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TUESDAY August13, 2013
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SCHOOL DIRECTORY-
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
BEND
Expiring levies eyed amid city fire needs
Kicker with Bend ties — Ryan Longwell, who got his football start at Bend High School, is retiring as a Green Bay Packer.C1
San Francisco to L.A. in 30 minutes? — That's the idea behind billionaire entrepreneur Elon
• For Bend-La Pinehigh schools, it meansascheduling challenge; in elementaryschools, smaller classeswere keyto early literacy
Musk's futuristic transportation concept.A3
Easy pickles —Amethod
By Tyler Leeds
for those with no time to can.01
The Bulletin
OSij fOOtball —Freshmen Beavers learn the ropes.C1
Congressional app — Idea by a Bend native keeps Capitol Hill in the loop.B1
ln WOrld neWS —AI-Qalda, under a newname, expands in Syria.A2
And a Web exclusiveBooksellers turn to loyal cus-
tomers for help staying afloat. bendbnlletin.com/extras
EDITOR'SCHOICE
Bigger hospitals may leadto bigger bills
BACK TO SCHOOL
By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
Bend officials say local governments are on track to pay off construction debt from the Downtown Bend Public Library and several public safety buildings next year, and property owners would see little change on their property tax bills if voters approve a new fire department levy in 2014. Two Deschutes County bonds issued in 1996 are scheduled to expire in 2014. The county used a $14.4 million bond to build the public safety campus, which includes the Sheriff's Office, the inmate work center, the parole and probation building and the juvenile detention center. The county levies a tax rate necessary to pay annual debt service, nearly 13 cents per $1,000 in assessed property in the last tax year, county AccountingManager Jeanine Faria wrote in an email to the Sheriff's Office. County Sheriff Larry Blanton said Bend Fire Chief Larry Langston recently called him to find out whether the Sheriff's Office planned to seek any new levieswhen the campus bond expires in 2014. See Fire/A4
bendbulletin.com/ back2school
The Bend-La Pine Schools budget for the upcoming year will continue to force the district to face tough decisions regarding class sizes and course offerings. Between 2009 and 2012, dwindling school budgets forcedOregon elementary and high school class sizes up 19.6 and 28.6 percent, respectively, according to the Confederation of Oregon School Administrators. In that same period, the teacher workforce was reduced by 15.9 percent. Mirroring this trend, the operating expenditure per student in Bend-La Pine was $8,660 in 2011-12, down from a high of $8,793 in 2008-09, according to the Oregon Department of Education. This situation has created two distinct problems for the Bend-La Pine district. At the high school level, it has forced administrators to tolerate larger class sizes in required courses in order to maintain specializedofferings,such as AP or technical education classes. At the primary level,
Watch for this logo inthe paperand
Class sizesupinBend-LaPine
checkthe Web address above for
continuedcoverageon school-related issues.
Average class size and the student-teacher ratio in Bend-La Pine Schools continue to climb.
CLASS SIZEANDSTUDENT-TEACHERRATIO INBEND-LA PINE HIGH SCHOOLS •
Av erage class size •
40 35 34.4
St u dents per teacher
34.9
35
26 2
ing less time for planning,
35 30
25.8
25 20 15 10
0
34 . 9
spend more of the day teaching, though along with hav-
30
30.8
26 2
In 2011, high schools switched from a 4-block system to a 7-block system '08-'09
'09-'10
'10-'11
'11-'12
'12-'13
'13-'14
Source: Vicki Van Buren, Asst. Superintendent of Secondary Education Andy Zeigert /The Bulletin
class sizes have increased, reversing a trend toward smaller sizes that facilitated the success of the district's
early literacy program.
Faster pace To alleviate large classes at the high school level, the district switched from a four-period day to a seven-
period day in the 2011-12 school year, according to Vicki Van Buren, assistant superintendentofsecondary education. Under the new schedule, teachers still have one planning period, but its lengthhas decreased from a quarter of the school day to one-seventh. Due to this shift, teachers
they seea greater number of students per day. According to numbers provided by Van Buren, the average size of a high school classroom is currently 35.9 students. If the district switched to a four-period schedule, that number would jump to 41. In the 2008-09 school year, when the district used a four-period day, the average class size was 34.4. Had the district used a seven-period day, that number would have been 30.1. "We could take a hit in the number of teachers we had and maintain class sizes we had under a four-period-aday schedule by switching to a seven-period schedule," said Van Buren. "There is pushback because teachers see more students a day, and the pace is also much faster." SeeClass size/A4
Photo illustration /Andy Tullis /The Bulletin file photo
Local leviesthat expirenextyear
By Julie Creswell and Reed Abelson New Yorh Times News Service
Deschntes County public safety campus constructionbond: issued 1996; expires
Hospitals across the nation are being swept up in thebiggestwave ofmergers since the 1990s, a development that is creating giant hospital systems that could one day dominate U.S. health care and drive up costs. • Another The condelay to solidations are part of b e i ng driven by health a confluenceof law,A4 po w erful forces, not least of which is President Barack Obama's signature health care law, the Affordable Care Act. That law, many experts say, is transforming the economics of health care and pushing a growing number of hospitals into the arms of suitors. The changes are unfolding with remarkable speed. Two big for-profit hospital chains, Community Health Systems of Tennessee and Health Management Associates of Florida, are combining in a $7.6 billion deal. SeeHospitals /A4
/ ~ ts 4.
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sudoku, which appeared Monday, Aug.12, on PageC4,was incorrect. The correct solution
appears below.
bond:issued1996; expires December 2013
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By Kevin Sullivan The Washington Post
HERMOSILLO, Mexico — Milton Tepeyac, who served eight years as a U.S.
Marine, scrapes by on $3 an
By Meeri Kim The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — You feel yourself float up and out of
your physical body. You glide
The Bulletin regrets the
error.
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DowntownBend library construction
27
Explaining the near-death experience
Correction
June 2014
r
toward the entrance of a tunnel, and a searing bright light envelops your field of vision. Rather than an ascent into the afterlife, a new study
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 85, Low 57
page B6
saysthese features ofa neardeath experience may just be a bunch of neurons in your brain going nuts. "A lot of people believed that what they saw was heaven," said lead researcher and neurologist Jimo Borjigin. "Science hadn't given them a convincing alternative."
Scientists from the University of Michigan recorded electroencephalogram — EEG — signals in nine anesthetized rats after inducing cardiac arrest. Within the first 30 seconds after the heart had stopped, all the mammals displayed a surge of brain activity that had features associ-
ated with consciousness and visual activation. The burst of electrical activity even exceededlevelsduring a normal, awake state. In other words, they may have been having the rodent version of a near-death experience. See Near death/A5
The Bulletin
INDEX At Home 01- 6 C lassified E1 - 6 D ear Abby 06 Obituaries Busines s/Stocks 05-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope 06 Sports Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies
B5 C1-4 06
AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 110, No. 225, 30 pages, 5 sections
hour in this northern Mexican city, where he has lived since the U.S. government deported him in April. His rented room floods when it rains. Scorpions skitter in. To kill them, he had to pay an exterminator $40 — a third of his weekly
paycheck. Once he served in Kuwaiti in a recon battalion, a highly trained grunt monitoring the movements of Saddam Hussein's military across the border in Iraq. See Immigration/A5
+ .4 We userecycled newsprint
: IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
88 267 02329
A2
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GENERAL INFORMATION
NATION 4% ORLD
- ai a,un ernew n ame,e an sin i a
AbduCtiOn aftermath —A close family friend suspected of abducting a16-year old girl after killing her mother and younger
By Liz Sly
also have taken advantage of the vacuum of authority to carry out kidnappings for ransom, mostly of Syrians. But at a time when the Islamic State is undergoing a revival in Iraq, killing more people there than at any time since 2008 and staging a spectacular jailbreak last month that freed h undreds of m i l i tants, t h e push into Syria signifies the transformation of the group into a regional entity. The U.S. military — which referred to the organization as al-Qaida
NYC StOp aIId friSk —The NewYork Police Department illegally
in Iraq (AQI) — claimed it had
negotiations with the military-backed government, leaving the most populous Arab nation in an uneasy limbo. Still, the delay by
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OUR ADDRESS Street
communities in which it is present, including, crucially, areas BEIRUT — A re b r anded surrounding the main border version of Iraq's al-Qaida af- crossings with Turkey. filiate is surging onto the front Civilian activists, rival rebel lines of the war in neighboring commanders and Westerners, Syria, expanding into territory including more than a dozen seized by other rebel groups journalists and relief workers, and carving out the kind of have been assassinated or absanctuaries that the U.S. mili- ducted in recent months in artary spentmore than a decade eas where the Islamic State has fighting to prevent in Iraq and a presence. Afghanistan. Most ofthe cases are being In the four months since the kept quiet for fear of jeoparIraqi al-Qaida group changed dizing the victims' release, but its name to reflect its grow- the escalating pace of disaping ambitions, it has forcefully pearances isturning already asserteditspresence in some dangerous partsof rebel-held of the towns and villages cap- territory into effective no-go tured from Syrian government areas for many Syrians as well forces.Ithas been bolstered by as foreigners, deterring aid efan influx of thousands of for- forts and media coverage, and eign fighters from the region potentially complicating future and beyond. attempts to supply more-modThe group, now known as erate factions of the rebel Free the Islamic State of Iraq and the Syrian Army. Levant, is by no means the largWith multiple groups comest of the loosely aligned rebel peting for influence, the Islamic organizations battling to over- State cannot be held responthrow Syrian President Bashar sible for all the incidents that Assad, and it is concentrated have occurred in Syria. Jabhat mostly in th e northern and al-Nusra, the original Syrian easternprovinces of the coun- al-Qaida affiliate, which has try. But with its radical ideology resisted efforts by the Islamic and tactics such as kidnappings State to absorb it, maintains a and beheadings, the g roup robustpresence in many parts has stamped its identity on the of the country. Criminal gangs The Washington Post
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subdued AQI by the time the United States withdrew from Iraq in 2011. Evidently it di d n ot, said Bruce Hoffman, director of security studies at Georgetown University, who thinks Syria is even more strategically significant for the group than Iraq. Syria's location — the country shares borders with Turkey, Israel, Iraq, Jordan and Lebanon — gives al-Qaida a foothold in the heart of the Middle East, Hoffman said. "There are a lot of reasons to worrythat Syria will emerge as an even more powerful variant of what Afghanistan was more than 30 years ago," he said.
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MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Monday night are:
Q5014Q 15Q 36 Q 38Q44 The estimated jackpot is now $3 million.
and the NewYork Police Department havedefended as alife-saving, crime-fighting tool that helped lead the city to historic crime lows. The legal outcome could affect how and whether other cities employ the tactic.
EgyPt PrOteStS —Supporters of toppled President Mohammed Morsi increased the pressure on Egypt's interim leadership by defiantly flooding into two protest camps Monday, prompting
police to postpone moving against the 6-week-old sit-ins because they feared a"massacre." Morsi's Islamist backers have rejected the security forces gave the Sunni Muslim world's top religious institution more time to try to ease the political tensions with a new initiative.
Nigeria attaCk —Suspected Islamic militants wearing army fatigues gunneddown 44people praying at a mosque in northeast Nigeria, while another12 civilians died in anapparently simultaneous attack, security agents said Monday. Sunday's attacks were the latest in a slew of violence blamed on religious extremists in this West Afri-
can oil producer, where the radical BokoHaramgroup, which wants to oust the government and impose Islamic law, poses the greatest security threat in years.
Paula Deen diSCriminatiOn CaSe —A federal judge Monday threw out race discrimination claims by a former Savannah
restaurant manager whose lawsuit against Paula Deenhas already cost the celebrity cook a valuable chunk of her culinary empire. Lisa
Jackson sued Deen and her brother, Bubba Hiers, last year saying she suffered from sexual harassment and racially offensive talk and
General'S MideaSt trip —The chairman of the Joint Chiefs
Kerry iII COIOmbia —Secretary of State John Kerry met Monday with leaders of Colombia, Washington's top ally in South
America, in Bogota, Colombia's capital, offering support as ne-
'fll ' 1. j//g „'
gotiators move ahead with talks aimed at ending that country's
long-running guerrilla war, and seeking to assuage concerns over the scope of the National Security Agency's surveillance practices. Kerry's two-day visit to South America will include meetings on today in Brazil.
J.Z534
HepatitiS plea deal —A traveling hospital technician accused of infecting dozens of patients with hepatitis C through tainted
needles told investigators he hadbeen stealing drugs for more than a decade andwas "killing a lot of people," according to a plea agreement filed Monday that would send him to prison for 30 to 40 years.
David Kwiatkowski, who has beenjailed since his arrest in July 2012, Charles Krupa/The Associated Press
A motorcadecarrying James"Whitey" Bulger departs the Moakley Federal Courthouse Monday in Boston.
Bulger, thefearedBoston mobbosswho became one of the nation's most-wanted fugitives, was con-
which listed 33 criminal acts — amongthem, 19 murders that he allegedly helped orchestrate or carried out himself during the1970s and '80s while he led the
Winter Hill Gang, Boston's ruthless Irish mob.
victed Monday in a string of11 killings and dozens of other gangland crimes, many of them committed
After 4/~ days of deliberations, the federal jury decided he took part in11 of those murders, along with
while he wassaid to be anFBIinformant.
nearly all the other crimes on the list, including acts
Bulger, 83, stood silently and showed no reaction to the verdict, which brought to a close a case that
of extortion, money laundering and drug dealing. He was also found guilty of 30 other offenses, including
not only transfixed the city with its grisly violence
possession ofmachineguns.
but exposed corruption inside the Boston FBI and an overly cozy relationship between the bureau and its
underworld snitches.
Bulger could get life in prison at sentencing Nov.
13. But given his age,even amodest term could amount to a life sentence.
Bulger was charged primarily with racketeering,
— The Associated Press
is accused of stealing painkiller syringes from Exeter Hospital's cardiac catheterization lab and replacing them with saline tainted with
his blood. He hasagreed to plead guilty to the14 federal drug theft and tampering charges hefaced in exchange for a lighter sentence. Had he been convicted at trial, he could have been sentenced to up
to 98 years behind bars. Pefll gUSITIIIBS —Thebodies of two men slain by security forces were flown to Lima onMondayfor DNAtests that authorities believed would show they were two of the Shining Path rebels' four leaders
as officials claimed amajor blow to the cocaine-funded insurgency. President Ollanta Humalatentatively identified them as"Comrade Gabriel," or Marco Antonio Quispe Palomino, the youngest of three brothers from the Quispe Palomino clan that commands an esti-
mated 500 fighters, and "ComradeAlipio" or Alejandro Borda Casafranca, the group's military chief.
MBII BISCtiOII —Former Prime Minister lbrahim Boubacar Keita
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he would appeal the ruling, which was a stinging rebuke to a policy he
said his talks in Jordan would include anassessment of whether U.S. surveillance aircraft or collaboration on other border-control techniques could help the Jordanians, whosecountry is the emergency home to tens of thousands of Syrian refugees.
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appointing an independent monitor to overseemajor changes, including body cameras onsomeofficers. Mayor Michael Bloomberg said
conflict in neighboring Syria. The chairman, Gen. Martin E. Dempsey,
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and systematically singled out large numbers of blacks and Hispanics under its stop-and-frisk policy, a federal judge ruled Monday while
Jordan, which are both facing border-security challenges from the
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with Hannah's father, Brett Anderson.
of Staff opened a weeklong visit to the Middle East on Monday for discussions on potential additions of American support to Israel and
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She was not a willing participant," Gore said at anewsconference
brother.
BULGER CONVICTED INSTRING OF CRIMES
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40-year-old James Lee DiMaggio, San Diego County Sheriff Bill Gore said. "I can't make it any clearer: She was a victim in this case.
five years as amanager of Uncle Bubba's Seafood and Oyster House. Deen is co-owner of the restaurant, which is primarily run by her
Traci Donaca ......................
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know her mother and brother were deaduntil she was rescued from
employment practices that were unfair to black workers during her
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brother fired his rifle at FBI agents before they killed him deep in the Idaho wilderness, authorities said Monday. Hannah Anderson didn't
Reactions mixed asHolder unveils policies to overhaul prisonsystem By Sari Horwitz and Matt Zapotosky The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — A t t orney General E ri c H o lder's p roposed p r i so n r e f o r ms drew praise from c r i minal justice experts Monday, but some critics said the proposals do not go far enough to begin overhauling a c ostly and broken law enforcement system. In an effort to reduce the population o f t h e n a t i on's overflowing federal prisons, Holder directed his 94 U.S. attorneys acrossthe country to stop charging low-level, nonviolent drug offenders with offenses thatimpose severe mandatory sentences. The disparities in the criminal justice system unfairly hit poor and minority communities the hardest, Holder said in a speech at the annual meeting of the American Bar Association in San Francisco. Holder cited a recent "deeply troubling report" that i n dicates that black male offend-
ers have received sentences nearly 2 0 p e r cent l o n ger than those imposed on white males convicted of s i milar crimes. "This isn't just unacceptable," Holder s a id. " It i s shameful." Many of Holder's proposals, which are aimed at saving tens of millions in prison costs, have bipartisan support, and the Obama administration does not expect them to be politically controversial. In fact, there is strong conservative backing for reforming prisons and mandatory minimum laws, and Republican governors in some of the most conservative states have led the way on prison reform. In Congress, both Republican and Democraticleaders have introduced legislation aimed at giving federal judges more discretion in applying mandatory minimums to certain drug offenders. Laura Murphy, director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Washington Legisla-
tive Office, said the ACLU is "thrilled" by Holder's actions. "These policies will make it more likely that wasteful and harmful federal prison overcrowding will end," Murphy said. Sen. Rand P a ul , R - Ky., said he wa s h eartened by the Obama administration's willingness to review mandatory minimum sentencing. But Sen. Charles Grassley, RIowa, said the law should be changed only in conjunction with Congress. "The overreach by the administration t o u n i l aterally decide which laws to enforce and which laws to ignore is a disturbing trend," Grassley said. Holder cited figures that show the federal prison population has grown almost 800 percent since 1980. "With an outsized, unnecessarily large prison population, we need to ensure that incarceration is used to punish, deter and rehabilitate, not merely to warehouse and forget," he said.
won Mali's presidency after his opponent conceded defeat late Monday in an election aimed at restoring stability to a country wracked
by a rebellion, a coupand an Islamic insurgency. Soumalia Cisse's concession averts a protracted election fight, allowing Mali to move ahead with establishing a democratically elected government, one of
the international community's caveats for unlocking some $4billion in promised aid. — From wire reports
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TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
M ART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Tuesday, Aug.13, the 225th day of 2013. There are140 days left in the year.
RESEARCH
DISCOVERY
HAPPENINGS
Futuristic
VOte —New Jersey holds a special primary ahead ofan
'hyperloop'
'E
October special election to fill its U.S. Senate seat left open by the death of Frank Lauten-
travel idea unveiled
4
berg.
4 HISTORY
Highlight:In1913, British metallurgist Harry Brearley
developed an alloy that came to be known as "stainless
By Justin Pritchard
t
The Associated Press
'll
steel." (Although Brearley is often credited as the "inven-
tor" of stainless steel, he was hardly alone in working to create steel that resisted cor-
rosion.) In1521, Spanish conqueror Hernando Cortez captured Tenochtitlan, present-day Mexico City, from the Aztecs. In1624, King Louis XIII of
France appointed Cardinal Richelieu his first minister. In 1792, French revolutionaries imprisoned the royal family. In1846, the American flag was raised for the first time in Los
TheAssociated Press file photo
An inflatable boat carries tourists past an iceberg along the Antarctic Peninsula in 2009.
Angeles. In1910, Florence Nightingale,
the founder of modern nursing, died in London at age 90. In 1923, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk was again elected
Speaker of Turkey's GrandAssembly. In1934, the satirical comic strip "Li'I Abner," created by Al Capp, made its debut. In1942, Walt Disney's animated feature "Bambi" had its U.S. premiere at Radio City Music Hall in New York, five
days after its world premiere in London. In1960, the first two-way
telephone conversation by satellite took place with the help of Echo1. The Central African Republic became totally inde-
pendent of French rule. In1961, East Germanysealed off the border betweenBerlin's eastern and western sectors and began building a wall that would stand for the next 28
years. In1981, in a ceremony at his California ranch, President
Ronald Reagansigned a historic package of tax and budget reductions. In1989, searchers in Ethiopia
found the wreckage of a plane which had disappeared almost a week earlier while carrying Rep. Mickey Leland, D-Texas,
and14 other people — there were no survivors. Ten years ago:Iraq began pumping crude oil from its
northern oil fields for the first time since the start of the war.
Libya agreed to set up a$2.7 billion fund for families of the 270 people killed in the1988 Pan Am bombing.
Five yearsago:A manbarged into the Arkansas Democratic
headquarters in Little Rock and opened fire, killing state party chairman Bill Gwatney
before speeding off in a pickup. (Police later shot and killed the gunman, Timothy
Dale Johnson.) Michael Phelps swam into history as the win-
ningest Olympic athlete ever with his10th and11th career gold medals. Phelps won the 200-meter butterfly, then
swam the leadoff of a runaway victory by the U.S. 800 free-
style relay team. One year ago:A routine serving of an eviction notice to a
(someone please do this),
Along with how high oceans may swell, researchers are also trying to
tral, an independent group of scientists and journalists in determine how quickly. Princeton that reports climate research,translated the Levermann results into graphiBy Justln Gillls the most recent ice age. In tiny. A sea-level scientist not cal form and showed the difNew York Times News Service that epoch, sometimes called involved in the work, Andrea ference it could make if we T hirty-five years a go, a the Eemian, th e p l anetary Dutton of the University of launched an aggressive proscientist named John Mercer temperature was similar to Florida, said the paper had gram to control emissions. By issued a warning. By then it levels we may see in coming failed to disclose enough de- 2100, their calculations sugwas already becoming clear decades as a result of human tailed information about the gest, continuing on our curthat human emissions would emissions, so it is considered a field sites to allow her to judge rent path would mean locking warm the earth,and Mercer possible indicator of things to the overall conclusion. But if in a long-term sea level rise of had begun thinking deeply come. the work does hold up, the im- 23 feet, but aggressive emisabout the consequences. Examining elevated fossil plications are profound. The sion cuts could limit that to His paper, in the journal Na- beaches and coral reefs along only possible explanation for seven feet. ture, was titled "West Antarc- more than a thousand miles such a large, rapid jump in sea If you are th e mayor of tic Ice Sheet and CO, Green- of coast, O'Leary's group con- level is the catastrophic col- Miami or of a beach town in house Effect: A Threat of Difirmed something we pretty lapse of a polar ice sheet, on ei- New Jersey, you may be asksaster." In it, Mercer pointed m uch already knew. In t h e ther Greenland or Antarctica. ing yourself: Exactly how long O'Leary is not prepared to out the unusual topography warmer world of the Eemian, is all this going to take to play of the ice sheet sitting over the sea level stabilized for several say which; figuring that out is out? western part o f A n t arctica. thousand years at about 10 the group's next project. But a On that crucial point, alas, Much of it is below sea level, to 12 feet above modern sea 17-foot rise in less than a thou- our science is s t il l n e arly in a sort of bowl, and he said level. sand years, a geologic instant, blind. Scientists can look at that a climatic warming could The interesting part is what has to mean that one or both the rocks and see indisputable cause the whole thing to de- happened after that. O'Leary's ice sheets contain some pro- evidence of jumps in sea level, grade rapidly on a geologic group found what they consid- found instability that can be and they can associate those time scale, leading to a pos- er to be compelling evidence set off by a warmer climate. w ith r elatively m odest i n sible rise in sea level of 16 feet. that near the end of the EemiThat, of c o u rse, augurs creases in global temperature. While it is clear by now that an, sea level jumped by an- poorly for humans. But the nature of the evidence we are in the early stages of other 17feet or so,to settle at Scientists at Stanford cal- is such that it is hard to tell the what is likely to be a substan- close to 30 feet above the mod- culated recently that human difference between something tial rise in sea level, we still do ern level, before beginning to emissions are causing the cli- that happened in a thousand not know if Mercer was right fall as the ice age set in. mate to change many times years and something that hapabout a dangerous instabilIn an i nterview, O'Leary faster than at any point since pened in a hundred. ity that could cause that rise told me he was confident that the dinosaurs died out. We are On the human time scale, to happen rapidly, in geologic the 17-foot jump happened in pushing the climate system of course, that is all the differtime. We may be getting closer less than a thousand years so hard that, if the ice sheets ence in the world. to figuring that out. An intrigu- — how much less, he cannot do have a threshold of some If sea level is going to rise by, ing new paper comes from Mi- be sure. kind, we stand a good chance say, 30feet over severalthouchael O'Leary of Curtin UniThis finding is something of of exceeding it. sand years, that is quite a lot versity in Australia and five a vindication for one member Another recent paper, by of time to adjust — to pull back colleagues scattered around of the team, a North Carolina A nders Levermann o f t h e from the beaches, to reinforce the world. O'Leary has spent field geologist, Paul Hearty. Potsdam Institute for Climate major cities, and to develop more than a decade exploring He had argued for decades Impact Research in Germany technologies to help us cope. the remote western coast of that the rock record suggested and a half-dozen colleagues, But if sea level is capable of Australia, considered one of a jump of this sort, but only re- implies that even if emissions rising several feet per century, as O'Leary's paper would the best places in the world to cently have measurement and were to stop tomorrow, we study sea levels of the past. modeling techniques reached have probably locked in sev- seem to imply and as many The paper, published July the level of precision needed eral feet of sea level rise over other scientists believe, then 28 in Nature Geoscience, fo- to nail the case. the long term. babies being born now could cuses on a warm period in the We have to see if their reBenjamin Strauss and his live to see the early stages of a earth's history that preceded sults withstand critical scru- colleagues at Climate Cenglobal calamity.
opened fire, leading to the death of a law enforcement
officer and another manbefore the gunman was killed.
India's fragmentedsociety onceamelting pot By Michael Balter
STUDY
ScienceNOW
BIRTHDAYS Former Cuban President Fidel Castro is 87. Actor Pat Harrington is 84. Hockey Hall of Famer Bobby Clarke is 64.
Golf Hall of FamerBetsy King is 58. Movie director Paul Greengrass is 58. TV host/
weatherman Sam Champion (TV: "Good Morning America") is 52. Country musician Mike
Melancon (Emerson Drive) is 35. Actress Kathryn Fiore is 34. — From wire reports
the only option for super fast travel is to build a tube over or under the ground that contains a special environment," Musk wrote in his proposal, posted online. The system Musk envisions is not unlike the pneumatic tubes that transport capsules stuffed with paperwork in older buildings. In this case, the cargo would be several people, reclining for the ride. Coming f r o m a l m o st anyone else, the hyperbole would be hard to take seriously. But Musk has a track record of success. He cofounded online payment service PayPal, e l ectric luxury carmaker Tesla Motors Inc. and rocket-build-
ing company SpaceX. Monday's unveiling lived up to the hype part of its name. Leading up to the unveiling, done on the SpaceX website, online speculation w as feverish. Musk h a s been dropping hints about his system for more than a year during public events, mentioning that i t c o uld never crash and would be immune to weather. During a Tesla earnings call on T h ursday, Musk said he is too focused on other projects to conside r actually building t h e
Hyperloop. "I think I k in d of shot myself by ever mentioning the Hyperloop," he said. "I don't have any plans to execute, because I must remain focused on SpaceX and Tesla." He said he would fulfill his commitment to publishing an open-source design, meaning anyone can use it and modify it.
lES SCHNIB
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet
man living near the Texas A8 M
University campus turned deadly when the resident
LOS ANGELES — Imagi ne stepping into a c a r sized capsule in downtown Los Angeles and, 30 minutes later, emerging in San Francisco. On Monday, billionaire entrepreneur Elon M u sk unveiled a transportation concept that he said could whisk passengers the nearly 400 miles from Los Angeles to San Francisco in 30 minutes — half the time it takes an airplane. If it's ever built. His "Hyperloop" system fo r t r a vel b e tween major cities would use a large tube. Inside, capsules would float on air, traveling at over 700 mph. The air would be sucked by a powerful fan at the front and expelled at the rear. "Short of figuring out real teleportation, which would of course b e a w esome
"In India we celebrate the commonality of major differences," wrote the celebrated author Shashi Tharoor about his native country. "We are a land of belonging rather than of blood." India's 1 .24-billion-strong population i s o n e o f the world's most diverse, with 700
study concludes that several thousand years ago, the entire subcontinent underwent a period of massive intermarriage, shuffling its population's genetic deck so thoroughly that it left clear traces — even in the genomes of today's most isolated tribes. In r ecent y ears, genetic ethnic and language groups studies of m o dern I n dians a nd possibly m an y m o r e, have provided a host of new depending on how they are insights into the ancient hiscounted. Today, most of these tory of this sprawling nation, groups keep pretty much to which harbors nearly onethemselves, only rarely mar- sixth of the world's popular ying outsiders. But a n ew tion. A key finding, reported
in 2009 by ateam led by geneticist David Reich of Harvard Medical School, was that most Indians today are descendants of two major population groups: Ancestral North
Indians (ANI), who probably migrated into the subcontinent 8,000 or more years ago from the Middle East, Central Asia and Europe; and Ancestral South Indians (ASI), who were native to the region and had been there much longer. The study also showed that these two groups began to mix at some point in the past, although just when was not clear.
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Fire Continued from A1 Blanton said M onday he has no plan to do so. "We're not asking for an extension of that," he said. The other expiring bond paid for construction of the library i n d o wntown Bend, said Deschutes Public Library system Director Todd Dunkelberg. The Deschutes Public Library District also does not plan to ask for a new tax levy. "We don't have any future building projects in mind, and the last two projects we've done, we've actually d o ne through tax revenue through our district," Dunkelberg said, referring to construction of libraries in La Pine and Sisters and improvements to a leased building for th e east Bend library. The tax levy for the $8 million library bond was roughly 14 cents per $1,000 in assessedproperty value in the last budget year, Faria said. Langstontoldthe City Council last week that he hopes to ask voters in May 2014 for a five-year local option levy of 20 cents per $1,000 in assessed property value to pay for more firefighter paramedics and reduce response times. City councilors said they support the idea. Based on the city's current projections, the levy would raise an average of $2 m illion annually o ver f i v e years, said Chief Financial Officer Sonia Andrews. The fire department currently receives a cut of $1.18 per $1,000 in assessed property value,from the city's permanent tax rate of $2.80 per $1,000. Mayor Pro Tem Jodie Barram said the council will likely vote in October or November on a resolution to place the levy on the ballot. The city pays for fire services out of its general fund, much of which comes from property taxes. A consultant's study earlier this year showed that unless the city spends another $1 million annually on its fire department by 2015, the department's expenses will exceed its general fund allocation. The city could provide that money, but only i f i t s t ops paying for bus service. If voters approve afire department levy, the city could instead spend the savings from ending the transit subsidy on police services. Some city officials have said that if voters approve the tax levy, it might eventually free up more money in the general fund topay forpolice services. However, under a 1999 contract withthe rural fire district, the city is obligated to allocate $1.18 of its permanent tax rate to fire protection and emergency medical services. City Councilor Victor Chudowsky said Monday that money from the levy would be strictly dedicated to the fire department. "This levy i s s p ecifically for the fire department," Chudowsky said. "We're not going to be taking money from this levy and giving it to somebody else." Blanton said he will support a fire department levy under those circumstances. "I am in support of that (fire levy) to enhance fire services,ifthe 20 cents is additional money to what they're already getting," he said. Currently, the fire department responds to emergency calls in the city within nine minutes 80 percent of the time. The wait time is longer in the rural fire district: the department responds to 80percent of calls within 12 m i nutes, according to a r e c ent c ity presentation. The Bend Fire D epartment and r u ra l f i r e district collaborate to provide services. Th e f i r e d e p artment also p r ovides ambulance services across a broad swath of Deschutes County, from the westernborder with Lane County, to the east past Hampton. "Our response area is 200 square miles larger than the state of Rhode Island," said EMS Program Manager Tom Wright. Langston said he believes the department could lower its response time to six minutes within the city by adding two more ambulance crews, a total of 14employees to cover three shifts. Langston also believes this will allow the fire department to lower the response time to eight minutes in the rural fire district. It w o uld likely take two years after the levy passes to hire and train enough firefighter paramedics to staff two additional ambulances, Langston said. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
Class size
just to having fewer teachers, assembling the master schedContinued from A1 ule for a high school has been There is little research on made harder in recent years by the effectiveness of differ- the higher student-to-teacher ent schedule systems in high ratio, Van Buren said. schools. The research availBend High School Principal able suggests that the sevH.D. Weddel discussed the en-period schedule is more challenges of assembling such strongly correlated with stua schedule with this year's dent successthan the four-pe- budget. "We're going to have some riod schedule. Advantages of this system include increased classes of 40, for sure," he instructional time, daily insaid. "For American literature, struction in all subjects and here'ssome of our class sizes fewer c ourse-request con- — American literature 37, 36, flicts, which could prevent 40, 31, 45. I'll balance it more students from enrolling in the once we get final numbers, and I'll have to go in by hand." courses they want to take. Van Buren also suggested Weddel is faced with an that teachers did not take full additional challenge — havadvantage of the longer class ing to offer the International periods in t h e f o u r-period Baccalaureate program, an schedule. advanced course of study for "When I visited classes dur- juniors and seniors. "You have to offer some IB ing the four-by-four schedule, the last 30 minutes students coursesbecause it's a diploma would just be doing home- program, which is different work," Van Buren said. from AP where you can play Disadvantages to the new with th e c ourses," Weddel system include increasing the said. "I have to offer certain students'course loads, which classes no matter the sizes, could lead to more homework. and I can play with them, but Also, two-year sequences are some will be very small. If not able to be compressed into numbers are low in one area, one year. Another concern is they're going to be pushed up that an increase in passing pe- in another." riods may result in more disWeddel pointed to a section ciplinary referrals as students of IB Higher Level Physics II have more opportunities to be that had 13 students as an exlate. ample. To balance out such a Even with a surplus of teach- small class, Weddel looks to ers, scheduling is a challenge, physical education and music as one has to avoid popular electives. "Right now, we have concert coursesconflicting and ensure that specialized classrooms are choir at 61 and choral at 78," available for certain courses. he said. "It helps a lot to have While theseven-period sched- P.E., but we don't increase P.E. ule has helped the district ad- so much, as it could become a
safety issue. Ten years ago, our sizes were lower, but what can you do until the state opens up and gives us more money'?" Even with more money, Van Buren stressed that creating an effectivemaster schedule requires an artful touch. "One instance of a challenge is, maybe you could use an extra science section in the morning, but you only have a limited number of science classrooms," she said. "You also need to look out for conflicts. If you put AP literature acrossfrom orchestra,that'd be a major conflict." Nonetheless, thi s is a challenge the district is eager to take on, as Van Buren views scheduling a s ne c essarily "student-driven." "It's the opposite of how scheduling works in college; in high school you find out what students want to take and then figure out how many sections you need within the parameters of the faculty available," Van Buren said. Despite the tighter parameters imposed bythe state budget, Bend-La Pine has not had to cut any course offerings. "We did notcut one career and technical, music, art, language, or AP program," Van Buren said. "We raised class sizes and combined levels to keep offerings so we could provide a comprehensive education. It comes down to what you value as a district, and we want to provide a comprehensive curriculum."
