t~-:J\[o:RfH ~FO:lk , TRAJ L
-
ND,~4J2
.. ,,~i2?l~ICYCL.E$J !J P riiLL OJIILY J .:~: i{~jMi-~_Uf rJ.\lL~ VLLW POIIII T 1/ 4 H;\:P PY V;.\ LU:f 4
Roller hockey in Bend · D1
Happy trails beyond Tumalo Falls • B1
@
AUGUST 16,
THURSDAY
2012
75¢
Serving Central Oregon since 1903 www. bendbulletin.com
RUN NOW, TEXT LATER
Federal grant may mean more flights out of Redmond
Audit: State overpaid jobless by $32.6M
By Erik Hidle The Bulletin
By Lauren Dake
A $500,000 federal grant awarded to the Redmond Airport has the region's largest airport preparing to board flights for Los Angeles. The competitive U.S. Department of Transportation grant will assist the city in developing new flights from the airport. A study conducted earlier this year by aviation consultants Mead & Hunt found high demand in Redmond for flights to Los Angeles, a destination the airport hasn't serviced since 2010. "It was offered by Horizon (airlines), and as I understand it did quite well," said airport director Kim Dickie. "But they pulled the flight in 2010 when they changed their business (plan)." Now the airport hopes to entice an airline to return service to Los Angeles, or perhaps to nearby John Wayne Airport in Orange County. "The $500,000 is to help (a prospective) airline with startup costs and provide them with a revenue guarantee," Dickie said. "That would help supplement them for a time if they are not operating in the black:' See Airport I A6
The Bulletin
SALEM -A state audit released Wednesday showed the Employment Department overpaid $32.6 million in unemployment benefits, some of which will likely not be recovered. "It's money that is actually paid by businesses in Oregon toward unemployment, so it's very important the money is well spent," said Gary Blackmer, .llml. director of the secretary of state's audit division. The overpayments are only IN 1 percent of the $2 .3 billion paid out by the agency last year, and agency SALEM officials said fixes have already been made to decrease the number of overpayments for the next fiscal year. The audit was what the state calls an "information technology audit," which examines the software controlling the state's major expenditures to ensure it is functioning accurately. Of the amount overpaid, it took longer than six months to discover that $23 million had been misspent. About $6 million, the audit found, would likely never be recovered. "During this Great Recession, unemployment benefits have been a lifeline to so many Oregonians," Secretary of State Kate Brown said in a statement. "Still, it's important for the Employment Department to minimize overpayments and to set up sound procedures for collecting that money to protect taxpayers and businesses." See Audit I A6
••
j.i;
Thousands line up in hope of gaining U.S. work permit
Montana tribe divided on tapping oil-rich land
By AmyTaxin The Associa ted Press
By Jack Healy New York Times News Service
BLACKFEET INDIAN RESERVATION, Mont. - The mountains along the eastern edge of Glacier National Park rise from the prairie like dinosaur teeth, their silvery ridges and teardrop fields of snow forming the doorway to one of America's most pristine places. Yes, there is beauty here on the Blackfeet reservation, but there is also oil, locked away in the tight shale thousands of feet underground. And tribal leaders have decided to tap their land's buried wealth. The move has divided the tribe while igniting a debate over the promise and perils of hydraulic fracturing, or tracking, in a place where grizzlies roam into backyards and many residents see the land as something living and sacred. All through the billiardgreen mesas leading up to the mountains are signs of the boom. Well pads and water tanks dot the rolling hills. Tractor-trailers loaded with chemicals and drilling machinery kick up contrails of dust along the reservation's winding gravel roads. S ee Oii i A6
0
We use recycled newsprint
V
88267 0232 9
icki O'Halloran, left, and Sarah Gribionkin, both of Bend, run along the shoulder of U.S. Highway 20 west of Sisters on Wednesday morning.
O'Halloran started running on Aug. 1 north of Portland and plans to cover 11.3 miles each day until she reaches the Oregon-California border. She was
in a car accident in which she was texting while driving, and is running to call attention to the issue. Gribionkin, a friend of O'Halloran's, is training for a half marathon and was accompanying her on the day's run. O'Halloran is looking for sponsors for her and her crew, and donations to the TXT L8R campaign. For more information, visit the Facebook page www.facebook.com/RunOregonTxtL8r.
As U.S. sounds alarm, Hezbollah operates with few limits in Europe By Nicholas Kulish New Y ork Times N ews Service
BERLIN - As American officials sound the alarm over what they call a resurgent threat from the Shiite militant group Hezbollah, thousands of its members and supporter s operate with few restrictions in Europe, raising money that is funneled to the group's leadership in Lebanon.
Vol. 109, No. 229, 40 pages, 7 sections
Washington and Jerusa lem insist that Hezbollah is an Iranian-backed terrorist organization with bloody hands, and that it is currently working closely with Tehran to train, arm and finance the Syria n military's lethal repression of the uprising there. Yet, the European Union continues to treat it foremost as a Lebanese political and social movement.
INDEX
The Bulletin An Independent N ewspaper
11111111111111111111
0
Joe Kline / T he Bulletin
SANTA ANA, Calif. - Nathaly Uribe has all the papers she needs to get a work permit - something the 17-year-old daughter of a construction worker only dreamed of growing up as an illegal immigrant in the United States. The high school senior said she hopes a federal program beginning Wednesday that defers deportation for illegal immigrants will make it easier to get a decent job and help pay for college. "This is my country. It's where my roots are," said Uribe, who moved from Chile when she was a toddler and lives in Glen Burnie, Md. "It feels great to know that the country that I call home is finally accepting me." Thousands of young illegal immigrants lined up Wednesday hoping for the right to work legally in America without being deported. The Obama administration's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals could expand the rights of more than 1 million young illegal immigrants by giving them work permits, though they would not obtain legal residency here or a path to citizenship. See Immigrants I A5
Business Calendar Classified
E1-4 Comics B4-5 B3 Crosswords 85, G2 G1 -6 Editorials C4
F1 -6 Health Local News C1-6 Outing 81 -6
As Israel heightens fears of a preemptive strike on Iran's nuclear sites, intelligence analysts warn that Iran an d Hezbollah would respond with attacks of their own on targets abroad. Israeli a nd American officials have attributed the Bulgarian bus bombing last month that killed six people, including five Israeli tourists, to Hezbollah and
TODAY'S WEATHER Sports 01 -6 E2-3 Stocks lV&Movies 82
Sunny High 92, Low 53
Page C6
Iran, saying it was part of a clandestine offensive that has included plots in Tha iland, India, Cyprus and elsewhere. While the group is believed to operate all over the Continent, Germany is a center of activity, with 950 members and supporters last year, up from 900 in 20 lO, according to official reports. See Hezbollah I A6
TOP NEWS VOTER ID: Judge upholds law, A3 PAKISTAN: Militants attack, A3
A2
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
The Bulletin
SMART START
How to reach us STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?
541-385-5800 Phone hours: 530 a.m.- 5 p.m. Mon.-Fri., 6:30 a.m.-noon Sat-Sun.
GENERAL INFORMATION
541-382-1811 ONLINE www.bendbulletin.com EMAIL bulletin@bendbulletin.com NEWSROOM AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS
541-383-0367 NEWSROOM FAX
541-385-5804 NEWSROOM EMAIL Business ..... business@bendbulletin.com City Desk ........... news@bendbulletin.com Community life ... communitylife@bendbulletin.com Sports ............. sports@bendbulletin.com
OUR ADDRESS Street Mailing
1777 SW Chandler Ave. Bend , OR 97702 P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman
Elizab6tl1 G. McCool ........541 -383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ....................541-383-0339 Editor-in-Chief John Costa ......................541 -383-0337
DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising Jay Brandt ................... 541 -383-0370 Circulation and Operations Keith Foutz ......................... 541 -385-5805 Finance Karen Anderson ...541-383-0324 Human Resources Traci Donaca .....................541 -383-0327
TALK TO AN EDITOR Business ...........................541-383-0360 City Desk Sheila G. Miller .................541-61 7-7831 Mike Braham..................... 541-383-0348 Community life, Health Julie Johnson .................... 541 -383-0308 Editorials Richard Coe .....541-383-0353 Family, At Home Alandra Johnson ..............541 -617-7860 GO! Magazine Ben Salmon ...................... 541 -383-0377 News Editor Jan Jordan ... 541 -383-0315 Photos Dean Guernsey ..... 541 -383-0366 Sports Bill Bigelow ...........541-383-0359
REDMOND BUREAU Street address ..... 226 N.W Sixth St Redmond, OR 97756 Mailing address... P.O. Box 788 Redmond, OR 97756 Phone . ...................... 541-504-2336 Fax ...................................541 -548-3203
CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primarJ conce rn is that all stories are accurate. If you know of an error in a story, call us at 541 -383-0358.
TO SUBSCRIBE Home delivery and E-Edition: One month: $11 (Print only $10.50) By mail in Deschutes County: One month: $14.50 By mail outside Deschutes County: One month: $18 E-Edition only: One month: $8 TO PLACE AN AD Classified ......................... 541-385-5809 Advertising tax ................. 541-385-5802 otherinformalion ............ 541-382-1 811
OTHER SERVICES Photo reprints .................. 541 -383-0358 Obituaries ......................... 541-617-7825 Back issues ...................... 541-385-5800 All Bulkltin payments are accepted at the drop box at City Hall. Check payments may be converted to an electronic funds transfer. The Bulletin, USPS #552-520, is published daily by Western Communications Inc., 1777 SW Chandler Ave , Bend, OR 97702. Periodicals postage paid at Bend, OR. Postmaster: Send address changes t o The
Bulletin circulation department. PO. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. The Bulletin retains ownership and copyr\)ht protection of all staff-prepared news copy, advertising copy and news or ad illustrations. They may not be reproduced without explicit prior approval.
•
Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oreg onlottery.org
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
®@@@@Q The estimated jackpot is now $40 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
@@@@@@ The estimated jackpot is now $4 million .
Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, names in the news - things you need to know to start your day.
HEALTH
TODAY
Athletes on the juice (cherry and beet)
It's Thursday, Aug. 16, the 229th day of 2012. There are 137 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS
By Gretchen Reynolds
"My (Gaelic football) teammates are all at least 20 years younger than me. I would attribute the ability to maintain the fitness required to play in part to the tart cherry juice."
New York Times News Service
Many of the Olympians competing in London were juiced - though not in the colloquial sense that they were doping. Instead, this juice is literal, with beetroot juice and tart cherry juice two of the most popular choices. Growing numbers of elite athletes are turning to these natural beverages to provide what they hope will be a legal performance benefit. Recent studies, however, raise questions about whether the athletes are necessarily receiving the benefits that they think they are, and what that means for the rest of us who'd love to find fitness in a glass. Beetroot juice, as the name implies, is created from the fleshy parts of a beet. Who first imagined that liquefying beets might improve physical performance is unknown. But in a series of studies in the past two years, beetroot juice has been found to enhance certain types of athletic performance. In a representative study published last year, for instance, cyclists who ingested 16 ounces of beetroot juice before a 2.5-mile or a 10-mile time trial were almost 3 percent faster than when they rode unjuiced. They also produced more power with each pedal stroke.
The slightest edge Since in the world of elite sports a 3 percent improvement in performance is enormous, athletes quickly embraced the juice. Beetroot juice was reportedly a staple among British track and field athletes at the Olympics, including Mo Farah, who won the gold medal in the men's 10,000-meter race, and among other Olympic runners, swimmers, rowers cyclists and soccer players. Although it isn't clear just how beetroot juice improves performance, it seems to improve blood and oxygen flow to muscles, said Andrew Jones, a professor of applied physiology at the University of Exeter in England, who's led many of the studies of beetroot juice and athletic performance. It also prompts muscles to use that augmented oxygen more efficiently. "There is a lower oxygen cost" to exercise when someone is drinking beetroot juice, he said. But that advantage may not exist in all types of exercise, other research suggests. A cautionary study published last
- Malachy McHugh, research director, Nicholas Institute of Sports Medicine and Athletic Trauma, Lenox Hill Hospital, Manhattan
The Associated Press file photo
Montmorency cherries are used in the creation of a tart juice popular among Olympic athletes for its ability to help the body recover from hard exertion.
month found that a single dose of beetroot juice several hours before a one-hour cycling time trial did not noticeably improve riders' performance. What that finding suggests, said Naomi Cermak, a researcher at the University of Maastricht in the Netherlands who led the study, is that beetroot juice, while effective at improving performance in short, extremely strenuous bouts of exercise, may have less effect during longer, relatively less intense types of exertion. In other words, the juice might help an 800-meter runner but perhaps not a marathoner. Based on the currently available science, Cermak added, it's also likely that benefits will be most evident in someone who drinks the juice regularly, not someone who tries it for the first time on the day of a race. So if you wish to experiment with beetroot as a performance booster, begin at least a week before a race or strenuous event. In many experiments, volunteers drank 16 ounces a day, though some studies used concentrated beetroot "shots." And be prepared for a period of acclimation. Beetroot iuice is "an acquired taste," Jones said.
In studies by McHugh and colleagues, tart cherry juice reduced muscle pain and weakness after bouts of intense strength training as well as after a marathon. In a similar experiment by other researchers, racers in the annual Hood to Coast 196-mile relay race in Oregon reported significantly less pain after the race if they drank tart cher ry juice in the week beforehand. Tart cherry juice has notable anti-inflammatory and antioxidant capabilities, McHugh said, although the particular components of the juice that are most active in that context are still being teased out. When he asked food scientist colleagues to analyze the juice, he said, "I was given a list of 30-plus compounds" that were likely to contribute to the drink's benefits. As for dose, his and other experiments have usually given volunteers two 8- or 12-ounce bottles of tart cherry juice a day, the equivalent of close to
100 Montmorency cherries. (Sweet cherries, by the way, have shown little efficacy in :;uch experiments.) McHugh and virtually all other exercise scientists looking into the potential benefits of juices caution that much science remains to be done to understand who will benefit and how, as well as whether there is such a thing as too much of a good thing. (Nitrate, for example, a key component of beetroot juice, has been found in extremely high doses to be carcinogenic and to contribute to other diseases.) Still, McHugh, for one, is a tart cherry juice convert. A dedicated player of Gaelic football, he downs "a bottle a day and two bottles on days of heavy training sessions or games," he said. "My teammates are all at least 20 years younger than me. I would attribute the ability to maintain the fitness required to play in part to the tart cheny juice."
• Facebook's early investors and a handful of directors become eligible to sell stock they own in the social networking company.
IN HISTORY Highlights: In 1962, The Beatles fired their original drummer, Pete Best, replacing him with Ringo Starr. In 1977, Elvis Presley died at his Graceland estate in Memphis, Tenn., at age 42. Ten years ago: Terrorist mastermind Abu Nidal reportedly wasfound shot to death in Baghdad, Iraq; he was 65. Five years ago: Jose Padilla, a U.S. citizen held for 3Y2 years as an enemy combatant, was convicted in Miami of helping Islamic extremists and plotting overseas attacks. One year ago: Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany and French President Nicolas Sarkozy, meeting in Paris, called for greater economic discipline and unity among European nations but declined to take immediate financial measures.
BIRTHDAYS Actor Bob Balaban is 67. Movie director James Cameron is 58. Actress Laura Innes is 55. Actor Steve Carel I is 50. Country singer Emily Robison (The Dixie Chicks) is 40. -From wire reports
Recovery aid Somewhat more palatable is tart cherry juice, which also had a wide following among Olympic athletes. Created using sharp, sour-tasting Montmorency cherries, it is not, strictly speaking, a performance-enhancing beverage. Instead, it affects the body's ability to recover from hard exertion, said Malachy McHugh, the director of research at the Nicholas Institute of Sports Medicine and Athletic Trauma at Lenox Hill Hospital in Manhattan.
ENGINEERING
The answer to too much rock 'n' roll is math? Ill
ScienceNOW Anyone who attended the Bruce Springsteen concert at Ullevi Stadium in Gothenburg, Sweden, in 1985 will recall more than just good vibrations. During the star's closing numbers, fans rocked the arena so hard that it needed millions of dollars' worth of repairs. Now, engineers think they can estimate the impact of crowds in such situations - a method that could make stadiums, bridges, and other civil structures far more secure. The forces of crowds on civil structures - known as crowdinduced loads - are a serious problem for designers. If loads get too high, a structure can visibly deform. Although the risk of collapse is usually small, people can panic and, in the worst cases, stampede. Ideally, it would be possible to predict the maximum crowdinduced loads so that designers could introduce adequate safeguards. It's easy enough to measure the load of a single bopping person - - simply ask them to jump up and down on some weighing scales. The difficulty comes in measuring people's combined loads. You can't simply extrapolate the time-varying load of a single person because of the "crowd effect": People respond to a rhythm more
precisely en masse than they do in isolation. Mathematicians know this type of synchronization leads to a big amplification of the maximum load - but quite how big, they can't say. Engineers Paolo Mazzoleni and Emanuele Zappa at the Politecnico di Milano in Italy have found a way to tackle the problem. They propose estimating the loads from people's actual movements using digital video cameras. So long as you know roughly how massive the people are, and how much they are accelerating up and down, you can - via Newlon's equations - calculate their force on a structure beneath them. Mazzoleni and Zappa tested their idea at the G. Meazza Stadium in Milan. They asked between one and eight volunteers to jump up and down on one of the stands in front of a video camera, following the beat of a metronome. The camera broke down the images into a grid so that the researchers could see frame by frame when each cell was filled or emptied by the volunteers' movements. Having calculated the acceleration of the volunteers from this process, the team simply had to add up the volunteers' total mass to estimate their combined jumping force - that is, their load on the stadium.
If you're planning a remodeling project, don't miss Neil Kelly's biggest event of the year! Receive great ideas and advice f rom Neil Kelly designers and loca l t rade partners, see the latest materials and product demonstrations, and get your dream project started today!
FREE Workshops Include: • Remodeling 101 • Kitchen Design & Remodeling • Home Energy Solutions • Sustainable Materials for Green Homes
• Bath Design & Remodeling • Countertops: Natural Stone, Quartz Stone, or Recycled Glass? ... and more!
"Buy Local" Exhibitors Include: AbbaJay Automated Control Systems, Bend Heat1ng, Dappled Earth, Desch utes Plumbing, Fabulous Finds, The Fixt ure Gallery, Gary's Vacuflo, Gypsy Soul, lmagineStoneworks, Johnson Brothers Appliance, The Joinery, Milgard Windows, N'Hance Revolutionary Wood Renewal, Parr Lumber, Pine Tavern, Quality Builder's Light ing and Design, Rodda Paint , Shade on Demand, Solar Light Energy, Sunlight Solar, Team Birtola- Garmyn, Westview Products, Inc.
Complimentary hot dogs and refreshments! Door prizes!
Take y our hnme tn new pl aces.
sponsored by
1
~
The lend Radio Group I<SI:'1029 ~Mix ~ /' ~"-·-·-
1oo.7
DESIGN BUIL D RE MODE LIN G • CUSTOM HOM ES • HOME PERFORMANCE Eugene • Portland • Lake Oswego • Be nd • Seattle 5 41 -3 82 -75 80 • www. neilkelly .com OR CCB I/1663; WA Reg # N EILKCI 18702
\l:~ Neil
Kelly 2012
THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012 • THE BULLETIN
A3
ToP SToRIES
Pennsylvania judge turns away suit to block voter ID law
NEWS IN BRIEF
3 killed as storm slams Philippines MANILA, Philippines - Tropical Storm Kai-Tak slammed the northern Philippines on Wednesday, triggering flash floods and landslides and killing at least three people, one week after deadly monsoon rains battered the country, disaster relief officials said. Kai-Tak, packing maximum sustained winds of 45 mph and gusts of up to 55 mph, made landfall over the northeastern Philippines before dawn, the weather bureau said. Twenty northern provinces had been placed under storm warnings since Tuesday. The Office of Civil Defense said one man drowned when he suffered a seizure and fell into a flooded rice field in the province of Pangasinan and another drowned while crossing a swollen river Tuesday in !locos Norte province. Another man died from electrocution in Naguilian town in nearby La Union province, said Superintendent Jovencio Badua, a regional police spokesman.
West Nile virus plagues Texas HOUSTON Dallas County officials have declared a state of emergency after the West Nile virus infected at least 190 people killing 10 - as the nation's worst outbreak hits Texas. An unusually warm winter and rainy spring in the Dallas-Fort Worth area and elsewhere in Texas has provided ideal conditions for breeding mosquitoes, West Nile carriers, officials said. The emergency declaration in Dallas clears the way for state money and resources to fight the outbreak. Statewide, 16 deaths - including the 10 in Dallas County - have been reported so far this year, compared with two in 2011 and seven the year before, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services.
3 bombings leave trail of dead in Iraq BAGHDAD Three bomb blasts shortly before sunset Wednesday killed 10 people north of Baghdad in the latest spasm of violence to grip Iraq. The first bomb went off Wednesday in Baqouba, about 35 miles northeast of the Iraqi capital. Police said two civilians and one police officer were killed, and five people were wounded. Minutes later, authorities said, a car bomb exploded at the entrance of the main market in Muqdadiyah, about 60 miles north of Baghdad. A second blast struck as police arrived on the scene. Police said the toll for both bombings in the town was seven killed and 26 wounded.
Anthrax outbreak claims 2 more cows LAKEWOOD, Colo. Two more cows have died from anthrax exposure in northeast Colorado, expanding the first outbreak of the disease in the slate in 31 years to three ranches. Last week, 60 cows died on a Logan County ranch, where anthrax was positively identified in one animal. Officials say it's likely they all died of the disease. The Colorado Department of Agriculture said Wednesday the additional cows were on two separate adjacent ranches. Both died from the disease. State Veterinarian Keith Roehr said all three ranches involved share fences and the new cases likely are the result of cows grazing in an area with soil containing anthrax spores. - From wire reports
By Ethan Bronner New York Times News Service
Khalil Hamra I The Associated Press
Syrians stand in rubble Wednesday after an airstrike destroyed at least 10 houses in the town of Azaz on the outskirts of Aleppo.
At least 20 die as Syrian jets raid rebel-held town By Ben Hubbard The Associated Press
AZAZ, Syria - Syrian fighter jets screamed through the sky Wednesday over this rebel-held town, dropping bombs that leveled the better part of a poor neighborhood and wounded scores of people, many of them women and children buried under piles of rubble. Activists said more than 20 people were killed. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 23 people died in the double airstrike and more than 200 were wounded. Mohammed Nour, a local activist reached by phone, put the death toll at 25. Neither figure could be independently confirmed. Reporters from The Associated Press saw nine dead bodies in the bombings' immediate aftermath, including a baby. The bombings sent panicked civilians fleeing for cover. So many were wounded that the local hospital locked its doors,
directing residents to drive to the nearby Turkish border so the injured could be treated on the other side. One person's remains were bundled into a small satchel. A group of young men found a man buried in the wreckage of destroyed homes, his clothes torn and his limbs dirty, but still alive. "God is great! God is great!" they chanted as they yanked him out and laid him on a blanket. Nearby, a woman sat on a pile of bricks that once was her home, cradling a dead baby wrapped in a dirty cloth. Two other bodies lay next to her, covered in blankets. She screamed and threw stones at a TV crew that tried to film her. The bombing of Azaz, some 30 miles north of Aleppo, shattered the sense of control rebels have sought to project since they took the area from President Bashar Assad's army last month. Azaz is also the town where rebels have been hold-
ing 11 Lebanese Shiites they captured in May. The attack came on the same day the U.N. released a report accusing Assad's forces and pro-government militiamen of war crimes during a May bloodbath in the village of Houla that killed more than 100 civilians, nearly half of them children. It said rebels were also responsible for war crimes in at least three other killings. The long-awaited report by the U.N. Huma n Rights Council marks the first time the world body has referred to events in Syria as war crimes - on both the government and rebel sides - and could be used in future prosecutions against Assad or others. It said the scale of the Houla carnage indicated "involvement at the highest levels" of Syria's military and government. The council also said the conflict is moving in increasingly brutal directions on both sides.
Militants attack Pakistani air force base By Sebastian Abbot '1'he A ssociated Press
ISLAMABAD - At least half a dozen militants attacked an air force base in northern Pakistan with suspected links to the country's nuclear program before dawn today, sparking a h eavy battle that killed two security personnel and left parts of the base in flames, officials said. The attack on the base in Kamra, located only about 25 miles northwest of Islamabad, was a brazen reminder of the threat posed by Islamist militants in Pakistan despite numerous military offensives against their sanctuaries along the Afgha n border. The large air base hosts a variety of fighter jets, including F-16s, and contains a factory that makes aircraft and other weapons systems. Some experts suspect the base could
house part of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal, although the army has denied it has any links to the program. The safety of the country's nuclear weapons has been a major concern for the United States. Western experts say Pakistan has about 100 nuclear weapons and is in the midst of a rapid expansion of its arsenal. The militants, who were wearing explosives, attacked the base at around 2 a.m. with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades and managed to get inside, according to the Pakistani air force. Other militants fired rocketpropelled grenades at the base from outside, damaging one aircraft. Security forces fought the militants for two hours and were finally able to retake the base, the air force said. The
militants did not reach the hangars inside the base. Six militants wearing explosives and two security personnel were killed in the fighting. The head of the base, Air Commodore Muhammad Azam, was wounded. Security forces are searching the area for any militants who may have escaped, said the air force. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, but suspicion will likely fall on the Pakistani Taliban, who have waged a bloody insurgency against the government for the past several years that has killed tens of thousands of people. While the group has carried out hundreds of bombings and other attacks through the country, raids against military bases are somewhat uncommon.
A Pennsylvania judge Wednesday declined to block a new state law requiring specific kinds of photo identification to vote. Liberal groups, arguing that minorities and the poor would be disproportionately deprived of the ballot, said they would appeal to the state Supreme Court to stop the law before November 's presidential election. The groups said the law, like those recently passed in 10 other states, was a Republican attempt to suppress participation of the less privileged, who tend to vote for Democrats. The laws' backers said they were seeking to preserve the integrity of the electoral process. In his ruling Wednesday, Judge Robert Simpson, a Republican, said that there might have been a partisan motive behind the law and that it might indeed cause difficulties for tens of thousands of voters Nov. 6. But neither matter is enough to stop it, he concluded, because judgments from both the state and federal Supreme Courts give legislatures leeway to regulate voting unless done in a clearly discriminatory or burdensome way. The Pennsylvania law, he said, passed muster. "Thus the photo ID requirement of Act 18 is a reasonable, nondiscrimina-
Visits to shrine underscore Japan's tension with neighbors By Martin Fackler and Choe Sang-hun New York Times News Service
TOKYO - Two Japanese cabinet members paid their respects at a Tokyo war shrine linked to Japan's militaristic past Wednesday. Their visits, the first by high-ranking officials in three years, coincided with a recent flare-up in tensions between Japan and its Asian neighbors over history and territory. The officials - Jin Mat~ubara, the minister in charge of the is&ue of Japanese abductions by Norih Korea, and Yuichiro Hata, the transportation minister - visited the Yasukuni Shrine separately to observe the anniversary of Japan's surrender in World War II. The two officials, both conservatives, went to the shrine despite a request from Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda that they stay away. Japanese rightists defend such visits as an appropriate way to honor Japan's war dead. But the shrine is seen by many in China and South Korea as a symbol of unrepentance in
Man charged with fraud in fake drowning By Alan Feuer New York Times News Service
A Long Island man suspected of faking his own drowning to collect as much as $400,000 in life insurance was arrested \Vednesday and formally charged with insurance fraud, conspiracy and filing a false report. The man, Raymond Roth, 47, of Massapequa, N.Y., was taken into custody by the New York State Park Police without incident at South Nassau Communities Hospital in Oceanside, where he had been discharged after undergoing a psychiatric evaluation. He had admitted himself there after reports early this month that his disappearance had been a hoax. Roth, who had recently been fired from his job as a
telecommunications manager, was initially believed to have disappeared July 28 in unprotected waters off Jones I3each, prompting an extensive search. His disappearance, officials said, was rep orted in a 911 call by Jonathan Roth, his
son. The search, however, was called off Aug. 1 when Raymond Roth's brother, Robert, alerted the police that Roth was in fact at his Florida time share in Orlando. Before authorities could verify this
DONATE YOUR CAR Free Towing •Tax Deductible Ask about aFREE 3
1·800·92~·0817 (IHeritage
., fortheBiind
vacation to over 80 destinations!!!'
tory, nonsevere burden when viewed in the broader context of the widespread use of photo ID in daily life," he wrote. "The commonwealth's asserted interest in protecting public confidence in elections is a relevant and legitimate state interest sufficiently weighty to justify the burden." The suit sought a preliminary injunction of the law, which is due to take effect next month. It was filed on behalf of 10 Pennsylvanians facing difficulties obtaining the proper !D. Their lawyers said it was disturbing that Simpson did not recognize the constitutional right to vote as sufficiently fundamental. 'We feel this is a blow to democracy," said Penda Hair, co-directoroftheAdvancement Project. "The court seemed to say that putting enormous hurdles in front of voters is constitutional even when you have no more than a theoretical possibility of fraud." She said that courts in Missouri and Wisconsin had applied a stricter standard against infringements on voting rights, and that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court should do the same when it gets the appeal. Simpson noted in his ruling that he took at face value promises by state officials that they would get ID cards into the hands of the vast majority of residents who needed them by Election Day and that those with manifest difficulties would be able to vote through a provisional or an absentee ballot.
lip, they received a call from the police in South Carolina, who informed them that Roth had just been stopped driving 90 mph on Interstate 95, near Santee. He eventually returned to New York and admitted himself to the hospital.
Japan over the country's militarism in the early 20th century, when its armies marched brutally through Asia. Matsubara said he visited the shrine as a private citizen. "I acted based on my own principles as a Japanese national," he said. There was no immediate reaction from South Korea or China, but the visits came at a sensitive time. Japan is locked in an increasingly emotional standoff with South Korea over the issue of compensation for women who were forced into prostitution by the Japanese military during World War II. It is also embroiled in heated disputes with China, South Korea and Russia over control of small islands near the principal Japanese islands. On Wednesday, a vesselfrom Hong Kong entered waters around one cluster of disputed islands in the East China Sea to protest a plan by the Japanese government to nationalize the islands, which are owned by a private citizen. Russia said Tuesday that it would send naval vessels to the Kuril Islands, the four southernmost of which are disputed. Provid ing unp aralled se rvice across a variety of industries since 1983 .
541-389-1505 400 SW Bluff Dr Ste 200 Bend , OR 97702
£VpressSM ~OYMENT PROFESSIONALS
www.expresspros .com
Bar Stools (
Indoor and Outdoor
)
Patio World 222 SE Reed Market Road 388-0022
QUESTION: As a novice runner, I have heard the acronym "RICE", and I have two questions: What exactly does "RICE" refer to? How long is it safe to rely on RICE ?
QUESTION: The older I get the smaller my mouth seems to be (although my husband would disagree!) I am wnsidering having fillers injected to enhance my lips. I understand it is not a long term solution. Ts permanent makeup a good alternative? ANSWER: Pe rman ent makeup i s a excellent alternate to enhance your lips and also make them look fuller. Lip liner or full lip color can reshape your lips. lip line alone coupled with your lips tick or gloss w ill keep the color from bleeding into the surrounding skin can even diminish the age lines around the lips. Full lip color can eliminate the chor e of always applying lipstick, especially after eating or k issing! Multiple colors are available from subtle to dramatic and the results will far outweigh fillers.
ANSWER: RICE s tands for Rest , Ice, Compression and Elevation. • Rest means keeping the weight off the affected extremity but not a total cessatlon of activ ity. • Icing means cooling the affected bo dy part for 10 to 15 minutes at a time, once an hour if needed, to reduce the swelling and inflamma tion in the area. • Compression refers to applying a gentle elastic bandage to the part if the s upport feels comfortable, and helps reduce o r prevent swelling. • Elevation: keep the injured part elevated, preferably higher than the hear t, to encourage drainage from the swollen extremity
Call today for a FREE consultation... You will wonder why you waited so long !
How long should you rely on RICE? I recommend that if the injury is not feeling significantly better in 24 to 48 hours, you should consult a medical professional.
PERMANENT MAKEUP BY SUSAN, CPCP
At Healing Bridge Physical Therapy our specially trained orthopedic physical thera pists are able to help you navigate the recovery process. Out individual hour long appointments give us ple nty of time to address any concerns you may have.
1265 NW Wall Street • Bend 541-383-3387 www.permanentmakeupbysusan.com
ZEYLA BRANDT,
Q uESTION: I rwticed a bulging area in my right groin the other duy. Is it u hemiu or u new growth?
ANSWER: An inguinal hernia is one of the most common hernias that general surgeons see and take care of. Infants can be born with inguinal hernias, especially if they are premature boys, or adults can acquire hernias som etimes by doing much strenuous labor and lifting. The classic symptoms include bulging into the inguinal canal or groin area while s tanding or walking during the day. The bulge generally disappears w hen ly ing down. Sometimes the bulge can be easily "reduced " or pushed back into place with external pressure. New growths or tumors will not "reduce" or go away and could be enlarged lymph nodes or a cystic fluid collection . A hernia is actually prolusion of int:raabdominal contents o utside of the abdominal cavity. Inguinal hernias should be repaired as a general rule so that a loop of bowel does not become stuck in the hernia sac and die causing the patient to be very ill. In children, inguinal hernias are repaired by just rem oving the h ernia sac, but in adults the best repair is by usin g a sterile polypropylene mesh to fill and cover the hole in the fascia that has develo ped . The repair in adults can be done open or laparoscopically. Hernias at the belly button or umbilicus can be repaired in the same way as well.
Dr. Jana M. VanAmburg, MD VanAmburg Surgery Care 2275 NE Doctors Dr. Suite 7, Bend, OR 97701 541·323-2790 • www.vanamburgsurgery.com Offices in Bend & Redmond
PT
www.HEALINGBRIDGE.COM
404 NE Penn Ave, Bend, OR 541-318-7041
PLASTIC SURGERY QuESTION: T've always loved the sun and as I am in my forties have developed sun spots on my face. I am interested in a facial peel. Will these remove my su n spots and also some of my facial w rinkles ?
QUESTION: I'L•e heard people talk about getting 'prolotherapy injections'. What are they talking about? Will it help my knee pain? ANSWER: Prolotherapy, including PRP (Platelet Rich Plasma) and dextrose prolotherapy, is permanent treatment for chronic pain. Prolotherapy has been used for over 50 years and has an excellent record of success for curing d1ronic pain. Payson Flattery, Prolotherapy targets tl1e functionally insufficient or degenD.C. NO erated connective tissue by tl1e precise injection of a mild irritant solution directly on tl1e ligament or tendon creating a controlled inflammation tl1at stimulates the body's natural healing mechanisms to create new strengtl1ened tissue. The previously injured tissue goes tl1rough the same healing cascade as when it was first injured and is given a second chance to heal. It may take several injections spaced at 3-6 week intervals to amieve a maximum result. Prolotherapy uses the body's nah1raI healin e, ability to relieve rhmnir pain, strengthen injured tissues, and restore function. It can treat anytl1ing from spinal pain to osteoartl1ritis and tennis elbow. The treatment is over 85% effective in most cases and is practiced at Harvard, Stanford, John Hopkins and Mayo clinics. Dr. Flattery has been using injection tl1erapy in his practice for 10 years, and teaches Prolotherapy and orthopedic assessment to other practitioners. Call for a free phone consult to see if Prolotherapy is right for you.
AdamM.D. Angeles,
look. C h e mical peel s are one o f many l ess invasive techniques the plastic surgeon uses today t o improve and smooth the texture of the facial skin by removingitsdamaged outer laye r s. Those indiv iduals with facial blemishes, wrinkles, uneven s kin pigm entation and precancerous skin lesio n s are candidates. After a comple te evalua tion, you r p l astic surgeon can recomm end which t ype of ch e mical peel and/ or oth er te chniques which will provide the m ost dramatic loo k fo r you.
Adam Angeles, M.D. Bend Plastic Surgery
center for
integrated
ANSWER: Chemical pee ling has emerged as an exciting anti-aging procedure and may o ffe r y ou a f resh er m ore you thf u ]
916 SW 17th ST. • Suite 202 • Redmond • 541-504-0250 www.CenterforlntegratedMed .com
2460 NE Neff Rd., Suite B • Bend www.bendprs.com, drangeles@bendprs.com 541-749-2282
MORBID OBESITY & DIABETES
COSMETIC DENTISTRY
Am I eligible for weight loss (bariatric) surgery? ANsWER: If you have a body mass index (bmi) between 35 and 40 k g/ m A2 w ith s i g nificant m edical conditio ns or complications s u c h " h bl oo d pressure, as : d"1ab e t es, h 1g
s lee p apnea, and o the r s. a body m ass index (BMI) > 40 (that's m en or 80 lbs f or wom e n).
If you
100
have lbs for
If you have
faile d other medically supervised die t / weig ht loss pro grams.
Any othe r questions contact Cascade Obesity.
Dr.
T huy Hughes at
CASCADE OBESITY AND GENERAL SURGERY
VEIN
0
SPEC I ALTY
541-382-6565
QuESTION: / have not changed a thing with my diet or exercise regimen, but / keep gaining weight. Do you have any insight as to why? ANswER: Sleep d isruption, stress, antidepressants, steroids, o ther medicatio ns, low thyroid function, adrenal dysfunction, PCOS, slowed metabolism, and quitting smoking are often overlooked causes of weight gain. So how do we go about correcting this once the cause/ s are discovered( Testing for metabolism hormone fu nction (thyroid, adrenal) is im perative. Sleep and energy are highly affected by these. Stress and sleep are also influenced by neurotransmitters such as serotonin, so supporting these levels are also of great importance. In addition, a complete medication review should be performed b y the p rescribing doctor. Diet and exercise are always crucial, and the calorie/ energy requirements of the body do change over time. Modifications here do not need to be drastic. Usually it is one or two small changes that need to happen, like avoiding coffee on an empty stomach, or increasing protein intake in the morning. PCOS is a somewhat common condition in women that often causes abnormal hair growth, acne, difficulty losing weight especially around the midsection, a disruption of the menstrual cycle and sometimes fertility problems. Weight gain is not necessary as you age. Be sure to talk with you r provider or make an appointment and we can go over a personalized plan together.
-
+ natural
www.cosurgery.com • 541-548-7761
EYE CARE Does optic nerve head drusen plus glaucoma always progress to blindness? Please explain. Please also explain treatment. Thank You. ANs\VER: Optic n e r v e h e ad druse n are deposit s of calcific material on the optic n e r ve. Th ey are u s u a lly congenita l and lda Alu1, may b e d e te cte d incide ntally during an M.D. eye e xa m . T hey may cau se small d e fects in per ipheral visi o n. Th e re is no way to r e m ove them. G laucom a is a disease that is charac terized b y increased p r ess ure in the eye that m ay d amage the optic n e r ve a nd lead to vision loss if not t reat e d. Th ese con d itions m ay coexist. Early dete ction and proper treatment to lower the intraocula r p r essure can red u ce the ris k o f v isio n l o ss . E y e drops, laser or surgery are u sed t o l ower the intraocula r pressure. The risk of blind n ess is greatly reduced with early detection. See your eyecare professional fo r further information.
i!
~
healthy
a
v
There are many over the cotmter ointments that can p rovide temporary relief. Mouth ulcer s u sually last 7-10 days and p eak in discomfort in the 5-7 d ay range. If you get them on a regular basi s you m a y be able to pattern a certain food that gives them to you. The only w ay to p r event them is to avoid what ever it is that creates the initial irritation. If on e ca tch es the ulcer in the very earliest s tage they can be treated with a dental laser. Laser treatment results in a sore tha t doesn ' t la st as long and d oesn 't h ave the intensity of pain. Laser treatment is n o t painful and can be the key to a voiding these painful mouth ulcers.
:,,~~,~~.?.~~~.~?.:..::..
ANSWER: YES.Many people suffer from uncomfortable night-time leg sensations, which are referred to as Restless Leg Syndrome (RLS). People describe this feeling as crawling, creeping, pulling, or itching, deep in the legs. Symptoms usually get worse as the day moves Andrew Jones, on, and they are worst at night. Often, their legs move M.D. on their own during sleep; some people have to get up during the night and walk around to get the pain to go away. Recent studies show that for many people, leaky veins are a significant contributing factor. Studies show that in some cases treating these veins will improve or totally relieve symptoms of RLS. Unfortunately, the many causes of RLS are not well understood, and it is therefore often treated with powerful medications aimed at symptom relief, rather than eliminating the cause. Current medical recommendations are that BEFORE starting medications for RLS, sufferers should have their veins checked by a specialist and possibly an ultrasound evaluation for leaky vein valves. lf leaking veins are identified, treating these veins may prevent the need for starting powerful medications. If you have symptoms of RLS, feel free to call Inovia Vein Specialty Center at 541 -382-8346 for an appointment for evaluation.
n
It is actua lly common for people to get m outh ulcers. They can b e incredibly painful and tmless treated in the ver y earliest s tage tend to nm their course with little r elief. M outh sores are almost always a result of trawna to the area . Trawna can b e in the form of abrasi on, from food, toothbrush , pens, e tc. They can also b e caused by chemical ir rita tio n. Foods like citrus, ch ocolates, and acid ic foods can all cau se a surface irritation and result in an ulcer.
1245 NW 4th Street #1 01 Redmond, Oregon
Q uESTION:
ANSWER:
~
QuESTION: 1 have uncomfortable feelings in my legs at night. I feel like I have to move my legs, which makes it hard to sleep. ls there anythinK that can be done about this?
\~
SUHG ICA L ASSOC IATES OF I"IIECASCADES
I get sores in my mouth often. They really hurt, is there anything I can do to prevent them?
DISTINCTIVE DENTISTRY AT BROKEN TOP 1475 SW Chandler Ave., Suite 201, Bend DISTINCTIVE DENTISTRY www.bendcosmeticdentist.com
Thuy Hughes, DO 1245 NW 4th St. #1 01, Redmond 541-548-7761
I
ANSWER: Gallstones (cholelithiasis) are very common. 10-20% of the adult population in developed countries has gallstones witl1 a higher prevalence in women, the obese, and older patients. 80% of patients with gallstones are asymptomatic. The 20% of patients with symptomatic galbtones are mos t likely to develop complications without timely surgical treatment. The complications can M.D., FACS range from recurrent gallbladder attacks to pancreatitis and possible liver and bile duct infection. Patients become symptomatic witl1 regards to tl1eir gallstones at a rate of 1-2% per year. The typical symptoms of a gallbladder attack include right upper quadrant pain usually after eating altl1ough a significant number of patients complain of mid epigastric pain. The pain is usually spasmodic in nature and may last several hours before relief. These attacks are often precipated by fatty meals altl1ough most foods can cause symptoms and can have associated nausea and vomiting. Some atypical presentations may include vague abdominal pain, increased flatulence, burping, heartburn, and even d1est pain. The diagnosis is made based on patient history, physical examination, laboratory studies, and d iagnostic ultrasound. Once a patient becomes symptomatic, elective molecystectomy (surgery) is indicated. Alternative nonstandard forms of treatment include dissolution of gallstones witl1 oral agents, and extracorporeal shockwave litl1otripsy. Cholecystectomy may l.Je performed l.Jy laparoscopic tedmiques or open surgery. For most patients who undergo elective cholecystecto my, tl1e ability to perform the case laparoscopically is quite high.
Q UESTION:
QuEsTioN:
00
What are the symptoms of gallstones? What is the treatment ofgallstones?
QUESTION :
Medical Director, St. Charles Wound & Ostomy Care Center
medicine
Thuy Hughes,
GALLSTONES
lnfocus
eye care
IDA ALUL, M.D. INFOCUS EYE CARE 24509 NE Mary Rose PI, Ste 110 • Bend 541 -318-8388 • www.infocus-eyecare.com
QUESTION: Wha t is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)? And how does it differ from other methods of therapy? ANSV..'ER: CBT is a form of psychotherapy that focuses on think ing patterns and the impact they have on mood . All met hods of therapy can be effective based on the skill of the therapist and the relationship between client and therapist. The important features of CBT are collaboration, goal-setting, client-driven focus, and skills w hich are taught and illustrated by the therapist and pract iced in session and in homework assignments. Homew ork helps to rnove the change p rocess along and 1nake the the rapy n1ore efficient
and effective. It b irnpo rtan t fo r clients to ask a thera p ist how he/ she p ractices so there is no mystery in the process. If a client wants lots of feedback and
interaction, CBT is the way to go. When I work with a client, I teach stress management and cognitive skills, illustrate the concepts with powerpoint slides, and assign problem-appropriate homew ork assignments. My clients tell me they are pleased with the transparency of the CBT methodology and transferable nature of the skills for future problem solving and mood management. For more inform a tio n on C BT, go to www.step haniecostello.com o r contact
Stepha nie Costello a t stephaniecostello@yahoo.com or call 21.S-917-0032
f amily p ractic e medic ine
C ARE
2200 NE Neff Road, Ste 204 • Bend • 541-382-8346 www.BendVein.com
~
541-389-9750 • www.bendnaturopath.com
STEPHANIE COSTELLO,
LCSW
215-9 17-0032 stephaniecoste llo@yahoo.com www.stephaniecoste llo.com
Ask any Health Question in the area of: • Homeopathic/ Holistic Medicine • Plastic Surgery • Permanent Make-up • AAHP • Chiropractic • Ophthahnology • Pain Medicine • Electrolysis • Optometry • Wellness • Cosmetic Dentistry • Family Medicine • Aesthetics
Send questions by fax: (541) 385-5802, email: kclark@bendbulletin.com, or mail to P.O Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708
THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012 â&#x20AC;˘ THE BULLETIN
AS
BIN LADEN RAID
Group accuses Obama of leaks By Scott Shane New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON - In a direct attack on one of President Barack Obama's political strengths, a group of former special operations and CIA officers started a campaign Tuesday night accusing Obama of recklessly leaking information about the raid that killed Osama bin Laden to gain political advantage. The new group, called the Special Operations UPSEC Education Fund, using shorthand for "operational security," describes itself as nonpartisan, but some of its leaders have been involved in Republican campaigns and tea party groups. A 22-minute
video called "Dishonorable Disclosures" featured on its website appears to be aimed squarely at the president, echoing charges made previously by Mitt Romney and other Republicans. The Obama campaign immediately compared the effort to the so-called Swift Boat advertisements against Sen. John Kerry in the 2004 presidential campaign. Like that operation, which attacked Kerry's military record in Vietnam, the OPSEC site goes after Obama's strong points on national security- specifically his role in overseeing the successful military-CIA operation that killed bin Laden, the founder of al-Qaida, in
May2011. Security officials and members of both parties in Congress have sharply criticized leaks about classified operations under Obama, as well as briefings for reporters on the bin Laden raid and assistance to filmmakers making a movie about the operation. I3ut the administration has also overseen an unprecedented number of prosecutions for disclosures to the press, and in June, Attorney General Eric Holder directed two United States attorneys to investigate recent leaks discussed in the OPSEC video. Chad Kolton, who was spokesman for the director of national intelligence in the
Bush administration and now represents the OPSEC group, said the group had raised nearly $1 million since June and intended to run television and Internet ads, as well as host showings of "Dishonorable Disclosures" in swing states. Kolton rejected the comparison with the Swift Boat advertisements, saying they reflected narrow differences of opinion between Kerry and other former servicemen about his war record. He said the OPSEC group had a broader purpose in speaking out against leaks and politicization of the Navy SEALs and CIA and hopes to keep working after the election.
CAMPAIGN
BRIEFS
Band asks Romney to stop using song LOS ANGELES- The Mitt Romney campaign has been asked to stop unauthorized playing of the Silversun Pickups' hit "Panic Switch" during campaign events. "We don't like people going behind our backs, using our music without asking, and we don't like the Romney campaign," Silversun Pickups lead singer-guitarist Brian Aubert said in a statement issued Wednesday. The statement said the band's attorney has issued a cease-and-desist letter to the Romney campaign. Last month, a Romney campaign attack ad directed at President Barack Obama showing a clip of Obama singing a snippet from Al Green's hit "Let's Stay Together" was pulled from YouTube because the song's publisher said the use constituted a violation of copyright.
Poll: People who donâ&#x20AC;˘t vote prefer Obama \WASHINGTON - More than 80 million eligible Americans will sit out this year's presidential election. These potential voters could make all the difference for President Rarack Ohama - a new survey shows they overwhelmingly support the president over Republican rival Mitt Romney - but they won't vote for him, even though a majority acknowledge that politics makes a difference in their lives. A Suffolk University-USA Today survey found that 43 percent of unregistered Americans and 43 percent of registered voters who are unlikely to make it to the polls in November would choose Obama if they were to cast a ballot. Just 14 percent of unregistered Americans and 20 percent of registered but unlikely voters said the same of Romney. - From wire reports
Carolyn Kaster I The Associated Press
President Barack Obama has a beer with Mike Cunningham and other workers at the beer
stand during a visit to the Iowa State Fair.
Obama plays up his love of beer to ferment coalition of the swilling By Amy Gardner The Washington Post
DUBUQUE, Iowa- When Michelle Obama asked her husband on Wednesday if he'd eaten a fried Twinkie at the Iowa State f air, President Barack Obama leaned into the microphone to boast: "Pork chop and beer." "He's so pleased with himself," the first lady shot back, rolling her eyes to the crowd. He sure seemed to be. Across Iowa over the past three days, Obama talked about wind power and drought relief and middleclass taxes. But what he really seemed excited about was beer. He bought a round of beers at the fair. He told coffee shop patrons about one of the latest features at the White House: a home brewery. He spoke longingly of the beer he planned to quaff on the bus at the end of the day. The crowds drank it up. They cheered al every mention, chanting: "Four more beers!" That may be exactly the point. As Obama and his Republican opponent, Mitt Romney, battle for hearts and
votes, Romney is trying to show that he shares their values of family, faith and hard work. He talks of marrying his high school sweetheart, supporting his wife through her battle with multiple sclerosis, raising his five boys and enjoying his grandchildren. Obama is taking it a step further by trying to seem an everyman himself. He talks of being raised by a single mom, his late father-in-law's working-class career, his own family's financial struggles in their early years. And he talks about beer. There is good reason to presume that beer is a way for Obama to connect with voters. It presents a contrast with Romney, who doesn't drink (and who was scooping ice cream in a 1950s-style parlor in Ohio when Obama was buying beers at the fair). Consumer research shows that beer is most popular with lhe very volers lhal Obama and Romney are fighting over: middle-America independents. According to Scarborough USA, 35 percent of these voters say they've had
Now that we've moved onto Highway 26, it's easier than ever to get your kicks at Indian HeadCasino' We have the latest and greatest in slots and video poker, blackjack, exclusive Player's Club perks, and entertainment, and we'reopen 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Enjoy finediningat the Cottonwood restaurant- now including a beer and wine menu- and gear upfor good times, any time, on Highway 26 !
TECH THURSDAYS Win a Toshi ba Satellite Laptop PCI Thu rsdays in August at 8pm and lOpm
Highway 26, Warm Springs I indianheadgaming.com I 541.460.7777
a beer in the past 30 days, compared with 30 percent of Democrats and 27 percent of Republicans. White House officials were quick to point out that to call the beer-making operation a "brewery" would be an exaggeration. That hasn't stopped Obama from talking about the beermaking enterprise - or sharing it. At a campaign stop Tuesday at a coffee shop in Knoxville, Iowa, he explained the light and dark varieties the White House produces. And when a patron requested a bottle, the president sent a member of his staff out to the campaign bus to get one. So he takes the beer on the road, too. It seems r easonable, in fact, to dub this swing the Iowa Beer Tour. "lt was pretty good being back here;' Obama told a revved up crowd in Waterloo late Tuesday, at an outdoor rally along lhe lwilil banks of lhe Cedar River. "Yesterday I went to the State Fair, and I had a pork chop and a beer. And it was good. Today I just had a beer. I didn't get the pork chop. But the beer was good, too."
Jose Luis Magana I T he Associated Press
Nathaly Uribe, of Valparaiso, Chile, fills out her application
form Wednesday for the Deferred Action Childhood Arrivals.
Immigrants Continued from A1
At least 13,000 people stood in line in Chicago, clutching reams of paperwork, for a workshop led by immigrant rights advocates at the city's Navy Pier. Hundreds of potential applicants waited outside nonprofit offices in Los Angeles for help filing paperwork to open the door to the staples of success in America- a work permit, and then later a Social Security number and driver's license. "It's something I have been waiting for since I was two years old," said Bupendra Ram, a 25-year-old communications graduate student in Fullerton, Calif., who still needs supporting documents from his Fiji Islands home before he can apply. "This offers us an opportunity to fulfill the dreams I've had since I was a child." Less than three months before an expected tight presidential election , the new immigration program is mired in controversy. Republican critics accuse President Barack Obama of drafting the plan to boost his political standing with Latinos ahead of November 's vote and say the program favors illegal immigrants over unemployed American citizens during dismal economic times. In Arizona, which passed one of the nation's toughest anti-immigration laws, Gov. Jan Brewer signed an executive order Wednesday directing state agencies to deny driver's licenses and other public benefits to illegal immigrants who obtain work authorizations under the program. Brewer said the federal program doesn't give immigrants legal status and she's following the intent of the current state law denying public benefits to them. To be eligible for the federal program, immigrants must prove they arrived in the United States before they turned 16, are 30 or younger, have been living in the country at least five years and are in school or graduated or served in the military. They cannot have been convicted of certain crimes or otherwise pose a safety threat. Initial concerns that federal authorities might lake a tough approach on applications or that a Republican presidential victory could unravel applicants' gains have largely been pushed aside by massive interest from thou-
sands of young people eager to work. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romnev does not support so-called Dream Act legislation for illegal immigrants who attend college - a key group that Obama aims to reach with this program. The former Massachusetts governor has also criticized the deferred action program but has not said it he would reverse it, pledging instead an unspecified "civil but resolute" long-term fix to illegal immigration. So far, the measure has won favor for Obama along Latinos - many who view immigration as a litmus test when choosing a political candidate, said Manuel Pastor, director of the University of Southern California's Center for the Study of Immigrant Integration. "What this has done is to signal that the president, who was unable to get comprehensive immigration reform, does at least care aboutthe situation of these immigrants," Pastor said. "This is something that has been overwhelmingly popular in the immigrant population and in the Latino population in general!' Some Republican lawmakers have accused Obama of sidestepping Congress and creating a backdoor amnesty program. "It's a betrayal of American young people," said Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, a California Republican. "We're supposed to be representing the interests of the American people - not people who come here illegally from other countries." In an internal document outlining the program's implementation, Department of Homeland Security offi. cials estimated more than 1 million people would apply in the first year and ahout 890,000 would be eligible. On Wednesday, immigrants lined up for help filing applications at workshops around the country. Others sought identity documents from consulates to be able to apply. In central California, one group has been warning farmworkers and their children not to sign up for the program at all. "Immigration agents could haul them off that same day," said Manuel Cunha, president of the Nisei Farmers League. "Even if they don't, if this policy is disbanded, now ICE has the addresses of all the families. Why would you want to squeal on your parents?"
A6
THE BULLETIN â&#x20AC;˘ THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
Audit Continued from A1 Dee Anna Hassanpour, the deputy administrator for the unemployment insurance benefit program, said one of the main causes of the overpayments was a programming error that was "immediately fixed." "People's claims weren't being stopped properly because we had a manual program in place. We worked with programmers to get a hard, automatic stop put in place," she said, adding that it would prevent people from being paid twice on the same claim. Some overpayments resulted from people returning to work and not informing the department, which caused a lag in stopping payments. Looking for a job is a requirement while receiving unemployment. There is also a new system in place, Hassanpour said, to electronically monitor work searches
Airport Continued from A1 The grant will supplement the city's larger plans to attract new flights to the airport. Dickie said the city expects to spend around $1.2 million in the next two or three years to bring a Los Angeles flight back to Redmond. That figure includes the $500,000 grant and anticipates donated funding from local and state organizations and businesses. "We will be reaching out to the community for funds when the airline comes in," Dickie said. "For us to have a strong application for the grant, we wanted to show a very compelling need and show there was community backing for the new route." The money will subsidize a new airline, or an airline adding flights, in its first years in Redmond. The $500,000 is going toward a "revenue guarantee" program which promises that the company won't lose money on the flights for a certain amount of time. The initiative will also lure an airline by offering to pay for marketing costs, offsetting airport operations costs and establishing a "travel bank" where individuals can prepurchase airline tickets and redeem them at a later date. Dickie said she was unsure of how some of the incentives would work as it's still early in the planning process. The city was awarded the money Tuesday, just days
Hezbollah Continued from A1 On Saturday, Hezbollah supporters and others will march in Berlin for the annual Jerusalem Day event, a protest against Israeli control of that city. Organizers told the Berlin police that the event would attract 1,000 demonstrators, and likely bring two counter-demonstrations. Hezhollah has maintained a low profile in Europe since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, quietly holding meetings and raising money that goes to Lebanon, where officials use it for an array of activities - building schools and clinics, delivering social services and, Western intelligence agencies say, carrying out terrorist attacks. European security services keep tabs on the group's political supporters, but experts say they are ineffective when it comes to tracking the sleeper cells lhal pose lhe mosl danger. "They have real, trained operatives in Europe that have not been used in a long time, but if they wanted them to become active, they could," said Alexander Ritzmann, a policy adviser at the European Foundation for Democracy in Brussels, who has testified before Congress on Hezbollah in Europe. The European Union's unwillingness to place the group on its list of terrorist organizations is also complicating the West's efforts to deal with the Bulgarian bus bombing and the Syrian conflict. The week after the attack in Bulgaria, Israel's foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, traveled to Brussels for a regular meeting with European officials, where he
and to stop paying those who aren't seeking employment. Those who received an overpayment have an option to fill out a hardship waiver explaining why the money can't be paid back. The state doesn't have any data on how many people choose that option versus those who can afford to repay the money. "No one likes to get audited," Hassanpour said, but she said the employment department cooperated with the state auditors and felt like "the audit did what it was supposed to do!' She pointed out that with the spike in the number of unemployed, the agency's workload has also increased drastically. "I think what they pointed out were good improvements. If we have another round of (unemployment) extensions I don't anticipate we'll have the same issues occur," she said. -Reporter: 541-554-1162, ldake@bendbulletin.com
Redmond Airport enplanements Enplanement numbers at the Redmond Airport through July this year are slightly ahead of last year's numbers. But the increase isn't likely to hold, as Allegiant Air ended service in Redmond on Aug. 12.
241,957 Yearly total 138,817 '"TiiroiiQil
139,140 Through
201 1
2012
July
July
Source: City of Redmond
Andy Zelgert I The Bulletin
after Allegiant Air pulled its flights from the airport. ':1\llegiant's last night here was Sunday," Dickie said. "So this was good news." Allegiant announced in May that it would pull out of Redmond Airport. That severed routes to Oakland and Mesa, and forced the city to adjust for less income and slash its 2012-13 airport budget by about $812,000. At that time, city officials vowed to seek additional flights to stabilize the airport and identified Los Angeles as a priority. The airport has seen a small amount of growth this year through July, but Dickie said she expects that to drop now that Allegiant has permanently departed. - Reporter: 541-617-7837, ehidle@bendbulletin.com
called for the European Union lo include Hezbollah on lhe lisl. But his pleas fell on deaf ears. "There is no consensus among the EU member states for putting Hezbollah in the terrorist-related list of the organizations," Erato Kozakou Marcoullis, the foreign minister of Cyprus, which holds the European Union's rotating presidency, said at the time of Lieberman's visit. "Should there he tangible evidence of Hezbollah engaging in acts of terrorism, the EU would con sider listing the organization." The stark difference in views reflects the many roles that Hezbollah has played since it emerged in Lebanon after the Israeli invasion in 1982. Hezbollah's militant wing was responsible for a string of kidnappings and for sophisticated bombings at home and has been accused of bombings abroad. But the group also became a source of social services lhallhe shallered Leban ese government was incapable of providing, and has evolved since then into a political force with two cabinet ministers and a dozen seats in Parliament. "They are quite professional in this, and this is something some Western donors are admitting that has a positive impression on some \Vestern politicians," said Stephan Rosiny, a research fellow at the Institute of Middle East Studies at the German Institute of Global and Area Studies in Hamburg. That in turn provides a rationale for the group's charitable networks among Lebanese immigrants in Europe. "They may collect money for their institutions, butthey aren't
Oil Continued from A1 And spirelike drilling rigs quietly bore into the ground, silhouetted against mountains with names like Sinopah, Running Wolf and Chief. It is an increasingly common sight for tribes across the West and Plains: Tourist spending has gone slack since the recession hit. American Indian casino revenues are stagnating just as tribal gambling faces new competition from online gambling and waves of new casinos. Oil and tracking are new lifelines. One drilling rig on the Blackfeet reservation generated 49 jobs for tribal members - a substantial feat in a place where unemployment is as high as 70 percent. But as others watched the rigs rise, they wondered whether the tribe was making an irrevocable mistake. "These are our mountains," said Cheryl Little Dog, a recently elected member of the Blackfeet Tribal Business Council, the reservation's governing body. "I look at what we have, and I think, why ruin it over an oil rig?" Oil exploration here began in the 1920s, largely on the plains along the eastern edge of the reservation, but it died off in the early 1980s. Over the past four years, though, new tracking technologies and rising oil prices have lured the drillers back, and farther and farther west, to the mountains that border Glacier National Park. Oil companies have leased out the drilling rights for a million of the reservation's 1.5 million acres, land held by the tribe, according to the Bureau of Indian Affairs. They have drilled 30 exploratory wells this year alone. "It'll ch ange the lives of a lot of people," said Grinnell Day Chief, the tribe's oil and gas manager. "It'll be a boost to everybody. There's talk of a hotel coming up." To tribal leaders, the oil wealth could be more lucrative and reliable than any casino - a resource whose royalty payments could transform a reservation scarred by poverty and alcoholism. Blackfeet elders say they have already collected about $30 million, primarily from three oil companies, the Anschutz Exploration Corp., the Newfield Exploration Co. and Rosetta Resources. The tribe has used signing bonuses to pay off debts from building the Glacier Peaks Casino. It built a tribe-owned grocery to compete with the JGA in Browning, the reservation's largest town. The tribe's approximately 16,500 members each received $200 in trickle-down payments from the drilling last year, and the oil companies have donated money to the local basketball
operatingpublicly," Rosiny said. "As long as lhey aren'l involved in politics and aren't operating openly they are tolerated." From all indications to date, it is an arrangement that Hezbollah is eager to preserve. The group's secretary general, Hassan Nasrallah, has said that a European blacklist would "destroy Hezbollah. The sources of our funding will dry up and the sources of moral political and material support will be destroyed." And Hezbollah's defenders note that no hard evidence has been produced tying the group to the Bulgarian bus bombing. Some analysts say that Shiite groups like Hezbollah pose less of a risk than Sunni militant organizations like al-Qaida. "The greatest danger from lslamist militants comes from the Salafists, not the Shiites but the Sunnis," said Berndt Georg Thamm, a terrorism expert in Berlin, referring to a hard-line branch of Sunni Islam. He cited as examples the man who confessed to killing seven people in southwest France earlier this year and the gunman who killed two United States airmen at the Frankfurt airport last year. "As far as Europe is concerned, Hezbollah is not what is moving it at the moment'' "The British see it as a tool: If you change, we take it off the list," Ritzmann said. "The French don't think it's smart to put them on the terrorist list because they're such a political actor." "There is no unified common assessment of Hezbollah," Thamm said. "And that is not something that will change in the foreseeable future."
Photos by Rich Add leks I New York T imes News Serv ice
An Anschutz Exploration Corp. drilling site on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation near Browning, Mont. Elders of the Blackfeet have decided to utilize their land's resources to transform a reservation scarred by poverty, but many in the tribe see the land as sacred.
Cheryl Lynn Little Dog, a newly elected member of the Blackfeet Tribal Business Council, wonders whether the tribe is making a mistake in exploiting the oil under its land.
team and to buy children toys and jackets at Christmas. For some on the reservation, the drills cannot come soon enough. In April, T.J. Show, then the chairman of the Blackfeet Tribal Business Council, told a House committee that the layers of oversight and paperwork needed to drill into tribal lands were "extremely slow and burdensome." He told the panel he opposed any new federal rules that would clamp down on fracking and chase away oil companies. To find the opposing view, one needs only to drive five miles west from Browning, past the casino, heading straight toward the mountains, and pull off at the red gate on the right. There, on a recent
summer afternoon, over mugs of horsemint tea, Pauline Matt and a handful of Blackfeet women were trying to find a way to persuade the tribal leaders to stop the drilling. "It threatens everything we are as Blackfeet," she said. Other environmental activists around Glacier have raised concerns that the fracking operations, if they continue and expand, could pollute air quality, contaminate sensitive watersheds and tarnish a
HAVEN HOME STYLE 'Furniture tmlflesf_!}n 856 NW Brnd â&#x20AC;˘ Downtown Bend â&#x20AC;˘ 541-330-5999 www.havenhom estyle.com
night almost uncontaminated by man-made lights. Chas Cartwright, the superintendent of Glacier National Park, has asked for a full-scale environmental review of drilling on the reservation. In a July 31 letter to the Bureau of Indian Affairs, he raised concerns about how drilling might affect grizzly bear populations, air qua lity and the vistas from mountain perches inside the park. To opponents, including the tribe's environmental office and roads department, the damage to the land is still being done. "You see this butterfly, vou hear those birds?" asked Crystal LaPlant, as she sat on Matt's back porch one evening, the meadows alive with sound. "Once they start drilling, we aren't going to have those things anymore."
WILSONS of Redmond 541-548-2066
MATTRESS
Gallery-Bend 541-330-5084
~
FLEETWOOD. NEW CLASS A MOTOR HOMES ARRIVING DAILY! BOUNDER! SOUTHWINO! STORM! & GEORGETOWN!
BIG ~
COUNTRYRV
www.bigcrv.com
TV &Movies, B2 Calendar, B3 Dear Abby, B3
UTING
B
Horoscope, B3 Comics, B4-5 Puzzles, B5
8
THE BULLETIN â&#x20AC;˘ THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
www.bendbulletin.com/outi ng
A ~ UPDATE TRAIL
Long-awaited road may open The U.S. Forest Service is tentatively planning to open the currently gated Forest Road 370 to the Broken Top trailhead this weekend, said Marv Lang, Forest Service recreation forester. The road is snowfree, but rough, muddy and recommended only for high-clearance vehicles. To confirm it's opening, contact the Forest Service front desk at 541-383-4000. The snow line continues to creep upward and nearly all of the wilderness trails are accessible up to 6,200 feet, according to the most recent Forest Service trail update. There may still be snow on the high country trails, including Broken Top, Tam MacArthur Rim , Green Lakes, Moraine Lake, the Three Sisters, Diamond Peak, Three Fingered Jack and some sections of the Pacific Crest Trail. For additional specific trail information, see the trail update on the Deschutes National Forest website: http://tinyurl .com/d29jsll.
ace
Anne Aurand I The Bulletin
Enjoy the view of the Cascade mountains from the Farewell Trail, toward the end of the clockwise 10-mile loop.
- Lydia Hoffman, The Bulletin
SPOTLIGHT Learn more about the Paisley Caves Dennis Jenkins, a senior research archaeologist from the Museum of Natural and Cultural History at the University of Oregon, will discuss recent archeological find s in Oregon's Paisley Caves at 6:30p.m. Friday at the Pozzi Education Center of the Sunriver Nature Center. Recent finds have strengthened the theory of multiple migrations to the Americas from the Asian continent. Radiocarbon dating of camel and horse bones, bone and wood tools, saltbush twigs and dried human feces containing Native American DNA indicate that people lived in the caves and may have hunted camels, horses, mammoths or mastodons and bison at the end of the ice age. Tickets cost $10for individuals, $8 for Sunriver Nature Center members and $3 for studentswith ID. Ticketsavailablein advance:541-593-4394 or 541-593-4442, or at the door.
Ryan Brennecke I The Bulletin
Many waterfalls can be viewed from the North Fork trail along Tumalo Creek, upstream from Tumalo Falls .
â&#x20AC;˘ Cross rustic footbridges and discover many waterfalls beyond Tumalo Falls on the North Fork-Farewell Loop By Anne Aurand T he Bulletin
recently discovered an outing that many frien ds have raved about as long as I can remember. Now it's my turn to preach the gospel. It's the North Fork-Farewell Loop, an approximately 10-mile trail that starts and finishes at Tumalo Falls, just 20 minutes west of Bend. I've been to Tumalo Falls a zillion times, and sure, it's spectacular, but the fun really starts the farther you venture away from the main destination. I'm ashamed to admit in the many years I've lived in Centra l Oregon , I've never explored more than a short distance upstream. The loop b egins at 4,900 feet in elevation and climbs steadily for miles. For me, it was a slow, steady, gasping-for-oxygenjog. I was wearing running shoes and carrying a water bottle in one h and, but I would be exaggerating to classify my speed as "running." The North Fork trail follows the clear, gurgling Tumalo Creek and passes seven waterfalls, any of which are worthy of stopping to gawk at (and catch your breath). But don't stop too long, because the mosquitoes are hungry. They were loving me like a summer picnic in those damp, shaded viewpoints. Those shady spots are
I
Dinner supports Slow Food Slow Food High Desert is hosting its third annual August's Bounty Farm to Table Dinner from 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday at Bras ada Ranch, 16986 S.W. Brasada Ranch Road, in Powell Butte. The event will feature locally sourced foods and beverages. Tickets cost $75 per personand can be purchased by calling Wendy DiPaolo at 541 -923-8675 by Friday. Proceeds from the event will help send Slow Food High Desert's delegationto theTerra Madreconference in Italy. Slow Food High Desert is the local chapter of Slow Food International and supports good, clean, fair and locally produced food. - From staff reports
Ryan Brenneck e I The Bulletin
Another waterfall along the North Fork of Tumalo Creek. Most have at least a small viewpoint, but some you have to keep your eyes open for.
Ryan Brennecke I The Bulletin
Start the clockwise loop at the North Fork trail sign , at th e Tumalo Falls parking lot.
also why this is a great trail for a hot summer day. Much of the trail is hidden among fir, spruce and pine trees, and has cool air bouncing off the nearby water. After about four miles of climbing, the tr ail leads to the Happy Valley area, which is the point at which I knew I was hopelessly enraptured with this place. Idyllic alpine meadows popped with lupine, larkspur, Indian painthrush and one of my favorites, columbine. (And a lot of other wildflowers that I can't identify on the run.) Quaint wooden bridges crossed clear creeks. I spooked a doe a nd her twin fawns, and I stopped for a minute to watch as they bounded off. See Outing ! B6
Anne Aurand I The Bulletin
About four miles upstream from Tumalo Falls on the North Fork trail, charming footbridges cross crystal clear creeks in the Happy Valley area, marked by green alpine meadows, wildflowers, wildlife and, unfortunately, mosquitoes.
82
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
TV&MoviES BBC America offers first original drama on the streets and offers her a hardboiled egg, which she SAN FRANCISCO - At devours. Later, the girl turns first glance, you could almost up dead, murdered by blunt mistake BBC America's pow- force with some object that erful new dramatic series, has left a distinctive mark on "Copper;' for a classic Ameri- her forehead in the shape of a can Western. In a way, you wolf's head. wouldn't be wrong, despite Corky's determination to solve the girl's the fact that the puts story of Irish imTV SPOTLIGHT murder migrant cops is him at odds with set in New York's powerful monied teeming Five Points neighbor- people, including a friend of his hard-drinking army budhood in 1864. The show is a major mile- dy, Robert Moorehouse (Kyle stone for BBCA because it is Schmid), whose life Corky the first original scripted dra- helped save during the war. ma for a network known for Corky, Robert and an Afriimporting the best of British can-American doctor named TV, shows like 'The Hour," Matthew Freeman (Ato Es"Doctor Who" and "Luther." sandoh) all served together, "Copper" is not only made and Corky has come to rely in the United States, but by on Freeman as a kind of 19th veterans of American telly: century version of a forenco-creator (with Will Rokos) sic crime scene investigator. Tom Fontana and his produc- With the first two episodes, ing partner, director Barry we're given a telling sense of Levinson ("Homicide: Life on class and ethnic differences in the Street," "Oz"). midcentury New York. Some The series, premiering of the class divisions carry Sunday night, focuses on over from the Old Country, Irish-born cop Kevin Corco- while others have been nurran (Tom Weston-Jones), tured by post-colonial culwho sometimes seems to ture. The song "No Irish Need be only a few points on the Apply" had been written moral compass away from just two years earlier, but as the thugs, thieves, murder- Irish immigrants found muers and child molesters he tual support in certain urban pursues with ruthless zeal in neighborhoods - Five Points Five Points. in New York, South Boston The difference between in Massachusetts - they Corky and the human ver- dug their heels in and built min he chases is that Corky their lives and families. They believes in right and wrong, weren't given many oppordespite how much that belief tunities, but being "coppers" has been tested, first by the was one way to earn a living, bloodshed of the Civil War, especially for men returning but mostly because he re- from the Civil War. "Copper" has much to recturned home to find his wife gone and his young daughter ommend it: action, passion murdered. and great performances arisHaunted by the loss of his ing from an exploration of daughter, he takes pity on a classic American themes. It young girl living on her own could tum out to be TV gold By David Wiegand
The San Francisco Chronicle
LocAL MoviE TIMES FOR THURSDAY, AUG. 16
BEND Regal Pilot Butte 6 2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend, 541 -382-6347
BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD (PG-13) 12:45, 3:45,6:30 THE BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG-13) Noon, 3, 6:15 THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 12:15, 4, 7 THE DARK KNIGHT RISES (PG-13) 12:30,6 LOLA VERSUS (R) 1, 3:30,6:45 MOONRISE KINGDOM (PG-13) 1:15, 4:15, 7:15
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 541-382-6347
THE BOURNELEGACY (PG-13) 12:05, 1:15,3:1 5,4,4:30,6:25,7,7:30, 9:35, 10 BRAVE (PG) 1:20, 3:50, 6:20, 9:05 THE CAMPAIGN (R) 12:15, 1:45,4:10, 5, 6:40, 7:45, 9:10, 10:10 THE DARK KNIGHT RISES (PG-13) Noon, 3:40, 7:20, 9:20 THE DARK KNIGHT RISES IMAX (PG13) 12:45, 4:20, 7:55 DIARY OFA WIMPY KID: DOG DAYS (PG) 1, 3:25, 6:05, 9 HOPE SPRINGS (PG-13) 1:05, 3:55, 6:45, 9:15 ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL DRIFT (PG) 12:30,3,6
NITRO CIRCUS: THE MOVIE 3-D (PG13) 1:55, 4:55, 7:15, 9:45 THE 0 DO LIFE OFTIMOTHY GREEN (PG) 12:30,3:30,6:05, 9 RIFFTRAX LIVE: "MANOS: THE HANDS OF FATE" (no MPAA rating) 8 STEP UP REVOLUTION (PG-13) 12:50 TED (R) 2, 4:45, 10:30 TOTAL RECALL (PG-13) 12:20,1:30, 3:10,4:35,6:30, 7:35,9:25,10:20
McMenamins Old St. Francis School 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562
MEN IN BLACK3 (PG-13) 6 PROMETHEUS (R) 9 After 7p.m., shows are 21 and older only Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m. if accompanied by a legal guardian.
Tin Pan Theater 869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271
SHUT UP AND PLAY THE HITS (no MPAA) 7:30 TAKETHIS WALTZ (R) 2:30, 5
REDMOND
541-382-41 71 541-548-770 7 2121 NE Division Bend
641 NW Fir Redmond
www.denfeldpaints.com
Redmond Cinemas
SISTERS Sisters Movie House THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 7 THE CAMPAIGN (PG-13) 5:15, 7:30 ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL DRIFT (PG)5 MOONRISE KINGDOM (PG-1 3) 7:30 TO ROME WITH LOVE (R) 5 TOTAL RECALL (PG-13) 7:1 5
MADRAS
1535 S.W. Odem Me do Road Redmond, 541-548-8777
DIARY OFA WIMPY KID: DOG DAYS (PG) 1:45, 4, 6:15, 8:30
1101 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505
THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 3:40, 6:30,9:25
Hotpoint Range Extreme VALUE for the kitchen!
MARKET
5CuFtOven Capacity 3- 6 " & 1- 8" Coil Elements
NorthWest Crossing Neighborhood Center
~
NORTHWEST "' CROSSING ._
www.nwxfarmersmarket.com
THE CAMPAIGN (R) 2:35, 4:45, 7, 9:10 THE DARK KNIGHT RISES (PG-13) 4:1 5, 7:30 DIARY OF AWIMPY KID: DOG DAYS (PG) 2:25, 4:30, 6:40, 9 TOTAL RECALL (PG-13) 2:20,4:35, 6:50,9:20
PRINEVILLE
THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 4, 7 DIARY OF AWIMPY KID: DOG DAYS (UPSTAIRS- PG) 6
Pine Theater's upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
cLASsic WINDOW
COVERINGS
Sarunlays,June 30 ·Sept 22 I10am·2pm
xh
The Associated Press
Jeremy Renner plays Aaron Cross in a scene from Universal Pictures' "The Bourne Legacy."
214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014
Madras Cinema 5
THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 3:15, 6:15, 9:15
LocAL TV LISTINGS THURSDAY PRIME TIME 8/16/12
THE ODD LIFE OFTIMOTHY GREEN (PG) 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 TOTAL RECALL (PG-13) 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30
Pine Theater
FARMERS
7:30AM-5:30PM MON-FRI 8 AM - 3 PM SAT.
• Open-captioned showtimes are bold. • There may be an additional fee for 3-D movies. • !MAX films are $15.50 for adults and $13 for children (ages 3 to 11) and seniors (ages 60 and older). • Movie times are subject to change after press time.
720 Desperado Court, Sisters , 541-549-8800
SATURDAY
Stt~ing perfect colors since 1975
EDITOR'S NOTES:
- -
RB526DPWW
~~~
541-382-6223
A lso see us for
Awnings, So lar Screens & Custom Dra perie s
(541) 388-4418
JOhnsonbrotherstv com
*In HD, these channels run three hours ahead. I 80-Bend/Redmond/SistersiBiack Butte i i Mf!WJi~~~~~~
THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 2012 â&#x20AC;˘ THE BULLETIN
83
AnvicE & AsTROLOGY
Students should learn more than just the basics Dear Abby: Wouldn't it make sense if grade-school teachers set aside time, weekly or monthly, to go over some very generic information that kids need to learn? I'm talking about things like how important it is to have pets neutered and why, how to manage money, and show them what the average dad earns and what it costs to run a household and suppor t a family. It might help kids to grow up understanding that money isn't free and get them past the "gimmes." There are so many topics that ought to be introduced to youngster s at an early age - how to groom themselves pr op erly, be exposed to a variety of music genres, teach them how grandparents can use help even from sm all children. They could be taught to be aware of their surroundings, to realize that foul l anguage i sn't an attribute and why it's impor tant to be pleasant. Ther e are so many topics. Ten minutes a week on different t opics would suffice. Why not?
- Chaplin, Conn., Reader Dear Reader: W hy not? Because teachers are so overwhelmed trying to get their students to learn enough basic curriculum to pass the statemandat ed tests that they don't have time! Readingyour letter, I couldn't help but wonder whose children you are describing. A ll of the topics you mentioned ar e things children should learn from their parents. Where ar e those parents? AWOL? Dear Abby: I have just star ted back into the dating scene after my divorce and being single for five year s.! had a vasectomy when I was married, and I'm w ondering at what point I should tell prospective dates this information.
