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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
MIRROR POND SURVEY
Twinkie revival —Hostess
Following up on Central Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news@bendbulletin.com. To follow the series, visit www.bendbulletin.com/updates.
WHATEVER HAPPENED TO ...
brands officially returns the
iconic snack cake tostores, though somewerealready
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selling them.C6
PELTON ROUND BUTTE DAM COMPLEX
SpaCe StarmS —Just how safe is Earth? Theworld's oldest insurance market has a
new assessment.A3
Summerbeer foodRecipes to pair with a brewfor your next hike or picnic.D1
By Hillary Borrud
Honeybee rescue —Bee
The Bulletin
people say we're killing them
Local officials had a first look Monday at the results of a survey on the future of Mirror Pond. Anyone who hoped for a clear picture of how the community wants the pond to look in the future might be disappointed. People who completed the survey still fundamentally disagree about whether to keep the pond or return this section of the Deschutes River to its natural, free-flowing state. Nearly 47 percent of survey respondents want to remove the Newport Avenue dam that created Mirror Pond,and roughly 43 percent want to keep the dam, according to the results of an unscientific community survey, said Project Manager Jim Figurski. The survey results show that "the Mirror Pond issue is a polarizing issue," Figurski said. He provided an overview of the survey results to the Mirror Pond Management Board on Monday, in advance of today's joint meeting of the Bend City Council and Bend Park 8 R ecreation District Board of Directors. The meeting also became a forum for members of the management board to press a representative of Pacific Power, which owns the Newport Avenue dam, for information on how long the company plans to maintain the dam. SeeMirror Pond/A4
off, jeopardizing the world's food supply.A6
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BaSeball —Mariano Rivera's farewell tour is different
from the usual suchevents for
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Iu national news —A showdown over filibusters is set for today in the U.S. Senate, barring a last-minute agreement.A2
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EDITOR'SCHOICE
Iron loss threatens U.S. blood
More migrants risk rails in Mexico
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By Michelle Fay Cortez
native
dog,'DNA affirms By Jack Hitt
Bloomberg News
New Yorh Times
By Nick Miroff
Dennis Gastineau start-
ed giving blood regularly when he was in medical school in the 1970s. The $25 he received bought alm ost enoughgroceriesfor a week. Now, it just seems like the right thing to do. It may also be bad for his health. Gastineau, who happens to be a hematologist, is among the 2.4 million donors who risk silent damage as a result of frequent giving. U.S. government researchpublished last year found this group iron-deficient, which can lead to fatigue, compromised mental function and eventually anemia. Now, iron levels are being examined as part of an $87.2 million studythe U.S. is funding on blood donation and transfusion safety. Seventy percent of the blood supply comes from repeat donors. Limiting their giving may hamper a system that already suffers shortages. The Mayo Clinic predicts a 10 percent drop in its supply from its restrictions on donors after finding that one-third had iron deficiency. "We want to make sure we don't have a group of people walking around being iron-deficient," said Manish Gandhi, the medical director of the Mayo Clinic's blood donation center. SeeBlood/A5
'Our
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Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Becky Burchell, a fish biologist with Portland General Electric, releases a spring chinook into Lake Billy Chinook after it was collected below the Pelton Round Butte dam complex on Friday.
The Washington Post
News Service
HUEHUETOCA, Mexico — At a makeshift church shelter beyondtheindustrial parks north of Mexico City, the train riders wait under a canvas tent, listening for a locomotive horn. They keep their shoes on and their backpacks
BISHOPVILLE, S.C.— Inside a fenced acre on the swampy Lynches River flood plain in central South Carolina, seven of Don Anderson's primitive
zipped. By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
The number of spring-run chinook salmon was down this year even more than last, but the low numbers aren't dimming the hopes of scientists working to restore the fish upstream of the Pelton Round Butte dam complex on the Deschutes River. "We are learning from what these fish are doing, and how they behave, to improve their overall survival," said Greg Concannon, fish and wildlife resources manager for Portland General Electric, which owns the dams near Madras with the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs. Last year was the first in 40 years that adult salmon swam in search of spawning groups above the dams. Released years before in the tributaries upstream of the dams, the fish were helped as youngsters
TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy High 87, Low 57
Page B6
The tracks outside run through Mexico's central highlands and all the way to the Texas border. The shelter is a halfway point for Central Americans on the 1,500-mile trip north, but many do not arrive here in one piece. "They got me on the roof of the train," said Arlen Acosta, his posture bent by two broken collarbones and his face disfigured from a bad suture job. He had set out from Honduras two months earlier. "They told me to give them $100. Then they threw me off." SeeMexico /A4
around the dam after being lured in by a $100 million fish tower built by PGE and the tribes. Fifty of the fish returned in 2012 — half went to the Round Butte Hatchery and half went into trucks that carried them up and around the dams, Concannon said. This year 16 fish returned, and all went into trucks and now swim free in waters above the dams. Overall spring chinook numbers were down last year and this year in the Columbia River, of which the Deschutes is a tributary. What caused the decline is not clear yet, said Rod French, district fish biologist for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife in The Dalles. "I don't have a good explanation for the Deschutes," he said. See Fish/A5
alert at approaching strangers. Mediumsized, they fan out amid his junkyard of improvised habitat: a few large barrels to dig under, an abandoned camper shell from a pickup, segments of black plastic water pipe and backhoed dirt mounds overgrown with waist-high
ragweed. These are Carolina dogs,andthoughthey are friendly, one can instantly sensethey are differentfrom other dogs. Several rush to the gate, their
whole bodies wagging eagerly. Others sprint off and take position — their jackal ears fully erect, their fishhook tails twitching. SeeDogs/A4
e p We userecycled newsprint
INDEX At Home D1 - 6 C lassified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Obituaries Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope D6 Sports Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies
dogs spring into high
AnIndependent
B5 C1-4 D6
vol. 110,No. 197, s s ections O
88267 0232 9
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 16, 20'l3
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NATION 4% ORLD
ena e's ea er se s ii users ow own By Jonathan Weisman and Ashley Parker
been struck in the closed session that went well into the New York Times News Service night. WASHINGTON — S en. Democratic and Republican Harry Reid, D-Nev., took a leaders promised to continue defiant an d u n c ompromis- negotiating, but Reid, the maing stand on Monday before a jority leader, said the first test showdown on the future of the vote was still scheduled for filibuster, saying that Repub- this morning. "There's no deal, but there's licans must stop blocking executive branch nominations or a much better understanding," he will try to change rules to said Sen. John D. Rockefeller "save the Senate from becom- IV, D-WVa. ing obsolete." All but two of the 100 senaBut senators emerged from tors c l oistered t h emselves a 3'/~-hour meeting in the Old in the Old Senate Chamber, Senate Chamber saying they where some of the great comwere confident that an agree- promises ofthe early days of ment could be reached today the nation were struck and to defuse the tense partisan where modern Senates have standoff, though no deal had met at difficult moments, in-
cluding the impeachment of President Bill Clinton. Senators said nearly all of them spoke, some passionately, for or against a change to the Senate rules, ostensibly only to end filibusters of presidential nominees for executive branch positions but possibly to pave the way to further limit the filibuster in the future. Advocates of th e c hange said Democrats would stay the course for a showdown today. "It was a very good discussion, but at this point, we're headed to votes" that will probably
trigger the change, said Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M. and a leading advocate of weakening the filibuster.
EgyPt unreSt —The most senior U.S. official to visit Egypt since its elected president was ousted said Mondaythat Washington is committed to helping the Arab country succeed in its "second chance" at democracy, adding this can only happen with the partici-
pation of the Muslim Brotherhood. Deputy Secretary of State William Burns' meetings with Egypt's interim leaders came as thousands of supporters of deposed President Mohammed Morsi held another
mass rally to demandhis return to office. The protest turned violent as police fired tear gas at pro-Morsi protesters who burned tires, threw rocks and blocked traffic flow on a main roadway running through the heart of the capital.
Cartel leader —Miguel Angel Trevino Morales, the notoriously brutal leader of the fearedZetas drug cartel, was captured before dawn Monday in the first major blow against an organized crime leader by a Mexican administration struggling to drive down persis-
tently high levels of violence, officials announced.Trevino Morales, 40, was captured by Mexican Marines who intercepted a pickup truck with $2 million in cash on a dirt road in the countryside outside the
border city of Nuevo Laredo, which has long served astheZetas' base of operations. GenOCide SentenCing —Afederal judge on Mondaysentenced a New Hampshire woman to the maximum10 years in prison for lying about her role in the1994 Rwanda genocide, saying the United States
cannot be ahavenfor thosewho slaughter out of hatred andignorance. Rwanda native Beatrice Munyenyezi declined her right to address the court after U.S. District Judge Steven McAuliffe imposed her sentence.
Munyenyezi,43, wasconvicted in February of entering theUnited States and securing citizenship bylying about herrole asa commander of one of the notorious roadblocks where Tutsis were singled out for slaughter.
VOtar ID —Pennsylvania's voter identification law, oneof the strictest in the nation, wasbackbefore acourt Monday. Lawyers representing a group of voters without proper ID argued that by requiring peopleto present photo identification to obtain a ballot, Pennsylvania was taking away the right to vote from hundreds of thousands of registered voters.
SAVING A SHIPWRECK
smuoo Aw.
Farm dill —Despite differences between the farm bills passed
DcsuuesRe
by the House and Senate, the chairwoman of the Senate Agriculture
Committee said shewanted to work with her House counterparts to draft new five-year farm legislation that would continue agriculture programs set to expire. Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., said the
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool...........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ..................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa.........................541-383-0337
Senate was still waiting for the House tosendover its bill so the two chambers can begin working out their differences.
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Volunteer award —In a homecoming tinged with nostalgia, President Barack Dbama on Monday welcomed his oldest living predecessor, George H.W. Bush, to the White House, where the two
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men, separated by nearly four decadesbut united in their fervor for volunteer service, presented anaward to a retired lowa couple. Ap-
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pearing together in the East Room, Dbama and Bush, who is 89, bestowed the 5,000th Daily Point of Light award — named after Bush's signature initiative on volunteer service.
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Monday night are:
OfsDa sO af 04s04704s The estimated jackpot is now $1.8 million.
audience of students Monday that the United States had effectively trapped Edward Snowden, the fugitive former intelligence contractor,
on Russian territory by frightening countries that otherwise might have accepted him. Russian officials said Monday that they still had not yet received an application from Snowden, and Putin did not say
outright whether hewould grant a request from him. The president signaled that it remained a possibility. — From wire reports
Gregono Borgia/The Assoaated Press
The Costa Concordia cruise ship lies on its side Mondayoff the Tuscan island of Giglio.
Salvage crews areworking against time to removethe shipwrecked vessel, which is slowly being crushed under its own weight on its perch of granite seabed. Officials said Monday that if this attempt fails, there
won't be a secondchance. Nick Sloane, the leader of the salvageoperation, said the Concordia
has compressed some10 feet since it came to rest on its side on the rocky perch Jan. 13, 2012, after ramming a jagged reef when it skirted
too close to the island during a publicity stunt allegedly ordered by the captain; 32 people were killed.
Sloane, anengineer for U.S.-owned companyTitan Salvage, said experts would haveonechance to pull the ship upright and float it away to the mainland for demolition. The attempt will probably take place in midSeptember. "We cannot put it back" down and start over, said Sloane. — The Associated Press
TO SUBSCRIBE
Home deliveryandE-Edition:
SIIOWdeII Saga —Russian President Vladimir Putin told an
/'
TALK TO AN EDITOR
Officialssayfederal charges vs. Zimmermanareunlikely By Philip Rucker and Sari Horwitz
celebrating the Delta Sigma Theta sorority, a large audience The Washington Post ofb lack women broke into apW ASHINGTON — Current p l ause when Holder said, "I and former Justice Depart- share your concern." ment officials said Mondaythat We are determined to meet and confusion with b ringing civil rights charges d i v'sion t a gainst George Z i m understanding and commerman in the shooting passion — and also with death of Trayvon Mar- • Protest in truth," Holder said, addPortland, ing: "We will never stop tin, an unarmed black 17-year-old in F l orida, B3 working to ensure that — in every case, in every would be extremely diff icult and may not be possible. c i r ucmstance and in every comA ttorney General Eric Hold- m u nity — justice must be done." er vowed to continue a federal Justice Department lawyers i nvestigation of the matter, but a r e reviewing an investigation other officials said in interviews o f M artin's shooting begun last t hat the government may not y e ar in conjunction with the b e able to charge Zimmerman F B I and state prosecutors in w ith a federal hate crime be- F l orida, officials said. Prosecuc ause it's not clear that he killed t o r s are combing through that M artin because ofhisrace. evidence, as well as testimony T heweaknessoftheevidence f r o m Zimmerman's state trial, c ompounds the political prob- t o determine whether to file l ems facing President Barack c i vil rights charges. Obama and Holder, who are The Department of Justice u nder mounting pressure from w ouldn't bring this case unless m any liberal an d A f r i can- t h ey believe they could prove American groups to bring a fed- to a jury beyond a reasonable e ral case against Zimmerman d o ubt that George Zimmerman a fter a Florida jury acquitted k i l ed l Trayvon Martin because him Saturday of second-degree of his race," said Rachel Harmurder and manslaughter. mon, a law professor at the UniO bama has responded cau- v e r sity of Virginia and a former t iously to the national uproar, p r osecutor in the Justice Dem aking no public comments p a r m t ent's civil rights division. It's not enough to show that other than a carefully worded statement Sunday. Zimmerman followed Trayvon I nstead, Holder is acting as M artin because of hisrace," t he administration's spokes- H a r mon added. "They are going man on the matter, saying in a t o h ave to show that he attacked s peech Monday that Martin's M artin for that reason.... That's k illing was a "tragic, unnec- w hyit'shardtobringhate crimes essary shooting death." At a in general and likely to be hard p reviously scheduled luncheon t o b ring them inthis case."
Are You Fatigued?
<<All The Time! need repair. We will do a metabolic examination to determine which major Do you wake up tired? metabolic engines are not Do you need caffeinejust to functioning properly. tn all, this is one ol' the makeit throyygh theday? most thorough evaluations, Because of fatigue, you may not enjoy important things like interpretations, and reports helping your kids, making dinner, or even taking a walk. No you will ever receive. Then one really understands how you feel because outwardly, you toot< we will interpret ali of your "fine." Your problem is — you feel anything BUT"line!" inl'ormation and design a program of' care that, il' you Do YouHave Any of the Following? quatif'y, will put you on the road to healing your health • Lack of Energy imbalances, improving your energy, and getting your iil'e back • Insomnia again. What would that be like?
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TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Tuesday, July16, the197th day of 2013. There are168 days left in the year.
PHENOMENON HAPPENINGS U.S. Senate —A test vote is scheduled on changing filibuster rules, though some senators are still hopeful a deal
can be reached.A2 BaSedall —The Major League Baseball All-Star Game takes place at Citi Field in New York.C3
Power outages. Disrupted communications. Diverted airplanes. A sober assessment by the world's oldest insurance market details big risks from outer space. Businesses and government agencies are working to adapt. By Brad Plumer
HISTORY Hlghllght:1973, during the
Senate Watergatehearings, former White HouseaideAlexander P. Butterfield publicly revealed the existence of Presi-
dent Richard Nixon's secret taping system. In1790, a site along the Potomac River was designated
the permanent seat of the United States government; the area became Washington, D.C. In1862, Flag Officer David
Farragut becamethe first rear admiral in the United States
Navy. In1912, New York gambler Herman Rosenthal, set to tes-
tify before agrand jury about police corruption, wasgunned down by members oftheLennox AvenueGang. In1935,the first parking meters were installed in Oklahoma City. In1945, the United States exploded its first experimental atomic bomb in the desert of Alamogordo, N.M. In1951, the novel "The Catcher in the Rye" by J.D. Salinger was first published by Little, Brown
and Co. In1964, as he accepted the Republican presidential nomi-
nation in SanFrancisco, Barry Goldwater said "extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice" and that"moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue." In1969,Apollo11 blasted off from Cape Kennedy on the first
manned mission to thesurface of the moon. In1979,Saddam Hussein be-
came president of Iraq. In1980,former California Gov. Ronald Reagan won the Repub-
lican presidential nomination at the party's convention in Detroit. In1981, singer Harry Chapin was killed when his car was struck by a tractor-trailer on New York's Long Island Ex-
pressway. In1999,John F. Kennedy Jr., his wife, Carolyn, and her sister,
Lauren Bessette, diedwhen their single-engine plane, pilot-
ed byKennedy,plungedintothe Atlantic Oceannear Martha's Vineyard, Mass. Ten yearsago:The Environmental Protection Agency
announced it wasstarting bigmoney, long-term cleanupsat 10 Superfund toxic waste sites
and putting10 other sites aside for later.
Fiveyearsago:Republican John McCain addressed the annual convention of the NAACP,
telling the civil rights group in Cincinnati he would expand
education opportunities, partly through vouchers for low-income children to attend private
schools. Israel freednotorious Lebanesemilitant Samir Kantar and four others after Hezbollah guerrillas handed over the bod-
ies of two Israeli soldiers. One yearago:North Korea reshuffled its military, dismissing its army chief — a key
mentor to young ruler KimJong Un — and promoting a little-
known general to animportant position in the million-man force. Singer Kitty Wells, whose hits such as "Making Believe" and "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels" made her the firstfemale superstar of
country music, died atage92.
BIRTHDAYS Former Attorney General Dick Thornburgh is 81. Rock
composer-musician Stewart Copeland is 61.Actorcomedian Will Ferrell is 46. College and Pro Football Hall
of Famer Barry Sanders is 45. Actor Corey Feldman is 42. — From wire reports
The Washington Post
On a cool September night in 1859, campers in Colorado were roused from sleep by a "light so bright that one could easily read common print," as one newspaper described it. Some of them, confused,
Why space weather matters The volatile surface of the sun is responsible for "space weather" that can affect Earth. Our atmosphere and magnetic field protect what's
below it from almost all such events, so solar weather went unnoticed until 1859. However, humans and their technology did not stay on the ground, making us increasingly vulnerable to the unpredictabilities of the sun.
got up and began making
Solar flares
breakfast. Farther east, thousands of New Yorkers were rushing onto their roofs and sidewalks to gaze up at the heavens. The
These explosions on the sun's surface occur without warning and can launchhugeamountsofX-rays, other radiation and particles into the ionosphere, the outer edge of Earth's atmosphere.
sky was glowing, ribboned in yellow, white and crimson. At the time, it was a dazzling display of nature. Yet if the same thing happened today, it would be an utter catastrophe. The auroras of 1859, known as the "Carrington Event," came afterthe sun unleashed a large coronal mass ejection, a burst of c h arged plasma aimed directly at the Earth. When the particles hit our magnetosphere,theytriggered a fierce geomagnetic storm that lit up the sky and frazzled communication wires around the world. Telegraphs in Philadelphia were spitting out "fantastical and unreadable mes-
Diverted
particles
Magnetic field lines
4 EARTH S
Earth's magnetic field
sages," one paper reported, with some systems unusable for many hours. Today, electric utilities, telecommunications pr o v iders and the insurance industry
are grappling with a scary possibility. A solar storm on the scale of that in 1859 would wreak havoc on power grids, pipelines and satellites. In the worst case, it could leave 20 million to 40 million people in the Northeast without power — possibly for years — as utilities struggled to replace thousands offried transformers stretching from Washington to Boston. Chaos and riots might ensue. That's not a lurid sci-fi fantasy, but rather a sober new assessment by Lloyd's of London, the world's oldest insurance market. The report notes that a smaller solar-induced geomagnetic storm i n 1 989 left 6 million people in Quebec without power for nine hours. "We're much more dependent on electricity now than we were in 1859," explains Neil Smith, a n e m e rgingrisks researcher at L l oyd's and co-author of the report. "The same event today could have a huge financial impact" — pegged at up to $2.6 trillion for anespecially severe storm. (To put that in context, Hurricane Sandy caused about $68
Solar winds
These slow-moving "space hurricanes" occur when the sun
Streams of gas
ejects part of its outer
atmosphere.
the polar regions, so those areas are most easily disrupted by solar weather.
particles and magnetic clouds pour from the sun's surface in all directions.
Vulneradle to space weather Satellites and GPS devices
Oil pipelines
Aircraft
Aboveground pipelines can conduct stray
Radiation storms can befuddle satellites,
communications Transmissions that
delaying or garbling radio waves and mucking up sensitive
currents and become corroded. Alaska's lines are vulnerable because they're so near the
electronic controls.
North Pole.
unreliable, especially near the North Pole.
International
Power grid
Water supply
Power lines can conduct
Because water processing and
space station No humans are closer — therefore
depend on low-frequency radio waves become
currents that develop in the ionosphere. The grid is so interconnected that a few blown transformers
more vulnerableto space radiation than residents of the space station.
distribution depend so heavily on electricity, a major loss of power would affect water delivery within days.
can cripple a large area.
Sun and Earth are shown to approximate scale, but distance is not to scale.
Source: NASA
The Washington Post
in Silver Spring, Md., Daniel Baker of the University of Colorado announced that the sun had unleashed another large coronal mass ejection in July 2012 that traveled at speeds comparable to the Carrington Event of 1859. It missed the Earth by a week. "Had that storm occurred billion in damage.) a week earlier, it would have The possibility of a p oca- been a direct hit," Baker said. lypse has piqued scientific in- "And we'd probably be having terest in solar storms in recent a very different conversation years. But researchers are now about this today." realizing that space weather When it c omes to space can cause allsorts of lesser weather, the foremost conmischief, such as disorienting cern is what a solar-induced GPS satellites or severing con- geomagnetic storm might do tact between polar flights and to electric grids around the air-traffic control. world. So, in recent years, scores At certain points in the sun's of businesses and government cycle, as sunspots appear and agencies are starting to take flares erupt, the sun will eject space weathermore seriously. part of its outer atmosphere, a E lectric-grid o p erators a r e cloud of fast-moving charged devising plans to reroute cur- particles. If one of these cororents through their systems to nal mass ejections hits the brace for solar storms. Airlines Earth's magnetic field in just such as Delta have developed the right way, it can induce plans to reroute flights in the strong ground currents that case of emergency. The U.S. travel through power lines, oil military has begun to realize that space-weather blips can disrupt communication in the heat of battle. But preparing for disruptions isn't easy. Just as interest in space weather is surging, the United States is facing the loss of key monitoring satellites in the coming years because budget cuts mean that I i I i i I aging systems aren't being replaced. And scientists are
pipelines and telecom cables. A truly severe geomagnetic storm could create currents powerful enough to overload electric grids and damage a significant number of h i ghvoltage transformers, which can take a long time to repair or replace. That could leave millions without power f or months or years. "That's a key vulnerability," Smith says. "If you had a really big solar event, there just aren't enough replacement transformers available. It can take up to 12 months to build new ones." As it turns out, most utilities don't keep lots of spares around. The l argest transformers, which convert the electricity i n hi g h - voltage lines to lower voltages, are c ustom-built, can cost m i l lions of dollars and weigh up to 400 tons. Procuring a new one isa complex process that involves lining up the necessary copperand steelsupplies, working with a long chain of manufacturersand arranging
rushing to plug troubling gaps ST
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specialized transport. So, the Lloyd's report notes, if even 20 transformers in the Northeast were knocked out, the logistical challenges would be "extremely concerning."
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
Mexico
the historic wave of M exican migration that peaked Continued from A1 in 2000, when Border PaCentral A m ericans have trol agents made 1.7 million been catching freight trains arrests. "The real growth is p r oto the U.S. border for years, riskinginjury or worse for a jected to come from Central free ride and a path clear of America," Olson said. Mexican government checkT he U n ited S t ates h a s points. But at a t ime when been leaning on Mexico to i llegal i m migration t o t h e tighten immigration enforceUnited States remains near ment within its borders, parits lowest point in f our de- ticularly the porous 600-mile cades, the number of Central boundary w i t h G u a temala Americans going north has that presents little barrier to soared, putting new attention people, weapons or drugs. on the rail system that takes T he administration of n ew thousands to the border each Mexican President Enrique year. Pena Nieto says it is preparWith lawmakers in Wash- ing to act. "We know how easy it is ington considering a b road revision of U.S. immigration to cross," Interior Secretary laws, the image of the illegal Miguel Osorio Chong said at border-crosser is no l onger a recent meeting with the fora farmworker jumping t h e eign news media, estimating fence in T i j uana, analysts that 200,000 Central Amerisay. It is a Central American cans entered Mexico illegally teenager riding on top of a last year. Mexican freight train. With U.S. assistance, technolog y and security aid, MexPerilousjourney ico pl ans to set up new immiT he dangers of the journey g r a t i o n checkpoints along its a re widely known and per- s o u t e hrn border and build a h aps worse than ever. Neither d a t a base of the unauthorized t he Mexican government nor i m m grants i it detains, taking t he two d ominant r a ilroad f i n g e r prints, r e tinal s c a ns companies here — o n e o f and other biometric data that w hich is a U .S. subsidiary c a n be shared with the United — have m anaged t o s to p S t a ts. e t he masses of people from B u t the checkpoints could c limbing atop the trains, or p u s heven more people onto t he criminals from targeting t h e r ails. t hem along t h e T he Me x i c an route. Railroad AssociaYOu uSed tO The result is a tion, a trade group, rolling gauntlet yy p ypyggpU~ said it is in t alks with g overnment pzngs homicides falling aSleeP o fficials ab ou t and m a imings or l tOP OftI7e t ightening s e c u aboard Mexico's (rg jri giig rity. Migrants and freight rail s y s- S/lpp/.gg pff their adv o c ates t em, th e b a c k say th e p r i v ate bone of the $1 NO W , it'S the guards who work billion-plus-a- k l ' df)gpperS." for t h e r a i l r oad day trade p artcompanies, includ— Oscar Rivas in g K a n s as C i t y nership between the United States Southern de Mexand Mexico. ico, a U.S. subsidEach day, the trains rumble iary, have been just as venal north loaded with new auto- as the police who shake the mobiles, washing machines, migrants down until they're cement and the other fruits left with nothing. "The train system is totally of NAFTA commerce. When they slowfor curves or track unsupervised," said R a fael switches, migrants run along- Gonzalez, one of the priests side and grab onto boxcars or running t h e s h elter h e r e, jump into the open-top con- which opened last year on the tainers known as gondolas. edge of town after gangsters For the kidnapping gangs, forced the previous one to cartel operatives and corrupt shut down. Mexican officials who await Central A m e r i ca n mi them, the train riders are a grants can avoid the trains by renewable natural resource: hiring smuggling guides to abundant and easy to prey drive them north. But few can upon, like salmon going up afford it and turn to the rail an Alaskan river. system instead. Government human rights Unknown toll officials estimate that more than 11,000 migrants are kidNo one knows how many napped crossing Mexico each migrants are killed or mutiyear, with many forced from lated in attacks or accidents the trains at notorious rail along the way. Two Hondujunctions whose names are ran women were shot and spoken with fear along the stabbed to death in the southroute: Medias Aguas, Oriza- ern state of Chiapas in May ba and Coatzacoalcos, where when they didn't pay the toll one group of Hondurans was demanded by gang members. hacked with m achetes last Much of the violence ocmonth. curs in the rail yards, where "You used to worry about migrants might end up waitfalling asleep on top of the ing days for a train. train and slipping off. Now, The gangs that rob and abit's the kidnappers," said Os- duct migrants are often made car Rivas, a 40-year-old Hon- up of other Central Ameriduran deportee trying to get cans working under the proback to a carpentry job and t ection o f M e x i co's c r i me three children i n P h i ladel- syndicates. "We've asked over and over phia. He said it was his sixth train trip north since 1986. for the authorities to clean T he last t i m e , h e w a s up the system and arrest the c hased by a b andit w ith a criminals — and they know machete. who they are," said Marta This time, he saw a sevS anchez, an a c t ivist w i t h ered head outside the city of the Mesoamerican Migrant Tlaxcala. Movement. "But it would re"It was stuck on a pole," he quire some intelligence work sard. and the firing of many corLocal news reports con- rupt officials." firmed the a ccount. Police Gustavo Mohar, a former found the head by the tracks, Mexican intelligence official with a bag over it. who was also in charge of immigration policy under PresiAt the border dent Felipe Calderon, said On the U.S. side of the di- stopping the migrants from vide, the number of Mexicans climbing atop the freight trains taken into custody since 2000 would requirea massive, sushas dropped 84 percent. But tained police operation that of 365,000 arrests made by the country can't afford. "From a huma n i tarian the U.S. Border Patrol during fiscal 2012, nearly 100,000 point of view, what's happenwere individuals classified ing is terrible," he said. "But as "Other than Mexican," the controlling the train system highest percentage to d ate over long distances is almost and almost twice as many as impossible when you h ave in 2011. limited resources." T he vast m ajority w e r e For now, such controls do from H onduras, E l S a lva- not exist. At the shelter set dor and Guatemala, Central up here in a dusty lot, GuateAmerica's Northern Triangle, malan Andrea Mendoza, 20, where economic failureand waited for the train - "the r ampant v i olence exert a long, long one" — that would powerful push, even at a time take her and a friend to Monwhen the pull of the U.S. la- terrey.Once there, she said, bor market remains weak. she would call "her coyote," " There's a f e e l in g t h a t t he same g uide w h o h a d Mexico has changed demo- smuggled her father and husgraphically and has turned band to Houston. the corner economically, and Mendoza said she k n ew we're never going to go back how to run and reach for the to what we had at the turn of train when it slowed, and not this century," said Eric Olson, to fall asleep. It wasn't her a Central America expert at first time. She had made the the Woodrow Wilson Center trip once before, she said, in Washington, referring to when she was 15.
Dogs
have an unusual white stripe at theshoulder.There are the noticeable ears and the tail, but also the athletic tucked-in stomach (like a Doberman). DNA studies may soon make it easier to assert the Carolina's distinctions from other dogs.
Continued from A1 A black pup scrabbles away in crablike submission that eventually takes her into an
underground den, dug deep enough that she is not seen
again.
Earlysightings
Walking into the pen is dangerous for only one reason: one of the dogs' defining hab-
its is digging snout pits, or gallon-size holes in the ground, perhaps to root for grubs or munch the soil for nutrients. "It's like a lunar landscape," Anderson warns as we tread carefully into the underbrush. Some Carolina dogs still live in the wild, and local people have long thought they were one of the few breeds that predated the European arrival in the Americas: "Our native dog," as Michael Ruano, another e nthusiast who often works with Anderson, put it. "America's natural
John W. Adkisson / New York Times News Service
Carolina dogs such as Peony, pictured here in Bishopviiie, S.C., are without certain genetic markers indicating European origins, suggesting they have been in America since the last Ice Age.
Awareness of this unusual dog has its own history. According to Mark Eden, another enthusiast working with Anderson, the j ournals of 16th-century Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto include possiblereferences to Caro-
lina dogs.
In the essential narrative of early U.S. natural history, some 12,000 years ago. and the man most responsible William Bartram's 1791 book Carolina dogs, then, could for the current interest in the "Bartram's Travels," the aube camp followers that wan- breed. In th e e arly 1970s, thor runs acrossa Seminole dered off from their Paleo-In- Brisbin was employed check- I ndian m a i ntaining s o m e dian masters and took up resi- ing out the wildlife on the pe- horses and writes: "One occurdence in swampy areas where riphery of the plant and often rence, remarkable here, was a they can easily hide out from came upon these wild dogs troop of horse under the contheir own natural predators. in the swampier parts of his trol and care of a single black dog. domain. He took a few in and dog, which seemed to differ Now, a new study of canine Encounter with a puppy today maintains an 18-acre in no respect from the wolf of DNA backs up the folklore. A Anderson, 79, ts a Virg<man enclosure where he has his Florida, except his being able team led by Peter Savolainen who moved to South Carolina own pack. to bark as the common dog." at the Royal Institute of Tech- in 1961. He's a garrulous man Brisbin got th e C arolina The occasional revival of nology in Sweden has report- dressed in comfortable blue dog recognized by the United interest in the Carolina dog ed thatseveral dog breeds in stretch pants, a pair of Crocs Kennel Club and was the first happens this time just as enthe Americas — among them on his feet, and a headband to describesome ofthe breed's thusiasts make the case for its the Peruvian hairless, the Chi- to hold back shoulder-length rare traits, including the fish- inclusion among the ancient huahua and the Carolina dog hair that stubbornly retains hook tail; the pointed, some- dogs the world over. Brisbin — are without some genetic some glints of blond. what lupine face; and the habit also suggests that the Carolina markers indicative of EuroHe remembers the d ay, of digging snout pits. The dogs dog fits in the niche of "pariah pean origin, suggesting they back in the Nixon administra- cooperate as a pack when they dogs," dingo-like and appeararrived in an earlier migration tion, when he had his first en- hunt a field mouse or a rab- ing to survive in difficult habifrom Asia. counter with these wild dogs. bit, possibly using their white tats, like Anderson's swamps, The study also reawakens Down by a nearby water hole hindquarters as signals. typically on the outskirts of "That white fishhook can ancient h u ma n m i g r ation the long debate about where on his land, he spied a mother and how dogs were domesti- and three pups, and they im- be hoisted like a white-tailed routes. deer's and can flash back and cated. Current theory specu- mediately bolted. There are many of these "Two of the puppies went lates that they are descended forth," Brisbin explained. "I older dogs: the Canaan dog from wolves that somehow east, and one puppy tried to saw them do it, and I saw the of Israel, the Santal hound became attached to humans get out west and he got stuck," rest of the pack honor it." of India, the Jindo of Korea, perhaps 12,000 to 33,000 years h e explained. He took t h e Carolina d og s t y p ically the Telomian of Malaysia, the ago — an early amity that has pup home and named him go into heat once a year, like New Guinea singing dog, the an extensive pedigree in hu- Tadpole. wolves, instead of twice, like Kintamani dog of Bali, the Afman folklore. (Think Romulus N ot l on g a f t erward a domesticated dogs. They cov- rican basenji — and the imagand Remus.) stranger saw the dog a nd er up their scat by pushing dirt es that pop up in a Web search But where that may have offered Anderson $300 for over it with their noses, not by are oddly similar to those of happened is not entirely set- what his neighbors called a using their hindquarters to the Carolina dog. tled. Some say the earliest "Lynches River wild dog." He scratch the ground. Continents and m i llennidogs emerged in the Middle refused the deal, thinking, he Most Carolina dogs are gin- ums aside, they possess many East. Others point to an area says now, "if he's worth $300 ger-colored, like Australian of the qualities Brisbin and south of the Yangtze River in to you, then he's worth $300 dingoes, but they can also be Anderson describe. T hese China. Savolainen's study pro- to me." black and piebald. Most, but primitive dogs started living vides more evidence for the Anderson soon learned that not all, are short-haired. near people tens of thousands China hypothesis and, as a re- others called them Carolina Some have tiny patches, of years ago, finding a place sult, lends support to the idea dogs, a name given to them right above their distinctive just out of sight of human enthat the earliest domesticated by I. Lehr Brisbin, a biologist almond eyes, that look like a campments — where, if the dogs crossed the Ice Age land with the Savannah River nu- spare set of eyes, what Ander- current studies hold up, they bridge known a s B eringia clear power plant, near Aiken, son calls "spirit eyes." Some steadfastly remain.
Mirror Pond Continued from A1 S ome members o f t h e board said it will be impossible for officials to commit to spending millions of dollars to deal with silt buildup in the pond, without knowing how long the dam will remain in place. As long as Pacific Power owns the dam, the company is responsible for maintenance and — if it decides to remove the dam — the cost to do so, Figurski said. Figurski said more than 1,200 people filled out the online questionnaire, and nearly 70 filled out forms at public meetings on the pond options. The questionnaire asked people to rate several options, in-
Ifyou go What:Joint meeting of Bend City Council
— Angeia Jacobson Price, Pacific Power
and the BendPark & Recreation District Board of Directors When:1:30 p.m. today Where:Bend Park & Recreation District Office, 799 S.W. Columbia St., Bend
opinion depends upon a mar-
gin of a couple of percentage
points. City Councilor Victor Chudowsky had similar concerns, and said the survey only reflected the views of people who cared enough about the issue to attend a cluding doing nothing, dredg- meeting or complete the oning sediment from the pond, line questionnaire. Figurski and rerouting the river chan- agreed, but said a statistically nel and removing the dam. valid survey would probably Today marks the end of the result in more responses from second phase ofthe Mirror people who do not care about Pond outreach process, when the issue or do not want to Figurskipresents the survey pay higher taxes for a Mirror results to the City Council Pond project. and Bend Park 8 Recreation The lack of agreement in District Board of Directors. the surveyresultsalso arose In the third phase, the coun- during the discussion of Pacil and board of d irectors cific Power's plans. Angela plan to identify their pre- Jacobson Price, regional comferred option for the future munity manager for Pacific of Mirror Pond by the end of Power, said many people have September. Park district Di- asked Pacific Power when the rector Don Horton said the company expects the dam ultimate decision on Mirror will reach the end of its useful Pond's future will lie w ith life. "We don't have a date," whoever pays for it: local officials if the city or park dis- Price said. trict pays for a project, or the Pacific Power will continue voters if officials ask them to to operate its hydropower approve a new tax district or project at the dam as long as bond measure. it makes financial sense for Ryan Houston, executive customers, Price said. director of the Upper DesHouston then asked what chutes Watershed Council, Pacific Power needs from the on Tuesday cautioned against community, to help the comreading too much into survey pany decide the future of the results in which the majority dam.
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"I'm not sure I have a clear picture as to whether this community wants that dam out or not."
Price responded, "I'm not sure I have a clear picture as to whether this community wants that dam out or not." "We're just being incredibly cautious that we don't force a decision on this community ... and then say, 'Live with it,'" Price said. Bill Smith, the developer of the Old Mill District, said he supports keeping the dam. "We've been talking here like this is a very old dam," Smith said of the century-old structure. But, he said, there are still dams in France that were built by the Romans. "It's not bound to fail. It could be here another 1,000 years if we take care of it." Smith said l ocal governm ents should ask voters to create a special tax district, with a new tax that will raise money to maintain the dam and Mirror Pond in the future. Tod Heisler, executive director of the Deschutes River Conservancy, said that the cost to dredge theDeschutes River is much higher than it was in the 1980s, and that projects will
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only grow more expensive in the future. "I just want to understand what those cost differences are, to keep itor remove it," Heisler said. City Councilor Mark Capell said he has two goals for Mirror Pond: to keep the landmark beautiful, and reach a decision about its future so that leaders do not have the same conversation again in 25 years. "If you look at what's happened to costs in the last 30 years, and regulations in the last 30 years, it's going to be incredibly p a i nful," C a pell said. "Unfortunately, it's what the cityhas done foryears.We continue to kick the can down the road on a lot of issues, and it's important to stop doing that."
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TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
UPDATE:SYRIA
Rebel infighting underminingrevolt By Zeina Karam
the expertise and r esourcThe Associated Press ground. es that their u neasy allies "The r ebels' f ocus h a s brought to the battlefield, but BEIRUT — On Syria's front lines, al-Qaida fighters and shifted from toppling the renow question whether such more mainstream Syrian reb- gime to governing and power military assets are worth the els have turned against each struggles," said a 29-year-old trouble — not to mention the other in a power struggle that woman from th e c ontested added difficulty in persuading has undermined the e f fort city of Homs. "I feel that the the West to arm them. "We don't w a n t f o r eign to topple Syrian P resident lack of true leadership is and Bashar Assad. has always been their biggest fighters. We have enough men After violent clashes and problem." She spoke on condi- and we want them out of Syrthe assassination of two rival tion of anonymity, fearing re- ia," said Brig. Gen. Salim Idris, commanders, one of w h om taliation from the fighters and head of the Supreme Military was beheaded, more moder- the regime. Council of the Free Syrian ate factions are publicly accusThe infighting, which exArmy, an umbrella group for ing the extremists of trying to ploded into the open in the dozens of brigades. seize control of the rebellion. country's rebel-held north in I n strikingly b lunt c o mThe rivalries — along with recent days, is contributing to ments in an interview with Althe efforts by extremist for- a sense across many parts of Arabiya on Monday, Idris, a eign fighters to impose their Syria that the revolution has secular-mindedarmy defector strict interpretation of Islam in faltered. It threatens to frac- who has the backing of foreign areas they control — are chip- ture an opposition movement powers, accused members of ping away at the movement's that has been plagued by divi- the Islamic State of Iraq and popularity in Syria at a time sions from the start. the Levant of being regime when the regime is making The moderates once valued agents and "criminals."
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Fish Continued from A1 Young salmon start their m igration to t h e o cean as year-old fish, French said. Some, known as jacks, swim back after one full year in the ocean, but most don't return until they are 3, 4 or even 5 years old. Somewhere along this life history lies a problem that leads to a drastic drop in the number of fish. Mimicking nature, hundreds of thousands of fryhave been released into tributaries above the dams in recent years. "We are still i n vestigating, trying to figure out some causes," French said. "... There is not a smoking gun." Adding to the mystery is that fall-run chinook salmon, which spawn on the Deschutes River downstream of the dam, have seen bumper runs in recent years. All of the spring chinook releasedupstream of the dam this year are implanted with r adio t r a n smitters, w h i c h show that half have swum into the Metolius River from Lake Billy Chinook, where they were released. This h asn't been a surprise. Concannon saidthe riverwas the primary source for springrun chinook before the dams were built in 1950s and '60s. The designs included a 3-milelong fish ladder and a tramway to move fish swimming upstream around the dams. The system worked, but young fish trying to swim out to the ocean became lost in the cross current of Lake Billy Chinook. In the late 1960s, a hatchery replaced the wild run of salmon. Plans to restore the spring chinook run, as well as sockeye salmon an d s t eelhead
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donating regularly had no iron reserves and 51 percent produced iron-deficient red blood cells. The risks were higher for those who were already regular donors, the study found, with 27 percent of women having absent iron stores and 62 percent producing iron deficient red blood cells. Eighteen percent of regular male donors had depletediron stores and 47 percent produced irondeficient red blood cells. The Red Cross, which provides 40 percent of the blood supply nationwide, changed its policies this winter. It now recommends men who donate three or more times a year and women of child-bearing age who give blood more than twice annually t o c o nsider iron supplements. It doesn't provide them. "We changed our stance on the whole iron issue," Benjamin said. "Research is being done through the National Institutes of Health, but we can't really wait. We have to react now."
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though, may be normal in the early stages of iron loss, when there are usually no symptoms, said Richard Benjamin, chief medical officer of t he American Red Cross. "The early symptoms are very subtle," Benjamin said by telephone. "It's difficult to ask donors if they're feeling tired, listless, depressed. Those are symptoms of the modern age." The U.S.-funded study probing iron deficiency in blood donors was published in April 2012 in the medical journal Transfusion. It found 20 percent of women who started
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
TODAY'S READ:FOOD AND FARMING
avin one ees — an t ewor — a iveatatime By Roy Wenzl WICHITA, Kan. — On a 102-degree afternoon h ere, Bill Vinduska pulled on his beekeepersuitand raised himself 25 feet in a hydraulic lift, to the eaves under the clubhouse roof at L.W. Clapp Municipal Golf Course. When you're trying to help save the world, you sometimes get stung, and sweaty. "There are days I just don't want to do this anymore," Vinduska said. Vinduska would sweat for the next four hours. To slip into the suit, he'd taken off his shirt, exposing the tattoos: a heavy-link chain encircling his neck. Inside the loop, on Vinduska's chest, lies a red heart wrapped in thorns. It was about 120 degrees under the eaves. The tats, the shaved head, sweatband and l ong b eard m ay look f o r m idable a n d off-putting, but K ansas bee people say Vinduska is one of the better mentors around hard-working, respectful and smart. And they say he's one of the few people trying to save the honeybees rather than one of the many killing them off. If he doeshelp save them, they say, he may end up saving all of us too.
Bee worries We are killing off the honey-
of wax honeycomb, filled with brown honey, and darker material, at one end, which was where the queen laid her eggs and the hive raised the baby bee larvae. They are such vulnerable creatures, Candy said. "People have no idea."
Hive preservation When they remove a wild hive like this one, Bill and Candy take it home to try to preserve it. They are by no means the only people trying to save the honeybee. Nearly every beekeeper nowadays is read-
'People have no idea'
ing, Googling reports, trying
As Vinduska cut with the
to save bees one hive at a time. Bill and Candy own 2 00 hives now, housing them at their farm near Marion and on property Candy owns in Oklahoma. Six years ago Bill began an experiment that continues to this day. To kill the varroa mite that has killedso many bees,scientists came up with a pesticide that literally killed a bug living on a bug. It was a fine piece of work. But it didn't last. Varroamites got creative, genetically. The pesticide would kill off maybe 99 percent of the mites, but the surviving 1 percent developed a resistance to pesticide. Then the next year, pesticide killed only 98 percent of the mites. All they did in the end was create a resistant varroa mite. Bill six years ago stopped using pesticide or any other chemicals in his hives. "I lost big," he said. "About 35 percent." He did the same thing the next year. "I lost 33 percent. The next year, 25 percent. And so on." He let nature take its course. And the bees began developing an increasing ability to survive the mites. He and Candy work hard at this. They grow clover for the bees on their farm. He said other beekeepers are adopting chemical-free methods and that it works.
saw, a gob of bright syrupy
Travta Heying / Wichita Eagle
Bill Vinduska removes a beehive in the eaves of the clubhouse at the L.W. Clapp Municipal Golf Course in Wichita, Kan., earlier this month. When he removes a wild hive, he takes it home to try to preserve it. hives, but he's down to 600, mostly because of colony collapse disorder. Verhoek manages 20,000 hives, and with 50,000 or so bees in every hive, that means he owns a billion bees. He loses millions of them everyyear. The EPA is worried. The Department of Agriculture is worried. Scientists and bee
farmers say honeybees help
bee, bee people say. We do so feed the world. If the bees die at our own great periL Randy Verhoek, the Texan who leads the American Honey Producers Association as president, said,"The losses we are suffering are simply not sustainable." B eekeepers, w h o tr u c k billions of bees all over the country to pollinate our fruits, nuts and vegetables, have lost nearly 40 percent of their hives each summer in recent years, Verhoek said, a catastrophic l oss. Bees are dying in t h e wild, too. Jerry Brown, a t hird-generationbeekeeper in Haddam, Kan., used to manage 4,000
a 5-foot-longyellow-gold wedge
The beekeepers truck billions of bees all over the country, 500 hives to a semi-truck load every spring and summer, setting out hives to pollinate the almond trees in California, and vegetable and fruit farms everywhere else. A beekeeper can collect anywhere from $50 to $150 to $180 per hive to deliver the bees for pollination. "Those big farming operations are mono-cultures — not enough variety in nutrients," Bill Vinduska had said. "So the bees become stressed,their diet isn't good. Makes them vulnerable."
