Outdoors on alternating Wednesdays through the riding season. entral Oregon is home to seemingly endless miles of singletrack mountain biking trails. But after 12 years of riding my

MARIC

MORICAL~S bike in the woods here, it is increasingly difficult to find trails I have yet to ride. Last week, I discovered one way to make familiar trails seem new: Look on the map, find a favorite loop and ride it in reverse of the direction

I normally ride it. The Swede Ridge Loop is a classic high-elevation ride in the trail system west of Bend. I try to pedal the 14-mile loop a few times each summer. Though, technically, it is not summer yet, the Swede Ridge Loop is already free of snow and ridable. And now is the best time to put the tire tread on the dirt up there, as the trails are firm, tacky and mostly free of dust. SeeGuide/D3

Mark Morical /The Bulletin

The newly snow-free South Fork Trail is a gem, whether climbing it or descending it.

Northwest's most-acclaimed SUP athletes.

Contestants and spectators will havethe opportunity to try out the

latest gear from popular SUP manufacturers. The challenge is expected to draw paddle-

board enthusiasts from all over the Northwest, including three of the

region's most notable racers, KarenWrenn, Beau Whitehead and

Cyril Burguiere. Wrenn, Whitehead and Burguiere will teach

free paddling clinics after the races.

To register orfor more information, visit www.BendPaddleboard

Challenge.com or call 541-639-2655.

Hike to tell Bend's timder tale The Deschutes Land Trust is offering a 7-mile history hike exploring

the era of timber and irrigation of early Bend. The free hike will be

from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday in the Skyline Forest west of Bend.

The hike to scenic Juniper Point will feature information about the

Photos by Alandra Johnson /The Bulletin

Fish Lake is the site of a historic settlement and makes a great place for a day hike. This cabin can be rented out in winter months.

history of the Tumalo I

Irrigation District and

!'ttt

how water has played such an important role

,'ifgt't rtf

in the settlement of

Central Oregon. To register, call 541-330-0017 or email

info©deschutes landtrust.org. For more information, visit www.deschutes

landtrust.org. „I

— From staff reports

TRAIL UPDATE With Chris Sabo

rP ' r

• Fish Lake, SantiamWagon Roadanice hikewith the right company By Alandra Johnson •The Bulletin

SUMMER WEATHER TAPERS OFF

y dad is the kind of dad who shows up to a hike with practical presents for me in hand: Garlic whistles and kale from

After a short spell of

hotter temperatures, the forecast is calling

for temperatures ranging in the high 60s to mid 70s. As the school

year ends today for Bend La Pine Schools, expect increased use at recreation sites and trails.

SUMMER TRAILS Snow lines remains at or above 6,000 feet with highly variable snow conditions. North Fork Trail above Tumalo Falls remains closed with snow. Bikers and hikers should avoid until snow melts out. Paulina Peak remains closed with

opening in near future. Todd Lake trailhead is accessible, but the trail

is blocked by snow. Pacific Crest Trail is 30-35 percent snow-free. Avoid until further melting takes

place and conditions are safer. Moraine Lake and Green Lakes areas still have 6-8 feet of snow with lakes frozen over. Black Butte Trail is in good condition. SeeTrail update /D4

,iII'r a

his garden, bug spray (that was on sale at Bi-Mart, the preferred shopping destination for dads like mine) and a clutch of brochures detailing the history of the area where we were going to hike. These items made me smile; they so perfectly represented my dad. My dad, Patrick Hutchins, is an ideal hiking partner. For decades he worked at the U.S. Forest Service ranger station in McKenzie Bridge. Now retired, he still knows the trails, back roadsand best spots of the area better than almost anyone. He loves to talk about historyand can rattleoff names of flowers and trees as he passes them by. He sees things I miss, like where beetles have eaten into the

Fish Lake will disappear in a few weeks, transforming into a meadow. This is where livestock traveling the Santiam Wagon Road would feed. bark of a tree; he can tell you if a snag is in danger of falling or if it will stand for years to come; he points out where birds are nesting, w here fires have spread and he'sgood atestimating the age of nearly any tree. SeeOuting/D2

anglers get a chance to cast for cash at the Lake Simtustus Squawfish Derby. Gary Lewis For The Bulletin

rtr.'.Ii:":l

I('

fj r j' a

r The Santiam Wagon Road takes hikers into a forest of old growth Douglas fir.

HUNTING 8r. FISHING

Chase Lettenmaier, 14, and Mikayla Lewis, 16, cast for fish at Lake Simtustus in April. On June15,

Pj

Pikemi nnows payoffinpocketmoney t has taken me many years to come to grips with my love of history and language. I have learned that both are subject to change over time. Our English is a living language, and history, too, seems to have a beating heart. Some words, like trout, and love and adoration, are beautiful, while other words are utilitarian; other words are

t

GARY LEWIS crass or ugly. Our attitudes toward certain words change and a word that connoted one

thing, for some people, begins to connote another.

That is how we ended up with the new names Whychus

Creek (formerly Squaw Creek) and Mount Washington (which has a colorful historical nickname), and that is how we got northern pikeminnow, even though we have had pikeminnow with us for time out of mind under their former appellation, squawfish. SeeLewis/D2


D2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

Time to licenseATVs Corvailis Gazette-Times

I was hunting chukars east of Juntura when I heard the unmistakable growl of an allterrain vehicle. I expected to see the mac hine become visible on a nearby f ir e t r a il . U n f ortunately, not one, but two ATVs emerged from a draw not far from me and headed off across an open hillside. Not only were they traversing unroaded real estate, but they weren't even bothering to stay in each other's tracks; they were making two separate trails as they went. We were on Bureau of Land Management land,where there are already plenty of established trails but these two felt the need to blaze new ones. I m otioned t o m y s o n , Corky, and we wandered over to them. After the obligatory round of "How are you's" we learned they were waiting for friends who were hunting down from the mountain peaks after elk. Presumably, those men would be so tired they couldn't walk another half-mile downhill. I asked for their names and addresses. "Why do you need them?" They pretended not to know. "So I can report you for illegal usage of a motor vehicle," I explained. They then pretended not to know they'd been doing something illegal. "No problem," I said. "I'm sure the cop will take your ignorance into consideration. Now, what are your names?" Unsurprisingly, they opted not to provide me with the information I requested. Confrontations like that are becoming more and more common. Unfortunately, most of the confrontations are as unproductive as mine because people like me have no authority, nor do we have a way of identifying the culprits. Here in Oregon we don't

even have a requirement for titles and registration of ATVs, which would b e n ecessary precursorsfor what we really need, which are ATV license plates. A small but significant number of ATV riders make a habit of ignoring laws, closed roads, gates and any other impediments to public lands. In so doing they ruin vegetation, harass wildlife, cause extensive erosion and ruin the experience of law-abiding users. Some of these riders are hunters, but the only label that matters is criminal. We need to be able to identify those people and turn them into the authorities for ticketing and prosecution, without the potentially dangerous personal confrontations. The best way to do so is to require ATVs to display easy-to-read license plates. That way, witnesses could write down or photograph the identification and turn the information into the authorities. Obviously, ATVs used only on private lands could be exempt. It would seem that any reasonable person could see the wisdom in a license plate system but Oregon House Bill 2725, put forth by Rep. Peter Buckley, of Ashland, came to an early end this spring in the face of organized resistance from ATV riders and sellers. They had a number of concerns, but the bottom line is this: Illegal ATV use is an assault on public lands and on the wildlife within them. It is rampant and increasing. Let's not pretend otherwise. Education is not working. Selfregulation is not working. We need to impose accountability in order to protect our natural resources and the experience of the law-abiding public. T itles, r e g istration a n d license plates are the tools we have to do the job. Let's use them.

Submission requirements:Include in your caption as much detail as possible — who, what, when, where, why, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

c4 C

' •

s '>

tit/ '

j)5

i

• '.J.

rf

Fish Lake Alandra Johnson/ rhe Bulletin

Fish Lake, not far from the Santiam Pass, offers a chance to enjoy a lake and walk the old wagon road.

Wagon road

Fish Lake is a great spot to connect to the Santiam Wagon Road. We decided on a short, relatively easy trek, from the lake to Hackleman Creek, a little less than 5 miles round trip. Right away, we passed the p ioneer graves of a y o u ng mother and her child, a reminder of the harsh history of the Old West. Accordingto mydad (and The wagon road is just wide the history brochures he enough for a small car, which brought me), this meadow makes it an ideal spot to walk served as a grazing spot for with a buddy. You can walk horses along the Santiam abreast, making chatting that Wagon Road. The road was much easier. It's hard to imagbuilt to bring early settlers ine cars rolling along this road from the Willamette Valley in the middle of the forest, but to the grazing lands in Cen- Dad says it was part of the first tral Oregon and to bring intercontinental road race in cattle to market east of the 1905. Not so much a race, as an Cascades. endurance test, as they drove Dad says Fish Lake got from New York to Portland. itsname because, once the The road winds through a lake dried up, people would stretch of old-growth Douglas come and scoop up the fish fir trees. Dad says this is likely — easy pickings. the closest old-growth DougFish Lake used to be a las fir forest to Bend. The trees small town, of sorts, com- stretch up 200 feet or more. plete with a hotel, saloon, D own b e low, a l l so r t s blacksmith, store, barn and of f l owers w er e t h r i v ing. coral. Most of the buildings T he road w a s c overed i n burned in the early 1920s, wild strawberry p lants, all and the Forest Service took flowering. over the location. Visitors The road itself is interestcan still check out a remain- ing. It curved and meandered ing historic dispatch station, through the forest, passing by which has been carefully small streams and rotted trees. maintained, as well as an I also spotted at least 10 small old cabin that sits right on frogs, hopping down the road. the lake (in the winter, visi- That made me think I should

>jP

Q

SOME FALLS ARE TALL; THESE ARE SMALL

Continued from D1 Nearly every F a ther's Day, we hike together usually to disastrous results. We have been swarmed by monstrous mosquitoes; watched a supposed twohour river float turn into eight; and huddled, freezing by a campfire as it snowed. We tend to fare much better when we hike for no reason at all. And that's what this latest outing was. We had agreed tomeet up in the middle of the week at a spot about equidistant from our homes (mine in Bend and his in Springfield). And we lucked out with Fish Lake.

cabin).

This photo of waterfalls along the Metolius River was taken by Byron Dudley, of Sisters, using a Nikon D300 at 1/30 sec at f/8 with a 18-85 mm lens on a tripod.

Lewis

tors can stay overnight in the

I I

Can you work a camera, and capture a great picture? And can you tell us a bit about it? Submit your color or black-and-white outdoors photos at bendbulletin.com/wellshotand tell us a bit about where and when you took them. All entries will appear online, and every week we'll run a stellar local photo in this section. Once a month, we'll publish a whole photo page on a specific topic. This month, the topic is WATERFALLS.

Outing

Fish Lake is a bucolically lovely spot this time of year. It also has a fascinating history. Located off U.S. Highway 126, just west of Santiam Pass, Fish Lake is easy to get to and just about an hour from Bend. Yet I almost never hear of anyone going there. The lake itself is sparkling blue and rimmed with trees, tall grasses and flowers — a perfect spot for canoeing. But the time to visit is now. Within a few weeks, the lake will dry up, as it does every year, and turn into a lovely meadow.

k • I''

• ' •

COMMENTARY

By Pay Wray

Tombstone Pass

Area of detail

I

Santiam Pass Suttle Lake

• •

' ClearLake

Camp

g; g L6ke" ~ea

• a+ ~i

Traiihead

I

Santiam WagonRoad Sisters

Hackleman Creek

Santiam WagonRoad

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

Fish Lake Fish Lake Creek

If yougo What:Fish Lake and

SantiamWagon Road come back with my 2-year-old daughter. It seems to be an ideal trek for young children — noth-

ing dangerous, a wide-open path plus flowers and frogs. After a little more than 2 miles, we came toa gate,which marked Hackleman Creek. We had to walk a few feet down a paved road to see the creek — a large, lovely stream bubbling over big rocks. Dad and I found a spot to sit down on an old down tree where we ate some snacks and listened to the creek rush by. More fun facts from Dad: Hackleman Creek, which feeds Clear Lake, is the true start of the McKenzie River. On the way back, we huffed our way up a slope. We hadn't noticed going down, but we definitely felt it coming back up. The entire outing, we didn't pass anyone on the road. But that was fine by me. My dad was all the company I needed. — Reporter: 541-617-7860, ajoltnsonC<bendbulletinicom

Directions:From Sisters, head west on U.S. Highway 20. Turn left to stay on 20 and then turn left again, heading south on U.S. Highway126 toward Eugene. The turnoff for Fish Lake is soon after the turn, so look for signs on the right hand side of the road. Park in the

day-use area,explorethe

old cabins, the corral and then find the Santiam

Wagon Road. Difficulty: Easy

Contact:For information about the SantiamWagon Road, contact the Willamette National Forest, Sweet Home Ranger District, 541-367-5168; for information about Fish Lake, check out Friends of Fish Lake, www.fish lakehistoricsite.org.

Bounty is another word with multiple meanings and countless connotations. It speaks to fullness or abundance, but it also means reward. Today's cultural awareness has bestowed a perhaps unintended aura of respectability to an otherwise familiar fish. But this creature of Columbia, this predator of inland waterways remains an eater of baby salmon and steelhead and, as such, we must control it. That is why there is a bounty on the pikeminnow. The Bonneville Power Administration, in c ooperation with the Washington and Oregon fish management agencies and t r ibal a dministrations, sponsors a sport reward program designed to thin pikem innow populations in t h e Columbia. For each of the first 100 fish an angler catches, a $4 bounty is paid. After that, the BPA pays up to $8 per fish depending upon how many fish are turned in. Tagged fish are w orth up to $500. In fact,every Columbia River pikeminnow over 9-inches long will pay off in pocket money. To learn more about season dates and how-to and whereto, call 800-769-9362 or visit www.pikeminnow.org. These fish are a problem in the Deschutes watershed as well.

Pg V >ME

8

Gary Lewis/ For The Bulletin

Chase Lettenmaier, 14, caught this northern pikeminnow while casting a spinner on Lake Simtustus in April. The longest pikeminnow onJune 15 can net an angler $300.

another swivel over the main line. Use a bead to protect the knot. Tie a 4-inch section of line to the sliding swivel and attach a piece of hollow-core pencil lead or a bullet sinker. Spinners and spoons are effective. Additional weight can be added in the form of split shot. Quarter-ounce and heavier spinners are best. On the opening day of trout season, I took my 16-year-old Mikayla Lewis and our 14year-old friend, Chase Lettenmaier, up past Madras to Lake Simtustus where we rented a boat and prowled the lower end of the reservoir. They congregate near dams, Toward the end of the mornislands, jetties, river mouths, ing, Chase hooked a fish that riprap, and rocky ledges. Their put up a good battle on his principal foods are salmon light tackle. When we got it and steelhead smolts, crayfish, in the net, we laid eyes on our baby lamprey eels and fresh- nemesis, the pikeminnow. We're going back and hopwater clams. Since salmon and steelhead smolts are dis- ing to catch some more. oriented after coming through On June 15, both resorts on d ams, p i k eminnow m a k e Lake Simtustus are sponsorshort work of t hem. North- ing their annual event they call ern pikeminnow have thrived the Squawfish Derby. Fishing in the slower water since the starts at 6 a.m. and fish must dams were introduced. beturnedinby2p.m. ThelonFor this reason, pikemin- gest pikeminnow wins. First now should not be returned to prize is $300, second place the water. If you want to keep pays $200, third is good for them, they make good crab $100 and all kids win a prize. bait and fertilizer for flower The entry fee is $10 for adults gardens. and $5 for kids. One of the most effective Sign up at Lake Simtustus t echniques is f i s hing w i t h Store or the Pelton Park Store. plastic grubs and worms up For more information, visit to 6-inches long. Try smoke- www.peltonpark.com or www chartreuse,white, red, purple, .lakesimtustusrvpark.com. orange-brown and black. — Gary Lewis is the host of "Adventure Journal" and author Worms, chicken liver, clusof "John Nosler — Going Ballistic," ter salmon eggs, and strips "Fishing Central Oregon," of fish are good baits. Tie a "Hunting Oregon" and other swivel to the leader and slide


WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

D3

r 1

Broken Top and South Sister as seen from the Swede Ridge Shelter.

Guide

,I

Continued from 01 T he loop consists of t h e Tumalo Ridge, Swede Ridge, South Fork and Tumalo Creek trails, and that is the order in which I typically ride it clockwise. For anewtwist on an old favorite, I decided last week to ride the loop counterclockwise, starting with a p retty grueling climb up the South Fork Trail. R iding p a r t ne r Du s t i n Gouker and I drove 10 miles west of Bend to Skyliner Snopark during a b r i g ht-blue, cloudless morning. From the sno-park, we started out on our bikes along the Tumalo Creek Trail, which is one of my favorite spots in Central Oregon, a p i cturesque cliff wall providing a b a ckdrop to the babbling brook that is Tumalo Creek. The sharp left t ur n o n to South Fork was a pretty telling one. The trail immediately c limbed steeply above t h e South Fork of Tumalo Creek, and it would remain a fairly p recipitous ascent until w e topped out at t h e Swampy Lakes Shelter. I had n ever r i dden t h e Swede Ridge Loop in this direction for that very reasonI just thought the South Fork Trail would be too difficult of a climb, and I already knew it was a blast to descend. But Dustin and I powered on as the trail switchbacked through deep forest along the narrow creek. We dismounted to walk our bikes in only

t

That trail started out fast, with a few technical downhill sections followed by a short c l i mb . B e fore l o n g, we emerged from the shady depths of the Deschutes National Forest into a n o p en space, w i t h sn o w -capped Cascade peaks dominating the horizon. Eventually we arrived at the Swede Ridge Shelter, where we allowed ourselvesa short break to take in the sprawling views of Broken Top and South Sister. We looked hard through the trees and finally found Tumalo Falls, visible a couple of miles to the north. B ack on o u r b i k es, w e hauled down some doubletrack, wh i c h eve n t ually merged into tight singletrack that weaved through t hick manzanita. Mount Bachelor and Tumalo Mountain sprang into view to th e west, and after a brief climb, we were atop Tumalo Ridge, where we could peer down at the creek far below and look eastward all the way t o B end, some 10 miles away. The ride down the ridge was steep and rock-strewn, but it was fun nonetheless. We connected back up to the Tumalo Creek Trail and sped back to

-- Mountain bike trail — Featured mountain bike trail

SwedeLoopTrail • .,::.,

Tumalo Fall'lh s'.,':~

Tu m aio Creek Trail E&» j

alooCreek Tuma South ForkTrail'.''--"

"Skyllner

C .

.

-

-

, ,

'

'

Sno-pafk Tumaio RidgeTrait'

r

l ,.: Swede Bitlge Trak DES4HUTES NATIQf tIAL, FOBEST

Viigirja Meissner Sno p rk CascadeLake Highway

r

e

Swampy Lakes Sno-park

"-To 8e'nd '

Wanoga, Sno-park.

SwedeRidgeLoop lie~ 'A~~

DIRECTIONS Head10 miles

LENGTH Fourteen miles,

TRAIL FEATURES Challenging climbs

west of Bend on Skyliners Road to

two to three hours.

and fast descents

RATING

along singletrack, with numerous

Skyliner Sno-park

Technically intermediate

on the left. !r

and aerobically strenuous.

Photos by Mark Morical/The Bulletin

Bend's Dustin Gouker rides his mountain bike along the Tumalo Creek Trail, west of Bend, last week. a few places, and the climb w as not as tough as I h a d expected. One benefit of climbing the South Fork is the scenery of the stream and the pine trees, which is hard to take in when

mountain views

along theway.The Swede RidgeShelter offers a midride pit

stop.

you're hammering fast downhill along the singletrack. On a slow, monotonous uphill, however, the pristine forest is noticeable all around. Finally, after a 3-mile climb with an elevation gain of about

1,100 feet, we made it to the Swampy Lakes shelter, which sits at about 5,800 feet in elevation. I downed a peanutbutter-and-jelly sand w i ch, Dustin ate some energy gel, and we were back in the saddle,

Skyliner Sno-park, arriving there about three hours after we had started. They were the same trails I have ridden for years, but reversing direction made for an entirely new — and pleasurable — experience.

cruising over the rooty, sandy soil of the Swampy Lakes area. We were forced to carry our bikes over astream crossing shortly before we made the left turn onto the Swede Ridge Trail.

— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmoricaIC<bendbulletin.com

AWashington state park gem:Deception Pass By Lynda V.Mapes

What makes it a gem

Seattle Times

It's the wide diversity of things to do and landscapes to enjoy, in a setting that feels remote but is so accessible. From pink-salmon fishing off the beach, to tide-pooling, flyfishing for brown trout, even whale watching for grays and orcas in spring and fall, there truly i s s omething for j u st about everyone.

turns into the second-largest city on Whidbey Island, with OAK HARBOR, Wash. — If some 2,000 visitorscamped you know only the landmark out. The park gets more than 2 green bridge a t D e ception million visitors a year — makPass State Park, you don't ing it on e o f W a shington's know this park. most popular, and far more What awaits visitors here is frequently visited than North so much more snapping pho- Cascades or Mount Rainier tos from the overlooks at the national parks. bridge that spans the green But forits ease of access, slash of saltwater as it r i ps and wide range of things to through the pass, with cur- do, it's been a f avorite for rentsthat can exceed 8 knots. many Washington f amilies That's fun, but don't stop for generations. "It's home there. Deception Pass State away from home," said Jane Park is the poor man's San Stauffer, of Conway, Skagit Juan Island getaway, with all County, set up with her husthe glory of those island land- band, Mike, and two grandscapes, without the ferry wait children in their campsite at and costs. It's all here: 400- to the Cranberry Lake Camp600-year-old trees. Glorious ground on a recent spring day. beaches,primo picnic areas, With the red-check oilcloth tide pools, rocky headlands on the picnic table, strings of and sweeping views to the far- lights and even a hummingthest horizon. bird feeder on the awning of No wonder as he walks the the RV, they had brought all park, "It gets better" is a favor- the comforts. ite saying of park ranger Jack Madison, the family dog, Hartt. Because every time he was tucked into her bed on turns a corner, it does. a folding chair by t h e f i r e Strewn across both ends of ring with its cheery blaze, a the bridge at Deception Pass blanket snugged around her at the tips of Whidbey and Fi- shoulders. At 16, "She's been dalgo islands, the park covers coming here a long time," said more than 4,000 acres and 10 Jane, joining two generations islands — one of them with a of their family now on Deceprentable cabin. tion Pass vacations. "You c an drive here so To be sure, this is not a park for everyone. Some won't like quickly, you aren't in the car the jet noise, rumbling from so long, and then there is so the Naval Air Station at Whid- much to do," Stauffer said. "We spend a lot of time on the bey Island. And for some, the summer beach looking for treasures, high season is just too busy. fly kites, and then there are On a summer night the park the beautiful sunsets."

out of the car. Consider West Beach. Visitors can drive right to the edge of the shore, and from the parking lot in their car enjoy sweeping views of the Olympics, Strait of Juan de Fuca and a milelong saltwater beach. Picnic tables right at the edge of the parking lot make setup and put-away easy. Driving the many loops of the park offers views o f C r a nberry Lake, old growth forests, saltwater beaches, and of course, thattrademark experience of crossing the bridge. This truly is a park for visitors of all ages and physical abilities.

A unique place The tidal rip through Deception Pass is unique in Washington, and it's fun to watch boats jockey the passage. The grounds are also graced with an unusually rich assortment of classic stone and timber buildings from the 1930s, built by the Civilian Conservation Corps, from picnic shelters with wood-burning stoves, to an interpretive center that can be rented out for weddings and other gatherings. This is also an unusually

Not to be missed The end-of-the-world view from Rosario Head. Park administrators have stood their ground against fencing the edge of th e h eadlands, allowing visitors a s p ectacular unobstructed view of the outer waters of the Salish Sea and an endless sky from the b leached rocky bald of t h e headland. The sense of space, sea and sky are matchless.

good park for people with small children, or visitors who cannot or prefer not to even get

Where to lay your head

tides to educatevisitors on

Deception Pass is p r i mo camping country with more than 300 sites. With hot showers,camp firewood, water taps,

Wotipka©parks.wa.gov

the life found in tide pools at Rosario Beach. Call 360675-3767 or email Sam.

fire rings, picnic tables, green grass and old-growth trees that provide a sense of priva-

5KRKM3

limited. Call 360-611-0682. • Go on a photo safari at

Goose Rock, more than 400 feet up and with a 360-

degree view.

HIGH DESERT BANK • •

I II

••• I

o re. a .- te 11

RlS.R%

ee r gggmg eep Qgga

R R O

or."'epl ~it the cost amongst e anglersefor a discounted rate.

Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties,

R D LF

play smart

r' >

• •

I I

I

I

'

I

I

I

< OZIi(5) IRIiIE+IITtttt or use the < QiEN©3K6gl service Io be

Qa

automatically emailed of notices that match your needs.

M~

Emsdtr e mu

Qa

gir~f •

• •

'

I

t

' •

•e

'.

e •

O'S Orb Day Guided Float Trip

,.~P<i]e -'

l r

• Take a freeisland tour of visits are available from 911 a.m. Saturdays. Spaceis

can drive to and bring all your stuff. So go ahead: Steep your thickest wool sweater with campfire wood smoke as you settle back in the camp chair and count your blessings. If camping really isn't your thing, B&Bs and small inns are readily available nearby in Coupeville, on W h idbey Island. The larger towns of Anacortes and Oak H arbor have all the usual options and conveniences.

OES HUTESRIVER •

I

• Packa picnic for West Beach. Kiket Island, now renamed Kukutali Preserve. Guided

cy, this is cushy camping you

A Free Public Service

•Volunteer beach naturalists are available during low

O UT F I T T E R S

OtttpA Orepon Newspapcr Publishars Association $ Ig~~a •

Just forfun

.

.


D4

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

FLY-TYING CORNER

U TDOORS

A L E N D AR

Email events at least 10days before publication to communitylife®bendbulletin.com, or cliclz on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.

BIRDING

/I

Cinnamon Sedge, tied by Pete Ouelette.

t

Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin

I

On any afternoon in June and July, clouds of caddis may emergeabovethe river. The bugs are likely to fly all

Cinnamon Sedge. Apply fly

the way until dusk, which makes them vulnerable to

the bottom hackle.

trout on the prowl. TheCinnamon Sedge is representa-

floatant and fish with a long leader to rising fish. If a

lower profile is desired, trim Tie the Cinnamon Sedge with brown thread on a No. 10-14 dry-fly hook. For the

tive of several varieties of

body, use cinnamon turkey herl and rib with gold wire.

few of these in various sizes

For the wing, use cinnamon hen or turkey wing quill.

dark-bodied caddis. Carry a in your summertime dry-fly box. If the trout are feeding

on the surface, tie on a

SKY WATCH

DEAN HALEWOODPECKER FESTIVAL:Participants have a choice of attending 12 different guided field trips in search of11 different species of woodpeckers and more than 200 other types of birds that have madethe forests and burn areas of Central Oregon a birding hot spot; East CascadesAudubon Society sponsors the festival; full-day trips are $30 while half-day trips are $20; June13-16; Sisters; register at www.ecaudubon.org.

CYCLING

Finish with a light ginger hackle. — Gary Lewis, For The Bulletin

FiSHING REPORT For the water report, turn each day to the weather page, today on B6

AstronomerBurnham,who diedarecluse, authoredesteemedcelestial handbooks By Bill Logan For The Bulletin

Robert Burnham, Jr., is

a household word among astronomers. We know his work through his three-volume

"Burnham Celestial Handbook."

COTA SPRINGFLING:Central Oregon Trail Alliance is looking for volunteers for the13th annual Spring Fling work party; this community effort will focus on expanding the new trail network near Wanoga Sno-park; COTA will supply tools, direction and refreshments; after partyat location TBD; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; June 15; meet at WebCyclery, 550 S.W. Industrial Way, Bend; www.cotamtb.com.