- Snipped in Ontario, Canada Dear Snipped: Raise the
DEAR ABBY subject as soon as a w oman mentions the idea of wanting children. It should certainly be discussed before y ou have sex. P.S. Because vasectomies hav e been know n to fail, and won't prevent someone from picking up an STD, you should always make sure you and your partner are protected by using a condom. Dear Abby: Sever al years ago we bought a u sed sof a at a gar age sale. It is now falling apart. A friend of mine in the hotel business offered me an almost new sofa bed from a r oom that was being r edecorated. It matches the col or s in our game room perfectly. My wife said, "You can't bring hot el fur niture into the house. Yuck!" My logic is this: W hy can't our kids sleep on a hotel bed in our house if our other hou seguests are using the k ids' rooms? We would use our clean sheet s, and they sleep on the sofa beds in the hotels we stay in. A m I cheap, or am I married to a clean freak? -Who's Been Sleeping
in My Bed? Dear Who's Been Sleeping: N ot k nowing you better, I can 't say whether or not you're cheap. But your w ife should know th at m any peopl e buy used hotel furniture, and selling it is big business. The sofa bed could be cleaned and sanitized and th e mattress replaced. (Inquire about it at any furniture stor e that sells sofa beds.) But don 't push your wife into taking it or the per son who winds up sleeping on it could be you. - Write D ear A bby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Horoscope: Happy Birthday for Thursday, Aug. 16, 2012 By Jacqueline Bigar This year you grow and evolve to a new level. Events will come forth that allow you to understand moreemotionally and learn more intellectually. Your efforts to network and become more socially integrated seem to comethrough to others. If you are single, you meet people with ease. A friendship could be instrumental in making a romance happen. You could meet Mr. or Ms. Right through a friend. You could be quiteexcited about this person. If you areattached, be more sensitive to your sweetie. Remember, a relationship is madeof two people who both needattention. Another LEOcan match you. He or she makes quitea competitor. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You'll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-Apri119) * *** The unexpected occurs.You discover just how much someone cares, as this person spontaneously decides toexpress his or her affection. Theend result will bethat you are beaming from ear to ear. Your attitude is contagious. Tonight Be authentic. TAURUS (Apri120-May 20) *** Much goes on at home. Please note the many thoughtsthat race through your head. Be sure to do some comparison shopping before purchasing a big item. Youhave the tendency, and arein just the right mood, to go way overboard. Tonight: Order in. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) * **** You tend to say the right words at the right time. A meeting with a group of friends provesto be a very exciting experience, as someone seems to be bouncing off the walls. Know that regardless of what happens, youwill land on your feet if you stay open. Tonight All smiles. CANCER (June 21-July 22) * *** You might decide to go off and buy this and that. You could have agreat time, but the results could be problematic. Someone youlook up to could be difficult right now, as he or she is so unpredictable. Tonight: Make yourfavorite meal. LEO(July 23-Aug. 22) *** *You might hear news that results in hurt feelings. The person delivering this news does not intend the message to havethat outcome. In fact, he or sheis trying to demonstrate his or her caring and support. A meeting proves to
be unusually supportive. Tonight: Friends are full of fun and energy. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) *** You might want tosharemore of yourself. Theelement of timing plays a role, and most likely, it is not clear when the besttime is. A partner or friend surprises you with his or her actions. Go with the flow, and know that everything could change quickly. Tonight: Not to be found. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22) **** Emphasize what you want froma friendship. Askfor the support you want in a meeting. Clearly, others have difficulty anticipating what you want. Learn to express yourself more often and assume youhave a receptiveaudience. Tonight: Where the action is. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) *** Takea stand quickly, and refuse to sell yourself short. You know what you want and in which direction you would like to head. In order to accomplish more of what you want, you will need to take the lead. Tonight: A must appearance. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) * * ** Look past the obvious when relating to a loved oneor a child. What did he or shenot say? This person does not intendto be secretive, but it is just the way he or she is. Try not to define this behavior; instead, be open and authentic. Tonight: Let music be a dominant theme. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ****Relateto someonedirectly, be it about business, networking or a personal matter. You will be surprised by what youhear, so much so that you might opt to head in a different direction. Give yourself sometime to respond. Tonight: Make it cozy. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ***** Others might see your knee-jerk action as being off-thewall. You could be taken aback by their reactions, since you know there is logic behind them. Let your creativity emerge. As a result, solutions will be found. Tonight: Let a love affair come back intoyour life. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) **** You seemset on doing a job a certain way. You will resist approaching it in any other manner. Recognize that others could distance themselves because of your attitude. Stay centered anddo your thing. A family member still surprises you! Tonight Head home. Š 2011 by King Fea1ures Syndica1e
CoMMUNITY CALENDAR Please email event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact:541-383-0351.
TODAY OREGON STAR PARTY: Gather at Indian Trail Spring for night sky viewing, with speakers and more; registration required; directions to site available on website; $75, $25 ages 12-17,$15 ages 6-11 ; ; www .oregonstarparty.org. TREEHOUSE PUPPETS IN THE PARK: With a performance of "Princess Patty's Silk Sheets"; followed by a coordinated activity; free; 11 a.m.-noon; Wildflower Park, 60955 River Rim Drive, Bend; 541-389-7275 or www.bendparksandrec.org. THE LIBRARY BOOK CLUB: Read and discuss "Hearts of Horses" by Molly Gloss; free; noon; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-312-1090 or www .deschutesl ibrary.o rg/calendar. BEND BREWFEST: Event includes tastings from more than 50 breweries, food vendors and more; children admitted until ? p.m.; ID required for entry; free admission, must purchase mug andtasting tokens; 3-11 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive; 541-312-8510 or www.bendbrewfest.com. TUMALO FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-6 p.m.; Tumalo Gard en Market, off of U.S. Highway 20 and Cook Avenue; 541-728-0088, earthsart@g mail.com or http:// tumalogardenmarket.com. MUNCH & MUSIC: Event includes a performance by blues guitaristTommy Castro, with FX Blues; with food and arts and crafts booths, children's area and more; dogs prohibited; free; 5:30-9 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; www.munchandmusic.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Dick Linford reads from his book "Halfway to Halfway and Other River Stories"; free; 7-8:30 p. m.; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe, 135 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-749-2010. CONJUGAL VISITORS: The soul-folk act performs; $5$10; 7 p.m.; Angeline's Bakery & Cafe, 121 W. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-549-9122 or www .angelinesbakery.com. "RIFFTRAXLIVE, 'MANOS' THE HANDS OF FATE":A screening of thefilm, with commentary by the comedians of "Mystery Science Theater 3000"; $12.50; 8 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541 -382-6347 or www .fathomevents.com. BENYARO: The New York-based Americana act performs, with The Harmed Brothers; $5; 8 p.m. ; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-7280879 or www.reverbnation.com/ venue/thehornedhand.
FRIDAY OREGON STAR PARTY: Gather at Indian Trail Spring for night sky viewing, with speakers and more; registration required; directions to siteavailable on website; $75, $25 ages 12-17,$15 ages 6-11 ; www.oregonstarparty.org . GARAGE SALE FUNDRAISER: Proceeds benefit the Bend Fire Department Historical Committee; free admission; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; North Fire Station Training Room, Bend; 541-350-9878. HIGH & DRY BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL: Festival includes live music, instrument workshops, food and more; directions to venue, Runway Ranch in Bend, on website; $15 for weekend; 12:30-10 p.m.; www.hadbf.com. HIGH DESERT BRIDGE SECTIONAL TOURNAMENT: Central Oregon Bridge Club presents a duplicate bridge tournament; $9 or $8 ACBL members; 1 and7 p.m.; 1 p.m. free for players with less than 5 MPS; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, South Sister, Three Sisters Conference and Convention Center. 3800 swAirport Way, Redmond; 541-322-9453 or pldouglas@ bendbroadband.com. BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 2-6 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@ gmail.com or http://bendfarmers market. com. BEND BREWFEST: Event includes tastings from more than 50 breweries, food vendors and more; children admitted until ? p.m.; ID required for entry; free admission, must purchase mug andtasting tokens; 3-11 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive; 541-312-8510 or www.bendbrewfest.com.
Submitted photo
Check out at least 200 autos, hot rods and more during the Harvest Run car show Friday and Saturday in downtown Redmond. SISTERS FARMERS MARKET: 3-6 p. m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenue and Ash Street; www.sistersfarrnersmarket.com. SUNRIVER FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 4-7 p.m.; Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; www.sunriverchamber.com. HARVEST RUN: Drifters Car Clubpresents a car show with approximately 200 autos, hot rods and more; with live music and a barbecue; proceeds benefit Make-
Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints, 2555 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 541-598-6584 or www.cogga.org. YARD SALE FUNDRAISER: Proceeds benefit the Motorcyclists of Central Oregon Toy Run; free admission; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; 22 N.W. Gordon Road, Bend; 541-350-2392. PRINEVILLE FARMERS MARKET: Free; 8:30 a.m.-1 2:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 503-739-0643 or prineville
A-WishFoundation of Oregon,
farmersmarket@grnail.com.
Redmond-Sisters Hospice and Sparrow Clubs USA;free admission; 6 p.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-548-6329. MUNCH & MOVIES: An outdoor screening of "The Lorax"; with food vendors and live music; free; 6 p.m., movie begins at dusk; Compass Park, 2500 N.W. Crossing Drive, Bend; 541-389-0995 orwww .n orthwestcrossing.com. "HOW DID WE GET HERE?" LECTURE SERIES: Dennis Jenkins talks about "Oregon's Ear1iest Inhabitants; Archaeological Investigations at the Paisley Caves"; $10, $8 Sunriver Nature Center members, $3 students, $50 for series; 6:30p.m.; Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Road; 541-593-4394. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Noah Stryckertalks about his book "Among Penguins: A Bird Man in Antarctica"; with a slide show; free; 6:30p. m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. "THE TEMPEST": Innovation TheatreWorks presents Shakespeare's play about a sorcerer trapped on an island; free; 7 p.m.; Village Green Park, 335 S. Elm St., Sisters; 541-504-6721 or www .innovationtw.org. SHOW US YOUR SPOKES: Featuring aperformance by Mosley Wotta and Cloaked Characters; proceeds benefit Commute Options; $5; 7 p.m.; Parrilla Grill, 635 N.W. 14th St., Bend; 541 -617-9600. SUNRIVER MUSIC FESTIVAL CLASSICAL CONCERT II: Featuring selections from Schubert and Beethoven, featuring Steven Moeckel; $30-$60, $10 youth; 7:30p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-593-9310, tickets@sunrivermusic.org or www.sunrivermusi c.org . SARA JACKSON-HOLMAN: The Portland-based singer-songwriter performs a CO-release show. with Matt Brown; $10 in advance, $12 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.sarajackson holman.com. ZOE MUTH AND THE LOST HIGH ROLLERS: The Seattle-based country band performs, with Hawkmeat; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 orwww .reverbnation.com/venue/ thehornedhand. HOOVES: The blues band performs, with Avery James and The Hillandales; $5; 9 p.m., doors open 8 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; www .liquidclub.net. STARGAZING PARTY: View the ni ght sky using telescopes; free; 9 p.m.; Pilot Butte State Park, Northeast Pilot Butte Summit Drive, Bend; 541-388-6055, ext. 27.
GARAGE SALE FUND RAISER: Proceeds benefit the Bend Fire Department Historical Committee; free admission; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; North Fire Station Training Room, Bend; 541-350-9878. LA PINE COOP & GARDEN TOUR: Tour homes throughout La Pine and see hothouses, hen houses and gardens; proceeds benefit La Pine Little Deschutes Grange and the Newberry Habitat for Humanity ReStore; $10 per car; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; www.lapinecoopandgarden.com. MADRAS SATURDAY MARKET: Free admission; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, Band Seventh streets; 541-489-3239 or madrassatmkt@ gmail.com. YARD SALE FUNDRAISER: Proceeds benefit the museum; free admission; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 N.W. Idaho Ave., Bend; 541-3891813 or info@deschuteshistory.org. CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAY MARKET: Featurin g arts and crafts from local artisans; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Bend Public Library, 600 N.W. Wall St.; 541-420-9015 or www .centraloregonsaturdaymarket.com. HARVEST RUN: Drifters Car Club presents a car show with approximately 200 autos, hot rods and more; with live music, ashow and shine and more; proceeds benefit Make-A-Wish Foundation of Oregon, Redmond-Sisters Hospice and Sparrow Clubs USA; free admission; 10 a.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-548-6329. HIGH & DRY BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL: Festival includes live music, instrument workshops, food and more; directions to venue, Runway Ranch in Bend, on website; $15 for weekend; 10 a.m.-10 p.m.; www.hadbf.com. HIGH DESERT BRIDGESECTIONAL TOURNAMENT: Central Oregon Bridge Club presents a duplicate bridge tournament; $9 or $8 ACBL members; 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, South Sister, Three Sisters Conference and Convention Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; 541-322-9453 or pi douglas@ bendbroadband .com. NORTHWEST GROSSING FARMERS MARKET: Free; 10 a.m.2 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives, Bend; 541-382-1662, valerie@brooksresources.com or www.nwxfarmersmarket.com. QUILT SHOW IN THE PARK: Mount Bachelor Ouilters Guild presents an outdoor quilt show, with two featured quilters, a boutique sale, sale table and a raffle; free; 10 a.m.4 p.m.; Pioneer Park, I 525 Hill St., Bend; 541-728-1286. SOLAR VIEWING: View thesun using safe techniques; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, S9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 11 a.m.-2 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. BEND BREWFEST: Event includes tastings from more than 50 breweries, food vendors and more; children admitted until ? p.m.; ID required for entry; free admission, must purchase mug and tasting tokens; noon-II p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive; 541-312-8510 or www.bendbrewfest.com.
SATURDAY OREGON STAR PARTY: Gather at Indian Trail Spring for night sky viewing, with speakers and more; registration required; directions to site available on website; $75, $25 ages 12-17, $15 ages 6-11; www .oregonstarparty.org. CENTRAL OREGON GREAT GIVEAWAY: Pick up clothing and household items; free; 8 a.m.-I p.m.;
DINNER FUND RAISER: A steak dinner and silent auction; proceeds benefit the Honor Flight of Eastern Oregon and Prineville's Band of Brothers; $10 for dinner; 4 p. m.; Elks Lodge, 151 N. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-5451. HIGH DESERT RENDEZVOUS: A Western auction and gala featuring live music, games and dinner; proceeds benefit the High Desert Museum's educational programs; S200, $150 for museum members; 4 p.m.; Horse Butte Equestrian Center, 60360 Horse Butte Road, Bend; 541-382-4754, ext. 365, hdr@highdesertmuseum.org or www.highdesertrendezvous.o rg. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Les Joslin talks about his book "Uncle Sam's Cabins"; with a slide show; free; 6:30p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St. , Redmond; 541-526-1 491. "THE TEMPEST": Innovation Theatre Works presents Shakespeare's play about a sorcerer trapped on an island; free; 7 p.m.; American Legion Community Park, 850 S.W. Rimrock Way, Redmond; 541-504-6721 or www.innovationtw.org. SEASON SHOWCASE: See scenes and musical numbers from upcoming shows at 2nd Street Theater; $10 suggested donation; 7:30p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; 2nd StreetTheater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. TRIAGE: The comedy improvisational troupe performs; $5; 7:30p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-771 -3189. BROWNCHICKEN BROWNCOW STRINGBAND: The W.Va.-based string band performs; S5; 9:30p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silvermoon brewing.com.
SUNDAY OREGON STAR PARTY: Gather at Indian Trail Spring for night sky viewing, with speakers and more; registration required; directions to site available on website; $75, $25 ages 12-17, $15 ages 6-11; www .oregonstarparty.org. HIGH DESERT BRIDGE SECTIONAL TOURNAMENT: Central Oregon Bridge Club presents a duplicate bridge tournament; $9 or S8 ACBL members; 10 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, South Sister, Three Sisters Conference and Convention Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Red mond; 541-322-9453 or pldouglas@bendbroadband.corn. HIGH & DRY BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL: Festival includes live music, instrument workshops, food and more; di rections to venue, Runway Ranch in Bend, on website; S15 fo r weekend; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; www.hadbf.com. "THETEMPEST": Innovation Theatre Works presents Shakespeare's play about a sorcerer trapped on an island; free; 2 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Ove rlook Road; 541-504-6721 or www .innovationtw.org. CHUKKERS FOR CHARITY: Featuring the USPA Officer's Cup polo match; proceeds benefit the Tower Theatre Foundation, Bend Paddle Trail Alliance and Healing Reins Therapeutic Riding Center; $10, free ages 12 and younger; 2 p.m., gates open noon; Camp Fraley Ranch, 60580 Gosney Road, Bend; www.cascadepoloclub.com. SUNRIVERMUSIC FESTIVAL PIANO RECITAL: Elizabeth Joy Roe performs selections from Corigliano, Chopin and Beethoven; S30-$50, $10 youth; 7:30p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall, 17728 Abbott Drive; 541 -593-9310, tickets@sunrivermusic.org or www.sunrivermusic.org.
84
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
TUNDRA
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE 60MEDAY1 MY goy1 THIS Wlt..t.. AU.. gE YOURS!
Mf\AI\H!-1
ear R
r---------.
BRAND-MEOW ERfi5E:RRN' LIZ.ZIE: BIT rr R,iGHT IN HALt=}
HEART OF THE CITY
SALLY FORTH
H~~T? IS T~AT <too~
I'M SORRY WE HAVEN'T HUNG OUT A LOT LATELY, JON. I'VE JUST BEEN WORRIEJ) ABOUT PLAYING AT AUNT r~- JACKIE'S WEJ>DING ...
SAY ScMETIIrtJG?
FRAZZ ~\lT ~OT ~0\Tl \\OT tJ~OOO\\ 10 ~~LV- UP A
S\.\VE. m
&1\~~~~?-5.
LUANN YES. 1'1-liS IEENY BIKINI WEEN!£ 15 JUSI DuMB ENOUGI-I 10 !.IKE CRAZY. 11..1.. PA55 If UP 10
W~t..-, AND<I AND r Af2.~
Gt...AO TO
HAV~ ANO'IH~IZ
Sm
(70'( Af20UNO.
DILBERT
... MAKE
FURNITURE
POL\SH.
GOOGLE HAS OFFERED TO BUY OUR COMPANY FOR $100 MILLION JUST TO GET OUR ENGINEERS.
WHO WROTE MY SPEECH?
)
) ..
t
N
"
~
~
____._~~~~ro~~~~~W-----~
~--~~~~~~~c~_.
PICKLES AN{) IT'5 NOT JU5T THEi TEiAM THAT'U.. 5UFF£iR, IT'U 8e THe WHOU3 COMMUNITY! NO MORe fi.AWC5 OR TAII.6ATIN6 OR HA&F-T/Me 5HOW5...
{)00/JUNe $TUP/3NT$ RIOT AN{)5CTRR£i TO THC/ROWIJ FUII.NITURC? NO!
I
ADAM
... A-NP YOU/ 71RBt ARt; Tft£ PeA?ANTS' '' &VBH OF HONOR:' THtYVE:: RB~RVBI/ fJr ~~t:,IAi.. PL.-AW FOR YOU
B.C. l CAN'froDAY. MY DADMA~ JL
GARFIELD
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE (
HEY! CAN I GET
~ l..IT1'J...E PRIVAC't'?!
I DIDN'T BEE THE )
~~ 0
BEWARE OF INVISIBL.E
P9G
BEWARE OF INVISIBL.E
WMV A((E 't'OU JUST
SITTING T~ERE ?!
WE~UIR. I'VE f/IJAI.~Y FIGURED OUT HOIJ TO USf PRIVAT6 OINKY IN MY ARMY. Hm BE ASURVm~ANCE ORONc ~OVERING HIGH OV~RUEAO.
POG
PEANUTS
MARY WORTH
T~IS
IS A 800K !
YOU KNOW W14AT A SOOK IS,DON'T VOU1
NOTI-l1N6, MOM .. I'M JUST ENCOURAGING
HIM TO READ ..
WI LBUR S AI D PI-IYSICAL/.. '/ T H!:'I AR E A ~L R IGHT, E')<CEPT F OR SOM E" BUMPS ANI/ BRU1 6E5! ...
SOMEONE WITH NO ECONOMIC VALUE.
B UT OF CO UR5 ~ !T'5 A
SHOCK TO GO THROUGH I HAT ' ... F 1G HTING F OR
S u RVIVAL ON P. SINK ING SHIP !
THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
BIZARRO
SUDOKU
9 7
19 4 5 8 6 3 2 7 9 3 2 4 7 5 8 6 1
5 7 6
6
2 7
SOLUTION TO YESTERDAY'S SUDOKU
2 3 8 7 9 1 5 6 4 18 6 9 2 3 4 5 7 6 7 9 8 1 2 3 4 5
5 1
4
Completethe grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.
~
2 4 3
9 18 7 54 ~ 8 6 1I 3 29 2 4 3 18 5 l 6 59 4 3 7 . 7 18 6 92 :
1
6 5 7 1 5 8
9 2
6 3 4
3 7 3
9 5 3
8 6
DIFFICULTY RATING:**** 1:?
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB
Thursday,August 16,2012
Poisoned slam
IJOW TliAT W~'V~ II~ALT W/TII YOUR ING~CUR/TV, I GUm YOU CAN TACKL~ YOUR HANY, HAAIY OTII~R FLAW~ ON YOUR OWN.
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services
Unlucky Louie, my club member whose luck is (he asserts) uniformly bad, says he could reach down to pick a four-leaf clover - and catch poison ivy. As today's South, Louie held a hand unusually strong for him. He got to six hearts after North bid encouragingly. When West led the queen of clubs , Louie won and cashed the A-K of trumps. West threw a spade, and Louie grimaced. Louie next took the ace of diamonds and led to dummy's king. Alas, East ruffed - more bad luck. East then led his last trump, and Louie lost a diamond.
GET FUZZY l CAII' T
flG-\JRe OJ1 W\\Y
COl>EX
\Ot-t> ME 11\A.T 'THE
\<Eel'ER Of WE WJL '(/lEt> ...
and your partner bids one spade. What do you say? ANSWER: A bid of two hearts would promise extra strength but not as much as you have. One possible action is a jump to three hearts, but that bid would crowd the auction. To suggest a hand with game or neargame values, many experts would mark time with a cue bid of two clubs. South dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH . AQ4 \) 8 6 2 0 K42
KEY SUITS
NON SEQUITUR 8-16
~U\-t\1'1~ PUN\r 'l\ ~~~ lt\1~~ ~~l\\~...
"So what else is new?'' Louie groaned. "My key suits always break badly." Louie was unlucky but could still make the slam. After he sees the 4-1 trump break, he can lead a diamond to the king and return a diamond. If East discards (ruffing won't help), Louie takes the ace , leads a spade to dummy and returns a third diamond. Again, East can' t gain by ruffing, so Louie wins and ruffs his last diamond in dummy, losing only one trump trick. DAILY QUESTION You hold: • K 9 6 \) A K Q 5 3
0 A Q 7 3 olt A. The dealer, at your right, opens one club. You double,
. 9863 WEST . 1072 \)7
EAST
• J853 \) J 10 9 4
0 10 olt K742
OJ9865
olt Q J 10 5
SOUTH
. K96 \JAKQ53 0 AQ 7 3 olt A South
lQ 30 6<:)
North West 2<:) Pass Pass All Pass
3.
East Pass Pass
Opening lead - olt Q (C) 2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
SAFE HAVENS
LOS ANGELES TIMES DAILY CROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS
ln. fl-.e
fa.dies' room., as in ftfe,
som.efimes if's 6effer
nof to look 6a.ck
I
'--- - - - - - - - ----' V.....
Gibb,..,.,_
811
(Af',)T:J: K i ~G FEI\TU!1 E S_COI~
HERMAN
JJ~~ffi!1LE.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square. to form four ordinary words.
[JYLI
t) II
©2012 Tribune Media Services, All Rights ReseiVed.
I EVMOD
rJ
1
g
-
.
rxJ rJ f....
\
Inc. ~
I
~CEDED }
I NIREWY rI I j
:~~~~.X?ouut~~~!r~~~~~~~~~~~~ Plus you used that cheap fertil~er. And your soil isn't as good as mine.
•
li I I
©LaughingStock lnternabonallnc., Dist. by Universal Uclick, 2012
"Whaddyer mean you don't take plastic. Everything I'm buying is plastic!"
Yesterday's
I Jumbles: BASIC
50 "Got your 6 Recorded for 40 Ends and posterity centers back" 7 "Project Runway'' 41 Programming 52 Th.D.'s field figure pioneer Lovelace 55 "Krazy'' comics 8Tune 42 Quilter's session feline 9 Soweto's nation: 43 "Amen to that!" 56 Golf's Davis Abbr. 44 _ dragon Love 10 Outstanding 45 Crowds 57 Slot lever 11 Sigh after losing 46 Two-thirds of 58 Go out in the 12 Tetley rival dodecaafternoon? 15 Ma with a baa 47 Org. led by 59 Hula strings 17 It's blown in the 60 Business card Robert Mueller winds since 2001 abbr. 20 Directional suffix ANSWERTO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: 21 Distort 22 Matinee heartthrob 23 In the wrong business? 24 Transcript fig. 25 First name in folk 26 Italian for "meatbased sauce" 30 Place for a legend 32 Hook shape 34 One on the range 35 Grand-scale tale 36 Lhasa 37 Economist Greenspan 38 Administer, with "out" 39 Winter Olympics xwordeditor@aol.com leap
DOWN Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Answer: r?"""'<T r I~ I.. .I . .,.,. ......,.,..... I I'<'T?"""',........, <I J 8-16
1 Wynonna's mom 6 Five-star general Bradley 10 Break a law, in a way 13 Industry magnate 14 Beurre hazelnut butter 16 *Bedroom fixture 18 Lover of an Irish Rose 19 Best of the best 21 *Tuxedo shirt feature 27 Predatory look 28 Many a pet 29 Period of fasting ended by Eid aiFitr 31 Activist Parks 32 Composer of a popular graduation march 33 Tissue box word 34 *Fog metaphor 37 Wkly. research journal publisher 40 Northern European people 41 A-Rod's "A" 42 Two-piece suits 45 Reason to get dolled up 48 North Carolina university 49 *Fashion icon with her own pertume 51 Sinclair Lewis's "_ Gantry" 53 Uffizi display 54 Screwball, and what each starred answer's beginning is 61 Capital of South Australia 62 Clutch neighbor 63 Old-style over there 64 Hermanos de su madre 65 Force
r
I I
J
(Answers tomorrow)
ALIAS GUILTY AROUND Answer: The umpire was glad the game was finally over because he was ready to - CAUL ITA DAY
1 "Seinfeld" network 2 Sigh during pampering 3 Underground treasure 4 Wks. and wks. 5 Unharmed
By Gareth Bain (c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
08/ 16/12
85
86
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
CoMMUNITY DATEBOOI( Datebook is a weekly calendar of regularly scheduled nonprofit events and meetings. Listings are free but must be updated monthly to continue to publish. Please email event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351.
ORGANIZATIONS
TODAY COMMUNICATORS PLUS TOASTMASTERS: 6:30-7:45 p.m.; IHOP, Bend; 541-593-1656 or 541-480-0222. THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.
Post#44, Redmond;541-548-5688. THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. NATIONAL ACTIVE AND RETIRED FEDERAL EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION, CENTRAL OREGON CHAPTER: 10 a.m.; Redmond Senior Center; 541-548-2228. RED ROCK SQUARE DANCE: 7-10 p.m.; Redmond Grange;541-923-8804.
SATURDAY
FRIDAY BEND KNIT-UP: $2; 10 a.m.-noon; Rosie Bareis Community Campus, Bend; 541-728-0050. BINGO: 6 p.m.; American Legion
Post #44, Redmond; 541-548-5688. THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: 12:455 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.
MONDAY THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-5 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. SCOTTISH COUNTRY DANCE: 7-9 p.m.; Sons of Norway Hall, Bend; 541-549-7311 or 541-848-7523.
No events listed.
TUESDAY
SUNDAY
BELLAACAPPELLA HARMONY: 6 p.m.; Bend Senior Center; 541 -388-5038.
BINGO: 12:30 p.m.; American Legion
BINGO: 6 p.m.; Eagles Lodge & Club, Prineville; 541-447-7659. CRIBBAGE CLUB: 6 p.m.; Bend's Community Center; 541-317-9022. GAME DAY: 11:45 a.m.; Bend's Community Center; 541-323-3344. THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Canasta; 9:45 a.m.-2 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. HIGH DESERT RUG HOOKERS: 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Bend Senior Center; 541-382-5337. HIGHNOONERS TOASTMASTER CLUB: Noon-1 p.m.; New Hope Church, Classroom D, Bend; 541390-5373 or 541-317-5052. LA PINE CHAMBER TOASTMASTERS: 8-9 a.m.; Gordy's
Truck Stop, La Pine; 541-536-9771.
WEDNESDAY BEND CHAMBER TOASTMASTERS: Noon-1 p.m.; The Environmental Center, Bend; 541-610-2308. BEND KNITUP: 5:30-8 p.m.; Barnes & Noble Booksellers, Bend; 541-728-0050. BEND SUNRISE LIONS CLUB: 7 a.m.; Jake's Diner, Bend; 541-286-5466. BINGO: 6 p.m.; American Legion Post #44, Redmond; 541-548-5688. THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. KIWANIS CLUB OF REDMOND: Noon-1 p.m.; Juniper Golf and
Country Club, Redmond; 541-5485935 orwww.redmond kiwanis.org. LA PINE LIONS CLUB: Noon; La Pine Community Park Building; 541-536-2201 or http:// lapinelionsor.l ionwap.org. PRIMETIME TOASTMASTERS: 12:05-1 p.m.; Home Federal Bank, Prineville; 541-416-6549. REDMOND AREA TOASTMASTERS: Noon-1 p.m.; Ray's Food Place, Redmond; 541-410-1758. WEDNESDAY MORNING BIRDERS: 7 a.m.; Nancy P's Baking Co., Bend; www.ecaudubon.org or jmeredit@ bendnet.com.
Outing Continued from 81 I texted my husband with enthusiastic expletives about how gorgeous the trail was, which he already knew. But the next day, he grabbed his mountain bike and charged the very same route. After Happy Valley, the loop follows the Metolius-Windigo Trail to the Mrazek Trail to the Farewell Trail (stay right at the intersections). It winds through trees and climbs away from the creek. Trail intersections are all well marked and I didn't worry about getting lost, except for when I popped onto a dirt road intersection - Forest roads 370 and 4601 - a little more than halfway through the loop. I checked my map to be sure, but what you need to do here is turn right on the road, and within a few yards you'll see the singletrack dirt trail on the right. The whole trail was generally in great shape and free of snow. The various footbridges were functional enough despite signs warning the contrary. The Central Oregon Trail Alliance's website says the only hazards on this route are "tourists," but that didn't detract from my experience. My modus operandi is to get up early and beat the crowds. On this recent sunny Saturday morning, r hit the trail shortly after 8 a.m. and only a couple of cars were parked at the trailhead. About two hours later, as I descended Farewell Trail's final switchbacks. a more open and exposed section of manzanita-covered hillside that offers views of snow-capped Cascade mountains that seemed zoom-lens close, I could hear many voices and the sounds of children shouting from Tumalo Falls, and nary a parking spot remained allhe lrailhead. Keep in mind, you don't have to get too far past the trailhead to escape the bulk of visitors. On my run, I passed only three hikers, got passed by two mountain bikers, and as I got toward the end, crossed paths with two runners whom I happened to know. They had the brilliant idea of running the loop counterclockwise. (Mountain hikers, however, must go clockwise. Bikes are allowed to ride uphill only on the North Fork trail, since it can be so heavily traveled by hikers.) I might run it counterclockwise next time, presuming I'm on foot. The Farewell Trail has the most exposure and the least water, so it'd be nice to
Ryan Brennecke I The Bullet in
Hikers walk along the North Fork trail near the Tumalo Falls viewpoint.
If you go Directions: From Galveston Avenue in Bend, drive west on what becomes Skyliners Road for 10 miles. Then drive another 2.6 miles on Forest Road 4603 to Tumalo Falls. Difficulty: Challenging; a 10-mile loop with elevation gain. Cost: Northwest Forest Pass required: $5 per day or $30 annually. Contact: Bend-Fort Rock Ranger District Office, 541-383-4000. Info: www.fs.usda.gov/ recarea/centraloregon/ recreation/recarea/ ?recid=38482
get that done first on a hot day. Plus, the Farewell Trail would be easier to navigate on fresh legs because it is rockier, dustier and steeper than the North Fork trail. For anyone who doesn't want to hike the whole 10 miles, I'd recommend just heading up the North Fork trail from Tumalo Falls as far as your legs allow before turning around. This section of the trail is definitely lovely enough to see twice in one day. - Reporter: 541-383-0304, aaurand@bendbulletin.com Thirty years ago we made a promise to give Central Oregon a place for high performance, exceptional service and incredible value. While a lot has changed since then, our promise has not. Join us as we celebrate with our 30th Birthday Sales Event, featuring special financing and deals on our huge inventory of Audis, BMWs, Porsches and Volkswagens. It's a sale that's been thirty years in the making.
Come by this Saturday for lunch on us and a chance to test drive the latest in German engineering.
~... ··.•. ~ ....f ···..
Autobahn For All
MrazekTrail
r·. ·' ... .. .,_1'~m iles
·, ··'Metolius-Windigo Trail •• 1.1 miles
''-l...:··-..-.•..-••.-....-.•.-
!.'
\., (%
" ~%c
Mrazek Trail
..... ~...
• ... >a>.,+
·-r.:;:-- Farewell Trail ~.-.-,, 3.3 m1les
.---··,·.. -~~~~\<1 MILES
0
0 6 °/0 FOR
.:.l!l!u
<-~~=~~~
APR
MONTHS
For 2012 Volkswagen gas models. Based on approved credit. Oller ends August 31st.
___ OCAL
c
Editorials, C4 Obituaries, C5 Weather, C6
EWS
ti) www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
LOCAL BRIEFING Fire damages utility property A brush fire Tuesday afternoon on Bend's east side damaged a Pacific Power utility box and a Cascade Natural Gas line. Bend firefighters were sent to the fire near Kayla Court around 3 p.m., and were able to extinguish the flames in a grove of juniper trees on a vacant lot. Damages were estimated at $1,500. Investigators said the fire was human-caused, and began in an area popular as a campsite and a teen hangout.
Redmond man hurt in crash A Redmond resident was injured Wednesday afternoon in acrash on U.S. Highway 26 between Madras and Prineville. Timothy Childress, 20, was eastbound at around 2 p.m. when his vehicle crossed the center line and struck a trailer being towed behind a westbound commercial truck driven by Dirk Graves, 57, of Bend. Childress was taken by ambulance to St. Charles Bend with critical injuries. Graves was uninjured. Oregon State Police restricted traffic to one lane for three hours while investigating the crash.
WARM SPRINGS
Bend council vote favors Crews battle blaze fines for false alarms
near reservation
The Bulletin
Hundreds of firefighters continue to dig containment lines around a blaze burning in rugged forestland on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation and releasing huge plumes of smoke over the area. The Waterfalls 2 Fire had burned about 2,700 acres as of Wednesday evening, having spread about 1,000 acres since Tuesday, said Rawlin Richardson, spokesman with Oregon Incident Management TeamNo.l.
See Waterfalls 2 I C2
-- j~~·-.
··:~
ByJoeiAschbrenner
By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
WARM
S P R ING S I ND . RES .
•-.
·----- j____
w-~~ ~-~..9-~-~:.r- ~-
JEF FERso ------~
C O U NTY
Warm Springs Ma ras If'\, Andy Zeiger! I The Bulletin
Inside • Counties elevate fire risks, C5 • More ready to flee Washington's Taylor Bridge Fire, C6
Bend city councilors voted Wednesday night to approve new rules aimed at reducing the time police spend responding to false alarms. The latest version of the false alarm ordinance would impose fines on businesses and residents when they have more than one false alarm in on e year. An earlier version of the ordinance imposed fines for the first offense, but s ome city councilors said that was too harsh . The city would also establish a voluntary alarm registration program so
it can collect information on whom to contact in case of a false alarm. Contact information would be collected when a business applies for a license from the city. The city would work with alarm companies to gather contact information for people with residential systems. Councilors must hold a second vote on the ordinance before it can take effect. Bend City Councilor Scott Ramsay, who voted against an earlier version of the ordinance, proposed the compromise at Wednesday's meeting. "My concern was to mitigate pressure on business," Ramsay said .
Jonesing for some tunes
T he B ulletin
More briefing and
News of Record, C2
a
Road closure Road closed
Detour
BUTLER MARKET ROAD Butler Market Road will be closed between Boyd Acres Road and the 8th Street roundabout for paving preperation. Traffic will be detoured around the intersection.
Andy Zeiger! I The Bulletin
FIRE UPDATE Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. For the latest information, visit www.nwccweb .us/information/ firemap.aspx. Rob Kerr I The Bu lletin
Norah Jones performs Wednesday night at the Les Schwab Amphitheater in Bend.
1. Barry Point Fire • Acres: 48,000 • Containment: 25% • Cause: Lightning 2. Holloway Fire • Acres: 432,378 • Containment: 68% • Cause: Lightning 3. Ten Mile Complex • Acres: 14,036 • Containment: 90% • Cause: Lightning 4. Buckhead Complex • Acres: 250 • Containment: 50% • Cause: Lightning
Bend man suspected of sex with prostitute, teenage girl By Sheila G. Miller
-Bulletin staff reports
-
Businesses need to take responsibility when their systems have false alarms, but t he original plan to create a new alarm registration program would have imposed more paperwork on people, Ramsay said. Police Chief Jeff Sale told councilors Wednesday night that he believes most false alarms are at businesses, but the Bend Police Department has not researched the breakdown between commercial properties and homes. Police respond to an average of 2,167 false alarms annually, which costs the Police Department approximately $110,000, according to a city domment. See Bend council / C2
Sisters airport seeks annexation By Ben Botkin The Bulletin
Sisters Eagle Air Airport wants to be annexed into the city limits of Sisters. The Sisters City Council will hear the airport's request for annexation during a workshop at 8 a .m. today at City Hall in Sisters. At 9:30 a.m., the council will have a special meeting to decide if the request will go on the ballot in November. The motivation for the a irport's annexation is tied to zoning. The 34.3-acre property is in a rural residential zone, giving the airport a county designation for non-residential uses that makes obtaining p ermission for changes to the property difficult, according to the airport 's memorandum to Sisters about its request.
See Airport I C2
A former Bulletin employee has been accused of sexual interactions with at least one underage girl and a prostitute. Kevin O'Connell, 35, was arrested and jailed Wednesday afternoon on suspicion of second-degree sexual abuse and prostitution. He was released shortly thereafter. O'Connell O'Connell recently left The Bulletin when his position as classifieds manager was eliminated. Second-degree sexual abuse is sex without consent or sex with someone under 18 who therefore cannot legally give consent, and is a Class C felony. Prostitution, which is engaging in sexual contact for a fee, is a Class A misdemeanor. According to a search warrant affidavit, Traci Donaca - human resources director for The Bulletin's parent company, Western Communications Inc. - contacted Bend p olice on Aug. 6 to report that she had found a list on O'Connell's work computer that detailed his sexual relationships, including those with underage girls and a prostitute. O'Connell asked to take personal files off of his work computer when he wasterminated Aug. 6, but Donaca refused, the search warrant affidavit states. Donaca told O'Connell she would get the documents from h is computer and forward them to him.
See Arrest I C2
CAR CRASHES INTO SOUTHEAST BEND HOME Bend firefighters assist police Thursday evening at a duplex off Blakely Road in southeast Bend that an SUV crashed into around 6:30 p.m. Two residents upstairs at the time were briefly trapped, but were not injured. Sgt. Brian Beekman said the 33year-old Bend man driving the SUV might have suffered a medical emergency, causing him to leave the road. The driver was examined at St. Charles Bend and released. He is not facing charges. Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin
C2
THE BULLETIN â&#x20AC;˘ THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
Waterfalls 2 LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from C1
Man arrested in rape case APrineville man was arrested Tuesday on suspicion of rape and sexual abuse following a monthlong investigation by the Prineville Police Department. Awoman reported to police that James Cotterell, 70, had sexually abused her as a child for several years, said Prineville Police Detective Mark Monroe. "This is one of those cases where the victim is (away) from the alleged abuser and they gain a sense of safety" to report the abuse, Monroe said. Cotterell was arraigned Wednesday in Crook County Circuit Court on two counts each of first-degree sexual abuse and second-degree rape, said Chief Deputy District Attorney Aaron Brenneman. Additional charges could be filed against Cotterell next week, Brenneman said. Cotterell is being held in Crook County jail on $50,000 bail.
Continued from C1 The multi-agency team took over management of the fire Wednesday morning at the request of Warm Springs Fire officials after the blaze grew too large for the tribal crews to contain, said Warm Springs Fire spokesman Clay Penhollow. Estimates on how much of the fire was contained were unavailable Wednesday
evening. The fire is burning in the mountains about 22 miles west of the town of Warm Springs. It has not threatened any structures, but has forced the evacuation of a nearby summer camp and closed a section of the Pacific Crest Trail from Russell Lake to Breitenbush Lake and Breitenbush Lake Campground. Nearly 300 firefighters and one light helicopter have been dispatched to the fire, Penhol-
low said. Fire officials have requested more aircraft but expect none will be available until larger fires in the region - like the Taylor Bridge Fire that has burned more than 60 homes near Ellensburg, Wash. - are contained. Firefighters have been unable to fight the blaze directly because of the rugged terrain. They were building containment lines Wednesday in an effort to prevent the blaze from spreading a few miles north to
an area stocked with dead, dry timber killed by a beetle infestation, Penhollow said. Lightning sparked the fire Aug. 4. Strong winds and low humidity helped spread the blaze Monday and Tuesday. Light winds Wednesday helped fire crews slow the fire, but temperatures predicted to reach triple digits today in Warm Springs could stoke the flames. -Reporter: 541-633-2184, juschbrenner@bendbulleLin.com
BEND GETS A TASTE OF POLICE CHIEF'S CAR-BECUE
Bombs explode near Prineville Two homemade bombs exploded in a residential neighborhood north of Prineville Tuesday night, and a third was disabled by bomb technicians from the Oregon State Police, authorities said. Crook County Sheriff's deputies responded to McDougal Court at around 10:22 p.m., when a resident reported that an unknown device had exploded in the driveway. Deputies found evidence of a second explosion shortly after arriving in the area, as well as a third, unexploded device nearby. Sgt. James Savage said the devices are similar to dry-ice bombs, but more powerful. Made with household items in beverage bottles, the pressure inside the bottle slowly builds up as a result of a chemical reaction between the ingredients, and the bottle eventually explodes. "It's pretty violent. It would probably blow your hand off if you had it in your hand when it went off," Savage said. Savage said an OSP bomb squad investigating a recent incident in Gilchrist was able to respond quickly to Crook County and disarm the unexploded device. Residents were asked to stay in their homes for about two hours while deputies, the bomb sq uad and Crook County Fire & Rescue personnel were on the scene.
Byway trails awarded grant A portion of a $2 million U. S. Department of Transportation grant will go toward improving the trail network along the Cascade Lakes Scenic Byway. The grant will help fund three scenic byway projects in the state, and is part of a larger grant of $28 million awarded by the department to fund Oregon transportation projects. Oregon received more funding for scenic byway projects than all but two states. - Bulletin staff reports
Rob Kerr I The Bulletin
Bend Police Chief Jeff Sale displays the department's "grill car" Wednesday for city councilors and passersby at City Hall in Bend. Sale said he came up with the idea at his former job in Cheney, Wash., to improve community interaction with
Arrest Continued from C1 When she accessed the personal files on O'Connell's computer, she found a document called "Conversion Log" - a spreadsheet with an "extensive list of approximately 70 names of women, and dated back to the vear 2002." The list, according to the affidavit, included names, birth dates and other p ersonal in-
Bend council Continued from C1 City staff say cracking down on false alarms is one way to reduce police expenses. The Police Department has proposed cutbacks, some of lhem dramalic, in response lo anticipated budget shortfalls and a projected increase in calls for service. For example, detectives could stop investigating all property crimes and thefts of property worth less than $100,000 this year, unless the incident is part of a series of crimes or the victim is over 65 years old. According to a
the police. Multiple sponsors helped get the vehicle- which has a smoker barbecue built into the interior- repainted and moved from Cheney to Bend. Sale barbecued pulled pork using the vehicle -a 10-12 hour process, he
formation about the women, as well as a column detailing O'Connell's sexual experiences with the women. Included in the list, Donaca told police, were at least six girls who were 17 years old or younger at the time of the reported sexual contact. According to the affidavit, the spreadsheet also allegedly contained information about O'Connell's sexually transmitted diseases and which
women he'd transmitted them to. The final entry, according to the affidavit, was from July 19 and noted that O'Connell had sex with a prostitute. Another list, entitled "Priority," listed women O'Connell planned to pursue. Pornographic photos were also found on the computer. Rend Police Detective Eric Hagan said a thorough investigation of the computer has
not concluded, and O'Connell could face more charges once the investigation is complete. Hagan said police examining the computer have only confirmed O'Connell's interactions with one minor and one prostitute, although there maybe more. O'Connell, who could not be reached for comment, is due in court Aug. ~0 .
presentation by Sale in May, detectives also could stop investigating sex abuse or rape by 2016, unless the victim is younger than 14 years old, over 65 years old or someone with a disability. Service reductions depend upon officers' workloads, which vary on a daily basis. Currently, the city begins charging a fine at the third false alarm in one year. Fines are $100 for the third false alarm, $150 for the fourth and $300 for each subsequent false alarm, Finance Director Sonia Andrews wrote in an email. City code also gives police
the option to stop responding to alarms from a particular property after three false alarms. The new fines would not take effect until at least the end of the year, because the City Council must first adopt a new fee schedule, Cily Manager Eric King said. The voluntary alarm registration program would help police more quickly resolve false alarms, City Councilor Mark Capell said. "One of the issues is when they go out to a false alarm, police have to spend time tracking down who to contact about alarm," Capell said. "If
they had that information on database, it would save police officer time." "This isn't a revenue issue, it's a freeing up police resources issue," he said. In other business Wednesday night, the City Council voled 5-2 lo approve a sevenyear extension of a development agreement with River's Edge Investments LLC. The extension is part of the settlement of a lawsuit that River's Edge brought against the city. Mayor Pro Tern Jodie Barram and Councilor Jim Clinton voted against the extension.
POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Poli ce Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358. Bend Police Department
Theft - Atheft was reported and anarrest made at 3:15p.m. Aug. 1, in the 300 blockof Southwest Century Drive. Criminal mischief - An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:34 a.m. Aug. 6, in the 1200 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft - Atheft was reported at 9:02p.m. Aug.1 2, in the 3100 block of North U.S. Highway 97. Criminal mischief - An act of criminal mischief was reported at 1:36 p.m. Aug.13, in the 61200 block of Blakely Road.
Criminal mischief- An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:14p.m. Aug. 13, in the area of Devils Lake Drive and Blue Lake Loop. Theft -A theft was reported at 3:43 p.rn. Aug. 13, in the 300 block of Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive. Theft - Atheft was reported at 5:51 p. m. Aug. 12, in the 2400 block of Northwest Dorian Way. Criminal mischief - An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 10: 22 p.m. Aug. 13, in the 2000 block of Northeast Linnea Drive. Prineville Police Department
DUll- Amy Reed, 28, was arrested
on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:07 a.m. Aug. 14, in the area of Northwest Third Street. Burglary-Aburglary was
MED I SPA HOME I NTE RIOR S
- Reporter: 541-617-7831, smiller@bendbulletin.com
- Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
Continued from C1 As a result, any improvement, even for relatively small projects like adding office or hangar space, requires a lengthy process of getting the county to sign off on changes, said Benny Benson,the airport's owner. The property is located north of Sisters at the intersection of Camp Polk Road and Barclay Drive. I3y annexing, the airport could get an airport zoning designation similar to that of the Bend Municipal Airport, Benson said. The annexation proposal also is intended to aid the growth of Energyneering Solutions, Inc., a renewable energy company and tenant at the airport. The 35-employee company has grown from seven employees just two years ago, said Benson, who is also president of Energyneering Solutions. His wife, Julie Benson, is the company's chief executive officer and chief financial officer. The memorandum notes that the city stands to gain more tax revenue from the business, the airport and employees relocating to Sisters, including new engineers and their families. "The benefit of having a company at the airport is that the airport doesn't have to be completely sustainable on its own," said Benson, who bought the airport in 2011. Benson said the annexation wouldn't expand the scope of the airport's mission. The privately-owned airport is designated for public use for general aviation. The annexation wouldn't pave the way for larger aircraft or additional uses, Benson said. The airport, already cleared by the Federal Aviation Administration and Oregon Department of Aviation, doesn't need the annexation to operate, Benson said. "Whether it gets annexed or not, the airport remains," he said. Sisters' charter requires an annexation be put to the public for a vote, said City Manager Eileen Stein. Stein said the city hasn't done any calculations yet on what the property tax revenue increase would be if the airport were annexed into Sisters. If the annexation goes to voters on Nov. 6, a simple majority is needed for it to pass. - Reporter: 541-977-7185, bbotkin@bendbulletin.com
Joe Kline I The Bulletin
A single-engine aircraft
prepares to land on the runway at the Sisters Eagle Air Airport on Wednesday morning in Sisters.
NEWS OF RECORD
NORTHWEST
70 SW Century Dr. Suite145 Bend , OR 9770 2
said- for Wednesday's City Council meeting. He said another barbecue is planned from 4 to 8 p.m. Sunday at the Crux Fermentation Project, sponsored by the Central Oregon Community College criminal justice program to benefit the Bend police K-9 program.
Airport
laser center w w w .l1v eg o l f b e nd .co m
Rebecca Nonweiler, MD, Board Certified
reported at 3 a.m. Aug. 14, in the area of Northwest DeerStreet. Criminal mischief- An act of criminal mischief was reported at 10:58 a.rn. Aug. 14, in the area of Southeast Second Street.
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com AAA Auto Source Certified Used Cars
BEND FIRE RUNS Tuesday 3 p.m.- Brush or brush-and-grass mixturefire, estimated damage of $1,500, in the area of Janalee Place. 9:40p.m.- Authorized controlled burning, 60154 Turquoise Road. 10:19 p.m.- Unauthorized burning, 61413 S.W. Elkhorn St. 10 - Medical aid calls.
OLD BACK NINE At Mountain High
'04 BMWX3
57,000 miles #WC36225 .. $17,995
'11 Honda Pilot EXL #6028263
for our
Dinner Escape Package Includes: Acco mmodations, Dinne r for two, A Bottle of Wine, Breakfast for two & Admission to The O regon Garden Call today to book t his deal!
895 W. Main St., Silverton, OR 97381 503-874-2500 oregongarden re sort.com Plus t ax & based on availability. Ex cludes ho lidays and special eve nts.
t: 541-322-7337
(541) 318- 7311
Valid Sunday- Thursday unt il Octo ber 3 1.
www.complementshome.com
www.northwestJnedispa.com
Stay Fr iday o r Saturday fo r o nly $1 59 + tax.
............... $31 ,995
'06 Ford Escape Limited #687410 ........................ $15,995
'08 Toyota Prius Touring Pkg 6 #407796 ......... .... .. ...... ... $19,995
'12 Ford Explorer XLT Loaded #A8461 1 .. .. ......... $34,995
~n
AutoSource
Sells Cars â&#x20AC;˘ Takes Trades Financing Available
541-598-3750
aaaoregonautosource .com
THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
C3
OREGON NEWS IN BRIEF Barry Point Fire continues to grow Firefighters have strengthened lines protecting about 20 rural homes outside Lakeview, but an evacuation advisory remains in force for those and a dozen more. Fire spokeswoman Renee Synder said Wednesday that they hope to soon tell residents of the homes around Drews Reservoir that it i<> safe to go home. Meanwhile, the Barry Point Fire continues to grow on the southern end in California, where it is burning timber and sagebrush on the Modoc National Forest. It remains 25 percent contained at 92 square miles. Snyder says firefighters were able to protect the Crowder Flat Guard Station, a local landmark, from the advancing flames. The fire is one of four major blazes still burning across Oregon since a series of lightning storms last week. The weather remains hot and dry.
Jan. 15 trial date set for accused terrorist PORTLAND - A judge has set a trial date of Jan. 15 for a man accused of attempting to detonate a weapon of mass destruction at a Portland Christmas tree lighting. Mohamed Mohamud, now 20, was arrested in November 2010. The FBI and the U.S. Attorney's Office say he planned to detonate explosives he thought were packed into a van near the Christmas tree. The bomb was a fake, and the men he thought were his co-conspirators were undercover FBI agents. Mohamud's defense team has said the government entrapped their client.
IN CASE OF TSUNAMI ...
Beach town prepares for the big one The Associated Press
CANNON I3EACH - What does one stash for a tsunami? Residents of Cannon Beach are thinking about that. They're planning to store drums full of survival gear far enough inland and high enough to be safe if the big one hits the Oregon Coast and sends a tsunami wave ashore. The Daily Astorian reports the city is offering residents space in a shipping container and various sizes of drums, barrels and buckets that can be stored inside. Cannon Beach is holding a workshop tonight on how to pack for the days after the big one - the equivalent of last year's Japanese earthquake that could send a deadly t:;unami across West Coast beaches and flood coastal towns. Essential items would include a shelter, such as a tent or tarp; sleeping bags or blankets; food with a long shelf life, such as ready-toeat meals or canned goods, and a can opener; a basic first-aid kit, either pre-assembled or one containing personal medical items; a survival knife; axe or hatchet; flashlights with extra batteries; matches or lighter with a fire starter; water purification items; and bottles or canteens for water storage. "We're encouraging people not to turn this into a big to-do," said City Council member Sam Steidel. "Most things they will need they
Lawsuit in case of • • m1ss1ng boy can proceed By Nigel Duara The A ssociated Press
Nancy McCarthy I
The Dally Astorian
Cannon Beach City Councilor Sam Steidel displays the three containers residents can choose from to store their emergency supplies, Friday in Cannon Beach. City officials expect to complete the placement of at least one sh ipping container full of emergency supplies on Elk Creek Road, east of U.S. Highway 101, by October.
can find at rummage sales, or they could be surplus stuff they find around the house that they're not using all the time." "I have packed my barrel with enough things for a twoperson camp," said Steidel, who participates in Civil War re-enactments. "The things are pretty much up-to-date items that are in the re-enactment trailer. A simple pot or Dutch oven is all you really need to cook with. Just about everyone has an old cast iron fry pan!' The city is preparing a 2,000square-foot pad for at least one,
and perhaps two shipping containers, each 20 feet long, 8 feet wide and 8 feet high. The pad is inland, east of the coastal highway, and planned for an elevation above the expected inundation level. Each shipping container could hold at least 50 of the largest containers offered, those of 55-gallon capacity, Steidel said. There also are 30-gallon plastic barrels and five-gallon buckets. In October, the shipping container is to be opened for families to store their emergency stashes. Unless there's a disas-
ter, it wouldn't be reopened until spring, when the caches could be restocked. Earlier this year, 53 people at a forum signed up for the small containers, and orders are being accepted for more. City officials said some families are buying more than one. In addition to a purchase fee, the city is charging an annual maintenance fee based on capacity. A 55gallon plastic barrel costs $57.90, and the annual fee is $55.
PORTLAND - A Portland judge has ruled that a lawsuit against t he stepmother of a missing boy can go forward, denying her request for a two-year delay. Judge Henry Kantor said Wednesday that the delay sought by Terri Horman, stepmother of Kyron Horman, wouldn't serve a purpose. Terri Horman said the civil suit would be a proxy for a criminal investigation - detectives have focused on her, although they haven't called her a suspect - that would carry a lower burden of proof than a criminal trial.
Filed by biological mother The lawsuit was filed by Desiree Young, Kyron's biological mother. It seeks $10 million a nd savs Terri Horman kidnappe"d Kyron, by herself or with help. "Ms . Young gave t he criminal justice system the chance to do something if it was going to do something," said Young's attorney, Elden Rosenthal. "Nothing has happened." Terri Horman was the last person k nown to have seen Kyron. He was 7 when he disappeared June 4, 2010. The suit will proceed today.
Governor addresses Columbia gillnetting Trying to head off a ballot measure to ban gillnetting for salmon on the Oregon side of the lower Columbia River, Gov. John Kitzhaber has told state fisheries managers to come up with new regulations that would accomplish a similar goal while still keeping gillnetters on the water. At the governor's behest, the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission on Tuesday directed state fisheries managers to develop regulations that relegate commercial gillnetters to side bays and channels of the Columbia below Bonneville Dam. In return, state salmon hatcheries would increase production just for them. That would take some of the harvesl pres~ure off salmon protected by the Endangered Species Act, and leave the mainstem lower Columbia to sports anglers.
Restaurant robber wielded bug spray ROSEBURG - A robber at a Roseburg restaurant brandished a can of insect repellent and wasn't deterred when the bartender tried to bat it away. Roseburg Police Sgt. Aaron Dunbar says the robber drove back the bartender late Monday night with a direct spray to the face. Then, Dunbar says, the robber grabbed money from a cash box behind the bar and fled. The amount taken wasn't disclosed. The Roseburg News-Review reported that the robber entered the Elmer's Restaurant wearing a hooded sweatshirt, gloves and a beanie alop a shoulder-lenglh blond wig that was pulled partly across his face.
Orig.* 49.50-59.50, after special 15.7520.82. Dress shirts from famous makers.
Misses. Selections for petites &women; wome n's prices
slightly higher.
CLEARANCE Orig.* $35-$40, after special 24.99. No Retreat shirts or Wearfirst shorts. S-XXL.
POLOS OR SPORTSHIRTS Reg. $39-$45, after special 29.99. Only at Macy's. From Alfani. S-XXL.
SPECIAL 65% OFF
SPECIAL $99
lOK& 14K GOLD EARRINGS Special 52.50-$559. Reg. $150-$1600, after special 63.75-$680. Shown:* WebiD 83701.
CULTURED FRESHWATER PEARLS Reg. $500, after special 212.50. 100 " 7-8mm endless strand. * WebiD 221829.
TAG 5-PC. LUGGAGE SET Reg. $300, after special 149.99. Only at Macy's. Coronado II 29 " &25 " spinners, 21 " upright, travel tote and travel kit. * WebiD 325390.
SPECIAL 75% OF C LEARANCE SWIMWEAR Special8.50-$30. Orig.* $34-$1 20, after special $17-$60. One-pieces, tankinis, cover-ups & more. Misses & juniors.
SPECIALTY BRAS Reg. $32-$36, after special 19.20-21.60. Strapless, T-backs, more from Maidenform", Lily of France", more. Shown: * Webl D 134871
SPECIAL 49.99
SPECIAL 5.99
C LEARANCE KIDS' TEES Orig.* 9.99-12.99, after special 7.99-9.99. Screen-printed styles. Girls' 2-16; boys' 2-20.
SPECIAL 50% OFF
SANDALS & SHOES Special19.50-69.50. Reg. $39-$139, after special 29.99-129.99 From Nine West, Aerosoles, our Marc Fisher & more.
SPECIAL $179
SPECIAL 19.99
SPECIAL 39.99
BLAC K & WHITEDIAMOND ** RING Reg. $150, after special 63.75. 1/4 ct. t.w.•in sterling silver by Victoria Townsend. *WebiD 533278.
GREEN QUARTZ & DIAMOND RING Reg. $600, after special ~~.::.~ $306. 1n 14kwhite gold. * WebiD 283736. Also available in peridot. ~-:~S61~:.'i * WebiD 283733.
SPECIAL 69.99
KITCHEN ELECTRICS Reg. 139.99-149.99, after special 99.99. Cuisinartfood processor ~!I!!-!!!!~ I #DLC6, coffee maker #DGB550, blender & food processor- combo. #BFP-1OCH or StoreBound juicer #JB001CM.
KITC HEN ELECTRIC$ Reg. 39.99-44.99, after special 29.99. Black & Decker waffler #WM1404S; toaster oven #TR0480BS (* WebiD 417573) or Bella Rocket blender #1
QUEEN OR KING SHEET SET Reg. $1 40 & $150, after special 59.99 & 69.99. New & only at Macy's. __...;;::;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 550-thread count. Cotton/polyester. *We biD 687990.
SPECIAL
OFF
A LL M EMORY FOAM PILLOWS & PADS Special 23.99-287.99. Reg. $60-$480, after special 29.99-239.99. Shown: *We biD 526020.
Police: North Bend church fire accidental NORTH BEND - Investigators have determined that the fire that destroyed a North Bend church last week was accidental. Assistant Fire Chief Jim Brown told The World that the fire was started by a hot light near the altar. It ignited a cloth that was draped nearby. The Aug. 7 fire destroyed the First United Methodist Church. Church leaders are renting space at the Pony Village Mall to hold services. - From wire reports
BEND RIVER PROMENADE,
m
BEND
Jew elry specials are only available at stores that carry fine jew elry. > REG. & O RIG. PRICES ARE OFFERING PRICES AND SAVIN GS MAY NOT BE BA SED O N ACTUAL SALES. SOM E ORIG. PRICES NOT IN EFFECT DURI NG THE PAST 90 DAYS. ON E DAY SALE PRICES IN EFFECT 8/ 17 & 8/18/12. BLOG *Int ermediat e price reductions may have been taken. :j:AII carat weights (ct. t .w.) are approximate; va riance may be .05 carat . **May contain rose-cut diamonds. Jewelry phot os may be enlarged or enhanced to sho w detail. Fine j ewelry at se lect stores; log on to macys.com for locat ions. Almost all gemstones and black d iamonds have been treated t o enhance t heir beauty and req uire special care, log on t o macys.com/gemstones or ask your sales professional. Extra savings are taken off already-reduced sale prices; "special" prices reflect extra savings. Specials are available wh ile supplies [ast. Advertised merchandise may not b e carried at your local Macy's and selection may vary by st ore. Prices and merchandise may differ at macys.com. Luggage & electric items shown ca rry warranties; to see a mfr's warranty at no charge before purchasing, visit a store or w rite to: Macy's Warranty Dept., PO Box 1026 Maryland Heig hts, MO 63043, attn: Consumer Warranties. N2070078. *Enter the WebiD in the search box at MACYS.COM to order.
*
OPEN A MACY'S ACCOUNT FOR EXTRA 20% SAVINGS TH E FIRST 2 DAYS, UP TO $100, WITH MORE REWA RD S TO COM E. Macy's credit card is available subject to credit approval; new account savings va lid the day your account is opened and the next day; excludes services, selected licensed departments, gift cards, restaurants, gourmet food & wine. The new account savi ngs are limited to a total of $100; application mu st qualify for immediate approva l to receive extra savings; employees not eligible.
C4
THE BULLETIN â&#x20AC;˘ THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
State contracting reform proposals need some work
0
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
BETSY McCooL
Chairwoman
GoRDON BLAcK
Publisher
] oHN CosTA
F.ditnr-in- ChiPj
RICHARD CoE
Editor ofEd~orials
IWOULON'T FEED Tl-\\S
S"l<\VELtJ) E~r< Ol= CORN10 MY P\GS,
regan has laws for public contracts to try to ensure money isn't wasted and there is no favoritism.
But some contractors and legislators have been concerned the laws don't do enough. State Sen. Lee Beyer, D-Springfield, along with state Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-Sunriver, formed a work group to develop proposals for the Legislature to consider. Now, the proposals might not do enough. Most contracts in Oregon are supposed to be awarded competitively to the lowest responsible bidder. One exception permitted under the law is for something called Construction Manager/General Contractor, commonly called CM/GC. A CM/GC contract has several advantages that government bodies have found appealing. The experience of the contractor can be considered, instead of just price. The contractor joins the project during the design phase, which can help save money and time downstream. The CM/GC submits a "guaranteed maximum price," which can eliminate some uncertainty for a government trying to manage its budget. For instance, Bend used a CM/GC contract for the downtown parking garage. It is also using one for its $68 million Bridge Creek water project. Oregon law requires governments to justify using CM/GC. They can't be promoting favoritism or diminishing competition by picking a CM/GC contractor.
Doing so also should have cost savings. Those are reasonable requirements. But dig deeper and they aren't as pretty. Guaranteed maximum price is not always the maximum price paid. For instance, when the city built the parking garage, the guaranteed maximum price was negotiated to be $9.7 million. The city paid $10.7 million. To be fair, most of the reason for the increase was requests made by the city's urban renewal district. After a CM/GC project is completed, the government that used CM/GC is required to issue a report to justify its use. The report for the parking garage said the city was able to save time and shave $500,000 off the project cost. The city did not itemize those savings. It also made other assertions without backing them up. Who does the government body send this report to? Itself. That's not much of a check and balance onCM/GC. An article in Oregon's Daily Journal of Commerce had a list of changes considered by the work group, including requiring the government body to consider its budget, possible public benefit, how costs can be controlled and whether the project is a new building or an expansion. We're not sure what some of those mean, let alone if they will help a teensy bit.
Proposed food standards could jeopardize safety
T
he U.S. Department of Agriculture should put consumer safety ahead of the desires of food producers, but proposed rules for inspecting the nation's poultry supply might fall short. Poultry producers think they're swell; consumer groups disagree. Currently, poultry inspection is left to employees of the USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service. They can look at as many as 145 chickens per minute, anumber that would rise to 175 per minute under the proposed changes. In addition to the speed-up, that job would largely be turned over to processing plant employees. The number of federal inspectors would also b e reduced by as much as 75 percent. Even that might be acceptable but for the fact that plant owners would be given far more latitude to decide what to inspect for and
how to train employees to recognize it. E.coli inspections, as one example, would no longer be required. Consider these numbers: In 2007, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, almost half of all raw chicken breasts it tested were contaminated with campylobacter - a bacteria that can make people sick. Consumer groups have asked for a variety of changes in the proposed rules, including a uniform training system and mandatory sampling of poultry. All that sounds like simple good sense. Giving poultry plant owners the major responsibility for poultry inspection might be just fine. It's less likely to be so, however, if owners themselves can decide what to test for and when, and create their own training programs for that testing.
My Nicl{el's Worth Good care at St. Charles The recent article and follow-up editorial regarding patient safety in the St. Charles operating room served to further erode my confidence in The Bulletin's ability to engage in responsible journalism. I'm an operating room nurse with 36 years of experience - not in ma nagement. It's true we experienced several years of instability in our management situation. Last year, we saw an unusual spike in low staffing because of people not being replaced and a high number of people on family medical leave and illnesses. The annual survey taken last fall accurately reflected that. However, that survey is meant to be an internal tool for us to use as a measurement of what we are doing well a nd where we can be better. I question the "whistleblowers"' intentions and would classify the actions as cowardly and vindictive. Since our present managers have been in place, we no longer work chronically understaffed, and we feel that when we voice our concerns, they are heard. We constantly look at ourselves and see how we can improve. For this information to be given to The Bulletin now- and for The Bulletin to act upon it without questioning "why now?" -is not productive for anyone. Instead of insinuating that
perhaps people should look elsewhere for their health care, The Bulletin should be grateful that we have in our midst a place where caregivers care enough for their patients to speak out and for management to listen. The public can rest assured that if they visit us, they will receive excellent care, because we care. Connie Shuman Hend
Stop political bickering Stop the sanctimonious prattle of "My Nickel's Worth'' and "In My View" pieces that bash one or the other political party for the mess we are in. They are not helpful. There is enough long-standing, bipartisan blame to fill many polling booths. Until our political class shows some class, works together and lives up to their sworn oath, we will not move forward to a brighter day. Joe Jezukewicz Rend
Conger works for region Jason Conger is an effective representative for Bend and Central Oregon. During the 2011 legislative session, Conger worked to extend a job-creation tax credit known as the Enterprise Zone Program. Enterprise zones have been the
most effective job-creating tool in the state and were key in attracting businesses like Facebook and Apple to Central Oregon. Without Conger's hard work, the program would have expired in 2013. After extending the program, Conger came back in 2012 and helped expand the program to permit additional enterprise zones to be created across the state. This action will create even more jobs. Conger has been a strong advocate of the Oregon State UniversityCascades Campus four-year university. He started by championing and successfully acquiring matching funds for OSU to purchase its new graduate facility here in Bend. This new building represented a permanent presence for OSU in Central Oregon. Next, Conger pushed for four-year status for OSU-Cascades. The ribbon-cutting ceremony took place this past week. This expansion will focus on meeting the rapidly expanding enrollment that we are experiencing. This has contributed greatly to the educational and economic health of Bend. It is with this kind of focus on Central Oregon and state needs that Conger has demonstrated his capability to get things done in Salem. It is important that you get to know Conger as he walks your neighborhoods. Dennis Dorgan H.edmond
Letters policy
In My View policy
How to submit
We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250 words and include the writer's signature, phone number and address for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhere and those appropriate for other sections of The Bulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece every 30 days.
In My Vi ew submissions should be between 550 and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. We edit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject those published elsewhere. In My Vi ew pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating with national columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece every 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Write: My Nickel's Worth / In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541 -385-5804 Email: bulletin@bendbulletin.com
Smart education funding better than more education funding By J. Puckett McClatchy-Tribune N ews Service
t 's August, which for most school districts and local governments means it's time to put the budget knives away and live wiLh whaLever decisions have been made. It's also time to remember an important lesson: how a school district spends money is just as important as how much it spends. For roughly 40 years, K-12 student performance has barely budged in the United States, though inflationadjusted spending has doubled. Math and literacy test scores for U.S. students at age 17 have remained flat since the 1970s. And on most international measures, we're moving down. Consider two U.S. students - one who graduated from high school in 1994, and one who entered kindergarten that year. On average, after adjusting for inflation, $25,000 more was spent on the kindergarten student over the next 13 years (19942007) than on the 1994 graduate. Despite this, the younger student's test
I
scores were no better than the older student's. Some school systems understand the importance of spending their education dollars efficiently. Using daLa from Lhe NaLional CenLer for Higher Education Management Systems and the National Center for Education Statistics, we compared graduation rates in the 50 states over consecutive 10-year periods, 1989-98 and 1999-2008. We found that the top 25 percent of states in terms of spending efficiency realized an average 1 percentage point increase in graduation rates for each additional $3,000 in per-pupil spending. Comparable spending increases among those in the bottom-performing quartile failed to prevent declines in graduation rates. Part of the problem has to do with the haphazard way education dollars often are spent. California, for instance, in 2009 earmarked more than $41 million to hire more gym teachers to fight childhood obesity, though there already
were plenty of phys-ed teachers in the state and no evidence that hiring more would reduce obesity. Indeed, California spent an additional $16,071 per pupil (in constant 2008-09 dollars) beLween 1999-2008 than between 1989-98. But graduation rates rose by less than 1 percentage point. This placed it 29th among the 50 states in terms of outcome per dollar. Another problem with spending practices is that new education initiatives are rarely reviewed for effectiveness after they're launched - and almost never canceled, even if they have little value. Rather than focusing entirely on spending levels, policymakers, educators and parents need to start focusing on value: spending that improves educational outcomes. Consider how we invest in teachers. Currently, seniority-based teacher pay accounts for 10 percent of all U.S. school spending. Yet, longevity doesn't necessarily assure effectiveness. School districts also reward
the attainment of advanced degrees, spending $8.6 billion annually on salary premiums. Yet there is no proven correlation between advanced degrees and teaching quality. At the same Lime, mosL school sysLems inve&t little time, effort, and money in providing teachers feedback that will help them improve their teaching skills. Although teacher evaluation and pay are politically sensitive topics, changes need to be made. One of the nation's largest school districts, Hillsborough County, Fla., for example, recently redesigned its approach. The new system creates a performance-based career ladder. Progress up the ladder is driven by measures of student progress and rigorous classroom observations. The new approach allows outstanding teachers to earn more, even if they're new on the job. Another area with great potential is technology. Many school districts use technology to automate or supplement ex-
isting practices, much the way early 20th-century factories used electricity to replace gas lamps. What they should be doing is looking for ways to use technology to transform educaLion - exLending Lhe reach of Lop teachers beyond the standard classroom, for instance, or improving student learning through individualized instruction. Thanks to technology, an excellent teacher with good managerial skills can easily lead multiple classrooms. A value-based approach to education will not be easy to implement. Spending more is always easier than spending right. Spending right means making tough trade-offs: cutting favored initiatives that no longer work, getting more from the same investment, and subjecting new spending proposals to the unforgiving value test. - J. Puckett is a Dallas-based senior partner of The Boston Consulting Group and co-author of "Achieving More For Less in U.S. Education with a Value-Based Approach."
THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
C5
OREGON NEWS
OBITUARIES DEATH NoTICES Allen Richard Hodges, of Bend Jan. 9, 1930 -Aug. 13,2012 Arrangements:
Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services:
A private Memorial Service with Military Honors will take place in Depoe Bay, Oregon on Saturday, August 25th . Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org Darrell Gordon Thompson, of Bend June 28, 1924- Aug. 13, 2012 Arrangements:
Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471' www.niswonger-reynolds.com
Services:
3:00 PM Saturday August 18,2012 at Grace First Lutheran Church, 2265 NW Shevlin Park Rd . Bend. Frances Kathryn Cadwell, of Redmond May 9, 1921 -Aug. 13, 2012 Arrangements:
Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our guestbook www. redmondmemorial.com
Services:
Graveside Service Monday August 20, 2012 at 12 pm at Willamette National Cemetery Portland, OR. James Hoyet "Stoney" Stone, of Bend Aug. 24, 1931- Aug. 13,2012 Arrangements:
Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-31 8-0842 www.autumnfunerals.com Services:
Graveside Service Friday, August 17,201211:00 A.M. Pilot Butte Cemetery, Bend, Oregon. Patricia "Patty" C. Swarens, of Sisters July 26, 1947- Aug. 11, 2012 Arrangements:
Jacqueline Rose (Anderson) Morris June 21, 1928- Aug. 14, 2012 Jacqueline Rose (Anderson) Morris passed away in Bend, Oregon, on August 14, 2012. Jackie was born the eldest of four daughters to Reverend Daniel and Margret Anderson in Dunning, Nebraska, on June 21, 1928. She married her high school sweetheart, Del Morris, August 16, 1946, and was an avid homemaker, wonderful cook and accomplished seamstress. Although quiet and humble, Jackie was a woman of unwavering faith in God and had a heart for children with cancer and other illnesses. She was a sponsor/contributor to Sparrow Clubs USA of Bend and other charities. Jackie had a great sense of humor, loved to laugh and reminisce with family, was dearly loved and will be missed by all. Jackie was preceded in death by her husband, Del; her father and mother and two sisters. She is survived by her three children, Cheri (Don) Detweiler of Bend, Debbie (Gene) H.oark of Livermore, California and Mike Morris of Redmond , Oregon; her younger sister, Marlene Jones of Oakley, California; her grandsons, Josh (Scooter) Detweiler of Bend, Zac (Gina) Detweiler of Redmond Oregon· and seven great-grandchildren, Katlyn, Laynie, Krystina and Jayson of Bend and Levi, Cayden a nd Aida of Redmond, Oregon. No services will be held at her request. but there will be a family gathering to honor her and remember her life. In lieu of flowers, please feel free to donate in Jackie's name to Sparrow Clubs USA of Be nd or Partners In Care Hospice of Bend.
Baird Funeral Homes (541 )382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries .com
Elizabeth Ann Lewis McCoy
Services:
Sept. 29, 1950- July 15, 2012
A Ce lebration of Patty's Life will take place at a later date . Contributions may be made to:
Humane Society of the Ochocos, 1280 S. Tom McCa ll Rd., Prineville, Oreqon 97754, www.numanesocietyochocos.com
William Caswell Lane, of Bend June 20, 1925 - Aug. 9, 2012 Arrangements:
Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471'
www.niswonger-reynolds.com
Services:
1:00 PM August 24, 2012 at Johnson's Funeral Home in San Angelo, Texas. A Me morial will be held in Be nd sometime in September.
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Localobituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. 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 noon Saturday. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Fridayfor Sundayor Monday publication, and by 9 a. m. Monday for Tuesday publication . Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541 -322-7254 Mail: Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
Elizabeth Ann passed away on Sunday, July 15, 2012, at the Hickey Hospice in Vancouver, WA. She was 60 years of age. She is survived by her loving mothe r, Elizabeth Lewis of Bend, OR; Elizabeth Ann's husband, Ed McCoy of Vancouver, WA. They had two sons, Brent McCoy wife Lorin son Sean, ' daughters, 'Kadi~ and early, grand-daughter, Brooklyn Elizabeth, all of Gresham, OR; second son, Casey McCoy, wife , Krissy, son, Kainan, of Vancouver, W A. She had three brothers, Mitch , wife, Becky of Bandon, OR, their daughte r, Stephe nie Lewis Foster, husband, Shawn, daughters, Kaitlin and Addison of Boise. 10. Mitch's son, Ed Lewis of Culver, OR. Second brother, Rod Lewis of Bend, OR. Third brother, Jon Lewis, wife, Tina a nd daughters, T anina and Tanna of Ruth, NV. Elizabeth Ann was pre ceded in death by her father, Edward Lewis in 2009. Private memorial services will be held in Vancouver, WA, on her birthday. We know she is with the Angels.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
Mary Lucille Kuchs July 30, 1921 -August 10, 2012 Mary Kuchs passed away peacefully August 10, 2012, in West Linn , from Alzheimer's disease. Mary was born July 30, 1921, in St. Louis, Missouri, to Otto and Della Roster. She grew up in California, and attended San Jose Mary Lucille College. Kuchs She and her husband, Joseph, were married 49 years. They had two children, Arlene and Charles. In 1951 , the family moved to South America. Mary and h er husband lived in Chile and Peru for 29 years, where Joe was a metallurgical engineer and she was a teacher and principal. In 1980, they returned to the United States for retirement and lived in Central Oregon. Mary was an avid golfer and enjoyed gardening, painting and needle pointing. Mary's son, Charles, and his wife, Kristi, live in West Linn with her grandsons, Karl a nd Kyle. Her daughter, Arlene, lives in Glendale, Arizona, and granddaughter, Mara, lives in Morenci, Arizona, with great-grandson, Justin. Jim McNamara, h er n ephew, lives in Crooked River Ranch. At her request no services will be held.
William Caswell Lane June 20, 1925 ·August 9, 2012 In Loving Memory Bill Lane was born the first male child in the West Texas boom town of Texan in Reagan County, June 20, 1925. He served in the Navy during WWII and returned to Austin, where he graduated with Bill Lane a busin ess degree from University of Texas. In 195 1, he married his life-long love, Wanda Lea Rawls. They lived in San Angelo, Texas, and had two sons and later moved to Houston. He h ad a successful business career in the tran sportation industry in w hich he was the cofounder of two companies, Lane Brothers Trucking in San Angelo and Lane Freight Systems in H oust on. He later moved to his Ranch in Barksdale, Texas, wher e he ranched for many years. He is survived by his sons, Bob and Rick; daughters-in-law, Deb and Kim; grandson, Will; stepgrandchildren, Kacee, Ryan and Jordan. Services will be held at Johnsons Funeral Home in San Angelo, August 24, at 1:00 p.m., and Bend, Or egon, in mid September, TBA.
Please sign our guest book at www .niswonger-reynolds.com
By Paul Fattig The Mail Tribune (Medjord)
Inflamed by ongoing broiling temperatures, the fire danger flickers up into the extreme range beginning today in Jackson and Josephine counties. With high temperatures in the triple digits expected to continue through Friday, the Oregon Department of Forestry is increasing the fire danger, which will ban the public use of chainsaws, mowing and cutting dead grass, welding and other potentially fire-starting activities between 10 a.m. and 8p.m. The industrial fire precaution level will remain at Level2. New on the list of restric-
tions for the public is the use of tracer rounds and exploding targets, which are now banned around the clock except in designated shooting ranges, said Brian Ballou, spokesman for ODF's Southwest Oregon District. An investigation into the cause of a recent fire on Anderson Butte determined it was ignited by tracer rounds used in target practice, he explained. However, despite the recent temperatures, the district hasn't been plagued with an exorbitant number of fires. "In general, people have been much more conscientious about not doing things that cause fires," Ballou said. "But we have also been lucky in that we haven't had a lot of windy afternoons."
