Bulletin Daily Paper 5/14/13

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75 $

TUESDAY May14,2013

PPP'scoursechanges AT HOME• D1

SPORTS• C1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

Bend pans to hire 15 for safety, otherjobs

OSU-CASCADES CAMPUS

Guantanamodetentions — Questions and challenges as Obamahaspromisedto"go back at it."A3

Oregon's economyStrong growth — except when

it comes to jobs.C6 By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

Odituary —Joyce Brothers, a former academic psychologist who counseled millions overthe airwaves.

The city of Bend plans to hire at least 15 workers during the next biennium,

adding police, firefightFoundation could get the school over its $4 million goal to prove local commitment for a four-year school.

BS

Auto recalls —GMsays

ers, an engineer and other

$aVjug fOi COiiege OSU-Cascades has raised $3.3 million in private donations. A matching grant from Oregon Community

Source: OSB-Cascades

employees.

Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

it has the technology to limit them.C6

"They are sold on the idea that Central Oregon is behind this, and we are going to

Summer SaladS — Try out

succeed."

the flavors of Greece.D3

— Edward Ray, Oregon State University president, speaking of the Oregon Community Foundation grant to support construction of a four-year OSU-Cascades campus in Bend

Death squadwhispers

— Families of slain gangmembers accuse police in Honduras, the owner of the world's

highest homicide rate.AS

Adortion access —Catholic mergers are changing the landscape in the heavily Democratic Washington state.A6

And in national news — Philadelphia abortion doctor convicted of first degree

murder; death penalty a possibility.A2

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Oregon State University President Edward Ray delivers his "State of the University" address Monday at the Riverhouse Convention Center in Bend.

Avision ofOStj-Cascades' future Plans for a four-year university could reshape an area currently filled

EDITOR'SCHOICE

Government secretly obtained AP phone logs By Charlie Savage and Leslie Kaufman

with offices and industrial buildings in southwest Bend. Officials at

Oregon State University-CascadesCampus hope to build a four-year university campus along Simpson andColorado avenues. This is only a vision and the campus is notyet planning to build on aspecific parcel. In

strongly suggested they are related to a continuing government investigation into the leaking of information in May 2012 about the CIA's disruption of a Yemen-based terrorist plot to bomb an airliner. The disclosures began with an AP article on May 7, 2012, breaking the news of the foiled plot; the organization had held off publishing it for several days at the Obama administration's request because the intelligence operations were still unfolding. See Phones/A5

your money,'" said Oregon State University President Edward Ray. Ray announced the grant Monday evening at The Riverhouse Convention Center in Bend during his "State of the University" address for OSUCascades before more than

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200 people. "This commitment by the Oregon Community Foundation is one more indication that all Oregonians clearly understand the transformative effect that a four-year university will have in Central Oregon — and all of Oregon — in fostering education attainment, economic vitality and cultural enrichment," he said. The grant is part of an ongoing effort to raise $4 million to show community commitment for a local

imPson /tve. Bike path

New Yorh Times News Service

WASHINGTON — Federal investigators secretly seized two months of phone records for reporters and editors of The Associated Press in what the news organization said Monday was a "serious interference with AP's constitutional rights to gather and report the news." The AP said that the Justice Department informed it on Friday that law enforcement officials had obtained the records for morethan 20 telephone lines of its offices and journalists, including their home phones and cellphones. It said the records were seized without notice sometime this year. The organization was not told the reason for the seizure. But the timing and the specific journalistic targets of the seizure

OSU-Cascades has asked for $16 million from the state, with a goal of kicking in $4million in donations and an additional $4 million in campus funds. That money would go to buy or renovate office, research and classroom space. Between May and June of 2012, the college raised more than $1.5 million in private donations. OSUCascades also received a $1 million donation in September 2012from Tykeson Family Charitable Trust. According to OSU-Cascades, it has to date raised more than $3.3 million in private donations. "The community support

Oregon State University-Cascades Campus has received a $250,000 matching grant from the Oregon Community Foundation to help the school expand to a four-year university. The grant is contingent upon the university's ability to raise $250,000 in private donations by Dec. 31. If OSU-Cascadescan raise $500,000 by the end of this year, the college could earn another $250,000 grant from the foundation next "We can honestly say to people, 'You can double

December, the university hired a consulting firm to plan the school's

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four-year college campus.

The Bulletin

year.

space needs for anexpansion. The firm will provide a space-needs assessment to the campus this week.

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By Sheila G. Miller

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(for the campus) has been so incredible; I think the board was kind of inspired by the broad-based and enthusiastic support from the community,and because of that, they fully expect the challenge will help them exceed the $4 million fundraising goal," said Julie Gregory, the foundation's regional director for Central and Eastern Oregon. "(The campus could have a) transformational effect on Central Oregon's educational attainment and economic growth far into the future in ways we can't even imagine." OSU-Cascades Vice President Becky Johnson said the campus about six months ago sent a proposal to the foundation. SeeCascades/A5

"We were blown away by the community

Riverdend Park

support (for OSU-Cascades)."

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— Kathleen Cornett, vice president for programs, Oregon Community Foundation

Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

City officials expect to bring in more revenue from property taxes and sewer and waterrate increases for the next two years. Filling some of the police and fire jobs that went unfilled during the recession is a top priority for city councilors. Thanks to an increase in property values and construction, the tax rolls will

likely grow enough to pay for two new police officers, at least two firefighters and other workers. "It's improving tax assessed value revenue to the point where it's giving us some confidence to be able to hire some positions in police and fire and streets," City Manager Eric King sa>d. The sewer and water rate hikes will pay for major infrastructure projects, and the city needs more workers to supervise construction and operate the utilities. SeeBend/A4

Green card lottery may be axed By Pamela Constable The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — In the contentious debate over immigration policy, three groups have dominated public and political attention: the roughly 11 million undocumented immigrants seeking to become legal, the skilled foreign workers bound for high-tech jobs and relatives waiting to be reunited with their families. Then there are those who won the green card lottery. This tiny visa program, aimed at diversifying the pool of immigrants to the United States, selects 55,000 applicants at random each year. Unlike the other U.S. visa programs, it offers the "winners" and their spouses and children U.S. residency with almost no strings attached. SeeLottery/A6

IRS targeting said to gobeyond Cincinnati branch By Juliet Eilperin and Zachary A. Goldfarb The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Internal Revenue Service officials in Washington and at least two other offices were involved in the targeting of conservative groups seeking tax-exempt status, making clear that the

TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy High 65, Low 35

Page B6

Inside • Obama: "outrageous," "contrary to our traditions,"A2 effort reached well beyond the branch in Cincinnati that was initially blamed, according to documents obtained by The Washington Post.

IRS officials at the agency's Washington headquarters sent queries to conservative groups asking about their donors and other aspects of their operations, while officials in the El Monte and Laguna Niguel offices in California sent similar questionnaires to tea party-affiliated

groups. IRS employees in Cincinnati also told conservatives seeking the status of "social welfare" groups that a task force in Washington was overseeing their applications, according to interviews with the activists. Lois Lerner, who oversees

INDEX At Home D1 - 6 C lassified Et -6 D ear Abby D6 Obituaries B 5 Ct-4 Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope D6 Sports D6 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies

The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper

vol. 110, No. 134, 30 pages, 5 sections

tax-exempt groups for the IRS, told reporters on Friday that the "absolutely inappropriate" actions were undertaken by "front-line people" working in Cincinnati to target groups with "tea party," "patriot" or "9/12" in their names. SeeIRS/A4

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A2

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COIOr8dO thuutur Shuutlllg —Lawyers for Colorado theater shooting suspect JamesHolmes formally told a judge on Monday that he wants to change his plea to not guilty by reason of insanity after outside experts diagnosed his mental illness. The attorneys,

however, did not specify the diagnosis. JudgeCarlos Samour Jr. indi-

ion

cated he would not decide whether to approve the new plea until the end of the month.

New Orleans shooting —Police on Monday identified a sus-

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pect in the shooting that wounded 19 people during a Mother's Day By Michael D. Shear and JonathanWeisman New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — P r esident Barack Obama, facing re-energized Republican adversaries and new questions about th e a d m i nistration's c onduct, o n M o n day d i s missed a furor over the handling of last year's attacks in Benghazi, Libya, as a political "sideshow" but joined a bipartisan chorus of outrage over disclosures that the Internal Revenue Service had singled out conservative groups for special scrutiny. O bama called t h e IR S reports " outrageous" a n d "contrary to our t r aditions," adding his voice to those of Republicans and isolating the agency as the House scheduled a hearing Friday in what is likely to be an extensive congressional review of the agency's actions. "I've got no patience with it," Obama said during a joint news conference at the White House with Prime M i nister David Cameron of Britain. "I will not tolerate it. And we will make sure that we find out ex-

actly what happened on this." Four months into his second term, the president was under increasingassault from Republicans who accused the administration o f po l i t ical bullying and a lack of transparency. Kathleen Sebelius, Obama's secretary of health and human s e rvices, h as drawn criticism in recent days for soliciting corporate donations to pay for the rollout next year of the new health care law. Obama's blunt condemnation of the IRS appeared designed to head off fallout as Republicans and Democrats called for hearings and investigations into the matter. But on Benghazi, he seemed exasperated and angry to be facing a continuing barrage of accusations that he deemed recycled and partisan. "We don't have time to be playing these kinds of political games here in Washington," Obama said, saying any inquiry should b e f o cused on the four people who died in Libya and how to prevent future attacks. "We dishonor them when we turn things like

parade in NewOrleans. Police Superintendent Ronal Serpas said

this into a political circus."

"Suddenly, three days ago,"

they were looking for19-year-old Akein Scott. He says multiple people identified Scott as the shooter. Three gunshot victims remained

he added, "this gets spun up as if there's something new to the story. There's no there there." A few h o urs l ater, at a D emocratic f u n d raiser i n New York City, Obama bemoaned "hyper-partisanship in Washington" and said he had hoped that Republicans might have been more willing to cooperate after his re-election last year. "My thinking was when we beat them in 2012 that might break the fever, and it's not quite broken yet," Obama told supporters at the f ive-story West Village home of the film mogul H a r vey W e i nstein. "But I am persistent. And I am staying at it." Obama's comments about the IRS left the agency and its leadership alone in answering charges that its employees had put added demands on Tea Party and other conser-

in critical condition Monday, though their wounds didn't appear to be life-threatening. Most of the injured have been released from the hospital.

Gay marriage —Gay couples will be permitted to wed in Minnesota starting in August, making it the 12th state to permit same-sex

marriage and the first in the Midwest to take such astep outside of a court ruling. The state Senate, controlled by Democrats, voted 37-30

on Monday to allow same-sex marriages, following approval by the state House last week. O.J. court appearance —O.J. Simpson returned to court Monday, asking for a newtrial in the armed robbery-kidnapping case that sent him to prison in 2008. The former football star is 65 and

serving a minimum nine-year prison term. Hewill be in court all week to claim that he hadpoor legal representation in the trial involving the gunpoint robbery of two sports memorabilia dealers in 2007 in a Las

Vegas hotel room. Lidya dombiug —A deadly car bomb exploded Mondaynear a hospital in a busy area packed with civilians in the eastern Libyan

city of Benghazi, destroying part of the facility, officials said. Officials gave conflicting casualty figures, with death tolls ranging from three to10 in the chaotic aftermath of the attack. Benghazi, which was the birthplace of the revolution that led to the ouster of dictator Moammar Gadhafi, has suffered a series of assassinations and other attacks, including the Sept. 11 assaults on the U.S. diplomatic mission

vative groups applying for

that killed Ambassador Chris Stevensandthree other Americans.

tax-exempt status from 2010 to 2012, even though none appeared to have been denied the classification.

MOrning-after pill —The Obamaadministration on Monday filed a last-minute appeal to delay thesale of the morning-after contraceptive pill to girls of any age without a prescription. The legal paperwork asked the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan to postpone

a federal judge's ruling that eliminated agelimits on the pill while the government appeals that overall decision.

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CIOVOIBIId kidIIBppillgs —A man charged with holding three women captive for about a decadehad beenaccused of threatening his neighbors, attacking his common-law wife and committing viola-

tions during his career as a school bus driver, according to records released Monday.TheCleveland police reports correspond with

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accounts provided by relatives of suspect Ariel Castro last week that

portrayed a manprone to violent outbursts, especially when it came to the mother of his children and incursions onto his property.

e

FrulICO SARS —France confirmed a second case of a newcoronavirus belonging to the same family as SARS on Monday, saying that a man who shared a hospital room with the first victim had been

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infected.

I••

— From wire reports

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H8 M, a trendy Swedish chainthat's the largest Monday, marking the end of rescue operations at the c l othing buyer in Bangladesh, onMonday said that it

2754 NW Crossing Dn

A Bangladeshi rescueworker raises a red flag

site where aBangladesh garment-factory building

wo u ld sign a five-year, legallyding bin factory safety

collapsed April 24. contract. Within hours, C&A of the Netherlands, BritSeveral of the biggest Western retailers embraced i s h retailers Tesco and Primark, and Spain's lnditex

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a plan that would require them to payfor factory im- o wner of the Zara chain, followed provements in Bangladesh as the search for victims ended with the death toll at a staggering 1,127.

The c ollapse of the eight-story Rana Plaza factory building April 24 focused worldwide attention on haz-

Bangladesh's government also agreed to allow

ardous conditions in Bangladesh's garment industry,

garment workers to form unions without permission

w h ere workers sew low-cost clot hing that ends up on

~~REISER

from factory owners. That decision came aday after store shelves around the globe, in cluding the U.S. and it announced aplan to raise the minimum wage inthe Western Europe. — The Associated Press

industry.

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Online

Abortion doctor guilty in babydeaths

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn

Monday night are:

fs Oas OaO»O O ss 04s The estimated jackpot is now $14.5 million.

By Maryclaire Dale The Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA An abortion doctor was convicted Monday of first-degree murder and could face execution in the deaths of three babies who were delivered alive and then killed with scissors at his grimy, "house of horrors" clinic. In a case that became a grisly flashpoint in the nation's abortion debate, Dr. Kermit Gosnell, 72, was also found guilty of involuntary manslaughter in the overdose death of a patient. He was cleared in the death of a fourth baby, who prosecutors say let out a whimper before the doctor cut the spinal cord. Gosnell, who portrayed himself as an advocate for poor and d esperate women in an i m poverished West Philadelphia neighborhood, appeared hopefulbefore the verdict was read and calm afterward. The jury reached its verdict on its 10th day of deliberations. It will return May 21 to hear evidence on whether Gosnell should get the death penalty.

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TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Tuesday, May14, the134th day of 2013. There are 231 days left in the year.

IN PERSPECTIVE HAPPENINGS

nswerin ues ions a ou uan anamo

Gay marriage —Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton is expected to sign into law ameasure permitting same-sex marriage.

ECOnOmy —Thefinance and economy ministers of the

17 eurozone countries meet in Brussels, with one topic likely

to be record youth unemployment.

HISTORY Highlight:In1973, the United States launched Skylab1, its first manned space station. (Skylab1 remained in orbit for

six years before burning up during re-entry in 1979.) In1643, Louis XIV became

King of France atage 4upon the death of his father, Louis XIII.

In1796,English physician Edward Jenner inoculated 8-

year-old James Phipps against smallpox byusingcowpox matter. In1804, the Lewis and Clark expedition to explore the Louisiana Territory as well as the Pacific Northwest left camp near present-day Hartford, III. In1863, Union forces defeated the Confederates in the Battle

of Jackson, Miss. In1900,the Olympic games opened in Paris, held as part of the 1900 World's Fair. In1913, the Rockefeller Foundation was founded in New

York. In1942, Aaron Copland's "Lincoln Portrait" was first performed by the Cincinnati

Symphony Orchestra. In1948, according to the

current-era calendar, the independent state of Israel was proclaimed in Tel Aviv. In1961, Freedom Riders were attacked by violent mobs in Anniston and Birmingham, Ala. In1973, the National Right to

Life Committee was incorporated. In1988, 27 people, mostly teens, were killed when their church bus collided with a

pickup truckgoing the wrong direction on a highway near

Carrollton, Ky. (Truck driver Larry Mahoney served9t/2

years in prison for manslaughter.) In 1998, singer-actor Frank Sinatra died at a Los Angeles hospital at age 82. The hit sitcom "Seinfeld" aired its

final episode after nine years on NBC. Ten years ago:More than 100 immigrants were abandoned in a locked trailer at a Texas truck stop; 19 of them died.

(Truck driver Tyrone Williams was later sentenced to nearly 34 years in prison for his role in the deaths.)

Five years ago:President George W.Bushopened a celebratory visit to Israel, which

was marking the 60th anniversary of its birth.

One year ago:President Barack Obama sought to tar-

nish Republican Mitt Romney as a corporate titan who got rich by cutting rather than

creating jobs; Romney's campaign responded that the for-

mer Massachusetts governor alone had helped spur more public and private jobs than Obama did for the nation.

BIRTHDAYS Photo-realist artist Richard

Estes is 81. FormerSen.Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., is 71. Rock

singer-musician Jack Bruce (Cream) is 70. Movie producer George Lucas is 69. Actress Meg Foster is 65. Movie

director Robert Zemeckis is 62. Rocksinger David Byrne is 61. Actor Tim Roth is 52.

Rock musician C.C.(aka Cecil) DeVille is 51. Rhythm-and-

blues singer RaphaelSaadiq is 47. Actress Cate Blanchett is 44. Movie writer-director

Sofia Coppola (KOH'-pah-lah) is 42. Rock singer-musician Dan Auerbach is 34. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is

29. Actress MirandaCosgrove is 20. — From wire reports

Since 2001, the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, has been a detention facility for hundreds of Aleged terrorists. A renewed effort to close the facility by President Barack Obama faces challenges — and raises many questions. By Michael Doyle and Carol Rosenberg

®

®

"HONOR BOUND TO DEFEND FREEDOM"

McClatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Candidate Barack Obama pledged that he'd close the Guantanamo Bay d e tention f acility. Easier said than done. As president, Obama has failed to shut down the facility he calls "expensive," and "inefficient" and a "recruitment tool for terrorists." On April 30, Obama promised that he'll "go back at" the Guantanamo problem, which frustrated him during his first term. His pledge raises many questions, some easier to answer than others.

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The Associated Press

As a presidential candidate, BarackObama pledged toclose the Guantanamo Bay prison. However, as president, Obama has had difficulty moving prisoners and closing the facility.

that looked like a backyard dog kennel. Now most deHowlonghasthe Guan- tainees are in air-conditioned . tanamo detention center buildings, styled after a maxibeen around? m um-security prison in t h e . Then-Defense S e c r e- United States. The buildings . tary D onald Rumsfeld are called camps, though they announced on Dec. 27, 2001, have little in common with the that some prisonerscaptured image that word conjures. in Afghanistan would be held Until recently, most of the within the bounds of the 45- detainees were in Camp 6, square-mile U.S. Naval Station where they were allowed to at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, keep their celldoors open and which the United States has move freely in a common area occupied since 1903 under a where they could watch televilease that gives the U.S. rights sion and eat together. But in "in perpetuity." The first 20 de- April, in response to detainees' covering cameras used tainees arrived Jan. 11, 2002. to monitor them, the guards • Why Guantanamo? forced all the prisoners back into their s ingle-occupancy, According to a report by 6.8-by-12-foot cells. The most • the C onstitution Proj- secret of the facilities, Camp ect, apolicy research center, 7, holds an estimated 15 of Pentagon officials considered the highest-value detainees, a variety of Pacific island and including those accused of other remote l ocations for planning the 9/11 attacks. As holding men detained during of Monday,100 detainees were the so-called war on terror- refusingfood; 23 of those are ism that President George W. force-fed twice daily through Bush declared after the Sept. tubes snaked up their noses 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on and down their throats. New York and Washington. Officials eventually t u r ned What rules apply to how • they're treated? to Guantanamo, which previously had been used to house . The United States charHaitians and Cubans who'd . acterizes most as "unbeen picked up on the high privileged enemy belligerents," seas trying to reach the United rather than prisoners of war. States. Under Executive Order 13492, O fficials thought that i n however, detainees are supaddition to providing limited posed to be treated in a manaccess, which would ease se- ner consistent with Common curityconcerns, Guantanamo Article 3 of the Geneva Conwould keepthe men held there ventions, which among other from accessing U.S. federal things prohibits"outrages upon courts since Guantanamo is personal dignity." Congress part of Cuba. The Supreme also has specified certain stanCourt eventually rejected that dards through laws such as the argument, however, and al2005 Detainee Treatment Act, l owed the detainees to f i le which prohibits "cruel, inhuhabeas corpus petitions chal- man or degrading" treatment lenging their imprisonment. and requires that interrogations conform with convenWho is being held at tional U.S. Army standards. • Guantanamo? . Currently, 166 men are Does the U.S. Constitu. detained t h ere, m o r e . tion apply to detainees than half of them from Yemen. at Guantanamo? Three of the 166 have been . Toadegree,yes. TheU.S. convicted of crimes by a mili. SupremeCourtruledina tary commission, seven have 2008 decision called Boumedibeen charged withcrimesene v. Bush that Guantanamo including the five accused of detainees had the same conconspiring in the 9/I1 attacks stitutional right to file a habeas — and 24 may face criminal corpus petition as prisoners in charges. Of the remainder, 86 the United States. Although have been cleared for release Cuba owns the Guantanamo or transfer to other countries, land, the Supreme Court noted, and 46 face no criminal charg- the United States has exercised "complete jurisdiction and cones but a multi-agency review of their cases found them to be trol" for more than 100 years. too dangerous to release. At its Consequently, the justices reapeak, in May 2003, the facil- soned that this amounted to de ity held about 680 men. The facto U.S.sovereignty. last prisoner arrived in March 2008. How much does Guan• tanamo cost to operate? Why are t hey c alled • T he O b a ma ad m i n • detainees rather than • i stration r e p o rted t o prisoners? Congress in mid-2011 that it "spends approximately $150 • The Pentagon says it • uses the term for most of million per year on detention the men because they haven't operations at G u antanamo, been convictedof crimes. The currently at a r ate of more three who've been convicted than $800,000 per detainee." are called prisoners. I n addition, the Bush a n d Obama administrations have • What are the conditions spent hundreds of millions of • like? dollars to upgrade the facilWhen the first detain- ity. The average cost to hold a • ees arrived, they were prisoner in the United States is housed in w i r e e n closures about $30,000 per year.

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The Associated Press file photo

U.S. military guards walk within Camp Delta at the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in 2006. The facility currently holds 166 detainees, but at its peak in 2003, about 680 men were being held. • What's stopping Obama • from closing it and moving the men to U.S. prisons? • Since 2009, Congress • has made it difficult for the Obama administration to transfer men out of Guantanamo. The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 prohibits using any military funds to transfer detainees to the United States. It also prohibits transfers to foreign countries unless the secretary ofdefense certifies that the country meets certain standards, including that it isn't "facing a threat that is likely to substantially affect its ability to exercise control over the individual." That's a problem for Yemen, which has an active al-Qaida branch. A f te r a Ni g e r ian who said he'd been recruited in Yemen tried to blow up a Detroit-bound plane, Obama ordered a halt to all transfers to Yemen. That's held up the releaseof 26 Yemenis who've been approved for t r ansfer and 30 more who the U.S. says could b e t r a n sferred

back to Yemen if the government there demonstrates it can hold them.

had become of 603 men who'd been transferred out of Guantanamo. The report found that 97 were "confirmed ofre-en-

m an y r e l eased gaging" against U.S. forces, Q •• How Guantanamo detainees of which about half were dead have returned to fighting the United States? . This is a hotly debated . topic. In J anuary, the director of n a t ional i ntelligence issued a report on what

or back in custody. Another 72 were "suspected of re-en-

gaging" against U.S. forces, though there was no explanation of what evidence led to the suspicion.

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The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since1903

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013

Bend

tee approved King's plan last week and recommended hirContinued from A1 ing one more firefighter than I t's a significant staff i n King proposed, for a t o t al crease, although small com- equivalent to three full-time pared to the number of jobs the firefighters and one part-time city shed during the recession. firefighter. The City C o unDuring the last five years, the cil will vote on the proposed city reduced its staff by nearly $494 million biennial budget 20 percent, or about 110 jobs, in June. through a combination of layThe net increase in city staff offs and attrition. will be closer to eight employThe city estimates it wi ll ees because the city currently collect 4.3 percent more tax has roughly six unfilled jobs, revenue during the next two according to K i n g's budget years than it did in the cur- proposal. Human Resources rent biennium, an i n crease Director Rob DuValle said the of roughly $1.9 million, ac- majority of unfilled jobs are c ording to a n alysis of t h e for command staffin the Fire proposed budget. Water rates Department, where f o rmer would increase 3 percent and Fire Chief Larry H uhn l eft sewer rates would increase these jobs open to avoid lay6 percent a n nually u n d er ing off firefighters. "They're King's budget proposal, al- running on a skeleton crew at though King said the actual the top of the organization," rateincreases could be differ- DuValle said. ent in the second year of the At the Police Department, biennium because the city is Lt. Chris Carney said three in the middle of adjusting the fewer sworn employees are model for its rates. employed today — 84, includThe city b udget commit- ing everyone f ro m t r a f f ic

IRS

The IRS and dig tax-ex-

Continued from A1 In one instance, however, Ron Bell, an IRS employee, informed an attorney representing a conservative group focused on voter fraud that the application was under review in Washington. On several other occasions, IRS officials in Washington and California sentconservative groups detailed questionnaires about their voter outreach and other a ctivities, according t o t h e documents. "For the IRS to say it was some low-level group in Cincinnati is simply false," said Cleta Mitchell, a partner in the law firm Foley & Lardner who sought to communicate with IRS headquarters about the delay in granting tax-exempt status to True the Vote. M oreover, details o f t h e IRS's efforts to t arget conservative groups reached the highest levels of the agency in May 2012, far earlier than has been disclosed, according to Republican congressional aides briefed by the IRS and the Treasury Inspector General for Tax A dministration (TIGTA) on the details of their reviews. Then commissioner, Douglas Shulman, a George W. Bush appointee who stepped down in November, received a briefing from the TIGTA about what was happening in the Cincinnati office in May 2012, the aides said. His deputy and the agency's current acting commissioner, Steven Miller, also learned about the matter that month, the aides said. The officials did not share details with Republican lawmakers who had been demanding to know whether the IRS was targeting conservative groups, Republicans said. "I wrote to the IRS three times last year after hearing concerns that conservative groups were being targeted," Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, the ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee, said in a statement Monday. "In response to the first letter I sent with some of my colleagues, Steven Miller, th e c u r rent Acting I R S C o m missioner, responded that these groups weren't being targeted." "Knowing what we k now now," he added, "the IRS was at best being far from forth coming, or at w o rst, being d eliberately dishonest w i t h Congress." As new details emerged Monday, Democrats and Republicans alike decried the agency's actions as an unacceptable abuse of power. White House spokesman Jay Carney t ol d r e porters Monday that the White House counsel's office learned of an upcoming IRS inspector's general report on April 22 as part of a routine notification, but had not received access to the report.

emPt grOuPS — Overthe last two years, government watchdog groups filed more than a dozen complaints with

the lnternal RevenueService seeking inquiries into whether large nonprofit organizations like those founded by the Republican political operative Karl

Rove and former Obama administration aides had violated their tax-exempt status by spending tens of millions of dollars on

political advertising. TheIRS neverresponded. During the same period, the

agencysingledoutdozensof Tea Party-inspired groups that had applied for IRS recognition,

officials acknowledged Friday, subjecting them to rounds of detailed questioning about their

political activities. None of those groups were big spenders on political advertising; most were

local TeaParty organizations with shoestring budgets. For the IRS' bipartisan legion

patrol officers up to captains and the police chief — than in 2006. "In 2008, we were supposed to hire 12 people," Carney said. "That's when the crash happened and all those positions got wiped out." Residents might not notice much change inpolice services if the city hires two new officers, but it will prevent police from falling further behind on work they would not have the time to do, Carney said. "I think it's going to help at least slow down the backlog, because I don't think our population is going down," Carney said. Last year, the City Council asked Police Chief Jeff Sale to report on the potential impact of police budget shortfalls. Sale told councilors that depending upon workload, detectives might soon stop investigating all property crimes and thefts of property worth less than $100,000, unless the incident is part of a series of

Tax Exemptions andPolitical Activity The lnternalRevenue Servicedisclosed that it had more closely scrutinized applications for tax-exempt status from conservativesounding 501(c)(4) groups to ensure they were not abusing limitations on political activity. Here are therules and how they differ from explicitly political organizations.

Nonprofits

Political committees

Tax exempt? YES

Tax exempt? YES

Must disclosedonors? NO

Must disclosedonors?YES

Contributionlimits? NO

Contribution limits? YES, if givendirectly to a candidate

Regulated by? IRS

Regulated by? FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION, or IRS if they don't expressly advocate for a candidate

Donationdeductible? YES, for purely nonpolitical charity [501(c)(3)grou psj;NO, if thegroup lobbies or electioneers

Donation deductible? NO

Political campaigning? YES but can't begroup's PRIMARYpurpose, afactor in much of the IRS scrutiny

Political campaigning? YES EXAMPLES

ROMNEYFORPRESIDENTINC. AMERICANCROSSROADS FREEDOMWORKS

EXAMPLES CROSSROADS GPS PRIORITIESUSA WACOTEAPARTY

New York Times News Service

of critics, the agency's record

and other elected officials. And has underscored its contradican agency thatissupposedto tory and seemingly confused stay as far awayfrom partisan response to the fastest-growing portion of the world of unlimited politics as possible has beenleft political spending: tax-exempt

crimes or the victim is over 65 years old. Sale also said that by 2016, detectives could stop investigating sex abuse or rape, unless the victim is a child younger than 14 years old, someone with a disability or older than 65. "Hiring people is going to really help put that type of thing off," Carney said of the possible service reductions. In the Public Works Department, the city will likely add two employees to its engineering staff because of a policy shift to do more of that work in-house and use fewer consultants. "We're taking a more active role in project management," King said. "We've just got an enormous amount of infrastructure work to do, and catchup to all the growth. We need people to manage those projects m oving f o r w ard." Mayor Jim Clinton has said he would prefer to hire city employees to do more of this w ork, rather t han r ely o n consultants.

to see the resources spent on hundreds of small groups that

appeared to spendvery little on elections."

in charge — almost by accident

Almost ali of the groups in

— of regulating a hugeamount of election spending. "We'vecomplainedabout

two election cycles.

a few big fish and we've heard

The IRS has done little to regulate a flood of political

nothing from the IRS," said

question are organized under 501(cj(4) of the tax code, which regulates nonprofit groups engaged in promoting "social welfare." At least16 such

Paul Ryan, senior counsel at the

organizations spent $1 million

Campaign LegalCenter, which filed many of the complaints

or more on campaign adver-

with the agency. "We would far rather see scrutiny of these big

(Crossroads GPS and Priorities

fish — the groups that spent

similar names that spent millions more.)

groups that havepaid for at least half a billion dollars in campaign ads during the last

spending by larger groups — like Crossroads Grassroots Policy Strategies, co-founded by Rove, and Priorities USA, with close ties to President

tising in the 2012 elections. USA also run super PACS with

hundreds of millions of dollars BarackObama — aswellas Republican leaders in Congress to influence elections — than

On Capitol Hill, two Senate panels — the Finance Committee and t h e P e rmanent Subcommittee on I nvestigations — announced Monday that they will investigate. The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee and the Ways and Means Committee have been looking into IRS attempts to single out organizations on the right for heightened scrutiny. Ways and Means has called IRS officials to testify Friday. "These actions by the IRS are an outrageous abuse of power and a breach of the public's trust," said Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont. "The IRS will now be the ones put under additional scrutiny." S eparately, S en . M a r c o Rubio, R-Fla., and Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, i n troduced companion bills Monday that would require the IRS to fire any employee found " w i l lfully" violating "the constitutional rights of a t axpayer," according to statements by both lawmakers. The bills also would make them criminally liable for their actions. Even as Obama vowed that his administration "will make sure that we find out exactly what happened on this," how-

— New York TimesNews Service

ever, the IRS offered no new information on how it selected which groups to single out for scrutiny. The White House is legally prohibited from contacting the IRS about a tax matter, under a prohibition adopted after the Watergate scandal. And a l though it can contact the Treasury Department about tax issues, neither Treasury nor the IRS can disclose specific t axpayer i n f ormation. T h e IRS can release information only about a petition for taxexempt status once it has been approved. Obama is not in a position to remove Lerner,a career official who can be terminated for

@enscq>

cause only under normal civil service proceedings. The IRS has two political appointees: the commissioner, who serves a five-yearterm, and the chief counsel. As the IR S c ame under broader political attack Monday, more details surfaced on how the tax-exempt organizations division struggled to determine which nonprofits should receive "social welfare" status after the 2010 Citizens United v. F ederal E lection Commission ruling. That decision, which allowed corporations and unions to raise and spend unlimited amounts of money on elections, opened the door for groups to accept

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add another employee or turn the part-time job into a fulltime position to increase its code enforcement presence. The additional staffing would allow the city to do a better job of enforcing a law that requires property owners to keep flammable vegetation under control, Goff said. The city could also do more to require property owners to remove invasive weeds. "There's been a prettyserious outcry f rom the community in t h e last few years just because noxious weeds are out of control," Goff said. "Hiring a s econd person is basically just trying to get us back to status quo," Goff said. "We are the largest city in Oregon that has essentially one full-time person on code enforcement." Code enforcement plays an important role in keeping the city attractive, which is v ital t o e conomic growth, Goff said. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com

undisclosed contributions as

suit against the IRS, Gerritson said. pose" was not politics. A lthough s om e o f the In a Jan. 9, 2012, letter to groups were explicitly labeled the Richmond Te a P a r ty, "tea party" or "patriot," others IRS specialist Stephen Seok that came underintense scruasked questions including "the tiny were focused on challengnames of the donors, contribu- ing the Affordable Care Act tors and grantors," as well as — known by many as Obamthe size of the contributions acare — or the integrity of fedand grants, and when they eral elections. were given. In a June 3, 2011, letter to Richmond Tea Party Presi- the IRS, Mitchell questioned dent Larry N ordvig, whose the agency's motivations for group applied for tax-exempt delaying recognition of one of statusin December 2009 and her clients who had filed nearreceived it in July 2012, said ly two years earlier, writing, the extended inquiry had "a "Is the (group's) opposition very chilling effect" on how to Obamacare and thetakemuch moneythe group could over of America'shealthcare raise because its donors pre- system by t h e g overnment ferred anonymity. the reason that this applicaThe Wetumpka Tea Party of tion has been held up and not Alabama experienced atwo- approved?" year delay after submitting its Catherine Enge l brecht, initial application. president of t h e H o u stonB ecky Gerritson, a 4 4 - based True the Vote, first filed year-old stay-at-home mother for tax-exempt status in July and the g r oup's president, 2010. At one point, Engelbresaid the IRS sent a question- cht — who is still awaiting a naire asking for the names determination from the IRS of all volunteers, donor iden- regarding her voting rights ortification an d c o n t ribution ganization and a separate tea amounts, the names of any party group, King Street Palegislators its members had triots — said an IRS employee communicated with directly informed her: "I'm just doing or indirectly, and the contents what Washington is t elling of all speeches its members me to do. I'm just asking what had made, among a long list they want me to ask." of other details. The IRS did not respond "I was outraged," Gerritson to r e quests f o r c o m ment said. "Being an election year, I Monday. felt like it was intimidation." The group did not provide the i n f ormation. A p proval came only after th e g roup sought help from the American Center for Law and Justice, which threatened a law-

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Fernando Antonio/The Associated Press

Police break into a home in April during a shootout that endedin two suspects killed and one officer injured in Tegucigaipa, Honduras. Family members of dead gang members say the police are getting away with murder.

Hon uran oice accuse o servin as eat suas By Aiberto Arce The Associated Press

TEGUCIGALPA,Honduras — At least five times in the last few months, members of a Honduras street gang were killed or went missing just after run-ins with the U.S.-supported national police, The Associated Press has determined, feeding accusations that they were victims of federal death squads. In a country with the highest homicide rate in the world and where only a fraction of crimes are prosecuted, the victims' families say the police are literally getting away with murder. In M a rch, t w o m o t h ers d iscovered th e b o d ies o f their sons after the men had called in a panic to say they were surrounded by armed, masked police. The y oung m en, both members of t h e 18th Street gang, had been shot in the head, their hands bound so tightly the cords cut to the bone. That was shortly after three members of 18th Street were detained by armed, masked men and taken to a police station. Two men with no criminal history were released, but their friend disappeared without any record of his detention. A month after the AP reported that a n 1 8th Street

gang says its members are b eing t a rgeted b y po l ice death squads, described by witnesses as heavily armed m asked m e n i n civi l i a n dress and bullet-proof vests

who kill or "disappear" gang members instead of bringing them to justice. In the last two years, the United States has given an estimated $30 million in aid to Honduran law enforcement. The U.S. State Department says it faces a dilemma: The police are essential to fighting crime in a country that has become a haven for drugrunners. It estimates that 40 percentof the cocaine headed to the U.S. — and 87 percent

of cocaine smuggling flights

from South America — pass through Honduras. " The option is that if w e don't work w ith th e police, w e have to w ork w i t h t h e armed forces, which almost everyone accepts to be worse than the police in terms of ... taking matters in their own hands," U.S. Assistant Secretary of State William Brownfield told the AP via live chat on March 28. "Although the national police may have its defects at the moment, it is the lesser evil." Alba Mejia, Deputy Director of the Committee for the Prevention of Torture, said gang leader and his girlfriend her group has documented vanished from police custody, hundreds of death squad casthey are still missing. es in the country since 2000. The 18th Street gang and The squads burst into homes another known as Mara Sal- with no warrants and take vatrucha are th e c ountry's away young men, she said. "We are convinced that biggest gangs, formed by C entral A m e r i ca n i m m i - there is a government policy grants in U.S. prisons who of killing gang members and later overran this small Cen- that there is a team dedicated t ral A m erican c ountry a s to this activity," Mejia said. theirmembers were deported Federal prosecutors say they back home. Both engage in have received about 150 comdealing drugs and charging plaints about similar r a ids extortion fees under threat in the capital of Tegucigalpa of death. Now the 18th Street over the last three years.

Cascades Continued from A1 "I just think when you look around the state and where a dollar can have the most impact in higher education right now, we have one of the best possibilities of any place," she said. "We're just delighted, of course, that they decided to help us." Johnson believes the $4 million fundraising goal is very attainable. "I think there's actually still a lot of momentum and enthusiasm," she said, noting that with the foundation's match, every dollar donated is worth two. "I think the closer we get, the more excited people are

getting." OSU-Cascades was founded in 2001, offering only upper-level and graduate courses for students working toward a bachelor's or master's degree. Students typically took lowerdivision courses at Central Oregon Community College. In August 2012 the Oregon State Board of Higher Education endorsed OSU-Cascades' plan to transition to a fouryear campus, allowing it t o offer lower-level courses. In February the state placed the OSU-Cascades expansion at No. 3 on a list of more than 30 higher-education construction

projects. The Oregon Legisla-

ture is expected to vote in the coming months on the $16 million request that would allow OSU-Cascades to w e lcome freshmen in 2015. The branch campus plans to offer lower-division courses and increase its student population by 1,000, for an enrollment of 2,000 by the year 2015, and to have a student enrollment near 5,000 by 2025. The Oregon Community Foundation gives out m o re than $60 million in grants and scholarships each year. The foundation has an office in Central Oregon and has a goal of improving life in Oregon. "We're honored to help. This community has had a dream of a four-year university for a long time, and this is an honor to participate with everyone in the community to help make this dream come true," Gregory said. Each year the Oregon Community Foundationgives about 300 grants from the funds it has available to support all sorts of projects, said Kathleen Cornett, vice president for programs for the foundation. Those average about $25,000 each. "So this is a big deal to give a grant of this size," Cornett said. — Reporter: 541-617-7831, smiller@bendbulletin.com

Phones

administration's anti-leak effort "dwarfs that of any previContinued from A1 ous administration to put leak In an angry letter to At- i nvestigations at the top o f torney General Eric Holder their list of priorities." on Monday, Gary Pruitt, The American Civil Liberthe president and chief ex- ties Union said the use of subecutive of the AP, called the poenas for a broad swath of reseizure a "massive and un- cords has a chilling effect both precedented intrusion" into onjournalists andwhistleblowits newsgathering activities. ers who want to reveal govern"There can be no possible ment wrongdoing. "The attorj ustification for s uch a n ney general must explain the overbroad collection of the Justice Department's actions telephone communications to the public so that we can of The Associated Press make sure thiskind of press and its reporters," he wrote. intimidation does not happen "These records potentially again," said Laura Murphy, the reveal com m u nications director of ACLU's Washingwith confidential sources ton legislative office. acrossallofthe newsgatherJay Carney, a White House ing activities undertaken by spokesman, said the W h ite the AP during a two-month House was not involved in the period, provide a road map subpoena. to AP's newsgathering op"Other than press reports, erations, and disclose infor- we have no knowledge of any mation about AP's activities attempt by the Justice Departand operations that the gov- ment toseek phone records of ernment has no conceivable the AP," he said. "We are not right to know." involved in decisions made in The development rep- connection with criminal inresents the latest collision vestigations, as those matters of news organizations and are handled independently by federal investigators over the Justice Department." government efforts to preThe Justice D e partment vent the disclosure of na- did not respond to a question tional security information, about whether a similar step and it comes against a back- was taken in another major drop of an aggressive policy government leak i n vestigaby the Obama administra- tion, believed to be focused on tion to rein in leaks. Under a New York Times reporter, President Barack Obama, David Sanger, and his disclosix current and former gov- sures in articles and in a book ernment officials have been about a joint U.S.-Israeli effort indicted in leak-related cas- to sabotage Iranian nuclear es so far, twice the number equipment. brought under all previous David McCraw, a l awyer administrations combined. for The New York Times, said, "We must notify the me- "We've had no contact from dia organization in advance the government of any sort." unless doing so would pose Representatives for o t h er a substantial threat to the news organizations, including integrity of the investiga- the Tribune Co.; Dow Jones, tion," said William Miller, which owns The Wall Street a spokesman for the U.S. Journal; and Gannett, all said attorney in the District of that they have not encountered Columbia, Ronald Machen. similar problems. Last June, Holder assigned Holder announced the two Machen to lead one of two special leak investigations in major leak i nvestigations June amid calls in Congress amid a congressional up- for a crackdown on leaks after roar over several disclo- a spate of disclosures about the sures of national security bomb plot, the alleged Iranian information in the media. sabotage, Obama's procedures "Because we value the for putting terrorism suspects freedom of the press," Mill- on a "kill list," and the raid that er added, "we are always killed Osama bin Laden. careful and deliberative in seeking to strike the right balance between the public interest in the free flow of information and the public interest in the fair and effective administration of our criminal laws."

The revelations had been published by The New York Times, AP, and i n s everal books; separately, administration critics contended that f ilmmakers working o n a movie about the bin L aden raid, "Zero Dark Thirty," had been given special access by the CIA.

Political fallout as well R epublicans accused t h e administration of deliberately leaking classified information, jeopardizing national security in an effort to make Obama look tough in an election year — a charge the White House rejected. But some Democrats, too, said the leaking of sensitive information had gotten out of control, including Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. On Monday, however, after the AP disclosed the seizure of the records,some Republican leaders criticized the administration as going too far. Michael Steel, a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, said: "The First Amendment is first for a reason. If the Obama administration is going after reporters' phone records, they better have a damned good explanation." And Douglas Heye, a spokesman for Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Va. and the House majority leader, linked the revelation to a brewing controversy over the tar-

rights, these new revelations suggest a pattern of intimidation by the Obama administration," Heye said. Democrats, t oo , c h i m ed in. Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said in an emailed statement: "The burden is always on the government when they go after private information, especially informationregarding the press or it s c o nfidential sources. ... On the face of it, I am concerned that the government may not have met that burden. I am very troubled by these allegations and want to hear the government's explanation." The AP said Monday that it first learned of the seizure of the records last Friday afternoon when its general counsel,Laura Malone, received a letter from Machen, the U.S. attorney. The AP's letter to Holder said th e s e izure i n cluded "all such records for, among o ther phone l i nes, an A P g eneral phone n u mber i n New York City as well as AP bureaus in New York City, Washington, D.C., Hartford, Conn., and at the House of Representatives." In an article it wrote about the seizure, the AP said that "more than 100 j ournalists work i n t h e o f f ices whose phone records were targeted." — The Associated Press contributed to this report.

geting of Tea Party groups for greater scrutiny by the Internal Revenue Service. "Whether it is secretly targeting patriotic A m ericans participating in the electoral

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Media, ACLUoutrage But First Amendment expertsportrayed the move as shocking in its breadth. Floyd Abrams, a prominent First Amendment lawyer who has worked for The New York Times in the past, said: "The norm, at least since the government instituted internal guidelines in the 1970s, was for the government to ask the press organization for information and to pursue them in court when they didn't receive it. The notion of avoiding any First Amendment resolution by the courts by going right to the telephone company with no notice to the press organization is outrageous." He also said the Obama

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A6 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013

LOOKING AHEAD: HEALTH CARE

Lottery

os ita mer ersrese a or ion-auess a e By Kirk Johnson New Yorh Times News Service

MOUNT VERNON, Wash. — Politicians seeking to restrict access to abortion, a marked trend this year from North Dakota to Arkansas, tend not to get much traction in this part of the country. Washington is heavily Democratic, leaning left especially on social issues. A majority of voters even put into law a statutory right to abortion in 1970 — the only state ever to do that. But now a wave of proposed and completed mergers between secular and Roman Catholic hospitals, which are barred by church doctrinefrom performing procedures that could harm the unborn, is raising the prospect that unelected health care administrators could go where politicians could not. The merger wave is mirrored around the country, driven by the shifting economic landscape in health care and the looming changes in f ederal regulation. Previous Catholic takeovers in Kentucky, IIIinois and Pennsylvania have made news and drawn scrutiny. The concentration of mergers here, through happenstance and history — Catholic nuns arrived in Washington with the first waves of settlers in the 1850s — is particularly pronounced. If all the proposed religious and secular combinations go through, almost half of the hospital beds in the state — the highest percentage in the nation, and up from less than a third at the beginning of last year — would be controlled by the Catholic health systems, according to Merger Watch, a nonprofit group in New York that tracks hospitals. Another wrinkle isthat many Washingtonians are not that keen on religion to start with. A poll by Gallup conducted throughout 2012 put the state at 12th fromthe bottom in percent-

age of people who described themselves as "very religious."

