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TODAY'S READERBOARD
IN SALEM
Shrinking skyscrapers — New demolition techniques
are cleaner andquieter. A3 By Lauren Dake The Bulletin
SALEM — The state House, after hearing personal testimony from lawmakers, approved a measure Wednesday making it more difficult for parents to refuse to vaccinate
their children. The bill passed 45-15 and now heads to Gov. John Kitzhaber. His office indicated Kitzhaber will sign it. Senate Bill 132 will make it harder for parents who want to opt out of vaccinations for non-
medical reasons to do so. "How many of you had a personal, first-hand contact with polio?" asked Rep. Bob Jenson,82,the oldestserving Oregon lawmaker. Jenson, a Republican from Pendleton, was emotional as
Afghan Scouting —Merit
he recounted how his father was crippled from polio as a child and died at 62, a "direct consequence" of having the disease. He also told of a time when his then-young daughter almost died. She had chicken
pox, measles and whooping
cough, he said, at the same time. As Jenson urged his colleagues to vote in favor of the measure, he said no family should have to endure what his family did. See Vaccines/A5
badges for identifying roadside bombs are just one of the dif-
ferences.A4
ainier ime
im in
Summit 1031 —ThreeCentral Oregonians arebeing tried in a real estate fraud case.C6
Ij'i dfire
suddenly at 51.B5
prevention may be cut further
Stretches —Forgolfers,
and Mead Gruver
Odituary —Actor James Gandolfini, best known
for his leading role as a crime boss in HBO's "The Sopranos," dies
By Nicholas Riccardi
posture and upper arms.E1
P
The Associated Press
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — As the West battles one catastrophic wildfire after another, the federal government is spending less and less on its main program for preventing blazes in the first
Plus: Varicoseveins —A procedure using medical glue is being tested in Bend.E1
And a Wed exclusiveAn exotic animal shelter in Colombia houses hundreds — some the former property of drug lords. bendbulletia.com/extras
place.
EDITOR'5CHOICE
'Big Data' reshaping more than economy Submitted photos
By Steve Lohr New Yorh Times News Service
In his young career, Jeffrey Hammerbacher has been a scout on the frontiers of the data economy. In 2005, Hammerbacher, then a freshly minted Harvard graduate, did what many math andcomputing whizzes did. He went to Wall Street as a "quant," building math models for complex financial products. Looking for a better use for his skills, Hammerbacher departed to Silicon Valley less than a year later and joined Facebook. He started a team that began to mine the vast amounts of social network data Facebook was collecting for insights on how to tweak the service and target ads. He called himself and his co-workers "data scientists," a term that has since become the hottest of job categories. Since then he has transitioned into a very different professional path. He joined the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York as an assistant professor, exploring genetic and other medical data. The story is the same in one field after another, in science, politics, crime prevention, public health, sports and industries as varied as energy and advertising. All are being transformed by datadriven discovery and decision-making. See Data/A4
ten bigger and bigger, we've
J.J. Justman of Bend rappels down Muir Peak on Mount Rainier. The climbing guide reached the peak for the 200th time this month after more than 300 attempts. Rainier, at14,410 feet, is the highest peak in the contiguous states.
By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
opping Mount Rainier is just another day at work for J.J. Justman, a mountain guide from Bend. Still, his recent accomplishment of 200 summits on the 14,410-foot volcano in Washington is something he savors. "I definitely will be climbing it a lot more," said Justman, 40. Having been to the top of Rainier 301 times himself, Robert Link, 55, of Bend, was impressed by his friend's milestone. Justman bagged Rainier summit No.200 on June 4. "It's just ridiculous," Link sard. Justman used to guide for Link's Bend-based company, Mountain Link. In May 2004, Justman reached the top of Mount Everest — at 29,035 feet, it's the tallest in the world. He attempted Everest again in 2006 and 2009 but didn't make it to the top. Still, he hasn't given up. "I'm always looking at
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TODAY'S WEATHER
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going back to Everest," he sa>d. But Rainier is where you'll most often find him, and he's there guiding climbers. Originally from Wisconsin, Justman first tried mountain climbing after college in 1995 and fell in love with the sport. That was on his first climb to the top of Rainier. Although his undergraduate degrees were in health promotion and psychology and his graduate degree was in organization communication — all from University of WisconsinStevens Point — he decided to pursue a career as a mountain-climbing guide. Like Everest, not all of Justman's climbs on Rainier have ended with a visit to the summit. He said he's attempted the summit more than 300 times. Link spoke highly of his former employee. "He's strong as an ox, polite as can be, great communication skills ... and just loves climbing," he said. See Rainier /A5
A combination of government austerity and the ballooning cost of battling the ruinous fires has taken a bite out of federal efforts to remove the dead trees and flammable underbrushthat clog Western forests. The U.S. Forest Service says that next year it expects to treat 1 million fewer acres than it did last year. In real, inflation-adjusted dollars, the government is spending less on the Hazardous Fuels Reduction Program, run jointly by the Forest Service and the Interior Department, than it did in 2002. And President Barack Obama has proposed a 31 percent cut for the fiscal year that begins in the fall. "Because the fires have gotspent more of our money on suppressionand less on fuel removal," Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., said in an interview. "We've gotten behind the eight-ball on this." See Wildfires/A5
Some states
speedingup executions By Maggie Clark Statetine.org
J.J. Justman celebrates in a crater that tops Mount Rainier after reaching the volcano's summit for the 200th time.
The Bulletin
INDEX E1-8 Obituaries Business/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles D2-3 Health Calendar B2 Crosswords 03 Ho roscope E7 Sports Classified D1 - 6 D ear Abby D7 Lo c al/State B1-6 TV/Movies
AhIndependent
B5 C1-4 E7
Newspaper
Vol. 110,No. 171, 32 pages, 5 sections
WASHINGTON — Supporters and opponents of capital punishmentagree:The current death penalty is expensive, inefficient and arbitrary. Some state legislatures have reacted to those faults by abolishing the death penalty, while others are trying to speed it up. Since 2007, six states have abolished capital punishment — most recently Maryland, which did so this year. But other states, troubled by some ofthe same problems, have moved in the opposite direction. See Penalty/A5
+ .4 We userecycled newsprint
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and Russia on the subject were themselves a relic of the past. "Now, this problem is wider MOSCOW — Russian officialsresponded coolly Wednesand naturally the circle of parday t o Pr e sident B a rack ties to be possibly contacted on Obama's call for further reduc- theissue has increased too,"Putions to the U.S. and Russian tin's aide, Sergei Ushakov, told nuclear arsenals. the RIA-Novosti news agency. "We cannot allow the balRussia's deputy foreign minance of the strategic deterrence ister, Sergei Ryabkov, could system to be broken, orthe barely hide his irritation when effectiveness of our n uclear asked about Obama's proposal. forces to be diminished," PresiRussia cannot "indefinitely dent Vladimir Putin said at a and bilaterally talk with the defense industry meeting in St. United States about cuts and Petersburg. restrictions on nuclear weapObama said he wants to go ons in a s i tuation where a beyond reductions outlined in whole number of other counthe New START treaty and tries are expanding their nuwill be seeking an additional clear and missile potentials," one-third cut in the number Ryabkov tol d R I A -Novosti. of deployed strategic nuclear "Before discussing the neceswarheads in the U.S. stockpile, sity of a further reduction of if the Russians agree to do the nuclear weapons we need to same. arrive at an acceptable solution In a speech at the Branden- of the ABM (anti-ballistic misburg Gate in Berlin, Obama sile) problem." said he would work with the Russia opposes U.S.-backed Russians "to move beyond Cold North Atlantic Treaty OrgaWar nuclear postures." nization plans to build a misRussian officials, however, sile defense system in Europe, suggested thatbilateral negotia- which it v i ews as a t h reat tions between the United States to i t s m i l i tary d e terrence Los Angeles Times
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.powerball.com
and www.oregonlouery.org
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
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ImmigratiOn dill —After secretive talks, key senators expressed optimism Wednesday night that they wereclosing in on abipartisan agreement to toughen the border security requirements in immigration legislation that also offers a path to citizenship to millions living
in the country illegally. Under theemerging compromise, the government would grant legal status to immigrants living in the United States unlawfully at the same time the additional security was being
put into place. Greencards, which signify permanent residency status, would be withheld until the security steps were complete.
Fed annaunCement — In a move that could send interest rates higher, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke ended weeks of speculation Wednesday by saying the Federal Reserve will likely slow its bond-
buying program this year andend it next year because the economy is strengthening. TheFed's purchases of Treasury and mortgage bonds have helped keep long-term interest rates at record lows. A pullback in its extraordinary $85 billion-a-month program would
Student IOBns —Students applying for financial aid for the coming school year could find some comfort in a bipartisan student loan
compromise taking shape in theSenatethat would prevent interest rates from doubling andset asingle rate each year for undergraduate students, rich or poor. Interest rates, which would be tied to the financial markets, would rise slightly to 3.8 percent for low-income
students receiving newsubsidized Stafford loans this year but not double as they're scheduled to do July1.
Jimmy HOffa —Beneath a swimming pool, under a horse farm and now a weed-grown field north of Detroit. For at least the third time in a decade, FBI agents grabbed shovels and combed through was futile. "Certainly, we're disappointed," Detroit FBI chief Robert
U.S. SUPERVISES JORDAN WAR GAMES
Foley told reporters Wednesday asfederal and local authorities wrapped up another excavation that failed to turn up anything that could be linked to Hoffa, who has been missing since1975.
Turkey daCklaSh —For Turkey's liberals and urban elite, including some amongtheyoung, middle-class protesters who campedout in Gezi Park inTaksimSquare here, the intense police crackdown represented the final and most painful break with Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdoganand his Justice and Development Party. Over the past few years, Erdoganhad begunalienating his liberal supporters by intimidating the news media and pursuing large urban development projects without public feedback. — From wire reports
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he was not authorized to disclose the information, said he still expects to have the first public meeting with Taliban representatives in the next
dirt and mud in thesearch for Jimmy Hoffa's remains or clues to the disappearance of the former Teamsters boss. Once again, the search
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the mercurial Karzai and infuriated many other Afghans was a move by the Taliban to cast their new office in the Gulf nation of Qatar as a
"In the near future, the United States will most likely install the ABM systems in Europe and Asia and by the 2030s, they will deploy such a system in space," Korotchenko told the Los Angeles Times. "Should Russia submit to the proposed initiative and proceed to seriously cut its number of nuclear missiles, the United States and NATO will be able to intercept all of them in the event of a global conflict."
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suspended security negotiations with the U.S. and scuttled a peace delegation to the Taliban, sending American officials scrambling to
capabilities. Igor Korotchenko, editorin-chief of Russia's monthly National Defense journal, said further reductions to the country's nuclear stockpile were not in Russia's interests. "Nuclearforces are the basis of our defense, with the help of which we currently maintain a strategic balance with the USA and NATO," he said. "Should this balance be broken, the tables will be turned in favor of the West." At best, he said, the Kremlin will ignore Obama's initiative and "at worst, will say a firm
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Tnlidnn inlks —Hopes dimmedfor talks aimed at ending the Afghan war when an angry President Hamid Karzai onWednesday
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across Jordan. Along with Jordan and the U.S., the exercise brings to-
gether some 8,000 personnel from 19Arab and Europeannations to train on border security, irregular warfare, terrorism and counterinsurgency. With the recent deployment of Patriot missiles near the Syrian border,
and the mockSyrian accents of those playing the enemy,the message was clear: There is fear of spillover from the Syrian war in this U.S.-allied
kingdom, and the potential for a Jordanian role in securing Syria's chemical weapons stockpiles should BasharAssad's regime lose control.
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accused of sexualassault The Associated Press ANNAPOLIS, Md. — The U .S. N aval A c a demy o n W ednesday charged t h r ee football players with sexually assaulting a female midshipman at an off-campus house in Annapolis more than a year ago, a case that has brought renewed focus to how the nation's military academies handle reports of sexual assaults. The academy said in a news release that the male midshipmen are being charged with two violations of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. One involves rape, sexual assault or other sexual misconduct. The otherisformaking a false official statement. The academy did notidentify the three students, and it was not immediately clear if they have an attorney. Two of the students were football players this past season, but they are not on the team anymore. Another is still on the team, but he has been suspended pending the outcome of the case. "The case is still in the pretrial phase, so any f u r ther comment on this ongoing investigation would be inappropriate," Cmdr. John Schofield, an academy spokesman, said in a statement.
The allegedassaultoccurred in April 2012. The woman's attorney, Susan Burke, has said the woman woke up with bruises after a night of heavy drinking and l ater l earned from friends and social media that three football players she consideredfriends were claiming to have had sex with her while she was intoxicated and blacked out. "My client and I are cautiously optimistic that justice will finally prevail in this case," Burke said i n a s t a tement W ednesday. "Even ifthis case is successfully p r osecuted, the larger problem remains: Rape cases in the military are controlled by untrained and biased commanders whose careerinterests may be served by covering up incidents like this one. The Naval Academy's handling of this case raises troubling q u estions a b out how the victim and the football players were treated. This case reflects why rape victims are fearful and skeptical of the military justice system." Burke has noted the academy closed an investigation into the same allegations last year without charges. Burke said the Navy agreed to reopen the investigation this year after the woman sought legal help.
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A Jordanian special operations forces soldier participates in anexercise with commandos from Iraq andthe U.S. as part of Eager Lion multinational military maneuvers Wednesday in theGulf of Aqaba, Jordan. The12-day exercise involves combined air, land andsea maneuvers
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THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Thursday, June 20, the 171st day of 2013. There are 194 days left in the year.
CUTTING EDGE HAPPENINGS Peace talks —Theu.s. was set to begin discussions with the Taliban but they could be delayed.A2
Tropical Storm —Barry is forecast to make landfall in Mexico.
The buildings shrink gradually and the work site is cleaner — which means U.S. cities may emulate these Japanese methods.
Summer —Officially arrives
By Henry Fountain
at10:04 p.m.
New Yorh Times News Service
HISTORY Highlight:In 1863, West Virginia became the 35th state.
In1782, Congress approved the Great Seal of the United
States, featuring the emblem of the bald eagle. In1791, King Louis XVI of France and his family attempted to flee the country in the so-called Flight to Varennes but were caught. In1837, Queen Victoria acceded to the British throne fol-
lowing the death of her uncle, King William IV. In1893, a jury in New Bedford, Mass., found Lizzie Borden not
guilty of the ax murders of her father and stepmother.
In1921, U.S. Rep.Alice Mary Robertson, R-Okla., became the first woman to preside over
a session of the House ofRepresentatives. In 1943, race-related rioting erupted in Detroit; federal
troops were sent in two days later to quell the violence that resulted in more than 30 deaths. In1947,Benjamin "Bugsy"
Siegel was shot dead atthe Beverly Hills, Calif., mansion of his girlfriend, Virginia Hill,
apparently at the order of mob associates. In1963, the United States and
Soviet Union signed anagreement to set up a"hot line" between the two superpowers.
In1967, boxerMuhammad Ali was convicted in Houston of violating Selective Service
laws by refusing to bedrafted. (Ali's conviction was ultimately
overturned by theSupreme Court). In1972, three days after the arrest of the Watergate burglars, President Richard Nixon met at the White House with his chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman; the se-
cretly made taperecording of this meeting ended up with the notorious 18~/~-minute gap. In1982, President Ronald Reagan proclaimed National Bald Eagle Day. In 2002, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled, 6-3, in Atkins v. Virginia that executing rnetally disabled murderers was
unconstitutionally cruel. Ten years ago:Secretary of State Colin Powell met separately with the leaders of Israel and the Palestinian Authority,
praising the Israelis for efforts toward an eventual peace settlementand urging speed on the Palestinians. President George W. Bush named Scott
McClellan his newpress secretary, succeeding Ari Fleischer. Wildfires fueled by high winds burned 250 homes in southern
Arizona. Five yearsago:Lightning began sparking more than 2,000
fires across northern and central California, eventually burning over a million acres. One yearago:A Republicancontrolled House committee voted to hold Attorney General
Eric Holder in contempt of Congress for failing to turn over
Justice Department documents related to Operation Fastand Furious. (The full Housevoted in favor of the contempt cita-
tion eight days later.)
BIRTHDAYS Actor Martin Landau is 85. Actress Olympia Dukakis
is 82. Actor DannyAiello is 80. Singer-songwriter Brian Wilson is 71. Singer Anne
Murray is 68. TVpersonality Bob Vila is 67. Rhythm-andblues singer Lionel Richie is
64.ActorJohnGoodman is 61. Actress Nicole Kidman is46. Movie director Robert
Rodriguez is 45. Actor Chris Mintz-Plasse is 24. — From wire reports
TOKYO — There are many ways to demolish a building, and some of them are spectacular: blowing it up from the inside so it collapses on itself, or smashing it to bits with a 2ton wrecking ball. But in Tokyo, a cheek-byjowl city with many outdated
..t n~~ lilgfil,...
high-rises and tough recycling and environmental r estrictions, Japanese companies are perfecting what m i ght be called stealth demolition. Some tall buildings are dismantled from the top down, the work hidden by a moving scaffold,others from the bottom up, the entire structure being slowly jacked down. At t i mes th e t e chniques seem to defy gravity, or at least common sense, for although the buildings appear intact, they slowly shrink. The methods, which make for a cleaner and quieter work site, may eventually find favor in New York and other cities as aging skyscrapers become obsolete and the best solution is to take them down and rebuild. The latest Tokyo high-rise to get the stealth treatment is the Akasaka Prince Hotel, a 40story tower with a distinctive saw-toothed facade overlooking one of the city's bustling commercial districts. Since last fall, its steel and concrete innards have been torn apart, floor by floor, starting near the top, by hydraulic shears and other heavy equipment. The building has been shrinking by about two floors every 10 days; this month it will be gone, to be replaced by two new towers. Hideki Ichihara, a manager with Taisei Corp., which developed the system being used to tear down the hotel, said the technique had environmental benefits and allowed for more efficient separation of metal, concreteand other recyclable materials. Another advantage is visual: The vanishing building looks normal for as long as possible. "We want people not to really see the demolition work," he said. Ichihara was speaking in the bowels of the hotel on a late winter day while, about 250 feet above, workers were demolishing two f l oors, removing the exterior aluminum and glass, cutting up the steel beams and pulverizing the concrete slabs. But none of the work was visible to passers-by — the top four floors were shrouded in a scaffold that hung from the intact roof and was covered in panels that mimicked the facade. When the two floors are gone, the roof and scaffold cap slowly descends, thanks to computer-controlled jacks on each of 15 temporary columns. Then the columns are lowered into new positions, and the workers start taking apart the next two floors. The cap helps keep noise and dust down compared with more conventional methods of demolishing tall buildings, which involve erecting a scaffold all the way up and around the structure but leaving the top exposed. "All the work is inside the covered area," Ichihara said. "The noise level is 20 decibels lower than the conventional way, and there's 90 percent less dust leaving the area." Aside from the cap, though, the Taisei system is similar to other methods in that the structure is taken apart from the top down. Another Japa-
nese company, Kajima Corp., has developed a bottom-up approach, cutting a building's steel columns at ground level and jacking the entire structure down as each floor is removed. Since all the demolition work is done on or near the ground, there is no need to place heavy e quipment, or workers, at the top of the
TaiseeSeibu JV via New York Times NewsService
Tokyo's Akasaka Prince Hotel is shown at dlfferents stages in the demolition process. Engineers in Japan are perfecting more efficient, and stealthier, demolition methods like the one used on the hotel, which ls being dismantled floor by floor.
buildings might be able to be renovated, but it would take decades for the investment to pay for itself. In those cases, Browning said, it might make better economic sense to take the building down and build a n ew tower that would have more space at higher rents and use the same energy, or less. It is unclear whether demolition contractors in the United States will adopt any of the Japanese methods; even in
a wrecking ball. Both methods are largely forbidden in New York because of safety and environmental concerns, although this month officials allowed the first implosion in m ore than decade, a of an old Coast Guard apartment building on largely isolated Governors Island. In general, although implosion makes for great YouTube videos, it i s a p propriate in fewer than 2 percent of projects, Duane said. It is also ocTokyo many buildings are de- casionally unsuccessful, as it molished in more convention- was last month in Brisbane, al ways. (With the new tech- Australia, when a concrete silo niques, setting up the project had to be delicately nudged can be more expensive, but over by an excavator after exthe demolition often takes less plosive charges left it leaning time than with conventional precariously. methods.) Implosion is also outlawed Herb Duane, a semiretired in Tokyo, which is even more d emolition c onsultant w h o d ensely packed t han N e w writes frequently on the topic, York. But the main impetus said that Kajima's ground-up there for the new demolition technique might be problem- techniques, said Seike of the atic in a city like New York, University of Tokyo, was a rewhere the weight of buildings cycling law that took effect in is greater. 2002. Bill Moore, a past president In addition to valuable metof the N ational Demolition als like steel, aluminum and Association an d m a r keting copper, the law required that director of Brandenburg Inwood and concrete waste be dustrial Services, a demolition recycled, even if the demolicompany, said that an Italian tion contractors had to pay contractor had tried to inter- to do so. "People started to est American companies in a take r e c ycling s e r i ously," top-cap system that is similar Seike said. "And things have to Taisei's, to little effect. "Our changed quite drastically with environmental regulations are demolition." not that strict," Moore said, and dust can be effectively contained by spraying with I H I G H DESERT BANK water. One thing is clear, Moore s aid: Implosion by u s e o f precisely placed explosives I II I I 1 • would not be used, nor would •
•
building. "The idea is to k eep the b uilding as i n tact a s p o ssible," said Ryo Mizutani, an official with Kajima, which in January f i nished demolishing a 24-story office tower, the Resona Maruha building, near the Imperial Gardens. Huge hydraulic jacks supported the building's 40 columns, and workers cut 30 inches from each column, over and over, to allow the structure to be slowly lowered. The Resona Maruha building was completed in 1978, the Akasaka Prince tower in 1982. Ordinarily, a building that is 30 or 40 years old should have many years of life left, if properly maintained. The Empire State Building, for example, is 82 and doing just fine after major renovation work. But the T okyo b u ildings fell victim to the vagaries of commercial real estate here, where high property values,
scores of dull, cookie-cutter office towers in Tokyo. Now many of those buildings are obsolete, with relatively low ceilings ( h eight s t a ndards were increased in 1990) that h ave become e ve n m o r e cramped by havingto accommodate the infrastructure of information technology. The A k asaka P r ince, a
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A
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gleaming showpiece designed
by one of Japan's most famous architects, the modernist Kenzo Tange, had low ceilings, too, but it also succumbed to economic pressures brought on by the influx of more upscale hotels run by f oreign companies. T okyo's situation may b e unique, but New York and other cities may eventually face the need to demolish some high-rises. A recent study by Terrapin Bright Green, a New York consulting firm, suggested that many office towers in Manhattan needed to be overchanging design standards hauled or demolished. These and other factors have con- structures were built from the spired to create a bull market late 1950s to the early '70s and for demolition. have low ceilings, tight col"There are many ways to umn spacing that limits floor renovate," said Tsuyoshi Seike, layouts, and inefficient heatan associateprofessor at the ing and cooling systems. Institute o f E n v i r onmental Bill Browning, a p a rtner Studies at the University of To- in Terrapin, said that some of kyo. "But with buildings in the these buildings, built in an era middle of Tokyo, they think of cheap energy, had facades it's better to demolish." About of single-glazed glass, and a dozen high-rises have been the structures could not suptorn down so far, Seike said. port the weight of additional The boom in Japan's econ- insulating glass to make them omy in th e 1970s spawned more energy-efficient. Other
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Boy Scouts was restarted in Afghanistan in 2008 and now has e membership of around1,100 members, 40 percent of whom are girls.
A ghan Scoutsearn merit a ges, in roasie oms By Mark Magnier
dangerous for i n ternational advisers to visit. "We're startKABUL , A fgha n i stan ing from zero," Hamkar said, M ohammad Aziz A y o b citing patchwork u n iforms, adjusts his Boy Scout scarf, unfinished manuals and limleans over and settles a sap- ited funding. ling into the dry Kabul soil as Hoping to learn from mistwo NATO helicopters pass takes in Iraq, where Scoutoverhead, the clack-clack of ing expanded to o q u i ckly their blades echoing off the and has largely fallen apart, neighboring mountains. the Afghan focus is on steady Bobbing green shirts and g rowth, Blackey said. T he matching caps m a y s e em program has 1,062 members, a bit incongruous in a w a r 40 percent of them girls, with zone, but organizers of A fa year-end goal of 1,500. ghanistan's nascent Scouting Scouting's links to the West program say its emphasis on and its English-language elecommunity service and self- ments could spell trouble if reliance is sorely needed in a Afghanistan descends into society scarred by decades of chaos after the withdrawal of violence. foreign troops in 2014, so orAyob, orphaned as a child ganizers are working hard to and raised by his aunt, can localize the program. barely afford to attend high In Ghor province, a troop's school and w o r r ies a bout volunteer w o r k inc l u d es finding a job. Such concerns cleaning mosques, bolstering melt away, however, when he the program's nondenominadons his Scouting shirt. tional, non-threatening cre"I love my uniform; it makes dentials. "It's not like we're me feel proud," said Ayob, 18. p roselytizing a n other r e l i "Scouts are like my family." gion," Blackey said. "We're The group's m otto, "Be t eaching t h e m t h e sa m e prepared," takes on special things their parents are." meaning here, where memO rganizers s t r u ggle t o bers risk death to attend meet- make the program financially ings, earn "rule of law" merit sustainable — currently it's badges and learn to identify 100 percent funded by foreign roadside bombs in f irst aid grants — and to mentor local class. staff. "If things get ugly, anything While Boy S couts plant trees onstreets traversed by with an international connecIslamist suicide bombers, Girl tion could be targeted," said Scouts in t hi s conservative Marnie Gustavson, Parsa's Muslim nation are more clois- executive director. "If the fortered, volunteering in hospi- eign staff becomes a liability, tals, for instance, rather than we'll leave." working in the open. Though it's making prog"With T aliban p r oblems, ress,Afghan Scouting isyears it's hard to let the girls do ev- away from official recognierything," said M ohammad tion by the 161-member GeneT amim H a m k ar , A f g h a n va-based World Organization Scouting'sprogram manager. of the Scout Movement, said Camping and hiking are Abdullah Rashid, its Manilaa lso r e stricted f o r bo y s , based regional director. given the securityconcerns. During the dark years, loyal Campfire singing stopped Scouts hid their uniforms. "I after mullahs accused the was too scared to wear mine, Scouts of worshipping fire. even alone in my room," said Allowing gays to participate training commissioner Musin Scouting isn't even an is- tafa. "Sometimes I'd peek in sue in A f ghanistan, where the drawer, though, and rethe very concept is taboo and member better times." open discussion of it is all but Recently, the United Naunthinkable. tions has encouraged police Though less visible, girls to train Scout troops. Parsa often make better Scouts than initially balked at the idea, boys, organizers say, even Gustavson said, given Scoutwhen it comes to tying knots, ing's unfortunate association because they h a v e f e w er with Soviet secret police, but outlets for activity in such a youngsters responded well. "In Afghanistan, kids are male-dominated society. "'Meek' Afghan girls are not inclined to go to the police empowered by the Scout uni- when they're in trouble," said form," said Keith Blackey, 68, Heather Coyne, a member of an American advising the Af- a U.N. police advisory unit. ghan Scouting program, who "We're trying to show that popreviously h e lped d e velop lice are something other than Scouting in Iraq. "It's like a a scary person." superhero putting on a cape. T he tr aining a n d m e r i t T hen they take i t o f f a n d badge materials used by Afthey're meek again." ghan Scouts, including those Scouting was i n t roduced identifying land mines and in Afghanistan in 1931, and roadside bombs, might give its golden years were in the Western troops nightmares. 1960s, said Gul Ahmad Mus- But most A f ghan c h ildren tafa, national training com- know someone who's been missioner. Things foundered killed in a blast, organizers during the Soviet occupation say, and some Scouts say their and later th e T aliban era, parents might still be alive if w hen tr a d i tional Sc o u t - they'd had training. ing was banned. At t i mes, Asked to devise their own Scouts were directed to spy rule-of-law skits, the Scouts on their parents or, later, to act out the discovery of a slayclean mosques and fill ablu- ing victim, then secure the tion pots. The international crime scene and call police. Scouting association delisted In other scenarios, they interAfghanistan in the 1970s. vene when a fatherbeats his A fghan c h a r it y Pa r s a , daughter, then risk r etribuwhich focuses on issues in- tion when the father emerges volving orphans, women and from jail. "We were shocked by the l iteracy, r e invigorated t h e program in 2009 as a way to l evel of v i o lence th e k i d s teach volunteerism and lead- build into their skits," Coyne ership skills and to counter said. "But that's what they've youth recruitment efforts by dealt with for the past 30 to extremists. 40 years. That's their reality. Scout troops are active in A safe, touchy-feely approach six of Afghanistan's 34 prov- isn't going to break through inces, most of which are too barriers." Los AngenesTimes
Continued from A1 T he p i oneering c o n sumer Internet companies, like Google,Facebook and A mazon, were j ust t h e start, experts say. Today, data tools and techniques are used for tasks as varied as predicting neighborhood blocks where crimes are most likely to occur and injecting intelligence into hulking industrial machines, like electrical power generators. Big Data is the shorthand label for the phenomenon, which embraces technology, decision-making and
public policy. Supplying
Big data will get bigger
Total datacreationandreplication 2020 PROJECTION: 40.0TRILLION GIGABYTES
Global data production is
RESTOF WORLD (16.9)
predicted to surge
WESTERN EUROPE (5.0)
with China and
India growing the fastest.
