WEDNESDAY September19,2012
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SAVVY SHOPPER • B1
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A parade of Olympians is forming
Ashton Eaton
Mohini
Miki
Bhardwaj Barry
McFadden
Decathlon London, 2012
Gymnastics Athens, 2004
Volleyball Mexico City, 1968
By Hillary Borrud
Suzanne King
Dan Simoneau
Kevin Serrapede
Misty Hoiioman
Cross country skiing Norway, 1994 Japan, 1998
Cross country skiing Lake Placid, 1980 Sarajevo, 1984 Calgary, 1988
Handball Munich, 1972 Montreal, 1976
Skiing, Special Olympics Oregon Winter State Games, training to compete in Korea
The Bulletin
The city of Bend has confirmed at least six athletes who competed in previous Olympic and Special Olympics games will join 2012 Olympic gold medalist Ashton Eaton in a pa rade through downtown Bend at I p.m. Sunday. A celebration of Olympic athletes on this scale will be a unique event for the city, said Bend volunteer coordi nator Cheryl Howard. "It will be the first time we' ve seen anything like it," Howard said. "I think it's going to come off looking really elegant." Organizers invited all of the past Olympians they could identify who live in the area, City Re corder Robyn Christie wrote in an email Tues day. The Police Depart ment also contacted a local Special Olympics group to invite past com petitors to participate in the parade, Christie wrote. The parade is a cel ebration of the accom plishments of Mountain View High School graduate Ashton Eaton, who won a gold medal in the decathlon at the summer Olympic games in London. See Parade/A5
By Elon Gluckuch The Bulletin
Nearly 75 percent of the workers at Warm Springs Forest Products will lose their jobs in November. Chief Financial Officer Lou Torgeson confirmed Tuesday that 93 of the company's 126 workers will be laid off.
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
McClatchy Newspapers
LEESBURG, Va. — With 1,350 employees in its five U.S. factories, New Balance is proud that it still produces 7 mil lion pairs of shoes each year at its plants in Maine and Massachusetts, the last major athletic foot wear company that still has manufacturing jobs in the United States. But the company says those jobs could very well disappear if the U.S. scraps its tariff on ath letic footwear coming in from Vietnam. It's part of the mount ing anxiety caused by the new Trans-Pacific Partnership, the largest trade pact proposed in U.S. history. And as 400 negotiators from nine countries met privately at a golf resort in north ern Virginia last week in an attempt to finalize details, New Balance officials weren't the only ones fretting. SeeTrade /A5
Ten days after the Pole Creek Fire roared to life, Sis ters wore its heaviest blanket of smoke yet on Tuesday. An air pollution monitor recalibrated Monday captured readings of 1,000 microns per cubic meter of fine par ticulate matter, four times the level considered hazardous to breathe for one hour. The Or egon Department of Environ mental Quality recalibrated the monitor at the Sisters Ranger District Office upon discovering it could only de tect up to 482.5 micrograms of fine particles per cubic meter. Smoke is primarily composed of particles that measure 2.5 microns in diameter or less, which can easily penetrate and damage lungs. Shifting winds pushed thick smoke into Bend in midafter noon, with the DEQ monitor ing station near downtown finding air in the "unhealthy" range — though still just one tenth as smoky as recorded in Sisters overnight. However, the same weather that choked Sisters and Bend with smoke provided firefight ers with a third straight day of favorable conditions for bat tling the flames. Pole Creek Fire spokes woman Katie Lighthall said the atmospheric inversion that settled over the region Monday and Tuesday kept smoke trapped on the surface, but also created lower tem peratures and higher humid ity, both of which benefit fire crews. "It's very favorable for just keeping flame lengths a little bit lower; everything is not quite so intense. It's safer, so they can get a lot of good work done on the lines," she said. Crews finished several miles of containment line Tuesday, Lighthall said, run ning along Forest Service Road 16 and the Tam McAr thur Rim. The line serves as insurance should weather
Weuse recycled newsprint Th e B ulletin An Independent
Vol 109, No. 263,
88267 02329
be available for comment later this week. Warm Springs For est Products, located on U.S. Highway 26 in Warm Springs, is the 10th larg est employer in Jefferson County, and the 47th largest private-sector employer in Central Oregon, according to
Economic Development for Central Oregon. The company was founded in 1967 by the Jefferson Plywood Corporation and is owned by the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, ac cording to the company's website. SeeWarm Springs/A5
e're o en or us>ness, iserssa s
By Rob Hotakainen
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Workforce Development on Tuesday. The layoffs would take effect starting Nov. 16, according to its WARN Act documents. Torgeson declined to com ment on the circumstances of the layoffs, or about the company's future. He said CEO John Katchia Sr. would
• In Sisters: Smoke thickens, sending air pollution to highest levelsyet
Pro osed trade deal ignitesfears of job losses
M
It's the second mill in the eastern half of the state to announce layoffs in about a month. Warm Springs Forest Products submitted Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act paperwork with the state Department of Community Colleges and
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• In Sports: Sisters athletics forced to make changesin venues, D1 • In Congress: Budget measure would include wildfire funding By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — When the Senate reconvenes today, it is expected to pass a con tinuing resolution that would keep the federal government funded for another six months. A stopgap measure, the continuing resolution keeps most funding for the first half of fi scalyear 2013 at this year's levels, with govern ment spend
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Sisters High School cross country team member Brennan Miller, 16, helps load gear onto a bus as the team prepared to go to the Metolius River to practice away from the smoke generated by the Pole Creek Fire on Tuesday. "We' re trying to be flexible," said cross country coach Charlie Kanzig. conditions change, Lighthall said, noting crews will con tinue to fight the main body of the fire a few miles north and west of the line. "It's a good line, 100 feet to a quarter mile (wide)," she said.
ckup
"So if it does decide to pi
and run a little bit south or to the east, they' re going to have a really good solid line in that direction." Lighthall said forecasts predict more challenging weather for fire crews over the next few days, but it's unlikely they' ll see a repeat of Friday, when high heat and winds al lowed the fire to nearly triple in size in 24 hours. As of 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, fire managers put the Pole Creek Fire at 17,500 acres, with an estimated 20 percent contain ment and more than 1,200 firefighters on the blaze. See Fire/A5
Air pollutants inSisters skyrocket
1,11 .8
Air quality in Sisters continues to be hazardous as winds blow smoke from the Pole Creek Fire into town. After Department of Environmental Quality engineers on Monday recalibrated a Sisters sensor to be able to record higher pollutant levels, measurements exceeded four times what is considered hazardous. The scale shown below originally went to 500.
MICRONS PERCUBIC METER OF POLLUTANT PM2.5
250
120 94.2 40
Bend M
MIDNIGHT WEDNESD AY
MIDNIGHT FRIDAY
MIDNIGHT SUNDAY
MIDNIGHT TUESDAY
Source: Oregon Department of Env>ronmental Quahty
INDEX B usiness E1-4 Crosswords B5, F2 Obituaries C 5 S ports 01- 6 C lassified F1-6 Editorials C 4 O r egon News C3 Stocks E2 - 3 Comics B4-5 Local News C1-6 Shopping B1-6 TV & Movies B2
Andy Zeigertl The Bullet>n
TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 88, Low 41
Page C6
at $1.047 trillion per year. One of the handful of items that would see an increase in funding is wildfire suppression, which would be in creased by $800 million. The House of Repre sentatives easily passed the continuing resolution last week. As a compro mise brokered by House and Senate leadership, it is expected to pass the Senate also. The devastating — and ongoing — 2012 fire season saw the U.S. Forest Service and other federal agencies exhaust their entire firefighting budgets for the year be fore the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30. When that happens, the Forest Service bor rows money from its other programs so it can continue to ac tively fight fires without interruption. See Budget/A6
TOP NEWS HARVARD:Jesushad a wife? A3 RUSSIA:U.S.relations chill, A6
A2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
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With less than seven weeks until the election, Mitt Rom ney can il l a f ford precious time explaining away another perceived gaffe, much less one playing to the image Demo crats hope to paint of an un feeling, uncaring plutocrat. But that may be the highest price exacted by the contro versy over taxes, victimhood and dependence that has been stirred by a secretly taped vid eo of the candidate at a closed door fundraiser. Though the tape could un dercut hi s s u pport a m ong seniors and downscale white voters — two groups Romney has long courted — so few vot ers are undecided that the lat est controversy may do more to reinforce existing senti ments than change minds. "A gaffe isn't going to shift 20 points in the polls," said Jack Pitney, a former Repub l ican Party s t rategist w h o teaches at Claremont McK erma College. That said, "the opportunity fo r p e r suading people diminishes every day. Every day spent talking about some gaffe is a day not talking about unemployment," which remains P r esident B a rack Obama's g reatest p o l itical liability. The political world roiled over Romney's remarks — in cluding a willingness to write off nearly half the electorate because, he said, they paid no income taxes, were dependent on government and refused to take responsibility for their lives — for a second day on Tuesday. The GOP presidential hope ful sought to reframe his re marks in a Fox News inter view by casting the election as a choice between "a govern
The '47 percent' During a private fundraiser, Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney described nearly half of Americans as "people who pay no income tax" and think themselves "entitled" to federal assistance. A closer look at his claims:
Who paid no federal income tax in 2011?
, 'What credits and deductions , 'did they get?
Most were elderly or low-income filers; nearly two-thirds paid payroll taxes (Social Security and Medicare); income tax liability in percentage of households:
Total households 163.9 million P ayers 53.6% (87.8 million)
• About 38 million , 'households filed an income ' tax return but had no income ' ,tax liability after taking these ' ,credits and deductions: ,
, 'Elderly tax benefits I
I
"Nonpayers' ' ,Credits for child, working poor 11.6 46.4% l ~ (76.1 million) ' ,Exclusions of cash gifts, etc.
' ,R2.3
Paid payroll , 'Education credits taxes 28.3% , 'R2.3 , 'Above-the-line deductions, , 'tax-exempt interest ; '• 1.9 , 'Itemized deductions
l • 1.9 Nonelderly, , 'Other credits income under , '• 1.0 $20,000 ' ,Capital gains, dividend rates 6. 9% , 'Io.s Others • Another 38 million had no 0. 9% ' ,income tax liability because , their income was too low source: Tax pohcy center '
pat Carr/© 2012 Mcclatcny-Tnbune News Service
ment that's larger and more intrusive (and) a government that sees its role as protecting freedom and opportunity." "The right course for Amer ica is to create growth, create wealth," Romney said. "Not to redistribute wealth." T he co n t roversy se n t both sides to familiar battle stations. Democrats seized on Rom ney's statements, first reported by the Mother Jones news or ganization, as an insult, in the words of AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, "to every day people who know what it means to work incredibly hard and still fail to get by."
"In a moment of candor, it was very clear that he doesn' t understand or care what al most everyone goes through, except for people like him," Trumka said Tuesday at a Washington news conference, part of efforts to keep Rom ney's comments alive — and the candidate on the defensive — for another day. Obama offered a measured reaction in his first public re sponse. "This is a big country," O bama said during an a p pearance on CBS' "Late Show With David Letterman." "And people disagree about a lot, but one thing I never tried to do — and I think none of us can
do in public office — is suggest that because someone doesn' t agree with me that they' re 'vic tims' or they' re unpatriotic." Republicans, with a few ex ceptions, flew to Romney's de fense, saying they welcomed the debate prompted by his remarks, uttered in May to a group of high-dollar Florida donors. "Romney is now in a posi tion that he has to bring the fight to Obama on the en titlement state," wrote Daniel Foster, editor of the National Review, voicing the sentiment of many conservatives hun gry for an ideologically driven contest, rather than a simple up-or-down r eferendum on the economy. "This could be the opportu nity for Romney and for that campaign to finally take the gloves off and take the fear off and just start explaining conservatism," radio's Rush Limbaugh told h i s s i zable audience. "Start explaining liberty to people and what it means." There were a few notable dissenters, among them Sen. Scott Brown o f M a ssachu setts (who happens to share a campaign consultant with Romney) and Linda McMa hon, who is running for the U.S. Senate in Connecticut. Both Republicans disavowed Romney's statements, seem ingly concerned about how they would play in their heav ily Democratic states. For his part, Romney said on Fox News he was merely stat ing the obvious, "That I don' t expect to get 60 or 70 percent of the vote. I understand that some portion will be the pres ident's, some portion will be mine. I' ve got to get as many as I can from every single co hort in the country."
It's Wednesday, Sept. 19, the 263rd day of 2012. There are 103 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS • The space shuttle Endeavour begins its journey from Florida to Los Angeles, where it will go on display at the California Science Center.A3
IN HISTORY Highlights:In 1982, the smiley emoticon was invented as Carnegie Mellon University professor Scott Fahlman proposed punctuating humorously intended computer messages by employing a colon followed by a hyphen and a parenthesis as a horizontal "smiley face.":-)
Ten years ago:President George W. Bush asked Congress for authority to "use all means," including military force if necessary, to disarm and overthrow Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein if he did not quickly meet United Nations demandstoabandon all weapons of mass destruction.
Five years ago: The Senate blocked legislation that would have regulated the amount of time troops spent in combat, a blow for Democrats struggling to challenge President George W. Bush's Iraq policies.
One yearago:In aWhite House address, President Barack Obama demandedthatthe richest Americans pay higher taxes to help cut soaring U.S. deficits by more than $3 trillion.
BIRTHDAYS Actor Jeremy irons is 64. College Football Hall of Famer and former NFL player Reggie Williams is 58. Country singer Trisha Yearwood is 48. Comedian and TV talk show host Jimmy Fallon is 38. — From wire reports
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CAMPAIGN STRATEGY •
Controlling themessage is critical tobothcandidates By Michael D. Shear
advantages of incumbency.
•
STOPSTOLETTHEWORLQSTARE.
New York Times News Service
There is a l most n othing more valuable to a presidential campaign than controlling the message. President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney have been struggling to d o t h at. Last week's events in the Middle East forced both campaigns to improvise — abandoning the economic playbook that the candidates had imagined us ing as Election Day neared. October will be filled with debates that produce more s urprising, unplanned m o ments, so message discipline will be d i f ficult. The week ahead may be one of the last chances that the candidates have to shape the political de bate to their advantage. Here are some important areas they need to focus on.
Economicdevelopments
Even as both men seek to shape the foreign policy nar rative, they are well aware of the issues that concern most voters. Each campaign will want to reframe the economic debate in ways more favorable to its candidate. R omney has w o r ked t o caution voters about Obama, saying they should be "fore warned" that th e p r esident would continue his economic policies in a second term. That would not be m oving "for ward," Romney says, mak ing fun of Obama's campaign slogan. Obama has pushed back on the "better off" question, and will probably continue to do so as he argues that Romney would take the country back to the policies of President Middle East developments George W. Bush. The presi Both candidates are eager dent's team is also continuing to seize control of the foreign to pressure Romney on the policy narrative — if events actions of his old company, overseas permit. Bain Capital, and his refusal For Romney, that means to release more years ofhis moving t h e con v ersation personal tax returns. about the violence in Africa The debates and the M iddle East away from his initial statement and Part of controlling the mes toward a broader criticism of sage is avoiding making a the president's handling of the critical mistake during the de unsettled region. The Repub bates next month. That means lican candidate and his allies setting aside plenty of time to may have that chance if the practice and study in the com protests continue to spread, ing week. raising questions about the That may b e h a rder f or administration's overall policy Obama, who must deal with there. the aftermath of the violence As president, Obama will over the anti-Muslim film even face scrutiny t hat R omney as he campaigns. will not. But Obama's position Romney has never partici also gives him a more natural pated in a one-on-one presi command of the situation as dential debate. And he h as he communicates with world had his moments during the leaders, orders investigations nominating c o ntests w h en and p o t entially r e s ponds something he said made his militarily to the death of U.S. campaign lose control of his diplomats in Libya. The presi message. (Recall the $10,000 dent's remarks at a ceremony bet he jokingly offered to Gov. when the bodies arrived back Rick Perry of Texas.) Prepar in the United States clearly ing for next month's debates displayed the public-relations will be critical for him.
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TOP T ORIES NEWS IN BRIEF
French court rebukes magazine over photos PARIS — A French court on Tuesday rebuked the maga zine Closer fo r p u b lishing "particularly intrusive" pho tographs of the Duchess of Cambridge, the former Kate Middleton, ordering its pub lisher to cease all publication, d istribution or sales of t h e pictures, and to hand over all digital copies of the images to the royal family. But the judgment had al ready been outpaced by the Internet and the international g ossip press, w h ic h h a v e brought the grainy photos of the duchess to readers and viewers across the globe. The ruling, in response to a lawsuit brought by the duchess and her husband, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, appeared unlikely to prevent the con tinuing dissemination of the photos online or elsewhere.
Myanmar's opposition leader visits the U.S. WASHINGTON — M y a n mar's opposition leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, called for the lift ing of U.S. sanctions against her country Tuesday, begin ning an emotional visit to the U.S. that punctuated the re markable shift in relations with Myanmar over the past year. Suu Kyi, who until recently remained wary of removing the sanctions that long isolated her country, said that they had served their purpose political ly, and she now urged the U.S. t o engage broadly with t h e country's leaders to help build a new democracy. "I do not think we should depend on U.S. sanctions to keep up the momentum of our new democracy," she said in remarks at the U.S. Institute of Peace in Washington, adding that "there are very many oth er ways in which the United States can help us to achieve our democratic ends."
Appeals court reverses campaign ad ruling WASHINGTON — An ap peals court on Tuesday re versed a lower court ruling that likely would have led to greater disclosure of who is paying for certain election ads. In M a rch, U .S . D i s trict Judge Amy Berman Jackson ruled that the Federal Elec tion Commission overstepped its bounds in allowing groups that f un d c e r tain e l ection ads to keep their financiers anonymous. But Tuesday's unanimous ruling by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia sent the case back to Jackson, with instructions to refer the matter to the FEC for further consideration. At issue are electioneering communications — ads that don't expressly advocate vot ing for or against a candidate running for federal office. In 2007, the FEC ruled that only contributors whose donations were "made for the purpose of furthering electioneering c ommunications" had to b e identified; those who gave un restricted money did not have to be identified.
132 inmates escape from Mexican prison MEXICO CITY — Complic ity by guards or other officials is suspected in the escape of 132 inmates from a p r i son in the northern border state of Coahuila, authorities said Tuesday. The i n mates a p parently fled through a 21-foot tunnel carved underneath a carpen try workshop in the prison at Piedras Negras, across the border from Eagle Pass, Tex as. They were noticed missing sometime Monday afternoon. Authorities on Tuesday said they had recaptured three fe male inmates. Four men also thought to be escapees were killed in a shootout with troops scouring the region in search of the fugitives, they said. It was the second-largest prison break in the six-year administration o f P r esident Felipe Calderon. — From wire reports
Suicide bomber kills 14 inAfghanistan Chicago By Rod Nordland and Sangar Rahimi
Balmoral, Candice Teubes, said the 10 foreign victims New Yorh Times News Service were believed to be South Af KABUL, Afghanistan — NATO's decision to restrict opera KABUL, A fgha n istan rican citizens. tions with small Afghan forces to mitigate the threat of insider — A suicide bomber killed In the attack Tuesday, the attacks means fewer boots on patrols and a shift in how the 14 people Tuesday, including suicide bomber drove a car U.S.-led coalition will fight the war in Afghanistan. 10 foreigners, most of whom f ull o f e x plosives at h i g h It's unclear whether the coalition's exit strategy can succeed worked as flight crew mem speed head-on into a minibus with less partnering with Afghan policemen and soldiers, who bers under contract with the on Airport Road early in the are slated to take over for foreign combat troops by the end of U.S. government, o f ficials morning, killing all 12 people 2014, just 27 months from now. What is clear is that the mantra said. The attack brought to at aboard and two people on the that Afghans and coalition forces are fighting the Taliban "shoul least 28 the number of deaths road, according to police. der to shoulder" is looking more and more like they' re standing attributed to unrest sweeping The U.S. Embassy said in at arm's length. the Muslim world as a result of a statement that many of the NATO's decision reflected escalating worries about insider at a video parodying the Prophet foreign victims were employ tacks, coupled with widespread tensions over an anti-Islam video Muhammad. ees of a private company that that has prompted protests around the world, including Afghanistan. A spokesman for an Afghan provides services to the U.S. — DebRiechmann, TheAssociated Press insurgent group, Hezb-e-Isla Agency for International De mi, claimed responsibility for velopment and other organi the bombing and said it was zations in Afghanistan. U.S. carried out by an 18-year-old The U.S. Embassy here said employed by a South African officials said they had been woman in response to the film in a statement that many of aviation charter c o mpany, employed by a South African insulting the Prophet Muham the foreign victims were em ACS/Balmoral, working un aviation charter c o mpany, mad and Islam. ployees of a private company der contract for USAID as pi ACS/Balmoral, working un The deaths in K abul on that provides services to the lots and crew flying planes in der contract for USAID as pi Tuesday were the first here U.S. Agency for International what is colloquially known as lots and crew flying planes in so farconnected to the video, Development and other orga "Embassy Air" to provincial what is colloquially known as "Embassy Air" to provincial posted online under the name nizations in Afghanistan. U.S. capitals in Afghanistan. "Innocence of Muslims." officials said they had been A spokeswoman for ACS/ capitals in Afghanistan.
Papyrus suggests
NATO curtails ground-level operations
ENDEAVOUR TO EMBARK ON ITSFINAL JOURNEY
Jesus had a wife ) .I "
By Rodriqne Ngowi The Associated Press
BOSTON — A Harvard U niversity p r ofessor on Tuesday unveiled a fourth century fragment of papy rus she said is the only ex isting ancient text quoting Jesus explicitly referring to having a wife. Karen King, an expert in the history of Christian ity, said the text contains a dialogue in which Jesus refers to "my wife," whom h e identifies a s M a r y . King says the fragment of Coptic script is a copy of a gospel, probably wr it ten in Greek in the second century. King helped t r anslate and unveiled the tiny frag ment at a c onference of Coptic experts in Rome. She said it doesn't prove J esus was m a r ried b u t speaks to issues of family and marriage that faced Christians. Four words in the 1.5 by-3-inch fragment pr o vide th e f i r s t e v i dence t hat some e arly C h r i s tians believed Jesus had been married, King said. Those words, written in a language of ancient Egyp tian Christians, translate to "Jesus said to t h em, my wife," King said in a statement. Christian tradition has long held that Jesus was unmarried even t h ough there was no reliable his torical evidence to support that, King said.
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John Raouxi The Associated Press
Kennedy Space Center employees pose for a photoin front of the space shuttle Endeavour atop a modified jumbo jet in Cape Canaveral, Fla. The shuttle has the green light to depart Florida at dawn today, NASA announced after another weather briefing Tuesday morning. Originally scheduled to depart Kennedy Space Center early Monday, the orbiter was twice delayed by a threat of thunderstorms between Florida and Houston, the first leg of its cross-country trip to Los Angeles, where it will go on permanent display at the California Science Center.
teachers vote to
end strike By Sophia Tareen and Tammy Webber The Associated Press
CH ICAGO — Chicago's teachers agreed Tuesday to return to the classroom after more than a w e ek on the picket lines, ending a spiteful stalemate with Mayor Rahm Emanuel over teacher evaluations and job security, two issues at the heart of efforts to reform the nation's public schools. Union delegates voted overwhelmingly to suspend the strike after discussing a proposed contract settle ment that had been on the table for days. Classes were to resume today. Jubilant delegates poured out of a South Side union hall singing "solidarity for ever," cheering, honking horns and yelling, "We' re going back." Most were eager to get to work and proud of a walk out that yielded results. "I'm very excited. I miss my students. I'm relieved because I think this con tract was better than what they offered," said Amer ica Olmedo, who teaches fourth- and fifth-grade bi lingual classes. "They tried to take everything away." Mayor Rahm Emanuel called the settlement "an honest compromise" that "means a new day and a new direction for the Chi cago public schools." "In p as t n e gotiations, taxpayers paid more, but our kids got less. This time, our taxpayers are paying less, and our kids are get ting more," the mayor said, referring to provisions in the deal that he says will cut costs.
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Obesity forecast is grim, groupsays By Mike Stobbe The Associated Press
NEW YORK — We Amer i cans already k now h o w fat we are. Can it get much worse? Apparently, yes, according to an advocacy group that predicts that by 2030 more than half the people in the vast majority of states will be obese. Mississippi is expected to retain its crown as the fat test state in the nation for at least two more decades. The report predicts 67 percent of that state's adults will be obese by 2030; that would be an astounding increase from
Mississippi's current 35 per cent obesity rate. The new projections were released Tuesdayby Trust for America's Health with fund ing from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Trust for America's Health regu larly reports on obesity to raise awareness, mostly re lying on government figures. The group's dismal fore cast goes beyond the 42 per cent national obesity level that federal health officials project by 2030. The group predicts every state would have rates above 44 percent by that t i me, although it didn't calculate an overall
national average. About two-thirds of Ameri cans are overweight now. That includes those who are obese, a group t hat a ccounts for about 36 percent. 'I
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Warm Springs
Trade
Continued from A1 Tuesday's a n n ouncement wasn't the first time the mill has resorted to large-scale lay offs. The company laid off 58 of its 115 workers in March, 2008 amid f a l l ing l u mber prices, with mill officials say ing the entire operation was in jeopardy, according to The Bulletin's archives. But those workers w ere rehired in D e cember, after the mill reached a deal with a regional wood products ex port company to sell to Asian markets. Warm Springs Forest Prod ucts didn't make public any in formation Tuesday regarding the prospect for workers to be rehired if conditions improve. The company's WARN Act a pplication means the e m ployees could be eligible for education and job re-training assistance. The announcement came a month after Prineville-based Ochoco Lumber announced its plans to close the Malheur Lumber mill in John Day. The closure would have meant a loss of about 90 jobs, but Ore gon's U.S. senators announced last week that an agreement for the U.S. Forest Service to provide Malheur Lumber with timber would keep it open.
Continued from A1 Autoworkers feared the loss of 26,500 domestic jobs and said the production of American cars would fall if Japan joins the pact and the United States drops a 2.5 percent tariff on Japa nese cars, making them cheaper to buy. Doctors worried that it will be harder to get medi cines to fight A IDS and other diseases in develop ing countries if U.S. nego tiators insist on extending patents for pharmaceutical companies. And many members of Congress and other critics lamented that such big de cisions were being made in secret meetings, at a lux ury resort in the Potomac River Valley, far from pub lic view.
— Reporter: 541-617-7820, egluchlichC~bendbulletin.corn
Fire Continued from A1 Early Tuesday afternoon, the Sisters Area Chamber of Com merce releaseda statement de claring the town "open for busi ness" despite the fire, and reiter ating that Sisters itself is largely protected from fire danger. Tourism officials at the Cen tral Oregon Visitors Associa tion said they' ve fielded several inquiries from out of the area from prospective visitors con cerned that the fire could dis rupt their vacation plans. Alana Hughson, CEO and association president, said it has tried to provide up-to-date information on fast-changing fire conditions, and reminded visitors that popular destina tions such as the Cascade Lakes Highway have been largely un affected by the smoke. "Most of the inquiries we' re getting is people planning for the weekend, and we' re think ing, gosh, we wish we had that crystal ball." Brad Boyd, owner of Euro sports in Sisters, said his busi ness seems to have softened a bit in the last week. "The beginning of our Sep tember was really strong, re ally, really good, and since the fire, Peterson Ridge Trail's been closed, and Three Creeks and all of that have been closed; things have definitely slowed down. Boyd said he's turned away some business from people who came into the shop looking to rent bikes, not knowing their favorite trails were closed. "You gotta tell 'em," Boyd said with a laugh. "What are you gonna do, rent them a bike and have 'em ride six blocks and find out the trail is closed? You got ta let 'em know." At Aspen Lakes Golf Course on Sisters' east side, diners on the clubhouse back patio have had a clear view of the fire since it began Sept. 9, according to Assistant Pro Christian Green. Green said that until Tues day the smoke had not affected play. But with slightly cooler conditions Tuesday, the smoke didn't lift as early as it had in past days, he said. The course tried to entice players to As pen Lakes by offering free golf carts. "Today's been enough where you probably wouldn't want to be walking 18 holes in it be cause you wouldn't want to be breathing all that," Green said. C hristian Jenkins of T h e Fly Fisher's Place said every one who's come in to his shop has mentioned the smoke, and out-of-town callers i nquired about the fire and smoky skies. Jenkins said he suspects a few have been deterred from going fishing on account of the con ditions. However, he said the Metolius River — the primary fishing destination for those coming through Sisters — has been largely smoke-free since the beginning of the Pole Creek Fire. "This is a great time ofyear to fish," he said. "The smoke's not going to affect how the fishing is, just whether or not people go out, essentially." — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammersC<bendbulletin.corn
'NAFTA onsteroids' But while opponents de rided the new trade pact as "NAFTA on steroids," a reference to the huge North A merican F r e e Tr a d e A greement p a ssed b y Congress in 1993 that op ponents say led to U.S. jobs moving to Mexico, backers predicted th e T r a ns-Pa cific deal would increase U.S. exports, create more jobs and lower prices for American consumers. N egotiations in c l u d e nine countries: the United S tates, A u stralia, B r u nei, Chile, Malaysia, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam. Mexico and Canada will soon formally join the talks, bringing the t otal membership t o 1 1 countries. Japan already has expressed interest in participating, and C hina is regarded as a potential partner down the road. "It's NAFTA on steroids in terms of its geographic scope, its economic scope a nd the new p o wers i t gives t o co r p o rations," said Arthur Stamoulis, a critic of the trade deal and e xecutive director of t h e Citizens Trade Campaign, a coalition that i ncludes labor and environmental groups. The deal is an attempt to get the United States to cash in on a region that a ccounts for m or e t h an 40 percent of all interna tional trade. In addition to eliminating many tariffs, negotiators hope to reduce regulations and the cost of trade, to promote more digital and green technol ogy, and tocome up with rules on a w i d e v ariety of topics, addressing ev erything f r o m s a n i tary standards to customs pro cedures to environmental issues. The Asia-Pacific region is an increasingly impor tant market for U.S. busi nesses, accounting for $775 billion in exports in 2010, a 25.5 percent increase from just a year earlier. In a speech in Russia on Sept. 8, Secretary of State H illary Clinton said t h e deal marked a major push
New trade pact in the works The Trans-Pacific Partnership, a deal being negotiated in secret among 11 nations, would be the largest trade pact in U.S. history. TPP nations
U.S. U.S. imports exports
Population
Australia Brunei
Canada
22.7
$10.2
0.4
0.0
34.4
Chile
Billions
$27.5
280.8 -35.7 15.9
Malaysia
28.7
25.8
14.2
Mexico
113.7
Singapore
1975 3.2
30.0
6.2
5.3 127.8
U.S.
311.9
6.8 -11.6
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4 .4
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0.2
3 16 . 5 9.1
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$17.3
0.2
17.4
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Tra d e balance with U.S.
Bilhons
Milhons
19.1
89.3
0.4 8.3
2.1
31.4
17.5
-65.6
12.3 -13.1
4.3
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-62.6 Total
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2003 Singapore New Zealand Chile form trade pact
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groups such as Halliburton, Chevron, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, Comcast and the Motion Picture Association of America. And in June, more than 130 House members sent a letter sent a letter to U.S. Trade Rep resentative Ron Kirk asking for more oversight from both Congress and the public. Assistant U.S. Trade Repre sentative Carol Guthrie said the negotiators met with 450 members of the public and h eard p r esentations f r o m more than 90 groups during l ast week's talks. And s he said the Obama administra tion has hosted hundreds of briefings for members of Con gress to keep them updated on every step of the talks. But she defended the pri vate negotiations, saying in an interview "there is a cer tain level of c onfidentiality that has to be maintained in order to preserve the United States' strategic negotiating ability."
Continued from A1 The lineup of parade par ticipants has grown since organizers began planning it in late August, with sev eral marching bands, in cluding the Mountain View High S c hool M a r ching Band, the Summit Express Jazz Band, the Cascade Horizon Band and the Bend Fire Department Pipes and Drums Band, as well as dancers and cheerleaders now scheduled to perform. Nonetheless, Steve Es selstyn, community liaison for the Bend Police Depart ment, said he expects the event to go smoothly. "There will be a police p resence, but t h er e a l ways is with parades just to keep the public and the motorists safe," Esselstyn said, adding that the pa rade plan is focused and well-choreographed. "It looks good," Esselstyn said. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrudC<bendbulletin.corn
Worried manufacturers
In the middle of the Lees b urg t alks, K i r k w e n t t o Maine to tour a New Balance SINGAPORE E~ ME factory, seeking to quell the fears of company executives. Pacific AUSTRALIA Guthrie said that U.S. negoti Ocean ators "know that footwear is a PERU sensitive issue for the United Source: Congressional States," and that it's important CHILE Research Service to gather input from affected companies to help shape the Judy Tr eibte/ © 20t2 McolatchyTnbune News talks. Matt LeBretton, public af by the Obama administration including Democratic Sens. fairsdirector for Massachu to open new foreign markets Claire McCaskill of Missouri, setts-based Ne w B a l a nce, and reduce barriers to trade, Debbie Stabenow of Michigan said the number of U.S. man which she said would lead to and Sherrod Brown of Ohio, ufacturing jobs in the athletic "more and b etter g r owth." who complain that Japan has shoe industry a l ready h as She said it's part of the pres passed too many policies that d windled from m or e t h a n ident's plan to advocate for make it nearly impossible for 50,000 three decades ago to U.S. businesses and to double foreign competitors to crack fewer than 3,000 today. "For us the big message is: the nation's exports during the Japanese market, especial a five-year period, from the ly in the automobile industry. Hey, we' ve been doing this year that Obama took office They, along w i t h s e ven here when everybody left," he in 2009 to 2014. other senators, have urged the said. But he said the compa "American companies are administration to bar Japan ny, which reported worldwide eager to invest more in Asia," from the trade talks, noting sales of more than $2 billion Clinton said. that 95 percent of all vehicles last year, will have a h ard sold in Japan are made by Jap time competing with Vietnam Secret negotiations anese manufacturers. Brown and its low-paid workers if Negotiators concluded their has introduced a bill to give the United States removes its 14th round of talks Saturday, Congress greater oversight in tariffs, which range from 10 wrapping up 10 days of meet negotiations of the trade deal. percent to 38.5 percent, de ings at the Lansdowne Con Sitting on a patio outside pending on the type of shoe. ference Center in Leesburg. the luxury hotel in Leesburg S tamoulis said that w i t h The talks ar e expected to last week, Stamoulis com Vietnamese workers earning continue into next year, with plained that h e a n d o t h er only a third to a half of what the next round of talks set for members of the public were a typical C h inese w orker Dec. 3-12 in Auckland, New locked out of the negotiations. makes, he worries that the lat Zealand. U.S. officials intend to release est trade agreement will con While specific details of the the final agreement only after tinue a "race to the bottom." "They' re one of thousands negotiations have been kept it's signed by all parties. "It's worth getting r i ght, secret, some documents have that wouldbe facingincreased been leaked. and (the secrecy is) not a rec competition from c ountries Responding to on e l eak, ipe for sound public policy as that are known for h aving the group Doctors Without far as we' re concerned," he sweatshop labor," Stamoulis Borders said it fears that the said. "This is supposed to be said. "First the jobs move from pharmaceutical industry will setting the rules for global the United States to Mexico prevail in its fight to protect trade and investment for a under NAFTA. Then under brand-name medicines, mak generation to come." the WTO (World Trade Or ing it much more expensive ganization) they move from Capitol Hill critics for developing countries to Mexico to China. And now gain access to cheaper gener On Capitol Hill, key law they' re moving from China ic drugs that would help treat makers have joined the grow to Vietnam. And each time victims of A ID S and other ing criticism. In a speech in the workers get paid less and diseases. The industry argues May, Democratic Sen. Ron less. How are you supposed to that patents help drug manu Wyden of Oregon, the chair compete with that?" facturers protect their invest man o f t h e s u bcommittee ment and raise money for new that oversees international research, noting that it can trade policy, said most mem Varicose Vein Experts cost $1 billion, on average, to bers of Congress are "being develop one new medication. kept in the dark," while U.S. J apan's potential entry i s trade negotiators consult and p articularly w o r r isome t o share details with corpora some members of Congress, tions and powerful advocacy U.S.
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Ifyou go When:1 p.m. Sunday Where:Downtown Bend
Police will begin closing thestreets as early as11:30a.m. Sunday. Signs along the route will inform drivers they must move their vehicles from sections of Bond, Wall and Oregon on the parade route by noon Sunday.
Street closures: Bond from Kansas to Oregon. Wall Street from Greenwood to Franklin. Oregon between Wall and Bond Franklin from Lava to Wall Street. Note: You can get into the south Mirror Pond parking lot via Broadway. Source: Steve Esselstyn, community liaison, Bend Police Department
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A6 T H E BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
Russiaor ersU.S.to at un in By David M. Herszenhorn
ton. It will cut off aid that cur While the Kremlin demand rently totals about $50 million ed that the aid programs cease MOSCOW — Russia has a year. by Oct. I, Obama administra ordered the United States to The Russian government tion officials said that they end its financial support for a has taken a number of ac had appealed to the Russian wide range of pro-democracy tions in recent months to bring Foreign Ministry for a more groups, human rights organi pressure on nongovernmental gradual phase-out. The pro zations and other civil society groups and clamp down on grams had been authorized programs, in a n a ggressive political dissent, including a through a bilateral agreement step by the Kremlin to halt new law requiring any orga that expired i n S e ptember what it has come to view as nization receiving aid f r om 2010. While little progress had thinly veiled American med a broad to register with t h e been made on a new accord, dling in the country's internal justice minister as "acting as a Russia's decision to cancel the affairs, and backing for some foreign agent." programs caught Washington opponents of President Vladi The aid money from Wash by surprise. mir Putin. ington supports a panorama Officials said that the Rus The Kremlin's provocative of organizations and advocacy sian Foreign Minister, Sergey decision to end two decades efforts, including Golos, Rus Lavrov, informed Secretary of work in post-Soviet Russia sia's only independent elec of State Hillary Clinton of the by the U.S. Agency for Inter tion monitoring group, which decision when they meet in national D evelopment was played in an important role in Vladivostok in the Russian Far announced on Tuesday by the exposing fraud in parliamen East earlier this month dur State Department in Washing tary elections last December. ing the Asia-Pacific Economic New York Times News Service
Father-daughter dances
Cooperation summit meeting. Formal notice was then sent to Washington by Moscow on Sept. 11, officials said. The Kremlin has also ex p ressed i n c reasing i m p a tience with what it views as American support for politi cal opponents of Putin, and as meddling in Russia's internal affairs. "They have been very clear that they are not happy with our work with Transparency I nternational o r G o l os, o r other groups related to those types of activities," said one A merican official who w a s not authorized t o p u b licly discuss the diplomatic issues. "They have made that clear directly with those groups as well."
Financial ramifications ofChina-Japanspat escalate By jnlie Makinen Los Angeles Times
BEIJING — The worst of the anti-Japanese protests that have swept China in r ecent days maybe over. The financial fallout for the world's second and third-biggest economies may be just beginning. Japanese-owned factories, restaurants, mini-marts and clothing retailers across China closed en masse Tuesday as protests continued in nearly 100 cities, sparked by a dispute over control of uninhabited islands near Taiwan. Automakers Nissan, Honda, Toyota and Mazda suspended operations at some plants, as did Sony. Hundreds of 7-Eleven shops run by a Japanese com pany were shuttered, as were dozens of outlets of the popu lar Gap-like Japanese clothing chain Uniqlo. Eateries serving Japanese food — even those with Chinese owners and staff — closed as well, shaken by weekend demonstrations that saw protesters overturning Jap anese cars, looting businesses and setting factories on fire. While d o mestic p o litical
ings between two major global players. The closure of businesses and calls to boycott Japanese goods helped drive down the stock prices of many Japanese companies, including Nissan, which fell 5 percent; Honda, which dropped 2.5 percent; and Uniqlo parent company Fast Retailing, which plummeted 7 percent. "This is the worst we have seen," said Tetsuo Kotani, a re search fellow at the Japan In stitute of International Affairs. "This could be a turning point Eugene Hoshlko/The Associated Press for Japanese companies, mak Anti-Japan protesters are stopped by police officers near the ing them reconsider the risks in Japanese ConsulateGeneral on Tuesday inShanghai. The 81st China and leading them to di anniversary of a Japanese invasion brought a fresh wave of versify toward Southeast Asia, anti-Japan demonstrations in China on Tuesday, with thousands South America and Africa." Anti-Japanese sentiment has of protesters venting anger over the colonial past and a current dispute involving contested islands in the East China Sea. long existed in China, and au thorities often have encouraged it. The recent demonstrations pressure made it difficult for ceived text messages from the were the largest and most vio either side to compromise, nei police asking them to protest lent since 2005, when Chinese ther appeared to be in the mood peacefully. took to the streets over griev for an escalation, either. China But with the world economy ances including a textbook that sent hundreds of police to the already struggling, damage al they said downplayed accounts Japanese Embassy on Tuesday ready has been done. One ana of Japanese brutality in China to monitor the crowd that gath lyst predicted a "short, sharp and elsewhere in Asia during ered there, and many people re downturn" in business deal World War I I.
banned inRhodeIsland By Rene Lynch Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — Father daughter dances and mother son ballgames — those cher ished hallmarks of Ameri cana — have been banned in a Rhode Island school dis trict after they were targeted by the American Civil Liber ties Union. The ACLU, the self-pro c laimed guardian o f t h e nation's liberty, says such events violate th e s t ate' s gender-discrimination l a w. The organization challenged their existence following a complaint from a single mom who said her daughter was prevented from a t tending a father-daughter dance in the Cranston Public Schools district. The story has created a furor both online as well as
in Cranston, a community located south of Providence and considered one of the safest places in America. The phones at Cranston City Hall were already ring ing off the hook bright and early Tuesday morning when staffersunlocked the doors. The outrage prompted a re action from Cranston Mayor Allan Fung, even t hough he has no control over the schools. "I am utterly disappointed to have such a time-honored tradition u n d e r at t a ck," Fung said in a s t atement that urged parents to turn their fury on the school dis trict. "I implore the Crans ton School Committee to re view this decision and find a way to make this work for the children and their parents."
Budget
Under the continuing reso lution, the Forest Service Continued from A1 would see its total wildland According to th e Forest fire suppression budget for Service, the agency has al 2013 increase to more than ready transferred almost $1.97 billion, which matches $300 million from its per the figure in President Barack manent trust funds, includ Obama's budget request for ing $40 million from brush fiscal year 2013. This repre disposal, $60 million from sentsan increase of$237 mil restoration an d i m p r ove lion from this year. ments and $20 million from For the Department of the timber salvage. An a d d i Interior, the 2013 firefighting tional $105 million has been budget would increase $161 moved from funds allocated million to $726 million, again for 2012, including $50 mil equalling t h e pr e sident's lion from the National For b udget request. A n a d d i est Fund, $30 million from tional $23 million would pay capital improvements and back Interior D epartment maintenance and $20 million programs used to fight fires. from land acquisition. According to the House Consequently, r ou g h ly Appropriations Committee, half of the $800 million in the continuing r e solution crease in t h e c o n tinuing increases funding levels for resolution will go to p only about a d o zen p r o these programs. grams. The increase in wild "This will h elp p r event fire funding is by far the big i mportant f o r estry jo b s gest increase, with the next from going unfunded," Rep. biggest being a $343 million Greg Walden, R-Hood River, bump in funding for nuclear said in a statement after the weapon modernization. House passed the funding — Reporter: 202-662-7456, measure. aclevenger@bendbulletin.corn
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THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
IN BRIEF Boutique gets 'Cozy' downtown Baby boutique The Cozy Lamb has opened on Northwest Minneso ta Avenue in downtown Bend. The shop originally was located on Wall Street. Then it became oneof seven purveyors sharing space in TresJolie, which is also downtown. The Cozy Lamb moved back into its own retail space earlier this month (118 N.W. Min nesota Ave.), allowing it to expand its array of specialty items. Its hours are 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays and noon to 4 p.m. Sundays. Contact: 541-550 7611.
New Old Mill shop offers sports merch Just in time for foot ball season, Oregon Locker Room by Lids in Bend's Old Mill District opened Friday in the space formerly occu pied by the Duck Store. The retailer specializes in hats, sportswear and memorabilia of col legiate and professional sports teams, as well as fashion merchandise. Goods will focus on Oregon teams. It is open 10a.m. to 8 p.m. Mondays through
APP RECOMM E N D A TIONS
Submit your holiday bazaars The Bulletin is now accepting submissions for a list of fairs and bazaars through the holiday season. The Community Life section will publish a calendar on Oct. 28 list ing fairs and bazaars. Each submitted event must include a brief description of what will be sold, dates, times, lo cation, admission price and a contact phone number. The deadline for submission is Oct. 19. After Oct. 28, a list of holiday bazaars and fairs happening that week will appear in the Savvy Shopper section, which publishes on Wednes days. New fair and bazaar admissions are welcome during that time. The deadline for submission is the Friday before the Wednesday publication. Submit events by email to communitylife
student on track
Here are a number of apps that emerged from the input of our sources, various Web apps lists and our own research. They' re just a few among many great educational apps. Keep in mind that while an app might, for instance, be on an iOS platform, it might be designed for one style of device only. Check the appropriate app purchasing venue.
By Heidi Hagemeier The Bulletin
For children andpreteens •
our child might think tablets are for entertain ment. But now that school is back in session, parents should consider how digital devices can assist in education. Apps — software pro grams for smartphones, tablets and other mobile devices — come in educa tional varieties, too. Just type "educational apps" into the iTunes Store search field and a flood of options pop up purporting to help children in areas including math, geography and music. How to choose which apps might really benefit your child is the tricky part. "It can be overwhelm ing," said Bend resident Stephanie Utzman, who regularly seeks out the best learning apps as part of her nonprofit organiza tion that assists children with vocal disabilities, Adler's Voice. "You' ve got this device now and you' re in this app store with hundreds of thousands of
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FISH SCHOOLHD Works on:iOS Cost:$1.99
KIDS ABC PHONICS LITE Works on:Android
From the well known children' s app developer Duck Duck Moose, Fish School HD brings to the younger set colorful, fun games to learn about matching, letters, differences and other concepts. It makes for a great all-in-one for preschoolers and kindergartners.
Cost:Free Kids ABC Phonics is intended for kids ages 3 to 7. Test out the free version, which goes from letters A to H. If you like it you can pay $3.99 for the entire alphabet. It teaches letter sounds and the basics of blending. The same developer, Intellijoy, also created Kids Numbers and Math Lite, a free version to address numbers and basic math.
Saturdaysandi' a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. The Duck Store relocated to the Bend River Promenade, 80 N.E. Bend River Mall Drive. Contact: 541-389 2766.
• Educational apps to helpkeepyour
KINDERTOWN Works on:iOS Cost:Free I know... an app for apps might seem excessive. But KinderTown assists in assessing what' s worthy and what' s junk. Teachers and others help vet the apps, which can be sorted by subject, age and price. And while KinderTown started out focusing on preschoolers and kindergartners, it now has expanded its range up to age 8.
MATH PRACTICE FLASH CARDS Works on:Android Cost:Free Math Practice Flash Cards by TeachersParadise. corn Studios is a fun game to practice addition, subtraction, multiplication or dlvlslon.
MONTESSORI STYLE APPS Apps claiming to be in the Montessori style typically lack ads, flashing lights and gizmos, which for the youngest users is just the way some educators prefer it. Developers like Montessorium create apps that feature simple looks and easy to-use interfaces. Offerings range from learning about letters to
geographyto science.
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FLASHCARDS DELUXE Works on:iOS Cost:$3.99 The free version of this app only allows for six decks of four cards — hardly enough fortest cramming. Upgrade to the paid version, which allows you to create cards on the computer or in the app itself. Users can choose among myriad customization options, from changing background colors to adding graphics to multisided cards. The app also works with DropBox, Google Docs and USB transfers.
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DICTIONARY.COM Works on:iOS, Android Cost:Free The app version of the interlinked websites Dictionary. corn and Thesaurus. corn is handy when stumbling over a word when reading or writing papers. The app works off line and includes more than 2 million definitions, synonyms and antonyms. The free version does contain ads, but it probably will not faze teenagers.
GRAPHING CALCULATORHD Works on:iOS Cost:$1.99 Remember those
$200 graphic calculator behemoths? Many of the functions your teens need can be found instead in this app. Then after creating a graph, for instance, users can take a snapshot and email themselves a high-resolution copy.
INCLASS Works on:iOS Cost:Free There are plenty of apps out there that act as high-tech desk planners to help track classes, homework and other deadlines. InClass has those functions, as well as note-taking and audio-recording capabilities. All in all, it helps provide organization for digital natives.
IVIONEYSMART Works on: iOS Cost:99 cents Introduce teens to managing their dollars with Money Smart, which helps track and understand expenses, incomes, budgets and bills. This app tracks transactions, budgets and bills and links them together. The better to know where all that cash went.
US HISTORY Works on: Android
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Cost:Free This app provides those documents teens continually return to in class: the U.S. Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the Federalist Papers and others. Also, it offers summaries of all the presidents.
Yet today's youngsters and teenagers — dubbed "digital natives" for being born into the Internet age — are interacting more of ten with technology in the school setting. Amy Tarnow, assistant director of instructional technology for Bend La Pine Schools, said dis trict teachers are just start ing to use mobile devices more in the classroom. Examples include using an app to help reinforce concepts or for English lan guage learners to get more practice. Tarnow thinks apps can particularly help children get more practice when struggling with a skill or concept, from telling time to algebra problems. "If there's something your child needs practice with," she said, "there's an app for that." See Apps /B6
Notebook photo via Thinkstock; app images submitted
©bendbulletin.corn or by mail to Community Life, The Bulletin, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. Contact: 541-383 0351.
August retail remains flat Back-to-school shop ping didn't boost retail sales all that much for August. According to the Na tional Retail Federation, August sales increased 0.2 percent when sea sonally adjusted from July and increased 3.8 percent unadjusted year-over-year. An NRF news release said consumers con tinue to face economic uncertainty in the shaky recovery. Year-over-year, U.S. Department of Com merce numbers also showed that clothing sales increased 7.8 percent, electronics 2.1 percent, general mer chandise 0.7 percent and hobby and sporting goods sales 6.6 percent. — Heidi Hagemeier, The Bulletin
Gettin • Edgier hairstyles turn up on clients 40 and older By Bee-Shyuan Chang New Yorh Times News Service
NEW YORK — One morn ing this month, three women, all over 40, were perched in the cushy gray chairs at the Yves Durif hair salon, on 76th Street off Madison Av enue in the Carlyle hotel. Given the address, you might have expected the mood to be reverent. Instead, the room rang with one-lin ers, while salon owner Durif, an energetic Frenchman, and David Johnstone, the unflap pable, bespectacled color di rector, assessed each client. "Don't you dare give me that boring Upper East Side hair," Dawn Bennett, 61, told Johnstone. "I want it rude,
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Linda Hol liday, who is in her 50s, chose blue streaks for a more punkish cast, when getting her hair done at Yves Durif hair salon in New York.
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New York Times News Service
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and I want it rock 'n' roll." Bennett, an arts adminis trator at the Brooklyn non profit organization Urban Glass, once had long dark strands down to the small of her back. Now she does what she pleases, including, on this day, magenta streaks, three blunt tiers ofbangs and
an undershave that could turn her short hairdo into a Mohawk if she willed it with strong gel. "Some of the young artists in the program have said, 'We have the coolest art ad ministrator around,'" Bennett said proudly. See Over 40/B6
Are we really better off with refrigerators? By jostin Moyer The Washington Post
My refrigerator died on a Saturday. I ignored the early signs of trouble with the French-door, bottom-freezer Kenmore Trio — a unit just 4 years old, yet suddenly unable to keep milk from spoiling or Luna and Larry's Coconut Bliss sorbet from melting into sugary soup. Though I held fast to slim hopes, an un sympathetic repairman sent by Sears offered none, and the Kenmore could not be resusci tated. By the time you read this, my family will have survived for three weeks without freon-chilled produce, dairy products, tofu, i" soda or filtered water. This isn't a bad-customer-service sob story. As the weeks flyby — as I grow to enjoy walking the dog to the bodega each morning to spend $4 on two seven-pound bags of ice for a cooler, and as my 2-year-old daughter forgets about yogurt — I have to ask: Who needs a refrigerator? See Fridge/B6 Bulletin file photo
B2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
T
a M O V IES
'A shoulder to cry on and a lot of tough talk "lyanla: Fix My Life" 9p.m. Saturdays, OWN
Lozada's faucet is quick and
gushing. "Just let her weep," Vanzant intones, over and over, to no one in particular. Her truth-teller presentation can go overboard at times: In a later episode,
By jon Caramanica New York Times News Service
Evelyn Lozada begins her appearance on "Iyanla: Fix M y L i fe" p e r
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fectly primped
— hair, makeup, outfit, all p r i s tine. It was filmed in July, 11 days aftershe married foot ball star Chad Johnson. Their n ot-always-romantic c o u r t ship had been documented in "Basketball Wives," the VHI reality battle royale of which she's the volatile star. (She was previously engaged to basket ball player Antoine Walker) In the way that many real ity-TV stars seek help by going on other reality TV programs, Lozada sought out Iyanla Van zant to discuss controlling her rage. Vanzant — the engine of "Iyanla: Fix My Life" — is a self-help guide and author with a mystical air but with a deeply grounded approach. She speaks in a soothing, en couraging voice, makes phe nomenal eye contact and has an evident distaste for polish. "Iyanla: Fix My Life" is "In tervention" and daytime talk distilled to c or e p r inciples. Much of the show is given over to long, hard conversa tions, shot up close, a tactic of discomfort. In the case of Lozada, who was the subject of the show's p remiere on O W N , O p r ah Winfrey's network, Vanzant's success can be measured by the stains — makeup and tears — Lozada leaves on her collar. "I'm gonna hold you," she tells Lozada. "I'm not gonna let you go, I' m n o t g o nna compromise y ou r di g n i ty, and whatever you say to me I promise you I'm not gonna use it against you."
she l i t erally ties
family members together w i th string to illustrate how bonds work, then uses scissors to e mphasize a p o i n t a b o u t abandonment. But mostly, i t ' s b r acing watching her poke holes in the delusions of her charges. In each episode, the stories people tell about themselves are subjected to pressure and interrogation until they col lapse, defeated. Most of Vanzant's guests aren't stars, but leading with Lozada allows Winfrey's net work to attract some of the re flected interest. One o f V a n zant's b est known interventions was with Winfrey herself. Vanzant was a regular guest on Winfrey's show in the 1990s, but the two had a falling out. Their tear f ul reconciliation came o n one of Winfrey's final shows last year, in one of the rare in teractions in which you could sense Winfrey's discomfort. The gravitational center that usually holds on her stage was upended. Vanzant is able to create these disruptions because she largely erases the force fields people keep around t hem selves merely by acknowledg ing their existence and thereby robbing them of effectiveness. Sometimes she just reaches through the force field and grabs on tight. In a later epi sode, she has to show a mother how to hug her son, whom she's abandoned. It's awful to watch and also full of hope.
LOCAL MOVIE TI M ES FOR WEDNESD AY,SEPT.19
BEND Regal Pilot Butte 6 2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend,541-382-6347
AI WEIWEI: NEVER SORRY(R) 1,4,7 BEASTS OFTHESOUTHERN WILD(PG-13) 1:15, 3:45, 6:45 THE BESTEXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL(PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15 THE BOURNE LEGACY(PG-13) Noon, 2:50, 5:45 CELESTEANDJESSE FOREVER (R)12:30,3,6 KILLERJOE(NC-17) 12:45, 3:30, 6:30
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend,541-382-6347
2016: OBAMA'SAMERICA(PG) 11:50, 3, 6:15, 9:15 THE BOURNE LEGACY(PG-13) 12:05, 3:25, 6:30, 9:40 THE CAMPAIGN (R) 11:45 a.m., 4:40, 7:50, 10:15
Ai WeiWei in a scene from Alison Klayman's "Ai WeiWei: Never Sorry."
EDITOR'S NOTES: • Accessibility devices are available for some movies at Regal Old Mill Stadium 16<I /MAX • There may be an additional fee for 3-D movies. • IMAX films are $15.50 for adults and $13 for children
Mcclatchy-Tnhune News Service
LAWLESS(R) 12:50, 3:40, 7:05, 9:55 THE ODDLIFEOFTIMOTHY GREEN (PG) 12:35, 3:10, 6:40, 9:10 PARANORMAN(PG) 12:20 THE POSSESSION (PG-13) 1:25, 3:55, 6:20, 9:05 RESIDENTEVIL: RETRIBUTION (R) 12:15, 3:35, 6:45, 9:20 RESIDENTEVIL: RETRIBUTION IMAX(R) 12:30, 3:50, 7:10, 9:50 TCM PRESENTS THEBIRDS (PG 13) 7 THE WORDS (PG-13) 1:05, 4:15, 7:40, 10:10
McMenamins Old St. Francis School 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend,541-330-8562
THE DARKKNIGHT RISES (PG 13) 1:35, 6
MARVEL'STHEAVENGERS(PG 13) 6 TED (R)9:30 After 7 p.m., showsare21 and older only.Youngerthan21may attend screenings before 7 p.m. if accompaniedby a legalguardian.
FINDING NEMO 3-D (G)12:45, 2:50,4:05,6,7,9,9:45
Redmond Cinemas 1535 S.W. Odem Medo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777
THE CAMPAIGN(R) 6:30 THE EXPENDABLES 2 (R) 6:45 LAWLESS(R) 4 THE ODDLIFEOFTIMOTHY GREEN (PG) 4:15 THE POSSESSION (PG-13) 5:15, 7:15 PREMIUM RUSH(PG-13) 5:30, 7:30
(PG) 3
HOPE SPRINGS (PG-13) 1:15, 4:25, 7:20, 10 LAST OUNCEOF COURAGE (PG) 11:55 a.m., 3:15, 7:25, 10:05
Madras Cine~a 5 1101 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505
THE BOURNE LEGACY(PG-13) 6:30 THE EXPENDABLES 2 (R) 7:20 FINDING NEMO 3-D (G) 7:10 HIT ANDRUN(R) 6:50 LAWLESS (R) 7
PRINE VILLE Pine Theater 214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014
720 Desperado Court,
Sisters, 541-549-8800
LAWLESS(R) 6:15 NEILYOUNG JOURNEYS (noM PAA rating) 6:45 RUBY SPARKS (R) 6:30 YOUR SISTER'SSISTER(R) 6:30
Tin Pan Theater
HIT ANDRUN(R) 2:45
MADRAS
Sisters Movie House
ICEAGE:CONTINENTAL DRIFT
FINDING NEMO (G) Noon, 2, 9:35
• Movie times are subject to change after press time.
REDMOND
SISTERS
THE COLDLIGHT OF DAY (PG 13) 3:45, 9:30
THE EXPENDABLES 2 (R) 1, 6:50
yvyvw.ttnpantheater corn for more
infor mation.
(ages 3to 11)andseniors (ages 60 andolder).