That could change, he warned, noting the potential for the current weather pattern to hang around into the fall. "If we stay in this trend,there could be a complete shutdown on power equipment," he said of future restrictions on outside activity. Extreme fire danger in the two counties is not unusual in August, Ballou said, noting the fire danger was bumped up to the extreme range last year. The increased fire danger also means additional restrictions on visitors to the Wild and Scenic Section of the Rogue River between the mouth of Grave Creek and Watson Creek. More information on the increased fire restrictions is available at www.swofire .oregon.gov.
Officials confirm West Nile virus in Southern Oregon mosquitoes By Paul Fattig The Mail Tribune (Medfo rd)
Mosquitoes carrying West Nile virus have been discovered at a testing site in Talent, according to the Jackson County Health Department. A test by the veterinary diagnostic laboratory at Oregon State University confirmed the virus was present in the mosquitoes, said Belle Shepherd, the county's public health division manager. Spread by mosquitoes, West Nile virus can cause mild flu-like symptoms in about 20 percent of the people infected but may have more serious consequences for the elderly and others with existing health problems, officials said. Jackson County Vector Control will concentrate its mosquito abatement in the
Talent area along Bear Creek, Shepherd said. The infected mosquitoes were found in that area, marking the first time this year any carrying the virus were found locally. While mosquitoes with West Nile virus have been found locally in recent years, the virus hasn't been found in a human in Jackson County since 2005.
Most people unaffected About 80 percent of people infected with West Nile virus exhibit no symptoms, she said. Of the rema ining 20 percent, most have very mild symptoms, such as fever, headaches and nausea lasting from three to six days, she reported. In some cases more severe symptoms can occur, including convulsions or disorientation. People with symptoms of West Nile virus should consult
a health care provider. Shepherd urged local residents to take precautions to avoid infection. "The risk of contracting West Nile disease may be low, but we do encourage people to take appropriate precautions to protect themselves against mosquito bites," she said. Precautions include: • Eliminate standing water that can be a breeding ground for mosquitoes, including stagnant swimming pools, watering troughs, bird baths, clogged gutters and old tires. • Use mosquito repellent when engaged in outdoor activities at dusk and dawn, when mosquitoes are most active. • Wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants in mosquito-infested areas. • Make sure screen doors and windows in your home are in good repair and fit tightly.
'Ghoul' burglar strikes in Shady Cove By Ryan Pfeil The Mail Tribune (Medford)
SHADY COVE - A burglar dressed in a black ghoul costume broke into two Shady Cove businesses a nd stole more than $16,000 in jewelry, antique weapons and other ilems last monlh, Lhe Jackson County Sheriff's Department said in a news release. Investigators said the costumed burglar broke into two separate businesses July 27 and July 28 and was seen in a surveillance video. The suspect stayed in the store several minutes gathering up merchandise. At Bargains on the Rogue, the suspect broke in through the back door and stole more than $10,000 in jewelry - including 100 rings, 50 necklaces, 50 gold watches, 30 bracelets
and 60 pairs of earrings - police said. Owner Donna Torres said she discovered the burglary when she came to work the next day. Toward the end of the spree, the suspect covered up the surveillance cameras. " lt was basically everything in the front glass display," Torres said, adding she's not sure how the burglar gained entry because the back door is thick and has three locks.
Antique store burglarized The next night, the burglar struck again, breaking in through the front door of Minimall, and stole more than $6,000 in merchandise - including an antique sword, knives and other miscellaneous items, including fishing tackle - police said. Owner Paul Osusky said several of the items were from his personal collection and
weren't for sale. "They were all sentimental," he said, adding he hopes to move forward from the incident and not dwell on it. For both stores, it's the first time something like this has happened. The burglar wore a black robe wilh a hood and a covering over the face that was half white and half black. The gender of the thief is not yet confirmed because of the full costume. "They're referring to (the burglar) as a 'him,"' said Sheriff's Department spokeswoman Andrea Carlson. The Sheriff's Department and Crime Stoppers of Southern Oregon are offering a reward of up to $1,000 for any information leading to an arrest. The Jackson County Sheriff's Office Tip Line is at 541-774-8333. Crime Stoppers is at 1-800-850-0580. Callers can remain anonymous.
Fein managed Benny and revitalized Burns' career By Dennis Mclellan
Deaths of note from around the world: Harry Harrison, 87: American author whose space-age spoofs delighted science fiction fans. Died Wednesday in Southern England. Joan Stein, 59: Theater producer who made her breakthrough while waiting tables in Manhattan and went on to share a Tony Award in 1999 for "Side Man." Died Aug. 3 in Los Angeles of appendix cancer. Nellie Gray, 88: Left a government career to start the March for Life. the annual antiabortion demonstration that for nearly four decades has drawn activists to Washington , D.C. Found dead Monday. - From wire reports
Fire danger raised in Josephine, Jackson
Los Angeles Time s
LOS ANGELES - Irving r'ein was a veteran Hollywood studio publicist when he began his 28-vear association with Jack Bermy in 1947, first as the popular radio comedian's publicity and advertising director. Fein , who became Benny's executive producer and personal manager and later helped revitalize the flagging career of George Burns, died Friday of congestive heart failure at his home in West Hollywood , said family friend Larry Solters. He was 101. In his 1976 b ook, "Jack Benny: An Intimate Biography," Fein wrote that soon after going to work for Benny, he came to love him "as l would a father
or a son, a falher because he died of pancreatic cancer in Dewas so much older than I and a cember 1974 at age 80, Benny son because he always seemed suggested that Fein become his so helpless and dependent in pal I3urns' personal manager. Gracie Allen, Burns' everything but the creation and performance FEATURED wife and comedy partof his program." ner, had died in 1964. OBITUARY And, ln 1955, Fein left BenFein recalled in a ny to take a job at CBS l998Archive of Amerin New York as vice president ican Television interview, in charge of advertising and "George hadn't done well for promotion. After only a couple about 10 years." of months, the comedian asked After Benny died, Fein him to return to Hollywood to pressed producer Ray Stark to become president of his newly audition Burns for the role of the old vaudevillian that Benformed J&M Productions. Fein was executive producer ny had been slated to play opof Benny's weekly series until posite Walter Matthau in the it ended in 1965, accepting an movie version of Neil Simon's Emmy Award in 1961 when it "The Sunshine Boys." won for outstanding program The role earned Burns an Oscar for best supporting acachievement. Two months before Benny tor in 1976 at age 80 and reju-
venated his career. Fein, who has been described as a gentleman and master negotiator, decided what jobs Burns would or wouldn't take. But, as Burns pointed out in a 1989 Los Angeles Times interview, "I follow Irving's advice, unless I don't like it. Then I say no. I have my own mind about things." Fein, who was executive producer of Burns' TV specials and was a producer on his 1979 movie "Just You and Me, Kid," was Burns' personal manager for 22 years, until the cigar-smoking comedian died in 1996 at age 100. "I've been lucky," Fein told The Associated Press in 1988. "I've been able to work with the best of them."
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
C6
WEATHER FORECAST Ma ps a nd national fo recast provided by Weathe r Central LP ©2012 .
TODAY, AUGUST 16
FRIDAY
Today: A hot day ahead w ith very dry conditions.
HIGH
Tonight: A few high clouds throug h the overnig ht hours.
LOW
92
53
McMinnville
I,~les ~76~s A'rlington 911.6! • e •Wasco• " " " ~~~~in
Salem
Newpqrt 82/53
Warm Springs.
~.
Corvallis" 73/S7
Eugeneo
68/52
101t:B
9;Js4
EAST
Prineville
92/46
Sunny skies and e>ntario very warm to hot 97tfl temperatures,
92/54
90158
.
92/S3
•
Valeo
Juntura
•Burns
100/58
Y3/J3
Yesterday's state extremes
•Rosebug
60/S1
98/61
Frenchglen
Port Orford
. 97/61
O'li'>Y
1
95/51
Gran15
•102°
Pass
Gold • Beach
103/(i
•
61/54 1
very warm t o hot temperatures.
•Unity
oJohn Day
98/ 60
• Bandon
Medford
"chiloqLil • 104/6l
Brookings
• Ashlond
60/S3 ~~==-.;. 99!67
92/58
oKia rna th Fa ll s 91;s7
..........
~
• 37°
Fie ld so
• Lakev ia.v
La P1ne
98/66
90/58
~
1Os
Yes.terday's extremes
• Calgary
Saskatoon
77/49
20s
30s
74/55
40s
50s
60s
70s
80s
90s
.
'
.
, Halifax
(in the 48 contiguous st ates):
75/63
Bis~arck 69!4S
• 109° RapidCitx
Needles, Calif.
70s
• 33°
n ;so•
St. Paul
@
Stanley, Idaho
• 2,89" Westfield, Mass.
88/73
=~
80i' ;:}-J
LOW
HIGH
I
LOW
85/66
HAWAII { ?
CONDITIONS FRONTS
............ ............. ......... Cold
New
I
LOW
88 53
PLANET WATCH
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrise today .. . . 6:11a.m. Moon phases Sunset today .. . . 8:07p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . 6:12a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . 8:1J) p.m. Moonrise today . . 5:16am. Moonset today ... 7:18pm.
HIGH
93 48
First
Full
Aug.17 Aug.24 Aug. 31
Rise .. .4:38am .. .2:33am .. 1134 am .. 12:33 am .. 11:21am .. .9:35pm
Tomorrow
Mercll'f Venus ..
Mars .. JlJI]ter. .
last
S€pt. 8
Cooler, more storms are possible late in the day.
SatiJn. . Urarus.
Astoria . . ... . .. 82155/0.00 . . . . .90/57/s . . . .78158/pc Baker City .. . .. B8151/0.00 . . . . .90/50/s . .. . .93/50/s Brookings .. . .. . 65151/0.00 . . . . .60/53/c . .. .SB/54/pc Burns. .98/48/0.00 .95/S4/s .94/55/s Eugene . ... . ... 94/60/0.00 .. . .101/58/s ... ..96/57/s Klamath Falls .. . 92/49/0.00 ... . .91/57/s . .. .94153/pc lakeview ... . .. 93150/0.00 . . . .90,58/pc ... .95156/pc La Pine . . ... . .. 92137/0.00 . . . . .92/51 /s . .. .95/48/pc Medford ... . . . I 02/63/0.00 .. . .104/69/s ...104168/pc Newport . ... . .. 59150/0.00 . . . . .82/53/s ... . . 63/53/l North Bend . . . . 63152/0.00 . . . . .61/53/s . .. .61154/pc Ontario . ... . .. 97/61/0.00 . . . . .97/62/s . . . . .98/60/s Pencleton ... . . . 93/63/0.00 . . . . .92/58/s ... . .98/62/s Portland .. . .. 96/62/0.00 .... 100/65/s . .. ..99/641s P1ineville ... . .. 89152/0.00 . . . . .92/46/s ... .97157/pc Redmond ...... 90152/0.00 ..... 93/56/s .....98/58/s Roseburg ... . .. 98/61/0.00 . . . . .98/61/s . . . . .95/641s Salem .. . ... . . . 94161/0.00 . . . .100/63/s ... . .97/59/s Sisters . . .. . . . . B7/4B/O.OO . . . . .93/54/s . .. .97152/pc The Dalles .. . .. 99/64/0.00 . . . . .97/64/s ... .101/67/s
Bend, west of Hwy. 97.. ....Ext. Bend, eastofHVIry. 97......Ext. Redmond!Madras.........Ext. MOO. =MOOerate; Ext.= Extreme
Prineville ............ .......Ext
HIGH
POLLEN COUNT Updated daily. Sou rce: pollen.com
®
LOW
PRECIPITATION
The following was compiled by the Ce ntral Oregon watermaster and irrigat ion dist ricts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen. Rese rvoi1 Acre feet Capacity
La Pine ...........................Ext
8
LOW
I
WATER REPORT Sisters ............ ...............Ext
Crane Prairie .. . . . . . . .. . 36,005 . .. . . 55,000
Wickiup ...... . ... . .. .. 133,11 7 .... 200,000 Crescent Lake . . .. . .. .. . . 73,299 .... . 91,700 Ochoco Reservo ir . ... . . .. 26,440 . . .. . 47,000 Prin evi lle . . .. . .. ... .. . 110,361 .. .. . 153,777 Rive1 flow Station Cubic ft./sec
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
I
HIGH
A few clouds, coolest day of the week
Yesterday's weathe1through 4 p.m. in Bend 24 hours ending 4 pm.' .0.00" High/Low .. .... .. .. . .. B6f.J7 Record !;gh .. .... . 98 in 1933 Morrthtodate . .... .. . 0.04" Average morrth to date . .. 0.22" Record low ....... . 30 in 1935 Year to date .. .. .... ... 6.61" Average tigh .... .. ... .. . B2 Average low ............ . 47 Average year to date. ... . 6.50" Barometric pressUie at 4 p.m29.94 Record 24 hours ..1.01 in 1954 ' Melled liqLid equivalent
The hig her the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Ind ex is for sola r at noon.
MEDIUM
"""'
TEMPERATURE
Set . .... 7:11 pm. . .. . .5:26 pm. . ... 10:17pm. . .. . . 3:38pm. . .. . 10:28 pm. . ... 1Q03 am.
To report a wildfire, call911
LOW
~.
85 51
FIRE INDEX
Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi!Lo/W Hi!Lo/W Precipitation'/alues C~e 24-hour totals through4 p.m.
~~'\'/}~
~
MEDIUM
-
Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie
428
Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup . ... ..... . 1,720 Crescent Cree kBelow Crescent Lake .. .. . .. 137 little Deschutes Near La Pin e .. . ... .. .. .. . 75.7 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Be nd . .. . . . . .. .. . . 144 Deschutes RiverA! Ben ham Falls ... .. . .. . 2,157 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res....... . . .. 1 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res. . . .. .. . . 228 Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. 17.2 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne . . . . ..... . . 75.7 Contact : Wate rmaster, 388-6669 or go to www.w rd.state.or.us
1
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
-30s
~0 Honolulu ~
I
More heat w ith w idespread afternoon th understorms.
MONDAY
legend:W-weather, Pep-precipitation, s-sun, pc-partial douds, c-douds, h-haze, sh-showers, r;-ain, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace
NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS -40s
HIGH
breaking temperal ures.
OREGON CITIES
Sunny skies and
86/52
90/9:)
64/)4 .
e
CENTRAL
JoseP,
Ba ke rCi)y
Grove
Coos Bay
tures.
0
Bend
91/52 °
.
nterpne
•.85/47
9012
Granite 81153 •
Redm~s'Js~
•
Sunr1ver
Cottag~
0
•
•
90/~ •union
• Spray95/!D
•
E
81148
• M~~4~ham
La Gra~de
88162
96/58
Sis t e rs'
Florenc,.
921'£
•Ma d ras
Camp Sh~;~~aliJ
99/60
Yachats•
98160
Wa llcwa
Pendleton
• 88/ffl
97/'J)
Albany
0
Condon
Wi llowda le
101 1
•
•
•
100/&e
••HermistortW59
Ruggs
93/61
Government Camp87/66
•
WEST Sunny skies w ill accompany warm to hot tempe ra-
Umatilla 93/60
.
Tillamook. 100/e.
near record~
SUNDAY
BEND ALMANAC Hood River
92/SS
An exceedingly hot day with
97 51
FORECAST: STATE
SATURDAY
Warm
Stationary
,,,, ,
... ~~ ' -
" ''' '
-...: ~~~
~~~~~~-- ~~~~~; Showers T-storms
o a 1d atJ
~
* *
--*""'*
Flurries
Snow
t/ 1/ r:*:*: ·'* * * * * ·. *"'* ~
d ,.
Rain
Ice
Yesterday Thmsday Friday Gty Hillo/PQJ Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, lX .. ..101/73/0.01 .99/73/p< .. .95171/t Ahon .. .. .. .. .82158/0.00 .85/63/pc . 775 51sh Albany .. ...... .80/64/0.12 .83/63/pc. 83/61/IX Ali>J<pJerque .. ..94/66/0.00 .. 91/69/t ...89/691! Anchorage .. .. .67/5810.01 .61/.iO/pc . 615 0/sh Alanla .... .. ..85171/0.00 .91172/pc .. .8917211 AlanticCity .. ..85170/0.31 .. 88/70/s. 87172/pc Austin .. ......101/7510.00 . 99/73/pc. 91)73/p< Baltimore .... ..85168/0.00 .. 88/67/s. 90/71/p< Bill1ngs .. .... ..82154/0.18 .. 7414?)s.. 811535 BiiTilingham .. ..85169/0.00 .91/73/pc .. .87171it Bismarck ...... .71/59/0.00 .. 69/45/s .. 76f.J25 &;se .. .. .... ..97/64/0.00 .. 92157/s .. 921555 Bostoo .........84/66/0.72 .83/69/sh . 81)68/IX Biidgep<l'\ Cl ..76/69/0(!9 .86/68/pc . 85167/pc Buffalo . ... .. ..80/60/0.00 .81/6?)pc . . .75/.i&t Builing1oo, VT. ..81/67/0.00 .82/62/p< . ..83/.i&t Ca1iboo, ME ....80/64/0.23 . 72158/sh . 78157/p< 01a~lesto~ SC ..91/76/0.00 . 92/73/pc. 92/74/IX 01a~lotte .. ..... 86/7010.00 .. 90/6?)s . 91/70/p< 01attanooga ....88/69/0.00 . 90/69/pc ...87/67/t 01eyeme .. ....83/6210.00 . 70/49/pc. 80/54/IX Chcago ...... .. 8516510.00 .. 81/6Mt .. 71/605 Gncimal .. .. ..86164/0.00 .. 90/68/t . . .781.i9it ae~dand ... .. ..81/5810.00 . 84/661pc. 76/60/sh Colorado Spfings .91/59/0.00 . 751.i3/pc. 81/54/p< Coumbia, MO . ..94/53/0.00 .. 86/60/t. 80154/p< Columbia, SC ... .92/7210.00 .. 93171/s. 9J/72/pc Coumbll\ GA.. ..91/71/0.00 . 92/73/pc . 91/73/p< Coumbll\ 00.. ..85164/0.00 .89/67/pc . . .7655it Concord, NH .. .. .83/6510.19 . 83157/sh. 87/60/p< C01pus Olnsti ...100/80/0.00 . 98/781pc . 98/781p< Da!asFtWorth.. .95170/1.42 . 99/7~pc ...95/74it Dayton .. .. ... ..84/59/0.00 .89/661pc .. .751.i6it Denver... .......95166/0.00 . 791.i2/pc. 85157/p< Des Moines.. ....90/60/0.00 .. 75152/t .. 76f.J25 Detroit.. .. ......81/61/0.00 .. 86/64/t. 75158/p< Duluth .. .... .. .. 78151/0.00 .67/49/pc .. 711515 EIPaso.. .. .. ..100/7410.00 .. 98175/t ...89/llit Faiibanb ...... .7614810.00 . 72/49/pc .. 70/47/c Fa~ o........ ...8116210.00 .. 69/44/s .. 741535 Flagstaff .. . .. .. .83/54/0.00 .. 81/S~t ...801.i7it
Yesterday Thu~day Fliday Gty Hi/Lo/PQJ Hi!Lo/W Hillo1W Grand Ra~dl . ..8415/ro.OO . . 811.i9/t. 711.i21p< Green Bay.. .... 81 155~.00 .. 74!51h. 70M p< Greensboro. . . ..86169~.00 . . 87/67/s . 89/681pc Harrisburg.. . . ..81/66M1 . . 87/651s ...87/63/t Hartford, CT .. .. 82/64~.42 .87/631pc. 87/641p< Helem .. .. .. .. 62/Sm.oo .. 79/49/s .. 851Slls Honolulu . 87176~.00 .. 88/73/s .. 89/74/s Houston .... .. 98179~.00 . 95179/pc. 94/781p< Hun~ville .. .. ..87/6/ro.OO . 91/71/pc. ..86/6~t lncianapolis .... 86161 ~.00 .. 89/65h .. 771551s Jackson MS .. .. 94170~.00 .. 93174h ...90/74h JackSOrllille. . . ..90173M1 . . 92/74h. 91/7l!p<: JuneJu. .. . .. .. 70/4m.oo .64149/pc. ..61151/r Kansas City. .... 95155~.00 .. 83/60h .. 82159/s lansing. .83159/0.00.. . 81'ilh. 71f521p< las Vegas . .. .108185MO 107/84/pc 105J1!31p< Lexington . .. .. 84166~.00 .. 90169/pc .. .79/61/t L01coo ... .... 94158~.00 .. 77/4~pc. . 791561s Little Rock .... .. 91 /70~.00 .. . 94172h ...88168/t LosAn9oes .... .72/65~.00 .. . 74/661s. 7416~pc LoLisvi~e .. .. .. 89/6m.oo .. . 92/lOh. 80/6~fX Madism, W1 .. ..85163~.00 .. . 74/49h. 72150/s Mempos .. .... 91 171~.00 .. 93172/pc. ..89/68/t Mami .. ...... 90/8m.oo .. . 90179h . ..91179h Milwaukee . .. .. 84166~.01 .. . 76155n .. 71/S7/s Minneapolis . ... 83/64~.72 .. 691>)/pc. 70/.i41p< Naslrime .... .. 86/69~.00 .. 92172/pc. ..85164h New 01leans .. .94/78~.42 ... 93178h ...9217/h Ne,vYmk . .... 82/68~.53.. . 87172/s . 88/6~p<: Ne,vail, NJ. .... 86171 ~.1 7 .. . 8901/s. 88/681pc Nort~~ VA .. . ..90171M 1.. . 88//0is. 92/ll!pc Oklahona City .. 99171MO.. . 97/66h ...88164h Omaha .. . .. .. 94162~.00 .. 76154/pc. . 78154/s Orlando .. . .... 93172~.00 .. . 94/75h. 93/79p<: Palm Springs . . .106/86M0 .. 108/851s 10611!9p< Peoria .... .... 88160~.00 ... 83f.i6h. 761.i31pc Philadaphia .. .. 85171 ~.60 .. . 89/70/s. 89/l~fX Phoerix .. . .... 98181 ~.00 .. 1051116h. 101/85/t ~ttsbulgh. . . . .. 80162~.00 .. 83164/pc. . .79156/t Portland, ME .... 79/65M3.. 77/61/sh . 81/631p< Providmce . .... 79/64~.81 .. 85166/pc. 87/671pc Ral~gh .. . .. .. 88171 ~.00 .. . 90/681s. 94/71'p<:
Yesterday Thu~day Friday City H>Lo/PQJ HuLo/W Hi/Lo/W Rapid City.. .. 7315~0.00 . 72150/pc. 79156/pc Reno ..... ..... 'ljj72/0.00 .96167/pc. 981681pc Richmond . .... .87/69/0.04 .. 90/68/s. 93/72/pc Rodlesta; IN .. .78161/0.00. 84167/pc ...77158/t Sacramento. .. .. ljjj6310.00 . 101/63/s. 951661pc Stlooi' .. .... .9216310.00 .. 89/661! .. 79.~ 7/s Saltlake City .. .97/70/0.00 .'ljj/1/pc. 94/69/pc SanAntooio ...1021mo.oo . 99177/pc. 98177/pc San Dego .. .. .. 78170/0.00 .. 79/69/s. 79/70/pc San Frandsco .. .69157/0.00 .. 70155/s. 701551pc San Jose .. ..... 78161/0.00 .. 83/58/s. 84/61/pc Santa Fe .. .... .8815~0.04 . 8359/pc. 83159/pc
Yesterday Tlllrsday Friday Gty Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/\V H>Lo/W Savamah ... ..93,7510.00 .. 93/74/pc . 93/74/p< Seattle.. . .. . ..88!6210.00 ... 94/64/s .. 95163/s Sioux Falls ... . .89!66/0.00 .. 72/461pc .. 77152/s Spokane .... ..83!6510.00 ... 88160/s .. 92162/s SprOlgfiad, MO .93!6510.00 ... 91163/t. 81159/p< Tampa.... .. ..92,77/0.00 ... 92/7~! ...91/7811 Tucon.. . ..98,7410.01 ... 9717&! .92177/t Tulsa .. .. .. ..98:6510.00 ... 96/6&t ...881651t Waslingto~ DC .86,7410.00 .. . 89172/s. 90/73/p< Wictna ... .. ..96!6210.00 .. 8759/pc. 83/62/p< Ya.ma . . .. . . .93,5810.00 ... 91/62/s .. 97/66/s Ytm .. .... .1 00,~7/0.00 111111!3/pc . 10211!3/t
INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam ..... 84/61/0.00. 74163/pc .. 77!64/c Athens .... .. ... 89/69/0.00 .. 93176/s .. 9lry6/s Auckland .. .... .6114~0.00 .61!521sh . 61/53/sh Baghdad .. ....I07/82/0.00. 109/80/s. 1 11.~1 /s Bangkok .. .. .. .93/79/0.00 .. 93/79/t .. .92179~ Beijirg .. .. .... .90/61/0.00 .88/70/pc. 86/71/pc Beil111 .... .... .90/81/0.00 .. 89/79/s .. 90.~01s Berlin .. .... .. .. 73132/0.00 . 72551sh . 76/59/pc Bogota ........ 64/4510.00 . 6S531sh . 64152/sh Budapest .. .. .. 8214610.00 . 79158/pc. B3/61/pc Buenos Aires .... .61/57/0.00 .61!59/sh . 68/62/sh Cabo San Lucas .77173.85.62 . 85177/t .. .8W77h Cairo .... .. .. .. .93/77/0.00 .. 96/76/s .. 9m 71s Calgary .... .... .6314~0.00 .. 77/49/s .. 79.~31s CanciJl .... ..... 88/79/0.15 .. 83/79/t. 881781pc Dublin .. .. .. .. .. 64157/0.00 . 68541sh .. 67!52/c Edirburgh....... 64152/0.00 .70160/pc. 69/58/sh Gene'Ja .... .. ... 90/59/0.00 .82581sh .. 88163/s Harare .. .... .. .. 79159/0.00 .. 79/49/s .. 75147/s Hong Koog .. .. .. 93/81/0.00 . . 9111!0/t .. .8?)80h lstanbtJ .. .. .. .. .88/70/0.00 .. 83171/s .. ssryl/s Jerusalan .. .... .8216~0.00 .. 8?)70/s .. 90ry11s Johannesburg.. .. 73150/0.00 .. 67/41 /s .. 70147/s lima .. .. .. .... .64159/0.00 .66/61/pc .. 66160/s Lisbon.. .. .. .... 77/63/0.00 .. 81158/s .. 8SI651s loodon .. .. .. .. .73/6310.00 . 74i66/sh. 80/64/sh Madrid .. .. .... .81/70/0.00 .. 93/66/s .. 99167/s Manila .... ... .. 8217510.00 .. 87177/t. 89/l?)pc
Me<ca .... .. .108,9010.00 .1091911s. 107/89/s M&ico City .... 7%410.00 .. 721551! .. .71153/t MontreJI .... ..79!6610.00 .. 79/62/s . 7JI.i51sh Mosc<MJ .. . . 75!61/0.00 . 74156/sh. 69541sh Nairobi ....... 79!4810.00 . 79551pc. 74551sh Nassau ... ....90,8210.00 .. 89/7~1 ...88/79/1 NewDahi ... ..90,~1/0. 00 .. 94/l!~t ...96183/t Osaka . .... ..91,81/0.00 .. 91/77/t ...92177/t Oslo .. .. . .. .. .73!4610.00 . 711.i51pc . 70/56/p< Ottawa ... .. ..81!61/0.00 .. 80163/s. 7154/sh Pans .. . .... ..86!63/0.00 .80/60/pc . 87/67/pc Riode Janoro .. 84,7010.05 . 82/62/pc . 82/63/p< Rome ........86!66/0.00 .88/69/pc .. 89/70/s Sarliago .. .. ..64!4310.00 .. 53/361c. S0136/sh Sao PatJo .. . . .79!61/0.00 . .77/GrJc.. 79158/s Sapporo .... .. 73,73/0.00 . 76167/sh .. 76/6?)c See>J .. .... ..8W210.00 .. 88/751! ...89177/t Shan!ttai .. .. ..99,79/0.00 .9311!2/pc. 92/81 /p< Singapore ... ..88,81/0.00 .. 87179/t .. .8711!0/1 Stockholm ... . .75,5510.00 . 731.i51pc. 75159/p< Sydn"f........ 72!4810.00 .69/47/pc. 62/47/sh TaipEi .. ......91,~210. 00 . 94/79/pc ...91/79ft Td Aviv . .. .. ..90,77/0.00 .. 90175/s .. 921761s Tokyo .. .... ..9W710.00 .. 91/79/t .. .88177/t Toronto . .. .. .. 77,59/0.00 . 81 /62/pc . 6757/sh Vancoover .. . .. 79!6410.00 .. 87/61 /s .. 84162/s Viema.. .... ..81SO/O.OO . 76160/sh . 80/62/pc Wa~saw ...... ..66,5510.07 . 711.i51pc . 73/5S/p<
OREGON STATE HOSPITAL
4 veterans laid to rest at last By Steven DuBois The A ssociated Press
Joshua TruJillo I seattlep i.com
A plane drops retardant at a housing development near Cle Elum, Wash., as the Taylor Bridge Fire advances on the community Tuesday,
Historic mining town prepares to flee Washington wildfire By Dan Catchpole and Molly Rosbach Yakima (Wash) Herald-Republic
CLE ELUM, Wash, - Residents in the historic mining town of Liberty, Wash,, have been told to prepare to evacuate as the Taylor Bridge Fire slowly moves toward the community, The unincorporated town is the oldest mining townsite in the state, dating to 1850, Today, it is a collection of mostly rustic cabins and anumber of1arge, modern homes, Residents are under a Level 1 evacuation, which means evacuation has become likely and residents should begin preparing to leave, Officials say it might be a week before firefighters are able to contain the wildfire, which has consumed thousands of acres and dozens of homes between Cle Elum and Ellensburg, Wash ,, since starting Monday. At a community meeting Wednesday, incident manager Rex Reed downgraded the fire's size to about 22,000 acres, from a peak estimate of 28,000, but he said firefighters have plenty of work to do to tame the fire, Some progress has been made on various sections, but helicopters and air tankers are focusing on a persistent section of the fire along US , Highway 97, "We're in a heck of a fire-
fight there," he said, Bulldozers and hand crews on the northwest edges of the fire are trying to protect unburned homes and strengthen fire lines, Reed said that once the fire is contained, it w ill be a few more days beyond that before crews can expect to declare the fire controlled, Monitoring for possible hot spots inside the perimeter will continue into winter. While Reed said that he recognizes residents' interest in returning home and learning about the condition of their property, the situation is not safe enough yet for inspections, "Il does lake lime. We are making progress," he said, About 900 firefighters are assigned, Reed noted that safety - for the public and emergency crews - remains the top priority, Standing in a school gym that features a picture of Cle Elum-Roslyn native Tom Craven, Reed recalled Craven's 2001 death while fighting the Thirtymile Fire in North Cen tral Washington, Alan Crankovich, chairman of the Kittitas County board of commissioners, noted the support for the fire victims that has poured in from both local sources and others in Washington and neighboring states, "Everybody's looking at Kittitas County," he said,
PORTLAND Four military veterans whose cremated remains sat unclaimed for decades in Oregon's state-run mental hospital were laid to rest Wednesday in Willamette National Cemetery. Val Conley, th·e deputy director of the state Dep artment of Veterans' Affairs , accepted the United States flag on behalf of the men whose relatives could not be located, They were Army Pvl. James Buller, Army Sgt, William Madson, Navy Boatswain's Mate 2nd Class Frank Martin and Navy sailor Lanier Johnson, whose rank is unknown,
Madson and Johnson served in World War I; the others served just hefore or during World War II. Almost nothing is known about the lives they led , From the late 1800s to the 1970s, the uncla imed bodies of 3,600 patients were cremated, and the remains stored in copper canisters, There were no names on the urns, only numbers that corresponded to the identities of patients in hospital records, The canisters, many of them corroded, were discovered in a storage room in 2004, The disrespectful treatment of the ashes spurred lawmakers to replace the crumbling Oregon State Hospital - the place where the movie "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest"
was filmed - and establish an online database to help people find the remains of their forgotten relatives, Only about 100 canisters have been claimed, Robert Yde, a state hospital spokesman, said. The state Department of Veterans' Affairs figured some of the unclaimed ashes might be former soldiers, and asked for a list of names. The identities were sent to the St Louis office of the U.S , Department of Veterans Affairs, Workers there did a line-by-line check and could only identify five military men with cerlainl y, "Because the record keeping was so terrible back then, it was a struggle for us to figure out who was a veteran and who was not," Conley said, The imprecision of the re-
cords became evident Monday, when it was learned that one of the five veterans had been claimed by relatives after his death in 1962 and has been buried for five decades near Coos Bay. It's unknown whose ashes are in the canister that had been identified as his. At Wednesday's ceremony, following a procession of Patriot Guard Riders and a halfdozen cars, Conley sat alone in a row of cha irs reserved for family. The folded flag she accepted will be displayed in a case at the Veterans' Building in Salem. "I think about those guys sitting down in that cold, dark basement for 50 years and nobody claiming them," she said, "It saddens me, It saddens me there was no family!'
PROVIDING SMALL BUSINESS SOLUTIONS MAKES US FEEL Alt
WARM INSIDE. Business phone lines as low as
$29.99* When it comes to business services, we know small companies make up the bulk of our customers. And, like you, were right here in Central Oregon. So we need to be sure things are done right; that we're able to deliver better reliability than the other, out-oftown guys. That way, if something ever does go wrong, you can know we'll be on-site quickly to fix things fast. After all, we don't just like technology, we love this stuff, *Some rest nc tio n s m a y apply.
bendbroadband,com/business ::
541.312.6600
~____,
bendbroadbandT. Business WE LOVE THIS STUFF.
Scoreboard, D2 Baseball, D2-D5 Golf, D3
PORTS
D
Football, D3 Hunting & Fishing, D6
8
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
www.bendbulletin.com/sports
ROLLER HOCKEY
TENNIS
17 teams set sights on titles in Bend By Emily Oiler The Bulletin
Rafael Nadal
Nadal pulls out of U.S. Open NEW YORK- Rafael Nadal's Grand Slam count will stay stuck at 11 for now, sidetracked by another knee problem. The third-ranked Spaniard withdrew from the U.S. Open on Wednesday. Tendinitis has kept him out of action since his stunning loss at Wimbledon in late June. The injury already forced him out of the London Olympics, where he was supposed to defend his title and carry Spain's flag in the opening ceremony. "I am very sad to announce that I am not ready to play the US Open in NY. Thanks to my fans for their support and specially, the new yorkers," Nadal wrote on his Twitter account. Nadal is still only 26, but the withdrawals raise questions about the future of a player who has had recurring knee problems in the past. His 11 Grand Slam titles include a record seven on the red clay of the French Open, yet his hard-charging, hard-hitting style of play takes a toll on his body, particularly his knees. Roger Federer, in contrast, has played in every Grand Slam tournament since the start of 2000, a streak of 51 in a row.
Two Bend teams, the Bullets Black Ops and Local Boyz, will defend their titles Saturday in the 19th annual Northwest Cup roller hockey tournament. " Seventeen teams are expected for the tournament, with six divisions that range in ages and level of play. Four teams will play in the Adult A division, four in lhe Adult B division, three in the Adult Recreation division, three in the 14-and-under division, and three in the 10-and-un-
der division. Adult divisions are for players 15 years of age and older. According to tournament director Butch Roberts, teams from Portland and Salem, as well as from Idaho and Vancouver, British Columbia, will be traveling to Central Oregon to compete in the Northwest Cup. The tournament will be staged at the Cascade Indoor Sports complex, off Empire Avenue in northeast Bend. Roberts noted that among the players expected to participate are several who competed in the Inter-
national Roller Sports FederationRoller Hockey World Cup. Roberts, who owns Cascade Indoor Sports, said this week that he predicts Bend teams will win titles in the A and B divisions. He also noted that the Adult H.ecreation division will have a guaranteed Central Oregon champion after an Idaho team dropped out of the field. The long-running Northwest Cup is no small-slakes event. Teams pay a $495 registration fee that guarantees them at least three games. See Cup / D5
What: Six divisions with four teams each in the Adult A and Adult B, three teams each in the Adult Recreation, 14-and-under and the 10-and-under. Two teams from Bend, the Bullets BlackOps and the Local Boyz, will also take part. When: Saturday, 7:30a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Where: Cascade Indoor Sports complex in northeast Bend off Empire Avenue Cost: Free for spectators
HUNTING & FISHING
Draw your bow GARY LEWIS
• Beginner's luck can help when archery season starts By Gary Lewis For The Bulletin
orne people. A few years ago my cousin called. "Gary, I didn't draw any deer or elk tags this year and I still want to go hunting," he said. "I know I could hunt in the Western Oregon deer rifle season, but I want to be a bowhunter." He didn't own a how yet, and archery season was due to start in three days . I thought back to the eight seasons I hunted with a bow and the months of practice each year. "You should have called me in April," I said to my cousin. "That's when you make a decision like this." He knew that, but he also believed he could learn to shoot a bow, learn to call elk and turn himself into a bowhunter in a short time. Calling elk into bow range is as intense as hunting gets. That's why practice is so important, not only before the season, but between hunts as well. The stealth, the draw, the anchor and Lhe release should be automatic. My initial compulsion was to discourage him, to tell him to buy the bow but skip the season and get ready for next year. It takes time to build muscle memory, to learn the fundamentals, to become proficient enough to make a good shot at 20, 30, 40 and 50 yards. But enthusiasm counts for a lot. " The day before the season, he bought a bow at a local archery shop. Then he went home to practice. Every year, new hunters walk into archery shops in that last week before opening day and want to buy a package, set up and ready to hunt. It is the wrong time to make the decision, but it is hard to deny the enthusiasm. See Archery !D6
S
- TheAssociated Press
NFL New York battles over Giants, Jets Defending champion Giants second banana in the Big Apple, D3
GOLF Players jockey to make FedEx Cup This weekend's Wyndham Championship marks the end of the regular season on the PGA Tour, 03
19th Northwest Cup
Gary Lewis / Far The Bulleti n
Jeremy Creasy tunes his compound bow at the Competitive Edge Archery store in Bend.
MLB
MLB
For King Felix. this finally was a day of perfection By Steve Kelley The Seattle Times
Stephen Strasburg
Debate: to pitch or not to pitch Experts weigh in on whether or not Washington pitcher Stephen Strasburg should take time off beforethe playoffs, D5
SEATTLE - The count fell to 2-0 on Sean Rodriguez, the last Tampa Bay hitter between Felix Hernandez and history. Hernandez walked around the mound, stood on the back slope and took a deep breath. He might have been the only person in Safeco Field who was still breathing. In the batter's box, Rodriguez told himself to look for a fastball. That's what a pitcher throws to the potential last out of a p erfect game. And that's what the Rays' scouting report said to look for from Hernandez. But Mariners catcher John Jaso who was lhe masterful conductbr of this Wednesday afternoon classic, called for a slider.
Inside • San Francisco's Melky Cabrera suspended 50 games after positive drug test, 05
A former Tampa Bay player, Jaso knew the Rays' approach to Hernandez. "I took a little walk, you know, to catch my breath," Hernandez said. "He (Jaso) called a slider and I'd been following him all day. I threw a slider and he (Rodriguez) swung and missed." The pitch was unfair and unhittable. The perfect pitch for this perfect Wednesday. The crowd got louder. The count went to two and two, and Rodriguez looked as helpless as a fighler caught on the ropes. "Throw it over the plate. Throw
it over the plate," Hernandez told himself as he looked into Jaso for the final time. "He's going to swing." But Rodriguez froze and home-plate umpire Rob Drake called the third strike and the Mariners had their first perfect game. And even though it only was the 23rd perfect game in bigleague history, a game like this for Hernandez seemed almost inevitable. How many times have we seen him cruise through the first three innings, looking untouchable? How many times has he taken no-hit stuff to the mound? How many times have we thought, "This is lhe day." This was the day. See Felix / D 5
The Mariners' Felix Hernandez reacts after throwing a prefect game on Wednesday in Seattle. Ted S. Warren I The
\
Assoc iated Press
02
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
TELEVISION Today GOLF
Friday GOLF
8 a.m.: USGA, U.S. Amateur, second round, Golf Channel. Noon: PGA Tour, Wyndham Championship, first round, Golf Channel.
8 a.m.: USGA, U.S. Amateur, third round, Golf Channel. 9:30a.m.: Champions Tour, Dick's Sporting Goods Open, first round, Golf Channel. Noon: PGA Tour, Wyndham Championship, second round, Golf Channel. 3:30p.m.: LPGA Tour, Safeway Classic, first round, Golf Channel. TENNIS 8 a.m.: ATP, Western & Southern Open, quarterfinals, ESPN2. 4 p.m.: ATP, Western & Southern Open, quarterfinals, ESPN2.
BASEBALL 10 a.m.: Little League World Series, Caribbean vs. Japan, ESPN. 10 a.m.: MLB, Texas Rangers at New York Yankees, MLB Network. Noon: Little League World Series, New England vs. West, ESPN. 2 p.m.: Little League World Series, Asia-Pacific vs. Europe, ESPN2. 4 p.m.: MLB, New York Mets at Cincinnati Reds or Boston Red Sox at Baltimore Orioles, MLB Network. 4 p.m.: Little League World Series, Midwest vs. Southeast, ESPN.
TENNIS 10 a.m.: ATP, Western & Southern Open, round of 16, ESPN2. 4 p.m.: ATP, Western & Southern Open, round of 16, ESPN2.
FOOTBALL 5 p.m.: NFL, preseason, Cincinnati Bengals at Atlanta Falcons, Fox.
BASEBALL 10 a.m.: Little league World Series, Canada vs. Mexico, ESPN. Noon: Little League World Series, Mid-Atlantic vs. Southwest, ESPN. 2 p.m.: little League World Series, Latin America vs. Middle East and Africa, ESPN2. 4 p.m.: MLB, Boston Red Sox at New York Yankees or Texas Rangers at Toronto Blue Jays, MLB Network. 5 p.m.: little League World Series, Great Lakes vs. Northwest, ESPN. 8 p.m.: MLB, Minnesota Twins at Seattle Mariners, Root Sports.
FOOTBALL 5 p.m.: NFL Preseason, Detroit Lions at Baltimore Ravens, Fox. BOXING 7 p.m.: Donovan George vs. Adonis Stevenson, ESPN2.
SOCCER 7 p.m.: Women's college, Santa Clara at Stanford, Pac-12 Network. Ustings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF
Soccer • Timbers tie Toronto 2-2: Darlington Nagbe scored in the 82nd minute to give the Portland Timbers a 2-2 tie with Toronto FC on Wednesday night in Toronto. Nagbe headed home a cross from Steven Smith past Milos Kocic to cancel out second-half goals from Toronto strikers luis Silva and Eric Hassli. Portland's Sal Zizzo put the Timbers up 1-0 in the 21st minute. After David Horst's header was cleared off the line by a TFC defender, Zizzo pounced on the loose ball from a yard out for his first goal of the season. • U.S. beats Mexico for first time in Mexico: Second-half substitute Michael Orozco Fiscal scored in the 80th minute to give the United States its first-ever win at Mexico with a 1-0 victory in afriendly Wednesday in Mexico City. Brek Shea, who entered two minutes earlier, went down the left flank and around Severo Meza before sending a cross to Terrence Boyd. Boyd made a quick backheel pass to Orozco Fiscal, who had entered in the 77th. Orozco Fizcal, who plays in Mexico for San Luis, beat keeper Guillermo Ochoa for his first international goal.
Hockey • Bettman says 'wide gap' remains in NHL labor talks: The wide gap that existed in labor talks between the NHL and NHL Players' Association was hardly bridged on Wednesday, a day afterthe union presented its counterproposal and with the threat of a lockout now only a month away. NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said the two sides are "still apart, far apart," and "not on the same page," in making his first public comments since having a chanceto read through the NHLPA's offer. Adding that he was "a little disappointed" that the union has yet to present its full proposal, Bellman said the league isn't even at the point of making a counteroffer.
Football • Cowboys' TE Witten out with spleen injury: Pro Bowl tight end Jason Witten has a spleen injury and will likely miss the rest of the preseason. It is unclear if Witten will be ready for the Dallas Cowboys' regular season opener in three weeks, Sept. 5 at the New York Giants. Coach Jason Garrett said Wednesday that Witten sustained a "slightly lacerated" spleen in the pre-
season opener Monday night. He said Witten has to remain still as much as possible over the next week so he can heal. • Paterno distraught after Penn State firing: Joe Paterno sobbed while meeting with his coaches and a former player the day after he was fired from Penn State, according to an excerpt of an upcoming article on Paterno to be published in GO magazine. "My name," the Hall of Fame coach was quoted in the excerpt as telling his son and quarterback coach, Jay. "I have spent my whole life trying to makethat name mean something. And now it's gone." Paterno was fired by school trustees in November in the fallout of the Jerry Sandusky child sex abu se scandal. He died in January at age 85.
Baseball • Red Sox boss says no players asked for new skipper: None of the Boston Red Sox players in a series of meetings with theteam's top brass called for manager Bobby Valentine to be replaced, owner John Henry said Wednesday. Henry issued a statement one day after Yahoo! Sports reported that several players met with him and team president Larry Lucchino in New York on July 27 to complain about Valentine's handling of the team. "No one in that meeting at any time took the position that Bobby should be or needed to be replaced," Henry wrote. Henry said players took responsibility for theteam's performance.
Golf • Woods, Mcilroy to stage duel in China: Tiger Woods and Rory Mcilroy will square off in China thisfall in a one-day exhibition. Woods and Mcilroy are to play an 18-hole matchat Lake Jinsha International Golf Club on Oct. 29, the Monday afterthetop two players in the world ranking compete in different Asian tournaments. Mark Steinberg at Excel Sports Management, the agent for Woods, saysthe exhibition has been in the works for a coupleof months. He described it as customer entertainment. The timing could not bebetter. Mcilroy won the PGA Championship on Sunday, boosting comparisons with Woods. They are the only two playersto win multiple majors by morethan eight shots over the past 35 years. Mcilroy won his second major at a slightly younger agethan when Woods won the second of his 14 majors. - From wire reports
PREPS
Peng Shuai, China, del. Roberta Vinci, llaly, 6-3. 6-4 Pelra Kvitova (4), Czech Republic, del. Mooa Barthel, Germany, 3 6, 6 2, 7 5. Sara Errani (7). llaly, del. Daniela Hantuchova, Slovak ~, 6-4, 6-4. Urszula Radwanska Poland, del. Yaroslava Shvcdova, Kazakhstan, 4-6, 4-1 , retired. EkaterinaMakarova. Russia, del. Anna Tatishvili, Georgia, 6-1, 6-2. Venus Williams, United Slates, del. Chanelle Scheepers, South Africa, 2-6, 6-3, 6-2. Caroline Wozniacki (6), Denmark, del. Sesil Karatanlcheva, I<Jzakhslan. 6-1. 6-0. Li Na (9), China, del. Sorana Cirstea, Romania, 6-3, 4-G, G-3.
IN THE BLEACHERS
Calendar To submit Informal ion lolhe Prep calendar, email TheBulletin al sports@bendhullelin.com
YWR Zl Pitt< IS OPEN!~
Ben~
High IOOiball Air Bear Camp: Aug. 13-16al Bend High practice lield, 5toBp.m. each day. Cosl is$100 lor early regislratioo and$110 lor lateregislratioo. Contact ~eod High headcoach Mall Craven a! mall.craveo@bend.k12.or.us or golo ~ww.bendloOiball.can for more information. Daily ~oubles: Aug. 20-30 at Bend H~h; Varsity/ JV from 91o 11:30 a.m. and 51o 7:30 p.m. Freshmen lromBto10:30 a.m. and 4lo 6:30p.m. Note: Paperwork is available at the Bend High's alhlctics oflicc starting Aug. 6. Paperwork and fc.;s are nOI necessarylo check oul equipment but musl be completed beforepractice starts Aug. 20. Mountain View football Weightlifling/condilioning : Grades 9-12, Aug. 13-16,9 to 10:30 a.m. Cougar Camp: Grades 9-12, Au9. 13-1 7from 3 to 5:30 p.m.; cosl is $65 at registration on Aug. 13 at 2 p.m. Daily ~oubles: Aug. 20-24; varsity/JV 91o 11:30 a.m.and l lo 5:30 p.m.; freshmen Bto 10:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. lo 2 p.m. Paperwork: Will be available for final clearance slarl~g Aug. 6 in lhe Mountain View High athletics ollice. All paperwork and physicals must be on file before Aug. 20. Summit football Conditioning camp: Today at Juniper Swim & Filness Center, 2:151o 4:30 p.m. Cosl$60 Daily ~oubles : Aug. 20-24, varsily/JV Blo 11 a.m. and 4 lo 6 p.m.; lreslmen 9 lo 11 a.m. and 4 to 5:30p.m. Paperwork: Available allheSummil Highathletics ollice. Mountain VIew girls soccer Preseason training: Aug. 6-17at Mountain View soccer fields; 61o 7:30 p.m. each day with addilional 9 a.m.workouts today; $70; for girls entering grades six through 12; for more information go to www.cougargirlssocce r.webs.com. summit girls soccer Condilioning camp: Aug. 13-17, B-1 0a.m.;$30; meel at Sum mil Stadium. Tryouts: Aug. 20-24, B-9:30 a.m. and 5-7 p.m. al Summit High. Players musl fill oul appropriate paperwork prior lo Monday morning; paperwork is available in the athletics ollice at Summit. For more inlormalion go lo hllp:(jwww.road9sporls.comfteam/ SummitGirlsSoccer/. Mountain VIew boys soccer Condilionlng camp: Aug. 13-16 al Mountain View High, B lo 9:15a.m. and 5:3D lo 7 p.m. each day. For more information call coach Chris Rogersat 541-200-9393. Ridgeview boys soccer All incoming Ridgeview and Redmond Proficiency Aca~my studentsliving within the Ridgeview boundary are weloome lo all end all of the following evenls For moreinformalion golo ridgeviewsoccer.com. Ravens dally·~ouble tryouts: Aug. 20-24 al Ridgeview High; check-in Aug. 20, 9-10 a.m., in TV production lab inside school. Sessions run 10 lo 11:45 a.m. each day. Players should bringshinguards and running shoes Summit cross-country Practices: Today, 8:45a.m. at lhe summ11 High Irack. For more information contact head coach carol McLalchieat541-7BB-1577 oratmclcarol@msn.oom, or see theSummil HighAthletics XC link. Casca~e Middle School football Contact camp: At Summit Stadium for incoming seventh-gradersand eighlh-·Jraders; Aug. 20-23,6:30 lo 8:3D p.m. Cost $80 for two-week camp. Contact Summit High head coach Joe Padilla at joe.padilla@ bend.k12.0r.us or caii 54H10-9B66 to sign up or for more information. Crook County athletics Physlca Is: Dr. David Cleveland oflhePioneer Healh care Cenler in Prineville is t:erlorming free physicalsat the Crook Counly High School nurse's offia: loday, Aug. 16, and Thursday, Aug. 17, from 1 to 5 p.m.. To make an appoinlmenl, call 541-323-4272. Walk-ns are also welcome.
FOOTBALL NFL NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE Preseason Glance All Times PDT Today's Games Cleveland at Green Bay, 5 p.m. Cindnnali al Allanla, 5p.m. Friday's Games Tennessee at Tampa Bay, 4:3Dp.m. Buffaloa! Mimesola, 5p.m. Jacksonvilleat NewOrleans, 5 p.m. Del roil at Baltimore, 5 p.m. Miami al Carolina, 5 p.m. Oakland at Arizona, 7 p.m. Saturday's Games N.Y. Giants al N.Y. Jets, 4 p.m.
DEALS Transactions
In the Bleachers © 2012 Steve Moore. Dis:. by Universal Uclic k www .go comic s. com/inthebleach ars
San Francisoo at Houston, 5 p.m. Kansas Cily al St. Louis, 5 p.m. Washington at Chicago, 5 p.m. Dallasal San Diego, 6 p.m. Seallleal Denver, 6 p.m. Sunday's Game Indianapolis at Pillsburgh, 5 p.m. Monday's Game Philadelphia at NewEngland. 5 p.m.
Sparling Kansas Cilyat Toronto FC, 1:30 p.m. SanJoseal Monlreal, 4:30 p.m. New England at Chicago, 5:3D p.m. FC Dallas at Real Salt Lake, 6p.m. Chivas USA at Colorado, 6p.m Sunday's Games Philadelphiaat D.C. United, 2p.m. Porlland al New York, 4 p.m. Columbus al Houston, 6 p.m.
BASEBALL
TENNIS
WCL
Professional
WEST GOAST LEAGUE All Times PDT Championshi p Series We~nesday's Game Wenatchee9, Corvallis 8 (Wenatchee leads series 1-0) Fri~ay's Game Corvall is al Wenalcllee, 7:05p.m. Satur~ay's Game Corvall is al Wenatchee(il nea:ssary), 7:05p.m.
Western & southern Open Wedn e s~ay
At The Lindner Family Tennis Center Mason, Ohio Purse: Men, $3.43 million (Masters 1000); Women , $2.17 million (Premier) surface: Har~·Out~oor Singles Men secon~ Roun~
SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT Eastern Conlerence w l T Pts GF Sporting Kansas City 13 I 4 43 30 New York 12 7 5 j 1 j D Houston 11 6 4D 35 Chicago 11 7 3B 2B 11 8 36 36 D.C. Montreal 1D 13 33 36 Columbus 8 B 29 21 Philadolphla 7 12 23 23 New England 6 12 23 26 Toronto FC 5 13 5 2D 27 Western Conference w l T Pts GF San Jose 14 5 5 47 47 Real Salt Lake 13 9 3 42 36 1D 6 Seatlle 37 32 Los Angeles 11 11 37 44 Vancouver 10 B 37 20 FCDallas 11 29 31 Chivas USA 9 26 14 Colorado 15 25 31 5 12 6 21 22 Porlland NOTE: Threepcints lor victory, one poinl for lie. Wednesday's Games Columbus 1, Los Angeles 1, lie Toronto FC2, Portland 2, lie FCOallas / , VanOOIIVP.r 0 Saturday's Games Vancouver al SeallleFC, 1 p.m.
GA 22 3j 27 25 29 43 22 27 29 42 GA 29 30 24 4D 31 34 25 35 39
Mardy Fish (1D), Uniled Stales, del. carlos Berlocq, Argentina 6-3. 6-1 Viklor Troicki, Serbia, del. L1e11on Hewill, Australia, 6-2, 6-D. Nikolay Davydenko, Russia, del. Florian Mayer, Germany, 6-3, 6-3. Novak Djokovic (2), Serbia, del. Andreas Seppi, Italy, 7-6 (4), 62. Juan Martin del POiro (6), Argentina, del. lommy Haas. Germany, 7-5, 6-2. Jeremy Chardy, Frana:, del. Denis lstom in, Uzbekistan, 6-4, 6-3. Andy Mu rray (3), Britain, del. Sam Querrey, United Slates, 6-2,6-4. Milos Raonic, canada, del. MarcosBagl1dalis, Cyprus, 6 7(6), 6 3, 6 4. Kei Nishikori (14), Japan, del. James Blake, Uniled Slates, 2-6,6-4, 6-4. Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic, del. Juan Monaco (B), P.rgertina, 7-6(2), 6-l Marin Cilic (12), Croalla, del. Jesse Levine, Uniled Slales, 7-5, 7-6 (6) Pablo Andujar, Spain, del. Janko Tipsarevic (7), Serbia, 6-4, 4-1 refired. noger f ederer (1), Switzerland, del. Alex Gogomolov Jr., Russia, 6-3, 6-2. StanislasWawrinka, Switzerland, del. David Ferrer 14), Spain, G-4, G-1. Women Secon~ Round Agnieszka Radwanska (1), Poland, del. Solla Arvidsson, Sweden, 6-4, 6-3. Sloane Stephens, Uniled Slates, del. Gamita Giorgi, llaly, 6-2,6-1. AndrP<~ Hlavar:kova, c7P.cll Republic, del. Oominika Cibulkova(11), Slovakia, 7-6(1), 4-1, retired. Anaslasli Pavlyudtenkova(17), Russli, del. JuliaGoerges, Germany, 6-3, 6-0.
BASEBALL COMMISSIO NER'S OFFICE- Susperded Sat Frandsr.o OF Melky f<~h rera 50 games for violating Major League Basehall's Joinl Drug Prevenlioo and Trealmenl Program. American League BALTIMOREORIOLES-P.ssigned OFEndy Chavez oulrighl loNorlolk (IL). KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Re~ased 28 Yuniesky Betancourt. MINNESOTA lWINS- Selecled lhe oontract of SS Pedro Florimonfroo1 Rochester (IL). TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Agreed lo terms wilh C Yorvil Torrealba on aminor teagueoonlract. Nalional League CHICAGO CUBS- Fired vice president of player personnel Oneri He1ta. COLORADO ROCKIES-Recalled RHP Guillenno Mosooso from Colorado Springs (PCL). Designated RHPMikeEkstromlor assignment. NEW YORK METS- Assigned LHP Garrell Olson oulrighllo Buffalo (IL). Optioned C Rob Johnson lo Buffalo. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS-Agreed lo lenns with 1B Brock Peterson on aminor leaguecontract. SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS- Placed RHP Brad Penny on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Dan Olero from Fresno (PCL). Optioned RHP Dan Otero lo Fresno. Assigned RHP Guillenno Mola to the AZL Gianls. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association CLEVELAND CAVALIERS- Named Koby Allman propersonnel manager. DETROIT PISTONS-Signed FKhris Middleton. HOUSTON ROCKETS- Waived C Josh Harrellson. FOOTBALL National Football League CAROLINA PANTHERS- 4vaived GAndreRamsey. Signed RBAnnond Smilh. NEW YORKG IANTS-P~ced DT Martirt Parker 011 the waived-injured list. Signed DT Carlton Powell and DT OrenWilson. NEW YORK JETS- Signed CB LeQuan Lewis. OAKLAND RAIDERS- Placed WR Duke Calhoun and LB Mario Kumon the waived-injured lisl. HOCKEY Nalionat Hockey League SAN JOSE SHARKS- Re-signed FBrandon Mashinter to ame-year oontracl. COLLEGE ARKANSAS- Named Nick Holl on-campus recruiting coordinator. CURRY- Named T.J. Manastersky men's hockey coach andTim Murphy men's lacrosse coach. DELAWARE-Named Brian Walker pitching ooach. FELICIAN- NamedA.leshla Jijon women'sassistant soccer ooach. GEORGEMASOtJ-P.nnouncedwomen's basketball GTaylor Grown is transferring fromGeorgetown. GEORGIA STATE- Announced the retirement of football ooact1Bill Curryafterlhe 2012 season. ILLINOIS- Announced OLRyan Klachko hastransferred from Nebraska. JOHNSON C. SMITH- Named Shenika Worthy women'sassociate head lxlskelhall coach. SAINTAUGUSTINE- Discontinued ils men'stennis program. VP.LDOSTASTATE- Arutuunced CB Grey Reid ltas transferredfromFlorida Slale WASHINGTON & JEFFERSON- Named Tracy Coyne women's lacrossecooG11.
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adull chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead al selected Columbia River dams last updated on Tuesday. Chnk Jchnk Sllh~ Wsllhd Ronneville 67B 15? 3,413 1,179 The Dalles 5B2 111 1,443 546 JohnDay 271 B3 1,196 4B2 McNary 237 72 1.438 486 Upstream year-to-dalemovement ol adull chinook, jack chinook, Sleethead and wild sleelhead al selected ColumbiaRiver dams last updated on Tuesday Chnk Jchnk Sllhd Wsllhd Bonneville 248,393 21,973 136,642 55,903 The Dalles 191,623 19,D71 BB,703 39,003 John Day 171,4D1 1B,D66 55,767 25,754 169,3'2'2 10,247 45,844 18,B64 McNary
LITTLE LEAGUE WORLD SERIES
African country set to make debut By Genaro C. Annas The A ssociated P ress
SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. - The pings of metal bats striking baseballs reverberated from the covered hitting cages at dawn. The early-risers from Uganda are the first team from Africa to make it to the Little League World Series, and they a ren't wasting a minute on the pristine grounds of South Williamsport. "I h ad never seen such a b eautiful field," third baseman Ronald Olaa, 11, said about Lamade Stadium, up a hill from lhe cages. "I gol mesmerized." The other 15 teams are captivated, too, by Olaa and his tea mmates. They're one of the most popular squads on the Little League campus half a world away from their home in Lugazi, Uganda . "Who gets to meet people from Uganda in our neck of the woods," Brad Wegner, manager of a Kearney, Neb., team , said in r ecounting how he told his players to meet other teams a nd enjoy time off the diamond. Wegner's boys are making history, too. It's the first time in the 66 years of the tournament that a team from that state has made the tournament. Opening day is today with fou r games on the slate. Nebraska plays the primetime game against Goodlettsville, Tenn. They're already ready to party back in Kearney no matter how far the town's mini-mashers make it in the World Series. But Blake Quintana, 13, is handling a ll the attention like a seasoned major leaguer. "They're planning to have a big celebration when we gel back," lhe 13-yearold second baseman said during a break at the cage while leaning against his bat. "I'm excited for it, but we have to focus on this first."
Caveat: Boys this age can have short attention spans, too. "I love the game room, dude," 13-yearold Jake Gappa exclaimed as he trudged back w ith teammates to the dorms carrying a bag full of equipment after a rou nd at the cage. Fr ee gear and a players housing complex with a rec room and pool are part of the perks of being one of the 16 teams left standing at the World Series after a summer-long tournament that began with 7,000 squads worldwide. In South Williamsport, the field is broken up inlo eight U.S. learns and eight international teams. The 11-dav tournament is double-elimination until the final weekend, when U.S. and international champions are crowned to face off for the World Series title. Sure, there's pressure, especially in the middle of games broadcast for millions watching on national television with tens of thousa nds more sitting in the stands. In the Williamsport area - the birthplace of Little League - the World Series is a time-honored tradition during which many r esidents and volunteers plan their vacations. "There's a giant time commitment ... But you always keep it in perspective. You know, it's 12-year-old baseball," said Fairfield, Conn., manager Bill Meury. Ther e's also already a sense of accomplishment and relief among teams that have advanced. "All the teams here have won, and you're playing with house money," said Meury, who couldn't stop smiling or laughing. "If you can put together a couple good games, maybe you can do something lhal I don'l lhink anyone ca n sel as a goal at the beginning of the year, which is to win a World Series!' finding a baseball field without pebbles or ant hills - let alone think-
ing about getting to the World Series - is tough enough for Olaa team's from Uganda. While baseball is an emerging sport in Uganda, it's still not as popular as soccer. Some players may come from families who can't afford shoes. But players in Uganda are also used to playing in bare feet, so much so that a couple Lugazi team members went without shoes for one of their first practices in South Williamsp ort. "They got here and they got brand new shoes and brand new bats," manager Henry Odong said. "They're very ex cited" they may have a future in baseball. Odong's team isn't the first team from Africa to qualify for the World Series, though it will be the first one to play in South Williamsport. A separate team from Kampala, Uganda, was disqualified last year after the U.S. State Department denied visas b ecause of discrepancies over players' ages and birth dates. Rut Uganda coach Richard Stanley, of New York, said the problem had to do with a coach last year falsifying documents. Stanley, a retired chemical engineer who owns a small stake of the Trenton Thunder Double-A minor league ba seball team, has donated about $2 million to establish a Little League program a nd build a baseball academy in Uganda . Stanley hopes the Lugazi team's success will help draw more boys and girls into Little League baseball and softball, which he hopes will eventua lly be a stepping stone to help children get scholarships and go lo college . But that's a goal for years down the road. For now, Olaa and his teammates plan to just enjoy the simple pleasure of playing baseball.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012 â&#x20AC;˘ THE BULLETIN
NFL
GOLF
Before baseball left
Playoff spots once aga1n on line at Wyndham
Brooklyn, Koufax left game of hoops
I
â&#x20AC;˘ With basketball set to return to the borough/ a look back at the iconic pitcher/s hardcourt career By Richard Sandomir New York T imes News Service
By Joedy McCreary The Associated Press
GREENSBORO, N.C. - Time is running out for some players at the Wyndham Championship. For U.S. Ryder Cup captain Davis Love III, there are precious few weeks left to complete his roster. For others, the need is much more pressing: Play well or forget about making the Fed Ex Cup playoff field. "It is on your mind the whole time," said Jhonattan Vegas, who is No. 124 on the points list. The top 125 qualify for The Barclays, the first playoff event. Hubble players are part of the drama at the Wyndham Championship, which for the sixth consecutive year marks the PGA Tour's final event before the postseason. There's no shortage of players who came to Sedgefield Country Club looking for a boost. Among those who occupy Nos. 120-130 on the points list, No. 127 Retief Goosen is the only one not playing this week. "The playoffs really start this week for me," said No. 126 Brendan Steele. Love has a little more breathing room before he must settle on his Ryder Cup team - he announces his four captain's picks Sept. 4. The only players at the Wyndham who are under serious consideration are Brandt Snedeker and Bill Haas. Before his team-picking duties become even more serious, Love indulged in some fun Wednesday by playing the pro-am with Los Angeles Clippers guard - and local favorite - Chris Paul. The Winston-Salem native and ex-Wake Forest star helped lead the U.S. Olympic basketball team to the gold medal in London. Love - who played collegiately at North Carolina -hopes some of Paul's international success rubbed off. "We talked about shooting free throws some and playing under pressure. Things like that always help," Love said. Then he quipped: "I've got to learn how to coach." There's always a strong Atlantic Coast Conference presence at Sedgefield - where the conference was created in 1953, and where school ties run deep. Seven different former ACC players have won this tournament, including two in the previous four years. Former Wake Forest player Webb Simpson's big calendar year started here last August when he claimed his first win on the tour, then went on to finish second in the Fed Ex Cup standings. He won the U.S. Open two months ago and for the first time in his career enters a tournament trying to defend a title. "The pressure of trying to defend, I think it's always going to be there," Simpson said. "I can't hide from it, bul allhe same lime, I know lhallhe three tournaments I've won on tour, I didn't show up saying, 'OK, I'm going to win this week or I need to win or I feel pressure to win.' Wins out here seem to come every so often." Haas, who also played for the Demon Deacons, won the playoffs last year but has only made the cut in Greensboro twice in seven tries. North Carolina State's Carl Pettersson won here in 2008 with a record score of 21-under 259. He's hack on his home course after winning the RBC Heritage in April and finishing tied for third last week at the PGA Championship. The last six men to win this tournament are in the field, including Pettersson, Simpson and Love. They will comprise a threesome today and Friday. But since Love's win in 2006, a lot has changed - the name, the course, the spot on the calendar and even the greens. The Donald Ross-designed Sedgefield course had its greens converted from benl grass lo Bermuda grass this year in an attempt to keep them firm and true to Ross' intent.
Gerry Broome I The Assoc iated Press
Davis Love Ill, left, and United States Olympic basketball gold medalist Chris Paul, of the Los Angeles Clippers talk during the pro-am for the Wyndham Championship in Greensboro, N.C., on Wednesday.
03
Stephen Morton I The Associated Press
New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning calls the signals during the first half of an NFL preseason game Friday in Jacksonville, Fla. The Giants are coming off a Super Bowl victory last season, but the New York Jets are getting the headlines.
Super Bowl champs taking back seat in New York City By Barry Wilner The A ssociated Press
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.- Country music star Kenny Chesney strode along an extended stage at MetLife Stadium, holding aloft a Giants helmet in one hand, a Jets helmet in the other. Overwhelmingly, the loudest cheers came when he extended the blue Giants headgear. Chesney knowingly mentioned, in reference to his 2011 hit song, that the "Boys of Fall" are coming back. And pretty much ever)'\vhere except on that night at the Meadowlands, the Super Bowl champions are being overshadowed as we close in on another season. Eclipsed by Tebowmania. By Rex Ryan and his entertaining proclamations. By a cornerback declaring he is the second-best receiver on the roster. By the feuding and fighting during practice by Gang Green, which didn't even make the playoffs last season. The Giants couldn't care less. "This is just the way we like it," team owner John Mara said as he watched his team prepare for Saturday night's annual "Battle of New York," which hasn't been played in New York in decades. "We are not trying to be on the front page, the back page, the lead story right now. "That other stuff we see, I do find it amusing; they do have personalities on that team. But more than a commentary on the Jets or any of us in football, it's a commentary more on the media, isn't it? "But we don't worry about what the headlines will be the next day." The Jets do, from owner Woody Johnson on down. Winning the back pages of the newspapers seems to be priority No.1 for them. The headlines rarely have belonged to the Giants almost since March. They enjoyed the spoils of winners, are trying not to be spoiled by winning, and have flown so far under the radar this summer that it doesn't seem like they left the
ground. While their co-owners of the twoyear-old stadium can be found hourly, if not more often, on ESPN - some folks joke about an upcoming new channel, TSPN (T for Tim Tebow, of course) - as well as all over the tabloids, the Giants quietly go about business. They're more concerned about avoiding any Super Bowl hangover than about being cast in the next sequel to "The Hangover." If the Jets are the NFL's version of Hollywood, the Giants are, well, Big Bluecollar New Jersey, far more Springsteen than Snooki. "After we won (in 2007), we were playing better the next season than the team that won the Super Bowl," general manager Jerry Reese said. "But it didn't work out at the end of the season. so 1 don't think you can say that (was Super Bowl hangover). We just didn't play well in the first round of the playoffs after winning our division. "We had veterans on that team who now have won two Super Bowls. They know what it takes to avoid a 'Super 13owl hangover' that some say a championship team gets when it wins. But for us, it's keep your head down and plow forward. We do the things we've always done." Perhaps the only off-field area where the Giants remotely challenge the Jets for the spotlight is in developing slogans. As everyone else is conjuring nicknames or promoting the preposterous for the Jets. the Giants do at least play that game little bit. They come up with mottos. This year, it's "Build the Bridge," following such catch phrases as "Finish," and "Talk is Cheap, Play the Game." Wild stuff for this bunch. It makes Mara smile. "We have good leadership at all levels," he said. "We have solid veterans who have been through this before but still have a hunger to win again and again."
a
a
Vikings RB Peterson never doubted playing in opener after ACL tear By Dave Campbell The Associated Press
MANKATO, Minn. - The NFL season starts for Minnesota on Sept. 9, barely eight months after Adrian Peterson had reconstructive surgery on his ripped-up left knee. Despite the medical advances that have made comebacks from anterior cruciate ligament quicker than ever, Peterson's return for the opener against the Jaguars was always on an optimistic timetable. But for the star Vikings running back, that hasn't really been a goal. Belief is more like it. "Despite what everyone else had to say, that was my vision," said Peterson, who also tore the medial collateral ligament when he was hit during a game lasl Dec. 24 al Washington. "I knew il was going to be a journey, a path, to get closer to that vision, and I'm closer. I see it. It's closer now. It was far away in the beginning, but I've been working hard and just moving forward. "So hopefully here in a couple weeks - here in a couple weeks, not hopefully - that vision will be right there in front of me in my lap." Peterson has cleared every hurdle in his rehabilitation either ahead of time or on schedule. As nervous as the Vikings must be - and as skeptical as some observers around the league might be - he is probably as capable as a nyone of taking the ball right at his tacklers without hesitation in Week 1. "You don't really want to put parameters on his rehabilitation . You want to just let it go and see where it takes us," coach Leslie Frazier said. "Our medical staff talked all along about what this
Sandy Koufax's sports odyssey took him from a muscular, leaping center for the Lafayette High School basketball team in Brooklyn to left-handed bonus baby for the Brooklyn Dodgers to the Hall of Fame as one of the most dynamic pitchers in baseball history. His path from basketball to baseball was the reverse of Brooklyn's better known but tortured major league history: losing the Dodgers in 1957 and now gaining the Nets, whose first season in the borough is to start Nov. l. For more than five decades, Koufax has been a symbol of Brooklyn's lost sports history. It turns out he was something more - a heck of a basketball player whose exploits way back when take on new meaning with the Nets' arrival. When the 6-foot 2-inch Koufax graduated from Lafayette High School in 1953, his yearbook declared that he "has been scouted and will most likely be a professional basketball player." The NBA was a backwater in the mid-1950s, but Koufax's friend, the talk-show host Larry King, class of '51 and team manager from an earlier Lafayette class, said that Koufax aspired to play for the Knicks. Yes, Koufax also played baseball at the time, manning first base for the school team, but he was not much of a hitter. And no one had any premonition that he would become the pitcher that he did.
Baskets win Instead, it was mostly basketball. In a Lafayette team photo, Koufax, No. 16, his biceps rippling, stands smiling beside his pal Fred Wilpon, No. 5, the future owner of the Mets and star pitcher on the baseball team. The frenchies at the time were nearly all Jewish: Abramowitz, Weiss, Levine, Stolzenberg, Horwitz, Lichtman, Lichtenstein. And Koufax, whose yearbook entry featured these rather modest goals: "To be successful and make my family proud of me." Koufax and his friends played in the school gymnasium, with protective padding on the walls that were just a few feet behind the baskets; in Bensonhurst at the nearby Jewish Community House, "the J"; or in schoolyards. Jerry Doren, one of the Frenchies, said, "You practically slept with the basketball." He paused, then added, "They were the best years of my life." Joel Comiteau , whose surname was originally Comito, said: "Il was like Princeton basketball. Nice teamwork, giveand-gas and back doors." Lafayette had a decent team in the early 1950s. It competed against Brooklyn public high schools like Lincoln, Madison, Jefferson, New Utrecht and Erasmus. Koufax, now 76, was not the best high school basketball player in Brooklyn at the time but he set himself apart on his team as its star. And as he and his teammates head toward 80, and the Nets' era in Brooklyn nears, they relish talking about him.
NBAfuture?
Jerry Holt) I The Star Tribune
Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson runs during training camp on Tuesday in Mankato, Minn .
process would look like and what's necessary. We're in that process right now, so we still have to take it day by day." Despite the evolution of the league into a passing-dominated game, Peterson is far too valuable for Minnesota to risk him getting hit the wrong way in some meaningless drill. He wore full pads in Tuesday's practice for the first time since his injury, but Frazier went out of his way to warn the defense not to touch him. His first contact will come later this month, maybe in practice next week or in the team's third preseason game Aug. 24 against San Diego. As offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave put it, Peterson "has to go through the mental gymnastics as well as the physical part." So far, so good.
"Sandy was an incredible athlete," said Burt Abramowitz, a real estate broker in Maryland. "When he was 14 he had these muscles. He didn't lift weights. No one did back then. We lifted radiators. And he could jump like a kangaroo. I'd play on the second team and we'd guard each other and he said, 'If I could shoot like you, I'd be in the NBA.' I'd say: 'Give me your legs. I'd start in the NI3A.' " Abramowitz added: "We used to sav he was the white Sihugo Green," who years before had been an African-American star at Boys High School in Brooklyn. "We called him the Jewish Li'l Abner," said another teammate, Martin Stolzenberg. Asher Jagoda, who later changed his surname to Dann when he became an actor, said: "He could leap, boy, and you know the size of his hands. He's the only one who could hold the ball in one hand." Doren remembered that Koufax "looked like a David even when he wasn't working out."
More prosaically, Comiteau said: "He was a regular guy. A mensch. Always a mensch."
A story about Sandy In February 1953, a Koufax legend was born, not one as grand as his perfect game at Dodger Stadium in 1965 against the Chicago Cubs but one that came alive inside Lafayette High School on a winter's night when a group of Knicks, including Harry Gallatin, staged a clinic at the school, in the Bath Beach section of Brooklyn. Jane Leavy, in her book "Sandy Koufax: A Lefty's Legacy," described a scene that featured a packed gymnasium and Lafayette's cheerleaders "in full pompomed confection." Comiteau said: "That was one of the highlights of my life." Sometime that evening, during drills or the scrimmage - depending on who is telling the story - the 6-foot-6 Gallatin, nicknamed the Horse, tried to dunk. Twice, he failed. "Well, I needed a step stool to dunk the ball," Gallatin said by telephone from Edwardsville, Ill. "That wasn't in my repertoire." According to Leavy, Lafayette Coach Frank Rabinowitz, apparently eager to show off the 17-year-old Koufax, gestured to him to demonstrate just how a dunk was done. Koufax threw it down once, left-handed, then Rabinowitz asked for an encore. Koufax obliged. "He surprised the heck out of me, and I said, 'Who is this kid?' " Gallatin said. "I thought the kid had some special skills. He had real big hands, but he had stumps for legs, which I think is probably one of the reasons he pitched so well.'' Abramowitz believed that during the scrimmage another Knick, maybe Nat (Sweetwater) Clifton, teased Gallatin that Koufax was outrebounding him during the scrimmage and showing him up. The New York Post, which covered the clinic, reported that Gallatin was so impressed by Koufax that he told Rabinowitz: "We'll be coming back for this kid some day." Gallatin never saw Koufax again but he said, "I read that he called me his favorite player."
Off to Cinci Koufax ended up going to the University of Cincinnati, where he walked on to the basketball team and got a partial scholarship, Leavy wrote. Back home in Brooklyn on Christmas break, Koufax surprised Stolzenberg when he told him that baseball was now his focus. (Koufax was 3-1, with a 2.81 earned run average, for the Bearcats in 1954.) "I saw him on 86th Street in Bensonhurst," Stolzenberg said, "and I asked him, 'How are you doing at school, Sandy?' and he said, 'I've been playing fall baseball, and Cincinnati, the Dodgers and Pittsburgh are interested in me.' I nodded my head, said uh-huh, and I went around the neighborhood saying, 'Sandy is out of his mind; he thinks he's going to be a baseball player.' " Through the years, some of his high school teammates have stayed in touch with him, although a recent reunion in Delray Beach, Fla., went on without him, Comiteau said. Koufax did not respond to requests for an interview for this article, but it is hard to imagine that he is not tickled by the idea that the first major league franchise to return to Brooklyn plays basketball, his original sports passion. Sid Young, one of Koufax's closest friends, and King are trying to establish a more tangible connection between the Lafayette High School of old and the Nets. The two are stockholders in the Original Brooklyn Water Bagel Co. chain and partners in an outlet in Beverly Hills, Calif., and have been negotiating to have a store at the Nets' new home, Barclays Center. What better than a bagel to help things come full circle? "When we have breakfast," Young said, "Larry and I watch ESPN, and they keep saying, 'Brooklyn Nets.' We say: ' Brooklyn Nets? It sounds good. We like it.' The Brooklyn never goes out of us."
04
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 2012
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Mariners 1, Rays 0
American League
Tampa Bay AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. Fuld II 3 0 0 0 0 0 .262 B. Upton cl 3 0 0 0 0 1 .243 Joyce rl 3 0 0 0 0 1 .269 Longoria dh 3 o o o o 2 .297 Zobrist 2b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .257 C.Pena 1b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .191 Lobaton c 2 0 0 0 0 1 .228 a-De.Jennings ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .254 E.Johnson ss 2 0 0 0 0 2 .245 b-Keppinger ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .319 S.Rodriguez 3b 3 0 0 0 0 2 .206 Totals 27 o 0 0 0 12 Seattle AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. P.ckley 2b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .225 M.Saunders cl 4 o o o o o .237 J.Montero dh 4 0 1 1 0 1 .266 Jaso c 3 0 1 0 0 0 .286 Seager 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .250 Smoak 1b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .109 I Robinson II 3 0 1 0 0 0 .227 Thames rl 2 0 0 0 1 0 .234 Ryan ss 3 1 1 0 0 0 .199 Totals 29 1 5 1 1 2 Tampa Bay ooo ooo ooo - o o 1 Seattle 001 ooo oox - 1 5 o a-struck out for Lobaton in the 9th. b-grounded out for E.Johnson in lhe9th. E- E.Jotmson (10). LOB-Tamp<~ Bay 0, Seallle5. /8-Jaso (14) DP- TampaBay1 . Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB Hellickson L, 7-8 7 5 I 1 1 Farnswonh I o oo o Seattle IP H R ER BB HernandezW, 11-59 0 0 0 0 T- 2:22. A- 21,889 (47,860).