INDIA (2.9)
2013: 4.2 TRILLION GIGABYTES WESTERN EUROPE INDIA
CHINA (8.6)
UNITED STATES (6.6)
CHINA Source: IDC
New York Times News Service
the technology is a f astgrowing market, increasing at more than 30 percent a year and likely to reach $24 billion by 2016, according to a forecast by IDC, a research firm. All the major technology companies, and a host of startups, are
about equal to the amount of information created by all the world's conversations, ever, according to research at the University of California, Berkeley. Yet the importance of the sheer volume of data — and its exponential growth path aggressively pursuing the — can be overstated. There's business. a lot of water in the ocean, D emand i s b r i s k f o r too, but you can't drink it. Bepeople with d at a s k i lls. yond advances in computer The McKinsey Global In- processing and storage, the stitute, the research arm of other essential technology is the consulting firm, projthe clever software to make ects that the United States sense of all that data. These needs 140,000 to 190,000 are largely tools taken from more workers with "deep the steadily evolving world of analytical" expertise and artificial intelligence, like ma1.5 million more data-liter- chine learning. ate managers, whether reThe increasing volume and trained or hired, by 2020. variety of data, combined with Yet the surveillance po- smart software, may well open tential of Big Data, with ev- the door to what some people ery click stream, physical call a revolution in measuremovement and commercial ment. This technology, they transaction monitored and say, is the digital equivalent analyzed, would strain the of the telescope or the microimagination of George Or- scope. Both of those made it well. So what will be soci- possibleto see and measure ety'sground rules for the things as never before — with collection and use of data'? the telescope, it was the heavHow do we weigh the trade- ens and new galaxies; with the offs involving privacy, com- microscope, it was the mystermerce and security? Those ies of life down to the cellular issues are just beginning to level. be addressed. The debate Data-driven i nsights, exsurrounding the recent dis- perts say, will fuel a shift in closure that the National the center of gravity in deciSecurity Agency has been sion-making. Decisions of all secretly stockpiling tele- kinds, they say, will increasphone call logs of Ameri- ingly be made on the basis cans and poring through of data and analysis rather email and other data from than experience and intuition major Internet companies — more science and less gut is merely an early round. feel. Data, for example, is an antidote to the human tendenWhat is Big Data? cy to rely too much on a single Big Data is a vague term, piece of information or what is used loosely, if often, these familiar — what psychologists days. But put simply, the call "anchoring bias." catchall phrase means Big Data, its proponents inthree things. First, it is a sist, will be the next big trend bundle of technologies. Sec- in management. Erik Brynond, it is a potential revolu- jolfsson, director of the MIT tion in measurement. And Center for Digital Business, third, it is a point of view, cites the familiar business truor philosophy, about how ism, "You can't manage what d ecisions will be — a n d you can't measure." And as it perhaps should be — made opens new horizons in meain the future. surement, the modern data The bundle of technolo- era, Brynjolfsson said, will gies is partly all the old and transform the practice of mannew sources of data — Web agement. Big Data, he said, pages, browsing habits, will "replace ideas, paradigms, sensor signals, social me- o rganizations and w ays o f dia, GPS location data from thinking about the world." smartphones, genomic inDiscrimination by statistiformation and surveillance cal inference is a real risk in videos. The data surge just the Big Data world, as some keeps rising, doubling in personal data trails suggest a volume every two years. correlation that may be wrong. Just two days ofthe cur- David Vladeck, a former senrent global data produc- ior Federal Trade Commission tion, from all sources — 5 official and a professor of law quintillion bytes (a letter of at Georgetown University, oftext equals one byte) — is fers this example: Imagine
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spending a few hours looking online for information on deep fat fryers. You could be looking for a gift for a friend or researching a report for cooking school. But to a data miner, tracking your online viewing, this hunt could be read as a telltale sign of an unhealthy habit — a data-based prediction that could make its way to a health insurer or potential
employer. And, again, the surveillance potential of Big Data technology, if it runs amok, is scary.
Medical applications
in individual humans — and personalize treatment. People with similar g enetic traits, Schadt notes, often have very different h e alth o u t comes. Chronic ailments like cancer, heartdisease and Alzheimer's are not caused by single genes, he said, but are "complex, networked disorders." The Mount Sinai researchers, Schadt said, intend to combine genetic information with th e m e dical h i stories — weight, age, gender, vital signs, tobacco use, toxic exposure and other data — to build more sophisticated models of biology and health outcomes. "We're trying to move medicine in the direction of climatology and physics; disciplines that are far more advanced and mature quantitatively," he said. Schadt recruited Hammerbacher, an overture that coincided with Hammerbacher's research into where next to best apply his skills. He describes hiscareer as a matter of "following the smartest people to find the best problem." Health care, in his view, is "the best problem by far," where his talents could do the most good. At Mount Sinai, Hammerbacher said he hoped to learn a lot and assemble a
small group of computing and
data experts to help accelerate the genomic and medical research there. Hammerbacher remains the chief scientist of data startup Cloudera and splits his time between San Francisco and Manhattan. Hammerbacher has qualms about the Big Data realm he has helped create, including ing researcher in genomics the surveillance potential of and biomathematics. Schadt the technology. "What does it joined Mount Sinai less than mean," Hammerbacher pontwo years ago, lured by ample dered at one point, "to live in financing and the promise that an era where things and peohis group's work would not be ple are infinitely observed?" research in isolation but part And he appreciates that there of the medical center in treat- is a lot of truth beyond data. "Just because you can't meaing patients. The genomics revolution sure it easily doesn't mean it's is on the cusp of realizing its not important," he observed. promise, according to Schadt, While he is perhaps a qualithanks to the advancing tech- fied e n t husiast, H a m mernology of genetic sequencing bacher is a data believer. He and analysis. The government- calls data the "intermediate financed H u ma n G e n ome representation of science." The Project, completed in 2 003, genome, he said, is "the quancost $2.7 billion. Today, whole tification of the core of what human genome sequencing, we are." identifying all 3 billion chemiHe says he thinks that medical units in the human genetic cine, and nearly every other instruction set, can be done for field, will increasingly fall un$3,000. In three years, Schadt der the sway of what he calls predicts, the cost will be less "the numerical imagination," t han $1,000, and in 5 t o 10 which can be distilled in a years, less than $100, almost question: "What is the story like a blood test today. the data tells us'?" The technology makes it possible not only to observe life at the molecular level as never before,but also to exComein now for plore how the minute ingredients of biology and the environment influence each other One glimpse of the potential payoff, however, can be seen at the Mount Sinai Medical Center, in the work being pursued by the group Hammerbacher has joined. The 100-member team at the Icahn Institute for Genomics and Multiscale Biology is headed by Eric Schadt, a lead-
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THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Wildfires
burn during fire season. Eight of the nine worst fire Continued from A1 seasons on record in the U.S., F ederal f i r efighting o f f i as measured in acres burned, cials say there is no question have occurred since 2000, acthe program prevents some cording to the National Interfires and makes others less agency Fire Center in Boise, dangerous t o h o m eowners Idaho. and firefighters alike. B ut Last year, 9.3 million acres they say they are caught in a burned, with 51 separate fires bind. of morethan40,000 acres each. "It's a wicked public policy Colorado suffered its most dequestion," said Tom Harbour, structive season in history as a the Forest Service's director of blaze on the edge of Colorado fire and aviation management. Springs destroyed 347 homes. "We've got to make trade-offs. That record stood for less than We're living in a time of con- a year: Last week, a wildfire strained budgets." just outside Colorado Springs Wildfires have grown in in- devastated at least 502 homes tensity and cost across the na- and killed two people. tion because of a combination Arizona, California, Florof high temperatures, drought, ida, Georgia New M e x ico, an infestation of pine-killing Texas and Utah a lso have beetles, and the rising number seen fires in the past six years of people living close to na- that set records for size or ture. Since the 1990s, 15 mil- destructiveness. lion to 17 million new homes Meanwhile, the Hazardous have been built in dangerous Fuels Reduction Program has fire zones, according to a gov- seen funding go from $421 ernment report. million in 2002 to $500 million The Forest Service says it last year. When those nummust clear flammable mate- bers are adjusted for inflation, rials from at least 65 million it is actually a slight decrease. acres to tamp down the dan- This year's automatic budget ger. The federalgovernment cuts have reduced the funding is the primary landlord in the even further to $419 million. western United States, with The Obama administration is responsibility for maintaining proposing to slash the total to much of the open lands that $292 million next year.
Vaccines
At the hearing, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., blamed the Obama administration's budget office for not believing in the value of fire prevention. "This waltz has gone on
Brennan Linsley/The Associated Press file photo
Firefighters burn off natural ground fuel in an evacuated neighborhood, prepping the area for the encroachment of the recent Black Forest Fire north of Colorado Springs, Colo. That's frustrated Western lawmakers, who pushed to include an extra $200 million to clear downed trees and other potential fire fuels in the version of the farm bill that passed the Senate earlier this year. But it's unclear whether the provision will clear the House. Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell told the U.S. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee earlier this month that putting out fires is con-
to "inject (their child) with the disease." Continued from A1 Oregon is leading the nation State law requires students properly. in the number of parents who attending public schools to Now, he's a healthy 7-year- opt out of vaccinating their chilvaccinatefor diseases such as old,she said,buthe catches ev- dren for nonmedical reasons, polio and measles, although erybug and his immune system according to legislative docuparents may obtain exemp- is constantly on overdrive. ments. The exemption rate for "I'm a defender of parent's kindergartners has increased tions for medical and religious purposes. rights ... but my grandson has from less than 2 percent in 2001 SB 132 r equires parents a right to be safe in his public to 5.8 in 2012. who want to opt out to obtain school too," Berger said. In a letter to lawmakers, Desa certificate from a h e alth Rep. Jason Conger, R-Bend, chutes County c ommissioncare provider verifying they voted against the measure, not- ers urged their support for the have reviewed the risks or ing he wasn't convinced it was measure. that they've viewed an Oregon necessary. "I know the intent is Commissioner Alan Unger Health Authority video outlin- good," he said. wrote that in Deschutes Couning the possible dangers of not But, he said, most of the dis- ty, the exemption rate has gone immunizing. easesthat schools require vac- from 0.4 percent in 2000 to 8 Rep. Vicki Berger, R-Salem, cinations for aren't deadly, he percent in 2013. He called the rate "alarming." who noted she rarely tells per- sa>d. It's not necessary, he said, "to sonal stories on the House floor, — Reporter,541-554-1162 told of the longest 12 hours of compel inany way" a parent ldake@bendbulletin.com her life, as her grandson fought for life shortly after being born. His lungs w eren't w orking
suming an increasing share of his agency's budget. In 1991, fighting fires accounted for 13 percent of the Forest Service budget; last year it was 40 percent, Tidwell said. The number of staffers dedicated to firefighting has gone up 110 percent since 1998, while the rest of the staff has shrunk by 35 percent, he said. The a gency's overall budget, in i n flation-adjusted dollars, is 10 percent lower than in 2001.
Rainier Continued from A1 Now Justman is a guide for Rainier Mountaineering, Inc, the primary guide service for Mount Rainier. An RMI official spoke highly of Justman, saying customers return just to climb with him again. "He has an avid following of climbers because he is such a great guy to hang out with," said Linden Mallory, marketing director and guide with the Ashford, Wash., outfit. He said only a handful of people have climbed Rainier more than 100 times. The most popular time is between May 15 and Sept. 15; about 10,000 people do so
everyyear.
Penalty Continued from A1 Republican lawmakers in North Carolina, which hasn't executed any convicts since 2006, repealed the state's Racial Justice Act. That law created an additional appeal for death row inmates who believed their death sentences were the result of racial bias. GOP legislators also ended medical licensing board restrictions that kept doctors and nurses from administering execution drugs. Florida R epublican G o v. Rick Scott recently signed a law that will speed up Florida's execution process. The governor now must sign a death warrant within 30 days of the Supreme Court certifying that an inmate has exhausted all appeals. The execution date must be six months from the date of the warrant. California death penalty supporters are working on a citizens' initiative for the 2014 ballot to restart the death penalty in that state. Last year's attempt to end the death penalty on the ballot failed. And attorneys general in California and North Carolina are vigorously contesting lawsuits in state and federal court that claim their executions by lethal injection are "cruel and unusual," and thus unconstitutional. In all three states, a death
Highestdeathrow populations California:727 Florida:413 Texas:300
Pennsylvania:202 Alabama:198 North Carolina:161 Ohio:147 Arizona:127
Georgia:97 Louisiana:88 Tennessee:87 Nevada:79 Source. Death Penalty Information Center
inmates can file numerous state and federal appeals. Nationwide, the lag between handing down a death sentence and the actual execution averages 14 years. In Florida, however, the average wait is 22 years. The state's new Timely Justice Act imposes a schedule on death penalty litigation to "discourage stalling tactics," according to Scott. "An inmate who has been on death row for 22 years has had a fair opportunity to discover all of the evidence needed to challenge his conviction," Scott wrote in his signing message. That amount of time "is surely a crushing burden of uncerpenalty backlog spurred frus- tainty to the victims' families," trated lawmakers to act. he added. "We had a few of the states Death penalty proponents that had the most tied up death have been especially active in penalty systems decide that North Carolina, where Repubfixing wasn't feasible and re- licans are firmly in control of pealed the death penalty, but politics in Raleigh for the first nobody's happy with the status time in more than 100 years. quo," said Kent Scheidegger, Their top target was the Racial general counsel for the Crimi- Justice Act, which Democrats nal Justice Legal Foundation, narrowly pushed through in a victims rights organization. 2009 when they had a small "So they're left with the ques- legislative majority and control tion, to borrow a phrase, mend of the governor's mansion. it or end it?" The law aimed to address In Oregon, which has 37 North Carolina's history of people on death row, Gov. John racial bias in the justice sysKitzhaber has the power to tem by allowing death row grantclemency. Kitzhaber has inmates to argue, using statissaid he regrets allowing in- tical evidence, that race was a mates to be put to death, and a "significant factor" in prosecucase in which he prevented an tors' decisions to seek the death execution is pending before the penalty. In the first four appeals Oregon Supreme Court. under the law, inmates proved In 1976, the U.S. Supreme that North Carolina prosecuCourt reinstated the d eath tors dismissed black jurors at penalty after a 10-year morato- a much higher rate than white rium. Since then, the court has jurors in death penalty cases. "We showed thatprosecutors consistently held that capital cases deserve extra scrutiny so over the last 20 years had conthat authorities don't execute sistently excusedblacks at twice an innocent person. Death row the rates of whites," said Tye
AS
Hunter, director of the North Carolina Center for Death Penalty Litigation. "It was true 20 years ago and was just as true five years ago, and it was true all over the state. It was quite amazing and consistent and the prosecutors just hated it." In prosecutors' notes, defense attorneys found references to black jurors as "blk. wino-drugs" or "thugs." The prosecutors also had n oted whether the juror came from a "respectable black family" or lived on a street that was predominantly black. Prosecutors also dismissed black jurors with mixed feelings about the death penalty, while retaining white members who also expressed misgivings. But opponents of the Racial Justice Act argued that it effectively placed a moratorium on the death penalty by providing yet another appeal to convicted murderers. Each motion under the law created months of work forthe prosecutor'soffice,said Peg Dorer, director of the North Carolina Conference of District Attorneys. "For nearly a decade, liberal death penalty opponents have orchestrated legal challenges to impede the law in North Carolina. Justice delayed is justice denied," said North Carolina Republican state Sen. Phil Berger. But even with the repeal of the Racial Justice Act, there are obstaclespreventing executions from moving forward. North Carolina is defending its three-drug lethal injection method in both state and federal court, and it cannot execute anybody until those lawsuits are resolved.According to the attorney general's office, there are multiple cases pending and no time frame for when they
Since 1998, Justman has guided with RMI at least part of the year. Often, he said, the climbers are going up their
The number of acrestreated for hazardous fuels is projected to fall from 1.8 million lastyear to 685,000 next year. Harbour said the agency is focusing on heavily populated long enough," Wyden said. areas, which are more expenThe government has other sive to treat. programs that lower fire danA study for the Interior Deger, including letting ranchers partment found it is more costgraze their livestock on grass- effective to try to prevent fires land and routine forest main- than to just extinguish them tenance. But even those have once they erupt. become victims of the growIn a 2010 blaze in Arizona, ing cost of fighting fires. for e x a mple, r e s earchers During last y ear's tough found that the fire cost about fireseason, the Forest Service $135 million. They calculated overspent its firefighting bud- that every dollar spent on baget by $440 million. To close sic prevention, such as trimthe gap, it borrowed from oth- ming dead branches and carter accounts, including $40 mil- ing out downed trees, could lion in brush clearance funds, have saved $10 in firefighting according to Forest Service costs. documents. One of the study's co-auC ongress eventually r e - thors, Diane Vosick of Northplenished those funds, but by ern Arizona University' s Ecothen it was long after the work logical Restoration Institute, should have been completed, likened the removal of old and said Christopher Topik of the easily ignitable trees — whethNature Conservancy. He not- er by p r escribed burns or ed that a2004 congressional mechanical harvesting — to report found that borrowing vaccinating people against a money disrupted critical fire deadly disease. "We know what to do and prevention programs. Last year, the ForestService t he investment up f r ont i s treated or restored 4.4 million much easier than the afteracres, according to agency math, which the poor people records.Next year that is pro- of Colorado are dealing with jected to drop to 3.5 million. right now," Vosick said.
first mountain, like a group from Florida he had earlier this month. "They had never even seen snow before," he said. While climbing the same mountain hundreds of times may seem repetitive, differences in the people you're with, the route you take and the weather you encounter make each climb unique, said Pete Keane, 49, the owner of Timberline Mountain Guides in Bend. "It is more variable than you think," he said. Although h i s n u m b ers aren't close to Justman on Rainier, Keane has summited Mount Hood — Oregon's tallest mountain — about 300 times. Since 2003, Justman has calledBend home when not on a c l imbing expedition. Along with going to Rainier nearly year round, he'll travel
•
to Argentina, Mexico and other countries with mountains to climb. "Whenever Iget a chance, I love coming back to Bend," he said. D espite the proximity o f Three Sisters, Mount Hood and other mountains, Justman said hespends most of recreation time in Bend riding his
road bike or fly fishing. He'll also sometimes meet up with Link and some of the other climbing guides here to share a beer and mountain-climbing stories. "With each trip, it is always an adventure," he said. — Reporter:541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbullet tn.com
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might end. There's also a w o rldwide shortage of the anesthetic sodium thiopental which is used in thethree-drugcocktailin North Carolina and other states, forcing states to look for alternative drugs and litigate the constitutionality of the choice. "Many states will have to change their method of execution, which means regulatory changes that have to be approved andlengthy court challenges," said Richard Dieter, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center. "In many states, this could take months, if not years, delaying executions."
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013
IN FOCUS:THREATENED SPECIES
carets ore ir servesas ar in ero cimatec an e By Erika Bolstad McClatchy Washington Bureau
SLAUGHTER BEACH, Del.
-
In years past, tens of thousands of red knots crowded the sandy beaches 44 ~
of Mispillion Harbor in Delaware Bay, gorging on fresh horseshoe crab eggs
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spawned in such abundance they turned the shoreline a gelatinous green. Smaller than a gull but larger than a robin, the shorebirds have one of the longest-distance migrations known in the animal kingdom. Each year, the ruddy-breasted birds fly to the Canadian Arctic from their winter home in Tierra del Fuego at the tip of South America. And each year, there are fewer and fewer. Andre Chung/McClatchy Newspapers
Red knots, elite athletes of the bird world, stop briefly in Delaware Bay in the spring, when the horseshoe crabs lay their eggs. They feast until they've doubled their weight, then they resume their flight to the Arctic to breed young of their own. "It's one of the world's most dramatic migrants," said Nigel Clark, who heads projects for the British Trust for Ornithology. Clark, who helped set up a program in Delaware 15 years ago to tag and monitor red knots, returns on vacation from the United Kingdom each year to volunteer with the scientific teams that are counting the birds and studying why they're in decline. Each May, as the red knots fuel up o n h o rseshoe crab eggs, scientists and volunteer bird-watchers from around the world also flock to Delaware Bay, to count and tag red knots and other shorebirds. Their work, which requires patience and painstaking attention to detail, will be crucial as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service decides later this year whether to list the red knot as a threat-
ened or endangered species. There are many threats that could warrant listing red knots, but climate change is one of the most challenging. As the Earth warms, the climate is changing at an accelerated pace in the polar regions. That's where red
knots spend much of their time, yet it's also the area where they've been studied the least. Red knots are beloved by bird-watchers and s cientists alike, who marvel at their good looks, their stamina and the interconnected nature of their existence across a sweeping
rather than congregating on beaches as they do in Delaware
Bay in the spring. "We know there are things that are happening outside of Delaware Bay, but we don't have enough information to figure it out," Breese said.
range.
Changing habitat
It's difficult to know how many red knots once made up the population that stops in Delaware Bay — perhaps more than 150,000, said Gregory Breese, abiologist with the Fish and Wildlife Service. But their numbers have dwindled since the mid-1990s, and there may be as few as 20,000 now. Research has concentrated in Delaware Bay because it's not just a crucial refueling stop, but also one of the most accessible red knot habitats to volunteers and scientists. While in the Mid-Atlantic, red knots double their weight from about 3 or 4 ounces to 6 or 8 ounces in a matter of weeks. The Fish and Wildlife Service's work to decide the birds' status will take into account some of the projected climate changes in the Arctic and in the South American stretch of the red knot's territory. Scientists research the birds worldwide, but it's most difficult for them to study red knots in Canada. There, the birds spread out over vast swaths of tundra when they're nesting,
One of the most intriguing areas of research comes from scientists who've studied lemming cycles in the Arctic. Research released in 2008 suggested that lemmings, which breed in predictable multiyear cycles, have fallen out of that pattern. Jim Fraser,a professor of wildlife at Virginia Tech, saw that study and thought there might be a link to the red knot.
He published a paper looking at the idea that red knots are less likely to be eaten by predators such as foxes when there are lots of lemmings to eat instead, and that a dearth of lemmings might be contributing to the decline of the red knot. The climate has become more humid in some Arctic zones, Fraser said, changing the characteristics of what's known as the subnivean layer, the area between the ground and the snowpack. That layer becomes unstable and collapses, and the habitat for the lemmings to reproduce is no longer reliable. That creates less-thanideal conditions for big bursts
Migratory red knots stop briefly in Delaware Bay, as seen here flying alongside Semipalmated Sandpipers. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is due to decide later this year whether to list the red knot as a threatened or endangered species. of lemming populations. The Fish and Wildlife Service will decide by the end of September whether to list red knots as endangered or threatened, agency spokesman Chris Tollefson said. Until now, their listing has been precluded by other, higher-priority l i sting actions. If the agency proceeds with the listing, it also will consider whether some parts of the red knot habitat are essential for red knot conservation. It could designate those places as critical habitat — but only in the United States, not in the Arctic or South America.
Horseshoecrab Much of the research into the red knot's decline has focused on the interplay between horseshoe crabs and the knots in Delaware Bay. The crabs were harvested for fertilizer into the early 1900s, but their modern use is as bait for eel and conch fishing; their blood also is used in biomedical testing. Catch bans and limits are in place in some areas, but the crabs' numbers remain one of the key areas of concern for the red knot. On one stretchof beach at high tide in mid-May, horseshoe crabs swarmed the water-
line, eager to spawn. Females dug into the sand to bury the fertilized eggs, then they exited with the tide. Ideally, so many crabs will do the same that they churn up one another's
the Delaware Bay is not absolutely crucial. Because it is one of the most important stopovers," Fraser said.
eggs, bringing some to the sur-
Fraser hopes to study red knots in the Arctic to get a better sense of what's happening
face, which then are accessible to shorebirds. "It's not just having crabs, it's having a superabundance of crabs available, so you get lots of eggs to the surface," Breese said. Horseshoe crab habitatfor
spawning is also of concern. The Fish and Wildlife Service notes in its most recent status report on red knots that there's no adequate way to address the destruction and changes
caused by erosion and rising sea level. Habitat used by red knots for
foraging in Delaware Bay "is being destroyed or modified due to beach erosion," the report says. "Erosion is occurring as a result of the combined effectof storms and a continued increasein sea level,and continued increases are predicted in association with global climate change." "Even if it turns out to be 100 percent about lemmings in the Arctic, it doesn't mean that conservation of shorebirds on
Tracking the red knot
to eggs and young birds. Other researcherswould like to see more work done to study what the young birds do after their parents leave the Arctic, and where they go next, said Jean Woods, the curator of birds at the Delaware Museum of Natural History and one of the scientists who study the red knot migration each spring. No one wants to see an end to such an e pic m i gration, least of all the scientists who study the knots, but the climate changes inthe polesare farbeyond the scope of the red knot listing that might be out in a few months. The environmentalist Aldo Leopold once wrote that there are people who can live without wild things, and people who can't, Fraser said. "I think there's a lot of people who can't. I'm one of them," he said. "Who wants to live in a world without shorebirds? I don't."
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Calendar, B1-2 Obituaries, B5
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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013
BRIEFING
Troops train for potential mission The 1-82Calvary Squadron, an infantry
brigade combat team of the OregonArmy National Guard based in Bend, is one of 41
National Guard combat teams to participate
in annual training in preparation for possible deployment to Afghanistan in 2014.
The training is taking place at the Orchard
Combat Training Center near Boise this month. The 1-82 Calvary Squad-
ron is headquartered in Bend and hassubordi-
e n ea s o i n By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
Bend city councilors slowed down a plan to put a room tax hike on the November ballot Wednesday night, voting to put off a decision until July 10. C ouncilors were scheduled to vote on a proposal to ask voters to decide if the city's room tax should climb from 10 percent to 12 percent. Seventy percent of the additional funds would be usedfortourism marketing, with the remaining 30 percent dedicated to the city's general fund. Councilor Victor Chudowsky
said he had reservations about putting a measure on the ballot that is currently opposed by Mt. Bachelor and The Riverhouse — the region's biggest tourist draw and largest convention center — as well as several midrange hotels. Dave Rathbun, generalmanger ofthe skiarea, and Wayne Purcell, co-owner of The Riverhouse, were among a group of opponents who provided councilors with a presentation Wednesday night, much as supporters had a week earlier. There's no need to rush a decision, Chudowsky said. "We can send something to
a xvoe
the ballot that's a second-rate ballot measure or we can hold out for something better," he sa>d. Approximately 20 citizens addressedthe council in support or opposition to the measure Wednesday. Tajinder Chahal with the Super 8 motel and Sue Carrington of Bend Dutch Vacation Rentals both urged the city to see that it's collecting all the room tax it's due before raising the rate. Both noted that many owner-managed house rentals are believed to be evading room taxes — Carrington
suggested the figure could approach $300,000 a year. Rocky Adrianson, hotel manager at The Riverhouse, told councilors that with record room tax revenues — up 9.6 percent over last year — the city has plenty of time to consider its options on any adjustment to the room tax. The city will be organizing a roundtable discussion in advance of its July 10 meeting to bring supporters and opponents of the proposal together, though the date and format of the event have not been determined. See Lodging /B5
nate units in Lebanon, Redmond, Klamath Falls
and Burns. Along with the 40 other combat teams,
the squadron received notification of potential
deployment last year. However, it's possible the mission could be
canceled or changed leading up to mid-2014.
Bend parkdistrict purchases land On Wednesday, the Bend Parkand
Recreation District purchased a4.5-acre
Sw 0 tt
tract due west of the
Bend Senior Center at the corner of S.E. 15th Streetand Reed Market
Road on Wednesdayfor $600,000. District Executive
Director Don Horton said the land will be
usedtoaccommodate a proposed expansion of the senior center the district plans to build
in five or six years. The park district also plans
to set aside aportion of the property so it can build a newentranceway
Lf
connecting 15th Street
'p~
4
with the senior center !
and Larkspur Park and to sell 0.4 acres of the
property to the city so itcanbe usedto build a roundabout at the inter-
section. Horton said the park district made the
purchase using money from a bond referendum
i
that went before voters
in November 2012. This
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
was the first piece of land that was purchased with that money, he sald. — Bulletin staff reports
ilver Moon Brewing owner Tyler Reichert moves kegs in the brewery's cooler Wednesday afternoon while preparing for tonight's Fermentation Celebration at Bend's Old Mill District. The Fermentation Celebration is a beer walk featuring special brews, ciders, wine and other libations from 23 area breweries, from 5 to 10 p.m. tonight. There'll be live music by Truck Stop Gravy from 5 to
STATE NEWS
7 p.m., followed by Cody Beebe and the Crooks from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., as well as performances by the Hokule'a Dancers. Silver Moon Brewing will be pouring its Pardon my French, a Biere de Garde-type
Wilsonville Salem
beer made with French, German and Belgian malts. For more information about the The Fermentation Celebration, as well as a map of where the breweries will be and what they'll be pouring, visit www.theoldmill.com/events/fermentation-celebration/
• Salem:HouseOKs increase in higher education budget. • Wilsonville:Dead
bees may havebeen victims of pesticide. Sfories on B3
Injured teen airlitted from Pole Creeknow doing fine By Branden Andersen
Well shot! reader photos • We want to seeyour best watersport photos for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work at wwtLbenddulletin
.com/watersportsand we'll pick the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible —when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photosmust be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
The Bulletin
A 16-year-old girl injured Tuesday working on the Pole Creek Trail was cleared to work again the next day, but her supervisor gave her the day off.