THE EXPENDABLES 2 (R) 4, 7 THE ODDLIFEOFTIMOTHY GREEN (LIPSTAIRS — PG)6 Pine Theater's upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
SATURDAY
869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271
Theateris closed for renovations. Scheduled to reopen Sept.24. Check
rtt'bm C Totat care" Bend Memorial Clinic ~c
FARIttIERS
hlARKET
Saturdays,June30 - Sept, 22 I lgam-2pm
for appointments HAVEN HOME STYLE 'Furniture nnZGewj n
NorthWest Crossing Neighborhood Center
call
541 -382-4900
856 NWBond• Downtown Bend• 541-330-5999 www.havenhomestyle.corn
NORTHWEST < CROSSING + www.nwxfarmersmarket.corn
LOCAI, TV LI S TINt=S WEDNESDAY PRIME TIME 9/ I 9/I 2
ALSO INHD;ADD 600TOCHANNEL No •
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*In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte Di ital PM-Prineville/Madras SR-Sunriver L-La Pine
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*A&E 130 28 18 32 Gangsters: America's Most Evil Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars StorageTexas Storage-Texas Storage-Texas Storage-Texas Hoggers Hoggers Hoggers Hoggers ** "The Ghost and Mr.Chicken" (1966)DonKnotts, JoanStaley. Anaspiring ** "The Shakiest GunintheWest"(1968)DonKnotts, Barbara Rhoades.A CSI: Miami G.O. Tracking a mysteriCSI: Miami A club where hunters CSI: Miami Last Stand The murderer *AM O 1 02 40 39 ous murdersuspect. '14' « pursue human prey. n '14' « Fiero returns toMiami. '14' reporter spends anight in a haunted house. « frontier dentist gains areputation as agunfighter. « *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Gator Boys n 'PG' cc Call-Wildman Call-Wildman Tanked: Unfiltered n 'PG' cc Tanked Neil Patrick Harris.'PG Call of Wildman Call of Wildman Gator Boys Alligator Face-Off 'PG' Tanked Neil Patrick Harris.'PG BRAVO 137 4 4 Ho u sewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Top Chef Masters '14' « Top Chef Masters (N) '14' « Wha t Happens Top Chef R e b a 'PG' « Reba'PG' « R e b a'PG' « *** "Gridiron Gang" (2006)The Rock. Acounselor turnsjuvenile criminals into football players. « CMT 190 32 42 53 Yes, Dear 'PG' Yes, Dear 'PG' Yes, Dear 'PG' Yes, Dear 'PG' Reba 'PG' « CNBC 54 36 40 52 Trashlnc: ThesecretLifeof Ame r ican Greed: The Fugitives American GreedArthur Nadel Mad Money American Greed: TheFugitives American GreedArthur Nadel Insanity! 21st Century CNN 55 38 35 48 Anderson Cooper360 (N) « Pie r s Morgan Tonight (N) Anderson Cooper 360 « Erin Burnett OutFront Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 « Erin Burnett OutFront COM 135 53 135 47 (4:58) Futurama Always Sunny (6:02) Tosh.0 Delbert Report Daily Show (7:44) Chappelle's Show '14' Key & Peele South Park 'MA' South Park 'MA' South Park 'MA' South Park 'MA' Daily Show D e lbert Report COTY 11 Dept. /Trans. C ity Edition Be nd City Council Work SessionBend City Council Get Outdoors Visions of NW The YogaShow The Yoga Show Talk of the TownLocal issues. I CSPAN 61 20 12 11 CapitolHIIIHearings Capitol Hill Hearings *DIS 87 43 14 39 Phineas, Ferb (5:25) *** "The Lion King"(1994) n cc "Phineasand Ferb: TheMovie Jake and the NeverLandPirates Good-Charlie My Babysitter Phineas, Ferb Jessie 'G' « M y Babysitter *DISC 156 21 16 37 Sons of Guns n '14' « Sons of Guns n '1 4' cc Sons of Guns ZombieGun! '14' S o ns of Guns n '14' cc Sons of Guns (N) o '14'cc How BoozeBuilt America (N) '14' Sons of Guns n '14' « *E! 136 25 (4:00) *** "Sexand theCity" (2008)SarahJessica Parker E! News(N) Keeping UpWith the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians The Soup '14' Carly Rae Jep Chelsea Lately E! News ESPN 21 23 22 23 (4:00)MLBBaseballOaklandAthleticsatDetroitTigers(N) cc MLB Baseball TexasRangersat LosAngeles Angels of Anaheim(N) (Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc ESPN2 22 24 21 24 CrossFit Games CrossFit Games CrossFit Games CrossFit Games Women's SoccerUnitedStatesvs. Australia (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc Baseball Tonight (N) (Live)« NFL Live ~c ESPNC 23 25 123 25 Boxing « Boxi n g « Stories of... S t o ries of Long WayDown « White Shadow « SportsCentury « One on One U p Close « SportsCentury « H-Lite Ex. H-L i te Ex ESPNN 24 63 12420 SportsCenter (N) (Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) « SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) « H Lite Ex H Li t e Ex H Ltte Ex. HLt t e Ex. Reba 'PG' cc ** "TheSandlot" (1993,Comedy-Drama)Tom Guiry, Mike Vitar, Patrick Renna * "Gonein Sixty Seconds" (2000,Action) NicolasCage, AngelinaJolie FAM 67 29 19 41 Reba'G' cc The 700 Club n 'G' cc The O'Reilly Factor cc FNC 57 61 36 50 TheO'ReillyFactor(N) cc Hannity (N) On Record, GretaVanSusteren Hannity On Record, GretaVanSusteren The Five *FOOD 17762 98 44 BestDishes Paula's Cooking Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Restaurant: Impossible Frankie's Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible Michele's Restaurant Stakeout (N) Restaurant: Impossible ** "Transformers:Revengeoi the Fallen" (2009,ScienceFiction) Shia LaBeouf, MeganFox ** "TheKarateKid" (2010,Drama)Jaden Smith, Jackie Chan,Taraii P. Henson. Premiere FX 131 (11:04) **"TheKarate Kid I HGTV 176 49 33 43 The Unsellables The Unsellables The Unsellables The Unsellables Hunters Int'I H o use HuntersProperty Brothers 'G' « Buying andSelling (N) 'G' « House Hunters Hunters Int'I Property Brothers 'G' « *HIST 155 42 41 36 Brad Meltzer's Decoded 'PG' Bra d Meltzer's Decoded 'PG Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars CajunPawn Cajun Pawn Cajun Pawn Cajun Pawn Restoration Restoration Restoration Restoration ** "MySister's Keeper" (2009,Drama)CameronDiaz. « *** "TheMemoryKeeper's Daughter" (2008,Drama)'PG' « LIFE 138 39 20 31 Wife Swap'PG' *** "Se/ena" (1997) Jennifer Lopez.Mexican-Americansinger skyrockets to fame. MSNBC 59 59128 51 The Edshow(N) The RachelMaddowShow(N) The Last Word The Ed Show The Rachel MaddowShow The Last Word Hardball With Chris Matthews MTV 192 22 38 57 Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness The Challenge: Battle of the Seasons (N) n '14' Th e Challenge NICK 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob S p ongeBob SpongeBob S pongeBob Drake & Josh Drake & Josh Full House 'G' Full House 'G' Full House 'G' Full House 'G TheNanny'PG' TheNanny 'PG' Friendsn 'PG' (11:33) Friends OWN 161103 31 10 Dallas DNA n '14' cc Dallas DNAMoral Dilemma'14' Dallas DNAJustice for All n '14 48 Hours: Hard Evidence n 'PG Dateline on OWN The Player '14 Dateline on OWN (N) n '14' 48 Hours: Hard Evidence n 'PG ROOT 20 45 28* 26 MLB Baseball: Orioles at Mariners Seahawks Ma r iners Pre. MLB Baseball BaltimoreOrioles at Seattle Mariners FromSafeco Field in Seattle. (N) (Live) Mariners Post. MLS Soccer: Timbers atEarthquakes SPIKE 132 31 34 46 Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters SYFY 133 35 133 45 Haunted Collector cc Hot Set CrashLandedAstronaut Paranormal Witness Ghost Hunters Camp Fear « Gho s t Hunters (N) n « ParanormalWitness (N) Ghost Hunters n « TBN 205 60 130 Behind Scenes Turning Point Joseph Prince End of the Age Praise the Lord « AlwaysGood Jesse Duplantis Easter Exper. Crefle Dollar P r aise the Lord « *TBS 16 27 11 28 Friends n'14' Friends n'14' KingofQueens KingofQueens Seinfeld n 'G' Seinfeld 'PG' Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14 Big Bang « Big Bang Con an (N) *** "How to Marry aMilionaire" (1953,Comedy)Marilyn (6:45) ** "The Cobweb"(1955,Drama)Richard Widmark,LaurenBacall, Charles Boyer. Psychi- ** "Blood Alley" (1955)JohnWayne, Lauren Bacall, PaulFix. Merchant ** "Written on theWind" (1956, Monroe, LaurenBacall. atric clinic director handlescrisis over newcurtains. cc marine captaintakes stern-wheeler past Reds toHongKong. Drama)RockHudson. « *TLC 178 34 32 34 Four Weddings n 'PG' « Toddlers & Tiaras n 'PG' « Island Medium Island Medium Breaking Amish n '14' « Here Comes Here Comes Here Comes Here Comes H ere Comes H ere Comes *TNT 17 26 15 27 The Mentalist n '14' « The Mentalist BloodMoney'14' The Mentalist Red All Over '14' The Mentalist n '14' « The Mentalist RuddyCheeks'14' The Mentalist n '14' « csl: NY n '1 4'~c *TOO N 84 Dragons: Riders Regular Show Regular Show Wrld, Gumball AdventurTi eme JohnnyTestn NiniaGo: Metre NiniaGo: Metre King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' *TRAV 179 51 45 42 Bourdain: No Reservations Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Man v. Food 'G' Man v. Food 'G Man v. Food'G' Man v.Food'G' Toy Hunter'PG' Toy Hunter'PG Bacon Paradise 'G' « Man v. Food 'G' Man v. Food 'G M'A*S*H 'PG' M'A*S*H 'PG' Home Improve. Home Improve Cosby Show Cosby Show C osby Show C osby Show The Soul Man The Soul Man King of Queens King of Queens TVLND 65 47 29 35 (4:30) Bonanza M*A*S*H 'PG' USA 15 30 23 30 NCIS Royals NCIS Crackedn PG « NCIS Ships inthe Night '14' « Royal Pains SandLegs(N)'PG (10:02) NCISGuilty Pleasure '14' (11:02) NCISMoonlightingn '14' an dLoyalsn 'PG' NCISDeadAirn '14' « ** "0/d School" (2003,Comedy)LukeWilson, Will Ferrell. n T.l. and Tiny T .l. and Tiny T . l. and Tiny T . l. and Tiny Rehab With Dr. Drew intake '14' Saturday Night Live n '14' « VH1 191 48 37 54 Basketball Wives LA n '14' •
(6:05) *** "The AmericanPresident" 1995 Michael Douglas. « Shogun(Part3of6) « (9:40) ** "Colombiana"2011, Action ZoeSaldana. n 'PG-13' « *A Man Apart ENGR 106401 306401"National Lampoon's Vacation FMC 10420410412 ** "Amelia"2009, BiographyHilary Swank. 'PG' « FXM Presents ** "Amelia" 2009, BiographyHilary Swank.'PG' « FXM Presents ** "Living Out Loud" 1998,Comedy-DramaHolly Hunter. 'R' « UFO ReloadedUFC92: Evansvs. Griffin Forrest Griffinagainst RashadEvans. UFO All Angles UFO All Angles UFO Prelims English Premier LeagueSoccer FUEL 34 Greenbrier Gr e enbrier On the Range Inside PGA G o lf Central G r eenbrier Gre enbrier On the Range School of Golf Golf Academy I GOLF 28301 27 301 Onthe Range(N) Little House on the Prairie 'G' Little House on the Prairie 'G' Lit t le House on the Prairie 'G' Frasier n 'PG' Frasier n 'PG' Frasier n 'PG' Frasier n 'PG' HALL 66 33 175 33 The Waltons TheLoveStory 'G ' L i t tle House on the Prairie 'G' (4:30) * "Dream House" 2011Daniel ** "Hop"2011, ComedyVoices of JamesMarsden, Rus- (7:45) *** "Extremely Loud EIncredibly Close" 2011, DramaTom Hanks, Thomas Horn. A boy Boardwalk Empire ResolutionNucky Real TimeWith Bill MaherJournalist Craig.n 'PG-13' « sell Brand,Kaley Cuoco. n 'PG' « searchesNewYorkfor clues related to a mysterious key. n 'PG-13' « makes a resolution.'MA' John Feehery.'MA' « IFC 105 1 0 5 *** "Little MissSunshine" 2006Greg Kinnear, SteveCarell. 'R (7:15) ** "TheBrothers Grimm"2005, Fantasy MattDamon,HeathLedger. 'PG-13 (9:45) *** "Little MissSunshine" 2006,Comedy-DramaGregKinnear. 'R 6: 1 0) ** "Life"1999, Comedy-DramaEddie Murphy. Two (10:45) **"The A-Team"2010LiamNeeson. Former • (felons wrongly convicted Strike Back Stonebridgebefriends (8:50) ** "Knight andDay" 2010,ActionTomCruise, MAX OO 508 50 (4: 00)Pitt. ***o "Seven" 995, Suspense Knox's daughter.n 'MA'« Brad 'R' « 1 makethe most of life in jail. n 'R' cc Cameron Diaz.n 'PG-13' « Special Forcessoldiers form arogue unit. NGC 157 15 7 A b andoned 'PG' Abandoned 'PG' Abandoned (N) Abandoned (N) Family Guns(N) 'PG Abandoned A b andoned Abandoned 'PG' Abandoned 'PG Family Guns 'PG Alien DeepWith Bob Ballard 'PG A v a tar: Air Odd Parents Odd Parents SpongeBob S pongeBob Avatar:Air. Av a tar:Air. Dr a gonBallZ I r onMan:Armor I NTOON 89 11518911 Odd Parents Odd Parents P l anet Sheen Planet Sheen Avatar: Air. OUTD 37 30743 307 Gun Stories Shooting USA « Best Defense Amer. Rifleman Impossible Gun Stories G u n Nuts Shooting USA « Best Defense Gun Stories I m possible Am e r. Rifleman ** "It's Aboutyou" 201 1 (5:50) ** "PeepWorld" 201 0Michael (7:15) ** "Barbershop" 2002,Comedyice Cube. Abarbershop ownercon Inside the NFL(N) n 'PG' « Inside NASCAR Weeds It's Time The Botwins are at a Inside the NFL n S Hp 500 5 0 0 (4:30) 'PQ' cc Documentaryn 'NR' « C. Hall.n 'R' cc siders selling his establishment.n 'PG-13' « (N) 'PG' crossroads.n 'MA'« SPEED 35 30312530 Pinks-All Out '14' The Cobra(N) 101 Cars Barrett-Jackson Special Edition P i nks - All Out '14 The Cobra 1 0 1 Cars Barrett-Jackson Special Edition Unique Whips '14 * "MyBoss'sDaughter"2003AshtonKutcher.n *** "Friends With Benefits" 2011 Justin Timberlake.n 'R' « *** "A Dangerous Method" STARZ 30040830040 Addicted-Lve (5:20) ** "How Doyou Know" 2010ReeseWitherspoon. 'PG-13' (4:45) "BareKnuckles" 2009Martin Kove. Adetermined (6:20) ** "CrimeSpree" 2003,Comedy-DramaGerard "LoveBirds"2011 RhysDarby. Aninjured duck helps a (9:45) "Dear LemonLima" 2009, ComedyMelissa Leo (11:15) ** "Burke EHare" 2010 • single mom tries to win aboxing tournament. Depardieu,JohnnyHallyday. n 'R' « guy find thepath totrue love. 'PG-13' cc SavanahWilffong. n 'PG-13' « Simon Pegg.n'R' « NBCSN 27 58 30 20 (4:30) **** "Rocky" (1976)Sylvester Stallone,Talia Shire NFL Turning Point (N) NFL Turning Point Dream On:Journey NFL Turning Point Sports Illustrated 'PG *WE 143 41 17411 Bridezillas Jennifer 8 Blanca '14' Bridezillas Jennifer 8 Minyon'14' Bridezillas '14' « Wedding- DavuUnveiled Wedding- DavuUnveiled Ghost Whisperer n 'PG' « Amazing Wedding Cakes'PG'
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
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ADVICE & ASTROLOGY
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O M M U N IT Y
A LE N D A R
Please email event information to communitylifeC~bendbulletin.corn or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.corn. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Dear Abby: My d a ughter "Anissa" is 3 and has an older cousin, "Billy," on my fiance's side who is 5. Billy has been caught on several occasions showing his "manhood" to little girls, and we r ecently found out he took Anissa into a pop-up tent and showed her as well. This was not on my watch, because I don't feel c omfortable l e aving t h e m alone together. After I learned about the in cident, I was told that Billy had done this with another cousin and told her it was a "secret" and not to tell. Abby, as far as I know, Billy was spoken to at great length a nd reprimanded after t h e first few occurrences, but he continues to do this, it seems, at every opportunity he gets. Is this normal behavior for boys? I think the parents are b urying their heads in t h e sand. They get defensive when the subject is brought up. Per sonally, all I can do is keep Anissa within a r m's r each when Billy is around. What do you think? — Not On My Watch Dear Not:I think that's intel ligent. Although children are naturally curious when they learn there'sa difference be tween boys and girls (hence the genesis of playing "doc tor"), Billy appears to be over ly preoccupied. Because he is telling the girls to keep what he's doing a secret, he knows he is doing something wrong. Repeated naughty actions can be correctedonly ifthere are consequences for them, and it appears a lengthy talking-to and a reprimand haven't got ten through to the child. Dear Abby:I need your assis tance resolving an awkward situation. I have noticed other women experiencing "ward robe malfunctions." In each instance, they were otherwise tastefully dressed but seem
ABBY inglyunaware of the sheerness of their clothing. For example, one was wearing white slacks through which the patterned fabric of her underwear could be seen clearly. Is there a polite way to alert them of the problem, or is it better to say nothing? Most of these women were strangers, but I couldn't think of tactful wording even when it h ap pened to a friend. — Just Trying to Help Dear Just Trying: If it's a friend, say, "Honey, I can see the pattern of your underwear through your slacks," and it will probably be appreciated. However, if it's a stranger, keep your comment to yourself be cause it probably won't be. Dear Abby: My late part ner and I had matching wed ding rings, as we had a civil marriage. Since my partner's death, I have met someone else. We have become a couple and also want to have a civil same-sex marriage. Do you think it would be wrong to use the same wed ding rings I had with my first partner? I'm not sure how I feel about it and need some input. — Allen in Florida Dear Allen:Far more impor tant than what I think about it is what your significant other thinks. Personally, I w o u ld "retire" the rings from your former marriage and s tart with new ones because it's a new relationship. While no rule of etiquette says there is anything wrong w ith u sing the old ones, this really isn't a question of etiquette. — Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.corn or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Horoscope:HappyBirthday for Wednesday,Sept. 19,2012 insecure. Do your best to let this person know your feelings. Tonight: Mosey on home. If you fight progress, youcould VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) encounter your share of bumps ** * * Y ou could be seeing a along the way. Learn to let go, and situation very differently from head down the path that greets you in the past. You' ll discover that a with energy and optimism. If you are person you counted on no longer single, you meet more people than is predictable. He or she has been usual. You will fall into an intense more upt ightand now chooses tango with many of your potential more off-the-wall ideas and actions. sweeties. Take your time deciding. Tonight: Visit with a pal. If you are attached, nothing seems LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) to bea "maybe" oran "if." You will ** * * B e aware of how much you find that everything is either black or offer. Sometimes you give away too white. Hopefully, you will be on the much of yourself. The unexpected same page. SCORPIO is nothing if impacts your daily life. You can work not deep and mysterious. with sudden change, yet something The Stars Show the Kind of Day within you seems to be building. You' ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; Could it have to do with a loved one? 3-Average; 2-So-so; f-Difficult Tonight: Treat yourself well. ARIES (March 21-April 19) SCORPIO (Ocb 23-Nov. 21) ** * * D eal with others directly. ** * * * B e more upbeat, and You might not like what comes work with a child or very lively down the path, but know that you friend. Sudden ideas come from out can transform a situation. Emotions of left field. Discuss them before expressed could help everyone you act. Impulsiveness plays a involved. Strong energy directs you. strong role in what goes on. Tonight: Push as hard as possible to get a Ask for what you want with the expectation of receiving it. project done. Tonight: Listen to a sug gestion. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ** * You might want to step back ** * * O thers clearly command from a sudden change involving the stage. You will be very happy your domestic or personal life. You if you do not try to interfere with could be wondering what might be this trend. An unexpected change best to do. Take ahard look at your encourages you to let go of what has finances before making a decision. not been working. You have tinkered Above all else, do not rush into to get this situation more in sync, anything. Tonight: Chill out. to no avail. Tonight: Just do not be CAPRICORN(Dec. 22-Jan. 19) alone. ** * * A n unexpected situation GEMINI (May 21-June 20) could create a lot of tension. What ** * You want to mix in a happier you can be sure of is that stability or more social part of your life. You is not an option, especially in your could be jolted by what heads your home or personal life. Express your way. The unexpected forces you to feelings to someone who seems to transform the way you deal with a understand you. Tonight: Where key person. As a result, you might your friends are. decide to open up. Tonight: Handle a AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) personal matter. ** * You might want to take a CANCER(June 21-July 22) break from a demanding situation. ** * * * Y our creativity opens youUnfortunately, that option is not on up to a new possibility when faced the table right now. A heart-to-heart with a difficult and unpredictable talk could shock you and prevent situation. You feel good and you from moving forward with a key empowered. Share some of your situation. Learn to say "no" more more intense feelings. Indirectly, often. Tonight: Let the fun begin. you mobilize others by revealing PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) more. Tonight: Paint the town red. ** * * I f you feel uncomfortable LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) by what you are hearing, you might ** * * A sudden insight or new wanttopullback some and make information heads your way. You your own decisions. In fact, you might want to slow down, as this really might not want any more input novel perspective could change a lot at this moment. You could feel at in your daily life. For a while, make odds with certain events happening fewer commitments until you review around you. Tonight: Where you can certain facets of your life. A close let your mind wander. friend or associate could become By Jacqueline Bigar This year you will be encouraged to greet change with greater ease.
© 20t 2 by King Features Syndicate
BEND FARMERS MARKET:Free admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@gmail.corn or www.bendfarmersmarket.corn. PICKIN'AND PADDLIN' MUSIC SERIES:Includes boat demonstrations in the Deschutes River and music by Americana act Polecat; proceeds benefit Bend Paddle Trail Alliance; free; 4-7 p.m. demonstrations, 6 p.m. music; Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; 541-317-9407. "THE BIRDS":A screening of the Alfred Hitchcock film, with an introduction by Robert Osborne; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347 or www .fathomevents.corn. CRAIG CAROTHERS: The Nashville-based singer songwriter performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.corn. "THE PRODUCERS": CatCall Productions presents the musical satire about two people who set out to produce the worst show in Broadway history; $30 or $35; 8 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.tower theatre.org. THE GOODHURT:The Seattle based rock band performs; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.corn.
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Americana act Polecat will performat the Pickin' and Paddlin' Music Series tonight at Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe in Bend. Music kicks off at 6 p.m.
www.redmondhumane.org. BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 2-6 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541 408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@ gmail.corn or www.bend farmersmarket.corn. BEND OKTOBERFEST:Event includes live music, dancing, beer, food and games; ages 21 and older only; free admission; 5-10 p.m.; downtown Bend; 541-788-3628 or www.downtownbend.org. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Julia Kennedy Cochran presents her father's memoir, "Ed Kennedy's War: V-E Day, Censorship and the Associated Press"; free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina SpringsBooks,422 S.W . Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. SOLDIERSOF PEACE: A viewing THURSDAY of the film "Soldiers of Peace;" nonperishable food donations for THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read the local food bank are accepted; and discuss "Tuesdays with free; film viewing in the Broughton Morrie" by Mitch Albom; free; Room.; Crook County Library, noon; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-312-1090 or 175 N.W. Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; 541-447-7978. www.deschuteslibrary.org/ NPRA FINALSRODEO: A Northwest calendar. Professional Rodeo Association WILD 8t SCENICFILM FESTIVAL: performance, with roping and A screening of films to inspire pageants; $10, $5 ages 6-11, free and inform; proceeds benefit ages 5 and younger; 7 p.m.; Crook the Oregon Natural Desert County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main Association; $1 0;6:30 p.m.; The St., Prineville; ccrodeo@hotmail Old Stone, 157 N.W.Franklin .corn or www.nwprorodeo.corn. Ave., Bend; 541-330-2638, "EXTREMELYLOUD 8tINCREDIBLY katya@onda.org or www.onda CLOSE":A screening of the PG .org/wildandscenic. 13-rated 2011 film; free; 7:30 p.m.; AUDUBON SOCIETYBIRDERS' Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez NIGHT:Habitat biologist Larry Annex, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541 Pecenka presents "Playa 475-3351 or www.jcld.org. Lakes/Desert Wetlands"; hosted "RICHARDIII": Thoroughly Modern by East Cascades Audubon Productions and Stage Right Society; free; 6:30 p.m. social; Productions present Shakespeare's The Environmental Center, play about the controversial English 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; king; $18, $15 students and seniors 541-385-6908. 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 THE DEFIBULATORS: The N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312 Brooklyn, N.Y.-based honky 9626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.corn tonk band performs; free; 7 p.m.; or www.2ndstreettheater.corn. McMenamins Old St. Francis "WRONGWINDOW": Opening night School, 700 N.W. Bond St., of Cascades Theatrical Company's Bend; 541-382-5174 or www presentation of the comedy about .mcmenamins.corn. a couple who think they have "RICHARDIII": Thoroughly witnessed a murder through a Modern Productions and window; with a champagne and Stage Right Productions dessert reception; $24, $18 seniors, present Shakespeare's play $12students;7:30 p.m.;Greenwood about the controversial English Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood king; $18, $15 students and Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street .cascadestheatrical.org. Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette LINCOLNBREWSTER:The Christian Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.corn or singer-songwriter performs, with Elliot; $20 in advance, $30 at the www.2ndstreettheater.corn. door; 7:30 p.m.; Christian Life "WRONGWINDOW": Preview Center, 21720 E. U.S. Highway 20, night of Cascades Theatrical Bend; 541-389-8241, info@clcbend Company's presentation of .corn or www.clcbend.corn. thecomedy abouta couple "THE PRODUCERS": CatCall who think they have witnessed Productions presents the musical a murder through a window; satire about two people who set $10; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood out to produce the worst show in Broadway history; $30 or $35; Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or 8 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. www.cascadestheatrical.org. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or ARCHAEOLOGICALSOCIETY www.towertheatre.org. PRESENTATION:Doug Devine THE AMES: The folk band performs, will speak about the recovery with Broken Down Guitars; $5; and investigation of the 8:30p.m.;Liquid Lounge,70 N.W . CSS Hunley, a Confederate Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-6999. submarine that sank in 1864; $5 sug gested donation; 7:30 M. WARD:Singer-songwriter M. Ward performs; registration 8:30 p.m.; Central Oregon requested; $22, $25 at the door; Association of Realtors, 2112 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 9 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788 541-382-3452. 2989 or www.randompresents.corn. "THEPRODUCERS":CatCall Productions presents the musical ANDY FRASCO:Party blues; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. satire about two people who set Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116 or out to produce the worst show in Broadway history; $30 or $35; www.astroloungebend.corn. 8 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org.
SATURDAY
FRIDAY RED DOGCLASSIC:A shotgun style golf tournament; includes cart, dinner, auction and raffles; proceeds benefit the Humane Society of Redmond; $100; f p.m.; Juniper Golf Course, 1938 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-350-7605 or
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LEADMAN TRI: Featuring 250K and 125K triathlons, finish-area festivities and live music; free for spectators; 250K starts at 7 a.m., 125Kstarts at 8 a.m., live music from 4-9 p.m.; Old Mill District, 661 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131 or www.leadmantri.corn. REDMOND GRANGEBREAKFAST: A community breakfast benefiting the Redmond Future Farmers
of America; $6, $3 ages 12 and younger; 7-10:30 a.m.; Redmond Grange, 707 S.W. KalamaAve.; 541-480-4495. AGILITYTRIAL:Bend Agility Action Dogs presents a day of dogs navigating obstacle courses; free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Ponderosa Elementary School, 3790 N.E. Purcell Blvd., Bend; 541-323-4300 or www.benddogagility.corn. PRINEVILLEFARMERS MARKET: Free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E.Third St.; 503 739-0643 or prinevillefarmers market@gmail.corn. DISCGOLF TOURNAMENT: Tournament for players of all abilities; registration required; proceeds benefit the Opportunity Foundation of Central Oregon; $25; 11 a.m., 9 a.m.r eg istration; American Legion Community Park, 850 S.W. Rimrock Way, Redmond; 541-548-2611, smichaels@ofco.org or www.ofco.org. PROJECTCONNECT:Event features medical and dental services, social services for low-income individuals, food and more; free; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, Hooker Creek Event Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-385-8977 or www.project connectco.org. REMODELING,DECORAND OUTDOOR LIVINGSHOW: Featuring up to 70 local businesses showcasing their products and services from home remodeling, health, spas,windows and more, food and beverages available; free; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Century Center, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend. DEEANNAROSE:DeeAnna Rose of Yuma, Ariz., performs; free; 10 a.m.; The Sound Garden,1279 N.E. Second St., Bend; 541-633-6804. NORTHWEST CROSSINGFARMERS MARKET:Free; 10a.m.-2 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives, Bend; 541-382-1662, valerie@ brooksresources.corn or www .nwxfarmersmarket.corn. BEND OKTOBERFEST: Event includes music, kids activities, wiener dog races, a yodeling contest, a race to hammer a nail into a log and more; free admission; noon-10 p.m., all ages until 6 p.m.; downtown Bend; 541-788-3628 or www.downtownbend.org. MCMENAMINS OKTOBERFEST: Featuring food, beer and live music; free; f p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www
.mcmenamins.corn. VFW DINNER:A dinner of chicken fried steak; proceeds benefit local veterans; $8, $7 senors and children ages 6 and younger; 5-7 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Michael Harris talks about his book "Falling Down Getting UP"; free; 7p.m.; Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 2690 E.U.S. Highway 20, Bend;541-318-7242. NPRA FINALSRODEO: A Northwest Professional Rodeo Association performance, with roping and pageants; $10, $5 ages 6-11, free ages 5 and younger; 7 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; ccrodeo@hotmail .corn or www.nwprorodeo.corn. "RICHARDIII": Thoroughly Modern Productions and Stage Right Productions present Shakespeare's play about the controversial English king $18 $15studentsandseniors 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312 9626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.corn or www.2ndstreettheater.corn. "WRONG WINDOW":Cascades Theatrical Company presents the comedyabouta couplewhothink they have witnessed a murder through a window; $24, $18 seniors, $12students;7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www .cascadestheatrical.org. "THE PRODUCERS": CatCall Productions presents the musical satire about two people who set out to produce the worst show in Broadway history; $30 or $35; 8 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. BRIANNEKATHLEEN:The Portland based folk-pop act performs; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www .silvermoonbrewing.corn.
SUNDAY AGILITYTRIAL:Bend Agility Action Dogs presents a day of dogs navigating obstacle courses; free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Ponderosa Elementary School, 3790 N.E. Purcell Blvd., Bend; 541-323-4300 or www.benddogagility.corn. FIDDLERSJAM: Listen or dance at the Oregon Old Time Fiddlers Jam; donations accepted; 1-3:30 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1836 S.W.Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-647-4789.
Gef movin'and come play with us! This family eventis chock full of fun, food, music, laughter and activities for all ages.
Saturday, September22 11am-3 pm Riverbend Park All Ages 799 SWi:olumbia Street in Old Mill District
ph. (541)389-7275 wwtLbendparksandrec.org
The Bulletin
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"Have you ever had a partner who was impossible to deal with at the table?" a club player asked me. "Quite a few," I a cknowledged. "Most partners will negotiate, but I' ve had partners who wouldn't listen to a word I said." My f r iend was t oday's North. "When West bid five hearts," he told me, "I liked that too much to double. My partner then bid six diamonds 'cheap insurance,' he called it — and we were minus instead of being plus.
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TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
Apps
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Continued from B1 Visit www.bend The same is true for pre bulletin.corn/schoolapps teens and teens, who can ben for a full list of education efit from sophisticated digital apps recommended by study aids. The periodic table, Stephanie Utzman, who referencematerials forpapers founded a nonprofit that and fancy flashcards are just assists children with vocal a few of the options available disabilities, Adler's Voice. as apps. There are ways to sort out which apps are better than the rest. Utzman said her observa • Seek ou t cr e dible tion is that more apps are recommendations. available for free in Android There are professionals out p latforms t ha n f o r A p p l e there vetting all these apps. devices. • Observe the app in action. Some of these sources are w ebsites making " best o f " Tarnow, a s e l f-described lists, while others are apps for "app snob," said she isn't afraid sorting apps. to delete an app. Tarnow has compiled a list She sits down with her child, of credible app review sources watching how the child navi on the Bend-La Pine Schools gates the app. The effective website for p a rents ( blogs ness of the software quickly .bend.k12.or.us/instructional becomes evident. "If there are ads flashing up technology/current-blog-feed). Utzman also offered up her fa or it's confusing, then I delete vorites. The Bulletin included it," she said. "I think one of the most im a few of them here (see "App r ecommendations") but h a s portant things parents can do offered up her full list online is really be involved in know at ww w . b endbulletin.corn/ ing what the apps are doing," schoolapps. Utzman also likes she added. a Facebook pagecalled Smart • If you like an app, look for Apps for Kids. the developer. • C onsider paying f o r The app developer's website content. should tell you what other apps For younger children, Tar it has available. That informa now particularly recommends tion should be available by s pending a buck or tw o on searching for the app online or an app. Free apps often come in the venue you purchased it with ads, which the children from. "If they have one success then click on instead of inter acting with the app content. ful app, they have others," "They get derailed from the Utzman said. goal you' re trying to teach," — Reporter: 541-817-7828, she said. hhagemeierC~bendbulletin.corn
Fridge Continued from B1 It's a relatively recent inven tion, after all. If Socrates and Plato ate frozen dinners, they pulled them from pits filled with snow; if th e Founding Fathers wanted their Madeira wine chilled, they had ice that was cut from frozen lakes and stored in insulated icehouses. H umankind would have to wait for electricity to store its arugula and fish sticks at a specific temperature. When the refrigerator did appear, it was a luxury. In the 1920s, when a Model T Ford cost as little as $260, the first Frigidaire cost roughly $750. Fridges remain a b i g-ticket item, often the most expensive kitchen appliance. I bought my Kenmore on sale in 2008 for $1,900. A comparable replace ment costs at least $2,000. And that's a pretty modest model. On Amazon.corn, one refrig e rator appropriate fo r m y 130-square-foot kitchen costs almost $6,000. Since I'm not a Top Chef, I'd have trouble spending that much. Still, few A m ericans try to get by without a refrig erator — 99.9 percent of U.S. households have one, accord ing to the Energy Information Administration. But maybe the 0.1 percent knows better. Refrigerators complicate kitchen designs, break r e novation b u dgets, burn fossil fuels and force us to contend with Sears's some times unreliable "Customer Solutions" center. They don' t p revent A m e r icans fr o m throwing away 40 percent of the food we produce each year. And they change the way we eat,often fortheworse. For most of the past month, I' ve followed food writer Mi chael Pollan's three-pronged exhortation in "The Omni vore's Dilemma": "Fat food. Not too much. Mostly plants." My other alternative is a highly processed junk-food diet, but I can't feed my toddler only Ore os. But fresh fruit, vegetables and dairy products spoil, and our family can't do one weekly shopping trip anymore. With out a refrigerator, we shop at least every other day and try to cook and eat our purchases within a few days. This means we have less food in the house, so we eat less. Un less we order Thai take-out much of which is wasted since the overstuffedcooler doesn't have lotsof room for leftovers — we eat more healthfully. Then there's meat — or the lack of it. I' ve been a vegetar ian since 1995 and a vegan on and-off since 1998, so I don' t have much truck with dead animals. But even if I did, mod ern carnivores need an appli ance that keeps meat uniform ly chilly. I' ve pulled milk from the cooler and taken a chance if it smells funny, but would hesitate to play the same game with a pork chop. And since meat substitutes can be as dif
ficult to store as the real thing, I' ve ditched them, too. Fridge-free life closes many doors, but it opens others. If the Maytag on order never arrives, I might eat more raw food. I might get a dehydrator and make zestypineapple-banana fruit leather. I might pickle and can. I might garden. I might buy and share an industrial size walk-in with my neigh bors — we could store the unit between our backyards to chill essentials such as medication and strawberry shortcake ice cream bars. I'd definitely have a smaller supply of the fried, fatty, sugary, microwavable, wastefully packaged foods that often end up in deep freeze. If I'm avoiding frozen pizzas and bean burritos, am I saving any money or helping the plan et? To find out, I called Rein hard Radermacher, a professor of engineering at the University of Maryland. The German-born editor of the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air Conditioning Engineers' HVAC8 R Research journal, Radermacher confirmed that Europeans get by with much smaller fridges than Americans and said the appliance doesn' t devour much energy. "The conventional wisdom is that a r e f r igerator con sumes as much as a 50-watt light bulb," he said. "Over the last 30 years, the refrigerators have become so energy effi cient that they are a relatively small energy consumer in the household." According to Radermacher, unplugging the Kenmore will save about 700 kilowatt hours of electricity per year. At about 13 cents per k i l owatt-hour, that's roughly $90 Pepco won' t get — small savings that don' t justify daily ice runs. Cost considerations aside, could industrial society func tion without a refrigerator in every home? American yup pie urbanites surrounded by supermarkets ar e u n i quely p ositioned t o j e t t ison t h e fridge. If they get biodegrad able diapers, bottled water, groceries and raw milk deliv ered, why not ice for iceboxes, just like Granddad? Giant and Safeway let us ignore sound advice to eat local by bringing us tomatoes in January and wild salmon from Alaska. We could at least consume these luxuries before they go bad. I' ve been haggling to get a new fridge since the old one broke. Though my kid enjoys filling the cooler with ice and now insists on drinking "icy water," I don't want to continue this experiment. But my family could survive it. Two weeks into my fridge free life, I picked up a bag of produce at our local farm share. When I fretted that my okra, green beans, heirloom tomatoes and squash would rot, the woman behind the counter pointed out that they would probably do fine on the kitchen counter for a few days. She was right.
Over 40 Continued from B1 A c h air o v er, S u nny Bates, a n en t r epreneur (her age was "somewhere between 49 and 100," she said), started the m o rn ing with the sedate above the-shoulder bob in a cool blonde she had had for the last six years. Durif snipped the ends until a sleeker look emerged. He also gave her a fine undershave, albeit on one side. "It's like playing hide and-seek if she runs her fingers through her hair," Durif said. Johnstone then brushed on a gingery tint and the f i nishing touch: chunky white-blonde high l ights befitting a c o m i c book heroine. "I don't ever want to be p lain," Bates said of the change. "The worst thing is to look too suburban." But perhaps her friend Linda Holliday, chief exec utive of Citia, a book-digest company, was the boldest of the bunch. She chose s emipermanent, sw im ming-pool-blue streaks that gave her usual sunny hue a punkish cast. "It's like my last summer f l ing," said Holliday, who is in her 50s, though she was slightly in shock after she emerged from the color room. "I was at my stepdaugh ter's high school gradua tion a few months ago, and every one of those girls had the same straight long hair with th e $3 0 b l ow-dry," she said. "It's oppressive. I know a lot of it is about at tracting men, but if you' re c ookie-cutter, what k i n d of man are you going to attract?" Wild colors and innova tive hairstyles have reso nated with a subset of the young and carefree, but in the salons of major cit ies like New York, London and Los Angeles, women in their 40s, 50s, 60s and up have adopted the trend. Of ten, they are ditching their classic Be r g dorf-blonde coifs (aka Park A v enue blonde or Madison Avenue blonde) in favor of loud and dramatic statements.
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Photos by Emily Bert / New York Times News Service
Sunny Bates, who started with a blonde boband emerged with a sleeker look, a gingery tint and white-blonde highlights, gets her hair cut and colored at Yves Durif hair salon in New York.
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the colorist George Papan ikolas of the Andy Lecompte salon on North Almont Drive in West Hollywood. Most of g Papanikolas' famous clients, including the model Miranda Kerr, h ave n a t ural-colored strands, he said. "The Hunger Games," with characters sporting a rainbow of hues,may have infl uenced a wider audience, he said. Michael Van Clarke, a styl ner in the chain of Warren But in and around Los An ist in London who has tended T ricomi s alons, ha s b e en geles, "the cuts are still clas to several royal families at his p erforming w ha t h e c a l l s sic," Papanikolas said. "And "hair pollination" at the Plaza it's a temporary color accent salon, has had requests for "crazy color flashes around hotel location. The free-form like an ombre effect with the the hairline, dip-dying or un method ditches the coloring ends dipped." usual temporary color tones," brush in favor of hand-splat For example, he has doused he said. "It wasn't us suggest tering strands with hair dye, the ends of Gela Nash-Tay ing this. It was these very vi perhaps, as he showcased, in lor, a Juicy Couture founder, brant 50- an d 6 0-year-olds light aqua. in mint green. Wives of rich "Our older New York cli show-business ex e c utives who still want to compete, in a sense, with trendy young entele is very p r ogressive," have also asked for the look. women." Tricomi said, pointing to the "It's more of a 'I don't care' or He often uses temporary intersection of a r t , f a shion 'I'm having fun' energy," he color (he particularly l i kes and music in the city. "Besides said. Wella Perfecton, a n e w ish that, you have these 60-year Yet according to the stylists, olds — my generation — who this is not a case of mothers technology that won't stain blonde manes, he said) in wide are healthy, going to the gym imitating their daughters. "Ac streaks or all-over washes. It' s and feeling young. I certainly tually, the young women are best on w e ll-dressed, well don't look like my uncles and all requesting the same bor groomed women, Van Clarke aunts when they were that ing long cut," said Durif at the said, "because only if the rest age. These women are living Carlyle. " It's probably t h e econ of the package is quite refined full and wonderful lives." and confident does it work." Even in Southern Califor omy," J o h n stone a d d e d. "It's about the contrast of nia, the land of l ong locks "Young people are f eeling elegance with this shock of and sun streaks, women are vulnerable in their jobs, and hair," he added. edging to edgier. "It's not be so they go conservative with E dward Tricomi, a p a r t ing driven by celebrities," said their look." David John stone, the color director of the Yves Durif hair salon, col ors Dawn Bennett's hair.
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© www.bendbulletin.corn/local
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
LOCAL BRIEFING
FIXING MIRROR POND
ioaswan new ax isnc •
Parking garage to partially close The Centennial Park ing Garage in downtown Bend will be partially closed starting Monday. The garage will be closed from the second floor ramp to the top floor through Oct. 1 for maintenance work. Pass holders in the parking garage will still be able to park in the open por tion of the garage.
Bend mayor on UO alumni board
•
By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
Local officials said Tuesday they plan to spend $200,000 seeking a solution for the sediment buildup in Mirror Pond, including as much as $100,000 to find out what citi zens want to do. Options include dredg ing the pond, removing a hydroelectric dam to return the river to its natural flow and allowing silt to continue building up until the pond
turns into a mudflat. Members of the Mirror Pond Steering Committee met Tuesday and said their ul timate goal is to ask voters to approve a new tax district to pay for work on Mirror Pond, but first they must gauge public support for various options. "That's going to gain momentum, it's going to get people excited about forming a special district and fixing Mirror Pond," Don Horton,
Bend mayor Jeff Eager has been ap pointed to the Univer sity of Oregon Alumni Association's board of directors. Eager, the mayor of Bend and a partner with Balyeat, Eager and Steele, received his law degree from the univer sity in 2004. About 50 alumni serve on the board and meet quarterly to set policies for the organi zation. — Bulletin staff reports
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executive director of the Bend Park 8 Recreation District, said of the public process. The remainder of the $200,000 can be used to obtain permits and other work to prepare for whichever option is selected during the public process, committee members said. The steering committee in cludes officials from the city and the park district, as well as Bill Smith, whose compa ny William Smith Properties Inc. owns the dam upstream
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from the pond; a representa tive of Pacific Power, which owns the dam that created Mirror Pond; and a member of Bend 2030, a civic group. The $200,000 was pledged earlier this year by the city and the park district, each of which plans to contribute $100,000. Officials have estimated the cost of dredging to be between $2 million and $5 million. SeePond/C5
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• The Dallas:Doctor who sexually abused patients sentenced.
• Corvallis:Deputy
Rob Kerri The Bulletin
Students take a test in a science class at Redmond Proficiency Academy on Tuesday.
FIRE UPDATE
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fit,i 1. Pole Creek Fire • Acres: 16,500 • Containment: 15% • Cause: Under investigation 2. Waterfalls 2 Fire • Acres: 12,265 • Containment: 100% • Cause: Lightning 3. Bear Slide Fire • Acres: 1,672 • Containment: 5% • Cause: Lightning
By Ben Botkin The Bulletin
REDMOND — Redmond Proficiency Academy has started the school year with a new campus for students in sixth through ninth grades. The public charter school's additional location in Redmond provides a set ting that allows it to reach younger students and ex pand its reach beyond high school grades. The charter school originally opened for high school students in 2009 in downtown Redmond. That campus continues to be used for 10th through 12th grade students, as well as any younger students ready for
advanced courses. The new west cam pus, near Redmond High School, is home to about 250 students. The school occupies a building where Redmond High freshmen formerly attended classes. The Redmond School Dis trict leased the building to the academy after the district opened its new Rid geview High School. Charter schools are public schools that have more flexibility than their traditional counterparts to try different approaches to education. "We tell kids, if you' re bored at RPA, it's your fault," said Greg Scott, as sistant director of the char
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ter school. For high school students, classes are taught in an open setting that prepares them for college. Students are free to come and go when not in class. Unlike the high school program, sixth- through eighth-grade students don' t have an open campus set ting. For the ninth-graders, it's up to their parents to decide if their student has that privilege. Students also can take courses based on their skill level rather than their grade level. They are encouraged to develop projects based on their strengths and inter ests, such as robotics or art. For the younger students,
It's shaping up to be a quiet electionseason in Madras, as all City Council races feature uncontested incumbents. Mayor Melanic Widmer is running for her third term. Incumbent councilors Royce Embanks Jr. and Tom Brown are running for two of three open council seats. The council seat vacated by Kevin O'Meara will go to the person with the most write-in votes who accepts the posi tion. If no write-in candidate accepts, the City Council will appoint someone. Terms are two years for the mayor and four years for council members. The positions are unpaid and nonpartisan. With no campaigns to worry about, the candi dates say they are focused on issues like planning for development andhighway improvements.
much of that continues. Stu dents in math, science and English classes receive their instruction based on skill level instead of their grade. Learners have different strengths, and it's impor tant to address gaps in a student's skills without stig matizing them, Scott said. "There's no shame in going back and filling that gap," he said. There also are opportuni ties for middle school-level students to start earning high school credits. For example, seventh- and eight-grade students can take high school-level biol ogy and math classes before they reach ninth grade. SeeCharter /C2
Brown said one of his pri orities is for the city to devel op a plan to manage growth as the economy rebounds and development returns. He said the city should encourage development at the Madras Airport Industrial Park, a 125-acre site with highway and rail access. Embanks, who has served three full terms on the City Council after being appointed in 2003, agreed that the air port industrial park will be critical for bringing manufac turing jobs to the city. There are plans to widen runways and update the railroad spur there, which should make the industrial park more attrac tive to developers, he said. See Madras /C2
MadrasCityCouncil THREEPOSITIONS OPEN
MAYOR
Two unopposed, plus a writeah Unopposed
6
Tom Brown
Royce Emdanks Jr.
Melanic Widmer
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Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. For the latest information, visit www.nwccweb .us/information/ firemap.aspx.
For our complete coverage, visit www.bendbulletin.corn/elections
By joel Aschbrenner
STATE NEWS
wounded in firefight gets out of hospital. • Ashland:State legislator supports pot legalization.
tSK= ELECTION: NOV. 6
OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS Educational news and activities, and local kids and their achievements. • School Notes and submission info,C6
During his sophomore year, Daniel Schimmoller did some thing a lot of teenagers his age wouldn't have the guts to do. Despite having no experience in singing and no ability to read music, Daniel got up on stage and sang in front of a group of judges. "You' re not going to get a lot out of life if you don't challenge your self in some way," Daniel, 17, said. Daniel is a Mountain View High School senior who isn't afraid to try new things. He's a football jock, a singer, an actor, a volunteer with the High Desert Museum and an expert at giving speeches — and he does it all while keep ing a 3.9 GPA. He's also a hard worker, recently getting a perfect score in the reading component of his SATs, and scoring in the 99th
percentile on the other areas of the test. "He's talented at everything he tries, but he's also very humble about it," Mountain View High School counselor Shanna Han cock said. Daniel's desire to get the most from his high school experience led him to try out for a musical in his sophomore year. Despite hav ing no musical background, he ended up with one of the lead roles in the Mountain View production of "Aida." "I love being the center of atten tion," Daniel said, smiling. "And there's not many better ways to get attention than getting up on stage." Keeping in theme with his love of the limelight, Daniel has also participated in speech and debate the past few years. SeeStudent/CB
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TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
Charter Continued from C1 " When they start a t t h e high school, they' ll go onto the next level of class," said Amy Mitchell, a science teacher at the school. "They' ll already have a year under their belt. S eventh-graders may h a v e two years." The charter is a proficiency based school, which means s tudents have flexibility i n demonstrating their k n owl edge. For example, a student w ho doesn't test w ell c a n show what he has learned by completing an approved sci ence project that shows his or her understanding. Students at the school Tues day said they enjoyed RPA for a variety of reasons. Taylor Carlson and Quinn
"(The school's) just a lot better. It seems like I have more time with the teachers." — Cody Wideman, eighth-grader
By Ben Botkin The Bulletin
Hannah, both 13-year olds in seventh grade, said the educa tors are patient with students. "They don't yell at y ou," Taylor said. Adryan Holly, 13, a sev enth-grader, said he likes the school environment, which is absent bullying or overcrowd ed hallways. Cody Wideman, an eighth grader, agreed. "It's just a lot better," he said. "It seems like I have more time with t h e teachers." The campus has ties to the high school location. Students in 10th through 12th grade can use the facility as well.
For example, the band room in the new location is avail able for high school students involved in music programs. A room for a r obotics pro gram will be available to high school and middle school-level students. At th e s am e t i me, s t u dents in middle school can take advanced classesat the downtown campus. A transit shuttle service is available for transportation. "We tell people we' re one school with two campuses," Scott said. — Reporter: 541-977-7185, bbotlzin@bendbulletin.corn
NEWS OF RECORD
POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358. Bend Police Department
Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at10:06 a.m. Sept. 14, in the 700 block of Northwest 14th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:01 p.m. Sept. 14, in the 1400 block of Northwest College Way. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered and an arrest made atty:11 p.m. Sept. 14, in the 19900 block of Porcupine Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:59 a.m. Sept. 15, in the 19500 block of Mirror Lake Place. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 3:47 p.m. Sept. 15, in the 900 block of Northeast Lena Place. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 5:27 a.m. Sept. 16, in the 2600 block of Northeast Neff Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:45 p.m. Sept. 16, in the 200 block of Northwest Greenwood Avenue. DUII —Zachary Glenn Mathews, 33, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:51 p.m. Sept. 16, in the area of Southwest Reed Market Road and Alderwood Circle. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 11:22 p.m. Sept. 16, in the 600 block of Northeast Franklin Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 1 1 a.m. Sept. 17, in the 63000 block of Sherman Road. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 2:14 p.m. Sept. 17, in the1800 block of Northwest Glassow Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:50 p.m. Sept. 16, in the 400 block of Southwest Powerhouse Drive. Redmond Police Department
Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:52 a.m. Sept. 10, in the 3000 block of Southwest Obsidian Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 11:01 a.m. Sept. 10, in the 2900 block of Southwest Indian Circle. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:50 a.m. Sept. 10, in the 3000 block of Southwest 28th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at f:05 p.m. Sept. 10, in the 1200 block of Northeast Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 3:39 p.m. Sept. 10, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 4:28 p.m. Sept. 10, in the1700 block of Southwest Odem Medo Road. Theft —A theft was reported and two arrests made at 4:34 p.m. Sept. 10, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:51 p.m. Sept. 10, in the 2500 block of Southwest Helmholz Way. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 5:16 p.m. Sept. 10, in the area of Southwest Canyon Drive and Southwest Highland Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 5:46 p.m. Sept. 10, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 6:43 p.m. Sept. 10, in the1700 block of Southwest Odem Medo Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:17 p.m. Sept. 10, in the 500 block
Redmond fire burns 2homes
of Southwest Rimrock Way. Burglary —A burglary was reported at10:38 p.m. Sept. 10, in the 1600 block of Southwest 27th Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:29a.m. Sept.11, inthe500 block of Northwest Canyon Drive. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at10:01 a.m. Sept. 11, in the 700 block of Northwest Maple Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 11:04 a.m. Sept. 11, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:20a.m. Sept.11, inthe4500 block of Southwest Elkhorn Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:45 p.m. Sept. 11, in the 2500 block of Southwest Wickiup Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:58 p.m. Sept. 11, in the 600 block of Southwest Rimrock Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:50 p.m. Sept. 1 1, in the 1700 block of Southwest Odem Medo Road. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:20 a.m. Sept. 12, in the 400 block of Northwest Sixth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:55 a.m. Sept. 12, in the 4500 block of Southwest Elkhorn Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 10:15 a.m. Sept. 12, in the 2000 block of Southwest Badger Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported at10:55a.m. Sept.12, in the 2600 block of Southwest 23rd Street. DUII —Debra Joan Wayne, 53, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 11:51 a.m. Sept.12, in the1400 block of West Antler Avenue. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 6:51 p.m. Sept. 12, in the area of Northwest19th Street and West Antler Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at12:13 a.m. Sept. 13, in the 3100 block of Southwest Pumice Place. DUII —Kaycee Lee Weeks, 24, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:16 a.m. Sept. 13, in the 1400 block of Southwest Sam Johnson Park. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:52 a.m. Sept. 13, in the 2800 block of Southwest 25th Street. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 9:58 a.m. Sept. 13, in the 900 block of Southwest Veterans Way. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 10:02 a.m. Sept. 13, in the 500 block of Southwest Seventh Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 10:10a.m. Sept.13, inthe1700 block of Southwest Odem Medo Road. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 1:01 p.m. Sept.13, in the 600 block of Southwest Glacier Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at f:02 p.m. Sept.13, in the 500 block of Southwest Sixth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at f:59 p.m. Sept. 13, in the 600 block of Southwest Rimrock Way. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 2:02 p.m. Sept. 13, in the 500 block of Southwest Seventh Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 2:42 p.m. Sept. 13, in the 600 block of Southwest Rimrock Way. DUII —Alejandro Jesus Vazquez, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 11:13 p.m. Sept. 13, in the area of Southwest Sixth Street
Fin It All
and Southwest Evergreen Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:23 a.m. Sept. 14, in the 2300 block of Northwest fath Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:39 p.m. Sept.14, in the 200 block of Southwest Rimrock Way. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:23 p.m. Sept. 14, in the 2800 block of Southwest Juniper Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:18 p.m. Sept. 14, in the 200 block of Northwest Larch Avenue. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 4:35 p.m. Sept. 14, in the area of East state Highway126 and Southeast Veterans Way. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at10:08 p.m. Sept. 14, in the area of Southeast Airport and Southeast Veterans ways. DUII —Nicolas Medrano-Garcia, 37, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:32 a.m. Sept. 15, in the area of Southwest10th Street and Southwest Evergreen Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:04a.m. Sept.15, in the 2400 block of Southwest Wickiup Court. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 6:50 a.m. Sept. 15, in the 1300 block of Southwest Canal Boulevard. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered, an act of criminal mischief reported and an arrest made at 7:21 a.m. Sept.15, in the 1200 block of Northeast Third Street. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 9:15 a.m. Sept. 15, in the area of Northwest19th Street and Northwest Ivy Avenue. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at12:23 p.m. Sept. 15, in the area of Southwest Canal Boulevard and Southwest Reindeer Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:19 p.m. Sept. 15, in the 900 block of Southwest Veterans Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:16 p.m. Sept. 15, in the 600 block of East Antler Avenue. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 8:52 p.m. Sept. 15, in the 2100 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported, a vehicle was reported entered and an arrest made at10:38 p.m. Sept. 15, in the area of Southwest 35th Street and Southwest QuartzAvenue. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 11:27 p.m. Sept. 15, in the area of 35th Street and Southwest Obsidian Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:51 a.m. Sept.16, inthe 2200 block of Southwest Lava Court. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:12 p.m. Sept. 16, in the 2300 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:14 p.m. Sept. 16, in the 900 block of Southwest 23rd Street. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at10:28 p.m. Sept. 16, in the 2500 block of Southeast Jesse Butler Circle.
A f ir e heavily damaged a house Tuesday in r u r al R edmond, and t h e b l a z e spread to a second house af ter a propane tank exploded. Redmond Fire 8 Rescue re sponded at 4:30 p.m. to a fully engulfed two-story house at 10097 Juniper Glen Circle in the Eagle Crest subdivision, said Fire Marshal Traci Coo per. The occupants escaped uninjured. The fire spread to a house nearby at 10271 Sundance Ridge Loop, the fire depart ment said. The blaze dam aged the side of that house and caught a tree on fire, but spread no further. The occupants of the sec ond house weren't home. The cause of the fire is under investigation, Cooper said. Neighbors helped keep the flames down with hoses at the second house while wait ing for the fire department, witnesses said. "We heard an explosion and looked out," said Dave White, a n eighbor. "There
was stuff flying u 100 feet in the air." Norm Notdurft, another neighbor, said he heard a series of four bangs. He said neighbors got hoses and wa tered down the second struc ture, a crucial act. "They saved the house," Notdurft said. The Red Cross was noti fied to assist the occupants of the two homes, whose names weren't immediately avail
able late Tuesday. Besides Redmond, f i r e f ighters r e sponded f r o m Bend, Sisters, Black Butte, Crooked River Ranch, the Bureau of L a n d M a nage ment, the Oregon Depart ment of Forestry and the U.S. Forest Service. Oregon State Police and Deschutes County deputies provided support. — Reporter: 541-977-7185, bbotlzin@bendbulletin.corn
Madras
apart. On J Street, near where the highway splits, the dis Continued from C1 tance between the two lanes is only 50 feet — too little Highway 97 improvement room for vehicles to safely A nother ke y i s sue f o r wait to cross or turn onto the Madras, council candidates highway, according to ODOT. agreed, is the reconfigura The city has already put tion of the U.S. Highway 97 $350,000 toward the project J Street intersection at the and has petitioned the state to southern entrance of town. put in a stoplight to make the The s o -called M a d ras intersection safer, Embanks South Y Project to realign said. the highway is expected to ODOT officials have said cost $18 million, according a stoplight will likely be in to the Oregon Department of cluded in a later phase of the Transportation. project. In Madras, the highway Brown, who is running for splits into north- and south his second term after being bound lanes running a block appointed in 2009, said the
city will apply for federal grants to raise its $2.5 million share of the project. Construction on the intersec tion is slated to being in 2014, according to ODOT. Widmer was f irst elected mayor in 2008 and served two terms on the City Council be fore that. She was unavailable for comment this week. — Reporter: 541-833-2184, jaschbrenner@bendbulletin.corn
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Burglary —A burglary was reported at 8:29 a.m. Sept. 17, in the area of Northwest Deer Street. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 11:55 a.m. Sept. 17, in the area of Northeast Laughlin Street.
Tract Cooper /Submitted photo
A firefighter works to extinguish a blaze at a home in the Eagle Crest subdivision of Redmond.
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
C3
REGON NEWS SEASIDE FIRE INJURES 1
Legislator supports pot legalization The Associated Press MEDFORD — A prominent state lawmaker has given his support to M easure 80, an initiative that would legalize marijuana. State Rep. Peter Buckley has served as co-chairman of the Legislature's Ways and Means Committee for the past two sessions. The Ashland Democrat told the Mail Tribune newspaper he supports regulating mari juana in a manner similar to the regulation of alcohol un der the Oregon Liquor Control Commission. Leg a l ization would take the "black market"
out of Oregon, he said. Oregon voters will decide this November on the Oregon Cannabis Tax Act. The mea sure would legalize, regulate and tax marijuana consumed by adults. Buckley said medical mari juana, which the state already allows, has legal loopholes that have frustrated law en forcement and led to abuse. "I do think it's a problem with some medical marijuana growers," he said. "They' ve gotten greedy." According to the YES on 80 campaign, legalizing mari juana could save $60 million
annually in law enforcement costs. Taxing it could bring in an extra $140 million. Un der the proposal, marijuana would be purchased through state-run stores. Even if the law is passed, the federal government might question Oregon's authority to legalize the drug. But Buckley said the national debate could change if enough states follow Oregon's lead. "Hopefully, the federal government will see the light," he said. State Rep. Dennis Rich a rdson, R - C entral Po i n t , co-chaired with Buckley the powerful Ways and M eans
Committee. He doesn't sup port legalizing marijuana but said the state needs a rational debate about whether it wants to legalize cannabis or start cracking down on violations. Like Buckley, he finds the current m edical m a r ijuana law flawed. "It i s b a sically l egaliza tion through a back-door ap proach," Richardson said. Though Measure 80 would add tax dollars to the finan cially challenged state, Rich ardson said he's reluctant to create a new bureaucracy to track the process and is wary of creating another "sin tax."
Doctor gets 23yearsfor sexually abusingpatients
k fry Wendy Richardson /The Daily Astorian
A firefighter breaks open a windowin a vacant laundry build ing Tuesday as smoke billows out from inside during a fire in Seaside. The fire started in the laundry, Police Chief Bob Gross said, sent one person the the hospital and damaged at least three buildings.
Deputy wounded in gunfight goes home The Associated Press CORVALLIS — A B enton County deputy has been re leased from a Corvallis hospital five weeks after he was wound ed in an exchange of gunfire. Sgt. David Peterson, 32, was shot twice in the leg and once in the lower abdomen during the Aug. 11 gunfight. His father, Dan Peterson, told the Corval lis Gazette-Times that the re covery has been complicated and painful. "He's looking forward to go ing home, and he has a long recovery ahead of him," Dan P eterson said M o nday. H e declined to provide more de tails, citing his son's wish for privacy. David Peterson and another law enforcement officer were shot while searching for Dem ecio Cardenas, who ran into heavy brush after crashing a stolen car just south of the Ben ton-Polk county line, authori ties said. A tracking dog located a man, and the gunfight fol lowed. Cardenas, Peterson and Cpl. Andrew Connolly, of the Salem Police Department, were all wounded. Connolly w as treated and released on the night of the shooting. The Benton County district attorney said officers were jus tified in their use of force. Cardenas, a fugitive from California, pleaded not guilty from his h ospital bed l a st month to charges of attempted aggravated murder and other felonies. His Benton County tri al is scheduled to start Oct. 22.
Feds raid medical pot operation The Associated Press PORTLAND Federal agents have raided the medical marijuana operation of James Bowman, the man widely con sidered to be the largest and most outspoken grower in the state. The Oregonian reports that U.S. Drug Enforcement Ad ministration agents raided the High Hopes Farm in Jackson County on Tuesday morning. B owman is a f i x t ur e i n Southern Oregon's medical marijuana community. He said in April that he would grow about 400 plants this year for 200 patients.
The Associated Press T HE DALLES — An a n esthesiologist wh o p l eaded guilty to sexually abusing in capacitated patients was sen tenced Tuesday to 23 years in prison.
Dr. Frederick Field, 46, was arrested in July 2011 after two victims came forward to allege abuse. In the end, 12 victims, including co-work ers, said they were abused by Field from 2007 to 2011.
S ome women said t h ey awoke as Field touched them. Others said they thought their memories were dreams until the doctor was arrested. In the cases involving co workers, according to pros
ecutors, Field asked if they wanted medication to ease a headache or some other ail ment. He then took them into a room and administered medi cation that incapacitated them before they were abused.
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Francis Hansen Bi Martin, LLP
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C4
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
overnmen S Oll n'su e u icou
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
of duty. The county's interview process for the candidates for the admin istrator job mostly shut the pub lic out. What should a potential county administrator conclude about Deschutes County govern ment but that openness, transpar ency and the obligation to inform the public are just a bunch of nice words? When it comes down to it, the county's playbook is to have the real discussions behind closed dool's. The county brought in five can didates for interviews and held a public meet and greet. The real in terview process began by shuttling the candidates into four interview panels. Here's a breakdown of the pub lic access to those panels: Panel 1. Closed to the public. Panel 2. Closed to the public. Panel 3. Closed to the public. Panel 4. Closed to the public. One panel was held in execu tive session with the three county commissioners. The three other panels were held with county staff, city councilors from the area and
staff from E conomic Develop ment of Central Oregon, a private nonprofit. Technically, under Oregon pub lic meetings law, the county can flee to the fortress called Wedid nothingillegal. The county com missioners can meet in executive session to discuss personnel mat ters. And the other panels don't fit under the legal umbrella that re quires the public to be allowed into the meeting. "In an interview process you want to get to know the candidates and they may answer differently if the public is there," explained Eric Kropp, the interim county administrator. You bet they will. And that is not good for the public. The county is trying to make a critical decision about one of the most powerful and highest-paid positions in county government.
De schutes County should not cower behind what is legally nec essary. The lesson commissioners taught its candidates is that it's OK to shield what's going on from the public.
Bend's Community Center faces tough obstades
t
f good intentions were enough, Bend's Community C e nter would be t h riving. Instead, most of its programs are shut down while the food service con tinues on a week-to-week basis. There's a good chance the center will shut down entirely. That would be a tremendous loss to the community, the sad re sult of tough times, bad luck and failure to act decisively in the face of mounting difficulties. Other nonprofits are f amil iar with the challenges; it takes imaginative thinking and nerves of steel to overcome the obsta cles, and even that might not be enough. In retrospect, the center's board Chairman Bruce Abernethy says, the decision to stay on course as finances deteriorated over t he spring and summer was a mis take. Most glaring was the con tinuation of the thrift store, which was expected to provide revenue but instead became a significant drain on finances. The budget was also hurt by the end of a job-training program that provided extra help, failure to get a line of credit to even out cash flow, loss of a grant and disap pointing results from fundraisers.
In recent years, the community center has provided critical ser vices to less fortunate residents, including meals for the needy, shower and laundry facilities for the homeless, a bicycle refurbish ment operation and a c lothes bailing program, among others. It welcomed the Central Oregon Council on Aging lunch program for seniors when it moved out of the Bend Park & Recreation Dis trict's Senior Center. Among the challenges for the thrift store was that it ended up giving away goods to people with vouchers. The vouchers were giv en out by the community center and other organizations to people in need. The center didn't pull the plug, Abernethy said, because the program did serve a social pur pose. But the result was a monthly loss of about $6,000 to $7,000 instead of the expected gain of $7,000 to $8,000. That points to the crucial di lemma. The nonprofit existed to do that kind of social good. But by trying to do more than it could support, it may have lost it all. Good people were trying mightily to do good things, but a tougher, more realistic assessment was needed.