SO 1 I SO 12
Braves 6, Padres 1
STANDINGS, SCORES AND SCHEDULES
AL Boxscores
New York Baltimore Tampa Bay Boston Toronto
W L 70 47 64 53 63 54 ~7 61 55 62
r.hicago Detroit Cleveland Kansas City Minnesota
W 64 63 54 51 50
65 67
W
L
Texas Oakland Los Angeles Seatlle
L 5?
55 64
67 49 61 55 62 56 55 64
Easl Division GB WCGB L1 0 7-3 .547 6 8-2 .538 7 7-3 .483 13Y2 6'12 4-6 .470 15 8 3-7 Central Division Pel GB WCGB L1 0 .55? 6-4 .534 2 Y, 5-5 .458 11 9'12 4-6 .440 13 11Y, 7-3 .427 14Y, 13 3-7 Wesl Division Pel GB WCGB L1 0 .578 4-6 .526 6 IY, 3-7 .525 6 1J,I, 4-6 .462 13Y, 9 4-6 Pel
.~98
Wednesday's Games Delroit 5, Minnesola 1 Seatlle 1, Tampa Bay o Baltimore 5, Boston 3 N.Y. Yankees 3, Texas 2 Chicago White Sox 9, Toronto 5 Kansas City3, Oak~od 2 L.A. Angels 8, Cleve ~nd 4
NP ERA 115 3.39 15 3.95 NP ERA 113 2.60
National League Sir Home Away W-3 37-22 33-2~ W-3 32-28 32-25 L-2 32-27 31-27 L-2 29-34 28-27 L-2 30-27 25-35 Sir Home Away W-? 3?-?6 3?-?6 W-2 33-23 30-32 L-2 30-29 24-35 W-2 23-32 28-33 L-2 24-37 26-30 Sir Home Away L-3 36-22 31-27 L-3 34-26 27-29 W-2 33-25 29-31 W-2 27-30 28-34
Today's Garnes Texas (D.Holland 7-6) at N.Y. Yankees (Nova 11-6), 10:05 a.m. Boston (Buchh o~ 10-3) at Baltimore (Tillman 5-2), 4:05 p.rn. Chicago White Sox (Liriano 3-10) at Toronto (Lalley 3-3), 4:07p.m. Oakland (Straily 0-0) at Kansas City (Hochevar 7-10), 5.10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Price 15-4) at LA Angels (Haren 8-9), 7:05p.m.
Washing!or. AllanIa New York Philadephia Miami
W 73 4~ 68 49 55 62 ~4 63 53 65
r.irdnnati Pittsburgh Sl. Louis Milwaukee Chicago Houslon
W 71 64 64 52 46 39
L 46 53 53 64 70 80
Los Angeles San francisco Arizona San Die,Jo Colorado
W 65 64 58 52 44
L 53 54 59
67 71
East Division Pel GB WCGB .619 .581 4Y2 .470 17'12 9 .462 18Y2 10 .449 20 11Y, Central Division Pel GB WCGB .607 .547 7 .54 7 7 .448 18Y, 11Y' .397 24Y2 17'/, .328 33 26 West Division Pel GB WCGB .55 1 .542 1 Y, .496 6'12 6 .437 13Yi 13 .383 19Y, 19
Wednesday's Games Miami 9, Philadelphia2 Chicago Cubs 7, Houston 2 Colorado 7, Milwaukee6 Washington 6, San Francisco 4 L.A. Dodgers 9, Pittsburgh3 Cincinnati 6, N.Y. Mets 1 AllanIa 6, San Diego 1 Sl. Louis 5, Arizona 2
L10 8-2 7-3 3-7 6-4 4-6
Sir W-1 W-2 L-2 L-1 W-1
HomeAway 32-22 41-23 34-27 34-22 28-30 27-32 26-33 28-30 29-31 24-34
L10 5-5 3-7 6-4 4-6 3-7 3-7
Sir W-5 L-3 W-2 L-3 W-1 L-1
HomeAway 38-?0 33-?6 36-23 28-30 36-23 28-30 33-26 19-38 30-28 16-42 27-32 12-48
L10 7-3 5-5 3-7 7-3 6-4
Sir W-4 L-1 L-2 L-2 W-3
HorneAway 33-25 32-28 35-26 29-28 31-26 27-33 27-30 25-37 24-37 20-34
Today's Games L.A. Dodgers (Bianlon 8-10) at Pittsburgh (A.JBurnett 14-4), 1:05 p.rn . N.Y. Mets (Harvey 1-3) at Cincinnati (H.Bailey 10-7), 4:10p.m. San Diego (Marquis 6-6) at Atlanta (Medlen 3-1), 4:10 p.m. Philade lph ~ (CI.Lee 2-7) at Milwaukee (Estrada 0-5), 5:10p.m. Nizona (Gahill 9-10) at Sl. Louis (Lohse 12-2) , 5:15p.m . Miami (Nolasco 9-11) at Colorado (White2-6), 5:40p.m.
Yankees 3, Rangers 2 Texas Kinsler 2b Mi.Adarnsp P.ndrus ss Hamilton cf Be lire3b N.Cruz rf Dav.Murphy If Solo c More~nd dh Young ph-dh-2b Oft 1b Totals
AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. 4 0 0 0 0 2 .268 000000 4 0 0 0 0 1 .297 4 2 2 2 0 1 .291 4 0 1 002 .300 4 0 0 0 0 0 .265 3 0 0 0 1 0.295 3 0 0 0 0 2 .152 2 01000.286 10 0 0 0 0 .269 3 0 0 0 0 1 .231 3224219
New York AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. 4 1 1 0 1 1 .319 Jeter ss Swisher 1b 1 1 1 0 2 .263 Granderson cf 2 0 0 1 1 1 .235 Teixeira dh 4 0 0 0 0 3 .257 Er.CiraveL 3b 3 0 3 1 1 0 .303 Ibanez If 2 0 1 0 2 0 252 R.Martin c 3 0 0 0 1 1 .197 !.Suzuki rf 4 o 2 o o o .265 J.Nix 2b 4 1 2 0 0 0 .261 Totals 31 3 1o 3 6 8 Texas ooo 101 ooo - 2 4 o New York 003 ooo oox - 3 1o 1 E- Er.Chavez (5). LOB- Texas 4, New York 11. :S- Moreland (11), Swisher (28). HR- Harnilton 2 (34), off F.Garc~ 2. SB- J.Nix (41. DP- Texas 2; New York 1 Texas feldman L, 6-8 R.Ross Ogando Mi.Adarns New York
IP H R ER BB 6 7 3 3 4 2-3 1 0 0 2 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 IP H R ER BB FGarc~ W,l-5 6 2-3 4 2 2 1 Logan H, 16 1-3 0 0 0 0 D.Robenson H, 16 1 0 0 0 0 Soriano S, 29-31 1 0 0 0 0 T- 3:05. A- 45,921 (50,291).
SO 7 1 0 0 SO 6 0 2 1
NP ERA 117 4.63 23 1.79 1 2.94 14 2.84 NP ERA 100 4.68 4 3.43 10 2.52 15 1.71
Royals 3, Athletics 2 Oakland Crisper J.Gomes rf Cespedes If Caner dh 1-J.Weekspr D. Norris c Oonaldsor. 3b Moss lb Rosales 2b Penninglon ss Totals
AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. 4 0 0 0 0 1 .250 300 01 2 .256 4 0 1 0 0 1 .301 4 1 2 0 0 0 .275 0 0 0 0 0 0 .220 4 0 0 0 0 2.204 4 1 2 1 0 0 .1 73 40 11 0 2.230 3 0 0 0 0 1 .208 3 0 0 0 0 0 .199 33 2 6 2 1 9
Kansas City AB R H Bf BB SO Avg. AGordon If 4 0 1 0 0 0 .293 P..Escobar ss 4 1 2 0 0 0 .302 Butler dh 4 0 2 1 0 0 .302 Mouslakas 3b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .2~0 S.Perezc 1 0 0 0 0 0 .298 Francoeur rf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .245 Hosmer 1b 3 1 1 o o 2 .229 L.Cain cf 3 1 1 1 0 1 .260 Gelz 2b 3 0 1 1 0 0 .284 Totals 32 3 9 3 1 4 Oakland 010 100 ooo - 2 6 1 Kansas City 1oo ooo 20x - 3 9 o 1-ran for Carter in lhe91h. E- D.Norris (2). LOB- Oakland 5, Kansas Cily 6. 28- caner (6), A.Escotar (25), Hosmer (18), L.Cain (5), Gelz (10). HR- Oonaldson (2) off W.Smith. SB- A.Escobar 2 (22). DP-0akland 1. Oakland IP H R ER BB McCarthyL, 6-4 62-3 7 3 2 0 Dooliltle 1-3 1 0 0 0 Neshek 1 1 0 0 1 Kansas City IP H R ER BB VI.Srnith W, 4-4 5 2 2 1 Crow H, 13 0 0 0 0 G.Holland S, 4-6 1 1 0 0 0 T- 2:35. A- 15,591 (37,903).
SO 4 0 0 SO 5 2 2
NP 94 16 21 NP 97 14 18
ERA 2.68 3.71 1.G9 ERA 5.09 3.54 3.21
Orioles 5, Red Sox 3 AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. Boston Ellsburycl 40 2 1 0 0 .270 C.CraNford If 2 0 0 2 1 0 .283 Pedroia 2b 40 10 00 .280 P.d.Gonzalez 1b 40 1 0 0 0 .306 Valenc~ 3b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .194 C.Ross dh 4 0 0 0 0 3 .274 :Jallalarnacchiac 40 10 0 1 .229 P.viles ss 1 0 0 0 0 0 .252 Podsednik rf 2 1 1 0 0 0 .377 a-Ciriaco ph-rf 2 0 0 0 0 1 .326 Punto 3b lb 4 2 1 000 .200 Totals 343 7 315 Baltimore AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. Markakisrt 2 1 0 0 2 1 .283 Hardy ss 4 1 1 0 0 0 .224 4 1 1 1 0 0 .281 Mcl outh If M.Jones cf 4 0 1 1 0 0 .295 Vlieters c 3 1 1 1 1 0 .247 C.Davis dh 4 1 0 0 0 0 .253 Mar. Reynolds 1b 3 0 1 2 1 1 .216 Machado 3b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .304 Quintanilla2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .315 Totals 31 5 6 5 4 3 Boston 000 020 1oo - 3 1 1 Baltimore ooo 005 oox - 5 6 1 a-flied oul for Podsednik in lhe71h. E- A.Cook (3), J.Rornero (1). LOB- Boston 6, Ballimore 6. 28-EIIsbury (14), Wielers (20), Mar. Reynolds (22). Boslon IP H R ER BB SO Hook L, 3-6 5 1-3 3 5 2 3 1 P..Miller 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Tazawa o 2 oo o o Breslow 11-3 0 0 0 0 1 Mortensen 1 1 0 0 1 1 Ballirnore IP H R ER BB SO Gonzalez W, 5-2 6 6 2 2 1 2 J.Romero H, 1 2-3 1 1 0 0 0 P.yala H, 8 1-3 o o o o o Strop H,20 1 0 0 0 0 2 Johnson S, 35-38 1 0 0 0 0 1 lazawa pitched to 2 bailers in the 6th. T- 2:53. A- 22,269 (45,971).
NP 71 3 7 11 23 NP 94 11
ERA 4.58 3.00 1.66 2.70 1.59 ERA 3.38 0.00
~
2.~4
14 1.20 13 3.26
White Sox 9, Blue Jays 5 Chicago DeAza cf Youkilis 3b P..Dunn 1b Rios rf Pierzynski c P.I.Ramirezss
AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. 3 1 0 0 1 2 .281 4 1 1 0 0 1 .239 5 11 3 01 .208 5 0 1 0 0 0 .310 5 2 2 000 .300 4 11 001 .2GO
American league roundup
National league roundup
• Mariners 1, Rays 0: SEATTLE- King Felix now has a crowning achievement. Felix Hernandez pitched the Seattle Mariners' first perfect game and the 23rd in baseball history, overpowering Tampa Bay. The Mariners' ace and former AL Cy Young Award winner has long talked of his desire to achieve pitching perfection. He finally accomplished it against the Rays, striking out the side twice and finishing with 12 strikeouts (for a related story, see 01). • Tigers 5, Twins 1: MINNEAPOLIS- Miguel Cabrera became the first player in Tigers history to reach 30 home runs in five straight seasons and Max Scherzer threw seven scoreless innings for Detroit. Cabrera also singled in the fifth off Cole De Vries (2-4) to push his majors-leading total to 103 RBis. • Orioles 5, Red Sox 3: BALTIMORE- Held hitless by Aaron Cook through five innings, Baltimore sent 10 batters to the plate during afive-run sixth and beat Boston. Baltimore trailed 2-0 before rallying against Cook, who fueled the uprising with athrowing error on a potential inning-ending, double-play comebacker. The miscue led to three unearned runs and saddled Cook (3-6) with his fourth loss in five starts. • White Sox 9, Blue Jays 5: TORONTO - Adam Dunn hit his major league-leading 34th home run, Dayan Viciedo and DeWayne Wise also connected and Chicago beat Toronto. Gavin Floyd pitched six innings to snap athree-start winless streak as the White Sox won back-to-back games north of the border for the first time since Aug. 4-5, 2006. • Royals 3, Athletics 2: KANSAS CITY, Mo.- Will Smith pitched seven strong innings, Chris Getz doubled homethe go-ahead run and Kansas City defeated Oakland. Smith (4-4), a 23-year-old rookie left-hander, limited the A's to two runs and five hits, while striking out five and walking one. • Yankees 3, Rangers 2: NEW YORK - Freddy Garcia worked around two homers by Josh Hamilton to remain undefeated against Texas for eight years and the New York Yankees beat the Rangers for the third straight night. Hamilton became the second player to reach 100 RBis this season- Detroit's Miguel Cabrera was first -with his career-high 33rd homer, a line drive to right in the fourth inning. • Angels 8, Indians 4: ANAHEIM , Calif.- Mike Trout and Chris !annetta homered to help Los Angeles build a big lead against Roberto Hernandez in his season debut with Cleveland, and Ervin Santana breezed to a victory. Santana (6-10) allowed a run and four hits in seven innings, struck out four and walked one.
• Nationals 6, Giants 4: SAN FRANCISCO- Stephen Strasburg outpitched Tim Lincecum, Danny Espinosa hit a go-ahead two-run homer in the third inning and Washington beat San Francisco. Jayson Werth drove in three runs and Kurt Suzuki added a sacrifice fly for the NL East-leading Nationals. • Marlins 9, Phillies 2: MlAMI - Greg Dobbs drove in Miami's first run in 31 innings then hit a go-ahead homer in the sixth off Roy Halladay to help the Marlins beat Philadelphia. Mark Buehrle (1011) achieved the 10-win milestone on his sixth try, extending his streak reaching double-digit wins to 12 straight years. The lefty allowed two runs in seven innings. • Cubs 7, Astros 2: CHICAGO- David DeJesus homered twice and tied a career best with four hits, and Justin Germano cruised through six innings to lead Chicago over Houston. Starlin Castro hit a two-run homer among his three hits for Chicago. Germano (2-2) allowed two runs over 6Y:l innings. He struck out six and walked one. • Rockies 7, Brewers 6: DENVER- Tyler Colvin hit a two-run double down the first base line in the ninth inning, rallying Colorado to a win over Milwaukee. Wilin Rosario got it started with a one-out pinch single to center off Jim Henderson (0-2) and Eric Young Jr., who homered earlier in the game, also singled to put runners at the corners. Colvin followed with his double, giving the Rockies their first home sweep since May28-31. • Dodgers 9, Pirates 3: PITTSBURGH - Clayton Kershaw won his fourth consecutive start and Matt Kemp drove in three runs for Los Angeles, which moved into first place in the NL West. Kemp had a two-run double and scored during the Dodgers' three-run fourth against Wandy Rodriguez (7-12). • Reds 6, Mets1: CINCINNATI - Scott Rolen and Todd Frazier hit back-to-back homeruns, and Mike Leake pitched his second complete game of the season to help Cincinnati extend its winning streak to five. Jay Bruce homered for the third consecutive game. • Braves 6, Padres 1: ATLANTA - Dan Uggla's three-run homer in thethird inning gave Atlantathe lead and Paul Maholm threw seven strong innings. The Braves remained 4Y2 games behind NL Eastleading Washington. Uggla is hitting only .215 but has homers in two straight games, giving him 15. • Cardinals 5, Diamondbacks 2: ST. LOU IS- Adam Wainwright allowed two runs over six innings and St. Louis got home runs from David Freese and Allen Craig. Rafael Furcal's two-run triple in the sixth gave the Cards athree-run lead.
Viciedo dll 3 Wise If 4 O.Hudson 2b 3 a-Beckham pll-2b 1 Totals 37
2 2 1 0 11
.255 .288 .182 .224
Toronlo AB R Bl BB SO Avg . 4 0 0 1 2 .260 R.Davis rf Rasmus dh 5 0 0 0 4 .247 tncarnacior. II 4 1 U o o .293 Cooper 1b j 1 0 0 1 .293 Y.Escobar ss 4 0 0 0 1 .248 4 1 o o 1 .231 K.Jollnson 2b Vizquel 3b j 1 0 0 0 .223 Mathisc 4 1 1 0 2 .217 Gose cf 4 0 0 0 2 .191 Totals 37 5 9 4 1 13 Chicago 020 200 500 - 9 11 2 ooo 01 3 001 - 5 9 o Toronto a-was announced for O.Hudson in t11e6th. E- Pierzynski (4), Veal (1). LOB- Chicago 5, Toronlo 6. :S- Rios (29), P~rzynski (13), Cooper (9). lin- Wise 14), off n.nomero; A.Dunn (34), off Lincoln; Viciedo (18), off Lincoln; K.Johnson (14), off Floyd; Mathis (7), off Humber. SB- Vizquel (3), Gose (7). Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP Floyd W, 9-9 G 8 4 3 0 B 92 Veal 2 0 0 0 1 3 28 Humber 1 1 1 1 0 2 18 Toronlo IP H R ER BB SO NP R.Romero L, 8-10 6 8 6 6 2 5 98 Lincoln 2 3 3 3 0 3 33 Jenkins 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 R.Romero pilched lo? hailers inIhe 71h. T- 2:39. A- 20,119 (49,260).
ERA 4.43 0.00 5.90 ERA 5.47 6.00 0.00
Tigers 5, Twins 1 Detroit A.Jackson cl Dirks rf Mi. Cabrera 3b Fielder 1b Avila c D.Young dh Jh.Peralta ss Infante2b Berry If Totals
AB R 5 0 4 1
Minnesota Re·1ere cf Mastroianni rf Mauer c WillinghamIf Morneau 1b Dournit dh Plouffe3b J.Carroll ss A.Casil~ 2b
AB R
5 1 4 0 3 5 1 1
4 1 1 4 1 ~ 0 3 0 38 5 4 1 4 0
4 0 4 0 3 0 3 0
4 0 3 0 3 0
2 1 1 12
Bl BB SO Avg. 0 1 .310 1 2 .337 0 0 .327 0 0 .309 0 1 .260 0 1 .265 0 0 .263 0 0 .308 1 1 .274
2 6 Bl BB SO Avg. 0 1 .319 0 3 .287 0 1 .320 0 2 .261 1 1 .276 1 1 .294 0 2 .247 0 2 .245 0 1 .220
Tolals 32 1 6 1 2 14 Detroit 100 210 010 - 5 12 o Minnesota 000 000 010 - 1 6 0 LOB- Delroil 9, Minnesota 6. 28--Dirks (14), Jh.Peralta 2 (28), Morneau (24). 3B- Revere (4). HR- Mi.Cabrera (30), off De Vries; D.Young (13), off De Vries. SB- Berry (16). Cs-Revere(7). DP- Minnesota 1. Delroil IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA ScherzerW, 12-6 7 1 0 0 2 10 117 1A1 Dotel 1 2 1 1 0 2 23 3.10 ~enoit 1 o o o o 2 13 3.46 Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA De Vries L, 2-4 4 8 4 4 2 3 84 5.04 Manship 3 1 0 0 0 2 48 7.89 Gray 1 2 1 1 0 1 17 5.13 Perkins 1 1 0 0 0 0 8 2.98 De Vries pilchedto 3 batters in the5th. T- 3:08. P.- 37,118 (39,500).
Angels 8, Indians 4 Cleveland Kipnis 2b As.Gabrera dh Choo rf C.Santana c Brantley cf Kutclmran 1b Lillibridge ss Hannahan 3b carrera 11 Totals
AB R H Bl BB SO Avg . 3 1 1 0 1 0 .259 40 2 1 0 1 .280 3 11 3 1 1 .284 4 0 0 0 0 1 .236 4 0 0 0 0 1 .290 4 0 0 0 0 2 .226 4 0 0 0 0 1 .198 3 11 000 .229 3 1 1 0 0 0 .389 32 4 6 4 2 7
Los An geles AB R H Bl BB SO Avg . Troul cf-11 4 2 1 1 0 0 .340 Aybar ss 4 0 1 1 0 0 .271 Tor.Hunler rl 3 o o o o o .294 Bourjos cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .227 4 2 3 0 0 0 .282 K.Morales dh Trumbo 1b 4 1 2 0 0 0 .289 3 1 2 1 1 0 .245 Callaspo 3b VWells 11-rf 3 1 0 2 1 0 .225 M.lzluris2b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .248 ~nnetta c 3 1 1 2 0 0 .214 Totals 32 8 11 7 2 o Cleveland ooo 001 030 - 4 6 3 Los Angeles 051 101 oox - 8 11 o E- Lillibridge 2 (3) C.Santana (9). LOB-Cieve~nd 3, Los Angeles 4. 2!3- As.Gabrera (27), K.Morales (16). 38- Aybar (4). HR- Choo (14), off lsringhausen; Trout (22), off Ro.Hernandez; !annetta (6), off Ro.Hemandez. SB- Troul (38) . DP Cleveland 1 (Hannahan, Kipnis, Kotchman). Cleveland IP Hernandez L, 0-1 6 E.Rogers 1 C.AIIen 1 Los Angeles IP E.SantanaW, 6-10 7
H 10 0 1 H 4
R ER BB SO NP ERA 8 5 0 0 91 7.50 0 0 0 0 9 2.53 0 0 2 0 29 0.00 R ER BB SO NP ERA 1 1 1 4 104 5.59
lsringhausen I 2 3 3 Jepsen 1 0 0 0 T- 2:47. A- 37,554145,957).
26 3.89 12 3.47
NL Boxscores
Dodgers 9, Pirates 3 Los Angeles V~torino If M. EIIis 2b Kernp cf H.Rarnirez ss Ethier rf .!.Rivera 1b a-Laney ph-1b l.CrUL 3b AEIIisc Kershaw p Leaguep Totals
AB 5 4 5 4 ? 2 5 4 3 0 39
R 2 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 9
H 3 2 1 2 3 0 1 1 0 2 0 15
Bl BB SO Avg. 0 0.266 0.2G2 0 3 0 .356 1 0 .258 0.288 0 1 0 .?43 0 .252 1 1 1 .267 1 1 .276 0.209 1 0 0 9 2
Plllsburgh AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. S.Marte If 4 0 0 0 0 3 .250 Walker 2b 0 0 0 0 o 0 .290 P.Aivarez 3b 4 o o o o 4 .229 A.McCulchen cf 3 1 1 1 I 0 .358 G.Sanchez 1b 4 1 2 0 0 .214 McKenry c 4 o o o 1 .276 G.Jones rf 2 0 0 1 0 .280 J.Harrison 3b-2b 3 0 0 0 0 .228 Mercer ss 2 0 0 0 0 .161 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Resopp 0 0 0 0 0 Quailsp J.Cruzp 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 .341 b-Snider ph Watson p 0 0 0 0 0 .000 W.Rodriguez p 1 0 0 0 0 .023 Barrnesss 2 0 2 1 0 .218 Totals 30 3 6 3 1 8 Los Angeles 101 300 400 - 9 15 o Pillsburgh 010 100 01 0 - 3 6 1 a-singled for J.Rivera in the 7th. b-doubled for J.Cruz in tl'<: 8th. E- J.Harrison (4). LOB- Los Angeles 8, Pittsburgh 2. 28--Victorino (22), Kemp (15), H.Ramirez (23), L.Cruz (12), G.Sanchez 2 (12), Snider (3). HR- A.McCutchen (24), off Kershaw. DP- Los Angeles 2. Los Angeles IP H R ER BB KershawW. 11-6 8 6 3 3 0 League 1 0 0 0 1 Pillsburgh IP H R ER BB RodriguezL, 7-12 52-3 10 5 5 Aesop 1 4 4 4 Quails 1-3 1 0 0 J Cruz 1 0 0 0 Watson 1 0 0 0 T- 3:04. A- 26,522138,362).
SONP ERA 8 108 2.90 0 12 12.27 SO NP ERA 1064.06 25 3.95 10 5.11 8 2.70 13 4.23
san Diego Denorf~ rf Forsythe2b Headley 3b Quentin If Alonso 1b Maybin cf Ev.Cabrera ss Hundley c Volquez p Mikolasp a-Amarista ph Burn s p Brach p c-Venable ph Totals
AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. 4 0 0 0 1 0 .278 4 1 2 1 0 0 .270 4 0 0 0 0 2 .272 2 0 2 0 1 0 .268 4 0 0 0 0 2 .273 4 0 2 0 0 0 .215 2 0 0 0 2 1 .230 4 0 0 0 0 2 .157 2 0 0 0 0 1 .071 000000 1 0 0 0 0 0 .259 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 00 1 0 0 0 0 0 .243 3216148
Allanta AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. Bourn cf 5 0 1 1 0 2 .291 Prado If 5 1 3 0 0 1 .302 Heyward rf 2 1 2 2 2 0 .271 F.Freernan 1b 4 1 0 0 0 1 .276 Uggla2b 2 1 1 3 2 1 .215 J.Francisco 3b 4 0 2 0 0 1 .258 McGann c 3 0 0 0 0 2 .230 Janishss 3 1 0 0 0 0 .198 Maholrn p 3 1 0 0 0 1 .064 Durbin p 0 0 0 0 0 0 b-Hinske pl1 1 0 0 0 0 1 .207 GeJrrin p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 6 9 6 4 10 San Diego 001 ooo ooo - 1 6 o Allanta 003 300 oox - 6 9 o a-grounded out for Mi ko~s in lhe 7th. b-struck out for DurtJin in the 8th. c-grounded out for Brach in the 9th. LOB- San Diego 9, Atlanla 8. :S- Quenlin (14), Heyward2(22), J.Francisco2(10). HR-Forsythe(3), off Maholm; Uggla (1 5), off Volquez. DP- San Diego 2; Atlanta 1. San Diego IP H R ER Volquez L, 7-9 3 2-3 7 6 6 Mikolas 21 -3 1 0 0 Burn s 1 1 0 0 Brach 1 0 0 0 Atlanta IP H R ER MaholmW, 11-7 7 5 1 1 Durbin 1 1 0 0 Gearrin 1 0 0 0 T- 2:46. A-1 6,302(49,586).
BB SO NP ERA 2 91 4.31 2 0 32 3.10 0 2 16 6.75 0 3 12 3.72 BB SO NP ERA 3 7 107 3.39 1 1 22 3.13 0 0 1D 0.79
Reds 6, Mets 1 New York Baxter rf Tejada ss Dan. Murplly 2b-1b D.Wright 3b !.Davis 1b Hefner p Valdespin If An.Torres cf Ihole c Dickey p Ju.Turner 2b Totals
AB R H Bl BB SO Avg . 4 1 2 0 0 1 .312 4 0 2 0 0 0 .320 4 0 0 0 0 0 .293 3 0 0 0 0 1 .321 3 0 0 0 0 0 .213 00 0 0 0 0 .100 3 0 0 0 0 1 .253 3 0 0 0 0 0 .237 30 0 0 0 0 .239 2 0 0 0 0 1 .180 10 0 0 0 0 .279 30 1 4 0 0 4
Cincin nati AB R H Bl BB SO Avg . Cozart ss 3 1 2 0 1 0 .248 Stubbs cf 3 1 1 0 0 2 .230 B.Ph illips 2b 4 0 1 1 0 1 .294 Ludwick If 4 0 1 1 0 2 .288 Bruce rf 4 1 2 1 0 0 .248 Rolen 3b 4 1 2 1 0 1 .245 Frazier 1b 4 2 3 1 0 0 .286 Mesoraco c 3 0 0 0 1 2 .213 Leake p 4 0 1 1 0 2 .250 Totals 33 6 13 6 2 10 New York ooo 100 ooo - 1 4 o Cincin nati 100 202 10x - 6 13 0 LOB- New ~Jrk 2, Cincinnati 6. 2B- Cozart 2 (27), Rolen (1 1), FraLier (19). HR- Rolen (6), off Oir.key; Fra1ier (15), off Oickey; Bruce (?4), off Oir.key. SB- Stubbs (28) Frazier (2). DP- New York 2; Clnclnnatl 1. New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Dickey L, 15-4 6 10 5 5 2 9 100 2.89 Hefner 2 3 1 1 0 1 36 4.76 Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Leake W, 5-7 9 4 1 1 o 4 111 4.29 T- 2:21. A- 26,082 (42,31 9).
Nationals 6, Giants 4 Washington Lombardozzi 2b Harper cf Zimmerman 3b LaRoche1b Morse If S.Bu rnelt p Clippard p Werthrf Espinosa ss K.Suzuki c Slrasburg p b-Tracy plr Matlheus p Bernadina If Totals
AB 5 5 3
R 1 0 0
H 4 0 0
Bl 0 0 0
BB 0 0 2
SO Avg . 0 .280 1 .245 3 .277
5 2 2 0 0 1
.265
4 1 1 0 1 0 000000 00 0 0 0 0 4 1 2 3 1 1 4 1 2 2 0 2 4 0 1 1 0 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0000 0 0 0 0 0 0 38 6 12 6 4 10
.300 .314 .255 .226 .293 .276 000 .296
San Francisco AB R H Bl BB so Avg . 5 o o o o o .277 Pagancl Theriot 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .264 Ja.Lopez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hensleyp 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 d-H.Sanchezph 1 1 1 0 0 0 .279 Sandoval 3b 4 1 2 0 1 0 .299 ~osey c 4 1 1 0 1 3 .330 Pence rf 3 1 0 0 1 2 .259 Bell 1b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .267 G.Bianco If 4 0 2 1 0 1 .236 B.Crawford ss 3 0 1 2 1 1 .244 Lincerurn p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .088 a-Arias ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .262 Kor.tos p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mijares p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 S.Casilla p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 c-Scularo ph-2b 2 0 0 0 0 0 .279 Totals 35 4 8 3 4 1o Washington 202 010 100 - 6 12 1 San Francisco 020 000 011 - 4 8 0 a-struck out for Lincerurn in the 4th. trgrounded out for Strasburg in lhe 7th. c-linedout for S.Gasil~ in the 7th . .J-singled for Hensley in the9th. E- LaRoche (6). LOB- Washington 11 , San Francisco 9. :S- Lombardozzi 2 (16), LaRoche(25), Morse (15), Espirmsa(29), Pusey (24). HR- Espinosa (13), off I inceCllm. Washinglon IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA 4 2 2 4 7 100 2.91 Strasburg W, 14-5 6 1 0 0 0 o 0 15 2.56 Mattheus S.Bu rnell 1 3 1 1 U 2 21 194 Clippard S, 25-29 1 1 1 0 0 1 21 2.98 San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA LincerumL, o-n 4 8 4 4 1 96 ~.4~ Kor.tos 1 2 1 1 23 2.57 Mijares 1 0 0 0 11 0.00 S.Casilla 1 1 1 1 15 3.40 Ja.Lopez 2-3 1 0 0 16 2.84 Hensley 11-3 0 0 0 14 3.30 T- 3:17. A- 42,133(41,915).
Rockies 7, Brewers 6 Milwaukee Aoki rf C.Gornez cf R.Weeks 2b Ar.Ramirez 3b Harl 1h Lucroy c Morgan If Seo.rra ss M.Rogers p Fr. Rodriguezp b-lshikawa ph M.Parra p Axford p Henderson p Totals
AB R H 4 0 0 4 1 0 5 13 4 1 1 3? 1 3 1 0 4 0 2 3 0 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 33 6 10
Bl BB SO Avg . 0 1 0 .287 0 1 1 .256 1 0 0 221 0 0 0 .293 1 ? 1 .?65 0 0 0 .324 3 0 1 .232 1 0 1 .286 0 0 0 .286 000 0 0 0 .247 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 .000 000
Colorado E.Young rf Colvin 1b Fowler cf C.Gonzalez If Ra.Hernandez c Pameco 3b Nelson 2b J.Herrera ss Moscoso p C.Torres p Mat. Reynolds p a-McBride ph W.Harrisp c-W.Rosario ph Tolals
AB 4 4 4 4 3
Bl 1 2 0 0 1
R 2 1 0 2 1
H 2 2 0 2 1
6 4 4 BB 1 1 0 0 0
SO Avg . 1 .323 1 .28t> 1 .293 0 .323 0 .216
3 0 1 0 1 0 4 0 2 3 0 2
.309 .269
4 1 1 0 1 0 1 34
.242 .286 .333 .000 .200
0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00000 1 1 0 0 0 7 11 7 3 7
.247
Milwaukee ooo 050 100 - 6 10 o Colorado 31 o 001 002 - 7 11 o One out when winning run scored. a-popped out for Mat. Reynolds in the 7th. b-flied out for Fr. Rodriguez in the 8th . c-singled for W.Harris in the9th. LOB- Milwaukee 8, Colorado 6. 2B-R.Weeks (26), Hart (27), M.Rogers (1), Colvin (16). HRC.Young (4), off M.Rogers. SG- Colvin (4) Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO M.Rogers 6 7 5 5 2 4 Fr. Rodrigue/ H. ?11 0 0 0 1 1 M.Parra H, 7 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Axford H, 2 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Henderson L, 0-2 1-3 3 2 2 0 1 Colorado IP H R ER BB SO Mosooso 4 7 4 4 3 3 C. Torres 2 1-3 2 2 2 1 0 Mat.Reynolds 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 W.Harris VI, 1-0 2 o oo o o Moscoso pl cl1ed to ~ batters in the5th. T- 305. A- 23,411 (50,398)
NP 92 19 2 8 11 NP 78 28 8 24
ERA 4.94 5.33 4.47 5.14 5.~1
ERA 8.33 4.66 4.28 9.0J
Cubs 7, Astros 2 Houston Altuve2b Ma.Gonzalez ss-3b Pearce 1b-lf Maxwell lf Fick p X. Cedeno p a-Bogusevic ph-d S.Moore 3tr1b B.Francisco rf J.Castroc B.Barn es cf Storey p W.Wright p ~. Norris p F. MartinezIf b-Greenepll-ss Totals
AB 4 4 3 2 0 0 2 4 3 2 3 0 0 1 1 1 30
R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0
H 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 o 1 0 0 0 0
Bl 0 0 0 0 0
BB 0 0 0 0 0
0
0
0 1 0 0 1 0 0
0
o 1 1
o 0 0
o o o o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 7 2 2
SO Avg. 0 .305 0 .237 1 .318 1 .239 0 0 .OOJ 0 .216 2 .246 1 .241 1 .251 o .188 0 0 .001 1 .13) 1 .121 1 .231 9
Chicago AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. DeJesus rf 4 2 4 3 1 0 .27D Vitters3b 5 0 1 0 0 2 .103 Rizzo 1b 5 0 0 0 0 2 .296 A.Soriano If 2 1 0 0 2 1 .263 s.Castro ss 4 2 3 2 o 1 .m Valbuena 2b 3 0 1 0 1 0 .207 B.Jackson cf 4 1 2 1 0 2 .188 Cleverrger c 2 0 0 0 2 0 .228 Gennano p 1 1 0 0 1 1 .143 Russell p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .001 Carnpp o o o o o o c-Mather ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .213 Marmo! p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 7 11 6 1 10 Houston 010 000 100 - 2 1 o Chicago 013 201 oox - 7 11 o a-bunted out for X.Gedeno in the 7th. b-struck out for F. Martinez in the 8th. c-struck out for Camp in theBlh. LOB- Houston 4, Chicago 8. 2B- S.Castro (161, Valbuena (12), O.Jackson (1). 30-0.Jackson (11. HR- S.Moore (7), off Gennano; DeJesus 2 (4), off B.Norris 2; S.Castro (12), off B.Norris. DP-Houston 3, Chicago3. Houston IP H R ER BB B. Norris L, 5-10 3 1-3 8 6 6 3 Fick 2 1-3 1 1 0 3 X.Cedeno 1-3 0 0 0 0 Storey 11-3 1 o o 1 W.Wright 2-3 1 0 0 0 Chicago IP H R ER BB Gennano W 2-2 6 1-3 5 2 2 1 Russell ' 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 Carnp Marmor 1 1 oo o T- 3:01. A- 33,714(41,009)
SO 4 2 1 3 0 SO
6 0 1 2
NP 81 3.9 3 26 14 NP 93 8 11 16
ERA 5.23 3.86 3.93 3.12 2.97 ERA 3.91 3.48 3.66 4.34
Marlins 9, Phillies 2 Philadelphia Rollins ss Frandsen 3b Utley 2b Wigginlon 1h Luna If D.Brown rf Mayberry cf Kralzc Halladay p b-Pierre pll Rosenberg p Valdes p Schwimer p Totals
AB R 3 0 4 1 3 0 41 4 0
SO Avg. 0 .246 0 .310 1 .241 0 .?33 1 .2~1 4 0 0 0 0 0 .255
3 3 2 1 0 0 0 31
o
H Bl BB 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 ??0 0 0 0
1
o o
1
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 000 0 0 00 00 0 00 000 2 5 2 2 4
.m
.294 .167 .31}3
Miami AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. Pelersen If 5 1 1 2 0 1 .188 Ruggiano cf 2 0 0 0 0 2 .326 G.Hernandez cf 3 0 1 1 0 1 .118 Reyes ss 4 1 1 0 1 0 .287 Ca.Lee 1b 3 2 1 0 1 0 .284 Stanton rf 4 2 2 1 0 1 .283 Dobbs 3b 4 1 3 2 0 0 .301 O.So8no 2b 2 1 0 1 1 0 .259 J.Buck c 3 0 0 0 0 3 .182 Ruehrlep ? 0 0 0 0 0 058 a-Cousins ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .169 M.Dunn p o o o o o o .001 c-Kearns pll 1 1 1 2 0 0 .248 Webbp 0 0 0 0 0 0 .OOJ Tolals 34 9 11 9 3 8 Philadelphia ooo 011 ooo - 2 5 o Miami ooo 201 06x - 9 11 1 a-singled lor ~ue llrl e in lhe /til. b-struck out lor Halladay in lhe8th. c-singledfor M.Dunn inlhe 81h. E- Dobbs (5). LOB- Philadelphia 4, Miami 6. 2B- Petersen (3), Stanton (24). HR- Wigginlon(101, off Buehrle; Dobbs (4), off Halladay. SB Cousins (1) DP- Miarni 2. Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Halladay L, 6-7 6 3 3 1 7 108 3.~1 Rosenberq 0 2 3 3 1 0 9 12.79 Valdes , 1-3 0 1 1 1 0 8 3.51 Schwirner 2-3 3 2 2 0 1 30 4.59 Mlarnl IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA RuehrleW, 10-11 ? 5 ? ? 1 3 !l6 3.74 M.Dur.n H, 14 1 0 0 0 1 1 18 3.67 Webb 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 4.66 Rosenberg pilched to3 batters in the 8th. T- 2:39. A- 22,450 (37,442)
Cardinals 5, Diamondbacks 2 Arizona Drewss A.Hill 2b Kubel lf Goldschrnidl 1b J.Upton rf M.Montero c C.Johnson3b C.Yoong cf .!.Saunders p Albers p b-R.Wileeler ph Bergesen p Totals
AB R H Bf 400 0 4 1 1 0 4 0 1 0 41 1 1 4 0 0 0 30 2 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0000 1 0 0 0 0 00 0 30 2 5 1
BB SO Avg. 0 321}3 0 1 .292 0 1 .276 00.295 0 2 .272 00.287 0 1 .277 1 1 .210 0 0 .086 00 0 0 .214 00
1 9
St. Louis AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. Jay cf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .31 1 Craig 1b 4 1 1 1 0 1 .302 1 0 0 0 0 2 .312 Holliday If Beltran rf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .281 Freese 3b 4 1 1 2 0 1 .297 Dcscalso 2b 4 1 2 0 0 0 .238 T.Cruz c 3 1 1 0 1 0 D1 Furcal ss 4 0 2 2 0 0 .266 Wainwright p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .125 a-S.Robinson pll 1 0 0 0 0 0 .251 Mujica p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Boggs p 0 000 00 Mottep 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 5 8 5 2 8 Arizona ooo 101 ooo - 2 5 1 St. Louis ooo 21 2 oox - 5 8 o a-flied out for Wainwright in the ilh. b-grounded oullor Albers in tile811l. E- Goldschmidt (6). LOB- Arizona 3, St. Louis 6. 2B- Beltran (21), Furcal (15). 38- Furcal (31. HR- Goldschmidl (17), oil Wainwright; Freese (16), off J.Saun.Jers; Craig (1 8), off J.Saunders. DP- St. Louis 1. Arizona IP H R ER BB J.Saunders L, 6-9 6 7 5 5 1 Albers 1 0 0 0 0 Bergescn 1 1 0 0 1 St. Louis IP H R ER BB Wnwrght W, 11-106 5 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 Mujica H, 18 Boggs H.21 1 0 0 0 0 MotteS, 27-31 1 0 0 0 0 T- 2:31. A- 33,572(43,975)
SO 5 2 1 SO 5 1 2 1
NP ERA 92 3.7D 12 O.OJ 19 1.17 NP ERA 98 3.87 13 3.74 17 2.21 15 2.52
THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 2012 â&#x20AC;˘ THE BULLETIN
MLB
Felix
Cabrera suspended 50 games â&#x20AC;˘ San Francisco outfielder apologizes after testing positive for testosterone By Tyler Kepner New York Times News Service
The fastball left Matt Harrison's hand at 93 mph, headed for the inner half of the plate, belt high. This was the All-Star Game, last month in Kansas City, and any hitter might have done what Melky Cabrera did to that pitch: lash it on a line into the left-field bullpen for a homerun. Cabrera alone did not win the game for the National League the score was 8-0- but he was the best player on the field. He went two for three and earned the Most Valuable Player award, a crystal bat named for Ted Williams. With his mother and grandmother by his side, Cabrera thanked the fans of Kansas City, where he played last season, and the fans of his new team, the San Francisco Giants, who voted him to start. "I think the one person that has the most influence on me is the Lord," Cabrera said that night. "He is the one that embraced me in terms ofplayingbetter." Harrison, a Texas Rangers lefthander, had to stand there and take it. lt was his first All-Star Game, too, a reward for a strong first half in which he bounced back from losing Game 7 of the World Series. That was a road game for the Rangers, in St. Louis, and they had hoped to secure home-field advantage this season with a victory in Kansas City. Not so. On Wednesday, Major League Baseball suspended Cabrera for 50 games after he tested positive for testosterone, a banned substance. Cabrera acknowledged his guilt in a statement, apologizing for using a substance he should not have used. "Anytime you hear about something like that, with someone that's had success against you, it's disappointing," Harrison said Wednesday by his locker in the Rangers' clubhouse at Yankee Sta-
Jeff Roberson I The Associated Press
National League's Melky Cabrera, of the San Francisco Giants, shows off his MVP trophy after the MLB All-Star baseball game in Kansas City, Mo., in July. Cabrera has been suspended for 50 games without pay after testing positive for testosterone.
dium. "You know that they got a little advantage over you because of something they took. But at the same time, it's over with now. You move on. That's something he has to deal with. It's not my issue." Yes and no. lf you follow baseball and care about it, and certainly if you play it, it is your issue, too. The last generation is so stained by steroid use that three headliners on this winter's Hall of Fame ballot - Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens and Sammy Sosa - are unlikely to be elected. So the career home run leader, the only seven-time Cy Young Award winner and the only man with three 60-homer seasons would be left out of Cooperstown, at least initially, a searing indictment of the era. The game has the power to amaze and inspire, to rise instantly above the bad news. Just hours after the Cabrera suspension came down Wednesday, Felix Hernandez tossed a perfect game under glorious Seattle sunshine. But the cheaters keep pulling baseball
down. "You're surprised, that goes without saying," said Cabrera's former teammate, the New York Yankees' Derek Jeter. "That's the initial reaction. You feel bad. You feel bad that you even have to be sitting here talking about it." The Cabrera suspension, Jeter said, at least shows that the system works. And MLB, on some level, is certainly glad to have a clear victory after losing the H.yan Braun arbitration hearing this spring. Braun tested positive for testosterone after a playoff game in October, but he avoided a 50-game ban by challenging the collection procedure. Still, Braun's Milwaukee Brewers won that playoff series, and the next month he was na med the National League MVP. Just as Harrison cannot go back in time to face a different hitter at the All-Star Game, the Arizona Diamondbacks must live with the outcome of a playoff series during which the other team's star player hit .500 while testing positive for
testosterone. "I'm sure they were pretty upset once thev found out," Harrison said. "He pretty much beat them himself in the playoffs." Cabrera's transgression, at least, will cost his own team. The Giants are tied for first place in the NL West and have lost Cabrera for the rest of the regular season, plus the first five games of the playoffs, should they qualify. But Cabrera is entering free agency this off-season, and surely he has cost himself dearly. Nobody truly knows if Cabrera is an AllStar in peak physical condition, or the doughy bodied, rather ordinary player he was for the Yankees and the Atlanta Braves. "Everybody tries to have an edge, but that edge should be doing it the right way," Harrison said. "Unfortunately, he wasn't. I just don't understand why you would take that chance when you know you're going to get caught. I just don't understand that. "I guess it's all good and everything, until you get caught."
Medical experts weigh in on innings limit for pitchers By James Wagner The Wash ington Post
Doctors who specialize in sports medicine, including leading authorities on the type of ligament replacement surgery performed on the throwing arm of Stephen Strasburg, say they aren't surprised by the Washington Nationals' decision to end their star pitcher's season early sometime next month. Even so, they acknowledge there is no consensus on whether it is a necessary step. The approach the Nationals are taking shutting Strasburg down once he reaches a yetto-be-decided cap, possibly between 160 and 180 innings - is being scrutinized and studied carefully by many across the sport. "It's been conservative, more conservative than what we've done in the past," said Kevin Wilk, whose group, Champion Sports Medicine, handles rehabilitation for the practice of James Andrews, one of the nation's foremost orthopedic surgeons. "But this may turn out to be the model that teams use as a result of it. It's very interesting to watch, especially because it's such a high-prized player and the Nationals are doing so well." Since the surgery was first performed on the elbow of Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Tommy John in 1974, broad timelines have been hammered out, mostly by trial and error, over how to treat pitchers in their first full season after the procedure. There's no proof that limiting the number of innings for a pitcher in his first full season back from the surgery will prevent another injury, but some leading medical experts on the subject agree that being cautious and limiting the workload of a talented, young pitcher such as Strasburg, 24, is a sound practice. Recovery from Tommy John surgery is typically a two-year process. Pitchers don't start throwing at full throttle off the mound until eight to nine months after surgery, and don't start competitive pitching until nine to 12 months. In the first full season back, or the second year of the recovery, a pitcher starts to feel completely comfortable with the new elbow, the feel of pitching and grip of the ball, and finds consistency. But there is no way to truly tell when the transplanted tendon fully becomes a new ligament, nor is there a consensus on when a pitcher's reins can be fully removed. "There is no book, no number, no magic, no 'You can pitch all the way until October,'" said Timothy Kremchek, the Cincinnati Reds team doctor. He performs nearly 60 Tommy John surgeries a year on major and minor league pitchers across the country. "Nobody knows that and many of us are afraid to take the chance with these guys." The Nationals have used fellow starter Jordan Zimmermann as a model for their similar approach with Strasburg. Zimmermann had Tommy John surgery to replace his torn ulnar collateral ligament in 2009 and pitched 161 \6 innings in his first full season back last year, just
JeffChtu I Th e Associated Press
Washington Nationals pitcher Stephen Strasburg may be shut down after he reaches 160 innings this season.
over his prescribed 160-inning limit. While that proved successful for Zimmermann, who has emerged as one of the league's best pitchers, Strasburg won't be held to the same number. The worst-case scenario would be if the tendon graft is damaged, but that's a rare occurrence since the surgery is extremely successful if performed by a capable surgeon and a player rehabbed correctly. (According to a 2010 study, 83 percent of athletes studied returned to the same level of competition or higher within a year of surgery.) But experts worry that tendinitis can develop or fatigue because overuse can wear down a pitch er, possibly leading to poorer mechanics and cause more serious shoulder injuries. Not all teams rely on a strict innings limit in the first full season back. Kremchek said the Reds keep a close eye on innings but don't prescribe a number. Instead, the team carefully scrutinizes the players' starts, especially beginning around the lOth start, watching for a loss in bite on breaking balls, comparing film and consulting with catchers and coaches. If needed, Kremchek said a pitcher can skip a start or be shut down. If a team has playoff potential, Texas Rangers team doctor Keith Meister said he works with Rangers coaches to manage the pitcher's innings: skipping starts, adding an extra day of
05
rest or pushing them to the back of the rotation. He said he generally sticks to the 150- to ZOOinning range in the first full season back, and anything beyond that is worrisome. "1 wish I could tell you there was science behind it," he said. "But there is none." Nationals General Manager Mike Rizzo - with the direction of Lewis Yocum, who performed the surgery on Strasburg and Zimmermann, the team's medical and pitching staff and other medical resources - will ultimately decide when to stop Strasburg. He will also look at how strongly and consistently Strasburg is pitching, and how many stressful innings he has thrown. Rizzo has held firm that Strasburg's schedule would not be manipulated so that he can pitch in the postseason, believing a regular schedule would help him recover but also because he has yet to experience the rigors of a full major league season. Strasburg was 22 at the time of his injury in 2010, having thrown 123 \6 innings in both the minors and majors. He had surgery on Sept. 3, 2010, and the following season, he threw only 44 \6 combined innings. With his six innings in Wednesday's start against the San Francisco Giants, he has thrown 139 V3 innings. Some experts say a pitcher's age and pitching style matter in the recovery process. If the pitcher is an experienced veteran, he could adjust his body, mind and arm to adapt to the challenges of the first full season. A pitcher who hasn't thrown a lot of innings in professional baseball could be more susceplible to injury if there's a large increase in work. And, a power pitcher, who gives maximum effort on every throw, should be monitored a little more closely, some experts said. Given that there is no evidence to explain the effects of limiting a pitcher in his first full season, medical experts said it is likely best to err on the side of caution, especially given Strasburg's potential and future. "It's a risk-reward situation," said James C. Walter, an orthopedic surgeon who trained under Andrews and serves as the medical director for FC Dallas of Major League Soccer. "We don't have a perfect science on what you can r ehab and when you can come back. It's trial and error. It makes you nervous with someone that talented, I think, it 's as much financial as medical!' Kremchek said he has wondered what he would do if faced with the same situation as the Nationals. When Strasburg is shut down in a postseason push, fans will be upset, he said. If he continues to pitch and gets hurt, the Nationals will also be scrutinized. Kremchek believes they are taking the correct approach for the future of Strasburg and the Nationals by being cautious. "The kid is obviously a No. 1pitcher and a No. 1 pitcher for the next 12 years on a team that is very young and potentially going to contend for the next eight years," he said. "There's no right or wrong answer."
Continued from 01 "I was talking to (Miguel) Olivo and I told him it was just a matter of time before Felix did this," said teammate and good friend franklin Gutierrez said. "We're always playing around with him about a perfect game and asking him, 'When you going to do it?' He told me, 'I'm going to do it sometime. Some of these days. I just don't know when.' " Warming up in the bullpen before the game, Hernandez knew that everything fastball, curveball, changeup, slider - was working. "Something's going on right now," he told himself. He took all of those pitches into the game. In fact, Hernandez was so good in the 1-0 win, he could throw any pitch on any count. Early in the game, he threw five breaking balls in a row and the Rays were helpless. Definitely, something was going on. "It almost seems like a matter of time until it happens," Jaso said. "Keep making your pitches and the odds (of a perfect game) are going to go in your favor eventually. And the guy deserved for the odds to fall in his favor today, for sure." Remember the silly concerns about his velocity after the team broke camp in Peoria? Well, in the seventh inning, an amped-up Hernandez threw 96 mph. And in the ninth, he jammed pinch-hitter Jeff Keppinger with a 95-mph fastball that Keppinger couldn't have hit if Jaso had whispered to him the location and the type of pitch that was coming. "That got my attention;' manager Eric Wedge said of that 1-1 pitch. "You have to have a little luck on your side when you talk about 27 outs and you're playing against the best ballplayers in the world. I think a lot of things have to come together. It starts with his stuff. "But the intangibles, for me, are what separate him. No doubt about it, he has great stuff. But the teammate that he is, the leadership that he brings and the toughness and consistency with all that. That's what separates him." Normally Gutierrez sits with Hernandez between innings and talks with him, keeping him loose and focused. Several times between innings, he usually walks into the clubhouse and grabs a bottle of water. But today, Gutierrez didn't talk to his friend and, for 27 outs, he didn't budge from his spot on the bench. "Today was different. I don't know. You could just feel it," Gutierrez said. "I saw that he was really serious today and I didn't want to bother him. I realized in the fourth inning that all of his pitches were working and I said, 'OK, I'm not going to say anything to him. I'm not going to play around.' "I don't know if Felix was nervous, but I was nervous. I was shaking and looking around. I just sat there and said, 'He's going to do it. He's going to do it.' And he did it. And for me to experience this is amazing." After the final strike, .laso stayed in his crouch for another half a beat, still framing the ball in his glove. "I can't believe that just happened," he told himself. "Oh, my god." This was how perfection felt.
Ted S. Warren I The Associated Press
Seattle Mariners pitcher Felix Hernandez delivers in the first inning of his perfect game against the Tampa Bay Rays, Wednesday, in Seattle.
Cup Continued from 01 Roberts said the winning teams will receive an assortment of apparel items, prizes from local businesses, and a championship banner. The tournament began 18 years ago at the former roller hockey rink in Juniper Park. Roberts said he began organizing theNorthwest Cup after friends in Portland, Medford, Salem and Idaho wanted to try out the newly opened rink at Juniper Park. When the rink was lorn down to build the current outdoor pool complex, Roberts moved the tournament indoors. Over the past few years indoor roller hockey has been rising in popularity locally, in part, according to Roberts, because of Cascade Indoor Sports' emphasis on making the sport fun and accessible. "We feel that kids that don't have a traditional sport (baseball, basketball, football, soccer) often flourish in roller hockey," Roberts said. "They are able to develop skills that build their self-esteem and confidence." Cascade Indoor Sports sponsors several leagues, including an Adult B league, open to any player over the age of 15. The facility also hosts a number of youth leagues, including a 6-8 age group, 10 and under, and 12 and under to 14 and under. Many of these local players will be competing in the Northwest Cup, Roberts said. The tournament will begin Saturday at 7:30a.m. and is expected to end at 11:30 p.m. The Northwest Cup was originally set to begin on Friday, but after a couple of teams dropped out of the competition, Cascade Indoor Spor ts decided lo make it a one-day event. Spectators are encouraged to attend the event and will be admitted free of charge. - Reporter: Eoller@bendbulletin.com.
06
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
HUNTING & FISHING
FISHING FLY-TYING CORNER
Warm weather has ODFW asking anglers to take precautions when releasing fish Bulletin staff report
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Comparadun Purple, courtesy The Patient Angler.
You probably have never seen a purple mayfly and maybe the trout have never seen one either. But there is something trout like about this color when mayflies struggle in the surface film. Peter Bower recommends the Comparadun Purple for late summer hatches and again in the fall, when dark-bodied mayflies dance above the water. Fish it with a long leader and light tippet. Coat the bug with
floatant then cast softly for a dead drift. If a trout turns to it and refuses, tie on a smaller version, give them a minute to rest and then cast again. Tie this pattern with purple thread on a No. 12-18 dry fly hook. For the tail, use dark moose fibers. Build the body with purple dubbing and rib with mylar. Tie in a deer hair wing and finish by dubbing the head. -Gary Lewis
FISHING REPORT
Solid fishing reported at area rivers, lakes Here is the weekly fishing report for selected areas in and around Central Oregon, provided by fisheries biologists for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife:
ANTELOPE FLAT RESERVOIR: No recent reports, but we expect fishing to be slower with the warm weather. Boat anglers will most likely be more successful than bank anglers. BEND PINE NURSERY POND: No recent reports. BIG LAVA LAKE: No recent reports, but fishing should be good. CLEAR LAKE RESERVOIR: Water levels in reservoir will be dropping as irrigation demand increases. Trout fishing should remain good, as long as the reservoir permits good access. CRANE PRAIRIE RESER· VOIR: High temperatures will likely push trout into the old river channels. CRESCENT LAKE: Kokanee fishing has been good. CROOKED RIVER BELOW BOWMAN DAM: Fishing for trout has been good. CULTUS LAKE: No recent reports. Cultus was stocked in mid-May. DAVIS LAKE: Water is much higher than normal, and all boat ramps are accessible. Please note this is a fly-fishing only lake. Please check your synopsis for the regulations for this water body. DESCHUTES RIVER: Mouth to the Pelton Regulating Dam: Summer steelhead fishing in the lower 25 miles of the Deschutes is good and should only get better as August progresses. Anglers are also reminded to that the river opened Aug. 1 to the harvest of fall chinook. DESCHUTES RIVER: Lake Billy Chinook to Bend: No recent reports, but there should be good fishing for rainbow and brown trout. Rainbow trout average 10 to 16 inches, while brown trout up to 26 inches are available. Anglers will find better access downstream of Lower Bridge. EAST LAKE: Fishing is good. FALL RIVER: Stocked in early July. FROG LAKE: Stocked with both legal and trophy-size rainbow trout, Frog Lake always offers great trout fishing early in the summ er season. HAYSTACK RESERVOIR: No recent reports. HOSMER LAKE: Open to fishing and annual population sampling indicates that Atlantic salmon and brook trout populations are healthy. Fishing on Hosmer is restricted to fly fish ing with barbless hooks. LAKE BILLY CHINOOK: Fishing for small mouth bass should be great right now. Fishing for
HIGH DESERT BANK
kokanee has slowed a bit, but anglers are still catching good numbers of fish. Kokanee are averaging about 10 to 11 inches long. LITTLE LAVA LAKE: No recent reports. LOST LAKE: Lost Lake has been stocked with legal and trophy-sized rain bow trout, and offers great opportunity during the heat of the summer. The combination of carry-over trout from 2011, newly stocked rainbow trout, and naturally produced brown trout makes Lost Lake a great place to take the family fishing. METOLIUS RIVER: Trout fishing has been good. Insect hatches should offer lots of opportunities for good dry-fly fishing. NORTH TWIN: No recent reports, but earlier angler reports indicated better than average fishing. OCHOCO CREEK UPSTREAM TO OCHOCO DAM: No recent reports. Angling is restricted to artificial flies and lures only; two trout per day and 8-inch minimum length with only one fish over 20 inches. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: No recent reports. With the warm water temperature, the best fishing will be for the bass, crappie and bullhead. Trout may still be caught, but it will be more difficult than in the spring and fall. ODELL LAKE: No recent reports. PAULINA LAKE: No recent reports. PINE HOLLOW RESERVOIR: Warm water temperatures may hinder success. Successful anglers will fish early morning in the cooler portions of the reservoir. PRINEVILLE RESERVOIR: Fishing for bass, crappie and bullhead catfish should be good. Anglers are reporting more bass and larger smallmouth bass than in recent years. Anglers have re ported catching larger trout than in recent years. ROCK CREEK RESERVOIR: Water levels will be dropping, and warm temperatures will limit success. SHEVLIN YOUTH FISHING POND: Shevlin has been stocked and is fishing well. SOUTH TWIN LAKE: Fishing is good. SUTTLE LAKE: No recent reports. TAYLOR LAKE: Fishing for large largemouth bass should be excellent. Trout fishing will resume in the fall when temperatures cool. WALTON LAKE: Fishing has been good, with the best fishing occurring during the cooler times of the day and near the springs. WICKIUP RESERVOIR: Fishing is good, with opportunities for large kokanee.
-:;;Be/tone·
Local Service. Local Knowledge. 541-848-4444
70 Years ofHearing Excellence
1000 SW Disk Dr. • Bend www.hig hdesertbank.com
Call 541-389-9690
® FDIC
SALEM - With summer temperatures reaching seasonal highs in Central Oregon and across the state, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife is asking anglers to take special care when catching and releasing fish. "Warm water temperatures, especially above 70 degrees, can be very hard on cool-water fish such as trout, steelhead and salmon," said Charlie Corrarino, ODFW Conservation and Recovery Program manager, in an ODFW news release Wednesday. The release noted that warm water does not hold as much oxygen as cooler water, which means fish are getting less oxygen while they are being caught and take longer to recover once they are released. ':A lot of fish simply stop biting when
the water gets too warm," Corrarino said. "And many anglers will voluntarily limit their fishing when air and water temperatures are high in order to protect fish populations." However, Corrarino added, anglers can still safely enjoy trout, steelhead and salmon fishing it they follow a few precautions: • Fish early in the mornings when water temperatures are lower. • Fish in lakes and reservoirs with deep waters that provide a cooler refuge for fish. • Use barbless hooks, land fish quickly, and keep the fish in the water as much as possible in order to minimize stress. • Shift your fishing efforts to higherelevation mountain lakes and streams, where water temperatures often remain
cool. According to the ODFW release, anglers also can turn their attention to warm-water species such as bass, bluegill and crappie, which are available in many lakes and reservoirs around the state. However, even warm-water fish can feel the effects of the heat, and anglers should try to land and release them as quickly as possible. Corrarino pointed out that hot summer temperatures do not necessarily mark the end of trout fishing for the year. "Once cool fall weather arrives, water temperatures will drop and trout will begin actively feeding again," he said. "ODFW also will resume stocking trout in many lakes and reservoirs. In fact, fall can offer some of the best fishing of the year."
Archery Continued from 01
Archery season begins Aug. 25 and runs through Sept. 23.
To be ready for the season opener, an archer should start in the spring, shooting several times a week at distances from 10 to 50 yards. In August, a hunter should continue to tune the bow and make the little adjustments in technique and equipment that can make the difference in the field. Can a hunter pick up a bow in mid-August and be ready for the season? Let's look at it this way. The season is long, and there is no need to hunt opening weekend. Instead, a hunter can spend those days in practice. The week after the season slarls is prime Lime lo invesl a few hours at the range and in the archery shop while everyone else is out in the field. With a few weeks of preseason practice and another week or two of in-season training, a hunter can be in shooting shape by the middle of the season with two weeks left to spend in the woods. For those who plan to hunt the late archery seasons in November, there is plenty of time to prepare. How did my cousin fare on his first season bowhunting? With two weeks of practice behind him, he tagged his first archery deer on a hunt in Washington. He had never called elk be-
Gary Lewis I For The Bullet in
Jon Brickey installs a string peep sight in a customer's bow at Competitive Edge Archery in Bend. Archery season begins August 25.
fore, but he bought a video and a push-button call. When first he used the call in the woods, he heard a low guttural reply from an unseen animal and it scared him so bad, he went back to his truck. He called me after dark on the last day of the season. "Gary, I'm pretty disappointed," he said. "I was after
this big six-point bull and I never could get close to him." "That's OK," I said. "You bagged a deer. That is something to be proud of. You really can't expect to get an elk in your first season, especially when you bought the bow and the call the day before the opener. Most people don't get an elk their first season."
"Oh, I got an elk," he said. "I ended up with a spike at 20 yards." · Some people. - Gary Lewis is the host of "Adventure Journal" and author of "JohnNosler- Going Ballistic," "Black Bear Hunting," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Lewis at www. GaryLewisOutdoors.com.
HuNTING & FISHING CALENDAR Please email Hunting & Fishing event information to sports@ bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" on our website at bendbulletincom. Items are pu.blished on a spaceavailability basis, and should he submitted at least 10 days before the event.
FISHING FREE FLY-FISHING LESSONS: Through the end of September, the Orvis Company retail store in Bend will offer free lessons every Tuesday, Thursday and most Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon; RSVP's are necessary; contact the Bend Orvis store at 541-312-8200 to register; www.orvis.com/bend. CENTRAL OREGON BASS CLUB: Meets onthe first Tuesday of each month at Abby's Pizza in Redmond; 7 to 9 p.m.; new members welcome; www.cobc.us. DESCHUTES CHAPTER OF TROUT UNLIMITED: Meets on the first Monday of each month at the ONDA offices in Bend; meeting starts at 6:45p.m. for members to meet and greet and discuss whatthe chapter is up to; 541 -306-4509; communications@deschutestu.org; www.deschutestu.org. BEND CASTING CLUB: The Bend Casting Club is a group of local fly anglers fromaround Central Oregon who are tryingto improve their casting technique; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month, from 6 to 8 p.m., at the Orvis Casting Course in Bend's Old Mill District; 541-306-4509 or bendcastingclub@gmail.com. THE SUNRIVER ANGLERS CLUB: Meets on the third Thursday of
each month (except July and August) at 7 p.m. at the Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center (SHARC); contact www. sunriveranglers.org THE CENTRAL OREGON FLYFISHERS CLUB: Meets on the third Wednesday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Road; contact: www.coflyfishers.org.
HUNTING LEARN THE ART OF TRACKING ANIMALS: Guided walks and workshops with a certified professional tracker; learn to identify and interpret tracks, sign and scat of the animals in Central Oregon; two or more walks per month all year; $35; ongoing, 8 a.m. to noon; 541 -633-7045; dave@wil dernesstracki ng.com; wildernesstrackin g.com. THE BEND CHAPTER OF THE OREGON HUNTERS ASSOCIATION: Meets the second Wednesday of each month at 7 p.m. at the King Buffet at the north end of the Wagner Mall, across from Robberson Ford in Bend; contact:
ohabendwebs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERS ASSOCIATION: Meets thefirst Tuesday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Prineville Fire Hall, 405 N. Belknap St.; contact: 447-5029. THE REDMOND CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERS ASSOCIATION: Meets thethird Tuesday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Redmond VFW Hall.
SHOOTING COSSA KIDS: The Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association's NRA Youth Marksmanship Program is every third Saturday of the month from 10 a.m. to noon at the COSSA Range; the range is east of Bend off U.S. Highway 20 at milepost 24; contact Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. BEND TRAP CLUB: Trap shooting, five-stand and skeet shooting are all open Thursdays and Sundays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m; located east of Bend off U.S. Highway 20 at milepost 30; contact Bill Grafton at 541-383-1428 or visit www. bendtrapcl ub.com. CENTRAL OREGON SPORTING CLAYS AND HUNTING PRESERVE: 13-station, 1DO-target course and 5-stand open Saturday and Sunday
from 10 a.m. to dusk, and Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 11 a.m. to dusk (closed Wednesday); located at 9020 South Highway 97, Redmond; www.birdandclay.com or 541-383-0001 . REDMOND ROD & GUN CLUB: Archery, pistol and rifle are Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; skeet is Tuesdays and Sundays from 10 a.m. to about 2 p.m.; sporting clays is the first and third Saturdays of each month from 10 a.m. to about 2 p.m.; trap is Wednesdays from 10 a.m. to about 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. to closing, and Sundays from10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; non-members are welcome; check www.rrandgc.com for events and closu res. PINE MOUNTAIN POSSE: Cowboy action shooting clubthat shoots at the Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range on U.S. Highway 20 at milepost 24; second Sunday of each month; 541-318-8199 or www. pinemountainposse.com. HORSE RIDGE PISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns at the Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range on U.S. Highway 20 at milepost 24; first and third Sunday of each month at 10 a.m.; 541-408-7027 or www.hrp-sass. com.
Find It All Online
bendbulletin.c om Call a Service Professional!
OLD BACK NINE At Mountain High
~ !!,~~~ [rotal Care~ for appointments
call
541-382-4900
Check out our classifieds to find the service professional you need!
ClaSsifieds - - - - - www.bendbulletin.com
Call 541-385-5809
Mention This Ad for Extra Savings! 2 Year Warranty on all our \\lurk!
541 .000.0000 l a ngstondrkpa intcan.ore
E
Stock listings, E2-3 Calendar, E4 Permits, E4
8
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
..&.
NASDAQ
CLOSE 3,030.93 CHANGE +13.95 +.46%
IN BRIEF Retailers to offer mobile payments Cash, credit or debit? You may one day have far more choices to make at the checkout counter. Agroup of big retailers, including 7-Eieven, Best Buy, CVS and WaiMart, said on Wednesday that they were forming a company that would offer a way for customers to pay for purchases with their smartphones, joining a wide array of groups and companies seeking a piece of this market. Other than announcing the formation of the payments network, to be called Merchant Customer Exchange, the companies released few details about how their mobile payments would work, and did not say when the technology would become available. They said that their payment application should be available for virtually any smartphone, and that it will use a secure technology to process transactions.
T DOW JONES
CLOSE 13,164.78 CHANGE -7.36-.06%
..&.
S&P 500
CLOSE 1,405.53 CHANGE+ 1.60 +.11%
..&.
BONDS
1C)·year Treasury
CLOSE 1.81 CHANGE +4.62%
Vacancy rate starting to shrink for Bend's industrial real estate • Several large deals have closed this year, but there's still an 'ample supply,' expert says By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
The list of Bend industrial buildings for sale or lease is slowly shrinking, after several high-profile deals this year pushed the vacancy rate down. But more than 500,000 square feet of industrial space remains unfilled. And Bend's oversupply of office space is largely unchanged from the depths of the recession. Canadian telecommunications company Navigata bought the old Suterra building on Southwest Columbia Street in June- the same month that Breedlove Guitars moved into a building on American Loop, and bulletmaker Nosler purchased the former Mt. Bachelor bus barn.
Those transactions alone absorbed more than 75,000 square feet of industrial space, combined. Sales on buildings of more than 10,000 square feet have been rare amid the down market, said Bruce Kemp, principal broker with Compass Commercial Heal Estate Services. But the recent activity comes as businesses bet deflated real estate prices won't go down any further, Kemp said. Navigata paid $1.8 million for the Suterra building. In 2010, the building was valued at $2.5 million, Deschutes County property records show. "We've had really great progress in the industrial
market" in 2012, Kemp said. "Rates remain low, but I don't think we'll see anymore downward movement:'
Downward trend Compass performs quarterly surveys of Bend's commercial real estate, compiling vacancy rates for industrial, retail and office space in different parts of town. The company's survey for the second quarter of 2012 found 12.8 percent of the city's industrial space vacant. That's down from 14.5 percent in the first quarter, and 16.6 percent this time last year. The vacant Cessna airplane factory on Nelson Road at Bend Municipal Airport accounts for roughly 25 percent of Bend's open industrial space, said Brian Fratzke, principal broker at Fratzke Commercial Real Estate. See Real estate IE4
..&.
GOLD
CLOSE $1,603.70 CHANGE +$4.30
Vacancy rates More than 68,000 square feet of industrial space was leased in Bend during the second quarter of 2012, lowering the city's industrialvacancy rate to 12.8 percent. But retail space has gone largely unchanged in the last year, and office vacancy has increased. 21.9%
Office
21.1% 20
r~ndustrial 17.6 Yo 15
---
~
- -Retail 8.8%
8.5% 5 03 2011
04 201 1
01 2012
02 2012
Source: Compass Commercial Real Estate Services
Andy Zeigert I The Bulletin
CENTRAL OREGON TOURISM
Carlyle to buy big stake in Getty The Carlyle Group, one of the biggest private equity firms in the world, plans to buy a controlling stake in the photo and video distributor Getty Images in a $3.3 billion deal that gives the Getty family and management a larger share of the company. Carlyle Group said Wednesday that it will partner with co-founders Mark Getty and Jonathan Klein and the Getty family in buying the company from another private equity firm, Hellman & Friedman. Getty Images Inc., which is based in Seattle, creates and distributes still images, video and multimedia products for customers to use in brochures, websites and other outlets.
Economy shows signs of resilience The U.S. economy looked more resilient Wednesday after reports showed factories produced more goods in July and homebuilders grew more confident in the housing recovery. At the same time, consumer prices stayedflat last month. Low inflation could boost consumer spending and lift growth in the second half of the year. Economists approachedthe mostly positive data with some caution. The economy remains weak after a sluggish spring. And a severedrought in the Midwest could send food prices surging later this year and crimp consumer spending. - From wire reports
CPI Consumer price index, percent change, by month, seasonally adjusted:
:lfil 0 1.6%
'01
Joe Kline I T he Bulletin file photo
Spectators and participants, such as these swimmers emerging from Wickiup Reservoir on June 23 at the Pacific Crest Weekend Sports Festival in Sunriver, have helped boost tourism this summer.
A sizzling summer • Visitors are pouring in for a variety of reasons -from events to beer buzz to weather By Rachael Rees The Bulletin
Sunny skies and a slew of events ranging from the Sisters Rodeo to the Pacific Crest Weekend Sports Festival in Sunriver may make this summer tourism season one of Central Oregon's brightest since the recession. "There was a lot of pent-up travel interest that came together in the summer," said Alana Hughson, president and CEO of the Central Oregon Visitors Association. "I wish we could pinpoint the increase to one specific thing, but it comes from a variety of different " factors."
Since March, she said, the region's growth in lodging taxes has exceeded the last six-year period - a healthy indicator that tourism in the region is on the road to recovery. Lodging properties were also able to raise room rates from the steep discounting that happened during the recession years, she said, which contributed to the increase. June room-tax collections in Deschutes County increased 29 percent over June 2011, she said. Total room-tax collections for the fiscal year from July 2011 to June 2012 were up about 6.5 percent. And while surveys for July and August aren't complete, Hughson said, pre-
..&.
Sll"ER ,y
CLOSE $27.805 CHANGE +$0.049
Economic recovery is weakest sinceWWII By Paul Wiseman The Associated Press
25 %
10
www.bendbulletin.com/business
liminary reports show July was a strong month. Total fiscal-year collections in the city of Bend equaled about $3.5 million - a 7.4 percent year-over-year increase and a historic high, Doug La Placa, the president and CEO of Visit Bend wrote in an email. Vanessa Berning, director of sales and marketing for Seventh Mountain Resort, said events - biking, running, triathlons, the Bend Summer Festival, Bend Winterfest, Bend Brewfest and others - create an atmosphere that doesn't exist in many other communities. See Tourism I E4
WASHINGTON- The recession that ended three years ago this summer has been followed by the feeblest economic recovery since the Great Depression. Since World War II, 10 U.S. recessions have been followed by a recovery that lasted at least three years. An Associated Press analysis shows that by just about any measure, the one that began in June 2009 is the weakest. The ugliness goes well beyond unemployment, which at 8.3 percent is the highest this long after a recession ended. Economic growth has never been weaker in a postwar recovery. Consumer spending has never been so slack. Only once has job growth been slower. More than in any other post-World War II recovery, people who have jobs are hurting: Their paychecks have fallen behind inflation. Many economists say the agonizing recovery from the Great Recession, which began in December 2007 and ended in June 2009, is the predictable consequence of a housing bust and a grave financial crisis. Credit, the fuel that powers economies, evaporated after Lehman Brothers collapsed in September 2008. And a 30 percent drop in housing prices erased trillions in home equity and brought construction to a near-standstill. So any recovery was destined to be a slog. "A housing collapse is very different from a stock market bubble and crash," says Nobel Prizewinning economist Peter Diamond of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "It affects so many people. It only corrects very slowly." The U.S. economy has olher problems, loo. Europe's troubles have undermined consumer and business confidence on both sides of the Atlantic. And the deeply divided U.S. political system has delivered growth-chilling uncertainty. The AP compared nine economic recoveries since the end of World War II that lasted at least three years. A lOth recovery that ran from 1945 to 1948 was not included because the statistics from that period aren't comprehensive, although the available data show that hiring was robust. There were two short-lived recoveries - 24 months and 12 months - after the recessions of 1957-58 and 1980. See Recovery !E3
5 reasons you should stash cash in an emergency fund
'11
0.50~
ln1 r l
0.25 0.00 _ .:..__:_:.....:...,_-'-:-:--0.25 - - -- ; -0.50 , - - - - --. JULY JULY '11 '12 Source: U.S. Bureau of L aOOr Statistics
© 2012 McC iatchy-Tribune News Service
By Donna Gehrke-White Sun Sentinel (Fort L auder da le, Fla.)
It seems like a waste ofvour hard-earned money: Putti"ng your cash in an emergency fund when all you have to do is pull out your credit card to pay for the unexpected. But financial planners say there are five vital reasons you should keep a special fund just for emergencies - even if you have to stash at least six months' worth of expenses in a savings account that pays
almost zero in interest. • You might lose your job. The economy has slowed down recently, losing steam from April PERSONAL to June, the U.S. Bureau FINANCE of Economic Analysis reported. It is a time for caution. Putting expenses on your credit card if vou are laid off can be disastrous. You also have to consider whether you are in a unique occupation
with a narrow field of employment, said Patrick Buchanan, president of Private Wealth Management in Lake Mary, Fla. That might mean you spend more time looking for work - and need more in your emergency fund. • You might become injured or sick. Are you adequately insured to cover your loss of income? Buchanan asks. Even if you think you are,you might need your emergency fund to pay for unexpected expenses
while you recuperate. • The emergency fund helps diversify your assets. It's important to have a variety of savings and investments because it protects you from losing much of your money if it is, for example, in one stock, said Matt Saneholtz, a Plantation personal planner who is president of the Financial Planning Association of Greater Fort Lauderdale. • Cash is accepted everywhere. During an emergency you might find yourself in a
position when you quickly need to pay for something. Credit cards aren't accepted everywhere and you wouldn't want to sell stocks or bonds at a loss to cover unexpected expenses. "There is no substitute for liquidity and marketability in the face of a financial crisis," Buchanan said. • You sleep better. There's something to be said for peace of mind: You know you have the money in case something happens.
E2
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY AUGUST 16 2012
Consolidated stock listings Drv
Name
last Ghg
1·11• MR ABBLtd ABM ACE Ltd ACI Wvde AES Ccrp AFLAC AG MtgerT
030 071 058 1 92
1348 177 1938 729 4418 016 11 66 1 32 45 64 280 23 49
AGCO
42.5
AGLRes 184 401 AK Steel 5 44 AMC Net 41 0 AOL 3298 ASMLHid 059 5754 AT&Tinc 176 3710 ATMIInc 1858 AlP O&G 41 AU Opt on 3 04 AVG Tch n 10 24 AXline 323 Aa ons
0 06 29 64
Aa~rom
I 82 Abtl.ab 2 04 66 42 AberfdG 0 70 35 23 AbdAsPac 042 7 94 Abiomed
2052
Ab axas 20 AcaoaTc 2510 AcadoPh I 63 AcadoRI 0 72 24 00 Accerlu e 1 35 60 82 AccoB ds 6 54 AccretvH 1060 AcliiiKlll 5 90 AcmePkt 1706 2300
t26
II 50 1162 2820 1674 329 21 82 71 30 1346 41 9 41 2299
t 05 +09 t1 9 t12
011
Adventrx
AdvActBear AecomTch AegearM' Aegon Aegon cap Ae Cap Aeroposl AEterna" Aetro AffiMgrc AffMg"42 Affymax
63 0 04
0 25 f 59
070 I 59
Affyme~x
Aglent Ag~co g
Ag umg M ease
040 0 80 100 256
~Prod
~rTmsp ~ casle ~!liS
060 160
Aka raT Akom ~askA
s
~askCom ~bema
0 20 le 080
~cateiLuc ~coo
012
~ere ~xB inc n
~exPEE
2 04
~excoRg ~exron
~""" s
~!1'Tech ~kenmes
~legTch ~ler!lln
~lete
0n 020 184
~Illata ~hHithCh
~loncOne
I 20 048 ~lonlfgy I 80 ~lonf~ h 0 80 ~lllGibfl
~lll~co
~ldNevG ~loonT n
024
~losrt.ra ~lotCom m ~lscr~IH
~l~te
0 88
~"}}amP
~oriJSA
016
~phaOmg ~plnNRs
~pGPPrp
0 60 0 66 t 00 ~teraCp If 040 ~terraCap 0 64 ~~ 164 ~umna 024 Amllev t 15 AmTrstF n 040 Amarn Amazon Amdocs Amed sys Ameren I 60 ~pTot~v
~~erMLP
Am er~~
AMov L Am!\ppl ~ AmA et AmAxle Am Campus ACapAgy AmCapltd ACapMtg AEagleOut AEP AEqlnvlf AmExp AfnciGp AGree!