The youngwoman fellapproximately 100 feet down a steep, rocky, forested hill while working to restore parts of the trail damaged by the Pole Creek Fire in September 2012. A worker with the Northwest Youth Corps, she was at first thought to be seriously injured and was medevaced by helicopter to St. Charles Bend. According to Jeff Parker, executive director of the corps, she excused herself during a lunch breakto find a place to relieve herself. She laid her hardhat down, putting the bill in
the direction she left the trail as per corps rules. When she was climbing back up, she slipped on the rock face and fell down the hill, landing unconscious near a boulder. "This is just one of those freakaccidents,"Parker said. "It's great to see a quick response by everyone involved." Chris Sabo, U.S. Forest Service wilderness ranger and crew leader, heard of the accident and rushed to tend to her. The fallen crew member awoke after a few minutes and was able to identify where she had pain, Sabo said. "All the symptoms at that point were leading to things such as spinal injuries," he said. "She came to and said where she was hurting — head, spine, legs." See Trail /B5
www.bendbulletin.com/local
OREGON NATIONAL GUARD YOUTH CHALLENGE
EVENT CALENDAR
TODAY "CHIP IN FOR CHILDREN":Featuring fun challenge courses and contests with prizes for children and families a barbecue silent auction, raffle and golf tournament; free admission, individual priced items or donations accepted, registration requested for golf tournament; 2 p.m., 5 p.m. barbecue; 6:15 a.m. golf check-in; Tetherow Golf Club, 61240 Skyline Ranch Road,Bend;541388-2582 or www.jpga. org/golf-marathon. FERMENTATION CELEBRATION:Taste samples from local breweries at participating shops and restaurants; live music at Center Plaza; purchase silipint at Ticket Mill from10 a.m.-9 p.m; free admission, $20 to drink; 5 p.m.-10 p.m., music starts at 6 p.m.; Old M>ll D>stnct, 661 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.theoldmill.com. SCHOOLOFDANCE-A NIGHT ATTHE TOWER: A performance by Mrs. Marcelle's School of Dance from the Athletic Club of Bend; $20 plus fees; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-335-1346 or www.towertheatre.org. AUTHOR! AUTHOR!: Erik Larson, author of "The Devil in the White City" and "In the Garden of Beasts" speaks; $20-$75; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 54 I-312- l027 or www. dplfoundation.org. "THE FOX ON THE FAIRWAY": Cascades Theatrical Company presents a comedy about the denizens of a private country club; $24, $18 seniors older than 60, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. "COMPANY": A timeless musical comedy by StephenSondheim about a single man in a seaof married couples; $21 adults, $18 students and seniors; 8 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater. com. NEW TRANSIT: The Idaho Americana band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. reverbnation.com/venue/ thehornedhand. OLIO: The California pop-rock-funk band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. "RIDE THEDIVIDE": An encore screening of the documentary that follows the world's toughest mountain bike race; raises funds and awareness for the Central Oregon Trail Alliance; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. AMBER SWEENEY:The Washington singersongwriter performs; $3; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing. com.
FRIDAY
Rob Kerr /The Bulletin
Oregon National Guard Youth ChalleNGe graduates Joshua Arp, left, and Sharon Harmon listen to their classmate, Leon Tellez Arizmendi, talk about his experiences with the program Wednesday during a graduation ceremony at Deschutes County Fairgrounds in Redmond. The program was the 45th class in its biannual schedule. Wednesday, it graduated 133 cadets from 63 high schools and 17 Oregon counties completing 29 high school diplomas and testing six for GEDs. The other cadets finishing the program return to their high schools to graduate with their respective classes.
4 PEAKS MUSIC FESTIVAL: A familyfriendly festival with Greensky Bluegrass, Head for the Hills and more; $109-$145 for 3daypasswith camping, free for children under 10; 11 a.m., gates open on June 21, gates close June 23; Rockin' A Ranch, 19449 Tumalo Reservoir Road, Tumalo; jasonbeardmusic© gmail.com or www.4peaksmusic.com. See Calendar /B2
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013
E VENT Calendar Continued from Bl SCHOOL OFDANCE -A NIGHT AT THE TOWER:A performance by Mrs. Marcelle's School of Dance from the Athletic Club of Bend; $20 plus fees; 11 a.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3351346 or www.towertheatre.org. SISTERS FARMERS MARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park,W estCascade Avenue and Ash Street; www. sistersfarmersmarket.com. THIRD FRIDAYSTROLL: Local downtown businesses are open with special sales, music, art, food and beverages; this month's theme is "I wish this were.."; free; 4-8 p.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-923-2411. "SUMMER SOLSTICESOIREE": Featuring music by the Portland Americana band TapWater; silent auction; beverages; food tidbits; fundraiser for local Montessori schools; $25 for adults includes snacks and a drink, $7 for children includes a meal; 6-9 p.m.; Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic Club Drive; 541-385-3062, riversongaccounting@hotmail.com or www.facebook.com/River.Song. School/events. SCHOOL OFDANCE -A NIGHT AT THE TOWER: Aperformance by Mrs. Marcelle's School of Dance
AL E N D A R from the Athletic Club of Bend; $20 plus fees; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3351346 or www.towertheatre.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Rick Steber will present"Writing the West" about western characters and read from some of his books; kick off for Adult Summer Reading Program; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Crook County Library, 175 N.W. Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; 541-447-7978 or www.crooklib.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Portland author Phillip Margolin will present his newest crime novel, "Sleight of Hand"; $5;6:30 p.m.;Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. "CINDERELLA": The ballet set to the musical score by Sergei Prokofiev is performed by Redmond School of Dance students; $10, $5 children under10; 7 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-548-6957 or www. redmondschoolof dance.com. TORREY NEWHART: A CDrelease show for the Eugene jazz artist; free; 7-9 p.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-7280749 or www.goodlifebrewing.com. "THE FOXON THE FAIRWAY": CascadesTheatricalCompany presents a comedy about the denizens of a private country club; $24, $18 seniors older than 60, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Andy Tullie/The Bulletin file photo
Fox on the Fairway actors rehearse a scene at the Greenwood Playhouse in Bend. The play continues this week. Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. "COMPANY": A timeless musical comedy by Stephen Sondheim about a single man in a seaof married couples; $21 adults, $18 studentsand seniors;8 p.m.;2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. REVOLTREVOLT:The Boise indierock band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W.Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.
facebook.com/thehornedhand. THE STAGGERANDSWAY: The Eugene Americana band performs, with special guests; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541388-8331 or www.reverbnation. com/thestaggerandsway.
SATURDAY BEND GENEALOGICALSOCIETY YARD SALE: Theannual fundraiser benefits the Bend Genealogical Society; free admission; 8 a.m.-3
NEWS OF
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 Unauthorizeduse — A vehicle was reported stolen at 9:25 a.m. June 3, in the 1800 block of Northeast Division Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 3:24 p.m. June 7, in the area of Fairway Drive and Murphy Road. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:43 p.m. June12, in the 20500 block of Mutt Court. DUII — Alexandra Theodora Bacha, 28, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:28 p.m. June15, in the area of Northeast Fifth Street and Northeast Kearney Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 3:44 p.m. June 16, in the 800 block of Southwest Industrial Way. Theft — A theft was reported at11:10a.m. June17, in the 200 block of Northwest Georgia Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 12:36 p.m. June 17, in the 2000 block of Northeast Linnea Drive. DUII — Nicole Jean Nazaroff, 38, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:59 p.m. June 17, in the 700 block of Northeast Third Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 5:27 p.m. June 17, in the 1000 block of Northwest Roanoke Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:02 p.m. June 17, in the area of Northwest 12th Street and Northwest Milwaukee Avenue. Burglary— A burglary was reported at 8:46 a.m. June 18, in the 700 block of Northeast Butler Market Road. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at10:31 a.m. June 18, in the 100 block of Northwest Pacific Park Lane. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 9:38 a.m. June 17, in the 2700 block of Northeast Mesa Court.
OREGON STATE POLICE Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 9:27 p.m. June 17, in the area of Northeast Dogwood Lane and North U.S. Highway 97 in Madras. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at10:16 a.m. June18, in the area of North U.S. Highway 97. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at12:13 p.m. June 18, in the 500 block of North Jefferson Avenue in Metolius.
BEND FIRE RUNS Tuesday 11:17 a.m.— Unauthorized burning,61680 Cedarwood Road. 6:30 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 61449 Lakeview Drive. 20 — Medical aid calls.
10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Popp's Field, milemarker17 on E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-330-5508 or www. banrc.com. KITCHENKALEIDOSCOPE:Tour homesand samplefood ma de by local chefs in the kitchens; with vendors; proceeds benefit theAssistanceLeague ofBend; $25 in advance, $30 day of event; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Tetherow location; 541-598-3026 or www. assistancel eaguebend.com. SUMMER SHOOTOUT MARBLE TOURNAMENT:Featuring free marble play, lessons, lawn games, booths and a competition; registration required; proceeds benefit the Deschutes County Historical Museum's educational programs; $10;10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 N.W. Idaho Ave., Bend; 541-3891813 or www.deschuteshistory.org. THE BACKYARDFARMERS MARKET: Free; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Celebrate the Season, 61515 American Lane, Bend; 541-CHICKEN or bendsummermarket@gmail.com. DESCHUTES BREWERY'S 25TH ANNIVERSARYCELEBRATION: Featuring family activities, food and live music, including Karl Denson's Tiny Universe; free admission; 1-9 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; 541-3858606 or www.deschutesbrewery. com.
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
RECORD POLICE LOG
p.m.; Rock Arbor Villa, Williamson Hall, 2200 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-317-9553. BREATHING INPLEIN AIR: A "Smith Rock Paint Out" art competition featuring family art activities, artist demonstrations and a park ranger presentation; bythe High Desert Art League and Smith Rock State Park with Arts Central and the Art Station; free, $5 parking fee; 8 a.m.2:30 p.m.; Smith Rock State Park, 9241 N.E. Crooked River Drive, Terrebonne; 541-548-7501 or www. smithrockpaintout.com. PRINEVILLEFARMERS MARKET: Free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 541-447-6217 or prinevillefarmersmarket@gmail. com. MADRAS SATURDAYMARKET: Freeadmission;9a.m.-2 p.m .; Sahalee Park, B andSeventh streets; 541-489-4239. CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts from local artisans; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Bend Public Library, Parking Lot,600 N.W. Wall St.; 541-420-9015 or www. centraloregonsaturdaymarket.com. FIRECRACKERFUN-FLY AND FUNDRAISER: Features a familyfriendly radio controlled airplane fun-fly, raffle; proceeds benefit Wounded Warrior Project; free;
For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials.
STATE OF OREGON • Gov. John Kitzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary of State Kate Brown, D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos©state.or.us • Treasurer Ted Wheeler, D 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer@state. OI.US
Web: www.ost.state.or.us • Attorney General Ellen Rosettblum, D 1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian 800 N.E. OregonSt., Suite1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax: 971-673-0762 Email: boli.mailostate.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
DESCHUTES COUNTY 1300 N.W.Wall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone:541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692
County Commission • Tammy Baney, R-Bend Phone: 541-388-6567 Email: Tammy BaneyO co.deschutes .Or.us
• Alan Unger, D-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger©co.deschutes. Or.us
• Tony Deaone, R-La Pine Phone: 541-388-6568 Email :Tony DeBone©co.deschutes. or.us
CROOK COUNTY 300 N.E. Third St., Prineville, OR 97754 Phone: 541-447-6555 Fax: 541-416-3891 Email: administration©co.crook. Or.us Web: co.crook.or.us
•CrookCountyJudgeMikeMcCabe Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: mike.mccabe@co.crcok. or.us
Email: jclinton©ci.bend.or.us • Victor Chudowsky Phone: 541-749-0085 Email: vchudowsky©ci.bend.or.us. • Doug Knight Phone:541-388-5505 Email: dknightiNci.bend.or.us • Scott Ramsay Phone:541-388-5505 Email: sramsayiNci.bend.or.us • Sally Russell Phone: 541-480-8141 Email: srusselltlci.bend.or.us
City Council • Kathy Agan Phone: 541-536-1432 Email: kagan@ci.la-pine.or.us • Ken Mulenex Phone: 541-536-1432 Email: kmulenex©ci.la-pine.or.us • Don Greiner Phone: 541-536-1432 Email: dgreinerteci.la-pine.or.us • Datt Varcoe Phone: 541-536-1432 Email: dvarcoe©ci.la-pine.or.us • Stu Martinez Phone: 541-536-1432 Email: smartinezOci.la-pine.or.us
CITY OF REDMOND 716 S.W.EvergreenAve. Redmond, OR97756 Phone: 541-923-7710 Fax: 541-548-0706
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• Jay Patrick Phone: 541-508-8408 Email: Jay.Patrick@ci.redmond.or.us • Tory Allman Phone: 541-923-7710 • Joe Centanni Phone: 541-923-7710 Joe.gentanni@ci.redmond.or.us • Camden King Phone:541-604-5402 Email: Camden.King©ci.redmond
Phone: 541-447-5627 Email: brcppe©cityofprineville.com • Jack Seley Phone: 541-447-5627 Email: jseley©cityofprineville.com • Stephen Uffelman Phone: 541-447-5627 Email: suffelman©cityofprineville.com
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• Ginny McPherson • Dean Noyes Phone: to bedetermined Phone: 541-447-5627 Email: Ginny.McPherson@ci.redmond Email: dnoyes@cityofprineville.com .Ol'. ils • Gordon Gillespie • Ed Ottimus Phone: 541-447-5627 Phone:541-604-5403 Email: ggillespieiocityofprineville.com Email: Ed.0nimus©ci.redmond.or.us
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Phone: 541-546-6494
• Bob Bozarth, John Chavez, Bill Reynolds, Tia Powell, Patty Wyler Phone: 541-546-5533
• Mayor Melanie Widmer Phone:541-475-2344 Email: mwidmeriNci.madras.or.us • Tom Brown Phone:541-475-2344 Email: thbrown@ci.madras.or.us • Walt Chamberlain Phone:541-475-2344 Email: to be determined • Royce Embanks Jr. Phone:541-475-2344 Email: rembanks@ci.madras.or.us • Jim Leach Phone:541-475-2344 Email: jleach©ci.madras.or.us • Richard Ladeby Phone:541-475-2344 Email: rladeby©ci.madras.or.us • Charles Schmidt Phone:541-475-2344 Email: to be determined
CITY OF SISTERS 520 E. CascadeAvenue, P.O.Box39 Sisters, OR 97759 Phone: 541-549-6022 Fax: 541-549-0561
City Council • Nancy Diaz, Laura Dudley, Amy McCully, Sharon Orr, Shannon Poole, Hilario Diaz
City Council
City Council
City Council • Betty Roppe
• Shawna Clantott
636 Jefferson Ave., Metolius, OR97741 Phone: 541-546-5533
71 S.E. 0 Street, Madras, OR 97741 Phone: 541-475-2344 Fax: 541-475-7061
387 N.E. Third St., Prineville, OR97754 Phone: 541-447-5627 Fax: 541-447-5628 Email: cityhall@cityofprineville.com Web: www.cityofprineville.com
Phone: 541-948-3219 Email: George.Endicott@ci.redmond
Mayer
CITY OF METOLIUS
CITY OF MADRAS
CITY OF PRINEVILLE
Gity Gouncil • Mayor George Endicott
County Court
JEFFERSON COUNTY
• Jason Beebe Phone: 541-447-5627 Email: jbeebe@cityofprineville.com • Gail Merritt Phone: 541-447-5627 Email: gmerritttecityofprineville.com • Jason Carr Phone:541-447-5627 Email: To bedetermined
Phone: 541-536-1432 Fax: 541-536-1462
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66 S.E. 0 St., Madras, OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2449 Fax: 541-475-4454 Web: www.co.jefferson.or.us
County Commission • Mike Ahern, John Hatfield, Wayne Fording Phone: 541-475-2449 Email: commissioneriN co.jefferson .Qr.us
CITY OF BEND 710 N.W. Wall St. Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-388-5505 Web: www.ci.bend.or.us
• City Manager Eric King Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: citymanager©ci.bend. or.us
City Council • Jodie Barram Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: jbarram©ci.bend.or.us • Mark Capell Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: mcapell©ci.bend.or.us • Jim Clinton Phone: 541-388-5505
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THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
H ouse Ksaraise or i er e
MediCal pnt diSpenSarieS —A legislative budget committee has signed off on a bill that would legalize medical marijuana
dispensaries in Oregon. TheWays and MeansCommittee approved By Jonathan J. Cooper
debt, critics say. The Associated Press "We have continued our SALEM — The state House disinvestment in higher eduon W e d nesday a p p r oved cation in this state to the point fundingincreases for Oregon's where it's pitiful," said Rep. universities and community Mitch Greenlick, a Portland colleges for the first time in Democrat who voted against years, but administrators say the budget. they'll still have to raise tuition Rep. Phil Barnhart, D-Euchargesto make ends meet. gene, said he'd vote for the bill Several lawmakers opposed "with a painful heart" because the universities budget as too it was the highest lawmakers small, but it passed easily in could go with the available a 48-12 vote. Community col- dollars. "The Legislature has consislege funding was approved 58-0. Both budgets go next to tently failed ... to raise the revthe Senate. enue to pay for basic services," Declining state support has Barnhart said. forced colleges and universiThe State Board of Higher ties to shift more of the burden E ducation meets Friday t o to students through higher tu- set university tuition for next ition, saddling students with school year. Most schools
have requested increases of 4 to 6 percent in student costs.
in savings from reductions in retirement benefits for governCommunity college governing ment employees. boards have already set tuition Legislators from both parfor next year. ties agree that most of the adColleges and u n iversities ditional revenue from a deal are among the first in line to would go to education at all get additional funding if bud- levels — primary and secondg et negotiations result in a ary schools, community colcompromise that would bring leges and universities — but they've been unable to agree additional state revenue. A deal could provide enough on how to get there. money to reduce or eliminate Under the twobills approved tuition increases, administra- Wednesday, funding for comtors say. munity colleges over the next L awmakers h a v e be e n two years would be $55 milworking for weeks on a com- lion dollars higher than for promise between Democrats, the two-year budget cycle that who want to raise upward of ends June 30 — an increase of $200 million in additional tax about 14 percent. Money for revenue, an d R e publicans, the university system would who want more than $1 billion go up about 8 percent.
the bill on Wednesday, sending it to the full House for a vote. Medical marijuana retail outlets exist now in Oregon, but they operate in a
legal gray areaand run the risk of being shut down. Current law says cardholders must grow the pot themselves or designate someone to grow it for them. Supporters say the bill would make it easier for the
state's 53,000 medical marijuana card holders to get their medicine. Opponents say they're concerned the legislation is a step toward legalizing marijuana. Voters last November rejected a ballot measure
that would have legalized recreational marijuana use.Voters rejected legalizing dispensaries in 2010.
Father, son accused of sex crimes —TheClackamas County Sheriff's Office arrested a father and son accused of sexually abusing a child at their home in Canby. Sgt. Robert Wurpes said
Wednesday that 61-year-old DuaneShottenkirk and 35-year-old Earnest Shottenkirk, were taken into custody late last week. Both men were charged with first-degree sexabuse, and the elder Shottenkirk
is also accused of distributing child pornography. Wurpessaysthe child was 6 years old when the alleged abuse occurred in 2011, and investigators are searching for other possible victims.
Josephine County budget —City officials in Grants Pass say they're considering making city funds available to help patch the
criminal justice system in JosephineCounty. TheDaily Courier reports that City Council members are considering lowering expected balances and increasing contingency funds in the next city budget.
Man pleads toshooting 2 officers inAlbany The Associated Press CORVALLIS — A Los Angeles man has pleaded no contest to attempted murder and assault charges for a shootout in Albany last year that wounded two police officers who are still recovering from their wounds. Demecio Junior Cardenas, 33, also pleaded guilty Tuesday togun and car theftcharges. He is to be sentenced July 10 in Corvallis, the GazetteTimes reported. C ardenas s h o t Be n t o n County sheriff's Sgt. David Peterson three times and Salem police Cpl. Andrew Connolly once after they chased him into a wooded area. Cardenas also was w ounded several times and appeared to walk with a limp Tuesday. California Department of C orrections r e cords s h ow Cardenas has served three stints in the California prison system since 2003, all for steal-
ing cars. A North Albany woman had alerted authorities to Cardenas, saying he trespassed on her property and drove away in a stolen car, according to court documents. Cardenas
That would makeroom for measures the council could decide on later. The county is among the hardest hit in Oregon by the end of federal timber subsidies. Voters in May rejected a tax increase to
raise about $9 million for law enforcement over three years. It gained a healthy majority in the city but was rejected countywide. The city's public safety chief, Joe Henner, has told the council that restoring jail
capacity and reopening the Juvenile Justice Center are thetop needs. TruCk fBIIS frum OVerpBSS —Oregon officials say they'll restripe a Portland freeway interchangewhere atruck plunged about 50 feet into a parking lot Wednesday, seriously injuring the driver. The Oregonian reported the hospitalized driver talked to investiga-
tors. He was identified as 67-year-old David LeeSitton of Arlington. Portland police say a car switched lanes and hit the semitrailer's front tire. It happened at a Y where lnterstate 84 traffic can take a ramp
to lnterstate 5 north. Highway officials say astriped line allows cars tochangelanesandcausesconfusion,somethingthey'veplanned for years to fix. Plans call for making it a solid stripe this summer.
Rescuers spent half an hour extricating Sitton. No citations were immediately issued.
WeSt Nile finding —Oregon health officials say WestNile virus has been found in mosquitoes for the first time in 2013. An Oregon State lab detected it last week in samples from the Harper-Little Val-
ley area of Malheur County. Most West Nile infections are mild, but Oregon health officials say the virus cancausesevere symptoms such as encephalitis. It is rarely fatal. No humancases havebeen reported in Oregon sofar this year. Last year, 12 were identified. Mal-
Amanda Cowan I Corvallis Gazette-Times
Demecio Junior Cardenas, 33, of California, right, talks with attorney Nicolas Ortiz Tuesday afternoon at the Benton County Courthouse in Corvallis.
heur County Health director Stephanie Dockweiler says mosquitoes have begun to show up after a mild winter and warm spring. Health was armed and had indicated he wouldn't be taken alive, she said. The officers were in the c ourtroom Tuesday for t h e
plea. A bullet fractured bones in Connolly's leg, and he has had surgery to repair ligaments in his knee, damage from falling after being wounded.
"Now I have to have another surgery torepair some fused bones and some joints in my ankle," he said. "I had a torn tendon in my a n kle, so it's
ongoing." It took four months before he was well enough to work, and he remains on light duty. Peterson was hospitalized
officials say protective measures include eliminating standing water,
for more than five weeks with wounds in the leg and lower abdomen. After he was released from the hospital, it took five months before he could work part-time on light duty. He is working full-time now but can't return to patrol duty until he fully heals.
using repellent, wearing long-sleeve shirts and long pants, and repairing doors and screens for tight fits. — From wire reports
5 tons of watermelon lifted The Associated Press OREGON CITY — Police and Clackamas County sheriff's detectives say two men stole 17 pallets of watermelon — about 5 tons — from grocery stores in Beaverton and Tigard. O fficials say t hey h i t WinCo stores in the early morning hours of June 7. The watermelons had been left outside for sale. The men told one employee who confronted them at the Beaverton store they were removing the melons because they had black spots. The Oregonian reports surveillance video helped
Thousandsof deadbeesfound in Wilsonvile The Associated Press WILSONVILLE — T h ousands of dead and dying bees have been found in the parking lot of a shopping center in Wilsonville southwest of Portland. Oregon officials say their preliminary investigation indicates blooming trees in the lot were recently sprayed with an insecticide known to be toxic to bees. Rich Hatfield, a biologist with the Portland-based Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation estimates at least 25,000 bumble bees have been killed. Shoppers called Hatfield on Monday to report the carnage, the Xerces Society said in a statement. The bees were clustered under dozens oflinden trees. D an Hilburn, p lant p r o grams director at the state Agriculture Department, visited the parking lot Wednesday. He confirmed "thousands of dead bees." "I've never seen anything like that before," Hilburn said. Most of the dead were goldand-black bumble bees although honey bees and some ladybugs were found dead as well. A primary f o cus o f t h e Agriculture Dep a r t ment's preliminary i nvestigation is a pesticide called Safari that apparently was applied in the area last Saturday to control aphids, said Dale M i tchell, program manager in the Agriculture Department's pesticide complianceand enforcement section. Safari is part of a family of pesticides called n eonicotinoids that a r e c o n sidered acutely toxic to pollinators. Mitchell notedthat approved
Find Your Dream Home In Reai Estate s s s Th e Bulletin
"I've never seen anything like that before." — Dan Hilburn, plant programs director at the state Agriculture Department
pesticide products carry very specific hazard labels. Bee and vegetation samples were taken for testing to confirm what's responsible for the kill, Mitchell said. His investigation will look at any potential pesticide use in the vicinity. Bumble bees play a crucial role in p o l l inating b erries, flowers and other plants. "Honey bees and bumble b ees were arriving a s w e were there, and bees are still dying," Hilburn said in a telephone interview Wednesday
evening. He planned a conference call today with r esearchers
and Xerces Society officials. Possibilities include netting the trees, stripping them of their flowers and using nontoxic repellents to keep the bees away. "We're not coming up with a lot of good options," Hilburn sa>d. With the investigation just beginning, Mitchell declinedto identify the property management company responsible for the area. Even if lab tests confirm the pesticide as a cause of the bee kill, it might have been applied by a subcontractor or other party, he said. The agency would also investigate whether the pesticide
was used according to label instructions and whether it was applied in a faulty, careless or negligent manner, M i tchell sa>d. If violations are found, Agr iculture D e partment c i v i l penalties could range from a standard maximum of $1,000 per violation to a maximum of $10,000 per violation for gross negligence or willful misconduct, Mitchell said.
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
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~OUR% yOU ARE.
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moking's bad, no doubt about it. It's bad for your health, it smells bad and it can leave an ugly mess in its wake. That said, a proposal that the city of Redmond consider banning smoking in some spots outdoors surely goes too far. Smokers already have been driven from the workplace, from restaurants, from just about every public indoor space around. Soon, they will not be able to smoke in their own cars if their children are present. While we wish everyone who smokes wouldquit,w e recognize that it remains a legal activity and, as such, people must be allowed to do it somewhere. Redmond officials say they're considering the ban, which might apply to some parks and downtown streets, in p ar t b ecause members of the public favor the idea and in part because of the mess smokers leave behind. Being the city employee or the volunteer charged with picking cigarette butts out of planters and off the ground is no fun, but it does raise a question. Does the city have adequate ashtrays available on sidewalks and parks to make proper disposal of smoking materials convenient? If it doesn't, then it effectively gives smokers no choice but to litter when the cigarette break is done. There's also some concern from merchants that smokers will linger in doorways and smoke will drift into their businesses. Oregon law
Redmond officials say they're considering the ban, which might apply to some parks and downtown streets, in part because members of the public favor theidea and in part because of the mess smokers leave behind. already makes it illegal to smoke within 10 feet of the entrance to most business establishments, from restaurants to retail outlets to office buildings, however. We agree that banning smoking in some areas would cut the number of smokers in those areas. Most people abide by the rules. We also believe that smoking bans during times of high fire danger make sense. But for rule breakers, a smoking ban is likely to be a law without enforcement. Redmond police are busy enough without having to go after scofflaw smokers. Make sure there are ashtrays available, yes. Post signs about smoking in doorways, yes. But a flat-out ban is too extreme.
Protect Ameriean workers he 2009 federal stimulus failed Oregon workers. Part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act was a stimulus program to get Americans forestry jobs. But the Department of Labor's own investigation found the rules for the stimulus were so shoddy it allowed companies to hire foreign workers under H2-B visas to do the jobs with almost no effort to find Oregonians or other Americans first. At the time, Oregon's unemployment rate was in double digits and one of the highest in the country. And the program's design was shockingly poor. The companies could tell the government themselves that they couldn't find workers in the United States. They were only required to advertise in the state where the jobs began, though the jobs may also include work in other states. They could satisfy the job advertisement requirement by running ads only in small out-of-state newspapers. To make matters worse, the federal government only audited the contracts after they were approved. And state agencies didn't forward on job listings to other states where the forestry projects may continue.
T
The end result, according to the Labor Department's inspector general, was that "employers were not required to recruit U.S. workers in Oregon, and we were provided no evidence that they did." After that report came out in 2011, some of the members of the Oregon congressional delegation insisted on changes. They are still waiting. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., recently introduced an amendment to the immigration bill and a bill of his own to ensure those needed changesgetmade. The amendment and the bill are similar. Merkley's amendment — now added tothe immigration bill — e s sentially requires that employers look for American workers first. There must be more robust recruitment efforts — in ads and through workforce agencies — to ensure there is an effort to find Americans interested in the jobs. State workforce agencies must also certify that employers have made the effort before they can hire workers on H2-B visas. There's nothing wrong with employers hiring foreign workers for jobs. They should first, though, make a meaningful effort to hire Americans.
NYU embodies everything wrong with higher education in America David Haglund
is this different than all the other sorts of compensation they offer? NEW YORK — A story by Ariel And the answer is: It's not, at least Kaminer and Alain Delaqueriere in in some respects — and that's the The New York Times this week is problem. enraging people all over the InterConsidered in the full context of net. The headline: "NYU Gives Its what top universities give to chief Stars Loans for Summer Homes." executivesand superstar academ"Stars" in this case means adminis- ics, these loans for summer homes tration bigwigs and highly regarded are largely symbolic — that is, they academics,a few of whom have re- symbolize the rather revolting disceived favorable-sounding l oans parities in pay that exist in Ameri(some involving forgiveness provi- can higher education and which sions) in order to purchase second have worsened at a time when more homes in popular vacation locales and more students are drowning in near New York City. debt that they took on to pay their Given that NYU i s among the college tuition. most expensive universities to attend At the Chronicle of Higher Educain the United States and its gradu- tion, Claire Potter, a professor at the ates are currently departing with New School, notes that she has in the startling levels of student loan debt, past been "the recipient of two sepathe story has understandably infuri- rate below-market-rate mortgages." ated readers across the country. These were apparently for primary T here are defenders of N Y U residences and for much smaller as well who claim that this sort of sums than those quoted in the NYU perk is no different, really, than the story. Her point, though, is that the many other benefits bestowed on broader practiceof cheap loans as top employees by NYU and other a form of compensation is not unwealthy universities. In fact, given usual in academia. But that doesn't that these are loans, some of the make the NYU revelations any less money, at least, will be paid back. of a "scandal," in her words. The school might even make a little As Potter notes, the NYU revelamoney: While the interest rates are tions follow the recent nomination apparently favorable, the univer- of aformer executive vice president sity is charging interest. On the of the university, Jacob Lew, to head other hand, according to one report, the Treasury Department. During "in some cases, even the interest his hearings lawmakers learned charged on the loans has been re- that NYU gave him a$685,000 boimbursed."These are not,it seems, nus when he left NYU, voluntarily, ordinary loans, exactly. for a job at Citigroup. Another forBut so what, the argument goes. mer executive received more than Don't universities throw all kinds of $1.2 million upon his departure. And perks andbenefitsattop employees the current president, John Sexton, to keep them from bolting to other who got one of those favorable loans schools or to the private sector? How for a summer home, will receive an Slate
annual pension of $800,000 when he retires — which, if he does so after 2015, will follow the $2.5 million "length of service" bonus he's set to receive on top of his $1.5 million annual salary. I n the meantime, NYU i s d e fending itself from c harges levied by a Chinese dissident, Chen Guangcheng, who says the university bowed to pressure from the Chinese government in not renewing his fellowship. (NYU recently received approval from China to open a campus in Shanghai.) It's not clear that the charges are fair; the fellowship was only for one year and NYU repoNedly received the approval it needed for its Shanghai campus well before the fellowship ended. But in the midst of a largely sympathetic piece about the controversy, Marc Tracy, at the New Republic, notes that NYU "increasingly appears to be building itself less like a university and more like a for-profit corporation." It "is not," he adds, "the most sympathetic institution right now." Potter goes further. "It's time," she says, nto investigate the various shenanigans by which wealthy universities retain their non-profit status; rely on vast amounts of temporary, student and non-union labor; m a intain v a st wage disparities between faculty; spend millions on athletic programs that are disconnected from the academic mission all the while charging high tuitions and running shell games that allow them to shovel millions of dollars towards their executives and stars." Sounds about right.