Chainoornan Pahtisher
JOHN COSTA
Editor-in- Chief Edi tor of Edaori als
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he first lesson Deschutes County's new administra tor may have learned from the county is: dereliction
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PSTOP tIOW.'!!
Follow political money to find who has the power in election By Les Lambert Election Day's coming; it's re minder time. Voters — especially those who only pay attention around elections — are targets of massively expensive advertising seeking their votes. Voters who haven't paid atten tion can get fooled. Awakening vot ers, remember this: Follow the mon ey — it's all about power and greed. Ambitions for wealth and power brought us second-rate Republican candidates, reliant on support from special interests. Republican favor ites remained on the sidelines. Chris Christie, Mitch Daniels, and Jeb Bush all foresaw winning in 2012 would give them one thankless term. They behaved as if severe spending cuts, plus tax cuts for the wealthy, would earn them a special place in history, alongside Herbert Hoover and George W. Bush. Instead, we saw Romney limp ahead during primary challenges from other second-rate hop efuls — Perry, Gingrich, Bachmann, San torum, etc. — making ill-considered bids for power. Worse yet, we' ve been victims of politicians openly in tent on defeating Obama's economic and jobs policies to aid recovery. Why? To deny Obama any success that might propel him to a second term. While tying Obama's hands, they claimed his leadership delayed economic recovery and then spread doubt and uncertainty, which defi nitely impaired recovery. They hope you didn't notice John Boehner, ap pearing stricken with gas pains, dur ing the State of the Union, as Obama emphasized, "Pass this bill." Very
IN MY VIEW big money is at work to distract you from noticing, remembering or even from voting. Why distraction and voter sup pression? Well, Marie A ntoinette proved the slogan HLet them eat cake" isn't effective. And several governments have recently fallen in Europe from attempts to abruptly switch to more austerely conserva tive fiscal policies. Some distractions push a rgu ments that can't pass the laugh test. H Examples: Obama had a near veto proof Democratic Congress for his first two years." (Keith Sime, I I/7/I I), or "... encouraging class warfare by promoting his tax-the-rich agenda." (Larry Fulkerson, 4/28/12). Veto override requires two-thirds of the House and Senate. In the Sen ate, Obama had 60 votes for a while — when Ted Kennedy left his death bed to vote. Most times, Republicans filibustered — well over 360 times since 2007 — to forestall votes on key Democratic or Obama initiatives (ask Elizabeth Warren). And since when is the "Buffet Rule" class war fare? It's simply equal treatment of different taxpayers. And then there's voter suppression. The Republicans want Obama vot ers, motivated by hope for change, to feel despondent and betrayed so they won't vote again. With little change due to Republican obstruction, those voters probably do feel despondent. But, betrayed by a Republican Con gress, they should also be very an
gry, and throw out every Republican Congressman in sight, starting with Greg Walden, who voted consis tently with John Boehner to obstruct Obama policy initiatives. Making voters feel disinclined to vote isn't enough for some Repub licans. They want to disqualify as many likely Democratic voters as they can, through voter ID (purport edly anti-voting fraud) measures. They are "solving" a problem (im personating a qualified voter) that doesn't exist. And, since really nasty mud-slinging has been shown to give swing voters a strong distaste for the whole process, we' re getting millions of dollars of very negative campaign advertising, to see how many inde pendent voters can be turned off, dis couraged from even voting. Follow the money, if you can. Thanks to Bush Supreme Court ap pointees and the Citizens United de cision, that's tough. Super PACs fund a barrage of commercials favoring candidates who advocate gutting regulations designed to prevent fu ture disasters like underregulated banking and global warming. Want to find who's funding those commer cials? Good luck. I'd rebut some of the other silly stuff said recently in readers' In My View pieces. But my "free speech" on this page is limited to 650 words per month. To say more, I'd have to pay for advertising. So my "voice" isn't near as loud as that of the oil bil lionaire Koch brothers, who recently gave Tim Knopp $5,000to promote his no-new-taxes agenda. — Les Lambert lives in Bend.
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Nature of journalism makes plagiarism a complicated issue By Edward Wasserman
seen an enormous fuss surrounding the high-profile cases of Fareed Za ne of the first things I learned karia (who was forgiven for his pilfer in my first newsroom job was age) and Jonah Lehrer (who wasn' t), how to use a thick, black pen as well as a spate of lesser-known cil to transform an official press re malefactors. lease into a news story. You crossed Craig Silverman, who bird-dogs out the letterhead and contact infor news practices for the Poynter Insti mation, made a few style fixes, put ... tute, calls it HJournalism's Summer where you wanted it to end and sent it of Sin," and chronicled the cascade to the typesetters. of cases where writers either made The information was newsworthy, things up or stole work from others, it was fully sourced and nobody cared while their bosses, confronted with the that it hadn't been reported and writ evidence, waffled. ten by staff journalists. Originality Now, I'm with Silverman in regard wasn't a big concern. ing fabrication as indefensible and It is now. You, as a member of the spineless bureaucrats as contempt public, might not rank this among ible. But my main interest is in the your top five beefs with the media, third and most numerous of these sins but plagiarism has become the roar — so-called plagiarism — and in the ing hot center of a moral panic among zeal with which textual borrowings journalists. In recent months we' ve are being ferreted out and denounced The Miami Herald
O
as a sign of moral failure. My fear is that what's condemned as plagiarism is actually a slippery thing, and sometimes comes so close to what journalists are supposed to do that if we' re not careful, we' ll end up not so much protecting originality, but crimi nalizing routines that are integral to some of the most broadly beneficial practices of contemporary reporting. Now, I' ve said something like this before (I need to acknowledge that because I might otherwise be accused of self-plagiarism, a new entry in the catalogue of professional sins) but it bears repeating: Journalism isn't built on imaginative originality. It's a quint essentially derivative enterprise. The journalist who's original, in the sense that we apply that term to poets or nov elists, needs to be fired,because he or she is fabricating.
The whole point of journalism is to reproduce information gathered in one place for the benefit of people who wouldn't know about it otherwise. It's the journalist's deliberate lack of originality that we value; we call it accuracy. I'm teasing, but only a little. News reporting is all about the determined quest for facts and ideas that origi nate elsewhere. Nowadays, thanks to the unprecedented bounty of relevant work online, the pressure on journal ists to background their work more thoroughly than ever is intense. That's a huge benefit to the rest of us. The labor of journalists in casting their nets wide and drawing from what they catch makes the immense abundance of the Internet accessible to all of us. Yes, this appropriation should be done properly. Original expression
and fresh discovery should be ac knowledged, so that innovators and pioneers get the credit they deserve and the public gets a true picture of how facts are brought to light. There's a wistfulness underlying the plagiarism panic, a longing for the era of journalism before today's curation and aggregation sites, which extend reach at the expense of stature. It was a day when authorship conveyed au thority and vital reporting stood alone for a moment, to be honored or re viled, instead ofbeing instantaneously transformed into grist for ten thou sand websites. Much great work came of that, and we can only hope that we' ll be able to say as much for the era that is succeeding it. — Edward Wasserman is Knight professor of journalism ethics at Washington and Lee University.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
C5
OREGON NEWS
Board legislation ontrack
BITIj ARIES DEATH NOTICES Delbert Leroy Kline, of Prineville Sept. 3, 1929 - Sept. 15, 2012 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals Redmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services to be held. Contributions may be made to:
Pioneer Memorial Home Health and Hospice, 1201 N. Elm, Prineville, OR 97754.
Donald Paul Schreiber, of Redmond April 1, 1931 - Sept. 15, 2012 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our online guestbook www. redmondmemo rial.corn Services: No services will be held at this time.
Edith Lucille (Addington) Root, of Redmond June 4, 1926 - Sept. 15, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.corn Services: No services will be taking place.
Eugene "Gene" M. Negus, of Bend Mar. 19, 1921 - Sept. 16, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471, www.niswonger-reynolds.corn
Services: A gathering of family will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701.
Francis Harkin, of Bend Oct. 10, 1927 - Sept. 14, 2012 Services: No services are scheduled at this time.
James Adron Sanders II, of Redmond Feb. 15, 1939 - Sept. 13, 2012 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our online guestbook www.redmondmemorial.corn Services: A memorial service will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
National Law enforcement Officers Memorial Fund www.lawmemorial.org
Treville "Terry" Hay Barber, of Sisters May 1, 1921- Sept. 9, 2012 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals Redmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Memorial Service: 11:00am, Thurs., Sept. 20, Community Presbyterian Church, 529 NW 19th St., Redmond.
Leland Conley Landers, of Bend Nov. 5, 1930 - Sept. 14, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471, www.niswonger-reynolds.corn
Services: A memorial service will be held at 1:00 pm on Saturday, September 22, 2012 at Christian Life Center, 21720 U.S. 20, Bend, OR. Contributions may be made
to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701.
Louise Baker Wenrich
Donald Paul Schreiber
Oct. 27, 1931 - Sept. 15, 2012
April 1, 1931 - Sept. 15, 2012
Louise passed away Sat urday, September 15, 2012, in Redmond, OR . L ouise was b or n i n E u gene, Oregon, and was the d aughter o f M a r t h a a n d James B a k e r . S he at tended St. Mary' s, Eugene High School a nd U. o f O. She spent much of h er t i m e in he r Louise B. y out h %enrich enjoying horses and spending sum m ers at th e f a m il y r a n c h on Kiger Island in Corval lis, OR. S he m o ve d to Pow e l l Butte with her husband in 1 989, and b u i l t t h e i r r e tirement home. S he enjoyed bowling o n leagues and d o ing v o l u n teer work at the Prineville Senior Center. They t r av eled throughout the United States and enjoyed enter taining friends and family d uring t h e s u m m e r s i n Central Oregon . S he is s u r v ived b y h e r h usband, B e n W en r i c h , d aughter, C h a r l otte H o l land of Prineville, OR, son, B ruce A b b ot t o f S p r i n g field, OR, Fritz Wenrich of Creswell OR, Sharon Wen r ich o f L a s C r u c es, N M , N ita Belles o f B e nd , O R ; g randdaughters, Geo r j i Brown o f C o eu r d ' A l ene, I D, Kara W e n r ich o f L o s Angeles, CA, T r i sta Wen r ich o f L a s C r u c es, N M ; grandsons, Andy Belles of S an D i ego, C A , J e r e m y Wenrich of P o r tland, OR; and three great-grandchil dren. A memorial service w i l l b e held o n F r i d ay , S e p tember 21, at 11:00 a.m., at A utumn Funeral H ome i n R edmond, OR. M e m o r i a l contributions may be made to Redmond Hospice or the American Cancer Society. T he family w o ul d l i k e t o thank Hospice for the care and love they o f fered her and the family du r ing her p assing. Sh e w a s l o v e d a nd will be f orever in ou r h earts and missed by h e r family and friends so very much. Please visit w w w .autum n funerals.org t o l e ave a n o nline condolence for t h e family.
Donald P au l S c h r eiber, b orn in Portland, OR. A t tended schools in Portland i ncluding P o r t l an d S t a t e College (University) where h e e a rned a d eg r e e i n mathematics. As a y o u th , Bo y S c outs were a big part of his life. H e achieved the Order of the Arrow and later served a s C am p Co u n s elor a t Camp M er i w e t he r in
Tillamook. D on b e ga n h i s ca r e e r with the Internal Revenue Service in Portland, and in 1 970, m e t and married Barbara (Mauldin). H e served i n t h e U. S . Army from 1955-1957, and w as stationed at F t . C a r s on, CO, i n t h e M i l i t a r y Police unit. Don was a n a v i d g o l f er a nd belonged t o J u n i p er Golf Club. H e w a s also a skilled woodworker. S urvived b y h i s w i fe , Barbara; a son , K u r t ( Jennifer) in A u burn, W A ; a s t e p -daughter, L y n d a L ewis (Jason) o f T i g a r d , OR; seven g r andchildren; and f ou r g r e at-grandchil dren. No services will be held. Memorial cont r i b u t ions may be m ade t o P a rtners In Care Hospice, Bend or Z ion Lu t h e ra n Ch u r c h , Redmond (Building Fund). R edmond Mem or i a l Chapel is honored to serve the family.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Russell Train, 92: Former head of th e E nvironmental Protection Agency and first president of the World Wild life Fund's American chapter. Died Sept. 17 in Maryland. Louis Simpson, 89: Pulitzer Prize-winning poet who told tales of common people and often cast a skeptical eye on the American dream. Died Friday at his home in Stony Brook, N.Y. Santiago Carrillo, 97: Veteran Spanish Communist P arty leader and Civil War combat ant; he spent 38 years in exile in France. Died Tuesday at his home in Madrid. — From wire reports
Bidwell W. 'Bud' Alexander Feb. 3, 1943- Sept. 13, 2012 B idwell W . ' Bud' A l e x a nder, ag e 6 9 , o f Red m ond, passed away S e p tember 13, 2012, at home. H e was born F ebruary 3 , 1943, in Portland, • O R, to E rnest t e Edith
(Mulanax)
Alex ander. Bud moved w ith the Bud Alexander family a chi l d f rom S h e r w ood, O R , t o Central Oregon in the late 1940s. He grew up and at tended school at Redmond. He ma rr i e d D ian a Johnson on A p ri l 2 , 1966, i n Corvallis, OR. With t h e family b ac k g r o un d in ranching, in 1967, he took a job running a feed lot in H ermiston, OR. T h e n e x t year, his father had an ac c ident an d b r ok e h i s l e g necessitating Bu d t o r e t urn an d r u n t h e f a m i l y r anch. Over th e n ex t f e w years, he worked with Bos ton Ranch Co. i n P r i n ev i lle, H e rshey C a t tl e C o . , a nd t h e n t h e Re d m o n d C o-op. T h e f a m il y o p e r a ted B8 D C o n c rete a n d l ater b e ga n C e n t ra l O r egon Monument Works. T hrough t h e y e a r s , h e was an avid an d success ful team roper w it h m a ny
wins an d c h a m pionships. He taught many c o w boys a nd cowgirls how t o r o p e a nd b e s u c cessful. Hi s d oor an d a r en a w e r e a l w ays o p e n t o t ho s e i n need. In the later years, he was c hute boss a t m a n y N W rodeos. H e w a s a m entor to rodeo judges and served as a director in several ro deo associations. Bud was a member o f t h e N o r t h west Pro Rodeo Assn. and the Pro R o deo C o w boy's A ssn., t o n a m e j u s t a couple. W hen it came to f a mi ly , m any h u n t in g t r i p s a n d g eneral o u t d o o r ex c u r s ions were enjoyed by al l . T he f a m il y i n c l u des h i s beloved wife o f 4 6 y e a rs, Diana and their son, Bob, as well as a host of friends. A r e m embrance o f h i s life will be held in conjunc t ion with the NW Pr o R o deo Year End Finals at the Crook Cou n ty Fai r Grounds. It w il l held Sun d ay, S ept . 2 3 , 2 0 12 , a t 1 0:00 a.m., i n t h e C a r e y Foster Hall. T hose wh o w i s h , m a y make memorial c o n t ribu t ions to P artners I n C a r e H ospice, 2075 N E W y a t t Ct., Bend, OR 97701. R edmond Mem or i a l Chapel is honored to serve the family. Please visit the o nline r e g i str y f or th e family a t ww w . r e d mond memorial.corn
The Associated Press SALEM — A state senator says a special legislative com mittee will vote next month on a final draft of a bill that would give the University of Oregon and Portland State University authority create in dependent governing boards. The Special Committee
on University Governance has wrestled with questions about how the boards would form and operate. But Demo cratic Sen. Mark Hass, of Beaverton, said Tuesday that the committee's work has not stalled and he expects to have a final draft of l egislation ready for approval on Oct. 4.
Pond
need the owners' permission for any project. The McKay family, whose ancestors moved to Bend in the early 1900s, claims owner ship of much of the land under Mirror Pond. The only mem ber of the steering committee who sought to verify the claim is Smith, the developer of the Old Mill District. Smith paid for a title search and told com mittee members the McKay family owns 90 percent of the land under Mirror Pond, Bend Director of Community Development Mel Oberst has said. However, Smith has not provided the results of the title search to the other committee members. Members of the committee said they will wait to pay for their own title search until the public process to select a plan for the pond is complete because they need specif ics before approaching any landowners.
Continued from C1 The park district is also poised to hire a temporary project manager to oversee the Mirror Pond public pro cess and another parks proj ect, the drafting of a master plan to redevelop the for mer Mt. Bachelor Park and Ride lot at Southwest Simp son Avenue and Columbia Street. Before the d istrict hires the contractor, howev er, Horton said he will meet with officials from Oregon State U n iversity-Cascades Campus to find out whether they support hiring a project manager. The master plan would designate space for both OSU-Cascades facili ties and parks projects. Meanwhile, the question of who owns the land under Mirror Pond remains. Com mittee members said they do not plan to seek a definitive answer anytime soon, de spite the fact that they would
— Reporter: 541-817-7829, hborrudC<bendbulletin.corn
SteveSabolof NFLFilms revolutionized sports onTV The Associated Press NEW YORK — With the eye of an art history major, Steve Sabol filmed the NFL as a bal let and blockbuster movie all in one. Half of the father-son team that r e v olutionized s p orts broadcasting, the NFL Films p resident died T uesday o f b rain cancer at ag e 6 9 i n Moorestown, N.J. He leaves
from the league confirming Sabol's death. "Steve's passion for football was matched by his behind a league bigger than incredible talent and energy. ever, its fans enthralled by the Steve's legacy will be part of plot twists and characters he the NFL forever. He was a ma so deftlychronicled. jor contributor to the success of "Steve Sabol was the cre the NFL, a man who changed ative genius behind the re the way we look at football and markable work of NFL Films," sports, and a great friend." NFL C o mmissioner R oger Sabol was diagnosed with Goodell said in a statement a tumor on the left side of his
FEATURED OBITUARY
brain after being hospitalized for a seizure in March, 2011. When Ed Sabol founded NFL Films, his son was there working beside him as a cin ematographer right from the start in 1964. They introduced a series of innovations taken for granted today, from super slow-motion replays to blooper reels to sticking microphones on coaches and players.
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They maybe 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. Friday for Sunday or 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.corn Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries
P.o. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
Rose Lorraine Holk February 23,ttt9-September8,20tt Rosie the Angel got her wings on September 8th to meet her maker. She wasloved by rtll rtnd will be missed by everyone she met. Rosewas 93 years old and most recently lived at the Mennonite home. She was born in Bend, the oldest of three daughters of Edward Otis and Winnifred May (Brick) Logan. She was the descendent of pioneer settlers to the Prineville area, who were first to settle the "96" ranch and had Logan Butte named after them.
Rosegraduated from Bend High School in 1937. She married Palmer T. Holk on December 26th, 1940 and had a son,Robert W. Holkin in 1947. After WWII, they moved to Long Beach, CA. Palmer passedaway in 1957 due to injuries from the Korean War. Two years later, she married Palmer's cousin Elmer Holk who had lost his wife, and they made their home in Camarillo, CA. Rose was a member of Trinity b'c Mt. Cross Lutheran Church, was a charter member of the Order of Eastern Star ¹ 649, ChildhelpUSA, the Camarillo Women's Club, and many other volunteer activities in the Camarillo area. She enjoyed returning to her class reunions to see her many Oregon friends and relatives. She also enjoyed her travels through the USA, Europe, Norway, the Holy Land and China. In 2001, Rosemoved to Albany to be closer to her son and lived at the Mennonite Village. In Albany she was amember of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church.
Roseis survived by her son, Robert and his wife, Linda of Philomath; 4 grandchildren; 6 great grandchildren and many nieces, nephews and cousins. She waspreceded in death by husbands, Palmer and Elmer; sisters, Sara Janeand Rae; and great-granddaughter, Carley Johnson. Many thanks to the Mennonite Nursing Home staff, Evergreen Hospice, Joann Chambers, JeanHeins, and Chaplains, Teresa Moser and Eric Martin. A memorial service will beat I pm Saturday, October 27 at the Mennonite Home Chapel. Private interment will beat the Pilot Butte Cemetery in Bend. Contributions maybemade to the charity of one's choice. Online condolences for the family maybeposted at www.fisherfmeralhome.corn. Fisher Funeral Home in Albany is handling arrangements.
WWII Army veteran, Jack J. Wilson, 8, of Bend, Oregon, passed away peacefully Thursday, Sept. 13 at home with his wife, daughter and granddaughter by his side. Jack was born in Harrisburg, Oregon, son of Guy N. and Gertrude Wilson, and grew up on wheat ranches in Sherman County, Oregon, where his father worked, and he broke horses as a teenager. He joined the US Army in 1942, train ing at Fort Ord. A Staff Sgt., he was in charge of 97 ambu lances and support vehicles landing on Omaha Beach with the Allied D-Day invasion. He served at major battles with the 3rd Army in the European Campaign near the front lines transporting casualties to field hospitals. After the war, he moved to Redmond, Oregon, where he met and married Carol Jean Martin in 1946, and they had daughter, Carol Yvonne, the next year. They later settled in Tumalo, Oregonfor25 years. Jack worked as a truck driver, an independent logger and later an auto mechanic, retiring from Robberson Ford in 1976, after 25 years as an automatic transmission special ist. After retirement, Jack and Carol saw the entire United States on trips in their RV, and spent several winters snow birding in Apache Junction, AZ. LI Jack wasa 60-year member ofthe Fraternal Order ofEagles, and past president of Bend Aerie ¹2089. He was a member of the American Legion and Bend Band of Brothers. He is survived by his wife, Carol; daughter, Yvonne Drury (Denny); grandchildren, Leigh Anne Denney (Philip) and Will Drury; and great-grandsons, Jack Harris and Dennis Drury. He was preceded in death by his parents and sister, Cleone Blaisdell. A celebration of Jack's life will be held at the Bend VFW Hall at 4th and Olney on Friday, September 21, at I p.m. with reception to follow. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to: Honor Flight of Eastern Oregon through Bend Heroes Foundation, www.bendheroes.org, or Partners in Care, www partnersbend.org. Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.corn.
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TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
W EA T H E R F O R E C A ST Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2012.
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SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunnsetoday...... 6:50 a.m Moon phases Sunset today...... 7:07 p.m F irst Ful l La s t Sunnsetomorrow .. 6:51 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 7:05 p.m Moonnsetoday... 11:18 a.m Moonset today.... 9:09 p.m Sept. 22 Sept. 29 Oct. 8 Oct.15 •
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TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....734am......726pm. Venus...... 3:1 0a.m...... 5:23 p.m. Mars......11:1 9a.m...... 858 p.m. Jupiter.....1028 pm...... 1:40pm. Saturn......9:25 a.m...... 8:21 p.m. Uranus..... 7:19 p.m...... 7:43 a.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 88/50 24hours ending 4p.m.'.. 0.00" Record high........ 94in1981 Monthto date.......... 0.00" Record low.........18 in1965 Average month todate... 0.25" Average high.............. 73 Year to date............ 6.61" Average low............... 39 Average yearto date..... 7 01" Barometncpressure at 4 p.m.30.06 Record 24 hours ...0.45 in 1969 'Melted hquid equivalent
FIRE INDEX
OREGON CITIES City
PLANET WATCH
WATER REPORT
Yesterday Wednesday Thursday Bend,westofHwy.97......Ext. Sisters................................Ext Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W H i / Lo/WBend, east ofHwy.97.......Ext. La Pine................................Ext
Preapitati onvaluesare24-hourtotalsthrough4pm.
Redmond/Madras......Mod. Prlnevlne...........................Ext
Astona ........58/48/0.01 ....66/50/pc.....64/49/pc Baker City......84/61/0.00 .....87/43/s......88/43/s Brookings......60/49/0.00 ....60/48/pc.....61/48/pc Burns..........87/34/0.00 .....87/45/s......90/50/s Eugene........ 79/47/0.00 .....83/47/s......81/46/s Klamath Falls...86/41/0.00 .....88/41/s......84/42/s Lakeview.......84/37/0.00 .....86/45/s......86/44/s La Pine........89/45/0.00 .....86/37/s......86/37/s Medford.......95/53/0.00 .....90/55/s......91/55/s Newport.......57/46/0.00 ....60/50/pc.....64/47/pc North Bend.....63/50/0.00 ....67/49/pc.....64/48/pc Ontano........86/42/0.00 .....90/52/s......89/50/s Pendleton......91/49/0.00 .....89/48/s......90/50/s Portland .......88/54/0.00 .....83/56/s......82/54/s Pnneville.......89/45/0.00 .....90/42/s......88/46/s Redmond.......89/40/0.00 .....86/42/s......86/45/s Roseburg.......86/56/0.00 .....87/50/s......81/50/s Salem.........86/47/0.00 .....83/49/s......82/48/s Sisters......... 76/43/0.00 .....86/40/s......84/40/s The Dalles......93/48/0.00 .....89/53/s......89/57/s
Med = Mederale,Exi. = Exlieme
To report a wildfire, call 911
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Index is for solar at noon.
L OW MEDIU 0
2
4
HI G H 6
POLLEN COUNT Updated daily. Source: pollen.corn
+ LO> O
MEDIUM
The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen. Res ervo ir
Acrefeet Capacity Crane Praine..... . . . . . . . 34,071...... 55,000 Wickiup..... . . . . . . . . . . 108,173..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 70,448...... 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir.... . . . . 19,980...... 47,000 Pnneville..... . . . . . . . . . . 94,265..... 153,777 R iver flow Stat i o n Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Praine ...... . 370 Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,180 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 27 Little DeschutesNear La Pme ...... . . . . . . . 114 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 122 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 1,699 Crooked RiverAbove Pnnewge Res. .... . . . . . NA Crooked RiverBelow Pnneville Res. .... . . . . 224 Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. .... . . . . . 15.1 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne .... . . . . . . . 114
Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669
or go to www.wrd.state. or.us Legend:W-weather,Pcp-preapitation, s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds, h-haze, sh-showers, r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowlurnes sn-snow, i-ice, rs-ram-snow mix,w-wind, f-fog, dr-dnzzle,tr-trace
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
YesterdayWednesdayThursday YesterdayWednesdayThursday YesterdayWednesdayThursday YesterdayWednesdayThursday Gty Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pqi Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pqi Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pqi Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX......77/59/0.20... 86/63/s .. 89/63/s Grand Rapids....62/5110.03.. 65/52/pc .. 67/49/c RapidCity.......84/40/000...72/50/s..75/51/c Savannah.......81/74/000...83/67/t.82/67/pc Akron..........66/57/048...64/42/s. 71/48/sh GreenBay.......59/42/000..71/47/sh. 64/48/sh Reno...........89/50/0.00... 88/54/s .. 89/53/s Seattle..........82/53/0.00... 82/52/s .. 78/53/s Albany..........72/61/3.09..66/42/sh.. 68/48/s Greensboro......76/66/0.75..68/53/pc. 72/54/pcRichmond.......78/66/0.84..73/54/pc.. 78/58/s SiouxFalls.......68/34/0.00...75/40/s. 71/42/pc Albuquerque.....81/54/000... 85/56/s .. 85/57/s Harnsburg.......72/66/1.59... 69/46/s. 72/52/pc RochesterNY....73/55/056... 63/43/s. 72/52/pc Spokane........83/49/0 00... 87/49/s .. 87/49/s 4 Anchorage......53/48/001... 56/47/r...56/45/r Hartford, CT.....76/57/017 ..69/47/sh.. 70/50/s Sacramento......87/51/000...85/55/s.. 87/56/s Spnngfidd MO. 68/47/trace...76/53/s.. 81/57/s Vancouver • Cal ar a ga'y 'iii i i i i i i xxxxxx Yesterday' s Saskatoon Wjnnj 0 10$ .i i i sctuebec3'4 4 0 4 • 72/55 Atlanta .........79/69/0.16 76/58/pc .. .. 78/60/s Helena..........85/45/0.00... 79/46/s.. 78/45/s St Louis.........69/50/0.26... 76/56/s. 79/56/pc Tampa..........81/75/0.77... 87/74/t...89/73/t drd 4 xxx'2 '2x'2x'2x' L s i i i i 637$ 4 4 extremes 59/43 p x'2x'2 Atlanac City.....79/72/0 01.. 74/56/pc.. 74/66/s Honolulu........86/71/002... 86/71/s.. 85/71/s Salt Lake City....84/55/0.00... 82/56/s .. 82/57/s Tucson..........97/67/0.00..100/70/s. 100/71/s ddd •Seattle dftallfa Austin..........86/64/0.00... 87/59/s .. 88/60/s Houston........88/70/0.00... 85/60/s .. 86/59/s SanAntonio.....88/64/000... 87/61/s .. 88/61/s Tulsa...........77/52/018... 85/58/s. 90/63/pc (in the 48 82/52 68/e Balsmore.......79/68/059... 72/53/s .. 76/60/s Huntsville.......77/66/017... 73/47/s .. 79/51/s SanDiego.......77/69/0.00... 79/69/s .. 81/69/s Washington,DC..80/69/0.96... 73/54/s .. 77/62/s 00 Il t I g U0 06 70s Bismarck states); Billings .........89/53/0.00...79/46/s.. 77/47/s Indianapolis.....66/55/0.00...66/46/s. 72/54/pc SanFranasco....65/53/0.00... 66/54/s .. 66/54/s Wichita.........76/47/0.00... 86/56/s. 83/60/pc Billings % 66/40 ortland Birmingham.....79/66/1.46... 77/54/s .. 82/57/s Jackson, MS.....80/68/1.23... 76/50/s .. 83/53/s SanJose........69/54/0.00... 75/54/s .. 74/55/s Yabma.........87/43/0.00... 88/49/s .. 88/53/s " Qs • • A H Bismarck........80/34/0.00... 66/40/s.. 67/41/c Jacksonvile......78/72/0.53... 86/72/t...85/70/t SantaFe........77/411000... 81/46/s .. 79/49/s Yuma..........103/77/000 ..101/80/s. 101/81/s • 1Q7' Boise...........86/55/000... 85/49/s .. 84/47/s Juneau..........54/45/0 00.. 59/45/pc. 63/46/pc Bullhead City, Ariz INTERNATIONAL Boston..........75/58/0.00... 71/53/r.. 65/54/s Kansas City......69/44/0.04... 82/53/s. 78/58/pc Bndgeport,CT....77/69/0.00..71/50/sh.. 70/53/s Lansing.........63/50/0.21..64/51/pc. 66/49/sh Amsterdam......61/50/000 ..60/48/sh. 62/54/sh Mecca.........109/84/0 00..109/85/s. 109/84/s • 20' -, 7 2/ 5 6 Cheyenne Buffalo .........70/56/036... 63/44/s. 73/52/pc LasVegas.......97/72/000... 98/72/s.. 98/73/s Athens..........80/60/0.00..83/69/sh. 82/70/pc MeacoCity......75/59/0.00..70/51/pc. 72/53/pc Int'I Falls, Minn. Burlington, VT....74/62/0.47 .. 60/37/sh.. 67/46/s Leangton.......66/59/0.32... 68/47/s .. 75/52/s Auckland........59/50/000..59/46/pc. 63/50/pc Montreal........68/61/000..58/43/pc.. 69/50/s 4 \1~~ • \\ 7 3/54 • w San Francisco Oma ao\ Des Moines Canbou, ME.....70/47/0.00... 64/35/r.. 65/42/s Lincoln..........74/37/0.00... 84/47/s. 78/54/pc Baghdad.......1 06/72/0.00..107/73/s. 106/71/s Moscow........63/45/0.00 .. 66/48/pc. 69/47/pc • 4.52 82/46 o~ 1 BPB o • CharlestonSC...86/75/015... 81166/t. 82/65/pc Little Rock.......76/65/000... 76/55/s .. 82/59/s Bangkok........90/79/0.00... 86/75/t...87/77/t Nairobi.........79/59/0.00 ..81/57/pc. 81/57/pc 73/54 Mount Pocono, • Louis " 0 I KansasCity 3 Charlotte........76/71/0 54 .. 75/55/pc.. 75/56/s Los Angdes......74/63/000... 80/65/s.. 80/66/s Beiyng..........84/52/0.00..84/62/pc. 86/62/pc Nassau.........90/81/0.00... 89/79/t...88/79/t Penn. Chattanooga.....79/64/367... 75/51/s .. 79/56/s Louisville........71/61/000... 70/50/s. 79/56/pc Beirut..........86/75/0.00... 87/76/s .. 86/76/s New Ddhi.......86/77/0.00... 89/77/t...93/79/t Charlotte+ 7CV56H ' • " ' ~ Cheyenne.......75/40/0.00...75/44/s.. 75/44/s Madison,WI.....60/42/0.00..71/46/sh. 68/48/pc Berlin...........77/50/0.00..63/41/sh. 60/44/pc Osaka..........81/77/0.00..82/70/pc. 81/65/pc Chicago.........63/48/0 00 .. 71/55/pc. 72/57/pc Memphis........73/64/0 01... 76/51/s .. 82/59/s Bogota.........68/45/000..61/51/sh. 63/52/sh Oslo............57/43/000..52/36/sh. 51/33/pc ahoma City Little RockI Nashvine ' 85/56 e I • 86/62. I 71/44, Cinannas.......70/64/0.03... 68/45/s. 76/53/pc Miami..........92/78/0.05... 91/77/t...89/78/t Budapest........77/59/000..78/55/sh. 56/42/sh Ottawa.........64/54/000..59/42/pc. 66/51/pc 76/55 o C-3 Phoenix I < Atlanta Clevdand.......66/56/0.44... 63/51/s. 71/56/pc Milwaukee......59/47/0.00 .. 71/52/pc. 69/54/pc BuenosAires.....64/52/000..57/43/sh. 66/46/pc Pans............66/50/000..67/42/pc. 64/51/pc • Honolulu fob, 103/78 ,;:ex. ColoradoSpnngs.75/40/000... 79/48/s.. 77/48/s Minneapolis.....61/43/000.. 71/51/pc.. 66/46/c CaboSanLucas ..91/73/0 00..94/75/pc .. 93/75/s Rio de Janero....91/72/000 ..100/78/s .. 88/71/c pS 86/71 Tijuana ColumbiaMO , .. 68/49/trace...79/52/s. 78/56/pc Nashville........72/62/003...71/44/s.. 78/53/s Cairo...........95/73/0.00... 94/72/s .. 90/70/s Rome...........75/57/0.00... 74/62/r .. 78/59/s 82/62 82/66 'I 80s~e ColumbiaSC....81/75/019 , ..78/59/pc. 81/59/pc New Orleans.....84/71/001 ... 81163/s.. 82/65/s Calgary.........79/50/0.00... 69/45/s .. 67/47/s Santiago........55/45/0.00 ..60/41/pc.. 62/49/s ew Orleans Columbus GA....82/71/0.59..80/59/pc. 84/59/pc New York .......75/68/0.29 ..72/56/sh.. 72/58/s Cancun.........91/82/0.00... 87/78/t...87/77/t Sao Paulo.......93/70/0.00... 96/70/s. 83/65/sh HAWA I I 81/63 Orla o 4 Houston Columbus OH....67/63/0.36... 66/44/s. 74/52/pc Newark, NJ......79/69/0.59 ..72/51/pc. 73/55/pc Dublin..........55/43/000..58/51/pc. 60/50/sh Sapporo........86/75/000... 80/70/t. 79/62/sh 89 7 Chihuahua 85/60 • Cancer/L NH.....70/49/0.15.. 68/35/sh.. 67/42/s Norfolk,VA......87/70/0.45... 74/63/c. 77/65/pc Edmburgh.......55/39/000... 56/47/c...51/36/r Seoul...........75/61/000... 77/62/t...75/61/t 85/63 Miami Corpus Chnsti....94/70/000... 85/68/s .. 86/72/s OklahomaCity...79/56/000... 86/62/s. 88/62/pc Geneva.........72/50/0.00 ..58/40/sh.. 65/43/s Shanghai........79/63/0.00 ..78/64/pc. 83/73/pc 30s 91/77 DallasFtWorlh...84/63/000... 82/62/s .. 85/62/s Omaha.........70/40/000... 82/46/s. 76/53/pc Harare..........79/52/0.00 ..81/57/pc.82/52/pc Singapore.......90/8110.00... 90/79/t...87/79/t Monterrey Dayton .........68/58/032... 67/44/s. 74/51/pc Orlando.........90/74/017... 89/75/t...89/73/t HongKong......86/77/0.00... 86/78/c...87/78/t Stockholm.......61/48/0.00..60/40/sh. 58/39/pc a Paz~ 93/67• Denver..........78/48/000... 81/50/s .. 81/51/s PalmSpnngs....106/74/000..105/79/s. 106/79/s Istanbul.........75/70/000..74/65/pc. 76/66/pc Sydney..........72/55/000..70/56/pc. 84/55/sh 50 93/77 Mazatlan Anchorage DesMoines......67/43/0.00.. 82/50/pc. 74/50/pc Peona..........63/46/0.00 .. 72/51/pc. 74/54/pc Jerusalem.......89/67/0.00... 86/67/s .. 85/65/s Taipe...........81/68/0.00... 88/75/c...84/78/t • 91 /77 56/47 Detroit..........67/54/0.06 ... 65/51Is . 69/57/pc Philadelphia .....80/69/0.64 .. 73/54/pc.. 77/60/s Johannesburg....75/52/000... 75/54/s. 76/59/pc Tel Aviv.........88/72/000... 88/74/s .. 87/72/s Juneau CONDITIONS Duluth ..........57/33/0 00 .. 59/42/sh. 59/42/sh Phoenix........l 02/77/0 00.. 103/78/s . 102/78/s Lima ...........70/61/000..67/60/pc. 68/60/pc Tokyo...........88/75/000... 87/75/t. 88/73/pc 59/45 4 0 * * El Paso..........86/60/0 00 ... 88/65/s .. 90/67/s Pittsburgh .......71/57/1.07 ... 64/43/s . 71/52/pc Lisbon..........86/66/0.00 ..89/65/pc.. 82/67/s Toronto.........66/52/0.00 .. 611 FRONTS 48/pc.. 63/53/c 4 4 4 *x*o * ++ ev 4 0 4 i* *** * Fairbanks........55/29/0.00... 58/41/r. 54/44/pc Portland,ME.....69/50/0.11... 69/43/r.. 63/45/s London.........64/46/0.00 ..65/44/pc.. 64/51/c Vancouver.......70/54/0.00... 72/55/s .. 72/56/s ae ae O 'ALASK A * Fargo...........61/32/0 00 .. 65/40/pc. 63/41/pc Providence......74/56/0 00.. 72/51/sh .. 68/52/s Madnd.........88/59/0.00...82/66/s. 87/57/pc Vienna..........77/52/0.00..70/55/sh. 61/47/pc Cold W arm Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice Flagstaff ........78/37/0 00 ... 77/37/s .. 76/36/s Raleigh .........81/69/1 .10 .. 70/54/pc . 74/57/pc Manila..........84/77/0.00... 86/77/t...86/77/t Warsaw.........75/48/0.00..65/51/sh. 56/45/sh
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Student Continued from C1 He placed fourth at the state championship his sophomore year for an informative speech he gave about zombies. Daniel is unable to partici pate in speech and debate this year because of a class-sched uling conflict, but he still helps the team whenever he can. This giving spirit is ty pi cal of Daniel, Hancock said. Last year, a friend organized a "Talk it Out" group during lunches, where kids who were struggling with school or their home lives could talk about their problems. Hancock said despite Daniel's busy sched ule, he made a point of attend ing each of the group's meet ings to help support his fellow classmates in need. "He's always so willing to help others," Hancock said. "It's refreshing to see that." Daniel ha s a l s o p l ayed football all four years of high school and was part of the var sity team that won the state championship last year. He said football has given him the tools to do so well in his academics. "It teaches you that y ou have to keep going," Daniel
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Mountain View senior Daniel Schim moller, 17, seen in jazz class Tues day, scored in the 99th percentile on the SAT. Pete Erlokoon The Bulletin
AdoutDaniel
Marine Corps Pvt. Journie Betschan graduated from recruit training at Marine Corps Recruit Depot in Parris Island, S.C. Betschan is a 2011 graduate of Redmond High School and the daughter of Scott and Rachele Stewart, of Terrebonne. Army Pvt. Scott Sheppard graduated from basic infantry training at Fort Benning, Columbus, Ga. Sheppard is the son of Martin
• INDUC'MJAI O V
Activites:Jazz choir, volunteer at High Desert Museum, National Honors Society, football Favorite Movie:"Night of the Living Dead" Favorite TV Show:"Game of Thrones" Favorite Book:"One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" Favorite Bands:Metallica, System of a Down
said. "When you feel like you travel to the unexplored jun can't give anymore, you learn g les of the Amazon or t h e to reach down and find a way Congo. to work harder. I' ve been able His face lights up when he to transfer that lesson to other talks about the groundbreak areas of my life." ing work he hopes to do in the Daniel has grand ambitions future. "One day, I'd like to say that for his future. He's applying to several Ivy League universi I' ve gone somewhere that no ties, and hopes to attend Yale. body else has gone before," In college, he wants to study Daniel said. —Reporter: 541-383-0354, animal biology — a passion of his — and then wants to mlzehoeC<bendbulletin.corn
and Toni Sheppard, of Redmond.
COLLEGE NOTES The following students were named to the Scholastic Honor Roll for summer 201 2 atOregon State University: For a 4.0 average GPA:Clinton Burdette, Mallory Feagans and Matthew Sharpe, all of Bend; Lance Dillon, of La Pine; Travis Comini and Sheila Karhu, both of
Hovv to submit Teen feats:Kids recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Please submit a photo.) Phone: 541-383-0358 Email: youth©bendbulletin.corn Mail: P.O.Box 6020,Bend,OR 97708 Other school notes:College announcements, military graduations or training completions, reunion announcements. Phone: 541-383-0358
4 D AY S O K L Y a Every Vehicle will be priced CHP *
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ScHooL NoTEs MILITARY NOTES
MURMYSHOL ' M 0 T 0 R S
Prineville; and Kimberly Pitts, of Redmond. For a 3.5 average GPAor better: Tessa Allen, Alisa Angelakis, Thomas Baker, Megan Campbell, Katrina Gates, Brian Laird, Lillie Mansfield, Bret Meloling, Julia Neuhaus, Emily Patterson, Stacia Stabler and Joshua Young, all of Bend; Tristyne Brindle and Brook Kremer, both of La Pine; Justin Proffer, of Redmond; and Christina Smith, of Terrebonne.
Email: bulletin©bendbulletin.corn
Story ideas School briefs:Items and announcements of general interest. Phone: 541-633-2161 Email: news©bendbulletin.corn Student profiles:Know of a kid with a compelling story? Phone: 541-383-0354 Email: mkehoe©bendbulletin.corn
>JIi li ++ ++ We Buy Usedlehicles++ ++
Sept. 17th, 18th, 18th I ROth ONLY!
MURMYSH LT murrayantIholt. corn • 541-382-2222 Right on the Corner of Third Street and Franklin in Bend. Right on the Price.
Scoreboard, D2
College football, D4
MLB, D3
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Prep sports, D4
Tee to Green, D5,6
© www.bendbulletin.corn/sports
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
GOLF Local senior teams in top six at PNGA SUNRI I/ER — Golf duos from Terrebonne and Bend have a lot of ground to make up in today's final round of the Pacific Northwest Women's Senior Team Championship. Anita Britton and Selma Cusick, both members at Crooked River Ranch, shot a 4 over-par 75 in Tuesday's second-round Chapman at Sunriver Resort's Meadows course to fall to 4 over for the tourna ment and from fourth place to fifth. The Bend team of Nettie Morrison and Nancy Breitenstein improved its position Tuesday, jumping from atiefor eighth placeto sixth after carding a 73 to move to 5 over. Both of those Central Oregon teams will have to play exceedingly well to catch the tournament leaders. Idaho duo Ka reen Markle, of Merid ian, and Shawna lanson, of Boise, are leading at 5 under par. The field of 36 teams will return today to Sun river's Meadows course, site of the first round of four ball, for the final round of four ball. Play for the Pacific Northwest Golf Asso ciation tournament is scheduled to begin today with a10a.m. shotgun. Spectators are welcomeand admission is free. For results, see Golf Scoreboard onD6. — Bulletin staff report
COLLEGE FOOTBALL OSU game watch set for Saturday Oregon State Beaver football fans are invited to watch their team play UCLA this Saturday on the big screen at the McMenamins Old St. Francis School theater in downtown Bend. The theater will open one hour before the scheduled 12:30 p.m. kickoff at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif. A $5 per-person donation will be asked at the theater door; proceeds will be part of the Central Oregon Beaver Athletic Student Fund's annual donation to the general BASF. A raffle for Beaver gear will take place at the theater during the game, and adult bever ages and food will be available for purchase. Minors are allowed if ac companied by a parent or adult guardian. For more information, contact Carol Connolly, Central Oregon BASF president, by phone at 541-410-4094, or by email at beaverbe
PREP SPORTS
Pole Creek Firesmoke affects Sisters athletics • A decision on whether the Outlaws' football gameon Friday against Cascadeis movedto another location is expectedtoday
Sistersschedulechanges
By Beau Eastes
TODAY
The Bulletin
As the Pole Creek Fire continues to grow, so too does the list of inconveniences it throws at the residents of Sisters and the surrounding areas. Sisters High School, whose athletic teams have had to practice in Redmond the past two days because of smoke, has announced a list of changes to its prep sports
schedule this week due to the fire, which as of 6 p.m. Tuesday had grown to 17,500 acres. The Sisters Invitational cross-country meet, which was scheduled for today, has been cancelled, and the Outlaws'boys soccer team and volleyball squad, both of whom were supposed to have home contests on Thursday, will now be on the road. Addi tionally, Sisters' home football game against Cascade on
Friday night and the Outlaws' home volleyball tournament scheduled for Saturday both could bemoved to Redmond High, according to Sisters High athletic director Tim Roth and Sisters volleyball coach Miki McFadden. "The smoke's been so bad we had to cancel indoor and outdoor practice (in Sisters) today and yesterday," Roth said Tuesday afternoon. SeeSmoke/D5
A look at the competitions involving Sisters High School teams that are in flux because of smoke from the Pole Creek Fire: • Sisters Invitational cross-country meet has been cancelled
THURSDAY • Sisters volleyball will play at Sweet Home at 6:45 p.m. • Sisters boys soccer will play at Elmira at 6:30 p.m.
FRIDAY • Cascade at Sisters football could be moved to another location. Sisters High administrators expect to make a decision today.
SATURDAY • Sisters Invitational volleyball tournament could be moved to Redmond High. Sisters High administrators expect to make a decision today.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Ducks and Wildcats atop the marquee In Pac-12 By john Marshall The Associated Press
k yrtitdryiikon.M
wi " . Andy Tullsi The Bulletin file
Connie Huckaba, center, tees offon the first hole at The Woodlands course in Sunriver, while competing in the first round of the Northwest Dodge Dealers Pacific Amateur Golf Classic on Sept. 28, 2009. The tournament is returning to September after being moved to August in 2010.
• Pac Am GolCl f assicismoving backto September, but will it return to growth? By Zack Hall
TEE TO GREEN
GolfWorldPacific AmateurGolfClassic What:54-hole net stroke-play golf tournament played at area courses When:Sept. 21-26, 2013
For moreinformation: www.pacamgolf.corn
The Bulletin
Finding the perfect weather window in which to host a golf tournament in these parts can be tricky. No tournament organizer knows this better than the Central Oregon Visitors Association, which has brought golfers from all over the country and beyond for the past 16 years to play in the Pa cific Amateur Golf Classic. "We just live in a place that has vari able weather conditions," says Alana Hughson, COVA's CEO. The release of a deep breath as Hughson speaks reveals some of the frustration of plan ning a golf tournament in Central Ore gon's fickle climate.
After moving the Pac Am in 2010 to late August, COVA has announced that it is once again shifting the tour nament's position on the calendar, this time to the very end of summer and the first days of autumn: The 2013 Pac Am is set for Sept. 21-26. The first 13 years of the expansive tournament were played during the first week of October. As most Central Oregonians are aware, the difference in weather here between late August and early October can be dramatic. Over the years, Pac Am veterans have played in just about every condition imaginable: from sear ing heat to snow flurries. SeePac Am/D6
PHOEN IX — The Pac-12 season got off to a rousing start last weekend with Stanford outlasting Southern California in a game that had streamers and fans flowing onto the field at Stanford Stadium. The conference gets into full swing this week with five games, the marquee-grabber a game that has the poten tial to top the Stanford-USC opener. Two of the fastest teams in the country meet Satur day night in Eugene when No. 3 Oregon plays No. 22 Arizona in a game that could include 200 plays, scoring in bunches, and plenty to miss if you step away to get some popcorn. "They' ve got a lot of fast guys playing fast," first-year Arizona coach Rich Rodri guez said Tuesday. "I think we' re very similar philosoph ically. You see some of the same plays and looks, like some of the same concepts on certain things offensively. We' re very similar in the way we like to push the game." Headlined by that game, it should be an interesting week in the Pac-12, even with No. 9 Stanford and Washing ton getting byes before the Cardinal and Huskies face off in Seattle on Sept. 27. The Rose Bowl will host two of the Pac-12's early surprise teams, No. 19 UCLA and Oregon State. SeePac-12/D5
PREP VOLLEYBALL
liever©crestviewcable. corn. — Bulletin staff report
Stanford looking forward, not back After big win over USC, Cardinal using bye week to prepare for Washing ton,D4.
CORRECTION The headline on a brief about Bend Swim Club tryouts that ap peared in Tuesday's Bulletin on page D1 was inaccurate. The club try outs run each day this week through Friday, starting at 615 p.m., at Juniper Swim 8 Fitness Center in Bend. The Bulletin regrets the error.
Crook County rolls past Mountain View in sweep The Bulletin
Cow girl s. But the 6-foot Lindburg was espe
Crook County's Makayla Lindburg posted 19 kills, many of them coming on key points as the six-time defend ing Class 4A state champion Cowgirls rolled past 5A Mountain View in three games Tuesday night. " Mak's just so calm and c ool," Crook County coach Rosie Honl said about her U n iversity o f P o r tland bound middle blocker after her team's 25-22, 25-20, 25-20 I ntermountain Hybrid victory over the Cougars at Mountain View. "She never gets down on the team and she's so humble. She' s a special kid." Crook County's Hannah Troutman added 11 kills and 14 digs, and Kayla Hamilton recorded 40 assists for the
cially dominant in th e f i nal game, registering nine kills and an ace in the final set as the Cowgirls (8-1 overall) finished the sweep. Crook County trailed 6-3 early in the final game, but Annie Fraser served 10 straight points after the Cowgirls got the serve back — Lindburg regis tered five of her team's kills during the streak — to put the game away. "We dug ourselves some holes that were just too hard to get out of," said Mountain View coach Jill M c Kae, whose team fell to 2-4 overall. "Vol leyball's such a momentum sport. It' s Rob Kerr / The Bulletin hard to get out of some of the holes we Crook County sophomore Kayla Hamilton(2) plays under pressure from Moun tain View senior Tylyn Johns (12) and junior Jill Roshak (13) Tuesday night at created." SeeVolleyball /D4 Mountain View High.
By Beau Eastes
02
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TELEVISION Today
Thursday
SOCCER 3 a.m.:UEFA Champions League, Real Madrid CF vs. Manchester City FC (same-day tape), Root Sports. 7 p.m.:Women's national, United States vs. Australia, ESP N2. 7:30 p.m.:MLS, Portland Timbers at San Jose Earthquakes, CW. BASEBALL 4 p.m.:MLB, Oakland Athletics at Detroit Tigers, ESPN. 7 p.m.:MLB, Texas Rangers at Los Angeles Angels, ESPN. 7 p.m.:MLB, Baltimore Orioles at Seattle Mariners, Root Sports. VOLLEYBALL 7 p.m.:Women's college, Oregon State at Oregon, Pac-12 Network.
GOLF 10a.m.: PGATour, Tour Championship, first round, Golf Channel. 3:30 p.m.:LPGA Tour, Navistar LPGA Classic, first round, Golf Channel. BASEBALL 4 p.m.:MLB, Los Angeles Dodgers at Washington Nationals or Toronto Blue Jays at New York Yankees, MLB Network. SOCCER 5 p.m.:MLS, D.C. United at Philadelphia Union, ESPN2. 7 p.m.:Women's college, Washington State at UCLA, Pac 12 Network. FOOTBALL 5 p.m.:College, Truman State at Central Missouri State, CBS Sports Network. 5:20 p.m.:NFL, New York Giants at Carolina Panthers, NFL Network. 6 p.m.:College, BYU at Boise State, ESPN. 7 p.m.:High school, Curtis at Puyallup, Root Sports.
ON DECK Today
Montreal NewEngland Philadelphia TorontoFC
IN THE BLEACHERS
Today: MountainViewJV2atCulver, 4:30p.m.
Thursday Volleyball: Ridgeviewat Burns, 6 p.m.; Sistersat
In the Bleachers © 2012 steve Moore Dist. by Universal Ucrick wwwrgocomics.corn/inthebleachers
W L T P t s GF GA 17 6 5 56 58 33 13 6 9 48 44 29 LosAngeles 1 4 11 4 4 6 5 0 4 0 R eal SaltLake 14 1 1 4 46 3 8 3 3 Vancouver 1 0 12 7 3 7 2 9 3 8 FC Dallas 9 12 9 3 6 3 5 3 8 Colorado 9 18 2 2 9 3 6 4 3 ChivesUSA 7 13 7 2 8 2 1 4 3 Porffand 7 14 7 2 8 2 8 4 7 NOTE: Threepoints for victory, onepoint for tie. x clinchedplayoffberth
I te ~P®l I
)A
p.m.
Girls soccer: Bend at Ridgeview,4:30 p.m.; Sisters at Elmira, 4:30 p.m.; Mountain View at Crook County ,4:30p.m.;RedmondatSummit,4:30p.m.; La Pin eatSweetHome,4:30 p.m.;MadrasatEs tacada, 6p.m. Boys water polo: Madras at Mountain View,TBA; Summit atRedmond, TBA
Today's Games SportingKansasCityat NewYork,4 pm. ChivesUSAat Columbus, 4:30p.m. Porff andatSanJose,7:30p.m. Thursday's Game D.C. United atPhiladelphia, 5p.m. Saturday's Games SportingKansasCityatMontreal, 10:30a.m. NewYorkat NewEngland,4:30 p.m. Porffand at Real Salt Lake,5p.m. Columbus atChicago,5:30p. m. Toront oF6atLosAngeles,7:30p.m. San JoseatSeatle F6, 7:30p.m.
Friday Football: Franklin atBend,7p.m.; MountainViewat McNary, p.m.; 7 Summitat TheDaffesWahtonka, 7 p.m.; HenleyatRedmond,7:30p.m.;Ridgeview at CottageGrove,7 p.m.; CrookCountyat Madras, 7 p.m.; Cascade vs.Sisters, TBA.;LaPineat Burns, 7 p.m.; Powers atGilchrist, 4 p.m. Volleyball: NorthLakeatGilchrist, 5 p.m.
Sunday's Games
Houston at Philadelphia,2p.m. ChivasUSAat D.C. United, 4p.m. Colorado atVancouver, 4:30p.m.
Saturday Cross-country: Bend, Mountain View, La Pine, Madras, Sisters, Crook County at 3 Course Challenge in Seaside, 10 a.m.; Redmond, Ridgeview, Summit atNorthwestClassic in Eugene, 11:30 a.m. Volleyball: Redmond,Ridgeview, Mountain View, Bend atRogueValley Classic in Medford, 8a.m.; Madrasat Sisterstourney, 10a.m.; Culverat McK enzie tournament,TBA;Gilchrist at Triad, 2 p.m.; Central Christian atSouthWascoCountytourney, 9:30 a.m. Boys soccer: CentralChristianatUmatiffa, I p.m.
Local Nostalgia Results Sept. 16 Results (ET, MPH,dial) Sportsman— W: Chuck Ziegler,The Daff es,
SPoRTs IN BRIEF Baseball • Blue Jay suspendedfor slur: Toronto shortstop Yunel Escobar was suspended for three games Tuesday by the Blue Jays for wearing eye-black displaying a homophobic slur written in Spanish during a game last weekend against Boston. Escobar apologized to his team and "to all those who have been offended" for what he said was meant to be "just a joke." "It was not something I intended to be offensive," he said through a translator. "It was not anything intended to be directed at anyone in par n ticular. Escobar said he wrote the message 10 minutes before Saturday's home game on his eye-black, a sticker players wear under their eyes to reduce sun glare. The 29-year-old Cuban said he frequently puts messages there — usually inspirational, manager John Farrell offered — and had never previously written that specific slur.
• Dodgers' Kershawgets opinion fromhip specialist: Reigning NL Cy Young Award winner Clayton Kershaw was examined Tuesday by a hip specialist who said the Los An geles left-hander can continue to pitch without risking dam age to his sore right hip — but the Dodgers want to keep him sidelined if the pain persists. The team said Kershaw would re-start a throwing program Tuesday, when the Dodgers' scheduledgame atthe Wash ington Nationals was post poned by rain. Asked whether Kershaw will pitch again this season, Dodgers manager Don Mattingly replied: "Yeah, maybe. Sounds like there's a n chance of it.
of Atlanta after clocking the car at 97mph — 32 mph overthe speed limit, said Cpl. Edwin Rit ter, a police spokesman. • NFL Films' Sabol dies at 69: Steve Sabol, who was the creative force behind NFL Films, his father's innovative enter prise that melded cinematic ingenuity, martial metaphors and symphonic music to lend professional football the aura of myth and help fuel its rise in popularity, died on Tuesday in Moorestown, N.J. He was 69. The cause was brain cancer, said Dan Masonson, a spokes man for the National Football League. Sabol learned of the cancer in March 2011. See obituary,C5.
Soccer • FIFA's goal-line technol ogy onschedule: Officials from two FIFA-approved goal-line technology systems arrived in Japan on a Club World Cup inspection visit on Tuesday, hours after English football witnessed yet another disputed incident. Everton was denied what appeared a clear goal against Newcastle in a Premier League match on Monday, as a referee's assistant did not spotthatthe ball had crossed the line. The Premier League has pledged to install goal-line technology, though the Hawk Eye andGoalRefsystems had no chance of being ready at the start of the season after FIFA's law-making panel cleared them for use in competitive matches on July 5.
Motor sports • NASCAR reinstates All
mendinger:The first phase
behind Amdt. Linda Melanic
of his comeback complete, an optimistic AJ Allmendinger is ready to get on with his life. He's hopeful that includes another job in racing. Allmend inger on Tuesday was reinstated by NASCAR, which said he successfully completed its re habilitation program after test ing positive for a banned sub stance. The process took a little more than two months, and All mendinger said he learned a lot about himself while participat ing in the "Road to Recovery" program. Allmendinger was suspended July 7 after failing a random drug test in June. His n backup "B urine sample also later tested positive.
Villumsen of New Zealand was third, 40.57 seconds back.
Hockey
Football
• Panthers announcelay offs, blame 'work stoppage'.
Cycling • German winswomen's time trial at worlds:Judith
Amdt of Germany successfully defended her individual time trial title Tuesday at the Road Cycling World Championships in the Netherlands. Amdt, who won silver in the Olympic time trial in London and plans to retire at the end of the season, finished the 15-mile race in 32 minutes, 26.46 seconds, an average speed of 27.71 mph. American rider Evelyn Stevens was second, 33.77 seconds
• Atlanta RBTurner arrested for DUI:Atlanta Falcons running back Michael Turner was jailed on charges of drunken driving and speeding early Tuesday, just hours after he scored a touchdown in the team's win over the Denver Broncos. Turner, 30, of Suwanee, Gan was booked into the Gwinnett County jail in metro Atlanta just after 5 a.m. Turner spent barely two hours behind bars before he was released on $2,179 bond, jail records showed. A Gwinnett County police officer pulled over Turner's black Audi R8 on Interstate 85 northeast
The Florida Panthers announced the layoffs of an unknown num ber of staff members Tuesday, only the third full day of the NHL's lockout. The Panthers are believedto be the NHL'ssecond team to publicly announce lay offs since the league's collective bargaining agreement with its
players expired atty:59 p.m. Eastern on Saturday and ush ered in the league's fourth work stoppage in the past 20 years. The Ottawa Senators have al ready had layoffs and full-time employees have been placed on a reduced work week. — From wire reports
1984Olds,8.78,74.01,8.77.R/U:John Smith,Bend, 1973 camaro, 8.69, 80.65, 8.69. Semis: Marshall Wentz, Redmond,1979Camaro,8.75,79.37,8.69. Pro— W:PaulComeau,Vancouver,Wash.,1939 Chev Sedan, 6.19, 108.1, 6.15. R/U: Kelly Pruett, Eugene,1955Chevy,6.15, 112.2, 6.12. Semis: Gina Nimmo, Bend,I964 Chevy0,7.32,92.78,7.30. Super Pro — W:TomStockero, Bend, I967Ca maro, 6.50,I02.5,6.47.R/U:LoyPetersen,Madras, 1979Chevy Malibu,6.82,100.6,6.79.Semis:Andy UppendahlBend, , 1965Mustang, 6.47, 109.2,6.47. Jackpot — W: DougGray, PoweffButte, 1940 Wiffys Roadster,6.14, 112.2,6.11. R/U:Eric Petersen, Forest Grove,1940Buick, 8.75, 77.72,8.71. Semis: Mare Pruett, Vancouver,Wash., 1955 Chevy 150 Wagon,6.63, 101.8,6.60;SebastianStaber, Estacada, 1967 Impala10.8, , 64.10, 10.65. Sept. 16 Results (ET, MPH,dial) Sportsman — W: Paul Comeau,Vancouver, Wash., 1939 ChevSedan, 7.60, 89.29, 7.63. R/U: KenGreen,HappyValley,1967Cheveff e,8.56,80.50, 8.63. Semis:Chuck Ziegler,The Daff es, 1984 Olds, 8. 76, 77. 72, 8.77. Pro — W:FredNicholas, Canby,1970Nova,7.46, 90.18, 7.43.R/U:ClayAllen,Sandy,1970 PLY GTX, 7.18, 95.95, 7.12.Semis:Gerl Reich, Nampa,Idaho, 1970 Cheveffe,7.03, 95.54,6.96. Super Pro — W:DougGray, PoweffBute, 1940 Wiffys Roadster,6.12, 112.2,6.11.R/U: RobertGlem bocki, Bend,1969Camaro, 6.33, 107.9,6.31. Semis: Andy Uppendahl,Bend,1965Mustang, 6.42, 109.7, 6.40. Jackpot — W: PaulComeau,Vancouver,Wash., 1939 ChevSedan,6.14, 112.2, 6.13. R/U:Marshall Wentz, Redmond,1979 Camaro,9.21,78.53,8.68. Semis: Loy Petersen,Madras, 1979ChevyMalibu, 6. 79, 101.1,6.80.
FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGU AH Times POT AMERICANCONFERENCE
East W L T Pc t PF PA I I 0 .50 0 58 55 I I 0 .50 0 52 33 I I 0 .50 0 45 43 I I 0 .50 0 63 65 South W L T Pc t PF PA Houston 2 0 0 1 . 000 5 7 17 Indianapolis I I 0 .50 0 44 61 Tennessee 0 2 0 .0 0 0 23 72 Jacksonville 0 2 0 .0 0 0 30 53 North W L T Pc t PF PA I I 0 .50 0 67 37 I I 0 .50 0 47 71 I I 0 .50 0 46 41 0 2 0 .0 0 0 43 51 West W L T Pc t PF PA San Diego 2 0 0 1 . 000 60 24 Denver I I 0 .50 0 52 46 KansasCit y 0 2 0 .000 41 75 Oakland 0 2 0 .0 0 0 27 57 NATIONALCONFERENCE East W L T Pc t PF PA Philadelphia 2 0 0 1 . 000 4 1 39 Dallas I I 0 .50 0 31 44 Washington I I 0 .50 0 68 63 N.Y. Giants I I 0 .50 0 58 58 South W L T Pc t PF PA Atlanta 2 0 0 1 . 000 6 7 45 TampaBay I I 0 .50 0 50 51 Carolina I I 0 .50 0 45 43 NewOrleans 0 2 0 .0 0 0 59 75 North W L T Pc t PF PA I I 0 .50 0 45 40 I I 0 .50 0 46 50 I I 0 .50 0 46 46 I I 0 .50 0 51 44 West W L T Pc t PF PA Arizona 2 0 0 1 . 000 40 34 San Francisco 2 0 0 1 . 000 5 7 41 St. Louis I I 0 .50 0 54 55 Seattle I I 0 .50 0 43 27
Monday's Game Atlanta 27,Denver21
Thursday's Game
N.Y. Giantsat Carolina, 5:20p.m.
Sunday's Games
Tampa BayatDallas, 10a.m. St. Louis atChicago,10a.m. San Franciscoat Minnesota, 10a.m. Detroit atTennessee,10a.m. KansasCity at NewOrleans, 10a.m. Cincinnati atWashington, 10a.m. N.Y. Jetsat Miami, 10a.m. Buffalo atCleveland, 10a.m. Jacksonville atIndianapolis, 10a.m. Philadelphiaat Arizona,I:05 p.m. Atlanta atSanDiego, I:05 p.m. PittsburghatOakland, I:25 p.m. Houstonat Denver,I:25 p.m. NewEnglandatBaltimore, 5:20p.m. Monday, Sep. 24 GreenBayat Seattle, 5:30 p.m.
College Schedule AH Times POT
(Subject to change) Today's Game EAST Kent St. atBuffalo, 4 p.m.
Thursday's Games SOUTH Ark. PineBluff atAlabamaSt., 4:30p.m. FAR WEST BYU atBoiseSt., 6 p.m.
Friday's Games EAST
Georgetown at Princeton,4 p.m. SOUTH
49 40 31 51
Seattle
Sweet Home,6:45 p.m.; La Pineat Elmira, 6:45 p.m.; Estacada at Madras, 6p.m.; Central Linnat Culver, 6p.m. Boys soccer: Bendat Ridgeview,3 p.m.; Sisters at Elmira,630pm..; MountainViewat CrookCounty, 3 p.m. ;Redmond atSummit,3 p.m.;Estacada at Madras, 4:30 p.m.;SweetHome atLa Pine,4:30
MADRAS ORAGSTRIP
Western Conference
44 36 26 32
x SanJose
BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION AH Times POT
Eastern Conference
AUTO RACING Listings are the most accurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechanges madeby TVor radio stations.
1 2 15 3 3 9 7 15 7 2 8 7 13 6 2 7 5 17 7 2 2
Today
Baylor atLouisiana Monroe,5p.m. BUFFALO
Saturday's Games
BOISEST
DuquesneatBryant, 10a.m. Yale atCorneff, 10a.m. Dartmouthat Holy Cross, 10a.m. SacredHeartatMonmouth (NJ), 10a.m. JamesMadisonat RhodeIsland, 10a.m. VMI atNavy,12:30p.m. Viff anovaatPenn,12:30p.m. Templeat PennSt., 12:30p.m. GardnerWebbat Pittsburgh, 12:30p.m. HarvardatBrown, I:30p.m. Wagnerat CCSU,3p.m. Albany(NY)at Maine,3p.m. Colgateat StonyBrook, 3p.m. St. Francis(Pa.)atTowson, 4p.m. SOUTH NewHampshireat OldDominion, 9a.m. Mississippi atTulane,9 a.m. BowlingGreenatVirginia Tech,9a.m. Kentuckyat Florida, 921am. Army atWakeForest, 9:30a.m. CharlestonSouthern atShorter, 10:30a.m. Furmanat Presbyterian, I I a m. Miami atGeorgiaTech, noon RichmondatGeorgia St., 12:30p.m. East Carolinaat North Carolina, 12:30p.m. Missouri atSouthCarolina, 12:30p.m. SamfordatW. Carolina, 12:30p.m. Tennes seeSt.atBethune Cookman,Ip.m. FAU atAlabama,2p.m. Southern U.atJacksonSt., 2 p.m. AppalachianSt.at Chatanooga, 3p.m. Florida Aff M at Delaware St.,3 p.m. Memphisat Duke,3p.m. Jacksonville St. atE.Kentucky, 3p.m. Elon atGeorgiaSouthern, 3p.m. The Citadelat NCState, 3p.m. LSU atAuburn, 4 p.m. UT Marlin atAustin Peay,4p.m. Louisville atFIU,4p.m. Lehigh atLiberty, 4 p.m. South Alabama atMississippi St., 4p.m. Evangel atNichoffs St., 4 p.m. MVSUat NorthwesternSt., 4 p.m. N6 CentralatSavannahSt., 4 p.m. SouthernMiss.atW.Kentucky, 4p.m. Delawareat Wiliam 8 Mary,4p.m. Akron atTennessee,4:30p.m. Vanderbilt atGeorgia,4:45p.m. Clemsonat FloridaSt., 5 p.m. McNeeseSt. at SELouisiana, 5p.m. MIDWEST UAB atOhioSt., 9a.m. Campbell atButler, 9a.m. Cent. Michiganat iowa, 9a.m. UMassat Miami(Ohio), 9 a.m.
UPE PatWisconsin,9a.m.
Jacksonville atDayton, 10a.m. MoreheadSt.atDrake, 11a.m. S. Illinois atMissouri St., 11a.m. Norfolk St. atOhio, 11a.m. UconnatW.Michigan, 11a.m. S. DakotaSt.at IndianaSt., 11:05a.m. E. MichiganatMichiganSt., 12:30p.m. Kansasat N.Illinois, 12:30 p.m. IdahoSt.at Nebraska,12:30p.m. South DakotaatNorthwestern, 12:30p.m. Rlinois St. atW.Illinois, I p.m. Prairie ViewatN. Dakota St., I:07 p.m. South Floridaat Ball St., I:30 p.m. Tennessee TechatSEMissouri, 4 p.m. CoastalCarolinaat Toledo,4p.m. N. IowaatYoungstown St., 4 p.m. MurraySt.at E.Illinois, 4:30 p.m. Michiganat NotreDame,4:30 p.m. LouisianaTechat Rlinois, 5 p.m. Syracuse at Minnesota, 5p.m. SOUTHWEST Virginia atTCU,9a.m. Alabama Aff Mat Texas Southern, 9a.m. NW Oklahoma at UTSA,11a.m. Marshall atRice, 12:30p.m. Sam HoustonSt. atCent. Arkansas, I p.m. Rutgersat Arkansas,4p.m. Alcorn St. atArkansasSt., 4 p.m. Troy atNorthTexas, 4p.m. SCStatea tTexasASM,4p.m. StephenF.Austin atTexasSt., 4 p.m. KansasSt.atOklahoma,4:50p.m. Langsto natLamar,5 p.m. FresnoSt.at Tulsa,5p.m. FAR WEST N. Arizonaat Montana,11a.m. OregonSt.at UCLA, 12:30p.m. Valparaisoat SanDiego, I p.m. ColoradoatWashington St., I p.m. N. Coloradoat MontanaSt., I:05 p.m. WyomingatIdaho,2p.m. California atSouthern Cal, 3p.m. Utah St. atColoradoSt., 4 p.m. NewMexicoat NewMexico St., 5 p.m. SanJoseSt.atSanDiegoSt.,5p.m. E. WashingtonatWeberSt., 5p.m. S. UtahatPorffandSt., 5:05p.m. UC Davisat CalPoly, 6:05p.m. North Dakotaat Sacramento St., 6:05p.m. Utah atArizonaSt., 7 p.m. Air Forceat UNLV,7p.m. Nevada atHawaii,7:30p.m. ArizonaatOregon, 7:30p.m.
NFL
(Home teams inCaps) Favorite Opening Current Underdog Thursday BFARS COWBO YS 49ers Lions REDSKINS Jets SAINTS Bills COHS
8.5 7 7 3 4 3 95 3 3 4 3 2 5 3
I
Sunday 7.5 7 7 3 35 3 9 3 3 4 3 2 4.5 3
Kent St
7
75
Western Conference
Pct G B .7 1 9 . 645 2/r . 563 5 . 438 9 . 406 1 0 . 156 1 8
Friday
Byu
Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round Sorana Cirstea(3), Romania, def. Hu YueYue,
Betting line
15
35
Thursday
W L 23 9 20 11 1 8 14 1 4 18 1 3 19 5 27
W L Pct G B z Minnesota 26 5 .8 3 9 2 3 10 . 697 4 Baylor 7.5 7.5 UL MONRE O x Los Angeles x San Antoni o 20 12 . 625 fy/r Saturday 14 18 . 438 12/r WAKEFOREST 75 7 Army x Seattle 8 2 3 . 258 1 8 FLORIDA ST 13 14 Clemson Tulsa 7 25 . 2 19 19/r S Florida 11 10. 5 BALL ST Phoenix x clinched pl a yoff spot DUKE 21 22. 5 Memphis z clinched conference MICHIGAN ST 32.5 33 EMichigan VA TECH 19 19. 5 BowlingGreen Tuesday'sGames IOWA 17 16. 5 6 Michigan OHIOST 37.5 37 Uab San Antonio77,NewYork 66 Seattle 75, Chi c ago 60 NCAROLIN A 1 4.5 1 6 .5 ECarolina PENNST 9 9 Temple Los Angeles101,Phoenix 76 Today's Game WVIRGINIA 28 27 Maryland WISCONSIN 1 6 17. 5 Utep IndianaatConnecticut, 4p.m. Thursday' s Games MIAMI OHIO 2 6.5 2 6 . 5 Massachusetts GEORG IA 1 3.5 1 5 .5 Vanderbilt Atlanta atChicago,5p.m. NewYorkat Tulsa,5p.m. Uiah St 14 13. 5 COLORADO ST otaatLosAngeles,7:30p.m. ARKANSA S 7 7 Rutgers Minnes TULSA 6 55 Fresno St Marshall 2.5 2.5 RICE DEALS NILLINOIS 9.5 9.5 Kansas OREGO N 24 23. 5 Arizona Transactions UCLA 1 1.5 9 OregonSt TCU 1 6.5 1 7 .5 Virginia BASEBALL USC 16 16 California MAJORLFAGUEBASEBALL Suspended To WASHST 18 18. 5 Colorado ronto SS Yunel Escobar threegamesfor displaying an Lsu 1 7.5 2 0 .5 AUBURN unacceptablemessageduring Saturday's gameagainst GA TECH 13.5 14 "Miami Florida Boston. Suspended Tampa Bay Rays'minorleaguer Wyoming 1.5 1.5 IDAHO LHP BrettBlaisefor 50 gamesfor testing positive for FLORIDA 2 4.5 2 4 .5 Kentucky anamphetamine. Connecticut I 1.5 WMICHIGAN American League SCAROLINA 10 10 Missouri TORONTO BLUEJAYS Signed a playerdevel NOTRE DAME 65 6 Michigan opment contract with Buffalo (IL) throughthe 2014 MINNESO TA 2 2 Syracuse season. OKLAHOM A 13.5 14 Kansas St National League NMEXICOST 7 7 NewMexico SAN DIEGO PADRES Extended their playerde TENNES SEE 35 35 Akron velopmentcontrcat with FortWayne(MWL)through 15 TULANE the 2014season. Mis sissippi 15 ILLINOIS 2 2 La Tech BASKETBALL ARIZONA ST 7 7 Uiah National Basketball Association SAN DIEGO ST 3 35 San Jose St ATLANTA HAWKS Re signedFIvanJohnson. Air Force 12 10. 5 UNLV MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES WaivedG/FD.J. Kennedy. Nevada 10 9 HAWAII FOOTBALL ALABAMA 50.5 50 Fla Atlantic National Football League WKENTUC KY 25 4 So Miss CINCINNATI BENGALS PlacedDEJamaalAnder NTEXAS PK PK Troy son oninjuredreserve.SignedDEWallaceGilberry. Louisville 1 2.5 1 3 .5 FLA INT'L DENVERBRONCOS Placed 6 Philip Blakeon MISSST 35 34. 5 SAlabama injured reserve.SignedGAdamGrant to the practice squad.Signed6 C.J. Davisfromthepractice squad. DETROITLIONS Released CB Kevin Barnes. TENNIS ReleasedRBStephfon Greenfrom thepractice squad. Signed CBConroyBlacktothe practicesquad. INDIANAPO LIS COLTS SignedNTNicolas Jean Professional BaptisteandOTTony Hills to the practice squad.Re Moselle Open leased DT Chigbo AnunobyandOTDarrion Weem s Tuesday from thepractice squad. At Les Arenes deMetz JACKSONVILLEJAGUARS Signed G Austin Metz, France Pasztor to the practicesquad. Purse: $690,700(WT260) MIAMI DOLPH INS Signed DTAndre Flueffen. Surface: Hard-Indoor MINNESOT AVIKINGS ReleasedWRTori Gurley. Singles Signed 1TroyKropogto thepractice squad. First Round NEW ORLFANSSAINTS Released CB Jerome Ivo Karlovic, Croatia, def. Kenny de Schepper, Murphy. France, 7 6 (5), 7 6 (3). NEWYORKGIANTS Released 6 Scott Wedige NikolayDavydenko(8), Russia,def. MischaZverev, from thepractice squad.Signed1Matt Mccants from Germany,2 6, 63, 6 3. the practicesquad. ClementReix, France,def. EdouardRogerVasse OAKLANDRAIDERS Waive d LS NickGuess. lin, France, 6 3, 36, 7 5. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES Placed 6 JasonKelce Vincent Millot, France,def. Igor Sijsling, Nether on injuredreserve. Signed6 SteveVaffos. lands,6 4,6 4. ST. LOUISRAMS Placed OGRokevious Watkins Benoit Paire,France.def.Xavier Malisse, Belgium, on injuredreserve. 6 I, 6 4. SAN DIEGOCHARGERS Released CB Greg Gael Monfils (7), France,def.Olivier Rochus,Bel Gatson. gium,6 3,6 2. SFATTLESEAHAWKS Released RB Kregg Lumpkin. Signed CBDannyGorrer. ReleasedWR St. PetersburgOpen RicardoLocketteandLBAllen Bradford fromtheprac Tuesday ticesquad.Signed G Rishaw Johnson and LB Korey At Scc Peterburgsky Toom ertothe practice squad. St. P etersburg,Russia TAMPABAYBUCCANEERS Released GDerek Purse: $466,360(WT260) Hardman.ReleasedLBJ.K. Schafferfrom the practice Surface: Hard-Indoor squad. Singles WASHINGTON REDSKINS Signed LB Markus First Round White. SignedDEDougWorthington fromthe practice RoberloBautistaAgut,Spain, def.YenhsunLu(6), squad. Si g ned DL Do minique Hamilton tothe practice Taiwan,6 4,6 2. Daniel GimenoTraver, Spain, def. Florent Serra, squad.PlacedDEAdamCarriker andLBBrian Orakpo on injuredreserve. France, 7 (5), 6 6 2. HOCKEY GregaZemi)a,Slovenia, def. LukasLacko(5), Slo National HockeyLeague vakia,6 3,6 2. MONTREAL CANADI ENS Signed6 StefanCha Mikhail Youzhny(I), Russia, def. VasekPospisil, put, 6 Olivier Fortier and 6DaultanLeveiffe to one Canada, 76(4), 6 1. year,twowaycontracts. ECHL GuangzhouInternational Open FLORIDA EVERBLADES Agreed totermswith F Tuesday AaronBogosianandF Mike Merrifield. At Tianhe SportsCenter IDAHOSTEELHEADS Agreed to terms with F Guangzhou,China AndrewCarroll. Purse: $220,000 (Intl.)
EAST LafayetteatBuckneff, 9a.m. Davidsonat Marist, 9a.m. MarylandatWest Virginia, 9 a.m. Fordhamat Columbia, 9:30a.m.
Giants
3
x Connecticut x Indiana x Atlanta NewYork Chicago Washington
PANTHER S
Ram s Bucs VIKINGS TITANS
Deutsche EishockeyLiga-Germany
KREFELD PINGUINE Agreed to termswithBuf falo D ChristianEhrhoff. COLLEGE ALBANY(NY) Signedwomen'sbasketball coach China, 6 2, 75. Henderson to a two yearcontract Alize Cornet(8), France, def. AlexandraPanova, Katie Abrahamson extension. Russia, 6 3, I I, retired. AUBURN Named RyanMiler men'sassociate UrszulaRadwanska(4), Poland,def. MelindaCz head basketballcoach. ink, Hungary, 7 6(1),6 2. AUGSBURG NamedKathrynKnippenberg worn Hsieh Suwei, Taiwan,def.NinaBratchikova, Rus en's lacrossecoach. sia, 7 5, 6 3. JACKSON VILLE STATE Named EugeneHarris ChangKaichen,Taiwan,def. MarionBarloli (I), men'sassistant basketball coach. France, 4 3,retired. JAMESMADISON Named LuciousJordandi MathildeJohansson, France,def. MonicaNicules rector ofmen'sbasketball operationsandSamDoweff cu (6), Romania7, 5,6 2. men' sgraduateassistant basketball coach. PengShuai (7), China,def. AyumiMorita, Japan, MONTANA STATE AnnouncedFEric Normanhas 7 6(3),6 0. been grantedrelief fromthe NCAAs' transfer rule, mak Nudnida Luangnam,Thailand, def. Jarmila Gal ing himimmediatelyeligible toplay. dosova,Australia,6 7(5),6 4,6 2. NORTH DAKOTA Suspended men's hockey D ZhengJie(2), China,def. ChanYungjan, Taiwan, Andrew MacWiffiam,FCorbanKnight, F Danny Kristo 5 3, retired. Zheng Saisai, China, def. Julia Cohen, United and FCarterRowneyonegame. NORTHER NIOWA SuspendedGAnthony James States, 7 6(I), 7 5. Giga Govorlsova,Belarus, def. ZarinaDiyas, Ka for the first threegamesof the upcomingmen's bas ketbaff season. zakhstan, 7 5, 62. Duan YingYing, China, def. Luksika Kumkhum, Thailand, 6 2, 61.
FISH COUNT
Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook, jack Bengals chinook, steelheadandwild steelheadat selected Co DOLPHINS l u mbia Riverdamslast updatedonMonday. Chiefs Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd BROWNS MLS B onneville 7,687 4,346 2,089 590 Jaguars MAJOR LEAGUESOCCER T he Daffes 9,932 5,559 2 ,931 7 9 0 Eagles CARDS AH TimesPOT J ohn Day 8,190 4,367 2,957 863 CHARGE RS Falcons M cNary 4 ,516 1 ,751 1,781 4 9 7 Texans BRONCO S Eastern Conference Upstream yearto datemovement ofadult chinook, Steelers RAIDERS W L T P t s GF GA jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected RAVENS Patriots S porting KansasCity 15 7 6 5 1 3 5 2 5 ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonMonday. Monday Chicago 15 8 5 50 40 33 Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Packers 3.5 3.5 SFAHAWK S NewYork 1 4 7 7 4 9 4 9 4 0 Bonneville 518,504 96,307 207,174 77,277 Houston 1 2 7 10 4 6 4 1 3 4 The Daffes 346,043 73,203 153,240 56,847 COLLEGE D.C. 1 3 10 5 4 4 4 5 3 9 John Day 275,830 60,829 103,465 41,445 (Home teams inCaps) Columbus 1 2 10 6 4 2 3 4 3 5 McNary 259,022 29,909 88,456 32,290
SOCCER
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
A OR EAGtjE
A SEBALL STANDINGS, SCORES AND SCHEDULES
A DIRTY COLLISION
Am erican Leag ue NewYork Baltimore TampaBay Boston Toronto
Chicago Detroit
KansasCity Cleveland Minnesota
W L 83 63 83 64 78 70 68 81 66 79 W L 81 66 78 69 66 81 61 87 61 87 W L
Texas 87 60 Oakland 84 63 Los Angeles 81 67 Seattle
70 78
East Division Pct GB WCGB L10 Str .568 .565
Twins 6, Indians 5 (12 innings) M innesota A B R H BI BB SO Avg. Spancf 6 2 3 0 0 1 .290 Revererf 5 1 1 0 1 1 .293 Mauerc 4 0 3 1 2 0 .325 Willingham lf 6 0 1 1 0 2 .257 M.carson lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .244 Morneau lb 5 0 1 1 0 0 .277 D oumit dh 3 1 1 0 1 0 .281 1 Mastroianni pr dh2 1 1 0 0 0 .252 P louffe 3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .232 2 A.casilla pr 2b 2 1 1 1 0 0 .228 J.carroll 2b 3b 6 0 2 0 0 2 .257 F.Fscobar ss 3 0 1 1 0 0 .211 a Parmeleph e 1 0 0 0 0 1 .239 Florimon ss 2 0 1 1 0 0 .242 Totals 49 0 10 0 4 7
Cincinnati B. Phillips 2b Stubbscf
Vot to lb
AB R 3 0 4 0 3 1 3 1 3 1 3 0 3 0 4 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 30 3
H BI 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 3
BB SO Avg. 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 5 7
. 2 87 . 2 14 . 3 38 . 2 75 . 2 58 . 2 38 . 2 88 . 1 99 . 1 09
Ludwick lf Brucerf Rolen 3b 2B A.Gordon(48), Francoeur(23). HR DeAza(8), Hanigan c off Hochevar;Beckham(16), off Hochevar; Rios(24), W.Valdez ss off Hochevar. H.Baileyp DP Chicago 1;KansasCity. Marshall p d Paul ph . 3 17 Chicago IP H R E R BB SO ERA NP Broxtonp FloydW,1010 7 5 2 2 1 3 7 8 4 .50 Totals Thornton H,25 1130 0 0 0 1 1 3 3.21 A .ReedS,2832 23 0 0 0 0 0 8 4. 8 2 Chicago AB R H B l BB SO Avg. KansasCity IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA DeJesusrf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .26 3 HochevarL,814 7 7 3 3 0 4 9 8 5.40 Cleveland AB R H Bl BB SOAvg. b Sappelt ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .29 0 Collins 23 0 0 0 1 1 1 4 3.33 Choo rf 6 1 1 0 0 1 .27 7 J.chapman p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 10 3 .94 V albuena Kipnis 2b 6 0 2 0 0 0 .25 3 L.coleman 0 3b 2 0 0 0 1 0 .21 4 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 3 2 . 1 9 c Vitters ph 3b 1 0 0 0 0 1 .10 8 A s. Cabrera ss 5 0 1 1 1 1 .26 8 Bueno M azzaro 1 0 0 0 0 1 9 5 .6 3 C .Santana c 6 2 2 1 0 1 .25 5 Rizzo lb 3 0 0 0 1 0 .29 3 L.colemanpitchedto 2batters in the8th. Brantley cf 5 1 1 0 1 1 .281 A.Soriano lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .261 1 2:12. A 14,420 (37,903). Canzler dh 5 0 1 0 0 2 .27 8 S.castro ss 4 0 0 0 0 0 .27 9 Chisenhall3b 5 1 1 1 0 2 .27 8 Clevenger c 3 0 1 0 0 0 .20 8 Kotchmanlb 4 0 1 0 0 0 .22 7 Tigers 1 2, e W.castilloph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .27 3 Athletics 2 b LaPorla ph lb 1 0 0 0 0 0 .22 2 B .Jackson cf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .17 5 Carreralf 5 0 1 1 0 1 .24 3 Oakland 3 1 2 0 0 0 .26 8 AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Barney 2b Totals 40 5 11 4 2 9 1 0 0 0 0 0 .067 Crisp cf 2 0 0 0 0 1 . 2 51 Germano p Minnesota 200 100 100 002 — 0 10 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 .00 0 a Carter ph lb 3 0 0 0 0 2 . 2 51 Corpasp Cleveland 110 002 000 001 — 5 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 S.Smith lf 4 0 0 0 0 0 . 2 44 Al.cabrerap 0 astruck out for F.Fscobar inthe 8th. b grounded b J.Weeksph a LaHairph rf 1 0 1 1 0 0 .26 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 . 2 22 out for Kotchman in the 11th. Totals 29 1 4 1 2 0 Reddick rf cf 3 2 2 0 1 0 . 2 54 1 ran for Doumit in the 8th. 2 ranfor Plouffe in 000 003 000 — 3 4 0 c Bartonph 1 0 0 0 0 0 . 1 96 Cincinnati the 8th. 000 000 010 — 1 4 0 Cespedes dh 2 0 1 1 2 0 . 2 91 Chicago F Plouffe (16), A.casilla (8). LOB Minne Moss lb rf a doubledforAl.cabrera in the8th. b washit bya 4 0 3 1 0 1 . 2 68 sota 12, Cleveland9. 2B Span (34), Doumit (31), Drewss 4 0 0 0 0 2 . 2 16 pitch forDeJesusin the8th. c struck out for Valbuena J.carroll (16). HR Chisenhall (5), off Walters; Donaldson3b 3 0 0 0 0 2 . 2 35 in the8th. d struckoutfor Marshall in the9th.e struck C.Santana(16), offPerkins.SB Span(15), Mastroi Kottarasc 4 0 2 0 0 1 . 2 10 out for Clevengerin the 9th. anni (21),A.casilla (18), Carrera(7). LOB Cincinnati 6, Chicago 5. 2B Votto (39), Pennington2b 3 0 0 0 1 0 . 2 11 DP Minnesota 1;Clevelandl. Hanigan (14), LaHair(17). B Bruce(9). Totals 34 2 0 2 4 9 DP Cincinnati 1. Minnesota IP H R ER BBSO NP ERA Detroit AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. Walters 5 8 4 2 1 3 8 9 6.39 A.Jacksoncf 5 IP H R ER BB SO ERA NP 3 3 1 0 0 .30 7 Cincinnati DuensingBS,11 3 1 0 0 0 3 4 1 4.77 Berry lf 4 0 2 2 0 0 .27 2 H.BaileyW,129 7134 1 1 2 4 1 063.82 Burton 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2.08 A.Garcia rf 1 1 1 0 0 0 .33 3 Marshall H,21 23 0 0 0 0 1 1 3 2.68 Fien 23 1 0 0 1 0 17 1 . 53 M i.cabrera 3b 4 3 3 6 0 0 .33 3 BroxtonS,35 1 0 0 0 0 1 14 2 .65 R obertson W,22 1130 0 0 0 1 9 5 . 7 0 Worth 3b IP H R E R BB SOERA NP 0 0 0 0 0 0 .21 1 Chicago Perkins S,1215 1 1 1 1 0 2 1 6 2.52 Fielder lb GermanoL,28 5 3 3 3 5 3 8 7 6.17 3 1 1 2 1 0 .305 Cleveland IP H R ER BB SONP ERA 2 1 0 0 0 1 2 0 4.22 1 D.Kelly pr lb 0 0 0 0 0 0 .17 9 Corpas D.Huff 41 3 7 3 3 1 3 8 4 2.61 D .Young 0 0 0 0 2 12 5 .94 dh 5 0 0 0 0 1 .27 0 Al.cabrera 1 Seddon 2 3 1 0 0 0 0 6 4. 0 0 Dirks rf lf J .chapman 1 0 0 0 0 1 6 1. 4 2 5 0 0 0 0 2 .30 5 F .Herrmann 1 0 0 0 0 0 9 3. 5 5 J h.Peralta ss 3 Germano pitched to3batters inthe6th. 1 1 1 1 1 .24 8 C.Allen BS,11 13 2 1 1 1 1 1 3 3.28 Infante2b 1 2:51. A 32,547 (41,009). 3 1 0 0 1 0 .25 1 S .Barnes 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 5. 1 7 G.Laird c 3 2 3 0 1 0 .28 0 Pestano 1 1 0 0 0 1 2 1 2.13 Totals 30 12 14 12 4 4 Brewers 6, Pirates 0 C.Perez 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 2 3.42 Oakland 100 000 100 — 2 0 1 J.Smith 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 4 3.26 Detroit 111 023 04x — 12 14 0 Milwaukee AB R H BI BB SO Avg. F.Rogers 11 3 0 0 0 1 1 1 9 2.47 a groundedinto adouble playfor Crisp in the4th. Aoki rf 3 0 2 2 0 0 . 2 91 Maine L,11 2 3 4 2 2 0 0 1 3 7 .71 b flied out forS.Smith inthe 9th. c flied outfor Red R.Weeks 2b 4 1 1 0 1 2 . 2 31 Walters pitched to 3batters in the6th. dick in the9th. Braun lf 4 1 2 1 1 0 . 3 14 1 4:00. A 10,342 (43,429). 1ran forFielder inthe8th. Ar. Ram irez 3b 5 0 0 0 0 0 . 2 94 F Drew(5). LOB Oakland10, Detroit 6. 2B Lucroy c 5 1 3 1 0 1 . 3 24 Reddick(28), Moss(10), Kottaras(2), A.Jackson(26), Angels 11, Rangers 3 Ishikawalb 4 1 0 0 0 0 . 2 57 Berry (10),Mi.cabrera(38). HR Jh.Peralta (12), off C.Gomez cf 4 1 3 0 0 0 . 2 51 Griffin; Mi.cabrera (39), off Gri f fin; Fiel d er (27), off Texas AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Segurass 4 1 2 2 1 1 . 2 60 Griffin; Mi . cab rera (40), off J.chavez. Kins ter 2b 3 1 1 2 0 0 . 2 63 Gallardop 3 0 0 0 0 1 . 1 56 DP Oakland 1;Detroit 1. Profar 2b 1 0 0 0 0 0 . 2 14 Henderson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Andrusss 4 0 0 0 0 0 . 2 92 d Morgan ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 . 2 45 Oakland I P H R ER BB NP SO ERA Hamilton cf 1 0 0 0 1 0 . 2 87 Loe p 0 0 0 0 0 0 GriffinL,61 42 3 8 5 5 1 3 1 0 02.45 L. Martincf 2 0 0 0 0 0 . 1 78 Verasp 0 0 0 0 0 0 13 0 0 0 0 1 5 2. 0 0 Totals Beltre dh 3 0 0 0 0 1 . 3 16 F igueroa 37 0 13 0 3 5 1 2 3 3 3 0 34 3 . 51 c Soto ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 . 2 07 Scribner 1 4 4 4 0 0 22 1 0.27 Pittsburgh N.cruz rf 3 0 0 0 0 0 . 2 55 J.chavez A B R H B l BB SO Avg. 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 2. 4 7 S.Marte lf Gentry rf 1 0 1 0 0 0 . 3 09 Blevins 4 0 0 0 0 3 .24 6 IP H R ER BB SO NPERA Tabatarf Mi.Young3b 3 0 1 0 0 0 . 2 74 Detroit 3 0 0 0 1 1 .24 2 2 2 1 1 2 4 44 3 . 78 A .Mccutchencf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .33 9 B.Snyder3b 1 0 0 0 0 0 . 2 77 Scherzer D.Downs W,2 1 2 2 3 2 0 0 1 1 4 1 1.93 Dav. Murphylf 4 0 0 0 0 0 . 3 11 G.Jones lb 4 0 0 0 0 0 .28 2 2 3 1 0 0 1 1 17 2 .29 Walker2b Napoli c 3 1 2 1 0 1 . 2 29 B.Villarreal 4 0 2 0 0 1 .27 8 1232 1 1 0 2 2 4 3.61 P Alvarez L.Martinezc 0 0 0 0 0 0 . 1 11 Coke 3b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .24 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 5 3.34 Barmesss Moreland lb 3 1 2 0 0 0 . 2 83 Benoit 2 0 1 0 0 0 .22 6 L.Marte 1 0 0 0 0 1 9 3 . 4 4 Totals 33 3 7 3 1 2 a Clement ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .11 8 J.chavezpitchedto 5 batters inthe8th. Morris p 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3:05. A 31,243 (41,255). Los Angeles AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. van denHurkp 0 0 0 0 0 0 Trout cf 3 2 0 0 2 1 .32 7 e Sniderph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .25 2 Aybarss 4 2 3 1 0 0 .29 5 Red Sox7, Rays 5 Baralas c 1 0 0 0 1 0 .19 8 A n.Romine ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 .33 3 b G.Sanchez ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .22 6 T or.Hunter rf 2 1 1 1 1 0 .30 8 Boston 1 Mercerprss 0 0 0 0 0 0 .19 6 AB R H BI BB SO Avg. a Calhoun ph rf 1 1 1 0 0 0 .21 1 Ciriaco 3b A .J.Burnett p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .05 4 5 1 1 0 0 1 . 2 92 K .Morales lb 4 1 1 1 1 0 .27 8 Fllsbury cf p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .00 0 4 0 1 1 1 1 . 2 72 Watson H.Kendrick 2b 4 1 1 1 0 0 .28 0 Pedroia2b 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 1 0 1 . 2 90 Quails p b M.lzluris ph 2b 1 0 0 1 0 0 .25 2 C.Rossrf 4 2 2 0 1 2 . 2 76 c McKenryph c 1 0 0 0 0 0 .24 9 VWells lf 4 1 2 1 0 1 .23 5 Loney lb 30 0 3 0 4 0 4 1 1 1 1 0 . 2 63 Totals Callaspo 3b 2 1 1 1 2 0 .25 1 Saltalamacchiac 5 1 1 1 0 2 . 2 31 Milwaukee 010 001 220 — 0 131 Trumbodh 4 0 0 0 0 0 .26 5 Lavarnway 000 000 000 — 0 3 2 dh 3 1 2 2 1 1 . 1 70 Pittsburgh lannettac 4 1 1 2 0 0 .24 6 Podsedniklf a flied out for Barmes in the 7th. b walked for 4 0 1 0 0 2 . 2 98 Totals 3 3 11 11 9 0 2 Iglesiasss 3 1 0 0 1 2 . 0 61 Baralas inthe 7th. c poppedout for Quails inthe 7th. Texas 003 000 000 — 3 7 1 d grounded out for Hendersonin the8th. e struck out Totals 3 0 7 9 0 5 12 Los Angeles 1 0 0 010 01x — 11 11 1 for vandenHurkin the9th. asingledfor TorHunter inthe8th. b groundedout 1 ran for G.Sanchezin the 7th. Tampa Bay AB R H B l BB SO Avg. for H.Kendrick inthe8th. F Segura (5),PAlvarez(24), S.Marte(3). LOB D e.Jennings lf 2 2 0 0 3 1 .24 8 F Napoli (7), Callaspo(12). LOB Texas4, Los B.upton cf 3 1 0 0 2 1 .24 9 Milwaukee11, Pittsburgh 7.SB Aoki (27), R.Wekes Angeles 7. 2B Callaspo(16). HR Napoli (19), off Zobrist ss 4 0 2 4 0 0 .26 7 (14), Braun 3(27), Lucroy(4), C.Gomez(33). Weaver; Kinsler (18), off Weaver. SB Trout (46), L ongoria dh 3 DP Milwaukee1; Pittsburgh3. 0 0 1 0 0 .27 6 Aybar(17). K eppinger lb 3b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .31 7 DP Texas 1;LosAngeles2. B .Francisco rf 2 0 0 0 1 1 .24 4 Milwaukee IP H R ERBB SO NP ERA 168 6 232 0 0 4 6 106 3.59 Lobatonc 0 0 0 0 0 0 .22 8 Gallardo W, Texas IP H R ER BB SO NPERA c Scott ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .21 8 HendersonH, 11 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 6 3 6 8 Dempster L,6 2 31 3 6 5 5 3 0 82 4. 7 0 J.Molina c 1 0 0 0 0 1 13 3.82 0 0 0 0 0 0 .201 Loe Scheppers 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 450 Veras 1 1 0 0 0 1 21 3.90 R.Roberts 2b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .217 M.Lowe 2 3 3 3 3 1 0 2 53 . 26 C .Gimenez c 2 IP H R ERBB SO NP ERA 0 0 0 0 2 .22 4 Pittsburgh Tateyama 1 1 1 1 1 0 2 3 10.43 a Joycephrf A.J.Burnett L, 5 1 86 7 2 2 2 4 94 3.64 2 0 0 0 0 0 .24 6 Font 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 00 . 00 S .Rodriguez Watson 13 1 1 1 0 0 8 3 78 3b 1 1 0 0 1 0 .21 4 R.Ross 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 6 1 . 75 b C.Penaph lb 0 1 0 0 1 0 .19 4 Quails 2 3 2 1 1 0 0 15 4.89 Grimm 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 2 10.64 Totals Morris 1 2 2 1 1 0 18 4.50 20 5 3 5 0 7 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NPERA Boston van den Hurk 1 1 0 0 0 1 26 21.60 000 121 300 — 7 9 0 WeaverW,184 7 6 3 3 1 2 8 72 7 9 Tampa Bay 0 0 3 000 200 — 5 3 3 1 324. A 15,492(38,362). H awkins 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 13 . 48 a poppedout for C.Gimenezin the 7th. bwashit Fnright 1 1 0 0 0 0 17 0. 0 0 by a pitchfor S.Rodriguezin the 7th. c groundedinto Marlins 4, Braves 3(10 innings) Scheppers pitched to 1batter in the4th. afielder'schoicefor Lobatoninthe8th. 1 3:08. A 36,948(45,957). F S.Rodriguez 2(18), Helickson(1). LOB Bos Atlanta AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. ton 8, Tampa Bay6. 2B C.Ross (32), Lavarnway(6). Bourn cf 5 0 0 0 0 2 .2 7 2 SB C.Ross (2). White Sox 3, Royals 2 Prado ss lf ss 4 0 0 0 1 0 .3 0 1 DP Boston 1(lglesias,Pedroia,Loney). Heywardrf 5 1 2 0 0 1 .2 7 4 Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. C.Jones3b 3 1 1 0 2 1 .2 9 7 Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA De Aza lf 4 1 2 1 0 0 . 2 75 F.Freeman lb 4 0 0 0 0 1 .2 6 7 DoubrontW,119 6 1 3 3 5 5 1 0 1 5.08 Youkilis 3b lb 4 0 0 0 0 1 . 2 34 Uggla2b 4 1 1 1 0 2 .2 1 7 0 2 2 2 1 2 3 2.55 Mccannc A.Dunndh 3 0 0 0 1 1 . 2 11 Mortensen 2 3 4 0 2 2 0 0 .2 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1.42 2 Pastornickypr 0 0 0 0 0 0 .2 4 4 Konerko lb 3 0 0 0 1 1 . 3 05 TazawaH,3 1 3 Padilla 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 4 . 6 0 1Jo.Lopezpr 3b 0 0 0 0 0 0 . 2 45 D.Rossc 0 0 0 0 0 0 .2 5 5 0 0 0 0 0 7 3. 3 1 Constanza Rios rf 3 1 1 1 1 1 . 2 97 B reslowH,4 1 lf 3 0 1 0 0 0 .2 4 1 0 0 0 1 1 15 3 .09 c Re.Johnson Pierzynskic 4 0 2 0 0 0 . 2 80 A.BaileyS,56 1 ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .2 9 7 H R ERBBSONP ERA Venters AI.Ramirezss 4 0 1 0 0 0 . 2 69 Tampa Bay I P p 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 3 3 2 7 94 3 .31 Gearrin p Wise cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 . 2 80 Hellickson 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 McGee 1 130 0 0 0 1 8 2 . 0 1 Beckham 2b 4 1 1 1 0 2 . 2 39 Maholm p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .0 6 9 FarnsworlhL,16 23 2 1 0 0 0 2 2 3.28 Moylanp Totals 33 3 7 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W.Davis 1 2 3 3 2 1 3 6 2.63 aOverbayph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .2 6 9 B adenhop 2 3 0 0 0 0 1 9 3 . 1 2 Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Durbin p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Jo.Peralta 1 0 0 0 1 2 20 3 . 67 Loughcf 2 1 0 0 1 0 . 2 42 dJe.Bakerph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .2 6 6 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 2 0. 6 6 Janish ss aBourgeoisph cf 1 0 0 0 0 0 . 3 41 Rodney 0 0 0 0 0 0 .1 8 6 Hellicksonpitchedto 3batters in the5th. A.Fscobar ss 4 0 0 0 0 0 . 2 93 Hinske lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .1 9 7 Padilla pitched to 1 bat t er i n the 8th. A.Gordon lf 4 1 2 0 0 2 . 2 91 Totals 30 3 7 3 4 9 1 4:09. A 11,502(34,078). Butler dh 4 0 1 2 0 0 . 3 09
East Division P c t G B WCGB L10 Str Home Away
HomeAway
WL
43 31 38 35 44 28 34 41 32 41 34 40 33 40 28 47 29 46 32 41
89 59 .601 7 8 70 .527 1 1 75 72 .510 13/e 2 / e 74 73 .503 14'/e 3'/e 58 90 .392 3 1 20 48 100 .324 4 1 30
HomeAway 47 27 40 33 44 31 40 32 41 32 40 35 36 37 34 41
Today's Games Toronto(H.Alvarez9 12)atN.Y.Yankees (Pettitte 3 3),10:05a.m., 1st game Minnesota(Hendriks 0 7)at Cleveland (McAllister 5 7),4:05p.m. Oakland(Bre.Anderson 4 1)at Detroit (Verlander148), 4:05p.m. Toronto (R.Rom ero 8 14) at N.Y.Yan kees (D.Phelps 4 4), 4:05 p.m., 2nd game Boston (Matsuzaka15) at TampaBay (Archer 03), 4:10p.m. ChicagoWhiteSox(Sale 176) at Kan sas City(B.chen1012), 5:10p.m. Texas(D.Holland 10 6) at L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 129), 7:05p.m. Baltimore (J.Saunders 2 2) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 13 8), 7:10p.m.
Pant Sancya/ The Associated Press
NL Boxscores Reds 3, Cttbs1
Washington
WL
L10 Str 73 W5 55 W 1 55 L2 .412 20'/e 22/e 2 8 L l .412 20'/e 22/e 55 W 1 West Division Pct GB WCGB L10 Str .592 55 L 1 .571 3 73 L2 . 547 tz/e 2 / e 6 4 W 2 .473 l Pie 13'/e 3 7 L 2
Central Division Pct GB WCGB .551 .531 3 5 .449 15 17
Oakland Athletics' Brandon Moss, right, slides safely into second base for a double as Detroit Tigers first baseman Prince Fielder slides into him trying to catch the ball and make a play in the fifth inning of Tuesday's game in Detroit. The Tigers won the game, 12-2. 4 0 0 0 0 1 .30 5 0 0 0 0 0 .24 7 0 1 0 0 0 .23 6 3 0 1 0 0 0 .24 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 .306 31 2 5 2 1 4 Chicago 100 001 100 — 3 7 0 Kansas City 20 0000 000 — 2 5 1 a grounded out for Loughin the8th. 1ran forKonerkoin the8th. F TAbreu (1). LOB Chicago 6,KansasCity 3.
HomeAway 43 29 40 34 42 32 41 32 39 34 39 36 33 43 35 38 36 38 30 41
Detroit 12,Oakland2 Torontoat NewYork, ppd., rain Boston 7,TampaBay5 ChicagoWhiteSox3,Kansas City 2 L.A. Angels11, Texas3 Baltimoreat Seattle, late
S.Perezc M oustakas 3b 3 Francoeur rf 3 Hosmer lb T.Abreu 2b Totals
64 64 28 55 64
National League
W2 W2 L4 W2 W 1
'/e ,527 6 5i/e . 456 t tz/e 1 6 . 455 t tz/e 1 6
Tuesday'sGames Minnesota6,Cleveland 5, 12innings
AL Boxscores
03
Atlanta Philadelphia NewYork Miami
89 57 .610 55 L 3 85 64 .570 5'/e 64 L 1 74 74 .500 1 6 4 73 W1 66 81 .449 23/e t t '/e 1 9 L 3 66 83 .443 24'/e 12/e 4 6 W 1
4 4 27 45 30 4 3 32 42 32 38 37 36 37 3 0 42 36 39 3 5 39 31 44
Central Division P c t G B WCGB L10 Str Home Away 6 4 W 2 47 28 42 31 4 6 W 2 44 29 34 41 8 2 W3 4 6 29 29 43 2 8 L 1 4 2 31 32 42 6 4 L 2 36 37 22 53 5 5 L 1 32 43 16 57
West Division WL P c t G B WCGB L10 Str Home Away San Francisco 85 63 .574 73 W 2 4 2 314332 L os Angeles 76 7 1 A rizona 73 74 San Diego 7 1 7 7 Colorado 58 89
Tuesday's Games
L 1 4 0 35 36 36 . 51 7 ty/e ti/e 3 7 .4 9 7 t it/e 4 i / e 6 4 W 2 37 36 36 38 . 48 0 1 4 7 73 L 1 40 35 31 42 . 3 9 5 2ty/e t g/e 2 8 L 4 3 1 43 27 46
Today's Games
Milwaukee6, Pittsburgh 0 L.A. Dodgers(Harang9 9)at Washing L.A. DodgersatWashington, ppd., rain t o n (Zimmermann108), 1:05p.m., Miami 4,Atlanta3, 10innings 1st game Philadelphiaat NewYork, ppd., rain M i lwaukee (Fstrada 3Pi 6)ttsburgh at Cincinnati 3,ChicagoDubs1 (McPherson 0 0), 4:05p.m. St. Louis 4,Houston1 Atlanta (Medlen 81) at Miami (Jo. Arizona 3,SanDiego 2 Johnson 812),4:10p.m. San Francisco 6, Colorado3 Philadelphia (Hamels 156) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 3 5), 4:10p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Beckett 12) atWashington (Lannan 3 0), 4:35p.m., 2ndgame Cincinnati (Leake 8 9)at ChicagoDubs (Rusin 12),5:05p.m. Houston (Harrell 10 9) at St. Louis (Lynn 157),5:15p.m. San Diego(Volquez 1010) at Arizona (Cahill 11 11),6:40p.m. Colorado(Chatwood4 4) at SanFran cisco (M.cain 145),7:15p.m.
American League roundup
National League roundup
• Tigers12, A's 2:DETROIT — Miguel Cabrera homered twice, including an eighth-inning grand slam, and Detroit had no trouble overcoming an early injury to right-hander Max Scherzer in a rout of Oakland. Cabrera matched a career high with six RBlsand now has40 homers on the season— also a career best. Prince Fielder and Jhonny Peralta added home runs for the Tigers, who remained three games behind the first-place Chicago White Sox in the AL Central. • WhiteSox 3,Royais2: KANSAS CITY,M o. Gavin Floyd pitched seven crisp innings, Alex Rios hit a tiebreaking homer in the seventh and Chicago beat Kansas City for its fifth consecutive win. • Red Sox 7, Rays 5:ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Felix Doubront limited Tampa Bay's sputtering offense to one hit over six innings and Boston rallied for a victory that dealt another blow to Tampa Bay's fading
• Brewers 6, Pirates 0:PITTSBURGH — Yovani Gallardo gave up just two hits over 6z/s innings and surging Milwaukee dropped weary Pittsburgh. Gallardo (16-8) struck out six and walked four to win his eighth straight decision as Milwaukee moved in front of fading Pittsburgh in the jumbled National League wild-card race. • Marlins 4, Braves 3:MIAMI — Jose Reyes hit a two-out RBI single in the 10th inning, and Miami overcame an awful ninth inning to snap Atlanta's four game winning streak. With one out in the 10th, pinch hitter Rob Brantly was walked by Gory Gearrin (0-1), and Gorkys Hernandez was hit by a pitch. Following a strikeout, Reyes hit a blooper that fell in front of a diving Jason Heyward in right field, and Brantly scored without a play. The Braves rallied from a 3-0 deficit in the ninth to tie the game. • Reds 3, Cnbs1:CHICAGO — Homer Bailey pitched effectively into the eighth inning, Ryan Hanigan hit a three-run double and Cincinnati moved closer to the NL Central title. • Giants 6, Rockies 3:SAN FRANCISCO — Tim Lincecum pitched San Francisco one win closer to an NL West crown, and the Giants lowered their magic number to clinch the division to seven with a victory over Colorado. • Cardinals 4, Astros1:ST. LOUIS — Kyle Lohse threw seven scoreless innings for his 15th victory and contributed an RBI double as St. Louis beat Houston to stay in front for the second NL wild card.
playoff hopes. • Twins 6, indians 5:CLEVELAND — Darin Mastroianni scored the go-ahead run from second base on an infield hit in a two-run 12th inning and Minnesota tied Cleveland for fourth place in the AL Central. • Angeis11, Rangers 3:ANAHEIM, Calif. — Jered Weaver earned his 100th victory, Chris lannetta had a two-run single and scored on a wild pitch during a crazy eight-run rally in the fourth inning, and Los Angeles moved up in the AL playoff race with a victory over Texas.
•Diamondbacks3,Padres2:PHOENIX— lan Kennedy gave up one run in eight innings for his 14th victory, Miguel Montero drove in two runs and Arizona finally got a home win over San Diego. Miami AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. G .Hernandez cf 4 0 1 1 0 1 .18 0 D.Solano 2b 5
0 0 0 0 5 0 3 1 0 Ca.Lee lb 4 0 1 0 0 R uggiano lf rf 4 0 0 0 0 Kearnsrf 3 0 1 0 0 1 Petersen pr lf 1 1 0 0 0 J.Buckc 3 2 2 2 1 Velazquez3b 4 0 0 0 0 Fovaldi p 2 0 0 0 0 b Dobbsph 1 0 0 0 0 Cishekp 0 0 0 0 0 M.Dunn p 0 0 0 0 0 H.Bell p 0 0 0 0 0 e Brantly ph 0 1 0 0 1 Totals 30 4 0 4 2 A tlanta 000 000 003 0 — Miami 001 0 002001 —
Reyesss
2 .27 5 0 .28 8 0 .274 2 .31 9 0 .24 8 1 .21 2 0 .20 0 1 .06 7 1 .10 7 0 .29 6 0 .00 0 0 .00 0 0 0 .34 3 0 3 7 0 4 0 0
Twooutswhenwinning runscored. a struckoutfor Moylaninthe8th. b groundedout for Fovaldi inthe8th. c groundedoutfor Constanzain the 9th. d wasintentionally walkedfor Durbin in the 9th. e walkedfor H.Bell in the10th. 1 ran for Kearnsin the 7th. 2 ranfor Mccannin the 9th. LOB Atlanta 7,Miami6. 2B Heyward(28), Mc Cann (14),Reyes(35), Kearns(6). 3B J.Buck (1). HR J.Buck(11),off Moylan. DP Atlanta 1;Miami 1. Atlanta Maholm Moylan Durbin Venters Gearrin L, 0 1 Miami Fovaldi CishekH,13 M.DunnBS,4 5
I P H R ER BB SO NPERA 6234 2 2 1 5 103 3.85 13 1 1 1 0 0 5 2 2 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 14 3.22 2 3 2 0 0 0 2 15 3.54 1 1 1 1 1 1 22 1.69 I P H R ER BB SO NPERA 8 4 0 0 2 5 114 4.36 13 2 3 3 1 1 22 2.87 2 3 1 0 0 1 1 15 3.77 H.Bell W,3 5 1 0 0 0 0 2 15 5.25 1 313A 23,009 (37,442).
Cardinals 4, Astros 1 Houston
Altuve 2b S.Moorerf Wallace lb Maxwell cf Lowrie ss J.D.Martinezlf
J.castro c Dominguez3b Abed p Fe.Rodriguezp X.cedenop c Paredes ph J.Valdezp Totals
AB R 4 0 3 0 4 0 3 0 4 0 4 0 4 0 4 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 33 1
H 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 7
BI 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
BB SO Avg. 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
0 0 0 2 0 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 7
. 2 91 . 2 42 . 2 62 . 2 37 . 2 52 . 2 44 . 2 61 . 2 90 . 1 43 . 0 00 . 2 17
St.Louis AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. Jay cf 3 0 2 2 0 1 .30 9 Beltran rf 4 0 1 0 0 3 .26 7 Boggsp 0 0 0 0 0 0 Rzepczynski p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Motte p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Holliday lf 3 0 0 0 1 2 .295 Craig lb 4 0 0 0 0 2 .30 5 Y.Molina c 3 1 2 0 1 0 .32 2 Freese3b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .29 2 Descalso 2b 3 1 1 1 1 0 .22 1 Kozmass 3 1 1 0 0 1 .31 0 Lohsep 2 1 1 1 0 1 .10 0 a Schumakerph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .28 6 b S.Robinson ph rf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .24 8 Totals 30 4 9 4 3 10 Houston 000 000 010 — 1 7 1 St. Louis 010 020 10x — 4 9 0 a wasannouncedforLohseinthe 7th.b grounded out for Schumakerin the 7th. c singled forX.cedeno in the 8th. F J D Martinez(2).LOB Houston7,St. Louis6. 2B S.Moore(8), Dominguez(2), Jay(16), YMolina
(28), Lohse(1). 3B Kozma(2). DP Houston3.
Houston
IP
H R E R BB SOERA NP
Abed L,O 5
5
6 3 3 0 6 82 5.11
Fe.Rodriguez 1 131 1 1 2 2 33 5.75 X.cedeno 2 3 1 0 0 0 1 20 4.18 J.Valdez 1 1 0 0 1 1 16 2.35 St. Louis IP H R ERBB SO NP ERA Lohse W,153 7 4 0 0 2 5 102 2.71 Boggs 2 3 3 1 1 0 1 25 2.43 RzepczynskiH, 1 713 0 0 0 0 0 3 4 3 7 Motte S,36 43 1 0 0 0 0 1 20 3.02 1 3:1 1. A 35,422 (43,975).
Diamondbacks 3, Padres2 San Diego Fv.cabrerass Forsylhe2b Headley3b Grandal c Alonso lb Denorfia rf Venablecf Guzman lf Stults p aAmaristaph Brach p
AB R 4 0 4 1 3 0 4 0 3 0 4 1 3 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 31 2
H BI 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 2 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
BB SO Avg. 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0
. 2 41 . 2 96 . 2 84 . 2 76 . 2 76 . 2 97 . 2 55 . 2 56 . 2 92 . 2 45
Pence rf 2 1 0 1 1 0 .25 9 H.Sanchez c 4 1 2 0 0 0 .26 7 Nady lf 3 0 2 2 0 0 .18 3 G.Blanco lf 1 1 1 0 0 0 .239 B .crawford ss 4 0 1 0 0 1 .24 9 Lincecum p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .09 1 Affeldt p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .00 0 S.casilla p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .33 3 Milares p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .00 0 d Theriot ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .26 6 Mota p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Rorno p Totals 34 0 12 5 3 0 Colorado 000 000 021 — 3 0 0 San Francisco 011 001 12x — 0 12 1 a singled forJ.Herrerainthe 7th. b groundedinto a double playfor C.Torresin the 7th. c struckout for Colvin in the8th. d poppedoutfor Milares inthe8th. e singledfor W.Harris inthe 9th. F H.Sanchez(4).LOB Colorado7,SanFrancis co 9. 2B LeMahieu(10), Sandoval(23), H.Sanchez (13), G.Blanco (14). 3B Pagan(14). HR W.Rosario (25), off S.casilla. SB Nelson(2). DP San Francisco l.
Colorado IP H R ER BB SO NPERA L, 5 6 5 6 2 2 1 3 7 85 . 58 . 2 52 Francis C . Torres 1 2 1 1 1 1 2 1 4.69 R oenicke 1 1 1 1 1 0 2 0 3.05 Outman 2 3 2 2 2 0 1 1 1 8.65 Arizona AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. W.Harris 13 1 00 0 1 6 54 0 Fatonlf cf 1 1 0 0 2 0 .26 8 San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NPERA A Hill 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .29 9 Lincecum W, 101461 3 5 0 0 2 6 1 064.91 J.upton rf 3 1 1 0 1 1 .27 3 Affeldt H, 15 1 1 3 01 1 1 1 1 52 . 91 G oldschmidt lb 3 1 1 1 1 0 .28 4 S .casilla 0 1 1 1 0 0 3 2 . 78 M .Montero c 4 0 2 2 0 1 .29 0 Milares H, 6 1 3 0 0 0 0 1 4 3 . 38 C.Youngcf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .22 7 Mota 1 3 1 1 1 0 1 1 2 5.60 G.Parralf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .26 8 2 3 1 0 0 0 0 8 1 . 95 C .Johnson 3b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .27 5 Rorno S.casilla pitchedto 1batter in the8th. J o.McDonalss d 3 0 1 0 0 0 .23 7 1 3:02. A 41,718(4 1,91 5). I .Kennedy p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .08 5 Putz p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 27 3 0 3 4 0 Leaders San Diego 100 000 001 — 2 0 0 ThroughTuesday'searlygames Arizona 200 010 00x — 3 0 1 AMERICANLEAGUE a fouled out forStults in the7th. b groundedout BATTING —Micabrera, Detroit, .333; Trout, for Layneinthe9th. Los Angeles, .327; Mauer,Minnesota, .325; Jeter, F Eaton (1).LOB San Diego7,Arizona7.2B New York, .323; Beltre, Texas, .316; DavMurphy, Head ley (27),MMontero2(23).3B Fvc abrera(3). Texas,.311; Butler, Kansas City,.309. SB Eaton (2). S Stults, I.Kennedy 2. RUNS —Trout, Los Angeles, 1 18; Micabrera, DP San Diegol. Detroit, 100; Hamilton, Texas, 98; Kinsler, Texas, AJackson,Detroit, 95; AdJones,Baltimore,94; San Diego I P H R ER BB SO NPERA 97; Jeter, NewYork, 93. Stults L, 6 3 6 5 3 3 3 6 1 022.69 RBI —Micabrera, Detroit, 129; Hamilton, Tex Brach 1 1 00 1 0 1 3 3 . 98 Layne 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 82 . 84 as, 123;Willingham,Minnesota, 106; Fncarnacion, Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NPERA Toronto, 102; Fielder, Detroit, 100; Butler, Kansas KennedyW, 14118 7 1 1 2 6 1 214.08 City, 97; Pulols, LosAngeles,96. HITS — Jeter, NewYork, 199; Micabrera, De Putz S, 30 35 1 1 10 0 0 7 3 . 0 6 troit, 189; Beltre, Texas, 175;Butler, Kansas City, 1 2:29. A 20,811(48,633). 173; AGordon, KansasCity, 173; AdJones, Balti more, 169; Andrus, Texas, 167; Cano,NewYork, Giants 6, Rockies 3 167. DOUBLES— AGordon, Kansas City , 48; Colorado AB R Bl BB SO Avg. Pulols, Los Angeles, 43; Cano, NewYork, 41; Fowler cf 4 0 0 1 1 .3 0 2 Kinsler, Texas,40; Micabrera, Detroit, 38; Choo, Blackmon lf 4 0 0 0 2 .2 4 6 Clevel and, 37; Ncruz, Texas,37;AdGonzalez, Pachecolb 3 1 0 1 0 .3 0 3 Boston, 37. W.Rosarioc 4 1 2 0 1 .2 5 6 NATIONALLEAGUE Colvin rf 2 0 0 0 0 .2 8 8 BATTING — Mecabrera, San Francisco, .346; c A.Brown ph rf 1 0 0 0 1 .2 4 6 AMccutchen, Pittsburgh, .339; Posey,San Fran Nelson3b 4 0 0 0 1 .2 9 4 cisco, .333; YMolina, St. Louis, .322; Braun, Mil LeMahieu2b 3 1 0 1 1 .2 7 3 waukee, .314;DWright, NewYork, .310; CGonzalez, J.Herrera ss 2 0 0 0 0 .2 3 6 Colorado, .307. RUNS —AMccutchen, Pittsburgh, 100; Braun, a Rutledge ph ss 2 0 0 0 0 .2 9 4 Francis p 2 0 0 0 2 .0 3 6 Milwaukee, 96; Rollins, Philadelphia, 92; Jupton, C.Torresp 0 0 0 0 0 .2 5 0 Arizona, 91;Bourn, Atlanta, 90; Holliday, St. Louis, b Giam bi ph 1 0 0 0 0 .2 2 7 90; CGonzalez,Colorado, 89. Roenicke p 0 0 0 0 0 .0 8 3 RBI — Braun, Milwaukee, 104; Headley, San Outmanp 0 0 0 0 0 .1 1 1 Diego, 104;ASoriano, Chicago, 101;Bruce,Cincin W.Harris p 0 0 0 0 0 nati, 96; Holliday, St. Louis, 96; Pence,SanFran e McBrideph 1 0 1 0 0 .1 9 0 cisco, 95;LaRoche,Washington,94. Totals 33 3 3 3 9 HITS — AMccutchen, Pittsburgh, 182; Prado, Atlanta, 174; Scutaro, SanFrancisco, 173; Reyes, San Francisco AB R Bl BB SO Avg. Miami, 171; Braun, Milwaukee, 170; Scastro, Pagancf 5 1 1 0 2 . 2 9 0 Chicago, 165; Bourn, Atlanta, 164; DWright, New Scutaro2b 5 2 1 0 0 . 3 0 0 York, 164. Sandoval3b 4 0 0 0 0 .2 7 8 DOUBLES —ArRamirez, Milwaukee, 45; Belt lb 1 0 0 0 1 .2 6 7 DWright, NewYork, 40; Goldschmidt, Arizona,39; Posey lb 2 0 0 2 1 .3 3 3 Votto, Cincinnati, 39; Prado,Atlanta, 38;AHill, Ari Arias 3b 0 0 0 0 0 .2 7 7 zona, 37;DanMurphy,NewYork, 37.