The Wichita Eagle
off, Brown said, we will eat nothing but lettuce and cereal and stringy free-range meat. Even the tender beef we eat comes indirectly from bees: They help pollinate the alfalfa that feeds cows. Bees are part of God's creation and deserve more respect, said Rocky Schmied, a Wichitabeekeeper who admires Bill Vinduska. "I am a Christian, and every time I see honeybees at work it is one more reason to believe in a creator," he said. "There are so many flowers, all of whom produce nectar at different times of the day, and yet
the bees know what flowers to go to when. They navigate back home f rom w h erever they are. They communicate. They work together. I sit there watching sometimes and am amazed at what's going on in those little tiny brains."
Removal job
before this one was in a west Wichita apartment — inside somebody's closet.
Bees began circling Bill's hooded head. He cut a hole through plywood. Watching from below, Candy said she had no idea how angry Bill was about to make the bees. "Sometimes they're nice," he had said. "And sometimes not."
Vinduska vacuumed hundreds of bees off the shingles, the vacuum hose leading into a containment box. He sheered Humans the culprit? shingles off with a nail-puller, Many scientists since 2006 s hingles c l attering d o w n . have said no one knows what's Clubhouse people had called killing the bees, but Vinduska after seeing bees grouped on and Brown and Verhoek say that's not really true. They all the roof. "I wonder what the golf- say the culprits include bee viers would've thought if they'd ruses, a parasitic mite called known there's thousands of the Varroa destructor, and bees just above their heads," several varieties of clueless husaid Vinduska's wife, Candy, man beings. while watching her husband at Farmers hose down their work. pastures and fields with pesThere were about 40,000 ticides. Bees bring home the wild bees in the roof seam. pesticides and die. Big bee opSometimes, Bill Vinduska said, erations complain about this they find hives that big inside publicly, but Bill and Candy people's houses. The last re- say the big bee operations do moval he and Candy had done some harm themselves.
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gold appeared in the cut, and began to ooze downward. It flowed lazily, sparkling in the lowering sun that baked him inside the bee suit. He kept cutting. A golfer wearing a straw hat and shorts drove up in a cart. "What the — !" he exclaimed. He saw roof shingles falling like autumn leaves, a man in a moon suit 25 feet up, and honeybees lazily circling his hooded head. The golfer must have seen the gob of wild honey, too, because he walked over to Candy. "Hey," he said. "Can I have some of that?" "Sure," she said. "Bring us a plate." But she grinned after he walked away. "I wouldn't want any of that. It's a sticky mess, and you don't know whether anybody's sprayed the hive." Candy says she sometimes has to hold her tongue. People can do what they want with their own property, she said. But she knows how vulnerable the bees are, though people are terrified of t hem. They spray them as though they are wasps. Under the roof, Bill had cut out a 5-foot section of roofing
plywood. He pulled it away. Underneath, now exposed to sunlight, were tens of thousands ofbees, acting sleepy and docile. They walked around on
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5
Weather, B6
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
BRIEFING
irecon inues o row
2 women cited for campfire blaze A mother and daughter living in a homeless camp off Neff Road
were cited in connection with a fire that charred just less than
four acres Thursday east of Bend. The Deschutes County Sheriff's Office cited the girl,14,
for reckless burning, reckless endangerment of another person and second-degree criminal mischief. Her mother, Ruth Johnson, 41, was cited for failure to supervise a child, the Sheriff's Office announced late
By Branden Andersen The Bulletin
A wildfire started by lightning on Saturday 20 miles southeast of Ashwood has grown from 50 acres to approximately 120 acres despite efforts to dampen the blaze Sunday and Monday. The Box Springs Fire is burning on both private and Oregon Department of Forestry land. It's the largest of three fires that started over the weekend, said fire information specialist Kate Goossens. "It's pretty smoky out there right now," Goossens said. "Dry fuel, poor access
and weather conditions have been challenging firefighting efforts." The Stephenson Mountain Lookout reported seeing the fire around 11:15 a.m. Sunday, said Goossens. She added the fire grew quickly due to high temperatures and wind, as well as dry fuel in the area from juniper, pine and sage. The Box Springs Fire was not a threat to any homes or buildings Monday evening. Goossens said the Forestry Department, U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, private contractors and private landowners are all
working on containing the fire. "Right now, it's not controlled and continuing to grow," Goossens said. Rod Nichols, spokesman for the Department of Forestry, said approximately 111 firefighting personnel are on site. The Forest Service said they are bringing in firefighting personnelfrom outside areas to help the local firefighters at the Box Springs Fire and in preparation for other fires that could start. " We're watching the f i r e closely," Nichols said. See Fire/B5
Box Springs Fire • Area: 0.19 square miles, 120
acres • Cause: Lightning Bend
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Hamby Road,according to sheriff's Sgt. Troy Gotchy. The fire spread south
and west, burning sage brush andjuniper trees, and threatening a home nearby,Gotchy reported. The fire was
apparently improperly extinguished by the girl, said Bend deputy fire marshal Dan Derlacki.
The girl used approximately1 liter of water to douse the flames and
covered the coals with dirt. Derlacki said more
water was needed,and dirt worked as aninsulator for the coals rather than a retardant. Although not positive, investigators believe that wind picked up and
reignited the fire, burning nearby brush. The
girl's tent and personal property were lost in the fire. — Bulletin staff report
Underpass detour The Third Street
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Well shot!
Branden Andersen The Bulletin
about 50 yards from south of Neff Road near
Policing through social media
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Sunday. The pair lived in atent the main part of a large homeless campjust
www.bendbulletin.com/local
Olivia Perry, of Vancouver, B.C., washes her sister's horse, Alezan, in preparation for competition in the Oregon High Desert Classics I at J Bar J Ranch in Bend. The hunter-jumper equestrian competition starts Wednesday and continues until July 28. For details, see the calendar listings on Page B2.
When a thief lifted a bright-yellow, high-end mountain bike Wednesday from Pine Mountain Sports on Century Drive, Bend Police Lt. Chris Carney did what police officersdo, and issued an old-fashioned "be on the lookout." But he used Twitter, a modern twist on the old staple, and one that goes beyond the usual police network to, so far, 300 followers of Bend PD on the social media platform. "We figured we could help by getting the photo out there," Carney said. "It was a perfect opportunity to use Twitter and get the community involved." Last week, Redmond Police Department announced the launch of its new Facebook page, another effort on social media to reach out and connect with the community it serves. The department has operated a lightly used Twitter account since 2009. "It's easy to interact with the general public when you have an interface that people are familiar with," said community service officer Chris Duchateau. "They are using it every day, so it's not asking the public to do anything different." Facebook and Twitter, two of the most popular social media platforms on the Internet, are being recognized as powerful tools forlaw enforcement. Facebook reg>stered 1.11 b>lhon users worldwide as of July 14, according to digital marketing website Digital Marketing Ramblings. Twitter, the social media website that allows users to send out 140-character "tweets,"ormessages, to followers, has 200 million active users, according to the same study. Computer and smartphone users spend 27 and 30 percent of their time on social media, respectively, according to marketing studies. A study by Pew Research Center found 47 percentof smartphone users got news from social media "sometimes" or "regularly." After emergency situations such as the Boston Marathon bombings and the Aurora, Colo., theater shooting, Twitter and Facebook were seen by authorities as potential avenues to quickly inform and warn the public about developing situations. See Police /B5
reader photos • We want to seeyour photos of water sports foranotherspecial version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors
section. Submityour best workat denddulletin.com /watersports and we'll pick the bestfor publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors
to readerphotos© bendbulletin.com and tell us a bit about where
and whenyou took them. We'll choose the best for publication. Submission requirements: 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 (atleast 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
Motb prone to population explosions returns By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
They are big, fuzzy-headed and may be attracted to a porch light near you — pandora moths are back in Bend. Whether the population of pandora moths will reach outbreak levels, as it did back in the mid-1990s, remains to be seen. "We might be on the front end of it," said Andy Eglitis, entomologist for the Deschutes National Forest. He said he started getting reports of the moths "here and there" around town in the past week. The moths have yellow antennae con-
trasting with their grayish brown bodies. The moths, which have a wingspan up to four inches, come from the forest but are drawn into town by lights at night. "It seems to be buildings that have lights on at night; that is where they congregate," he said. During the mid-1990s outbreak, the moths amassed at Vince Genna Stadium, attracted by the lights for Bend Bandit night games. The Bend Elks, who now call the stadium east of Southeast Third Street home, haven't seen the moths around this
year, said Jim Richards, general manager of the baseball club. "So far, knock on wood, it hasn't happened," he said. While the moths are a native species and don't pose a harm to people, they are a "defoliator," an insect that eats leaves or needles. As caterpillars, they munch heavilyon pine needles, leaving many branches bare, but not killing the trees. The caterpillars come out during even-numbered years, Eglitis said, and the moths fly during odd-numbered years. See Moth /B5
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A pandora moth clings to a tree in Bend on Thursday. The moths are defoliators, insects that strip trees of leaves or needles, and periodically appear in large numbers. The last outbreak was in1994.
B2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
E VENT
AL E N D A R
SHOW:A National Reined Cow Horse Association event featuring herd work, rein work, steer SUMMER SHOWDOWN HORSE stopping and more; free; 8 a.m. and SHOW: A National Reined Cow 7 p.m. shows; Rim Rock Riders Horse Association event featuring Arena, 17037 S.W. Alfalfa Road, herd work, rein work, steer stopping Powell Butte; 206-713-1121 or andmore; free;8a.m. and 7 p.m . www.nwrcha.com. shows; Rim Rock Riders Arena, CASCADECYCLINGCLASSIC: 17037 S.W. Alfalfa Road, Powell The 74-mile McKenzie Pass Road Butte; 206-713-1121 or www. Race stage begins at Maxwell Snonwrcha.com. parkfor women and Big Springs REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Sno-park for men; both end at Free admission; 3-6 p.m.; Centennial Three Creeks Sno-park; free for Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen spectators; 10 a.m.; Bend location; Avenue; 541-550-0066 or 541-388-0002 or www.cascaderedmondfarmersmarket1©hotmail. classic.org. com. BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free TUESDAY FARMERSMARKET: admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks Free admission; 3-7 p.m.; Alley, between Northwest Brookswood Meadow Plaza, Franklin Avenue and Northwest 19530 Amber Meadow Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, Drive, Bend; 541-323bendfarmersmarket@gmail.com or 3370 or farmersmarket© www.bendfarmersmarket.com. brookswoodmeadowplaza.com. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Sue CASCADECYCLING CLASSIC: Fountain reads from her book, The three-mile prologue stage "Too Cold to Snow"; free; 4-6 begins at Meeks Trail Road; free for p.m.; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe, spectators; 6 p.m.; Bend location; 135 N.W.MinnesotaAve.,Bend; 541-388-0002 or www.cascade541-749-2010. classic.org. ALIVE AFTERFIVE: Hit Explosion STORIES AT SUNSET: Features performs, with Mosely Wotta; at poetand musician Jason the north end of Powerhouse Drive; Graham telling the story of one free; 5-8 p.m.; Old Mill District, child's courage; free; 6:30 p.m.; 661 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Downtown Bend Public Library, Bend; 541-389-0995 or www. 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617aliveafterfivebend.com. 7099 or www.deschuteslibrary. HOUSECONCERT:Hardcore punk/ org/calendar. metal ACxDCband performs, with 234TH ARMYBAND:The official opening bands and a potluck; $5 military band of Oregon performs; suggesteddonation;5 p.m .;House free; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 Concert on Daniel Road, 62855 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 Daniel Road, Bend; www.m-o-mor www.234tharmyband.com. p.blogspot.com. "JOSH GROBAN:ALL THAT MUSIC IN THE CANYON: Featuring ECHOESARTIST CUT": A Soul Benders; free; 5:30-8 p.m.; screening of Josh Groban's American Legion Community Park, Feb. 4 performance in New York 850 S.W. Rimrock Way, Redmond; City; $15; 7:30 p.m.; Regal Old www.musicinthecanyon.com. Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 AUTHORPRESENTATION:Learn S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; about fermented foods and how to 541-382-6347. make them from Sandor Katz; $20; ORIONFREEMAN:The 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Locavore, Pennsylvania folk band performs; 1216 N.E. First St., Bend; www. $7 in advance; 7:30 p.m.; The centraloregonlocavore.com. Sound Garden, 1279 N.E. Second PICNIC INTHEPARK: Featuring St., Bend; 541-633-6804 or www. high energy music and comedy with thesoundgardenstudio.com. Stoddard and Cole; free; 6-8 p.m.; Pioneer Park, 450 N.E. Third St., Prineville; 541-447-6909. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: LA WEDNESDAY TRAVIATA":An encore presentation OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS I: of Willy Decker's production of A U.S. Equestrian Federation class the Verdi opera starring Natalie AA international hunter-jumper Dessay; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal equestrian competition; proceeds Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; admission; 8 a.m.-5 p.m .;JBarJ 541-382-6347. Boys Ranch, 62895 HambyRoad, THE CONGRESS:The Colorado Bend; 541-389-1409, tryan©jbarj. rock 'n' roll band performs; free; org or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. SUMMER SHOWDOWNHORSE Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vvvvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
TODAY
Metropohtan Opera via The Assoaated Press
Natalle Dessay plays Violetta in the Metropolitan Opera's production of "La Travlata." Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX will screen the operaat7 p.m. Wednesday. St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com.
234TH ARMYBAND:The brass band of the official military band of Oregon performs; free; 2 p.m.; AmericanLegion Post45,52532 Drafter Road, La Pine; 541-536THURSDAY 1402 or www.234tharmyband.com. Craig OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS I: AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Johnson will present his newest A U.S. Equestrian Federation class Walt Longmire mystery, "A AA international hunter-jumper Serpent's Tooth"; $5; 4 p.m.; Paulina equestrian competition; proceeds Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free Redmond; 541-526-1491. admission; 8a.m.-5 p.m.;JBarJ Boys Ranch, 62895 HambyRoad, MUNCH 8 MUSIC: The music series Bend; 541-389-1409, tryan©jbarj. continues with Chicago Afrobeat org or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. Project; with food, arts and crafts booths, children's area and more; SUMMER SHOWDOWNHORSE dogs prohibited; free; 5:30 p.m.; SHOW: A National Reined Cow Horse Association event featuring Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside herd work, rein work, steer stopping Blvd., Bend; www.munchandmusic. and more; free;8a.m .and 7 p.m . com. shows; Rim Rock Riders Arena, AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Craig 17037 S.W. Alfalfa Road, Powell Johnson will present his newest Butte; 206-713-1121 or www. Walt Longmire mystery, "A nwrcha.com. Serpent's Tooth"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; 234THARMY BAND:The woodwind Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. ensemble of the official military Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. band of Oregon performs; free;10 "A MIDSUMMERNIGHT'S a.m.; High Desert Assisted Living DREAM":The classic play by Community, 2660 N.E. Mary Rose Shakespeare is performed by the Place, Bend; 541-312-2003 or Bend Experimental Art Theatre; $15 www.234tharmyband.com. adult, $10 students18 and younger; CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC:The 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. 20-mile Time Trial stage begins and Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558 ends at Crooked River Park; free for or www.beatonline.org. spectators; 10 a.m.; Crooked River AMY GRANT:The pop star Park, Amphitheater, 1037 S. Main performs, with Brandon Heath; St., Prineville; 541-388-0002 or $35 (reserved), $17.50 (general www.cascade-classic.org. admission), $75 (VIP) plus fees; add DRONES ATHOME: A panel $5 for door sales; 7 p.m.; Christian discussion of the evolution of Life Center, 21720 E. U.S. Highway drones from battleground to 20, Bend; 541-389-8241 or www. backyard; buffet lunch included; $20 j.mp/amygrantinfo. members and first-time attendees, "CHASINGLEGENDS":A screening $35 non-members, $35 at door; of the film about The Tour de France; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m., early registration closes July16; St. Charles Bend conference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 410-633-7163 or www. cityclubco.org.
raises funds and awareness for Central Oregon Trail Alliance; $5; 9:15 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. THE LADYCROONERS:The California rootsy folk-pop band performs; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3888331 or www.silvermoonbrewing. com. YOU'RE WELCOME:The 80's cover band performs, with Tentareign; free; 9:30 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; 541-408-2599.
three-day festival with workshops, a luau, jams, open mic and live performances; benefits Ukes for Youths program; $75, $40 children ages 8-13, free for children 7 and younger; 10 a.m., gates open July 19, ends July 21 at noon; Runway Ranch, 22655 Peacock Lane, Bend; 541-390-4646 or www.ukeu.info. SISTERS FARMERSMARKET:3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park,W estCascade Avenue and Ash Street; www. sistersfarmersmarket.com. THIRD FRIDAYSTROLL: Businesses stay open with special sales, music, art, food and beverages; this month's theme is "Moonlight Madness"; free; 4-8 p.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-923-5191. MUSICIN THEPARK:"Jazz'n FRIDAY Blues" with Jeff Leslie Blues Trio and John 4Tune; free; BALLOONSOVERBEND 6:30 p.m.; Sahalee Park, B and CHILDREN'SFESTIVAL: Balloons Seventh streets, Madras; www. launch over Bend, weather centraloregonshowcase.com. permitting; followed by a Night Glow; free admission; 6 a.m. Iaunch, "A MIDSUMMERNIGHT'S 8:30 p.m. Night Glow; Riverbend DREAM":The classic play by Park, Southwest Columbia Street Shakespeare is performed by the and Southwest Shevlin Hixon Bend Experimental Art Theatre; $15 Drive; 541-323-0964 or www. adult, $10 students18 and younger; balloonsoverbend.com. 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS I: Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558 or www.beatonline.org. A U.S. Federation class AA international hunter-jumper AL DUGAS: TheSeattle singerequestrian competition; proceeds songwriter performs, with Rural benefit J Bar J Youth Services; Demons; $6; 8 p.m.; Tin Pan free admission; $10 per person for Theater, 869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, barbecue, ticket required; 8 a.m.-9 Bend; 541-241-2271 or www. p.m., 6 p.m. Mardi Gra barbecue tinpantheater.com. while watching Pro-Am relay; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-389-1409, tryan©jbarj. org or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. SATURDAY SUMMER SHOWDOWN HORSE BALLOONSOVERBEND SHOW:A National Reined Cow CHILDREN'S FESTIVAL:Balloons Horse Association event featuring herd work, rein work, steer stopping launch over Bend, weather permitting; followed by a festival andmore; free;8a.m. and 7 p.m . with activities, food, crafts, an shows; Rim Rock Riders Arena, Urban Scramble and more; a portion 17037 S.W. Alfalfa Road, Powell of proceeds benefits Saving Grace; Butte; 206-713-1121 or www. free, fees for activities; 6 a.m. nwrcha.com. launch, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. festival, CAMP COURAGE ARTSHOW: noon Urban Scramble; Riverbend Featuring artwork by children to Park, Southwest Columbia Street express their grief; free admission; and Southwest Shevlin Hixon 10 a.m.; Hollinshead Barn, 1235 N.E. Drive; 541-323-0964 or www. Jones Road, Bend; 541-977-8923 or balloonsoverbend.com. www.partnersbend.org. THE PICKLEBALLCOMMUNITY CASCADECYCLINGCLASSIC: GARAGESALEFUNDRAISER: The 92-mil e and 70-mile Cascade Proceeds benefit the Bend Parks Lakes Road Race stage begins and and Recreation Foundation for ends at Mt. Bachelor's West Village the purpose of building pickleball Lodge; free for spectators; 10 a.m.; courts; free admission; 7 a.m.-4 Mt. Bachelor ski area, 13000 S.W. p.m., donation drop-off 10 a.m.-5 Century Drive, Bend; 541-388-0002 p.m. July19at site; Parking lot, or www.cascade-classic.org. 50 N.W. Shevlin Hixon Rd.,Bend; UKULELE UNIVERSITY 2013: A anneretired@gmail.com.
NAPA HI6H DESERT AUTO SUPPLY
NEWS OF RECORD Anderson, 22, was arrested POLICE LOG on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants The Bulletin will update items at10:23 p.m. July11, in the in the Police Log when such area of North U.S. Highway a request is received. Any 97 and Empire Avenue. new information, such as the DUII —John Patrick Nolan, dismissal of charges or acquittal, 40, was arrested on suspicion must be verifiable. For more of driving under the influence information, call 541-383-0358. of intoxicants at 11:17 a.m. July 12, in the 1000 block of BEND POLICE Southeast Third Street. DEPARTMENT DUII —Blake Thomas Lyden, 24, was arrested on suspicion Criminal mischief — An of driving under the influence act of criminal mischief of intoxicants at 11:43 was reported at 11:18 a.m. p.m. July12, in the area of July10, in the 200 block of Northeast Fourth Street and Northwest Florida Avenue. Northeast Norton Avenue. Criminal mlschlef — An act of criminal mischief was reported at DUII —Kelby Blain Smith, 26, was arrested on suspicion of 3:43 p.m. July10, in the 900 block driving under the influence of of Northwest Riverside Boulevard. intoxicants at 2:02 a.m. July Theft — A theft was reported 13, in the area of Brosterhous at 8:42 p.m. July 10, in the Road and Rolen Avenue. 1500 block of Northeast Unlawful entry — A vehicle was F.J. McClean Court. entered and an act of criminal DUII —Shauna Marie Olson, mischief were reported and 24, was arrested on suspicion an arrest made at 3:17 a.m. of driving under the influence July13, in the 800 block of of intoxicants at11:07 p.m. July Northwest Newport Avenue. 10, in the area of Southwest Brookswood Boulevard PRINEVILLE POLICE and McClellan Road. DEPARTMENT Criminal mlschlef — An act of criminal mischief was reported at DUII —Robert Phillips, 62, was 12:32 p.m. July 11, in the 61400 arrested on suspicion of driving block of Elder Ridge Street. under the influence of intoxicants Theft — A theft was reported at12:50 a.m. July13, in the at1:34 p.m. July11, in the area of North Main Street. 2600 block of Northeast DUII —Brigette Gross, 40, U.S. Highway 20. was arrested on suspicion of Unlawful entry — A vehicle driving under the influence of was reported entered at 5:18 intoxicants at 2:16 a.m. July14, p.m. July11, in the area of in the area of Tom McCall Road. Meyer Drive and Reed Lane. Burglary — A burglary and a Theft — A theft was reported theft were reported at1:39 at 2:14 p.m. July12, in the p.m. July14, in the area of 2300 block of Northeast Northwest Fifth Street. Wells Acres Road. Theft — A theft was reported Theft — A theft was reported at 8 p.m. July14, in the area at 4:34 p.m. July 12, in the area of Northwest Terrace Lane. of Northwest Floyd Lane and Northwest Lemhi Pass Drive. JEFFERSON Theft — A theft was reported at COUNTY SHERIFF'S 6:54 p.m. July12, in the 20200 OFFICE block of East Reed Lane. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was Theft — A theft was reported reported entered at 10:43 a.m. at1:41 p.m. July 8, in the July13, in the 61200 block 6400 block of Southwest of South U.S. Highway 97. Wren Street in Culver. Burglary— A burglary was Criminal mischief — An act reported at12:03 p.m. of criminal mischief was July 4, in the 1200 block of reported at 7:53 p.m. July 8, Southeast Wilson Avenue. in the 200 block of Northwest DUII — Christopher John Juniper Lane in Madras.
0
Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at1:37 p.m. July 9, in the 1000 block of Northeast Brown Drive in Madras. Theft — A 1978 Chevy service truck was reported stolen at 8:42 a.m. July10, in the 5700 block of Southwest Elbe Drive in Culver. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:15 p.m. July 11, in the 200 block of East A Street in Culver. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at10:29 p.m. July12, in the area of South U.S. Highway 97 and Park Lane in Culver. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 8:07 p.m. July13, in the 400 block of Northeast A Street in Madras. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:02 a.m. July14, in Madras.
NIGN011II m ' ' ll
OREGON STATE POLICE Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 5:32 p.m. July 12, in the area of East U.S. Highway 20 near milepost 62. DUII — Tarah Marann Christen, 26, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:39 a.m. July 13, in the area of 61st Street and Gift Road in Bend. DUII — William Kurt Vanderpool, 42, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:55 p.m. July13, in the area of Butler Market Road and Powell Butte Highway in Bend. DUII —Andrew Philip Romandia, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:44 a.m. July 14, in the area of Southwest Reed Market Road and Southwest Silver Sage Boulevard in Bend. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at10:28 a.m. July14, in the area of West U.S. Highway 20 and Cooley Road in Bend. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at10:24 a.m. July12, in the area of South U.S. Highway 97 and Rosedale Road in Crescent. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 6:26 a.m. July 14, in the area of South U.S. Highway 97 and Tumbo Drive in Gilchrist.
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TUESDAY, JULY 'I6, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
ri ea viser acesscru in detailed," she wrote. • Ethics panel is investigating accusations priately The Oregon Legislature, with from the governor's of a conflict of interest in failed I-5 project prodding office, approved $450 million
LOgging aCCident —Washington County authorities say a logger reported to have two broken legs has been hoisted out of a 400-foot
ravine and sent to the hospital. Forest Grovecrews couldn't get a
Communications & O p i nion Research Inc. to a $90-an-hour contract in2009, before she was hired by the governor. By Steven Dubois tant on the project. this spring for a new Interstate Although the b ridge ultiThe Associated Press The investigation will likely 5 bridge over the Columbia mately went nowhere, David PORTLAND — Gov. John take close to six months, Ron- River between Portland and Evans and Associates billed Kitzhaber's top adviser on the ald Bersin, the commission's ex- Vancouver, Wash., but the $3.4 $ 37 million for the work i t failed Columbia River Crossing ecutive director, said Monday. billion project fell apart when performed. McCaig Commuproject is under investigation The commission's prelimi- Washington state l a wmak- nications was paid more than for potential violations of state nary review, prepared in a re- ers declined to pay that state's $400,000 through the end of ethics law. port dated July 2, said the inves- share. April 2013. The Oregon Government tigation is warranted because Two people filed ethics comThe commission's prelimiEthics Commission decided to there is "substantial objective plaints in March after the Wil- nary review said McCaig may formally investigate accusa- basis" to believe McCaig may lamette Week newspaper ob- have engaged in a conflict of tions that Patricia McCaig did have violated rules. McCaig, 59, tained documents that showed interest each time her recomnot register as a lobbyist, as denied the allegations in a writ- David Evans and Associates, a mendation or action as the govrequired, and had a conflict of ten response to the panel. design-and-management firm ernor's adviser had an effect on "My work i s t r ansparent, with a financial interest in the the business with which she is interest by working for both the governor and the prime consul- properly reported and appro- bridge project, signed McCaig associated.
vehicle to the logger Monday morning, so they called in a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter. KGW-TV quoted Fire and Rescue Capt. Chris Wood-
ford as saying hedidn't believe the injuries would be life threatening. He said a large log rolled down the hill and struck the logger. The man was not identified.
Portland protest —Hundreds of people gathered in north Portland's Peninsula Park Sunday afternoon to protest neighborhood
watch volunteer GeorgeZimmerman's acquittal in the fatal shooting of17-year-old Trayvon Martin in Sanford, Fla. KGW reports speak-
ers took turns using amegaphone to shareconcerns and frustration about what they consider racial inequality in the criminal justice system. Thepeaceful rally was one of manyacross the country after Zimmerman was found not guilty Saturday of murder or manslaugh-
ter. He says hefired in self-defense. Rafting death —A South Carolina man hasdied after falling in the Rogue River whenhis raft got stuck in a rapid. Curry County Sheriff John Bishop said Monday he is waiting for the body to be examined by the medical examiner to know whether the man drowned
or died of a medical issue. Bishop says57-year-old Steven D. Hoyer of Spartanburg died Friday at Blossom Bar, a Class IV rapid in the wild section of the popular whitewater river.
AShland hOme rentalS —TheAshland City Council plans to take a that's becomeeasyto do with online listings and communications. The idea has drawn opposition from the local lodging association
representing, hotels, motels, bedandbreakfast operators and people who rent vacation homeslegally in amarket that attracts thousands for By Lynda V. Mapes
Shakespeare plays, wine country visits and other tourist activity. The
The Seat tle Times
city has beennotifying someproperty owners that they're operating illegally in single-family zones, theAshland Daily Tidings reported. The
S EATTLE — T h e y a r e older than dinosaurs, older than salmon. Around for an astounding 450 million years, Pacific lamprey have been feeding the native people and landscape of the Northwest for millennia. And come summer, as the heat builds, tribal members from all around the Columbia Basin travel fo r h o urs and hundreds of miles to fish for lamprey, in one of the few places where the ancient fish are still abundant: Oregon's Willamette Falls. "It's kind of its own unique taste, you either like it or you don't," said fisherman Bobby Begay of the Yakama Indian Nation, who likes to barbecue what lamprey he doesn't gift to elders. "To us, they are sacred food. We use themforfunerals, memorials and honor dinners, our special times. In our way, we say they have a history in them," he said of the fish. "They serve a purpose, and they are part of the balance of life." As Begay fishes, using cotton gloves to pull the eels from a pool at the falls, he remembers thestories his grandfather used to tell, about how Eel lost his bones in a bet with Sucker. The 365 bones in a sucker fish — one for every day of the year — each came with it s ow n s t ory, Begay remembers. He passes those stories, and the lamprey fishing tradition, on to his own little ones each summer, heading to the falls for aslippery harvest. Wind dried, eel makes a nutritious snack, three times higher in healthy fats than salmon. Roasted, it s i zzles with fat — for lamprey is an animal that has always fed not only the people but the land. Like salmon, they return from the ocean, bringing a harvest of nutrients from the sea to the streams where they spawn. Both the male and the fem ale carry r o cks i n t h e i r mouths to build the nest for their young. When it's ready, the m a l e w r a p s h i m s elf around thefemale to squeeze her eggs from her, fertilizes them, and the two then die. "Salmon get all the credit," said Sara Thompson of the Columbia River I n t ertribal F ish Commission, which i s
City Council meets today to debate whether to loosen restrictions.
Hikers rescued — Rescue teamshavebrought back three Southern Oregon hikers who took what looked like a shortcut down Mount McLoughlin and got lost. The Medford Mail Tribune reports the
three spent Saturday night at 5,600 feet, lighting a fire to keepwarm. Rescuers wentupSundaymorningtogetthem.Searchand Rescue Sgt. Shawn Richards said they took what appears to be a shortcut
through a field of rock that often gets hikers lost — crews rescue
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more than a dozen a year who try it. — From wire reports 'p
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Steven Begay sits between rocks at Willamette Falls and fills a net with lamprey as he and other fishermen continue an ancient tradition earlier this month. A cooler full of Pacific lamprey will be taken to tribal elders, who eagerly await the oily meat of the fish.
working with Columbia River tribes to restore lamprey to abundance. "But the ecosystem of the Pacific Northwest was built on the backs of these
them hundreds of m iles to their home waters above and beyond the dams, to help the fish survive and spawn a new generation. guys." Tribes also have launched a Once blackening the river $50 million restoration effort in untold numbers, today the with the U.S. Army Corps of eelscan be counted on the fin- Engineers to improve passage gers of two hands at some of for eels at the dams. And at the inland dams in the Colum- the Mukilteo Research Stabia River and Lower Snake tion, NOAA biologist Mary River, which block their pas- Moser is working on a project sage to spawning grounds. with the Confederated Tribes Dams, and even poisoning by of the Umatilla Indian Reserfisheries officials who from vation to develop techniques the 1940s to the 1980s worked to raise lamprey in a hatchery to rid streams of so-called environment. "rough fish," have put lamprey As he fished in the pool at at risk of extinction in many the falls, Begay said it was a streams. good day, laughing with famiThe lowest lamprey runs ly and friends, and harvesting on record were counted at a food he knew was eagerly Columbia and Snake r iver anticipated back home. "Our elders who grew up dams in 2010 and 2011, said Brian McIlraith, Pacific lamon it, they crave it, they wish prey project leader at the fish for it," he said of hi s l amcommission. prey catch. "We are fishing Today, lamprey populations for them, so they will have are in such severe decline, enough eels for the winter. "We will make a lot of peotribal members gather eels at Bonneville Dam and truck ple happy tonight."
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3. An enriched education is provided with Spanish, German, music, art and electives including snowboarding, xc skiing, kayaking, rock climbing, mountain biking, archery, swim team, skateboarding, cooking, finance, and farming. 4. Students learn to engage their community through relevant field trips and impactful service projects, such as orphans in Rwanda, seniors at Aspen Ridge, and the homeless at The Bethlehem Inn. 5. We teach to the whole child through an innovative approach of instruction in academics, spirituality and creativity. 6. We are at the fOrefrOnt of imPlementing innOVatiVe STEM CurriCulum
Eugene shelter tightens its rules The Associated Press
the Eugene Mission based on here, you don't know what it's God," Tripp told the Eugene like. It can be insane." Register-Guard. "It's how can The mission operates three we love these guests more by centers. The capacity at one keeping them safe and also forhomeless men to spend the giving them the opportunity to night has been reduced from get the heck out of here." 350 to 285.Its women's cenThe mission hadn't had a ter will remain at 60, but the major fight or i n jurious in- number of people in its Mothcident, he said, but it c an't ers and Children's Center has deal with the "overwhelming been cut from 34 to 15. number of homeless people A couple of months ago, paign, making chapel volun- in town," including those with nearly 500 people were staying tary and starting a Christian- drug and alcohol addictions overnight at the mission, Tripp based program to help people and criminal histories. said. He said the staff "was "There are always arguparticipate in mental health breaking under the strain of and addiction counseling and ments here, but they have be- having that many mentally ill work on other goals. come more frequent," he said. people and those with crimi"I call it t h e r etooling of "Unless you spend a n i ght nal backgrounds here." EUGENE T he o n l y homeless shelter in the Eugene-Springfieldarea has cut the number of people it lets in and toughened its drug and alcohol rules. Executive D i r ector J a ck Tripp said those are among changes at the Eugene Mission that i nclude ending a newspaper collection c a m-
in our classroom from Kindergarten through Middle School. We PrOVide BuS SerViCe,
Early drop Off — 7:30, Late Pick Up - 5:30 • We use current research based best practices to instruct students according to their many different learning styles. • We use efficient interactive SMART boards to keep our instruction relevant, flexible and excellent. • Teachers partner with parents to develop passionate learners in a safe and friendly classroom environment.
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B4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
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f the community wants to preserve Bend's Mirror Pond,
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it all comes down to the dam. Will Pacific Power maintain it? If not, is there any way for the community to take it over or otherwise preserve its pond-creating effect? If the answer to both of those questions is no, options to save the pond in its traditional form are severely limited. Yet both the park district and the power company reportthey haven't tried to find those answers, because they're waitingto see what the community wants. They supposedly will l e arn about the community's desires today when survey results are presented to a joint meeting of the Bend City Council and the Bend Park 8 Recreation District board. But today's presentation won't actually tell them what residents prefer; it will tell them only what a few self-selected people think. An unscientific survey will be offered, and may beinterpreted as meaning far more than it does. The park district's Mirror Pond Project Manager, Jim Figurski, and Pacific Power's Regional Community Manager, Angela Price, say they will consider the questions about the dam only once this process tells them what the community wants.
The communitycan'tknow what it wants, or what it's willing to pay for, unless it knows the dam's future. That's backwards, because the community can't know what it wants, or what it's willing to pay for, unless it knows the dam's future. Figurski said he expects the council and park board to identify a preferred option by the end of the month. Then the work starts on the details of how it could be accomplished and at what cost. We've argued repeatedly for preserving Mirror Pond, but the future of the dam is critical. It would be foolish to spend millions dredging the pond if the dam that makes it possible has a short-term future. We hope the decision-makers will put the survey results in proper perspective and demand real information before narrowing the options.
Better usesfor lottery bond money than Portland hotel
M
etro, the Portland-area's regional g overnment o rganization, owns t h e city's east-side Convention Center, and it's losing money on the deal — some $10 million in 2011 alone, according to Oregon Tax News. To stem the loss, it plans to shovel a truck full of public money into a new hotel nearby. The idea — build a hotel and conventioneers will flock to fill it — is not new. What is new is that this year the Oregon Legislature allowed itself to be persuaded to put $10 million in lottery bond proceeds toward the deal. That's just a fraction of the public money that will go toward the hotel, which Metro and the city of Portland have tried to get built for more than 20 years. In all, publicly backed bonds, loans and grants will supply some $78 million of the more than $195 million cost to build the 600-room hotel; private developers will put up another $117 million. That may not be the end of it, either. There's also talk of refunding transient room taxes to Hyatt, which will run the hotel, if the fa-
cility isn't the moneymaker its supporters hope it will be. There's no guarantee a hotel at the convention center will draw enough business to stem the latter's loss, either. In fact, Metro could end up with two money-losers on its hands if the gamble doesn't pay off. Oregon taxpayers would not be directly on the hook if things go south for Metro, but they should be concernedabout the arrangement just the same. Lottery revenues are supposed to be used to improve the economy, and the evidence that this project will do that is sketchy, at best. Worse, for Portlanders, at least, should be the knowledge that other hotels in the area, from the Hilton downtown to the Red Lion near the center, will see the taxes they collect from their own guests used to support a fancy new competitor. Fortunately the deal is far from done, and Metro still must persuade other governments in the area to shoulder part of the financial burden. We hope they fail. The lottery bond money surely could be put to better use.
M IVickel's Worth John Paul II ignored
pedophileproblem So the Catholic Church wants to make Pope John Paul II a saint. I am a practicing Catholic and I think the one miracle Pope John Paul II per-
formed was ignoring the pedophile problem in the Catholic Church all those years. Where was the leadership? The silence was deafening! Amazing — no — it's a miracle! Lauri Kelly Bend
Why not Juniper Ridge for new OSUcampus? What's with looking for land for our new university campus in the most expensive section of town'? Isn't that what Juniper Ridge is for? One of the main "selling points" for the city's entry into the development business was space for higher education. Let us use it now. When students are on campus, they are in class. There is no reason forclassrooms to be located convenient to downtown.
Julia Meglasson Bend
Why no coverage of Freedom Ride? On Thursday, the Fourth of July, my family gathered at the Pioneer Park pavilion for our biennial reunion. The unofficial entertainment began around I:30 p.m. and lasted until about 3 p.m. It included a cast of hundreds, if not thousands, of loud, enthusiastic bicycle riders of all ages and descriptions, intent on celebrating their constitutional right
to freedom ofassembly. much ignored him. Maybe this is Apart from a few inappropriate one of the reasons the newspaper fireworks, beer cans and an incom- gets so little attention. plete cleanup, I found the vast maI could see numerous articles that jority of revelers to be cheery and would have been a natural: He is pleasant. At 3 p.m., the group biked leading the league in stolen bases out of the park and formed a very (no one else is close to his number), impressive parade, all on p u blic he stole five bases in one game, he is property. batting nearly.300, he has a day in Although w e w e r e in c onve- which he gets hits in four out of five nienced for a time, my family reat-bats, he is leading the league in sumed its festivities and had a won- triples and is high in runs scored. derful reunion. Maybe it's the injury to his wrist Seven issues of the Bulletin have that is the story. Or maybe our TV been published since, and not a station might have had a shot on word. What does it take to be news- sports, maybe an interview, maybe worthy? Murder, rape, assault, po- even a human i nterest segment litical dissension, financial fraud, on the local portion. And then we arson, traffic fatalities, theft, etc., all have the local dog BendBroadband, make the list with nauseating regu- which cannot settle w it h R oots larity. But no mention of a celebra- sports where many of u s m i ght tion of freedom that creates a harm- watch Ellsbury playing against our less inconvenience once a year? Northwest team, Seattle. I don't understand. Robert Vancil Skip Harvey Redmond Bend
Local media have failed to promote Ellsbury I believe our local news media missed the boat when they provided no leadership in supporting Jacoby Ellsbury, from Madras, of the Boston Red Sox, as a candidate for the Major League Baseball A l l-Star Game. He has all of the credentials, and with some support and information about how to vote, organized from his hometown region, he might have been selected. Of course we have seen very little of Ellsbury's work or heard much of how he is doing because the three main sources of i nformation regarding how he is doing have pretty
Trouble with bike riders at roundabouts
I need to say something to bike riders about the crosswalks in the roundabouts. They are for people walking! I have had some close calls when I am driving and bikers are riding on the sidewalk and don't stop but think that they can keep riding their bikes in the crosswalk without stopping. We can't see you and stop in time. If you want to walk your bike in the crosswalk, fine. I don't want anyone to get hurt, so obey the rules of the road, ride in the bike lane, move to the middle of the road when in the roundabout and let's all stay safe.
Cindy Murphy Bend
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Connecting the dots reveals a picture of corruption M
By Jared Black
cause tracking wood imports from the source tothe end user would up doing connect-the-dots be nearly impossible. But in 2008, puzzles. It develops hand- a U.S. senator, working with a Briteye coordination w h il e t eaching ish fr inge e nvironmental g r oup, numbers and counting. To a child, prepared and attached the Lacey it seems miraculous how a jumble amendment to a slam-dunk agriof dots and numbers, when properly cultural funding bill. The British connected, reveals an i nteresting group even authored portions of the and surprising image. Dot-connect- amendment to assure it met their ing skills help one make sense of trade-restriction goals. scattered bits of information; when Dot 2: A Sept. I, 2011, Wall Street put in proper sequence it can show Journal article noted that in August unexpected results. Let's do a puzan armed team of U.S. Fish and zle andsee what picture emerges. Wildlife agents raided the Gibson Dot I: The Lacey Act, passed in Guitar Co. on the pretext that it had 1900, was designed to prohibit the received illegally imported specialty importation of exotic or rare ani- wood products. The agents claimed mals. In2008, the act was amended the imported wood, destined for guito include wood and wood products, tar fingerboards, violated the Lacey but with the provision that impor- Act terms. The agents shut down the tation was allowed provided the factory and confiscated the wood, exporting country's environmental valued at $1 million, along with guilaws were met. The Lacey amend- tars and computers. ment had been proposed a number Dot 3: Although Gibson had docuof times, but Congress resisted be- mentation from both Madagascar
any youngsters have grown
favorite; Gibson's is nonunion. The M artin CEO d onated heavily t o Democratic interests; the Gibson and India that the wood was export- CEO made small donations to Reed legally, the Fish and Wildlife de- publican candidates. partment denied the validity of the In a 2008 interview with Voice export documentation. It threatened of America, a Martin representathe company with damaging,even tive extolled the need for controlbankrupting, legal action. Gibson, ling exotic-wood distribution. It apto avoid a crippling lawsuit, relented pears that the Gibson company was and paid a$300,000 fine and made singled out by the Fish and Wildlife a required donation of $50,000 to a agency using the same criteria that Fish and Wildlife Foundation. the IRS and EPA have used to select Dot 4: Investor's Business Daily groups for harassment: potential oppublished an article this year on position to Obama's policies. May 23 describing the differences Dot 5: For decades our freedoms between the Gibson company and h ave been gradually eroded by another quality guitar-maker, C.F. ever-expanding rules and regulaMartin. tions at both the state and federal The M arti n c o m pany c a talog levels. Elected officials are enactlists guitars that contain East India i ng ill-conceived laws t hat g i v e rosewood, the identical wood that overzealousgovernment regulators triggered the Gibson raid, but Mar- unrestricted power over private cititin was not investigated. Why was zens. It is apparent that no adminGibson singled out? Martin has a istration has advanced this insidiunionized workforce, an Obama ous process more than the Obama
IN MY VIEW
administration. Dot 6: We now see that federal agencies have become strangely corrupt in applying their powers. So corrupt, in fact, that the Fish and Wildlife agency now interprets and adjudicates the laws of sovereign foreign governments for the purpose of selectively damaging private law-abiding U.S. companies. This constitutes corruption of the highest order and violates our most basic Constitutional rights. Dot 7: The Lacey amendment enabled the Obama administration to harass, fine and confiscate valuable materials from the Gibson Guitar Co. The Lacey modification was introduced by a senator. The enabling senator: the Honorable Ronald Lee
(Ron) Wyden of Oregon. The connected dots present a shameful image of our nation's ruling class and, sadly, a nation in decline. — Jared Blacklives in Bend.
TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Fire
BITUARIES
Continued from B1 Goossens said firefighters and fire stations are also on high alert today, with potential lightning storms tonight. The Forest Service has the forest fire potential in Central
DEATH NOTICES
Oregon at "high."
"We're mobilizing our resources to be on the ready for a potential fire as we always are when a lightning storm is forecasted," Goossens said.
Norman Ernest MacLeod, of Bend July 22, 1929 - July 10, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will be held at a later date.
