Serving Central Oregon since190375
MONDAY June16,2014 Atmli'
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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
GROWTH •
•
•
Bend to weigh risk of fire asit plans future
Fighting in Iraq —Sunni militants claim to havemassacred hundreds of captives.A2
By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
AB-25 domder atBend's
The Two Bulls Fire that
airpart —Also at the Sunday event: more old planes, new planes, helicopters and classic cars.A7
threatened the west side of Bend last week was a
wake-up call for residents, proof that the forest can be just as dangerous to live near as it is beautiful.
Oditual' y — caseyKasem,
It was also a reminder
king of the top-40 radio show andthe voice of Shaggy on "Scooby-Doo."
that expanding the city west toward the Deschutes National Forest could be an
expensive and risky decision because of the likelihood of wildfires.
A2
U.S. Open —Kaymercruises to victory.B1
MBP il l olde • Ar e a fire risk,A6
Two Bulls was the second wildfire
in 25 years to burn on or
NBA finals —sanAntonio
near the west side of Bend, where city councilors voted
finishes off a dominant run.B1
in 2009 to expand farther into the ponderosa forest. The state rejected the ex-
Korea's divisive deli-
cacy —proponentsswear
pansion plan for reasons
by hongeo, fermented fish so strong it can makepeople's mouths peel.A3
unrelated to fire, and now
city officials are redoing it. Paul Dewey, a local lawyer and executive
director of the Bend conservation group Central Oregon LandWatch, said
Aud a Wed exclusiveIncommencement addresses, cautioning graduates about shutting off opposing views. bentlbulletin.cnm/extrns
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Forvocal VA staff, a culture of punishment
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
At Woodriver Village, a 42-year-old Bend subdivision across from Farewell Bend Park, work has begun to ready the area for a planned13 new, custom homes. Six older homes in the subdivision are being torn down.
• With land short and the state pushingdensity, expect moresuch redevelopment, according to AndyHighof the Central OregonBuildersAssociation By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin
Developers have started
changing the face of Woodriver Village, a 42-year-
Woodriver Village
Riverbend Park. Another,
A developer is clearing away existing modular homes in the 42-yearold subdivision to build newer homes. ogg~
old Bend subdivision on
the edge of Reed Market Road near the Deschutes River.
Bend builder Larry Kine said he plans a total of 13
Coiurtt
BEN ctte
Farewe end Park
WASHINGTON — Staff members atdozens of Department of Veterans
seven lots, demolishing six older homes. On Thursday, Beau Perrin, 34, eyed the backhoe slicing with its bucket into
Affairs hospitals across the
a stubborn stump on the lot
country have objected for
across Alderwood Circle from the mobile home he
New York Times News Service
years to falsified patient appointment schedules and other improper practices, only to be rebuffed, disciplined or even fired after speaking up, according to
and his brother shared for
"'« a rist
12 years. Perrin had three days remaining to vacate the rental property, he said.
Kine is planning to de-
interviews with current
molish the home, which be-
and former staff members
longs to his father, R. Dean Kine, along with two more nearby homes that belong
nered with his father and
to Dan Mahoney.
down three buildings along
Perrin took the redevelopment of his neighbor-
Southwest Reed Market between Alderwood and
hood in stride.
Birchwood Drive. He said he plans to erect five new
and internal documents.
The growing VAscandal over longpatient wait times and fake schedulingbooks is emboldeninghundreds of employees togo to federal watchdogs, unions, lawmakers and outsidewhistleblower gtoups to report continuingproblems, officials for thosevarious groups said. In interviews with The New York Times, a
half-dozen current and former staff members — four
"I'm happy the guy
M ahoney to redevelop the lots. Kine has already torn
tion larger lots into smaller ones. High, staff vice president of government affairs for the Central Oregon Build-
GregCross/The Bulletin
gets rid of the old crappy trailers and yards. It'll modernize it, and give some peoplesome nice homes." Larry Kine said he part-
City senior planner Heidi Kennedy said the Kines and Mahoneyhave filed
Expect to see more of that in Bend, said Andy
Lots cleared
bought it," Perrin said. "It
tion," Kine said
five applications to parti-
Oeschutes Ries
new, custom homes on
By Eric Lichtblau
smaller park, Woodriver, lies adjacent to and south of the property being cleared. "It's an amazing loca-
ers Association. With land
available to build upon homes there, including his coming into short supply, own new residence. infill will become the norm, "I wanted to live down he said Thursday. there, personally, myself, The state also wants the and I was nervous someone city to increase housing would come buy the propdensity in developed areas erty and I wouldn't have before it adds to its urban the opportunity," Kine said growth boundary. "Redevelopment will be Wednesday. The curbside lots offer more common in Bend," a fine view. Just across High said. "In part because Reed Market Road are the state is pushing us to Farewell Bend Park and the and partly because of the Deschutes River. Beyond, unavailability of land." bluffs rise abruptly above SeeSubdivision/A6
on Friday that the 2009 ex-
pansion plan would have resulted in more people living where the risk of wildfire is highest. SeeFire risk/A6
Populations shift, and politics are now national By Ashley Parker and Jonathan Martin New York Times News Service
SOUTHAVEN, Miss.When William Davis was
growingup here in DeSoto County, just across the state line from Memphis, Tenn., there were more than 300 dairy farms, and he was raised on one of them.
"Nowthere are zero," said Davis, 66, the chancery court derk in a county that
hasbeentransformed into a booming suburb of over 168,000 residents.
About 800 miles to the east, the same kind of sweeping changes have taken hold in the suburbs around Richmond, Va. See Politics /A4
Art looted byNazis... now inEurope'stop museums.
doctors, a nurse, and an of-
fice manager in Delaware, Pennsylvania and Alaska — said that they faced
retaliation for reporting systemic problems. Their accounts, some corroborated by internal documents, portray a culture of silence and intimidation within the
By Anthony Faiola The Washington Post
PARIS — Since the discov-
ery of a long-hidden trove of master works in Germany
last year, advocates have sought to shine a spotlight on looted artworks hiding in plain sight.
In other words, those hanging on the walls of Europe's great museums.
occupying Nazis. Today,
institutions.
actively seeking to trace the
more than 2,000 pieces returned to France after the
provenance, or ownership backgrounds, of some pieces
Enter France, known as the art attic of Europe before the onset of World War II
war, including canvases by
Under pressure for years to get such paintings to their rightful owners, French officials have launched an effort aimed at trying to clear the
French operation as too little, too late.
Claude Monet, Peter Paul
and where tens of thousands
Rubens and Max Ernst, remain in the custody of the
of works were dispossessed
Louvre, the Musee d'Orsay
books on looted art. Instead of waiting for claimants to
from Jewish families by the
and other celebrated French
come forward,authoritiesare
as they belatedly try to unrav-
el war-era mysteries. But critics are decrying the SeeNazi art/A5
department and echo experiences detailed by other VA personnel in court
filings, government investigations and congressional testimony, much of it largely unnoticed until now. SeeVA/A5
TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy High 58, Low33 Page B10
INDEX Calendar A7 - 8 C rosswords Classified C 1 - 6Dear Abby Comics/Pu zzles C3-4 Horoscope
C4 Local/State A 7-8 SportsMonday B1-10 A9 Movies A9 Tee to Green B8-9 A9 Nation/World A 2 T elevision A9
The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper
vol. 112, No. 1e7,
2e pages, 3 sections
Q l/i/e use recycied newsprint
': IIIIIIIIIIIII o
8 8 267 02329
MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Monday, June16, the167th day of 2014. Thereare198 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS EduCatlOh —Starbucks and Arizona State University are set to announce aprogram providing free, online college education to thousands of Starbucks workers.Ag JUStlCSS —The U.S. Supreme Court heads into the last two weeks of its annual term.
NuClear —U.S.andIranian diplomats return to nuclear talks in Vienna.
TRENDING
SCIENCE
looking orea'sis s ecia:a Researchers into stic situation su e as e o ammonia with frog tongues To its fans, South Korea's hongeo — or fermented skate — is prized as a challenging food that causes the mouth to tingle. To its detractors, it's like "licking a urinal."
HISTORY
BIRTHDAYS Author Joyce Carol Oates is 76. Boxing Hall of Famer Roberto Duran is 63. Golfer Phil Mickelson is 44. Actress Sibel Kekilli (TV: "Gameof Thrones") is 34. — From wire reports
Kleinteich's
o b s ervations
Los Angeles Times
e
Highlight:In1944, George Stinney, a14-year-old black youth, became theyoungest person to die in the electric chair as the state of South Carolina executed him for the murders of two white girls, Betty June Binnicker, 11,and Mary Emma Thames, 7.(George Stinney's family, who maintains his innocence, is seeking to overturn his conviction.) In1567, Mary, Queen ofScots, was imprisoned in Lochleven Castle in Scotland. (Sheescaped almost a yearlater but ended up imprisoned again.) In1858, accepting the lllinois Republican Party's nomination for the U.S. Senate, Abraham Lincoln said the slavery issue had to be resolved, declaring, "A house divided against itself cannot stand." In1883, baseball's first "Ladies' Day" took place asthe New York Gothamsoffered women free admission to a game against the Cleveland Spiders. (NewYorkwon, 5-2.) In1903, Ford Motor Co. was incorporated. In1911, IBM hadits beginnings as theComputing-Tabulating-Recording Co.was incorporated in NewYork State. In1933, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. wasfounded as President Roosevelt signed the Banking Act of1933. In1943,comedian Charles Chaplin, 54, married his fourth wife, 18-year-old OonaO'Neill, daughter of playwright Eugene O'Neill, in Carpinteria, Calif. In1959,actor George Reeves, TV's "Superman," was found dead of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound in the bedroom of his Beverly Hills, Calif., home; hewas45. In1963, the world's first female space traveler, Valentina Tereshkova, 26, was launched into orbit by the Soviet Union aboard Vostok 6; shespent 71 hours in flight, circling the Earth 48 times before returning safely. In1978, President Jimmy Carter and Panamanian leader Omar Torrijos exchangedthe instruments of ratification for the PanamaCanal treaties. In1999,Vice President Al Gore formally opened his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination. Ten years age:Rebuffing Bush administration claims, the independent commission investigating the Sept.11 attacks said no evidenceexisted that al-Qaida hadstrong ties to Saddam Hussein. Five years age:President Barack Obamamet with South Korean President LeeMyungbak at the White House; afterward, Obamadeclared North Korea a "grave threat" to the world and pledged the U.S. and its allies would aggressively enforce fresh penalties against the nuclear-armed nation. One year age:Riot police firing tear gas andwater cannons repelled thousands of anti-government protesters attempting to converge on Istanbul's central Taksim Squarewhile Prime Minister RecepTayipp Erdogan defended the crackdown at a rally of his supporters.
By Julia Rosen
may help explain the astonishEvery predator needs to ing speed of the frogs'tongues,
catch its prey. We humans
which dart in and out of their
use our hands, sharks and wolves use their jaws, but a few animals like frogs use something much stranger: their tongues.
mouths in milliseconds. "People always think the speed is to catch elusive prey, which makes sense," said Kleinteich. However, the re-
To understand just how
sults present another possible
frogs snatch their snacks, reason for fast-flicking frogs: scientists made the first Greater speed means more imdirect measurements of pact, more adhesion and, ulti-
the amphibians' tongues mately, a bigger meal. in action. They found that This ability to reel in large certain frogs can lift meals prey would be a particular up to three times heavi- asset to a sit-and-wait species er than their body weight like the horned frog, said Kii(although they probably sa Nishikawa, an amphibian couldn't eat them) using a biologist at Northern Arizona sticking mechanism sim- University in Flagstaff who ilar to the tacky glue on was not involved in the study. "One meal could be their enPost-it notes, according to a study published this week ergybudgetforan entireyear," in the j ournal Scientific Nishikawa said. She should Reports. know: She has a horned frog
t
For t h e
exp e r iment, at home that hasn't eaten since November when it went into hibernation for the winter. South American amphibBeyond quantifying t he ian with devilish protru- stickiness of frogs' tongues,
the researchers recruited the horned frog, a rotund Photos by Jean Chung /New YorkTimes News Service
Kim Young-chang cuts a skate fish in front of his shop on the island of Heuksando, South Korea. Served most often, like below, as chewy pink slabs of sashimi, hongeo — or fermented skate — is
prized in South Korea for fumes sostrong they sometimes cause people's mouths to peel.
sions above its eye sockets Kleinteich also wanted to unthat has proved itself a
derstand how they work. So
popular pet. Horned frogs he searchedfor correlations prefer to hunker down and between the impact force By Choe Sang-hun
wait for their prey to wan-
of the tongue, its adhesive
New York TimesNews Service
der by before snagging their victims with powerful
strength and the amount of mucus slimed on the plate to
tongues. Their stationary
find out more about frogs' fan-
H EUKSAN
I SLA ND ,
South Korea — South Korea has a generous list of foods some find hard to swallow, among them boiled silkworm pupae and live baby octopuses, which have been known to attach their suction cups to
habits make them easy tastic sticking mechanism. "The common opinion is subjects to use in studies,
the roofs of diners' mouths in
what appear to be desperate bids to escape. But fermented skate from
this southern island tops them all. By far South Korea's smell-
a t g 't",jye
geo, is described by lovers and Customers eat a "sam-hap" dish, which is composed of boiled detractors alike as releasing pork, fermented kimchi and sashimi of skate fish, at a restaurant house. Served most often as chewy pink slabs of sashimi, hongeo is prized by enthusiasts for the ammonia fumes it releases,sometimes so strong
they cause people's mouths to peel. "I used to think that peo-
ple could not possibly eat this stuff unless they were crazy," said Park Jae-hee, a 48-yearold marketing executive. "But
like smelly blue cheese, it has no replacement once you fall in love with it."
It is easy, of course, to poke fun at
on the island of Heuksando, South Korea.
"I used to think that
people could not possibly eat this stuff
unless they were crazy. But likesmelly blue cheese, tt has no replacement once you fall in love with it."
sines: Consider Europeans' wrinkled noses at the American penchant for slathering ketchup on everything from fries to scrambled eggs. But s ome South K o reans w h o
are otherwise fiercely proud of their fiery, often odoriferous foods, like kimchi, admit
with restaurants specializing
fish's fans, the velvety tex-
and South Jeolla, followed the migration of rural workers during South Korea's industrial boom in the 20th century,
p~~ kafQI' Das"
superglue that sticks to everything immediately," Kleinteich
the scientists inserted glass
occurred with less mucus.
said. But the results of his ex-
periment showed exactly the opposite: Stronger adhesion
ters about an inch from their
pressure-sensitive a dhesion,
faces. Then they offered up tantalizing g rasshoppers behind the glass. When the hungry frogs fired their "ballistic tongues" (yes,
the same effect that allows
that's an actual scientific
term), the sensors mea-
hesives like glue — which harden to form a permanent
sticky tape and labels to adhere to a surface and later
be removed without a trace. In contrast to structural ad-
sured the impact force. The
bond —
tongue prints they left behind gave scientists an in-
adhesives employ a substance somewhere between a solid
pr e ssure-sensitive
dication of the contact area and the amount of mucus
and liquid. It must be fluid
enough to form a connection between the surfaces it binds
the Guy Fawkes-like smile has long been the foundation
on the tongue.
of the island's economy, and
fishing boats head out several
that, on average, the adhesive force of the frogs'
ing ripped apart. Beyond this,
times a month to nearby wa-
tongues exceeded t h eir
doesn't know exactly wh at
body mass by 50 percent. One enthusiastic juvenile managed to slam his tongue into the plate with 3.4 times the force of his own weight. "I knew t hese frogs could eat large things," said
parts of frogs' tongues do the sticking — this is the topic of
gained a following here because of a quirk of biology. In the daysbefore refrigeration,
in hongeo opening to serve growing populations of scat- the f i s hermen's f o r ebears tered Jeolla natives. learned that hongeo was the Still, it took a while to catch only fish they could ship to the on, thwarted not only by its mainland 60 miles away withformidable odor and limited out salting. The hongeo lacks supply, but also by the region- a bladder and excretes uric al prejudices that have dogged acid through its skin. As it fer-
specialize in hongeo advise ture of frozen hongeo liver customers to seal their jackets melting on the tongue with in plastic bags before the meal a pinch of salt and red pepand offer to spray them with per has been compared to deodorant afterward. foie gras. The smell, to their "I've eaten dog, durian and minds, is most of the appeal, bugs, but this is still the most coupled with a tingling in the challenging food I've ever eat- mouth that accompanies the en," said Joe McPherson, the hit of a m monia. Gourmets American founder of the Kore- say a proper hongeo dinner an food blog ZenKimchi, who must end with hongeo soup, has become a self-appointed steaming with the smell of ambassador for Korean cui- boiling ammonia. sine. "It's like licking a urinal." The lowly fish, once just UrolO a regional specialty in the southwest provinces of North
The bottom-feeding fish with
Islanders say the fish first
to being repelled by hon- Jeolla, where Heuksan Island geo and baffled by its rising is. During decades of milipopularity. tary dictatorships, the coun"I can't understand who in try's elites, often from rival the world would pay to eat a Gyeongsang province, were rotten fish in a restaurant that accused of ostracizing Jeolla smells like an uncleaned pub- and fomenting a bias that outlic restroom," said Park's clos- lived authoritarian rule. est friend, Huh Eun. Then, about 10 years ago, Even those who swoon over a free-trade agreement with its exotic taste cheerily adChile helped wear down resismit their passion comes with tance to Jeolla's signature fish some social costs. A subway dish, flooding the market with ride after a meal of hongeo relatively cheap Chilean honcan be isolating, with fellow geo and inspiring new restauriders sometimes casting fur- rants to open. tive glances and sidling away. Among the legions of the Owners of r estaurants that
Despite the dish's newfound popularity, the center of hongeo worship remains here on Heuksan Island, off the country's southwestern tip.
— Park Jae-hee, ters where hongeo feed and marketing executive layeggs.
o t her n a tions' cui-
that the mucus is some sort of
plates fitted with pressure Kleinteich thinks the mechsensors into the frogs' quar- anism most closely resembles
iest food, the fish, called honodors reminiscent of an out-
and they are known for
their voracious appetites — they have been caught tackling prey more than half their size. Just before mealtimes,
ments, it oozes ammonia that
keeps it from going bad. "Hongeo can't pee, and that's where the miracle begins," said Kim Young-chang, 77, the owner of a hongeo restaurant here. A true be-
The researchers found
but elastic enough to resist be-
his current research. Howev-
er, the frogs' version of pressure-sensitive adhesion bests our synthetic imitations in sev-
eral ways.
Thomas Kleinteich, lead
author of the study and a zoologist at Kiel University in Germany, "but I didn't really expect that the forces would be that high."
-
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%ILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066
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liever in the fish's power, Kim rattled off a list of health ben-
541-3$0-50$4
efits he believes come from eating it. "I have never seen anyone having stomach trouble after eating hongeo," he proclaimed. Among Heuksan residents and their neighbors across the water in mainland Jeolla,
K l einteich
I •
•
•
•
•
•
I
I I•
hongeo has long been an integral part of local tradition
and lore. Wedding parties are considered incomplete if hongeo is not served. And n atives point ou t
that t he
dissident-turned-president Kim Dae-jung, perhaps Jeolla's most famous son, was so homesick for the fish that poli-
88
ticians made sure to bring him
fresh stocks during the years of military rule when he was in exile.
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014
IN FOCUS: BANKRUPT CITY
se in o vacan omes
e Fol I By Corey Williams The Associated Press
DETROIT
-
Anthony
Brown keeps his home of 36 years in good shape, but it is an island of tranquility in a sea of blight in Detroit's Marygrove neighborhood. There is a vacant house next door, another
across the street and still others farther down Wisconsin Street. "It was b eautiful a round
here," Brown, a59-year-old Ford Motor Co. worker, said about howthings once looked. "Everybody was in the houses. Everybodykept their lawns up. Everybodywas planting flowers." Now he and others in bankrupt Detroit see signs ofhope in an aggressive home preservation plan that Mayor Mike Duggan is using to lure people back into city neighborhoods. It's no
5,500 of those are ownedby the Associated Press last week. "We're going strong to weak. city or the Detroit Land Bank We're starting in the strongest Authority. Instead of razing them all, neighborhoods in this city and the city is highlighting the ones going after every single abanthat can be saved and selling doned house. "If you've got four abanthem at auction to individuals and families who want to fix doned houses on a block and them and move in. That strat- you demo one house, you haegy,ifsuccessful,is expected ven't changed the quality of to help eradicate blight and life for people on that block. If strengthen neighborhoods that you tryto sellonehousewhere are stable or on-the-edge. there are three abandoned, noThe Land Bank began auc- body's going to buy. When you Corey Williams/Ttte Assooiated Press tioning off one home per day in take the entire neighborhood Anthony Brown, 59, stands next to a vacant house adjacent to his early May. That has since been at once and attack every single home in Detroit's Marygrove neighborhood. Brown is hoping that expanded to two per day and abandoned house, that's when an online auction of city-owned homes helps strengthen his neigh- soonwill growto three. people are willingto invest." borhood snd other parts of Detroit. About 50 have been sold, so The highest winning aucfar, and 6,500 bidders have reg- tion bid has been $135,000 for istered on the online auction a 4-bedroom, 3-bath historic smalltask:A recentstudy rec- are unoccupied,abandoned or site. home in t h e B oston-Edison ommended razing more than g o v ernment-owned and at risk ''We've sold $700,000 worth area near the city's center. Ac38,000houses.Another 35,000 of becoming blighted. About of houses," Duggan told The tivity was so furious that the l
Politics
margins.
Continued from A1 There, woods and farmland
thrashed Cochran by 36 per-
have been turned into gleam-
ty, the state'sthird-largest, akey factor in his edging the incum-
ing new subdivisions with names meant to evoke the state's colonial past. In both states, the growth
centage points in DeSoto Counbent by less than 2,000 votes
statewide and forcing Cochran into a runoff. Cantor lost the
more than any other voters, For all the talk about how who most crucially rejected partisan polarization is over-
two influential Republican incumbents — the House majority leader, Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia, and Sen. Thad Co-
whehning Washington, there is another powerful, overlapping force at play: Voters who are not deeply rooted increasingly chran of Mmsmsippi — m prt- view politics through a generic maries this month, upending national lens. long-held assumptions about Friends-and-neighbors electhe appeal of traditional levers tions were already a thing of of power. the past in congressional camIn the newly built communi- paigns. But the axiom that "all ties of DeSoto County in Mis- politics is local" is increasingly sissippi, and the fast-growing anachronistic when ever-largprecincts in such metropolitan er numbers of voters have little awarenessofwhat incumbents
co, Hanover and Chesterfield did for their community in — what could be called the years past and are becoming Chick-fil-A belt — the conser- as informed by cable television, vative challengers to thetwo in-
talk radio and the Internet as
cumbents ledbyoverwhelming by local sources of news. In
•
rg
About nine homes have been auctioned off in Latisha
Johnson's East English Village neighborhood. She says they sold for an average of $30,000. "We recognize how much work needs to go into it," Johnson said of rehabbing each of the homes."I'd venture to say theywould have to put$30,000 in work to put in to it."
On Friday, the high bid for a 1,200-square-foot brick bungalow in the east-side neighborhood was $14,100. The house has afireplace,three bedrooms
and a good roof, but the auction website notes that it's a fixer-upper: Both bathrooms and
the kitchen will need replacing, as will the doors, windows, plumbing and HVAC system.
to Southaven three years ago Engineers center in Vicksburg, from North Carolina. "I think benefitedmore moderate can- history, though, that is proving the Stennis Space Center," said it's like Cochran — this guy didates in general elections. particularlypainfully given Co- former Gov. Haley Barbour wasn't doing what was best for "They don't know who the chran's primary finish in this of Mississippi, who backs Co- the country." heck Thad is," said the Repub- community of big box stores, chran,reeling offplaces and In Virginia, similar demolican strategist Karl Rove, of national fast food chains and projects that mean precious lit- graphic shifts have occurred Mississippi's newly arrived housing developments boast- tle to manyvoters here. and have chiefl y worked to voters. "There is no 40-year ing of "Furnished Models Open Because of their Memphis make a conservative-l eaning — that is the local media mar- Southern state into a mid-Athistory with him, knowing that Daily." this is the guy who built up the In recent decades, Cochran, ket — and national orientation, lantic dynamo that now leans state's modern Republican Par- a six-term veteran, has used his voters here can vex Mississippi Democratic. "Virginia has become a ty. The same with Eric, people senior status on the Appropria- politicians three hours to the who have just gotten to Rich- tions Committee to make these south in Jackson, the capital. state full of Southern statues mond don't even know what very neighborhoods possible: When Barbour ran for gov- and Northern voters," said J. the House of Delegates is, let He steered nearly $80 million ernor in 2003, he had President Tucker Martin, a Republican alone thathe served there." to DeSoto County to help build George W. Bush campaign operative and a native. Much Voters in both places were new wastewater treatment fa- for him in this town. "Only a of this growth has taken place chiefly interested in who would cilities to meet the growing de- high-profile thing like bring- in Northern Virginia, but the take a hard line against Presi- mand that has come with the ing the president of the United arrival of what some local resdent Barack Obama and most surge in commercial and resi- States in" could get people there idents term "come-heres" has lacked, for example, some long- dential construction. to pay attention to Mississippi also transformed the Richago fraternity connection to Cochran's backers note that politics, Rove said. mond area. Cochran at Ole Miss or a rela- the earmarking of such money In Snowden Grove, a recent Over 40 percent of voters in tionship with Cantor's political- — now taboo in the Tea Party DeSoto development where Henrico and Chesterfield counly-active parents — the kind of era — has kept utility bills in children were recently playing ties, the two largest in Cantor's links that once were so import- the county reasonable and pre- with water pistols in a front district, were born outside the ant in primary politics. vented the need for higher local yard while workers labored state or outside the country — a In a rich historical turnabout, taxes. in the heat to lay the beams of striking change in the onetime "People in DeSoto County, a new house across the street, capital of the Confederacy. two states once ruled by native-born elites notorious for many of whom work in Mem- Jeanette Lyons said Washing"You can replicate the same keeping voter participation low phis and have not been there ton "stinks" right now. voter hereoutside of Kansas "It's just like the guy in Vir- City, Milwaukee or Phoenix," among poor whites and blacks very long, they don't know have seen their politics sharply about Ingalls shipyard, they ginia — Brat is his name, of all Martin said of the cul-de-sac altered this year, in part be- don't care about Columbus Air things — and he uprooted Can- bloc. "The only difference is the cause of surprisingly high turn- Force Base, Meridian Naval tor," said Lyons, 69, who moved weather." is lifting hard-liners, but it has
fueled by a migration of new- suburban population centers comers fromotherparts of the of his district by double-digits country and even abroad is en route to being unseated by bringing nationalized politics David Brat, a conservative ecoto racesfurther down the bal- nomics professor and himself a lot. It was these new arrivals, Virginia transplant.
Richmond counties as Henri-
out bytransplants.
this year's primaries, the trend
State Sen. Chris McDaniel
website crashed near the end of the auction.
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MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Nazi art
find the owners of orphaned w orks,
L a b ourdette s a i d ,
"France is clearly committing Continued from A1 At best, they say, museum itself to repaying the damofficials here are still failing age done to Jewish families to make restitution a priority d u ring the war." and, at worst, are dragging their feet in prder tp hpld pn
Mofe sougbt
to valuable works. The lum-
Ye t s ome critics, like Isa-
bering effort to find the own-
b e l l e A t tard, a French con-
ers of France's orphaned art, gresswoman who is calling criticscontend,illustratesthe fo r more accountability on lack of commitment by Euro-
l o o ted art, said the part-time
pean governments to finally p r ogram launched by the govfinish the job of returning e r nment is simply not large propertylootedbytheNazis. e n ough to make a serious "What we get are f in e d i f ference. She is demandwords but not necessarily i n g a full-time operation indeeds," said David Lewis, v olving scholars from French co-chair of the Commission universities and a host of for Looted Art in Europe, a i nvestigators. nonprofit body based in Lon-
In ad d i t ion, she and others
don that advocates on behalf are calling for a broader inof claimants. "Museum di- v estigation into the general rectors and curators begin to
c o l l ections of French muse-
think of their collections as ums to identify other works theirs and don't wish them to be disturbed."
t h a t maybear the fingerprints of the Nazis.
In 1998, 44 nations signed Fr e nch museums, Attard a landmark deal in Wash- s aid, are part of the probington on assets looted by
l e m . She recounted a recent
the Nazis, adopting a set of c onversation she said she principles including the goal had with the head of a major of identifying and French museum, returning looted w hom she d e art. Since t h en,
"What We
c lined t o
however, the pro- get gye fiAe cess "as moved WOI'dS bUt AO't forward i n fi t s and starts, with AB C BSSBI'Ilg n ations pursuing d e e d S such goals with varying degrees
name
p ublic l y. Whi l e quer Y ing him a bout th e s l o w p rogre s s ma d e on ret u r ning works of art, she said he told her,
In F e b ruary,CUI BtOI S begIA • Germany announced the cre- 50 tAIAk Of Neif
"If we give back the paintings the families will only seI I them, so why
ation of a lost-art
retur n
ofco~itment.
dire C torS aAd •
CO I IBCtlOAS BS
nat i o n a l
foundation with $I I ejySgAd dOA'g p atrimony?' " the aim of helping French mupublic museums seum o ffi c ials, and private insti- be d i S turbed." howe v er, i n s i st tutes identify susthey have been — David Lewis, nothing but suppect pieces. Last Commission for portive of the efyear, Dutch offiLootedArtinEurope f o rt. If they have acted cautiously
cials conciuded a four-year investi-
gation into Nazi at times, they say, looted art in public collec- i t is because they need to entions, announcing the identi-
s u r e due process in the resti-
fication of 139 suspect pieces tution of important works. including a majestic Matisse Cl a ire Chastanier, spokestitled "Odalisque" in Amster-
dam's landmark Museum.
w o m an for the French Depart-
Stedelijk ment of Museums, said the agency is willing to consider f urther reviews of ar t
VA Continued from A1 T he d epartment
has
a history of r etaliating against w h i stleblowers, which Sloan Gibson, the
acting VA secretary, acknowledged this month at a news conference in San Antonio. "I understand
that we've got a cultural issue there, and we're going to deal with that cultural
issue," said Gibson, who replaced Eric Shinseki after
Shinseki resigned over the scandal last month. Pun-
ishing whistleblowers is "absolutely unacceptable," Gibson said. The federal Office of Special Counsel, which investigates whistleblower
complaints, is examining 37 claims of retaliation by VA employees in 19 states,
and recently persuaded the VA to drop the disciplining of three staff members who had spoken out. Together with reports to other watchdog agencies
with administrators at a
staff meeting in 2008 when she objected to using phantom appointments to make wait times appear shorter, as they had instructed her.
She said that the practice amounted to medical fraud, and she complained about other patient care problems as well. Days later, a top admin-
istrator came to Brecht's clinic, put her on administrative leave, and had security officers walk her out of the building. "It's scary to think that
people can try to stand up and do the right thing, and this is the reaction,"
chased by museums during Yet for each step forward, the war years. But she largely there have been complica- dismissed calls for a broader
practice in Massachusetts.
tions and setbacks. Last year, for instance, a r e stitutions commission in t h e N etherlands ruled that three works
r e v iew of France's vast public c o l lections, saying that would i n v o lve a"tremendous" effort t of ind what is likely to be rela-
in Dutch museums were the tively few suspect pieces. "French museums are exproductsofa distress sale by Richard Semmel, a Jewish in- tremely cautious when it dustrialist persecuted by the comes to their acquisition Nazis. But it agreed to return policy, and pay special attento his heirs only one minor t i on to determining the origin work because the museum that owned it "had little or no interest" in the painting.
o f t h e p i ecesof art th at enter th e i r c o l lections," she said.
"This is to avoid buying items The commission refused to w hose trajectory isn't clear in restitute two more significant the period from 1933 to 1945." works, saying the rights of Yet a t least one recent exhis heirs carried "less weight" ample suggests otherwise. than those of museums that currently owned them.
L ast y e ar, the Musee d'Or-
Here in France, tens of
say purchased "Hercules D e livering Hesione," by the
thousands of works were restored to their rightful owners
G e r m an master Hans Thoma. S o l d to the Nazis in the 1940s,
in the years immediately after the painting was destined the war. But outraged critics have blasted authorities for
f o r A d olf Hitler's never-reali z e d Fiihrermuseum in Linz,
A laska
istry launched a new battle a gallery in Munich in 1939, plan last year. A team of 15
a n d the d'Orsay opted to ac-
experts was assembled to q u ire it despite concerns of identify surviving heirs un- a p o ssible taint raised by awareoftheirrightfulclaims. France's Department of MuS ince the program started seums, according to t w o 15 months ago, however, the people familiar with the purgroup has worked largely c hase, who spoke on the conpart time, meeting roughly d i tion of anonymity because once a month. of the sensitivity of the issue. So far, officials say they A sked for comment, the mumay have identified the orig- seum's press office supplied inal owners of slightly more a statement saying the work than 20 works but have yet to
h a d b een vetted by at least
discover the current where- tw o investigations and that abouts of any of the owners no evidence of despoliation or or, more likely, their surviv- a forced sale during the Nazi ing heirs. era had been found. Without a d oubt, tracin g
But cr i t ics insist the deci-
ownership is no easy matter. sion to buy such a painting Some of the works, said Ma- suggests a general lack of serie-Christine L a bourdette, r iousness in dealing with lootdirector of museums for the e d art. "We have made so little French government, may simply have been returned to progress returning p aintFrance in the 1940s because ings, and they buy this?" said they were purchased here at Corinne Bouchoux, a French one point, meaning the original owners could have been
from anywhere. By actively seeking t o
s e n ator who has advocated f o r more action on looted art.
"What message does that s e nd? The wrong one."
s o m e s t aff s c h eduling
practices, no one had protested or faced disciplining
other problems, Dr. Ram Chaturvedi, formerly with the Dallas V A M e d ical C enter, said that he b e-
gan complaining in 2008 about shoddy patient care, including negligence by nurses who had marked the wrong kidney while preparing a patient for a procedure. In another instance, Chaturvedi said, medical personnel had brought the wrong patient to an operating table. A
sup e r visor
told
Chaturvedi to "let some things slide" because of staffing problems, but he continued writing up complaints. Officials considered him disruptive and
fired him in 2010. At the VA Medical Center in W i l m ington, Del.,
Michelle Washington, a psychologist treating soldiers with post-traumatic
stress disorder, also found her worries u nwelcome. She said in an interview
that she faced retaliation
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after me," he told The Arizona
Republic. He decided to retire early last year as a result. One way the VA ha s si-
lenced whistleblowers, their l awyers maintain, i s b y threatening to hold them in
violation of patient privacy laws if they discuss medical cases. That happened in a
2007 case in Chicago, where Dr. Anil P a rikh w a s f i r ed after reporting " systematic
problems" that he said delayed patient care. In termi-
nating him, the VA charged that he had violated confidentiality laws by reporting his concerns to the inspector general and to Barack Obama, at the time a senator
from Illinois, and other government officials, court filings show. After four years, a grievance panel reinstated Parikh with back pay.
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patient appointments (Le. commit FRAUD)." They do so, she wrote, "just so our numbers look good to DC (and the administrators get their bonuses for these numbers)." Cynthia Joe, the chief
Vpu.fk 608d 6 60.
Bend Redmond
Yu called the department's
email that Brecht sent to a military doctor at the time. Brecht wrote that administrators "schedule fake
that, w h il e
ministrators "started coming
"The VA isn't a place where
you speak out," Stout said in
were the subject of an
ing the VA response to
un k n ow n c i r cumstances to
ing them." In 1999, a House
from outstanding to unsatis- s ubcommittee hearing on factory in 30 days," Washing- "Whistleblowing and Retaliaton said. "The only interven- tion in the Department of Veting thing was my testimony." erans Affairs" found little had In Pittsburgh, two VA doc- changed. tors specializing in LegionToday VA employees and naires' disease, Dr . J a n et whistleblower lawyers say Stout and Dr. Victor Yu, said the problem has only gotten they were forced out after worse. In Phoenix,Dr. Sam Foote, complaining about budget and salary matters in 2006. whose complaints triggered The VA then closed their lab the currentscandal, said hosand destroyed their speci- pital officials ignored him at mens — decisions the doctors first and then harassed him contend contributed to a 2011 when he complained about a dministrators wh o w e r e outbreak of Legionnaires' at "cooking the books." VA adthe Pittsburgh hospital that killed six people.
p e r sonnel a n d terview that "I fall into a cat-
less than 4 percent of the or1951. France's culture min -
"I'm not sure how I w ent
Her complaints were decision to close his lab "macorroborated by o t h er licious," and added in an in-
after raising concerns. In court f i lings detail-
The w or k , h o w ever, had
to a Senate committee about
said Brecht, now in private an interview.
returning only 77 works — or Austria. phaned art collection — since previously been sold under
Jeff Swensen/New YorkTimes News Service
Dr. Victor Yu snd Dr. Janet Stout, two VA doctors specializing in Legionnaires' disease, say they were forced out by the Veterans Administration after complaining about budget and salary matters in 2006.
egory that the VA absolutely staffing shortages that she abhors — whistleblowers." said left veterans waiting danThe number of claims of gerously long for psychologi- retaliation by VA whistleblowand the Times interviews, cal help. ersare among the highest of the accounts by VA whisA week before her sched- any federal agency, said Cartleblowers cover several uled appearance, Washing- olyn Lerner, who runs the Ofdozen hospitals, with com- ton said, she received an fice of Special Counsel, and plaints dating back seven evaluation downgrading her have been documented by years or longer. performance at the hospital Congress going back at least Dr. Jacqueline Brecht, from "outstanding" to "unsat- two decades. a former urologist at the isfactory," citing management In 1992, a congressional Alaska V A Hea l t hcare complaints she h a d n e ver report concluded that the VA System in Anchorage, said heard before. She was also discouraged employees from in an interview that she stripped of some psychologi- reporting problems by "hahad a h e ated argument cal treatment duties. rassing whistleblowers or fir-
pur-
Setbacks abound
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TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014
Subdivision
found new homes, he said.
Continued from A1
"All the people we had in our places easily found other
Kine said the h omes he wants to build will range in
places to live and moved out readily," Kine said. "We tried
last name, had at least 60 days notice but have yet to find a place.Mahoney could not be reached for comment. R obert Swagger, a g a s
price from $500,000 to $1.2 to go do what was right."
t enants, H ig h
million, and in size from 1,800
during the recession, Bend
Two tenants who
station attendant who l i ves r e nted next door to Garred, said he
homes on the Mahoney prop- planned to ask Mahoney for
continued to grow modestly,
erty had until Sunday to va-
while housing construction ground nearly to a halt, he
and allowed them to live Piz months rent-free until t h ey
She and her roommate, Jeff, who declined to provide his
five years and then, bam! Everything sold. It's been really
"Our landlord's been really cool," he said. But finding a new home on what he and his fiancee can afford has been difficult, Swagger said. He said he'd prefer to stay in Bend and keep his daughter at the same
fast."
school.
cate, they said. "The owner's been awesome," said L i nda G arred. She's lived on Southwest El-
mwood Place for seven years, she said."It's been for sale for
college education to thousands of workers
s a id. E v en
square feet to 4,200 square feet. He said his construction company, Equity Homebuilders, will build to suit. "We customize from the ground up," he said. Two tenants were moved off the lots Kine cleared, he said Friday. After purchasing the property, Kine returned the tenants' security deposits
an extension.
Starbucksoffering free
everywhere." The lack o f a ff ordable housing coupled with infill development may spell hardship for some low-income
said.Builders need toaddress
demand across allincome levels, he said. "We're focusing on making sure we have enough entry-level and affordable housing," High said. "I definitely feelforpeople."
"All we're running into is high rent," he said. "High rent
— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
WILDFIRE RISK RATING High Q Extreme • High density extreme
Two BullsFire, 2014 umalo
By Richard Perez-Pena
Starbucks is, in effect, inviting its workers, from the day Starbucks will provide they join the company, to study a free, online college edu- whatever they like, and then New Yorh Times News Service
cation to thousands of its
l eave whenever they like -
workers, without requiring
knowing that many of them, degrees in hand, will leave for company, through an un- better-paying jobs. usual arrangement with Even if they did, their experiArizona State U n iversi- ence "would be accreted to our ty,the company and the brand, our reputation and our university will announce business," Howard Schultz, the today. company's chairman and chief The program is open executive, said in an interview. to any of the company's "I believe it will lower attrition, 135,000 U.S. employees, it'll i ncrease performance, that they remain with the
it'll attract and retain better
provided they work at least
20 hours a week and have people." the grades and test scores In a low-wage service industo gain admission to Arizona State. For a barista with at least two years of college
try, Starbucks has for decades
been unusual, doing things such as providing health in-
credit, the company will surance, even for part-timers, pay full tuition; for those and giving its employees stock with fewer credits it will pay options. (Like other food and
Alfalfa
part of the cost, but even for
drink chains, it has also been
many of them, courses will
accused of using improper hardball tactics in fighting
be free, with government
and university aid. " Starbucks i s
unionization drives.) Whether
go i n g in spite of those perks or be-
where no other major cor-
cause ofthem, the company
poration has gone," said has been highly successful; Jamie Merisotis, president its stock, which dosed Friday and chief executive of the at $74.69, has grown in val-
Bend-area wildfire risk assessment
Awilrey Hall Fire, 1990 • Deschuteh er-Woodg,'
In 2~011, a committee with Project<Wildfire updated a map of wildfire risk in and around Bend.Thegroup used state standards that include factors such as whether
18
there is more thang g
Skeleton Fire,1996
Source: ProjectWildfire
Fire risk Continued from A1 "Last time, there was discussion of upto 2,000 more homes out t h e re," D ewey said. "With that many more people and three schools, it
one evacuation route from a development to assess the level of risk.