The handbook is to astronomers what the "Kelly Blue Book"

is to car dealers. On the evening of Oct.18, 1957, eager to use his home-

made 10-inch reflector telescope, the 26-year-old propped it up against the porch railings

of his parents' Prescott, Ariz., home. At10:30 p.m., he saw a

smudgethatwasn'tsupposed to be there. It was his first

cometdiscoveryknown today Here is the weekly fishing report for selected areas in and around Central Oregon, provided by fisheries biologists for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife:

HAYSTACK RESERVOIR: Fishing has been good for large trout and kokanee. HOOD RIVER:Spring chinook season will remain open until June 30. Anglers may retain CENTRAL ZONE two adipose fin-clipped adult chinook and five fin-clipped ANTELOPEFLAT RESERVOIR: The jack chinook. reservoir has been very turbid, HOSMER LAKE:The lake which has negatively impacted is accessible but no recent the fishing. Anglers trolling fishing report. hardware seem to be having the m ost success. Recentsampling LAKE BILLYCHINOOK: suggests most of the trout average Fishing for smallmouth bass around12-inches long with a good should start picking up with number of trout around 20-inches the warmer weather. A tribal long available. The reservoir also angling permit is required in received a load of catchable-size the Metolius Arm. Please check trout this week. the special regulations for this BEND PINE NURSERYPOND:The area. Anglers are reminded pond hasbeen stocked and fishing there are small numbers of Is good. spring chinook and summer steelhead in Lake Billy Chinook BIG LAVALAKE:The lake is as part of the reintroduction accessible and fishing has been effort. Please release these good. fish unharmed. CLEAR LAKERESERVOIR: The LOST LAKE:The lake has been lake has been stocked and should stocked and should be great be a great opportunity for spring trout fishing. Anglers are most fishing for newly stocked and successful in Clear Lake early in hold over trout. the spring while the reservoir is METOLILIS RIVER:Trout full of water. fishing has been good. Insect CRANE PRAIRIERESERVOIR: hatches should offer lots of Anglers are catching large brook opportunities for good, dry-fly trout, kokanee and rainbows. The fishing. resort owner reports some of the OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM best fishing he has seen in many TO OCHOCODAM: Fishing for years, particularly for brook trout. Anglers are reporting success with trout has been good for trout averaging 8 to 10 inches. flies, lures and bait. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Fishing CRESCENTLAKE:Opportunities for trout has been good. for rainbow and brown trout are Anglers are reporting trout good. up to 18-inches long. Recent CROOKED RIVERBELOW sampling indicated there BOWMAN DAM:Fishing for10- to is a good number of trout 16-inch rainbow trout has been averaging 12- to 14-inches good. long available. DAVIS LAKE: Anglers are catching ODELL LAKE:Anglers are trout near the mouth of Odell reporting large catches of Creek. kokanee. Anglers targeting lake DESCHUTES RIVER (MOLITHTO trout are also having success. THE PELTONREGULATING DAM): Early season provides the best Good to excellent reports of trout opportunity for lake trout. fishing from the Deschutes above PAULINA LAKE:Currently Maupin were reported. Best trout accessible. Water temperature fishing typically occurs around is cool but kokanee and midday, as the best light reaches rainbow trout angling is fair the canyon floor. Fly anglers will find best success with mayfly and and should improve. caddis patterns. Anglers have PRINEVILLERESERVOIR: reported the best stonefly hatches Fishing has been good and the in years on the Deschutes. trout that have been caught were large. Bass and crappie DESCHUTES RIVER (LAKE BILLYCHINOOK TO BEND): fishing has been picking up in Flows are typical for irrigation the east end of the reservoir. season: approximately 150 cfs SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING above Lower Bridge and 400POND:the pond fishing well. 500 downstream. Rainbow trout WALTONLAKE: The lake average 10- to 16-inches long, was stocked with a load of while brown trout up to 26-inches catchable and larger-sized long are available. Anglers will find better access downstream of trout. There are also some Lower Bridge. Remains open year- holdover fish up to 20-inches long available. round; however, gear is restricted to artificial flies and lures only. WICKIUP RESERVOIR:Fish are scattered, but anglers are EAST LAKE:The lake is reporting catches of 18 to 20 accessible. Opportunities for kokanee, rainbow and brown trout kokanee as well as a few large, are good. brown trout.

Trail update Continued from 01 Pole Creek Fire burn area trail restrictions are still in place until f u r t her n o t ice. Users are urged to stay on trails for safety. Chush Falls, Scott Pass and Pole Creek

trailheads remain closed to vehicle access.

Roadupdates State Highway 46 is now completely open from Bend to the Crescent Cutoff Road. Road 21 into Newberry Caldera is open for the season.

FISHING

as Comet Burnham 1958a.

CENTRALOREGONBASS CLUB: Meets on the first Tuesday of each month; new members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; www.cobc.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; meets on the first Mondayofeachm onth,6:45 p.m .; ONDA off ces, i Bend;541-306-4509, communications@deschutestu.org, www.deschutestu.org. BEND CASTINGCLUB:A group of fly anglers from around Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month; 6-8 p.m.; location TBA; 541306-4509orbendcastingclub@ gmail.com. THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB: Meets on the third Thursday of each month; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center; www.sunriveranglers.org. THECENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB: Meets on the third Wednesday of each month; 7 p.m.; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org.

he was visited by the late Sen. Barry Goldwater. The senator

HIKING DESCHUTESLANDTRUST HISTORY HIKE:Seven-mile hike exploring the era of timber and irrigation in early Bend; 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.; June18; Skyline Forest, Bend; free; register by June17; 541-3300017, info@deschuteslandtrust.org or www.deschuteslandtrust.org. PNW BACKCOUNTRYLLAMA RENDEZVOUS:Learn from experienced handlers what lowimpact llama trekking is about at the annual Pacific Northwest Backcountry Llama Rendezvous; participate in a selection of guided educational day hikes; July1921; South Steens Campground, Burns; 509-430-2198; llamas@ rattlesnakeridgeranch.com or www. rattlesnakeridgeranch.com.

HUNTING LEARN THEARTOFTRACKING ANIMALS:Guided walks and workshops with a certified professional tracker to learn how to identify and interpret tracks, signs and scat of the animals in Central Oregon; two or more walks per month all year; $35; 8 a.m. to noon; 541-633-7045; dave©wildernesstracking.com, wildernesstracking.com. THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: Meetsthe second Wednesday of each month; 7 p.m.; King Buffet, Bend; ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: Meets the first Tuesday of each month; 7 p.m.; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: Meets the third Tuesday of each month; 7 p.m.; Redmond VFWHall.

MISCELLANEOUS BEND OHAYOUTH 8IFAMILY OUTDOOR DAY: Outdoorevents and displays, including wilderness

t

Every Friday In

MA GAzINE

Thenunetin

surprised Burnham, offering him an 1882 brass refracting

telescope owned byhis late uncle, Morris Goldwater, who had once been Prescott's mayor.

and professional astronomers

years, Tombaughwas relegated to taking long-exposure photo-

around the world. It was written

graphs of the sky. Burnham was hired to per-

published and sold to this day in

work on a comparator, or "blinker" machine, that was below the

for the proper motion study dried up and without a formal

dignity of professional astrono-

education, after 21 years of hard

mers. Burnham would spend all night taking photographs of the

work, Burnham was fired. Poor royalties for his bookand the

sameareasthatTombaugh had

firing at Lowell were devastat-

in several languagesand is still

any bookstore. form monotonous and repetitive Three years later, funding

taken 25 years earlier. Then he would insert both the glass pho-

ing. Even though he was offered

an astronomy teaching position at a high school in Texas, he

tographic plates in the blinker. By rapidly switching plates, he could see that some stars had proper motion study. It was boring and repetitive work, but

vanished. Not even his family knew his whereabouts. It wasn't until 1997 that Tony Ortega, an amateur astronomer and writer for the Phoenix New Times, un-

perfect for Burnham. Hegot to

covered the mystery of Robert

moved. This wascalled the

spend a lot of time behind the Burnham, Jr. Clark13-inch refractor and this Burnham hadbecome areallowed him a lot of time toward cluse in SanDiego. Hepainted the continued writing of his cats in Balboa Park, living in astronomical journal that he had homeless shelters.Hewasseen

started in high school.

in Balboa Park at night, but no

amassedenough astronomical

one recognized this stranger who would spout incredible

Word spread throughout Ari-

By1966, Burnham had data to fill eight notebooks. His

knowledge of the stars.

attracted the attention of Henry Giclas, director of the Lowell

unfettered access to Lowell's

Robert Burnham, Jr., an Air Force veteran, was buried

library, with mountains of infor-

at Fort Rosecrans National

mation and photographs. With this information, this amateur

Cemetery in1993. Like many

scientific depth in his handbook. He couldn't find anyone,

years alone and destitute. As a final note, in 2009 a memorial

including Giclas, to publish it,

bronze plaque resembling a

so with help from his family, he self-published his now famous

page in Burnham's "Celestial Handbook" was installed on the Pluto Walk at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff. — Bill Loganis an expert solar observer and volunteeramateur astronomer with the Vniversity of Oregon's Pine Mountain Observatory. Helivesin Bend. Contact: blogan0821©gmail.com

zona in various newspapers and employment at Lowell gave him Observatory in Flagstaff, Ariz. If Burnham had the patience to look for comets, thought Giclas,

he would bewell-qualified for a mundane andboring job called a"proper motion" study. In February1958, Giclas offered Burnham a$6,000-a-year job at

people of genius, this asastronomer could include more tronomy giant spent his last

two years.

"Burnham's Celestial Handbook."

This was not the first time Lowell had hired a skilled ama-

publishing, in1976, Burnham

Lowell that would likely only last

teur for cheap repetitive work. In1929, Lowell hired ayoung

After several years of selfsecured a deal with Dover Publications and the three-volume

"Celestial Handbook" became Kansas farmer by the nameof Clyde Tombaugh, the discoverer widely available to amateur survival, archery, sporting clays, camping essentials and lunch; registration required by June10; 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.; June15; Central Oregon Sporting Clays, 9020 S. Highway 97, Redmond; 541-3887337 or www.ohabend.webs.com. STREAMSTEWARDSHIP DAY:Aday to engage partners, river users and communitymembers in hands-on stewardship activities to enhance the health of the Deschutes River; volunteers of all ages are invited to join and learn about water quality, fish habitat, vegetation and good stewardship as they help restore, protectand support the health of the river by removing invasive weeds, cleaning up litter and removing instream debris; paddlers are welcome; 10 a.m. to1 p.m.; July11; Riverbend Park, Bend; 541-382-6103, kyake© restorethedeschutes.org or www. restorethedeschutes.org.

CENTRALOREGON SPORTING CLAYSANDHUNTING PRESERVE: 13-station, 100-target course and five-stand; 10 a.m. to dusk Saturday and Sunday,11 a.m. to dusk Monday, Tuesday, Thursday andFriday; 9020 S. U.S. Highway 97,Redmond; www. birdandclay.com or 541-383-0001. REDMOND ROD 8[ GUN CLUB: Archery, pistol, rifle, skeet, sporting clays and trap; club is open to the community and offers many training programs; three miles east of Redmond on the north side of state Highway126; www.rrandgc.com. PINE MOUNTAINPOSSE: Cowboy action shooting club; second Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-8199, www.pinemountainposse.com.

HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541408-7027 or www.hrp-sass.com.

I

PADDLING KAYAKINGCLASSES:W eekly classes and open pool; $3; 4-6 p.m. Sundays; equipment provided to those who preregister, first-come, first-served; Cascade Swim Center, Redmond; 541-548-7275, www. I'apr'dl.oi'g.

se . •

• • Jetclean® Plus Steam cycle Induat 'e Moat Powerful Motor

I

I *

I

COSSA KIDS:Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear and eye protection are provided; parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each child is $10; 10 a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. BEND BOWMEN INDOORARCHERY LEAGUE:Traditional league; Wednesday evenings; Lenny at 541-480-6743; indoor 3-D league Thursday; 7 p.m.; Bruce at 541-4101380 or Del at 541-389-7234. BEND TRAPCLUB:Trap shooting, five-stand and skeet shooting; 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Thursdays and Sundays;milepost30,U.S.Highway 20, Bend; Bill Grafton at 541-3831428 or www.bendtrapclub.com.

"Quality Painting Inside and Out"

Painting in Central Oregon for over 18 years

• I

•I

541-382-6223

SHOOTING

Heartlaqd Paiqtiqg J

Weekly Arts Sc Entertainment

Soon after this discovery,

of Pluto. During the post-Pluto

QHNsoN

s

I •

I '

e

I I ' ' •

I

• I

I

e

TV.APPLIANCE

yohnsonbrothersttrcom

20th A n n i v e rsary Membership Special

~r

. 1 99~

g

Awbrey Glen

GoK.CLu Come see why 340 Members Come for the Golf, Stay for the Friendships. Your Jogrney Golf2lfembership, the Ntay you mant it! Frienrk, Family, Golf, and More. No Membership Fees for a minimum of 12 months. Choice oF. Golf Cart Lease, set of freeirons, or $1,000 credit in the Restaurant. Other memberships options are available to fit your golfing and social desires.

Insured Bonded and Licensed ¹156152 Phone: 541-383-2927 18633 Riverwoods Drive EmaiL heartlandllc®msn.com Bend,OR 97702 tnquire about trading goods for services.

Contact our Membership Department for more details: (541) 385-6011 I Email: keith@awbreyglen.com

~vw.awbreyglen.com


WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DS

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

ummer

S OWero me owerS

TV SPOTLIGHT By Hank Stuever

-',I, i ifi"

The Washington Post

There's plenty of television to choose from, but that whole notion of summer being the most provocative and experimental TV season is losing its luster. Looking at this summer's lineup is a little like arriving at your favorite vacation spot and noticing that the shaveice shack burned down over the winter. (No "Louie," for ex-

it takes place along Mexican

" /IItI,/~

"The Newsroom" Starts July 14,HBO After last summer's (deserved!) critical drubbing, Aaron Sorkin's cable news drama is back with the sorta-promise of acure for its characters'ex-

)I

I:

g

ltit

plosive logorrhea. (That insip-

et k;

Netflix via The Washington Post

"Orange Is the New Black," based on Piper Kerman's memoir, is about a Brooklyn socialite (played by Taylor Schilling) who must do time in a federal women's prison. not be the one responsible for beheading his wife. I'm halfhappy the show is back and hope it doesn't violate parole.

"Dexter" "The Killing" (recommended) Starts June 30, Showtime I t's the beginning of t h e 9 p.m. Sundays, AMC The show's stars look just end for th e v i gilante serial as shocked as you are that killer, whose carefully Saranthis moody, elongated crime wrapped life started to crumseries is b ack f o r a n other ble last season when his sister, season. Last week's engag- Deb, not only learned his dark ing an d c o r rective r eturn secret, but also became his acepisode set Linden and Hold- complice. As the eighth season er (the superb Mireille Enos and final 12 episodes get underand Joel Kinnaman) off on a way, Deb appears to fall apart, grisly new serial-killer case, and the question remains: Will in which a death-row inmate Dexter make it out alive? (rejoice, pirates — it's Peter "Ray Donovan"(recommended) Saaaaarrrrrsgaaaaard) might

idly pompous "desert" promo for the series that HBO aired last Sunday doesn't bode well for what's ahead, however.) I couldn't be more skeptical, but it is my sworn duty to keep an open mind for two or three episodes.Besides, I'm curious if "The Newsroom" can be saved.

"The Bridge" (recommended)

"Breaking Bad"(recommended)

Starts July 10,FX Very loosely based on a Swedish/Danish crime series about two detectives of different nationalities pursuing a serial killer on either side of a shared border. (In our version,

Starts Aug. 11, AMC Well, Walter, how does your story end? It feels like the whole world finally caught up on the back episodes of the best TV show around, so we're ready to do this, yo.

and we all enjoy spending time together. The last few visits were not so great. W e c aught M o m DEAR snooping i n ou r ABBY b edroom an d o u r home office. When we confronted her, she got upset and stormed out of the room in tears. I have asked her to respect our privacy,but her response is that she — as the mother — isthe one who deserves respect. We recently had some renovations done to the house that included locks on our bedroom and office doors. When neither of us are home, the doors stay locked. Nothing was said about it during Mom's last visit, but last week we received a note from her telling us not to come for our usual summer visit. I tried to call her, but she won't answer. Today I talked with m y a u nt (Mom's sister), who told me Mom is furious over the locks. My aunt also expressed disappointment in

me or "shutting Mom out." I don't understand how I could be in the wrong, but it seems my whole family feels I am. Please advise. — In a Jam in St. Pete Dear in a Jam: Although your mother deserves respect, it is hard to respect someone who goes through one's bedroom and office after h aving b e en a sked not to . Y o u may be her son, but you are also an adult and have the right to some privacy. What Mom is doing is the equivalent of throwing a tantrum. You were not shutting her out; you were drawing the line. Regardless of what your aunt said, you owe no

one an apology. Let's hope thi s storm b l ows over soon. And as to your summer holiday plans, an Alaskan cruise might be a lovely change from the humidity of Florida and the steam coming from wherever your mother lives. Dear Abby: My g r a ndmother was very poor, but she was generous with what she had. As a child, I noticed that most of the gifts she received were regifted to others.

"Futurama" (recommended) Starts June 19,Comedy Central I'm as guilty as you for being a fair-weather friend to "Futurama," which had a great and resilient run. Let's let by-

gones be bygones and enjoy one last bender with Bender, et al., before the animated series rockets away for good. "Skywire Live With Nik Wallenda" Starts June 23, Discovery The famed tightroper walks a wide portion of the Grand Canyon, 1,500 feet high without a net or a harness, on live TV.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE12, 2013:This year you experience your share of ups and downs. Make it a point to take good care of yourself. Stay active and follow an exercise routine. Share your feelings more often. If you Stars showthe kind are single, you of day you'll have mi g ht go from ** * * * D ynamic being alone one ** * * P ositive mi n ute to meeting ** * A verage thelove of your ** S o-so life the next! If you * Difficult are attached, the two of you could developanew hobbytogether.Counton LEO for fun and laughter.

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

CANCER (June21-July22) ** * * L i sten to forthcoming news that has the potential to change a financial issue. Your intuition will tell you whatyou need to do in order to maximize the situation. Honor whatisgoing onbetweenyouand aboss or an older relative. Tonight: It just gets better and better.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

9 p.m. on SYFY,"Ghost Hunters" —Bumped from its original April premiere date, this series serves up six new episodes starting tonight. Amy Bruni rejoins the team for the first investigation since going on maternity leave last year. In the premiere, "The Ghost Hasn't Left the Building," TAPS is invited to Louisiana's Shreveport Municipal Auditorium to investigate claims of paranormal activity.

At first, it upset me because I spent a lot of time choosing a "perfect" gift for her. Then I realized she was enjoying the gift twice. She loved receiving it, but it gave her even more pleasureto pass iton to someone elseto enjoy when she couldn't afford to buy a present on her limited income. I get so tired of people whining about "regifting." Instead of being happy that someone gave them something, people worry about how much was spent. (I'm willing to bet the real reason for the upset is that the regift can't be returned or exchanged.) People who don't want to receive regifts should let the givers know so t hey won't waste their generosity on them in the future.

— The Joy of Giving Dear Joy: I see the issue differently, because I suspect that some complainers may have confused the monetary value of the item with how much they — the recipients — are valued in the relationship. As you point out — and I agree — it really IS the spirit in which a gift is given that counts. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabbyicom or P.O. Box69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069

(recommended) Starts July 11,Netflix Jenji Kohan, the skewed genius behind Showtime's hit "Weeds," streams her entire new series, about a Brooklyn

socialite (Taylor Schilling) who must do time in a federal women's prison. Based on Piper Kerman's memoir.

someoneelseyou mustanswerto.An associate or close friend might be ableto tap into this person's mindset far better thanyoucan.Adjustyourplanswhen a responsibility appears. Tonight: In the limelight.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * Y our perspective is constantly evolving, which allows for more neutrality; however, it does not deter your impulsiveness. A partner or loved one keeps pushing you very hard. Besmart, and let this person's attempts wash right over you. Tonight: The only answer is "yes."

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * You might not realize how much ** * * Deal directly with matters youcanaccomplishwhenyouhityour involving business, money or feelings. You power days. A friend could push you to ARIES (March 21-April19) cannot imagine how muchyour complete act on something that is very important ** * * L et your wilder ideas float up into to you. Recognize your limits. You'll want attention means to others, but know that yourconsciousness.You mightchoose your energy might be alittle overwhelming. to approach a personal matter differently. to jotthem down, butshare only one or An unexpecte d developmentcouldshake Tonight: Whatever knocks your socks off. two. Use your high energy and business you up. Tonight: Call a friend. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) acumen to push a project forward. A new friend or potential suitor could enter your ** * * Try not to push yourself too hard. AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb. 18) ** * * O t hers seekyou out, and you If you suddenly find that your feelings life. Tonight: Pretend that it's Friday! might have somedifficulty juggling all are hurt, stop and detach. Youcould be TAURUS (April 20-May20) the different demands that land onyour emotionally vulnerable. Postpone thinking ** * You might want to revise your shoulders. A child or new love interest about this matter. Perhaps at adifferent plans. A domestic matter takes priority, could be on theverge of throwing a tantrum time, the sameactions will get a different which could result in additional spending. reaction. Tonight: Get some R if he or she doesn't get what he or she and R. Listen to different takes on the issue wants. Tonight: Among the crowds. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) before making a decision. Costs could 20) B e spontaneous, especially when PISCES (Feb.19-March play a large role in your choice, but just go ** * * * ** * You could be easily irritated, and dealing with matters involving friends. You with your sixth sense. Tonight: Your treat. thatfrustration might come out in your might get a newperspective because of GEMINI (May 21-June20) interactions with those who areclose to what an associate says.Onceyou identify or ** * * R ecognize your goals, and make underst you. Take adeep breath. Indulge yourself, andsomeone'sviewpoint,youcan a plan for how to achieve them. Remain and buy a newitem or two for your go along with his or her ideasmore easily. sensitive to an unpredictable friend, as wardrobe. Consider taking a walk if that's Tonight: Zero in on a goal. he or she could give you some powerful what it takes. Tonight: Run an errand or SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) feedback. Listen, even if you would two. ** * * You might want to lighten up prefer not to. Both of you have the same about a situation involving a boss or interests in mind. Tonight: Hang out. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

10 p.m. on TRAV,"Dig Wars" — Anything can be agameshow these days — even archaeology. In this new series, three teams of relic hunters compete to find the most valuable items at locations across the country. A local expert judges their finds and picks the winner at the end of the day. In the premiere, they're looking for Civil War artifacts at Fort St. Philip in Louisiana.

"Clear History" Starts Aug. 10,HBO A well-disguised Larry David stars in Greg Mottolla's comedy film about an embittered startup guy who mistakenly walks away from a fortune. Warning: We hear that the film is almost entirely improvised. Co-stars Jon Hamm, Bill Hader, Kate Hudson and more.

10:01 p.m. on USA,"Necessary Roughness" —The Season 3 premiere, "Ch-Ch-Changes," picks up six months after the New York Hawks' playoff run. Big changes at the team force Dani, TK and Matt (Callie Thorne, Mehcad Brooks, Marc Blucas) to reconsider their futures with the franchise. A powerful sports and entertainment management agency run by the seductive Connor McClane (recurring guest star John Stamos) makes Dani an offer to join the firm, but at what cost?

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

I

I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 tl IMAX,680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • 42(PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 2:35, 6:10, 9:10 • AFTER EARTH (PG-13) Noon, 1, 3, 4:05, 6:40, 7:40, 9:20, 10:20 • EPIC(PG)11:50 a.m., 2:30, 6:05, 9:05 • EPIC 3-0(PGl 12:05, 305, 635, 925 • FASTA FURIOUSB(PG-13)l2:40,3:45,7: IO, IO:05 • THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6:15, 9:30 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 12:25, 'I:10, 4:15, 7:30, IO:05 • ICE AGE: CONTINENTALDRIFT (PG) 10a.m. • THE INTERNSHIP (PG-13) 1:25, 3:25, 4:25, 7:20, 9:30, 10:15 • IRON MAN 3(PG-13) 'l2:50, 3:55, 6:55, 9:55 • NOW YOUSEE ME (PG-l3)12:30,3:35,6:50,9:45 • THE PURGE (R) 1:20, 4:30, 7:50, 10:10 • SPIRITOFTHE MARATHON II (no MPAArating) 7 • STARTREKINTODARKNESS IMAX3-0 (PG-I3) 1215, 4,7,10 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:50, 6:30, 9:35 • THIS IS THE END(R) 12:25, 3:15, 7:15, 9:50 • THETHREE STOOGES (PG) Wed: 10 a.m. • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •

/

/

3:01 a.m. on USA,"I'm Having Their Baby" —The season premiere features Tory, the pregnant mother of a 3-year-old. Worried about the stability of her relationship with her boyfriend, Mike, shefears she cannotsupport another child on her own. But after signing over his paternal rights, Mike regrets his decision and confronts the potential adoptive father. ©Zap2it 5

IN !

WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066 Adjustable Beds

Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347 • DISCONNECT (R) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 • THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) Noon, 3, 6 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 1, 4, 7 • THE ICEMAN (R) 1:15, 4:15, 7 • MUDiPG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15 • THE SAPPHIRES (PG-13) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45 I

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR

9 p.m. on SPIKE,"Spike Guys Choice 2013" —The biggest boys night out is back in Hollywood for this annual tribute to manliness in sports, music, TV and movies. Among thewinners this year are Ben Affleck for Guy of the Year, Vince Vaughn for the Guycon award and Emilia Clarke ("Game of Thrones") for the Holy Grail of Hot award.

"Orange Is the New Black"

"The White Queen" Starts Aug. 10,Starz Starts June 30, Showtime A florid sudsing of the "War T his ne w d r a m a f r o m of the Roses" power grab in "Southland" creator Ann Bipre-Tudor England, courtesy derman starsLiev Schreiber of Philippa Gregory's historias a tough-guy fixer/clean- cal novels. The first two epiup/PR miracle man in H ol- sodes prove that the catchall lywood who must now deal "it's complicated" has been with his menacing father (Jon with us a long, long time. And Voight), who's just been re- there seems to be plenty of leased from prison. The pilot fabric softener in this version episode is taut and flawless. I of the 15th century — even the want more. laundry looks sexy.

Snoopingmomfeels shut out byson Dear Abby: My partner of 1 2 years and I are well-educated, successful career men. Every few months my mom comes to visit,

4 p.m. on NGC,"Breakout" — After escaping through a pipe and then climbing out through the roof of Grant County Detention Center in New Mexico, three gang members make for the Mexican border with the police in hot pursuit.

At random

border, of course.)

ample.) The new crop of reality shows instead feel like those old, toasted copies of Us Weekly you find in a rental cabin. In any event, most of us are just here so we can get a good spot forthe real fireworks: "Breaking Bad" starts its last season Aug. 11. Here's my annual quick-hit guide to what looks interesting. My recommendations are so noted:

TV TODAY

I

McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • ADMISSION(PG-13) 9:15 • THECROODS (PGl3 • OBLIVION(PG-13) 6 • After 7 p.m., shows are 2f and older only. Younger than 2f mayatt endscreeningsbefore 7pm.ifaccompaniedby a legal guardian.