Laynep b Kotsayph Totals
04
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
PREP ROUNDUP
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Stanford looking forward, not back en voe eview 0s in oui ames By AantonioGonzalez The Associated Press
Bulletin staff report Bend continued its impres sive start to the season on Tuesday night with a four game volleyball victory at home against Ridgeview. The Lava Bears (4-1) won 25-16, 25-17, 23-25, 25-13, in a match featuring two of the area's best teams early in the season. Both Class 5A Bend and Class 4A Ridgeview had lost just once entering Tuesday night's contest, each f all ing to defending Class 4A champion Crook County in best-of-three matches at the Mountain View tournament. The Lava Bears (4-1) were the better team on Tuesday, taking the first two games before dropping a close third set. Bend put the match away in the fourth game, though, jumping out to a 6-0 lead on AliciaTodd's service before winning th e g am e g oing away. "They wanted to make a statement in that last game," Bend High c oach K r istin Cooper. "They really kept the pressure on, and they didn't look back." Molly Maloney led Bend with 18 kills and four blocks, while Amanda Todd added six kills, nine digs and a pair of aces, and Allison Daley contributed five kills. Anna leise Hollingsworth ended the night with 20 digs. K atie Nurge was 17 o f 17 from the service line for Ridgeview (5-2), while also registering four aces and 25 digs. Katrina Johnson had 10 kills and Kayla Jackson added nine for the Ravens. "We' re looking for con sistency right n o w," s a id Ridgeview coach Debi Dew ey, whose squad had dropped just four sets this season prior to Tuesday night. "We are going back to the draw ing board to work on a few things after this." Bend plays at the Rogue Valley Classic in Medford on Saturday. Ridgeview travels to play defending Class 3A champion Burns on Thurs day before also playing at the Medford tourney t h is weekend. In other action: GIRLS SOCCER Crook County ........ . . . . . . 4 La Pine ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 LA PINE — A f ter f our c onsecutive goals b y t h e Cowgirls — three coming in the first half — senior Hailey Brewer carried the Hawks in the second half and fin ished with two goals and an assist. The La Pine rally fell short, however, as Crook County took the nonleague matchup. Junior Holli Glenn r egistered a g oal f o r t h e Hawks, while senior Ash lee Horn collected an assist. Crook County ( I -I) opens up I ntermountain H y b rid play when it hosts Mountain View on Thursday. La Pine
(1-3) begins Sky-Em League action at Sweet Home the same day. VOLLEYBALL Summit............. 25-25-27 Redmond...... . . . . . 14-15-25 REDMOND Senior Laney Hayes had 10 kills
Volleyball
a nd j u nior E m m a D a h l a dded seven more as t he Storm opened Class 5A In termountain Con f e rence play with a win. Freshman Jordan Waskom pitched in with eight digs to go along with three aces. Senior Jo hanna Bailey led the Pan thers with eight k i lls and eight digs. Junior Lexie Os tranderrecorded eight digs, while junior S helby B er gum piled up six blocks for Redmond. Summit (1-0 I MC, 6 -6) visits R i dgeview o n Tuesday. Redmond (0-1 I MC, 1-5) opens the Rogue Valley Classic in Medford against St. Mary's on Saturday. Sisters...... . . . . . . .. 25-25-25 Junction City...... . . 18-12-15 JUNCTION CITY — Sen ior Duree Standley, sopho m ore N i l a L u k en s a n d freshman Isabelle Tara all recorded six kills i n l ead ing the Outlaws to victory in their Sky-Em League open er. Senior Shelbi Thompson racked up 13 digs, while sen ior Shannon Fouts delivered 32 assists to go with her 13 points on serves. Sisters (1-0 Sky-Em, 5-2) continues con ference play when it visits Sweet Home on Thursday. Sweet Home......... 25-25-25 La Pine..... . . . . . . . . 15-12-18 S WEET HOME — T h e Hawks fell i n t h eir C lass 4A Sky-Em League opener, making the final game close before losing in three sets. La Pine (0-4) continues league p lay on T hursday with a match at Elmira. Kennedy...... . . . . .. 25-25-25 Culver..... . . . . . . . . . 21-17-20 MT. ANGEL — In a battle of the last remaining unbeat ens in the Class 2A Tri-Val ley Conference, the Bulldogs fell to the Trojans. Culver (4-1 TRC, 7-5) looks to bounce back when it welcomes Cen tral Linn for a league contest on Thursday. Trinity Lutheran 25-18-21-25-15 Gilchrist...... . 7-25-25-18-12 A school-record 20 kills by sophomore Katie Murphy helped the Saints overcome a 2-1 game deficit and pick up a Class IA Mountain Valley League win. C ontributing with eight blocks was sen ior Abbey Carpenter, who Trinity Lutheran coach Greg Clift said was "huge at the net." Ashley James led the Grizzlies with six kills to go along with eight digs. Paige Kooker added five kills and 10 digs for Gilchrist. Court ney James contributed 18 a ssists and four k i l l s f o r the Grizzlies. Gilchrist (0-4 MVL, 0-5) entertains North Lake for a conference con test on Friday. Trinity Lu theran of Bend (3-1 MVL, 6 2) hosts Hosanna Christian in an MV L m atchup next Wednesday. South Wasco County 25-25-25 Central Christian..... 11-12-20 MAUPIN — A late rally by Central Christian came up empty-handed, as South W asco County swept t h e T igers in a C l ass I A B i g Sky League matchup. Cen tral Christian (0-1 BSL, 3-3) heads back to Maupin on Saturday for the South Was co Redside Tournament.
trol of the second game near the end of the set, turning a Continued from D1 17-16 lead into a 22-17 advan T he Cougars, wh o o n tage following kills by Trout Thursday lost a thrilling five man and Kathryn K aonis set match against crosstown and an ace by Karlee Hollis. rival Bend High, came out Lindburg closed out the sec strong in the opening game ond game with two kills of and led 8-3 early on. Lind her own to give the Cowgirls burg got hot at the service a commanding 2-0lead. line for the Cowgirls, though, "Hannah and Mak are just and led Crook County on a so strong," said Honl, whose seven-point run to make the squad next plays at a tourna score 13-9. Mountain View ment in Kent, Wash., on Sat rallied and actually led 22-21, urday. "They were key." but the Cowgirls won the last Jill Roshak led Mountain four points of the set to take View with 10 kills Tuesday the opener 25-22. night. Brenna Crecraft added "We showed some good 16 assists and Rachel Bueh things," McKae said. "We' ve ner contributed 12 digs. The just got to be more consis Cougars are at the Rogue tent. We can't let opponents Valley Classic in Medford on have those six-, seven-, eight Saturday. — Reporter: 541-383-0305, point swings." Crook County seized con beastesC<bendbulletin.corn.
STANFORD, Calif. — Da vid Shaw came home late Saturday night and his wife, Kori, already wanted to watch t he television replay of h i s Stanford team's 21-14 upset over Southern California. By the time Shaw woke up Sunday morning, more than 200 text messages had piled up on his phone — some from people he didn't even know had his number. Not to men tion the countless calls and emails the second-year head coach has received since. Indeed, almost everywhere Shaw looks he's reminded of the victory. With a bye this week before playing at Washington (2-1) on Sept. 27, staying focused might be the toughest test for the No. 9 Cardinal (3-0, 1-0) after a physical and formi dable win against Matt Bark ley and the favored Trojans caught everybody's attention in the Pac-12 this season. "I don't want to treat it like a national holiday," Shaw said Tuesday. "We won a football game. Great.We have anoth er one in about 10 days." Suddenly, t h o u gh , the stakes are even higher. Stanford's stampede past a program expected to contend for the national title — out gaining the Trojans 417 to 280 in total yards, holding USC to 26 yards rushing and forcing Barkley into tw o i n t ercep tions — has reshaped expec tations in what was supposed to be a transitional year with Andrew Luck a n d s everal other key contributors now
Marclo Jose Sanchez/ The Associated Press
Stanford head coach David Shawleads his team before a game against USC in Stanford, Calif., Saturday. on NFL sidelines. N ew q u a r terback J o s h Nunes was hardly Luck-like, except for a p air o f g ame changing scrambles for first downs late that even left his coach "shocked." But Nunes did just enough with a pow erful running game led by Maxwell Award Player of the Week Stepfan Taylor, a de fense that bullied and bruised Barkley and never allowed All-American receiver Rob ert Woods and r i sing star Marqise Lee to break free. Shaw clicked over his tele vision to another channel lat er that night and no celebra tory toast, for one, because h e's "never had a d r ink o f alcohol in my life." Also be cause he knows Washington is the first stop in a difficult road schedule that also in
eludes games at No. 3 Oregon and No. 11 Notre Dame this season. "I live in a world of anxi ety," he joked. Stanford h a s a b s o rbed Luck's departure better than m ost imagined, similar t o the way it did the loss of2009 Heisman Trophy runner-up Toby Gerhart and coach Jim Harbaugh after the 2010 sea son. The win against USC certainly sent s h ockwaves across the conference, and Stanford is n o l o nger sur prising a n ybody a n y m ore this year. "They' ve been a ble t o carry on and they' ve got the combination of r eally good coaching and very good tal ent. They can match up with anybody," said Oregon State coach M ik e R i l ey, w h o se
team visits Stanford Stadium on Nov. 10. "I wasn't shocked by it. SC has been so hot, though, I was surprised they didn't get many points." Much o f t h e s u s t ained success can be attributed to Stanford's system. In preparing for his team's game next week, Washington coach Steve Sarkisian said his staff's studies showed Stanford has the most 6-foot 4 or taller players in the con ference — and perhaps any where. The C ardinal h ave cornered the market on a spe cific type of athlete who fits that system, Sarkisian said, and that has been evident on the recruiting trail. " Stanford ha s a u n i q u e style of football in their big p ersonnel g r oupings w i t h multiple tight ends and extra offensive linemen, and then their ability to play stout up front on the defensive side of the ball to keep the game close," Sarkisian said. "The m oment you b r eak d o w n , they seem to take advantage of it." O ne place Shaw and hi s staff won't shy away from the USC win: with recruits. In a series between Cali fornia's two p r ivate Pac-12 schools that dates to 1905, Stanford had never won four in a row against USC until now. The timing couldn't be any better, either. During the bye, Stanford is hitting the recruiting trail, as most programs always do with the extra time. Three Stanford coaches just so hap pened to be heading to South ern California this week.
NFL
Pressureintensifies onleague to Seahawks show style bring backlockedout officials in rebound
Mark Maske
COMMENTARY
The Washington Post
r iticism of N F L r e placement officials has i ntensified after t h e second week of games, with loud, public pleas by players a nd commentators for t h e league to reach an agreement with its locked-out referees and get them back on the field. " It's just like a t eam of r ookies," R e dskins li n e backer Lorenzo Alexander said of the replacement of ficials, who, some players and coaches said, nearly lost control of Washington's con test with the St. Louis Rams. "If you' ve got a whole bunch of rookies on an NFL roster, you' re going to have a lot of mistakes out there. So it's the same thing and that's what
the weekend, including the Redskins' loss at St. Louis and the P h iladelphia Ea gles' win over the Baltimore Ravens, featured s cuffles among players. Some games seemed to drag on while of ficials worked through rules and replay issues, prompting complain about the flow of
play.
"The control of the game is the biggest thing — the chip piness, guys taking cheap shots," Alexander said Mon day in the locker room at Red skins Park in Ashburn, Va. "Some of that stuff, the other refsdon't have tolerance for. ... As soon as you start throw ing 15-yard penalties on peo ple, I think that gets guys to calm down a little bit." we' re etting." g The NFL Players Associa Mike Pereira, the league's tion has called replacement former vice president of of officials a safety issue for f iciating and now an N F L players. Alexander said he' s rules analyst for Fox, publicly beginning to have concerns. "You' re going to come up asked Atlanta Falcons owner Arthur Blank, a member of with schemes, come up with the NFL negotiating commit techniques or a mentality and tee, to end the lockout. push the envelope as far as "Arthur . . . get the refs to the refs allow you to do. Until the table tomorrow and get they call it, why wouldn't you this done," Pereira wrote on do it, if it's going to give you Twitter Monday during the an advantage to win games? Falcons-Broncos game. ... Guys were getting thrown B ut if p r essure on t h e down, literally getting tack league to strike a deal with led, covering kickoffs Sun the NFL Referees Association day. But they' re not calling was increasing, there was no it. So as a player, why not do sign of a breakthrough. The it?" league continued to stand R edskins C o ac h Mi k e by the work of replacement Shanahan said he never had officials. seen a game like Sunday's "Officiating is never per defeat. "I' ve never been in a fect," the league said in a situation where you feel that written statement released there is going to be an explo Monday. The current officials sion on the field," Shanahan have made great strides and said Monday. "You' re hoping are performing a dmirably that doesn't happen. It was under unprecedented scru very close to losing control." tiny and great pressure. As The Redskins lost in part we do every season, we will because of a 1 5 -yard un work to improve officiating sportsmanlike conduct pen and are confident that the alty on wide receiver Josh game officials will show con M organ for t h r owing t h e tinued improvement." ball a t R a m s c o rnerback There appears to be much Cortland Finnegan after a t o improve. The N FL r e play. Shanahan said Morgan moved a r eplacement side shouldn't have lost his poise. judge, Brian Stropolo, before But he also said there was "no Sunday's game between the question" that an u ncalled New Orleans Saints and Car hit to the helmet of Redskins olina Panthers after it was tight end Fred Davis should reported that photos of him have resulted in a flag. And wearing Saints gear were on the Rams should have been his Facebook page. p enalized for t h r owing a S everal g a me s d u r i n g challenge flag on a play that
was not subject to a coach's challenge, he said. The R e dskins w e r en' t alone in their ire over the replacements. After the Ra vens had a c r ucial touch d own c a tch n e gated b y an offensive pass interfer ence call in their loss to the Eagles, Baltimore quarter back Joe Flacco said: "The NFL and everyone always talks about the integrity of the game and t h ings like that, and I think this is right along those lines. Not to say that these guys are doing a bad job, but the fact that we don't have the normal guys out there is a little crazy." Pereira wrote Sunday on Twitter that "the regular refs need to get back on the field. Enough is enough." L ast W e dnesday, N F L Commissioner Roger Goodell said the replacement officials h ad performed well in t h e opening week of games and the league could continue to use them as long as needed. "They did a very credible job," Goodell said, "and they' re only going to get better." Goodell said there were no active negotiations with the referees association at that point. The league made a failed negotiating push to strike a deal with the locked out refereesdays before the regular season began. The league and the ref erees are bargaining over salaries, benefits and non economic issues. The NFL wants to increase the num ber of officials, make some of them full-time employees and enhance its ability to re place the ones it considers underper formers. Average com p ensation for a game official last year was $149,000, according to a memo sent by league at torney Jeff Pash to all NFL teams. According to Pash's memo, the league offered be fore the lockout to increase pay to $189,000 by 2018. The referees association responded that the NFL was involved in a " m isinforma tion campaign." The organi zation says it just wants a fair deal that wouldn't come close to taxing the sport's mam moth revenues. Officials did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday.
Vld:Ol Q By Tim Booth The Associated Press
RENTON, Wash. — For one of the rare times since coming back to the NFL, Pete Carroll saw the exact style he wanted the Seattle Seahawks to play with in their 27-7 rout of Dallas. The Sea hawks were ag gressive, physical, controlled possession and wore d own the Cowboys Sunday. Seattle had played that way at times during Carroll's previous two seasons as head coach, but the Seahawks were arguably never more complete than in taking Dallas apart. "We' ve had some fun wins and great games and stuff, but because we' ve been so specific, laid it out there, we told you for what we' re shoot ing for and how we want it to go. We' ve seen it in preseason and the first time we really got a chance to see it come to life, that is satisfying," Carroll said Monday. Seattle's first win of the sea son quickly erased the disap pointment and concern that arose following a Week I loss at Arizona. The defense gave up just one scoring drive, held Dallas to 19 plays and less than 100 yards offense in the second half, and
forced Tony Rorno into a trio of three-and-outs. Offensively, Mars h awn Lynch ran for 100 of his 122 yards rushing in the second half. Seattle was so successful with the run game that rookie quarterback Russell W i lson was asked to throw just eight times in the second half. "We played really physical, a really physical style that is what we really want to cap ture," Carroll said. "There is not a guy that sits in this room that doesn't want to play on a team like that." T hat physical style w a s shown early with Dallas tight end Jason Witten taking hits over the middle from safety Kam Chancellor and running back DeMarco Murray smoth ered by S e attle's defensive line. Murray was held to just 44 yards after he rumbled for 139 yards last year against the Seahawks.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Smoke Continued from D1 "Nathan Stanley (Redmond High's athletic director) has been a huge help. He really went above and beyond help ing us with fields." "It's been like soup in the mornings," McFadden added Tuesday evening after the Out laws swept Junction City on the road. "It's just been terrible. Monday caught us by surprise and we couldn't even practice. today) we' ll be at Sky View Middle School in Bend.... (Fel low Central Oregon school districts) have been really nice about helping out. We really appreciate it." Roth said he hopes to know by early afternoon today where Sisters will play football on Fri day. Independence, where Cas cade High is located, is one op tion if the smoke does not clear, according to Roth, who added that another possibility would be to move the game to anoth er Central Oregon high school field. The football teams from Redmond's Ridgeview High and Bend's Mountain View and Summit high schools are all on the road Friday night, making those schools poten tial sites for the Outlaws' non league game.
Sisters to de presentedwith OregonianCup A representative from the Oregon School Activities Association will be at Sisters High on Friday at 9 a.m. to present the school its award for winning the 2011-12 Class 4A Oregonian Cup. Started in1999, The Oregonian Cup, which is sponsored by The Oregonian newspaper, scores schools on academics, activities, athletics and sportsmanship throughout the school year. Sisters totaled 2,797.5 points to win its first Oregonian Cup, edging out Klamath Falls' Henley High, which placed second in the 4A ranks with 2,527.5 points.
"We' re supposed to have a weather change tomorrow," Roth said. "From what they' re telling us, it's supposed to be good for (clearing) smoke, but bad inregards to fire." — Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastesC<bendbulletin.corn.
Oon Ryan Th / e A ssociated Press
Oregon center Hronlss Grasu, right, sets up for the snap while quarterback Marcus Mariota calls out signals during the first half against Fresno State in Eugene, Ore. on Sept. 8.
Pac-12 Continued from D1 The Bruins (3-0) have been an offensive juggernaut under new coach Jim Mora, ranking second in the nation with 622 yards per game. UCLA opened with an expected lopsided win over Rice, followed by a some what unexpected win over No. 17 Nebraska, and then kept it rolling by trouncing Houston last weekend. The Beavers (1-0) have had a strange season so far. Their opener against Nicholls State was postponed because of a hurricane, giving them an un expected week off. They used it to prepare for one of the big gest nonconference victories in school history, 10-7 over No. 13 Wisconsin. Then came another week off for their bye, meaning Oregon State has played only one game while many teams have already played three. "We' re way behind all in the number of games in college football with the postponement in the first game and the bye week in the third week, so it' ll be nice to get into the rhythm of a season," Oregon State coach Mike Riley said. Two teams struggling to find an identity will meet in the Pa cific Northwest. Colorado (0-3) has labored in its second season under coach J on Embree, opening w i t h three losses that seemed to get more disheartening each week. The Buffaloes started the season with a loss to rival Col orado State, then lost to Sac ramento State of the Football Championship Subdivision in the second week. They were blown off the field against Fres no State last week, allowing more than 500 yards just in the first half of a 69-14 loss. Washington State (2-1) has a better record, but the Cougars have not exactly clicked under new coach Mike Leach, open ing with a lopsided loss to BYU followed by just-get-by wins over FCS Eastern Washington and UNLV. "I think we' re similar teams from the standpoint of we don' t quite have a tent over our circus right now," Leach said. A battle of strengths will take place in the desert: Ari zona State'srapid-fire offense against Utah's rugged defense. The Sun Devils (2-1) opened with two easy victories over FCS Northern Arizona and Illinois before numerous mis takes, including four turnovers and a disastrous day on spe
cial teams, led to a 24-20 loss to Missouri. U tah (2-1) had a r o u g h stretch after rolling over North ern Colorado in its opener, los ing to smaller rival Utah State and losing quarterback Jordan Wynn, who retired from foot ball after suffering a fourth shoulder injury. The Utes bounced back last week, hanging on for a 24-21 win over rival Brigham Young in a wild game that featured two missed field goals by the Cougars with one second left and Utah's fans storming and re-storming the field before it finally ended. "A game like that, a rivalry game, against BYU, definitely carries momentum, and we' ve got to take that with us down to Arizona," said Utah quarter back Jon Hays, who completed 18 of 27 passes for 196 yards and two touchdowns with no turnovers in place of Wynn. "The team's definitely riding on a high right now after that type of win." Coming off t h eir l oss at Stanford, the 13th-ranked Tro jans will look to bounce back against California (1-2). One of the preseason favor ites to win the national cham pionship, USC (2-1, 0-1 Pac-12) was manhandled by Stanford's defense and running game in the 21-14 loss, its fourth straight to the Cardinal. Always under a microscope, the Trojans dropped nine spots to 13th in The Associated Press poll and have already been written off by some in the na tional-title chase. "We understand that's what comes with being at SC," USC coach Lane Kiffin said. "You could feel that coming the first two weeks with all the articles and interviews that you' re not playing well because you' re not winning by 40 or whatever points. We knew if we didn' t win, this was going to be the reaction. That's fine. I have no problem with that." Arizona-Oregon will be all about reaction times. Rodriguez is one of the in novators in the no-huddle trend that's sweeping across college football, and Oregon coach Chip Kelly has nearly perfect ed it with his athletic flock of Ducks. Their offenses are not quite mirror images, but they are close enough to set up a fast paced, w h o -can-do-it-better showdown that should keep the scoreboard operators busy at Autzen Stadium.
D5
GOLF COMMENTARY
Two big weeks ingolf, two different prizes By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press
A TLANTA — T w o b i g weeks in golf could not be more diff erent. East Lake has the top 30 players on the PGA Tour. Me dinah will have 24 of the top 35 players in the world. One pays $10 million to the winner. The other doesn't pay a dime. If there's a similarity be tween the Tour Championship and the Ryder Cup, it's the value players place on win ning them. "One is monetary, the other is pride," Steve Stricker said Tuesday. "This is playing for your year. You can do a lot of good things, and you' re play ing for a lot of money. Next week you' re playing for some thing totally different. You' re playing for your country, with teammates. You have part ners. You can see it across ev ery guy's face. You go through the whole gamut of emotions. "But if you talk to any player, I guarantee they would want to win either one. It would mean a lot." T he fl a g -waving, f o o t stomping crowd that has wait ed two years for the most ex citing three days in golf might find this hard to believe, but the players gathered at East Lake for the FedEx Cup finale are thinking only of winning the Tour Championship. Because that's all they can win this week. Tiger Woods was roasted by the British press in 2002 when a World Golf Championship was staged at Mount Juliet in Ireland the week before the Ryder Cup. After taking a one-shot lead after the open ing round, Woods was asked which was more important for him to win. He chose the WGC event and its $1 million purse — that was back when $1 million meant something in golf — over taking a 17-inch gold trophy home on the team plane.
whelmed with t h e p l aying schedule since Akron, really," 4g.'t '" I he said. "I'm doing my best to z) stay into each week. As soon as I putt out on Sunday, I think the juices will start to fly. Or when I get on that plane in Or lando with (Ian) Poulter and some of the guys, yes, amaz ing. It's the week we' ve been waiting for. n "But now, I can't get invest ed in it," he said. "I' ve got to do myself justice for this week." It's still a point of consterna tion for the PGA Tour. This is the big conclusion they envisioned for the Fed AP Rle Photo Ex Cup, especially with this Europe team members hold the trophyafter winning the 2010 lineup of stars who occupy the Ryder Cup golf tournament at the Celtic Manor Resort in top five seeds and only have to Newport, Wales, on Oct. 4, 2010. win the Tour Championship to capture the $10 million prize — Rory McIlroy, Woods, Nick "Why? I can think of a mil plenty of debate that some Watney, Phil Mickelson, and lion reasons," Woods said, a one could win the Fed Ex Cup Brandt Snedeker. The three tongue-in-cheek remark that without winning a t o urna playoff events leading up to the backfired. ment all year. This is the fourth Tour Championship have been Oddly enough, just about straight year such a scenario nothing short of blockbuster, every Ryder Cup player at could happen, but it hasn't yet. with all the top names on the Mount Juliet felt the same The list of FedEx Cup cham leaderboard week after week. way. One week they are play pions includes Woods (twice), One of the ideas behind the ing for themselves, another Vijay Singh and Jim Furyk. FedEx Cup was to give the week they are playing for a The lone fluke was Bill Haas PGA Tour season a definitive flag. Two different tourna last year, who was No. 45 in ending. Trouble is, every two ments. Two important weeks. the world. The fluke was that years the end of the season is One at a time. he won the $10 million despite followed by an exhibition that Justin Rose was working on being the No. 25 seed. happens to be the second-big his bunker play at East Lake More than a fl u ke, that gest event in golf behind the when the rain finally gave way should serve as inspiration Masters. to patchy skies. He walked that anyone at East Lake still The 10 million-pound ele over to chat w it h K eegan has a chance. phant in the room is the Ryder "It's an individual game, and Cup. Bradley, who was chipping out of the deep Bermuda rough. that's how ultimately you' re It could b e w o rse. The Rose is playing in his second going to be remembered in last time the Ryder Cup was Ryder Cup. Bradley will be this game," Rose said. "You p layed in A m erica, it w a s making his debut next week. can win the Ryder Cup and held the week before the Tour The topic? lose three of four matches, and Championship. The A meri Rose was commiserating it will be an amazing week. cans won at Valhalla, and with Bradley over the New But I don't think you come out they staggered down to At England Patriots losing at of it a better player. You win lanta to cap off the Fed Ex Cup home on Sunday. this week, in this scenario, you season. It didn't help that Vijay The Ryder Cup will get here come out of it a better player." Singh only had to stay upright soon enough. Rose doesn't want to think through four rounds to win For now, the focus is on the about the Ryder Cup until he the $10 million. And it didn' t final event of the FedEx Cup holes out his final putt at East help when Kentucky native that comes with a $10 million Lake on Sunday. Kenny Perry said, "It's ruined "I' ve been having a hard my greatest week in my life, bonus and a five-year exemp tion on the PGA Tour. time getting super excited coming here." The FedEx Cup is still in a bout the Ryder Cup b e And he went home with a its infancy, and there remains cause I' ve been slightly over $250,000 bonus. '"
I
GoLF %EEI< from the players at the top of the standings... .W atney openedthe four-event playoffs with a victory in The Barclays at Bethpage Black.... East Lake, the course where Bobby Jones learned to play, was designed by Donald
PGA Tour TOUR CHAMPIONSHIP Site:Atlanta. Schedule:Thursday-Sunday. Course:East Lake Golf Club
(7,319 yards, par 70). Purse:$8 million. Winner's
Ross and renovated byRees Jones.... The Ryder Cup is next week at Medinah in illinois.
share: $1.44 million. Television:Golf Channel
(Thursday-Friday, 10a.m.-3 p.m., 5:30 p.m.-10:30 p.m.; Saturday, 3-8 a.m., 9-11 a.m., 4:30-8:30 p.m.; Sunday, 4-8 a.m., 8:30
LPGA Tour
NAVISTARLPGACLASSIC Site: Prattville, Ala. a.m.-10:30 a.m., 4-8:30 p.m.) and Schedule:Thursday-Sunday. NBC (Saturday, 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; Course:Robert Trent Jones Golf Sunday, 10:30 a.m.-3 p.m.). Trail, Capitol Hill, The Senator Last year:Bill Haas won the (6,460 yards, par 72). playoff finale and the FedEx Cup Purse:$1.3 million. Winner's to take home $11.44 million, share: $195,000. beating Hunter Mahan on the Television:Golf Channel third hole of a playoff. Haas saved (Thursday-Friday, 3:30-5:30 par on the second extra hole by p.m.; Saturday-Sunday, 11 a.m.-2 splashing a half-submerged ball p.m.). from a lake to 3 feet. Haas failed Lastyear: Lexi Thompson to qualify this year. becametheyoungestchampion Last event:Rory Mcllroy won the in LPGA Tour history at age 16, BMW Championship on Sept. 9 winning by five strokes. Last at Crooked Stick in Indiana for his month, 15-year-old amateur second straight FedEx Cup victory Lydia Ko broke the record in the and fourth PGA Tour win of the Canadian Women's Open. year. He closed with a 5-under 67 Last week:Jiyai Shin won the for a two-shot victory over Phil Women's British Open by a Mickelsonand LeeWestwood. record nine strokes, shooting Notes:The top 30 in the FedEx 71-73 in miserable weather in the Cup standings qualified for the 36-hole finale Sunday at Royal event. The top five — Mcllroy, Liverpool. The 24-year-old South Tiger Woods, Nick Watney, Korean player won the major Mickelson and Brandt Snedeker championship for the second — can take the $10 million FedEx time in five years. Six days earlier, Cup prize with a victory. The she finished off Paula Creamer other 25 players have a chance on the ninth hole of a playoff in to win the playoff title with a the Kingsmill Championship. Shin victory, but would need help has 10 LPGA Tour victories.
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OCTOBER 5t" — 7t",2012 e
36-hole 2-player Best Ball Br Texas Hold-Em Poker Tournament
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Notes:Shin is skipping the tournament. Top-ranked Yani Tseng is in the field along with Thompson, second-ranked Stacy Lewis, Suzann Pettersen, So Yeon Ryu, Brittany Lincicome and Michelle Wie.... In 2009, Lorena Ochoa successfully defended her title for the last of her 27 LPGA Tour victories.... The links-style Senator is part of a 54-hole facility.... The tour is off the next two weeks. Play will resume Oct. 11-14 with the LPGA Malaysia in Kuala Lumpur.
Web.corn Tour WNB GOLFCLASSIC Site: Midland, Texas. Schedule:Thursday-Sunday. Course:Midland Country Club
(7,380 yards, par 72). Purse:$550,000. Winner's share:
$99,000. Television:None. Lastyear:NewZealand's Danny Lee beat Harris English with a par on the first hole of a playoff. Last week:Luke Guthrie wrapped up a PGATour card for next season, winning the Boise Open for his first Web.corn Tour title. Guthrie closed with a 6-under 65 for a four-stroke victory. He opened with rounds of 64, 71 and 62 and finished with a tournament-record 22-under 262 total. The 22-year-old former illinois player turned professional after the NCAA tournament. Notes:Guthrie earned $130,500 last week to jump from 22nd to fourth on the money list with $283,463, more than enough
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ChampionsTour Nextevent:SAS Championship, Oct. 5-7, Prestonwood Country Club, Cary, N.C. Last week:Willie Wood won the Hawaii Championship for his second victory in the past three events, taking advantage of Bill Glasson's back-nine collapse. Five strokes back in the final round, Wood birdied the last two holes for a 6-under 66 and a one-stroke victory over Glasson. Wood won the Dick's Sporting Goods Open last month in New York, beating Michael Allen in a playoff.
European Tour Next event:Ryder Cup,Sept. 28-30, Medinah Country Club, Medinah, III. Lastweek: Spain'sGonzalo Fernandez-Castano won the Italian Open for the second time, closing with an 8-under 64 for a two-stroke victory over South Africa's Garth Mulroy. Fernandez Castano, the 2007 winner at Castello di Tolcinasco, also won the Singapore Open this year. ALL TIMES PDT
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to earn a PGA Tour spot as a top-25 finisher. He has five top-10 finishes in six starts on the developmental tour, losing a playoff to Ben Kohles in Columbus, Ohio, and tying for third in Omaha, Neb. The two time Big Ten champion also has earned $284,672 in three PGA Tour starts, all top-20 finishes. He tied for fifth in the John Deere Classic in July.
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T H E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
T EE T O G R E E N
GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletin welcomes contributions to its Lemp, 94. 3, Jim Lee/TomCarrico/Thomas Stump/ weekly local golf results listings and events DennisMagill, 95. Nine-Hole Women'sSweeps, Sept.13 calendar. Clearly legible items should be faxed to the sports department, 541-365 One Net 0631, emailed to sports©bendbulletin.corn, I, Neenie Greenhoe/DarleneWarner/Patty Stark/ or maile dto P.O.Box6020;Bend,OR 97706. LindaQuattrone,31.2, DonnaBaird/Rosie Long/Sally Murphy,32. Local Golf Women's Sweeps,Sept. 13 Two Net BestBall PACIFICNORTHWEST WOMEN'S SENIOR I, Ther esa Kavanagh/Lynda Weinstock/Candy TEAM CHAMPIONSHIP O'Rear /Anne Goldner, 130. 2, Donna Hook/Molly at Sunriver Resort Meadows Mount/SallyBatchelder/NanWinter, 130. Sept. 16 Par71 BEND GOLFANO COUNTRY CLUB Chapman Ladies Nine-Hole Visitation, Sept. 12 Second Round Best Ball I, KareenMarkle, Meridian, Idaho/Shawnalanson, I, Marlys Lysaker,Sunriver Resort/ERenNewbore, Boise, Idaho, 66 72 138. 2, LisaSmego,Olympia, SunriverResort/CarolynOlsen,BendCC,38. 2,won Wash. /Karen Brannon, Redmond,Wash.,69 70 scorecard playoff Lenore Groat, Bend C.C./Pam 139. 3, RachelWhittington, LakeOswego/Nancy Eg lin, Yakima,Wash., 70 71 141. 4, GinnyBurkey,Fir crest ,Wash./Loree McKay,HiRsboro,72 74 146.5, Anita Britton, Terrebonne/SelmaCusick, Terrebonne, 72 75 147. 6 (tie), Jackie Nelson, HiRsboro/Mary Sias, Portland, 79 69 148; Carol Dick, Lakewood, Wash. /Mary O'DonneR, Bellevue, Wash., 73 75 148; NettieMorrison, Bend/NancyBreitenstein, Bend, 75 73 148. 9 (tie), Susan McCoy, Seattle/Patty Knight, Seattle, 73 77 150. RobinCole,ERensburg, Wash./Cindi Stewart, Yakima, Wash., 75 75 150. 11, AnnDenhart, Bellevue,Wash./Meg LoDolce, Ca mano Island,Wash., 75 76 151. 12 (tie), Tsuyako Dennis, Salem/Linda Haglund,Salem,75 78 153. Sharon Johnston, University Place,Wash./Pat Harrop Schumacher,Sequim,Wash., 81 72 153; Annette Seydel, Sumner,Wash./Kristine Adams,LakeTapps, Wash., 76 77 153; Cece Patterson, Bend/Mary Jensen, Bend, 76 77 153. 16 (tie), BobbySours, Kenmore, Wash./Leslie Campbell, White Salmon, Wash., 75 79 —154. Betty Gilmore, Yakima, Wash./ Ann Hall, Yakima,Wash., 77 77 154. 18, Linda Spear,Seattle/SharonDrivstuen,Mukilteo, Wash., 77 78 155. 19, KarenHerness, PorRand/Helen Becket, Oak Grove, 82 75 157. 20, HaRieMarks, Burien, Wash. /Linda Paul, Everett, Wash., 80 78—158. 21, RobinMcClymonds,Lakewood,Wash./Jan Merriman, Lakewood,Wash., 77 82 159. 22, ShawnaMyoga, PorRan d/Mayho Tanabe, Portl and, 80 83 163. 23,Marilyn Olson,Olympia,Wash. /Sandy Luze,Ta coma,Wash., 8183 164. 24, DeeHanich, Mukilteo, Wash. /Susan ArkeR,Bellevue,Wash.,80 85 165. 25, PattyAnnMyers, Olympia,Wash./SueRen Hamm, Lakewood,Wash., 8189 170. 26, Katie Kintner, Mill Creek,Wash./Cindy Carlin, Mukilteo,Wash.,83 88 171. 27, SandraDiVito, Vancouver,Wash./Carol Beaman,Vancouver, Wash., 83 89—172. 28 (tie), CindyAnderson,Eugene/Linda Robertson,Eugene, 87 86 173. Linda Wheat,Newcastle, Wash./Doris Rogers,Seattle, 87 86—173. 30(tie), Judi Mendoza, Oympia, Wash./PaulineWelker,Dupont,Wash.,93 86 179; Phyllis Holm,Tacoma,Wash./Judy Borgia, PuyaRup,Wash., 92 87 179. 32, Barbara Fortier, Selah, Wash./Melissa AnneKeeter, Yakima, Wash., 90 92 182. 33 (tie), Jennifer Eggers, Fall City, Wash. /Hazel Kelly, PalmDesert, Calif., 97 89 186; JoAnneBarter, Snoqualmie,Wash./Pat Rutledge,Fall City, Wash.,93 93 186. 35, KathyMarlin, PorRand,/ ChristineMcClave,Portland,,92 100—192. 36,Lau rie Evans,Olympia, Wash./Lois Wusterbarlh,Olympia, Wash., 98 111 209.
Club Results
Bluhm,87.3,Pauline Rhoads,89.4,CarolWood ruff, 90. Net: I, SueRogers,70. 2, Carol AnnStiR, 71. 3, CarmenWest, 72. 4(tie), Bonnie Gaston,73; Diane Hayes,73;MarieOlds,73;Veron Rygh,73. Flight 6 — Gross: I, Darlene Allison, 94. 2, Janice Jackson, 95. 3 (tie), Judy Davidson, 96; Karen Wintermyre, 96; Marcia Wood, 96. Net: I (tie), Hilary Kenyon,71; SandraMartin, 71. 3,Jean Sowles, 72. 4(tie), Pat MurriH, 74;LindaWakefield, 74.
FlightC — Gross:I,Denise WaddeR,92.2 (tie), KarenJamison, 99;Paula Reents, 99.4, Nancy Snyder, I 00.Net: I, Joey DuPuis, 70. 2(tie), Joan Mathews, 71;Joan Sheets,71.4,NancyDolby,73. Flight 0 — Gross: I, Pat Majchrowski, 109. 2 (tie), DianeConcannon, 110; DianeStorlie, 110. 4, Anita Lohman,115.Net: I, DarleneRoss,65.2, Gen Clements ,73.3,Neenie Greenhoe,77.4,Sharon Madison, 79. KPs — Flight A: JanSandburg. Flight B: Dar lene Allison. Flight D:JeanRivera. Accurate Drive — Flight A: Judy Bluhm. Flight B: JeanSowles. Flight 6: Pat Tacy.Flight D: Diane Storlie. WednesdayMen's Sweeps,Sept.12 Odd/Even I, Hi Becker/LonUlmer/KenWaskom/Joe Gayer, 94.2,John Maniscalco/JohnSeaton/John Hunt/Ron
MEADOWLAKES
Men s Assoctatton Shamble, Sept. 12 One Gorss, OneNet I, ToddGoodew/DeweySpringer/Jordan Simmons, 63.2,Jeff Brown/GregLambert/JeffBenkosky,64.3, Mike Chappell/MarkJones/MikeBall, 65. KPs — A Flight: MikeClose, No.13; DaveBarn house,No.17.BFlight: ShawnLamperl, No.13;John Novak,No. 17.
QUAIL RUN Men's Home &Homewith Eagle Crest, Garzini, Crooked River Ranch/Juanita Hill, Cross water Club/Marilyn Wurster,BendCC,40. 3, Penny Sept. 12 Kellogg, CrookedRiver Ranch/Meredith Khachigian, Net Best Ball Sunriver Resort/Gila Taylor, Sunriver Resort/Jean Flight 1 — I, JerrySmith/Gary Dyer,62. 2, Trevor Hardman,BendCC,40. Gray/JimDexter 63. 3Jim Ulrey/Dennis Haniford,64. KPs — SallyMann,BendCC,No.11. 4,MikeMann/DaleToten,65. Accurate Drive — BonnieSperbeck,Sunriver Flight 2 — I, Frank Deluca/RichardJohnson, Resort, No.13. 61. 2, MoWalker/Rick Bauman, 64.3,SteveRandol/Al Men's Daily Game,Sept. 13 Wakefi eld,66.4,RonMoye/Jim RoRandi,67. Best Ball KPs — GaryDyer,No.2;Al Wakefield, No.8. 1st Flight — Gross: I, Scott Holmberg/Darrin Women's Club, Sept. 13 KeReher, 65. Net: I, Ron Estes/Craig Smith, 64. 2, Low Gross, LowNet FranzMiRer/PatMcClain,64.5. 3,ChuckWehrle/Andy Flight A — Gross: I, DebAiken, 82. Net: I, Alice West, 65. Jenkins, 72. 2(tie), CathyHayler,75;LindaDyer, 75. 2nd Flight — Gross: I,RichardGagne/TomDun Flight 6 — Gross: LahondaElmblade, 108.Net:I derdale, 72.Net: I, TedMartens/Frank Putnam,62.2, (tie), Gwen Duran,81; BevClaypool, 81. Brett Evert/StephenErdmann, 63.3, Josh Rodriguez/ TerryRennie,65.5. RIVER'6 EDGE Men's Club, Sept. 11 3rd Flight — Gross: I (tie), TomRiley/Mike Binns, 75.Net: I, RichardMorehead/RobertOlsen,61. Stableford 2, BarryTank/JackSealock, 66.5. 3 (tie), GuyHarrel Gross: I, Dave Fiedler, 29.2, BobDrake,25.3(tie), son/PeterGarison,67; NeatHueske/MikeGoldstein, Mike Reuter,23;Don Braunton,23.5,DaveBryson, 67. 22. 6, NeetMichael, 20. 7(tie), KeithHiRard,18;Bob Rhodes, 18. 9 (tie), GaryMack,16; Dieter Haussler, BROKENTOP 16. Net: I, Drake,48. 2(tie), Al Derenzis,47;Fiedler, Men's Gathering, Sept. 12 47. 4 (tie), Bryson,45; Rhodes,45. 6, Michael, 44. Two Net BestBall, Bonus 7, DougKing, 43. 8,JackTibbetts, 42. 9(tie), Reuter, Green Flight — I, Mike Marr/TerryCochran/Jim 41; Braunton,41. Curran,123.2,Jim Wolfe/SteveHarrison/Kip Gladder, KPs — Dave Fiedler, No.7;DaveBryson, No.14. 125. Silver Flight — I, Joe TiRa mn/Tom Sifferman/ SUNRIVERRESORT Men's Golf Club, Sept.12 LamarBlair/EdPerkins, 113. Bonus — I, KirkBashore/CraigBrown/JohnPhil at Woodlands ips/Dave Machamer, 12points. One Net Better Ball Ladies 16-Hole Play, Sept. 13 I, Randy Schneider/Cal Hutchins, 57. 2, Ron Odd Holes Bures/PeterKnaupp,60. 3, Tim Swezey/Mike Sul Gross: I, LucyStack,39. 2,BarbaraJermane,44. livan, 61. 4, Don Olson/Scott Brown, 62; 5, Gene 3, SarahGray,45. Net: I, Julie Seneker,32.2, Sherri Carpenter/DanWeybright, 62. 6, JoeWoischke/Mike Bashore,32.3, Margi Lillegard,33. Pinto, 63. Individual — Gross: I, MikeCalhoun,67. Net: DESERTPEAKS I, Scott Brown,63. Thursday Men's Club, Sept. 13 Skins — Gross:Peter Knaupp3, DanWeybright Best Nine 2, Mike Calhoun2, DanFrantz. Net:PeterKnaupp3, I, Dean Hunt,32.5. 2,BobVictorin, 33.5. 3, Joe Mike Sullivan 2, PaulGrieco, Robert Hill, Bill Bos Kirkwood,34. 4 (tie), Don Gish,35; KenSouthwick, ton. 35. KPs — SteveStedman, No.4; RandySchneider, KP — MikeFunk. No. 8; GeneCarpentter, No. 13;MikePinto, No.16. LO — GerryERis. Friday Night Couples, Sept.14 WIOGI CREEK
Chapman
I, MikeFunk/Juanice Schram, 29.9. 2, Gary Gruner/Tina Gruner, 32.2. 3, Scott Ditmore/Vicki Moore,32.4.
SundayGroupPlay, Sept.16 Stroke PLay
AWBREYGLEN
Central OregonSenior Women's Golf Association, Sept. 11 Stroke Play Flight A — Gross:I,JanSandburg,83.2,Judy
ski, 62; MannyDiaz,62. Flight 6 — Nine Holes: I, Arl Tassie, 29.5. 2, Louie Rogerson,32.5. 18 Holes: I, GeneCartwright, 51.2,PhilBackup,56.3,Ron Minnice,58.4,Ron Jondahl, 59. 5,DonOffield, 61. KPs — DanMorris, Nos. 6, 14;SteveWarwick, No. 4; DarwinThies,No. 13.
Gross: I, FranciscoMorales, 74. 2, EdMcDaniel, 78. Net: I, Al Dupont,61. 2,BobVictorin, 66. KP — EdMcDaniel. LO — Bobby Brunoe. EAGLECREST
Women's Golf Group, Sept. 11 at Resort Course EZs Flight A — I, DianneRogers, 30. 2, Kathleen Mooberry,33. 3, KatWidmer, 33.5. Flight 6 — I, ElaineBlyler 32.2(tie), Betty Stea ms,37.5; Peggy O'Donne0,37.5; DarleneNash,37.5. THE GREENS ATREDMOND
Ladies Of TheGreens, Sept. 11 Best Ball I, Lou Wayne Steiger/Marge Mumford, 22.5. 2, Dee Baker/KarleneGrove, 23.5. 3, Ruth Chal tery/Margaret Pickett, 24. 4, LindaKanable/Sharon Rosengarth,24.5. 5, DorisBabb/Marilyn Feis, 24.5. 6,Jackie Hester/LindaJohnston,24.5.7,BevTout/ SarahWinner,24.5. 8, NormaCarter/Hazel schiefer stein, 24.5. Golfer of the Week — Judi Vanderpool, 45/26. Low Putts — Norma Carter, 15;KayWebb, 15. Men's Club, Sept.13 Gross StrokePlay Flight A — NineHoles: I, Phil Weimar,31.5. 18 Holes: I, Dan Morris, 53. 2, Steve Warwick, 56. 3, Mike Frier,60.4, BobGrabar, 61. 5(tie), SteveAdam
Pac Am
just too dicey." T hat l e f t the tou r n a Continued from D1 ment with the third week of So why move it? September. When the Pac Am moved But moving it there was not to the week before Labor Day, an easy decision. a typically slow time for Cen "It absolutely has to work tral Oregon tourism, organiz for the courses, for the spon ers were hopeful that the shift sors, and for t h e v i sitors," to a period of warmer weather Hughson adds. "There are a would help spark participa lot of components." tion growth again. Count Larry Stewart, a 65 The tournament — which year-old from W o odinville, hasted as many as 800 golfers Wash., among the concerned. in 2007 and '08 — has seen a Stewart — who has played decline in recent years and in every Pac Am except the shrank to fewer than 500 play inaugural tournament in 1997 ers this year. COVA blames — believes that after years of much of the dip in participa Pac Am participants begging tion on a struggling economy. for a warmer week to play, "they' re going backwards in But late August, it turns out, is a favorite time for families doing this." to get together for reunions H e is r e m inded o f t h e before the school year begins, Warren Bateman A m ateur Hughson observes. I nvitational G o l f To u r n a Plus, she says, late August ment in Walla Walla, Wash. was not a favorite time for That tournament, he recalls, the tournament's presenting moved from May to Septem sponsor, Medford-based Lith ber, then moved back to May ta Motors, because the end before being cancelled this of months tends to be a busy year after running for more time for car dealerships. than 50 years. "I'm just afraid that if they In addition, the core mis sion of the Pac Am is to draw keep moving (the Pac Am) visitors during w eeks t h at around that they are going to a re ordinarily slow for t h e do the same thing to it," Stew tourism industry. That lim art says. its the available dates for the Jacquelyn Alderman, who tournament. has played in th e Pac A m "As the event organizers, since 1999, is not as worried. "I really don't care," says we said we really don't want to go back to October," Hugh Alderman, a 68-year-old re son adds. "(The weather) was tiree from Damascus. "I'm not
Bailey/Ray Horgen, 135. 2, Eric Lonnquist/Jerry Murch/Mike Boynton, 137. 3, Ken Schofield/Jim Weitenhagen/PeterGulick, 138. 4, TomClifford/Tony Lord/LarryStrunk,141. KPs — LonHoover,No. 2; RonStassens, No.5; Bob Brydges,No. 11;GregWatt, No. 15. LOs — Michael Carroll, No. 10; Larry Strunk, No. 12. Long Putts — Bob Reid, No. 9; JimWeR ock, No. 18. Home andHomewith Eagle Crest, Sept. 12 TeamMatchPlay Quail Run def. Eagle Crest, 27-21. Eagle Crest Men's Club, Sept12 One Net BestBall A Fligh— t I,Hank McCauley/Evan Knox,65.2 (tie), MikeNarzisi/BiRWidmer,66; Jerry Coday/Phil McCage,66; TomJohnson/Jerry Rogers, 66. 5, Ron Wolfe/SteveAustin, 68. 6 Flight — I, Bill Marlin/JoeKosanovic, 64.2, Larry Rygalski/Cliff Shrock,66. 3, KenBenshoof/Jim Hehn, 67. 4,BrooksGunsel/Melvin Nunn,68. 5(tie), Jerry Decoto/DanMyers, 69; ErnieBrooks/NedOn garo, 69.
Hole-In-One Report Sept. 1 BEND GOLFANO COUNTRY CLUB
Erica Higlin, Bend No.11.......................80yards..........................9 iron Sept. 13 BEND GOLFANO COUNTRY CLUB
Pam Caine, Bend No.11.......................72yards............pitchingwedge Sept. 13 EAGLECRESTRIDGE
Elaine Styler, Redmond No.16......................102yards.......................7 wood
Sept. 14
rangeballs eachday,afour coursewinedinner, two breakfasts and a barbecueawards luncheon, plus prizes andgifts. Friday practice roundavailable for additional $55.Spaceis limited to first 64 couples. For more information or to register: contact Ken dal Daiger at541 595 1536or kdaiger©btackbutte ranch.corn, or click the "Events 8Activities" link at www.blackbutteranch.corn. Sept. 24-27 — The Fall Tour is a pro am tournament for teams and individuals through the Oregon Chapter of thePGA.This four dayevent is held at PronghornClubinBend, EagleCrest Resort's RidgeCoursein Redmond and BlackButteRanch's GlazeMeadowandBig Meadowcourses. Admission is free for spectators. Contact:AmyKerle, 800574 0503 orwww.pnwpga.corn. Sept. 29-30 — Deer Widows Invitational at Juniper Golf Course inRedmondis a womenonly tournament.Formoreinformation or to register,call Juniper at 541548 3121, or visit www.playjuniper. corn. Oct. 2 — Central OregonGolf Tour two man best ball at PrineviRe Golf Club.TheCentral Oregon Golf Tour is a competitive golf series held at golf courses throughoutCentral Oregon.Gross andnet competitionsopento aHamateur golfers of aRabili ties. Prize pool awardedweekly, andmembership not required. For moreinformation or to register: 541 633 7652, 541 3185155, or www.centralore gongolftour.corn. Oct. 5-6 — The 85th OGA Men's Team Championship at Pronghorn Club's Nicklausand Fazio courses is an OregonGolf Association 36 hole gross strokeplay event. OGAmember clubs nominatefouramateurgolfers to representthe club. Team scores are calculated using the best three individual scores onthe team eachday. For more information, visit www.oga.org or call the OGA at 866 981 4653. Oct. 5-7 — The Patriot Challenge at As pen LakesGolf Course in Sisters, Bend Golf and Country Club, andWidgi Creek Golf Club in Bend. Two personbest ball tournament includes 18holes
of golf at eachcourse. Cost is $565 perteamand includesgolf, carl, rangeballs, contests, luncheach day and tee prizes. Proceedsbenefit the Folds of Honor Foundation andPatriot Golf Day. For more information or toregister,contact AspenLakeshead Sept. 15 pro Josh McKinley at 541549 4653 or josh©as ASPEN LAKES penlak es.corn;Bend GSCC head pro Erik Nielsen Ken Ruettgers, Sisters No. 8 ........................127yards.................. gap wedge at 541 382 2878 or erikn©bendgotfctub.corn; or Widgi Creekheadpro DanOstrin at 541 382 4449 or danostrinOwidgi.corn. Sept. 16 Oct. 5-7 — Ace in the Hole tournament at BLACKBUTTE RANCH GLAZE MEADOW BrasadaCanyonsGolf Club in PoweRButte. Cost Casey Tercek,Welches is $299andincludes threeroundsof golf, entryinto No. 5........................154yards.........................9 iron poker tournament andateeprize. Formoreinforma tion call Brasada at 541 504 3200. Calendar Oct.6-7 — TheCrooked RiverRanch Couples The Bulletin welcomes contributions to Caperisa 36 hole mixed couplesChapman.Open to any golfer with an official USGA handicap. For its weekly local golf events calendar. Items more information or to register, call CrookedRiver shouldbe mailed to P.O.Box 6020,Bend,OR 97706; faxed to the sports department at 541 Ranch at 541 9236343, or visit www.crookedriv 365-0631; or emailed to sports©bendbuNetin. eranch.corn. Oct. 6 — Chip in Fore Kidscharity golf tour corn. nament at BendGolf and Country Club. Scramble tournamentbenefits the DeschutesChildren's Foun CLINICS ORCLASSES Sept. 20 — Ladies golf clinic at Juniper Golf dation andbeginswith anoonshotgun. Cost is $150 Women's Golf Association Member-Guest for an individualgolferand$500 for afoursome, and Course in Redmond.Studentswill be introducedto Sept. 12 the fundamentals of golf by StuartAllison, Juniper's includesfood, drinksandspecialty gamesavailable. Best Ball director of instruction. Clinicbeginsat8:30a.m. Cost For more information or to register: call Jacob at North Division — Gross: I, Janet Knowlton/ is $20 perclassand eachis opento the public. For 541 388 3101or email jacob©deschuteschitdrens Kristina Evans,76. 2, DeniseWaddeR/Jennifer Pace, more information or toregister: call 480 5403015or foundation.org. 80. Net: I, Sherry Deetz/JudyBluhm, 61. 2, Pam email pro©stuartattisongotf.corn. Oct. 6 — CentralOregonSeniors Golf Organi Chase/LaelCooksley,61. zation event at MeadowLakesGolf Coursein Prine West Division — Gross: I,Chris Fitzgibbons/ ville. The format is individual gross and net best TOURNAMENTS Judy Davidson, 83. 2, Hilary Kenyon/BarbWeybright, ball, as well asteambest ball. Cash prizes awarded Sept. 19-21 — PNGAmen's Senior Teamat 86. Net: I, Cheryl Shay/KeRieHarper, 58. 2, Sally SunriverResort'sMeadowsandWoodlands courses. at each event.Tournamentseries is opento men's Groth /RocheReNeat,64. club membersat host sites, and participants must Tournamentis 54 holes oftwo personteamcompe East Division — Gross: I,NancySnyder/Margo tition (four ball, chapman,and four ball) for golf have an OregonGolf Association handicap.Cost is Maddux,88. 2,Mindy CicineRi/PamelaKast, 90. Net: ers age 50andolder. ARgolfers mustcarry a26.4 $150 for the seasonplus a $5 perevent fee. For I, Virginia Knowles/LindaBurk, 60. 2, Phyllis Bear/ handicapindexor better. Costis $425per teamand more information, call Ron Meisner at 541 548 AdeleJohansen,65. 3307. field is limited to 60teams.Deadlineto enter is Aug. SouthDivision — Gross:I,BevRamsey/Janice 29. For more information or to register, visit www. Oct. 11 — CentralOregonGolf Tourtournament Voth, 96. 2,JeanRivera/Pat Elliot, 106.Net: I, Dottie thepnga.org orcall the PNGAat 800 643 6410. atBlack Butte Ranch's Glaze Meadow course.The Groves/LindaSullivan, 59. 2, CatherineMasterlon/ Central OregonGolf Tour is a competitive golf se Sept. 20 — CentralOregonGolf Tourtwo man SarahFraser,69. best ball tournamentat MeadowLakesGolf Course ries held atgolf coursesthroughout CentralOregon. KPs — Members:1223handicaps: Sherry Deetz, Grossandnetcompetitions opento aRamateurgolf in PrineviRe.TheCentral OregonGolf Touris acorn No. 5. 24 28:HiRlary Kenyon, No.2. 29 40: Raeann ers of aRabilities. Prize pool awardedweekly, and petitive golf series held at golf coursesthroughout Schimpf, No. 15.Guests: 12 23handicaps: Kristina Central Oregon.Grossandnet competitions opento membershipnot required. For moreinformation or Evans,No.5. 2428: BarbWellnitz, No.2.29 40:Kelly to register: 541 6337652,541 318 5155, or www. aR amateurgolfers of aRabilities. Prize pool award Craven,No. 15. ed weekly,andmembership not required. Formore centraloregongolftour.corn. Balloon Race — A Race: I, NancyStewart/ Oct. 13-14 — Brewer'sChapmanat BrokenTop information or toregister: 541 633 7652,541 318 Molly Mount. 2, Chris Fitzgibbons/JudyDavidson. 5155, orwww.centraloregongolftour.corn. Clubin Bend.Noon shotgun both days and a din 3, DebraBergeson/Marilyn Babich. B Race: I, Bev Sept. 21 — RedDogClassic Golf Tournament ner on the Fridaynight before the tournament. For Ramsey/ Janice Voth.2,Nancy Snyder/Margo Mad more information or toregister, call theBrokenTop at Juniper Golf Course inRedmond.Thefour per dux. 3,CherylShay/Kelli Harper. son scramblebeginswith a noonshotgun. Cost is clubhouseat 541383 0868. Men's Club, Sept. 12 Oct. 14 — Benefit scramble golf tournament $100 pergolferand benefits theHumaneSociety of One Gross,OneNet for Sisters HighSchoolsoccer teamsat Black Butte Redmond.Formoreinformation or to register, call Blue Tees — I, Bill Burley/SteveLarson/Gary 541 350 7605or visit www.redmondhumane.org. Ranch'sGlazeMeadow.Cost is $125per player or Wendla nd/John Masterlon, 132.2, Bob Brydges/ $500 per team of four, and includesgolf with carl, Sept. 21-23 — Grapes 8 Golf tournamentat Jerry Olsen/BiR Cashel, 136.3 (tie), JohnDeetz/Eddie Black ButteRanchis acouples tournament. Twoday range balls and lunch.Additional contests, includ McKeon/ Rick Moar,138;Eric Hughson/Ted Thoren/ tournamentfeaturestwo rounds of golf, Saturdayat ing closest to the pin, also included. For more JimZupancic/RickHanson,138. information or toregister, contact RobJensen atrob. Glaze Meadow and Sundayat BigMeadow.Cost is White Tees — I, Bill Brown/Dave Madrigal/Tony jensen©sisters.kt 2.or usor at 541 2790787. $590 per couple,and includestworounds of golf,
a fair-weather golfer. You just dress for the weather." Alderman remembers that in 2011, when the Pac Am was still staged in late August, golf ers in Sunriver encountered snow flurries. Such unpredict able weather is just life in the Pacific Northwest, she adds. "I think you might get more comments from th e people who are coming from warmer weather than you will from p eople f ro m O r e gon a n d Washington," Alderman says. "But you know what? We had 8 00 (players) when i t w a s (played in October)." Stewart and Alderman say that they fully expect to play in the Pac Am next year. That loyalty is what COVA is banking on. And organiz ers are hoping that the later date helps draw golfers who were otherwise engaged with f amily o b ligations i n l a t e August. "By moving the tournament to a post Labor Day date, we have eliminated those poten tial obstacles," says Scott El lender,director of resort op erations at Sunriver Resort, which serves as the launching point for the tournament.
LOST TRACKS
Mike Koutonen, Redmond,Wash. No. 16......................141yards........... pitching wedge
One thing is clear: COVA still considers the Pac Am a centerpiece event with which to showcase Central Oregon
We' re Cutting Prices.
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!
a
PGA Tour FedEx Cup Standings Through Sept.9 Rank Player Points YTO Money 1. RoryMcRroy 7,299 $7,842,92 I 2. TigerWoods 4,067 $5,885,58 I 3. NickWatney 3,586 $2,800,524 4. Phil Mickelson 3,420 $4,036,621 5. BrandtSnedeker 3,357 $3,549,739 6. LouisOosthuizen 3,167 $3,320,95 I 7. DustinJohnson 3,097 $3, I 88,060 8. LeeWestwood 2, 726 $2,888,569 9. ZachJohnson 2,576 $4,326,804 10. JasonDufner 2,575 $4, 717,304 11. Bubba Watson 2,377 $4,340,997 12. SergioGarcia 2,043 $2,342,916 I 3. Steve Stricker 2,028 $3,272,821 14. Keegan Bradley 2,007 $3, 769,858 15. LukeDonald 2,005 $3,044,024 16. MattKuchar 2,002 $3,697,305 17. CarlPettersson 1,976 $3,386,656 18. JimFuryk 1,966 $3,079,805 19. BoVanP eIt 1,950 $2,837,749 20. RobertGarrigus 1,945 $2,547,683 21.AdamScott 1,923 $2,742,757 22. ErnieEls 1,922 $3,247,818 23. HunterMahan 1,899 $3,771,193 24. JustinRose 1,791 $3,426,930 25. WebbSimpson 1,782 $3,132,758 26.John Huh 1,640 $2,490,013 27. RickieFowler 1,600 $2,925,493 28. RyanMoore 1,568 $1,580,944 29.JohnSenden 1,512 $1,782,251 30. Scott Piercy 1,499 $2,375,630 Oid notadvance toTour Cltampionship
31. KyleStanley 32. Bill Haas 33. VijaySingh 34. KevinStadler 35. GregCha
1,492 1,471 1,406 1,403 1,402 1,386 1,379 1,342 1,280 1,277 1,230 1,222 n 1,213 1,199 1,190 1,165 1,164 1,153 1,152 1,125 1,122 1,095 1,085 1,073 1,070 1,065 1,065 1,058 1,049 1,043 1,041 1,033 1,027 1,024 1,023 991 979 967 916 884
harles Schw ugh Sept.1 Points 2,139 1,893 I, 756 1,531 1,530 1,122 1,108 1,009 958 933 911 875 862 797 763 737 693 684 653 644 643 631 493 455 384
this as a continued win for the region, and we are as enthusi astic as we' ve ever been." — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhallC<bendbulletin.corn
golf. T his year, a ccording t o COVA estimates, the tourna ment generated about $2.5 million in economic impact from the 500 golfers and the friends and family who trav eled to the area with them. But organizers want to see the tournament grow again. " Certainly we' re not u n concerned," Hughson says of the falling number of partici pants. "We are constantly re evaluating the event. "Even with ou r n u mbers coming in at that 500 mark, it is still such a significant eco nomic impact, at a time that there isn't other business that we are displacing." Hughson is optimistic that the Pac Am has hit its low-wa ter mark. A sked if sh e t h i nks t h e tournament will g row n ext year, she replies: "Absolutely." "I t hink h a v in g g o n e through this whole evalua tive process, we' re feeling really good going forward," Hughson adds. "We just see
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Stock listings, E2-3 News of Record, E4 Calendar, E4 THE BULLETIN eWEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
W NASDAQ cHANGE-.sj-.oa% IN BRIEF State jobless rate jumps to 8.9% PORTLAND — Ore gon's jobless rate has increased to almost 9 percent. The state Employ ment Department said Tuesday the unemploy ment rate for August was 8.9 percent — up from 8.7 percent in July and 8.5 percent in June. Despite the higher rate, Oregon gained 8,800 jobs in August. The agency says it's the sixth consecutive month that payroll employment has grown. Seven of the 10 major private-sector industries posted seasonally ad justed gains of at least 600 jobs, while none showed a loss. Construction employ ment jumped more than expected, and record low interest rates led to more work at mortgage brokers. One loser was gov ernment. It shed 800 jobs in August, double the expected seasonal decline.