L umina
— Ed Keith, Deschutes County forester
would just be a nightmare thing." t hose subdivisions a l i t t l e face of a fast-moving fire." As of Saturday, the cost to safer." City of B end P rincipal fight the Two Bulls Fire had The city planned since the Planner Brian Rankin said reached $5.7 million and the 1970s to expand west toward l ast week that the city w i l l blaze had burned more than the forest, and city planners consider the risk of wildfire 6,900 acres, according to the noted in the early 1980s that as it works on the latest ex- state-led team managing the p rivate landholders i n t h e pansion plan. fire. Officials have not re- area had made "financial "There's no easy solution to leased estimates of the prop- commitments" based on the this," Rankin said, pointing erty damage caused by the understanding they would be out that a community wild- fire. The 3,350-acre Awbrey included in the city, according fire plan assigns a high risk Hall Firedestroyed 22 homes to a 1981 city comprehensive of wildfire to the entire city. in 1990, and at the time, offi- plan. Private property ownRankin said that because of cials estimated that it caused ers are not the only ones with zoning decisions local offi- as much as $9 million in dam- something to gain if a future cials made decades ago, land age. Since then, developers city expansion leads to more on the west side of the city have built many high-end high-end homes on the west would still receive top pri- homes in the scar of the Aw- side. The city could receive ority to be included in a city brey Hall Fire. millions in new property tax "Close to the forest, on the revenue as a result of expanboundary expansion. However,fire and natural resources west side of Bend, is proba- sion. The same taxpayers officials said there are a cou- bly one of the most desirable also pay the tab to fight huge ple of reasons the west side places to live from many per- wildfires, but that does not of the city is at higher risk of spectives — access to recre- come out of the city's budget. fire. Winds typically sweep ation and things like that," The city's urban growth eastoffthe Cascades,so they Chang said. "But close to boundary, the limit beyond tend to push flames in the the forest on the west side of which city development is Deschutes National F orest Bend might also be one of the prohibited in Oregon, was toward the west edge of the most dangerous places to live, larger in the 1970s than the city. from a wildfire perspective." current city limits. But when "Our prevailing winds alA 2011 plan to protect Bend the city drafted a comprehenways have that westward and the outskirts of the city sive land use plan in the early component, so if we get a fire from wildfire, drafted by a 1980s, state land use officials on the west side of Bend, it committee of local fire offi- told the city it had not demonwill generally always spread cials, business r epresenta- strated a need for all the land east," Deschutes County For- tives and r e sidents, stated on the outer edge of its urban ester Ed Keith said Friday. that "previous population growth boundary, Peter Gu"The west side has an elevat- growth and projected future towsky, a principal planner ed risk, and then obviously growth has led to increased for Deschutes County, said the fuels — you've got enough residential development into Friday. Instead, the state almoisture to grow more fuels," forests and into the wildland lowed the city to set aside the Keith said, referring to the urban interface ... present- extra land as a reserve area trees and o ther v egetation ing an increased challenge for future expansion, and that would burn in a fire. for fireprotection, fire pre- some of the land was rezoned The ponderosa pine for- vention and law enforcement to give it a higher priority for est on the west side of Bend agencies." inclusion. burns longer than desert Chang said major forest Dewey sai d L a n dWatch grasses and brush east of the thinning work currently un- raised concerns in the past city, and fires in the forest derway, known as the West about the city allowing develcan send embers over long Bend Project, will help re- opment near the forest. "We actually r aised this distances, said Phil Chang, duce the risk from overgrown natural resource program forests west of th e c ity. "I back in 2010 with (the Orea dministrator f o r Ce n t r al wouldn't want people to hear gon Land Conservation and Oregon I ntergovernmental that and say, 'Oh, well we can Development Commission), CounciL "It's stuff that when build wherever we want and and said any expansion on it catches on fire, it burns for the Forest Service will pro- the west side should be very a long time.... If you have tect us,'" Chang said. "But limited, exactly because of something that's dangerous, with the development in the this danger," he said. In Noyou need to think very care- wildland urban interface we vember 2008, Central Oregon fully before you put homes have in Central Oregon al- LandWatch wrote in a letter evencloserto thatdangerous ready, we can help to make to the Bend City Council and to try to evacuate that in the
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet •
'
•
-• •
C l aSSif1edS
the Deschutes County Commission that "o f p a r ticular concern to LandWatch is the
ue more than 100-fold since it
tion. "For many of these
The president of A r i zona
Starbucks employees, an online university education is the only reasonable way they're going to get a bachelor's degree." Many employers offer
State, Michael Crow, something of an evangelist for on-
tuition reimbursement. But
in New York.
line education, was scheduled
to join Schultz and Arne Duncan, the education secretary, to announce the program today
those programs usually come with limitations like
the full cost not being paid, new employees being excluded, requiring that workersstayforyears afterward, or limiting reimbursement
ON SALE
to work-related courses.
E310 6512001
REDN OND
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
"Our prevailing winds always have that westward component,so if we get a fire on the west side of Bend, it will generally always spread east."
F o undation, a
group focused on educa- went public in 1992.
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city's attempt to ignore ... the fire risk on the west side of Bend." LandWatch referred to a 2000 article in Forest Mag-
azine, a publication of the group Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics, that listed Bend as one
of several cities in the West at risk of catastrophic wildfire
such as the May 2000 Cerro Grande Fire that burned more than 200 homes in Los Alamos, N.M. T h e a r t i cle noted that Bend "has built into the extensive ponderosa
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forests on the east side of the Cascade Range," and that the
MRC Weight LossSpedalist in
city was "just as much at risk
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t o expand farther into t h e
forest, because state law requires cities to consider natural hazards including wildfires in land use planning. "The reality is that developing on the west side really puts people at risk, not just the people that live there, but the firefighters," Dewey said. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
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MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
BRIEFING
Man killed in motorcycle crash Oregon State Police are investigating a Saturday crash in east Lane County resulting in thedeathofaRedmond resident. David Edwards, 41, of Redmond, washeading east on state Highway 126, driving a Yamaha motorcycle pulling a small utility trailer, when it reportedly crossed into the westbound
lane roughly halfway between Eugeneand Sisters and collided with a Honda Accord, according to anOSPnews release. Edwards waswearing a helmet but wasejected from the motorcycle and pronounced dead atthe scene. The Accord's driver, 77-year-old Ellen Weaver of Eugene,was transported to a hospital in Springfield and later released. OSP is looking for witnesses whowere believed to be inthe area at the time of the crash but left before law enforcement officials could interview them. Anyone with information is asked to contact
SUMMER MEALS
Yout ree unc ro rams ic in o By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin
Starting today, free lunches will be offered in Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties
for students 18 years and younger through the annual summer meals program. Any student who shows up to a meal site during the allotted time will be served a free
meal. Students do not need to provide any proof they qualify for free and reduced lunches.
Most sites will be open Monday through Friday, and most will not operate July 4.
take place Monday through Friday, and 3 p.m.snack today through Aug. 22 (closed July ELK MEADOW 4) at the following locations and ELEMENTARYSCHOOL times: 60880 BrookswoodBlvd. AL MOODY PARK Lunch: 11:30a.m.-12:30 p.m. 2225 N.E.Daggett Lane This site opens onJuly 28 Lunch: 11:15a.m.-12:15 p.m. HARMON PARK BEAR CREEK ELEMENTARYSCHOOL 1100 N.W.Harmon Road Lunch: Noon-1:00 p.m. 51 S.E. 13th St. LARKSPUR PARK Lunch: 11 a.m.-noon
SUN MEADOWPARK 61150 Dayspring Drive Lunch: 11:45a.m.-12:45 p.m.
BOYS &GIRLS CLUB -ARIEL (BREAKFAST ONLY)
Finley Butte Road and Walling Lane Lunch: 11:45a.m.-12:30 p.m. LA PINECOMMUNITY
1700 S.E.Tempest Drive Breakfast: 9 a.m.-9:30 a.m.
DESCHUTES COUMTY
BOYS &GIRLS CLUB/
Bend
LAWN)
The summer meals program will
BEND-LA PINE SCHOOLS EDUCATION CENTER(FRONT 520 N.W.Wall St. Lunch: 11:45 a.m.-12:45 p.m.
1700 S.E.ReedMarket Road Lunch: 11:30a.m.-12:30 p.m. ORCHARD PARK
La Pine The summer meals program will take place in La Pine, Monday through Friday, from June 23 to Aug. 22 (closed July 4) at the following locations and times: FINLEY BUTTE PARK
2001 N.E. 6th St.
CENTER
Lunch: 11:30a.m.-12:30 p.m.
16405 First St. Breakfast: 9 a.m.-9:30 a.m. (The Community Center will be closed from June 30 toJuly11.)
PILOT BUTTE NEIGHBORHOODPARK 1310 N.E.U.S. Highway 20 Lunch:11:15 a.m.-12:15p.m.
SeeLunchIA8
w
I
inspire wows at Bend's airport
OSP at 800-452-7888. — Bulletin staff report
A7
CIVIC CALENDAR MONDAY
La PineCity Council — Councilors areexpected to hold aspecial meeting at 6 p.m. atCity Hall, 16345 Sixth St., to
discuss forming anurban renewal district. Thedistrict would divert more than $7 million in future property tax revenueinto a series of projects aimed at getting rid of blight in the downtownarea by improving roadsand storefronts.
DeschutesCounty Commission — Commissioners areexpected to hold a public hearing at10 a.m. Mondayat the county services building,1300 N.W.Wall St., in Bend, todiscuss the county Community DevelopmentDepartment's priorities for the next fiscal year,which starts July1. Thosepriorities include clarifying acceptable landusesand events in rural areas,and developing long-term plans to improveroad and sewer infrastructure in southern Deschutes County. TUESDAY
RedmondCity
Council —Councilors are expected tohold a workshop at6:30p.m. at City Hall, 777 S.W. De-
schutes Ave., todiscuss issues with thecity's stormwater code,and to provide anupdateon a contract to implement energy savings in the city.
STATE NEWS
Florence
WEDNESDAY
Bend CityCouncilCouncilors areexpected to hold a public hearing at 7 p.m. atCity Hall, 710 N.W. Wall St., to discuss changes to city fees starting July1, aswell as to discuss changesto its water treatment plant improvement project. The council alsoexpects to discuss grant funding for possible affordable housing projects.
FIOrenCe — The Lane CountySheriff's Office says asmall plane carrying two peoplehas crashed offtheOregon coast near Florence,and at least oneperson has died. Sgt. CarrieCarver says the single-engine aircraft crashedjust before10 a.m.Sunday about 500 yards from the shore. Shesaysthe Coast Guardhasrecovered onebody.Search crews weretrying Sunday afternoon to locatea second person.Authorities did not releasethe identities of thepeople. The planewas destroyed. The FAAandthe National Transportation Safety Board will investigate. — The Associated Press
EVENT CALENDAR TODAY USA VS. GHANA VIEWING: Watch World Cup actjon on the big screen;free; 3 p.m.; McMenamlnsOld St. Francis School, 700 N.W. BondSt., Bend;www. mcmenamins.comor 541-382-5174. "DOCTORWHO: RISEOF THE CYBERMEN/THE AGE OF STEEL" AND "WINGS 3D":Two-dayscreening of David Tennantfilms, flrst as the "TenthDoctor" and then narratjng theBBC Discovery Programabout bjrds; $18 for both films; 7:30 p.m.; RegalOld Mil Stadjum16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; www.fathomevents. com/event/doctor-who-andwings/more-info/details or 541-312-2901. TUESDAY THE LIBRARYBOOK
CLUB:Readand dlscuss "People of theBook" by Geraldine Brooks; noon; East BendPublic Llbrary, 62080 DeanSwlft Road; www.deschutesljbrary. org/eastbend, reneeb@ deschutesljbrary.org or 541-312-1055. AUTHORPRESENTATION: Jim Henson,former director of DeschutesCounty Mental Health, will present onhlsbook"Seeing Red: A Memolr"; free; 4:30-6 p.m.; DesChutes Historical Museum, 129N.W.
Contact:541-383-0354, news@bendbulletin.com. In emails, please write "Civic Calendar" in the subject line. Include a contact name and number. Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noon Thursday. Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Pilots fire up the propellers and prepare to take off in aB-25 bomber nicknamed "Grumpy" during the Wings &Wheels event at the Bend Municipal Airport on Sunday.
Well shot!
• A B-25 bomber Experience a ride in aB-25 O bomber flying over the named 'Grumpy' Three Sisters: highlightsweekend dendbulletin.com/b25 of tours andrides The bomber, nicknamed
Readerphotos
• We want to see your photos for the next special theme ofWell shot! — "psyched about summer" — to run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work at dendbulletln.cem/ summer2014and we'll pick the best for publication.
"Grumpy," was getting ready
By Elon Glucklich
to take off for good after
The Bulletin
three days of tours and rides at the airport, part of the
The wind kicked up by the B-25 bomber's twin pro-
Wings & Wheels event that
pellers nearly knocked Joey Pavlich off his feet.
ran from Friday through Sunday. When Joey's dad, John Pavlich, asked what he thought, Joey's one-word answer summed it up nicely. "Cool!" SeeWings/A8
But the 5-year-old Bend
resident quickly recovered, and watched the World War II-era plane taxi down the
runway at Bend Municipal Airport on Sunday.
Idaho Ave.,Bend;www. deschuteshlstory.org or 541-389- I8 I3. "MAGIC TRIP": Ashowlng of the 2011film about Ken Keseyand the Merry Pranksters' road trjp across America; $12;5:45p.m.; McMenamjnsOldSt. Francls School, 700 N.W.BondSt., Bend; www.mcmenamlns. com or 541-382-5174. WEDNESDAY BENDFARMERSMARKET: 3-7 p.m.; BrooksAlley, betweenNorthwest Franklin AvenueandNorthwest Brooks Street;www. bendfarmersmarket.com. OPEN MIC: 6: 30-9p.m.; Hey JoeCoffeeBar,19570 Amber MeadowDrive, Suite 190, Bend; 541-728-0095. "THE METROPOLITAN OPERA:RIGOLETTO": Verdl's opera about an
innocent girl seducedby aduke; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadlum 16 & IMAX,680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents. com/lvent/let-summmrrlgoletto or 541-312-2901. DESERT NOISES:The Utah roots-rock bandperforms; free; 7-10p.m.; McMenamins Old St. FrancjsSchool, 700 N.W.BondSt., Bend; www.mcmenamjns.comor 541-382-5174. MARC COHN: Thefolk-pop singer performs; $44and $55, plus fees; 7p.m., doors open at 6p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835N.W.Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. TUCKER JAMESON: Poprockfrom Texas; 9p.m.; Volcanic TheatrePub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881.
THURSDAY OREGONSENIORGAMES: Athletes ages 50and older compete in oneof16 sports; free for spectators; June 19-22, events scheduled throughout theday;Bend location; www.j.mpl SrGames or541-382-8048. THE LIBRARY BOOKCLUB: Read anddjscuss"Njne Parts of Desire" byGeraldine Brooks; noon; LaPine Public Llbrary,16425 Flrst St.; www.deschutesllbrary. org/laplne, reneeb© deschutesllbrary.org or 54 I-312- I055. FERMENTATION CELEBRATION: Featuring beer tastings from Bend breweries, live music and more; $20(includes pjntglass and ninedrjnk tickets), additional tickets three for $5; 4-10p.m.; Old Mill District, 661 S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend;
Two-year-old Bodhi Whitney, of Bend, touches the propeller of an airplane on display during the Wings & Wheels event at the Bend Municipal Airport on Sunday.
Submissionrequirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpij and cannot be altered.
OSU-CASCADES
www.theoldmill.com or 54I-3 I2-0131. MEDESKI SCOFIELD MARTINAND WOOD: The avant-jazz/funk band performs; $34 or$74(djnner and show); 6:30p.m., doors open at 5:30p.m.; Athletic Club of Bend,61615Athletic Club Drive; www.c3events. com or 541-385-3062. "THE FIRE LINE: WILDFIRE INCOLORADO":A screening of afllm about wildfire wlthln our communjty, followedby apaneldjscusslon;7 p.m.; Central OregonCommunlty College, Hltchcock Auditorium, 2600N.W. College Way,Bend;www. cocc.edu or541-383-7700.
SeeCalendar/A8 Contact:54f -383-0351, communitylifeObendbullelin.com or "Submit an Event" online at www.bendbulletin.com. Entries must be submitted at least 10 days before publication.
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Oregon State University-Cascades graduates watch as their
classmates receive diplomas on stage during the school's commencementceremony Sunday atthe Les Schwab Amphitheater in Bend.
AS TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014
Lunch
Breakfast: 7:30 a.m.-8 a.m. Lunch: 11a.m.-11:30 p.m.
Continued fromA7
CROOKCO. PARKS&
Redmond
RECREATIONPOOL 399 N.E.Garner, Prineville The summermeals program will Dates: June16-Aug. 22 run today throughAug. 22, Monday Lunch: 12:30 p.m.-1 p.m. through Friday, at the following lo- LUTHERAN COMMUNITY cations unless otherwise noted. SERVICES CENTER SAM JOHNSONPARK 450 W. Fourth St., Prineville 333 S.W.15th St. Dates: June16-Aug. 22 Breakfa st:8:30a.m.-8:45a.m. Lunch: 11:30a.m.-12:30 p.m. Lunch: 11:45a.m.-12:15 p.m. TERREBONNE COMMUNITY
SCHOOL 1199 B St. Breakfa st:8:30a.m.-8:45a.m. Lunch: 11:30a.m.-11:50a.m. CENTENNIAL PARK 725 S.W.EvergreenAve. Lunch: 11:30a.m.-12:15 p.m. HIGHLANDBAPTIST CHURCH
Lunch times: 11:45 a.m.-12:05 p.m. Note: John Tuck Elementary, Sage Elementary, Redmond High, and Ridgeview High schools in Redmond will also serve free meals during their summer school programs.
CROOK COUNTY
AUTHOR! AUTHOR!: Geraldine Brooks, Pulitzer Prize winner and author of "Caleb's Crossing," "March"
By Phuong Le
have asked the Coast Guard
The Associated Press
maritime issues, officials in
dents and pollution.
JEFFERSON COUNTY
states are concernedbywhat it may mean for states' rights in preventing oil spills. State officials in California, Washington and New York
The Coast Guard rules out- would interfere with or create line a number of regulations it confusion about state-specific says has a pre-emptive effect laws regarding spill reporting, on state and local law. It clar- tugboat escorts or oil spill conifies its federal authority over tingency plans, they say.
Mealsserved Monday through Friday unless notedotherwise. WESTSIDESCHOOL
Wings
COMMUNITYCENTER 2200 Hollywood Blvd., Warm Springs Dates: June23-Aug. 22 Lunch: 11a.m.-11:30 a.m. WARM SPRINGS ELEMENTARY 1114 WascoSt., WarmSprings Dates: June23-Aug. 22 Lunch: 11:45a.m.-12:30 p.m. JEFFERSONCOUNTY
and "People of the Book" will speak;$20-$75; 7p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E.Sixth St.; www. dplfoundation.org or 541-312-1027. "COMMUNICATINGDOORS":A time-traveling comic thriller by
SEATTLE — As the U.S. Coast Guard moves to assert its federal authority over
Forexample, Washingtonrequires tug escorts for all tank-
areas such as vessel safety and
Washington, Alaska and other
All meals are offered Monday MIDDLESCHOOL through Friday unless otherwise noted. 1180 S.E.Kemper, Madras Dates: July 8 - Aug. 2 1, CECILSLYSCHOOL Monday-Thursday CAFETERIA Breakfast: 8 a.m.-8:30 a.m. 1400 S.E.SecondSt., Prineville Lunch: 11:15a.m.-12:15 p.m. Dates: June16-Aug. 22 MADRAS PRIMARY Breakfast: 8:30 a.m.-9 a.m. Lunch: noon-12:30 p.m. 215 S.E.10thSt., Madras Dates: Aug.18-Aug. 29 PIONEERHIGH SCHOOL Breakfast: 9 a.m.-9:30 a.m. 297 N.E.Holly St., Prineville Lunch: noon-12:45 p.m. Dates: June 23-July 24, — Reporter: 541-383-0354, Monday-Thursday mkehoe@bendbulletin.com
Calendar Continued fromA7
States concernedabout proposed Coast Guard rule to withdraw rules it proposed inspection, small passenger in December, and say they're vessels, marine accident reconcerned the r ules would porting and other areas. limit the states' role in protectIn comments to the agening citizens from vessel acci- cy, some state official say the
410 S.W.Fourth St., Madras Dates: June23-Aug. 22 Lunch: noon-12:45 p.m. 3100 S.W.HighlandAve. Afternoon meal: 3 p.m.-3:15 p.m. Dates: June 23-June 27 (During METOLIUSELEMENTARY Vacation Bible SchoolWeek) Lunch: noon-12:20 p.m. 420 Butte Ave.,Metolius Dates: June23-Aug. 22 REDMOND BOYS &GIRLS Lunch: 11:45a.m.-12:15 p.m. CLUB WARM SPRINGS 1379 S.W. 15th St.
NORTHWEST NEWS
ers entering the Strait of Juan
de Fuca and headed for Washingtonports. Butundertheproposed rules, the state would be
prevented from requiring those escorts, said Maia Bellon, the
rules are too broad. The rules
state's Ecology Director.
"This is not acceptable to protect our waters," she said at a hearing last month.
Continued fromA7 Several hundred people gathered at the airport Sunday to take in a collection of
old and new planes, helicopters,even a few classic cars and motorcycles.
Grumpy was the headliner. The plane tours the country, part of the national Historic
Flight Foundation's collection spanning from the 1920s to 1950s.
But Bend airport businesses also got a chance to show off some o f
t h ei r p l anes.
Outside of Advanced Aviation's airport hangar, a pilot showed 11-year-old Mariah Tuck how a plane's rudders help it steer through the sky. "I might want to be a pilot
when I grow up," the Bend resident said. Planes weren't the
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
o n ly
Kolton Kopachik, 6, of Bend, experiences the propeller wash of anAirLink helicopter as it takes off
vehicles on display. Several during the Wings 8 Wheels event at the Bend Municipal Airport on Sunday. classiccars and motorcycles,
including a blue, 1957 Harley Davidson, lined the tarmac. Despite it being Father's
that reason. "Thomas goes nuts when
Day, several dads said mak- he sees a plane on TV," Rick ing the trip was about giving said, as Thomas sat on his their kids a chance for an up- shoulders. "I've brought him close look at some powerful out here before to watch pieces of machinery. planes take off, but this is the Rick Hormel brought his closest he's been to one." sons, 7-year-old Micah and At that moment, a member 4-year-old Thomas, for just of the local Experimental Air-
Alan Ayckbourn about awoman who stumbles into a murder plot; $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; GreenwoodPlayhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or
541-389-0803. "SWEENEYTODD: THE DEMON BARBEROFFLEETSTREET": StephenSondheimand Hugh Wheeler's humorousmusical about murderous barberandculinary crime;
craft Association, the "High
cally toppled the High Desert
Desert Flyers," announced
Flyers booth 100 feet away.
over a m i crophone that Grumpy taxied down the Grumpy was due for another runway, then all went quiet. air show in Washington state.
Two or three minutes later,
Thomas watched as the B-25's two rows of seven-cylinder engines roared to life and kicked up a huge gust of
the sound of its engines re-
wind — so much that it practi-
egluchlich@bendbulletin.com
$22 for adults, $19for students/ seniors; 7:30p.m.; 2ndStreet Theater, 220N.E Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.comor 541-312-9626.
turned as it zoomed back into view and took off. — Reporter: 541-617-782O,
"RAD COMPANY": A showing ofthe 2014 film aboutfreerlde mountain biking; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenaminsOld St.FrancisSchool,700 N.W .Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamlns.com or 541-382-5174.
You are invited to the Collaction SystamMastar Plan OpanHousa! WHEN: Thursday,Jun819from 4pm—Bpm W HERE: BrOOkS Street RiVerfrOnt PlaZa <875NWBrooksSt.i Bend'sSewerInfrastructure Advisory Group,acitizen panelchargedwith finding anaffordable solution for Bend'spressingsewerproblems, invitesyouto learnmoreabout their recommendedsolutions.
G< Seesomebig sewerequipment upclose! G< Foodandrefreshments will be served! 9 Child friendly!
• I
MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A9
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
e
as n o ans oscra ' eau
TV SPOTLIGHT
ca Lange and Drew Barrymore in the Emmy-winning 2009 HBO movie "Grey Gardens." Since using his real name professionally, Ferreira also has had guest roles on shows including "Breaking Bad" and "Rookie Blue."
By Jay Bobbin Zap2it
The CW canceled Q ••Has "Beauty and the Beast"'? — Geoffrey Briggs, Delray Beach, Fla.
• It certainly might have • seemed that way, given
recently watched an epQ •• Iisode of "NCIS" that was
the long hiatus it took from
the lineup and its summertime return ... but "Beauty" Kristin
a two-parter and had the team helping another team stationed
Kreuk and "Beast" Jay Ryan will get to carry their tortured
in New Orleans. It co-starred Scott Bakula. Is it possible that
on-screen love story forward,
could have been the start of
since the show has been renewed for a third season. It won't be a fall starter, but likely
will be the first replacement for any hour that doesn't perform as well as The CWhopes. Are there any plans to • rerun"Crossing Jordan"?
Q•
— Rose Odrosky,
Clearfield, Pa.
Photos via Newscom
another "NCIS" series for next season?
While there are no plans to rerun "Crossing Jordan," the show's star, Jill Hennessy, did make
Kristin Kreuk and the rest of the "Beauty and the Beast" cast will be back for a third season on The a return appearance last month onCBS' "The CW. Good Wife."
— Ralph Rizzuto, Palm Coast, Fla.
• It's more than possible, • it's a done deal. As you
the upcoming "This Is Where I Gardner law firm. It's likely Fox curearenewal.When itdoesn't Leave You." would be brought back to wrap work, fans are left hanging; that up, at least.
Q •• pear on "The Good Wife"
A
A
ed" series pilot, the potential
that evidently is the case this
Will Michael J. Fox ap-
• Not that we know of, at again next season? • least at the time this is be— Joanne Parks, ing written. However, title star Columbus, Ohio • We'd certainly bet very Jill Hennessy is still in action,
suspected, the episode was made as what's called a "plant-
like the finaQ •• Itle seemed of " Revolution" was ready to start a whole new chapter of the series. Why would NBC cancel it after it
as proven by her return appear• strongly on it, for a num- appeared to have been set up to ance last month on CBS' "The ber of reasons. First, he loves continue that way? Good Wife." doing the show, and its produc— Dave Lockhart, As forother"Jordan" alumni, ers love having him — as they Baltimore M iguel Ferrernow is a regular all reaffirmed in comments • Season finales frequenton the same network's "NCIS: made recently, verified even • ly are filmed before a Los Angeles," and Kathryn more by the strong showing his network makes its decisions Hahn appears to be busier character Louis Canning made on which shows will move forthan ever ... thanks to such in multiple episodes at the end ward ... though admittedly, TV work as NBC's "Parks and oflast season. NBC made early calls on such Recreation" and FX's "Chozen," Also, there's the matter of programs as "Chicago Fire" and movies induding the re- that ongoing story arc, which and "Chicago PD." Producers cent "The Secret Life of Walter has Canning plotting an at- sometimes will build in that Mitty" and "Bad Words" and tempt to take over the Lockhart sort of cliffhanger in abid to se-
time, since as of this writing, no springboard for a separate seother network has announced ries to emerge from the parent plans to continue "Revolution."
show with an assist from famil-
iar characters and situations. The ratings ended up being
I recognize the male lead
Q •• on ABC's "Motive," and I
what CBS wanted, so "NCIS:
see him billed as Louis Ferrei- New Orleans" will air immedira, but I'm pretty sure he used ately after "NCIS" on Tuesdays to have a different name. Am I
starting this fall — with Mark
right?
Harmon, whohad abighandin getting the new show launched • Indeed you are. Louis viahisown series,serving as • (actually, Luis) Ferreira an executive producer. The first is his birth name, but he went spinoff, "NCIS: Los Angeles," — Mike Lucks, Buffalo, NY.
A
by "Justin Louis" for much of his career. Under that identi-
will move to Mondays. — Send questions of general interest via email to tvpipeline®
fication, he was a co-star of such series as "Public Morals,"
tribune.corrL Writers must include their names, cities and states. Personal replies cannot be sent.
"Missing"and "Durham County," and he appeared with Jessi-
Ba no ix orcou e's ro ems
MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • iNovie times are subject to change after press time. t
Dear Abby:Lately I have been having problems with my live-in boyfriend, "Ethan." We fight about
Don't do it!
everything, and he refuses to admit
in a motel in a suburb of Cleveland
erosity that day provided nourishDear Abby: In the summer of ment not only for your bodies, but 1995, I was a 12-year-old girl living also for your faith in the humanity of others — and I am sure you have
when he's wrong. Ethan has been with my mother, older brother and sleeping on the couch for a week younger sister. We were poor and waiting for me to take the first step very hungry. and reconcile. My mother led my He isn't working younger sister and me and I am, and that is to a doughnut shop DFP,R for our only meal of ABBY him so mad. I pay the day. After waitall the bills, and he ing for everyone to thinks I feel superior leave, my mother apbecause I'm bringing in money and proached the young woman behind
emulated her example in the years
he'snot.
the counter and asked to buy some
as Mom and can visit her anytime
We argue day and night, swear and scream at each other, and he does not appreciate everything I'm doing so we can survive. I have two daughters, he has one, and I'm supporting all of us. Doyouthink it's a good idea for us
doughnuts with our foreign coins. It was the only money we had. Instead of turning us away, she told my mother: "We're allowed to give away a certain number of free doughnuts every day. Just tell me what you want." (I don't know if this
theyplease.Isee Mom once a year
that have followed. After all, isn't that what acts of kindness are all
about'? Dear Abby:Once a year I invite my mother, who lives in Arizona, to visit me in California. This year,
Mom has decided to bring one of my sisters along because "she really needs avacation." My sisters live in the same city at most, and I do not want to share my limited time with her. How do I
let my sisters know they're not welcome without causing a family rift? — Wants Quality Time WithMom
was true.) It was because ofher kindDear Wants:You shouldn't have for a child with me — even though ness that my family ate that day. to tell your sisters. The person you we can't get along or communicate. If thatkindwoman is readingthis, need to tell is your mother, who — Mary Jane in Massachusetts Iwant to say:"Thankyou. You made should not have invited anyone Dear Mary Jane:Not only do I the hunger go away for just a little without clearing it with you first. think it's not a good idea, but I think bit, so a mother and her children Because you're having trouble it's a terrible idea. Babies are expen- could go a day without pain. You re- with what to say to her, read her sive, and you're already carrying main foreverin alittle girl's heart." the second paragraph of your leta heavy load. I suspect that Ethan — Ursala in Messina, Italy ter to me. thinks a baby will fix what's wrong Dear Ursala: I, too, hope your — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com in your relationship, but he's wrong. benefactorsees your letter.H ergen- or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069 to have a baby? Ethan is desperate
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY, JUNE16, 2014:This year you often find that you are faced with creative
challenges, whichyoulove. Sometimesa
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE unexpected will play a role in opening a door. Someone you meet might be emotionally unavailable. Tonight: Your choice.
** * Pressure builds, and you might feel irritated or frustrated with someone. Don't push a personal situation, and don't demand that someone else think like you. You probably are overly serious and difficult without even realizing it. Tonight: Happily head home.
CANCER (June21-July 22)
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)
By Jacqueline Bigar
low-level fatigue or depression slows you
down.Keepyourselfbusywhenyoufeel off. Taking good care of your health is a must, as it will help you stay focused. If you are single, screen a potential sweetie with care, as you Stars showthe kind are in a period of day you'll have when you are likely ** * * * D ynamic to attract an emotionally unavailable
** S
person. If youare
attached, you will enjoy the times you are with your significant other even more. Remember to plan more dates! AQUARIUScan be quite offbeat. * Difficult
ARIES (March21-April 19) * *** You have opinionsand ideasthat you might choose to express in a meeting. There seems to be an element of the unexpected that continues to keep your life exciting. You could feel irritated as you deal with someone who is fairly close to you. Tonight: Indulge a friend.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * You might be feeling as if you have a lot of ground to cover. A partner or loved one could be unusually irritating, in the sense that he or she doesn't seem to understand your concerns and issues. Use your charm. Tonight: A must
** * * S tay on top of a problem that keeps emerging. You'll need to handle this matter before it becomes even more of a problem. Do not underestimate your ability to persuade someone to thinkas you do. Tonight: Listen to what a family member has to share.
LEO (July 23-Aug.22)
** * * S omeone close to you could be testy. Think carefully before chiming in about this person's irritation. Communication is likely to open up, but a friend or loved one might be too abrupt at first. Let him or her be for now. Tonight: Go along with someone else's request.
** * * I nitiate a conversation, but don't expect to have control over what others say.In fact,you could be shocked bythe twists and turns of a conversation and where the talk finally lands. Recognize thatyou don't have control over anyone but yourself. Tonight: Hang with a friend.
GAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jao.19) ** * Be aware of your finances and your commitments. You generally are, but right now there seems to be an element of the unexpected running through your day that has you feeling off-kilter. A friend could be difficult; know thatyou can't change this person. Tonight: Your treat.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18)
** * Use caution with your finances, as you easily could go overboard in some way. Communication with a person you care about could be difficult. Focus on what you must do, and let time work its wonders. Someone is likely to change his or her tune. Tonight: Get a lot done.
** * * Despite a difficult boss, you'll be on cruise control. You simply have to bypass this person and not allow him or her to get to you. A surprise that will encourage you to try something different is likely to occur. You won't be able to resist the offer. Tonight: As you like it.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
PISCES (Feb. 19-March20)
** * * You could be overwhelmed by everythingyou haveto do,butonceyou appearance. get started, you'll achieve a lot. You are likely to withdraw if someone mentions GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * Keep reaching out to someone at anything aboutmoney. Youhavegood a distance or to someone whose opinion reasonto assume thatstance.Keep an eye on your budget. Tonight: Add more you respect in order to get feedback on a creative twist to an existing plan. The fun.
** * Keep your own counsel, as it might be too difficult to see the big picture with a certain situation right now. You will gather a lot of information in a conversation with someone who might be viewing the same situation differently. Tonight: Gain a new perspective. © King Features Syndicate
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 22JUMPSTREET(R)I, I:30,4:20,4:50,7:15,7:45,9:50, 10:20 • BELLE(PG) 12:20 • BLENDED(PG-13) 12:45, 3:40, 6:30, 9:25 • CHEF (R)6:45, 9:40 • DOCTORWHO: RISEOFTHECYBERMAN/TIIEAGEOF STEEL+ WINGS 3-0 (no MPAArating) 7:30 • EDGE OF TOMORROW(PG-13) 1:35, 4:30, 7:25, 10:10 • EDGE OF TOMORROW IMAX3-0 (PG-13)5,7:40,10:25 • THE FAULT INOURSTARS(PG-13) 11:10 a.m.,11:40 a.m., 2:45, 3:20, 6:20, 9:15 • GODZILLA(PG-13) 12:10, 3:05, 6:25, 9:20 • HOW TOTRAINYOURDRAGON2(PG) 11 a.m., 12:15, 1:15,3:15,4:15,6,7,9,9:30 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 23-0 (PG)1: 45,4:45, 7:30, 10 • HOW TO TRAINYOURDRAGON2IMAX3-0 (PG)11:45 a.m., 2:15 • MALEFICENT (PG) Noon, 2:30, 6:15, 9:05 • MALEFICENT3-0(PG) l2:30,3 • A MILLIONWAYSTODIEIN THEWEST(R) 1:20, 4:10, 7:20, 10: I5 • NEIGHBORS (R) 4:25, 7:35, 10:05 • X-MEN:DAYS OF FUTURE PAST (PG-13)11:20a.m., 2:25, 6:05, 9:10 • "Wings3-D"screensat730p.m.Tuesday,butyou need to purchase theMonday "Doctor Who"event ticket to be able toseeit. • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •
I
11 a.m. on 6, "The Youngand the Restless" —The lives, loves and machinations of the good
—and not sogood— people of
Genoa fuel the storylines for this daytime drama now in its fourth decade. Eric Braeden, Melody Scott Thomas, Kristoff St. John, Peter Bergman and Amelia Heinle star. 2:30 p.m. on ESPN, "2014 FIFA World Cup" — The U.S. squad has a chance to get a little satisfaction today in Brazil, when KyleBeckerman and hismates open up their 2014 World Cup schedule with a Group-G match against Ghana.Led byAsamoah Gyan,Ghana has defeated the Americans twice in the last two World Cups, so TeamUSAwill
not only belooking for somere-
venge, but also an opportunity to score some early points against a tough opponent. Sp.m. onAMC, Movie:"The Perfect Storm" — Billy Tyne (George Clooney), captain of the fishing boat Andrea Gail, hasn't had much luck lately. He's hoping the final run of the season will change that. It does; the haul is excellent. But to get it back to shore before it spoils, the crew must go directly through the mother of all storms. Mark Wahlberg, Michael Ironside, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio and John C. Reillyalso star in this fact-inspired 2000 adventure, boasting incredible special effects. 6 p.m. ooIFC, Movie: "Scarface" — Al Pacino gives an appropriately over-the-top performance in director Brian De Palma's violent1983 remake of the mobster classic. As gangland wannabe Tony Montana, the actor drips machismo from every pore, even when it's ill-advised. Michelle Pfeiffer plays the walking mannequin who becomes the underworld novice's mistress. Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Steven Bauer and Robert Loggia co-star. 9 p.m. on10, "24: Live Another Day" — The 200th episode of the "24" franchise overall, the new episode "Day 9: 6:00 PM-7:00 PM" leaves Jack and President Heller (Kiefer Sutherland, William Devane) stunned by the latest results of Margot's (Michelle Fairley) terror campaign. Kate (Yvonne Strahovski) makes her own moves to try to ensure Margot never reaches her end game. Jordan Reed (Giles Matthey) faces peril of his own — the sort that puts his own mortality in question. © Zap2it
2 Locationsin Bend Maln Center 2150NE StudioRd,Suite10
NWX 2863 NorthwestCrossingDr,suiteiO
541-389-9252 sylvan©bendbroadband.com
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-13) 6:30 • TheUSA vs.Ghana FIFA World Cup Soccergamescreens at 3 p.m. today. • After 7p.m.,showsare21andolderonly.Youngerthan 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • UNDERTHESKIN(R) 8:30 I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • EDGE OF TOMORROW(PG-13) I:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9: I5 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2(PG)1:30,4,6:30,9 • MALEFICENT(PG) 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 • A MILLIONWAYSTODIEIN THEWEST(R) 2,4:30, 7, 9:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • 22 JUMP STREET (R) 5:15, 7:30 • CHEF (R) 7 • THE FAULT INOURSTARS(PG-13) 4:45, 7:15 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2(PG)4:45,7 • MALEFICENT(PG) 5 • t
Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • 22 JUMP STREET (R) 2:40, 5:05, 7:30 • EDGEOFTOMORROW (PG-13) 2:20,4:45,7:20 • THE FAULT INOURSTARS(PG-13) 1:25, 4:10, 7 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2(PG)4:25,6:50 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 23-0 (PG)2:05 • MALEFICENT (PG) 2:30, 4:50, 7: IO •
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • EDGE OF TOMORROW(Upstairs — PG-13) 6:30 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2(PG)6:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
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TV TODAY
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
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© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014
The week ahea
A rundown of gamesandevents to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:
Today
Thursday-Sunday
Thursday-Sunday
Saturday
Saturday/Sunday
Soccer, WorldCup, U.S. vs. Ghana, 3 p.m. (ESPN): The Americans open play in Group G —the so-called "group of death" — at Estadio dasDunas inNatal, facingaGhanateam thathasknocked the U.S. out of each of the past two World Cups. Theother two teams in the group, favored Germanyand talented Portugal, face off earlier today (9 a.m., ESPN).
U.S. Women'sOpengolf, Pinehurst, N.C., noon(ESPN2first two days, NBC Saturday andSunday): Theheadliner in the156-player field at Pinehurst No. 2is Lucy Li, whoatage11is the youngest player ever to qualify for the biggest championship in women's golf. A sixth-grader from RedwoodShores, Calif., Li was medalist in a sectional qualifier — by sevenstrokes.
OregonSeniorGames,Bend:Theplace will be hopping with silver-haired sports enthusiasts, more than 400 of whomare expected to take part in the first Oregon Senior Gamesever staged in Central Oregon. Archery, golf, shuffleboard, swimming, table tennis and track andfield are just a few of the16 different sports featured. For more information, go to www. visitbend.com/seniorgames.