MXtTREss

G allery- B e n d 541-330-5084

See us for FREE LtteRise®

cordless lifting system upgrades and $25-$100 mail-in rebates on select

Hunter Douglas products.

s~®~iC LAssIC COVERINGS

541-388-4418 Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271 • No movies arescheduled toscreentoday. I

I

www.classic-coverings.com

I

Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 54 I -548-8777

• FAST &FURIOUS6 (PG-13) 3:30, 6:15, 9 • THE INTERNSHIP (PG-13) 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 • NOW YOUSEE ME (PG-13)2,4:30,7,9:30 • THIS IS THE END(R) 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • THE INTERNSHIP (PG-13) 6:30 • MUD(PG-13) 6 • NOW YOU SEEME(PG- l3) 6: I5 • THIS IS THE END(R) 7 t/

nwxhullabaloo,com

t

Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • AFTER EARTH (PG-I3) 5, 7:20 • EPIC(PG)7 • EPIC 3-0(PG) 4:30 • FAST 5 FURIOUS 6 (PG-13) 3:45, 6:40 • THE INTERNSHIP (PG-13) 4:35, 7: l5 • THIS IS THE END(R) 4:40, 7:10 •

6jjLt EL?

Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • AFTER EARTH (PG-l3) 6:15 • EPIC(UPSTAIRS —PG)6:30 • Theupstairs screening room has limited accessibility.

lES SCHNIB

B iSllli i VAEIIi PROMISE g•

•)

I

~

I

I

'

I


'

DON'TFORGET TO SAY THANKS DAD!

S UNDAV J U N E 0 6T H

]• 1" PLACE

&2 years in a row!

NO INTEREST WITH EQUAL PNMENTS U th minimum purchase of$999or Purchase any items in our store k 56 qual payments withNOINTERES. •

'488.eO '288.eO

a

I

I

'388.8O

• •

,

RGC

.

rik

Free $tatewide Delivery www mjacobsfamilyofstores com Bend River Promenade

541-382-5900 • Toll Free 1-800-275-7214 Open Mon.-Fri. 1OAM to 7PM • Sat. 5 Sun. 10AM-6PM ** $999 or more.

*Minimum payment is $18.00


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

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JUNE 'I2, 2013

'f

Ij

l

•/•

I

.rk

%. A

0

::haurs:

cantact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

: Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Includeyour name, phone number and address

: Monday — Friday : 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

: Classified telephone hours:

Subscribe or manage your subscription

: Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

Place, cancel or extend an ad

T h e

B u l lde t j n :

17 7 7

Q. W .

Ch a n d l e r

A v~

. ,• B e n d

O r e g o n

9 g 7 ~

208

208

208

208

212

255

261

267

Pets 8 Supplies

Pets & Supplies

Pets & Supplies

Pets & Supplies

Antiques & Collectibles

Computers

Medical Equipment

Fuel & Wood

0

Aussie/Maltese-cross Donate deposit bottles/ English Bulldog, beauti- POODLEPups, Toy. Toy puppies (they look cans to local all vol- ful white, female, 4 yrs Also, POMAPOOSAussie) 1 male $250, 1 unteer, non-profit res- old. spayed. Needs So cute! 541-475-3889 female $300. CASH. cue, to h elp w /cat bulldog-knowledgable 541-546-7909 spay/neuter vet bills. family, air conditioned Queensland Heelers Cans for Cats trailer is home, no small chil- Standard & Mini, $150 A ussie Mix, (2), 1 s t at Bend PETCO (near dren. V er y a c t ive. 8 up. 541-280-1537 shots, dew o rmed, Applebee's). Donate $500. 541-350-1965. www.rightwayranch.wor dpress.com $150. 541-771-2606 Mon-Fri at Smith Sign, 208 1515 NE 2nd; or at Rodent control experts Pets & Supplies Australian S h e pherd CRAFT i n Tu m a lo (barn cats) seek work Mini pups, registered, anytime. 3 8 9 -8420. in exchange for safe family raised, bred for For more i nfo/map, The Bulletin recomshelter, basic care. temperament and visit www.craftcats.org Fixed, shots. Will demends extra caution when purc h as- agility. 541-389-7499 E nglish Mastiff A K C liver! 541-389-8420 ing products or ser- BOXER AKC puppies, Fin d exactly what puppies, dam & sire Scottish Terrier p upvices from out of the reat litter, 1st shots, you are looking for in the fully OFA tested, litter pies, AKC, born 4/2. area. Sending cash, 700. 541-325-3376 is champion sired with shots 8 wormed, parCg gSSIFibg)S checks, or credit inincredible pedigrees! ents on site, Ready f ormation may b e People Look for Information S mall litter, only 5 now! 541-317-5624. subjected to fraud. pups avail. $ 2000. Wolf-Husky-Malamute About Products and Doxie Mini Long Haired For more i nformaChris, 503-577-7185. pups, only 2 left! $300! tion about an adver- Services Every Day through Male 7 weeks, has first shots and dew541-977-7019 The Bulletin Claesifieds Frenchie Faux puppies, tiser, you may call ormed. $300. Mandy the O r egon State very coby, 8 wks, 1st Yorkie pups, AKC, big 541.306.7784 shots/dewormed, $600. eyes, short-nosed, health Attorney General's 541-447-0210 Office C o n sumer guar. Potty training; ready Protection hotline at 6/28. 541-777-7743 DO YOU HAVE German Shepherds AKC 1-877-877-9392. SOMETHING TO www.sherman-ranch.us Yorkies, beautiful pups, 4 SELL 541-281-6829 males/2 fem., ready now! The Bulletin Cavalier King Charles Seruing Central Oregan knre 1903 FOR $500 OR $600 firm. 541-460-3884 LESS? LhasaApso/Shih Tzu tri pup male, $1500. 210 Non-commercial pup. So adorable! $300. AKC reg., house-bro503-888-0800, Madras. Furniture & Appliances Adopt a nice cat from ken, c rate- t r ained, advertisers may place an ad with Petco, PetSmart or shots an d w o r ming oul' Tumalo s a n ctuary!current 541-382-7614 A1 Washers&Dryers "QUICK CASH Fixed, shots, ID chip, $150 ea. Full warSPECIAL" tested, more! Sanc- Chihuahua male, 8 mo. ranty. Free Del. Also tuary open Sat/Sun cream colored, very 1 week 3 lines 12 wanted, used W/D's 1-5, other days by ~ k k k 0! s mart, $150. Cal l 541-280-7355 a ppt. 6 5480 7 8 t h, 541-270-8294 (no text) Ad must include Malamute/wolf pup Bend. Photos, map at price of single item 9-week-old female. www.craftcats.org. Dining chairs Queen of $500 or less, or $400. First shots. 541-389-8420, or like multiple items Anne, 4 sides, 2 cpt., 541.241.4914 us on Facebook. covered cushions, like whose total does not exceed $500. $ 2 5 0 obo . Mixed breed dog, me- new 541-549-6523 A pet sitter in NE Bend, dium sized, spayed feCall Classifieds at male, 2 yrs old, good with GENERATE warm and loving home S OM E 541-385-5809 awesome children, good compan- EXCITEMENT in your with no cages, $25 day. Chihuahuas, asst'd colors, all meds, www.bendbulletin.com ion, free to good home. neighborhood! Plan a Linda at 541-647-7308 $250. 541-362-1977 541-382-7790 garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified!

00

l

Western Wear -Gently Used* Double D Ranch * Patricia Wolf * Boots * Turquoise 541-549-6950 242

Exercise Equipment

T HE B U LLETIN r e quires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules orthose selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer. •

Inversion table (backstretch) brand new, $85 obo. 541-480-7024 Golf Equipment

541-504-6010.

Buyrng Dramonds /Gold for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655 BUYING

Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories.

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood

Tools Sears Elite Series Generator, 7000 watts, new in box, $895 new; sell $725. 541-306-0166. Building Materials

Misc. Items

245

Power l i f t rec l iner, works perfect l i ght beige color. $350 Call

La Pine Habitat RESTORE Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES 52684 Hwy 97 541-536-3234

Open to the public .

only upon delivery and inspection.

• A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8'

• Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.

The Bulletin

Golf cart, 2000 Yamaha 541-408-2191. Check out the gas, custom top, runs All Year Dependable classifieds online g ood. $ 1500 f i r m, BUYING & SE L LING Firewood: Seasoned 541-280-3780 All gold jewelry, silver www.bendbulletin.com Lodgepole, Split, Del. Updated daily Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 MEN'S QUALITY GOLF and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, for $335. Cash, Check SET with bag, acces- class rings, sterling silor Credit Card OK. s ories. Photos o n ver, coin collect, vin541-420-3484. craigslist $350. Red- tage watches, Heating & Stoves • dental mond. 541-526-0897 gold. Bill Fl e ming, NOTICE TO 541-382-9419. 246 Gardening Supplies ADVERTISER Guns, Hunting Gas Grill with rotisserie, Since September 29, & Equipment & Fishing tank & cover included, 1991, advertising for used 2 times, $150. used woodstoves has BarkTurfSoil.com been limited to mod1500 rnds of .556-.223 firm. 541-312-2845 els which have been $1000. 2900 rnds 22LR, $300. 140 rnds of 25-06, Wanted- paying cash c ertified by the O r - PROMPT D E LIVERY for Hi-fi audio & stuegon Department of $140. 541-647-8931 542-389-9663 equip. Mclntosh, Environmental Qual223 Remington, Federal dio J BL, Marantz, D y ity (DEQ) and the fedAE 223, 55 grain, $15 naco, Heathkit, San- eral En v ironmental box. 18 boxes total For newspaper Ag e n cy sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Protection Paul, 541-241-0532 delivery, call the Call 541-261-1808 (EPA) as having met Circulation Dept. at 240 rnds of 30-30 ammo, smoke emission stan541-385-5800 $240. 650 rnds of 9mm Wild bird feeder w/ 6 dards. A cer t ified To place an ad, call $260. 541-647-8931 feeder stations, NIB. w oodstove may b e 541-385-5809 identified by its certifi500 rnds 40 S8W, $250. $35. 541-678-5407. or email cation label, which is 500 rnds of 38spl, $250. classued@bendbulletin.com 261 541-647-8931 permanently attached 541-385-5809. to the stove. The Buledical Equipment Bend local pays CASH!! sek er central oregonance 1903 letin will no t k nowfor all firearms 8 ingly accept advertisThe Bulletin ammo. 541-526-0617 Go-Go Ultra X mobility scooter with accesso- i ng for the sale of Lawn Hog 18" e lect. recommends extra k • p CASH!! ries, like new, $375. uncertified mower/mulcher $65. For Guns, Ammo & 541-389-8335 woodstoves. 541-420-2116 chasing products or, Reloading Supplies. services from out of I 541-408-6900. the area. Sending I[ c ash, checks, o r Collection: Ammo incl. i credit i n f o rmation REM M3 7 R a ngemay be subjected to master; Cimarron "Evil i FRAUD. For more Roy" 45LC; COLT Ofinformation about an I ficers .22; R u gers: advertiser, you may i Blackhawk Flattop 44; call t h e Or e gonI Super Blackhawk 44; State At tor n ey ' 1's i n 6mm, 2 7 0 , i General's O f f i c e 7mm. 541-389-1392 Consumer Protec- • OR & UT Carry t ion ho t l in e at I Concealed Handgun ,u i 1-877-877-9392. License Class, Sat. 6/15, OR, 10 a.m.• UT,12:30 a.m. St. Francis School Bend. Cost: OR $35; UT f $45. 541-848-8999 •

The Bulletin

I

I 282

286

288

290

Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend Sales Redmond Area

Huge Garage S a le GIGANTIC Yard Sale, children's clo t hes, UCCO Fundraiser. tools, baby i t ems, 62855 Powell Butte household. Fri. Sat. Highway, Bendand Sun., 7:30 a.m. Fri 8 Sat 9-2; no early 65260 94th St., o f f birds. You name the Old Bend/Rdmd Hwy price, within reason! Huge inventory. 286

Sales Northeast Bend

** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit

Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT IN CLUDES:

• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"

Liquidation Sale of Insulation Business, and A-Z Household

BIG SALE -Lots of stuff, ACs; heaters, luggage; DVDs by the hundreds, all genres; tools 8 equip.; clothing; electronics &computer stuff; sporting goods Sat. -Sun. 8-3, 375 SE Airpark Dr. 541-419-3794

Hel us find 'Chester'

I

i

I

LThe Bniieting

Seasonal Garage Sale! Antique and new furniGARAGE SALE! ture, other antiques 8 212 Fri. 8 Sat., 8 -3. Furn. Trucks, insulation, ladlinens, glassAntiques & f arm e q uip., u t i l . collectibles, ders, lifts, scaffolding, ware, handmade crafts, trailer, holiday stuff, Collectibles tools, office furniture, July 4th, western, artartwork, household. supplies & much more. work. Thurs-Sat, 6/1 361771 Arrow Ave. Antiques wanted: tools, Household treasures, 6/1 5, 8am-4pm.4504 furniture, marbles, beer antiques, art work sportSW Minson Rd., Powell The Bullefin cans, early B/W phoing goods, kitchenware, Butte -look for signs! To Subscribe call tography, radios & furniture, lawnmower.

Fri-Sat, June 14-15, 8-4. 541-385-5800 or go to 1304 NE 1st St. www.bendbulletin.com

(turn north off of Greenwood, across from Mission Linen).

Garage / Moving Sale Fri-Sat, 8-4. Tools, misc household, treadmill & 59785 Calgary Lp, Moving Sale! Jun 14-15, more. in Sundance 9am-5pm. E v e rything must go! Dressers, dbl MOSTLY MEN'S PICK UP YOUR bed, upright freezer, apt. STUFF... Friday only, GARAGE SALE KIT at size refrigerator, kitchen 8-6. Tools, auto 1777 SW Chandler stuff, shelves, some of misc., clothing, Golf Ave., Bend, OR 97702 everything! Sale inside cart, storage trunks, house 8 garage at 1348 etc. Women's things NE Thompson Drive. also. 21873 Rincon Avenue, Bend. MOVING SALE! Sup290 & creations of an Garage-moving s a le- plies avid c rafter, m a ny Sales Redmond Area household items of all household & garden kind. Saturday only 8 items, antiques. Fri. 10+ Family Garage Sale, a .m. to noon 2 9 7 0 9-5, 1342 NE 11th St. Park-wide at Desert TerNE Pinnacle Pl., on race, 5063 S. Hwy 97. the corner of Wells Fri-Sat, Jun. 14-15, 9-4. Acres & Pinnacle Pl. Garden 8 patio, furniture, Yard Sale 6/15 household, kitchen, tools, 8:00 am - 3:00 pm electrical 8 misc. Can't miss this oneGarage Sale - Sat., June lots of great stuff! GARAGE SALE 15, 9-2, 1816 NE Bob- 63215 Peterman Ln. Fri. & Sat., 9-5, Lots of bie Court. Furniture, off Butler Mkt. Rd. sporting goods, lots of good stuff !2033 NW by the Bend Airport. miscellaneous. JOSHUA TREE CT.

The Bulletin

QUILTERS-KNITTERS: Selling my "stash!" Quality fabric & yarns. Books, magazines, dolls, jewelry 8 many other items. June 14-15, 9-4, Cascade View Estates 3228 SW 35th St (off Wickiup/ Reservoir to 36th St.)

i i i

Revolver, .38 special, undercover Charter Arms with s peed l o aders, shoulder holster, ammo and more, $499. .30-.30 Marlin lever action rifle, 1949 heirloom, hunting/ saddle gun, $400. 18' lighting. 541-389-1578 Terry trailer, great hunting rig, everything works, Sales Other Areasg new radials, $2000. Personal fishing cataraft, Mary 8 Trudy's Annual $400 OBO, with 2 oars. Stampin' Up, ScrapMazda pickup, g reat booking, Craft & Huge mileage, with gear/wood Garage Sale! This is rack, new studded snow the largest one ever! tires, 1993 4 c ylinder, Beautiful hand66500 Ponderosa Lp $2500. Couch with 2 recarved coffee table cliners built-in, plus free Bend (off Hwy 20 & (44" x 19374" x 17'/2") Gist Rd) June 14-15 and 2 matching end TV, 541-516-8985 (mes9:00-4:00 tables (shown) 2434" sage) or 541-610-3578. x 15" x 24Y4". Built in Ruger 22 pistol, stainMoving Sale - Furniture, Taiwan between less NIB 1980s limclothinq, kitchen/house- 1940-1950, all glass i ted e d ition, r a r e . hold. Sat-Sun, 6/1 5-16, covered, in excel$500 541-382-8973 8am-2pm. 861 SE Kris- lent condition. $1600 tin Way, (take J St. to Ruger M77 rifle 25-06 Strawberry Ln in Madras) OBO. 541-382-6731 Liberty mdl S N ¹ 2 9, exc. c ond., $ 5 0 0. Moving Sale June 14 Roseville bowl mauve 541-382-8973 &15 8:00-4:00 13892 Foxglove ¹659-4, $60 Taurus 17HMR Tracker, 541-389-7379 Cinder Dr, CRR. Furstainless, 6/2" barrel, as niture; small a p pli- The Bulletin reserves new, amazing pistol tack ances & housewares; the right to publish all driver, $500 obo. power, hand tools. ads from The Bulletin 541-420-3106 newspaper onto The Yard Sale Fri. & Sat., Bulletin Internet webWanted: Collector June 14 & 15, 5 miles site. seeks high quality south of the Powell Butte fishing items. Post Office, 9-6 O 14152 The Bulletin Call 541-678-5753, or Lupine Dr., follow signs. servingcentral oregon since e09 503-351-2746

'r I

gh

p.

$1000 Reward He is a 10 lb. Chihuahua/ Terrier Mix

r

N~

Micro-chipped. White with dark brown markings

and a snaggle tooth. He EscApED from

Kindred Spirit Pet Care betWeen Bend 8 RedmOnd On May 7th.(He may Still haVe a COllar On frOm Kindred SPirit). He Will Only COme to "BaCOn", "CheeSe"Or "COOkie" When Called. He jS Our diSabled daughter'S SerViCe Dog. PLEASE HELP BRING CHESTER HOME!!!

If seen or found pLEASE CALL any of these numbers, day or night!

831-241-6458 • 831-241-4817 831-277-3918 • 619-871-7279


E2 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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

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

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Houses forRent SE Bend

Redm o nd Homes

Looking for your next MOTEL - Housekeeping TRUCK DRIVERS bdrm, 1 bath w/gaemp/oyee? Supervisor 8 H o use-Knight Transportation is rage on fenced .75 Place a Bulletin help keeping staff, full-time. hiring! 48, 11W, NW acre. Detached 24 x ad today and Apply in person at Sug- regional or dedicated 36 shop, greenhouse, wanted reach over 60,000 arloaf Mountain Motel Canada Runs! FT/ PT close to High Desert each week. front desk, 62980 N. school. Pet friendly. readers for drivers living in WA Your classified ad Highway 97, in Bend. 1st, last & c leaning will and OR. Ask about 630 also appear on deposit. $980/mo. Plumbers, Journeymen $1000 bonus*! Rooms for Rent bendbulletin com For address, call Contact Daisy or needed for which currently re• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon Tuess 541-410-9064. submit application at new construction. Studios & Kitchenettes ceives over www.driveKnight.com Start immediately! Furnished room, TV w/ 671 1.5 million page 503-405-1800 Call Gary, 541-410-1655 cable, micro & fridge. views every month Mobile/Mfd. Utils & li nens. New at no extra cost. Receptionist Truck Drivers with for Rent owners. $145-$165/wk Bulletin Classifieds - Full Time experience needed. 541-382-1885 Get Results! Long established famSeeking dump truck, bdrm, 2 bath dbl. wide Call 385-5809 or ily practice seeks belly dump, flatbed, m fd in DRW o n 1 place 634 your ad on-line full-time Receptionlowboy & c o ntainer acre., pets ok. $1200 at ist. Help us provide d rivers. Local a n d Apt./Multiplex NE Bend mo. Call after 10 a.m. bendbulletin.com the best care posover the road posi541-617-0179 sible by adding your tions. Must have 2 **No Application Fee ** bi-lingual skills and years experience and 2 bdrm, 1 bath, 773 prior exp with comvalid Class A C D L. $530 & $540 w/lease. puterized a p pointWages based on exCarports included! Acreages ment s c h eduling. perience. Benefits inPlace a photoin your private party ad Pick up job packet clude health i nsur- FOX HOLLOW APTS. PRIVATE PARTY RATES for only $15.00 perweek. at office. (541) 383-3152 ance, 401(k) p lan, Starting at 3 lines CHECK YOUR AD Cascade Rental Madras Medical paid vacation, inspecPlease check your ad "UNDER '500in total merchandise Management. Co. OVER '500in total merchandise Group tion bonus program. on the first day it runs 76 NE 12th St., Call Kenny, 7 days .................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 to make sure it is corCall for Specials! Madras, OR. Western Heavy Haul, rect. Sometimes in14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 Limited numbers avail. 541-447-5643 705 s tructions over t h e *Must state prices in ed 14 days .................................................$33.50 Need help fixing stuff? 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. phone are misunderp o s ition, W/D hookups, patios Real Estate Services 28 days .................................................$61.50 Call A Service Professional Warehouse Garage Sale Special stood and an e rror or decks. find the help you need. part-time, clean ODL, (caii for commercial line ad rates) 4 lines for 4 days.................................. can occur in your ad. Boise, ID Real Estate heavy lifting, respon- MOUNTAIN GLEN, www.bendbulletin.com If this happens to your For relocation info, sible & h ardworking. 541-383-9313 ad, please contact us call Mike Conklin, Remember.... Apply in person, 1735 Professionally the first day your ad 208-941-8458 A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: A dd your we b a d - NE Hwy 20. managed by Norris & appears and we will Silvercreek Realty dress to your ad and Stevens, Inc. Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. be happy to fix it as readers on The * 745 s oon as w e c a n . BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) Bulletin' s web site 648 Deadlines are: WeekHomes for Sale will be able to click REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well Houses for days 11:00 noon for through automatically next day, Sat. 11:00 as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Rent General 6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, to your site. 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, a.m. for Sunday and reserves the right to reject any ad at bendbulletimcom Sales view. By owner, ideal for Monday. PUBLISHER'S any time. is located at: Furniture salesperson extended family. 541-385-5809 NOTICE Thank you! needed full time, reAII real estate adver- $590,000. 541-390-0886 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. tail e xp . p r eferred. The Bulletin Classified tising in this newspaBend, Oregon 97702 NOTICE Some heavy lifting reper is subject to the 528 quired. Apply in perF air H o using A c t All real estate adverLoans 8 Mortgages tised here in is subson at 2145 S. Hwy which makes it illegal PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is 97, Redmond, Oregon "any ject to t h e F e deral Garage Sales to a d vertise needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or Tues - Sat., 10-6. Ask WARNING preference, limitation F air H o using A c t , reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher for Stephen or fax re- The Bulletin recomor disc r imination which makes it illegal Garage Sales shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days mends you use causume 541-923-6774. based on race, color, to advertise any prefwill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. tion when you proGreat American religion, sex, handi- erence, limitation or Garage Sales vide personal discrimination based Furniture cap, familial status, Find them information to compaon race, color, reli341 476 marital status or naSales part-time position, nies offering loans or gion, sex, handicap, tional origin, or an inin Gardening Supplies Horses & Equipment Employment exp. helpful but not credit especially familial status or natention to make any 8 Equipment Opportunities The Bulletin r equired, clean r e those asking for adtional origin, or intensuch pre f e rence, sponsible person. Apvance loan fees or or discrimi- tion to make any such Classifieds Prompt Delivery ply in person, Furni- companies from out of limitation nation." Familial sta- preferences, l i mitaDO YOU NEED Rock, Sand & Gravel ture Outlet, 1735 NE state. If you have tions or discrimination. 541-385-5809 tus includes children 0 A GREAT Multiple Colors, Sizes Hwy 20, Bend.. concerns or quesWe will not knowingly under the age of 18 0 EMPLOYEE Instant Landscaping Co. tions, we suggest you living with parents or accept any advertis541-389-9663 RIGHT NOW? Service Tech consult your attorney legal 775 cus t o dians, ing for r eal e state Call The Bulletin Immediate Job opor call CONSUMER 470 pregnant women, and which is in violation of Call The Bulletin At Manufactured/ TACK & SADDLE before 11 a.m. and HOTLINE, this law All persons portunity for qualipeople securing cus541-385-5809 AUCTION Domestic & get an ad in to pubMobile Homes 1-877-877-9392. fied and trained pertody of children under are hereby informed Sat. June 15, 7 p.m. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail lish the next day! In-Home Positions son. See the display 18. This newspaper that all dwellings adPreview 5:30 p.m. BANK TURNED YOU 541-385-5809. SPECIAL At: www.bendbulletin.com ad in our classified not knowingly ac- vertised are available FACTORY Liquidating 70 DOWN? Private party will New Home, 3 bdrm, VIEW the Live-in, full time care for s ection today f o r cept any advertising on an equal opportuSaddles+ an entire SUPER TOP SOIL will loan on real es$46,500 finished elderly woman in LaPine Classifieds at: more information. real estate which is nity basis. The Bullewww.hershe soilandbark.com store's worth of intate equity. Credit, no for on your site. area. Help with mobility, www.bendbulletin.com Hollingsworths' lnc. violation of the law. tin Classified Screened, soil & comventory at public J and M Homes problem, good equity in grooming, meal preparaBurns, OR O ur r e aders ar e post mi x ed , no auction, regardless 541-548-5511 is all you need. Call hereby informed that 746 tion, t ran s portation,Food Service - Bruno's 541-573-7254 rocks/clods. High huof loss or cost. Top medications, some light Grocery/U-bake is taking Oregon Land Mort- all Northwest Bend Homes dwellings advermus level, exc. for brand and custom housekeeping, house- apps for Cashier & Pizza gage 541-388-4200. LOT MODEL tised in this newspaflower beds, lawns, made Saddles, hold errands and com- Maker. Apply: 1709 NE LIQUIDATION per are available on Beautiful NW cottage, gardens, straight Bridles, Blankets, panionship. Wages ne- 6th, Bend. No phone calls Good classified ads tell an equal opportunity c lose to C OCC 8 Prices Slashed Huge s creened to p s o i l . too much to list. otiable and will include the essential facts in an Savings! 10 Year basis. To complain of shops Master bdrm w/ Bark. Clean fill. DeLook at: Everything used on f ree rent. R e ferences interesting Manner. Write chasing products or I discrimination cal l large walk-in closet. conditional warranty. liver/you haul. required. For interview & around a horse! Bendhomes.com services from out of from the readers view not Upstairs perfect for Finished on your site. 541-548-3949. HUD t o l l-free at Cash, Cards, NO call 916-216-0162. for Complete Listings of l the area. Sending the seller's. Convert the 1-800-877-0246. The family room, 2nd bdrm ONLY 2 LEFT! CHECKS 10% Buyor office. Large attic Area Real Estate for Sale c ash, checks, o r facts into benefits. Show 476 Redmond, Oregon toll f re e t e l ephone for storage or easy ers Premium l credit i n f o rmation the reader how the item will 541-548-5511 number for the hearI Lo s t & Found Employment Elks Lodge ¹. 1371 Housekeeping to l i ving JandMHomes.com be subjected to help them in someway. ing im p aired is conversion 63120 Boyd Acres Seasonal Housekeep- l may Opportunities space. Oversized gaFRAUD. This 1-800-927-9275. Found iPOD on Reed Rd., Bend, OR ers Needed. M ust For more informarage w/ space for your advertising tip Market Road by Des(541) 362-1150 CLER!CAL work weekends and tion about an advercar, skis & k a yak. • I brought to you by Rent /Own t c hutes R iver. C a l l Auctioneer holidays. M i n imuml tiser, you may call Comes with all appli. DMV / Title Clerk 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes 541-740-5775. Mike Murphy wage while t raining the Oregon State i ncluding W/D. A p needed, full-time, for The Bulletin $2500 down, $750 mo. then to p iece rate. l Attorney General's Bend location. Title 8 on week- Thank you St. Jude 8 Found small coin purse OAC. J and M Homes pointments Registration e x p eri- Must have r e liable Office ends only. $218,000 Sacred H e ar t of Co n s umer t with contents, along Hwy 541-548-5511 Get your transportation, ODL, LOCAL MONEyrWe buy John 503-804-4681. ence a must; RV/Auto Protection hotline at I Jesus. j.d. 97. Cal l t o id e ntify: secured trustdeeds & Industry 8 Accounting current Ins, over 18 I 1-877-877-9392. business 541-593-6021 note,some hard money experience preferred. years of age. Please loans. Call Pat Kellev C ompetitive pa y 8 ie Bitlletiii g LOST dog on Commercall Car o l @ 541-382-3099 ext.13. benefits. Please send 541-749-1296; cial St., Madras. Small e ROWI N G resume' to red, deaf, old. Reward. Village Properties bcrvhireO mail.com 541-475-3889; 280-3629, Sunriver with an ad in Fax: 541-330-2496, or Web Developer or 541-325-6212 The Bulletin's apply in person, 63500 Call54I 385 5809topramcteyourservice'Advertise for 28daysstarting at ' I4I irtrr spec ialpackogerr rarssilaile onourwebsirei N. Hwy 97, Bend, OR. Are you a technical star who can also commu"Call A Service Call a Pro nicate effectively with non-technical execuConstruction Professional" Whether you need a tives and employees? Would you like to work Exp, framer, 2 months Directory hard, play hard in beautiful Bend, OR, the recBuilding/Contracting Landscaping/YardCare Landscaping/YardCare( fence fixed, hedges of steady work, possiMedcor has an reation capital of the state? Then we'd like to bly more. Send retrimmed or a house Tennessee Walker reg. exciting opportunity talk to you. NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landgelding stable-mates: sume and wage to: for a Wellness built, you'll find law r equires anyone scape Contractors Law black, $3500; Sorrel Job, PO Box 2321, La Coordinator in Bend. Our busy media company that publishes nuwho con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all professional help in w ith b l a z e nos e Pine, OR 97739. This is a Full Time Zor//',tz gaaErip merous web and mobile sites seeks an expericonstruction work to businesses that a dThe Bulletin's "Call a $2500. 541-317-8991. opportunity working enced developer who is also a forward thinker, be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form Zacu4 gas.e, i,. TURN THE PAGE 32 hours a week. Service Professional" creative problem solver, excellent communiConstruction Contrac- More ThanService Landscape Construc345 For More Ads Apply at cator, and self-motivated professional. We are tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Directory Livestock & Equipment Peace Ot Mind www.medcor.com redesigning all of our websites within the next active license p lanting, decks , The Bulletin 541-385-5809 couple of years and want you in on the ground means the contractor fences, arbors, Replacement-quality Spring Clean Up floor. is bonded & insured. water-features, and in•Leaves Lost wedding ring Me- purebred y e arling Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir> Home Delivery Advisor > morial weekend pos- Angus heifers, Final •Cones Fluency withPHP, HTML5, CSS3, jQuery and CCB li c ense at rigation systems to be • Needles sibly at Sugarloaf Mtn. Answer and Danny The Bulletin Circulation Department is JavaScript is a must. Experience integrating www.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the Motel, High D esert Boy bloodlines. Good seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a • Debris Hauling contractor.com Landscape Contracthird-party solutions and social media applicadisposition. Raised in Middle School, Pilot full time position and consists of managing a tions required. Desired experience includes: or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit long-established herd. Butte o r Bo r den's Weed Free Bark The Bulletin recomnumber is to be i ndelivery area and working with an adult carXML/JSON, MySQL, Joomla, Java, responCorner. Cash reward. $1000 ea. Del. avail. 8 Flower Beds mends checking with cluded in all adverrier force to ensure our customers receive susive web design, Rails, WordPress. Top-notch 541-480-8096 Madras 253-653-5296 the CCB prior to contisements which indiperior service. Must be able to create and skills with user interface and graphic design an tracting with anyone. Lawn Renovation cate the business has 358 added plus. perform strategic plans to meet department REMEMBER: If you Some other t r ades Aeration Dethatching a bond,insurance and objectives such as increasing market share have lost an animal, Farmers Column also req u ire addiworkers c o mpensaOverseed Background in the media industry desired but and route by route penetration. Ideal candidon't forget to check tional licenses and tion for their employCompost date will be a self-starter who can work both in not required. This is a full-time position with 10X20 STORAGE The Humane Society certifications. ees. For your protecTop Dressing the office and in their assigned territory with benefits. If you've got what it takes, e-mail a in Bend 541-382-3537 BUILDINGS tion call 503-378-5909 minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are cover letter, resume, and portfolio/work sample for protecting hay, Redmond, or use our website: Concrete Construction links a n d/or re p ository ( GitHub) t o Landscape necessary with company vehicle provided. 541-923-0882 firewood, livestock www.lcb.state.or.us to Strong customer service skills and manageresume@wescompapers.com. Maintenance Prineville, etc. $1496 Installed. check license status ment skills are necessary. Computer experiJJ 8 B Construction, Full or Partial Service 541-447-7178; 541-617-1133. before contracting with This posting is also on the web at www.bendence is helpful. We offer benefits including quality concrete work. •Mowing ~Edging CCB ¹t 73684. OR Craft Cats, the business. Persons bulletin.com Over 30 Years Exp. medical, dental, 401(k), paid vacation and sick • Pruning «Weeding 541-389-8420. kfjbuilders@ykwc.net doing land s cape Sidewalks; RV pads; Sprinkler Adjustments time. We believe in promoting from within so maintenance do not advancement within the company is available. EOE/Drug Free Workplace Driveways; Color & r equire an L C B For Sale, Lowline Stamp wor k a v a il. Fertilizer included If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse Angus and Dexter's Also Hardwood floor- with monthly program cense. backgrounds, and you are energetic, have Heifers. (pregnant or ing a t aff o r dable KlkGBSR great organizational skills and interpersonal with calf) NO steers BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS prices. 541-279-3183 communication skills, please fill out an appliWeekly,monthly available except for CCB¹190612 Search the area's most cation at The Bulletin or send your resume to: or one time service. cow/calf pairs. comprehensive listing of Grass fed/raised. Job Opening-Circulation classified advertising... • D e bris Removal EXPERIENCED Reasonable prices. c/o The Bulletin real estate to automotive, Commercial Must sell as PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 merchandise to sporting JUNK BE GONE OI' & Residential I am retiring. goods. Bulletin Classifieds I Haul Away FREE Leo 541-306-0357 kfoutz@bendbulletin.com appear every day in the For Salvage. Also No phone calls, please. print or on line. Senior Discounts Cleanups & Cleanouts Wanted: Irrigated farm The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace, EOE. Call 541-385-5809 Mel, 541-389-8107 541-390-1466 ground, under pivot irwww.bendbulletin.com rigation, in C e ntral Just bought a new boat? Same Day Response OR. 541-419-2713 Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Want to b u y A l falfa, Super Seller rates! Nelson grass and grain hay, 541-385-5809 standing, in C entral Landscaping & SPRING CLEAN-UP! Advertising Account Executive Ore. 541-419-2713 Aeration/Dethatching Maintenance Fresh strawberries! Weekly/one-time service Domestic Services Serving Central The Bulletin is looking for a professional and Picked daily 7 days avail. Bonded, insured. Oregon Since 2003 week. Open Mon. driven Sales and Marketing person to help our Free Estimates! Want a sparkling clean Residental/Commercial Sat., 9-7, Sun. 10-6 customers grow their businesses with an COLLINS Lawn Maint. house? Give CJ's Wholesale avail. AdSprinkler Ca/l 541-480-9714 expanding list of broad-reach and targeted Housecleaning a call, vance orders. Activation/Repair products. This full time position requires a 541-604-1908. Over We pick or U-Pick Back Flow Testing background in consultative sales, territory 25 years experience! ALLEN REINSCH K Family Farm management and aggressive prospecting skills. Yard maintenance & 33427 Seven Mile Maintenance X e Two years of m edia sales experience is Handyman clean-up, thatching, Immediate job OPPOrtunity fOr .Thatch & Aerate Lane SE, Albany, OR. preferable, but we will train the right candidate. plugging & much more! • Spring Clean up 541-286-2164. Qualified and Trained Person I DO THAT! Call 541-536-1 294 Mowing Home/Rental repairs •Weekly The p o sition in c ludes a com p etitive & Edging Small jobs to remodels •Bi-Monthly & Monthly compensation package including benefits, and Maverick Landscaping Service Technician: Must have I Hay, Grain & Feed Honest, guaranteed Mowing, weedeating,yd rewards an aggressive, customer focused Maintenance pervious experience in Ag Equipment. work. CCB¹151573 detail., chain saw work, salesperson with unlimited earning potential. •Bark, Rock, Etc. 1st quality grass hay, Irg Dennis 541-317-9768 bobcat excv., etc! LCB 3'x3'x8' bales, approx Resume with references required. ¹8671 541-923-4324 Email your resume, cover letter ~Landsca in 750lbs ea. $240/ton, barn ERIC REEVE HANDY •Landscape Call Ron Weatherby, for appointment. and salary history to: stored. Patterson Ranch, SERVICES. Home & Construction Sisters, 541-549-3831 Jay Brandt, Advertising Director Commercial Repairs, •Water Feature Painting/Wall Coveringl jbrandt@bendbulletin.com Carpentry-Painting, HOLLINGS W O R T H S' INC. Installation/Maint. Wanted: Irrigated farm OI Pressure-washing, WESTERN PAINTING •Pavers ground, under pivot irdrop off your resume in person at Honey Do's. On-time •Renovations CO. Richard Hayman, rigation, i n C e n tral Burns, Oregon Thousands of ads daily 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, DR 97702; promise. Senior a semi-retired paint•Irrigations Installation OR. 541-419-2713 Discount. Work guaring contractor of 45 in print and online. Or mailto PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; (541-573-7254) anteed. 541-389-3361 Senior Discounts years. S m al l J obs Want to b u y A l falfa, No phone inquiries please. or 541-771-4463 Welcome. Interior & grass and grain hay, Bonded & Insured standing, in C entral Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 Exterior. c c b ¹51 84. EOE / Drug Free Workplace ' s s l» Ore. 541-419-2713 CCB¹181 595 LCB¹8759 541-388-6910