Matthew Ryan Williams/New York Times News Service

Island Hospital in Anacortes, Wash., is weighing merger offers from Catholic and secular hospitals. If all the proposed religious and secular mergers in the state go through, almost half the state's hospital beds would be controlled by the Catholic health systems. It is also one of only two states — Oregon is the other — where voters have approved a physician-assisted suicide law for terminally ill people. Centuries of Catholic teaching hold suicide as a mortal sin. "You happen to be the hot zone," Sarah Dunne, the legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington, said on a recent evening to a group of 75 or so residents here who are opposing the mergers. Skagit Valley Hospital in Mount Vernon, about an hour north of Seattle, has joined with two other local hospitals in seeking a merger partner and is entertaining bids from two Catholic and two secular hospitals. A decision is expected this summer. Catholic hospital leaders said that changes in the medical and economic landscape could threaten service to millions of Americans inrural and suburban areas who might have no choices at all if their local hospital dosed or shrank, and that Catholic partners — driven by a missionto servetheunderserved — are uniquely fittedto help. The issue is not availability of abortion or consult to the dying, they say, which will still be available in secular institutions not that far away, but access to care at all.

"The Catholic health system is in many of the communities we're inbecause other health care providers have not wanted to serve those communities and have not had a commitment to serve every human being," said Peter Adler, a senior vice president at PeaceHealth, a Catholic hospital system based in the Pacific Northwest that is one of the bidders for the three hospitals in northwest Washington. But critics said that Catholic hospitals do not, in fact, serve every human being because they deny certain reproductive services or end-of-life care that could help a dying patient end his or hersuffering. A spokesman for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, which issues rules for Catholic care providers called the "Ethical and Religious Directives," said that procedures deemed by the church to be immoral are bright lines that cannot be crossed. Anything relating to abortion is one such line, but anything making it easier for a person to end his or her own life, as Washington's Death with Dignity law does, would also be prohibited, said the Rev. Thomas Weinandy, the executive director of the Conference of Catholic Bishops' Secretariat for Doctrine.

country," Rep. Donald Payne, recent televised panel. But he D-N.J., said in an interview. said that between Republican "We are talking about creat- opposition and the sense that Continued from A1 Although the o dds of ing a path to citizenship for the lottery had strayed from winning are infinitesimal, 11 mi l lion u n d ocumented its original purpose, "we dethe program is so wildly people, and I wholeheartedly cided we couldn't continue popular that last year alsupport that. But why do we it." most 8 million people ap- need to cut a program where Despite its good intentions, plied. And now it is likely millions of people are com- the program has also lost lusto be quietly cut. peting for only 55,000 visas? ter because of its notorious "In my country, whole I'm sorry, but I just can't ac- vulnerability to scam artists. cities wait to hear the recept that." Dozens of unscrupulous busisults of this lottery. I can't But senators who negoti- nesses offer applicants help believe they would take it ated the proposed massive through websites and emails away," said Ermais Amiimmigration change, which that appear to be from the rat, 29, an Ethiopian lotis being aired in a series of U.S. government and t r i ck t ery w i n ner w h o l i v e s hearings, said the diversity desperate people into sending in Alexandria, Va., and p rogram c r u m bled u n d er them money. drives a l i mousine. "We R epublican i n s istence o n Mark Jacobsen, a lawyer in may not earn a lot, but on finding more visas for skill- Hawaii who has helped hun$200 a month, your whole b ased i m m i g rants. T h e y dreds of lottery applicants in family can survive back said it also has lost appeal the past 20 years, called the home." by shifting f ro m i t s e a r ly scams a "huge problem" that Under a Senate compro- goals. Launched in the early has gotten worse with relimise, the program would 1990s with a focus on Africa, ance on the Internet. "People be eliminated and its visa the program h a s r e cently set up websites that mimic slots would be subsumed brought in large numbers of the official U.S. government into a broad system that people from countries includ- sites," he said in a telephone stresses skills, education ing Albania, Nepal, Bangla- interview. " They send o u t and other criteria for legal desh and Iran. emails telling p eople they " I was an author of t h i s immigration. have won and that they have A few defenders, includ- program. I care about it," Sen. to send a $1,000 processing ing members of the ConCharles Schumer, D-N.Y., a fee right away. In fact, there gressional Black Caucus, key negotiator, said during a is no official fee at all." have urged that the lottery be preserved. They say it helps compensate for the lopsided history of l egal immigration, long dominated by a few large countries w i t h h ig h - skilled workers, such as C h ina and India, and those with strong family ties to the U nited States, such a s Mexico and t h e P h i lippines. They also note that it creates wide i nternat ional goodwill f o r t h e United States at a low cost, amounting to only 5 per'I I cent of legal immigrants. I "Diversity visas are one w lsa of the few w ays people Aw rey G1en from Africa and the Ca- olf.Quribbean can come to this

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6

©

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013

BRIEFING

Cigarette sparks Bend brushfire Bend firefighters,

o use s

a 0 a e anS

quelled aquarter-acre

• Seaplanes and motorboats areprohibited in legislation that headsto ICitzhaber's desk

brush fire Monday afternoon at 20720 Brinson

By Lauren Dake

with help from U.S. Forest Service firefighters,

Blvd., according to the Bend Fire Department. A discarded cigarette

probably started thefire along the fence line of

AdvancedEnergy, amaker of solar powercontrol technologies in northeast

Bend, according to Deputy Fire MarshalCindy Kettering. A city fire crew

arrived to find employees with shovels and fire extinguishers fighting the

growing blaze,according to Kettering's report. The fire, reported at 3:44 p.m., with flames of 8-10

The Bulletin

SALEM — The Oregon House voted Monday to ban motorboats and seaplanes from pristine Waldo Lake, sendingthe measure to Gov. John Kitzhaber for his signature. The governor in January indicated his support for doing away with gasolinepowered motors on the lake, considered among the purest in the world. Senate Bill 602, which passed the House, 37 to 20, prohibits motorboats and seaplanes on the lake but carves

www.bendbulletin.com/local

Floatplanes on Waldo

SenateBill 602 What lt does:Bansmotors and seaplanesWaldo Lake.

out an exemption for electric motors going less than 10 mph. Three Republicans, including Rep. Jason Conger, R-Bend, and Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-Sunriver, joined all House Democrats in voting in favor of the bill.

Allows boats propelled by electric motors traveling

The Oregon HouseMonday approved a ban onfloatplanes at Waldo Lake, which is about 40 miles southwest of Bend. The bill

now goes to the governor to be signed into law.

less than10 mph What's next:Passed both chambers; heads to the

Speaking on behalf of the measure, Chris Gorsek, D-Troutdale, noted Waldo Lake's much-touted reputation as being the third-purest lake in the world. "That should count for something," he said. "That should be something we cherish and do anything we can to preserve."

Proponents of the measure also warned that seaplanes, in particular, could bring invasive species into the lake. They noted it would codify a Marine Board ban in 2010 that prohibited gas-powered

Ballot returns County clerks announced the following

ballot returns as of Monday: • Crook County, 16

percent • Jefferson County, 18 percent • Deschutes County reported 10 percent of all ballots returned as of

Waldolake 4

governor for his signature. Takes effect once signed.

MAY 21 ELECTION

C e Prairi Re

Friday.

Wickiup Reservoir

Events Another spring election is just ahead.

Y LaPi

The May 21ballot car4e Cascade

ries contests extremely

Lakes Highway

Odell Lake

Crescent

CrescentLake

and recreation directors to water districts. Bond

measures andtax levies

engines. SeeWaldo/B5

close to home, from school boards to parks

Andy Zergert l The Bulletin

feet tall spreadrapidly

for new school buildings, fire equipment and

through heavy brush

emergency dispatch services are also atstake.

and juniper, according to Kettering.

lish a daily calendar of

The Bulletin will pub-

A HAIR-RAISING DAY AT THE PARK

"Citizens were attempting to fight the fire

election-related events, including candidate fo-

without training, protec-

rums and issue-related

tive clothing or proper

town halls. Are you planning an event? Please

equipment," Kettering wrote. "This could have resulted in severeinjury or even death." Nine firefighters

submit your notice to bulletin©bendbulletin.

com, or by conventional mail to P.O. Box 6020, Bend OR 97708-6020.

quickly contained the fire without loss of property

To qualify for pub-

orinjury.

lication in The Bulletin calendar, the event must

In the event of a fire, Kettering advised, retreat

be open to thegeneral public by freeadmission.

to a safe location, ensure all are accountedfor and wait for trained personnel to arrive.

Fundraising events do not qualify, nor do strict-

ly partisan gatherings.

Pringle Falls burn set for this week

Who's running

A 490-acre prescribed burn is plannedTuesday

Deschutes andJefferson

A complete list of candidates for Crook, counties canbe found at www.bendbulletin.com/

through Thursday in the Deschutes National For-

may21 candidates

est, according to Jean Nelson-Dean with the Central Oregon Fire Man-

Measures andlevies • Deschutes 911 • Madras Aquatic Center

agement Service. The burn will be located in the Pringle Falls Experimental Forest approximately13 miles

operating levy • Bend-La Pine School bond • La Pine Fire District

southwest of Sunriver and nine miles northwest of La Pine. The burn will begin

at10 a.m. todayandis expected toendat6p.m. Thursday.

operation and equipment levies Roh Kerr /The Bulletin

Claire Nichols, 19, takes advantage of windy conditions Monday afternoon while flying a kite at Farewell Bend Park. Unlike last week's warm weather, cooler days are forecast through the weekend. For more weather information, see Page B6.

Pine residents maysee visible smokeplumes

tions officials no later

and, depending on wind condition and direction, nearby forest roads. Wild River, Fall River Estates and Ponderosa Estates

than 8 p.m. on Election Day. Postmarks do not

WHATEyER

Following 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.

count.

O To follow the series, visit www.bendbulletin.com/updates.

If you didn't receive a ballot in the mail with

subdivisions arelikely to experiencesomesmoke impacts due to their proximity to the burn,

a voter guide, call your county clerk's office: • Deschutes: 541-388-6546 • Crook: 541-447-6553 • Jefferson: 541-475-4451

BISHOP OF THE DIOCESE OFBAKER

Nelson-Deansaid. The burn is part of

a research project to explore options for fuels managementand forest insect and treedisease issues. Thespecific goal of the burn is to reduce

brush coverandfuel load to decreasethe crown fire hazard in the area.

Deschutes traffic patrols planned The Deschutes County Sheriff's Office is increasing daylight traffic patrols to enforce violations of seat belt and child-restraint laws from May 20 through June 2, the office announced. The Sheriff's Office is

also increasing patrols during nighttime hours

for Dull enforcement. That campaign will run from May 23 through May 27 and focus on the

Memorial Dayweekend. The Sheriff's Office

and OregonDepartment of Transportation

remind drivers andpassengers to useseatbelts at all times in a motor

vehicle, regardless of the distance traveled.

Use a designated driver or public transportation

if planning a night out that involves alcohol, the Sheriff's Office stated. — From staff reports

bond

Ballots Ballots must be received by county elec-

Sunriver and La

may encounter smokeon

• Culver school bond • Crook County school

t'S a Wan er LI i e aS iS O

Read ourstories Coverage leading up to the election is at

www.bendbulletin.com/ election2013

• Cary, raised in Prinevile, says he'senjoyedgetting reacquaintedwith Central and EasternOregon

Higher fire risk; same fire rules

n ',,'

Fire season has begun weeksearlier

By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

The call that changed Liam Cary's life and brought him back to Central Oregon came at 1p.m. on Feb. 28, 2012. At the time Cary was the pastor for a Catholic church in Eugene. On the other end of the phone was Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, the papal ambassador to the United States in Washington, D.C. "Pope Benedict has named you Bishop of the Diocese of Baker, do you accept?" Vigano said. While he was stunned, Cary said his answer came quickly. "Well, yes," Cary said. The Roman Catholic Church installed Cary as Bishop of the Diocese of Baker,which covers the eastern two thirds of Oregon and has about 34,000 members, in May 2012. He is the seventh man to hold the church's highest post in Central and Eastern

Oregon. Cary's family moved from Port-

than usual in parts of Oregon, a result of drier-

than-normal conditions so far this spring, the U.S. Forest Service reit-

erated Monday. Experts seea propensity for wildfires

beginning in June,according to the National Andy Tullie / rhe Bulletin

Liam Cary, Bishop of the Diocese of Baker, has driven about 20,000 miles in the past year. "Almost every weekend I have someplace to go,n he said.

Significant Wildland Fire Potential Outlook.

"(S)ignificant fire potential is predicted to be

above normal in much land, where he was born, to Prineville when he was 3 years old in 1950, according t o t h e d i o cese website. Reminiscing of his childhood in Central Oregon, Cary said he knew when he was 6 that he wanted to be a priest — just like the pastor he looked up to at St. Joseph Parish in Prineville.

"I wanted to be like him," Cary said. "I wanted to take his place when I grew up." Cary left at age 14 to study at Mount Angel Seminary near Salem, where he graduated high school in 1961 and college in 1969. But before becoming a priest Cary took a nearly two-decade detour. SeeCary/B5

of the West," the Forest

Service report said. The increase in wildfire risk coincides with the usual ban

on open burning in Central Oregon after

May 30. Open burning is allowed November through May in Des-

chutes, Crook and Jefferson counties. SeeFire/B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAY 'I4, 2013

E VENT TODAY FILM FESTIVALSCREENING: A screening of winning and favorite short movies from the 2013 Central Oregon Film Festival; free; 6 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. "MY SO-CALLEDENEMY": Featuring a screening of a documentary film by Lisa Gossels about six Palestinian and Israeli teenage girls after they participated in "Building Bridges for Peace"; proceeds benefit Bend High School student, Marley Forest, to attend the Seeds of Peace program in Maine; free; 7 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-633-6826 or mari.latimer©gmail.com. NATURAL HISTORY PUB: Leon Powers discusses "Ferruginous Hawk Natural History and Conservation in the High Desert"; free; reservation requested; 7 p.m., doorsopen at6 p.m .;M cMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.highdesertmuseum.org/rsvp.

WEDNESDAY BIRD WATCHINGFOR YOUTH: Starting new club foryoung birders 12 to18 years old and supporting adults; bring binoculars if you have them; meet at pedestrian bridge with flags; free; 3-5 p.m.; Center Plaza, the Old Mill District, Southwest Powerhouse Drive between The Gapand Anthony's, Bend; 541-385-1799. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: GIULIO CESARE":Starring Natalie

AL E N D A R

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

Dessay, Alice Cooteand David Daniels in an encore presentation of Handel's masterpiece; $18; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend;541-382-6347. CRAIG CAROTHERS:The awardwinning Nashville singer and songwriter performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174.

THURSDAY "GROW, PLAY,FLOURISH: A PANEL DISCUSSIONABOUT THE KEYS TOHAPPINESS": Learn what the fields of geography, economics, health, human development and psychology can tell us about how to find happiness; free; 5-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. CollegeWay, Bend; 541-330-4357. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Former Bendite Bob Welch talks about hisbook,"Cascade Summer: My Adventure on Oregon's Pacific Crest Trail"; $5; 6 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. MOVIE NIGHTAND POTLUCK: A screening of films and discussion aboutchickensandeggswith a potluck; donations accepted; 6 p.m.; Cascade Culinary Institute, 2555 N.W. Campus Village Way, Bend; 541-390-5362. "THE SUNSETLIMITED":Stage Right Productions presents the Cormac McCarthy play about an encounter on a NewYork subway platform that leads two strangers to a tenement where a life-or-death decision must be made; $18, $15

Metropolitan Opera via The Associated Press

Natalie Dessay stars as Cleopatra in The Metropolitan Opera's production of eGiulio Cesare." Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX will screen an encore presentation of the opera at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. "TRUE WEST": A staged reading of Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Sam Shepard's play; $3; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. SARA WATKINS:The Nickel Creek singer performs, with Kris Orlowski; $23 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. REHAB: The Georgia alternative southern-rock band performs; $15 plus fees; 8 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar & Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886. T.V. MIKE ANDTHE SCARECROWES:The California folk band performs, with Northwest

Northwest and Don Quixote; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541728-0879 or www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand. MIGHTY HIGH: The band performs genre-spanning dance music, with 2nd Hand Soldiers; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331.

FRIDAY REDMONDGARDENCLUBPLANT SALE: The members of this nonprofit club will have a variety of annuals, perennials, herbs, shrubs, fruits and vegetables to sell; proceeds from the sale finance the club's various community activities; free; noon-6 p.m.; 2614

S.W. Quartz Ave.; 541-548-4952 or redmondoregongardenclub.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Former Bendite Bob Welch talks about his book, "Cascade Summer: My Adventure on Oregon's Pacific Crest Trail"; $5; 6 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. UPSTREAM:A fundraiser for The Upstream Project with catered dinner, silent auction and exhibit of student work; $55; 6-9 p.m.; The Barn in Sisters, 68467 Three Creeks Road; 541-382-6103 ext. 33 or www.restorethedeschutes.org. "HOW DID WEGET HERE?" LECTURESERIES: Dr. Stephen Giovannoni talks about "Extreme Outliers: How the Smallest Cells in the Ocean Change the Planet"; $10, $50 for series, $8 for Sunriver Nature Center members, free for students with ID; 6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-593-4394. "CINDERELLA":A performance of the Rodgers & Hammerstein's "Cinderella" (Enchanted Edition)with a live orchestra; $10, $25 for VIP, $5 students; 7 p.m.; Trinity Lutheran Church 8 School, 2550 N.E. Butler Market Road, Bend; 541-382-1850 or music© saints.org. "YOU CAN'TTAKE IT W ITH YOU": The Summit High School theater department presents a play by Pulitzer Prize winners Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman about a man who does as he pleases; $8, $5 seniors and children; 7 p.m.; Summit High School commons, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-322-3300. "BEASTS OFTHE SOUTHERN WILD":A screening of the 2012

Academy Award nominated film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-475-3351. "THE SUNSETLIMITED":Stage Right Productions presents the Cormac McCarthy play about an encounter on a NewYork subway platform that leads two strangers to a tenement where a life-or-death decision must be made; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. THE FREEWAY REVIVAL: The North Carolina rock band performs, with Leo J. and the Melee; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541728-0879 or www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand.

Franklin Avenue. 2:38a.m. — Smoke odor reported, 655 N.W. Jackpine Ave. 4:50 p.m.— Smoke odor reported, 1615 S.W. Salmon Ave. 7 —Medical aid calls. Thursday 1:55 p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 11050 N.E. Vineyard Way. 5 — Medical aid calls. Friday 4:29 p.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, 1705 South U.S. Highway 97. 7:D6p.m.— Smoke odor reported, area of Northwest 91st Street.

6 — Medical aid calls. Saturday 4 — Medical aid calls. Sunday 10:55 a.m.— Brush or brushand-grass mixture fire, area of Southwest15th Street. 1:16 p.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, 826 N.W. Slxth St. 9 — Medical aid calls.

SATURDAY REDMOND GRANGE BREAKFAST: A community breakfast with scrambled eggs, sausage, beverages, pancakes or biscuits and gravy; benefits Josephine's Heroes, a local Central Oregon Great Strides for Cystic Fibrosis walking team; $6,$3 ages12 and younger; 7-10:30 a.m.; Redmond Grange, 707 S.W. Kalama Ave.; 541-480-4495. POLE PEDALPADDLE: Participants will race through multiple sports from Mt. Bachelor to Bend; the Les Schwab Amphitheater, which marks the end of the race, will host a festival with music and vendor booths; free for spectators; 9 a.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-388-0002 or www.mbsef.org.

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

REDMOND POLICE DEPARTMENT Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 6:55 a.m. May 7, in the 2300 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Unauthorizeduse — A vehicle was reported stolen at10:13 a.m. May 7, in the 2500 block of Southeast Jesse Butler Circle. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at10:50 a.m. May 7, in the area of Southwest Fifth Street and Southwest Evergreen Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 4:29 p.m. May 7, in the area of West state Highway 126 near milepost 109. Theft — A theft was reported at4:57 p.m. May 7,in the3300 block of Southwest lndian Place. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 5:46 p.m. May 7, in the area of Southwest Veterans Way near the railroad tracks. Theft — A theft was reported at 7 p.m. May 7, in the1800 block of North U.S. Highway 97. DUII —Ronda Lea Sundell, 50, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:38 a.m. May 8, in the 800 block of Northwest Teak Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident and an act of criminal mischief were reported at 7:38 a.m. May 8, in the 800 block of Northwest Teak Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 9:54 a.m.May 8,in the 800 block of West Antler Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:18 a.m. May 8, in the 2700 block of Southwest 24th Street. Burglary— A burglary was reported at11:25 a.m. May 8, in the 2400 block of Northwest Norse Drive. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 2:07 p.m. May 8, in the area of Southwest Rimrock Way and West Antler Avenue. Burglary— A burglary was reported at 4:01 p.m. May 8, in the 2400 block of Southwest 39th Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 4:29 p.m. May 8, in the 300 block of Northwest Quince Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 4:38 p.m. May 8, in the1600 block of Southwest Odem Medo Road. Burglary— A burglary was reported at 8:10 a.m. May 9, in the 2300 block of Northwest Elm Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:14 a.m. May 9, in the1300 block of Northeast Fifth Street. Theft — A theft was reported at

9:52 a.m. May 9, in the 1500 block of Southwest Reindeer Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:59 a.m. May 9, in the 2100 block of Northeast Fifth Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 9:19 p.m. May 9, in the area of Southwest Sixth Street and SouthwestHighland Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 10:02 p.m. May 9, in the 900 block of Southwest 26th Lane. Theft — A theft was reported and arrests made at1:56 a.m. May10, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 9:23 a.m. May10, in the 2700 block of Southwest Wickiup Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 10:12 a.m. May 10, in the area of Southwest Sixth Street and Southwest Glacier Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 3:32 p.m. May10, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at11:13 p.m. May 10, in the 3400 block of Southwest Salmon Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at10:03 a.m. May 11, in the area of Southwest Meadow Lane and Southwest Windrow Court. Burglary — A burglary was reported at11:04 a.m. May11, in the 2800 block of Southwest Cascade Vista Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 11:34a.m. May11, in the100 block of Southwest 26th Street. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at1:12 p.m. May 11, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:30 p.m. May11, in the 2900 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft — A theft was reported at 3:38 p.m. May12, in the 200 block of Southeast Jackson Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 4:23 p.m. May12, in the 500 block of Northeast Negus Loop.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:30 a.m. May10, in the area of North Main Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 3:45 p.m. May10, in the area of Northwest Cains Road. Theft —A theft with an estimated loss of $3,740 was reported at 8:17 p.m. May10, in the area of Northwest Third Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 5:32 p.m. May11, in the area of Northeast Third Street. DUII —Jesse C. Wheeler, 24, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:51 a.m. May12, in the area of Southeast Second Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered and items stolen at12:46 p.m. May12, in the

area of Southeast Fifth Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 1:02 p.m. May12, in the area of Northeast Stoneridge Loop. Theft — A theft was reported at 7:04 p.m. May12, in the area of Southeast Lynn Boulevard.

JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 4:36 p.m. May 6, in the area of Feather Drive and lris Lane in Culver. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:36 p.m. May 6, in the 1400 block of Northeast Grimm Drive in Madras. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 9:39 a.m. May 7, in the 1700 block of South Adams Drive in Madras. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 12:30 p.m. May 7, in the 400 block of Third Street in Culver. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 6:41 p.m. May 9, in the 6400 block of Southwest Feather Drive in Culver. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at10:16 a.m. May 12, in the 2500 block of Culver Highway in Metolius. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:20 p.m. May 12, in the 5100 block of Southwest Clubhouse Road in Crooked River Ranch.

OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Julie Ann Miller, 46, was arrested on suspicion of

driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:33 a.m. May 10, in the area of West U.S. Highway 20 near milepost18. DUII —Kevin Paul Owen, 32, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:46 a.m. May 11, in the area of Southwest 29th Street and Southwest Zenith Avenue in Redmond. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 5:34 p.m. May11, in the area of Brooks Lane and Pine Loop Drive in La Pine. Unauthorizeduse — A vehicle was reported stolen at 5:34 p.m. May 11, in the area of Brooks Lane and Pine Loop Drive in La Pine. DUII —Joshua Truman Winger, 21, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:19 p.m. May10, in the 51300 block of U.S. Highway 97 in La Pine. Unauthorizeduse — A vehicle was reported stolen at 8:19 p.m. May10, in the 51300 block of U.S. Highway 97 in La Pine.

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TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON AROUND THE STATE

ouse ovoeon os i a By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press

SALEM — The Oregon Legislature is nearing a vote on extending a tax on hospitals and nursing homes, but Senate Republicans are vowing to block it in hopes of extracting tougher cuts to public-employee pensions. The state House isscheduled to vote today on the tax, which is projected to raise about $2.1 billion over the next two years.

The money provides a big chunk of the funding for the Oregon Health Plan, the state's Medicaid program for low-income Oregonresidents.

Hospitals and most nursing homes support the measure. The tax dollars they pay are matched by the federal government and ultimately come back to them in the form of reimbursements for the care they provide for Medicaid patients. The tax was created in 2003 and was e x tended several times. The latest version expires this year. The extension will need votes from both parties to reach the supermajority required to pass bills that raise revenue. If majority Democrats all support it, at least two Republican votes in each chamber will be needed to reach the

three-fifths threshold. Senate Republicans said Mondaythat theywon't support any bill that raises revenue unlessDemocrats agree to steeper cuts to retirement benefits for retiredgovernment workers. Gov. John Kitzhaber signed a Democrat-backed bill last month that would save state and local governments $460 million in pension costs over the next two years. Republicans have pushed for more than $1 billion in pension savings, saying the rising costs of pensions is threatening investments in education and other government services.

Small jet runS Off runWay —A small jet airplane ran off the end of the runway at the McMinnville Municipal Airport Monday after-

noon. McMinnville Fire Department Division Chief Debbie McDermott

"I am concerned that the majority party believes we can get out of here without addressing those things, and we cannot," said Sen. Larry George, R-Sherwood. The latest iteration of the hospital tax would continue the existing 4.3 percent assessment applied to the net revenue of some hospitals. It would also add an additional 1 percent tax to create a new fund that would be used to reward hospitals that meet certain performance metrics. A l together, h ospitals stand to pay an estimated $745 million and earn back $2 billion.

says the Evergreen International Aviation, Inc., Lear jet was unable to stop and ended up in a ditch at the end of the runway. McDermott

says all three people aboard wereable to get out unhurt, and there appeared to be little damage. A receptionist at Evergreen said no one was available to comment.

Lane Ceunty SuSpenSien —The state of Oregon hassuspended Lane County for three years from applying for federal community development block grants because of mistakes in overseeing a$1 million rural water treatment project. The Eugene Register-Guard reports the state found the county failed to ensure and document

that contractors were paying their workers prevailing wages required on government-funded construction. The paper said the ban was imposed in December but not made public until word got out to

unincorporated communities that might apply through the county for the federal development grants. The state Infrastructure Finance Authority said most of the problems have been cleared up, and it

would consider exceptions to the ban in true emergencies or if there are significant health or safety issues.

Oregon National Guard drones —TheOregon National Guard will be showing off four new drones that are based at the Eastern Oregon Regional Airport in Pendleton. The guard is hold-

Army won't kill gulls to helpCaspianterns By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press

GRANTS PASS — The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said Monday it will not continue killing gulls that have been eating baby C aspian terns at the West Coast's largest nesting colony, located at the mouth of the Columbia River. The corps issued an environmental assessment to decide whether the continued failure of the tern colony on East Sand Island to produce young due to predation by the gulls would drive the terns to return to another island upstream, where they consumed millions of baby salmon. The corps concluded that new research indicates the terns are not likely to move the colony, so no action is needed. In recent years, eagles flying overhead have scared the terns into flying off their nests, allowing gulls to move in and eat the

eggs and young left behind. Federal agencies became

The Associated Press file photo

Caspian terns tend to a chick outside Adel. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers announced Monday that it will not continue to kill gulls that have been eating baby terns on East Sand Island. c oncerned t ha t t h e te r n s U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. would return to Rice Island if Bob Salinger of Portland they continued to fail to pro- Audubon said the situation duce new young. points out how complicated The assessment looked at it is getting to protect salmon shooting up to 150 gulls to from natural predators, when keep them from eating baby the real problem is the dams terns. The corps started shoot- on the Columbia. "What we are seeing isa ing gulls last year under a permit to kill up to 50 granted by wider and wider net being cast

ing a press conference at the airport today, where it will fly the unmanned aircraft for the first time in civilian airspace. The Federal Aviation Administration recently gave approval to fly drones over

a100-square-mile area of mostly wheat fields north of the airport. The guard has previously flown the drones in military airspace at thenearby Boardman Bombing Range.The RQ 7B Shadow 200

to manipulate a variety of species — cormorants, gulls, Caspian terns, sea lions — natural predators that have coexisted for millennia with salmon," Salinger said. "In the meantime, we don't feel the core reasons for salmon declining have been adequately addressed by the corps - the dams." Meanwhile, the corps and otherfederalagencies charged with protecting salmon in the Columbia continue to look for ways to make their strategy for controlling tern predation on salmon, said corps spokeswoman Diana Fredlund. The terns had been nesting farther upriver on Rice Island, made of left-over sand from dredging operations, where they consumed millions of baby salmon migrating to the ocean. Federal agencies forced the terns to relocate closer to the Columbia's mouth, where the birds eat fewer salmon because they are mixed in with otherspecies of ocean fish.

drones have awingspan of14 feet and are equipped with two cameras — one infrared and onevideo. Spokesman Pat Caldwell says Bravo Company of the 41 Brigade Special Troops Battalion will be

training with the drones. Garbage Canned —Among the amenities that will be cut from some federal recreation sites in Southern Oregonbecause of thefederal budget cuts known assequestration: garbagecans. TheMedford Mail Tribune reports that garbage cans have been removed from the

parking lots and trail heads at UpperandLower Table Rocks because crews won't be able to keep up with emptying them. Jim Whittington, spokesman for the Medford District of the U.S. Bureau of Land Man-

agement, said hikers andcampers will be encouraged to packout their trash. Among its budget cuts, the district expects its seasonal summer staff to be cut in half.

Fire CenterS tO merge —Two centers that send crews to battle wildfires in south-central Oregon are to be merged next year

in Lakeview. Theinteragency fire centers are now in Lakeview and Klamath Falls. They have state and federal workers who decide

where fire crews should bedeployed. Kevin Abel, a spokesmanfor the Bureau of LandManagement, says thedecision was driven by operational rather than budgetary considerations. He says the consolidation will mean that the fire crews closest to a wildfire will be

dispatched to it. Counting year-round andseasonal employees, Abel says, there are 11 workers in the Lakeview office and nine in Klamath Falls at the height of fire season. Abel says no decisions have been

made about how large the consolidated Lakeview staff will be. — From wire reports

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Plan tests Universi officials l(itzhaber's dispute survey on gambling presidents' pay policy The Associated Press PORTLAND — H i g h er education officials are disputing a n a t ional survey that said Oregon State University President Ed Ray's compensation put him at No. 20 among American public university presidents. The Chronicle of Higher Education's survey results were released Sunday and said Ray's 2011-2012 pay topped $700,000. But the state university system's general counsel, Ryan Hagemann told The Oregonian newspaper (http://bit.ly/10CBItG ) that w as w r o ng : R a y ma d e $590,000. The rankings mistakenly counted a sup p l emental retirement payment twice, Hagemann said. The publication made the same mistake with al l o f O r egon's public university presidents,

The Associated Press MEDFORD — Gov. John Kitzhaber's attempts to limit Oregon casinos to one per tribe are getting a test from a video gambling establishment the Coquille Indian Tribe proposes in Medford. A lthough K i t zhaber h a s opposed an expansion beyond the nine tribal casinos currently i n o p eration, the Coquille tribe said it n ever agreed to a permanent provision limiting it to the one it has in North Bend along the Oregon coast. And, the Medford Mail Tribune reported,the compact the Coquille tribe signed with the state in 2000 doesn't prohibit the sort of v i deo-only operation planned for a bowling alley in Medford. Federal regulations categorize casinos with table games such as craps, roulette and blackjack as Class III. More modest operations with video games fall into a Class II

games. He said he continued his policy, dating to the 1990s and his first two terms in office, that there should be one casino per tribe in Oregon.

of liying

overstating c o mpensation by $115,000 to $300,000, he sald. In 2011-12, Ray was paid a salary of $426,000, part from taxpayers, part from the OSU Foundation.Tax-

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into a state retirement system, and t h e f o u ndation paid $126,000 into a supplemental retirement account. At $590,000, Ray would be about 52nd inthe compensation rankings, the Oregonian said. S ara H ebel, a se n i o r editor at The Chronicle of Higher Education, said the p aper would c o rrect t h e p residents' r e ported p a y and rankings if it confirmed there were errors. She said universities were given a one-day chance last week to verify the f i gures, and Oregon universities did not request changes.

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category. The Coquille compact explicitly said it did not cover Class II operations, the Mail T ribune reported, and t h e limit to one Class III casino lasted five years. The federal government requiresthe gambling compacts between tribes and states. In a letter to the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs on May 6 that reiterated his policy of one casino per tribe, Kitzhaber said he understood the distinction between the two classesof casinos but argued that opening a video-only operation would open the door to an operation with t able

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

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end's noise ordinance is getting a needed upgrade, but the revision flops when it comes to protecting homes from arbitrary enforcement. The Bend City Council is scheduled to vote on changes to the ordinance on Wednesday. The councilmade a number of worthy changes in the ordinance at its last meeting. For one, it lowered the fine for the first offense. The ordinance was written so that the fine for the first violation in a year would be up to $750. The council decided to grind it down to a more reasonable maximum of $250. The fines for succeeding violations are unchanged. They are up to $1,500 for the second in a year, up to $5,000 for the third, and the fourth or more is up to $10,000. The amount of the penalty cannot be reduced morethan 50 percent by the municipal court for any violation. There is also new language in place that would protect athletic events from violating the ordi-

nance if they drag on into the night because of overtime, delays or extra innings. That's much better than asking fans: Please be quiet. But the most vital change the council made is to require that a noise meter reading "shall be taken" if the amplified noise originates from a commercial establishment. Before that change, enforcement could be without measurements. And even now there is a still a section of the ordinance that reads "sound measurements are n ot required." The question that remains is: Why don'thomesdeserve thesame clear protection from arbitrary enforcement'? The council should address that on Wednesday.

Tighten rules onDAs, collection companies he Oregon Senatevoted in late April to approve a measure designed to tighten the rules covering companies that collect on bad checks for local district attorneys. Senate Bill 525 would require that a bill collector working for the local district attorney use his own letterhead, telephone number and address on any letters he sends out. It also makes it legal for district attorneys to send their bad check cases to private bill collectors as part of a bad check diversion program. Currently, DAs in several counties contract with one of two companies to collect what's owed when a check bounces. The practice may not be explicitly covered by existing law,and SB 525 would make clear that it is legal with certain conditions. The companies, meanwhile, use the district attorney's official letterhead but include their own telephone numbers and addresses and assess fees not specifically permitted under current law. And that's where the problems lie. The letters themselves tell recipients they must pay for the bounced check and, according to The Oregonian, pay fees, which can be far higher than the face value of the check, sometimes as much as $300 or more. Fees cover such things as cost of the diversion class,cost of bank charges, and the like. Failing to do all that can result in prosecution, though that is rare. The district attorney in the state's largest county pros-

While check bouncing is

enormously expensive to American businesses — some $127 billion nationally in 2009, according to information from the Federal Reserve — allowing collectors to insinuate they're something they're not is wrong. ecuted only 27such cases from 2010-2012. Locally, D eschutes C ounty District Attorney Patrick Flaherty has suspendedhisoffice'scontract with a check collection company over just the sort of issues cleared up in the bill. He and members of his staff are working to correct those matters. While check bouncing is enormously expensive to American businesses — some $127 billion nationally in 2009, according to information from the Federal Reserve — allowing collectors to insinuate they're something they're not is wrong. We certainly do not believe DAs should be barred from hiring check collection agencies, given the magnitude of the bounced check problem. We do believe that the companies should be required to be honest about who they are. SB 525 addresses that issue. The House should approve it, as well.

M Nickel's Worth Vote yes for schools,911

the priority of the education "elite." The researchers believed that the Education an d p u b li c s a fety high preference for vocational edu— what's more important for a cation was driven largely by Central community? and Eastern Oregon residents. They As a f i scal conservative who surmised our area's high unemployseriously questions public expen- ment would lead residents to want ditures, and usually opposes re- "direct job training for high school quests for more money, Ialmost students entering a challenging job surprise myself by endorsing two market." bond measures as essential for our One candidate fo r R e dmond community. school board is an avid supporter Most of our school buildings are of enhanced vocational education aging and need serious upgrading. — Johnny Corbin. He understands And as our growth continues, we the needs of many of our youth, need new schools. This bond mea- those preferring not to go to college sure will accomplish both, without directly out of high school. These an increase in our tax bill! high school graduates want and Similarly, the 911 measure will need job skills that are in demand in provide a continuation of this essen- our area. tial service at a slightly reduced cost If this approach sounds good to to taxpayers. you, please vote for Corbin. You'll be I heartily encourage a yes vote on making the future brighter for our each of these measures. children and our grandchildren. Allan Bruckner Dale and Hazel Jenson Bend Redmond

Corbin supports vocational education

M aybe Wydenisseeing the light

Oregon's education npolicymakers" and the general public have dramatically d i f f erent p r i orities for improving public education, according to public opinion research conducted by a g r oup based at Portland State University called Oregon's Kitchen Table. In this research, 3,223 Oregonians were given choices on how to spend money on education (Oregon Live website, Aug. 16, 2012) Respondents were most interested in enhancing vocational education programs. Needless to say, this is not

I thought I was in a time warp when I first read your front page article in the May 2 Bulletin. A U.S. senator saying, "The reason we are on the floor talking about it, and talking about ... businesses being forced to do this against their will, is that it is not without costs. It is not without hassle." This had to be some Republican railing about the adverse effects of Obamacare or some other Democrat mandate that would hurt the economy, right? Something dredged upfrom two or more years

ago. Old news.

But what a shock to see that it wasn't some reactionary conservative but rather our own liberal icon Sen. Ron Wyden making the case against an Internet sales tax. Arguing that government interference, higher taxes and unfunded mandates are bad for business! So it wasn't a time warp after all, and it might have been a sign that Wyden is finally beginning to see the light about some of the ways that his big government policies stifle the private sector, but I'm not holding my breath. Jeff Keller Bend

Road too narrow for cars and bikes I read where the paved bicycle pathway from Sunriver to L a va B utte lookout entrance wil l b e opened this summer. I wondered if bicycles would be allowed to use the road up to the top, so I stopped in at the entrance hut to find out. According to the official at the entrance, bicycles will be allowed to use the road to the top along with cars. While driving up the road, I found that the road is narrow enough to prevent a car going up to pass a car going down unless each moves off the pavement and onto the narrow dirt shoulders. If bicycles get into the mix, there will be additional problems because most riders will be walking alongside their bikes up the steep road. I would like to hear from the officials if they have a "plan b" such as bus service. Gary Will LaPine

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Obama, America need to wake up to terrorist threat By Ed Klmball n n the rush to "nitpick"n the Boston terror attack — not trivializing this horrific event in any w ay — the Obama administration and the country as a whole are missing the giant picture of the dangerous watershed of worldwide Islamic terrorism! Fox news estimates that 90 percent of all worldwide terror comes from the Islamic block. To wit: In a recent week on TV, at least four nationally known personalities, including a former governor of South Carolina, a former mayor of New York and a person on "Meet the Press" have decried the misclassification of the Fort Hood massacre three years ago as a "workplace disturbance" by Obama and the U.S. Army, when it was a direct Islamic radical attack with the killer in the

process of shouting Islamic slogans. He killed 20 U.S.servicemen and wounded scores. He was a card-carrying, mosque-attending Muslim. The real crime is that he has not gone to trial and been convicted due to political wrangling and political correctness considerations. If this event happened in an Islamic country by a U.S. citizen, his head would be in the street by nightfall. The powers that be were loath to call this an Islamic terror attack and sort of kicked off the "soft on terrorism" atmosphere! The president finally used the word terrorattack when bombs exploded in Boston; don't the gunshots at Fort Hood qualify as a terror attack? Our new Secretary of Defense: It was brought out in the confirmation hearings that Chuck Hagel had

word terror!) We were lied to! Now even after Hillary Clinton said before Congress, "I take the full rerefused to sign a letter condemn- sponsibility," eyewitnesses are told ing Iran as a terrorist nation! What by the government to keep silent! kind of a hard-nosed policy can we Investigation again appears "swept expect from him as Iran proceeds under the rug." The president and toward nuclear might? Former U.N. his spokespeople seem to have an ambassador John Bolton said, "they aversion to at any time use the words "Muslim" and "Islamic," using them have four months to reality!" High in the administration leaks: only under duress, and "terrorist" fiLast year, two n ewsmen caused nally in the connection with bombs. damage to our agents and our allies. (Bullets don't count.) Eric Holder to investigate; swept unAppeasement of the villains has der rug? led to two world wars. Obama is on a "slippery slope" with both North The Benghazi massacre being covered up as an attack when 100 Korea and Iran and you could add terrorists had the embassy sur- Pakistan. If Iran does not develop rounded, and this was certainly a the bomb, North K orea has anterror attack; and the administra- nounced that it will sell one to the tion covered it up (two weeks before highest bidder; picture Islamic terelection, no one wanted to hear the rorists with one — not pretty! Unless

IN MY VIEW

we identify the enemy as worldwide Islamic terrorism, we don't stand much of achance of a coordinated front against them. Obama will not admit that we are in a global war with Islamic terrorists when most Americans are realizing this and are tired of the mealymouth treatment by the media. (I guess there could be a block of voters alienated.) With several thousand trained terrorists(and more every day),who will give their lives as suicide bombers for Allah and their pledging of death to the "infidel," unless our leaders and the American public in general wake up and admit what we are all up against, the Boston massacre may just be the tip of the

iceberg! — Ed Kimball livesin Redmond.


TUESDAY, MAY 'I4, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Florence S. Best, of Bend Dec. 31, 1925 - April 30, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: The urn will be placed in a private ceremony at a later date. Service details will follow in a full length obituary. Contributions may be made to:

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

BIot els

a vise mi ions By Margalit Fox New York Times News Service

Continued from B1 In Deschutes County, outside the city limits of Bend

and Sisters, open burning is allowed through the end of May as usual,saidcounty forester Ed Keith.