Youth-onlytriathlon, Sisters, 9a.m.: Sisters Multisport hosts anintroductory triathlon experiencefor boys andgirls ages 3 to12. In theyoungest agegroup (5 and younger), kids will participate in a25yard pool swim, aquarter-mile bikeanda 200-yard run; theoldest agegroup (11-12) will take ona100-yard swim, a3-mile bike and a1-mile run. Formoreinformation, go to sistersmultisport.com/try-a-tri.
Golf, Mirror PondInvitational, Bend Golf andCountry Club:Thelongest-running golf tournament in Central Oregon will tee off in a 36-hole stroke-play competition that will feature top amateurs from throughout the region. Play begins both days atapproximately 8 a.m. Spectators are welcomeand admission is free.
COMMUNITY SPORTS
RODEO
TEE TOGREEN: CENTRAL OREGON GOLF COURSE TOUR
PeedleS the toP lOCal Cowdolt
Ore on Senior Games to open
The dasics Number ofholes:18 Status:Open seasonally Location:In Sunriver, 15 miles south of Bend, west of U.S. Highway 97 Tee times: 541-593-4402
By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
Fast and fit seniors are about to take over Central
Oregon. The Oregon Senior Games officially kick off this week with golf, pickleball, bowling and tennis competitions in
and around Bend on Thursday. Sixteen different sports are offered at this year's
games for athletesage50 and older, everything from tennis and pickleball to a one-day track and field event and a three-on-three softball game known as "over the line."
Sanctioned by the National Senior Games Association,
Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
With Mount Bachelor in the distance, Lew Ballenger of Ridgecrest, Calif., hits up onto the16th green while playing at the Woodlands Golf Course in Sunriver on Tuesday.
the top four finishers in most
sports will earn berths at next year's National Senior Games in St. Paul, Minn. With four
days of competition, athletes can mix and match events,
golfing one day and playing
ZACK HALL
badminton the next.
SeeSenior Games/B6
NBA FINALS
A dynasty that spans deCBdeS By Scott Cacciola New York Times News Service
SAN ANTONIO — The
arena rumbled. It was only the first half on Sunday night, but there was already a growing sense of inevitability with each passing possession. Having withstood the best that LeBron
James could offer, the San Antonio Spurs were closing in on another championship. Tim Duncan was backing down an opponentbefore throwing in a baby hook. Manu Ginobili was racing end to end for an emphatic dunk that nearly blew the top off AT&T Center. And James, the
• New greenshave Sunriver Resortcourse whipped into shape Editor's note: This is another installment in a seasonlong
series in which Bulletin golf writer Zach Hall visits each public and semiprivate golf coursein Central Oregon.
Sam Grant of Pasco, Wash., tees off on No. 9 while playing Tuesday.
the green on the 550-yard first hole — the first in the course's
greens that were replaced this spring, the final phase of a proj-
set of enticing par 5s — I needed
ect that started in 2010 to replace
t greens have made at Sunriv-
to make a 10-foot putt to salvage bogey.
all 18 Woodlands greens with a hardy strain of bentgrass.
er Resort's Woodlands course.
Short of the hole on the uni-
With a firm putting stroke, I
I played Woodlands on a recent quiet weekday morning, and after struggling to reach
formly green putting surface, I knew I could trust my line. After
sent the ball rolling perfectly toward the hole and it dropped in. SeeWoodlands/B8
SUNRIVERt did not take long for me to realize the difference the new
all, the first hole is one of five
Course stats: par 72, 6,947 yards Green fees:Through July 3 and Sept. 1528: $79 Mon.-Thur. and $89 Fri.-Sun. for Deschutes County residents; $99 Mon.-Thur. and $109 Fri.-Sun. for all others; July 4-Sept. 14: $79 Mon.-Thur. and $99 Fri.-Sun. for Deschutes County residents; $99 Mon.-Thur. and $119 Fri.-Sun. for all others (prices include cart); after Sept. 28: $49 daily for Deschutes County residents $59 for all others Off-peak rates: Through July 3 and Sept. 15-28: Mon.Thur.: $69 (Deschutes County) or $79 (public) from noon-2 p.m., $59 from 2 p.m.-5 p.m., $49 after 5 p.m. Weekends: $79 (Deschutes County) or $89 (pubhc) from noon-2 p.m., $69 from 2 p.m.-5 p.m., $49 after 5 p.m. (prices include cart); July 4-Sept. 14: Mon.-Thur.: $69 (Deschutes County) or $79 (public) from noon-2 p.m., $59 from 2 p.m.-5 p.m., $49after 5 p.m. Weekends: $89 (Deschutes County) or $99 (public) from noon-2 p.m., $79 from 2 p.m.-5 p.m., $49 after 5 p.m. (prices include cart) Director of golf: Josh Willis
Course designers: Robert Trent JonesJr. (1981) Extras:Driving range, H ole 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Out 10 11 12 13 14 1 5 1 6 1 7 1 8 ln To t a l chipping greenwith bunker, putting green Par 5 4 4 4 3 5 3 4 4 3 6 5 4 3 4 4 5 4 3 4 36 72 Website: www. Yards" 550 427 398 419 188 543 168 398 416 3,507 506 425 175 372 397 530 392 205 438 3,440 6,947 sunriver-resort.com
Scorecard
* All distances from back tees
Brealdnedown the course A closer look at theWoodlands. For more information on the following items, seePageB8.
DIFFICULTY A position golf course that demands accuracy off the tee. Wild golfers will be punished by fairway bunkers, ponderosa pines and/or thick rough.
STRATEGY Let the fairway bunkers guide tee shots and pick spots to be aggressive. Short-iron approach shots are particularly ideal to the heavily bunkered greens.
VERDICT With newgreens and achallenging layout, Woodlands rivals Central Oregon's better daily-fee courses, even if its peak rates are a bit high.
Miami Heat's resident superstar and the best player on the
planet, was rendered powerless by the Spurs' slow march to history. SeeNBAfinals/B7
SPURS 4, HEAT1
jgP," Rg
U.S. OPEN
Martin Kay-
Kaymer leadsall the way
with the
• The German golfer cruisesto an 8-shot victory By Bill Pennington New York Times News Service
Game1: Spurs110, Heat 95 Game 2: Heat98, Spurs 96 Game 3: Spurs111, Heat92 Game 4: Spurs107, Heat86 Game 5: Spurs104, Heat 87
PINEHURST, N.C.— Martin Kay-
mer arrived at the first tee Sunday dressed appropriately for a methodical man with a modest, logical plan for the day. Kaymer chose a white shirt,
mer poses trophy after wining the U.S. Open in Pinehurst, N.C., Sunday.
muted dark gray pants and plain, all-white shoes. It was an outfit that
matched his golf bag, which was white and unadorned by a sponsor's logo, making it a rare piece of unpretentious golf gear that endorsed only its owner. SeeKaymer/B8
Charlie Riedel/The Associated Press
SISTERS — Locals were largely shut out of the final standings at this week's Sisters Rodeo, which concluded Sunday afternoon. Redmond cowboy Steven Peebles placed fifth in the bareback riding event with an 80, the top finish of any Central Oregon participant. Ethen Thouvenell, of Hooper, Utah, took the steer wrestling aggregate title, recording a two-head time of 8.8 seconds. Thesaddle bronc competition saw two cowboys tie for first as Dustin Flundra, of Pincher Creek, Alberta, and Isaac Diaz, of Desdemona, Texas, both posted 80-point rides. Brady Tryan, of Huntley, Mont., andTommy Zuniga, of Centerville, Texas, claimed top team roping honors at Sisters, registering an aggregate time of12.3 seconds. California cowgirl Ann Scott won the barrel racing in 17.5 seconds andTim Bingham, of Honeyville, Utah, recorded the top roughstock score of the rodeo, an 82, enroute to winning the bull riding. In tie-down roping, K.C. Miller, of Pueblo, Colo., had the fastest two-head time, 17 seconds. Having placed in both the first and second go-rounds, Miller collected $5,187.99 to earn the biggest paycheck of anyone atthe rodeo. The bareback riding event saw afour-way tie as Tyler Scales, of Severance, Colo., R.C. Landingham, of Pendleton, ChaseErickson, of Helena, Mont., and Seth Hardwick, of Laramie, Wyo., all scored 81-point rides. — Bulletin staff report
BASEBALL
Elks deat 'Cats, snap 6-gameskid The Bend Elksscored two runs in the eighth on a Johnathan Brooks double and aZachClose single, and Cohenstruck out two for the saveas the Elks snapped asixgame losing streak with a 7-6 win over Victoria on SundaynightatGenna Stadium in Bend. The Elks (3-7) fell behind 5-0 after three innings and tied it up in the fifth. Grant Newton
started the rally with an RBI single, Brooks scored on awild pitch, Close singled home Newton, Antonio Roque singled home Sam Finfer, and Closescored on another wild pitch to tie the game.The HarbourCats (5-4) took a 6-5 lead in the eighth before the Elks scored two in the bottom half of the inning off Ryan Keller (0-1). Austin Guzzon (2-1) struck out his lone batter in the eighth. — Bulletin staff report
B2 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY SOCCER World Cup, Germanyvs. Portugal World Cup, Iran vs. Nigeria World Cup, Ghana vs. United States
Time TV/Radio 8:30 a.m. ESPN 11:30 a.m. ESPN
2:30 p.m. ESPN
BASEBALL
College World Series, Texasvs. Louisville MLB, N.Y.Mets at St. Louis College World Series, UC Irvine vs. Vanderbilt MLB, San Diego atSeattle
noon 5 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
E S P N2 E S PN E SPN2 Roo t
TUESDAY SOCCER World Cup, Belgium vs. Algeria World Cup, Brazil vs. Mexico World Cup, Russia vs. South Korea
Time TV/Radio 8:30 a.m. ESPN 11:30 a.m. ESPN
2:30 p.m. ESPN
BASEBALL
College World Series, TexasTechvs. Mississippi MLB, San Diego atSeattle MLB, KansasCity at Detroit College World Series, TCU vs. Virginia
noon E S P N2 12:30 p.m. Root 4 p.m. MLB 5 p.m. E S PN
Listings are themostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changesmadeby 7Vor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF PREPS High DeSert laCrOSSetakeS tOurney —TheHigh Desert Conference went undefeated in round-robin play andwas declared champion of the inaugural Oregon High School Lacrosse Association all-star tournament in Sisters. The HighDesert team, composed primarily of players from Bend, Summit, Mountain View andSisters high schools, went 4-0 on Saturday, defeating Midwestern11-4, Pacific 8-2, Columbia 9-5, and North Valley11-1. Leading goal scorers in the tournament for High Desert were JensStadeli with seven, Scott Nelson with five, Nick Rasmussenand Eli Pite with four each, and James Rockett, Troy LaLonde, ZacVoloppi and Griffin Reinecke with three apiece. Assist leaders for High Desert were Rasmussen and Kinnon Roywith five each, Pite with four, and Stu Bledsoe and Lane Gladdenwith three apiece.
TENNIS DimitrOV WinS Queen'S final —Grigor Dimitrov saved a match point to defeat Spanish left-hander Feliciano Lopez6-7 (8), 7-6 (1), 7-6 (6) Sunday andwin the grass court tournament at Queen's Club in London, a warm-up event for Wimbledon. Thefourth-seeded Dimitrov is the first Bulgarian to lift the title, and also the first player this year to win titles on three different surfaces after claiming victories in Acapulco on hardcourt and Bucharest on clay. At age32, 10th-seeded Lopezwas attempting to become the oldest winner of the tournament since 33-year old TonyRochedefeated John McEnroe in the 1978 final, and to win his first title since Eastbourne one year ago.
RODEO Sisters Rodeo Sunday Aggregateresults Tie-downroping 1. K.C. Miller, San Louis Obispo, Calif., 17.0, $5,187.99 2. Rhen Richard, Roosevelt, Utah,17.6,$3,938.32 3. Trent Creager, Stilwater, Okla.,18.5, $3,446.04 t4. Clint Robinson, Spanish Fork, Utah, 18.8, $2,025.97 t4. Dane Kissack, Spearfish,S.D., 18.8,$1,798.76 6. RogerNonela, KlamathFalls,19.0, $2,537.19 7. Chase Wiliams, 20.1, $568.03 t8. Randall Carlisle, Baton Rouge,Texas, 20.5, $1,173.92 t8. RyleSmith, Oakdale, Calif,. 20.5,$113.60 Bareback riding t1. TylerScales, Severance,Colo., 81,$2,969.46 t1. R.C.Landingham,Pendelton, 81, $2,969.46 t1. ChaseErickson, Helena,Mont.,81, $2,969.46 t1. SethHardwick, Laramie, Wyo., 81,$2,969.46 5. Steven Peebles,Redmond,80, $1,026.48 6.TeddyAthan,RedBluff ,Calif.,79,$733.20 7.J.R.Vezain,Cowley, Wyo., 78,$586.56 8. Brian Bain, Culver,77,$439.92 Steer wrestling 1. Ethan Thouvenel, Hooper,Utah,8.8, $3,460.36 2. JoshPeek, Pueblo, Colo.,9.0, $3,237.11 3. Jake Rinehart, Highmore, S.D.,9.1$2,567.36 4. BlakeKnowles, Heppner,10.0, $1,190.66 5. SterlingLambert, Faffon,Nev.,10.4, $2,530.16 6. CarlSeiders,Adrian,10.5, $1,972.03 7.Sam MacKenzie,JordanValley,10.9,$372.08 8. Morgan Grant, Granton, Ontario,11.3, $1,637.16 Saddlebroncriding t1. Dustin Flundra, PincherCreek, Alberta, 80, $3,885.96 t1.l saacDias,Desdemona,Texas,80,$3,885.96 t3. NickLaduke,Livermore,Calif.,78,$2,052.96 t3.RoyJohnson,Etna,Calif.,78,$2,052.96 5. Jake Wright, Milford, Utah,77,$1,026.48 6. Jesse Wright, Milford,Utah,76,$733.20 t7.J.R.Berg,Wainwright, Alberta,75,$513.24 t7. BradyNicholes, Hoytsvile, Utah,75,$513.24 Teamroping 1. BradyTyran, Huntley, Mont., andTommy Zuniga, Cente rviff e,Texas,12.3,$2,962.02 2. JakeStanley,Hermiston, andJustin Davis, Cottonwood,Calif., 13.2,$2,362.77 3. Doyle Hoskins, Chualar,Calif., andMatt Costa,Turlock, Calif.,14.3,$1,284.11 4. ZayneDishion, Bishop,Calif., and ClayO'Brien Cooper,Gardnerviffe, Nev.,14.4, $1,027.29 5. DavidMotes,Tolar,Texas, andEvan Arnold, Santa Margarita,Calif., 17.3,$633.50 6. BogerNoneffaand BoPatzke, Klamath Falls,19.7, $736.22 Barrel racing 1. Ann Scott, CanyonCountry, Calif.,17.50, $3,935.78 2.MeganMcLeod,Star,Idaho,17.53,$3,148.62 3.MaryWalker,Ennis,Texas,17.72,$2,558.26 t4. CindyWoods, Newberg, 17.84,$1,771.10 t4. ChristyLoflin, Franktown,Colo., 17.84,$1,771.10 6. Kym LaRoche,Arlington, Wash.,17.87, $1,180.73 7. MaryHayes, Hermiston,17.88, $983.94 8.KassidyDennison,Tohatchi,N.M.,17.90,$885.55 9. KelsieMiler, Riley,17.91,$787.16 10. KelleyCarrington, Boston, Ga.,17.95, $688.76 11. Callahan Crossley, Hermiston,17.97, $590.37 t12.Jackie Gudmu ndson, Monroe, Wash., 17.99, $393.58 t12.SammiLane,Arlington,17.99, $393.58 t12.callieGray,Weatherford, Okla.,17.99,$393.58 15.PamelC aapper,Cheney, Wash.,18.00, $196.79 Bull riding 1. TimBingham,Honeyvile, Utah,82,$4,230.00 2. A.J.Ham re, Chico, Calif., 79,$3,243.00 3. TannerLearmont, Cleburne,Texas,78, $2,397.00 4. Dalan Duncan,Ballard, Utah,73,$1,551.00 5. Shawn Proctor, Tooele, Utah,72,$987.00 6. Jesse Kardos,Newport, Wash., 70,$705.00, 7.JedJones,GardenValley,Idaho,64,$564.00 8.JustinAnderson,Nephi,Utah.,57,$423.00
RUNNING Local
IVRROViCWinS firSt graSS COurt title — Ana Ivanovic captured her first grass court title after almost a decade of trying on Sunday after a straight sets win over Barbora Zahlavova-Strycova at the AegonClassic in Birmingham, England. Theformer world number one beatZahlavova-Strycova, 6-3, 6-2, with her opponent also playing in her first major tournament final. Although Ivanovic started shakily for the secondday in succession, and dropped serve immediately, she recovered quickly, her heavy ground strokes and willingness to attack soon dominating her unseededopponent. It vvas Ivanovic's 37th win andherthird title of the year, putting her level with SerenaWilliams' and Maria Sharapova's three.
Federer beatS Falla fOr 7th Weber title —RogerFederer won the Gerry WeberOpenfor the seventh time by defeating Alejandro Falla 7-6 (2j, 7-6 (3) in the final on Sunday inHalle, Germany. Federer fired five acesandsaved three of the five break points he faced to win in1 hour, 28 minutes. It was the32-year-old's14th title on grass and 79th overall. Theseven-time Wimbledon champion improved his record to 46-5 in12 appearances at the tournament where hemade his debut14 years ago. It wasalso Federer's seventh win in seven meetings with Falla.
GOLF Cart driVer Charged after run-in With trOOper —The man who drove NBCSports analyst Roger Maltbie's golf cart during the third round of the U.S. Open is facing four charges after an incident with a state trooper on the course, a North Carolina State Police spokeswoman said Sunday. According to a police report, Tommy Lineberry was charged with felony assault on a law enforcement officer, felony hit and run, driving while impaired, and resisting, obstructing and delaying a law enforcement officer. Spokeswoman PamWalker said the 59-year-old Lineberry, from Wilmington, was released from the Moore County jail Saturday night after posting bail. The trooper said Lineberry ignored instructions to stay put, then hit the officer with his golf cart. Maltbie was walking Saturday with the final group of Martin Kaymer and Brendon Todd. Lineberry's job is to drive Maltbie to get in position for the next shots.
SWIMMING Meyer, AnderSOn Win U.S. Open Water titleS — Alex Meyer and Haley Anderson wonthe 5-kilometer titles Sunday on thefinal day of the USASwimming OpenWater National Championships at Castaic Lake. Meyer, from Ithaca, New York, finished in 55 minutes, 34.30seconds,edgingJordanW ilimovskyofMalibuandJoeyPedraza of Borward, Florida. Wilimovsky wassecond in 55:34.57, and Pedraza third in 55:35.00. Anderson, from Granite Bay,wonthe event for the second time, finishing in1:00:08.37. Tristin Baxter of Fresno was second in1:00:09.59,followed byEvaFabianofKeene,New Hampshire, in 1:00:10.56.
CYCLING Talansky holds off Contador to win criteriiimAmerican rider Andrew Talansky was the surprise winner of the Criterium du Dauphine on Sunday in Courchevel, France, as he held off two-time Tour de France winner Alberto Contador in a gripping finale on the eighth stage. The 25-year-old Talansky was in tears after it was confirmed he had won the race, when Contador crossed the line more than a minute after him. Talanskywas fourthontheday,sevenseconds behind stagewinner Mikel Nieve on the131.5-kilometer (81.7-mile) trek from Megeve to Courchevel. Contador was 27 seconds behind in the overall standings, with Jurgen Van den Broeck eight seconds further back in third. Talansky had started the day in third place, 39 secondsbehind Contador,who had an eight-second leadover defending champion Chris Froome. — From staffand wire reports
IN THE BLEACHERS
SmithRockAscent SundayinTerrebonne Half marathon 1, Tim Foley,Crescent, 1:28:36. 2, TonyaLittlehales, Bend,1:37:36. 3, Joe Benev ento, Bend, 1:39:17. 4,Dearric Winchester, Redmond,1:40:28. 5, Lisa Stroup,Madras,1;42;28. 6, Randi Paolo, Wilamina,1:54:40. 7, KaraKing, McMinnviffe,1:54:40. 8, CharlesLindberg,Redmond, 1:56:08. 9, AndreaFlanagan,Bend,1:57:41. 10, KatieChristensen,Salem, 2:06:11. 11, Chris Parkins, Sisters, 2:06:54. 12, Carey Fitzgerald,Bend,2:07:05. 13,Rachel Worbes, Bend, 2;07;11.14,Darryl Houghteling, Condon,2;16;37. 15, NatalieBoggess-lrzyk, Condon,2:16:37.16, Sarah ChapmanToff ett,Sheridan,2:22:48.17,SaraShoemake,Carlton,2:22:49. Wheelchairhalfmarathon 1, DanielleWatson, Bend,1:35:01. 10K 1, KarstanLovorn, Portland, 41:41.2, CoffinRobinson,Bend,43:51. 3,HannahTanler, Bend,46:54. 4, Matt Anthes-W ashburn, Beaverton, 55:53. 5, Elaine Nam,Portland,1:04:50.
Colombia IvoryCoast Japan Greece
1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 GROUP D W L T 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 GROUPE W L T 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 GROUPF W L T 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore.Dist. by Universal Uclick wwwrgocomics.com/inthebleachers
France Swilzerland Ecuador Honduras
Argentina Iran Nigeria B osnia-Herze govina 0 1 0 GROUP G W 0 0 0 0
Germany Ghana Portugal UnitedStates
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T GF GA Pls 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
GROUP H W L T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Algeria Belgium Russia SouthKorea
"The Tommy John surgery was a success! However, we need to go back in. Dr. Moore can't find his wedding ring."
L 0 0 0 0
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Sunday'sGames Swilzerland 2, Ecuador 1 France3, Honduras0 Argentina 2, Bosnia-Herzegovina 1 Today'sGames Germany vs. Portugal,9a.m. Iran vs.Nigeria,noon Ghana vs. UnitedStates, 3p.m. Tuesday'sGames Belgiumvs.Algeria, 9a.m. Brazil vs.Mexico,noon Russiavs SouthKorea3pm
NWSL Bunday'sGames Bellingham at Kitsap,ppd., rain KlamathFalls10, Yakima9 Bend7,Victoria6 Corvallis12,WallaWala11 Cowlitz11,Kelowna1 Wenat chee3,Medford2 Today'sGames Wenatchee at Medford,12:05p.m. WallaWallaat Corvallis,12:05p.m. Yakima Valey atKlamath Falls, 6:35p.m. Bellingham atVictoria, 7:11p.m. Sunday'sSummary
Elks 7, HarbourCats6 283 ggg818 — 6 7 2 ggg 858 82X — 7 8 1 Peabody,Torrez-Costa(5), Feldman(5), Keler (6), Fagalde(8)andNorris-Jones.McGuff, Mack(5), Prat (6), Wilcox(8), Guzzon (8), Cohen(9) andNevrton, Finfer. W —Guzzon. L — Keller. 28 — Victoria: Lukes,Mercado-Hood,Greager; Bend: Brooks. Victoria Bend
College CollegeWorldSeries All TimesPDT At Omaha,Neb. (DoubleElimination, x-if necessary) Sunday'sGames TCU 3,TexasTech2 Virginia 2, Mississippi 1 Today'sGames Game 5—Texas(43-20)vs. Louisville (50-16), noon p.m. Game 6 —UCIrvine(41-23) vs.Vanderbilt (47-19), 5 p.m. Tuesday'sGames Game7— TexasTech(45-20) vs. Mississippi (4620),noon Game8—TCU(48-16)vs. Virginia (50-14),5 p.m.
BASKETBALL NBA Piayoffs NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION AU TimesPDT FINALS
(Besl-of-7) San Antonio4, Miami1 Game1:SanAntonio110, Miami95 Game2:Miami98,SanAntonio96 Game 3: San Antonio111, Miami92 Game 4: San Antonio107, Miami86 Game 5: San Antonio104, Miami87
9. (9)JoeyLogano,Ford, 200,117.3,36,$129,056. 10. (15)Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 200,92,34, $128,256. 11. (26) TonyStewart, Chevrolet, 200, 94.1, 34, $126,473. 12. (11)JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet, 200,95.6,33, $129,404. 13. (8)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,200, 96.8,32,$91,090. 14. (21) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 200, 83.5, 31, $134,901. 15 (24) RyanNewman Chevrolet 200 776 29 $98,715. 16. (17) Justin Allgaier,Chevrolet, 200,79.6, 28, $115,523. 17. (27) DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, 200,68.1, 27, $96,365. 18. (28)JuanPablo Montoya, Ford,200, 72.4,26, $84,265. 19. (23)TrevorBayne,Ford, 200, 68.4,0, $87,665. 20. (18)GregBiffle, Ford,200,68, 24,$129415. 21. (37) MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, 199,53.5, 23, $103,098. 22. (25) AJAllmendinger, Chevrolet, 199,60.6,22, $100,773. 23. (22)CarlEdwards,Ford,199, 57,21,$101,865. 24. (31) CaseyMears, Chevrolet, 199, 56.5, 20, $105,723. 25. (20) MarcosAmbrose, Ford, 199, 61.5, 19, $112,685. 26. (32) David Gilliland, Ford, 198, 51.5, 18, $102,937. 27. (30) RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,198,51.7, 17, $120,915. 28. (42)ColeWhitt, Toyota,198,42.1,16, $84,840. 29. (29) DennyHamlin, Toyota,198, 61.2, 15, $92,640. 30. (19) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 197, 74.9, 15, $130,801. 31. (4)AricAlmirola,Ford,197,73.5,13, $121,201. 32. (40) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 197,36.6, 12, $82,315. 33. (38)JoshWise,Chevrolet,197,42.9,11, $81,240. 34. (34)BrettMoffitt, Toyota,197,44,10, $89,140. 35. (39) LandonCassill, Chevrolet, 197, 36.9, 0, $80,975. 36. (35)J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet,197, 30,0, $80,920. 37. (16) MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet, 196, 33.2, 7, $108,768. 38. (33)David Ragan, Ford, 196,44.3, 6,$84,070. 39. (36) DavidStremme,Chevrolet, 195, 29.9, 5, $72,070. 40. (41)AlexBowman, Toyota, accident, 169,33.9, 4, $68,070. 41.(14)KyleBusch,Toyota,169,74.6,3,$111,911. 42.(10)BrianVickers, Toyota,110,25.5, 2, $92,145. 43. (43) TravisKvapil, Ford,accident, 23,28.8, 1, $56,570.
RaceStatistics Average Speed of RaceWinner: 143.441 mph. Time ofRace:2 hours, 47minutes,19seconds. Margin of Victory:1.214seconds. Caution Flags:8for 36laps. LeadChanges:25among13drivers. Sunday'sSummary Lap Leaders:K.Harvick1-18; J.Gordon19-42; B.Kes elowski43-44;J.Gordon45-56;K.Harvick57DashforDadsBK 74; J.Johnson75-77; J.Logano 78-91; J.Johnson SundayinBend Spurs104, Heat87 9 2-104; K.Harvick105-112; B.Keselowski 113;K.Har1, MarshalGree l ne,14;43. 2, DaveHarms, 14;54. vick 114-118;B.Keselowski 119; K.Harvick 120-126; 3, RyanNess, 15:12. 4, Nathanael Werner, 16:36. 5, MIAMI (87) 127-141;K.Harvick 142-148;J.McMurray Ken House,16:37. 6, MarkPressey, 16:43. 7, Aron LJames10-218-931, Lewis1-20-0 3, Bosh6-14 J.Logano Homberg,18:01. 8, Chris Gilliland, 18:45. 9, Ron 1-213, Wade 4-122 411, Affen1-82-25, Battier0-0 149-151; J.Johnson 152-164; J.McMurray 165; D .EarnhardtJr.166; Ku.Busch167-182; K.Kahne183; Deems,18:54.10,CraigMavis,19:15. 0-00, Andersen0-10-00, Cole0-22-22, Haslem 11, LizLefeber,19:46. 12,A.J. Losoya,19:53.13, 1-2 0-0 2,Beasley4-71-3 9, Chalmers2-34-5 8, K.Larson184-185;A.Dilon 186-187;TStewart 188; Mike Edgerton,20:08.14, Kori Losoya,20:57. 15, Jones0-1 0-00, Douglas1-20-0 3. Totals 38-76 M.Kenseth189-190;J.Johnson191-200. LeadersSummary (Driver, TimesLed, Laps Chris Royston,20:59.16,KerryWitterschein, 21;13. 20-27 87. Led):K.Harvick, 6 timesfor 63laps; J.Johnson,4 17, EmmettNave,21:51. 18,ShermanMcDonald, SANANTONIO(104) 21:59. 19,TreyPressey,22:33. 20, ChristinaWeston, Leonard7-105-6 22, Duncan5-104-614, Diaw timesfor39 laps;J.Gordon,2 timesfor 36laps;J.Lo2-70-0 5, Parker7-182-216, Green0-50-0 0, Gi- gano,2timesfor29laps;KuBusch,1 timefor16 laps; 22:33. 21, KurtBjorklund,22:44. 22,MitchNave, 22:45. nobili 6-114-519,Splitter1-11-23, Mills6-100-0 B.Keselowski3, timesfor 4laps; J.McMurray, 2times 23, SamRoyston, 23:20. 24, ReneeEvans, 23:27. 17, Bonner0-00-00, Belineffi2-30-04,Ayres1-1 for 4 laps;K.Larson,1timefor 2 laps; M.Kenseth, 1 25, ChristinaBoxberger, 23:37.26, David Boxberger, 0-0 2,Joseph0-2 0-00, Baynes0-0 2-2 2. Totals time for2 laps;A.Dilon,1 timefor 2 laps;K.Kahne,1 time for1lap;DEarnhardt Jr.,1 timefor1lap; TStew23:38. 27,TiffaniCable,23:47. 28, GrahamSlater, 37-7818-23 104. art 1 time for1lap. 23:52. 29, Keith Slater,23:52. 30, Lauren Paltzer, Miami 29 11 18 29 — 87 23:54. San Antonio 22 2 6 38 27 — 184 Wins:J.Johnson,3; D.Earnhardt Jr., 2; K.Harvick, 2; JLogano,2; Ku.Busch,1; KyBusch,1; C.Edwards, 31, AlexChang,24:05. 32,AlexandraBoxberger, 1; J.Gordon,1;D.Ham lin,1; Bra.Keselowski,1. 24:24 .33,MichaelDennis,24:35.34,KevinHopper, WNBA Top12inPoints:1.JGordon,537;2.JJohnson, 25:13. 35,Mindy Mason,25:14.36,John Boylen, 5 22; 3. D.E a rnh ardt Jr.,514; 4.M.Kenseth,513; 5.Bra. 25:24. 37,Julie Nave,25:27.38, Daniel Filipenko, WOMEN'SNATIONAL Keselowski490; , 6.C.Edwards, 462;7.J.Logano,454; 25;30. 39,JennifferSmith, 25:40. 40,WendyKorn, BASKET BALLASSOCIATIDN 8. K.Larson,454; 9. K.Harvick,447; 10. Ky.Busch, 25:41. AU TimesPDT 446; 11.R.Newman,440; 12.D.Hamlin, 435. 41, Richard Anthoney,25:47. 42, KatrinaWilson, 25:47.43,LindaMcDonald, 26:02.44, BowdenNave, Eastern Conference 26:17.45,ChadMeadors, 26:37. 46,AnneRoyston, W L Pct GB NHRA 28:00 /47,DougWhite,28:08.48,SusanKeith,28:09. Atlanta 7 3 .7 0 0 ThunderValley Nationals 49, LindaFisher-Berlanga, 28:17. 50,Kendell Nave, Indiana 5 4 55 6 1lat 28:36. Sunday Connecticut 6 6 .5 0 0 2 At BristolDragway 51, GeraldHines,28:47. 52,DavidThiele, 29:10. Chicago 5 5 .5 0 0 2 Bristol, Tenn. 53, CamilleFetzer-Lockhar,29:10.54, BeckyCoffins, Washington 5 6 .4 5 5 2t /t 29:21. 55,RedGililand, 29:22.56,JamieAnthoney, NewYork Final Results 3 8 .2 7 3 4tyt Top Fuel — Shawn Langdon, 3.902seconds, 29:35.57,ColePaltzer, 29:39.58, JakePaltzer,29:40. WesternConference 316.08 mph def. Doug Kalitta, 4.128seconds,260.97 59, MelissaMcDonald, 29:51. 60, Christy Chang, W L Pct GB mph.FunnyCar—TommyJohnsonJr., DodgeChar30:25. Minnesota 8 3 .7 2 7 61, ClaudiaWiliams,31:37. 62, SamMay, 32:34. Phoenix 7 3 70 0 '/2 ger, 4.156,302.14def.TimWilkerson, FordMustang, 4.423, 227.34.ProStock —Erica Enders-Stevens, 63, LizGilliland, 34:52.64, KellyGililand,35:04. 65, SanAntonio 5 6 .4 5 5 3 ChevyCamaro,6.698,207.15 def.Jonathan Gray, Brenda Weatherhead,35:26.66, DaveRamsey, 35:46. Tulsa 4 5 .4 4 4 3 64.40.ProModified—PeteFarber, 67, TaraRamsey, 35:49. 68, BuddBeatty, 36:57. 69, Seattle 5 8 .3 8 5 4 Camaro,13.480, ona,6.087,240.51def.SteveMatusek, ElizabethNylander,38:13.70,Hayley Palmer,38:24. LosAngeles 3 6 .3 3 3 4 DodgeDayt Chevy Camaro, 6.971, 152.61.TopFuel Harley71, PaulNylander,38:25. 72,MaxPrice, 38:25. Tommy Gri m es, Harley, 6.413, 221.45def. Dam ian 73, BrandiPalmer,38:25. 74, AimeeRoseborrough, Sunday'sGames Cownden,Harley, 6.454, 214.04.Super Stock39:50.75,EllaRoseborrough,39:52. 76, KyleRoseb- Phoeni x80,Minnesota72 Larry Miler,PlymouthBarracuda, 10.003,131.02def. orrough,39:53.77, CarrieBlevins,40:01.78,Renee Connecticut76,NewYork72 DrewSkiffman,FordMustang, foul. StockEliminaMay, 40:01. 79, AngelaHerget, 40:01. 80, Charla Atlanta75,Washington 67 tor —DrewSkilman, FordMustang,9.217, 138.94 Meyer,40:47. Tulsa85,Seatle 79 81, PatBushling,40;54. 82,Craig May,43;51. 83, Tuesday'sGames def. KeviWe n ls, ChevyNova, foul. SuperCompMichae lMay,43:52.84,SherryNicholson,43:52.85, IndianaatConnecticut, 4p.m. Jeff Taylor,Dragster,8.917,164.79def. KevinBranRichardMithoff,55:08.86, RichMithoff, 55:08.87, Minnes otaatLosAngeles,7:30p.m. non, Dragster,8.873, 176.74. Buper Gas—Scott KathyJordan1:14:16.88, PaulJordan1:14:16. Lawton,ChevyCorvete, 9.912,150.63def. JimPerry, Chevy S-10,9.896,163.43. TopDragster—AnthoMOTOR SPORTS ny BertozziDragster, , 7.397,173.43def. DylanStott, BASEBALL Dragster, 6.792, 194.97.TopSporlsman —Tony Fagniffi,PontiacGXP,6914,191.62 def.MarcoAbruNASCAR WCL zzi, Chevy C am ar o,7.050,198.12. Bprint Cup-GuickenLoans408 WESTCOAST LEAGUE Sunday AU TimesPDT At MichiganInternational Speedway SOCCER Brooklyn,Mich. East Division Lap length:2 miles World Cup W L Pct. GB (Starl positioninparentheses) AU TimesPDT Wenatchee 5 3 .625 1. (7) JimmieJohnson,Chevrolet, 200laps, 130.7 Yakima Valey 3 5 .375 2 rating, 47points, $205,661. GROUP A WallaWalla 3 5 .375 2 2. (1) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 200, 135.1, 44, W L T G F GA Pls Kelowna 3 6 .333 2.5 $196,118. SouthDivision 3. (6) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 200, 113.9, 42, Brazil 1 0 0 3 1 3 W L Pct. GB $153,393. Mexico 1 0 0 1 0 3 Medford 6 3 .667 4. (5) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 200, 105.8, 40, Cameroon 0 1 0 0 1 0 Corvaffis 5 3 .625 .5 $136,349. Croatia 0 1 0 1 3 0 Bend 3 7 .300 3.5 5. (13) KaseyKahne, Chevrolet, 200, 85.9, 40, GROUP B Klamath Falls 2 6 .250 3.5 $121,250. W L T G F GA Pls Wesl Division 6. (2) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 200, 117.2, 39, Netherlands 1 0 0 5 1 3 W L Pct. GB $140,526. Chile 1 0 0 3 1 3 Cowlitz 6 3 .667 7. (3) DaleEarnhardtJr., Chevrolet, 200,106.2,38, Australia 0 1 0 1 3 0 Bellingham 5 3 .611 .5 $103,590. Spain 0 1 0 1 5 0 Kitsap 5 3 .611 .5 8. (12) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 200, 89.7, 37, GROUP C Victoria 5 4 .556 1 $121,460. W L T G F GA Pls
NationalWomen'sSoccer League AU TimesPDT Seattle FC Kansas City Chicago Washington Portland WesternNewYork Houston Sky BlueFC Boston
W 9 7 6 6 5 4 4 2 3
L 0 4 4 6 4 6 8 6 8
T 2 3 2 1 2 2 1 5 0
Pls GF GA 29 25 9 24 23 17 20 18 19 21 17 12 14 20 13 16 11 13 9 15
12 24 15 16 23 23 24
Saturday'sGame FC Kansas City 2, Houston1
Sunday'sGames
Chicago2,SkyBlueFC2,tie Portland2, Washington 0 Wednesday'sGame ChicagoatWesternNewYork, 4p.m.
Thursday'sGame
Seattle FC atBoston,4 p.m.
TENNIS Professional ATPWorldTourGerry Weber Open
Sunday At GerryWeberBtadion, Haoe, Germany Purse:$1.1million(WT268) Surface:Grass-Outdoor Singles Championship RogerFederer(2), Swilzerland,def.Alejandro Fala, Colombia7-6 , (2), 7-6(3). ATPWorldTourAEGDNChampionships Sunday At TheGueen'sClub, London Purse:$1.1million(WT258) Surface:Grass-Outdoor Singles Championship GrigorDimitrov(4), Bulgaria,def. FelicianoLopez (10), Spain6-7 , (8), 7-6(1), 7-6(6). WTAAEGDNClassic Sunday At EdgbastonPriory Club, Birmingham, England Purse:$710,000(Premier) Burface:Grass-Outdoor Singles Championship Ana Ivanovic(1), Serbia,def.BarboraZahlavova Strycova,CzechRepublic, 6-3,6-2.
TopshelfOpen Sunday At AutotronRosmalen, DenBosch, Netherlands Purse:ATP,$658,800(WT268); WTA, $25g,ggg (Intl.) Surface:Grass-Outdoor Singles Men First Round JesseHutaGalung, Netherlands,def. Aleksandr Nedovyesov, Kazakhstan, 6-2,1-0, retired. Dudi SelaIsrael , , def. BenoitPaire,France,6-4, 7-6 (2). Women Firsl Round MagdalenaRybarikova, Slovakia, def.An-Sophie Mesta ch,Belgium,6-4,6-4. YvonneMeusburger, Austria, def. KaiaKanepi, Estonia,6-1,6-2.
AndreaPetkovic (5), Germ any, def. YaninaWickmayer,Belgium,6-2,6-4.
DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L
AmericanLeague DETROITIGERS— Optioned RHPCorey Knebel to Toledo (IL). Recalled LHPBlaineHardyfrom Toledo. HOUSTONASTROS — PlacedRHPJoshFields on the15-dayDL.Recalled RHPPaul Clemensfrom Oklahoma City (PCL). LOSANGELESANGELS— PlacedRHPFernando Salas onthe15-dayDL.RecalledRHPDaneDeLa RosafromSalt Lake(PCL).
MINNES OTATWINS— Placed 38Trevor Plouffe on the15-dayDL.Recaled INFPedro Florimonfrom Rochester (IL). NEW YORKYANKEES — Assigned LHPWade LeBlanc outright toScranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL). OAKLANDATHLETICS— TradedOFMichaelTaylor to the ChicagoWhite Soxfor RHPJakeSanchez. TEXASRANGERS— Agreed to termswith LHP Shane Mccain onaminor leaguecontract. NationalLeague MIAMIMARLINS—Sent LHPBradHandto New Orleans(PCL)for a rehabassignment. PlacedRHP NathanEovaldi onpaternity leave.Recalled RH PSam DysonfromNewOrleans. NEWYORKMETS— AcquiredLHPBlakeTaylor from Pittsburgh to completeanearlier trade, andassignedhimto theGCLMets. PDTSBU RGHPIRATES—Optioned INFMichael Martinezto Indianapolis (IL).Selectedthecontract of RHPVanceWorley fromIndianapolis. ST.LOUIS CARDINALS — Optioned OF Randal Grichuk toMemphis (PCL). Selectedthecontract of LHPNickGreenwoodfromMemphis. Agreedtoterms with LHP Austin Gomber andRHPTyler Brayonminor leaguecontracts. SANDIEGOPADRES— PlacedRHPNickVincent on the15-dayDL,retroactive toThursday.Selectedthe contractof RHPBlaineBoyer fromElPaso(PCL).