00rj0rj

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

Monday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 : 0 0 pm Fri. Tuesday.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . N oon Mon.

Wednesday •

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.

The Bulletin

gQ<Ij

C®X

I

QOrj0rj

r.=.-"-,.— .a I

I

l l l l l l l

I

gT}

I

JoHN DEERE

Qrj c

The Bulletin

-

,C4.

Where buyers meet sellers

Clissifieds •

The Bulletin



E4 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 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 w'll shor zt

w ednesda y,June 12,2013

ACROSS

Subcutaneously gifted

i Not square 4 Avoid responsibilities 9"A Passage to India" woman i4 Wall St. rating is TV signal part is Boneheads iz N.B.A. or N.FL. honor is Remembered

Tribune Media Services

ANSWER: Your partner may have a minimum opening bid with five spades and four hearts; he may have substantial extra strength with five cards in each major. Since your values are prime, slam is possible. To bid 3NT would be unwise. Bid three diamonds to let partner continue describing his hand. North dealer Both sides vulnerable

NORTH 41 A3

9 1 062 C A53 oeoAK874

UNDRAWN

EAST Cy could make the slam with what WEST 4862 is known as an "incomplete strip and 41 K Q 10974 'v) 985 end play," but I fear that his only 9 3 O Q 76 4 2 0 1098 concept of an incomplete strip is a 45 4 Q 1093 sirloin steak that lacks a side of french fries. After Cy takes the top SOUTH clubs, he leaves the missing trump 4J5 undrawn and exits with a spade. Q AKQ J 7 4 West must concede the 12th trick. OKJ If he leads a diamond, Cy gets a free 4 J62 f inesse; if a s p ade, Cy r u ffs i n dummy and discards his losing club. DAILY QUESTION

N orth 14

Eas t Pass

S outh

3g

Pass

4O 6Q

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE HAR OHA WA T SA

We s t

1 iv/ 2

4

Pass A ll Pa s s

Y T A H RWA N O S O S S L I 0 E X

H O T B A T H

U S E R

S T R A P E H N R T

T H E Y R E

H E B MA O Y P H R O H

M O J O

ART U MAY S M A R I N E R ANC I E N T SCH A S H C A N R ET D SH P S S A G A E S T A B A T S L EW D

Pass Youhold: 41 A 3 Q 10 6 2 4 41 O A5 3 AA K 87 4. Y o u rpartner opens one spade, you respond two Opening lead — 4 K clubs and he bids two hearts. What do you say? (C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

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

P R E Y

P E R T AMA H

E A T A R U B A E V E R Y W H E R E

I MH 0 DYE S

M EC E C H O

1

DOWN

44 Dim with tears

46 Typical political talk 4s Remembered Mom, in a way si City SE of Honolulu sz Princess who was captured b Jabba the utt Mom, in a way s3 Dashing Flynn zo Filters slowly ss Pieces in a zz Auto financing Mideast armory letters se Famous rescue 23 Greek salad vessel staple eo m a nual 34 Princess, e.g. 63 Remembered zz Noted literary Mom, in a way pseudonym 39 Mr. (Peter sz Bankbook abbr. ee Chocolate base Lorre film sleuth) e9 Employs soap and water 3i Remembered Mom, in a way zo Old Mideast alliance, for 36 Zodiac symbol short 3s Lamprey hunter Ti Motorist's 39 Hillbilly problem negative n "Cheers" role 4o Clears, as a drain T3 Meddle

By FRANK STEWART Too many square meals make a round person, and Cy the Cynic continues to struggle with his weight. Cy denies he's fat; he says he's a n utritional o verachiever. Bu t h e underachieved as today's declarer. West led the king of spades against six hearts, and the Cynic took the ace and cashed theA-K of trumps. He next took the A-K of clubs. When West discarded, Cy led a diamond and finessed with his jack, hoping for a discardon dummy's ace. (The ten of trumps remained a dummy entry.) But West produced the queen and cashed the queen of spades.

43 Hawaii's Mauna

U RO N O H G O D

i Certain radio enthusiasts 3 Roof part 3 lt may be on a roll 4 Haying an attitude

3

4 15

17

18

20

29

again?" e With 25-Down, 1979 exile z "Hope & Faith" actress Kelly

6

7

37

39

40

26

33

34

35

61

62

28

27

41

42

43

46

47

50

51

52

53 58

63

13

38

49

57

12

23

32

45

56

11

19

31

36

55

10

16

25

48

slang ii Falco of "Nurse Jackie" iz Sleeping site, maybe i3 Terrier in whodunits is Sta n ley Gardner zi What "D" means zs See 6-Down zs Ho Chi Minh Trail locale zs Words before a clarification 39 "The Rachel Maddow Show" carrier 3o Florida's National Forest 33 Emcee's delivery 33 Extremely agitated 34 Lubncate again 3s Harry Potter villain Malfoy 37 Make a mush of 4i Words of woe

9

8

22

30

44

s Ted once of ABC news

5

21 24

s "Say that

9 Focusing problem, for short io G.l., in old

2

14

No. 0508

54

60

59

65

64

66

67

68

69

70

71

72

73

PUZZLE BY BRUCE VENZKE

43

o f th e

Charlotte (cream-filled dessert) ss Law enforcers at sea: Abbr. 56 Enthusiasm 57 Empire (bygone domain) 59 Title river in 1957's Best Picture

si Sit on it sz Not even close to creaky 64 Opposition ss "Die Meistersinger" soprano se Cartoon Chihuahua

54

realm 4s Like a blockbuster's cast, often 4z Cries of discovery 49 Lifebuoy competitor so Lloyd of the silents

DIAGONAL

i Annual message

For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nyiimes.com/wordpiay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

DENNIS THE MENACE

2-

SUDOKU

RizAI(KDCoi/IlcLcof/l Fozebookzoio/Rizirrocoioizk Dioiif Ieoiroolo5o

CoYLgrat utat ioYLC, Mr. Kroll. gou have the budket of a Yftavthalf qour age.

Complete the grid so that

every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.

Sz

SOLUTION TO YESTERDAY'S SUDOKU

24 •

Qo

7!

D

56

t ',I'iioo

CO

13

I/>

CO

B o

47, 32

f

12

al ID

IL

ZCD

a

"I )IIJON T I3EEATING t)INNEK, llf(OM,. tflRS,WILSON 0 I5 BAK(hb' &RDWN(ES!

o7

95I

Ct

CANDORVILLE

Q w o

J//PT/CE I//, I'/f LEMONT KPART- SEOb//V,k/ITI/ MENT. TI/ECANDOEVILLE CO//RIER

/'M /iv Ci/ARGEOF CONVI/V CIIVS YOI//T4 IVO S/8 KAL.

PLCAKP TO MCCTyOI/, MR,SRob/N, /'M SRyAN SRyANT.

/'M COI/EE/NC TI/O dOVEEii/ffEAIT-e2PVING-ON-

REPORTEA"-EHAILP PTOEY .

DIFFICULTY RATING: ** *

PLEAKp TOMEET

4 4

yof/, T00.

LOS ANGELES TIMESCROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS 1 Bank offerings, briefly 4 Emmy winner Edie 9 Stockholm native 14 Pewter with 80% tin 15 First husband of Bathsheba 16 Hermit

SAFE HAVENS ~fIIEIZ&'5 1HE lyiuSIC..JIIZE ifou I26AD1f, 6/(ivIAtITHPIZ

(5)I(oA.

FAEI1 I/IITH

ft(&5E

'(65.

&luPIT7 5HAD&5 or)

c 2013 by King Features Syndicate, Inc World oghto reserved

E-mai bholbrook1@gmai com

hop //wwwoafehavenocoooc.com

SIX CHIX J'

ISN'T BEING4 GIPIGEQ8QE4TJ HOII/I4N IIAIONPERFUL ...

oo

00

C2

1 ME'AAi APART fgofvI 4I.L T46 QEAST

p

/I

O

0, 0

INFEC7lohlS ~ C-tt.

giCCol, Ri<4ei0 001.0, Cpnn

oo013 R ha 5 Molo slx cl-Ilxct20I3 K 9 Fe t es sy ocale, I c

ZITS

JERENLY! ppy~

NO!

AREYOU gg TffAT

%GN

NQ

ALLRI( HTPONylPay

DOWN 33 Unable to reach a 42 Sought a seat 1 Use for scratching verdict 43 Dan Quayle's 2 "GoodFellaso 34 Natural or successor actor renewable supply 44 Had to have 3 One may be used 35 Grafton's " fo r 45 S a intly Mother to pick Powerball Outlaw" 47 What hagglers numbers 36 Pirate's cry split 4 Oft-blown circuit 37 Insulated 48 Sea eagle component container 51 Sheep's sound 5 Crafts partner 38 Like Mount 52 Hammetthound 6 Alibis, sometimes Everest 53 Swerve 7 Cleveland NBAer 41 Explorers John 54 E x tremes 17 Ques. response 8 Storywriter known and Sebastian 56 H e ad of Hastings? 18"Father Df the for twists ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: Bride" co-star 9 Mattress supports 20 Star on the stand 10 Tattered J O B E P S O N A S P C A 22 Mean 11 Like a Greek I R E T R A D E D U R U M 23 It's uncertain siren FR A T H O U S E I S E R E when it's gray 12 Cold weather W A L L B E A T E N 24 Rite performed by wing CA S I N O F L A U N T a mohel maintenance I NO N G A L A S S Y F Y 25 USSR 13 Che, at birth 19 'Who, me?o RO L E O S Y R IA P I E successor 26 "Father Dowling 21 Arrest C I D C O W B E L L A N A Mysteries" star 24 Father's Day U N I S N E A D T A P E S "award" 30 Force S T E R A L L OW T E S T 31 Cardinal and 27 Globes R E F I L L H E A R T Y carmine 28 Appear L U B B E R P O L L 32 "In that case, 29 Pres. or CEO A T L A W S C H O O L B U S scram!" 30 o f iniquity 34 "Father Knows S A U T E G R A S P O K S 32 British Best" star SH E E R T I T H E Y E W Conservative's 37 Belief in one god ancestor 06/1 2/1 3 xwordeditor@aol.com 39 Put in stitches 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 40 Disapproving

sound

— j HERMAN

Blt)JML3EX

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt ond Jeff Knurok W ell, at least wo I t ' s oot roao turn thlo into a totol loss.

to fOrm fOur Ordinary WOrdS.

02013 Tnbune Media Serv ces, Inc All Rights Reserved.

VICIL

RADNOG THF &DL.t2 MINE TUIZNE12

OUT TD ae A e125T; BUT THANKFULLY, T HFRF v/A5 A —-

TENLER

N0W arrange the CirCled letterS to farm the SurPriSe anSWer, as

suggested by the above cartoon.

(AnoWero tamOrrOW)

I Jumbles: RELlc

46 Freud's "The o and the Id 47 Cattle unit 49 Out Df the wind 50 Brouhaha 52 One settling a

16

18 20

B Q GU s CL o s E T AD J UsT

AnSWer: She tried 10 make 8 dent in her Credit Card

debt,but ohe couldn't— BUDGE rr

55 "Father Murphy" star 57 Keats opus 58 First name in wieners 59 Carried 60 Legal thing 61 Marks on a manuscript 62 Reaches great heights

63 Leshan who wrote "It's Better to Be Over the Hill Than Under o

It

19

21

22

23 26

27 2 8

30

29

31 34

37

25

24

score

E

VIRSO

y 1 0

15

co-star

J

Unscramble these four Jumbles, One letter 10 eaCh Square,

"If you want to read the editorials, you'll have to wait until I've finished the comics."

14

41 "Father Goose"

32

33

35

38

39 41

46 50

47

42

48

43

44

45

49

51

52 5 3 56

55

54 57

58

59

60

61

62

63

By Jack MeiniurIT (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Ine.

06/1 2/1 3


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

:o.

Boats & Accessories •

Q

oQ00 Snowmobiles

THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12 2013 E5

Mot o r homes

Travel Trailers •

885

932

Canopies & Campers

Antique & Classic Autos

17.5' Glastron 2002,

Chevy eng., Volvo outdrive, open bow, stereo, sink/live well, w/glastron tr a i ler, incl. b oa t c o v e r, Fleetwood D i s covery Like new, $ 8 500. 40' 2003, diesel mo- Outdoors RV 29' 541-447-4876 Wind River 250 torhome w/all options-3 slide outs, RLSW 2011 satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, One owner etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. Lightly used Wintered in h e ated shop. $89,900 O.B.O. Perfect condi-

2 ) 2000 A r ctic C at L 580's EFI with n e w covers, electric start w/ reverse, low miles, both excellent; with new 2009 Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, drive off/on w/double tilt, 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 lots of accys. Selling due Volvo Penta, 270HP, to m edical r e asons. low hrs., must see, $6000 all. 541-536-8130 $15,000, 541-330-3939 Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, short track, variable exhaust valves, electric s t art, r e v erse, manuals, re c o rds, new spare belt, cover, heated hand g r ips, 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L nice, fast, $999. Call Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 hp Bowrider w/depth Tom, 541-385-7932, finder, radio/ CD player, • Yamaha 750 1999 rod holders, full canvas, Mountain Max, $1400. EZ Loader trailer, exclnt • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 cond, $11,500. 707-484-3518 (Bend) EXT, $1000. • Zieman 4-place 18.7' Sea Ray Monaco, trailer, SOLD! All in good condition. 1984, 185hp, V6 Merfull canvas, life Located in La Pine. Cruiser, vests, bumpers, water Call 541-408-6149. skis, swim float, extra prop & more. EZ Loader 860 Motorcycles & Accessories trailer, never in saltwater,

541-447-8664

tion Sleeps 6

823,900 541-317-3991 Jayco Seneca 34', 2007. 28K miles, 2 slides, Duramax diesel, 1 owner, excellent cond, $84,995; Trade'? 541-546-6920

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED 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

I

975

Antique & Classic Autos

Vans

Automobiles

1952 Ford Customline Coupe, project car, flathead V-8, 3 spd extra parts, & materials, $2000

Lance Camper 1994, fits long bed crew cab, tv, a/c, loaded. $6200 OBO. 541-580-7334 0

0 r

,

r

'o jj 908

Aircraft, Parts 8 Service

obo. 541-410-7473

Lumina Va n 1 9 95, CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Plymouth B a r racuda X LNT c o nd., w e l l Grand Sport -4 LT 1966, original car! 300 cared for. $2000 obo. loaded, clear bra hp, 360 Vs, center- 541-382-9835. hood 8 fenders. lines, 541-593-2597 New Michelin Super Buick Riviera 1991, clas- PROJECT CARS: Chevv Sports, G.S. floor Automobiles • sic low-mile car, driven 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & mats, 17,000 miles, about 5K/year. Always Chevy Coupe 1950 Crystal red. garaged 8 p a mpered,rolling chassis's $1750 A udi A 6 se d a n $45,000. non-smoker, exclnt cond, ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Quattro 2003 4wd, 503-358-1164. $4300 obo 541-389-0049 complete car, $ 1949; a/c, auto, tilt steer, Series 61 1950, sun & moon roofs, Chev Cheyenne 20 1972 2Cadillac ~w u i ~ll't-dr. hard top, complete leather int, disc & 8 Custom Camper, new Tar- w/spare kK f r on t cl i p ., tape, good to exc etMaster eng., 1 owner, $3950, 541-382-7391 cond, + 4 mounted 1350 obo. 541-350-6235 studs KBB $8200, ask $7500. Chevrolet Cameo Call 541-385-5634 Pickup, 1957, Ford Taurus Wagon 2004, or 541-420-2699. disassembled, frame 120K miles, loaded, in powder coated, new nice shape, $3,900. front sheet metal, cab 541-815-9939 restored. $9995 firm. T-BIRD 1988 S port Find It in Call for more info, coupe, 34,400 orig. The Bulletin Classifiedsi 541-306-9958 (cell) mi A/C PW PL new 541 -385-5809 tires/brakes/hoses/ belts 8 exhausts. Tan w/tan interior. Buick LeSabre CusImmaculate! $4,995. tom 2004, rare 75k, Nissan Sentra 2012 Days 5 4 1-322-4843, $6000, worth way Full warranty, 35mpg, Eves 541-383- 5043 more. leather, 520 per tank, all power. heated seats, nice Chevy C-20 Pickup $13,500. 541-788-0427 wheels. Good tires, 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; 30 mpg, white. auto 4-spd, 396, model Porsche 911 Convinced? Call Bob CST /all options, orig. Carrera 993 cou e 541-318-9999 owner, $19,950,