028 084 I 35 5 00 3 60 044 188 012 0 80 070 060
Am lrt~rp
t 93 0 70 0 88 010 t 00 Amer~nse t 40 Amerilr!1' 0 52 Ameteks 024 Amgen I 44 ArmcusTh AmkorTch Amplnnol 042 AlrtGr62 APJtyCT n AmTo11e AVang d Am WI Nks
Am~oPiim
Amyns Anada~o 0 36 Anadrgc AnalogDev I 20 Anc~y
Angiesl n AngioOyn Anglog~A
ABinBev Anxter Ann Inc Annao/ Ames n Ansys AntaresP AnllieraPh Anworth Ac>n~c
0Iii I 57 4 50 2 27
0 83 063
A1238ys Apache 0 68 Aptlnv 0 80 ApotloGM t 65 ApotloGrp Apotlolnv 080 ApotloPM 3 00 ApotiSrFII 126 Ap~e oc I 0 60 ApdlndiT 0 84 ApdMatl 036 AMCC Approach AprrcusBro AquaAm 0 70 Arc~orMI 075 ArchCap ArchGool 012 ArchOon 0 70 ArcosOor 0 24 AremPhm AresCap h I 52 AresGmcln 024 ArodP Arba in< ArkBest 012 ArmHid 018 Armou Rsd I 20 Arm~rWid 8 55 ArrayBro Ar s Arrow8 Art oGinv 008 ArubaNet AsburyA AscenoRt s AscentSolh AsiJand 090 Aspenkls 0 68 AspenTech AsscdBanc 0 20 AsdEstrt on Assuant
21 88 1919 6 98 5 28 25 48 11 83 13 63 47 3765 1169 25 24 1685 410 40 48 43 95 98 78 2064 83 5 477 1180 828 3680 1296 341 212 60 8 114 873 1874 292 73 95 326 10535 400 3425 180S 31 49 8635 41 32 13439 1 36 283 15 65 8 46 46 2 50 36 2775 1906 1 78 2612 11 46 37 89 176 1206 10 34 66 68 44 16 30 36 1 23 00 35 13 32 37 95 292 123 '37 42 318 1439 34 34 900 2638 I 03 2576 10 98 45 75 34 04 II 0 24 35 2113 4316 11 38 56 66 3729 1379 34 03 25 38 II 25 71 20 28 78 38 3 54 39 38 02 33 12 83 65 535 535 61 7 265 405 69 06 114 40 43 3290 11 20 1056 33 93 8113 60 70 2782 17 14 4000 65 70 382 86 660 5250 48 8773 25 90 13 27 2815 773 20 00 1890 o30 83 40 94 11 80 529 28 68 2 99 25 44 1529 39 68 6 94 26 25 14 22 825 17 29 1664 1986 4455 1023 2738 7 48 4228 5 23 1355 37 1 332 1666 26 7 18 53 165 7406 28 59 23 15 13 02 1s o
084 343
last Chg
174 AvakmBay 388 13984 +26 Ava1Phn 3!10 9J6 t06 AVEOPh I 08 31 29 t40 Av"'fO AvntNetw 235 8;s AvidTch AvisBudg 1595 AV1Sia 116 26 28 3282 Avnet 092 16 )3 Avon Axcels ll3 AXIS ..ap 0 96 3377 &% Foods I 08 2810 BB&TCp 080 3188 25 7 BB&Tp!E BBCNBcp 1218 BCEg 227 45 29 I>{Ae o 40:.4 BGC l'trs 068 4 71 BH' BILl 220 68 ,, BH'Biplc 220 61ll B.JsR.est 3977 BMC Sft 4140 192 4244 +25 BP PLC +2 90 BP2 Res 268 154 4880 +03 BRE t17 BFFBra:>i 027 1491 01 BabckWil 26 50 13010 t35 Baidu 07 Bakri1J 060 47 20 t 16 BaJICorp 040 42o5 44o7 44 Balo/Tech 22 BanCorum 11 2 5794 +14 Bc&IA g 055 7J5 +05 BcoB ad pf 0 58 16 79 t51 BcoSantSA 082 6o2
ActweNet Actwsf!z Actuant AcXIom AdobeSy Adtran AdvAuto AdvEnll AMO AdvSem AdventSoft
0 36 0 24
OIV
AvaklR<tre
AcordaTh
018 004
Name
+04 t45 140 +26 t I 32 +18 02
t OI +I 63 23
+61 09 t 67 +09 +II t 08
AssuedG 036 134 AstexPhm 253 AstonaF 016 978 AslraZen 285 4758 a hemhlth 91 70 ~IPv.r g 115 1399 MasA 51 9 ~lasPpln 2 24 34 45 ~m~ 589 ATMOS I 38 3683 ~v.oodOcn 45 33
+25 +01 tOI +27 18 t02 +68 +26 +OS t 02 +26
AuRICog
628
+04
Auroong 40 AuthenTec 804 AutoNatn 39 53 Autodesk 3448 Antol I 88 604 AutoOala I 58 57 84 AutoZone 357 86
t07 06 OS +32 t 42 +06 +86
kx l m
2426
t46
AvagoTch 060 3658
t 43
t02
BcpSouth BkofAm BkAm wtA BkHa var Bkl eld s BkMCJ11 g
DIV
last Chg
Cemgpfs 118 1961
+I 28 +06 t33 17
CenovusE 0 88 Centene CentePnt 081 CrfBraspf 087
32 99 +34 4067 +158 2051 04 1010 tiO
OoxEnBull
CenEIBras 06
CentEuro CFOJag 001 CenG dA I GeniAl
+01
Crtryl nk
+02 42 tiO t33 +09 +15 09 17 09 72 79
Cenveo 94 +01 Cephod 36 93 +14 Coradyne O&J 2274 t09 Corner 7349 +2 00 CerusCp 3 23 01 Changyau 3 80 21 69 +133 Clilllab 36 58 +07 Crnrt~ds 7 15 +81 CrnrterGm 79 80 +I 30 Cltf'ort 48 55 +61 Ct.esecake 0 48 33 25 +64
t40
ChemoCtxn
10 30
20
t35 +26 +08 ti S 19 +17 36 II +64
Ct.mtua Ct.oereEn Ct.sEng Ct.sGrann Chevon ClicB&I Clicos ClildPoce Climera
16 72 14 51 19 01 2295 112 57 3 34 1605 5 57 244
t37 +07 20
+22
Chmalnl rs
t47 Cli111Ufe 05o +05 Cli111r.'lole 214 +OS ChmaShen
Cli111Lki Olo CliXFash CliplvKJS Clif<ll~
Cli'IJia ChoceHtls 074 Clibb 164 Cru clillll 09il C<raCcrp C~m 004 Cmarex 048 Cnc~el
Cmf n Cnemarl< Cnbs Crrus C•co Crblrends Ci group CizRepllc CirxSys Ciy~cm s CoudeRg
161 084 054 056 004 72
C~anEngy C~anfllrb
Cloantoh~
Clearv.tre CiffsNRs Clo ox CloudPeak Gooch CobaltEn Cocaeotas CocaCE Coeu Cog>zTech Coban&St CohStlnfra CohStOIR Constar
2; J 25o 1 2l 10' 064 07 144 07
C~d\\01\ h C~trx
C~aPal
248
C~lctvB d C~crfl
0 7'
C~umlb h C0111ca~
C0111c spcl Comerrca CmcBMO CmclMtis CmwPEIT
06o 0 6o O&l 0 ~' 048 20l
Gmt;~
C0111mVlt CBO Paa 0 Z' Cm~Gnom
C0111pSo Compuv.re
O ~l
C0111~kRs
Comverse ConWay 04J Conl!l"a 0 9o Con epts Con hoRe; ConurTch Corns Corocl'his 264 Cons~Engy 0 ; J Cons~Com I So ConEd 2 4' ConsofW~ 03l ConstartC Constefl', Contango CortiRes Cnv gys 02l CooperCo 005 Coope lnd I 24 CooperTi e 04 CopaHo~ 21l CopanoEn 2 3l Copart s Copol 0 94 Corelabs II CoreLCI!IC CornthC Cor0rD011 Cornng 03J CorpOfiP Ill Cor ectrql 080 Cosan ltd 028 Cro lnc h Costco Ill CottCp CousPrp 018 Covance CovartaH 0 &J CoverlryH o; J CovKi en O ~l Crane IP Cra; Inc CSVS2xV S CSVeWSt CredSurss 0 8 CrSuffl 03' Creelnc Crel us 119 Crocs CrossiTg Cros~exE 048 CrosstxLP IS Crl\ll~le
Crovrliod CrumbBke
Ctripcom Cub Smart OS Cub cEngy Cui>~Ph
Cummrns GumMed Cu s CuEu o CurtisWrt CushTRcl Cynosure CypSem Cytec
20l 01 03o O ~l
044 o;J
Cyta~noth
Cyte< OCTindl OOR Ccrp OFCGbl ONP Sdct ORHorton OSV/ Inc OTE Oaml-ldg Oarnlier Oaden Oaring DaVIa OeVry Oeanfds
028 048 078 Oh 07' 248 0 2l Oil 20) 03l
Oec~sOut
Dooe 1 84 O~curE g Oefcath Oelek Oh Deline OS OelpliAu n OelbAr Deluxe 1 OJ 0011ndMda oemuryR Dndreon DemrMg OeM{S Oertsply 02' Oepomed Oeu schllk 09' OBGodSh DBGodOR Oevarf O ~l DexCon
Ooaeo
258
o~mndf ~f o~offs
O~mf'l<
69
o;J OS 08 050 114
t17
287 +09 2004 01 10 50 07 616 02
2 90 42 29
044
DIV
DrxSPBull
t03
0 3o 2513 3&J 0 2l 021
Name
t14
+12 t52 17 t29
t05 787 +25 0 04 1446 02 004 787 +09 3)6 t03 180 4664 t03 519 05 280 5796 +29 BkNYMet 0 52 2211 04 220 5292 t43 1889 +12 23)6 +21 039 1147 06 1175 tOO 40 78 +1 2 98 68 +64 12 54 77 34o9 t 55 11 73 10 180 5944 t 34 264 46l2 +94 01 15J4 26 :.4 +04 082 59 40 43 271 03 180 76 17 til 63 j6 t49 03 020 34 50 Balo 032 716 +22 Bern• I 00 30 20 II BenchEiec 16'8 Berllsy 036 37o3 +30 Beri<HB 84 71 23 BenyPet 0 32 39 93 27 BestBuy 068 1936 tOI ~glots 38 13 +02 BBa ell 23)4 tl 07 ~otDvry lf 464 +21 Brocryst 3 97 33 ~ogenldc 14687 tl 37 ~oMa n 38 66 t03 ~oMedR 086 18 82 t 02 ~oSa~ers I 41 t02 ~kH IsCp I 48 31o7 02 ~kPJ<elso I 04 9 ol BlackRock 6 00 176 )3 t3 03 ~kBdAm I 58 22 73 20 ~kOe~Str 032 4 ' 4 06 ~kEEq[)v 0 68 7 50 +05 ~kGibOp 2 28 13 35 08 ~krr 049 768 04 ~klrt~& l 088 7 36 tOI Blackstone 040 13 50 +03 ~ockHR 080 16 7 +02 ~00111ril n 1297 +04 ~ourt 13 JS +08 Blucora 15J9 t i S ~ueNie 34 !10 +57 BdlllkP~ 213 2720 +17 BobE ans II 0 39 76 +1 05 Boeing 176 73 J7 30 Boingo 6 80 22 Boise Inc 048 746 01 BoozAIIerli 036 19 J6 +10 BorgWam 70 73 t 33 Bos!Prv 004 1001 tOt BostProp 220 111 34 t 78 BostooSo 5o3 +07 BttrnlnT 2339 05 BoxSh ps I 04 6 o2 +01 ~dGm 6J3 +II BradyCp 074 2764 t14 Branco/w 060 12 J8 +17 Braskm 065 14 J6 ti S Brerlflun 184 1892 06 BridgptEd 10J7 +27 BrrgSt at 048 17 50 t 35 Brrg~cv n 1169 I 29 Brrg,tprt 897 t03 BrigJsGg 82 02 02 Brrnker 0 64 33 90 Brrnks 040 23 )3 t 46 BrMySq I 36 31 88 ti S Broodcom 040 34 71 t 30 Brood d!f 0 72 22 88 +30 BroodSol 37 93 +21 21 02 531 t 06 18j6 07 056 3495 t04 I SO 36 19 +33 056 1675 03 Br~neB 034 8oS t04 BrooksAuto 032 814 t 02 BrwnB n 034 25o5 +43 Brov.nShoe 028 1441 +41 Brol\llFBs 093 6198 +27 BrukeCp 11 91 t05 Brunswick 005 22 ol II Bucksye 41 5 5273 t 23 BuckTch 032 3049 +51 Bucl<le 080 40 )3 t1 2 Brerovent 063 3285 59 BuffaloWW 73 48 +I 07 Bungelt I 08 6448 13 BurgerKn 1440 +25 C&J Engy 1984 t 51 CA ine I 00 25 45 t06 CBIZtrc 568 t03 CBl l sc 088 2068 t14 CBL pfO 184 2536 +08 CBOE 060 2898 06 CBREGRE 054 850 +09 17j6 +04 CBREGrp CBSB 048 36 J7 07 Cf lnds 160 211?2 +341 CH Rol>ns 132 55 90 t 68 3784 +14 CrT G~ CLECO 135 4243 t 43 Cf.t'G p s I SO 52 oS +07 22 CMS Eng 096 23 50 OOG~ 4088 75 CNOFrd 008 9l2 +21 CPFlEng 154 23o5 05 CPI-I 086 1771 65 CSGSys 1996 04 csx 056 23!10 t 04 ere Medo 052 8o9 t 08 CVE Frd 034 1196 t 05 CVR Engy 032 29 72 t1 9 CVS Care 065 44 22 ti O CYS Invest 200 1410 09 Cabelas 47 12 t 59 CbtvsnNY 060 1537 13 Cabot 080 36 32 t32 CabotOGs 008 4217 36 CACI 57 38 t 83 397 19 Cadoncel'h 1254 +1 6 Caderte I 76 03 CaiOi e CalaOOjln 074 841 tOI CabS! TR 084 10J6 t06 Calgon 1391 t 40 485 +11 Cal• Cal~olf 004 614 +1 2 Calhdus 4 24 21 CallonPet 5 30 OS 1688 12 Calpne CalumetSp 236 25 93 +47 1236 tOI Cambrex CamdenPT 224 67 68 +95 Camecog 040 21 IS 55 Came on 51 87 t26 CampSp 1 16 34 64 +t o CampusCC 064 10:.4 t 08 CdnNiljg 150 9143 t 52 CdnNRs gs 042 31 16 t 20 CPRII'} g 140 8438 08 COOSolar 271 34 Caoon 34 l5 til CapOne 020 55 J4 09 CapP od 093 7 94 +09 CaJjtiSrce 004 715 +05 Capfedfn 030 11 34 t 04 Caplease 026 475 tOI 01 Ca~"dM 1 70 13 90 99 02 CpstnHh Cartx;;er I 08 6935 + 26 Cardnflth 095 3981 t 04 CardrumTh t8 01 Cardt 011c 29o3 47 CareFuSioo 26 79 ti O 342 +09 Care~Ed CanbouC 1258 17 Carl sle 080 51j6 +54 CarMax 2980 +49 Cam al I 00 3358 31 2473 72 Carrizo Carte 52o3 24 CaS¥ 066 6040 t65 CashAm 014 3981 +61 CatalystPh 140 18 Catamaran 88 17 45 Gate pnar 208 87o1 26 CathayGen 004 1630 13 cavum 54 31 J4 Ceda F I 90 32o2 t08 35 t OI CetSo Celanese 030 40 1 tl 41 Getgene 7091 21 CelfTheral 41 00 Cellcom 1 71 7 45 84 Cet~ exTh 471 02 CeiSim 336 t1 2 Cemex 032 750 t1 3 BcoSB asi 037
Name
45
DonarGen
OaOarTh Dollarli s
OamRescs Oamnos 0Cl111a g Oanldson s Oonlk¥f1R Oaafnd
211 300 180 036 104
Oau~m
OEmmett 001er
084 060 140
DowOlm
128
Or!'epSrap I 36 OrngonWg
OrmWksA OresserR tiS Or HYSt +85 Dr SM +15 Om OU p +95 OrSiips t02 OuPort
042 057
last
Chg
83 79 5002 36 85 5320 501 1 3105 4989 2931 8454 1242 5176 7657 50 00 5381 8422 321 34 63 1252 I 09 1327 23 78 5703 2967 45 04 226 1785 4923 431 935 70 81 231 50 28 26 76 66 77 1394 8222 3086 1857 380 1031
t21 20 t 14 t07 t 18 t42 t20 11 t24 t 13 55 +193 62 t31 t44 58 t 77 20
012 172 77 08 DuPFab os 060 4 18 77 OukeEn s 306 58 89 41 Ouk<R~ 068 46 + 05 OrmBrad 152 060 1590 34 Dunkin 15 04 Oycom 1291 +22 D;navax 29 98 t115 D)'lexCap 116 595 t17 4293 +112 72 18 t03 52 59 +35 ~~~ 015 ; ~~ 17 20 +So ETrade 853 43 86 +22 eBay 4498 6 74 44 EMC Cp 25 44 4 56 +06 EMCOR 020 27 49 3861 +17 ENI 285 4397 23 82 +08 EOG Res 068 109 82 4 39 t 65 EQT Co~ 088 55 18 38 45 08 EVEngy 306 55 47 I 35 tiS EagleMa 040 39 03 1253 2 21 EagiRkEn 088 912 28 74 03 ErlhLrnk 020 6 72 20 01 t 06 EstW~ p 040 2187 75 06 41 EastCiim s I 04 5393 445 06 Eaton 152 45 72 56 03 EatnVan 076 2714 14 28 +13 EVErfq 104 1095 55 73 +43 EVEEq2 I 05 1082 288 50 EVLtdOur 125 16 69 71 t03 EVrtunBd 076 1383 4 61 45 EVFlskMgd 112 1052 7207 46 EVSrAt 107 1572 I 59 +05 EVTxOi e 101 957 55 65 +1 32 EVTxMGio 098 8 84 24 00 +37 EVTxBWin 130 14 33 3935 03 EVTxGBW 117 1097 2922 tOt Eb• ~c 020 24 04 20 01 t 26 Ecokrb 080 65 09 63 73 58 Ecapetro 395 5891 35 55 +69 ECOtaltyh .50 I 85 +09 Ed.onOI 130 4532 10 81 Educflty 040 111 6 4822 t 76 Edwl!S<i 9818 55 t 02 Bx81nc 592 3296 t 45 BPasol'pl 220 35 26 10550 +08 Elan 11 94 2 63 tOI EldorG~ g 015 11 37 2 64 +24 8ec1Arts 1309 89 t 04 El !Arden 45 85 3419 17 Ell eMle 26 98 33 25 42 Ellll!Pf 280 2245 3 03 +36 oMacpn 3 79 39 40 02 Embrae 038 2629 1327 t 08 EmersonEI I 60 51 52 1549 17 186 24 71 +09 6 67 5053 +1 05 217 3167 40 84 26 217 2984 2 48 113 39 88 3 34 080 2236 9 80 +38 851 I 20 +02 793 5 92 +06 3263 3090 +68 945 24 65 +09 1328 19 06 +45 124 3690 96 25 +117 139 1909 7033 t ill 923 2 37 +42 058 ~A 5 24 II 160 6637 3 90 +15 250 41 75 16 09 +II 358 4388 62 68 52 028 8431 8 05 17 2.35 1864 tiS l OS 14 80 3 65 +97 058 1675 5512 -476 3756 73 46 +I 42 1682 1565 06 150 5590 8 75 t 358 878 73 89 +05 332 6987 1977 +22 300 78 38 t1 65 5271 29 75 OS sn 25 42 +27 244 2038 114 6U 11830 t 215 on en 24 34 +08 18428 225 +06 088 211 3 25 00 +63 I 58 59 56 I 59 t 07 035 965 2253 t07 44015105 33 05 t SI 053 8093 1384 II 080 2471 81 +02 1034 96 47 t 80 2202 840 10 760 71 t 05 016 743 48 65 +06 041 10 67 I 42 +04 010 444 32n t 40 210 3778 5 25 15 307 40 40 +1 3 052 5291 I 50 +30 056 3740 270 t 02 1551 13 73 02 6085 I 40 05 1875 323 01 080 3366 2 80 +23 335 1006 t OS 228 8800 1664 +1 2 2902 17 01 23 10 1241 +08 9929 14 78 13 032 5556 63 30 +43 028 2084 36n +1 8 036 5456 2 66 35 4726 1392 +22 048 II b 1268 ti S 617 21 + 01 25 47 4381 +33 FXEnor 7 97 10076 14 FXCM 024 982 2 67 +06 2120 413 1529 122 12 40 1 78 2989 +1 2 084 6382 920 +17 076 4295 25 80 +49 056 8955 I 87 +23 292 10582 6486 +55 096 2019 77 t 04 474 292 ti O 200 2175 615 t 03 346 14 89 +08 807 20 01 +09 056 1905 1067 20 080 3088 1811 22 1223 5850 55 115 1044 60 24 +23 032 1429 14 07 +25 2058 5357 01 1448 5336 04 024 2234 17 07 t 22 032 1927 98 13 +26 020 686 1986 +29 004 854 1646 01 1242 4620 +1 45 1700 75 10 S ill 004 11 68 20 +01 032 817 2 02 t 01 080 1214 2420 t 05 040 8222 1221 +02 2110 2848 15 oos 1684 9 26 02 060 1909 28 24 09 582 I IS t02 220 46 10 15 s2 +t o 064 1569 497 t 31 711 6 39 t 05 3325 467 96 39 05 t 58 41 96 506 +09 025 25 32 3078 +09 6 57 12 39 03 4 94 03 Raw sfds 064 ~~: I 44 127 22 5840 35 Aawserve 064 5358 1283 t1 6 Auor 10757 t 55 focusMda 027 2520 18 32 +65 FEMSA 121 8599 6 41 22 072 8452 964 +09 591 06 020 ~!: 718 +14 83 820 +17 14 98 4985 t1 26 3329 +06 10 16 t 25 4 22 17 869 +24 020 2;~: 7611 15 1570 +36 87 12 2089 t 23 1985 7419 +28 176 5 53 38 060 4810 16 01 I OS 11 799 5 44 +228 83 40 45 125 3476 94 01 +76 11 86 1 20 42 3229 46 040 ~;~ 3 77 2088 18 1763 1881 09 I 02 46 14 46 1016 +10 fuUerHB 034 2941 8 42 +02 ful orfncl 028 978 3 73 +53 Fusoo-to 2626 120 42 38 1298 t 06 Gil)( 5454 +122 GMACCpT 203 2483
10 t26 t04 01 t07 45 37 t02 t05 09 t05 t 14 t57 66 +01 +2 34 t36 t 82 t09 +02
:e:m:
t~ 14 88 27 + 73 07 53 til 35 54 03 07 t iD t42 03 t 04 t03 03 t04 t 11 01 Ot 01 01 t 07 05 t 87 t 30 t 10 14 t 04 t08 t61 ti S t 52 t II t1 5 t38
+11 +117 94 34 t 55 t II 06 t 17 t 30 t23 t 18 24 t 23 t il t29 t 24 t 12 t 29 t 14 t iS te t1 26 t 33 04 t82 t 17 05 t OI t 18 06 t09 t 19 1 24 t 10 t iD t OS 04 t~
t 22 t382 t 04 t 24 +06 t55 t BO 13 t 10 82 t 15 09 t03 t05 26 t 12 t60 t 37 49 12 t 06 t47 t09 20 t 78 t 46 +2 80 IS t09 t 78 33 +17 t 44 t 40 t OI +82 t 18 14 t 55 t67 +1 97 t 79 t09 06 t 44 02 t 08 t 17 25 t 34 t1 2 t05 16 t 74 t22 t 47 02 +04 t 02 t35 t 13 t II +23 t 17 +107 t09 05 +20 02 t 07 t39 t 74 00 +I 25 07 01
:~
05 +30 05 28 t 25
+~
Name
;~!i :~ :~~~
29' 02)
1 98 10
: ;: +2 56 +1 3
:;~ +1 ~ :~~ +149 +1 58 25 t 37
6: t 09 t 34 +28 t 12 iS t 39 01
D1v
last
Chg
OfficeMax 0 OS 5 03 16 ~ SA s 201 432 II Here are the 2 578 most act ve stocks on the New York Stock Exc hange Nasdaq OIStates 79 57 +93 Nat anal Markets and Amer can Stock Exchange Mutu al funds are 4f 5 1argest ~dOomFrt 44 81 t51 Stocks 1n bold changed 5 percent or more 1n pr ce ~dNBcp 036 1273 +18 ~dRef<Jb 071 890 t 07 Name Stocks are I sted alphabetically by the company s full name (not 1ts Ol n 080 20 82 +14 OmegaHI I 68 23 48 11 abbrev at on) Company names made up of n t als appear at the beg nn ng of each Om ncr 028 31 69 OS letters llsl Om n~com t 20 5143 02 Dtv Current annual d v dend rate pad on stock based on latest quarterly or Omn.Vsn 144 +16 semrann ual declarat on unless olherw se footn oted Om nova 738 +06 Last Pr ce slack was tradmg at when exchange closed for the day OnAssgn 1634 06 Chg Loss or ga n for the day No change nd1cated by mark OnSmcnd 05 669 ONEOKs t 32 44 37 Oneokl'ts 264 56 80 +06 OnyxPh 70 68 152 OpenTrl 54 14 t 80 Openlble h 43 08 12 emvesled Opkoflth 421 +04 Opbm~Ph 1502 t i S Oracle 024 31 55 t 20 OraSu e 10 13 37 Orbliz 305 20 Orex1gen 421 II OreriEH 858 +16 Orertfn 024 1049 +05 Orlan 060 14 54 +21 OsiJcoshCp 2424 t 45 Otelco un 04 256 OVSiup 720 +34 OwensMn 0 88 28 28 t 31 Owero...om 2999 07 Owens II 18 35 t 07 PDCEngy 2774 +88 060 734 +19 POL ~o PG&E Cp 182 44 91 37 PHHCorp 17 91 t 05 PmcoTR 089 106 68 27 PmShMat I 53 101 29 +01 PMCSa 578 +03 PNC 160 60 97 +54 PNM Res 058 20 70 +04 01v last Chg Name Drv last Chg POSCC 222 84 38 01 Name Orv last 2 36 10943 +95 1489 MedCath 685 7 9o t 11 PPG GMXRs 82 04 078 7622 t84 MedAssets 1569 33 PPLCc<p 144 2970 GNC l44 3720 21 19 +26 19 44 +36 Medgen<S 10 24 +12 PSS Wr~ GSESy 195 0811 2202 +21 MedProp 080 9 98 t OO PVHCo p 015 86 78 t1 51 GT Ad Tc 5 39 080 41 09 t 19 211 29 61 t 50 MedCo '5 33 t 07 Pacca GabenET 058 553 923 16 15 Medets 040 3252 t 29 PacDr ll n 299 GabUtrl 0 60 8 05 PacEtban h 31 02 9827 t 99 176 50 97 t 16 Medrvat on Gafisa SA l 24 339 204 32 59 t 37 MedleyCap 144 1320 +12 PacSt.m'M' GalenoB~ 155 P acraPhm 1693 07 064 3625 t 35 Mednax o9 80 t e Gal~glr I 36 35 68 93 tOI Medtmc 104 40 33 t 16 PackAmer I 00 3211 +42 GamGidiiR I 68 14 30 PaiiCcrp 0 84 54 79 02 MeetMe 263 820 Gametlop l 60 17 05 ·~ Palo<\Net n 6273 t293 10 71 020 823 t01 MelcoCrorn Gannett l 80 1510 PanASw o20 1535 03 IJ839 140 46 80 +29 Melk1nox Gap J 50 34 61 Panasonc 006 690 21 020 I 32 t12 MensW 072 2937 Ga dOenv l 20 61 21 Pandora 930 tOI 296 83 03 t 09 MerlorGr 15 67 Ga mn 180 40 97 t140 156 02 044 84 82 076 19 84 +17 Gartne 48 15 14 71 t 04 168 44 06 138 24 45 t03 GascaEngy II 4989 +04 153 3346 04 492 82 61 GaylrdEnt 39 88 2164 t 09 3 09 140 34 49 28 GencoSiip 348 227 076 1823 282 03 GenCorp 880 2732 +34 3565 492 7327 13 Gneable 28 35 480 +09 4 80 1084 tiS Gen[),imm '04 64 20 t 64 81 86 44 2 28 71 +03 Gen8e 0 68 20 96 215 +02 14 74 016 813 til GenGrP p l44 1865 050 4 02 + 41 074 84 79 695 09 t GenMis 1 32 38 35 248 7424 9 79 28 5423 t143 GenMctors 20 14 056 3576 t 39 4939 295 04 Genes\\ljo 63 91 020 1591 33 016 9 81 024 15 13 +24 GenOn En 250 128 3284 13 140 3535 185 775 65 Genpact l 18 1849 034 21 85 43 649 048 1424 +22 Gentex l 52 17 96 048 2333 t35 4729 900 +19 Gentiva h 10 72 0 12 27 57 +170 2060 128 5 03 t 32 GenuPrt 1 98 6345 2747 +20 SliJJOv 19o 57 o3 080 80 20 1065 05 Genworth 4 99 701 stBlips 248 11 898 1 87 995 t 37 GeoGrp l 80 25 78 3843 +92 ShChro25 093 3493 5650 116 4070 20 GeoEye 27 45 PennV a 0 23 738 t03 124 9184 Ill 2 26 +69 Geof>ooiR 19 PennVaRs 212 2451 +13 266 14156 1142 495 10 GaGulf )32 36 11 PennW st g I OS 14 12 28 301 111 24 036 19 16 648 t OO Gerdau J 21 979 PennariPk 112 10 82 +16 082 40 80 2209 26 MndrayM 040 3560 Ge onCp 171 Penne; 2367 +69 119 3841 4 51 1830 +22 MtekSys Gevo 370 PennaRE 0 64 1516 +25 4 55 4 72 11 865 1 83 +35 MtsuUFJ Gartlnter s 030 494 Pen"}Mac 2 20 2170 88 I 06 4548 325 200 6874 05 MzuhoFn Gldan l 30 3166 Penske 048 2537 +34 009 25 15 1399 047 2273 10 MModal ~lead& 57 97 P ensonWh 06 04 547 11798 1798 GlaoeBc l52 1525 39 01 Mol> 1oM~ Penta r 088 4249 +24 141 76 34 1920 3 75 86 Mol>leTele QaxoSKin ' 36 46 77 PeopLJtdF 064 1204 +14 049 3785 7Z75 048 2895 +12 Mohawk Gleache h 72 PepBoy 951 +04 131 4285 088 '664 74 t09 Mol ex GlmchRt l40 10 26 PepcoH~d I OS 1943 19 140 64 18 '508 1295 tiS Mol roflth QobaiCash 7 40 PepsiCo 215 7262 +38 ShB20 T 346 122 05 MolsCocrB I 28 4381 QobPay l OS 41 19 8850 07 Perego P 264 +12 ShB7 I OT 253 I 06 85 12 06 GijXIJ-an 765 35 t06 Molycorp Pe fect'Md 200 II 09 t iS ShlntSdOv I 62 3131 13 72 Qobalst h 32 3489 +06 Momenta ,, 04 Pe frm rln 10 52 +31 ShBI 3T 040 84 39 QuMoble 528 32 19 t 12 MonPwSys Pe kErn 028 2756 +05 SEafu I 72 5159 GoUnhas 4 84 3936 t 51 MOIYoMuf 040 3500 032 11660 t OI SRJsMCV 092 4788 Go~GLtd 40 13 2689 t il Monsanto 150 8664 22 27 +I 81 SRJsMCG 0 52 60 66 68 78 GodFLW 13 67 383 t iS Manstrl!is 821 t07 st/1sMd 164 108 49 6 89 1793 0811 2859 +04 ManstrWw 066 6744 05 SSPMd 121 96 46 1 22 loapiNrrlss 5!13 +34 Mortpel 042 '115 060 975 +II SliBxHYB 6 85 91 20 Moodys 064 3903 36~ Leapfrog I 41 13 905 II stMtg 1 70 1469 12 Lea Ccrp 056 40 02 t 36 MorgStan 020 1458 t 03 2073 +12 SttJsdqBio 004 13483 184 10313 leeEnt 1 59 + 26 MSEMODbt 120 1668 I 03 21 74 t 07 ShC&SR 224 79J8 100 6835 1311 leggMlscn 044 25 46 04 MosaJc 180 1379 +14 ShBf?<Bd 289 10841 11 64 LeggPiat 116 23 21 01 Mot ~Solu I 04 47 50 633 04 SRIKV 152 70 46 51 66754 LenderPS 040 26 93 t09 Mot rciy h 088 2404 +06 SRIK G 082 6541 Motr1t1tyrl 01 +Ill LenrorA 016 3 33 t 05 1 68 2183 128 02 139 7772 59 49 Lenncx 0 72 46 18 t35 Movado 020 17 87 +160 6066 +1 52 SR2KV 146 7110 797 22 )90 4941 leucNatl 025 2 95 +19 Movers 9297 17 Stilarcl 3 214 1051 8 10 86 Level3rs 2 90 t28 MuolerWat 007 382 t 06 2289 +22 I 68 SR2KG 0 76 9197 46 320 20239 LexPIYm 218 t 06 4036 t 43 st/121( 123 8080 1614 t 41 252 Lexrutyli 050 902 t 08 1116 87 Sftl~vEq I 73 6114 125 :.429 4 78 Lexmark 120 1981 t38 63l +61 ShBShfT 002 11 020 362 2091 lbtyASE 032 4 70 +02 4 21 +53 ?499 StiJSPid 222 39 49 l52 2581 LloGiobA 56 46 +17 080 1714 +03 SlJSAf{inV 0 25 29 47 2245 s~ LloGiobC 52 64 t 35 016 1769 t23 3687 049 2190 25 LloCapA 10028 t1 33 481 t 19 2462 180 1728 067 7~ Uo~ ntA 1s os +36 146 138 t03 221 6461 31 05 1 60 LlolertAn 43 13 67 1092 +14 SliJJHm 007 1725 694 2192 LloiPop 190 35 65 t 06 210 53 26 755 10 17 t i O SIJ.JSEngy 060 4128 UfeTech 47 47 +78 770 09 771 GroenMIC 24 II +I 26 ShSPSm 092 7450 UfeTFI 4 00 +44 DOS 98 75 t1 57 036 2087 GreenbCos 1545 +17 SliJJOG 039 6222 UlyEI I 96 42 98 +25 2214 t 43 068 18 13 Grmf A 168 40 97 2.34 steu 350 I 27 3526 linellltN 2 60 +09 t 50 1336 10 ' 5 01 Group! J 60 54 44 t138 SSC\al I 22 75 99 linled 100 4899 t 08 335 +02 703 120 '5 17 Groupcnn 532 19 Sta l.ilcEiec 068 4 47 t 46 426 8702 t87 lTC H old 141 71 74 1601 Grpofm l 03 4 76 II l.ild'Jat 032 2360 tOI 4141 t 49 ITT Cp s 036 2064 3 39 GpT~evsa 013 23 44 l.i101Tch 100 3309 +05 Nanosphere 040 3631 +59 ITT Ed 3231 GuanRcyh 66 l.ilkedln 102 23 +47 NasdOMX 052 330 76 03 lberobnk 136 47!10 1 57 Guess )80 3228 LilnEngy 290 39 43 t 42 NBGrce s 102 11 1855 GugSPEW J74 5111 Lionbrdg 303 03 NatfuGas 146 50 70 168 4020 02 831 Gu de• en 25 4 LionsGt g 1447 t34 NatGrid 311 :.482 432 t iS 080 40 40 GulfportE 25 27 Liqwdiy 44 89 +1 29 Natnstrm 056 2624 148 7381 ti ll 152 5780 NO~arco 048 7662 HCA Hidg 00 27 27 lihaMot 040 28 67 +37 975 t43 4165 HCC ins l62 3238 lileNatri 8 81 tiO NatPem 036 890 020 1595 +22 2125 HCP in >00 4580 L•ePsn 15 58 t 02 NatRetP p 158 80 13 33 76 03 302 '731 fllfCBk l24 3501 LioydBkg 98 t02 Natlonst n 1549 +06 lmunoGn 13 !15 + 90 lo.Jock f'MS fld s 3663 2 89 + 47 NatResPt s 220 2080 I OS 27 48 30 419 t1 95 lockhciM 400 9 51 +16 NatusMed 11 92 HSBC OS 44 13 t 46 llllflacf.tg 085 431 05 24 03 46 LodgeNcl 360 +02 03 Nav dea8 o HSBCCap2 '00 2781 t09 lmpaxLabs 56 I 00 50 76 11 37 tOO 05 NavgCons HSNirc 050 44 21 t i S lmpOigs 048 4606 ti O Loews 0 25 40 44 056 4381 +53 2991 ti O Loglec:h '5 19 t 25 flrnCo 5393 +122 lmpevan 8fil t03 Navsta t 24 34 70 +80 1850 +25 LogMeln 822 t 07 8 29 +.57 lncyte 19 92 +46 Neklarlh 020 3426 t63 lndoTel 160 39 18 + 139 69 t 02 ) 36 34 58 27 lonePine g 35 tOI NeoSt011 579 tOS lner!ll 150 1969 ti S Lor ia d 620 12495 Neogen 3950 t 73 5 99 4204 87 Neonode lnfi1e• 573 +03 L.aPac 385 ) 96 30 18 1273 2810 +24 lnlili;Ph 1705 +48 Loii<S N eptuneTg 468 t OO 3258 064 26 83 2971 +19 30 77 +20 Lull<n 31 75 +33 Informal N~ 1280 0 50 49 90 26 70 +13 lnfOS)s 092 4188 t23 NetEase 68 18 t2 15 3540 59 51 55 25 +16 064 4531 60 Netfl x o326 t1 50 lngerRd 4482 148 2272 +06 lrqmM 15 62 Noth~ 157 3l 4143 18 15 950 +01 lngred on 0 80 53 44 NetSperxl 943 t OO 4506 4 77 1509 +01 j623 + 18 lrJandPE 057 814 NetSu te 442 18 28 01 lmop\os I 08 46 68 Netiii<Eng 1 43 l OS 10 28 5999 +08 lnovoPhm 55 NBPESec 024 468 03 1 32 45 8 MIACOMn 2963 1097 !13 Noural~om 52 14 16 If'~'~' 1083 )56 40 15 M\PPhm 1357 +04 NeuSta 36 28 t 13 PS SrLaan t 29 2465 lnsulet 2004 )82 21 61 MBI~ 10 40 01 Nevsung 01 0 358 +02 PSSP Lw\1 082 2797 01 lrlgO 546 J 40 1754 MCGCap 056 4 58 +04 Nv.Go~g 1034 t 29 PSVrdoTf 0 06 2498 t01 lrtegrysE 272 57 53 946 07 MDC I 00 3242 t 03 NJ Rscs 152 4541 03 PSi'I'JaMu I 09 2543 lrlel 090 2627 flrsb 0 144 3772 06 MOU Res 067 22 09 t 07 N wMtnFn 136 14 72 t14 PSHYCpBd l 09 1890 lrlorXon 1917 flrttorasF 370 2854 PwShPfd 0 93 14 69 01 MEMC t 06 N v.<lr Eds 080 13 63 266 040 1359 lrtoractBif flrwa El 1 24 2755 PShEMSw 149 2991 09 MFAFncl 099 807 +04 N\&Co 371 lrlcniiEx 13280 flrwHdd 611 PS ~d a 005 1702 04 MCR 064 990 lrter[ijg 040 32 61 04 N\Cm~B 100 1318 Headwatrs 700 PwShs 053 000 0 51 67 22 +17 M IN 644 01 NWigli I 08 694 01 0 1362 lrlrbce HtCrRE IT 96 5961 Pwrwv rsh 49 t 07 MMT 048 23 02 N\Times 9 22 lrlormec 597 HthCS c )66 21 55 220 10797 t67 MGIC 1 24 07 Nem:aste 080 7 59 lrierMune 811 HtMgmt 673 020 1350 07 MGM R~s 10 21 +25 NeweiiRub 040 1688 lrlorNAP 699 Hthcr~ty t 20 2414 012 16019 +32 MIPS Tech 6 58 05 NewfldExp 32 34 340 198 40 HthcrT n )57 935 t il IBM 864 04 MKS I~ 0 64 26 74 +51 Ne~~mtM 140 46 63 lrlfkrv 136 6143 HealthN~ 2161 +77 136 fi160 t 57 MRCGI>n 22 25 +01 NewpkRes 7 02 HthSouth 2220 +20 lriiGame 024 1152 57531 +1 065 MSC lnd I 00 68 87 26 N ewsCpA 017 340 1 OS 3434 fttlndEx lOS 1353 t i S lrtPap 028 2898 t iO MSCIInc 36 01 +46 NewsCpB 017 '354 1843 fttldPay l 24 3050 t 40 lrltiectrt 112 OS 220 5 78 +18 Nexen g 020 566 8051 Heckrnam 277 tOI lrierCnl g 072 2631 06 180 2653 t OI NexPriCrd 042 6 61 lrlorpu~ c 024 1072 HectaM )06 4 61 +03 004 1596 t07 2 50 42 43 05 NextEraEn 240 o9 23 048 925 l 12 34 60 18 lrlor~ 33 31 +12 080 38 54 t 30 N Sou~e 096 499 040 1947 06 5583 3489 01 4839 +116 NelsenH 28 60 519 18 76 2528 08 8 11 +88 N•eB 144 9422 2196 4758 3510 03 4 55 + 26 NpponTT ?4 27 060 5920 42 144 02 ciJeCorp 056 37 80 10 N 2 79 51731 7778 5824 +29 4444 t14 NciJeEn 088 8941 13 99 1 20 5305 2915 16 4 28 + 23 Na~aCp 0 26 2 64 2379 413 5822 +06 8 Iii +10 Ne<anda~l 016 6 15 19 67 )24 4 92 4125 19 2752 +26 Ne<dcAm 120 1264 1221 I 52 7262 1631 +44 15 39 +22 Ne<dson 060 :.4 35 493 1252 2163 t07 14 05 IS Ne<dstrm 108 3651 742 ) 40 4923 5772 t 31 12 55 09 Ne<flkSo 200 74 72 I 08 3339 HewleiiP )53 1929 1799 01 232 01 NAPalg 1 53 11 86 Hexco 2388 4665 01 3717 +28 N cestUt 137 39 02 1339 ~egg 664 60 75 + 144 I 43 02 NthnO&G 17 50 !13 Hbbett 6093 26 20 20 2 48 tiO 16 96 081 1676 H""One 11 14 5692 t40 49n +59 120 4649 4383 HglrwdPrp I 70 3320 05 40 72 t 61 44 15 +22 220 6828 71 Hrll-llon 0 50 2770 +143 29 77 +41 4057 II 064 548 14 89 Hllenlr< l 77 1826 +23 838 t22 33 50 t06 048 11 74 088 2852 6468 03 Hllsliren l50 2576 t31 058 2 76 II 4 50 00 11 79 179 4234 HSoftTech 1991 +07 246 5000 3040 555 tOI fl>lyfrt s ) 60 3992 50 13 29 N 111avax 2 00 JDSUmph 11 56 1975 33 27 +46 fl>og c JPMargCI1 120 37 07 37 64 +09 Nc"oNo d 250 h9 37 16 5500 3900 58 23 35 11 NuSkin 080 42 50 JPMIIernn 207 3977 ::::%s I 2400 2497 03 32 64 02 NuVa•ve 20 86 Jal>l 032 22 57 flllln."vcn 1 20 154 1745 II JackHenry 046 3696 3 74 +26 NuanceCm '3 46 3860 t 04 fl>nePop '64 6311 5065 t18 Nucor 146 3956 JacklnBox 2596 24 45 221 0 t i S 36 79 +13 NutriSyst 070 1049 JacobsEng 40 14 3207 2380 +01 33 99 +09 NuvBidAm I 30 ~ 01 JagJO g 109 Honllllntl 149 5847 6664 09 75 90 85 NvCredSt 080 942 Jamba 280 4 88 422 01 I 94 +16 Nuvfloot 088 12 01 JamesfW 251 )60 28 55 t31 1945 13 19 t 21 NilvA<N 090 15 13 Janu Cap 024 847 41 91 1988 +OS 22 05 +23 Nuvrt.Val 047 10 26 Jarden 4867 874 49 22 06 18 46 +21 Nlf'ldlnco 076 9 62 47 2 3388 29 57 47 f'osprra MlsterCrd I 20 42 09 99 NuvPI2 095 15 13 030 1337 180 2371 4206 II MatadorR n 9 66 37 NuvQP~ 066 9 35 508 ~:~~- ) 28 1539 4295 I ll 030 1994 t 25 N;iio 1448 1575 )32 967 4000 30 124 35 52 14 NxStageMd 1342 028 1622 114 11 23 t 07 1 08 + 08 OCZTech 4 83 244 6835 250 4040 +21 He-manE 096 28 46 07 OGEE~ 157 :.469 t 07 072 2635 565 +04 f!JdsCty l 32 664 93 +29 OM Group 17 37 t l 07 020 1151 717 2847 t i O JonesLL 040 7086 360 606 04 ORe lo/Au 84 95 t 31 ~~~~ ~ ~ 6772 2598 22 124 5977 02 OSISys 73 56 t149 JonesSdah 44 ftn~B ) 56 5582 5400 t 46 1 52 +24 OaktreeC n 1 34 JosABank 4053 3270 +08 142 HuntBn<sh l 16 647 070 5447 Je>,<Gibl 280 8 81 31 OaosPet 440 143 83 +72 4004 f!Jntgb ~g I 02 49 OS 48 Oba~Med 1844 Jr¢\lwk Hunt mn 040 14 48 1278 t OS 080 8878 12 OccPet 216 KBHome 010 10 32 3738 0 31 525 +04 fljatt KBRklc 020 2739 1373 +22 Oceaneeg 072 69 036 564 t 03 f!Jpordyn 020 1564 3 30 01 OdcZiff 047 72 92 08 Oclaro 291 •••mt:.~••• 070 1452 28 24 +OS Ocwerfn DOS 26 52 17 lAC~te 084 918 6 80 12 OdysMa IAMI>dg 2 65 OHceD~ 17 47 +25 160 52 55 t 26
::"'Y sm t ~~ ::m tOI t 22
How to Read the Market in Review
Ow
Last
Chg
Name
llREnergy 1 95 Cihoc360 GM kTech GMCI!IC llualcom I 00 lluai~Ss 0 70 lluanexBid 01 6
Name
1753 1770 2179 1187 6252 1852 1773
30 t 62 +44 t24 + 13 t 20 + 13
SmartBal
OuanlaSvc
24 77 + 22
SmlhWos SmlhAO Sm!hiF Smucker SnapOn Srryllance Socl&M SodaSinn Sohu ern
ilrtmOSS lluanf u h
I 60 80
01
OualeiTa g
35
02
Sola Winds
0 68 5927
10
S<Jazyme
llsiDag
27 95 + 03
QuestSI
iluesll Ouestcor
206
06
Clk•I Res
415 285 467 1577 377 1760 1244 2663 1180 2322 53 91 317 295 27 43 6566 15251 471 9669 6663 3529 4760 5624 1043 25 49 40 60 55 72
t 14 +OS t 02 +02 t06 t06 23 +16 +20 06 + 71 05 01 + 06 t1 07 t29 t09 11 +41 + 06 +14 t 13 +OS + 30 07 +59
OU kSWI
F\1\ITF n 0 32 PBS piG PfMcO PLJ LodgT 0 66 RPCs 0 32 PPM 0 86 RPXCorp RTl lntiM Rackspace RadanGrp 0 01 Rad aSIJc RaiiAmer Ralccrp Pl.au en 1 60 Rarnbus Randgold 040 RangRs 01 6 RJamesfn 0 52 Rayoner s I 76 Raytheon 200 ReaiD RealPage Fltyln<o I 75 RedHat
31 60
+ 53
+ 02 +01 t 19 + 14 10 t1 64
0 04 0 24 0 96 I 00 I 08
1352 6816 1389 4795 2290 13758 705 1703 5708 5217 75 57
10 +I 03 + 07 +45
5 98
1 28
Rerlen ReriACt 0 64 Rerlech I 06 RentochNn 4 68 Repu bAir Repu b5Vc 094 Rec:hMotn ResMed 0 68 ResouteEn
398 36 25 225 33 72 4 95 28 73 752 3679 921
+ 07 +t 91 20 + 06 04 t 34 , 11
ResoUteF
1260
+01
0 80 563 0 56 1252 0 66 1036 1268 2 36 4659 1 64 4771 049 1925 120 1987 0 20 5997 0 60 28 47 0 80 64 77 0 36 II 90 I 88 71 44 1 20 4933 140 4658 1993 1 58 4095 0 55 10500 440 44 25 0 56 6850 092 768 1496 3562 228 5328 698 1 44 1997 2224 040 2574 3 44 73 56 344 7095 0 60 7564 I !13 325 676 2711 1 24 4127 0 12 2447 048 1205 1 48 6396 61 44 I 98 48 65 0 30 2139 1463 I 00 8094 1 91 2525 1 63 2477 0 50 1625 0 10 4799 3 67 13172 SpriG~d 15563 Spr1 Euro50 1 31 2936 Spri i~RE 1 51 3867 SPMd 1 69 17579 S&PSOOfTF270 140 95 Sprl ~v 1 79 5716 SpriHome 0 23 2237 Spr1 S&PBk 041 22 33 Sprlr\VIiE 208 730S Spr1 LTBd 2 12 4094 SpriShTHY0 64 3014 Spr1 Let-HI 363 3964 Spr1 NuBST 0 29 2437 SprlrNuBMu 0 84 24 27 Sprl Lei 3bll 4581 Spr1 S&PRB048 2749 Spr1 Retl 0 58 60 34 Spr1 PIYm 056 5877 Spr1 OGEx 045 5357 Spr1 MetM 0 56 4102 SPXCp 1 00 6347 STEC 696 S1M 0 040 588 STR Hldgs 3 38 SVB F4 57 43 SABESP 296 8834 SabraHic 1 32 1879 SafeBuk 0 60 634 Safeway 0 70 1602 StJoe 1854 StJude 0 92 3856 Sales 11 61 Salesorce 14413 SalxPiim 45 73 Sai~Bty 2705 SarnsO&G 115 SanchezE n 17 44 Sar-.te~m 0 68 4043 Sari)"' 4156 Sar-.!Rdge 647 Sar-.tPMss 313 2563 Sar-.!RdgP 243 1971 Sarin 1\1 880 Sanoi I 76 4221 Sanoi rt I 40 Sarlarus 614 &q;ert 0 35 995 Sarepta ~ 920 Saro 2 11 421 0 SavientP h 96 Sctdmbrg 110 7387 Scm!zer 0 7 29 29 Schoh~c 0 50 30 92 Si:tw.!JSM~ 0 61 33 76 Schwab 0 24 13 05 SoCione 4 74
04 t 06
RedRobin
I 00 0 76 0 84 I 85 1 84
Renll'NEn n
ResrceCap Reta iOpp Reta Prpn ResEnergy ReynAmer FloTinto FltcheBr FlteAd Flve berrT Rob!Mjor RobtHan Roci<Ten Rockvlfn Rock MAul RockColl RockwdH Rofin>nar RogCm gs Roper RosttaGrs RoselaR RossStrs s Roundysn Rov Corp Rowan RoyaBk g PBScotlnd PBSctprl PBSctprT RyiCarb RoyOStiiB RoyOStiiA RoyGid Royale En Rub<ong Rubylues ue21 Ryde lljtand SAIC SAP AG SBA Com SCANA SEIInv SK~ m SLG een SLG npiC SLGnpft SLM..p SM Energy SpriDJIA
Se~Gamcs
6 69
Scotts Si:nppsNcl Si:nppsEW SeabGidg Sead IILtd SeagateT
1 30 4273 048 5913 1014 1501 3 28 4040 1 28 3411 Seal~ 0 52 1355 SearsH~gs 0 33 5660 Seaspan I 00 17 39 SeattGen 25 79 SdCmlrt 28 46 SdMedl-ld 1057 SemGroup 3525 Sem praEn 2 40 69 29 Semi ch 2489
Senesco 24 Ser/ious 1 52 2216 Serlious 421 41 24 04 Sensa!aT 31 02 ~enom 346 Serv<eCp 0 24 1298 ServNow n
29 68
SvcSource SvArts rsh ShandaGs 1 02
:~g
080 208 136 0 64 1 04
040
0 65 2026 +15 SoltaMed 39 57 + 59 Somaxan h
Qu cklog
RedwdTr RegaEiel RegaEnt RgcyCtrs RegnoyEn Regen n f\e901sfn RogsCp RetnsGrp ReiSt AI Rem•Re
Solera
D1v
097
t02
+56
+ 09 01 1 43 +19 t 03 + 62 +13 + 29 + 56 + 01 56 t iO t 81 +41 +13 +23 14 15 + 96 t 01 +18 t 46 + 87 02 t 09 t 16 t il + 28 t il t 41 21 t il +12 t1 12 t 38 24 t il 34 t 82 37 t iO t OS +51 07 01 t 19 +55 t06 t 50 OS t 03 t123 +16 +12 t 07 t 11 t 37 36 02 17 02 04
SondeR grs
SoocAut SoncCorp
SonocoP SonjCp Sothel>ys SouFun
Spansron Spo;t afn 112 Spoo!Ph SpritAoro SpriAr Splunkn
~::d ~ ~ ~~
Si~Et.Jwts 0 48 46 47
49
Chg
t 14 116 +76 t24 +1 13 42 +12
Susser
Sv.fRGmTR SwfiEng S"'ftTrans Sv;sherH If Syke:>Ent Symartec Syrncoc n Syrnptrcs Syn lYon SynergyRs Syncpsys
Syn:rvus SyntaPhm Sysco TALirll TCFFncl TOA rer~ TE Comect TECO TtCCC.p TIMPart TJXs TPCGrp TRV/Auto mATch twtelecom TawSem
004 I OS 240 020 024 0 84 088 116 046
050
TakeTwo
ToroCos
Toyota TradSupp TrCda g TmsatlPot TransceptP TransOigm Tran ocn
~:~!':h
TreeHsef Tnm~eN TnnaSola
~~~~~t
Skechers Skullcandy
~: . ~ ~:~,~·
si:~ : ~ ~v~!Rs
Chg
03 til 21 tSI +03 t 125 t25 01 t 88 tOI t83 t 32 24 t 28 15 t09 46 03 03 t203 +1 09 t 26 +03 t iS 01 +81 02 t40 t34 tiS 46 t27 27 22 t75 t69 t85 +20 16 t04 t02 t 03 + 21
121 121 240 t53 +2 62 21 18 tOI +50 t 13 01 +27 +19
938
t31 +27 +18 +1 12 08 +05 19 +50 +22 +82 +12 07 +05 +07 01
104 4269
0 92 40 22 002 20 73 28 39 030 12 49 897 3046 60 5053 044 3705 80 67 ~ : 4929 040 2369 5374 040 363 8021 0 52 0 80 9010 176 4551 I 07 540 128 47 316 4802 l OS 184 63 75 4904 4623 468 044 2801 3396 573 016 6322
°
°
0 60
last
10 71 25 12 8086 8809 1015 11 82 44 72 83 1801 I 02 1396 820 8590 22 48 22 58 1227 5596 34 54 35 74 123 71 20 47 2422 763 1820 213 5433 526 7658 3265 33 17 1887 35 19 2237
054 036
Sil!llnfld 0 48 4068 + 35 Tnnly Silic&n 879 + 01 TnpAdv n ~hcnlmg 515 06 TnChJrt Silert.ab 3937 +38 TnumphGp Sihcnrvlotn 1669 + 54 Tronox s 1 00 ~cnwae 0 24 551 03 TruoRelrg 0 80 SilverBull 49 00 Trunkhow ~lvStd g 1254 +16 TrstNY 026 SilvWhtn g 0 37 30 75 ', 31 ~rue~: 92 9 20 ~~~~~ ~ ~ ISm +I 22 Tumlidn
~:,
DIV
011 088 108 080
006
5 39 1134 14 00 14 91 2012 1913 30 19 35 76 3878 35 78 44 89 7196 1498 3663 30 17 3728 621 6 01 25 95 11 49 438 4810 5401 22 71 1465 4135 2514 13 OS 929 I 70 9013 3393 2043 795 40 95 3064 90S 2412 22 89 6495 5 75 54 11 638 45 39 3 78 614 845 22 94 16 98 3214 47 60 4? 60 50S 4 34 8 34 IOOS 101 2502 21 94 2 36 287 18 38 I 0 58 3818 8 66 20 89 8 64 204 13 70 I 67 794 2974 21 91 2 94 80 91 200 6 84 30 65 3510 1043 1682 3516 1779 970 21 Iii 45 02 39 47 42 22 9 32 24 03 1442
027 1337 0 84 33 03 20 09 158 4348 2 57 40 35 4 93 144 6450 256 5 50 036 2075 185 7921 2827 50 28 080 2902 I 27 31 86 053 441 t 53 0 93 II 92 057 909 I 86 24 68 1240 049 24 56 17 00 008 330 0~ 947 31 21 076 4067 5 22 29 80 7540 1543 21 09 075 1975 2940 048 38 41 26 77 660 0 99 40 50 43 98 41 00 068 2990 0 36 1718 0 08 26 80 26 76 052 5 56 010 141 2 30 I 28 29 84 0 60 32 39 31 33 40 00 236 9254 11 35 7 75 2 77 I 00 48 75 128 5941 084 5048 224 89 77
Name
UBSAG UDR UGICo p URS USAnw
100
Spr11allrm 0 40 18 22
SprrntNex SprattSilv SprottGcjd STAG lndl I 08 Stagestrs 040 Stamps cm Stancrpfn 0 89 SP Matls 0 74 SPHithC 074 SPCnSt 091 SP Consum 064 SP Engy 115 SPDRfnd 023 SP k1ds 074 SPTec:h 040 SP Uti 141 StdPac Stan~kOk 196 StanB&Oo2 144 Staples 0 44 StarScient Starbucks 0 68 StarwciHI 050 StarwciPT 176 Stat~ rtf 060 Statestr 096 StatolASA 112 Stl[)jrom 040 Steelcse 036 StemCI sh Stencycle Stens 076 StedF WA 060 Stedte 015 SMadden Sti!OF n St iN!rM StoneEngv StoneMor 2 34 StralaSjiS St alHolels Sb)<er 085 Studertli g 056 SturmRug I 05 SubPpne 341 SumiMtsu SunHih Suriffng 144 SunCokeE Suncor gs 0 52 Sunoco 0 80 Sunocol s 188 SurJlpta Surl'owe Surr seSen Sunstrljij Sirtec:h SunH 020 SupE rgy Sui>ialu 0 35 supportcm SurMod c SusqBnc 0 24
~:~ : ~ ~~=:at
2 60 W t tl tl 02 02 + 62 Sll.Jtt fly 31 50 + 56 Side u ~c 043 509 11 41 43 Si!l"'a!Bk 64 32 +42
032 032 2!10
Soucef1re Soumco 196 StlroCoppe 166 SmWrt 004 Sl'<lrfn91
776 +18 ~~~~Ag 03 00 347 + 06 TolaiSys
Sheri'An I 56 138 37 Stinerlm:l 19 Sliplin 1 56 1513 Sli e 046 9505 ShoreTef 435 SliJffiMl~ 1438
120
Sonus
lalsmEg langerfac langoe Til gaRes t iS la gaRslP t26 la gacept t25 la get t 26 laseko 04 lASER 01 lataMot'" 03 laubmn t 02 Teaml-lth t 21 TeciOJta +117 Tec~Res g +43 Tee~oy t iO Tee~oyH t iS TtCmSys II TtcmArg 37 Tellblo +17 TeleiBras I t 09 Telefsp t157 Tel Data +17 ToleTech 02 Tellabs 02 Tmpl>b 25 TempurP t161 Tena• tl 03 Tenetl-llll t OS Tenneco 47 Toradata 15 Toradyn 11 TorO< +57 Tornum 02 TesuMot 04 Tesoro +10 TetaTc +78 TetaTec:h 01 TovaPiim 02 TxCapBsh 60 Texas lnds 47 Texh~ 07 TexRdhse + 07 Tex~on + 20 The avnce 10 Themofs 49 ThoStroot +92 ThomCI1cg 18 Thorn sonR +16 Thor lnds t 16 Thoratec + 17 30Sys +06 3MCo 12 3SBo +143 llYshdPhm + 07 TibcoSft 1 02 lidv.tr + 06 liffa"J + 25 THcrlong +53 TWCa~e 04 lim Warn 16 limken + 04 Titan ~tl +17 litanMach +04 litanMet 48 TiV nc +09 TollBros +02 To chmark 2 60
010
last
11 84 8 60 5185 1934 78 97 6312 22 57 60 34 3767 3933 55 76 1326 4319 281 28 96 1779 912 3054 I 75 1139 3224 1440 4945 4639 3250 902 31 80 1201 2943 12 50 2513 2032 29 29
144
1947 + 05 Twcttblnv I 60 1616 + 39 Tycolrtl 1 !10 SkyWest 01 6 814 10 Tyson 016 SkywksS<J 28 58 65 U-V-W-X-Y-Z
+04 +01 +34 t85 + 07 09 +34 +25
124 oos 040 228
020 052 2~1 5 214 7799 5678 085 5282 4090 020 3962 052 19 44 96 1 45 2 59 51 3124 1880 288 14925 809 075 4993 2431 174 1802 174 17 54 5127 ValeroE 070 2860 Vodus I 00 3282 065 9 64 V~Mlcp Vomort 090 12768 Vospo 080 5139 VaiVIS A I 113 VoueC~ck 1542 Vancelnlo 904 VandaPtm 403 VanglniBd 422 88 71 VongSTBd 164 81 13 VangTatBd 287 84 18 Van~DvY 137 49 78 VangGrth 076 70 71 VangTSM 143 7194 VongValu 150 5753 VanS&PoOO I 25 64 49 VangPEIT 212 6581 Vang!Mp 120 5882 Vangt\IWI 137 42 45 VangEmg 091 41 16 VangEu 191 44 70 Van~tR 240 2850 VanS!CpB 188 79 70 VanLTCpB 395 9018 VanntCpB 310 8599 VangEAFE I 06 3263 Vantagellrl 150 Vantiv n 2234 VarorM d 58 76 Vo:torGp 160 1699 Vectren 140 29 12 Veecolnst 3560 vot 785 953 248 6396 078 1028 2492 8400 4769 4883 200 44 19 5442 3789 110 4964 347 10 20 2749 2632 2521 088 12906 996 25 4039 5555 255 2301 9460 199 29 63 27 94 2525 213 276 81 42 24 69 1 13 3 08 004 39 14 032 1737 WoLHOd 160 4053 1542 WMS WPXEnn 1458 Wabash 6 65 WASCO 5694 Wadd.IR I 00 29 65 WaiMlrt 159 7445 110 35 56 Wai!Pl WalterEn 050 3679 Walterlnv 022 2643 Wa -.acc 4904 WarnerOl 1742 WarenRs 300 Wastfed 032 1601 WRErT 120 2643 WasteCcm 036 80 43 WsteMhc 142 3533 7833 7983 044 37 27 75 1215 1715 1512 1538 070 48 72 116 27 50 54 19 57 80 3397 828 1064 440 23 35 5930 4769 29 67 1043 642 2080 44 17 2683 17 59 22 6693 3759 302 060 2386 200 7177 44 57 286 995 184 20 26 056 9446 555 125 8237 317 51 18 088 3644 I OS 3667 646 I 00 9 59 II 02 120 38 94 658 208 5357 015 17 08 450 048 44 85 7310 01 5 3592 052 2208 6535 20 63 092 5086 200 1!10 21 044 23 15 321 1503 108 2862 886 017 7 24 088 3359 01 6 285 2 68 040 2429 030 1249 2 00 168 1195 14 76 026 1509 20 13 22 11 189 1803 114 6590 8 19 135 36 13 072 6185 00 1916 5 17 8 14 2 62 84 32 306
01
t92 +11 II tiS +93 t17 29 32 tSI 11 t02 +05 tl 04 t65 t 11 02 +25 04
33 30 02 t16 t16 t Ot t07 +30 +18 06 II 01 t07 tOI 116 37 II
02 t14 t159 t06 t43 03 t 29 +28 t08 t30 t29 t 72 19 14 t89 t120 t 36 +03 + 82 t09 19 t 56 61 +02 01 24 94 05 23 t53 34 t20 t43 +02 t40 t07 tOI 26 tOI 55 t14 +08 37 t02 50 +58 +44 +13 t86 +156 t52 12 til +24 t20 t36 +12 tl 00 35 +81 + 17 31 06 t47 08 +41 til ti ll t 90 tOI t 01 04 t 02 t 35 +31 +47 28 t04 t04 +20 +17 32 04 Ill +24 tl 09 t16 t25 t62 t23 04 +73 12 +22 t06 23 t 37 05 t08 14 OS 02 t04 tOI 29 t43 +34 +01 +17 t 69 t23 +23 +67 +09 tiS t 09 15 +14 t06 +23 t 06 22 +23 t09 t OI 24 +03 +03 07 18 +41 35 05 +03 41 t 37 00 t35 +12 t04 tOI t 25 t04
THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Recovery Continued from E1 Here is a closer look at how the comeback from the Great Recession stacks up with the others:
The economy has only slowly come back from the deep recession that ended in June 2009. The Associated Press compared the current economic recovery with eight earlier post-World War II recoveries that lasted at least three years. By nearly every measure, this is the weakest.
Feeble growth America's gross domestic product - the broadest measure of economic output - grew 6.8 percent from the April-June quarter of 2009 through the same quarter this year, the slowest in the first three years of a postwar recovery. GDP grew an average of 15.5 percent in the first three years of the eight other comebacks analyzed. The engines that usually drive recoveries aren't firing this time. Investment in housing, which grew an average of nearly 34 percent this far into previous postwar recoveries, is up just 8 percent since the April-June quarter of 2009. That's because the overbuilding of the mid-2000s left a glut of houses. Prices fell and remain depressed. The housing market has yet to return to anything close to full health even as mortgage rates have plunged to record lows. Government spending and investment at the federal, state and local levels was 4.5 percent lower in the second quarter than three years earlier. Three years into previous postwar recoveries, government spending had risen an average 12.5 percent. In the first three years after the 1981-82 recession, during President Ronald Reagan's first term, the economy got a jolt from a 15 percent increase in government spending and investment. This time, state and local governments have been slashing spending - and jobs. And since passing President Barack Obama's $862 billion stimulus package in 2009, a divided Congress has been reluctant to try to help the economy with federal spending programs. Trying to contain the $11.1 trillion federal debt has been a higher priority. Since June 2009, governments at all levels have slashed 642,000 jobs, the only time government employment has fallen in the three years after a recession. This long after the 1973-74 recession, by contrast, governments had added more than 1 million johs.
GOP GROWTH THREE YEARS INTO RECOVERY 30 percent- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -·
25 20 15 10 5 0
'48-49 '53-54 '60-61 '69-70 '73-75 '81-82 '90-91 '01 '07-09 RECESSION CYCLES
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE THREE YEARS LATER 10 percent - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -8.3% 8 ------------------------------------
6 -----------------4 2 0 '48-49 '53-54 '60-61 '69-70 '73-75 '81-82 '90-91
'01
GROWTH IN RESIDENTIALINVESTMENTTHREE YEARS LATER
~
AlaskAir s Avista BkofAm BarrettB Boeing CascooBcp CascdeCp CoiSprtw Costco CrattBrew FUR Sys HewlettP HmFOOID Intel Keycorp Kroger Lattice LaPac MDURes MentorGr Microsoft
PE
Last Chg %Chg
116 04 44 176
12 17 8 36 13
34.11 26.28 7.87 25.66 73.07 4.97 47.09 52.07 96.47 7.94 20.84 19.29 10.14 26.27 8.23 22.09 3.83 12.73 22.09 15.67 30.20
140
88 110 28
53
9 18 27 53 14 7
22 .901 20 46
67
80
11 8 21 9 19 15 15
+.14 -.17 +.09 +.26 -.30 +.1 9 t.B4 +.1 2 t .BO +.32 +.09 -.07 +.43 -.21 +.01 -.26 +.1 8 +.22 +.07 +.29 t.D7
'01
NY HSBC Bank US NY Mere Gold NY Mere Silver
The Associated Press
Exhausted consumers Consumer spending has grown just 6.5 percent since the recession ended, the feeblest in a postwar recovery. In the first three years of previous recoveries, spending rose an average of nearly 14 percent. It's no mystery why consumers are being frugal. Many have lost access to credit, which fueled their spending in the 2000s. Home equity has evaporated and credit cards have been canceled. Falling home prices have slashed home equity 49 percent, from $13.2 trillion in 2005 to $6.7 trillion early this year. Others are spending less because they're paying down debt or saving more. Household debt peaked at 126 percent of after-tax income in mid-2007 and has fallen to 107 percent, according to Haver Analytics. The savings rate has risen from 1.1 percent of after-tax income in 2005 to 4.4 percent in June. Consumers have cut credit card debt by 14 percent - to $865 billion - since it peaked at over $1 trillion in December 2007. "We were in a period in which we borrowed too much ," says Carl Weinberg, chief economist at High Frequency Economics. "We are now deleveraging. That's a
process that slows us down."
The jobs hole The economy shed a staggering 8.8 million jobs during and shortly after the recession. Since employment hit bottom, the economy has created just over 4 million jobs. So the new hiring has replaced 46 percent of the lost jobs, by far the worst performance since World War II. In the previous eight recoveries, the economy had regained more than 350 percent of the jobs lost, on average. During the 1981-82 recession, the U.S. lost 2.8 million jobs. In the three years and one month after that recession ended, the economy added 9.8 million - replacing the 2.8 million and adding 7 million more. Never before have so many Americans been unemployed for so long three years into a recovery. Nea rly 5.2 million have b een out of work for six months or more. The longterm unemployed account for 41 percent of the jobless; the highest mark in the other recoveries was 22 percent. Gregory Mann, 58, lost his job as a real estate appraiser three years ago. "Basically, I am looking for anything," he says. He has applied to
Dtv
PE
Last Chg %Chg
--------------~~ NikeB 1.44 20 94.22 -.69 -2.2
-9.1 +2.1 t 41.5 t28.6 -.4 t1 3.5 -.2 +11.9 +15.8 t 31.9 -16.9 -25.1 -2.5 t8.3 t 7.0 -8.8 -35.5 t 57.7 +2.9 t 15.6 t 16.3
Nordstrm NwstNG OfficeMax Paccar
1.08
1.78 08
.80
18 21 11 12
P~narSy
PlwrCrk PrecCastpt Safeway Schnitzer Sherwin Stancrpfn Starbucks TriQuin1 Umpqua USBarap Washf ed WellsFargo WstCstBcp Weyerhsr
Pvs Day $1599.00 $1 599.40
$27.756
1.68 .12 .?Of .75 1.56 .89f
.68 .36f .78
.32 .88 .60
$1 trillion last year - a drop of more than $370 billion, or 27 percent. That amounts to shrinking income for many retirees. Washington isn't doing much to help the economy. An impasse between Obama and congressional Republicans brought the U.S. to the brink of default on the federal debt last year -a confrontation that rattled financial markets and sapped consumer and business confidence. Given the political divide, businesses and consumers don't know what's going to happen to taxes, government spending or regulation. Sharp tax increases and spending cuts are scheduled to kick in at year's end unless Congress and the White House reach a budget deal. In the meantime, it's difficult for consumers to summon the confidence to spend and businesses the confidence to hire and expand. Never in the postwar period has there been so much uncertainty about what policymakers will do, says Steven Davis, an economist at the
NYSE
37 18 9 13 28 10 27 15 12 13 11 12 37
56.51 49.41 5.03 4109 133 4D.20 160.1 9 16.02 29.29 138.37 30.19 48.10 5.73 12.27 33.17 16.01 33.97 20.22 2386
+.07 +.17 -.16 +.19 +.03 -.02 +.32 -.11 -.47 -2.60 +.01 +1.67 +.04 t.09 +.15 +.24 t .Ol t .43 +.16
+13.7 t3.1 t 10.8 t9.7 -30.4 +10.0 -2.8 -23.9 -30.7 t55.0 -17.9 t 4.5 t 17.7 -1.0 +22.6 +14.4 t 23.3 t29.6 t27.8
Prime rate nme period
Pen:ent
Last Previous day A weekago
3.25 3.25 3.25
Most Active ($1 or more) Name
Voi(OO)
Last Chg
2012
*
AwARD WINNER for:
BEST KITCHEN
*
B EST I NTERIOR F I NISH
SpnrtNex 13657D8 5.39 BkofAm 711859 7.87 S&P500ETF 644887 140.95 348314 2.64 NokiaCp Ge~Eiec 2858D9 20.00
t.40 +.09 +.16 +.15 +.02
Gainers ($2 or more) Name
Last
Chg o/oChg
CSVlgBrnt Cellcom US Silica n ProUPacex Tronox s
60.00 t16.89 7.45 +.84 11 .82 t1.25 30.84 +3.14 24.00 +2.28 Last
NovaGid g UraniumEn
+.07 -.26 +.07 t.21 +.21
Gainers ($2 or more) Name
Name
-8.1 eMagin -8.1 Contango -7.6 Vringo -7.6 W ~rdSftrs -6.6 Medgenwt
Diary Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows
51391 2.25 30067 3.08 25087 14.51 22859 4.50 16317 2.59 Last
Chg %Chg
4.19 +1.95 t 87.1 10.26 +1.25 t13.9 4.00 t .38 t10.3 2.59 +.21 +8.8 2.94 +.1 8 +6.5 Losers ($2 or more)
Chg %Chg
MiiiMda n 11 .42 -1.00 ServNow n 29.68 -2.60 CSVInvBrnt 39.75 -3.25 XuedaEd 2.68 -.22 SimsMe1al 9.12 -.64
Rentech Vri~JO Chen~reEn
Last Chg
t39.2 lmpacMtg t 12.7 eUn 2yrEq t11.8 ASp eeRily t11.3 UraniumEn t1 0.1 SynergyRs
Losers ($2 or more) Name
Nasdaq
Amex Vot(OO)
Last
Chg %Chg
3.79 -.34 55.12 -4.76 3.08 -.26 4.50 -.29 4.10 -.25
Name
Voi(OO)
Staples SinusXM Clxo Face book ~ M~ronT
Last Chg
867844 11.49 -1 .97 757519 2.55 t.02 494544 17.35 +.18 449906 21.20 t.82 342335 6.49 -.06
Gainers ($2 or more) Name
Last
Chg %Chg
SeGNtl ~ RenewEn n LoJack AlphaOmg PhysnsFm
3.49 +.89 +34.2 5.98 t1.28 +27.2 2.89 t.47 t19.4 10.34 +1 .63 +18.7 4.21 +.53 +14.4 Losers ($2 or more)
Name
Last
-8 2 -7.9 -7.8 -6.1 -5.7
ForbEnSv Ci1iTreoos Staples SmithWes CdnSolar
3.50 -.86 -1 9.7 12.53 -2.21 -15.0 11.49 -1.97 -14.6 8.60 -1.16 -11.9 2.71 -.34 -11.0
238 189 30 457 2 8
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows
Diary 1,005 Advanced 1,11 2 Declined 103 Unchanged 3,120 Total issues 100 New Highs 17 New Lows
*
BEST VALUE
~GREG
WELCH CONSTRUCTION
Bend, Oregon · 541.420 .1497 grcgwclchconstructton.com
Your Premier North West Custom Home Builder Outstandmg customer servtce. mtegnty and a connmtment to quah ty are at the heart of every Greg Welch custom-bmlt smgle fmmly home .
Indexes
Most Active ($1 or more) Most Active ($1 or more) Name
University of Chicago Booth School of Business: "No one is sure what will actually happen." As weak as this recovery is, it's nothing like what the U.S. went through in the 1930s. The period known as the Great Depression actually included two severe recessions separated by a recovery that lasted from March 1933 until May 1937. It 's tough to compare the current recovery with the 1933-37 version. Economic figures comparable to today's go back only to the late 1940s. But calculations by economist Robert Coen, professor emeritus at Northwestern University, suggest that things were far bleaker during the recovery three-quarters of a century ago: Coen found that unemployment remained well above 10 percent - and usually above 15 percent throughout the 1930s. Only the approach and outbreak of World War II - the ultimate government stimulus program - restored the economy and the job market to full health.
COBA TouR OF HoMEs™
Market recap YTD
Name
Price(troyoz.) $1605.00 $1603.70 $27805
'07-09
Sources: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis; U.S. Dept. of Labor
Precious metals Metal
Shrinking paychecks Usually, workers' pay rises as the economy picks up momentum after a recession. Not this time. Employers don't have to be generous in a weak job market because most workers don't have anywhereto go. As a result, pay raises haven't kept up with even modest levels of inflation. Earnings for production and nonsupervisory workers - a category that covers about 80 percent of the private, nonfarm workforce - have risen just over 6.2 percent since June 2009. Consumer prices have risen nearly 7.2 percent. Adjusted for inflation, wages have fallen 0.8 percent. In the previous five recoveries -the records go back only to 1964 - real wages had gone up an average 1.5 percent at this point. Falling wages haven't hurt everyone. Lower labor costs helped push corporate profits to a record 10.6 p ercent of U.S. GDP in the first three months of 2012, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. And those surging profits helped lift the Dow Jones industrials 54 percent from the end of June 2009 to the end of last month. Only after the recessions of 194849 and 1953-54 did stocks rise more. Stock investments may b e coming back, but savings are still getting squeezed by the rock-bottom interest rates the Fed has engineered to boost the economy. The money Americans earn from interest payments fell from nearly $1.4 trillion in 2008 to barely
~
'48-49 '53·54 '60·61 '69-70 '73-75 '81-82 '90·91
YTD Dlv
'07-09
70 percent ----------------------------------60 - - - - -
Northwest stocks Name
McDonald's, Target and Nordstrom's. "Nothing, not even a rejection letter," he says. His wife, a registered nurse, has lost two jobs in the interim - and just received an offer to work reviewing medical records near Atlanta. "We are broke and nearly homeless ," he says. "If this job for my wife hadn't come through, we would be out on the street come Sept. 1 or would have had to move in with relatives." Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has called long-term unemployment a "national crisis." The longer people remain unemployed, the harder it is to find work, Bernanke has said. Skills erode, and people lose contact with former colleagues who could help with the job search.