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Working morns — and dads — need employer support By Andrea Paluso he Pew Research Center re~ cently published a report called n i" ~iModern Parenthood" about the changing roles of moms and dads and how both now struggle to meet the often competing demands of work and family. What they found won't startle many parents in the trenches today: The roles of moms and dads are converging, especially in d u al-income families. Moms are doing more paid work outside the home, dads are doing more unpaid care work inside the home, and both now report work-family conflict in nearly equal numbers (56percent of mothers and 50 percent of fathers) — a realshiftfrom decades past when working mothers bore the brunt of juggling work and family. But attitudes about work and family have changed much faster than the
public policies designed to support families. A 2008 study from the Families and Work Institute found that only 34 percent of millenials think it's better for the family if the man earns the money and the woman takes care of the home and children — compared to 51 percent of those aged 63 and up (both are down from the 70 percent of men who felt this way in 1977). Young men are less interested in very long hours at work and increasingly expect that they will need and be able to spend more time with their kids than their dads did — and they're doing it, too. And there's no going back. Sixty percent of t w o-parent households with kids under 18 now have two working parents — and that number is only expected to grow. Combine that with the growing number of
IN MY VIEW single parent households and parents who are simultaneously raising kids and caring for aging family members while in the paid workforce — and you can see why many families are nearing their breaking points. There are many factors that predict work-family conflict for fathers, i ncluding: the more hours a d a d works, the more child care he takes on, the less supportive his supervisor is of his family responsibilities, the less autonomy he has at work, and the morepressure he feels on thejob. The Center for WorkLife Law (at UC Hastings) is a leading researcher in family responsibilities discrimination in workplaces. This problem manifests most often for mothers who aren't hired, or promoted, or given
raises because they are pregnant or raising kids — and therefore are assumed to be less committed to work, less available all hours, less likely to want to travel, etc. But increasingly, fathers are facing this kind of discrimination at work, too, especially the more they do what mothers are
doing: taking paid (or unpaid) time off or requesting part-time or flexible work options. It's worth remembering that kids do better when their dads are more involved in raising them. Countless studies and projects like the National Fatherhood Initiative and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' "Promoting Responsible Fatherhood Program" have shown clear benefits to a child's long-term development,success at school and myriad other positive outcomes due
to paternal involvement. Yet despite the enormous cultural shift in work and family and the proven upsides to dads doing more caregiving and moms doing more earning, very few p ublic policies have been enactedto better support the important combination of paid work and family caregiving. We know we can't go back (and most of us don't want to), so it's time to create the infrastructure that allows moms and dads to balance the demands of work and family. Families benefit when all parents have access to paid family leave to bond with a new baby, options for flexible work arrangements and accessto affordable child care. Working toward this is the only reasonable path forward. — Andrea Paluso is executive director of Family Forward Oregon.
THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
BS
WASHINGTON NEWS
U.S. Energy Secretary visits TV's TonySoprano, Hanford site in Washington 3ames Gandolfini
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Faye Inza Bolinger, of Bend April 20, 1928 - June 10, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No Services will be held at this time.
Linda Marie Norriss, of Christmas Valley July 16, 1949 - June 13, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life will be held at the Christmas Valley Community Church on Saturday, June 22, 2013 at 1 PM.
Terry Richard Allee, of Bend Aug. 16, 1951 - June 13, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Memorial Service will be held on Saturday June 22, 2013 at 12:00 PM with a reception to immediately follow at Vision Church, located at 3732 SW 21st Place, ¹104 in Redmond, Oregon. Contributions may be made to:
The Terry Richard Allee Memorial Fund at any Mid-Oregon Credit Union Branch.
Obituary policy Death Notices arefree and will be run for one day, but
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By Shannon Dininny
Today, it i s t h e n ation's most contaminated nuclear RICHLAND , Wash . site, with cleanup expected — Energy Secretary Ernest to last decades. The effortMoniz said Wednesday he with a price tag of about $2 intends to have a new plan billion annually — has cost by the end of the summer for taxpayers $40 billion to date resolving technical problems and is estimated will cost with a waste treatment plant $115 billion more. u nder construction at t h e The most challenging task nation's most contaminated so far has been the removal nuclear site. of highly radioactive waste The waste treatment plant from a g ing, u n derground has long been considered the tanks, some of w h ich are cornerstone of c leanup at currently leaking, and f or south-central Washington's the design and construction Hanford Nuclear Reserva- of a plant to treat that waste. tion, which receives roughly The Energy Department one-third of the Energy Derecently notified Washingpartment's annual b u dget ton and Oregon that it may for nuclear waste cleanup miss two upcoming deadnationally. lines to empty some tanks M oniz v i sited t h e s i t e and to complete a key part of Wednesday for the first time the plant to handle some of since being confirmed by the the worst waste. Senate in May. He last visited Meanwhile, six tanks with Hanford in 1998 as an Ener- just a single wall are leakgy Department employee. ing into the soil. A seventh, "We will put t ogether a sturdier, double-shell tank is plan, going f o rward, t hat leaking into the annulus, the recognizes today's realities, space between its two walls. both technical realities and Those leaking tanks have the uncertainties of budget imposed added pressure on realities," he said. the Energy Department and The federal government its hired contractor, Bechtel created Hanford at the National Inc., to c omplete h eight of World War II a s the long-delayed plant that part of the top-secret Man- would encase the waste in hattan Project to build the glass-like logs for disposal atomic bomb. The site prodeep underground. d uced plutonium f o r t h e Once targeted for complebomb that was dropped on tion in 2011, the plant now Nagasaki, Japan, effectively won't be operating before ending the war, and contin2019. Concerns center on ued production through the whether the plant, as d eCold War. signed, will be able to ad-
equately mix the waste and on erosion and c o rrosion in tanks and piping — concerns that have been raised by several workers, leading to whistleblower complaints of retribution and federal investigations at the site. M oniz n oted t h e c o m plexity of the one-of-a-kind project, but said th e p l an the Energy Department will put forward in the next few months will address those technical concerns. He also said he would be holding Energy Department contractors more accountable, and not just at the Hanford site. "The focus on m a nagement and p erformance is going to b e elevated considerably," he said. "I plan to hold contractors across t he complex m uc h m o r e accountable." Originally bid at $4.3 bill ion, the price tag for t h e p lant has since grown t o more than $12.3 billion, a figure that is expected to rise even further. Moniz met w ith E nergy Department and contractor employees in the morni ng, b efore t r aveling b y bus across the s prawling 586-square-mile site to see key cleanup projects firsthand, including the waste treatment plant and the und erground tank s i tes. H e also was scheduled to meet with some w h istleblowers privately o n W ed n esday evening.
Lodging
s uggestion t h e y 'r e m o v ing too fast, noting they've Continued from B1 met with opponents several Councilor M a r k C a p ell times over the l ast seven said he's not sure additional months. Continued discusdiscussion will change much, sion b etween s u pporters recalling a roundtable held and opponents is "a dead earlier in the week. horse," she said. "Nothing is "We talked a lot and people more transparent and diagot along, but we didn't really logue-driven than a v ote," move the ballanywhere," he she said. said. Doug LaPlaca, president of Kelly Cannon M i l ler, a Visit Bend — the largest resupporter of th e proposal, cipient of room tax collected s aid she's puzzled by t h e in Bend — said no amount of
discussion will lead to complete consensus among hotel operators and others in the tourism i n dustry. L a Placa said while some opponents have suggested a council vote to move the tax proposal to the ballot would be the end of the debate, the reality is quite the opposite. "If you put it on the ballot, the true debate will begin," he said.
soon as possible. Especially when the fall had such an Continued from B1 unknown nature to it." Sabo said th e s i tuation However, the worker suscalled for a medevac due to tained only minor injuries the potential extent of the and left the hospital after young woman's injuries and two hours. Sabo e xpects the difficulty navigating the her to return soon to a light trail. workload. Her medical ex"There are so many unp enses were c overed b y knowns out here," he said. workmen's c o mpensation, "Injuries like t hi s r e quire Parker said. advanced medical care as T he N o r t hwest Y o u t h
Corps, based out of Eugene, has more than 1,100 youth workers over f i v e s t ates. Of the 36 injuries reported over the past two years, all but one were minor such as bites, cuts, sprains and poison oak, Parker said. The one exception was a f r actured leg sustained during a weekend retreat.
The Associated Press
By Lynn Elber The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — James Gandolfini, whose portrayal of a brutal, emotionally delicate crime boss in HBO's "The Sopranos" was the brilliant center of one of TV's greatest drama seriesand turned the mobster stereotype on its head, died Wednesday in Italy. He was 51. FEA7UREP Gandolfini
bc
4c
QQ(7UARy died while vac ationing i n Rome, the cable channel and Gandolfini's managers Mark A r m strong and Nancy Sanders said in a joint statement. No cause of death was given. "He was a genius," said "Sopranos" creator David Chase. "Anyone who saw him even in the smallest of his performances knows that. He is one of thegreatest actors ofthis or any time. A great deal of that genius resided in those sad
The Associated press file
On Sept. 10, 2000, actor James Gandolfini accepted his award for outstanding lead in a drama series for his work in "The Sopranos" at the 52nd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards in Los Angeles.
way too young," Gannascoli said. G andolfini and h i s w i f e , Deborah, who were married eyes." in 2008, have a daughter, LiliGandolfini, who won three ana, born last year, HBO said. Emmy Awards for his role as The actorand his former wife, Tony Soprano, worked steadi- Marcy, have a teenage son, ly in film and on stage after the Michael. series ended. He earned a 2009 Gandolfini's p e rformance in "The Sopranos" was indelTony Award nomination for his role in the celebrated pro- ible and career-making, but duction of "God of Carnage." he refused tobe stereotyped "Our hearts are shattered as the bulky m obster who and we will miss him deeply. was a therapy patient, family He and his family were part of man and apparently effortless our family for many years and killer. we are all grieving," said ArmIn a December 2012 interstrong and Sanders. view w it h T h e A s sociated H BO called th e a ctor a Press — a rare sit-down for "special man, a great talent, the star who avoided the spotbut more importantly a gentle light — he was upbeat about a and loving person who treat- slew of smaller roles followed everyone, no matter their ing the breathtaking blacktitle or position, with equal re- out ending in 2007 of "The spect." The channel expressed Sopranos." "I'm much more comforts ympathy for hi s w i f e a n d children. able doing smaller things," Joe Gannascoli, who played G andolfini said i n t h e i n Vito Spatafore on the HBO terview. " I like them. I l i k e drama, said he was shocked the way they're shot; they're and heartbroken. shot quickly. It's al l a b out "Fifty-one and leaves a kid the scripts — that's what it is — he was newly married. His — and I'm getting some interson is fatherless now.... It's esting little scripts."
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Slim Whit-
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Yodeling SlimWhitman often the object of humor By Douglas Martin New York Times News Service
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Vince Flynn, 47: Best-selling author who wrote the Mitch Rapp counterterrorism thriller series and sold more than 15 million books in the U.S. alone. Died Wednesday in Minnesota after a more than two-year battle with prostate cancer,according to friends and his publisher. Gyula Horn 80: Former Hungarian prime minister who played a key role in opening the Iron Curtain. He was best k nown i n t ernationally f o r his announcement as foreign minister in 1989 that Hungary would allow East German refugees to leave the country for West Germany, one of the key events that helped bring an end to communism in Eastern Europe. Died Wednesday in Budapest. Sherwood Ross, 92: Turned his father's Brooklyn galvanizing company i nt o R o ss B icycles, fo r m a n y y e a r s America's third-largest bicycle manufacturer. Died on June 4 in Pembroke Pines, Fla. — From wire reports
In the 1996 movie comedy "Mars Attacks!" Slim Whitman's yodeling, high-octave r endition o f
FEA7UREP "Indian Love
OBITUARY
the heads of the invading M artians t o explode, saving Planet Earth. Whitman, the countrycrooner with the weather-beaten face, velvet voice and sentimental lyrics, was often the object of humor, almost always good-natured. In the early 1980s a disc jockey offered Slim Whitman makeup kits "complete with receding hairline, furry black eyebrows and a cream to make your upper lip quiver." In 1997 Rush Limbaugh whimsically suggested that when W h i tman's songs were played backward, the Devil's voice could be
heard. (It couldn't.) In 2003 Jim Nayder, who hosts "The Annoying Music Show!" on NPR, announced that he was giving Whitman a lifetime achievement award. A generation of late-night television hosts joked about him. The reason for all this jocularity about Whitman — who died at 90 on Wednesday in Orange Park, Fla. — was his
ordinary-guy, squeaky-clean sincerity in writing and singing songs that were, depending on one's taste, inspiring
love ballads aimed at middleagers orpure cornball.Bu tthe bottom line is that Whitman could laugh all the way to the proverbial bank. He recorded more than 500 songs, made more than 100 albums and sold more than 70 million records. In the 1970s his recording of "Rose Marie" was No. I on the British pop charts for 11 weeks, a feat the Beatles never accomplished. Michael Jackson named Whitman one of his 10 favorite vocalists. George Harrison credited him as an early influence. Paul McCartney said Whitman gave him the idea of playing the guitar left-handed. Elvis Presley, in his first professional appearance in Memphis in 1954, opened for Whitman. Mistakenly billed as Ellis, he was paid $50; Whitman got $500. Whitman later let Presley borrow his trademark white rhinestone jacket. Through an eclectic repertory that included Broadway show tunes, European folk music, religious songs, cowboy songs and, of course, love songs, Whitman said he strove to reach everyday people, to bring "the big songs down to the people's size," as he put it. In 1952 he had his first hit song, "Love Song of the Waterfall," which 25 years later became part of the soundtrack for "Close Encounters of the Third Kind."
Summer Shnoloul Marlle Tournament Des Chules HistoricalMuseum
SaIIIrdaV june 22 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. I
I I '
I
I
R eglstration $ 10 .0 0 per person
9es Chutes Histnt ical Iruseue
The Bulletin ggpp p~DLgp > Serving Central Oregon since 1903
Two cate ories: Children 7 to 11, Young at Heart 12 years and up, Grand Prize for both categories are Schwinn Bicycles from Gear Peddler! More great prizes from Sharc Water Park, Sun Mountain Fun Center, the Art Station, the Old Mill District and Wabi Sabl. No need to know how to play, tournament starts with lessons and practice time. Each participant receives a t-shlrt, commemorative bracelet and free museum admission.
Registration forms available at www.DeschutesHistory.org, or by calling S41.389.181 3
IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 Sports in brief, C2
NHL, C2 MLB, C3
Track and field, C4
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013
NBA FINALS
WCL BASEBALL
Bend routs Kitsap on road, 14-3 BREMERTON, Wash. — Derek Dixon drove in
five runs and scored two more as the BendElks routed the Kitsap BlueJackets14-3 in a West
Coast Leaguebaseball game on Wednesday
San Antonio's Tony Parker, right, defends Miami's LeBron James gy during Game 6 of the NBA Finals on Tuesday. Game 7 is tonight.
i e, e aciesa sa ein ame
LynneSladky/The Associated Press
night.
With Bend leading
By Brian Mahoney
2-0 in the middle of the
The Associated Press
second inning, Dixon came through with
MIAMI — Game 7s do more than settle championships. They define legacies. No matter what happens Thursday night, LeBron James and the Miami Heat, and Tim Duncan's San Antonio Spurs have already won NBA titles and secured a place in history. Now is their opportunity to elevate it. The truly memorable teams won the hard way, and that will be the case for the one celebrating at center court this time. It's either a Heat repeat,possible only after James led them back from what seemed certain elimination in the closing sec-
a two-run double to increase the Elks' lead to 4-0. Grant Newton followed with a sacrifice fly and Turner Gill had
an RBI single asthe Elks scored five in the inning to make the score 6-0. The Elks went on to tack on three runs in the fourth and four more
over the next four innings to put the game out of reach.
Every player in the lineup had at least one hitforthe Elks (10-4),
Nextup NBA Finals Game , 7,
San Antonio Spurs at Miami Heat • When:Today, 6 p.m. 7
• TV:ABC • Radio:KICE-AM 940
l!4)
onds of Game 6, or the Spurs shaking off as gut-wrenching a loss as a team can have to become just the fourth club to win a Game 7 of the NBA Finals on the road. "As a competitor you love it, because you know you have an opportunity and it's up to you," Heat guard Ray Allen said. SeeFinals /C4
on and ChaseFields all
don last August. Eaton, who
grewup in Central Oregon and now lives
in Eugene, is
COLLEGE WORLD SERIES
scheduled to Eaton compete in the USA Outdoor Track 8 Field Championships decathlon this Friday and Saturday at Drake Stadium in Des Moines, Iowa. A top-three finish in Des Moines and a score of 8,000 points or better will qualify Eaton for the 2013 IAAF World Track & Field Championships, set for Aug. 10-18 in Moscow. SeeEaton /C4
Cullen O'Dwyer singled and tripled, while Seth Spivey and Keach Ballard both had a single
and a double. Clay Gartner started and got his third win of
the season. The Elks will look for
the series sweepagainst Kitsap (4-10) today at 6:35 p.m. — From wire reports
USAOutdoor Track 8 Field Championships
GOLF
Four advanceat OregonAmateur
When:Today through
EUGENE — All four
Sunday
Bend golfers to advance
Where:Des M oines,lowa
into match play at the
rArr"' n -,.
men's and women's Oregon Amateur Cham-
pionship managedto survive their first-round matches on Wednesday. Jesse Heinly, the
TELEVISION
60 seed and asenior-tobe at Concordia Univer-
All times Pacific Friday:5 to 8 p.m., ESPN2 Saturday:1 to 2 p.m., Universal Sports; 2 to 4
sity in Portland, upset No. 5 Conner Nash,
Heinly's college teammate from Vancouver,
p.m., NBCSports Network Sunday:11a.m. to noon,
'n
Wash., 1 up. And Charlie
Rice, the No. 41seed
Universal Sports; noon to 1 p.m., NBC Sports Network; 1to3p.m.,NBC
and a 48-year-old painter, held on to beat No.
24 seed Travis Johnsen, of Wilsonville, 2 up. Among the women,
Photos by Ted Kirk/The Associated Press
Oregon State's Kavin Keyes, right, scores at home plate as the ball gets away from Indiana catcher Kyle Schwarber on a sacrifice fly by Jake Rodriguez in the fourth inning of a College World Series elimination game in Omaha, Neb., on Wednesday.
who will turn pro next week, beat Eugene's
• Oregon State avoidel simination again with a 1-0 victory overIndiana behind a complete gameby pitcher Matt Boyd
Sharon Hadley, 4 and 3.
And No. 18seed Rosie Cook, a 42-year-old member of Awbrey Glen Golf Club, beat Tualatin golfer Hayley Mortensen, 4 and 3.
Wednesday in the first
round of single-elimina-
tion match play at Eu-
gene Country Club. The men's round of 32 will tee off today at 7:30 a.m., followed
immediately by the women's round of 16. The winners from the
men's draw will advance to play in the round of 16 this afternoon. Both sides of the Oregon Amateur, the oldest amateur tournament in the state, will conclude Saturday with
OMAHA, Neb. — From start to finish, this Oregon State victory belonged to a guy who had dreamed about pitching in the College World Series since he was a kid. In a press conference Wednesday night after his dazzling 1-0 shutout of the Indiana Hoosiers, a grinning Matt Boyd told reporters he would have done anything to play here: "Starting, closing,
Oregon State vs. Mississippi State • When:Friday, noon
like that — I love to help out the team with whatever is needed." It was more than a bit of an understatement. Boyd delivered exactly what
the Beavers (52-12) needed,
results, visit www.oreg-
onamateur.org. — t3u!tetrn staff report
NHL
Blackhawks tie 6-5 in overtime,G2
Nextup
playing first, DHing, anything
36-hole championship matches. For complete
Chicago beats Boston
By Erin Golden
For The Bulletin
Sixty-four men and 32 womenplayed
finals at 2-2
DECATHLON Friday's events:100 meters, long jump, shot put, high jump, 400 Saturday's events:110 hurdles, discus, pole vault, javelin, 1,500
men's tournament's No.
part-time Bend resident
• The Olympic gold medalist from Bend will compete in the decathlon in lowa
Olympic gold medal in Lon-
had three hits for Bend.
No. 7 seedKarinn Dickinson, a 23-year-old
Eaton seeks third U.S. title Bulletin staff report Ashton Eaton will compete this week in his first full decathlon since winning an
who becamethe first team in the WCL to reach10 wins. Gill, Dix-
TRACK & FIELD
Oregon State pitcher Matt Boyd points upward after the final out against Indiana in the Beavers' victory in the College World Seriesin Omaha, Neb.,on Wednesday.
dealing the Big Ten-champion Hoosiers their first shutout of the season and keeping OSU's national championship hopes alive. Indiana (49-16), the first Big Ten team to reach the College World Series since 1984, was knocked out of the doubleelimination tournament. Hoosiers pitcher Aaron Slegers held Oregon State to just one run — making the game the first 1-0 shutout at
• TV:ESPN • Radio: KICE-AM 940 the CWS since 1985 — but it did not matter. Boyd was on a roll. In nine innings the senior lefty recorded 11 strikeouts, the most ever in a CWS game played at TD Ameritrade Park, which opened in 2011. "His stuff was on point all game," said OSU designated hitter Ryan Barnes. "He was locating his fastball, using both his curveball and sliders. So give him the credit. He singlehandedly won it for us." The Beavers, champions of the Pac-12 Conference, managed a few hits in the early innings of the game. But they struggled to make headway against Slegers, Indiana's 6foot-10-inch right-hander. Oregon State was also playing with a last-minute lineup change,as freshman Jeff Hendrix started in center field in place of senior Max Gordon. SeeBeavers /C3
Former state
championis back on track • Summit graduate Travis Neuman isset for junior nationals By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
Travis Neuman is alive and well. After disappearing from the high school track scene this spring, the recently graduated Summit High standout is set to run the 1,500and 5,000-meter races this week at the USA Junior Outdoor Track & Field NationalchamNe u man pionships in Des Moines, Iowa. Neuman, who won Class 5A individual crosscountry state titles in 2011 and 2012 but had struggled with injuries and illness in the 2011 and '12 track seasons, skipped his senior year of high school track this spring to focus on his health and his upcoming distance career at the Univer-
sity of Oregon. See Neuman/C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013
SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY GOLF EuropeanTour, BMWInternationalOpen PGA Tour,Travelers Championship SOCCER Confederations Cup,Spain vs. Tahiti Confederations Cup,Nigeriavs. Uruguay BASEBALL MLB, Boston at Detroit College World Series, N.Carolina vs. N.C.State MLB, Seattle at LosAngeles Angels BASKETBALL NBA, finals, SanAntonio at Miami
Time
TV/Radio
6 a.m. noon
Golf Golf
11:45 a.m. 2:45 p.m.
ESPN ESPN
4 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
MLB ESPN Root
6 p.m.
ABC
GOLF EuropeanTour, BMWInternationalOpen Champions Tour,Encompass Championship PGA Tour,Travelers Championship LPGATour, NWArkansasChampionship SOCCER FIFA U-20World Cup,United States vs. Spain BASEBALL CollegeWorld Series,Mississippi Statevs. OregonState
Time TV / Radio 6 a.m. Golf 9:30 a.m. Gol f noon Golf 3:30 p.m. Gol f 10:45 a.m. ESPN2
noon
ESPN KICE-AM940 5 p.m. ESPN 5 p.m. MLB 7 p.m. Root
College World Series, UCLAvs. TBA MLB, Texasat St. Louis MLB, Oakland atSeattle MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Toyota/Save Mart 350, practice 1 p.m. TRACK & FIELD U.S. outdoor championships 5 p.m. BOXING Rances Barthelemy vs. FahsaiSakkreerin 7 p.m.
Speed ESPN2 ESPN2
Listings are themostaccurateavailable. TheBulletin is not responsib/e for late changesmade byN or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL
WOOdS tO reSt eldOW —In little more than amonth, Tiger
Astros signNo. 1pick
Woods went from being tough to beat to having a tough time even
praise from MLB commissioner
playing. WoodssaidWednesday that soreness in his left elbow
would keep him from defending his title next week in the ATBT National at Congressional, and
that he would not competeagain until the British Open next month at Muirfieid. This is the sixth straight year that injury has kept
BASEBALL
IN THE BLEACHERS
College
In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore Dist. by Universal Ucrick www.gocomrcs.com/inthebreachers
NCAACollege WorldSeries At TD AmeritradeParkOmaha Omaha, Neb. All Times PDT Double Elimination x-if necessary
— Mark Appei received high Bud Seiig on Wednesdaywhen the No. 1 overall pick signed with the Houston Astros. Speaking at an MLB diversity business sum-
mit at a convention near Minute Maid Park, Seiig praised Houston's rebuilding efforts. He then
likened Appei, a right-handed pitcher, and Houston's 2012 No.
noon
Wednesday's Linescore
6-1,3-6,6-2.
Oregon State1, Indiana 0
WCL
D.C.
7 4 L
9 6 10
Tuesday'sLinescore
Elks 8, BlueJackets 6 Bend 012 140 000 — 0 11 1 Kitsap 000 202 110 — 6 11 4 Elman,Murillo (6), Jordan(8) Hlghberger and Wildung.McCasland, Thompson(5), Volkers(8) and Dhanani. W—Elman.L— McCasland. S— Highberger.2B Bend: Ring,Fields.Kitsap:Jones,Torres, McKeon.3B— Bend:Wildung. HR— Bend: Ring, O'Dwyer.Kitsap:Jewett.
but Astros general manager Jeff Luhnow said it vvas "the
Bend 016 312 110 — 14 10 0 Kitsap 000 020 100 — 3 9 1 Gartner,Grantham(8), Anderson(9) andServais. Steindorf, Lunde(4), McKay(5), Hansen(6) Luper (8), Fry(9) andLack. W— Gartner. L— Steindorf. 2B Bend: Spivey,Bagard, Dixon,Fields. Kitsap McKeon,O'Such,Jewett. 3B — Bend: O'Dwyer. HR — Kitsap.Sheehan.
piete gamesand a2.12 ERAthis
His injury is a blow to the AT&T National, which benefits the Ti-
season with Stanford.
be the third time since it began in2007thatWoods has missed
TENNIS the tournament because of injury Nadal seededNo. 5for — knee surgery in 2008, his left Achilles tendon in 2011 and an
Wimbledan —If Rafaei Nadai is going to win Wimbledon for a
elbow injury this year.
third time, he'll have to do it the hard vvay. Fresh from winning his eighth French Open, Nadai is
FOOTBALL Homicide victim
COnneCted ta PatriOt —A man found dead in an industrial
park about a mile from NewEngland Patriots tight endAaron Hernandez's homehadbeen
All Times PDT
seededonl y No.5atW imbledon — setting up the possibility of
a quarterfinai match against title contenders RogerFederer,
MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT
EasternConference T Pts GF GA 2 2 9 24 17 4 25 2 3 1 9 4 22 2 2 2 4
4 4 5 5 3 5
2 2 19 2 2 18 20 18 20 1 8 1 5 13 11 1 4
16 13 13 16 20 20
the seedings Wednesdayfor this year's grass-court Grand Siam,
day in Boston. Thestate medical
five in the ATPrankings remain
examiner identified the man as 27-year-oid Odin Lloyd and ruled
in their positions: Djokovic at No. 1, followed by Murray, Federer,
he vvas ahomicide victim, Bristol
David Ferrer andNadai. Nadai
District Attorney Samuel Sutter's office said. Lloyd's family said he
slipped down the rankings after being sidelined for about seven
vvas a semi-pro football player
months with a left knee injury. The Spaniard hasvvonseven
By Jimmy Goien
of the nine tournaments he has
BOSTON — A f ter s truggling for more than 120 minutes to score even once, the B lackhawks b e a t Bos t on goalie Tuukka Rask a halfdozen times in Game 4 of the Stanley Cup finals to send the series back to Chicago tied two
entered in his comeback — in-
Ward, had said earlier police had told her the body was that of her
ciuding the French Open last month — but he still fell to No. 5
son, vvhoplayedfor the Boston
after Roland Garros behind the
Bandits. Ward would not say how Lloyd knew Hernandezand
man he beat in the final — Fer-
did not say if police told her how her son died. An uncle said Lloyd
had a connection to Hernandez but wouldn't elaborate.
rer. Wimbiedon's seeding order is determined using theATP rankings, and points are added for achievements in grass-court tournaments in the past12 months. The women's seedings follow the WTA rankings, with
SOCCER Timders draw —Robbie
five-time Wimbledon champion Serena Williams at No. 1 and Victoria Azarenka at No. 2.