Moth The Associated Press file photo
Tony Richard Cimino Sept. 9, 1927 - July11, 2013 Tony Richard Cimino, 85, succumbed to A l zheimer's and passed a wa y p e a cefully on July 11, 2013. Born in South Sioux City, NE to Dick and
Mary
Cimmo, h e liv e d • m ost of h is life i n Sacras mento, CA an d P. Bend, OR. A celebraTony Cimino tion of his life will be held 10:00 a.m. Saturday, July 20, 2013 at St. Francis C h u r ch, 2 450 NE 27th St., Bend, Oregon. A memorial tribute site has been e s tablished i n h i s honor. It is there that you m ay l e av e y o u r co n d o l ences, share a m e m o r y , h umorous s t o r y , ph o t o s and video: http://memorial.yourtribute. com/Tony-Richard-Cimino/ He is survived by his wife o f 6 1 y e a rs , B e tt y J u n e (Lutzy); six children, John (Darci), M i c hael ( A r d i th), P aul ( L i s a), T i m (M a r i anna), Mary (Greg) Lucia, T oni ( W a de) F a gen; a n d many l o v i n g g r a n d c h ildren, g r e at-grandchildren and extended family. Tony was a loving husband, father, grandfather, brother, and friend. Tony enjoyed his profession as an electrician, and after retiring continued to w ork h elping b u il d m a n y h omes for th e B end A r e a H abitat for H u m anity. H e w as passionate about a l l t hings pertaining t o a u t o m obtles, s p o r ts , j i g s a w p uzzles, dancing, and i c e cream. Tony was a man of character. T h a t i s w h y many genuinely loved him. A thank you to all wh om have helped during Tony's tryin g t i mes with A lzheimer's. A sp ec i a l t hank yo u t o a l l t h e c a r egivers at Caring Homes of B end, P a r tners I n Car e Hospice, an d H o m e In stead. W e w er e t ru l y b lessed having al l o f y o u in his l i fe. Y our k i n d ness and th o u g h t fulness t owards o u r fath e r w as greatly appreciated. It was Tony's wish that ins tead of f l o w er s a d o n a tion or a few hours of one's time be given to Bend Area Habitat for Humanity, www.bendhabitat.org
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeralhomes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
Cory Monteith, a cast member of "Glee" who struggled with substance addiction off-screen, died Sunday.
'Gee' cast mem er Cory Monteit oun ea at31 By Megan McDonough
the songs to 'Rent' and Billy Joel's greatest hits so I'd have On camera, he w a s t h e so m ething to audition with," show-tune-crooning qua r - he t o l d the Canadian Times terback who had heart. Off Co l o nist. camera, he was a self-made Ear l y on , "Glee" "autoentertainer w h o s t r u ggled t u n ed" Monteith's performancwith substance addiction. And e s ; in later seasons, thanks to in his work and in real his diligent improveThe Washington Post
life, he was associ- FFATURFP m ent, he didn't re-
Continued from B1 In 1994 the caterpillars defoliated trees in about 350,000 acres near Bend, he said. This shocking sight caused "a lot of panic." People wondered if they should to something to kill the insects. "It seems like I was on the radio and in the paper a lot," Eglitis said, "trying to keep
people from overreacting." Before the mid-1990s outbreak, th e l a s t o u t break around Bend had been in the 1960s, he said. An outbreak occurred in 2005 in Chiloquin. About every 1 5 y e a r s, the moths appear in numbers somewhere in the pine forests of Central Oregon, Eglitis said. What exactly causes the moth population
Police
Continued from B1 "How Boston police used ated with overcomtng tre such electronic OBITUARY qu obstacles. manipulation. His first social networking after the Cory Monteith, the performance before a Boston bombings is actually Canadian-born actor who was l i v e audience was at the White what encouraged me to probest known for playing the H o u s e in2010. pose the use of Twitter," said "If I were to give ... a 'most strait-laced, lovable American Bend Police Department f ootball star on the musical- i m p r oved,' i t w o ul d g o t o public information officer Lt. comedy TV hit " Glee," died C o r y ," " Glee" co-star a n d Chris Carney, who in May Saturday. He was 31. singer Matthew Morrison told encouraged the department The star was found dead the AssociatedPress in 2010. to create a Twitter account. "He wasn't a singer. Definitely in his 2lst-floor room at the Boston Police confirmed Fairmont Pacific Rim hotel in w a s n't a dancer. To see where details of the Boston MaraVancouver, B.C., aftermissing h e ' s come, I feel like such a thon bombings on Twitter, his scheduled checkout time, p r o u dteacher ... oralmostlike informing the public about the Vancouver police said in a p r o u d parent. It'scrazy." c asualties, s uspects a n d a statement. Authorities conBoth o n s c r een and o f f , rumors. "We want to make sure firmed that there was no inM o n t eith dated Lea Michele, dication of foul play and that w h o p l a y s t h e a m b i tious, we can be as helpful as they they think the actor was alone s o mewhat neurotic performer were in the event of a crisis," when he died.The cause of RachelBerryon"Glee." Carney said. death remained unclearMon- A Fox press representative Bend and Redmond Police day, and authorities in Canada t o l d the New York Times on join the ranks of other state said it could take several days S u nday that "the new season o rganizations already o n before toxicology test results o f ' Glee' was not scheduled to Twitter. The Oregon State are in. begin production until later Police established a Twitter Reactions of shock, disbe- t h i s month or early August" account in August 2012, and lief and condolence poured in a n d that "no decision had yet now more than 3,100 followS unday from castmates, for- b e e n m ade about how t h e ers subscribe to its updates. mer co-stars and fans. show might address Mr. MonThe O regon D e partment "I have no words! My heart t e i t h's death." of Transportation started is broken," said D ot-Marie The a c tor had been candid tweeting in J anuary 2009 Jones, who plays coach Shan- a b out his drug abuse, which he and has just over 10,829 folnon Beiste on "Glee." Cory s a i d beganinhisearlyteenage lowers. Both organizations was not only a hell of a friend y e a rs, and his troubled past. believe Twitter is important ... he was one amazing man H e entered a treatment facility to connecting and informing that I will hold close to my fo r a l coholaddictionat 19,and a segment of the public that heart forever." most recently completed voldoesn't use traditional aveCastmate S t ephen T o - unt a r y treatment for unspecinues, such as radio or televibolowsky, who played choir f i e d substance addiction at a sion, to find out about traffic director Sandy Ryerson, de- r e hab facility in April. closures, crimes and general "I was done fighting myscribed Monteith as "tireless public safety information. " We've noticed that w e as a performer." self," he told Parade Magazine "We are deeply saddened by about getting help more than a continue to gain followers," this tragic news," Fox said in a d e cade ago. "I finally said, 'I'm said OSP spokesman Lt . statement in its "Glee" Twitter- g o nna start looking at my life Gregg Hastings. "People are feed on behalf of the network, a n d figure out why I'm doing posting replies, retweeting the show'sproducers and 20th this.'" information and seeing val"I don't want kids to think Century Fox Television. "Cory ue in the information we prowas an exceptional talent and i t ' s OK to drop out of school vide. It has been a huge win." an even m or e e x ceptional a n d get high, and they'll be faHastings said he moderperson." mous actors, too," he later said. ates the OSP Twitter account "But for t hose people who Despitealackofformalmuto preserve the professional sicaltraining, Monteithgothis m i g h t give up: Get real about nature of the messages sent big break when he landed the w h at you want and go after it." out. Most of the time, Hastrole of heartthrob Finn HudCor y A l l an Michael Monteings said, he is posting or son — an upbeat, sometimes i t h was born May 11, 1982, in automatic posts are going aloof jock-turned-geek."Glee," C a lgary, Alberta, and grew up up with OSP information to which debuted in 2009, was i n V i ctoria, B.C.,afterhisparflashalert.com. "Our approach is somean instant hit and spawned a e n t s divorced when he was 7. series of young adult novels, H e said that the split affected what conservative," he said. "We want to avoid anything cast albums, a clothing line, h i m d eeply and that he soon national concert tours, a re- b e g an dabbling in petty crime, ality-show spinoff and more a l c ohol and drugs. "I didn't have an easy run," than 200 chart-toppers on Billboard's Hot 100. he told M a clean's. "There "Glee's" first season fea- w e r e a lot of negative things DEATHS tured Finn's fear of risking his g o ing on. It sort of multiplied social standing and budding i n s chool." He attended about ELSEWHERE sportingcareer by joining the a dozen high schools before school's unpopular show choir d r o pping out at 16. — but the charactergrew to B efore becoming an actor, be a ringleaderof the choir's he worked a series ofodd jobs, Deaths of note from around band of misfits, as well a s in c l uding as a Wal-Mart peo- theworld: righthand man to the group's p l e greeter, school bus driver, Leonard Garment, 89: A director. In the show's most r o o f erandtaxidriver. lawyer who was a friend and "If you're an aspiring actor adviser to President Richard recent s e ason, M o n teith's character returned to his alma a n d you want a good charac- Nixon as the Watergate scanmater to help coach his former t e r study, you should be a taxi dal unfolded and who urged club. driver for a while — you see a him no t t o d e s troy t a pes "I realize that this happens l o t of characters," he joked to of his c onversations. Died to an actor about once every U S W e eklymagazinein2010. Saturday at his M anhattan 10 lifetimes," Monteith tol d A cco r d ing to news reports, home. the Canadian newsmagazine s u r v ivors include his mother, Vice Adm. Eugene P. WilkinMaclean's in 2010 about be- A n n M c G regor; hi s f a ther, s on, 94: C o mmanded t h e ingcaston"Glee,""Tobeon a J o e M onteith; and a brother, Nautilus, the U.S. Navy's first show that's this good, it's rar- S h aun Monteith. nuclear-powered submarine " I've learned a s I we n t and the first machine to harefied air." The actor said he drove to a l o ng. I d i dn't come out of ness atomic fission for proLos Angeles from Vancouver s o me school knowing how to pulsion rather than weaponin 20 hours to audition for the a c t," he told the Boston Herald ry. Died Thursday in Del Mar, part. "I slept on the side of the i n 2009. "I put this all together Calif. road in Oregon and learned all a s time has gone along." — From wire reports
BS
The cause of tw o o ther Central Oregon fires over the weekend, now under control, were unknown Monday, Goossens said. The fires, one in the Three SistersWilderness, a second in Crook County, occurred in areas where lightning strikes were not recorded. "Unfortunately, there are always some human-caused fires," Goossens said.
Doug Weber, ameteorologist at the National Weather Service in Pendleton, predicted a 20-25 percent chance of t h understorms c oming through today. But, he said, the storms should have precipitation rather than the dry storm that prompted the Box Springs Fire. "Abundant lightning can still start a fire, even in rain," Weber said. "But, it should help the smaller fires from breaking out."
— Reporter: 541-383-0348, bandersen@bendbulletin.com
The pandora moth Scientific name:Coloradia pandora Characteristics:Adults are large and full-bodied. Color is grayish brown, with yellow antennae. Wingspan ranges from 2.5 to 4 inches.
Life cycle:Takestwo years to complete, going from egg to larva to pupa to moth. Adults appear in June orearly July, mostly flying at night. They live two to three weeks. Habitat:Pine forests
Food:As caterpillars, they strip pine trees of their needles, leaving many of the branches bare. Sources: Oregon State University Extension Service, U.S. Forest Service
to spike is unknown. What is known, however, is what corrals it. A v i rus kills off the insects when their numbers explode. As yet the moths might not c o m mand a t t e ntion, with a handful of the insects scattered around walls and
streetlights a r ound B e n d. That would l i kely c hange with an outbreak. "It could become something that gets very noticeable very q u ickly," Eglitis said. — Reporter: 541-817-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com
"We've noticed that we continue to gain followers. People are posting replies, retweeting information and seeing value in the information we provide. It has been a
huge win." — Lt. Gregg Hastings, spokesman, Oregon State Police
negative or c ompromising posted to the account." Since the responsibility of moderating the social media accounts falls to one person each for Bend and Redmond police and OSP, they keep their platforms reduced to either Facebook or Twitter. ODOT takes a different approach. ODOT s p okeswoman S a ll y Ri d e nour, s pokeswoman fo r O D O T in Salem and moderator for the agency's social media accounts, said ODOT uses multiple social media outlets to connect with the public. " Social media is i n o u r communications t o o lbox," she said. "We have a lot of different ways to communicate with our customers, but social media is a big one." ODOT started its social media campaign in 2008, when it started with an account on Flickr, a photo sharing website, to get photos of incidents to the media. The photos served their purpose,
but also appealed to people using the site for recreation. "We were starting to engage and connect with people, although it wasn't the original intention," Ridenour said. The agency followed its F lickr c a mpaign w i t h a channel on YouTube, where it posts videos ranging from information about conditions on Central Oregon highways to teaching the public how to put chains on tires. The success of both ODOT's Flickr and YouTube accounts led to the agency starting Twitter and Facebook accounts. "Each tool is for different
job is to see what information people respond to and do not respond to. When people interact with posts, whether they be "likes," "retweets" or "favorites." Bend Police measure success in the same way. Carney said he keeps an eye on what people are taking notice of and what they aren't. So far, he said, he has tweeted everything from a theft in progress to a thank-you message for park users who are adhering to leash laws. "We've always tried at this agency to show that we are just community members," he said. "We have a job to do, and we do it really well. But, overall, we're human. Come over, shake our hand, and talk to us. That's essentially what Twitter can do — remind people that we're humans." — Reporter: 541-383-0348, bandersen@bendbulletin.com
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OREGON CITIES
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 86/54 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........98m1987 Monthtodate.......... 0.00" Recordlow......... 30in1943 Average monthtodate... 0.29" Average high.............. 82 Year to date............ 3.1 9" Average low .............. 48 Average year to date..... 6.01" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m29.93 Record 24 hours ...0.48 in1975 *Melted liquid equivalent
FIRE INDEX
WATER REPORT
Y esterday Tuesday W e d . Bend, westof Hwy 97....High Sisters.............................High Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend,eastofHwy.97.....High LaPine..............................High
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
Astoria ........74/54/0.00....75/58/pc.....66/55/pc Baker City......87/42/0.00....93/56/pc......90/54/s Brookings......62/51/0.00....63/53/pc.....63/53/pc Burns..........95/47/0.00....94/51/pc......90/52/s
Salem ....... 89/52/0 00 .91/57/pc ... 85/54/s Sisters.........89/48/0.00....87/51/pc......87/47/s The DaBes......95/56/0.00....94/64/pc......92/61/s
Meacham
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• 121
• Pl
TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5:04 a.m...... 7:36 p.m. Venus......8:07 a.m.....10:14 p.m. Mars.......3:49 a.m...... 7:20 p.m. Jupiter......4 03 a.m...... 7 24 p.m. Satum......2:15 p.m.....12:58 a.m. Uranus....11:48 p.m.....12:29 p.m.
The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as Redmond/Madras.......High Prinevine.........................High a service to irrigators and sportsmen. Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme
Reservoir Acre feet C a p acity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 30,095...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 104,905..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 73,030...... 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 20,612...... 47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 118,210..... 153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i o n Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 284 for sol t noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,560 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ...... . 150 LO M E DIUM H I GH Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 81.1 0 2 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 131 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 2,064 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res.. ... . . . . . . 5 Crooked RiverBelow Prinevige Res..... . . . . 216 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 17.2 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 81.1 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 xocDIUM LOWI or go to www.wrd.state.or.us
To report a wildfire, call 911
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 2
IPOLLEN COUNT O
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
•
83/61
Sunsettoday.... 8 45 p.m F ull L ast N e w First Sunrise tomorrow .. 5:38 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 8:44 p.m l• Moonrisetoday.... 2:27 p.m Moonsettoday ...12:16 a.m July22 July29 Aug.6 Aug.14
PLANET WATCH
Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation, s-sun,pc-partial clouds,c-clouds,h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, snsnow, i-ice, rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
•• x ++ + + + + Vancouver L L~ocalgary • . x +5 ++ : S askatoon W. • W Wtnnlpes„ „ '' 72/50 70s 75/52 81/59 •Seattle p
'.
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 5:37 a.m Moon phases
• 39'
o www m (in the 48 contiguous states):
91 54
Roseburg.......93/58/0.00.....91/56/s.....89/55/pc
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
Yesterday's extremes
HIGH LOW
93 54
Ontario
Yesterday's state extremes
Jordan Valley
Chr i stmas Valley
Silv e r
M 5
Port Orford
HIGH LOW
91 53
• 101'
400/68
Juntura
o BurnS
79/47
• Bandon
HIGH LOW
Klamath Falls .. 89/47/0 00 ...87/49/pc ... 87/50/s Lakeview.......91/46/0.00 ....87/50/s..... 88/54/s La Pine.........90/39/NA....89/47/pc......88/44/s Medford......100/59/0.00....96/62/pc......95/62/s Newport.......59/43/0.00....65/58/pc.....63/50/pc North Bend... MM/MM/NA....68/53/pc.....66/53/pc Ontario.......101/59/0.00...102/72/pc......99/69/s Pendleton......89/56/0.00....95/63/pc......95/58/s Portland .......87/56/0.00....90/60/pc.....83/58/pc Prineville.......88/52/0.00....89/57/pc......89/53/s Redmond.......90/49/0.00....90/56/pc......90/48/s
Nyssa
• Brothers 91/54
Sunny.
88 51
Eugene........89/50/0.00....92/54/pc.....85/51/pc
Valeo i02/70
87 / 57
Sunny.
HIGH LOW
BEND ALMANAC
IFORECAST: 5TATE
I
Sunny.
Mostly sunny.
3
87
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Tonight: Clearing skies
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W a r m Stationary Showers T-storms
*
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Ice
Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene TX......68/63/0 89...80/67/t...84/70/t GrandRapids....95/71/023..92/73/pc. 92/73/pc RapidCity.......89/64/000..89/64/pc. 90/65/pc Savannah.......89/74/0 02..90/72/pc. 91/74/pc Akron ..........92/72/0.00..91/73/pc. 92/73/pc GreenBay.......91/65/0.00..88/73/pc. 91/72/pc Reno...........95/64/0.00...93/60/s.. 94/61/s Seattle..........82/58/0.00...87/61/s...82/60/t Albany..........91/73/0.00...93/71/t. 95/73/pc Greensboro......88/69/0.00...91/73/t. 90/72/pc Richmond.......93/73/000...95/74/t. 96/74/pc SiouxFalls.......88/61/000...87/69/s.. 90/71/s Albuquerque.....76/66/0.00...81/63/t...81/63/t Harusburg.......95/70/0.00...95/73/s.. 95/74/s Rochester, NY....89/73/000 ..91/72/pc. 92/74/pc Spokane........83/55/000 ..93/61/pc...91/59/t Anchorage ......62/56/0 00...71/57/c. 72/55/pc Hartford,CT.....93/74/0 00..96/71/pc.96/73/pc Sacrameuto......84/54/0.00...90/58/s .. 95/60/s Springfield, MO ..89/70/0.00..89/70/pc. 92/71/pc Atlanta .........86/72/006..87/72/pc...89/71/t Helena..........96/55/000..83/58/pc...86/61/t St.Louis.........91/74/000..92/74/pc.93775/pc Tampa..........91/73/000...90/76/t.88/75/pc Atlantic City.....93/74/0 00...90/73/s. 88/75/pc Honolulu........86/75/0 00...89/76/s. 89/76/pc Salt Lake City...100/70/000 ..101/75/t. 99/73/pc Tucson.........104/78/000... 93/74/t...94/75/t Austin..........83/72/0.23...92/71/t...92/71/t Houston ........89/72/0.02...89/75/t...89/75/t SanAntonio.....85/73/0.55... 91/74/t...91/75/t Tulsa...........83/66/0.35... 89/73/t. 92/73/pc Baltimore .......95/72/000...95/74/s. 97/76/pc Huntsville.......89/74/0.00 ..89/71/pc. 92/72/pc SanDiego.......78/67/000... 76/66/s.. 76/67/s Washington, DC..96/75/000 ..96/7ipc. 96/79/pc BigingS.........96/60/000..83/61/pc...91/61/t Indianapolis.....88/74/0 00..91/7Wpc. 92/75/pc SanFrancisco....69/53/0.00..67/54/pc.69/53/pc Wichita.........81/66/0.51..87/69/pc.90/72/pc Birmingham .. 88/75/000 ..89/70/pc. 91/73/pc Jackson, MS.... 90/70/0.00. 90/71/t .. 92/71/t SanJose........72/55/000..77/55/pc 81/56/pc Yakima.........89/60/000 93/65/pc.. 93/61/s Bismarck........85/66/000 ..91/64/pc. 91/67/pc Jacksonvile......87/71/002..89/72/pc. 89/72/pc SantaFe........66/60/001 ..75/52/pc.75/55/pc Yuma..........113/88/000 107/82/pc104/83/pc Boise...........99/64/000 .. 106/64/t.. 99/62/s Juneau..........65/45/000...79/49/s .. 77/52/s INTERNATIONAL Boston..........92/74/000... 92/72/t.91/74/pc Kansas City......89/69/0.00 ..91/76/pc. 92/77/pc Budgeport,CT....94/76/000...92/73/s. 91/74/pc Lansing.........93/69/0.00..92/72/pc. 91/73/pc Amsterdam......75/55/000 ..79/57/pc 76/58/c Mecca.........109/90/000 104/84/c. 108/84/s Buffalo.........90/74/0.00 ..89/73/pc. 90/74/pc LasVegas......108/89/0.00..105/86/s104/86/pc Athens..........86/66/0.00..91/72/pc .. 83/71/s MexicoCity .....79/55/000... 70/54/t.. 69/52/1 Burlington, VT....93/69/0.00... 91/68/t...93/71/t Lexington.......90/72/0.00... 93/72/s. 93/73/pc Auckland........52/41/000 ..51/44/pc.58/51/pc Montreal........91/72/000... 89/75/t. 88/72/sh Caribou,ME.....94/62/000 ..86/59/pc...85/57/t Lincoln..........91/60/000 ..90/68/pc. 92/73/pc Baghdad.......114/84/0.00 ..118/94/s. 116/91/s Moscow........73/61/0.43... 78/58/r. 70/54/pc Charleston,SC ...90/76/0.00..90/73/pc...91/74/t Little Rock.......93/71/0.00..91774/pc. 94/73/pc Bangkok........95/81/000 ..88/75/sh.83/74/sh Hairobi.........81/48/000 ..76/54/pc...77/54/t Charlotte........88/70/000...92/73/t...93/74/t LosAngeles......75/67/0 00...75/65/s. 76/62/pcBeiyng..........79/73/1.09...93/78/s. 96/79/pc Nassau.........88/77/000... 86/76/t...83/78/t Chattauooga.....89/71/0 00...91/71/s. 91/73/pc Louisvige........92/74/000...95/77/s. 95/77/pc Be/rut..........84/79/000...85/72/s .. 84/71/s New Delh/.......95/82/000 ..104/90/t101/82/sh Cheyenne.......78/61/002..81/56/pc.. 85/59/s MadisonWl.....90/66/000..89/72/pc. 90/73/pc Berlin...........73/54/000 ..82/60/pc.83/64/pc Osaka..........82/77/011 ..88/73/pc. 88/75/pc Chicago...... 89/71/009 .91/77/pc.93/77/pc Memphis....... 91/74/001 . 93/75/pc.95/75/pc Bogota .........64/52/020... 64/46/t...66/45/t Oslo............70/54/000 ..71753/sh. 78/56/pc Cincinnati.......91/69/000 ..93/73/pc.92/73/pc Miami..........88/73/0.56... 88/78/t...89/76/t Budapest........79/57/000..85/62/pc .. 89/66/s Ottawa.........90/66/000... 89/70/t. 90/72/sh Cleveland.......91/76/000 ..90/74/pc. 91/75/pc Milwaukee......85/71/0.00..87/74/pc. 88/74/pc Buenos Aires.....61/36/000...61/49/s. 59/36/pc Paris............84/61/000 ..82/64/pc.. 84/62/c Colorado Spnngs.71/62/064 ..76/56/pc. 82/59/pc Miuneapolis.....89/70/0 00 ..92/75/pc. 93/74/pc CaboSanLucas ..93/75/000..93/79/pc.. 91/79/c Riode Janeiro....90/70/000..67/61/sh.. 76/65/s Columbia,MO...89/69/032 ..91/72/pc.. 93/73/s Nashvige........91/73/0 00 ..94/73/pc. 95/74/pc Cairo...........93/73/000... 98/68/s .. 98/68/s Rome...........84/68/0 00... 84/73/s.. 88/72/s Columbia,SC....87/75/067 ..92/73/pc...93/73/t New Orleans.....90/75/I 03... 88/75/t. 88/75/pc Calgary.........61/46/0.02... 72/50/s.70/54/sh Santiago........70/36/0.00... 64/60/s .. 63/58/s Columbus, GA....88/74/047..91/72/pc.91/71/pc NewYork.......94/78/000...98/78/s. 94/79/pc Cancun.........86/77/0.00... 87/79/t...87/79/t Sao Paulo.......75/59/0.00... 62/53/c .. 73/55/s Columbus,OH....92/75/0.00..93/74/pc.92/74/pc Newark,Hl......97/77/0.00...99/75/s. 96/77/pc Dublin..........66/55/000..77/54/pc.74/60/pc Sapporo ........72/70/000 ..78/63/sh. 70/66/sh Concord, HH.....93/65/000...93/64/t. 95/68/pc Norfolk, VA......90/73/000 ..93/75/pc. 94/75/pc Edinburgh.......70/52/000.. 75/54/pc.72/55/pc Seoul...........84/75/000... 86/72/r...77/74/r Corpus Christi....96/80/0.00...93/77/t...88/77/t Oklahoma City...78/65/1.45... 85/69/t...87/70/t Geneva.........84/55/0.00... 86/65/s...80/62/t Shangha/........97/82/0.00 ..88/77/sh. 87/78/sh Dallas FtWorth...74/67/0.51 ... 87/73/t...92/75/t Omaha.........89/63/0.00 ..90/70/pc. 92/73/pc Harare..........66/41/000...67/43/s .. 68/42/s Singapore.......90/75/015 ..92779/sh. 90/80/sh Dayton .........91/73/0.00 ..92/72/pc. 90/73/pc Orlando.........87/72/0.22... 92/73/t. 92/73/pc HongKong......88/77/1 28..86/80/sh. 85/80/pc Stockholm.......72/48/000..75/56/pc. 75/59/pc Denver..........79/63/087...83/59/s. 86/62/pc PalmSprings....112/83/0.00..107/80/s109/82/pc Istanbul.........84/70/0.00...86/69/s .. 80/72/s Sydney..........70/57/0.00 ..67/44/pc. 69/42/pc DesMoines......91/70/000..89/73/pc. 91/75/pc Peoria..........91/73/0.00..90/73/pc. 91/75/pc lerusalem.......94/71/0.00... 87/66/s .. 84/66/s Taipei...........91/79/0.00... 88/78/s. 87/78/sh Detroit..........93/75/0.05..92/74/pc.92/75/pc Philadelphia.....95/76/0.00...96/77/s. 97/80/pc Johannesburg....62/37/000... 62/39/s .. 62/38/s Tel Aviv.........88/75/000...91/69/s. 89/70/pc Duluth..........81/68/011 ..87/69/pc...83/64/t Phoeuix........110/92/000 103/85/pc...99/85/t Lima...........61/59/000...70/61/s .. 70/61/s Tokyo...........95/73/000 ..81/72/pc. 82/74/pc El Paso..........83/71/000... 82/69/t...83/70/t Pittsburgh.......90/69/0 00 ..91/72/pc. 90/73/pc Lisbon..........81/61/000 81/61/s 85/61/s Toronto.........88/72/000 ..91/75/pc. 91/75/sh Fairhanks........80/62/000 ..77/58/sh. 73/53/sh Portland,ME.....91/70/0.00..89/65/pc. 87/69/pc London.........79/63/000..87/62/pc...81/61/r Vancouver.......75/61/000...79/68/s. 79/59/pc Fargo...........73/65/0.17..91/69/pc.91/69/pc Providence ......94/76/0.00..95773/pc. 94/73/pc Madrid .........93/66/0.00... 96/66/s .. 95/67/s Vienna..........79/59/0.00..83/62/pc.. 88/64/s Flagstaff ........81/55/0.00...77/55/t...77/53/t Raleigh.........90/69/0.00...92/74/t. 93/73/pc Manila..........86/79/0.08 ..93/79/sh.88/78/sh Warsaw.........72/55/0.00... 70/56/c. 79/61/pc
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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 ML B , C3 Sports in brief, C2 Golf, C3 Cycling, C2
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
WCL BASEBALL
CYCLING
Seven Elksnamed to all-star team
IC SO
Seven members of the Bend Elks have been named to the 2013 West Coast League All-Star
Game. First baseman Derek
Dixon, second baseman Seth Spivey, outfielders Chase Fields and Turner Gill, and pitchers Clay Gartner, David Murillo and Hunter Raley will all play for the WCL South Division squad during the league's all-star contest next Tuesday at Royal Athletic Park in Victoria, British Columbia. The Elks, who at 20-13 this season are tied for the best record in the league with the Corvallis Knights, had the second-most
Bulletin staff report The 34th annual Bend Memorial Clinic Cascade Cycling Classic starts tonight with the Tetherow Prologue at Tetherow Golf Club in Bend. Some of the country's best road cyclists, including morethan 200 pro men and more than 100 pro women, are set to start the six-
TetherowPrologue
O I 1I
Wednesday, is the 74-mile McKenzie Pass Road Race, which includes climbs up the switchbacks of state Highway 242 and up Three Creeks Road to the finish at Three Creek Sno-park south of Sisters. Favorites for the pro men include Spaniard Francisco Mancebo, of 5-Hour Energy, who has won the past two overall titles at the CCC. Mara Abbott, who rides for Exergy and lives in Boulder, Colo., is the favorite in the women's race. Last week in I t aly A bbott won the eight-stage Giro Rosa, considered one of the most prestigious races in women's
day stage race. Tonight's prologue is a fast 2.8-mile individual time trial on new roads around Tetherow Golf Club. The purpose of a prologue is to put a rider in the yellow leader's jersey for the official first stage. The pro women's prologue starts at 6 p.m. and will be followed by the pro men's prologue. The time trial start is on Meeks Trail Road, andthe finish is on Skyline Ranch Road near the Tetherow clubhouse. The Cascade Classic's first stage, set for
cycling.
0
0/lt/s Or
TETHEROW GOLF CLUB n33
o Bend
Start+ Finish
The Cascade Cycling Classic is the longest-running pro cycling stage race in North America and is a fundraiser for the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation. The event is one of six stage races on USA Cycling's National Racing Calendar.
geqc
d~L~v,eY'
46 To Mt. Bachelor Greg Cross/The Bulletin
players selected to the all-star game. Only the Walla Walla Sweets, with nine players, will
have more all-stars in
DESCHUTES DASH
Victoria. Bend, which was off Monday night, continues WCL play tonight with a 6:35 home game against the Klamath Falls Gems. — Bulletin staff report
Shelli Zulauf rides down the Cascade Lakes Highway while competing in the Deschutes Dash sprint distance triathlon on Sunday. Zulauf suffered a serious injury while training for the 2010 event, but took part in the Deschutes Dash on Sunday.
L
r
TEAM SPORTS
r
1
Real Madrid tops team value list NEW YORK — Real
Madrid tops Forbes' list of 50 most valuable sports teams, with
Manchester United and Barcelona holding the
next two spots. Forbes says RealMadrid is worth $3.3 bil-
Joe Kiine/ The Bulletin
lion. The Spanish power moved up aspot from No. 2 last year. Man United, which
was No.1 lastyear, is worth $3.17 billion. Barcelona, Real Madrid's
fierce rival and Spanish Leaguechampions last season, is worth $2.6
.e '
billion. The New York Yankees are fourth with a
value of $2.3 billion and the Dallas Cowboys are fifth at $2.1 billion. Thirty of the 32 NFL teams made the list,
along with seven baseball teams andseven soccer teams. — The Associated Press
MLB
• Three years after being injuredwhile riding her bike, Bend'sShelli Zulauf returned tocompete inthe localtriathlon for which shehad beentraining By Emily Oller The Bulletin
"I think she's wearing out, Shelli. Now's your chance to kick it into gear and catch her." Those were the last words Bend cyclist Shelli Zulauf heard from her trainer, Moori Stewart, on a pleasant late-June afternoon in
2010 before being struck by an SUV while riding toward town on Century Drive. Zulauf had been on a training ride with Stewart and one other woman to prepare for the Deschutes Dash triathlon in B end when she was involved in an accident that landed her in the hos-
pital for 20 days. When Stewart, Zulauf and Susan Duffy were most of the way through their planned ride, Stewart, a personal trainer in Bend, instructed Zulauf to pull ahead of her to catch Duffy, the leader of the three, while maintaining a single-file line in the bike lane. When
Zulauf was several bike lengths ahead of Stewart, a black Dodge Durango approached the group from behind. According to police in a story published in The Bulletin shortly after the accident, the driver of the Durango swerved in front of Stewart onto the shoulder of the road, then overcorrected, hitting Zulauf's right side with the left front panel of the vehicle. SeeZulauf /C4
BASEBALL American League's Yoenis Cespedes, of the Oakland Athletics, poses with a trophy and belt after winning the Home Run Derby, on Monday in New York.
A's Cespedesis home runking Cuban, left out of today's All-Star Game, hits 32 home runs to win the 2013 Home Run Derby,C3
CYCLING
Froome upbig at Tour de France The Engli shman holds a four-minute lead with just six sages left after
Monday's rest day,C2
Rivera spends goodbye tour saying he o
Ceciliani doing well in the minors
By David Waldstein
By Beau Eastes
Two and a half hours before the game, Mariano Rivera sat in the owner's suite at Target Field in Minneapolis, wearing his batting practice uniform, sneakers and a dark blue New York Yankees cap. But there was no owner in the lavish suite. Across from Rivera River a , in a s emicircle of 15 chairs, sat a group including a security guard, a grounds crew worker, an organist, an usher and a season-ticket holder, all brought in to be in the presence of Rivera, the Yankees' closer. See Rivera/C4
the Mets in the 2009 draft, After missing almost all of Ceciliani is fifth in the Eastern last season because League with 18 stolen of a hamstring injury, bases and is third on Darrell Ceciliani is off his team with 84 hits. and running in 2013. Through June he was hitting a modest.262 Ceciliani, a former Madras High baseball before catching fire standout who turned Cecil i ani thi s past week, going 18-for-39 in 10 games 23 last month, has hit .281 in 79 games this season (.462) with four homers, a for the Binghamton Mets, double, a triple and 10 RBIs. "I'm feeling pretty good," Double-A affiliate of the National League's New York Ceciliani said during a phone Mets. A fourth-round selecinterview last Friday. tion out of Columbia Basin SeeCeciliani /C4
Madras standout
New York Times News Service
The Bulletin
Photo courtesy of Just Sports photography
Former Madras baseball player Darrell Ceciliani is hitting .281 with 84 hits and 18 stolen bases early this season.
College in Pasco, Wash., by
C2
TH E BULLETiN• TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY CYCLING
Tour de France,Stage16
Time 5 a.m.
BASEBALL MLB, All-Star Game
4:30 p.m.
COREBOARD
TV/R adio NBCS N Fox
YOUTH SPORTS
IN THE BLEACHERS
Baseball 11U StateTournament In Pendleton
WEDNESDAY
In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucrick www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers
Monday'sResult
BendNorth16, Wilshire-RiversideI
CYCLING
Time 5 a.m.
Tour de France,Stage17 AWARDS 2013 ESPY Awards
TV/R adio NBCS N
6 p.m.
ESPN
Softball
DEALS
11-13 PoolPlay In KlamathFalls Monday's Result JeffersonCountyJuniors 19, WestSalem/Parrish/ SouthSalem2
Transactions
Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by N or radio stations.
BASEBALL American League
/oI;sRLtI4II
BASEBALL WCL WESTCOAST LEAGUE
Leaguestandings Norlh Division
SPORTS IN BRIEF YOUTH SPORTS
client would be joining for next
season.
Bend North advances at State — Bend North won
HaWkS SignBrand —The
jts third straight state tournament game against Djstrjct1's Wjlshjre-Rjversjde, 16-1 on Monday jn Pendleton. Drew
Atlanta Hawks have signed free
agent Eiton Brand. The34-yearold Brand averaged 7.2 points
Steelhammer had 2home runs
and 6.0 rebounds pergamelast season with the Dallas Maver-
to carry Bend North to victory. Bend North will play today at 6
jcks. He played jn72 games, with18 starts. Contract terms
p.m. against District 3's Pilot
weren't disclosed.
Rock. Also on Monday, Jefferson County Juniors softball team eliminated District 7's West Salem/Parrjsh/South Salem19-2 jn Klamath Falls.
SaCramentO SignSLandry
— The Sacramento Kings have officially announced the signing
of free agent Carl Landry. Landry Jefferson County will play today signed hjs four-year, $26 million at 6 p.m. against District 4's Tjl-
lamook.
FOOTBALL Bronco executives suspelIded —The DenverBroncos came downhard ontheir
deal Monday. He js the first free
played last season —until buyjng the Kings jn May. Landry played parts of the 2009-10 and
2010-11 seasons for Sacramen-
two executives facing drunken
to. The 29-year-old power for-
driving charges, suspending
ward averaged10.8 points and
them without pay and making jt clear they must straighten out their lives jf they want to work jn
sjx rebounds jn 23.2 minutes off the bench to help the Warriors reach the second round of the
the NFLagain. Director of player playoffs last season. personnel Matt Russell was suspended indefinitely, and director
of pro personnel TomHeckert was suspended for a month. Team president Joe Ellis said
MOTOR SPORTS NASGAR to autOmate rule
both men expressed remorse.
dDDk —NASCARplans to au-
But "this jn no way excuses their conduct," Ellis said.
tomate jts rule book and revamp
Washingtonplayer pleads
jts appeals process jn awideranging effort to bring more clarjty to race teams and fans. The
guilty —Washington tight end
governing body outlined several
Austin Seferjan-Jenkjns pleaded guilty Monday to a charge of drjvjng under the influence stemming
initiatives Monday jt expects to implement jn jts three major series before the start of the 2015
fromhjs arrestafter crashing hjs
racing season. Thoseincluded
car jn March. Seferjan-Jenkjns made the guilty plea jn Seattle
converting jts rule book from
on hjs case. Seferjan-Jenkjns
js allowed and what isn't.
a word document to computer Municipal Court during whatwas automated-design drawings so supposed to be a pre-trjal hearing race shops cansee exactly what was sentenced to364days jnjail with 363 suspended.
BASKETBALL Warld PeaCe to Sign With KIIICkS — Metta World Peace says he will be signing with the
New York Knjcks. Teamofficials at the NBA summer league jn Las Vegas wouldn't confirm the
TRACK & FIELD Italian police raid sprinterS' hatel —Italian police confiscated unidentified substances Monday jn a raid on the
Rome hotel where Jamaican sprjnters Asafa Powell and Sherone Simpson werestaying after each tested positive for
move, butWorldPeacesays
banned stimulants. Roomsof
he is excited to join Carmelo Anthony and the Knjcks. "The
the athletes and physical trainer Christopher Xuereb of Canada
team js amazing, the players.
were searchedand drugs and
i'm excited to play and hustle," he said Monday while attend-
supplements were seized, Udjne
jng the summer league jn Las Vegas. While no official an-
nouncement was made,World Peace's agent Marc Cornstejn
WallaWallaSweets WenatcheeAppleSox
VictoriaHarbourcats Begingham Bells Kelowna Falcons South Division BendElks CorvagisKnights CowlitzBlackBears KlamathFals Gems MedfordRogues KitsapBlueJackets
police captain Antonio Pjsapia told The Associated Press. Pjsapja said jt was unclear jf the substances were illegal, and that
they were being analyzed.
was clear about what team hjs
— From wire reports
W 19 19 15 18 11
14 14 14 15
W 21 20 16 16 14 12
13 14 14 17 20
Monday'sGames Klamath Fals 7,Victoria4 Begingham 4,Corvagis3 Wenat chee6,Medford3 Today'sGames KlamathFals at Bend,6:35p.m. VictoriaatMedford,6:35 p.m. CorvagisatBelingham,7:05 p.m. Cowlitz atWala Wala, 7:05p.m. Kelowna atWenatchee,795pm Wednesday'sGames VictoriaatMedford,6:35 p.m. Cowlitz atWalaWala, 7:05p.m. KelownaatWenatchee,7.05p.m. CorvagisatBelingham,7:05 p.m.
agent to sign under newowner
Vjvek Ranadjve, who had held a minority stake jn the Golden State Warriors — where Landry
MatthewEbden, Australia, def. JimmyWang,Taiwan, 6-1,2-6, 6-1. MatteoViola, Italy, def. Illya Marchenko,Ukraine, 6-3, 2-6,6-0. AdrianMannarino (5), France,def AlejandroGonzalez ,Colombia,6-4,0-6,6-4. SantiagoGiraldo(6), Colombia,def. CarlosSalamanca, Colombia,6-2,6-4.
L
22 L
24
CYCLING Tour de France Rest DayMonday (After 16 stages) 1. ChrisFroome,England, SkyProcycling, 61hours, 11minutes,43seconds. 2. BaukeMollema, Netherlands, Belkin ProCycling,
4:14. 3. Alberto Contador, Sparn, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff, 4:25. 4. Roman Kreuziger, Czech Republic, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff,4:28. 5. Laurens ten Dam, Netherlands, BelkinProCycling, 4'54. 6. NairoQuintana,Colombia,Movistar,5:47. 7. JakobFuglsang,Denmark, Astana, 6:22. 8. JoaquiRo n driguez, Spain,Katusha, Pff. 9.Jean-Christophe Peraud,France,AG2R La Mondiale, Z:47. 10. Michal Kwiatkowski, Poland,OmegaPharmaQuickStep,7:58. 11. DanieMartin, l Ireland,Garmin-Sharp,8:28. 12. MichaelRogers,Australia, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff, 9.54. 13. AndrewTalansky, United States, Garmin-Sharp, 12:32. 14. Maxime Monfort, Belgium,RadioShack Leopard, 13;47. 15. Alejandro Valverde,Spain, Movistar,14:42. 16. CadelEvans, Australia, BMCRacing,15 40. 17. MikelNieve,Spain,Euskaltel-Euskadi,1812. 18. AndySchleck,Luxembourg, RadioShackLeopard, 19:14.
I9. DanielMoreno,Spain,Katusha, 21:42 20. DanieNavarro, l Spain, Cofidis, 23.36.
Also 47. TejayVanGarderen, UnitedStates,BMCRacing, 1:00:02. 65. Thomas Danielson, UnitedStates Garmin-Sharp, 1.18:16. 82. Brent Bookwalter,United States, BMCRacing, I:32:04.
Tuesday.A104.4-mile medium-mountain rideto the Alps from Vaison-la-Romaineto Gap,with anearly Category-3climbanda pair of Category-2s,one early,onelate. Tour deFranceStages-Winners June 29 First Stage: Porto-Vecchio to Bastia, Corsica, flat (213km-132.4mies) (Stage: Marcel Kittel, Germany; Yellow Jersey: Kittel) June 30 SecondStage:Bastia to Ajaccio, Corsica, medium mountain(156-969) (JanBakelants, Belgium;Bakelants) July 1 — Third Stage:Ajaccio to Calvi, Corsica, mediummountain (145.5-90.4) (SimonGerrans, Australia;Bakelants) July 2 —FourthStage:Nice, France,teamtrme trial (25-15.5)(OricaGreenEdge; SimonGerrans,Australia) July 3 — FifthStage:Cagnes-sur-Mer to Marseile, rolling (228.5-142.0)(MarkCavendish, England,
Gerrans)
July 4 —SixthStage:Aix-en-Provenceto Montpellier, flat(176.5-109.7)(Andrei Greipel, Germany; Daryl Impey,SouthAfrica) July 5 —SeventhStage: Montpellier to Albi, rolling (205.5-127.7)(PeterSagan,Slovakia; Impey) July 6 — EighthStage:Castresto Ax3 Domaines, high mountain(195-121.2) (Chris Froome,England; Froom e) July 7 — Ninth Stage:Saint-Girons to Bagneresde-Bigorre,highmountain(168.5-104.7) (Daniel Martin, Ireland;Froome) July 8 —Restday,Saint-Nazaire/Loire-Atlantique July 9 —10th Stage: Saint-Gildas-des-Bois to SaintMalo, flat (I97-122.4) (Kittel; Froome) July10 — 11thStage: Avranchesto Mont-Saint-Michel, individualtimetrial (33-20.5) (TonyMartin,
Germany;Froome)
July11 — 12thStage:Fougeresto Tours, Ilat (218135.5)(Kittel; Froome) July 12 —13thStage.Toursto Saint-Amand-Montrond, flat(173-107.5)(Cavendish; Froome) July 13 14th Stage:Saint-Pourcain-sur-Sioule to l.yon, rolling (191-118.7)(MatteoTrentin, Italy;
Froome)
July14 — 15thStage:Givors to MontVentoux, high mountain(242.5-150.7)(Froome;Froome) July15 —Restday,Vaucluse July16 16th Stage:Vaison-la-Romaineto Gap, mediummountain (168-104.4) July 17 —17thStage: Embrun to Chorges, individual time trial (32-19.9) July18 —18fhStage: GaptoAlpe-Huez, highmountain(172.5-107.2) July 19 19th Stage:Bourg-O'Oisans to LeGrandBornand,highmountain(204.5-127.1) July 20 — 20thStage:Annecyto Annecy-Semnoz, high mountain(125-77.7) July 21 —21st Stage:Versailes to Paris,ChampsElysees,flat (133.5-83.0) Total 3,403.5 kilometers(2,114.8miles)
EasternConference W L 10 3 10 4
Chicago Washington NewYork Indiana Connecticut
714 t/t 500 31/2
7
7
6 5 4
8 8 9
429 4'/~ 385 5 308 6
W 11 10 8 6 4 3
L
Pct GB 786
Western Conference
Minnesota Los Angeles Phoenix Seattle SanAntonio Tulsa
3 4
7 8 10 13
714 1 533 3 1/2
429 5 286 7 188 9
Monday'sGames No games schedued Today's Game SanAntonioatWashington, 4p.m. Wednesday'sGames TulsaatSeatle, noon Atlantaat LosAngeles, 7:30p.m.