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 2,529 5 0 9 249 81 The Daffes 2,178 35 0 86 24 John Day 2,603 3 2 0 67 20 McNary 2,223 2 9 3 47 5 Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chinook, jackchinook, steelheadandwild steelhead at selectedColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon Saturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 223,237 32,029 8,277 2,159 T he Daffes 165,980 23,572 1,643 3 97 John Day 141,972 21,645 3,814 1,376 M cNary 118,890 17,626 1,286 4 17
MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN B3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL
Pct GB
I.DavisIb 4 0 0 0 Stantonrf 4 0 1 0 win his third straight start and RMartnc 3 I I 0 McGeh3b 4 0 3 3 Arizona beat the LosAngeles PAlvrz3b 4 0 I 0 GJonesIb 4 0 1 0 Dodgers, preventing a three-game JHrrsn2b 4 0 2 I Ozunacf 4 0 1 0 I 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 3 0 1 0 sweep. Arroyo (7-4) allowed a run Barmes2b Mercerss 4 0 0 0 Mathis c 4 0 0 0 and five hits in five innings. Josh Worley p 3 0 0 0 HAlvrz p 2 0 0 0 Watson p 0 0 0 0 Hatchr p 0 0 0 0 Beckett (4-4) was charged with S nider ph I 0 0 0 JeBakrph I I 1 0 four runs — three earned —and JHughs p 0 0 0 0 Cishek p 0 0 0 0 Solano ph I 0 0 0 five hits through seven innings ARamsp 0 0 0 0 with six strikeouts and nowalks Totals 3 7 2 9 2 Totals 3 63 103 P ittsburgh 001 100 000 0 — 2 for the Dodgers.
529 1'/t 500 31/2
Arizona
catandings
MARINERS END LOSING SKID
All TimesPDT
Toronto Baltimore NewYork Boston Tampa Bay Detroit Kansas City Cleveland Minnesota Chicago
Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Texas Houston
AMERICANLEAGUE East Oivision W L pm GB 41 35 35 31 27
30 33 33 38 43
Central Division W L 36 29 36 32 35 35 32 35 33 37
West Division
W L 42 27 37 31 35 34 34 35 32 39
.577
.515 4'/t .515 4'/t
.449 9
386 13'/t
.554
.478 5 .471 5'/t
Pct GB .609
544 41/2
.507 7 .493 8 .451 11
LosAngeles ab r hbi ab r hbi Gregrsss 5 0 0 0 DGordn2b 4 0 0 0 GParrarf 4 0 0 0 HRmrzss 5 0 I I G ldschIb 3 2 1 1 Puigrf 5020 M Mntrc 4 2 2 2 AdGnzlIb 3 1 I 0 H ill2b 4 1 2 0 Kemplf 3 0 2 0 P rado3b 3 0 0 1 VnSlykcf 4 0 I 0 DPerlt cf-If 4 1 1 0 Romak 3b 4 1 0 I C .Rosslf 3 0 1 0 Buterac 3 0 0 0 Z ieglerp 0 0 0 0 Beckettp 2 0 I 0
Miami 0 00 000 020 1 — 3 Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. E—PAlvarez (15). DP—Pittsburgh I, Miami 2. LOB —Pittsburgh 11, Miami 8. 28—S.Marte (13),
McGehee(16), Hechavarria (9). SB—A.Mccutchen (9). S —R.Johnson,Hechavarria. SF—McGehee. IP H
R E R BBSO
Pittsburgh Worley 7 5 0 0 0 WatsonBS,3-3 1 3 2 2 0 J.Hughes L,3-2 1 2 -3 2 I I 1 Miami H.Alvarez 7 7 2 2 2 Hatcher 1 I 0 0 0 Cishek 1 0 0 0 0 A.RamosW4-0 1 I 0 0 3 HBP—byH.Alvarez(R.Martin). WP—J.Hughes. T—3:22. A—25,953(37,442).
5 2 1
6 O wingsph I 0 1 0 JuTrnrph I 0 I I 3 A.Reedp 0 0 0 0 Triunflpr 0 0 0 0 0 A rroyop I 0 0 0 Mahlmp 0 0 0 0 1 Pachecph I 0 0 0 C.Perezp 0 0 0 0 OPerezp 0 0 0 0 JWrghtp 0 0 0 0 E Mrshlp 0 0 0 0 Ethierph I 1 I 0 Campnph-cf 2 0 0 0 Totals 3 5 6 8 4 Totals 3 53 103 Cubs 3, Phillies 0 Arizona 1 00 010 202 — 6 Los Angeles 01 0 000 101 — 3 Today'sGam es PHILADELPHIA — Travis Wood E — P rad o (11), G re gori us (2), D.Gordon(6). DPL.A. Angels(Weaver 7-5) at Cleveland(Bauer 1-3), A rizona1. LOB — A rizon a 4, Los Angeles 9. 28—D. pitched hitless ball into the sixth 4:05 p.m. Peralta(4),H.Ramirez(19), Ju.Turner (8). HR —Gold- inning and theChicago Cubsbeat KansasCity (Vargas6-2) at Detroit(Verlander6-6), schmidt (15),M.Montero(10). SB—D.Peralta (I). 4:08 p.m. CS — P uig (7). Philadelphia to win a roadseries Elaine Thompson /The Associated Press Baltimore(W.chen7-2) at TampaBay (Odorizzi 2-7), IP H R E R BBSO for the first time this season. An4:10 p.m. Seattle's Kyle Seager doubles in a pair of runs against Texas in the fifth inning of Sunday's game in Arizona Minnesota(Correia3-7) atBoston(R.DeLaRosa1-2), thony Rizzo hit his14th home run ArroyoW,7-4 5 5 I I I I Seattle. Seager had four hits and three RBls as the Mariners beat the Rangers 5-1. 4:10 p.m. I 1-3 2 I 0 I I O.PerezH,6 and Starlin Castro added three hits Texas (Lewis4-4) atOakland(Pomeranz5-3), 7:05 E .Marshal l H,7 2 3 0 0 0 0 I p.m. as the Cubstook two of three at Z iegler H,16 I 1 0 0 I 0 SanDiego(TRoss 6-5) at Seattle (C.Young5-4), 7:10 Ellsurycf 4 0 0 0 DNorrsc 5 1 3 3 Zeid 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 IP H R E R BBSO A.Reed I 2 I I 0 0 Citizens BankPark. p.m. ASorinlf I 0 I 0 Lowriess 4 0 0 0 Sipp I I 0 0 0 1 Minnesota LosAngeles Tuesday'sGames TeixeirIb 3 0 I I Dnldsn3b4 0 1 1 Farnsworth 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Nolasco 5 1-3 9 3 3 2 5 BeckettL,4-4 7 5 4 3 0 6 Chicago SanDiegoatSeattle,12:40 p.m. Philadelphia JMrphyc 2 0 0 0 Mossrf 3000 HBP—byWilliams(Y.Escobar). WP—Peacock. Burton I 0 0 0 2 0 Maholm I 0 0 0 0 I ab r hbi ab r hbi Housto natWashington,4:05p.m. Mccnnc-1b 3 0 0 0 BlanksIb 4 2 2 0 T—3:41.A—25,526 (42,060). Guerrier I 2-3 0 0 0 I I 1-3 3 2 2 2 I C.Perez Valuen3b 4 0 0 0 Reverecf 3 0 1 0 L.A. AngelsatCleveland,4:05p.m. Beltrandh 4 I 2 I Punto2b 3 2 1 0 Fien L,3-3 2-3 1 1 0 0 0 J.Wright 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Rugginlf 4 I I 0 Rollinsss 4 0 1 0 TorontoatN.Y.Yankees, 4:05p.m. I Suzukirf 4 I 2 0 Detroit HBP—by O.Perez(D.Gordon). WP—Beckett. Royals 6, WhiteSox3 R izzo1b 4 I I I U tley2b 4 0 0 0 Kansas CityatDetroit, 4:08p.m. Solarte2b 3 I 0 0 Porcego 7 5 3 3 3 4 T—3:04.A—52,519 (56,000). S castross 4 I 3 I Byrdrf 4000 BaltimoreatTampaBay,4:10 p.m. KJhnsn3b 3 0 I 0 Chamberlain I 0 0 0 I 2 S weenycf 4 0 I 0 Ruizc 3000 Minnesotaat Boston, 4:10p.m. Totals 3 4 5 9 5 Totals 3 6101210 CHICAGO — Salvador Perez hit a NathanW,3-2 I 2 0 0 0 0 S chrhltrf 4 0 I I DBrwnlf 4 000 SanFranciscoatChicagoWhite Sox, 5:10p.m. Reds13, Brewers4 N ew York 000 0 0 1 2 02 — 5 three-run homer andKansas City WP — Chamberlain. Barney2b 4 0 0 0 MayrryIb 2 000 Texas atOakland,7:05p.m. T—3:19. A—41,462(41,681). Oakland 330 400 ggx — 10 Whitsdc 4 0 0 0 Rceden3b 3 0 0 0 athree-game sweep E—Ryan (3), Blanks(1). DP—NewYork1, Oak- completed MILWAUKEE — Billy Hamilton T Woodp 3 0 I 0 ABrnttp 2 0 0 0 NATIONALLEAGUE land1. LOB —NewYork8, Oakland6. 2B—Jeter (7), of the Chicago White Sox. James National Lea ue l e d off the game with a home run, NRmrzp 0 0 0 0 CHrndzph I 0 1 0 East Division Teixeira(4), D.Norris(9). HR—Gardner (5), Beltran Shields (8-3) won his fifth straight G ilesp 0 0 0 0 W L Pct GB (6), Crisp Brandon Phillips added a two-run (5), D. N orri s (7). SF — J eter . Rockies 8,Giants7 Totals 35 3 8 3 Totals 3 00 3 0 Atlanta 36 32 .529 IP H R E R BBSO decision and theRoyalsextended shot in the first inning and Todd Miami 35 33 .515 I Chicago 101 001 000 — 3 NewYork their season-high win streak to Washington 35 33 .515 I 00 0 000 000 — 0 Frazier later hit his team-high 15th P hiladelphia NunoL,1-3 3 8 8 8 1 2 SAN FRANCISCO — Justin MorLOB —Chicago 5, Philadelphia 6. 2B—S.castro NewYork 31 38 449 5'/t tchedoutof J.Ramirez 1 3 2 2 1 0 sevengames.Hepi homer as Ci n cinnati beat Milwauneau hit a two-run double in the Philadelphia 29 38 .433 6'/t 19), Schi e rhol t z (9). HR —Rizzo (14). SB—S.castro Kegey 1 0 0 0 0 1 trouble throughout his outing. CentralDivision kee. Hamilton homered for the 2), Revere(19). eighth inning asColorado beat Warren 2 I 0 0 1 4 W L Pct GB Thornton IP H R E R BBSO 1 0 0 0 0 1 San Francisco to complete athree- second straight day, connecting KansasCity Chicago Milwaukee 41 29 .586 Chicago Oakland ab r h bi ab r hbi off Marco Estrada (5-4). St. Louis 37 32 .536 3'/t TWoodW7-5 8 3 0 0 3 6 game sweep wit h anot her comeJ.chavez W6-4 6 5 I I 0 4 Pittsburgh 34 35 .493 6r/t Cook N.RamirezS,3-3 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 2 2 2 1 J Dysoncf 5 0 2 I Eatoncf 4 I 3 0 back victory. Morneau's pinch-hit I nfante2b 5 I I 0 GBckh2b 5 0 I 0 Cincinnati 33 35 .485 7 Philadelphia Cincinnati Milwaukee Abad 1 0 0 0 1 0 Hosmer1b 5 I I 2 Gigaspi3b 4 0 I 0 highlighted a four-run rally for the Chicago 28 39 .418 Itr/t A .Burnett L,4-6 8 8 3 3 0 4 ab r hbi ab r hbi Ji Johnson 23 2 2 2 2 1 West Division Giles 1 0 0 0 0 2 BHmltncf 6 2 3 2 Gennett2b 5 0 2 2 Gregerson 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 BButlerdh 2 I I 0 JAreuIb 4 0 2 0 Rockies, who scored in the ninth A Gordnlf 3 I 0 0 A.Dunndh 5 I I 0 WP — A.Burnett. W L Pct GB Nunopitchedto2 batters inthe4th. F razier3b-Ib 6 1 2 4 Braunrf 5 0 0 0 in each of the first two gamesof T—2:35. A—41,238(43,651). SanFrancisco 43 27 .614 V otto1b 4 1 2 1 Lucroyc 4 1 2 I HBP—by J.Ramirez (Gentry). WP—Nuno. PB—J. S.Perezc 3 I 2 3 AIRmrzss 5 I 2 0 Los Angeles 37 34 521 Br/t L.cainrf 4 0 0 0 Viciedorf 5 0 0 0 the series for the win. Cingrnp I 0 0 0 Maldndc I 0 0 0 Murphy. Colorado 34 35 .493 8'/t M ostks3b 2 I I 0 DeAzalf 4 0 I 2 Phillips2b 4 1 2 3 CGomzcf 4 0 2 0 T—3:06. A—36,067(35,067). Interleague SanDiego 29 40 .420 13r/t A Escor ss 3 0 0 0 Nieto c 3 0 I 0 Colorado B rucerf 5 1 1 0 ArRmr3b 4 0 I 0 San Francisco Arizona 30 42 .417 14 Totals 3 2 6 8 6 Totals 3 93 12 2 Ludwcklf 5 2 4 0 Overay1b 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Braves 7,Angels3 Indians 3,RedSox2(11innings) K ansas City 2 0 3 1 0 0 000 — 6 B lckmnlf 5 1 3 0 Blancocf 6 0 I 0 M esorcc 5 1 3 1 KDavislf 3 1 I 0 Sunday'sGames Chicago 1 00 200 000 — 3 Cozartss 5 2 1 1 MrRynlIb-3b 3 1 I 0 B arnesrf 5 0 0 I Pencerf 5 0 I I DP—Chicag o2.LOB—Kansas City6,Chicago Miami 3,Pittsburgh2,10 innings Leakep 2 0 0 0 Segurass 3 1 0 0 ATLANTA —Tommy LaStella BOSTON — Nick Swisher led off lwlzkss 4 2 3 2 Poseyc 2 0 I 0 N.Y.Mets3, SanDiego1 13.2B—G.ec Bkham(12), Gilaspie(16),J Abreu(15), T H eiseyph I 0 0 0 Estradp I 0 I I 5 0 0 0 HSnchzph-c 3 I I I had three hits, including a two-run the 11th inning with a homerand Chicago Cubs3, Philadelphia 0 De Aza (9). 3B—Eaton (4). HR —Hosmer(4), S.Perez RosarioIb-c MParrp 0 0 0 0 Grzlnyp 0 0 0 0 Stubbscf 4 1 I I Sandovl3b 3 2 I I Cincinnati13,Milwaukee4 (7). CS— L.cain (I). double in Atlanta's four-run sixth, Lecurep 0 0 0 0 EHerrrph I 0 0 0 Cleveland beat Boston to gain a M cKnrc 3 1 I I MorseIb 4 0 I 0 St. Louis5,Washington 2 IP H R E R BBSO M assetp 0 0 0 0 Colvinlf 3 I 2 I S chmkrph I 1 1 1 Kintzlrp 0 0 0 0 and the Bravesbeat Hector Santisplit of the four-gameseries. It Colorado 8, SanFrancisco 7 KansasCity RSantg3b I 1 0 0 Wootenp 0 0 0 0 Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 Ariasph 1 0 0 0 Arizona6,L.A.Dodgers3 S hields W, 8 -3 6 1 0 3 3 1 3 was Swisher's fourth homer of F iersp 0 0 0 0 ago and the LosAngeles Angels. H wknsp 0 0 0 0 Machip 0 0 0 0 2-3 I 0 0 0 0 Atlanta 7, L.A.Angels3 Bueno H,3 RWeksph I 0 0 0 La Stella, the rookie second basethe season andfirst since being ulersn3b 2 0 0 0 BCrwfrss 3 I I 0 Monday'sGames K.HerreraH,4 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 C Wangp 0 0 0 0 LeMahi2b 2 3 0 0 Adrianz2b 3 I I I man, is hitting .411 with at least ChicagoCubs(Hammel 6-4) at Miami(Koehler 5-5), activated from the disabled list on W.DavisH,12 I 0 0 0 2 1 Totals 4 6 131913 Totals 3 5 4 104 4:10 p.m. G.HollandS,20-21 I I 0 0 1 1 N icasio p 1 0 0 0 Bmgrn p 2 I I 2 Cincinnati 300 0 2 0 063 — 13 two hits in nine of his16 games. Thursday before the series opener. FMorls p 0 0 0 0 B.Hicks ph 1 0 0 0 Chicago Philadelphia(Hamels 2-3) at Atlanta(Teheran6-4), M ilwaukee 0 0 0 3 1 0 000 — 4 0 0 00 JGutrrzp 0 0 0 0 For the second straight day, Cleve- RienzoL,4-4 6 6 6 6 4 3 CMartnp 4:10 p.m. E—Segura (10). DP—Cincinnati 2. LOB—Cin- LosAngeles Atlanta Rutledgph 1 0 I I J.Lopezp 0 0 0 0 N.Y.Mets(deGrom0-3) atSt. Louis(C.Martinez0-3), 2-3 0 0 0 1 2 cinnati 8,Milwaukee8. 28—Frazier (15), Votto (11), land won after trailing Boston 2-1 Petricka ab r hbi ab r hbi S.Downs 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Belislep 0 0 0 0 J.Perezlf 1 0 0 0 5:10 p.m. Ludwick 3 (11), Gen n et t (16), C.Go m e z (20), Mar. C owgi g rf 4 0 0 0 Heywrdrf 4I 1 1 Morneaph-Ib1 0 I 2 in the seventh. Putnam I I 0 0 1 0 Milwaukee (WPeralta6-5) at Arizona(Mccarthy1-9), Reynol d s (5). HR — B .H a m ilton (4), Frazi e r (15), Phi l Calhonph I 0 0 0 BUptoncf 4 2 1 0 Totals 3 3 8 108 Totals 3 7 7 117 Belisario I I 0 0 0 6:40 p.m. K.Davis(2). SF—Phillips. T routcf 5 I 3 I FFrmnIb 4 I 2 0 C olorado 002 0 1 0 140 — 0 lips (5),Lucroy(6). SB— Boston HBP —by Rienzo(B.Butler). WP—G.Holland. BalkColorado(Matzek1-0) at L.A.Dodgers(Ryu7-3), Cleveland IP H R E R BBSO P ujolsIb 4 I 2 0 Gattisc 4 I 2 1 San Francisco 030 211 000 — 7 ab r hbi ab r hbi Shields. 7:10 p.m. Cincinnati E — R os ari o (4), Ni c asi o (I). DP — C o lor ado 2, J Hmltnlf 4 0 2 0 J.Uptonlf 4 I 1 1 SanDiego(TRoss6-5) at Seattle (C.Young5-4), 7:10 B ourncf 6 0 0 0 Holt3b 5 I 2 0 T—3:10.A—29,152 (40,615). L eake W, 4 -6 5 9 4 4 3 3 HKndrc2b 5 0 I I CJhnsn3b 4 0 2 0 SanFrancisco2.LOB— Colorado5,SanFrancisco M.ParraH,9 Acarer ss 5 0 0 0 Pedroia 2b 5 0 0 1 p.m. 2 -3 0 0 0 0 I A ybarss 2 I I I LaStell2b 3 I 3 2 12. 2B—Rutledge (3), Morneau(16). 38—Stubbs LecureH,9 Brantlylf 4 I 2 I D.Ortizdh 5 0 1 1 Tuesday'sGames I 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 JMcDnlss 2 0 I 0 R.Pena2b 0 0 0 0 Blue Jays 5, Orioles2 (1). HR —Tulowitzki (18), H.Sa nchez (3), Sandoval Cingrani Kipnis2b 4 0 I 0 NapoliIb 5 0 1 0 San Diego atSeattle, 5:40p.m. 2 0 0 0 I 0 Freese3b 4 0 0 0 ASmnsss 4 0 0 0 (9), Bumg rner a (2). SB — C olvi n (I). S — F .M or ales, C hsnhll3b 3 0 0 0 Navalf 2 0 0 0 Cincinnatiat Pittsburgh,4:05p.m. Milwaukee C ongerc 4 0 I 0 Minorp I 0 0 0 Avilesph-3b I 0 0 0 Przynsc 3 0 0 0 BALTIMORE — J.A. Happpitched Bumgarner. Housto natWashington,4:05p.m. stradaL,5-4 5 8 5 5 0 3 H Santgp 3 0 I 0 Ugglaph I 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO E Swisher dh 5 I I I Bogarts pr 0 0 0 0 Chicago Cubsat Miami,4:10 p.m. Gorzel a nny I 1 0 0 0 0 effectively into the seventh inning, Colorado Jepsen p 0 0 0 0 Varvar p 0 0 0 0 D vMrprf 4 I 0 0 D.Rossc I 0 0 0 Philadelphia atAtlanta, 4:10 p.m. Kintzler I 1 0 0 0 2 Bedrsnp 0 0 0 0 JSchafrph I 0 0 0 2 4 3 3 4 2 Dioner Navarro had three hits and Nicasio SanFranciscoatChicagoWhite Sox, 5:10p.m. CSantn1b 5 0 3 0 GSizmrrf 4 0 0 0 Wooten 0 6 5 5 0 0 CrRsmp 0 0 0 0 JWaldnp 0 0 0 0 F.Moral e s 3 6 4 4 2 2 N.Y.MetsatSt. Louis, 5:15p.m. YGomsc 3 0 0 I Drewss 4 0 2 0 I 0 0 0 I I two RBls andToronto beat BaltiC.Martin I 0 0 0 0 0 Fiers Ibanezph I 0 0 0 Doumitph 0 0 0 1 MilwaukeeatArizona,6:40p.m. B rdlyJrcf 2 I 0 0 Wang I 3 3 I 0 I B elisle W, 2 -2 I 0 0 0 0 I DDLRsp 0 0 0 0 Dcrpntp 0 0 0 0 more for a split of the four-game Coloradoat LA. Dodgers, 7:10p.m. Totals 40 3 7 3 Totals 3 6 2 6 2 Wooten pitchedto 6battersin the8th. 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 MassetH,2 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 Cleveland 1 0 0 000 100 01 — 3 series. Edwin Encarnacion also PB — Mesoraco. Brothers H,9 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 39 3 123 Totals 3 4 7 126 Boston 100 010 000 00 — 2 T — 3: 1 9. A — 42,21 3 (41, 9 00). HawkinsS,14-15 I 0 0 0 I I L os Angeles 01 2 0 00 000 — 3 American League DP — Cleveland1. LOB —Cleveland10, Boston8. had three hits for the BlueJays, San Francisco Atlanta 000 004 21x — 7 2B — C.Santana(9). HR—Brantley (11), Swisher(4). who had totaled 15 runs in losing E—J.Hamilton (3), A.Simm ons (3). LOB—Los Bumgarner 7 6 4 4 4 9 Mariners 5, Rangers1 Cardinals 5, Nationals 2 SB — Drew(I). CS—Nava(I). SF—Y.Gomes. six of their previous eight games. J.GutierrezL,1-2H,10 2-3 3 4 4 I 0 Angeles11,Atlanta7. 28—F.Freeman(18), LaStella IP H R E R BBSO BS,2-2 1- 3 1 0 0 0 I (2). HR —Trout (14), Aybar(5), Heyward (8). SB—B. The AL East leaders came totown J.Lopez Cleveland SEATTLE —Kyle Seager hadfour Matt Adams homMachi I 0 0 0 0 0 ST. LOUIS — Upton(11).SF—Doumit. Kluber 51-3 5 2 2 4 4 with a 4t/z-game lead. Nicasio pi t ched to 2 ba tt e rs i n the 3rd. IP H R E R BBSO hits and three RBls, andSeattle ered for the third time in three Rzepczynski 12 - 3 I 0 0 0 1 F.Moralespitchedto 3battersin the6th. LosAngeles games — all with his father in stopped a five-game losing streak Shaw 1 0 0 0 0 1 Toronto Baltimore HBP —by F.Morales (Morse),byBumgarner(CulberH.SantiagoL,0-7 51-3 5 4 4 2 4 Axford 2-3 0 0 0 3 2 with a win overTexas. Hisashi ab r hbi ab r hbi son). WP —Nicasio, Bumgarner. attendance —and Matt Holliday Jepsen BS,1-1 2 - 3 2 0 0 0 0 Atchison 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 T — 3: 4 3. A — 41,824 (41, 9 15). Bedrosi a n 2-3 3 2 2 0 1 Iwakuma pitched eight sharp also went deep, helping St. Louis Cor.Rasmus AllenW,3-1 2 0 0 0 0 3 Reyesss 5 I 2 0 Markksrf 4 0 0 0 1- 30 0 0 0 0 Mecarrlf 4 0 0 I Machd3b 4 0 0 0 Boston innings for Seattle, allowing one to a victory and series sweep D.DeLaRosa 1 2 I I 1 0 Bautistrf 4 0 2 I A.Jonescf 4 2 2 I Workman 6 5 2 2 2 7 IVlets 3, Padres1 Atlanta Ib 5 2 3 0 N.cruz 0 3 0 3 I run on BradSnyder's first career overWashington.Adams gave BadenhopBS,1-2 1 0 0 0 0 0 Encrnc Lawrie3b 5 I 0 0 Pearce1b 4 0 0 0 Minor 5 113 3 1 6 homer in the secondand six hits. A.Miller 1 0 0 0 0 3 DNavrrdh 4 0 3 2 DYongdh 4 0 I 0 St. Louis a 2-0 lead in thesecond NEW YORK — Curtis Granderson VarvaroW,2-1 2 0 0 0 0 3 Uehara 1 0 0 0 0 1 Kratzc 3 0 0 0 JHardyss 4 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 Charlie Furbush then got three inning with a two-run shot on an J.WaldenH,4 1 hit his first leadoff homer in five Breslow 1 0 0 0 2 1 StTgsn2b 4 0 0 I Schoop2b 4 0 I 0 D.carpenter 1-3 I 0 0 0 1 0-2 pitch, his sixth homer of the outs to complete the six-hitter. Tazawa L,1-1 1 2 I I 0 2 Gosecf 4 I 2 0Hundlyc 4 0 0 0 years, Carlos Torres and two other KimbrelS,20-23 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 Workman pitched to2 batters inthe 7th. season. HBP—by D.carpenter (Puj o l s ). WP—B edrosian, Totals 38 5 125 Totals 3 5 2 9 2 relievers filled in admirably for an HBP — by W or km an (Y G om e s). W P — K lu ber , A xf o rd, Texas Seattle D.DeLaRosa. Toronto 100 110 020 — 0 A.Miller. ailing Daisuke Matsuzaka and the ab r hbi ab r hbi T—3:31. A—29,320(49,586). B altimore 000 0 0 1 0 10 — 2 Washington St. Louis T—4:03. A—37,356(37,071). LMartncf 4 0 1 0 Enchvzrf 5 1 2 0 DP — Toronto 1. LOB —Toronto 9, Baltimore7. New York Mets beatSan Diego. ab r hbi ab r hbi Andrus ss 4 0 1 0 J.Jones cf 3 0 I 0 2B — Reyes (14), Bautista(14), Encarnacion2 (19), Bobby Abreu added anRBIdouble Rendon3b 4 0 1 0 Mcrpnt3b 4 0 0 0 Leaders Choolf 4 0 0 0 Canodh-2b 3 1 0 0 Rays 4, Astros D.Navarro2 (7), A.Jones(14), J.Hardy(16). HR —A. M cLothcf 4 0 1 0 Wong2b 4 1 I 0 3 ABeltre3b 4 0 0 0 MorrsnIb 3 0 0 0 in the first and Daniel Murphy had L aRochph 0 0 0 1 Hollidylf 2 2 I 2 Jones(11).SF—Me.cabrera. ThroughSunday's Games R iosrf 4 0 0 0 BuckIb I 0 I 0 IP H R E R BBSO a sacrifice fly in the secondagainst W erthrf 4 0 0 1 Craigrf 4 1 2 I AMERICAN LEAGUE HOUSTON —DavidPriceshook SnyderIb 3 1 2 1 Gillespipr 0 1 0 0 Toronto BATTING —VMartinez,Detroit, .333;Cano,SeatZmrmn1b 4 0 0 0 MAdmsIb 4 1 I 2 Gimenzc 3 0 1 0 Furushp 0 0 0 0 off a tough start to strike out10, HappW,6-3 6 7 I 1 0 6 a shaky lan Kennedy (5-8), helping Hairstnlf 4 0 1 0 JhPerltss 4 0 2 0 t l e, .327; Mi c abrera, De t r oi t , .324;Rios,Texas, .322; Sardins2b 3 0 1 0 Seager3b 4 1 4 3 McGowan H,6 I 2 - 3 I I 1 1 2 New York take the rubber game Dsmndss 4 0 1 0 Jaycf 3 0 I 0 Brantley,Cleveland,.322;Altuve, Houston, .318;Baupinch-hitter Jerry Sands broke D Mrphdh 3 0 0 0 Zuninoc 4 1 I 0 JanssenS,12-14 I 1-3 I 0 0 0 2 Espinos2b 3 1 2 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 tista, Toronto,.314. in a series between thetwo worst A ckleylf 4 0 2 I three bats while singling homethe Baltimore RUNS—Do zier, Minnesota, 55; Donaldson,OakS rLeonc 4 1 1 0 T.cruzc 3 0 I 0 Blmqst2b-tb 3 0 2 0 Tillman L,5-4 7 8 3 3 0 0 hitting teams in the maj o rs. F ister p 2 0 0 0 JGarci p I 0 0 0 land, 52;Bautista,Toronto, 51;Brantley, Cleveland, go-ahead run in theeighth inning BMigerss 3 0 0 I Tom.Hunter 2-3 2 2 2 2 0 F rndsnph I 0 0 0 Mottep 0 0 0 0 49; Encarnacion,Toronto, 45; Kinsler, Detroit, 45; Totals 32 1 6 1 Totals 3 3 5 135 and TampaBaybeat creative McFarland 11-3 2 0 0 0 0 San Diego Detwilrp 0 0 0 0 SFrmnp 0 0 0 0 Trout,LosAngeles,45. NewYork Texas 0 10 000 000 — 1 Houston. For the second time in a Happpitchedto1 batter inthe7th. RBI — Ncruz, Baltimore, 56; Micabrera, Detroit, RSorinp 0 0 0 0 Bourjoscf 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Seattle 000 020 03x — 6 T—3:07.AM6,469 (45,971). Dobbsph I 0 1 0 55;Encarnacion,Toronto,54;Moss,Oakland,53; Venalecf 2 0 0 0 Grndrscf-rf 3 I 2 I DP—Texas2.LOB—Texas4,Seattle8.28week, Astros manager BoPorter Totals 3 5 2 8 2 Totals 2 95 9 5 JAbreu,Chicago,51;Donaldson, Oakland, 51; Trout, Ecarerss 3 0 0 0 DnMrp2b 3 I I I En.chavez (4), Seager2 (15), Ackley(11). HR —Sny- moved reliever TonySipp to left Washington 00 0 010 001 — 2 Los Angeles,50. S.Smithrf 2 0 0 0 DWrght3b 3 0 0 0 Tigers 4, Twins3 der (1). CS —Andrus(5), Seager (3). S—Bloomquist. field, then brought him backto HITS — Altuve, Houston,90; Mecabrera,Toronto, St. Louis 021 0 1 0 1 0x— 5 H eadly3b 3 0 0 0 BAreurf 3 0 I I SF — B.Miler. DP — Washington 1. LOB —Washington 10, St. 86;Rios,Texas,86;Brantley,Cleveland,85;AJones, Quentinlf 3 1 I 0 Tejadass 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO pitch. There was a brief delay as DETROIT — J.D. Martinez's Louis 6.28—Craig (13). 38—Wong (2). HR —Holli- Baltimore,84; Markakis,Baltimore,84; AIRamirez, A lonsoIb 4 0 I 0 ABrwnlf 3 0 0 0 Texas day (5),Ma.Adams(6). S—J.Garcia2. SF—Holliday. Chicago,84. the umpires huddled after Porter's ninth-inning sacrifice fly scored R iverac 3 0 I I Blackp 0 0 0 0 N.MartinezL,1-4 6 9 2 2 I 3 IP H R E R BBSO HOMERUNS —Ncruz, Baltimore, 21; Encarna0 0 0 0 dnDkkrph-cf 1 0 0 0 RossJr. I 4 3 3 I 0 strategy. Torii Hunter with the winning run Qcknshp Washington cion, Toronto,20;JAbreu,Chicago,19; Donaldson, Stauff rp 0 0 0 0 DudaIb 4 0 2 0 Rowen I 0 0 0 0 0 FisterL,5-2 6 7 4 4 2 2 Oakland,17;VMartinez,Detroit, 17; Moss,Oakland, and Detroit beat the Minnesota. D enorfiph 1 0 0 0 Floresss 4 0 I 0 Seattle TampaBay Houston Detwiler I 1 I I I I 16; Pujols,LosAngeles,16. P etersn2b 2 0 0 0 Mejiap 0 0 0 0 Hunter led off the ninth with a Iwakuma W,5-3 8 6 I I 0 6 ab r hbi ab r hbi R.Soriano I 1 0 0 0 0 STOLENBASES— Altuve,Houston,24;RDavis, A marstph-2b 2 0 0 0 Reckerc 3 I 0 0 Furbush I 0 0 0 0 I DJnngscf 4 0 0 I Fowlercf 4 2 2 1 single off Casey Fein (3-3), and St. Louis Detroit,19; Egsbury,NewYork,18; AEscobar, Kansas Kenndyp 1 0 0 0 Matszkp 0 0 0 0 RossJr. pitchedto4 batters inthe8th. Kiermrrf 5 0 0 0 Springrrf 4 0 0 0 J .Garci a W 3-0 , 7 5 I I 2 6 C ity, 17;Andrus,Texas, 16;LMartin, Texas, 15; Reyes, ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 CTorrsp 1 0 0 0 Miguel Cabrera rifled a line drive T—2:46.A—39,196 (47,476). Longori3b 4 0 I 0 Guzmn1b 4 0 1 1 Motte I 0 0 0 0 2 Toronto,15. G randlc 1 0 I 0 Campglf 2 0 I 0 that almost knocked over short2 -3 2 I I 0 I L oneyIb 5 I I 0 MDmn3b 4 I 2 1 n Totals 2 7 1 4 I Totals 3 03 8 3 S.Freema Zobrist2b-If 4 0 3 0 Carterdh 3 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 NATIONALLEAGUE Athletics10, Yankees 5 S an Diego 0 1 0 0 0 0 000 — 1 RosenthalS,20-23 1-3 1 stop Dany Santana as hemadea DeJessdh 2 I 0 0 Sipplf-p 0 0 0 0 H BP — by J.Garcia (Esoinosa).WP—J.Garcia. BATTING —Tulowitzki, Colorado,.362; Lucroy, — 3 New York 2 0 1 0 0 0 Ogx leaping catch. Forsythph-dh1 0 0 0 Frnswrp 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee, .336; AMccutchen, Pittsburgh, .325; DP—NewYork2. LOB—San Diego7, NewYork T—2:40.A—45,325 (45,399). OAKLAND, Calif.— Derek Norris Joycelf 4 I I 0 Altuveph I 0 0 0 Puig, LosAngeles, .320;CGomez, Milwaukee, .313; 11. 28—Dan .Murphy(17), B.Abreu(9), Duda2(14). SRdrgzph-2b1 0 0 0 Grssmng 3 0 0 0 Minnesota Detroit Goldschmidt,Arizona,r309;McGehee,Miami,.309. and Coco Crisp hit early three-run HR—Gra nderson(9). SB—Venable(3). S—E.cabre- Marlins 3, Pirates 2 (10 innings) Y Escorss 2 I 2 2 Zeidp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi RUNS —Tulowitzki, Colorado,55; Goldschmidt, ra, Kenn edy,C.Torres.SF—Dan.Murphy. homers to backa strong start by JMolinc 3 0 I 0 Presleylf 0 0 0 0 Arizona,52;Pence,SanFrancisco, 51;Stanton, MiIP H R E R BBSO Jesse Chavez,and Oakland beat Sandsph I 0 I I Singltnph I 0 0 0 DSantnss 5 0 0 0 Kinsler2b 5 I 2 0 MIAMI — CaseyMcGeheetied ami,48;CGomez,Milwaukee,45;Rizzo,Chicago, San Diego Hanignc 0 0 0 0 Corprnc 3 0 0 0 Mauer1b 4 I 2 0 TrHntrrf 5 I I 0 KennedyL,5-8 5 45; Mcarpenter,St. Louis, 44; DanMurphy,New 1-3 7 3 3 4 7 the game in theeighth inning with the New YorkYankees.Carlos MGnzlz2b 3 0 0 0 Dozier2b 4 0 0 0 Micarr1b 4 0 I 0 1-3 0 0 0 I 0 York,44. A.Torres Beltran hit his first home run for Vigarss 3 0 1 0 RBI — Stanton, Miami, 54;Goldschmidt, Arizona, Wlnghlf 4 I I I VMrtnzdh 3 I 2 I Quackenbush I 1 - 3 1 0 0 0 2 a two-out, two-run double, then Totals 36 4 10 4 Totals 3 3 3 6 3 K Morlsdh 4 I I I JMrtnzlf 4 0 I I , orado,45;Blackmon, Colorado,44; the Yankeessincecoming off Stauffer I 0 0 0 I I drove home thewinning run with a 51; TulowitzkiCol T ampa Bay 0 1 0 1 0 1 010 — 4 F lormnpr-dh 0 0 0 0 AJcksncf 4 I I 0 New York Morneau ,Colorado,44;Morse,San Francisco,44; the disabled list. But the All-Star sacrifice fly in the10th, and Miami Houston 2 01 000 000 — 3 Arciarf 2 0 0 0 Cstgns3b 3 0 I 2 Matsuzaka McGehee, Mi a mi ,43. I 0 0 0 2 0 LOB—TampaBay12,Houston3.28— Longoria K Suzukc 4 0 I I Avilac HITS — Goldschmidt, Arizona, 86; Lucroy,Milveteran also wascalled out on a 2 0 0 0 C.TorresW,3-4 4 beating 3 1 I I 4 averted a series sweep by (10), YEscobar(10), Fowler(11). HR —Fowler (5), Fuldcf 4 0 0 0 RDavispr 0 0 0 0 BlackH,3 waukee, 84; DanMurphy,NewYork, 84; AMccutchen, 2 1 0 0 2 I strange play in the eighth inning Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh's Vance M.Dominguez(10). SB—Villar 2 (13). S—De.Jen- EEscor3b 4 0 2 0 Holadyc 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh,83; Pence,SanFrancisco, 82; McGehee, Mejia S,7-8 2 0 0 0 0 0 when he seemedto lose track of Worley pitched seven innings in nings. Suarezss 4 0 I 0 Miami, 81; Tulowitzki, Colorado,81. HBP —byC.Torres(Quentin). WP—Kennedy. IP H R E R BBSO Totals 3 5 3 7 3 Totals 3 44 104 T—3:15. A—38,987(41,922). HOME RUNS —Stanton, Miami, 18; Tulowitzki, the outs and wanderedawayfrom his season debut and departed TampaBay M innesota 0 0 0 0 0 3 000 — 3 Colorado,18;Frazier, Cincinnati, 15;Gattis, Atlanta, first base. with a 2-0 lead. PriceW,5-6 8 5 3 3 0 10 Detroit 1 10 001 001 — 4 15; Goldschmidt,Arizona,15; Rizzo,Chicago, 14; Diamondbacks6, Dodgers3 McGee S,1-1 1 I 0 0 0 1 Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. Jupton,Atlanta,14. E—Arcia (2). DP—Minnesota 1. LOB —MinneNewYork Oakland Houston PiNsburgh Miami STOLEN BASES—DGordon, Los Angeles, 36; ab r hbi ab r hbi Peacock 4 3 2 2 4 3 sota 9,Detroit 11.28—Mauer (10), Wigingham(3), ab r hbi ab r hbi BHamilton,Cincinnati, 25; Revere,Philadelphia, 19; LOS ANGELES— PaulGoldGardnrlf-cf 4 1 1 2 Crispcf 4 3 2 3 D.Downs 11-3 I 0 0 1 0 E.Escobar (21), Kinsler(21),VMartinez(17), Castel- schmidt and Miguel Montero Polancrf 5 1 2 0 Furcal2b 5 1 2 0 EYoung,NewYork,17; SMarte,Pittsburgh,16; BonJ eterss 3 1 1 1 Gentrylf 4 2 I I WilliamsL,1-3BS,2-2 2 5 2 2 0 1 lanos (13). 38 —AJackson (3). SB—R.Davis (19). SMartelf 4 0 1 1 Lucaspr 0 1 0 0 ifacio,Chicago,13; Ecabrera, SanDiego,13; Segura, Ryanss 0 0 0 0 Cespdsdh 5 0 2 2 Sipp 1 I 0 0 0 1 SF — J.Martinez, Casteganos. homered to help Bronson Arroyo AMcctcf 4 0 2 0 RJhnsnlf 4 0 0 0 Milwaukee,13.