Cary

and Lakeview in the south. East to west it goes from OnContinued from B1 tario on the Oregon-Idaho He said he did because he border to the eastern side of wanted to experience living the Cascades. The diocese on his own and learn how covers nearly 67,000 square to pay his own bills. He vol- miles, according to the diounteered at a legal aid office cese website. in Chicago. He worked at a Pope Leo XIII created the medical clinic for farmwork- D iocese of Baker, then called ers in California. He painted the Diocese of Baker City, in h ouses i n P o r t land a n d 1903, according to the webEugene. site. In 1987, the diocesan ofHe went back to seminary fices moved from Baker City in 1988 and was ordained a to Bend, where Cary now priest in 1992. After spend- has his office. Cary's travel over the past ing time at churches in Portland and Salem he spent 12'/2 year hasn't been limited to years in Medford before mov- Oregon. He said he's also ing back to Eugene where he made three trips to Vatican was a priest for eight months C ity, where he me t w i t h before becoming bishop. church leaders, i ncluding Now 65, he said it's been now Pope Emeritus Benedict a pleasure to become reac- XVI. He said he has yet to quainted the past year with meet Pope Francis, who asOregon east of the Cascades. cended to the Throne of PeThe travel has been the ter in March after Benedict biggest change in becoming resigned in late February. a bishop. He's driven about While he said he misses 20,000 miles, mostly on his the ongoing connections he own in a 2007 Subaru Out- had with parishioners as a back that was donated to the priest, he said he is enjoying diocese. the travel and meetings with "Almost every w eekend a lot of people in different I have someplace to go," he settings as a bishop. "It's a wonderful l i f e," said. The diocese stretches from Cary said. Hood River and Pendleton in — Reporter: 541-617-7812, the north to Klamath Falls ddarlingC<bendbtdletin.com

Waldo

the fire. "Around this time of year when things haven't yet greened up and are still really dry, we see them," he said. "Someone will

be burning and will go inside to eat or answer the phone, then the wind kicks up and the fire will

spread to a neighbor's yard"

Keith stresses staying with "If an agricultural producer the fire, having a water source needs to burn, there are ways nearby and being certain the fire to go through a process and is completely out before leaving. receive a permit," he said. From 2001-2011, an average Each county has its own of 85 percent of wildfires in the regulations regarding fire U.S. were human-caused, acsize, required distance from cording to statistics from the structures and permitting. U.S. Forest Service. Taking care

Submitted photo

Joyce Brothers, a f ormer academic psychologist who, long before Drs. Ruth, Phil and Laura, was counseling m illions ove r the ai r w aves, Death Notices are free and died Monday at will be run for oneday, but her home in Fort specific guidelines must be L ee, N.J. S h e followed. Local obituaries n, was 85. are paid advertisements Her daughter, Br o thers submitted by families or Lisa B r o t hers funeral homes.Theymay Arbisser, confirmed the death. be submit tedbyphone, Dr. Joyce Brothers, as she mail, email or fax. The was always known p r ofesBulletin reserves the right to sionally — a full-name halledit all submissions. Please mark of the more formal times include contact information in which she began her career in all correspondence. — was widely described as the For information on anyof mother of m ass-media psythese services or about the chology because of the firm, obituary policy, contact pragmatic and homiletic guid541-617-7825. ance sheadministered for deDeadlines:Death Notices cades via radio and television. are accepted until noon H istorically, sh e w a s a Monday through Friday bridge between advice columfor next-day publication nists like Dear Abby and Ann and by 4:30 p.m. Friday Landers, who got their start for Sunday publication. in the mid-1950s, and the selfObituaries must be help advocates of the 1970s received by 5p.m. Monday and afterward. through Thursday for She was also a ubiquitous publication on the second guest on talk shows like "The day after submission, by Tonight Show" and on variety 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday shows like "The Sonny and Continued from B1 publication, and by 9 a.m. Cher Comedy Hour." Opponents blasted the Monday for Tuesday S he was a p a n elist o n legislation as unnecessary publication. Deadlines for many game shows, including and argued the l ake, a display ads vary; pleasecall "What's My Line?" and "The It/z-hour drive from Bend, for details. Hollywood Squares." These should be available for all a ppearances had a f i t t i n g to enjoy. Phone: 541-617-7825 symmetry: It was as a gameThe bill now heads to the Email: obits©bendbulletin.com show contestant that Brothers governor for his signature. Fax: 541-322-7254 had received her first televiThe ban takes effect as Mail:Dbituaries sion exposure. soon as Kitzhaber signs it. P.D. Box 6020 J oyce Diane B auer w a s Rep. Bruce Hanna, RBend, DR 97708 born in New York on Oct. 20, R oseburg, criticized t h e 1927, and reared in Queens legislation as being restricand Manhattan. She earned tive in nature. There were a bachelor's degree from Coramendments, he said, that nell, with a double major in could have carved out cerDEATHS home economics and psycholtain months for those with ogy, followed by a Ph.D. in seaplanes to also enjoy the ELSEWHERE psychology from Columbia. lake. "I look at this as just one In the late 1940s and early '50s, Brothers taught psycholDeaths of note from around more way you take away the world: ogy at Hunter College. By the from Oregonians some of James L. Tolbert, 86: Enter- mid-'50s, while her husband, the places they have histortainment attorney who led the Milton Brothers, was pursuing ically enjoyed and restrict "March on H ollywood," the a medical residency, she had it to those who want it all campaign that pushed Hol- left the academy to stay home to themselves," he said of lywood and Madison Avenue with their baby daughter. the lake, which is located for greaterrepresentation of Milton Brothers' residenin Lane County about 50 black people on-screen and in cy paid $50 a month. Joyce miles southwest of Bend. craft unions. Died April 22. Brothers decided to suppleRep. Jim W eidner, RJack Butler, 85: Football ment their income by appearYamhill, invoked the lake's player who was ignored in ing on a quiz show. She settled reputation for purity in arthe National Football League on "The $64,000 Question," guing against the ban. "This bill isn't necessary draft but became a Hall of produced in New York. She Fame defensive back with the made her first appearance on ... It's maintained its cleanPittsburgh Steelers and was the show in late 1955, returnliness for years and years," chosen forthe league's all-de- ing week after week until she Weidner said. cade team of the 1950s. Died had won the top prize, $64,000 House Republican LeadS aturday i n P i t t sburgh o f — onlythe second person, and er Mike McLane, R-Powell complications from a staph in- the first woman, to do so. Butte, also voted against fection that had lingered from But for the most part, Broththe bill. After the floor dethe knee injury that ended his ers displayed a far more sebate, he said in a statement careerin 1959. rious side:More than once, that very fe w s eaplanes George Sauer, 69: Wide reshe dissuaded suicidal callers use the lake and their landceiver for the New York Jets to her radio show from ending on it "does not pose a who played a pivotal role in ing their lives, keeping them danger." the team's stunning victory on the line with encouraging The legislation will put to in Super Bowl III, and who talk until their phone numrest an ongoing debate over later quit p rofessional foot- bers could be traced and help what type of recreational acball because he considered it dispatched. tivities should be allowed on dehumanizing. Died May 7 of M ilton B r others, a n i n the lake. The state Marine Alzheimer's disease. t ernist wh o s p ecialized i n Board banned motorboats Alan Abelson, 87: A former d iabetes treatment, died i n on the lake previously, but top editor of Barron's maga- 1989. Besides he r d a ughthe Aviation Board allowed zine who made waves — some- ter, an ophthalmic surgeon, the use of float planes. The times tsunamis — by writing a B rothers is s u rvived b y a different rules regulating pugnacious, sagacious stock sister, E l a in e Go l d smith; the ban sparked a jurisdicmarket column that denounced four grandchildren; and two tional controversy. Wall Street hucksterism and great-grandchildren. Rep. Paul Holvey, D-Euroutinelyrocked share prices. Died of a heart attack Thursday in Manhattan. A Free Public Service Orepon Newspapcr Jacqueline Brookes, 82: An Publtehere Association Q gg~g actress who appeared in films I K693~ t and on television but who won h er widest acclaim on t h e rr stage in New York and around the country, performing the work of Shakespeare, Moliere, Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, Pirandello, Edward Albee and other dramatists over a 60from 36 Counties, year career. Died April 26 in New York.

Obituary policy

Fire

Bishop Liam Cary of the Diocese of Baker in Bend, left, met with Pope Benedict XVI last fall. Between them is Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet.

Check with your local fire protection district prior to

when burning fires at home can

burning. No open-debris burning

millions of dollars.

save lives, natural resources and In 2012, 9.3 million acres of

is allowed in Bend. Recreational fires, barbecue pits

and bonfires are allowed as long as they meet the city's guidelines. Contact the Bend Fire Department at 541-322-

6309 to learn more, or view

private, state, and federal land, and more than 4,400 structures burned in wildfires, the third-

highest number of acres burned since at least1960, according to the Forest Service. — From staff reports

a PDF of Bend's guidelines at www.bend.or.us/mod-

ules/showdocument. aspx?documentid=3127. Keith said at least a few hu-

mplements

man-caused fires could have been prevented each year had better attention been paid to

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAY 'I4, 2013

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

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Today: Partly cloudy

Tonight: Partly cloudy skies and seasonable temperatures

skies and seasonable

Get localweather u dates

tempera-

HIGH

t ur e s

65

35 WEST Coastal clouds early otherwise partly cloudy

As t oria 59/46

Umatilla

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Seasideo 55/47 • CannonPeach

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64/45

Lincoln City

67/39

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68/40

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5 8/49 ~

62/3i

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Chemult 62/33

73/46

76/49

Valeo Juntura

• Bul'DS Riley 66/39

68/40

Frenchgle 76/44

Rome

• 96'

75/42

Ontario

70/42

• Klamath

Ashland

• 39'

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• Lakeview

FallS ew3e

68/44

60/48

Yesterday's state extremes

Jordan Valley

65/38

• 74/47

• Brookings

74/49

75/42

Paisley

Chiloquin

Medford

Nyssa

69/36

rants Pass 72/44

Ontario

65/40

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Unity

64/36

• Fort Rock 68/35

62/34

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SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 5:40 a.m. Moon phases Sunsettoday.... 8 24 p.m. First Full L a st Sunrise tomorrow .. 5:39 a.m. Sunset tomorrow... 8:25 p.m. Moonrise today.... 9:25 a.m. Moonsettoday ........none May17 May 24 May 31 June 8 •

Yesterday Tuesday Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.

PLANET WATCH

TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5:50 a.m...... 8:54 p.m. Venus......6:19 a.m...... 9:29 p.m. Mars.......5:23 a.m...... 7:49 p.m. Jupiter......711 a m.....10 29 pm. Satum......633pm......512 am. Uranus.....3:56 a.m...... 4:29 p.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 68/48 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........87m1997 Monthtodate.......... 0.02" Record low......... 19 in 1955 Average month todate... 0.33" Average high.............. 64 Year to date............ 2.59" Average low .............. 36 Average year to date..... 4.46" 6arometric pressureat 4 p.m30.09 Record 24 hours ...0.61 in1929 *Melted liquid equivalent

WATER REPORT

W e d. Bend,westofHwy97.....Low H i /Lo/WBend,eastof Hwy.97......Low

Astoria ........59/54/0.15.....59/46/c.....59/49/sh Baker City......85/46/0.00....68/39/pc.....69/41/pc Brookings......62/52/0.00....60/48/pc.....61/49/pc 6urns..........84/40/0.00....69/38/pc.....70/40lpc Eugene........70/57/0.02....67/43/pc......68/47/c Klamath Falls .. 77/41/0 00 ...68/36/pc ...67/40/pc Lakeview.......79/39/0.00 ....69/39/s.....69/43/pc La Pine.........70/42/NA....62/29/pc.....65/34/pc Medford.......76/50/0.00....74/47/pc.....73/49/pc Newport.......55/52/0.03....59/44/pc......58/48/c North Bend......63/54/NA....58/49/pc......61/52/c Ontario........96/59/0.00.....76/49/s.....78/54/pc Pendleton......71/50/0.13....69/42/pc.....74/48/pc Portland .......70/57/0.00....66/48/pc......68/50/c Prineville.......66/47/0.00....65/37/pc.....70/40/pc Redmond.......70/40/0.00....66/36/pc.....69/41/pc Roseburg.......73/59/0.00....71/46lpc.....71/49lpc Salem ....... 68/57/000 .67/45/pc ... 68/49/c Sisters.........68/46/0.00....61/34/pc......67/37/c The Dages......74/58/0.00 ....69/46/pc......73/49/c

HIGH LOW

63 37

FIRE INDEX

OREGON CITIES

Mostly sunny and pleasant conditions

Sisters..............................Low La Pine...............................Low Redmond/Madras........Low Prineville..........................Low Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme

The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen.

Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 49,741...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 164,333..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 77,162...... 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 30,045 . . . . 47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 143,574..... 153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 311 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,600 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 10 LOW MEDIUM H I 63 Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 48.9 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 114 Deschutes RiverAt 6enham Falls ..... . . . . 2,133 Crooked RiverAbove Prinevige Res.. ... . . . . . 51 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 228 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 13.2 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 48.9 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 M~ E.UM LOW I or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

To report a wildfire, call 911

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 7

IPOLLEN COUNT

Qy

g%g

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

o www m »

peratures

HIGH LOW

A chance of showers early, then becoming partly cloudy

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

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

YeSterday'S

and seasonable tem-

Partly cloudy and seasonable.

D

• 5 „,

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eu38 Unlo~

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Willowdale

56 I32

Condon

67/45•

Newport

• Meacham

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63/42

67/41

Camp siae

Salem Sa em

61/46

69/42

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Maupin

Government

,

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Wa l lowa

• PendletOn 5,57/33

Sa n dy 65/44

• Hermiston " ' " e9i43 I

,

McMinnville

6iggs

Da l l es 66/45 Arlington 69/ r, • " • oWasco

HjgsboroPortland x66/48

69/44

Th

68/42

Tigamook•

Mostly cloudy skies with a chance of showers

BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST:5TATE I,

Partly cloudy skies

•g4

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FRONTS Cold

CONDITIONS •+++4 . 6+++ '

o4

4 4 4 3 d 8 x

W ar m Stationary Showers T storms Rain

Flurries Snow

Ice

Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/LolW City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......87/58/0 00..85/66/pc. 88/67/pc GrandRapids....55/29/0.00..71/61Ipc. 81/55/pc RapidCity.......90/50/000..77/48/pc. 75/52/pc Savannah.......76/53/0.00... 78/56/s .. 84/63/5 Akron ..........53/32/000..58/48/pc...80/61/t GreenBay.......57/30/000..68/56/pc.. 73/52/s Reno...........87/54/0.00...83/52/s.. 83/52/s Seattle..........66/54/0.11 ..64/48/pc. 63/49/sh Albany..........50/41/000...63/37/s...69/51/t Greensboro......66/43/0.00..70/52/pc.. 83/61/s Richmond.......65/41/0.00...68/52/s. 85/62/pc SiouxFalls.......89/50/000 ..89/52/pc. 75/51/pc Albuquerque.....82/54/000..85/59/pc.. 89/59/s Harnsburg.......56/41/000..63/43/pc. 72/57/pc Rochester, NY....50/36/0.00..58/45/pc...73/57/t Spokane ........63/52/0.23..64/42/pc. 68/45/pc Anchorage ......54/41/0.00..46/33/pc. 46/34/pc Hartford,CT .....57/44/0.00...65/36/s...69/51/t Sacramento......90/57/0.00...89/57/s.. 87/55/s Springfield, MO . 78/46/trace..85/62/pc...81/61/t Atlanta .........70/45/000...77/59/s.. 86/61/s Helena..........87/58/0.00..67/42/pc.71/46/pc St.Louis.........69/43/0.00..89/66/pc...86/65/t Tampa..........85/71/000...84/63/s..86/67/s Atlantic City.....60/37/000...65/49/s...64/58/t Honolulu........83/71/000...89/75/s. 87/75/pc SaltLake City ....93/62/0.00..84/54/pc. 85/57/pc Tucson..........96/71/0.00...96/67/s .. 98/67/s Austin..........84/48/0.00..85/6ipc.83/67lpc Houston ........81/55/0.00..83/67/pc...81/68/t SanAntonlo .....84/55/0.00...83/69/t. 85/68/pc Tulsa ...........88/50/0.00..87/64/pc.78/64/pc Baltimore .......60/3$000...66/4Is. 74/60/pc Huntsville.......71/42/0.00 ..82/57/pc. 84/60/pc SanDiego.......85/65/0.00...76/61/s.. 70/59/5 Washington,DC..63/46/0.01...67/49/s. 77/62/pc 6illings.........94/64/000..75/45/pc. 76/50/pc Indianapolis.....63/37/0.00..79/64/pc. 84/64/pc SanFrancisco....65/51/0.00...70/51/s.. 69/51/5 Wichita .........83/49/0.00..88/63/pc...83/62/t Birmingham .. 73/42/000 ..82/60/pc. 84/61/pc Jackson, MS.... 79/46/0.00. 85/59/s. 84/60/pc SanJose........77/53/000.. 77/51/5.. 75/52/5 Yakima .........74/52/0 00 68/43/pc. 73/47/pc Bismarck........91/54/000 ..76/45/pc. 75/49/pc Jacksonvile......78/61/000... 78/54/s.. 85/60/s SantaFe........81/42/0.00..79/52/pc.82/53/pc Yuma..........105/74/000..102/70/s. 100/68/5 Boise...........95/58/000...74/47/s.75/47/pc Juneau..........51/45/022..49/40/sh.51/39/sh INTERNATIONAL Boston..........60/46/000...60/44/s.65/54/pc Kansas City......77/45/0.00 ..92/64/pc...82/62/t Bndgeport,CT....59/45/0.00...60/43/s...62/53/t Lansing.........54/28/0.00..67/58/pc...83/55/t Amsterdam......57/46/014 54/46/sh 56/42/sh Mecca.........1 04/84/000 108/84/s. 111/82/5 Buffalo.........46/34/0.00 ..58/45/pc...70/57/t LasVegas......102/74/0.00 ..101/73/s .. 97/72/s Athens..........73/53/000..79/61/sh.76/63/pc Mexico City .....73/55/000... 75/55/t.. 76/55/t Burlington, VT....54/41/000... 61/37/s...68/53/t Lexington.......65/38/0 00 ..76/60/pc .. 82/63/s Auckland........66/46/0.00 ..68/59/pc.. 63/57/c Montreal........50/39/015... 59/41/s...59/54/r Caribou,ME.....52/39/000 ..57/33/pc. 63/42/pc Lincoln..........85/46/000..95/58/pc. 78/57/pc Baghdad........87/71/007 ..95/78/pc. 98/73/pc Moscow ........82/55/0.00...82/57/s. 82/60/pc Charleston, SC...75/55/000...75/56/s.. 81/63/s Little Rock.......83/50/000...88/63/s...81/63/t Bangkok........99/86/000 ..101/81/t. 101/84/t Nairobi.........77/54/0.00... 71/58/t...74/54/t Charlotte........69/42/000 ..74/54/pc .. 86/62/s LosAngeles......84/66/0 00... 78/61/s .. 72/60/s Beifng..........82/52/0 00 ..84/62/pc. 85/65/pc Nassau.........86/73/0.00..80/69/pc. 74/69/pc Chattanooga.....71/43/000 ..80/58/pc. 85/60/pc Louisvile........68/42/0.00..82/65/pc. 86/65/pc Beirut..........75/66/000 .. 72/61/pc. 71/61/sh New Delh/.......99/75/000 ..109/85/s.110/88/s Cheyenne.......81/52/000... 84/47/t...73/46/t MadisonWl.....64/31/000..83/59/pc. 76/53/pc Berlin...........61/39/000... 65/48/c. 75/52/sh Osaka..........81/55/0.00 ..80/59/pc. 76/52/pc Chicago...... 64/36/000 .87/69/pc.81/58/pc Memphis....... 75/49/000 86/65/s. 85/66/pc Bogota .........68/52/0.00... 68/50/t...70/51/t Oslo............46/41/0.15 52/37/pc. .. 54/45/sh Cincinnati.......62/36/000 ..76/59/pc. 85/63/pc Miami..........90/73/000...82/70/s .. 82/71/s Budapest........61/48/0.00... 71/51/s. 75/56/pc Ottawa.........52/37/0.03...59/37/s.55/50/sh Cleveland.......49/33/000 ..57/53/pc...71/57/t Milwaukee......51/33/000 ..69/61/pc. 75/53/pc Buenos Aires.....70/46/0 00.. 66/46/pc.. 48/36/s Paris............63/52/0.06 .. 61/44/sh. 60/41/sh ColoradoSpnngs.82/50/000... 81/50/t. 73/48/pc Minneapolis.....71/41/0.01..92/57/pc. 79/53/pc CaboSanLucas ..90/64/000 ..90/68/pc. 93/68/pc Rio de Janeiro....86/68/0 00... 82/69ls.. 83/70/s Columbia,MO...74/39/000 ..88/64/pc...82/63/t Nashville........71/39/0 00..83/59/pc. 86/63/pc Cairo...........95/68/000.. 86/61/5 84/61/pc Rome...........73/52/0.00... 69/59/s. 70/60/sh Columbia, SC....73/54/000...76/54/s .. 87/63/s New Orleans.....78/61/0.00..82/64/pc. 83/67/pc Calgary.........70/52/0.00.. 59/45/pc.63/46/pc Santiago........61/48/0.00... 56/51/c .. 60/57/c Columbus, GA....76/50/000...82/58/s.. 87/60/s NewYork.......58/46/000...65/49/s...66/56/t Cancun.........86/75/0.00... 83/74/t...83/74/t SaoPaulo.......79/63/0.00.. 78/60/pc. 80/62/pc Columbus OH....58/38/000 ..73/58/pc...84/63/t Newark Nl......59/45/0 00...65/47/s. 69/57/sh Dublin..........50/41/0.20 ..53/43/sh. 51/38/sh Sapporo ........48/48/0.00 59/43/sh. .. 52/46/sh Concord,NH.....56/41/000...64/30/5. 69/45/pc Norfolk, VA......64/57/0 00... 64/52/s. 81/62/pc Edinburgh.......48/36/0 00.. 46/35/sh. 52/39/sh Seoul...........79/57/000 ..77/54/pc. 74/61/pc Corpus Christi....85/64/000 ..82/72/pc. 83/72/pc Oklahoma City...88/55/0.00 ..88/65/pc...82/62/t Geneva.........6669/0.00... 69/50/s. 52/44/sh Shangha/........88/66/0.00... 72/64/c. 70/62/sh DallasFtWorth...88/54/000 ..88/65/pc. 79/66/pc Omaha.........83/48/000..95/59/pc. 78/58/pc Harare..........75/52/000 ..70/47/pc .. 71/46/s Singapore.......91/82/0.00... 91/81/t...91/80/t Dayton .........60/38/000..73/59/pc...83/63/t Orlando.........84/70/0 00... 82/60/5.. 85/63/s Hong Kong......88/77/0.00...83/78/c...82/75/t Stockholm.......66/45/0 00 ..59/40/sh. 55/44/pc Denver....... 85/56/000... 86/48/t.76I48/pc Palm Springs....108/74/0.00 ..107/67/s. 103/68/s Istanbul.........72/63/000 .. 71/56/pc.68/59/sh Sydney..........73/57/0.00... 66/50/s.67/45/pc DesMoines......76/43/0.00..95/62/pc. 79/56/pc Peoria..........69/35/0.00..85/65/pc...81/61/t Jerusalem.......76/56/0.04... 71/56/s.67/54lsh Taipei...........82/72/0.00 ..84/75/pc...86/73/t Detroit..........56/30/000 ..62/56/pc. 81/57/pc Philadelphia.....57/46/000... 66/49/s...73/58/t Johannesburg....68/47/0.00...64/43/s .. 63/43/s Tel Aviv.........84/64/0.00... 78/61/s. 74/61/sh Duluth..........55/32/001 ... 57/48/t .. 70/48/s Phoenix........l03/75/0 00 ..102/78/s. 101/75/s Lima...........72/61/0.00 .. 73/63/pc.72/63/pc Tokyo...........75/59/0.00..75/64/pc.. 73/56/c El Paso..........83/57/000 ..85/65/pc .. 94/67/s Pittsburgh.......53/34/0 00 ..62/50/pc...80/59/t Lisbon..........84/59/000 69/54/pc 62/52/sh Toronto.........52/34/0.04 57/46/pc 72/50/sh Fairbanks........35/22/000...41/28/c.. 49/28/c Portland,ME.....57/41/000...61/37/s. 63/48/pc London.........59/46/0.00 .. 54/39/sh. 53/36/sh Vancouver.......63/54/0.07..59/50/sh.61/54/sh Fargo...........93/50/0.00..81/51/pc.. 74/52/s Providence ......61/41/0.00...64/41/s. 67/52/pc Madrid .........81/48/0.00 76/51/sh. .. 66/43lsh Vienna..........63/46/000..71/49/pc.. 74/50/c Flagstaff ........78/34/000...76/43/s.. 75/43/s Raleigh.........65/44/0.00..71/51Ipc..83/62/s Manila..........90/81/0.03... 96/81/t...93/81/t Warsaw.........61/52/001..67/49/pc.. 74/53/5

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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 NB A , C3 Sports in brief, C2 MLB, C3 NHL, C2 Prep sports, C4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013

POLE PEDAL PADDLE

GOLF

Idaho manstarts fast at Master-40 POWELL BUTTE — An Idaho golfer shot the low round of the day, while five of17 Central

Oregon golfers in the field settled in position to make the championship flight in Monday's first round of the Pacific Northwest Golf Association Men's Master-40 Amateur Championship. Pocatello's Darren Kuhn, who finished second at the 2012 Master40, shot a 5-under-par 67 at windy Brasada

37th annualU.S.Bank Pole PedalPaddle

ew run courseset or

What:A six-stage multisport race that includes a downhill ski/snowboard stage, an 8-kilometer nordic ski, a 22-mile bike ride, a 5-mile run, a 2-

kilometer paddle and ahalf-mile sprint By Mark Morical The Bulletin

A new run course for the 37th annual U.S. Bank Pole Pedal Paddle on Saturday should not make only the racers happy, but also drivers who have been frustrated by race-related detours in years past. Beginning this year, the 5-mile run leg of the multisport race will start at the Athletic Club of Bend and include sections of the Deschutes River Trail on both banks from the South Canyon footbridge to Riverbend Park.

Canyons Golf Club. That was goodenough to amass a two-stroke

The new course offers a much more scenic route, and it includes much less pavement than the old course. Also, because PPP bikers will not be riding through the Century Drive-Mt. Washington Street roundabout as they did on the former route, along with the Century Drive-Colorado Avenue roundabout, the roundabouts will be open to traffic on Saturday morning and no detours will be necessary. The bike/run exchange will be at the Athletic Club of Bend. SeePPP/C4

Where:A course that starts at Mt. Bachelor ski area and finishes at Bend's Les Schwab Amphitheater Who:About 3,000 participants competing as

individuals or as members of teams When:Saturday, May18; start waves go from 9:15 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.; first finisher is expected at about11 a.m.

Contact andregistration:www.pppbend.com

PREP GIRLS GOLF: CLASS 4A/3A/2A/1A STATE CHAMPIONSHIP

lead over Steve Rude, of Graham, Wash.

Anthony Leogrande,

Hernandez jumped at the chance to stay in

of Bend, shota 4over-par 77 to finish the round in a tie for

23rd place andpaceall Central Oregon golfers. Bend golfers Charles Griswold, Erik Jensen, Jeff Ward and Tom Carlsen all shot 77 and

are part of an eight-way tie for 29th place.

The top 32 players after today's round will make the tournament's championship flight, which will be seeded

Seattle

based on eachgolfer's stroke-play score. The

By Greg Bishop

champion is determined after five rounds of single-elimination match play, culminating with Friday's 18-hole cham-

New York Times News Service

SEATTLE — On the day the Seattle Mariners made Felix Hernandez the highestpaid pitcher in baseball history, about 100 team employees waited for him outside an elevator, clad in gold T-shirts that read simply "King." They

pionship match. Those who do not make thechampionship flight will form consolation flights of eight. — Bulletin staff report

ULTIMATE FRISBEE

held "K" signs as they clapped Photos by Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

Sammie McPherson, of La Pine, watches her drive on the18thhole of Eagle Crest's Ridge Course on Monday during the opening round of the Class 4A/3A/2A/1A girls golf state championship. McPherson carded an11-over par 83.

Summitsecond in state tourney Sheldon High of Eu-

gene edgedSummit 8-7 on Sunday for first place in the USA Ultimate

Mixed (Coed) State Championships. The two-day high school ultimate Frisbee tournament was staged at Pine Nursery Park in Bend. Summit, which lost to Sheldonby thesame

• La Pine sits in seventhplacein a 14-teamfield after the first day ofthe state championship in Redmond

8-7 score in secondround play onSaturday, captured second place in the six-team field. In other finals contests

Sunday, Crescent Valley defeated Corvallis 13-6 for third place, and the Summit JV beat Grant 8-7 for fifth place.

Complete tournament scores in Scoreboard, C2. — t3ultetin staff report

MLB

Braves win big Justin Upton returns to Phoenix and hasfour hits to lead Atlanta,C3

Trinity Lutheran's Victoria Sample putts on EagleCrest's Ridge Course on Monday.

Bulletin staff report REDMOND — The first round of the Class 4A/3A/2A/1A OSAA girls golf state championship at Eagle Crest Ridge Course was a little rough for La Pine coach Todd Sickles' liking. The Hawks finished the day with an overall 404, good enough for seventh place inthe 14-team standings and well behind three-time defending state champion Molalla, which totaled a 356. "It got a little windy in the afternoon," Sickles said. "I don't think it played extra tough today. The girls did say the rough was a little bit thick, a little tough to get out of." Sammie McPherson recordedthe low round for La Pine, carding an 11-over 83 to sit in 13th place with one day to play. She hit the ball well, Sickles said, but putting cost McPherson. "They just have to do better on course management," Sickles said about what his Hawks need to do during today's second round. "Just keep the ball in better position on the course. It is a shotmaker's course.... Eliminate those bad holes." SeeState/C4

NBA

Oklahoma City's Thabo Sefolosha, right, defends against Memphis point guard Mike Conley during Monday's game.

Grizzlies goup 3-1 over Thunder Memphis is a game away from eliminating Oklahoma City from the

playoffs,C3

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

Prep golf inside,C4 • Crownover fifth after first day at 5A boys

state championship to lead Bend to secondplace 310; Summit third, two strokes back • Storm lead 5A girls

state championship by 11 strokes with Odiorne tied atop leaderboard after first round • Sisters 11th afterfirst

day at 4A boys state championship with Pajutee tied for17th;

Ridgeview's Seeley tied for14th

and screamed and chanted his name. Hernandez stepped from the elevator, into the concourse, his family in tow. That is when the tears welled. He started down the hallway, toward the news conference where the team would announce his seven-year, $175 million deal, and spied a video montage of his highlights. He tried to compose himself. He failed. He stoodbefore the cameras, a man now, a player among the most dominant in baseball, nearly a decade removed from theteenager who arrived from Venezuela and made Seattle his home. He saw his wife, Sandra, in the audience. She was crying. "I just lost it," Hernandez said. That moment, on Feb. 13, at once stamped the marriage between Hernandez, 27, and the Mariners and cemented the contradiction inherent in his career. Hernandez is a rarity in professional sports, an elite talent who chose the scenic route to glory, who chose Seattle over Los Angeles or Philadelphia or New York. He will either be rewarded for his patience or be doomed to waste his prime outside the playoffs. He is an ace who has never pitched in the postseason. See Hernandez/C4

PREP GIRLS LACROSSE

Bend United knocked

Bend United's Tori Landin

from state playoffs

past several Liberty defenders while attempting to score during the first half on Monday.

Bulletin staff report Seniors Tori Landin and Katie Alhart scored three goals apiece for Bend United, but visiting Liberty knocked off host BU 8-7 at Summit High on Monday in the first round of the Oregon Girls Lacrosse Association state playoffs. Bend United (8-4 overall), which is made up of players from Summit, Bend High and Mountain View, trailed 3-0 early in the game, but score six consecutive goals to take a 6-3 lead after halftime. The Falcons then went on a fourgoal run of their own and led 7-6 with 2 minutes, 55 second left in the game. BU rallied back as Alhart scored her third and final goal to tie the game 7-7 with 1:35 remaining, but Liberty (9-7) recorded what turned out to be the game-winning goal 21 seconds later. BU had two shots on goal before the end of the game but could not get them past the Falcons'

keeper. See Playoffs /C4

(15) runs

Ryan Brenneckei The Bulletin

I

5


C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY HOCKEY IIHF World Championships, Slovakia vs. LI.S. CYCLING Tour of California, Stage 3 BASEBALL MLB, Cleveland at Detroit or

Time T V/Radio 2 a.m. N B CSN 2 p.m.

N B CSN

Los Angeles Angels at ChicagoWhite Sox

4 p.m. 4 p.m.

MLB Root

7 p.m.

MLB

4 p.m. 6 :30 p.m.

TNT TNT

MLB, Seattle at New York Yankees MLB, Washington at Los Angeles Dodgers or Texas at Oakland BASKETBALL NBA, playoffs, New Yorkat Indiana NBA, playoffs, Golden State at San Antonio HOCKEY NHL, playoffs, Ottawa at Pittsburgh

NHL,playoffs,SanJoseatLosAngeles

4:30 p.m. NBCSN 7 p.m. N B CSN

WEDNESDAY CYCLING

Time

Tour of California, Stage 4

2 p.m. NBCSN

BASEBALL M LB, TampaBay atBoston MLB, Seattle at New York Yankees BASKETBALL NBA, playoffs, Chicago at Miami

T V /Radio

4 p.m. 4 p.m.

ESP N Root

4 p.m.

TNT

NBA, playoffs, Memphis at OklahomaCity

6:30 p.m. TNT

HOCKEY NHL, Detroit at Chicago

5 p.m.

N B CSN

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

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL

member of the four-time winners club at Indy.

James, Allen topNBAAll-

DefenSiVe Team —I eBron Jamesand Memphis guardTony Allen headline the NBA All-Defensive First Team. The league announcedMonday thatAllen

received 53 points in the voting, while the Miami Heat star had 52. Each player had 25 first-team

FOOTBALL Bills GMsetps down — Buddy Nix is stepping down

as the Buffalo Bills general manager, theteam announced on Monday. Nix will remain with

votes from the NBA's 30head coaches. Thepair were joined on the first team byClippers guard Chris Paul (37 points), Thunder forward Serge Ibaka(46), Knicks center Tyson Chandler (24) and Bulls center Joakim Noah(24j.

the team in anewrole as special

Marc Gasol, who was the NBA's

in January. Though the Bills did

joined on that squad by Celtics guard Avery Bradley, Grizzlies

Whaley, a former executive with

defensive player of the year, made the second team. Hewas guard Mike Conley, Spurs forward Tim Duncanand Pacers forward Paul George.

BASEBALL Astros president resigns — George Postolos resignedas president andCEOof the Hous-

ton Astros on Monday, returning

assistant, the Bills said in a released statement. Assistant GM

Doug Whaley, entering his fourth season in Buffalo, is expected to take over. Hewas signed to a long-term contract extension not immediately announceNix's replacement, the teamhas spent much of the offseason grooming the Steelers and aformer player at Pitt, to take over.

HOCKEY BOOgaard family SIieS NHL — Derek Boogaard's family

has filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against the National Hockey League. In the lawsuit, the family says the

to sports consulting work in the midst of the team's third consec- NHL is responsible for the utive season of struggles. Posto- brain damage that Boogaard los worked for sevenyears with sustained during six seasons as Houstonbusinessman Jim Crane an enforcer in the league, and to buy a sports franchise and it wound up being the Astros. He

had beenAstros presidentand CEO since November 2011. The

successes havebeenrare of late for Houston. TheAstros entered

Monday night's game in Detroit at10-28, the worst record in the

major leagues, andHouston batters have struck out a big leaguehigh 381 times.

MOTOR SPORTS Andretti tops Indyspeed Chart —Marco Andretti posted the fastest lndianapolis 500 practice speed of the month

Monday, turning a fast lap of

225.100 mph on the 2.5-mile oval. It was the second straight day an Andretti Autosport driver

held the top spot. Colombia's Carlos Munoz, a rookie, was the fastest driver Sunday. Warmer

temperatures and brighter skies created much better conditions from the first two days of

practice at Indy, and it showed. Andretti and three-time Indy

winner Helio Castroneveseach topped 225 mph.Castroneves posteda lap of225.075 mph as he tries to become the fourth

for his addiction to prescription

painkillers. Boogaard was found dead of an accidental overdose of pain medication and alcohol on May13, 2011. He was 28. He

was posthumously diagnosed with chronic traumatic

encephalopathy, a degenerative brain ailment that is caused by repeated blows to the head.

CYCLING Colomdian leadsTourof

CalifOrnia —Javier Acevedo of Colombia bolted to the front with about 700 yards left in the final steep climb, winning

Monday's second stagein Palm Springs, Calif., in scorching heat to take the overall lead at the Tour of California. The

27-year-old rider completed the 124.1-mile Murrieta to

Greater Palm Springs road race in 5 hours, 7 minutes and 40 seconds as temperatures approached 110degrees. Acevedo, who rides for American team Jamis-Hagens Berman, leads American Tejay vanGarderen (BMC) by12 seconds with six stages remaining. — From wire reports

COREBOARD ON DECK Today Boys golf: Class 5A state championships at Trysting Treein Corvagis, 1215 p.m.; Class4Astate championships at EmeraldValley in Creswel, 12:15p.m. Girls golf: Class 5Astatechampionships at Quail Valley inBanks, 12.15p.m.; Class4A/3A/2A/1A state championshipat s EagleCrest RidgeCourse in Redmond, 8a.m. Baseball: BendatLakeOswego, 4:30p.m. Softball: Bendvs. Clevelandat DeltaParkin Portland, 3.45p.m.

GOLF PNGAMEN'SMASTER-40 AMATEURCHAMPIONSHIP 36-Hole stroke-play qualifying First of two rounds

Monday At BrasadaCanyonsGolf Club(Powell Butte) Top 10 —1,DarrenKuhn,Pocatego,Idaho,67.2, SteveRude,Graham,Wash., 69. 3 (tie), KentBrown, Colvige,Wash., 71; Bil Winter,Beaverton, 71;Steven Savage,Surrey, BC., 71; Brad Karns, Vancouver, Wash., 71. 7(tie), MichaelKloenne,WestLinn, 72; Billy Anderson,Eugene,72; NormBradley, Kelowna, B.C.,72 10,KarlSmith, GigHarbor, Wash., 73. Locals — 23 (tie), AnthonyLeogrande, Bend, 76. 29(tie), CharlesGriswold, Bend,77;Erik Jensen, Bend, 77;Jeff Ward,Bend,77; TomCarlsen, Bend, 77. 37 (tie), DonOrreg, Bend,78. 39 (tie), Stein Swenson,Bend,79. 43 (tie), GregWalsh, Bend, 80; Jim Tebbs,Bend,80. 51(tie), RogerEichhorn, Bend, 82. 54(tie), PatrickAndrade,Bend,83. 57(tie), Mark Crose,Redmond, 85; Brett Morelock,Bend,85. 61, Tim Booher,Bend, 86.67 (tie), LonUlmer, Bend, 89. 76, CraigChastain, Redmond, 93.80, JamesToffolo, Redmond, 99.