MLS MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT
FLORIDA PANTHERS Agreed to termswith G
NuernbergerGastein Ladies Monday At TC Wels76 Bad Gastein, Austria Purse: $236,090(Intl.)
W L T S porting KansasCity 9 5 6 Montreal 9 5 4 NewYork 9 7 4 Philadelphia 8 6 6 Houston 8 6 5 NewEngland 6 6 6 Columbus 6 8 5 Chicago 6 9 3 TorontoFC 2 9 7 D.C. 2 13 4
Daniel Brands,Germany, def. PaoloLorenzi,Italy,
Pts 33 31 31 30 29 24 23 21 13 10
GF 29 31 29 32 22 22 23 20 17 8
GA 19 29 24 30 19 16 23 28 27 29
7-5, 6-3. Tobia sKamke,Germany,def.Lukas Rosol,Czech Republic, 6-3,6-0.
Pts 37 33 32 31 30 27
GF 32 30 32 27 30 23
GA 18 18 26 27 24 22
At Centro deAlto Rendimiento Bogota, Colombia Purse: $727,685(WT250)
WesternConference T 4 9 5 7 3 6
Swedish Open Monday At Bastad TennisStadium Bastad, Sweden Purse: $22g,ggg(Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round JohannaLarsson(8), Sweden, def. SofiaArvidsson, Sweden, 6-1, 6-1. LourdesDominguezLino (5), Spain, def.Anabel MedinaGarrigues, Spain, 6-1, 6-2. Virginie Razza no, France,def. Silvia Soler-Espinosa(7), Spain,7-5, 6-1. FlaviaPennetta,Italy,def. MarianaDuque-Marino, Colombia,6-1,4-6, 6-4. ArantxaParraSantonja, Spain, def.Alla Kudryavtseva,Russia2-6 6-4 7-5.
Poland,6-3, 6-2.
EasternConference
RealSaltLake Portland Vancouver FC Dallas Los Angeles Colorado
COLUMBUSBLUEJACKETS — Signed D David
Savardtoaone-year, two-waycontract.
Professional
Bet-a t-home Open Monday At RothenbaumSport GmbH Hamburg, Germany Purse: $1.44 million (WTBB)B Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Albert Montanes,Spain, def. Paul-Henri Mathieu, France,6-4, 6-4. JanHajek,Czech Republic,def.Lukasz Kubot,
SOCCER
W L 11 5 8 2 9 5 8 5 9 8 7 7
TENNIS
UnitedStates,6-0,6-0. Pct GB 769
Roberto Bautista Agut, Spain, def. Alexander Zverev,Germany,6-3,6-2. DmitryTursunov,Russia,def. PabloAndujar,Spain, 6-7 (5),7-6(4), 6-2. Florian Mayer,Germany, def. Nikolay Davydenko, Russia,6-1, 6-3.
Claro Open Monday
Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round
BASKETBALL National Basketball Association ATLANTA HAWKS—SignedFEltonBrand. BOSTON CELTICS—Waived FKris Joseph. DETROIT PISTONS—Signed FLuigi Datomeand GWill Bynum HOUSTO N ROCKETS—SignedGIsaiah Canaan. Agreedto termswith FRobert CovingtonandGB.J. Young.WaivedG/FJamesAndersonandCTimOhlbrecht. MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES—Re-signedGTonyAllen and FJonLeuerto multiyear contracts SACRAM ENTOKINGS—SignedFCarl Landryto afour-yearcontract. FOOTBALL National Football League CINCINNATI BENGALS— SignedTETyler Eifert to afour-yearcontract. DENVER BRONCOS — Suspended director of playerpersonnelMatt Russell indefinitelyanddirector
HOCKEY
Irina-CameliaBegu(3), Romania, def. CarinaWitthoeft,Germa ny, 6-3, 6-3. ArantxaRus,Netherlands, def. Maria-TeresaTorroFlor (7),Spain,7-5,5-7,6-4. Mona Barthel (1), Germany,def. ChiaraScholl,
WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION All Times PDT
NEW YORKYANKEES — Sent3BAlex Rodriguez
to Trenton (EL)fora rehabassignment. TEXASRANGERS SentDFs Craig Gentry and Jeff Baker to Frisco(TL)for rehabassignments. TORONTOBLUE JAYS — SentOF Melky Cabrera to NewHampshire (EL)for arehabassignment. National League COLORADOROCKIES— TradedRHPsParkerFrazier toCincinnati forRHPArmandoGalarraga. MIAMIMARI.INS—Optioned LHPDuaneBelow to New Orleans(PCL). SentRHPJoseCedatotheGCL Marlinsfor arehabassignment. MII.WAUKE E BREWERS — Optioned OFKhris Davis toNashville (PCL). ST. LOUISCARDINALS— Sent RHPChris Carpenter to Springfield (TL) for a rehabassignment. Optioned RHPKerth Butler to Memphis(PCL).
National Hockey League ANAHEIM DUCKS— Re-signed DMat Clark to a one-yearcontract. CAROLINA HURRICANES—SignedFElias Lindholm toathree-year, entry-levelcontract
sia, 6-3, 6-2.
VVNBA
Aceves outnght to Pawtucket (IL).
of propersonnelTomHeckert onemonthfor suspicion of drunken driving. JACKSO NVILLEJAGUARS—SignedWR/PRAce Sanders. SAN FRANCI SCO 49ERS Signed P/K Colton Schmrdtto athree-year contract.
Saturday'sGames
NewYorkatToronto FC,1 p.m. Colorado at Seattle FC,I p.m. FC DallasatMontreal, 4 p.m. PortlandatPhiladelphia, 4:30p.m. NewEnglandatColumbus, 4:30p.m. D.C. UnitedatChicago,5:30pm. SportingKansasCity at Real Salt l.ake,7 p.m. Vancouver at LosAngeles, 7:30 p.m.
Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round KarinKnapp(8), Italy,def. ValeriaSolovyeva,Rus-
BASKETBALL
Atlanta
Seattle 7 7 3 2 4 21 20 SanJose 6 9 6 2 4 21 32 ChivasIJSA 3 11 5 14 f 7 3 5 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint fortie.
BOSTONRED SOX — Assi gned RHP Alfredo
JacobMarkstromonatwo-yearcontract. LOSANG ELESKINGS— Agreedto termswith D Alec Martinezonatwo-yearcontract. MONTR EALCANADIENS—Announcedthe retrrement of F BlakeGeoffrion. SignedFSvenAndrighetto to a three-year,entry-level contract. NEW YOR KISLANDERS— Agreedto terms with LW Josh Bailey onafive-year contract. PHILADEL PHIA FLYERS— NamedRon Hextal
assistant generalmanager and director of hockey operations. TAMPABAYLIGHTNING — Re-signed F J.T. Browntoaone-year, two-waycontract. COLLEGE CASTLE TON—NamedBrittany Higginsassistant director ofcomplianceandassistant strengthandconditioningcoach. AUBURN — NamedGregNorton hitting coach. AUSTINPEAY—NamedJosh Richards wide receiverscoach. ELON —Named Alex Smyth volunteerassistant
crosscountrycoach. FLORIDAINTERNATIONAL DismissedRBKedrick Rhodes fromthefootball team. GRU AUG USTA — Promoted part-time assistant coachesCourtney Boyd to women'sassistant basketball coach,JamieQuarles to men'sassistant basketbalcoach l andEvanSmith to assistant softball
coach. HARDINSIMMONS — NamedMelanie Chonko women' sbasketballcoach. JACKSO NVILLE STATE — NamedAli Heller women'sassistantbasketbal coach. LIMESTON E— Named JoeWassink men'sand women'scrosscountry coach, inaddition to hisduties as assistanttrackandfield coach. LIPSCOMB —NamedMeganRhodesSmith softball pitchingcoach ST. JOSEP H'S (L.I.) — Named MatthewPerry
men'sandwomen's indoor track andfield coach,in addition tohisdutiesasmen'sandwomen's assistant
crosscountrycoach. UTSA —SuspendedDEWill Ritter indefinitely VANDERBIL T — Dismissed DB BrandonBanks,S CoreyBatey,WRJaborian McKenzie andTEBrandon Vandenburg fromthefootball team WESTVIRGINIA—AnnouncedFAaric Murrayhas left themen'sbasketball team.
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadatselected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd B onneville 8 1 9 The Dalles 1,164 John Day 1,142 McNary 1 ,085
199 264 208 214
1 , 010 595 382 263
5 70 288 191 136
Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 164,822 57,669 16,476 7,292 The Dalles 143,199 50,905 7,365 3,306 John Day 121,424 46 251 6,229 2,621 McNary f 15,751 34,853 4,894 1,722
CYCLING: TOUR DE FRANCE
Froome oo sun eata ein uest or Tourvicto By Jerome Pugmire The Associated Press
ENTRECHAUX, France — There appears to be little to stop Chris Froome from reachingthe ChampsElysees on Sunday in th e yellow jersey and becoming the second s traight British cyclist to wi n t h e Tour de France. After another brutal attack in the mountains on Sunday, Froome leads Bauke Mollema and Alberto Contador by more than four minutes with only six stages left — four of them suited to him. There is a time trial on Wednesday, followed by three straight days of tortuous climbs in the Alps. But winning looks like the easy part. The 28-year-old Froome's physicai superiority at th e 100th Tour has raised eyebrows, practically inevitable in the climate of suspicion that haunts cycling after Lance Armstrong was stripped of his seven titles for serial doping. This year's race is the first since A rmstrong l os t h i s ti t l es, a n d
Froome understands the tone of the questions. Still, he was unhappy that doping became a main topic of his news conference on Monday's rest day. That followed his stage win on Mont Ventoux, a mammoth climb in Provence that he tamed with two blistering attacks and where he left Contador — the 2007 and '09 Tour
" I can assure you that we a r e thinking very, very hard about the
optimal way of proving to you guys that we're not doping," Sky team manager D av e B r a i lsford said Monday, adding that the World Anti-Doping Agency
could help by appointing an
expert to scrutinize Froome. "They can come and live c hampion — lagging behind. F r ome o wit h us , " B r a i lsford s a id. "I just think it's quite sad "They can have all of our inthat we're sitting here the day after formation. They can see all of our the biggest victory of my life ... quite data." Brailsford an d F r o ome w o u ld a historic win, talking about doping," Froome said. "Here I am basically much rather be focusing on the Alps. being accused of being a cheat and a And judging by what Contador liar and that's not cool. saw on the 21-kilometer (13-mile) "To compare me with L ance, I ascent up Ventoux, the Spaniard has mean, Lance cheated.I'm not cheat- every reason to fear more misery ing. End of story." there. "My objective was to win the Tour, With so many of cycling's recent exploits later shown to have been but (Froome) is a level above the drug-assisted, people understand- I est," Contador said. ably want to k now w hether they If Contador thinks Ventoux was should continue believing. Froome's tough, then he w i l l b e d r eading performances are subject to intense Thursday's 18th stage — featuring debate on social media, cycling biogs two big climbs up I'Alpe d'Huez, one and in mainstream media. of the Tour's most famed mountain
passes. That is bad enough, but Friday's 204.5-kilometer (127-mile) trek from Bourg d'Oisans to Le Grand-Bornand looks horrendous. There is simply no respite. The day begins with two massive climbs, known as HC (Hors Categorie, essentially meaning they are beyond classification because they are so tough) and finishes with two nasty Category 1 climbs, a level just below HC but still incredibly hard. For good m easure, Saturday's stage ends with a 10.7-kilometer (6.6mile) HC climb up to Semnoz. Froome, however, remains wary of Contador. "There are a iot of very eager racers in the peloton left with a iot still to prove," Froome said. "For us it's about keeping the yellow jersey and riding in whatever way we can to best defend (it). i don't think we are necessarily on a mission to try and win every mountain top finish." There is a glimmer ofhope for Contador, however, because Froome's Sky teammates have struggled at
times. On two stages, Froome had to fend for himself. If that happens again in the Alps — and if he has a bad day — he could yet lose a serious amount of time. "Yes, there is one stage i am looking at. It could be a good day to try something," Contador said through a translator. "i'm going to look for an opportunity. In one week's time you'll know which one it was.e Sky now has seven riders because Edvald Boasson Hagen retired with injury last week and Vasil Kiryienka missed the time cut on Stage 9. "We losta lot of our horsepower, our engine room," Froome said. "Since then it's been about managing the resources we do have and trying to get through each day as best we can. i feel the guys have done a fantastic job." Froome may need a little bit more of a cushion, though, and could target the 32-kilometer (20-mile) time trial. The race resumes today with a medium mountain stage from Vaisonla-Romaine to Gap in the Alps.
TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MLB: ALL-STAR GAME
u anseass ow,wins er By Mike Fitzpatrick The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The Home Run Derby champion didn't even make the All-Star team. Yoenis Cespedes won baseball's power-hitting competition with a dazzling display Monday night, becoming the first player left out of the AllStar game to take home the crown. The Oakland Athletics
II ~
. "a st
g ~ -1ER@y II~
whopping 17 home runs in the first round — more than any other player managed in their first two trips to the plate. "I felt that I was getting into a very good rhythm, and that as long as the ball was right
Mickelson wants to make it easy at Muirfield By Doug Ferguson
GOLF NOTEBOOK
The Associated Press
's
slugger beat Bryce Harper 9-8 in the final round at reconfigured Citi Field, hitting the decisive drive with five swings to spare. In his second major league season, the outfielder from C uba dropped his bat a n d raised his ar m i n t r i u mph when he sent his 32nd homer of the night some 455 feet to deep center field, where it caromed off the back wall of the black batter's eye. He was swarmed by t h e A m erican L eague All-Stars near t h e third base line. "You come for a show in New York. He put on a show," said Detroit T igers pitcher M ax Scherzer, set to start for the AL tonight. T he final addition to t h e field, Cespedes was the fourth player not selected for the AllStar game to compete in the event. Right off the bat, he proved he belonged. With family in the stands, Cespedes hit a
C3
. 'Ns ~W
Frank Franklin II /The Assoaated Press
American League's Yoenis Cespedes of the Oakland Athletics hits during the final round of the MLB All-StarHome Run Derby on Monday inNew York.Cespedes won the event.
over the plate, I felt like I was in a good groove," Cespedes said through a tr a n slator. "That was the key." That sent him straight into the finals, though he added six long balls in round two for good measure. Some of his early drives were particularly impressive, too. Cespedes hit about a halfdozen balls into th e u pper deck inleft,never reached by
anyone in a game, and banged another couple of shots off the restaurant windows in the corner just below. The 27-year-old Cespedes
believed in me, that thought I could play at this level," he said. The 20-year-old H a rper, wearing shiny gold spikes as has struggled as a sophomore, his father pitched to him, hambatting only.225 with 15 home mered eight homers in all three runs, but hardly anyone in the rounds. But the Washington game doubts his ability. Nationals phenom c ouldn't "This trophy will motivate keep up with Cespedes. "He's i ncredible," H a r pme so that things continue to go well for me, and I just er said. "He's an absolute want to thank the people that machine."
MLB SCOREBOARD
Met to start All-Star Game; Yankeeto finish?
Standings AllTimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE
East Division
By Ronald Blum
Bryce Harper said. The Associated Press S cherzer, 28, h a d t h e NEW YORK — The first most dominant first half in and last pitch of the All-Star a quarter-century, in terms of wins. His 13-0 record begame could well be "New York, New York." fore Saturday's loss to TexYoung ace Matt Harvey as was the most wins in a of the Mets will start f or perfect start since Clemens the National League on his won his first 14 decisions in home mound. Mariano Ri1986. vera, in hi s f i nal season, Detroit's Justin Verlander may well finish for the AL. was the AL starter and loser "Having the opportunity last year. Scherzer (13-1, 3.10 to take the ball is something ERA) joins him to become I'll never f orget," Harvey the first pitchers from the said Monday. same club to start consecuOn July 16 last year, Har- tive All-Star games since vey was pitching for Triple- Arizona's Randy Johnson A Buffalo against Toledo (2000-01) and Curt Schilbefore 5,885 fans at Coca- ling (2002). "We go t hroughout the Cola Field. Tonight, he'll be starting a gainst D e troit's season and w e see g uys Max Scherzer in front of a who absolutely deal, and for sellout crowd at Citi Field skipper to give me the nod and a worldwide television over those guys just means audience. so much to me," Scherzer A t 24 , H a r vey i s t h e said as he sat next to Tiy oungest A l l - Star s t a r t - gers manager Jim Leyland, ing pitcher since the Mets' who will pilot the American Dwight Gooden i n 1 9 88, League squad. when he was 23. Harvey Rivera, at 43 the oldest will be the first pitcher from A ll-Star this y ear, sat i n the host team to start an All- Jackie Robinson Rotunda in Star game since Houston's front of a large blue sculpRoger Clemens in 2004 and ture of Robinson's "42" just the 11th overall. fitting given that the num"It really wouldn't have ber was retired for all teams mattered what city we were in 1997 on the 50th anniverplaying in with the year that sary of the day Robinson he's had, the impressive broke baseball's color barnumbers that he's put up," rier. Rivera, grandfathered said San Francisco's Bruce in, will be th e last major Bochy," the N L m a n ager. leaguer to have that number "He would have been the on his back. starting pitcher." W ith 3 0 s a ves i n 3 2 Harvey, 7-2 with a 2.35 chances and a 1.83 ERA in ERA and an N L -high 147 his farewell season for the strikeouts, has made 29 ma- New York Yankees, Rivera jor league starts — the few- is still the best. "I think it would be probaest for an A l l-Star starter since Hideo Nomo with 13 bly the most beautiful touch in 1995. Big league hitters in the world i f w e c o uld can't stop talking about his somehow get a lead on the heater. National League and play H is fastball velocity o f t he ninth inning with t h e 95.2 mph is 0.1 mph b egreatest closer of a ll-time hind Washington's Stephen coming out of the bullpen," Strasburg, the major league Leyland said. If not? leader this year, according "You can r est assured, to fangraphs.com. "He's a power guy that he will be on the mound at attacks hitters," said Minsome point and you will see nesota catcher Joe Mauer, a him pitch, whether it be to a two-time AL batting cham- hitter, an inning," Leyland pion. "He has four above- said. "You will see No. 42 average pitches." pitch." A 13- t im e A ll - S t ar, Harvey throws the hardest slider and curve in the still slender but his shortmajors, and he ranks second cropped hair receded, Rivein swinging strikes at 12.7 ra has thrown eight scorepercent, just behind Texas' less innings i n A l l - Star Yu Darvish (13.3) and ahead games and has a record four of Scherzer (12.3). saves. "It's not emotional yet," "I don't even know what he's throwing. He t h rows he said. "Now, that could everything," Washington's change by tomorrow." -
Boston TampaBay Batimore NewYork Toronto Detroit Cleveland
Kansas City Minnesota Chicago Oakland Texas Los Angeles Seattle Houston
W L 58 39 55 41 53 43 51 44 45 49 Central Division W t 52 42
51 44 43 49 39 53 37 55 WestDivision W t 56 39 54 41 44 49 43 52 33 61
Pct GB .598 573 2'I~ .552 4'/2
.537 6 ,479 u i/z
Pct GB 553 .537 1'/~ .467 8 .424 12 .402 14
Pct GB .589 .568 2 473 0
.453 13 .351 22'/z
Monday's Games No games scheduled Today'sGame All-starGam eat NewYork(Mets), 5 p.m.
Atlanta Washington Philadelphia NewYork Miami St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Chicago Milwaukee
NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W t 54 41
48 47 48 48 41 50 35 58 Central Division W t 57 36 56 37 53 42 42 51 38 56
WestDivision W 50 47 46 43 42
Arizona Los Angeles Colorado
SanFrancisco San Diego
L 45 47 50 51 54
waukee,.325;Posey,SanFrancisco,.325; MCarpenter, St Louis,.321;Votto, Cincinnati,.318. RUNS —MCarpenter, St. Louis, 72; CGonzalez, Colorado,68;Choo,Cincinnati,66; Votto, Cincinnati, 66; Holliday,St. Louis,64;Goldschmidt, Arizona,60; SMarte,Pittsburgh,59; JUpton,Atlanta, 59. BBI — Goldschmidt, Arizona,77; Craig, St. Louis, 74; Phillips,Cincinnati,74, DBrown,Philadelphia,67; Bruce,Cincinnati, 66;CGonzalez, Colorado,64; PAIvatez,pittsburgh,6z HITS — Segura, Milwaukee,121; Craig,St. Louis, 116; MCarpenter,St Louis, 115; Votto, Cincinnati, 02; Goldschmidt,Arizona, 00; YMolina, St Louis, 00; GGonzalez,colorado, 107;sMarte, pittsburgh, 107.
DOUBLES —Bruce, Cincinnati, 28; MCarpenter, St. Lou>s,28;YMolina, St.Louis,27; Posey,SanFrancisco,27;Rizzo,Chicago,27; McCutchen, Pitsburgh, 26; GParra,Arizona, 26. TRIPLES —CGomez, Milwaukee,9; SMarte, Pittsburgh, 8;Segura,Milwaukee,8;Span,Washington, 7, CGonzalez,Colorado,6; HechavarrIa, Miami, 5; DWright,NewYork,5. HOME RUNS— CGonzalez,Colorado,25;PAlvarez, Pittsburgh,24; DBrown,Philadelphia, 23;Goldschmidt, Arizona,21; Beltran,St Louis, 19;Bruce, Cincinnati,19;Uggla,Atlanta,18. STOLENBASE S—ECatrera, San D>e go, 34; SMarte, Pittsburgh,28, Segura, Milwaukee,27; Revere, Philadelphia22; , CGomez, Milwaukee, 21; McCutchen,Pittsburgh,20;Pierre,Miami,18. PITCHING —Zimmermann, Washington, 12-4;
wainwright, st. Louis, 12-5; corbin, Arizona,0Pct GB .568 .505 6 .500 6'/z 451 11 .376 18
Pct GB .613 .602 558 5 .452 15 .404 19'/z Pct GB .526 500 2'Iz 479 4 1/2 .457 6'/z .438 O'Iz
Monday's Games No games scheduled Today's Game All-starGam eat NewYork(Mets), 5 p.m.
Leaders ThroughSunday's Games
AMERICANLEAGUE BATTING —MiCabrera, Detroit, .365;Trout, Los Angeles,.322;Mauer,Minnesota, 320;DOrtiz, Boston, .317;Pedroia,Boston, .316;ABeltre, Texas, .316 CDavis,Baltimore,.315;Loney,TampaBay,.315; TorHunter,Detroit, 315. RUNS —MiCabrera, Detroit, 73; CDavis,Balti-
more,70;AJones,Baltimore, 6t, Trout,LosAngeles, 65; DeJennings,TampaBay, 63;Bautista, Toronto,61; Encarnacion, Toronto, 60 RBI — MIcabrera, Detroit, 95;CDavis, Baltimore, 93;Encamacion,Toronto,72;NCruz,Texas,69;Fielder, Detroit,69;AJones,Baltimore, 67;Cano,NewYork, 65; Dortiz,Boston,65. HITS — MiCabrera, Detroit, 132;Machado,Baltimore,128;Pedroia,Boston,119;Trout, LosAngeles, 09; ABeltre, Texas, 08; AJones,Baltimore, 07, Ellsbury,Boston,115. DOUBLES —Machado, Baltimore, 39; Mauer, Minnesota,30,Trout, LosAngeles, 29; CDavis, Baltimore,27;JCastro,Houston,25; Pedroia,Boston,25;
JhPeralta,Detroit, 25.
TRIPLES —Trout, LosAngeles,8, Ellsbury, Boston, 7;Drew,Boston, 6; Gardner, NewYork, 5; DeJennings, Tampa Bay, 5; LMartin, Texas,5; Kawa saki, Toronto, 4;HKendrick, LosAngeles, 4. HOMERUNS —CD avis, Baltimore, 37; MiCabrera, Detroit, 30;Encarnacion,Toronto, 25;ADunn, Chica go,24;Ibanez,Seattle,24;NCruz,Texas,22; ABeltre,Texas,21; Cano, NewYork, 21;trumbo, Los Angeles,21. STOLENBASES— Ellsbury,Boston,36;RDavis, Toronto,24;McLouth,Baltimore,24; Altuve,Houston, 21; Kipnis,Cieveland,21;Trout, LosAngeles, 21;AlRamirez,Chicago,20. PITCHING —Scherzer, Detroit, 13-1; MMoore, TampaBay, 13-3; Colon, Oakland,12-3; Tillman, Baltimore,11-3;FHernandez,Seattle,10-4; jterlander, Detroit10-6; Masterson,Cleveland,10-7 STRIKEOUTS —Darvish, Texas,157; Scherzer, Detroit,152; FHernandez,Seattle, 140; Masterson, Cleveland,137;Sale,Chicago,131; jter ander,Detroit, 125; DHolland, Texas,121. SAVES —JIJohnson, Baltimore, 33;Nathan,Texas, 30;MRivera,NewYork, 30; Baltour,Dakland,25; AReed, Chicago,24;Frieri,LosAngeles,22;Rodney, Tampa Bay,22; GHolland, KansasCity,22. NATIONALLEAGUE BATTING —YMolina, St. Louis, .341;Craig, St. Louis, .333;Cuddyer,Colorado,.330;Segura, M>l-
1; Lynn, St. Louis, 11-4; Lee, Philadelphia, 10-3; Bumgamer, SanFrancisco,10-5; 7tied at9. STRIKEOUTS —Harvey, NewYork, 147; Kershaw,LosAngeies,139; Wainwright, St. Louis,130; Samardzija, Chicago,128; Latos, Cincinnati, 127; Lincecum,SanFrancisco, 125; Lee, Philadelphia, 125. SAVES —Grilli, Pittsburgh, 29;Kimbrel, Atlanta,
26; Mui<ca, St. Louis,26; Rsoriano,Washington,25; Romo,SanFrancisco, 21;Chapman, Cincinnati, 21; Papelbon,Philadelphia,20.
2013 All-Star Rosters Rosters for theMLBAl-Star gametodayat Citi Field in NewYork(x-injured, wil notplay;y-injtrr replacement;z-inactivepitcherreplacement; t-final playerfan vote;i-inactivepitcher).
American League Starters Catcher—JoeMauer, Minnesota FirstBase—Chris Davis, Baltimore SecondBase—RobinsonCano, NewYork Third Base —Miguel Cabrera, Detroit Shortstop—J.J. Hardy,Baltimore Outfield Mike Trout, LosAngeles;AdamJones, Baltimore;JoseBautIsta, Toronto Designated Hiter— David Ortiz, Boston Reserves Catcher —JasonCastro, Houston;Salvador Perez, KansasCity Infielders —PrinceFielder,1b, Detroit; JasonKipnis, 2b, Cleveland;MannyMachado, 3b, Baltimore; DtIstin Pedroia2b, , Boston;Jhonny Perata,ss, Detroit; BenZobrist,2b, TampaBay Outtielders—NelsonCruz, Texas; Alex Gordon,Kansas City,Torii Hunter,Detroit Designated Hiter— Edwin Encatnacion,Toronto Pitchers z-GrantBaltour, Oakland;x-Clay Buchholz,Boston; Brett Cecil,Toronto;yI-Bartolo Colon,Dakland;xJesse Crain, Chicago;x-YuDarvish, Texas; f-Steve Delabar,Toronto,Felix Hernandez,Se attle; z-Greg Holland,KansasCity; i-HisashiIwakuma,Seattle; Justin Masterson, Cleveland;y-Matt Moore,Tampa Bay; JoeNathan,Texas;y-GlenPerkins,Minnesota; MarianoRivera, NewYork; Chris Sale,Chicago; Max Scherzer,Detroit; z-Chris Tilman,Baltimore; i-Justinjterlander,Detroit National League
Starters Catcher—Yadier Mol<na,St Louis FirstBase—JoeyVotto, Cincinnati SecondBase—BrandonPhilips, Cincinnati Third Base David Wright,NewYork Shortstop—TroyTulowitzki, Colorado Outfield —CarlosBeltran, St.Louis, CarlosGonzalez, Colorado;BryceHarper Washington
Reserves
Catcher —y-Brian McCann, Atlanta; Buster Posey,
SanFrancisco Infielders Pedro Alvarez,3b, Pittsburgh; Everth Cabrera,ss, SanDiego; Matt Carpenter,2b, St. Louis; AllenCraig, 1b, St. Louis;fx-FreddieFreeman, 1b,Atlanta;PaulGoldschmidt, 1b,Arizona; Marco Scutato,2b,San Francisco;Jean Segura, ss,Milwaukee Outfielders—DomonicBrown, Philadelphia; Michael Cuddyer,Colorado;Carlos Gomez, Milwaukee;AndrewMcCutchen,Pittsburgh Pitchers MadisonBum garner, SanFrancisco; Aroldis Chapman, Cincinnati; Patrick Corbin, Arizona;Jose Fernandez,Miami; JasonGrilli, Pittsburgh; Matt Harvey,NewYork; Clayton Kerstaw, LosAngeles; Craig Kimbrel, Atlanta; Cliff Lee, Philadelphia; i-Jeff Locke,Pittsburgh;z-MarkMelancon,Pittsburgh;z-EdwardMujica St. Louis;z-SergioRomo, San Francisco; i-AdamWainwright, St Louis; Travis Wood, Chicago; i-Jordan ZImme rmann, Washington.
G ULLANE , Sco t l a n d — Fresh off a Scottish Open victory, P h i l Mi c k e lson showed up at Muirfield for the first time in 11 years and didn't take long to figure out his strategy for the British Open. He wants to keep it as simple as possible and try to
"I think I did Matt Lauer and "Today" — Katie Couric was there still back in the day — did a little thing with them," he said. "Went back to the 18th green at Oakmont, and that was the only thing. I didn't even own a house in those days. I got
make easy pars.
back on my plane, myself
He didn't take the easy route on t h e p a r- 5 17th, however. Mickelson couldn't resist the temptation of the dunes right of the green. He placed the ball on the upward slope, even with the flag, and attempted his favorite trick shot — hitting a lob wedge that goes backward. With a full swing, the ball went up and over his head, landed on the green and stopped about 6 feet away. But it was only Monday, a day of practice. "It is fun to come in with a win, but no w i t ' s t i m e to focus on Muirfield and try to learn the nuances," Mickelson said. "What I'm looking for is how to make easy pars, how to get the ball in the fairway easily, how to get it up and around the greens without a lot of stress, without having to hit perfect shots. Because imperfect shots will be magnified by the wind." M ickelson has not h a d much success in the Open. He finished one shot out of a playoff in 2004 at Royal Troon in what he considers his best week in the British Open. Two years ago, he made a Sunday charge that came up three shots short at Royal St. George's. He is trying to understand how to play the game on the ground, so typical of links golf, but he said Muirfield is a course that sometimes requires the ball to travel more in the air to cover some of the pot bunkers short of the
and (wife) Leizl, and flew back to London. We rented a cottage from Renton Laidlaw, and we just hid from the world there. "The w hole t hing h a s changed a l ot , e specially since '94," he said. "There are so many story lines that people want. So it can get very, very busy."
Hanson's back Peter Hanson has been struggling with a sore back, and he's still not sure if he'll tee it u p T h u r sday. The Swede said it was 50-50 he
would play. "I thought the disk problem in my back was getting better, but then it starts to feel worse," Hanson said. Hanson had planned to play The Greenbrier Classic and the following week, either in America or Scotland. But there was a rain delay at The Greenbrier, and he couldn'tmove when play resumed so he had to withdraw. He came straight to Scotland to work with hi s physical therapist trying to
get ready. The key was going to be today. "If I can play nine holes pain-free, then that will be
the key to my playing or
not," he said. The first alternate if he were to withdraw is Joost Luiten of The Netherlands. The French connection Thomas Levet was part of the four-man playoff at Muirfield in 2002, and he went one extra hole of sudden death before making bogey on the 18th hole and green. M ickelson f i n ished t o - losing to Ernie Els. He didn't ward the bottom of the pack qualify to play this year. Neiin 2002 at M u i r field. He ther did the other two from missed the nasty weather that playoff, Stuart Appleby on Saturday that derailed and Steve Elkington. Levet is doing TV work, so many other players, but failed to take advantage of and he said it's been tough. "I am fine here in the practhe calm c o nditions and shot 76. He tried to come tice range, but when I walk down on Tuesday of l a st back among the crowd it week for a practice round, is difficult because everybut he didn't make it. That one keeps reminding me means he wil l b e s pend- of what happened in 2002," ing more time playing the Levet said. " I think I ' v e course than he does at other signed 20,000 autographs almajors. ready this week, so it is very Take Mer i o n , for difficult." example. France at least is repreMickelson did most of his sented by Gregory Bourdy, preparations a week before so maybe he can get atonethe U.S. Open, so he had no ment from his country. "The question to Gregory trouble flying home across the country to San Diego is, 'Who will be only the secfor his daughter's eighth- ond French player to win the g rade graduation and r e British Open,' " Levet said. t urning overnight in t i m e "And the answer this week for his Thursday morning will be, 'Gregory Bourdy.' " tee time. He nearly won the Arnaud Massy i n 1 9 07 U.S. Open. a t Royal Liverpool is t h e At other majors, it's not o nly Frenchman to wi n a unusual for him to play one claret jug. Jean Van de Velde f ull practice round at t h e nearly joined him in 1999 at course and g o e l sewhere Carnoustie when he took a t he rest of th e w eek u n three-shot lead into the final til the opening round. But hole. Van de Velde famously he knows t hose courses. made triple bogey and lost in Muirfield requires getting a playoff. Divots reacquainted. "This week I'll spend more Ben Curtis is back with time on the golf course," he a familiar face on the bag. said. "Being able to be here He has reunited with Andy and have a few quiet days is Sutton, the English caddie good. he hired in 2003 to work for His wife and three chil- him at Royal St. George's d ren were w i t h h i m a t when Curtis shocked the Castle Stuart in the north golfing world by winning of Scotland last week. They the British Open.... Charles dropped him of f M o nday Howell III would have been and headed to Barcelona for the second alternate, but he a few days until the champi- withdrew from the Open on onship begins. Sunday when Jordan SpiFatigue factor eth qualified by winning the Ernie Els has won major John Deere Classic. If Zach c hampionships 1 8 ye a r s Johnson had won the Deere, apart, and one big differ- then Joost L u iten w o uld ence is the reaction of the have gotten in, and Howell media and the time commit- w ould have moved upto the ments. It can be exhausting, first alternate position. and last year's win at Royal Harris English was among Lytham 8t St. Annes was those who flew over on the even tougher because he charter from the John Deere wanted to honor his spon- Classic. He l o oked t i r ed, sor's commitment by play- but still managed to get in ing in the Canadian Open nine holes of practice to stay the next week. He never re- awake. He at least received ally recovered the rest of the some great instruction. Engyear. lish was joined for nine holes It wasn't like that in 1994 by Ernie Els, the defending when he won the U.S. Open champion and 2002 winner at Oakmont. at Muirfield.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
Rivera
highly paid players, and to
learn more about their lives Continued from C1 and work. "And we have a chef," Ri"I just want to say thank vera said, gesturing to Phillip you," Rivera explained in Wells, who wore his uniform an interview last week. "I've and hat. "Hello, Phillip." been so blessed to be able A fter an n o uncing i n to play this game, but we spring training that he would wouldn't be able to do it withretire at the end of this sea- out the help and support of son, his 19th with the Yan- all these people behind the kees, the 43-year-old Rivera scenes. They make baseball has embarked on an unusual work as much as we do." tour of American League citThe idea is to meet with ies, meeting with ordinary, people during the Yankees' behind-the-scenes workers last stop in each city they and some fans, who drive the regularly visit. Although a machinery of baseball. basic format has evolved, With all their money and Rivera and Zillo have varsuccess, the Yankees may ied it occasionally to keep be the most widely disliked it fresh. The one constant is t eam in b aseball. A r i v al the response. executive o n c e b r a n ded Dressed in his uniform bethem the Evil Empire, and fore taking the field for batting practice, at about 4:30 few people came to t heir defense. But in stadium con- p.m., Rivera meets the people ference rooms and offices, in casual settings. He chats Rivera thanks r ival f a ns, with secretaries, custodians, charms them, regales them, community relations workawes them. And he t u rns ers and long-serving press many Yankee haters into box attendants. Relaxed and admirers. engaging,he sits across from Rivera, an e missary of them with Zillo at his side, good will, has penetrated en- moderating. "Of course I hate the Yanemy lines and unintentionally become the Yankees' kees," said John Adams, a most successful ambassador Cleveland Indians fan who sinceBabe Ruth spread their has been banging a drum brand across the globe in the at their games for nearly 40 1920s and '30s. years. "I guess you could say "Without a d o u bt, h e 's Mariano is a special case. as great an ambassador as We talked abouthow much we've ever had in baseball," we both love baseball, so we said Jerry Dipoto, the Los have a bond. Maybe he kind Angeles Angels' general of puts a human face on the manager who started his ca- Yankees." In Kansas City, a family reer as a pitcher in 1993 but never played with or against that lost a son in an accident Rivera. shared its grief and struggle When a g r eat b aseball as Rivera held back tears. "That was the one that replayer retires, his final season often includes an almost ally stayed with me," he said. trite farewell tour, includ- "That one was tough, but it
ing applause and humorous was good. gifts from each team in a ceremony at home plate. Rivera, who made his 13th All-Star team this year and is expected to pitch today at Citi Field,
has happily participated in thatprocess,receiving some meaningful gifts, too. But he wanted to do more. A few years ago, with ret irement approaching, h e asked Jason Zillo, the Yankees'director ofcommunications, how he could do something thoughtful and memorable in his final season. Rivera ultimately decided he wanted to express appreciation for the many people in baseball who were not
Ceciliani Continued from C1 "I'm seeing the ball pretty good and just slowing down everything at the plate. I got out of whack with my swing early in th e year, chasing pitches, but now I'm staying
short (with my swing) and staying on top of the ball," he added. C eciliani was a bit of a question mark heading into spring training this season,
having played in just 23 games for the Mets' High-A affiliate, St. Lucie (Fla.), in 2012. He hit .329 in 97 plate appearancesforthe St.Lucie Mets last year before holding his own in the Arizona Fall League, finishing the 2012 fall campaign with a .258 batting average. A number of current big leaguers played in the Arizona Fall
After the meeting in Minneapolis, Rivera went down to the field to stretch with his teammates. About five hours later, he was in the game, receiving a n other s t a nding ovation from appreciative fans in enemy territory, even if they knew what was
coming.
Rivera needed only two pitches to record the 635th save of his career. At the same moment that most of the people he had met that afternoon were doing their jobs in the stands, at the organ or in the kitchen, Rivera was back on the mound do-
inghis.
my advantage." C eciliani's r e c ent ho t streak has not gone unnoticed. B aseball A m e r ica, which publishes one of the most respected prospect guides in the country, mentioned him in an article in its July 12 web edition, saying his recent tear shows his potential to develop into a fourth outfielder for a major league team. Having spent his entire career playing center field, Ceciliani is also getting starts in left field at Binghamton, which as of Monday led the Eastern League with a 59-34 record.
"I've probably played 20
or 25 games in left field this year," th e e x -White B u ffalo said. "I'm trying it. Anything to get to the big .
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leagues."
Despite putting up impressive numbers for a first-year League last year, including a player at the Double-A level, pair of Seattle Mariner start- Ceciliani said he i s m o st ers: catcher Mike Z u nino p leased with being in t h e and second baseman Nick lineup every day. Franklin. "My main g oal c oming "That was huge for me," into this year was to stay C eciliani s ai d a b out t h e healthy," s a i d Ce c i l iani, chance t o p l a y a g a i n st who lost approximately 10 h igh-level competition i n pounds in the offseason in Arizona. "Going to Arizona an effort to avoid hamstring and doing decent out there problems again and opened helped me start out well in camp this past spring at 210 Double-A." pounds. "It's a huge relief to When healthy, Ceciliani, be on the field after missing who hits and t hrows left- a year of development. handed, has shown the po- I've got a routine and regitential to be a classic top-of- men I do every day with my the-order batter. Over the core and lower body." course of his four-year pro With the big league club career he has stolen 79 bases struggling this season — the in 317 games, and he ended Mets are 41-50 and 11 games the season with an on-base out of first place the National percentage over .400 in both League East at the All-Star 2010 and 2012. With 18 steals break — a call-up to New through 79 games this year, York when Major L eague Ceciliani is on pace for his Baseball's rosters expand in best season yet for swipes. September is not out of the His single-season high for question for Ceciliani. "Yeah, the ultimate goal stolen bases is 25, which he set in 109 games with the is to put yourself in a posiMets' Single-A club in Sa- tion of getting called up in vannah, Ga., in 2011. September," Ceciliani added. "I'm trying to show my "Everyone wants that, and legs are feeling better," said that's my goal, too. If it hapCeciliani, who has hit sec- pens, awesome. But the main ond in the Binghamton bat- thing is putting yourself in ting order for most of the position to have a successful season. "I'm starting to get year." — Reporter: 541-383-0305, that confidence in my legs again ... and use my speed to beastes@bendbulletin.com. .
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Shelli Zulauf runs her bike through the transition area after finishing the swim part of the Deschutes Dash sprint distance triathlon on Sunday near the Les Schwaub Amphitheater. Joe Kline i The Bulletin
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j I"ti'
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Zulauf Continued from C1 Based on the speed-tracking feature of her sports watch, Zulauf determined that she was traveling at 16 miles per hour before impact with the SUV and accelerated to 48.3 mph once she was hit. Police said the vehicle traveled sideways 75 yards before hitting an embankment across the opposite lane and flipping. "It skyrocketed her to the yellow (center) lines," Stewart remembered ina recent interview. "When I got to her she was laying on her left side ... and not blinking, but her eyes were wide open. There was a split second where I went, 'I'm looking at my friend, and she's dead.'" Zulauf, who was 40 at the t ime, and the driver of t h e SUV were both taken to St. Charles Bend, where the driver was treated for minor injuriesand released. But Zulauf was in critical condition and spent nearly three weeks in St. Charles' intensive care unit. Initially charged with thirddegree assault and reckless driving, the driver, after pleading no contest, was convicted of thelesser offense of careless driving and was ordered to perform 200 hoursof community service. According to Zulauf, who is a mother and a stepmother, her many injuries from the accident included f r actures of her skull, her clavicle, both
of her tibia and fibula suffered in the 2010 accident. The nerve damage usually requires Zulauf, a f o r mer c o mpetitive distance runner, to walk for most of a run. In Sunday's triathlon, however, she managed to maintain a j o g t h r ough the entire 3.1-mile run — a goal she did not believe was achievable. "I had to be really careful, and still am because I have some nerve damage and also
damage to my lymphatic system," Zulauf said before Sunday's triathlon, her first race of any kind since that fateful bike ride three years ago. "I have a tendency to have a lot of swell-
with her husband, David Zulauf. As Shelli recounted, they remained on a bicycle path away from automobile traffic, but when they approached a vehicle overpass she broke down in fear after hearing a car pass. "A car came by on the side I was hit and I had a major panic attack," she r emembered. "I was literally frozen in fear. I c o uldn't move. I couldn't breathe. My palms were sweating and I had to get off my bike. I just sat there
crying."
all those memories and it was awful. So we had to pull off the road (her husband was riding with her) and we had to sit at the scene where I got hit for 15 minutes changing a tire!" During her sprint triathlon Sunday, the memories of that flat tire and the accident came flashing back to her. But the bike ride, it turned out, was not the most difficult stage of the race. "The run was th e m o st challenging," she said. "I was afraid I was going to trip so I kept telling myself, 'Lift your foot. Lift your foot.' I caught my toes a couple of times, but never went down." S tewart believes i t w a s Zulauf's courage that allowed her toovercome her emotional and physical hurdles. "She has a light, and she's not going to let that light go out that makes her uniquely her," Stewart said. "Whenever I've been in Shelli' s presence, she radiates an inner strength." When Zulauf crossed the finish line at Riverbend Park on Sunday morning, her small but passionate group of supportersembraced her in tears of joy and pride. "I love her so much and I'm so proud of her," David Zulauf said, weeping after watching his wife complete the race. "She's been so determined. She's been through so much and she's worked so hard. "Words fail me."