Sunday'sGames
Detroit 4,Minnesota3 Cleveland 3,Boston2,11innings Toronto5, Baltimore2 Kansas City6, ChicagoWhite Sox3 Tampa Bay4, Houston3 Oakland 10,N.Y.Yankees5 Seattle 5, Texas1 Atlanta7, LA.Angels3
B4
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014
FOOTBALL
MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP
jo nson ina w insatMic i an Femaleofficial hopes to break NFLbarrier
The Associated Press BROOKLYN, Mich. — In
the final seconds of his first
By Tom Withers
victory a t
The Associated Press
M i c h igan I n ter-
national Speedway, Jimmie Johnson could finally relax a
BEREA, Ohio —
"About 200 yards before the finish line, I knew if the car exploded, I'd still slide across the
finish line," Johnson said. Johnson and his No. 48
when someone said, 'What did you think of the female
impossible.
Thomas does not consider herself a pioneer, just "one of the guys." But as one of two female officials in the NFL's officiating development program, Thomas has a chance to break barriers in a
Chevrolet made it through the
last few laps with a comfortable lead, and the six-time series champion won Sunday for
I
the first time in 25 NASCAR
I
I
Sprint Cup starts at MIS. Johnson outlasted pole winner Kevin Harvick by 1.214 seconds for his third victory in four races. He also won at
official'?' And they said, 'There's a female official out
here?' I thought she was on point." Browns cornerback Joe
Haden joked that Thomas was a little whistle happy. "She was calling everything," Haden said, smiling. "I couldn't snap on her. I was chilling." Thomas said her goal is to blend in. She does not want to
male-dominated profession.
This week, Thomas, a former college basketball player, current college official and mother of three whose full-time job is as a pharma-
Charlotte and Dover. It was the fifth victory in a
row for Chevy and Hendrick Bob Brodbeck/The Associated Press Motorsports. Jeff Gordon and Jimmie Johnson takes the checkered flag during the NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Michigan Internetional Speedway in Brooklyn, Mich., on Sunday. It was Johnson's first win at the 2-mile oval in 25
career Sprint Cup starts.
doesn't count Jamie McMurray's win for Chevy and Chip
"It's good to see Jimmie, after leading so many laps here, Brad Ke s elowski fi n- close the deal," owner Rick ished third Sunday after two Hendrick said. "We've run out straight runner-up showings of gas, broke motors, blown Ganassi in the Sprint All-Star
race last month.
at Dover and Pocono. Paul
the league to welcome female S arah officials.
"If she's efficient and good Thomas starts the day at her second job by tucking her at what she does, I have no longblond hair inside her cap issues with it," Pettine said. "I think the best compliment so she will not get noticed. On a football field, that is somebody paid to her was
bit.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. also have won during the streak that
Pettine believes it is time for
ish them all," Johnson said. "It is not easy to win in this
Keselowski, who has a couple Nationwide victories at
sport.
Michigan, is 0 for 10 in Cup
Hendrick's team, however,
is making it look easy, having won five straight races for the
tires."
Menard was fourth, followed by Kasey Kahne, Gordon and
races at the track.
"Even at 69 wins, I still cher-
igan. That would mean a lot."
'
•
Audi wins 13th title at Le Mans: LE MANS, FranceMarcel Fassler, Andre Lotter-
• s
ond run at 320.51 mph.
•
r e presenta-
"I am a female, but I don't
Also on Sunday:
Johnson led after 164 laps third time. Hendrick accomSunday before stopping to pit plished the feat twice in 2007, Earnhardt in t h e 4 0 0-mile, and giving up the lead. He was including a six-race streak. er and Benoit Treluyer over200-lap race. back in front with about 10 Gordon's sixth-place finish came turbocharger problems Johnson had finished in the laps to go following a cycle of was enough to keep him atop to drive Audi to its 13th title top five four times previously pit stops by other drivers. the points race, with Hendrick at the 24 Hours of Le Mans. It "We really were in a win- teammates Johnson and Earn- was the trio's third victory in at Michigan, including a second-place showing in August win situation," Johnson said. hardt in second and third. the world's most famous en2011. He lost in August 2012 "Those guys still had to come Ford had won the past three durance race. Their Audi No. when his engine faltered with to pit road to make it to the Cup races at Michigan, with 2 finished three laps ahead six laps remaining. end. Once I got an idea of how Joey Logano prevailing last of Audi No. 1 driven by Lu"It was a long time coming," the race was unfolding, I knew August and Greg Biffle win- cas di Grassi, Marc Gene and crew chief Chad Knaus said. we were in the catbird seat, ning twice before that. Kes- defending champion Tom "We've raced very well up and were able to take advan- elowski couldn't extend that Kristensen. here, and we haven't been able tage of it." streak, and Logano finished Langdon wins NHRA Thunto close the deal on quite a few Hendrick had four drivers ninth. der Valley Nationals: BRIS"We kind o f occasions." in the top seven. tr u dged TOL, Tenn. — Defending Top There are now only four Johnson is trying for his sev- through it and came away with Fuel champion Shawn Langtracks on the current sched- enth Cup title, which would tie another top-three effort, which don raced to his first victory ule where Johnson has never the mark shared by Richard is good but not great," said Ke- of the season, beating points won — K e ntucky, Watkins Petty and the late Dale Earn- selowski, who was unable to l eader Doug Kalitta i n t h e Glen,Chicagoland and Home- hardt. This was his 69th career come away with a victory in NHRA Thunder Valley ¹ stead-Miami. Johnson had led victory, and he's the first driver his home state. "We want the tionals. Langdon edged Kalitin 15 previous Cup races at with three wins in 2014. wins, especially here at Mich- ta in the final with a 3.819-secMIS.
ceutical sales
tive, worked with a crew of stand out because of her genofficials during Cleveland der — or worse, because she Browns' mini-camp. Like the is not competent. She is dediplayers, she worked on im- cated to being a solid, fair and proving her skills and honing mostly unseen, which is why her craft. she pulls her hair up under She hopes to one day be on her cap. Still, sometimes playthe field with the pros. But not ers do a double take when because of her gender. they see her on the field. "Yes, I do tuck my hair and at
first I really wasn't too sure why. But I get it. We don't want to be noticed and anything I can do to blend in — I
like it when I leave the field and people go, 'I told you that was a girl.' " Thomas has two sons and
the NFL's developmental pro-
gram,now initssecond year. an 18-month-old daughter. Thomas worked some train- She said her sons are most ining camps and preseason terested in her nabbing some games last season. NFL attire or autographs. "I The next step is a regu- can't do that," she said. lar-season game, and the earHer children have never liest that can happen is 2015. thought about their mom beIt is not her call, so to ing anything other than an speak, but Thomas believes official, so they do not really she is ready. grasp that she could make If this week was any indi- history as the NFL's first fecation, she could be on her male official. "They just know mom offiway. "She's done a good job," ciates and it's nothing foreign Browns coach Mike Pettine to them or pioneering or anysaidafter practice Thursday. thing," she said. "I do this."
•
•
'
FIH Llg
' '
•
"I think sometimes they
go 'What is that?' " she said.
look at myself as just a female," she said. "I look at myself as an official." Thomas began her officiating career in 1996, when an NFL scout spotted her working a high school game. From there, she joined Conference USA and was invited to join
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•
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MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B5
WORLD mp
essl sml'es Bs r en inawinsi so ener The Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO — Lionel Messi
remainder of
t h e h a lf , A r gentina close range.
showed little with Messi seldom
Argentina's Lionel Messi, left,
France 3, Honduras 0: PORTO
scored a stunning second-half goal touching the ball and Bosnia — a ALEGRE, Brazil — Karim Benzema to push staggering Argentina to a 2-1 World Cup debutant — looking more scored twice and created a third that victory over Bosnia Sunday at the threatening. was confirmed by goal-line technoloMaracana in the Group F opener for Also on Sunday: gy. Benzema first converted a penalty both teams. Switzerland 2, Ecuador1: BRASIL- just before halftime after Wilson PalaMessi lifted Argentina in the 65th IA, Brazil — A goal deep in stop- cios was sent off with his second yelminute, moving in from the right and page-time by Haris Seferovic gave low card for charging into the back of striking a low left-footed shot off the
Switzerland a dramatic victory in
inside of the post behind Bosnian keeper Asmir Begovic. It was Messi's second World Cup goal, adding to one he scored eight years ago in Germany. Vedad Ibisevic scored a close-in goal in the 85th to give Bosnia hope. Argentina took a 1-0 lead in the third minute on an own-goal by
their Group E opener. In a match that 10 men,Benzema createdthe second looked destined to end in a draw, sub- goal in the 48th minute — the first to stitute Seferovic fired home the win- be confirmed by goal-line technology ner in the closing seconds. Enner Va- at the World Cup. Benzema's shot hit lencia had given Ecuador the lead in the post and came back across goal the 22nd minute at Estadio Nacional before goalkeeper Noel Valladeres in the Brazilian capital. Switzerland's fumbled it over his own line. Benzema equalizer followed in the 48th, with scored his second in the 72nd, firing Admir Mehmedi heading home from in powerfully from inside the area.
d efender Sead Kolasinac. For t h e
Paul Pogba. With Honduras down to
At last, U.S. has its chance
scores his team's
second goal in a 2-1 win
over Bosnia and
i *
Herze-
govina on Sunday.
Al
Sergei Grits I The Associated
Press
J trsj
/
for revenge against Ghana
rettttalrerser
By Steven Goff The Washington Post
NATAL, Brazil — The United States is as-
sured of playing three matches in the World Cup. There is today's Group G opener against Ghana in this surf-and-sun destination on the northeast coast, then Portugal in the heart of
Amazonia and Germany in the port city of Recife.
It is a journey cast across an enormous expanse over 11 days, marked by charters in and out of Sao Paulo and the rich embrace of a
country where futebol is hailed and treasured. For all practical purposes, however, the American experience — and the hope of ex-
tending their stay in Brazil — hinges on the events that transpire over 90 minutes at Estadio das Dunas, a 39,000-seat stadium designed
to reflect the area's white dunes. Thousands of U.S. supporters arrived in
*
•a
a
rainy Natal the past two days — Americans
purchased more tickets to the tournament than any other country, aside from Brazil-
and will provide a backing more typical of a crucial home qualifier. Anything short of victory, though, would leave Jurgen Klinsmann's squad in a precarious situation heading into daunting matchups against the group favorites. A loss would not extinguish hopes of advancing to the knockout stage. Nor would a victory secure passage. In reality, though, "we need to beat Ghana,"
Klinsmann has said repeatedly since FIFA conducted the draw in December, one that placed the Americans in the so-called Group of Death.
The Americans failed to beat Ghana in the previous two World Cups, a pair of 2-1 defeats that sent them home. In 2006, the Black Stars
closed the U.S. team's winless account in the group finale in Germany and, four years later,
John RaouxIrhe Associated Press
United States forward Jozy Altidore, left, scores a goal as heshoots past Nigeria's Joseph Yobo, right, during a friendly against Nigeria on June7.
i ore'scareer, ie u i o n ai , ar vvor an success
inflicted an extra-time setback in the round of
By Kevin Baxter
16 in South Africa.
Los Angeles Times
With g l obal
a m bitions, th e A m e ricans
are facing increasingly higher expectations. And that means beating Ghana, a 2010 quarterfinalist.
"Overtime,you want to see progress happening with the team," Klinsmann said. "With the whole game in the country, we see levels
of progress. Now this is just an awesome moment, this is the biggest stage you can have, where you want to show you improve."
With Portugal and Germany looming, the pressure to bag those points is heavy. "This is step one. And then comes Portu-
gal and then comes Germany and then we'll see," Klinsmann said. "Expectations now in
the United States are high. Every area of the game is growing, so we want to drive this as the locomotive — the locomotive is the nation-
al team. We embrace that. We want to go far." With a sly grin, he added that "I booked my flight (home) after the final." Still, though, the U.S. team has that inglori-
ous history with Ghana. From the U.S. perspective,"not a word's
been spoken" about the quadrennial rivalry
with the Black Stars, Howard said. "It's ancient history. This is a different team with a different mind-set."
The Black Stars look at it differently. "They arecoming forrevenge,"said Ghana captain Asamoah Gyan, who scored the winning goal in the 2010 meeting. "Mentally they don't want us to beat them for the third time."
SAO PAULO — Jozy Altidore settled into a white plastic chair
beneath a blazing sun at the U.S. team's World Cup training facility here last week, sweat beading on
his furrowedbrow. But he knew it was about to get much hotter.
Altidore has known feast and famine during a sometimes brilliant, sometimes brutal soccer ca-
reer. And with his second World Cup only a few days away, a crowd of reporters pushed in to ask him, for the millionth time, why.
"Sometimes you go through times where you're not scoring. It's just like that," he said, looking straight ahead. "That's how the game is. If things aren't going well individually, or you're not having as much success as you want, you just have to make sure that you're
helpingandyou can addvalueother than that to the team." Altidore brought the U.S. a lot
of value his last time out, scoring both goals in the team's final World Cup warmup, a 2-0 victory over Nigeria. And that should be a good sign because when Altidore scores, the goals come inbunches. When he doesn't, the dry spells can last months.
He was only 19 when his fourth goal in seven games beat topranked Spain in the 2009 Confederations Cup. But over the next
four years, he scored only five more times, getting shut out in the
','iib
t
last World Cup in South Africa. He rebounded last year with a team-high eight goals, including scores in a national team-record five consecutive games that got
~ Dolores Ochoa/The Associated Press
Ghana's AsamoahGyanscored the game-winning goal against the United States four years ago that knocked the Americans out of the World
Cup.
Struggles forclud and country Appearances andgoals since the last World Cup:
"I'm the same guy I was before. Just believe (in) the reason why you're there, how you got there. Sometimes itjust goes like that. There's no other
America to chase. Soccer was a
fine game, they said, but education was more important. Jozy
way to put it. Sometimes you just don't have that
begged for a chance to see whether he could make it in the sport.
streak. You've got to keep training hard, you've got
He could always study later, he sard.
to understand that it's going to be better. And it will.
It alwaysdoes." — U.S. forward Jozy Altidore
Eventually, his father relented. "Sometimes, you have to let your children do what is in their
heart," Joseph said. Turns out the boy could make
it, signing as a 16-year-old with him selectedU.S. Soccer's male Altidore's family history has the New York Red Bulls, though player of the year. Then he joined been built on a similar formula he was forced to finish high Sunderland of the English Premier — lots of faith, lots of work and, school before he could play. From League and it went south again, eventually,success. there he bounced around Europe, with Altidore ending the season on His father Joseph grew up in from Spain to England, Turkey, the bench while suffering through Haiti, the son of a farmer, before the Netherlands and eventually a six-month, 27-game scoreless leaving the island for the U.S. back to England. drought for club and country. with nothing more than $200 and During his down time, he beYet, U.S. coach Jurgen Klins- a pocketful of dreams. There he came the fifth-leading scorer in mann, a World Cup-winning met another Haitian, a nursing national team history. And he's striker with West Germany, saw student named Gisele. They mar- not even 25. things he liked. ried and moved from Orange, The next two weeks could "He's sharp, he's hungry," he N.J., to South Florida, where they present the most difficult test. said. "So we build on that. And raised four children. The U.S., drawn into the toughest then, you know, a striker's got to Joseph followed the same rou- group in the World Cup, begins solve himself as well. tine with each, teaching them play today. Its opponent, Ghana, "Go out there and be hungry to kick a soccer ball shortly af- eliminated the U.S. is each of the and once you get an opportunity, ter they had learned to walk. He past two World Cups. And if that's you've got to put the ball in the had never played soccer but he not enough, with Landon Dononet. I think he's on a really good thought the game was fun. And so van not on the U.S. roster for the path." did his children. first team since 1998, much of the Altidore says he never lost faith But the fourth child, Jozy, was scoring load will fall to Altidore. even when he lost his touch. different, not just from his siblings Four years ago, Altidore wilted "I'm the same guy I was before," but from everyone else. He was under the pressure. In four games he said. "Just believe (in) the rea- good. Really good. he never found the back ofthe son why you're there, how you got When Jozy was 8, Josef Schulz, net, extending a drought in which there. Sometimes it just goes like a former Austrian player and the U.S. has not had a goal from that. There's no other way to put coach who ran a soccer acade- a striker since Brian McBride it. Sometimes you just don't have my in South Florida, saw the boy scored in th e k n ockout round that streak. playing in a park and told his fa- against Mexico in 2002. "You've got to keep training ther that some day Jozy would "Nobody cares about what you hard, you've got to understand play for the national team. did a year, two or three years that it's going to be better. And it But that wasn't the dream Jo- ago," Altidore said. "It's what you will. It always does." seph and Gisele had come to do now that matters."
2013-14 2012-13 2011-12 2010-11 United States 15 (10) United States 15 (1 j United States 10 (2) United States 6 (1 j S underland (England) 41 (2) AZ Alkmaar (Hollandj 26 (26) AZ Alkmaar (Holland) 51 (19) Villarreal (Spain) 11 ( 2 ) Bursaspor (Turkey) 11 (1)
B6
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014
OMMU1VITY P O RTS
E
Email events at least 10days before publication to sports@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.com/comsportscal.
IVD
BASKETBALL
CYCLIMG
EQUESTRIAM
Club members, $5 for all others; www. bendpickleballclub.com.
LITTLEDRIBBLERS: Fundamentalscamp; grades1-4; June 23-26,9a m.-noon at Pilot Butte Middle School; orJuly 21-24, 9 a.m.noon, atCascadeMiddleSchool;$74-$89;
BEND BICYCLE FILM FESTIVAL: Variety of local short films about cycling; at the Tower Theatre;June 24, 7 p.m.; fundraiser forBend Endurance Academy; submission deadline for films is June17; www. BendBicycleFilmFestival.com.
PNW INVITE CHAMPIONSHIPS:Pacific Northwest Invitational Championship; at Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center;June 27-29;top prep equestrian teams from Oregon and Washington; www.ohset.com.
RUNNIMG
www.bendparksandrec.org. MIDDLESCHOOL: COBO camp; grades 5-9,June 23-26,1-4 p.m. at Pilot Butte Middle School; orJuly 21-24, 1-4 p.m., at CascadeMiddleSchool;$74-$89;www.
bendparksandrec.org. COBO ADVANCEDCAMP: Camp focuson advanced skill development in a competitive environment; grades4-9Aug.11-14;9a m.-
noon (grades4-6) and1-4 p.m. (grades7-9); at Cascade Middle School; $98-$118; www. bendparksandrec.org. SUMMIT GIRLSCLINIC: Summit High youth clinic for girls; June16-19; girls entering grades 2-9; 9-10:30a.m. for grades 2-4 and 9a.m.-uooefor grades 5-9; $55 for younger grades and $85 for older girls; ryan.cruz@ bend.k12.or.us. RIDGEVIEWYOUTHBOYSCAMP: For players entering grades 5-8;June23-26, 5-8 p.m.; $100, includes T-shirt; at Ridgeview; nathan.covill©redmond.k12.or.us. RIDGEVIEWYOUTHGIRLS CAMP:For players entering grades 4-8;June 16-16, 9-11:30a.m.; $45; at Ridgeview; randi.davis@ redmond.k12.or.us. PACIFIC UNIVERSITYCAMP: Boys and girls campatCulverHigh;Juue27-29;ages7-12, 8:30-11:30 a.m.; ages13-18, 1:30-4:30 p.m.; $45; Alex Carlson, 503-467-6241. BEND HIGHBOYS CAMP: Lava Bearboys camp; June16-19,9a.m.-noon;atBend High; $60, includes aT-shirt; for boys entering grades 3-9; scott.baker©bend.k12.or.us. REDMONDHIGHGIRLSCAMP: Panthers girls camp;Juue16-16, 9-11:30 a.m.; at Redmond High; $40, includes aT-shirt;
angela.capps©redmond.k12.or.us.
MAARTY LEUNENCAMP: Camp conducted by former Redmondand Oregonstandout; for boys and girls entering grades 3-8;June 25-27, 9 a.m.-noon;atRedmond High;$60; redmondhch©gmail.com, 541-480-2901.
FIRECRACKER100K: MBSEF15th annual Firecracker ride;July 4, 8 a.m.; 100K (65 miles); starts at Brasada Ranch Resort's Equestrian Center and ends in Prineville; $20 or $25 day-of registration; three aid stations and food on course; www.mbsef.
org. TOUR DESCHUTES: Cancer benefit ride and run; July12,6a.m.-4 p.m .;$50 adults, $20 kids, and $110 for families for the bike; $25 adults, $10 kids and $50 for families for run; www.tourdeschutes.org. CASCADE TRIPLE CHALLENGE:Three-day weekendofroad cycling,hosted by Bowen Sports Performance;June 20-22;June 20, 50-mile ride on Crater Lake Loop; June 21, 73-mile ride on Aufderheide Scenic Drive to Belknap Hot Springs; June 22, 49-mile ride from Belknap Springs up Three Creeks Sno-park; $375; full supported, cost includes lodging, meals and transportation; bowensportsperformance.com or 541-977-1321. MINI MOUNTAIN BIKE CLASS:Ages 6-8; bike skills and trail etiquette; two sessions, Juue16-July17andJuly 21-Aug. 21; 8:30 a.m.-noon; www.bendenduranceacademy.
org. MIGHTY MOUNTAINBIKE CLASS: Ages 9-12; bike skills and trail etiquette; two sessions,Juue16-July17 and July 21-Aug. 21;8:30 a.m.-noon; www.
bendenduranceacademy.org. MOUNTAINBIKE DEVELOPMENT: Ag es 13-18; three days a week,June16-Aug. 21; riding with teammates and coaches, www. bendenduranceacademy.org. DIRT DIVAS:Women's mountain bike rides;second aud fourth Mondays of the mouth,5:30 p.m., through September; at Pine Mountain Sports; free demos; www.
pinemountainsports.com.
CLIMBING YOUTH ROCK CLIMBING CAMP: Outdoor climbing and instruction for beginners with Bend Endurance Academy; Ages 12-15; July14-17,8:45 a.m.-4 p.m.; no previous experience needed; transportation and equipment provided;$300;www. bendenduranceacademy.org/climbing-team. EXPERIENCEDYOUTH CLIMBING CAMP: Bend Endurance Academy outdoor climbing and instruction for youth climbers with some previous experience; ages12-15; July 26-31;8:45 a.m.-4 p.m.; some previous experience needed; transportation and equipment provided;$300;www. bendenduranceacademy.org/climbing-team.
CO-ED GROUP MTBRIDES:Firstaed thlrd Wednesdays of the mouth,5:30 p.m.; co-ed group rides; free demos; www. pinemountainsports.com. SUMMER MOUNTAINBIKE PROGRAM: Sessions run for two weeks inJune, July aud August;MBSEF;mbsef©mbsef.org, 541-388-0002. WOMEN'S RIDES: Road rides;Thursdays; meet at Sunnyside Sports; casual pace, 25 miles to start; led by Wenzel coaches Karen Kenlan and Anne Linton.
KARATE OPEN TOURNAMENT:FaceYourFears Open Karate Tournament;June 21,7:30 a.m.; at Bend High; $30 for one division or $50 for three divisions; www.gtgafoundation.org.
FOOTBALL RIDGEVIEWYOUTHCAMP: For players entering grades 3-8;July 7-9, 9 a.m.-noon; $60, includes T-shirt; at Ridgeview; andy. codding©redmond.k12.or.us.
LACROSSE YOUTH GIRLSCAMP: Grades3-8;July 6-10;at Big Sky Park, Field No. 4, 9 a.m.noon; $54-66; www.bendparksandrec.org. SUMMIT BOYSCAMP:Grades 1-8; led by Summit coaching staff and players;July 7-10;at Big SkyPark, Field No.1,9a.m.noon; $74-$89; www.bendparksandrec.org. RHINO STICKCLINIC: For boys and girls, grades 4-12;July 20,6:15-7:30 p.m.; at Big Sky Park; www.bendparksandrec.org.
PUB RUN:FootZone pub run to Broken Top Bottle Shop;Juue16,5:30 p.m.; run isfree; 3 miles; discounted beer at BTBSandfree chipsand salsa;www.footzonebend.com. SOLSTICERUN:9k and5k run with dogs off-l eash;atW anogaSno-park;June21,4:30
p.m.; $20;www.dogpac.org.
WEDNESDAY RUNS: Fleet Feet"s 3-5 mile "RunthisTown" run,Wednesdays,6 p.m .; free; 541-389-1601. COTC YOUTHPROGRAM:Central Oregon Track Club "Cheetahs" summer youth program; ages 6-14;June 2-Aug. 4, Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, 5:30-7 p.m.; $100, includes T-shirt; at Pilot Butte Middle School; www. centraloregontrackclub.com.
SOFTBALL
SUNS OUT, GUNS OUT RUN: FootZone 3-5 mile fun run in tank tops ("guns out"); June 26,5:30 p.m.; free; starts at FootZone and ends at Crow's Feet Commons; www. footzonebend.com. RECYCLE RUN: Sisters Habitat for Humanity Recycle Run8K or5K;July4,8a.m.;in Sisters; $20 or $25 day-of registration; www. sistershabitat.org. FLOAT RUN:FootZone's run/river float event;July 22, 5:30 p.m.; run 2 miles from FootZone and then float down the Deschutes River to Tumalo CreekKayak and Canoe; post-eventroot beer— and beer— ice cream floats; www.footzonebend.com. MOMS RUNNING GROUP: Rainor shine, 3-4.5-mil e runs;Thursdays,9:30a.m .; outside FootZone; lisa.nasr©me.com, angela@footzonebend. com. REDMOND OREGON RUNNINGKLUB
(RORK):Weeklyrun/walk; Saturdays
PROSPECTCAMP: Fastpitch Northwest Prospect Evaluation Camp;Juue16-17; at Redmond High; open to players who will be incoming freshmen to incoming seniors; $120; Ken Olson at 360-790-9173 or Tom Mauldin at 541-948-9501.
TABLE TENNIS BEND TABLE TENNIS CLUB: Evening play
Mondays;6-9 p.m. (setup 30minutes prior); beginner classes available, cost $60; at Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Oregon; drop-in fee, $3 for adults, $2 for youths and seniors; club membership available to those who donate $100 or more; Jeff at 541-480-2834; Don at 541-318-0890; Sean at 267-6146477;bendtabletennis©yahoo.com; www. bendtabletennis.com.
TENNIS
at 8 a.m.; all levels welcome; free; for more information and to be added to a SUMMIT CLINIC:Youth clinic for ages 6-14; weekly email list, email Dan Edwards at MULTI-SPORT at Summit High tennis courts;July 7-10; rundanorun19©yahoo.com; follow Redmond 8:30-9:45 a.m. for ages 6-9 and10-11:45 DESCHUTESDASH:Deschutes Dash Oregon RunningKlubonFacebook. a.m. for ages10-14; coed; $65; ryan.cruz© Multisport Weekend;July 26-27; Olympic REDMONDRUNNINGGROUP:Weekly bend.k12.or.us. triathlon; sprint triathlon; youth triathlon; runsonTuesdaysat6:30 p.m.;meetat314 two dualthlons; aquabike;10K, 5K; kids S.W. Seventh St. in Redmond for runs of TRACK8KFIELD obstacle course;www.deschutesdash.com. 3-5 miles; all abilities welcome; free; pia© Leadman Tri: 85-, 125-or 250-kilometer runaroundsports.com; 541-639-5953. YOUTH PROGRAM:Central Oregon triathlons; prices start at $110; Sept. 20; PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP: 5:30 Running Klub (CORK) youth track and race starts at Cultus Lake and finishes at p.m. onTuesdays;with Max King; locations field club; started May 28;Mondays, Northwest Crossing; www.leadmantri.com vary; interval-based; all ability levels; max© Wednesdays, Thursdays,4-5:30 p.m.; at footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. CascadeMiddleSchool;ages7-15;$25; NORDIC SKI centraloregonrunningklub.org. MOVE IT MONDAYS: Mondays at5:30 p.m.; carpool from FootZone to trailhead REGIONALMEET:RunTrackTown Youth SUMMER CAMP: Bend Endurance Academy when scheduled (first and third Mondays of League, Bend regional;June27; at Bend summer Nordic training program; ages13 each month); all other runs start and finish High; open to boys andgirls in grades 3-8; and up; one -to-five-day-a-week options; at FootZone, downtown Bend; 3-5 miles; free; events staged arethe100, 400,1,500, strength and conditioning, bounding, paces 7-12 minutes per mile; melanieO long jump and turbojav; top three finishers roller skiing;through August;www. footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. advance to RunTrackTownYouth League bendenduranceacademy.org/nordic-team/ NOON TACORUN:Wednesdays atnoon; championships at Hayward Field in Eugene nordic-summer-training. on July 26. meet at FootZone, downtown Bend; order a Taco Stand burrito before leaving and PICKLEBALL it will be ready upon return; teagueO VOLLEYBALL footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. OPEN PLAY:Open play at Broken Top Club RIDGEVIEWYOUTHCAMP: For players GROWLER RUN:Group run of 3-5 miles; pickleball courts;Mondays, Wednesdays, entering grades 3-8;Aug. 11-13, 8-11 a.m.; Fridays audSaturdays, 9-11 a.m. through Thursdays,6 p.m.; leave from Fleet Feet and the summer; $5 per person per day; www. finish with a shared growler of beer from $65, includes T-shirt; chefdaniellesteed@ faceboook.com/brokentoppb. Growler Phil's; free; 541-389-1601. gmail.com. ROUND ROBIN/CHALLENGEPLAY: CORK WEEKLYPERFORMANCE RUN: SUMMIT YOUTHCAMP: For players in Round robin and/or challenge court play; Thursdays;5:30 p.m.; locations vary; call grades 3-9;July 21-24, 1-4 p.m.; $80, at Pine Nursery Park;Monday-Saturday, Roger Daniels at 541-389-6424 for more includes T-shirt; www.road9sports.com/ 7 a.m.-12:30 p.m; Free for Bend Pickelball information. team/SummitVolleyball.
Senior Games
Bend Pickleball Club member Joan
Continued from B1 "I"m golfing, playing men's doubles (tennis), and I'd do
COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF
Spongberg
CYCLING
hite a backhand with
CCC needShOStfamilieS — TheCascadeCycling Classic is
my schedule," says local senior Phil McCage, who is also the tournament director for the over the line softball
her playing partner Dick
looking for host families to provide housing for cyclists July13-20. For more information, email ccchousing©bendbroadband.com or
Low last year. Pickleball Is
call 541-788-6227.
event. "I'd do as many events
among the
as I could if the schedule allowed for it." Visit Bend, which is putting on the games, expects more To sign up for 400 over the line, participants contact Phil — men a n d McCageat phillymac© from a>> over bendbroad the country band.com.
events at this
WEIGHTLIFTING
The Bulletin file photo
LOCal WinS State —Ryan Hudson, of Sisters, won the men's Level 5 overall state weighlifting title June 7 atthe University of Oregon. Hudson snatched 116kilograms — anew state record — and clean and jerked144 kilograms for combined total of 260 kilograms. Bend's Adam Hamilton placed fourth in the Level 5category with a combined weight total of 256 kilograms. Together, Hudsonand Hamilton won the men's teamstate title.
pickleball if I could fit it into
week's Oregon Senior Games.
"This year we'll get that inition of the sport today at 3:30 p.m. at Bend's Skyline Sports tial exposure," McCage said Complex. about the Senior Games, "and
we'll just grow from there."
— Bulletin staff report
— Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes@bendbulletin.com.
t o gather i n
Central Oregon this week. The pickleball competition
A Free Public Service
alone has attracted approxi-
mately 165 players. Competitors do not have to be from
Oregon to participate in the Oregon Senior Games. While registration for most
events is closed, McCage is still accepting entries for teams in over the line. Over
the line play is set for Saturday starting at 5 p.m. at Hal Puddy Fiel d in Bend. McCage is putting on a free demonstra-
OregonSenior Games Wednesday:Packetpickup at Visit Bend, 4-8 p.m. Thursday:Packet pickup at Visit Bend, 8 a.m.-noon; golf, pickleball, bowling and tennis FrIday:Packet pickup at Visit Bend, 8 a.m.-noon; golf, pickleball, bowling, shuffleboard and tennis Saturday:Packet pickup at Visit Bend, 8 a.m.-noon; badminton, pickleball, table tennis, softball, racquetball, track and field, shuffleboard, tennis, archery, bowling, swimming and overtheline Sunday:5K run and softball More information: www.visitbend.com
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties I
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MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
"(The Spurs) played exquisite basketball this series. They are the better team. There's no other way to say it. They played great basketball, and we
87
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
couldn't respond to it." — Miami Heat coach Erik Spoelstra
NBA finals Continued from B1 With their 104-87 win in Game 5 of the NBA finals, the Spurs celebrated their fifth
championship in 16 seasons. San Antonio turned the series into a coronation by winning four of five games, including the last three, with the bonus of snuffing Miami's well-publicized quest for a third straight title
"" /'//j(
in the process.
Kawhi Leonard, who was named the most valuable player of the finals, finished with 22 points and 10 rebounds. Ginobili added 19
points, and Duncan, in his 17th season with the team, added 14 points and 8 rebounds. "They played exquisite basketball this series," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said, adding, "They arethe betterteam. There's no other way to say it. They played great basketball, and we couldn't respond to it." The victory was even sweeter for the
gY
Alex Gallardo I The Associated Press
Los Angeles Dodgers' Yasiel Puig slides into first base, but is called out against the San Francisco Giants in April. Bryce Harper of the Washington Nationals, Puig and Josh Hamilton of the Angels are among several stars who have been hurt sliding that way this year.
Spurs given their not-so-distant history with
the Heat. In last year's finals, the Spurs had a 3-2 series lead before it all slipped away: They blew a late lead in Game 6, then lost
in Game 7. It was a devastating result, with many openly questioning whether the Spurs — who were not getting any youngercould muster another run. The Spurs responded by posting the league'sbest record in the regular season before storming through the playoffs. Their rematch with the Heat was fine art with a
basketball — the passing, the footwork, the skill, the teamwork. If the Heat were a highwire act without a net (James was the unfor-
tunate performer on the trapeze), the Spurs were ballet dancers. James had a game-high 31 points. Dwyane Wade, hampered by bad knees and an injured hamstring in the regular season, struggled for the second straight game, finishing with 11 points. "I know he's feeling what we felt last year," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said of James, "and I wouldn't wish that on anybody." Said James, "Obviously, I didn't do enough." The losswas a dose ofreality forJames, who faces an uncertain off-season. James, Wade and Chris Bosh — Miami's Big Three — can all opt out of their contracts and become free agents. They have won two titles together and were hoping for a third, but the Spurs exposed some weaknesses. They were on display in the third quarter, as the Heat went the opening 4 minutes, 8
By Noah Trister • The Associated Press
ven Pete Rose, the man who made the headfirst slide fashionable, says there is a time and place to be prudent. As in, no need to get your nose bashed in at home plate. "You don't want to slide headfirst into shin guards," said Rose, who played the most games in big league baseball history. If Rose played today, his signature dives would not be much of a novelty. It has become common in the majors for runners to fling their arms out, lead with their faces and hurtle toward bases. But at what price'? Bryce Harper of the Washington Nationals, Yasiel Puig of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Josh Hamilton of the Los Angeles Angels are among the stars who have gotten hurt sliding that way this year.
Nolan Arenado of the Colorado Rockies, Mike Napoli of the Boston Red Sox and Ryan
seconds without scoring a point. They missed their first seven shots. They looked sluggish on defense, too. The Spurs' Patty Mills blew pastMiami'sbaseline defenders forareverse layup, then made two 3-pointers. Ginobili followed with a 3-pointer of his own for a 21-point lead, and the party was on.
Zimmerman of the Nationals are also on the list.
That the Heat had seized a 16-point lead in the first quarter made the Spurs' victory
— their fourth title together in 13 seasons as
yanked from a game while in the Houston system — the Astros had instructed minor league managers to immediately pull any player sliding headfirst into first base or home. Zobrist has no plans to stop. "I'll keep sliding headfirst," the All-Star said. "Probably with an oven mitt on my hand — or
teammates — it also underscored the coaching acumen of Popovich, the importance of
something to protect it." That is what New York Yankees leadoff hit-
the Spurs' scouting department and how
ter Brett Gardner does. When he gets on base,
seamlessly the team incorporates new parts. Consider Leonard, a swingman who was
he puts a cutoff elbow sleeve made of synthetic
more impressive.San Antonio outscored Miami by 98-65 the rest of the way.
And while the championship was certainly about Duncan, Ginobili and Tony Parker
acquired in a draft-day trade from the Indi-
ana Pacers in 2011. Popovich has already anointed him the future face of the franchise, and in the last three games of the fi-
nals — all convincing wins for the Spursthe future seemed to be now.
"We have conversations throughout the
year; they're mostly one waybecause Kawhi is really a quiet young man," Popovich said. "But he listens and he's a great learner and
super competitive, and he has a drive to be the best that's really uncommon in our
league." Consider also Boris Diaw, a formidable postpresence whose old-school game should require him to wear sweatpants. He joined the Spurs last season as a reliable reserve and did his role without complaint be-
fore emerging as a dynamic starter in these finals. "We've given him more of a prominent role, and he's responded well at both ends of the floor," Popovich said before the game. It was pure Popovich: pragmatic to the
point of near detachment. The Spurs have a system in place. The system means making sacrifices. The system means winning games. The system means collecting championships.
s
So many injuries, in fact, that many wonder whether the move is safe, or should be banned.
/
Tampa Bay's Ben Zobrist recently slid headfirst while trying to steal second base and dis-
r
located his left thumb. A decade ago, he was
,s
rubber over his hand. "If it happened to get stepped on, it definitely protects me more so than not having anything
Pete Rose, bottom, dives safely into third on a sacrifice by teammate Gary Matthews against Montreal in a1981 game. If Rose played today, his signature dives wouldn't be much of a novelty. It's become
at all," Gardner said. "The main thing with me,
common in themajors for runners to fling their armsout, lead with their faces and hurtle toward bases.
it keeps all my fingers together so when I slide headfirst, maybe my finger doesn't get caught on a base." Rose's slides helped solidify his reputation as one of the game's rough-and-tumble performers, and the image of him sailing through the air, arms extended, lives on.
"l'vejammed my fingers, of course, becausel go headfirst slides all the time, but nothing
Rose brought a style all his own to the field.
He would use more of a diving motion — he would also elevate his legs, figuring that made him more likely to get hit by a throw on a close play. He was willing to risk scrapes, but he wanted to avoid really hurting his legs and feet. "I'd rather get spiked on my arm or my elbows or my shoulder," he said.
The Associated Press file photo
serious, thank God. If you think
about injuries when you play, you're going to get injured. You just need to let it fly and let whatever happens, happen." — Toronto Blue Jays' Jose Reyes
you're going to do what you've got to do to compete," Washington said. "Sometimes, the headfirst thing is just natural, it just happens." Detroit manager Brad Ausmus suggested the bases themselves — made of hard rubber — might be made softer to reduce the risk of finger injuries. Sometimes, a headfirst slide can have more catastrophic consequences. In 2011, Arizona State's Cory Hahn fractured a vertebra in his
neck when his head struck the knee of an opposing second baseman. Rose says he would not advocate going headfirst into home or first base, but some players are not convinced that sliding head-
Detroit Tigers speedster Rajai Davis takes gested that sliding headfirst can help a runa more standard approach to headfirst slides, ner reach the base more quickly, but only first is more dangerous. Take Toronto Blue staying low to the ground and launching him- by a small fraction of a second. He also says Jays star Jose Reyes. "I feel more safe sliding headfirst because self across the dirt. The landing is a little more leading with the feet can be more practical begentle that way. causea player can pop up quickly and head to I've already had two major injuries with my "The Pete Rose, that's not a good slide in my the next base if need be. ankle sliding feet first," Reyes said. "After opinion," Davis said. "Of course, it worked for Harper, who has said he tries to emulate that, you justgo that way. I feel like I get to the Rose's all-out style, hurt his left thumb in base a lot faster when I do that." somebody else. That's why he's Pete Rose." Whicheverway a player performs a head- April diving into third base. Reyes said he wears a protective brace on first slide, Rose still believes there are benefits Puig hurt his left thumb early this season his wrist when running the bases, and he has to the technique. Runners can adjust in mid- plunging into first. scars on his fingers from sliding. slide to avoid a tag, and Rose says they might Hamilton tore a ligament in his left thumb The Tigers have no hard-and-fast rules, but have an easier time seeing the ball. flying into first. In 2011, a year after winning they would rather their minor leaguers lead "You go into second and the ball squirts the American League Most Valuable Player with their feet. "If you get a guy that's a headfirst slider, away from the fielder, your peripheral vision's award, he broke his upper right arm while going to pick the ball up," Rose said. diving toward home plate. we don't tell him, 'You can't do it.' But we tell No less a baserunning authority than RickBut Texas m anager Ro n W a s hington, him, 'We don't want you to do it.' And we tell ey Henderson — the career leader in stealswho had Hamilton on his team a few years him why. It's just kind of dangerous," assistant used to go headfirst as well. ago, does not expect anyone to stop going general manager Al Avila said. For years, the different slides have led to a headfirst. Reyes figures there is a risk either way. And "I don't think you can put a rule on that. Let as long as high-profile players like him are debate: Is one way faster than another? Research by professor David Peters of them know that it's not something you want diving into bases, that style will probably reWashington University in St. Louis has sug- to see, and to stop it, but when you compete, main a big part of the game, risks and alL "I've jammed my fingers, of course, because I go headfirst slides all the time, but nothing
serious, thank God," Reyes said. "If you think about injuries when you play, you're going to
Iulowitzki leadsAll-Star voting
Tony Gutierrez/The Associated Press
San Antonio's Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili
embrace during the closing moments of their NBA championship-clinching win over Miami
on Sunday.