1/3 interest in Columbia Redmond: Monaco Windsor, 2001, 400, $150,000 (located 541-548-5254 loaded! (was $234,000 @ Bend.) Also: Sunrinew) Solid-surface ver hangar available for counters, convection/ sale at $155K, or lease, micro, 4-dr, fridge, @ $400/mo. washer/dryer, ceramic 541-948-2963 tile & carpet, TV, DVD, satellite dish, leveling, s-airbags, power cord - ~ A a aa WEEKEND WARRIOR reel, 2 full pass-thru always garaged, very clean, all maint. records. trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 Toy hauler/travel trailer. 541-923-6049 24' with 21' interior. 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 $5500. 541-389-7329 VW BUG 1972 rebuilt Buick Century Limited Diesel gen set. $85,000 Chevy 1955 PROJECT Sleeps 6. Self-con2000, r un s g r e at, eng, new paint, tires, 1 /3 interest i n w e l lcar. 2 door wgn, 350 obo. 541-233-7963 tained. Systems/ chrome whls,30mpg, beautiful car. $3400. equipped IFR Beech Bosmall block w/Weiand appearancein good 541-312-3085 condition. Smoke-free. nanza A36, new 10-550/ dual quad tunnel ram $3800. 541-233-7272 prop, located KBDN. with 450 Holleys. T-10 Tow with ~/~-ton. Strong 1996, 73k miles, Harley Davidson Heri4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Buick LeSabre 1996. suspension; can haul $65,000. 541-419-9510 Tiptronic auto tage Softail 2002, Fl, Weld Prostar wheels, • Pickups Good condition, ATVs snowmobiles, transmission. Silver, emerald green & black, 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, extra rolling chassis + 121,000 miles. even a small car! Great blue leather interior, lots of chrome & extras, inboard motor, g reat extras. $6500 for all. Non-smoker price - $8900. moon/sunroof, new 9K, perfect cond. $9995 cond, well maintained, NATIONAL DOLPHIN G MC Sierra S L T 541-389-7669. $2200 OBO. Call 541-593-6266 quality tires and 503-999-7356 (cell) 2006 - 1 500 Crew $8995obo. 541-350-7755 37' 1997, loaded! 1 541-954-5193. battery, car and seat Cab 4x4, Z71, exc. slide, Corian surfaces, Harley Davidson Softcovers, many extras. cond., 82 k m i les, wood floors (kitchen), Tail De luxe 2 0 0 7, Recently fully ser2-dr fridge, convection $19,900. Buick Lucerne CXS white/cobalt, w / pas1/5th interest in 1973 viced, garaged, 541-408-0763 microwave, Vizio TV & 2006 sedan, Vs, senger kit, Vance & 1 8' Seaswirl 1984, Cessna 150 LLC looks and runs like roof satellite, walk-in Northstar 4.6L enHines muffler system open bow, V6, ennew. Excellent conshower, new queen bed. Weekend Warrior Toy 150hp conversion, low Chevy Wagon 1957, gine, silver, black & kit, 1045 mi., exc. time on air frame and gine 8 outdrive reWhite leather hide-adition.$33,000 obo Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, leather, new $36,000; 4-dr., complete, c ond, $16,9 9 9 , built, extras, $2495. engine, hangared in bed 8 chair, all records, fuel station, exc cond. 541-589-4047 92K miles, 18" wheels 541-389-9188. $7,000 OBO / trades. Bend. Excellent per541-546-6920 no pets o r s moking. sleeps 8, black/gray 8 much more, best I nternational Fla t formance & affordPlease call $28,450. Harley Heritage i nterior, u se d 3X , offer over $7900. Bed Pickup 1963, 1 541-389-6998 able flying! $6,500. Call 541-771-4800 Softail, 2003 $19,999 firm. Porsche Carrera 911 Bob, 541-318-9999 ton dually, 4 s p d. 541-382-6752 $5,000+ in extras, 541-389-9188 Chrysler 300 C o upe trans., great MPG, 2003 convertible with $2000 paint job, 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, hardtop. 50K miles, RV be exc. wood 30K mi. 1 owner, new factory Porsche auto. trans, ps, air, could CONSIGNMENTS Looking for your hauler, runs great, For more information motor 6 mos ago with frame on rebuild, re- new brakes, $1950. WANTED next employee? 18 mo factory warplease call We Do The Work ... painted original blue, Place a Bulletin help 541-419-5480. 541-385-8090 ranty remaining. 19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, You Keep The Cash! original blue interior, wanted ad today and $37,500. or 209-605-5537 new upholstery, new elecOn-site credit original hub caps, exc. reach over 60,000 541-322-6928 tronics, winch, much more. Chevy Nova - 1976, chrome, asking $9000 935 approval team, readers each week. $3,600. web site presence. 1974 Bellanca or make offer. HDFatBo 1996 $9500. 541-306-0280 Your classified ad Sport Utility Vehicles Rebuilt 327 engine. 541-385-9350 We Take Trade-Ins! Toyota Camry LE 2007 will also appear on 1730A 20'1993 Sea Nympf Fish Free Advertising. bendbulletin.com Jeep Grand Cherokee Call Matt 541-280-9463. 75,000 on e o w n er 8 Ski, 50 hrs on new BIG COUNTRY RV m iles, a l l mai n t . which currently re2011 Overland. engine, fish finder, chart 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 541-330-2495 records, new t i res, ceives over 1.5 milstk¹6407. $ 3 7 ,988 plotter 8 VHF radio with Bend:Redmond: 180 mph, excellent excellent! $ 1 5 ,200. lion page views evantenna. Good shape, condition, always 541-548-5254 541-419-8059. full cover, heavy duty ery month at no hangared, 1 owner Completely trailer, kicker and electric extra cost. Bulletin for 35 years. $60K. Oregon Rebuilt/Customized motors. Classifieds Get ReAutoSource USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! FAST '66 Ranchero! 2012/2013 Award $7500 or best offer, sults! Call 385-5809 Chrysler Sebring 2004 I) I In Madras, 541-598-3750 541-292-1834 $7500 invested Winner or place your ad 84k, beautiful dark gray/ Door-to-door selling with call 541-475-6302 aaaoregonautosource.com sell for $4500! Showroom Condition on-line at brown, tan leather int., fast results! It's the easiest Call 541.382.9835 Many Extras bendbulletin.com $5995 541-350-5373 Toyota Sienna XLE way in the world to sell. Low Miles. Executive Hangar 2010 35.2k mi. silver Southwind 35.5' Triton, n i G at Bend Airport (KBDN) 817,000 20.5' 2004 Bayliner ¹314822 $32,995 2008,V10, 2slides, DuThe Bulletin Classified 60' wide x 50' d eep, 541-548-4807 205 Run About, 220 pont UV coat, 7500 mi. Fifth Wheels • w/55' wide x 17' high bi541-385-5809 HP, Vs, open bow, Bought new at fold dr. Natural gas heat, HD Screaming Eagle exc. cond with very $132,913; Oregon offc, bathroom. Adjacent Electra Glide 2005, low hours, lots of asking $91,000. to Frontage Rd; great FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, AutoSource Toyota Camryst 103" motor, two tone Call 503-982-4745 extras incl. tower, visibility for aviation busidoor panels w/flowers 541-598-3750 "My Little Red Corvette" 1984, SOLD; candy teal, new tires, Bimini & custom ness. Financing avail& hummingbirds, aaaoregonautosource.com Toyota / Winnebago Coupe,1996,350, 23K miles, CD player 1985 SOLD; trailer, $17,950. able. 541-948-2126 or white soft top & hard Warrlor auto, 26-34 mpg, 132K, hydraulic clutch, ex541-389-1413 1986 parts car email I jetjock©q.com Advertise your car! top. Just reduced to 1993. Very good $12,500/offer. cellent condition. only one left! $500 Add A Picture! $3,750. 541-317-9319 541-923-1781 shape. 73,413 miles. Highest offer takes it. Keystone Montana Reach thousands of readers! Call for details, or 541-647-8483 $11,500. 541-480-8080. 2955 RL 2008, Call 541-385-5809 541-548-6592 (541) 495-2000. 2 slides, arctic The Bulletin Class!fieds insulation, loaded, 20.5' Seaswirl Spyexcellent never used der 1989 H.O. 302, The Bulletin recoml condition. $33,500 • Vans 285 hrs., exc. cond., 541-923-4707 mends extra caution t One Half Interest in stored indoors for when p u r chasing ~ Ford 1-ton extended van, RV-9A for SALE CORVETTE life $11,900 OBO. Ford Galaxie 500 1963, f products or services Winnebago Suncruiser34' 2005 Vans RV-9A, 1995, 460 engine, set-up Convertible 2005 Victory TC 2002, 541-379-3530 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, from out of the area. 2004, only 34K, loaded, 0-320, Dynon, GPS, 390 vs,auto, pwr. steer & f or c o n tractor w i t h Automatic LS2 high runs great, many J S ending c ash , too much to list, ext'd ICOM's, KT-76C, shelves 8 bins, fold-down performance motor, radio (orig),541-419-4989 ladder rack, tow hitch, checks, or credit inaccessories, new 21' Bluewater Mirage warr. thru 2014, $54,900 Oxygen. Flies great, only 29k miles, Stertires, under 40K Ford Mustang Coupe 180K miles, new tranny & ling S ilver, b l ack formation may be I MUST SELL. Dennis, 541-589-3243 no damage history. 1966, original owner, brakes; needs catalytic toFRAUD miles, well kept. Worth $8315300 plus Hours tach, interior, Bose / subject 881 For more informaVs, automatic, great converter & new wind- leather Will sacrifice for kept in Redmond C Komfort 2003 $6500 OBO. For premium sound steabout an advershape, $9000 OBO. shield. $2200. $4,900 for quick sell. 6' Slideout, 13' awHangar. Reduced to m ore i nfo. c a l l reo, new quality tires f tion 530-515-81 99 541-220-7808 you may call To see video, go to: ning A/C, large stor$35K, OBO: and battery, car and I tiser, 541-647-4232 the Oregon State I www.u2pro.com/95 age tanks, gas/ elecDick Hansen, seat covers many Ford Aerostar 1994 541-815-9981 541-923-2318 Attorney General's t tric water heater, Ford Ranchero extras. Rec e ntly ~ Office Eddie Bauer Edition C o n sumer dkhansen@bendLED TV, DVD, frig/ 1979 factory serviced. 21' Crownline 215 hp Fully Loaded, f Protection hotline at freezer, microwave, broadband.com or with 351 Cleveland Garaged. B eautiful in/outboard e n g i ne 1-877-877-9392. Mint Condition! Tod, 541-350-6462 pantry, extra counter modified engine. car, Perfect cond. 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin Runs Excellent! space, tub/ shower Body is in $37,000 obo sleeps 2/3 p eople,Fleetwood 31' Wilderbathroom, Queen $3000. Serving Central Oregon since1903 Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, excellent condition, 541-589-4047 portable toilet, exc. ess Gl 1 9 99, 1 2 ' bed, 2 skylights, 541-350-1201 $2500 obo. Yamaha Classic 1973 cond. Asking $8,000. n based in Madras, alslide, 2 4 ' aw n ing, ceiling fan, Clean, 541-420-4677 ways hangared since 250 Eunduro. All original, OBO. 541-388-8339 queen bed, FSC, outGood Condition. street legal, 11K miles, new. New annual, auto side shower, E-Z lift $9500 Ads published in the $1195. 541-382-7515 pilot, IFR, one piece stabilizer hitch, l i ke 541-325-2220 "Boats" classification windshield. Fastest Arnew, been stored. 865 include: Speed, fishcher around. 1750 to$10,950. 707-688-4253 ing, drift, canoe, ATVs tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. house and sail boats. FIND ITl 541-475-6947, ask for For all other types of Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 Suzuki Ei er 2004 Rob Berg. BUY IT! watercraft, please see engine, power everyQuadrunner ATV, autoSELL IT! thing, new paint, 54K Class 875. 916 matic, new tires, 2215 The Bulletin Classifieds original m i les, runs 541-385-5809 miles, covered dog Trucks & MONTANA 3585 2008, great, excellent condicarrier platform, nylon exc. cond., 3 slides, Heavy Equipment tion in & out. Asking dust cover, set of 4 king bed, Irg LR, $8,500. 541-480-3179 snow chains. $2899. Arctic insulation, all Contact Larry at options $35,000. G K E AT 971-678-3196 or ~ •

WOW!

-PW-'P-5"8t l

) j

t l

) j

t j

W

OO©

r---I

f J

I

'

"

"

'

"

"

"

J

"

-

I f

The Bulletin

Advertise with a full-color photo in

The Bulletin ClassifiecIS

The Bulletin 'li

Beautiful

Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft long, 2000 h o u seboat,

$85,000. 541-390-4693

Yamaha Banshee 2001 custom built 350 motor race-ready, lots of extras

$4999/obo 541-647-8931

IBoats & Accessories

www.centraloregon houseboat.com. GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.

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

The Bulletin serving central oregonsrnce 19r8

875

Watercraft

RM- -' 14' a luminum bo a t Ads published in "Waw/trailer, 2009 Mercury tercraft" include: Kay15hp motor, fish finder, aks, rafts and motor$2700. 541-815-8797 Ized personal watercrafts. For 15' older Seaswirl, "boats" please see 35HP motor, cover, Class 870. d epth finder, a s 541-385-5809 sorted live v e sts, $1400. OBO. 541-548-7645 541-408-3811.

or

ax.rv r 29 7LK H itch-

4

541-420-3250

nortonjack © comcast.net

The Bulletin

Keystone Sprinter 31', 2008

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

Call 541-410-5415 880

Motorhomes 15' older Seaswirl, 35HP motor, cover, 198830' Class A 4000 d epth f inder, a s W gen., new fridge, sorted live v e sts, wheelchair lift. Good $1400. OBO. cond. $18,000 obo 541-548-7645 or 541-447-5504 541-408-3811.

EXCELLENT CON-

DITION. All accessories are included. $16,000 OBO. 541-382-9441

Hyster H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, $3500, call 541-749-0724

541-447-1641 eves.

Ford Thunderbird 1955, new white soft top, tonneau cover and upholstery. New chrome. B e a utiful Car. $25,0 0 0 . 541-548-1422

Peterbilt 359 p o table water t ruck, 1 9 90, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4-3" h o ses, Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th camlocks, $ 2 5,000. wheel, 1 s lide, AC, 541-820-3724 TV,full awning, excelGMC V~ton 1971, Only 925 lent shape, $23,900. $1 9,700! Original low 541-350-8629 mile, exceptional, 3rd Utility Trailers owner. 951-699-7171 RV 1987 Trail-Eze tilt trailer, MOVING - NO ROOM! 25', 26,000-lb cap, new CONSIGNMENTS WANTED deck & paint, air brakes, We Do The Work ... in excellent cond., $6995. You Keep The Cash! 541-408-6579 On-site credit 2011 Interstate Load approval team, A SB Clia".".~ AN Runner custom utility web site presence. GMC 1977 Sierra trailer, 6x12, enclosed, We Take Trade-Ins! rear ramp, c ustom Classic 4x4 Free Advertising. wheels, silver & black, Original owner, a show BIG COUNTRY RV been stored, towed truck. Never restored or Bend: 541-330-2495 only 150 miles. Excel- off-road. AT, 400 Vs, exRedmond: lent! $2995. cellent mechanical con541-548-5254 541-408-7908 dition, many extras + Al-

L

885

932

Canopies & Campers

Antique & Classic Autos

Orbit 21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual

batteries, sleeps 4-5, 16' O ld T o w n 22' 19 7 8 , Camper C a n oe, D odge class C, 67K mi., exc. cond, $900. good cond.$3500. 541-312-8740 541-389-4873

Nuwa Hiker 2007, 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 &

and online.

$6995. 503-880-5020

1921 Model T Delivery Truck Canopy for long bed great c ond., w h ite Restored 8 Runs w/tinted windows & $9000. slider window. $500. 541-389-8963 541-580-7334

p ine c a nopy. N o nsmoking owners. Collectors welcome! Sorry, no trades. Firm, cash.

Mercedes 450SL, 1977, 113K, 2nd owner, gar aged, b o t h top s . $10,900. 541-389-7596

Easy, flexible, and affordable ad packages are alSO aVailable On Our Web Site. To place your Bulletin ad with a photo, visitwww.bendbulletin.com, click on "Place an ad" and follow these easy steps: Choose a category, choose a classification, and then select your ad package. Write your ad and upload your digital photo. Create your account with any major credit card. All ads appear in both print and online Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print and online.

To place your photo ad, visit us online at www.bendbulletin.com or call with questions 541-385-5809

Classifteds www.bendbullctin.com


E6 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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

1000

I

L e gal Notices LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R C UIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Deutsche Bank National Trust

Company, as trustee for Ixis Real Estate Capital Trust 2 006-

HE-1 Mortgage Pass Through Certificates, Series 20 0 6-HE-1, Plaintiff/s, v. Kelly R. Young; USAA FSB; Internal Revenue Service; and Persons or Parties unknown claiming any r i ght, title, lien or interest in t he P r o perty d e scribed in the Complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Case N o . : 12CV0411. NOTICE O F S AL E U N D ER WRIT O F E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o t ic e is

hereby given that I will on June 25, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction t o t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s h ier's check, the real property commonly known as 1 60 9 NE 8th Street, Bend, Oregon 97701, an d f u r ther d escribed as , T h e South 100.87 feet of

L ots Six ( 6 ) a n d Seven (7), Block Thirty- Two (32), Wiestoria, Deschutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure i s sued out o f t h e C i r cuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County

of Deschutes, dated April 16, 2013, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein De u tsche Bank National Trust Company, as trustee for Ixis Real Estate Capital Trust 2006HE-1 Mortgage Pass Through Certificates, Series 2006-HE-1 as plaintiff/s, recovered [Judgment - Specific name of judgment] on F ebruary 7 , 20 1 3 , against K e ll y R. Young; USAA FSB; Internal Revenue Service; and Persons or Parties unknown claiming any r i ght, title, lien or interest in t he P r o perty de scribed in the Complaint herein as defendant/s. B E FORE B IDDING A T TH E SALE, A PROSPEC-

Legal Notices hereby given that I will on June 25, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction t o t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s h ier's check, the real property commonly known as 2792 N o rthwest F airway Heig h t s Drive, Bend, Oregon 97701, an d f u r ther described as, Lot Nine (9), River's Edge Village, Phase V, Deschutes County, Ore gon. Said sale i s made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure issued out of the C ircuit Court of t h e State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated April 16, 2013, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein HSBC Bank USA, N.A., as Trustee on behalf of Ace Securities Corp. Home Equity L o an Trust and for the regi stered holders o f ACE Securities Corp. Home Equity L o an Trust, Series 2 005HE6, Asset Backed Pass-Through Certificates as plaintiff/s, rec overed Gene r a l Judgment Determining Amount Owed and F oreclosure; Mo n etary J udgm e nt Against Defendant ¹1 Diana Novotny; General Judgment Against Defendant ¹2 L a r ry Fudenna, Defendant ¹3 M ortgage Electronic Reg i stration Systems, Inc., Defendant ¹ 4 Col u mbia River Bank DBA CRB Mortgage Team, Defendant ¹5 Persons or Parties Unk n o wn Claiming Any Right, Title, Lien or Interest In The Property Described In The Complaint Herein on Febr uary 2 6, 2013 , a gainst Diana N o votny; Larry Fudenna; Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.; Columbia River Bank DBA CRB Mort-

gage Team; and Persons or Parties Unknown claiming any right, title, lien or in-

terest in the Property described i n the Complaint herein as defendant/s. BEFORE BIDDING AT THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE B IDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY IN V E STI-

BIDDER GATE: (a)The priority SHOULD INDEPEN- of the lien or interest t h e j ud g ment DENTLY I N V ESTI- of

TIVE

GATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of t h e jud g ment creditor; (b)Land use laws and regulations applicable t o the property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d) Limits on f arming o r for e st practices on the property; (e) Rights of neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the p roperty. Published in Bend Bulle-

creditor; (b) Land use laws and regulations applicable t o the property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d)Limits on f arming o r for e s t practices on the property; (e) Rights of neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the p roperty. P u blished in Bend Bulletin. Date of First and Successive Publica-

tions: May 22, 2013; May 29, 2013; June 5, tin. Date of First and Successive Publica- 2013. Date of L a st Publication: June 12, tions: May 22, 2013; May 29, 2013; June 5, 2013. Attorney:Craig OSB 2 013. Date o f L a st Peterson, ¹120365, R o binson Publication: June 12, Tait, P.S., 710 Sec2013. Attorney:Craig Peterson, OSB ond Avenue, S uite ¹120365, R o binson 7 10, S e a ttle, W A 98104, 206-676-9640. Tait, P.S., 710 Second Avenue, S uite Conditions of S a le: 7 10, S e a ttle, W A Potential bidders must 98104, 206-676-9640. arrive 15 minutes prior Conditions of S a l e: to the auction to allow Potential bidders must the Deschutes County arrive 15 minutes prior Sheriff's Office to reto the auction to allow view bidder's funds. the Deschutes County Only U.S. c urrency cashier's Sheriff's Office to re- and/or view bidder's funds. checks made payable Only U.S. c urrency to Deschutes County and/or cashier's Sheriff's Office will be

checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon the c lose of t h e s a l e. LARRY B L A NTON, Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff. Blair Barkhurst, Field Technician. Date: May 21, 2013.

LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R CUIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. HSBC Bank USA, N.A., as trustee on behalf of Ace Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan T rust an d f o r t h e Registered Holders of Ace Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust, Series 2 005-HE6, A sse t Backed Pass-Through Certificates, Plaintiff/s, v. D iana N o votny; Larry Fudenna; Mortgage Electronic Registration Sys t ems, Inc.; Columbia River Bank DBA CRB Mortgage Team; and Persons or Parties Unknown claiming any right, title, lien or interest in the Property described i n the Complaint her e i n, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 12CV0722. NOTICE OF SALE UND ER WRIT OF E X ECUTION - REAL P ROP ERTY. Notice is

accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of t h e s a l e. LARRY

B L A NTON,

Deschutes Co u n ty Sheriff. Blair Barkhurst, Field Technician. Date: May 21, 2013.

LEGAL NOTICE

IN

THE

CIR C U IT

COURT O F T HE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Amanda E. J ones; an d O c c u pants of the Premises, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 12CV0799. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that I will on June 25, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction t o t h e h ighest bidder, f o r

cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 2 0 02 4 B a d ger Road, Bend, Oregon 97702-2570, and further described as, Lot

Four (4), High Desert Village, City of Bend, Deschutes C o unty, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ of

Legal Notices • Execution in Foreclosure issued out of the C ircuit Court of t h e State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated April 18, 2013, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. as plaintiff/s, recovered Stipulated G e n eral Judgment of Foreclosure and Shortening of Redemption Period Against Defendants: 1) Amanda E. Jones 2) Occupants of the Premises on January 22, 2 0 13 , a g a inst Amanda E. Jones and Occupants o f the Premises as defend ant/s. BEFO R E BIDDING A T TH E SALE, A PROSPEC-

Legal Notices • 503-977-7840. Condi-

tions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency cashier's and/or checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon the c lose of t h e s a l e . LARRY

B L A NTON,

Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff. Blair Barkhurst, Field T echnician. Dat e : June 10, 2013. LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R CUIT COURT O F THE TIVE BIDDER STATE OF OREGON SHOULD INDEPENDESCHUTES DENTLY I N V ESTIWell s GATE: (a)The priority COUNTY. Fargo Bank, its sucof the lien or interest i n i n t erest of t h e jud g ment cessors and/or assigns, Plaincreditor; (b) Land use iff/s, v . Jeff r e y laws and regulations tHunter; l ina applicable t o the Hunter, and Ange O c cuproperty; (c)Appants of the Premises, proved uses for the efendant/s. C a s e property; (d)Limits on D 11CV0821. NOf arming o r for e st No.: OF SALE UNpractices on the prop- TICE ER WRIT OF E X erty; (e) Rights of D - REAL neighboring property ECUTION P ROP ERTY. Notice is owners; and (f)Envihereby given that I will ronmental laws and July 16, 2013 at regulations that affect on 10:00 AM in the main the property. Pubobby of t h e D e s lished in Bend Bulle- lchutes County tin. Date of First and Sheriff's Office, 63333 Successive PublicaW. Highway 20, Bend, tions: May 22, 2013; sell, at public May 29, 2013; June 5, Oregon, 2 013. Date o f L a st o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, for Publication: June 12, or cas h ier's 2013. Attorney: cash the real propMichael T h ornicroft, check, erty commonly known OSB ¹981104, RCO as 5340 Northwest IrLegal, P.C., 511 SW win Lane, Redmond, 10th Ave., Ste. 400, Oregon 97756, and Portland, OR 97205. further described as, 503-977-7840. CondiL ot Fiv e , Bl o c k tions of Sale: PotenEleven, Tet h erow tial bidders must arPhase rive 15 minutes prior Crossing, to the auction to allow Deschutes C o unty, save and exthe Deschutes County Oregon, cept the following deSheriff's Office to rescribed real property: view bidder's funds. at a 1/2" Only U.S. c urrency Commencing m o numenting and/or cashier's rebar the Northwest corner checks made payable of Lot 5 , B lock 11, to Deschutes County Tetherow C rossing, Sheriff's Office will be Phase III, the initial accepted. P a y ment point as well as the must be made in full of b eginimmediately upon the true point thence South 77 c lose of t h e s a l e . ning; degrees 26'46" East LARRY B L A NTON, the North line of Deschutes C o u nty along said Lot 5, 65.00 feet Sheriff. Blair a 1/2" pipe; thence Barkhurst, Field to 2 2 d e g rees Technician. Date: May South 01'05" West, parallel 21, 2013. with the West line of said Lot 5, 140.00 feet LEGAL NOTICE to a 1/2" pipe; thence IN T H E CIR C UIT 74 de g rees COURT O F THE South 48'20" West, 8 0 . 51 STATE OF OREGON feet to a 1/2" pipe on DESCHUTES the West line of said COUNTY. US B a nk 5; thence North 22 National Association, Lot 01'05" East as Trustee for CMLTI degrees said West line, 2007-AR1, its succes- along 1 78.00 feet t o t h e sors in interest and/or point o f b e g inning. assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. sale is made unDonald M. Bowerman Said der a Writ of Execuaka Donald Marcus in Foreclosure isBowerman; M arissa tion out of the Circuit Bowerman aka sued of the State of M arissa Webe r ; Court for the County Washington M u t ual Oregon of Deschutes, Bank nka JPMorgan May 15, 2013.dated The Chase Bank; Occu- Notice of Sale will be pants of the Premises; published in The Buland the Real Propletin, a newspaper of erty located at 61028 circulation in B orden Aven u e , general Deschutes C o u nty, Bend, Oregon 97702, Oregon, on the folD efendant/s. C a s e lowing dates: June 12, No.: 12CV0777. NO2013; June 19, 2013; TICE OF SALE UNJune 26, 2013; and D ER WRIT OF E X uly 3 , 2 0 13. B E ECUTION - REAL JFORE BIDDING AT P ROP E RTY. Notice is SALE, A PROhereby given that I will THE SPECTIVE B IDDER on July 18, 2013 at SHOULD INDEPEN10:00 AM in the main IN V E STIl obby of t h e D e s - DENTLY (a)The priority chutes County GATE: the lien or interest Sheriff's Office, 63333 of t h e jud g ment W. Highway 20, Bend, of (b)Land use Oregon, sell, at public creditor; and regulations o ral auction to t h e laws to the h ighest bidder, f o r applicable (c)Apcash o r cas h ier's property; uses for the check, the real prop- proved (d)Limits on erty commonly known property; f arming r for e s t as 61028 Borden Av- practicesoon the propenue, Bend, Oregon erty; (e) Rights of 97702, an d f u r ther property d escribed as , Lo t neighboring owners; and (f)EnviTwenty-Six (26), laws and S outh V i llage, r e - ronmental regulations that affect corded October 13, the property. Attorney: 2004, i n Cab i n et T h ornicroft, G-469, De s c hutes Michael ¹981104, RCO County, Oregon. Said OSB Legal P.C., 511 SW sale is made under a 10th Ave., Ste. 400, Writ of Execution in OR 97205, Foreclosure i s sued Portland, 503-977-7840. Condiout o f t h e Ci r cuit tions of Sale: PotenCourt of the State of bidders must arOregon for the County tial 15 minutes prior of Deschutes, dated rive the auction to allow May 3, 2013. The No- to the Deschutes County tice of Sale will be Office to republished in The Bul- Sheriff's bidder's funds. letin, a newspaper of view Only U.S. c urrency general circulation in cashier's Deschutes C o u nty, and/or checks made payable Oregon, on the folCounty lowing dates: June 12, to Deschutes Office will be 2013; June 19, 2013; Sheriff's accepted. P a yment June 26, 2013; and be made in full J uly 3 , 2 0 13 . B E - must immediately upon the FORE BIDDING AT close of t h e s a l e. THE SALE, A PROLARRY B L A NTON, SPECTIVE B IDDER Co u n ty SHOULD INDEPEN- Deschutes Sheriff. Blair DENTLY IN V E STIField GATE: (a)The priority Barkhurst, T echnician. Dat e : of the lien or interest of t h e jud g ment June 10, 2013. creditor; (b) Land use LEGAL NOTICE laws and regulations IN T H E CI R CUIT applicable t o the COURT O F THE property; (c)ApSTATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES proved uses for the property; (d)Limits on COUNTY. Well s f arming o r for e s t Fargo Bank, N.A., its practices on the prop- successors in interest of and/or assigns, Plainerty; (e) Rights neighboring property tiff/s, v. Fe Anderson owners; and (f)EnviA KA Fe Loui s a ronmental laws and Anderson; Do n a ld regulations that affect Anderson AKA the property. Attorney: Donald Bruce AnderMichael T h ornicroft, son; JPMorgan Chase OSB ¹981104, RCO Bank successor in interest to WashingLegal, P.C., 511 SW 10th Ave., Ste. 400, ton Mutual Bank; OcPortland, OR 97205, cupants of the Pre-