'Gateway skill' In the 2005-06 school year,
Bend-La Pine began a major early literacy initiative that emphasized lowering class sizes for the district's youngest students. District officials, including Sup e r intendent Ron Wilkinson, credit this program with an increase in state reading scores. The percent of B end-La Pine students meeting or exceeding statereading benchmarks has risen steadily since 2002, only dipping when the cut-off levels for proficiency were raised before the last school year a n d 2 0 06-07. Nonetheless, the benefits of early lit eracy programs are not often immediately apparent in test scores, as a cohort continuesto experience payoffs throughout its academic career. "Reading is th e gateway skill," said Lora Nordquist, assistant superintendent for primary education. "There are a lot of esteem issues for strug-
because they allow teachers to focus on their students' individual challenges. The more students there are, the less time there is to address the specific reading roadblocks each studentfaces. "There's no change in achievement yet, but there's concern about internal assessments from K t h r ough second grade," W i l k inson said. "I don't think we're at a drop-off, just not continued growth." The district's early literacy program is not entirely dependent on small class sizes. There is also a focus on providing intervention instruction in addition to a student's general curriculum. "They can be pull-out or push-in lessons," Nordquist said. "It's almost like a diagnosisand prescription, where we identify and gauge what skills each student needs." Schools with Title I funding gling readers going forward. have staff dedicated to readIt's like going to the pool for ing interventions, while other a day but not being able to schools have faculty trained swim. Students who aren't in the practice. reading by 8 are statistically Schools also utilize learnstruggling moving on." ing communities to better adThe district had been able dress student needs. "Under this system, imagto get kindergarten and first g rade classes down t o 1 8 ine a first-grade team of teachstudents, and second grade ers divides all their students classesto 20 students,accord- into one large group of core ing to Wilkinson. Those num- reading time, and another of bers have now increased to 24 smaller groups focused on and 26, respectively. enrichment," Nordquist said. "We had one shining gold- "With this model, the strugen year around 2007-2008, gling students will spend part but we've crept back up since of their time in a class with 12." then," Nordquist said. Smallerclasses are essen— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tial for early literacyprograms tleeds@bendbulletin.com
UPDATE: HEALTH CAREOVERHAUL ' WIl
Limit on consumercosts in Obama'shealth care law delayeduntil 2015
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The Trinity Medical Center In BIrmingham, Ala. In May, TrInity Health and Catholic Health East joined forces to create an 82-hospitai system in 21 states.
Hospitals
combine given the coming changes in the industry. Many Continued from A1 hospitals are struggling with In New York City, Mount lower payments from the fedSinai Medical Center, which eral government and declinis one of the country's oldest ing patient admissions. They and largest private nonprofit are also being confronted with hospitals, is buying the parent fundamental changes in how of Beth Israel Medical Center they are paid under the Afand St. Luke's and Roosevelt fordable Care Act and by priHospitals. Tenet Healthcare vate insurers. of Dallas, which operates in Instead of being paid on 10 states, is buying Vanguard volume, rewarded for filling Health Systems of Nashville, beds and performing more a network of 28 hospitals and tests and procedures, hospifacilities that includes Detroit tals are becoming responsible Medical Center. for more of the total cost of In fact, Booz & Co., a con- a patient's care. As a result, sulting firm, p r edicts that they have an incentive to keep 1,000 of the nation's roughly patients healthy — and out of 5,000 hospitals could seek out their facilities. mergers in the next five to By combining, hospitals seven years. can reduce costs in back-of"There's immense logic for fice activities like billing and them to become largesuper- devote more financial resourcregionalsystems, even some es to investing in expensive national systems," said David electronic medical r ecords W . Johnson, a managing di- systems and physician pracrector for BMO Capital Mar- tices to better follow patients kets, which advises nonprofit outside the hospital. Under health systems. Some chains the new state exchanges creare merging to increase their ated by the federal health care size and their negotiating clout law, consumers will be able to with insurers, while others are tell the difference in hospital trying to reduce costs and im- prices between markets that prove care, he said. have consolidated and those S ome e c onomists a n d that have not, Ignagni said. health insurance companies The plans have similar deworry that the trend could signs, but a policy offered by raise health care costs. the same insurer in, for in"The rhetoric is all about ef- stance, Northern California, ficiency," said Karen Ignagni, where hospitals have merged, the chief executive of Ameri- will be more expensive than ca's Health Insurance Plans, a one offered in Southern Calitrade group that represents in- fornia, where the systems are surers. "The reality is all about smaller, she said. higher prices." Federal regulators are conWhatever the outcome, hos- cerned that the growing numpitals are merging faster and ber of mergers could lead to in greater numbers than they anti-competitivepractices. The have in years. After holding Federal Trade Commission steady through much of the has increased its examination 2000s, thenumber of deals of the deals and has blocked a doubled to 105 in 2012 from handful of transactions. 50 in 2009, according to Irving Last year, tw o h o spital Levin Associates, a health chains in Illinois, OSF Healthcare research firm. That is still care System of Illinois and less than half the annual peak Rockford H e alth S y stem, during the last merger wave, abandoned plans to merge in the late 1990s, but Booz after the FTC challenged the and others say this is only the deal on the expectation that beginning. the combined hospitals would Hospital executives say control 64 percent of acutethey have little choice but to care inpatient services. That,
regulators said, would allow the combined entity to raise rates and "impose a financial burden on local employers and
employees," through higher insurance premiums, co-pays and out-of-pocket expenses. For the most part, however, the mergers continue unchallenged among for-profit systems as well as nonprofit hospitals. Roman Catholic-sponsored systems have formed some of the first national nonprofit chains, and some worry that Catholic hospitals' growth and acquisitions of non-Catholic hospitals could limit patient access to services like birth control. In May, for example, Trinity Health and Catholic Health East joined forces to create an 82-hospital system in 21 states. Ascension Health, the largest Catholic nonprofit health system, added 35 hospitals to its network of 78 earlier this year when it closed a deal to acquire a hospital system based in Tulsa, Okla. Ascension has teamed with Oak Hill Capital Partners, a private investment firm, to help finance some of its purchases in the future. "There isn't an i n dependent hospital out there that is not thinking about this," said Gary Ahlquist, a senior partner at Booz, referring to the mergers. "At the top of the list is the question, Who should I merge with'?" But as the hospital merger boom continues, hospitals fiercely holding onto their independence may find it more difficult to compete against
WASHINGTON — In anothersetback for President Barack O bama's h ealth care initiative, the administration has delayed until 2015 a significant consumer protection in the law that limits how m uch people may have to spend on their own health care. The limit on out-of-pocket costs, including deductibles and co-payments, was not supposed to e xceed $6,350 for an md>vtdual and $12,700 for a family. But under a little-noticed ruling, f e deral o f f i cials have granted a one-year grace periodto some insurers, allowing them to set higher limits, or no limit at all, in 2014. The grace period has been outlined on the Labor Department's website since February but was obscured in a maze of legal and bureaucratic language that went l a rgely u n n oticed. When asked i n re c ent
days about the language — which appeared as an answer to one of 137 "frequently asked q uestions about Affordable Care Act implementation" — department officials confirmed the policy. The discovery is likely to fuel continuing Republican efforts this fall to discredit the president's health care law. Under the policy, many group health plans will be able to maintain separate out-of-pocket limits for benefits in 2014. As a result, a consumer may be required to pay $6,350 for doctors' services and hospital care, and an additional $6,350 for prescriptiondrugs under a p lan a dministered by a p h a r macy b enefit manager. Some consumers may have to pay even more, as some group health plans
will not be required to impose any limit on a patient's out-ofpocket costs for drugs next year. If a drug plan does not currently have a limit on outof-pocket costs, it will not have to impose one for 2014, federal officials said Monday. The health l a w , s i gned more than three years ago by Obama, clearly established a single overall limit on out-ofpocket costs for each individual or family. But federal officials said that many insurers and employers needed more time to comply because they used separate companies to help administer major medical coverage and drug benefits, with separate limits on out-ofpocket costs. In many cases, the companies have separatecomputer systems that cannot communicate with one another. A senior administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations, said: "We knew this was an important issue. We had to balance the interests of consumers with the concerns of health plan sponsors and carriers,which told us that their computer systems were not set up to aggregate all of a person's out-of-pocket costs. They asked for more time to comply." Health plans are f ree to set out-of-pocket limits lower than the levels allowed by the administration. But many employers and health plans sought the grace period, saying they needed time to upgrade their computer systems.
bigger, leaner organizations, say analysts. "There are hospitals out therethat have been independent for 80 years and they're saying, ' We're going to b e independent for the next 100 years,'" said Lisa Goldstein, an analyst of nonprofit hospitals at Moody's Investors Service. "That's going to be a tall order. As other hospitals consolidate and grow around you, whatever niche you had will vaporize."
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Immigration Continued from A1 Later he ran a seafood business in Phoenix, drove a BMW and owned a f i v e-bedroom house with a billiards room and apool. But then, with his business foundering inthe 2008 recession, he was offered $1,000 to help with a drug deal that turned out to be a police sting. He was convicted of felony "possession of marijuana for sale"and was sentenced to four years in an A r izona prison. When he completed his time, he was deported from the country where he had lived since he was 3. "It was a stupid thing to do," Tepeyac, 37,said ofhiscrime. "I feel like I'm stuck in a perpetual nightmare. I can't seem to adjust to this life. In the Marines, we have a motto that we never leave a man behind. I feel like I've been left behind." As a deported veteran, Tepeyac is one of a little-known cadre of warriors who served in the U.S. military as greencard holders — permanent legal residents but not U.S. citizens — then committed a crime after returning to civilian life, were convicted and punished, then p ermanently e x pelled from the United States.
Unknown number No one knows how many there are. U.S. officials said they do not keep track, but immigration lawyers and Banished Veterans, a group formed to help the deportees, said that at least hundreds, and perhaps thousands, have been deported in recent years. Some committed felonies; others were deported for drug possession, bar fights, theft or forgery. Veterans who fought for the United States in wars from Korea to A f ghanistan have been sent t o M e xico, Germany, Jamaica, Portugal, Italy, England and other nations. Most of them came to the United States as children; many have beendeported to countries where they know no one and don't speakthe language. Deported veterans are receiving almost no attention in the Washington debate over immigration reform. Despite their full-throated support for U.S. troops, political leaders are generally unwilling to advocate on behalf of convicted criminals. U.S. immigration law states that noncitizens who c o mmit serious crimes forfeit their right to remain in the country. Deported veterans and their advocates say those who wear the uniform should be treated as U.S. citizens: punished for any crimes they commit, but not deported. Retired Air Force Gen. Rich-
citizenship after being killed in the line of duty.
First, Congress, in an effort to tighten immigration controls, greatlyexpandedthe list of more U.S. upbringing than 30 categories of offenses for Tepeyac and h i s f a m i ly which a person can be deported, earned green cards in an am- adding crimessuch as forgery nesty signed by President Ron- and any theft that carries a senald Reagan in 1986, when Te- tence of one year or more. peyac was 13. His parents had brought him to Arizona illegally Definition argued from Mexico when he was 3. The government calls those He played baseball and soc- offenses "aggravated felonies," cer, trumpet and trombone in but immigration lawyers say the school band, and enlisted in that many of them do not fit the the Marines two weeks after his common definitions of "aggra1995 high school graduation. vated" or "felony." Shoplifting His eightyears inthe Marines is generally a nonviolent misdetook him to the Pacific and the meanor, but if a judge imposes Persian Gulf, to Kenya after the a sentence of one year or more 1998 U.S. Embassybombings in — even if that sentence is susEast Africa, and to Kuwait twice pended — a noncitizen shopin the late 1990s. With "USMC" lifter can be deported. tattooed on his right calf, he The definition of "aggravated earned medalsand commendafelony" is "a fraud on the Ameritions — Good Conduct Medal, can people," said M argaret Linda Davidson/The Washington Post Armed Forced Expeditionary Stock, an Alaska immigration Milton Tepeyac was a U.S. Marine for eight years. He was deported to Mexico in April after serving prison Medal, National Defense Ser- lawyer who is also a retired time for a felony drug conviction. He now lives in this studio apartment in Hermosilio, Mexico, and works vice Medal — and was honor- lieutenant colonel in the U.S. for $3 an hour at a call center. Immigration lawyers and Banished Veterans, a group formed to help the ably discharged in 2003. Military Police andtaught at the "Milton was a good Marine," U.S. Military Academy at West deportees, say hundreds, and perhaps thousands, of veterans have been deported in recent years. said Jon Batts, who was Tepey- Point, N.Y. ac's supervisor for part of his Stock said she once defended "To say to them, 'Youswore to support and one he especially regrets is not time in the Marines and is now a National Guardsman in Alasapplying for citizenship when an active-duty Army staff ser- ka who was charged with a firedefend the Constitution and put your life on the was eligible. If he had, he geant based at Fort Hood, Tex- arms violation after he drove line for the rest of us. But you're not a citizen.So, he would not have been deported. as. "He could have sacrificed into a school parking lot, forgettoo bad. You're gone.' I just think that's not us." Under U.S. law, Tepeyac had his life for the United States, ting that his legally registered beenentitledto applyfor citizen- and he's going to get deported? gun was in the car. — Retired Air Force Gen. Richard Myers ship when he was 18; he had re- There's an injustice going on." Federal officials tried to deceivedhisgreen card fiveyears Afterhis discharge, Tepeyac port him to th e Philippines. earlier. Also, once he joined the started a seafood distribution Stock said she was able to avert ard Myers, who served as chair- on the uniform of the United military the next year he could business in Phoenix. When it the deportation by persuading man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff States military, the last thing have applied for citizenship im- failed, he said, he became de- the local prosecutor to downunder President George W. they should have to w o r ry mediately, under a policy Bush pressed, started usingdrugs and grade theoffense to disorderly Bush from 2001 to 2005, said about is their immigration sta- enacted in 2002. fell in with the "wrong crowd." conduct. deporting veterans "is not fair, tus and that of their family; we But he never filled out the He was busted twice, for posThe 1996laws did not address and it's not appropriate for who shouldn't be deporting them," paperwork. He said he thought session of cocaine and then military service. But ICE Direcwe are as a people." Thompson said in an interview. that he automatically became drug paraphernalia, and placed tor John Morton issued a memo "One thing A m erica has But in June, he said, House a citizen when he swore his on probation. Then in October in 2011 instructing his agencyto always done is revere its veter- leaders declined to consider Marine Corps oath to "defend 2009, hesaid,a friend offered take a person's military service ans," he said. "To say to them, the proposal, which he called the Constitution of the United him $1,000 to interpret for him into account when considering 'You swore to support and de- a "slap in the face to our vet- States against all enemies, for- and count cash in a deal involv- deportation. fend the Constitution and put erans, our service members eign and domestic." ing 91 pounds of marijuana. Asked for comment for this "It never really crossed my "Like an idiot, I went with your life on the line for the rest and our history as a nation of article, ICE issued a statement of us. But you're not a citizen. immigrants." mind that I could ever be de- him," he said. saying that "ICE respects the So, too bad. You're gone.' I just ported," Tepeyac said. Tepeyac's felony c o nvic- service and sacrifice of those in Varied opinions thinkthat's not us." According to the Pentagon, tion put him squarely in the military service" and that "any Although deported veterans Veterans are divided on this about 35,000 nonciti zens are crosshairsof President Barack deportations of military veterare banned for life, they are issue. serving in the U.S. military. Obama's administration, which ans must be approved by a sen"We hold all militaryveterans Since 2009, about 9,800 military has deported people in unprec- ior ICE official." welcome to return when they "ICE is committed to ensurare dead. Honorably discharged in high regard, but if following recruits have earned their citi- edented numbers. Obama has veterans, even deportees, are our nation's laws is a require- zenship during basictraining in already deported nearly 1.9 mil- ing that its limited resources are entitled to burial at a U.S. mili- ment for any guest to remain in a program run by the military lion people, surpassing Bush's focused on the removal of those tary cemetery with an engraved our country, then that's the law," and the United States Citizen- total of 1.6 million deportees in who pose a threat to public safeheadstone and t heir c asket said Joe Davis, a spokesman ship and Immigration Services eight years, according to U.S. ty such as criminal aliens," the draped with an American flag, for the nation's largest veterans (USCIS). Immigration and Customs En- statement said, adding, "ICE exaccording to the Department group, the Veterans of Foreign They are part of more than forcement (ICE). ercises prosecutorial discretion of Veterans Affairs. The VA Wars. "An honorable discharge 89,000 people who have reMany deportations of veter- for members of the armed forcwill even pay $300 toward the is not a free pass." ceived c itizenship t h r ough ans can be traced to changes to es who have honorably served cost of bringing a deportee's reCraig Shagin, a Pennsylva- military service since 9/11. That immigration laws passed 1994 our country on a case-by-case mains to the United States. nia lawyer who represents Te- includes 140 who were granted and 1996. basis as appropriate." One of the few politicians peyac and is a leading national who has been willing to raise advocate against deporting vetthe issue is Rep. Mike Thomp- erans, calls the issue"a question son, D-Calif., an Army veteran of loyalty." "When Milton was in the Mawho was wounded in Vietnam. He and aRepublican colleague, rines, doing dangerous work on Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Fla., inbehalf of the United States, we • • r • troduced legislation this year treated him as an American," that would have required the Shagin said. "Why would that secretary of homeland security change when he is out of unia • • a • a to sign off on each deportation form? Because he failed to file a proceeding against a veteran. coupleofpiecesofpaper?" "If someone is willing to put Of all Tepeyac's mistakes,
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on what types of processing gist Nicholas Schiff of the Weill are going on; in a completely Cornell Medical College, who Continued from A1 dead brain, it flat-lines. was not involved in the study. "On a f u ndamental level, When the heart suddenly Borjigin also noted an inthis study makes us t h i nk stops, ongoing blood flow to crease in EEG activity that has about the n e urobiology of the brain stops and causes been tied to visual stimulation the dying brain," said senior d eath in a h u m a n w i t h i n in humans that could possibly author and a nesthesiologist minutes. A likely assumption explain the very bright light George Mashour. It was pub- would be that, without a fresh that survivors describe. lished Monday online by the supply of oxygen, any sort of The researchers also conProceedings of the National brain activity would go flat. firmed the effect using anothAcademy of Sciences. But after the rats went into car- er form of death, asphyxiation Near-deathexperienceshave diac arrest, Mashour and his via carbon dioxide inhalation. been reported by many who colleagues saw the opposite. The same highly aroused fea"We saw a window of ac- tures were seen in a nearly have faced death, worldwide and across cultures. About 20 tivity with certain signatures identical pattern. percent of cardiac arrest survi- t ypically a s s ociated w i t h Schiff finds the study "very vors report visions during clini- conscious processing," said interesting" and novel, but is cal death, with features such as Mashour. very skeptical about any neara bright light, life playback or Those signatures include death interpretations. "There's no intrinsic reason an out-of-body feeling. heightened c o m m unication "There's hundreds of thou- among the different parts of to believe that these rats are sands of people reporting the brain, actively seen in an in some heightened state of these (near-death) e x peri- awake state, but often lost dur- awareness," he said. He beences," said Borjigin. "If that ing anesthesia. In the rats, this lieves the spike in activity is experience comes from t he connectivity went above and simply a shock-to-the-system brain,there has to be a finger- beyond the levels seen durresponse by the brain cells to a print of that." ing the awake state — which major change in physiology. An unanswered question c ould possibly explain t h e While the study does look at from a previous experiment hypervivid, "realer-than-real" the data within the context of bothered her. In 2007, Bor- perceptions reported close to near-death experiences, both jigin ha d b een m o nitoring death, said Borjigin. Borjigin and Mashour hesitate neurotransmitter secretion in Mashour speculates this in- to state a direct connection rats when, in the middle of the tegration coincides with con- between the two. The links night, two of the animals un- sciousness while we work to are merely speculative at this expectedlydied.Upon review- process aspectsof the world point and provide a frameing the overnight data, she in different areas of the brain, work for a human study, said saw several unknown peaks like visual in one area and au- Borjigin. near the time of death. ditory in another. Even if the EEG patterns af"The brain kind of gets it all ter cardiac arrest appear simiThis got her thinking: What kinds of changes does the together so we have this uni- lar to the those of the awake brain go through at the mo- fied,seamless experience," he state, Schiff cautioned that ment of death'? sard. the same rules may not apply Last year, Borjigin turned to But there are many gray when the brain's playing field Mashour, a colleague with ex- areas of consciousness — for has changed drastically due pertise in EEG and conscious- instance, being under anes- to lack of blood flow. He does ness, for help conducting the thesia or in a vegetative state think that a similar surge in first experiment to system- or seizing — and scientists activity, if seen in rat brain, atically investigate electrical are still trying to pin down a w ould translate t o h u m an brain activity a fter c ardiac clear-cut electrical marker of brain as well. arrest. EEG uses electrodes to consciousness. There are some case reports "We don't have any rough measure voltage fluctuations b y doctors who h ave w i t in the brain caused by many and ready way to take a mea- nessed a surge in EEG activity neurons firing at once. A nor- surement and assign a mean- in their patients at the point of mal, awake brain should show ing to it with regards to con- death, but no systematic study spikes of activity depending scious content," said neurolo- has been done.
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541-382-6223 571B NE Azure, Hwy 20, east of Pilot Butte
wwwj ohnsonbrotherstv.com
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2fj13: flt fI fjLflNCE:Presenting our 2013 calendar at a glance with all of our scheduled specialty publications. You'll also receive grocery inserts every Tuesday; our arts and entertainment section, GO! Magazine, every Friday; and look for a wide variety of shopping inserts every Saturday and Sunday. You'll also enjoy the national magazine, PARADE, which highlights the world of entertainment, games and comics every Sunday. I
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2013: SPECIHLPUBLICHTIONSBVMONTH
*PUBLIC ATIONDATESARESUBJECTTO CHANGE.
January
March (cnnt.)
May (cont.)
July
August (cont.)
November
• 9 Book of Love • 12 Picture Your Home • 31 Ageless
• 29 Sisters Magazine
• 13 High Desert PULSE • U.S. Bank Pole Pedal Paddle • 18 Ageless • 24 Sisters Magazine
• 13 Picture Your Home Cascade Cycling Classic • U Magazine • 17 Tour of Homes™ • 24 Deschutes County Fair Guide • 27 Ageless
• 23 Sisters Magazine • 28 Redmond Magazine
• • • • •
February • • • •
6 Baby Book 9 Picture Your Home 11 High Desert PULSE 16 U Magazine
March • • • •
2 Central Oregon Living 4 C.O. Sportsmen's Show 9 Picture Your Home 16 Ageless
April • • • • •
6 U Magazine 12 Summer Youth Directory 13 Picture Your Home 17 Redmond Magazine 27 Home and Garden Show Guide • (TBA) 110 Ways to Discover Central Oregon
June
• 1 U Magazine • 5 Deschutes County Fair Premium Book • 8 Picture Your Home • 12 Graduation 2013 May • 19 Redmond Magazine • 11 Picture Your Home • 12 Central Oregon Golf Preview • 28 Sisters Magazine • 29 Central Oregon Living
August I 9 Bend Brewfest Guide • 10 Picture Your Home • 12 High Desert PULSE 14 School Directory • 20 Remodeling, Design 8 Outdoor Living Show™
September • 7 U Magazine • 14 Picture Your Home • 21 Ageless
October • • • • •
5 Central Oregon Living 12 Picture Your Home 19 U Magazine 25 The Nature of Words (TBA) 110 Ways to Discover Central Oregon
9 Picture Your Home 11 High Desert PULSE 13 Redmond Magazine 15 Sisters Magazine 16 Ageless
December • 7 Central Oregon Living • 14 Picture Your Home • 25 Connections
Weekly Grocery (Tuesdays) Sale Inserts (Saturdays) I Sale Inserts/Parade (Sundays)
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5
Weather, B6
©
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013
BRIEFING
www.bendbulletin.com/local
BRIEFING
YOUTH CHALLENGE PROGRAM
aterni
Armedman robs Bend restaurant Bend Police officers were looking Monday night for a manwho robbed a restaurant in
By Branden Andersen The Bulletin
A lawyer for the state urged a Bend circuit court judge Monday to dismiss a woman's $500,000 suit alleging sexual harassment and other claims against the Oregon National Guard's Youth Challenge Program. Amber Peterson, a group
north Bend. Armed with a hand-
gun, the manrobbed the Taco Del Mar at the Cas-
cade Village Shopping Center around 6:35 p.m., said Bend Police Sgt. Kurt Koester. He said the man is 6 feet tall, white with black facial hair and
arassment suit i e
life coordinator in the program from 2007 to 2011, alleges a supervisor, Lawrence DeMarr, solicited a romantic relationship and made "unwelcome remarks" toward her. In her suit, filed in August 2012, Peterson also alleged she was denied adequate bathroom breaks during her
pregnancy and was not allowed to pump breast milk as often as she needed. She allegesshe was denied overtime and hervoice mail access was restricted. Ken Crowley, senior assistant state attorney general, argued that Peterson failed to file her complaint within 180 days of the alleged incidents,
as required by the Oregon Tort Claims Act. "The claim was filed two years outside of the 180-day window," he said. Circuit Court Judge A. Michael Adler, after a 45-minute hearing, said he would review the case prior to ruling. Trial is set for Jan. 7. See Suit/B2
was last seenwearing a red baseball cap.The
ATV rider lost for 8 hours A Bend manbecame separated from a group of all-terrain vehicle rid-
ers Saturday southeast of town and was lost for about eight hours. Julio Medellin, 33, was found in the East Fort Rock Off-Highway
Vehicle Trails System by his friends at about
11:30 p.m., according to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. He
was in good condition although cold. Hewas
man made off with an
wearing a T-shirt and
undisclosed amount of money.
WHATEyER
~
•
The Taco Del Mar is
located in the shopping center between U.S. Highway 20 and U.S. Highway 97. Police of-
Fol low i n g up on Central Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news@bendbulletin.com.
o
down to a half tank of
gas when hewent missing shortly after 3:30 p.m. He wasout of gas by time he was found.
PEGASUS BOOKS OWNER AND AUTHOR
ficers and Deschutes
jeans, didn't haveany food or water andwas
Marcy Arellano, 29,
County Sheriff's
of Redmond, who was
deputies used dogsto search forthe man, but
among the group ofATV
uncan
Koester said they didn't find him.
Police ask that anyone who spots the man call 541-693-6911.
C BBI H i
'WIi in
3 teens arrested in auto break-ins
riders, called 911 at 8:39 p.m. to report Medel-
lin missing, according to the Sheriff's Office. A Deschutes County
Search andRescue team started a search
i 8 CIcI.Z
Police arrested three
for Medellin at11 p.m.
He was found by apair of riders from his group who also kept looking for him. — Bulletin staff report
Bend teensSaturday on suspicion of breaking into cars and ahome under construction in
More briefingand News of Record, B2
northeast Bend. Tanner William
Chaney, 19,was arrested along with two
15-year-old boys, according to the Bend
STATE NEWS
Police Department.
Chaney wasgiven a conditional release from
Qy
Deschutes County jail M onday night .A deputy
there said hestill faces charges of second-
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degree theft, reckless
burning, unlawful entry
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into a motor vehicle and first-degree criminal
trespass. The boys also face similar charges, said
t EEP I •s
Bend Police Lt. Chris
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ill
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Carney. Hesaid Friday
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night the teens broke
Underpass detour
into cars off Eagle Road and then a home on the 3100 block of Northeast
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Delmass Street.
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A real estate agent discovered the teens
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in the houseSaturday
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
morning, he said. They ran but were found later
Duncan McGeary, author and owner ofPegasus Books indowntown Bend, operates the blog "Best Minimum Wage Job a Middle Aged Guy Ever Had." One of his recent posts discussed the difficulty of selling high-brow graphic novels, such as the one he's holding, "Building Stories," by Chris Ware.
Saturday morning and arrested. While in the house
• After a 25-yearbreakfrom writing, he's tapping into his literary prowesswith a numberof projects
seem like a decade-long endeavor, McGeary's energy has also produced a "historical horror" take on one of the West's most macabre exBy Tyler Leeds McGeary said. "I had to rework my peditions — "Led to the Slaughter: The Bulletin firstbook,'Nearly Human,'fourtimes, The Donner Party Werewolves." In 2011, Duncan McGeary over- but about a year ago it clicked and I've Other projects include a vampire came a 25-year spell of writer' s been writing like crazy since." trilogy and what McGeary casually "Nearly Human" follows a private referred to as "a book about modern block. Since then, he's more than made up for his long fallow period. detectivearound Bend. The detec- art full of philosophy." McGeary, the owner of Pegasus tive, Cobb, is an exiled fairy in huOne of his more attention-grabBooks in downtown Bend, moved man form who is less concerned with bing projects is titled "Freedy Filkins, to Bend at age 3 in the 1950s and re- hunting recreation pass violators International Jewel Thief." "It's so weirdly nerd-specific that turned after going to college at the than with chasing down creatures I'm not sure if the general public University of Oregon. After publish- not well known on the High Desert. ing three fantasy novels in the 1980s, McGeary is already at work on a would like Freedy," McGeary said. he switched his focus to his family sequel concerning werewolves, and "It's a modern story that parallels the and business and let his literary am- he plans for the third and fourth Hobbit, but it isn't like the Hobbit. Inbitions fall to the wayside. books to address ghosts and aliens. stead of a ring, it's a flash drive, the "When I first came back to writing While composing a f o u r -part one flash drive to rule them all." a few years ago, it was a struggle," supernatural detective series may SeeMcGeary/B6
the teens lit paper on fire, according to police, and urinated on the sub-
floor. — From staff reports
FIRE UPDATE Reported for Central
and Eastern Oregon. For the latest information, visit www.nwccweb .us/information/
firemap.aspx. B end
[,- vi "; Qend ::
John+yDa
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Burns
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Chiloquin
The Third Street
underpass will be closed from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. nightly throughout
August as city crews work to correct frequent flooding. A
signed detour will lead commuters to Franklin Avenue, Ninth Street
and Wilson Avenue. Gre wood Ave. Franklin Av
Detour Thir
tre nde ass nA BS I
I
R d Market d Greg Cross/The Bulletin
'
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•
Ben natlYe chlmes In wlth Capltol Hlll app By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
1. Green Ridge • Acres: 1,510 • Containment: 95% • Cause: Lightning 2. GC Complex
• Acres: 11,963 • Containment: 80%
• Cause: Lightning 2. Cedar Mountain • Acres: 18,000 • Containment: 60%
• Cause: Lightning
WASHINGTON — With its myriad hallways and sprawling office buildings, Capitol Hill can be a tough place to navigate, even for veteran lawmakers who sometimes have to rush to the floor to cast a vote. A bells-and-lights system alertsmembers and staffers of upcoming votes. Bend native Ted Henderson, who learned to decipher the buzzes and blinks during the two years he spent as a Hill staffer, realized a mobile phone application thatserved the same purpose
would be more convenient. So when his former boss, Rep. Dale Kildee, D-Mich., retired in January, Henderson, who has a degree in mechanical engineering, set about to make one. "When buzzers go off, everyone drops what they are doing, and it really drives the day," said Henderson, 29. "The scheduler turns on C-SPAN to make sure that it's a vote that's happening, and not just a quorum call (a procedural maneuver that is often used to stall for time). This is an easier wayto
keep people in the loop." Henderson grew up in
Bend and attended Mountain View High School before graduating from The Lawrenceville School in New Jersey. As a kid, he went to robotics camp, and has been coding since he was in the fifth grade. Building an app from scratch was a challenge, he said, but it felt good to do something with tangible, quantitative results. He launched the first version of his Capitol Bells app in April, and it quickly gained traction with members and staffers. Rep. Jared Polis, D-Colo., recently said he and his staff use it, and House Minority Whip
Steny Hoyer, D-Md., called Et an Ennovattve ¹opengov app" in a tweet last month. "With instant alerts when votes are called and realtime tallies during votes, the Capitol Bells app is a valued resource for members and their staff around the Capitol, including my own, which is responsible for managing the House floor," Hoyer told The Bulletin. "I applaud these efforts to make our government more transparent and open to the public, and will continue to push for more accessibility to our work in Congress." SeeApp/B6
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ro",or
Andrew Clevenger/The Bulletin
B2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 'I3, 2013
E VENT
AL E N D A R
Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. "ERICCLAPTON'S CROSSROADS REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: GUITAR FESTIVAL 2013": A Free admission; 3-6 p.m.; screening of the film about guitar Centennial Park, Seventh Street legends joining Eric Clapton for a and Evergreen Avenue; 541-5500066 or redmondfarmersmarket1O jam session; $15; 7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 hotmail.com. S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; TUESDAYFARMERS MARKET: Free 541-382-6347. admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brookswood MISS LONELYHEARTS BAND: The Meadow Plaza, 19530 Amber California country and rockabilly Meadow Drive, Bend; 541band performs; free; 9 p.m.; Blue 323-3370 or farmersmarket© Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25 S.W. brookswoodmeadowplaza.com. Century Drive, Bend; 541-389-2558 SMART ATTHELIBRARY: Learn or www.bluepinebar.com. what it takes to volunteer to read in local elementary schools and create WHISKEY SHIVERS: TheAustin, Texas-based Americana band a book-inspired art piece; free; 5-7 performs, with Wild Child; $5; p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541-355-5601 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood or www.getsmartoregon.org. Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www. THE HIDDENCAVES OF OREGON: silvermoonbrewing.com. Experience an in-depth account of Oregon's hidden caves with Brent McGregor; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. WEDNESDAY Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or www. "DIG INTO BRIAN WAITE BAND": deschuteslibrary.org. Featuring musical theatre, TUMALO TUMAL00 BENEFIT imaginative storytelling and a rock CONCERT:Featuring Americana concert; free; 2:30 p.m.; Sisters live music, a potluck picnic and Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; pie auction; proceeds benefit 541-312-1 070. the funding of maintenance and sanitation services along the BEND FARMERSMARKET: Free Deschutes River in Tumalo; $10 admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks Alley, between Northwest suggesteddonation;6-9 p.m .; Franklin Avenue and Northwest Tumalo Garden Market, 19879 Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, Eighth St.; 541-728-0088 or bendfarmersmarket@gmail.com or earthsart@gmail.com. www.bendfarmersmarket.com. TWILIGHT CINEMA: An outdoor screening of "Cloudy With a Chance MUSIC IN THECANYON: Featuring classic rock with Hangar 52; free; of Meatballs" (2009); bring low5:30-8p.m.;Am erican Legion profile chair or blanket, your own CommunityPark,850 S.W. picnic, no glass or pets, snacks Rimrock Way, Redmond; www. available; free; 6:30 p.m.; Sunriver musicint hecanyon.com. Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541PICNIC IN THEPARK: Featuring 585-3333 or www.sunriversharc. freeform Americana with John com. Shipe; free; 6-8 p.m.; Pioneer Park, 450 N.E. Third St., "LOSTANGELS:SKID ROW ISMY Prineville; 541-447-6909 or www. HOME": A screening of the film crookcountyfoundation.org/events. about people living on the street, "DIG INTO BRIANWAITE BAND": followedbyQ 8 A;$5suggested donation; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 Featuring musical theatre, p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. imaginative storytelling and a rock
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
TODAY
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin file photo
Farmers markets will be held in multiple locations in the coming days. Redmond's runs from 3-6 p.m. at Centennial Park today, while Brookswood Meadow Plaza in Bend will host one from 3-7 p.m.The Bend Farmers Market is Wednesday from 3-7 p.m. between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street. concert; free; 6:30 p.m.; Highland Magnet School, 701 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; 541-617-7050 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. COOPERANDTHEJAM: The Nashville, Tenn.-based soul artist performs; free; 7 p.m., doors open 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. SUNRIVER MUSICFESTIVAL CLASSICAL CONCERT II: "Mozart in Motion" featuring all Mozart music; $30-$60, $10 youth; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-593-9310, tickets@ sunrivermusic.org or www. sunrivermusic.org. TRUTH & SALVAGECO.: The Nashville, Tenn.-based countryrock band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Blue Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-389-2558 or www.bluepinebar.com.
THURSDAY "DIG INTO BRIANWAITEBAND": Featuring musical theatre,
imaginative storytelling and a rock concert; free; 11:30 a.m.; M.A. Lynch Elementary School,1314 S.W. Kalama Ave., Redmond; 541312-1050 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. "DIG INTO BRIANWAITE BAND": Featuring musical theatre, imaginative storytelling and a rock concert; free; 2:30 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 54 I-3 I2- I090. BEND BREWFEST:Event includes tastings from multiple brewers, food vendors and more; children admitted until 7 p.m.; ID required for entry; free admission, must purchase mug and tasting tokens to drink; 3-11 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive; 541-312-8510 or www. bendbrewfest.com. GRIDIRON RIBFEED: A barbecue fundraiser with a competitive cook-off, rib feed and live music; proceeds benefit the Summit High School football program and related youth programs; $25, $15 for children; 5:30-8:30 p.m.; Century Center, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; landrews@salesfish.com or
www.bendstorm.com. MUNCH & MUSIC: The rock'n' roll band Igor & Red Elvises performs; with food, arts and crafts booths, children's area and more; dogs prohibited; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; www.munchandmusic.com. TWILIGHT CINEMA: An outdoor screening of "Despicable Me" (2010); bring low-profile chair or blanket, your own picnic, snacks available; free; 6:30 p.m.; Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; 541585-3333 or www.sunriversharc. com. PLAY READINGSERIES: Derek and Jeanne Sitter read "Gruesome Playground Injuries," Rajiv Joseph's award-winning play; $5; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. RIFFTRAX LIVE: "STARSHIP TROOPERS": A screening of the 1997 science-fiction movie, with humorouscommentary;$12.50;8 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. "REVEAL THEPATH": A screening of the film about exploring four continents on a bike; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. HELLO DOLLFACE:The Colorado blues, rock and soul band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend;541-388-8331 or www. silvermoonbrewing.com.