Colorado shortstop TroyTulowitzki is the leading vote-getter for the MLBAll-Star Game. TheRockies shortstop, a three-time All-star, has 2,593,387 votes, far outpacing SanFrancisco's Brandon Crawford (899,641) at the position for the National League. The top five vote-gstters are Toronto outfielder Jose Bautista (2,135,223), St. Louis catcher Yadier Molina (2,003,557j, Los AngelesAngels outfielder Mike Trout (1,945,170j and LosAngeles Dodgers outfielder Yasier Puig (1,942,701 j. Seattle second basemanRobinson Canoleads in his position, the only Mariner in the top five. —TheAssociated Press
get injured. You just need to let it fly and let
whatever happens, happen."
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
BS TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014
T EE TO
R EEN U.S.OPEN NOTEBOOK
Martin Kaymer watches his tee shot on the10th hole during the final round of the U.S. Open in Pinehurst,
Women'sOpenplayers arrive at PinehLlrst No. 2
N.C., Sunday. By Aaron Beard The Associated Press
Matt York/The
Associated Press
PINEHURST, N.C. — In
the final group at a major for the first time, Rickie Fowl-
Berger's 66: Daniel Berger closed his first U.S. Open with one of the week's lowest
scores at Pinehurst No 2. The 21-year-old ranked
er was on the putting green 484th in the world finished about 45 minutes before at 4-under 66 in Sunday's fihis tee time with six other
players. All were women. Defending U.S.
nal round. It was the lowest round outside of r unaway
leader Martin K a ymer's O p en back-to-back 65s on Thurschampion Justin Rose was day and Friday. "Today I hit a lot of greens, walking over a bridge when he passed another player gave myself a lot of opheaded tothe practice range. portunities," Berger said. Rose stopped and turned his "And when you do that, head. It was Pernilla Lind- you're bound to make some berg of Sweden. birdies." Sunday at the U.S. Open Berger came into the final was unlike any other. day at ll-over, with most of Even as the men w ere that damage coming from wrapping up their champi- a 78 on Saturday. But after onship, the women arrived managing just six birdies so to prepare for the U.S. Wom- far, Berger had five birdies en's Open — the second half with his only bogey coming
"I would playmygame but never defend the lead. Defending a lead is how you fall back. Feeling
Kaymer Continued from B1 But the stoic, steady and humble Kay-
mer used a different strategy to stand out.
freeand confident enough to
He let his clubs make a statement at the
continue to charge and excel is how you win. It's the only way."
2014 U.S. Open, not his clothes, and certainly not a marketing campaign on his bag. In the o pening rounds, Kaymer stormed the Pinehurst No. 2 golf course with record-setting, back to back 65s to
stun the field. All of the golfers trailingthe surprise leader knew they could not catch him unless he faltered and allowed them
to claw at his heels. But from there, Kaymer had a simple blueprint for victory. He would keep his competitors at bay with the same systematic but assertively creative play that put him at the top of the leader board.
The attention turned to Compton, who
Day in the United States. Now he has won
need the British Open." It was Langer who was instrumental
in Kaymer's resurrection as a golfer after Kaymer fell from the top-ranked player in the world to 63rd in the rankings this
year. Langer advised Kaymer to relax his determined ways and be more convivial with other players.
Fowler.
event to be the leader after each of the Kaymer never seemed to waver from four rounds. the c o nsistent, m i d dle-of-the-fairway Erik Compton and Rickie Fowler tied style he started with Thursday and disfor second place at 279, 1 under for the played none of the nerves that might tournament. After days when the refurbe expected on the final day of a major bished Pinehurst No. 2course seemed championship. He parred the first two both vulnerable and invincible, Kaymer, holes, then birdied the third. Compton andFowler were the only playStill, at the fourth tee, the grandstand ers under par. Five players tied for fourth implored Fowler to make a charge. He in-
Continued from B1 The greens held true, a testament to the work by the Sunriver Resort maintenance staff.
33-year-old position golf course. (The new greens are, as expected, still a touch slow as they take firm root.) Among the first golf courses in Central Oregon to be designed by a big-name architect — in this case
"It's been a long, hard process," Robert Trent Jones Jr. — Woodlands has always been an enjoyable place superintendent. "It's been a lot of to play. work and we've had a lot of support Doglegs are present on 12 holes, from (management at Sunriver Re- making your choice of routes to the sort). I am just glad that everybody green of paramount importance, a sees the benefit that we are going hallmark of Jones' courses. to get out of these new bentgrass The ponderosa pine-lined course greens." challenges golfers to think their Wulff is not exaggerating about way around it, sometimes forcing the work his staff put in to replace the awkward shots around trees and greens. Instead of buying turf from bunkers. an outside company — something An extreme example is the 416Sunriverdid three yearsago when it yard, par-4 ninth hole, which doglegs replaced all 18 greens at Crosswater around a large pond. Club — Sunriver grew the turf itself The hole offers two choices, and using its own nursery. neither is easy. One, you can cut off That takes time. significant yardage by hitting driver The project was originally slated to over the water to a thin landing area take nine years. But Woodlands has (the target is a sliver of fairway with replaced several greens each year water both short and long), leaving since 2010, and this spring, greens an easy pitch to the green. on the first four holes and on the Struggling with control off the par-4 18th were replaced to complete tee, I played it safe and opted for a 220-yard shot to the right. The probthe project four years earlier than planned. lem was that left a difficult iron shot "It has been a huge challenge," into the green — a shot that must be Wulff said. "All of the guys that have played around a massive ponderosa been involved with it ... have put 100 guarding the direct line to the hole. said Ryan Wulff, Sunriver Resort's
percent into it. It's definitely WAY
His biggest improvement came with his putter. After tallying at least 32 putts in
each round, Berger had 26 on Sunday. "When you play on such a big stage as this, the Web. com doesn't feel as big," Berger said. "But obviously watch next week just to see I've got to kind of shift my how they get on around here focusback to Web. com, have and see how they fare." a couple of good weeks, and USGA officials had ex- if all goes well I'll be out here pressed hope fo r s o me next year." cross-promotion between the Johnson's ace:Zach Johnevents. They got that, from son watched the ball drop Natalie Gulbis taking swings into the ninth hole, flipped at the driving range to San- his club in the air then ran dra Gal watching German around high-fiving fans. countryman Martin Kaymer Managing an acein the in the final men's group. U.S. Open deserved a good "I hope putting them back- celebration. to-back works out," Phil His shot landed about 20 Mickelson said. "All of the feet left of the flag on the 172execution from the USGA's yard hole, bounced twice, side gets cut in half. You only then curled down a ridge into have to do it once instead of the cup. It was the 44th ace in twice, and hopefully they Open history and the third will be able to make it more straight year that a player profitable and put more mon- had a hole-in-one. eyback into the game." Johnson, who finished at The U.S. Women's Open 9 over, said it was his first in begins Thursday. competition.
"He told me that I must stop worrying
final round, it was evident Kaymer had taken Langer'sadvice. He talked about
having recently watched the golf movie "The Legend of Bagger Vance," which is rife with themes about the ethos of the
game. Kaymer, a humble man who came to the golf course Sunday with a simple, common-sense plan for victory, quoted the protagonist in the film. "At the end of the day we're playing a at 1 over 281. stead hit an approach shot short and right game," Kaymer said. Kaymer, a 29-year-old native of Diissel- of the green, and then blasted a pitch shot He added his personal take-away from dorf, is the first German to win the event from a sandy waste area 50 feet over the that message. "Now I just play," he said. and the first player to win the U.S. Open green. He made a spectacular recovery
Woodlands
"It's cool to run into the girls," Rory McIlroy said. "I would like to see it happen more often. I think it's a good thing. I think it's a good thing for women's golf to give them a little bit more exposure.... I'm going to tune in on and
on the 14th Sunday.
about my game so much," Kaymer told a stroke lead, and though the Pinehurst British newspaper. "Because I was getting galleries greeted him warmly, they were in my own way." eager to see a dramatic competition and Saturday night, on the eve of Sunday's
Open history, behind Rory McIlroy's score of 268 in 2011. Kaymer is also just threw the bulk of their support behind the seventh player in 114 years of the
For the next few hours, Fowler's role
and the Players Championship in the surged to get within four strokes of Kaysame year. He is also only one of five play- mer at one point on the back nine. But ers to win the U.S. Open, the PGA and the then Compton made consecutive bogeys Players Championship. The others are on the 11th and 12th holes and shortly Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Lee Trevino thereafter Kaymer made successive birdand Raymond Floyd. ies on the 13th and 14th. "I didn't make many mistakes at the There would be no tense dramatics in start of the tournament, and that gave me the final round. a very nice cushion for the weekend," KayKaymer's childhood hero in golf was mer said. "Even when I didn't play perfect- his countryman Bernard Langer, who ly on Saturday, I kept it together, and I did won two Masters titles in the 1980s and not play conservative. I was still trying to 1990s. "We almost have the German grand extend the lead. I did the same today, even though I knew I had that edge." slam," Kaymer said Sunday. "We just
distance himself from the field at nearly the U.S. Open on Father's Day here. every important sequence of the tournaOn Sunday, he said Germany celebratment. It ended with an authoritative eight- ed its Father's Day earlier in the year. "I did not get him anything for Father's stroke victory as Kaymer, winner of 2010 PGA Championship, captured his second Day," Kaymer said of his own father. "Maybe this is his present." major championship. Kaymer's final-round 69 gave him a Kaymer began Sunday with a fivetournament total of 271, 9 under par. It is the second-best four-round total in U.S.
just to make double bogey. But Fowler's chances disappeared with that hole as Kaymer made another par. Kaymer was also off the green in two but got up and down.
was chiefly as a front-row witness to a coronation. "Martin was playing his own golf tour—Martin Kaymer nament today," Fowler said.
"I would play my game but never defend the lead," Kaymer said. "Defending a lead is how you fall back. Feeling free and confident enough to continue to charge and excel is how you win. It's the only way." Kaymer, who was ranked No. 1 in the Across four days, tactics, personality world for about two months in 2011, won and steely purpose combined for a deft the Players Championship on Mother's performance that allowed Kaymer to
of an unprecedented doubleheader at Pinehurst No.2.
My decision turned out to be a mis-
more challenging and there is a lot take. Left with a 7-iron to the hole, I more to it than anybody understands. mis-hit my approach shot into the It'sbeen a learning process for us, ponderosa, and my ball dropped to too." the base of the tree. With no chance The result is a golf course with uni- from there at a full swing, I had to versally smooth putting surfaces that chip clear of the ponderosa, inching beg a golfer to take a fresh look at the myball toward the hole before finally
Matt York/The Associated Press
LPGA player Sandra Gal splashes water on Martin Kaymer after
he won the U.S. Open onSunday.
hitting a wedge into the green. roomy bunker guarding the left side fairway bunkers can shorten a hole On in four shots, I easily two-putt- of the fairway about 250 yards from considerably and lead to a short-iron ed fordouble bogey. So much for the back tees. approach. playing it safe. Those who make the shortcut The greens offer mostly subtle The ninth hole is the most extreme should have a clear downhill shot breaks, but a true line is rewarded by example of the risk-reward choices to the green for an opportunity at the new bentgrass greens. Woodlands forces a golfer to make. an eagle. But the risks are plentiA gambler by nature, I have always ful. The fairway bunker is tough to Off the course enjoyed this style of golf. escape, and drives that drift even The Woodlands' facilities are sepOn this day, though, I was burned slightly right from the intended tar- arate from Sunriver Resort's three more often than not by my choices. get just right of that bunker could othergolfcourses.Itspro shop is exAt least the greens at Woodlands run through the fairway and into a clusively dedicated to Nike products, are true, even if my golf swing is not. pine-lined prison. and the nearby snack bar serves all The second shot should be played the basics, including hamburgers, Difficulty of course to the left side of the fairway. That sandwiches, soda and beer. The Woodlands is not overly tax- will help take the waste bunker and A sizable putting greens sits next ing for golfers who play under rela- a pine that is set about 70 yards short to the clubhouse, and the Woodtive controL But the position course of the green's right side out of play lands' modest driving range still has can be punitive for those who strug- for the approach shot into the flat enough room on all but the busiest gle to hit their target, particularly green. days. Woodlands does have a signifthose who are wild off the tee. icant short-game practice area bethe course As the course's name suggests, How to approach tween the driving range and the 18th Woodlands is characterized by ponIf you are playing the set of tees green. derosapines.However,thetreesthat that best suits your game, the fairway line course are most often set far bunkers should help you guide your Verdict enough from the fairway to keep the tee shot to the proper position. With its greens now all bentgrass, ball in play after a moderate miss. A However, playing conservatively the Woodlands is an excellent golf dicey secondary rough, though, puts off the tee is often a wise choice to course (and the best designed of Sunan additional premium on accuracy. avoid the thick rough and the nu- river Resort's two daily-fee courses) Novices will not have to worry merous pines. If you find the heavy that will put a premium on accuracy. about a forced carry over water, but rough, best not to overplay your hand The green fees at Sunriver Resort Woodlands has a significant number by taking a risky shot. In most cir- have ticked up in recent years, and of water hazards that can be tricky cumstances, it is best to work the ball this season they will peak after July to navigate around for lesser-skilled back into the fairway for a clearer 3 at $119 for Deschutes County resigolfers. shot. dents. That is a bit high, even though Longer irons intothe greens, the fee includes the use of a cart. Favorite hole though, can be a challenge. The However, the Deschutes County rates The par-5 15th sets up a wonder- greens are typically heavily bun- drops significantly as the day goes ful series of finishing holes — as it kered and are most often set at a on, and $59 including cart after 2 has since 2010, when the original different elevation from the fair- p.m. during weekdays is a decent valfront and back nines were flipped. A way, forcing a downhill or uphill ue for the quality of golf course. 530-yard dogleg left, 15 entices lon- approachshot.In some cases,play— Reporter: 541-617-7868, ger hitters to take a shortcut over the ing an aggressive tee shot over the zhall®bendbulletin.com.
GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletinwelcomescontributions Io its holes. weekly localgolf resultslistingsandevents Flight 7 — Te d Mooredef. BrooksGunsul,4 &2. calendar. Clearly legible items should be Flight 8: —MelNunndef. Phil Chappron, 5&4. faxad to the sporls department, 641-385Flight 9 —Cliff Shrockdef. BradHallock,2 &1. Men'sClub,June11 8831, emailed Io sportsrNbau dbulatla.com, ormailedIoP.O.Box6828;Bend,OR97708. at ResorlCourse TwoNetBestBalls 1, Jerry Coday/DennisFlinn/Bill Hurst/Michael Club Results Mooberry,115.2,RandyMyers/JimHehn/Art Thenell/ blind draw,122. 3 (tie), FredDuysings/JoeKosaAWBREYGLEN novic/PeterO'Reily/DanMyers, 125;RogerDuby/ FootGolf, June6 DennisO'Donn el/Chris Wiliams/RayDuPuis, 125. StrokePlayIPar28) Men'sDivision—1(tie), JohnMefvin, 24;Mathew 5, Ron Wolfe/GeorgeSteelhammer/Roger Frichette/ blind draw,126.6, Donald Nash/HankCavender/Jerry McFarland,24. Women'sDivision —1, Cherri Miler, 27.2, Pa- Decotto/TerryBlack,127. tricia Roland, 28. Kid's Division — 1(tie), ErosEichner, 18;Jace THE GREEN SAT REDMOND Men'sClub,Juna11 Marshall,18. 3,SimonKidder,19.4 (tie), JackCauble, Stroke Play 21; Lucas Morais,21. Flight A —Gross:1, JohnGlover,62. Net:1, Wednesday Men'sSweeps, June11 Rob Kimball,50. 2,MikeFrier, 52. 3, GaryDuff,54; TwoNatBestBalls Flight 1 —TomKemph/Lon Ulmer/Gary Mack/ MikeLantz,54.5, MarvBibler,55. Flight B —Gross: 1,BobGordon, 66. Nat: 1, Jim Tudor,130.2, DaveQuattrone/Bob Rosencrance/ BobHaak,48.2,RonMinnice,50. 3, AllenBurnett,51. Jim Lee/DenniMa s gil,131. Flight 2 —1, ShelleyGrudin/RonLemp/Jack 4, Phil Backup,52.5, GeneCartwright,55. KPs —GeneCartwrigh, No.6; Gary Duff, No.9; Tibbetts/ArchieBleyer,118.2, EdHagstrom/KenWasAllen Burnett,No.12; BobGordon,No.14. kom/Tom Stump/Art Batchelder,123.
its weekly localgolf eventscalendar. Items should bemailedtoP.O.Box6020,Bend,OR 97788; faxed to the sports deparlmeat at641385-8831; or amailedto sporls@bendbuletiu. com. CLINICSORCLASSES Tuesdays: Nine-hole ladiesgolf clinic atJuniper Golf Course in Redmond. Studentswil be introduced to thefundamentals of golf byStuartAllison, Juniper's director ofinstruction.Clinicsbeginat 8:15a.m.Cost is $20perclassandeachis opento thepublic and space islimited.Formoreinformation orto register: call 480-540-3015,541-548-3121, or email pro@ stuartallisongolf.com. Wednesdays: Men's golf clinic atJuniperGolf Course inRedmond. Studentswill be introducedto the fundam entals of golf by StuartAllison, Juniper's director of instruction.Clinic beginsat 9 a.m.Cost is $20perclassandeachis opento thepublic and space islimited.For moreinformation orto register: call 480-540-3015,541-548-3121, or email prore stuartagisongolf.com. Thursdays:18-holeladiesgolf clinic atJuniper Golf Course in Redmond. Studentswil be introduced to thefundamentals of golf byStuart Allison, Juniper's director of instruction.Clinicsbeginsat 9a.m. Cost is $20 perclassandeach is opento thepublic and space islimited.Formoreinformation orto register: JUNIPER call 480-540-3015,541-548-3121, or email proro BENDGOLF ANO COUNTRY CLUB Men's DailyGame,June6 LadiesClub,June11 stuartallisongolf.com. Score your B ast June 17:OregonAdapivt e Sports will host an Beat thePro Flight A(0-22 handicaps)—1,SandyCamer- adaptivegolf clinicfor peoplewith disabilities atAwNet ScoreBetterthan79 —BradChambers, brey Glen Golf Clubin Bend.Clinic will betaught by TomDunderdale, Gen e Powell, ChipCleveland,Skip on, 30. 2,CarolAnnStill, 35.3, MaryAnnDoyle, 37. Flight 8 (23-29) —1, DebbieCooper, 28.5. 2, AwbreyGlengolf professionals.Clinic is scheduled Marlatt,RogerBjorvik, Sid Smith, JimRodgers, Eric Kelly Harper, 29. 3, Judy G a l o way and Judy D av i d f rom 4 : 3 0 p .m.to6:30p.m.andisopentoanyoneage Knapp, MarkGarcia,Jay Bennett,Wade Hampton, SOIl, 32. 6or olderwithaphysical orcognitive disability who Bob Roach, MacRyder, DougBender, Roger WiliamFlight C (38andup) — 1, ArleneLipscomb, wants totrygolf. Costis freeandis partof amonthly son, EdChernoff,BobThye, DonThornburg, Ron series ofclinics throughthe summer. Volunteersalso Tokuyama,JimKeller, John Collins, Bill Holm,Ryan 32.5. 2,CherrySpurlock, 33.3 (tie), BarbSchreiber, 34; PatPorter,34;Carolyn Houghton, 34. needed.For moreinformation or to register: contact Nopp,Bill DeGree,Jeff Pufinburger, GregVernon, Birdies — SandyCameron, Nos.13,18; Cherry Lucyat 541-306-4774orlucycboregonadaptivespods. MikeBinns,BobCaine,BrianMikkelborg, RonEstes. Spurl ock,No.12;JudyDavidson,No.13;LindaWake- org. field, No.14. June16-18:Women-onlylessonsatLostTracks BLACK BUTTERANCH Chip-ins —LindaWakefield, Nos.11, 14; Barb Golf Club inBendofferedbythe Bend Park& RecreCentralOregonSeniorWomen'sGolf AssociSchreiber,No.3;Barb Wascher, No.4. ationDistrict.Sessionsare6 p.m.to 7:30p.m.and are ation, June9 LOs —20-24handicap: LindaWakefield. 25-31: taught byPGAprofessional BobGarza. Eachsession at BigMeadow KimLoveday.32-34:CarolynHoughton.35andhigh- includes on-courseinstruction anda maximumstuStrokePlay er: BarbSchreiber. dentffeacher ratio of 8-to-1. Equipment wil beprovidFlight A —Gross:1, ShanWattenburger, 82. KPs — KimLoveday, No.13. ed forthosestudents withouttheir own.Cost is $55for 2 (tie), MelindaBailey, 90;Elly Cashel,90. 4, Sue Men'sClub,Juna12 residentsoftheBendPark& Recreation District, $74 Rogers, 94.Net:1, JanSandburg, 71. 2 (tie), Mona Btableford for others.Toregister, call 541-389-7275or visitwww. Benetti, 73;BettyCarlsmith,73;JanetKing, 73;Sally 1, Paullgotz/Rod Co op er/Ji m Fl a herl y /Jack John bendparksandrec.org. Martin,73;MarieOlds, 73. June21:CentralOregonGolf DemoDayat ProngFlight B —Gross:1, PatMurril, 93. 2, Sally son (189) 2,Ja yYake/KipGerke/JohnHodecker/AllenHare horn Clunear b Bend.Theevent wil featureequipment Batchelder,98.3, Virginia Knowles, 99.4, Beattie Staandapparelfromsomeof thetopmanufacturers ingolf beck,103.Net:1, KarenPeterson,73. 2(tie), Linda (188) 3 , Dave K i n g / R i c h a r d T h u r s t o n / J i m G o a d / B o b s uch as Ca laway,Cleveland,Nike, Ping,TaylorMade, Stump, 74;Wilie Wiliams,74.4(tie), CarolHallock, Babcock(183) Titleist, adidas,FootJoy,Linksoul andPuma.The 79 Linda Thurlow, 79;BarbWeybright, 79. KPs —PaulKlotz, No.3; DaveKing, No.13;Jim eventwill alsoofferactivities fortheentire family. Cost Flight C — Gross:1, Wendy Micklus, 95. 2, is freeandopento thepublic. Formoreinformation; Jacki eYake,98.3,BonnieGaston,100.4,Teddie Goad,No.16. 541-693-5365 orvisit www.pronghornclub.com. Crippen,103.Net:1, SharWanichek, 70.2, Nan cy MEADOW LAKES July 11:OregonAdaptiveSports will host an Dolby7, 1.3,NancyCotton,73.4,NancyHunt,74. Sunday Skins, June8 adaptivegolf clinicfor peoplewith disabilities at AwFlight D —Gross:1, CarolynHoughton, 100. GrossPlay breyGlenGolf Clubin Bend.Clinic wil betaught by 2, Deanna Cooper,105. 3, DianeStorlie,111. 4,Judy Gross: 1, Jeff St o rm, 71. 2, Les Br a y n, 76. 3, Ji m Awbrey Glengolf professionals.Clinic is scheduled Rowan,113. Net: 1, DarleneRoss, 66. 2, Janice 80.Neh1, DeweySpringer,69. 2 (ffe), from4;30p.m,to6;30p.m.andisopentoanyoneage Vander waff ,72.3,CarolAnnThurston,77.4,Karan Montgomery, DaveBarnhouse,70; DennisWilings, 70;VicMartin, 6or olderwithaphysical orcognitive disability who Andrews, 80. 70. wants totrygolf. Costis freeandis partof amonthly Skins — Gro ss: Jeff St o rm, 7 ,12,17; TomHa tch, series ofclinics throughthe summer. Volunteers also CROOKED RIVERRANCH Men's GolfClub,Juna18 Nos. 2,4; RonMeredith, No.5; LesBryan,No.15. needed.For moreinformation or to register: contact Net:1, TomHatch, Nos.2, 4; RonMeredith, No.5; Lucyat541-306-4774orlucyeoregonadaptivesports. StrokePlay A Flight (0-16handicaps)— Gross:1, Bob DennisWigings,No.6;Vic Martin, No.13; LesBryan, org. July 13-17:NikeJuneGolf Campat Eagle Crest Holloway,75.2, MontyModreff, 77. 3, Chris Ferrara, No.15. KPs —RonMeredith, No.4; Jeff Storm,No.8; Resort inRedmond. Camperswil learneveryfacet of 78. 4, Bob Jones, 80.Net: 1 (tie), DennisGlender, the game.Theovernight campincludes golfinstruc63; RogerFerguson,63; RonF>tzpatrick, 63.4, Ron DaveBarnhouse,No.13; MikeClose,No.17. Men's Association,June11 tion, courseplay, meals, housingandeveningactiviGarzini,65. Best Ball ties. Theextendeddaycamp optionfrom8:30 a.m.-9 B FlightI17 andhigher) —Gross: 1, Deane Gross:1, ClaySmith/RobDudley, 35. 2, Zach p.m, andincludeseverythingexcept breakfastand Cooper,76.2, Phil Piazza,82. 3, JimManser, 85. 4, Shinkle, 36. Net:1, HankSimmons/ lodgi ng.Thedaycamprunsfrom 9a.m.-5p.m.and Mike Kimbe rlIn, 88.Net:1, JimLese t r,63. 2,Joe Lampert/Jake eSimmons32;Fred Bushong/GeorgeLienkae- includesall golf instruction,lunch,andcourse play. Griffin, 66;3(tie), TedCarlin, 67; RomanoRomani, 67. Jordi mper; Patrick Andrade / D e we y Spri n ger, 32. 4 (ffe), All camp options arefor junior golfers of all ability Men vs.Ladies,June10 JoelWhite/JohnnieJones,33;Cody Jessee/Steve levels, ages10to 18. Costis $1,145for overnight TeamMatchPlay Jessee,33. campers ,$945forextendeddaycamps,and$675for Ladiesdef. Men,35.5-27.5. KPs — AFlight: RonMeredith, No.4;JohnCleve- daycam pers. Formoreinformation orto register: visit l a nd, No. 8. 8 Fl i g ht Fred Bush ong, No, 4; Jordi e w ww.ussportsca m ps.com. DESERT PEAKS Simmons, No.8. July 28 and27:Short-gameclinic offeredby Wednesday Ladies Club,June4 Central OregonCommunity Collegeat Juniper Golf OddHoles QUAILRUN Course in Redmond.Two-dayclass istaught byJuni1, JuanitaHaw kins, 36.2, MargaretSturza,38.5. Men's Club, June11 per directorofinstruction StuartAllisonandbegins at 3, Sara Gephart, 39. Two NetBestBalls 1p.m.eachday. Cost is $79.Formoreinformation or KP —TeresaLindgren 1, Josh Day/DavidHam ilton/Jim Myers/Richard to register:www.cocc.edu/continuinged,call 541-383Wednesday TwilightLeague,June4 Johnson,124. 2, DonBanducci/Phil Murray/Doug 7270 or email proestuartaffisongolf.com. StrokePlay Anderson/bl i nd draw,125. Aug. 16:OregonAdaptive Sports will host an Gross: 1(tie), ChrisFerrara,37; Brian Ringering, KP —DaveRoyer, No.10. adaptivegolf clinicfor peoplewith disabilities atAw37. 3(tie),JohnathanSharp, 39;Tyler Hague,39. Nat: Women'sClub,June12 brey Glen Golf Clubin Bend.Clinic will betaught by 1 (tie), GregEdeleman, 33;DonKraus, 33. 3 (tie), StrokePlay AwbreyGlengolf professionals.Clinic is scheduled Steve Thill, 34;JonathanBurcheff,34. Flight A — Gr o ss:1, Sharon Mu r ray103. Net: f rom 4 : 3 0 p .m.to6:30p.m.andisopentoanyoneage KPs — 7handicaporless:TaylorLark.8orhigh1, PennyScott 73. 2(tie), DonnaBrown, 78; Linda 6or olderwithaphysical orcognitive disability who er: Shane Henning. wants totrygolf. Costis freeandis partof amonthly LOs — 7 handicaporless:TylerHague.8 orhigh- Bennett,78. Flight 8 —Gross:1,VivianTaylor,104. Net:1 series ofclinics throughthe summer. Volunteersalso er: Shane Henntng. needed.For moreinformation or to register: contact Team Btan dings — Brunoe Logging,21-35. (tie), Brenda Rollandi, 75;LindaDyer,75. LD —Flight A: LindaMorrow. Flight 8: Vivian Lucyat 541-306-4774orlucycboregonadaptivespods. GoodOld Boys,19-45. Geno's Italian Grill, 18-46. Taylor. org. TheGood,Bad8 Ugly,37-27. TryTwoFarms,35-29. OregonEmbroidery, 28-28.Keith Manufacturing, 47BUNRIVER RESORT TOURNAM ENTS 17. SchmidtHouse,40-16.DuffThis, 39-25. Earnest CentralOregonSeniorWomen's Golf AssociJune 16:Central OregonJuniorGolf Association Electric, 41-15.TinCup,27-19. ation, Juna11 tournament at BlackBute Ranch'sBigMeadowcourse. Thursday Men'sClub, June6 at Meadows TeetimesTBD.Formoreinformation, call CO JGApresNet StrokePlay Stroke Play i d ent Nei l Pe dersenat541-480-6288,email cojgagolfro 1, Bruce Stecher, 70. 2, JoeStanfield, 72. 3(tie), Flight A — Gross:1, ShanWattenburger, 82.2, hotmail.com,orvisit www.cojga.com. Kurt Ocker, 75;KenSouthwick, 75. MelindaBailey,85. 3, JanSandburg, 89. 4 (tie), Elly June19:Chip-in for Children100-HoleGolf MarKP —JoeStanfield. Cashel ,92;JanetKnowlton,92;SueAdams,92.Net: athon atTetherowGolf Clubin Bend.Event begins at LD —JoeStanfield. 1 (tie), Sue R og ers, 68; Ph yl l i s Pen gel l y , 68. 3, Jan e t 7:30 a.m.,andobject is to finishasmanygolf holesas FridayNightCouples, June6 King,70.4, DeniseWaddell, 71. possible,upto100. Toparticipate asatwo-personteam Chapman Flight 8 —Gross:1, Carol AnnHaffock,94. 2, golferswil needto raiseat least$1,500and golf 100 1, Carl &TeresaLindgren,29.7. 2, CurtOlson & MarieOlds,96. 3(tie), PatriciaVavrinek,98;Molly holes.Individualswhoraise $1,250can play72holes, MargaretSturza,33.1. 3,Dick &Patly Pliska,33.2. Mount, 98.Net:1, KarenPeterson, 70.2, KathyMad- or 54 holesfor $1,000.Entryfeeincludesgolf, cart, Sunday GroupPlay, June8 rigal, 72. 3,MoeBleyer, 73.4, JoanSpringer-Wellprizes,breakfast, lunch,snacksandthree-coursedinner StrokePlay for two.Proceedsfromtheevent benefit Central Oregon Gross:1,Lowell Patterson,71. 2,Chuck Schmidt, man,74. Flight C —Gross:1, WendyMicklus, 93. 2, Rae youthprogram sandchildren's charities includingFam73. 3 (tie),SpudMiler, 75;DennyStory, 75.Net:1 (tie), AlDupont, 68; DonKraus, 68; JoeStanfield, 68. Schlappi,97.3, AndiNorthcote, 98.4, Paula Reents, ily AccessNetwork, Grandma's House, Healthy Begin101.Net:1,JackieYake,66.2(tie),DianaNorem,69; ningsandthe Bend-LaPineEducationFoundation. For KP — SpudMiler. PatriciaMclain,69. 4,LaelCooksley,72. more information onsponsorship opportunities, visit LO — MikeGardner. Flight O — Gross:1, SharWanichek, 99.2, www.bend golfmarathon.com. Judy Row a n, 109. 3 (ti e ), Betl y Murphy, 110; Di a ne June 19: Gol f ers for Scholarsgolf tourname nt at EAGLE CRESTRESORT Storlie,110.Net:1(ffe),DarleneRoss,70; Carol Ann EagleCrestResort Course in Redmond. Four-person LadiesClub,June10 Thurston,70.3, JaniceVanderwall, 76.4(tie), Norma scramble begins with 8:30a.m.shotgun. Costis $75 at RasorlCourse McPherren,78; Chris Sappington, 78;Gen Clements, per personandincludescart, rangeballs andbarbecue Net BestNine 78. lunch. Proceeds to benefit theRedmond High School First Flight —1, KareenQueen, 29.5. 2, KathScholarshipProgram.Toregister or for moreinforleen Mooberry, 31.5. 3, DianneRogers, 32. 4, Debbie mation:contactBeaLeachat 541-788-2274 orbeal© Hehn,33. Hole-In-One Report johnlscott.com. Second Flight —1, CorinneMcKean,31.2,JanJune 19:Couplesgolf outing atAspenLakesGolf ice Thenell,33. 3(tie), AliceGommoll, 33.5;Lesley June 7 CourseinSisters. Nine-holescramblebegins at4 p.m. Hummel33.5. , JUNIPER Cost is $90percoupleandincludesa three-course Third Flight —1, NancyDolby, 29.5. 2, Dawn JonasNorkunas, pitchingwedge Duby,30.5.3, SandraMartin, 33.4 ttie), Lael Cooks- No. 13......................137yards......... pitching wedge dinner atAspenLakes' Brand33 restaurant. Formore information orto register: 541-549-4653or visit www. ley, 34;LindaKelly, 34;KathyTrench, 34. aspenlake s.com. FourthFlight —1, DianeConcannon, 27.5. 2, June 8 June19-20:The2014OregonSeniorGamesGolf SusanOsborn, 30.5. 3, Patricia Perkins,34.4, Bette BENDGOLFANO COUNTRY CLUB Chappron, 34.5. Terry Pislole,Bend Men's MatchPlayFinals,June11 No. 11.......................80yards.................. gapwedge at ResorlCourse MatchPlay June 11 Flight1 — TimSwopedef. MarkScott,21 holes. BLACKBUTTE RANCH BIG MEADOW Flight 2 — JimTrenchdef. RaySchadt,1up. Jim Hodge,Kellogg, Idaho Flight 3 — Jim Hawkesdef. HelmutBloo, 2&1. No. 8........................171yards........................ 4-iron vyc'e c 3n Fcebc'>J Flight 4 — TomJoycedef.BruceBrandlund,1up. Flight 5 —SteveGould def. AngeloRadatti, 4 70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Calendar &2. Bend,OR 97702• 541-322-7337 Flight 6 —GaryJacksondef. BobHocker, 20 The Bulletin welcomescontributions to complementshomeinteriors.com
groupe dbyage,genderandhandicapinbothnetand grosscompetitions. Grossscoreswil determineeligibility fortheNational Senior Games. Cost is $140and includescart andrangebags. For more information or to register:visit oregon.fusesport.com/registration/166 oremaiorego l nseniorgames@visitbend.com. June 19-21:FourthAnnual Best ofBend Best Ball at Crosswa ter Clubin Sunriver andBend's Pronghorn ClubandTetherowGolf Club. Tournamentis anamateur two-manbest ball withgrossandnet divisions forboth menandwomen. Thefirst roundstarts with a1 p.m. shotgunstartat Pronghorn's Nicklauscourse,followed by1 p.m.startatTetherowanda1 p.m. startat Crosswater.Costis $695per golfer or$1,390per team.Price includesthreeroundsof golf, cocktail reception,lunch, and an awardsdinner. Formore information visit www. bestofbendb estbag.comor contact tournament coordinatorSteinSwensonat 541-318-5155orsswenson© wychick.com. June 28-22:The61stMen's Mirror PondAmateur InvitationalCent , ralOregon'slongest-running golf tourname nt, at BendGolf andCountry Clubattracts top amateurmalegolfersfromOregonand beyond for 36 holes of individualstroke-playcompetition over two days.Apractice roundis scheduledfor June20, followed bytournament playonboth SaturdayandSunday.Nonmemberentry feeis$225andincludespractice round, teeprize,hostedtournament dinner, 36-hole stroke-plaev y ent andadditional contestsandprizes. All maleplayerswith ahandicap of 27or beter arewelcome.Fieldlimitedto140players. Players canregister in three divisions:open(age18andolder), senior (age 50 andolder)andsuper senior (age65and older). To register,calltheBendG&CCgolfshopat541-382-2878 or emaiben l dgolfshopfbbendgolfclub.com.Entry forms also availableonlineat www.bendgolfclub.com (cgck the "Tourna ments" tab). June 21:The20th annualThreeSisters Open Women'G solfTournament at Widgi CreekGolf Clubin Bend.Theteamscramble beginswithan8a.m.shotgun start andis forwomengolfers ofagabilties. Proceeds will benefitQuotaInternational of Central Oregonand the Bend Women'sScholarship Fund. Cost is $100per playerandincludesgolf, cart, continentalbreakfast, lunch,teegift andprizes. Spaceis limited andentries will beacceptedon afirst-comebasis. Formore information or toregister:GayleNajera, 541-408-0940or gnajera@ bendbroadband.com, or visit www.quotaofcentraloregon .org. June 21:Fifth annualFather's HouseGolf Tournament atAspenLakesGolf Coursein Sisters.Scramble tournament begins with a1p.m. shotgun. Costis $80 and includesrangeballs, cart, prizes,andhamburgers and hotdogsafter thetournament. Deadline to register is June13.Formoreinformation or to register: 541389-75 00,541-382-5607oremailray@ rbwassoc.com. June 21:Kids Clubof JeffersonCounty four-person golscram f bleatDesert PeaksGolf ClubinMadras. Tournam ent begins with 8 a.m.shotgun.Cost is $100 per golferandincludesgolf cart,greenfeesand lunch. Longdriye, closestto thepin, puttingcontest andraffle prizeswil beincluded.All proceedsgoto theKidsClub of Jefferson County. Formoreinformationor to register: contactJoeMcHaney at 541-647-3710 oremail kidsclub©509j.net. June22:TheRexUnderwoodMemorialGolf Tournamentat Quail RunGolf Clubin LaPine. Proceeds benefit theGilchrist BoosterClubandGilchrist High Schoolstudentactivities, sports andclubs. For more information: contactLynneUnderwood-Murray at541390-4221oratlynnectraveldbaol.comor Gilchrist High
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June 22:BendFCTimbersSoccerGolfTournament at Tetherow Golf ClubinBendisafour personscramble. Tournam ent begins with a8:30 a.m.shotgun. Costis $600perfoursomeandincludesgreenfees, cart, dinner andawards.Event, contestandhole sponsorshipsavailable.Proceedsbenefit theBendFCTimbersfinancial aid fund and fielddeyelopment fund. Formoreinformation or to register:visit www.bendfctimbers.comor email at darby©bendfctimbers.com . June 22:Secondannual StormtheBack Nineat The OldBackNine. Two-personscramble teesoff with anoonshotgun.Costis $150per teamand includesa golf cart,lunch,beyerages, contests and teamawards. Theproceedsbenefit theThunderstruck LacrosseAssociationwhichassists fundingyouth sportsandSummit High lacrosse programs. Formoreinformation orto register:call DaveRasmussenat541-280-7847. June 23:CentralOregon Junior Golf Association tournamen t atMeadowLakes Golf CourseinPrinevige. TeetimesTBD. For moreinformation, call COJGApresidentNeilPedersenat541-480-6288,email cojgagolO hotmail.com,orvisit www.cojga.com. June 24:CentralOregonJunior Golf Association's loopertournament at Awbrey Glen Golf Club's LoopCoursein Bend. Event is for 6- to B-year-olds. Golf beginsat 4p.m. Cost is $15to registerfor three events,plusan$8per-eventfee. Formore information, call COJG Apresident Neil Pedersenat 541-480-6288, emailcojgagolf@hotmail.com, orvisit www.cojga.com. June 26:CentralOregonGolf Tour individual stroke play tournam ent at BlackBute Ranch'sGlaze Meadow. TheCentral OregonGolfTour is acompetitive golfseries held atgolfcoursesthroughoutCentral Oregon. Gross and netcompetitions opento agamateur golfers of all abilities.Prizepoolawardedweekly, andmembership not required.Formore information orto register;541633-7652,541-350-7605, orwww.centraloregongolftour.com. June 26: TheCentralOregonBuilders Association is hostingtwogolf tournaments in oneday at River's EdgeGolf Coursein Bend.Four-personshambleteesoff with an8a.m,shotgunstart. Cost is $125per personor $450perteamto playin onetournament. Fe e includes lunch,teeandraffleprizes. Proceedsto benefit COBA. For moreinformationorto register, call AndyHighat 541-389-1058 oremail himat andyh©coba.org. June 27: FourthAnnual CentralOregonTeenChallenge at Widgi CreekGolf Club.Four-personscramble tournamen t beginswitha11:30a.m,shotgunstart. Cost is $125perpersonand includes gre
July13: TheAudreyDitmoreMemorialGolf Tournamentisan18-holefour-personscrambleat DesertPeaks Golf Club in Madras.Cost is$100per teamandincludes greenfees,KPand longdrives, aswell asabarbecue lunch.Formoreinformation orto register, call Desert Peaksat541-475-6368,visit www.desertpeaksgolf.com, or emaide l sertpeaksgolf©gmail.com. July 14:CentralOregonJunior Golf Association tournament at TetherowGolf Clubin Bend.Tee times TBD.Formoreinformation, call COJGApresident Neil Pedersen at 541-480-6288,email cojgagolfOrhotmail. com, or visit www.cojga.com.