O www.bendbulletin.corn/business
+ DOW JONES cHANGE+«.s4+.o9% W StIP 500cHANGE „,s, „,o/,
Spate of real estate deals changessceneat Tetherow By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
A flurry of land transac tions have changed the land scape at Tetherow resort, with new owners and a series of land swaps aimed at paving the way for construction of new homes and a hotel on the property just west of Bend. The Deschutes County Clerk's Office has recorded
several transactions at the re sort since the start of August, including a deed transfer recorded Tuesday of 159 lots valued at $20 million, now owned by New York real estate investment company iStar Financial, Deschutes County property records show. The transfer came days after St. Louis-based Virtual
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Realty Enterprises received a $72 million line of credit from a Missouri bank to develop upscale homes on a 12-acre tract, according to clerk's of fice documents. The moves are a preview of things to come at Tetherow, representatives with iStar and Virtual Realty Enterprises said this week. See Tetherow/E3
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"It's definitely a lot of pressure. There are 65,000 people who have preordered a watch that doesn't yet exist." — Eric Migicovsky, whose Kickstarter project is a line of wristwatches with innovative displays 'ej g n
Apple sharestop $700 for first time NEW YORK — Ap ple's stock has reached $700 for the first time, setting a record for the company the day after it announced that orders for its iPhone 5 topped 2 million in the first 24 hours. The shares closed Tuesday at $701.91, up nearly a third of a percent from Monday's close. The rally in its stocwk price puts the company's value at $656 billion, more than any public company has ever been worth, dis counting inflation. The Cupertino, Calif., company started taking orders forthe iPhone 5 last week. Apple says most orders will be de livered on Friday.
Montanafirms announce merger MISSOULA, Mont. — Two competing Mis soula-based insurance companiesplan to com bine to form a private insurance brokerage that will serve custom ers in the Pacific North west, the companies announced. Officials with Payne Financial Group lnc. and Western States Insur ance said Monday the two companies plan to merge by the end of the
year. The combined com panies have around 640 employees, serve 30 communities through 40 offices in Montana, Idaho,Washington and Oregon and anticipate generating $90 million in revenue in 2012. The name of the new company has not been announced, but it will remain headquartered in Missoula. — From wire reports
Photos byLeah Nash/ New York T>mes News Serv>ce
A crowd during the XOXO Festival listens to a presentation Sunday at the YU Contemporary Center in Portland. The festival fo cused on new models and outlets for creativity on the Internet using platforms like Kickstarter.
The pitfalls of • Financing their dreams hasgotten easier for entrepreneurs, but it's not without risk By Jenna Wortham New Yorh Times News Service
PORTLAND n effort to build a sleek aluminum charging dock for the i Phone generated fervor online when it was announced in Decem ber. The project's creators raised close to $1.5 million through Kickstarter, a crowd funding website, and prom ised to start shipping their El evation Dock in April to those who had backed the project. But last week Apple an nounced a redesigned iPhone that is not compatible with the dock — and because of manu facturing delays, some of the project's original backers were still waiting to receive theirs. The designers are now scrambling to make an adapt er and update the product. Crowd-funding sites like Kickstarter, IndieGogo and Quirky are letting designers and other creative people connect with audiences who want to finance their dreams, and they are becoming in creasingly popular. Nearly 3 million people have helped a total of 30,000 projects meet their fundraising goals on Kickstarter, the largest such site, to the tune of $300 million in pledges. But for the creators ofthese projects, getting the money is sometimes the easy part. SeeFunding/E4
A
Efforts to land drone test site continue By Jordan Novet The Bulletin
Officials continue their efforts on several fronts to land a federally approved unmanned aerial vehicle testing site in the state, pos sibly in Central Oregon. Under one such sce nario, Oregon would secure one of six available federally mandated test ranges nationwide for re search and development of unmanned aerial vehicles, also known as drones. Central Oregon is one of many areas around the nation vying for one of the test ranges. The other option is to re ceive approval for one spe cific research project with one drone model at a time. "If we get either one of these, we win. If we get both, we win big," said Col lins Hemingway, chairman of the aviation recruitment committee at Economic Development for Central Oregon, referring to the two options. If one is not granted, the other would still be possible, Heming way said. See Drones/E3
Retailers race to lure holiday shoppers By Corilyn Shropshire Chicago Tribune
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ABOVE:Fred Benenson, from left, Lance Ivy and Dan Drabik talk during a break at the XOXO Festival. The festival, a conference that focused on new models and outlets for creativity on the Internet, was co-founded by an early employee of Kickstarter. LEFT:Michael Davis-Yates shows off his Kickstarter funded project, the "Jammy! A Funky-Fresh Boombox."
CHICAGO — September had barely started, but that didn't stop retailers from talking Christmas: Wal Mart said it would kick off its holiday layaway promo tion just two weeks after Labor Day — a full month early. Afewdays later, Toys R Us and Kmart said they' d do away with layaway fees altogether. One might say they were late to the holiday party. A Neiman Marcus in Oak Brook, Ill., debuted a decked-out display of Christmas trees, collect ibles and holiday decor in August. Fretting that an upcom ing presidential election, rising energy and food costs as well as ongoing job fears could cause skit tish consumers to tighten their purse strings, retail ers are drumming up ways to convince them to shop early and often. See Holidays/E4
Poverty
unchange d The percentageof people living in poverty in the U.S.stood statistically unchanged from 2011.Annual rate: 25% 20
2011: 15'/
15 10
'60 '70 '80 '90 '00 '10 Source: Census Bureau AP
Online hiring systemsleave manyapplicants frustrated By Lorraine Mirabella The Baltimore Sun
BALTIMORE — The emailed rejection came as no surprise to Bill Skibinski, though the Abingdon, Md., resident believed he was more than qualified for the entry-level job he'd applied for online. After spending two years seeking full-time work, Skibinski is convinced that the computerized screening systems most companies use
to hire actually work against Most l a rge employers, even job candidates, no matter how t h e federal government, use so-called applicant tracking qualified they are. "It is a frustrating and unsyst ems to find qualified can fair process," said Skibinski, d ida t es. Increasingly, smaller who is working part companies are turn time as a contractor AT WORK' ing to them, too. while completing a Software screening is master's degree in designed to help em environmental planning at pl oye r s manage overwhelm Towson University. "You don't i n g volumes of applications hear a thing through the Web a n d eliminate applicants who process, but that's really the l ac kt he required skills. only way you can" apply for But so m e experts blame a job. these systems for eliminating
qualified candidates and for contributing to a shortage of skilled workers — a problem companies say they face even in a market glutted with job seekers. More than a third of em ployers in a June CareerBuild er survey said they currently have positions they can't fill because of a lack ofqualified candidates. And that's hurt ing business: A third said vacancies lead to overworked employees and a lower quality
ofwork. Peter Cappelli, a professor at the University of Pennsyl vania's Wharton School of business, argues in his book "Why Good People Can't Get Jobs" that employers can' t find qualified workers not because of a "skills gap," but because employers' hiring requirements are unrealistic, salaries are too low and overly rigid applicant screening keeps most people out. See Work/E3
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Drones
River. Testing drones on Warm Continued from E1 Springs Indian Reservation Hemingway and Joe Gibbs, land has been proposed. But vice president of business de the FAA ruled that the Con velopment at M cMinnville federated Tribes of Warm based Northwest UAV Pro S prings do not qualify t o pulsion Systems Inc., were sponsor a test range for the scheduled to make a proposal more limited drone testing a Tuesday to the Oregon Inno certificate of authorization vation Council to obtain as would allow. much as $3 million in grant But the FAA has allowed money for a business plan certain universities to spon that would support the devel sor test areas. opment of a hub for drones. Universities have received The money would pay for federal approval to use drones on-the-ground support facili to collect in-air samples from ties, land surveys and people plant pathogens, conduct land with drone-flying expertise, surveys and make images of Hemingway said. a r iver-restoration project, " We think w e' ll see a according to documents the pretty substantial return on FAA released this summer. investment for t h e s t ate' s In August, 2011, EDCO money," he said. and Oregon State Univer Separately, local economic sity announced that they had development officials were signed an agreement to test s cheduled to b r i e f m e m drones in Central Oregon. bers of the Oregon Aviation Now Rick Spinrad, OSU's Board about the state's most vicepresident for research,is recent efforts on Tuesday at raising money to pay a "pro the board's monthly meeting, posal coordinator" $60,000 held at Madras Airport. to follow FAA specifications R egional efforts t o t e st for an application for a lon dronesin thearea firstsurfaced ger-term test range. in late 2010, as EDCO consid So far, Spinrad said, OSU and ered involving part of the Ju the state of Oregon have each niper military-operations area, contributed$5,000, and other spanning nearly 5,000 square groups have added $20,000. miles across Crook, Deschutes, The FAA will select the Harney and Lake counties, six test ranges in "late 2012," when it was not being used. spokesman Allen Kenitzer EDCO's a v i ation-recruitwrote in an email. ment committee described The Warm Springs reser drones as "the future of Ameri vation remains a solid option can military aviation" and cited for testing, Spinrad said, be several nonmilitary uses, such cause it contains or lies near as border patrol and weather forest l a nds, a g r icultural monitoring, in a N ovember, areas, mountains, bodies of 2010 letter to Central Oregon's water and other geographi congressional delegation. cal features. That's impor Recruiting drone-oriented tant because a bill Congress companies could bring 450 passed in F e bruary s p e jobs and $28 million in pay cifically mandates that test roll in direct economic im ranges consider "geographic pacts and $70 million in total and climatic diversity." impacts over seven years, ac But other areas in the state, cording to a conservative esti and even out-of-state areas, mate that EDCO published in could be included, too. The a news release. FAA has not yet decided if test Besides Northwest UAV ranges may go beyond state Propulsion Systems, which lines. the state agency Business Ore In any case, Spinrad be gon describes as the country' s lieves the FAA would be wise largest drone engine maker, to consider the Northwest, Oregon has a few other com including Oregon. "We think the geography panies that deal in drone parts, and Insitu, a subsidiary of of the Northwest can be a Boeing Co., designs and builds very compelling argument," unmanned aircraft systems he said. — Reporter: 541-833-2117, in Bingen, Wash., across the Columbia River from Hood j novet@bendbulletin.corn
Tetherow Continued from E1 They hope to distance them selves from some of the owner ship disputes an d m i s sed deadlines that have plagued the resort since it opened in 2008. Virtual Realty Enterprises struck a deal w ith o r iginal Tetherow investor Joe Weston last month to exchange sev eral residential tracts on the property. The exchange would give Weston's development company, Por t l a nd-based Weston Investment Co. LLC, the go-ahead to build a hotel on land adjacent to the club house, said Jason Eckhoff, a consultant with B end-based Maryville Hotel Association, speaking on behalf of Virtual Realty Enterprises. Virtual Realty acquired two residential land parcels in the deal. Weston's timeline for hotel construction isn't known. He did not immediately respond to a message left Tuesday at his Portland office. An extension signed last month by Deschutes County commissioners gives Weston until August, 2014, and possi bly as late as 2017, to build the
hotel. The resort has a clubhouse and restaurant, and a handful of finished homes scattered across the property. Four separate parties cur rently own large portions of Tetherow: Virtual Realty En terprises, iStar Financial and Weston Investment own various residential tracts, while Teth erow Golf Course LLC, headed by former professional golfer Chris van der Velde, owns the golf course and clubhouse. The o w n ership p a r t i es haven't always communicated well in the past, Eckhoff said. But iStar's entry into Teth erow would improve the rela tionship between the owners of residential lots, Eckhoff said, allowing them to better coordinate development. "Some of the cohesion is sues have been a ddressed through this exchange," he said, referring to the land ex change and iStar's purchase of lots. "VRE (Virtual Realty E nterprises) and i S tar a r e committed to Tetherow. Our focus is on working with iStar to create momentum and sell more of the finished lots." Development at Tetherow has been slowed by bad eco nomic timing, the ownership
Work
who could do your job," Cap pelli said. Continued from E1 For Skibinski, a 36-year-old "The problem comes with Army veteran who switched employers trying to use these careers in 2006 after being systems for more than they' re laid off as a field engineer and capable of doing," said Cap project manager in the lottery pelli, director of W h a rton's industry, th e c o mputerized Center for Human Resources. job-application process is full "They have so c onstrained of stumbling blocks and frus their criteria, they end up with tration. He said his status as a nothing. They want skill sets veteran hasn't helped him. that don't exist." In the past couple of years, Cappelli says the software S kibinski h a s a p p lied f o r often is inflexible and can' t graduate assistantships, entry determine "all the different level planning positions, jobs ways that somebody might at Wal-Mart, Target and Star b e qualified" for a j ob. I n bucks — anything to bring in stead,he said, candidates are a paycheck. asked a series of yes-or-no The result? Either no r e q uestions designed to f i n d sponse or a r ejection note, someone who's already do even when he met all the mini ing the precise job the em ployer is trying to fill. "It explains why employers feel that there's nobody for them to hire, even though any objective observer would say $ zp "~perfectcolorssince 1975 there are hundreds of people
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HOME INTERIORS
2121 NE Division B en d
70 SW Century Dr. Suite145 Bend, OR 97702 e 541-322-7337 •
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Div PE Last Chg%Chg
AlaskAir s Avista BkofAm BarrettB Boeing CascdeBcp
12 34.08 -.34 -9.2 1.16 16 25.25 +.10 -1.9 .04 10 9 . 23-.07 +66.0 .44 38 2753 +.66 +37.9 1.76 12 70.45 +.53 -4.0 5.30 -.15 +21.0 1.40 11 5a54 -.85 +13.5 .88 18 5z09 -.48 +11.9 1.10 28 101.99 -.26 +22.4 5 2 7 7 8 -.24 +29.2 .28 14 20.89 -.07 -1 6.7 .53 6 1 8 .25+.04 -29.2 .24f ... 1 1.34+.35 +9.0 .901 10 2a37 +.06 -3.6 . 20 9 8.8 9 -.02 +15.6 .601 22 2a63 -.18 -2.4 10 4.24 -.07 -28.6 1a49 -.87 +67.2 .67 20 2z43 -.10 +4.5 15 16.73 -.06 +23.4 .921 16 31.18 -.04 +20.1
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Price(troyoz.)
NY HSBCBankUS NY MercGald NY MercSilver
$1768.00 $1768.40 $34.644
WILSONSof Redmond
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a25 a25 a25
Diary Advanced Declined Unchanged
Totalissues
New Highs New Laws
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Laws
ENPLONHEHT PROFESSIQIMLS
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www.express pros.corn
Indexes Nasdag
Diary 1,335 1,681 119 3,135 111 5
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NYSE
Providing unparalled service across a variety of industries since 1983.
541-548-2066
541-389-1505
64 1 N W Fir R ed m o n d
MOSt ACtiVe (S1 ormore) MOSt ACtiVe (S1 or more) MOSt ACtiVe (S1 or more) Name Vol(00) Last Chg Name Vol (00) Lasl Chg Hans Vol (00) Last Chg
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thousands of applicants for ev ery opening, he said. But the systems have their limitations, ack n o wledged Haag-Hatterer, president and CEO of Consulting Authority LLC. "You' ve got to spend the time to get the right system in place, customize it and set up the criteria that will best give you the return you' re af ter," she said. "And that can be a moving target. You don' t just implement software to parse through hundreds of resumes." Haag-Hatterer, h o w ever, warns that employers that do little more than rely on key words may hurt their chances of finding the right people.
— Reporter:541-817-7820, egluchlichC~bendbulletin.corn
400 SW Bluff Dr Ste 200 Bend, OR 97702
52-Week H igh L o w
97.72 -.25 +1.4 56.33 -1.13 +1a3 BkofAm 1453392 9.23 -.07 DenisnM g 137934 1.72 +.27 SiriusXM 953071 2.43 +.04 48.74 +.21 +1.7 -.12 St P500ETF 833955 146.62 -.12 jtringo 57 0 1 53.34 -.05 Cisco 43 6179 19.05 7 . 57 -.15 +66.7 AMD 794 445 3.62-.39 NwGoldg 51455 12.50 +.16 Yahoo 4 2 2272 159I +.23 42.13 -.45 +1z4 SPDR Fncl 569659 16.05 -.08 NovaGld g 46757 5.83 +.12 Intel 374 51 2 23.37 +.06 1.31 -.05 -31.4 Nokiacp 488239 2.90 -.07 Neuralstem 45553 1.40 +.09 Facebook n 361175 21.87 +.35 1.68 40 43.74 +.07 +19.6 Gainers ls2 or more) GainerS (S2 or more) Gainers ls2 or more) .12 18 159.35 +.96 -a3 L a s t Chg %Chg Name L a s t Chg %Chg Name L a s tChg %Chg .70 9 1 6 .37-.11 -2z2 Name .75 13 29.81 -.33 -29.5 SchiffNutr 24.37 +3.47 +16.6 Arrhythm 2 .46 i . 31 i14.4 Telestone 2.45 +.76 +45.0 1.56 29 145.49 -.52 +6ao 3 . 6 0 + .51 +16.5 .891 10 31.77 -.42 -1a6 Kngswy rs 2.10 +.29 +16.0 ImpacMtg 7.50 +.88 +13.3 Misonix Dolan Co 5.22 +.59 +12.7 NDynMn g 4.40 +.46 +11.7 Charmcom 6.01 +.69 +1 3.0 .68 27 49.25 -.41 +zo PrisaB 2. 3 4 + .24 +11.4Aerosonic 3.42 +.26 +8.2 jtelti 9.70 +1.10 +12.8 5.85 +.03 +20.1 Natuzzi 2. 3 2 + .23 +11.0Medgen wt 4.75 +.29 +6.5 Sciclone 5 .27 +.58 +1 2.4 . 36 16 13.29 . . . + 7 3 Losers ls2 or more) Losers ls2 or more) Losers ls2 or more) .78 13 34.19 . . . +26.4 L a s t Chg %Chg Name L a s t Chg %Chg Name L a s tChg %Chg .32 13 16.66 -.17 +19.1 Name .88 12 35.44 +.11 +28.6 -.14 -5.8 MCGCap HNI Corp 26.05 -4.64 -15.1 Avaln Rare 2.26 4.70 -.57 4 0.8 12 20.42 +.41 +30.9 CSjtS2xPall 51.00 -5.67 -10.0 Espey 24.40 -1.34 -5.2 SthcstFn 3.80 -.46 40.8 .60 41 26.39 -.45 +41.3 RBS OilTrd 25.22 -2.78 -9.9 InvcapHld 3.76 -.20 -5.0 Sanfilp 14.15 -1.56 -9.9 -.39 -9.7 -.12 -4.2 AMD 3.62 Augusta g 2.74 Deckrsout 43.95 -4.02 -8.4 Frontline 3 . 92 -.35 -8.2 eMagin 4.17 -.18 -4.1 DFCGIbI 17.75 -1.61 -8.3
Pvs Oay T ime period $1763.00 $1767.70 $34.298
mum requirements. B ut fo r c o m panies t r y ing to sort through an ava lanche of applications at a time o f r e c ord u n employ ment, tracking systems can be a "godsend," said Dawn Haag-Hatterer, a human re sources advisory consultant based in Frederick, Md. She said the systems help compa nies weed out "the folks who truly don't belong in the ap plicant pool." Companies began shifting from paper to electronic appli cations in the 1990s to make it easier for people to apply and to save on recruitment costs, Cappelli said. Because it's so easy to apply online, compa nies have been inundated with
Market recap
Northwest stocks NikeB Nordstrm NwstNG Offi ceMax
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areas of the resort, Brooks said. The idea is build a sense of community among homeown ers, avoiding the eerie feeling of living in an upscale home with no other properties in sight. "We want to create more of a neighborhood feeling, where someone can go out and have the p rospects o f m e e ting neighbors," he said. Brooks said the company doesn't plan to resell its stake in Tetherow. IStar's goal is to slowly build up homesites at the resort over the next sev eral years. The firm sees interest in Tetherow picking up as the economy recovers, with the city of Bend still a tourist draw and deliberate growth at the resort building momentum for future development. "We' ve seen (development) projects fail because they were poorly designed, and we' ve seen projects have trouble be cause of market conditions. Tetherow is not a failed project. The problems have been di rectly related to the economy," Brooks said. "Tetherow has the ability to draw people."
Adjustable
541-382-4171 54 1-548-7707
Heir Center
disputes and efforts by devel opers toextend deadlines for building infrastructure. The resort opened in 2008, as the housing market was heading down quickly into a y ears long slump. A vast majority of home lots at the resort have gone unde veloped to date, with several completed homes sitting next to empty lots and partially built roads. But the resort has seen some p ositive developments t h i s year, Eckhoff said. He pointed out that more than a dozen lots have been sold in 2012. "Taken in the context of the past few years, it's significant growth," he said. IStar now owns home lots across the Tetherow devel opment, focused mostly on the project'seastern border. About 120 of those lots would be ready for home construc tion today, said Eric Brooks, vice president of land for iStar. Tetherow lists shovel-ready homesites for sale at prices ranging f ro m $ 2 35,000 to $387,000, according to the re sort's real estate website. But iStar plans to pull some of its properties off the market and concentrate development on two yet-to-be-determined
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Diary Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs 2 9 New Laws
219 204 41 464
1,195 1,258 133 2,586 95 17
Net Last Chg
Name
13,653.24 10,404.49 Dow Jones Industrials 5,390.0 3,950.66 Dow Jones Transportation 499.82 40.54 Dow Jones Utilities 8,515.60 6,414.89 NYSE Composite 2,498.89 1,94t99 Amex Index 3395.67 2,298.89 NasdaqComposite 1,474.51 1,074.77 S&P 500 15,43z54 0,208.42 Wilshire 5000 868.50 60t71 Russell 2000
13,564.64 5,083.00 46768 8,38743 2,490.15 337780 1,459.32 15,26t51 856.93
World markets
+0.54 -57.46 -t58 -2t54
+3z27 -.87 -t87 -26.64 -t97
YTO 52-wk % Chg %Chg % C hg +.09 +1 t03 +1 8.90 - t12 + t 2 6 +1 z48 -.34 + . 65 +5.45 -.26 +1 z18 +1 6.22 +t31 + 9.30 +1 z22 -.03 +2t98 +2z68 -33 +16.04 +2t40 -37 +15.71 +20.93 -.23 +1 5.66 +24.20
Currencies
Here is how key international stock markets performed Tuesday. Market Close % Change
Key currency exchange ratesTuesday compared with late Monday in NewYork.
Amsterdam Brussels Paris London Frankfurt HangKong Mexico Milan NewZealand Tokyo Seoul Singapore
AustraliaDollar Britain Pound CanadaDollar Chile Peso ChinaYuan EuroEuro HangKongDollar JapanYen MexicoPeso RussiaRuble SO.KoreaWon SwedenKrona SwitzerlndFranc TaiwanDollar
Sydney Zurich
335.47 2,449.40 3,51 2.69 5,868.16 7,347.69 20,601.93 40,590.91 16,076.03 3,804.48 9,123.77 2,004.96 3,067.98 4,41 7.82 6,061.01
-.50 -1.01 -1.15 t -.43 t -.76 t -.27 t -.08
-z39 -.33 t -.39 e13 s -.35 t -.09 -.35 t
Dollarvs:
E x change Rate Pvs Day 1.0438 1.6239 1.0255 .002125 .1582 1.3036 .1290 .012681 .078065 .0323 .000894 .1522 1.0758 .0341
1.0462 1.6241 1.0252 .002124 .1583 1.3107 .1290 .012700 .078174 .0325 .000896 .1518 1.0774 .0341
Selected mutual funds YTD Equ>tyov 2029+001 +127 Name NAY Chg %Ret GlbAllocr 1982 -003 +95 Cohen &Steers: Amer CenturyInv: Eqlncx 802 -006 +124 RltyShrs 7078 -068+176 Growlhl 28 99 + 1 8 0ColumbiaClassZ: Ultra 2 7 19+003+186 AcomZ 31 86 -013+170 AcomlntZ 3986 -020 +168 American Funds A: AmcpAp 2172 -005+158 Credit SuisseComm: AMutlAp 2874 -005 +124 ComRett 850 -007 +39 BalAp 2038 -001 +136 DFA Funds: BondAp 1291 +001 +49 IntlcorEq 1024 -008 +132 CaplBAp 5363 -006+110 USCorEq11246 -003+171 CapWGAp3666 -014 +160 USCorEq21228 -003+172 CapWAp 2156 -001 +66 Davis FundsA: EuparAp 4016 -025+142 NYl/enA 3690 -011 +135 FdlnvAp 4069 -009+161 Davis FundsY: G ovtA p 14 57 +1 9 NYl/enY 3734 -012 +138 GwlhAp 3434 -007 +195 DelawareInveslA: H ITrAp 1126 +11 2 everlncp 942+001 +56 IncoAp 1806 -002+108 Dimensional Fds: IntBdAp 1377 +23 EmMCrEq1924 -0 04 +13 1 8 ICAAp 3117 -005 +166 EmMktV 28 92 -0 07 +12 2 NEcoAp 2865 -006 +205 IntSmVa 15 25 -0 10 +14 Largtco 11 50 -0 02 +17 7 NPerAp 3078 -008+177 4 NwNlrldA 5264 -023 +141 USLgVa 22 56 -0 09 +19 SmcpAp 3944 -016+189 USSmall 2386 -006+170 TxExAp 1302+001 +67 USSmVa 2742 -013+189 W shAp 3188 +13 5 IntlSmco 1539 -009 +131 Rxd 1 0 3 5 +08 Arlisan Funds: Intl 23 7 4 -010 +197IntVa 1609 -015 +120 01 +4 0 IntlValr 2930 -015+168 Glb5Fxlnc 11 23 +0 M>dcap 3978 -026 +208 2YGIFxd 1012 -001 +08 M>dcapVal2165 -007 +99 Dodge&Cox: Baron Funds: Balanced 77 96 -0 24 +171 Growlh 5899 -009 +156 Income 13 89 +0 01 +64 IntlSlk 3349 -021 +145 Bernslein Fds: IntDur 1416 +001 +4 2 Bock 121 56 -053 +208 evMu 1482 +001 +21 Doubleune Funds: TRBd I 11 41 NA BlackRockA: NA Eqtyev 2024 +001 +126 TRBd N p 1140 GIAIAr 1972 -003 +93 Dreylus: BlackRockB&C: Aprec 46 05 +0 06 +146 GIAICt 1835 -002 +87 Eaton Vance I: BlackRockInstl: AtgRt 9 10 +0 01 +6 6
FMI Funds: Lgcapp 1759 -002+153 FPA Funds: Newlnco 1068+001 +1 8 FPACres 2908 -003 +95 Fairholme 31 55 -035 +363 Federated Instl: TotRetBd 1158+001 +53 StrValDvlS 516 +91 Fidelity AdvisorA: Nwlnsghp2345 -001 +189 S trlnA 12 75 +85 Fidelity AdvisorI: Nwlnsgtl 2377 -001 +191 Fidelity Freedom: FF2010 1442 -002 +104 FF2010K 1321 -002 +105 FF2015 1206 -002 +106 FF2015K 1328 -003 +107 FF2020 14 62 -0 03 +117 FF2020K 13 73 -0 03 +118 FF2025 1221 -003 +132 FF2025K 1393 -003 +134 FF2030 1456 -003 +137 FF2030K 1408 -003 +138 FF2035 12 09 -0 03 +148 FF2035K 14 21 -0 04 +1 49 FF2040 8 44 -0 02 +14 9 FF2040K 14 25 -0 04 +150 Fidelity Invest: AIISectEq 1327 -002 +182 AMgr50 1649 -001 +107 AMgr20r 1337 -001 +61 Balanc 2048 -001 +135 BalancedK2048 -001 +137 BlutchGr 51 47 -0 06 +214 CapAp 3019 -019 +226 Cplnc r 94 5 +135 Contra 8048 -003 +193 ContraK 8049 -003 +194 DisEq 2516 -004 +170 Divlntl 2933 -011 +149 DivrslntK r 2932 -011 +151 DivGth 3073 -008 +196
Eqlnc 4772 -007+171 EQII 1 9 89 -002+156 Fidel 3 6 70 -002+185 RtRateHu 995 +56 GNMA 1184 +30 Govtlnc 1089+001 +22 Groco 10034 -034+240 Grolnc 21 57 -001 +194 GrowCQF10036 -033+242 GrowlhCQK1 00 34-0 34 +24 2 Highlncr 935+001 +127 IntBd 1111+001 +40 IntmMu 1060+001 +36 Intlo>sc 3208 -025+162 InvGrBd 1199+001 +45 InvGB 7 96+001 +51 LgcapVal 1154 -004+146 LowPr 3972 -018+164 LowPnKr 3970 -018+165 Magelln 7564 -003+203 M>dcap 3045 -019+166 Mumlnc 1344 +002 +58 NwMktr 1757 -002+151 OTC 6 450 -006+179 100lndex 10 54 + 1 9 5 Puntn 2000 -001 +141 PuntanK 2000 -001 +142 SAIISecEqF1329 -002+183 SCmdtyBrt 935 -006 +44 SCmdtyBrF938 -005 +46 SrslntGrw 1177 -003+164 SrslntVal 925 -006+145 SrlnvGrdF 1200+001 +46 STBF 8 5 9 +20 Bratlnc 1141 +a7 TotalBd 1126+001 +53 USBI 1197 +001 +34 Value 7538 -034+188 Fidelity Sparlan: 500ldxlnv 51 94 -006+178 500ldxl 5194 -007+178 Fidelity SparlAdv: ExMktAd r 4111 -015 +173 500ldxAdv51 94 -007 +179
TotMktAdr4240 -007+177 Harlford FdsA: InvGrBdY 1273 +99 DvMktAp 3399 -018 +159 USBondl 1197+002 +35 CpAppAp 3317 -014 +151 Lord Ab bett A: GlobAp 6216 -038 +150 First Eagle: Harlford HLSIA: Aff>IAp 1212 -002 +158 GblBrlnrA 4 30 NA GlblA 5007 -009 +110 CapApp 4311 -019 +160 B doebAp 812 +1 1 1 IntBdAp 653 -001 NA OverseasA 2255 -002 +108 HussmanFunds: ShourlnrAp464 +52 MnStFdA 3818 -008 +187 Forum Funds: BrGrowlh 1081 +001 -130 Lord Ab bett C: R>angD> vA1774 -003 +139 AbsBrl r 1119 +001 +1 3 IVA Funds: Shourlncct467 +47 S&MdcpVI31 50 -006 +63 Frank/Temp FrnkA: Nlldwidel r1637 -005 +66 Lord Ab bett F: OppenheimerB: FedTIAp 1264+002 +68 InvescoFundsA: ShtDurlnco 4 64 +53 R>angD> vB1603 -002 +131 GrwlhAp 5094 -004 +141 Chartp 18 18 -0 04 +13 3 MFS FundsA: S&MdcpVI2664 -004 +57 HYTFAp 1083 +002 +a7 CmstkA 1766 -001 +170 TotRA 1528 -001 +107 OppenheimerC&M: IncomAp 225 -001 +124 EqlncA 92 8 +125 ValueA 2581 -001 +163 R>angovcp1597-002 +133 BSDvAp 3799 -001 +92 GrlnrAp 2119 -001 +148 MFS FundsI: OppenheimerRoch: Bratlncp 1070 +97 HYMuA 1001 +001 +109 Valuel 2594 -001 +165 RcNtMuA 748+001 +145 USGovAp 688 -001 +1 8 hry Funds: MainStay FundsA: OppenheimerY: Frank/TmpFrnkAdv: AsselSCt 2482 -005+147 H>YldBA 613+001 +108 Ds(MktY 3367 -017 +162 GlbBdAdv 1332 -001 +11 6 AsselStAp2568 -005 +154 ManagersFunds: IntlBdY 653 -001 NA Inc meAd 2 24 +1 3 2 AsselStrl r 25 93 -0 05 +155 Yacktman p19 27 +11 5 IntGrowY 2979 -013 +167 Frank/Temp FrnkC: JPMorganAClass: Y acktFoc 2072 +1 0 9 PIMCOAdmin PIMS: Manning&Napier Fds: I ncomct 228 +12 4 CoreBdA 1207 TotRtAd 11 54 +a4 WldoppA 765 -003 +155 PIMCO Insll PIMS: Frank/TempMtl A&B: JP MorganInstl: SharesA 2251 -001 +144 MdcpVal 2806 -011 +181 MergerFd 1601 +001 +27 AIAsetAutr1130 -003+143 Frank/TempTempA: JPMorgan RCl: Metro WestFds: AIIAsset 1279 -003+125 GIBdAp 1336 -001 +114 C oreBond 12 07 + 41 TotRetBd 1100+001 +91 ComodRR 714 -007+109 GrwlhAp 1917 -020 +177 JPMorganSel Cls: T otRtBdl 10 99 +92 D>vlnc 1216+001 +115 WorldAp 1599 -014 +164 C oreBd 12 06 +40 MorganStanley Inst: EmgMkcur1050 -003 +70 Frank/Temp TmpB&C: H>ghYld 819 +001 +122 MCapGrl 3618 -002 +99 EmMkBd 1225 -002+124 GIBdcp 1339 -001 +111 S htDurBd 1102 +15 Mutual Series: H >Yld 9 6 0 +117 GE ElfunS&S: USLCCrPls2371 -005 +201 GblescA 3004 -006 +124 InvGrCp 1118+002+114 US Eqty 4593 -010 +185 Janus TShrs: GlbescZ 3048 -005 +126 Lowou 1064 +001 +53 GMO TrustIII: PrkMCValT2249 -009+114 Shared 2273 -001 +147 RealRtnl 1254 -001 +80 Qual>ty 2410+007+156 John HancockCI1: Neuberger&BermFds: ShortT 988+001 +28 GMO TrustIV: LSBalanc 1366 -002 +127 Geneslnst 5054 -014 +89 TotRt 11 54 +8 6 IntllntrVI 2059 -017 +102 LSGrwlh 1361 -003+143 Norlhern Funds: PIMCO Funds A: GMO TrustVl: Lazard Insll: H >YFxlnc 750 +12 1 RealRtAp 1254 -001 +77 EmgMklsr1151 -005+116 EmgMktl 1971 +001 +173 OakmarkFundsI: T otRtA 11 54 +8 3 GoldmanSachsInst: Longleaf Parlners: Eqtylncr 2945 -007 +89 PIMCO FundsC: aYield 73 9 +128 Parlners 3083 -020+157 Intll r 1 957 -021 +182 T otRtC t 11 54 +7 7 M>dcapV 39 04 -0 24+163 LoomisSayles: Oakmark 4988 -019+196 PIMCO Funds0: Harbor Funds: LSBondl 1508+001 +120 Old WestburyFds: TRtn p 11 54 +84 Bond 1298+001 +78 Brlncc 1552 -001 +103 Globopp 7 52 -0 01 +119 PIMCO FundsP: CapAplnst 4389 -007 +189 LSBondR 15 02+002 +117 GlbSMdcap1495-0 04 +130 AslAIIAuthP11 28 -0 04 +142 Intllnvt 5979 -018+150 BrlnrA 1544 -001 +109 LgcapBrat 9 95 -0 04 +135 T otRlnP 11 54 +8 5 Intl r 6 0 48 -018 +153LoomisSayles hN: OppenheimerA: Perm PortFunds:
Permannt 4996 -009 +84 S&PSel 2306 -003+178 TtlBAdml 1114+001 +34 Pioneer FundsA: Scout Funds: TSlkAdm 3652-006 +178 PionFdAp 4283 -006+115 Intl 3195 -012 +151WdlslAdm 59 55 +010 +90 Price Funds: Sequo>a 16379 -058 +126 WdltnAdm 5967 -003 +118 BIChip 4690 -007 +21 3 TCW Funds: Windsor 5040 -021 +182 CapApp 2338 -001 +134 TotRetBdl 1023+001 +107 WdsrllAd 5277 -006 +167 EmMktS 3231 -012+133 TempletonInstit: VanguardFds: Eqlnc 2653 -005+163 ForEqS 1935 -025 +137 Capopp 33 83-0 14 +14 6 Eqlndex 3948 -005+176 ThornburgFds: evdGro 17 00-001 +115 Growlh 3877 -005+21 8 IntValAp 2657 -013+113 Energy 63 06-052 +70 HlthSa 4392 +015 +34 7 IntValuel 2718 -014 +117 Eqlnc 24 58+002 +139 HiYield 6 9 3 +12 2 TweedyBrowne: Explr 81 95 -027 +147 InstlcpG 1942 -003+205 GblValue 2497 -006+143 GNMA 11 08 +24 Admiral: IntlBond 1016 -002 +60 Vanguard HYCorp 6 06 +11 5 IntlG&l 1284 -007+115 BalAdml 2413 -002 +11 9 Hlthcre 14695+032 +143 IntlStk 1407 -008+145 CAITAdm 1164+001 +48 IntlaPro 14 91-001 +61 M>dcap 6032 -020+144 CpopAdl 7816 -032 +14 7 IntlGr 18 70 -009 +144 MCapVal 2539 -007+187 EMAdmrr 3554 -010+123 IntlVal 30 37 -0 18 +14 0 NAs>a 1613 -008+160 Energy 11843 -098 +70 ITIGrade 10 39+002 +73 Nev Era 4497 -038 +69 EqlnAdmn5152+002 +139 ufecon 17 43-001 +85 NHonz 3693 -021 +190 ExtdAdm 4617 -018 +174 ufeGro 23 82-004 +137 Nlnc 99 0 + 001 +46 500Adml 13516 -017 +179 ufeMOd 21 11-002 +111 OverS SF 8 38 -0 05 +145 GNMAAd 1108 +25 LTIGrade 1078+005 +87 R2010 1677 -003+117 GrwAdm 3804 -005+204 Morg 20 67 -003 +183 R2015 1308 -002+130 Hlthcr 6202 +014 +14 3 Mulnt 14 29+001 +41 R2020 1815 -004 +141 aYldcp 606 +1 1 6Prmcpcor 15 23 -005 +129 R2025 1332 -003+150 InfProAd 2928 -003 +62 Prmcp r 70 33-026 +139 R2030 1916 -005+158 ITBdAdml 1209+002 +55 SelValur 2110 -008 +135 R2035 1356 -004 +163 ITsryAdml 11 76+001 +2 2 STAR 20 83 -002 +122 R2040 1931 -005+165 IntGrAdm 5951 -029+145 STIGrade 10 85 +37 ShtBd 4 8 6 +2 5 ITAdml 14 29 +0 01 +4 2 BratEq 21 40 -012 +167 SmcpSlk 3702 -014+185 ITGrAdm 1039+002 +74 TgtRetlnc 12 32 +77 SmcapVal3964 -010+150 LtdTrAd 1117 +001 +1 5 TgRe2010 2456 -002 +95 Specln 1299 -001 +85 LTGrAdml 1078+005 +88 TgtRe20151362 -001 +107 Value 2642 -007+172 LTAdml 1170+002 +61 TgRe2020 24 23 -003 +117 MCpAdml10235 -050 +14 8 TgtRe20251383 -002 +127 Principal Inv: 77 -004 +136 LgCGlln 1064 -002+198 MuHYAdm1117 +002 +71 TgRe2030 23 Putnam FundsA: Prmcapr 7300 -027+140 TgtRe20351433 -003 +145 GrlnAp 1471 -004+170 Re>tAdmr 9617 -097+190 TgtRe20402357 -005 +150 RoyceFunds: STsyAdml 1079 +06 TgtRe20451480 -003 +150 PennMulr1213 -003+127 S TBdAdml1066 +17 USGro 21 67-001 +201 Prem>erlr 2028 -005 +95 ShtTrAd 15 93 +0 01 +0 9 Wdlsly 24 58+004 +90 SchwabFunds: STIGrAd 1085 +38 Wdltn 34 55 -001 +118 1000lnvr 4151 -007+174 SmCAdm 3929 -013 +177 Wnd sr 14 94 -006 +181
Wndsll 2973 -003+166 Vang uardIdx Fds: ExtMktl 11395 -045 +174 M>dcplstPI11153-0 54 +148 TotlntAdmr2467 -012 +130 Totlntllnslr9868 -048 +130 TotlntllPr 9871 -048+130 500 1 3513 -017 +178 M>dcap 2254 -011 +147 TotBnd 11 14 +0 01 +3 3 Totllntl 14 75 -0 07 +12 9 TotStk 36 50 -0 06 +17 7 VanguardInstl Fds: Ballnsl 24 14 -0 01 +12 0 DevMklnst 955 -006 +134 Extln 4 6 17 -018 +174 Grwlhlsl 3804 -005 +204 InfProlnsl 1193 -001 +62 Inslldx 134 30 -017 +179 InsPI 13431 -017+179 InsTStPlus3306 -005 +179 M>dcplst 2261 -011 +148 STIGrlnst 1085 +38 SClnst 3929 -013 +177 TBlst 11 14 +0 01 +34 TSlnst 3652 -007+178 Valuelst 2326 -004 +151 VanguardSignal: 500Sgl 111 65 -014 +179 M>dcpldx 3230 -016 +148 S TBdldx 10 66 +17 TotBdSgl 1114 +001 +34 TotStkSgl 3525 -006 +178 Virlus FundsI: EmMktl 9 79 WesternAsset: CorePlus I 11 61 +0 01 +69
E4
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012
MARKETPLAC E
If you have Marketplace events you would like to submit, please contact Ashley Brothers at 541-383-0323, email businessC~bendbulletin.corn or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.corn. Please allow at least IO days before the desired date of publication.
Funding
BUSINESS CALENDAR
TODAY CENTRALOREGON OCCUPATIONALSAFETY AND HEALTHCONFERENCE:Oregon's Occupational Safety and Health Division encourages workers and employers to attend the event to help improve safety and health performance; keynote speaker Jake French; registration required; $125, with optional pre-conference workshops for $40; Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 503-378-3272 or www .orosha.org/conferences. THE STAGES OFBRAND DEVELOPMENT:BNIweekly meeting; free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; for information, contact Anna andJames Kramer atPneuma 33 Breakthrough Marketing, 888-608 3878. HR AND THEGREATLEGAL ROUNDUP:Registration required; $30forHRACO members,$40 for non-members; 7:30-11 a.m.; Shilo Inn Suites Hotel, 3105 O.B. Riley Road, Bend; to register, go to www.hrcentraloregon.org/ calendarevents.aspx¹rsvpform; for more information, call 541-389 9600. FOR WHAT AMIPAYING?: Learn about the costs of various investment-related products from Miller Ferrari Wealth Management; coffee will be provided; free; 8:30 10 a.m.; Starbucks, 61470 U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-639-8055. KNOW EXCELFOR BEGINNERS: Free; f:30-3 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-536 051 5. NETWORK OFENTREPRENEURIAL WOMEN MONTHLYMEETING: Elevating the art of networking; members $22, non-members $30; 5-8 p.m.; St. Charles Bend conference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; register online at http: // networkwomen.org before Sept. 13; 541-848-8598.
THURSDAY BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALDESCHUTES BUSINESSNETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Masonic Center,1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541 610-9125. CENTRALOREGON OCCUPATIONALSAFETY AND HEALTHCONFERENCE:Oregon's Occupational Safety and Health Division encourages workers and employers to attend the event to help improve safety and health performance; keynote speaker Jake French; registration required; $125, with optional pre-conference workshops for $40; Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 503-378-3272 or www .orosha.org/conferences. DESERTCONFERENCE:A forum for land managers, conservationists, academics and advocates to educate and collaborate on critical desert issues; includes Wild and Scenic Film Fest, live music and guest speakers; $50; 8 a.m.-8 p.m.; Oregon Natural Desert Association, 50 S.W.Bond St.,Suite4,Bend; 541-330-2638. ADVICE AT SCHWAB:Free; noon ' p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541 318-1794. KNOW WORD FORBEGINNERS: Free; 2-3:30 p.m.;EastBend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-330-3760. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Free; 2 3:30p.m.;Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617 7080. BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALWILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-480-1765.
ADFED OFCENTRAL OREGON MIXER:4:30-6 p.m.; Sound Concepts Recording, 1216 N.E. First St., Bend; 541-312-5272. HOW TO SELECTTHE RIGHT FRANCHISE:Participants will learn how to choose a franchise, how to arrange financing, and other critical details; registration required; free; 6 9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290.
FRIDAY TOWN HALLFORUM: "Fouryear university: what does that mean for education in Bend?"; free; 7:30 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-7437 or www.bendchamber.org. DESERTCONFERENCE:A forum for land managers, conservationists, academicsand advocatesto educate and collaborate on critical desert issues; includes Wild and Scenic Film Fest, live music and
guest speakers; $50; 8a.m.-8 p.m.;
Oregon Natural Desert Association, 50 S.W. Bond St.,Suite 4,Bend; 541-330-2638. ENTRELEADERSHIPONEDAY SIMULCAST:Nationally syndicated radio talk-show host and NewYork Times best-selling author Dave Ramsey will teach companies how to take their businesses to the next level, in a live simulcast from Nashville to locations around the country; 8:45 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 N.E. 27th St.; 541-382-5496; contact Jet Cowan at 541-788-3868 for more information or to register. CENTRALOREGONREALESTATE INVESTMENTCLUB:Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile@windermere.corn. LEADERLUNCH: Reservations required, open to Bend Chamber members; noon-1:30 p.m.; Awbrey Glen Golf Club, 2500 N.W.Awbrey Glen Drive, Bend; 541-388-8526. KNOW CRAIGSLIST:Free; 1-2:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. FREE TAXFRIDAY:Freetax return reviews; schedule an appointment at 541-385-9666 or www.myzoomtax . corn; free; 2-4 p.m.; Zoom Tax, 963 S.W.Simpson Ave.,Suite100,Bend; 541-385-9666. KNOW WORD II: Free;3-4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W.
Drive; 541-382-7437 or www.bend chamber.org. KNOW INTERNETFOR BEGINNERS:Free;2-3:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Free; 2 3:30 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-330 3760. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Free; 3 4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312 1050. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Free; 5:30 7 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312 1050. SMALL-BUSINESSCOUNSELING: No appointment necessary; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-617-7080. SUSTAINABLEWASTEWATER SOLUTIONS,BETTER CHOICES FOR CITIES, DEVELOPMENTS 8 INDIVIDUAL HOMES:Morgan Brown, Whole Water Systems, will present; free; 7 p.m.; Bend Park & Recreation District Office, Community Room, 799 S.W. Columbia St.; 541-389-7275.
WEDNESDAY Sept. 26 BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541 749-0789. LEADER LUNCH,BEND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ADVISORYBOARD MARKETINGSUBCOMMITTEE MEETING:Opento the public; 3 p.m.; Bend Visitor Center, 750 N.W. Lava Road; 541-388-5529. BUSINESSAFTERHOURS PURECAREDENTALOFBEND: Registration required; 5-7 p.m.; PureCare Dental of Bend, 3081 North U.S. Highway 97, Suite 105; 541-647-5555 or www .bendchamber.org/events.
THURSDAY Sept. 27
BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALDESCHUTES BUSINESSNETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Des chutesAve.;541-312-1050. Visitors are welcome and first two REDMOND CHAMBER DINNER visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Masonic DANCEANDAUCTION: Theme, Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541 "The Great Outdoors." 6-11 p.m.; 610-9125. Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way; 541 OREGON ALCOHOLSERVER 548-27t L PERMIT TRAINING:Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit; SATURDAY registration required; $35; 9 a.m.; DESERTCONFERENCE:A forum for Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E.Third land managers, conservationists, St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www academicsand advocatesto .happyhourtraining.corn. educate and collaborate on critical GETTINGTHE MOST OUT OF desert issues; includes Wild and SCHWAB.COM:Free;noon-1p.m .; Scenic Film Fest, live music and Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. guest speakers; $50; 8a.m.-8 p.m.; Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318 Oregon Natural Desert Association, 1794. 50 S.W. Bond St.,Suite 4,,Bend; OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Free; f 541-330-2638. 2:30 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-536-051 5. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Free; 2 TUESDAY 3:30p.m.;Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617 BUSINESSNETWORK 7080. INTERNATIONALHIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: BUSINESSNETWORK Starts at 7:15 a.m.; visitors are INTERNATIONALWILDFIRE welcome and first two visits are CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: free; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Visitors are welcome and first two Highway 20; 541-420-7377. visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; THE SIMPLEMECHANICS OF 541-480-1 765. QUICKLYPERFECTING YOUR BUSINESS (ANDLIFE): Sam SOROPTIMISTINTERNATIONAL Carpenter, founder and CEOof OF BEND:Deschutes County Centratel, will get to the nuts and Commissioner Tammy Baney will bolts of his best-selling book, "Work speak at Soroptimist's autumn kickoff dinner program; RSVPis the System: The Simple Mechanics of Making More and Working necessary by Sept. 26; $15 dinner Less;" registration required; $25 for includes beverage and gratuity; 5:30-7 p.m.; Boston's, 61276 S. U.S. Chamber members, $45 for non members; 11 a.m.; Bend Golf and Highway97,Suite 140; 541-728 Country Club, 61045 Country Club 0820 or president@sibend.org.
Baio, who sold $400 tickets on Kickstarter itself to gauge Continued from E1 interest in and raise money T hey then have to t u rn for the event. their dreams i nto r e ality, The relationship between with a crowd keeping an eye c reators and b a ckers o n on their progress. crowd-funding sites is still This new m odel comes being worked out. The back with a host of potential pit ers play the role of philan falls that are often difficult thropists, investors, custom for project creators to antici ers — or all of the above. And pate, and hard for the arm when promised rewards are chair p h ilanthropists who slow to m aterialize, eager back them to grasp. Backers backers can get cranky. "It's definitely a lot of pres are essentially putting their trust in the project creators, sure," said Eric Migicovsky, giving them cash in return whose Kickstarter p r oject for the promise of a future to create a line of "Pebble" reward. Those who give a wristwatches with innovative few dollars to a moviemak displays raised more than ing project might get their $10 million — more than 10 names in the credits, while times what he had hoped to someone who puts up $100 get. "There are 65,000 people to support development of a who have preordered a watch smart wristwatch might be that doesn't yet exist." promised one of the finished Migicovsky hired someone items. to help manage his in-box M uch of t h e t i m e t h i s — nearly 9,000 people have works out. But some projects, emailed him about the proj including several high-profile ect — and to post updates. and in-demand ones, have He originally hoped to start run into glitches and lengthy shipping the watches in Sep delays. The permits for a new tember, a date that he has had food truck might not come to push back, although he de through. Or a g adget like clined to say by how much. the Elevation Dock m ight A study by Ethan Mollick, be harder than expected to a professor of management manufacture and ship. at the Wharton School of the The rise of crowd funding University of Pennsylvania, came up often over the week found that 75 percent of de end here at the debut of the sign- and technology-related XOXO Festival, a conference projects on Kickstarter, most that focused on new models of which i nvolve physical and outlets for creativity on products, failed to meet their the Internet. The conference promised deadlines. In gen was co-founded by an early eral,project backers seem to Kickstarter employee, Andy be understanding of hiccups
and willing to wait as long as they are kept in the loop. "The honeymoon period that w e a r e e x periencing around crowd funding is be ginning to come to a close," s aid W i l Sc h r oeter, c o founder and chief executive of Fundable, a company that is applying crowd funding to the venture capital process. "People realize there is real risk involved in investing in anything early-stage, wheth er it's an idea, a charity or a product, and they' re starting to understand they a ren' t buying off of Amazon." Kickstarter says it is not responsible for making sure a project is completed on time, or at all. It says project creators are legally obligated to fulfill their promises, but if they do not, Kickstarter has no mechanism for re funding the money that was pledged. The company says it is w o r k ing o n c l a r ify ing its policies. Sometimes project creators can end up being overwhelmed by the success of a crowd-funding campaign. The four college students behind Diaspora, a project that aimed to build an open alternative to Facebook, be gan with the modest goal of $ 10,000. T hey r a i sed $200,000 from around 6,500 people. But after three years, they still did not have a ver sion to release publicly and turned the code over to any one who might want to keep working on it.
Holidays
than the 3 percent gain pre dicted for the last year's holi day shopping season, which ended up as a mixed bag for retailers. Many s c r atched out sales gains of 3.4 per cent year-over-year, accord ing to Thomson Reuters, but that was bolstered by deep discounts. By comparison, in 2010, retailers realized same-store sales gains of 4 percent.
Continued from E1 They' ll spend the next few months vying for shoppers' attention and dollars, aiming to drive all-important holiday sales, which make up rough ly 25 percent of their yearly profits, according to the In ternational Council of Shop ping Centers. By kicking off promotions
while it's still hot outside, re tailers are making a calcu lated move to stay in front of consumers and lock in their loyalty early, say retail ex perts. Early estimates from S hopperTrak predict a 3 . 3 percent gain this year from last. Foot traffic in stores, which was down last year, is expected to pick up 2.8 percent. That's a brighter forecast
GREEN + SOLAR HONE TOUR CASCADIA
GREEN BUILDING COUNCIL
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WWW.greenandSOlarhameta ur.COm
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NEWS OF RECORD
BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed Sept. 11
Kenneth D. Ballard,P.O.Box744, Crane Kimberly A. Snow,832 N.E.Crow Court, Redmond Ashlie R. Cantrell,3351 N.W. Gumpert Road, Prineville Garrett J. Gladden,62720 Larkview Road, Bend Filed Sept. 13
Tayva J. Tucker,594 S.W. Culver Highway, Apt. B, Madras Teresa L. Ijselman,446 S.E. Douglas, Bend RickyE.W indsor,2647 N.E.Pikes Peak Road, Bend Scott R. Tate,1025 N.W. Rimrock Drive, Redmond Filed Sept. 14
Ayrian R. Schjoll,423 East Metolius
St., Culver Rachel C. Young,2619 Ordway Ave., Unit¹f, Bend Ryan D. Johnson,651 N.W .Sixth St., Suite B, Redmond Alberta V. Farias,8084 S.W. Elbe Drive, Culver
Melissa Adams,3151 S.W.Juniper Ave., Redmond Randy L. Damon,2406 N.W. Hemmingway St., Bend
Filed Sept. 13
CurtisA. Davey,55161 Munson St., Bend
Michael B. Kerkmann,241 8N.W. Summer Hill Drive, Bend
: K I c K- O F F + K E Y N Q T E
COCC's CAMPUs CENTER, 2600 CQLLEGE WAY, BEND 1 0:30 A M - 5 AM : F R E E H Q M E T Q U R *SEE MAP FOR BIKE ROUTE
Peter L. Shirley,21 075Quail Lane, Bend
Filed Sept. 17
Chapter 13
8 :30 - 10 A M
OGTo BER 6
Filed Sept. 12
Mark Shadley,1375 N.E. ElkCourt Apt117, Bend Amy C. Saul,24855 Deer Lane, Bend ManuelR. Diaz,1121N.E. Hidden Valley Drive ¹ f, Bend Kathlyn M. Wilson,16017th St., Redmond Margaret L. Phillips,P.O.Box 825, La Pine Robert J. Dethman,61 53Dingo Lane, Terrebonne Filed Sept. 11
S ATU R D AY ,
Find "High Desert Branch on Facebook
Filed Sept. 14
Ryan L. Andersen,61354 S.W. Blakey, Unit 60, Bend Charles R. Stoughton,1654 S.E. Ramsay Road, Bend Filed Sept. 17
Kelly D. Pedrick,17170 Bakersfield Road, Bend Joe A. Marcoux,P.O.Box2166, Sisters Where Buyers And Sellers Meet
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The Bulletin
THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 19 2012 F1 •
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Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing
Misc. Items
Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Saturday 10:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
B e n d Heating 8 Stoves
O r e g o n
9 7 7 0 2
Lost 8 Found
BUYING & SELLING NOTICE TO REMEMBER: If you gold jewelry, silver ADVERTISER have lost an animal, Premier Goose Gun, Alland gold coins, bars, Since September 29, don't forget to check Benelli Super Black rounds, wedding sets, 1991, advertising for ITEMS FORSALE 264- Snow Removal Equipment The Humane Society Eagle, camo, custom class rings, sterling sil 201- New Today 265 - Building Materials ported 28" barrel, re ver, coin collect, vin used woodstoves has in Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond, 202- Want to buy or rent coil system, trigger work tage watches, dental been limited to mod 266 - Heating and Stoves 541-923-0882 els which have been and swing weight, exc. 203 - Holiday Bazaar 8 Craft Shows 267- Fuel and Wood gold. Bill Fl e ming, c ertified by the O r 421 Prineville, 204- Santa's Gift Basket Antique 1929 Canadian c ond., $ 1350 f i r m, 541-382-941 9. 268- Trees, Plants 8 Flowers 541-385-3355. egon Department of 541-447-71 78; Schools 8 Training M cClary's wood o r 205- Free Items 269- Gardening Supplies 8 Equipment coal stove, restored, Environmental Qual OR Craft Cats, COWGIRL CASH 208- Pets and Supplies Remington 243 788 car We pay cash for boots, 541-389-8420. 270 - Lost and Found ity (DEQ) and the fed TRUCK SCHOOL renickeled, like new bine, scope, sling, nice! 210- Furniture 8 Appliances eral En v ironmental buckles, jewelry & www. I IT R.net with pipes & chimney $500. 541-788-8137 GARAGESALES 211 - Children's Items Protection Ag e n cy more! 924 Brooks St. blocks, $2000, Redmond Campus 275 Auction Sales 212 - Antiques 8 Collectibles 541-678-51 62 (EPA) as having met 541-389-4079. Smith & Wesson 1500 Auction Sales • Student Loans/Job 280 - Estate Sales 215- Coins 8 Stamps Deluxe, 7mm Rem mag, www.getcowgirlcash.corn smoke emission stan Waiting Toll Free Antiques wanted: tools, 281Fundraiser Sales dards. A cer t ified 240- Crafts and Hobbies walnut stock, beautiful. Jewelers/Watchmaking Unreserved Auction 1-888-387-9252 furniture, fishing, w oodstove may b e 282 Sales Northwest Bend mint cond, 90%, $600. Sun. Sept 23, 299 Stan 241 - Bicycles andAccessories equip., 50 yrs. worth, identified by its certifi ford Rd, Winston, OR,10 marbles, old signs, 503-396-2644 (Rdmnd). 454 284Sales Southwest Bend 242- Exercise Equipment furnishings & p a rts, cation label, which is a.m. Heavy equip, trucks, toys, costume jewelry. Looking for Employment 286- Sales Northeast Bend call 541-389-4079. 243 - Ski Equipment Call 541-389-1578 Wanted: Collector permanently attached trailers, pickups, classic 244 - Snowboards 288 - Sales Southeast Bend seeks high quality New Hytest Safety dress to the stove. The Bul cars, rock crusher, as Experienced cou p le Skipper Doll, v intage 290 - Sales RedmondArea fishing items. 245 - Golf Equipment boots, 3pr, men's 9~/2EE letin will no t k now phalt plant 100 Firearms avail. for housesitting 1967 + some clothes/ Call 541-678-5753, or $50/pr. 541-678-5605 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 292 - Sales Other Areas & More. 541-643-0552 ingly accept advertis shoes, $25, Oct. 1. 541-410-4794 503-351-2746 247 - Sporting Goods - Misc. 541-504-9078 New Hytest Safety dress i ng for the sale o f www I-Sauctions corn FARM MARKET uncertified Need to get an 248- Health and Beauty Items Wanted: Quality 28 Ga. boots, men's size 9~/2E, 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery The Bulletin reserves woodstoves. 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs Shotgun, call $50. 541-678-5605 ad in ASAP? 316 - Irrigation Equipment the right to publish all 251 - Hot Tubs andSpas ads from The Bulletin 541-408-0014. You can place it 325 - Hay, Grain and Feed Call a Pro 253- TV, Stereo and Video newspaper onto The Weatherby MK V .357 Fuel 8 Wood 333 - Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies online at: 255 - Computers Bulletin Internet web mag, Burris s cope Whether you need a • 341 Horses and Equi p ment www.bendbulletin.corn 256 - Photography site. 3x9, $1250. Weath fence fixed, hedges 345 Livestockand Equipment 257 - Musical Instruments erby .300 mag, Burris WHEN BUYING 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 541-385-5809 scope 3x9, $ 1 250. trimmed or a house 258 - Travel/Tickets FIREWOOD... Servng Central Oregon i>nre l903 350 Horseshoeing/Farriers built, you' ll find WIN model 88, .308 259 - Memberships To avoid fraud, 476 358- Farmer's Column Bushnell scope 4X, 260- Misc. Items professional help in The Bulletin $400. 541-549-5490 375 - Meat and Animal Processing Employment 261 - Medical Equipment Coins 8 Stamps • The Bulletin's "Call a recommends pay 383 - Produce andFood 262- Commercial/Office Equip. Opportunities ment for Firewood W EATHERBY MK V Hay, Grain 8 Feed 5 Service Professional" Private collector buying Left Hand.240 WM New 263 - Tools only upon delivery Directory p ostage stamp a l in box — $1,300 Call and inspection. Premium 1st cutting Or 208 bums & c o llections, 541-251-0089 Redmond 541-385-5809 • A cord is 128 cu. ft. chard Grass hay, shed CAUTION READERS: world-wide and U.S. 4' x 4' x 8' Pets 8 Supplies stored, 7 0 -Ib b a l es, 573-286-4343 (local, 255 Wanted- pa ying cash • Receipts should $225/ton. Call Ten Barr Ads published in "Em 0 cell ¹) ployment Opportuni for Hi-fi audio & stu Ranch, 541-389-1165 Labradors AKC e x lnt Computers include name, t ies" i n c lude e m bloodlines, choc & black, dio equip. Mclntosh, phone, price and ployee and $500. 1-541-231-8957 T HE B U LLETIN r e J BL, Marantz, D y kind of wood pur TURN THE PAGE i ndependent pos i quires computer ad naco, Heathkit, San chased. POODLE (TOY) PUPS For More Ads tions. Ads for posi vertisers with multiple sui, Carver, NAD, etc. • Firewood ads Well-socialized & lov The Bulletin tions that require a fee ad schedules or those Call 541-261-1808 MUST include spe Dachshund p u r ebred able. 541-475-3889 1 973 M a r li n 30 - 3 0 selling multiple sys or upfront investment cies and cost per Women's eelskin heels, mini puppy born 7/25, Queensiand Heelers must be stated. With tems/ software, to dis black, sz 8B, good cond, cord to better serve $350. Ruger Super Wheat Straw: Certified & will be 6-10 lbs. $500; standard & mini,$150 & Redhawk 44mag w/ close the name of the $25. 541-678-5605 our customers. Bedding Straw & Garden any independent job I Want to Buy or Rent parents on site. up. 541-280-1537 http: // scope an d h o lster. business or the term Straw;Compost.546-6171 opportunity, p l e ase 541-536-3809 in La Pine nghtwayranch.wordpress.corn investigate thor "dealer" in their ads. 261 POR. 541-350-0325 Wanted: $Cash paid for Serwng Central Oiegan i>nre l903 Wheat straw, small 50-Ib oughly. Weimaraners AKC Almost New Remington Private party advertis Medical Equipment vintage costume jew bales, in stack, $1.00 ers are d efined as 4 males, 3 females. elry. Top dollar paid for Dog Crates Model 700 7mm Mag, those who sell one Golden brand p ower Call The Bulletin At ea. 541-546-9821 Use extra caution when $575. 503-394-3486 / Gold/Silver.l buy by the Wire 2 Door 36"(L) x Buckmaster's Edition, applying for jobs on 503-871-01 75 computer. 541-385-5809 wheelchair, red, like Estate, Honest Artist 22" (W) x 25" (H) $50 a sking $ 5 00 , c a l l line and never pro new, used only 6 mos, Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Plastic Travel Crate Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Looking for your Yorkie Pups, 3 hand 541-728-1817. 257 vide personal infor 32" (L) x 22.5" (W) x $3400 new; sacrifice next employee? some purebred males, mation to any source 24.5(H) $75 $2000. 541-848-7755 At: www.bendbulletin.corn Find exactly what Place a Bulletin ready now, 1st shots Browning White Gold Musical Instruments 541-41 9-6436 you may not have re or 541-948-7518 Free Wood, Juniper, on help wanted ad you are looking for in the & deworming, mom & Medallion II i n . 270. searched and deemed New w it h L e u pold Piano/Organ/Guitar Medline Push wheelchair, ground, you cut/ haul, dad on site, $500 ea. today and to be reputable. Use CLASSIFIEDS Dog Kennel, 10x10x6 c ontact Krist i n a Varx II s cope and Lessons — blue, new, u n used, CRR, 541-548-9619. reach over al l ages extreme caution when original box. $ 9 99. and pro-piano tuning Behlen complete club 541-408-3211. $95, 541-306-0290 Tamarack & pine, split, 60,000 readers r esponding to A N Y 541-280-3035 k ennel, l i k e ne w , special! 541-647-1366 Shower Seat, new, $50, approx 1~/2 cords, $225 each week. online e m p loyment 210 $450. 541-647-1236 all. 541-382-4144 Items for Free CASH!! call Your classified ad ad from out-of-state. please Furniture & Appliances For Guns, Ammo & Doxie,chocAKC mini pup, 541-306-0290 will also Concrete driveway pad, 4 wks, female,Sunriver, Reloading Supplies. We suggest you call appear on Gardening Supplies 2 very nice multi-task Check out the you tear up and haul, $425, 541-593-7606 541-408-6900. the State of Oregon bendbulletin.corn o ffice c h airs, $ 2 5 classifieds online free, 541-389-9268. • 8 E q u ipment Consumer Hotline at which currently Collector WIN m o del each. 541-678-5605 wwvv.bendbulletin.corn 1-503-378-4320 DO YOU HAVE receives over Free 20' long aluminum 6 3, n i c e ! $12 0 0 . Updated daily SOMETHING TO 1.5 million page gutter, you haul. B RWN 3 4 8 , ne w . For newspaper A1 Washers&nryers For Equal Opportunity SELL 541-382-0890 $1000. 541-447-0202 Piano, Steinway Model views every delivery, call the $150 ea. Full war 262 L aws: Oregon B u 0 Baby Grand 1911, FOR $500 OR Circulation Dept. at month at no ranty. Free Del. Also Over 120 moving boxes reau of Labor & In gorgeous, artist qual Commercial/Office LESS? 541-385-5800 extra cost. wanted, used W/D's GUN SHOW dustry, C i vil Rights a nd s u p plies, a l l ity instrument w/great Equipment 8 Fixtures Non-commercial To place an ad, call 541-280-7355 Bulletin Linn Co. Fairgrounds Division, sizes. 541-408-9328 action & S t einway's advertisers may 541-385-5809 Classifieds Albany, Oregon 971-673-0764 warm, rich sound. Will Gray 4-drawer metal file place an ad with or email Get Results! GENERATE SOME ex Sat. Sept. 22, 9-5 adorn any living room, cabinet, legal s i ze, dassified@bendbullevn corn oui citement i n your Sun. Sept. 23, 9-4 Call 541-385-5809 If you have any ques church or music stu $45. 541-678-5605 I P ets 8 Supplies "QUICK CASH 420 tables neighborhood! Plan a or place your ad tions, concerns or dio perfectly. New re SPECIAL" Serwng Central Oregon i>nre l903 Admission $5 garage sale and don' t 263 on-line at comments, contact: tail $ 6 9 ,000. Sacri 1 week 3 lines 12 Sponsored by Albany The Bulletin recom forget to advertise in bendbulletin.corn Classified Department fice at $34,000 OBO, k 20 ! Tools 2~ Rifle & Pistol Club mends extra caution classified! Prompt Delivery The Bulletin call 541-383-3150. Ad must include 541-491-3755 541-385-5809. Rock, Sand & Gravel when purc h a s price of single item 541-385-5809 Take 1-5 to exit 234 Saxophone Panamerican All Craftsman tools: wood Multiple Colors, Sizes ing products or ser lathe, $170; router & of $500 or less, or Loveseat rocker, earth vices from out of the Alto, good cond., $395 stand, $50; chop saw, Instant Landscaping Co. Poultry, Rabbits, multiple items tones, floral print, $35. 541-389-9663 area. Sending cash, 541-388-9270 $50; table saw, $75; all 8 Supplies whose total does 541-678-5605 HANDGUN SAFETY checks, or credit in obo. 541-548-5516 or not exceed $500. CLASS for concealed li SUPER TOP SOIL 258 f ormation may b e Washer, Frigidaire, white, www.hershe soilandbark.corn 541-548-6195 cense. NRA, Police Serama's the smallest Automotive subjected to fraud. 5 yrs, works great! $100 Travel/Tickets soil & com breed in world, 6 pair Call Classifieds at Firearms Instructor, Service Advisor Bandsaw Delta 14" wood Screened, For more i nforma obo. 541-771-1325 post mi x ed , no 541-385-5809 Mike Kidwell. for sale, $50/pair w/2 Must be c u stomer -cutting, Model 28-275, rocks/clods. High hu tion about an adver www.bendbulletin.corn Washer, Kenmore heavy Thurs., Sept. 27, free chicks, great for focused with CSI a $350. 541-848-7819 tiser, you may call PBR W O RLD mus level, exc. f or 4-H, FFA or showing, 6:30-10:30 pm. t op p r iority. F a st duty, 7 yrs, exlnt cond, the O r e gon State FINALS tickets, Oct. flower beds, lawns, beautiful & show qual pace 264 Kevin at Centwise, for dea l ership 24-28, 2 tickets for Attorney General' s Golden Retriever pups, $150. 541-447-4078 gardens, straight ity, laying & hatching offering great ben reservations $40. Snow RemovalEquipment each of 5 rounds. Office Co n s umer ready Oct. 13, Male & s creened to p s o i l . chicks, 541-433-2112. 541-548-4422 efits with a l asting F emale l e ft . Ca l l The Bulletin EXCELLENT seats right Protection hotline at Bark. Clean fill. De c areer for a h a r d ATV Sn o w Plow 541-848-2277. recommends extra ' Hunters Sight-in Work next to main bucking 1-877-877-9392. liver/you haul. working individual. w/manual lift. 15 x 48, chute! $1280. Call l caution when pur shop: Sept. 22nd-23rd 541-548-3949. Kittens/cats avail. thru 541-475-6919 Produce 8 Food • Send resume to: 3 horizontal positions. chasing products or • COSSA Park. $7/gun rescue group. Tame, PO Box 6676, Serwng Centra( Oregons>nre 1903 $400 OBO C all/text services from out of I $5 for shots, altered, ID chip, the area. Sending l non-members, THOMAS ORCHAROS Bend, OR 97708 Bobby 541-639-9243 • members. Bring eye & Lo s t 8 Found more. Sat/Sun 1-5, call c ash, checks, o r 260 Kimberly, OR:U-Pick 8 ear protection. E. on Aussie's Mini Toy, all Snow Blower, A riens re: other days. 65480 Ready Picked: Free Misc. Items Hwy 20 toward Burns, c olors $325 & u p , 7 8th 5.5hp 24", easy start, Lost cat, gray/tiger stripe stone canning peaches St ., Bend , l credit i n f o rmation Automotive /2 mi past MP 24. Info parents on site. 389-8420; photos, etc. may be subjected to $350. 541-848-7819 F, white neck/chest, SW — Monroe & O'Henry, Technician call 541-389-1272 9-pc quilted comforter l FRAUD. For more 541-598-531 4/788-7799 at www.craftcats.org Bend Lodgepole/Honkers Plums, nectarines, Bar Good diagnostician? 265 information about an l Kahr CW40 semi-auto set, floral print, $45. area, 9/6. 541-330-8732 tlett Pears, Gala Good automotive Barn/shop cats FREE, Lab, Male black hunting advertiser, you may I 541-578-5605 Building Materials background? Stick Lost:GPS,between Crane Apples. Ready Picked some tame, some not. Lab looking for AKC fe I call the O r egon l pistol. Carry case and ier for done right the We d eliver! F i xed, male to breed. My lab is State Prairie Rock C r eek Only:JonagoldApples Attor n ey ' 2 m a g s in c luded. Buying Diamonds La Pine Habitat $350. 541-408-4662. 1st time? We have a shots, etc. 389-8420 /Gold for Cash Boat ramp & Sunriver, BRING CONTAINERS pointing, hi-power, hand l General's O f f i c e RESTORE Open 7 days/week, 8am spot for you on our signals, good hunter. Consumer P r otec- • Like new .45 Cal Wit Saxon's Fine Jewelers Building Supply Resale 9/9, 541-593-5279. Cavachon, Pomachon, & Let's talk! 541-408-4528 6 pm only 541-934-2870 award-winning team! 541-389-6655 t ion ho t l in e at l ness-P Sem i -Auto Quality at Lost in Bend, Visit us on Facebook Shichon beautiful pup Send resume with w/clip, case, manual, LOW PRICES blue stone, white pies, home raised, vet Labradoodies — Mini & l 1-877-877-9392. BUYING for updates verifiable work his cleaning kit, ammo. Lionel/American Flyer 52684 Hwy 97 diamonds, yellow gold checked, will be small lap med size, several colors Also we are at Bend tory to PO Box 6676, 541-536-3234 dogs. Reasonable; can 541-504-2662 $400 OBO C all/text trains, accessories. womans ring. Reward! Farmer's Mkt at Drake Bend, OR 97708 deliver. 1-503-598-6769 www.alpen-ridge.corn Bobby 541-639-9243 541-408-2191. Open to the public . 541-388-4888 Park & St. Charles
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F2 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
541 a385-5809
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD No. 0815
Edited by Will Shortz ACROSS 1 Andersson of "Persona" 5 Bilko and Friday: Abbr. 9 Pie choice 14 Black, to bards 15 Ritz look-alike of old 16 Simon of Duran Duran 17 Managed care
34 Subway Series borough 35 What the six groups of circled letters represent 38 Ivy League sch. 40 Excessive 41 Girl in a Beatles title 42 Patronized a restaurant 44 Toward the rear 47 Close-fitting women' s garments 49 "In conclusion
61 Sound like a
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banshee
62 Wonder Woman' s weapon 63 Takes night courses? 64 Zaire's Mobutu Seko
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US U A L T O R S O S TE I N
HA W NN E NG
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call 541-934-2423.