FRIDAY THE NEWBERRYEVENTMUSIC & ARTS FESTIVAL:Camping, live music, art, silent auction, food and beverage booths; a "Defeat MS" fundraiser; $18 one-day pass, $45 three-day pass (camping included), free 12 and younger; 1-9 p.m.;Diamond Stone GuestLodge, 16693 Sprague Loop, La Pine; 541-
536-6263orwww.bendticket.com. HIGH 8 DRYBLUEGRASS FESTIVAL: The three-day festival includes live music, workshops, food and more; $15, free for children younger than12; $10 camping fee per vehicle; 1:30 p.m., gates open noon Aug. 15 for campsites; last performance is 4:25 p.m. Aug. 18; Runway Ranch, 22655 Peacock Lane, Bend; www.hadbf.com. BEND BREWFEST:Event includes tastings from multiple brewers, food vendors and more; children admitted until 7 p.m.; ID required for entry; free admission, must purchase mug and tasting tokens to drink; 3-11 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive; 541-312-8510 or www. bendbrewfest.com. SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park,W estCascade Avenue and Ash Street; www. sistersfarmersmarket.com. HARVEST RUN:Featuring the Drifter's Car Club annual car show near the park with barbecue, music, raffle, games and more; proceeds benefit Make-A-Wish Foundation, Hospice of Redmond and Sisters, and Sparrow Clubs; free admission; 6 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond; 541-548-6329. MUNCH & MOVIES: An outdoor screening of "Brave" (2012); with food vendors and live music; free; 6 p.m.,movie beginsatdusk; Compass Park, 2500 N.W. Crossing Drive, Bend; 541-382-1662 or www. northwestcrossing.com. TAARKA: The global Americana band performs; $5-10; 7 p.m.; Angeline's Bakery & Cafe, 121 W. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-549-9122. SUNRIVER MUSICFESTIVAL CLASSICALCONCERT III:"Tango Fire," featuring the music of Ginastera, Piazzolla, Vivaldi and Marquez; $30-$60, $10 youth; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-593-9310, tickets© sunrivermusic.org or www. sunrivermusic.org.
NEWS OF RECORD
Theft — A theft was reported at 5:02 p.m. July 25, in the 200 block of Southwest Century Drive. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 5:58 p.m. July 26, in the 200 block of Northwest Columbia Street. DUII — Joanne Marie Wallis, 46, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:05 p.m. July 31, in the 20900 block of Desert Woods Drive. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 1:30 p.m.Aug.4,in the 200 block of Southeast Third Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:29 a.m. Aug. 8, in the 1800 block of Northeast Altura Drive. DUII — Phillip Stanley Black, 49, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence
of intoxicants at 7:32 p.m. Aug. 8, in the area of McClellan Road andMcClellan Lane. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 9:58 p.m. Aug. 8, in the 63100 block of Desert Sage Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:59a.m. Aug.9,in the 60800 block of Yellow Leaf Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 8:28 a.m. Aug. 9, in the 63300 blockof Lamoine Lane. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 5:08 p.m.Aug.9,in the 400 block of Southeast Fourth Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 11:16 p.m. Aug. 9, in the area of Northeast Franklin Avenue and Northeast First Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 9:51 a.m. Aug. 10, in the area of Northwest Wall Street and Northwest Minnesota Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at11:04 a.m.Aug. 8,in the 900 block of Northwest Bond Street. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 2:53 p.m. Aug. 8, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. DUII — Elizabeth Laura Churchill,
Suit
"I'm not saying it
POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT
Contlnued from B1 "We didn't get a feeling one way or another whether it went well," said one of Peterson's attorneys, Mario Riquelme, of Elliott, Anderson, Riquelme 5 Wilson LLP. "But we obviously think our legal argument is strong." Peterson counseled a n d supervised cadets in the military-model high school for atrisk youth. When shereturned from maternity leave in 2011, Peterson claimed she was not reinstated to her previous position as a supervisor. She quit her job in September2011 because of"intolerable working conditions," the complaint states. She is seeking $500,000in the lawsuit for emotional and physical suffering aswell as legal fees. Crowley told Adler the allegations do not rise to sexual harassment. "I'm not saying it was an employee relationship t h a t was perfect — there were issues," Crowley said. "But the issues she talks about do not rise to the level alleged." Riquelme argued that the alleged harassment was ongo-
was an employee relationship that was perfect — there were issues. But the issues she talks about do not rise to the level
al/eged." — Ken Crowley, senior assistant state attorney general
32, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 4:25 p.m. Aug. 8, in the area of Southeast 15th Street and Southeast Ramsay Road. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 2:39 a.m. Aug. 9, in the 900 block of Northwest Galveston Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:28 a.m. Aug. 10, in the 400 block of Southwest Bluff Drive. Burglary — A burglary, an act of criminal mischief, a vehicle was entered with items stolen and an arrest made at11:34 a.m. Aug. 10, in the 3100 block of Northeast Delmas Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 3:44 p.m. Aug. 10, in the 61000 block of Snowbrush Drive. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 10:14 p.m. Aug. 10, in the 1500 block of Northeast Medical Center Drive. DUII — Rikki Elaine Blodgett, 31, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:38 p.m. Aug. 10, in the area of Northwest Greenwood Avenue and Northwest Harriman Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 8:07a.m.Aug. 9,in the 700 block of Northwest Broadway Street.
— Reporter: 541-383-0348, bandersen@bendbulletin.com
Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:21 a.m. Aug. 9, in the area of Northwest Deer Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:30 a.m. Aug. 9, in the area of Northwest Ninth Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at9:36a.m. Aug. 9, in the area of Northeast Juniper Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at10:36 a.m. Aug. 9, in the area of South Main Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:03 a.m. Aug. 9, in the area of Northwest Gardner Road. Burglary — A burglary was reported at11:33 a.m. Aug. 9, in the area of Northeast Lookout Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 9:13 p.m. Aug. 9, in the area of Northwest Third Street. Theft — A theft was reported at1:55 p.m. Aug. 10, in the area of North Main Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 5:08 p.m. Aug. 10, in the area of Ochoco Creek Park. Burglary — A burglary was reported at10:55 a.m. Aug. 11, in
Continued from B1
Police to stage safety enforcement operation Bend Police officers will be watching whether drivers
are stopping for and yielding to pedestrians Thursday at a downtown intersection as part of a safety enforcement
CONGRESS U.S. Senate • Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore.
the intersection. Hesaid officers will be giving warnings to drivers who don't stop and
U.S. House of Representatives
Northwest Wall and Northwest Vermont streets, said Bend Police Lt. Chris Carney. Northwest Bond Street also connects to
remain stoppedwhile a pedestrian crosses the street.
Motorists must stop and yield to pedestrians who are waiting to cross, or are crossing the road, according to Bend Police. Funding for the operation
comes from a grantfrom Oregon Walks, aPortlandbasednonprofitgroup, and the Oregon Department of Transportation. — Bulletin staff report
JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Theft — A theft was reported at 1:53 p.m. Aug. 5, in the 13600 block of Southwest Cinder Drive in Crooked River Ranch. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 3 p.m. Aug. 8, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 and Dover Lane in Madras. Burglary — A burglary and a theft were reported at 2:43 p.m. Aug. 8, in the area of East Ridgeview Drive and East D Street in Culver. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:11 a.m. Aug. 11, in the 300 block of East Metolius Street in Culver. Unauthorizeduse — A vehicle was reported stolen at11:38 a.m. Aug. 11, in the 200 block of Third Street in Metolius. Theft — A theft was reported at4:21 p.m. Aug.11, in the area of Southwest Elbe Drive and Southwest Belmont Lane in Madras.
OREGON STATE POLICE Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 2:42 p.m. Aug.
9, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost153. DUII — Lanae Denise Jerome, 51, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:55 p.m. Aug. 9, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost 176. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at1:33 a.m. Aug. 11, in the area of Highway 20 and Cook Avenue in Tumalo. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 9:39 a.m. Aug. 8, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 in Chemult. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 1:20 p.m. Aug. 10, in the area of Birchwood Drive and Sun Forest Drive in La Pine.
BEND FIRE RUNS Friday 27 — Medical aid calls. Saturday 1:10 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, area of Baker Road. 7:31 p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 20007 Alderwood Circle. 18 — Medical aid calls. Sunday 4:28 p.m.— Smoke odor reported, area of Northeast Mays Avenue. 22 — Medical aid calls.
For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit tvtvw.bendbulletin.comlofficials.
107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142
operation. The operation is set to
the area of Northwest10th Street.
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
BRIEFING
runfrom 7:30to11:30a.m. Thursday at the intersection of ing and therefore could not be framed in the 180-day window. Another of Peterson's attorneys, Phil Anderson, said DeMarrinvited Peterson out to a bar underfalsepretenses.He also said that, while pregnant, Peterson had her breaks tracked by superiors, and she was admonished for taking longer breaks to pump breast milk. "The state's argument sounds really good when you look at it from the surface," Anderson said. "But the facts are deep." The director of the Youth Challenge Program, Dan Radabaugh, declined to comment Monday on the lawsuit.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT
• Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone:202-225-6730 W eb: http://walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 N.W. BondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452
STATE OF OREGON • Gov. John Kltzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582
Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary of State Kate Brown, D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1616 Fax:503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us • Treasurer Ted Wheeler, 0 1590regon State Capitol 900 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phoner503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer©state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • Attorney GeneralEllen Rosenblum, D 1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phoner 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian 800 N.E. Oregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail@state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
LEGISLATURE Senate • Sen. Ted Ferrloll, R-District 30 (includesJefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., 8-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. TimKnopp, 8-District27 (includes portion of Deschutes)
900 Court St. N.E., S-423 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp@state.or.us W eb: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. Doug Whltsett, R-District28
(includesCrook,portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsettOstate.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett
House • Rep. Jason Conger, R-District 54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-477 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasoncongerC!state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. John Huffman, R-District 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. N.E., H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. Mike McLane, R-District55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. Gene Whlsnant, R-District 53 (portion of DeschutesCounty) 900 Court St. N.E., H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant
TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
Wild stretch of Rogue reopened
AROUND THE STATE Rock climding accident —oregonstate Police sayarock climber was seriously injured in a fall Sunday at Golden and Silver
Falls State Natural Areaabout 24 miles northeast of Coos Bay.The man was climbing a rock wall near a waterfall when he fell more than 30 feet to the rocks below. The climber was identified as 39-year-old
Jeffrey N. Harden ofCoos Bay. Anair ambulancetook him to Sacred Heart Medical Center at RiverBend in Springfield. He was listed there Monday in serious condition.
to rafters The Associated Press GRANTS PASS Whitewater outfitters scrambled Monday to get back in business after the U.S. Bureau of Land Mana gement r e opened t h e popular wild sectiogrern of the Rogue River, which has been closed for nearly two weeks amid heavy smoke from wildfires. Rain over the weekend cleared the skies enough for BLM to lift the closure that rafting outfitters and lodges say has cost them hundreds of thousands of dollars. T he hiking t r ail f r o m Grave Creek to Rogue River Ranch remained closed, as did Bear Camp Road, the main route used to shuttle rafters' vehicles. "That's good news," Pete Wallstrom of M omentum River E x peditions s aid. "The Rogue is the Eiffel Tower of Southern Oregon. When it's closed, nobody comes here for anything." T here was no bi g i n flux of rafters at the Grave Creek boat ramp on Mond ay morning, said L o r i Bodi, the BLM ranger at Rand, where the agency hands out permits for floating the p opular 34-mile stretch of the Rogue River, one of Oregon's top whitewater destinations. There were no private boaters putting on, and one family trip using a commercial permit. Wallstrom said his trips scheduled for t hi s w eek remained canceled, to give guests time to change their plans, but trips for next week were filled. Affordable Shuttles owner Sharon McCall said she lost revenue from the 12day closure, but her business would survive and she was ready to go back to work. The closure of the Bear Camp Road shuttle route meant she would have to take rafters' vehicles to the Foster Bar takeout by the longer coast route, which doubledthe fee to $200. "I'm not crying," she said. "It's all nature." BLM had said it closed the river out of fears the smoke would keep helicopters from making a rescue attempt if a rafter got into trouble, The agency said f i r efighters were still working on the Big W i ndy complex of fires, which were 15 percent contained after burning through 23 square miles. Though rafters were allowed to put on the river, some areas where the fire was active remained closed
to camping and stopping, except to scout rapids. Meanwhile, fi r e f ighters on Sunday were dispatched to 10 new fires on the Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest that were sparked by lightning from Saturday's thunderstorms. The largest was 4 acres, burning near Bolan Lake 15 miles southeast of Cave Junction. The other nine fires were all smaller than an acre. At the Labrador Fire 10 miles west of Selma, evacuationprecautions were eased for the Oak Flat community, where residents were advised to be ready to leave. The evacuation advisory was lifted for the area between Kerby Flat and McCaleb Ranch.
"The Rogue is the Eiffel Tower of Southern Oregon. When it's closed,
nobody comes here for anything." — Pete Wallstrom of Ashland-based Momentum River Expeditions
a
Oregnn gaS prICeS —TheAAAauto club reports the average price of a gallon of gasoline in Oregon is $3.82. That's down 4cents in a week. It's 27 cents higher than the national average.
(
FiShermen prOteSt —Sport fishermen at the mouth of the Columbia River are protesting a decision to raise parking fees at the Port of Astoria. Bob Rees says the $20-a-day fee strikes many in the '
sport-fishing groups he represents as price-gouging, or revengefor recent changes in gillnetting on the river that restrict commercial
•
fishing. But a member of the port's commission, Stephen Fulton,
says the port is "bleeding money" and needsthe revenue. Hesays the gillnetting controversy has nothing to do with the parking fees. The late-summer Buoy10 salmon fishing season has recently started.
The port currently charges $5 adayfor parking and trailer storage at the East EndMooring Basin or $60 for one month.
Lee Juillerat/The Heraldahd News
The remains of a World War II torpedo bomber that crashed in1944 rest in the Klamath Marsh. The plane was on a training mission, and a passenger on the plane was killed near the Klamath Marsh National Wildlife Refuge headquarters in Chiloquin, which is located north of Klamath Falls.
'Suicide Bridge' death —Despite the pleas of a volunteer trying to prevent deaths at Portland's Vista Bridge, amanjumped to his
Piece of WWII history rests in field near Klamath Marsh
death Monday morning. It was the fifth death this year at the span long known as the "Suicide Bridge." City workers have begun putting
up barriers to prevent suicides, but work won't be complete until next week. In the meantime, volunteers trained in suicide prevention are patrolling the bridge. The woman on duty Mondayyelled at the man,
who was described as "agitated andpacing." Then heclimbed over a railing on the west end of the bridge andjumped, landing on aservice road near light-rail tracks.
EVaCuatiOn SCam —TheDouglas County sheriff's office says By Lee Juillerat Klamath Falls Herald and News
CHILOQUIN — A piece of fuselage lying partially buried in a field is what remains of "Betty the Bomber," a World War II airplane that crashed in the nearby Klamath Marsh in 1944. Not much is known about the accident, although a story on the front page of the July 10, 1944, Herald and News provides basic information. A day earlier, two N avy TBF Avengers, torpedo bombers developed for the Navy, were flying on a training mission from Pasco, Wash., to
someone has been calling people in the Myrtle Creek area and telling
w
We really dOn't knOW muCh abaut the hiStOry."
— Mike Johnson, Klamath Marsh National Wildlife Refuge manager
that area.
M ike J o h n son, re f u g e manager for what is now the Klamath M a r s h Na t i onal Wildlife Refuge, said the refuge has l i t tl e i n f ormation about the incident. B ased on h i s torical a c counts, he said at least one of the planes was moved from the crash site about two or three miles to a location near the refuge headquarters to end reports of th e downed San Diego. planes from other pilots seeWhen one of the planes had ing the site from the air. "We r eally d o n't k n o w engine problems, the pilots decided to land on the marsh, much about the history, other which is about 70 miles north than what Capt. Bartholomew of Klamath Falls. has collected and the account Capt. Ryan Bartholomew, in 'Bill Kitt,'" Johnson said, rea historian with the Air Naferring to the book, "Bill Kitt: tional G u ar d a t Ki n g sley From trail driver to Cowboy Field, said the plane with en- Hall of Fame," by D.L. "Jack" gine problems landed safely, Nicol, W i l l ia m K i t t r edge's but the second plane had its grandson, and Amy Thompwheels caught in the marsh, son, Nicol's niece. causing it to flip. Ensign RichThe book lists the crash as ard Baker of Dillsburg, Pa., a happening in 1945, but based passenger in the plane, was on newspaper accounts, it killed. happened a year earlier. According to the newspaAccording to "Bill K i tt," per story, another officer and "one of the planes had engine three enlisted men were in- trouble over Klamath Marsh jured. None of the four people Ranch a n d cra s h-landed, on the other bomber were wheels up, in the YJ Mitchell injured. Field. The squadron leader
circled and decided to land and check on the pilot of the downed plane. Tragically, he landed with his wheels down," flipping the plane. "He didn't notice it w a s s of t g r o und with grass growing through water." The wrecked airplanes, according to " Bill K i tt," were given to rancher Bill Gouldin. Later in the year, when the ground dried, the planes were dragged out of the meadow and moved under trees because "The Navy didn't want to be getting repeated reports of downed airplanes. Gouldin later took them apart, salvaging whatever he could use at the ranch." All that remains is a piece of fuselage of the Avenger that flipped over. For years, it has lain partially buried in a field near the marsh refuge headquarters. Because of sometimes contradictory historical reports, Johnson said th e K l amath Basin National Wildlife Refuges office, which oversees the Klamath Marsh and other refuges, wants to collect a correctaccount and develop a future interpretive sign.
Oregon Court of Appealsrulesthat online filing repository ispublic record By Nigel Duara The Associated Press
PORTLAND — The state online repository of court files is apublic record, the Oregon Court of Appeals has ruled, overturning a low e r -court judgment that put the state in the awkward position of arguing that its own online registry was insufficiently reliable to establish that a conviction had taken place. The ruling came in a minor Multnomah County m i sdemeanor case in which a circuit courtjudge refused to accept a defendant's use of the Oregon Judicial Information Network as a public record to attack the credibility of a g o vernment witness. "We disagree with the state's argument that an OJIN register is not sufficiently reliable to 'establish' the existence of a conviction," Appeals Court Judge Timothy Sercombe wrote in the ruling released last week. The case itself was simple: Two people in the same place at the same time were questioned in t h e s ame c r ime, in this case, breaking car wlndows. Each said the other person did it. Heather Marie Thomas was charged with c r iminal mischief.The other person was the government's chief witness. Under questioning to establish his credibility, the witness acknowledged one previous
them to prepare to evacuate because of wildfires. The sheriff's office says the calls are bogusandapparently some type of scam. The Douglas County sheriff's office says there is noevacuation order in
conviction for robbery in "1998 or 1999." But Thomas' defense attorneys saw an opportunity to impeach him as a witness — to show he was lying by demonstrating he actually had two convictions. So they turned to a printout from OJIN, the official online case register created using the best of early-1980s computing technology. It showed the two convictions. But then, the state argued that its own case regi ster wa s i n s ufficient a n d unreliable. The trial court judge agreed. "I have seen enough errors in judgment print-outs like that," the trial judge said in his ruling. The appeals court f ound that thinking problematic, especially in a trial that hinged on the credibility of the witness and the defendant. " The case turned on t h e credibility of th e tw o m a in witnesses," the appeals court ruled. "Both disclaimed responsibility and blamed the other. In the absence of physical evidence, the jury was left to make a credibility judgment as to which competing narrative to believe." Under those circumstances, the judges wrote, witness credibility was paramount. They reversed Thomas' conviction and sent the case back down to Multnomah County Circuit Court. The appeals court judges
declined to rule on what other records could be considered "public record" to attack a witness's credibility.
Boy allegedly raped —The Marion County sheriff's office says a35-year -oldSalem woman was arrestedSundayandaccusedof raping a neighbor boy over an eight-month period beginning when
he was11 years old. Theboy's mother called police Sunday and reported her suspicions about her friend andneighbor. Thesheriff's office says the boy and the woman admitted they had been having sex
since February at the woman's apartment or in public places when they went for walks. Thewomanwas booked into jail on rape and sex abuse charges. Sex charge —The operations director of a Southern Oregonvineyard has taken a leave of absence after disclosure that he faces a federal charge of engaging in sex with a woman he was sitting with during
a commercial flight to LasVegas.Troon Vineyards issued astatement from Chris Martin, the son of owner Larry Martin, saying news ac-
countshavemisrepresentedwhathappened,buthehasbeenadvised by counsel not to give hisown account. Heapologized for the adverse attention. In an affidavit supporting charges of lewd acts on an airplane against Martin and a woman named Jessica Stroble, an FBI agent
wrote that passengerssawthem repeatedly engaging in oral sex during an Allegiant Airlines flight last June from Medford to Las Vegas.
Portland apartment fire —Investigators believe a fire that gutted a five-story Portland apartment building was deliberately set. Portland Fire and Rescue Lt. Rich Chatman said at a briefing on
Monday that authorities are keeping details of the investigation under wraps until they can find more witnesses. The department is offering a $2,500 reward for information that leads to a conviction. Chatman
says investigators don't believe the fire wascaused by negligent squatters or was set inadvertently. The fire on Thursday destroyed the apartment building in northeast Portland, valued at about $5 mil-
lion. No onewas injured. The fire required seven ladder trucks, more than two dozen engines and more than120 firefighters. The fire also
heavily damagedtwo homes nearby. Chatmansays investigators don't believe the fire is connected to other crimes. — From wire reports Weekly Arts Br Entertainment Inside hS L GfLZBiE
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B4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
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isters and La Pine want a place at the economic development table, and they're willing to put up some money to get it. There's plenty of logic to the idea, but they'd be wise to establish performance metrics at the outset with a deadline to cut their losses if they don't get value for their investment. La Pine has agreed to pay $20,000and Sisters$30,000 to help pay for two part-time positions in Economic Development forCentral Oregon, according to EDCO Executive Director Roger Lee. The effort will also get $40,000 from Deschutes County and $15,000 from local businesses, he said. Four other communities Bend, Redmond, Prineville and Jefferson County — are already represented in EDCO. La Pine City Manager Rick Allen said the move will allow La Pine to fully promote its ready-togo industrial land, which has an electrical substation that could serve a high-tech firm. He said the new EDCO employee will be based in La Pine City Hall and can work on attracting new businesses and expanding existing ones from La Pine to Sunriver.
For Sisters City Manager Andrew Gorayeb, the message is that Sisters "is definitely open for business." He said he's interested in diversity, seeking multiple medium and small businesses rather than one large one. Lee said it's difficult for EDCO to have working relationships with every mayor and city manager in the region, and having local experts will help address issues unique to each area. Each community i n C entral Oregon has its own strengths and complications, and it makes sense that they will be better represented by a dedicatedperson. Economic development efforts, however, are tough to evaluate: Did thatbusiness come here because of those efforts, or would it have arrived on its own or through other connections'? After a designated period of time, Sisters and La Pine should examine what they've gained in concrete terms, not just in effort expended. Then they can sunset the effort if it hasn't helped their local economies.
Time to tap the brakes on Pay it Forward idea he Pay it Forward concept for college tuition received a gush of enthusiasm from across the nation when it first surfaced publicly during Oregon's legislative session earlier this year. State lawmakers took the suitably measured step of seeking a study, but now Oregon U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley wants the federal government to pay for pilot programs. It's certainly a politically attractive idea, but the risks are enormous. Nobodyshould be dumping money into it before far more detailed studies are completed. Under the Pay it Forward approach, students would attend college tuition-free and then pay a small percentage of their incomes for the next couple of decades. Those who earn more would pay more, and there would be less risk fora poor student to seek a degree, according to the idea. Proponents estimated it would take payments of 3 percent of income for 24 years to make the system work, and as much as $9 billion of taxpayer moneyup front before it became self-sustaining in Oregon. The Oregon Legislature asked the state's Higher Education Coordinating Commission to explore the idea and design a pilot program to test it. Several Oregon legislators welcomed Merkley's proposal
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of federal money to pay for such a pilot. In our view, this is an idea that has gotten way ahead of itself. Study it, yes. But don't jump straight to designing a pilot. Add a little skepticism to balance the excitement. Start with the question of whether there should even be a pilot. Look for the possible unintended consequences. For example, what happens to the would-be poets and historians as cash-strapped college administrators decide which programs get investments'? If repayments depend on high salaries, interest will likely flow to high finance and engineering, not literature and social-worker training. Most importantly, this approach could provide an off-ramp from the critical discussion we need to have about why college tuition is so high and what can be done to bring it down. Well-intentioned actions in the past — making student and parent loans so easily available, for example — freed colleges from the natural market restraints that could have slowed tuition's rise. It's a measure of our national anxiety about college costs and student debt that Pay it Forward is getting so much attention. Free tuition sounds awfully good — probably too good to be true.
• n
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U.S. low on leverage in Arab world By Doyle McManus
sprawling economy. Sisi and other Egyptians know this all too well — but American politicians often sound as if they haven't noticed. And other powers have stepped in to fill the breach. Last month, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait announced that they were rushing $12 billion in economic aid to Egypt to help the military regime stabilize the economy. Those gulf monarchies had an agenda, too; they fear the Muslim Brotherhood, don't yearn for the restoration of democracy and would be perfectly happy if Sisi crackeddown hard.Ifforeign aid creates leverage, the sheikdoms' $12 billion trumps our $1.6 billion handily. Besides, foreign influence in countries struggling toward democracy is a double-edged sword. The Obama administration has managed to alienate both sides in Egypt's political battle; the Muslim Brotherhood thinks the United States plotted to undermine it, and the military and its secular supporters saythe United States is being too hard on Sisi now. All sides, including Sisi, cast themselves as nationalists; appearing to bow to U.S. wishes won't help the general maintain his sky-high popularity. In any case, the stakes for Egyptians are too high for U.S. advice to count for much. "We're a sideshow," notes Steven Cook, an Egypt scholar at the Council on Foreign Relations. "If you're an Egyptian leader, one of your best political strategies right now is to stick it to Washington." And that's precisely what Sisi is doing. "You turned your backs on the Egyptians, and they can't forget that," hetold the Washington Post last week. "Talking a lot about aid and U.S. assistance really hurts our pride and dignity, (but) if the Americans want to cut assistance, they can."
Los Angeles Times
he "Arab Spring" may not have succeeded in bringing democracy to the Middle East. But it has provided powerful evidence of a different phenomenon: the illusion of U.S. influence over governments we onceconsidered our clients. Take Egypt. Before 2011, the Bush and Obama administrations tried to nudge the autocratic Hosni Mubarak t oward d emocracy; Mubarak ignored the advice. Last year, the Obama administration
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pleaded (gently) with the freely
elected Mohamed Morsi to make his Muslim Brotherhood government more inclusive; Morsi ignored the advice. Now Egypt's armed forces have seized power and the United States is begging Gen. Abdel Fattah Sisi to refrain from cracking down too hard. Will he comply? Not likely. Whatever happened to our leverage as a superpower? If the United States could be expected to have influence over any institution in th e A rab w orld, it would be the government of Egypt, which collects $1.6 billion a year in American aid. But two factors have diminished the leverage that the United States once gained by doling out foreign aid: less money and more competition. First, $1.6 billion doesn't buy what it used to. U.S. aid to Egypt has been shrinking for most of Sisi's career. Adjusted for inflation, this year's $1.6billion is only about one-third as much as the U.S. spent on Egypt aid in 1986. The military portion of that annual aid, $1.3 billion, goes mostly to buying aircraft and tanks made in U.S. factories; the nonmilitary portion, $250 million, is little more than a drop in the bucket for Egypt's
The general's prickliness reflected anotherparadox: As leverage,foreign aid can be hard to use. Threatening to cut military aid may be a useful way to get Egyptian leaders' attention; but actually reducing military cooperation could hurt U.S. interests as much as Egypt's — not only in keeping peace with Israel, but also in counter-terrorismeff orts across the Arab world. That's why the Obama White House quickly walked away from the temptation to call Sisi's takeover a coup and freeze U.S. aid. Instead, it was left to Secretary of State John Kerry to categorize the military's action this way: "In effect, they were restoring democracy." For Egyptians, the message was familiar, if not entirely clear: For two decades, American politicians have threatened to pull aid if things didn't change, but they never dared pull the trigger. This time is unlikely to be much different. The same limits apply, in different propol1:ions, to U.S. policy in other parts of the Arab world. In 2012, Obama proposed major new funding to support nascent Arab democracies; most of the money never came through."We're responding to events of historic consequence with the equivalent of the change we can find in the couch cushions," said Tamara Cofman Wittes of the Brookings Institution's Saban Center, who ran democracy aid programs at the State Department. That doesn't mean the United States has no influence over events in the Arab world. It just means we have less sway than we often imagine — and the source of our influence may not be the size of the checks we write. — DoyleMcManus is acolumnist forT he Los Angeles Times.
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Political denigration of the poor a blow to our country's values By Billy Hardin ave you really been paying attention? I don't mean attention to the commentaries or pseudo-scientific reports funded by political, private or vested interests. If you have, the following will not be surprising. If you have relied on a limited perspective for information, you might appreciate some authentic facts. The U.S. Census Bureau reported: • In 2000, 31 million people lived below the poverty line — 11.3 percent of the U.S. population. • In 2010, the p opulation grew to 46 million — 15 percent of our population. • In 2010 alone, we saw r ecord wealth increase for the nation, but 2.6 million were added to poverty rolls. •Using the more accurate supplem ental poverty measure that i n cluded government supplements, the rate rose to 16.1 percent of our
IN MY VIEW population in 2010. • In 2011, another 600,000 dropped into poverty. Who are these people who swell the ranks of poordom'? The 50 million poor, now so-designated because they earn less than $11,000 ($23,000 for a family of four), are followed closely by another 51 million designated as "near poor," who earn less than $17,000. More than half of the "near poor" landed there from high-
er-paying jobs that no longer need them. This means more than onethird of us are in or nearing poverty because of medical or other fiscal reversals. The number of our poor encompasses 18.1 percent of our children and 15.5 percent of our working adults. More than one-third of our working-age population is no longer in the job market; only 58.6 percent
are now employed.More than 20 percent of American families reported not a single family member had a job last year. It is with a sense of frustrated outrage that I read or hear of political, or even private, denigration of the poor in our society. Like many other citizens who are swayed by personal morality to heed the dictum to help "the least among us," I give of time and treasure to help alleviate the savagery of poverty on both local and national levels. I ask myself, "How can arrogant, selfish, privileged citizens fail to recognize their debt to society and even petition for ever-increasing personal wealth?" More importantly, perhaps, is the path to destruction down which competing powers such as political, economic, institutional, etc., are leading our country. Selfish interest focused on the "bottom linen is not a value that
can lead to a bright future for nations. It has been demonstrated historically, and is common sense now, to realize the need to nurture the roots of a nation as well as its fruits. There are many examples of public leadership that poison the well of public judgment. Consider the following examples taken from public media: • In Texas, the legislature considered havingevery recipient of unemployment or welfare payments pass a drug test. •Republican leaders Rick Perry, Mitt Romney and Michele Bachmann, among others, complained the poor didn't pay income tax. (When there's insufficient income, what's to tax?) • A South Carolina official suggested feeding the poor was futile because, like feeding stray animals, they just kept breeding. • The Wall Street Journal touted a rising economy but also deplored
a rise in food stamps applications. (I wonder where the benefits went.) • Paul Ryan's House-approved budget called for $125 billion cut over the next five years, affecting 13 million people, half of whom are children. • Legislation limiting services to the elderly, medical care to the public, veteran benefits for tuition, health care and housing have been suggested. This is by no means a comprehensive summary of such leadership sentiments, but watch what goes on both locally and nationally. This is our country, and it should be reflecting our general attitudes and values. Worship of the "bottom line n has led us far afield from our basic American values. Historically, such concentration of power leads to tyranny. Read the words of the fathers of our constitution and appreciate their eternal wisdom on this subject. — Billy Hardin livesin Terrebonne.
TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
BS
OREGON NEWS
BITUARIES DE~TH N OTIgES Charles Lant, of Prineville June 20, 1925 - Aug. 7, 2013 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, 541-447-6459 Services: A committal service will be held on Wednesday, August 14, 2013, at 'IO:00 a.m., at Juniper Haven Cemetery in Prineville.
Donald Roe Sutherland, of Redmond July 8, 1929 - July 19, 2013 Services: Committal Service at Mt. Jefferson Memorial Park Madras, OR, at 11:00 a.m. Memorial Service at 2:00 p.m., at Community Presbyterian Church, 529 NW 19th Street, Redmond, OR
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 funeralhomes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Jody Payne, 77: A guitarist who toured with Willie Nelson for more thanthree decades, Payne retired to S t apleton, Ala., where he continued playing music, teaching the guitar at a local music store. Died Saturday in Stapleton. Thomas Stanhope, 87: A master of d i sguises whose reputation had nothing to do with his career at the Central Intelligence Agency, but was the result of moonlighting as the principal costume dresser at the Washington Opera. Died July 8 in Washington, D.C. Roy Rubin, 87: Fo r m er coach of t h e P h i l adelphia 76ers known for coaching the NBA's worst team — the 197273 76ers, who were 4-47 when Rubin was fired at the All-Star break and finished 9-73. Died Aug. 5 in Miami. — From wire reports
FEATURED OBITUARY
Clark was Reagan's trusted adviser By Tami Abdollah The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — William Clark, who rose from campaign volunteer to one of President Ronald Reagan's most trusted advisers, has died. He was 81. Clark died Saturday at his ranch home in the central California town of Shandon after a long battle with Parkinson's disease,according to his son. "It's been a hard fight for him, but we do feel he's in a better place and he's not suffering any longer," Paul Clark said Sunday. The elder Clark began work-
ing for Reaganbymanagingthe actor's 1966 gubernatorial campaign in Ventura County, north of Los Angeles. He ascended to various political jobs as Reagan moved from the Golden State to the White House. Clark worked for Reagan in Sacramento, rising to the position of executive secretary before accepting a judgeship with the San Luis Obispo County Superior Court. Reagan later appointed him to the s tate appellate court in L o s Angeles and then the state Supreme Courtbefore he moved to Washington to serve as deputy secretaryof state and national security adviser. Clark was national security adviser when Reagan maneuvered the Soviet Union toward arms control, and he was a key
player in Reagan's philosophy of "peace through strength." Their close relationship led Time magazine to name Clark "the second most powerful man in the White House" in a 1983 cover story. The New York Times said Clark had more access to Reagan than anyone else. "They had very similar ideas about what ought to be done," Edwin Meese, who served as counselor to Reagan and then as attorney general, told the San Luis Obispo Tribune in 2009. "And they also knew and understood one another very well, having worked together back in the California days." Clark then served as interior secretary for nearly two years, replacing u npopular department head James Watt, before returning to his private law practiceand business consulting firm. Born in 1931 in Oxnard to a family of lawmen (his grandfather Robert was Ventura County sheriff and a U.S. marshal; his father, William Sr., was the police chief of Oxnard), Clark served in the Army CounterIntelligence Corps in Europe in the mid-1950s. He attended both Stanford University and Loyola Law School without earning degrees, but nevertheless passed the bar exam. "That's been pointed out throughout his career that he finished neither college nor law school, but be that as it may he did just fine," his son Paul said. Clark is survived by f ive children. His wife died four years ago.
en sum e ain 0 reaene sea ir 's a ia By Steven Dubois
Jim Rogers, with the group Friends of the Elk River, stands next to a tree that was felled by the U.S. Forest Service. The Forest Service removed five trees at the Sunshine Bar Campground near Port Orford in southwest Oregon. The oldgrowth trees are part of prime habitat for a protected bird called the marbled murrelet.