Worst recovery since the Great Depression
E3
Chg %Chg
Diary 1,712 755 115 2,582 60 41
52-Week Low
High
Name
13,338.66 10,404.49 Dow Jones Industrials 5,390.11 3,950.66 Dow Jones Transportatkm 499.82 4t 0.92 Dow Jones Utilities 8,327.67 6,414.89 NYSEComposite 2,498.89 1,941.99 Amex Index 3,134.17 2,298.89 Nasdaq Compffirte 1,422.38 1,074.77 S&P500 14,951 .57 11,208.42 Wilshire 5000 847.92 601.71 Russeii 200J
lasl
Net Chg
13,1 64.78 5,142.03 481.37 8,029.01 2,420.90 3,030.93 1,405.53 14,651.10 804.26
-7.36 t60.25 -2.17 t9.48 -21.03 t1 3.95 +1.60 t 36.24 +7.38
World markets Here is how key intern ati onal st ock markets pe rf orm ed Wednes day. Malt<et Amstercllm Brussels Pars London Frankfurt Hong Kong Mexico Milan New Zealand
Close
% Change
333.18 2.351.68 3.449.20 5.833.04 6.946.80 20.052.29 40.793.48
+.09 s +.05 s -.03 t -.54 t
To~;o
Seoul Singapore Sydooy Zurth
- (J3
t 1.19 -.45 +.12
·.86 t .46 +.11 t .25 t .93
Dollar vs:
PVs Day 1.0499 1.5690 1.0087 .002077 .1572 1.2330 .1289 .012692 .076128 .0314 .000885 .1495 1.0266 .0334
lntVouel 26.34 -0.05 +8.2 Tweedy Browne: GbiValue 24.46 -0.03 +11.9 VanguardAdmiral: BaiAdm 2347 tOOl t 8.8 GAITAdm 11.64 -0.02 t4.5 CpOpAdl 75.56 +0.52 +10.9 EMAdmrr 3428 -O.ot +8.3 Energy 112.72 -0.02 +1.8 EqlnAdmn50.42 +0.02 +11.5 ExtdAdm 43.67 t0.33 t i i .O 500Adm 129.95 t0.20 tf3.3 GNMAAd 11.03 -0.02 +1 .7 GIWAdm 36.40 t0.11 tl 5.2 HtllCr 60.00 t0.20 +f0.6 HY1dCp 5.96 -O.ot +9.1 lnfProAd 28.62 ·0.19 t 3.8 ITBdAdm 12.00 -0.05 t4.4 ITsryAdm 11.71 -0.04 +1.6 lnlGrAdm 56.91 -0.03 t 9.5 ITAdrrJ 14.30 -0.02 t4.0 ITGrAdm 1028 -0.03 +5.9 t 1.3 LtdTrAd 11.17 LTGrAdm 10.69 -0.12 t7.4 LTAdm 11.70 -0.02 +5.8 MCpAdm 98.32 tO.&l t l0.3 MuKYAdm11.17 -0.02 t 6.8 PrmCapr 71.11 +0.31 +11.0 ReitAdmr 9329 t0.47 +15.4 001 • ShtTrAd 15.93 t0.8 STIGrAd 10.79 -001 t3.0
Eqlnc 24.05 +0.01 +1 1.4 Elqjr 71.27 t 0.67 t8.2 GNMA 11.03 -0.02 +1.7 HYCmp 5.96 -O.Dl +9.0 HthCre 142.18 t 0.48 t10.6 lnflaPro 14.;7 -0.10 +3.7 lniGr 17.88 -O.Dl +9.4 lniVal 28.67 ·0.04 +7.7 ITIGrade 10.28 -0.03 +5.9 LifeCoo 17.05 -0.02 +6.1 LifeGro 22.94 +0.02 +9.5 LifeMod 20.48 -O.Dl +7.8 IJIGrade 10.69 -0.12 +7.3 Mo~ 19.75 t 0.09 t13.1 Mulnt 14.30 -0.02 t 3.9 PrmcpCor 14.82 +0.00 +9.9 Prmcp r 6851 +0.30 t1 1.0 SeiValu r 20.I 2 t 0.05 t8.2 STAR 20.19 -0.02 t 8.7 STIGrade 10.79 -O.ot +2.9 StratEq 20.60 t 0.14 t1 2.3 TgtReUnc 12.!16 -0.03 t5.4 TgRe2010 23.93 -0.04 +0.7 TgtRe201513.23 -O.Dl t 7.6 TgRe2020 23.47 -O.Dl t8.2 TgtRe20251336 t 0.01 t8.9 TgRe2030 22.90 t0.02 t 9.5 Tg1Re203513.77 +0.02 +10.1 TgtRe204022.61 +0.03 +10.3
1
t
%Chg
1.0508 1.5687 1.01 12 .002071 .1571 1.2290 .1289 .012678 .076069 .0314 .000883 .1496 1.0232
Sni:Adm 37.01 t 0.30 TtlBAdm 11.10 -0.03 TSikAdm 35.01 +0.09 WalsiAdm58.79 ·0.16 WaltnAdm58.12 -0.04 1'>1ndsor 48.28 WdsriiAd 51 .07 t 0.07 Vanguartf Fds: CapOpp 32.70 +0-22
s s
t15.38 t1 2.34 t12.58 t8.22 t5.20 t20.68 t1 7.73 t16.52 t 14.24
Exchange Rate
S&PSel 22.17 t0.03 t l3.3 Seoul Funds: lnl 30.46 -OJJ6 t 9.7 SeqlKia 158.31 t0.;9 +8.8 TCWFunds: ToiRetBdl 10.08 -0.01 +8.5 Templelon lnslit: FortqS 18.11 -0.04 NA Thornburg Fds:
+.62 -.05 t 1.27 -.83 -.24 +.01
t 7.75 t 2.44 t 3.59 t7.38 t6.26 t 16.34 +11.76 +11.08 t 8.55
Key currency exchange rates Wednesday compared with late Tuesday in New York.
t s
3.631.19 8.925.04 1956.96 3002.11 4.307.04 6.011.82
-40 t
52-wk
Currencies Australia Dollar Brrtain Pound Canada Dollar Chile Peso ChinaYuan Euro Euro Hong Kong Dol~r JapanYen Mex~o Peso Russia Ruble So. KoreaWon Sweden Krona Switzerlrd Franc Tarwan Dollar
-1.18 t t .37 s
YTD %Chg
%Chg
.0334
Selected mutual funds YTD NAV Chg %Rei Name Amer Cenlury lnv: Eqlnc 7.89tO.DI +9.8 Growfhl 27.82 t0.08 t 13.2 Utra 25.92 t0.08 +13.1 AmericanfundsA: AmcpA p 20.91 t0.08 +11.5 AMuiAp 28.27 +0.02 +10.6 BaiAp 1990 tO.DI +104 BondAp 12.82 -0.04 t 3.9 CapiBAp 52.76 -O.D3 +9.2 CapWGAp3529 tO.OZ tl1.7 CapWAp 21.13 -0.06 t4.5 Eupaa\ p 38.51 +9.5 FdlnvAp 3924 +0.08 +11 .6 GovtAp 14.52 -0.03 t1 .4 G\vthAp 32.70 +0.12 tl3.8 HI TrAp tf 05 -001 t85 lncoA p 17.80 t 8.2 lntBdAp 13.71 -0.02 +1 .7 ICAA p 30.37 +0.05 +13.1 NEcoAp 27.48 t 0.13 t 15.6 NPerAp 29.54 t0.08 +12.9 ~WrfdA 50.61 -0.01 t9.7 SmCpAp 37.35 t0.13 t 12.6 TxExAp 13.02 -0.02 +6.4 WshAp 31 .04 +0.04 +10.5 Artisan funds: lnl 22.90 -0.15 +15.5 lniValr 2771 t O.OZ t 104 MidCap 37.93 t020 t 15.2 MidCapV~20.94 t0.09 +6.3 Baron funds: Growfh 5623 t0.43 t 10.2 Bernstein Fds: lntDur 14 06 -005 t 32 OvMu 14.84 -003 +2.0 BlackRod<A: Eqty[lv 19.70 -0.02 t 9.6 GI/>JA r 19.12 t 6.0 BlackRod< B&C: GI/>JCt 17.80 t 5.5 BlackRod< lnsll:
EquiiJDv 19.74 -0.02 t 9.7 Qb/>Jioc r 19.21 +6.2 Cohen & Steers: PltyShrs 68.39 t0.32 t l3.7 Columbia Class A: TxEA p 14.19 -D.03 t 6.6 ColumbiaCiass Z: Acorn Z 30.16 t0.25 +10.8 AcomlniZ 37.82 -D.03 +10.8 LgCapGr 13.27 t0.07 t l0.4 Credil Suisse Comm: ComRett 8.20+0.02 t02 DFAFunds: lntlCorEq 9.63 -Q.Ql +6.0 USCorEq1 11.95 +0.04 +11.8 USCorEq211.74 t0.05 +11.6 Davis Funds A: NYV01A 35.45 +0.04 t 9.1 Davis Funds Y: NYVenY 35.86 t0.04 +9.3 Delaware Invest A: ~ver Inc p 9.36 -0.04 t4.6 Dimensional Fds: EmMCrEq 18.59 t 8.5 EmMktV 27.68 t0.01 t72 lntSmVa 14.30 t0.01 +6.8 l.argECo 11.12 +0.02 +13.3 USLgVa 21.52 t0.06 t l3.4 US Small 22.48 t0.19 tiO.O USSmVa 25.74 +0.24 +11.5 lntlSmCo 14.46 -0.01 t 6.0 Rxd 10.34 tO.? lntVa 14.97 -D.02 t 3.7 l>b5Fxlnc 11.24 -0.01 t 3.5 2YQFxd 10.13 t 0.8 Dodge& Cox: Balanced 75.39.0.25 t l32 Income 13.74 -0.03 t 5.3 lniSik 31.44 +0.02 t 7.5 Stock 116.67 t0.55 t l 6.0 Dooblelinefunds: TRBd l 11.31 NA TRBd Np 11.30 NA Dreyfus:
Aprec 44.78 t0.01 +11 .4 Ealon Vance 1: RtgRI 9.02 +52 GbiMarAbR9.84t0.02 t2.7 FMI Funds: LgCapp 17.10 -D.01 +12.1 FPA Funds: Newlnco 10.65 +1.5 FPACres 28.26 t0.04 +6.4 Fairholme 29.87 t0.12 +29.0 Federaled lnsll: TotRetBd 11.48 -D.03 t4.1 Strl'aiDviS 5.15 -D.OI t8.4 FidelilyAdvisorA: Nwlnsghp 22.34 tO.OO +13.3 StrlnA 12.51 -D.03 t6.1 FidelilyAdvisorl: Nwlnsgtl 22.65 t0.D7 +13.5 Fidelily Freedom: FF2010 14.03 +7.4 FF2010K 12.85 -D.01 +7.5 FF2015 11.72 -D.OI t7.5 FF2015K 12.91 -D.01 +7.6 FF2020 14.18 t8.4 FF2020K 13.32 +8.5 FF2025 11.79 +9.3 FF2025K 13.44 t 9.4 FF2030 14.04 +9.6 FF2030K 13.58 +9.8 FF2035 11.62 tM1 +10.3 FF2035K 13.66 t0.02 t10.5 FF2040 8.11 t0.01 t10.4 FF2040K 13.69 tM1 +10.4 Fidelilylnvest AISoctEq 12.74 t0.02 t 13.4 AMgr50 16.06 -D.01 +7.8 AMg120r 13.21 -D.02 t4.7 Baanc 19.83 -D.01 t 9.9 BoancedK 19.83 t 10.1 BlueChGr 48.84 t0.20 t 15.1 C<1JAp 28.79t0.08t16.9 Cplncr 9.21 -D.02 t 10.1 Contra 76.66 t0.20 t 13.6 ContraK 76.67 t0.21 +13.7
DisEq Divlntl
24.20 t 0.03 +12.5 28.04 ·0.06 +9.9 Divr~ntK r 28.02 ·0.06 +10.0 DivGtll 29.38 t 0.09 t 13.6 Eq Inc 46.10 t O03 +13.1 EOII 19.39 t 0.01 +12.7 Rdel 35.25 t 0.02 t13.8 RtRateHi r 9.87 t4.4 GriMA 11.91 ·0.03 +2.2 Govllnc 10.84 ·0.03 +1.6 GruCo 95.34 +0.58 +17.9 Grolnc 20.62 t 0.02 t14.1 GrowthCoK95.33 t0.58 t18.0 Highlncr 9.15 ·0.01 +9.8 lntBd 11.04 ·0.02 t 3.1 lntmMu 10.61 ·0.02 t 3.4 lniDisc 30.42 ·0.07 +10.2 lnvGrBd 11.92 ·0.04 t 3.7 lnvGB 7.90 ·0.02 t4.1 l gCapVal 11.07 +0.02 t 9.9 L.owP r 39.87 t 0.10 +1 1.6 LowPnKr 39.87 t0.10 +11.7 Mag~ln 71.74 t 0.21 t14.1 MidGap 29.01 t 0.15 +1 1.1 Munilnc 13.45 ·0.03 t 5.6 NwMkt r 17.27 ·0.03 t12.7 OTC 59.86 t 0.31 t 9.4 1001ndex 10.12 t0.01 t14.7 Puritn 19.38 t10.5 PuritanK 19.38 +10.7 SAIISocEqF12.76 t0.03 t1 3.6 SCmdtyStrt 9.02 t 0.02 tO.? SCmdtyStrf9.05 t 0.03 +0.9 SrslnlGrw 11.22 ·0.02 +1 1.0 SrslntViJJ 8.78 ·0.01 t8.7 SrlnvGrdf 11.93 ·0.04 t 3.7 STBF 8.57 +1.6 Stmtlnc 11.20 ·0.03 +0.3 Tot>Bd 11.18 ·0.03 t4.3 USBI 11.92 ·0.03 +2.8 Value 71.95 t 0.29 t1 3.4 Fidelity Spartan: 5001dxlnv 49.94 t0.08 +13.3 5001dx I 49.94 t 0.07 +13.3
FidelilySpartAdv: ExMktAd r 38.93 +028 +11.0 5001dxAdv 49.94 +0.08 +13.3 TotMktAdr40.65 t0.10 t 12.9 USBond I 11.91 -0.04 +2.7 First Eagle: GlbiA 48.35 ·0.01 t 7.2 OverseasA 21.63 -0.03 +6.2 Forum Funds: PbsSirlr 11 26 +1.9 Frank/Temp FrnkA: FedTii\ p 12.64 -0.02 +6.5 GrwtllAp 49.05 t 0.14 t9.9 HYTFAp 10.84 -0.02 +8.4 lncom'\ p 2.20 t9.3 ~sDvA p 37.08 +0.12 +6.6 Stratlncp 10.55 -0.01 t 7.7 USGovAp 6.87 -0.01 t 1.4 Frank!Tmp FmkAdv: GlbBdAdvxl 3.16 -0.04 I~A lncmeAd 2.18 -0.01 +9.5 Frank/Temp Frnk C: lncom:: t 222 t 8.9 Frank!fempMtiA&B: SharesA 21.92 -0.01 I~A Frank[TempTempA: GIBd Apx 13.20 -0.04 t 9.7 GrwtllAp 17.98 t 10.4 Wo~dA p 15.08 t 0.02 t 9.8 Frank!fempTmp B&C: GIBdCpx 1323 -0.03 I~A GE ElfunS&S: USEqty 43.89 t005 t 13.3 GMOTrusllll: Quality 23.53 t O.OI t 12.8 GMO Trust IV: lntllntM 19.41 -0.01 t 3.9 GMO TrusfVI: EmgMkts rl0.99 +6.6 Quality 23.54 tO.OI +12.9 Goldman Sachs lnst ~Yield 724 +9.9 MidCapV 37.66 t021 +12.2 Hamor Funds:
Bond 12.76 -0.04 +6.0 Capf>lllnst 41.76 t0.21 +13.2 lntlln'l I 56.97 -0.21 t9.6 lntlr 57.61 -0.20 t 9.8 Hartlord Fds A: CpAppAp 31.49 +0.11 t9.3 Hartlord HLSIA : Capf>w 40.91 t0.17 +10.0 HussmanFunds: StiGrowth 11.11 t0.01 ·10.6 IVA Funds: l'i1dwidelr15.82 -0.03 t 3.0 lnvesco FundsA: Chart p 17.56 t0.04 +9.4 CmslkA 16.90 +12.0 EqlncA 9.02 t0.01 t9.4 GrtnrA p 20.46 t0.03 +10.9 HYMuA 10.01 -0.01 +10.3 Ivy Funds: AsseiSCt 23.78 t0.01 +9.9 AsseiSIAp24.58 +10.4 AsseiStrl r 24.82 +10.6 JPMorganA Class: CoreBdA 12.02 -0.03 t 3.2 JPMorgan R Cl: CoreBond 12.02 -0.03 t 3.4 JPMorganSeiCis: CoreBd 12.01 -0.03 t3.3 righYid 8.00 -0.01 t9.0 ShtDurBd 10.99 -0.01 +1.1 USLCCrAs22.48 t0.04 tl3.9 Janus TShrs: PrkMCVaiT21.51 +0.07 t6.5 JohnHar<:ockCI1 : LSBiJJanc 13.22 t0.01 t 9.1 LSGrwlh 13.09 +0.02 t 9.9 l azardlnsll: EmgMktf 18.96 t0.01 tl 2.9 Longleaf Partners: Partners 29.83 t0.13 +11 .9 LoomisSayles: LSBondl 14.71 -0.02 +8.7 StrlncC 15.05 t6.7 LSBondR 14.65 -0.02 +8.5
StrlncA 14.97 t 7.2 loomis Sayles lnv: lnvG rBdY 12.45 -0.02 +7.1 l ortfAbbetiA: AffiiAp 11.58 +0.01 +10.7 BdDebAp 7.94 +8.0 ShDurlnrA p4.61 ·0.01 t4.2 Lortf Abbell C: ShDurlnd; t4.64 -0.01 t 3.7 lortfAbbetiF: ShtDurlnco 4.61 t4.2 MFSFundsA: TotRA 14.94 ·0.01 t8.0 ValueA 24.94 +0.01 +12.4 MFS Funds 1: Valuel 25.06 +0.01 t 12.6 MainSiayfundsA: HiY1dBA 6.02 -0.01 t 82 Managers Funds: Yacktmanp18.32 +0.03 t8.9 YacktFoc 20.25 +0.04 +8.4 Manning& Napier Fds: WldllppA 7.24 +9.2 MergerFd 15.91 +0.02 +2.1 Melro Wesl Fds: TotRetBd 10.82 -0.02 t 7.0 TotRtBdl 10.81 -0.03 +7.0 MorganSianley lnst MCapGrl 34.45 t0.15 t4.6 Mutual Series: G~~scA 29.62 -0.04 NA Glb~scz 30.04 -0.03 NA SharesZ 22.13 t 10.9 Neuberger&Benn Fds: Geneslnsl 48.47 t0.27 t4.4 Northern Furlls: HiYFxlnc 7.35 t92 Oakmark Funds 1: Eqtylncr 28.64 -0.01 +5.9 lntl l r 17.99 -0.02 t 8.7 Oakmark48.00t0.10 t 15.1 OldWestbury Fds: GlobOpp 7.34 t 92 GlbSMdCap14.34 t0.04 t8.4
Oppenheimer A: DvMktAp 32.48 ·0 03 +10.3 GlobAp 58.74 t O.OO tM GbiStrfnrA 4.25 ·0.01 t8.3 lniBdAp 6.44 ·0.01 +0.3 MnSIFdA 36.44 t 0.05 +13.3 Ri.ng~vA1 7. 1 5 t 0.04 +10.1 S&MdqJV130.16 +0.22 +1.3 Oppenheimer 8: Ri.ng~vB 1 5. 50 t0.03 t 9.4 S&MdqJV125.53 t O.19 +1.3 OppenheimerC&M: Ri.ng0vCp15.44t0.03 t 9.; OppenheimerRoch: RcNIMuA 7.48 ·0.01 +13.8 OppenheimerY: DwMktY 32.16 ·0.03 +11.0 lntiBdY 6.44 ·0.01 +0.6 lntGrowY 27.96 ·0.06 t 9.6 PIMCOAdmin PIMS: TotRIAd 11.37 ·0.03 +0.6 PIMCO lnsll PIMS: A~se1Autr10.89 ·0.02 +10.2 A!Asset 12.36 ·0.02 +0.8 ComodRR 6.76 t 5.0 Divine 12.01 ·0.02 t 9.6 EmgMkCur10.26 ·0.01 t4.4 EmMkBd 12.10 ·0.03 tiO.; HiYid 9.42 t9.1 lnvGrCp 11.02 ·0.03 t 9.4 LowDu 10.52 ·0.02 t 3.9 ReaiRtnl 12.27 ·0.08 t 5.; ShortT 9.84 ·0.01 +2.3 ToiRt 1137 -003 +08 PIMCOFunds A: ReaiRIA p 12.27 ·0.08 +5.3 ToiRIA 11.37 ·0.03 +05 PIMCO Funds C: TotRICI 11.37 ·0.03 +0.0 PIMCO Funds D: TRtn p 11.37·003+0.6 PIMCOFunds P: ToiRtnP 11.37 ·0.03 +0.7 Perm Port Funds:
Permmnt 47.35 t2.7 Pioneer FundsA: PionFdA p 41.35 +0.12 +7.7 PriceFunds: ~Chip 44.54 +0.20 +15.2 CapAr!J 22.75 t0.05 t 10.3 EmMktS 31.01 ·0.10 t8.8 Eqlnc 25.60 +0.02 +12.2 Eqlndex 37.96 +0.05 +13.1 Growfh 36.87 t0.14 t 15.8 H~hSc 41 .64 +0.32 +27.7 HO'ield 6.78 -0.01 +9.1 lnsi CpG 18.39 t0.11 t 14.1 lntlBond 9.83 -0.04 +2.4 lnl G&l 1226 -0.03 t6.4 lntlSII< 13.41 t9.1 MidCap 57.80 +0.4f +9.6 MCapVal 24.22 +0.07 +13.2 NAsia 15.60 -0.05 +12.1 Nw Era 42.36 +0.08 t O.? NHoriz 35.31 +0.32 t 13.8 NInc 9.83 -0.03 t3.6 OverS SF 7.96 -0.02 t 8.7 R2010 1627 -0.01 t8.3 R201 5 12.64 t9.2 R2020 17.49 t O.OI t9.9 R2025 12.80 t O.OI +10.5 R2030 18.37 t0.02 +11.1 R2035 12.98 t0.02 t 11.3 R2040 18.47 +0.03 +1 1.5 ShtBd 4.84 -0.01 +1 .9 Sni:pSik 35.04 +0.27 t 12.1 SrrCapVal37.57 +0.29 t9.0 Specln 1278 -003 t 64 Value 25.38 +0.06 t 12.6 Principallnv: LgCGIIn 10.11 t0.04 t1 3.9 Putnam FundsA: GrlnAp 14.03 +0.03 +11.3 Royce Furds: PennMul rl t 42 +0 09t6.1 Premierlr 19.17 +0.08 t3.5 Sct.vab Funds: 10001nv r 39.90 t 0.08 +12.8
t 10.9 +2.8 +12.9 t 7.6 t8.9 t13.2 +12.9
5
:~i ~~~ ~ ~ ::~ :~~ ~ Walsly Waltn
14.31 t13.1 28.71 +0.03 +12.9
Vanguard ldx Fds: ExtMkt l 107.79 +0.82 +11.0 MdCplstPf107.13t 0.55 t 10.3 TallntAdmr23.40 ·0.01 t 7.1 Tollntllnstrll3.60 ·0.05 t 7.2 +10·8 TollntliPr 93.63 ·0.04 +7.2
:~~~~dc p~~i: :~:~ :i~ ~v:~o ~:~ ·:~ :~ ~
~~~d% ~~~
Wndsr Wndsll
500 129.93 +0.19 +13.2 MdCap 21.65 +0.11 t 10.2 TaiBnd 11.10 ·0.03 t 2.7 Tolllntl 13.99 t 7.1 ToiSII< 35.00 +0.09 +12.3 Vanguard lnstl Fds: B>lnsl 23.47 +0.01 t8.9 DevMklnst 9.04 ·0.01 t 7.4 Extln 43.67 t 0.33 t 11.0 Grwlhlsl 36.40 +0.11 +15.2 lnfProlnst 11_66 ·O.D7 +3.8 lnstldx 129.12 t 0.20 +13.3 lnsPI 129.12 t 0.19 t13.3 lnsTStPfus31 .69 t0.08 t 13.0 MdCplst 21.72 +0.11 +10.3 STIGrlnst 10.79 ·0.01 SCinst 37.01 t 0.30 TBist 11.10 ·0.03 TSinst 35.02 t0.09 Valuelsl 22.44 tOOl Vanguanl Signal:
t 3.0 +10.9 +2.8 t 12.9 +11.1
500Sgl 107.34 t 0.16 +13.3 MdCpldx 31.03 t 0.16 t 10.3 STBdldx 10.64 t 1.3 ToiBdSgl 11.10 ·003 +2.3 ToiSII<Sgl 3179 +0.09 ..12.9
WesternA« et: 24.26 -0.07 +7.5 CorePfusl 11.53 ·0.03 +5.9 33.65 -0.02 t8.9
E4
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 2012
If you have Marketplace events you would like to submit, please contact A shley Brothers at 541-383-0323, email business@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Please allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication.
MARI(ETPLACE BusiNEss CALENDAR
Tourism Continued from E1
TODAY BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL DESCHUTES BUSINESS NETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541610-9125. UNITED WAY WORKPLACE COORDINATOR BREAKFAST: Informational breakfast for businesses that currently host a United Way of Deschutes County workplace campaign or would like to learn how to do so; 7:30a.m.; Higher Ground, 2582 N.E. Dagget Lane, Bend; to learn more and to RSVP, call541-389-6507, or email Darleen@deschutesunitedway.org. EXPLORE THE BENEFITS OF WORKING WITH SCHWAB: Free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co. , 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541 -318-1794. BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-480-1765.
FRIDAY TOWN HALL FORUM: Job creation in Central Oregon; registration required; 7:30a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; www.bendchamber.org. CENTRAL OREGON REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT CLUB: Free; 11 a.m.; Service Master Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-6104006 or bobbleile@windermere .corn. LEADER LUNCH: Lunch with Bend Chamber leadership for members; reservations required; cost of lunch; noon; Awbrey Glen Golf Clu b, 2500 N.W. Awbrey Glen Drive, Bend; 541382-3221. FREE TAX FRIDAY: Free tax return reviews; schedule an appointment at 541-385-9666 or www.myzoom tax.com; free; 2-4 p.m.; ZoomTax, 963 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite 100, Bend; 541-385-9666.
SATURDAY OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMIT TRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control
Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www .happyhourtraining.com. TECH PETTING ZOO: Take a handson look at some of the popular e-reader and tablet devices on the market today; free; 1-3 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541 -312-1050.
TUESDAY BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL HIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7:15 a.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-420-7377. VISIT BEND BOARD MEETING: Open to the public; 8 a.m.; Bend Visitor Center, 750 N.W. Lava Road; 541-382-8048 or valerie@visitbend .com. OPEN COMPUTER LAB: Practice computer skills and learn about e-readers; free; 3 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. PARTNERS IN CARE BUSINESS AFTER HOURS: Registration required; 4:30 p.rn.; Partners in Care, 755 S.W. Seventh St., Suite C, Redmond; 541-280-4187. eRR-TERREBONNE NETWORKING SOCIAL: Free; 5:30p.m.; Desert Meadows Clubhouse, 520 N.E. Shoshone Ave., Redmond; 541923-2679 or www.crrchamber.com. SMALL-BUSINESS COUNSELING: Free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St. ; 541-312-1037.
WEDNESDAY BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL BEND CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a. m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541749-0789. STONE LODGE BUSINESS AFTER HOURS: Registration required; 5 p.m.; Stone Lodge, 1460 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-382-3221 or www .bendchamber.org. UNDERSTANDING AND MANAGING CREDIT: 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; call 541-3187506, ext. 309 to reserve a seat.
THURSDAY Aug. 23 BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL DESCHUTES BUSINESS NETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Starts at 7 a.m.; visitors are welcome and first twovisits arefree; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541-61 0-9125. GETTING THE MOST OUT OF SCHWAB.COM: Free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1794. BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits arefree; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-480-1765.
FRIDAY Aug. 24 COFFEE CLATTER: Redmond Chamber of Commerce meeting; free; 8:30-9:30 a.m.; City of Redmond Public Works Training Room, 243 East Antler Avenue. CENTRAL OREGON REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT CLUB: Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile@windermere.com. FREE TAX FRIDAY: Free tax retu rn reviews; schedule an appointment at 541-385-9666 or www.myzoomtax .com; free; 2-4 p.m.; Zoom Tax, 963 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite 100, Bend; 541-385-9666.
MONDAY A ug. 27 OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMITTRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain thealcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com. FORECLOSURE PREVENTION CLASS: Learn about Neighborlmpact's Housing Center tools and services, which canassist individuals struggling to pay their mortgages; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; 541-318-7506, ext. 309, karenb@neighborimpact.org or www.homeownershipcenter.org.
City of Bend Lambert Neighbour, 20691 N.E. Patriot, $186,247 Bank of the Cascades, 55 S.W. Quail Butte, $411,942 (No owner listed) 2885 N.W. Perlette, $494,430 Somerset Development LLC, 20265 S.E. Knightsbridge, $172,743 GW Land Acquisitions LLC, 63380 N.E. Lamoine, $204,822 Michelle L. Marquis, 3439 N.W. Bryce Canyon, $217,816 Island Park Properties LLC, 61538 Aaron, $236,019 Island Park Properties LLC, 61542 Aaron, $236,019 360 Bond LLC, 360 S.W. Bond 130, $195,000 Cousins Construction Inc., 21272 Hurita, $176,983 Deschutes Properties LLC, 929 S.W. Simpson, $174,210 Steven D. Bothroyd, 2522 N.E. Cretia, $191,683 Miller Revocable Trust, 61434 Tam McArthur, $498,907 Bruce L. Kemp, 20293 S.E. Knightsbridge, $124,556 Simply Land LLC, 1693 N.W. Precision, $185,112 Simply Land LLC, 1709 N.W. Precision, $203,480 Bend Equity Group LLC, 1096 N.E. Bennington, $190,101 Dale B. Engel, 3515 N.W. Conrad, $315,459 ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20737 N.E. Comet, $184,905 ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20741 N.E. Comet, $185,162 ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20760 N.E. Smoke Stack, $167,091 Chet Antonsen, 21257 S.E. Bellflower, $247,582 Wood Hill Enterprises LLC, 611 80 S.W. Hobart, $259,247 Nicholas Schuetz, 3442 N.W. Bryce Canyon, $327,083 Powers Crossing LLC, 20255 Powers, $3,500,000 Greg Welch Construction Inc., 3295 N.W. Pee Wee, $306,042 Michael and Mary L. Van Skaik, 62578 Sparrow Hawk, S352,314
Scott Knox, 3124 N.W. Golf View, $240,578 2001 Stephen B. Dandurand Revocable, 20252 Badger, $164,181 2001 Stephen B. Dandurand Revocable, 20248 Badger, $164,181 East Bend Clinic LLC, 2200 N.E. Professional, $200,000 Forest Park II LLC, 61309 S.E. Ring Bearer, $237,240 Brookswood Bend LLC, 19690 Aspen Meadows, $287,503 Brooks Resources Corporation, 1641 N.W. Wild Rye, $551,510 RF Wilson Trust, 2721 N. E. Rosemary, $195,883 Deschutes Ridge Business Park, 999 S.W. Disk, $160,000 Island Park Properties LLC, 61531 Aaron, $198,675 Daniel R. Butala, 20924 Sage Creek, $21 4,993 ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20745 N.E. Comet, $239,189 ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20764 N.E. Smoke Stack, $167,703 Wood Hill Enterprises LLC, 611 89 S.W. Hobart, $254,605 Long Term Bend Investors LLC, 60982 S.E. GrandTarghee, $179,228 Long Term Bend Investors LLC, 60955 S.E. Miles, $179,228 ChetAntonsen, 61703 S.E.Yarrow, $200,000 Bri-Lin Construction Inc., 61243 Ladera, $316,743 Serene View Investments LLC, 3206 N.W. Fairway Heights, $341,693 Somerset Development LLC, 20249 S.E. Knightsbridge, $198,620 Somerset Development LLC, 20261 S.E. Knightsbridge, $198,620 Richard L. Carpenter Revocable, 20314 S.E. Knightsbridge, $214,447 Brookswood Bend LLC, 19703 S.W. Aspen Ridge, $205,1 98 RD Building and Design LLC, 626 N.W. Compass, $213,347 Molly Scofield, 2867 N.W. Perlette, $383,483 Structure Development N.W. LLC, 2332 N.W. Lola, $248,914 Simply Land LLC, 1713 N.W. Precision, $241,256 Simply Land LLC, 1717 N.W. Precision, $241,176
Real estate Continued from E1 But even though industrial buildings are being bought, "w e still have an ample supply availabl e," Fratzk e said. while industrial A nd sh ow s modest signs of improv ement, v acant of fice sp ace still poses a challenge for r eal estate offi cial s. More than 20 percent of Bend's of fice space is un occupied, according to Compass market surveys, a r ate that has held steady since • mid-2010. A good p ortion of that office space h as been on the mark et for a year or l onger, said Vic M artinez, a real estate brok er with Th e Lowes Group. The rush t o build top-grade offices durin g the real estate boom year s i s responsibl e for much of the vacancy. "We have a couple of listings that we've been hanging onto because t here just i sn't as much activity (from potenti al buyer s) as w e would like to see," M artinez said. Even w ith prices at about half their pre-recession values, tenants looking for office sp ace ar e hesitant to
The H.iverhouse. Purcell said overall occup ancy in the city w as up 5.7 p er cent over June 2011. W hile t his was less than the room tax collecti on, he said hotel s are charging more for their r ooms, which yields more revenue on the same number of r ooms rented. "Th e consumer is less price sensitive now, and hotel s are m or e willing to increase rates without the fear of losing occupancy," he said. -Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
"I do see a recovery occurring, but it's nothing earthshattering. There is some absorption happening, but it's slow, almost not perceivable."
minds, said Fr at zke. A true r ecovery in the commer cial market w on 't com e until devel oper s star t p en ciling in new construct ion on r etail , office and industri al space. And that's still year s aw ay, Frat zk e said. " You aren't going to get any new development w hen l ease rates are half of what t hey w er e at the p eak of the m arket," he said. M ar tinez agreed. W it h lease and purchase rates low , much of the act ivity cont inu es to be small businesses relocating w ithin town, rather than new bu sin esses coming i n. "I do see a r ecovery occurr i ng, but it's nothing earthshattering," Mar tinez said. "Th ere is some absorption h appening, but it's slow , alm ost not perceivable. It's going to tak e a whi le befor e (busin esses) feel comfor table movi ng into bigger spaces, which would lead to new building. Whether t hat's three or f ive or seven years away, it 's still going to be a slow r ecovery that's going to take a l ong time." -Neporter: 541-617-7820, eglucklich@bendbulletin.com
-Vic Martinez, real estate broker, The Lowes Group
pull the trigger on a property bigger th an 5,000 squar e feet, said Gr eg Jacobs, principal br ok er with Colm Com mercial. "Ten ants' m ain concerns are w ith their monthly budget, not n ecessarily w hat the square foot age of a building i s," Jacobs sai d. In other words, bu sinesses are still t hinking sm all, f inding the lowest monthly l ease rates. In some cases, Jacob s said, they will settle for a bit l ess space than th ey truly need if they can save on monthly payments. How l ong w ill it take for vacancy rates to dr op below 10 p ercent? That 's a question on m any real estate official s'
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
:~:~~;: YOUR SUMMER SALES EVENT
NEWS OF RECORD
PERMITS
Resort revenue i s up 33 percent this summer compared to a year ago. Berning said the region's activities, along w ith the draw of Mt. Bachelor and the recent national attention for Central Or egon brew eries, help cr eate loyal visitors to the r egion. "All of this combined has cr eated a buzz for Central Oregon, and it seems the visitors have swarmed," she said.
Wayne Purcell, p artner at The Riverhouse H otel & Convention Center, said occupancywas up in June. "A lot of the credit goes to Mt. Bachelor," he w r ote in an email. "Many other pl aces did not have snow this year. Mt. Bachelor did a great job going after this business." Mt. Bach elor hosted skidevelopment camps in June. Purcell said most of the groups stayed for at least a w eek and some for two w eeks, which had a signif icant impact on occupancy at
Simply Land LLC, 1297 N.W. Criterion, $203,480 Bridges at Shadow Glen LLC, 611 27 S.E. Ambassador, $237,041 Bridges at Shadow Glen LLC, 61131 S.E. Ambassador, $206,964 Zachary S. Petersen, 20514 Whitstone, $356,644 Bridges at Shadow Glen LLC, 61135 S.E. Ambassador, $167,091 Brookswood Bend LLC, 19709 S.W. Aspen Ridge, $288,438 Brucel. Kemp, 2832 N.E. Spring Water, $197,716 Tony J. Rosengarth, 21259 Chilliwack, $293,967 PhilipS. Harnack, 1516 N.W. Fifth, $148,071 Pacwest II LLC, 21175 S.E. Ph illy, $186,008 RD Building and Design LLC, 2598 N.W. Awbrey Point, $223,576 Brookswood Bend LLC, 19728 S.W. Aspen Meadows, $223,072 Stonegate Development LLC, 60308AddieTriplett, $318,063 Stonegate Development LLC, 60286 AddieTriplett, $210,210 Bend EquityGroupLLC, 1011 N.E. Bennington, $145,631 Brookswood Bend LLC, 61149 Snowbrush, $225,627
MAKE NO PAYMENTS UNTIL Z013
ON EVERY NEW 2012 VOLVO NOW THRU AUGUST 31ST!
City of Sisters Hayden Homes LLC, West Lambert Ave. #80, $183,022 Hayden Homes LLC, West Lambert Ave. #91, $248,184 Hayden Homes LLC, West Lambert Ave. #76, $179,866 Alan Schrock, East Jefferson Ave., $220,825 City of Redmond Nate and Janey Powell, 1600 N.W. Larch Tree Court, $163,695 City of Redmond, 2433 SW Canal Blvd., $112,000 Deschutes County Barbara Roof, 52097 Pine Forest Drive, La Pine, $283,968 PC Affordable Housing Inc., 51745 Little Deschutes Lane, La Pine, $101,276 Robert D. and Elizabeth Gorris, 56437 Fireglass Loop, Bend, $435,684.46 Stephen and Lana Anderson, 14630 Bear Berry, La Pine, $184,664
PAY NOTHING FOR S ERVICE ON ALL N EW VOLVO'S
SAFE+ SECURE COVERAGE PLAN
--------------------------------
I5
YEAR WARRANTY YEAR SCHEDULED MAINTENANCE YEAR WEAR & TEAR
SMOLICH VOLVO 1865 North East Highway 20
I
Bend, OR
I
(541) 389-11 77
www.s molichvolvo.com
vo lvocars.co m/ us ©201 2 Volvo Cars of North America, LLC. The Iron Mark is a registered trademark of Volvo .
Ex pires 8131/12
Health Events, F2 People, F2 Nutrition, F2
EALTH
F
Fitness, F3 Medicine, F4-5 Money, F6
QJ www.bendbulletin.com/health
THE BULLETIN â&#x20AC;˘ THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2012
Your gut will thank you for all that fiber Alex McDougall I The Bullet in
By Anne Aurand
Sandy Shores, 36, has lost 125 pounds over the past two years. A big part of her new, healthier lifestyle includes an informal but regular circuit training wo rkout with friends and family at Pine Nursery Park, four mornings a week.
The Bulletin
A new study adds to a list of reasons why we should eat fiber. Fiber, a carbohydrate that is not digested, can fill you up without unnecessary NUTRITION calories, aiding in the effort of weight maintenance. Some fibrous foods, including vegetables and whole grains, are rich in vitamins and nutrients. Eating diets rich in fiber is associated with a reduced risk of heart disease and gastrointestinal disorders, according to the Harvard School of Public Health. Now, a study published in the July issue of The Journal of Nutrition says consuming fiber can increase certain healthy bacteria in the gut. The diversity and composition of a gut's bacteria is associated with complex conditions such as obesity, diabetes, colon cancer and inflammatory bowel disease, according to the study. Perhaps, the study suggested, there is therapeutic potential in eating fiber as a prebiotic, a food product that can improve the bacterial makeup of the digestive system and lead to numerous health benefits. See Fiber I F2
125 pounds later/ Bend woman still on a path to well ness By Anne Aurand The Bulletin As the orange sun illuminates the morning sky one recent morning, Sandy Shores meets her mother, sister and a few female friends at the Pine Nursery Park in northeast Bend. Shores' husband, Jason Shores, sets up traffic cones around the bleachers FITNESS in the ball fields and tapes pieces of paper to them that assign some number of a variety of exercises, such as burpees, jumping jacks, lunges and pushups. The women set yoga mats and small hand weights at some stations. They jog a minute to warm up, then form a circle to stretch. Sandy, 36, talks about her plan for the morning's circuit-style workout. Jason looks at his wife lovingly and tells the group it's time to get moving. This is what they do at 6 a.m., four times a week. Breaking off indep endently or into groups of two, thewomenjogfrom station to station, performing the posted exercises and running up and down the bleachers. They chat breathlessly. The atmosphere is casual and not intimidating, but the workout is not easy. Their quads burn from all the squats and bleacher running. Their shoulders ache from military style presses and pushups. Jason wanders between stations, gives pointers about form, and keeps track of time. Someone calls to him, "How much longer?" Jason hears the occasional four-letter word from the ladies. But they are enjoying the pain as much as the camaraderie. And, they're doing it for themselves as much as for Sandy. Over the past two years, Sandy Shores has lost about 125 pounds. When she started this circuit routine, her belly bounced so much that jumping jacks were nearly impossible. The workout made her cry, it was so painful and miserable. But on this recent day, her brown eyes reflect a proud smile on her freckled face, a nd she's talking pretty much all the way through the tough, hourlongworkout.
Raspberries are a good source of fiber. Thinkstock
Ambiguity in law may be costly for families By Roberl Pear New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON - The new health care law is known as the Affordable Care Act. But Democrats in Congress and advocates for low-income people say coverage MONEY maybeunaffordable for millions of Americans b ecause of a cramped reading of the law by the administration and by the Internal Revenue Service in particular. Under rules proposed by the service, some working-class families would be unable to afford family coverage offered by their employers and yet they would not qualify for subsidies provided by the law. The fight revolves around how to define "affordable" under provisions of the law that are ambiguous. The definition could have huge practical consequences, affecting who gets help from the government in buying health insurance. See Ambiguity IF6
Evidence of low iron levels in frequent donors has U.S. blood banks re-examining the duration period between donations By Markian Hawryluk â&#x20AC;˘ The Bulletin fter years of suspecting a problem, blood collection groups now have sufficient evidence to say that the eightweek minimum interval between blood donations is causing many donors to develop iron deficiency. The American Association of Blood Banks is now drafting a bulletin to blood collection centers in which it will acknowledge that iron depletion is a problem for frequent blood donors, and outlying potential steps centers can take to mitigate the impact. "It's clear that we do deplete donors of iron , a nd that there are some donors that may b e harmed by that," said Dr. Richard Benjamin, medical director of the American Red Cross a nd part of the workgroup writing the bulletin. "If you give more than three, four, five times a year, you are likely to b e depleting your iron. What is unclear is how harmful that is:' Iron is a key component in red blood cells, which carry oxygen to the muscles. When iron stores drop, oxygen supply is reduced, leaving individuals feeling tired or lacking in energy. The missive is expected to oulline four steps that blood collection centers could ta ke to protect donors from iron depletion: extending the interval between donations, measuring iron levels more directly with a blood test, providing frequent donors with iron tablets to replace lost iron and educating donor s about iron deficiency and
Joe Wierzba, seen with hlswlfe, Shelly, was a frequent donor until he learn ed how low his iron levels had become. Blood centers are considering changes to help protect donors.
A
Submitted photo
replacement strategies. Blood donors a re cu rrently tested for low hemoglobin levels, but recent studies have shown the hemoglobin finger-stick test is a poor indicator of a person's overall iron stores. Hemoglobin is the iron-containing protein in red b lood cells, but about 25 percent of the body's iron is stored in the protein ferritin . Unlike free iron, ferritin is not toxic to the cells. Last year, researchers published the results of the most comprehensive study of iron deficiency in blood donors to date. The results were surprising. See Blood I F4
Sandy's journey
Illustratio n by Jennifer Montgomery I T he Bulletin
Two years ago, Shores, at 5 feet, 7 inches, weighed 302 pounds. See Shores I F3
HEALTH HIGHLIGHTS NUTRITION: Keep your seafood safe during hot summer months, F2
FITNESS: Stop slouching: proper form for those who like to lounge, F3
MEDICINE: Teen girls are more likely to be depressed than boys, F4
MONEY: People with paid sick leave get more preventive care, F6
F2
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 2012
HEALTH IN BRIEF
Local hospitals avoid Medicare penalties More than 2,200 hospitals nationwide will face a reduction in their Medicare payments because their readmission rates were too high, according to a Kaiser Health News analysis of data released by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. None of the hospitals in Central Oregon will face the penalty this year. The penalties were based on the number of patients readmitted within 30 days after being treated for a heart attack, heart failure or pneumonia between July 2008 and June 20ll. Some 278 hospitals received the maximum penalty possible - a I percent reduction in Medicare payments - and 1,933 hospitals will receive at least some penalty. The maximum penalties will increase to 2 percent in 2013 and 3 percent in 2014. Hospitals have traditionally had little financial incentive to keep patients from returning by providing them with better discharge information and connecting them with ongoing health services. The penalties were implemented as part of the Affordable Care Act in 2010. -From staff reports
HEALTH EvENTS Editor's note: Ongoing health classes and support groups now appear online only. See www.bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses and www .bendbulletin.coml supportgroups. To submit an entry for either list, see instructions below.
CLASSES GETTING AGOOD NIGHT'S SLEEP:
Dr. Christopher Kelley, of Bend Memorial Clinic, will talk about common causes of and solutions for insomnia and sleepapnea; free; noon Monday; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; contact Liz 541-312-1032 or lizg@ deschutesli brary.org. GETTING AGOOD NIGHT'S SLEEP:
Dr. Christopher Kelley, of Bend Memorial Clinic, will talk about common causes of sleeplessness and solutions for insomnia and sleep apnea;free; 6:30p.m. Monday; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; contact Liz 541-3121032 or lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. HEALTHY BEGINNINGS SCREENINGS: Free health
screenings for ages 0-5; Friday; Bend; call for location, 541-383-6357. PET PARTNER TEAM TRAINING:
Therapy animal training for visiting hospitals, nursing homes, classrooms and other facilities; $90, includes workbook; 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Sept. 15; register by Sept. 4; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-312-8663 or pwittnberg@ cs.com. REDMOND WEIGHT LOSS CHALLENGE: Includes support,
educational talks, literature and weigh-ins, cash prize for participant with highest percentage of weight loss; $50 for 12 weeks; first weigh-in 12-2 p.m. or 45:30 p.m. Aug. 30 or Sept. 6; register by Aug. 30; Therapeutic Associates, Redmond Physical Therapy, 413 N.W. Larch Ave., Suite 102, Redmond ; 541-923-7494 or rdmd@taiweb.com.
How to submit Health Events: Email event information to healthevents@ bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must be updated monthly and will appear at www.bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses. Contact: 541 -383-0358. People: Email info about local people involved in health issues to health events@ bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541 -383-0358.
NuTRITION Keep your seafood safe during summer months The U.S. Food and Drug Administration offers seafood safety tips that are especially important in hot weather when food-borne bacteria can multiply faster. •Thaw frozen seafood gradually by placing it in the refrigerator overnight. To thaw quickly, seal it in a plastic bag and immerse in cold water. If cooking immediately, microwave it on defrost and stop while the fish is still icy but pliable. •If traveling, carry the seafood in a cooler with cold packs or ice, and keep it at 40 degrees or below. Keep the cooler in
the shade with the lid closed. • Most seafood should be cooked to an internal temperature of 145 degrees. Lacking a food !her-
mometer, consider these tips: Fish should be opaque and separate easily with a fork. Shrimp and lobster flesh becomes pearly and opaque. Scallops turn opaque and firm. Clams, mussels and oysters will open their shells during
cooking. •Never put cooked food back on a platter that held raw food. Never reuse marinade that contacted rawfood unless you boil it first. Don't leave cooked seafood out of the refrigerator or cooler for more than two hours, or one hour when temperatures are hotter than 90 degrees. •Uncooked spoiled seafood can have an ammonia odor which becomes stronger after cooking. Don't eat seafood that has an ammonia odor. -AnneAurand, The Bulletin Thinkstock
Fiber Continued from F1
The study comes at a time when researchers around the world are mapping, defining and trying to understand the human microbiome - all the microorganisms in the body. Modern DNA-sequencing technology has revolutionized the study of these microbes in the past decade in an attempt to better understand the role of bacteria in disease. Some bacteria can help maintain the body's gastrointestinal immune system and fight pathogen growth, said the study's lea d researcher, Kelly Swanson, a professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Fermentable fiber provides the bacteria with a substance they can use for energy, she said.
Understanding bacteria Since different types of fiber nurture different types of bacteria, nutrition researchers are working to understanding which types of fiber feed healthpromoting gut bacteria. To this end, Swanson and her fellow scientists studied which organisms lived in the intestines of healthy adults when they ate very little fiber versus soluble corn fiber versus polydextrose, a common synthetic food additive that is classified as fiber. Using what's considered the gold standard of nutrition research, the placebo-controlled, double-blind study experimented on 20 healthy men who each tried three different dietary treatments in random order. The participants ate either no fiber, or 21 grams of soluble corn fiber or 21 grams of polydextrose daily. Each treatment lasted three weeks. Researchers collected and tested participants' fecal samples to see what bacteria were present. Researchers found "clear evidence that consumption of the different experimental fibers prompted shifts in which intestinal bacteria were predominant," the study said. For instance, lactobacillus - a common lactic acid bacteria believed to have some therapeutic health benefits and present in many foods such as yogurt, kefir, miso and sauerkraut became more dominant in the fecal samples when soluble corn fiber was consumed. And faecalibacterium prausnitzii, known for its anti-inflammatory effects, rose during both fiber treatments. Traditionally, lactic acid-producing bacteria such as bifidobacte ria and lactobacilli have been considered "good" because of their asso ciation with lower risk of disease, Swanson said. More recent testing tech niques have identified other bacteria as "good," including fae calibacterium, because they possess anti-inflammatory prop-
High-tiber toods Lentils Beans Raspberries Artichokes Peas Whole wheat spaghetti Barley Bran flakes Whole grain bread Brown rice
Th inkstock
erties, Swanson said.
Increasing intake Americans generally need to increase their fiber intake, she said. Average fiber intake is around 15 grams per day, but people should eat between 30 and 35 grams per day. One cup of pinto beans has 8.4 grams of fiber. One cup of whole wheat spaghetti has 6.3 grams of fiber. One medium apple has 4.4 grams. One cup of raspberries has 8 grams. There are many ways to consume more fiber. Swanson said plenty of fiber is available in whole foods , and her recommendation is "to consume foods that naturally contain increased concentrations of dietary fiber." Eat natural or whole foods instead of processed foods, she said. In other words, eat fruit, vegetables, beans and whole grains instead of apple sauce, vegetable juice or refined grains such as white rice, white bread or most kinds of crackers. "Because fruits and vegetables contain so much water, however, it is difficult to rely on them alone," she said. "Eating whole grains versus refined grains is a very effective way to increase your fiber intake. Increased consumption of beans and other legumes also provides more fiber in the diet." Many processed food products contain added fiber sources, including bran or inulin. Both polydextrose and soluble corn fiber, the products used in the study, are added to a wide range of food products. Polydextrose, a low-calorie ingredient that provides volume, texture and soluble dietary fiber to food items, is common in bakery goods, cereals, dairy desserts, fruit fillings, flavored water, ice cream, juice drinks, ketchup, snacks and sauces, said Swanson. Soluble corn fiber is similar in that it is also a low-calorie ingredient that provides soluble fiber and is easily mixed into foods such as bakery goods, cereals, beverages, confections, sauces and soups, without changing taste or texture. A couple of the authors of the study, Swanson exclu ded, work for General Mills, a cereal, snack and processed food manufacturer that provided some funding for the study. - Reporter: 541-38.3- 0304, aaurand@bendbulletin.com
Find II All Online bendbulletin.com
If you're going to drink your veggies, juice 'em By Bob Carden
Juicing vegetables removes elements like seeds and
Special to The Washington Post
WASHINGTON - Julian Thomson is juiced. He moves fast and talks faster. That's what kale - along with spinach, carrots and apples- can do for you. This morning, the same as just about every other day, the Washington videotape editor churned those foods in a five-speed Breville Elite Juicer, dumped them into a glass and chugged it all down in no more than three gulps. "I feel great, man. Really great. My head, my skin, my energy. It's all because of the juice," he says in rapid sound bites. As a 44-year-old home juicer (and vegan for more than two decades), Thomson is passionate and uncompromising: "Smoothies, blenders, that's all wussy stuff. Posers who think they're doing something healthy. Juicing is juicing, man, not blending. You have to yank the juice out of the veggies. You want to blend? Then go drink a margarita." Juicing has been around forever, but the latest craze seems to have a lot to do with baby boomers' fixation about remaining young and hip. Norman Walker, who invented the first modern juicer in the 1930s, lived to he 100. Jack LaLanne pitched them relentlessly in the '70s and '80s. He died at age 96. It's hard to turn on latenight or early-morning TV without seeing an infomercial for some sort of juicer. In fact , I stumbled onto juicing about a month ago after an evening at an Irish saloon. Couldn't sleep, grabbed the remote. Saw an earnest guy with thick hair, big pees, a bigger smile and an adoring studio audience. He was shouting about something called the NutriBullet. Or was it a Ninja Master system? There was a lot of healthful, visually appealing food on his table. Apples, celer y, carrots, kale. I wanted it all: the hair, the physique, the fans. Detoxing after a night of Guinness on tap sounded so right. The health benefits of juic-
stems that can create a bitter flavor, which is why many prefer the method over blending. T hinkstock
ing are clear, and the coolness factor is intense. But which equipment would work best? The marble and soapstone countertops in upscale kitchens scream for something hipper than a Hamilton Beach blender, and espresso machines are so, well, '90s. Research was required. A blender pulverizes veggies and fruits, and makes for a thick, fiber-filled drink. A juicer separates, so all you get is pure juice. It comes at you with a slow hand and an easy touch, lovingly churning that apple while extracting its juice. Blending's more of a one-night stand, while juicing's a long-term affair. People who get paid to think about this stuff will tell you juicing provides a pure, unadulterated flavor. "Juicing gets rid of the bitter stuff we don't like: seeds, stems. It comes out in a smooth texture," says Matt Wallace, manager of a Williams-Sonoma store in Rockville, Md. "Blending is mushy." Until I started juicing, mixing cucumbers with bananas or parsley with peaches seemed pretty nasty. Now I'm hooked - even on raw kale and spinach. I never thought that would happen. Blended juices "are great for masking the taste of kale and other greens," Wallace says. "Throw some ginger in with the kale, maybe a banana. It will come out green but taste really good." My friend's kid is a terrific athlete. Like most teenagers, he prefers Cheetos over carrots. But the kid downs a juice made from leafy greens,
carrots, bananas and berries every morning. And loves it. Experts worry that people can get carried away with a juice craze. "Juicing is supplemental. It should not replace balanced meals," says registered dietitian H.ebecca Scritchfield. She says those new to juicing tend load up on fruit at the expense of vegetables. "You want to make it taste good. But if you put too many apples, grapes or bananas in there it's like drinking a cup of sugar. Three apples have about 90 grams of sugar. You have to watch that." Juicers aren't only for making juice, of course. They are also a high-tech version of the old-fashioned food mill. Think fresh tomato sauce and sorbet and any sort of puree. Good juicers require patience and deep pockets. Cleaning them takes commitment. Parts have to be removed and washed after each session. Blenders are a lot easier to maintain. A good juicer costs from $300 to more than $1,000. Lowerpriced models are built with more plastic, have a bit less power and are often even harder to clean. I went with a machine made by Breville. Its midlevel Elite models cost about $400 and look impressive on a kitchen counter: die-cast steel housing, titanium cutting disk, 1,000 watts of power. Other well-known models include the Omega, Jack LaLanne and Hamilton Beach. So far, my pees haven't tightened and my hair's still thin. But I do feel better.
LOW TESTOSTERONE WHAT YOU N EED TO KNOW
Low Te stoste rone, ot he rwise kno wn as hypogonadism, affects as many as 1 in 3 me n. Symptoms of low t estoste ro ne inc lud e fatig ue, irritability, diminishe d sexual desire o r function and musc le loss. Supp lem e ntation with t estoste rone c a n he lp many m e n re gain the ir stre ngth a nd vitality. J o in the Physic ians of Be nd Uro logy fo r a n info rma t ive p re se ntation about the c ruc ial ro le te st oste ro ne p la ys in yo ur o ve ra ll we ll ne ss.
Saturday, August 18th Re fre shme n ts available at 8:30a.m. Pre se ntatio n b e g ins a t 9:00 a .m.
located at St. Charles Medical Center 2500 NE Ne ff Rd Be nd lo c a te d in C lassro o m A v ia ma in e ntrance
Call 541-382-6447 to re g ist e r now *Reg istratio n is not necessary
~
)'(- BendUrology ~
5"V'"G CCN"Al AND [A$<(0N OOCGON "NC( 096<
THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
F3
FITNESS SAFE MOVEMENTS In a weekly four-part series, physical therapist Lisa Ann McCall offers examples and tips about how to use our bodies safely in our daily lives.
Strengthen your lower body with lunges Improper
Part two of four - reclined sitting
Everyone wants to lounge now and then, whether it's at the movies, at your desk or on the couch. That's fine if you can do it without slumping down and curving the spine, which will create tension in the shoulders, neck and back and potentially develop painful problems in those regions. To recline in a supported way, keep the pelvis tilted forward but relaxed, and the upper back extended upward. If the chair allows, hook your shoulder blades over the back of the chair. Relax the thighs, belly, back and hips.
Proper
Source: Lisa Ann McCall, physical therapist, former yoga teacher and author of The McCall Body Balance Method. McCall studied body movements in agrarian cultures, where people's daily lives include a lot of manual labor but their joints and bodies don't break down as much as people from Western cultures. -Anne Aurand, The Bulletin
Joe Kline I The Bulletin
Lunges are a popular exercise choice for lower-body strengthening. Requiring no equipment, lunges are a multijoint movement primarily targeting the hips, glutes and thighs. Lunges are extremelytime efficient. Basic lunge: Stand with your feet hipto shoulder-width apart, arms relaxed at your sides. Take a very large step forward while keeping your torso erect, and bend the knees, slowly lowering your trunk straight down. To help avoid overstressing the knee joint, keep the front knee behind the toes and be sure to lower straight down rather than bring your upper body forward. After reaching the bottom of the movement, pause only long enough to take in a breath, then push your body back up, placing emphasis through the heel of the front foot. Be careful not to lock the knees at the top of the movement. Beginners should avoid coming down too far toward the floor untilthey have es-
tablished reasonable leg strength, and if you have knee problems, do not attempt until you have checked with your doctor. For those looking for maximum range of motion, lower the hips so that the thigh of the front leg is parallel to the floor. The knee should be positioned directly over the ankle and foot pointing straight ahead. The back leg can be positioned in one of two ways. You can bend both knees to an approximatly 90 degree angle, or if greater flexi bility of the hip flexor is desired, keep the back leg straight but relaxed, while bending the knee of the front leg until you feel a gentle stretch. Reverse lunge: Instead of taking a step forward ,take a slow, controlled step backward. Side lunge: Anice wayto mix it up, side lunges target the inner thighs to a greater extent than traditional lunges. With this variation, you take a step to
the side and lower your body by bending your knee, rather than stepping to the front or back. Once you feel a strong contraction on your outer thigh, step back to the starting point and repeat with the other leg Tips: The lower your bodytravels in a lunge, the greater emphasis is placed on the glutes. If you have trouble keeping your balance while doing lunges, hold onto a sturdy chair or wall for support. Try to look straight ahead rather than down. If you are looking for a way to take it to the next level, hold onto dumbbells while performing the exercise. You can also elevate the back foot onto a low step or platform, which places more emphasis on the front leg. Placing the back foot on a small stability ball is also an advanced move, creating an additional balance challenge. Never allow the front knee to go beyond the toe. - MaijieGilliam, Cox Newspapers
Hairstylists push looks that encourage exercise General Regina Benjamin and the Washington MysIn addition to those two tics' Ashley Robinson. "But gold medals, 16-year-old we have to take away any gymnast Gabby Douglas got barrier we can." something else in London: Tuckson says this barflak about her hair. Social rier is particularly critical media sites buzzed with among African-Americans, slams that her bun was un- whose percentage of obesity kempt, and questions about is higher than that of other why she didn't get her locks ethnicities. done for the Olympics. Enlisting an army A t1ood of defenders equipped with scissors and quickly responded that her combs has another potential style was a practical choice benefit, he says. Some womfor someone flipping all over en may not see their docthe place. And it brought at- tors much, but they're likely tention to the fact that, un- to get their hair checked like Douglas, some African- out several times a year (or American women shy away month). If they're hearing from physical activity be- the right messages while cause they're worried about getting snipped and styled, that's bound to lead to better messing up their hair. "They say, 'I just spent outcomes. $250, so I'm not going to "What an opportunity to sweat it out,"' says Elgin make them literally deputies Charles, star of VH1's "Bev- in our work," says Tuckson, erly Hills Fabulous" and an who envisions a nationwide expert hairstylist who tried network of exercise-friendto help change that attitude ly certified salons. For the by hosting the third annual past year, UnitedHealthcare Hair Fitness Competition at has been running a pilot the Bronner Bros. Interna- program in Wisconsin that tional Hair Show in Atlanta trains stylists in how to encourage their female Afrion Sunday. Sponsored by United- can-American clients to get Healthcare, the contest is de- active and watch what they signed to get hair profession- eat. als thinking about exerciseThere's certainly interfriendly styles. Whether it's est. When Charles offered a an updo, a weave or braids, "Stylin' Healthier Futures" the key to winning is finding class in Atlanta, it was so an attractive look that wom- popular he had to turn peoen can maintain no matter ple away. how often they want to raise After doing hair for 26 their heart rates. years, and talking to women "The hairstyle isn't the about absolutely everything only reason people aren'L going on in Lheir lives, inexercising. It's one," says cluding health scares and Reed Tuckson, chief of medi- surgeries, it seems only natucal affairs for UnitedHealth ral to Charles to take on this Group, who was joined at role. "They believe in you, the competition by Surgeon and trust in you," he says. By Vicky Hallett
The W ashington Post
Submitted photo
ABOVE: Sandy Shores, at 5 feet, 7 inches, weighed 302
pounds about two years ago, before she started exercising. LEFT: Shores completes the running portion of her circuit training on a recent morning at Pine Nursery Park. Alex McDougall / The Bulletin
Shores Continued from F1
She had been accumulating unwanted pounds ever since high school, when she started coping with the onset of hormones and emotions by eating. It wasn't any specific event that launched her unhealthy relationship with food, she said, but she remembers one job in food services that gave her access to junk food in large quantities. "I lost control," she said. Not being athletic or exceptionally active, she couldn't burn the additional calories. Food, in large quantities, has always been her "happy pill," she said. Especially sugar and sweets. Shores, who works in marketing for Papa Murphy's pizza, had Lried many dieLs, buL nothing really worked until her life's circumstances came to a head and she realized "doing things the same wasn't working for me anymore," she said. The economy tanked, and her husband lost his job. She worked three jobs and wasn't handling the stress well, experiencing anxiety, panic attacks, depression and fatigue. When they had to move into a different house, "the physical part of moving was almost impossible;' she said. "I could hardly lift furniture." And she realized that no matter what she told her daughters - who are now 12, 10 and 7 - they were starting to mimic her behavior: eating junk food, sitting on the couch too much. She had tried to tell them how to eat right, "but I was being a hypocrite." Her goal is to reach 150 pounds or a size 8, whichever comes firsl. She's abouL 50 pounds away, she figures, after a spell of weight gain last winter. She set that weight goal because it's on the top of the "normal" range within the body mass index (BMI) calculation of height and weight. "I'll be half of my former self," she said.
Self-motivated, community-supported She didn't have the money to join a gym or to hire a personal trainer or dietitian. But she watched a television show called "Losing it with Jillian" (Michaels) about a trainer who helps people reach their fitness goals. To Sandy, this show, where people were still contending with their normal
lives, families, jobs, bills, etc., had a more realistic tone than "The Biggest Loser," where obese people exit their daily lives and live together away from home for a reality TV show filming. She looked up Jillian Michaels' website and read about her food program and circuit-training workouts. She signed up for a free trial in July of 2010. She lost six pounds in one week, then 50 pounds in 16 weeks. Success motivated her. Exercise became part of her daily routine, a job that she's dedicated to keeping even if she doesn't like it some days. It helped her manage her life. "Working out helped me deal with stress," she said. She counts calories now. She guessed that she used to eat between 3,000 and 5,000 calories a day. She could consume two cheeseburgers, a super-size fries, a Coke and a milkshake at McDonald's in one sitting. Now she limits herself to about 1,300 calories a day. She feels hungry a lot, sometimes so much she has to sit on her hands to keep from eating something, or just go to bed to make the hunger go away. But she knows eating the right foods - more vegetables, chicken, eggs, fewer hamburgers and fries - will fill her up better. For most of this time, she's allowed herself a "cheat" day each week, when she can eat what she wants. "I can turn down a brownie on Friday because I can have a whole pan on Saturday," she said. But she's starting to realize that's not healthy, either. On Saturdays , she usually feels horrible. "I think I'm at the point now - no, I know I'm aL Lhe poinL in my journey where Saturday is not a free-for-all." On top of strength-building circuit workouts, she started walking, then jogging. Her husband joined her, and he subsequently has lost weight, too. They ran a 5K. In the fall of 2010, she started a blog (www. sandysjourney.com), to tell her story as well as to inspire others, and she's gathered anumber of followers. It keeps her accountable, she said. Last summer, some of her supportive friends said, "What can we do?" and she told them, "You can work out with me." In the fall of 2011, Sandy completed a half marathon. Footzone running supply store gave her some shoes and
gear. Juniper Swim & Fitness Center gave her family a type of scholarship to help them work out over the winter. A company called Nathan, a performance gear outfitter based in Pennsylvania, gave her some reflective gear and handheld water bottles for running. Her sister, Sarah Miller, of Rend, took her to Las Vegas last summer as a reward for losing 100 pounds, she said. "It was so exciting sitting in an airplane seat, comfortably, and buckling the seat belt without asking for a seat belt extender. It's the little things that mean the most. "My support system has been crucial to my success," she said.
Challenges Last winter, some friends and family Lold her she was getting obsessive about working out. They told her she didn't need to lose more weight. "It messed with me. I listened to them," she said. For
six weeks she stopped exercise, and she regained some weight. "I didn't like the way it felt. This is me now. It has to be me. They'll never understand because they weren't 150 pounds overweight. They haven't dealt with the food addictions I have." She still sees herself as a fat person, she said. When she thinks about fun things to do on her off time, she considers friends she wants to sit around and eat with and watch movies with. She doesn't yet see herself as part of the crowd that she knows she should spend time with - the ones who ride bikes on weekends, for example. But recently she and her dad went on a 40-mile bike ride. She also hiked Black Butte with her sister. "I'm geLLing exciLed abouL the things I'm able to do now," she said. "This will change the course of my life." - Reporter: 541-383-0304, aaurand@bendbulletin.com
Weekly Arts & Entertainment
If you or someone you know has b een diag nosed wit h Irrit able Bowe l Syndrom e, th ere is no w an opportunity to j oin a new re sea rch st ud y. ELIGIBILI TY REQUIREMENTS : • Must be b etween 18 and 80 years old • Have diarrhea predo minant irritable bowel syndrome
Call 877-692-8338 for mo re informatio n.
!
!?o~i~ ITotal Canf
F4
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 2012
MEDICINE •
Study finds stressed-out men prefer a fleshier woman
VITALSTATS
WASHINGTON- There may be a love story at the intersection of the nation's battered economy and a steady rise in its obesity rates: Compared with men without a care in the world, men who are stressed out are more likely to find a rounder, plumper woman more attractive. Men under stress not only rated the attractiveness of heavier women more positively, they found women appealing across a wider size spectrum than did men who were not stressed , says a new study published by the open-access journal Public Library of Science (PLoS) One. Those findings are in line with long-standing evolutionary theories of how humans define beauty ideals in the opposite sex. Whether it's a man's square chin or the curve of a woman's waist, physical traits that project good
Depression among adolescents Adolescent girls have more than three times the rate (12 percent) of major episodes of depression as adolescent boys (3.5 percent). The risk of depression for girls appears to peak at age 16.
20·------------------------------,
5
12
13
14 15 Years of age
Continued from F1 Among frequent donors defined as women who donate more than three times a year and men who donate more than four times - two-thirds of women and half of men where iron deficient, despite having passed the finger-stick hemoglobin test. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, among the general population, about 2 percent of U.S. men and 3 percent of U.S. women are iron deficient. "The unavoidable conclusion is present blood collection practice fails to protect committed blood donors from the iron deficiency," Dr. Gary Brittenham, a pediatric hematologist, wrote in an editorial on the study findings in the journal Transfusion last year. Blood donation experts have long suspected the current standards for donating blood may lead to iron depletion if not outright deficiency in donors, but other than anecdotal reports, had little hard data on which to base decisions. A second study published last month by the National Institutes of Health Department of Transfusion Medicine found that 49 percent of women and 39 percent of men who passed finger-stick hemoglobin tests had low iron stores. Combined, those studies are prompting the Red Cross and other blood collection centers to look at making changes. "Do we have enough knowledge to make a change today? That answer 's got to be yes," Benjamin said.
Changing the rules While blood donation :;tandards are set by the FDA, collection centers can adopt stricter rules on their own. One option would be to increase the minimum time between donations. The FDA has set that minimum interval at 56 days, allowing donors to give blood more than six times a year. The U.S. and Canada have the shortest duration of any country. The U.K., for example, requires a wait of 112 days, although the nation's National Health Service recently launched a studvto determine whether that interval could be shortened. Benjamin said, however, that increasing the minimum interval in the U.S. could cut the overall blood supply by 5 to 10 percent. Another option would be to improve the testing for iron depletion by measuring ferritin levels in the bloodstream. That would be more complicated to do at donation sites. Results of the test would not be available prior to the donation, meaning blood centers would have to notify donors of their low iron status after the fact. Those donors could then seek help from their doctors to restore their iron stores. That's not unlike what now happens with blood that tests positive for HIV or hepatitis. The testing would also add additional costs to the process, and there is no ferritin test approved by the FDA for donor screening. Blood centers are considering handing out iron tablets to frequent donors. But if that was done in the absence of ferritin testing, it could results in some donors getting more iron
17
Scott Steussy I The Bulletin
source: Substance Abuse and Mental Hea~h Services Administration
Blood
16
health, maximum fertility and access to food and shelter promise the interested party the prospect of a good mate for carrying forth one's genes, and are thus more attractive. By this reasoning, traits that convey ample access to food and an ability to withstand hardship will become more appealing in places and at times when food supplies are scarce or threatened. The study, conducted by researchers from the University of Westminster in London, gathered 81 heterosexual male university students between the ages of 18 and 42, and divided them into two groups. Each individual in the no-stress group was shown to a quiet room before he was asked to judge a series of photographic and standardized images of women who ranged from ema-
ciated to obese. To induce stress in the members of one group, the researchers put individuals in a mock job-interview situation, standing each man before a video camera, tape recorder and a panel of four judges and asking him to make afive-m inute pitch for himself. The "stressed" participants were then further rattled by having to count backward from 1,022 by factors of 13. In the wake of those trials, the average "ideal" body shape identified by the stressed men was larger than that identified by men who had not experienced the combined pressures of a job interview and arithmetic gymnastics. The stressed men rated female body shapes at a higher body-mass index as more attractive than did the unstressed men. At the same time, the stressed
Iron status
World of blood donation
A study by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute found that half of men and two-thirds of women who donated blood frequently were iron deficient. Nonetheless, the average hemoglobin levels, PERCENT IRON the measure used to AVERAGE DEFICIENT test for iron HEMOGLOBIN deficiency at blOOd Grams per decaliter 80% - - - - -, collection sites, 20 were above the 12.5 70 1--- - - ·66;115.1 g/d I cutoff for both 14.5 13.3 60 1--- - - - l 15 r.l- 13.2 men and women.
Other countries use different hemoglobin cutoffs and minimum intervals for blood donation than the U.S. Many have separate standards for men and women.
• No donation in past two years More than 3 (2 for women) donations in last year
to 5
0
MEN
WOMEN
WOMEN
Source: REDS-II Donor Iron Status Evaluation study
Region
Hemoglobin cut-offs
Minimum interval (in days)
Men
Women
Men
Women
Germany
13.5
12.5
56 (6x/yr)
56 (4x/yr)
Australia
13.0
12.0
84
84
U.K.
13.5
12.5
112
112
Scotland Singapore
13.5
12.5
84 (3x/yr)
84 (3x/yr)
12.5
12.5
84 (4x/yr)
84 (4x/yr)
U.S.A./Canada 12.5
12.5
56
56
Switzerland
12.5
12.5
(4x/yr)
(3x/yr)
Netherlands
13.5
12.5
(5x/yr)
(3x/yr)
Hong Kong
13.0
11.5
(4x/yr)
(3x/yr)
Source: Food and Drug Administration
A second study PERCENT IRON compared iron DEPLETED levels in people to 60°ft0 those in donors 50 who had been deferred due to low 40 hemoglobin levels. 30 29 30 .
Low hemoglobin Normal hemoglobin
20
-
to
-rl
0
MEN
18_:-
WOMEN
PERCENT IRON DEFICIENT 60°/c0
53
50
~ --
40
--
30
--
23
20
~-
to
.!!!.---
0
MEN
~
WOMEN
Source: Department of Transfusion Medicine, Natlonallnstrtutes of Health Andy Zeigert i The Bulletin
than needed. FDA officials have also been asking their advisors about the possibility of changing the hemoglobin cutoffs to donate. Currently, both men and women must have a hemoglobin score of at least 12.5 grams per decaliter to donate. Many consider that cutoff to be too low for men, and some believe it is too high for women. That could mean manv women with normal iron stores are being deferred while at the same time, men who are borderline anemic are allowed to donate. But while blood collection organizations recognize that iron stores are being depleted with the current donation protocols, they are less sure that patients are experiencing any harm. "We really have no evidence, whether symptomatology or good clinical evidence, that we've done h arm," Ben jamin said. "It's a theoretical construct." The NIH study did find that iron-deficient donors had higher rates of restless leg syn drome or a condition known as pica, which is characterized by a desire to eat non-nutritive substances, such as chewing ice. Donors who develop ane mia can also feel fatigu ed or lethargic. Dr. Celso Bianco, executive vice president of America's I3lood Centers, fears that moves to protect donors from uncertain harm could also affect the supply of blood needed to save lives. "We want to do well with the donors, but on the other hand, we are afraid that if you just go for a number in the cutoff in hemoglobin, we are going to create some issues and we may not resolve the problem," Bianco said. A change in the hemoglobin cutoff, he says, could affect the number of AfricanAmerican donors who have a higher prevalence of certain kinds of blood types needed to treat conditions like sickle cell
a nemia. "Even among Caucasians, we are all after the universal donor, the 0 -negative, for red cells, and so those are the donors that get more calls from the centers to go and donate," Bianco said. "What is the impact of reducing the frequency of donation by those individuals?" While replacing the iron lost though frequent blood donations could be an option that doesn't affect the supply of blood, Bianco expressed concerns that handing out iron tablets could mask the symptoms of other conditions not caused by blood donation. "For instance, among males, (with) colon cancer or even hemorrhoids, the way you are going to find out that a person has the problem is because they h ave a lower level than expected of hemoglobin and that will trigger a lot of action by the physician searching for a cause," he said.
Patient harm But blood collection officials also acknowledge they've heard plenty of cases of patients whose doctors ordered test after test searching for the cause of blood loss, the most common cause of iron deficiency, without considering the impact of blood donation. Joe Weirzba, 63, of Bend, has been donating blood since he was 18, prompted by a classmate who had hemophilia. While a health care administrator on the Oregon Coast, he donated every time a blood drive came to town, about two to three times a year. But once he and his wife, Shelly, moved to Bend two years ago, he could donate every eight weeks. After his lOth donation at the minimum interval, a blood test during an annual physical in July showed his ferritin levels were well below normal. The low end of the normal ferritin level for men is between 12 and 18 nanograms per mil-
Andy Zeiger! I The Bulletin
liliter of blood. Wierzba's levels were in the single digits. "That started a process with the doctor and the first part of that was kind of scary," h e recalled. "The first step in the algorithm or standard of care is, this guy is losing blood, so where is it coming from?" His doctors recommended a colonoscopy and endoscopy to search for possible internal bleeding or colon cancer. Wierzba asked his wife, a physician assistant, whether his low iron levels could be the result of blood don ation. At first she discounted the notion. After all, there are set standards to en sure donors don't donate too often. But upon researching the issues, she uncovered dozens of case reports suggesting her husband's case was hardly unique. Wierzba stopped donating blood and by December, his ferritin levels had rebounded to normal levels. "The doctor said this could be cancer," he recalls. "We'd been in health care really long and this was a real awakening how tenuous all of this is." Benjamin said that sort of cascade of events is not uncommon. "We do have a lot of anec-
dotes, donors coming in and saying, 'I went to my doctor and they saw I was anemic. I told him I was a blood donor but he ignored me, and said, 'you might have colon cancer, so we'd better do $10,000 worth of tests,"'hesaid. "That's where we've failed." Benjamin said at a minimum , Red Cross centers will work to do a better job of educating patients about the risk of iron depletion and ways they can protect themselves, whether through diet and iron replacement or by waiting longer to donate if they see any of the warning signs of iron depletion. "If you are a frequent donor or a female of childbearing age, just eating a steak once a month is not going to replace the iron," Benjamin said. "You should seriously consider taking some iron supplementation." Dr. Barbara Bryant, a pathologist with the University of Texas Medical Branch, has been running perhaps the longest study of iron replacement with blood donors so far. Working with the Department of Transfusion Medicine at NIH, she developed a protocol for iron replacement and tested it in the first long-term
men were a little less discriminating in their references than were the unstressed men: They found themselves attracted to a wider range of body shapes and sizes than did the unstressed men. In designing their experiment, the researchers acknowledged that beauty ideals are strongly influenced by culture and can differ markedly among various ethnic groups. As a result, all of the participants in the study were white British men. Further research, the researchers said, might aim to flesh out how the experience of chronic stress- a more toxic form of stress than that induced in a 15-minute job interview -might account for differences in body-size judgments within and between ethnic groups. - Melissa Healy Los Angeles Times
study in blood donors. The study identified donors who had been deferred due to low hemoglobin, tested their blood for ferritin levels and then provided them with a 60-day supply of iron tablets. "We actually watched the laboratory values as they continued to donate blood," she said. "There was a correction of the iron depletion or deficiency that we had observed. As you continue to donate, you basically absorb the amount of iron you need." Bryant said that 68 percent of the test subjects given supplements took the full supply, and all of them returned to the normal range of iron stores. The researchers also found that while in their general donor population donors averaged 1.3 donations per year, those that were in the study were able to donate 1.9 times a year. "It's something that makes sense," she said. "It's relatively easy to do and it's safe, with good results." It's a protocol that donors could implement on their own as well. Benjamin recommends that even frequent donors check with their doctors before starting to take iron supplements. Bianco said that while there is concern about iron stores, he hopes that donors remember the importance of blood donation. "Most people fall with in the normal category and have reasonable stores," he said. "If people feel they are very tired, if they are pale, if their hemoglobin is too close to the cutoffs, they could wait a little bit longer between donations." Donors at America's Blood Centers donate on average 1.7 times a year, he said. Even if individuals donated twice a year, they could increase the current supply of blood without putting their iron stores at risk. "Encourage them to donate," he said, "but to pay attention to their bodies. If they have a good diet, if they have a healthy set of habits, they will do well." - Reporter: 541-617-7814, mhawryluk@bendbulletin.com
ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE All-day Workshop Friday, August 17, 201 2
J
8:30AM - 4:30PM
SESSION OBJECTIVES AND TOPICS: • • • • •
Causes, sym pt oms, treatments and behaviors Capturing Life's Jo urney; sharing stories and memories Techniques to handle challeng ing behaviors A ctivities to encourag e engagement W ays to stimu late your loved one's five senses
PRESENTER: Todd and Lori Sensenbach Family Education Trainers; Home Inst ea d Se nior Care
In Care
Seating is limited. No Charge. RSVP required.