Keane hit the right postand
Serena's sister, VenusWilliams,
Landon Donovan had three opportunities inside the Portland
withdrew Tuesday, citing a back
boxastheLosAngelesGalaxy settled for a 0-0 draw with the Timbers on Wednesday night in
Carson, Calif. Portland (6-1-9j
injury.
Serena backsoff rape COmment —Serena Williams says she's reaching out to the
extended its unbeaten streak to 14 matches with its third shutout
family of the victim in the Steu-
bounced through the goaimouth
shouldn't have put herself in that
and off the right post, vvasthe bestscoringchanceinagame
position." "I am currently reach-
benviiie, Ohio, rapecaseafter in the past four. Keane's glancing the tennis star vvasquoted inaa header in the 55th minute, which Rolling Stone article saying she
that featured superb ball movement through midfield by both teams but little effective pene-
tration and scarce opportunities to break the deadlock. Donovan
ing out to the girl's family to iet
her know that I amdeeply sorry for what vvas written in the Rolling Stone article," Williams said in a statement released through
heragentW ednesday."W hat
had aii of his three chances in the first half, with aii coming on
vvas written — what I supposediy said — is insensitive and
through balls from Keane,but
hurtful, and I by nomeans would
Timbers defender Pa-Modou
say or insinuate that she was at aii to blame." — From wire reports
Kah madestopsintheboxeach time.
L 1 2 2 2 5 5
Pct GB .857
W 5 3 3 3 2 I
L I 2 3 4 4 7
Pct GB .833
WesternConference
,667 1'/z ,667 l ia .667 1'/z .286 4 ,167 4 ia
.600 1'/z
.500 2 ,429 2'/z
.333 3 .125 5
Wednesday'sGame Minnes ota80,Phoenix69
Today'sGame
Chicag oatTulsa,9:30a.m.
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE
sia, 6-2,6-4. Jan Hernych, CzechRepublic, def. MichaelLlodra,
France,6-7(5), 6-4,7-5. EvgenyDonskoy,Russia,def.RobinHaase,Netherlands,6-4,7-5. GuillermoGarcia-l.opez, Spain, def.Daniel Brands, Germany, 7-6(7),6-2. RobertoBautistaAgut,Spain, def CarlosBerocq, Argentina,6-2, 6-3. XavierMalisse,Begium, def.LuYen-Hsun,Taiwan, 3-6,6-1,6-4.
Women SecondRound Simona Halep, Romania, def. RobertaVinci (I), Italy, 6-0,6-1. DominikaCibulkova(2), Slovakia,def.AnabelMedina Garrigues Spain2-6 6-4 6-3. KirstenFlipkens(4), Belgium,def. MichaellaKrajicek,Netherlands,7-6 (6),7 6(3). Garbine Muguruza,Spain, def.LaurenDavis, United States,6-2,6-0. Lesia Tsurenko,Ukraine,def. StefanieVoegele, Switzerland, 6-1, 7-6(4). AEGON International Wednesday At Devonshire Park Eastbourne,England Purse: ATP,$701,700 (WT250); WTA, $690,000 (Premier) Surface: Grass-Outdoor
Singles Men SecondRound Ivan DodigCroati , a, del.MilosRaonic(1), Canada, 6-2,7-6(7). Radek Stepanek,Czech Republic, def. Philipp
WASHINGTON NATIONALS— Reinstated2B Danny
Espinosafromthe 15-day DLand optioned himto Syracuse(IL).
FOOTBALL National Football League CHICAGO BEARS NamedMitchell Tanneydirector ol analytics. CLEVELANDBROWNS— Named Frank Edgerly senior proscoutand BrentBlaylock, BrendanDonovan, Matthew Manocherian andPatrick Moorecollege scouts. DALLASCOWBOYS Signed WR Terrance Williams toafour-year contractandSJ.J. Wilcox. SANFRANCISC049ERS — SignedDTJustinSmith to a two-yearcontract extensionthroughthe 2015 season. TAMPABAYBUCCANEERS— Signed CB Michael Adams.WaivedGJeremyLewis. TENNE SSEETITANS—Agreed to termswith OT BarryRichardson. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague LOSANGELES KINGS— Re-signed FBrandon Kozun to aone-yearcontract NASHVILLE PREDATORS—SignedDVictor Bartley to a three-yearcontract. COLLEGE PENNSTATE—AnnouncedtheresignationofbaseballcoachRobbieWine.Announcedjunior men'sbasketbagFJonGrahamwasgrantedareleaseto transfer.
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 3,147 8 6 3 166 34 The Dalles 1,923 5 1 7 42 10 John Day 1,673 3 5 5 26 3 McNary 2,403 4 5 0 19 0 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chlnook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadatselected ColumbiaRiverdamslastupdatedonTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Sehd Wstlhd Bonneville 121,352 45,169 4,788 1,247 The Dalles 99,572 40,076 1,330 4 65 J ohn Day 81,224 34,977 1,367 6 0 8 M cNary 71,734 26,337 1,879 7 7 7
NHL: STANLEY CUP FINALS
which starts Monday. The top
whose homevvassearched by police. Lloyd's mother, Ursula
W 6 4 4 4 2 1
Topshelf Open Wednesday At Autotron Rosmalen Rosmalen, Netherlands Purse: ATP,$624,000 (WT260);WTA, $235,000 (Intl.) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles Men SecondRound StanislasWawrinka(2), Switzerland, def. Paolo LorenziItal , y,6-3,7-6(8). Jeremy Chardy (5), France,def. MariusCopil, Romania,7-5,6-4. NicolasMahut,France,def AndreyKuznetsov,Rus-
StuartTurner,LHPStephen Gonsalves,CBrianNavaretto, RHP BrianGilbert, CMitch Garver,RHPCK Irby, INF NelsonMolina, RHPEthanMildren, RHPBrandon Peterson,OFZach Granite, LHPDerrick Penila, RHP TannerMendonca, SSRyanWalker,RHPJaredWilson, OF JasonKanzler, RHPTyler Stirewalt, C AlexSwim, RHPZachHayden, LHPBrandon Easton, OFChad Christensen, 2BTanner VavraandSSCarlos Avila Jr. to minorleaguecontracts. National League CHICAGOCUBS Signed RHP Trey Masek to a minor league contract. HOUSTO NASTROS—Signed RHPMarkAppel toa minor league contract. NEW YORKMETS—OptionedRHPZackWheelerto LasVegas(PCL). Recalled OFAndrewBrownfrom Las Vegas.PlacedRHPScott Atchisonon the15-dayDL. Designated OFCollin Cowgil forassignment. SAN DIEGO PADRES—Recalled OFJaff Decker from Tucson(PCL). PlacedSSEverth Cabrera onthe 15-dayDL,retroactive toJune17. ST.LOUISCARDINALS—Agreedto termswith LHP MarcoGonzales onaminor leaguecontract
Novak Djokovic or Andy Murray. The Aii England Club released
killed, a prosecutor said Wednes-
with a connection to Hernandez,
Eastern Conference
Minnesota Los Angeles Seattle Phoenix SanAntonio Tulsa
MLS
W L Montreal 9 3 NewYork 7 5 Philadelphia 6 5 Houston 6 5 S porting KansasCity 6 5 NewEngland 5 5 Columbus 5 5 Chicago 4 7 TorontoFC 2 7
Professional
NBA FINALS San Antonio 3, Miami 3 Thurs day,June6:SanAntonio92,Miami88 Sunday,June9.Miami103, SanAntonio 84 Today,June11:SanAntonio113, Miami 77 Thursday,June13.Miami109,SanAntonio 93 Sunday,June16:SanAntonio114, Miami104 TuesdayJune18:Miami103,SanAntonio100,OT Today,June20:SanAntonio at Miami,6p.m.
Atlanta Chicago NewYork Washington Connecticut Indiana
STANLEYCUPFINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Boston 2, Chicago 2 Wednes day,June12.Chicago4,Boston3(3OT) Saturday,June 15:Boston 2,ChicagoI, OT Monday,June 17:Boston2, Chicago0 Wednes day,June19:Chicago6,Boston5(OT) Satur day,June22:BostonatChicago,5p.m. Monday, June24:ChicagoatBoston,5p.m. x-Wedne sday,June26 BostonatChicago,5pm
TENNIS
WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION
SOCCER
ger Woods Foundation. This will
W L T P t s GFGA FC Dallas 8 3 4 2 8 2 3 18 Portland 6 1 9 2 7 2 5 16 RealSaltLake 8 5 3 27 24 16 Vancouver 6 5 4 2 2 2 5 24 Los Angeles 6 6 3 2 1 2 2 18 Seattle 6 4 3 2 1 1 9 15 Colorado 5 6 5 2 0 1 7 16 San Jose 4 6 6 18 1 5 24 ChivasUSA 3 9 2 11 1 4 29 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint fortie.
WNBA
Wednesday'sLinescore
All Times PDT
26
NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT
elbow. Theproblem first became apparent during the opening
Appei was10-4 with four com-
7
NBA
Elks 14, BlueJackets 3
of the thick, punishing rough.
6
BASKETBALL
stars, Craig Biggio and Jeff Bagwell. Terms were not disclosed
his left wrist or dangling his arm behind his backafter shots out
1 11 3
Western Conference
Wednesday'sGames Montreal2, Houston0 Chicago2,Coiorado1 Vancouver 3, ChivasUSAI Los Angele0, s Portland0, tie
ment or finishing one. The culprit this time is a strain in his left
at Merion, when hevvasflexing
BASEBALL
American League BOSTONRED SOX— SignedLHPTreyBall,OFForrestt Allday,RHPKyle Martin, RHPTaylor Grover,INF CarlosAsuale, CJakeRomanski, OFBryanHudson, RHP JoeGunke, INFReedGragnani, INFJantzenWitte and CDaniel Betheato minor leaguecontracts MINNESOT ATWINS—Signed RHPKohl Stewart,C
W 9 7 6 4 2
W Bend E ks 10 KlamathFallsGems 6 CorvallisKnights 7 CowlitzBlackBears 6 MedfordRogues 5 KitsapBlueJackets 4 Wednesday'sGames Bend14, Kitsap3 Corvallis 8,Medford4 Victoria 4,Bellingham2 Wenatchee atWalla Walla, ppd.,rain KlamathFallsat Kelowna,ppd., rain Today's Games WenatcheeatWalla Walla, 3:05(DH) BendatKitsap, 6:35p.m. KlamathFallsat Kelowna,4:30p.m.(DH) Corvallis atMedford,6:35p.m. Victoria atBellingham,7:05p.m.
Transactions
"I'll know more when I see X-rays, but my guess is that he got ripped apart, limb by limb."
WESTCOASTLEAGUE
1 pick, shortstop Carlos Correa, to tvvo of the franchise's greatest
most significant investment" the Astros haveever made inan amateur player. The21-year-oid
DEALS
OregonState 0 0 0100 000 — 1 7 0 Indiana 000 000 000 — 0 4 0 Boyd and Rodriguez,Slegersand Schwarber. W—Boyd. L—Slegers.
him from either playing atourna-
round of the U.S. Open last week
Women SecondRound Li Na(2), China,def.Marion Bartoli, France,walkover EkaterinaMakarova, Russia, def. AngeliqueKerber (3),Germany,6-3,6-4. YaninaWickmayer, Belgium, def. PetraKvitova(4), Czech Republic, 3-6,6-4,7-5. CarolineWozniacki (5), Denmark, def. LauraRobson, Britain,6-4,6-4. Maria Kirilenko(6), Russia, def. ElenaBaltacha, Britain, 4-6, 6-4, 6-3. JamieHampton, UnitedStates, def HsiehSu-wei, Taiwan,6-4,7-6(2). LucieSafarova,CzechRepublic,def. SamanthaStosur, Australia,7-6(5),6-3 Elena Vesnina,Russia,def. HeatherWatson,Britain,
x-Game14— UCLAvs. North Carolina-N.C.State winner,5 p.m. If onlyonegameis necessary,it wil startat5:30p.m.
VictoriaHarbourcats Bellingham Bels WallaWallaSweets Wenatchee AppleSox Kelowna Falcons South Division
States,3-6, 7-5,6-3. FabioFognini(8),Italy,def.MartinKlizan,Slovakia,
7-6 (5),7-6(3).
Oregon State1, Indlana0, Indianaeliminated Today,June 20 Game10 —NorthCarolina(5B-11) vs. N.C.State (50-15), 5p.m. Friday, June21 Game11 —Mississippi Statevs. OregonState (5212), noon Game12—UCLAvs. North Carolina-N.C Statewinner,5 p.m. Saturday, June22 x-Game13 — Mississippi Statevs. OregonState,
Leaguestandings North Division
Kohlschreiber (3), Germany, 7-5, 6-3. FelicianoLopez,Spain, def.JuanMonaco (4), Argentina,6-4,6-4. AndreasSeppi (7), Italy,def. RyanHarrison, United 6-7 (6),6-2, 6-2. FernandoVerdasco, Spain, def Albert Ramos, Spain,6-4, 6-0. BernardTomic, Australia, def. JulienBenne teau, France,6-2,5-7,7-6(4). Gilles Simon (2), France,def.KyleEdmund, Britain,
Wednesday,June19
FRIDAY
GOLF
COREBOARD
B ac aw s winin 7, tie series The Associated Press
games apiece. Now that's an Original Six. Brent Seabrook's slap shot 9:51 into overtime gave the Blackhawks a 6-5 victory on Wednesday night, restoring the home-ice advantage to the Western Conference champions. Game 5 is Saturday night in Chicago, with Game 6 back in Boston on Monday. "I guess it was just our turn to score again," said Blackhawks forward Patrick Kane, who had a goal and an assist in the back-and-forth game in which Boston come back to tie the score three times. "It was a fun game to play.... I'm sure the fans enjoyed that, for sure." It was the third overtime game in the matchup of Original Six franchises, but it bore little resemblance to the three tightly contested games that opened the series. The teams combined for five goals in the second period — as many as in Games 2 and3 combined — as Chicago bounced back from its first shutout of the season with its most prolific output of the playoffs.
found a way." The Blackhawks ied 1-0, 4-2 and 5-4, but each time the Bruins evened it Up. The last, just st pg,=: 55 secondsafterChicago took the lead, came when Johnny Boychuk slapped it over a sliding Johnny Oduya with 7:46 left in regulation. Boychuk, who had never scored more than five goals i n a season, has six in t h e postseason. "It wasn't a Bruins' type of game, but at the same time you have to get yourself back into it," Bruins coach Claude Julien Charles Krupa I The Associated Press said. "Our guys worked hard to Chicago Blackhawke center Jonathan Toews (19) watches the score goals. Probably got ourwinning goal by teammate Brent Seabrook, not pictured, sail past selves out of what our normal Boston Bruins goalie TLILtkka Rask during overtime in Game 4 of game plan is. So we opened the Stanley Cup finals on Wednesday in Boston. Chicago won 6-5. Up and we scored goals, but we also gave them some goals, like the game-winning goaL" Bryan Bickell and Michal the three losses have all been The overtime was even until Rozsival had two assists apiece in overtime. the Bruins failed to clear the for Chicago, which had scored Rask made 41 saves but he zone, and the Blackhawks got only five goals total in the first was screened by J onathan the puck to Seabrook at the three games ofthe series and Toews on the game-winner, right point. What seemed like hadn't gotten the puck past w hich quickly q u ieted t h e a harmless shot eluded Rask, Rask in more than 129 minbuilding where Boston had and the Blackhawks followed utes coming into Game 4. Co- earned a dominating, 2-0 vic- with a subdued celebration at rey Crawford made 28 saves, tory two nights earlier — the the end of another long night. "If he sees the puck, he's gocoughing up the lead three only Blackhawks shutout of times. the season. ing to be almost impossible to "They keep coming," Black"One of the things we have beat," QuenneVille Said. aWe hawks coach Joel Quenneville talked about, get pucks to the w ant to make sure we getthere net," said Seabrook, a defense- and make it hard on him to said. "One of those nights." man who also hadthe overtime find it, try to go on the second Patrice B ergeron s cored twice and Zdeno Chara and goal in Game 7 of the Western and third opportunity. Nice Jaromir Jagr each had tvvo as- Conference semifinals. "I just ending with traffic in the net, sists for Boston, which has won tried getting it on net, we had Seabs having a shot that tied 11 of its past 14 playoff games; a great screen in front.... It just US UP.
THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
C3
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL the fences twice, giving him a
Standings
major league leading 26 homers,
All Times PDT AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Boston 44 30 Baltimore 42 31 NewYork 39 32 TampaBay 37 35 Toronto 35 36 Central Division W L Detroit 39 31 Cleveland 36 35 Kansas City 34 36 Minnesota 32 36 Chicago 29 40 West Division W L
Oakland Texas Los Angeles Seattle Houston
43 31 40 32
Pct GB .595 .575 1'/z .549 3'/r 514 6 493 7
1/2
Pct GB .557 507 3
1/2
486 5 .471 6 .420 9'/z
Pct GB 581 .556 2 .444 10
to help Baltimore beat Detroit. Davis hit a two-run homer and Taylor Teagarden followed with a three-run home run in Baltimore's six-run fourth. Against embattled reliever Jose Valverde, Davis hit another two-run shot for his second multihomer game of the season and the fifth of his career. Baltimore
Detroit
ab r hbi ab r hbi McLothlf 5 2 3 0AJcksncf 5 0 2 0 M achd3b 4 2 2 1 Dirkslf-rf 5 0 1 0 Markksrf 5 2 2 0 Micarr3b 4 0 2 0 Pearcerf 0 0 0 0 Fielder1b 4 0 0 0 A .Jonescf 5 2 2 3 VMrtnzdh 4 I I 0 Dickrsn cf 0 0 0 0 JhPerlt ss 3 2 1 0 C.Davisdh 5 2 3 5 D.Kellyrf 2 0 1 0 Hardyss 4 1 1 1 Tuiasspph-Ii 2 0 1 2 Acasill2b 0 0 0 0 Infante2b 4 0 1 1 I shikaw1b 5 0 1 0 Holadyc 4 0 I 0 Flahrty2b-ss 5 I 2 0 Tegrdnc 5 1 1 3 Totals 4 3 131713 Totals 3 7 3 113 Baltimore 000 6 0 0 3 0 4 — 13 Detroit 0 00 102 000 — 3 LDB —Baltimore 5, Detroit 10. 28—McLouth 2
Indians 6, Royals 3 CLEVELAND — Justin Masterson managed to hang around for 6/s innings and win for the sixth time
PapelbonBS,2-16 1 2 1 1 1 Mi.Adams 1 1 0 0 0 StutesL,2-1 1 3 4 4 2 WP —Mi.Adams. T—3:35. A—39594(43,651).
2 0 I
HBP —by E.Jackson (Jay), by Westbrook(Rizzo). WP — E.Jackson PB—Y.Molina. T—2:53.A—43,878(43,975).
Giants 4, Padres 2
at home, leading Cleveland over
Braves 5, Mets 3
Kansas City. The right-hander
ATLANTA — Chris Johnson homered for the first time in
SAN FRANCISCO — Gregor Blanco had a pinch hit, two-run triple in the seventh inning,
more than amonth, Kris Medlen overcame adefensive blunder
Diego. Brandon Belt and Marco
struck out eight while allowing two runs and nine hits. Michael Brantley hit a pair of solo homers for the Indians. KansasCity Cleveland ab r hbi ab r hbi A Gordnlf 5 0 0 0 Boumci 3 2 1 0 Hosmerlb 4 1 3 1 Avilesss 3 1 1 2 S.Perez c 4 0 0 0 Kipnis 2b 2 0 1 0 BButler dh 4 0 1 0 CSantn c 3 0 0 1 L.caincf 4 0 0 0 Brantlylf 3 2 2 3 Loughrf 4 1 3 1 MrRynl1b 4 0 1 0 Mostks3b 4 0 20 Giambidh 2 0 0 0 EJhnsn 2b 4 0 I I Raburn ph-dh 2 0 0 0 AEscorss 4 1 2 0 Chsnhll3b 4 0 0 0 JMcDnl3b 0 0 0 0
and Atlanta bounced back from a
leading SanFrancisco past San Scutaro also drove in runs andthe
doubleheader sweep bybeating New York.
Giants won their second straight following a three-game slide.
New York
had two hits.
Atlanta
Scutaro and Hunter Penceeach
L.cruz3b 4 0 0 0 Brigncph-ss 1 0 0 0
M.Ellis2b 4 0 0 0 Dveraylb 3 0 1 0 AuRmnc 2 0 0 0 Almontph 1 0 0 0 T otals 3 7 6 126 Totals 2 90 3 0 L os Angeles 2 0 1 0 2 0 100 — 6 N ew York 000 0 0 0 0 00 — 0 DP —NewYork1. LOB —LosAngeles6, NewYork
3. 2B—Ad.Gonzaez(15), Ethier(12). HR—Puig (5). SB — Puig (2). SF—Hairston Jr.. Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO CapuanoW,2-4 6 3 0 0 0 4 Withrow 2 0 0 0 0 0 League 1 0 0 0 0 0 New York PHughesL,3-6 6 Warren 3
10 5 5 0 2 1 1 0
3 1
HBP —by League (J.Nix), by PHughes (Puig). WP Warren. T—2:39. A—41,320(50,291).