The Associated Press
PORTLAND — Two feder-
alagenciesare atloggerheads over a decision to remove five o ld-growth trees from t h e habitat that supports a threatened sea bird during breeding season. The U.S. Forest Service cut the massive trees — one was 238-feet tall — in late April at the Sunshine Bar Campg round near P or t O r f o rd in southwest Oregon. The threatened marbled murrelet nests in the campground, though it's unknown if any were in the trees at the time they fell.
the Forest Service wrote. As for why it did not get approval from Fish and Wildlife, the agency said guidelines written for hazard trees in the The agency generally must Rogue River-Siskiyou NationgetapermitfromtheU.S. Fish al Forest are not compatible and Wildlife Service to take a with newer, regional Forest tree duringthe breeding sea- Service rules regarding hazson. But Fish and Wildlife did ard trees in campgrounds. It not know the trees were gone said it is now "working closely" with Fish and Wildlife to until getting a tip in late July. "We're still trying to figure address the issue. out the rationale," said Jim The marbled murrelet was Thrailkill, a f i el d s upervi- listed as threatened in 1992 sor for the Fish and Wildlife and habitat protection has Service. m eant less logging in t h e Forest Service officials de- Northwest. The tiny sea birds clined phone interviews this venture inland to raise their week. In written responses Fri- young and — like the spotted day,the agency said the trees owl — depend on old-growth were locatednear a campsite forests for nesting. and at high risk of losing limbs The v o lunteer e n v ironor falling. Of the five hazard mental group Friends of the trees that were removed, the Elk River reported the habiForest Service said, one was tat removal to the Fish and completely dead and the other Wildlife Service. The group's four had dead tops. founder,Jim Rogers, used the "Because ofits design and Freedom of Information Act layout, it would have been dif- to obtain a Feb. 7 letter from ficult to close the campground the Forest Service in which to the public, so waiting to Powers Ranger District engiremove hazard trees would neer Robin McAlpin wrote to have put the public at risk," District Ranger Jessie Berner
aboutthe need for a refresher class for fallers who cut big trees. Sunshine Bar Campground is mentioned as the site. McAlpin wrote that some "questions come to m i nd," i ncluding how F r i ends o f the Elk River would take the news and whether threatened and endangered species protections were a hurdle. "They were aware that if they let this get out, there would be trouble and they might not be able to do it," Rogers said. The Forest Service a cknowledged t ha t t r a i ning took place at Sunshine Bar. It said, however, the removal of hazard trees was the priority and it turned into a training session. Thrailkill s aid T h ursday his office has had preliminary talks with the Forest Service, and must fact check the information received. The Forest Service said it's implementing a new policy in w hich the district ranger makes a judgment call on hazard trees at campgrounds. Liability is
an issue, he was told, and a district ranger's options include pruning, topping, tree removal and c l osing sites within the campground. "It's still very concerning that these large trees were cut," Thrailkill said. Rogers, a 71-year-old forester, said at least four of the trees could have had their tops removed rather t h an felled, and the public have would have been safe. "They have to certify people as being trained to fall big trees, and so these trees were handy for them to cut," he said. "They didn't want to top them because that wouldn't solve their need for big trees to cut down." Thrailkill declined to say if his agency would pursue a penalty against the Forest Service. He said prevention is his focus. "A lot of our discussions have been framed around what kind of communication needs to happen internally within the f orest to a void this type of thing happening
again," he said.
WEST NEWS
Washington state usingdrug-recognition officers By Colin Campbell The Seattle Times
SEATTLE — Seattle Police DUI Officer Mike Lewis hears it all the time when he pulls over stoned driverscrawling along Interstate 5 at half the speed limit. "But it's legal." They're right — sort of. Initiative 502 legalized recreational marijuana use in Washington last year, but if drivers are too high to safely operate a vehicle, they'll still face a DUI charge. Just as state law limits drivers to a .08 blood alcohol content, it limits them to 5 nanograms of THC, marijuana's active ingredient, per milliliter of whole blood. A blood test is the quickest way to tell, but getting one became trickier when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in April that officers must have a warrant to obtain blood samples. Because many stops are made late atnight, when judges aren't available, officers must determineon thescene whether the driver is impaired. Lewis and more than 200 other officers around the state have been trained to make that determination. As drug-recognition experts, or "DREs," they receive two weeks of instruction on picking out impaired drivers and analyzing their
behaviorforthe presence ofalcohol or drugs. Since the program is administered on the state level, DRE officers can respond to DUI calls outside their jurisdiction and perform impaired-driver examinations wherever they're needed. Different agencies' policies vary on when a DRE is needed, but they're always called to investigate major collisions, especially those involving fatalities, and any in which officers suspect drug involvement beyond alcohol. Seattle police Officer Jon Huber, a regional DRE coordinator and instructor, likens each officer to a"walking, talking, drug-testing machine." Their observations aid state prosecutors in DUI cases that often can be complicated. Around 9 p.m. on a recent Friday, a call came over Lewis' radio that a woman had sideswiped several cars on a residential street in northwest Seattle. The driver told responding officers that she'd taken Risperdal,a prescription drug used to treat symptoms of schizophrenia and other forms of
psychosis. The middle-aged woman was sitting on a row of steps near the sidewalk when Lewis arrived. Her hands were shaking. She looked up at Lewis
FEATURED OBITUARY
Eydie Gormepersonified Vegas-styleglamour By Martin Weil and Terence McArdle
Ktamath Siskiyou Witdlands Center via The Associated Press
re
With her bouffant hairdos c omfortably steeped in t h e and beaded and f e athered sentiment of old marrieds who The Washing ton Pos t dresses, Gorme personified trusted each other enough Eydie Gorme, the bouncy, Vegas-style glamour. to tease about almost bantering, big-voiced pop sing- Best known for the novany subject, from the er and entertainer who, as a elty song "Blame It on mundane to the slightly solo act and with her husband, the Bossa Nova" (1963) risque. Steve Lawrence, performed a nd h e r Gra m m y Their routine had its on the air, in clubs, onstage winning ballad "If He roots in L ouis Prima and on records for more than Walked Into My Life" G orme and Keely Smith and 50 years, died Saturday in Las (1966), Gorme, whose presaged Sonny Bono Vegas. She was 84. other solo hits included "Too and Cher. Steve and Eydie's Her publicist, Howard Brag- Close for Comfort" (1956), was best-known duets i n cluded man, announced the death a mainstay of television variety "We Got Us" (1960), which but did not disclose the cause. shows as well as easy-listening won a Grammy for best pop Health problems were cited in and adult-contemporary radio. vocal group performance; "I 2009 when she remained home L awrence and Gorme Want to Stay Here" (1963); and as her husband went on tour. marketed as Steve and Eydie "I Can't Stop Talking About Their official website said — proved an enduring duo, in You" (1963). Lawrence also the next year that health issues both their personal bond and had a notable solo career with had prompted herretirement their audience appeal. hits including "Go Away, Little from touring. Their breezy repartee was Girl," written by Gerry Goffin
and Carole King. Edith Gormezano was born Aug. 16, 1928, in the Bronx to immigrant parents. After graduating from high school, she worked as a Spanish interpreter during the day and attended the City College of New York at night. On weekends, she pursued her musical ambitions as a singer. In later years, Gorme and Lawrence were involved in historic preservation, including an initiative to save the historic Chicago Theatre in the 1980s. Besides her husband of 56 years, survivors include a son, David, and a granddaughter. Another son, Michael, died of a heart condition in 1986 at 23.
with wide eyes as he introduced himself and asked if she'd be willing to answer a series of questions. Was she OK'? Yes. Did she need to wear her glasses to drive'? Yes. Had she been wearing them when she hit the cars? Yes. He brought up the Risperdal. Did she have any medical conditions he should be aware of? "a nervous S he d i d : condition." How often did she take Risperdal'? How much was she prescribed'? When had she last taken it? When had she last eaten? After she described what had happened, she agreed to take a sobriety test and trembled wildly as she attempted the various tasks. She was clearly in no state to drive. But it was her nervous condition that had caused the crash, not the Risperdal, Lewis determined. Her symptoms weren't consistent with the drug's effectsas a centralnervous system depressant. No DUI. O ther c ases a r e m o r e open-and-shut. Later that night, officers on patrol spotted a car backing out of a driveway. As the driver saw them, he stopped his car, opened the door and stumbled out sideways.
The man's breath reeked of alcohol, and he hadn't even been able to follow the questioning, the patrol officers told Lewis. S waying slightly o n t h e front bumper of the patrol car, the man gave Lewis varying answers as to how much he'd had to drink, among them
"yes" and "no."
The DRE is a nationwide p rogram a d m inistered i n Washington by the State Patrol. The state's 230 DREs make up about 2 percent of its total police force, Huber said. Lewis is one of SPD's 12 active-duty drug-recognition experts. The program costs $3,000 p er officer, funded by t h e Washington Traffic Safety C ommission, and 30 to 5 0 "top-notch" applicants are accepted per year, said Sgt. Ken Denton, who works in the impaired-driving section of the Washington State Patrol. DREs face an array of challenges when they're evaluating drivers' impairment. Many dr ivers li e a b out w hat t hey've t a ken, h o w much and whether it's prescribed to them. Analysis becomes even more complicated when drugs are mixed, as some symptoms of one drug can be mistaken for those of another.
DEscHUTEs MEMQRIAL CHAPEL R GARDENs 63875 N. HIGHWAY97 ' BEND
S41.382. S S92
~.~.~ gz.. cM~Z Deschutes Memorial now displays obituaries on our website. Please go to www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com to leave condolence messages for the family and to learn about funeral/ memorial services.
FUNERALsi BURIALs i CREMATIQN LOCALLY FAMILY OWNED6t OPERATED We honor all pre-arranged plans including Neptune Society.
IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 ML B , C3 Sports in brief, C2 Track & field, C3 Motor sports, C2
F o o t ball, C4
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013
ROLLER HOCKEY
TRACK & FIELD
NFL
Local champions crowned at Cup
ic er
The Bend-based
Bullets Black Opsroller hockey team took first place in the Adult A division at the 20th annual Northwest Cup at
roAl
I.s.w'
Cascade Indoor Sports on Sunday.
/
The Bullets defeated
Ben to retire as a Pac er
the defending-champion Wildfire of Bend, 6-1, in the tournament's head-
a
line matchup. Jason Dimitrivik scored three
t
Q tN4
of the Black Ops' six
goals and registered one assist. John Kromm, the team captain, scored
4TDI<
two goals and had two
EATOh
assists, and Kirk French scored onegoal to compliment his three assists.
•
oscovv ac1a
I
Also among the lo-
cal champions at the Northwest Cup were the
12U CISCrushers, who beat Portland's Titans 8-4, Bend's Hoodoo Ho-
dags defeated Summit Power, 4-2, and the 10U Red Vines beat Sour
Punch 8-6. Bend-based Team Worthy lost to the Portland Riot10-2 in the Adult B division. More Northwest Cup
results in Scoreboard, C2. — Bulletin Staff Report
;."r
8W'
Ivan Sekretarev/The Associated Press
U.S. athlete Ashton Eaton, a graduate of Bend's Mountain View High School, gestures after his win following the men's 1,500-meter race during the decathlon at the World Athletics Championships in Moscow on Sunday. Eaton took the overall title in the decathlon.
BASEBALL
Little Leagueeyes drug education
include field goals made (226), field-goal percentage (81.6, 226/277), seasons leading the team in field goals (nine),
SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa.— Little
League Baseball plans to introduce an
extra points (376), 100-point
educational program for coaches andvolunteers
seasons (eight) and consecutive games scoring (144).
intended to raise aware-
nessabout the use and dangers of performance-enhancing drugs among young players. Working with the Taylor Hooton Foundation, Little League hopes to have an online
program ready for the 2014 season. The youth sports organization had been in discussions with the foundation for more
than ayear about such a program, well before Major LeagueBaseball announced suspensions recently for more than a
dozen players following a lengthy investigation into a Florida anti-aging clinic accused of distributing PEDs. The most recent
batch of suspensions handed down Aug. 5 came less than two weeks before the start of the Little League World Series, which is scheduled to begin
Thursday. Thousands of coaches, along with young players andtheir families, are expected to visit South Williamsport during the 11-day tournament, and foundation president Don Hooton plans to attend, too, to
spread his awareness message in person. "This is a teachable moment. Every parent,
every coach should take the opportunity of all these suspensions to sit down and talk to your kids about why they shouldn't be involved in
performance-enhancing drugs," Hooton said in a recent phone interview. The Hooton Founda-
tion works with Major League Baseball, as well as local athletic leagues. A program with Little League would give the foundation an even
broaderaudience. — The Associated Press
MLB
Dodgers get sixth straight victory Los Angeles beats the New York Mets 4-2,C3
Staff and wire reports GREEN BAY, Wis. — Veteran kicker Ryan Longwell, who got his football start at Bend High School, is retiring as a Green Bay Packer, the team announced Monday. Longwell, who turns 39 this week, is the all-time leading scorer in Packers' history. He scored 1,054 points during his nine-year career in Green Bay (1997-2005). He connected on 226 field goals and 376 extra points. Longwell set a team record by leading the Packers in scoring in nine consecutive seasons,beating the previous mark of seven by Hall of Fame receiver Don Hutson from 1939 to 1945. Other Packer franchise records held by Longwell
Inside
• With some down time in 2014,the decathlete will need to balancestaying healthy andtraining
• The World Championships
continue in Moscow,C3
signed during the playoffs by Marra sa>d. Marra has decades of experience in the multi-events, and he knows better than anyone the toll that training for and competing in the decathlon can take, especially during and immediately after
By Steve Ritchie For The Bulletin
MOSCOW — After winning his first World Championships gold medal in the decathlon on Sunday, Ashton Eaton said, "It was the only thing I had left on my list to do. Now I have done everything there is to do in the multi-events." That comment, made in the afterglow of his latest triumph, does not mean that
Eaton is going to simply rest on his laurels, however. On Sunday night, less than 30 minutes after Eaton clinched the victory, his coach, Harry Marra, was
an Olympicyear.
Matt Dunham / rhe Associated Press
Ashton Eaton competes in the men's javelin throw of the decathlon at the World Athletics Championships in Moscow, Russia, on Sunday. already developing a plan for Eaton through 2015, when the next World Championships will take place in
Beijing. But Eaton, the 25-year-old track and field superstar from Central Oregon, will
"The year after the Olympic Games is a trauma," Marra said. "Take a look at some of the Olympic decathlon winners and what they did
They did nothing. "Let's be clear, for the people that don't understand now have some well-dewhat goes into the multiserved down time. And he events and what goes into it: likely will have a low-key After a big year like with the Olympics, the coach is fried season in 2014 — a year with no Olympic Games or World and the athletes are fried, so you've really got to pace Championships. "He doesn't have to do yourself." SeeEaton/C4 jack-diddly squat (next year),"
• With a little mentoring from teammates, the OregonStatefreshmenlearn the ropes
Ted S. Warren /The Associated Press file
Ryan Longwell is the all-time leading scorer in Green Bay Packers' history.
GOLF COMMENTARY
OutSider DLltner
joins exclusiveclub
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
By Karen Crouse
Corvallis Gazet te-Times
CORVALLIS — When Grant Enger arrived at Oregon State as a freshman, getting used to major-college football was a little overwhelming. Enger had help. Lineman Alex Linnenkohl was quick to lend a hand as a mentor. After Linnenkohl finished his senior season in 2010, Grant Johnson stepped in. "They were just guys that had been in the program for five years and they knew everything, so they could teach me what they knew," said Enger, now a senior starting guard for the Beavers. "A lot of it is just defenses and defensive alignments and how to predict what's going to happen before it happens so
the Seattle Seahawks after their regular kicker was sidelined with an injury. In what would be his final NFL game, Longwell kicked four extra points in Seattle's 30-28 loss to Atlanta in the NFC divisional playoff round. Longwell was an all-state kicker at Bend High, from which he graduated in 1992.
(the year) after the Games.
Beavers in some ui ance By Kevin Hampton
Longwell played his final six full seasons with the Minnesota Vikings and ranks No. 13 on the NFL's all-time scoring list with 1,687 career points. Last January, Longwell was
New York Times News Service
you can make the right calls." Every fall camp, the coaches do their best to teach all the
PITTSFORD, N.Y. here is much to applaud about a major-
players. The freshmen need all the guidance they can get, so the upperclassmen take on the mentor role. "When you come in, it's a ton to learn," Enger said. "Playing high school football, it's a whole lot different. The speed and our offense, compared to my offense in high school, is just completely different and there's so many things you have to learn. So you just have to kind of help
those guys along and teach them when you can and take them aside a little extra and help them." SeeBeavers /C4
championship golf season that began in April w ith 14-year-old Guan Tianlang becoming the youngest competitor at the Masters and ended this past Sunday with Jason Dufner and Jim Furyk locked in combat for the Wanamaker Trophy at the PGA
Championship.
Amanda Cowan I Corvalhs Gazette-Times
Oregon State's Brandin Cooks, right, and Victor Bolden keep an eye on the action during practice last week. Cooks and other upperclassmen help mentor the freshmen, like Bolden, during fall camp.
I f 2013 has demonstrated anything, it i s that golf's populism is in full swing despite the exclusionary mindset of many of those who govern and guard it. While some persist in believing there is one preferred sex, swing and career path, the game continues to flaunt its diversity in the form of South Korea's Inbee Park, who next month will renew her quest to become the first professional golfer, male or female, to win four majors in a single year. It is in Adam Scott's perfect swing and Furyk's perfectly functional one. See Dufner /C4
C4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 'I3, 2013
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Eaton
Stanford to leanon Bmore thisyear By Antonio Gonzalez The Associated Press
STANFORD, C a l if. Kevin Hogan leaned back on the fence that surrounds the Stanford practice field late Monday afternoon, cracked a smile and laughed at the differencebetween how he feels now versus a year ago. "I'm more comfortable," he said. Entering his first full year as the starting quarterback, Hogan sure looks that way — and will need to be. He has almost all new wide receivers and tight ends and will be expected to carry the Cardinal offense even more this season.
Hogan's presence alone already had t h e d e f ending Pac-12 champions and Rose Bowl winners ahead o f schedule on t h e f i r s t day of training camp. The race to replace record-setting Andrew Luck had not been decided at this time last August, and the uncertainty delayed the offense's progression. This year, Stanford coach David Shaw can install the offense — and more of itat a rapid pace. Hogan spent the summer organizing voluntary workouts — dubbed the "Captains' P r actices" — and taking leadership of the offense. "I think it forced him to get a good handle on everything that we're doing," Shaw said. "He put together all the scripts. He decided what they were doing eve ry day, and he did it a l l summer." Shaw said he noticed a
change in Hogan's command on the field from the first conversation they had
before camp.
nalist i n t h e c o mpetition between Nunes and Brett Nottingham last August. On the first day of camp a year ago, Hogan said he worked with th e y ounger players and might've had "a snap or two" with the first-team offense. Hogan's role i n c reased more each week in the fall, starting with w i l dcat and read-option packages, and then moving into the prototypical sets of Stanford's complicated offense to take the job in one of the smoothest midseason quarterback transitions ever for a contending team. Shaw said Hogan ran a "pretty substantial" amount of the offense by the end of the season — but nowhere near the call-any-play-youwant freedom Luck had at the line of scrimmage, which will forever be the standard on The Farm. "There's the Andrew category, which is carte blanche, which is anything and everything. The next step for Kevin, honestly, is just giving him more and not feeling like we need to put him in a small box," Shaw said. "Now we want to give him a bigger chunk of the offense and not really hold back as much." Stanford has no c hoice but to lean on Hogan more. Last year's tight ends, AllAmerican Zach Ertz and 6foot-8 target Levine Toilolo, are in NFL training camps now along with school-rushing leader Stepfan Taylor. Wide receivers Drew Terrell and Jamal-Rashad Patterson also are gone. Together, the quintet accounted for 18 of Stanford's 19 touchdowns receiving last season. T y M o n tgomery, w h o showed promise as a freshman but injured a knee and missed most of l ast year, likely will be the No. I receiver. Devon Cajuste, Michael Rector, Kodi Whitfield and tight end Luke Kaumatule
"I was r e a lly, r e a l ly vague. I said, 'How'd it go?' I wanted to hear what he had to say, andthen I asked him what his top five pass ideas were," Shaw said. "And he told me those, whereas a y ear ago, I'd ask him f o r five, and he had to kind of have played sparingly — or think. But after all summer not at all — but will now be
going through everything
key players.
that we've got, he's got a comfort level now. It's nice to know what those are now so we can work them into the game plan every week." For all his success, Hogan still has limited experience in the huddle. H ogan was 5-0 a s t h e starter after taking over for Josh Nunes late last season. He finished off the 122 campaign in spectacular fashion, toppling top-ranked O regon, beating UCLA i n back-to-back w e ek s fo r the conference crown and holding off W i sconsin for Stanford's first Rose Bowl victory in 41 years. Hogan threw fo r 1 ,096 yards, nine touchdowns and three interceptions last season. He completed 71.7 percent ofhis passes and also was theteam's second-leading rusher with 263 yards and two touchdowns. But he wasn't even a fi-
Hogan said the lack of experience from his receivers is not as big a deal as it might seem. He spent most of his first two years throwing to them in practice and had the entire summer to develop chemistry. "I've been out there with these guys. I feel comfortable with them. I've actually probably thrown more with these guys than I did with
all those guys who graduated," Hogan said. Hogan said he hasn't noticed a difference in attention he's receiving this year. He still lives a life of relative anonymity, attributing that to the quant Stanford campus, which is filled with future Olympians, venture capitalist and politicians. " Kevin's s t i l l K ev i n ," Montgomery said. "He's a cool guy, laid back, confident. None of this is new to him anymore."
Elaine Thompson/The Associated Press
Seattle tight end Luke Willson takes part in training camp in Benton, Wash., in July.
Ti ten swi
nee toste u O f eB Bw S By Curtis Crabtree
RENTON, Wash.— The Seattle Seahawks felt they would be set at tight end after selecting Luke Willson in the fifth round of April's draft. With veterans Zach Miller and Anthony McCoy returning to fill the top two spots on the depth chart, Willson would come in as a third option to solidly the back end of the Seahawks' roster. But those plans have since been thrown out the window. McCoy was lost for the season to a torn Achilles during OTAs in May and Zach Miller has yet to practice in training camp after injuring his foot during the team's mini-camp in June. It's forced Willson a nd second-year tight e n d Sean McGrath to step into more prominent roles during
Charlie Neibergall/TheAssociated Press
Jason Dufner celebrates winning the PGA Championship golf tournament at Oak Hill Country Club on Sunday in Pittsford, N.Y.
Woods mold. As recently as last year, Dufner wasroutinely described as a journeyman player. He won his first two PGA Tour events in 2012, beating the World Golf Hall of Fame member Ernie Els in a playoff in New Orleans and coming back three weeks later to win the Byron Nelson
Championship.
really nice job. I thought Sean played really consistent ball
on the edges and blocking and
all, something I was anxious to see. He's a little stronger than he was last season and a little more physical so he kind of showed up." The one benefit of Miller's absence has been the additional work the young guys have been able to get on the practice field. Willson and McGrath work mostly with th e f irstteam offense with r eserves Cooper Helfet, Jameson Konz and Andrei Lintz getting time with the second- and thirdteam offenses. Darren Fells will also begin to get more work after missing most of the past two weeks with a hamstring strain. "Getting live reps you can kind of learn from your own camp. With Miller sidelined for an- mistakes," Willson said. "It's other coupleof weeks before one thing to be able to learn it he's expected to return to prac- on your iPad or on the chalk tice, McGrath is the only tight board but it's another thing to end currently practicing who do it live, have guys moving has any regular-season ex- around, see the blitzes and perience. He appeared in the the coverages and all the little last two games of the season details. You can talk about (it) for Seattle and the Seahawks' but until you actually experitwo postseason games against ence it, it's just a whole differWashington and Atlanta. Now ent world. It's been great for he's the most experienced development." player taking practice snaps Carroll said they aren't in a for the team. rush to get Miller back on the The Seahawks frequently field. They know what he can used two tight end sets a sea- bring to the table already and son ago and will need Mc- want to make sure he's fully Grath and Willson to play even healthy before clearing him to after Miller returns to action. return to practice. Until Miller Willson caught two passes for returns, McGrath and Willson 16 yards in the Seahawks' pre- have the biggest chance to season opener against the San prove they can be effective opDiego Chargers last Thursday. tions in Seattle's offense. "We've got all th e confiMcGrath has yet to record a catch outside of the 2012 dence in Luke and (Cooper) preseason. and all the other tight ends "Luke got started a l i ttle that are in our position groups slow and then he got going are doing just fine in picking and got his feet under him up the slack," McGrath said. with his blocking — caught "It would be great to have Zach t he ball w hen h e h a d h i s back and have that veteran chances," Seattle coach Pete edge. It's a big difference when Carroll said. "McGrath did a he comes back around."
Dufner Continued from C1 It is in the fast path to the PGA Tour of the 19-year-old American Jordan Spieth, who won an event as a temporary member, and 21-year-old Hideki Matsuyama of Japan, who in four months has made enough money to earn his playing privileges for next season. It is in the protracted journey of Dufner. A year older than Guan when he started playing golf, Dufner is an overnight success story that has, in fact, played out over a decade and included a failed stint on the PGA Tour in 2004 when he made $317,770 in 28 starts. At 36, Dufner is 15 months younger than Tiger Woods, who has spent the past five years in unsuccessful pursuit of his 15th major title. Dufner graduated from Auburn in 1997, Woods' first full year on the Tour, and with his twostroke victory Sunday at the PGA Championship at Oak Hill, he served a reminder that not every major champion has to be a prodigy out of the
NFL
The Associated Press
Dufner is the 18th player to win a major in the past 20 events, dating to 2009, the first full year of Woods' drought. The only multiple winners in that time have been Rory Mcllroy (2011 U.S. Open, 2012 PGA
tice. In the competition here in Moscow, the rust in those Continued from C1 events was apparent, as EaAs Marra noted, no Olym- ton struggled at times with pic decathlon champion has his technique and rhythm. ever been able to come back The fact that he was able and win a gold medal the to s u ccessfully m a n a ge following year in the World those challenges is a testaChampionships. ment to Eaton's ability and One needs only to look at his strength of character. His the previous two Americans score of 8,809 points here who wo n m a jo r i n t erna- was just eight points behind tional championships in the Dan O'Brien's 1993 total of decathlon to see the truth of 8,817, the highest decathlon Marra's point. Trey Hardee score ever recorded at the won world titles in 2009 and world championships by an 2011, then underwent elbow American. surgery and has struggled to Eaton's rise to the top has return to form. In this meet, been nothing short of mehe cramped up in the high teoric. A 2006 graduate of jump, failed to get a clear- Mountain View High School ance and withdrew from the in Bend, he was a total novcompetition. ice in the multi-events when The 2008 Olympic cham- he started to compete in the pion, Bryan Clay, never had decathlon early in his career a fully healthy season after at the University of Oregon. his win in Beijing, and he did In his first world championship meet in 2009, Eaton did not compete at all this year. In his comments Sunday well on the first day and then after the competition, Eaton faded on the second day, finalso referred to the intense ishing 18th. In 2011 he placed demands that the decathlon second behind Hardee in the makes on an athlete. World Championships, then, "This year has been differ- in 2012, he won Olympic gold ent in that we've had to do a in London. lot of physical and mental The challenge for Eaton managing of things," Eaton will be to continue to sucsaid. "In 2012 I really had no cessfully find th e b alance physical problems, I think between staying healthy and that is why I was able to do working hard in a blue-colso well. This year I started lar event that demands and out feeling great but all of rewards intense training. If a sudden these little things he can do that, who knows started coming up." what Eaton might eventually A mong tho s e "little do? things" were a hamstring in"You never should put a jury that limited Eaton in the limit on that," Marra said. high jump, and a shoulder "Ashton, if he stays healthy, "tweak" that kept him from you can't put a limit on that. throwing the javelin in prac- Nothings impossible."
McIlroy was 23 at the time of his most recent major championship; Mickelson was 43. Straddling the two generations is Dufner, the laid-back late bloomer. Until he put himself in a position to win the PGA Championship two years ago, Dufner was invisible in plain sight, like most every other citizen golfer in the wide world of Woods. Those who are wondering why thereare not more repeat winners in the majors should consider this: In the 20 majors between 1999 and 2003, there was one repeat winner: Woods, who won seven times. Two years ago, when Dufner was in his sixth year on the Tour and winless, he said: "There's tons and tons of guys that can play golf out here. The networks and the media maybe focus on bigger names for a reason. That's who people want to see. People want to see Tiger Woods, people want to see Phil Mickelson. But there are other
Beavers
wants to make sure they are learning the plays and runContinued from C1 ning the right routes. "I've got to get the other Senior outside linebacker Michael Doctor has b een guys ready to be able to step w orking p r i m arily wit h up to the plate because it can't freshmen Darrell Songy and be just one receiver that's Michael Greer. Doctor said successful in this offense," he has been telling them to Cooks said. " We've just go t t o g e t focus on details such as their shuffle, alignment, and lever- them going and being able to age on pass coverage. make plays and able to learn "You just have to pay at- the offense and learn the tention to the little things," schemes." Doctor said. "With this deSenior cornerback fense you have to do the little Rashaad Reynolds said he things right and you have to coaches his teammates when really pay attention in meet- they are getting reps durings and everything. What ing practice and he is on the I would tell a young guy is sideline. just stay focused and be conHe also tries to make sure fident in the game. Because that the freshmen take care of without confidence in this themselves after practice, eat game, especially in college right in the dining hall and — it's a whole lot faster than get in some film sessions. "Any time they have queshigh school — you've just got to have confidence out t ions, whether it's i n t h e there." dorms or in film, make sure Junior receiver Brandin you always sit next to a freshCooks had some good ones man so if they have questions to look to for help when he you can help them," Reynolds came to Corvallis. said. James R o d gers was Corner is a tough position around for advice, and Cooks to play physically, but it is the could always talk to Markus mental aspect of the spot that Wheaton. can bemost demanding. Now Cooks will pass on Even the best get burned. "The big thing I tell them is what he has learned. "It's really important bedon't get down on yourself," cause as I came in, I looked Reynolds said. "You're going up to guys like Markus and to lose some battles, you're James and what they taught going to win some battles. As me," Cooks said. "So I've corners, we've just got to forgot to do the same thing for get and move on to the next them." play. "Also, I just tell them when The job is to get some of the youngsters ready to play you're on the sideline, you don't get a lot of r eps, so as soon as possible. T he Beavers h ave s i x you've got to get a mental rep. true-freshman receiverson Which means that you've got the roster and a few redshirt to be paying attention when freshmen as w e ll. C ooks you're on the sideline."
very, very competitive out here. I don't thinkthe average golf fan realizes how competitive it is to be on the PGA Tour, keep your card, win tournaments. It's just not an easy thing, and for guys that you've never heard of to do it, that shows you how deep the fields are." The pool of talent is not getting any shallower. In a nod to the game's growth in Guan's homeland, the PGA Tour on Monday announced the hiring of Greg Gilligan as its liaison in China, a newly created role. Scott, the reigning Masters champion, said: "I think generally golf is in a great spot at the moment. With so many guys
fame this year came when his friend and fellow golfer Keegan Bradley tweeted a
photograph of Dufner slumped against the wall of a children's classroom. In no time Twitter was alive with people tweeting photographs of themselves and others Dufnering. If that is not the image of a major champion that those who govern and guard the game want to see, well, they had better get used to it. Winning the PGA Championship
"is definitely going to change my life," Dufner said, "but I'm determined that it's not going to change me."
playing so well, and people getting to know all these players a little bit, I think it is also what makes it interesting for everyone." Dufner's first brush w ith
$7". s:.-4 d
HIGH DESERT BANK
Championship) and Phil Mick- guys that can really, really play elson (2010 Masters, 2013 British Open), further proof that the game does not discriminate.
golf out here and that are good that you've never heard of." Dufner added:"I just thinkit's
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© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013
BRIEFING
CEO totake Dole Foodprivate Dole Foodsaid Monday its CEO will take it private in a deal that val-
ues the company atapproximately $1.21 billion. Dole shareholders will
MEXICO
EXECUTIVE FILE
Proposal would
What:Smartwaiver lnc.
What it does:Creates electronic liability waivers Pictured:Mark Silliman,
CEO andco-founder Where:233 S.W.W il son Ave., Suite1, Bend
open oil
Employees:Seven
receive $13.50pershare,
Phone:800-277-0285
a 5 percent premium to its $12.81 Friday closing
Wedsite:www.smartwaiver.com
market
price. This is asweetened bid for the fresh fruits and vegetable
business, up from the $12 per shareChairman
By Stephanie Mccrummen The Washington Post
and CEO David Murdock
offered in June.
FacebookC00 unloads shares
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Facebook's chief operating officer, Sheryl
. Whatis
Sandberg, has sold $91 million worth of shares company. Thesalewas part of a pre-determined trading plan that was set up in 2012. It came
a week after Facebook's stock passed its $38 IPO price for the first
time since going public in May 2012. — From wire reports
• your favor-
B1VeI'S 0
in the social networking
0
ite part about own-
ing and operating Smartwaiver? . I love talking , tocustom-
ecou
ers, figuring out what problems we
can solve andthen watching themuse what we devel-
oped. It's extremely satisfying to see business owners
By Rachael Reese The Bulletin
DEEDS Deschutes County
• Hayden HomesLLCto Cathy Quirk, Obsidian Ridge, Phases1 and 2, Lot 7, $ l83,142 • Jean M. Metzto Bruce S. and Karla R.Jones, Creekside, Lot19, $427,000 • John and Kathy Coke to Torrey M. De Alicante, Canyon RimVillage, Phase 6, Lot140, $225,000 • Rodney G. andMichele R. Hatchell, trustees for theRodney G.and Michele Rene Hatchell Family Living Trust, to John M. and Diane L.Kiesler, Partition Plat 2006-64, Parcels1 and 2, $395,000 • Vincent A. and Diane V. Mercurio, trustees for the Vincentand Diane Mercurio Community Property, to John E.and Colleen M. Peterson, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase 28, Lot 7, $1,240,000 • Travis Ramsbyto Paul F. and Catherine J. Imwalle, Northpointe, Phase1, Lot 15, $180,000 • Elwin G. andMarilyn B. Larson, trustees for the Elwin Gale Larson and Marilyn B. Larson Revocable Trust, to Roger and SusanJohnson, High Meadow Addition to lndian Ford RanchHomes,Lot 2, Block1, $425,000 • East Bend Plaza LLCto Petrescu Ventures LLC, Courtenay Footman,James P. and Linda J. Ellman, trustees for the Ellman Family Trust, and Richard P. Brashears and Mitzi Lazzareschi,trustcesfor the Richard Brashears and Mitzi Lazzareschi Family Trust, Eastside Business and lndustrial Park, Lot 4, Block 5, Partition Plat 1993-33, Parcels1-3, Partition Plat1994-26, Parcel 2, $3,490,000 • Pahlisch Homes lnc. to Peggy M. Carey,McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot70, $233,000 • Michael G. andHeidi A. Mitchell to Tod A. and Dana A. Kintz, Broken Top, Phase2C, Lot143, $550,000 • Robert E. Westlund, trustee to the Robert E. Westlund Trust, to Tina M. Williams, Obsidian Estates, No. 3, Lot101, $195,000 • Anthony J. and Rebecca P. Ozrelic to Jason A.and Chelsea L. Graff, City View, Phase 2, Lot10, $449,000 • Floyd C. Antonsen and Elizabeth Aguilar-Antonsen to Joseph A.and Heather L. Light, 27th Street Crossing, Lot 6, $267,447 • Peter K. and Sherry F. Christoffersen to Daniel G. and Laura L. Hickmond, Southwood, Lot 2, $302,000 • Three Pines Development LLC to Lisbeth J.B. Rink, Three PinesP.U.D., Phases 7-10, Lots 67and 68, $180,000 • Craig J. Kirtland and Wendy S. Kirtland, formerly known asWendy L. Kirtland, to Edward R. and M.J. Coulson, Elkai Woods Townhomes, Phase 2, Lot 54, $430,000 • Allister R. and EdnaM.
all over the country
From tattoo parlors and yoga studios to summer
get that "aha" mo-
camps and rock-climbing gyms, businesses that require a release of liability from their patrons are using Bendbased Smartwaiver Inc., a digital replacement for conventional paper forms. "Release-of-liability documents are the most commonly signed legal document in America per day ... It gives you an idea of how many companies use these," said Smartwaiver CEO and co-founder Mark Silliman. "Over the past year, we've seen over 400 percent growth and we've become profitable." Silliman started Smartwaiver with Andy Laakmann in May 2012. The two experienced entrepreneurs met while operating separatebusinesses, became biking buddies and decided to start a business venture together. "Major League Baseball was contacting Andy for a waiver solution," Silliman said. "We presumed that one already existed, and we presumed wrong. That's what led to the creation of Smartwaiver." The company converts paper release-of-liability waivers into interactive digital documents that allow participants to sign a waiver online, either from home or at a business location. The business owner can then securely store those signed documents in the cloud and search for them with a few clicks of the mouse, he said. Silliman said the company worked hard to bring in the first 100 customers one by one, but has
now hit the point of critical mass, with customers throughout the U.S. and Canada. "People didn't realize digital waivers existed," he said. "Now that they see it being used at other locations, business owners introduce it at their facilities as well." And after the National Football League's NFL Experience, which offered entertainment activities during Super Bowl XLVII last February, used Smartwaiver, Silliman said it proved Smartwaivers hold up legally for the largest customers' demands. Despitethe company's success, he said, the work is not done. The company is constantly evolving, releasing a new upgrade every two weeks to fulfill customers' requests. The product started off simple, but today it includes features such as capturing a photo of the person signing the waiver for proof of signature; recording the exact time a waiver is completed and where it is signed; and documenting the device on which a waiver was signed. "I expect all paper documents in all forms to switch over to digital," Silliman said. "Technology can go way beyond where just paper can." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rreesC©bendbulletin.com
ment when they realize how much
more efficient digital waivers
are compared to paper. I really enjoy having such a positive impact onbusinessesand introducing people to new technology that makes their life easier and their
business more profitable. And the fact that I can do all of this from an
amazing place like Bend makes it even
sweeter. . Wheredo
, youhopeit will be in the next
five years? . Overthe • next few
years, Smartwaiver will play a
key role in keeping insurance costs down for businesses. As more insurance companies recognize thevalue of digital waivers in increasing their
margins, wesee smart insurance companies offering incentives to use Smartwaiver to the companies they insure.