After that experience, Zulauf stayed off her bike until she and David took a trip ing and my foot drops (while to the Netherlands this past running). If I don't lift my foot April. She was able to build h igh enough, my t oes w i ll her confidence in the northdrop, and I will trip. I think ern European country, where that's one of the challenges for strict liability laws state that this triathlon." the motorist is always at fault Part of her recovery prior in a vehicle-bicycle collision. "It's a very b i ke-friendly to the race was learning how to accept her physical condi- country," Shelli Zulauf said. "Over there, if a motorist hits a tion. After the accident, Zulauf was in a wheelchair for cyclist, they're in a lot of troufour months. Then she used a ble. It's not like the (United) walker, several different types States ... I mean, they have to of canes, a walking boot and go to jail. We did that so I could orthotic devices before she get used to being on bike trails was able to walk on her own. near traffic and hearing cars." "I had to see a counselor Once the Zulaufs returned because my body looked dif- to Bend from the Netherlands, ferent," Shelli r emembered, Shelli began training for the "and it was shameful for me. I Deschutes Dash. She continhad to learn how to react when ued building her confidence peoplestared atmy scars." by riding on quiet streets in The biggest obstacle, how- town before she revisited the ever, has been overcoming the crash site. Because the bike — Reporter: 541-383-0375, post-traumatic stress disorder portionofthe Deschutes Dash eoller@bendbulletin.com that she said developed follow- course runspast the accident scapulas (shoulder blades), her ing the accident. scene, she knew she had to test "There's a lot more that goes herself back (in two places), nine ribs, to see ifshe could emoand the two bones in her low- into an injury like this," Zulauf tionally handle the ride. "The first time I went past er right leg, which, she said, said. "It's scarring mentally, nearly resulted in amputation emotionally, physically... I fig- it, I was crossing the impact of the lower leg. She said she ured that if I did everything I zone and got a flat tire," she realso suffered a punctured lung was supposed to do, I would be counted. "Then it brought back and short-term memory loss OK. I think the accident took that has prevented her from away my sense of security." returning to her job as an XUntil last year, Zulauf said, ray technician. she was unable, physically or In addition to six surgeries, emotionally, to even get on a EVERGREEN she said she has undergone bike. The first time she rode In-Home Care Servlces countless hours of p hysical after the accident was last Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. S41-389-0006 therapy, speech therapy, and summer in Y akima, Wash., P www.evergreeninhome.com counseling. But the now 43year-old Zulauf has f i nally completed the t riathlon for An old-fashionedaffordable CountyFair with something FUNfor everyone! which she was training in the a months leading up to that terrible accident: the sprint triathlon in the Deschutes Dash Weekend Sports Festival. "I finally succeeded in the goal I set out for myself," Zulauf said at the finish line of Sunday's race in Bend's RivQiiCe yau'VePaill far general aSl miSSiaii, COm eenjaygameS,CanteSIS,ShOWS, I ill mare!Aiill it'Sall FRE E! erbend Park. "And for me it wasn't allowing someone else (to) dictate whether I finished a goal. And I did it. Three years and six surgeries later, I'm finally a triathlete." Zulauf went into the race LIL' BUCKAROOS CAN HONE THEIR WILD WEST SKILLS believing she would complete with fun activity stations such as gold panning, roping, horse saddling and more. the 800-yard swim, 12.5-mile bike ride and 5-kilometer run MILK A COW! in two hours. She surprised (It's nat real but t'6 really cool!) herself, along with her supp orters, by c ompleting the PEDAL TRACTOR AREA! race more than 25 minutes DRESS LIKE A COWBOY faster than her projected time. OR COWGIRL! Her official time — I hour, 34 minutes,32 seconds — put her Sponsored by 10th among 17 finishers in the women's 40-44 age division.
~ The Bulletin
COMSOV800T C
CerAtal Oregon ~ Raneh Suyyly
"The best part (was) cross-
ing the finish line," Zulauf said. "That's what I'm going to remember. And I passed a guy right at the finish line too. That was pretty cool." Training for the sprint triathlon in the Deschutes Dash posed nearly impossible obstacles. To begin with, Zulauf said, she has severe nerve damage in her right leg, the result of compound fractures
lZ
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C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com/business. Alsoseearecapin Sunday's Businesssection.
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
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NASDAO ~
15,484.26
S&P 500
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Tuesday, July 16, 2013
Wall Street will be listening today for an update on sales of Johnson & Johnson's first diabetes drug. The world's largest health products maker is due to report second-quarter earnings, which should provide insight on sales of Invokana, a recently launched drug for treating Type 2 diabetes. Johnson & Johnson is also expected to give an update on its efforts to turn around its smallest division, which makesBand-Aids and other consumer health products.
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2,553 1,408 2,965 1,519 1901 1617 1 166 8 6 8 3 20 3 6 7 21 15
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%CHG. WK Mo OTR YTD +0.13% L +18.16% +0.50% L +21.90% +1.55% L T +11.62% +0.24% L +1 2.76% +0.21% +19.47% +0.14% +17.97% +0.29% L +20.03% +0.21% +18.94% L +22.84% +0.65%
HIGH LOW C LOSE C H G. 15509.48 15455.77 15484.26 +19.96 6481.64 6426.46 6468.83 +31.90 506.50 496.85 5 05.73 + 7 . 70 9531.66 9496.92 9520.96 +22.45 3609.59 3591.54 3607.49 + 7 . 41 1684.51 1677.89 1682.50 + 2 . 31 1225.83 1219.81 1224.84 + 3 . 60 17852.61 17775.54 17834.91 +37.87 1043.92 1036.90 1043.30 + 6 . 78
DDW DDW Trans. DDW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000
NAME
Alaska Air Group AvistaCorp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co
$45
KO
$41.01
$38.32
40 • '13
Operating EPS
I
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ALK 32.69 AVA 22.78 BAC 6 . 90 BBSI 19.99 BA 6 9 .03 CascadeBancorp CACB 4.50 Columbia Bukg CDLB 16.18 Columbia Sporlswear COLM 47.72 Costco Wholesale COST 93.20 Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 Home Federal Bucp ID HOME 9.64 Intel Corp INTC 19.23 Keycorp K EY 7 . 71 Kroger Co KR 2 0 .98 Lattice Semi LSCC 3.17 LA Pacific L PX 9 . 87 MDU Resources MDU 19.59 — Mentor Graphics MENT 13.21 — Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 — Nike Iuc 8 NKE 44.83 Nordstrom Iuc JWN 50.90 Nwst Net Gas NWN 41.01 OfficeMax Iuc DMX 3 . 71 ~ PeccarIuc PCAR 35,44 —
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4y Planar Systms P LNR 1 1 2 Plum Creek PCL 39.17 ~ Prec Cestperts PCP 150.53 ~ Sefeway Iuc SWY 14.73 ~ Price-earnings ratio: 22 based on past 12 months' results Schuitzer Steel SCHN 230 7 ~ 3 Sherwin Wms SHW 122.79 ~ L Dividend: $1.12 Div. Yield: 2.7% Staucorp Fucl SFG 28.74 — 0 L Sterbucks Cp SBUX 43,04 — 0 L source: Factset Triquiut Semi TQNT 4.30 ~ L Umpque Holdings UMPQ 11,17 — 0 L US Baucorp USB 30.96 ~ L More confident? Washington Fedl WAFD 15.34 ~ 2 L WFC 31.25 — 0 The improving housing market has Wells Fargo & Co Weyerheeuser WY 2 2.55 ~ L many homebuilders feeling more optimistic about their sales Dividend Footnotes: 2 Extra - dividends were paid, bst are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock 2 - Liquidating dividend. 8 - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. f - Current prospects this year. annual rate, which was mcreased bymost recent dividend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. l - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent Last month, the National dwuend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pad th>syear, a cumulative issue with dividends m arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. 7 - Declared or paid in precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approx>matecash Association of Home Builders/Wells announcement. value on exsustribution date. pE Footnotes: e - Stock is a closed-2nd fund - no piE ratio shown. cc - p/E exceeds 99. d4I - Loss in last12 months Fargo builder sentiment index jumped to 52, the highest level in more than seven years. A reading above 50 indicates that more builders view sales conditions as Shareholders of Krispy Kreme Doughnuts have good rather than poor. This month's seen the stock more than double this year. And Cpinpany And higher earnings per share often, though not $petiight always, lead to rising stock prices. reading is due out today. the stock may rise further because the board The company also repeated its prior has approved the purchase of $50 outlook for the year, saying it expects to NAHB/Weiis Fargo million of company stock. post adjusted net income of between Housing Market Index Investors like buybacks because $42 million and $45 million for the Seasonally adjusted they suggest that management fiscal year ending in February. thinks their company's stock is Analysts, on average, were expecting 50 cheap. Buybacks also help reduce the adjusted profit of $38.5 million, number of shares outstanding, which according to FactSet, with estimates automatically increases earnings per share. ranging from $26.9 million to $46.2 million
2Q '12 2 Q '13
Krispy Kremeapproves buyback ~ i
•
•
Krispy Kreme Doughnuts (KKD) Monday's close:$20.19
45
$6
Price-earnings ratio (Based on past 12 months' results):63
Total return this year: 115% 3-YR* : 77%
40 J
F
M
A
M
J
source Factset
AP
BkofAm iShEMkts S&P500ETF SiriusXM Citigroup
Sprint u Oracle GenElec Microsoft MicronT
857060 680724 627053 537139 508271 412127 359847 339520 330599 303182
13.88 +.10 39.34 +.40 168.16 + . 65 3.66 —.06 51.81 +1.00 6.72 + .27 32.01 + . 76 23.63 —.13 36.17 +.50 13.07 + . 38
Gainers NAME LeapWirlss
L AST CH G 1 6.95 +8 . 9 7 Inteliqunt s 8 .50 +2 . 4 1 Cogo Grp 2.54 +.49 FamwhaSol 3 .17 $-. 5 7 FrozenFd h 2.06 +.36 CdnSolar 1 3.93 +2 . 3 8 ChinaSuo h 2.67 +.44 TaylorCap 2 1.20 +3. 3 9 ProUltTel 79.74 $ . 12.13 JinkoSolar 1 2.03 +1 . 8 3
%CHG $.112.4
+39.6 +23.9 +21.9 +21.2 +20.6 +19.7 +19.0 +17.9 +17.9
Losers NAME LAST W i-LAN g 3.2 5 ArtsWay 6.6 0 Wstmlud pf 26.82 Ingredion 6 2 .57 MazorRbt u 12.18
CHG %CHG -1.47 -31.1 —.97 -12.8 -3.17 -10.6 -6.89 -9.9 -1.13 -8.5
Foreign Markets LAST CHG %CHG + 23.49 + . 6 1 3,878.58 London 6,586.11 + 41.17 + . 63 Frankfurt + 22.04 + . 2 7 8,234.81 Hong Kong 21,303.31 + 26.04 + . 1 2 Mexico -7.49 -.02 40,322.32 Milan 15,597.34 +166.77 +1.08 Tokyo 14,506.25 + 33.67 + . 2 3 Stockholm 1,215.23 + 4.50 + . 3 7 Sydney + 8.10 + . 1 6 4,965.60 Zurich 7,999.15 + 15.97 + . 2 0 NAME Paris
5-Y R * : 37% 1 0 - Y R *: -7%
~
~
~
~
21
Market value: $1.3 billion
*annualized
Source: FactSet
FundFocus
SelectedMutualFunds
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 22.85 +.06 +13.0 +19.8 +14.3 + 89 A A A BondA m 12.48 +.03 -2.5 -0.9 +3.7 + 40 D C E CaplocBuA m 56.07 +.10 +8.1 +13.3 +11.0 + 52 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 40.84 +.03 +11.4 +24.3 +11.6 + 48 C C C EurPecGrA m 43.45 +.08 $5.4 +20.7 +7.5 + 28 D D A FulnyA m 47.73 +.08 $-17.7 +28.9 +16.1 + 71 8 C D M atthews Asian Grluc d MAC S X GrthAmA m 40.43 +.03 +17.7 +30.2 +15.7 + 71 A C C IocAmerA m 19.63 +.04 +10.6 +16.9 +13.2 + 82 8 A A VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH IuvCoAmA m 35.22 +.07 +17.7 +25.9 +14.9 + 78 D D C 43 NewPerspA m35.32 +.05 +13.0 +26.7 +13.4 + 69 8 8 8 cC 23 WAMutlnvA m37.00 +.12 +19.8 +25.6 +18.2 + 93 D A 8 2S $L Dodge & Cox Income 13.5 1 + .03 -1.1 + 1 .6 + 4.6 +6.7 A 8 8 IntlStk 38.18 +.22 + 10.2 +31.3 +9.5 +3.9 A 8 A Stock 149.4 0 + .41+ 23.6 +39.1 +18.4 +9.4 A A 8 Fidelity Contra 89.97 -.16 + 17.0 +23.0 +16.6 +7.9 D 8 C GrowCo 112. 17 +.12+ 20.3 +27.7 +20.0 +9.6 8 A B LowPriStk d 47 .70 +.21+ 20.8 +33.1 +19.0+12.3 8 8 A Fidelity Spartan 500l d xAdvtg 59 .66 +.09+ 19.3 +26.8 +17.8 +9.1 C 8 8 «C 23 FrankTemp-Fraukliu Income Cm 2.35 +.01+7.2 +14.3+10.6 +7.5 A A A IocomeA m 2.3 3 + .01 + 7.5 +15.0 +11.2 +8.1 A A A «C FrankTemp-TemletouGIBoudAdv x 13.00 ... -0.3 + 8 .3 + 6 .7 +9.5 A A A 473 RisDivA m 20. 08 +.01+16.1 +23.6 +15.3 +7.2 E D D Morniugstar OwnershipZone™ Oppeuheimer RisDiyB m 18. 1 8 +.01+ 15.5 +22.4 +14.2 +6.2 E E E o Fund target represents weighted O RisDivC m 18 . 09 +.01 + 15.6 +22.6 +14.4 +6.4 E D E average of stock holdings S mMidvalA m 40.01 +.05 +23.4 +38.0 +14.7 +6.0 A E E • Represents 75% ofIuud'sstock holdings SmMidValBm 33.63 +.05+22.9 +36.8+13.8 +5.2 A E E CATEGORY Pacific/Asia ex-Japan PIMCO TotRetA m 1 0 .77 +.03 -3.0 0 . 0 + 4.1 +6.7 C C B MORNINGSTAR T Rowe Price Eqtyloc 31.2 2 +.06 +19.1 +29.2 +16.7 +9.8 C C B R ATING™ *** * * GrowStk 44.4 8 - . 08+ 17.7 +24.5 +18.3 +9.4 C A 8 HealthSci 53. 5 7 - .01 +30.0 +35.7 +30.7+17.7 C A A ASSETS $3,419 million Newlocome 9. 4 4 +.02-2.8 - 0.9 +3.5 +5.5 D D C EXP RATIO Stk Vanguard 155.20 +.22 +19.3 +26.8 +17.8 +9.2 C A 8 500Adml MANAGER 1.11% 500lnv 155.20 +.22 +19.2 +26.6 +17.7 +9.0 C 8 8 SINCE Kenneth Lowe CapDp 42.77 +.01 +27.2 +43.0 +18.1+10.0 A A A RETURNS 3-MD +0.5 Eqloc 28.65 +.07 +20.3 +27.1 $.19.9 $.11.1 D A A YTD +4.3 StratgcEq 26.54 +.04 +23.7 +35.9 $-21.3 $9.9 A A C 1-YR +18.8 Tgtet2025 14.90 +.04 +9.6 +17.1 +11.8 +6.9 8 8 A 3-YR ANNL +10.6 TotBdAdml 10.66 +.02 -2.5 -1.7 +3.3 +5.0 E D D 5-YR-ANNL +9.0 Totlntl 15.33 +.09 +3.9 +19.8 +6.9 +1.3 D D C TotStlAdm 42.34 +.08 +19.9 +27.9 +18.3 +9.7 8 A A TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 42.33 +.08 +19.8 +27.8 +18.1 +9.5 C A A 2011-12-19 USGro 24.94 -.01 +17.3 +26.5 +17.5 +8.3 8 8 C Singapore Technologies Engineering Ltd. Welltn 37.46 +.08 +12.1 +18.4 +12.8 +8.6 8 A A 4.01 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs 1$paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption AIA Group Ltd. 2.87 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or HSBC Holdings PLCADR 2.63 redemption fee. Source: Morwngsta7.
Most Asian markets tumbled in the first half of this year; this Marketsummary fund was able to post a gain of Most Active 2.5 percent while most Asia NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG funds lost money. A. Veiga, J. Sohn • AP
52-WEEK RANGE
FAMILY
EURO 1.3063
' 37
StoryStocks Stocks ended higher Monday, with Boeing and Citigroup surging on positive news. Traders gave Boeing a lift after it was found that the plane maker's batteries were not the cause of a fire on one of its 787 aircraft in London last week. Citigroup reported better-than-expected second-quarter earnings, leading bank stocks higher. The market's advance was held back by news that economic growth in China fell to the lowest rate since 1991. Investors were also discouraged by report showing that L.S. retail sales grew less than anticipated between M ay andJune. Even so,the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones industrial average both closed at record highs. TIF Close: $79.78L2.76 or 3.6% AStifel Nicolaus analyst upgraded the luxury jewelry company's stock to a "Buy," saying that consumers may be feeling wealthier. $80
Genesco GCO Close:$72.50 V-t.91 or -2.6% A Sterne Agee analyst downgraded shares of the shoe, hat and clothing seller to "Neutral" from "Buy" citing a recent rise in its stock. $80
75
70
70
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$51.81 ~
J $81.25
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$55.33 ~
CSH
Close: $45.65V-3.07 or -6.3%
The pawn shop operator and payday lender said that it expects its second-quarter earnings to come in below analysts' estimates. $50 45 40
J $75.84
Volu1.8m (1.5x avg.) PE: 2 4.5 Volu153.2k (1.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$10.18 b Yie l d : 1.7% Mkt. Cap:$1.73 b
Cash America Int'I
52-WK RANGE oCLOSE YTD 1YR VOL TICKER LO HI C LOSE CHG %CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
Coca-Cola's latest quarterly report card is expected to show improved earnings but a dip in sales. The beverage maker's soda sales have been declining amid criticism that its sugary drinks contribute to obesity. Coca-Cola has responded with a marketing campaign in a bid to win back soda fans. Expect Wall Street to focus on what thecompany says about sales trends today when it reports second-quarter results.
+
Tiffany & Co.
NorthwestStocks Coke in the spotlight
CRUDEOIL $106.32
ii5
$19.83
Dow jones industrials
Close: 1,682.50
New star drug?
SILVER
GOLD $1,283.80 ~
PE : 1 5.9 Yield:...
Leap Wireless LEAP Close: $1 6.95 %8.97 or 112.4% Wireless carrier AT&T said Friday that it agreed to acquire the pre-paid cellphone carrier for about $1.19 billion in cash. $20 15 10
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M J 52-week range
$34.21 ~
J $54.12
5
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M J 52-wcek range
$4.28 ~
$17.25
VolJ 301.5k(1.6x avg.) PE: 1 3 .0 VolJ 33.5m (17.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.3 b Yiel d : 0 . 3% Mkt. Cap:$1.34 b
Aruba Networks
ARUN Close: $17.59L0.61 or 3.6% The wireless company said that its board approved the buyback of up to $100 million of its outstanding common stock. $25
er capacity. $60 50
15
40
M J 52-week range
J
$12.37~
$28.78
VolJ 2.9m (0.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.01 b
PE: . . Yield: ..
P E: . . . Yield:...
First Solar FSLR Close: $50.27%2.62 or 5.5% Shares of the solar company rose after the Chinese government announced plans to expand solar pow-
20
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$13.81 ~
J $58.55
VolJ 7.9m (1.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$4.91 b
P E: 10 . 7 Yield:...
Given Imaging
G IVN T aylor Capital Group T A YC Close: $15.48 %1.45 or 10.3% Close: $21.20 A3.39 or 19.0% Regulators in Japan have approved MB Financial is buying the commerthe company's PillCam pill-sized dicial bank for about $680 million in a agnostic camera for use in diagnos- deal to increase its presence in the ing diseases of the colon. Chicago area. $18 $25 16 20 14
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M J 52-week range
J
A
M J 52-week range
$12.14~
$18.48
Volu355.8k(3.1x avg.) M kt. Cap: $478.75 m
PE : 3 5.2 VolJ 4.0m (20.2x avg.) Yi e ld: . .. Mkt. Cap: $616.67 m
$12.87 ~
J $21.72 PE: 1 0 . 7 Yiel d : ... AP
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.54 percent on Monday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO
3-month T-bill
. 0 3 . 03
...
w
w
w
.09
6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
. 07 .10
...
-
W
W
.14
V
V
V
.18
V L W L W L W L
L L L L
.24 .62 1.49 2.58
.07 .10
2-year T-note . 3 3 .34 5-year T-note 1 .38 1 .42 10-year T-note 2.54 2.59 30-year T-bond 3.59 3.63
BONDS
-0.01 -0.04 -0.05 -0.04
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO
Barclays LoogT-Bdldx 3.36 3.40 -0.04 W L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.86 4.85 +0.01 L L Barclays USAggregate 2.42 2.40 +0.02 W L PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.27 6.35 -0.08 W L RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 4.37 4.34 +0.03 L L YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.58 1.61 -0.03 W L 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3 .32 3.30 +0.02 W L 1 YR AGO 3.25 . 1 3
Commodities The price of oil climbed past $106 a barrel, as stronger demand trumped a report of weaker economic growth in China. Gold, platinum and most other metals also rose. Crops were mixed.
Foreign Exchange The dollar advanced against the Japanese yen and euro, which is a sign traders are more confident in the U.S. economy. The dollar fell versus the British pound and Australian dollar.
h5N4 QG
L L L L L L L
2.30 4.35 1.81 7.15 3.41 .88 3 1.0
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 106.32 105.95 $-0.35 $ 15.8 Ethanol (gal) 2.51 2.45 +0.57 +14.4 Heating Dil (gal) 3.03 3.03 -0.11 -0.6 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.67 3.64 + 0.82 + 9 . 6 Unleaded Ges(gal) 3.10 3.12 -0.47 + 10.3 FUELS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 1283.80 1277.80 19.83 19.78 1422.50 1409.60 3.16 3.17 731.05 721.60
%CH. %YTD +0.47 -23.4 +0.24 -34.3 +0.92 -7.6 -0.30 -13.2 + 1.31 + 4 . 0
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -5.7 1.22 1.22 +0.49 1.23 1.19 +3.15 -14.5 Corn (bu) 5.36 7.02 -1.32 -23.2 Cotton (Ib) 0.85 0.85 +0.02 +13.3 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 290.50 296.50 -2.02 -22.3 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.39 1.39 +0.18 +20.2 Soybeans (bu) 14.54 15.63 + 1.58 + 2 . 5 Wheat(bu) 6.70 6.76 -1.70 -14.0 AGRICULTURE
Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5103 —.0001 —.01% 1.5570 Canadian Dollar 1.04 2 1 + .0027 +.26% 1 .0141 USD per Euro 1.3063 +.0003 +.02% 1 .2241 Japanese Yen 9 9.86 + . 4 7 + . 47 % 79 . 2 7 Mexican Peso 12. 6 922 —.1443 -1.14% 13.2924 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3. 5777 —. 0206 —. 58% 3.9584 Norwegian Krone 6.0679 +.0022 +.04% 6.1053 South African Rand 9.8865 —.0897 —.91% 8.2670 6.6789 +.0083 +.12% 7.0327 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9483 +.0016 +.17% .9812 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0991 -.0048 -.44% . 9 782 Chinese Yuan 6.1422 -.0000 -.00% 6.3882 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7591 +.0004 +.01% 7 .7572 Indian Rupee 59.900 +.008 +.01% 5 5 .125 Singapore Dollar 1.2627 +.0003 +.02% 1 .2639 South Korean Won 1123.40 +.26 +.02% 1148.15 -.07 -.23% 3 0 .00 Taiwan Dollar 29.83
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
BRIEFING
Boardingsdip at RedmondAirport Passenger boardings at Redmond Airport declined slightly more than 2 percent last
month over June 2012, according to information recently released by the airport. Last month, 21,824
passengers flew out
axo tie to we o
EXECUTIVE FILE What: Butterfly Yarn Shop
What it does:Sells yarn and offers classes Pictured:Lauran Potter-Torres, y owner Employees:One Where:446 S.W. 6th St.,
Redmond Phone:541-526-0015 Wedsite:www.butterflyyarnshop.
com
<f' fy
of Redmond Airport, a decrease of 550 from June 2012. For the first six months of this year,
Vegas-based vacation and leisure travel airline, ended flights from Redmond in August.
However, American Airlines began daily service from Redmond to Los Angeles last month.
Retail sales miss expectations Retail sales were mixed in June, buoyed
by strong auto and furniture sales but tamped down by high unem-
ployment and taxes, analysts said. The overall gauge of sales rose 0.4 percent from May following a revised 0.5 percent
increase the previous month, according to the Commerce Department.
The measureincreased 5.7 percent compared with June 2012. But Wall Street had
expected a 0.8 percent boost, according to Credit Suisse. And a calculation of so-called
core sales, which strip out the effects of auto
and gas purchases, slipped 0.1 percent in its first decline in a
year. Credit Suisse analysts called retailers'
performance "disappointing." — Staffand wire reports
DEEDS Deeds Deschutes County • Kenneth L. Peterson, trustee for the Kenneth L. Peterson Revocable Trust,
and Beverly J. Peterson, trustee for the Beverly J. Peterson RevocableTrust, to Jacob and Morgan Young, JustinGlen,Phase 3, Lot 65, $205,500 • Gary G. Miller to Christian A. and Jennifer L. Green, Crosswinds, Lot 5, $179,000 • Robert J. Fincham, Jr. and Jill M. Fincham to Michael B. and Susan S.Rainaldi, Broken Top,Phase2E, Lot 164, $750,000 • Wyakin J. and Christy L. Walsworth to Erik H. and Brenda L.Engdahl, trusteesforthe Engdahl Family Living Trust, Lazy River, Lot10, Block1, $520,000 • The Bankruptcy Estate of Berjac of Oregon, successor by mergerto Berjac of Portland, acting by and through Thomas A. Huntsberger to Karoma Properties LLC,Township 15, Range13, Section 3, $160,000 • Jeffrey A. and LeahM. Peters, trustees for Jeffrey and Leah Peters Revocable Living Trust, to Jon S.and Ceola L. Harris, Partition Plat 2001-49, Parcels 2 and 3, $520,000 • SFI Cascades Highlands LLC to Arthur T. Griffith, trustee for the Arthur T. Griffith Trust, Tetherow, Phase 3, Lot189, $295,000 • Brad and Debra Pearson to Stephen Whitcomb and Nancy Bovie, Tamarack Park East, Phase1, Lot 7, Block1, $169,900 • Larry E. and Karen Hotaling to Jill M. Perry, Aero Acres, Lot1, Block3, $199,900 • Tyler E. and MeganD. Mackeson to StephenP. and Jennifer A. Peterson, Sugar Pine, Lot 24,
By David Barboza New Yorh Times News Service
boardings have declined nearly 3 percent over the same period last year, according to airport figures. Allegiant, the Las
ri e
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
type Q •. What of chal-
rom 0 o usiness
lenges haveyou run into as a new
business owner? • It's a bit A . nerve-racking, having always
been a salaried person, wondering ifyou're going to makethemonth's rent. I can't afford
an employee, so I do everything,
By Ejon Gjuckjich •The Bulletin
Two yearsago,Lauran Potter-Torreswas looking for work. Laid off from a teaching job at Central Oregon
with an eye on
myfriends and husband,Jose,for help.
Community College, she indulged in her lifelong hobby
• Where do . you see ~t
Of knitting to stay busy.
Butterfly Yarn
But when that wasn't enough to satisfy her, Potter-Torres took her passion to the next level: business ownership. In March,Potter-Torres opened Butterfly Yarn Shop in downtown Redmond. Combining a yarn supply store and a center for knitting and crocheting classes, she hopes to give the shop a community-center feel, bringing in new knitters and longtime enthusiasts. Potter-Torres grewup in Scholls, a small town southwest of Beaverton. She and her husband, Jose, moved to Redmond 10 years ago. After losing her teaching job, she reached out to SCORE of Central Oregon, a regional nonprofit that helps small businesses get off the ground. Potter-Torres leased her 1,000-
square-foot store on Southwest Sixth Street earlier this year. Butterfly Y ar n S h o p o f f ers yarns and knitting supplies from distributors across the northwest. Potter-Torreshas held several crocheting, knitting, spinning and weaving classes, and is planning more in August and September. The store offers free open knitting sessions twice a week. Running a business is a completely new venture for PotterTorres, whose background is in teaching. She hopes her education background can be put to use helping new knitters learn the craft. In the next few w eeks, she plans tomake some of her store's supplies available for purchase online.
Shop in a few years? . Hopefully
• Ican keep building it up. I do it mostlyfor the love of it, but I'd like to be able to
buy more yarns and just keep growing, and really become part ofthe Redmond business com-
ATLANTA — In the movie "Zombieland," Woody Harrelson had to slay three of the undead to get his hands on a Twinkie. Real-life junkies pining for the return of the spongy yellow creme log won't have to go to such lengths. Monday Hostess Brands officially revived the iconic snack cake, following a sevenmonth hiatus after the original company decided to liquidate under bankruptcy. The confection maker puts Twinkies, CupCakes and Ding Dongs in stores across the United States. Some retailers, including WalMart Stores, couldn't wait for the official rollout and began selling the cakes early. Hostess said it hadn't given any retailers permission to sell its
$175,000 • Brad J. and Michelle D. Martin to Kevney Croucher-Duganand Eric M. Dugan, Valhalla Heights, Phase 3,Lot13, Block 5, $405,000 • Lewis A. and Helga K. Roman toJason A. Mendell, Summerhill, Phase1, Lot 8, $230,000 • Pahlisch Homes lnc. to Chad R. andKarri A. Davis, Rivers EdgeVillage, Phase 8, Lot 73, $567,000 • Janice G. Anderson, also known asJanice L. Renwick, to Gabriel Lanning, Selken Subdivision, First Addition, Lot4, Block4, $211,050 • Daryl L. and DeannaF. Ochs, trustees for Daryl Lane Ochsand Deanna Fern OchsJoing Living Trust, to Giustino I. and
Matt York/The Associated Press
Twinkies are back on store shelves after a seven-month hiatus following Hostess' bankruptcy. products before Monday. Given Twinkies' pop-culture status, Hostess's return was in little doubt. Apollo Global Management and C. Dean Metropoulos & Co. came to Hostess's rescue last year, paying as much as $410 million for the name. The new owners have resumedproduction,plan
Hannah S.Durighello, Tango Creek, Lot 6, $225,000 • Frank L. and Shelby Cenigato Taylor Utley and Shannon Mitchell, Township16, Range12, Section14, $196,000 • Wells Fargo Bank N.A. to Nathan W. andRebecca M. Lynch, CopperCanyon, Phase1, Lot3, $280,000 • Lehman Family LLC to Daniel and ShannaN. Hutton, Quelah Estates, Lot12, $555,000 • Michael A. and Rhonda K. Mishalanie to DeanA. and Sarah J. Prudhomme, Westside Pines, Phase1, Lot 8, $315,000 • Robert B. and Valerie L. Vance toTracyand Susanne Thompson, J-D Ranch Estates, Lot 7, Block 3, $249,000
• Gerald Marcykto Paul Mears and Chieri Uegaki, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 6, Lot 256, $394,500 • Linda C. Ellett to Kenneth L. Peterson, trustee for the Peterson Revocable Living Trust, Greens atRedmond, Phases 4 and 5, Lot 44, $279,500 • JKC LLC to David A. and Marion A. Coates-Jarman, Scotts Landing, Lot 7, $192,162 • Creative Real Estate Solutions LLC to Holly S. Mc Cown, Highland Addition to Bend, Lots 14 and15, Block 29, $253,000 • Terry L. Coppock to Bruce A. Thompson, Yeoman Park, Lot14, $170,000 • GW Land Acquisitions
What they uncovered, they said Monday, was a conspiracy involving tens of millions of dollars and directed by senior executives at the British drug giant GlaxoSmithKline. Investigators said that for years, senior executives at the company joined with travel agencies and consulting firms in China to funnel bribes to doctors, hospitals, medical associations, foundations and government officials. The payoffs, investigators said, helped bolster drug sales and allowed GlaxoSmithKline, also known as GSK, to sell its products for higher prices in China. At a news conference in Beijing, authorities accused senior executives at GSK of organizing fictitious conferences, overbilling for training sessions and accepting kickbacks in the form of cash and luxurytravel. "It's like a criminal organization — there's always a boss," Gao Feng,head oftheeconomic crime unit of the Chinese Ministry of Public Security, said at the news conference. "And in this case, GSK is the boss."
Supplier investigated in plane fire
A sweetcomeback forTw inkies By Duane D. Stanford
bookings.
munity.
— Reporter: 541-617-7820 eglucklich~bendbttlletin.com
Bloomberg News
SHANGHAI — Earlier this year,authoritieshere began looking into suspicious activity involving a Shanghai travel agency that was rumored to have huge revenue but few
a fifth factory and expanded distribution. The Metropoulos family, always eager to milk a marketing opportunity, dubbed the revival the "sweetest comeback in the history of ever." Hostess's previous owners ended production in November amid its second bankruptcy in a decade. The news sparked a feeding frenzy and bidding wars on eBay. Last week, retailers scrambled to catch the latest Hostess wave. Grocer Albertson's said on its website July 10 it was putting a"secret stash" of "Hostess gold" on sale early at select stores while supplies lasted. Kroger also began selling the cakes in some stores, and they were available in a majority of Wal-Mart's U.S. stores Sunday, the retailer said.
LLC to Pacwest II LLC, Angus Acres, Phase 2, Lot 57, $262,132 • Pacwest II LLC to Donald H. and Joan L.Gilbertsen, Angus Acres, Phase 2, Lot 57, $262,132 • Mahlon I. Couch to Marcel Russenberger, Bend Park, Lots 7 and8, Block 78, $150,000 • Salvesen HomesLLC to Brian L. and Stephanie A. Erickson, NorthWest Crossing, Phase19, Lot 673, $715,000 • John H. andMarsha G. Trolan to Terry L. Humphrey, Ridge atEagle Crest 27, Lot 61, $305,000 • SFI Cascade Highlands LLC to Donald E.and Susan S. Stevens, Tetherow, Phase1, Lot 96, $200,000 • 1st Avenue Properties
By W.J. Hennigan Los Angeles Times
A key supplier on Boeing Co.'s 787 Dreamliner passenger jet has confirmed it has
joined the ongoing investigation into a fire that broke out last week on an Ethiopian Airlines aircraft parked at London's Heathrow Airport. Honeywell International Inc. makes the plane's emergency locator transmitter, which is a device installed on all commercial airplanes. Known as an ELT, it transmits signals in an emergency. So if a plane is involved in a crash, the transmitter will alert search parties to its location. The emergency locator transmitter is not known to be a fire risk. Honeywell said the transmitter has been certified by the Federal Aviation Administration since 2005 and installed on more than 3,000 planes of various models.
LLC to Thomas S.O'Neil, River Terrace, Lots 6 and 7, Block 8, $410,000 • Michelle Cubero to Michael L.andJonathon C. Ellis, HeiermanMcCormick Addition, Lot 4, Block 7, $167,000 • John and J. L. Roppto Terry Larson, Westside Meadows, Lot 46, $320,000 •Pahli schHomesLLCto Robert D. andSarah E. Swaney, McCallLanding, Phase1, Lot 50, $201,000 • Federal National Mortgage Association to William K. and Jackie L. Gibbons, Lazy River South, First Addition, Lot 6, Block17, $269,900 • Veldon R. andLouisa M. L. Burgess, trustees for Burgess Family Revocable Trust, to StevenRandall,
Forest Hills, Phase 4,Lot 74, $365,000 • Leonard J. Bartek II and Janette M. Bartekto Scottand JoyceM. Paul, Phoenix Park, Phase 3,Lot 32, $232,000 • Ryan D. andSonja Badley to Chadwick M. Kyte, Foxborough, Phase 6, Lot 280, $167,000 • Gary S. and Virginia A. Collison to Robert Jardine and Michael D.Churches, Bella Sera, Lot1, $156,000 • Oksenholt Construction Company to Michael A. Shanafelt, trustee for the Michael and Willa Beth Shanafelt Trust, Mountain Village East 4, Lot 8, Block 28, $239,000 • Brian W. and Michelle W. Nicholson to Diana Blom, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 6, Lot 285,
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Project Management Professional certification meeting:Informational discussion on the Project Management Professional certification; coffee, pastries and networking start at 7:15 a.m.; to RSVP, email Jeff Busch at Busch©teleport.com; to learn more, visit www.pmi. org; free; 7:30-8:30 a.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. KansasAve., Bend; 541-385-6908. • CrookedRiver RanchTerredonneChamderof Commercenetworking social:See the newfire hall; refreshments and networking opportunities; call 541-923-2679; free; 5:30 p.m.; Crooked River Ranch Fire 8 Rescue, 6971 S.W. ShadRoad; 541-923-6776. WEDNESDAY • Online Sales Techniques:Business owners and managers learnto use company websites and social media tools to generate income; registration required; call 541-383-7290; $49; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend. • BuildingTeamsThat Work: Learn components of successful teams; course includes online and classroom sessions; begins online July17; classroom sessions July 29, Aug. 12 andAug. 26; registration required; $189; 5:30-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. • Network of Entrepreneurial Women: Nonprofit showcase extravaganzanight; $27; 5 p.m.; St. Charles Bend conference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-848-8598 or www. networkwomen.org. • Women's Roundtable Social — High Desert Classic — JBar JYouth Services:To learn what you can bring to support The Academy at Sisters, visit www.bendchamber. org;5p m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-389-1 409 THURSDAY • OuickBooksSeminar — Training forBusiness: Registration required, introductory course, registerat www. qbexpress.com/bendquickbooks-proadvisorIoy-spray/$97; 9 a.m.-1 p.m., Prudential Northwest Properties, 377 S.W. Century Drive, Suite102, Bend; 541-322-8880. • Bend WebCAMBrown Bag BrainBooster: When It's Too Late to Say I'm Sorry: avoiding irreparable social media gaffes during times of crisis; noon-1 p.m.; Looney BeanRoasting Co., 961 N.W.Brooks St.; registration required, athttp://bendwebcam. b.smartzsites.com; 541-323-64I8. FRIDAY • CCBLicense 'Test Prep' course for contractors: Satisfies the educational requirement to take the test to become a licensed contractor in Oregon; price includes required current edition of the Oregon Contractor's Reference Manual, prepayment is required; $305; 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7700.
For the complete calendar, pick upSunday's Bulletin or visit bendbu//etin.corrt/bizcai
$465,000 • Rex D. and Dianna Block to Danny L. and DianaL. Burkhalter, OregonWater Wonderland, Unit 2, Lot 11, Block 36, $272,750 • Nicholas J. and Margaret E. Juren to Stephanand Tricia S. Rotter, Fairway Point Village 4, Lot 27, Block17, $514,900 • SFI Cascade Highlands LLC to Robert E. andMarie A. Dumas to Tetherow, Phase1, Lot110, $310,000 • Sage Builders LLC to Tina J. Morgan, NorthWest Crossing, Phases 9and 10, Lot 497, $405,987 • Wes and Carol Lippert Family LLC to 61533 Parrell Road BendOregon LLC, ReedHighway Acreage, Section 2, Tract 18, $255,000
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
O» www.bendbulletin.com/athome
AT THE MARKET A weekly look at produce at local farmers markets.
4
Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin
What: Blueberries
Season:July and August
Adout:The season for fresh Oregon blueberries is precious and short. Berries are
available now at local farmers markets and should be through mid to late August. And then they disappear
QO ~g cs
pO~~
again, only to be found in the freezer section.
a,co
Blueberries are often
got
called a superfood. They are packedwith fiber, Vitamin C and antioxidants. Basically
they are a tasty, colorful punch of health. The skin of a blueberry is
more purple than blue, while the interior is nearly white. The seeds
inside are barely detectable. Blueberries are juicy and sweet, with just a hint of tart. Look for berries that have a firm skin — a wrinkled
or shriveled appearance means the berry is past its prime. "The
New Food Lover's Companion" recommends waiting to wash berries
until you are ready to eat them, and to store berries in the fridge for
up to five days.
,hs "'
Preparation:It's hard
to avoid simply snacking on these delectable berries straight from the container. But blueber-
ries also are wonderful prepared in avariety of ways. Sprinkle on top of a salad — greens, feta, a squeeze of lemonand drizzle of olive oil, plus
cucumbers or toasted nuts for some crunch should do the trick.
Blueberries also make delightful jams and
chutneys, which can be paired with cream cheese andspread on crackers for an appetizer. Or for those craving a simple dessert, consider pairing blueberries with homemade
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Pair New York Sausage Sandwiches with either a pale ale or a lively IPA. See recipe on Page D2. aybe it was the circumstances: We'd been three days in the backcountry of Eagle Cap Wilderness in northeast Oregon, and the food choices were formed around practical considerations like lack of refrigeration and unwillingness to haul more than 25 pounds of clothing and survival gear on my back. So bottled craft beer — and the foods that go great with it — just didn't make the cut. But back at the trail-
FOOD head I'd planned ahead for the very moment when our band of thirsty trail warriors would be hankering for a frosty wet one. I'd shrugged the sweaty, heavy pack from my shoulders. My dusty boots were unlaced and replaced with flip-flops. Then I reached into the still-frosty depths of the cooler that we had hidden in our car, beneath a space blanket for the duration of the hike, and
pulled out the brews, an intensely hopped IPA that many beer lovers would appreciate, Ninkasi's Tricerahops IPA. Passing bottles around to grateful friends, we popped the caps and took long pulls. Then from deep down inside my pack, I retrieved the Rembrandt extra-aged gouda, and tossed it to the nearest friend. She unwrapped the packet, carved off a taste and passed it on. Sip and chew. Sip and chew. Silence ensued as we enjoyed the moment. See Beer/D2
whipped cream. Mix the two together or layer,
then chill. You caneat as is, or serve in apuff pastry shell or on top of a cookie. — Alandra Johnson, The Bulletin Produce purchased from Agncultural Connections, which distributes goods from regional farms (www. agriculturalconnections.comh
HOME
In the kitchenwith ... Getting kids togrow OregonSpirit Distillers'CEO Ofnote By Liz Douville For The Bulletin
Editor's note:"In the kitchen
sugar, cayenne pepper and his
with ..."features people in
special ingredient — his company's award-winning marionberry cordial, also known as "Black Mariah." Irwin did a little taste test and announced, "Pretty good, but needs a little more cayenne pepper." He was making a Black Mariah reduction sauce. As he constantly stirred his pan, Irwin added a little cornstarch, cut his tofu and added it to the pan for his vegetarian dish. "I really do enjoy cooking," said Irwin from his home kitchen. It was in this kitchen that Irwin starting experimenting with distillinghis own spirits, or as he jokingly calls it, "moonshine." SeeIrwin /D4
the local culinary scene at home in their own kitchens. To suggest someone to profile, contact athome@ bendbulletin.com.
By Penny Nakamura For The Bulletin
He's the founder and CEO of Oregon Spirit Distillers, so you'd probably expect Brad Irwin to know almost everything about the process of grain fermentation. But what may surprise you is Irwin also knows his way around a kitchen as an amateur or "wanna be gourmet chef." During a recent visit, Irwin melted a copious amount of butter in a pan, added some
TODAY'S RECIPES
GARDEN
A gardening friend shared a March 2013 article from the Smithsonian magazine written by Jane Goodall with me. The article recounts Goodall's childhood in England and her love of the plant kingdom and the natural world. Goodall wrote the article overlooking the trees she climbed as a child. Her favorite was a beech tree where she would read "Doctor Dolittle" and "Tarzan" and "dream about the time I, too, would live in the forests." Goodall had a little basket that she would fill with a book, a saved piece of cake and perhaps her homework. She would climb the tree and then haul up the basket. From her vantage point, she studied local plants and
Beer pairiugs:Muffuletta Garlic-Olive Relish for Poor Boys, Grilled Drunken Chicken with Hoisin Sauce, New York Sausage
Sandwich, BarbecueDogswith Beer, FancyFranks, 02 Buttermilk Soup with
Radishes audPeppery Green
Seven gardens in Bend
Oif:An elegant way to beat the heat of summer,D3
will be featured on the High Desert Garden Tour on Saturday. Tickets
Another coldsouprecipe: Cucumber andYogurt Soup
are $10. For more
with Barley,D3
information, visit www.
gocomga.com.
flowers. When she was 12, she kept a nature notebook filled with sketches and handwritten detailed descriptions based on her observations. As I read the article, I kept thinking of her parents. Were they considered progressive or permissive? I can imagine they might have been the talk of the neighborhood allowing their daughter to climb trees and study nature. See Kids/D5
Wild Salmon with GreenBeansandSauce Varta: Take advantage while the salmon is in season,D3
Recipe Finder:Cioppino, streamlined but still tasty, D2
D2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
Fooo
Next week: Sandwiches
Streamlined, tasty and healthy cioppino By Julie Rothman
RECIPE FINDER=
The Baltimore Sun
Jim Reichenberg of Rockville, Md., wrote for help locating a recipe that he said ran many years ago in The Baltimore Sun for cioppino, a seafood stew that was developed in the late 1800s by Portuguese and Italian fishermen who settled in San Francisco. He said he made the dish several times and that it was "the best thing I h ave ever eaten." Unfortunately, he lost the recipe and has never been able to duplicate it. Aside from the traditional ingredients like fish, crab, clams and shrimp, the recipe called for Clamato juice in the base. He said the dish took several hours to make, "but oh, was it worth it." We searched The Sun's archives and the closest recipe we found was for a streamlined cioppino made with Clamato juice that originally ran in January 1974 in a column called the Slim Gourmet written by Barbara Gibbons. Despite its reputation as a complicated dish, this tasty fish and shellfish stew is pretty easy to make. The trick is using the highest-quality seafood. I wouldn't attempt this stew unless I had access tofresh fish and shell-
Looking for a hard-to-find recipe or can answer a request? Write to Julie
Rothman, RecipeFinder, The Baltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder@
gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for them to be published.
fish. As Gibbons points out, it is a great dish for the calorie-conscious and is excellent for serving a crowd.