Professional U.B. Open Saturday At PiaehurstResortandCountry Club, No. 2 Course Pinahursl,N.C. Purse:TBA($8 million in2813) yardage:7,662; Par:70 Third Round (a-amataur) 65-65-72—202 MartinKaym er 70-70-67—207 RickieFowler 72-68-67—207 Erik Compton 69-69-70—208 HenrikStenson 69-69-70—208 DustinJohnson 69-68-72—209 BrandtSnedeker 69-70-71—210 Matt Kuchar BrooksKoepka 70-68-72—210 68-69-73—210 KevinNa 72-69-70—211 Justin Rose JordanSpieth 69-70-72—211 Chris Kirk 71-68-72—211 BrendonDeJonge 68-70-73—211 Victor Dubuisson 70-72-70—212 Francesco Molinari 69-71-72—212 GarthMulroy 71-72-70—213 Jimmy Walker 70-72-71—213 JasonDay 73-68-72—213 MarcelSiem 70-71-72—213 J.B. Holmes 70-71-72—213 AdamScott
RoryMcllroy Shiv Kapur LucasBjerregaard AaronBaddeley SteveStricker HidekiMatsuyam a lan Poulter KeeganBradley RyanMoore RetiefGoosen Bill Haas Phil Mickelson BrendonTodd SergioGarcia CodyGribble ErnieEls Billy Horschel WebbSimpson PatrickReed Jim Furyk NicholasLindheim ZachJohnson KennyPerry GraemeMcDowell Zac Blair StewartCink ScottLangley GaryWoodland Seung-YulNoh PaulCasey Bo VanPelt HarrisEnglish DannyWilett Billy Hurleyffl JustinLeonard ClaytonRask AlexCejka DanielBerger FranQuinn a-Matthew Filzpatrick LouisOosthuizen KevinStadler BooWeekley KevinTway RusselHenl l ey ToruTaniguchi
73-67-73—213 71-68-74—213 73-70-71—214 70-72-72—214 70-71-73—214 70-71-73—214 69-71-74—214 70-70-74—214 69-69-76—214 76-68-71—215 73-71-71—215 72-72-71—215 70-73-72—215 69-67-79—215 73-71-72—216 72-72-72—216 74-70-72—216 75-68-73—216 71-72-73—216 71-72-73—216 73-70-73—216 72-73-72—217 71-74-72—217 74-69-74—217 68-74-75—217 71-74-73—218 72-72-74—218 72-71-75—218 72-71-75—218 70-72-76—218 70-75-74—219 72-72-75—219 69-75-75—219 70-71-78—219 71-74-75—220 75-70-75—220 73-71-77—221 73-71-77—221 72-71-78—221 68-74-79—221 71-73-78—222 71-73-78—222 77-68-78—223 71-73-80—224 72-72-81—225 70-74-82—226 72-73-88—233
GOLF BRIEFS
— Bulletin staff report
N QRTHWEsT CROSSING
Aadrard-84/inning
neighborhood on Bend's 44/eStSide. 716 SW11111 S1. Redmond 541.923.4732
www.northwestcrossing.com
GENERATIONAL FAMILY MEMBERSHIPS Our Generational Family Memberships include privileges for not only you and your spouse, but for your parents, your children, your c h i l dr en's spouses and even your grandchildren as well.
62000 Broken Top Dr.
GOLF COURSK
In Redmond Par 3 Course 4 Driving Range 541-923-3426
1401 NE Maple
•
To request further information regarding Generational Afembership opportunities or other membership options, p/ease contact General Afairager, Brad Plyrick vxt bmyrick@brokentop.com
541-480-3566.
at541-433-2295.
mplements
•
MeadowLakesproshopat 541-447-7113or visit www. rimrocktrailsats.org. July 12-13:59th AnnualPrinevile Invitational Pro-Amat PrinevigeGolf Club. The36-hole individual andteamcompetition begins at 7:30a.m, eachday. Field includes 24professionals and96amateurs. Friday practiceroundand evening horse raceforprofessionals alsoavailable. Admission is freeand spectators are welcome.Formoreinformation, contact Prinevile GCat
Tournam entat LostTracksGolf ClubandWidgi Creek Golf Clubin Bend. Stroke-play tournament is forgolfers age 50andolderandis playedover 36holes.Play beginswith 9a.m,shotgunboth days. Fieldwil be
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B9.0 TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, Inc. ©2014
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TODAY
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TONIGHT
HIGH 58' I f '
ALMANAC TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 72 42'
77
THURSDAY
43. Clouds andsun, at-storm in the afternoon
Mainly clear and chilly
92' in 1 9 17 24'in 1902
EAST: Breezyand cooler with sunshine Seasid and patchy clouds 59/53 today. Partly cloudy Cannon and chilly tonight. 58/52
Sunny much of the time and warmer
/5
o
Yesterday
city
Today Tuesday
Hi/Lu/Prac. HiRo/W Hi/Lu/W 92/74/0.00 92/73/pc 91/72/pc 81/49/0.00 84/66/I 88/71/t 77/49/0.00 84/62/pc 86/63/pc 89/56/0.00 92/62/s 89/63/s 62/51/Tr 61/50/ah 61/51/sh
lington 72/50
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UV INDEX TODAY
POLLEN COUNT
NATIONAL WEATHER
WATER REPORT
Wickiup 138746 Crescent Lake 7 6 1 62 88% Ochoco Reservoir 31319 71% Prinevige 136133 92% River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t .lsec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 438 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 910 Deschutes R.below Bend 122 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 2060 Little Deschutes near LaPine 117 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 58 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 6 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 186 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 92 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 0
SKI REPORT In inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday
Ski resort Mt. Bachelor
New snow Base 0
61- 1 30
Mt. HoodMeadows
0
96-1 1 0
Timberline Lodge
0
10 0 -100
Source: onThaSnuw.cum
48 contiguousstates) National high: 110 at Death Valley,CA National low: 24 at Stanley, ID Precipitation: 2.90" at Red Wing,MN
to
Amsterdam Athens
64/54/0.00 63/53/c unatnn 86/64/0.01 87/69/s sft1 Mi a aa. • 68/45 alo 2 Auckland 60/46/0.02 62/56/sh 7 st/8 York Baghdad 106/79/0.00 109/79/s Rapi ni 4/89 sal itv Bangkok 91/84/0.11 91/79/t SS/72 Cm agn 7 2 uadelphla eaijing 93no/0.10 88/70/t ni mb enne 8 0 Tno Beirut 81n2/0.00 81/69/s Oma 'L nulnBerlin 71/48/0.00 71/54/pc Ington Sa Franci 9 oenve nuia ille Laa V aa 91 Bogota 66/50/0.01 65/48/c 6 1 88/55 Kan na City 92fta 94/73 Budapest 73/52/0.00 77/53/pc 90/72 Buenos Ai r es 59/45/0.00 60/41/s • »»0 Charln Loa An les Cabu San Lucas gon4/o'.oo 93/75/s 92/7 1/60 Cairn 95/73/0.00 102/73/s phoen x klahoma C • Li Ancirorag Albuque ue 9 • Atl ta Calgary 57/46/0.02 58/43/t • 108/8 /8 9 n 0 92/62 Cancun 88n9/0.05 90/78/t + uir ingha 7 2 • oalla Juneau El Paa Dublin 66/48/0.00 66/52/pc 9 0 91/TS 66/49 5/T5 Edinburgh 62/55/0.04 66/53/pc o d Geneva 72/59/0.00 75/51/pc , ~ g d , d) d o • rlando Harare 73/42/0.00 76/46/s Orlaana 2/75 9 Hong Kong 94/84/0.11 93/84/pc Honolulu 89/74 Chihuahua Istanbul 82/70/0.00 82/68/s 88/T2 elÃit Jerusalem 81/62/0.00 85/67/s Monter ey 96/TS Johannesburg 69/46/0.00 63/39/s . NN ) i N X N~ ) N X N X N i N Lima 72/64/0.00 72/62/pc Lisbon 93/70/0.00 90/66/s Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 65/57/0.00 64/52/c T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 86/55/0.00 81/57/s Manila 88/77/0.00 92/79/t Inn
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BASEBALL: COLLEGE WORLD SERIES
Yesterday Today Tuesday
City
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vagas Lexington Lincoln
Hi/Lu/Prac. Hi/Lu/W HiRo/W 62/47/Tr 66/49/s 57/46/r 80/64/0.47 90ft2/pc 90/73/s 82/52/0.00 86/67/I
91/73/t 83/72/pc 91/74/t
93/70/pc 65/47/I 92/71/pc 78/57/I 66/47/I 78/64/pc 81/66/pc 84/68/t
83/63/pc 78/53/c gtnt/I 92/68/t 92/70/pc 80/48/pc gtn4/I 92/69/pc
87nz/I
86/54/pc 92/72/pc 94/71/t 93/72/t 92/72/t 82/59/pc 91/78/pc 91/75/pc
gon2/I
89/53/pc 91/74/pc 88/73/t 79/60/I
97nats
75/54/sh 81/61/I 74/50/s 88/73/t 86/69/I 93/69/I 89/69/pc 86/64/pc 58/44/t 86/73/pc 93/75/pc 93/70/pc
88/73/t
97ns/o.oo 94n3/s 91/73/s
87/60/0.00 90/68/I 83/62/0.27 92f/1/t Litiia Rock ssnuo.oo 91n2/pc Lus Angeles 74/60/0.00 71/60/pc Louisville 91/63/0.00 92/73/t Madison, Wl 84/62/Tr 85/69/pc Memphis 90/69/0.00 92n4/pc Miami 89/75/0.18 89n6/pc Milwaukee 83/56/Tr 78/64/pc Minneapolis 76/57/1.05 85f/1/t Nashville 92/63/0.00 92no/pc New Orleans 87/73/0.01 89n4/t New YorkCity 80/59/0.00 84/69/s Newark, NJ 82/59/0.00 84/68/s Norfolk, VA 81/65/0.00 88n1/s OklahomaCity 88/74/0.20 92n3/pc Omaha 82/64/0.20 90/71/t Orlando 92/70/0.07 92f/2/t Palm Springs 103/71/0.00 97nots Paoria 86/64/0.00 90n1/t Philadelphia 83/58/0.00 87/70/s Phoenix 101/75/0.00 103/81/s Pittsburgh 81/50/0.00 86/66/I Portland, ME 76/56/0.00 77/54/s Providence 80/57/0.00 82/59/s Raleigh 87/58/0.00 92/68/pc Rapid City 72/45/0.46 84/53/I Ranu 80/57/0.00 77/49/s Richmond 84/58/0.00 93/71/s Rochester, NY 71/50/0.02 85/64/t Sacramento 83/58/0.00 80/50/s St. Louis 88/67/Tr gon4/t Salt Lake City 81/53/Tr 79/52/s San Antonio 94ntto.oo 92ft6/pc san Diego 72/65/0.00 71/62/pc San Francisco 70/56/0.00 63/51/s San Jose 74/54/0.00 73/53/s santa re 85/41/0.00 87/53/s Savannah 92/71/Tr 90no/pc Seattle 65/52/0.01 62/51/sh Sioux Falls 78/60/3.01 85/68/I Spokane 64/48/Tr 63/45/s Springfield, Mo 81/66/0.62 89/70/pc
92/69/pc 96/74/pc 92/72/pc 72/59/pc 94/74/pc 89/74/t 92/75/pc 89/77/t 85/69/I 88/72/t 93/71/pc 89/73/t
87nztpc 9On1/pc 91/73/pc 91/72/s 94/73/pc 89/71/t 93/67/s 93/74/pc 90/71/pc 102/77/s 88/70/t 73/56/pc 81/64/pc 93/70/t 83/53/pc 73/47/pc
95nz/pc 84/68/pc 84/55/pc
95n5/pc 66/48/I
gtno/I
69/61/pc 68/53/pc 78/54/pc 85/53/s
gonon
67/52/pc 91/64/pc 66/48/pc 89/71/pc Tampa Sanznr gon4/t 90/73/t Tucson 102/71/Tr 102/76/s 100/75/a Tulsa 85/65/0.20 91ft4/pc gtn4/s W ashingt on,OC 84/60/0.00 91n2/s 94/74/pc Wichita 80/63/0.97 93n3/pc 93/72/s Yakima 75/52/0.00 71/46/pc 77/48/pc Yuma 102/76/0.00 103ft3/s 1OOnt/s
gon2/pc 92/71/pc 89/68/I
o
3/50
79/57
ani
Sunshine andpatchy clouds
Partly sunny
Abilene Akron Meac am Losti ne 51 • W co 61/38 E~terp~ise Albany PRECIPITATION dleton 55/3 he Daa Albuquerque • • 69/37 Tdlamo • • 66/ 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" CENTRAL:Sunshine andy• Anchorage Mc innvie • 67/61 1.35"in 1903 and patchy clouds JosePh Atlanta 89no/0.91 88/70/t Record • HeP Pner Grande • Gove nt • upi o • Condon 4 3 61 40 Atlantic City 79/59/0.00 80/67/s Cam Month to date (normal) Tra ce (0.41 Union ) today; breezy in the Lincoln o o Austin 93n5/0.00 92/74/pc 48/ Year to date (normal ) 4.03 (5.43 ) afternoon. Clearand 59/51 Sale Baltimore 83/51/0.01 89/67/a • pray Granitea Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 8 5" cold tonight. 63/ • 43 Billings 73/50/0.07 72/51/t 'Baker C Newpo 66/34 • 63/39 Birmingham 88/69/0.00 gonon SUN ANDMOON 47 59/47 • Mltch II 59/34 Bismarck 70/47/0.01 79/57/pc 0 a m 9 S e r a n R 6 d WEST: Partly 58/39 Today Tue. n OrV 8 I8 Boise 76/53/Tr 68/45/a 58/38 • John aU Sunrise 5:22 a.m. 5: 2 2 a.m. sunny andcool with a Yach 65/47 Boston 78/62/s 58/49 • Prineville Oay /35 tario Bridgeport, CT 80/58/0.00 Sunset 8:50 p.m. 8: 5 1 p.m. shower in spots today 80/57/0.00 79/64/s 62/36 • Pa lina 67/39 7 49 Buffalo 77/50/0.00 81/64/I Moonrise 11 : 37 p.m. none Becoming cloudywith Floren e • Eugene ' Be d Brothers Valea 60/48 Burlington, VT 73/57/0.01 82/61/a a shower tonight. Moonset 9 : 41 a.m. 10:53 a.m. Su iVera 58/33 70/45 Caribou, ME 65/55/Tr 73/50/s Nyssa • 57/ Ham on MOONPHASES C e Charleston, SC 93n2/0.00 89/70/pc • La pine 72/47 Grove Oakridge Charlotte 89/64/0.00 90/67/I Last New First Full • Burns Juntura OREGON EXTREMES 66/39 64/44 42 Chattanooga 91/66/0.00 90/68/I • Fort Rock Riley 61/34 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 60/32 Cheyenne 72/36/0.01 82/50/t 61/35 56/32 Chicago 84/60/0.00 87/70/pc High: 78' Bandon Ros eburg • Ch r i stmas alley Cincinnati 86/57/0.00 90/68/I J un 19 Jun 27 Ju l6 Jul 1 2 at Ontario Jordan V gey 62/48 Beaver Silver st/32 Frenchglen 68/48 Cleveland 83/49/0.00 84/67/I Low: 38' 62/37 Marsh Lake 63/36 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 77/43/0.00 86/54/s 57/31 at Meacham 61/32 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 81/66/0.08 91/71/c T he Planets Ris e Set • Paisley 61/ Columbia, SC 93n1/0.00 92/69/pc • 65/40 Mercury 5:59 a.m. 8: 5 4 p.m. Chitoquin 63/34 Columbus,GA 91/69/0.00 92/70/t 'et/34 Goid ach • 43 MedfO d Rorne Venus 3:36 a.m. 5 : 5 6 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 86/56/0.00 88/70/t ,71/45 59/ 68/41 Mars 2:34 p.m. 1 : 5 9 a.m. Klamath Concord, NH 77/50/0.00 83/55/s Fields• • Ashl nd F a l l s Jupiter 7:32 a.m. 1 0:41 p.m. • Lakeview Mcoermi Corpus Christi 95ns/o'.oo 92/78/s Bro ings 67/41 69/4 62/33 Saturn 5:28 p.m. 3: 3 6 a.m. 62/4 64/32 66/41 Dallas 94na/o'.oo 91/75/pc Dayton 86/54/0.00 88/70/t Uranus 2:01 a.m. 2: 5 1 p.m. Denver 78/42/0.00 88/55/s Yesterday Today TUesday Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday oas Moines 83no/Tr 88/72/t city H i/Lu/Prac. Hi/Lu/W Hi/Lo/W C i t y Hi/Ln/Prac. Hi/Lu/W Hi/Lu/W city Hi/Lo/Prac. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lu/W Detroit 79/55/0.00 86/67/I 64/53/0.02 61/52/sh62/48/pc La Grande 70/48/0.00 61/40/a 64/41/t Portland 63/5 4/0.2263/52/pc67/52/ pc 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Aaturia Duluth 70/47/0.83 77/57/I Baker City 64/38/0.00 59/34/a 61/36/t La Pine 59/39/0.00 57/33/a 62/36/t Prinavilla 62/ 4 0/0.0062/36/s 62/40/t El Paso 99n6/0.00 95n5/s 5 NI~ B ~ S~ N 5 Brnnkings 67/50/0.00 62/47/pc 65/48/pc M a dfnrd 7 6/51 /0.00 71/45/pc 75/46/t Redmond 65/ 39/0.0062/33/s 68/34/t Fairbanks 75/49/0.00 74/49/sh The highertheAccuWaautar.rxrm IIVIndex number, eums 71/50/0.00 61/34/s 63/35/t N ew p ort 6 1/52 /Tr 5 9/ 4 7/c 5 9 /46/pc Roaeburg 70/ 5 5/0.0068/48/pc 74/50/ pc Fargo 73/59/1.20 80/62/t the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protecgon.0-2 Low, Eugene 70/45/0.00 64/45/pc 68/43/pc North Bend 64/52/0.00 62/48/pc 61/48/ pc Salem 67/52/0.00 63/48/pc 68/46 / p c Flagstaff 76/35/0.00 77/50/s 35 Moderate; 6-7High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlreme. Klamath Falls 71/44/0.00 62/33/a 66/34/t On t ario 78/53/0.00 73/49/a 73/48/t Sisters 59/43/0.00 61/35/s 66/35/t Grand Rapids 83/54/0.00 85/68/I Lakaview 73/45/0.00 64/32/s 63/31/t Pe n dleton 71/ 5 1/0.00 66/46/s 71/49/pc The Oalles 7 0 / 56/0.00 67/51/pc 72/51/pc Green say 78/55/0.03 83/64/pc Greensboro 85/60/0.00 90/68/I Weathar(W):a-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-clnudy, sh-shnwers, t-thundaratnrms, r-rain, af-snnwflurries, an-snnw i-ica, Tr-traca,Yesterdaydata asnf 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 81/51/0.00 88/66/t G rasses T r ees Wee d s Harffurd, CT 79/52/0.00 84/60/s • Hi g~h M od e rate A bs ent Helena 71/44/Tr 62/46/t Source: OregonAllargyAssociatas 541-683-1577 Honolulu 86/74/0.00 88nz/pc ~ g s ~ f o s ~ 2 08 ~ 30s ~ 40s ~ 50s ~ eos ~ 708 ~ ags ~ gos ~tggs ~ff Os Houston ~ fgs ~gs 93n4/0.00 92/75/s Huntsville 90/68/0.00 91/69/I NATIONAL Indianapulis 83/55/0.00 87/70/t As of 7 a.m.yesterday Ouab c sw43 Jackson, MS gono/o.oo 91/70/t • I hl nag 0 ~ Reservoir Acr e feet Ca p acity EXTREMES 71 3 i i c + +k Jacksonville 91no/0.00 89/69/pc C rane Prairie 466 8 8 84% YESTERDAY(for the <t alifax elamarck port 69'yo Y l48
Portland 64
41'
'Fvw
TRAVEL WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. Umatiaa Hood 72/50 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
ria
FRIDAY ' ' 75'
80' 43'
0
OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday 63 41'
WEDNESDAY
LOW 33'
Sunny to partly cloudy
I
TUESDAY
t
I
Mecca Mexico City
71/51/pc 9OnO/s 63/54/sh 107/79/s 86/80/r
106/80/0.00 110/83/s 80/57/0.05 76/54/I Montreal 73/57/0.00 75/61/s Moscow 63/46/0.02 64/48/pc Nairobi 75/59/0.00 82/57/s Nassau 88/79/0.03 88/77/pc New Delhi 107/86/0.00 105/89/I Osaka 86/65/0.00 80/63/pc Oslo 75/46/0.03 69/42/s Ottawa 73/50/0.00 79/58/I Paris 68/52/0.00 72/50/s Riu da Janeiro ssno/o.oo 79/70/a Rome 77/66/0.33 76/64/r Santiago 66/37/0.00 68/38/s Sau Paulo 68/64/0.00 76/60/pc Sappuru 66/57/0.07 67/59/ah Seoul 81/66/0.00 83/66/pc Shanghai 86/73/0.05 81/76/sh Singapore 90/81/0.02 89/80/I Stockholm 72/43/0.00 61/45/c Sydney 63/45/0.08 66/44/pc Taipei 88/81/0.12 88/79/t Tel Aviv 87/68/0.00 88n1/s Tokyo 82/68/0.00 82/68/pc Toronto 70/50/0.00 78/58/t Vancouver 63/54/0.03 64/51/pc Vienna 70/50/0.01 74/52/pc Warsaw 59/52/0.05 68/51/pc
ssnt/I
84/67/s 74/49/pc 66/48/c 76/54/c 57/39/pc 93/74/s 98/71/s 60/42/t
sgnrtt
67/52/pc 67/53/c 72/50/pc 73/45/s 93/84/I 83/72/pc 88/63/s 61/41/s 72/63/pc 83/62/s 68/51/c 84/61/s 90/80/I
113/86/s 74/54/I 79/63/c 65/44/sh 80/60/c 88/77/pc 105/90/I 79/64/pc 68/51/pc 81/60/c 67/55/pc 81/69/s 76/61/pc 71/41/s 73/60/I 69/59/sh 82/66/sh 80/69/r 88/79/t 60/48/c 67/43/s 91/80/r
9OnO/s 80/68/pc 81/67/I 67/52/pc 75/54/c 67/45/s
Stay Connected to Life with
PREMIUM HEARING AIDS at Factory Direct, Retail Outlet Prices
w4'
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Model Clearance Rebate:
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$399 Per Set Freedom SIE
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Nati Harnik/The Associated Presa
Virginia players swarm teammate Mike Papi, center with beard, after he hit a double in the ninth Inning
$399
against Missisippi that scored Thomas Woodruff to win Sunday's game 2-1.
$400 REBATE!
Late hit lifts VirginiaoverOleMiss The Associated Press OMAHA, Neb. — Mike Pa-
pi's RBI double into right-center with two out in the bottom
of the ninth inning gave Virginia a 2-1 victory over Mississippi in the College World Series on Sunday night. The Cavaliers' win came as Nathan Kirby and Artie Le-
and Ti m M e acham t h r ew one against Arizona State in
Oooo doe ot time of purchase. Rebate processed 30 doys after invoicing. Offers valid through June30, 207 4 or while supplies last.
attd struck out three itt six in-
nings. Jeremy Massie entered 1983. with a runner on base and Ole Miss' only hit against nOne out itt the SeVenth and, Kirby was Errol Robinson's thanks to Bousfield's spectacsingle leading off the third, ular catch, got out of the sevbut the senior left-hander enth unscathed. walked three and needed reGreenwood pitched a perlief help from Lewicki in the fect eighth but walked Ireighth. ving to start the bottom of
wicki combined for the first
The Cavaliers had convert-
One-hitter at the CWS itt 31
ed three singles and a walk
years. The Rebels elected to pitch
into a run in the fifth and then
•
m
• -
the ninth. Branden Coswell moved him over with a sacrifice. After D a niel P inero
hoped Kirby could take them struck out, Papi delivered his the rest of the way. game-winning hit to spark RBI leader even though first Ole Miss center fielder Aus- Virgittia's celebration. base was unoccupied. Aaron ton Bousfield kept Virginia Also on Sunday: Greenwood (3-2) ran the count from taking a three-rttn lead TCU 3, Texas Tech 2: OMAfull before Papi drilled the ball in the seventh when, with two HA, Neb. — Boomer White into the gap, allowing Nate Ir- runners on, he made an over- drove in the go-ahead run in Vittg tO SCOre frOm SeCOnd. the-shoulder catch of Derek a dramatic eighth inning, attd Virginia (50-14) plays TCU Fisher's fly to end the inning. TCU beat Big 12 rival Texas in a winners game on Tuesday That big defensive play put Tech. The Horned Frogs (48night. Ole Miss (46-20) meets the Rebels in position to tie it 16) fell behind in the top of Texas Tech in an elimination after Kirby, who had retired the eighth after starting pitchgame in the afternoon. 14 of the previous 15 batters, er Preston Morrison left the Lewicki (2-0) earned the walked Sikes Orvis and Col- game, butthey came back in win in relief after Kirby gave by Bortles to start the eighth. the bottom half against Tech up one hit and one run over Lewicki came on, the runners closer Jonny Drozd. TCU closs even innings. Ole M i ss moved over on a sacrifice and er Riley Ferrell (3-1) earned the
0.0*
•
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e
•
•
.
A •
' •
•
to Virginia's top hitter artd
c onverted tw o w a l k s a n d a groundout to tie it i n t h e
eighth. The one-hitter was the first since Alabama's Alan Dunn
then pinch-hitter Holt P er- win in relief of Preston MOTYidzock made it 1-1 with his RBI son, who allowed five singles groundout. artd StruCk out a Career-high Rebels starter Chris Ellis 10 in 7 /3 inningS. DroZd (7-1)
allowed six hits, walked four
took the loss.
w
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•
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
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Pets & Supplies
Pets 8 Supplies
Exercise Equipment
Sporting Goods - Misc.
Iiiledical Equipment
Fuel & Wood
Lost & Found
9 7a •
Boxers AKC & V alley Maine Coon kittens, 9 Power adjust hospital F oundsuckeiittit l t o o l s Nautilus NS 200 WHEN BUYING Bulldogs CKC puppies. wks, 1 female, 1 polybed, good cond. $150. on6/12 inmiddleof 1974 MAHERAJAH like new! Pulley $700-800.541-325-3376 dactyl male, $125 ea., c ul - d e - s a c onFa i r FIREWOOD... waterski, classic wood, 541-420-3277 system with extra 541-389-0322 woodDr . r aend.Call $125, 541-647-2314 To avoid fraud, 263 Chihuahua purebred, weights, $600! to identi f y , The Bulletin healthy playful puppies, Min Pin AKC p u p s . Will deliver! Wood stove, 16n x8" x8" Tools 541-388-6948 recommends pay$100 ea. 541-382-6905 Potty trained, shots, 541-388-2809 for camping/campers, chipped, b e a utiful. ment for Firewood $175. 541-410-4596 Muro screw gun, coil 308 205 Dachshund AKC mini pups $500.00 P ics avail only upon delivery Get your type, w it h 1 2 , 000 www.bendweenies.com 602-284-4110 Farm Equipment 255 Items for Free Pilates XP297 w/riser, and inspection. business screws, $500. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. All colors• 541-508-4558 Malibu chair, fluidity bar, & Machinery Computers 541-480-1353 POODLE,toys & minis, like new, 541-408-0846 4' x 4' x 8' Oak oval table with 4 also rescued older pup Power Washer (commatchinq chairs, free, Fuel tank, 300-gal dieT HE B U LLETIN r e - mercial) new in crate, • Receipts should a ROW I N G to adopt. 541-475-3889 245 you haul; 541-598-5170 include name, sel w/stand, filter, hose, quires computer ad- Honda 13 hp - 4000 phone, price and $500 541-480-1353 Golf Equipment vertisers with multiple psi, 4 gpm. Retails Queensiand Heelers with an ad in You Haul - 40' triple ad schedules or those $1849, Sell $ 1 349. kind of wood Standard & Mini, $150 325 axle 5 t h wh e e l. purchased. The Bulletin's CHECKyOUR AD selling multiple sys- Steve 541-771-7007. 8 up. 541-280-1537 Free for Salvage. • Firewood ads e Hay, Grain & Feed "Call A Service Dachshund mini chocotems/ software, to diswww.rightwayranch.wor 541-977-1976 or late dapple male, $375, close the name of the Wildland Fi r efighting MUST include dpress.com Professional" 541-419-8043 species & cost per 1st Qualilty mixed grass avail 6/21. Pics avail. business or the term equip., new & used, cord to better serve Directory hay, no rain, barn stored, 541-41 6-2530 Siamese kittens, raised "dealer" in their ads. hose, nozzles, wyes, 206 in home. Gorgeous! our customers. $250/ton. Private party advertis- reducers, bladder bags. Donate deposit bottles/ Only $25. 541-977-7019 Found engraved wedCall 541-549-3831 Pets & Supplies on the first day it runs ers are defined as Steve 541-771-7007. Patterson Ranch, Sisters cans to local all vol., ding ring at City Park The Bulletin who sell one sure it is cor- those 265 Sereing Centra/Oregonrlnre tglte non-profit rescue, for Three 7 mo. old pups, to make in John Day, OR. ID computer. eSpellcheck e and 341 lots of snow white rect. The Bulletin recomferal cat spay/neuter. Building Materials to claim, hi g hlights, human errors do ocmends extra caution 260 Horses & Equipment Cans for Cats trailer w/black 541-233-8961 Aii year Dependable when purc h as- at Jakes Dlner, Hwy great family dogs, cur. If this happens to 2 Vinyl windows, trap- Firewood: Seasoned; Misc. Items parents on site. $150 your ad, please conFound GT Dirt Jumper ing products or ser20 E & Bend Petco e zoid, 7'x6'6", 3 0 ' , Lodgepole, split, del, tact us ASAP so that Aussie gas BBQ pit, both earlier this spring, vices from out of the near Applebee's, do- ea. 541-447-1323 fo r $300. B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95bike, call to I.D., 541-382-3754 corrections and any w/cast iron burners, exlnt 541-480-1353 area. Sending cash, nate M-F a t S mith or 2 for $365. Call for 210 adjustments can be cond, $75. 541-706-1051 checks, or credit inSign, 1515 NE 2nd; or Bricks, c urb-interlock, multi-cord discounts! Found on Thursday, made to your ad. f ormation may be CRAFT, Tumalo. Lv. Furniture & Appliances 6/5, Black bicycle, 11x3x4, red, 230 total 541-420-3484. 541 -385-5809 Buying Diamonds subjected to fraud. msg. for pick up large near dow ntown $150. OBO The Bulletin Classified /Gofd for Cash 2001 Silverado For more informa- amt, 5 4 1-389-8420. A1 Washers&Dryers Check out the Bend. Call to iden3-horse trailer5th tion about an adverSaxon's Fine Jewelers 541-504-8111 www.craftcats.org classifieds online tify, 541-383-2505. $150 ea. Full warFor sale 1 gas golf cart 541-389-6655 wheel, 29'x8', deluxe tiser, you may call www.tgendbufletirLcom ranty. Free Del. Also choice of two. For inFind exactly what showman/semi living the O r egon State English Bulldog 2 yrs Lost set of Hyundai 8 wanted, used W/D's BUYING Updated daily formation call you are looking for in the quarters, lots of exAttorney General's old, red & white, good house keys on bull Lionel/American Flyer 541-280-7355 541-576-2477 tras. Beautiful condiOffice C o n sumer with children, must be CLASSIFIEDS clip, Sun. 6/8, at Old trains, accessories. 269 Protection hotline at only dog in home. Mill District, B e nd. tion. $21,900. OBO 541-408-2191. 246 Gardening Supplies 541-420-3277 1-877-877-9392. $500. 541-382-9334. Bench cabinet w/stor541-633-7122. MADRAS Habitat BUYING & SE LLING age, black satin finish, Guns, Hunting & Equipment RESTORE Springer Spaniel $75. 541-706-1051 All gold jewelry, silver Building Supply Resale The Bulletin English & Fishing ServingCentral tt eyon since egg puppies. AKC, field and gold coins, bars, Quality at champion blood lines, Gas kitchen stove, black, rounds, wedding sets, For newspaper LOW PRICES REMEMBER: If you Iree-standing 30" worksl Bend local pays CASH!! class rings, sterling sildelivery, call the Adopt a rescue cat or liver 8 white, avail. 7/1. $300 541 213 2511 have lost an animal, for all firearms & 84 SW K St. ver, coin collect, vinCirculation Dept. at REDUCED! kitten! Altered, vacci- $800/ea. Beaver Creek don't forget to check ammo. 541-526-0617 541-475-9722 tage watches, dental Kennels. 541-523-7951 541-385-5800 nated, ID chip, tested, The Humane Society 3-Horse Trailer, 22' long, G ENERATE SOM E Open to the public. gold. Bill Fl e ming, armnjamOq.com To place an ad, call more! CRAFT, 65480 CASH!! 7' wide, 2 rear axles, good Bend EXCITEMENT in your 541-382-9419. Prineville Habitat 541-385-5809 For Guns, Ammo & 78th St, Bend, 1-5 PM French Bulldog pups, 541-382-3537 cond. Logan Coach Inc. neighborhood! Plan a ReStore or email Sat/Sun. 389 8420, beautiful cream, avail. garage sale and don't Reloading Supplies Harley Davidson men's Redmond $4500 obo. 305-794-0190 clannified@bendbulletin.com Building Supply Resale 541-408-6900. SS bracelet, 105th Anniv. www.craftcats.org. 541-923-0882 now $2000, Pet qual- forget to advertise in 1427 NW Murphy Ct. 345 $200. 909-240-8017 Madras classified! The Bulletin ity. 541-382-9334 541-447-6934 Sereing Centra/Oregonalnre tglte Aussie, Mini AKC, blue www.enchantabull.com 541-475-6889 Livestock & Equipment 541-385-5809. How to avoid scam Open to the public. merle, black tri, m/f parPrineville and fraud attempts e nts o n si t e . C a l lLab Pups AKC, black & Maytag refrigerator with H onda 3 8 " rid i n g 541-447-7'I 78 Reg. mini donkeys for 541-788-7799 /598-5314 yellow, Master Hunter icemaker, very clean. s/Be aware of internamower, bagger, $500. or Craft Cats sale, $ 2 0 0 up, DO YOU HAVE tional fraud. Deal losired, performance pedi- $450; 541-815-4811 541-480-1353 541-389-8420. 541-548-5216 SOMETHING TO Border Collie pups, cally whenever posree, OFA cert hips & elSELL $300 to best offer. sible. ows, 541-771-2330 FOR $500 OR memphisOcbbmail.com www.kinnamanretrieveracom Twin E rgo-motion gg' Watch for buyers LESS? 500 automatic bed who offer more than Solid Marble Non-commercial with memory foam your asking price and Columns advertisers may MOTORCVCLE:Custom Harley mattress, like new, who ask to have Bargain-priced place an ad only used for a short Davidson 1997 Sportster 1200 XL. money wired or columns that were with our t ime. $ 75 0 o b o . 5000 Miles. Lots ofchrome.$10,000. handed back to them. donated to Equine "QUICK CASH 541-383-7603 Fake cashier checks Great ride, but noroombrthe softball Outreach. Perfect for SPECIALe and money orders a custom home or team. Contact Cheryl at 000-0000. 1 week3!ines 12 are common. deck. Still in crates, or' The Bulletin YNever give out per1200 Ibs each. ~ee eke ae! YCLE:Gentl recommends extra ' sonal financial infor$500 each; Ad must i caution when purmation. $2500for aii 5. include price of 286 chasing products or • Call 541-480-6130 YTrust your instincts in le lem of $500 MOVING SALE: e~ Sales Northeast Bend Gilchrist. from out of I and be wary of Good clean ~ services or less, or multiple the area. Sending ~ someone using an furniture, electronics, ' cash, items whosetotal checks, o r ' escrow service or Call a Pro does not exceed two 50" plasma TVs, i credit i n f ormation ** FREE ** agent to pick up your s urround sou n d , may be subjected to $500. Whether you need a Garage Sale Kit merchandise. household, clothing, i FRAUD. For more fencefixed,hedges Place an ad in The Call Classifieds at fishing, sporting, information about an t The Bulletin Bulletin for your gatrimmed or a house 541-385-5809 Serving Centrar Oregonsince renr camping, knives, En- advertiser, you may i rage sale and rewww.bendbulletin.com g lander king b e d , t call t h e built, you'll find Ore g ont Kathy luggage bag, ceive a Garage Sale a Ashley fur n iture, ' State Atto r ney ' 18 nx30nx12", black, professional help in Kit FREE! washer/dryer, tons of i General's O f fi ce New 4-weight 9-ft, $20. 541-410-4596 The Bulletin's "Call a items all good and 4-pc fly rod, $65. KIT INCLUDES: Protec- • clean, many n e w. Consumer • 4 Garage Sale Signs 850-264-8105 (in Bend) Kenmore propane BBQ, Service Professional" tion h o t line a t I 2008 32 ' C a rdinal i 1-877-877-9392. tank 8 c o ver, $75. • $2.000ff Coupon To Directory t ravel t r a iler w i t h 541-410-4596 Use Toward Your 541-385-5809 tipouts. 140528 KoNext Ad > kanee Ln, left before t TheBulletin Serving CentralOregon since fgng • 10 Tips For "Garage i Largest 3-Day i 266 bridge north of GilSale Success!" GUN 8g KNIFE christ onto Creel In., Heating & Stoves 212 SHOW right o n K o kanee, PATIO SET PICK UP YOUR Antiques & June 20-21-22 follow signs. NOTICE TO Glass table with 6 GARAGE SALE KIT at June 13-30, 9 a.m.-? Portland Expo ADVERTISER Collectibles chairs and cushions, 1777 SW Chandler 541-480-1996 Center Since September 29, umbrella & stand, Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, The Bulletin reserves 1991, advertising for $200. Sun.10-4 the right to publish all used woodstoves has The Bulletin 1-5 exit ¹306B been limited to modads from The Bulletin Serring Cenrrer Oregonsince rgnr Call 951454-2561 Admission $10 els which have been newspaper onto The (/n Redmond) I 18 00-659-3440 I certified by the O rBulletin Internet website. i CollectorsWest.co~m Swamp cooler, heavy egon Department of 292 Environmental Qualin classified advertising! Sales Other Areas like new, 3ft. x ity (DEQ) and the fedGerman Wirehaired The Bulletin Private party wants to duty, SerrfngCentral Oregonrlnte tgtB 3 ft., p o rtable o r eral E n v ironmental Newspaper classified advertising leads Pointer Puppies 10 WWII 1911 pistol, s tationary. 50 Years Collecting $3 7 5 . Protection A g e ncy the pack when it comes to connecting weeks old. American People Look for Information buy S&W Victory, M1 carSale of Antiques! 541-382-6773 buyers with sellers Kennel Club Litter (EPA) as having met bine. 541-389-9836 Oil lamps, American About Products and Certificate SR821323. Trailer wheels & tires, 3 smoke emission stanFostoria, Belleek miniaServices Every Day through One male $500, and 3 cer t ified Whether you're at a fork in the road or Salt water fishing gear, ea. ture cream 8 sugars, 205/ 7 5/14-C dards. A The BulletinClassifieds females $600 each. the beginning of an excursion, classified misc., assortment of $150.00 OBO w oodstove may b e Biggs bookcase desk, Contact Gerri identified by its certifican fuel the journey. china cabinet, oak table, rods, Hippo Ranger 541-504-8111 541-413-0959. 215 wwn.Bentibnlletin.eom cation label, which is bookcase, miscellafull of j igs, Wantedpaying cash permanently attached neous antique glass. • C oins & Stamps 541-771-0665 If you'rs ready to gst rolling, check for Hi-fi audio & stu- to the stove. The BulIndoor Sale, 12 people at SAVE THIS DATE! us out. In print and online, there's LARGE Estate/Ga- Private collector buying Wanted: Collector seeks dio equip. Mclntosh, letin will not knowa time due to small space freedom in classified! 12 pm Fri., 6/20; rage Sale coming postagestamp albums & high quality fishing items JBL, Marantz, D y- ingly accept advertise necoen e r t e non e e c e ~ erce wn e e Bam Sat., 6/21; 9am Sun. June 27-28 in La Pine. collections, world-wide & upscale bamboo fly naco, Heathkit, San- ing for the sale of 6/22 at 260 S. Fairview, Check our progress in and U.S. 573-286-4343 rods. Call 541-678-5753, sui, Carver, NAD, etc. uncertified n n • • in Burns. 541-589-1686 next week's ad. or 503-351-2746 Call 541-261-1808 woodstoves. (local, cell phone).