New York investigates Bitcoin By Michael Gormley The Associated Press
ALBANY, N.Y. — New York is investigating the "Wild West" atmosphere of virtual currency such as Bitcoin to create new regulations against its use in crimes. Financial Services Superintendent Benjamin Lawsky's inquiry is confirmed in a memo provided to The Associated Press on Monday.
Dallas to Tanya K.Hatch, StonehedgeWest, Phase 2, Lot 33, $192,900 • Kenneth R. andLinda E.Johnsonto Robb Schotthoefer and Barbara C. Bell, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase1, Lots 4-6, Block 3, $705,000 • Tetherow Glen 58 LLC to James andRachel McGuire, Tetherow, Phase 2, Lot 38, $305,000 • Judith E. Ramskill, trustee to the Robert Francis Ramskill and Judith Eileen Ramskill Revocable Trust, to Luther C. Lilly, Luke Lillyand Doris Lilly, Glacier Ridge, Phase 2, Lot 23, $193,500 • Capital One N.A.to
Virtual currency is composed of digital bits and based on mathematical schemes that guard against counterfeiting. Bitcoin was started in 2009 as a currency free from government controls. Like any money, virtual currency can be used for legal or illegitimate reasons. Lawsky's memo claims it has been used for narcot-
Thomas J. andJonnie M. Vanderzanden, Ridge at Eagle Crest 39, Lot 3, $360,000 • Mark E. Filson and Mary E. Mahoneyto Jamieand Julie Kind, West Ridge, Lot 3, Block1, $157,500 • Edwin M. and Carol C. Enright to Victor and Carol Herinckx, Deer Park 2, Lot 13, Block 14, $337,000 • Eric M. Meloling to J.F. Chaimson, trustee to the J. Fred ChaimsonTrust, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 5, Lot 242, $546,023 • Timothy J Kneato Greg and Dianna Salciccioli, Sun Meadow, No. 4, Lot123, $364,900
• Hayden HomesLLCto Constance Tallent, Aspen Rim, Lot 69, $189,045 • Jane J. Fitzgerald, trustee to Fitzgerald Revocable Trust, to Lawrence E.and Angie M. Siefer, trusteeto the Siefer Joint Revocable Living Trust, Summer Creek, Phase1, Lot4, $180,000 • Jane A. Schlappi to Timothy S. and Katherine H. Hudnall, FirstAddition to Tillicum Village, Lots 3 and 4, $210,000 • Matthew G. and Tisha L. Barker to John andTeresa Schader, Starwood,Lots 5 and 6, Block 4, $265,900 • Jeffrey T. andTeresa G. Fouts, trustees for
MEXICO CITY — Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto proposedhistoric changes to this nation's state-run energy sector Monday, cracking open the door for global oil giants such as Exxon Mobil and Shell to invest in this country's lethargic 75-year old state oil monopoly, Pemex, the eighthlargest oil company in the world and a symbol of deep nationalist pride. In an address highly anticipated in oil capitals from Houstonto Rio de Janeiro, Pena Nieto stopped short of offering foreign oil firms what they really want: a right to own and sell the oil they drill in Mexico. Instead, he proposed constitutional changes that would allow for risk and profit-sharing partnerships between foreign firms and Pemex, a move aimed at luring the money and technology necessary to exploit Mexico's immense but hard-toreach deep water and shale oil fields. At the same time, Pena Nieto emphasized that Pemex would remain the sole owner and manager of Mexico's oil. "Pemex will not be sold, nor privatized," Pena Nieto said in an address that did not offer many details on how investors would partner with Pemex, which currently funds about 30 percent of Mexico's national budget.
ics, illegal guns and child
pornography. A state official says 22 subpoenas were issued last week. They seek records of anti-money laundering measures, consumer protections, and investment and promotional materials. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity because the investigation hasn't been announced yet.
the Jeffrey T. Fouts and Teresa G.Fouts Revocable Living Trust, to Borgie's Inc., BrokenTop, Lot169, $157,500 • Weston lnvestment Co. LLCto Triple Knot Associates LLC,Golf Homes at Tetherow, Lots 3-4 and 9-10, $300,000 • John A. and JanetR. Bakerto Ronald E.Duffy, Fairway Point Village 2, Lot 5, Block11, $419,000 • Joseph C. andRosalie A. Gehlen to DianeMarsch, Ridge at EagleCrest 56, Lot 123, $242,000 • Association of Unit Owners of the lnn of the Seventh Mountain to Worldmark the Club, Inn
BlackBerry consjders
selling itself By Hugo Miller Btoomberg News
TORONTO — BlackBerry Ltd., the struggling Canadian smartphone maker, is considering putting itself up for sale after the lackluster debut of the BlackBerry 10 lineup dimmed its prospects as an independent company. A special board committee will consider ways to enhance BlackBerry's value and scale, including joint ventures, partnershipsor a sale ofthe company, according to a statement Monday. JPMorgan Chase will serve as its financial adviser. The announcement builds on a move last year when BlackBerry hired JPMorgan and RBC Capital Markets to advise the company on strategic alternatives. At the time, Chief Executive Officer Thorsten Heins said a sale wasn't the "main direction" he was considering. The company's outlook has worsened since then, with the revamped BlackBerry 10 — the linchpin of a turnaround strategy — meeting scant demand.
at the Seventh Mountain, Phase1, Unit 220 of Phase 2B, Units 262, 263, 462 and 463 of Phase3B, Units 519 and 520 of Phase4, $300,000 • David and AspenClayton to Seth and David M. Rowan, Boulder Ridge, Phase1, Lot14, $175,000 • Dale E. Grantto John F. and Tracy A.Jasper, Pinebrook, Phase 3,Lot 6, Block 9, $232,000 • Richard Strait to William H. and Shannon M. Strait, Second Addition to West Hills, Lot1, Block2, $315,000 • Frank E. andMonica J. Platt to John F.and Janice J. Gottfried, Township
14, Range13, Section13, $318,000 • Wallace J. andDebraJ. Kiely to Barbara A.Jordan, Sundance East, Phase1, Lot 4, Block 3, $312,000 • Leonard W. RehnJr. to David M. Brennan, Township17, Range13, Section 19, $306,000 • Van and Kari Schoessler to Joshua T.and Kyla M. Danos, Paulina Peaks, Phase1, Lot14, $175,000 • David M. and Satu H. Woodland, trustees for the Woodland Family Trust, to Matthew and Julie G. Weed, PonderosaEstates, First Addition, Lot 20, Block 3, $565,000 • Thomas E. andPamela
BRIEFING
Greek economy shrinks again The Greekeconomy posted its 20th consecutive quarterly decline in the three months through June, government data showed Monday, but a
slower pace ofcontraction provided a glimmer
ofhope for beleaguered Greeks. Grossdomestic product shrank by 4.6
percent in thesecond quarter from thesame three months a year earlier, the official Hellenic Statistical Authority said. — From wire reports
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Professional Enrichment Series: Mike Hollern, president of Brooks Resources Corp., and Troy Reinhart, partner with Northwest Quadrant Wealth Management, answer questions; registration required; members $20, or $30 for both August sessions; nonmembers $35, or $45 for both August sessions; 7:30 a.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.bendchamber.org. • Membership101 — Driving Your Membership: Connecting new membersoftheBend Chamber of Commerce with current members; registration required; 10 a.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-382-3221, shelleyte bendchamber.org or www.bendchamber.org. WEDNESDAY • How to Start a Business: Registration required; $15; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building,1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 54 I-383-7290. • What's Brewing in Your Community: A recap of the 2013 legislative session with Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend,and Rep. Jason Conger, R-Bend; registration recommended; $30 for members, $40 for nonmembers; 5 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. bendchamber.org/ THURSDAY • City Club's August Forum: Former Portland Mayor SamAdams discusses the city as an economic force: what has worked, what has been learned andwhat would have beendone differently; register before Aug. I3; $20 for first-time guests and members; $35 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Charles Bend Center for Health & Learning, 2500 N.E.Neff Road; 541-633-7163 or www.cityclubco.org. •Lunchwit hLandW atch: Discussion of Bend's Urban Growth Boundary andother land issues; free, BYOL (buy your own lunch); noon-1 p.m.; Zydeco Kitchen andCocktails, 919 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-647-2930, sherryn@ centraloregonlandwatch. org or www.centraloregon landwatch.org/blog/329lunch-with-landwatch FRIDAY • Sunriver and La Pine chambers breakfast: Presentation by Deschutes County, followed by Q&A; $10; 7:30 a.m., table networking; starts at 7:45 a.m.; Thousand Trails, 17480 S. Century Drive; 541-536-9771.
For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbu/ietin.com/bizca/ Norr, trustees of the Thomas andPamela Norr Trust, to Joel A. and Shauna M.M. Sturgill, River CanyonEstates, Lot 128, $389,000 • Gail M. Leopold, trustee of the Gail Leopold Trust, to Edwin M. andClaire H. Weiser, SaddlebackWest, Lot 7, Block 6, $480,000 • West Bend Property Company LLC toRidgeline Custom HomesLLC, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 18, Lot 648, $230,000 • Ridgeline Custom Homes LLCto James M.and Diane L. Dunntrusteesfor the Dunn Revocable Trust, NorthWest Crossing, Phase18, Lot 648, $207,000
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013
O» www.bendbulletin.com/athome
AT THE MARKET
FOOD
A weekly look at produce atlocalfarmers markets.
pickles the easy
way
Ryan Brenhecke/The Bulletin
By Jan
What:Cherry toma-
Roberts-Dominguez
toes Season:Late sum-
For The Bulletin
mer, early fall
Adout:Cherry to-
matoes and their larger
cousins are in season now at local farmers markets. You can get
cherry tomatoes at many supermarkets, so why bother hiking down to the farmers market
or vegetable stand for a pint? It's all about the flavor. See, most
tO
supermarket varieties of tomatoes are devel-
oped to be hearty and to hold up during shipping. But sometimes with heartiness comes
a lack of flavor. And this is as true for cherry tomatoes as it is with
beefsteak, grape or pear tomatoes. Cherry tomatoes come in red, yellow and sometimes purple. They are typi-
Editor's note:The At Home section featuresa garden profile each month during the gardening season. To suggest a garden to profile, email athomeCIbendbulletin.com.
cally about1 inch wide, with a sweet taste. Don't refrigerate these
gems;keepthem at room temperature
By Mariollo Gallagher
until you're ready to eat them.
In the heat of July in 2009, Tiare and Kris Helmstead bought their first home. It was a short sale property — and after waiting four months for their offer
The Bulletin
Preparation:Here's where you can have some fun. Cherry tomatoes can beeaten
GARDEN to clear, they were handed the keys to a two-story home in a development in Northeast Bend. The yard had an irrigation system, but because the house had sat empty for so long, it hadn't been on, and the summer heat had dried the lawn to a crispy brown. The backyard was rife with limitations, including an immovable wall of lava rock, poor-quality soil, no privacy
and a tiny square of concrete off the back door hardly big enough for a small grill and a bistro-size table and chairs. As for landscaping, "There were two shrubs randomly placed and three or four of those tall grasses," said Tiare Helmstead. But they had a big vision to transform the generic, rectangular space into a lush garden where they could entertain and relax. Four years later, they've accomplished that goal. SeeOasis/D5
right out of the box or
simply dipped in some dressing or placed atop a salad. But there's lots of other fun things
you can do. Heat up a healthy drizzle of olive
oil in an oven-safe pan and wait for it to get hot. Add the cherry tomatoes and let them
sizzle for a few minutes, then add in a few
chunks of garlic and place the whole thing
in the oven until the garlic is soft, about 30
minutes. The tomatoes will develop an incred-
ible sweetness and a bit of a crust. Toss with pasta and basil.
Cherry tomatoes are also divine with Greek flavors. Consider splitting the tomatoes in
half, mixing with fresh parsley, oregano, garlic and kalamata olives to
create a fresh salad. Or serve with feta and
crackers. — Alandra Johnson, The Bulletin
Top: submitted photo; above: Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
See additional photos on The Bulletin's website:
Produce purchased from Agricultural Connections, which distributes goods from regional farms (www. aghculturalcchnections.ccm).
donddullotin.com/athomotour
When the Helmsteads bought their home in 2009, the backyard, at top, had a patchy, browned lawn and little privacy from the neighbors. Four years later, above, they have installed a paver patio. Hops growing on the fence at left and o crabapple tree in the back corner combine with an umbrella to provide a feeling of seclusion.
TODAY'5 RECIPES Two tasty pickle recipes: Bread and Butter Pickles
+
and Jan's DamnGood Garlic Dills stay good in the fridge
for months, no canning necessary,D2 Tomato Crostoto with Honey-Thyme Glaze: Put perfectly ripe tomatoes to use,D3
HOME
By Alison Highberger
to do their own electrical repairs
fixture. It's not hard to do if you're replacing a light with a new one
of similar size andweight. That's what we'll explain how to do here.
If you're going from a simple dome light to a big, elaborate chandelier, you'll probably have to add a support bracket to the
ceiling, and maybecut a bigger Recipe Finder:Old-Fashioned BananaCreamPie, 03
1. Switch off the circuit breaker that controls the ceiling fixture you want to replace. Makesure the light goes off when you switch In Oregon, a permit is required off the breaker.
to install new electrical lines, and a licensed electrician must do the
room by changing aceiling light
Vinaigrette,03
with pickling cukes and I was good to go." Then he rattled off the list of lucky recipients who were slated to receive a portion of his treasured cache. It was quite impressive. Obviously, I agree with Nelson wholeheartedly. Making refrigerator pickles is an amazing and simple thing. I don't know if it's the fact that you go from neutral veggie to potent condiment without breaking a sweat. Or the fact that homemade pickles, when appreciated by the right people, become the culinary equivalent of REI gift certificates. But the fact is that for very little effort on your part — in the context of kitchen messes and psyche stresses that can occur with other forms of preserving — you can create a bona fide culinary treasure. Indeed, it's a great way to pickle. I start by scrubbing and trimming huge quantities of pickling cukes (working in 10-pound increments like Nelson is not unheard of). SeePickles/D2
Replacing aceiling light fixture
Editor's note:Check bach every otherweek fordo-ityourself projects.
It's easy to update the look of a
Remoulade, GreenandWax BeanSaladwith Spicy Tomato
my fridge was loaded
Do it: Changeout a ceiling light fixture For The Bufletin
Moro tomato recipes:Fried Green Tomatoes with Bacon
"Guess what my first act as a retired person was," said Corvallis' beloved former city manager Jon Nelson as we chatted over glasses of wine at an event last summer. I couldn't. Although I was pretty sure it was something quirky and food-related or he wouldn't have brought it up. "I made myyearly batch of Jan's Bread and Butter Refrigerator Pickles." uWhy Jon, I didn't even know you pickled!" He nodded, a big ol' Cheshire cat grin spreading across his face. "I made them on August 5, which was literally 24 hours after walking out of city hall. First I bought 10 pounds of pickling cukes from Davis F. Farms. Brought them home and got to work. Two-and-a-half hours and a couple of gallons of cukes later,
hole, and that turns into a job for a licensed electrician.
work. Homeowners are allowed and projects, of course, but handymanservicescannot.In
2. Remove the glass or other coverfrom the old fixture.
general, big electrical jobs in Ore-
gon should be done by alicensed electrician who has completed an apprenticeship program and 3. passed various training programs Unfasten and tests that are required by the the cap nuts to state. remove If you've never tried a do-ittheold yourself lighting project, the fixture base from theceiling. thought of working around elec-
4. Pull the old base from the ceiling and unscrewthe wire nuts or remove theelectrical tape from the two wires (black and white) and unfasten the ground wire (green or barecopper) if there is one. Removeold fixture. 5. Reverse the process to connect the newfixture to the white, black andground wires in the junction box on theceiling. Attach the newbaseto the mounting bar screwsand mount the new cover andyou're done.
tricity and wires can be daunting. See Fixture/D4
Greg Cross/ The Bulletin
D2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013
Fooo
Next week: No-bake desserts
Pickles
ee
Continued from D1 Then I simply tumble them into large containers, throw in handfulls of sliced fresh garlic, fresh dill heads and
red pepper flakes, and pour on my spicy, salty, boiling-hot vinegar and water brine. The final stop? The refrigerator. No fussing with little canning jars and l i ds, and boiling water canners. The activity is so stress- and mess-free, and produces such a marvelously flavored and textured pickle, I will never go back to processing — unless all r e f r igerator r i ghts
in my folks' garage refrigerator suddenly are revoked. Which is unlikely, since they too have become refrigerator pickle fans. For every party, picnic and football tailgater throughout the year, Mom really loves dipping into "our"
garage pickle supply. Good thing I always figure on about 15 gallons. In case you haven't gone this route yet, here's my helpful-hints list, subtitled, "Variablesto consider for dynamic
„,u
refrigerator pickling": • Containers. This is where
t,2
refrigerator pickling shines. You don't have to worry about canning jars and two-piece lids. Plastic works just fine, as long as it's food-grade. Select whatever size and shape suits your r e frigerator; the bigger, the better. I use Rubbermaid's 1.3 gallon capacity "Servin'Saver" canisters, because they're deep, so the cukes staynicely submerged in the brine. If you do go with jars (they don't have to be "canning"), just make sure the lids seal well and that the undersides aren't reacting with the vinegar over time (actual-
The Bulletin file photo
Store your homemade pickles in the fridge unless you go through thecanning process described in the recipes below. ly, if they are, just replace the lids with fresh ones). When it comes around to the gift-giv-
son jars, mainly because the U.S. Department of Agriculture does not provide guidel ines for canning with t h i s size of jar. But they are still a wonderful size for refrigerator pickles since a single 2-quart jar i s a c o nvenient size forrefrigerator storage.
So if you encounter 2-quart
access to a u-pick field, lucky
canning jars at garage sales, you! If you can track down
or inherit them from a relative or friend, don't overlook their transfer portions from the big potential in this area. tubs or jars into pretty little • C ucumber s i z e. O b v i jars. ously, the smaller the pickI n 1997, Ball a n d K e r r l ing cuke, th e c r isper t h e stopped making 2-quart mapickle will be . Plus, "baby garlic dills" look so cute and snazzy in their jars. But now that I'm into real high volume Bread and Butter Pickles refrigerator pickling, I have grown to appreciate the adMake-Ahead Pickling Brine vantages of working with mid Makest/~ gallon of brine (enough for1 gallon of pickles). to large cukes as well, which is a good thing, because small 6 C cider vinegar 1 C fresh dillweed 2 tsp ground turmeric cukes are much more diffi2 C water 1 cinnamon stick (optional) cult to find. I usually cut any 1/e C granulated sugar 2TBSsalt cukes larger than 3 i n ches into rounds or mouth-sized In a large non-aluminum pot, combine the vinegar, water, sugar, dillweed, cinnamon stick (if using), salt and chunks prior to packing them turmeric. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer, covered, for 5 minutes. If readying a batch for the refrigera- in their containers. When cut, tor, let the mixture cool, then strain off the dill and cinnamon stick. Pour the brine into non-reactive containers, you can pack a lot more cuke such as glass canning jars or food-grade plastic tubs or jugs with tight-fitting lids. Refrigerate until ready to use. into each container, so there's much less wasted space. The Pickles • C ucumber quality. T h e For up to1 gallon of pickles. fresher the better. If you have 4 qts pickling cucumbers rinsed well, blossom ends rubbed off
ing phase, you can always
2 TBS yellow mustard seeds 2 tsp celery seeds 2 tsp red pepper flakes
1 bat c h of prepared brine (makes t/2 gallon)
a supply of cukes that's only been out of the field for 24 hours, you're off to a g o od start, even if you weren't in on the initial picking. Just nose around the farmers'markets to get a line on who's produc-
ing pickling cukes. Also, local markets that support local growers typically are stocking pickling cucumbers this time of year. Refrigeration and humidity are important factors, too. Cukes really are sensitive critters. Throw in a little heat or dryness and theydeteriorate in quality (texture and flavor mainly). If you must purchase
your pickling cukes from a s upermarket, do so only i f they're firm (no shrivelling at the tips) and you're positive that they've been under constantrefrigeration. • M ake sure to rub off the
blossom end of each cucumber when y o u're w a shing them. There's a n e n z y me lurking at the blossom's base which can lead to softening in the pickle. • Vinegar selection. Of the commercially-prepared varieties, white distilled vinegar imparts the most robust flavor. Cider vinegar has a milder taste, but may discolor your light-colored vegetables, such as onions and c auliflower. However, I consider it the vinegar ofchoice for my Damn Good Garlic Dills. Of course, any number of vinegar styles may be used, as long as they are at least 5 percent acidity. Just don't experiment with any of t h e trendy h o m emade f l avors since it would be difficult to verify that they are 5 percent acidity. • The brine. While we're on the subject of vinegars, I'm going to pass along another great tip: I m ak e u p l a r ge batches of the brine (see "Jan's Damn Good G a rlic D i l l s" recipe as an example) and store it in the refrigerator so that when I get my hands on a box of great pickling cukes, there's no down time. I simply pack the cukes into containers, heat up the br ine and pour it over the cucumbers. • Salt. A lth o u gh any food-grade salt can be used, pickling/canning salt is reco mmended. I o d ized t a b l e salt contains an anti-caking agent, which gives a cloudy pickling solution, and iodine, which darkensthe vegetables as they pickle. Read the label of your salt package carefully; I've even encountered "Canning" salt that contains an anti-caking agent, which underminesthe reason forusing it in the first place. • R ecipes. You can t u r n any "freshpack" pickle recipe into refrigerator pickles simply by refrigerating them instead of processing them in a boiling water canner. A fresh pack pickle is defined as one that is pickled with vinegar instead of by fermentation. So that's just about it. Have I inspired you'? Pickling season in the Northwest is underway and w i l l h o pefully continue through mid to late September. — Jan Roberts-Dominguez is a Corvallis food writer, cookbooh authorand artist. Contact: janrd~ proaxis.com.
jan's Damn Good Garlic Dills Make-Ahead Pickling Brine
Cut the preparedcukes into '/4-inch slices. Packthecucumbers into clean jars or food-grade plastic containers, leaving/2-inchhead space. Divide the mustard seeds, celery seeds and pepper flakes among the containers. If the brine has been refrigerated, then reheat irf a non-aluminum pan. Ladle the hot brine into the containers,
Makes/2 gallon of brine (enough for1 gallon of pickles). I make up a big batch of brine for my favorite pickle recipe so that when I encounter a good supply of high-quality
leaving '/4-inch headspace.Attach lids. Let cool to room temperature, then store in the refrigerator.
pickling cukes I canjump right into action. Store the brine in the fridge — it will keep indefinitely — in a covered
The pickles need at least 7 to10 days of aging but will improve even more as time goes by. Even then, they will container, then simply reheat as much of the chilled brine as needed to make a batch of pickles. Figure on a ratio continue to improve and improve arfd improve for months and months. I've kept batches for up to 24 months, of two parts pickling cukes to one part brine (i.e., for 2 quarts of pickling cukes, you'll need 1 quart of brine).
and they've beenfabulous down to the last pickle. To store yourpickles at roomtemperature: If you really don't have enough refrigerator space and needto store batches at room temperature, then you'll have to process the jars in acanner. Here's how: Wash pint or quart canning jars (such asBall or Kerr). Keephot until used. Packthe pickles into the jars, leav-
So, make upthe brine nowand keep it in your refrigerator. Then whenyou've got some pickling cukes to pickle, simply pack them into jars or plastic containers as described below and pour in enough of the pickling brine to
cover the cukes. Screw on the lid and refrigerate or process in a boiling water canner asdescribed below. Store any remaining brine in the refrigerator until you're ready to pickle another batch of cukes.
ing t/2-inch head space. Divide the garlic slices among the jars. Pour the strained hot brine into 1 Iar at a time, leavingt/~-inch head space. Wipe Iar rim with a clean, damp cloth. Place the metal disc of the two-piece lid on top 1 qt cider vinegar /2 tsp ground turmeric of the jar opening, then screw onthe metal screw band. Fill and close remaining jars. 1 qt water 1 C chopped fresh dill heads (this is the Process the jars, using the low temperature pasteurization treatment (this method keeps the pickles from t/4 C pickling spices umbelliferous seed head, which is usually sold being subjected to boiling water, which will help them stay a little firmer): Place jars in canner filled halfway with /3 C pickling salt in bundles, with each head still attached to its warm (120 to140 degrees) water. Addhot water to a level1 inch abovethe jars. Heat the water enough to main- 2 TBS sugar long stalk) tain180- to 185-degree water temperature for 30 minutes. Check with a candy or jelly thermometer to be certain that the water temperature is at least 180 degrees during the entire 30 minutes. Temperatures higher than 185 In a large norf-aluminum pot, combine the vinegar, water, pickling spices, salt, sugar, turmeric and chopped
degrees maycause unnecessary softening of pickles. Note:There is not a processing time for 2-quart jars, so if you areusing this size, the jar(s) must be refrigerated.
dill heads. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer, covered, for 5 minutes. If readying a batch for the refrigerator, let the mixture cool, then strain off the seasonings and dill (be sure and press down on the strainer to extract as much flavor from the ingredients as possible before discarding them). Pour the brine into nonreactive
containers, such as glass canning jars or food-grade plastic tubs or jugs with tight-fitting lids. Refrigerate until ready to Use.
The Pickles PtPITTSBURGH
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For Up to1 gallon of pickles. 4 qts pickling cucumbers rinsed well 4 heads of fresh pickling dill, halved
FLAT ' "//
About t/2tsp dried red pepper flakes 16 whole peeled garlic cloves, sliced
1 batch of prepared brine (makes t/2 gallon)
After rinsing the cucumbers and removing any dirt, rub or trim away the blossom end of each cuke (the blos-
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som end is opposite the stemend). If the cucumbers are too large, you maywant to cut them into chunks, slices
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containers. Cover andlet cool to room temperature, then store in the refrigerator.
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or sticks. Otherwise, leave them whole. Pack the cucumbers into clean jars or food-grade plastic containers, leavingt/2-inch head space. Divide the sliced pieces of garlic and halved heads of fresh pickling dill among the
containers. Add a pinch (about '/4 of a teaspoon per quart) of the dried red pepper flakes to each container (an-
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The pickles are "becoming good" after 7 to 10 days of aging, but they won't be "Damn Good" for at least a month. Even then, they will continue to improve and improve and improve for months and months. I've kept
batches for up to 24months, and they've beenfabulous down to the last pickle. To store yourpickles at roomtemperature: If you really don't have enough refrigerator space and needto store batches in your pantry at room temperature, then you'll have to process the jars in a boiling-water canner. Wash pint or quart canning jars (such asBall or Kerr). Keephot until used. Pack the pickles into the jars, leaving /2-inchhead space. Divide the garlic slices among the jars (figure on 4 cloves per quart). Pour the strained hot brine into 1 jar at a time, leavingt/~-inch head space. Wipe Iar rim with a clean, damp cloth. Place the metal
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other pinch of two should be used for those folks who enjoy more of a "bite" in their pickles). If the brine has been refrigerated, then reheat in a non-aluminum pan. Ladle or pour the hot brine into the
disc of the two-piece lid on top of the jar opening, then screw on themetal screw band. Fill and close remaining jars. Process the jars using the low temperature pasteurization treatment (this method keeps the pickles from be-
Pa.~ Qa pi
ing subjected to boiling water, which will help them stay a little firmer): Place jars in canner filled halfway with warm (120to140 degrees) water. Add hot water to a level1inch above the jars. Heat the water enough to maintain180- to185-degree water temperature for 30 minutes. Check with a candy or jelly thermometer to be certain
that the water temperature is at least180 degrees during the entire 30 minutes. Temperatures higher than185 degrees maycause Unnecessary softening of pickles. Note:There is not a processing time for 2-quart jars, so if you areusing this size, the jar(s) must be refrigerated.
FOO D
TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
By Melissa Clark
D3
Fried Green Tomatoes with Bacon Remoulade
New York Times News Service
Makes 6 servings.
I was strolling with Christopher Boswell in the vegetable gardens of the American Academy in Rome, where he is the chef, when he saved me from a rookie mistake. It was late May. I had just devoured the fava-and-chicory soup he served for lunch. I mentioned my plan to make it as soon as the legumes came into season in New York in June. "Don't do it," he cautioned as he split a fat pod from the fava
FOR THE BACON REMOULADE: FOR THE FRIEDTOMATOES: /2Ib bacon (about 6 thick slices) 1 tsp coarse kosher salt /2 Ib pickled green tomatoes, 1 tsp black pepper finely chopped, plus pickling 3 Ig unripe green tomatoes, liquid sliced /4-inch thick 1 TBS minced fresh chives, 1 /2 C all-purpose flour plus more for serving 4 Ig eggs, beaten with a splash 1 egg yolk of water /4 tsp coarse kosher salt 1 /2 C cornmeal /2 C neutral oil, like grapeseed, Hot sauce, for serving safflower or canola /4 C olive oil
patch, exposing beans as big as his thumbs. "You have to wait until late in the season when the favas turn starchy, like these. The first young beans are too crisp and tender." But Boswell's point was larger than that. "Good cooking is about understanding the life cycle of your ingredients and knowing howto get the best out of them." This sentiment, that there are seasons within seasons (call it microseasonality), is the latest paradigm for chefs and home cooks who keep a sharp eye on the calendar. Take the tomato. The first specimens in early summer are hard and green and mildly acidic. Late-season tomatoes are oftenoverripe and overly soft, gaining sweetness but losing texture. End-of-season tomatoes come full circle back to
In a large nonstick skillet over high heat, cook bacon until crisp, about 6 min-
utes. Transfer to aplate linedwith papertowels. Reservethe bacongrease. In a small bowl, combine pickled tomatoes and chives. Crumble in bacon. In a medium bowl, combine egg yolk, 1 tablespoon green tomato pickling liquid (or lemon juice), 1 teaspoon cold water andi/4 teaspoon salt. While whisking constantly, slowly drizzle in neutral oil and olive oil until sauce begins to thicken into mayonnaise. Add more pickling liquid to taste.
Finely chop /2 cup of the pickled-tomato-and-bacon relish and mix it into mayonnaise to make remoulade. Save remaining relish for serving. Andrew Scrivani i New York Times News Service
A tomato crostata takes advantage of perfectly ripe tomatoes.
Sprinkle1 teaspoonsalt and1 teaspoon pepper over greentomatoes and set aside. Put flour into a shallow bowl, the eggsinto another shallow bowl, and the cornmeal into a third. Line a rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper. Add tomatoes to flour one or two at a time. Coat all over, shake off any
excess andtransfer to eggs. Dipboth sides ineggs, shakeoff anyexcessand
Tomato Crostata with Honey-Thyme Glaze
transfer to cornmeal. Press tomatoes into cornmeal until well coated on both sides, and then transfer to baking sheet. Repeat with remaining tomatoes.
Makes 6 to 8 servings.
Heat the nonstick skillet with the bacongreaseover medium heat. Line a
'/s bunch fresh thyme sprigs, FOR THE CRUST: FOR THE FILLING: 1i/s Ibs different-colored 125 g all-purpose flour (about1 plus 2 TBS chopped fresh tomatoes, sliced /4-inch thick thyme leaves C), more for rolling out dough 75 g fine cornmeal (about /. C) (or halved if cherry or grape 2 TBS olive oil /4 tsp fine sea salt tomatoes) 3 garlic cloves, smashed and 10 TBS cold unsalted butter 1 tsp kosher sea salt, plus a peeled (1 stick plus 2 TBS), cut into pinch 65 g extra-sharp cheddar, small cubes 2 TBS cider vinegar grated (about1 C) 1 TBS honey Black pepper, to taste green, not ripening fully before 35 g grated extra-sharp faiiing off the vine. cheddar (about /s C) 1 Ig egg In need of something to do Ice water Flaky sea salt, like Maldon with my tomato haul from the farmers market, I set out to Make the crust: In a food processor, briefly pulse together flour, cornmeal and salt. Add butter and cheese, make three dishes that showed and pulse until mixture forms chickpea-size pieces (three to five1-second pulses). Add icewater1 tablespoon at them off at different stages of a time, up to 6tablespoons, pulsing occasionally until mixture is just moist enough to hold together. Form dough ripeness. into a ball, wrap with plastic and flatten into a disk. Refrigerate at least 2 hours. I took softball-size green toMeanwhile, line a rimmed baking sheet with a double layer of paper towels. Spread out tomato slices in a matoes and fried them up, pair- single layer. Sprinkle with1 teaspoon salt and let sit for at least1 hour and up to 3hours. ing them with a bacon remouIn a skillet over medium heat, combine vinegar, honey and thyme sprigs, and bring to a simmer; let simmer 2 lade spiked with pickled green minutes, then transfer to a bowl. Wipe out skillet, then add olive oil and garlic. Cook garlic for 2 to 3 minutes, or tomatoes (store-bought, but until it is golden andcaramelized. Remove garlic and finely chop. Reserve garlic oil. homemade ones work if you Line a rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper. Lightly flour a work surface and rolling pin. Gently roll out are so inclined). dough to a /s-inch thickness, dusting with flour if dough is sticking. Transfer dough to baking sheet and return to Perfectly ripe tomatoes were fridge for another 20 minutes. baked into an herbed, cheeseHeat oven to 425 degrees. Pat tomatoes dry with paper towels. Brush tomatoes with honey mixture (reladen tomato crostata with a serve the thyme sprigs). Leaving a 3-inch border, distribute cheese, garlic and half the chopped thyme leaves cornmeal crust. on center of crust. Add black pepper to taste, then layer tomatoes in an overlapping pattern, maintaining the Then, for my oozing, over- border. Drizzle garlic oil over tomatoes, sprinkle with remaining thyme leaves and lay the reserved whole ripe tomatoes, I followed the thyme sprigs on top. Gently fold crust up around tomatoes, making a 2-inch border. chef Wade Moises'lead. At In a small bowl, whisk eggand1 teaspoon water. Using apastry brush, his restaurant,Rosemary's in brush egg wash over crust and sprinkle top of crostata with flaky salt. New York, he uses past-their- Bake for about 35 minutes, until pastry is deeply golden brown. Serve prime specimens to make a warm or at room temperature. vinaigrette.
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baking sheet with paper towels or a paper bag. When grease is hot but not smoking, add tomatoes to pan in batches of three to four. Cook 2 to 3 minutes
per side, oruntil goldenbrown. Transfer to bakingsheet andsprinkle with salt. Serve with remoulade, bacon and pickled green tomato relish and hot sauce.