Recipe request Kathy Blair from Somerset, Ky., is looking for a
recipe she clipped years ago from a magazine for a meatloaf that, after it was mixed, was rolled flat, about an inch thick, and then mashed potatoes and celery leaves were spread over it. This was all rolled up like a jellyroll and baked. After baking and cooling a little you could slice the meatloaf. She said the flavor was unique because of the celery leaves.
If frozen, have all the seafood defrosted. Cut fish in two-inch chunks. Remove legs from shrimp and peel if desired (leaving shells on adds more flavor). Split the lobster tails as you would for broiling.
Put tomatoes andliquid in alarge soup kettle, break upwith a spoon. Add onions, peppers, Clamatojuice, wine,water andall seasonings. Simmer, covered for 20 minutes. Add fish and lobster, cover and
simmer for10 more minutes. Add shrimp and simmeranother 5 minutes or until shrimp is pink. Take care not to overcook. Add the clams, cover and simmer for approximately 5 minutes or until the clams
open. Discard any that do not open. Serve in large bowls, shells included.
Why hotpanandcold oil?
•
A •
•
L ife's D e scender IPA has become my g o -to s umm e r trail b e er. A dditi o n ally, there's Hopworks in Por t land, Fort
before heating the pan and never heating the pan be-
yond medium-high. — Email questions to hpuruis@charlotteobserver.com
•
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Beyond sandwich construction, this is a marvelous spread for your favorite cracker or crostini. Pairing suggestion:Consider pairing this with a lively IPA, where the intensity of the beer meets the intensity of the dish. '/4 C minced fresh flat-leaf parsley 2 TBS balsamic vinegar 1 TBS minced garlic 1 tsp drained and rinsed capers
'/2 C coarsely chopped pimiento-stuffed olives '/a C coarsely chopped pitted black olives '/4 C chopped red onion
i/4 tsp dried oregano, crumbled ~/4 tsp freshly ground black
pepper /3 C extra-virgin olive oil
Place the olives, onion, parsley, vinegar, garlic, capers, oregano and peppers in a food processor. Pulse the mixture until the ingredients are finely chopped. Add the olive oil and continue processing until the mixture is thoroughly chopped but not pureed. This will keep in the refrigerator for at least 2 weeks.
Using mnffnietta garlic-olive relish in a sandwich: Select an array of Italian-style meats and cheeses, thinly sliced. For each sandwich, slice a good-quality bun or roll in half, horizontally. Spread both sides with mayonnaise, then add a layering of the muffuletta olive relish. Pile on the meats and cheeses. That's it. Gastronomic
heaven will ensue.
Grilled Drunken Chicken with Hoisin Sauce Makes 4 to 6 servings. I got this delicious grilled chicken recipe from Deschutes Brewery's Bend Public House.
Pairing suggestion:Taking a cue from Deschutes Brewery, where the recipe originated, consider pairing this with a lively IPA, where the intensity of the beer meets the intensity of the dish, and the bitterness of the hops gets along great with the spices and light fruitiness in the dish. FOR THE CHICKEN: 2 Ibs chicken pieces (breasts or thighs and legs) 4 TBS fresh lime juice 2 TBS soy sauce 2 TBS garlic, chopped 4 TBS freshly grated ginger
2 (12-oz) bottles Deschutes Inversion IPA (or your favorite brand of IPA)
FOR THE SAUCE: /2 C hoisin sauce /2 C sesame oil ~/4 C fresh cilantro, chopped i/4 C vegetable oil Zest of 3 limes 2 TBS freshly grated ginger
New York Sausage Sandwich
Makes 6 servings. The fantastic aromas created during the cooking of the brats, onions and peppers will drive your fellow picnick-
ers crazy. Pairing suggestion:This dish will pair nicely with either a pale ale or a lively IPA. The spice and smoke of the
grilled sausage isvery comfortable in a moderate to highly-hopped ale. 3 peppers, (one each, red,
2 Ibssmoked kielbasa, bratwurst, knockwurst or spicy Italian sausages 4 onions, peeled and halved
yellow and green), cored, seeded and halved 2 to 3 TBS olive oil Juice of half a lemon
Salt and black pepper French rolls, split and toasted Whole grain mustard
Cook the sausagesover medium coals or heat from gas burner, turning frequently for even cooking. Cut one to test after 10 minutes. Remove from heat when ready.
Toss the vegetables with oil and lemon juice andseason with salt and pepper. Add to the grill, turning as they are browned. When the onions and peppers are done, cut into dice and serve in hot crusty rolls along with the sausage. Have a jar of good-quality whole grain mustard available.
Barbecue Dogs with Beer Makes 5 servings. This is a simple and tasty treat to take along on picnics or day-hikes. Just prepare in the comfort of your own kitchen, then pack into a wide-mouthed thermos and hit the road. Pairing suggestion:This dish will pair nicely with either all three of the craft beers I'm talking about here: Ameriin a moderate to highly-hopped ale, where things aren't too sweet or too bitter. 1 C beer (anything from a pale ale to an IPA will do) 1 TBS Worcestershire sauce
and Astoria Brewing in Ast oria, C a l dera in A s h Ryan erennecke land, Fearless in Estacada, H op Valley in Eugene and Seven Brides in Silverton. "In addition, a fewproducers here in Oregon have developed small growlers made of insulated metal, for the hiking/biking community," said Oberst. Of all the beers you may encounter this summer, the top three styles that I always
/2 C commercial or homemade barbecue sauce 10 hot dogs, quartered 5 French rolls, split
Sandwich garnishes: shredded cheddar cheese, chopped yellow or red onion
In a saucepan, combine beer,Worcestershire sauce, barbecue sauceand hot dogs. Simmer for 20 minutes. Spoon mixture into a wide-mouth vacuum bottle and take to picnic or tuck into your pack for a day-hike. To serve, spoon a portion of the filling into each of the rolls. Each diner adds cheese and onion to taste.
Fancy Franks Makes 8 to 10servings. Make the zesty apricot-tomato barbecue sauce ahead of time, then slather it on your dogs or sausages as they
cook at your picnic. Pairing suggestion:Consider a simple pale ale with this dish where there's a bit of sweetness and spice to contend with. On the other hand, if all you've got is an IPA, you'll be just fine since the spice and smoke within the hot dogs is comfortable in a moderate to highly-hopped ale. 1 C apricot preserves /2 C (4 oz) tomato sauce /3 C cider vinegar '/4 C dry white wine
2 TBS soy sauce 2 TBS honey 1 TBS salad oil 1 tspsalt
~/4 tsp ground ginger 8 to 10 hot dogs 8 to 10 buns, toasted
Combine apricot preserves, tomato sauce, vinegar, wine, soy sauce, honey, salad oil, salt and ginger. Sauce may be prepared up to two weeks ahead and refrigerated until ready to use. Score franks on the bias and broil over hot coals or gas burner, turning and basting often with sauce. Serve on the toasted buns. The remaining
saucemay beheatedand passedaroundwiththefranks.
have in good supply because
Expires 7/31/2013.
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or picnics, just pack it into a leak-free container and tuck it into your pack or picnic basket.
G eo r g e
usually suggest adding oil
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It's the perfect bring-along to your outdoor eating adventures because it travels so well, not even needing refrigeration for several hours at a time. For quality's sake, keep it cold for long-term storage. However, for day-hikes
com). Good-
Nudge it a little before trying to turn it. If it's sticking, let it cook a little longer to let it release on its own. Nonstick pans are a different story. If the coating gets too hot, it can release fumes that may b e t oxic. You shouldn't heat t h ose pans empty. Manufacturers
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publication promoting O r egon'scraftbeer industry. "Not just because it's convenient," she added. "But because they also believe cans protect freshness better than l ightpenetrating bottles." Light affects beer, and cans eliminate that problem. And when properly filled, cans hold far less oxygen than bottles, so beers will stay fresher longer. In addition t o p r otecting beer from light and oxidation, cans are lighter and cheaper to ship and recycle. They're also more transportable for the consumer, whether it's in a cooler or on a golf course. Cans can often go where glass bottles are prohibited. Among the Oregon breweries jumping onto the canned beer bandwagon, one of my favorites is right here in Central Oregon, GoodLife Brewing lifebrewing.
has developed a good sear.
adding oil prevents sticking. I've never noticed the benefits and have had food stick as soon as I put it in the pan. How hot should the pan be before adding the oil? And is this pointless when using nonstick? "Hot pan, cold oil" is • one of those cooking mantras that may or may not work. If you wait until the pan is hot before you add oil, there is less chance for the oil to burn or break down. However, you also lose the benefit of
tion of Italian-style meats and cheeses, slathered with a rich olive andgarlic relish — wascreated decades ago.
in Bend (good can wheat ale, pale ale or a lively IPA. Themoderate spice and smoke of the grilled sausage is very comfortable
watching for the oil to shimmer to gauge how hot it is. Meat will release when it
I have been told that Q ..heating a skillet before
Makes1 cup. This is a marvelous concoction, with roots in New Orleans, where the muffuletta sandwich — a hearty combina-
beergrowler.com), a monthly
/2 C chopped green pepper 2 C Clamato juice 1 C Chianti 1 C water 2 tsp garlic salt 2 bayleaves /2 tsp basil, oregano or Italian seasoning
The Charlot te Observer
Continued from D1 Like I said, maybe it was the circumstances. But when we united that trail-weary hunk of nutty, caramely cheese with that fantastic beer, the union was immense. Summer is definitely a time to enjoy the region's wonderful selectionof craft beers. And a nice twist to your drinking pleasure in the wilds is that so many ofthem are now being sold in aluminum cans. It began in Lyon, Colo., in November of 2002, when Oskar Blues Brewery launched its Canned Beer Apocalypse. A year later, I spoke with Oskar's marketing mastermind Marty Jones, who said he was on board with the concept from the beginning, and felt that being the first to can a high quality craft beer really put the brewery on the map. What the canned beer was doing, he explained, was playing off a Southern tradition. "Where I come from, you don't go fishing without beer in the cooler. Our canned beers have totally added a motherlode of flavor to this tradition. "We thought the idea of our
funny — no one was doing it at the time," he added. And it not only caught the market by surprise, it actually became a successfulapproach. These days, the n u mber Combine the chicken with the lime juice, soy sauce, choppedgarlic, grated ginger and beer. Marinate up to12 of craft breweries offering hours. canned beer has exploded, esMeanwhile, for the sauce, combine the hoisin sauce, sesame oil, cilantro, vegetable oil, zest of the limes and pecially in the Pacific North- the ginger. west. "Many of Oregon's faTo prepare the chicken, heat a grill until very hot. Grill chicken until almost fully cooked, then begin brushing vorite craft breweries are put- with the sauce during the last 20 minutes or so. Turn the chicken frequently to prevent burning. ting their beers in cans," says Gail Oberst, publisher of the Oregon Beer Growler (oregon
Makes 8 servings.
By Kathleen Purvis
Muffuletta Garlic-Olive Relish for Poor Boys
big, hoppy beer in a can was
Oioppino 1 Ib halibut or bass fillets or other firm white fish 1 Ib jumbo shrimp 2 Ibs lobster tails, split 2 Ibs clams or mussels in shells 4 C canned tomatoes 1 C chopped onion
Beer
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they'rerefreshing and sport flavor profiles complementary to a wide range of seasonal offerings are pale ales, IPAs and American wheat beers. They are all perfect companions to outdoor cooking. The American wheat beer, for example, is the perfect summer afternoon beer; mediumbodied with subtle flavors of biscuit and citrus. It's a refreshingale from start to finish when you're looking for something to quench your thirst and partner gently with light summer cuisine. Thanks to its well-balanced, slightly sweet maltiness and moderate hop bitterness with citrus overtones, this beer complements a wide range of dishes that aren't too rich, too spicy, too peppery or too sweet. For example: fresh and lightly roasted vegetables, main dish
salads of fresh greens and vegetables tossed with simple vinaigrettes, nutty cheeses, grilled meats or seafood, egg-based bunch dishes with mushrooms and n o t-too-sweet t o mato sauces, and crepes with savory cheeses or fresh fruit fillings. Up the scale a bit in hoppiness, consider the pale ales: Light malty sweetness balanced by rich hoppy bitterness. Beyond that, this is a lovely ale from the first look — it's a deep gold to copper color — to the final sip, layered in flavors
ranging from highly aromatic (that's the American hops at work, bringing bold overtones of citrus, floral, exotic spices
and pine), with a splash of fruitiness in the middle and ending with a medium-bodied maltiness. The foods that can blossom in such a busy profile
tend to be equally bright, spicy and earthy. Dishes with some chili, citrus, cumin and cilantro zing, along with the rich, earthy flavors of mushrooms, roasted corn and nuts and smoky barbecue. And then there are the IPAs. The ones I really love are constructed to flow s eamlessly between the extreme bitterness of the hops and the toffee sweetness of the malts. Which is to say that every sip of a wellbalanced American IPA will have pronounced hoppy aroma and flavor along with substantial maltiness. What to serve with a brash, brassy and bitter beer that bites back? For starters, consider fighting intensity with intensity. When two op-
posing flavors meet and merge, if it's the right union, then the combined characteris far bet-
ter than either of the components alone. The bitterness of hops gets along great with the spices and light fruitiness. Hoppybeers embrace salty and umami flavors. Bitterness also scrubs the palate that's been overcome by fatty foods. And finally, the soft caramel/toffee malts will latch onto the sweet side of a given dish, such as a rich tomato or barbecue sauce, and bring the whole experience back to center, completing that more perfect union. So stock up on your favorite regional craft brews and head for the greatoutdoors. Here are a few recipes that would truly complement both the adventure and the beer. — Jan Roberts-Dominguez isa Corvalfis food writer, cookbooh author and artist. Contact: janrd~ proaxis.com.
FOO D
TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
D3
Beat t e summer
heatwithml soup By Russ Parsons
stand in for a full meal doesn't mean these soups are in any Revenge, patient people tell way slight. Easy to make? Sure. us, is a dish best served cold. I But you still need to pay attenfeel the same way about soup, tiontothe details. Andtheytake at least at this time of year. a certain amount of patience. When it gets hot, there are few Maybe the most important things that will whet a flagging thing to remember: The freshly appetite like a sip of cold soup. made soup is little more than a What's even better, they're so rough draft. Unlike a hot soup, easy to make. Puree tomatoes, which is usually ready to eat soaked bread, garlic, assorted as soon as you're done cookvegetables and good Spanish ing, you really need to give cold olive oil and you've got gazpa- soups a couple hours to chill cho. Blend avocado with cold before serving them. And you'll chicken stock and you've got definitely need to go back afthe base for something equally ter the soup's been thoroughly grand. chilled and fine-tune the seaJust as easy, but seen a lot soning and the texture. less often, are cold dairy soups Cold dulls flavor; you'll al— based on tart buttermilk or most certainly want t o a dd yogurt. You can make them as more salt an d p epper and simple as grated cucumbers maybe more acidity. Season stirred into yogurt or some- generously to start and don't be thing much more elaborate. afraid to add more just before And there are few dishes more serving. refreshing. At the same time, vegetaFor the most part, these bles sometimes give up liquid, soups workbest asappetizers.I which will thin the soup. On the remember one of the first fancy other hand, starches can abdinners I ever made was for my sorb some of that liquid, which parents. I labored for a couple will make the soup thick and hours on a lovely Hungarian muddy. That's easy to fix, with cherry soup that Richard Olney the addition of a little milk. But had collected in one volume of it's better to start with a soup his "The Good Cook" series. It that's a little thick, because it's really was something — you a lot easier to thin a soup than pitted sour cherries, then made to thicken it. a quick stock with the cracked A dairy background makes pits (I used a hammer), a cin- an ideal blank canvas for exnamon stick and Riesling, then perimentation. For example, brought everything together b lend r a dishes a n d t h e i r with sour cream and chilled it. blanched tops with buttermilk, Everyone seemed to enjoy it, green onions and a little garlic and I basked in much praise. and you've got a soup that's But when we were finished, pretty nice — tart and spicy everyone sat looking around with bits of crunch. Float thinly at each other, wondering who sliced radishes on top and drizwas going to be the first to ask zle with a little green oil made where the main course was. from those peppery tops and We went out for burgers, if I re- you've got something elegant call correctly. enough to start a nice dinner But just because they won't party. Los Angeles Times
Buttermilk Soup with Radishes and Peppery Green Oil Makes 6 servings. 2 bunches radishes, with their
tops
3 C buttermilk
1 C sour cream
1 clove garlic, chopped 1 bunch green onions, chopped green and white parts
1/2 tsp salt /2 tsp white pepper /2 C olive oil
Trim the green tops from the radishes and rinse them well, discarding any that are discolored or wilted. Blanch in a1-quart saucepan full of rap-
idly boiling salted water just until they aretender, about 30 seconds. Drain and transfer to a bowl full of ice water to stop the cooking. Squeeze dry
and chop coarsely. Reserve 2tablespoons to makethe oil. Quarter all but 4 of the radishes. In a food processor, coarsely grind the quartered radishes, most of the blanched tops, garlic and green onions. Transfer the mixture to a large bowl or pitcher, add the buttermilk and
sour cream and stir well to combine. Season aggressively with salt and white pepper. Chill for a couple hours. While the soup is chilling, blend the reserved 2 tablespoons blanched
radish tops with the olive oil until smooth and strain it through cheesecloth into a bowl. Do not press or squeeze the solids or the results will be
cloudy. To serve, taste and adjust seasoning for salt and pepper. Thinly slice the remaining radishes. Divide the soup among 6 chilled bowls. Float the sliced radishes on top and drizzle with a little of the green oil.
Fred R. Conrad/New York Times News Service
Served with seasonal vegetables and herbs, wild salmon offers a sublime summer meal.
By David Tanis New Yorh Times News Service
I have come to view a meal of wild salmon as a splurge, a treat to be savored, and I'm willing to pay the price. Wild salmon is a seasonal thing, available from May to O ctober. It's not cheap, but the flavor is incredible — sweet, silky, meaty — and the vermilion color is magnificent. With th e a b undance of relatively low-priced farmed salmon, however, many of us succumb. But the flavor of farmed salmon doesn't even compare. It's like the difference between a f ree-range chicken and one that's been factory raised. Wild salmon swims long distances, its color a result o f a n atural diet o f k r i l l , plankton and algae. Farmed salmon languishes in pens, and its p in k c o lor c omes artificially. And even if some fish farms are exploring more sustainable methods, it is well known that a quacultured s almon is an environmental danger and potential health hazard. A quick Internet search will give curious cooks more information on the topic. It's enough to put you off your dinner, and may well make you a wild-salmon convert. Certainly, once you taste wild salmon you'll be convinced. There are many ways to
Wild Salmon with Green Beans and Sauce Verte Makes 4 to 6 servings. 1'/s Ibs wild salmon fillet, like king or sockeye, skin on Salt and pepper Olive oil 2 Ibs new potatoes 1 Ib haricots verts, or a mixture of sm green and yellow beans 1 shallot, finely diced 2 TBS red wine vinegar Zest and juice of 1 sm Meyer lemon
1 tsp Dijon mustard 1 TBS capers, rinsed and roughly chopped /4 C finely chopped parsley /4 C finely chopped chervil, or a mixture of parsley and
tarragon Lettuce leaves, optional 2 hard-cooked (9-minute)
eggs, roughly chopped
Using pliers, remove pin bones from salmon (or haveyour fishmonger do it). Season on both sides with salt and pepper. Place on baking sheet skin side down and drizzle with 1 tablespoon olive oil. Set aside at
room temperature. Heatoven to 350 degrees. Scrub potatoes and simmer in well-salted water until tender, about 15 minutes. Drain and keep warm.
Top and tail the haricots verts and simmer in well-salted water until tender, 3 to 5 minutes. Spread out on a platter to cool (or rinse briefly in
cool water) and leave at roomtemperature. Make the sauce verte: Put shallot in a small bowl with Y2 teaspoon salt and cover with red wine vinegar. Macerate 5 minutes, then stir in lemon zest and juice, mustard and capers. Whisk in /2 cup olive oil. Just
before serving, add parsley, chervil and black pepper to taste. Bake salmon, uncovered, until just done, 10 to 12 minutes. Remove and let cool slightly. Put beans in a medium bowl, season with salt and
pepper, and dress with 2 tablespoons sauce verte. Line a platter with lettuce leaves, if using. With a spatula, lift salmon from skin and place in the center. Surround with the dressed beans. Dab salmon with 2 more
tablespoonssauceverte,garnishwithchoppedeggandserve.Passpotatoes and remaining sauceseparately. prepare this good salmon. For a summer lunch or supper, I like to keep it simple,
so I often opt for a room-temperature salad, pairing the fish with seasonal vegetables
and herbs. At the market now, there are lots of wonderful green beans, many still on the juvenile side; known as haricots verts, they are also called filet beans, and may be green, yellow or purple. Look for the smallest, which are more t ender than t h e b i g b l u e lakes. Cook them in salted w ater briefly, just past a l dente, so they're firm but not crunchy. Freshly dug creamy new potatoes are here now, t oo, and they make a f i ne accompaniment. As for the salmon, the most important thing is not to overcook it. Whether baked or grilled, it is ready as soon as you see white juices rising to the surface, which means the fish will be succulent, not dry. It is better to err on the rare side. All that is needed to complete this salad is a green herb sauce: sauce verte in French. It's basically a zippy vinaigrette with shallots, capers and a mixture of herbs, mostly parsley. Use chervil, too, if you can find it. It is similar to parsley but more delicate, with a faint anise taste. A little fresh tarragon or mint also makes a nice addition. T here you have it. W i ld salmon, green beans, new potatoes and herbs: simple seasonal ingredients for an epic summer dining experience.
1 'p C
Electricity out?Better keepyour food safe By Lee Svitak Dean Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
Bob Chamberiin / Los Angeles Times
On a hot summer day a cold soup, such as buttermilk soup with radishes and peppery green oil, makes a great appetizer or light meal.
Cucumber and Yogurt Soup with Barley Makes 6 servings. 1 C pearl barley 3 C water Salt 1 Ib small cucumbers 4 C yogurt 2 cloves garlic, minced 2 to 3 TBS finely diced, seeded
'/s C finely diced red onion 1 TBS chopped mint, divided 3 TBS chopped dill, divided 1 to 1/s C milk /2 C walnuts, chopped Paprika
jalapeno pepper Cook the barley: Toast it in a dry1-quart saucepan over medium heat until it smells browned. Remove the pan from the heat to avoid spattering and add the water andi/~ teaspoon salt. Simmer until tender, about 35 minutes. Drain and cool to room temperature. If the cucumbers have been waxed, peel them. Cut the cucumbers in
half lengthwise and scrape the center with a spoon to remove the seeds. Grate the cucumber into a large bowl and add the garlic, jalapeno, red onion, 2 teaspoons mint and 2 tablespoons dill. Add the yogurt and cooked
Is your refrigerator running? If so, better go catch it. That was a joke from the 1930s as kids crank-called on the telephone. ("Do you h ave Prince A lbert i n a can? Better let him out," was another.) It's not so funny if your electricity is off — and so is your refrigerator. When that's the case, you don't have a lot of time before the food in your refrigerator could go bad — only 4 hours for m any f o ods. The temperature to keep in mind is 40 degrees. Anything perishable — such as raw meat, cooked foods or soft cheeses — that'sbeen warmer than that temperature formore than 2 hours should be d i scarded, acc ording t o f e d eral f o o d safety g u i delines. F r esh produce generally can be saved, though prewashed
packaged greens should be discarded. Anything that's been in contact with r aw meat juices should be discarded. Do not gauge the
safety of food by its taste or smell. The key is to keep your refrigerator closed — don't dip in there for a glass of milk because each time you open the door you cause the refrigeratorto warm up faster. For a list of safety guidelines for specific foods, see www. foodsafety.gov. F reezers, especially f u l l o nes, will stay cold for a longer period: full ones, 48 hours; half full, 24 hours. If frozen foods are thawed or partially thawed, they can be refrozen if there are still ice crystals in the food or if the food was at 40 degrees or below for less than 2 hours. Depending on the food, its quality may be affected by refreezing, though it will be safe to eat. Check the freezer temperature once the electricity comes back on to assure that it did not go above 40 degrees. As with the refrigerator, if food has become thawed and has been held at a temperature warmer than 40 degrees for more than 2 hours, it should be discarded. For
a list of safety guidelines for specificfoods in the freezer, see www.foodsafety.gov. Dry ice or block ice can help maintain cold t emperatures
during extended periods. According to foodsafety.gov, 50 pounds of dry ice should keep an 18-cubic-feet freezer that's full of food cold for two days.
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barley, seasonaggressively with salt, and chill for a couple of hours. To serve, add just enough milk to thin to the consistency of heavy
cream (the cucumber will release some liquid, and the barley will absorb some, so the amount might vary). Add moresalt to taste. Divide the soup
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet
among 6 chilled soup bowls. Top with the remaining 1 teaspoon mint, 2
teaspoons dill, a sprinkling of choppedwalnuts and adash of paprika.
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D4 TH E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
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Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Brad Irwin, the owner of Oregon Spirit Distillers, talks in his Bend home kitchen about how he cooks with spirits next to a selection of the different types his company produces.
Irwin
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Continued from D1 "There's plenty to read, and you have to educate yourself on making spirits, and then you start to develop a palate for it," said Irwin. "You figure out what makes a great spirit. You can have two whiskeys that are both very good, but they may have different tastes." Irwin said he starting playing around with making spirits in 2005,and two years later he had a business plan. By 2009 he had private financial backing. He said no bank would loan him money because his first batch of whiskey wouldn't be ready forsale for three years, as it aged in barrels. Undeterred, Irwin went all in, "I was on the precipice; I invested everything for the inventory," said Irwin. "I bought my tall stack distiller that we affectionately named Loraine, from Germany. It p r obably cost about $250,000 back then. It's a 400-liter copper still that's beautiful."
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T hough h e s t arted w i t h his passion, whiskey, Irwin branched out and started distilling gin, vodka, absinthe and marionberry cordiaL Irwin is proud to say that all of his grains and berries used for the spirits are locally
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grown. "The wheat and barley come from the Madras/Culver agriculture area, and the rye is grown east of the Burns area," said Irwin. "The juniper berries for the gin we pick from this area, and the marionberries come from the Willamette Valley." The byproduct of the grains does not go to waste. Irwin has a 300 gallon tub of "slop" that goes to a farm four times a week where itis used to feed chickens. In return, Irwin says
he usuall y hasfresh farm eggs in his home refrigerator. Irwin says all tasting is done toward the end of the day. "If you start tasting early in the day, it makes for a very long day," he said with a laugh. Oregon Spirit Distillers defi-
Irwin adds cayenne pepper to a pan with his company's Black Mariah marionberry cordial while preparing a dish at his Bend home. nitely has its fan base. Members of its Oregon Spirit Distillers clubare treated to new releasesof aged spirits.Some of the members have even passed on recipes to Irwin. "Someone gave me a recipe for amarionberry cordialcoffeecake," said Irwin.
Though he has a degree from Oregon State University, he says he didn't study fermentation, chemistry or engineering, which would've been helpful for this business. But the spirit industry seems to be his true calling. His wife, Kathy, has joined the business too and is the CFO andis lookingto expand Oregon Spirit Distillers' market beyond the western U.S. Irwin says his fall-back job has always been bartending, but he's also been a game shop owner and a professional pok-
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er player.
"I've tried a lot of jobs before this, but I hope this is it," said Irwin. What are the three ingredi-
ents you'll always find in your •
Irwin slices tofu before adding it to the marionberry cordial mixture in the pan.
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home kitchen cupboard and/or refrigerator?
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Bragg Liquid Aminos, Bragg Irwin tastes the dish he is making.
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I love getting up on a Sunday morning and making breakfast. We get fresh eggs from Great American Egg. He feeds his chickens with the spent grain from our whiskey. They're fantastic eggs. I like to make omelets if there are three or four us; otherwise I make a scramble, but making potatoes is the best part. Maybe I like them so much because when it takes 90 minutes to cook breakfast potatoes, you are so hungry by the time they're done, they better be good.
Irwin adds a corn starch and water mixture to the dish. herring salad that is fantastic. Favorite room you like to eat
your meals? Although I love eating outside, I enjoy our dining room. We only eat in the living room when eating pizza and watching a movie.
and major sink stuff, and a sink
Does your family have regular where drinks are prepared and
dinners or meals together? As a family, the most important thing that we do is sit down What is your favorite kitchen and have a meal together. We hand tool/cooking utensil, other enjoy having breakfasts togeththan a knife? er,and we eatdinner together I l ik e m a shing p otatoes most nights. I think that this is with the square-faced potato really important time for our masher. For some reason that family. I value it a great deal. seems rewarding; I don't need a mixer. Best meal you've ever eatenin your life? I t's funny; when I t h i n k Is there an appliance you disdain having in the kitchen? about the great meals I have I hate coffee grinders and had in my life. I remember the blenders. They're very loud. people that I was with as much They're loud when you're cook- as what we ate. (When) my ing dinner and trying to talk to wife and I got married 10 years someone, and they're loud in ago, ... we ate on the beach, the morning when you're tryand it was fantastic. We had ing to talk to yourself. lots of fresh fish, fruit and great family.
What chefs do you admire most? There are two p eople in my life that I admire for their cooking ability. Eli Goodall is my 27-year-old stepson. He has taught himself to prepare fantastic meals. He is completely self-taught, very creative and never misses. I wish he would quit his job and get in a professional kitchen. The other wonderful cook I know is Elena Jackova; she is my Russian-born stepmother. When she cooks a Russian Easter dinner, it is an extraordinary event. I can't count the courses, maybe 25? The entire meal takes days to prepare and four hours to consume. She makes a pickled beet and
For a final step, Irwin plates the tofu and Black Mariah reduction sauce.
an island where someone can prep food for the meal while visiting with the cook. What do you like to do outside of the kitchen, in other words what happens when the distill-
er's hat comes off?
I run. I'm not sure why. I don't think I like running, but I really feel good when I'm done with a IOK. My daughter is 9, and I try and spend time every day doing something she wants to do. Right now we play a lot of lacrosse. It's really fun. My wife is fantastic. I love her (which is goodsince we are married). We need to go to Mexico more often. We like to travel, or at least we tell ourselves we do.
If you weren't in the food and/ Guilty food pleasure? They know us pretty well at Cuppa Yo. I don't feel guilty about it, though, after all it's not ice cream, though I do smother it in goodies and chocolate sauce. Also, if Ben & Jerry's thought you'd share servings of Stephen Colbert's "Americone Dream" ice cream, they would make it in bigger containers. What's y ou r id e al/dream kitchen? Our kitchen at home is not big enough. My wife complains because I take up all the room. She says I don't share space well. I wish I had two more sink stations. Every kitchen should have the main sink for dishes
or spirit industry, what profes-
sion would you have chosen? I love making whiskey. I hope that this is my last career. I was a pretty good bartender
for many years as long as you didn't expect a great drink and were happy w it h m e diocre service. Unfortunately, I was a little slow at making drinks, I'm better making spirits. Favorite foo d
q u ot e o r
philosophy? "Not all those who wander are lost," from J.R.R. Tolkien. This applies to the kitchen as well as vacations and vocations. — Reporter: pnahamura~ bendbulletin.com
TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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These linen towels only look as though they were silk-screened; their designs were really made by manipulating household items: toy blocks, a tart tin, a drinking glass, buttons, jars, rope, a berry basket, house numbers, a potato masher, a trivet and a bottle stopper.
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Kids Continued from 01 Can you begin to imagine the loss the world would have sufferedhad she been thwarted along the way with "girls don't do that?" That thought brings me full circle to how many times do we fail to recognize a trait in our children that, with a little effort, we can encourage or help to develop the seed of an interest. We are a month into summer school vacation. Many of the looked-forward-to activities have lost their luster and appeal, and we're starting to hear, "I'm bored." A love for nature — think gardening — can be instilled
even as young as preschool, and it will be a pleasure that lasts a lifetime. It's a little late in our season to start a garden from seed, but plant nurseries and garden centers still have annual plants available that c ould benefit from some TLC. A fun exercise would be to
find annual flowers to make an alphabet garden using the letters in th e c hild's name. The plants could go into a vegetable garden or grace a border planting. You know those plants will flourish with all the attention. It would be fun to design a Goodall getaway. It probably couldn't be in a tree; the sprawling oaks an d b eech trees are pretty rare in our High Desert backyards. Instead,a secret space might be created tucked away behind a sizeable shrub. A basket of books, some art supplies, a magnifying glass to study critters or appreciate the delicate veining in leaves, plus a few snacks, a water thermos, sunscreen and an old blanket or a camp chair, and you have the makings of a perfect summer afternoon. Did I mention — no texting or electronic games? Remember,thisis supposed to emulate a Goodall experience. Making vegetable stamps from potatoes,carrots,radishes or any firm vegetable from the garden or market is an old
summer favorite. Using a paring knife, cut a small raised design in the vegetables. Crescents,triangles, squares and circles are good motifs for the novice carver. Tempera paint works best. Pour a little on to a paper plate. Dip the stamp lightly and stamp onto paper. Budding engineers and artsy designers can create garden art from old garden tools or kitchen treasures from the thrift stores. Hold it all together with wire or outdoor glues. Remember that each and everyprojectneeds to have the ownership of the creator. There will be lessons learned from failures as well as from the success of a project. If a plant dies from lack of watering, don't run out and replace it. Children of all ages, even those ofusin oursecond childhood, love praise and recognition, so let that be a major part of your garden culture. You'll be surprisedhow simple positive words will creep their way into other aspects of life. — Reporter: douville@ bendbroadband.com.
ou probably know all about the carvedp otato trick or, of course, your own thumb. Or maybe there's a little girl in your life who presses her princess stamps all the way down your left arm. Such has been your understanding of making prints. But have you considered that odd button? A scrap of string? The berry basket in the recycling bin? These e veryday objects — a n d
many, many more — can be used to make graphic and beautiful block-printed fabrics and papers. The process is easy enough for a summer afternoon, and it requires very few supplies beyond the stuff you already have on hand.
(Be sure to do a test run, and be aware that paint might permanently stain the object.)
2. Make a printing block. Some things, such as plastic berry baskets and woven trivets, are ready-made for printing. For others, such as buttons or lengths of twine, you'll need a hot-glue gun to secure a scrap of wood to the object, creating a base panel.
3. Prep and print. If you're printing on paper, use craft paint; if you're printing on a textile, fabric paint i s best. If you want a sheerer finish w ithout watering down t h e pigment, mix one part paint with three parts lightener medium (also known as colorless extender) in a jar. When you're ready to print, spread paint on a paletteor a piece of cardboard; dab paint all over the object with a foam pouncer. 4. Press on color. When printing on a textile, lay the cloth over an old towel or a
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Daily Press (Newport News, Vad
on theobject— you may need to experiment). In addition to helping the paint press into the 1. Keep your eyes peeled. fabric, this cushioning keeps Once you s t art l o oking the block from slipping. Some around for objects that lend paints dry in as little as five themselves to block-print- minutes; if you're creating an ing, you'll find that your overlapping pattern, allow for home is practically Guten- drying time between applicaberg's workshop: You will tions. When you're finished, see potential everywhere set paint according to package — a pair of dice, rubber instructions to make the debands, striped bocce balls. sign permanent and machine
Block printing tipsand tricks
When you don't have or want a t r a ditional garden, you can st il l e njoy h omegrown vegetables and herbs, thanks to some alternative ways of planting. Here are two easy ones to try — and you don't need a yard to use them:
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Pallet planting This year, McDonald Garden Center in southeastern Virginia, introduces its customers t o p a l let p l a nting. Materials you need include a pallet, enough landscape fabric to line the pallet on both sides, vegetable o r f l o w er transplants, I cubic foot potting soil and fertilizer. Here's how to plant a pallet, courtesy McDonald Garden Center. Place the landscape fabric-lined pallet on end and fill with potting soil. Be sure not to pack too full so that the
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Photo courtesy Joel Karsten / MCT
Tomatoes are among the easiest plants to grow in straw bales, which are embellished with flowering annuals. the hole and push any excess soil up around the roots. Space edibles out on each row of the pallet — about 3 inches apart.
for the water to seep down through the soil to get to the bottom plants. Tip: You can either hang the veggie pallet on the wall or lean to display your vertical garden.
graduate, including: • All the advantages of a raised-bed garden, including taller height, less compaction, b ack-friendly p l anting a n d convenient harvesting. • Fresh, insect- and d i s ease-freegrowingmedia each season when you use new straw bales.Older ones can be composted or recycled. • E arlier p l a n t ing t i m e because as the new s t raw decomposes, itreleases heat that's good for seedlings and transplants. Poly tent covers are easy to fashion to protect crops from n i ght t emperatures that drop too low. His book features dozens of graphics an d f u l l -color photographs that show how to arrange straw bales — five to 20 bales — into single-row or i n t r icate-style g a r dens t hat support t h e g r o w i ng needs of diverse crops, in-
cluding peanuts, cabbage,
strawberries, tomatoes, carrots, beets, radishes, potalandscape fabric is bulging, edibles or f l owering plants toes and lettuce. but tap the soil down so it lev- to the top of the pallet. These He also shares how to conels out, making sure to fill it should b e mo r e ve r t i cal Straw bale gardening dition the bales over 10-12 to the top. plants. The new book "Straw Bale days, using water and fertilPick out v e ggies, herbs, W hen w a t e r ing , m a k e G ardening" details how t o izer so the bale center deor flowers in annual packs sure the p allet i s v e r t ical grow vegetables anywhere composes to create the ideal — think patio, deck, porch, environment for seeds and to use for planting. Veggies, with th e open/top side up herbs orflowers in cellpacks and slowly water every two courtyard, driveway, parking plants. Planting mixes can a re smaller an d e asier t o to three days during spring lot, roof top or in the lawn. be used directly on top of the work with. or fall — and daily during Soilless, straw bales give bales to g ro w c o ol-season Cut the landscape fabric in summer when soil dries out you benefits to g a rdening, crops such as peas, beans the shape of an "x" to create a quickly. S ometimes w ater a ccording t o a u t ho r J o e l and lettuces; trellising wiresmall hole or planting pocket may need to b e added diKarsten, a Minnesota-based type structures can also be and sprinkle in fertilizer. rectly to young seedlings. Be garden author and University used to support vining crops. Plant the edible or flower in sure to allow enough time of M i n nesota h o r ticulture The 140-page book, which
Finish planting by adding
Block printing how-to Tools and materials Craft paint Lightener medium
(optional) Jar
Hot-glue gun (optional) Wood scrap (optional) Cardboard Foam pouncer Paper or fabric Mix paint and medium as needed in jar. Hot glue chosen objectto wood scrap ifnecessary. Pour some paint on cardboard, and dip foam pouncer in. Dab paint on raised portions of block. Position block over paper or fabric,and press straight down. Reapply paint, and reposition the block to create desired pattern. Let dry.
Paint primer If you want to print on tex-
piece of batting (depending tiles, experiment with a v a-
No room for a traditional garden? Noproblem By Kathy Van Mullekom
washable.
includes plant profiles for the
riety of fabric paints. Some brands are more transparent; some are heavier — so each gives a different effect. Mix in colorless extender to make the paint semitransparent — if you overlap colors, you can create a new shade. — Questions of general interest can be emailed to mslletters@ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column,visit www.marthastewart.com.
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best crops, is $20. "Straw bales gardens are as rewarding and bountiful
as they are easy and efficient to grow," Karsten says.
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D6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
anie e roo s: rom ui iar o ai TV SPOTLIGHT
The actress Danielle Brooks, a recent Juilliard graduate, plays the imprisoned Taystee Jefferson on the new Netflix series "Orange Is the New Black."
By Alexis Soloski New York Times News Service
NEW YORK — G r owing up in S o uth C arolina, the daughter of a minister and a deacon, Danielle Brooks never planned on a stint in federal prison. In middle school, she visited a juvenile justice complex. "They gave us a tour of the jail," Brooks recalled. "The handcuffs, the walking in a straight line, the smell. I was like: This is totally not a place for me." But fresh from Juilliard, she landed the role of the brash,
Chester Higgins Jr /New YorkTimes News Service
"There were times l was nervous about what my family back home would say. But I want to play characters rooted in truth. And it's exciting to be someone else, to say all these crazy things, to do all these crazy things." — Danielle Brooks
All of the voice trainA •• No. ing, all of the Alexander
this was refreshing.
training, at some point that gets thrown out the window, because that's not what this character needs. But Juilliard has trained me to stay truthful in the moment.
Would you find prison Q . .difficult'?
known as Taystee, on the new Netflix series "Orange Is the New Black," based on Piper Kerman's memoir about her stint in th e pen for m oney l aundering an d d r u g t r a f ficking. While other inmates struggle with life in p r ison, Taystee struts down the hallways, sings in the shower and dominates the prison library, where she offers an astute critique of Joyce's rambling "Ulysses": "Ain't nobody got time for that." Taysteeeven seems to embrace the beige prison-issue jumpsuit. But on a recent morning at Corner Social, a lively cafe near her Harlem apartment, Brooks, 23, wore a more exuberant outfit: burgundy dress, orange heels, and c olossal earrings woven from brightly
A colored African cloth. With started sending me to acting her huge smile and throaty programs. laugh, she spoke to A l exis Soloski about playlists and How did you research hair c ar e o n t h e in s i de. • the role of Taystee? These are excerpts from the . I have always been fasconversation. . cinated with women in prison, and I'd watched a lot of W hat was y ou r f i r st TV shows and reality shows, like "Beyond Scared Straight." . role? • I s tarted acting when So I was already prepared. • I was 6 years old in a Taystee's the light of the prischurch play, a Ch r i stmas on. She finds the joy in that pageant. I played Baby Girl. place. And my mother played my grandmother, though I promDo Shakespeare and ise you she doesn't look that • Chekhov prepare you o ld. Everybody w a s l i k e : to roll on the ground in a hairShe's sogood! So my mama pulling catfight?
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Dear Abby: I was recently hired for a job I have wanted for years. I am a counselor for troubled teens. I love it, and I e mpathize with those I work with. (Ten years ago, I was a teen placed in a similar facility for some of the
same reasons.) period of my life, I
DEAR ABBY
was a cutter. I still have deep scars on one arm that are noticeable. How do I handle this nowthat I'm in the psychological field? I don't wish to go into detail about my past, as that would be poor boundaries as an employee and counselor. But it's hard to avoid with hot summer weather here and my past literally "on my sleeve." Please help. Some actions have permanent consequences. I hope this will remind other cutters that their wounds may be something they wish they could undo once they are emotionally healed. — Nameless in America
Dear Nameless: I hope your comments will remind other cutters not only that actions have consequences, but also that there are more effective solutions for emo-
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tional pain than self-injury. This is something you should discuss with your employers. My thinking is, if your clients see your scars, it may help them to talk about their own cutting, which would be therapeutic. Dear Abby: I r e c ently b e c am e a father for the third t ime. My chi l dren are 18, 5 and 3 weeks o ld . M y wife, "Molly," had complications during this last pregnancy that caused her blood pressure to remain in a h e ightened state for the last few months of her pregnancy. She had been hoping for a little girl, but we were blessed with another boy. I'm turning 40 and my wife is 37. I have reached a point in my life where I'm ready to be done c hanging d i apers, b u t M o l l y wants to try again for a little girl. I have issues with my back and have a hard time getting to my 5year-old's level now. I'm afraid if we continue having children, I'll be unable to be the involved dad I want to be. Am I a bad husband for feeling this way? I don't want Molly to go
HAPPY BIRTHDAY FORTUESDAY, JULY16, 2013:Thisyear, opportunity
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8 p.m. on(CW), "Whose Line
Hair care clearly matQ . .ters to T aystee. How
9 p.m. on(CW), "Perfect
of Taystee's lines Q •• Most are veryprofane. Was it
YOURHOROSCOPE
after opportunity seems to headyour way. By Jacqueline Bigar You will feel like a kid in acandy store. Come winter 2013 into 2014, luck might play an evenbigger role in your life. You will someone to join your team in order to make have the ability to a project better and easier on you. This Stars showthe kind merge good, solid person's enthusiasm might surprise you. of day you'll have se nse with the luck Tonight: Buyacardonthewayhome. ** * * * D ynamic from an invisible 21-July22) ** * * P ositive ra b bit's foot in your CANCER (June ** * * You might not be aware of how ** * A verage bac k pocket! If responsive others are at the moment. You ** So-so you are single, you are like a locomotive, with the enthusiasm * Difficult could be attracted and energy. Others are like the rest of the to someone older or train, with the expertise and knowledge. more serious. Usecare with commitments, Together, you are a winning team. Tonight: because onceyou makeone, it will be Lighten up the moment. nearly impossible to get out of it. If you are LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) attached, the two of you are likely to add a ** * You could be takenaback by concrete manifestation of your caring. A someone's stubbornness.The lesssaidthe fellow CANCER is asoul mate. better. You might be quite amused bythis ARIES (March 21-April 19) person's attitude at first, but by evening, it ** * O pportunity merges with a sense could get old rather quickly. You will be a of responsibility, and your confidence bit touchy by late afternoon. Tonight: Don't is strengthened as aresult. The path in hold back. Shareyour feelings. which you choose to headhasvery good VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) indicators of success. Remain sensitive * *** You have a keen senseofdirection, to a family member who could be facing a and you know what needs to happen.Use difficult time. Tonight: Headhome. your strong support system to create TAURUS (April20-May20) more of whatyou desire. Someone isquite ** * * Your expectations of a project responsive to your ideas, and he orshewill will be more than reasonable, especially take a lot of the burden off your shoulders. following a very upbeat conversation. A Tonight: Have along-overdue talk. partner or an associate will be on thesame LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.22) page as you, which will add extra pizazzand ** ** You might want to take good a energy. You are onthe same team. Tonight: look at the basics before you move in anew Go where there is music. direction and try to foster a seemingly good GEMINI (May21-June20) idea. If you can behonest with yourself, ** * * Understand that the power you you might see aweakness in your finances. wield is a result of having competence, Weigh the impact of this issue before you knowledge and financial backing. Ask act. Tonight: Time for a talk.