PREP SPORTS

May11-12 at PineNurseryPark, Bend Saturday's results Round1 Sheldon11,Corvagis8 Summit10,CrescentValey 6 SummiJV13, t Grant2 Round 2 Sheldon8,Summit 7 Corvagis13,SummitJV3 CrescentValleyI3, Grant0 Round 3 Sheldon9,Summit JV3 CrescentVagey13, Corvagis11 Summit13,Grant0 Sunday's results Round 4 Summit13,SummitJV2 Sheldon13,CrescentValey 5

Corvagis13,Grant0

Round 5 Summit12,Corvagis10 Sheldon13,Grant0 CrescentVagey13, Summit 5 Finals First/secondplace Sheldon 8, Summit 7

Third/fourth place CrescentVagey13, Corvagis6 Fifth/sixth place SummiJVB, t Grant7

BASKETBALL NBA NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT

Playoff Glance AR TimesPDT (x-if necessary) (Best-of-7) CONFERENCESEMIFINALS EASTERNCONFERENCE

Miami 3, Chicago1 Monday,May6: Chicago93,Miami86 Wednesd ay,May8:Miami115,Chicago78 Monday's results Friday,May10:Miami104,Chicago94 Class 4A Monday,May13:Miami88, Chicago65 Nonconference Wednesday,May15: ChicagoatMiami, 4 p.m. Sisters 200 460 2 — 14 15 1 x-Friday,May17.MiamiatChicago, TBA Ridgeview 002 301 2 — 8 12 1 x-Sunday,May19 ChicagoatMiami TBA Indiana 2, NewYork1 Sunday,May5:Indiana I02, NewYork95 Softball Tuesday, May7:NewYork105,lndiana79 Monday's results Saturday,May11:Indiana82,NewYork71 Class 4A Today,May14:NewYorkatIndiana, 4p.m. Nonconference Thursday,May16: IndianaatNewYork, 5p.m. Sisters 0 00 100 0 — 1 1 0 x-Saturday, May18: NewYorkat Indiana,TBA Ridgeview 000 200 x 2 3 3 x-Monday, May20:IndianaatNewYork, 5 p.m. WESTERNCONFERENCE San Antonio 2,GoldenState2 Golf Monday,May6: SanAntonio 129, GoldenState 127, Monday's results 20T Girls Wednesd ay,May8:GoldenSt.100,San Antonio91 Friday,May10:SanAntonio102, GoldenState92 Class 5A Sunday,May12:GoldenState97,SanAntonio 87, OT 2013 OSAAState Championships Today,May14: GoldenStateatSanAntonio, 6:30p.m. At Quail Valley GolfCourse, Banks Thursday,May16: SanAntonio atGolden State, TBA Par 72 x-Sunday,May19: GoldenStateat SanAntonio, TBA Team scores — Summi343, t CrescentValley Memphis 3, OklahomaCity1 354, West Albany366,Bend376,Wilamette 383,LibSunday,May5:OklahomaCity 93, Memphis 91 erty 396,Pendleton414 Wilsonvige419, HoodRiver Tuesday, May7.Memphis 99,OklahomaCity 93 Valley433,Wilson434 Marshfield439 Saturday,May11: Memphis87, OklahomaCity 81 Individual leaders (top 10) T1, Brenna Monday,May13 Memphis 103, OklahomaCity 97, Murphy,CrescentValley, 77.Tl, MadrsonOdiorne, DT Summit,77.3, KalynThayer, West Albany, 79.4, Ma- Wednesday,May15: Memphis atOklahomaCity, 6:30 dalyn Ardueser,Wigamete, 80.5, MadiMansberger, p.m. Summit,83. 6,SamMiler, Liberty,85. 7, Heidi Fro- x-Friday,May17:OklahomaCity atMemphis, TBA elich, Bend, 87.8,AdrienneJohnson, CrescentValey, x-Sunday,May19: Memphis atOklahomaCity, TBA 88. T9,TianaDuncan, CrescentValey, 91.T9, Shelby Greb,Pendleton,91.T9, AlyssaKerry Summit, 91. Monday'sSummaries SUMMIT (343) — MadisonOdiorne77, Madi Mansberger83,Alyssa Kerry 91, MeganMitchell 92, Heat 88, Bulls 65 SarahHeinly95 BEND (376) — Heidi Froelich 87, Madeline MIAMI (BB) Rice 93,MaddyMode97,Holly Froelich99, Delaney James9-208-927, Haslem3-5 0-0 6, Bosh7-10 Morse111. 0-2 14, Chal m ers 2-5 1-16, Wade3-10 0-06, BatClass 4A/3A/2A/1A tier 1-6 0-0 3,Allen 2-30-0 5, Andersen2-3 5-59, 2013OSAA StateChampionships Cole 2-42-47, Miller 0-00-00, Lewis1-1 0-02 At Eagle CrestRidgeCourse, Redmond Anthony0-0 0-0 0, Jones1-1 0-0 3.Totals 33-68 Par 72 Team scores — Molaga 356, Valley Catholic 16-21 BB. CHICAGO (65) 378, Taft 382,Seaside391, Ontario 394, Heppner Butler 4-104-412,Boozer3-148-1214, Noah1-6 402, LaPine404, Reedsport 408, CrookCounty 413, 4-46, Robi n son0-120-00, Bel inegi3-83-39, Gibson Bandon 423,BlanchetCatholic426,Scappoose437, 3-8 4-510,Moham med1-1 0-02, Hamilton4-111-2 North Valley442, St.Mary's458. 0-10-00, Teague0-20-00, Thomas0-1 1-2 Individual leaders (top 10) — I, Kaitlin Col- 11, Cook lom, Henley, 68. T2,HannahReynolds, Mazama, 69. 1. Totals19-74 25-3265. Miami 21 23 17 27 — BB T2, MonicaVaughn,Reedsport, 69 4, Kylie Col15 18 9 23 — 65 lom, Henley,74.T5, SydneyKing, McKen zie, 76 Chicago T5, Lindsie LaBonte,Valley Catholic, 76. 7, Riley Helmick,Ontario,77. 8, Jessi Wea ver, Taft, 78.T9, Grizzlies103, Thunder 97 (OTj JanegeFerlan, Molala, 79.T9,JessicaYoung,Gold Beach,79. OKLAHOMA CITY (97) LA PINE(404) — SammieMcPherson83, Durant 10-272-3 27, Ibaka6-134-417, Perkins BridgetMcDonald105,Taylor Tavares108, KaraCope 1-5 0-0 2, Jackson6-8 2-2 15,Sefolosha1-4 3-4 108, Breanna Cram129. 5, Martin 6-125-518, Cogison3-54-410, Fisher CROOKCOUNTY (413) — Caitlin Dalton 92, 1-5 0-0 3, Thabeet0-0 0-0 0. Totals 34-79 20ChelseaShank103, CoraWhite 106, Sierra Smith 22 97. 112, Maddie Kasberger121. MEMPHIS(103) RIDGEVIEW (inc.) — TiannaBrown104. Princ e 3-7 2-2 8,Randolph 8-177-8 23,Gasol TRINITYLUTHERAN (inc.) — Victoria Samp l e 8-18 7-9 23,Conley7-21 6-724, Allen5-9 0-010, 84. Arthur 2-5 2-2 6,Dooling0-00-0 0, Pondexter0Boys 3 0-0 0, Bayless3-9 1-1 9.Totals 36-89 26-29 103. Class 5A OklahomaCity 29 27 20 18 3 — 97 2013OSAA State Championships Memphis 18 3 028 18 9 — 103 At Trysting TreeGolf Club, Corvallis Par 72 Teamscores WestAlbany305,Bend310, BASEBALL Summi312, t Pendleton324, Wil amette 328, Marrst 331, Sherwood 336, Hermiston338, Cleveland339, College Wilson 345Wilsonville353. Pac-12 Standings Individual leaders (top 10) — 1, Conner AR Times PDT Kumpula,WestAlbany, 69 2, HoganArey,Corvallrs, 71. 3,WalkerHoolehan, Pendleton, 72. 4, Kevin Conference Overall Geniza, CrescentValley, 73. 5, Ryan Crownover, W L W L Bend, 74.6,MattHedges,Ashland,75.T7,Chace 20 4 41 8 Daskalos 76.T7,StephenDrgastin, Summit, 76. T7, OregonState 19 5 40 11 SamuelMar,Wilamette,76. T7, ChapinPedersen, Oregon UCLA 17 7 34 14 Bend,76 Arizona State 14 10 32 15 BEND(310) — RyanCrownover 74, Chapin Stanford 11 13 26 20 Peder sen76,JairedRodmaker77,RyanDecastihos Arizona 10 14 29 20 83, Jack Klar84. Washi n gton 1 0 1 4 19 30 SUMMIT (312) StephenDrgastin76, Declan Southern Cal 10 14 19 30 Watts 77,Jackl.oberg78, TK.Wasserman 81,Alex Califomia 10 17 12 28 Bowlin 81. WashingtonState 8 16 21 27 Class 4A Utah 6 2 1 17 28 2013OSAA State Championships Monday'sGame At Emerald Valley Golf Club, Creswell x-UCSantaBarbara7, WashingtonState Par 72 Today's Games Team scores — La Salle 334, Scappoose351, Seasid e362,Baker362,HiddenValley365,Estacada x-Washingtonat Portland,3 p.m. x-BYU at Utah,5 p.m. 371, NorthValley380,LaGrande381, Sutherlin 391, x-SantaClaraat Stanford, 5:30p.m. Newport391,Sisters 394,CottageGrove399, Taft x-UCLA at CalStateFugerton, 6p.m. 399, Coqui le 399 agaatOregon,6p.m Individual leaders (top 10) — 1, Bryce x-Gonz Wednesday'sGames Wortman,Mazama,79. 2, TylerFranke, Sutherlin, agaatOregon,6p.m. 81. T3, BrandonEllwanger,Baker, 82. T3, Kyle x-Gonz Techat ArizonaState, 6:30 p.m. Gordon, Brookings-Harbor,82. T3, Nick Nguyen, x-Texas = Scappoose,82.T6, PaulBundy,La Salle, 83. T6, x nonconference Eric Clemens,LaSalle, 83. TB,SamHrnton, Seaside, 84.TB,Jake Maes,La Salle,84.TB,Austin HOCKEY Yeo, La Salle, 84. SISTERS(394) — NatePajutee 87, Tyler Berg NHL 94, NolanFerwalt102, JacobHanson111, Jacob Jepsen113. NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE RIDGEVIEW (inc.) — Jimi Seeley86. NHL Pl ayoff Glance AR TimesPDT

Baseball

Ultimate frisbee USA Ultimate Mixed(Coed) High School StateChampionships

FIRSTROUND

(Best-of-7)

EASTERNCONFERENCE

Pittsburgh 4, N.Y.Islanders 2 Wednesday, May1: Pittsburgh5, N.Y.Islanders0 Friday,May3: N.Y.Islanders 4, Pittsburgh3 Sunday,May5. Pigsburgh5, N.Y.Islanders 4, OT Tuesday, May7:N.Y.Islanders 6, Pittsburgh4 Thursday, May9: Pittsburgh4, N.Y.Islanders 0 Saturday,May11:Pittsburgh4, N.Y.Islanders 3,OT Ottawa 4, Montreal1 Thursday,May2: Ottawa4, Montreal 2 Friday,May3: Montreal 3,OttawaI Sunday,May5. Ottawa6,Montreal1 Tuesday,May7:Ottawa3, Montreal 2, OT Thursday,May9: Ottawa6, Montreal I N.Y. Rangers 4,Washington 3 Thursday,May2.Washington 3,N.Y.Rangers1 Saturday,May4 Washington1, NYRangers0, OT Monday,May6:N.Y.Rangers4,Washington 3 Wednesday, May8:N.Y.Rangers4, Washington 3 Friday,May10:Washington 2,N.Y.Rangers1, OT Sunday ,May12:N.Y.Rangers1,Washington0 Monday, May13:N.Y.Rangers5,Washington0 Boston 4, Toronto 3 Wednesday, May1 Boston4,Toronto1 Saturday, May4:Toronto4, Boston2 Monday, May6:Boston5,Toronto2 Wednes day,May8:Boston4,Toronto3,OT Friday,May10:Toronto2, Boston1 Sunday,May12:Toronto 2, Boston 1 Monday,May13: Boston5,Toronto 4,OT WESTERN CONFERENCE Chicago4,Minnesota1 Tuesday, April 30: Chicago2, Minnesota1, OT Friday,May3: Chicago5, Minnesota2 Sunday,May5 Minnesota3, Chicago2,OT Tuesday ,May 7Chicago3,Minnesota0 Thurs day,May9:Chicago5,Minnesota1 Detroit 4, Anaheim 3 Tuesday, April 30: Anaheim3, Detrort1 Thursday,May2: Detroit 5, Anaheim4, OT Saturday, May4:Anaheim4, Detroit 0 Monday,May6:Detroit 3,Anaheim2, OT Wednesday, May8:Anaheim 3,Detroit 2, OT Friday,May10:Detroit 4, Anaheim3, OT Sunday,May12:Detroit 3, Anaheim2 San Jose 4,Vancouver 0 Wednesday, MayI:SanJose 3,Vancouver1 Friday,May3: SanJose3,Vancouver2, OT Sunday,May5 SanJose5,Vancouver2 Tuesday, May 7:SanJose4,Vancouver3, OT Los Angeles 4, St. Louis 2 Tuesday, April 30: St.Louis2, LosAngeles1, OT Thurs day,May2:St.Louis2,LosAngeles1 Saturday, May4: LosAngeles1, St.Louis0 Monday Ma ,y6:LosAngeles4,St.Louis3 Wednesday, May8:LosAngeles3, St.Louis2, OT Friday,May10:LosAngeles 2,St. LouisI CONFERENCESEMIFINALS

(Best-of-7)

EASTERNCONFERENCE Pittsburgh vs. Ottawa Today, May14:OttawaatPittsburgh,430 p m Friday,May17:Ottawaat Pittsburgh,4:30 p.m. Sunday,May19:Pittsburghat Ogawa, 4.30p.m.

Wednesday,May22: Pitsburgh atOttawa.4:30p.m. x-Friday,May24:Ottawaat Pittsburgh, 430 p.m x-Sunday,May26:Pittsburgh atOttawa,TBD x-Tuesday,May28:Ottawaat Pittsburgh,TBD

Boston vs.N.Y. Rangers

Thurs day,May16:N.Y.RangersatBoston,4:30p.m. Sunday,May19:N.Y.Rangersat Boston, noon Tuesd ay ,May21:BostonatN.Y.Rangers,4:30p.m. Thursday,May23:Boston atN.Y.Rangers,4p m. x-Saturday,May25:N.Y. Rangersat BostonTBD x-Monday,May27.Boston atN.Y.Rangers,TBD x-Wednesday,May29: N.Y. Rangersat Boston, TBD WESTERN CONFERENCE Chicago vs. Detroit Wednesday,May15: Detroit atChicago,5p.m. Saturday, May18 Detroit atChicago,10a m Monday,May20:Chicagoat Detroit, 4:30p.m. Thursday,May23:ChicagoatDetroit, 5p.m. xSaturday,May25: Detroit atChicago,TBD x-Monday,May27:ChicagoatDetroit, TBD x-Wednesday,May29: Detroit at Chicago,TBD

Los Angelesvs. SanJose Today, May14:SanJoseatl.osAngeles,7p.m. Thurs day,May16:SanJoseatLosAngeles,7p.m. Satur day,May18.LosAngelesatSanJose,6p.m. Tuesday ,May 21:LosAngelesatSanJose,7p.m. x-Thursday,May23: SanJoseat LosAngeles, 7:30 p.m. x-Sunday,May26: LosAngelesatSanJose,TBD x-Tuesday,May28:SanJoseat LosAngeles, TBD

TENNIS Professional Italian Open Monday At Foro Italico Rome Purse: Men,$4.17milion (WT1000); Women, $2.37 million (Premier) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Men First Round BenoitPaire,France,def.JuanMonaco, Argentina, 7-6 (4),1-6,6-4. AlbertRamos, Spain, def.JanHajek, CzechRepublic, 7-5, 6-0.

AndreyKuznetsov,Russia,def. Xavier Maisse,Belgium, 6-2,3-1 retired. Potito Starace,Italy, def. RadekStepanek, Czech Republic,4-6, 6-4,6-3. Marin Cilic (11),Croatia,def. AndreyGolubev, Kazakhstan,6-4,6-2. ErnestsGulbis, Latvia,def.JarkkoNieminen,Finland,6-2,7-6(6). Albert Montanes, Spain, def. Martin Klizan,Slovakia, 3-6,7-5,6-3. JerzyJanowicz, Poland,def.SantiagoGiraldo, Colombia,7-5,6-2. FabioFognini,Italy,def.AndreasSeppi,Italy, 6-4, 6-1. Phiipp Kohlschreiber,Germany, def. MilosRaonic (14), Cana da,7-6(2), 6-4. Kei Nishikori(16),Japan, def. PaoloLorenzi,Italy, 6-2,6-4. Women First Round Sabine Lisicki, Germany,def. Mallory Burdette, UnitedStates,6-1, 6-2. PengShuai,China,def.MonicaNiculescu,Romania, 4-6,6-3, 6-2. AyumiMorita,Japan,def.SoranaCirstea, Romania, 6-1,6-3. NastassjaBurnett, Italy, def.AlizeCornet, France, 6-2,6-2. MelanieDudin,UnitedStates, def EkaterinaMakarova,Russia,2-6,7-5, 4-2,retired. GarbineMuguruza,Spain, def.Mathilde Johansson, France,1-6,6-0,6-2i LauraRobson,Britarn, def. VenusWil iams,Unrted States,6-3,6-2. SamStosur(9), Australia, def.HsiehSu-wei, Taiwan, 6-2,6-3. SimonaHalep, Romania, def.SvetlanaKuznetsova, Russia,6-1,6-1. JelenaJankovic, Serbia, def. TsvetanaPironkova, Bulgaria,6-3, 6-0. Kiki Bertens,Netherlands,def. FrancescaSchiavone,Italy,7-6(5), 6-1.

SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUESOCCER AR Times PDT

Wednesday'sGame Los Angeleat s Philadelphia, 430p.m. Saturday's Games ColumbusatToronto FC,2p.m. PortlandatVancouver,4 p.m. Chicago at Philadelphia, 4:30p.m. NewEnglandatHouston,5:30p.m. Colorado at SanJose, 7:30p.m. FC Dallas at Seattle FC,7:30 p.m. Sunday's Games Los Angelesat NewYork, 10a.m. SportingKansasCity atD.C. United, 2p.m. RealSaltLakeat ChivasUSA,7:30p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague

BALTIMORE ORIOLES—OptionedLHPMike Bel-

fiore toNorfolk (IL).

CLEVELAND INDI ANS Optioned 38 Lonnie

Chisenhag to Columbus(IL). Selectedthecontract of LHPDavidHufffromColumbus. Recaled RHPTrevor BauerfromColumbus. DETROITI TGERS—Placed DFAustin Jacksonon the 15-dayDL, retroactive to Sunday.RecalledOF Avisail fromToledo (IL). HOUSTO N ASTROS—Announced the resignation of presidentandCEOGeorgePostolos. NEWYOR KYANKEES—Recalled RHPBrett Mar-

shall fromScranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL) OptionedOF Brennan Boeschto Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. National League CHICAGO CUBS Agreedto termswith 18 AnthonyRizzoonaseven-yearcontract. CINCINNATI REDS—AssignedCCorkyMileroutright toLouisville (IL). MIAMIMARLINS—DptionedC Kye Skipworthto NewOrleans(PCL). PlacedOFAustin Kearnsonthe restricted list. NEWYDRKMETS—Agreedto termswithOFRick Ankiel on aone-yearcontract. OptionedOFAndrew Brown toLasVegas(PCL). TransferredRHPJenrry Mejia tothe60-dayDL.

PITTSBU RGH PIRA TES—Reinstated INF Neil Walkerfromthe15-dayDL.Optioned INFJordyMercer toIndianapolis(IL). ST.LOUIS CARDINALS— Placed RHP Jake Westbrook on the15-dayDL, retroactiveto May9. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES —Announced assistant coachBarryHeckerhasleft theteam. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS—PromotedDru Grigsonto director ofcollegescouting, Quentin Harris todirector of pro scouting,andJoshScobeyto proscout. Named Terry McDonougheastern regionalscout, John Mancini areascout-midwest, DebbiePogomcollege scoutingcoordinatorandGlen Foxand Darius Vinnett scoutingassistants. ATLANTA FALCONS SignedCBSaeed Leeand KJeremySheley. BUFFALOBILLS—Announced Buddy Nix is steppingdownas executive vice president/general manager andwil remainwrththeclub asspecial assistant. CAROLINAPANTHERS— Signed WR Br enton Bersin, TE LoganBrock, CBrianFolkerts, DTLinden Gaydosh WR Taulib Ikharo,LB BenJacobs,DE Louis Nzegwu andWRR.J. Webb. Waived WRTrey Diler, LB DamarioJeffery, DEThomas Keiser andOLZack Williams. CHICAGO BEARS—SignedWRDemetrius Fields, DT CorveyIrvin andDTChristian Tupou.Agreedto termswithCBMauriceJones. ReleasedLBDomDeCiccoandCBLeQuanLewis. CINCINNATI BENGALS—Signed LBSean Porter, HB RexBurkheadandDTTerrenceStephens. Waived DT TraviCha s ppelear. CLEVELANDBROWNS— Signed DB Akeem Auguste, DBAbdul Kanneh, PTJ. Conley, DLNicolas Jean-Baptiste andLBAusar Walcott. WaivedDBKevin Barnes, DBRicky Tunstag,WRMike Edwards, DL PaipaiFaiemauandPJakeSchum. DALLASCOWBOYS— Signed RBJosephRandle, OL EdawnCoughman,OLD.J. Hall andWRAnthony Jones.ReleasedOLCharlie BryantandAderious SimmonsandWRGreg Herd. DETROIT LIONS—Signed C Darren Keyton. ReleasedCSkyler Allen. GREENBAY PACKERS—Signed FB Jonathan Amosa,LBDonteSavage,CBBrandonSmith, WRTyroneWalkerandLBJarvis Wilson ReleasedLBMicah JohnsonandFBRyanRoberson. KANSAS CITYCHIEFS—Signed RBKnile Davis, DL RiseanBroussard, S GregCastigo, DE Miguel Chavis, SJustin Glenn,RBJordan Roberts andDB JamesRogers. ReleasedFBRyan D'Imperio, RBNate EachusandDBJoseGumbs. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS Si gned OL Tyronne Green andOLR.J.Mattes.Released DLBrandonDeaderickandWRAndreHolmes. NEW ORLEANSSAINTS Si gned DE Baraka Atkins, WRBrentLeonard,DBKoreyLindsey,PKJose Maltos, RB Khiry RobinsonandGJeremiah Warren. Waived RB ShawneAlston,CBRyanLacyandC Ryan Lee. OAKLAND RAIDERS—Signed CBChanceCaseyThomas,LBEric Harper, WRGreg Jenkins, TEJeron Mastrud, DE Ryan Robinson, CAndrewRobiskie and CB Mitchell White. ClaimedWRAndre Holmesoff waiversfromNewEngland WaivedCBAdrianBusheg, C DevericGagington, DBAkwasi Owusu-Ansah, TE MickeyShulerandLSAdamSteiner. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS—Released LBRamon Buchanon.SignedTEVictor Marshall andDEBenson Mayowa. TENNES SEETITANS—Signed DTAntonio Johnson to a one-year contract. Waived LBTomWort. TAMPABAYBUCCANEERS—Signed DESteven MeansandRBMikeJames. WASHINGTONREDSKINS— Signed LB Brandon Jenkin sandS BacarriRambo Waived WRJason Thompson. COLLEGE ECAC NamedDr KevinT. McGinniss commissioner. CHATTANOOGA — Named WillWade men's basketbag coach. ELON —NamedJonathanSmall director offootball operations. GEORG EMASON—Accepted aninvitation to join the Eastem Wrestling League. MANHA TTAN—NamedAlyssaShale assistant athletic directorforcompliance MICHIGAN —Announced SMarvin Robinson and LB Mike Jones and LB Kaleb Ringer haveleft the football team. VIRGINIA —Announced the resignation of softbaI coachEileenSchmidt.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook, jack chinook,steeheadandwi dsteelheadat selectedColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd

Bonnevil e 95 7 916 21 3 The Dalles 1,922 2,103 8 4 John Day 1,693 2,104 4 2 McNary 1 ,903 1 ,665 9 4 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd B onneville 64,329 21,967 2,851 8 3 2 T he Dages 49,897 19,597 723 33 5 J ohn Day 38,459 14,962 83 2 45 2 M cNary 29,705 8,089 1,383 6 8 3

Bruins a vance aer ra in to eat Ma eLea s The Associated Press BOSTON — The Boston Bruins turned back Toronto's comeback with a rally of their own. Trailing by three goals in the third period and still by two with less than 90 seconds left in their season, the Bruins scored twice in a span of 31 seconds to tie it and then eliminated the M aple Leafs on Patrice Bergeron's goal at6:05 of overtime to win 5-4 in Game 7 on Monday night. "It was one of the crazy ones I've been part of," said Bergeron, who assisted on Milan Lucic's goal with 1:22 in regulation and scored to

NHL PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP tie it with 51 seconds left in the third. "We found a way, not necessarily the way we would have liked to play the whole game." TuLtkka Rask stopped 24 shots for Boston, which led the best-of-seven series 3-1 before the Maple Leafs won two in a row to force a seventh game. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, the Bruins are the first team in NHL history to win a Game 7 after trailing by three goals in the third period.

The Bruins will play the New York Rangers in the Eastern Conference semifinals. The Bruins will host Games 1 and 2 on Thursday and Sunday before traveling to New York for Games 3 and 4 on May 21 and 23. Toronto opened a 4-1 lead in the third period of the decisive game, but Nathan Horton cut the deficit to two midway through the third period and then Lucic and Bergeron scored in the final 1:22 with Rask on the bench for an extra skater. "Anything can happen," Lucic said, "and

that's exactly what happened." In anothergame on Monday: Rangers 5, Capitals 0: WASHINGTON — Led by Henr


TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

NBA PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP

rizzies a e - series ea The Associated Press MEMPHIS, Tenn. — The Grizzlies are proving they know how to g r ab a n advantage and hold onto i t t h i s postseason. Tony Allen scored on a driving layup to open overtime and the Grizzlies held off the Oklahoma City Thunder 103-97 Monday night to push the defending Western Conference champions to the edge of elimination. The Grizzlies shook off a first half in which they couldn't hit shots and the Thunder seemingly couldn't miss in building their largest lead in this series at 17 points. But the Grizzlies have yet to lose on their home court this postseason, and they won their third straight and seventh in eight games to grab a 3-1 lead in the series. "We have an opportunity in front of us that we can take advantage of," Grizzlies guard Mike Conley said. "I know our guys are focused. We're treating it one game at a time. We know they're going to fight like they have their backs against the wall just like they did tonight. They're going to play with a sense of urgency, and we have to be ready." Game 5 is Wednesday night in Oklahoma City, and the Thunder have played in the Western finals each of the past two playoffs. But they don't have Russell Westbrook in this series. "It's not over yet, and we understand that," Thunder coach Scott Brooks said. "It's the first to four. They're in a good position, but our challenge is not impossible. It's something that we can do. We just haveto focus one possession, one game at a time. Hopefully, we can do that and come back here Friday night. There's a barbeque festival right'?"

The Grizzliesoutscored the Thunder 9-3 in overtime. Kevin Durant scored 27 points but missed all five of his shots in the extra period, including a layup in the final seconds. Durant went 2 of 13 in the fourth quarter and overtime and had only five points. He did score on a driving layup that forced overtime. But the All Star played 48 minutes and was just short on his shots as the game wore on. Asked why he drove for the tying layup in regulation instead of a 3 to win, Durant said he saw a wide-open lane. "I just went to get as close as I could and try to send it to overtime, which we did," Durant said. "They made more plays than us in overtime, and they got the win." Durant got the help from his teammates that he had been needing. Kevin Martin scored 18 points, Serge Ibaka had his best game of the series with 17 points and 14 rebounds, and Reggie Jackson had 15. Nick Collison even added 10. Mike Conley led Memphis with 24 points and Marc Gasol and Zach Randolph each had double-doubles. Randolph had 23 and 12, while Gasol had 23 and 11 along with six blocks on the day the Defensive Player of Year was named to the NBA's second All-Defensive team along with Conley, who had four steals. Allen, who finished with 10 points, had three steals on the day he edged LeBron James for most points for the NBA's All-Defensive team. In 2011, the Grizzlies were the team that blew the big lead in the first half of Game 4 with the Thunder pulling out the win to even up the series. They also wasted home-court advantage last year in the playoffs in the opening round

against the Clippers. This time, the Thunder were up by as much as 17 in the first half and 12 in the third. But Memphis used a 20-8 run in the third to get back into this game. The Grizzlies had a chance to close out the win when Ibaka blocked a shot by Randolph just before the buzzer in regulation before doing just that in overtime. "Two years ago when we went three overtimes and we weren't feeling like this two years ago, so it feels good," Randolph said. "But we're focused, and we know what we got to do Wednesday. Come outand play.They're going to come out and play hard. It's not over yet." But Allen scored to open overtime, then Randolph rebounded a miss by Marc Gasol and scored on a putback. Derek Fisher, who missed his first four shots, finally hit a 3-pointer. But the 38year-old veteran also had his inbound pass stolen by Allen with 21.1 seconds left and Memphis up 100-97. Memphis bounced back and outs cored Oklahoma City 44-30 in t h e paint even though the Grizzlies got outrebounded 44-41. The Grizzlies still had a 13-8 advantage on the offensive glass leading to a 21-10 edge in second-chance points. Also on Monday: Heat 88, Bulls 65: CHICAGO — LeBron James scored 27 points and Miami nearly matched a franchiserecord for

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points allowed in a playoff game, pounding listless and short-handed Chicago to take a 3-1 lead in the Eastern Conference semifinals. The 65 points allowed were just two more than the all-time postseason low for a Miami opponent, and it was easily the worst offensive performance by a Chicago team.

Danny Johnston/The Associated Press

Memphis Grizzlies' Mike Conley, right, shoots against Oklahoma City Thunder point guard Reggie Jackson in the first half of Game 4 in a Western Conference semifinal in Memphis, Tenn., Monday.

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings All Times PDT

NewYork Baltimore Boston

Tampa Bay Toronto Detroit

Cleveland Kansas City Minnesota Chicago Texas Oakland Seattle Los Angeles Houston

AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L 24 14 23 15 22 16 19 18 15 24

Central Division W L 21 21 19 18 15

15 16 16 t7 21

West Division W L

24 t4 20 20 t8 20 14 24 10 29

Pct GB .632 .605 1 .579 2 .514 4'It .385 9'It

Pct GB .583 .568 !/t .543 1'It .514 2 !/t

.417 6

Pct GB .632 .500 5 .474 6 .368 10 .256 14'It

Monday's Games Cleveland1,N.Y.Yankees0,1st game N.Y.Yankees7, Cleveland0,2ndgame Detroit 7,Houston2 Minnesota10,ChicagoWhite Sox3 Kansas Cityt 1, L.A.Angels 4 Oakland5, Texas1 Today's Games Cleveland(Kazmir21) at Philadelphia(PettiboneZ0), 4:05p.m. San Diego (Cashner 2-2) at Baltimore(Tittman3-1), 4:05 p.m. Seattle (FHernandez 5-2) at N.Y.Yankees (Sabathia 4-3), 4:05 p.m. SanFrancisco(Zito 3-1) atToronto (Dickey2-5), 4:07

Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 405p.m San FranciscoatToronto, 4:07 p.m. Cincinnati atMiami, 4:10p.m. Color adoatChicagoCubs,5:05p.m. N.Y.MetsatSt.Louis, 5:15 p.m. WashingtonatL.A.Dodgers,7:10 p.m.

American League

Royals11, Angels 4 ANAHEIM, Calif.— Billy Butler

broke out of a severe slump with five hits and five RBls, and Kansas City kept Joe Blanton

winless in eight starts this season with a victory over Los Angeles. Butler's hit total tied his career high, established on July 27, 2009, at Baltimore.

The designated hitter has three games with five or more RBls in the majors. KansasCity Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi Dyson cf 6 1 2 1 Shucklf-rf 4 0 1 1 A Escorss 5 2 3 1 Troutcl 4 1 1 0 E Jhnsn ss 0 0 0 0 Pujots tb 4 1 t 1

/kGordntf 5 2 2 0 Trumodh 4 0 0 1 Butler dh 5 2 5 5 Hamltn rf 3 0 2 0 Hosmer1b 5 1 1 0 LJimnzss 1 0 0 0 L.Cainrf 5 2 3 2 HKndrc2b 4 0 0 0 Mostks3b 5 0 00 Callasp3b 4 2 2 0 S.Perezc 4 1 3 2 BHarrsss-If 3 0 0 0 p.m. c l 0 0 0 Conger ph 1 0 t 0 Houston (Harrett 3-3) at Detroit (Fister 4-1), 4.08 Kottars G et/2b 5 0 0 0 iannettc 4 0 1 1 p.m. 4 6 111911 Totals 3 6 4 9 4 Boston (Lackey1-3) atTampaBay (M.Moore6-0), Totals Kansas City 1 0 2 1 3 3 100 — 11 4:10 p.m. L os Angeles 0 0 1 0 0 2 100 — 4 Chicago WhiteSox(Peavy4-1) at Minnesota(Correia LOB —KansasCity 8, LosAngeles5. 2B—Dyson(5),

4-2), 5:10p.m. Kansas City(Guthrie 5-0) at L.A.Angels (Vargas1-3), 7:05 p.m. Texas(0.Holtand3-2) at Oakland(Coton3-2), 7:05 p.m. Wednesday'sGames San DiegoatBaitimore, 9:35am. ClevelandatPhiladelphia,1005 a.m. HoustonatDetroit, 10:08a.m. Chicago WhiteSoxat Minnesota,10:10a.m. Texas atOakland,12:35p.m. Seattle atN.Y.Yankees, 4:05p.m. SanFranciscoatToronto, 407p.m. Boston atTampaBay,4:10p.m. KansasCity atL.A.Angels, 7:05 p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE

East Division

tN L 22 16 21 17 18 21 14 21 Miami 11 27 Central Division tN L St. Louis 24 13 Cincinnati 22 t6 Pittsburgh 21 t7 Milwaukee t6 20 Chicago 16 22 West Division tN L SanFrancisco 23 15 Arizona 21 18 Colorado 20 18 San Diego 16 21 Los Angeles 15 22 Atlanta Washington Philadelphia NewYork

Monday's Games Milwaukee 5, Pittsburgh1 St. Louis 6,NY Mets 3 Chicago Cubs9, Colorado1 Attanta10,Anzona1 Washington 6, L.A.Dodgers2

Pct GB .579 .553 1 462 4!/t .400 6!/t

.289 11 Pct GB .649 .579 2 !/t 553 3 1/2 444 7 1/2 421 l3!/t

Pct GB .605 538 2

!/t

.526 3 432 405

6 !/t 7 1/2

Today's Games Cleveland(Kazmir 2-1) at Philadelphia(Pettibone20), 4:05p.m. Milwaukee(Lohse t-4) at Pittsburgh (Locke3-1), 4:05 p.m. San Diego (Cashner 2-2) at Baltimore(Tittman3-1), 4:05 p.m. SanFrancisco(Zito 3-1) atToronto (Dickey2-5), 4:07 p.m. Cincinnati (H.Bailey1-3) at Miami (Notasco2-4), 4:10 p.m. Colorado(Francis 1-3) at ChicagoCubs(Vittanueva 1-2), 5:05p.m. N.Y.Mets(Gee2-4)at St.Louis (Gast 0-0), 5:15p.m. Atlanta(Teheran2-0) at Arizona(Corbin 5-0), 6:40 p.m. Washington(Haren4-3) at L.A. Dodgers(Kershaw 3-2), 7:t 0p.m. Wednesday'sGames SanDiegoatBaltimore, 9.35a.m. ClevelandatPhiladelphia,1005 a.m. Atlanta at Arizona,12:40 p.m.

T—2'5t. A—25,605(39,021).

Athletics 5, Rangers1 OAKLAND, Calif.— Yoenis

Cespedes andBrandon Moss hit consecutive home runsand A.J. Griffin matched his season high with eight strikeottts to lead OaklandoverTexas.ItwasTexas' first trip to Oakland since being

swept in the final three games of the 2012 regular seasonand coughing up the AL West title to

the surprising A's. Texas

Oakland

ab r hbi ab r hbi K inste!2b 4 0 1 0 Jasodh 4 0 2 1 Andrusss 4 0 1 0 S.Smithlf 4 0 1 0 Brkmndh 4 0 0 0 Lowriess 4 0 0 0 Bettre 3b 4 0 1 0 Cespds cf 2 1 1 1 N .Cruzrf 3 0 1 0 MTayrrf 2 0 0 0 Morlnd1b 3 1 1 1 Mossrf-cf 3 1 1 1 Sotoc 3 0 1 0 Dntdsn3b 4 0 1 0 DvMrpll 2 0 1 0 Barton1b 3 2 0 0 JeBakr ph-If 1 0 0 0 DNorrs c 3 1 1 1 LMartn cf 2 0 0 0 Sogard 2b 3 0 1 1 Gentryph-ct 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 1 t 7 1 Totals 3 25 8 5 Texas 0 10 000 000 — 1 Oakland 022 001 00x — 5 DP — Oakland Z LOB—Texas 3, Oakland 6 2B — S.Smith (10), D.Norris (6). HR—Moreiand (7), Cespedes(7), Moss(6). SB—Andrus(8). CS—Kin-

Justin Masterson pitched a fourhitter for his third career shutout as the Indians won the opener1-0 and stoppedtheYankees'fivegame winning streak.

Atlanta 7,Arizona8. 2B—J.Upton (7), F.Freeman(5), Uggta(2), C.Johnsoni8), Gotdschm Idt (8), C.Ross (5i, Prado (6). HR —J.Upton (13), McCann(3), C.Johnson (3), Goldschmidt 00). CS—Gregorius(1). S—Minor. SF—McCann, Uggta.

New York

D.Carpenter O'Flaherty Arizona

Cleveland

ab r hbi ab r hbi G ardnrcf 4 0 1 0 Boumci 2 0 0 0 ISu/ukitf 4 0 0 0 Kipnis2b 4 1 1 1 Cano2b 4 0 0 0 ACarerss 4 0 1 0 Ftafnerdh 3 0 0 0 Swisher1b 4 0 1 0 Boeschrf 4 0 1 0 Giambidh 4 0 0 0 Netson3b 3 0 1 0 CSantnc 1 0 0 0 VWettsph 1 0 0 0 M!Rynt3b 2 0 0 0 J osephtb 2 0 0 0 Brantytf 3 0 1 0 CStwrtc 3 0 1 0 Stubbsrf 3 0 1 0 AGnztzss 2 0 0 0 Overayph 0 0 0 0 J.Nixpr-ss 0 0 0 0 T otals 3 0 0 4 0 Totals 2 71 5 t N ew York 000 0 0 0 0 00 — 0 C leveland 100 0 0 0 0 0x — 1 DP — New York1, Cleveland L LOB—New York 6, Cleveland 7. 2B —A.Cabrera (11), Stubbs (81

Atlanta Minor W,5-2 t/arvaro

IP Ft 62- 3 8 13 0 1 l 1 1

Miley L,3-2

5

R 1 0 0 0

Cleveland

MastersonW,6-2 9

6 7 6 2

1

Colmenter 2 2 0 0 0 4 Sipp 1 2 1 1 t 0 W.Harris 1 3 2 2 0 1 Miley pitched to 5baters inthe 6th. HBP —byMiley(B.Upton). WP—Miley2, W.Harris. T—3:OZ A—25,052 (48,633).

Nationals 6, Dodgers 2

7 t 1

8

2 0 l

E R BB SO 5 5 t 2 2 2 0 1 2 2 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 t 1 0

HBP—byNicasio (S.Castro). WP—TrWood. T—2:4L /k—35,080(41,019).

2 2 3

Cardinals 6, Mets 3 ST. LOUIS —Lance Lynn overcame early control woes and St. Louis Used a three-run seventh inning to beat New York.

Lynn (6-1) allowed three runs on

Zimmermann wonhis NLand major league-leading seventh game, RyanZimmerman drove

three hits and four walks the first

season.

7

defeated Los Angeles after

t

collision with the wall in right field.

4 0 0 3

9

Yankees 7, Indians 0 (Second Game)

IP Ft 6 8 1 3 1 3

LOS ANGELES — Jordan

2-3 4 1 1 5 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0

WP—Logan, Masterson. T—2:26. A—0 (42,24t).

(2) Colorado

Nicasio L,3-1 0ttavino E R BB SO W.Lopez 1 2 4 Chicago 0 0 0 TrWoodW4-2 0 1 1 Fujikawa 0 0 0 Marmol

HR — Kipnis (5). CS—Bourn (1). in three runs and Washington New York IP H 8 E R BB SO D.PhelpsL,1-2 6 Logan Claiborne

HR — Ruttedge (5), A.Soriano(4). CS—Schierhottz

losing Bryce Harper in aviolent Zimmermann (7-1) allowed nine hits and two runs in 7/s innings, struck ottt five and walked none.

Washington Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi S pancf 5 1 2 0 Crwfrdlf 4 0 2 0 sler (2). Cleveland Lmrdzztf 5 2 1 0 DGordnss 4 1 1 0 Texas IP H R E R BBSO New York ab r hbi ab r hbi EPereztf 0 0 0 0 AdGnzttb 4 0 2 0 GrimmL,2-3 5 7 5 5 2 3 Gardnr cf 4 1 0 0 Stubbs cf 3 0 1 0 H arperrf 1 2 1 0 Kempct 4 0 1 1 J.Ortiz 2 1 0 0 0 3 B emdnrf 2 0 1 0 Ethierrf 4 0 1 0 J .Nix3b 4 2 2 1 Brantytf 4 0 1 0 Frasor 0 0 0 0 t Z mrmn3b 4 0 1 3 /kEttisc 4 1 1 0 Canodh 5 0 1 0 ACarerss 4 0 0 0 Oakland LaRoch1b 5 0 1 2 Schmkr2b 4 0 0 1 Griffin W,4-3 7 6 1 1 0 8 VWettstf 4 1 2 2 Swisherdh 3 0 1 0 Dsmndss 4 0 1 0 Punto3b 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 Overay1b 5 1 1 2 CSantn1b 4 0 0 0 A.Escobar(7), Buter2 (7), S.Perez(7), Shuck(4), Doolittle Espinos2b 5 0 0 0 Betisarip 0 0 0 0 BF!ncsrf 4 0 1 0 M!Rynt3b 3 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 Pujols (8), Hamilton(6), Callaspo(2). SB—Dyson Cook K Suzukc 5 0 1 0 Guerrirp 0 0 0 0 J oseph 2b 4 1 1 0 Raburn rt 4 0 t 0 Grimmpitched to1batter in the6th. (6), A.Escobar (8). Zmrmnp 3 1 1 0 Vnstykph 1 0 0 0 AIGnzt zss 4 0 2 0 Avites2b 4 0 0 0 —by Grimm (Barton). WP—Griffin. PBKansasCity IP H 1 ER BB SO HBP Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 Beckettp 0 0 0 0 AuRmnc 4 1 1 1 YGomsc 3 0 1 0 Mendoza W,t-2 6 6 3 3 0 6 D.Norris. Storenp 0 0 0 0 LC!uzph 1 0 0 0 T otals 3 8 7 0 6 Totals 3 2 0 5 0 T—2:26.A—11,030(35,067). Hochevar5,1-1 3 3 1 l 0 4 Guerrap 0 0 0 0 New York 1 00 000 600 — 7 Los Angeles Fdrwczph 1 0 0 0 C leveland 000 0 0 0 0 00 — 0 BtantonL,0-7 42- 3 12 7 7 0 7 Tigers 7, Astros 2 Howettp 0 0 0 0 E Mar Reynol(3), ds C.Santana(2) DP—CleveRoth 2 1-3 6 4 4 0 2 land L LOB —NewYork7, Cleveland8. 2B—Overbay Uribe3b 1 0 0 0 Coello 2 1 0 0 0 4 T otals 3 9 6 105 Totals 3 5 2 9 2 (0), Joseph(1), Au.Romine0), Swisher(9). DETROIT — Andy Dirks hit his WP — MendozaZ 1 0 3 0 2 0 000 — 6 New York IP Ft R E R BB SO W ashington T—3:07. A—32,203(45,483). first career grand slam, partofa NunoYtt1-0 5 3 0 0 3 3 L os Angeles 0 0 0 0 1 0 010 — 2 E — K .S u zuki (3), Ad.sonzal ez(4), Guerra(1). six-rttn fourth inning for Detroit WarrenS,1-1 4 2 0 0 0 4 DP — Washington 1. LOB—Washington 11, Los Cleveland in its victory over Houston. Victor 6 1-3 6 3 2 2 4 Angeles 6. 2B —Zimmerman (4), C.Crawford (6). Twins10, White Sox 3 BauerL,1-2 1-3 3 4 3 1 1 3B A Ellis (1). SB C Crawford(8i, D.Gordon(5) Martinezalso homered for the ttagadone 2-3 1 0 0 0 Washington IP t4 8 ER BB SO A bers MINNEAPOLIS — Twins rookie Tigers, who swept four straight t 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 Zimmermann W,7-t 72-3 9 2 2 0 5 Huff Aaron Hicks hit two home runs from the Astros in Houston earlier WP Albers ClippardH,6 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Storen 1 0 0 0 0 1 and made a leaping catch in center this month and opened this three- T—2:56. A—23,300(42,241). Los Angeles field to take a tying home rttn away game series at Comerica Parkwith BeckettL,0-5 3 3 4 2 2 5 Guerra 2 2 2 1 2 1 from Adam DLtnn in Minnesota's another convincing victory. National League Howell 2 3 0 0 1 2 victory over Chicago. Justin Betisarto 1 t 0 0 0 t Houston Detroit Guerrier 1 0 0 0 1 Morneau extended his hitting ab r hbi ab r hbi Braves 10, Diamondbacks1 PB — A.Etis. streak to nine games with three G rssmncf 4 1 2 1 Dirkslf 4234 T—3;14 A—32,337(56,000). P aredsrf 3 0 1 0 TrHntrrf 4 0 1 1 hits and four RBls, including a PHOENIX — Justin Upton /kttuve2b 1 0 0 0 MiCarr3b 4 0 0 0 three-run double that capped the Cubs 9, Rockies1 RCedenss 2 0 0 1 Fietder1b 4 1 1 0 snapped a14-game homerless 4 0 0 0 VMrtnzdh 4 1 1 2 scoring in the eighth inning. Trevor JCastroc drought and had four hits to help C artertb 4 0 0 0 Avitac 4000 CHICAGO — Travis Wood pitched Plouffe had a two-rurt double in C.Penadh 4 0 1 0 JhPerttss 2 1 2 0 Atlanta rout the Diamondbacks in seven scoreless innings and JMrtnztf 4 0 2 0 D.Kettycf 3 1 1 0 the third. his return to Arizona. Upton, the Dmngz3b 4 0 0 0Intante2b 2 1 0 0 Chicago came within two outs of first overall pick by Arizona in the MGnztzss-2b3 t 1 0 Minnesota Chicago its first shutout since last August T otals 3 3 2 7 2 Totals 3 17 9 7 2005 amateur draft, was playing ab r hbi ab r hbi in a win over Colorado. Alfonso Houston 0 02 000 000 — 2 DeAzacf 5 2 3 0 Dozier2b 5 1 1 0 his first game at Chase Field since Detroit 100 600 00x — 7 A IRmrzss 4 1 3 0 Mauerc 2 2 1 0 Soriano homered for Chicago, 0P Houston 2,Detroit t LOB Houston6, De- the offseason trade that sent him R iosrf 4 0 1 2 Wnghtf 4 1 0 1 which has won three straight for troit Z 2B —J.MartInez(5), Dirks(2),TorHunter (11), and third baseman Chris Johnson Viciedodh 3 0 0 1 Mornea1b 5 1 3 4 Fielder(9). rtR Dirks(4),V.Martinez(2). SB Parethe second time this season. The A.Dunn1b 3 0 0 0 Doumitdh 4 0 1 1 to Atlanta in a seven-player deal. des (1),Ma.Gonzatez(4). Kppngr Sb 3 0 0 0 Ploutfe Sb 4 0 t 2 Cttbs'14 hits were one short of a Houston IP H R E R BB SO Gittaspiph-Sb1 0 0 0 /krciarf 4 0 t 0 B.Norris L,4-4 5 9 7 7 1 2 Atlanta season high. Arizona C .Wetlstf 4 0 1 0 Hickscf 3 3 2 2 Clemens 3 0 0 0 1 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi Flowrsc 4 0 2 0 Flormnss 4 2 2 0 Detroit Smmns ss 4 0 0 0 Pollockcl 4 0 0 0 Greene 2b 4 0 0 0 Colorado Chicago W4-3 7 6 2 2 1 8 BUpton cf 2 1 0 0 Gregrsss 3 0 1 0 Totals 3 5 3 103 Totals 3 5101210 /kni.sanchez ab r hbi ab r hbi 2 1 0 0 0 0 JSchafrph-cf 2 0 0 0 Gtdsch1b 3 1 2 1 Chicago 2 00 001 000 — 3 Ortega EYongcf 4 0 0 0 Dedesscf 4 2 2 2 —by0rtega(R.Cedeno). M innesota 004 1 0 1 0 4x — 10 HBP J.Upton rl 5 2 4 2 Ftinskeph-1b 1 0 0 0 Rutledg2b 3 1 1 1 SCastross 3 1 2 2 FFrmn1b 5 2 2 0 C.Rosslf 4 0 2 0 E—AI.Ramirez (6). DP—Chicago 1, Minnesota T—Z50.A—31,161(4t,255). C Gnztztf 4 0 0 0 Rizzo1b 5 1 1 0 L LOB Chicago 7, Minnesota7. 2B AI.Ramirez Gattis If 3 2 0 0 Prado3b 2 0 2 0 T twtzkss 4 0 0 0 ASorinlf 4 1 2 2 RJhnsnIf 1 0 1 1 Pnngtnph-2b i 0 0 0 W Rosrc 2 0 0 0 Fujikwp 0 0 0 0 (8), Rios(8), Morneau2 00), Ploufte(7), Arcia(5), Indians1, Yankees0 Florimon (4). HR —Hicks 2 (3). SB—Dozier (3). McCnn c 3 2 2 3 GParrarf 4 0 1 0 H etton1b 2 0 1 0 Marmlp 0 0 0 0 SF — Viciedo, Doumit. (First Game) Uggta2b 4 0 1 1 Nievesc 4 0 1 0 A renad 3b 3 0 0 0 Schrhltrf 4 0 2 2 Chicago IP H 1 E R BB SO OFlhrt p 0 0 0 0 JoWitsn2b-303 0 1 0 Btckmn rf 3 0 0 0 Ransm 3b 4 0 0 0 H.SantiagoL,1-2 52-3 8 6 3 1 6 CLEVELAND — Vidal Nuno CJhnsn 3b 4 1 3 3 Mileyp 2 0 0 0 Nicasio p 2 0 t 0 Castillo c 4 2 2 0 Lindstrom 13 0 0 0 0 1 DCrpnt p 0 0 0 0 Cllmntrp 0 0 0 0 0ttavinp 0 0 0 0 Bamey2b 4 1 1 0 pitched five innings of three-hit Omogrosso 1 1 0 0 t JF!ncsph-Sb1 0 0 0 Kubelph 1 0 0 0 Brigncph 1 0 0 0 TrWoodp 3 1 2 1 Heath t 3 4 4 3 0 ball to win his first major leagUe Minorp 2 0 0 0 Sippp 00 0 0 WLopezp 0 0 0 0 Borbontf 1 0 0 0 Minnesota Varvar p 0 0 0 0 WFtarrsp 0 0 0 0 Totals 2 8 1 3 t Totals 3 69 149 start, Vernon Wells and Lyle PHernandez W,2-0 51-3 6 3 3 0 4 R.Pena ph-3b 1 0 0 0 ErChvzph l 0 0 0 Colorado 0 00 000 001 — 1 RoenickeH,5 t 2 - 3 1 0 0 0 3 Overbayhad two RBISapieceand Totals 37 101310 Totals 33 t 1 01 Chicago 230 000 22x — 9 BurtonH,8 1 2 0 0 1 1 Atlanta 000 034 012 — 10 DP — Colorado 1, ChicagoZ LOB —Colorado3, New York beat Cl e veland 7-0 for Fien Arizona 1 00 000 000 — 1 Chicago 5. 2B DeJesus(11), SCastro(9),A Soriano 1 t 0 0 0 1 WP — toenicke. E—Prado (1). DP — Atlanta 2, ArizonaL LOB a doubleheader split. Cleveland's (10), Castillo 2(8),TrWood(1). 3B—Schierhotz(1).

two innings.Heonlygaveupone hit and one walk in his past five innings. He is 4-0 at home this New York

St. Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi Baxterrf 4 1 0 0 MCrpnt2b-Sb4 2 2 2 D nMrp2b 4 1 3 2 Beltranrf 3 0 0 0 D Wrght3b 4 0 1 1 Holidylf 4 2 2 2 I .Davistb 3 0 0 0 Craig1b 4 0 2 1 D udalf 2 0 0 0 YMolinc 3 0 1 0 Buckc 3 0 0 0 Jaycf 200 1 Ankiet cf 3 1 0 0 Freese 3b 4 1 t 0 RTejadss 4 0 0 0 Kozmass 0 0 0 0

Hefnerp 1 0 0 0 Descalsss-2b 4 0 2 0 T umerph 1 0 0 0 Lynnp 10 0 0 Ricep 0 0 0 0 Wggntnph 1 1 1 0 Atchrsnp 0 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 Burkep 0 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 Vtdspnph 1 0 0 0 MAdmsph 1 0 0 0 Mujicap 0 0 0 0 T otals 3 0 3 4 3 Totals 3 16 0 6 New York 0 30 000 000 — 3 St. Louis 210 000 30x — 6 DP — New York Z LOB—New York7, St. Louis 7. 2B —Dan.Murphy(10), Craig(11), YMolina(11), Wigginton(t). HR—Holliday (6). SB—Descalso (3). S—Hefner, Lynn.SF—Jay. New York IP Ft 8 E R BB SO Hefner 6 5 3 3 4 2 Rice L,1-3 2-3 2 2 2 0 1 Atchison 0 3 1 1 0 0 Burke 1t-3 1 0 0 0 St. Louis LynnW,6-1 7 4 3 3 5 7 Choate H,5 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 RosenthalFt,10 2 - 3 0 0 0 0 2 Mulica S,10-10 1 0 0 0 0 t Atchisonpitchedto3 baters inthe7th. T—2;54. /k—38,412(43,975).