TiCk, Tock TiCk, Tock... ...don't let time get
away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
Sales Representative
Lincare, a l e a ding national respiratory company, seeks re s ults-driven s a l e s representative. Cre ate working relation s hips w it h M D s , nurses, social work ers, and a rticulate our excellent patient care with attentive l istening skil l s . Competitive base + uncapped commis sion. Drug - free w orkplace. EOE . Please fax resume to 541-382-8358.
Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tuesa Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . . 1 1:00 am Fri. a nn Frl • Saturday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a 3500 Sunday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Sat a
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34 Really, really 42 Early nuclear Ol'g. tough 3 5 Hanoi holidays 4 3Uses as a pattern 36 Ch i c ago Grill 44 Withdrawal charge 37 Really looks up to 45 Distress signals 3 8 Populous area, 4 6 Old county of informally Northern Ireland 39 More, on a 48 101 course, score typically
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 which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809
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Est a te Sales Estate Sale — Sat. 9/22, 9:00, 2026 SW 35th PI.
Redmond.Antiques, col lectibles, furniture. 282
Sales Northwest Bend 2-Family Yard Sale Sat., 8-5 p.m. 1325 NW Harmon B l vd. Lots of toys & misc. LARGE SHOP SALE! Fri. Sat. 8-5. Tools, tack, fishing, ladders, garden items. 20950 89th off Tumalo Rd. 541-385-3313.
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 ISales Northeast Bend Foreclosure/Garage Sale. Fri. only, 8-2, 21378 Puffin Dr. Garage Sale Sat, 10-5, 20798 Renee Ct. Ev erything priced to sell. Holiday items, c o l lectibles & more!
Sale sNortheast Bend Sales Redmond Area
** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit
Place an ad in The Bulletin for your ga
rage sale and re ceive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad
• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!" PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at
Garage Sale: Sat.-unn., 9-4, tools, household, & furniture, odds & ends, 808 NW 9th St Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 Moving Sa l e:Fri. & Sat., 627 S 14th, 54
years of stuff, old win dows, doll collection. Redmond Assn. for Suc cessful Community Liv ing GIANT Garage Sale, Sat 9/22, 9-3 (no early birds!) NW 9th & Cedar.
1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702
The Bulletin
• Sales Other Areas •
Madras Moving Sale Fri. & Sat., 8-6, Tools, tent trailer, skis, fishing pwr. tools, guns, camp equip., coats, furniture, ing gear, horse tack, table saw, yard tools, mtn. bike, f urniture, chain saws, & misc. much more. 2.5 Mi. E. decor, 231 Nyjf Elk Dr, of Alfalfa store, 9740 1 mi. from Belmont on SW Willard Rd, Bend. way to Pelton Dam.
Sat. 9/22, 9-2,hand tools,
288 Multi-Family Barn Sale! Sales Southeast Bend Fri.-Sat., 9-5. Antiques, vintage items, paintings, Fri. 9/21, Sat. 9/22, 9-5, jewelry, household & 1042 SE Castlewood Dr. many, many more items! 4 upholstered bar stools, 6 7349 Gist R oad ( 7 name brand boys cloth miles before Sisters, just ing, toys, misc hsehold. off Hwy 20 on Gist Rd.)
... $20.00
(call for commeraal kne ad rates)
.... $18.50 .... $24.00 .....$33.50 .....$61.50
52 Attend Choate,
say
A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS B ELOW MARKED WITH A N (* ) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.
53 Proverb ender? 54 Evidence in paternity suits 55 Hammer-on-the thumb cries 57 "The Simpsons" merchant
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. SATURDAY by telephone 10:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
The Bulletin bendbunetin.corn is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
cern
PLEASE NOTE: Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index anyadvertising 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 eachTuesday. 648
X!MERRQ
Houses for Rent General
9
KOrj0rj COOrj 528
605
Loans 8 Mortgages
Roommate Wanted
CRR- Nice and clean 2 bdrm, 2 bath, custom ranch home with mtn RENTALS views, dbl. garage., 603 - Rental Alternatives N o s moking. O n e 604 - Storage Rentals small pet neg. $750. •
541-548-4225. 650
Houses for Rent Roommate needed, avail. now. Own bath, quiet NE Bend mends you use cau duplex, $350 mo., $200 dep.+t/z util., internet All ready to move into tion when you pro incl. 541-728-5731. vide personal a 3 bdrm, 2 bath, gas information to compa heat, fenced yard, dbl. 616 nies offering loans or garage Near hospital, Want To Rent credit, especially no smoking/ no pets. those asking for ad Call 541-388-2250, or Mature male, semi-retired vance loan fees or 541-81 5-7099. companies from out of professional, no smok ing, drinking, drugs, Looking for your next state. If you have clean, solid refs, seeks concerns or ques employee? est side r oom i n tions, we suggest you w townhouse, condo or Place a Bulletin help consult your attorney wanted ad today and home, 541-647-8121 or call CONSUMER reach over 60,000 HOTLINE, 630 readers each week. 1-877-877-9392. Your classified ad Rooms for Rent will also appear on BANK TURNED YOU bendbulletin.corn, DOWN? Private party Furnished rm, $425 +sec currently receiving will loan on real es dep; refs. TV, Wifi, mi over 1.5 million page tate equity. Credit, no cro, frig. 541-389-9268 views, every month problem, good equity Studios & Kitchenettes at no extra cost. is all you need. Call Furnished room, TV w/ Bulletin Classifieds now. Oregon L a nd cable, micro & fridge. Get Results! Mortgage 388-4200. Utils & l inens. New Call 541-385-5809 or owners. $145-$165/wk place your ad on-line LOCAL MONEY:We buy 541-382-1885 at secured trust deeds & bendbulletin.corn note, some hard money 634 loans. Call Pat Kelley Apt./Multiplex NE Bend Just bought a new boat? 541-382-3099 ext.13. Sell your old one in the CHECK OUT THIS classifieds! Ask about our Reverse Mortgages HOT DEAL! Super Seller rates! by local expert Mike * 541-385-5809 LeRoux NMLS57716 $299 1st month's rent! 2 bdrm, 1 bath Call to learn more. 652 WARNING The Bulletin recom
$530 & 540 Carpolts & A/C incl!
541-350-7839
Securitv1 Lending
Fox Hollow Apts. (541) 383-3152
NMLS98161 573
Business Opportunities
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 which currently re ceives over 1.5 mil lion page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.corn
Houses for Rent NW Bend
Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co 2 bdrm, nice *Upstairs only with lease* Clean, quiet yard, "R-60" insulation!
Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc. 638
$ 800+ l a st + dep . lease. No pets. Local refs. 1977 NW 2nd. 671
Mobile/Mfd. for Rent Large mnfd home, 3 bdrm 2 bath, fam rm, fenced yd, heat pump, w/s/g paid. $900/mo +
Apt./Multiplex SE Bend $900 sec. 541-383-8244 675
Special, Small 1 bdrm, RV Parking private, furnished, near town, rent adjusted for health related help, RV Space for rent, in Smith Rock area, on call 541-389-0566. private property, nice 642 lawn/trees, good credit Apt./Multiplex Redmond req., 541-548-8052 687
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EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470- Domestic 8 In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions
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25 Starters at A WA G some seafood V A NA G I L A restaurants I N Y E S ES 26 Lust, deified I N G U V A 27 Lo-o-o-ong time T O R P I D 28 Monkey suit S T ON E E R G I O D D E R 31 Cadillac model unveiled in 2012 I N N E RC I T Y 33 Some P I E R A C N E Beethoven SCAR PEAS works
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DOWN 1 Urgent request 2 Cloned off ice g I'ps. equipment 18 Sch. type 3 [That's such a 19 Gut course shame!] 20 F.D.A.-banned 4 Cartographic detail weight-loss supplement 51 People who 5 Marriott valued vicuna competitor 22 Next century's wool end 6 Arizona county 52 Hale telescope's or river 24 Edinburgh's observatory locale, in poetry 7 Everyday article 53 Words of denial 25 It may be fit for 8 Elke of film 56 "Add to a queen 9 Baldwin and (e-shopper's 29 Menu general others button) 30 Some flights 10 Atlanta's main 58 Wig style 32 Drop street 59 Egypt's Sadat 11 "Sesame Street" 33 Blackens with 60 Sport with channel chimney grime touches 12 Powell's "The ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE Thin Man" co-star SO I T GR AY RE T RO 13 Doe in "Bambi" I N FO Y A L E O T H E R T E F L O N D O N L E E R Y 21 Wash one' s hands of H A Y D N I N T E L J AX 23 Rx writers Y UR I G A G A R I N AD A T OR I C EL I M A C OR BA K I
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605 - RoommateWanted 616 - Want ToRent 627 Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630 - Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SW Bend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for Rent General 650 - Houses for Rent NEBend 652 - Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656 - Houses for Rent SWBend 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 - Housesfor Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
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Southeast Bend Homes
Acreages
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NE Bend 139716 Dorothy Lane, McCall Landing C rescent Lake, O r e. Our Newest Community Charming cottage with Starting in the Mid 150 feet of Crescent $100,000's. Creek frontage. Per Pahlisch Homes fect vacation home The Hasson with covered deck for Company Realtors. e ntertaining, wo o d 745 Rhianna Kunkler, stove, 2 bed/ 1 bath. Homes for Sale Broker, 541-306-0939 An RV garage and lots of upgrades on 4270Sq.ft., 6/6, 4-car, 750 this one acre. Close c orner, .83 acre m t n to the Ski Pass, trails Redmond Homes v iew, by owne r . and lakes. $275,000
'prj Ij
$590,000 541-390-0886 See: bloomkey.corn/8779
Looking for your next emp/oyee? People Look for Information Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and About Products and reach over 60,000 Services Every Day through readers each week. The Bulletin Classineds Your classified ad will also appear on BANK OWNED HOMES! bendbulletin.corn FREE List w/Pics! which currently re www. BendRepos.corn ceives over bend and beyond real estate 1.5 million page 20967 yeoman, bend or views every month at no extra cost. F ixer Upper 7 5 S W Bulletin Classifieds Roosevelt Bend 3/2 + Get Results! Bonus, Det a c hed Call 385-5809 or 3-car G arage-Work place your ad on-line shop, Lot over 9000 at sq.ft., Bend Park-Old bendbulletin.corn Mill District, Z oned RM for Multi Units, Owner (541)390-5721 762
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The Bulletin
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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 - Condos &Townhomesfor Sale 744 - Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest BendHomes 747- Southwest BendHomes 748 - Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast Bend Homes 750 - RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757 - Crook County Homes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763 - Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
Duplex 3 bdrm, 2 bath, Commercial for 1260 sq.ft., 1 story, ga rage w/opener, fenced Rent/Lease yard, RV/Boat parking, Sell them in fridge, dishwasher, mi Spectrum professional The Bulletin Classifieds cro, walk-in laundry, building, 2 5 0 ' -500',N EW O N M A R KET! Homes with Acreage W/S/G paid, front gard $1.00 per ft. total. No Enjoy peace & tran Deschutes River front ner paid, $775+dep., N NN. C a l l An d y , quility i n th i s 3 age. Custom single 541-385-5809 541-604-0338 541-385-6732. bdrm/2.5 bath, 2080 3 bdrm, 3 bath, sq. ft. on just under .5 level 3962 sq.ft., 12.72 acre acre on corner lot in Independent Contractor gated community, pri cul-de-sac. M o ve-in setting with 1/4 ready, so don't wait! vate river f rontage. Close to r e creation mile MLS and just minutes from $997,000. ¹ 201205961. Pa m Bend! MLS¹ Lester, Principal Bro 2 01206813. Kat h y Century 21 Gold D enning, Brok e r ker, Country Realty, Inc.
Operate Your Own Business
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541-480-4429 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.johnlscott.corn/57 361
MLS¹
Call
20 1 2 0 7074.
Ker r y
541-815-6363
at
Cascade Realty Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
CHECK YOUR AD
Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is cor rect. Sometimes in s tructions over t h e phone are misunder stood and a n e r ror can occur in your ad. If this happens to your ad, please contact us the first day your ad appears and we will be happy to fix it as s oon a s w e ca n . Deadlines are: Week days 11:00 noon for next day, Sat. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday and Monday. 541-385-5809 Thank you! The Bulletin Classified
541-504-1338
FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN
Your future is just a page away. Whether you' relooking All real estate adver for a hat or a place to hangit, tised here in is sub The Bulletin Classified is ject to t h e F e deral your best source. F air H o using A c t , Every day thousandsof which makes it illegal to advertise any pref buyers and sellers of goods erence, limitation or and services do business in these pages. Theyknow discrimination based on race, color, reli you can't beat TheBulletin Classified Section for gion, sex, handicap, familial status or na selection and convenience tional origin, or inten - every item is just a phone call away. tion to make any such preferences, l i m ita The Classified Section is tions or discrimination. easy to use. Every item We will not knowingly is categorized andevery accept any advertis cartegory is indexed onthe ing for r ea l e s tate section's front page. which is in violation of this law. All persons Whether you are looking for are hereby informed a home or need aservice, that all dwellings ad your future is in the pagesof The Bulletin Classified. vertised are available on an equal opportu nity basis. The Bulle Sear naCaea Oayon sinn 1aa tin Classified
NOTICE
The Bulletin
Get your business
a ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory 775
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
FACTORY SPECIAL
New Home, 3 bdrm,1026 sq.ft., $46,900 finished on your site,541.548.5511 www.JandMHomes.corn Fleetwood 1997, 14x60, 2 bdrm, 1 bath., well maint., $17,000 OBO, must be moved from Tumalo loca t ion, 503-523-7908.
THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012 F3
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 870
Boats 8 Accessories •
15' Smokercralt Alas kan 1998, 15HP 4 Stroke Joh n son, electric start, trailer, Bimini top, fish finder, center console, and extras. $3 9 9 5. llllotorcycles & Accessories
541-31 6-1 388.
875
Wate r c raft
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2007 Sea Doo 2004 Waverunner, excellent condition, LOW hours. Double trailer, lots of extras. $10,000 541-71 9-8444
Motorhomes •
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Trave l Trailers
Fifth Wheels
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ROUADigorgio 1971 fridge, heater, propane & elec. lights, awning, Hunter's Delight! Pack 2 spares, extra insu age deal! 1988 Win lation for late season nebago Super Chief, hunting/cold weather 3 8K m i l es , gr e a t camping, well maint, Montana 3400RL 2008, 4 shape; 1988 Bronco II very roomy, sleeps 5, slides, no smokers or 4 x4 t o t o w , 1 3 0 K reat f o r hu n t ing, pets, limited u sage, mostly towed miles, 3200, 541-410-6561 5500 watt Onan gen, solar panel, fireplace, nice rig! $15,000 both. dual A/C, central vac, 541-382-3964, leave elect. awning w/sun msg. screen arctic pkg, rear receiver, alum wheels, 2 itasca Spirit Class C TVs, m an y ex t ras. 2007, 20K miles, front $35,500. 541-416-8087 entertainment center, S pringdale 2005 27', 4' all bells & whistles, slide in dining/living area, extremely good con sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 dition, 2 s l ides, 2 obo. 541-408-3811 HDTV's, $48,500
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BOATS 8 RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmodiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats 8 Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RV's for Rent
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AUTOS 8TRANSPORTATION 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 - Automodiles
Ads published in "Wa 17' 1984 Chris Craft tercraft" include: Kay — Scorpion, 140 HP ks, rafts and motor inboard/outboard, 2 Ized personal depth finders, troll atercrafts. For ing motor, full cover, 541-420-2408. " boats" please s e e EZ — Load trailer, lass 870. Harley Davidson Soft $3500 OBO. 541-385-5809 Tail De luxe 2 0 0 7, 541-382-3728. white/cobalt, w / pas senger kit, Vance & Hines muffler system 17' Seaswirl 1988 o & kit, 1045 mi., exc. open bow, r ebuilt Where can you find a OBO. 541-447-5484 8 c ond, $19,9 9 9 , Chevy V6 e ngine, helping hand? oo Q o MONTANA 3585 2008, 541-389-9188. new uph o lstery, exc. cond., 3 slides, From contractors to Lazy Daze 26' 2 004, $4500 or best offer. Harley Heritage 14K m i. , $ 4 2 ,000. king bed, Irg LR, Arc yard care, it's all here 707-688-4523 61 9-733-8472. Softail, 2003 tic insulation, all op in The Bulletin's tions $37,500. $5,000+ in extras, 541-420-3250 $2000 paint job, "Call A Service slide, Bunkhouse style, 30K mi. 1 owner, sleeps 7-8, excellent Nuyya 297LK Hitch Professional" Directory For more information condition, $ 1 6 ,900, Hiker 20 07,*Snow Chev Corvair Monza con GMC Vi ton 1971, Only please call 541-390-2504 vertible,1964, new top & St 9,700! Original low bird Spec i a*l 3 2 ' , Aircraft, Parts 541-385-8090 tranny, runs great, exlnt mile, exceptional, 3rd t ouring c oach, l e f t or 209-605-5537 8 Service cruising car! $5500 obo. kitchen, rear lounge, 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 Immaculate! many extras, beautiful Volvo Penta, 270HP, Beaver Coach Marquis HD FAT BOY c ond. inside & o u t , 40' 1987. New cover, low hrs., must see, $35,900 OBO, Prinev 1996 $15,000, 541-330-3939 new paint (2004), new Sea Kayaks Hi s & ille. 541-447-5502 days Completely rebuilt/ Eddyline Wind inverter (2007). Onan Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 & 541-447-1641 eves. customized, low 1965, Exc. All original, 18.5' Ba y liner 1 85 Hers, 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, Dancers,17', fiberglass miles. Accepting of 4-dr. sedan, in stor 2008. 3.0L, open bow, boats, all equip incl., parked covered $35,000 29', weatherized, like age last 15 yrs., 390 fers. 541-548-4807 1/3 interest in Colum slim d eck, c u stom paddies, personal flo obo. 541-419-9859 or n ew, f u rnished & Co m pression bia 400, located at Chevy C-20 P i ckup High cover & trailer, exc. tation devices,dry bags, 541-280-2014 ready to go, incl Wine Hit the roadin this Sunriver. $ 1 3 8,500.1969, all orig. Turbo 44; engine, new tires & li cond., 30-35 total hrs., spray skirts, roof rack w/ gard S a tellite dish, Check out the nice Open Road 37' auto 4-spd, 396, model c ense, reduced t o $26,995. 541-420-9964 incl. 4 li f e v e s t s, towers & cradles — Just classifieds online '04 with 3 slides! W/D Call 541-647-3718 CST /all options, orig. $2850, 541-410-3425. hook-up, large LR www.bendbulletin.corn ropes, anchor, stereo, add water, $1250/boat 1 /3 interest i n w e l l owner, $24,000, depth finder, $12,000, Firm. 541-504-8557. Take care of with rear window & equipped IFR Beech 541-923-6049 Updated daily 541-729-9860. desk area. $19,750 B onanza A 36 , l o your investments @ i~ 4t OBO (541) 280-7879 HD Screaming Eagle cated KBDN. $55,000. Call The Bulletin At with the help from Motorhomes Electra Glide 2005, 541-419-9510 Monaco Dynasty 2004, • 541-385-5809 103" motor, two tone loaded, 3 slides, die The Bulletin's candy teal, new tires, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail r,o, r t sel, Reduced — now "Call A Service Plymouth B a r racuda 23K miles, CD player, At: www.bendbulletin.corn $119,000, 5 4 1 -923 1966, original car! 300 hydraulic clutch, ex 8572 or 541-749-0037 Professional" Directory Chevy Wagon 1957, hp, 360 V8, center cellent condition. 4-dr., complete, lines, (Original 'ay 273 RV CONS IGNMENTS Highest offer takes it. Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th $15,000 OBO, trades, eng & wheels incl.) WANTED 541-480-8080. call wheel, 1 s lide, AC, please /2 Interest in RV-9A 20.5' 2004 Bayliner Allegro 2002, 2 slides, We Do The Work, You 541-593-2597 TV,full awning, excel 300 hr, RDM, glass $40K 541-420-5453. 22K mi , wor k horse Honda Elite 80 2001, 205 Run About, 220 Keep The Cash, lent shape, $23,900. PROJECT CARS: Chevy OBO. 541-923-2318 chassis, 8.1 Chev en Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe 2-dr FB 1949 1400 mi., absolutely HP, V8, open bow, On-Site Credit & Chevy 541-350-8629 gine, like new, $41,900 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, like new., comes w/ exc. cond., very fast Approval Team, Weekend Warrior Toy Coupe 1950 — rolling obo. 541-420-9346 auto. trans, ps, air, carrying rack for 2" w/very low hours, Web Site Presence, Hauler 28'2007, Gen, $1750 ea., Trucks 8 frame on rebuild, re chassis's receiver, ideal for use lots of extras incl. We Take Trade-lns. Chevy 4-dr 1949, com fuel station, exc cond. ! painted original blue, w/motorhome, $995, tower, Bimini & Heavy Equipment Free Advertising. plete car, $1949; Ca sleeps 8, black/gray original blue interior, dillac 541-546-6920 custom trailer, BIG COUNTRY RV Series 61 1950, 2 i nterior, u se d 3X , original hub caps, exc. $19,500. Bend 541-330-2495 dr. hard top, complete $24,999. chrome, asking $9000 541-389-1413 Redmond: 541-548-5254 w/spare front c l ip., 541-389-91 88 Pilgrim In t e rnational Softail DeluXe or ma k e offe r . $3950, 541-382-7391 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, 541-385-9350. 2010, 805 miles, Country Coach Intrigue Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 Looking for your Black Chameleon. 2002, 40' Tag axle. next employee? Fall price $ 2 1,865. Pickups $17,000 400hp Cummins Die 541-31 2-4466 Place a Bulletin help Diamond Reo Dump Call Don I sel. tw o s l ide-outs. 20.5' Seaswirl Spy wanted ad today and Roadranger 27' 1993, • Truck 19 7 4, 12 -14 L 541-41 0-3823 4 1,000 m iles, n e w der 1989 H.O. 302, reach over 60,000 A/C, awning, sleeps 6, yard box, runs good, tires & batteries. Most Southwind 35.5' Triton, readers each week. 285 hrs., exc. cond., exc. cond., used little, $6900, 541-548-6812 options.$95,000 OBO 2008,V10, 2 slides, Du C hevy 3/ 4 t o n 4 x 4 , stored indoors for Your classified ad FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, Suzuki Blvd, 2006, less $4,495 OBO. 541-678-571 2 1995, extended cab, pont UV coat, 7500 mi. will also appear on life $11,900 OBO. than 6Kmiles,exc cond, 541-389-8963 door panels w/flowers long box, grill guard, Bought new at bendbulletin.corn & hummingbirds, $3695 obo 541-410-7075 541-379-3530 running boards, bed $132,913; which currently re white soft top & hard Have an item to rails & canopy, 178K asking $94,900. ceives over 1.5 mil 21'7" Sun Tracker top. Just reduced to Call 541-923-2774 m iles, $ 4800 o b o . lion page views ev sell quick? I" $3,750. 541-317-9319 208-301-3321 (Bend) I ATVs Pontoon Fishin' ery month at no If it's under or 541-647-8483 Barge, 2008, with low E conoline trai l e r extra cost. Bulletin Chevy Si l v erado hours Mercury 90, top 16- Ton 29 ' B ed , '500 you can place it in Classifieds Get Re Econoline RV 1 9 8 9, 1500 2000, 4WD, & cover. $16,000. w/fold up ramps, elec. sults! Call 385-5809 fully loaded, exc. cond, The Bulletin 503-701-2256 brakes, P i n t lehitch, auto, X-cab, heated or place your ad 35K orig. mi., $19,750. l eather s e ats, t o w $4700, 541-548-6812 Classifieds for: on-line at Call 541-546-6133. Ads published in the pkg, chrome brush bendbulletin.corn "Boats" classification Winnebago Class C 27' guard, exc. c o nd., '10 - 3 lines, 7 days 1992, Ford 460 V8,64K Honda TRX300 EX 2005 include: Speed, fish CAN'T BEAT THIS! runs great, 130K mi., Ford Galaxi e500 1963, sport quad w/Rev, runs mi., good cond., $7000 ing, drift, canoe, '1 6 - 3 lines, 14 days $9500, 541-389-5579. Look before you Good classified ads tell 2 dr. hardtop, fastback, OBO 541-678-5575 & rides great, new pipe & house and sail boats. 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & buy, below market the essential facts in an (Private Party ads only) paddies incl. $1700 obo. For all other types of radio (orig),541-419-4989 value! Size & mile interesting Manner. Write 541-647-8931 watercraft, please see age DOES matter! TURN THE PAGE Peterbilt 359 p o tableFord Model T Touring, from the readers view not Class 875. Class A 32' Hurri SPRINTER 36' 2005, w ater t r uck, 1 9 9 0, For More Ads the seller' s. Convert the 541-385-5809 cane by Four Winds, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp 1919, in good shape & $10,500 obo. Two facts into benefits. Show The Bulletin Boats 8 Accessories slides, sleeps 5, pump, 4-3" h o ses, running cond. Was rib 2007. 12,500 mi, all the reader how the item will camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. bon breaker at H i gh Ford Lariat F-350 2001 amenities, Ford V10, queen air mattress, Bridge dedication! Call help them in someway. 541-820-3724 13' Ithr, cherry, slides, small sgl. bed, couch Smokercraft 7.3 Diesel 4x4 X-Cab 541-420-2478 This like new! New low folds out. 1.5 baths, GENERATE SOME ex 1985, good cond., Pickup T r uc k w/ Travel Trailers • advertising tip 541-382-0865, price, $54,900. Ford Mustang Coupe citement in your neig 15HP gas Evinrude 1 11,894 mi. See a t 541-548-5216 broughttoyouby leave message! 1966, original owner, Utility Trailers borhood. Plan a ga Bend Park and Sell. + Minakota 44 elec. V8, automatic, great rage sale and don' t P lease call Rod a t motor, fish finder, 2 forget to advertise in The Bulletin shape, $9000 OBO. Stonycentralorgan dna soo 0 • ullstream Sce n i c 541-350-8603. extra seats, trailer, classified! 385-5809. GCruiser 530-51 5-81 99 36 lt. 1999, n extra equip. $3500 882 Cummins 330 hp die Big Tex Landscap obo. 541-388-9270 Ford Ranchero sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 Fifth Wheels serving central oregon smce1903 ing/ ATV Trailer, in. kitchen slide out, Komfort 20' Trailblazer, 1979 Taurus 27.5' 1988 dual axle flatbed, 2004, with all the extras, new tires, under cover, with 351 Cleveland Everything works, 7'x16', 7000 lb. Used out-drive hwy. miles only,4 door from new tires & chrome modified engine. $1750/partial trade for GVW, all steel, parts - Mercury fridge/freezer ice wheels to A/C! $8495. Body is in car. 541-460-9127 $1400. Ford Ranger 1999, 4x4, maker, W/D combo, 541-447-3342, Prineville OMC rebuilt ma excellent condition, 541-382-4115, or 7 1K, X- c ab , X L T , To the bicyclist who I Interbath t ub & $2500 obo. rine motors: 151 a uto, 4 . 0L , $ 7 9 00 541-280-7024. invertantly cut off at shower, 50 amp pro FIND YOUR FUTURE 541-420-4677 $1595; 3.0 $1895; Garage Sales OBO. 541-388-0232 the Mill Mall round pane gen & m o re! HOME INTHE BULLETIN Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 4.3 (1993), $1995. about last Saturday, by Carriage, 4 slide Garage Sales $55,000. 541-389-0435 Say "goodbuy" my apologies. Your future is just a page outs, inverter, satel 541-948-231 0 Ford T-Bird 1966 away. Whether you' relooking lite sys, fireplace, 2 Garage Sales 390 engine, power to that unused for a hat or a place to hangit, flat screen TVs. everything, new item by placing it in The Bulletin Classified is $60,000. Find them paint, 54K original your best source. 541-480-3923 miles, runs great, The Bulletin Classifieds in Ford Super Duty F-250 excellent cond. in & Every day thousandsof 2001, 4X4, very good The Bulletin out. Asking $8,500. buyers and sellers of goods shape, V10 eng, $8500 5 41-385 - 5 8 0 9 541-480-31 79 C lassifieds and services do business in OBO. 541-815-9939 cail 54!3855809topromoteyour service Advertisefor28daro starting ar 'l to!too veoafpaaageonotavailableonorrrwebsv these pages. Theyknow 541-385-5809 you can't beat TheBulletin Classified Section for 885 selection and convenience Fleetwood Wilderness Building/Contracting H o m e Improvement L a ndscaping/yard Care - every item is just a phone 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, Canopies 8 Campers call away. rear bdrm, fireplace, NOTICE: Oregon state Kelly Kerfoot Const. Nelson Landscape AC, W/D hkup beau 8' Leer canopy, miss The Classified Section is law req u ires any28 yrs exp in Central OR! tiful u n it ! $ 3 0 ,500. ing rear door, $250 Maintenance easy to use. Every item one who co n t ractsQuality & honesty, from 541-815-2380 541-480-1 536 Serving i s categorized and every for construction work carpentry & handyman Central Oregon cartegory is indexed on the to be licensed with the jobs, to expert wall cov Residential section's front page. C onstruction Con ering install / removal. & Commercial tractors Board (CCB). Sr. discounts CCB¹47120 Whether you are looking for • Sprinkler Repair A n active lice n se Licensed/bonded/insured a home or need aservice, • Sprinkler means the contractor 541-389-1413 /410-2422 your future is in the pagesof K omfort 25' 2 0 06, 1 i s bonded and i n Installation The Bulletin Classified. slide, AC, TV, awning. Lance 945 1995, 11'3", s ured. Ver i f y t h e BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS • Back Flow Testing NEW: tires, converter, all appl., solar panel, contractor's CCB • Fire Prevention, Search the area's most batteries. Hardly used. new battery, exc. cond., c ense through t h e comprehensive listing of Lot Clearing $16,500. 541-923-2595 $5995, 541-977-3181 CCB Cons u m er classified advertising... • Fall Clean up Website •Weekly Mowing real estate to automotive, Harley Davidson Helmet, Chaps & heavy leather coat, all like new, exc. cond., Maker Offer,
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•Senior Discounts or call 503-378-4621. goods. Bulletin Classifieds Reserving spots The Bulletin recom appear every day in the mends checking with for sprinkler print or on line. the CCB prior to con Call 541-385-5809 winterization & snow tracting with anyone. www.denddulletin.corn removal Some other t r ades Bonded & Insured also req u ire addi 541-815-4458 tional licenses a nd LCB¹8759 certifications. Call The Yard Doctor yard maintenance, PeopleLookfor Information Landscaping/yard Care for thatching, sod, sprin AboutProductsand N OTICE: ORE G O N kler blowouts, water Contrac features, more! ServicesEveryDaythrough Landscape tors Law (ORS 671) Allen 541-536-1294 TheBulletin ClaSsiNedS r equires a l l bus i LCB 5012 nesses that advertise Aeration/Fall Clean-up to p e r form L a n d Debris Removal BOOK NOW! scape C o n structionWeekly/one-time service which inclu d es: avail. Bonded, insured, JUNK BE GONE p lanting, decks , free estimates! I Haul Away FREE fences, arbors, COLLINS Lawn Maint. For Salvage. Also w ater-features, a n d Cleanups & Cleanouts Ca/i 541-480-9714 installation, repair of M el, 541-389-8107 irrigation systems to Maverick Landscaping Mowing, weedeattng, be licensed with the Handyman yard detailing, chain Landscape Contrac saw work & more! t ors B o a rd . Th i s ERIC REEVE HANDY 4-digit number is to be LCB¹8671 541-923-4324 SERVICES. Home & included in all adver Commercial Repairs, Pet Services tisements which indi • Carpentry-Painting, cate the business has Pressure-washing, a bond, insurance and Gentle Giant H oney Do' s.O n-time workers c ompensa promise. Senior Animal Care Discount. Work guar tion for their employ Central Oregon Best ees. For your protec anteed. 541-389-3361 in-home animal care tion call 503-378-5909 or 541-771-4463 or use our website: s ervice. G oing o n Bonded & Insured www.lcb.state. or.us to vacation? We provide CC B¹1 81 595 check license status c ompassionate a n d I DO THAT! before con t racting loving in-home ani Home/Rental repairs with t h e b u s iness. mal care. Make it a Small jobs to remodels Persons doing land vacation for your pet Honest, guaranteed scape m a intenance too! Call today! work. CCB¹151573 Tamron Stone do not require a LCB Dennis 541-317-9768 license. 541-21 5-5372
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F4 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012 • THE BULLETIN 933
975
Pickups
Automobiles
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
Ford '/4-T 1985 4x4, 460 Grandmother's Car! 93
eng, 4-spd, posi-traction, Chrysler LeBaron con runs great, $2000 obo. vertible, 6 cyl, auto, red Call 541-420-2478 w/black top, gray/black int, low miles, 6800 miles /yr, air blows cold, new tires, beautiful wheels, nice interior, kept under 1000 1000 GMC i/z-ton Pickup, cover, never damaged, • Le g al Notices • Legal Notices • Legal Notices Legal Notices 1 972, LWB, 3 5 0 h i $3200. 541-317-4985 motor, mechanically Views m a nagement part of t h e a c t ual LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE A-1, interior great; areas will likely last e-mail message or as CIRCUIT COURT OF Notice of Decision body needs some longer than two years. an attachment in Mi OREGON FOR DES Ogden Vegetation TLC. $3131 OBO. crosoft Word (.doc), CHUTES C O UNTY. Management Project Call 541-382-9441 The ROD and FEIS rich text format (.rtf), THE BANK OF NEW Deschutes National can be obtained by or portable document Y ORK MELL O N , Forest, Bend-Fort Rock Chrysler Sebring contacting Beth Peer, format (.pdf) o n ly. SUCCESSOR IN IN Ranger District 2006 exc. cond, Bend-Ft. Rock Ranger E-mails submitted to TEREST T O J P very low miles (38k), add r e sses M ORGAN CH A S E This legal notice an District, 63095 Des e-mail International Fla t always garaged, BANK, AS TRUSTEE nounces the decision chutes Market Road, o ther than th e o n e Bed Pickup 1963, 1 transferable war 97 7 0 1 . listed above, in other FOR TH E R E G IS for the Ogden Veg B end, O R ton dually, 4 s pd. ranty incl. $9,100 TERED H O L DERS etation Management Phone: (541) formats than t h o se trans., great MPG, 541-330-4087 383-4769 or v iewed listed or containing vi OF NOVA S T AR Project Final E n vi could be exc. wood M ORTGAGE F U N D r onmental Imp a c t on the Forest website: ruses will be rejected. hauler, runs great, Only individuals or or ING TRUST, SERIES Statement (FEIS). http: //www.fs.fed.us/n new brakes, $1950. ganizations who sub 2004-3 N O VASTAR The project area is lo epa/project list.php?f 541-419-5480. mitted sub s tantive H OME EQUIT Y cated about 12 miles orest =110601. comments during the LOAN ASSET south of Bend, Or BACKED C E R TIFI egon, on the western This decision is sub comment period may Dodge Magnum '06, C ATES, S ERI E S flank of the Newberry ject to appeal pursu appeal. This project 2004-3, Plaintiff, C. may be implemented Runs Great! 80k, Exc Crater. Th e F o rest ant to 36 CFR 2 15. Cond, Ne w Ti r e s, JOSE A. BALCAZAR; had identified a need Any written notice of 50 days after this le $9500. 702-606-7207 Y AZMINA E . B A L to reduce forest veg appeal of the d eci gal notice if no a p sion must b e f u l ly peal is received. If an CAZAR; WASHING etation density a nd RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L BMW X5 2011, 55k, TON MUTUAL BANK, fuels to increase re c onsistent w it h 3 6 appeal is received this hemi V8, hd, auto, cruise, ¹Y29612 $20,995 FA; UNITED STATE silience t o i n s ects, CFR 215.14, "Appeal p roject may not b e am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. i mplemented for 1 5 O F A MERICA, I N disease, and wildfire, Content." The notice 541-420-3634 /390-1 285 days after the appeal TERNAL REVENUE to improve growth and o f appeal must b e filed hard copy with decision. S ERVICE; AND health o f res i dual Oreg err PERSONS OR PAR trees, and to increase the Appeal Deciding Sport Utility Vehicles AutoSosrce TIES UNK N O WN the proportion of LOS Officer, ATTN: 1570 APPEALS, 333 S.W. FIND YOURFUTURE 541-598-3750 CLAIMING A NY ponderosa pine. aaaoregonautosource.corn First Avenue, P .O. HOME INTHE BULLETIN RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN 3623, Portland, Mercedes-Benz E320, O R I N TEREST I N J ohn A l l en , D e s Box THE PRO P E RTY chutes National For Oregon, 97208-3623, Your future jsjust a page 2001. Loaded. 196K faxed to est Forest Supervisor, (503) away.Whetheryou're looking miles. Runs g r eat! DESCRIBED IN THE 808-2339, sent elec has de c i de d to $ 4700 O BO . T e x t COMPLAINT Buick Enclave 2008 CXL to for a hat ora placelo hangjl, HEREIN, Defendants. implement Alternative tronically 41-948-5552. I c a n AWD, V-6, black, clean, 5 The BulletinClassified js NO. 12CV0 5 3 1. 3 as described in the appeals-pacificnorth send pics mechanicall y sound, 82k SUMMONS BY PUB FEIS. He signed the west-regional-office O your bestsource. miles. $24,900. Mitsubishi 3 00 0 GT LICATION. TO: Jose Record of Decision on fs.fed.us, or hand de Call 541-815-1216 E Very daythouSandSof 1 999, a u to., p e a r l A. Balcazar; Yazmina September 14, 2012. livered to the above w hite, very low m i . bet w e en buyersandsellers of goods E. Balcazar; and Per The decision autho a ddress Want to impress the $9500. 541-788-8218. sons or parties un rizes actions across 7:45AM and 4:30PM, and SerViCeS do buSineSSjn relatives? Remodel known claiming any about 14,422 acres of Monday through Fri these pages.Theyknow Look at: day except legal holi right, title, lien or in the 26,52 1 -acre your home with the Bendhomes.corn t TheBulletin terest in the property p roject area. T h i n days. T h e a p peal you can'beat help of a professional for Complete Listings of ClassifiedSectionfor must be postmarked described in the com ning will take place on from The Bulletin's Area Real Estate for Sale plaint herein, IN THE nearly 12,000 acres or delivered within 45 selectionandconvenience "Call A Service NAME OF THE and fuels reatments days of the date the -every itemjs just aphone Professional" Directory legal notice for this STATE OF OREGON: will cover over 9,000 call away. decision appears in You are hereby re acres in the form of The Bulletin (Bend, Chevy. 1985 quired to appear and m owing, an d p r e The ClassifiedSectionjs K-5 BLAZER d efend against t h e scribed underburning. Oregon). The publi eaSy loUSe.EVery item Great Hunting Rig allegations contained The selected alterna cation date of the le js categorizedandevery Tow Package. V-8 in the Complaint filed tive also includes two gal notice in The Bul Nissan Altima 3 .5SR indeXedonthe $1,900. 2012, 13,200 mi., exc. a gainst you i n t h e non-significant Forest letin is the exclusive Cartegory IS section's frontpage. 541-977-8696 cond., 6-cyl., 270HP, above entitled pro Plan Amendments so means for calculating power driver ceeding within thirty that low-intensity pre the time to file an ap Whetheryouare lookingfor Chevy Equinox LT 2010, 8-way peal and those wish 60/40 rear seat, s cribed fire can b e (30) days from the exc cond, well main seat, leather steering wheel date of service of this applied within Scenic ing to appeal should ahOmeor needaSerViCe, tained, 21K mi, 1 owner, with audio controls, Summons upon you. Views m a nagement not rely on dates or yOurfuture ISjn the pageSof $19,500. 541-447-1624 AM/FM/C D/AUX with If you fail to appear a reas on blo c k s timeframes provided The BulletinClassified. Bose speakers, A/C, and defend this mat greater than five acres by any other source. GMC Denali 2003 Bluetooth, USB, back ter within thirty (30) and because the vi loaded with options. up camera, heated ap p e als days from the date of sual effects of these Electronic Exc. cond., snow serving errlraioregonsince5$ front seats, p o wer publication specified actions within Scenic must be submitted as tires and rims in moonroof & more. In herein along with the cluded. 130k hwy B end, b elow B l u e required filing fee, the 1000 1000 miles. $12,000. Book a t $22 , 955, Bank of Ne w Y o rk 541-41 9-4890. Legal Notices • Legal Notices Legal Notices (317) 966-2189 Mellon, successor in interest to J P MOR PORSCHE 914 1974, LEGAL NOTICE Roller (no e ngine), GAN CHASE BANK, What are you lowered, full roll cage, as trustee for the reg IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP, f/k/a Countrywide Home looking for? 5-pt harnesses, rac i stered h o lders o f Loans Servicing LP, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. NovaStar M o rtgage ing seats, 911 dash & You' ll find it in Funding Trust, Series The Unknown Heirs of William Mark Hamilton; Angela Ceris Hamilton; instruments, d e cent Nova S t ar Homeowners of Nottingham Square Association; Shane Groshong; Or The Bulletin Classifieds shape, v e r y c o ol! 2004-3 egon Department of Human Services; and Occupants of the Premises, Home Equity L o an $1699. 541-678-3249 Case No.:10CV0492AB. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT Asset-Backed Certifi Defendant/s. OF EXECUTION — REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that I will on The Bulletin's cates, Series 2004-3 541-385-5809 "Call A Service will apply to the Court October 18, 2012 at 11:15 AM in the main lobby of the Deschutes County f or th e r e l ief d e Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral Professional" Directory manded in the Com auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the following is all about meeting plaint. The first date of realproperty,known as 61284 Robin Hood Lane, Bend, Oregon 97702, to your needs. p ublication i s S e p wit, Lot 28, Block 7, Nottingham Square First Addition, Deschutes County, tember 12, 2012. NO Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution issued out of the Call on one of the TICE T O DE F E N Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated Jeep Willys 1947,custom, professionals today! DANTS: READ August 28, 2012, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein BAC small block Chevy, PS, T HESE PA PE R S Home Loans Servicing, LP, f/k/a Countrywide Home Loans Servicing LP, OD, mags+trailer. Swap CAREFULLY! You its successors in interest and/or assigns, as plaintiff/s, recovered General for backhoe.No am calls must "appear" in this Judgment of Foreclosure on April 27, 2012, against The Unknown Heirs please. 541-389-6990 case or the other side of William Mark Hamilton; Angela Ceris Hamilton; Homeowners of Not will win automatically. tingham Square Association; Shane Groshong; Oregon Department of Lexus RX 350, 2010, To "appear" you must Human Services; and Occupants of the Premises as defendant/s. BE auto, AWD, silver, 35K, loaded, no OR winters. Porsche Carrera 1999 file with the court a le FORE BIDDING AT THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY INVESTIGATE: (a) The priority of the lien or interest of $36,750. 541-593-3619 gal paper called a black metallic, 46k "motion" or "answer." the judgment creditor; (b) Land use laws and regulations applicable to the careful mi, beautiful, Subaru Forester 2.5X The "motion" or "an property; (c) Approved uses for the property; (d) Limits on farming or for upgrades, Tiptronic. 2008, Black, 65K, exc. est practices on the property; (e) Rights of neighboring property owners; swer" must be given c ond., $15,0 0 0 , $20,000. 541-593-2394 and (f) Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property. Pub to the court clerk or 541-389-5421. administrator w i t hin lished in Bend Bulletin. Date of First and Successive Publications: Sep tember 19, 2012; September 26, 2012; October 3, 2012. Date of Last days along with More PixatBejdbjletij corn thirty the required filing fee. Publication: October 10, 2012. Attorney: Tony Kullen, O S B ¹ 0 9 0 218. It must be in proper Routh Crabtree Olsen, P.C, 621 SW Alder St., Suite 800, Portland, Or Subaru Forester 97205-3623, 503-459-0101. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must ar form and have proof 2004 Turbo, 5-spd Toyota 4Runner o f service o n t h e rive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County manual, studded plaintiff's attorney or, Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or 4WD 1986, auto, tires & wheels, if the plaintiff does not cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will 2 dr., $1200, chains, Thule ski have a n at t o rney, be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of 541-923-7384 box, 67K miles, proof of service on the the sale. LARRY BLANTON, Deschutes County Sheriff. Krista Mudrick, perfect! $13,950. plaintiff. I F YOU Civil Technician. Date: September 17, 2012. 541-504-8316 HAVE ANY Q U ES TIONS, YOU Legal Notices • Legal N otices S HOULD SE E A N A TTORNEY. If y o u Need to get an ad LEGAL NOTICE need help in finding in ASAP? an attorney, you may USDA Forest Service Toyota 4-Runner 4x4 Ltd, Deschutes National Forest call the Oregon State 2006, Salsa Red pearl, Bend-Fort Rock Ranger District Bar's Lawyer Referral 49,990 miles, exlnt cond, Fax it to 541-322-7253 Notice of Decision S ervice a t (503) professionally detailed, 684-3763 or toll-free Kapka Butte Sno-park Project $22,900. 541-390-7649 The Bulletin Classifieds in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. The object On September 14, 2012, District Ranger Kevin Larkin made a decision to of the said action and implement Alternative 2 of the Kapka Butte Sno-park Project Environ Toyotas: 1999 Avalon Vans the relief sought to he mental Assessment (EA) as modified by the Decision Notice. The project 254k; 1996 Camry, area is located approximately 19 miles west of Bend, Oregon at the junc 98k, 4 cyl. Lots of o btained therein i s miles left in these fully set forth in said tion of Forest Service roads 46 (Cascade Lakes Highway) and 45 (Sunri Chevy Astro cars. Price? You tell complaint, a n d is ver Cutoff). The legal description is: Township 18 South, Range 9 East, Cargo Van 2001, me! I'd guess briefly stated as fol Section 35, Willamette Meridian, Deschutes County, Oregon. pw, pdl great cond $2000-$4000. lows: Foreclosure of a business car, well Your servant, Bob at Deed of T r ust/Mort Alternative 2 modified includes the following actions: m aint, regular o i l 541-318-9999, no gage — Grantors: Jose c hanges, $4 5 0 0 , charge for looking. A. Balcazar; Yazmina • Construct a parking area that will accommodate 70 parking spaces de please call 541-633-51 49 F. Balcazar; Persons signed for larger vehicles. An estimated 189,600 square feet of paved Volvo V70XC 2000, or parties unknown surface and subgrade will be used equating to an approximate 6 acre 3rd row seat, mounted claiming an y r i g ht, footprint. Ford Arrowstar 1989, studs, tow pkg, extras, title, lien or interest in • Two single vault toilets will be incorporated within the island of the park $500. $5000, 541.693.4764 t he p r o perty de ing area. 541-977-4391 scribed in the com • A 0.2 mile snowmobile trail to link to Trail ¹45, and a 0.6 mile trail to link Looking for your plaint herein. Prop to Vista Butte Sno-park will be constructed. next employee? erty address: 20510 • Snowmobile Trail ¹5 will be realigned to remove sharp turns and im I Au t o mobiles Place a Bulletin help prove sight distances. Peak Avenue Lot 16, wanted ad today and B end, O R 97 7 0 2 . Buicks! 1996 Regal, reach over 60,000 Publication: The Bul The EA and Decision are available at the Bend-Fort Rock Ranger Station, 87k; 1997 LeSabre, readers each week. letin. DATED this 9 63095 DeschutesMarket Road, Bend, Oregon and on the Forest Service 112k; and others! Your classified ad You' ll not find nicer day of August, 2012. website: will also appear on Craig Peterson, OSB http: //data. ecosystem-management.org/nepaweb/nepa project exp.php? Buicks $4000 & up. bendbulletin.corn ¹120365, R o b inson project=11086. One look's worth a which currently re Tait, P.S., Attorneys thousand words. Call ceives over 1.5 mil This decision is subject to appeal pursuant to 36 CFR 215. Any written Bob, 541-318-9999. for Plaintiff. lion page views appeal must be fully consistent with 36 CFR 215.14 (Content of an Ap for an appt. and take a every month at drive in a 30 mpg. car peal). Appeals may be filed by mail to Appeal Deciding Officer, Pacific no extra cost. Bulle Northwest Region, USDA Forest Service, Attn. 1570 Appeals, PO Box Cadillac CTS S e dan tin Classifieds 3623, Por t l and , OR 97208 - 3623 , or email e d to 2007, 29K, auto, exc. Get Results! Call appeals-pacificnorthwest-regional-officeofs.fed.us (please put APPEAL cond, loaded, $17,900 385-5809 or place and the project name in the subject line), or faxed to Regional Forester, OBO, 541-549-8828 your ad on-line at Attn. 1570 APPEALS at (503) 808-2339 or hand delivered to Pacific Northwest Regional Office, 333 S.W. First Avenue, Robert Duncan Plaza Cadillac E l D o r ado bendbulletln.corn Building,Portland, Oregon 97204-3440 between 7:45 AM and 4:30 PM, 1994, T otal c r e a m Monday through Friday except on legal holidays. puff, body, paint, trunk I The Bulletin recoml as showroom, blue mends extra caution i Electronic appeals must be submitted as part of the actual e-mail mes leather, $1700 wheels p u r chasing • sage, or as an attachment in Microsoft Word (.doc), rich text format (.rtf), w/snow tires although when i products or services or portable document format (.pdf) only. In cases where no identifiable car has not been wet from out of the area. name is attached to an electronic message, verification of identity will be in 8 years. On trip to ash , required. E-mails submitted to email addresses other than the one listed Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., i S ending c checks, or credit in above, or in formats other than those listed, or containing viruses, will be $5400, 541-593-4016. formation may be I rejected. It is the responsibility of the appellant to confirm receipt of ap subject toFRAUD. peals submitted by electronic mail. Cadillac Seville STS i For more in forma 2003 — just finished l tion about an adver Appeals, including attachments, must be postmarked or delivered within $4900 engine work you may call 45 days of the publication of the legal notice for this decision in The Bulle by Certified GM me I tiser, the Oregon State tin, the newspaper of record. Attachments received after the 45-day ap chanic. Has every Attorney General's g peal period will not be considered. The publication date is the exclusive thing but navigation. Office Co n s umer I Thousands ofadsdaily means for calculating the time to file an appeal. Those wishing to appeal Too many bells and i Protection hotline at this decision should not rely upon dates or timeframe information pro in print andonline. w histles t o l i s t . 1-877-877-9392. vided by any other source. bought a new one. $6900 firm. For additional information contact Amy Tinderholt, Project Leader at (541) 541-420-1283 Serving Central Oregon smce 1903 ' i i l i 383-4708 or by email at atinderholtofs.fed.us. •