2075 NE W yaH Cou rt
Call 541 -382-5882 or email Lisa lisamh@partnersbend.org
Bend, OR 9770 1
Locat ion: Partners In Ca re ; large confe re nce room 2075 NE Wyatt Co urt
H ospice
I
541 -382·5882
I Bend , O reg on
H o m e H ealth
•• X: Partners www.partnersbend.org
I
Hospice H o use
I
Transitio ns
MEDICINE
THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
F5
Artificial pancreas researcher A hint of success in uses own diabetes in his work treating Alzheimer's By Meeri Kim The Philadelphia In4.uirer
PHILADELPHIA - A halfdozen medical students crowd into a lab at Jefferson Medical College as Jeffrey Joseph points to a graph of a patient's blood sugar. While healthy levels stay within a narrow range, this man's pattern is wildly erratic, peaking at four times the normal amount after a meal and plunging dangerously low during sleep. The graph<> are from a diabetic named Brian who had his blood sugar, or glucose, continuously monitored over three days for a study, says Joseph, head of Jefferson's Artificial Pancreas Center. "You know, Brian? From the lab!' He is referring to Brian Hipszer: assistant professor at the center, Type 1 diabetic and sometime guinea pig. "He has modeled his own body for research purposes," said anesthesiologist Joseph. Hipszer, who graduated from Drexel University with a doctorate in biomedical engineering, describes his relationship with Joseph, 54, as "yin and yang; he's clinical, I'm technical." Their research aims to create the "holy grail" for Type 1 diabetics - a "closed-loop" artificial pancreas that mimics the natural organ. They test different types of continuous glucose monitors and develop computer programs to automate insulin delivery. Such a system would require no input from the patient, thus "closing the loop." Hipszer believes that such an artificial pancreas will be available within 5 to 10 years. Life for Type 1 diabetics is a never-ending balancing act. Blood-sugar levels outside the narrow healthy range can have dire consequences. Hypoglycemia, or too little glucose, can get "very dangerous, very quickly," said Hipszer, because the brain runs only on glucose. Low levels can cause loss of consciousness and eventually death. Too much glucose, hyperglycemia, over time can have serious long-term effects including kidney failure and blindness. The artificial pancreas aims to prevent such extremes by continuously monitoring glucose and dosing the right amount of insulin - a hormone normally produced by the pancreas - to keep blood sugar levels stable. That amount isn't easy to gauge, however. It takes an immense amount of planning for diabetics to properly dose insulin. They have to count carbs before every meal or snack, while also accounting for activity level, stress, and overall heallh. "If I didn't eat, then I can give myself a little bit of insulin minute by minute and everything will be cool. But in the real world, I eat three meals a day, exercise - it is challeng-
April Saul I Philadelphia Inquirer
Dr. Brian Hipszer shows a continuous insulin infusion system with a real-time glucose sensor that helps him manage his diabetes.
ing to keep it nice and stable," Hipszer said. Indeed, Joseph tells his medical students that even for a diabetes researcher who has been studying his disease for more than a decade - wearing an insulin pump and a sensor and pricking his finger - Hipszer's glucose still bounces "all over the place." A blood test, hemoglobin Al C, is used to gauge a person's average glucose level over several months. A normal nondiabetic's AlC level is about 4.5 to 6 percent, while "someone who's had uncontrolled diabetes for a long time" can have levels above 9 percent, the Mayo Clinic says. During Hipszer's freshman and sophomore years at Drexel, his was up to 12 percent, putting him at risk for severe kidney, nerve, and blood vessel damage. "I was a little angry at that point," he recalls. "I guess everybody with a chronic disease struggles with the issue that it will be a part of their life." For many diabetics, it can take months, or even years, to accept reality. Hipszer says, for him, two people made him finally snap out of it. The first, his endocrinologist: "It got to a point where he said, 'lf you can't do this on your own, maybe we should hospitalize you.' Thal made me slarl paying attention." The second was his future wife, Laurel, now a pharmacist, whom he met while they were at Drexel. Hipszer initially shied away from diabetes research be-
cause it felt "too personal" and he "didn't want (diabetes) to be any larger than it had to be" in his life. But as his health improved, he thought more about devoting his career to the condition. His strengths were in computer engineering and math, and after being introduced to Joseph, they decided he could use that expertise to artificially mimic the regulation of glucose in a healthy body. He spent the next 10 years with this as the focus of his doctoral research, investigating equations that model how the body regulates glucose. Today, what Hipszer calls his "unique perspective" remains invaluable: "I make sure people are grounded and understand the realities of the disease." His dual role as researcher and patient also comes in handy while planning studies. For instance, Hipszer was curious about where he could "comfortably" harpoon hospital patients with multiple needletipped glucose sensors. His own body provided the answer: three in his abdomen, two in his biceps. Originally, he tried a sixth in his thigh but it was too painful going into that large muscle, so he took it out after a few hours. The other five he wore for three days. Hipszer also volunteered to be a subject in one of the early closed-loop trials for Medtronic, a company that uses the center to test products. Founded in 1998, the Jefferson center consists of Joseph,
care trust. Trust. It isn't something that is freely given. It has to be earned. For the past 90 years, when you or your loved ones have needed medical care, St. Charles Health System has been there. But did you know that you can also rely on St. Charles for your family's primary care? With clinics throughout Central Oregon, St. Charles Family Care providers will guide you through all of your family's medical needs in every chapter of life.
St. Charles
~~
Family f Care 541· 706·4800 I 2965 NE Conners Ave., Bend StCharlesHealthCare.org 110
Hipszer, and a handful of research coordinators. The center relies mostly on industry funding - it now has eight industry sponsors, including insulin pump manufacturers Medtronic and West Chester-based Animas Corp. -but also has National Institutes of Health and U.S. Army grants. It typically works with a total of about $500,000 per year. Joseph and his team often test products and present their results to the Food and Drug Administration to help with decisions about approving medical devices. Joseph recently returned from FDA headquarters, where he showed data from a Medtronic insulin delivery system built with a feature called "low glucose suspend," a step toward a closed-loop system, he says. It protects only against low blood sugar. If the sensor recognizes that glucose is plunging to dangerous levels, the system will attempt to alert the diabetic. If, after multiple alarms, the person does not respond due to deep sleep, the insulin will automatically shut off for a few hours to prevent blood sugar from dropping too low and causing loss of consciousness. In Europe, the low glucose suspend feature is already available commercially; it should be available in the United States within a year, Joseph said. While a fully functioning artificial pancreas would not be a cure, it would ease diabetics' daily life immensely. Already, Hipszer uses a glucose sensor that talks to his insulin pump, linking two of the three pieces of an artificial pancreas. "1 have three kids at home. My wife is a working professional, and I'm very busy at work," he says. "This device helps." His insulin pump, Medtronic's Paradigm Revel523, is one of a handful that are commercially available, and the only device that combines the insulin pump and glucose monitor display in one unit. The Revel pump sells for $6,900, and it costs about $700 a month to operate. Hipszer said his health insurance covers these expenses. The last piece would be to allow one of his own computer programs to take full control of his insulin pump. Would an automated system do a better job than a leading artificial pancreas researcher? "I know I'm not the worstcontrolled diabetic, but I know I'm not the best," he admits with a laugh. "I'd jump off a building if I couldn't eat what I wanted."
raises ethical quandary
By Melissa Healy Los Angeles T imes
Amid the generally discouraging news about drugs that can slow or reverse the progress of Alzheimer's disease, a new study is a faint glimmer of hope: In mice whose brains are clogged with the protein deposits that characterize Alzheimer's, a drug called bexarotene substantially reversed key signs of dementia and reduced by half the telltale protein deposits of the disease. The encouraging new findings come at a heartbreaking moment: just two days after a pair of pharmaceutical giants announced they are abandoning further work on bapineuzumab, an immunotherapy for Alzheimer's disease that proved disappointing in the late stages of human testing. By contrast, bexarotene, known commercially as Targretin, is already on the U.S. market, approved by the Food and Drug Administration as a treatment for a form of non-Hodgkins lymphoma that affects the skin. And that has led a trio of bioethicists from the Nationa! Institutes of Health to ask: What's to stop a physician from prescribing bexarotene to an Alzheimer's patient whose family believes it's their loved one's only hope? Legally, the answer is: nothing. Because bexarotene is already legally available in the U.S., physicians are perfectly entitled to use their medical judgment and prescribe the drug "off-label" to their patients. Ethically, however, the team of bioethicists savs that the latest study poses a difficult conundrum- as have similar situations where early evidence suggests an existing medication may help treat an incurable disease. The latest study, and the accompanying perspective, were published last week in theNew England Journal of Medicine. And the ethicists' concerns couldn't come too soon: There's already plenty of evidence that patients' families are clamoring to get bexarotene, on the basis of research published last February. For starters, the ethicists note that the results of the new research are a far cry from proof that bexarotene will have the same dramatic effects in the human
brain, or on human behavior. The drug's side effects can be significant, they add: It can raise cholesterol, reduce the effectiveness of insulin in diabetics, and it's been linked to changes in thyroid function, acute pancreatitis and low white blood-cell count. Those facts alone dictate that it is too early for a physician ethically to prescribe bexarotene for Alzheimer's disease. But even if further trials on humans are promising - a circumstance the ethicists say would likely create "sudden overwhelming demand" for the drug - the dilemma faced by physicians, patients and their advocates may persist. For one thing, widespread use of the drug among Alzheimer's disease patients may make it more difficult for researchers to populate the clinical trials needed to rigorously test the drug's effectiveness in treating the disease. Those will require that some subjects get a placebo - and if bexarotene is already in wide use, many families will shy away from enrolling a loved one in a clinical trial, fearing they might not get the drug. Second, patients and their advocates must consider whether it is fair for doctors to begin writing prescriptions for bexarotene for patients with dementia. The unreimbursed cost of treating an Alzheimer's disease patient with bexarotene would make this a treatment option only for the very wealthy. And to the extent that Alzheimer's patients would likely quickly deplete stores of bexarotene, the far smaller population of lymphoma patients who need the drug would likely be unable to find it. Physicians' groups "should not try to address this challenge alone," wrote the bioethicists, led by Dr. Steven Pearson of the National Human Genome Research Institute. Similar ethical concerns came up when drugs that would treat HIV/AIDS first came to light, they wrote. And they will continue to arise as research finds new uses for old drugs. "It would be crucial ... to engage with a broad spectrum of patient advocates and others to produce guidance with true legitimacy," the authors wrote. "Such a discussion could provide a model for future situations with other therapies," they added.
for appointments call EVERGREEN
In-Home Care Servlceo Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541· 389· 0006 www.evergreeninhome.com
541 -382-4900
F6
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 2012
MoNEY Mental health coverage to benefrt under health care ad, advocates say
~~ VITAL SlATS
AUSTIN, Texas- Private insurance has saved Barbara Vinson thousands of dollars on her son's mental health care. Since 2010, her carrier has paid more than $18,000 for her son Michael's inpatient treatment and psychiatric drugs for bipolar disorder. Now, due to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Michael, 24, will be able to stay on that insurance until he's 26. "You are born with this biological disease, and it's like diabetes," said Vinson, a high school teacher. "You have to deal with it your whole life." The U.S. Supreme Court in June upheld most of the Affordable Care Act, the federal health care overhaul aimed primarily at decreasing the number of uninsured Americans and reducing the
Time oil A recent survey found that workers with paid sick leave were more likely to have seen a doctor or received preventive cancer screenings in the past year. • Has sick leave 100% • No sick leave 80%
76%
72%
60% 40% 20% 0
Physician visit
Mammography
Pap smear
Health encounter
Source: Biomed Central Public Health Journal
Ambiguity Continued from F1
Under the law, most Americans will be required to have health insurance starting in 2014. Low- and middleincome people can get tax credits and other subsidies to help pay their premiums, unless they have access to affordable coverage from an employer. The law specifies that employer-sponsored insurance is not affordable if a worker's share of the premium is more than 9.5 percent of the worker's household income. The IRS says this calculation should be based solely on the cost of individual coverage for the employee, what the worker would pay for "selfonly coverage." Critics say the administration should also take account of the costs of covering a spouse and children because family coverage typically costs much more. In 2011, according to an annual survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation, premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance averaged $5,430 a year for single coverage and $15,070 for family coverage. The employee's share of the premium averaged $920 for individual coverage and more than four times as much, $4,130, for family coverage. Under the IRS proposal, such costs would be deemed affordable for a family making $35,000 a year, even though the family would have to spend 12 percent of its income for full coverage under the employer's plan. The debate over the meaning of affordable pits the administration against its usual allies. Many people who support the new law said the proposed rules could leave millions of people in the lower middle class uninsured and frustrate the intent of Congress, which was to expand coverage. "The effect of this wrong interpretation of the law will be that many families remain or potentially become uninsured," said a letter to the administration from Democrats who pushed the bill through the House in 200910. The lawmakers include Reps. Henry Waxman of California and Sander Levin of Michigan. Bruce Lesley, the presi-
Greg Cross I The Bulletin
many employers.
"This is a serious glitch. Under the proposal, millions of children and families would be unable to obtain affordable coverage in the workplace, but ineligible for subsidies to buy private insurance in the exchanges."
Differing interpretations
-Bruce Lesley, president, First Focus
dent of First Focus, a child advocacy group, said: "This is a serious glitch. Under the proposal, millions of children and families would be unable to obtain affordable coverage in the workplace, but ineligible for subsidies to buy private insurance in the exchanges" to be established in each state.
Business concerns Businesses dislike the idea of insurance mandates and penalties but said the IRS had correctly interpreted the law. "Employers who offer health coverage do so primarily on behalf of their employees," said Kathryn Wilber, a lawyer at the American Benefits Council, which represents many Fortune 500 companies. "Although many employers do provide family coverage to full-time employees, many do not." The IRS issued final rules for the health insurance premium tax credit in May, but deferred its final decision on the affordability of family coverage. Sabrina Siddiqui, a Treasury Department spokeswoman, said, "\Ve welcome comments from stakeholders and consumer groups and look forward to continuing to work with them to implement these rules and to ensure families get the affordable care they need." The administration is trying to strike a balance. If the rules allow more people to qualify for subsidies, it would increase costs to the federal government. If the rules re quire employers to provide affordable coverage to de pendents as well as workers, it would increase costs for
Dr. David Bromberg, a spokesman for the American Academy of Pediatrics, said, "The IRS' interpretation of the law could unravel much of the progress that has been made in covering children in recent years." The Service Employees International Union said the proposal "discriminates against marriage and families ." Some of the most important provisions of the law will be carried out by the IRS . Besides offering tax credits to individuals and families, it will impose tax penalties on people who go without insurance and on businesses that do not offer it. The agency said its reading of the law was supported by the Congressional Joint Committee on Taxation. The health care rules were drafted by "our legal experts - career civil servants who are some of the best tax lawyers in the world," said Douglas Shulman, the IRS commissioner. The law says an employer with 50 or more full-time employees may be subject to a tax penalty if it fails to offer coverage to "its full time employees (and their dependents)." However, more than two years after President Barack Obama signed the law, the employer's obligation to dependents is unclear. In explaining how the penalty is to be computed, the law does not mention dependents. Employers pay a penalty only if one or more full-time employees receive subsidies. Companies are less likely to offer or pay for coverage of dependents in industries with low wages and high turnover, like restaurants. Some employers and members of Congress have suggested a possible compromise. The government would still look at the cost of "selfonly coverage" in deciding whether insurance was affordable to an employee. If family coverage under the employer's plan was too expensive, a family could get subsidies to buy insurance for dependents in the exchange, and the employer would not be penalized.
cost of health care. While much of the attention has focused on physical health care, mental health advocates say the legislation is a victory for people with psychiatric disorders. In fact, they say, some of its key elements that went into effect in 2010- such as prohibiting lifetime limits on benefits and allowing young adults to be covered by their parents' insurance up to the age of 26- have already helped people. Mental health experts say extending dependent insurance coverage was critical because mental illness often emerges in a person's teens or early 20s. "This was huge," said Gyl Switzer, public policy director for Mental Health America of Texas. "There's lots of research showing your brain doesn't stop develop-
ing until you're 25." Starting in 2014, insurers will have to provide benefits for mental health and substance abuse disorders, such as medications and rehabilitative services. That requirement not only provides people with the financial he Ipthey need but helps battle stigma by making psychiatric services a routine part of health care, said David Evans, executive director of Austin Travis County Integral Care, which provides mental health services to low-income people. "This makes treatment affordable and hopefully allows people to access services much earlier in the course of their illness," he said. The act includes incentives for health care providers to coordinate primary care, mental health and addiction services. It also prohibits insurers from deny-
ing coverage or charging higher premiums because of pre-existing conditions. The Supreme Court struck downthe law's mandate for states to expand Medicaid coverage to childless adults and people without disabilities, but states can still chooseto participate. Under provisions of the act, the federal government would pay states 100 percent of the expansion for the first three years; later, it would push as much as 10 percent of the burden to the states. The expanded program would add 1.5 million to 2 million Texans to the Medicaid rolls, which would then give them access to mental health services, according to the Center for Public Policy Priorities, a nonprofit advocacy group. -By Andrea Ball, The Austin American-Statesman
Poll finds seniors upbeat but ill-prepared for aging By Diane C. Lade Sun S entinel (Fort Lauderdale)
Life is good, say more than 2,000 senior citizens in a new nationwide survey released in Miami on Wednesday. Almost ·three-fourths of those surveyed say their past year was as good or better than the previous one. And more than a third of those younger than 70 expect their quality of life to improve as they age. But other results seen in the first-ever "United States of Aging" poll - which asked questions about health, housing, finances and life satisfaction - suggests a peek inside some seniors' checkbooks and medical files might hint they are poorly prepared for the road ahead. The National Council on Aging, UnitedHealthcare and USA Today commissioned the telephone survey of adults 60 and older, conducted in five cities or regions: Miami, Dallas, upstate New York, Milwaukee and Southern California's Orange County. While eight out of every 10 Miami seniors plan to age in their homes, almost
40 percent of them said they probably would need one of their grandchildren or children to care for them eventually. Twenty-eight percent said they didn't know if their money would last through retirement or did not have a financial plan, a rate higher than the national average. And about one-third said they might not be able to pay for an accident or unexpected medical expense, a figure also above the national average. "1 was pleased that there was so much positivity about aging, as a positive attitude has such good impacts on health. But many (elders) have not done necessary planning," said Dr. Rhonda Randall, chief medical officer for UnitedHealthcare Medicare & Retirement. While 84 percent of those surveyed nationally said they believed they could do what was necessary to maintain their health for the next five to 10 years, only half reported they exercised regularly. "Those engaging in unhealthy lifestyle habits won't have the ability to age healthy," Randall said. The poll, which may be repeated annually, aims to
gauge if the baby boomers are prepared for aging as well as those who retired years ago. The results will b e used to create a discussion guide available for communities wanting to run forums on how to better serve their elders. Seniors with household incomes of less than $30,000 face even greater challenges, as they have fewer resources and tend to be in poorer health, said Richard Birkel, acting senior vice president at the council's Center for Healthy Aging. Almost half of those with lower incomes polled said they didn't know if they could meet their monthly expenses in the near future, and 72 percent had at least one chronic health condition. Max Rothman, president of the Alliance for Aging serving Miami-Dade and Monroe counties, said most seniors looking for assistance are close to 80. About 5,000 are on waiting lists for services like home care. "I think the biggest problems we keep hearing about fall into the area of financial insecurity and everything that means," he said.
Stay COOL in the Summer and Warm in the Winter with a Mini-Split Heat Pump Breathe Healthy Air! Pay Less On Your Power Bill!
SPEC FEST
FRIDAY 8/3 11 AM-3 PM
25% OFF ALL FRAMES
Get this 2-Zone, high efficiency, ductless heat pump system, Completely installed with a full warranty and 100% Satisfaction Guarantee for only $3595*
AMAZING EGO-INCENTIVES & CASH BACK REBATES.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Supplies are Limited.
Call Now!
"Net price after cash rebates and tax ~~~~~~~ credits.
L=
541 382-1231
ASPEX EYEWEAR: TAKUMI, GREG NORMAN, EASYTWIST AND EASY CLI P [FRAMES W/ MAGNETI CSUN CLIP-ONS) EUROPA INTERNATIONAL: CINZIA, CINZIABLACK, COTE D'AZURE, MICHAEL RYEN, SCOTT HARRIS
ANY PURCHASE MADEAT BLINK OPTICAL BETWEEN JULY 9TH AUGUST 3RD WILL INCLUDE A Tl CKET TO ENT ER TO WIN A SAMSUNG43-INCH PLASMA TV.
VIVA INTERNATIONAL: GUESS, GUESS BY MARCIANO
NEED NOTBE PRESENT mWIN.
blink
opti ca l boutiqu e
t£~~ ITotal Care" SPECFEST IS LOCATED AT BMC EASTSIDE CLINIC,1S01 MEDICAL CENTERDR.
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY AUGUST 16 2012
G1
Find Classifieds at
www.bendbulletin.com PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
TRANSPORTATION
contact us: .......................................................................................... ·-.~hours: .................................... . 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 hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Include your name, phone number and address
• Monday - Friday • 7:30a.m.- 5:00p.m.
Subscriber Services: 541-385-5800
· Classified Telephone Hours:
Subscribe or manage your subscription
24 Hour Message Line: 541-383-2371 On the web at:
Place, cancel, or extend an ad
The
Bullet
n
1 777
GENERAL MERCHANDISE C a n b e found unde r the following c a t e gories:
ITEMS FOR SALE 201 - New Today
202 - Want to buy or rent 203 - Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204 - Santa's Gill Basket 205 - Free Items 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 Tubs and Spas 253 - TV, Stereo and Video 255- Computers 256 - Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258- Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260 - Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262- Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
264- Snow Removal Equipment 265- Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves 267 - Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270 -lost and Found GARAGE SALES 275- Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Northwest Bend 284 - Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Northeast Bend 288 - Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales Redmond Area 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308 -Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 -Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 -Horses and Equipment 345 - livestock and Equipment 347 - llamas/Exotic Animals 350- Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce and Food
Pets & Supplies
---1~1---
Want to Buy or Rent Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver. I buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541 -633-7006 WANTED: RAZORS, Double or singleedged, straight razors, shaving brushes, mugs & scuttles. strops, shaving accessories & memora bilia. Fair prices paid. Call 541 -390-7029 between 1 o am-3 pm. ---1~1-- Pets & Supplies The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area . Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to fraud. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Atto rney General's Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1 -877-877-9392 .
The Bulletin Serving C€'n tral O regon since 1903
Aussie's mini AKC, red tri's/merle's, males / females parents on site some toy size. Call 541-598-5314/788-7799 Australian Shepherd 2-yr male, free to approved home. 541 -383-4552 Barn/shop cats FREE, some tame, some not. We deliver! Fixed, shots, etc. 541- 389-8420
Boxer puppies, AKC reg, 1st shots, very social $700. 541 -325-3376
Kittens/cats avail. thru rescue group. Tame, shots, altered, ID chip, more. Sat/Sun 1-5, other days by appt. 65480 78th Bend, Buddha needs a furever 541 -389-8420; visit home' Playful 8-yr old www.craltcats.org for boy LOVES people & photos & more. kids! Call Jefferson Co. Kennels (541 -475-6889) Lab Pups AKC , black or visit Buddha's Face& yellow, Master book page (Wanted: A Hunter sired, perterHome tor Buddha the Pit mance pedigree, OFA Bull) to learn more about cert hips & elbows, adopting Buddha. Cal l 541 -771-2330 - - - - - - - - - www.kinnamanretrievers.com Chi-Pom female , 6 yrs Labradoodles - Mini & needs new home. med size, several colors $150. 541-639-7279. 541 -504-2662 www.alpen-ridge.com Dachshund AKC mini Maltese Toy AKC (1), puppy, ready 8/25, $350. Champ bloodlines, 1 _75 www.bendweenies.com lb, $ _ _ _ 685 541 420 1577 541 -508-4558 DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $5000R LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with o ur "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 w eek 3 lines, $12 or 2 weeks. $20! Ad must include price of single item of $500 or less. or multiple items w l10se total does not exceed 5500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
Pitbull Purebred Pups, fawns & seals, $250$300, 541 -362-5133. POODLE (TOY) PUPS W ell-socialized & lovable. 54 1-475-3889
Queensland Heelers
standard & mini,51 50 & up. 541-280-1537 http:// rightwayranch.wordpress.com Schnauzer Miniature puppies . Family raised, parents on site, 1st/2nd vaccinatio ns, males & females available, $350 each. 541 -771-1830. Siamese kittens. raised in home. Gorgeous! only $15. 541-977-7019 THANKS to Dr. Peterson & staff of Companion Pet Clinic, Bend, for the long- time support & expert guidance given to Cat Rescue. Adoption & Foster Team while they help the forgotten & abused cats & kittens of Central O R. www .craftcats.org
GIANT yard sale to benefit rescued animals! Every Sat/Sun in Aug, 10-4. Nonprofit, no-kill, all volunteer, all proceeds for vet bills. Tax ded. 8950 Hwy 97, Redmond, 2 mi. N of Tumalo Rd overpass. 541-788-41 70, or Wolf-Husky Pup, sweet, 541-389-8420. playful, runt ma le, www.craftcats.org $275. 541 -977-7019 --------Jack Russell puppies, Yorkie - Adorable 9 week old purebred purebred, born 7/2, $ 350 ea. 541 _420_0739 Male pup fo r sale. $500. Will be a pprox Sib full grown First shots. tail li!ldocked, dewclaws removed, health guarantee and worming . Ready for his new forever home Kittens, I : 1 fenow. Call to schedule male, $10 ea., only to a meetin g to fall in a good home! 8 wks. love with your new fur old, 541-290-9395 baby! 541-678-3105.
s. w
www.bendbulletin.com
Chandler
Ave . '
• Monday- Friday 7:30a.m.- 5:00 p.m. • Saturday 10:00 a.m.- 12:30 p.m.
Bend
Oregon
9 7 7 0 2
---1~1-- ---1~1--~ ---1~1---- ---1~1---...., ~-----1~1------...., ~------1~1--------Pets & Supplies Antiques & Guns, Hunting Tools Fuel & Wood Lost & Found & Fishing Collectibles 10" Craftsman Radial Yorkie male 7 mo. FOUND: Bicycle, Wall WHEN BUYING St. area. Call to idenneutered & micro- Sale of very, VERY old Take the Rifleman's arm saw, 2.4hp. Older, tify 541-388-3645. chipped, $250. books - hundreds at $1 FIREWOOD ... Challenge! Place a but new cond, $175. 541 -550-7036 alter 6pm 541 -419-8938. each! Sat-Sun 9-2; one-inch black square To avoid fraud, Found commercial will be ongoing! down range at 25 Attn: Hunters & RV'ers The Bulletin Yorkie male pup AKC grade backpack meters and put 10 Like potty trained, loves kids, 60734 Bristol Way, Bend recommends paynew Yamaha blower. 54 1-610-8471 rounds inside the EF3000 shots, heath guaranteed. The Bulletin reserves ment for Firewood generator black, can you do it? If w/cover, electric start, $650. 541-316-0005 . only upon delivery the right to publish all Found Fly Rod , on East not, come join us at quiet and inspection. running. New ads from The Bulletin Lake Hwy, call to Yorkie male puppy, 6 The Appleseed $2250; asking $1500 • A cord is 128 cu. ft. newspaper onto The identify. 541-610-9832 mos. shots, vet check, Project at Redmond obo. 541-815-5409 4' X 4' X 8' Bulletin Internet web$600. 541 -792-0375 Rod and Gun Club, • Receipts should site. Found pair of Oakley Sat. & Sunday, Au- Scaffolding: Safeway Yorkie Puppies, ready include name, su ng lasses on Cenlight-weight, 3 sections now, 1 little male left! gust 25 & 26. Visit phone, price and tu ry Dr. 541 -388-8897 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 $600, 541-536-3108 www.appleseedinfo.org high, all attachments & 4 kind of wood pu rfor more info. Call Paul planks incl. $3200 new; chased. Wanted: Ceramic Gas Lost Cat, 8/10, longhair ---1@£:]1--sell $950. 541-419-9233. • Firewood ads at 360-953-3232 Pump Salt & Pe pper 5-toe tabby, female, Furniture & Appliances MUST include speShakers, "Flying A UTAH +OR CCW : Or- ---1~1--Cimarron City, "Tinkcies and cost per Service, Brothers, Oregon & Utah Conerbell," 541 -771-9548. cord to better serve Building Materials egon" 701 -238-4039 cealed License Class. A1 Washers&Dryers customers. our Sat. Aug 25, 9:30 am, $150 ea. Full warTURN THE PAGE ----1~1--- REDMOND Ha bitat Madras Ra nge. Utah ranty. Free Del. Also RESTO RE For More Ads Coins & Stamps $65, OR+UT - $100. wanted, used WID's Serving Cent ral Or egon sin<e 1903 541-280-7355 lncl photo for Utah, Building Supply Resale The Bulletin Q uality at Private collector buying Call Paul Sumner LOW PRICES Dry Lodgepole: $175 postage stamp al541-475-7277 for preBar stools (2) matching, 1242 S. Hwy 97 REMEMBER: If you cord rounds; $210 cord bums & collections, reg, email , map, info wrought iron, nice! $60 541 -548-1406 split.1 Y2 Cord Minimum have lost an animal, world-wide and U.S. both. 503-396-2644 WANTED: 20 ga. shot37 yrs service to Cent. Open to the public . don't forget to check 573-286-4343 (loca l, gun, youth model, short Ore. 541-350-2859 Bookcase, 1 shelf, 28" H The Humane Society cell #) stock, pump action for x 24" W x16" deep, $10. in Bend 541 -382-3537 young hunter of small USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Call The Bulletin At 541-383-18 11 /420-6753 ---1@!]1--Redmond, 541-480-7298 stature. 541-385-5809 541-923-0882 Bicycles & Door-to-door selling with Bookcase, with drawer Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Prineville, Winchester 30-30, pre- fast results! It's the easiest Accessories files, $200, call 541 -447-7 178; At www.bendbulletin.com 64, exc. cond., $575, 541-788-7372 way in the world to sell. OR Craft Cats , Ruger, 10-22, StainBreezer Villager women's WE BUY 541 -389-8420. less, exc. cond., $200, Computer desk, good bike, 17", blue, like new, The Bulletin Classified FIREWOOD LOG S 503-830-6564 condition, $20. $400 541 330 1972 541 -383-1811/420-6753 . Juniper, Pine, 541 -385-5809 ----~1--C heck out the Mtn Bike, 17Y2' Gary Tamarack, 500+ cords. Auction Sales Desk, Executive with Fisher Marlin, blk & silclassifieds o nline 503-519-5918 glass top , $200, ver, $200 . 541 -330-1972 www.bendbulletln.com ----1~1--- 541 -788-7372. Heating & Stoves ---1~1--Estate Auction Updated daily - - - i@!)I - - Gardening Supplies Desk. oak office. w/ file Sat., Aug.18, 10 a.m. NOTICE TO Guns, Hunting drawers, $200, call ~ 15500 SW Quail Rd. & Equipment ADVERTISER 541 -788-7372 & Fishing Computers Crooked River Ranch Since September 29, (Follow signs from Hwy 97 Fridge, white, 1991, advertising for For newspaper at Lower Bridge Rd.) $~~~: 1953 Winchester Model TH E BULLETIN re- used 28"x64-3/4", woodstoves has delivery, call the Featuring 12 Field Gun, 30" bbl, quires computer ad541 -788-7372. been limited to mod1964 Chevelle, comfull choke, 95-98% cond, C irculation Dept. at vertise rs with multiple els which have been pletely restored; 1929 $500 firm. 541 -382-8723 541 -385-5800 ad schedules or those certified by the OrModel A High Top w/ To place an ad, call selling multiple sys.257 and .30-.378 egon Department of Mustang running gear; 541 -385-5809 te ms/ software, to disn C:oneopl A C:on~lg:Q Weatherby's, MarkV Environmental Qual1895 Colt Lightning 44or email Do~1g close the name of the with Leopolds. classified @bendbulletin.com ity (DEQ) and the fed40 hex bbl pump rifle; business or the term Visit our HUG E 541 -771-6768. 24' Reinell cabin cruiser; eral Environmenta l "dealer" in their ads. ho me decor Seaswirl jet boat. very Protection Agency Bend local pays CASH!! Serving Cent ral Oregon sin<e 1903 Private party advertisconsig nment store. low hrs; 2003 30' 5th (EPA) as having met for Guns. Knives & ers are defined as New items wheel w/3 slides. Guns, smoke emission stanAmmo. 541-526-0617 those who sell one arrive daily! SUPER TOP SOIL cars, tractors, impledards. A certified www .hersheysoilan dbark.com computer. g3o SE Textron, ments, shop, antiques, CASH!! woodstove may be Screened, soil & comBend 541-318-150 1 glassware, household, For Guns, Ammo & identified by its certifi---1~1--www.redeuxbend.com post mixed, no craft supplies, much Reloading Supplies. cation label, which is Travei/Tickets rocks/clods. High h umore! Very clean, 541 -408-6900. permanently attached mus level, exc. for top-quality offering. Call GENERATE SOME exto the stove. The BulDUCK TIC KETS (4), flower beds, lawns, Fred Bewley, Auctioncite ment in your letin will not knowDO YO U HAVE great seats, $125 & gardens, straight eer, 541 -923-3586 neighborhood! Plan a ingly accept advertisSOMETHING TO up. 541-573-11 00. screened top soil. or email garage sale and don't ing fo r the sale of S ELL bid2by@gmail.com Bark. Clean fill. Deforget to advertise in ---1~1--uncertified FOR $5000R 10% buyers premium will liver/ you haul. classified! apply on all purchases. LESS? woodstoves. Misc.ltems 541 -548-3949. 541-385-5809. Non-commercial advertisers may 22' alum. semi-truck trlr, Lift chair, beige color, place an ad best used for storage, barely used, like new , with our $375. 541-241 -4446 $500. 541 -447-4405 YOUR AD WILL RECEIVE CLOSE TO 2,000,000 "QUICK CASH EXPOSURESFORONLY $150! BOXES- Great for movLoveseat & Sofa, MisSPECIAL" ing/storage, $25 cash. sion style, green, 1 week 3 1ines 512 Call 541-318-4577. good cond. $250. or Week ofAugust 13, 2012 541 -504-5362 2 w eeks $20! Buying Diamonds Ad must / Gold for Cash Micro. Sharp Carousel II, include price of Saxon's Fine Jewelers works great, 24" wide, single item of $500 541 -389-6655 $10, 541 -318-4577 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 o r less, or multiple BUYIN G items whose total 541-385-5809 r;;:;uTet;;;-Lionel/American Flyer does not exceed recommends extra trains, accessories. $500. caut1on when pur541 -408-2191. chasing produc ts or Call Classifieds at BUYING & SELLING DIVORCE $135. C omplete preparation. Inc ludes children, services from out of 541-385-5809 All gold jewelry, silver the a rea. Sending www.bendbulletin.com custody, support, property and bills division. No c ourt and gold coins, bars, cas h, checks, or ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! rounds, wedding sets, appearances. Divorced in 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772-5295. credit information class rings, sterling silmay be subjected to Garno Hunter Extreme www.pa ralegalalternatives.com , divorce @usa.com . ver, coin collect , vin. 177 pellet rifle. FRAUD. For more tage watches, dental 3-9x50 scope. Near information a bout an gold. Bill Fle ming, new. List $550, ask advertiser, you may 541 -382-941 9. $300. 54 1-389-7379 call the Oregon & Womens Men State Attorney DRIVERS: ANNUAL salary $45K to $60K. $0.01 inc rease per GUN SHOW clothing; jeans, General's Office Sept. 1 & 2 mile after 6 mo nths. Quarterly bonuses. COL-A, 3 months shirts, coats . Exc. Consumer ProtecDeschutes Fairgrounds cond. 541-318-6919 tion hotline at current OTR experience. 800-414-9569, www.driveknight.com. Buy! Sell! Trade! 1 -a77-877-9392. Pedestal bed with SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 draw ers and 2 twin $8 Admission, mattress, oak SOL D. 12 & under free. Solid Mahogany comOREGON TRAIL GUN 50% OFF oc eanfront condos 12br/2ba was $700K, now $399 ,000. puter cabinet/desk, ---I@DI--- SHOWS 541-347-2120 $300. 541-815-1828 Acq uired from bank. 1 hr Vancouver, 2 hrs Seattle. Be rkshi re Antiques & Ruger M77 .338 Win Poulan Pro riding lawn Direct, 1-888-99-Marin x541 8 . Mag , 3x9x RedfieldCollectibles mower 42" 18Y2 hp Tracker scope, $1500. good shape. $700 - -A -nt-iq_u_ e_S_a-fe-.- or best reasonable OBO. 541-389-9268 offer. 541 -382-1772. great condition, $ 1800. Wanted- paying cash 949-939-5690 (Bend) LOOMIX(R) FEED supplements is seeking deale rs. Motivated for Hi-li a udio & stuSig model 228 9mm dio equip. Mcintosh, Antiques wanted: tools. individuals with cattle knowledge and community ties. Contact 4 clips, night sights, JBL, Marantz, Dyfurniture, fishing, ho lster, extra trigger, Bethany @ 800-870-0356 I becomeadeale r@adm.com to find naco, Heathkit, Sanmarbles, old signs, $500. Great gun . sui, Carver, NAD, etc. toys, costume jewelry. out if there is a dealership opportunity in your area. 541 -4 20-9487 Call 541-261-1808 Call 541-389-1578
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
R Ra'X.
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
I l
:JI I
I
1
1
1
I I I
I I I
1 I I
1 I I
LI!!:~:!!~,:.J
Services
Hel Wanted: Drivers
Real Estate
Business 0
ortunit
T0
G2THURSDAY,AUGUST16 2012•THE BULLETIN
No. 0712
Edited by Will Shortz 29 Drill sound? 31 Symbol of the planet Neptune 32 It's all downhill from here 36 Like some almanac data 37 See 24-Across 38 " .. . whole world hands" 39 Traumatize 40 Flit 41 Morticia or Uncle Fester 42 Apply roughly 44 Something that's not hard to drink? 45 "Riddle-me-46 See 24-Across 50 Not in this direction 51 Cap add-on 52 It might be used for tracking shots 54 Old lab burners 55 Cham pion wannabe
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
58 Take a coat off 59 Deal preceder 60 28-Across locale 61 Look accompanying the comment "Is that all you got?" 62 Not natural, in a way 63 Grills DOWN 1 Larry O'Brien Championship Trophy org . 2 It's a mouthful 3 With 30-Down, difficult things to be "between" 4 Prefix with culture 5 Kind of job 6 Like Napoleon 7 Called on a farm 8Country _ 9 Source of the line "Each of us bears his own Hell" 10 With 33-Down, difficult things to be "between" 11 Ancient land SE of Lesbos 12 Close in Hollywood 13 Overruled 18 Crafty 21 Roman numeral that's an anagram of part of Caesar's boast
Monday .. .. Noon Sat. Tuesday. ... Noon Mon. Wednesday Noon Tues. Thursday Noon Wed. Friday .. Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate ......... . .11:00 am Fri. Saturday .. 3:00 Fri. Sunday .. Noon Sat. Starting at 3 tines
OVER
.. ....... $18.50 4 days ... 7 days ... .. ...... $24.00 14 days. .$33.50 28 days ....... .......... ......... ......... ........ .$61.50 (call for commemalline ad rates)
30 See 3-Down 31 Ultimate degree? 33 See 10-Down 34 Old copier 35 City north of Bonn
37 "The forbidden fragrance" 38 Brainstorm 40 [Boy, am I in trouble now!) 4 1 Given a tip 43 Bully, by nature 44 Four-time Pro Bowler Samuel 46 Scouts' work
Garage Sale Special
47 Like victuals
4 tines for 4 days ..........
49 Black 53 Tolstoy heroine 55 Heel
A Payment Drop Box is avai lable at
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS:
Bend C ity Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS
MON.-FRI. 7:30a.m.- 5 :00 p.m.
BELOW
SATURDAY by telephone 10:00 a .m . - 12:30 p.m.
MARKED W ITH
KIT INCLUDES: • 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"
Multi-Family Fri-Sat 8-6, 65430 Swalley, Black powder rifles. desk, trundle bed, youth quad, 32" TV, carved bears, clothes, misc .
PICK UP YOUR BULLETIN CLASSJFJEDS GARAGE SALE KIT at Search the area's most 1777 SW C ha ndle r comprehensive listing of Ave., Bend, OR 97702 classified adverti sing .. real estate to automotive, Serving Cefltral Oreg on since 1903 merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the Fri. & S at. 8 -2, Co rne r print or on line. of NE Moonlight & Jackson. Multi-family/ Call 541-385-5809 way to much to list. www .bendbulletin.com Yard Sale, Friday & Saturday , August 17th SeMng Central Oregon since 19QJ & 18th . *8:00am Multi-Family Garage 4:00pm. 2 1566 NE Sale, Sat., Aug . 18, Butler Market Road. 9-4, in alley be hind Vintage dishes, lawn 1982 S hevlin Park Rd. mower, saddle , horse Sporting goods, furgear, baby c lothes/ bla nkets, ta ble linen, niture, tools & more! appliance s, children's Garage Multi- Family books, tables, and sale , Sat. Aug. 18, much more. 9 -4, in a lley behind 1982 S hevlin Park Rd. ----1@!)1---Spo rting goods , fur- Sales Southeast Bend niture, tools & m ore . Estate Sale: Sat. 8/18, Sat. Garage Sale: 9 am, Sun. 8/19, 8-4 , Furni2428 Todds Crest Dr., ture , household, kids off Mt Washington,shop clo thes, bedding, auto hand tools, treadmill, ite ms, collectibles, art , bikes, kayaks , 61077 Ferguson Ct.
56 Utah state animal
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
57 Low--
----1~1--- Sales Southwest Bend
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates!
Gift Store Garage Sale 541-385-5809 19827 Porcupine 8-2 Fri!Sat Christmas Gift GARAGE SALE - SAT ONLY 8-2 61225 SaTrees ++ 541 -383-2250 rah Dr. Mutti-family sale. TONS of baby Moving Sale: 60439 items: clothes , exerZuni Rd., Sat. & Sun., saucers, front packs , 9-5, Ford 8N tractor, infant carseat, stroller, misc. antiques & col& more! LOTS of quallectibles, household & ity maternity clothes . office items, snowmoPaintball equip., basebiles & gear, some ball cards, furniture, clothes & jewelry. tools, suitcases, kitchen items & more ! ----l~I--Sales Northeast Bend
Huge Garage Sale Fri., Sat. , & Sun., 9-4, 60441 Tall Pine Ave., Lo ts of good stuff, & artist supplies books, sm all appl., books , dishware,some tools, bike & ski equip.
2 Person Garage Sale: Fri. Aug. 17 th , 8-3 ,
2648 NEWintergreen Dr, Jots of great items! Big Yard Sale: Thur.
S 8 3 64004 D - un., - · eschutes Mkt. Rd., I YARD SALE - I Medical e quip., hospita! bed, Hoya lift to Treadmill, furniture, · tires, wheels, patio s tan d • w h eeIc h air, furn1ture, storage w alker, scooter, toilet shelf , clothing & c ha irs, much more. --------shoes, clocks, house ho ld & ba th Downsizing Sale! Fri. room ttems, and Noon-5, S at. , 9-3, 912 I more. Free wa ter & 1 NE Rever e Ave, Furniture, tools , fabric , 1 donuts . Sat.-Sun., 1 206 65 ~;1b;ro~g · h·Ln _j household goods, & 1 L...much more!
r--------,
I I I
ESTATE SALE
Sat. On ly, 8-3,
Wii-
Iiams Lp(off o f Northw est W ay & Williams W ay) follow signs . _ ___;:..:.__ ____:::_ __ Sat.-Sun. 8/ 18- 19, 9-3, Downsizing,some antiq ues & collectibles. 2215 NW 19th St.
I
*
50 yrs in Drake Park home!
We a re excited to announce an available pos ition in Bend, O reg on. Branch Supervisor Salary Range: $ 29 ,000 - $40,000 EOE. For mo re details , please apply o nline: www .sofc u.com
================
=====::;
~
o rry ; po sman ATV 500 Polaris; Honda 15hp 4-stroke short shaft boat motor; Flat Bed Trailer, double axle; Kenmore Dryer, 110 stackable; Heavy Duty Gas Chipper; Mise Household/Garden Variety Yard sale -- cloth-
:~5ni~~~~~P~t~:·fi:~~~~
... antiques -- You name it, we probably have it!! Prineville, Juniper Canyon towards Prine. Res, Upper Davis Loop to PLA2, 15051 SE Cayvintage j ew elry & s ilve r, coppe r & b rass, use, Thurs-Sun. B/ 16-19 fi shin g , P LU S q u een b e d , Missio n Oak 9-5 . 541-977-4288 d esk & d re s se r, 2 sofas, campin g , cy c lin g - - - - - - - - item s , lo ts of big & ta ll clothing, d i e cast NOTICE t oy co ll ectio n , la rge f la t screen T V , gaRemember to remove rage full of tools , c om p resso r, ro lling tool yo ur Garage Sale signs box, outdoor ite m s, elect ronics , p ia no , (nails, staples , etc.) after your Sale event 1 OO's book s, b edding & lin e ns , sewing , is ove r! THANKS ! From The B ulletin la rg e h o m e pack e d full! FRI . - SUN. 9 a.m . - 4 p .m . and your local utility crowd c ontrol # 's Fri. 8 a .m . companies.
go to atticestatesandappraisals.com
SOFCU
and head div ider. Toyo -=B=e=n=d=. radial tires & spare; .... new floor w ith mats ; DO YOU NEED center partition panel; A GREAT bed liner coated in key E MPLOYEE areas , 6.5 K torsion RIGHT NOW? axles with electric Call The Bulletin brakes , and new paint, b efore 11 a.m . and $7500 OBO! Call get a n ad in to pu bJohn at 54 1-589 -0777. Yard Sale - Fri-Sat-Sun lish the next day! 9-5 , 2639 SW Yew Ave. 113More Pix at Bendbulletin.c' 541-385-5809. Women's & children's Look at: VIEW the clothes, household items, Bendhomes.com Classifie ds at: cra fts, and LOTS more. for Complete Listings of www.bendbulletin .com Yard Sale Thurs-Sun, 9-? Area Real Estate for Sale 7200 SW 51st St. FurElectrician niture, household, glass~ ware, collectibles, art Produce & Food work - Give-away prices! ---.----'ol.:..__,.,.---,w ood gra in mi llw ork THOMAS ORCHARDS ot hom~ natu r ally Years of Collecting - Kimberly, OR U-Pick & Multi-family Sale, a nPlant Supervising Ready Picked: Freetiques,collectibles, die stone canning peaches Electrician cast cars, do lls, 1974 Sunbright; Loring Elberta, A pplications are being VW Thunderbug , old Nectarines, Santa Rosa accepted for a litrunks, 7-Up Machine, Plums. U-Pick only - by censed full-time plant furniture , automotive, Fri. 8/ 17. Suncrest supervising electrihousehold misc., Sat. Peaches. Ready Picked cian. Position re8-4, Sun. 9-2 , 2564 Only-Gravenstien Apples quires minimum 5 BRING CONTAINERS years journey man exSW Volcan o Ave. Open 7 days/wk 8am-6 pe rience . preferab ly in ----l~J--- pm only 541 -934-2870. a manufacturing or inVis it us on Facebook dustrial plant. Must Sales Other Areas for updates Also we are ha ve strong trouble at Bend Farmer's Mkt at shooting s kills . PLC Garage/Shop Sa le. Drake Park & St. Charles programming and LOTS O F TOOLS & mise! Fri-S un 8/ 17-19 trouble-shooting Have an item to 10-5 . 17315 Guss (Allen-Bradley) skills
B eautiful a ntiqu e furnit ure fro m the 1800 's to Mid Century M odern . Paul Frankl liv ing room set, a ntiq u e glass & c hina , q uilts , lin e ns , o ld t oy s & gam es, c lo c k s , Art D eco la m p s , vintage kitc he n, a rtw o rk & d e cor,
498 NW Broadway Attic Esta tes & Appraisal s 541-350-6822 for pieS & more info
Banking
refurbis hed by Frenchglen Blacksmiths , a Classy Classic. Great design for multiple uses. Overhead tack box (bunk- Caregiver - All Shifts house) with side and avail. Apply in person. easy pickup bed acInterview s this w eek. cess; manger with left side access, windows 1099 N E Watt Way,
Tools, appl., sporting, plumbing, elec, hardware, household, garden, pet, decor, sew/ crafts, wood, bldg materials,more!Aug 18/ 19, 9 AM,21st SW & Pumice Ave, No Early Birds
I W ay, Sunriver I _ ___::. :._______ Motor Home - '98 Safari; I 2009 Roadmaster Tow 2001 s n D 11
I
*
Schools & Training Big Garage Sale, Fri and Oregon Medical TrainSun only, 7am-5pm. 821 ing PCS Phlebotomy NE Larch Ave. (follow Brush Hog 7 2" , good classes begin August cond. , $600. signs from Hwy 97 & 27. Registration now 541-548-3818 or Maple). See craigslist for open: www.oregon541-480-8009. details on items, to inmedica~raining .co m clude 1940-1960 Pyrex, 541-343-3100 Need to get an Sorel & Columbia boots, Oriental pieces, Canon ad in ASAP? TRUCK SCHOOL copier, hunting camp www.IITR .net You can place it stove , household items, Redmond Campus & some furniture. We online at: Student Loans/J ob have pro vided shade for www.bendbulletin.com Waiting Toll Free avid shoppers' 1-888-387-9252 Garage Sale: Fis hing, 541-385-5809 reloading, guns, 8 ----l~I--tables, Fri. & Sat. 8-5, Employment ~ 3340 NW Odern Ave, Hay, Grain & Feed Opportunities Terrebonne .
Multi-Family Neighborhood Yard Sale: 1977 14' Blake Trailer,
The BU l1etm · Serving Central Oregon since 1903
www.bendbulletin.com
sell quick? If it's under 1500 you can place
rt in
The Bulletin Classifieds for: 110 - 3 lines, 7 days 1 16 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)
(*)
as a ny out-of-area ads. The Bulletin
For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
Gun Sale: Military rifles & Wheat Straw: Certified & handguns , U.S ., Ger- Bedding Straw & Garden many France, Japan, etc Straw ;Compost.546-6 171 Fri-Sat., 8-5. 3340 NW ------j~ Odem Ave, Terrebonne. Livestock & Equipment HUGE Moving Sale , everything goes! Sat, 8-3, 2956 SW Indian Circle. From quality furniture to electronics to kids stuff to housewares & more !
AN
R EQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well
----1~1---
**FREE**
.. ..... $20.00
48 Orange TV character
reserves the right t o reject any ad at
The Bulletin
any time.
is located a t:
assoc iated a plus. W e offer com peMve wages and benefits. Mail resu me' to : W oodgrain Millwork : 1948 N Main St. , Prineville , O R 97754, o r email resume to: bbarron @woodgrain.com 54 1-447-4177 EEO Drug Testing Re quired
D at a C enter N etwork Technicia ns Facebook i s hiring! W e' re seeking a hig hly mo tiva ted D ata Center Ne two rk Technic ian to help u s b uild a w o rld -cla ss facility at o u r P rineville , O re gon locatio n. T he id eal cand id ate w ill ha ve 3 + years' exp erie nce in d ata cente r ne twork dep loy me nt, stro ng trou bleshooting skills , a solrd u ndersta nding of Lay e r 2 and Laye r 3 netwo rk switc hing/ro uting, and expe rie nce in configuring an d su ppo rting C isco , Junipe r, and F5 d evices. For m ore info rmatio n p lease visit o u r care e rs p age http s ://www.facebook. co m/ca reer o r em ail ristine@ fb.co m .
bendbulletin.com
1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Orego n 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 responsibilrty for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classffy 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 Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday.
~.:_-,---,-
Garage Sale Kit Pla ce an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE!
""" $10.00 """" $16.00
•Must state pric es in ad
25 What Fred Astaire danced with
ssoo in total merchandise
*UNDER $500 in total merchandise 7 days ...... .................. .... .. 14 days.
w_ _ o_ o~ d~ gra ~in
yr o ld. LG Front load Washer/Dryer, futon , Jots of be dding, glass end ta bles, 2 yr. old treadmill , gas BBQ & patio furniture, very nice clothes & more .
Place a photo in your private party ad for only $15.00 per week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
n
Complete Moving Sale: Sat. 8 -5, 2487 NW Crossing Dr., 2
541 -385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 Indianapolisbased sports org. engine 5_ 9 "Give me 14 Hamlet 15 Impulse carrier 16 Strand in the water? 17 Worship 19 Fo rmer Baby Bell 20 Club 21 Dion who didn't sing with the Belmonts 22 It has a round bottom 24 With 37-/46-Across, difficult things to be "between" 26 Its state flower is the camellia: Abbr. 27 Supplied 28 Hit Broadway musical set partly in a tomb
PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED •
1
ll
om e
-
millwork
n
l'l 1 I!
rn
I J
y
Can be found on these pages: EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 -Schools and Training 454 - Looking for Employment 470- Domestic & In-Home Positions 476- Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions
Human Resource Generalist Woodgrain Millwork is seeking a highly motivate d Human Resource Generalist at the Prineville, Oregon, location . In this role ~ you will be re sponEmployment sible for providing Opportunities comprehensive HR expertise as well as RV Salesperson ensuring compliance with law s , po licies, Big Country RV, Inc., Central Oregon's and procedures. Largest RV Dea lerM onitor and adminisship, is growing and te r w orkers' camp adding to our strong claims a nd O SHA sales staff. We are record keeping. Must looking for th e right possess excellent communication , interperso n who wants a personal and decicaree r in one of the sion making skills. fastest growing inExperience in recruitdus tries in Central ing, interviewing, new O regon . Great ophire orientation, benportunity for someone efit coordination, paywith prior vehicle roll. Profic ient in Misales exp erienc e. Excrosoft office (Word, ceptional inventory of Excel, Outlook), SA P New and Used RVs . experience a plus. Unlimited earning B achelor's degree in potential with an exrela ted field preferred. cellent benefit packMinimum of 3 years age to include: experience in Human •IRA Resources , ideally in • Dental Plan a Gene ralist capacity. • Medical Ins ura nce W e offer competitive • Up to 35% co mmissalary, benefits insion cl uding medical, life, • Great Training and dental insurance, and 401 k. To apply, p lease send Must be a ble to w ork w eeke nds and hav e a resume to passio n for the RV jtoholsky @woodgrain. bus iness. Please apcom. W e a re an equal ply in person, o r drop opportunity emp loyer. resume o ff at: Operations M an ager Bi g Country RV, Inc. 3 500 N. Hwy 97 Big Country RV, Inc. Successful Central OrBend, O R 97701 egon RV Dealership or email a resume to seeks Operations Manbcrvhire@ gmail.com ager to oversee 3 locations. Ideal candidate Summer Jobs will have proven experiThe J L Ward ence in management, Company has 5 to budgeting, accounting, 1o positions to fill computers & production. within the n ext two Exce llent compensation & benefit package, inw eeks . cluding: Medical insurance, vacation, Simple All applicants must IRA. Please apply with meet the following resume & cover letter to: requirements: bcrvhire @gmail.com ·Hig h School or in person at 63500 N Graduate Hwy 97, Bend. .v alid O re gon Driver's license Parts Counter Clerk ·Ability and desire to Big Country RV, Inc. do physical w ork Central Oregon's largest RV dealer is lookIf you meet ing for a Parts these requireC ounter clerk. C usments , please aptomer serv ice experiply weekdays ence , and previous between 8:00 a.m. parts experience a 11 :00 a.m . at and plus; computer skills 20505 Murphy Road necessary. Good pay Bend Oregon 9770 2; and benefits. Apply to 541 -382-049 1. bcrvh ire @qmail.com or in person at 63500 N Hwy 97, in Bend. Indepe ndent Co ntractor Remember... A dd y our web address to your ad and readers on The Bulletin' s web s ite will be able to click through automa tically to your site.
RN Case Man agers Partners In Care Hom e Health and Hospice is s eeking applicants fo r full-time RN Case M anagers to pro v ide care to ou r hospice a nd home health patients. Hospice experience preferred. Applicants MU ST have a current Oregon RN license. Qualified candida tes are aske d to submit a resume to 20 75 NE Wya tt Court, Bend O R 97701 Attn: HR . or via email to H R @partners bend. org .
•• oc
PartnIners Care
FINANCE AND BUSINESS 507 - Rea I Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 -Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 -Business Investments 573 -Business Opportunities
Home Delivery Advisor
1:! Home Delivery Advisor 1:! The Bu lletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full time position and consists of mana ging a de livery area and w orking with an adult carrie r fo rce to ensure our customers receive supe rior service. Must be able to create and pe rform strategic plans to meet department objec tives such as inc reasing market share and route by route penetration. Ideal candida te will be a self-starter who can work both in the office and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. Strong c ustomer service s kills and management skills are necessary . Computer experience is helpful. We offer be nefits in cluding medical, dental, 401 (k), paid vacation and sick time. We believe in promo ting from within so advanceme nt w ith in the company is available. If you enjoy dealing w ith people from diverse backgrounds , and y ou are energetic , have great organizational skills and interpersona l communication skills, please fill out an application at The B ulletin or send y ou r resu me to: J ob Opening-Circulation The Bulletin PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 or circ ulation @bendbulletin .com No phone calls, please. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace, EOE.
Electrician General Journeyman Warm Springs Composite Pro ducts is looking for an individual to help a growing inn ovative light manufacturing plant. Basic Duties: Assist in troubleshooting and repairs o f plant equipment. Install, repair and maintain all electrical and electronic equipment. Able to read a nd rev ise electrical schematics, Must be able to perform bo th electrical a nd mechanical preventive mainte nance requirements and report, PLC experience. Minimum Skills: A minimum of 5 years in the indus trial maintenance field with a valid Oregon State Electricians License in Manufacturing. A strong mechanical aptitude with the ability to pe rform light w elding and fabrication duties. S uccessful a pp licant shall supply the no rmal hand tools required for both electrical and mechanical m aintenance. Benefits: Full Family Medical, V ision, Dental, Life, Disability, S alary Incentives, Company Bonuses, Pension and 401 K w/Company Matching and Above Pay Rate Scale . Please remit resume to:
Warm Springs Composite Products PO Box 906, War m Springs, OR 97761 Pho ne: 541 -553-11 43, Fax: 541-553-1145 Attn : Mac Coom bs , mcoombs @wscp.com
Operate Your Own Business
++++++++++++++++++
Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor
® Call Today ® W e a r e loo kin g f o r indepe nde nt co ntract o rs t o se rvice h o m e d e liv e ry ro utes in :
* Prineville, Sunriver/La Pine * Mu s t b e a v a ilable 7 d a y s a w ee k, early m o rnin g h o u rs.
Must have reliable, insured vehicle. P le a se c a ll 5 4 1 .3 8 5.5800 o r 8 00 .50 3.3933 d urin g b u s in ess h o urs app ly v i a e m a il a t o n lin e@ b e n db ull e tin .co m
The Bulletin Serving Centr al Oregon since 1903
T0
PLACE AN AD
---~~~-Employment Opportunities
CLASSIFIED •
541-385;...·5 =8=0=9= ====i1 ----1
~
~ ~fS
~h~u-;ti;- I I ~®~~ U U
[" Recommends extra cautron when purchasing products or services from out of 1 the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to FRAUD. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State 1 Attorney General's Office Consumer 1 Protection hotline at -877-877-9392. 11
I l
I I I l
1
1
1
I
1
'fhe llulletin..J
L.:=':=":;~.:,:•
Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory TRUCK DRIVERS Harney Rock & Paving Co. is hiring experienced truck drivers for summer. Requires valid COL & Medical Card. Call 541 -573-7855 for more info. Pay DOE. EOE. CCB #51289. Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bend bulletin .com which currently receives over 1 .5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin C lassifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at be ndbulletin.com Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
Building/Contracting NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who contracts for construction w ork to be licensed with the Construction Contractors Board (CCB). An active license means the contractor is bonded and insured. Ve rify the contractor's CCB license thro ugh the CCB Consumer Website www. hirealicensedcontractor. corn
or call 503-378-4621 . The Bulletin recommends checking with the CCB prior to contracting with anyone. Some other trades also require additiona l licenses a nd certificatio ns . Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Wrtte from the readers view - not the seller s. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will help them in some way. This advertising tip brought to you by
The Bulletin SeMng Central Oregon sl'no 1503
High Standard Cons!. Full Service general contractor, post frame construction #181477 541 -389-4622 People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Day through
The Bulletin Classifieds Debris Removal JUNK BE GONE I H a ul Away FREE For Salvage. Also Cleanups & Cleanouts Mel, 541 -389-8107 Handyman ERIC REEVE HANDY SERVICES. Home & Co mmercial Repairs, Carpentry- Painting, Pressure-washing, Honey Do's. On-time promise. Senior Discount. Work guaranteed. 541 -389-3361 or 541-771-4463 Bonded & Insured CCB#181 595 I DO THAT! Horne/Rental repairs Small jobs to remode ls Honest, guaranteed work. CCB#151573 Dennis 54 1-317-9768 Home Improvement
~
®®
~0 \Q)
-=======i! lr
Houses for Rent Redmond
The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or thcredit, ekspecf iallyd ose as rng or a vance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.
LOCAL MONEY: We buy secured trust deeds & note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13. Reverse Mortgages by local expert Mike LeRoux NMLS57716 Call to learn more. _ _ 541 350 7839 · 1 L d. S ecunty en rng NMlS98161
--~~r-Business Opportunities
In small friendly North Central Oregon town on John Day River. 2800 sq. ft. commercial bldg. on state hwy in Spray. Has been bar & restaurant, could be anything. $125,000 by owner, 541-468-3201 or 541 -468-2071 Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin .com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
NW Redmond - Nice 3 Bdrm, 2 bath home on HUGE lot. dbl garage, landscaped, fenced , underground sprinklers, nice neighbor---1~1--- hood, taking applica- --~~r-Roommate Wanted tions, $850/mo + dep., Timeshares for Sale 541-419-1917. Great location - DesShare cozy mobile home FIND IT! chutes River views! in Terrebonne, $275 + BUY IT! utilities. 1-503-679-7496 Nicely appointed, turn-key fully-furSELL IT! ----frsJOll---nished, 2 bdrm, 2 Roo~ Rent The Bulletin Classifieds bath, 1/10th Time- - - - - - - - ----1'68711---share/fractional. EnMt. Bachelor Motel has comL..:::::..:....mercr·al for joy the serenity of the rooms, starting $150/ flowing river below, k $ 1 1 1 Rent/Lease blue sky above & all wee or 35 nt. nc the beauty Central guest laundry, cable & Warehouse - Industrial Oregon and Eagle WiFi. 541 -382-6365 unit for rent. 5600 Crest Resort have to Studios & Kitchenettes sq.ft., $2250/month, offer. $10,500 Furnished room, TV w/ near Bend High. MLS#201203509, cable, micro & fridge. 541-389-8794. John L. Scott Real Utils & linens. New Estate 541-548-1 712 owners. $145-$165/wk Take care of 541-382-1885 Advertise your car! your investments Add A Picture! ~1---Reach thousands of readers I with the help from Apt./Multiplex NE Bend Call 541·385·5809 The Bullet in Classifieds The Bulletin's CHECK OUT THIS "Call A Service ---1~1--HOT DEAL! Commercial/lnvestment $299 1st month's rent! • Professional" Directory Properties for Sale 2 bdrm, 1 bath -----1~1----- -------------$530 & 540 Carports & AIC incl! Office/Retail Space Biz Opp. North Central Fox Hollow Apts. Oregon on John Day for Rent River. 2800 sq. ft. (541) 383-3152 Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co commercial bldg. o n 'Upstairs only with lease' Office space, high visstate hwy Spray. Has ibility o n Highland Ave. been bar & res tau rant, --~~~-- in Redmond. $425 could be anything. Apt./Multlplex NW Bend mo., incl. W/S/G, call $125,000 541-468541-419-1917. 3201 or 541-468-2071 Fully furnished loft Apt on W all Street in What are you Say "goodbuy'' Bend, with parking. All to that unused looking for? utilities paid. Call 541 -389-2389 for appt item by placing it in You'll find it in
RIVER FALLS APTS LIVE ON THE RIVER WALK DOWNTOWN 1 bdrm. apt. fully furnished in fine 50s style. 1546 NW 1st St., $790 + $690 dep. Nice pets welcomed. 541 -382-0117
Ll®®
Painting/Wall Covering
Kelly Kerfoot Const. 28 yrs exp in Central OR! WESTERN PAINTING CO. Richard Hayman, Quality & honesty, fro m a semi-retired paintcarpentry & handyman ing contractor of 45 jobs, to expert wall covyears. Small Jobs ering install / removal. We lcome. Interior & Sr. discounts CCB#47120 Licensed/bonded/insured Exterior. ccb#5184. 54 1-388-6910 541·389-1413/410-2422
The Bulletin Classifieds
---1@!)1--Apt./Multiplex SE Bend A sharp, clean 2Bdrm, 1% bath apt, NEW CARPETS, neutral colors, great storage, private patio, no pets/ smkg. $555 incl w/s/g. Call541-633-0663
The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541 -385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin .com
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin .corn, currently receiving over 1.5 million page views, every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541 -385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.co m
The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
Small studio downtown area, all util. pd. $550, $525 dep. No pets/ smoking . 541 -3309769 or 541 -480-7870
SHARP 2 BEDROOM S585 61545 Parrell Road Classy new exterior, small quiet complex, lots of upgrades, beautiful new kitchen cabinets and counte rtops, dishwasher and microwave , large master with closets, private 3 fenced patio, laundry Landscaping/Yard Care on site, includes W/S/G no smoking/no pets. NOTICE: OR EGON Call 541-633-0663 Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) --~~r- requires all busi- Apt/Multiplex Redmond nesses tlhat advertise to perform Land- Duplex, very clean & priscape Construction vate, large 1300 sq It 2 which includes: bdrm 2 bath, garage decks, w/opener, fenced backplanting, fences, arbors, yard, deck, fridge, DW, water-features, and WID hkup, extra parkinstallation, repair of ing, w/s/g paid, $710 + irrigation systems to dep. 541 -604-0338 be licensed with the Landscape Contrac- --~~~-Houses for tors Board. This 4-digit number is to be Rent General included in all advertisements which indiPUBLISHER'S cate the business has NOTICE a bond. insurance and All real estate adverwo rkers co mpensatising in this newspatio n fo r th eir employper is subject to the ees. For your protecFair Housing Act tion call 503-378-5909 which makes it illegal or use our website: to advertise "a ny www.lcb.state.o r.us to preference, limitation check license status or discrimination before contracting based on race, color, with the business. religion, sex, handiPersons do ing landcap, familial status, scape maintenance marital status or nado not require a LCB tional origin, or an inlicense. tention to make any preference, Nelson Landscape such limitation or discrimiMaintenance nation." Familial staServing tus includes children Central Oregon under the age of 18 Residentia l living with parents or & Commerc ial legal custodians, pregnant w omen. and •Sprinkler Repair people securing cus•Sprinkler tody of children under Installation 18. This newspaper •Back Flow Testing will not knowingly ac•Fire Prevention, cept any advertising Lot Clearing for real estate which is • Summer Clean up in violation of the law. •Weekly Mowing Our readers are •Bi -Monthly & Monthly hereby informed that Mainte nance all dwellings adver• Flower Bed Clean Up tised in this newspa•Bark, Rock, Etc. per are available on •Senior Discounts an equal opportunity basis. To complain of Bonded & Insured discrimination call 541-815-4458 HUD toll-free at LCB#8759 1-800-877-0246. The Call The Yard Doctor toll free telephone for yard mainte nance , number for the hearthatching, sod, sprining impaired is kler blowouts, water 1-800-927-9275. features , more! Allen 541 -5 36- 1294 --~~r-LCB 5012 Houses for Re nt Aeration I Dethatching NE Bend BOOK NOW! Weekly I one-time service Spotless, Light, Bright ! avail. Bonded, insured, 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, dbl. gar, free estimates! fireplace, fenced, COLLINS Lawn Maint. gas large patio, RV parking. Ca/1541 -480-9714 $1095. 541 -480-7653 Maveric k Landscaping Mowing, weedeatrng, yard detailing, chain saw work & more! LCB#8671 541 -923-4324 Holmes Landscape Main! • C lean-up • Aerate • De-thatch • Free Est. • Weekly I Bi-wkly Svc. call Josh 541 -610-6011
~~
ffirn ~
1!===--====:!1 ••=======;:.!
1 --~~~-L & M oans ortgages WARNING
I I I I
~~--
lr
541-385-5809
--~~~-Homes for Sale 4 Bedroom, 2 .5 bath, 1963 sq. ft. home lo cated in the heart of Prineville. This lovely traditional style home has a low mainte· nance yard, solid wood cabinetry throughout, as well as a tile entry, and lami nate wood floors. Master on the main floor and a bonus room over the garage. Wiring for AC unit is already there, sllort distance to movies, restaurants, and shopping. MLS #201108663 $159.950. Team ClarkCentury 21, Gold Country Realty 541-548-2131 960 $190,000 On-top-of-the hill. One of our best view loca lions, quality Creek side Townhome that includes use of all Eagle Crest Ridge amenities. A great buy, location and priced to move. 2 bed room, 2 bath, 1419 sq.ft. Eagle Crest Properties rM 866-722-3370 Find It in The Bulletin Classifieds!
541·385·5809 4270 sq ft. 6 bdrm, 6 ba, 4-car, corner, .83 acre mtn view, by owner. $590' 000 541 -390-0886 See: bloomkey.com/8779 BANK OWNED HOMES! FREE List w/ Pics! www.BendRepos.com bend and beyond real estate 20967 yeoman, bend or
RENTALS 603 - Renta I Alternatives 604- Storage Rentals 605 - Room mate Wanted 616- Want To Rent 627 -Vacation Rentals & Exchanges 630 -Rooms for Rent 631 -Condos & Townhomes for Rent 632 - Api./Multiplex General 634 - Api./Multiplex NE Bend 636 - Api./Multiplex NW Bend 638 • Api./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Api./Multiplex SW Bend 642 - Api./Multiplex Redmond 646 -Apt/Multiplex Furnished 648 -Houses for Rent General 650 -Houses for Rent NE Bend 652 -Houses for Rent NW Bend 654- Houses for Rent SE Bend 656 -Houses for Rent SW Bend 658 -Houses for Rent Redmond 659 -Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 -Houses for Rent Sisters 663 -Houses for Rent Madras 664- Houses for Rent Furnished 671 -Mobile/Mid. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 -Mobile/Mid. Space
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in Th e Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory
541-385·5809
682- Farms, Ranches and Acreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713- Real Estate Wanted 719- Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738- Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos & Townhomes for Sale 7 44- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest Bend Homes 7 47 - Southwest Bend Homes 748- Northeast Bend Homes 7 49 - Southeast Bend Homes 750- Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook County Homes 762- Homes with Acreage 763 - Recreational Homes and Property 764- Farms and Ranches 771 -Lots 773 - Acreages 775- Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mid. /Mobile Homes with Land
Get your business
Get your business
GROWING GROWING with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Sho\N Your Stuff. ·Sell Your Stuff.
••• •
• • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds
• • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • •
Full Color Photos For an additional s15 per week* s4o for 4 weeks*
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES, We are three adorable, loving ('Special private party rates apply to puppies looking for a caring home. merchandise and automotive categories.) Please call right away. $500.
QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! Modern amenities and all the quiet you will need. Room to grow in your own little paradise! Call now.
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, and a tough V8 engine will get t he job done on the ranch!
QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! Modern amenities and all the quiet you will need. Room to grow in your own little paradise! Call now.
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!
~dd
Color to your ad For an additional s2 per day
~dda
Border For an additional s1.50 per day
Italic and Bold headlines For an additional .50¢ up to $2.00 per ad
AttentionGetting Graphics For an additional s3 per week s10 for 4 weeks
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES, We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for a caring home. Please call right away. $500.
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES, We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for a caring home. Please call right away. $500.
iQUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES~! :Modern amenities and all the quiet: :you will need. Room to grow in : :your own little paradise! Call now. :
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,
QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES/
We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for a caring home. Please call right away. $500.
Modern amenities and all the quiet you will need. Room to grow in your own little paradise! Call now.
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES, We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for a caring home. Please call right away. $500.
QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! Modern amenities and all the quiet you will need. Room to grow in your own little paradise! Call now.
$ Price [o.ere~ $
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!
FORO F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!
.rm .. ~
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!
1e s Hours: Monday - Friday 7 30am - 5 OOpm
Telephone Hours: Monday - Friday
7 30am - 5 OOpm Satruday 10 OOam - 12 30pm
;!;!§1a
24-Hour Message une: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel, or extend an ad after hours. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
T0
G4THURSDAY ' AUGUST16 ' 2012•THE BULLETIN
DESCHUTES COUNTY 2012-2013 FORECLOSURE NOTICE
151329-AC-03400
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
62155 647.97 67305 60159
07.92 1E4 .16 278.20 344.34 Toblamoun:due
678.47 812.13 951.25 944.93 3336.78
130154
MILLS, MAX 521SW CANYO~ DR REDMOND, OR S7756
151328-0IHOIIOOA2
2011 -1 2 201D-11 2009-10 2008-09
2976.84 4342.73 627?.24 4115.41
1B9518
GREENS IT REDMONDLLC 7767 fJ/1 CIRRUS DR BEAVERTON,OR97008-5958
151129-AC-03300
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
201.43 21138 224.09 204.23
18.BO :3.30 £2.62 117.09 Toblamoun:due
210.23 233.68 316.71 321.32 11 21.94
130/IB
MILLS, MAX 521 SW CANYO~ DR REDMOND, OR S7756
161306-0:J-01:600
2011-1 2 201()-11 2009-10 2008-09
952.46 925.23 912.27 533.65
189519
GREENS IT REDMONDLLC 7767 fJ//CIRRUS DR BEAVERTON,OR 97008-5958
151129-AC-03400
201 1-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
92551 963.41 102925 937.98
16.37 244.82 425.42 'XW Tobl amoun:due
1011.88 1211.23 1454.67 1475.75 51 53.53
167931
MillS, MAX 521SW CANYO~ DR REDMOND, OR £7756
151328-0D-COIIOOA3
1011-12 201 ()-11 1009-10 2008-09
421' .54 6158.53 6970.67 4046.63
1B9532
GReeNS IT REDMONDlLC 7767 fJ//CIRRUS DR BEAVERTON,OR97008-5958
151329-BD-D110l
201 1-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
11.36 11.8 12.4 11.25
1.51 3.46 5.62 6.90 Toblamoun: due
12.B7 15.26 IB02 IB.15 34.30
172463
MILlS, MAX 521SW CANYD~ DR REDMOND. OR £7756
151319-A0·001 11
1011-12 2D1D-11 2009-10 1008-09
19?4.9 1001.81 1B73.49 1114.4B
1B4.32 481.04 77438 613.67 Totalarrounl due
204922
GReENS IT REDMONDlLC 7767 fJ//CIRRUS DR BEAVERTON,OR97008-5008
151129-CC-01900
201 1-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
2564.95 2673.46 2852.8 2599.B5
239.40 2814.35 6iB.54 3357.00 11i 9.15 4031.95 14£0.5B 4090.43 Totll amoun:due 14233.73
1618L4
MDNG,JOHNR 2244SW SALMCN AVE REDMOND, ORS7756
151320-DA-01400
2D1H2 101()-11 2009-10 1008-09
225363 217' .35 213775 100?.61
21J33 246396 55100 2711 .43 883.110 3021.35 1093.70 3001.31 Tolalaroount due 11208.05
247398
GREENS IT REDMONDLLC 7767 fJ// CIRRUS DR BEAVERTON,OR97008-5008
15132900011306
201 1-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
1727.28 1664.26 1633.66 1462.21
1E122 42162 677.31 83B.33 Tobl amoun:due
1838.50 2035.B8 2315.97 2310.54 8590.89
118585
MORRISSEY,ROBERTS& DELORES l 21560 FUTCHER LN BEND,OR97701
171226-000011li
2011-1 2 101D-11 1009-10 2008-09
267615 3188.25 31116.28 1769.63
24l.78 B0/. 69 1275.00 974.84 Toblaroounl due
2925.93 3995.94 4361 .94 2744.47 1402B.28
114156
GULLO,GAILA &MAR;UM,CRAIGA 1 2526 SU~ FOR:STDR LA PINE, OR 97i39
211C35-CJ.02800
201 1-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
501.93 495.54 430.1 393.18
46.85 125.54 1SB.44 224.36 Toblamoun:due
548.78 621.08 67B.54 620.54 243B.94
144334
MORTON,,ON RO BERT PO BOX867 KITTITAS,'NA91934
141316-CA-00400
2011-12 201D-11 1009-10 2008-09
184.18 177.19 174 .B 135.52
17.19 44.89 72.25 73 00 Tobl aroounl due
201.37 222.08 147.05 2'2.50 883.00
130137
GYPSYINVESTMeNTS l LC 291 3 NW .OWERBRIDGEWAY TERREP!JNNE, CR97760
15132B-00·00700
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
1713.01 1664.98 163922 201 1.95
1E1.28 42180 6i7.55 1113.28 Toblamoun:due
1B39.29 2036.78 231 677 3125.23 941B.07
124138
NORTHWeST COMMERCIAL ~D RT3AG E lLC 521 SW CANYO~ DR REDMOND, OR £7756
15131 6-DC·Ol60'
1011-12 201()-11 1009-10 2008-09
88' .69 849.56 636.57 49?.72
B2.29 215.22 345.78 275.41 Toblaroounldue
953.98 11li4.78 1182.35 7?3.13 3984.24
13013B
GYPSYIN/tSTMeNTS l LC 2913 NW .OWER BRIDGEWAY TERREP!JNNE, CR97760
15132B-00·00000
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
161347 1553.41 1535.29 1942.23
1E1.05 385.05 634.59 1074.71 Tobl amoun:due
1739.52 1954.46 2139.B8 3016.94 8910.80
1621 93
NORTHWeST COMMERCIAL ~ORT3AG E llC 521SW CANYO~ DR REDMOND, OR S7756
151316-0C·Ol603
1011-12 101()-11 2009-10 2008-09
2034.B6 1000.49 1930.29 1148.38
1Bl.92 495.ffi 797.85 635.43 Toblaroounl due
2214.78 2457.14 272B.14 1783.81 9193.87
167932
GYPSYINVESTMENTSl LC 2913 NW .OWER BRIDGEWAY TERREP!JNNE,CR97760
15132B-00·00701
201 1-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
663.64 642.42 63262 373.46
PENSCO T1UST F8J PileHMERETAl PO BOX26903 MN FRAN:ISCO,CA 94126
221016-ll J.00102
2011-12 101 ()-11 2009-10 100B-09
95.13 7B.7 7559 7'23
3.88 19.94 3124 4J. 84 Tolalaroounl due
GY ~Y INVESTMENTSl lC 2913 NW .OWERBRIDGEWAY TERREP!JNNE,CR97760
151 328-00·0iliOI
201 1-1 2 201 0-11 2009-1 0 2008-09
11053.4 10649.2B 10484.49 6237.02
10131ll
PRIIIZING,GUY 231' NE DIVISION BEND,OR97701
171229-DA·00400
2011-12 101D-11 2009-10 2008-09
295291 2925.23 281' .36 91?.37
106433
HANDKE,IENNA 623SE 6TH ST BEND,OR9770<
181204-CI-03900
201 1-1 2 2010-1 1 2009-10 2008-1)9
1483.97 1515.57 1453.56 11B3.9B
72B.B6 BJ5.16 8l4 10 534.77 3012.89 12035 04 13347.09 14818.08 963B.18 49938.39 1625.75 1899.51 2058.60 1B31.92 7445.78
262119
167933
E2.22 1E2.74 2E148 2CB.31 Tobl amoun:due 1()3164 26£7.B1 4833.59 34E1.16 Totll amoun:due 138.78 313.94 &2.04 672.94 Toblamoun:due
112000
RALPH &AMYCDEWAYNE TRUST 21/'0 MCGILVRAY RD BEND, OR97701
1B1213-00·01100
2011-1 2 201D-11 1009-10 2008-09
1121.5 1108.54 11li6.58 687.54
115004
HARPOLE RUTHE&STEVEl 55338 HOMESTEAD WAY BEND,OR9770i
221C14-CI-01000
2011-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
75l.71 1159.52 721.1 653.56
70.92 2£3.75 2SB.05 376.42 Tobl amoun:due
830.63 145327 1019.15 1032.98 4336.03
114252
RASMUSSEN-NIEMAN ,MARCIERETAL PO BOX2577 LA FINE,OR97739
211036-[)j·0110'
1011-12 201()-11 1009-10 2008-09
89908 923.16 893.1B 844.92
8391 233.87 36l.18 484.42 Toblaroounldue
982.99 115703 1262.36 1329.34 4731.72
114234
HARPOLE STEVe &Rl TH 55338 HOMESTEAD WAY BEND,OR9770i
211C36-CD-00102
201 1-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 1008-09
90175 887.14 B53.31 813.2
14.06 224.73 3E4.76 4e6.24 Tobl amoun:due
934.B1 11 11.87 1213.07 1179.44 4539.19
119694
DIRECTOR OF Vt!ERA %AFFAIRS REECE,ARON R& MICHELLE 20003ALCeRWOOD CIR BEND,OR97701
1B121 :6-CC·02900
1011-12 201()-11 2009-10 2008-08
8?5.1 864 630.45 556.07
Bl .68 213.88 343.25 3C8.00 Toblaroounl due
956.78 11!12.88 11?3.70 86503 4078.39
HARRIS,OODY PO BOX 4541 SUNRIVER, OR97707
201 C12-CD-06400
201 1-12 1010-11 2009-1 0 2008-09
1627.55 1693.16 1639.63 155368
1E1.91 419.69 677.71 8£0.78 Tobl amoun:due
1779.46 2125.85 2317.34 2444.46 8637.11
13B762
RO BBINS,IRENE M&ALICE C 17015WHITTIEF.DR BEND,OR97707
211001-AO·OOOOO
2011-12 101D-11 2009-10 2008-09
514.64 til799 492.3 477.8
43.03
1140'8
ROBINSON,DALE l &SHARRON D PO BOX1624 lAFINE,OR97739
211034-AO·OIIIOO
2011-12 101()-11 2009-10 2008-09
871 976.BB 97201 518.72
B1 .29 247.4B 4rn .76 2B5. 27 Tolalaroounl due
562.67 636.68 695.78 751.73 2646.86 952.29 1214.36 13?3.77 !lj3 99 4354.41
1164'3
ROGERS, JOHNl !!lOO SE 66TH MILWAUKIE,OR 97222
201013-A0·18200
2011-12 201D-11 1009-10 2008-09
89.97 B9 86.47 B6.12
340 22.55 35.74 4l. 38 Tobl aroount due
9837 1'1.55 112.21 135.50 467.63
assessments, fees or other charges are delinquent on each property, together with the principal of the delinquent amount of each year and the amount of accrued and accruing interest thereon through September 15, 2012 The 2012-2013 Foreclosure List issued by Deschutes County, Stale of Oregon, is marked "Exhibit 1", attached hereto and by this reference made a part hereof.