Brewers 5, Pirates1 PITTSBURGH — Marco Estrada

allowed three hits over seven innings and Milwaukeebeat sloppy Pittsburgh to snap afourgame losing streak. Norichika Aoki went 3 for 5 with three RBls and two stolen bases for the Brewers. Milwaukee Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi A okirf 5 2 3 3 SMartelf 4 0 0 0 S egura ss 5 0 3 1 Snider rf 4 0 t 0 CGomzcf 4 0 1 1 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 ArRmr3b 4 0 0 0 McCtchcl 4 0 0 0 Bianchi3b 0 0 0 0 GSnchz1b 3 1 1 0 YBtncr2b 4 0 0 0 Watker2b 4 0 0 0 l.ucroyc 4 0 0 0 PAvrz3b 3 0 0 1 L atti1b 3 0 0 0 McKnrc 3 0 0 0 AIGnztzph-101 1 1 0 Barmesss 3 0 2 0 L Schfrlf 3 2 1 0 AJBrntp 1 0 0 0 Estradp 1 0 0 0 Contrrsp 0 0 0 0 Kintztrp 0 0 0 0 Tabataph-rf 1 0 0 0 Weeksph 1 0 0 0 Hndrsnp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 5 5 9 5 Totals 3 01 4 t M ilwaukee 100 0 2 0 101 — 5 P ittsburgh 000 0 0 0 1 00 — 1

E—/LJ.Burnett 2(2), G.sanchez(1). LOB —Mriwaukee6, Pittsburgh4. 2B—Aoki 2 (8), L.Schaler (1), G.Sanchez (5). SB—Aoki 2 (6), Segura3 (13), 0.Gome/(8).S—L.Schafer,Estrada2,/kJ.Burnett. Milwaukee IP Ft R E RBB SO EstradaW,3-2 7 3 1 t 1 KintzterH,5 1 1 0 0 0 Henderson 1 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh /kJ.BurnettL,3-4 7 7 4 3 0 Contreras t 0 0 0 0 Watson 1 2 t t 0 WP — Watson. T—2:48. A—11,872(38,362).

5 0 1

6 0 1


C4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013

State Continued from C1 Sophomore K a i t l in Collom, o f K l a m a th Falls' Henley, the state champ in 2012, leads the 82-player field with a 4-under 68, followed closely b y ma t c hing scores of 69 by Mazama's Hannah Reynolds and Reedsport's Monica Vaughn, the 2011 state winner. C rook County, t h e state runner-up here in 2012, stands in n i nth p lace after t h e f i r s t day with a 4D, led by a 92 from Caitlin Dalton, putting her 2 0th overall. Competing as individuals are Trinity Lutheran's Victoria Sample, who is 14th after an 84, and Ridgeview's Tianna Brown, who's 104 puts her in a tie for 44th. The final round of the state championship tees off today at 8 a.m.

Kyra Hajovsky runs through the Liberty defense in an attempt to score for Bend United during the first half of Monday's game at Summit High School. Ryan Brennecke/ The Bulletin

Playoffs

" This season was ou r

Continued from C1 "Every year we get a little bit better," said Bend United coach Sean Hansen, whose program was in the playoffs for the second straight year.

Last year was our first time in the playoffs." Kyra Hajovsky added a score for Bend United in the loss and Allie Rockett and K J H e llis each dished out an assist.

PPP Continued from C1 "We have such an awesome, scenic river trail system, and I think it's going to be less confusing," r ace o r g anizer

f i r st

Pole Pedal Paddle 2013

Run course

Rliit-BOatEXChange ,to>

Molly Cogswell-Kelley says

of the new run course. "I've never liked trying to explain, especially to out-of-towners, the (old) run course. There were a lot of times where I'd just get in my car with a competitor and say, 'OK, this is where it is.' It was so confusing. And so much of it was on cement. That was really the main thing. It simplifies everything. The fact that we can use the Athletic Club for our (bike-run) exchange, that was the key factor in making this work." The move w il l e l i minate the need for traffic detours in Bend during the race because c yclists will n o t b e r i d i ng through any roundabouts, according t o C o gswell-Kelley. But team members driving f rom M ount B achelor w i l l still need to detour through Sunriver on their way back

Hernandez Continued from C1 Hernandez made his major league debut in 2005, at age 19, and in the years that followed he went96-24 when the Mariners provided him a t l e ast two runs. Over the past five seasons, including this one, Hernandez has ranked second in baseball in earned run aver-

age (2.74), second in strikeouts (950) and tied for first in games

started (142). And yet, on 89 occasions, the Mariners managed one run or no runs when Hernandez pitched. He reached 100 victories anyway, the pace slowed by a team that last reached the playoffs in 2001. He collected the Cy Young Award in 2010 with a 13-12 record. He threw a perfect game in 2012. (Naturally, the Mariners barely won,

1-0.)

Hernandez considered all of this last week, inside an interview room in the Mariners' clubhouse. He wore a diamond ring on his left finger and diamonds in both ears. A black watch the size of a mini-bagel hung from his left wrist. The central questions hung overthe proceedings, the same as always. Why stay? Why Seattle? Why, when Ro y H a l laday went to Philadelphia and C.C. Sabathia joined the New York Y ankees, when stars in a l l sports jump to more established contenders, did Hernandez not follow the same pattern? The answer, in part, was pancakes. For Hernandez, the choice came down to comfort. Comfort in his neighborhood, east of Seattle in the Bellevue suburbs, where his two children play in the local parks. Comfort in t h e d i r ection being taken by the Mariners' organization, its minor league teams laden with young talent. And comfort food at his favorite local eatery, Chace's Pancake Corral, an unassuming joint that suits its most superstar of clients. "After t hree y ears h ere, I'm like, this is it, man, this is my place," Hernandez said. "When you work somewhere and you feel comfortable, you

B U, which had wo n

four

time hosting a playoff game. straight before Monday's de-

Reed MarketRd.

Bike-RiinExchange ~

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Zc0 t t eea ttt' 0

Bike-Run Exch e Bike rottle

Run ou e I Greg Cross/The Bulletin

to Bend. Century Drive eastbound from the Sunriver cutoff to the Athletic Club of Bend will be closed to traffic from 9 a.m. to noon. As they approach town, cyclists in the PPP will access a

paved path that runs parallel to Century Drive just before the Mt. Washington roundabout. They will ride on the path forseveral hundred feet before they dismount at the bike/run exchange.

don't want to leave. You want to staythere forever. "Something about it, t h is place, it got me pretty good." Today, Hernandez is scheduled to start against Sabathia at Yankee Stadium. Hernandez is 5-2 against the Yankees on the road. He liked the old stadium, all the noise, all that history, more than the new version. But he drew a distinction between the allure of playing in New York and playing for New York. He pointed at the pattern on his black shirt. Stripes, he noted. Not pinstripes. In recent years, hardly a day passed without some speculation that Hernandez would be traded. The general manager, Jack Zduriencik, even created a running gag. He knew to expect the question at banquets or community f unctions or whenever he spoke to reporters, so he would excuse himself and pretend to answer his phone and say: "Hello? No, no, we're not trading Felix." The calls came anyway, one after another,especially as each season wore on and the losses piled up and the cycle of perpetual rebuilding continued unabated. The temptation, a tradition as old as baseball, was to deal Hernandez for a host of prospects. Zduriencik insisted he never wavered. H ernandez s i gned w i t h the Mariners in 2002, at age 16. He knew only two things about Seattle: that F r eddy Garcia, a fellow hurler from V enezuela, pitched for t h e Mariners, and that it o f t en rained. Garcia opened a tab at a local restaurant and told Hernandez to eat there any time he wanted. The protege rose through the Mariners' system with the speed of one of his 100-mph fastballs. Daren Brown, now an assistant with the Mariners, had Hernandez in Class A ball in San Bernardino, Calif., for half a season. In one contest, Hernandez notched seven innings and the opposition hit one ball out of the infield. Back then, Hernandez was a power pitcher who knew only one speed — fast. Over the years, his velocity diminished, which raised concerns

about his durability, and he went through a period when "even though he had that ability to be unpredictable, he really wasn't," said Carl Willis, the Mariners' pitching coach. H ernandez adjusted. H e learned to rely on movement, the way his pitches dipped and darted, over pure speed. He learned to throw a slider and a sinker and stumbled upon what has become his signature pitch, the changeup. Hernandez developed his c hange by tinkering in t h e bullpen. He settled on a grip between two and four seams, and he retained the same arm speed as with h i s f astball, which made it even more difficult for batters to decipher. It looked like a fastball and tailed like a splitter and traveled slower. His r epertoire b olstered, Hernandez could change sequences with ease. He watched little video of hitters and studied few advanced statistics. His teammate Raul Ibanez, who played with the Yankees last season, said Hernandez left the opposition with only one option, to look for the fastball and hope to connect. "I can't tell you how I approached the change," Ibanez said. "I don't think I ever hit

feat, won 11 of 17 draw controls but converted just seven of 23 shot attempts. Keeper Darion Maldonado paced Bend United's defense with five saves.

"It's a very narrow path and it's fast," says Cogswell-Kelley. "It's on a downhill. We want people to slow down before they turn into it." C ogswell-Kelley said s h e advises spectators hoping to watch the bike-run transition to park at n earby Cascade Middle School or r ide their bikes to the Athletic Club of Bend, because the parking lot will be filled with vehicles belonging to PPP competitors and club members. In another change to the P PP, the boat d r op-off o n Friday has been moved from 4 to 5 p.m. Elites, individuals and pairs can take their b oats t o R i v e rbend P a r k starting at 5 p.m. on Friday. All others can drop off boats beginning at 5:30p.m. The Friday boat drop-off ends at 8 p.m., but a Saturday prerace emergency boat dropoff is scheduled from 6:30 to 7 a.m. The deadline to register for the PPP is just before midnight tonight. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com.

the sectionof fans at Safeco Field who wear gold T-shirts and chant "K" throughout his starts. They laugh at the commercials that star Hernandez with a ventriloquist dummy or in h i s a l ter ego, Larry Bernandez. The Hernandez they described has it all — the contract, the fame, the car collection, the face-of-the-franchise status — except for what he wants most. A p l ayoff appearance, for starters. And a championship. To that end, as much as Hernandez based his decision to remain in Seattle on the value of the contract and his desire to remain in the city where he started, he also said he took a long look at the future of the organization and decided he could win here. In pitcher Taijuan Walker, catcher Mike Zunino and shortstop Nick Franklin, he saw a trio of top prospects to add to a roster that is already improved. On their end, the Mariners were not overly concerned with Hernandez's drop in velocity or any potential elbow issues.Hernandez pointed to his start this season, a 4-0 record in his past five starts, the lowest ERA in the American League, as proof that he is it rr — and will remain — durable. All those seasons, all those He said he planned to pitch losses, and yet when Ibanez until age 40, or six years past returned to Seattle after four the conclusion of the current mega-contract. years with other teams, he f ound Hernandez had n o t The longer Hernandez rechanged. He remained, Ibanez mains in Seattle, the more he said, "unaffected by his suc- will become synonymous with cess" and by the constant ros- the Mariners. Like Ken Griffey ter shuffling around him. Jr. Or Edgar Martinez. There "I want to win here," Her- is something to be said for that, nandez told Jaime Navarro, for remaining the cornerstone the team's bullpen coach. "I and resisting the temptation to want to do what they say can- become the latest hired gun. not be done." For growing up in an organiNavarro said: "That is rare. zation and remaining there. It's always the Yankees. And For evolving from a p ower the Dodgers. If you're a big- pitcher into a varied one. For name guy, you go somewhere the pancake special at the loelse to win a W o rld Series cal breakfast spot. right now, this season. You On the day after the Marid on't see a guy like Fifi i n ners made H ernandez the most places." highest-paid pitcher in baseFifi is a nother nickname ball history, he shared a quiet for Hernandez, given by those moment with Zduriencik. The closest to him. They want Fifi general manager asked how to have it all. They note the his star was feeling. "When do you want to work contract, the statistics, the individual accolades. They on an extension?" Hernandez point to t h e K i n g's Court, said.

PREP ROUNDUP

Lava Bears,Storm oys gol in title contention at state Bulletin staff report C ORVALLIS — B e n d High and Summit are both within striking distance of a title after the first day of the Class 5A boys golf state championships at Trysting Tree Golf Club after the first round on Monday. The Lava Bears finished the first day in second place with a team score of 310, five strokes behind leader

second-place Crescent Valley. Madi Mansberger sits in fifth place for Summit after recording an 83, and Alyssa Kerry joins her teammates in the top 10 with a 91 that tied her for ninth with one round to play. Bend, which stands in fourth with a 376, was paced by Heidi Froelich'sseventh-place 87 as well as Madeline Rice's 93, putting her in a tie for 15th. The final day of the state championWest Albany (305). Sum- ship begins today at 12:15 p.m. mit sits in third place after BOYS GOLF finishing with a 312. Sisters 11th at championR yan C r ownover l e d ship: CRESWELL — Sisters the way for Bend, card- wrapped up the first day of the ing a 2-over 74 on a breezy Class 4A state championships day when the wind gusts at Emerald Valley Golf Club reached 30 mph, accord- in 11th place with an overall ing to Bend coach Rusty 394. Nate Pajutee led the OutClemons. laws with a 15-over 87, putting "I just kept it in play and the senior in a tie for 17th with made some putts," said one round to play. Ridgeview's Crownover, who is in fifth Jimi Seeley carded an 86 to tie place going into today. for 14th in the 81-player field. "We're in a good position Bryce Wortman of Klamath for (today)." Falls' Mazama sits atop the W est A l b any's C o n - leaderboard with a 7-over 79, ner Kumpula shot the low and La Salle leads the team score of the day with a 3- standings with a 334. The final under 69. round of the state championS tephen Drgastin l e d ship tees off today at 12:15 p.m. Summit, carding a 4-over SOFTBALL R idgeview 2, S i sters 1 : 76. He is tied for seventh with three other golfers, REDMOND — Erin Ware hit including Bend's Chapin a two-run double in the bottom Pedersen. of the fourth inning to propel "I was happy with how the Ravens in the nonleague we played," Pedersen said. regular-season finale for both "I feel really confident. I teams. The Outlaws managed feel like we can gain a lot of just one hit in the game, a Casstrokes and make it up for sidy Edwards double. Sisters

(17-6 overall) hosts Scappoose

(today)." Also scoring for Bend

on Thursday in the 4A play-in

were Jaired Rodmaker (77) round. Ridgeview (16-9) is at Yamhill-Carlton in the play-in round, also on Thursday. Western Mennonite 9, Culver 8: SALEM — The Bulldogs rallied for three runs in the top very, very good. They know of the fifth inning and added the course really well. But another in the sixth, but the we know it pretty well, too." Pioneers shut Culver down in Other scorersfor Sumthe seventh to take the Class mit were D eclan W atts 2A/IA Special District 3 win. (77), Jack Loberg (78) and The Bulldogs end the season 3-21 overall and 2-10 in conferTyler Bahn (81). "It wasn't very pretty on ence play. the front n ine," Summit BASEBALL coach Mark Tichenor said. Sisters 14, Ridgeview 8: "But the kids showed some REDMOND — Joey Morgan resiliency and p l ayed a went 4-for-4 with two home strong back nine. I'm really runs, including a grand slam, proud ofthe way they came to lead the Outlaws to a nonconference win in both teams' back." In other Monday action: regular-season finale. Morgan GIRLS GOLF knocked in six runs, and Justin Odiorne leads Summit to Harrer added a 2-for-2 perfortop spot:BANKS — Madimance with a homer and four son Odiorne, the reigning runs scored for the Outlaws (23Class 5A state champion, 2). For Ridgeview (13-12), Collin carded a 5-over 77 to tie Runge was 3-for-5 with a home Crescent Valley's Brenna run, and George Mendazona Murphy for first place after went 3-for-5 with two RBIs. the first day of the Class 5A state championship at Quail Valley Golf Club, helping i/ / guide the Storm to an overall 343. That team score tops the 11-team standings and is 11 strokes ahead of and Ryan DeCastilhos (83). "We're putting things together here at the end of the year," Clemons said. "We know that West Albany is

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Stone Lodge Garden Extravaganza Thursday, May 23 at 11am Duane Schiedler with Celebrate the Season will talk about the best herbs and vegetables to use for gardening in Central Oregon. We'll have lunch together and do some planting, too. Just bring your gloves!

Call 541-595-3779 to RSVP. Welcome to Holiday. Welcome home.

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Stone Lodge Independent Reti r ement Li vi ng

1460 NE 27th, Bend OR, 97701 541-595-3779 i stonelodgeretirement.com 02013 HARVEST MANAGEMENT SUB LLC 19428


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

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013

NASDAQ 3,438.79

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1,64o

Tuesday, May14,2013

Retail monitor

stores that have opened or closed in the past year. The Redbook index declined five weeks in a row heading into last week. Will the new data show another decline?

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Close: 15,091.68

Change: -26.81 (-0.2%)

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Vol. (In mil.) 2,862 1,583 Pvs. Volume 3,034 1,629 Advanced 1189 1127 Declined 1856 1335 New Highs 3 05 191 New Lows 13 18

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ALK 31.29 AVA 22.78 BAC 6 . 72 BBSI 19.10 BA 66. 8 2 Pricier imports? CascadeBancorp CACB 4.23 Economists forecast an uptick in Columbia Bukg CDLB 16.18 $$ the price paid by L.S. importers Columbia Sporlswear C OLM 46.02 ~ last month. Costco Wholesale COST 82.26 — 0 Import prices fell in March, Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 driven down by cheaper oil. That FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 followed price increases in the previous two months. Import prices Home Federal BucpID HOME 8.67 Intel Corp INTC 19.23 were down 2.7 percent in the 12 — 0 Keycorp K EY 6 8 0 months ending in March. They — 0 Kroger Co KR 20 9 8 haven'trecorded a year-over-year tyLattice Semi LSCC 3. 17 increase since April 2012. The LA Pacific L PX 8 . 3 6 ~ Labor Department reports April MDU Resources MDU 1959 o import price data today. Mentor Graphics MENT 12.85 ~ Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 ~ Import price index Nike Iuc 8 NKE 42,55 — 0 monthly percent change Nordstrom Iuc JWN 46.27 — 0 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.01 ~ 0.6 OfficeMax Iuc DMX 4.10 PaccarIuc PCAR 35,21 — 0 Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 0.3 PCL 35.43 — o 0.1% Plum Creek Prec Castparts PCP 150.53 — 0 0.0 Safeway Iuc SWY 14.73 Schuitzer Steel SCH N 2 2.78 ~ SherwinWms SHW 114,68 — o -0.3 Staucorp Fucl SFG 28 74 — 0 Starbucks Cp SBUX 43,04 — 0 -0.6 Triquiut Semi TQNT 4.30 — 0 UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11.17 N D J F M A US Baucorp USB 28.58 Source: Factset Washington Fedl WAFD 14.30 Wells Fargo 8 Co WFC 29.80 — 0 Weyerhaeuser WY 1 8.60

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63,19 6.10 13.88 35.46 18.25 38.67 32.33

Taylor Morrison Home made its market debut last month, marking the second homebuilder this year to go public. The company, due to report first-quarter earnings today, operates its namesake brand and Darling Homes in the L.S., and Monarch in Canada. Last year it closed onmore than 4,000 homes Will its first quarterly earnings report as a publicly traded company impress Wall Street?

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t aylo r m or r i so n . . . . Homes Inspired by You

Dividend Footnotes:a - Extra dividends were paid, ttut are not included. tt - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. 1 -Current annual rate, wtt>ctt wasmcreaseu bymost recent diwdend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends paut after stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dwidends pad tas year. Most recent awdend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pad th>syear, a cumulative issue with dividends m arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. r - Declared or paid in precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approamate cash value on ex-distrittution date. PE Footnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no PiE ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months

Walgreen extendsCVSdeal::;;;"" Walgreen has extended its agreement to fill prescriptions for CVS Caremark, which runs one of the nation's largest pharmacy benefit management businesses. The deal means customers with prescription drug plans managed by CVS Caremark can still have their prescriptions filled at Walgreens drugstores. CVS Caremark runs the nation's second largest drugstore chain, in addition to its pharmacy benefits

Walgreen (WAG) Monday's close:$49.07 Total return YTD: 33%

management,or PBM, business. Last year, Walgreen took a revenue hit when it went nearly nine months without a new agreement to do business with Express Scripts Holding, the nation's largest PBM. The lapse meant that some Walgreen customers migrated to competing stores before the companies reached a new deal that started last September. $ CVS drugstoresgained some business from that split.

52-wEEK RANGE

$29 ~ 1-Y R :52%

~

~

~

3-Y R*: 14%

50

FundFocus

Annual dividend$1.10 Divide n d yield2.2%

5-YR*: 9%

total returns through May 13

AP

Pric e -earnings ratio (traillng 12 months): 22

Market value: $46.5 billion *annualized

Source: FactSet

SelectedMutualFunds

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK This fund pursues one of the more FAMILY FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 conservative strategies in the Marketsummary 22.52 -.01 +10.9 +19.1 +12.8 + 66 A A A short-term bond category. When it AmericanFunds BalA m Most Active B ondA m 12. 8 9 -.81 +0.3 t3.4 +5.4 + 42 D D E comes to interest-rate sensitivity, CaplncBuA m 57.36 -.89 +9.7 +17.3 t11.7 +36 A A C NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG however, it's among the bolder opCpWldGrlA m 41.48 -.89 +12.0 +24.7 t11.7 + 21 8 8 C BkofAm 922059 12.98 —.04 tions. EurPacGrA m 44.47 -.19 +7.9 +20.4 +8.7 + 08 D C A A. Velga, J. Sohn • AP

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LAST 4.23 Sky-mobi 3.11 Theragen 2.03 AlimeraSci 3.96 DpexaTh rs 2.18 Unilife 3.76 SolarCity tt 35.88 YouDnDmd 2.08 Chinalnfo 2.41 SutorTch h 2.05

CHG %CHG +1.35 +.94 +.54 +.85 +.45 +.76 +7.00 +.36 +.40 +.33

+ 4 6 .9 + 4 3.3 + 3 6 .2 + 2 7 .3 + 2 6 .0 + 2 5 .3 + 2 4.2 + 2 0 .9 + 1 9 .9 + 1 9.2

Losers NAME LAST StarBulk rs 6.40 Astealntl h 2.50 FaTBBISPBr 12.75 DragonW g 2.17 Kemet 4.35

CHG %CHG -1.33 -17.2 —.31 -11.0 -1.47 -10.3 -.24 -10.0 -.46 -9.6

Foreign Markets LAST CHG %CHG -8.63 -.22 3,945.20 London 6,631.76 + 6.78 + . 10 Frankfurt + .70 + . 0 1 8,279.29 Hong Kong 22,989.81 -331.41 -1.42 Mexico 41,766.91 + 25.37 + . 0 6 Milan 17,171.52 -112.51 —.65 Tokyo 14,782.21 +174.67 +1.20 Stockholm 1,223.89 -3.42 -.28 Sydney + 3.70 + . 0 7 5,194.80 Zurich 8,147.68 -30.17 —.37 NAME Paris

F nlnvA m 46.5 1 t14.4 +24.9 +13.8 + 4.0 A 8 D GrthAmA m 39 . 2 3+.85 +14.2 +25.0 +13.0 + 40 A C D IncAmerA m 19 .75-.82 +10.3 +18.7 +12.9 +61 A A A LIMITED MODERATE EXTENSIVE InvCoAmA m 34.53 -.81 +14.9 +23.7 t12.7 + 47 8 C C NewPerspA m 34.94 -.82 +11.8 +23.4 t12.8 + 44 8 8 8 WAMutlnvA m 35.71 +15.0 +22.7 t15.1 + 54 D A 8 Dodge & Cox In c ome 1 3.89 -.81 + 1.0 + 4 . 8 + 6.0 +6.9 C C 8 IntlStk 3 8.34 -.84 +10.7 +28.6 +9.6 +0.8 A 8 A Stock 141.92 -.89 + 16.9 +32.1 +14.3 +4.1 A 8 C Fidelity Contra 8 7.86 +.10 +14.3 +19.5 +14.5 +5.7 8 8 8 GrowCo 108.1 1 +.18 + 16.0 +20.7 +16.3 +7.2 8 A A LowPriStk d 45 . 70 -.14+ 15.7 +26.2 +15.2 +8.0 8 A A Fidelity Spartan 500ldxAdvtg 58 . 80 +.01+15.4 +23.4 +14.6 +5.4 B A B FrankTemp-Fraukliu lncome 0 m 2 . 3 9 . .. +8 . 1 + 17.0 +10.8 +5.5 A A 8 Cl IncomeA m 2.37 . .. +8. 4 + 1 7.7 +11.2 +6.0 A A 8 Oppeuheimer RisDivA m 19.5 8 . . . +1 2 .8 +19.2 +13.0 +4.1 E C C RisDivB m 17.7 2 . . . + 1 2 .4 + 18.1 +11.9 +3.2 E D D Morningstar OwnershipZone™ RisDivC m 17.6 4 . . . + 1 2 .5 +18.3 +12.1 +3.3 E D D Vertical axis represents average credit SmMidValA m 37.94 -.84 + 17.1 +24.7 +10.1 +1.5 D E E quality; horizontal axis represents SmMidValB m 31.94 -.83 +16.7 +23.7 +9.2 +0.7 D E E interest-rate sensitivity PIMCO TotRetA m 11.2 6 - .01 + 1 .0 + 6 . 1 + 6 .3 +7.4 8 8 A CATEGORY Short-Term Bond T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 38.29 -.82 +15.0 +25.9 +13.0 +5.2 8 C 8 4 2.82 +.87 +13.3 +17.8 +14.6 +6.2 C A 8 MORNINGSTAR GrowStk RATING™ ** * 1 y1y HealthSci 50.26 +.49 +21.9 +35.8 +25.7+16.1 8 A A ASSETS $6,953 million Vanguard 500Adml 158.92 +.82 t15.4 +23.5 +14.6 +5.4 8 A 8 500lnv 158.90 +.82 t15.4 +23.3 +14.4 +5.3 C A 8 EXP RATIO 0.61% CapDp 41.37 +.12 t23.1 +37.2 +14.0 +6.9 A 8 A MANAGER John Smet Eqlnc 27.80 +.82 +15.8 +24.5 +17.0 +7.1 C A A SINCE 1991-01-01 GNMAAdml 18.80 +.81 -0.1 tt.2 +4.5 +5.6 C 8 A RETURNS3-MD +0.5 STGradeAd 18.81 +0.7 t3.1 +3.3 +4.0 8 8 8 YTD StratgcEq 25.37 -.84 +18.3 +28.1 +16.3 +6.2 A A C 1-YR +1.3 Tgtet2025 14.84 -.81 t9.2 +16.8 +10.7 +4.6 C 8 A 3-YR ANNL +2.9 TotBdAdml 18.99 -.81 +0.1 t2.4 +5.1 +5.6 E D D 5-YR-ANNL +3.2 Totlntl 16.85 -.84 t7.4 +21.4 +8.4 -1.1 D D C TotStlAdm 41.83 -.81 +15.6 +23.7 +14.6 +6.0 8 A A TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 41.82 +15.6 +23.6 +14.5 +5.9 8 A A US Treasury Note 0.25% 3.72 USGro 24.25 +.81 t14.I +20.9 +14.1 +5.7 8 8 8 US Treasury Note 0.875% 3.23 Welltn 37.18 +10.5 +17.9 +11.8 +6.5 A A A Fannie Mae Sgle Fmly TBA 2.5% 2028-05Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption 01 2.6 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or Fed Natl Mort Assc 3.5% 2.08 redemption fea Source: Morangstac

American FundsIutBdAmA m AIBAX

-.0013

StoryStocks

POST Theragenics TGX Close $ 4445V 26 7 o r 5 7 / , Close:$2.03L0.54 or 36.2% The makerofGrape-Nuts,Honey Juniper Investment raised its buyout Bunches of Oats and Raisin Bran bid for the medical device company cereals said that its second-quarter to $2.25 to $2.30 per share up from net income fell 59 percent. $2.05 to $2.10 per share. $50 $2.5 45

2.0

40

1.5

F

M

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M

F

52-wcek range $27.3$~

$47.$$

PE: 33.9 Yield: ...

JOSB Close:$42.90 V-3.31 or -7.2% The men's clothing company said its fiscal first-quarter earnings will likely come in below Wall Street's view on lower sales. $50 45 40

F

M

A

M A 52-week range

$1.$2 ~

$2.1$

Vol.:1.2m (17.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$63.03 m

PE: 29.0 Yield:...

Tesla Motors

TSLA Close:$87.80 %11.04 or 14.4% Shares of the electric car maker continued to soar on optimism about the boost the company could get from its Model S sedan. $100 50

M

F

M A 52-wcek range

$50.75 $25. 52 P E: 12 . 3 Vol.:22.2m (5.6x avg.) Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$10.13 b

$$7.$1 ~ Vol.:1.4m (2.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.2 b

M

52-week range

Vol.:367.0k (1.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.45 b

Overstock.com

OSTK Close:$26.28 %0.78 or 3.1% Shares of the online retailer hit a 52-week high a month after the company posted strong results during its first quarter. $30

M $88. 00 P E: .. Yield: ..

Theravance

THRX Close:$41.20 A6.26 or 17.9% Irish drugmaker Elan plans to pay $1 billion for royalties from four respiratory treatments being developed by Theravance and GlaxoSmithKline. $50 40

20

30 F

M

A

M

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52-week range $$72 ~

M

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52-week range $27 0$

Vol.:688.9k (2.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$621.52 m

PE: 32.1 Yield :...

$17.06

$41.23

Vol.:8.2m (5.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$4.1 b

P E: .. . Yield:...

Warner Chilcott

WCRX Perion Network PERI Close:$18.91 %0.90 or 5.0% Close: $13.94 %1.34 or 10.6% A Cantor Fitzgerald analyst boosted The company, which offers instant her price target for the drugmaker on messaging and other online setvicoptimism it will reach a deal to comes, said its first-quarter net income bine with Actavis. grew more than sevenfold. $20 $14 12

15

10

F

M A 52-week range

$10.$$~

Earnings debut

1.2970+

Stock indexes were little changed Monday, and the Standard 8 Poor's 500 index took a breather from its strong 2013 rally. The S&P 5DD flipped between modest gains and losses through the day, never climbing by more than 0.1 percent or falling more than 0.4 percent. Stocks in the health care and financial sectors had the market's biggest gains, but they were offset by drops for raw materials producers and telecommunications stocks. The Dow Jones industrial average fell modestly, dipping from its record high set on Friday. Stocks had little reaction to a report that showed retail sales rose D.1 percent last month. Economists expected a decline.

Jos. A Bank

52-WK RANGE oCLOSE YTD 1YR VOL TICKER LO HI C LOSE CHG %CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

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

+ -.87 '

Post Holdings

NorthwestStocks March

$95.17

Dow jones industrials

Close: 1,633.77

Change: 0.07 (flat)

1,560 '

N

Redbookindex

GOLD ~ $L434.50 ~

S&P 500

16oo "

The latest Johnson Redbook retail sales index is due out today. The index tracks data on stores open at least a year. That's a key indicator of retailer performance because it strips out the volatility of

10 YR T NOTE 1.92% ~

1,633.77

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Vol.:19.1m (4.0x avg.) P E: . . . Vol.:3.9m (10.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$4.74 b Yiel d : 2. 6 % Mkt. Cap:$167.7 m

PE: 60.6 Yield: ... AP

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

The yield on the 1D-year Treasury note rose to 1.92 percent Monday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill

. 0 3 . 03 . 0 7 .08

52-wk T-bill

.10

.11

... w -0.01 -0.01 ~

w

w

.08

W

W

.14

W

V

.17

2-year T-note . 25 .24 +0 . 01 L L 5 -year T-note . 82 .82 ... L L 10-year T-ttote 1.92 1 .90 + 0 .02 L L 30-year T-bond 3.13 3.10 +0.03 L L

BONDS

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO IlTRAGO

Barclay s LottgT-Bdldx 2.80 2.77 +0.03 L L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.08 4.07 +0.01 L L Barclays USAggregate 1.87 1.81 +0.06 L L PRIME FED Barcl ays US High Yield 5.03 4.95 +0.08 w w w RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 3.89 3.80 +0.09 L L YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.10 1.08 +0.02 L L 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2 . 7 1 2.65 +0.06 L L 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

Commodities

FUELS

The price of crude oil fell for a third straight day and settled at its lowest level since May 2, hurt by a stronger dollar. The wholesale price of gasoline and gold also fell.

METALS

T .26 T .75 W 1.84 W 3.01

L 2 .49 L 4.46 W 2.06 7.02 3.89 W 1.01 W 3.28

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 95.17 96.04 - 0.91 + 3 . 7 Ethanol (gal) 2.68 2.61 +0.34 +22.4 Heating Dil (gal) 2.89 2.91 -0.52 -5.1 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.93 3.91 +0.38 +17.1 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.82 2.86 - 1.37 + 0 .3

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

CLOSE PVS. 1434.50 1436.80 23.67 23.63 1484.50 1486.00 3.36 3.36 717.95 704.60

%CH. %YTD -0.16 -14.4 +0.16 -21.6 -0.10 -3.5 -7.7 +0.18 + 1.89 + 2 . 2

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -7.2 1.21 1.20 +0.10 1.45 1.44 + 0.52 + 0 . 5 7.18 Corn (bu) 6.88 + 4.40 + 2 . 8 Cotton (Ib) 0.86 0.86 -0.51 + 14.5 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 332.50 335.00 -0.75 -11.1 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.48 1.48 +2.56 +27.7 Soybeans (bu) 15.21 14.88 + 2.20 + 7 . 2 Wheat(bu) 7.02 6.97 +0.68 -9.8 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

Foreign Exchange The dollar rose at one point during trading to its highest level against the Japanese yen since 2008. The dollar rose against the euro, British pound and Australian dollar.

h5N4 QG

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5292 —.0060 —.39% 1.6074 C anadian Dollar 1.0 1 08 —.0007 —.07% .9999 USD per Euro 1.2970 —.0013 —.10% 1.2925 Japanese Yen 1 01.93 + . 4 0 + . 39 % 79 . 9 0 Mexican Peso 12.1 375 + .0188 +.15% 13.5408 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6153 +.0454 +1.26% 3.8151 Norwegian Krone 5.8010 +.0041 +.07% 5.8653 South African Rand 9.1621 +.0682 +.74% 8.1004 6.6121 +.0075 +.11% 6.9605 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9583 +.0013 +.14% .9294 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0047 + .0056 +.56% .9 9 70 Chinese Yuan 6.1515 +.0074 +.12% 6 .3150 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7618 +.0006 +.01% 7 .7645 Indian Rupee 54.846 -.029 -.05% 53.555 Singapore Dollar 1.2415 +.0029 +.23% 1 .2523 South Korean Won 1113.50 +2.57 +.23% 1147.10 Taiwan Dollar 29.92 + .19 +.64% 29 . 44


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013

BRIEFING

Cascade Bancorp posts $1.7M profit

Whet: Redmond Craft Brewing

Cascade Bancorp, parent company of

supplies and ingredients Pictured:Jesse Sweetman,

Bend-based Bank of

the Cascades, reported net income for the first quarter of about

$1.7 million, about 60 percent higher than the first quarter of last year,

according to a report released Monday. Total deposits for

the quarter ending March 31 increased $28 million, or about11

OREGON ECONOMY

EXECUTIVE FILE Supply

Re ort: Stron rowt

What it does:Sells home-brewing

left, and Adam Henry, co-

owners of RedmondCraft Brewing Supply Where:235 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond

Employees:Two Phone:541-390-7686

Wedsite:www.facebook.com/ pages/Redmond-Craft-Brewing-

a ea

Supply/136176639774217

percent, over the fourth quarter, according to the company's quarterly

By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin Roh Kerr /The Bulletin

statement filed with the Securities and Exchange

Commission. The bank reduced its poorly performing loans, those classified

as special mention and substandard, by $57.2 million during the first quarter. It worked with

customers to payoff, paydown or restructure the loans, or foreclosed on them.

wo

Samsung Electronics said Monday it had

made a keybreakthrough in developing

0

your brew shop? • Henry:I

• moved up to Redmond

owners

0

Samsungmakes breakthrough

. Whydid • you start

"Home brewing appeals to a lot of people because it involves chemistry, cooking, a do-it-yourself project ... and then you get to make a product that you get to drink afterwards," said Adam Henry, co-owner of Redmond Craft Brewing Supply. Henry operated Redmond Home Brewing Supply in an industrial warehouse for about two years. He took on a new partner, Jesse Sweetman, and changed the business name, and last month the company moved toSouthwest Sixth Street in downtown Redmond. For about $200, Sweetman said, customers can walk into Redmond Craft Brewing Supply and purchase the equipment and supplies to create their own beers that afternoon. From yeasts and 30 differentkinds offresh hops, to kegs and fermentation tanks, he said, Redmond Craft Brewing Supply has what a new or veteran brewer needs for beer production. Sweetman said about 100 customers have come through the

several hundred times faster than the current

fourth-generation, or 4G, technology. The breakthrough

helped Samsungovercome limitations in transmitting large vol-

umes of data over long distances using a broad band of frequencies, the company said in anews release. Samsung, the world's biggest maker of mobile phones, saidit would accelerate the re-

search and development to commercialize those technologies by 2020. — Staffand wire reports

DEEDS Deschutes County • VRE Crescent LLC to Tim Horvath and Gloria D. Lester, Tetherow, Phase1, Lot 269, $199,000 • Steven E. andLori L. Nichols to Walter G. and Reah L. Trest, Caldera Springs, Phase 2,Lot 228, $218,000 • Cousins Construction Inc. to Nancy E.Miller, Westbrook Village, Phase 2, Lot 8, $226,031 • SFI CascadeHighlands LLC to Heather M. Mcllhinney and Jeremy S. Sanchez, Tetherow, Phase 1, Lot 87, $220,000 • PahlischHomeslnc. to Molly B. and Timothy F. Izo, McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot 47, $196,000 • Ronald L. Bryant, personal representative for Estate of Dan H.Heierman Sr., to Joseph Schwab, Township16, Range12, Section 11, $407,000 • Robert H. and Marjorie C. Folkestad to Amber M. Davids, Ranch Village, Lot 3, Block 7, $169,900 • 5 Fir Cone LaneLLCto Robert R. Fallow, Fairway Crest Village, Phase 4,Lot 5, Block17, $550,500 • Pamela Sorenson to Yolanda A.Alonso, Starwood, Lot 2, Block 8, $244,000 • Signature Homebuilders LLC to David W. and Michele R. Hegelmeyer, Millbrook Estates, Lot 4, $319,610.41 • William Terriquez to Crewmore LLC,NorthWest Crossing, Phases9and10, Lot 459, $457,125 • Robert C. andBernadette H. Hoyer to CalderaCapital LLC, Township18, Range 12, Section 9, $160,000 • Jonathan A. andMeg K. Thompson to Trent L. and Sheri F.Boggs, River Canyon Estates No. 3, Lot 195, $348,100 • Carol Jacobs to Anthony D. Molin and Kathryn Wolff, Awbrey Heights, Lot 29, Block 2, $220,000

son I was driving into Bend was to

buy my homebrewing supplies.

satisfy your palate, Redmond Craft Brewing Supply

eration networks that would provide data

transmission up to

number one rea-

REDMOND — If a typical pale ale Or porter doesn't offers another option: make the beer yourself.

I consider Bendto be. I've beenhere for11 years, and I've only driven into Bend maybe 100 times. The

By RaChaei ReeS •The Bulletin

mobile technologies for so-called fifth-gen-

to get out of the metroplex, which

Rather than mail

ordering, I figured

door each week. Many start with a kettle and the shop's $95 Brewer Starter Kit, which creates about 5 gallons of beer. But soon, he said, some want to brew larger quantities and return for more equipment. Henry said it isn't economical for production brewers to make many of the specialty beers home brewers create. "Most commercialbeers are really simple recipes because it's all about cost," he said, noting specialty beers are usually more expensive. "Commercial brewers will use three or four grains and maybe two different types of hops. I can show you some home-brew recipes that are 11 specialty grains and five different types of hops." The beauty of home brewing, Henry said, is having the freedom to create whatever you like and at a lower cost. "The fruits of your labor are having a good beer when you're done," he said.

it was easier to

justopenup my own shop. . Where

• do you see the company in the next five

years? . Sweetman: • I hope to

still be selling ingredients and

equipment to our hoppy customers. Maybe we will look into adding a bottle shop to our location and

maybe a growler fill station. Right

now we really just want to let

everyone know we're here, we're open and we're hoppy to serve Redmond.

— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rreesC<bendbulletin.com

GM: New tech will limit recalls By Tom Krisher The Associated Press

WARREN, Mich. — General Motors Co. says a new supercomputing data center

and a fledgling shift to bring software development inhouse should help it limit the sizeoffuture safety recalls. The Detroit automaker, which formally opened the giant data storage center in suburban Warren, Mich., on Monday, said the changes are examples of how it is moving faster to cut costs and serve its customers better by bringing more computer technology inside the company. In the past, GM's regional operationstracked problems by themselves, sometimes without communicating with other regions, even though many of its cars are now sold worldwide. Engineers in one

• Kathleen Elliott, trustee for Terry E. Elliott Trust, to Kathleen Elliott, Parks at Broken Top,Phase 5,Lot 193, $275,000 • David W. Wilson, trustee for David D. Wilson Revocable Living Trust, and Patricia A. Wilson, trustee for Patricia A. Wilson Revocable Living Trust, to Jenny J. Smithers, Braeburn, Phase 1, Lot4, $235,000 • Kachina Properties lnc. to David P.and Jillian N. Smith, Fairway Point Village 4, Lot28, Block17, $329,000

region would check a problem part, but it wasn't studied worldwide, at least not at the

early stages. Now, with new software developed by GM's so-called innovation centers and the data storage, problems are spotted quickly when they crop up across the globe, and they're assigned to the right engineer who can work with parts makers to fix the problem faster, said Randy Mott, the company's chief information officer. "You'd hope that if there is a problem with a set of components, that you understand which components were potentially susceptible and you would expect your recalls to be smaller," Mott said. "You identify it earlier and you certainly limit it to only the ones aff ectedby whatever the

• Jeffrey A. and Susan D. Conant to Joseph D. Griffin and Tracy Hankins, Boulevard Addition to Bend, Lot13, Block15, $250,000 • James B. andJanet L. Marckette to Stuart and Audrey M. Rehbein, Partition Plat1997-26, Parcel 1, $235,000 • PNW Equities LLC to Lance C.CabeandTammy J. Cornett, Township17, Range13, Section 33, $300,000 • Mark A. and Judy Jorgensen to Deanand Marian Porter, Deer

Park 4, Lot 27, Block 24, $235,000 • Stephen M. and lrene M. Jeffryes to Zachary M. and Laura N.Oswald, Red Hawk Unit 3, Lot 49, $169,000 • PWD Associates LLC to CarylA. H.and Jay J. Casbon, Points West, Lot 42, $439,000 • Sarah M. Kelly and Deborah M. Bensonto Nouvarat Kangsathien, Old Mill Landing, Lot 3, $250,000 • TJ and Charissa M. Toney to Koby and Lori Heston, Lazy River West, Lot 9,

problem was." GM, which typically sells more than 9 million vehicles worldwide each year, makes cars and trucks in 30 different countries. Many of its parts are common worldwide, so if there is a recall, it can be large and costly. When problems are spotted and fixed early, the size and cost can be held down, Mott said. GM also said Monday that it will build a duplicate data storage center about 40 miles from Warren at its proving grounds in Milford, Mich. During the next two years, the company will close 23 data centers worldwide and consolidate them into the two new facilities. GM says data centers at Google and Facebook were benchmarked to draw up plans for the state-of-the art facilities.

Block10, $449,900 • Stacey M. Sonneto Kathleen Miller, Parkway Villages, Phases1-3, Lot 46, $185,000 • Theodore R. Smart, Lee Ann Doolittle and John P. and Debbie M.Shepherd to David S. Glennie, Rachel Perez, David C.Baca, Thomas B. andNaniscah R. Apperson, yaughn L. Brown, Deborah K. Davis and James R.and Sandra P.Keiter, South Meadow Homesite Section Second Addition, Lot127, $155,000 • Pacwest II LLC to Gordon

Oregon's economic growth in the first quarter continued to outpace the national economy — except when it comes to creating jobs, according to a report released today. Going forward, the report from California Lutheran UniversityCenter for Economic Research & Forecasting predictsmore jobs,higher wages and overall growth at "phenomenal rates." "This forecast is the most optimistic we've ever issued for Oregon," wrote Bill Watkins, the center's executive director. The center's first Oregon report was issued in 2010. A flourishing technology sector increased Oregon's grossdomesticproduct 3.4 percent in the first quarter, the report said. GDP for the nation as a whole rose 2.5 percent in the same period, according to preliminary figures from the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Oregon's GDP has risen m ore than 20 percent over the last three years, yet employment has grown just 4 percent, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data show. The state added more than 22,000 jobs between March 2012 and March 2013. But it's still about 77,000 jobs down from late 2007 levels, and Watkins called the decline in Oregon's labor force "disturbing." It had declined by more than 43,000 workers in March, compared with March 2012, state figures show. Still, the year started with some solid national job gains, increased homebuilding activity and higher retail sales — all of which bode well for the economy over the next few years, said Ralph Cole, senior vice president of research with Portland financial consulting firm Ferguson Wellman Capital Management. Some of the state's biggest companies are making aggressive growth plans, he noted, a big departure from the first few years of the downturn. "You're seeing companies like Nike making continued investments in Portland and Beaverton, Intel continuing to grow," Cole said. "Companies are making decisions, signing leases. They're still slow to add employees, but layoffs have really slowed." Permits for new homes in Oregon have risen to their highest levels since before the 2008 real estate crash, the California Lutheran University report shows. Foreclosures have slowed, though they're still a drag on the market. The report goes on to forecast expected growth moving forward all the way to 2015. It predicts state GDP to increase D percent over the next two years, retail sales to go up more than 14 percent and total wages to rise 16 percent. — Reporter: 541-617-7820 egluclzlich@bendbulletin.com

C. Pennock, Northcrest, Lot 40, $200,000 • Betsy A. and Mark V. Zoboski to McCarthy Development and Construction Services Inc., Orion Estates, Lot 26, Block15, $246,250 • FederalHomeLoan Mortgage Corp. to Timothy and Gloria Sheehy, CarriageAddition, Lot 6, Block1, $151,600 • William G. and Patricia Z. Willitts, trustees for William G. andPatricia Zoe Willitts1988 Trust, to Vernon E.Renner and Kathryn A. Lindbloom,

Fivepine, Lot15, $725,000 • Robinaand Lester B. Johnson to Timothy D. Gregory, Deschutes River Woods, Lots 24-26, $200,000 • Nathan and Nichole Becker to John M.and Denise J. Heath, Quail Pine Estates, Phase 7,Lot 20, $322,000 • John C. Dobell, trustee for Julia B. Dobell Revocable Living Trust, to Nicholas R. andAlisa M. Jeffries, Starwood, Lot 2, Block 5, $180,000 • Choice OneBuilders LLC to Dale P.and Barbara

BRIEFING

Drugmaker to pay $500M in fines The generic drugmaker Ranbaxy pleaded guilty Monday to federal drug safety violations and will pay $500 million in fines to resolve claims that it

sold subpar drugs and made false statements to the Foodand Drug Administration about its

manufacturing practices at two factories in India, the company andfederal prosecutors announced Monday. Thesettlement is the largest in his-

tory involving a generic manufacturer and drug safety, the Justice De-

partment said.

T-Mobile raises price of iPhone5 T-Mobile has quietly

increased its price of the iPhone 5 by $50, raising

the down payment to $149.99. The Seattle-based

carrier began selling the phone last month at $99.99 plus 24 payments of $20, for a total cost of $579.99, but now, T-Mobile is saying the initial $99.99 down

payment was apromotional price that ended

Sunday. "We all know promotions are temporary," T-Mobile said in a state-

ment. — From wire reports

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY

• How to Take Control of Your TimeandGet More Out of Life!: Online webinar with strategies and solutions toboost productivity and efficiency; hosted by SIMPLIFY; registration required; $65; 8-9:30 a.m.; Camp Sherman; 503-260-8714 or info©simplifynw.com. WEDNESDAY

• Don't Leave Success to Chance: Jim Wilcox of Central OregonCommunity College's Small Business Development Center, will present business planning best practices; reservations requested; free; 7:30 a.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-382-3221or www. bendchamber.org. • Young Professionals Network: Ridge Golf Pavilion; registration required; $7 for members, $15 for nonmembers; 7:30 a.m.; Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org. • Howto Develop a Business Plan: Learn how to evaluate finances, target a marketand present ideas in a written business plan; registration required $59 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeWay,Bend; 541-383-7290. • project Management Fundamentals: Learn the concepts needed to plan, implement, control and closeanytype of project; approved for 24 hours of PDUs by PMI; registration required; online class begins May15 and classroom sessions meet May23,June6and June 27; $159; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal

Dolby, Renaissanceat Shevlin Park, Lot12, $524,763.74 • JamesE.and Sharla A. Shupe to Henry S. Keesling andCarol A. Rolen, Second Addition to Whispering PinesEstates, Lot12, Block 20, $170,000 • David and Amanda R. Pistorto R. F. Wilson, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase21 Lot8 Block19 $199,000 • David W. and Kayrn L. Mosbyto Ernest D.and Nancy G. Pool, Hollow Pine Estates, Phase 6, Lot 116, $379,000


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013

O» www.bendbulletin.com/athome

FOOD

Cookies with

an edge By Alison Highberger For The Bulletin

Cookies and milk are a classic children's snack. So, how about cookies and cocktails for adults? We're not talking snickerdoodles with a martini or chocolate chip cookies with a beer. In "Cookies for Grown-Ups," author Kelly Cooper reinvents the cookie for the adult palate and suggests adult beverage pairings for each of her more than 80 intriguing recipes for savory and sweet appetizer, snack and dessert cookies. "The cookies aren't too sweet. Flavor is primary, and sweetness is secondary. My 'Nosh' cookie is full of peanuts, dried chili flakes and cilantro. It's salty and great with a beer," Cooper told us in a phone interviewfrom her home near Las Vegas. (See

Photos by Rob Kerri rhe Bulletin

Thanks to a microclimate, the Arnolds' property generally is about 5 degrees warmer than in Bend. "My early stuff starts in February.... I'm into the early, early summer stuff already," Becky Arnold says.

GARDEN

recipe, Page D2.) Cooper's "ManCookies" are made with bits of Slim Jim snack sticks, dry-roasted sunflower kernels, lime and a

W1

quarter cup of beer (see recipe, Page D2).

1111

Cooper recommends

pairing ManCookies

• Flowers and lambs at the Arnolds' farm in Tumalo

with a cold beer and serving them the next time there's a big game on TV. "The sunflower seeds bring in the salt and crunch. It's almost like chewing onan oatmeal cookie with raisins — that's the texture of it. Beer in the dough gives it flavor, but you wouldn't say 'There's beer in this,' and you wouldn't think it's a regular sugar cookie with the sunflower seeds and Slim Jims," she said. SeeCookies /D2

Editor's note:The At Home section features a garden profile each month during the gardening season. To suggest a garden to profile, email athome@bendbulletin.com.

By Marielle Gallagher The Bulletin

pring at the Arnolds' farm in Tumalo means daffodils, tulips, narcissus and lambs. In early March, Becky Arnold's ewes begin lambing, and in the subsequent months the pastures are dotted with grazing sheep and their fuzzy offspring with spindly

L

legs. In November of1974,Becky and David Arnold bought 10 acres just outside of Tuma-

lo. The land had one pasture and many juniper trees. They spent the first year clearing the land. Bit by bit, the Arnolds built barns, additions to the house and a garden around the home. "It was always as we had the money," said Becky Arnold. They traded manual labor when they could, like in the case of a cedar tongue-and-groove building salvaged from the U.S. Forest Service that cost $300. "We didn't even have the $300 to pay ... so we worked it out in labor," said Arnold. SeeArnold/D4

Ifyou go What:Kelly Cooper, author of "Cookies for

Grown-Ups," will perform a cooking demonstration and hosta cookie tasting and

When she was 9, Becky Arnold decided she wanted sheep,and she spent a summer working a paper route to save the money to purchase five Suffolk ewes. These days, she keeps 23 ewes, tw o rams, 39 lambs and about 20 market lambs.

book signing When:3 p.m., July 28. Where:Ginger's Kitchenware, 375 S.W.

Powerhouse Drive, Bend, Old Mill District Contact:www.

O

O

See video of feeding time at theArnolds' sheep farm: bendbulletin.com/sheepfarm See additional photos on The Bulletin's website:

bendbulletin.com/athometour

gingerskitchenware.com or

Species tulips bloom in Arnold's garden.

541-617-0312

Recaulk abathtub Removeold,m oldy caulk

Cut caulking tube and pierce inner seal

HOME

Doit: RecaLi atLi

TODAY'S RECIPES Really? cookies:Cookbook P author Kelly Cooper suggests serving these kalamata-oliveand-white-chocolate creations with pinot noir,D2

Editor's note:Ch eck back every other w eek fordo-it-yourself projects.

By Alison Highberger

Use painter's tape when recaulking for a neat edge

For TheBulletin

Moregrown-up cookies:Nosh,ManCookie,D2

The caulk — that waterproof filler and sealant that's in the joints between a wall or floor and a bathtub — can crack, turn brown or black with dirt or

Dakos Salad:Thegreekversion of panzanella combines

mold, or might be missing entirely, allowing water to seepinto the walls or floor and causing extensive andexpensive damage. Replacing old caulking is easy andquick anddoesn't require many supplies. If you can squeezea toothpaste tube, you canrecaulk.

ciabatta bread, tomatoes, kalamata olives and feta, among other ingredients,D3

Time:About an hour (and then 24 hours for the caulk to cure) Difficulty:Easy

Cost:Less than $40 Supplies: • Scraping tool: putty knife, utility knife, 5-in-1 tool, awl, can opener or thin-bladed screwdriver • Cutting tool: utility knife or box cutter to cut the tip off the tube of caulk

More Greeksaladrecipes:GreekSalsa Meze,Almost Classic Horiatiki, Greek Salad Salad,D3

• Caulk: (about $8 for a large, 10-ounce tube) (Caulk comes in silicone, Greg Cross /The Bulletin

latex and eco-friendly varieties. See information on Page D4.) SeeCaulking /D4

Recipe Finder:Roasted tomatoes make asoup to remember, D2


D2 TH E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 14, 20'l3

Fooo

Next week: conquer artichokes

Cookies

Roasted tomatoes

Really?

Continued from D1 After Cooper invented her "Really'?" cookie, named for the response she got from tasters who found out what was in it, she paired it with pinot noir. Its surprising ingredients include kalamata olives and white chocolate. Really? "The white chocolate cuts the kalamata flavor, so it's not like biting into a kalamata in a salad with a vinaigrette. A good quality white chocolate sweetens and modifies the taste of the olive," Cooper told us. "Cookies for Grown-Ups" is Cooper's first cookbook. She's not a food professional; she's a tech teacher. For 20 years, Cooper has taught college-level Web development and computer programming. A passion for cooking, baking and travel inspired Cooper to start inventing cookies with bold and unusual flavors more than a decade ago. "It's fun to go into my kitchen and make something that tastes great and travels easily. I can share them with people, and they're like cookies, but they're not traditional. Everyone loves to get cookies, so you give these to people, and they call you and say, 'How did you do this?'" It's fun. For me, it's been about celebrating friends and flavors, all wrapped up in the tradition of baking and sharing cookies," Cooper said. Not all of Cooper's cookie r ecipes are paired with a l coholic beverages. She recommends coffee and tea for Delectable, a cookie inspired by caramelizedpear desserts in upscale restaurants. It's a shortbread-style sweet with

Makes about 7 dozen. Pairing: Pinot noir. 1 C butter, softened '/4 C sugar '/4 C light brown sugar, packed 1lgegg 1 tsp vanilla extract 2'/4 C all-purpose flour 1 tsp baking soda

make soup special

1 tsp salt 1 (4.4-oz) high-quality white chocolate bar, roughly chopped (about 1 C) /2 C kalamata olives, roughly chopped

By Julie Rothman V iola Br own f r o m L a Pointe, Ind., was looking for a good and easy recipe for making tomato basil soup. She said she is 82 years old and has a hard time finding things she still likes to eat. It's not surprising that she would be in search of a recipe for homemade tomato soup, as it's a classic comfort food no matter what the season. Jenny Garciafrom Santa Rosa, Calif., shared a recipe that she and her husband came up with that she said was inspired by a s i milar recipe in the "Barefoot Cont essa C o okbook." W h a t makes this soup special is the roasted tomatoes. This simple step brings out the best flavor of the tomatoes and gives th e s oup r e al depth. The soup is easy to prepare and it freezes very well. Add to that the fact that it is both vegan friendly and lactose free and you can't really go wrong with this one. Pair this soup with a grilled cheese sandwich and you have genuine comfort food at its very best.

Preheat oven to 375 degrees. In a large bowl, using an electric mixer, Photos courtesy Frank Anzalone

Kelly Cooper's "Really?" cookies combine white chocolate and kalamata olives. Really.

"The white chocolate cuts the kalamata flavor, so it's not like biting into a kalamata in a salad with a vinaigrette. A good quality white chocolate sweetens and modifies the taste of the olive."

RECIPE FINDER

The Baltimore Sun

cream together butter and sugars until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes. Mix in egg and vanilla. Beat until well-blended.

Whisk together flour, baking soda and salt in a small bowl and add to butter mixture. Beat until just incorporated. Mix in chocolate and olives. Scoop or drop doughby1 teaspoon portions and place1t/z inches apart on a parchment-lined or nonstick baking sheet. Bake for 8-9 minutes or until bottoms are just golden. Let sit for a few minutes and transfer to a

cooling rack. — From "Cookies for Groytrn-Vps," by Kelly Cooper, RedRock Press, 2012

— Kelly Cooper

the light glaze doesn't have the sugary blast of a f rost-

ing." She suggests pairing

these cookies with club soda with a splash of pomegranate juice. Cooper thinks it's time to break out of our cookie-cutter approach to cookies. Instead of always baking the same old cookies — chocolate chip, oatmeal, peanut butter an d s n i ckerdoodles — she'd like everyone older t han 18 t o t r y s o m e n e w flavor c o mbinations, even t hough sh e k n o w s s o m e of her newfangled cookies pear, crystallized ginger, cin- sound a little odd. "Some are really quirky, namon and walnuts. Her At the Diner cookie is but people say they're suralso paired with coffee. It's a prised, and it evokes a lot of breakfast cookie, full of Yu- conversation. Th e c o o kies kon gold potatoes, onion, sau- make you slow down and talk sage and chives. about something d i f ferent. P ink-a-Dot i s a coo k i e Like my Refrescante, baked flavored wit h p i n k g r a p e- in a little light, crunchy cornfruit juice, zest and poppy m eal and f l our b o wl , a n d seeds. As Cooper writes in inside is cream cheese, jalaher cookbook, "I love pink peno and a little lemon," she grapefruit and had fun find- said. She suggests a margaring its perfect role in a cook- ita will taste great with that ie. Pink-a-Dot is both crisp one. Cheers! and soft. The poppy seeds — Reporter: ahighberfrer@mac. Cooper's "Mancookien includes chopped Slim Jims and roasted add spots of personality, and com. sunflower seeds.

Looking for a hardto-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 recipesfor them to be published.

Request Mary Quinn from Baltimore would like some help locating the recipe for the Louisiana Ring Cake that was sold by the long-ago closed Rice's bakery in Baltimore. As she recalls, this slightly o range-flavored ring c a k e had a crunchy outer "crust" on all sides. She said "back in the good old days" the bakery would deliver wonderful fresh breads and cakes to your door. She has never found a bakery version that comes close to the flavor and texture of the Rice's bakery cake and was hoping someone might have their recipe.

Roasted Tomato Basil Soup Makes 4-6 servings. 2t/z Ibs Roma tomatoes cut in half lengthwise 4 TBS olive oil, divided Salt and pepper, to taste, for seasoning tomatoes 1 med onion, chopped 4 cloves of garlic, minced

Dash of red pepper flakes 1 C freshly chopped basil 1 (15-oz) can diced tomatoes 4 C vegetable broth (you can use chicken broth) Salt and pepper, to taste

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Spread the tomatoes on a baking sheet and drizzle with 2 table-

spoons of olive oil. Season with salt and pepper and roast for about 45 minutes. In a large stockpot, heat the other 2 tablespoons of olive oil over

medium heat. Add theonion and cook until tender, about 2-3 minutes. Stir in the garlic and red pepper flakes. Cook for another 2-3 minutes. Add the canned tomatoes, fresh basil and vegetable or chicken broth.

Stir in the oven-roasted tomatoes. Cook for about 30 minutes over medium-low heat. Use an immersion blender to puree the soup in the stockpot, or

transfer soup to a food processor or blender to blend. Thesoup should be smooth, with a few tomato chunks. Season with salt and pepper to

taste, and serve warm. Note: Be careful when transferring the soup to a blender or food

Nosh Makes about 4 dozen.

Makes about 4 dozen.

Pairing: Amber ale.

Pairing: Beer.

/2C unsalted butter, softened t/z C sugar /2C light brown sugar, packed

1 Ig egg t/z tsp vanilla extract 2 TBS fresh cilantro, finely chopped

processor. You may want to wait until it is at room temperature to blend.

ManCookie

1 C all-purpose flour 2 C dry-roasted, salted peanuts 2 TBS dried chili flakes (reduce if you prefer a milder flavor) 1 tsp baking powder 1t/z tsp coarse salt (plus more for garnish before baking)

'/4 C unsalted butter, softened t/z C sugar /2 C light brown sugar, packed

1lgegg '/4 C beer (choose a flavorful beer; not a light beer) 1 TBS lime zest 3 C all-purpose flour

/2 tsp baking powder '/4 tsp baking soda t/z tsp salt 1 C Slim Jim sliced or chopped (about 2 Slim Jim sticks) 14/4C dry-roasted sunflower kernels (non-dry roasted are

ASK A COOK

Are there toxins indried, uncookedbeans'?

oily)

In a large bowl, using an electric mixer, cream together butter and sug-

ars until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes. Mix in egg, vanilla and cilantro.

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In a large bowl, using an electric mixer,

Beat until well blended. cream together butter and sugars until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes. Whisk together flour, peanuts, chili flakes, baking powder and salt in a Mix in egg, beer and lime zest. Beat until well blended.

By Kathleen Purvis

small bowl andadd to butter mixture. Beat until just incorporated. Refrig-

The Charlotte Observer

erate dough for1 hour.

Whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt in a small

s it t rue t hat u n Q •• Icooked dried beans

bowl and add to butter mixture. Beat until just incorporated. Fold in the

Preheat oven to 350degrees. Scoop or drop dough by1 teaspoon por- Slim Jim pieces and sunflower kernels. tions, sprinkle each with a pinch of coarse salt and place1/z inches apart Scoop or drop dough by 1 rounded teaspoon portions and place 1/z on a parchment-lined or nonstick baking sheet. Bake for 9-11 minutes or until bottoms are golden brown. Let sit for a few minutes and transfer to

inches apart on a parchment-lined or nonstick baking sheet. Bake for 8-10 minutes or until bottoms are golden. Let sit for a few minutes and transfer

a cooling rack.

to a cooling rack.

— From "Cookies for GroMrn-Vps,"by Kelly Cooper, RedRock Press, 2012

are poisonous? I bought garbanzo bean f lour to m ak e m y o w n h ummus. I s t h er e a n y danger to eating this flour uncooked?

— From "Cookies for Groytrn-Vps," by Kelly Cooper, RedRock Press, 2012

A

• This is a case of a little • bit of truth leading to a lot of worry. Dried beans do have lectin, a type of protein, called phytohemagglutinin, or PHA. And while PHA is toxic in large amounts, only red kid-

ney beans are high enough in PHA to be an issue. Most dried beans, including garbanzos

(also called chickpeas), have

A sslstance L e a g u e "

of

much smaller amounts. PHA ts reduced by bothng beans for 10 minutes — a lot less time than it takes to cook dried, soaked kidney beans. By the time you soak and cook the beans, the PHA problem is gone. There have been a

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stomach distressafter cooking dried kidney beans in a slow cooker, which doesn't reach a high enough temperature to deactivate the PHA. But canned beans or beans cooked on the stove are OK. Commercially made garb anzo bean f l ou r i s p r o c essed so that the PHA i s not a problem. If you're worr ied, hummus also can b e made from cooked or canned garbanzos.

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FOO D

TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

D3

By David Hagedorn Special to The Washington Post

The Greek salad is a pretty simple affair that represents Mediterranean cuisine at its best. Healthful, refreshing and balanced, every bite of what the Greeks call "horiatiki salata" invites a sensation — be it the saltiness of the olives and feta cheese, the sweetness and acid of the tomatoes, the bite of the onions, the richness of olive oil or the herbaceousness of Greek oregano. Add to that the vibrancy of th e i n gredients' colors, the contrasting textures and the fact that the salad requires so little to put together, and the sum total is unfettered satisfaction. As would be the case with a dish that no doubt was made in ancient times, opinions run strong about w h ich d eviations from the basic recipe are allowable. Dakos salad, the Greek version of panzanella, is best eaten right after you make it. Even the olives can be a non-starter. "It was forced into my head

Greek Salsa Meze

from an earlyagebymy father's father, who was from Kalamos, that a horiatiki salad was only tomato, cucumber, white onion, olive oil, feta cheese, salt and really good oregano," says chef John Manolatos of Cashion's Eat Place in Washington. eNo (additional) acid at all, no peppers and definitely no olives. That was a bastardization." Manolatos pretty much adheres to that. In the summer, he combines heirloom tomatoes at their peak with fresh oregano, Dodoni feta cheese and Lakonian extra-virgin olive oil made from kalamata olives, the kind often found in horiatiki iterations. The Greek version of panzanella, the Dakos salad, hails from Crete. That salad is made by dressing tomatoes, black olives, oregano and capers or caper berries with olive oil and piling them on top of dried barley bread to absorb juices. In my take on the Dakos salad, I use Camparis, pureeing a couple of them to use as soaking liquid for toasted ciabatta bread slices that anchor the dish. As flavor enhancements, I throw in dill and scallions. I have a laissez-faire attitude toward horiatiki. I use small, organic pickling cucumbers, mini seedless cucumbers or English cucumbers because they don't need to be peeled and are less watery than regular cucumbers. I like to include red and daikon radishes, some avocado if I have one on hand and slices of jalapeno to inject heat. 0thers like to add bell or peperoncini peppers and capers. As noted before, the traditional horiatiki d oesn't call for vinegar, but I like red wine vinegar's extra touch of acid in the mix. Two ingredients, in my opinion, are vital to any version of Greek salad: dried Greek oregano and Greek olive oiL If you place Greek oregano next to generic oregano or what's called "Mediterranean

Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post

Dakos Salad

Makes 4 servings. The salsa can bemadeaday in advance, but it's best to add the cheesejust before serving.

Makes 6 servings.

6 slices ciabatta bread (may substitute barley rusk, half an English (seedless) coarsely chopped available at Mediterranean '/4 C minced red onion cucumber, cut into /t-inch markets) cubes (unpeeled) 1 tsp minced preserved lemon 2 Ibs Campari tomatoes, /2 C semi-dried cherry tomatoes (optional) peeled, hulled and cut into1packed in oil, such as Isola 1 tsp dried Greek oregano inch pieces (see note) brand, drained (see notes) 1 TBS fresh lemon juice Pinch kosher salt 4 tsp capers, rinsed and drained (may substitute caper berries, Combine the cucumbers, tomatoes, olives, onion, preserved lemon, if using, oregano, lemon juice, 2 tablecut into quarters) spoons of oil and the feta cheese in a medium bowl. 2 mini cucumbers (seeded) or

/s C cured pitted black olives,

/4 C pitted kalamata olives 2 tsp red wine vinegar /2 C chopped scallions (white and light-green parts) /4 C chopped dill /4 C Greek olive oil, plus more for drizzling 2 tsp dried Greek oregano 8 oz feta cheese, crumbled

2 TBS Greek olive oil, plus more for drizzling 1 (3-oz) piece feta cheese, cut into /s-inch cubes 1 C homemade or store-bought labneh (see notes) Warm pita triangles or pita chips, for serving

Spread /t cup of labneh oneach plate, then spoon the salsa over it. Drizzle with oil and serve with pita bread or chips. Notes:To dry fresh cherry tomatoes, cut each one in half, spread them on a lined baking sheet, season them

with salt and bake at200 degrees for 30 to 40 minutes.

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Place the bread on a baking sheet and toast it until crisp, about 25 minutes. Place one slice on each serving plate and let cool.

Combine /t cup of the tomatoes and the salt in a food processor; pu-

To make labneh, place Greek-style yogurt in a cheesecloth-lined strainer and let it drain at room temperature ree until smooth. Spoon the pureed tomato over each piece of toasted

for 8 hours.

bread. Combine the remaining tomatoes, capers, olives, vinegar, scallions, dill, oil and oregano in a mixing bowl. Spoon the mixture over each piece of toast. Top with feta cheese

Almost Classic Horiatiki

and a drizzle of oil.

Makes 6 servings. Assemble the salad just before serving.

Serve right away.

Note:To peel tomatoes, use a sharp knife to score a shallow "X" on the bottoms. Drop the tomatoes into a pot of boiling water; leave

2 Ibs Campari or Kumato tomatoes, peeled, hulled and cut into 2-inch pieces (see note)

/s sm daikon radish, peeled and cubed 10 red radishes, trimmed and cut into quarters 4 mini cucumbers (seeded) or 1 /2sm jalapeno pepper,seeded, English (seedless) cucumber, if desired, cut crosswise into cut into 1-inch pieces thin slices /2 sm red onion, sliced thin

1 C pitted kalamata olives (may substitute other Greek olives) /2 tsp kosher salt 2 tsp red wine vinegar 1 tsp dried Greek oregano /2 C Greek olive oil 1 (8-oz) block feta cheese, cut into 6 equal slices

them there just long enough for the skins to start to separate and curl. Transfer to a bowl of cold water. When the tomatoes are cool

enough to handle, peel and discard the skins.

Combine the tomatoes, cucumbers, onion, daikon and red radishes, jalapeno, olives, salt, vinegar, /t teaspoon of

the oreganoand Ncup of the oil in a large bowl. Toss tocoat evenly andincorporate. Divide evenly amongindividual plates. Topeach portion with a slice of feta. Sprinkle the cheesewith the remain-

ing oregano and drizzle with the remaining oil.

Note:Topeeland seedtomatoes, bring a medium saucepanof water to a boil. Have ready a bowl of ice water. Cut an "X" in the bottom of eachtomato and removethe stem. Working with one at atime, placethe tomato in the boiling water for15 seconds. Use a slotted spoon to quickly transfer it to the ice water. The skin should slip off. oregano," you'll notice that the Greek is darker and finer. It has a more pungent,earthier flavor than the others, which have a touch of marjoram sweetness to them. Greek olive oil

accompaniment to grilled fish or seafood.I cut the cucumber into small, neat squares, tossed them with semi-dried cherry tomatoes in oil (a great find at Whole Foods Market), feta (high-quality, of course), to me, cubes, cured black olives and is greener, sweeter and more preserved lemon bits.Spread luxuriant than many Italian or on labneh and served with pita Spanish ones I've tried. triangles, the salsa transformed While performing my Greek into a meze. salad experiments, I used the One item most everyone horiatiki profile to fashion an agrees does not belong in an intensely flavored salsa as an authentic Greek salad is let-

tuce. Naturally, I couldn't resist spreading a mixture of cucumbers, sun-dried tomatoes, olives, feta cheese and labneh on overlapping romaine leaves and rolling it all into a cylinder, to be sliced into medallions for a first-course, restaurant-worthy presentation. It's a method c hef-restaurateur Mi ch a el Richard created for his riff on Caesar salad. I call mine a Greek Salad Salad.

Christopher 8 his wife, Mareshah, are back in Bend Io introduce their brand: "Crazy Beautiful" — astyle like no other using b iomejric

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color techniques. Thus implementing his claim tO fame, «Re-DiStributian of Weight Proportion."

Greek Salad Salad

HIGH DESERT BANK

Makes 6 servings. This is a sophisticated presentation of a Greek salad based on chef Michel Richard's concept of a rolled Caesar salad.

In this version, cucumbersand redonion arecombined with labneh (Greek-style yogurt that has beenstrained into a

• •

'

ricotta-like consistency) to make a filling that gets rolled up with romaine leaves, olives and sun-dried tomatoes. I II

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1 English (seedless, unpeeled) /2 C labneh (see note) cucumber, cut into /4-inch dice 8 oz feta cheese, crumbled /4 C minced red onion (about 1/s C) 1 tsp kosher salt 1 clove garlic, crushed 2 heads romaine lettuce, very 1 C oil-packed sun-dried dark green outer leaves tomatoes, drained and removed (about 24 leaves, chopped plus small inner leaves)

/2 C pitted green or black Greek olives 1 tsp dried Greek oregano /2 tsp freshly ground black

pepper Greek extra-virgin olive oil, for drizzling

Combine the cucumbers, onion and salt in a small bowl. Transfer them to a strainer set over a bowl and let them drain for 30 minutes. Trim the tops of the romaine heads so the leaves have a flat edge. Discard the cores. Separate the leaves,

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Combine the labneh, 1 cup of feta and the garlic in a food processor; puree until smooth. Transfer the mixture

to a bowl. Transfer the cucumbers andonion to atowel and gently squeeze andexcess moisture from them. Stir them into the labneh. Combine the sun-dried tomatoes and olives in a small bowl.

FREE coL0R sAMPLEs Now.

Starting 3 inches in from the edge of the plastic wrap closest to you, use the romaine leaves to form a rectangle that

Complete the information belowand bring it to us by May31, 2013 to receive three freePPGVoice of Color samplejars.

Lay 36-inch lengths ofplastic wrap onaclean work surface, overlapping themhorizontally to form a3-foot square.

is 6 leaveswideand4 leaves long, overlapping abit. (Topthe rectangle randomly with any leftover leaves.) Spoon two parallel, horizontal rows of cucumber mixture onto the rectangle of romaine leaves. Thenspread a row of tomatoes and olives below each row of cucumber mixture. (You should have 4 stripes of the mixture

now.) Sprinkle the entire surface with oreganoand pepper. Starting at the side closest to you, roll the lettuce leaves over themselves and into a cylinder, like a jelly roll; you can use some of the plastic wrap as aguide to facilitate the rolling (as you would use when rolling a log of compound butter). Do not let the plastic wrap get caught in the lettuce roll. Once the lettuce rows have rolled

Expert Service Always.

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were wrapping a piece of toffee. Refrigerate the roll for 6 hours. To serve, use a sharp knife to cut a total of12 equal-size slices through the plastic wrap, forming salad "medallions," laying two on each individual plate. Use scissors to cut and remove the bands of plastic wrap.

Garnish each portion with a sprinkle of the remaining feta cheese and a drizzle of oil. Note:To make labneh, place Greek-style yogurt in a cheesecloth-lined strainer and let it drain at room temperature for 8 hours. Or it's available at larger grocery stores and at Mediterranean markets.

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D4 TH E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013

H OME 4

A R DEN

Run a box cutter or utility knife along each side of the old caulk

Caulking

and pull out what you can. Dig • Caulking gun: ($4-$20) (Nec- out the restof the old caulkwith essary for the10-ounce hard plas- a scraping tool like a putty knife, tic tube of caulk that covers about screwdriver or can opener, being Continued from D1

careful to not scratch the tub or tile surfaces.

55 feet; the 5-ounce soft tube covers about17 feet and doesn't

require a gunfor application.) • Rag, sponge or paper towels and non-scratch scrubbing pad • Painter's or masking tape • Rubbing alcohol for cleanup • Mineral spirits (paint thinner) for cleanup

Step 2: Clean and dry the

Step1: Remove old caulk.

an abrasive padsoaked in mineral

that you "scrub the surface with

Arnold

ter helping her do some stuff and told my mom I w anted

Continued from D1

sheep."

the caulk; smooth it down, and then carefully lift away the tape,"

tube of caulk, squeeze it like a tube done, DIYer! Your new caulk of toothpaste, and fill the joint with should last for five years or more.

new sealant from sticking."

recommends the book, "The

a thick bead of caulk.

Do a final cleaning of the joint with a rag moistened with rubbing

Family Handyman Helpful Hints," published by The Reader's Digest

To smooth the caulk, wet your finger with cold water so it won't stick, and slide it down the caulk, pressing it into the joint. Remove

alcohol. If mold is present, spray

Association, 1995.

it with a mild bleach solution, let it sit for several minutes and then

Make a small opening in the tube of caulk by cutting a 45-

wipe it off with clean water. Use

degree angle off the plastic tip. (A large opening will release too

Step 3: Apply new caulk. For a professional-looking, straight line of caulk, use painter's or masking tape. "Run tape along both sides of your planned line of caulk; apply

from the joint with a rag, sponge

• Hair dryer

spirits to get rid of any silicone residue, which will prevent the

a hair dryer to dry the joint completely, or allow it to air dry.

joints. W ipe dustandsoapscum away or paper towels. Newcaulk won't adhere to old caulk, so OldHouse Magazine' swebsiterecommends

Next week: Many uses for leftover cans

much caulk, and you'llhave a

goopy mess.) If you're using a large tubeof caulk, you'll need acaulking gun. Follow the gun instructions to load in the tube, and then fill the joint with a thick bead (about'/~ inch)

of caulk. If using the smaller size

If caulk is sticking to you or

your tools, clean upwith a small amount of mineral spirits (paint thinner) on a rag,andthen wash up with warm soapywater. Allow the caulk to cure for 24

hours before using your bath or shower. Congratulations on ajob well

Silicone caulk is notoriously

stinky, and maycontain toxic chemicals. Be sure to recaulk in a well-ventilated room. Read

the warnings on somebrands of caulk, which inform the consumer that the product contains chemi-

cals known to causecancer, birth defects or other reproductive harm. Environmentally friendly

caulk is available, like Eco-Bond Kitchen-Bath-Plumbing, and Titebond's Tub and Tile Caulk. — Reporter :ahighberger@mac.com.

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p4,'$"

.

Arnold's mother said she would need to save $100 if she Arnold's f asci n a t ion wanted sheep. "So that sumwith sheep started at age 9 mer I worked for the Tigard when she regularly helped a Times and had a paper route neighbor with her animals. so I could save enough monr Our neighbor had a zoo of ey." By the end of the sumanimals, and she had these mer, she'd saved the money sheep, and Icame home af- and bought five Suffolk ewes at $16 each, which "was like a king's ransom to me," said Arnold. Now, she raises sheep for their meat an d s ells t heir wool to the Pendleton Woolen Mill and some local spini ners. Just beyond her home's s ide an d b a c k y ards, t h e sheep roam in fields. Around the house, colorful g arden beds are tucked in between swaths of neatly manicured lawn. The farm is situated in a microclimate and is generallyabout 5 degrees warmer than Bend. "My early stuff starts in F ebruary. ... I'm into the early, early summer stuff already." Peonies, flox, candytuft, akila, a lacy green vine wit h s m all b l ossoms, columbine and wood rose are all on their way to budding out in the Arnolds' yard. For now, the dominant colors are I a • - . the yellow daffodils, purple squill and red species tulips. Arnold keeps 23 ewes, two rams, 39 lambs and about 20

Sheep farming

the masking tapeand admire your work.

"Green" recaulklng:

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r+>

Photos by Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

"I always want the things I have in my yard to have meaning to me," says Becky Arnold at her home in Tumalo.

market lambs. The market lambs are raised until their butcher age, which is 12 to 18 months. That's when she

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transports them to a l o c al butcher shop, w h ere t h ey are inspected. Arnold never names the market lambs to avoid getting attached. There is, however, one exception in the market lamb flock, and her name is Pearl. Born in M a rch o f 2 0 12, P earl s u r vived h e r tw i n and mother following birth. Pearl's mother had become heavy and sick during t he final weeks o f p r e gnancy. Arnold kept her in a small space in the barn to conserve her strength for Iambing, but after the birth the ewe prolapsed and Arnold was left with two w eak l ambs, one of which died in the first few days. The other was brought i nside where it s lept on a rabbit warmer i n A r n o ld's laundry room sink and was bottle-fed around the clock. Arnold's great niece, Pearl, came to visit the farm and named the tiny lamb in the sink as her namesake. "(My great niece) looked at me and said, 'Well, I guess she's going to live her whole life here since she has a name.'"

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As a result of being bottleraised, Pearl is curious about people and will approach as if to say hello. Every day at feeding time, Pearl stands at the gate and waits for Arnold. As the rest of the flock beelinesfor the hay troughs, Pearl trots behind Arnold as she fills water buckets and tends the animals. "I always say my great niece Pearl and Pearl the sheep are soul sisters. They're exactly alike. Pearl is 10, and she's very

gregarious and outgoing, and Pearl the sheep is exactly the same way." In addition to raising sheep, Arnold also tends the garden beds around their house. The yard surrounding the house is fenced to delineate the yard from the pasture. Arnold incorporates mementos from their worldly travels into her garden space, including a sheep bell from Tanzania and a birdhouse with a Kentucky l icense plate for t h e r o o f , which hangs from a s hepherd's hook under a flowering cherry tree. She had the birdhouse made on a trip to

p

On approved credit; see store for details.

Kentucky to visit Abraham Lincoln's b i r thplace. She's also installed edging made of wine bottles, made ornamental trellis from rebar, willow and birch branches and an arbor from metal coat racks. "I always want th e t h i ngs I have in my yard to have meaning to me," said Arnold. "One time I had to buy over-

age on baggage because I brought a bunch of rocks and shells back from my travels. ... I'm a picker at heart."

Feeding time Twice a day, once in the m orning and again i n t h e e vening, A r n old p u l l s o n her sneakers and gloves and heads to the barn to feed the sheep. Before she begins feeding, a chorus of "baaa"ing has already commenced. Each of the sheep types — market lambs, ewes and rams — are corralled separately and fed together, so as Arnold feeds each group of sheep the din lessens. "The neighbors jokingly laugh that they know e xactly where I a m a t d i f f erent times of day by t h e amount of noise the sheep make." Afterthe flocks have had their fill of hay and alfalfa, they pile together and bask in the sun. "Now you could hear a pin drop practically," said Arnold.

Animal understanding

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Daffodils and narcissus bloom in Arnold's garden.

Arnold's workwith animals has taught her that they're capable o f u n d e rstanding things. One experience in particular demonstrated this finding. The Arnolds bought a young f owl, n amed h er E cho, and paired her w i t h a mare named Chocae, and "they became lik e m o ther and daughter." Chocae became sick with cancer when Echo was about 15. The mare declined quickly and died in the middle of the night when Echo wasn't around. When the rendering man arrived to take Chocae away, Arnold pulled off the sheet covering her, and Echo saw for the first time that Chocae was dead. "I have never heard the sound that came out of Echo ... that scream ... she raced up to Chocae and prodded her.... She was so t error-stricken that this mare was gone," said Arnold. "I am a firm believer that animals have more going on in their brain than people think. It changed my mind that animals understand." — Reporter: 541-383-0361or mgallagher@bendbulletin.com


TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DS

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4

While there are many ways to get omega-3 fatty acids into your diet — walnuts, flaxseeds, salmon — if you think your diet is lacking, ome-

ga-3-enhanced eggs could be a good choice. The amountof omega-3s varies by brand, though, so be sure to check.

Photos by Benjamin Benschneider/The Seattle Times

The Shireys call their Bellevue, Wash., home, designed by architect David Clinkston, "the Zero Energy Idea House." The exterior is metal and Hardiepanel. The home has a five-star Built Green rating.