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

mises; and The Real Property Located at 62435 Eagle Road, Bend, Oregon 97701, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 12CV0693. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that I will on July 11, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r cas h ier's check, the real property commonly known as 62435 Eagle Road, Bend, Oregon 97701, and further described as, Lot Twenty-One (21), View Ridge, City of Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure i s s ued out o f t h e C i r cuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated May 15, 2013. The Notice of Sale will be published in The Bulletin, a newspaper of general circulation in Deschutes C o unty, Oregon, on the following dates: June 12, 2013; June 19, 2013; June 26, 2013; and J uly 3 , 2 0 13 . B E FORE BIDDING AT

THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE B I DDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY I N V ESTI-

GATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of t h e j ud g ment creditor; (b) Land use laws and regulations applicable t o the property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d)Limits on f arming o r for e st practices on the property; (e) Rights of neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property. Attorney: Michael T h ornicroft, OSB ¹981104, RCO

Legal, P.C., 511 SW 10th Ave., Ste 400, Portland, OR 97205,

503-977-7840. Condi-

tions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a y ment must be made in full immediately upon the c lose of t h e s a l e . LARRY B L A NTON, Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff. Blair Barkhurst, Field T echnician. Dat e : June 10,2013. LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CIR C UIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Wells Fargo Bank, NA, its

successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Deanna Silsbee; Newport Hills Homeowners Association, Inc.; and Occupants of the Premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 11CV0901. N OTICE OF S A L E U NDER WRIT O F EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that I will on June 20, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction t o t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 1234 N o rthwest 18th Street, B e nd, Oregon 97701, and further described as, Lot 83 of Forest Hills Phase I, Deschutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure i s sued out o f t h e C i r cuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated April 24, 2013, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein Wells Fargo Bank, NA, its successors in interest and/or assigns as plaintiff/s, recovered G e n eral Judgment of Foreclosure A g ainst: 1) D eanna Silsbee 2 ) Occupants o f the Premises; and Money A ward Against t h e R eal P roperty L o cated at 1234 Northwest 1 8 t h St r eet, Bend, Oregon

property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d)Limits on f arming o r for e s t practices on the propof erty; (e) Rights neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property. Published in Bend Bulle-

L e g al Notices • LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R C UIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Wells Fargo Bank, NA, its

successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. K r istina A . Johnson; H y p erion Capital Group; Junitin. Date of First and p er Gl e n Nor t h Successive Publica- Homeowners' Assotions: May 22, 2013; ciation; and O c cuMay 29, 2013; June 5, pants of the Premises, 2 013. Date o f L a st D efendant/s. C ase Publication: June 12, No.: 11CV0805. NO2013. Attorney: TICE OF SALE UNMichael T h ornicroft, D ER WRIT OF E X OSB ¹981104, RCO ECUTION - REAL Legal, PC, 511 SW P ROP ERTY. Notice is 10th Avenue, Suite hereby given that I will 4 00, P o rtland, O R on June 25, 2013 at 97205, (503) 10:00 AM in the main 977-7840. Conditions l obby of t h e D e s of Sale: Po t e ntial chutes County bidders must arrive 15 Sheriff's Office, 63333 minutes prior to the W. Highway 20, Bend, auction to allow the Oregon, sell, at public Deschutes C o u nty o ral auction to t h e Sheriff's Office to reh ighest bidder, f o r view bidder's funds. cash o r cas h ier's Only U.S. c urrency check, the real propand/or cashier's erty commonly known checks made payable as 2901 SW Indian to Deschutes County Circle, Redmond, OrSheriff's Office will be egon 97756, and furaccepted. P a yment ther described as, Lot must be made in full 59 of J uniper Glen immediately upon the North, City of R edclose of t h e s a l e. mond, Des c hutes LARRY B L A NTON, County, Oregon. Said Deschutes Co u n ty sale is made under a Sheriff. Anthony Ra- Writ of Execution in guine, Civil TechniForeclosure i s s ued cian. Date: May 21, out o f t h e C i r cuit 2013. Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated April 18, 2013, to me directed in the above-entitled action LEGAL NOTICE wherein Wells Fargo IN T H E CI R CUIT Bank, NA, its succesCOURT O F THE sors in interest and/or STATE OF OREGON assigns as plaintiff/s, DESCHUTES recovered Stipulated COUNTY. Well s Limited Judgment of Fargo Bank, N.A., its Foreclosure and successors in interest Shortening o f Re and/or assigns, Plain- d emption Peri o d tiff/s, v. Norman K. Against Defendant: 1) D oubledee; A s p e n Kristina A. J ohnson Creek Manufactured on May 1 7 , 2 0 12, Home Su b d ivision a gainst Kristina A . Homeowner's Asso- Johnson as d e fenciation; and O c cu- d ant/s. BEFO R E pants of the Premises, B IDDING A T TH E D efendant/s. C a s e SALE, A PROSPECNo.: 12CV1078. NO- TIVE BIDDER TICE OF SALE UNSHOULD INDEPENDER WRIT OF EXDENTLY I N V ESTIECUTION - REAL GATE: (a)The priority PROPERTY. Notice is of the lien or interest hereby given that I will of t h e jud g ment on June 27, 2013 at creditor; (b)Land use 10:00 AM in the main laws and regulations l obby of t h e D e s - applicable t o the chutes County property; (c)ApSheriff's Office, 63333 proved uses for the W. Highway 20, Bend, property; (d)Limits on Oregon, sell, at public f arming o r for e st o ral auction to t h e practices on the proph ighest bidder, f o r erty; (e) Rights of cash o r cas h ier's neighboring property check, the real prop- owners; and (f)Envierty commonly known ronmental laws and as 2550 S o uthwest regulations that affect Yarrow Creek Drive, the p roperty. P u bRedmond, O r e gon lished in Bend Bulle97756, an d f u r ther tin. Date of First and described as, Lot 64 Successive Publicaof A s p e n Cre e k tions: May 22, 2013; Manufactured Home May 29, 2013; June 5, S ubdivision, City o f 2013. Date of L a st Redmond, Deschutes Publication: June 12, County, Oregon. Said 2013. Attor n e y: sale is made under a Michael T h ornicroft, Writ of Execution in OSB ¹981104, RCO Foreclosure i s s ued Legal, P.C., 511 SW out o f t h e Ci r c uit 10th Avenue, Suite Court of the State of 4 00, Portland, O R Oregon for the County 97205 (503) of Deschutes, dated 977-7840. Conditions May 3, 2013, to me of Sale: Pot e ntial directed in the bidders must arrive 15 above-entitled action minutes prior to the wherein Wells Fargo auction to allow the Bank, N.A., its sucDeschutes Co u n ty cessors i n i n t erest Sheriff's Office to rea nd/or assigns a s view bidder's funds. plaintiff/s, r ecovered Only U.S. c urrency General Judgment of and/or cashier's Foreclosure Against: checks made payable Norman K. to Deschutes County (1) Doubledee; and Sheriff's Office will be Money Award Against accepted. P a y ment Norman K. Double- must be made in full dee, rendered on April immediately upon the 4, 2013, against Nor- c lose of t h e s a l e . man K. Doubledee as LARRY B L A NTON, defendant/s. BE- Deschutes C o u nty FORE BIDDING AT Sheriff. Anthony RaTHE SALE, A PROguine, Civil TechniSPECTIVE B IDDER cian. Date: May 21, SHOULD INDEPEN- 2013.

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r cas h ier's check, the real property commonly known as 1304 N o rtheast H ollinshead Dr i v e, Bend, Oregon 97701, and further described as, Lot Thirteen (13) in Block Six (6), of Meadowview Estates Second Addition, City of Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure i s sued out o f t h e Ci r cuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated May 3, 2013, to me directed in t he above-entitled action wherein Wells Fargo Bank, NA as plaintiff/s, recovered General Judgment of Foreclosure Against:

(1) Gregory S. Cofer (2) Sarah L. Williver FKA Sarah L. Cofer (3) Midland Funding, LLC (4) Lindsay K. Wostmann (5) Occupants of the Premises: and Money A ward A gainst Th e Re a l Property Located at 1304 Northeast Hollinshead Drive, Bend, Oregon 97701, rendered on January 3, 2013, against Gre-

gory S. Cofer, Sarah L. Williver fka Sarah L. C o fer, M i d land Funding, LLC, Lindsay K . W o stmann, and Occupants of the Premises as d efend ant/s. BEFO R E BIDDING A T THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY IN V E STI-

GATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of t h e j ud g ment creditor; (b)Land use laws and regulations applicable t o the property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d) Limits on f arming o r for e s t practices on the property; (e)Rights of neighboring property owners; and (f) Environmental laws and regulations that affect the p roperty. P u blished in Bend Bulletin. Date of First and Successive Publications: May 29, 2013; June 5, 2013; June 12, 2013. Date of Last Publication: June 19, 2013. Att or n e y: Michael T h ornicroft, O

LEGAL NOTICE IN

THE

CIR C U IT

COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, its successors i n i n t erest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v . Un k n own DENTLY IN V E STILEGAL NOTICE Heirs of Howard C. GATE: (a)The priority IN T H E CIR C U IT Thompson; Lee Doral of the lien or interest THE Thompson; Oregon of t h e jud g ment COURT O F creditor; (b)Land use STATE OF OREGON D epartment of H u man Services; and laws and regulations DESCHUTES the Wells Occupants o f applicable t o the COUNTY. Fargo Bank, NA, its Premises, property; (c)ApD efendant/s. C ase proved uses for the successors in interest 0 9 C V 1371AB. property; (d)Limits on and/or assigns, Plain- No.: N OTICE OF S A L E f arming o r for e s t tiff/s, v. Gregory S. UNDER W RI T OF practices on the prop- Cofer and Sarah L. erty; (e) Rights of Cofer; Midland Fund- EXECUTION - REAL neighboring property ing, LLC; Lindsay K. P ROP ERTY. Notice is hereby given that I will Wostmann; and Ocowners; and (f)Envion June 27, 2013 at ronmental laws and cupants of the Preregulations that affect mises, D efendant/s. 10:00 AM in the main Case No.: 11CV0804. l obby of t h e D e s the p roperty. P u bCounty lished in Bend Bulle- N OTICE O F S A L E chutes U NDER WRIT O F Shenff's Office, 63333 tin. Date of First and Successive Publica- EXECUTION - REAL W. Highway 20, Bend, PROPERTY. Notice is Oregon, sell, at public tions: May 29, 2013; hereby given that I will o ral auction to t h e June 5, 2013; June h ighest bidder, f o r 12, 2013. Date of Last on June 27, 2013 at cas h ier's 10:00 AM in the main cash o r Publication: June 19, 2013. Attor n e y: Michael T h ornicroft, OSB ¹981104, RCO Legal, P.C., 511 SW 10th Ave., Ste 400, Portland, OR 97205, (503) 977-7840. Cond itions of Sale: P o tential bidders must An important premise upon which the principle of arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow democracy is based is thatinformation about the Deschutes County 97701-0000 on FebSheriff's Office to regovernment activities must be accessible in order r uary 2 7, 2013 , view bidder's funds. for the electorate to make well-informed decisions. against Deanna Sils- Only U.S. c urrency Public notices provide this sort of accessibility fo bee and Occupants of and/or cashier's the Premises as de- checks made payable citizens who want io know more about government fendant/s. B E FORE to Deschutes County activities. BIDDING A T THE Sheriff's Office will be SALE, A PROSPEC- accepted. P a yment TIVE BIDDER must be made in full Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin SHOULD INDEPEN- immediately upon the classifieds or go fowvvvv.bendbulletin.com and DENTLY IN V E STI- close of t h e s a l e. GATE: (a)The priority LARRY B L A NTON, click on "Classified Ads" of the lien or interest Deschutes Co u n ty of t h e j ud g ment Sheriff. Anthony Racreditor; (b) Land use guine, Civil Technilaws and regulations cian. Date: May 28, applicable t o the 2013.

l LRE P U B L I C NOTICES INPORTANT+

The Bulletin


BEND CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CENTRAL OREGON CHRISTIAN HOME EDUCATORS CROOK COUNTY

CULmR GILCHRIST

LA PINE MADRAS MARSHALL MOUNTAIN V I EW NORTH LAKE O R EGON N A T IO NAL GUA R D YOUTH CHALLENGE REDMOND REDMOND PROFICIENCY ACADEMY SISTERS SUMMIT TRINITY LUTHERAN

The Bulletin ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT Published June 12, 2013


ih

Bend. Hi ClassMotto: "If you canimagineit, you canachieveit.Ifyou candream it,you canbecome it." —Wiliam A. Ward BlakelyNicoleAbbott AshleyElizabethAbieras JustinDavidAbieras AmandaChristineAccardo JordanReneeAdams ZanaTafibegAdams JacquelineJulieAdler * * * NicoleRoseAguilar * AudreySaharAli * * * MasonPaulAnderson SophiaCamilleAndrews * SeanWilsonAnthony DanaEugeneArmstrong TaylorleanArney GabrielEliasArredondo* * * MaivelA yvila ElizabethMichele Baer * * * MirandaRoseBaglien * KyleAustin Bailey * * * HaydenMaverick Baney** HeatherDaniegeBarber * * * GabrielleCecilia Barin Brandon EdwardBartlett * * * TannerBasil Bauer * ** Kelvin Felipe Bautista TaylorLeneeBelgarde McKenziAn e nBell * * * NicolasJamesBelmontes * Jonathan Robert Benitez SaraYingXIBennett * ** SkylerEugeneBernard MeredithKeley Berrigan * ** TravisEthanBillow AlyssaNicoleBjork * ArianeSop hia Blank * * * BrianMichaelBlum Jameson David Borland * * * CaryRobertBoyer MarioEstebanBradley ChanelBonnyLeeBranham ErikaJeanBraschko WilliamPatrick Brawner * Samantha StarAnnBrewer

NickolasRyanBrodock * AbbyIreneBrown * * * SamanthaDawnBryan * * * HannahMarie Buckner EdnaIbarraBueno JacobThomasButcher BryanAustin Calame KevinTamarit Calderon HeideChristianaCamarata * MarthaLouiseCampbell * " MorganBreannCampbell Kelcey LassenCanfield ' KatherineHyatt Carew* DerekScot Carpenter AustinTrevorCaswell * * * Amelia SusanCecchini ' ** AmitChop ra * Ellis Cha ndler Clair * " OlivierJonas Clerc + JennaLynnCoats * TristynMoCombs * * * CodyDwayneConnell DarrenAnthonyContreras * * * TaylorMa rie Contreras * CodyJerom eCook LeslieAnnette Cook Kassandra Marie Cooper AndresCorona Jonathan Corona RyanChristopherCrownover GraceLeeCurran JacobColin Curry * " " MitchellMcG uire Cutter * * * AllisonLeeDaley,Salutatorian * CierraAnnDeBoy LucasWilliamJamesDeGaetano * KarsenMonet DeJarnett * LindseyReneeDeWitt Joshua Ray DeFebbo ShaneSylvio DelPozzo NicholaC sain Donovan Steven JamesDougherty, Valedictorian* * * AnsleyPiperDunning * MatthewJay Durante Mall oryMaeEdmunson HaleyMarissaERsworth RonaldJosephEmick, HI * * *

Sch e o l

I r| Q )j[()N

p

l~'

I,

Zachary Spencerlackson * RebeccaJansen CurtisJosep hJensen ScottPatrickJense n Kameran ElizabethJoel * * * IsaacScott Johnson " Summe rLynneJohnson Briauna Marie Jones " "" OyllanBradleyDeanJones JacobNoahJuarez ' MatthewDennisKaminsky Casey AndrewKanalos " KathrynElenKennedy Matthew JamesKerins " ShelbyLynnKine* MitchellDeanKocer JonahSamuel Koski * * * JasperAllenKotkins Jordan GeessienKropf Elizabeth LaurenKryder " JacobDylanKurzer * * * Chel sieReneeLaemmle """ JanetTomm y Lansburgh SierraLatriceLantz SierraVirginiaLarsen* DavidJosephLarson Alexander BjornLarsson** DesireeIvanaLee ZayneOlin Leisher EdgarDuranLemus KatherineAnneLiska * * * Makeila RoseLundy " KathrynRoseLyman Tanya IreneLytle MollyKathleenMaloney * * * Shawn TylerMarcum MichaelAnd rewMarks Corey StevensMartorano " BenjamiT naylor Massey * TiahLarayeMatthews JennaRoseMattox * JordynMicheleMaxwel " JocelyM ncAbee-Keen Kathleen RoseMcClintic LouisEdwardMcCoy * * * Hannah MayMcCugough " "" MackJame sMcHone SabrieAnne McMahan* KandiMarisaMcNeil Hannah LorynMendoza " Oeena Marie BahrMerril * * * MirandaMaeMeskel Andrew BryanMiller BethaniL eoveMiller " Brooke Ashlee Miller * CourtneyJane Miller " JacobMichaelMiller RyanChristopherMock CaelenAndrewMoore Delaney LindaMorse " "" AsaleighBailey Moses * MariaMourzaev + GeoffryEverett Mouser ElizabethKathleenMunroe KiyokoHopeNakamura-Koyama * DanielHaroldNase" HunterDainNelson "

Allison LeeDaley, Salutatorian, andSteven James Dougherty, Valedmtonan/ photoby ShannonCarroll

JustinDonaldErlandson* * * LucasAllenEschelbach* BrandonHerreraEstrada LunaSierraFagan " DallasWadeFagen KendalLeeFancher SarahJayneFarina JoelAndrewFeitler LisaLen oraFifer JacobDeanFillmore Brandon GeraldFitzpatrick Charles PaulFraley, IV" HeidiAnnFroelich * EvanJamesFurgurson Aaron Scott Galinat ** CalebScott Gardner BrittanyCeleneGates AmbyrleR eoseGattshal EmilyDaleGeddes * * * Bryanne LouiseGigespie"" MariaIsabelGonzalez GregoryDeanGraham JessikaLianaGreenshield MitchelDo l uglasGrimmett " BrodyDouglasHadley * * * "

/ g /

• •

AidanPatrick Hannon KellyClaireHarding " "" DallasAlexandra-LeeHaroldson Andrew DouglasHarris ' Caleb Christopher Harrison KariAnne Hatlestad " Cheyene AshleyHazebroek Ashley LynnHeflin JazmiH nernandez AmyAnn Hil " PaytonWalshHill MackenziP eageHladick-Chaffee Kelly JoHockman * CiaraDianeHogue" ChetAllenHolland AnnaleisD en ' aeHollingsworth " BriarRobert Holipeter KarlieJomg Hol ren" MichaelChristopherHouser Melissa AnnHubler " "" Travis Jordon Huffman Makayla Paige Hunt " MikeP.Huynh * * * Avalon KatherynIrwin "' MekaylaMaeVaughnlsaak * * * "

"

"

• • •

'

"

~q uura'

(

"

"

"

cc>

-'C-' ~

p

tx

NO PURCHASENECESSARY Coupon expires 8/31/13 Not valid with any other offer.

RSRERI 2 STORES IN BEND:

IN REDMOND:

NE3RDgREVERE'541-3891272 j5HWV91 g MURPHYRD'541-3826761 SW IOTHg HIGHLAND '541-3826161

L ~

~

~

2 I GRADUATION 2013

mJ

"

Jesse ThomasNielsen MatthewC onnerNiemeyer " "" JustinEdwardNorris Isabella RoselynnO'Hair Brenda Villafuerte Ortega Brenden ThomasOrton BrittneyKianaOsborn Brynna LouiseBel Owens " "" IsabelCelia FortunoPadiga + RileyMa delinePalcic ' AlexandraKirstenParker * * * KaitlinAnneParker Matthew DillonParker JustinAda mParsons ChandlaRa r ePaul Alyssa LaurenPease " AmandaNicolePease * * * Toby SpencerPedrick Joshua LeviPensinger * MacaelaElaineMcDonaldPerez Lindsey AnnPetersen * * * Thomas Sinclair Peterson ZacharyDakota Pfliger * DaxAm unsonPoboisk MitchellLogan Potter * NathanieGlarry Potter Dayman Austin Poweg Kelsey BrookePowers " "" LoganMichaelPowers * * * Cassandra AnnPrestridge AbigailRosePrice * ChandleR ryanPrice " Gerardo Pulido Andrea ReneRamosPyne " "" BenjaminKahlil JahanQadir ** Madiso nQuinn MeganBonnerQuinn * * * GabrielSteven Rada " "" MariaPerlaRamirez BailieAnnReinwald ' "

"

'

"

* **

KnutMcAlister Renton AndreaCelesteReyesReyes AndrewJos ephRhine* * * Lauren RocheHeRichardson ' ElleSuz anneRipp Jaired MichaelRodmaker ' "" RyanNicholasBel Roemer * * * DallasCameronRogers MasonWilliamRolph KyrstenMarie Romine Rufina Rosales-Felix SierraShawnRoss AliciaVanessaChavezRuiz Cameron Michael Rynearson KyleWestonRynearson JulioSalcedo NathanieAn l thonySalyers JosueIvan Sanchez VictorHugoSanchez RichardOmarSarabia MariaRo seSarao * * * Kathenne EhzabethSargent AndrewWilliamSchaal * Jonathan CurtisSchaumloefel * JaredRogerSchultz PeterDouglasSchwarz * "" GraceLauren-KeRySchweitzer *

TylerDavidSellers JuanSerrano Hannah ColleenSharp AshleyMarie Shaw * DanieBe Mary ElizabethShea * Ashley MicheleShrader ' " * MariaElisaSilverio KiraKam ila Smiley " JacobToddSmith StephaniE elizabethSmith " DavidRobert Smith-Botnen KeatonCharlesSparhawk KieraLouiseSpithil-Hayes Amanda NicoleSt. Clair ColeBallardStanley * MollySteelhammer " MyrsideysAlexiaSteward* * * AshleyReneeStewart DylanWadeSumraB OwenD.Sweeney SkylerAllenSwenson TrinityArielTankersley * Brooke LindsayTennison Thomas JohnHi gginsTheobald EmmaleL eynnThill * JessicaFeng-HuiThomas * " " RyanDavidTolentino Kaylee AlyssaTornay " '* MadeleineTeresaTorres Logan BrianTroyer ' CameronLewisTulare MariahAnnTurner-Macy TearraDawnLeeTweet MelissaReneeVanDoren SamanthaRoseVanDoren * * * TylerWayneVanHoose-Ceniga JasonLeonVinton,Jr. EmilyMarieWaggoner " "" ShawniAnne Wall * * * JessicaNicoleTheresaWallace" '* ToriAnnWalton JustinSkyWarren "" MelissaKayWatkins * * * MarlenaKayWeber BuckWyat Weirup ClintonJamesWeishaupt ShayTyler JamesWeiss Emma JosephineWest " JustinLeeRobert Wetzel * AaronMichaelStevenWickham JackThom asWidmer * * * CarlyMargaretWilliams RhysElizabethWilliams JacobColin Wilson JoshuaWilliamWoodland* AleciaMarieWright TeslaJeanWright ** MichaelaSusanSimalamailagiYoung MorganJaneYourdon * * * JessicaLynnZachem" '* KaytieJoZellner Lauren TaylorZivney '

"

"

"

"

"

* Honor Students (3.5 GP Aandabove) ** HonorsDiploma 0IB Diplom aCandidates +ForeignExchange


AlexandraLeeAdams CarynAnnAgnew JosieNoelAlberts * Courtney JacquelineAldridge ' EmilyElizabethAlexander * Kaitlin Beacham Alhart " Eric CharleAsUdritt * * * MarshalJeffery l Allen " KirstenLynnAHred Erik Alexan derAlvstad LucasMartin JamesAmodeo AustinPatrickArthur TylerNicholasBahn ChristianRobert Bailey JessicaRaleneBaker * NathanAveryBaker MariaVittoria BaU irano * + Kaitlin Laura Barreras TiffanyMarieBeatie Julianne MicheU eBelza " Gregory Russell Benedikt * Brooke Emily Bennet " SarahMarie Berge* Dimitri Gaven BigneH" MathildaAdeline Blea JosephPaul Boero Luc MichelBoileau * Hannah RileyBoorstein " James LawrenceBowlin IV * * * Christian AlanBoyd " ConnorfonathanBrenda * MadisonAnnBrewer Spencer MichaelBrinker AddisonMaeBrooks NicoleAdrianBryant-Secord * SarahRoseBuchanan MaxwelNel l sonBurbidge Erin Elizabeth Burk ' HaydenHamiltonBurket * * * RacheU eNicholeBurnham MileaMarieButler Scott RobertCagan " *" LexieRaeCampbell JosieElizabethCarlton ' WilliamCameronCarrick KaryRaeChristiansen Camden JohnCocores AugustRileyCohen SytrusMicheH eCoker Kathryn ElizabethConnor " KyleMichaelConnors RebeccaLeeCook "

'

"

"

"

"

"

"

Madeline RembieCuniff BryceParkerCunnington Kaitlin Marie Daley * * * CourtneyRoseDamon AidanPatrick Daniels-Soles BrentHavenDaniels-Soles KevinRichardDavis Zachary KajDean "" JesseRyanDefoe BrandoHonorio DeHorta JacobYale Derman DavidMichaelDeWilde " Jean-Luc Djukanovich SpencerJame sDoak Fernando Dorantes Kanyon Shoulee Douglass " Stephen Robert Drgastin * DylanRoger Drudge FlorianeColette Dugast * + MaxwelKent l Dunkelberg * Kai DavidDunn ChaseWilliamDunphy McKenna RaeEddy Alexandra RileyEngel ' ErinAngelinaEreman Hannah RoseErmisch " KarlynBryneU eEvans * * * lan Alexan derHoida Ferguso JosephKeith FilbenJr. NatalieMarieFisher " AustinJohnFletcher Cyrus James Flynn " AlexandriaCherie Foy * Logan WallaceFrantz MorganValier Freeman Jacob BrendanFritz " Tianshan WangFuUop * * * Kaitlin MariFeurlan ' MarissaMarina Galvan PaulJosephAlanGantz Hannah LeahGoldstein * * TaylorLeeGonzales " KaylaKahGroth CodyJamesGwin BradleyBruceAllen Harder GillianChristineHarper Luanna Marie Harrison RileyShannon Harrold " MichaelBurtonHartmeier * AbigaiDel l aneyHayes " DakotaGarrison Hayes GrantGeofery Hays "

'

"

'

"

'

"

'

Marshall Allen (left), Valedictorian, and Max L'Etoile, Salutatorian.