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541-385-5809
C2 MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •
Starting at 3 lines
Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER'500 in 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 ................................. $20.00
icall for commercial line ad rates)
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
eilliust state prices in ad
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Food Service
Whispering
Winds Retirement is seeking a part time dining room food server. 32 H ours a w e e k , benefits included. Apply in person at 2 920 N E C o n ners Ave., Bend., Pre-employment drug test required. Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader hcw the itemwill help them insomeway. This advertising tip brought toyouby
The Bulletin Setving Cent el Cngdntince lggg
Bend Park@
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
MX
Recreation n nc n n v
Is Accepting Applications For: • Seasonal Park Custodian • Fitness Instructor • Facility Supervisor • Swimming Head Coach
Sales Support / Customer Service (part-time) Comejoin our team! Standard TV & Appliance is the largest, independently owned appliance retailer in the Pacific Northwest. We need professionals who have experience delivering excellent customer service both in person and on the phone. Must have strong ten-key and data entry s k ills, great attitude and professional appearance. Varying shifts including nights and weekends. Apply in person at 6 3 7 36 Paramount D r ive, Bend, OR 97701 or online at
I
860
Houses for Rent Redmond
Ngaats
D esirable sg l le v e l 3br/2ba, lots of upgrades, pets neg. No smoking $1200 mo 415-596-2006
XkwH ~g ®) j jfl
746
FXSTD Harley Davidson 2001,twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684
Northwest Bend Homes
Brand new on market! Custom craftsman 3 bd, 2.5 ba, extensive interior upgrades, granite slab in gourmet kitchen, hickory flooring. Off Mt. Washington Dr.t borders Quail Park, adjacent to Awbrey Glen golf community. Fabulous Cascade skyline view, private fully fenced backyard. 2004 Tour of Homes!Open htt:// t d d t d ~ 1-4 Sat. & Sun. 2772 al iance. ~ NW Rainbow Ridge Dr. a licant ro.com/'obs/ $575,000. By owner, 541-848-0040 TRUCK DRIVER Exceptional NW WANTED location, skyline Must have doubles views and privacy. endorsement. Custom craftsman Local run. Tour Home borders Truck is parked in Quail Park by Awbrey Madras. 541-475-4221 Golf. Interior upgrades, Courtesy to 486 Realtors. $575,000. Independent Positions 2772 NW Rainbow Ridge Dr Sales 541-848-0040
870
Mot o rcycles & AccessoriesBoats & Accessories
12' Aluminum boat with trailer, 3hp motor,
good cond, $1200.. 503-307-8570
12' aluminum fishing boat, t r ailer, motor, fish finder, accessories, $1200. 541-389-7234
15' Coleman Scanoe 2 HP motor, Yakima rack & hanger system, preservers, $350/all 541-408-9007
Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $20,000or best offer. 541-318-6049
15' tri-hull fiberglas fishing boat, 1971 walk-thru, fish finder, full top cover, 45 hp Evinrude, tr a i ler,
spare tire, access., good cond. $1200 obo. 541-408-3811
16.2' 1987 Barron Ma-
rine, i/o, top cover, $4,500 obo 541-419-5731
HDFatBo 1996
Completely
Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award
18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, g reat cond, well maintained, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755
Earn over For completej ob Winner Watercraft announcements Redmond Homes Showroom Condition $1,000 or to apply go to Many Extras 2013 Jackson nCoosan a week! PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction bendparksandrec.org Low Miles. fishing kayak, $900. 1036 SW Rimrock is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right Equal Opportunity 360-280-1313 $15,000 Way Redmond New tc accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these Employer Welcome toYOUR 541-548-4807 NEIGHBORHOOD construction to be ds published in eWa newspapers. The publisher shall nct be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Medical Built, 1800 Single PUBLICATIONS. tercraft" include: Kay Classified ads running 7 cr moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. Fresenius Medical Care We are establishing Story, 3 bdrms., 2 aks, rafts and motor of Redmond is a dibaths, 2 car garage a branch in Ized personal 476 476 476 alysis center in Redwith RV parking and watercrafts. Fo Central Oregon. Employment Employment Employment mond, OR, we are Canyon View. Call "boats" please se We are looking for expanding our team Kevin 541-948-8700 Class 870. Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities responsible and and have openings for ambitious individuals to $259,000. HD Sportster, 2001 exc 541-385-5809 the following posicond, 1 owner, maint'd, Add your web address sell subscriptions to Wildland new t i res, cu s tom tions: Dialysis P ato your ad and readThe Bulletin at DRIVERS Firefighters chrome, leather saddle Serving Central Oregon since 1903 Just too many tient Care Techniers on The Bullefin's established sales To fight forest fires must cian f ull t i m e fo r bags, 32,400 mi, $4200. locations. web site, www.bendcollectibles? Class A and Class 880 be 18yrs old & Drug Tom, 541-382-6501 Redmond Clinic, exp. bulletin.com, will be B CDL Drivers free! Apply 9am-3pm preferred but will train Control what you earn Motorhomes Honda Goldwing 1985 able to click through needed. Mon-Thurs. Bring two right individual with a Sell them in automatically to your by working a Interstate Motorcycle. Must be able to forms of ID fill out 476 The Bulletin Classifieds Has about 6 5 ,000 min.of one year padesignated local website. Federal 1-9 form. work hard, pass Employment tient care exp; CNA, territory and essentially original miles. Runs No ID = No Application U/A and backEMT, MA or phlelebuild your own Caregiver reat still looks good. Opportunities 541-385-5809 ground check. botomy exp. helpful, Prineville Senior care business! 1 500. C a l l J ohn No experience military, veterans enh ome l ooking f o r 541-306-7615. 773 necessary. CAUTION: couraged to apply. If To learn more about Caregiver; f u l l-time Piaggio/Vespa 3-wheel Acreages Ads published in you are a team player /dayshift. Pass this new 2007 Winnebago MP3 scooter 2009 "Employment OpP ATR l c K with flexibility and exc. criminal background Call Bill, employment Outlook Class"C" with only 400 miles. 5.17 acres. 65694 Old communications skills, portunities" include check. 541-447-5773. PatRick Corp. 31', solar panel, Cat. 541-383-3362 opportunity Bend/Redmond Hwy, Not a scratch! Like employee and indeplease apply. We of1199 NE Hemlock, heater, excellent please call us at for more info. mtn view, power, wa- brand new! $5900. fer 10 w eeks paid pendent positions. Cleaning team memRedmond condition, more ex548-206-0905 ter, septic approved. 520-360-9300, owner Ads for p o sitions bers needed for pri541-923-0703 EOE training program in tras.Asking $58K. or email us at $174,000 O.B.O. Call that require a fee or Hemo-dialysis, comvate homes, w e ekPI1. 541-447-9268 Brad 5 4 1-419-1725, upfront investment days on l y , no Need to get an petitive salary a nd paperman09@hotmail.com FoodService Can be viewed at or Deb 541-480-3956. must be stated. With benifits, Sundays off w eekends, eves o r ad in ASAP? Bend Brewing Co. is Western Recreation Your Neighborhood debra©bendbroadany independentjob holidays. CALL NOW! and more. EOE seeking a exp. Line (fop of hill) You can place it Publications band.com opportunity, please 541-815-0015 For immediate considcook and prep cook. in Prineville. i nvestigate tho r online at: eration mail resume to P lease bring r e oughly. Use extra FMC-Redmond Attn: www.bendbulletin.com sume to 1019 NW Manufactured/ caution when apPersonnel, 916 SW RmljtCa Triumph Da ytona Brooks St., B end 17th St, s uite 1 00, plying for jobs onMobile Homes 2004, 15K m i l es, TV & APPUANCE before 11:00 am. No ® XX@iilIM 541-385-5809 line and never proRedmond, OR 97756 perfect bike, needs phone calls please. vide personal inforor go on l ine a t 2 006 S u pe r Go o d nothing. Vin Delivery Driver I mation to any source fmcna.com/jobs and Cents 1 296 sq. ft. ¹201536. Warehouse fill out an application. you may not have m fd. home, 2 f u l l The Bulletin $4995 Worker Sernng Centrei Oregon sincetggg Alfa See Ya 2006 36' researched and New Hire class starts baths, 3 bdrms, walk Dream Car Standard TV & ApExcellent condition, 1 deemed to be repuin July. in closets, all appliAuto Sales The Bulletin Circulation department is looking pliance is looking for owner, 350 Cat diesel, table. Use extreme ances, inc l uding 1801Division, Bend a deliyery driver. This for a District Representative to join our Single 51,000 miles, 4-dr frig, c aution when r e 528 freezer. Very clean, DreamCarsBend.com Copy team. This is a full time, 40 hour per week Where can you find a is full-time icemaker, gas stove, s ponding to A N Y position must be moved 541-678-0240 helping hand? Loans & Mortgages and requires heavy position. Overall focus is the representation, oven, washer/dryer, online employment $36,000 541-382-6650 Dlr 3665 lifting, l e adership, sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspa- From contractors to non-smokeri 3 shdes, ad from out-of-state. BANK TURNED YOU professional appearper. These apply to news rack locations, hotels, yard care, it's all here SPECIAL generator, invertor, We suggest you call DOWN? Private party FACTORY ance and ability to special events and news dealer outlets. Daily New Home, 3 bdrm, Vespa GTS 250 2007, leather interior, satelthe State of Oregon n work Saturdays and in The Bulletin's will loan on real esred, just over 4k mi., responsibilities include driving a company ve$46,500 finished lite, 7'4 ceiling. Consumer Hotline tate equity. Credit, no Sundays. D r i vers hicle to service a defined district, ensuring exc. cond. $ 3300. "Call A Service on your site. Cleanl $74,500. at 1-503-378-4320 need recent experi541-419-3147 J andM Homes newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, Professional" Directory problem, good equity 541-233-6520 For Equal Opportuence driving a box is all you need. Call 541-548-5511 managing newspaper counts for the district, nity Laws contact truck and must be inOregon Land Mortbuilding relationships with our current news MENTAL HEALTH Oregon Bureau of surable with no more gage 541-388-4200. dealer locations and growing those locations Labor & I n dustry, than 3 moving violawith new outlets. Position requires total ownerMental Wellness Civil Rights Division, tions. Must also pass LOCALNONEyrWe buy ship of and accountability of all single copy eleCenters, Inc. 971-673- 0764. a background check, secured trustdeeds & ments within that district. Work schedule will be is in an evaluation stage note,some lift test/physical and hard money Thursday through Monday with Tuesday and The Bulletin drug screen. Apply in Wednesday off of opening a compreloans. Call Pat Kellev . R equi res good communicati on 541-382-3099 ext.t 8. erson at: 6 3736 skills, a strong attention to detail, the ability to lift hensive outpatient / V ictory T C 2 0 0 2 , Allegro 28' 54'I -385-5809 aramount Dr., community-based 40K mi., runs great, Class A 2008 45 pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to m ental health/ s u bBend, OR 97701 or s tage 1 kit, n e w Ford V10 gas, 50K multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong stance abuse treatment online at tires, rear brakes & miles, 2 slides, satelservice/team orientation, sales and problem program in Bend, Orwww.standardtv more. Health forces lite, 2 TVs, Onan gen, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 860 solving skills. Send inquiries and resume to: egon. We are seeking e~nda ttence. s ale. $4,5 0 0 . rear & side cameras, circulation@bendbulletin.com a licant ro.com/'obs Snowmobiles an Executive Director to 541-771-0665 hydraulic levelers, Door-to-door selling with oversee the daily op300w solar panel fast results! It's the easiest Applications are available at the front desk. Arctic Cat 580 1994, erations of the facility. with inverter. 865 way in the world to sell. Drop off your resume in person at DRIVER - CDL exp. EXT, in good They must hold an acOriginal owner. with flatbed, RGN or 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; condition, $1000. ATVs tive masters-level $55,500. The Bulletin Classified No phone inquiries please. lowboy Run 48 states. Located in La Pine. 541-420-4303 cense in the State of 45-50e per mile. Pre-employment drug testing required. 541-385-5809 Call 541-408-6149. A rcticCat AT V 7 0 0 Oregon such a s a 630 EOE/Drug Free Workplace Call 541-777-7427 2008 t w o-rider veLCSW or LPC, a nd 860 Rooms for Rent Must be insurable to drive company vehicle. hicle, EFI LE. L ow • g J have clinical superviI Motorcycles & Accessories hours, high p erforsion/ executive experiAssociate Director ot Development, Furn. room i n q u iet mance. Nice wheels, General ence. We prefer someOregon and Southwest Washington winch, extra equip., Thank you St. Jude & The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- o ne wh o h o ld s a home no drugs, alco- Aluminum ramps by Region University Advancement smoking. $450 S-star, 1500-Ib load cap., $5000. Moving causes Sacred H e ar t of day night shift and other shifts as needed. We certification in addiction hol, 1st/1st. 541-408-0846 Jesus. j.d. $100. 541-548-0749 sale. 541-447-3342. currently have openings all nights of the week. counseling along with ** TH/S POSITION WILL BE LOCATEDIN Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts the LCSW/ LPC, but it BEND, OREGON ee start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and is not mandatory. The end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpo- position will be salary, The University of Oregon seeks applications sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. DOE. In addition MWC for the Associate Director of Development, Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a offers a f u l l b e nefit Oregon and Southwest Washington region. minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts package. Furthermore, Reporting directly to the AVP for the Oregon are short (1 1:30 - 1:30). The work consists of the person hired will reRegional Development Program, the AssociCOII 54 I-385-5809tO prOmOteyOur SerVICe• AdVertite far 28 dayt StOrting at 'l40 ffftis sfteoal packageis ndtavailablegndgrtgebstej loading inserting machines or stitcher, stack- ceive growth incentives ate Director of Development is responsible for ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup in addition to their salidentification, cultivation, solicitation a nd and other tasks. For qualifying employees we ary. If you are interstewardship of donors and new prospects offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, ested please email reacross Oregon and SW Washington.This Adult Care Handyman Landscaping/Yard Care Aeration/Dethatching short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid sume to position will concentrate heavily on donor 1-time or Weekly Services vacation and sick time. Drug test is required e ettin ill@mwcid.com prospecting and concentrating on individuals in I DO THAT! NOTICE: Oregon Land- Ask about FREEadded ax to 08-528-2945 or Professional Caregiver prior to employment. the "Discovery" pool (those identified by the svcs w/seasonal contract! with 26+ yrs exp will pro- Home/Rental repairs scape Contractors Law for questions call Office o f P r o spect M anagement and Bonded & Insured. (ORS 671) requires all 208-542-1026 and ask to vide private care in your Small jobs to remodels Please submit a completed application attenAnalytics). home. Disabled/elderly/ Honest, guaranteed businesses that ad- COLLINS Lawn Maint. speak with Eric. tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available hospice. 541-279-9492 vettise t o pe r form Ca/l 541-480-9714 work. CCB¹151573 at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanThe Associate Director of Development will Landscape Construc- Tierra Landscaping LLC Part time yard work Dennis 541-317-9768 dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be represent the university internally and extertion which includes: needed for the obtained upon request by contacting Kevin nally, and contribute to the implementation of p lanting, deck s , Maintenance,clean-up, summer, boy or girl. Eldred via email (keldredObendbulletin.com). and full irrigathe university's development program. The fences, arbors, pavers, 541-382-4464 No phone calls please. Only completed appliBuilding/Contracting tion. LCB¹9267 position is field-oriented, requiring frequent Landscaping/Yard Care water-features, and incations will be considered for this position. No 541-981-8386 travel and direct contact with prospects and stallation, repair of irBULLETINCLASSIFIEDS NOTICE: Oregon state resumes will be accepted. Drug test is redonors, as well as collaboration with staff and rigation systems to be Allen Reinsch Yard law requires anyone quired prior to employment. EOE. Search the area's most faculty across the university. The Associate l icensed w it h th e who con t racts for comprehensive listing of & Mowing Landscape Contrac- Maintenance Director will be responsible for meeting fundconstruction work to (& many other things!) classified advertising... The Bulletin tors Board. This 4-digit raising goals as they relate to the strategic Serving Central Oregon sincetggg be licensed with the Call 541-536-1294 or real estate to automotive, Serving Central number is to be inneeds of the university. P e rformance as 641-816-5313 merchandise to sporting Construction ContracOregon Since 2003 cluded in all adverm easured against these goals w ill b e goods. Bulletin Classifieds tors Board (CCB). An Residental/Commercial tisements which indi- Maverick Landscaping evaluated annually. The position involves license appear every day in the active cate the business has M owing, travel throughout Oregon and Southwest General means the contractor weedeating,yd Sprinkler print or on line. a bond,insurance and detail, chain Washington. CROOK COUNTY is bonded & insured. Activation/Repair work, workers c ompensa- bobcat excv.,saw Call 541-385-5809 EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES etc! LCB Verify the contractor's Back Flow Testing tion for their employwww.bendbulletin.com University Advancement is c o mmitted to ¹8671 541-923-4324 CCB l i c ense at ees. For your protecproviding a fair, equitable, and inclusive work Crook CountyLibrary www.hirealicensedMaintenance tion call 503-378-5909 The Bulletin environment. We welcome applications from Library Janitorand Nainfenance Specialist contractor.com ServingCentral Oregonsince ele «Thatch & Aerate or use our website: Take care of candidates that will promote and value our $1 3A7hourly or call 503-378-4621. • Spring Clean up www.lcbistate.or.us to culture and exercise teamwork and collabora29 hours perweek The Bulletin recom- •Weekly Mowing your investments check license status RETAIL tion when working with diverse groups, donors, Closes: July 3,2014 5:00p.m. mends checking with & Edging with the help from before contracting with volunteer groups, and coworkers. the CCB prior to con- •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Work Where the business. Persons The Bulletin's Janitor and Maintenance Specialist sought to tracting with anyone. Maintenance You Love to doing lan d scape Some other t rades •Bark, Rock, Etc. Search will remain open until filled. Review of clean all areas of the Crook County Library "Call A Service maintenance do not Shop!!! applications will begin June 26, 2014. Salary is building and provide light maintenance for the also req u ire addirequire an L CB Professional" Directory tional licenses and commensurate with experience and will range facility and grounds. Experience providing ~Lendede in cense. We are currently certifications. commercial janitorial services strongly pre•Landscape from $55-75K. T h e u niversity offers an hiring for our new excellent package of employee benefits. ferred. Please attach cover letter that details Construction Painting/Wall Covering job-related experience. Full job description can Ross Store •Water Feature in South Bend. For further information, please see the full be found at www.co.crook.or.us. Installation/Maint. WESTERN PAINTING We have • Pavers position announcement, including minimum Zd ped Qua/reI Debris Removal CO. Richard Hayman, opportunities for and p referred q u alifications, e ducation Please apply at the •Renovations ltfrargrgPP8 /atg, a semi-retired paintpart-time retail requirements, and application procedure on • Irrigations Installation Crook CountyTreasurer's/Tax Office JUNK BE GONE Full Service ing contractor of 45 associates. the UO website at http://hr.uoregon.edu/jobs/. 200 NE 2 Sf. I Haul Away FREE Landscape Management years. S mall Jobs Apply today at Senior Discounts Prineville, OR 97754 For Salvage. Also 541-390-1 466 Welcome. Interior & Bonded & Insured www.rossstores.com UO is an AA/EO/ADA 541-447-6554 Cleanups & Cleanouts 541-815-4458 Experienced Exterior. c c b¹5184. institution committed to cultural diversity EOE LCB¹8759 Commercial & Residential 541-388-6910 Mel, 541-389-8107
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TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, JUN 16, 2014
DAILY BRI DG E C LU B
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will shprfz
Monday,June16,2014
Lights out By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency A man shows up at a cardiologist's office and says, "Doc, I need help. I think I'm a moth." "You're in the wrong place," the cardiologist says. "I treat heartr elated conditions. You n eed a psychiatrist. Why did you come to me?" "Well, your light was on." As for today's declarer, the lights were on but nobody was home. When West led the king of hearts against six spades, South took the ace and had to get rid of dummy's last heart before he started the trumps. So South took the queen,king and ace of diamonds for a heart discard.
ACROSS 1 Secret stash 6 Doorframe'5 vertical part 10Water,in Latin 14Buenos 15Dial button sharing the "0" 16Big oafs 17Samsung Galaxy or BlackBerry 19 1953 Leslie Caron musical 20 Number after Big or top 21Twocents' worth 22 CBS police drama that debuted in 2003 23 Be hot under the collar 26 Green ogre of film 28 Carriage puller 31 Where oysters and clams are selved 34 It's beneficial
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Both defenders followed, so South next led a trump. When West took the ace, he led his last diamond, and East scored his nine of trumps, overruffing dummy. It appears that the light bulb over South's head had burned out. South should make the slam. After he discards on the high diamonds, he must take dummy's A-K of clubs to pitch his jack of d iamonds. Then S outh leads a t r u mp , a n d t h e defenders get only the ace of trumps.
WEST 4s A 'Y1K Q 108
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DAILY QUESTION
W e s t North Pass 34 Pa s s 50 All P a ss
East Pass Pass
Youhold: 4 8 8 7 6 4 2 9 7 2 0Q 6 4 A K I 4. Y our partner Opening lead — 9 K opens one diamond, you bid one spade and he raises to two spades. (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
1
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43When repeated, 73 Does as told 20 22 a Latin dance 44Turkish official 23 24 25 26 27 DOWN 45Jimmy who works 28 29 30 31 32 33 with Lois Lane 1 Selects for a role 46Workerwith an 2 'TilTuesday 34 3 5 36 37 38 39 apron and a singer Mann white hat 40 41 42 3 Machine at a 48 Go carousing construction site 44 46 47 with a drinker, 4"TellLaura I Love say " (1960 hit) 48 49 50 51 50Archaeologist's 5 Suffix with find 52 53 54 55 5 6 57 winning 52Trails 6 Chief Justice 58 59 60 61 62 63 54 "Sic 'em!" Roberts 66 67 58 Makes a pick 64 65 7 Individually 60 Book of the world 8 Hostess's 68 69 70 63 Guy's date handouts 72 73 64 It's beneficial 9 Fellow members 71 of a congregation 65What an optimist PUZZLE BY GARY CEE always looks on 10 Never-beforeseen 68 of S andwich 35 Long, involved 58 Newspaper think 53 Something to 11 Easily made story piece stick in a milk 69 Comfort profit shake 36Abruptleft or 59 on w ords 12 Hybrid citrus fruit ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE right SSAbleto move 61 Bart's intelligent 13 In its existing 38AII over well B AN J 0 M C M A N S I O N sister state 42 Kindergarten O LE I C C R A Z Y B O N E 18 Dockside 62 Years on end 56G.M. luxury car, learning T OW N S D O N T PA N IC informally plafform 66 Number of points C HE X C UE D I N T 47 Statute scored by a 24 Start of many 57 Some German/ H AR E M S H A K MA Y A 49Givea hard time safehl band names Swiss artworks in S E U E L M l N E R 51 Mascara target MOMA 67 Bro or sis D SO R U N T B O N S A I 25 Hurry, with "it" 27 Melted cheese R AR E G A S LA N T E R N Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday on toast crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. E L A T E D WOR K A S E 29 Figure (out) AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit A LL E 5 H E 8 R Ew nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. M I E S B A B E Y A L T A 30Go in Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 L EX H E R S P O O R 32 Tennis legend past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). AM A R Y L L I 5 Z IP P O Arthur Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. N AM E P L A T E A T E A M 33 Backside Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords. D E S M O I N E S P I Z Z A 34 Vengeful captain
What do you say? ANSWER: This case is close. If partner has an ordinary raise such as A Q 9 5, 8 6 5, A K 5 3, 3 2, you may take 11 tricks, hence to bid four spades w o ul d be r ea s onable, especially if y o u're vulnerable. If you're concerned about your weak trumps, and if partner often raises with three-card support, bid three spades. South dealer Both sides vtdnerable
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S E L P E A S T B A R E R A T E R I CA N Y P I N E 08/16/14 11
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60
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By David W. Cromer (e)2014 Tribune Content Agency,LLC
06/16/14
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, JUNE 16 2014 C5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880
880
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KeystoneLaredo 31' RV
20 06 w ith 1 2 '
on the first day it runs to make sure it is cor-
slide-out. Sleeps 6, rect. eSpellchecke and queen walk-around human errors do ocbed w/storage undercur. If this happens to neath. Tub 8 shower. your ad, please con2 swivel rockers. TV. tact us ASAP so that Air cond. Gas stove & corrections and any refrigerator/freezer. adjustments can be Microwave. Awning. made to your ad. Outside sho w er. 541-385-5809 Slide through stor- The Bulletin Classified a ge, E a s y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600 541-4947-4805
DLR ¹3447
Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652
Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings Engine / Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans / Less than 40K miles /Offered at $199K. Too many options to list here! For more information go to moe ~ elle rob e.com ~ or email trainwater157@ mail.com or ca 858-527-8627 Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174
TOW EQUIPMENT Fleetwood Discovery Brake Buddy, $500; Guardian rock 40' 2003, diesel, w/all shield, $200; options - 3 slide outs, Roadmaster 5000 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, tow bar, $450; etc., 32,000 miles. Wintered in h eated OR $900for ALL. Call 541-548-1422 shop. $82,000 O.B.O. 541-447-8664
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
Fleetwood Discovery diesel 36' 1999 10-11 mpg, 47k miles, fully loaded, beautiful condition, sleeps 6-7, big slider, walk around bedroom, w/d, tow pkg,$29,500. Pics avail.
Aircraft, Parts & Service
935
Utility Trailers
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Featherlite a l uminum car hauler, 20'x6' with 7000¹ axles, electric brakes, winch, chrome wheels, spare tire, 4 extra tires, removable fenders, and rare air dam. V er y cl e an, $3900. 541-389-7329
„
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories
1/3interest in
Columbia 400,
Financing available.
Cooper studded tires,
ROBBERSON ~
$250. 541-318-7202 F lexible vehicle t o w
541-312-3986 DLR¹0205
M8 ES.
hitch, $300. 541-815-4611
Komfort Pacific Ridge Perfect Condition! Like NEW 27ft deluxe NW design, 15' Super Slide, priv bdrm, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt, led lights, always stored inside. A MUST see! $26,000 obo! Call Pam 541-788-6767 or Bill 541-480-7930
2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo. Call Dick, 541-480-1687.
IBII If~ m.
Holiday Rambler Alumascape 28' 2003, 1-owner. Self-contained, 13' slide, 60W solar panel, walkaround queen + sofa/bed, loads of storage throughout. Excellent cond., licensed 2015. see!$15,700. e m : Must 541-389-9214
em
24' w/large slide, 4-Season, fully loaded & used only 4 times. Has extra Trident surface protection coat, stinger w/sway bars, electric tongue jack, 6-volt batteries, queen walk-around bed, large front kitchen w/pantry, complete entertainment system w/exterior spkrs, power awning. Like new, $29,995. 541-480-4148
Bend.Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007
172 CessnaShare IFR equipped, new avionics, Garmin 750 touchscreen, center stack, 180hp. Kit Companion 1994, Exceptionally clean good cond. 26' with & economical! one slide, $4500 obo. $13,500. 541-389-5788 Hangared in KBDN Call 541-728-0773 Laredo 30'2009
overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C, table 8 chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com
$28,000
541-419-3301
ij
irs
2013 R-Vision 23RBS Trail-LiteSport by Monaco -Expedition pkg, Sport Value pkg, convenience pkg, elec. awning, spare tire, LED TV/ent. system, outside shower, elec. tongue jack, black flush sys, beautiful interior, huge galley, great storage, 1/2-ton towable, alloys, queen bed. Likenew, asking $22,000 Gordon, 541-382-5797 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
with living r oom slide, 48,000 miles, in good condition. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV.$31,000 Call Dick at
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
541-408-2387
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Re-
881
Travel Trailers
Fleetwood Wilderness NW Edition 2002, 26' 1 slide, electric
tongue jack, stabilizers, new brakes, waste tank heaters, ducted heat/AC, micro/stove/oven, tub/shower, couch, elec/gas hot water tank. Sleeps 6. Includes Eaz Lift hitch, storage cover and accessories. $10,500. 541-447-3425
2160 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always
hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K. In Madras, call 541-475-6302
': •
:
~
— =
-
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250
OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566
Redmond:
541-548-5254
sults! Call 385-5809
or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com 882
—.;:I•
Fifth Wheels
Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition.$36,000 obo. Call Peter,
1976 Cessna 150M Just oyer 3000hrs, 600 hrs since out of frame major, Horton Stol Kit. Avionics: Apollo 65 GPS & additional radio (4 frequencies can be monitored at once). Transponder w/mode C, JPI Fuel Flow Monitor, digital density, temp & amp monitor. Nice paint & upholstery w/memory foam seat bottoms. Oil filter & block htr. 1 owner past 14 yrs; always hangared, no damage history. N9475U.$26,000. 541-480-4375 3000 sq. ft. Hangar Bend Airport west side. 60' wide by 50' deep with 55' wide by 16' high bi-fold door 14'x14' door rear side. Upgraded with painted floor, windows, sky lights, 240V/50 amp outlets. $195,000. (520) 360-9300, Owner
Hangarfor sale at Redmond Airport - not a T Hangar - $39,000. 541-420-0626
$2500 obo.
Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K orig. miles, runs great, exc. cond.in/out. $7500
Forest River Salem T222006, Queen bed, solar panel, sway bar, bath with shower, awning,$8,900. 541-617-5775
541-548-0318
(photo above is ol a similar model & nor the actual vehicle)
6.4L V6, Diesel, 4WD, automatic, 65k mi. Vin¹A32746 $33,977
Garage Sales
Garage Sales Garage Sales
ROBBERSON m
Find them
in The Bulletin Classifieds
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1 96 8
Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5164.
T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998. 916
885
Trucks 8 Heavy Equipment
Canopies & Campers
Ford F-350 4x4,
2006 XLT 4-door Crew Cab Plymouth B a rracuda 1966, original car! 300 6.0L Turbo diesel, full hp, 360 V8, center- power, a u tomatic, lines, 541-593-2597 6-disc CD, cruise, fog lights, running boards, WHEN ONLY THE tow pkg, bedliner, grill BEST WILL DO! guard, folding rear r seat. Tan cloth interior, metallic tan exterior. 91,400 miles. Price reduced to $20,500 541-350-6925 Buick Skylark 1972 17K orig. miles. Please see hemmings.com for details. $18,900. 541-323-1896 I nternational Fl a t 933 Bed Pickup 1963, 1 Pickups ton dually, 4 s pd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.
Keystone Cougar 31' 2 004 2 sl i des, 2 bdrms, sleeps 7 with r ear bunks, tub 8 shower combo, elect. Providence2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 tongue jack, s o lar miles, 350 Cat, Very pkg. all the bells & clean, non-smoker, whistles, and lots of 3 slides, side-by-side storage, immaculate refrigerator with ice c ond., always g a maker, Washer/Dryer, raged. Great for famFlat screen TV's, In ily v a c ations or motion satellite. part-time home. $95,000 $16,400 obo 541-460-9876
Arctic Fox 29' 2003, covered storage, slideout, exc. cond inside 8 outside 2016 tags, $14,500. 541-678-1449 or 541-410-8849
541-416-9686
utility Trailer 5'x8', drop ramp. Perfect for hauling your motorcycle, jet skis, quads, etc!
$1,200
541-379-3530
na aaa
DLR¹0205
AWD, less than 11k mi., auto, 6 spd. vin ¹202364 $30,977 ROBBERSON ~
ne mezeeee
541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205 e'•
3.5L 5 cyls, RWD, manual, 56k miles, vin¹200940
II IBR eeee
BMW X3
541-312-3986 DLR¹0205
Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 with camper s hell, good cond., $1500 OBO. 541-447-5504. Chevy Silverado 1996, 2WD 2500, all pwr options, 62K orig. mi., stored winters, all servicing com p leted, $3400 cash only. La Pine, 541-508-0042.
2WD, 55,000
erllceee ~
II IR K R
541-312-3986 dlr ¹0205 940
Mercedes Benz e320, 1999 wagon, white 120k mi., incl. studded tires, exc. cond., $4500. 541-318-4502.
Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e
1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition$29,700 541-322-9647 Porsche 911 Turbo
Vans
(4
Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside 8 out, one owner, nonsmoker,. Ioaded with options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds available. $4 , 950. Call Mike, (541) 8158176 after 3:30 p.m.
2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality t ires, and battery, Bose p remium sou n d stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, p e r fect condition, $59,700. 541-322-9647
Buick LeSabre, 1995, with 102K miles, automatic, air, power windows, doors & seats. Excellent cond, well maintained, all records available. Must see to Subaru Outback 2012 appreciate! $3000 or best 3.6R Limited, 6 cyl, auto. trans., AWD, offer. 541-475-0537 leather heated seats, AWD, power moon Chevrolet Impala r oof, a n d mor e ! SS2008 25,600 miles. Below KB © $2 7 ,500 541-344-5325 annie2657©yahoo.com
2 0 07, 99K
miles, premium pack- 5.3L V6, auto., 52k age, heated lumbar miles, 24 MPG Hwy vin¹123364 supported seats, pan$13,977 oramic mo o nroof, Bluetooth, ski bag, XeROBBERSON non headlights, tan & black leather interior, elllcoee ~ ~ n ew front & r ear brakes ia 76K miles, 541-312-3986 one owner, all records, DLR ¹0205 very clean, $1 6,900. 541-388-4360
Toyota lnflnltl I30 2001 great condition/ well maintained, 127k miles. $5,900.00 obo. 541-420-3277
Corvette 1979
BMW X3 2008, 3.0 si., 71,600 mi., Premium, cold
weather, sports pkg. All maintenance up to date w/ records. Lots of extras - new brakes, new tires, new battery, winter mats, running boards, hitch-Must see! $19,000 obo.
L82- 4speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never dam-
aged or abused. $12,900.
Dave, 541-350-4077
FordFusion Syorf
541-480-8615
Chevrolet Tahoe 2009 LT1
miles. New batteries, rear air bags, Roll-n-lock bed cover, spray-in liner. 5th wheel hitch available, too. $19,000. 541-604-1285
black w/ leather seat trim, 3.4L V6, 27,709 miles. vin¹362484 6.977 ROBBERSON
975
m
Dodge Ram 2500 2008 Diesel, exc. towing vehicle,
Big Tex
~
541.312.3986
...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
Automobiles
Chevy ColoradoLS 2004 ExtendedCab
925
Northland 1997 990 Polar, camper very clean, s/c $4,700. 541-617-0932
SNUG TOP Pickup canopy for F250 short bed, white in color, like new, $675.
VolvoS6075 2013
541-408-7826
Utility Trailers
Ask for Theo,
Sport Utility Vehicles
Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer.
Sell for $350D.
541-260-4293
935
2005 Diesel 4x4
Peterbilt 359 p otable water truck, 1 990, Eagle Cap 850, 2005 3200 gal. tank, Shp Chevy 3/4ton 1982, built with slideout, AC, micro, p ump, 4 - 3 e hoses, 350 with 450 HP and frig, heater, queen bed, camiocks, $25,000. $1000 tires. $3000 obo. 541-633-8951 wet bath, exlnt cond, 541-620-3724 $16 900. 541-388-3477
Call for quote
$8,977 ROBBERSON ~ m
A ero
541-546-5254
LEAR CANOPY 2003 blue, fits Ford F-350 s hort b o x , $5 0 0 . 541-410-4354.
mereea
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...
Nissan Murano SL 2011
elecoell~
WILL DELIVER
leave message.
~m
541-312-3986 DLR¹0205
2005 4.2L6cyl., 4WD, auto., 141k miles, 20 MPG Hwy,Vin¹303927 BARGAIN CORRAL!
Mazda RX-8 40th Anniversary Edition 2008 Gray Mica Paint, Red & Black Leather Interior, Bose Sound, Sunroof, 4-Door, 6-Speed Auto. Trans. w/Paddle Shifters. Original Owners. 34,000 Miles. $17,000. 541-568-6670
/;ME®%-
5th Wheel Transport, 1990 Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, OR For Hire
541-480-2019
GMC Envoy SLE
obo. 541-480-3179
ROBBERSON
( in La Pine )
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:
Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1989Automatic, power steering, stereo upgrade, set-up to tow, runs good. $1700. 541-633-6662
tool box, trailer brakes. Excellent condition, Ford Explorer 4x4 2001 $5500. 2-dr Sport, V6, heater/AC Call Gary 206-720-3255 works great, tags qood 3/16, leather, good tires, everything works. $4800 Ford F250Lariat obo. 541-815-9939 2008 Crew cab
541-516-8222
$11,977
307-221-2422,
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit
'i
Ford F-250 1985 Diesel
KOUNTRY AIRE
$25,000.
Ford F150 LIGHTNING 1993, 500 miles on rebuilt engine. Clean interior 8 new tires. $7000, OBO. 541-647-8723
1974 Bellanca 1730A
MONTANA 3585 2008, '
v
L ~ ,
Cessna 150 LLC 2WD. 110,000 original 150hp conversion, low Chevy 1953 one-ton miles. ATS Turbo, Gear time on air frame and V-8 w/auto trans, new Vendor Splitter Box tires, good cond., engine, hangared in overdrive, camper shell,
tt p>
Lance 2013 Model 2385
s re em
with hard 8 soft top, silver with black interior, all original very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend)
Call 541-389-5353 or 541-647-6176
1/5th interest in 1973
Komfort Ridgecrest 23', 2008, queen bed, sleeps 6, micro & AC, full awning, living room slider, yule tables, outside shower, 4 closets, fiberglass frame, as new, $11,500. La Pine call 541-914-3360
~m
Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible
Say "goodbuy" to that unused Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, item by placing it in AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, The Bulletin Classifieds Ford 3/4 ton F250 1993 clean title, 12/15 taqs, Power Stroke diesel, $5995. 541-610-6150 turbocharged, 5-spd, 5 4 1 m385-5809 good runner & work truck. $4500 obo.
Antique & Classic Autos
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bo- Chevy C-20 Pickup nanza A36, new 10-550/ 1969,was a special prop, located KBDN. order, has all the ex$65,000. 541-419-95i0 tras, and is all original. www.N4972M.com See tobelieve! $16,000 or bestoffer. 541-9234049
m
Chevrolet Trailblazer 2008 4x4 Automatic, 6-cylinder, tilt wheel, power windows, power brakes, air conditioning, keyless entry, 69K miles. Excellent condition; tires have 90% tread. $11,995. Call 541-598-5111
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
932
32' - 2001
Cm
•
For Sale
1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
2008 6.7L 6 cyl. diesel, automatic, 61k miles, VIN¹191705 $30,977
931
225/45/R17,
975
Auto m obiles
DodgeRam 3500 SLTQuad Cab
Fleetwood Prowler
Winnebago Adventurer 2005 35/2', gas, less than 20,000 miles, excellent condition, 2 Like NEW! Trail-Lite slide-outs, work horse 2011 Crossover, 21-ft. chassis, Banks power A/C, awning, AM/FM CD, brake system, sleeps custom queen bed, cus5, with a l l o p tions,tom drawer pullouts. Dry $62,000 / negotiable. axle wgt 2,566; dry unCall 5 4 1-308-6711or loaded wgt 2,847. Equaemail a i kistu iN bend- Flex suspension, extecable.com rior shower, indoor tub/ shower combo, stabilizer jacks, 2 batteries, plus MORE!$12,995. Call 541-280-9516for info, or to see - in Bend.
Winnebago Sightseer 30' 2004
Jayco Greyhawk 26SS 2005 —6000 miles, 1 slide, sleeps 4, full bath in rear+ outside shower & BBQ, back-up camera, awning, solar panel, brand new tires, new engine battery, protective sealants in/out, lots more! Excellent cond,$38,000 Call 541-815-2737
908
933
541-385-5809
Winnebago Aspect 2009- 32', 3 slideouts, Leather inte• g irior, Power seat, locks, windows, Aluminum wheels. e 17 Flat Screen, FLEETWOOD Surround s o u nd, PACE ARROW, 1999 Queen bed, Updated interior, 36', 2 camera, mattress, Awsffdes, 42,600 miles, V10 Foam ning, Generator, Inas, 5000 watt generator, Auto Jacks, hydraulic levelers, auto verter, steps, back-up camera, Air leveling, Moon washer/dryer, central vac, roof, no smoking or ne w , ice m aker, l o aded, p ets. L i k e $74,900 excellent condition. 541-480-6900 $27,500 541420-2135 (SeeCraigslist ¹4470374489)
6.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, workhorse, Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEMI TIRES, 2 slides, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockpit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008
•
(located iN Bend) 541-268-3333
54'I -647-9555
HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003
00
$150,000
TIFFINALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP
Bigfoot Diesel 32' 2006, Su per C Duramax di e s el, Allison trans., only 37K mi., do u b le slide, 5500 Onan diesel gen., to many options to list. Vin¹ 534032, $79,995. BeaverCoach Sales& Service, Bend 541-914-8438
e
925
5.3L V8, 4WD, auto, 69k miles, 20 MPG Hwy, Vin¹103597
29,997 ROBBERSON erecoee ~
maaa a
541-312-3986 dlr ¹0205
2011 - 2. 5L 4 cyl., FWD, auto., 64k
miles, Bordeaux Reserve vin¹324193 $20,997 ROBBERSON LINcoLN~
I M ROR
541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218 Vyy Jetta GLI 2012
Bluetooth, pl, pw, manual trans. Vin¹106574 $18,977
ROBBERSON y \ I II c e e e ~
IM RD B
541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205