Green and Wax Bean Salad with Spicy Tomato Vinaigrette Makes 4 servings. /2 Ib green beans, trimmed /4 C extra-virgin olive oil /2 Ib yellow wax beans, trimmed 1 garlic clove, minced 1 overripe large tomato /4 C thinly sliced pitted 1 TBS red wine vinegar, or to taste kalamata olives '/s C torn fresh basil leaves /4 tsp kosher sea salt, plus
more as needed Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Fill a large bowl with ice and water. Drop green and wax beans into boiling water for 1 to 3 minutes or
until just tender. Drain and immediately transfer to the ice bath. When cool, drain and dry with a towel and place in a large bowl.
Cut tomato inhalf across its equatorandsqueezeout seeds (usefor another purpose or discard). Using the largest hole on abox grater, grate the tomato flesh. Discard skin and transfer grated flesh to a medium bowl. You should have about /2 cup. Stir in vinegar and salt, then stir in olive oil and garlic.
Add just enough vinaigrette to coat beans,addolives, then toss well. Let sit for at least10 minutes (and up to 4 hours) before serving with torn basil.
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T iso -sc oo pieisawinner RECIPE FINDER
The Baltimore Sun
Mary Kilby from Timonium, Md., was in search of the recipe for the delicious banana cream pie that used to be served at Toddle House restaurants in the 1950s. Toddle House was a national quick-service restaurant chain with locations throughout the United States. It specialized in breakfast but was open 24/7. Even though the chainhas been closed for years it still has quite a devoted fan base, including its own Facebook page. While there are copycatrecipes forsome of the chain's other famous dishes, unfortunately, I had no luck finding any recipes for their banana cream pie. However, Patsy S c hlemmer from Bremen, Ind., saw Kilby's request and shared a recipefor a banana cream pie that she said came from one of her m other's cookbooks from the 1950s. She thinks it should fit the bill nicely. This is a recipe from before Cool Whip and i n stant pudding were around and it is made
Looking for a hard-
to-find recipe or can answer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, The Baltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, or email
baltsunrecipefinder© gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for them to be published.
t he old-fashioned way w i th basic ingredients you most likely will have in your pantry. The filling is creamy and delicately flavored. It is also very adaptable, if you leave out the bananas, you have vanilla cream pie. If you add I cup of shredded coconut to milk as it's being heated, you have coconut cream pie. No matter what, this pie is a winner. Serve it topped with sliced bananas and whipped cream or meringue and perhaps even a drizzle of chocolate and you
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Cindy Mosier from Dowagiac, Mich., is looking for a recipe for a Cinnamon Loaf, like the one made by a bakery in Dowagiac that she enjoyed growing up in the 1950s and '60s. She says that it was moist yet firm and baked ina loafpan. When it was turned upside down after baking, it had a caramel topping that was firm yet gooey.You could see the cinnamon swirled in the loaf. Sherri Trilling from North Chicago, Ill., said that many years ago there was a restaurant chain called the Indian Trial in Winnetka, Ill. It closed in the 1980s. The entrees would change daily, however, she said many people would come in for their special Cranberry Chicken, which she remembers was sweet but tart and had the cranberry flavor all through the chicken. She would love to know how they made it.
2 TBS butter 1 /2 tsp vanilla 3 to 4 ripe bananas
topping)
Prepare pie shell. In a large saucepan, scald the milk. In another saucepan, combine sugar, cornstarch or flour and salt; gradually stir in the scalded milk. Over medium heat, stirring constantly, cook until thickened. Cover and cook for 2 minutes longer, stirring
occasionally. In a small bowl have the egg yolks, slightly beaten, ready: stir a small amount of the hot mixture into the beaten yolks; when thoroughly combined, stir the yolks into the hot mixture. Cook1 minute longer, stirring constantly.
Remove from heat andblend in the butter and thevanilla. Let sit until lukewarm. When custard is cool and ready to pour, slice the bananas and scatter them in the bottom of the cooked pie
shell; pour the lukewarm mixture over the bananaslices. If desired, make a meringue with the reserved egg whites to top the pie or cool until ready to serve and top with fresh whipped cream instead.
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Makes 6 to 8servings. 3 TBS cornstarch or '/s C flour 3 egg yolks (save the whites if you want to make a meringue
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will have a slice of good oldfashioned comfort food at its very best.
Old-Fashioned Banana Cream Pie
A 9-inch pie crust, baked /3 C sugar '/s tsp salt 3 C whole milk
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By Julie Rothman
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Touraplecrw 0 flo seack plann ng 0 ycanyow r I re
W HEN TO LOOK FOR IT: pudlishing four editions ayear August 28, November 13
REDMOND MAGAZINE DISCOVER EVERYTHINGTHISCHARMING TOWNHASTOOFFER From itsheritage tothearts, there's somethingfor everyonein Redmond. Four times a year, Redmond Magazine is published to highlight the businesses and individuals who work to build a strong community. The publication features a calendar of community events, personality features and insight into "hidden treasures" around Redmond.
SISTERS M AGAZ I N E
AKTSi CULTURE i EVENTS
SUMMER 2013
WELCOMETOTHECENTRAL OREGON TOWN OFSISTERS
Sisters Magazinehonorsthe uniquenessof this mountaintown. Sisters Magazine is the area's foremost resource for events, activities, artists and businessesthat make up the backbone of this small mountain town. In the coming year, each edition will highlight Sisters' events that draw thousands to the area.
W HEN TO LOOK FOR IT: pudlishing four editions ayear
August 23 (September in Sisters), November 15 (A Cowboy Christmas)
D4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013
H OME 4
A R DEN
Fixture Continued from 01 But ifyou follow our safety recommen-
dations, andthe manufacturer's instructions on your new light fixture, plus read up
online and inhomerepair books,youprobablywon'thaveashockingexperience. Time:About1-2 hours Difficulty:Intermediate. Like many things, this project is easier and faster if
you have a friend to help.
Next week: Book traces gardening through history
Voltage tester ($15) Crescent wrench ($15) Wire stripper ($8) Wire nuts ($8 for multi-pack)
ladder. Important: Use a voltage tester to make sure the power is off. Follow
your voltage meter's instructions, and test to confirm that the black (hot) wire
and green (ground) wire have noAC voltage on them.
Step1: Shutoff electricity andthen take down the old light fixture. Before you do anything, turn off the
Cost:Your new light fixture, and minimost of the supplies below.
Supplies: Wooden or fiberglass stepladder (Don't use ametal ladder — it conducts electricity!) Safety goggles ($5) Screwdriver
Pliers to twist wires together, or use your fingers
Step 4: Attach the new light fixture
www.bendoregonelectric.com) told us he thinks the trickiest part of installing a new light fixture is knowing what fixture goes with what ceiling junction box. "If
to the ceiling. you have abox rated for15 pounds, and Follow your new light fixture's instruc- put in a chandelier that's 35 pounds, it tions to attach it to the junction box.
can pull right through the sheetrock," he said. Mesarich also told us that older
power to the light fixture at your electri-
Step 3: Connectwhite, dlack and green wires.
Screw in the appropriate wattage lightbulbs. Now youmayturnthepowerback
cal panel/circuit breaker. Turning the wall light switch to "off" is not enough. Stand
With a wire stripper tool, strip an inch of plastic insulation off the
on to see if your new light fixture works. If it doesn't, try another lightbulb. If it's
on a wooden or fiberglass (not metal)
white (neutral), black (hot) and green (ground) wires of the new fixture to expose the copper wire. You're ready to connect the new fixture's wires to
still not working, try not to swear, and nections are securely fastenedandthat the wires are connected black to black,
insulation on the wires may have burned
the ceiling wires. Twist the copper strands of the black wire of the new fixture to the ceiling's black wires with
white to white and ground to ground. If you see a problem with the wiring, turn
or black. If you find that in your home, I
your fingers or pliers in a clockwise di-
before attempting to fix it. If that doesn't do the trick, it may be the new fixture is
stepladder, remove the light fixture cover and light bulbs, and unscrew the exist-
ing fixture from the ceiling. Slowly pull
malexpense,assumingyoualreadyhave
box, attach it to the lug nut or screw on the box.
it away from the ceiling junction box to
expose the wires. Step 2: Detach wires from the old light fixture.
rection, and put a wire nut on the end, twisting it in the same direction until it's tight. Twist and then cap the white
Twist off the wire nuts (plastic caps) that are holding the old fixture's spliced wires together, and disconnect the
"check the wiring to make sure the con-
the power off at the circuit breaker again
from the ceiling junction box. If you have a helper, hand the old light fixture
to him or her so you don't fall off your
"I find some homes are wired incorrectly, and I have to tell the homeowner
it's not wired to code, andneedsan upgrade. In someolder homes, the
off, and you can't see if they're white suggest you call a licensed electrician, " Mesarich said. If you decide that this DIY project is
fault yandneedstobeexchanged,"ac-
too complicated, Mesarich said he's changed out ceiling lights for as low as
cording to the book, "Be Thrifty — How
$75, while some jobs took half a day in
(neutral) wires together the same way. to Live Better with Less," edited by Pia Look for a ground (green) wire from Catton and Califa Suntree (Workman the fixture, and attach it to the junction Publishing) box ground wire with a wire nut. If you Bend licensed electrician SeanMeshave a ground wire on the junction arich (Mesarich Electric, 541-771-0038,
fixture's wires from the wires coming
homes might have electrical concerns.
order to correct wiring problems, and the bill was $300, so that gives you a
ballpark idea of what it would cost to call
in a pro. — Reporter :ahighberger@mac.com.
eima inin vaca ion omes + By Deborah K. Dietsch
day if I needed to." Weller, 60, has a much lonThe desire to connect with ger commute.He is the curator the g reat o u t doors d r ove of Northern European art at Washington, D.C., homeown- the North Carolina Museum of ers Janis Goodman and Den- Art in Raleigh and frequently nis Weller to buy a weekend spends weekends in W ashgetaway in Berkeley Springs, ington or at the West Virginia WVa. "I wanted a place in the retreat. landscape that would serve The c ouple p ai d a b o ut as a source of research for my $125,000 in 2009 for the tiny paintings," says G o odman, dwelling on a ridge overlookan artist known for abstract ing the Potomac River. The scenes of nature. purchase was based more on Given her busy schedule as the property's dramatic view an arts reviewer on local TV of the river valley than on the and associateprofessor atthe design of the house. "It wasn't a lovely old cabin. Corcoran College of Art and Design, she didn't want the va- T he inside was funky a n d cation home to be too far away dark, and the windows didn't from Washington. "It had to work," Goodman recalls. be in a place that was an easy Opportunity struck in 2011 drive from the city so I could when the empty house caught go back and forth on the same fire and a large portion of it Speciai To The Washington Post
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'Youneed tohave an idea of what you want from the beginning and then get a contractor you can trust." — Dennis Weller, vacation homeowner
burned to the ground. The need to rebuild led the owners toraze the remaining structure and spend $150,000 to build a house more to their liking. "We didn't want rustic or cute but something contemporary," says Goodman, who declined to disclose her age. With its angular shapes of wood and metal, the couple's new cabin exemplifies the stylish ways in which vacation homes can be reimagined. Most retreats provide an
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WEWILL BE CLOSED THIS WEEKTO MARK DOWN PRICESTO SELL OUT OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF:
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escape in the natural world, b ut increasingly, many a r e designed to reflect the sophistication of urban dwellings. Forget about roughing it. All the comforts of a primary home, from great rooms to glass-enclosed showers, are part of pricier getaways to accommodate long stays, possible renting of the property and full-time retirement in the future. They are becoming more important as the improving real estate market drives second-home sales upward. Vacation home sales nationwide rose 10.1 percent from 2011 to 2012, according to a survey conducted in March by the National Association of Realtors. They accounted for ll percent of all transactions last year, unchanged from 2011. The median priceof a vacation home also increased, from $121,300 in 2011 to $150,000 in 2012, as reported by the association. Like Goodman and Weller, some buyers of second homes will be faced with remodeling and expanding the property. The processcan be complicated, given that the work is undertaken from a distance and homeowners have to m a ke an extra effort to monitor the progressin construction. "You need to have an idea of what you want from the beginning and then get a contractor you can trust," Weller says. He and Goodman turned to a local builder, No Worries Carpentry of Great Cacapon, WVa., to construct their vacation house based on a design by GriD Architects, a fledgling firm that rents space in Goodman's studio in Mt. Rainier, Md. A compact floor plan and low-priced components kept costs in check. Kitchen cabinets are from Ikea, steel columns were made by a local metalworker, floors are raw concreteand framing lumber, windows and lighting were bought at Lowe's.
Courtesy Paul Burk via The Washington Post
Metal clads the entrance side of the Berkeley Springs, W.Va., weekend home designed by GriD Architects for Janis Goodman and Dennis Weller. The resulting cabin achieves what the owners wanted in the first place: a sunny, open living area offering river views through huge windows. "We gave them the same square footage of what they had beforebut made itmore spacious by combining the living and dining rooms and kitchen into one largespace,"says architect Brian Grieb, who designed the interior to be multi-functional. "Janis' studio could become a second bedroom or a home office, and Dennis' reading area could be used as a guest room." Insulating t h e s t r u cture from extreme temperatures to save energy was another priority. "Instead of the typical five inches of insulation, we used 7.5 inches to create a robust, thermal envelope," Grieb says. Heated floors keep the rooms toasty during winter months.
ambitious renovation of t he structure. But a consultation with D.C. architect Reena Racki about adding a fireplace and reconfiguring a staircase took the couple in a different direction. Racki encouraged them to transform the cramped interior into a modern loft. She turned a screened porch into a two-story living space framed by tall windows overlooking the bay. "My goal was to design a simple, tranquil retreat where harried urban dwellers could chill out and be enveloped and soothed by the amazing water views," she says. Much like the couple's Washington condo, the living area opens to the kitchen and its silvery cabinets and stainless-steel appliances. The rest of the 2,280-squarefoot house was renovated to provide a ground-level master suite and, on the upper floor, a loft-sitting area overlooking Going in a different direction the living room and a skylightLike Goodman and Weller, ed guest suite. homeowners Bill Karas, 78, Upkeep of the house is miniand Judy Kelly, 68, both of mized through durable, lowwhom work i n r e a l e state, maintenance materials. Fiberbought a vacation house based cement panels covering the on its close proximity to D.C. exterior don't require paintand then renovated it after the ing. Windows are framed in home sustained damage. "We rot-resistant fiberglass rather bought in Shady Side, Md., than wood. The roof is covbecause it's an hour from the ered with coated sheet steel city," Kelly says. instead of shingles. Decking at K aras a n d Ke l l y pa i d the rearismade of a composite $ 394,000 in 2 0 0 1 f o r t h e material combining reclaimed 1940s cottage, attracted to its wood and plastic. "So many peoplebuild a vafrontage on a tributary of the Chesapeake Bay. When a pipe cation house with extra space broke and flooded the house to accommodate a lot of people, in 2009, they remodeled the but we built for how we use it kitchen and, with th e h elp most of the time," says Karas, of local builder Chesapeake noting that extra guests have Carpentry, planned a m ore slept on the couple's sailboat.
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EDMAN f ine furnitur e D OW N T O W
N BEND
1020 NW Wall St Bend, OR ph 541-617-9799 SPecial Hours this Weekend: Fri V Srt.t 10-6 Sun 12-5 Courtesy Reena Racki via The Washington Post
Pictured items are subtect to Onor sale and may not be available for purchase..
In renovating the Shady Side, Md., home of Bill Karas and Judy Kelly, architect Reena Racki created a two-story living space framed by tall windows that overlook a tributary of the Chesapeake Bay.
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The Helmsteads plant containers with a variety of plants to provide color and texture to their backyard. In back, herbs such as mint, tarragon, chives and dill grow in a wine barrel. Other plants — including petunias, blue lobelia and a neon green potato vine — complete the ensemble.
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In the beginning The H e lmsteads b ought theirhouse because they could see the potential beyond the browned grass and b a rren landscape. "My mom is a gardener. That's her hobby and her career, so she was a big help because she understood the High Desert climate and knew what types of trees and plants to get," said Tiare Helmstead. H elmstead's mom an d a landscape architect put together a garden plan for them to follow. They used it as a guide to install and remodel the garden as they had time and money to invest. "I had a plan and a plant list. I would go to the nursery and get these plants and know where they're going to go in the bed," said Helmstead. The Helmsteads' objectives for the end product were clear. "We wanted an outdoor seating area because we barbecue a lot and have friends over. We wanted the dogs to have a safe place to play. We wanted privacy from the neighbors and wanted the space to be lowmaintenance and something that could grow from spring to fall," said Helmstead. T he g a rden p l a n tha t achieved all of their objectives included trees, flower beds, shrubs, a patio and a small fountain. Helmstead said all she could envision was the price tag. "I remember distinctly when I got the garden plan back, Iasked my mom about how much it would all cost. She said it would be about $10,000." So the Helmsteads paced themselves. During the f irst summer in the house they focused on the i nterior. "The garden was an afterthought," said Helmstead. The second summer, Tiare and Kris got married and, "We put all of our efforts towards the wedding." The third year, the Helmsteads added a couple of dogs to their family. And finally, in 2012 they got busy on the yard. They installed a paver patio out the back sliding glass doors, a synthetic lawn over half of the yard and planted aspen trees, a crabapple and arbor vitae. "It took four years to get where we are now.... It was a phased approach, and this year it all came together and we were just wowed."
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Growing in pumice are assorted succulent plants, including stone crop and hen and chicks. bors.... You feel like they're looking down on you," said Helmstead. To create a sense of privacy, they planted hops that have covered a fence, put a crabapple in the corner where it has doubled in size and put in an umbrella over the seating area. "It makes it feel like our own space," said Helmstead.
Self-sustaining space
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Containers grouped around the fountain are filled with plants of contrasting colors and textures, including orange calendula, a redleafed coleus, blue lobelia and kale. annuals to provide instant color and texturearound the outdoor furniture. An i n i tial i nvestment of less than $150 buys the flower configurations that are planted in Black Gold soil amended with compost that is also used to top dress the garden beds around the yard. "My mom picked the configurations. She uses the phrase when planting containers: 'There's a pillar, a thriller and the spiller,'" Helmstead said. In other words, something tall in the back, a big pop of color and then something to grow and spill over the front of the container. For Helmstead's containers, coral- and inky purple-colored petunias grow next to shocking
blue lobelia and a neon green potato vine spilling over the edge. One of the wine barrels is filled with tomato plants, a sweet 100 and an indigo rose variety, habanero peppers, basil and nasturtiums. The other barrel is filled with herbs, including mint, tarragon, chives and dill. "The containers add a lot of interest, and we do different groupings every year," said Helmstead.
Creating privacy in a fish bowl The Helmsteads' lot is set lower than the surrounding houses, and six or seven homes loom over the backyard. "We wanted privacy from the neigh-
Helmstead spends about an hour per week m aintaining the backyard. With a synthetic lawn and irrigation to water the beds, she said tending the garden consists of watering the containers daily and pulling a weed here and there. T o soften the look of t h e lava rock wall, which is the foundation of the neighboring property, Helmstead planted succulents and Virginia creeper. And in the beds along the house, bleeding heart blooms amid hostas and spirea, towering sunflowers and periwinkle ground cover. In the front yard, where it can be as hot as 100 degrees, Helmstead said there has been a lot of trial and error until this year when she found plants that could survive. Ice plants add pink color to the front walkway, and container gardens of assorted succulents thrive in the direct sun. On the front fence, a raspberry plant that was given to Helmstead as a small clipping in a yogurt cup has covered the fence with pink berries tucked under the leaves. — Reporter: 541-383-0361 or mgallagher@bendbulletin.com
. I just bought an orchid .plant. How should I care for it? • To maintain a healthy • orchid, mimic its natural environments as much as possible. Orchids like temperatures close to those we like, but the air in your home may be too dry. There are a few ways to give an orchid a moist atmosphere: Keep it in a bathroom with a window (for sunlight), set it on a pebble tray partially filled with water, or group plants together to establish a mini ecosystem. W hile o r chids t h r i ve in moist air, be sure not to overwater them. There are more than 30,000 varieties, so research how frequently yours should be watered. Allow the plants to approach dryness before watering; then drench the potting medium with tepid rainwater or tap water. As the mixture dries out, the container will become lighter, indicating it's time to water again. Never leave your orchid bone-dry for long. As with watering, avoid overfeeding: After every third or fourth dousing, feed your plant an orchid fertilizer diluted with water. Place the plant in ample diffuse sunlight. East- and s outh-facing w ind o w s provide the best light. The leaves should be g r assy green — excessive light will cause them to yellow; too much shade will slow growth. When the plant has outgrown its original pot, use a potting medium suited for your kind of orchid. There are two main types: terrestrial orchids, which grow in the ground, and epiphytic orchids, which ar e u sually found on tree branches a nd trunks, says M a r c Hachadourian, m a n ager of the Nolen Greenhouses for Living Collections at the New York B otanical Garden. Terrestrial plants like a mixture with a fine to m edium c o nsistency; epiphytic ones thrive with less potting medium near their roots. In either case, you'll need a f a st-draining potting mix, typically made from a combination of orchid bark, sphagnum m oss,tree-fern fiber,perlite and charcoal. Ask at your local garden center about ready-made varieties for your particular orchid. Repot the plant with a new batch of potting mixture every tw o t o t h r ee
Weekly Arts &
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sntertainment ••
Tony Cenicola/ New York Times News Service
Orchids are particularly sensitive to temperature and humidity, so it's crucial to create the right environment for them. years — ormore often ifyour tap water has high levels of calcium.
Polishing brass
Q
• How do I polish brass. ware? I've tried silver polish, and i t j u s t d o esn't work. • Polishes involve chemi• cals that strip a microscopic layer of oxidized matter from the surface. To avoid damaging your m e talware, it is important to know the metal and whether it is solid or plated and then use the proper agent to polish it. To determine whether your piece is solid or plated, scratch in a place not easily seen. If your brassware is golden yellow, it is probably solid brass. If it has a white sheen, it could be steel, aluminum, zinc, pot metal, spelter or something else plated in brass. Silver polish uses a relatively safe, weak chemical, so it can only be substituted for brass polish when the tarnish is not too severe. For brass pieces,Michael Vetrone, president of Empire Metal Finishing in New York City, often u ses N e vrDull Metal Polish (available from nevrdull.com). If the piece is brass-plated, do not use too much polish or rub too vigorously, as the thinly plated metal will wear. Other sound advice from V etrone: Be s ure t o w e a r gloves, and test the product in an inconspicuous area of the piece before applying it all over. After polishing the piece, buff it, and apply butcher's wax to make the shine last longer and protect it from further oxidation.
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— Questions of general interest can beemailed to mslletters@ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column,visit www.marthastewart.com.
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Throughout the process, they learned a lot about aesthetics and how to plan. With the help of a landscape architect friend and a mom who is a master gardener,the Helmsteads learned how to c o nceptualize their backyardusingthesetips: Every view from inside of the house '::, :wij: 'g, "':: should be framing a vignette; complementary colors should be grouped together, like yellow and purple, orange and blue or green and red; plant things in odd numbers rather than pairs The Helmsteads' front yard is planted with ice plants — the pink blooms — and assorted succulents and practice symmetry. to create a landscape capable of surviving the heat and direct sunlight. The scene from the living room window features a cluster of aspen with yellow columbines and purple Russian sage. • We want to see your garden • Email other good photos And out the sliding doors, the of the great outdoors to photos for another special patio is an extension of their livversion of Well shot! that will readerphotos©bendbulletin. reader PhotoS ing space. run in the Outdoors section. cemand tell Lts a bit about Submission requirements:Include as Submit your best work at where and whenyoutook Adding big color much detail as possible — when and bendbulletin.cem/garden them. We'll choose the best for with little effort where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, and we'll pickthe best for publication. Every year,the Helmsteads hometown andphone number. Photos publication. must be high resolution (at least 6 inches start anew with potted plants. wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered. They fill terra-cotta pots and wine barrels in late April with
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 'I3, 2013
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT TV TODAY
etwor s ta e issue wit critics'tweets TV SPOTLIGHT
Ellyn Angelotti, a f aculty member at the Poynter InstiBy Greg Braxton tute for Media Studies who Los Angeles Times specializes in digital trends CBS executives and puband social media, said that licists huddled in the back of the press events can produce a "blind spot" effect, where the I nternational B a llroom a t the Beverly Hilton w i t h tweeters are i n fluenced by anticipation. their own echo chamber inThe network, one of more stead of looking at the broader than a d o zen p articipating picture. "You can look at the shiny over a two-week period, was hosting a marathon day preobject and miss the bigger story," said Angelotti. "It might viewing its new fall shows at the Television Critics Associanot allow for a d iversity of tion press tour, a semi-annual views. Social media makes a gathering of more than 200 The Associated Press virtual living room where you TV journalists and bloggers From left: Cast members Kal Penn, Jerry O'Connell and Tony can see people sharing perfrom around the country. Net- Shalhoub participate in the "We Are Men" panel at the Television spectives, and the context of work honchos were naturally Critics Association press tour in Beverly Hills, Calif. TV critics the message can change." hoping their slate of comedies greeted early viewings of the sitcom with scorn on Twitter. For decades the press tour, and dramas would get a posiheld in summer and winter, tive response from the room. was a mostly symbiotic relaInstead, they got bitten by a for a week and have to stay for what they regard as Twitter's tionship in w hich program"snark-nado." another" CBS press tour. dark side. While prizing the mers promoted their new Tim Goodman, TV c r i tic Welcome to the 2013 TCA social media platform as a shows to an eager press who for the Hollywood Reporter press tour, where social me- powerful device to promote received easy access to stars (CBastardMachine), tweeted dia is rattling the relationship theirshows, executives none- and creators. But the Twitabout two coming network between publicity-hungry net- theless complain that Twitter ter explosion has shifted the sitcoms: "Not sure you could works and journalists under has given rise to a new jour- dynamics. "This constant snarking has make the pilot for 'We A r e mounting pressure to deliver nalistic culture of snark that Men' any worse unless some- immediate, constant 140-char- encourages incivility, cheap changed the whole tenor of one from 'The M i llers' far- acter commentary to attract shots and a pile-on mentality, the tour," said one network exted on it." Hank Stuever, TV readers. Where once j ouroften atthe expense of pro- ecutive who asked to remain critic for the Washington Post nalists might have gossiped, viding m eaningful c o ntext anonymous for fear of being (@hankstuever), told his Twit- sniped and snarked privately and analysis. penalized by TCA members. "It's gotten absolutely ap"Of course everyone is entitled ter followers that he hadn't yet during q uestion-and-answer watched "We Are Men," "but sessions, the Twitter age has palling," said a top network to their own opinion. But what the reaction seems to be (sup- provided a very public arena honcho, who requested ano- happens iseveryone tries to pressing retch)." for those comments — much nymity for fear of reprisals by out-tweet each other, and it Meanwhile, blogger Roger to the chagrin of image-sensi- TCA journalists. "Much of the becomes like insider baseball. Catlin (@rcatlin) tweeted that tive networks. coverage isn't even about the They're forming these persothe network's new t h r i ller As the two-week confershows — it's about what peo- nas behind their Twitters." "Hostages" "is certainly a re- ence wrapped up, network Fox's panel last week on its ple are wearing. It's gotten into latable concept in a ballroom and cableexecutives are qui- personal insults. There's just a new sitcom "Dads" generated where people have been stuck etly fuming once again over real lack of respect." a flurry of tweets among jour-
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ing.The comedy about aging fathers and their more enlightened adultsons features several jokes aimed at people of color. Many ofthe conference's predominantly white journalists denounced the series as racially offensive. The snark wa s b ubbling even before the p anel b egan as members encouraged each other to attack the show. C. Joan P o rter, entertainment editor for MSN Canada (@cjoanporter), tweeted that the "Dads" panel "is about to be a blood bath. It's giving me hives just thinking about it." Lisa Palmer (@TVTherapy) tweeted, "Get ready for the firing squad." Added Gwen Reyes (@ReelVixen): "Let Paula Deen know she can make her comeback on 'Dads.'" While some executives have called for revamping the tour, even passing on some of the millions in costs to journalists, most recognize that the advantages far outweigh any pitfalls. "It's true that the general tone has evolved in such a way that I don't see it reversing. I don't see how you put the genie back in the bottle," said Andrew Wallenstein, Variety's editor in chief, Digital. "There are new voices at the table, and to some degree it's good for everyone. What's happening now has brought a creativity to the coverage that can be irreverent and which also might be seen as inappropriate."
given up?"
ABBY
I know folks are curious, but these comments are hurtful. The details of my sons' lives are private, to be shared as they grow in age-appropriate ways. They know they are adopted, but are too young to know the details surrounding their lives prior to joining our family. I do not want to have an in-depth conversation with everyperson who asks a nosy question. These questionsalways seem to come up when the kids are around and I feel unprepared to answer them. Do you have any suggestions for a witty and confident response that can shut down these questions? I don't want my boys to be ashamed that they were adopted, but I also don't want the details out there for public consumption. — Adopted Mom in lndy Dear Adopted Mom: That some-
one would be so insensitive as to pose those questions in front of the children is disconcerting. While I can't think of a "witty" response that would deter the questioner, I can think of one that would be effective. Look the person in the eye, smile and say, "Oh, that's a long story, but look at what beautiful sons I have. I feel truly blessed."
Dear Abby: My parents died when I was a teenager. In the years since I have noticed strange things. While I don't find pennies, I do often see streetlights turn off right before I drive under them. I drive a lot at night and in the early morning because I work graveyard shifts, and it seems to happen almost every day when I go to work or come home. I guess it could be coincidental. But a friend suggested years ago that it's my parents letting me know they're watching over me. I want to believe, yet I feel skeptical at the same time.Have you ever heard of anything like it'? — Lights Out in Federal Way, Wash. Dear Lights Out: The only time I have heard of anything like what
HAPPY BIRTHDAY FORTUESDAY, AUG. 13, 2013:This yearyouhave many demands domestically. How you handle them will impact other areas of your life. A move, achange in the family, a new addition are only some of the possibilities of what might Stars showthe kind occur. If you are of dayyou'll have si n gle, someone
you're experiencing has been when I happened to change channels and come upon a television show about theparanormal. Moreimportant than what I believe is what you choose to believe. If the reassurance that your parents are watching over you brings you comfort, then I am all for it. Dear Abby:This idea may appeal to the parents of young children: Celebrate"half-birthdays." (Theconcept is derived from the "Half-Birthday Song" in "Alice in Wonderland.")
A year to a young child is a long time. In addition to recognizing the joy that he/she was born, it's a start to learningthe structure of ourcalendar. ltdoesn'thavetoinvolve abigparty or gifts, just a special activity day with a parent. Our family has observed halfbirthdays for 45 years and have found it to be a worthwhile tradition. — FunMom Dear Fun Mom: The title of the song you mentioned is actually "The UNbirthday Song," but I'm in favor of anything that will bring parents and children closer. If the household is headed by a single working parent, then I'll bet a grandparent would be delighted for the chance to celebrate that special occasion. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com orP0. Box 69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
when you deal with another person whom you care about. Tonight: Know when to quit working.
** * * * Y ou seem to be very centered and know which way to go. Others will follow your lead and indirectly give you support. Stop and take time to see the big picture before making adecision. Tonight: Whatever knocks your socks off.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)
** * T ake your time thinking about an CANCER (June 21-July22) ** * * * Dynamic you become impending change. Youseea potential ** * * * Y ou are the poster child for ** * * P ositive ro mantically issue involving funds. Youtend to be less transparency. You cannot help but show ** * A verage inv o lved with your feelings. Caring seems to flow. A friend positive than a partner, yetyou have more ** So-so mightbecome a or associate will bend more than usual, but insight into the negatives. For this reason, * Difficult live-in quickly. Be you are generally more prepared. Tonight: this might not always bethe case. Havean aware that this Let go of concerns for an evening. important discussion. Tonight: Paint the person might not move out as quickly if town red. CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) you want him or her to. If you areattached, ** * * A i m for exactly whatyou want. LEO (July23-Aug.22) look within if you're not feeling content. Listen to news andconsider howyou want ** * You could be taken aback by another Responsibilities could beweighing on you to use the information. You demonstrate person's suggestion. In a sense you mi g ht so much so thatyou are losing your sense the ability to integrate different elements find this person a bit intrusive, probably of spontaneity and fun. SCORPIO can into a successful, winning proposition. because his or her perception hits close weigh you down mentally and emotionally. Tonight: Find your friends. to home. A partner doesn't know how ARIES (March 21-April 19) to respond to your upset and thoughts. AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb. 18) ** * * Your intensity cannot be hidden. Tonight: Order in. ** * Be aware of your limitations with a Even if another party has aone- or twofriend or loved one. Listen to news more VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) sentence conversation with you, your openly, and makedecisions accordingly. ** * * Conversations are lively, even if fervency and passion come through. Honor a changethat seems necessary. they are somewhat stilted. You might not Confusion might arise easily. The more Trust in your resilience to get around a know what to say. Aneighbor or a close you tryto clarify, the more chaos seemsto difficulty. You are ontop of your game, even relative gets an attitude at one of the worst arise. Tonight: Togetherness works. if you feel a little insecure. Tonight: Others moments possible. Invite others to join TAURUS (April20-May20) you for a fun happening, maybe this Friday. follow your lead. ** * * You have a subtle yet strong Tonight: Hang out with a friend. PISCES (Feb.19-March20) manner that marks your conversations and ** * * * L i sten to news with a grain of LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) actions. Others know whenyou are serious. salt. You are hearing information that until ** * You cannot have asay in every Confusion marks a moneymatter. Tonight: now has not beenshared. Your ingenuity matter, though you might like to. Yousee a Defer to another person's suggestion. takes this information and funnels it series of events as acontinuum. With this GEMINI (May21-June20) appropriately to create a winning situation. perspective, you might not pay attention ** * You know the toll of pushing others Trust in your abilityto grasp deeper to some important details, which could too hard, and once moreyou seethe impact be critical. Pressure builds, as aboss or a concepts. Tonight: Letyour mind wander, of this behavior. A close associate gives you parent wants your attention. Tonight: Leave and follow its lead (within reason!). thecoldshoulder.Pushcomes to shove the day behind and join a friend for a drink. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
9 p.m. on CW, "Capture" — One team is feeling the heat from the other contestants after destroying the food supply. Luke gives one of the teams a peek at the entire playing field, which could change everything. The Hunt Team makes a surprising capture that causes emotions to boil over in the new episode "Blue Devils." 9 p.m. on USA, "Covert Affairs" — Annie (Piper Perabo) is sent to Vienna on an undercover assignment that requires her to cut off all contact with Auggie (Christopher Gorham). Arthur and Joan (Peter Gallagher, Kari Matchett) make a decision about bringing in reinforcements in the new episode "Here Comes Your Man." Manolo Cardona and Gregory Itzin guest star. 10p.m. onH C), "Bodyof Proof" —Oh, this doesn't look good. Megan (Dana Delany) arrives at the scene of a girl's murder and finds Tommy (Mark Valley) there — covered in blood and unable to remember anything about the previous night. She struggles to put her personal feelings for him aside as she tries to determine what really happened in "Doubting Tommy." Lorraine Toussaint, Joanna Cassidy and Richard Burgi guest star. 10:01 p.m. on USA, "Suits" — Harvey and Stephen (Gabriel Macht, Max Beesley) team up to work on Ava's (Michelle Fairley) case, while Mike (Patrick J. Adams) invites Rachel (Meghan Markle) to join him a case that threatens to expose his secret to her parents in the new episode "Shadow of a Doubt." Gina Torres also stars.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to changeafter press time. I
Dear Abby: My h u sband and I have two wonderful sons who joined our family through adoption. While we don't broadcast that they are adopted, it sometimes comes up in conversation. When it does, people inevitably ask, "What happened to their 'real' parents?" DEAR or, "Why were they
8 p.m. on ES, "NCIS" —Ziva (Cote de Pablo) is distracted from the team's current case — the deaths of a journalist and a petty officer — by a surprise visit from her father, Eli (Michael Nouri). She's convinced he's come to the U.S. in his official capacity as director of Mossad, but he insists he's only there to share a Shabbat dinner with his daughter. Mark Harmon also stars in "Shabbat Shalom."