ab r hbi ab r hbi EYongci 4 0 1 0 JSchairrf 4 1 1 0 Yankees 6, Dodgers4 San Diego San Francisco 32 40 DnMrp2b 4 0 0 0 RJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi (First Game) 32 41 438 10i/w D Wrght3b 4 0 I 0 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 27 46 .370 )5r/r Byrdrf 4 1 1 0 Smmnsss 3 0 1 0 D enorfirf 4 0 0 0 AnTrrslf 3 0 1 0 Forsyth2b 3 0 1 0 GBlancph-If 1 1 1 2 Los Angeles New York Duda1b 3 1 1 0 FFrmn1b 2 1 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Wednesday'sGames Buckc 3 1 0 0 J.Uptonlf 4 0 0 0 Headly3b 3 0 0 0 Scutaro2b 4 0 2 1 B lankslf 4 0 0 0 Poseyc 3 0 1 0 Puntoss 5 0 0 0 Gardnrcf 5 0 1 0 N.Y.Yankees6, L.A Dodgers4,1st game Nrwnhslf 3 0 1 1 Mccnnc 3 0 0 0 G uzmn1b 3 1 1 1 Pencerf 4 I 2 0 S tubbsri 4 1 1 0 P uigrf 5 1 2 0 J.Nixss-3b 4II 0 Baltimore13,Detroit 3 Quntnllss 3 0 0 0 BUptoncf 3 1 2 1 G randlc 4 0 0 0 Ariasss 4 0 1 0 T otals 3 7 3 123 Totals 3 0 6 7 6 Marcmp 2 0 0 0 Uggla2b 4 1 1 0 A dGnzl1b 4 0 1 0 Cano2b 3 1 1 0 Cleveland 6,KansasCity 3 V enal e cf 4 1 1 1 Belt1b 4 0 1 1 K ansas City 0 0 0 1 1 0 001 — 3 CTorrsp 0 0 0 0 CJhnsn3b 4 1 2 3 H Rmrzdh 4 2 4 2 VWellslf 4 1 0 0 L.A. Dodgers 6,N.Y.Yankees0,2nd game Clevel and 0 0 0 013 llx — 6 Ethier ci 2 1 0 0 Neal dh 3 I I 0 Toronto5, Coorado2 Satinph I 0 1 0 Medlenp 2 0 0 0 Ciriacoss 2 0 1 0 JPerezcf 4 0 0 0 Stultsp 3 0 0 0 Abreu3b 3 1 1 0 E E.Johnson (2). DP — C le ve land 2. LOB KanU ribe3b 3 0 0 0 ISuzukirf 4 2 3 3 Tampa Bay6, Boston2 A rdsmp 0 0 0 0 Avilanp 0 0 0 0 sas City9, Cleveland6. 2B—Hosmer (13), Moustakas Ricep 0 0 0 0 Heywrdph-rf 0 0 0 0 G rgrsnp 0 0 0 0 Romop 0 0 0 0 Schmkr2b 4 0 1 0 DAdms3b 3 0 0 0 Texas 9, Oakland 4 T .Rossp 0 0 0 0 Bmgrnp 2 0 0 0 (15), A.Jones (22), C.Davis (23), Jh.Peralta(21),Tuia- (8), Bourn(11). HR —Brantley 2(4). SB—Hosmer 2 T otals 3 1 3 6 1 Totals A.Ellisc 3 0 1 1 Brigncss 0 0 0 0 Minnesota 7, ChicagoWhite Sox4 3 05 7 4 HSnchz ph 1 0 1 0 sosopo(7), Infante(11). HR —C.Davis 2 (26), Teagar- (7), EJohnson (11), Bourn(11), Kipnis(16). SF Cstllnslf 2 0 0 0 Dveray1b 4 0 1 2 Milwaukee 3,Houston1 N ew York 000 0 3 0 0 00 — 3 Aviles, Brantl e y. Bcrwfr pr 0 I 0 0 den (1). SB — M cLou t h (2 4), Ma ch ado (6), Ha rdy (1). — 5 H rstnJrph-If 2 0 1 1 CStwrtc 3 0 0 0 L.A. Angels1,Seattle0 Atlanta 000 320 Ogx CS — A.Jackson(1). SF—Hardy. Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO E—Medlen (1). DP —Atlanta 3. LOB—New Dunnng p 0 0 0 0 Today's Games T otals 3 4 4 104 Totals 3 36 8 5 4 4 4 3 3 York 2, Atlanta8. 2B D Wright (13), JSchafer (4), Noonan 3b 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BB SO MendozaL,2-4 5 L os Angeles 0 0 0 0 0 0 220 — 4 ChicagoWhite Sox(JohDanks 1-3) at Minnesota Baltimore Collins I I 0 0 0 I Totals 3 0 2 4 2 Totals 3 3 4 114 TrllmanWB-2 5 7 3 3 3 I N ew York 020 0 0 13 0x — 6 (Diamond 4-6),10:10 am. B.Upton(7). HR —C.Johnson (4). SB—Medlen (1). K.Herrera 1 1 1 1 1 2 S—Simmons. S an Diego 001 0 0 0 1 00 — 2 2 2 0 0 0 2 E—Behsario 2 (2), Schum aker 2 (5). DP—New Oakland (Griffin 5-6) at Texas(Lindblom 0-2), 11:05 McFarland Hochevar 1 1 1 1 0 1 New York 4 Strop 1 0 0 0 0 2 York l. LOB —LosAngeles7, NewYork8.28—Puig a.m. IP H R E R BB SO San Francisco 000 100 30x E — B el t (3). DP — S an D ieg o 2, San F r an ci s co1. Cleveland 1 2 0 0 0 2 Milwaukee(Gallardo 6-6) at Houston(Harrell 5-7), FGarcra MarcumL,0-9 4 2 - 3 65 5 4 6 H.Ram irez(4), Overbay(15). HR—H.Ramirez(2), LDB —San Diego 5, SanFrancisco 7. 3B—G.Blanco (3), MastersonW9-5 61-3 9 2 2 2 8 CTorres Detroit 11:10a.m. 2 1-3 0 0 0 1 4 I.Suzuki(3). S—J.Nix, D.Adams. SF—AEllis. ShawH,4 12-3 1 0 0 0 I (4). HR — G uzm an (3), V en abl e (1 0). P orcello l.,4-4 6 9 6 6 0 4 TampaBay(M.Moore8-3) at N.Y.Yankees (Pettitte Aardsma 2-3 1 0 0 0 I Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO 1-3 1 2 2 I 1 J.Smith 1 2 1 1 0 1 Rice San Diego IP H R E R BB SO Ryu L,6-3 D.Downs 5-4), 4.05p.m. 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 6 5 3 3 2 4 I 2-3 2 1 1 0 3 Mendoza pitched to5 baters inthe6th. Stults 6137 2 2 2 3 Boston(Lackey4-5) at Detroit (J.Alvarez1-0), 4:08 E.Reed Atlanta Howell 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 T — 2:47. A — 17,349 (42, 2 41). G regerson L,4-3 BS, 3 -60 4 2 2 0 0 Valverde 1 5 4 4 0 1 MedlenW,4-7 7 6 3 1 0 7 Be isario 0 0 I 0 0 0 p.m. T.Ross 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 5 Tiilman pi t ched to 2 b a t e rs i n the 6t h . Seattle(F.Hemandez8-4) atL.A.Angels(Hanson4-2), Avilan H,11 I 0 0 0 0 0 PRodriguez 23 1 0 0 0 1 San Francisco T 3:13. A 38,574(41,255). 7:05 p.m. KimbrelS,20-23 1 0 0 0 0 2 Guerrier 1 0 0 0 0 0 Twins 7, White Sox 4 BumgarnerW,7-4 7 3 2 2 4 8 New York Medlenpitchedto1batter in the8th. DunningH,1 1 1 0 0 0 1 NATIONALLEAGUE I-IBP —byMedlen (Duda) WP —Marcum KurodaW,7-5 62 - 3 8 2 2 1 2 Rangers 9, Athletics 4 RomoS,18-21 1 0 0 0 0 1 MINNEAPOLIS — Justin Morneau T—3:00. A—21852(49,586). East Division 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Kelley H,1 Gregerson pitchedto 4baters inthe7th. W L Pct GB Claiborne 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 homered for the first time in T—2:47.A—41,866(41,915). ARLINGTON,Texas — David Atlanta 43 30 589 D .Robertson H,15 2-3 0 0 0 2 0 Reds 2, Pirates1 (13 innings) Washington 35 36 .493 7 RiveraS,25-26 1 0 0 0 0 2 Murphy had three hits and scored almost two months and the twoPhiladelphia 35 38 .479 8 run shot helped Minnesota send Belisario pitched to2 baters inthe7th. Diamondbacks 3, Marlins1 27 41 .397 )3r/r twice to snap out of a long slump NewYork HBP by Belisario(Neal). Chicago to its sixth loss in seven CINCINNATI — Jay Bruce ended Miami 22 49 .310 20 to help Texas beat AL WestT — 3:09. A — 4 0,60 4(50,291). Jason Grilli's saves streak with PHOENIX — CodyRoss hita games. Central Division leading Oakland. Justin Grimm a solo homer in the ninth, and W L Pct GB three-run, pinch-hit home run (6-5) trailed when he threw his St. Louis 46 26 .639 Chicago Minnesota Brandon Philips singled with the for Arizona in the eighth inning Blue Jays 5, Rockies 2 Cincinnati 44 29 603 2'/z ab r hbi ab r hbi last pitch, but the Rangers scored bases loaded in the13th inning to to spoil an outstanding outing Pittsburgh 42 30 .583 4 DeAzacf 4 1 1 1 Dozier2b 2 1 1 3 twice in the bottom of the fifth to Chicago 29 41 .414 16 rally Cincinnati past Pittsburgh. A IRmrzss 4 1 1 0 Mauerc 5 1 1 0 TORONTO — Adam Lindhita byyoung Miami starter Jose Milwaukee 29 41 .414 16 go ahead and make him the first Riosrf 3 0 0 0 Doumitrf 3 0 2 0 three-run home run, Mark Buehrle Fernandez. Fernandez (4-4) retired West Division C.Wegsrf I 0 0 0 Wlnghdh 4 2 2 1 Pittsburgh Cincinnati W L Pct GB Texas starter this month to get a A.Dunndh 4 0 1 2 Mornea1b 5 1 2 2 won his second straight start ab r hbi ab r hbi 14 in a row before walking two Arrzona 39 33 542 victory. Konerk1b 4 0 1 0 Plouffe3b 5 0 1 1 SMartelf 6 1 1 0 DRonsnlf 4 1 1 0 and Toronto earned its eighth of the three batters he faced in SanFrancisco 37 34 .521 1'/z G rllaspi3b 4 1 1 0 Arciali 2 1 1 0 R Martnc 4 0 1 0 Choocf 6 0 2 0 Colorado 37 36 .507 2'/r consecutive victory, beating V iciedolf 4 0 2 1 Thomscf 3 1 0 0 the eighth. He was relieved by Oakland Texas M cctchcf 6 0 0 0 Votto1b 5 0 1 0 San Diego 36 36 .500 3 Bckhm2b 4 0 1 0 Flormnss 4 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r bbi G Joneslb 4 0 2 0 Phillips2b 5 0 I I left-hander Mike Dunn, who gave Colorado to complete athreeLos Angeles 30 40 .429 8 F lowrsc 4 I I 0 CYoungcf 5 1 2 3 Kinsler2b 4 1 2 2 G Snchz1b 1 0 0 0 Brucerf 5 1 1 1 up the home run to Ross on a1-2 game sweep. Totals 3 6 4 9 4 Totals 3 37 107 Walker2b 4 0 0 0 Frazier3b 5 0 2 0 Lowriess 4 0 0 0 Andrusss 4 0 0 0 Wednesday'sGames Chicago 1 00 000 120 — 4 J uWlsnp 0 0 0 0 MParrp 0 0 0 0 C espdsdh 4 1 1 0 N.cruzrf 5 0 3 2 pitch. N.Y.Yankees6, L.A Dodgers4,1st game — 7 Minnesota 031 003 Ogx Moss1b 3 0 0 0 Beltre3b 5 1 2 1 Ingeph I 0 0 0 Cozartss 4 0 0 0 Colorado Toronto Arizona3,Miami I E—Beckham(4), Gigaspie(4). DP—Chicago 1. Mazzarp 0 0 0 0 Hanignc 4 0 2 0 D nldsn3b 3 0 I I Brkmndh 5 I I 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi Miami Arizona SanFrancisco4, SanDiego2 LDB—Chicago 5, Minnesota 11. 2B—AI.Ramirez PAlvrz3b 5 0 1 0 Mesorcpr-c 1 0 0 0 S .Smithlf 4 0 1 0 Przynsc 4 1 0 0 L eMahi2b 5 0 1 0 Mecarrlf 4 0 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi L.A. Dodgers 6, NrY.Yankees0,2ndgame Reddckrf 3 1 0 0 Chirins1b 4 1 1 0 (14), Gillaspie(8), Beckham(4), Doumit(14) HRS niderrf 6 0 1 0 Arroyop 2 0 0 0 CGnzlzlf 5 1 2 1 RDavispr-If 0 0 0 0 R ugginlf 4 1 2 1 GParrarf 4 0 1 0 Washington 6, Philadelphia2,11innings D Norrsc 2 0 0 0 DvMrpli 4 2 3 0 De Aza (9), Dozier (5), Morneau(3). Mercerss-2b 3 0 1 0 Crngrnp 0 0 0 0 C uddyrrf 5 0 1 0 Bautistrf 4 1 1 0 Lucas3b 4 0 1 0 Pnngtn2b 4 0 0 0 Toronto 5,Colorado2 Jasoc 2 0 0 0 LMartncf 3 2 2 1 Chicago IP H R E R BB SOL ocke p 3 0 0 0 Paulph 10 0 0 WRosrdh 3 0 2 0 Encrncdh 3 1 1 0 Stantonrf 3 0 1 0 Gldsch1b 3 0 0 0 Atlanta 5,N.Y.Mets3 Sogard2b 2 1 1 0 Sale L,5-6 5 8 4 4 2 5 Melncnp 0 0 0 0Simonp 0 0 0 0 A renad3b 3 0 0 0 Lind1b 4 1 1 3 D zunacf 4 0 0 0 MMntrc 3 0 0 0 Cincinnati 2,Pittsburgh1,13 innings Totals 3 2 4 6 4 Totals 3 89 148 Heath 2 2 3 3 4 1 Presleyph 1 0 1 0 Chpmnp 0 0 0 0 Pacheclb 4 1 1 0 CIRsmsci 3 1 1 0 Dietrch2b 4 0 0 0 Prado3b 3 0 0 0 Milwaukee 3,Houston1 Oakland 0 00 030 010 — 4 Troncoso I 0 0 0 I 0 Grillip 0 0 0 0 Clztursph 0 0 0 0 H chvrrss 3 0 0 0 Kubellf 2 0 1 0 C ovincf 4 0 0 0 Arenciic 3 0 0 0 St. Louis 4,ChicagoCubs1 Texas 020 024 lgx — 9 Minnesota Barmesss 2 0 1 0 Lecurep 0 0 0 0 Torrealc 4 0 2 1 Mlzturs3b 4 0 0 0 Morrsnph 1 0 0 0 JoWilsnpr 0 1 0 0 Today's Games LDB Oakland6, Texas9 2B Cespedes (10), CorreiaW,6-4 62 - 3 5 2 2 0 6 Hannhn 3b 1 0 0 0 Rutledg ss 4 0 0 0 Bonifac 2b 3 0 1 1 D obbs 1b 2 0 1 0 Beilp 0000 Pittsburgh (Cumpton0-0)at Cincinnati (H.Bailey4-5), Beltre (16), Dav.Murphy(13). HR—C.Young (7), Pressly 1 2 2 2 0 1 Totals 4 6 1 9 0 Totals 4 32 102 Mathrsc 3 0 0 0 Pollockcf 3 0 0 0 Kawskss 3 1 1 0 9:35a.m. Berkman(6). SB—L.Martin (12). CS—Sogard (3). Duensing 0 1 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 001 000 000 000 0 — 1 Totals 3 7 2 9 2 Totals 3 15 7 5 Frnndzp 3 0 0 0 Gregrsss 2 1 0 0 Milwaukee(Gallardo 6-6) at Houston(Harrell 5-7), SF — Kinsler. RoenickeH,9 1 3- 1 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati 0 0 0 000 001 000 1 — 2 Colorado 0 10 010 000 — 2 M Dunnp 0 0 0 0 Cahigp 0 0 0 0 11:10a.m. Oakland IP H R E R BB SO PerkinsS,18-20 1 0 0 0 0 2 One out when w inni n g run scored. Toronto 300 100 lgx - 5 C llmntr p 2 0 I 0 Colorado(Oswat 0-0) at Washington (Zimmermann Milone L,6-7 5 1- 3 8 6 6 1 1 Duensing pitchedto1batter in the8th. E GJones (4), Arroyo(1). DP Pittsburgh2, E Arenado (4), LeMahieu(2), Kawasaki (5). DHrndzp 0 0 0 0 9-3), 4:05p.m. 1-3 4 2 2 0 0 Dtero HBP —bySale (Dozier,Arcia). WP—Sale, Heath. Crncinnati 1. LOB —Prttsburgh 14, Cincinnati 10. DP — Colorado 1. LOB—Colorado 10, Toronto5. Hinske ph 0 0 0 0 N.Y. Mets(Niese3-6) at Atlanta(Minor 8-2), 4.10 J.chavez 11-3 1 1 1 1 0 T—3.00.A—30,003(39,021). 28 —R.Martin (13), Snider(11), Frazier(13), Hani28 —C.Gonzalez (18), W.Rosario (9), Pacheco(10), C.Rossph-If I I I 3 p.m. Neshek I I 0 0 0 I gan (4). 3B — S .M art e (5). HR — B ruc e (14). CS (11), Bonifacio(12). 38 Kawasaki (4). Totals 3 1 1 5 1 Totals 2 73 4 3 Col.Rasmus ChicagoCubs(Fedman6-5) at St.Louis(Lynn9-1), Texas DRobinson(3). S C Izturis C.Gonzalez (21), Lind(9). SB—R.Davis (13), Miami 0 00 000 001 — 1 HR — 5:15 p.m. GrimmW,6-5 5 3 3 3 3 3 Pittsburgh IP H R E R BB SO Arizona Bonifaci o (9). CS—Arencibia(2). — 3 000 000 03x L.A. Dodgers (Fife 1-2) at SanDiego(Marquis 9-2), FrasorH,2 National League 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 Locke 7 4 0 0 3 3 Colorado IP H R E R BB SO DP — Arizona1. LDB—Miami 5, Arizona2. HR7:10 p.m. 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 2 Cotts H,3 MelanconH,22 1 1 0 0 0 0 NicasioL,4-3 5 4 4 2 1 3 Ruggiano (9), CRoss(3). CS—G.Parra(9). Miami (Koehle0-5) r at SanFrancisco (Gaudin 2-1), Mcclellan 2 2 1 1 0 0 Grilli BS,1-26 1 1 1 1 0 0 I 2-3 3 I I 0 0 Miami IP H R E R BB SO Scahill 7:15 p.m. HBP—by J.chavez (Pierzynski). WP—J.chavez, Nationals 6, Phillies 2 Ju. Wilson 2 1 0 0 1 1 FernandezL,4-4 7 1-3 3 2 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Dutman 2 2 4 Grimm. MazzaroL,3-2 11 - 3 3 1 I I 2 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 (11 innings) Kensing M Dunn 2-3 1 1 1 0 0 T—3:14. A—39,274(48,114). Cincinnati American League Toronto Arizona Arroyo 7 6 1 0 3 3 BuehrleW,4-4 5 8 2 2 1 4 Cahig 1 1 0 0 0 0 PHILADELPHIA— lanDesmond Cingrani 1 0 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 2 Rays 6, RedSox2 Colmenter 6 I 0 0 1 7 WagnerH,3 I 1 0 0 0 0 hit a grand slam in the11th inning Simon Cecil H,5 I 0 0 0 0 2 Angels1, Mariners 0 D.Hernandez W,4-4 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 DelabarH,4 1 0 0 0 1 3 Bell S,13-15 1 2 1 1 1 1 and Washington beat Philadelphia Chapman BOSTON — DesmondJennings Lecure 2 1 0 0 2 1 T—2:42.A—26867(48,633). JanssenS,16-17 1 1 0 0 0 0 ANAHEIM, Calif.— C.J. Wilson to avoid a three-gamesweep. MParraW,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 1 homered, JeremyHellickson HBP —byScahil (Encarnacion).PB—Arencibia. HBP —byArroyo(R.Martin), bySimon(Mercer). pitched two-hit ball for seven T — 2: 5 8. A — 2 7,235 (49, 2 82). Jayson Werth's RBI single with pitched six strong innings and T—4.18. A—36567(42,319).
innings, Mike Trout scored the only run on a wild pitch by Joe
Saunders and LosAngeles edged Seattle. Trout legged out a leadoff double in the sixth and moved to
third on a flyout. Hescored on the
Tampa Bay ended its drought at
Fenway Park. Topprospect Wil Myers delivered a two-run double
during TampaBay's three-run seventh that broke the gameopen.
two outs in the ninth tied it off Jonathan Papelbon, who blewa save for the second time in three nights after starting the season 13 for13.
Interleague
Cardinals 4, Cobs1 ST. LOUIS — Yadier Molina hit his fifth home run and Jake Westbrook pitched seven innings of two-hit ball in St. Louis' victory
Dodgers 6, Yankees0 (Second Game)
NEW YORK —Hanley Ramirez Washington Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r bbi capped a six-hit day with a pair of Saunders (5-7). S pancf 5 I I 0 Revereci 5 I I 0 over Chicago. RBI singles, Yasiel Puig homered Rendon 2b 5 0 0 0 MYong 3b 5 1 2 2 to complete a dazzling debut Zmrmn3b 4 2 1 0 Rollinsss 3 0 0 0 Seattle Los Angeles Chicago St. Louis AdLRclb 3 I I 0 Howardlb 4 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Zobrist2b 5 1 2 1 D.Ortizdh 4 1 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi in New York and Los Angeles W erthrf 4 1 2 2 DBrwnli 4 0 0 0 Enchvz rf 4 0 0 0 Bourios cf 4 0 2 0 Valuen3b 4 0 1 0 Mcrpnt2b 4 1 2 0 Longori3b 5 1 3 1 Napoli 1b 4 0 0 0 earned a split of the day-night D smndss 5 1 1 4 DYongrf 3 0 0 0 F rnkln2b 4 0 0 0 Troutlf 3110 S castross 4 0 0 0 Beltranrf 3 0 I 0 Loney Ib 4 1 2 1 Sltlmch c 4 1 I 0 L mrdzzli 5 0 1 0 Mayrryrf 1 0 0 0 Seager3b 4 0 1 0 Puiolsdh 3 0 0 0 W Myrsrf 5 0 I 2 JGomslf 4 0 2 2 S chrhltrf 3 0 0 0 Hollidylf 4 0 2 0 doubleheader. The Dodgers KSuzukc 5 0 1 0 Frndsn2b 3 0 0 0 KMorlsdh 4 0 1 0 Trumo1b 4 0 1 0 F uldrf 0 0 0 0 Drewss 3 0 1 0 ASorinli 4 0 0 0 SRonsnlf 0 0 0 0 salvaged managerDonMattingly's GGnzlzp 2 0 0 0 Galvis2b 1 0 0 0 Morselb 2 0 0 0 HKndrc2b 3 0 0 0 KJhnsndh 4 0 0 0 Iglesias3b 2 0 0 0 R izzo1b 3 1 1 0 Craiglb 4 1 1 1 T racyph 0 0 0 0 Ruizc 4 0 1 0 S weenycf 3 0 0 0 YMolinc 4 I I 2 return to the Bronx after the loss Ibanezlf 2 0 0 0 Callasp3b 3 0 1 0 J Molinc 4 1 3 0 Marrerph 1 0 0 0 Kndrckp 1 0 0 0 Zuninoc 2 0 0 0 Hamltnrf 3 0 0 0 C astilloc 2 0 0 0 Jaycf 3 10 0 YEscor ss 4 0 1 0 in the opener. In the first matchup M Sndrscf 3 0 0 0 Aybarss 3 0 I 0 T otals 4 0 6 156 Totals 3 32 7 2 C lipprdp 0 0 0 0 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 Barney2b 1 0 0 1 Descals3b 4 0 1 0 between the teams in New York 0 0 0 0 L.Nixph 1 0 0 0 R yan ss 3 0 0 0 lannettc 3 0 0 0 T ampa Bay 2 0 0 0 1 0 300 — 6 K rol p EJcksnp 1 0 0 0 Kozmass 3 0 1 1 Totals 2 8 0 2 0 Totals 2 91 6 0 Boston 0 10 100 000 — 2 Koernsph 1 0 0 0 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 V illanvp 0 0 0 0 Westrkp 1 0 0 0 since the Dodgers clinched the Seattle 0 00 000 000 — 0 E—Iglesias (1). DP—Tampa Bay 1, Boston 1. Storenp 0 0 0 0 MAdmsp 0 0 0 0 Campp 0 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 1981 World Series title with a Los Angeles 0 0 0 0 0 1 Ogx— 1 LDB TampaBay10, Boston 5 2B Loney (17), JSolanoph 1 0 0 0 Mrtnzph 1 0 0 0 Borbonph 1 0 0 0 Muiicap 0 0 0 0 E—Franklin (3). DP—Seattle 2, LosAngeles1. WMyers(1), D.Ortiz(15), Saltalamacchia(18) HR R Sorinp 0 0 0 0 Stutesp 0 0 0 0 B Parkrp 0 0 0 0 Game 6 victory at old Yankee LDB —Seattle 4, LosAngeles6. 28—Bourios (3), De.Jennings(9). SF—Loney. T otals 4 1 6 8 6 Totals 3 62 4 2 Totals 2 6 1 2 1 Totals 3 04 9 4 Stadium, Ichiro Suzuki homered, Trout(22),Callaspo(10). SB—Seager (3), Aybar (2) Tampa Bay IP H R ER B BSO Washington 0 0 0 000 101 04 — 6 Chicago 0 10 000 000 — 1 drove in three runs andmadea Seattle IP H R E R BB SOHeilicksonW,5-3 6 7 2 2 0 4 Philad elphia 200 000 000 00 — 2 St.Louis 100 003 Ogx — 4 J.SaundersL,5-7 8 6 1 1 2 3 McGee DP — Washington 1. LOB —Washington 6, E Y.Molina(3), M.carpenter(6). DP Chicago spectacular catch on the warning 1 0 0 0 1 2 Los Angeles Philadel p hi a 5. 2B Zimmerman (12), K.Suz uki (9). Jo.Peralta 1 0 0 0 0 1 2, St. Louis 2.LOB —Chicago4, St. Louis6. HR track for the Yankees. C.WrlsonW6-5 7 2 0 0 2 3 J.Wright 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 HR — Desmond(10), M.Young(3).SB—Lombardozzi Y.Molina (5). CS—Valbuena(2). S—Westbrook. S.DownsH,13 1 0 0 0 0 1 Rodney 1-3 0 0 0 0 I SF—Barney. (2). CS —Rollins (4). Frieri S,16-17 1 0 0 0 0 1 Boston Washington IP H R E R BB SO Chicago IP H R E R BB SO Los Angeles New York HBP —by C Wilson (Morse). WP—J.Saunders, DempsterL,4-8 6 8 3 3 2 3 G.Gonzalez 7 2 2 2 2 11 E.JacksonL,3-9 5 1-3 6 4 4 2 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi C.Wilson. Breslow 2-3 3 3 3 0 0 Clippard 12-3 0 0 0 1 1 Villanueva 23 2 0 0 0 0 Schmkr If 5 1 2 0 Gardnrcf 4 0 0 0 T—2:27.A—35,401(45,483). A.Wilson 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Kro 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 Camp 1 1 0 0 0 0 Puig rf 4 3 2 1 J.Nixss-3b 3 0 1 0 FMorales 1 1 0 0 0 2 StorenW,2-1 I I 0 0 0 2 B.Parker AdGnzldh 5 1 3 1 Cano2b 4 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 RSoriano 1 1 0 0 0 1 HRmrz ss 4 1 2 2 VWellsdh 3 0 0 0 Beato I 2 0 0 0 I St. Louis Drioles13, Tigers 3 WP — Hellickson 2. Balk—Hellickson. Philadelphia WestbrookW3-2 7 2 1 0 3 2 Ethier cf 4 0 2 1 Nealrf 3000 T—3.21. A—35,710(37,499). K.Kendrick RosenthalH,17 1 0 0 0 1 2 HrstnJr Ib 3 0 I 1 ISuzukilf 3 0 0 0 DETROIT — Chris Davis cleared BastardoH,9 MuiicaS,21-21 1 0 0 0 0 0 Fdrwcz c 4 0 0 0 DAdms3b 2 0 0 0 first pitch wild of the season by
TampaBay Boston ab r hbi ab r hbi J oyceli 4 0 0 0 Ellsuryci 4 0 2 0 S Rdrgzph-If 1 0 1 0 Navarf 4 0 0 0 DJnngscf 4 2 2 1 Pedroia2b 4 0 0 0
Beavers Continued from C1 It turned out that Gordon was having vision problems after an embarrassing mix-
up — he had poured allergy eyedrops into his contact lens case, thinking it was cleaning solution. Teammates said Gordon was doing fine after the game. After three fruitless innings against Slegers,the Beavers finally found an opening. K avin K eyes s ingled t o center field and then moved to third base on a double by Barnes, who had bluffed a bunt and then pulled a hard grounder down the line past drawn-in Indiana third baseman Dustin DeMuth. A sacrifice fly by Jake Rodriguez — a looper down the right-field line
inning.
gjIw ', ) a/
c.:
Mark Davis/The Omaha World-Herald via The Associated Press
Oregon State's Tyler Smith (1) tags out Indiana's Chris Sujka after catching him stealing second base as the Beavers' Andy Peterson looks on during the first inning in a game at the College World Seriesin Omaha, Neb.,on Wednesday. — was deep enough to score Keyes, who slid home safely to beat the throw by Hoosiers
right fielder Casey Smith. Indiana, meanwhile, did not manage a hit until the fifth
Hoosier coach Tracy Smith said the struggle came down to one problem: Boyd. "I could b e d i sappointed with a lack of effectiveness in the batter's box," Smith said, "but I think a lot of that has to do with what their guy's doing against us." Michael B asil, I n d iana's senior shortstop, said Boyd frustrated hitters with accurate fastballs and first-strike breaking balls. "It really kept us off balance a lot, and we wanted to jump on his fastball," said Basil, who boasted a .313 batting average this year and went 1-for4 on Wednesday night. "But a lot of times when his fastball was in the zone, it was right on the inside corner, outside corner. Didn't really leave too
much right over the heart of the plate." Beavers head coach Pat Casey praised Boyd's efforts, c alling hi m a "no-maintenance guy" wh o h a s been successful at OSU both on the baseball diamond and in the classroom. " He's a really fun ki d t o coach and he's a great man," Casey said. "Especially when he throws shutouts. He's really
a great guy." Now, the Beavers move on to a rematch with Mississippi State, a team they lost to 5-4 in their CWS opener on Saturday and will have to beat twice to make it into the series championship. They will need to dust themselves off after a shaky offensive performance against Indiana.
Brewers 3, Astros1 HOUSTON — Rickie Weeks hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Aramis Ramirez added a solo shot in the ninth to lift
Milwaukee past Houston. Milwaukee Houston ab r hbi ab r hbi Weeks2b 4 1 2 2 BBarnscf 4 0 1 0 Segurass 4 0 1 0 Altuve2b 4 1 3 0 CGomzcf 3 0 0 0 Jcastroc 3 0 1 0 A rRmr3b 4 1 1 1 JMrtnzlf 3 0 0 1 Lucroydh 3 0 1 0 Carterdh 3 0 0 0 YBtncr1b 4 0 0 0 C.Pena1b 4 0 1 0 M aldndc 4 0 1 0 Maxwllrf 4 0 1 0 P rincelf 3 1 0 0 Dmngz3b 4 0 I 0 LSchfrrf 2 0 0 0 Rcedenss 4 0 2 0 Totals 3 1 3 6 3 Totals 3 31 101 M ilwaukee 000 0 0 0 021 — 3 Houston 1 00 000 000 — 1 E—Altuve (5). DP—Milwaukee 1, I-louston 1. LOB —Milwaukee 5, Houston 8. HR—Weeks (6), Ar.Ramirez (4). SB—Altuve3 (16). CS—J.Castro (1). S—L.Schafer. SF—J.Martinez. Milwaukee I P H R E R BB SO Lohse 6 6 I 1 2 5 AxfordW,3-3 1 1 0 0 0 2 HendersonH,2 1 1 0 0 0 1 Fr.RodriguezS,5-5 1 2 0 0 0 2 Houston Bedard 7 134 1 I 2 8 AmbrizL,1-4 BS,3-5 2-3 2 2 2 0 0 Fields 1 0 0 0 0 2 Ambriz pitched to 2 baters inthe9th.
HBP —byAmbriz (Lucroy).
T—3:07. A—15,866(42,060).
Oregon State simply struggled to t ak e a dvantage of Slegers' few mistakes. The Beavers logged seven hits, but they stranded seven runners on base. Theyfinished 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position, and they were just 1for-11 with runners on base. Still, OSU f a n s s t icking around to see their team play until the bitter end did not seem picky about Wednesday's do-or-die win. The team walked out of the ballpark to find its bus surrounded by a loud crowd in orange caps and shirts. One fan held up a sign that read: "We won't go home easy." "Hey, one-nothing," shouted another fan. "It works." — Johnny Perez of the Omaha World-Herald contributed to this report.
C4 TH E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013
Finals
TRACK & FIELD: U.S. CHAMPIONSHIPS NOTEBOOK
Gatlin hopesCampbell-Brown not hastily judged By Pat Graham The Associated Press
DES MOINES, Iowa — Justin Gatlin realizes that to some his reputation will be forever tarnished by a positive test for excessive testosterone in 2006. That'sfine. He served his four-year suspension and no longer worries about critics. The American sprinter hopes that judgment on Jamaica's Veronica Campbell-Brown following her suspension for a positive test is reserved until everything is examined. "When you see someone who has such a stellar pedigree like hers, from youth age to now, you have to sit and wait and watch what happens," said Gatlin, who will run in the first round of the 100 meters today at U.S. Championships. "I wish the best for her." Campbell-Brown, the reigning 200-meter world champion and three-time Olympic gold medalist, was suspended by Jamaica's national federation on Tuesday pending an investigation into a positive drug test. Jamaican officials said Campbell-Brown tested positive for a banned diuretic at a meet on the island in May. Campbell-Brown's manager, Claude Bryan, recently said the accusation came as a "shock to her," and the sprinter is determined to clear her name. Gatlin has steadily regained his form since returning in July 2010 from his ban, capturing a bronze medal in London last summer. He maintained that his positive test back in 2006 was caused when a massage therapist rubbed
Eaton Continued from C1 L ast June, Eaton set a decathlon world record of 9,039 points at th e Olympic Trials in Eugene before claiming gold in London. Eaton skipped a trip to the
prestigious Hypo Meeting in Gotzis, Austria, at the end of May, which, according to the Register-Guard newspaper in Eugene, was a precautionary m e asure b ecause of a minor knee injury. But Eaton's coach, Harry Marra, told the newspaper that Eaton is in "great shape." A 2006 graduate of Bend's Mountain View High School
a testosterone-like cream onto his legs. As for restoring his reputation, he said he's not focused on that. "In track and field, one thing you learn is you'rejudged by your performance," Gatlin said. "No matter how often I say I'm innocent ... I have to go out here and perform. I knew I had to come backand run 9.7.Iknew Ihad to come back and win a gold medal indoors. I knew I had tocome back and make the Olympic team. These arethings Ihad to do because those are things I did before anything happened to me in a negative light. "I always have to remember that there's always going to be critics out there, always going to be haters that are going to look at me or anybody else like the Veronica situation in a negative light." Of Merritt: Lately, hurdler Aries Merritt has spent more time on a bike than in the starting blocks. It was the only way he could keep up his training. Merritt, the world record holder in the 110-meter hurdles, has been dealing with
a nagging right hamstring injury for quite a while. It started out as a cramp and turned into something more. He saw a specialist in Germany, who detected a tiny rupture in the hamstring. "It's been a test of my patience," said Merritt, who set the world mark of 12.80 seconds a month after winning Olympic gold in London. "I'velearned over the years you have to be patient for things to come full circle. I'm ready to hit it full tilt again."
who went on to star for the University of O r egon, Eaton has set non-decathlon personal bests this season in the 400 meters (45.64 seconds), the shot put (46 feet, 6'/4 inches) and the javelin (218-7'/2). The 25-year-old is seeking hi s t h i r d c o nsecutive U.S. championship. Other top decathletes on the entry list include two-time world champion and 2012 Olympic silver medalist Trey Hardee, of Austin, Texas, and Jeremy Taiwo, a University of Washington senior who was injured during the 2012 season. UO's Dakotah Keys is also in the field.