Tony Cenicofa / New York Times News Service

Bellevue couple built green for themselves and to teach others

oosin e s:en ance orno? MARTHA STEWART

By Rebecca Teagarden The Seattle Times

SEATTLE — Before she got into the construction business 41 years ago, Donna Shirey was a teacher. Turns out, she still is. "Our first project with SIPs was in 1987," says Shirey, cofounder of Shirey Handyman 8 Remodeling, discussing the benefits of building with structural insulated panels. "The firstshow we ever did was the Tacoma Home Show in 1987. People said to us, 'You're gonna put foam in h ouses? I read about that in Popular Science.'" The Shireys, Donna and her husband, Riley, have long believed that sustainable building is smart building. And in 2005 they decided to go for it: build the greenest, most affordable, healthy, comfortable and quiet home possible on the shore of Lake Sammamish in Bellevue, Wash. The Shireys would be their own client, and they would open the house to anybody who wanted to come have a look, from construction to completion. Its sustainable credentials are many: photovoltaic panels, solar hot water, tankless water heater, hydronic radiant heating, heat-recovery ventilator, living roof, recycled-content tile, salvaged-wood flooring, metal roof, local materials, rainwater collection using a 3,000-gallon c i stern, s m all footprint, wind turbine, fivestar Built Green rating. More. "We had 3,500 people come t hrough, and that's not i n -

cluding groups," Shirey says brightly, sitting in the golden kitchen of their 1,630-squarefoot home, a little bit country, a little bit contemporary and d esigned by a r c hitect D a vid Clinkston. "Riley thinks the lookie-loos added three months to the process." The morethe merrier, is how they look at it. Why, Shirey (who's fond of such construction bon mots as "build tight; ventilate right," and "use builtins, not furniture") has lived all of her years in a sustainable frame of mind. "My parents went through the Depression; my dad was a butcher in Cleveland. We saved and recycled everything," she says. "You never knew what you were going to need." The Shireys completed the place they call "the Zero Ener-

Q

• I've seen omega-3• e nhanced eggs a t the supermarket. Do they really contain more of the "good" fatty acids? . Eggs enriched with ~

. omega-3s are a good

choice for those who are seeking to get more fatty acids in their diet, says Dee Sandquist, registered dietician and spokesperson for the Academy of Nutrition and D i etetics. F ortified

The Associated Press file photo

Agave syrup tastes like a cross between maple syrup and

honey.

eggs provide more omega3s than regular eggs, beThe TV loft, a private "away room," sits a quick trip up a ship's ladder. Donna Shirey became a contractor after she built her own home 41 years ago. gy Idea House"in 2009. Most recently it and th e couple's Florida home were featured in the book "Prefabulous + Almost Off the Grid" by Sheri Koones. (Fun fact: Robert Redford, who wrotethe preface, worked as a roustabout in the oil fields south of Los Angeles as a teenager.) Koones tells us that houses use about one-third of all the energy in America. But for 80 percent of the year, the Shirey home requires no energy to operate. And each year Puget Sound Energy has sent the Shireys a check for about $650 forpower returned to the grid. The home is contemporary but made comfortable with fat alder trim and bright, cheerful

(no VOC) paint. Rooms (two bedrooms, 2 t/~ baths) are no larger than needed. The living room is a conversation-inducing 11 feet by 12 feet. The home steps down the lake'sedge hillside, from TV loft upstairs to the bedrooms below the main living space. Interior designer Autumn Donovan helped inside, working with the Shireys' "recycled" furniture — pieces they already owned. "Those chairs over there'?" Shirey s ays, pointing to the living room. "I've had those since 1982. We just got them recovered." That kind of ethic is evident all around. "There's always something people can d o," Shirey says, "whether they're building a new house or have an existing one."

The tiles in the powder room are made from scraps of bamboo in the Bellevue, Wash., home of the Shireys. The faucet is low-flow, and the slumped-glass sink is recycled plate glass.

cause the chickens are fed foods rich in omega-3 fatty acids, such as flaxseeds. Note that th e a mount of omega-3s varies by the b rand of e gg, an d t h at you should t a k e s t o ck of your diet before you purchase the fortified variety. " There are m a ny other ways you can get

where from 104 to 120 degrees diminishes nutrients and kills e nzymes. Raw s y rups a r e available in light, amber and dark and are indistinguishable from regular varieties in taste.

your omega-3s, such as

p illows. What should I f i l l them with? Can I make them waterproof? • Most o utdoor p i l lows • and cushion inserts are not fully waterproof, but most are water-repellent. Water is bound to seep into pillows that are left uncovered and subject to rain. If you are sewing your own covers,construct them with an opening that lets water drain out. Pillow inserts: When buying inserts, avoid feather and down, which will retain water. Instead, opt for washable

walnuts, flaxseeds, chia seeds, salmon or herring," s ays Sandquist. If y o u r diet already includes these items and you eat at least one serving of these foods per day, you may not need the ome g a-3-enhanced

eggs. The eggs may be a good substitute, however, if you don't eat fish, nuts or seeds. The Institute of Medicine has established that 1,100 to 1,600 milligrams a day of omega-3s are adequate for a dults. Yo u s h ould also consult your doctor, who can suggest the right amount and type ofomega-3s for you. "People with cardiac risk factors and medical conditions may have differentrecommendations," Sandquist says.

tain foams are good to use as inserts: Dryfast foam ($108 for on e 3 - by-50-by-45-inch sheet, t h e foamfactory.com) dries quickly and is less prone to mold and mildew. An alternative is durable, elastic Dacron foam, a s y n t hetic polyester that can be found in most fabric or upholstery shops, and can go through the washer and dryer. Maintenance: To ensure a fabric's vitality through several summers, it's important to properly care for your outdoor items. The best-quality outdoor fabrics are made of a breathable 100 percent solution-dyed synthetic fabric, such as Sunbrella or Sun N Shade. These cloths can be

wiped down (if casing isn't removable) or hand-washed

(if casing is removable) with warm water and a mild soap. If mold or mildew becomes an issue, spot-treat with a bleachand-water solution, and then lay the fabric flat and let it

air-dry. — Questions of general interest can be emailed to mslletters~ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.com.

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• Agave syrup a nd

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D6 TH E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY '!4, 2013

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

o emanri

i n i meon' o o r

TV SPOTLIGHT

surrogate, helping make the show's outlandish story lines — which can i nvolve alien By Noelene Clark Los Angeles Times races, other planets and fuLOS ANGELES — "Doctor turistic technology — become Who" star Jenna-Louise Colemore relatable. "It's normally me being like, man has been warned. She 'What? Why? How?'" Coleknows that two months from now, fans at Comic-Con Interman said, c huckling. "I'm national in San Diego will line more of the audience asking, up in the thousands, camping and Matt has the dialogue and overnight outside the city's the jargon. I'm very much the convention center tosecure human." seats for the annual panel deC oleman, 27, h a s b e e n voted to the BBC TV sensaperforming since she was a tion. Many will w i eld sonic teenager a ttending s c hool screwdrivers or wear Dalek in Lancashire, in northwest c ostumes, and m o r e t h a n KristaKennell /Abaca Press England. She loved trips to a few will come dressed as "It's normally me being like, the theater and acted in the 'What? Why? How?'" says Coleman's character, Clara. Edinburgh Festival F r i nge But back in March, the hype Jenna-Loulse Coleman of her when she was 18. She landed hadn't caught up with her. role on "Doctor Who." her first job playing Jasmine "Everyone wants to know, Thomas, the niece of the lo'Has your lifechanged since cal vicar, in the long-running joining the show?'" Coleman the show has enjoyed a cross- British soap opera "Emmerdale" while auditioning for said over a lunch of baby beets over into the American mainand tangerine at downtown stream, drawing more than drama schools. "People always refer back Los Angeles' Lazy Ox Can- 2 million viewers for its BBC teen. "And I'm like, 'No, not re- America midseason premiere to that role," she said. "It's the ally.' I just go to Cardiff, and I this March. vicar's niece, so that's all I do mad thingsand experience The current season wraps used to get from people walkmad stuff on set, and then I up May 18, marking the third ing down the street, like 'Does come back to my London life, space tour for Matt Smith as the vicar know you're out this late'?' That kind of thing." which suddenly seems more the Doctor, the 11th actor to boring b ecause I 'v e b e en play the character in the series S he ultimately chose t o blasting Cybermen." over thedecades, and the first forgo formal training, opting T hough "Doctor Who" i s for Coleman's Clara Oswald, instead to continue working something of a British institu- the latest in a long line of so- in television and taking occation, celebrating its 50th an- called companions, partners sional night classes. "I thought, if I go to drama niversary this year, stateside who travel with the Doctor to the series about the eccentric assist him in his Earth-saving schoolfor three years, I'm gotime-traveling alien has long and otherworldly sleuthing. ing to be like 28 when I come been relegated to the realm Like many companions out, and then there's all that of cultish fandom. But with throughout the show's history, playing age I'm going to miss its 2005 revival and reboot, Clara serves as an audience in the middle," she said. "You

try to learn on the job." She landed roles in the BBC drama "Waterloo Road" and in Julian Fellowes' "Titanic" miniseries, in addition to some smaller indie films and a bit part in "Captain America: The First Avenger." But her turn on "Doctor Who" might prove to be what raises her professional profile in the U.S. When she auditioned, she recalled that Smith greeted her with a hug, and instead of watching her from behind a desk, they worked on several scenes together. "I had prepared my scenes in a certain way, like you do, and Matt knocked all of that out the window and totally surprised me, and in surprising me, it felt very spontaneous between the two of us, and that was really exciting," she said. At 5 feet 2, Coleman stands a full head shorter than Smith, but as Clara, the diminutive actressmatches Smith's audacious Doctor toe to toe in spiritedbanter.Coleman possesses a ready smile, punctuated by dimples, and expressive brown eyes that sparkle with contained mischief when she teasesSmith on screen. "She's up for a bit of banter, and she holds her own," Coleman said. "She's definitely a match for the Doctor. She's not intimidated by him. She's curious. She finds him amazing and ridiculous in equal measures, but she mentions the

W oman ngl sie,sex-reean happy Dear Abby: I am a woman in my late 40s and I hate sex. I always have and always will. I'm disabled, and it has always been torture. I never got anypositive benefits out of it. My problem is I get hit on constantly. I tried marriage once, more for financialreasons than anything else, but I couldn't wait to DEAR get out. I'm single now, ABBY own my own home, and the men in this town (married and single) all seem to think I'm fair game. They're convinced that I'm in need of satisfaction because I don't date or have a steady man in my life. I have told them repeatedly that it's not goingto happen, but everyonce in a while one pops up on my doorstep or approaches me in town, only to be told AGAIN to leave me alone. Please don'ttellmeto seeatherapist. The last one I went to tried to tell me I

ture. Your therapist should not have tried to label you as gay. You appear to beasexual,which you describe as happily sex-free. The next time you are hit on by one ofthesemen — who, by the way, probably think that by doing so they are "helping" — tell

him you are happy

with your life just the way it is, and it isn't necessaryto off erhelp where none is needed. Period. Dear Abby: I really like this girl, but my parents absolutely cannot stand her. They hate that she has a tattoo and a lip ring, but her appearance has had no effect on her professional life, as she is on the road to success in her field. I am not writingto askwhether I should stay with her, because I intend to. She's an amazing person, a hard worker, a trustworthy partner and, most of all, she's my best friend. was gay. No! I'm simply happy being How can I diffusepotentially"comsingle and sex-free. I go where I want bustible" situations with my parents, and don't have to answer to anyone. who always try to put her down no Short of running these idiots off with matter how often I plead my case? —Joein Rhode Island a shotgun, how do I get it throughtheir thick skulls that I'm not available? Dear Joe: Whether your parents — Sexless ByChoice approve or not, tattoos seem to have Dear Sexless: Although we live in become a rite of passage for many a sex-obsessed society, not everyone people of your generation, and so — male or female — is a sexual crea- have lip rings, eyebrow rings and

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUESDAY, MAY14, 2013: This yearyouencounter

multiple ear piercings. If you are over 21 and living independent of your parents, then you have the right to choose thewomen you become involved with. From your letter, I'd say your values are mature. In time, your parents may recognize the fine qualities you see in this young woman. If they don't, theymay wind up estranging a son. Right now, getting into a debate about her will be a losing proposition and I'm advising you against it. Dear Abby: I'll be visiting the United States in a couple of weeks, and I'm really excited. Now my question: How do I tip the waitress properly'? I know to round the bill by 15 percent and up, but do I pay only in cash, or can I have this amount charged to my credit card? Are there any other things I have to look out for'? I don't want to offend anyone. — Jutta inTrier, Germany Dear Jutta: If you prefer to add your tip to your credit card, it is perfectly acceptableto do so.H owever,before you pay, you should review the bill to be sure that a gratuity has not already been included, which can happen when a group of people dine together. I hope you will enjoy your visit and that it will be the first of many. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

YOUR HOROSCOPE

some touchy situations yet manageto By Jacqueline Bigar remain held together. Sometimes you get involvedinpowerplays,evenwhenyou have no interest in them. Try to figure out Your sixth sense tells you when to stop, whyyou do this. so make it a point to listen carefully to it. Stars show the kind If you are single, Tonight: Indulge a loved one. of dayyou'll have you could meet ** * * * D ynamic someone easily and CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * P ositive e x perience the most** * * You are capable of creating what ** * A verage eup horic beginning. you want. You could bedealing with a contentious friend right now, or perhaps ** S o-so Give yourself plenty a demanding and unpredictable situation. * Difficult of time before Instead of running from fire to fire, stop and committing. If you center yourself. Decide what your priorities are attached, as acouple, you have had are, then act. Tonight: All smiles. and continue to haveissues over power and control. Accept each other asyou are. LEO (July 23-Aug.22) ** You sense that more is going on CANCERseems understanding and nearly behind the scenes than others are willing to always receptive to your energy. acknowledge. Observe more, andget to the ARIES (March21-April 19) root of a problem. Theunexpected occurs ** * * Whether it happens in reality when you least expect it, but the experience or in your dreams, you'll awake with an opensyou upto bemoreadventuresome. unusual insight and aneed to push in a Tonight: Vanish while you can. certain direction. You have a lot of power VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) andenergybehindyou,andyoucouldfeel ** * * * Y ou will want to keep your focus nearly unstoppable. Bemore awareofyour and not get distracted. There is something public image. Tonight: Let the fun begin. going on that could bedeterring you from TAURUS (April 20-May20) staying centered. A loved onemight have ** * * You will be on a mission from pushed beyond normal limits. Avoid a themomentyou wake up.Youcouldhave something you want to say to someone, but power play by not playing, and remain unresponsive. Tonight: Ever playful. this person might not be readyto hear it. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Detach, and tryto see the whole situation ** * Pressure builds. It seems as if an from a different perspective. Tonight: Let authority figure has high expectations for yourself relax with friends. whatyou can do. Truthbe told, you might GEMINI (May21-June20) be focused on apersonal issue that is ** * Be more aware of your possessive taking up a lot of your time. Youcould be andmaterialistic side; otherwise, you could egging on the other party, but a fight might find yourself caught up in ashopping spree clear the air. Tonight: Try to stay centered. that might be nearly impossible to stop.

** * * W hile others run around in circles, you have the uniqueability to stay focused on whatyou need to do. Though youare an emotional sign, you know when to detach and see the big picture. Youwill do just that right now. Avoid a power struggle. Tonight: Go for something unusual.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

** * You could be trying to do something very differently. Realize that you needto work closely with one person in order to succeed. Don't allow a situation to intimidate you. Someonecould be trying to make you feel insecure. Just be assertive. Tonight: Chat over dinner.

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * * O t hers have the intention of running the show. Aren't you a little tired of this scenario? Youmight want to be more involved. Perhaps you need to start your own project and not let others in. No one questions your competency. Tonight: Let your creative genie out of the bottle.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * K nowwhatyou want. You will want to put an extra effort into maintaining your desired pace. Someonemight throw a boomerang in your path. Don't spend too much time wondering why. Just continue as you have been.Tonight: Happy whenyou finally get home.

PISCES (Feh.19-March20) ** * * You are so creative and dynamic that others can trigger your imagination with a simple comment about the weather or something similar. You might want to stay on top of what is going on. Jot down your thoughts if you're being hit bytoo manyideas.Tonight:Funand games. © 2013 by King Features Syndicate

TV TODAY

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Sp.m. onlD~, "So YouThinkYou Can Dance" — Host Cat Deeley andjudges NigelLythgoeand Mary Murphy return for Season 10 of the dance competition, with an assortment of guest judges including actors Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Minnie Driver, comedian Wayne Brady.

ridiculous a bit more often." The playfully c o mbative companionship between the Doctor and Clara was inspired partly by Indiana Jones and Marion Ravenwood in "Raiders of the Lost Ark," which Coleman watched at Smith's

9p.m. onl3, "NCIS: Los Angeles" — The search for stolen nuclear weapons is on after an explosion in the Pacific that has some aftershocks for the NCIS team. Hetty (Linda Hunt) assigns Callen and Kensi (Chris O'Donnell, Daniela Ruah) to investigate overseas, while Sam (LL Cool J) works stateside with Deeks (Eric Christian Olsen) in the season finale, "Descent."

urging. "I really loved their sparky kind of r elationship," Coleman said. "He's like, 'You wait here,' and she's like, 'I'm not waiting here, I'm coming with

you!'"

Coleman's performance so far hasbeen well-received by Whovians, who are quick to draw parallels between Clara, a nanny i n c o n temporary London, and previous companions. Los Angeles Times critic Robert Lloyd described the character as "very clever, and a little bit impudent" and "young, pretty, spunky and self-possessed." Coleman currently is back in the U.K. She just finished shooting the f e ature-length "Doctor Who" 50th annivers ary special, which will b e r eleased theatrically and i n 3-D in Britain in November, in addition to airing on BBC One. The special, which will featureprevious Doctors and companions, will be televised in the U.S. on BBC America. She'll return to the States this summer for Comic-Con, where some 6,500 fans are expected to gather in the venue's largest hall for the panel devoted to the series.

9 p.m. on l3, "New Girl" — As Cece (Hannah Simone) prepares to walk down the aisle, Jess and Nick(Zooey Deschanel,Jake Johnson) come to a decision about their own relationship. Schmidt and Winston (Max Greenfield, Lamorne Morris) schemetosabotagethewedding, buta shocking announcement steals their thunder in the season finale, "Elaine's Big Day." Rob Reiner and Taylor Swift guest star. 9:30p.m. on lI 3,"The Mindy ~ Project" — Unwilling to wait for Casey (Anders Holm) to return from his volunteer mission in Haiti, Mindy (Mindy Kalingi decides to go with him. Danny (Chris Messina) and his ex, Christina (Chloe Sevigny), throw them an unforgettable going-away party in the season finale, "Take MeWith You." Ed Weeksalso stars. 10 p.m. onES, "Golden Boy" — Speculation has been rampant that CBS will not bring back this cop drama, so this very well could be your last chance. In the season finale, "Next Question," the newly deskbound Clark (Theo James) delves into Owen's (Chi McBride) cold case involving a murdered construction worker. Michael Madsen guest stars as Clark's estranged father.

MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • 42 (PG-13) 12:05, 3:05, 6:40, 9:50 • THE BIG WEDDING (R) I:20, 4:25, 7:45, 10:05 •THE CROODS (PG)1:IO,4:20,6:50,9:25 • G.I. JOE: RETALIATION (PG-13) I, 3:35, 7:25, 10:05 • THE GREAT GATSBY3-0 (PG-13) 12:20, 2:30, 3:40, 6:15, 6:55, 9:30, 10:10 • THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 4:10, 6, 7:35, 9:15 • IRON MAN 3 (PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 12:40, 1:25, 2:35, 4:30, 6:05, 7: I0, 7:55, 9:20 • IRON MAN 33-0 (PG-13) I2:10, 3:15, 3:50, 6:25, 9:35, 10:15 • IRON MAN IMAX 3 (PG-13) 12:30, 4, 7, 10 • OBLIVION (PG-13) 12:35, 3:30, 6:30, 9:40 • OLYMPUS HAS FALLEN (R) Noon • OZ THEGREAT AND POWERFUL (PG)11:50a.m.,2:55, 6:35, 9:45 • PAIN & GAIN(R)12:50,4:05,7:20,10:20 • SCARY MOVIE(PG-13) 5 11:45 a.m. • Accessibility devicesareavailable forsome movies. t

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10:01 p.m. onHf3, "Grimm" — The zombies had to show up eventually. In this new episode, Nick and Hank (David Giuntoli, Russell Hornsby) investigate when they discover suspects dying a second time. Adalind (Claire Coffee) is caught in the middle of a feud between FrauPechand Stefania (Mary McDonald-Lewis, Shohreh Aghdashlooi in Europe. Juliette (Bitsie Tulloch) insists Monroe (Silas Weir Mitchell) tell her Nick's darkest secret in "The Waking Dead." ©zap2u

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Madras Cinema 5, 1101S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • 42 (PG-13) 4:10, 7 • THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) 3:40, 6:30 • IRON MAN (PG-13) 3 3:30, 6:20 • IRON MAN 33-0 (PG-13) 4, 6:50 • PAIN 5 GAIN (R) 3:50, 6:40 Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • IDENTITY THIEF (Rj 6:30 • IRON MAN (UPSTAIRS 3 — PG-13) 6:15 • Theupstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibility.

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

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013

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Pets & Supplies

Antiques & Collectibles

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Building Materials

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209 4x4 posts, 8' L, Port Factory bulk ammo sale: Orford treated Cedar, $12 SUPER TOP SOIL 45acp, 40 S&W, 223/556 ea; or $10 ea for whole www.hershe sotlahdbark.com Pomeranian/long haired load. 541-598-5710 ITEMS FORSALE 264-Snow RemovalEquipment Screened, soil 8 com22LR. 541-647-8931 Chihuahua puppies, post m i x ed , no 201 - NewToday 265 - Building Materials $250 cash.541-678-7599 Davltzn Need to get an GUNS,GUNS,GUNS rocks/clods. High hu202- Want to buy or rent 266- Heating and Stoves Visit our HUGE Pomeranian Puppies, 3 Olympic arms AR-15, mus level, exc. f or ad in ASAP? 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 267- Fuel and Wood home decor of the cutest, just in fully customized w/ flower beds, lawns, consignment store. 204- Santa's Gift Basket You can place it 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers time for Mothers Day! extras, $1350. Remgardens, straight New items Farm Equipment 205- Free ltems 269- GardeningSupplies & Equipment ington 870 express online at: $350. 541-480-3160 s creened to p s o i l . arrive daily! & Machinery 208- Pets and Supplies shotgun, $250. Marlin 270 - Lost and Found Bark. Clean fill. Dewww.bendbulletin.com 930 SE Textron, POODLE AKC Toys. 210- Furniture & Appliances .17 customized with liver/you haul. Bend 541-318-1501 GARAGE SALES Loving, cuddly comTrailer 1 6x 8 f l a tbed 211 - Children's Items AMMO, $400. 541-548-3949. www.redeuxbend.com 541-385-5809 275 - Auction Sales panions. 541-475-3889 metal deck, tandem Call 541-419-6054 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 280 - Estate Sales axle, tilt, sideboards, Just bought a new boat? 215- Coins & Stamps Bend Habitat NEW Bushmaster AR-15 $1000. 541-312-2137 281 - Fundraiser Sales Sell your old one in the The Bulletin reserves rifle, $1175. G lock 19 240- Crafts and Hobbies RESTORE Lost & Found classifieds! Ask about our the right to publish all 9mm, 282- Sales Northwest Bend 241 - Bicycles and Accessories Building Supply Resale $550. 541-647-8931 ads from The Bulletin Super Seller rates! 284- Sales Southwest Bend Quality at LOW Found dog, black & white Hay, Grain & Feed 242 - ExerciseEquipment newspaper onto The OREGON'S LARGEST 541-385-5809 PRICES female, Rickard Rd 8 286- Sales Northeast Bend 243 - Ski Equipment Bulletin Internet web- GUN & KNIFE SHOW 740 NE 1st Billadeau. 541-385-7626 Queensfand Heelers 244 - Snowboards 288- Sales Southeast Bend site. Wanted: Irrigated farm May 18th & 19th 541-312-6709 Standard & Mini, $150 290- Sales RedmondArea 245 - Golf Equipment Found to y in The ground, under pivot irSat. 9-6 • Sun. 9-4 Open to the public. 8 up. 541-280-1537 The Bulletin rigation, i n C e n tral 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 292- Sales Other Areas ADM: $10.00 Bulletin's parking lot ger rng Cent el Oregontnte lg03 www.rightwayranch.wor 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. Portland Expo Center Sisters Habitat ReStore Fri. 5/3; call to iden- OR. 541-419-2713 FARM MARKET dpress.com Building Supply Resale tify, 541-382-1811 1-5 Exit 306B 246 248- Health andBeautyItems Want to b u y A l falfa, 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery Seniors & V e t erans! Quality items. For Info: 503-363-9564 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs grass and grain hay, Guns, Hunting 316 - Irrigation Equipment www.wesknodelgunLOW PRICES! Lost cat, black, stub tail, Adopt a c o mpanion standing, in Central 251 - Hot TubsandSpas & Fishing 150 N. Fir. 325Hay, Grain and Feed shows.com Sat 5/4 near Wagner Mall cat from Tumalo resOre. 541-419-2713 253- TV, StereoandVideo 541-549-1621 Redmond. 541-548-1620 cue, f e e wai v ed! 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies R UGER LCR .38 c a l 255 - Computers 300 rnds of .357 Sig, Open to the public. Tame, fixed, shots, ID 341 - Horses and Equipment lightweight rev, new in Lost Cat (Roxy) - RE256- Photography chip, tested, more! $200. 400 rnds of .40 box, Poultry, Rabbits, 345-Livestockand Equipment $450. 541-815-4901 WARD. Small female 257- Musical Instruments 389-8420. P hot o s : S&W hollow points, 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals Tortoiseshell w/white & Supplies $280. 541-647-8931 Heating & Stoves www.craftcats.org. 258 - Travel/Tickets SAVAGE Mod. 111 7mm 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers chest & b e lly. Last Like us on Facebook. 259- Memberships mag, 3x9 scope 8 ammo, 357 Sass V aqueros, seen 4/27 in the vicin- Serama's Chi c kens, NOTICE TO 358- Farmer's Column 260- Misc. Items Shih Tzu mix, very tiny, consecutive numbers, $395. 541-815-4901 smallest 8 lig h test ity of Badger Rd. 8 ADVERTISER 375- Meat and Animal Processing 261 - MedicalEquipment gorgeous. $300 each. $1600. 541-728-8772 Savage Model 110E cal. Since September 29, Parrell. Please call or breed in the world. For 383 - Produce andFood 262 -Commercial/Office Equip. 541-977-0035 show or companion30-06 w/Burnell 9x scope 1991, advertising for text if you see her. 400 rnds of .308 Win, ship, 541-433-2112. 263- Tools m i litary a djustable used woodstoves has 541-390-5169. Siamese kittens, raised $450. 40 rnds of 22-250, 8 sling, $395 obo. Call been limited to modin home. Gorgeous! 208 $50. 541-647-8931 541-593-7438 before 5pm els which have been Lost kitty, black & white Only $20. 541-977-7019 Pets 8 Supplies c ertified by th e O r- long-haired, white spot on Horses & Equipment i 500 rnds . 380 a u to, Thompson Siberian Husky pups; 8 $250. 500 rnds 9mm, T CR83, 2 23 , Arms egon Department of chin, microchipped, Thou0 2 4 3 , Trails campground MINIATURE DONKEYS Ball Python, 40"+, 55 English Bulldog, beau- Husky-Wolf-Mal. p u ps Environmental Qual- sand $250. 541-647-8931 30-06 barrels and two 5/10. 541-923-6948 gallon glass tank, $300 tiful white, female, 4 $400 ea. 541-977-7019 registered, Red and ity (DEQ) and the fedscopes, $1,500. o bo. T al k to Eve , yrs o l d . sp a y ed, Bend local pays CASH!! R uger ¹ t eral En v ironmentalLOST "Olive" 10-yr-old w hite jack, 9 m o . , 2 7 0 , 3 1 0 541-420-7925, or Iv msg. needs bulldog knowl- Yorkies! 2 beautiful girls $250, Jennets $400 for all firearms & Ag e n cy spayed f e male t/g left. Taking deposits ammo. Leopold Gold Ring, Protection e dgable family, a i r and up. Must s ell. 541-526-0617 (EPA) as having met '/g Shi-Tzu, Corgi $1,000. Boxer AKC puppies; also conditioned home, no $200. A vail i n 2 smoke emission stan- long-hair black, gray, 541-548-5216. 541-728-1568 weeks. Will be small. CASH!! Valley Bulldogs. $700/ small children. Very dards. A cer t ified Text f o r pic t ures NE area near For Guns, Ammo 8 $800. 541-325-3375 active. $500. w oodstove may b e white Wanted: Collector airport. 541-419-6356 Call a Pro 541-480-2715 or Reloading Supplies. 541-382-9334. identified by its certifiI Want to Buy or Rent seeks high quality email ta n a O bend541-408-6900. Whether you need a cation label, which is fishing items. REMEMBER: If you broadband.com permanently attached fence fixed, hedges Wanted: $Cash paid for have lost an animal, Colt AR-15 .223 Match Call 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746 to the stove. The Buldon't forget to check vintage costume jewtrimmed or a house letin will no t k n ow- The Humane Society elry. Top dollar paid for II, many extras, $1895. Furniturea,Appliances 255 built, you'll find ingly accept advertisGold/Silver.l buy by the in Bend 541-382-3537 Michael, 541-310-9057 Estate, Honest Artist Computers i ng for the sale of professional help in Redmond, Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Cavalier King Charles Fawn Pugs CKC $400. A1 Washers&Dryers uncertified 541-923-0882 The Bulletin's "Call a Spaniel, C h a mpion Mother and Father on DON'TMISS IHIS T HE B U L LETIN r e - woodstoves. $150 ea. Full warPrineville, WANTED: Tobacco sired, tri-colored 5-mo site. Ready for their Service Professional" quires computer adranty. Free Del. Also 541-447-71 78; old male puppy, very n ew h o mes. C a l l wanted, used W/D's 267 pipes - Briars and vertisers with multiple Directory OR Craft Cats, affectionate, housebro- 541-261-9437 smoking accessories. DO YOU HAVE Fuel 8 Wood 541-280-7355 ad schedules or those 541-389-8420. 541-385-5809 Fair prices paid. ken, crate 8 l e a sh SOMETHING TO selling multiple sysCall 541-390-7029 trained, parents heart & SELL tems/ software, to diseye certified, neutered, GENERATE SOME exbetween 10 am-3 pm FOR $500 OR WHEN BUYING close the name of the vaccinations & wormcitement i n your Estate Sales • Liv e stock 8, Equipment LESS? FIREWOOD... business or the term ing up-to-date, $1500. neighborhood! Plan a Non-commercial "dealer" in their ads. Kerrill, 541-382-7614 To avoid fraud, garage sale and don't Estate Sale 2 days only, Nubian Dairy Goats Pets & Supplies advertisers may Private party advertis. K, The Bulletin forget to advertise in Fri-Sat, May 17-18, 8-5. milkers, does, wethers 8 place an ad ers are d efined as classified! recommends pay6251 SE Beretta Way, bucks. 541-923-7116 Chihuahua puppies, (2) Frenchtons - SPRING with our those who sell one The Bulletin recomPUPPIES. Put ment for Firewood Prineville. Appliances r eally c u te ! $ 2 5 0 . 541-385-5809. "QUICK CASH computer. mends extra caution 541-771-2606 deposit down for only upon delivery furniture, clothing, veSPECIAL" when purc h asMothers Day. $700 to Patio furniture: Brown & 1 week 3 lines 12 and inspection. hicles, watercraft, trailer, 257 Farmers Column • A cord is 128 cu. ft. sporting goods & tools. ing products or ser- Dachshund, minicream $800. 541-548-0747 Jordan, 4 chairs 8 table, OI' ood c o n d , $20 0 . Musical Instruments 4' x 4' x 8' Estate buyers welcome. vices from out of the dapple girl, 7 weeks, ~M ore Pixat Bendbulletin.c g ~ge eke g et tox20 STORAGE 541-241-0237 • Receipts should area. Sending cash, $300. Can send pic- German Shepherd pups, Ad must BUILDINGS Yamaha 88-Keyboard, 286 checks, or credit ininclude name, tures. 541-408-6762. R ecliner, L aZ B o y , include price of for protecting hay, ready May 15th. DGX-505, w / bench, f ormation may b e phone, price and Sales Northeast Bend burgundy leather, like e~le te of Seoo Call 541-620-0946 firewood, livestock $350. 541-647-1292 kind of wood subjected to fraud. Donate deposit bottles/ new cond., orig. $900, or less, or multiple etc. $1496 Installed. For more i nformapurchased. German Shorthair $490. 541-385-8020 cans to local all volitems whose total 541-617-1133. 260 tion about an adver• Firewood ads ** FREE ** unteer, non-profit res- Pointer, AKC, liver, neudoes not exceed CCB ¹173684. Misc. Items tiser, you may call tered, all shots, worked R ecliner, Power L i f t MUST include cue, to h elp w /cat on game preserve. $300. chair, brown corduroy, $500. Garage Safe Kit kfjbuildersOykwc.net the O r egon State species 8 cost per spay/neuter vet bills. Place an ad in The 541-419-8963 Buying Diamonds Attorney General's $250 firm. cord to better serve Call Classifieds at for Cats trailer Bulletin for your gaFind exactly what Office Co n s umer Cans 541-610-9910. /Gold for Cash our customers. 541-385-5809 at n e w Re d mond Lab mix female 1 y r. rage sale and re- you are looking for in the Protection hotline at Saxon's Fine Jewelers www.bendbulletin.com Petco (near Wal-Mart) FREE to good home ceive a Garage Sale 1-877-877-9392. 541-389-6655 'til The Bulletin CLASSIFIEDS 5/20. D o n a teonly. 541-420-5602, Joe. The Bulletin Kit FREE! gen ng Cenr el O egon rwre tg03 M on-Fri a t Smi t h recommends extra BUYING The Bulletin Labradoodles Mini & e • o. Signs, 1515 NE 2nd; FIND YOUR FUTURE KIT INCLUDES: Ser ing Central 0 egon t nte rggg Lionel/American Flyer AH Year Dependable size, several colors chasing products or, HOME INTHE BULLETIN • 4 Garage Sale Signs For Sale, Lowline or at CRAFT, Tumalo med 541-504-2662 trains, accessories. Firewood: Seasoned • $2.00 Off Coupon To Angus and Dexter's anytime. 3 8 9 -8420; services from out of I 541-408-2191. Adopt a nice cat from for more i n fo/map, www.alpen-ridge.com the area. Sending y Lodgepole, Split, Del. Use Toward Your Your future is just a page Heifers. (pregnant or Tumalo s a n ctuary, visit www.craftcats.org Labrador, golden pure- c ash, c hecks, o r I• away. Whether you're looking BUYING & S E L LING Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 Next Ad with calf) NO steers PetSmart, or P etco! for $335. Cash, Check • 10 Tips For "Garage available except for bred neutered male, no l credit i n f o rmation for a hat cr a place to hangit, All gold jewelry, silver or Credit Card OK. Fixed, shots, ID chip, Sale Success!" The Bulletin Classified is and gold coins, bars, 541-420-3484. cow/calf pairs. papers, 3 yrs, exlnt with may be subjected to tested, more! Sancrounds, wedding sets, DO YOU HAVE your best source. Grass fed/raised. kids/pets/ other dogs. l FRAUD. For more tuary open Sat/Sun class rings, sterling silSOMETHING TO Reasonable prices. $300/obo, to approved information about an s 1-5, other days by Every daythousandsof PICK UP YOUR SELL home only. 541-408-3004 Must sell as advertiser, you may l buyers and sellers cf goods ver, coin collect, vin- Gardening Supplies GARAGE SALE KIT at a ppt. 6 5 48 0 7 8 t h , tage watches, dental FOR $500 OR I am retiring. call t h e Or e gon / and services do business in 1777 SW Chandler Bend. Photos, map at Like cats? Want to help /' State gold. Bill Fl e ming,• & E q uipment LESS? Att or n ey ' Leo 541-306-0357 www.craftcats.org. Ave., Bend, OR 97702 these pages.Theyknow the forgotten cats of 541-382-9419. Non-commercial l General's O f f i c e 541-389-8420, or like C .O.? Volunteer a t you can't beat The Bul l etin advertisers may Protec- • The Bulletin Wanted: Irrigated farm us on Facebook. Wanted- paying cash BarkTurfSoil.com Classified Section for CRAFT 8 ge t y o ur I Consumer place an ad with t ion ho t l in e at I selection for Hi-fi audio & stuground, under pivot irand convenience kitty fix! All kinds of our Adult barn/shop/ workrigation, i n C e n tral l 1-877-877-9392. dio equip. Mclntosh, PROMPT D E LIVERY - every item isjust a phone help needed, give a "QUICK CASH ing cats, fixed, shots, OR. 541-419-2713 call away. J BL, Marantz, D y little time or a lot. Call Good classified ads tell 541-389-9663 SPECIAL" some friendly, some naco, Heathkit, San3 89-8420 o r vis i t the essential facts in an Want to b u y A l falfa, The Classified Section is not. No fee 8 free de- 1 week 3 lines 12 sui, Carver, NAD, etc. www.craftcats.org. interesting Manner. Write grass and grain hay, e~ k ge! easy to use. Every item livery. 541-389 8420 Call 541-261-1808 from the readers view - nct standing, in C entral Ad must include For newspaper is categorized andevery Parrot Cage, 35" tall, Ore. 541-419-2713 delivery, call the the seller's. Convert the Alaskan Malamutes, price of single item cartegory is indexed onthe WHEN YOU SEE THIS 37" wide, 24" deep, Antiques & AKC-Champion, of $500 or less, or Circulation Dept. at facts into benefits. Show section's front page. play pen on top and Collectibles 541-385-5800 Extremely well bred, multiple items the reader how the item will skirt around bottom. ~Oo Whether youare lookingfor Produce & Food unaltered, 2 young whosetotal does To place an ad, call help them in someway. $75 OBO. Circa 1945 -14 place a home orneed aservice, More P ixa t B e n d b u i l e ti f j , com 541-385-5809 adult females, $400 not exceed $500. 541-647-4232 This setting of C a stleton your future is in the pagesof On a classified ad Capt. Johnny Halibut or email ea. 541-848-5558 advertising tip The Bulletin Classified. classified 0 bendbulletin.com go to Sale! Case price half off Call Classifieds at Pit mix puppies, born China, Sunnybrooke brought to you by www.bendbulletin.com Aussie-mix, mini,working 541-385-5809 4/2/13, parents on site, 5 pattern, many extra all stores. In Bend 8 The Bulletin dad, 1st shots/worming, www.bendbulletin.com boys, 4 girls, nice color- p ieces incl. $ 4 7 5 . The Bulletin to view additional Redmond, call for locaSererng Central Oregon stnte tgta The Bulletin $150. 541-420-4403 541-475-2872 tions: 503-396-9428 ing, $200 541-306-9218. photos of the item. •

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E2 TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809

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

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

The Bulletin

Sereng Central Oregon tmce 1909

The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week but all applicants must be available to work Saturday nights. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m., and end between 2:00a.m.and 3:30 a.m. Starting pay is $9.00 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts are short (11:301:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. Must be able to stand for long periods of time to load machines. Will require repetitive stooping and bending and must be able to lift 50 lbs. All hiring is contingent upon passing

Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Saturday • • • •. . . . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri. • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • pre-employment drug screen. Sunday. • • • •

a

Place a photoinyour private party ad foronly $15.00 perweek.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

"UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500in total merchandise

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

Garage Sale Special

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

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

(caii for commercial line ad rates)

*Must state prices in sd

Please apply by delivering a resume to The Bulletin at 1777 SW Chandler Ave., 8-5, M thru F. Or email a resume to keldred@bendbulletin.com. Please include job title in the subject line.

EOE, Drug Free Workplace.

Human Resources

: lES SCNNAB A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

C®X

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

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

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

QOrj0rj

476

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

CLERICAL AutomotiveLube Tech/Customer DMV/Title Clerk Relation Specialist needed, full-time, for No experience neces- Bend location. Title 8 sary! Oil Can Henry's Registration e x p erinow hiring motivated, ence a must; RV/Auto friendly people to fill Industry 8 Accounting experience preferred. Immediate opening for lubrication/customer relation specialist po- C ompetitive pa y 8 an experienced sitions. Our compre- benefits. Please send Sawmill Supervisor hensive training pro- resume' to (Gilchrist, OR) gram includes bcrvhireo mail.com you want to be part apply in person at Dooi advancement oppor- or a "World Class" tunities c o m petitive 6 3500 N . H w y 9 7 , maintenance organiBend, Oregon. pay and bonus prozation? Doyou posgram. Apply or fax sess the follow expecontract information to General rienceiskill leve/s? our Bend s tore ; •Post-secondary edu6 1160 S. Hwy 9 7 cation - minimum JEL&WEN. Fax 541-318-1595 or wINDows a Doo Rs Grade 12 education our Redmond store; •5+ years of Sawmill 2184 S. Hwy 97 - fax J ELD-WEN, i n c . supervisory or similar

INTERFOR

421

Schools & Training Tired of Your Boring Dead-End Job?? Power Your Career with WIND! 6 Mo. Turbine Technician Program FREE SEMINAR

Wednesday, May 15th 2:OOPM OR 7:00PM Holiday Inn Express 20615 Grandview Bend, OR 800-868-1816 www.nw-rei.com 470

Domestic & In-Home Positions Christian woman w i ll work for room and board. 503-267-1444. 476

541-923-9987. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.

Banking

has the following experience employment op- •Lumber grading ticket and familiarization portunities available in K l amath with Optimization will be an asset Falls, OR: We want you to join

• Service Desk first communit c r e d t u n t o n Computer Tech • Data Center We are excited to Tech announce an avail• Release/Deploy able position for a Financial S e r vice Administrator R epresentative Bend, Oregon.

Employment Opportunities

in

Salary Range: $10.00- $19.00

For more details please apply online: Pull-time, needed for www.myfirstccu.org Bend location. RV/ EOE Auto Industry accounting experience preferred. Co m petitive pay 8 benefits. Please Check out the send resume' to classifieds online bcrvhireo mail.com or apply in person at www.bendbulletin.com 63500 N. Hwy 97, Updated daily Bend, Oregon.

Accounting Clerk,

Administrative

l jS SCNWAB Administrative Assistant — Purchasing Department Provides administrative s upport t o the Purchasing and Technical Training groups. Duties include managing travel schedules, reviewing and sorting correspondence, preparing training materials, record keeping and preparing and proofing documents, and providing information related to training and testing.

Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service and over 400 stores in the Northwest, we offer a competitive salary, excellent benefits, retirement, and cash bonus. Resumes will be accepted through May 22, 2013. Please send resume and salary requirements to: Z Y LSHuman.Resources Olesschwab.com. Emails must include the position title in the subject line. No phone calls please. EOE Accounting

liS SCHINB Assistant Controller

Manages various accounting functions within the Warehouse Division. Responsibilities include supervising accounting staff; evaluating and monitoring accounts payable processes; assisting the Controller in publishing monthly financial statements; overseeing the general ledger and reconciling gross profits by general ledger account; performing year-end inventory adjustments; preparing various year-end accruals and analysis and working with internal and external auditors. Requires a bachelor's degree in accounting, finance or related field and 3+ years of accounting experience. CPA preferred. Must have working knowledge of GAAP, proven supervisory success, strong organizational skills and attention to detail, advanced PC skills including Microsoft Word and Excel, and working knowledge of general ledger and ERP systems. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service and over 400 stores in the Northwest, we offer a c o mpetitive salary, excellent benefits, retirement, and cash bonus. Resumes will be accepted through May 22, 2013.

Please send resume and salary requirements to: ZYLSHuman.Resources@lesschwab.com. Emails must state "Assistant Controller" in the subject line. No phone calls please. EOE

Benefits Supervisor Oversees the company's benefits programs including group health, dental, vision, life insurance, EAP and Retirement Trust.

The Bulletin

For more info. please visit

www.jeld-wen.com.

Email resume to jobs@jeld-wen.com

EOE

our Sawmill team in Gilchrist, OR. We offer a competitive salary and benefits package. Please apply on line at www.interfor.com/careers EEO/Drug Free Workplace Employer Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

f g,tr~> JIP) Jf,jj JlitJjjJ~ jg Can be found on these pages:

Mailroom Clerk

Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5e00 pm Fri •

Tuesday•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mona Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tuese

476

Responsibilities include benefit plan administration; vendor r elations; monitoring and reporting on benefit plan performance; assisting with benefit plan design; working with legal counsel an d s u pervising b enefits s t aff. Requires a bachelor's degree and 5-7 years related experience or equivalent and prior supervisory experience. Must have knowledge of federal and state regulations, filing and compliance requirements, excellent communication, organizational and analytical skills, thorough knowledge of p la n d esign and proficiency in MS Office applications.

Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service and over 400 stores in the Northwest, we offer a c o mpetitive salary, e xcellent benefits, retirement, an d c a s h bonus. Resumes will be accepted through June 9,2013. Please send resume and salary requirements to: ZYLSHuman.Resources@lesschwab.com. Emails must state "Benefits Supervisor" in the subject line. No phone calls please. EOE

is

liS SCNNAB Help Desk Analyst Provide support services for company-wide users. Responds to calls regarding all types of computer hardware and software related issues; resolves issues or coordinates resolution with appropriate IS departments and provides training on new technologies.

Computer Operator Runs and monitors scheduled jobs, prepares and monitors equipment, removes and prepares output for distribution, maintains proper documentation and performs routine equipment maintenance.Responds to user and system support issues, troubleshoots problems and works with other groups on project or support work.