BenjaminJohnHeatherman lan Gene Hecker * * * KjerstenAilinnHeUis * * * ElizabethGuadalupeHernandez HaileyRoseHewitson * * * Nicholas HoweHiglin * Samantha Nicole HigneU-Stark AlexaJaneHill * * * ShaelinMarguerite Himsworth * LukeThomasHinz * * * KierstenLeighHizak * AugustusDavidHobson DevonJames Holler * PierceReaganHolt ** Stephen LloydHorreH* SierraMarieHorton BrianAlexanderHosier Hannah LynnHuntsman * SeanRobertJacox * JenoaBreeJenkins AaronThomasJohnson * AnthonyMarkJohnson * Eric Harkne ssJohnson GabrielThorJohn son HarrisonGreyJohnson KylieMarieJohnson NigelPatrickJones * HayesJacobJ oyner * RyanChaseKarpik EllenTheresaKarren * ** Hannah Marie Karren Brandon Stuart Kater BlakeAlexanderKaufman SkylerJason Kenna

NatalieKinkade* ** JosephinM earie Kinney * Lyndsey Marilyn Knighten * Hannah Elizabeth Knowlton * Andrew JamesKreps JiHiansEHi seKrueger * MishaylaNicoleKubota *

MarissaLouiseKuehne • Taylor Ann Laidlaw • Victoria Qui La nndin * * * WilliamRichardLane* Amanda KayLawrence • Bretton Davi Leddbetter NikoleMayLeinweber KennaRoseLeis * * * ReesePatrick Leland MaxwelAl l bert L'Etoile * * * HarleyRoseLiH • Sydney Grace Lind* RachaelMarie Lobel DalioThomasLosch • Jennifer Kathle Loen wery • Marco AntonioLucasViHanueva DuncanAngusKennish • MacDougal* ** • Jamie LeiM gacR h ae Madiso nMaeMansberger* * * Hayden Jefrey ThomasMartin * MicaelaErikaMartin * AlexisMartinez-Garcia ClaireFrancesMastrangelo ** DanielJohnMaunder * * * MichaelAndrewMayer Alexandra NicoleMcCrea

KennedySheaMcGahan * Matthew ForrestMcGrath Whitni RoiMeece * AdamKendaUMerril * * * NoahMonteMeyer * Stephe nChaseMickel EmilyMarieMiler James Alan Miler U KaylaMarieMiUer-Marney MaxWiliamVilesMiUslagle * * * StephanieMoreno AcaciaLahreeMorford * DanaAnnMuensterman * JacobDavid Munsell RileyChristynMurtaugh * * * ColtorDavidMyers AshleyChristine Needham TessAmeliaNelson " ** ElizabethAnne Nesbitt * * * TravisColeNeuman * ParkerJamesNichols * MackenziLeorraineNicholson * JessicaChristine Nuno * * * CarolineElizabethNyberg Brit Rose Oliphant Bria nnaLynneVanTyneO'Malley BrandonLeeMichael Ostrander TylerNeiHPalfrey SydneyElayneParchman * MitchellDeanParks ' *" Scott Richards Parr * RonakRakeshPatel * ' * NicoleLynPatterson Areli CinaiPerez-Orea

OliviaSimonePerry AustinKennon-Luther Peters Braedon JamesPetrus * CorbinDouglasPforsich * MatthewThomasPiUing AnnabelPineda MaliaElisabethPowers SamuelPatrick MinhPutnam TannerMicheal KristopherQuinn PresleyLinQuon* KarinaRamos ** DillonMichaelRandaU** CaseLawler Resor JoaquiA nndresReyes RichardEugeneRice TrevorMichaelRiley JacobDaniel Ripley * BenjaminDouglas Ritchey * NatalieRos eRobbins Kia DeniseRogers AlecMichaelRoth MiyaKiyoeSaito-Beckman * MatthewRiley Sales Fernando ViUalobosSanchez CamilleDeeganSandahl Kassandra AnnSanford Coleman BuckleySchaefer * * * JacobColins Mitchell Schuman MichaelPaulSchwartz KaylynSheaScott DylanEverett Seefeldt KyleElyShemesh ScottWiliamSherfey lan ScottSherman RobertGlennSherman EUiottfigmeSherpa* StewartTobdenSherpa * RyanNicholasShields * GregoryDaneShipman * AnnaLisaSidor * Eli Andrew Simmons SamuelWarrenSimmons OliviaMarySinger KellyChristianSmaUwood Christina JoySmith * MadisonLeighannSmith * TylerAnthonySmith BennettWa lshSouther AustinLouisSouto-Maior DeionPeterSpalding

EdistoMetoliusSterne * Tia JiangSw enson * JessicaKayTaylor ClaytonEdsel Teague GabrielNeilThompson * Leigha OdileThrelkeld * * * SpencerBenjaminTimm* " * MelissaJazminTrejo-Gamez CarolinUU rich * + KaitlynReneeVanBlaricum TheaEllenVanKessel MeredithEllenVanValkenburg * Joseph MichaelVentreUa SydneyJessicaVerbrugge McKenzieJordan Vincent AlecJame sSinghVirk * ChristopherNicholasVlessis * RandaU Scot LincolnVoHrath U MadisonCatherine Walker * James JaredWarburton * AlexisJenningsWard* RaeAnneWatkins SkyeLucyWatson * * ' ChloeJeanWeatherman WadeWiliam Weatherman MazzyLynnWeathers * TurnerAllanWeber DakotaBlueWeeda * KyleKenyonWels " ** BrookeMcKenzieWest MorganJacobWest * StuartEugen eWettstein Khyra NicoleWilhelm ' DavidMichaelWilsonJr. MichaelStevenWilson * AlecNicholasRunyanWiltz * JesseDarrin Witwer AedinMe adorWright * AnnaSheaYoung ' *" JadeNicoleYoung * * * DavidDrakeYundt JoseMarioZacarias * JuanCarlos Zacarias MeganPamelaZuUo *

**

HonorStudents HonorsDiploma + Foreign ExchangeStudents **

ChristopherOldsSpreadborough Ariel MarieSteele * * *

THE BULLETIN 3


M ou n t a i n

V i e w H i g dh Seho o l Photo OyShara Howard

Motto:"Twe ntyyears fromnowyouwill: be more disappointedbythethings thatyoudidn't dothanbytheonesyou. did do.Sothrowoff thebowlines. Sail: awayfromtheharbor. Catchthetrade: windsin yoursails. Explore. Dream. Discover."-MarkTwain

Randag James-Scot BrosiusJt JeffreyScott Brown MalachiGaiusBrown DouglasCharlesBruce0 RachelAnne Buehner* RichardLeoBurkeIV CourtneyLeighannCandeRa* 0 Mikayla Marie Cant ' l AlexandraLynnCarroll JohnScugyCarrol * '* ft KerenLunaCastro MarissaLouiseCaudle Makenzie AnnChandler EvanAlenChinadle LaraMaxineChodelski * DominiA clexanderClanin 0 JeremiaP hacerUrijahClark AllanChristopherClawson0 MollyJeanneCoehlo*** tt0 McKen zieRaeAnnColemanWilliams ** Jk0 TasianEdwardWayneCollins Tanner AndrewCombsJk0 JaredScott ConnJk Carmen MarieCook Jasmine NicoleCoplin Juliana Corrales** B 0 MacKe nnaReneeCowan Weston KaneCowelltt 0 KaitlynSueCox KailahShauntel CozadJk KatherinJeaneCramer" "" tt 0 DavidJacksonCreach* ** t tt 0 Brenna NicoleCrecraft ' "" ll 0 KatieLynnCulbertsonB Jacob Scot Cummins JosieDanieleCummins* ft AlyssaAnneCundeg PaigeElizabethCunningham AustinTyler Custard KaylaNicoleD'Orazio KaraKaiDavenport JusticeAndrew-ColeDavisJk0 Shelby Wyatt Franklin Davis0 NatashaEvalaniDayton** tt 0 AliciaBethDemers" CassieArloineDeSoto

BrandonLeeAdams DianaCzarinaAguilar Jasmyne OliviaAhmed ToryianMalaAhmed HunterRyanAkintt RussellLeeAlbright Monique AlexandriaAlcantarft FabiolaAlcantaraCastelanos RhiannonElizabethAlexander" NicholasRyanAlvis DavidAndaracuaHernandez MarkaylaDawnAndreJk Tatum AnnAnhelukft KodiakWilliamArndt KylerGaryAyers ChadConnorBach* Jessica AnnBaileyt LuCretiaKathleenBakerChirco KatherinaJayBaltodano EricScottBarber ConnerS kyeBarham0 Kelsey Marie Baritel 0 ChristopherRobert Barnes KaiDavidBarry MakaylR aeneeBashiant 0 JacobAllenBeard LeviAlexan der Beardsley MadisonJa ydeeBeebe* ** f Jk 0 McKen zieNicoleBeebeJk BenjaminDavidBehmJk FredriN kybergBerget+ Joshua AlexanderBickford* ** tt Joshua Sterling Bileter * ft 0 RyanMathewBlalack MaddyO'MaraBooster* '* f tt 0 ErinElaineBowen*** B 0 CourtneyElizabeth Boyd" *" tt 0 KiyaMarie Brainard Andrew LoganBright * '* ll KyleJame sBrooks

- r' a

I

• .t

C r a

• •

I I • TV.APPLIANCE P:

4 I GRADUATION 2013

I

• •

r

, r'

Kyle VanGordon, Valedictorian, and RaeAnnMoreni, Salutatorian

Jordan Michael DeSouza"' ll 0 AshleyMarie Dickson SallyLou iseDrutman" "' t tt0 KimberlyMaeEgerbee KaitlynDanaeEmerson ZionEstrada TaylorluneEvans ChelseaLynnFarnsworth * ** ft DakotaChristianFarrell " Jayden MicahFernett AshleyMarie Fetcho Lindsay AnneFetcho HunterJordan Fetterstt 0 Quinn MichaelFief TaylorlvoryFraley DanyaleLynnGale VictorHug oGaminoVazquez DanielAlejandroGarciaAlcantara EmilyFrancesKalei' OnalaniGarcia' l 0 GenesisGisel Garcia SarahRoseGarcia Spencerloseph Garrido JustinMa thewGermain**' ll 0 Kelcee AllisonGlanvile TuckerJamesGlanzer JustinRo bert Glembocki 0 KaylaAnahiGomez0 SaraDianaGomez Gabriege BreAnaGonzales" YeseniaGradiga* ** A 0 DanielleAdele Gravett RebeccaMaizyGray*** A0 Tomm yDuaneGray"" Jk0 Branden AllenGribskovft 0 Amanda FayeGrippin0 JoyAlexandraGrossmn HollyJorde nGuardado MarceR aConnieGuerra* Jk 0 Brendan TrevorHamlin"" Jk0 AnnaliseTereseHansen*** A 0 DalynWalkerHardy Rachel DanieleHart 0 KassiaNicoleHartman* KassidyJacquelineHarwood KristopherAn thonyHasbunB Aspen SummerHassell * ** Jk 0 DakotaLeeHatton** Jt Kiersten Elizabeth Hatton*** Jk TrentonAlen Hawkins* Jk 0

: TarikMilesHay ward*0 : Jacob Robert Heffner Megan MackenzieHeinrich** tt0 Bo Helikson 0 • Joshua LeroyHenderson : SelmaJoy Henneke NathanialLee Herberger : Katie Mari Hess e* Joseph BenjaminHester0 : SinaShirinHetkam p+ : JustineTay lorHeywood : EmileeMarie Hietala KaiSeanHill MaxPatrickHill KaitlynMarie Hoffman RileyTannerHogue : Jacob RyanHoke0 VeronicH aolm-Eriksen+ Courtney Marie Horrel BritniNicoleHoule : Jessica MaureenHouston*0 . SharaRaeH oward** b : Tianna JeanHoward-Walker • Saki lshii+ Hayden CashJacoby-Boozell : Patricia Ma rieJaeger EthanJessen : JosetoAn nioJimenez-Moreno : Tylyn El betizhaJohns0 Hannah NoelleJohnsontt KyleRobertJohnson* 0 : Samantha LouiseJolly McKenna NicoleJones : TristanSea nKahlb0 KyleMichealKatchmar lan Hun ter Katz** Jk 0 NicholasGrahamKealey ChristianMichaelKeller DariannAlyssaKeller** t tt0 ChristianAceKennedy : JoelBradleyKe rcher*h McKenzie Kaitlin-RaeKihs** tt 0 : Sydney ElizabethKing BrittanyAtlanta Kinney Kristopher MichaelKirkpatrick MikaelA anneKoegermeier0 KenanGordonKoenig0 Channa sNadineKozlowski : SethWilliamKurtz0

DavidTanner LaFrance AustinDaniel Lain0 TaylorPaigeLancaster JaxsonKaymenLandrus' AngelicaLara-Mendoza Kieran AeneasLavrich" '" t Jk Amanda GailLawrence* ** Jkz EmilyJoanne Lawrence" ""tt 0 WyattWatsonLay* FinnChristianLeahy" 0 KeliMau lumaLemapu LoganJamesDeanLeonard LuisAntonio LinaresAlonso Steven KennethLivingston0 ShelbyDorleneLoew Matthew GregoryLogan" "' t tt0 CodyTylerLon gerbeam0 JesseRobertLynch0 DakinClermont Macgowan*** tt 0 Jaydon BrandonMahr" "" tt Cody Levi Marcoulier JadeRachegeMarken' "" t tt 0 KatiLeeMarkey CurtisBenjamin Markle Nathen Earl Martin*** Jk 0 DiegoFernandoMartinez SarahLaurenMartinoft 0 Crosby SheltonMays0 Christiano FrancisMazzioti * ft 0 Christopher AndrewMcBridetk0 Megan ElizabethMcCadden*** Jk 0 Maureen AnneMcCarthyt Brenna AnnMcFarland BrianKely McGinnis0 KaitlynDaniegeMcKenney* Jk 0 MichaelDel-Vincent McLean StephanieMendez0 JustinWest Mendoza Shelb ySusanneMiles AndrejJoshuaMiller Blake AlenMiller Christian AlexanderMiller0 Courtney LynnMiller *** A0 JacquelinN eicoleMiller 0 BaileyJoyMills A0 Christopher AllenMinshew FelicityAnnMiskimon AlexisReneeMitchel" tt BethannieNicoleMobley Mitch GrantModin"' ll 0 JuanHernandezMolina RaechelAnnette Moregi*'" t Jk0 Keegan AndrewMuginnix0 AileenCaraMurphy" "" Jk0 JohnPatrick Murphy Matthew JackMurphytt KirstenMarie Murren * ** tt 0 Logan ThomasMyerstt 0 Jourdan Scot Neal TaylorJamesNeal' MckenziT eaylor Nelson Anderson DangThinhNguyen Alexzandra MaeNizinski0 TannerLeeNobentt TaylorDeanNolan Jaimee AllissaNothiger0

TravisJoshu aNuneztt Shannon MarieO'Grady Macke nzieMaeO'Toole Anthony LeeOliver ConorJohanOlsen CarlosGiovaniOrozcoRodriguez0 MiguelAgnelOrtega KelseaLaurenPacheco AlexisIvan Pelayol}uiroz* ** Jk 0 RianNicolePena WyattMichaelPenington Rhianna LoreePeterson SethStephenPfister0 James EdwardPhelan RileyMaePickel* 0 NicholaRsyanPierce" tt 0 LarissaAnnPlessz CaitlinMaePrat t A0 EmilySarahPrice* ** tt 0 Amand aJustynePuga MarlaRkaRauscher+ CruzReneRazoNoriega DevinDeanReed AudreyNicoleReeves* ** Jt 0 ClayBryanReinhardt DeniseAshleyRising KarenJulissaRivera LoganNicoleRobbins Morgan LeighRoberts** tt TaylorComptonRoberts TrevorScot Roberts*** tt 0 TylerLewisRobertson HannahJ eanRobinsontt SalvadorRoblesJk WesleT yylerRoRins Lati shaMercedesRonningen AnnaChristineRoshak* ** tt 0 Chase EugeneLeeRoss BeauLynnRunyan Kristopher Daniel KaiserSagers MichaelLoganSall DanielJoseph Schimmoller* t Jk 0 LeviLouisSchlapfer AlizaGraceSchloesser* A 0 Jona'eMarieSchoen0 ChadNolanSchoenborn* ** Jt 0 BrianChristopherSegaga KianaSkyeSell DaneAndrewShaver Thomas KyleShaver" B0 MeganNicoleShaw DukeAnthonyShenkJt l}uincy IdanhaDrewShepard-Mate KassidyMariahSherman* tk 0 EmileeAnnShevlin DaltonChristopherShooks ErikAugustSiefken* AustinHegerSilbermanA0 Rebecka AnneSipeJk Katie Jo Smith*** B 0 KimberlyReneeSmith* B0 Michege JanaeSmith Jamie ElaineSouthworth TroyEliasScott Sprague Savanna MarieStebbins ArisaRachegeSteece** A 0

AlyssaAnnLeeSteele Hannah GraceSteria Tess AbigailStern * DakotaKainoaSterner WilliamDakotaStevensontt SierraLorraineStewart *** B 0 TaylorElizabethStinnet AlexKaytlynnSullivanA KaytlinRoseSullivan DylanDakotah-OliverSutich DakotaAlanTague0 ChaddEdwardTaula'i TatumElizabethTemplett TravisJayTgrudzinski TonyWayneThomas, Jr. Cayden CoalThompson* JakeWilliamThompson** Jk 0 BryceCraigTipton**" B Angelica AnnTrudeg KyleDouglasVanGordon*** t B 0 TaniaVereniceVasquez0 AndresRobertoVazquez Delaney MichegeVecqueray SteveViRanuevaAvalos MarkusMichaelVolkmann+ AshgyJac klynVonHurst CieraBobbieWaldrup** tt KipperAndrewWalls** tt0 SeanAlanWalsh Kennedy RayneWaltersB0 NicholasCharlesWard RobertKevinWeant,Jr. TobiasLukeWebb* CourtneyDawnWelch**" B 0 DevinEarl Welch LexiGraceWelch*** tt0 DylanKenyonWells* JeAnna KathleenWells*** A AlexaDeannWestberg* ** Jk 0 KatherinePaigeWestoby** B 0 BradyMarieWhatleyt Jacob GeorgeWalterWheelert0 Saman thaCaraWheelis LaceyMarieWickersham*** n tt0 Jenna NicoleWigems AbigaiJe l annineWillis * B 0 Annabel SusanWillis *** tt 0 CayleeAnnWilson Joshua LaVernWilson SarahNikoleWilson* 0 AshleyLinnayWinchell Harrison MichaelWirtz Zachary PaulWitsch0 PaulDanielWoods KatieLynnWright NatalieShireenZadeh * Goldno Ho rCord(3.5+G.PA.) ** Honors + Foreign ExchangeStudent f APScholar n APScholarwithHon or 0 CareerEndorsementCertificate A EssentiaSk l ils Certificate InformatioisncurrentasofMay1T,2013


Kaycee NicoleAlen CharisaCoHynBates Rosem arieDawnBlake GavinReaseBoen HaileyBrewer Benjaman WayneBrown EthanWyatt Brown MitchellEug eneBush AlexJosephCannon Brody KevinCarpenter RenaeAnneRoseCarter AustinWiliamCavaness Nicholas Garrett Clark CodyAllenClubb Vencent T.Coddington Richard M.Collins AlexisRaeannConklin TimothyConnoly KaraDelM arie Cope TheresaM.CraH Breanna MicheHeCram DevonB.Cram

DennisDaniel Crow Gareth AlexanderDahlgren EmilyMarieDennis Jeremy Anthony LeeDesrosIers• CiaraNicoleDarakjian ChristopherRobert DiCato PaulMichaelDiLorenzo KaylieDowling TiffanyLeAnnDrevo DarrinDou glas DuHey TimothyScott Ebner ChaseAlan Fahning DennisAnnFarley HeatherReFarweH HeatherCharleneFisher CheryceAubriForeman CaseyAyeForester SamuelAnthonyFrick Jeremy G.Friton Joshua Alen Gacke CamdenPeterGall ColtonRandaHGeorge

RobertRayGrant AbbyeNoeHeGray KeHieArleneGrigsby ChristopherDeanHaley DylanRayHall ChristianDoyleHarris TristanSeanHarris WilliamMathewHarris Mariah ShahenaHatfield AshleeReneeHorn MaKenziJ.eHuddleston HollyJeanJackson ErikaJohnson KoleWiliamKimmel ZackaryMathewKnabe Cameron JosephKraft Chance Link KelsiBrianneLoyd MarsheH eJordanMalmay Clint DarreH Manes BrendanForrestMann HaileyChristine McCarty

BridgetAnneMcDonald Samanth aLouiseMcPherson KiraMayMocan TylorJackMooney Christa Layerne-BeH eMorehouse • Joseph RobertThomasMorehouse, BrookeAshlynnMoss SarahAnneMoye TaylorMicheH eRead LoganAshlin Ringer KurstineMarieNaiHon Zane Garrett Na ylor BrandonLeeNelson TaylorJamesOgle ErikJohn-Thomas Page AlexanderL Pappas BuckParsley Joshua Taylor Pate DillonLeePatrick CodyLeePerkins Alexandra LeePlover Elizabeth Maire Quintana

Joshua Mathew Ramirez ZacharyReid Jacob AnthonyRichardson RogerLeeRies Hl KeandraMarieRenzelman CassandraRoes JessieRayeSealey BrittaneyBonnilynnSearcy JesseWadeSeehawer WilliamHarrisonSiauw LandonJamesSkopp NicholasSteinbach ChristopherJaredStephens TristinMarieSuton Joseph AaronSwayze ChanseEdwardSyres TaylorValentinTavares RettaElizabethTedrow KeHey MasTerreH CodyTho mpson DeannaMarrieThompson DestinyToruno

• •

• •

Joseph TylerTugweH Lauren Marithy Walters Jo nah Michael Wa tkins Roseanne Marie Williams Joseph GlennWilson JustinJayWilson TaylorAnnaMarie Wyse JesseAllenYoung Kaylee-Jo Zogg Class Motto: "Don'tcrybecau seit's over,smilebecause ithappened."—Dr.Seuss Class Song: "Hall ofFam e" byTheScript, featuring wiH.i.am

"tsy-.l ity, .

1

tw r

'I

jl' i ForestLayneBaer AutumnWillow Bell StephanieNicholeByers AngelNarcisoContreras SaulSantoyoCortez Gunner JamesCrawford DeidraNicoleDiHard ZacharyJohnDouglas DianaFlores ZacharyMichealForsberg JosephWayneGann PaytonRaeGress-Bohren Ayabeye Hernandez SileaMarieKalebaugh JessieAaronKeHough MorganJoannaKing Julie Alexandra KoHerer ElizabethRaeLantis DavidGregoryLee KalaRaeLittle DamianMartinez Mendez Nicol eMckenzieLeasonMong DylanColeMontes

C OO VtOttATULyxT1O

UI •

o

DylanZacharyMorley AungSanMyat LineaJoNeumann, First HighestGP AStudent EmilyJeanRemington LucasPatrick Reyes-Owings JadeMoniqueRobeson LauralynKathleenSearcy GabrielRobert Shelton Zachar ySteveSimmons JesseLoveSommers-Merced HannahMarieSpears, Second Highest GPAStudent AdamJohnTappert NathanDaniel Uriz ZevenAnthonyViero MeganReneeWard BryannaMarie White NathanieRo l bert Wise MHS ClassMotto: Wecannotliveforyesterdayoryesterday's dreams, but onlyfortodayandtomorrowsreality.

Marshall High School Class of 2013 Photo by Scott Meredith

S UMM E R SPECIAL 'I I ' .

• •

.

SERVICES: Laser Hair Removal, Fillers, Botox, Skin Tightening, Facials and Fraxel.

N ORT H W E S T

M ED I S P A l a s e r

c e n t e r

541-318-7311 i www.nwmedispa.com 447 NE Greenwood • Bend THE BULLETINI 5


JamesDeanAbbas RobertJ.Adams Miranda ReneeAguilar JoeCopenhaverAguilera CooperD.Alexander WhitneyMeleah Allen* KyeeshaArleneAlvarez ZacharyJ.Andruss JesusEmmanuelArreola LucilleMarieAusman* WendyAyalaMolina TaylorMcKenzie Baca Johanna Marie Bailey * DanieUe AshleeBaker TannerScott Barber Tanner GlenBarichio CyleLewisBarker Alexander SalvadoraBarros JessicaBaumgartner * SarahBrookBeers Carolin Beysse U JeffreyJamesBierman" JasminM earie Bilyeu KarlyRuthBlaney DeenaMarie KayBorden Brayden Levi Bordges TrevorA.Branson LeviJ. Brant AlexSterlingBray JohnEdwinBreen Jacob Curtis Breitling Breanna MarthaGarcia Britt KyleAllenBrooks TannerJoseph BrouiHard BrianaNicoleBrown EmilyJoAnneBrown JaymeLynBrown KyleMatthewBrown KerriganTannerBryant DevinMikealBunce AllisonKayBurss AmandaL.Cain JosueJeremiasCaUes Jonathan Tyler Campagna JustinCamper EmilyAnnCapson"

BiancaLeticia Cardona : Tracen ZaneCardoza AcaciaBelleCarlin Matthew Robert Carpenter Matthew PalmerCarrel DaisyCastaneda Emily Catalda : TreytonJosephCentanni CharliJeanChalker : Jessica Ma rie Chandler HaydenClark HayleeMarieClark MarinaLeighClark . Stephani DeeneeClement : Riley DuaiCn oe Benjamin Paul Coles* MichaelaSueConley* KayleenLoraneConner EvanWiliam Cook Brayden Corner MisaelCorrea : StephenEarl Crabtree DylanRobert Craig CanonGregoryCravens CortneyAnnCrocket RileyThomasCron : Jessica AleneCurl KendaH YvonneCurrent KarsonHolt Cyr MickaelaLilaRebekah Cyrus* MatthewCharlesDahlen* OliviaReneeDaniels : JacobLeviDarrah ChandleJe r fery Davies Thomas Davies GuiUermoDeLaTorre : JordonDerrickson-Aguilera NathanieDa l vid Dial : Jordan Melissa Dicker MarcoAntonio Diego MarthaEstela Dominguez : Joseph Kevin Donohue Eric Michael Doolin : TannerDorricott MarissaDuchi

p8II l1 ii 4a

Top Row,Left to Right Cordell McKinney, Matt Dahlen, BenColes, Ashley Pesek, Jessica Baumgartner, Jordyn Lowen, SummerYoung, Johanna Bailey, Hannah Holley, Jordan Swaggerty. Middle Row: Lucille Ausman, Madison Duff, Lilianna Wagner, Katy Williams, Emily Capson; Bottom Row:Timothy Messner, Jeffrey Bierman, Liam Flynn, Conor Smith, AubreyJohnson, Michaela Conley, Mickaela Cyrus. Not Pictured: Whitney Allen, Rosie Skinner, Keely O'Kcefe, Joshua Suran,Jaclyn Parks,Jesse Stevens

• Blake Rob ert Duff : MadisonNivenDuff* : VictoriaLynnEaton : Gunnar Christian Egge : Colton Ellis . Jason Elmer : DamonManuelAyrda Escamia U AmberMaureenEverhart : Tyler R.Fish : TatyanaNicoleFletcher LiamRichardFlynn* : Andrew JamesForsgren : Christian J. Fuentes : Anthony JordanFuHerton : Jose Edua rdoGarcia : Codie Makaihla Garlitz : Jamie LynnGarr : Heidi McK enzieGaspereti • Casey Dti Ga stes : Trevor DilonGenz : TylerScottGeorge • Gabriel Jared Giacci

: AylaR.Gile : Bryan Giles • Matthew HunterGivens : Omega SierraGlenn : Kirk DanieGl l isson : TheodoreRobert Godfrey : Nicholas OrionGonzales : Aide Gonz alez : Jose Edu ardoGonzalez TrujiUo TylerJohnGorden : Zachary WayneGover : JoseD.Gradi aU • BenjamiRo nssGreen : Elijah PhiGro lipoms : Oliver Gun ther : BrendaGutierrez : AshleyLaurenHalkola ..JacobAlexanderHall : LorraineHamilton : Hannah MoorHammack ZacharyNathaniel Hannem ann

JustyGraceHanson PerneH CarolineHarris ZackaryHartzeH HeideeLeeannHarvey AshleyMarieHauser SkylerHeathHawks ClaudiaHernandez Marissa Hesselgrave ShelbyMicheH eHetrick Tyler Higgins KaileeDanieUeHightower SharonRoseHill . Trevor MatthewHindman Barbara TaylorHinton NicoleAnnHoffman HannahK. HoHey * ColtonPatrickHoward AshleyNicoleHunsaker JosephM.Jackson Kelsey JilJackson JaironDavidJacobson AlexisMarleaJames Dustin ScottJeffers

cc> p

IRSIJQIRI 2 STORES IN BEND:

w

NO PURCHASENECESSARY Coupon expires 8/31/13 Not valid with any other offer.