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10:30 p.m. on SYFY, "Heroes of Cosplay" —There's a name for dressing up like Batman or Darth Vader or Sailor Moon. It's called cosplay — "cos" is short for "costume." This new series follows nine cosplayers who compete with one another at comic book, anime and sci-fi fan conventions around the U.S. ©Zap2rt
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Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-4t6-10t4 • PERCYJACKSON: SEAOF MONSTERS (Upstairs— PG) 6:30 • PLANES(PG)6:15 • Theupstairs screeningroomhaslimited accessibility.
Elevation Capital Strategies 775 SW BonnetWay Suite120 Bend Main: 541-728-0321 www.elevationcapital.biz
TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013
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Thepower of oxygen ls undeniable; Mother Nature has used oxygento naturally purify the Earth for thousands I of years. Now let the power of oxygen clean your carpets! I C ARPET C L E A H I N G "
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ofCentral Oregon 54 $ 593 $ 799
If FR EE Estimate Over the Phone of IICRC Certified Technician
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Oxi Fresh uses a combination of ics one of a kind Oxi Sponge Encapsu/ator, and Oxi Powder.This three part cleaning solution creates a powerful oxygenated cleaning system that breaks down the stains while encapsulating them, so thatthey can be eff iciently removed from the carpet pile.
Bend - 63500 NE Hwy 97 (acrossfrom Home Depot) 541-330-2495 Redmond South RV SALES & PARTS 2795 S, Hwy 97 54l 548 5254
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TAKE 'N' BAKE PIXZA
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ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013
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c antact u s : Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
: Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Includeyour name, phone number and address
: Monday — Friday : 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
: Classified telephone hours:
Subscribe or manage your subscription
: Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
Place, cancel or extend an ad
T h e
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Items for Free
Free apples (fallen from my tree) for the deer! 541-548-2879
Stainless steel double sink w/disposal hook-up,
210
246
Furniture & Appliances
Furniture & Appliances
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355
264-Snow RemovalEquipment 265 - Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270 - Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales Dining table 42"x58" 280 - Estate Sales (42"x94" with three 281 - Fundraiser Sales 12" leaf extensions), 282- Sales Northwest Bend 4 straight back 8 2 284- Sales Southwest Bend arm chairs. 25+ yr. 286- Sales Northeast Bend old set has had but 2 288- Sales Southeast Bend owners. 290- Sales RedmondArea Asking $185obo 541-419-5060 292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS 316 - Irrigation Equipment Search the area's most comprehensive listing of 325- Hay, Grain and Feed classified advertising... 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies real estate to automotive, 341 - Horses and Equipment merchandise to sporting 345-Livestockand Equipment goods. Bulletin Classifieds 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals appear every day in the 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers print or on line. 358- Farmer's Column Call 541-385-5809 375- Meat and Animal Processing www.bendbulletin.com 383 - Produce andFood
The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purc h asing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit inf ormation may b e subjected to fraud. For more i nformation about an advertiser, you may call the O r egon State Attorney General's Office Co n s umer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.
The Bulletin recommends extra '
i caution when pur- i
I
chasing products or, services from out of I
i the area. Sending ti cash, checks, or i credit i n f ormation i may be subjected to
i FRAUD. For morei about an t I information advertiser, you may I
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advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12 or ~2
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Ad must include price of
Antiques & Collectibles
or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500.
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Winchester Mod. 94 32 Special Ser. ¹1213708, Redfield Peep Sight, 2 Boxes
Hornaday Ammo
$499 541-604-6099
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Computers Dell Computer 2012 and printer/fax, $199 541-521-6806.
9
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260
260
Misc. Items
Misc. Items
How to avoid scam and fraud attempts YBe aware of interna-
WHEN YOU SEE THIS
tional fraud. Deal locally whenever possible. Y Watch for buyers who offer more than
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On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional your asking price and photos of the item. who ask to have People Look for Information money wired or About Products and handed back to them. Fake cashier checks Services Every Daythrough and money orders The Bulletin Classifieds are common. YNever give out personal financial inforCommercial/Office mation. Equipment & Fixtures VTrust your instincts and be wary of Commercial s t ainless someone using an s teel 30x30 x 30 escrow service or cooler, pre v iously agent to pick up your used b y b e v erage merchandise. distributor. A lso smaller cooler avail-
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 Microwave $15, BBQ rill $15. Porta-a-crib, computer.
The Bulletin
able. 541-749-0724.
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
RC 01IX
your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad.
www.kinnamametrievers.com
DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO
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,
Call Classifieds at The Bulletin reserves 541-385-5809 the right to publish all www.bendbulletin.com ads from The Bulletin Tools 10. 541-420-2220 newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet web10' contractors Old car collector stuff, rackfora pickup,ladder Honda EU2000i generator, site. has6' Misc . I tems 50th anniv. Ford Horn great cond, less than 48 • toolboxes each side, ring, etc. Call for info hrs, $750. 541-548-3724 $475. 541-416-9686 2 burial plots, sect C ¹945 541-598-7636 Serwng Cent al Oregon 5>nce l903 &946 Redmond Memorial, Mossberg 3-06 b o lt, 10'rollerpanels for feed241 Leupold 3x9x40, sling, $500 each. 509-630-8348 Sled Carriage for up to ing cut-off saws / moving 4-yr old child, $25. Ser ingCenfrai Oregon 5>ncei903 Bicycles 8 bi-pod, ammo, sleeve Buying Diamonds heavy objects. Rollers 8" 458-206-4825 long; spacing 5y2". 15 @ $475. 334-477-2354 Accessories 208 /Gold for Cash $20 ea. 541-416-9686 Saxon's Fine Jewelers Table: round k itchen Pets 8 Supplies • Pets & Supplies• exc. cond., clean,09 Women's Special- Wanted: Collector 541-389-6655 $35; chest of drawers, Cement mixer, r u ns $245. 541-504-7096 seeks high quality ized Safire Elite SZ good. $75. $45, 541-420-2220 Irish Wolfhound/Great fishing items. SM Bronze. Missing 541-475-3200 BUYING D ane, 7 wks, 3 f e 8/8/13 Any info please Call 541-678-5753, or Lionel/American Flyer Wanted- paying cash male, XL, $ 500/ea. 503-351-2746 contact 541-318-1271 trains, accessories. for Hi-fi audio 8 stu- Large Breaker hammer 541-390-2830 541-408-2191. dio equip. Mclntosh, Harbor Freight 115V Dgvttzn 242 Weatherby 12 ga. pump 17 am p , $225 KITTENS! Fos t ered, J BL, Marantz, D y Visit our HUGE Model PA459, Home Exercise Equipment 541-521-6806 BUYING & SE L LING naco, Heathkit, SanChihuahua puppies, tea- friendly, fixed, shots, ID home decor Defense, new, never All gold jewelry, silver sui, Carver, NAD, etc. cup, shots 8 dewormed, chip, more! Variety of consignment store. $500. and Nordic Track C3SI ex- fired, colors 8 p e rsonalities. gold coins, bars, Call 541-261-1808 $250. 541-420-4403 New items 541-350-9336 ercise cycle, extra's. Building Materials Adopt from foster homerounds, wedding sets, arrive daily! $125. 541-388-6941 Chihuahuas miniature see TomTom Motel Mgr, class rings, sterling sil930 SE Textron, 1M, 1F white w/tan across from Sonic - Sat. ver, coin collect, vinREDMOND Habitat 245 Weatherby 300 W. Bend 541-318-1501 markings. S250 ea. 8 Sun. 1-5 PM. Just tage watches, dental RESTORE Mag, Mark V Eurowww.redeuxbend.com Golf Equipment 541-408-7858 $25/kitten; adopt 2 for gold. Bill Fl e ming, Building Supply Resale mark, Leupold 541-382-9419. $40! 541-389-8420. Quality at Vari-X-III 3.5-10 Donate deposit bottles/ CHECK YOUR AD www.craftcats.org GENERATE SOM E LOW PRICES scope, muz break, cans to local all volunCanon Photo printer, EXCITEMENT in your Water Fountain. Iovely 1242 S. Hwy 97 sling, some ammo, teer, non-profit rescue, to Lab Pups, AKC, Black neighborhood! Plan a new $30. for patio or inside 541-548-1406 $1250. 541-604-6099 help w/cat spay/neuter $600. Call Steve @ 541-521-6806. $199 541-382-9295. garage sale and don't Open to the public. vet bills. Cans for Cats (541) 680-0009. trailer at Ray's Foods on cabincreekgundogs.com forget to advertise in classified! Century Dr . Do n ate on the first day it runs Mon-Fri at Smith Sign, Lab Pups AKC, black & 541-385-5809. to make sure it is cor1 515 NE 2 nd; o r a t yellow, Master Hunter rect. "Spellcheck" and CRAFT in Tumalo any- sired, performance peditime. 541-389-8420. human errors do ocree, OFA cert hips & elwww.craftcats.org cur. If this happens to ows, 541-771-2330
FREE! 541-548-4667
I
A v e .
210
A1 Washers&Dryers
ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free ltems 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212 - Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - MedicalEquipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
C h a n d i e r
SELL
FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12 ~ 2
k
20 !
Ad must include price of single item of $500 or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at
541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
Lovebird babies, handfed, sweet, ready in 1-2 weeks. $60 each; taking deposits. 541-279-3578
! '.~' Mixed: Maltese/Chihuahua, 2 males born 2009. Also 1 female AKC Yorkshire Terrier, born 2007. All are small dogs. No A.M. calls, please! 541-350-5106 Part-time dog walker, wanted, mornings, in Cascade area. 541-317-5590.
High Quality King Bedroom Set with Storage - 1 yr old, in 541-385-5809 PERFECT condition! The Bulletin Classified Beautiful medium oak 246 hardwood bedframe with storage drawers, Guns, Hunting king pillow-top mat8 Fishing tress, 2 night stands, 2 lamps, 1 5-drawer Bend local pays CASH!! dresser, 1 dresser + for all firearms 8 mirror, ALL for only ammo. 541-526-0617 $3000. 541-410-1010 CASH!! For Guns, Ammo 8 Mattress queen, Reloading Supplies. excellent cond, $75. 541-549-0805
541-408-6900.
FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN
Your future is just a page The Bulletin away. Whether you're looking Serving Central Oregon since 1909 POODLE Toy pups & for a hat or a place to hangit, German Shepherds AKC teens. Also, POMAPOOS Call 541-475-3889 MOVING, MUST SELL. The Bulletin Classified is Just bought a new boat? www.sherman-ranch.us your best source. Two recliners $500 for 541-281-6829 Sell your old one in the Queensland Heelers both. Custom made classifieds! Ask about our Every daythousandsof German Sh o r thairedStandard & Mini, $150 sectional and o t to- buyers and sellers of goods Super Seller rates! Pointer Puppies, 1 male, & up. 541-280-1537 541-385-5809 man $850. L eather and services do business in 3 females avail, $400 ea, www.rightwayranch.wor sofa $ 650. C o ffee these pages.Theyknow Adopt a nice cat from parents on site. No padpress.com table $100. See Bul- you can't beat TheBulletin PetSmart or Tumalo res- pers. Erica 541-420-2271 letin web ad for more Classified Section for cue! Fixed, shots, ID photos. Call Steve at selection and convenience German Wirehaired AKC, chip, t e sted, m o r e! 503-585-5000. - every item isjust a phone Sanctuary open Sat/ Sun pointers, parents OSA -p call away. 1-5, other days bv appt. certified hips 8 elbows, Pine Trestle Table w/2 65480 78th, Bend. Pho- great hunting ancestry, benches, made by ForThe Classified Section is ready to g o ! $ 8 0 0. tos, map at www.craftest Furniture of LaPine. easy to use. Everyitem cats.org. 541-389-8420, 541-247-2928, eves. Yorkie pups AKC, health Paid $1000; like new, sell is categorized andevery or like us on Facebook. guar, potty training, $750 $750. 541-531-7903 or cartegory is indexed onthe 8 up. 541-777-7743 541-282-2356 section's front page. Adult barn/shop/working cats, fixed, shots, some Whether youare lookingfor friendly, some not. No Furniture & Appliances aire, water/ice in door, a home orneed aservice, fee & fre e d e l ivery. P $250 obo. 541-379-3530 your future is in the pagesof 541-389-8420 The Bulletin Classified. Great Danes 5-pc. brown sectional, Boxer, beautiful fawn AKC AKC Blue 3/4 Euro good shape, paid $1699 Treadle sewing mamale puppy, all shots, 2 Males 2 Females left new; sell for $500 obo. chine, 6 drawer, $195. The Bulletin 458-206-4825 $700. 541-325-3376 $1,500 (541)306 8391 541-548-7126
Show Your Stuff. Sell Your Stuff. In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds. GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,
QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES!
We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for acaring hom Please call right away.$500.
Modern amenities and anthe quiet you will need.Roomto grow in your own little paradise! Call now.
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck
can haul it an! Extra Cab, 4x4, and a tough V8 engine will get the iob done on the ranch!
Add color to your ad For an addifional '2 per day
< a.iii i e
s
To place your ad, visit www.bendbulletin.com or 541-385-5809
E2 TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5e00 pm Fri •
Tuesday•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mone Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tuese Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Saturday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e 3:00 Pm FrI • Sunday. • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5e00 Pm FrI •
a
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
fg,tF~>Jir) JI,J j Jlq tJjjJ~ jg
Add your web address Wildland Firefighters to your ad and readTo fight forest fires. ers on The Bulletin's Must be 18 years old web site, www.bend8 drug free. Apply bulletin.com, will be between 9 a.m. to 3 able to click through p.m., Mon. thru Thurs. automatically to your Bring two forms of ID fill website. out Federal 1-9 form. No ID =No Application.
Chemical Handling Technician Microsemi Corporation in B e nd, O regon has an immediate opening for a chemical h a ndling technician. Respons ibilities incl u de set-up of c hemical process baths, disposal of waste products, monitoring gas and liquid usage as well as cle a ning production process equipment. Some relevant experience a nd education i n chemical handling is highly desired. Interested ca n d idates should visit our web-
P ATR l c K
1199 NE Hemlock, Redmond, OR (541) 923-0703
Can be found on these pages:
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions
FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
MOTEL- Housekeeping The RiverhouseStaff, Full-time.Apply in Bend's largest Hotel and person at front desk Convention Center, is Sugarloaf Mou n tain seeking a quality-minded Motel 62980 N. HighThe Bulletin Auditorto join the way 97, in Bend. I Recommends extra Night Riverhouse Team. Appli528 caution when pur- cants must have strong PARTS MANAGER chasing products or I Loans & Mortgages Big Country RV has 8 computer services from out of • accounting requires some cus- immediate opening for Place a photoin your private party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES I the area. Sending skills; tomer service a F/ T E x perienced The WARNING for only$15.00 per week. c ash, c hecks, o r We offer cinteraction. Bulletin recomStarting at 3 lines o mpetitive Parts Manager who mends you use cauI credit i n f o rmation compensation as well as will share our com"UNDER '500in total merchandise OVER '500in total merchandise tion when you proI may be subjected to free golf and use of the mitment to customers. FRAUD. vide personal 7 days .................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 pool facilities. Bring re- Competitive pay, and For more i nforma- sume 8 complete appli- benefit package. information to compa14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 tion about an adver- cation in person at The nies offering loans or Apply in person at *Must state prices in ed 14 days .................................................$33.50 I tiser, you may call Riverhouse, 3075 N Hwy 3500 credit, especially North Hwy 97, 28 days .................................................$61.50 the Oregon State those asking for adGarage Sale Special site a t www . m i- Attorney General's 97, Bend, OR. Or apply Bend, Oregon; email vance loan fees or (call for commercial line ad rates) 8 submit resume/cover resume to 4 lines for 4 days.................................. c rosemi.com a n d Office C o n sumer s letter online at: companies from out of bcrvhire@ mail.com please apply on-line. Protection hotline at l www.riverhouse.com state. If you have or call Rick Breeden at PRE-EMPLOYMENT concerns or quesI 1-877-877-9392. 541-419-8680 A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: CUSTOMER SERVICE DRUG SCREENING tions, we suggest you Who wants to LThe Bttlletip g IS REQUIRED. consult your attorney Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. QUALITY CONTROL * or call CONSUMER be a pawn star? Apollo, Inc. is looking BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) HOTLINE, Established local Bend for experienced QualREQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well 1-877-877-9392. business is seeking a IS ity Control person to Network Operations full-time p r ofessional, as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin o versee 8 man a ge Call The Bulletin At Center: motivated individual for LES gBIIIII8 Quality Control activireserves the right to reject any ad at bendbolletimcom 541-385-5809 long-term employment. Computer Operator t ies, workload & r e We want to train the right any time. is located at: sources on water rec- Place Your Ad Or E-Mail individual, male or feRuns and monitors scheduled jobs, prepares project. Can- At: www.bendbulletin.com 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. male. If you are looking and monitors data c e nter i n frastructure lamation d idate must h ave 5 for an opportunity that equipment, maintains proper documentation Bend, Oregon 97702 experience in QC BANK TURNED YOU separates you from the and performs routine equipment installation years' DOWN? Private party or related field. Good rest, this is it. Fun & and m a i ntenance. P e r forms ne t work communication s k ills, will loan on real esPLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is hardworking is a must. If monitoring and basic configuration tasks. written & verbal, a must. tate equity. Credit, no needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or this sounds like you, you Responds touser and system supportissues, Civil QC background or problem, good equity reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher could be our next Pawn trouble shoots problems and works with other related experience preis all you need. Call shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days Star! High energy is rec- g roups on project or support work. L e s ferred. USACE CQCM Oregon Land Mortommended. Must pass Schwab has a re p utation o f e x cellent will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. credentials a plus. Full gage 541-388-4200. background check. customer service and over 400 stores in the benefit packet offered; • Salary is DOE Northwest. We offer a competitive salary, MONEyrWe buy 270 w age depending o n LOCAL • Bonus system secured trustdeeds & e xcellent benefits, retirement, and c a s h qualifications & experi• Paid vacation Heating & Stoves Lost & Found bonus. Visit us at: www.LesSchwab.com. hard money • Employee perks ence. Submit resume & note,some loans. Call Pat Kelley Please send resume to: cover letter to: AttenNOTICE TO LOST between 7/11-12. 541-382-3099 ext.13. Resumes will be accepted through tion Q C D e partment, ~ e tat a e k e ADVERTISER womans 10-diamond August 15, 2013. Please send resume and a a eh .e • ~ P.O. Box 7305, KenSince September 29, anniversary ring. Very salary requirements to: newick WA 99336. 1991, advertising for sentimental. Reward! TiCk, TOck Disbursement AgentZYLSHuman. Resources I lesschwab.com. Equal Opportunity used woodstoves has Sisters, 541-549-1132 A leading provider of Emails must state "Computer Operator" in the Employer TiCk, TOck... been limited to modconstruction risk mansubject line. No phone calls please. els which have been LOST: big white cat a gement services i s ...don't let time get 421 c ertified by the O r - with black and gray seeking a qualified indiTake care of EOE m arkings, lost o n away. Hire a egon Department of Schools & Training vidual in its Sunriver, your investments Environmental Qual- Awbrey Butte. ReOregon off ice. 2 years professional out ity (DEQ) and the fed- ward. 541-410-8191 Oregon Medical Train- minimum experience in with the help from Career 0 o r t unities of The Bulletin's eral En v ironmental ing PCS - Phlebotomy c onstruction or c o m - Night Pressman Framing hammer, The Bulletin's Protection Ag e n cy Lost: classes begin Sept. 3, m ercial l e nding r e - The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Or"Call A Service SW Bend area. Sen2013. Registration now quired, and proficiency egon. is seeking a night-time Pressman. "Call A Service (EPA) as having met 8/5, value. Reward if Professional" smoke emission stan- timental :~ o e e e with Excel e xpected. We are part of Western Communications, Inc. Professional" Directory dards. A cer t ifiedreturned. 541-420-0097 medicaltrainin .com Directory today! Job offers a competi25-ft 3 axle pintle which is a small, family owned group consist541-343-3100 w oodstove may b e Lost gold amethyst ring tive wage and g reat hitch trailer, ing of 7 newspapers - 5 in Oregon and 2 in identified by its certifi- 8/3 a t benefits. Please send California. Ideal candidate must be able to Des c hutes $2500. 470 Sales cation label, which is Expo Center during resume to: learn our equipment/processes quickly. A Call 541-480-8009 Domestic & permanently attached the fair Sentimental matthew.guthrieI hands-on style is a requirement for our 3ya to the stove. The BulIndependent Contractor Sales In-Home Positions tetratech.com value. 541-382-7069 tower KBA press. In addition to our 7-day a letin will no t k n owWe are seeking dynamic individuals. week newspaper, we have numerous comEDUCATION ingly accept advertisHome care for spinal Gilchrist School is cur- mercial print clients as well. Competitive wage LOST: Sony Cami ng for the sale of DOES THIS SOUND LIKE YOU? injured fem., no exp. rently hiring (1) Parapro- and benefit program, and potential for adera. I lost my Sony • OUTGOING & COMPETITIVE uncertified 1st quality grass hay, nec. 541-385-0177 vancement in a stable work environment. If camera in its black fessional — Child Specific woodstoves. • PERSONABLE & ENTHUSIASTIC bales, barn stored, Part-time care needed for 5.5 hours per day / stu- you provide dependability, combined with a case at t h e P a rk 70-lb. •CONSISTENT & MOTIVATED $250/ton. 750-Ib bales, positive attitude and are a team player, we Meadows Trailhead $240/ton. my husband with mobildent contact days; and 267 Patterson Ranch ity issues & incontinence. would like to hear from you. parking lot. Like an (1) Paraprofessional Sisters, 541-549-3831 Fuel & Wood Our winning team of sales & promotion idiot, I put it on the Friday, 8 hrs. S at. & Tutor 5.5 hours per day / professionals are making an average of roof of my van to load Barn stored 2 string 100 Sun. 2-3 hrs, a.m. Refs. student contact days. Pressroom Roll Tender $400 - $800 per week doing special my backpack into the lb. orchard grass, required. $12/hr. Sis- Both include a competi- Entry-level position responsible for the loading WHEN BUYING of newsprint rolls and the operation of the reel van and drove off clover mix, exc. horse ters area. 541-548-3304 tive benefits package. events, trade shows, retail & grocery FIREWOOD... with it up there. I'm feed. $220/ton. For job description and to stands on the press. The work schedule constore promotions while representing 476 offering a reward and Delivery available. To avoid fraud, apply for either position sists of four 10-hour days from 3:30 p.m. to THE BULLETlN newspaper will pay for shipping. approx 2:30 a.m. on a rotating schedule that 541-350-8515 or Employment The Bulletin go towww.kcsd.k12.or.us as an independent contractor 541-343-6897 541-447-4815 will allow for every other weekend being 3 recommends payCall 541-433-2295 for Opportunities days off. Must be able to move and lift 50 lbs. ment for Firewood more information. Grass hay, e xcellent M/EOFFER: or more on a continuing basis, also requires only upon delivery q uality, $ 20 0 t o n . • Solid Income Opportunity * reaching, standing, sitting, pushing, pulling, CAUTION: and inspection. 541-788-4539 *Complete Training Program" stooping, kneeling, walking and climbing stairs. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Ads published in Call a Pro Hay tarps, G.l. 35 oz Learning and using proper safety practices will *No Selling Door to Door * 4' x 4' x 8' "Employment Optreated canvas, 20' x 40', portunities" in clude be a primary responsibility. Starting rate $10/hr *No Telemarketing Involved* • Receipts should Whether you need a $200 ea. 541-480-8009 DOE. employee and indeinclude name, *Great Advancement Opportunity' fence fixed, hedges pendent p o sitions. phone, price and ORCHARD GRASS * Full and Part Time Hours * Lost: Tan/White trimmed or a house For more information or to submit a resume, Ads fo r p o sitions kind of wood 1st cutting, no rain, ChihuahuaFriday night please contact: Al Nelson, Pressroom Man$205/ton; or $200/ton that require a fee or built, you'll find purchased. (8/2) in Crooked River FOR THE CHANCE OF A for 15 ton. Powell upfront i nvestment ager, anelson I bendbulletin.com. Applica• Firewood ads Ranch near Ermine Rd. professional help in LIFETIME, tions are also available at the front desk at The Butte, 541-350-3164 must be stated. With MUST include Male, 8 years old, about The Bulletin's "Call a Call Adam Johnson Bulletin, 1777 Chandler Ave., Bend, OR. any independentjob species & cost per 7 lbs.$500 reward, no Check out the Pre-employment drug testing required. EOE 541-410-5521, TODAY! opportunity, please Service Professional" cord to better serve questions asked. classifieds online i nvestigate tho r our customers. Call 503-805-3833. Directory vvvvw.bendbultetin.com oughly. Use extra 541-385-5809 Updated daily c aution when a p aetvthg central oregon sthce lara plying for jobs one • line and never proLooking for your REMEMBER: Ifyou Facilities vide personal inforAll Year Dependable next employee? have lost an animal, Maintenance mation to any source Firewood: Seasoned don't forget to check Place a Bulletin Mechanic you may not have Lodgepole, Split, Del. Call 54 I-385-5809 to promote your service ' Advertisefor 28 daysstarting at 'l40 (rttis aperiapackttge i isaot availableohour website) The Humane Society help wanted ad Microsemi Corporaresearched and Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 Bend today and tion in B e nd, O rdeemed to be repufor $335. Cash, Check 541-382-3537 egon has an immereach over table. Use extreme or Credit Card OK. Redmond diate opening for a 60,000 readers c aution when r e 541-420-3484. 541-923-0882 Hand y man LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Carej facilities mai n t e- Building/Contracting • each week. s ponding t o A N Y Pt nance m e c hanic. Seasoned Juniper fireYour classified ad online employment eat-aar-rtre; NOTICE: Oregon state I DO THAT! NOTICE: Oregon LandNelson Responsibilities inw ood d elivered i n will also ad from out-of-state. law requires anyone Home/Rental repairs scape Contractors Law or Craft Cats clude maintenance Landscaping & C entral Ore . $ 1 7 5 appear on We suggest you call 541-389-8420. who contracts for Small jobs to remodels (ORS 671) requires all and repair of plant Maintenance cord. 541-419-9859 the State of Oregon bendbulletin.com construction work to businesses that adHonest, guaranteed HVAC, process pipServing Central which currently Consumer H o tline be licensed with the vertise t o pe r f orm work. CCB¹151573 Young man willing to split ing, waste treatment, Oregon Since 2003 Find exactly what at 1-503-378-4320 Construction Contrac- Dennis 541-317-9768 receives over Landscape Construc/stack firewood. Wage you are looking for in the and e nvironmental Residental/Commercial For Equal OpportuBoard (CCB). An tion which includes: 1.5 million page negotiable. 541-419-6651 sys t ems. tors nity Laws c o ntact control active license ERIC REEVE HANDY p lanting, decks , views every CLASSIFIEDS Sprinkler Current experience SERVICES. Home & Oregon Bureau of means the contractor fences, arbors, month at no Activation/Repair in HVAC systems is Commercial Repairs, Labor & I n dustry, is bonded & insured. water-features, and inextra cost. Gardening Supplies Reward for return '09 a must. Interested Back Flow Testing Carpentry-Painting, Civil Rights Division, Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irBulletin candidates s hould Women's Specialized Pressure-washing, & Equipment 971-673- 0764. CCB li c ense at rigation systems to be Maintenance Classifieds visit our website at S afire Elite S Z S M Honey Do's. On-time www.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the eThatch & Aerate www.microsemi.com B ronze. Miss i n g Get Results! The Bulletin promise. Senior contractor.com Landscape ContracSpring Clean up and please apply BarkTurfSoil.com 8/8/13 Any info please Call 541-385-5809 Discount. Work guar- ••Weekly or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit Mowing 541-385-5809 on-line. contact 541-318-1271 or place your ad The Bulletin recom- anteed. 541-389-3361 & Edging number is to be i non-line at or 541-771-4463 mends checking with cluded in all adverPROMPT D E LIVERY •Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly 286 bendbulletin.com the CCB prior to conBonded 8 Insured tisements which indi542-389-9663 Maintenance tracting with anyone. CCB¹181595 cate the business has Sales Northeast Bend •Bark, Rock, Etc. Some other t r ades a bond,insurance and 341 also req u ire addi- LandscapingNard Care workers c ompensakahdeee ih For newspaper ~ Horses & Equipment tional licenses a nd tion for their employ** FREE ** •Landscape delivery, call the certifications. ees. For your protecConstruction Circulation Dept. at Garage Sale Kit 2 quality Arabian mares tion call 503-378-5909 Check •Water Feature 541-385-5800 Place an ad in The free t o app r oved Concrete Construction or use our website: Installation/Maint. To place an ad, call Bulletin for your gaThe Bulletin Classified Zodns homes. 541-447-1522 ua/uP www.lcb.state.or.us to Q •Pavers 541-385-5809 rage sale and reJJ & B Construction, Z'a~~ ga ~/,. check license status 375 •Renovations or email ceive a Garage Sale before contracting with quality concrete work. More Than Service •Irrigations Installation classified@bendbulletin.com Kit FREE! Meat & Animal Processing the business. Persons Over 30 Years Exp. Peace Of Mind doing land s cape Sidewalks; RV pads; Senior Discounts reta hg cehtratQreqeh tthce l903 KIT INCLUDES: A ngus l o cker b e e f , maintenance do not Driveways; Color 8 Bonded & Insured • 4 Garage Sale Signs Fire Protection grass-fed, no adrenar equire an LCB Stamp wor k a v a il. 541-815-4458 • $2.00 Off Coupon To line butchered at CinFuels Reduction cense. Also Hardwood floorLCB¹8759 SUPER TOP SOIL Use Toward Your •Tall Grass www.hersne sotlandbark.com der Butte Meats, $3/lb. ing a t af fo r dable Ad cut & wrapped to your •Low Limbs ALLEN REINSCH Painting/Wall Covering Screened, soil 8 com- •Next 10 Tips For "Garage prices. 541-279-3183 Yard maintenance & post mi x ed , no Sale Success!" specs. 541-350-2737 •Brush and Debris CCB¹190612 clean-up, thatching, WESTERN P AINTING rocks/clods. High huFIND YOUR FUTURE plugging & much more! mus level, exc. for CO. Richard Hayman, Protect your home Debris Removal Call 541-536-1294 ea a semi-retired paintflower beds, lawns, HOME IN THE BULLETIN PICK UP YOUR with defensible space gardens, straight GARAGE SALE KIT at ing contractor of 45 JUNK BE GONE Villanueva Lawn Care. Your future i s j u st a p ag e aw ay. s creened to p s o i l. 1777 SW Chandler Maintenance,clean-up, years. S m all Jobs I Haul Away FREE Landscape W hether you ' r e l o oki n g for a ha t o r Bark. Clean fill. DeWelcome. Interior 8 Ave., Bend, OR 97702 thatching + more! For Salvage. Also Maintenance aplaceIo hangit, TheBulletin Exterior. c c b ¹ 5184. liver/you haul. Free estimates. Cleanups 8 Cleanouts Full or Partial Service 541-548-3949. 541-388-6910 Classifiedis yourbestsource. 541-981-8386 Mel, 541-389-8107 • Mowing «Edging • Pruning eWeeding Everydaythousandsofbuyers and Remodeling/Carpentryj Concrete/Paving Get your Sprinkler Adjustments sellersolgoodsandservicesdo I Lo s t & Found SILVER LINING businessinthese pages.They Doug Strain business Fertilizer included CONSTRUCTION knowyoucan't beatTheBulletin Construction, Inc. with monthly program Residential const., ClassifiedSectionfor selection Concrete Division remodels, maint. Residential & andconvenience- everyitemis & repair. CCB ¹199645 Its not too late Commercial concrete; Cody Aschenbrenner just phon a ecall away. for a beautiful foundations, driveways, 541-263-1268 sidewalks & curbs. $400 Reward for TheClassifiedSectionis easy landscape 'Miley' 4-mo. female Call Chris for appt. • Lawn Restoration to ttse.Everyitemis categorized With an ad in USE THECLASSIFIEDS! Springer Spaniel, liver 541-280-0581 •Weed Free beds andeverycategoryis indexedon Find them in & white, has tags. CCB¹109532 • Bark Installation www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin's the sectiods frontpage. Door-to-door selling with Lost 7/24 on ShumThe Bulletin way Rd., in Powell Decks Whetheryottarelookingfor ahome fast results! It's the easiest EXPERIENCED "Call A Service Butte. 541-604-6232 Classifieds! or need aservice, yourfutureis in Commercial way in the world to sell. Oregon Decks & Fencing & Residential the pages of TheBuleiin Classlied. F ound small m a l e Expert installation,all types Professional" Senior Discounts C hihuahua-mix i n Excellent work! Over 50 The Bulletin Classified 541-390-1466 Christmas V a l l ey yrs exp. Serving all of CO The Bulletin Directory 541-385-5809 area. 541-576-2544 ccb 20010• 541-526-1973 Same Day Response
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E4 TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
ACROSS 3e See 17-, 21-, 53- and 3 Polite turndown 61-Across 7 Magnum 42 Rentaa Dallas N.B.A.'er (purchasing option) 34 Jesse who 43 Westernmost pitched in a record 1,252 capital in major-league Continental games Europe zs Strike a chord 4s Six-pack muscles (with) 37 Famous person 4e Take care of with "8" as a so Genesis woman 38-Across sz Chow ae Songwriter s3 ... "E" as a Jacques 38-Across 2o Big blood sz Texas ASM vessels team 23 ... "J"asa so Promise 38-Across product ez... "D"asa zs Big beer buy 38-Across 27 Org. that s7 Two-player encourages basketball flossing game zs Texas' state se Archipelago tree part 31 DO g00 ss Like some eyes 32 Word processing and skies command 7o Blast maker of 36 Bullfight bulls 2002
Courageous play By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services
This week's deals treat hold-up plays bythe defenders. Some take more courage than others. Holding up an ace may not elevate your blood pressure, but say you're defending a gainst 3NT, an d d u mm y h a s A-Q-J-9-3-2 in clubs and nothing else. You sit behind dummy with K-4. If declarer lets the ten ride from his hand, do you duck? At today's 3NT, South won the first spade with the king and let the jack of diamonds ride. East won to return a spade, but South won and forced outthe ace of diamonds. He took the third spade in dummy and ran the diamonds, making four.
left, opens three clubs. Your partner doubles, and the next player passes. What do you say? ANSWER: Partner's double asks you to bid, though at this level you could pass for penalty with strength in clubs. As it is, you must decide how many spades to bid. Your hand is fair, but partner has counted on you to have a few points. Bid three spades. You would bid game withA1095 2, J 6,A7 5 , 7 3 2 . South dealer Both sides vulnerable
NORTH 4Q83 'v) 853
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NO ENTRY East could see he was unlikely to beat 3NT with West's spades; West couldn't have A-J-10-9-5 plus an entry. East's best chance is to hope declarer must bring i n d u mmy's diamonds to take nine tricks. So East should have let the jack of diamonds win! If South next leads a diamond to dummy's ten — and who would not? — East wins and returns a spade. South can't set u p an d c ash the diamonds and takes only eight tricks.
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By Greg Johnson (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
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08/13/13
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 13 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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Seeking house for rent Bend or east of Bend call 541-220-6330. TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin 627
Vacation Rentals & Exchanges
Ocean front house,
each walk from town, 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, Fireplace, BBQ. $95 per night, 3 night MIN. 208-342-6999 632
Apt./Multiplex General CHECK YOUR AD
on the first day it runs Io make sure it ise core rect. Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to
your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made Io your ad.
541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified 634
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend Call for Speclals! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313
Professionally managed by Norris 8 Stevens, Inc.
The Bulletin is your
E mploy m e n t Marketplace Call
5 41 -385 - 5 8 0 9 to advertise. www.bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
ATVs
CII
881
Boats & Accessories
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Motor h o mes
Motorhomes
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Trav el T r ailers
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Snowmobiles
20' Seaswirl 1992, 4.3L V6 w/OMC outdrive, open bow,Shorelander trlr, nds some interior trim work. $4500. 541-639-3209 9.5' Old Town Kayak with paddies & life jacket, Boats & Accessories $190. 541-593-5312 Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of 12s/9' HiLaker f i shing watercraft, please go boat with trailer and to Class 875. newly overhauled 18 541-385-5809 h.p. Johnston o u tb oard, $ 85 0 o b o . Eves 541-383-5043, Servmg Central Oregon since 1903 days 541-322-4843 Honda TRX 450R sport quad 2008, low hrs, new wheels 8 DNC perf. pipe $4250. 541-647-8931
•
• 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, $1000. • Yamaha 750 1999 Mountain Max, SOLD!