Neuman
Eaton has improved his decathlon personal best by more than 900 points since 2008 and set the world record in the indoor heptathl on t h re e s t r aight y e a r s
(2010-12). He has scored 8,000 points or more in his past 14 decathlons, dating back to June 2008. Eaton and fiancee Brianne Theisen, a Canadian Olympian and former UO heptathlete, are scheduled to be married on July 13. Theisen, 24, will be competing in the Canadian championships in Moncton, New Brunswick, this week to vie for a spot at the world championships in the heptathlon.
tween workouts) and less on intensity," says Metcalf, who Continued from C1 volunteered his time coach"At Summit, I d e f i nitely ing Neuman. "So we hit the felt like some of the training volume early." wasn't p a r t icularly s u i t ed N euman's decision to g o to me," says Neuman, who solo this spring was not withworked ou t i n d ependently out consequences. He missed this spring w it h T ate Met- out on the Storm boys' third calf, a family friend who is state track title and on trainan assistant track coach at ing opportunities with SumM ountain V i e w . "Certain m it r u nners M atthew M a workout plans benefit others ton and Eric A l l dritt, both more.... They (Summit) have of whom are in Des Moines their training plan, which is competing in the 1,500. Magood, but it doesn't work for ton has the fastest qualifying everyone. time of any high school run"The hardest part for me ner in the race at 3:54.13, and w as not r u n ning w it h t h e Alldritt enters the event with guys (at Summit)," Neuman a PR of 3:55.98. "I don't advise this for the adds. "But training with Tate majority of high school athand running with some of the Mountain View guys, it letes," Metcalf s ays. "You was like I still had a team. I miss out on so many things did some strength work with t hat are g r eat about h i gh Kyle Will (a l ocal personal school athletics. I'd hate to trainer who also is head track see a trend go forward where coach at Bend High) and did kids are getting more specialsome running with the Bend ized coaching. "I was really hesitant at guys. It's awesome how those first and tried to talk him out programs brought me in. It felt like I still had a team." Competing in just five races this spring — high school track athletes often compete in as many as 14 meets between the end ofMarch and the state meet in l ate May — Neuman set personal records in the 1,500 (3 minutes, 57.06 seconds) and the 3,000
in regulation. It had close calls, debatable Continued from C1 decisions, and the NBA's best "We have a chance in our player at his very best when building to make something his team needed him most. great. All of our legacies are Games 2-5 in the series had tied to this moment, this game. been ugly, but that one was a It's something our kids will beauty. "I think — I know — that be able to talk about that they were a part of. Forever we'll game will go down as one of remember these moments, so the best finals games that's we want to not live and have b een s een," H e a t gu a r d any regrets." Dwyane Wade said. "But I Allen played in the game think this series will go down the last time the NBA's season as being one of the most comwent down to the very last day, petitive,bizarre series that's the Boston Celtics fading at the been seen. So this is what you finish and falling 83-79 to the pay for to watch. You pay to Los Angeles Lakers in 2010. watch two great teams battle That made home teams 14-3 in to the very, very end, and finals Game 7s, with no road that's what we'll do (Thursteam winning since Washing- day). It will be to the very last ton beat Seattle in 1978. second." Overcoming t h ose o d ds, The Heat couldbecome the not to mention the NBA's win- NBA's first r epeat champiningest team, would m ake ons since the Lakers in 2010. this more memorable than James and Chris Bosh moved the Spurs' previous four titles, to Miami to join Wade a few though this is a franchise that weeks later and they are in never dwells too much on the the finals for the third time in past or looks too far into the three chances. future. But playing for titles is more All that matters is now. expectedthan celebrated now "You know what, it's all in Miami, and a 66-win season about just winning the title. It's that included a 27-game winnot about situation or what has ning streak — and perhaps the led up to it," Duncan said. "It's whole Big Three era — goes a great story for everybody down as a failure if the Heat else, but we're here for one fall today. Yet James said he reason, one reason only: It's to doesn't need the victory to valtry to win this game (Thurs- idate his decision to take his day). We have had a very good talents to South Beach. "I mean, I need it because I season thus far, and I think we just want to get to the game want it and I only came here — my only goal i s t o w i n more than anything. We just want to see what happens and championships," he said. "I be able to leave everything out said it, this is what I came here there." for. This is what I wanted to be The teams trudged back to a part of this team for." the arena Wednesday, some He, Wade and Bosh are go12 hours after the Heat pulled ing for No. 2, while San Antonio is getting a second shot at out a 103-100 overtime victory in Game 6 to even the series. what would be a fourth togethThe Spurs, five points ahead er for Duncan, Tony Parker with 28 seconds left in regu- and Manu Ginobili. All their lation, had to fight off fatigue years togetherhave given the and heartbreak, insisting nei- Spurs' trio the belief they can ther would linger into today. bounce back from Tuesday's By far the best game of collapse. this series, Game 6 immediThe team went to dinner afately took its place among the ter the game, Duncan figuring best finishes in finals history, that was better than guys sitwith everything from James' ting alone with their thoughts triple-double to Allen's tying 3-pointer with 5.2 seconds left
of not running his senior year in high school," adds Metcalf, who also has coached and mentored Ashton Eaton, a Mountain View g r aduate
running. He's an exceptional t alent. W h atever yo u c a n do to help him find success, whether he's running for us or Crook County, I don't care,
and the reigning Olympic
as long as he's running and happy, you do."
gold medalist in the decathlon. "I've been friends with the family for a long time and have watched him grow up. I really like the kid and said, 'Well, here's all the negatives.' ...But once he made the decision he was totally fine with it and never looked back." Neuman's decisionreceived the blessing of Summit track coach Dave Turnbull, despite t he fact that Turnbull w as losing one of the top distance runners in the state. "Travis needed a different training plan than what we offer at S u mmit," says Turnbull, wh o h a s g u i ded the Storm t r ack an d f i e ld
program to 10 boys and girls t eam championships in t h e last seven seasons. "A kid like Travis, you want to do whatever you can do to keep him
in their rooms. Parker and Boris Diaw discussed a similar situation with the French national team in the 2005 European championships, when they blew a late lead against Greece in the semifinals but then came back to beat Spain for the bronze medaL "We just have to be positive and forget Game 6," Parker said. "It was a great opportunity, but that's life. It's basketball and everybody will be
ready." So will James, who was planning a relaxing night with family and friends Wednesday. He has the most at stake in the game, and when it's over he'll be either a two-time NBA Finals MVP or a twotime loser in a Heat uniform. "I want to go down as one of the greatest. I want our team to go down as one of the greatest teams. And we have an opportunity to do that," James said. "So I'll be there (Thurs-
day) night. I'm going to give it my all." The Spurs have never lost the finals, but they have never faced a situation quite like this. They won a Game 7 for the 2005 championship, but that victory over Detroit was at home. The past five finals that went the distance all went to the home team. "I don't really care what it's been like for anybody else at any time," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. "All I know is we have had a hell of a year and we have an opportunity to win a championship. That's all that matters."
P
Open to the public at Pronghorn--
Against a f i eld made up
mainly of college freshmen, Neuman will ru n th e 5,000 final tonight at 5:15 PDT. On Friday, he, Maton and Alldritt will race in the first round of the 1,500 with the goal of making Saturday's finals. "If I ha d th e same decision in front of me again, I'd definitely do the same thing," Neuman says. "It was a bummer not running for Summit and going to the state meet, but this has been an awesome experience. Heading into college, looking back on it, it's been a good decision to take a season and focus on what's important and get everything back before I start training with the UO guys."
July 2, 2015 5:00 - 6:00pm
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SEATING IS LIMITED
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Call to reserve your seat. PROCEEDS TO BENEFIT: Providing Birthday Parties for Homeless Children
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i
PeterJacobsen
Devin'sDestiny is a non-proht 501(c)(3) organ izat>on solely funded byprivate donations.
www.DevinsDestiny.org
P
i •
•
(8:36.21), qualifying him in both events for the 2013 junior nationals at Drake University. (Neuman's 3,000-meter time qualified him for the 5,000 at junior nationals.) More important, t hough, he is still running this time of year. In 2011, Neuman was o ne of the favorites in t h e 1,500 and the 3,000 at state, but a bout of sickness crippled him at the championship meet. Last year, his track season never really got going as Achilles tendinitis and then knee pain limited him to just two meets in March. "We definitely erred on the conservative side with him," says Metcalf, who accompan ied Neuman to I owa t h i s week. "Going into nationals, he's probably a little undertrained, but he's injury-free." Metcalf limited Neuman to just one or two days a week on the track this spring and mixed in l ow-impact workouts like deep-water running
to help keep his legs fresh. "He seems to thrive on volume (more miles on one run but with plenty of r est be-
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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013
15,11 2.19
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Some investors have grown concerned about the company's ability to grow while facing tougher competition from rivals that sell monthly or annual subscriptions to lease programs stored online, a trend known as "cloud computing." Oracle is trying to adapt by buying small software makers specializing in that approach. s40
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HIGH LOW C LOSE C H G. 15322.07 15112.11 15112.19 -206.04 6372.17 6281.78 6283.04 -75.52 491.19 479.38 479.38 -11.44 9397.37 9255.37 9255.71 -143.93 3485.45 3443.20 3443.20 -38.98 1652.45 1628.91 1628.93 -22.88 1188.07 1171.26 1171.33 -16.98 17424.61 17191.21 17191.43 -229.80 999.77 986.47 986.50 -13.49
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Dividend Footnotes:a - Extra dividends were paid, hut are not included. h - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was mcreased bymost recent dividend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. I - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent awdend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or paid thi$ year, acumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - imtiai dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid in precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approamate cash value on ex-distrihution date.PE Footnotes:e - Stock is a closed-end fund - no 8/E ratio shown. cc - 8/E exceeds 9a dd - Loss in last i2 months
: " Dish scraps Sprint bid Dish Network said Tuesday it will not submit a revised Sprint's demand came after Softbank last week bid for Sprint Nextel. That leaves the path open for the boosted its bid for the carrier by $1.5 billion to $21.6 wireless carrier to accept what it considers a superior billion, which Sprint considers the best offer. offer from Japan's Softbank. Softbank's offer would give it a 78 The satellite TV operator said percent stake in Sprint. Dish is that Sprint's decision to cut offering to buy all of Sprint for Dish's due diligence process $25.5 billion, but the deal would short, among other things, create a combined company with made it impractical to submit a a high debt load and is seen as revised bid. more nsky. N E T W 0R KI
DISH NETWORK (DISH) Wednesday's close:$39.27
4 Q' 1 2
Price-earnings ratio:
16
Total return this year: 10%
Dividend: $0.24 Div yield: 0.7%
AP
3- YR*: 28%
5-Y R * :10%
52-WEEK RANGE
$26 ~
Price-earnings ratio (Based on past 12 months' results):36
based on past 12 months' results
10 -YR *: 6%
~
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41
Market value: $18.3 billion
*annualized
Source: FactSet
Source: FactSet
FundFocus AP
S&P500ETF SpriritNex Pfizer BkofAm iShEMkts BariPVix rs MicronT SiriusXM SPDR Fncl GeriElec
163.45 -2.29 7.00 -.32 29.10 -.30 13.19 —.08 38.61 -1.23 20.06 -.02
1783829 1432905 1162291 1018264 989734 836990 769226 703004 604750 455019
1 3.97 $ . 2 2
3.37 19.60 23.98
—.03 —.26 -.35
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LAST 3.37 Repros wtB 18.00 Interphase 3.35 Lee Ent 2.10 AV Homes 17.53 Intercept n 38.41 Dxygn8 rsh 3.18 Amtech 5.67 AmrRlty 5.88 NCI Inc 4.74
CHG %CHG +.80 +3.61 +.65 +.36 +2.99 +5.40 +.42 +.69 +.71 $-.57
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Losers NAME VandaPhm ZionD&G VitesseS TetraTc USMD n
LAST 8.51 2.06 2.27 23.09 30.27
CHG %CHG -2.41 -22.1 —.54 -20.8 —.48 -17.5 -3.64 -13.6 -4.74 -13.5
Foreign Markets LAST CHG %CHG -21.21 -.55 3,839.34 London 6,348.82 -25.39 —.40 Frankfurt -32.43 —.39 8,197.08 Hong Kong 20,986.89 -238.99 -1.13 Mexico 39,044.95 -415.03 -1.05 Milan 16,045.52 -152.42 —.94 Tokyo 13,245.22 +237.94 +1 .83 Stockholm 1,174.84 -19.11 -1.60 Sydney + 47.20 + . 9 8 4,841.80 Zurich 7,731.82 + 32.08 + . 42 NAME Paris
SelectedMutualFunds
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 2 2.30 25 +10.3 +17.7 $-13.3 $7.1 A A A BondA m 1 2.5 8 08 -1.9 +0.7 +4.4 +3.9 D D E CaplncBuA m 54.98 91 +6.0 +12.8 +10.8 +3.7 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 40.01 66 +9.1 +22.5 $-11.5 $2.7 8 C C EurPacGrA m 42.73 69 +37 +1 8.4 +7.6 +0.9 D D A FrilnvA m 4 6.2 0 62 +13.9 +24.7 $-14.4 $4.5 8 C D Oppeuheimer IutlGrowA m O I GAX GrthAmA m 38.90 44 $-13.2 +24.4 $-13.7 $-4.3 A C C IricAmerA m 19.24 23 +8.4 +16.0 +12.6 +6.6 8 A A VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH IrivCoAmA m 34.09 49 +13.9 +21.7 $-13.5 +5.3 D D C NewPerspA m34.27 56 +96 +22.2 $-12.5 $4.7 8 8 8 cC 0 $$ WAMutlnvA m35.94 48 +15.8 +22.6 +16.4 +6.5 D A 8 $e $L Dodge &Cox Income 13.68 -.05 -0.5 +3.3 +5.2 +6.7 8 8 8 Oe IntlStk 3 7.17 -.79 $7.3 +26.2 +9.1 $1.3 A 8 A Stock 1 44.06 -1.30 +18.7 +33.3 +16.3 +5.7 A A C Fidelity Contra 8 6.70 -1.00 +12.8 +17.3 +14.4 +5.6 C 8 8 G rowCo 1 0 6 .51 -1.26 +14.2 +19.6 +16.8 +6.9 8 AA L owPriStk d 46.05 -.45 +16.6 +29.5 +16.9 +9.0 8 A A Fidelity Spartan 50 0 ldxAdvtg 57.95 -.82 +15.3 +22.6 +15.8 +6.3 C A 8 «C $$ FrankTemp-FraukliuIncome Cm 2.33 -.02+5.8 +13.9+10.5 +5.6 A A 8 IncomeA m 2.3 1 - . 02 + 6.1 +14.6 +11.1 +6.2 A A B «C FrankTemp-Tem letouGIBoridAdv 12 . 96 -.01 -1.0 + 9 .9 + 6 .5 +9.6 A A A $1$ RisDivA m 19. 60 - .24+13.0 +20.0 +14.0 +4.9 E C C Mornihgslar Ownership Zone™ Oppeuheimer RisDivB m 17 . 72 - .22+ 12.4 +19.0 +12.9 +4.0 E D D o Fund target represents weighted O RisDivC m 17 . 64 - .22+ 12.5 +19.1 +13.1 +4.2 E D D average of stock holdings SmMidValA m38.58 -.52 + 19.0 +31.7 +12.2 +2.5 A E E • Represents 75% of furid's stock holdings SmMidValB m32.44 -.44 + 18.5 +30.5 +11.2 +1.7 B E E CATEGORY Foreign Large Growth PIMCO TotRetA m 10 . 86 -.11 -2.4 + 1 .9 + 4.9 +7.1 C C B MORNINGSTAR T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 30.36 - . 40+15.3 +26.2 +14.7 +6.6 C C B RATING™ * * * * * GrowStk 42.4 4 - . 50+ 12.3 +16.8 +15.4 +6.4 D 8 8 HealthSci 49.4 5 - . 80+20.0 +29.7 +26.0+15.6 C A A ASSETS $2,982 million Newlncome 9 .54 -.05 - 2.0 +1.2 +4.3 +6.0 C D C EXP RATIO 1.18% Vanguard 150.81 -2.12 +15.3 +22.6 +15.8 +6.3 C A 8 500Adml MANAGER Robert Dunphy 500lnv 150.78 -2.11 $-15.3 +22.5 +15.7 +6.2 C 8 8 SINCE 2012-03-29 CapDp 41.15 -.45 $-22.4 +36.2 +15.7 +6.8 A A A RETURNS3-MD +3.8 Eqlnc 27.86 -.42 +16.1 +23.6 +18.1 +8.3 D A A YTD +10.3 StratgcEq 25.43 -.36 +18.6 +31.6 +18.1 +6.5 A A C 1-YR +29.8 Tgtet2025 14.58 -.18 $7.3 +14.9 +10.8 +4.9 C 8 A 3-YR ANNL +13.3 TotBdAdml 10.76 -.06 -1.7 0.0 +4.0 +5.5 E D D 5-YR-ANNL +4.3 Totlntl 15.17 -.29 +1.5 +16.9 +6.9 -1.1 E D C TotStlAdm 40.99 -.57 +15.5 +23.5 +16.0 +6.7 C A A TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 40.97 -.56 +15.4 +23.3 +15.8 +6.5 C A A BT Group PLC 2.43 USGro 23.98 -.23 +12.8 +19.8 +15.1 +5.6 8 8 8 Sap AG 2.32 Welltn 36.98 -.42 $9.9 +16.7 +12.2 +7.0 A A A William Hill PLC 2.27 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption Experiari PLC 1.99 fee. f - front load (saies charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or Roche Holding AG 1.82 redemption fee. Source: Morwngstah
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StoryStocks Stocks sank Wednesday as investors gained insight that the Federal Reserve is closer to reducing its economic stimulus program. The central bank said it would continue buying $85 billion of bonds a month and keep interest rates at record lows, but also noted that the U.S. economy is growing moderately. Investors took that as a hint that a pullback on the stimulus effort may be near. The policy has been a major factor in driving stocks higher from their lows during the Great Recession. Among stocks making big moves, software maker Adobe rose sharply after reporting that its Creative Cloud subscriptions climbed in its fiscal second quarter. FDX Men's Wearhouse MW Close:$100.54 L1.06 or 1.1% Close:$37.04%-0.43 or -1.1% The package delivery company's The men'sclothing company said fourth-quarter profit fell 45 percent, that it fired the face of the company but the results still beat Wall Street and its executive chairman, George Zimmer. expectations. $105 $40 100
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Sales of previously occupied homes are running ahead of last year, reflecting a resurgent housing market. While the supply of available homes for sale remains tight in many markets, the pace of sales ticked up in April from March to the highest level in more than three years. Did the spring homeselling season boost sales again last month? Find out today, when the National Association of Realtors reports sales figures for May.
10-YR T-NDTE
-22.88
LZB Close:$19.77 V-0.51 or -2.5% The Monroe, Mich.-based furniture maker reported that its fiscal fourthquarter net income fell compared with last year's quarter. $22 20 18
Alcatel-Lucent
ALU Close:$1.93%0.06 or 3.2% The telecommunications equipment manufacturer said that it launched a major effort to shed businesses and jobs to cut its costs. $2.5 2.0 1.5
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Adobe Systems
ADBE Close:$45.78 A2.42 or 5.6% The software maker said that its profit shrank in the fiscal second quarter, but its Creative Cloud subscriptions kept rising. $48
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PE: 2.8 Yield: ...
DreamWorks Animation DWA Close:$24.95 %0.64 or 2.6% Shares of the animation studio, known for its "Shrek" and "Madagascar" films, said it expects revenue from TV shows to double.
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TTEK Pool POOL Close:$23.09 V-3.64 or -13.6% Close:$51.57%-3.15 or -5.8% The engineering services company The distributer of supplies for swimsaid it will take a loss in the fiscal ming pools cut its profit estimate for third quarter as it absorbs about $95 the year because cool, wet weather million in charges. is hurting sales. $35 $55 30 50
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SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
The yield on the 1D-year Treasury note rose to 2.35 percent Wednesday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.
. 0 4 .04 . 0 8 .08 .11 .11
.08
...
-
2-year T-note . 31 .27 +0 . 0 4 V 5-year T-note 1 . 2 3 1 .06 + 0.17 L 10-year T-riote 2.35 2.19 + 0.16 L 30-year T-bond 3.42 3.34 +0.08 L
BONDS
-
w
. 14
L
T
.17
L L L L
L L L L
.29 .70 1.62 2.73
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO IlTRAGO
Barclays Long T-Bdldx 3.15 3.07 +0.08 L L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.56 4.51 +0.05 L L Barclays USAggregate 2.12 2.11 +0.01 W L PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.12 6.13 -0.01 W L RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.23 4.24 -0.01 W L YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.39 1.29 +0.10 L L 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3 .04 3.03 +0.01 W L 1 YR AGO3.25 .13
Commodities The price of oil fell as traders took the Federal Reserve's latest assessment of the economy as a sign the Fed will ease its stimulus efforts. Gold, silver and other metals also fell.
Exchange The dollar advanced against the euro, Japanese yen, British pound and other major currencies, as the Federal Reserve issued a slightly more optimistic outlook for the U.S.
economy.
h5N4 QG
2.44 4.38 1.98 7.79 3.63 .95 3 3.1
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 98.24 98.44 - 0.20 + 7 . 0 Ethanol (gal) 2.47 2.50 -0.44 + 13.0 Heating Dil (gal) 2.97 2.96 +0.36 -2.4 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.96 3.91 +1.49 +18.3 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.89 2.88 + 0.45 + 2 . 9 FUELS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 1373.60 1366.60 21.62 21.68 1423.90 1440.10 3.14 3.16 694.85 706.80
%CH. %YTD +0.51 -18.0 -0.25 -28.3 -1.12 -7.5 -0.43 -13.7 -1.69 -1.1
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -7.3 Cattle (Ib) 1.20 1.20 +0.81 Coffee (Ib) 1.23 1.22 +0.61 -14.6 Corri (bu) 6.73 +1.34 -2.3 6.82 Cotton (Ib) 0.85 0.85 +0.49 +13.7 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 281.50 280.80 +0.25 -24.7 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.43 1.45 -1.76 + 22.8 AGRICULTURE
Soybeans (bu) Wheat(bu)
Foreign
L L L L L L L
15.23 7.07
15.11 6.88
+ 0.81 +2.84
+ 7.4
-9.1
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5484 —.0167 -1.08% 1.5730 Canadian Dollar 1.0 2 8 3 + .0079 +.77% 1 .0180 USD per Euro 1.3274 —.0131 —.99% 1.2689 Japanese Yen 96.54 + 1 .27 +1.32% 7 9 . 04 Mexican Peso 13.0 835 + .1899 +1.45% 13.7216 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6076 +.0208 +.58% 3.8541 Norwegian Krone 5 . 7 780 +.0495 +.86%5.9321 South African Rand 10.1179 +.1217 +1.20% 8.2119 Swedish Krona 6.46 0 7 + . 0222 +.34% 6.9632 Swiss Franc .9302 +.0107 +1.15% .9464 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0703 +.0169 +1.58% . 9 8 14 Chinese Yuan 6.1312 -.0020 -.03% 6.3573 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7564 -.0020 -.03% 7.7589 Indian Rupee 58.721 -.059 -.10% 55.905 Singapore Dollar 1.2667 +.0054 +.43% 1 .2667 South Korean Won 1141.13 +8.64 +.76% 1154.32 -.01 -.03% 2 9 .88 Taiwan Dollar 29.88
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013
BRIEFING
Bend company expands Bend-based Vantage Clinical Solutions Inc., a health care consult-
ing,management and marketing company, is more than doubling the size of its facility.
The company, located on Southwest
Chandler Avenue, has acquired 2,200-squarefeet of adjacent office
space. Theexpansion is underway and should be complete within the
een anson Iia
ummi By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
PORTLAND — Three Central Oregon men are on trial infederalcourton charges of wire fraud and money launder-
ing conspiracy, allegedly funneling more than $44 million in client funds into real estate deals between 1999 and 2008. Federal prosecutors allege MarkNeuman, ofBend; Timothy Larkin, of Redmond; and Lane Lyons, of Bend; took clients' deposits at Sum-
mit Accommodators — also known as Summit 1031 Exchange — and loaned them to a separate company they owned. Thatcompany, Inland Capital Corp., used those client funds toward the purchases of homes, apartments, mobile homes and home lots, many of them in Central Oregon. The trial, which began last week in U.S. District Court, is scheduled to continue today. Neuman and business associate Brian Stevens, both
certified public accountants, co-founded Summit in 1991. It operated as a "qualified intermediary" for clients seeking to defer capital gains taxes. Under section 1031 of the federal tax code, clients can put off federal tax payments from profits on a property sale, as long as they reinvest the funds in another, similar property within 180 days. But federal law prohibits sellers from handling the money,so they use companies like Summit to hold the funds.
Stevens pleaded guilty to fraud and money laundering charges in April 2012 and is serving a four-year prison sentence. Defense attorneys for Neuman, Larkin, and Lyons argued this week that the men broke no laws at the time, and worked to reduce the amount of money they owed starting in 2006,as the housing market's first signs ofw eakness became apparent. Federal laws don't explicitly say where exchange
companies can put client funds, though most companies place them in insured bank accounts. Summit's former chief financial officer, Kyle Cummings, testified Tuesday and Wednesday. Responding to a prosecutor's questioning, Cummings said the Summit principals were still using client funds for real estate deals in mid-2007. — Reporter: 541-617-7820 egfucklichCbendbulletin.com
next two weeks, said Tannus Quatre, president and CEO.
"We've beenwork-
States lure
ing on this expansion behind the scenes for
months and months, eying the spaceand
companies by offering 'megadeals'
negotiating the terms,"
Quatre said. "We are able to justify the urgen-
cy to get this place going right away because we're just bursting at
the seams." Vantage Clinical Solutions currently employs 14 full-time
By Pamela M. Prah Statetine.org
employees, Quatre said,
Michigan has given large
and the new space will
allow the company to add several newemployees in the next six
months. — Bulletin staff reports
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Free Legal Assistance for Seniors in Redmond: Offered by Central Oregon
Matt Schodorf, owner of Schodorf's Luncheonette, swipes a credit card on the Square Stand at his restaurant, in the Highland Park area of Los Angeles earlier this month. The Square Stand rings customers up on Squares applications. More merchants are moving increasingly to credit card-swiping machines that plug into mobile pads.
• Think Forward Marketing Mastery Series: Presentations
o I.e- a mentcom anies ro outsavin s or usinesses
Council on Aging and Legal Aid Services of Oregon; to schedule an appointment, call 541-548-6325; free; 8 a.m.-noon; Redmond Senior Center, 325 N.W. Dogwood Ave.; 54I-548-6325.
on digital media, video and photography, branding and design, social media and content marketing, traditional media and marketing finances, Register at www.intrepidforward. com/workshops; free; 9 a.m.-noon; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 54 I-323- l881. • Energy Efficiency Workshop:Part of a statewide series by Pacific Power to help customers tap incentives and plan effective energy-saving projects; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-389-3111. SATURDAY • Job Search Skills 101:Learn how to start
Gary Feedman i Los Angeles Times
By Adolfo Flores Los Angeles Times
orget ka-ching. It's all tap-tap these
F days.
Restaurants and shop owners fed up with antiquated cash registers and expensive credit card terminals are switching to cheaper devices that plug into smartphones and tablets. And companies such as PayPal, Square Inc. and Groupon Inc. are rushing to meet them, developing sleeker stands to mount tablets running their software or hooking up with existing systems. The shift is happening as mobile devicespermeate many facetsofconsumers' lives, including the way they shop and pay for everyday items. There are players of all sizes in the burgeoning mobile payment systems industry, including big U.S. financial
institutions such as Bank of America and small startups such as Square in San Francisco. It has become a crowded field, and some of the bigger players are expanding their products to set themselves apart. "It was a very simple solution, which makes it very difficult to develop differences," said David Kaminsky, senior analyst for emerging technologies at Mercator Advisory Group. "Now you see them trying to expand into these slightly more complex tablet systems." The standard bearer has been Square, among the first companies to enablecreditcard payments to be accepted on mobile phones through its Square Reader and app in 2010. It has since seen a big boom in the number of businesses and people using its app, and it is now processing more than $15
billion in payments annually. The company said it plans next month to release what it calls Square Stand, which incorporates a built-in card reader that attaches to an iPad and a USB hub thatconnects to accessoriessuch as a cash drawer, receiptprinterand scanner. For the cost of an iPad and $299 for the Square Stand, the company says small retailers can get a cash register that organizes their inventory and provides instant sales analysis. That's significantly lower than similar systems running on standard cash registers that can be cumbersome and cost thousands of dollars. Analysts expect a dogfight as PayPal takes on Square, launching in the next few weeks an incentive program aimed at persuading businesses to dump their tills.
and organize your search, update your skills and how the library can help; free; 2 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050.
Men's Wearhousefounder Zimmer fired
MONDAY • Build a Professional Website for Your
Houston Chronicle
Business:Create a customized website that looks professional using the industrystandard, Wordpress; classcontinuesMondays through July15; registration required; $129; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. TUESDAY • Linux Essentials:
Learn-by-doing in beginner class; understand essentials of Linux; registration required; class continues Tuesdays and Thursdays through Aug. 8; $499; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College - Crook County Open Campus, 510 S.E Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 54 I -383-7270. For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbulletin.comlbizcal
tax breaks and subsidies to employers more often than any other state, according to a new report that tallies up state and local "megadeals," or incentive packages worth more than $75 million. Good Jobs First, which tracks subsidies that state and local governments give to companies, found that Michigan has given 29 such deals to employers in the past 35 years. The state gave Chrysler and General Motors separate deals worth $1 billion each in 2010 and 2009, respectively. But while Michigan offered "megadeals" most frequently, New York ranked first in
overall spending on such giant packages, with $11.4 billion. New York also had the single most expensive deal: In 2007, the New York Power Authority gave aluminum producer Alcoa a 30-year discounted-electricity package worth an estimated $5.6 billion. Washington state had the second-largest"megadeal," a $3.2 billion package of tax breaks and other subsidies it gave to Boeing in 2003. One of the biggest recent deals was Oregon's decision to preserve Nike's preferential sales tax treatment for the next 30 years. That agreement, aimed at keeping Nike in the state, is worth an estimated $2 billion to the company, the report said.
Billion-dollardeals • New York: Alcoa lnc.
($5.6 billion) •Washingto n:BoeingCo. ($3.2 billion) • Oregon: Nike lnc. ($2.02 billion) • New Mexico: Intel Corp.
By David Kaplan George Zimmer, who founded Men's Wearhouse with a single store in Houston and built it into a national clothing chain, was fired
Wednesday by company board members who, in his words, did not want to hear his concerns about how the company is being run. But a financial analyst who follows the multibillion-
dollar company suspects that Zimmer, the bearded baritone famous for his "You're gonna like the way you look" guarantee in television commercials, had failedto successfully navigate the transition that began two years ago from hands-on CEO to a lesser position as executive chairman. "We believe that despite Zimmer's planned transi-
tion to a smaller role at the company, he had difficulty letting go of the reins an the leadership of the business," Richard Jaffe, an analyst with Stifel Nicolaus, wrote in a note to investors after the Wednesday morning announcement. "We believe this led to a conflict with the board and his subsequent termination." That termination was announced in a bluntly worded
statement just ahead of the company's planned annual shareholders meeting. That meeting was delayed, the company said, to allow time to propose a new slate of directors for election. The company gave no reason for dismissing Zimmer, 64, and said only that it would discuss with him "the extent, if any, and terms
of his ongoing relationship
($2 billion) • Louisiana: Cheniere
Energy Inc. ($1.69 billion) • Pennsylvania: Royal Dutch Shell PLC ($1.65 billion)
• Michigan: Chrysler Group LLC ($1.3 billion) • Mississippi: Nissan Motor Co. ($1.25 b>lhon) • New York: GlobalFoundries Inc. ($1.2 billion) • Alabama: ThyssenKrupp AG ($1.07 billion) • Michigan: General Motors
Co. ($1.01 billion) source. Good Jobs First
with the company."