To all persons or parties herein named and to all persons owning or claiming to own, or having or claiming to have, ~my interest in any property induded in the Foredo.'!l.nre Lid set forth within "Exhibit 1", being the Deschutes County 2012-2013 Tax Foreclosure List:
EXHIBIT 1 TAX
ACCT 161 4B7
182642
125606
15721 9
127769
126[()0
MAILING/AGENT NAME MAILING ADDReSS
PROPERTY NO
YEARS
OELINQ TAXES
INTEREST T0 9/15M
11\KeR,DARRINC&SHANNDNL 2015 SW 26THST REDMOND,OR 97756
15132D-AC-D231Xl
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008{)9
191Xl.22 2102.49 26C5.94 2324.63
1'7.35 2C77.57 545.30 2(97.79 1077.12 3E83.06 1332.75 3E57.38 Toblaroounl due 12115.80
11\lCAZAU OSe &YAZMINA 20510PE.\KAV: BEND,OR97702
151320-CD -001 17
2011-12 2010-1 1 2009-1 0 2008{)9
1814.36 2046.41 2516.02 131787
1'5.B7 2C60.23 51B.42 2:64.83 1068.89 3E54.91 714.B1 2C42.68 Tolal aroountdue 10322.65
BEITTY,RJ BER- NETAL 19/TURTlE COVE CT POliTEVEDRA, Fl32082
201'18-[)j-07900
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008~9
1548.44 14E877 1374.87 712.9B
144.52 369.56 568.28 396.25 Tobl aroounl due
1E92.96 112B.33 1843.1 5 111!1.23 6E73.67
TOTAL DUE
2011-12 2010-11 2009-1 0 2008{)9
3942.02 38£1.76 3740.24 3613.86
367.92 985.92 1545.95 2071.94 Tobl aroounl due
431!1.94 4177.68 5286.20 5E85.80 20159.62
BERG,MICHAEL 20590ENPIRElVE BEND, OR97701
171121-110-011501
BERGSTAD,BYRON 6383 NWICEAVE TEFREBONNE, OR 97756
141103-DO-D221Xl
2011-12 2010-1 1 2009-1 0 2008{)9
15111.12 1524.63 15C0.04 1333.49
HB.22 386.24 620.02 764.54 Tobl aroounldue
1i36.34 1£1 0.87 2120.06 2C00.03 71ffi.30
PiiYD,CHARLESA & MARY R
211002-!lj-05500
2011-1 2 2010-1 1 2009-10 2008{)9
47.44 47.17 46.1B 1.35
4.43 11.94 19.1!1 071 Tolalaroountdue
51.B7 59.1 1 ffi.27 2.07 17B.32
12.93 34.ffi 54.73 ' 485 Tolal aroounldue
15145 171 .50 187.13 21:6.38 715.46
:!J[() RIOLINDA BLVD
RIOLINDA, CA !!i673
541 -385-5809
GREENS IT REDMONDLLC 7767 fJ/1 CIRRUS DR BEAVERTON,OR97008-5958
The Tax Collector of Deschutes County, Oregon, has prepared the following list of all properties now subject to foreclosure, embracing the Foreclosure List, attached hereto and made a part hereof, containing the names of the several persons appearing in the latest tax roll as respective owners of lax delinquent properties, a description of each such property as the same appears in the latest tax rol~ the year or years for which taxes, special
PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED •
189516
11711 5
CIGLIERO,GRACE STRAIN 4607 NMeRCED AVE 11\LOWINPARK, CA 91706
201'0W-07700
2011-12 2010-11 2009-1 0 2008~9
138.52 13684 132.4 130.53
1106/B
CILQUHCUN,CLARA HTRUSTEE 18B74 SIIJSHDNE RD BEND,OR97701
181'23-[)j-02500
2011-12 2010-11 2009-1 0 200B-D9
2829.27 28i9.31 2776.52 27C8.48
264.07 3C£13.34 71 9.42 3EDB.73 1H7.61 3£24.14 1552.86 4261 .34 Tobl aroounl due 141B7.55
254793
CIRROLL, ARCHIEKEN &RJBERT JAMES 2471 SW23RDST REDMOND,OR 97756
151309-CB-D0111l
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008{)9
324.61 357.8 10C5.6B 9C3.91
30.30 90.ffi 415.68 51B.24 Tobl aroounldue
354.91 44B.45 1421.36 1422.15 3E46.B7
115885
257545
Cl\SCAOIA PRO'eRTitS & INVESTMENTSLLC 6822 SW THUNJERBI1DCT REDMOND,OR 97756
151114-CD -01300
2011-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 1008{)9
16000.33 18534.69 1B3C9.14 15845.74
1500.63 4695.45 7567.78 9084.00 Tobl aroounl due
17EB1.16 23230.14 25176.92 24£30.64 91 t18.86
115013
HARTER, AMANDA D 56519ECliPSE JR BEND. OR9770i
201 C1 2·A~23700
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
1016B 99.56 9351 95.B4
9.39 25.23 39.89 E4.95 Tobl amoun:due
13421B
CHAIN,RCBBIE~ELL PO PiiXB2 TEFREBONNE. OR 97760
14131 6-CA-D311Xl
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10
11 8.70 31 0.83 49900 60B.53 Tolal aroountdue
1300.46 1E3717 1709 61 1E69.91 6107.75
115!lj5
HARTER, AMANDA D 5652 9ECLIPSE JR BEND, OR9770i
201C1 2·B~1 0800
2008~9
1271.76 1226.94 12C9.63 10E1.3B
2011-1 2 2010-1 1 1009-10 2008-1)9
972 93.1B 93.31 92.79
9.07 24.36 18.56 :3.20 Tobl amoun:due
110.07 124.79 136.40 150.79 522.05 1J627 120.54 131.87 145.99 5J4.67
:o
277.83 325467 11 0115 5442.88 2594.:!1 B871.B3 2277.19 6392.60 Tobl aroounl due 23951.98 89.63 234.39 377.07 295.29 Toblaroounl due
11:62.29 1159.62 1289.34 828.94 4330.19 46'5.55 39401 156116 77' 8.69 28BI.21 9851.B8 2233.14 6285.77 Toblaroounl due 2B471.B9 2159.22 2384.85 264/.BI 1731.15 8923.09
104.01 9B.64 10683 1'207 421.55 323945 27354 741 .1:6 3€06.28 11 62.1ll 397>.39 4Bl.74 1407.11 Tolalaroountdue 12286.23 104.68 1226.18 283.63 1389.37 44J.85 1507.43 383.43 11li7.97 Tobl aroounl due 5190.95
11300 203.4B 273.£13 Tolalaroounl due
131 352
SPENCER,JACK l &MARGARETA O:l lt,BARBARA PO BOX 15ffi MONTEREY,CA93940
141036-00{)131Xl
2011-12 2010-11 1009-1 0 200B-DB
11 e6.o1 11 i0.45 11 14.99 1124.3
108.74 296.51 469.13 644.22 Tobl aroounl due
1273.75 14€0.96 1104.11 1768.52 6113.35
117160
HARTER, AMANOA R 56529ECLIPSE JR BEND, OR9770i
201107-C0-11 500
101 1-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 200B-09
844.5 831.64 80508 778.5
78.B1 210.69 832.77 446.34 Tobl amoun:due
923.31 1042.33 lll/.85 1224.84 432B.33
155878
RTCPARTNERS.LC 1572NW CUM8ERLAND BEND,OR97701
151316-DC·Oill03
1011-12 201()-11 2009-10 2008-09
30.35 29.38 2903 26.02
4.1:6 3.62 13.16 15.95 Toblaroounl due
34.40 38.00 42.19 41.9B 156.57
114942
CCOK, DANIEL 0 &REED, TREVOR 56646LLOYD WAY SUIIRWER,OR 97707
221014-BC-D13rn
2011-12 2010-1 1 2009-10 2008{)9
2115.64 21£5.89 211 B.7 1928B2
104.00 n89.64 556.29 2752.1B 8'5.73 2£94.43 110586 3C3468 Tobl aroounldue 11170.93
1631'2
HEFlOCK'R,JOHNROBERT I R&DENISEK 3601 NWDRCHARD DR TERREP!JNNE, CR97760
141306-AJ.02000
201 1-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 1008-09
2005.05 1569.22 1335./B 1142.69
117.14 3S7.54 5E2.12 6E3.97 Tobl amoun:due
2192.19 1936.76 1837.90 1796.66 7B43.51
203015
MNDERSON CO INC 221NWLAFAYE-TEAVE BEND,OR97701-1927
181 2!!J-AC·01200
2011-12 201()-11 2009-10 1008-09
269.23 265.85 255.52 246.95
25.14 67. 35 105.61 141 .:!1 Toblaroounl due
294.37 333.20 361.13 38B.54 1377.24
130697
CCSTA,KURTAllEN 1724/lUMBERVIEW RD BROO ~ N3S, OR97415
161 223-!lj-01000
2011-1 2
0
000 Tolal aroountdue
000 0.00
129922
151317-BD-D1BOJ
161223-!lj-01000
2011-12 1010-11 2009-10 2008{)9
212.56 271.62 2E8 01 19.13
26.37 6B.82 11 0.78 47.00 Tobl aroount due
31ll.93 340.44 378.79 137.11 1105.27
1252.27 1461.23 1787.25 1594.88
116.BB 370.18 738.72 914.40 Tobl amoun:due
1339.15 1B31.41 2525.97 25J9.28 8235.81
SCHNEIDffi ,BRLCE M& MARILYN 17413 SE WALTI.VISTA DR PORTlAND, OR 97267
CCSTA,KURT AllEN 1724/lUMBERVIEW RD BROO~ N3S, OR9741 5
201 1-1 2 2010-1 1 2009-10 2008-08
179132
132867
M101ElleJENNINGS REV LV TRUST JENNINGS, MICHELLE !TEE POBOX324 RECMONO,OR97756·0061
201105-DI\-00600U1 2011-12 101D-11 2009-10 1008-09
1043.15 1029.62 !116.61 975.02
97.35 26J.84 407.110 559.01 Toblaroounldue
1140.50 1290.46 1394.41 153403 5359.40
131692
171421 -00·01700
1B1117
JOllY,SCOTT JAYJRANDDONNA l EE 3049 NEFALEIGH CT BEND, OR 97701
171235-11\-07400
201 1-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
2232.79 2437.9 2439.68 544.53
115067
SHIEl DS.lONNIEB 63050 DEStRTSAGEST BEND,OR97701
221015-AA·02100
115.93 111.54 11003 £6.62
360.16 395.85 1S40.47 1195.29 4:92.77 126.75 139.BO 156.51 152.02 E/4.08
3524.37 3778.83 3703.74 3578.64
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 200B-D9
30.75 80.22 56/.til 690.05 Tolal aroountdue 10.82 2B.26 15.48 55.40 Tolal aroounl due
531.80 536.44 651.49 353.61 212334 2441.1B 3055.50 344B 08 B34.95 9779.71
2011-12 101D-11 2009-10 1008-09
2008~9
329.41 316.63 1372.97 12C4.64
45.40 118.53 1£0.53 125.40 Totll amoun: due 2C8.39 61 7.60 10CB.40 2£0.42 Tolal amoun:due
1B1209-CD·01600
2011-12 2010-11 2009-1 0
4:1i.4 467.91 46J.96 223.21
SEH3AL, EABITA& DANASHK 61259SPlENDOR LN BEND,OR97702
141316-DA-00099
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008-0B
243059
CROOK[)jUNTY INVESTMENTCO INC
MATHERS,KENNETHW&BETTY A JOHNSON,JAYSO NT&BRANDE T 25390BACHELORLN BEND,OR97701
2011-12 201D-11 1009-10 2008-09
54.67 53.B7 51.06 47.42
323.95 3853.32 957.31 4736.14 153188 5234 .62 2051.75 5630.39 Tolalaroounl due 19454 47 5.10 5977 13.05 67.52 21.52 73.58 27.19 74.61 Tolalaroounl due 1?5.48
12289B
KG~ ULL E R PROPERmSLLC 239 NW4THST RECMONO, OR97756
151309-0D-0220J
1177.26 2389.5B 2135.52 2134.72 9i37.0B
1615.52 1734.31 1931.16 1958.00 7348.99
221015-AA·02001
160.25 483.00 7'077 1032.99 Tobl aroounldue
117.91 360.66 579.39 717.15 Totll amoun:due
SHIELDS,LONNIEB 63050 DESERT SAGEST BEND,OR97701
171701 19[6.58 1814.75 18C1.73
1477.61 1423.65 140177 125J.B5
115001
1011-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008{)9
101 1-1 2 2010-11 1009-10 2008-09
1011-12 201D-11 1009-10 2008-09
4' .66 4' .05 39.63 36.22
3.89 1l41 17.97 2221 Tolalaroounldue
45.55 51.46 57.60 58.43 2'3.04
202871
KEY RESOURCES LLC CCRPORATE CIRClE STE 400 HEWERSJN,N¥ 89074-7722
181203-CI-09900
146.24 10563 160.74 173.13 e05.74
858.47 1496.24 1621.70 1744.23 5730.64
221015-AA·01701
12.49 3348 52.86 62.69 Tobl aroountdue
74.13 3C2.43 474.27 635.61 Tobl amoun:due
SHIELDS,lONNIEB 63050DESERT SAGEST BEND,OR97701
133.75 112.15 12/.BB 110.44
794.34 1193.B1 1147.43 1103.62
115071
2011-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 2008{)9
1011-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
1011-1 2 201()-11 2009-10 2008-09
25.68 25.37 24.53 21.38
3.42 7.44 11 .12 13.73 Toblaroounl due
19.10 32.81 35.65 36.11 133.67
152205
LA~ N E V ILLAG E LLC 2762 NW GROSSING CR10C BEND, OR97701
221014-DB-D110l
2011 -12
0
100 Toblaroounl due
000 0.00
1ffi.86 100.21 204.89 219.55 14.90 7£13.41
157.61 139.91 2J705 122.53 737.10
221015-AA·02100
14.16 38.04 59.92 80.01 6.10 Tobl aroounldue
14.31 3B.39 E0.55 11 09 Tobl amoun:due
SHIELDS,LONNIEB 63050 DESERTSAGEST BEND,OR97701
151.7 150.17 144.97 139.54 B.8
153.3 151.52 146.5 141.44
20131!1
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008{)9 2007-DB
201 1-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 1008-09
109676
LARNEVIlLAGEl LC 2761 NW GROSSINGCR 10C BEND, OR97701
221014-08-0100)
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
1330B 134.42 13].02 115.84
1270 14.05 E3.74 i 2.15 Tobl amoun:due
14B.78 138.47 133.76 197.99 699.00
SINE, RO&'RTV 19270 SHOSHONeCIR BEND,OR97702
181125-80·03600
152206
2011-12 101()-11 2009-10 1008-09
602.83 :!15.B4 575.1B 321.28
63.26 15J.94 237.75 173.14 Toblaroounl due
121BOO
LAWlER, oJREG S&HJFANI, JAMIEL POBOX493 SCAPPOOSE, OR971156
191616-00·04400
201 1-1 2 2010-11 2009-1 0 2008-09
125.45 112.41 1H11 14309
11 .80 31.01 49.23 E4.62 Totll amoun:due
138.25 153.42 13B.34 2J771 63772
SMITH,KR STINESIIZI.NNE 6091BASPEN OR BEND,OR97702
1B1218-D8·04100
151267
2011-12 101D-11 2009-10 1008-09
949.45 1045.91 1007.81 100' .98
83.62 264.95 413.iXi 574.47 Toblaroounl due
1181L8
1113.2 107105 1055 263.96
1C3.90 2i1 .0B 436.07 140.78 Tobl amoun:due
121710 1341.13 1491.07 4J4.74 4454.04
STERLING REAL ESTATE PAFTNERS II LlC 1205FREEDOM BLVD 1 WATSONV lLE, CA95C76
171 220-A0·00400
201 1-1 2 2010-11 1009-10 2008-09
2011-12 101 D-11 2009-10 2008-09
2840.92 21104.76 2695.66 3828.51
11 14.21 2195.01 Toblaroounl due
65909 716.78 8' 2.93 502.42 2721.22 103B.07 13'0.87 1424.37 15?6.45 5349.76 310607 35'5.30 3!lj987 6023.52 16454.76
242316
TRADEMA1KENTERPRISES llC PO BOX524B ML:M,OR97304
161316-AA-021 00
1011-12 201D-11 1009-10 2008-09
126' .79 3106.96 4863.21 4266.94
11777 787.1!1 201l13 2445.39 Toblaroounl due
1379.56 3894.05 68?3.34 67'3.33 1B860.28
1496L/
TROXELL,JUSTINP 63332VOGTRD BEND,OR97701
1011-12 201()-11 1009-10 2008-09
1379.55 138303 1329.21 1284.35
123.76 35J.37 549.41 733.37 Tolalaroount due
150B.31 1733.40 18?8.62 2020.72 7141.05
117359
ULRICH, L' IGH&ALISON 171721SLANDlDOPWAY BEND,OR977D7
1011-12 201()-11 2009-10 1008-09
207?.40 2044.21 1975.69 19l1.6B
193.89 22?1.29 51 7.B7 256208 81 3.61 2792.3D 11 32.34 3115.02 Toblaroounl due 10750.69
137536
WAGNER, ROWAN EEl\ l 2400BRUCeST \PT 14 CCNWAY, AR 721ll4-6264
2011-12 101()-11 2009-10 100B-09
219.6B 21?.9B 212.32 209.39
20.5 55.22 B/. 76 12J.l6 Tobl aroounl due
240.18 1?3.20 30008 319.44 1142.90
119776
WAYMAN,NORA 199?1ALCeRWOODCIR BEND,OR97702
2011-12 101D-11 2009-10 1008-09
697.12 688.2B ffi' .53 5?1.8
65.00 174.36 273.42 325.13 Toblaroounl due
762.18 862.64 934.95 896.93 3456.70
163QL4
WEHOE,BRADLEiD 65310WHWY20 BEND,OR97701
2011-12 201D-11 1009-10 2008-09
140' .16 1360.56 1344.D4 39'.65
13J.77 344.67 555.54 203.88 Toblaroounl due
1531.93 1705.23 1899.58 W0.53 5737.27
141219
WEl l S, NORMAN&EUNICE PO BOX 1079 lAFINE,OR97739
1011-1 2 101()-11 1009-10 2008-09
935.66 101 '.36 004.34 927.05
B/.33 265.21 40i.86 531.48 Tolalaroounldue
1022.99 1267.57 1391.20 1458.53 5140.29
1303L5
WESTSIDeTIMBeRINC PO BOX 1109 AUMSVILLE, OR 97325
1011-12 201()-11 2009-10 1008-09
37' .94 357.56 351.53 308.6B
34.71 9158 145.71 173.95 Toblaroounl due
406.65 41B.14 498.24 485.63 1B3B.66
130030
WHISTLEFOEV LLC 523SW7THST STE1 1Xl REDMOND, OR S7756
1011-12 101()-11 2009-10 1008-09
701.33 676.77 666.36 63422
65.55 171.45 275.42 47329 Toblaroounldue
767.8B 84B.22 941.78 13' 251 3B70.39
192470
WHITE,JENNIFERLYNNE& STEPHAN 2414 NW1STST BEND,OR97701
2011-12 101D-11 2009-1 0 200B09
71li9.64 704335 6769.26 5032.06
659. 63 7729.47 178432 B82767 2797.95 9567.22 2B24.71 7856.77 Toblaroounldue 33!111.13
130100
WIU AMS, DAVIDP&HEDIII, GAFY S PO BOX3WO STe112 SISTeRS, OR97':!1
151329-AB·06700
2011-12 2010-11 1009-1 0 2008-09
1042.36 1133.14 1115.71 9l5.65
97.29 287.07 461.16 57J. 84 Tobl aroounl due
100989
WI LSO N,ST EVE~
H&DeBRAl 117? NEP' NNME BEND.OR97701
17111B-DC·0140'
1011-12 201()-11 1009-1 0 2008-09
2B30.1B 2629.86 3580.69 41li7.26
245.49 2875.67 663.23 3296.09 1483.03 51li0.72 2331.89 6399.15 Toblaroounl due 17631 .63
256B81
WRIGHT.5t!HANN 1945 NWMONTEREY PINESDR 6 BEND,OR97701
171231-BB·/ 0101
1011-12 201()-11 2009-10 1008-09
1621.16 1110'.55 1539.22 824.95
151 .41 405.73 633.22 453.14 Totalarrounl due
20321B
203221
180866
CROOK [)jUNTY INVESTMENTCO INC
CU MMI NGS, PA~ELA l
14131 6-DD -DOOSS
171127-BC-D031!1
1726 NESONYACT BEND,OR97701
23~)
CURTIS, ,AASONl &MICHAEL WESTATE OF 1322 SOMERSETDR MNDIMAS, Cl\ 91773
201'1 8-[)j-02800
DAVISON,MICHAELN 8917 NE15TH IVE47 VANCOUVER, WA 00665
221009-!lj-04900
12B7BO
DENTON,SCOTT PO PiiX107 REDMOND,OR97756
141335-(Jj-03400
2011-12 201 0-11 2009-10 2008{)9
12£4.63 1244.49 1227 10i6.63
120.84 31527 507.15 617.27 Tobl aroounldue
1415.47 1E:!I76 1734.15 1E£13.90 6403.28
246123
DIAMONC BUILT HOMESLLC PO IIOX5757 BEND,OR97708-5757
18121 7-BD-13200
2011-12 2010-11 2009-1 0
28.87 7735 121.32 50.12 Tobl aroountdue
338.1 4 362.67 414.84 144.10 1279.75
128763
LEWIS, JEFFREY 1601 7SBeAVER GLENDR OREGON CITY, CR97045
141335-CJ.01100
2008~9
3C9.27 3C5.32 2S3.52 S3.9B
117256
1419/B
247745
DIAMONCBUILT HOMESLLC PO PiiX 5757 BEND, OR97708-5757
181204-CD -001 51
2011-1 2 2010-11 1009-10 200B-D9
5:6.31 7:6.41 716.98 23414
51.93 191.63 300.49 124.87 Tolal aroounldue
eoo.24 S4B.04 1C27.47 3:!101 2£42.76
134816
LUCAS, PIPER POBOX 305 SIS-ERS,OR97759
151C09-BB-06900
2011-12 2010-11 2009-1 0 2008-09
3207.86 321J05 3111 .42 158].04
2£9.40 35]7.26 B13.21 4023.26 1216.05 4397.47 874.28 2454.32 Totll amoun:due 14332.31
247746
DIAMONCBUILTHOMESLLG PO PiJX5757 BEND,OR97708-5757
181204-CD -00152
201 1-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008{)9
5:6.31 756.41 716.98 23414
51.93 191.63 300.49 124.87 Tobl aroounl due
E00.24 S4B.04 1C27.47 3:!1.01 2£42.76
244691
LUCKMAN, OENNISG& KENNETH0 64815 DESCHUTES MARKETROAD BEND, OR97701
161226-CJ.00111
201 1-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
11111B 1097.23 1082.56 945.22
1C3.62 277.96 447.46 541.93 Tobl amoun:due
1213.BO 1375.19 1530.02 1437.1 5 56]6.16
247752
DIAMON CBUILTHOMESLLG PO PiiX5757 BEND,OR97708-5757
181204-CD-001 58
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 1008{)9
5E6.31 7:6.41 716.9B 23414
51.93 191.63 300.49 114.87 Tobl aroounldue
Elll.24 S4B.04 1C27.47 35901 2£4276
132%9
LUCKMAN,OSCIH C 64815 DESCHUTeSMKT RD1 -A BEND, OR97701
161226-CJ.004rn
2011-1 2 201 0-11 2009-10 2008-09
17905 172.1 169.87 143.31
16.71 43.60 70.21 1503 Tobl amoun:due
195.76 115.70 240.0B 233.34 834.8B
247753
DIAMONC BUILT HOMESLLC PO BOX5757 BEND,OR97708-5757
1B1204-CD -001 59
2011-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 2008{)9
5E6.31 7:6.41 716.98 214.14
51.93 191.63 300.49 114.87 Tobl aroountdue
Elll.24 £48.04 1C27.47 359.01 2S4276
132970
LUCKMAN,OSCIH C 64BI 5DESCHUTeSMKT RDI-A BEND, OR97701
161226-CJ.00400
201 1-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 200B-09
1637.93 161995 1942.22 1695.64
247754
DIAMONC BUILT HOMESLLC PO IIOX5757 BEND,OR97708-5757
181204-CD-00160
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 200B-D9
5:6.31 7:6.41 716.98 23414
51.93 191.63 300.49 124.87 Tolal aroountdue
tlll.24 £48.04 1C27.47 3:!101 2£42.76
1257'1
LYNCH,JA; KC&PAM:LAA 7636 SE HOWARD M I ~NAU ~e . OR 97267
201 1 18·D~10000
201 1-1 2 201 0-11 2009-10 2008-09
183.33 185.01 130.7 603.97
1:2.88 410.39 &2.79 9i 2.17 Tobl amoun: due 17.39 46.87 74.70 349.14 Tobl amoun: due
1790.81 2030.34 274501 2657.81 9233.97 2J3.72 231.88 255.40 95B.11 1649.11
114435
DOOSDN.IULIEA 3400CAEANA CR #2121 LASVEGI S, NVB9122
2211X13-!lj-0B100
2011-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 2008{)9
387.5 312.85 3i1.62 3t7.89
36.17 96.99 153.60 210.92 Tolal aroounldue
423.67 479.84 :25.22 :78.81 2C07.54
108!lj1
MAOISON,RDGffi G&SHERRIEF 63355DESCHUTESMARKETRD BEND, OR 97701
171114-CB-OiliOO
2011-12 201 0-11 2009-10 2008-09 2007-08
7BI.B9 773.43 743.12 71 7.49 682.57
114405
DUCKW01TH, DANNYM 52376 PINEFORESTCR lA ' INE,OR97739
221003-!lj-02400
2011-1 2 201 0-11 2009-10 2008{)9
929.44 1038.37 1012.15 10C9.47
86.75 263.1:6 447.30 5' B.76 Tobl aroounldue
1[16.19 1301.42 1:29.45 1E88.23 5435.29
201 1-1 2 201 0-11 2009-10 200B-09
774J.69 7745.97 7507.71 7305.36
201 1-12 2010-11 2009-10
1211.74 S355 19.94 16.09
11.28 1370 37.17 18.79 Tobl aroountdue 252.:!1 701.36 1109.20 11'1.35 Tobl aroounl due
132.D2 117 25 127.11 133.B8 E10.26 2S58.8B 3469.90 3792.77 32110.26 13:01.B1
2011-1 2 201 0-11 2009-10 2008-09
100151 9B5.97 9B4.96 86417
201 1-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 2008-09
231518 2225.43 2194.11 1924.5
96.29 258.18 £1117 40578 975.96 559.55 Tolal aroounl due
1127.91 1277.2B 138748 1E35.51 532B.19
2011-12 201 0-11 2009-10 2008-09
31.92 33.92 32.65 31.57
4.26 9.95 1480 19.36 Tobl amoun:due
36.18 43.87 47.45 50.93 178.43
201 1-1 2 201 0-1 1 2009-10 2008-09
1181.57 1324.15 1454.61 732.43
2011-1 2 201 0-11 2009-10 2008-09
79].45 773.77 753.77 307.B2
110.28 315.45 &1.24 4C1 .9B Tobl amoun:due 73.77 1£7.29 311.55 1e6.92 Tobl amoun:due
1291.85 1659.60 2055.85 1134.41 6141.71 B34.22 976.06 1035.32 474.74 3330.34
126679
FETTERS,JOES'H E&LISA R 20712NICOLETTe OR BEND,OR97701
2111!13-[)j-011000
2008~9
134706
259587
120956
FORESTER, LALRA L&LARRY E 20608 KINGHEZEKIAHWAY BEND,OR97702
18121D-CB-D141Xl
201 1-12 2010-11 2009-10
11!1B11
FREeMAN, lEEI &KI ~BERlY A PO PiJX /822 BEND,OR97708
181' 36-A0-01500
201 1-12 2010-11 2009-1 0 200B-D9
1031.63 1C19.1
2011-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008{)9
116.45 112.41 119.11 3.B3
11.80 31.01 49.23 2.04 Tolal aroount due
138.25 153.42 166.34 5.87 4ffi.88
141944
2011-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 200B-D9
9838.71 10273.B6 10942.72 99i247
918.2B 2602.71 4522.9l 571755 Tobl aroountdue 32 4.81 847.42 1363.14 1659.04 Tobl aroounldue
107:0.99 12176.5B 15405.71 15E00 02 54789.30 3104.84 4192.50 4E61 .07 4E52.71 17211.12
139078
2008~9
151264
130146
GRttNLei ,OLIVeRDAVID 5103NE14THPl PORTlAND, OR97211
191616-00{)41 0]
27C6.29 27E8.54 2613.57 21 C8.91
130467
1511li3
MCKAY, D' LlA M ADDRESS UNKNOWN
171232-M-04200
Mill S, MAX 521SW ClNYO II DR RECMONO,OR97756
15111 6-BC-02500
201 1-1 2 201 0-11 2009-10 2008-09
3027.79 2917.12 2B72.06 1703.54
212.60 331 0.39 739.00 3656.12 1117.11 4059.17 945.39 2553.93 Tobl amoun:due 13679.61
MILl S, MAX 521SWClNYOII DR RECMOND. OR97756
151316-BD-D100J
2011-1 2 201 0-11 2009-10 2008-09
1674.97 1912.23 1963 61 1163.13
MILl S, MAX 521SWCl NYOII DR RECMONO, OR97756
15132B-DO-IXIB01l11
2011-12 201 0-11 2009-10 2008-1)9
104361 1522.42 1693.97 101175
1E6.33 41443 811 62 646.37 Tolai Qmoun:due ,7 40 315.68 7C2.25 5E9.28 Totll amoun:due
MILLS, MAX 521 SWClNYO II DR RECMOND, OR97/iXi
15132B OOOOOOO
201 1-1 2 201 0-11 2009-10 2008-09
7362.16 7093.01 6983.34 41 54.22
201 1-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008{)9
3400 03 3345.0B 32S7.93 2BS3.67
189462
GRttNS AT REDMOND LLC 7767SWCIRRUSDR BEIVERTON, OR9701ll-5963
151329-CA-D151Xl
2011-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 200B-D9
1113.94 14E5.33 2000.59 1S37.9
103.97 368.68 859.00 111 1.00 Tolal aroounldue
1217.91 1124.01 2£40.57 3C4B.96 9C31.45
123716
GRttNSATREDMOND lLC 7767 SWCIRRUSDR BEIVERTON, OR970118-5963
151329-CA-D251Xl
2011-1 2 2010-11 2009-10 2008{)9
14.26 14.83 15.74 14.34
1.00 4.35 7.14 B.IIO
130135
Totalam:IUntdue
16.16 19.18 22.B8 23.14 81.36
539.34 1515.78 2612.93 3303.02 Tobl aroountdue
631B.OB 749l.17 8834.53 9C64.10 31115.88
130136
5778.74 5913.39 6121 .6 57E1.0B
161212-00·001 04
123701
151329-00-D080i
201 1-12 2010-11 2009-10 2008{)9
MCCORD.:HARleSE 5312 fJ//RAINBJWCT RECMONO, OR97756
£3.39 1093.90 249.78 1235.75 4C7.12 1392.08 4£5.46 1359.63 Totl.l amoun:due 5031.36 21609 2531 27 51'3 .78 2739.21 !!'6.B9 31]1.00 11C3.36 3027.86 Total amoun:due 11449.34
211C15-BJ.05800
GREENS ATREDMONDLLC 7767SWCIRRUSDR BEIVERTON,OR97000-5963
151329-AC-D331Xl
141331-AJ.OOIO'
Mlll ARD,TAB &MARCIE 16120SPARKS OR LA PI NE, OR97i39
130173
GREENSATREDMOND LLC 7767 SWCIRRUSDR BEIVERTON,OR97000-5963
MCCl EAN, JOHN &HI RTY, TAMMY S 3311 NW 1ADEMACHERPL BEND. OR97701
211C34-CJ.09400
151329-00-D050J
189515
151C09-II\-03700
METCALF, ROBERT &TAMI L 52536 DEER At.D DR LA PI NE, OR 97i39
GREENSATREDMOND LLC 7767 SW CIRRUSDR BEIVERTON, OR97000-5963
189472
MCCAULOU, FRED C POBOX 1930 Sls-tRS,OR97759
72.98 B54.87 1£5.93 939.36 3C7.16 1050.28 411 .36 1128.85 &0.56 1133.13 Tobl amoun:due 6337.17 722.46 8433.15 1!!'2.30 97J8.27 31C3.19 10610.90 4118.41 11 4l3.77 Tobl amoun:due 40276.09
1B31.30 2395.66 277523 1814.50 B817.69 114101 19JB.10 24]1.22 157003 7020.36
61!7.13 B049.29 17£6.90 8B39.91 261!6.45 9859.79 22SB.67 6452.B9 Tobl amoun:due 33231.88
265.15
71J54
1139.65 1420.21 1576.B7 Wi6.49 5703.22
17?3.57 2007.28 21 ?5.44 127B09 7234 .38
YOU ARE HEREBY REQUIRED TO TAKE NOTICE that Deschutes County, Oregon, has filed in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Deschutes County, a complaint to foreclose the lien of all taxes s hown on the 2012-2013 Deschutes County Tax Foreclosure List set forth, and that the said Deschutes
County, as Plaintifr in said application, will apply to the Court for General Judgment foreclosing such tax liens not less than thirty (30) days from the date of the publication of this Notice, and any and all persons interested in any of the real property included in sa id Foreclosure List arc hereby required to file answer
and defense, if any there be, to such complaint for General Judgment within thirty (30) days from the date of the publication of this Notice, which date~ the 16th day of September, 2012. Notice of this foreclosure proceed ing is given exclus ively by one (1) weekly publication of the foregoing Foreclosure List in the "Bulletin". a daily newspap er of general circulation in Deschutes County, Oregon,
pursuant to Oregon Rev~ed Statute 312.040(1)(ai. MARTIN WYNNE Tax Collector Deschutes County, Oregon
LAURIE E. CRAGHEAD Assistant Legal Counsel Deschutes County, Oregon
T 0 PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809 ----~~ ~ ~~---- ----~~~---- -----1~1----Homes for Sale BUNGALOW ON THE WESTSIDE! Cute with endless possibilities to re-design or plenty of room to add additional square footage on this large double lot. Sturdy construction of a bygone era with all the quirky charm you just don't find in modern homes today. $219,900 MLS#201204713 Rhonda Garrison & Chris Sperry Principal Broker & Broker 541-279-1768 & 541 -550-4922 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com'Bend
Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
Homes for Sale
Redmond Homes
1/4 Mi. Deschutes River NOTICE: frontage. Custom All real estate adversingle level 3 bdrm, 3 tised here in is subbath, 3962 sq.ft., ject to the Federal 12.72 acre gated Fair Housing Act, community, private which makes it illegal setting. $997,000. to advertise any prefMLS #201205961. erence, limitation or Pam Lester, Principal discrimination based Broker, Century 21 on race, color, reliGold Country Realty, gion, sex, handicap, Inc. 541-504-1338 familial status or national origin, or intenThe Bulletin tion to make any such To Subscribe call preferences, limita541-385-5800 or go to tions or discrimination. We will not knowingly www.bendbulletin.com accept any advertis- Just bought a new boat? ing for real estate Sell your old one in the which is in violation of classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! this law. All persons 541-385-5809 are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available Looking for your next on an equal opportuemployee? nity basis. The BullePlace a Bulletin help tin Classified wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad SW Bend will also appear on Deschutes Landing bendbulletin.com Riverfront Townhomes which currently reStarting in the low ceives over $400,000s 1.5 million page Pahlisch Homes views every month The Hasson at no extra cost. Company Realtors. Bulletin Classifieds Edie Delay, Broker Get Results! 541-420-2950' Call 385-5809 or Julie Burgoni, Broker place your ad on-line 541-306-8927 at bendbulletin.com
Homes with Acreage
GUST~12 G5
THE
-----~~~----
Acreages
Boats & Accessories
Motorcycles & Accessories
HD Heritage Classic 1592 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 Powell Butte 6 acres, bath, site-built, 2 car 360 views, great horse 2003, 100 yr. Anniv. garage, 24x36 shop property, 10223 Housmodel. 10,905 Miles, w/10' ceilings & 220V ton Lake Rd. $99,900. new tires, battery, power, all on 1.22 treed 541-350-4684 loaded w/ custom exacre lot in CRR. & tras, exhaust 400, $195,000. chrome. Hard/soft 2005 4x4, 2500 lb winch, http://bend. craigsl ist. org/ BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS bags & much -----1~1----gun rack & alum loading reo/3069581828.html Search the area's most $1 1,995, or ramp, only 542 miles, Call541-633- 9613 Motorcycles & Accessories comprehensive listing of 541 -306-6505 show room cond, $4800. classified advertising. 503-819-8100. FIND IT! 541-280-9401 real estate to automotive, Harley Davidson SoftBUY IT! Tail Deluxe 2007, merchandise to sparling -----1~1----SELL IT! goods. Bulletin Classifieds white/cobalt, w/pas- ----1~1--- Boats & Accessories ATVs The Bulletin Classifieds senger kit, Vance & appear every day in the Hines muffler system print or on line. 12' Porta-Bote, Gen-----1~1----18.5' '05 Reinell185, V-6 & kit. 1045 mi., exc. Call 541-385-5809 esis Ill, $600. Volvo Penta, 270HP, Acreages cond, $19,999, www.bendbulletin.com 10' Pelican Scorpio dinlow hrs., must see, 541-389-9188. ghy, $350. $17,500 ,541-330-3939 541-280-0514. Ser.fng Central Oregon since 19tB CHECK YOUR AD Harley Heritage Find It in 16' Crestliner fiberPlease check your ad Softail, 2003 Honda TRX300 EX 2005 $5,000+ in extras, on the first day it runs glass with trailer, The Bulletin Classifieds! sport quad w/Rev, runs -----!~!---- $2000 paint job. to make sure it is cor541-385·5809 no motor, extra & rides great, new pipe & Manufactured/ 30K mi. 1 owner, rect. Sometimes inpaddles incl. $1 700 obo. stuff, nice boat. A ------For more information structions over the Mobile Homes 541-647-8931 Steal @ $300! USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! please call phone are misunder541 -385-8090 541-876-7029 or stood and an error FACTORY SPECIAL Door-to-door selling with or 209-605-5537 can occur in your ad. New Home, 3 bdrm, 1026 541-536-1395. Find exactly what fast results! It's the easiest If this happens to your sq.ft. , $46,900 finished you are looking for in the Advertise your car! ad, please contact us on yoursite,541.548.5511 People Look for Information way in the worl d to sell. Add A Picture! CLASSIFIEDS the first day your ad www.JandMHomes.com About Products and Reach t housands of readers ! The Bulletin Classified appears and we will Services Every Day through Call 541-385-5809 be happy to fix it as 541-385-5809 The Bullet in Classifieds The Bulletin Classifieds Yamaha Grizzly 700 Fl The Bulletin's soon as we can. 2009, 543 mi, 2WD/ Deadlines are: Week"Call A Service 18.5' Bayliner 185 17' 1984 Ch ris Craft 4WD, black w/EPS, days 11 :00 noon for Professional" Directory 2008. 3.0L, open bow, - Scorpion, 140 HP fuel injection, indepenHD FAT BOY next day, Sat. 11 :00 slim deck, custom inboard/outboard, 2 is all about meeting dent rear suspension 1996 a.m. for Sunday and cover & trailer, exc. winch w/handle condepth finders, trollyour needs. Completely rebuilt' Monday. cond., 30-35 total hrs., trols & remote, ps. ing motor, full cover, customized, low 541·385-5809 incl. 4 life vests, auto, large racks, exc. EZ - Load trailer, Call on one of the miles. Accepting ofThank you! ropes, anchor, stereo, cond ., $7850, $3500 OBO. professionals today! fers . 541-548-4807 The Bulletin C lassified depth finder, $12,000, 541 -322-0215 541-382-3728 . 541 -729-9860.
The Bulletin
Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE FOR CIVIL FORFEITURE TO ALL POTENTIAL CLAIMANTS AND TO ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS READ THIS CAREFULLY
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE FOR C IVIL FORFEITURE TO ALL POTENTIAL CLAIMANTS AND TO ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS READ THIS CAREFULLY
If you have any interest in the seized propenty described below, you must claim that interest or you will automatically lose that interest. If you do not file a claim for the property, the property may be forfeited even if you are not convicted of any crime . To claim an interest, y ou must file a written c laim with the forfeiture counsel named below, The written claim must be signed by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, and state : (a) Your true name; (b) The address at whic h you will accept future from the mailings court and forfeiture counsel; and (3) A statement that you have an interest in the seized property. Your deadline for filing the c laim docu ment with forfe iture counsel named below is 21 days from the last day of publication of this notice . Where to file a claim and for more information : Daina Vitolins , C rook County District Attorneys Office , 300 N .E. Third Street, Prineville , OR 97754. Notice of reasons for Forfeiture: The property described below was seized for forfeiture because it: (1) Constitutes the proceeds of the violation of, solicitation to violate , attempt to violate , or conspiracy to violates, the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture , distribution, o r possession of controlled substances (ORS Chapter 475); and/or (2) W as used o r intended for use in committing or facilitating the violation of, solic itation to violate , attempt to violate. or conspiracy to violate the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution or possession of consubstances trolled (ORS Chapter 475).
If you have any interest in the seized property described be low, you must claim that interest or you will automatically lose that interest. If you do not file a claim for the property, the property may be forfeited eve n if you are not convicted of any crime . To claim an interest, you mu st file a writte n claim with the forfe iture coun sel named below, The writte n claim must be signed by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, and state: (a) Your true name; (b) The address at which you will accept future mailings from the court a nd forfeiture counsel; and (3) A statement that you have an interest in the seized property. Your deadline for filing the claim docume nt with forfeiture counsel named below is 2 1 days from the last day of publication of this notice . Where to file a claim and for more information: Daina Vitolins, Crook County District Attorney Office, 300 NE Third Street, Prineville, OR 97754 . Notice of reasons for Forfeiture: The property described below was seized for forfeiture because it: (1) Constitutes the proceeds of the violatio n of, solicitation to violate, atte mpt to violate , or conspiracy to vio lates, the c riminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution, or possessio n of contro lled substances (ORS Chapter475); and/or (2) Was used or intended for use in committing or facilitating the violation o f, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, o r conspiracy to vio late the c riminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution o r possession of consubstances trolled (ORS Chapter 475). IN THE MATTER OF: One 2009 Dodge Challenger, OLN 583EBG, VIN 2B3LJ7 4WX9 H63305 2, Case 12-04- 1596 seized 04/18/2012 from Casey Roberti.
LEGAL NOTICE James SUMMONS: R. O'Bryant, Trustee of the James R. O 'Bryant Living Trust dated February 25, 2010 v . Richard Crow and Unknown Heirs of Coy Clinton Crow, County Deschutes Case No. 12CV0708, To: Unknown Heirs of Coy Clinton Crow, Defe nda nts. YOU ARE HEREBY REQUIRED to appear and defend the complaint filed against you in the above entitled cause within thirty (30) days from the date of service of this summons upon you, and in case of your fa ilure to do so, for want thereof, plaintiff will a pply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint. NOTICE TO THE DEFENDANT: READ THIS SUMMONS CAR EFULLY: The Plaintiff has filed a lawsuit against Defe ndants, in which the complaint seeks actio n on a promissory note for $286,137.50, foreclosure of a trust deed , plus attorney fees and court costs. The property being is defo reclosed scribed in the records of Deschutes County as Parcel 1, PARTITION PLAT NO. 2006-11 , Deschutes County, Oregon. You must appear in this case or the other side will win automatically. To appear you must file with the court a legal document called a motion or answer. The motion or answ er must be given to the court clerk or administrator within thirty (30) days of the date of first publication specified herein (the date of first publicatio n of the Summo ns is/was August 2, 201 2) along with the req uired filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof of service on the plaintiff's attorn ey or, if the plaintiff does not an attorney, have proof of service o n the plaintiff. If you have questions. you should see an a ttorney imIf you mediate ly. need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Service online at www.oregonstatebar.org or by ca lling (503) 684-3763 (in the Portland metropolitan area) or to ll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636 . Andrew J. Bean , OSB #992185, attorney for plaintiff, P.O. Box 667 - 130 First Ave. W ., Albany, O regon 97321 , P: (54 1) 926-2255; F: (54 1) 967-6579; E: abean@wtlegal.com
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Th e Trustee under the terms of th e Trust Deed described herein, at the direction of the Beneficiary, hereby elects to sell the property described in the Trust Deed to satisfy the obligations secured thereby . Pursuant to Grantor: ORS 86.745, the following information is provided: 1.PARTIES: ALAN M. MCFEE AND HEIDI K . MCFEE. Trustee: FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANC E COMPANY OF OREGON. Successor Trustee: NANCY K. CARY. Beneficiary:WORLD SAVINGS BANK, FSB. 2.DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY: The real property is described as follows: Parcel 1 of Partition Plat No. 1996-17, being located in the Northwest Quarter of the Northeast Quarter (NW1 /4NE1 /4) of Section Twenty-three (23), Township Sixtee n (16) South, Range Twelve (1 2) , East of the Willamette Meridian, Deschutes County, Oregon. 3.RECORDING. The Trust Deed was recorded as fo llows: Date Recorded: May 24, 2006. Recording No. 2006-35829 Official Records of Deschutes County, Oregon. 4.DEFAULT . The Grantor or any other person obligated on the Trust Deed and Promissory Note secured thereby is in default and the Beneficiary seeks to foreclose the Trust Deed for failure to pay: Monthly payments in the amount of $2,813.63 each, due the fifteenth of each month , for the months of May 2010 through May 2012; plus late charges and advances; plus a ny The unpaid real property taxes or liens, plus interest. 5.AMOUNT DUE. amount due on the Note which is secured by the Trust Deed referred to herein is: Principal balance in the amount of $444,622.62; plus interest at An adjustable rate pursuant to the terms of the Promissory Note from April 15, 201 0; plus late charges of $1 ,328.70; plus advances a nd foreclosure attorney fees and costs. 6 .SALE OF PROP ERTY . The Trustee here by states that the property will be sold to satisfy the obligations secured by the Trust Deed. A Trustee's Notice of Default and Election to Sell Under Terms of Trust Deed has been recorded in the Official Records of Deschutes County, Oregon. 7. TIME OF SALE. Date:Octo ber 18, 2012. Time: 11 :00 a.m. Place:Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond Street, Bend, Oregon. 8.RIGHT TO REINSTATE. Any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time that is not later than five days before the Trustee conducts the sale , to have this foreclosure dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire amount then due, other than such po rtion of the principal as would not the n be due had no default occurred, by curing any othe r default tha t is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Trust Deed and by paying all costs and expenses actua lly incurred in e nforcing the o bligation and Trust Deed, together with the trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amount provided in ORS 86.753. You may reach the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Service at 503-684-3763 or to ll-free in Oregon at 800-452-7636 or you may visit its website at: www.osbar.org. Legal assistance may be available if you have a low income and meet federal poverty guidelines. For more information and a directory of legal aid programs, go to http:// www.oregonlawhelp.org. Any questions regarding this matter should be directed to Lisa Summers, Paralegal, (541) 686-0344 (TS #17368.30898). DATED: May 24, 2012. Is/ Nancy K. Cary. Nancy K. Cary, S uccessor Trustee. He rshner Hunter,
LL~:.~i:: r·~~~ii:~ 75
Leo~~t_,
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No : xxxxxx1672 T.S. No .: 1355344-09.
An important premise upon which the principle of
Reference is made to that certa in deed made by Mary Norsen, An Unmarried Woman, as Grantor to First American Title Insura nce Company Of Oregon, as Trustee, in favor of World Savings Bank, Fsb, Its Successors and/or Assignees, as Beneficiary, dated April10 , 2007, recorded April1 6 , 2007, in official records of Deschutes, Orego n in book/reel/volume No. xx at page No. xx, fee/file/ Instrument/microfilm/reception No. 2007-21439 covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: Lot fifty (50), Forest Grove Estates, Phase 3 and 4 Deschutes County, Oregon. Commonly known as: 588 SW Hillwood Ct. Bend OR 97702. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: Failure to pay the monthly payment due November 1, 20 11 of principal and interest and subsequent installme nts due thereafter; plus late charges; together with all subsequent sums advanced by beneficiary pursua nt to the terms and conditions of said deed of trus t. Monthly payment $711 .78 Monthly Late Charge $24.07. By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said Deed of Trus t immediately due a nd pay able, said sums being the following, to-wit; The sum of $156,574.30 together with interest thereon at 2 .000% per annum from October 01, 2011 until pa id; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, fo reclosure costs and a ny sums advance by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms and conditions of the said deed of trust. Whereof, notice he reby is given that, Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation the undersigned trustee will on November 01, 2012 at the hour of 1:OOpm, Standard of Time, as established by Section 187.11 0, Oregon Rev ised Statutes, At the Bond Street entrance to Deschutes County Courthouse 11 64 NW Bond, City o f Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the gran tor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the g rantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expense of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee . Notice is further given that any person na me d in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinsta ted by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount the n due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and c uring any other default compla ined o f in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "granto r" includes any successor in interest to the granto r as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" includes their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: June 25, 201 2. Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation 525 East Main Street P.O. Box 22004 El Cajon CA 92022-9004 Cal-Western Re conveyance Corporation Signature/By: Tammy La ird
d e mocracy is based is that information about
R-413812 07/26/12 , 08/02, 08/09, 08/16
IN THE MATTER OF: $6,91 7 .00 in US Currency, Case #080677 04/1 8/2008 seized from Jeffery Shetler ;
Want to impress the relatives? Re model your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Need to get an ad in ASA P? Fax it to 541-322-7253 The Bulletin C lassifieds
ARE PUBLIC NOTICES IMPORTANT?
government activities must
be accessible in order
Public notices provide this sort of accessibility to activities.
Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin dassi~eds or go to www.bendbvlletin.com and dick on "Classified Aclsu
The Bulletin
75
LL~]iL: T"'~~~iim
Leg~~/.o.,
LEGAL NOTIC E TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 00311 52283 T.S. No.: 12-0 1073-5 Reference is made to that certain Deed of Trust dated as of May 23, 2006 made by, DAN L TAYLOR, as the original grantor, to W ESTERN TITL E AND ESCROW COMPAN Y, as the original trustee , in favor of MORTGA GE ELECTRO NIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC , AS NOMIN EE FOR AM ERIC AN BROKERS CONDUIT, as the original beneficiary, recorded on May 26, 2006, as Instrument No . 2006-36686 of Official Records in the Office of the Recorder of Deschutes County, Oregon (the "Deed of T rus t") . The current beneficiary is: Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for American Home Mortgage Assets Trus t 2006-2, Mortgage-Backed Pass-Through Certificates Series 2006-2, (the "Bene ficiary"). APN : 155897 LOT EIGHTEEN (18), IN BLOCK THR EE (3) , O F TAMARACK PARK, C ITY OF BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 2858 N E DAGGETT LANE, BEND, OR Both the Beneficiary and the Trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the Deed of Trust and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default(s) for which the foreclosure is made is that the grantor(s): failed to pay payments which became due; together with late charges due; and w hic h defaulted amounts total: $4,532.00 as of June 28, 2012. By this reason of said defa ult the Beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following , to wit: The sum of $214,659.74 together with inte rest thereon at the rate of 3.29600% per annum from Jan uary 1, 2012 until paid ; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all Trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the Be neficiary pursua nt to the terms of said deed of trus t. Whereof, notice here by is given that FIDELITY NATIO NAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as the duly appointed Trustee under the Deed of Trust will on November 8, 2012 at the hour of 01:00 PM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187 .11 0, Oregon Revised Statues, At the fro nt entrance to the Deschutes County Courthouse 11 64 NW Bond St. Bend, OR County of Deschutes, State of O regon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said desc ribed real pro perty which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution of the Dee d of Trust, together with any interest which the gra ntor or his successor(s) in interest acquired after the execution of the Deed of Trust, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the Trustee. Notice is furthe r given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised S tatutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reins tated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than suc h portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), togethe r with the costs. Trustee's or attorney's fees and c uring any other default compla ined of in the Notice of Default by te ndering the performance required under the obligation or Deed of Trust, at any time prior to five days before the date last se t for sale. FOR FURT HE R INFORMATION, PLEA SE CONTACT FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, 11000 Olson Drive Ste 101, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670 916-636-Q114 FOR SALE INFORMATION CALL: 71 4-573-1965 We bsite for Trustee's Sale Information: www.prio rityposting. com
for the electorate to make well-informed decisions. citize ns who want to know more about government
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTIC E OF SALE The Trustee under the terms of the Trust Deed described here in, at the direction of the Beneficiary, hereby elects to se ll the property described in the Trust Deed to satisfy the obligations secured thereby. Pursuant to ORS 86.745, the following information is provided: 1.PARTIES: Grantor: MARY JEAN MCLAU GHLIN. Trustee :FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANC E COMPANY OF OREGON. Successor Trustee: NANC Y K. CARY. Beneficiary:WORLD SAVINGS BANK, FSB. 2. DESCR IPTION OF PROPERTY: The real property is described as follows: Lot 11 , Block 2 , TILLICUM VI LLAGE, Deschutes County, Oregon . 3. RECORDING. The Trust Deed was recorded as follows: Date Recorded : April 20, 2007. Recording No.: 2007-22704 Official Records of Deschutes County, Oregon. 4. DEFAULT. The Grantor or any other person obligated on the Trust Deed and Promissory Note secu red thereby is in default and the Beneficiary seeks to foreclose the Trust Deed for failure to pay: Monthly payments in the amount of $ 1,353.73 each, due the first of each month, for the months of March 2012 through May 2012; plus late c harges and advances; plus any unpaid real property taxes or liens, plus interest. 5 .AMO UNT DUE. The amount due on the Note whic h is secured by the Trust Deed referred to herein is: Principal balance in the amount o f $262,229.12 ; plus interest at an adjustable rate pursuant to the terms of the Promissory Note from Fe bruary 1, 2012; plus late charges of $592.27; plus advances and foreclosure attorney fees and costs. 6.SALE OF PROPERTY. The Trustee hereby states that the property w ill be sold to satisfy the ob ligations secured by the Trust Deed. A Trustee's Notice of Default and Election to Sell Under Terms of Trust Deed has bee n recorded in the Official Records of Deschutes Cou nty, Oregon. ? .TIM E OF SALE. Date :October 18, 2012. Time: 11 :00a.m. Place:Deschutes County Courthouse, 11 64 NW Bond Street , Bend, Oregon. 8.RIGHT TO REINSTATE. Any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time that is not later than five days before the Trustee conducts the sale, to have this foreclosure dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire amount then due, other tha n such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred , by curing any other default that is capable of being c ured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Trust Deed and by paying all costs a nd expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, together with the tru stee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amount provided in ORS 86.753. You may reach the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Service at 503-684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at 800-452-7636 o r you may visit its website a t: www.osbar.org. Legal assistance may be available if you have a low income and meet federal poverty guidelines. For more information and a directory of legal a id programs, go to http:// www.oregonlawhelp.org. Any ques tions regarding this matter should be directed to Lisa Summers, Paralegal, (541) 686-0344 (TS #17368.30960). DATED: May 29, 2012. I s/ Nancy K. Cary. Nancy K. Cary, Successor Trustee. Hershner Hunter,
Get yo ur business
Tick, Tock Tick, l ock ...
GROWING
...don't let time get away. Hire a pro fessional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
with a n ad in T he Bulletin's "Call A Service Pro fessio na l" Directo ry
Call a Pro Whethe r you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built , you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professio nal" Directory
541-385-5809
TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular inc ludes plural, th e word "g rantor" includes any successo r in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Deed of Trust. the words "Trustee" and 'Be neficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: 7/9/20 12 FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, Trustee Megan Curtis, Authorized Signature P964746 7/26, 8/2, 8/9, 08/16/201 2
G6 THURSDAY,
T 0 PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541 -385-5809 ---1~1--~ :----1~1-- ---1~ ~ ~~---Utility Trailers Pickups Sport Utility Vehicles Vans Automobiles
AUGUST 16, 2012• THE BULLETIN
CARS, TRUCKS, BOATS & RVs Can be found on these pages: 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 - RV's for 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
~
Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
Pilgrim 2005, w/d hookup, grades, $24,440. 541-312-4466 Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at:
~
Travel Trailers
GREAT
20.5' 2004 Bayliner 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow, exc. cond., very fast w/very low hours, Jots of extras incl. & tower, Bimini custom trailer, $ 19,500. 541-389-1413
Hunter's Delight! Package deal! 1988 Winnebago Super Chief, 38K miles, great shape; 198B Bronco II 4x4 to tow, 130K mostly towed miles, nice rig! $15,000 both. 541 -3B2-3964, leave msg.
••[. I
~~!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!~~~ I'
I'
I'
20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11 ,900 OBO. 541-379-3530 Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please see Class 875. 541-385-5809
Itasca Sun Cruiser 1997, 460 Ford, Class A, 26K mi., 37', living room slide, new awnings, new fridge, 8 new tires, 2 A/C, 6.5 Onan Gen., new batteries, tow pkg., rear towing TV, 2 tv's, new hydraulic jack springs, tandem axel, $15,000, 541-385-1782
GREAT
BUY!
Jayco Greyhawk 2004, 31' Class C, 6BOO mi. , hyd. jacks, new tires, slide out, exc. cond, $49,900, 541-480-8648
The Bulletin Servin g Central Oreg on since 1903
BUY! Terry 23' 1 990 self-contained, sleeps 6, in good condition, $3495. Please call 541 -419-5495
CALL~
TODAY' Viking Tent trailer 200B, clean, self contained, sleep 5, easy to tow, great cond. $6500. 541-383-7150.
Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, fuel station , exc cond. sleeps 8, black/gray interior, used 3X, $24,999. 541-389-9188 Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin .com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results ! Call 385-5B09 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Regal Prowler AX6 Extreme Edition 38' '05, 4 slides, 2 fireplaces, all maple cabs, king bed/ bdrm separated w/slide glass dr,loaded,always garaged,lived in only 3 mo,brand new $54,000, still like new, $28,500, will deliver,see rvt.com, ad#4957646 for pies. Cory, 541 -580-7334 SPRINTER 36' 5th wheel, 2005, dual slides, queen bed air mattress, fold out couch. $10,500 obo. 541-3B2-0B65, leave message!
SPRINTER 36' 5th wheel, 2005, dual slides, bunk, 2 baths, queen bed air mattress, fold out couch. Very clean! $10,500 obo. 541-3B2-0B65, leave message!
GENERATE SOME exTaurus 27.5' 1988 citement in your neigEverything works, borhood. Plan a ga- Beaver Coach Marquis $1750/par1ial trade lor rage sale and don't 40' 1987. New cover, car. 541 -460-9127 forget to advertise in new paint (2004), new inverter (2007). Onan classified! 385-5809. ---i~t--6300 watt gen, 111 K mi, parked covered $35,000 Canopies & Campers serving c entral o reg on since 1903 obo. 541 -419·9859 or 541 -280-2014 Arctic Fox Silver Edition Used out-drive 11 40, 2005. 5 hrs on parts- Mercury gen; air, slideout, dry bath, like new, loaded! OMC rebuilt ma---i~t-- $16,900. Also 2004 rine motors: 151 Dodge Ram 3500 quad $1595; 3.0 $1895; Fifth Wheels cab dually 4x4, 11 ,800 4.3 (1993), $1995. mi, SuperHitch, $26,950. 5 41-389-0435 Monaco Dynasty 2004, Alfa Ideal 2001, 31', 3 OR both lor $39,B50. slides, island kitchen, loaded, 3 slides, dieCall 541-382-6708 AC/heat pump, gensel, Reduced now :----i~t-- erator, satellite sys$129,900, 541 -923Watercraft tem, 2 llatscreen TVs, 8572 or 541 -749-0037 hitch & awning incl. Ads published in "Wa$16,000. (Dodge 3500 tercraft' include: Kay1 ton also available) aks , rafts and motor541 -388- 1529; 408-4B77 ized personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see National Sea Breeze Class 870. 2004 M-134 1 35', gas, 541-385-5809 2 power slides, upgraded queen matServing Central Oregon since 1903 tress, hyd. leveling system, rear camera & monitor, on ly 6k mi. Reduced to $41 ,300! 541-480-0617
Immaculate!
The Bulletin
...
'1'he Bulletin
I
2001 3-man jet ski, low hours, Ready for fun! $2900. 541 -617-0077
Kayak,Eddyline Sandpiper, 12', like new, $975, 541-420-3277.
Sea Kayaks - His & Hers, Eddyline Wind Dancers, 17', fiberglass boats, all equip incl., paddles, personal flotation devices,dry bags, spray skirts,roof rack w/ towers & cradles -- Just add water, $1250/boat Firm. 541 -504-8557.
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work, You Keep The Cash, O n-Site Credit Approval Team, Web Site Presence, We Take Trade-Ins. Free Advertising . BIG COUNTRY RV Bend 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
200B,V10, 2 slides, Dupont UV coat, 7500 mi. Avg NADA ret.114,343; asking $99,000. Call 541-923-2774
---1@!]1 - - Travel Trailers
GREAT
Fl eetwood 28' Pioneer 2003, 13' slide, sleeps 6, walk-around bed with new mattress; power hitch, very clean $11 ,500. Please call Country Coach Intrigue 541-548-4284. 2002, 40' Tag axle. 400hp Cummins Diesel. Two slide-outs. 41 ,000 miles. Most options . $110,000 OBO 541-67B-5712 CAN'T BEAT THIS! Look before you buy, below market value! Size & mileage DOES matter! Class A 32' Hurricane by Four Winds, 2007. 12,500 mi, all amenities, Ford V1 0, lthr, cherry, slides, like new! New low price, $54,900. 541 -548-5216
Springdale 29' 2007, slide, Bunkhouse style, sleeps 7-8, excellent condition, $ 16,900, Gulfstream Scenic 54 1-390-2504 Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, Cummins 330 hp diesel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 in. kitchen slide out, new tires, under cover . hwy. miles only,4 door fridge/freezer icemaker, W/D combo, Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 lnterbath tub & 29', weatherized, like shower, 50 amp pronew, furnished & pane gen & more! ready to go, incl Wine$55,000. gard Satellite dish, 541-94B-2310 $26,995. 541-420-9964
Dodge Caravan Sport 2003
BUY!
134,278 miles, great cond, very comfortable, $5000 OBO. 541-848-B539. guera_blt@yahoo.com
NISSAN QUEST 1996, 3-seat mini WoN'rlMrl van, ex1ra nice in and Utility Trailer, 1O'x5'x5' out $3,400. Sold my high, enclosed, ramp Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4, 1995, extended cab, Windstar, need anon back, 3000 lb., AutoSource long box, grill guard, other van! $500, 541-604-1519. running boards, bed 541 -598-3750 541-31 8-9999, ask rails & canopy, 178K rce.com ---1~1--for Bob. Ask about miles, $4800 obo. free trip to D.C. lor Automotive Parts, 208-301 -3321 (Bend) WWII vets. GMC Denali 2003 Service & Accessories loaded with options. Chevy Silverado 1998, Exc. cond ., snow 4 hwy tires, P205/70 R- black and silver, pro REDUCED! Ford tires and rirns in15, <6000 miles on rims lifted, loaded, new 33" 197B truck, $1100 cluded. 130k hwy that lit a 2000 Lumina. tires, aluminum slot obo. VB 4 spd, runs miles. $1 2,000. wheels, tow pkg., drop $100.541-382-8723 good, new battery, 541-419-4890. hitch, diamond plate 4 Toyo 70,000-mile tires, tool box, $12,000, or spark plugs, rebuilt 205-65-R15, bought new possible trade for newer carb . Ex U-Haul, 7/11 , used 5 mos, wow! Tacoma. 541-460-9127 541-548-7171 $60 ea. 541-999-4561 Dodge 1500 2001 , 4x4 TURN THE PAGE ---1~1--sport, red, loaded, rollbar, AND 2011 For More Ads Automoblles Moped Trike used 3 Jeep Cherokee 1990, The Bulletin months, street legal. Buick LeSabre Lim4WD, 3 sets rims & call 541-433-23B4 ited 1997 111,000 Honda A ocord 19B1 tires, exlnt set snow miles, blue, new tires, parts car, $250. tires, great 1st car! Ford F250 XL T '95, 4WD brakes and air, S2900 541 -44 7-4405 $1800. 541-633-5149 auto, long bed, 3/4 ton, firm. Others available, 8600 GVW, white,178K Jeep Compass 2009, like a 1996 Regal with ---1~1--- mi, AC, pw, pdl, Sirius, 25K, 5-spd, 1-owner, 86,000 miles, only Antique & tow pkg., bedliner, bed $13,400, 541-280-5B66 $3500. Call Bob rail caps, rear slide Classic Autos 541-31B-9999. window, new tires, radiator, water pump, Jeep Grand Chryser LeBaron 1990 hoses, brakes, more, convertible, 5 spd, Cherokee Ltd, $5200,541-322-0215 new paint, top , tires 1995 and rims. $1BOO. BOK miles, 4WD, 54 1-41 6-9566 excellent cond, has extra snow tires/ Ford Thunderbird 1988, rirns. $3000 obo. 3.8 V-6, 35K actual mi., 541-420-4677 new hoses, be ~s. tires, battery, pb, ps, cruise, A/C, CD, exc. cond. in Ford Ranger 1999, 4x4, & out, 2nd owner, 71 K, X-cab, XLT, maint. records, must auto, 4.0L, $7900 see & drive! OBO. 541-38B-0232 Reduced! Now $3500, obo. 541-330-0733 Ford Ranger XL T Jeep Willys 1947,custom, 1998 X-cab • ' £ small block Chevy, PS, 2.5L 4-cyl engine, 1969 Chevrolet Pickup, OD, mags+ trailer. Swap 5-spd standard trans, 1 owner, all original, lor backhoe.No am calls long bed, newer molooks like new, seeing is tor & paint, new clutch please. 541·389-6990 believing! $26,000 obo. & tires, excellent con541 -923-6049 Look at: dition, clean, $4500. Hyundai Accent 2008, Bendhomes.com Call 541-447-6552 C hevy 1954, 5 window, 32MPG! $7900 obo lor Complete Listings of 350 V-8, auto/ps, Hatchback, 47,800 meneeds minor mi. , NC, one Owner, Area Real Estate for Sale chanical work, exteClean, 5 Spd Manual. 54 1-550-9935 rior good, new paint; needs some gauges, gun metal grey , $6100 obo. 503-504-2764, Ford Super Duty F-250 CRR. 2001 , 4X4, very good shape, V10 eng, $8800 Jeep Wrangler 1999, TJ OBO. 541 -815-9939 Sahara Ed., 4.0L, exlnt tires, body & paint. 69,700+ mi, hardtop + new lull buckskin soft & bikini tops, Warn winch, GMC Y2-ton Pickup, motorhome tow pkg, 1957, 350hi 1972, LWB, stinger, alum wheels, --,----= =-- --=- 4-dr., complete, motor, mechanically $13,000. 541-617-9176 $15,000 OBO, trades, A -1, interior great; please call body needs some 54 1-420-5453. TLC . S313 1 OBO. Coupe Call 541 -382-9441 engine, auto . trans, ps, air, frame on rebuild, repainted original blue, original blue interior, International Flat original hub caps, exc. Bed Pickup 1963, 1 chrome, asking $9000 ton dually, 4 spd. or make offer. trans., great MPG, 541 -385-9350. could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1 950. Mercedes E320 2004, 541-41 9-5480. 71K miles, silver/silver, Chrysler SD 4-Door exc. cond, below Blue 1930, CDS Royal ---l~t--- Book, $1 3,500 Call Standard, B-cylinder, 541-788-4229 Sport Ut ility Vehicles body is good, needs Porsche Cayenne 2004, Mercury Grand Marquis some restoration , Chevy HHR LT 2007, B6k , immac, dealer 2004, runs excellent, runs , taking bids, maint'd, loaded, now very clean, 1 owner, Vin #597750 541 -3B3-38B8, $1 7000. 503-459-1580 clear $4800. title, $ 10,995 541-B15-3318 360-508-8748 (in Bend)
~on
~
Hertz car Sales
FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, door panels w/flowers & hummingbirds, white soft top & hard 1/3 interest in Columtop . Just reduced to $3,750. 541-317-9319 bia 400, located at or 541 -647-B4B3 Sunriver. $13B,500. Call 541-647-3718 2005, 4 slides, rear bdrm, fireplace, AC, W/D hkup beautiful unit! $30,500. 541 -815-2380
1/3 interest in w ellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, located KBDN . $55,000. 541-419-9510
Montana 3400RL 2008, 4 slides, no smokers or pets, limited usage, 5500 watt Onan gen, solar panel, fireplace, dual A/C, central vac, elect. awning w/sunscreen arctic pkg, rear receiver, alum wheels, 2 TVs, many extras. $35,500. 541 -41 6-8087
ONLY 2 OWNERSHIP SHARES LEFT! Economical flying in your own Cessna 172/1BO HP for only $10,000! Based at BON. Cal/ Gabe at Professional Air! 541-388-0019
Chevy Suburban 2500 1995, 120K, auto, 4WD , pw/ps, CD, alloy wheels, extra set tires, roof cargo box, NC, exc. cond., $3299, 541-325-240B
Toyota X R 2006,great mpg, non-smoker. $11 ,900 541-420-2385 Where can you lind a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Volvo 740 '87, 4-cyl,auto 86k on eng.,exc. main!. $2895, 541-301-1185. www .youtu.te/ycOn6zVIbAc Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin .com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will help them in some way. This advertising tip brought to you by
The Bulletin ORiOnstncc tlfll
Jttvfnj Cfmlll
r------..., I The Bulletin recom- I
mends extra caution 1 I when purchasing 1products or services 1 from out of the area. I cash , I Sending checks, or credit in- I I formation may be subject to FRAUD. 1 I For more informal tion about an adver-I I tiser, you may calli the Oregon State General's I I Attorney Office Consumer 11-877-B77-9392. Protection hotline at 1 IThe Bulletin I
=
t.=i: :en.::O ::n :.I Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in Th e Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
Mini Cooper 2008, auto , power all, low mi. Vin#T6149B, $ 16,225
O F B END
541 -647-2822 Hertz Bend. com DLR4821
Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) Wenonah canoe Spirit II 60' wide x 50' deep. 17' Kevlar Ultralight, w/55' wide x 17' high $1500. 541-330-1 972 bi-fold door. Natural Komlort 25' 2006, 1 gas heat, office, bathnal AC , TV, awning. room. Parking for 6 round living. 8' closet, 2 slide, NEW: tires, converter, to cars. Adjacent slides, 2 TVs, surround batteries. Hardly used. Frontage Rd; great sound, $22,800. In $19,500. 541-923-2595 visibility for aviation Prineville, 509-521 -0369 bus . 1jetjock @q.com 541 -948-2 126 Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com
BUY!
Big Tex Landscaping! ATV Trailer, dual axle ftatbed , 7'x16', 7000 lb. GVW, all steel, $1400. 541-3B2-4115, or 541-2B0-7024.
Chevrolet 2500, 1991, 2WD, ex1'd cab, lull size bed, 61,400 mi. 454 VB, spray-on bedliner, elec- Ford Excursion tric windows & door 2005, 4WD, diesel, locks, cruise, AC , set up exc. cond., $19,900, for 5th wheel or hitch call 54 1-923-0231 . trailer, wired for lights, exlnt cond, runs great, Ford Explorer 2012 XL T $3250. 541 -382-6028 Loaded! #A84611 $34,995
Hertz car Sales
O F BE N D
541-647-2822 HertzBend.com DLR4821 Toyota Rav4 2001, AWD, 83Kmi., VIN #052545 $12.495
Hertz car Sales
Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 4x4. 120K mi, Power ::....:c-=-c:____:=- - oF B E N D seats, Tow Pkg , 3rd 541-647-2822 row seating, ex1ra HertzBend.com Ford Ga/axie 500 1963, tires, CD, privacy tintDLR4821 2 dr. hardtop,lastback, ing, upgraded rims. 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & Fantastic cond. $7995 ---l~t--radio (orig),541 -419-4989 Contact Timm at Vans 541 -40B-2393 for info Ford Mustang Coupe or to view vehicle. 1966, original owner, Chevy Astro VB, automatic, great Cargo Van 2001, Trailblazer shape, $9000 OBO. Chevy pw, pdl, great cond. , 2005, gold, LS 4X4, 530-5 15-B199 business car, well 6 cyl., auto, NC, pdl, maint, regular oil new tires, keyless Ford Ranchero changes, $4500, entry, 66K mi., exc. 1979 please call cond. $8950 . with 351 Cleveland 541-633-5149 541-59B-5111 modified engine. Body is in excellent condition, $2500 obo. 541 -420-4677
Mitsubishi 3000 GT 1999, auto., pearl white, very low mi. $9500. 541-78B-B21B. PORSCHE 914 1974, Roller (no engine) , lowered, l ull roll cage , 5-pt harnesses, racing seats, 911 dash & instruments , decent shape, very cool! $1699. 541-678-3249
Toyota Matrix 2009, AWD, auto, power all Fue1Saver#09276A, $19,9B5
Hertz car Sales
::....:c-=-c:____:=- - a F B E N D
541-647-2822 HertzBend.com DLR4821
Ford T-Bird 1966 390 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original miles ,runs great, excellent cond in & out Asking $B,500 . 541-480-3179
---i~t--Trucks & Heavy Equipment MONTANA 35B5 200B, exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, lrg LR, Arctic insulation , all options $37,500. 541-420-3250
Open Road 37' 2004 3 slides, W/D hookup, large LR w/rear window. Desk area. Asking $19,750 OBO Call (541) 280-7879 visit rvt.com ad# 104243920 for pies
Freightliner 2000, 24' van box, 8.3L 210 HP eng. in good cond. $9000, 541-749-0724.
GREAT
BUY! Hyster H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, $3500, call 541 -749-0724
GMC %ton 1971, Only $19, 700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-717 1
w ~
Mercury Monterrey 1965, Exc. All original, 4-dr. sedan, in storage last 15 yrs., 390 High Compression engine, new tires & license, reduced to $2850, 541-410-3425.
LAST WEEK.
HOW DO YOU KNOW ABOUT ZONINC CHANCES BEFOREHAND? YOU TURN TO THE PUBLIC NOTICES IN YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER.•
, The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1JtB
T hro ug h 8/22/12 All vehicles subject to prior sale, does
nol include tax, license orlille andreg· Sometimes zonin g changes are good and sometimes they're not. Advance notice is always good. It's your right to know AND your
' 2007 I, 1 slide, AC, TV,Iull awning, excellent shape, $23,900. 541 -350-8629
Plymouth Barracuda i 1966, original car! 300 water truck, 1990, hp, 360 VB, center3200 gal. tank, 5hp lines, (Original 273 pump, 4-3" hoses, & wheels incl .) eng camlocks, $25,000. 541-820-3724 541 -5 93-2597
responsibility to find out ab out zoning changes in your city or
state-before they happen. Here's how : Read the public notices in
your local newspaper-
IT'S HOW YOU KNOW.
istration processing lee of $100. Villi's
posled al dealership. See Herlz Car Sales of Bend lor details. Oeater#4821
Hertz car"~~~.~~ 5 41 -64 7-2822 535 NESavannah Dr, Bend HertzBend.c::om