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

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Photographer

The Bulletin Bulletin Advertising Department Special Projects Photographer I Editorial Assistant

Medical Ass i stant Full-time, 6 mo. min. exp. Pick up application/job description pkg at office. Madras Medical Group 76 NE 12th St.,

Madras, OR. Plumber- Ri d geline Plumbing is seeking The Bulletin is seeking a skilled photographer licensed journeyman and editorial assistant to join the Special plumber. Full time poProjects team. This position will average 20 sition. 541-467-2971 hours per week. Successful candidate will be responsible for on-site and studio photogra- Remember.... phy for advertising products including special A dd your we b a d magazines and niche products as well as dress to your ad and retail advertising. readers on The Bulletin' s web site Editorial assistant duties include some writing, will be able to click organization, editing, data base management. through automatically Will also assist in some social media project to your site. assistance as well as participation in local RV Service/Parts Manevents sponsored by The Bulletin. This is a ager a n d Te c h s. fun, fast-paced position. 25-Year D e alership expands and is hiring Qualified employee will possess basic photography s kills, c o mputer s k ills i n c luding exceptionally s k illed Microsoft Office Suite and Adobe Creative people. M o v e to beautiful Lake Havasu Suite. Will require the use of a reliable personal a u tomobile, proof of insurance, lifting City, Arizona Now! 928-208-6474. up to 40 lbs. To apply, send a resume, cover letter and any appropriate work samples to: Martha Tiller at mtillerobendbulletin.com EOE / Drug-free Workplace

Web Developer Are you a technical star who can also communicate effectively with non-technical executives and employees? Would you like to work hard, play hard in beautiful Bend, OR, the recreation capital of the state? Then we'd like to talk to you. Our busy media company that publishes numerous web and mobile sites seeks an experienced developer who is also a forward thinker, creative problem solver, excellent communicator, and self-motivated professional. We are redesigning all of our websites within the next couple of years and want you in on the ground floor. Fluencywith PHP, HTML5, CSS3, jQuery and JavaScript is a must. Experience integrating third-party solutions and social media applications required. Desired experience includes: XML/JSON, MySQL, Joomla, Java, responsive web design, Rails, WordPress. Top-notch skills with user interface and graphic design an added plus. Background in the media industry desired but not required. This is a full-time position with benefits. If you've got what it takes, e-mail a cover letter, resume, and portfolio/work sample links a n d/o r re p ository ( GitHub) t o

resume@wescompapers.com.

This posting is also on the web at www.bendbulletin.com EOE/Drug Free Workplace

r

The Bulletin

I Recommends extra

caution when pur- i products or I I chasing services from out of i i the area. Sendingi c ash, checks, o r l credit i n f o rmationl i may be subjected to FRAUD. i more informaI For tion about an adver- i l tiser, you may call l the Oregon State l Attorney General'si Co n s umert I Office Protection hotline at I I 1-877-877-9392. I iilletttT

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i

TRUCK DRIVER wanted must have doubles endorsement. Truck is parked in Madras, OR.

Local run. Call

541-475-4221

Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

R iver F o rest A c r es Road District and Neighborhood Townhall M eeting...Sunriver L i brary . . June 18..O 1 pm

Business Application Specialist

Works with business stakeholders to understand business requirements and identify approaches to meet businessneeds. Works with others to ensure the application is functioning at optimal performance levels and meets business needs; configures the application for feature and function roll-outs; maintains current knowledge; works with business users to analyze current procedures; suggests process improvements; and performs other duties related to the application.

Call54I 385 5809tc tramoteyourservice Advertisefor 28 dcysstarting at ' I4I irat tpeoal pattagertaotaralatteaaaarwttarte t

Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Carel

NOTICE: Oregon state Nelson law req u ires anyLandscaping & one who co n t racts Maintenance Zccrt't'd gaa/riI Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent for construction work Advertising Account Executive Serving Central customer service and over 400 stores in the to be licensed with the Zau9r gth e r',a. Oregon Since 2003 Northwest, we offer a c o mpetitive salary, C onstruction Con - More Than Service The Bulletin is looking for a professional and Residental/Commercial excellent benefits, retirement, and cash bonus. tractors Board (CCB). driven Sales and Marketing person to help our Peace Of Mind Resumes will be accepted through May 22, A n active lice n se Sprinkler customers grow their businesses with an 2013. Please send resume and salary remeans the contractor Activation/Repair expanding list of broad-reach and targeted Spring Clean Up quirements to: ZYLSHuman.Resourceso i s bonded an d i n Back Flow Testing •Leaves products. This full time position requires a lesschwab.com. Emails must include the posis ured. Ver if y t h e •Cones background in c onsultative sales, territory tion title in the subject line. contractor's CCB Maintenance • Needles management and aggressive prospecting skills. c ense through t h e • Thatch 8 Aerate • Debris Hauling Two years of m edia sales experience is No phone calls please. CCB Cons u m er • Spring Clean up EOE preferable, but we will train the right candidate. Website •Weekly Mowing Weed Free Bark www.hirealtcensedcontractor. & Edging 8 Flower Beds com • Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly The p o sition in c ludes a com p etitive or call 503-378-4621. Maintenance compensation package including benefits, and Human Resources The Bulletin recom- Lawn Renovation •Bark, Rock, Etc. rewards an aggressive, customer focused mends checking with Aeration - Dethatching salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Overseed the CCB prior to con': liS SCNNAB ~Landaca in tracting with anyone. Compost •Landscape Email your resume, cover letter Top Dressing Some other t rades Construction and salary history to: also req u ire addi•Water Feature Human Resources / Legal Jay 8randt, Advertising Director tional licenses a nd Landscape Installation/Maint. We have the following positions available certifications. jbrandt@bendbulletin.com •Pavers Maintenance in our HR and Legal Departments: Oi' Full or Partial Service •Renovations drop off your resume in person at • Irngations Installation • Mowing eEdging Drywall Services 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, DR 97702; Internal Promotions Remodels 8 Repairs. No • Pruning «Weeding Senior Discounts Or mailto PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; job too small, free ex- Sprinkler Adjustments Coordinator Bonded & Insured No phone inquiries please. act quotes. CCB¹ Coordinate al l a s pects o f o u r in t ernal 541-815-4458 177336 541-408-6169 Fertilizer included employee promotion program including openLCB¹8759 with monthly program EOE I Drug Free Workplace ing and closing positions, scheduling and coordinating panel i n terviews, p roviding SPRING CLEAN-UP! Weekly,monthly p rogram s u pport a n d inf o rmation t o • D e bris Removal Aeration/Dethatching Accounting employees,managers and executives. or one time service. Weekly/one-time service JUNK BE GONE avail. Bonded, insured. I Haul Away FREE EXPERIENCED Free Estimates! HR Administrative Assistant lES SCNNAB For Salvage. Also Commercial COLLINS Lawn Maint Provide general support to the HR department Cleanups & Cleanouts & Residential including answering questions and providing Ca/l 541-480-9714 Mel, 541-389-8107 information to e mployees and managers, Accounting / Finance administering pre-employment background We have the following positions available in Senior Discounts USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! check and drug screen processes, adminisHandyman our Accounting and Finance Departments: 541-390-1466 tering random drug testing program, maintain- • Same Day Response Door-to-door selling with ing department calendar, processing invoices I DO THAT! fast results! It's the easiest and check requests and other duties and Accounting Specialist Home/Rental repairs N OTICE: OREGON way in the world to sell. projects as assigned. Responsible for accounting and reporting Landscape ContracSmall jobs to remodels duties such as posting invoices and journal Honest, guaranteed tors Law (ORS 671) entries, a s sisting with financial statement HR Business Partner r equires a l l bu s i - The Bulletin Classified work. CCB¹151573 541-385-5809 preparation, preparing monthly and quarterly This is a senior level HR Generalist position Dennis 541-317-9768 nesses that advertise reports, assisting with month end and year end serving as the primary point of contact for to p e r form L a n dclosing, issuing vendor payments, maintaining management in an assigned geographic scape C o nstruction ALLEN REINSCH BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS which 1099s, and other duties as assigned. region. Provide advice regarding employeeincl u des: Yard maintenance & Search the area's most related issues, company policy, regulatory p lanting, deck s , clean-up, thatching, comprehensive listing of requirements, and other complicated HRfences, arbors, plugging 8 much more! Merchant Services Specialist classified advertising... related issues. w ater-features, and Reconciles merchant services (VISA, M/C, Call 541-536-1 294 real estate to automotive, installation, repair of AMEX and Discover) transactions for all store merchandise to sporting irrigation systems to locations; monitors, analyzes and re-bills Paralegal Landscaping goods. Bulletin Classifieds be licensed with the Maverick bankcard fees; investigates chargeback and Provide general support for the legal and Mowing, weedeating,yd appear every day in the Landscape Contrac- detail., chain saw work, retrieval request notices; resolves customer compliance departments through dual role as print or on line. t ors B o a rd . Th i s bobcat excv., etc! LCB transaction disputes; sets u p n e w s t ore paralegal and administrative assistant. Assist 4-digit number is to be ¹8671 541-923-4324 Call 541-385-5809 locations with merchant ID ¹s; and reconciles in response to legal inquiries and complaints, www.bendbulletin.com included in all advermonthly bank statements and performs other provide general litigation and administrative tisements which indi- Expert Chainsaw and duties as assigned. support and maintain legal files and records. cate the business has hedge trimming opa bond, insurance and erator, 30 yrs. exp. workers c ompensa- Call 541-633-9895. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent Les Schwab has a r eputation of excellent ERIC REEVE HANDY tion for their employcustomer service and over 400 stores in the customer service and over 400 stores in the ees. For your protecNorthwest, we offer a c o mpetitive salary, Northwest, we offer a c o mpetitive salary, SERVICES. Home & Commercial Repairs, tion call 503-378-5909 Painting/Wall Coveringi excellent benefits, retirement, and cash bonus. e xcellent benefits, retirement, an d c a s h Carpentry-Painting, or use our website: Resumes will be accepted through May 22, bonus. Resumes will be accepted through Pressure-washing, www.lcb.state.or.us to WESTERN PAINTING 2013. Please send r e sume an d s a lary May 22 , 2 0 13 . P l ease s en d r e sume Honey Do's. On-time check license status CO. Richard Hayman, requirements to : ZY L SHuman.Resources and salary requirements to: ZYLSHuman. promise. Senior before co n t racting a semi-retired paint@lesschwab.com. Emails must include the R esources I lesschwab.com. Emails m u s t Discount. Work guar- with t h e bu s iness. ing contractor of 45 position title in the subject line. include position title in the subject line. anteed. 541-389-3361 Persons doing land- years. S m al l J obs or 541-771-4463 scape m aintenance Welcome. Interior & No phone calls please. No phone calls please. Bonded & Insured do not require a LCB Exterior. c c b ¹ 5184. EOE EOE CCB¹181595 license. 541-388-6910

The Bulletin



E4 TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DAILY BRI D (j E C LUB

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

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Will OrtZ Sh

4,2013 Tu esday,May1

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Expect the worst By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services

"Hope for the best, expect the worst. Life is a play. We're unrehearsed." — Mel Brooks A s declarer, yo u m u s t o f t e n assume a friendly lie of the cards to have a chance. You also may need to guard against a foul lie. Today's South jumped boldly to four hearts in response to North's double. He played low from dummy on the first club, ruffed in his hand and led a t rump, on w hich West played the jack.

dealer. What is your opening call? ANSWER: Experts can disagree over basicissues: Here there would be support for opening one club and one diamond. I would prefer to open one club, planning to bid 1NT over a one-spade response. That sequence would let me reach a heart partscore if partner had a weak hand with 5-4-2-2 distribution. I would never open one diamond and bid two clubs next. East dealer Both sides vulnerable

NORTH

SPADE SHIFT

4I A

When dummy's king won, South returned a trump ... and saw East discard. West won with the eight and defended accuratelyby cashing the ace and leading a spade. When declarer took the ace and started the diamonds, West waited to ruff the fourth diamond, stranding dummy with two more losers. Down two. South hoped for good things in t rumps when h e s h o ul d h a v e expected the worst. He can afford three trump losers, so after the king wins, he should start the diamonds. West can ruff the third diamond, but no matter how he continues, South loses only two more tricks.

DAILY QUESTION

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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 14 2013 E5

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

~

u

I •

762

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

f • •

n

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 834

PSEKEBQ 8 DtTIHZCm

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

0~0~

Very Nice - $565

Clean, quiet 2 bdrm w/ private patio, no smkg or pets. 1000 NE Butler Mkt Rd. Call 541-598-4877

630

528

Rooms for Rent

Loans & Mortgages

836

Apt./Multiplex NW Bend

Small clean Studio Room for rent, Just bring Downtown area, $495 your toothbrush, one 1 mo.; $475 dep. all The Bulletin recombdrm, full bath, office, utilities paid. No pets, mends you use cauk itchen u s e , fu l l y no smoking. 541- 330tion when you prostocked with utensils. 9769 or 541-480-7870 vide personal home at The information to compa- Beautiful Greens Golf Course in 650 nies offering loans or Redmond. $500/mo. + credit, especially Houses for Rent s mall ut i l it y bil l . those asking for ad541-279-9538. NE Bend vance loan fees or companies from out of Studios 8 Kitchenettes 1611 Bear Creek Rd. 4 state. If you have Furnished room, TV w/ Bdrm, 2 bath, garage, concerns or quescable, micro & fridge. fireplace, gas tions, we suggest you Utils & l inens. New fenced, w/d, $925 mo. owners.$145-$165/wk heat, consult your attorney 541-948-4531 541-382-1885 or call CONSUMER WARNING

HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.

634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party **No Application Fee **

will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200.

2 bdrm, 1 bath, $530 8 $540 w/lease. Carports included! FOX HOLLOW APTS.

(541) 383-31 52 Cascade Rental Management. Co.

LOCALMONEYrWe buy secured trust deeds 8 Call for Specials! note,some hard money Limited numbers avail. loans. Call Pat Kellev 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. 541-382-3099 ext.1 3. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN, TURN THE PAGE 541-383-9313 For More Ads Professionally The Bulletin managed by Norris 8 Stevens, Inc.

870

Homes with Acreage

705

Real Estate Services Boise, ID Real Estate For relocation info, call Mike Conklin, 208-941-8458 Silvercreek Realty 745

Homes for Sale

C oming Soon to t h e Market, beautiful log home on 1 acre w/ s pectacular v ie w , 4 0'x60' R V Shop. $339,000. Lisa Johnson Principal Broker, Horsepower Real Estate 541-510-4601

:o.

Motorcycles & Accessories

Q

Suzuki Ei er 2004 Harley Davidson XL Quadrunner ATV, auto1200 2007, Sportsmatic, new tires, 2215 ter Low. Like new, miles, covered dog only 2800 mi., major carrier platform, nylon upgrades and addidust cover, set of 4 tions. Helmets and snow chains. $3200. Jackets i n c luded. Contact Larry at $6500.503-508-2367 971-678-3196 or

oD(( 850

Snowmobiles

Harley Heritage

(2) 2000 A rctic C at Softail, 2003 Z L580's EFI with n e w Bendhomes.com $5,000+ in extras, covers, electric start w/ $2000 paint job, for Complete Listings of reverse, low miles, both 30K mi. 1 owner, Area Real Estate for Sale excellent; with new 2009 For more information Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, 763 please call drive off/on w/double tilt, 541-385-8090 Recreational Homes lots of accys. Selling due or 209-605-5537 to m e dical r e asons. & Property $6000 all. 541-536-8130 Look at:

6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, Cabin in forest, hunting, short track, variable view. By owner, ideal for f ishing, stream 7 5 exhaust valves, elecmiles. 541-480-7215 extended family. tric s tart, r e verse, $590,000. 541-390-0886 manuals, rec o rds,Harley Limited 103 2011, new spare belt, cover, many extras, stage 1 & air 773 heated hand g rips, cushion seat. 18,123 mi, NOTICE Acreages nice, fast, $999. Call $20,990. 541-306-0289 All real estate adverTom, 541-385-7932, tised here in is subThe Bulletin ject to t h e F e deral CHECK YOUR AD • Yamaha 750 1999 To Subscribe call F air H o using A c t , Please check your ad Mountain Max, $1400 541-385-5800 or go to which makes it illegal on the first day it runs • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 www.bendbulletin.com to advertise any pref- to make sure it is cor- EXT, $1000. erence, limitation or • Zieman 4-place rect. Sometimes indiscrimination based s tructions over t h e trailer SOLDi on race, color, reli- phone are misunder- All in good condition. gion, sex, handicap, stood and an e rror Located in La Pine. familial status or na- can occur in your ad. Call 541-408-6149. tional origin, or inten- If this happens to your HD Fat Boy 1996 tion to make any such ad, please contact us 860 preferences, l i mita- the first day your ad Motorcycles & Accessories Completely customized Must see and hear to tions or discrimination. appears and we will We will not knowingly be happy to fix it as appreciate. 2012 Award Winner. accept any advertis- s oon a s w e ca n . ing for r eal e state Deadlines are: Week$17,000 obo. 541-548-4807 which is in violation of days 11:00 noon for this law. All persons next day, Sat. 11:00 HD Screaming Eagle are hereby informed a.m. for Sunday and Electra Glide 2005, that all dwellings ad- Monday. 1988 ATK 406, refur103" motor, two tone vertised are available bished by American Dirt 541 -385-5809 candy teal, new tires, on an equal opportuBike, 1 hour running time 23K Thank you! miles, CD player, on complete overhaul. nity basis. The Bulle- The Bulletin Classified $1495. 541-504-7745 hydraulic clutch, extin Classified cellent condition. Highest offer takes it. Need help fixing stuff? 775 750 541-480-8080. Call A Service Professional Manufactured/ Redmond Homes find the help you need. Mobile Homes www.bendbulletin.com Looking for your next

emp/oyee?

FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. 541-548-5511 Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page 4 Bdrm 2.5 bath, 1700 views every month sq.ft., appls., f enced at no extra cost. yard, on cul-de-sac. No Bulletin Classifieds smoking. Pets? 2400 Get Results! NE Jeni Jo Ct., near Call 385-5809 or You know what hospital. $ 1 0 95/mo.. place your ad on-line 503-680-9590. at they say about bendbulletin.com "one man's trash". BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Search the area's most There's a whole pile 762 comprehensive listing of of "treasure" here! Homes with Acreage classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting Baker City - 3 Bdrm, 3 goods. Bulletin Classifieds bath, 3 100+ s q . ft. semi secluded home, appear every day in the on 5 acre lot w/many print or on line. p onderosa pin e s. Thousands ofadsdaily Call 541-385-5809 45'x24' Morton built in print andonline. www.bendbulletin.com insolated metal shop, $395,000. 541-523-2368

Where buyers meet sellers

Classifieds

The Bulletin

.

x

xl »

ATVs

Boa t s & Accessories j 19.5' Bayliner Discovery 2008, MerCruiser 135hp motor, open bow, full canopy, al-

ways garage-stored, used 5 times, new tags, $14,500 541-977-3120

nortonjack © comcast.net I

Yamaha Banshee 2001 custom built 350 motor race-ready, lots of extras $4999/obo 541-647-8931

20.5' 2004 Bayliner 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow, exc. cond with very low hours, lots of extras incl. tower, Bimini & custom trailer, $17,950. 541-389-1413

870

Boats & Accessories

14' 1982 Valco River Sled, 70 h.p., FishFinder. Older boat but price includes trailer, 3 wheels and tires. All for $1 5 00 ! Cal l 541-416-8811

eee

20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530

21' Crownline 215 hp in/outboard e n g ine 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin sleeps 2/ 3 p e ople, portable toilet, exc. cond. Asking $8,000. OBO. 541-388-8339 14'5" Gregor 2005 9' Outdoor inflatable boat, 2004 EZ Load pontoon boat, as new, t railer, 2005 1 5 hp full of extras, deluxe seat, Merc motor, electric oars, anchors, fish & rod trolling motor w i th holders, $300, a bargain! remote foot control, Peter, 562-659-4691 downrigger, H u mmingbird fish/depth Ads published in the "Boats" classification finder, full canvas & much more. Excelinclude: Speed, fishlent cond. $ 3100. ing, drift, canoe, 541-382-6731, Bend house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please se 16' Reinell, 1975, 4-cyl Class 875. Volvo in/outboard motor, 541-385-5809 EZ Loader trailer, $3300, as is. 541-350-0967

The Bulletin Advertise your car! Add A Picture!

Reach thousands of readers!

Road King Classic 2002 Harley Davidson Heritage Softail - Fl, emerald green & black, lots of chrome & extras, 9K mi, perfect cond. $9995. Call 503-999-7356 (cell)

2000 22K mi, 1550 stage II EFI, SEI2

cam, new heads/Ig valves, Revtech digital fuel optimizer, Samson true dual headers, Hooker mufflers, HD touring seat/handlebars, BMW K100 LT 1 9 87 backrests, lots of 52k miles, b r onze, extras, excellent extra wind s hield, condition. $9700 trailer hitch, battery Call for more info charger, full luggage 541-788-3004 hard bags, manuals and paperwork. Al-

ways garaged. $3200.

18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 Volvo Penta, 270HP,

Call 541-385-5809 The BulletinCfassffieds

low hrs., must see, $15,000, 541-330-3939 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 hp Bowrider w/depth finder, radio/CD player, rod holders, full canvas, EZ Loader trailer, exclnt cond, $13,000. 707-484-3518 (Bend)

Beautiful

h o u seboat,

$85,000. 541-390-4693

www.centraloregon houseboat.com.

FIMD IT!

Don, 541-504-5989

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Harley Davidson SoftTail De l uxe 2 0 0 7 , white/cobalt, w / passenger kit, Vance 8 Hines muffler system & kit, 1045 mi., exc. cond, $16,9 9 9, 541-389-91 88.

Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. Harley Davidson Sports- $7000 OBO. For ter, 2001, 1200cc, 9,257 m ore info. c a l l m iles, $ 5 750. Ca l l 541-647-4232 Michael, 541-310-9057

I

SELL IT! Boat loader, elec. for The Bulletin Classifieds pickup canopy, extras, $450, 541-548-3711 GENERATE SOME ex-

citement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, g r eat classified! 385-5809. cond, well maintained, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755

The Bulletin

Serwng Central Oregon s<nce l903

Time to declutter? Need some extra cash? Need some extra space the garage?

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List one Item* in The Bulletin's

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Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and

ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com c

The Bulletin

To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (on Bend's west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines of text only. Excludesall service, hay, wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals arid employment advertising, acdall commercial accounts. Must be anindividual item under $200.00 arid price of individual item must beincludediri the ad. Ask your Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer riin schedulesandadditional features. Limit1 ad per item per30 daysto be sold


E6 TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 932

v

4

BOATS &RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890- RVsfor Rent

Antique & Classic Autos

Antique & Classic Autos

Sport Utility Vehicles •

Aut o m obiles

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

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

CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport - 4 LT loaded, clear bra hood 8 fenders. New Michelin Super

Ford Explorer Limited 2006, RV Tow Vehicle, Exc. Cond. Flat Tow, Remote Start M&G Air Tow B rake Syst e m , Coupe, project car, flatLights Wired Breakhead V-8, 3 spd extra away switch, Roadparts, & materials, $2000 master Tow H itch obo. 541-410-7473 3M Clearguard, Always Garaged, 32k Chevrolet Cameo mi., Camel Leather Pickup, 1957, Interior $17 , 9 95. Plymouth B a r racuda disassembled, frame 541-480-7837 1966, original car! 300 powder coated, new hp, 360 V8, centerfront sheet metal, cab lines, 541-593-2597 restored. $9995 firm. Have an item to Call for more info, PROJECT CARS: Chevy sell quick? 541-306-9958 (cell) 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & If it's under Chevy Coupe 1950 rolling chassis's $1750 '500 you can place it in ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, complete car, $ 1949; The Bulletin Cadillac Series 61 1950, Classifieds for: 2 dr. hard top, complete w/spare f r on t cl i p ., '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Chevy C-20 Pickup $3950, 541-382-7391 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; '16 - 3 lines, 14 days auto 4-spd, 396, model (Private Party ads only) CST /all options, orig. owner, $19,950, 940 541-923-6049 Oldsmobile Alero 2004, classic 4-dr in showroom condition, leather, chrome wheels, 1 owner, low miles. $7500. 1952 Ford Customline 541-382-2452

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

March 21, 2006, in official records of DesSports, G.S. floor chutes County, Oregon, in b o ok/reel/ mats, 17,000 miles, volume No. XX, page Crystal red. No. XX , f e e/file/In$45,000. 503-358-1164. strument/microfilm/rec eption No . 2 0 0 619347, covering the People Look for Information for the County of Des- following d e s cribed 881 About Products and real property situated chutes, h a s apServices Every Daythrough Watercraft Travel Trailers 0 pointed A n ni e P. in said County and The Bulletin Classifieds State, to-wit: Lot 7, of B ridgeford as P e r 0 0 , I Ads published in "Wa- P ioneer 23 ' 19 0 F Q sonal Representative Sunpointe, Phase III, tercraft" include: Kay- 2006, EZ Lift, $9750. Ford Taurus 1999, 91K, of the Estate of RobDeschutes C o u nty, professionally m aint'd, ert Bridgeford, d eaks, rafts and motor- 541-548-1096 Oregon, c o mmonly $2800. 541-306-6937 Ized personal ceased. All persons known as: 21355 Pufwatercrafts. For As I having claims against fin Drive, Bend, OR "boats" please see 97701. Both the Bens aid estate are r e Class 870. a n d the quired to present the eficiary 541-385-5809 same w it h p r oper Trustee have elected vouchers to the Per- to sell the said real sonal Representative, property to satisfy the Prowler 2009 Extreme Ford Taurus Wagon 2004, c/o John D. S orlie, obligations secured by E dition. Model 2 7 0 120K miles, loaded, in B ryant, L o vlien & said Trust Deed and RL, 2 slides, opposnice s hape, $ 4 200. Jarvis, PC, 591 SW notice has been reV" Motorhomes ing in living area, ent. 541-815-9939 Mill View Way, Bend, corded pursuant to center, sep. bedroom, & a ~zer " Section 86.735(3) of Mazda Miata2008 Tour- Oregon 97702 within Oregon Revised 2 ne w e x tra t i res, Statfour months from the Vans ing Edition, 6-spd, 9900 hitch, bars, sway bar Chevy 1955 PROJECT T-BIRD 1988 S port date of first publica- utes: The default for miles, no issues, Carfax/ included. P r o-Pack, 1/3 interest in Columbia car. 2 door wgn, 350 which the foreclosure tion of this notice as anti-theft. Good cond, 400, $150,000 located small block w/Weiand coupe, 34,400 orig. Ford 1-ton extended van, maint records, $17,000 stated below, or they is m a d e is the 'til @ Sunriver. H o urly dual quad tunnel ram mi., A/C, PW, PL, new 1995, 460 engine, set-up obo; 541-788-1234 c lean. Re q . Grantor's: Failure to L m ay be barred. A l l f or c o n tractor w i t h 'SPM %I 4/20/15. $19 , 900. rental rate (based upon with 450 Holleys. T-10 tires/brakes/hoses/ persons whose rights pay the monthly payFleetwood D i scovery 541-390-1122 8 exhausts. Tan shelves & bins, fold-down approval) $775. Also: 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, belts ment due on June 1, may be affected by 40' 2003, diesel mo- skslra@msn.com ladder rack, tow hitch, w/tan interior. Weld Prostar wheels, S21 hangar avail. for this proceeding may 2010, of principal, intorhome w/all Immaculate! $4,995. 180K miles, new tranny & extra rolling chassis + s ale, o r l e ase @ terest and impounds obtain additional inoptions-3 slide outs, 5 4 1-322-4843, brakes; needs catalytic $15/day or $325/mo. extras. $6500 for all. Days f ormation from t h e and subsequent inRV converter & new windsatellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Eves 541-3835043 541-389-7669. 541-948-2963 shield. $2200. records of the court, stallments due thereetc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. CONSIGNMENTS Nissan Sentra 2012 pl u s late 541-220-7808 the Personal Repre- after; WANTED Wintered i n h e ated Pull warranty, 35mpg, I charges; together with sentative, or the Atshop. $89,900 O.B.O. We Do The Work ... . ~ < h 520 per tank, all power. aa Ford Aerostar 1994 You Keep The Cash! torney for the Per- all subsequent sums 541-447-8664 Eddie Bauer Edition $13,500. 541-788-0427 On-site credit sonal Representative. advanced by BenefiG eorgie B o y 199 6 approval team, Fully Loaded, Dated and first pub- ciary pursuant to the Cruisemaster 31', web site presence. Mint Condition! Porsche Carrera 911 lished May 14, 2013. terms and conditions VW BUG 1972 rebuilt 460, Banks air, slide We Take Trade-Ins! 1/3 interest i n w e l l- Chevy Wagon 1957, 2003 convertible with Personal Representa- of said Deed of Trust. Runs Excellent! o ut, l evelers, n e w eng, new paint, tires, equipped IFR Beech Bohardtop. 50K miles, pay m e nt Free Advertising. 4-dr., complete, tive: Annie P. Bridge- Monthly $3000. chrome whls, 30 mpg tires, lo w m i l eage, BIG COUNTRY RV new factory Porsche nanza A36, new 10-550/ $7,000 OBO, trades. Mo n t hly f ord, 6 9389 C a m p $1,372.34 541-350-1201 nice! $19,000. C a ll $3800. 541-233-7272 motor 6 mos ago with prop, located KBDN. Late Charge $0.00. Bend: 541-330-2495 Polk Road, Sisters, Please call 18 mo factory warDon (541) 520-8547 $65,000. 541-419-9510 Redmond: O regon, 97759 , By this reason of said 541-389-6998 ranty remaining. 541-548-5254 541-549-9539. Attor- default th e B e n efi$37,500. ney f o r Pe r sonal ciary has declared all Garage Sales 541-322-6928 Tick, Tock Representative: John obligations secured by Springdale 2007 26' low D. So r l ie , OSB said Deed of T rust miles, awninq, A/C, Garage Sales Tick, Tock... immediately due and ¹95045, Bryant, Lovexc. cond., $14,000. Garage Sales Toyota Camrysr VW Convertible 1977, Ford E150, 2002, imlien 8 J a rvis, P.C., payable, said sums 541-848-9359. ...don't let time get maculate, 144K, $4995; Jayco Seneca 34', 2007. new tires & brakes, re1984, SOLD; being the f ollowing, 591 S.W. Mill View Find them built engine, newer paint, consider trade for nice 28K miles, 2 slides, Duaway. Hire a 1985 SOLD; Way, Bend, Oregon t o-wit; The s u m o f travel trlr. 541-610-6150 ramax diesel, 1 owner, $9500. 541-388-5591 to 97702, T e l ephone: $223,932.23, in 1986 parts car professional out excellent cond, $89,995; (541) 382-4331, Fax: gether with i nterest only one left! $500 933 Trade? 541-546-6920 The Bulletin of The Bulletin's thereon at 6.125% per (541) 389- 3 386, Call for details, Pickups "Call A Service Email: sorlie@bljlaw- annum from May 01, Classifieds 541-548-6592 2010, until paid; plus yers.com. Professional" Springdale 27' 2005, 4' a ll a c c rued la t e 541-385-5809 G MC Sierra S L T LEGAL NOTICE slide in dining/living area, Directory today! Toyota Corolla 2004, charges thereon; and 2006 - 1500 Crew IN T H E CI R CUIT sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 all T r ustee's f e es, 4x4, Z71, exc. Lumina Va n 1 99 5 , auto., loaded, 204k obo. 541-408-3811 COURT O F THE Chrysler 300 C o upe Cab miies odg owner non foreclosure costs and 82 k m i les, X LNT c o nd. , w e l l smoker, STATE OF OREGON Monaco Dynasty 2004, 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, cond., exc. c ond. any sums advance by cared for. $2000 obo. FOR THE COUNTY loaded, 3 slides, dieauto. trans, ps, air, $19,900. $6500 Prin e ville the Beneficiary pursu541 382 9835 541-408-0763 OF DES C HUTES ant to the terms and 503-358-8241 sel, Reduced - now frame on rebuild, rePROBATE DEPART$119,000, 5 4 1-923- Streamliner painted original blue, conditions of the said 30' Say "goodbuy" VW Jetta 2009 TDI seMENT In the Matter of 8572 or 541-749-0037 1963, good condioriginal blue interior, D eed of T rus t . 1/5th interest in 1973 dan, leather, moon. the Estate of PAUL original hub caps, exc. Whereof, to that unused notice tion, com p lete, Cessna 150 LLC ¹077879 $18,995. MANLEY WILLIAMS, chrome, asking $9000 I nternational hereby is given that, RV ready to go. $2000. Fla t item by placing it in 150hp conversion, low Deceased. Case No.: or make offer. Cal-Western ReconCONSIGNMENTS 541-306-0383 time on air frame and Bed Pickup 1963, 1 541-385-9350 NOTICE TO INTER- veyance Corporation, The Bulletin Classifieds WANTED Oregon ton dually, 4 s pd. engine, hangared in ESTED P E RSONS. the We Do the Work... undersigned AutoSource Bend. Excellent pertrans., great MPG, NOTICE IS HEREBY Trustee, will on AuYou Keep the Cash! 541-598-3750 could be exc. wood formance & afford5 41 -385-580 9 GIVEN that Barbara gust 23, 2013, at the On-site credit aaaoregonautosource.com I jg~—~l, Ig hauler, runs great, able flying! $6,500. Williams, under- h our of 1 : 0 0 P M . approval team, new brakes, $1950. 541-382-6752 signed, has been ap- Standard of Time, as web site presence. WHEN YOU SEE THIS 975 541-419-5480. pointed personal rep- established by SecWe Take Trade-Ins! Executive Hangar Automobiles Weekend Warrior Toy at resentative. All Oo Free Advertising. tion 187.110, Oregon Bend Airport (KBDN) ~ Hauler 28' 2007,Gen, 60' wide x 50' d eep, FAST66 Ranchero! persons having claims Revised Statutes, At BIG COUNTRY RV Buick LeSabre Cusfuel station, exc cond. w/55' wide x 17' high biagainst the estate are Bend: 541-330-2495 the Bond Street en$7500 invested, On a classified ad tom 2004, rare 75k, required to p r esent trance to D e utsche sleeps 8, black/gray fold dr. Natural gas heat, Redmond: sell for $4500! go to i nterior, u se d 3X , offc, bathroom. Adjacent $6000, worth way them, with vouchers County Courthouse, 541-548-5254 Call 541.382.9835 www.bendbulletin.com $19,999 firm. more. leather, attached, to the unto Frontage Rd; great 1164 N.W. Bond, City to view additional 541-389-9188 dersigned p e rsonal of Bend, County of heated seats, nice visibility for aviation busiN issan Pickup 1 9 9 1 photos of the item. representative at the ness. Financing availwheels. Good tires, D eschutes, sel l a t 2WD/4Cyl Auto. Runs Albertazzi Law Firm, able. 541-948-2126 or 30 mpg, white. public auction to the Looking for your great. Extras. $3700. Convinced? Call Bob email 1jetjock@q.com 44 NW Irwng Ave., h ighest b idder f o r Looking for your next employee? 541-316-1367 Bend, Oregon, 97701, 541-318-9999 cash the interest in next employee? Place a Bulletin help ~uMore Pix at Bendbulletin.c within four m o nths the said d e scribed wanted ad today and Place a Bulletin help Southwind 35.5' Triton, FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, after the date of first real property which wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 Buick LeSabre 1996. 2008,V10, 2 slides, Dudoor panels w/flowers publication of this no- t he Grantor had o r T itan 4 x 4 20 0 7 , readers each week. reach over 60,000 Good condition, pont UV coat, 7500 mi. & hummingbirds, tice, or the claims may Off-Road, beautiful had power to convey readers each week. Your classified ad Bought new at 121,000 miles. white soft top & hard be barred. All perat the time of the exinside and out, mewill also appear on Your classified ad Non-smoker $132,913; top. Just reduced to sons whose r i ghts ecution by him of the tallic black/charcoal will also appear on bendbulletin.com One Half Interest in asking $91,000. $2200 OBO. $3,750. 541-317-9319 may be affected by said Trust Deed, toleather, loaded, 69k which currently rebendbulletin.com RV-9A for SALE Call 503-982-4745 541-954-5193. or 541-647-8483 the proceedings may gether with any intermi., $19,995 obo. which currently receives over 1.5 mil2005 Vans RV-9A, obtain additional inest which the Grantor 541-410-6183. lion page views evceives over 1.5 mil0-320, Dynon, GPS, f ormation from t h e or his Successors in lion page views ery month at no ICOM's, KT-76C, records of the court, interest acquired after every month at extra cost. Bulletin Oxygen. Flies great, 935 the personal repre- the execution of said no extra cost. BulleClassifieds Get Reno damage history. sentative, or the attorTrust Deed, to satisfy Sport Utility Vehicles Chevy Malibu 2009 Call 385-5809 300 plus Hours tach, tin Classifieds Winnebago Suncruiser34' sults! ney for the personal the foregoing obliga43k miles, loaded, Get Results! Call or place your ad kept in Redmond C 2004, only 34K, loaded, representative, tions thereby secured 385-5809 or place on-line at FordGalaxie 500 1963, studs on rims/ Han~ar.Reduced to too much to list, ext'd Tamara Powell. Dated and the costs and ex2 dr. hardtop,fastback, Asking $12,900. your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 35K, OBOr warr. thru 2014, $54,900 and first p u blished pense of sale, includ541-610-6834. Dick Hansen, 390 vs,auto, pwr. steer & bendbulietin.com Dennis, 541-589-3243 May 7, 2013. Barbara ing a rea s onable 541-923-2318 radio (orig),541-419-4989 882 Williams, Pe r sonal charge by the dkhansen@bendR epresentative, A l T rustee. N o t ice i s Fifth Wheels broadband.com or Just too many The Bulletin recoml Travel Trailers bertazzi Law Firm, 44 Ford Explorer 2002, Tod, 541-350-6462 mends extra caution t NW Irving Avenue, further given that any collectibles? XLT A u t o 4 Wheel person named in Secwhen p u r chasing ~ A irstream 1969 L a nd Leather, Power Roof Oregon 97701, tion 86.753 of Oregon Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, f products or services Bend, Y acht, 31-ft, ad o n Sell them in Trailer pkg, one owner (541) 317-0231. Revised Statutes has based in Madras, alout of the area. Bend CraigsList. $6500 on s moker, n e w Chrysler Sebring 2004 f from the right to have the ways hangared since The Bulletin Classifieds n S ending c ash , LEGAL NOTICE OBO. 541-905-1705 84k, beautiful dark gray/ Michelins plus set of foreclosure proceednew. New annual, auto or credit inNOTICE: REQUEST studs brakes differen- brown, tan leather int., checks, ing dismissed and the formation may be I FOR INFORMATION pilot, IFR, one piece $5995 541-350-5373 tial guar a nteed. Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 Trust Deed reinstated windshield. Fastest Ar- 541-385-5809 ( subject to FRAUD. The College is seek$5900 Jack by Carriage, 4 slides, cher around. 1750 tob y payment to t h e For more informaing information from 541-815-7393 inverter, satellite sys, Aladdin 16' 1968 Beneficiary of the ental t i me. $68,500. Ford Mustang Coupe f tion about an adverVendors that may be tire fireplace, 2 flat screen amount then due camper trailer, 1966, original owner, 541-475-6947, ask for tiser, you may call interested in submitTake care of TVs. $54,950 (other than such porV8, automatic, great $700. Rob Berg. I the Oregon State I ting a p roposal for 541-480-3923 shape, $9000 OBO. 541-389-6990, your investments S Attorney General's S Mental Health S e r- tion of said principal 530-515-8199 I Office C o n sumerI vices for the College as would not then be afternoons only. Get your with the help from had no d efault Little Red Corvette f Protection hotline at Campus. Responses due t o gether business The Bulletin's 1-877-877-9392. will be used to deter- occurred), Ford Ranchero Coupe, 1996,350, the cost s , mine if a Request for w ith auto, 26-34 mpg, 132K, "Call A Service 1979 and Proposal (RFP) will be Trustee's $12,500/offer. Serving Central Oregon since 1903 with 351 Cleveland attorney's fees a nd a ROW I N G Professional" Directory 541-923-1781 issued. modified engine. curing any other MONTANA 3585 2008, Briefly, the scope for fault complained ofdeBody is in in with an ad in this service: exc. cond., 3 slides, excellent condition, the Notice of Default king bed, Irg LR, The College is in need The Bulletin's $2500 obo. by tendering the perFleetwood 10' Tent of s t udent m e ntal formance Arctic insulation, all 541-420-4677 "Call A Service r e q uired Travel Trailer, 2004 options $35,000. health and retention under the obligation or 1 queen bed, 1 regu541-420-3250 Professional" counseling services, lar bed + dining area rust Deed, at a n y consisting of individu- T Directory time prior to five days bed; gas stovetop, alized mental health, Find It in before the date last 2.5 cu. ft. refrigerator, crisis response when set for sale. In conportable toilet, awrequired, educational ning/grass mat, BBQ, struing this notice, the 541-385-580 9 • outreach and counFord T-Bird, 1966, 390 receiver for bike car• Heavy Equipment • seling referrals when masculine gender inengine, power everyrier. Original owner. the f eminine n ecessary o n th e cludes NuINa 297LK Hi t chthing, new paint, 54K $6500. Bend campus. Crisis and the neuter, the Hiker 2007, All seaoriginal m i les, runs includes pluCall 541-389-2426 response may occur singular sons, 3 s l ides, 32' great, excellent condiral, the word "Grantor" on other College faperfect for snow birds, tion in 8 out. Asking includes any succescilities, or, on rare oc- sor in interest l eft k i t chen, re a r $8,500. 541-480-3179 to the casions, at other localounge, extras, must Grantor as well as any tions. see. $28,000 Prineville Diamond Reo Dump Note: This Request other persons owing 541-447-5502 days 8 n o b ligation, t h e Truck 19 7 4, 12 -14 541-447-1641 eves. for Information is Not aperformance I of which ard box, runs good, a Bid or a RFP. is secured by s a id Fleetwood 31' Wilder6900, 541-548-6812 For more information Trust Deed, the words n ess Gl 1 9 99 , 1 2 ' and a copy of the RFI "Trustee" and "Benslide, 2 4 ' aw n ing, GMC 1966, too many details, please con- eficiary" includes their ExK E A T To place your Bulletin ad with a photo, queen bed, FSC, outextras to list, reduced to tact Julie Mosier, Purside shower, E-Z lift respective s u c ces$7500 obo. Serious buyvisit www.bendbulletin.com, click on chasing Coordinator, sors in interest, if any. stabilizer hitch, l i ke ers only. 541-536-0123 via ema il at Hysfer H25E, runs "Place an ad" and follow these easy steps: new, been stored. Pilgrim 27', 2007 5t h Dated: April 22, 2013 jmosier@cocc.edu well, 2982 Hours, $10,950. 707-688-4253 wheel, 1 s lide, AC, Responses to the RFI Cal-Western Recon$3500,call Choose a category, choose a classification, and TV,full awning, excelCorporation, are due no later than veyance 541-749-0724 then select your ad package. 525 East Main Street, lent shape, $23,900. May 31st. P.O. Box 22004, El 541-350-8629 Just bought a new boat? Write your ad and upload your digital photo. Cajon, C A 92 0 2 2LEGAL NOTICE Sell your old one in the TRUSTEE'S NOTICE 9004 Cal - Western RV classifieds! Ask about our GMC Y~ton 1971, Only Create your account with any major credit card, Reconveyance CorpoOF SALE Loan No. CONSIGNMENTS Super Seller rates! $19,700! Original low XXX T.S. No. ration. Signature/By: WANTED 541-385-5809 mile, exceptional, 3rd All ads appear in both print and online 1310671-36 R e f e r- Yvonne J. Wheeler, Keystone Sprinter We Do The Work ... owner. 951-699-7171 ence is made to that A.V.P. (04/30/2013, 31', 2008 H ( Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your You Keep The Cash! certain Deed made 05/07, 05/14, 05/21) King size walkOn-site credit ad appears in print and online. by: David Mackenzie, R-429847. around bed, electric approval team, as Grantor, to First awning, (4) 6-volt web site presence. American Title Insurbatteries, plus many We Take Trade-Ins! Lookfor Information To place your photo ad, visit us online ance Co. of Oregon, People Peterbilt 35 9 p o table more extras, never Free Advertising. as Trustee, in favor of smoked in, first water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, AbOut PrOduCtS80d BIG COUNTRY RV National City of Indiowners, $19,900. 3200 gal. tank, 5hp Mercedes 450SL, 1977, Bend: 541-330-2495 EveryDaythrough pump, 4-3" h o ses, 113K, 2nd owner, gaana, as Beneficiary, Services Redmond: 541-385-5809 camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. r aged, b o t h top s . dated on March 10, Call 541-410-5415 541-548-5254 The Bul letinClalf'tf'eds 541-820-3724 $11,900. 541-389-7596 2 006, recorded o n

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LEGAL NOTICE Estate of R O B ERT BRIDGEFORD. NOT ICE T O INT E R ESTED P ERSONS. Case Number: 13PB0058. No t i ce: The Circuit Court of the State of Oregon,

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$3455 Hwy. $7 N. 541-388-2100 PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, MAY14,2013 IFOOD

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