• Zieman 4-place trailer, SOLD! All in good condition. Located in La Pine. CalI 541-408-6149. ( 2) 2000 A r ctic C a t Z L580'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, lots of accys. Selling due to m e dical r e asons.
G ulfstream Su n - TIFFIN PHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides, CAT sport 30' Class A 350hp diesel engine, 1988 ne w f r i dge, $129,900. 30,900 miles, TV, solar panel, new great condition! refrigerator, wheelExtended warranty, c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W dishwasher, washer/ g enerator, Goo d dryer, central vac, roof condition! $18,000 satellite, aluminum obo 541-447-5504 wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays 8 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towbar and JAMEE 1982 20', Even-Brake included. low miles on it, Call 541-977-4150 self-contained. Runs Great, everything —g works. $3,000.
Orbit 21'2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual
Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' 2004, onfy 34K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $54,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
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541-382-6494
The Bulletin
$6000 all. 541-536-8130 Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001,
batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $15,000 OBO. 541-382-9441 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
Jayco Greyhawk Class short track, variable C 3 1 ' 2 005, 2 Redmond: exhaust valves, elec- 14'8 e boat, 40hp Mer- Beautiful h o u seboat slide-outs, many exGet your 541-548-5254 tric s tart, r e verse,cury outboard (4-stroke, $85,000. 541-390-4693 Iras, lo w m i l eage, business manuals, rec o rds,electric trim, EFI, less www.centraloregon $48000 will consider new spare belt, cover, than 10 hrs) + electric houseboat.com offers. 541-389-9292 heated hand g rips, trolling motor, fish finder, a ROW I N G nice, fast, $999. Call $5000 obo. 541-548-2173 GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigTom, 541-385-7932, — h~ with an ad in borhood. Plan a gaW~ 860 rage sale and don't The Bulletin's 648 forget to advertise in WEEKEND WARRIOR Motorcycles & Accessories "Call A Service classified! 385-5809. Toy hauler/travel trailer. Houses for Professional" 24' with 21' interior. Rent General KOUNTRY AIRE HDFatBo 19 96 14' Sleeps 6. Self-conDirectory 1994 37.5' motora luminum bo a t Servrng Central Oregon since 1903 tained. Systems/ PUBLISHER'S home, with awning, w/trailer, 2009 Mercury appearancein good 875 NOTICE 15hp motor, fish finder, and one slide-out, condition. Smoke-free. Only 47k miles All real estate adver$2500. 541-815-8797 Watercraft Travel Trailers Tow with s/9-ton. Strong tising in this newspaand good condition. suspension; can haul per is subject to the Ads published in eWa$25,000. ATVs snowmobiles, F air H o using A c t tercraft" include: Kay541-548-0318 745 Completely even a small car! Great which makes it illegal (photo aboveis ol a aks, rafts and motorRebuilt/Customized price - $8900. Homes for Sale to a d v ertise "any Ized personal similar model 8 not the 2012/2013 Award Call 541-593-6266 actual vehicle) preference, limitation watercrafts. For Winner or disc r imination " boats" please s e e NOTICE Condition 14' LAZER 1993 s ailbased on race, color, All real estate adver- Showroom Looking for your boat with trailer, exc. Class 870. Many Extras Arctic Fox 2004 29V, religion, sex, handi- tised here in is subnext employee? cond., $2000 o b o. 541-385-5809 Low Miles. one owner, perfect for Place a Bulletin help cap, familial status, ject to t h e F e deral Call 503-312-4168 snowbirds, very l iv$77,000 marital status or nawanted ad today and F air H o using A c t , able, 2 s lides, A/C/ 541-548-4807 reach over 60,000 tional origin, or an in- which makes it illegal furnace, added catatention to make any to advertise any prefeach week. l ytic h e ater, f r o nt readers HD Screaming Eagle 880 Monaco Windsor, 2001, Your classified ad such pre f erence, erence, limitation or kitchen large fndge, Electra Glide 2005, loaded! (was $234,000 limitation or discrimi- discrimination based will also appear on Motorhomes separated bath, aw103 e motor, two tone new) Solid-surface nation." Familial sta- on race, color, relibendbulletin.com ning, spare tire, Hencounters, convection/ candy teal, new tires, tus includes children gion, sex, handicap, which currently reSeadoo 1997 boat, sley hitch, great stor23K miles, CD player, 14' micro, 4-dr, fridge, ceives over 1.5 milunder the age of 18 familial status or natwin modified engines. age, outside shower, washer/dryer, ceramic hydraulic clutch, exliving with parents or tional origin, or intenlion page views ev210hp/1200lbs, fast. tile 8 carpet, TV, DVD, well main. $13 800 cellent condition. ery month at no legal cust o dians, tion to make any such 541-410-6561 $5500. 541-390-7035 satellite dish, leveling, Highest offer takes it. pregnant women, and preferences, l i m itaextra cost. Bulletin 8-airbags, power cord 541-480-8080. Classifieds Get Repeople securing cus- tions or discrimination. 17.5' Glastron 2002, reel, 2 full pass-thru tody of children under We will not knowingly Honda Sabre, 1983, 750, Chevy eng., Volvo Brougham 1978 motor trays, sults! Call 385-5809 Cummins ISO 8.3 home, Dodge chassis, 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 or place your ad 18. This newspaper accept any advertis- 6 speed, 27,800 miles. outdrive, open bow, 17' coach, sleeps 4, will not knowingly ac- ing for r ea l e s tate Shaft drive. Handlegrip stereo, sink/live well, on line at Diesel gen set. $85,000 rear dining. $4500. bendbulletin.com cept any advertising which is in violation of heaters. Ding in gas tank. w/glastron tr a i ler, 541-602-8652. obo. 503-799-2950 for real estate which is this law. All persons Photos on C r aigslist. incl. b oa t c o v e r, in violation of the law. are hereby informed New Stator 8 b attery. Like new, $ 8 500. Cougar 33 ft. 2006, Need help fixing stuff? O ur r e aders a r e that all dwellings ad- Good rubber. I get 50 541-447-4876 •5 14 ft. slide, awning, Call A Service Professional Fifth Wheels hereby informed that vertised are available mpg on the road. Dean, easy lift, stability bar, all dwellings adver- on an equal opporlu- $1500. 541-480-4704 find the help you need. bumper extends for CAMEO LXI 2003, 35 ft. tised in this newspa- nity basis. The Bullewww.bendbulletin.com extra cargo, all acO nan g en . 3 6 00, per are available on tin Classified Need to get an wired 8 plumbed for an equal opportunity NATIONAL DOLPHIN cess. incl., like new ad in ASAP? condition, stored in 763 37' 1997, loaded! 1 W/D, 3 slides, Fanbasis. To complain of You can place it slide, Corian surfaces, RV barn, used less tastic fan, ice maker, discrimination cal l Recreational Homes than 10 t imes lor ange top & o v e n HUD t o l l-free at online at: wood floors (kitchen), 17' Cris Craft Scorpion, & Property 2-dr fridge, convection c ally, no p ets o r 1-800-877-0246. The (never been u sed) www.bendbulletin.com fast8 readytofish! I/O & smoking. $20 000 microwave, Vizio TV 8 very nice; $29,500. toll f re e t e l ephone 637 Acres in forest trolling motor. Lots of exroof satellite, walk-in obo. 541-536-2709. 541-548-0625. number for the heartras! $5000. 541-318-7473 Alfa See Ya 2005 40' west of Silver Lake, 541-385-5809 excellent cond, 1 owner, shower, new queen bed. ing im p aired is OR, with recreation 4-dr frig w/icemaker, gas White leather hide-aCHECK YOURAD 1-800-927-9275. cabin and stream. +a stove/oven, convection bed & chair, all records, 541-480-7215 oven, washer/dryer no pets o r s moking. 693 combo, flatscreen TV, all $28,450. 771 electronics, new tires, Call 541-771-4800 Office/Retail Space Lots many extras. 7.5 diesel for Rent 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, gen, lots of storage, Shadow/Aero inboard motor, g r eat on the first day it runs 3438 NW Bryce Canyon Honda 750, 2007 Black, 11K cond, well maintained, basement freezer, 350 Spectrum Profession Jayco Eagle to make sure it ise corLane, Lot¹111 Freiqhtliner chassis. mi, 60 mpg, new de- $8995obo. 541-350-7755 Cat al Bldg. several ofAwbrey Park. rect. nSpellcheck and Asking $86,500. See at 26.6 ft long, 2000 Iachable windshield, fices for r ent. Call human errors do oc$167,000. Crook County RV Park, Look at: Mustang seat & tires; uim Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, Andy, 5 4 1-385-6732 541-382-8559 cur. If this happens to ¹43. 520-609-6372 detachable Paladin Bendhomes.com Newmar Scottsdale or Jim at Exit Realty, awning, Eaz-Lift your ad, please conbackrest 8 luggage 775 33-fL, 2005 541-480-8835 for Complete Listings of tact us ASAP so that stabilizer bars, heat rack w/keylock.VanceBOUNDER 1993 GMC 8.1L Vortec engine, Manufactured/ corrections and any Area Real Estate for Sale 8 air, queen Hines pipes, great 34.6', 43k miles, Allison transmission, walk-around bed, adjustments can be Mobile Homes sound. Cruise control, loaded, $13,900. Workhorse frame, 2 made to your ad. very good condition, audible turn signals Info - Call slides. All upgrades! 3 541-385-5809 $10,000 obo. Delivered and Set up for safety. $4495 obo. 541-536-8816. awnings, skylight, rain 541-595-2003 The Bulletin Classified '023/4 bd,2 ba. 42,900 Jack, 541-549-4949 sensor vent, 32" flat '10 2/3 bd, 2 ba. 47,900 B ounder 2 8 ' 199 3 , screen TV, solar panel, 541-350-1782 Street Glide 2006 black 19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, Chevy 454, 66K mi., back-up camera, HWH Smart Housing LLC Mallard 22' 199 5 , cherry metal f lake, jacks, plumbed for tow•n upholstery, new elec- solar, inverter & conready for hunting seaing bar & hitch. 19K good extras, 8 ,100 new FACTORY SPECIAL verter, Hyd. leveling miles, tronics, winch, much more. in excellent cond. son, sleeps 7, fully miles, will take some $9500. 541-306-0280 New Home, 3 bdrm, jacks, back up cam- $45,000. 541-520-6450 equipped, very clean, trade of firearms or $46,500 finished air, twin beds, cond, $5000; or Fleetwood Prowler 32' 20' 1993 Sea Nympf Fish era, You know what small ironhead. on your site. awnings, New micro, Roadmaster RM3477 Iow good trade for Subaru OutJ and M Homes $14,000. & Ski, 50 hrs on new TV, 2001, many upgrade they say about $10,500. dolly, like new, elect. brks, back or PT Cruiser, 541-548-5511 541-306-8812 engine, fish finder, chart 541-388-6941 options, $14,500 obo. "one man's trash". $1500. 541-504-7483 obo. 541-678-5575 plotter 8 VHF radio with 541-480-1687, Dick. LOT MODEL antenna. Good shape, RV There's a whole pile LIQUIDATION full cover, heavy duty Good classified ads tell Prices Slashed Huge trailer, kicker and electric CONSIGNMENTS of "treasure" here! the essential facts in an Savings! 10 Year WANTED motors. ~nn • ~' ll - I interesting Manner. Write conditional warranty. $7500 or best offer. We Do The Work ... from the readers view - not 3 Finished on your site. 541-292-1834 You Keep The Cash! the seller's. Convert the On-site credit Victory TC 2002, ONLY 2 LEFT! Fleetwood D i s covery facts into benefits. Show approval team, Redmond, Oregon runs great, many Monte Carlo 2012 Lim- the reader how the item will 40' 2003, diesel mo541-548-5511 web site presence. accessories, new ited Edition, 2 slides, 2 torhome w/all help them in someway. Thousands ofadsdaily 20.5' Seaswirl SpyWe Take Trade-Ins! JandMHomes.com tires, under 40K options-3 slide outs, A/Cs, 2 bdrm, sleeps This in print andonline. der 1989 H.O. 302, Free Advertising. 6-8 comfortably, has satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, miles, well kept. Rent /Own advertising tip 285 hrs., exc. cond., w/d, dishwasher, many etc. 3 2 ,000 m i l es. BIG COUNTRY RV 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes $5500 or P artial brought to you by stored indoors for extras, fully l o aded. i n h e ated Bend: 541-330-2495 $2500 down, $750 mo. Trade/firearms l ife $ 9 900 O B O . Wintered Redmond: ge shop. $89,900 O.B.O. $29,600 obo. Located • . OAC. J and M Homes 541-647-4232 The Bulletin 541-548-5254 541-379-3530 Serv ng Centrei oregon s nce r9N 541-447-8664 in Bend. 682-777-8039 541-548-5511
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719- Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 -Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land
RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space
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The Bulletin
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To place your ad, visit www.bendbulletin.com or call 541-385-5809
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E6 TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541 -385-5809 975
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Antique & Classic Autos
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Sport Utility Vehicles
AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts andService 916- Trucks andHeavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique andClassic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
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I I,.- W s . Keystone Challenger 2004 CH34TLB04 34'
908
fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. ins ide & o ut . 27 " T V dvd/cd/am/fm ent. center. Call for more details. Only used 4
Aircraft, Parts 8 Service
fseyer
1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located y ears.. No p ets, n o smoking. High r etail O Bend.) Also: Sunri$27,700. Will sell for ver hangar available for $24,000 including slid- sale at $155K, or lease, O $400/mo. ing hitch that fits in 541-948-2963 your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to see. 541-330-5527.
$19,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171
i MGA 1959 - $19,999 Convertible. O r iginal body/motor. No
¹J10560
$12,988 ©QSUBARU. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
rust. 541-549-3838
Service & Accessories Hitches: 3 ball mount 9 1 shank 4" deep $10, 8" deep $20, 9 11 d eep $ 3 0 ; H usky 10,000 l b . hitch, spring bars not included, $50.
Mari n e r Luxury 2007, loaded, leather, moonroof. Vin
9UBARUOIBRND COM
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MorePixatBendbuletincom
Nissan Pathfinder SE 1998, 150K mi, 5-spd 4x4, loaded, very good tires, very good cond, $4800. 503-334-7345
Subaru Forester 2006 LL Bean, 66,423 mi. ¹741048 $ 1 5,495
541-504-7483. Michelin LTX M&S tires, 40% trd, 265x70x R17, $120. 541-504-3833 Winter l i k e new studded tires 6-hole rims, P235 75/R15, $425. 541-317-8991
Mustang 1966 2 dr. coupe, 200 cu. in. 6 cyl. Over $12,000 invested, asking $9000. All receipts, runs good. 541-420-5011
Oregon
Autngnurce
541-598-3750 www. aaaoregonautosource.com 975
Automobiles
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Antique 8 Classic Autos
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1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963
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Keystone Montana 2955 RL 2008,
1/5th interest in 1973 Chevy C-20 Pickup Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; time on air frame and auto 4-spd, 396, model CST /all options, orig. engine, hangared in owner, $19,950, Bend. Excellent per541-923-6049 formance & affordable flying! $6,500. Chevy 1955 PROJECT 541-410-6007 car. 2 door wgn, 350 small block w/Weiand Executive Hangar quad tunnel ram at Bend Airport (KBDN) dual 60' wide x 50' d eep, with 450 Holleys. T-10 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, w/55' wide x 17' high biProstar wheels, fold dr. Natural gas heat, Weld offc, bathroom. Adjacent extra rolling chassis + to Frontage Rd; great extras. $6500 for all. visibility for aviation busi- 541-389-7669. ness. Financing available. 541-948-2126 or email 1jetjock©q.com Piper A rcher 1 9 80, based in Madras, always hangared since new. New annual, auto Chevy Nova - 1976, $3,400. pilot, IFR, one piece Rebuilt 327 engine. windshield. Fastest Archer around. 1750 to- Call Matt 541-280-9463 tal t i m e. $68,500. 541-475-6947, ask for Rob Berg.
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo.
Chevy Stepside 1963 I/0
541-420-3250
Nuyya 297LK HitchHiker 2007, All seasons, 3 slides, 32' perfect for snow birds left kitchen, rear lounge, extras, must see. Prineville 541-447-5502 days 8 541-447-1641 eves.
$ gggf .
Superhavvk Ownership Share Available!
ton One owner, good inside 8 out. $9,999 541-382-7515.
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garaged, premium Bose stereo,
$11,000.
541-480-9822
1996, 350 auto, 132,000 miles. Non-ethanol fuel & synthetic oil only,
541-923-1781
Say Ugoodbuy
AUDI 1990 V8 Quattro. Perfect Ski Car. LOW MILES. $3,995 Must Sell! Health forces sale. Buick Riviera 1991, obo. 541-480-9200. classic low-mileage car, Buick Century Limited
CORVETTE Convertible 2005 Automatic LS2 high performance motor, only 29k miles, Sterling S ilver, b l ack leather interior, Bose premium sound stereo, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Rec e ntly factory serviced. Garaged. B eautiful car, Perfect cond. $29,700 SOLD!
8
garaged, pampered, non-smoker, exclnt cond, $4300 obo 541-389-0049
2000, r un s g r e at, beautiful car. $3400.
Subaru Outback 2.5 XT Li mited 20 0 6 , AWD, leather, roof, loaded. Vin ¹348859
$14,888
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE FOR CIVIL 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. FORFEITURE TO ALL 877-266-3821 POTENTIAL Dlr ¹0354 CLAIMANTS AND TO ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS READ THIS CAREFULLY
+©~ SUBARU. 9UBARUOI BRND COM
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to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds Subaru Outback 3.0 Limited 2005, AWD, auto, l e ather, roof, 5 41 -385-580 9 CD. Vin ¹371122
$17,988 S UB A R U .
Porsche 911
9UBARUOI BRND COM
Carrera 993 cou e
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Toyota Carr rs: 1984, SOLD; 1985 SOLD; 1986 parts car only one left! $500 Call for details, 54 I -548-6592
1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new
quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700
CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport -4 LT loaded, clear bra
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9UBMIUOBBRND COM
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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. f S ending c ash , 877-266-3821 checks, or credit inDlr ¹0354 formation may be I
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BUBARUOBBRND COM
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BUBARUOBBRND COM
541-385-9350
and drives as new. s hort bed, 5 s p d , Satin Silver color with 4 WD, li f t , allo y black leather interior, wheels, VIN ¹022984 mint dash. PS, P B, $5488 AC, 4 speed. Knock 307-221-2422, offs. New tires. Fresh S UBA RU. BUBABUOBBRNDCOM 327 N.O.M. All CorAILL DELIV/R Backhoe 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. vette restoration parts 2007 John Deere 877-266-3821 in and out. $64,500. 310SG, cab 4x4, RV Dlr ¹0354 Call: 541 410-2870 4-in-1 bucket CONSIGNMENTS 935 Extendahoe, Ford Mustang Coupe WANTED hydraulic thumb, We Do The Work ... 1966, original owner, Sport Utility Vehicles loaded, like new, V8, automatic, great You Keep The Cash! 500 hours. shape, $9000 OBO. BMW X5 2008 grey, On-site credit 530-515-8199 New $105,000. approval team, 37k miles, ¹ 1 66402 web site presence. Sell $75,000. $33.995 FIND ITl 541-350-3393 We Take Trade-Ins! SUY IT! Free Advertising. Oregon SELL IT! BIG COUNTRY RV Autngource Mitsubishi Fuso Bend: 541-330-2495 The Bulletin Classifieds 541-598-3750 1995 14' box truck Redmond: www.aaaoregonautowith lift gate, 541-548-5254 Ford Ranchero source.com 184,000 miles, 1979 needs turbo seal. Advertise your car! with 351 Cleveland $3500 or best offer. Add A Pfcture! modified engine. 541-420-2323 Reach thousands of readers! [ Canopies & Campers Body is in Catt 541-385-5809 excellent condition, The Bulletin Classifieds $2500 obo. i ~ Q- , 541-420-4677 5[ Ford Bronco 1981 4 speed 4x4, 3 02 engine, low m iles, Lance 8I/0' camper, 1991 Peterbilt 35 9 p o table h eaders, roll b a r, Great cond; toilet & fullhitch kit, good tires, water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, size bed. Lightly used. straight body, runs 3200 gal. tank, 5hp 9 Recently serviced, p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 great, $950. $4500. 503-307-8571 camlocks, $ 2 5,000. engine, power every- 541 -350-71 76 541-820-3724 thing, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs The Bulletin is your Just too many great, excellent condi"; jQ~Sa~~ Employment collectibles? tion in 8 out. Asking l
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to advertise.
www.bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin SDAUlng Central OregOn lmCB 9903
Utility Trailers Power trailer/boat dolly, 12v motor, will move less than 2500 Ibs and up to 9800 Ibs GVW. $350. 541-548-3724
541-548-1422
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The Bulletin
Li~le ' Red Corvette"
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Monaco Dyna Y 0009 . AOADEu ~ solid Fea atures include rs, COunte 4-dr Sttitaoe micro, 1 'd Q, convection er, cebuilt-in washer/drye, rarnic ti'le tioor, TU, o
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Your auto, RV, motorcycle,
boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months
004 Col'vette Convertible Coupe, 350, auto with 132rniles gets 26-24 inpg Add lots more description and interesting facts for $99! Look how much n agirl couldhave in asweet car likethisi
$12,5OO 541-000-OOO
(whichever comes first!) Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" tn length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000.
Jeep C herokee Ford Thunderbird 1955, new white soft top, tonneau cover and upholstery. New chrome. B e a utiful Car. $ 25,00 0 .
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$8,500. 541-480-3179
925
/ subject toFRAUD. Leytem. For more informaf tion about an adver-f tiser, you may call LEGAL NOTICE Ithe Oregon State The Crooked River Attorney General's t Watershed Council is Office C o nsumer I c urrently seek i ng q ualifications fro m f Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392. qualified e x cavation contractors to remove Stearns Dam from the SRIVINg Central Oregan SinCe1903 Crooked River. More i nformation can b e Just bought a new boat? found at Sell your old one in the www.crwc.info in the classifieds! Ask about our Job Opp o rtunities Super Seller rates! section. 541-385-5809
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5 4 1-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9
Case N o 1 3 -53949 s eized M a rch 2 1 , 2013 from Kristopher
FOR ONLY
center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition. $42,500 or best offer. Call Peter,
5 41 -385 - 5 8 0 9
I
541-41 9-5480.
Recreation by Design 1987 Freightliner COE 32013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft axle truck, Cummins en- Corvette Coupe 1964 Top living room 5th gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 530 miles since frame Toyota Tacoma wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 obo. 541-419-2713 off restoration. Runs Regular cab 19 95, A/Cs, entertainment
Call
BUBARUOBBRND COM
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541-771-2852.
Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
If you have any interest i n t h e s e i zed property d e s cribed below you must claim that interest or you will automatically lose that interest. If you do not file a c laim for t he property, the property may be forfeited even if you are not convicted of any crime. To claim an interest, you must file a written claim with the forfeiture counsel named below, The w r itten claim must be signed by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, and state: (a) Your true name; (b) The address at which you will a c cept f u t ure m ailings f ro m th e court and f o rfeiture
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Chrysler Concord 2001 Kia Soul+ 2012, ECO Economical flying 4 door sedan, good pkg, auto, gas saver, in your own cond., 63k mi., $2900. low mil e s . Vin IFR equipped 9 541-548-6860 a.-' ¹455234 Cessna 172/180 HP for Chevy Wagon 1957, Ford F250 S uperCab $15,488 only $13,500! New 4-dr., complete, Find It in Garmin Touchscreen 2001, Triton V8, May '15 $7,000 OBO / trades. tags, ONLY 89K miles, The Bulletin Classifiedsl fj+3 SUBARU. avionics center stack! Please call Exceptionally clean! $6495 obo 541-610-6150 541-385-5809 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 541-389-6998 Subaru Outback 2.5i ~l u B i Hangared at BDN. 877-266-3821 wagon 2007, AWD, Call 541-728-0773 Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe Dlr ¹0354 auto, air, tilt, cruise. 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, s T-Hangar for rent Vin ¹343098 auto. trans, ps, air, Mustang GT 1995 red I nternational Fla t at Bend airport. $12,788 133k miles, Boss 302 frame on rebuild, rePilgrim 27', 2007 5th Call 541-382-8998. Bed Pickup 1963, 1 painted original blue, motor, custom pipes, @gg SUBARU. wheel, 1 s lide, AC, ton dually, 4 s pd. 916 original blue interior, trans., great MPG, 5 s p ee d m a n ual, Chrysler Newport TV,full awninl0,exceloriginal hub caps, exc. could be exc. wood (2) 1962 4 door sedans, power windows, cus- 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. lent shape, 2 3 ,900. Trucks & tom stereo, very fast. 877-266-3821 chrome, asking $9000 541-350-8629 hauler, runs great, $2500 and $5500. Heavy Equipment or make offer. Dlr ¹0354 new brakes, $1950. La Pine, 541-602-8652. $5800. 541-280-7910
Marketplace
1000
Legal Notices
counsel; and (3) A s tatement that y o u have an interest in the seized property. Your 541-322-9647 for filing the Volksvvagon Bee t le deadline claim document with hood 8 fenders. GLS 1999, 5 Speed, forfeiture New Michelin Super n s el leather, air, roof rack, n amed belowcou Porsche 911 Turbo is 2 1 Sports, G.S. floor Vin ¹139189 mats, 17,000 miles, days from the last day $4488 of publication of this Crystal red. notice. Where to file $42,000. www.aaaoregonautoS UB A R U . lines, 541-593-2597 I 503-358-1164. a claim and for more sourceUcom i nformation: Da i n a PROJECT CARS: Chevy 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Vitolins, Crook County 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) 8 Buick Lucerne CXS Ford Taurus 2003 SSE 877-266-3821 2003 6 speed, X50 2006 Sports sedan, District Attorney OfChevy Coupe 1950 Dlr ¹0354 s edan, e xc . co n d added power pkg., acceptable miles, all rolling chassis's $1750 fice, 300 N E T h i rd 63,000 miles. $5,000 530 HP! Under 10k ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, the nice features you'll 541-389-9569 WHEN YOU SEE THIS Street, Prineville, OR miles, Arctic silver, complete car, $ 1949; want, truly an exc. buy 97754. gray leather interior, Cadillac Series 61 1950, at $8000. Come 8 see Notice of reasons for ~ Oo 2 dr. hard top, complete no charge for looking. Garage Sales new quality t i res, Forfeiture: The propMorePixatBendbulletin,com erty and battery, Bose w/spare f r ont cl i p ., Ask Buick Bob, described below On a classified ad $3950, 541-382-7391 541-318-9999 premium sound steGarage Sales was seized for forfeireo, moon/sunroof, go to ture because it: (1) Cadillac El Dor a do Garage Sales car and seat covers. www.bendbulletin.com Constitutes the p ro1994, T otal C r e a m to view additional Pickups Many extras. Gaceeds of the violation Puff! Body, paint, trunk Find them photos of the item. raged, perfect conof, solicitation to vioas showroom, blue dition $59,700. late, attempt to vioin leather, $1700 wheels 541-322-9647 late, or conspiracy to w/snow tires although Looking for your The Bulletin violates, the criminal car has not been wet in next employee? laws of the State of Classifieds 8 years. On t rip t o Place a Bulletin help Porsche Carrera 911 Oregon regarding the Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., wanted ad today and 2003 convertible with manufacture, distribu541-385-5809 reach over 60,000 Chevy 2500 HD 2003 $5400, 541-593-4016. hardtop. 50K miles, tion, or possession of readers each week. 4 WD w o r k tru c k , new factory Porsche controlled substances Your classified ad 140,000 miles, $7000 motor 6 mos ago with (ORS C h apter475); will also appear on obo. 541-408-4994. 18 mo factory warand/or (2) Was used bendbulletin.com ranty remaining. or intended for use in which currently re$37,500. committing or f acili541-322-6928 ceives over 1.5 miltating the violation of, lion page views Chevrolet Corvette solicitation to violate, every month at Coupe 2007, 20,700 Honda Civic EX 2006, attempt to violate, or no extra cost. Bullemi., beautiful cond. conspiracy to violate auto, air, tilt, cruise. tin Classifieds 3LT loaded, victory CD. Vin ¹096644 the criminal laws of Get Results! Call Dodge Dakota Quad I'ed, two-tone the State of Oregon $10,988 385-5809 or place Cab SLT 2006, 4WD, leather, powerseats, regarding the manuyour ad on-line at 6 spd, shell, tow pkg, with logos, memory, i SUB A R U . © facture, distribution or bendbulletin.com a lloy w h eels. V i n headsupdisplay, Subaru Legacy 2.5 GT p ossession of c o n¹627033 nav., XM, Bose, tilt, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Limited 2005, loaded, trolled sub s tances 877-266-3821 $14,988 chrome wheels, upleather, roof, a l loy (ORS Chapter 475). Dlr ¹0354 The Bulletin recom1 graded drilled slotwheels. VIN ¹210360 S UBA R U . mends extra caution I ted brake r o tors, IN THE MATTER OF: $15,988 when p u r chasing ' extra insulation, al2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. f products or services ways garaged, seri4g®SUBARU. 877-266-3821 (1) US Currency in the BUBARUORBRNDCOM from out of the area. ous only $36,500. amount of 6,400.00, Dlr ¹0354 541-312-3085
The Bulletin Buick Lucerne CXL seTo Subscribe call dan, 2008, 62,500 mi., 541-385-5800 or go to ¹208460 $ 1 3,995 interest i n w e l lwww.bendbulletin.com 1/3 equipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ 1952 Ford Customline project car, flat- Plymouth Oregon prop, located KBDN. Coupe, B a r racuda AutoSource $65,000. 541-419-9510 head V-8, 3 spd extra 1966, original car! 300 parts, 8 materials, $2000 hp, 360 V8, center541-598-3750 obo. 541-410-7473
MONTANA 3585 2008,
0
83<iA%cR
Nissan 350Z 2005 Black, excellent condition, 22,531 gently driven miles, 1 owner, non-smoker, $14,000.
SOLD!
times total in last 5I/0
Monaco Lakota 2004 5th Wheel 34 ft.; 3 s lides; immaculate c o ndition; l arge screen TV w / entertainment center; reclining chairs; center kitchen; air; queen bed; complete hitch and new fabric cover. $22,900 OBO. (541) 548-5886
Automobiles •
(photo forillustration only)
GMC frston 1971, Only M ercury
,, cV.—0
-
Fifth Wheels
541-923-4707
Au t o mobiles
M My little red Coryetteu Coupe
•
BOATS &RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies andCampers 890- RVsfor Rent
2 slides, arctic insulation, loaded, excellent never used condition. $29,900
•
Automobiles
Grand 1 9 99,
1 59,970 mile s . 4WD, au t omatic transmission, cloth interior, power everything, A/C, trailer hitch. Well maintained & runs great. $3850. 541-385-5286
• Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households. • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.
Oper 2,000 NEW Check Ottt Our Hettt
MEAT
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PROGD0Ut E
Department
PR DUCTS! e
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•
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BEEF T-BONE
KIMBERLY OREGON PEACHES Great for Canning!
LB
BEEF CROSSRIB POTROAST Boneless
I
•
I '
LARGE BELL PEPPERS
LB
Green, Red, Yellow
asq
GREENBEANS Fresh Northwest Grown
HERMISTON SEEDLESS WATERMELON
8 $8
$298
LB
PORK SIRLOIN CHOPS Boneless
RED DELICIOUS APPLES
GREEN 5 RED SEEDLESS GRAPES
8..
8 88 LB
BEEF RIBEYE STEAK
LB
CHICKEN
BREAST Southern Grown Boneless, Skinless
LB
MAHI MAHI
FILLETS Frozen
Boneless
$648
ZUCCHINI Northwest Grown!
LB
BEEF TOP ROUND STEAK
'A 0 $
Boneless
' $248
JUMBO YELLOW
CHICKEN THIGHS
ONIONS
8 88 LB
Your Locally Owned Ad Items Subject To Avoilobility
I 1
' 98!
LB
PRICES EFFECTIVE: I
1 4 15 16 1 7
$3455 Hwy. 97 N., Bend • 541-388-2100
18 29 20 FOOD 4 LESS -BEND
I TUESDAY, AUG 13, 2013 PA I GE 1
WIDMERL KONA BEER
MILLER BEER 18 Pack, 12 Oz Cans 8 Bottles
I
6 Pack 12 Oz Bottles
~ EA + DEP
~y(ljbOARD
EA + DEP
SOURC~
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EA + DEP
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(yellow tell
YELLOW TAIL WINE 750 ML Selected Varieties
BUSCH
FRANZCR
RRRR
30 Pack 12 Oz Cans
RUFFLES POTATOCHIPS
0( 100'/o W
Selected Varieties
22.5 to 24 Oz
WHEATBR
EA + DEP
DUCKPOND WINE 750 ML Chardonnay Only
~ oyllyyys ow
CDfg„ r
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3 oo
O,oe
1
SPARKLE PAPER TOWELS
NISSIN
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3 Roll EA
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PEPSI, RRPEPPER, MTN DEW
g~p~~
SI ERRA MIST 12 Pack
EA
ROCKSTAR ENERGY
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I cQR»'
DRINK 16 Oz Selected Varieties
SNOW'S
WESTERN FAMILY
CHOWDER
PAGE 2 I TUESDAY, AUG 13,2013 (FOOD 4 LESS - BEND
FOR
EA
CLAM EA + DEP
2.25 Oz, Chicken, Beef, Shrimp
EA + DEP
15 Oz New England
FLOUR FOR
5 Lb, Bleached
EA
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POST HONEY BUNCHES OF OATS
STASH TEA 20 Count Selected Varieties
14.5 Oz, Honey Roasted FA & With Almonds
AKER VAlUES
EROlER VAlUES
F.A
QAIRY IIAlUES
EBERHARDPS 1s oz,SOUR CREAM 16 oz,WHIPPING
Q
CREAM ss o*, HALF H HALF
IuuAnuS
Mix & Match
FRESH BAKED
THOMAS BAGELS 20 Oz Selected Varieties
FLAV-R-PAC
FRENCH BREAD EA
IOEOHAHO'S~~c~
VEGGIEBLENDS 16 Oz Selected Varieties
16 Pz
QEll
FOR
EROlER
VAlUES
QAIRY
VAlUES
VAlUES.':
CR E'
WESTER I
FAMILY MARSH MALLOWS 10 Oz Regular 8 Mini
EA DELI HAM
LB
56 Oz Selected Varieties
'E:-j
FLORIDA'S
EBERHARD ss ICE CREAM
SLICED
70 0HHI '
NATURAL
SMOOTHIES EA
1 Liter Selected Varieties
EA
FOOD 4 LESS - BEND I TUESDAY, AUG 13,2013 IPAGE 3
esL e)ltc~ il)~pt.SPECIALS.
LEAF LETTUCE Northwest Grown! F.
4'
Red, Green
r'
8 Romaine
EA
LIMES Juicy I
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IQ
1ir( t,
dr Latttda
s tNt 4sjv'sees t
FOR
washed
l ORGANIC GIRLg
Guacamole!!! = .
SALADS
JUMBO AVOCAQOS
5 Oz, Selected Varieties wescedt
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FOR
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FOSTERFARMS
II
wt ~
I
•
•
A•
EA
~~s<~nt A it<3~)t. SPECIALS.
'
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CHICKEN THIGHS
OR DRUMSTICKS
FRESH ROCKFISH FILLETS
Northwest Grown Family Pack
LB
BANQUETBROWN L SERVE SAUSAGE 6.4 Oz
48
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EA
RESER'SBAJACAFE BURRITOS
LB
ggg e
Not to Exceed 15% Fat
10 Oz Bean & Cheese Or Red Hot
28
EXTRA LEAN HAMBURGER
ggNBO •
•
•
pgK
LB
EA
WE ACCEPT:
Send
$3455 Hwy. $7 N. 541-388-2100 PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, AUG 13,2013 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND
• Food Stamps • W IC Vou c h e r s • M anu f a c t u r e r ' s We reserve the right te limit quantities
Coupons