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices •
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Pursuantto O.R.S. 86.705 et seq. and O.R.S. 79.5010, et seq. Trustee's Sale No. 09-NC-118246 NOTICE TO BORROWER: YOU SHOULD BE AWARE THAT THE UN DERSIGNED IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND THAT ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Ref erence is made to that certain Deed of Trust made by, JEFFERY S. MILES, as grantor, to FIRST AMERICAN TITLE, as Trustee, in favor of NEW CENTURY MORTGAGE CORPORATION, asbeneficiary,dated 4/26/2004, recorded 5/5/2004, under Instrument No. 2004-26131, records of DESCHUTES County, OREGON. The beneficial interest under said Trust Deed and the obligations secured thereby are presently held by Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Indenture Trustee for New Century Home Equity Loan Trust 2004-2. Said Trust Deed encumbers the following described real property situated in said county and state, to-wit: LOT 10 OF DEMARIS ACRES, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. The street address or other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 16497 DEA DRIVE BEND, OR 97701 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the above street address or other common designation. Both the benefi ciary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due, the following sums: Amount due as of September 4, 2012 Delinquent Pay ments from December 01, 2010 22 payments at $1,864.08 each $ 41,009.76 (12-01-10 through 09-04-12) Late Charges: $2,609.60 Benefi ciaryAdvances: $20,706.25 Suspense Credit:$ -7,170.37 TOTAL: $ 57,155.24 ALSO, if you have failed to pay taxes on the property, provide insurance on the property or pay other senior liens or encumbrances as required in the note and deed of trust, the beneficiary may insist that you do so in order to reinstate your account in good standing. The beneficiary may require as a condition to reinstatement that you provide reliable writ ten evidence that you have paid all senior liens or encumbrances, prop erty taxes, and hazard insurance premiums. These requirements for rein statement should be confirmed by contacting the undersigned Trustee. By reason of said default, the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following: UNPAID PRINCIPAL BALANCE OF $269,528.46, PLUS interest thereon at 6.500% per annum from 11/1/2010, until paid, together with escrow advances, foreclosure costs, trustee fees, attorney fees, sums required for the protection of the prop erty and additional sums secured by the Deed of Trust. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee, will on January 4, 2013, at the hour of 11:00 AM, in accord with the standard of time estab lished by ORS 187.110, at FRONT ENTRANCE TO THE DESCHUTES COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 1164 NW BOND STREET, BEND, Countyof DESCHUTES, State of OREGON, sell at public auction to the highest bid der for cash, the interest in the said described property which the grantor had, or had the power to convey, at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his succes sors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure pro ceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the benefi ciary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the princi pal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by ten dering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objec tions if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the same. NOTICE TO RESIDENTIAL TENANTS: The property in which you are living is in foreclosure. A foreclosure sale is scheduled for January 4, 2013. Unless the lender who is foreclosing on this property is paid, the foreclosure will go through and someone new will own this property. The following information applies to you only if you occupy and rent this property as a residential dwelling under a legitimate rental agreement. The information does not apply to you if you own this property or if you are not a residential tenant. If the foreclosure goes through, the business or individual who buys this property at the foreclosure sale has the right to require you to move out. The buyer must first give you an eviction notice in writing that specifies the date by which you must move out. The buyer may not give you this notice until after the foreclosure sale happens. If you do not leave before the move-out date, the buyer can have the sheriff remove you from the property after a court hearing. You will receive notice of the court hearing. FEDERAL LAW REQUIRES YOU TO BE NOTIFIED IF YOU ARE OCCUPYING AND RENTING THIS PROPERTY AS A RESIDENTIAL DWELLING UNDER A LEGITIMATE RENTAL AGREEMENT, FEDERAL LAW REQUIRES THE BUYER TO GIVE YOU NOTICE IN WRITING A CERTAIN NUMBER OF DAYS BEFORE THE BUYER CAN REQUIRE YOU TO MOVE OUT. THE FEDERAL LAW THAT REQUIRES THE BUYER TO GIVE YOU THIS NOTICE IS EFFECTIVE UNTIL DECEMBER 31, 2012. Under federal law, the buyer must give you at least 90 days notice in writing before requiring you to move out. If you are renting this property under a fixed-term lease (for example, a six-month or one-year lease), you may stay until the end of your lease term. If the buyer wants to move in and use this property as the buyer's primary residence, the buyer can give you written notice and require you to move out after 90 days, even if you have a fixed-term lease with more than 90 days left. STATE LAW NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS: IFTHE FEDERAL LAW DOES NOT APPLY, STATE LAW STILL REQUIRES THE BUYER TO GIVE YOU NOTICE IN WRIT ING BEFORE REQUIRING YOU TO MOVE OUT IF YOU ARE OCCUPYING AND RENTING THE PROPERTY AS A TENANT IN GOOD FAITH. EVEN IFTHE FEDERAL LAW REQUIREMENT IS NO LONGER EFFECTIVE AFTER DECEMBER 31, 2012,THE REQUIREMENT UNDER STATE LAW STILL APPLIES TO YOUR SITUATION. Under state law, if you have a fixed-term lease (for example, a six-month or one-year lease), the buyer must give you at least 60 days notice in writing before requiring you to move out. If the buyer wants to move in and use this property as the buyer's primary residence, the buyer can give you written notice and require you to move out after 30 days, even if you have a fixed-term lease with more than 30 days left. If you are renting under a month-to-month or week-to-week rental agreement, the buyer must give you at least 30 days notice in writing before requiring you to move out. IMPORTANT: For the buyer to be required to give you notice under state law, you must prove to the business or individual who is handling the foreclosure sale that you are occupying and renting this property as a residential dwelling under a legitimate rental agreement. The name and address of the business or individual who is handling the foreclosure sale is shown on this notice under the heading "TRUSTEE". You must mail or deliver your proof not later than 12/5/2012 (30 days before the date first set for th
THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012 F5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 CRANEIVAA CRAWFORDILAL CRAWFORD ROBIND CREASEYOPAL0 CREEDON TED CREELJ LEROY BURRELL JAMES H CRESCENZIEDGARJ Central Electric Cooperative, Inc., gives notice BURT CHER YLA CRISAFULLILINDYW BURTMARIEM CRISMAN WILLIAM G that unClaimed CaPital Credit PaymentS haVe BURTISRAY CROCKERRICHARDL CROFTS FRA NKLIN P been available SinCe DeCember 11, 2007 at the BURTONMICHAELA CROMWELLWILLIAMT office of the Cooperative, at 2098 N. Highway BURTON ROBERTD CRONINGEORGE R BURWELL KIRBY J CROOK COIMP 97, RedmOnd, OregOn tO the member'S nameS BURWELLTODDV CROOKSRICHARD0 CROSSETTADAJ hereunder Of memberShiP and PaymentS WhiCh BUSHARDPAUL CROTHERSLEONARD0 have been authorized for more than 4 years. BU SSARD SUE CROUCHBOBR BUTLEREUGENE CROUCH MATTHEWW BUTLERGARYD CROWEDAVIDV UnleSS Said memberS or h e irS Claim Said BUTI ERMARYF GRUM R0 ASSOC CUELLARJUDYK PaymentS not later than Jan 1, 2Q13, they Will BUTLERRONJ CUEVASJAMESW BUTTERFIELD PA TRICK L GULLEYKEVINR be fOrfeited to the COOPeratiVe. These payments BUTTKECARLH CULVERJOSEPHG are retired CaPital CreditS fOr PatrOnage fOr the BUTTRAMWI URC LB CUMINSJAMESE CUMMINGSROGER E yearS: 1982 and 2006. T0 Claim the CaPital Credit PQXTON ~DAVID CUNNINGHAMJOHN S CUNNINGHAM MINNIE Payment PleaSe PhOne or Write our OffiCe. BUZZARDWILLI AM G CUNNINGHAM PATRICKJ BYE RS GEORGEJ CUNNIONJOHNJ BYE RS MICHAELL CURRIEJAMESA 69&&0HOLMES/NIELLI BENNETTROBERTL BYRD JOHNNIE CURTISHAROLDM 7 R LAND& CATTLECO BENNETTSTEPHEN BYRD RICHARDL CURTISLINDAM ABAR DPINTORANCH BENNETTSTEVENL BYRDWALTONE CURTISMARCELLAR ABBOTTOLETHAM BENSONAMANDAS BYRNE GREGORYW CURTISMICHAELJ ABBY JOHND BENSONCECILG 0 &L RANCH GUSHINGDONALD ACOSTAMARCIAA BENSONGARYG CALCAGNO CHRISTI NE CUSTENBORDER J0 ADAIR RICHARD BENSONHELENTRUM CALDWELLFRANKLIN H CUTANEOEUGENE0 ADAMSDEVINT BENSONRONL CALDWELLLOUIS CUTSFORTH DA VID H ADAMSJOEYL BERGGARYM CALKINSRONALDD CUTTINGPATJ ADAMSKENARD BERGSTEVEN CALLAHANORVILLER D & R RENTALS ADAMSNORMAN BERGERCHARLESD CAMA RILL OTHOMASL D & S CATTLECO ADAMSSHERRYA BERGERDAVID CAMERONSHARON D H MDEVELOPMENT CO ADAMSWENDELLS BERGHOFER RONALDB CAME RONWILEY DACHENHAUSEN ROBERTD ADAMSONEF BERGMEN CLARKA CAMOMILEBETTY DAGGETTGLORIAJ AGNERE M BERGSMAGEORGE CAMPBELLBOB0 DAGGETT HAZEL M AHRENSJOHN H BERGSMA RODDYG CAMPBELLELLAE DAHLCLYDE AINGE RAY BERKSON JOHNS CAMPBELLFREDL DAHLEN JIM H AIROLDI HAROLD BERLANDKENNETH CAMPBELLKENR DAHLSTROMVIRGINIA M AKENSDENNIS0 BERNDTMERLEH CAMPBELLKIRK R DALE ROBERT L ALBERTLUCIENJ BERNHARDS TAILORSHOP CAMPBELLMELISSA DALEROMIG GIFTS ALBERTINIALANF BERNHARDT-GEHRM ANN CANNARDWALTER0 DALTONERNEST B ALBRECHTLOUISE M BERRYGEORGES CANNONAW DALY-RUNGE CONSTCO ALDERCRESTHOMES BERRYHERSCHALA CANNONRICHARDR DAMMANN CARLL ALDORKATHRYN BERRYMICHAELR CANOYRICHARDL DAMON MELBA J ALDOUSMARVINL BERTINOIAEDWARD A CANTWELLROGER W DANFORDJANICE ALEXANDER DAVIDJ BESSEYEARL0 CANYONCOURT DANIEL BOB N ALFORDALMOUTHA BESSEYFLOYDJ CARBAUGHPAUL B DANIELSNORMANP ALGER RICHARD B BEST BARRETT J CARD ROBERTV DANNENWE ALLDREDGE LLOYDG BEST ROBERT D CARELLIMACW DAUGHERTYELDREDD ALLEN DOUGLAS P BETTUCCIFRANKA CAREWADA DAUGHERTYJRICHARD ALLEN RICHARD BEVINSMAURICE G ESTATE CARGOKARINE DAVIDSONGERALD0 ALLEN STEVER BEYERLEINDAVIDA CARLEYMARGARETV DAVIDSONN GORDON ALMASIELARRYP BIDIMANORRINW CARLINLARRYF DAVIDSONRONNIE ALT I SHIN DANIEL B BIG WRANCH CARLSONAB DAVIDSONTHOMAS A ALZURIJOEF BIGHAUSTOM A CARLTONCLAIR DAVISALBERTW AMARALJOEL J BILKOSKYROBERTR CARLTONLEAHAM DAVISANDREAP AMBROSON RODDM BILLHYMER HELENJ CARLTONRA DAVISCOLEMANE AMEN S ROBERTD BILLINGSDAN M CARLTONRICHARD0 DAVISDAVIDB AMERICANFEDERAL SAVINGS BILLINGSJACKR CARPENTERANDREW DAVISDENNISL AMES AGARY BILLINGSJAMESR CARPENTERLARRYK DAVISFREDERICKA AMES DALE BILYEURICHARD CARR ARRAH M DAVISHOWARDH AMSBERRY H MEL BINFORDLINDLEY CARR LESLIED DAVISJANEL ANGELLCELESTE0 BINGHAMJERRYL CARR MICHELLE DAVISJOEW ANDASOLARICHARD BISTERFELDT DONALDE CARRICKCAROLK DAVISJOHNF ANDERSRICHARDL BLACKJAMESE CARRIGANCARROLLE DAVISKENNETH ANDERSEN ANTHONY0 BLACKBURN HELENM CARSTENSENLEROY DAVISLONJ ANDERSENDAVIDA BLACKWELLHENRYB CARTERGEORGE W DAVISMARTYL ANDERSEN RALPHV BLACKWOOD JEFF D CARTERGREGA DAVIS RICHARDE ANDERSONBENL BLAGG-HAWES ELLENA CARTWRIGHTGARY E DAVISSTAFFORDW ANDERSONBRUCEP BLAIR GARYL CARVERCHERI DAY GERALDINEB ANDERSONCARL BLANCHARD EUNICEF CARYMARIEN DAY LE STERA ANDERSONDARRELLD BLANKMARY0 CASCADEDEV INC DAY MICHAELH ANDERSONDAVID 0 BLAYLOCKDONALD CASE THOMASJ DE BACKER DANIEL ANDERSONDELR BLEVINSCINDYL CASEYKATHYA DE JAIFREJOSEPH ANDERSONDONB BLOCHBONNIEJ CASTEELSID M DE KONING EDWIN ANDERSONDONALDR BLOCHKEITHW CASTLEWILLI AM E DE MERCADO KEN ANDERSONERNA BLODGETTJOHN T CASTROJAMESJ DEAN FRANK L ANDERSONLLOYDW BLODGETTNICK0 CASWELLBURNEY DEAN HOW ARD R ANDERSONMARYE BLONSKIARTHURS CASWELLJOSEPHH DEARDORFFDELBERTR ANDERSONRAINSEE BLOOMMICHAELM CATLINDAVIDW DEASON MARY M ANDERSONRICHARDF BLOOM WILLIAMH CAUDLECAROLL DEBLANDERED ANDERSONRON BLUMHAGEN DW CAUFIELDJOSEPH DEFREMERYMARY S ANDERSONRUTHF BOARDMANERUSSELL CAVANAUGHRICK DEGERMANKENNETH ANDERSONSCOTTD BOARDMAN PHYLLIS M CAVENDERDIANEM DE JAN IKUSMIMI S ANDERSON WMR BOATWRIGHTJERRY D CEDERGREEN COLLINL DEKAYCHARLESW ANDRESEN DARVONM BOB GODFREYPONTIAC INC CENARRUSA JOEE DELGADOJON ANDREWS AUDRE0 BOCCIROBERTL CENTRALTRUSS0 DELL DOUGLAS ANGELLMILLARD BOCHSLERGERALDJ CENTRALOREGON PROPERTIES DELL GERALD0 ANGLERKATHRYNM BOD INDAVIDW CESSNADOLORESL DELL JOHND AN SELLRICHARDM BODTKER FN CHAFFIN GORDON R DELLERDAVIDJ ANSTETTGARYF BOEHIRONALD 0 CHAMBERLAINCRAIG D DELLETTHARRYJ APPLEGATE LOUIS A BOEHMCARTERR CHAMBERLAINLYNDALL0 DELONG DENNISG APPLEGATEWILLIAM R BOHAMDANS CHAMNESSARTHURW DEMAR KOENTERPRISES ARCH PAGING BOHNMARYA CHANEYNATHAN DEMASTERSJAMESG ARENZJOHN BOHRJANETA CHANGINGHORIZONS INC DENISONMARJEAN ARIAIL JAMES M BOLCEELLAM CHAPIN ALP DENISONSHARONL ARMITAGE JANETE BOLCENANCYM CHAPMANHOWARD 0 DENLORINC ARNOLDBERNICE BOLLARDTERESAA CHAPMANPAULS DENNISGARY ARONSONDAVID J BOLTRUSS CHAPPELORVILLEH DENNISWAYNE R ASH LAWRENCE M BOLTEN PHILLIP B CHAPUTMELVINL DENTON ROBINM ASHBAUGH RE BOLTINGHOUSEWILLIAM A CHARPILLOZEDNAM DENTONWAYNE E ASHWELLEDW ARD0 BOLTONDON CHASENINAM DEPOT BUILDI NG ASSOCIATEDEVELOPMENT CO BOLTONROBERTS CHASEPHILW DERBYSHIREDON ASSOCIATEDMGMT BONANNOROBERTK CHAVEZMARGARETT R DERIEUXLARRYE ASTONEDWINL BONDNANCYK CHESHIREMICHAELN DERRJANICEM AUGUSTINEFRANKE BONDTHOMAS CHESTERRODNEYL DESCHUTESBANK AUGUSTINERUTHA BONHAMHARRYS CHIAPUZIOROBERT DESERTSEED AUGUSTYNOVICHRON BONIFACERICHARD M CHICHENOFFGERALDP DEVINEPEGGY AUSTENBENL BONNIEVIEWRANCH INC CHILDERSRONALDE DEVIVOERNESTL AUZENNE ALLENJ BONGREBECCAN CHOPPINGROBERT DEVORELILLIAN AUZENNERONALDJ BONBON NORMANL CHRISMANROSS0 DEWEESEHOWARD AVEDOVECH MYERA BOONEJACK CHRISTENSENGERALDM DEZOTELLROBERTW AVERILLJOANESTATE OF BOONE JOHNW CHRISTENSENGREGA DIAZ BONNIEL AVEY FRANK D BOOTH LOUIS0 CHRISTIANMARKA DIAZ RICHARDE AYLWARD ERNEST M BORDENCLARA CHRISTOPHERSON CARRIEL DIBBLEJANETE BABBITTANDREWE BORDERSEDGARW CHURCHILLJULIETN DICK LARRY BABBITTJAMESM BOSTICJOHNE CHURCHILLTOMMIE N DILLEYPATRICKW BABCOCKARCHIE BOUCHEPARRIS CIRCLE FRANCHESINC DILLMANJUDYM BABCOCKCRAIG BOWEN JEANE CLAESTHOMASE DILLS ROGER A BACHCHARLESJ BOWENPAUL CLAFLINPETERE DIMMITTROBERT BACHANDMICHAEL BOWERS MARIONE CLAPPMARTINA DINGER LLOYD E BACHELORBROADCASTING BOWSERDONALDL CLAREYDUVEEN0 DINGLESTEPHEN BACKMANKAYLA J BOYANOVSKYKUTSCHRON CLARKALFREDL DINGMAN LYLE J BACONDONALD0 BOYDCHARLEST CLARKDARWINH DITMOREDEAN BACONKATHLEENL BOYDROBERTG CLARKDAVIDL DIXON FLOYD L BACONMIKE BOYLECHRISD CLARKKENNETHH DIXON LILLIAN0 BACONWARREN0 BOYLEDANIELJ CLARKKENNETHW DIXONMIKE L BAGGETT BRADBURYHAROLDW CLARKRICHARDI DIXSONSUSANL BAGLEYROBERTR BRADBURY JOSEPH H CLARKROBERTD DOBKINSJOHNV BAILEY ALL BRADFORD CAROLA CLARKRUSSELLB DODDNEALJ BAILEY WM M BRADFORD JOHNP CLARKSTEVE DOGGETTWAYNE M BAILIN RICHARD A BRADLEYCLARKJ CLARKTERRYL DOHERTYALIDENEM BAKER E0 BRADLEYDOUGLASL CLARKTHOMASL DOHERTYRAYE BAKEREDWINM BRANDMALCOLML CLARKTOMR DOLL GEORGE M BAKERHARVEYW BRANDENBURG DON F CLARKVIOLETE DOMINGUESPAULH BAKERMICHAELD BRANDENBURG ELIZABETH A CLARKEJAMES H DON MICHAEL CUSTOM HOMES BAKERRICHARDW BRANDER ALEXG CLECKERMARIAP DONACARAYMOND0 BAKERFRANK&KATHY BRANDTERNESTR CLEMENSCEOILE DONAFRIODON BALDRIDGEROGER H BRANDTFORREST CLEMENSMARYV DONALDSONMICHAEL BALDWINDANAW BRANDTWMD CLEMENTBRADD DONOHOWOODROWW BALL CECIL J BRANSON LORRI J CLEMENTROBERTW DOOLINFRED BALL DON BRATLEY 0M CLINE FALLSOASIS IMPDIS DORANMILOA BA LLEWWILLIAM W BRAUNDREWH CLINTONL POWELL DORIGANFRANCIS BALLIN RUTH E BREADONROBERTW CLONTZALVIET DORRROBERTD BALTZOR ARTHURL BRENDLEHARRYL CLOSEMARLYCE DOUGLASBERTR BANEYCURTA BRENIMAN S KEYESL CLOUSERONALDE DOUGLASDONALDE BANGSGARYW BRENNANMICHAELA CLOVERDALE SCHOOL DOUGLASJEFFREYW KIFER RUTHL BREUSER PHILLIP D CMC CONSTRUCTION DOUGLASCASCADECORP BANKOFIERANNW BREWROBERTS CNTRLLMB & TRUSS/G HOBIN DOUGLASSDAVIDL BANTAOREN0 BREWERDONALDL COATSKATHLEENK DOWDROYB BARBER JAMES S BREWERROYB COBLANTZRAYJ DOWELLLARRYG BARBERMURLS BRICKERPENNI-ANN COBURNKARALYNL DOYLEMARKW BARCLAY JOSEPHJ BRIDGEDANIELR COCHRANLESLIEA DR TURNER-SPRANG ETAL BARKDOLLAGNESI BRIDGMANDANIEL0 COCKRUMJACKW DRAHEIMBETHA BARKER G GLEN BRIER FRANK D CODE R MARY DRAKE BRAD BARKERKARENJ BRIGHTKENNETHL COE MERILYN DRAKESTEVENA BARKERREEDA BRILESJUDITHM COFFEYKATHRYNN DREESROYJ BARKESRICHARDD BRINKARNOLDL COFFEYLEONAD DREWBRIAN0 BARLUPGERALDL BRINKLEYTOM G COFFMANROBERTE DREWDAVIDL BARNARDROBERT BRITTAINCHARLESL COLE GLORIAJ DREWLINDAE BARNDOLLAR VICKY M BRITTON JIMMIE P COLE STEVEN W DRINKERSHIRLEY E BARNESGAYLAA BRITTONTHOMAS L COLEMANALLENB DRIVERELBERTD BARNESLOYD0 BRITTSANRUSSELL COLEMANLULAI DRY CANYON FARMS BARNETTDANNYL BROCKTERRYV COLLIERLORRI BARNETTJAMESE BROCKWAY BRAD R DU FAULTLYNN COLLINSBLANCHEE DUCHETTERIC BARNETTLOUE BRONSONROBERTP COLLINSGEORGE A DUCKWORTHCAROLA BARNGROVER ROBERTE BROOKSCONLEY COLLINSPATRICIAA DUDLEYDEEM BARNHARTJANETL BROOKTREEREALTY COLLINSVELMAF DUDLEYNANCYA BARRESESTEVENJ BROSWICKBRUCE I COMBS DAVID W BARRETTKEN BROTHERS HEIDI S DUFFYTOM COMBSPAULW DUGGAN DENNISW BARRETTRODERICK D BROTHERS J THOMAS COMBSTHOMAS DULIN GLENN BARRICKMARYE BROTHE RSPAUL COMPTONJUDYR DUNAWAY 0E BARRYOLIVE M BROTHE RTON BRUCEL COMPTONLAURENCER BARTAVERNAI BROUGHTON DEBBIE L DUNBARARLOW COMSTOCK ROBERT DUNBAREDITH D BARTHHERBERTE BROUGHTON HALF CONANTEATONH DUNBARROBERTE BARTLETTLINDAJ BROWUNAW CONINGGARY A DUNCANEDWARDN BARTLETTNICKH BROWNALFREDJ CONKLINEVELYNM DUNCANELIZABETHA BARTONGARYA BROWNALICEA CONLEYMARG VER IT E BARTSCHERLYLE BROWN CRAIGE DUNCANLARRYHEL CONLEYRITAJ DUNCAN NB BASHORJAYF BROWNDEBORAHK CONNERRONA DUNCANCREEKRANCH BASS CHARLES L BROWN DONALDG CONNOLLYMICHAEL DUNCKLEYELIZABETH BASSFORDPAULS BROWNHAZEL F CONRADS0 B BATESCARYLB BROWNJW DUNHAMTIM CONTRERASRICHARDM BATESDAVIDL BROWNJSCOTT DUNLAPNORMANJ COOKALMAA DUNNCORRINE0 BATESRAYB BROWNJAMESW COOK WINONA DUNNEUGENER BAUERDIANAL BROWNJEFFREYA COOKEEDWARDJ BAUERKEITH J BROWNKATHYM DUNNJULIUSH COOKEROBERTA BAUMANJOHNS BROWNMARYP DUNNPHILIP G COOKSON PATRICKU DUNN RICHARD0 BAUMANRANDALL ME BROWN MIKEA COOLWAYNEA DUNNROBERTM BAUNACHFRANCESV BROWNNEILD COONCELEE F BAXTERJOHN T BROWNPAULG DUNNSHIRLEYA COOPEREDWARDL BAXTERSANDRAK BROWNROBERTL DUNNEERICN COOPER EDWINT BEALLPAULINE BROWNINGJROBERT DUNNERICHARDD COOPER JAMES H BEAN STEVEN BRUCKER M DURANMONSE COOPERLAFEM DURANTGAILL BEARDJOHNR BRUCKERT 00 COPELANDRICHARDD DURETTEDOREEN BEARDPAULD BRUINGTONANNA M CORPROBERTS BEATYPATM BRUNELEROYA DURHAM WILLIAM 0 CORBARIARCHIED BEAUDREAUDEANP BRUNMEIERRJ DURNING-STALICK ANNE W CORBARIROBERTS DUTCHERROBERTD BEAUPRE CHRISTINE 0 BRYANKENNETHM CORDES ROGER A DWYER DANNY S BEBB EDWARD E BRYANTWAYNE E CORDON DONALDW BECK JOHNE BRYANTWILLIAM M DYERLANDDEV CORDON MARIE BECK MARGARET BUCHMAN ED H EARLYWINE WILLIAM E CORNELIALLOYDK BECKERKARENL BUCKVIRGINIAR EARWICKE RJONA CORNOGCHESTER EAST PORTLAND INVESTMENT BECKETTGERALDN BUCKNERAUGUST A CORRIGANGEORGE J BECKMANIKENT BUCKNERGRACE EASTMANDARWIN0 CORRIGANROBERT BECKWITHJEFFERYD BUCKNERW A EATON 0SUSAN CORUMALLEN BECRAFTHARRYR BUENAVISTACATTLE CO ECKMANPAUL CORUMVINCED BEELSEUGENEH BUERMANN WILLI AM L EDGINGTONJESSE 0 COSNERANDREW R BELDINGMICHAEL T BUESHERRBTG EDMONDSON MUSETTA COSNERFREDR BELL JAYE BUFFUMMARVON0 EDWARDS0 B COSSETTEJACKT BELL RANDALLN BUIGI THOMAS J EDWARDS0 CHICKH GOTTRELLGENE BELL ROGER G BULGERJOSEPHE EDWARDSEUGENEL COUNTRY ESTMOBILE HOMES EDWARDSLEEE BELLEMORE PAUL H BULLOCKBRADLEYJ COUNTRYSUNSET MOBILE PRK EDWARDSRONALDE BELLINGERGROVER L BUNCHDAN COURSEYLINDAM BELZELJOHN BUNDOCKHUGHM EDWARDST RANDY COWANBARBARA BENDELEPAULA BUNDOCKW E EDWARDS WILLIAM J COWANRICKW BENDTTRAVISF BUNNELLLORENK EGANVIRGINIA G COX BOYD E BENIASCHKEITH R BURGHROBERTF EGELINESTEVEN0 COX OLENJ BE NISHRICHARDJ BURGESSDALEE EIDE MELVIND COZBYBETSYE BENJAMINROBERT M BURINGRICHARD M EIDE MILLER DOROTHYD CRAIGDALED BENNETTJOSEPH W BURKEDANIEL D EKLUNDWALTERE CRAMANDRHOADS BENNETTLEONAM BURKETONIS EL TOROEXPRESS INC
ELBERS JULIANNEM ELLE R WENDELLL ELLIOTTCHARLESR ELLIOTTDONALDP ELLIOTTMORGAN H ELLIS CLIFFR ELLIS EDMUND ELLIS NANCY I ELLIS ROBERT D ELLISONDAVID G ELLISONJOHN0 ELLISONMICHELLEM ELLISONPEGGY L ELLISONWILLIAMH ELLSWORTH RUSSELL J ELSERRAYW ELSTON JUDYK EMERSON BONNIE EMMONS NEIL L EMRICKAL ENDICOTTCHARLES EN GINASSOC ENGLEGLADYS ENGSTLERCAROLEL ENOS LEWIS W EORIATTIJULIEN EPSTEIN MICHAEL P EQUITABLESAVINGS & LOAN ERCOLINDIANEE ERDMAN HENRYM ERHARDT TOMM ERICKSON HERBERT H ERICKSON KGLENN ESTERGREEN ALICE ESTESBURTONE ETHREDGELOISM EVANSMARYL EVANSREUBENW EVANSROBLEY0 EVE RED MARGARETJ EVERETTRO GER W EVERHARTCHARLES S EVETT ROBERT E EWINGLEON EXTRA R GESTATE FAIR ANDREA S FAIRCHILDHELENJ FAIRCHILDSCOTT M FALLERTEVELYNL FALTYSRANDY FANNINGCURTISH FANNINGDAVIDA FAR WESTFEDERALBANK FARISJAMES0 FARLEYARNOLD FARLEYROBERTF FARNEYJAMESM FARRW M FARRA JAMES S FARRELL ALYS BELLE FARRELL J DOUGLAS FASSETTRICHARDJ FEHLMAN AVALYN L FELDSCHAULAWRENCE FENNELLDENNISE FERGUSONSAMUELE FERRERA BART R FERRYWILLIAM M FERTSCHARONW FICK DEXTER A FIELDSCYRUSL FIELDSRAYMOND FIJALKADAVIDF FIN CHER HAROLDM FINDLAY HUGHG FINDLEYCOLLEN FINEGANLESLIE M FINK ANNEH FINNELLMICHAEL R FIRSTASSEMBLY OF GOD FIRST INTER STATE BANK FISHERAD FISHERFRANKA FISHERGEORGE A FISHER LN FISHERMARCR FISHERMICHAELL FISHEROLIVE E FISHERRODGERA FISHERTHOMASC FISHERWILLIAM D FITCH HARRY L FITZGERALD JOSEPH 0 FITZGERALDTHOMAS F FITZPATRICKEB FITZSIMMONSDWAYNE L FITZSIMONSPATRICK0 FLAIG KELLY B FLANDEY MEYERF FLEGELWINSTON M FLESHERRICKA FLETCHERHK FLINT LARRY B FLIP-A-COIN FLOREADAN FLOYD JEFFH FOLEYROBERTH FOLEYTHOMASP FOLK JACK L FOLLETTLYNNP FORD CLAUDIA F FORD EVELYN E FORE STEVEN E FOREMAN LYLEG FORESTER PATRICK L FOSS ART FOSTERFRANK FOSTERGRANT FOSTERMILO FOSTERPRESTONL FOUCAULT JAMES FOUNTAINTIM N FOURNIER JARRETL FOUSSAT ERIC FOUSTGARYA FOWLS CAROLINEA FOX BURT 0 FOX RODNEY G FOX WILLIAML &COMPANY FOXLEYEDWARD FOY DWIGHT D FRALEYHELEN FRAMBESRICHARDD FRANCEALLEN H FRANCEDAVIDW FRANEYJAMES M FRANKRICHARDL FRANKEHERBERTP FRANKLINCAROLYNN FRANKLINEDITHM FRANKLINWILLIAML FRANKSR MINOR FRANTZ VIRGINIA F FRASERPATRICIA M FRATZKEFERNESTATEOF FRAZEE D BRUCE FRAZEENONAESTATEOF FREEMANJACKN FREEMANROBERTJ FREIGHTLINERINC FRENCHMARYJ FROLICKPATRICIAM FRYE DELMER E FUDGEBANN FULS CHARLES FULTON IZETTAL FULTONLAMOINE FULTON&KAUFFMAN FUNKHOUSER DONALDR FUNKHOUSER JOHNA FU QUA DONALDK FURGASON MARJORIE GAEDEFRANCISL GAETZPALMAM GAGE THOMASM GAGNON WILLIAMESTATEOF GA INESCLAY GA INESTHOMASM GAISERDONALDF GALANMANUELM GALEWESTONW GALESCOLLENAM GALL ALVIN G GALLOWAY JOHN0 GAMAJORGE GAMBLE TED R GANDERDAVE0 GANGERLAWRENCE GARCIAROBIN D GARD EDWARD E GARDEN HOMEPROPERTIES GARDNER ETHEL R GARDNER KENNETHL GARDNERROBERT0 GARNERRALPHJ GAROUETTE ANNEM GARRISDONALDE GARRISONCALEENA GARRISONJAMES ESTATE OF GARSIDESTAN GASCON JOSEPHF GASSNERGERALDM GECK HALE GEHRKECLARENCEA GEORGE ERNEST GEORGE MARYA GERALDACOFFMAN GERBERJOHN 0 GERBERROBERTD GE RGEN YVONNE 0 GERKEEUNICE GERNESDEBRAJ GE RVAIS DOREE N M GESIK KELLEY A GHIRARDO LOUISJ GIBBONSJAMES H GIBEAUT CHARLESB GIBSONCHRISTINEA GIBSONKATHLEEN G GIBSONRAYW GIBSONSTANLEY M GIBSONWARREN N GIEFFELSMONTE J GILBERTDORATHY GILBERTTEDD GILCHRISTEDITH GILL WILLIAM E GILLIHANJOHNF GILLILANDNORMAN GILLOCKSHONIA D GILMERJERRYL GILMOREBERNADETT L GILMORERO BERT L GILMOREVIRGLE F GILPIN CLARENCE H GILPIN EILEEN GILPIN MICHAELE GIORDANODEANNE GISHEDJ GITTINGSEMMA H GLANTZKENNETHE GLASHOFFPHILM GLASPEYSUSANL
GLASSBYRONB GLAZIERHOWARD L GLOVERBILLI EK GLOVER REXF GOBLEWILBUR M GOCKE WILLIAMF GODATCARYLE GODBYRUEBENBESTATE GODDARD GALEL GODDARDLAVONNE G GODDEN JACOBJ GOETZ RL GOLD RENA GOLDBERGSARA G GOLDSMITHRICHARD E GOLDSTRAND LUCY GOMPERTZ KATHLEENA GONZALES DANIEL0 GONZALEZFRED 0 GOODMAN FAYEE GOODMANJOHN J GOODWINDONALD A GORDENIERSTEPHEN0 GORDONDUANEA GORDONEVELYN GORDON JOHNR GORDON NORMANW GORDON RICHARDL GOTCHYCLARENCEE GOULD ALTAM GRABENHORST RICHARD GRACEARNOLDW GRACEROCKYD GRADY ROBERTM GRAGEDENNISH GRAHAM BONNIE GRAHAM DUANEK GRANTCLOYCEJ GRANUM MICHAELJ GRAUSNICK CAROLL GRAVANCE DAVEL GRAVANCE SHARONL GRAVESFRED0 GRAVESREBECCAK GRAVESROBERT D GRAVLEY JAMES GRAYCHARLESE GRAYCLAIREM GRAYHELENB GRAYJACKE GRAYLAURIEL GRAYROYALM GRECO INVESTMENTSLLC GREEN DIANE GREEN DOROTHYE GREEN LESTERD GREENRAYMONDV GREENRICHARDW GREEN WILLIAMD GREENBLAT ALANP GREENECORDELLF GREENOUGH ED GREESON DAVID L GREGOIRE JOHNJ GREGORY ALEX L GREKELEDW ARD GRIFFIN EM GRIFFITHJIM D GRIFFITH LAWRENCE S GRIFFITH THOMAS GRIFFITHTRADINGCOINC GRIGGSDAN D GRINDSTONELIVESTOCK GRINERUTHJ GROGAN-BERRYJAMES L GROSHONG THOMASM GROSSWILLIAMN GROVE GERALDE GROVE HARRYL GROVER MICHAEL GRUBB DONALDT GRUBBS EDWARD0 GRUETZEMACHERMICHAEL J GULLICKSON CARLA GUNDERSON CECILY GUNDERSONEDWINF GUNTERROBERTG GUS ASSOC GUTHRIERAY GUYTONCHARLES GUZMAN MARIBEL GWARTNEY MAUREEN R HAASPAULG HAASPAULH HAASEPHILLIP R HADDIXSTEPHEN HADDOCKJOHN D HAFTERELITAV ESTATE OF HAGEMAN PAULL HAGER ORVAL0 HAHNSUSANE HAINESRALPHA HALEYMARJORIEM HALEYTHOMASW HALEYWILLIAM W HALL BILLY J HALL DALEF HALL FRED A HALL HAZEL M HALL JIM F HALL JOHN H HALL MARGUERIT A HALL PATRICIA A HALL RICHARD D HALL RICHARD L HALLERANNE HALLOWELL SCOTTA HALSTEAD KATHYR HALTERJERRY HAMARBRUCEA HAMER P W HAMILTONJAMES G HAMILTONLUCILLE M HAMILTONJACSKONGLORIA HAMMACK BRICE HAMMACK DRUSILLA HAMMACK JOHN HAMMACK SANDRAK HAMMACK ALANG&SANDRA HAMMERLARSONK HAMMETTGARY HAMMON DURLINR HAMMOND CRAIGB HAMMOND LINDAD HAMPTON DANAS HAMPTONBUTTE GRAZING ASN HANBYMARIE HANCOCKPAUL HANDELLOISL HANEYCARLL HANEYJOYCE A HANKINSCLAUDEL HANKINS TRACYA HANLON COLLEENL HANNAHSINNA HANNAM DW HANNEMANNVIRGIL HANSBROUGH GARYB HANSEN EVERETTW HANBENHAZEL L HANBENMARLENEB HANBENMARNA S HANSENPAT HANSENRONR HANSEN STEPHENG HANSONARNOLDE HANSONDONALDA HANSONOSWALD HANSONPHILIP L HARBAUGHEVA HARBEINTNER ROBERTG HARBICK WAYNER HARDIEARTHURD HARDINBOBW HARDINGEDNA HARDING HAROLDS HARDINGMICHAEL L HARGISROBERTE HARINGARLINE HARKLE ROADDONALD G HARKLEROAD JIMMIE R HARLESS DEWEYR HARMAN EUGENE0 HARMON WILLIAM D HARMON WILLIAMW HARNESS DON HAROLD WJ HARPER TRACYK HARPOLE JOHNJ HARRELL ALLEN L HARRINGTON 0 JAKE HARRINGTON EVERETT J HARRINGTON STEVE HARRIS ADON HARRIS EMAY HARRISEVERETTL HARRISFRANKJ HARRISGRACE HARRISJOHNNIE HARRISWAYNEL HARRISONGORDON S HARRISONIK HARRISONWILLARD R HART EMARLENE HARTGLENNA HARTMAN ANNA HARTMANFRAY AA HARTSOCKROBERTE HASKINROBERT HASKINYERNG HASLEYLESLEYL HASWELLRICHARDW HATCH DAVID A HAWKINSGEO L HAWKINS HARRYD HAWLEY NANCYG HAYCOCK RICHARDD HAYESHUBERTE HAYESTHOMASB HAYHURST DAVID G HAYHURSTWILLIAM L HAYNESEMOGENE M HAYNES JACKL HAYNES JONNIE S HAYNESROBERTN HAYSDICKE HAYSKENE HEAGEN ED F HEAGLE JAMES H HEATH MONTYD HEATONTHOMAS W HEBBPAULH HECHTWILLI AM J HECKMAN TERRIA HEDGE JDALE HEIER BERNARD D HE ILMEYE RVICKI L HEIMANHERBERT HEINRICH DANJ HE INTZTHEO HEISERGEORGE W HEITKEMPER PETER HELBERG ERICG
HELF RICH PHILLIP E HELLERWESLEY G HELMSSUSAN HELZER 0 L HEMPENIUSSTEVEH HE MPH ILL CHARLES T HENDERSONDORISJ HENDRICKS ARCHIE P HENDRICKSONGORDON D HENDRICKSONRUSSELL HENKELJACKR HENNENJACKD HENRYJACQUELINB HENRYMARLEEL HENRYRICHARDR HENRYTHOMASA HENSHAWFRED HENSLEYMICHAELA HERAUFGARYA HERB STANLEY0 HEREFORD BLANCHE HE RING JOHN B HERMANMICHAELR HERNANDEZMIKEJ HERRERAJIM D HERRINGHUBERTB HERRMANN FRANZE HE RSHBERGER DOYLE A HERVINJASON0 HESS DANIELR HETZLERHOWARD G HEUSTONLEONARDZ HEWITT BR IANNA HE WITT VICKI I HEWITTWILLIAMJ HEYDENJOHNR HIATTHAZELD HIATTMARYE HIBBARDGEORGE HIBBARDJIM0 HIBBARDLARRYG HIBBS CHARLES H HICKEYILA M HIGHDESERT MORTGAGE HILDEBRANDTRUSSELLR HILDERBRAND FRANCESS 0 HILGERSRANDALLD HILL CHARLIE HILL DAVIDW HILL DOUGLASA HILL JOHNJ HILL RONALD J HILLE ARVIN HILLS GIFFORD L HILLS JAMESR HINDERLIDER JOHNM HINKEMEYER JERRYL HINKLE SG HINMANJUDYA HINMANTERRI HINRICHSJOHN HINTZ NANCY L HIRSCHKATHRYNR HITE WILLIAMH HITES JAMES L HOBGOOD ROBYN0 HOBIN LESLIER HOBINBUILDING MTRLS HODGESDONNAJ HODGSON CECIL HODGSON ROBERTL HOEKSTRECLIFF0 HOFFMANGARY HOFSTETTERADAMJ HOGANCHUCKN HOGANJEFFERYL HOGANRITAE HOILIEN LERIC HOLBROOK STEPHEN M HOLCOMB RICHARDE HOLLAMON MARYANNE HOLLANDJAMESF HOLLANDLORIANN HOLLINGSHEAD KATHLEENL HOLTJACQUELIN E HOLTPAUL HOLTERDALVIND HOLUM JAMESM HOM DALE L HOODNUEL HOOVERBRAD HOPKINSEDWARDR HOPKINSJULIETMAGBY HOPPERJOHN A HORNSHERRYL HORNEDAVIDL HORSEBUTTERANCH HORTON CHERRYR HOSFORD JAMES D HOSKINSKATHLEENL HOUGH MERLEM HOUGHT GLENNJ HOUSDENOSCARESTATE HOUSEBERTHAJ HOUSTONLAKERANCH HOVERSONRICHARDD HOWARD DALEW HOWARD HANKL HOWARD STELLA W HOWE WIL& ASSOC HOWELLHILLTOPWT20 HOWEYJERALDE HOYT MILDREDI HUBERHAROLDA HUCKEBYJUDIL HUDDLESTON LP HUDSONGLINTN HUDSON GORDONW HUDSONNEILK HUDSON THOMASR HUFSTADER RICK A HUGHESDANIELJ HUGHES GEORGEW HUGHESJOHNG HUGIE SCOTT HULBERTRONALDA HULLWARRENT HULSEDAVEYW HUMEKENNETH0 HUNTHL HUNT KATHRYN M HUNT RDEE HUNTERVANCE HUNTLEYCLIFF R HURL AE HURLBURT FT HURSTBENB HURST LM HURSTRONALDL HURTDARRINP HVALGARYL IACOVETTABEAS IHLE CARL IMCE LEROY IMELMICHAEL L IMELVERNON IMMELL SALLY W IMWALLEROBERT J INGLISMARIEA IRELANDKENNETHG IREY H YERNESTATE IRWINANDREA IRWIN RICHARDH ISAACBURDETTE ISHAMRICHARDL IVERSONLARRYR IVIE GEORGE E J D ROELKE CABINETS J G BOSWELL CO JABSONFRANCESE J
MCMULLENSSHARON I MCMURRAY DARRELL G MCMURRAY LYNNL MCNELLISJIM MCNELLISLILLY0 MCPHERSON DONALD MCPHIESTANLEY MCQUAIDJOEE MCQUOWN DOUGLASE MCSWAINMARY E MCVAYSHAWNT MCWILLIAMBJ MEADOWS BYROND MECHAMGLENT MEDEIROSLOUISJ MEDEIROSMARCIAJ MEEKERBARBARAL MEEKSLUCILLEM MEINERTDENNIS MEJDELLHARRYH MELGAARD BRENT R MELHORNTHOMAS D MELOTSANDRAL MELTONWAYNE H MENDENHALLSTEVE MENDOZA MIGUEL MERCER D E MERCERTHOMASH MERIWETHERAL MERLICHSTUARTK MERRICKSTEVEN MERRITTGENE W MERWINJOHNW METKE JPAT MEYERARTHURB MEYER 0FRED MEYERHARVEYL MEYERSDONETRUST"B" MICHAELTHOMAS W MICHALSENROGER 0 MICHELSONJONATHAN MIDDLETON BETTY J MIDWAYPLUMBING MILES RAYM MILESVADAL MILLARBRANFORDP MILLERCRAIG R MILLERDON M MILLEREDNAR MILLER EMILY J MILLERGLENN MILLERHARLANR MILLERHARVEYI MILLERHELENA MILLERJERRYI MILLERKARENA MILLERKENNETH0 MILLERKENNETHW MILLER LVIVIAN MILLERLARRYW MILLERMICHAEL J MILLERMONICA MILLERMORRIS M MILLERRAYMOND L MILLERROBERTL MILLERROBERT W MILLERSTANLEYF MILLERCLARENCETRUST MILLS REBECCA S MILLS ROCKY MILLS WILLIAMF MILTONEDWARD G MINNICKPAULINE MISCHELRODD MITTS LINDA&JOHN MIZE ANNIEM MLASKORUDOLPHR MODEGARYR MOELLERDEBRAA MOEN THOMASD MONAHANBEVERLYK MONDAYMILTON G MONICALOLIVEG MONROEBARBARA MONTAGUE RICHARD 0 MONTGOMERYEVANS MONTGOMERYLORREN K MOODYFREDL MOORE DANIELR MOOREDELLAM MOOREFRANCESN MOORE GARYT MOORE JAMESW MOORE LIN G MOORE MICHAELD MOOREPANSYL MOORE CLEARCO MOOREHEADDAVIDM MOORMAN JEANNETTEM MORANDENNISB MORANPAULD MOREJOHNH MORELLISUEA MORELLI-WIDMARK MORFINRICHARD F MORGAN BOBJ MORGAN HAROLDR MORGANRAPP MORGAN RUSSELLG MORLEYMARGARET B ESTATE OF MORRISARCHIEJ MORRISEVERETT R MORRISGARYW MORRISJOHNW MORRISLYDIA0 MORRIS B MORRISONGERALD L MORRISONHARRY A MORRISONMILDRED M MORRISONROBERT N MORRISONWAYLAND E MORRISSEYROBERT S MORTGAGEBANCORPORATION MOSCHETTIRON MOSERTOM 0 MOSESROBERTL MOTTNERJOHNE MOULDERJOHN M MOUSEROLENJ MOYERSAM MRS KEN0 OLDSESTATE MUD SPRINGSRANCHES MUE TERS MICHAELJ MUHLHAUSE RCONRAD 0 MUIR DIANEL MULE SHOECATTLECO MULLANEY DANIELJ MULLARDPHILLI PG MULLENSMICHAELL MULLINSRICHARDD MUMFORD DWIGHT0 MUMMERT AEUGENE MUNKERSHAZELJ MUNSONWE MURDERSRONALD L MURDOCH THOMASL MURPHYAL MURPHYFATHERJ MURPHYLOISL MURRAYARTHURE MURRAYBRAD0 MURRAYCHRISTOPHER MURRAYRICHARDM MUSTARDA0 MUZGAYPERRY MUZZEYFRANKD MYERSHANNAH MYERSIRENEE MYERSLYNN MYE RS MARTYA MYERSMONTEK NACHITGALLANDY NAGELJOHNE NAGELJOHNK NAKAMURASTEPHENR NASH FRANCIS MP NASH FRANK E NASON DSCOTT NASONDENNISR NATION RCLARK NAVARRA CYNTHIA R NAYLORROBERTM NEAL ELIZABETH0 NEARYPATRICIAL NEE DON NEEDHAMHARLEYM NEFF KENTE NE ILLWAYNEA NEILSON JOHN NEITZGEORGE E NELSENJOHNW NELSON ATED NELSONELWINW NELSONHARRY NELSONKENNETHS NELSONPHILLIP D NELSONROBERTD NELSONSTAN NELSONWALTERJ ESTATE NESS STEVEN A NEUGARDJONW NEUMANDANIELE NEUMEISTERVERA NEWBERRYJOSEPHA NEWMAN JIMMIE F NEWPORT ROBINW NEWTON MARVINM NEWTON THEODOREE NICHLOSERNESTH NICHOLASNORMAN H NICHOLSBETTYJ NICHOLSONDAVIDL NICHOLSONSCOTT L NICKERSON GARY NICOLAI THEODORE NICOSONWILLIAML NIENDORF JOHNE NIERMANNALVIN H NIESSDAVIDR NOAH GKENNETH NOBLEMARGARET NOICEVIRGINIAA NOLANDANIELD NOLE NEDWARD 0 NORDBYROBERTH NORDSTROMRAYA NORMANCHARLESB NORMANTELFERE NORRISMARYA NORTHAM MICHAELB NOVOTNYMARIANNE Y NOW &THENSHOP NUGENTROY0 NUGENTTHOMASF NW BAPTISTINSTITUTE
F6 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
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LEGAL NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, NA, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Richard Schreiber; Yvonne Schreiber; and occupants of the premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 11CV0778. NOTICE O F SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION — REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that I will on October 11, 2012 at 11:15 AM in the main lobby of the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the following real property, known as 2305 Northeast Moonlight Drive, Bend, Oregon 97701, to wit, LOT EIGHTY-FOUR, EASTBROOK ESTATES, PHASE 4, CITY OF BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated August 29, 2012, to me directed in the above entitled action wherein Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns as plaintiff/s, recovered General Judgment of Foreclosure on April 6, 2 012, against Richard Schreiber; Yvonne Schreiber; and Occupants of the Premises as defendant/s. BEFORE BID DING AT THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPEN DENTLY INVESTIGATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of the judg ment creditor; (b) Land use laws and regulations applicable to t he
property; (c) Approved uses for the property; (d) Limits on farming or for est practices on the property; (e) Rights of neighboring property owners; and (f) Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property. Pub lished in Bend Bulletin. Date of First and Successive Publications: Sep tember 12, 2012; September 19, 2012; September 26, 2012. Date of Last Publication: October 3, 2012. Attorney: Erik Wilson, OSB ¹095507, Routh Crabtree Olsen, P.C., 621 SW Alder St., Suite 800, Portland, OR 97205, (503) 977-7840. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 min utes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. LARRY BLANTON, Deschutes County Sheriff. Lisa Griggs, Civil Technician. Date: September 7, 2012.
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Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF OPPORTUNITY TO COMMENT Schultz Special Use Permit Bend-Fort Rock Ranger District Deschutes National Forest Service
The Bend Fort Rock Ranger District, Deschutes National Forest, is pro viding an opportunity to comment on the following proposed action: Schultz Special Use Permit. This project proposes to reissue a special use permit that would allow the permittee to 1) maintain and use Govern ment owned improvements, including one water well with a 63 foot depth and an 80 square foot wood framed pump house on a 20 foot by 20 foot site; 2) maintain and use permittee owned facilities including a pump sys tem with one hp pump, controls, riser pipes, fittings, 100 gallon pressure tank, and associated plumbing; and 3) maintain a strip of land 10 feet wide by 170 feet long across National Forest lands which contains two permit tee owned two inch diameter water lines and one electric line in conduit from the pump site to the property line. The well was drilled to supply domestic water to two adjacent private resi dences when the land was owned by private interests. Upon acquisition by the Federal Government in the late 1970s, the well and associated im provements also reverted to Federal ownership with ownership of the pump, waterlines and related facilities remaining in private ownership along with the two residence parcels. Use of the well and the associated easement was subsequently permitted to the then owners of those par cels. Ownership of those parcels has subsequently changed hands re quiring that the reissuance of the permit to the new owners.
The project area is located in Township (T) 19 South (S), Range (R) 11 East (E), sections 20, approximately 8 air miles south of Bend, OR and less than 1/8 mile northwest of the northwest corner of Sunriver (Figure 1). Forest Road (FR) 9702-652 provides access to the site. It is located Advertise your car! F IN D I T ! The Bulletin within the Upper Deschutes Wild and Scenic River Corridor and approxi Add A Picture! mately two miles to the southwest of the Newberry National Volcanic BV Y IT! To Subscribe call Reach thousands of readers' SELL IT! 541 - 385-5800 or go to Monument (NNVM). Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin Classifieds ww w.bendbulletin.corn No ground disturbance or new construction is proposed. No Threatened, Endangered, or Sensitive species or their habitat will be affected by the 1000 project. The project would have no effect on the Upper Deschutes Wild I Le g al Notices Legal Notices • Le g al Notices • and Scenic River. The project permits and allows continued use of an existing, permitted activity. This projectis expected to be documented in a LEGAL NOTICE Decision Memo and implementation is planned for fall of 2012. Additional IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON, DESCHUTES information regarding this action can be obtained from: Lisa Dilley, Special COUNTY. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest and/or as Uses Administrator, at the Bend/Ft. Rock Ranger District (541) 383-4025. signs, Plaintiff/s, v. Diane L. Luckett nka Diane L. Turnbull; Luther James Luckett; and Occupants of the Premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: How to Comment and Timeframe 11CV0738. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER W RIT OF EXECUTION IN FORECLOSURE. Notice is hereby given that I will on October 18, 2012 at The opportunity to provide comments ends 30 days following the date of 11:00 AM in the main lobby of the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, publication of this notice in The Bulletin, Bend, Oregon. Written, facsimile, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the hand-delivered, oral, and electronic comments concerning this action will highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the following real property, be accepted. The publication date of this notice in The Bulletin is the known as 2472 Northeast 6th Street, Bend, Oregon 97701, to wit, Lot exclusive means for calculating the comment period for this proposed Seven (7), Block Three (3), DEER POINTE VILLAGE, Phase II, Des action. T hose wishing to comment should not rely upon dates or chutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in timeframe information provided by any other source. Foreclosure issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated August 28, 2012, to me directed in the Written comments must be submitted to: Kevin Larkin, District Ranger, at above-entitled action wherein Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in 63095 Deschutes Market Road, Bend, Oregon, 97701 or by FAX at T h e o f f ice b u siness hours fo r t h ose s u bmitting interest and/or assigns as plaintiff/s, recovered Limited Judgment of Fore 541-383-4755. closure and Stipulated General Judgment of Foreclosure and Shortening hand-delivered comments are 7:45 am to 4:30 pm Monday through Friday, of Redemption Period Against Defendants: 1) Diane L. Luckett nka Diane excluding holidays. L. Turnbull, 2) Luther James Luckett, on June 25, 2012, against Diane L. Luckett nka Diane L. Turnbull and Luther James Luckett as defendant/s. Oral comments must be provided at the Responsible Official's office BEFORE BIDDING AT THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD during normal business hours via telephone (see contact information INDEPENDENTLY INVESTIGATE: (a) The priority of the lien or interest of above) or in person, or at an official agency function (i.e. public meeting) the judgment creditor; (b) Land use laws and regulations applicable to the that is designed to elicit public comments. Electronic comments must be property; (c) Approved uses for the property; (d) Limits on farming or for submitted in a format such as an email message, plain text (.txt), rich text est practices on the property; (e) Rights of neighboring property owners; format (.rff), portable document format (.pdf), or Word (.doc) to: and(f) Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property. comments-pacificnorthwest-deschutes-bend-ftrockofs.fed.us. I n c ases LARRY BLANTON, Deschutes County Sheriff. Anthony Raguine, Civil where no identifiable name is attached to a comment, a verification of Technician. Date: September 14, 2012. Published in Bend Bulletin. Date identity will be required for appeal eligibility. I f u sing an electronic of First and Successive Publications:September 19, 2012; September 26, message, a scanned signature is one way to provide verification. Please 2012; October 3, 2012. Date of Last Publication: October 10, 2012. Attor include the name of the proposed action in the email subject line. ney:Erik Wilson, OSB ¹095507, Routh Crabtree Olsen, PC, 621 SW Alder Street, Suite 800, Portland, OR 97205-3623, (503) 977-7840. Conditions It is the responsibility of persons providing comments to submit them by of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to the close of the comment period. Only those who submit timely and allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only substantive comments will have eligibility to appeal the subsequent U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County decision under 36 CFR 215. Individuals and organizations wishing to be Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immedi eligible to appeal must meet the information requirements of 36 CFR ately upon the close of the sale. 215.6. OAK K R OAR KATE A OATMANROYD OBRIENPATRICKF OBRIENROBERT M O' BRIENEDWARDJ O' BRIENJOHNS OCHOCO TELECASTERSINC OCONNELLMICHAEL OCONNOR DONAL ODOMREGINOLDF OFFICERJIM OF FIELDDONALDF OG RADY KELLY M O'HALLORANDEBRAA OHIO KNIFECO OHOLLARENJOHN ESTATE OF OLDHAMALLEN P OLEARYCLARENCE OLEMANDELMERL OLES GARYt OLIVERJACKW OLIVERJOHNF OLIVERLARRYL OLIVERMARYL OLMSTEADPAULE OLMSTEDVERNON OLSENDAVIDS OLSONCORAE OLSON CRAIGR OLSONGLENNL OLSONHARVEYJ OLSONPATRICKK OLSONRICHARDc
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Le g al Notices
Legal Notices •
Legal N otices
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT THE AMOUNT OF YOUR INDEBTEDNESS TO THE BENEFICIARY, THEIR SUCCESSORS IN IN TEREST AND/OR ASSIGNEES AS RECITED BELOW, AS OF THE DATE OF THIS NOTICE/LETTER, IS $531,674.64.INTEREST FEES AND COSTS WILL CONTINUE TO-ACCRUE AFTER THE DATE OF THIS NOTICE/LETTER. UNLESS YOU DISPUTE THE VALIDITY OF THE DEBT OR ANY PORTION THEREOF WITHIN 30 DAYS AFTER RECEIVING NOTICE OF THIS DOCUMENT, THIS OFFICE WILL AS SUME THE DEBT TO BE VALID. IF YOU NOTIFY THIS OFFICE IN WRITING WITHIN THE 30-DAY PERIOD THAT THE DEBT OR ANY PORTION THEREOF IS DISPUTED, VERIFICATION OF THE DEBT WILL BE OBTAINED AND WILL BE MAILED TO YOU. UPON WRITTEN REQUEST WITHIN 30 DAYS, THE NAME AND ADDRESS OF THE ORIGINAL CREDITOR, IFDIFFERENT FROM THE CURRENT CREDI TOR, WILL BE PROVIDED. NOTICE: WE ARE A DEBT COLLECTOR. THIS COMMUNICATION IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR PURPOSES OF DEBT COLLECTION. Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Jeffrey Freund and Jill L. Freund, as grantor, to Amerititle, as trustee, in favor of first Mutual Bank, as beneficiary, dated February 29, 2008, re corded March 7, 2008, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County, Or egon, as Recording Number 2008-10451, said Deed of Trust was modi fied on April 13, 2009 by an instrument recorded under Auditor's File No. 2009-17933 on April 29, 2009, said Deed of Trust was modified on De cember 4, 2009 by an instrument recorded under Auditor's File No. 2010-00540 on January 5, 2010, covering the following described real property situated in said county and state, to-wit: LOT TWO (2) IN BLOCK FIVE (5) OF HOWELL'S RIVER RIM, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON; TOGETHER WITH A PARCEL OF LAND SITUATED IN A PORTION OF LOT ONE (1) IN BLOCK FIVE (5) OF HOWELL'S RIVER RIM, DES CHUTES COUNTY OREGON, A SUBDIVISION LOCATED IN THE SOUTH ONE HALF OF THE SOUTHEAST ONE QUARTER (S1/2SE1/4) OF SECTION ONE (1) OF TOWNSHIP FIFTEEN (15) SOUTH, RANGE TWELVE (12),EAST OF THE WILLAMETTE MERIDIAN, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS FOL LOWS: COMMENCING AT A HALF INCH IRON ROD MONUMENTING THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF LOT 1 IN BLOCK 5 OF HOWELL'S RIVER RIM, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, THE INITIAL POINT AS WELL AS THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE NORTH 89 41' 42" WEST ALONG THE SOUTH LINE OF SAID LOT 1 TO A HALF INCH IRON ROD MONUMENTING THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF SAID LOT 1 ON THE SOUTHEAST RIGHT OF WAY OF 57TH WAY; THENCE NORTHEAST ALONG SAID RIGHT OF WAY APPROXIMATELY 55 FEET TO AN EXISTING FENCE; THENCE EASTERLY ALONG SAID FENCE TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. Both the beneficiary and the trustee, David A. Weibel, will sell the said real property to satisfy the obli gations secured by said trust deed and a notice of default has been re corded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statues 86.753(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay the following sums: 1. Monthly Payments: Delinquent Monthly Payments Due from 3/1/2012 through 7/1/2012: Total Payments: $15,140.00. Accrued Late Charges:$605.60. THE SUM OWING ON THE OBLIGATION SECURED BY THE TRUST DEED: $15,745.60. 2. Delinquent Real Property Taxes, if any. By reason of said default, the beneficiary has declared all sums ow ing on the obligation secured by said trust deed immediately due and pay able, said sums being the following, to wit: Unpaid balance is $529,174.64 as of July 5, 2012. In addition there are attorney's fees and foreclosure costs which as of the date of this notice are estimated to be $2,500.00. Interest, late charges and advances for the protection and preservation of the property may accrue after the date of this notice. WHEREFORE, no tice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee, David A. Weibel, on No vember 14, 2012 at the hour of 11:00 am, in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the front entrance of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the said trust deed together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reason able charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time that is not later than five days before the date last set for the sale to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), paying all advances au thorized under the trust deed, including all costs and expenses incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, and by curing any other default complained of therein that is capable of being cured by tendering the per formance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the de fault, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. DATED: July 9, 2012. David A. Weibel, Trustee. For Infor mation Call: Bishop, White, Marshall & Weibel, P.S., 720 Olive Way, Suite 1301, Seattle, WA 98101, (206) 622-7527.
STORRSA H STOUTENBURG PAULc STOVALLEDW ARD c STRAETERBETTYA STRAHMJOSEPHF STRATTONWILLIAM D STREADWICKROBERTL STREBINGER JOHN STRICKERHENRY0 STRIDEJON P STRINGFELLOWMICHAEL J ST ROBE HN CLIFFORD M STROMMEERNESTH STRONEGGER MABELL STRONEGGERRICHARD J STRONGCARLW STROUPCAROLN ST ROUSEMICHAELS STUFFLEBEEMCHARLES S STUMPH'SWELDING STURZAEDA STUVEDAVIDJ SUA TRAN V SUGLIANMICHAELJ SUITERJERRYW SULLIVANDELOS SULLIVANJ KEVIN SULLIVANJAMESP SULLIVANJOHNt SUMMERFIELD LYLE SUMMERS JOHNNIEM SUMNERJERRY 0 SUNBURSTHOMES SUNCRAFTMOLDINGS INC SUNDANCELND& LVSTCK SUNDSETHGERALDINE t SURGEONMARYKAY SUTHERLAND CHARLESW SUTTNERCARLE SUTTON CLAYTONc SUTTONDORIS SUTTONVANL SWANKHERBERTF SWANSON CINV( R SWANSON D SWANSONDALLEENJ SWANSONDANA SWANSONDIANE SWANSON LUELLENI SWARTZELMERc SWEARINGENDAND SWEENY GORDONF SWEETSTEPHENH SWENSON OSCARL SWINKROBERTE TABERRONF TACKMANWMH ESTATE TADLOCKMARY TANNERGERALD E TANNIEHILLLEROYD TAPPERTDIANEJ TARANOFF ANNABELLE E TATUMHOWARD L TAYLESMELINDAE TAYLORALFREDB TAYLORBETTYL TAYLORDAN0 TAYLORDAVID TAYLORFORESTG TAYLORL A TAYLORNAOMIJ TAYLORPAULINE G TAYLORROSSH TAYLORSIDNEYR TAYLORWAYNE L TEATERINS TECMIRERANDALLD TE JCKA JIM D TELFERCHRISTINE TELLEFSON KEMS TENNANT MARGARETc TERRILLGEORGE A TERRITOc J TERRYFRANKA TESDALETHOR TE USCHERWALLACEV TEWALTGENER THE BLUNTTRUST THE CRAFTINGPATCHH THE HUBRESTAURANT THE OREGON BANK THE PINECONE THE SANESIGROUP THEOBALDKENDALL THIEMANNELLIE B THOMAS DOUGLASW THOMASGUY0 THOMASSUSANP THOMMEN RONALDL THOMPSONBRUCED THOMPSON DAVIDD THOMPSON DONALD THOMPSON GETTAF THOMPSON JOSEPH THOMPSON MARTYL THOMPSON NORMG THOMPSONSTANLEY A THOMSEN THOMASL THORNSTANA THORNERICHARDM THORNTON GE THORPEJAMESR THREECRICKSINV THRIFTYFOODCENTER TIEKAMPPATRICKJ TIERNEYANNETTE TIERNEYJAMES M TIERNEYROBERTB