• I w o u ld r e a l ly n e e d • music, a CD player or something — Jill Scott, Ledisi, Le'Andria Johnson. And I would have to have some rap. The gospel music would help me to relax.The rap would help if someone messed with me, so I'd feel like I could beat them up.
would you manage your hair Did you get tired of that inside? . same beige jumpsuit'? • It w o uld p r o bably be • It was cool not to have to • braided up a lot or in big • think about it. You come poof balls. I would find ways to work and you know what to be creative, to spice it up. you're going to wear, how it's I'd need Miss Jessie's, Kinkygoing to fit. All of us want to be Curly, some shea butter, and in Chanel or Michael Kors, but water. You always need water.
Q.
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x-cutter esitant to s ow scars T he problem i s , when I was in a dark
would help you Q •• What get by?
. mybiggestfear, figuring out who I could trust, making sure Ihad people to take care of me.
ever hard to say them? • There were times I was • nervous about what my family back home would say. But I want to play characters rooted in truth. And it's exciting to be someone else, to say all these crazy things, to do all these crazy things. My dad came for the premiere. I kind of prepared him for it. He loved it. He had respect for what I did. My family understands that I still have my morals.
through life regretting not having the daughter she always wanted, but there is no guarantee it will happen if we decide to try again. I make a fair living, but with additional mouths to feed come additional financial responsibilities. I'm afraid I won't be able to p rovide for m y g r o w in g f a m ily as I need to. Am I right in my thinking, or a m I b e ing overly cautious'? — Stoppingat Threein Pennsylvania Dear Stopping at Three:You are thinking clearly. At 37, and with h er medical history, your w i f e w ould be c onsidered "at r i s k " if she becomes pregnant again. While I sympathize with the fact that she yearns for a daughter, allow me to share a true story with
you: A man was in a similar situation to yours, but he had four daughters.So he and his wife decided they would try "one more time" for a son. Sure enough, his wife became pregnant. She delivered beautiful identical twin ... daughters. At that point he gave up and had a vasectomy! — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21) ** * * What might have seemed difficult now seemsmuch easier.Listento news from someone at adistance. Evaluate what is happening, then decide if you want to take action. This could involve taking a workshop or listening to a lecture. Tonight: Others are delighted to seeyou.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * Deal directly with someone who holds the purse strings. This person is in this position because he orshe has agood sense of what is needed.You might not agree, and you could feel put off. Choose to learn from this person. Ask questions. Tonight: Spend time with a loved one.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * * You could be exhausted and looking for a solution. Youmight discover how willing others are to beyour support system and/or to pitch in. Pickthe people with the most determination andendurance. Meetings keepdotting your calendar. Tonight: Choosewhatmakesyouhappy.
AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb. 18)
** * * P ressure builds, as you could be stressed out by aboss's requests. You will go out of your way to deliver what this person wants. Even if he or sheappears to be stern, it does not meanthat is the case, nor does it meanthat he or she is not pleased. Tonight: Burn the midnight oil.
PISCES (Fed.19-March20) ** * * * Y ou know how to read beyond what someone says. Youwill look at the person in question, and you'll carefully assess his or her demeanor. Note what he or she does notsayas well. You will be able to tell whether a fact or two are missing. Tonight: Where you can relax. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
4:30 p.m. on G~ 3, "2013 MLB All-Star Game" —Baseball's best — as determined by a fan vote — turn out at Citi Field in New York for the 2013 All-Star Game. Miguel Cabrera of the Detroit Tigers, Buster Posey of the San Francisco Giants, the New York Yankees' Robinson Cano and the Baltimore Orioles' Adam Jones are among the players on the two squads. The National League holds a 43-38-2 edge in All-Star play, including lastyear's 8-0 rout at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. 8 p.m. on ES,"NCIS" —Although he's still on medical leave, Ducky (David McCallum) orders the exhumation of a body related to a 12-year-old case. As Gibbs (Mark Harmon) and the rest of the team investigate a Marine's death, they start to suspect this new case is connected to Ducky's old one in "Phoenix." Rocker Michael Des Barres guest stars.
• Being alone would be
swaggering Tasha Jefferson,
TV TODAY
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McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 54I-330-8562 • IRON MAN 3 (PG-13) 6 • THE PURGE (R) 9: l5 • After 7 p.m., shows are2f and olderonly. Younger than 2f may at tendscreeningsbefore 7pm.ifaccompaniedby a legalguardian. f
Is It Anyway?" —Wayne Brady, Colin Mochrie and RyanStiles, who brought the laughs in the 1998-2007 incarnation of the improvisational comedy series, are back for this new reboot. Aisha Tyler takes over the hosting duties as the featured players and guest stars create sketches, scenes and songs on the spot. Score" — Date or no date? In eachepisode ofthis new game show, two friends compete to pick their ideal mates from a field of prospects, each of whom has a cash value attached based on the results of a compatibility test. The player who picks the most compatible — and valuable — bachelor or bachelorette wins a date with that person and the cash. Arielle Kebbel ("The Vampire Diaries") hosts. 9:30 p.m. on ASE, "Storage Wars New York" —This new episode brings the buyers back to Brooklyn, where Joe P.scores with some modern technology, and Candy and Courtney try a new bidding strategy. Chris and Tad enjoy a wine tasting in "HiText ... Hi-Jinx." 10p.m. on TNT,"Perception" — An environmental activist asks Pierce (Eric McCormack) to look into a string of abnormal neurological reactions in a group of girls. His examination yields the discovery that a dark secret is behind their symptoms. Moretti (Rachael Leigh Cook) wants to know why Pierce has taken on a case without her in the new episode "Toxic." Arjay Smith also stars. 10:01 p.m. on USA,"Suits" — As a new season opens, Jessica's (Gina Torres) new partnership with Darby (Conleth Hill) is put to the test when heassigns Harvey (Gabriel Macht) to a highprofile, high-stakes case. Mike (Patrick J. Adams) tries to mend fences with Harvey and deal with the fallout from his confession to Rachel (Meghan Markle) in "The Arrangement." ©Zap2it
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 54 I -548-8777 • DESPICABLE ME2 (PG) 1:45, 4, 6:15, 8:30 • GROWN UPS2 (PG-I3)2:15,4:30,6:45,9 • THE LONE RANGER(PG-13) 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 • PACIFIC RIM(PG-13) 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • DESPICABLE ME2 (PG) 5, 7:15 • THE HEAT (R) 5, 7:30 • THE LONE RANGER(PG-13) 7 • MONSTERS UNIVERSITY (G) 5: I5 • WORLDWARZ (PG- l3) 7:30 i/
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SAVE $50 or $100 Per unit on select motorized Hunter Douglas products with PowerRise®
d~a g TLASSIP COVERINGS
541-388-4418 www.classic-coverings.com
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• DESPICABLE ME2 (PG)Noon, 2:20, 7:05, 9:25 • DESPICABLE ME23-0 (PG) 4:40 • GROWN UPS ( 2PG-I3)12:35,2:50,5:05,7:20,9:35 • THE HEAT (R) 2, 4:35, 7: I0, 9:40 • THE LONE RANGER(PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 • PACIFIC RIM(PG-13) 1:30, 4:20, 7 • PACIFIC RIM3-D (PG-13) 9:45 •
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John Day Burns Lakeview
TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013
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STMLEY STEEMEB)-
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6 ROOMS FOR )UST
Serving Central Oregon 541-706-9390• 1-800-STEENiER
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Chem-Dry of Central Oregon ServingDeschutes,Crook &JeffersonCounties • IndependentlyOwned&Operated
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Tile, Stone I Grout CleaningI Sealing 541-388-7374 • Residential & Commercial
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TERIlti]INIX PROTECTIO'N IS BACKED BY THE
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40 SE BRIDGEFORD BLVD. I
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Power over pests:
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Welcome to The Outpost! The Outpost is a Oregon retailer. We specialize in providing a fun shopping experience for our customers, with a lot of interesting and unique items. Wehave toys, clothing, crafts, swords, tools, leather goods, household supplies,and an assortment of tobacco products, all at great prices!
P A STA R I A
Valid any day of the week. Bring in this voucher to redeem. Must buy two regularly priced entrees and two beverages to receive$7 discount. Limit one coupon per table. Cannot be combined with any other offers, discounts, or specials. Does not apply to the Pastini Sunday Supper. Valid in Bend only. Pleasehonor your server with a gratuity based on the amount before discount. Offer expires 7/31/13.
Old Mill- Next to REI 375 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend, OR 9770Z
l541) 749-1060
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Oxi Fresh uses a combination of its one of a kind Oxi Sponge Encopsulotor, ondOxi Powder.This three part cleaning solution creates a powerful oxygenated cleaning systemthat breaks down the stains while encapsulating them, so that they can be efficiently removed from the carpet pile.
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CARPET I TILE &GROUTI HARDWOODI FURNITURE
Serving Central Oregon 541-706-9390• 1-800-STEEMER Schedule Online at www.stanleystaemer.cam
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Stanley Steemer' pholstery, Tile & Grout Cleaning Special
" Must presen t coupon at timeof cleamng Anareais defined asanyroomupto 300squarefeet Baths, halls,staircases,largewalk-in closetsandarearugsarephcedseparately.Offerdoesnot includeprotector Residentiaonl l y.Somerestnctronsmayapply Erprres0/5/13
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—STANLEY STEEMEB.
Bring Sunshine into Your L ivin S a c e •
If I I CRC Certified Technician
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If FREE Estimate Over the Phone
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on purchase of $250 or more made from June 1, 2013 to July 31, 2013. Interest will be charged to your account from the purchase date if the purchase balance is not paid in full within 6 months or if you make a late payment. Minimum payment required. See this ad for details. •
If Convenient Appointments
ofCentral Oregon e 54 i 593 $ 799
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NO INTEREST IFPAID IN FULLWITHIN 6 MONTHS'
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The power of oxygen is undeniable; MotherNature has used oxygen to naturally purify the Earth for thousands I of years. Now let the power of oxygen clean your carpets! I
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www.Pastini.com •
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Chemgry.
No Coupon required!
Drier. Cleaner. Healthier.
~Xhursda Endless Shrimp• $12.95 Frida ~ 8 oz. Prime Rib• $16.95 Cod n' Chips• $8.95
Mouda ~ 1/2 Rack Baby Back Ribs• $12.95
How clean is your tile? Dirt and grime begin to absorb into the pores of grout. Over time, the grout coloring becomes uneven which makes the entire floor look worn and dirty. Call Chem-Dry today and let our professional technicians extract the dirt and grime from your tile and stone surfaces. Our process also seals your tile and grout to resist mold, mildew and dirt. Don't forget, we also clean carpet, area rugs & upholstery tooi
Tuenda ~ SteakNight,7 oz Top Sirloin • $12.95 ~ ednesda W
~Saturda 8 oz. Prime Rib• $16.95
The Combo-7oz.Top,Main Lobster8 Grilled Shrimp • $19.95 Ruszek'I
Chem Dry of C-entral Oregon
Fish House
541-382-3173
54 I -388-7374 • Residential & Commercial
Behind BankofAmericaon3rdStreet,
1230 NE 3RD• BEND, OR
Serving Deschutes, Crook & Jefferson Counties • Independently Owned & Operated
6END SOUTH 6 END NORTH South Hwy 97 NE 3 r d St & Murphy Rd & Re v e re
(541)
TAKE 'N' BAKE PNXXA
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(541) 548-7272
Facebook at: Papa Murphy's Central Oregon Online at: wqnyw. pmpizza,com
phone ahead
when Vouarrlve
MADRAS SW Hwy 97 & Bard Lane
(541)
(541)
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Complete Landscape Maintenance Commercial 8 Residential
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Expires 7/31/13
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* spring tag Fall Clean Up * Trimming *Bark installation * Top Dressing
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PRINEVILLE NE Third St Near Les Schwab
L awu R L a ssdseape M a I I I t e I I a I I c e
* Mowing services * Lawn Reseeding * De-thatching *Aeration @ *Fertilization
541-382-2222 I
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ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JULY 'l6, 2013
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c antact u s : Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
: Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Includeyour name, phone number and address
: Monday — Friday : 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
: Classified telephone hours:
Subscribe or manage your subscription
: Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
Place, cancel or extend an ad
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Pets & Supplies
Antiques & Collectibles
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Antiques wanted: tools, furniture, marbles, beer cans, early B/W photography, radios 8 lighting. 541-389-1578
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Guns, Hunting & Fishing
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266
Misc. Items
Heating & Stoves NOTICE TO
How to avoid scam and fraud attempts w/Leupold 4.5x14 scope, YBe aware of interna-
ADVERTISER
Remington XR-100 204
Since September 29, 1991, advertising for tional fraud. Deal loused woodstoves has cally whenever posS avage 7 m m M a g . sible. been limited to models which have been Scope, Sling and car- Y Watch for buyers rying case. Just 17 c ertified by the O r who offer more than Department of rounds fired. $300. your asking price and egon Environmental QualCall 541-977-4884 who ask to have ity (DEQ) and the fedmoney wired or Springfield XD-9, 9mm, eral E n v ironmental handed back to them. 2-16 rnd mags, 4-18 Protection A g e n cy Fake cashier checks rnd mags, Springer (EPA) as having met and money orders trigger, Trijicon nite smoke emission stanare common. sights, Fobus holster, dards. A cer t ified YNever give out per$650, 541-410-8680 w oodstove may b e sonal financial inforidentified by its certifimation. Where can you find a cation label, which is VTrust your instincts permanently attached helping hand? and be wary of to the stove. The BulFrom contractors to someone using an letin will not k n owescrow service or yard care it's all here ingly accept advertisagent to pick up your i ng for the s ale o f in The Bulletin's merchandise. uncertified "Call A Service woodstoves. Professional" Directory Wanted: 100-gallon Wanted: Collector Fuel & Wood propane tank. seeks high quality 541-593-0309 fishing items. Call 541-678-5753, or Wanted- paying cash WHEN BUYING 503-351-2746 for Hi-fi audio & stuFIREWOOD... dio equip. Mclntosh, To avoid fraud, J BL, Marantz, D y The Bulletin • Misc . I tems naco, Heathkit, Sanrecommends paysui, Carver, NAD, etc. ment for Firewood ture, if you have room Buying Diamonds Call 541-261-1808 ammo, plus access., only upon delivery in your heart 8 home /Gold for Cash retail $5656, asking and inspection. for one or more. Cat 206 $4800; 3 7 5 H&H Saxon's Fine Jewelers WHEN YOU SEE THIS • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Rescue, Adoption & Pets 8 Supplies magnum, $700 obo; 541-389-6655 4' x 4' x 8' Foster Team, POB Remington 870 12 ga. 0 • Receipts should 6441, Bend 9 7 708; KITTENS! Fo s t ered, magnum, $350 obo. BUYING MOre PiXaIBefidbjletil).CO (n include name, & JustGive at friendly, fixed, shots, PayPal Lionel/American Flyer On a classified ad www.craftcats.org, or Pfaff Creative Vision 5.0 541-390-1010 phone, price and trains, accessories. ID chip, more! Varigo to kind of wood contact us, 389-8420 sewing machine: sew, HUNTERS 541-408-2191. ety of colors & perpiecing, f r ee-motion in Silvies Hunt Unit. www.bendbulletin.com purchased. sonalities. Adopt from or infoocraftcats.org. quilting, e mbroidery, Cabin to view additional • Firewood ads in the pines, run- BUYING & SEL LING you for helping $2499. 541-504-61 96 foster home (see Bless ning water, green yard, All gold jewelry, silver photos of the item. MUST include us help them. Chihuahuas! 1 blue & 1 TomTom Motel Mgr, amenities. Or need prispecies & cost per 245 and gold coins, bars, black & tan, $250 across from Sonic) or Yorkie male 13 wks, vate place for camp trailcord to better serve each. 541-362-1977 rounds, wedding sets, sanctuary (65480 78th $600. Ca n D e l iver. Golf Equipment ers? Call 541-589-1130 Building Materials5 our customers. I Want to Buy or Rent class rings, sterling silSt., Tumalo), Sat. 8 541-792-0375 View at Donate deposit bottles/ Sun. 1-5 PM. Just $30 ver, coin collect, vinYamaha golf cart, elkridgecabin.com REDMOND Habitat tage watches, dental Need to buy a wheel cans to local all vol- per kitten; adopt a pair Yorkie-Maltese puppies, 2005 6 batteries w/charger, 5erkrng Central Oregan Sfnte 1903 RESTORE chair ramp 4'-6' long. unteer, non-profit res- for $50! 3 8 9 8 420, 1 white male, $150. 1 -NEW L a k e Cit y gold. Bill Fl e ming, $1950. 541-977-1974 white female, $300, cash 541-382-9419. Building Supply Resale 541-383-7603. cue, to h elp w /cat www.craftcats.org. 5.56x45 NATO FMJ 541-546-7909 Quality at spay/neuter vet bills. Bag Boy golf pull cart, 62 grain SS109 M855 People Look for Information Cans for Cats trailer Lab Pups AKC, black & Yorkie pups AKC, cute, good condition, $15. 3025fps $70/100rnds Full hook-up for travl trlr LOW PRICES Wanted: 100-gallon About Products and at Jake's Diner, E. hitch, stability bars, sway 1242 S. Hwy 97 yellow, Master Hunter big eyes, short nosed, so- 541-383-4231 propane tank. Assorted 22lr Services Every Day through bar + al l connections, 541-548-1406 541-593-0309 Hwy. 20 at P urcell.sired, performance pedi- cialized, health g uar., $22/100rnds CHECK YOUR AD TheBulletin Classifieds D onate Mon-Fri a t gree, OFA cert hips 8 el- $650 & up. 541-777-7743 Open to the public. 541-848-2893-AMMO $175. 541-447-1928 Wanted: $Cash paid for Smith Sign, 1515 NE bows, 541-771-2330 www kinnamanretrievers.com vintaqe costume jew- 2nd; or at CRAFT in elry. Top dollar paid for Tumalo anytime. Labrador purebred pup- Furniture & Appliances Gold/Silver.l buy by the 389-8420. I nfo/map, pies, yellows & blacks, Estate, Honest Artist www.craftcats.org males & females, ready Elizabeth,541-633-7006 now! $300. 541-771-551 1 A1 Washersa Dryers on the first day it runs $150 ea. Full warto make sure it is corDO YOU HAVE ranty. Free Del. Also Pomeranian Pups FM 6 SOMETHING TO rect. "Spellcheck" and wanted, used W/D's wks, raised in our home, Pets 8 Supplies human errors do ocSELL 541-280-7355 parents on s ite, very FOR $500 OR cur. If this happens to cute, ready now. $300. LESS? your ad, please conThe Bulletin recomBecca, 541-279-4838 Non-commercial tact us ASAP so that mends extra caution corrections and any advertisers may when purc h asadjustments can be place an ad with Call a Pro ing products or serDkvlnn oui' made to your ad. Whether you need a vices from out of the Visit our HUGE "QUICK CASH 541-365-5809 area. Sending cash, fence fixed, hedges home decor SPECIAL" The Bulletin Classified checks, or credit inconsignment store. 1 week 3 lines 12 trimmed or a house f ormation may b e Several thousand clean New items k 20 ! 2~ built, you'll find subjected to fraud. olf balls - 100 for arrive daily! Ad must include 25. Make check to For more i nformaprofessional help in 930 SE Textron, price of single item tion about an adverHumane Soc i ety. GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES, QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! Bend 541-318-1501 of $500 or less, or The Bulletin's "Call a 541-383-2155. tiser, you may call www.redeuxbend.com multiple items We are three adorable, loving Modern amenities andall the quiet Service Professional" the O r egon State whose total does 246 puppies looking for a caring hom you will need.Roomto grow in your Attorney General's Directory GENERATE SOM E Office C o n sumer not exceed $500. Guns, Hunting EXCITEMENT in your Please call right away. $500. own little paradise! Call now. 541-385-5809 Protection hotline at & Fishing Call Classifieds at neighborhood! Plan a 1-877-877-9392. 541-385-5809 sale and don't Poodle teacup puppies, garage rnds .556 ammo, www.bendbulletin.com Apricot, 8 weeks, $300. forget to advertise in 1500 FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck $950. 500 rnds 45acp, classified! Sewing Central Oregon tfnte 1903 541-977-0035 $300. 500 rds of .380, 541-385-5809. can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, French Bulldog m i x, $250. 541-647-8931 POODLE Toy pups 8 and a tough V8 engine will get Adopt a nice cat from adorable! Bobbed tails, teens. Also, POMAPOOS Roll-top desk pecan, 300 rds factory 45 Long exc. cond., like new. Petco, PetSmart, Tu- 1st shots, dewclaws reCall 541-475-3889 the iob done on the ranch! Colt, $270. 500 rnds 38 moved. Good price to $235/obo. m alo sanctuary o r spl, $230. 541-647-8931 541-923-8271 Bend foster h ome! good homes only, $175 Queensland Heelers Fixed, shots, ID chip, cash. 541-447-0210 Standard & Mini, $150 380 Ruger LCP pistol, tested, more! Sanc& up. 541-280-1537 The Bulletrn new in box $309 tuary & kitten foster German Shorthaired www.rightwayranch.wor recommends extra ' Call Bob, 541-788-6365 Pointers, white/liver, home open Sat/Sun dpress.com l caution when pur7/13. $350. (541) S8 W BodyGuard, 1-5, other days by ready chasing products or • 380 new in box, $449. a ppt. 6 5 48 0 7 8 t h , 389-6899 or 350-7829 Schnoodle Pups, 3M 8 services from out of I Bend; foster home © bought a new boat? 2F, Dews and tails, y the area. Sending I Call Bob, 541-788-6365 TomTom Motel office, Just 1st shots, wormed, l cash, checks, or ' 500 rnds factory .40 Sell your old one in the across from S onic. classifieds! Ask about our raised w/ kids. Par- l credit i n f ormation S&W, $240. 650 rds 9 Photos, m o r e at Super Seller rates! ents on s ite. $500. may be subjected to mm, $260. 541-647-8931 www.craftcats.org. 541-385-5809 541-410-7701 l FRAUD. For more 541-389-8420, or like local pays CASH!! information about an s Bendfor us on Facebook. all firearms & German Sh o r thaired Scottish Terrier AKC advertiser, you may I Pointer pups, AKC Reg. pups, born 4/2. Shots / call t h e Or e gon / ammo. 541-526-0617 Adult b arn/shop/work- The best in style, tem- & wormed, parents on ' State Attor ney ' Black Powder Pistol .44 ing cats, fixed, shots, perament & natural abilsite, Ready now! l General's O f f i ce cal. 58 Rem. Brass some friendly, some ity. $500. 541-410-2667 541-31 7-5624. Consumer P rotec- • Frame, bullets, caps, not. No fee & free deho t l in e at I N ew n e ve r sh o t , livery. 541-389-8420 Jack Russell Terriers, Shepherd/Lab mix, beau- t ion $300. Perfect Flame purebred, puppy pedi- tiful male, 90 Ibs, very l 1-877-877-9392. Gas upright smoker, BOXER AKC puppies, gree, tails docked, dew- loving, good with kids/ To place your ad, visit www.bendbulletin.com or 541-385-5809 reat litter, 1st shots, claws removed, ready dogs; NO cats. Free to only used 3 t i m es 700. 541-325-3376 7/27. $275. 541-279-9935 good home. 541-410-7847 $100. 541-410-0041
ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free ltems 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212 - Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - MedicalEquipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
For Guns, Ammo 8
264-Snow RemovalEquipment Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900. 265 - Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves Sponsors needed for DOH'TMISSTHIS 267- Fuel and Wood s weet Daylene, a n 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers abandoned former pet 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment that came to no-kill DO YOU HAVE CRAFT ready to give 270 - Lost and Found SOMETHING TO b irth. W i thin a f e w SELL GARAGESALES days, she had 8 kitFOR $500 OR 275 - Auction Sales tens (7 survived). She Beautiful handLESS? 280 - Estate Sales was a great mom but carved coffee table Non-commercial 281 - Fundraiser Sales started f a i ling, a t (44" x 190/4" x 17'/2") advertisers may which time a vet did 282- Sales Northwest Bend and 2 matching end place an ad exploratory surgery & tables (shown) 240/~" 284- Sales Southwest Bend with our f ound she h a d a x 15" x 24 2/4". Built in "QUICK CASH 286- Sales Northeast Bend twisted intestine, a Taiwan between SPECIAL" 288- Sales Southeast Bend b lockage that w a s 1940-1950, all glass 1 week3lines 12 290- Sales RedmondArea killing her. After excovered, in excelOI' 292- Sales Other Areas t ensive surgery & lent condition. $1600 k 20f ~2 care, Daylene is on OBO. 541-382-6731 FARM MARKET Ad must the mend 8 he r kitinclude price of 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery tens are being fos- The Bulletin reserves tt f 55 0 0 316 - Irrigation Equipment tered by ou r b ottle the right to publish all or less, or multiple 325- Hay, Grain and Feed baby specialist, but it ads from The Bulletin items whose total left our s mall non333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies onto The does not exceed profit with a huge vet newspaper 341 - Horses and Equipment Bulletin Internet web$500. bill. D o n ations for 345-Livestockand Equipment site. Daylene & her babies' Call Classifieds at 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals care are desperately The Bulletin 541-385-5809 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers Ser 00 Central Dregon 2 nte l903 needed 8 tax deductwww.bendbulletin.com 358- Farmer's Column ible. Daylene 8 her 240 375- Meat and Animal Processing kittens will be adoptFerret 50 cal., NXS5.5 able in the near fuCrafts & Hobbies 383 - Produce andFood 22x56 scope, some
$1200. 541-382-6721
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E2 TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
"UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days..................................
(call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
*Must state prices in ad
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The Bulletin bendbulletin.com
is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.
Fuel & Wood
All Year Dependable Firewood: Seasoned Lodgepole, Split, Del. Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 for $335. Cash, Check or Credit Card OK. 541-420-3484.
286
476
Sales Northeast Bend
Employment Opportunities
** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your ga-
rage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE!
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Gardening Supplies 8 Equipment BarkTurfSoil.com •
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To place an ad, call 541-385-5809
or email
470
Domestic & In-Home Positions CNA needed for elderly bedridden lady. SE Bend. Fri. 4:30-9pm; Sat. am/pm split shift. Call 541-419-3405 TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
290
Care Manager P rineville Sen i o r Care Home looking for Care Manager for full-time overnight shifts. Must pass criminal background check.
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HUGE GARAGE SALE. Sat. 7/20, 8-2 SW 43rd Ct. Redmond NO EARLY BIRDS
The Bulletin is looking for a professional and driven Sales and Marketing person to help our customers grow their businesses with an expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of media sales experience is preferable, but w e w i l l t r ai n t h e r i g ht candidate. Inc l udes a compe t itive compensation package including benefits, and rewards an aggressive, customer focused salesperson with unlimited earning potential.
FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities
476
Employment Opportunities RESTAURANT
MCMENAMINS OLD ST. FRANCIS is now hiring LINE COOKS! Qualified apps must have an open 8 flex schedule i n c luding,
I, "", • 1
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Columbia
528
XIHE!MS 8 DITIHZem
Loans & Mortgages
ÃOIjOI 528
Loans 8 Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recom-
BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit no
problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200. LOCAL MONEYrWe buy secured trustdeeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13.
mends you use cau573 tion when you proBusiness Opportunities vide personal information to companies offering loans or Visual Communications Business For S ale! credit, especially B2B Services. Great those asking for adRepeat Clients. Low vance loan fees or Overhead. Great Loc. companies from out of High Net To Gross. state. If you have No Exp Nec! Finance concerns or questions, we suggest you 8 Training Available! consult your attorney Call:1-800-796-3234 or call CONSUMER Check out the HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.
classifieds online www.bendbulletln.com Updated daily
Nurse Manager: Pre-Op/Post-OplCall Room
B~
S U RGERY
c • F. • N • T • rs • rk hkr Cm ' Ikeae kr Conkrt
Job Summary: We are looking for a strong leader to fill the Nurse Manager role for the Pre-op / Post-Op / Call Room. This position requires an individual capable of providing direct oversight of Pre-Op, Post-Op and the call room whilemanaging 20-25 FTE's. The position reports directly to the Clinical Director. Duties will include, but not be limited to, performance evaluations and performance management as well as new staff orientation. This position is a member of multiple committees. Qualifications: Must be able to demonstrate strong leadership and communication skills. Must be a licensed RN in the state of Oregon, or able to obtain licensure upon hire. 3-5 years of Peri-Operative experience, preferably in an ASC setting. The ideal candidate will have management experience in an ASC setting. Position details:This is a full time exempt position; Monday through Friday. Competitive salary, benefit package, retirement and bonus plan. Position closes on July 26, 2013.
Email resume to jobs©bendsurgery.com COLUMBIA STATE BANK
If you are searching for a company where customers and employees are highly valued, Columbia Bank is the place to work! We are always looking for high energy and fantastic employees to join our customer-focused Bank!
The Bulletin Advertising Account Executive
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions
days, eves, w eekends and h o lidays. We are looking for applicants who have 541-447-5773. previous exp. related exp. and enjoy working in a b usy cusCall The Bulletin At tomer ser v ice-oriented enviroment. We 541-385-5809 a re also w illing t o Place Your Ad Or E-Mail train! We offer opporAt: www.bendbulletin.ccm tunities for advancement and e x cellent HEATING / HVACbenefits for e l igible We are currently seekemployees, including ing experienced HVAC vision, medical, chiro, Service Techs and apply in person in dental and so much Personnel Installers. Multiple re- the more! Please apply quirements; please in- Department at 335 online 24/7 at He s s St ., quire at Bend Heating NW www.mcmenamins.com & Sheet Metal, 61540 Madras OR 97741. or pick up a paper app American Lane, Bend. Pre em p l oyment at any McMenamins drug test required. Maintenance Person location. Mail to: 430 Equal O p portunity needed, full-time swing Employer. N. Killi n gsworth, shift. Apply: The Pines at Portland OR, 97217 S unriver, 17655 P i n or fax: 503-221-8749. nacle Ln., 541-593-2160 Call 503-952-0598 for info on other ways to a pply. P lease n o Looking for your next phone calls or emails employee? locations! Place a Bulletin help chasing products or I to tndtvldual E.O.E. services from out of wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 l the area. Sending c ash, checks, o r readers each week. Your classified ad l credit i n f o rmation Service Assoc. will also appear on l may be subjected to Registered C l i ent bendbulletin.com FRAUD. Service Associate, For more informawhich currently Bend, OR. — Finanreceives over 1.5 tion about an advercial Services Indusmillion page views you may call try experience and ) tiser, every month at the Oregon State Series 7/66 licensl Attorney General's no extra cost. ing required. Bulletin Classifieds Office Co n s umert Please fax resume Protection hotline at l to Get Results! 8 5 5 - 822-5258. Call 385-5809 I 1-877-877-9392. For additional deor place tails, please visit our gTl~e Bulletip g job posting at: your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com www.ubs.com/ careers/ professionals/ americas (job reference ¹96817BR)
541-385-5809
Sales Redmond Area
We are looking for a f ully s k i lled m i l l wright to p e rform preventative and breakdown maintenance at our Headquarters location in M adras. W e ar e l ooking for a t a l ented individual who c an d evelop t h e skills to become a standard work set up auditor to a s s ure quality of machine set up and to develop actual set up skills to perform the duties of an operator in the event an operator is absent. You should be able to work well independently as well as in a t e a m a t mos phere. M u s t b e willing to work any shift. W age DOE. W e offer a s o lid benefits p a c kage including m e dical, dental, l i f e and vision insurance as w ell a s a pro f i t sharing plan. To be considered for this position please
Apply at the M & J Tavern, 102 NW Greenwood Avenue, in Bend.
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fg,IF~>J!P) JI,J j JIJ IJjjJ~ Ig
MILLWRIGHT
Part-time Bartenderneeded, Sunday-Monday days / fill-in.
Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Saturday • • • • 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place a photoin your private party ad for only$15.00 per week.
Employment Opportunities
M & J Tavern!
Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon Tuess
Starting at 3 lines
Employment Opportunities
BARTENDER An opportunity tojoin the
Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mon.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
476
Can be found on these pages:
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
a
476
Call 54I 3855809 to pramoteyourserrice Adreitise for 28dcysstarting at 'IIII Irkr tacrrltrrrkatr rrer rrrrrrableororrwebrret
We are currently seeking a
Branch Manager for our NE 3rd Street Bend location.
Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care
NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landclassifiedebendbulletin.com If you are interested in applying for this law requires anyone scape Contractors Law position, or seeing what else may be who contracts for (ORS 671) requires all The Bulletin ZedC Z Qualiif hr ng central oregons nce lka available in your area, please visit our construction work to businesses that adwebsite and apply online at be licensed with the Z'a~< 0a e/,. vertise t o pe r f orm Construction Contrac- More Than Service Landscape Construcwww.columbiabank.com Newberry's tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: ANNUAL GARDEN Peace Of Mind active license p lanting, decks , SHOW Columbia Bankis proud to be an means the contractor fences, arbors, SAT. JULY 20, 9-5 Equal Opportunity Employer. Fire Protection is bonded 8 insured. water-features, and in1968 Hollow Tree Lane Fuels Reduction Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irSUPER TOP SOIL •Tall Grass CCB li c ense at rigation systems to be www.hershe soiiandbark.com www.hirealicensed• Low Limbs licensed w it h the Screened, soil & comEmail your resume, cover letter contractor.com •Brush and Debris Landscape Contracpost m i x ed , no and salary history to: or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit 316 rocks/clods. High huJay Brandt, Advertising Director The Bulletin recomnumber is to be i nDigital Imaging Specialist Protect your home mus level, exc. f or Irrigation Equipment jbrandt@bendbulletin.com mends checking with with defensible space cluded in all adverPart-time Position Available flower beds, lawns, or drop off your resume in person at the CCB prior to contisements which indigardens, straight FOR SALE 0.48 acre tracting with anyone. cate the business has 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; The Bulletin is seeking an individual to work Landscape s creened to p s o i l. IRRIGATION RIGHT; Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; Some other t r ades a bond,insurance and with the news and advertising departments to Tumalo Irrigation DisBark. Clean fill. DeMaintenance also req u ire addiworkers c ompensaNo phone inquiries please. tone and process digital photos and scan liver/you haul. t rict, $1500; I p a y Full or Partial Service t ional licenses a nd tion for their employEOE / Drug Free Workplace images for use in print and on the web. This is fees. 206-673-7876 541-548-3949. • Mowing ~Edging certifications. ees. For your proteca deadline-oriented position requiring detailed • Pruning ~Weeding tion call 503-378-5909 AutoRenew Coordinator 325 work. Responsibilities also include uploading USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Sprinkler Adjustments or use our website: The Bulletin is seeking an individual to join our photo and text content to The Bulletin web I Lo s t & Found Hay, Grain & Feed www.lcb.state.or.us to fast-paced Circulation team. We have a current s ite. Expert l evel P hotoshop skills a n d Door-to-door selling with Fertilizer included check license status opening for an AutoRenew Coordinator. The proficiency in color correction and toning images Found high-end SunGRASS HAY contracting with ideal candidate will be extremely analytical and are a must; knowledge of Adobe InDesign and fast results! It's the easiest with monthly program before glasses, 7/13 in NE Bend 1st cutting, barn-stored, be the business. Persons able to focus on details. This position is in lllustrator is a p l us. Pre-employment drug way in the world to sell. neighborhood, Call to standard sized bales, doing land scape the accounting field, requiring accuracy while screen. The Bulletin is an equal opportunity Its not too late identify, 541-728-8278. maintenance do n ot in Sisters. $225/ton. following strict written procedures without fail. The Bulletin Classified employer that provides competitive wages and for a beautiful r equire an L C B 541-588-6531 10-key experience helpful. Computer literacy is benefits. Send a resume with qualifications, 541-385-5809 landscape cense. Get your required. Ability and willingness to cross train skills, experience and a past employment •Lawn Restoration into other tasks also a plus. This full time posi- history to: business Looking for your •Weed Free beds ALLEN REINSCH Concrete Construction tion offers benefits including health, vacation, next employee? Yard maintenance & •Bark Installation and a 401-k plan. Compensation between Place a Bulletin The Bulletin clean-up, thatching, JJ 8 B Construction, $10-$11 per hour based upon experience with a a ROW I N G help wanted ad Attn: James Baisinger plugging 8 much more! EXPERIENCED quality concrete work. monthly incentive program. This is a Monday 1777 SW Chandler Ave. Call 541-536-1 294 today and Over 30 Years Exp. Commercial through Friday, 8-5 position. For more informawith an ad in PO Box 6020 reach over Sidewalks; RV pads; tion, please send your resume Attn: Amy & Residential Maverick Landscaping Bend, OR 97708-6020 60,000 readers The Bulletin's Driveways; Color & Senior Discounts Husted, Office Manager, c/o The Bulletin, PO Mowing, weedeating,yd EOE / Drug-Free Workplace each week. Stamp wor k a v a il. "Call A Service Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. 541-390-1466 detail., chain saw work, Your classified ad Also Hardwood floor- Same Day Response bobcat excv., etc! LCB Professional" ing a t aff o rdable will also Single Copy District Representative ¹8671 541-923-4324 Accounting Directory Nelson appear on prices. 541-279-3183 The Bulletin Circulation department is looking for Billing CCB¹190612 bendbulletin.com a District Representative to join our Single Copy Landscaping & Department Painting/Wall Covering )@gyg4B which currently team. Overall focus is the representation, sales Maintenance Lead and presentation of The Bulletin newspaper. • D ebris Removal Serving Central receives over WESTERN P AINTING These apply to news rack locations, hotels, speOregon Since 2003 1.5 million page CO. Richard Hayman, cial events and news dealer outlets. Daily re- Responsible for overseeing the daily work of JUNK BE GONE Residental/Commercial views every a semi-retired paintsponsibilities include driving a company vehicle the department including ensuring accurate I Haul Away FREE month at no ing contractor of 45 Sprinkler to service a defined district, ensuring newspa- and timely work completion, researching and For Salvage. Also extra cost. Lost on July 7th, a years. S m all Jobs Activation/Repair per locations are serviced and supplied, manCleanups 8 Cleanouts resolving errors, maintaining accurate payee Leopard Tor t oise, Bulletin Welcome. Interior & Back Flow Testing aging newspaper counts for the district, building data, managing vendor relationships, and Mel, 541-389-8107 area of 13th St. by Classifieds Exterior. c c b ¹ 5184. relationships with our current news dealer locaworking with IT staff to maintain efficient sysH ollingshead B a r n . 541-388-6910 Get Results! Maintenance tions and growing those locations with new outHandyman tems and processes. Requires strong acCall 541-410-7883 Call 541-385-5809 Thatch & Aerate lets. Position requires total ownership of and ac- counting skills, proficiency with Excel, and • Spring Clean up or place your ad Need to get an countability of all single copy elements within ability to learn new software. M ust have Lost prescription sunI DO THAT! on-line at •Weekly Mowing glasses in case, end of that district. This full time position will become ad in ASAP? Home/Rental repairs proven leadership, communication and ana& Edging June, Redmond area. bendbulletin.com available late July as a long time employee will lytical skills. Degree in Accounting preferred. Small jobs to remodels • Bi-Monthly & Monthly You can place it Call 541-420-3385 be retiring. Work schedule will be Thursday Experience with ERP implementation helpful. Honest, guaranteed Maintenance online at: through Monday withTuesday and Wednesday work. CCB¹151573 •Bark, Rock, Etc. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent Good classified ads tell off. Requires good communication skills, a www.bendbulletin.com customer service and over 400 stores in the Dennis 541-317-9768 the essential facts in an strong attention to detail, the ability to lift 45 Northwest. We offer a competitive salary, exinteresting Manner. Write ~Landsca in REMEMBER: If you pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to ERIC REEVE HANDY •Landscape cellent benefits, retirement, and cash bonus. 541-385-5809 have lost an animal, from the readers view - not multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong SERVICES. Home & Visit us at: www.LesSchwab.com. Construction don't forget to check the seller's. Convert the service/team orientation, sales and problem Commercial Repairs, •Water Feature The Humane Society facts into benefits. Show solving skills. Send inquiries and resume to: Carpentry-Painting, Remodeling/Carpentry I Resumes will be accepted through Installation/Maint. Bend the reader hcw the item will circulationIbendbulletin.com Pressure-washing, •Pavers July 19, 2013. Please send resume 541-382-3537 help them in someway. Honey Do's. On-ti me SILVER LINING and salary requirements to: •Renovations Redmond This Applications are available at the front desk. promise. Senior CONSTRUCTION ZYLSHuman.Resources@lesschwab.com. •Irrigations Installation 541-923-0882 Drop off your resume in person at Discount. Work guaradvertising tip Residential const., Emails must state "Billing Lead" in the subject PI 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; anteed. 541-389-3361 Senior Discounts brought to youby remodels, maint. line. No phone calls please. 541-447-7178; No phone inquiries please. or 541-771-4463 Bonded & Insured & repair. CCB ¹199645 or Craft Cats The Bulletin Pre-employment drug testing required. Bonded 8 Insured 541-815-4458 Cody Aschenbrenner EOE 541-389-8420. EOE/Drug Free Workplace CCB¹181 595 LCB¹8759 541-263-1268
The Bulletin
Y OUR WEEKLY GUIDE TO CENTRAL OREGON EVENTS, ARTS & ENTERTAINME N T P R estaurant R e v i ew s/ M o v i e R e v i e w s Stay informe d o n ou r r i c h l o cal scene o f food, mu sic, fine arts & e n t e r t a i n m e n t e
Area 97 ClubS •
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E4 TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
DA ILY
B R I D t alE C L U B
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD WillShortz
T uesday,Juty 16,2013
ACROSS 38 Took to the slopes 1It has a balance: Abbr. 40 Ref. work that took 70 years to 5 Reverberation complete 9 la z u li 41 Grow fond of 14 Superdome locale, informally 44 Sinatra backers, sometimes 15 H u b bard, Scientology 47 Judgment on a founder book's cover? 16 Party or parade 49 "Super!" 17 Reason for rehab 50 Groundskeeper's 19 Hardly rambling bane 20Give a new title 53 Pong purveyor 21 Cheese with red 57 " out!" (ump's wrapping cry) 23 Six-sided 580ne-billionthof a randomizer gig 24Twounder par 59 Wild-eyed sort 25Trail 60 World capital 27 New York theater whose name award means "victorious" 29 Plant fungus 30 Darts and 62 Assortments ... snooker or what you'll find in 17-, 25-, 34 Separate into 30-, 44- and charged particles 50-Across? 37 Braun who married Hitler 64 Forest vine
No admittanCe By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services
I've heard it said that listening to a nun confess is like being stoned to death with popcorn. Hearing Cy the Cynic confess is nonexistent: Cy never admits to mistakes. Cy was today's East, and West led the jack of clubs against four hearts: three, seven from Cy. Declarer ruffed the next club, led a spade to the king, ruffed the king of clubs, led a spade to theace and ruffed a spade. South next led a trump, and when the Cynic won, he had to break the diamonds to avoid conceding a ruff-sluff. South played low, and when West took the king, he was end-played. "You goofed," West barked. "A mistake," Cy said loftily, "is any play I wouldn't make."
you raise to two spades and he tries 2NT. What do you say? ANSWER: Partner's 2NT is a try for game; he has 10 or 11 points, balanced. You have a sound raise and can accept his invitation. Since you have four trumps and a shapely hand, bid four spades. True, partner may hold wasted heart honors opposite your bare ace, but you can't stay out of game. South dealer Neither side vulnerable
NORTH 4o AK6 (vi K J8 7
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OVERTAKES Whether Cy wants to admit it, he erred. He should overtake the first club with the queen, cash his ace of trumps and exit with a spade. South must lead diamonds himself and lose two tricks there to go down. It's hard to construct a South hand consistent with the bidding where this defense will cost the contract.