IN REDMOND:

NE3RDfk REVERE'541-3891272 j5HWY91 fkMURPHYRD'541-3826761 SW10THg HIGHLAND '541-3826161

L ~

~

~

6 I GRADUAT10N 2013

mJ

JessicaLayneJensen TaylieLynnJensen AlexanderPaulJohnson Amanda JordanJohnson AubreyAUie Johnson* JasperN.Johnson JenniferRebeccaJohnson KeUeeChristian Johnson KyleeMarieJohnson NathanAllanJohnson JonasKahler Jacob ThomasKelly KevinKenel KirstinMarieKeyte UtahKaneKimbaU CassidyLynKing MicahAveryKing Sommer ElizabethKirk JustinKnapp HaileyMarie Konze ClaytonBruceKronsberg KeithRobert Kronsberg KamreinLeroyLaemmle JadenlanD'ArtagnanLake SydneyK.Langdon GeoffreyWayneLasater Brennan F.Lash BrockAshtonLash Andrew Scott Leeland CastiUoNathaniel Lepez MikaylaRenaeLeroue KieferRossLeutschaft Tyler Lindbeck Chance Lindquist Flor Briceyda Lopez MonicaReneeLopez DayanaLopezParada Amanda Elizabeth Lovsness JenniferGwynnLovsness ElizabethAnnLowe JordynElizabethLowen"

CaylaDeannLussier ShadrachJ.Machau DonaldWiliam Macneish AshleeAnnMagiH AlexanderDouglas Mangan BrianWayneMann TravisNoleMarks KendaH MarieMarshal BradleyScott Martin ZaneRa y Martin MelissaRaeanneMartinson MussaMashakaMbugi AryeUeMakai McBride ConorPatrick McCue JacobDaniel Mclntosh MollyElizabethMcKenzie BrandonL.McKiernan CordeU Allen McKinney" CourtneyUeneMcLean RandaU MichaelMeddaugh Zochil Mend ez-Verduzco NataliaAleksandrovna Menshova TimothyMichaelMessner* BlakeWiliamMitchell Tefna RayeHMitcheU-Hoegh KorreyLynMoeckel Hailie Molina EmmaDonMonroe JessicaMicheHeMurasko LeahRoseMurphy JonathonNace DanielAlbertoNa jera Mitchell B.Nave RichardDaniel Neel AubreyLynnNelson JessicaNelson JosueG.Nieves AlyssaB.Nitschelm KeelyBriannaO'Keefe* DaisyJanetOlivera Diaz AustinMichaelOntjes MichaelAnthony OreUana HaileyBlaizeOsborn Brice Palen TimothyPaUozzi JaclynMarieParks* Justin R.Parsley CharlesNelsonPayne AlejandraMoncerat PenaSantana MoniqueE.Penick Joshua G.Peplin TeaganBrookePerkins AshleyPesek * Cameron Scot Peters BaileyMariePhilips ShelbyTracePick NathanLewis Pielstick AshleyMistyMariePike EmilyElizabethPiper MarcusLeonPitzer DianaPlascencia-Martinez KaomaPonceLuna

Rosal ieGenevievePoppe NathanielAndrew PoweH ZacharyLewisPoweU Braedon M.Price Joshua Leel}uattlebum AdamC. RainviUe TravisRalph Vanessa Janet Ramirez KelseyMarieRedden Zamesha JadeReitz LoganMitchell Re y TrevorDaytonaRhoden Tabbitha Marie Roberts AlexanderW.F.Rockow MasonPaul Rodby KayleeArdeURogers JavenWayneRoHins HaydenRobert RothbaHer EmilyWiHmyrth Roundtree SaraRu iz-Robles MatthewCharlesSadony VicenteSaldana DanielEnriqueSamayoa BrodyWayneSanchez BrandonOctavio Santos Zamora BrittneyR.Sarkisian SumnerAtleySaulsbury MirandaNicole Schmidt Samanth aBonnieScholz KellyMarieSchubert DeniseSegoviano SoniaSegoviano BobbyGailonSensenbach FelipeDeJesusSerrano LucasA.Shaffer SarekStephenShields CaseyWiliamSholes BrandonLeroyShort AndriaDawnShowers AshleyLeannSidoti DeclanKaiSiewert MycalG.Sigado BrentAlanSimpson ChadLeeSimpson HaileeNicoleSkala RosieJoSkinner* DanieHe NicoleSkranak AshleyMarieSmith ConorLawrenceSmith * Kaitlin Nicole Smith HaleyJeanSmits Lindsay D.Soliz MichelinaMarieSolomon Anthony Joel Sotelo DureeStandley AlexandryaTianneSteHer KarissaDawnStephenson JesseRaeStevens* RicheeLeeStevens AmeilyaLaurenStreeter JasonLeeSturdy BrentAllenSuing Joshua Scott Suran"

JordanEllenSwaggerty * NoeUe Christine Swee lan HunterSwift KendraRaeSword BeauM.Taynton DanielJ.Thomas JosiahJamesTippets BenjaminJamesTolke HaydenMichaelTolzman AmaiaMaeTotorica JarrettSha unnUnverzagt ChristopherEu geneUpton MirandaKateUreH DianaUreno YosefA.Valdivia Perez JenniferRoseValenti KyleDwight Verburg Elias VillaEstrada Guadalupe ViHagomez Gonsalez YoselinViramo ntes Gamboa RachelLynnVogt ChristopherJamesVoigt LiliannaWagner* AlexanderRyanWales CiaraChristiannaWallace AustinTaylor Walsh ZizhenWang RebeccaAnnWarren TracyAnnWatkins AaronJamesWebb Steve nRaymondWeirbach JordanDale Welch EricaLynnWhite JenniferRos eWhite NatashiaMiquelWhite Hayden JamesWhitehurst ConnorJ.Whitlow KellyAnnWhitt KeisenMarie Wilber AnnRa chealWilliams Katy Jo Williams" KodyToddWilliams Megan AnastasiaWilliams RalynThereseWilliams Jazzm yneDarleneWiHingham Stephen Michael Witherow BrodyWittenburg MichaelaJeannineWolff KatelynnMarieYoung Summer K.Young* HaleyBrianaZook * Valedictorian

MOTTO: "kpeare the last to standtogether; wearethe last to walk together,anddownthis road, wewill be the last to leavetogether."


JasminA ebarca JohnHarrisonAdamek BrandonCharlesAlexander MeHisM aarieAllison JadeMarieAnderson* JordanDuaneAnderson Ali MckenaApperson Bertrand MauriceJosephAsselin DawsonKeith Barber CodyWyatt Barney DavidAlexanderBennett JacobBennet ShadBennight KatrinaJeanBenzkofer KaitlynReneeBlank CodyBryanBlankenship * Harli Bowers JedidiahBridge EthanAdamBuchheit ChristopherAndrew Bush* DarienChristopher Campo BrittanyDanieHeCastiHo JohnSamuelChandler AmandaClawson ClayCoffman AlexShayCox RobertWiliamJamesCox SamanthaJoCurry Deserae HopeDalton DylanDean* DillonJeffreyDees Quinn RaymondDemaris Bowdey JoeDye MichaelGeorge Egbert AnaMariaElias ShantellNicoleEmhof-Foss RubyEverett Larry S. Farrington

ShelbyMelissa Hazel Fioravanti OryWalterFoltz AndreaMarie Fraser * DominicJuliusGates GeoffreyGen eGerdes AmberDesirea Gienger KyriaChareeGoertzen ShelbiLynnGrant TaylorGrant JustinLeeGratreak MarcusGreaves AlissaLaNa eGreen EmilyAnneGreenberg AshleyNicoleGriffin MichaelMilesGrimes StetsonDavid Hal HaleySueHalsey ColbyRayHammeH BrittneyLaNaeHerber * CarlyJeanHibbs,Valedictorian * Courtney AnnHibbs, Valedictorian * AndrewJamesHill AustinAlanHil TaylerEldonHil AnthonyJosephHoward BethanyRoseJohnson* HalieMarieJones DanielKeffer NatalieMarieKimmel PatrickKing-Farley EmilyFaithAnnKozey Devon Emmitt Kruse Breanna Gail Larkin KyleLee KeniaJ. Leon-Mora * Makayla BreanneLindburg Casey Nichol Herr-Little TeraChristineHerr-Little

BrittneyRoseLockling JordanMathew Loomis JessieMarieLoper, Salutatorian * AlonzoStevenLopez ShelbyMaden JacobChristian Mahurin DaltonMalone MeganN.Malone Chelsea DawnMartin Brenda Martinez Jessicah RaeannMeeker AndresMendoza TaylorLeAnnMichel Torri Rose Michel CarrieLeannMiller DerickTylorMiler JasonMiler AneishaAnnMix JosephLawsonMorgan Stephen AlexanderMorgenstern SarahElizabethMarie Myers BryannaMarie Nelson JackieLeeNelson* CaseyNicholsen LorenaNunez JonahOoten OliverPeterson JaredMichaelPucket TiffanyKathleenPucket Brayan QuirozBarajas LivieBessRaymond MiHicentReed BenjaminMolina Reyes* MarisolReyes Rainey JadeRoberts * Jourdan DianeRobirts * SaraMicheH eRoss* LaneJosephRutz*

JoeSaenz MelanieLyne'Salisbury JavierSanche z PaigeMarieScofield TiffanyReneeShuH AnyssaMicheleSmith DeanThomasSmith MirandaJoeSmith NicoleMarieSmith KerseyVictoria Stegman NatalieTamarStenbeck* SamanthaMarieStephens NathanielStevenson ChadStewart KatieLeeStout Chance MarxSutfin RamiroTapia EloisaTerrazas EmilyJeanTho mpson Kimber leyAnnThompson EdgarToledo DakotaTyger JessicaVazquez DillonViescas MollyMaeViles OmarViHagomez BryannaJoLeneWalker PhillipWallace PrestonWayneWashechek LyleWebber ConnieMarieWeger Shawna West AshleyJordanWhite CalebAustin Wiliams Nikki Elaine Wiliams AndrewRayWitherspoon AnnMarieYanez BrandonRonald Zemp*

CENT RALOREGON INTERGO VERNMENTALCOUNCIL(COIC) ChristianDlouhy DenniseGraceHinton FOREIGN EXCHANGE PitlasperLee-Germany Guadalupe Doria — Argentina * Honors Diploma PIONEER ALTERNATIVESCHOOL R.J. Ainsworth LorenaBentley NicholasDezini Brown DarrienWadeCollins AlejandroNicholasFrausto KatieRicheH eGregor GabrielGlenHeath CodyJohnson AaronLamance AshlynneMason MarkMonroe NatoshaCiera Newstrand KadeRileyNichol ReneeNicholsen Shyanna Kristine Schwartz KevinVilagomez RobertWa terman Shelena Wells MariahVictoria Wood

gi/

TopRow,left to right: ConnorBriggs, AmyConklin, FaithAmati Second -From-TopRow:RickyMiller,CooperAnderson,DavidHouston,ReaganKnopp Second-From -Bottom Row: Grant Moss, Ethan Landers, Allison Lee,SarahLueling, SarahMcCoy BottomRow:Kerilynn Ayers, Cassie Klein, MaeganBulis, NathanHildebrandt, DanielDeCeles, JaredChandler

a

4

s

Not photographed: RosalindaCorning, Daniel Sprando,TylerSwan, Daniele Higgins

THE BULLETINI 7


Nieman TroyAdams-Jackson MichaelaLarisaAdams-Kalama Teneasha CharneaAdams NoraNellyAguirre Anthony Deveraux-DeeAUbritton AnaKarenAlvarado ElizabethLeeAnnArmitage JazminAlexis BandaTorres Joseph Barrera Vargas CadaleanaNatalya Bates Perez ZackeryLeeBenham CristianBen itez Yanez AliciaDawnBooren SarahMarie PaigeBrown KaseyJayCabral Maria DeLosAngelesCarranza KaitlynNicoleCarter ColtonJayCartney DevinAustin Cecilani RodrigoGutierrezChamu HanselEderCha vez TahmairaElaineClements DesireeEleseCoUver AmberLynneCoonce MiahnaKay Marrie CoreHa AlexisGonzales Correa Jonathan Cortez GavinGarrenCrist NicoleDanieHeDavies AbbyLynnDavis Timothy AllenDeyore,Jr.

I

MariaTeresaDiaz : Justin Che yenneDonovan : NancyJeanette Downey : StarrLynnEbersole : Mileena Raelee Edwards . Marth aLuciaEspinosa-Mundo : Salina YvetteEsquivel : AraceliEstrada-Alejo • Madeline GiseUeFigueroa : MicheUe DezireeFigueroa : AndrewPhilip Fine

JackLouisFine RobertluddFine ChristopherRalphFisk TylerDaneFoster CalebGuy Freshour JuanCarlosGarcia-Alvarez EliceoAngel Garcia-Mata LauraTasha-AimeeGarcia StephaniS ehantal Garcia UzielGarcia JordanConstantinos Gemelas

~

,

(

TylerJustinGeorge DianaGonzalez-Celestino NatalyGonzalez BekkaKayGott KatrinaLeeGreene Andrea NicoleGuerin MarleniGutierrez-Acosta JasonGuzman-Covarrubias Yadyrah Lyzbet Haro-Gonzalez .' SteeleHeathHaugen Colto nAlmondHemenway

Joseph MontanaHisatake KelseyAraeHoffman Caitlin MicheH eHulsey TeganJeanHulsey Josephine DarleneHunt CleaIbrahim LisaMarieIke-Lopez ColbyDeanJack-Parks BryceKatonJohnson InezErnestineJones DustinWad eKenviUe

AmberLawrence-Solis MercedesMaria Lawrence MarlenPatricia Lopez-Guevara ' Clair ElyseManion NatalieKathleenMartin Horacio Martinez-Sifuentes LaneJoseph McDonald VanessaMendez DianaElizabeth-Menjivar DylanEliasMiler Rodney Eric Mitchell JamieLynnMoe RoyAnthonyMoroyoqui Hermene gildoCarlos Muniz Armando Navarro,Jr. AshleyJuneNichols TiffanyElaineNichols CourtneyAmberNolan TannerJamesNorwest TrentonJamesNorwest Noemi RocioOchoa-Espinosa DerrickLopez-Pacheco GuadalupeX. Pacheco ErikaPadron ZacharyScott Parsons AlexsisJose Penaloza AaronKareemPhillips NicholasW.Picard AshleeVanessaPineda AngelaLeticiaPolkRuiz Evelyn Quiroz

YeniferRamirez-Gonzalez Jonathan Ramos Lindsey CorinnaReeves GiseHeReynoso AzurGenisseRice-Presbury WyattQuaidRodin JamieElizabethRudd OrlandoRuiz-Andrade VeronicaIvetteRuiz YeseniaSalgado JaylenOrlandoSam Thij menSamayoa KatherinePatricia Sanmartin CastiHo (honorary;foreign exchange student) DaliaSarabia ShaiandraNevaLeeSaundersKalama RobertKevinShirtcliff, Jr. LaurenElizabethSimmons KalebDavidSmith TristonWadeSmith StaphanyReyesSolis BrysonColeSpino RobertGarySpino Tre' ShawnRavenStacona-Mejia JessicaRaeEHenStinson Shoshanna MaeStreet lan ChristopherSym ons EmilyMicheleTaylor GarrettLeeTaylor

JoshuaKyleThompson MarvinRTThompson WoodrowHarveyTohet Smith MerlinErnestTom EthanJohnTracy KodyWayneTurner CristalValerio-Baltazar Miguel AngelVasquez JesusVazquez LatishaMalika Waheneka Jonathan Paul Wald CherishAbigail Wason AshleyNicholeWelden HaleyDebra Wells MichaylaRaeWilliams Kenneth KoleWills JhaylenMurphyYeahquo NathanPaulYoungman PaulRobert Yow MichaelDamonZacariasWhipple

R1

( QTIGRAT< LA T I Q A I>

VI

'i4p' A

PIIGIGITUOITIOIIS

Left to Right:TylerDunn,Chenru Zhao, AbbeyCarpenter andKelseyPolk CLASSVERSE: "AndI amsureof this, that hewhobeganagoodworkin youwill bring it tocompletion atthedayof JesusChrist." Philippians1:6 Photo by ShannonPolk

eentral eliristi~an Righ Sehool

01" I

0 '%L

xw '.:

8 1 GRADUATION 2013

Madison Allen IsaacBryant TraverCarlson,Honors diploma, Valedictorian DanieHeCheney

Desiree'Duke DanieHeDuren CalenFitzsimmons, Honors diploma,Salutatorian SamanthaFoster

NancyHarris JoshuaHole Abigail Mahnke IsaacReynolds MackenzieRussel

z 0

z

x C

z r0


LaurenAlexander AshleeAndren RexBarberHI RileyBarrett, Valedictorian* MarissaBendel TylerBerg SamanthaBeymer NicolasBlumm* AustinBoatwright Eli Boettner HarleyBowler JustineBruguier SamuelCalarco MarcyCalavan LeticiaCam pos, ExchangeStudent ; LaurenCantwell HollyChapman* Meghan Connolly * ColtonCooper Michaela Cornis Andrew Corrigan * JoshuaCrenshaw AndrewDyer Naomi Eckstine CassidyEdwards TrevorElson Johnathon Englich-MiRs DereckEnneberg ConorEvans DanyaEvans

• • •

OliviaFaludi Sydney Foteff Shannon Fouts, Salutatorian * MichaelaFujita-Conrads * Shoshanna Gauthier AngelaTeglia ChadGlanz IsaiahGlatz AdrianaGoodwin SpencerGreene AlishaHaken JacobHanson WilliamHarrison * JacobHeath * HaleyHedren AustinHinshaw StephenHouck

ChristopherHumphreys Elizabeth Isle IsaacJackson AustinJacobsen* KristinaJohns John-HenryJohn son HaydenJones NoahKanzig * MitchellKeranen ChristinaKokesh-Carhart AnnikaKudrisch, ExchangeStudent RyanLahey CodyLane JesseLarimore NicholasLarson* SkylerLaughlin EmmaleeLawson

SolsticeLing-Scott DanieRe Lovegren, Valedictorian* EricaLowry* PedroLucasHernandez TaylorLucas EthanLuloff AveryMartin ClaraMcC abe* JosephMcCabe EvinMccain-Aldrich BrittanyMcCleHan MatthewMcConneH GemmaMcGinness,ExchangeStudent JessicaMiler * Tiffani MiHim an MeganMinke

P P

Mckenzie Mitchell ColeMoore DexterMuller Kira Neil TaylorNieri,Salutatorian* ElissaOconnor LukeOlson NathanPajutee* Montann aPayment NatashaPepperling RyanPollard Jerrett Reed EHieRicker GabrielRietmann RossRobinson HannahRockwood BobbiRosaue r

• • •

MadisonRost * HarleyRo we MitchellSaba YuridiaSanchez MikaelSavol Excha a, ngeStudent LaceySchaf KileySheldon* BritneySimundson JaimeeSimundson ) L~ Qf AndrewSnyder* ( 1 Katherine * Ste wart ShelbiThompson CierraTigard PaigeToseHo* KyleVanKrieken NoelVirgenChavez DavidVitelle AweraVogel JordanWiliams * DillonWitt

* Honol's

Class Song:"Kids"byMG MT Class Flower:Rose Class Color:Turquoise Class Motto:"If YouAin't First, You're Last."-RickyBobby

II I% QuintonLel}uieu ZacharyLofting s

w

KyleMacias

I

A

~

I

NicoleMadsen DustinMarkel MichealaMiler MisaelMorales Cristal Munoz -Toledo SabrinaNavarro Shayne Petersen GemmaRosales-Ruiz MariaSanchez

KristeanaTichenor StephaniW e hiteside AshleyWilda TuckWiliams

Good Xuek

To@ll The Cmduates of 2018!

DiegoSanchez

KyleBelanger Dillon Brown MonikaByrd BrittneyCather JahnieCleveland

RyanFritz CassandraRobinett-Fulton ClayGibson GersonGonzalez JaredKasch

JessicaKnotek Garrett Knotek KevinKnudson Cayden Krivinko

Zachary Leeper

LoriSandy ChantelleSeehawer Justin Shaw NicoNeSheweN ColeSimmons MorganSurratt-Walters

I g

R A

I I

I

M

AaronTaylor EduardoTerrazas

Jeep '

Hvunoat

THE BULLETINI 9


ZaneMartinAnderson SarahChristeneArcher BrandonMichael Boehrs AlexanderJosephGiovannetti DeniseNicholeGordon Aleya Matsoe JoyHarris AshleyReneeJames TaranSandersKoch JordynNicholeJohnson

Darryl LeeLowel Katlin Roze Neff JevonLeyghPainter Asia Dawn Perkins

PaigeAshleyKooker DavidDilonLink

Hig~hSeheel BackRow,left to right: WyattSmith,DilonEdwards, Vandal Pline. MiddleRow:Conley Kittredge, TrentEmery, David Ward, BradLibolt, JoshHand, Shelby Swearengin.FrontRow:CaHieWilson, AndrewMiles, RavenWaldron, SabrinaHanson

|lk

Co-Valedictorians: BradLibolt, AndrewMiles, RavenWaldron(al threehave4.DGPA)

R SCcL e S P ro Golf of Be n d

-P~ d ~

-

Aeail of Central Oregon

C entral Or e gon G r a d u a t e s! & H H

R D L F

play smart

dF No matter how you hit it, we can help. In Bend River Plaza, just north of Macy's. 541-593-4653 10 I GRADUATION 2013

NiknGianninses


P

BrianMartinez AndrewL.Newton Dillon R.Niccum AnthonyJ.Parker MicahC.Sisson EddieI.ViUarrealCastiUo CesarE.Alvarado StephanA.Palmer EricaAguilar Chipres MonicaBedoHa-Hernandez Andrea E.Forsyth AbigailDlmso StephaniL. e Sherfield MaribelMendoza-Govea Chelsea Joyner-Wilson

ShaneA.Abbott DavidJ.Ayala-Regalado Paul AJ D'Antonio MichaelR.lensen DaltonJ.Jones NeryA.Ramirez GabrielJ. Weaver Wick,ConnerM. StevenMartinez-Lopez JohnK.ConneU Armando Peregrina Walter R. Britt Austin K.Carlan KennedyE.Dinkel Tyler D.Hyde

1

V

R'eInioNN. PI'05.eicitey A'eRtleM BrendaPaigeAdams AngelaKristineAnderson MackinziAn e nApperson'"' Nicholas EricAschenbrenner" JessicaAnnette Baca TalonMichael Bailey BaileighPageBaker KileyElaineBaxter GageRenoBeemish' TroyRichardBenton DevinWiliamBlackler Elayna Nicole Boot, Valedictorian""' BrandonLavelBrawner SophieBreunig' RachealBrunoe Kathryn MicheH eBryant'" AmandaMarie Burcham' HarleyLynnByram ZacharyAllanCannon SallyElizabethClaridge,Valedictorian Myranda AnnClipfeH Edward Michael Coddington'"' Rita MariC eohen'" CaeliaRoseCroft KaUee DeanneCross" Rylie JoDehiya Joshua AllenDeWitt ' TaylorGraceDick'"' TaylorKathleenDockins'" AnaleeMaeDunn SawyerEnsz BriandaJoannaEsquivel MikaelaElizabethFarasyn" DanieUe Christine Fuler

EmilyFrancesGaffery ' TaraNicoleGoad CaitlinMarieGreen" Joseph Timothy Grier, Salutatorian '" I! AaronMickeal Haertle ' DustinJohnHenderson,Valedictorian tin AbigailRoseHenry"' GarrettTaylorHodgson ChristinaRenee' Hornbeck'" CameronDennisHubbard LukeDouglasHudson'" Brianna Marie Hunt" StephaniKa e yJacobson"" LindsayAnnJohnson SierraAshley Kampfen KevinMatthewKlett '"' AustinLeeKroske' YungYeungKenneth Lau KaitlynLeslieMalott JessicaRoseMarthaUer '" Amanda LeeMcCoy'" TiffanyLisaMeyer ' RobertMarshallMichael Margaux AnnMohler ' KaitlynMaureenMonchamptm ' LaMiy aMcKenzieNance Alexandra Marie NeweH,Valedictoria n tttli! EmilyJeanPayne' Dakota ShalomQuattlebum ShaneErin Ray KerstaMarie-AnnReed' Sheyenne Noel Reynolds' Cari-KaitlynGabrieUeRobison CaraNicoleSanchez

KaraLynScharton'" KimberlyErinSchloesser" CorySeverance' CierraRoseMorganShawetm AshleyElizabethSizemore Andrew Michael Solorzano' Courtney NicoleStarr KaseyJeanStevens RekiahJoyStone' John-Tho masStory Breeana KayThompson Breanna ElizabethTorres' MichaelJohnTuttle Shelb yRoselynnUlam" KenndraLeighUrbach PaigeJordanVanNorsdaU Grace AHynVeldsma"'' Caitlin Daniela Vila WhitneyKathleenWaite" JessicaChristine Wester" AustinJame sWeyand-' Bethany JoyWilliams" WyattAugustusWillis" Kaylee AnnWilson'" IsaacZendejas ' JuanJonasZendejas

ki:

/

L.

/ / 1

p•

y

ED ITT OnO R 0 F IC IE n C'I

academy IKIIiBII i~ STANLEY STEEMER. r t

p

' National HonorSociety " Honorary Diploma ' Proficiency HonorCords " AcademiH conorCords3.5+GPA Thespian Honor Cords ' ScholarshiR pecipients

Stay Clean in ' i3 CARPET ITILE & GROUT IHARDWOOD IFURNITURE

Serving Central Oregon 541-706-9390• 1-800-STEENiER Schedule Online at www.stanleysteemencom THE BULLETIN j 11


Hayden Maverick Baney

CONGRATULATIONS

Curt 8t Robin

Baney Bend Senior

High

H A'

DE N

'wl

."a

res

+l I Ciara Hogue

Megan Quinn

Amanda & Alyssa Pease

Macaela Perez

Michaela Susan Simalamailagi Young

Dave 8t Kim Hogue

Robert 8t Lil Quinn

Mike 8t Patrice Pease

Rudy 8t Jodie

Stephen 8t Michele Young

Bend Senior High

Bend Senior High

Bend Senior High

Bend Senior High

Bend Senior High

Cooper Anderson

Ashlee Renee Horn

Brent Cc Darlene Anderson Homeschool

La Pine High School

Jennifer Horn

k(p rjb o

w

i~ '4

d'.

Alexis Conklin

Rosalinda Grace Corning

Brianna M Comiskey

Hailey Konze

Jennifer Conklin

Bill tk Lucy Brackett

Elizabeth Comiskey

Tammy Konze

Josh Peplin Todd tk Candy Peplin

CathyHammackti DougHammack

Hannah Hammack

Brandon McKiernan Tonya McKiernan

La Pine High School

Liberty Homeschool

Marshall High School

Redmond High School

Redmond High School

Redmond High School

Redmond High School

Braedon J. Petrus

s•

a

.I

sl,

ea

s

Jacob Munsell

Jessica Baker

Stephen Drgastin

Ryan Shields

Brit Rose Oliphant

Brandon Katter

Dave 8i Connie

Stace 8i Amy Baker

Steve 8i Lori Drgastin

Mark 8t Kristin Shields

WendytttcDonald&Dennis Oliphant

Shelly Himler & Stuart Katter

Joel tk Della Petrus

Summit High School

Summit High School

Summit High School

Summit High School

Summit High School

Summit High School

Summit High School

MidOregon Credit Union good friends. great service.'

C7 -"'N Q U A raw.wsstos

LENDER

,

.

- "" ' -

llus credttumon ts fedcrany insurcd by thc National (:rcdit

—.

Union Admintstratton.

WE HAVE MONEY TO LEND! Auto - Trucl< - RV - Home - Visa www.midoregon.com 541-382-1795

ss


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.