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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
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PUZZLE BY PETE MULLER
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26 Babydoll 63Mark, as a ballot O P 28 1960 ¹1 Brenda N G For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit Lee hit card, 1-800-814-5554. EA 30 Place to Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday congregate? crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. P O 31Thos.Jefferson AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit U B nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. founded it Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past P A 32 Conan, for one puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). I M Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. 33 Close relation, L A Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords. informally
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31 Newly employed 4 9 White with age person 50 1/1 6 of a pound 4 Refused to 32 Goad 51 James and 6 Sets, as a price cooperate 34 Alejandro's aunt Jone s of jazz 10 Overcast 35 ER VIPs 52 Greek vacation 5 Covert WWII 14 Opera solos agcy. 36 Giant star Mel island 15 Chop 6 Vote by O f 39 Astronomer who 5 3 Fixed look 16 The stuff of hands discovered 55 Poke legends 7 Like Cary Grant Uranus 57 IRS identifiers 40 "Mustn't do" thing 58 Publisher 17 Fish organs characters 18 Subjects for 8 Excited, with "up" 45 Trivial Pursuit wearing p.j.'s Monet 9 Part of TBS: category: Abbr. 5 9 1 08-card game 20 Pocketed, as a Abbr. 47 Stereotypical 60 Be a rded beast 10 Flower with pool ball professorial attire 6 1 kw o n do 21 Broke the Tenth sword-shaped ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: Commandment leaves 22 Sounded like an 11 Legendary bird S A C I C E E S A L I A S 12 Noah's boat donkey A G E D O G M A T O N G A 13 'You betcha!" 24 Wimp N I L O L Y M P I C F L A G 2 8 Tanzania's e s 19 Midterm, say E L L L O P E R O T A T E Salaam 21 2011 Polanski 29 Thomas More's comedy with an RE P R I N T S I S WE T ironically violent perfect world HA Z Y F U S T Y 30 With 41-Across, title A T O N E F A R E A C E S thing sometimes 23 "The Lost Boys" F A N G R I N G S H I G H resisted actor Corey 33 Words T R E E O N C E P O R G Y 25Goon a welcoming shopping spree R E L A Y C R O C speakers 26 Because H A H A L L P R E S U M E 37 Pre-Easter 27 David who AR I O S O ER A S S O N season directed four W E D D I N G V O W S A L E 38 Like someone Harry Potter needing a lot of films K N E E L A I S L E C A M attention 29 Log-in needs SA S S Y B L ES S T R Y 41 See 30-Across 30 Hooligans 07/16/13 xwordedltor@aol.com 42 Gourmet's prefix 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 1 12 13 43 M o i nes 44 Self-described 14 15 16 "short, stocky, slow-witted bald 17 18 19 man" of "Seinfeld" 20 21 46 Bankbook cred. 48 Taste, e.g. 22 23 24 25 2 6 27 49 Barn dances 54 Lame excuses 28 29 56 Absorbs, as a
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30 3 1
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assassins?
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DOWN 1 Sprees 2 Awful Heep
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By David Poole (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
07/1 6/1 3
THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JULY 16 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 -Houses for Rent NEBend 652- Housesfor RentNWBend 654- Housesfor RentSEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 -Houses for RentFurnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space
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Real Estate Services
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511
LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION 6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, Prices Slashed Huge 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, Savings! 10 Year view. By owner, ideal for conditional warranty. extended family. $590,000. 541-390-0886 Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! Redmond, Oregon NOTICE 541-548-5511 All real estate adverJandMHomes.com tised here in is subject to t h e F e deral F air H o using A c t , which makes it illegal :o. Q to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i mitaMisc. Items tions or discrimination. • We will not knowingly accept any advertis- Custom Flow louvered ing for r eal e state locking 5th wheel tail ate (GMC-2008-13) which is in violation of 250; Eaz-Lift 1000 this law. All persons are hereby informed lb. travel trailer weight that all dwellings ad- distribution hitch asvertised are available sembly, $250 (cash on an equal oppoitu- only). 541-923-5622 nity basis. The Bulletin Classified Snowmobiles
T r a vel Trailers
JAMEE 1982 20',
Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft long, 2000
extras incl. tower, Bimini 8 custom trailer, $17,950.
entf
541-389-1413
UC!©0
KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO.
Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, awning, Eaz-Lift stabilizer bars, heat
8 air, queen walk-around bed, very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003
$25,000.
541-379-3530
541-548-0318 (photo aboveis of a 21' 2001 Skiers Choice similar model & not the actual vehicle) Moomba O u t back,
Honda TRX 450R sport quad 2008, low hrs, new wheels & DNC perf. pipe $4250. 541-647-8931 870
383 stroker engine, $8500 o r c o n sider trade for good vehicle with low mileage.
msg if no answer)
PerfectC.O. fishing boat! 14' Glastron tri-hull. 25hp 21 ft. Crownline, 215
h.p. in/outboard engine 310 hrs, Cuddy C abin s l eeps 2 / 3 people, portable toilet, fishfinder, exc. cond. $7,500 cash, OBO. Call 541-388-8339
14'8" boat, 40hp Mercury outboard (4-stroke, electric trim, EFI, less than 10 hrs) + electric trolling motor, fish finder, $5000 obo. 541-548-2173 =. t
Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809
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Qx=
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14' a luminum bo a t w/trailer, 2009 Mercury 15hp motor, fish finder,
The Bulletin
Monaco Windsor, 2001, loaded! (was $234,000 new) Solid-surface counters, convection/ micro, 4-dr, fridge, washer/dryer, ceramic tile 8 carpet, TV, DVD, satellite dish, leveling, 8-airbags, power cord reel, 2 full pass-thru trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 Diesel gen set. $85,000 obo.541-233-7963
+nn
•5
NATIONAL DOLPHIN 37' 1997, loaded! 1 slide, Corian surfaces,
wood floors (kitchen), 2-dr fridge, convection microwave, Vizio TV & roof satellite, walk-in shower, new queen bed. White leather hide-abed & chair, all records, no pets or s moking. $28,450. Call 541-771-4800
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... Beautiful h o u seboat, You Keep The Cash! On-site credit $85,000. 541-390-4693
King size walkaround bed, electric awning, (4) 6-volt batteries, plus many more extras, never smoked in, first owners, $19,900.
The Bulletin
Piper A rcher 1 9 80, based in Madras, always hangared since new. New annual, auto Pilot, IFR, one 'Piece Fleetwood prowler 32 2QQ1 many upgrade windshield. Fastest Archer around. 1 750 topptjpns $1 4 5QQ pbp' tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. 541 48Q 1 687 Djck 541-475-6947, ask for Rob Berg.
t~ Itx.
Keystone Montana 2955 RL 2008, 2 slides, arctic insulation, loaded, excellent never used condition. $33,500
Superhawk Ownership Share Available!
Economical flying in your own IFR equipped Cessna 172/180 HP for only $13,500! New Montana 2006 3400 Garmin Touchscreen RL, 37', 4 slides, Aravionics center stack! I tic options, K/bed, I Exceptionally clean! w/d combo. M ust Hangared at BDN. ~ sell $22,990.OBO. ~ Call 541-728-0773 Call f o r det a i ls T-Hangar for rent 805-844-3094 at Bend airport. La Pine Address Call 541-382-8998.
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Trucks &
vEq 'p MONTANA 3585 2008,
Orbit 21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $1 6,000 OBO. 541-382-9441
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250
NuWa 297LK HitchHiker2007, All sea-
4
1987 Freightliner COE 3axle truck, Cummins engine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 obo 541-419-2713
sons, 3 slides, 32' perfect for snow birds, left kitchen, rear lounge, extras, must see. Prineville 541-447-5502 days &
RUN UNTIL SOLD For
only $99
Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
RV
CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th wheel, 1 s lide, AC, TV,full awning, excel-
541-385-5809
lent shape, $23,900. 541-350-8629 RV
CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
Backhoe 2007 John Deere 310SG, cab 4x4, 4-in-1 bucket Extendahoe, hydraulic thumb, loaded, like new, 500 hours. New $105,000. Sell $75,000. 541-350-3393
Redmond: 541-548-5254
G K E AT
885
Canopies & Campers
R U T T Hyster H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, $3500 call
$~i a-.=
541-749-0724
Lance Camper 1994, fits long bed crew cab, tv, a/c, loaded. $6200 OBO. 541-580-7334 Lance Camper, 2011 ¹992, new cond, 2 slides, 2 awnings, built-in gen & AC, power jacks, wired for solar, tie-downs incl. $28,500. 541-977-5358
Mitsubishi Fuso 1995 14' box truck with lift gate, 184,000 miles, needs turbo seal. $3500 or best offer. 541-420-2323
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Peterbilt 359 p o table water t ruck, 1 9 90, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp .
00
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pump, 4-3" h oses, camlocks, $ 2 5,000. 541-820-3724
Utility Trailers
& Service
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15" spa r e tire, $480. 541-318-8503.
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories
„IP;a-
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Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales
541-447-1641 eves.
•
The Bulletin
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Call 541-410-5415
www.centraloregon approval team, web site presence. houseboat.com. We Take Trade-Ins! GENERATE SOME exFree Advertising. citement in your neig- BIG COUNTRY RV borhood. Plan a gaBend: 541-330-2495 14' Seadoo 1997 boat rage sale and don't Redmond: twin modified engines forget to advertise in Trail Sport 2013 541-548-5254 632 210hp/1200lbs, fast 23' Travel Trailer classified! 385-5809. $5500. 541-390-7035 Like new, used twice. Apt./Multiplex General Tow with SUV or 15' 1994 Smokercraft, Serving Central Oregon since 1903 small pickup. Queen CHECK YOUR AD Alaskan, a l u minum bed, air, TV, micro, 875 boat. 25 hp Yamaha, built-in stereo, electo il-injection mo t o r . Watercraft ric awning, barbecue, Trolls excellent. If you Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' extras. Non-smoker. wish to t roll a l i ttle 9-ft Avon Inflatable, in- 2004, on1y 34K, loaded, Selling due to health; slower it has an elec- cludes original carry bag, too much to list, ext'd Sacrifice, on the first day it runs tric trolling motor in- motor transom, f loor warr. thru 2014, $54,900 $16,000 obo. to make sure it is corcluded. Shorelander boards 8 oars, $350. Dennis, 541-589-3243 Call Jim, 541-401-9963 rect. "Spellcheck" and trailer w it h e l e ctric541-389-6167 881 winch, extra w heel Ads published in "Wahuman errors do occur. If this happens to and tire. Humming- tercraft" include: KayTravel Trailers your ad, please conb ird F i shfinder, a aks, rafts and motortact us ASAP so that cover fo r t r ailering. ized ompanion 1992 2 5 ' personal C sleeps new fridge, corrections and any Also a top and side watercrafts. 750 For heat/air,7,awning, stabi- Weekend Warrior Toy adjustments can be curtains. Bought new, (2) 2000 A rctic C at " boats" please s e e Redmond Homes lizer bars, 3 batteries, Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, made to your ad. would not c o nsider Class 870. Z L580's EFI with n e w r oof n e eds w o r k. fuel station, exc cond. 541-385-5809 covers, electric start w/ selling it, but moving 541-385-5809 $1,975. 541-504-9387 sleeps 8, black/gray The Bulletin Classified Looking for your next reverse, low miles, both to the coast and need i nterior, u se d 3X , excellent; with new 2009 a larger boat! Many emp/oyee? 634 $19,999 firm. Place a Bulletin help Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, accessories included. 541-408-0273 Apt./Multiplex NE Bend wanted ad today and drive off/on w/double tilt, $5000 firm. Pr inev- Tandem Kayak, Wilderlots of accys. Selling due ille 541-447-3342. reach over 60,000 ness Pamlico 135T, exto m edical r e asons. **No Application Fee ** readers each week. cellent cond, p addles $6000 all. 541-536-8130 2 bdrm, 1 bath, Your classified ad incl, $500. 541-389-6167 $530 8 $540 w/lease. will also appear on Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, 880 Carports included! Cougar 33 ft. 2006, bendbulletin.com short track, variable 14 ft. slide, awning, exhaust valves, elec- 16' which currently reMotorhomes O ld T o w n FOX HOLLOW APTS. easy lift, stability bar, WEEKEND WARRIOR ceives over tric s t art, r e v erse, Camper c a n oe, (541) 383-3152 bumper extends for Toy hauler/travel trailer. 1.5 million page manuals, rec o rds, exc. cond, $ 750. Cascade Rental extra cargo, all ac24' with 21' interior. views every month new spare belt, cover, 541-312-8740 Management. Co. cess. incl., like new heated hand g rips, Sleeps 6. Self-conat no extra cost. condition, stored in tained. Systems/ Bulletin Classifieds nice, fast, $999. Call Call for Specials! RV barn, used less Tom, 541-385-7932, appearancein good Get Results! Limited numbers avail. 17.5' Glastron 2002, than 10 t imes loCall 385-5809 or condition. Smoke-free. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. • Yamaha 750 1999 Chevy eng., Volvo 1978 motor c ally, no p et s o r Tow with y2-ton. Strong place your ad on-line W/D hookups, patios Mountain Max, $1400. outdrive, open bow, Brougham home, Dodge chassis, smoking. $20,000 suspension; can haul at or decks. • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 stereo, sink/Iive well, 17' coach, sleeps 4, obo. 541-536-2709. ATVs snowmobiles, bendbulletin.com MOUNTAIN GLEN, EXT, $1000. w/glastron tr a i ler rear dining. $4500. even a small car! Great 541-383-9313 • Zieman 4-place incl. b oa t c o v e r, 541-602-8652. price - $8900. Professionally trailer, SOLD! 753 Like new, $ 8 500. Call 541-593-6266 managed by Norris 8 All in good condition. 541-447-4876 Sisters Homes Stevens, Inc. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149. Squaw Creek Canyon 648 Fifth Wheels • Estates 70075 Sorrel 860 Houses for Dr. (corner of Sorrel & Mptorcycles & Accessories CHECK YOUR AD Rent General Mt. View) completely Creek Side 20' Alfa See Ya 2005 40' renovated over 3000 excellent cond, 1 owner, 2010, used 8 Davidson 2009 PUBLISHER'S sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 full Harley Super Glide, Stage 17' Cris Craft Scorpion, 4-dr frig w/icemaker, gas times, AC, flat NOTICE bath home, new en- Dyna convection Eagle perscreen TV, oven, All real estate adver- ergy eff. furnace & 1 Screamin' 8 readytofish! I/O & stove/oven, oven, washer/dryer kit + many op- fast microwave, tub/ tising in this newspa- heat pump, wide plank formance trolling motor. Lots of excombo, flatscreen TV, all 11,720 mi, asking shower, awning, wood floors, walk-in tions, on the first day it runs per is subject to the tras! $5000. 541-318-7473 electronics, new tires, $10,900. 541-388-8939 been stored, to make sure it is corF air H o using A c t closets and p antry, many extras. 7.5 diesel non-smokers, no rect. "Spellcheck" and which makes it illegal stone fireplace w i th Hariey Davidson Softgen, lots of storage, Tail De l uxe 2 0 0 7 , pets, 1 owner. human errors do octo a d v ertise "any woodstove insert, 1 i/2 basement freezer, 350 white/cobalt, w / pascur. If this happens to preference, limitation acres, fenced, cov$13,900 obo. Cat Freightliner chassis. 541-410-2360 your ad, please conor disc r imination ered decks, 2-car ga- senger kit, Vance 8 Asking $86,500. See at tact us ASAP so that based on race, color, rage, mtn. views. Just Hines muffler system Crook County RV Park, reduced! $ 3 8 5,000. 8 kit, 1045 mi., exc. corrections and any religion, sex, handi¹43. 520-609-6372 Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L The Bulletin $16,9 9 9 , 18.5' adjustments can be cap, familial status, Call (503) 786-7835 c ond, Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 (recording) To Subscribe call 541-408-0273 made to your ad. marital status or naBOUNDER 1993 hp Bowrider w/depth 541-385-5800 or go to 541-385-5809 tional origin, or an in34.6', 43k miles, Look at: finder, radio/ CD player, tention to make any HDFatBo 1996 www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Classified loaded, $13,900. rod holders, full canvas, Bendhomes.com such pre f e rence, Info - Call EZ Loader trailer, exclnt limitation or discrimi- for Complete Listings of 541-536-8816. cond, $11,500. nation." Familial sta- Area Real Estate for Sale 707-484-3518 (Bend) tus includes children 762 18.7' Sea Ray Monaco, under the age of 18 1984, 185hp, V6 Merliving with parents or Homes with Acreage Cruiser, full canvas, life legal cus t o dians, Completely vests, bumpers, water pregnant women, and 2 Bdrm 2 Bath on 2 Rebuilt/Customized Fleetwood 31' skis, swim float, extra people securing cus- acres - Large shop/ 2012/2013 Award Wilderness Gi prop & more. EZ Loader D odge tody of children under garage, fenced yard, 2 2' 19 7 8 , Winner trailer, never in saltwater, 1999 18. This newspaper cabin. LaPine $83,000 Showroom Condition always garaged, very class C, 67K mi., 12' slide, will not knowingly ac541-390-7394 or good cond.$3500. Many Extras 24' awning, clean, all maint. records. 541-389-4873 cept any advertising 541-771-0143 Low Miles. $5500. 541-389-7329 queen bed, FSC, or up to for real estate which is W $77,000 outside shower, in violation of the law. FIND YOUR FUTURE 541-548-4807 52 weeks E-Z lift stabilizer O ur r e a ders ar e HOME INTHE BULLETIN hitch, like new, -whichever hereby informed that HD Screaming Eagle been stored. all dwellings adver- Your future is just a page Electra Glide 2005, comes first! $10,950. tised in this newspa- away. Whether you're looking E 103" motor, two tone 541-000-000 per are available on for a hat or a place to hangit, candy teal, new tires, Fleetwood D i scovery an equal opportunity The Bulletin Classified is Maxum skiboat,2000, 40' 2003, diesel mo23K miles, CD player, 18' basis. To complain of inboard motor, g r eat your best source. hydraulic clutch, ex- cond, well maintained, torhome w/all Includes up to 40 words of text, up discrimination cal l cellent condition. Every day thousandsof to 2" in length, with border, HUD t o l l -free at $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 options-3 slide outs, Highest offer takes it. satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, 1-800-877-0246. The buyers and sellers of goods full color photo, bold italic 541-480-8080. and services do busi n ess in etc. 3 2 ,000 m i l es. toll f re e t e lephone headline and pricel* Wintered i n h e ated these pages.Theyknow number for the hearshop. $89,900 O.B.O. you can't beat The Bul l etin ing im p a ired is Plus the following publications: 541-447-8664 Classified Section for 1-800-927-9275. The Bulletin daily publication with over selection and convenience 76,000 subscribers. Rent /Own - every item isjust a phone The Central Oregon Marketplace weekly 19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes call away. publication DELIVERED to over 31,000 Honda Shadow/Aero new upholstery, new elec$2500 down, $750 mo. non-subscriber households. Classified Section is 750, 2007 Black, 11K tronics, winch, much more. OAC. J and M Homes The easy to use. Every item The Central Oregon Nickel Ads weekly mi, 60 mpg, new de- $9500. 541-306-0280 541-548-5511 is categorized andevery publication - 15,000 distribution throughout tachable windshield, caitegory is indexed onthe Central and Eastern Oregon. 687 Mustang seat 8 tires; 20' 1993 Sea Nympf Fish G ulfstream S u n section's front page. & Ski, 50 hrs on new sport 30' Class A detachable Paladin Commercial for engine, fish finder, chart 1988 ne w f r i dge, *A $290 valuebased on an ad with the same backrest & luggage Whether youare looking for Rent/Lease rack w/keylock. Vance- plotter 8 VHF radio with TV, solar panel, new extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the a home orneed aservice, antenna. Good shape, refrigerator, wheelabove publications. Hines pipes, great 3000 sq ft @ 40C /sq ft, your future is in the pagesof full cover, heavy duty sound. Cruise control, c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0 W The Bulletin Classified. 3-phase pwr, fire sprintrailer, kicker and electric g enerator, audible turn signals Goo d "Private party merchandise ads only, klers, approx 26' ceilings, for safety. $4495 obo. motors. condition! $18,000 excludes pets, real estate, rentals, 12x14 overhead door. $7500 or best offer. The Bulletin obo 541-447-5504 and garage sale categories. Jack, 541-549-4949 Avail8/1. 530-305-0104 541-292-1834
cQ00
•
Fifth Wheels
541-923-4707
Keystone Sprinter 31', 2008
Call 541-604-1475 or 541-604-1203 (leave
Boats & Accessories
.541-480-7215
Vacation Rentals & Exchanges
Room for rent, top-notch, beautiful area! $500/ month. 541-279-9538.
•
•
low miles on it, self-contained. Runs Great, everything works. $3 000. 541-382-6494
20.5' 2004 Bayliner 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow, exc. cond with very low hours, lots of
637 Acres with recre- 12' SeaKing. great alum. ation cabin and fishing boat, 3 seats, stream. in forest, west V-Hull l ight w e ight, $400. 541-388-2159 Need help fixing stuff? of Silver Lake, OR 775
Rooms for Rent
ATVs
763 Merc. Almost new elec motor. Newer full Recreational Homes trolling canvas top. Many extras. 8 Property $2700. 541-504-8645
705
630
Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $6000 or P artial Trade/firearms 541-647-4232
908
Motorhomes
9-wQ-44%
•
627
Boise, ID Real Estate For relocation info, Ocean front house, call Mike Conklin, each walk from town, 208-941-8458 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, Silvercreek Realty Fireplace, BBQ. $95 per night, 3 night MIN. 745 208-342-6999 Homes for Sale
880
Motprcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories
682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real EstateWanted 719- Real EstateTrades 726 -Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos&Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746- NorthwestBendHomes 747 -Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
00~0~XD~D I)
870
1/3 interest in Columbia Tires: 4 Toyo traction on r i ms, 400, $150,000 (located 205/70R15 minimal tread wear, iN Bend.) Also: Sunri- 5x4.5 bolt pattern, fits ver hangar available for most Hondas, Toyosale at $155K, or lease, tas 8 Mazdas. $200. @ $400/mo 541-504-9387. 541-948-2963 - ~
A S sg
1 /3 interest i n w e llequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510
Antique & Classic Autos
1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541 -389-8963
1952 Ford Customline Coupe, project car, flathead V-8, 3 spd extra parts, & materials, $2000 1/5th interest in 1973 obo. 541-410-7473 Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in L~ q Bend. Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,500. Chevy C-20 Pickup 541-410-6007 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; auto 4-spd, 396, model CST /all options, orig. owner, $19,950,
~P + . «
541-923-6049
IS 1974 BeHanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
ln Madras, call 541-475-6302
Chevy Nova - 1976, $3,400. Rebuilt 327 engine. Call Matt 541-280-9463. FIND IT! BUY IT! SELL IT!
The Bulletin Classifieds
Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN)
60' wide x 50' deep, w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great visibility for aviation business. Financing available. 541-948-2126 or email 1 jetjock@q.com
Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $7,000 OBO / trades. Please call 541-389-6998
E6 TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
• s
v
935
935
975
Sport Utility Vehicles
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
•
Au t o mobiles
•
•
BOATS &RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890- RVsfor Rent
AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 -Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles 932
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
2003 t/s ton 4WD, white, 135k miles,
immaculate. Have maint. records. $5,500. 541-280-7299.
Ford Bronco 1981
• 9
CORVETTE COUPE Chevrolet Corvette Coupe 2007, 20,700 Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport - 4 LT mi., beautiful cond. 3LT loaded, victory loaded, clear bra I'ed, hood & fenders. two-tone leather, powerseats, New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor with logos, memory, headsupdisplay, mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. nav., XM, Bose, tilt, chrome wheels, up$45,000. 503-358-1164. graded drilled slotted b rake r o tors, extra insulation, al- Ford Taurus 2003 SSE ways garaged, seris edan, e xc . co n d ous only $36,500. 63,000 miles. $5,000 541-771-2852. 541-389-9569
Suberu Baj a S p o rt 2005, 4 dr., leather, moon roof, tow pkg., 35K miles, like new. Vin¹101442
4 speed 4x4, 302 $18,999 engine, low m iles, h eaders, roll b a r , S UBA R U . hitch kit, good tires, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. straight body, runs 877-266-3821 great, $950. Dlr ¹0354 541-350-7176 I
©
Ford Excursion 2004
Chrysler 300 C o upe Jeep Wrangler X 2004, 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, Hard top, tow pkg., auto. trans, ps, air, alloys, 49K miles. frame on rebuild, reVin ¹749542 4L One owner, Turbo painted original blue, $16,488 Ford F250 S uperCab Diesel, original blue interior, 2001, Triton V8, May '15 Plymouth B a r racuda Eddie Bauer 4WD, original hub caps, exc. tags, ONLY 89K miles, ~ ~ S U BA R U. chrome, asking $9000 1966, original car! 300 $6495 obo 541-610-6150 46,400 miles, hp, 360 V8, center2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. or make offer. $26,500 lines, 541-593-2597 541-385-9350 877-266-3821 Call (206) 849-4513 Dlr ¹0354 in Bend. Ford Mustang Coupe PROJECT CARS:Chevy « Ba « 9 1966, original owner, 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & I nternational Fla t Jeep Cherokee 1991 V8, automatic, great Chevy Coupe 1950 shape, $9000 OBO. rolling chassis's $1750 Bed Pickup 1963, 1 Laredo 4WD, 189K, 4.0 L 530-515-8199 ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, t on dually, 4 s p d. in-line 6, auto, air, cloth, complete car, $ 1949; trans., great MPG, well-maintained, $1900. Advertise your car! Cadillac Series 61 1950, could be exc. wood 541-330-8777 Add A Ptcture! 2 dr. hard top, complete hauler, runs great, Subaru Tribeca 2009, Reach thousands of readers! w/spare f r on t cl i p ., new brakes, $1950. Jeep Wrangler 2005 6 c yl., A WD, w e ll Call 541-385-5809 $3950, 541-382-7391 541-419-5480. Rubicon hardtop, 34k The Bulletin Classifieds equipped. Vin mi. ¹373768. $21,995
933
$17,988
935
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
with 351 Cleveland modified engine. Body is in excellent condition, $2500 obo.
¹403118
Oregon AnroSonree 541-598-3750
www.aaaoregonauto-
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...
source.com
Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390
$8,999
©
BUBBRUOBBRND COM
541-598-3750 aaaoregonautosource.com
Chevy 2500 HD 2003 Ford Th underbird 4 WD w o r k t ru c k , 1955, new white soft 140,000 miles, $7000 top, tonneau cover obo. 541-408-4994.
541-548-1422
Find It in
The Bulletin Classifiedsl 541-385-5809
GMC Yzton 1971, Only $19,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171
F ord F - 15 0 XL T 1992 4WD, s uper cab, long bed, 5.0 litre, 138k mi., power
seats, $2,600. Call for more info, Rick. 541-633-7017
Legal Notices
complaint, a copy of LEGAL NOTICE which was filed with IN THE CIRCUIT the abo v e-entitled COURT FOR THE Court. STATE OF OREGON You must "appear" in IN AND FOR THE this case or the other COUNTY OF side will win automatiDESCHUTES c ally. T o "appear" O NEWEST BANK , you must file with the
Ford Aerostar 1994 Eddie Bauer Edition Fully Loaded, Mint Condition! Runs Excellent! $3000. 541-350-1201 975
Automobiles
Buick LeSabre Custom 2004, rare 75k, $6000, worth way more. leather, heated seats, nice wheels. Good tires, 30 mpg, white. Convinced? Call Bob 541-318-9999
9UBBRUOlBRND COM
Legal Notices claim must be signed by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, and state: (a) Your
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE The Trust Deed to be foreclosed pursuant to true name; (b) The O regon law is r eaddress at which you ferred to as follows will a c cept f u t u re (the "Trust Deed"): m ailings f ro m th e rantor: Steven W . a legal docu- court and f o rfeiture G FSB, its successors in court Cameron and Nancy ment called a "motion" counsel; and (3) A i nterest and/or a s "answer." The s tatement that y o u Cameron, as tenants signs, Plaintiff, v. UN- or t he enti r ety. "motion" or "answer" have an interest in the by KNOWN HEIRS OF "reply") must be seized property. Your Trustee: Deschutes CLIFTON G. (or C ounty Title C o mgiven to t h e c o u rt deadline for filing the HUTCHINS; UNITED pany. Beneficiary: Miclerk or administrator claim document with STATES OF Oregon Fed e r al forfeiture cou n s el d A MERICA; S T A T E within 30 days of the Credit Union, PO Box date of first publican amed below is 2 1 OF OREGON; OCB e nd , OR tion specified herein days from the last day 6749, C UPANTS OF T H E 97708. Date: June 12, a long with t h e r e of publication of this PREMISES; AND 2007. Reco r ding THE REAL P R OP- q uired filing fee. I t notice. Where to file Date: June 18, 2007. be i n p r oper a claim and for more Recording Reference: ERTY LOCATED AT must form and have proof i nformation: Da i n a 6 1450 BLAK E L Y County o f service o n t h e Vitolins, Crook County 2007-33909. ROAD, BEND, ORo f Recording: D e s plaintiff's attorney or, District Attorney OfEGON 97702, DefenCounty. The the plaintiff does not fice, 300 N E T h i rd chutes dants. C a s e No. ifhave Successor Trustee is a n at t orney, Street, Prineville, OR 13CV0294. S UMPatrick L . S t e vens MONS BY PUBLICA- proof of service on the 97754. the mailing adNotice of r e asons and T ION TO TH E D E - plaintiff. of the SuccesIf you have any ques- for F orfeiture: The dress FENDANTS: sor Trustee is: Patrick tions, you should see property d e s cribed L. Stevens, SuccesU NKNOWN H E I R S an attorney immedibelow was seized for OF C L I FTON G . ately. I f y o u n e ed forfeiture because it: sor Trustee, HutchinHUTCHINS: son, Cox, Coons, Orr help in finding an at(1) Constitutes t he In the name of the State torney, you may con& Sherlock, P.C., PO proceeds of the violaof Oregon, you are tact the Oregon State Box 10886, Eugene, tion of, solicitation to h ereby required t o 97440. The Trust Lawyer Referral v iolate, a t tempt t o OR appear and answer Bar's covers the folS ervice o n line a t violate, or conspiracy Deed the c omplaint f iled lowing described real www.oregonstatebar. to violates, the crimia gainst you i n t h e org or by calling (503) property in the County nal laws of the State above-entitled C ourt f D e schutes a n d ( in t h e of Oregon regarding o and cause on or be- 684-3763 State of Oregon, (Bthe Portland metropolitan the manufacture, disfore the expiration of area) or toll-free else- tribution, or posses- Property"): Lot Nine, 30 days from the date where in Oregon at Block Two, SUMMIT sion of controlled sub- ACRES, D e schutes of the first publication (800) 452-7636. stances (ORS County, of this summons. The This Oreg o n. u m mons is Chapter475); and/or date of first publica- issueds pursuant Commonly known as: to (2) Was used or in- 16486 Sprague Loop, tion in this matter is 7. RCO t ended for u s e i n July 16, 2013. If you ORCP LaPine, OR 9 7 739. LEGAL, P.C. committing or f a cilifail timely to appear Both the beneficiary Michael Botthof, tating the violation of, and answer, plaintiff and the trustee have OSB ¹113337 solicitation to violate, will a pply t o the mbotthofOrcolegal.com elected to sell the said attempt to violate, or above-entitled c o u rt property to satfor Plaintiff conspiracy to violate real for the relief prayed Attorneys isfy th e o b ligations 511 SW 10th Ave., the criminal laws of for in its c omplaint. secured trust Ste. 400. Portland, the State of Oregon deed andbya said This is a judicial forenotice of OR 97205 regarding the manuclosure of a deed of has been reP: (503) 977-7840 facture, distribution or default t rust i n w h ic h t h e corded pursuant to F: (503) 977-7963 p ossession of c o nplaintiff requests that Revised Stattrolled su b stances Oregon t he plaintiff b e a l LEGAL NOTICE utes 86.735(3). The (ORS Chapter 475). lowed t o f o r ecloseNOTICE OF SEIZURE default for which foreFOR CIVIL c losure is m ade i s y our interest in t he IN THE MATTER OF: following d e scribed FORFEITURE TO ALL G rantor's failure t o real property: POTENTIAL p ay when due t he (1)US Currency in the following sums: The PARCEL TWO (2) OF CLAIMANTS AND TO amount of 29,470.00, P ARTITION PLA T ALL UNKNOWN monthly i n s tallment RE- PERSONS READ THIS Case No 13000282, 2004-25, payments of s eized January 4 , CORDED MARCH 22, CAREFULLY $1,062.29 beginning 2013 from David and 2004 IN PARTITION J une 1, 2 0 1 2 a n d Miriam Tyson. PLAT 2-539, D E S- If you have any intercontinuing through the CHUTES COUNTY, est i n t h e s e i z ed installment due April CLASSIFIEOS OREGON property d e s cribed BULLETIN 1, 2013; plus interest Commonly known as: below, you must claim Search the area's most and late charges; real 61450 Blakely Road, that interest or you will comprehensive listing of property taxes, plus Bend, Oregon 97702. automatically lose that classified advertising... interest and penalties; NOTICE TO DEFENinterest. If you do not real estate to automotive, and other liens and DANTS: READ file a c laim for t he merchandise to sporting penalties. T otal deT HESE PAPE R S property, the property ault as o f A p ril 1 , Bulletin Classifieds f2013 CAREFULLY! may be forfeited even goods. is $ 11,685.19. appear every day in the A lawsuit has b e en if you are not conThe sum owing on the print or on line. started against you in victed of any crime. o bligation t ha t th e the abo v e -entitled To claim an interest, Trust Deed secures Call 541-385-5809 court b y O n eWest you must file a written www.bendbulletin.com the "Obligation") is: Bank, FSB, plaintiff. claim with the forfei157,760.02, t oPlaintiff's claims are ture counsel named ether with the sum of SBCNDgCBDUBIOCBgOD lMCB ee stated in the written below, Th e w r i tten 6,008.09, which rep-
The Bulletin
Porsche 911 Turbo
2003 6 speed, X50
Have an item to sell quick? Kia Soul+ 2012, keyIf it's under less entry, buletooth, '500 you can place it in alloys. Vin ¹445234 $14,788 The Bulletin Classifieds for: 4@ SU B ARU.
"My little red Corvette" Coupe
Iet
BUBBRUOBBRND COM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
1996, 350 auto,
132,000 miles. Non-ethanol fuel & synthetic oil only, garaged, premium Bose stereo,
$11,000.
541-923-1781
Ntssan 350Z 2005 Black, excellent condition, 22,531 gently driven miles, 1 owner, non-smoker, $15,500.
CORVETTE Convertible 2005 Automatic LS2 high
Vin ¹976007
©
$1,999 S UBA R U . BUBBRUOBBRND COM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Toyota Camryst 1984, SOLD; 1985 SOLD; 1986 parts car only one left! $500 Call for details, 541-548-6592 People Lookfor Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough
La Pine, 541-602-8652.
Vans
Buick Century Limited Chevy Equinox LT 2000, r un s g r e at, Sport AWD 20 10. Subaru Baja T u r bo beautiful car. $3400. Auto, 6-Spd w/OverSport 2005, Auto, tow 541-312-3085 drive, 29 Hwy mpg, pkg., two tone, moon 41K miles, traction Buick Lucerne CXS roof, alloys. control, keyless en2006 Sports sedan, Vin¹103619 try, moonroof, air, low miles, all the nice $16,488 power e v erything, features you'll want, X M S a tellite e n truly an exc. buy at 4@~~ S UBARU. gaged, OnStar avail. $8000. Come & see MP3. $21,500. Call 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. no charge for looking. 541-419-0736. 877-266-3821 Ask Buick Bob, Dlr ¹0354 541-318-9999
1000
Legal Notices
Ford Taurus Wagon 2004, 120K miles, loaded! $4200 or trade for motorhome. 541-815-9939
away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
940
S UBA R U . engine, power every5 41-385 -5 8 0 9 A R U. thing, new paint, 54K © ? S U B BUBBRUOBBBND COM 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. original m i les, runs 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Nissan 2011 Juke awd great, excellent condi877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 NAV, moonroof, tion in & out. Asking Dlr ¹0354 ¹016566 $2 0 ,995 $8,500. 541-480-3179 Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Oregon Super Seller rates! AutoSource 541-385-5809
and upholstery. New chrome. B e a utiful Car. $25, 0 0 0.
'~p=-
RUBBRUOBBRND COM
U
541-589-4047
added power pkg., Ford Focus S 2010 se- 530 HP! Under 10k d an, A/ C 3 1 k m i . , miles, Arctic silver, ¹138045 $ 1 1 ,495 gray leather interior, new quality t i res, and battery, Bose Oregon premium sound steAutoSource reo, moon/sunroof, 541-598-3750 car and seat covers. www.aaaoregonautoMany extras. Gasource.com raged, perfect conChrysler Newport dition $5 9 ,700. (2) 1962 4 door sedans, 541-589-4047 $2500 and $5500.
~ SUBA R U .
Say Ugoodbuy Chevy 1500 Exf Cab 1995, lift, took b ox, BMW X5 2005, loaded, to that unused custom bum p ers, leather, Sport P k g. item by placing it in m uch m ore, v e r y Vin ¹E82257 clean. Vin ¹153791 The Bulletin Classifieds $17,988
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
...don't let time get
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
541-420-4677
1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto.
Subaru Legacy Outback Wagon 1996, 5 spd, air, power windows, power locks,
~& sgi I"I(-
BUBBRUOBBRND COM
Ford Ranchero 1979
Automo b iles
Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e
Chevy Suburban
•
Automobiles •
'10 - 3 lines, 7 days '16 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only) Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928
The Bulletin Clessineds
Toyota Corolla 2011, auto, air, tilt, MP3. Vin ¹630707
$12,788
S UB A R U . 9UBBRUOBBRND COM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Toyota Yaris 2010 wonderful little car, 40 mpg on hwy, $8,500. 541-410-1078
Volkswagen Karmann Ghia 1970 convertible, very rare, new top & interior upholstery, $9000. 541-389-2636 WHEN YOU SEE THIS
~OO
MorePixatBendbuletin,com
On a classified ad performance motor, go to 541-390-6081 only 29k miles, Sterwww.bendbulletin.com ling S ilver, b l ack to view additional Subaru Impreza WRX leather interior, Bose photos of the item. STI 2005, 6 s p e ed, premium sound stepower windows, reo, new quality tires DON'TMI SSTHIS Want to Impress the and battery, car and power locks Alloys seat covers, many Olds Aurora 1999, white Vin ¹506223 relatives? Remodel extras. Rec e ntly 4-dr, 134K miles, front Call for Details your home with the factory serviced. help of a professional wheel drive, leather, ©' Garaged. B eautiful S U B A R U. air, CD/radio, excelfrom The Bulletin's car, Perfect cond. lent condition. $4000 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. "Call A Service $29,700 or best offer. 877-266-3821 541-589-4047 Professional" Directory 541-548-5886 Dlr ¹0354 BUBBRUOlBRND COM
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
1000
Legal Notices
resents unpaid contractual interest, fees and l at e ch a rges through and including A pril 15, 2 0 13, t o gether with interest on the principal sum of $ 157,760.02 at t h e rate of 4.00% per annum from April 16, 2013 until paid, together with insurance paid by the Beneficiary on the property,
dwelling under a legitimate rental agreement. The i nformation does not apply to you if you own this property or if you are not a bona fide residential tenant. If the foreclosure sale goes through, t h e new owner will have the right to require you to move out. Before the new owner can relate charges and pen- quire you to move, the alties, trustee f ees, new owner must proattorney fees, foreclo- vide you with written sure costs and any notice that specifies sums advanced by the date by which you the Beneficiary pursu- must move out. If you ant to the trust deed. do not leave before By reason of the de- the move-out date, fault, the Beneficiary the new owner can and the Trustee elect have the sheriff reto sell the Property to move you from the satisfy the Obligation property after a court and to foreclose the hearing. You will reTrust Deed by adver- c eive notice of t h e t isement an d s a l e court hearing. PROpursuant t o ORS TECTION FROM 86.705 to 86.795. At E VICTION: IF Y O U p ublic auction, t h e ARE A BONA FIDE Trustee shall sell to TENANT O C CUPYthe highest bidder for ING AND RENTING cash the interest in THIS PROPERTY AS the Property which the A RES I D ENTIAL Grantor had, or had DWELLING, YOU the power to convey, HAVE THE R I GHT at the time of the ex- TO CONTINUE LIVecution by Grantor of ING IN THIS PROPthe Trust Deed, toE RTY AFTER T H E gether with any inter- FORECLOSURE est Gr a nto r or SALE FOR: • T H E Grantor's successors REMAINDER OF in interest acquired YOUR FIXED TERM after the execution of LEASE, I F YOU t he Trust Deed, to HAVE A FIXED satisfy the Obligation. TERM LEASE; OR • The date, time and AT LEAST 90 DAYS place of the sale is: F ROM TH E D A T E D ate: September 4 , YOU ARE GIVEN A 2013. Time: 11:00 WRITTEN TERMINAo'clock a.m. P lace: TION NOTICE. If the Deschutes C o u nty new owner wants to Courthouse, 1100 NW move in and use this Bond St., Bend, OR property as a primary 97701. NOTICE TO r esidence, the n e w RESIDENTIAL TENowner can give you ANTS: The property in written notice and rewhich you are living is quire you to move out in foreclosure. A fore- after 90 days, even closure sale is sched- though you have a uled for September 4, fixed term lease with 2013. The date of this more than 90 days sale may b e p ost- left. You must be prop oned. Unless t h e vided with at least 90 lender that i s f o re- days' written notice closing on this prop- after the foreclosure erty is paid before the sale before you can sale date, the foreclo- be required to move. sure will go through A bona fide tenant is a and someone new will residential tenant who own this property. Af- is not the borrower ter the sale, the new (property owner) or a owner is required to child, spouse or parprovide you with con- ent of the borrower, tact information and and w h os e r e n tal notice that the sale agreement: • Is t h e took place. The folresult of a n a r m'slowing in f o rmation length transaction; applies to you only if R equires th e p a y you are a bona fide ment of rent that is not tenant occupying and substantially less than renting this property fair market rent for the as a resi d e ntial property, unless the •
r ent is r e duced o r subsidized due to a federal, state or local subsidy; and • W a s entered into prior to the date of the foreclosure sale. ABOUT YOUR TEN A NCY BETWEEN NOW A ND T H E FO R E C LOSURE SAL E : RENT YOU SHOULD CONTINUE TO PAY RENT TO
YOUR L A N DLORD UNTIL THE P ROPERTY IS SOLD OR
U NTIL A COU R T T ELLS YO U O T H ERWISE. IF YOU DO N OT P A Y RE N T , YOU CAN BE EVICTED. BE SURE TO KEEP PROOF OF ANY PAY M E NTS YOU MAKE. SECURITY DEPOSIT: You
Legal Notices foreclosure sale that you must move out, the new owner bec omes y o u r ne w l andlord an d m u s t maintain the property. Otherwise: • You do not owe rent; • Th e new owner is not your landlord and is not responsible for m aintaining the property on your behalf; and • You must move out by the date the new owner specifies in a notice to you. The new owner may offer to pay your moving expenses and a ny other costs o r amounts you and the new owner agree on in exchange for your agreement to l e ave the premises in less than 90 days or before your fixed term lease expires. Y ou should speak with a lawyer to fully understand your rights before making any decisions regarding your tenancy. IT I S U N-
Legal Notices be due, had no default occurred); (2) Curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering th e p e r formance required under the Trust Deed;
and (3) Paying all costs and expenses
a ctually Incurred I n enforcing the Obligation and Trust Deed, with together Trustee's and a ttorney's fees n o t exceeding the
amounts provided by ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, t h e word "Grantor" includes any successor in interest to the Grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, may apply your secuthe performance of rity deposit and any which is secured by rent you paid in adthe Trust Deed, and vance against the curthe words "Trustee" rent rent you owe your and "Beneficiary" inlandlord as provided clude their respective in ORS 90.367. To do successors in interest, L AWFUL FOR A N Y this, you must notify if any. We are a debt your landlord in writPERSON TO TRY TO collector attempting to ing that you want to FORCE Y O U TO collect a debt and any subtract the amount of LEAVE YOUR Informatfon we obtafn UNIT your security deposit DWELLING be used to collect or prepaid rent from W ITHOUT FI R S T will debt. Cashier's your rent p ayment. GIVING YOU WRIT- the for the foreYou may do this only TEN NOTICE AND checks closure sale must be for the rent you owe G OING TO C O U R T payable to M i dOreyour current landlord. TO EVICT YOU. FOR gon Federal Credit If you do t his, you MORE IN F O RMAUnion. Dated: April must do so before the TION ABOUT YOUR 23, 2013. /s/ Patrick foreclosure sale. The RIGHTS, YOU L. Stevens. Patrick L. business or individual SHOULD CONSULT Stevens, S uccessor who buys this prop- A LAWYER. If y o u Hutchinson, erty at the foreclosure believe you need le- Trustee, ox, Coons, Orr & sale is not r espon- gal assistance, con- C Sherlock, P.C. Attorsible to you for any tact the Oregon State neys at Law, PO Box deposit o r p r e paid Bar and ask for the 10886, Eugene, OR rent you paid to your lawyer referral ser- 97440, Phone: (541) l andlord. A BOU T vice. Contact informaFax: (541) YOUR TEN A NCY tion for the Oregon 686-9160, D at e of AFTER THE FOREState Bar is included 343-8693. First Publication: June CLOSURE SALE: The with this notice. If you 25, 2013. Date of Last new owner that buys do not have enough Publication: July 16, this property at t he money to pay a law- 2013. foreclosure sale may yer and are otherwise be willing to allow you eligible, you may be LEGAL NOTICE to stay as a tenant in- able to receive legal Wall Storage, stead of requiring you assistance for f r ee. L LC Street at 1 3 1 5 N W to move out after 90 I nformation abo u t Wall St., Bend, OR days or at the end of whom to contact for 9 7701 will be a c your fixed term lease. free legal assistance cepting sealed bids After the sale, you is included with this JULY, 26 2013 should receive a writ- n otice. R IGHT T O on from 9 am to 2 pm ten notice informing CURE: The right ex- for t h e fo l lowing u n d e r ORS u nits: you that the sale took ists THAY N E place and giving you 86.753 to have this B11; the n e w own e r's foreclosure proceed- OWENS: JO KOWALname and contact in- ing dismissed and the ANNA formation. You should Trust Deed reinstated SKI: J4. contact t h e new by doing all of the folowner if yo u w ould lowing at any time that USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! like to stay. If the new is not later than five owner accepts rent days before the date Door-to-door sellfng wIth from you, signs a new last set for the sale: fast results! It s the easIest r esidential rent a l (1)Paying to the Ben- way in the world to sell agreement with you or eficiary th e e n t i re does not notify you in a mount t he n du e The Bulletin Classified writing within 30 days (other than such por541-385-5809 after the date of the tion as would not then
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