PERMITS Permits City of Bend • ML Bend U.S.A. Limited Partnership, 20763 N.E. Smokestack, $193,737 • Frederick Stilson, 3276 N.W. Pee Wee,$381,139 • Eric Hansen, 1424 N.W. Elgin, $257,672 • Hendrickson Homes of Oregon LLC,60826 Falcon Pointe, $275,671 • Hayden HomesLLC,
2776 N.E Springwater, $188,042 • Hendrickson Homes of Oregon LLC,60805 Whitney, $256,266 • Hayden Homes LLC, 63773 Hunters, $127,328 • OCAT Inc., 63126 Pikes, $250,884 • Hendrickson Homes of Oregon LLC,60817 Whitney, $243,630 • Longterm Bend
Investors LLC, 21367 N.E Nolan, $221,455 • Randall G. Wight, 61422 S.W. Sunbrook, $276,521 • Brice Murri, 20963 S.E. Avery, $330,906 • Longterm Bend Investors LLC, 21319 N.E. Brooklyn, $189,082 • Dutchland Properites Inc., 2679 N.W.Crossing, $174,390 City of Redmond
• Parker Northwest Builders lnc., 1340 N.W. 17th St., $207,375 • 1400 S.W. CanalBlvd. LLC, 1400 S.W.Canal Blvd., $180,000 • Crystal Park Construction LLC, 27901 S.W. 32nd St., $ l58,111 • Karoma Properties LLC, 2162 N.E Sixth St., $172,772 • Elk Ridge Properties
LLC, 708 W. Antler Ave., $350,000 Deschutes County • Curt A. Christopher, 21220 YeomanRoad, Bend, $117,259.72 • Roger P. Lamoureux, l7540 Plainview Road, Bend, $120,553.28 • FMVVand JL LLC, 18800 Macalpine Loop, Bend, $435,336 • Paul Drake, 69795
Goodrich Road, Sisters, $151,212.96 • Gregory A. Evanson, 56641 Sunstone Loop, Bend, $433,081 • Weston lnvestment Company LLC,61355 Triple Knot Road, Bend, $351,524 • Weston lnvestment Company LLC,61353 Triple Knot Road, Bend, $278,409
• Weston lnvestment Company LLC,61367 Triple Knot Road,Bend, $351,524 • Weston lnvestment Company LLC,61365 Triple Knot Road,Bend, $278,409 • Syncopation lnc., 15989 Burgess Road, LaPine, $139,835 • Ronald D. Murray, 17129 Blue Heron Drive, Bend, $285,086
ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013
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Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
: Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Includeyour name, phone number and address
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Subscribe or manage your subscription
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24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
Place, cancel or extend an ad
Th
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B u l l~ t j n :
I Want to Buy or Rent Old fence boards or lumber. C a l l Ro n 541-41 9-5060
Need help fixing stuff?
Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.I buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006
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Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Gray recliner, gd cond.; Adopt a nice cat from Donate deposit bottles/ DO YOU HAVE cans to local all volunone white chair, outPetco, PetSmart or SOMETHING TO door patio, matching Tumalo sa n ctuary! teer, non-profit rescue, to SELL help w/cat spay/neuter footstool; b oth turn, Fixed, shots, ID chip, FOR $500 OR vet bills. Cans for Cats swivel & recline; of- tested, more! SancLESS? trailer is at Bend PETCO fice chair on wheels tuary open Sat/Sun Non-commercial 541-639-9210, 1 -5, other days b y Cavalier King Charles (near Applebee's). Doadvertisers may a ppt. 6 5 48 0 7 8 t h , Spaniel purebred pup- nate Mon-Fri at Smith place an ad with 208 Bend. Photos, map at pies, wormed, parents Siqn, 1515 NE 2nd; or at OUI' CRAFT in Tumalo anyon site. health guaranwww.craftcats.org. Pets & Supplies time. 541-389-8420. For "QUICK CASH tee, $ 8 00. 5 4 1-548541-389-8420, or like more info/map, visit 4574. 541-408-5909 SPECIAL" us on Facebook. www.craftcats.org 1 week 3 lines 12 k k k ct ~ A pet sitter in NE Bend, Ad must include warm and loving home Just bought a new boat? price of single item with no cages, $25 day. Sell your old one in the of $500 or less, or Linda at 541-647-7308 classifieds! Ask about our multiple items Abyssinian female, Super Seller rates! whose total does spayed, vacc'd, Rosie A ussie Mix, (2), 1 st 541-385-5809 not exceed $500. shots, dew o rmed, is a CFA Chmp retired, 4yrs old, always $150. 541-771-2606 Chihuahuas, awesome Call Classifieds at healthy, loves everyasst'd colors, all meds, Doves, white, for 4-H or 541-385-5809 BOXER AKC puppies, $250. 541-362-1977 one! Call Cynthia to FFA projects, 6 /$25 www.bendbulletin.com discuss adoption reat litter, 1st shots, Cash 541-382-2194 541-923-7304 CRR
700. 541-325-3376
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Furn i ture & Appliances
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chasing products or, services from out of I E nglish Mastiff A K C ~ the area. Sending ~ puppies, dam 8 sire ' cash, checks, or fully OFA tested, litter I credit i n f ormation is champion sired with may be subjected to incredible pedigrees! I FRAUD. For more S mall litter, only 5 information about an e pups avail. $ 2 000. advertiser, you may Chris, 503-577-7185. / call t h e Or e gon / Attor ney ' Like new puppy play- ' State
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p en, 3 6 Consumer P rotec- • $60. 541-617-8464 t ion ho t l in e at I Maine Coon kittens, no I 1-877-877-9392. papers, 2 boys, 1 girl, 8 wks, $75-$100 each obo. Call 541-389-0322 or 541-647-3038.
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POODLE Pups, Toy.
Also, POMAPOOSSo cute! 541-475-3889
Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing
DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial
advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12 or ~k
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Ad must include price of
Antiques & Collectibles
or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500.
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Call ClassIfIeds at Antiques wanted: tools, 541-385-5809 furniture, marbles, beer www.bendbulletin.com cans, early B/W phowww.rightwayranch.wor tography, radios & dpress.com lighting. 541-389-1578 New Winchester SXP 12 ga. shotgun. $350 Red-Tailed Boa Snake, 541-385-6202 a dult f e male, e x c . temperament - eater. Weatherby Mark V 340 $145. 541-410-8590 Magnum, Al a s kan 284 286 288 292 model, com p osite Estate Sales Sales Northwest Bend Sales Southwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend Sales Other Areas Rodent control experts stock, all weather fin(barn cats) seek work ish, Burris scope, 4 Beautiful hand3-FAMILY YARD SALE! Moving Sale, 6/22, 9-1, Fri. & Sat., 10-4: Lots of Here it is - the garage Fri. & Sat. 8 4: w ine in exchange for safe boxes of ammo, in B ARN SALE F r I . I Fri & Sat 8 3 Some carved coffee table 19558 Mammoth Dr. h ousehold items & sale of the summer! fridge, studless tires shelter, basic c are. a x 19'/4 a t/ea thru Sun., 8 a . m . I case, like new. $1450 (44 x 17 ) thing for everyone! Household, garage, quality furn., dishes, It's all here! 20586 on wheels, glass pa- Fixed, shots. Will deOBO. S 8 W model I New 8 used HORSE I and 2 matching enda linens, Christmas de- Ambrosia Lane, Sat. 1555 NW Elgln office, fitness 8 more. tio table, household liver! 541-389-8420 EQUIP., household, 686, 357 p lus, l i ke tables (shown) 24eA cor, everything has to 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. items. 55952 Wood I tools, Elliptical & I Garage Sale! Furniture, Multi-family g a rage new, 2 speed loaders x 15 a x 24 t/4". Built in g o! 2331 N E L a k Duck Drive, Vander- Scottish Terrier p upI more! 15602 SW I fabric/household goods, sale Sat., 6/22, 8-4. pies, AKC, born 4/2. holster, ammo, $675 eridge in Stonebrook, Multi-family yard sale vert/left on So. CenTaiwan between shots & wormed, parQuail Rd., Crooked clothing, antique sewing 6 1443 R o c k Fri. 8 Sat., 9-3, West- tury to Swan, left on OBO. 541-419-3262 1940-1950, all glass Bl u f f off Butler Mkt Road. R!ver Ranch. ents on site, Ready machine, elliptical. 6/21- Lane. Home decor, ern & English tack, Wood Duck. covered, in excelGarage Sale - Large now! 541-317-5624. 22, Fri, 9-5; Sat, 8-2 2031 dishes, TV w/stand, saddle, furn i ture, lent condition. $1600 accumulation tools, toys, Sporting Goods ESTATE SALE AN D NW Shevlin Crest Dr. b eds, k i d s stu f f . GIANT ESTATE SALE! children's books and St Bernard Pups, Pure- OBO. 541-382-6731 books, etc. Fri-Sat, 9-2 EXCAVATION BUSI2 0139 Veryl Ct., i n 69270 Enewetak Lane, bred - Ready June 22. - Misc. glass front cabinet. « Ing « n e 2342 NE Shepard Rd. NESS LIQUIDATION. Going Golfside Park, Bend. Sisters, on back side of 2 girls 8 1 boy left. The Bulletin reserves 45 Yrs. of stuff. 63985 4094 SW Bear Drlve 286 Panoramic E s t ates, $450. 5 4 1.306.0205 the right to publish all Wind Surfing gear, sails, MOVING SALE - 9:00 Madras, OR, Sat. 6/22 Tyler Rd. Fri. 8 Sat., Sales Northeast Bend Fri. - Sat. June 21-22 Priced to Sell items + Sat.-Sun. 9-4. Visit ou r f a c ebook ads from The Bulletin masts, boards, wetsuits, Antiques! 21015 Via and Sun. 6/23, 9 to 4 page for pics and info newspaper onto The custom built trailer (best 990 NE WiestWay Sandia. Details and P.m. New and Used https://www.facebook. Bulletin Internet web- offers). 541-389-2636 Multi FamilyGarage 1 Day Garage Sale, Sat., Furniture, misc. items map see Craigslist. At BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS com/pages/Sisters-Sa cutting an d r e ining Sale, site. 541-678-3310 Search the area's most Fri-Sat, 6/21 -22, 6/22 9-5, 64100 N. Hwy least two n eighbors saddles, tack, house- 8-3, 1142 ints/234349691708 NW Knoxville. 97, Space ¹25. Picture comprehensive listing of are selling! 7:30 1:30 hold items framed art, Tools, household goods, TV, Stereo & Video Multi-Family Garage framing equipment, classified advertising... Saturday 6/22 Serving Caplral Oregon since lppa "P Sale! Fri-Sat, 6/21-22, ciothing, and much more! bikes,mIsc household. real estate to automotive, Wolf-Husky-Malamute , pups, only 1 girl left! 32" TOSHIBA TV, big c oncrete t ools, 1 6 ! 8am-5pm. Collectibles, merchandise to sporting 245 YARD SALE $300! 541-977-7019 but works beautifully! flatbed trailer, Cat skid Multi-Family Sale. Sun., Cedar Creek Townfurniture, housewares, Saturday, • goods. Bulletin Classifieds June 22 only, Gol«quipment steer, dump t rucks, 6 / 23, 10-4. Sports, of- homes 18th Annual electronics, tools, $50. 541-610-9318. appear every day in the Yorkie pups, AKC, big from 9 am to 4 pm Multi-Family Sale! job box, pick-up tool f i c e equip., TV, bike. clothes, movies 8 more. print or on line. eyes, short-nosed, health Golf cart, 2000 Yamaha 21175 Philly Ave. box and fuel tanks, 1 9 24 NW Hillpoint Dr. Fri-Sat, 6/21-22, 8-5, 1050 NE Butler Mkt Rd, guar. Potty training; ready gas, custom top, runs CHECK YOUR AD Call 541-385-5809 1050 NE Butler Mkt Rd, Condo ¹48, corner of 500 gallon diesel tank 290 www.bendbulletin.com 6/28. 541-777-7743 g ood. $ 1500 f i r m, Please check your ad corner of 8th/Butler Mkt. 8th/Butler Mkt. Rd. on the first day it runs Yorkies, beautiful pups, 4 541-280-3780 more! Sales Southwest Bend Community Sale - Sat., Plant sale/yard sale, Sales Redmond Area to make sure it is cormales/2 fem., ready now! 9-3, 2755 NE Boyd 6/21 &22, 8-3, GARAGE S A L E rect. Sometimes in@ $600 firm. 541-460-3884 A cres R d . Gr e a t 5 41-382-6379. S e e E agle C rest, S a t . MOVING SALE Fri-Sat Guns, Hunting s tructions over t h e s tuff, d o n' t mi s s . craigslist ad. 63 4 88 6/22, Sun. 6/23, 8 to phone are misunder& Fishing 9-3, furniture, appliSun. 8-2. 1808 SW (Corner of Boyd Acres Abbey Rd., Bend. stood and a n e r ror 3, yard tools, ladders, ance m is c 1630 NW 11th. Fri. 8' 5 5 97 1 F urniture & Appliances T urnberry Pl F u & Butler Mkt.) ousehold item s , 1000 rnds of .556 ammo, can occur in your ad. Providence Yard Sale, h small app l iances„ Wood Duck Dnve linens, Patio furniture, tools and gardening. Daycare going out of $650. 500 rnds of 45acp, If this happens to your Sat., 7-3. Providence A1 Washers&Dryers power tools, m uch clothes, lamps, etc. $300. 750 rnds of 9mm, ad, please contact us MOVING SALE! Fri-Sun b usiness sale a n d Sub Division. Many more! Cline Falls Hwy @ 8 a.m, 1117 E. $150 ea. Full warthe first day your ad $300. 541-647-8931 Patty 8 Arnie Swarens home owners will be other hous e hold to Coopers Hawk Dr., Creekside Ct., Sisters, ranty. Free Del. Also appears and we will 200 rnds of .44 mag, i tems. 64020 D e s - participating. R. to 8787 Merlin wanted, used W/D's happy to fix it as desk, chair, c offee ESTATE SALE $180. 340 rnds of 30-30, sbe c hutes M arket R d Sale! Fri-Sat., 6/21-22, 541-280-7355 oon a s w e ca n . table, grill, o utdoor $320. 541-647-8931 65920 Deer Ridge Road, Sisters Bend HUGE Annual Deadlines are: Weekfurniture, tools, and 8-4. 764 NE T ierra. Community Sale! Friday, June 21 • Saturday, June 22 much more! Beautiful leather couch BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS days O 11 a.m. for Roll top desk, office ESTATE SALE. Ni Lah Sha Village/ next day's edition and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. recliner, r emodeling Search the area's most furniture, fish t a nk, Everything goesDesert Meadows. Pre Move Yard Sale4 p.m. Friday for Sun$100. 541-420-0577 Crowd control admittance clothes and more. comprehensive listing of CASH ONLY. House Fri-Sat, 9-3, NE 6th St, day and Monday edSat/Sun 6/22-23, 9-3, numbers issued at 8:00 a.m. at gate pillars!!!!!! classified advertising... 4 sale too! Fri/Satbehind Walmart, COUCH: Rattan, SNOWBERRY VILLAGE tions. 541-385-5809 CRR, Chinook at (Take Hwy 20 west to Sisters -Turn right on Loreal estate to automotive, June 21-22. 7:30am follow signs. $160. In Bend. Annual Garage Sale. Badger. Weber BBQ, Thankyou! cust and follow to Camp Polk Road - extension to 4:00pm 1886 NE merchandise to sporting The Bulletin 541-706-9383 sales, lots of fun! Tools, patio, 1Vs, sport- studded tires, patio Classified o/Locust- go two miles to Deer Ridge Road goods. Bulletin Classifieds Curtis Dr., off Neff Rd. Many ing goods, pet supplies, 1188 NE 27th, furniture, treadmill, and fo/low to sa/e site 1/4 mile) 541-993-5821 Large oak dining table, appear every day in the tons of furn., lots more! Sat., 6/22,9am-4pm aquarium, books, print or on line. with 4 chairs, $100. 255 electronics, more. PARKING ONLY ON SIDE OF DEER RIDGE Estate sale Sat.-Sun., 9 Stonebrook BIG Com- Moving sale Fri only! 541-383-5060. Call 541-385-5809 Computers RD. - MUST WALK TO HOUSE a.m. Camping equip., munity Garage Sale, June 21 - 7am-1pm. Prineville Garage Sale, Entertainment cntr, oak www.bendbulletin.com household, furn., 8 EXCEPTIONS: Loadingor handicapped antiques 8 tools! 6/21 3411 SW Kalama Ave T HE B ULLETIN r e Saturday, June 22nd w/glass dr., 3 shelves, more! 514 NE Norton & 22, 7-4. Follow signs off of 35th quires computer adfrom 7-11 a.m. Misc $35. 541-598-7160. SewingCeptraiOregon kcte f903 This nice home is also for sale!!! from Butler Mkt. Rd. a ntiques, hous e vertisers with multiple Sat. Only, 8-4. 3036 Fantastic carving by J. Skip Armstrong called 400 rnds of 45acp, $240. ad schedules or those ** FREE ** SW Cascade Vista Dr. wares, guns, fishing Yard Sale/Benefit. "Stampede "; Leather loveseat; Leather chair & 650 rnds of 9mm $260. selling multiple sysHome decor, furniture, gear 8 tools. 2 9 58 Sat. 6/22, 8-3, ottoman; Circa 1865 Leather stagecoach trunk; Garage Sale Kit 541-647-8931 tems/ software, to disNW Century Drive. and much more. Williamson Hall Matching sofa, coffee & end tables-wood, glass & Place an ad in The Dttvtgrt 541-728-1568 500 rnds .40 S&W, $230. close the name of the (behind Jake's Diner) wrought iron; Wicker chair; Oak dining set with Bulletin for your gaVisit our HUGE THE CLIFFS OF 550 rnds of 38spl, $270. business or the term 2200 NE Hwy 20 (turn six chairs; Beautiful King Bed; bedside tables; rage sale and rea home decor "dealer" in their ads. 541-647-8931 at Chevron). Benefits REDMOND ANNUAL Just bought a new boat? Hutch display cabinet; Lots of cowboyadecor; ceive a Garage Sale Sell your old one in the YARD SALE. consignment store. Private party advertisBend Genealogical Sleigh Office desk with leather top; Antique radio Kit FREE! classifieds! Ask about our New items Need to get an ers are defined as Society. Lots of great Fri. 6/21, 8-4; Sat. 6/22, cabinet; Antique treadle sewing machine; 10 Super Seller rates! 8-2. Behind St. Thoarrive daily! those who sell one stuff! Info call plates of Royal Doulton china; Pots and pans; KIT I NCLUDES: ad in ASAP? 541-385-5809 mas Catholic Church 930 SE Textron, 541-317-9553 computer. glassware; side serving dishes; Great prints and • 4 Garage Sale Signs You can place it off 19th St. 8 Maple. Bend 541-318-1501 pictures; Lots of Christmas items and Christmas • $2.00 Off Coupon To NOTICE www.redeuxbend.com 288 Tools, Furniture, Fionline at: trees; Clothing, shoes and boots; Kirby deluxe Use Toward Your esta Ware, Antique Remember to remove vacuum; Treadmill; large dog c rate; older Next Ad Sales Southeast Bend www.bendbulletin.com Mustcal Instruments i dressers & Trunks. your Garage Sale signs GENERATE side-by-side refrigerator; pots and faux plants; • 10 Tips For "Garage SOME (nails, staples, etc.) Baskets; Decanters and stemware; ProForm Sale Success!" Garage Sale, Lots of EXCITEMENT in your 292 541-385-5809 after your Sale event treadmill; Fountain; Small Honda Generator; furniture, antiques, colneighborhood! Plan a is over! THANKS! Sales Other Areas Huge Gilt framed mirror; Shelf unit and booklectibles, mirrors, other garage sale and don't 750 rnds .223 RemingPICK UP YOUR From The BulletIn cases; Bar Stools; side chairs; lots of other items. misc. Fri-Sat, 6/21-22, forget to advertise in ton new factory ammo, GARAGE SALE KIT at and your local utility See the pictures on the web page!!!!! 8-2, 21020 Via Sandia. Appliances/furniture, incl classified! $500. 541-647-8931 1777 SW Chandler companies. W/D, bookcases, com541-385-5809. Handledby Deedy's Estate Sales Co. LLC Ave., Bend, OR 97702 B eautiful Yam a h a Garage Sale, Sat 9-5 puter armoire... Sat-Sun CASH!! 541-419-4742 days • 541-382-5950 eves Console piano, like 61000 Brosterhous Rd, 6/22-23, 9-4, 1 3 8759 rarvrcg Central Oregon ttnca 1903 Oak table, 43 ax62", (4) For Guns, Ammo & wvvvv.deeedysestatesales.com a leaves, seats 10-12, (The Pines Mobile Park). Rainbow Cir. G ilchist, 11 Reloading Supplies. new cond. $ 3 200. Lots of everything! 541-433-2579. Cash only www.bendbulletin.com $125. 541-419-1317 541-408-6900. 541-318-7279 8 up. 541-280-1537
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D2 THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 270
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
Employment Opportunities
Lost & Found Lost brown leather coin pouch, approx 3"x3" with cash. Please return to senior lady. 541-318-4746
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
Monday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 : 0 0 pm Fri. Tuesday.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . N oon Mon.
470
Thursday • • ••. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . N o o n Wed. Caregiver Ava i lable to hire to help you. 20+ yrs. (Live Fr i d ay . . . . . . •. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . N o o n Thurs. 308 in, hospice, short Farm Equipment and l on g t e r m). Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. & Machinery Send e m ai l to merebrockett@ 8 Ranch equip, call gmail.com o r c a ll Saturday • • • • 3:00 pm Fri. Farm for info and best offer 660-635-0297. pricing. 541-389-2636 Sunday. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri. S eeking someone t o
a
pull weed for elderly. South East Bend. Call 541-382-4464
Starting at 3 lines
Place a photoin your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.
"UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days..................................
(call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
*Must state prices in ad
WILL DO -in Bend: Fresh strawberries! Private (elderly) in-home Picked daily 7 days care, 20 yrs hospital exweek. Open Mon. perience in local hospital. Sat., 9-7, Sun. 10-6 Light housekeeping, Wholesale avail. Admeal prep, Drs. appts, vance orders. have dependable car w/ins. 9-5 Mon-Thurs. We pick or U-Pick K Family Farm Person must be somewhat independent. 33427 Seven Mile Available Lane SE, Albany, OR. W ages nego. July 1. 541-383-2851 541-286-2164. -
LEGAL NOTICE AGCO Finance LLC will offer the follow-
ing re p ossessed equipment for sale
The Bulletin
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
RegisteredNursePACU
CONCRETE
Domestic & In-Home Positions
Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon Tuess
Employment Opportunities
Looking for your next employee? Expenenced Place a Bulletin help BEN'nSURGERY Concrete Finisher/ wanted ad today and C • F. • N • T • ts • R Foundation reach over 60,000 kkrCar 'Ikmekr Camkn each week. Form Setter F ull-Time, 4-1 0 h r . readers Your classified ad needed, for Bend/ shifts, Mon. - Fri. will also appear on Redmond area. Critical Care or ASC bendbulletin.com Full-time employexperience prewhich currently ment. Musthave ferred, e n doscopy receives over 1.5 reliable transportaexperience a plus. million page views tion and clean Job offers excellent every month at dnving record. benefit pac k age. no extra cost. Interested persons Bulletin Classifieds Call 541-815-8075 Get Results! s hould e m ai l r e Call 385-5809 sume to: or place jobs@bendsurgery.com your ad on-line at Director of Nu r sing bendbulletin.com Sales Services/RN H armony H o use o f Furniture salesperBend. To apply send s on needed f u ll 486 resume to: B r enda t ime, r etail e x p . Purvis, Avamere Re- p referred. S o m e Independent Positions cruiting Manager at h eavy l ifting r e Choose your hours, BPurvis@avamere.com q uired. Apply i n income 8 rewardCall 971-224-2068 person at 2145 S. Choose Avon. Patty, Hwy 97, Redmond, 541-330-1836, Avon Oregon DO YOU NEED independent sales rep. Tues Sat., 10-6. A GREAT Ask for Stephen or EMPLOYEE fax resume RIGHT NOW? 541-923-6774. Call The Bulletin GreatAmerican before 11 a.m. and Furniture get an ad in to publish the next day! 541-385-5809. Find exactly what VIEW the you are looking for in the Classifieds at: www.bendbulletin.com CLASSIFIEDS
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Food Service - Bruno's Grocery/U-bake is taking apps for Cashier 8 Pizza Maker. Apply: 1709 NE 6th, Bend. No phone calls
Sales Loans & Mortgages We are looking for experienced Sales is located at: applicable sales tax. WARNING professional to Join Equipment: Massey Bulletin recom1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Central O r e gon's The Ferguson-1648L mends you use cauemployee and indeBend, Oregon 97702 l argest ne w ca r Tractor/Loader, S/N: Food Service tion when you propendent positions. d ealer Subaru o f JUE80916. Date of vide personal Ads fo r p o sitions Exp. cooks, breakfast Bend. Offe r i ng sale: Thursday-June skills a plus, competiinformation to compaPLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is that require a fee or 401k, profit sharing, 27, 2013. Time of tive wages - DOE. nies offering loans or upfront i nvestment needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or medical plan, split Sale: 11:00 A .M.. Drop resume at Side- s hifts, a n d credit, especially must be stated. With reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher pai d Place of sale: High lines Sports Bar, 1020 training. Please apthose asking for adany independentjob shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days Desert Ranch and NW W a l l Str e e t, vance loan fees or opportunity, please will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. at 2060 NE Hwy Home, 350 NE AdBend, by Friday, June ply companies from out of i nvestigate tho r 20, Bend. d ison, Bend, O R . 21st. state. If you have oughly. Use e xtra Equipment can be concerns or quesc aution when a p inspected at place Materials Manager tions, we suggest you Heating & Stoves • plying for jobs onof sale. The equipWeiser, ID consult your attorney line and never proment will be sold AS or call CONSUMER NOTICE TO Materia's Man a g er vide personal inforThank you, St. A nIS, without warranty. ADVERTISER n eeded for a fa s t chasing products or I HOTLINE, mation to any source thony, for finding my Since September 29, We reserve the right 1-877-877-9392. paced manufactured services from out of may not have — J.S. 1991, advertising for to bid. F o r further you lost items. h ousing plant. J o b researched and area. Sending used woodstoves has information please duties include but not l the BANK TURNED YOU Thank you St. Jude 8 deemed to be repuash, checks, o r contact Nick Bush been limited to modlimited to: managing l c Sacred H e ar t of table. Use extreme DOWN? Private party credit i n f o rmation (530) 638-6446 Cell, els which have been purchasing staff, maJesus. j.d. c aution when r e l may be subjected to will loan on real esc ertified by the O r - Reference Number t erial h andlers, i n s ponding t o A N Y tate equity. Credit no FRAUD. 1128952. egon Department of ventory control ,and For more informaonline employment problem, good equity to romote our ServiCe Environmental Qualt he ordering of a l l tion about an adverMisc. Items ad from out-of-state. is all you need. Call • ity (DEQ) and the fed- People Look for Information We suggest you call production m aterial. l tiser, you may call Oregon Land MortAbout Products and eral En v i ronmental Bachelor's D e g ree the Oregon State the State of Oregon gage 541-388-4200. IBuilding/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Protection Ag e n cy Services Every Day through Consumer H o tline preferred with 5 years l Attorney General's e•e experience. in materi~ (EPA) as having met The Bulletin Classifieds at 1-503-378-4320 Office Co n s umerI LOCAL MONEyrWe buy NOTICE: Oregon state Nelson smoke emission stanals management. For Equal OpportuProtection hotline at I secured trustdeeds & law r equires anyone 10-piece Martha Landscaping & dards. A cer t i fied 316 Respond if interested to nity Laws c ontact I 1-877-877-9392. note,some hard money who con t racts for Stewart outdoor w oodstove may b e pclarkOchampionhoMaintenance Irrigation Equipment Oregon Bureau of loans. Call Pat Kelley construction work to patio set,chocolate identified by its certifimes.com Serving Central Labor & I n d ustry, LThe Bulletin 541-382-3099 ext.13. be licensed with the brown with silver Oregon Since 2003 cation label, which is Civil Rights Division, Construction Contrac- Residental/Commercial flecks and teal with permanently attached 0.48 Acre irrigation 971-673- 0764. tors Board (CCB). An beige, (wasFather's Medical Assistant in to the stove. The Bulrights for sale in Delivery active license Day gift, hatedit, Bend. F T /40 h r/4 Sprinkler letin will no t k nowTumalo Irrigation The Bulletin means the contractor would rather be kw ng CentralOregon since 1903 day work wk at busy Activation/Repair ingly accept advertisDistrict, $1500. is bonded & insured. Back Flow Testing fishing!) $750 obo. internal me d icine 541-385-5809 i ng for the s ale of 206-673-7876 Verify the contractor's Also patio furniture practice. Recent MA $upplement Your Income uncertified CCB l i c ense at and Foreman Grill, experience with Maintenance woodstoves. www.hirealicensedbest offer. All in Add your web address 325 .Thatch & Aerate E MR req. Gr e a t contractor.com to your ad and readperfect condition. benefit pa c k age; • Spring Clean up Hay, Grain & Feed Now taking bids for an lndependent Contract or call 503-378-4621. •Weekly Mowing 541-504-8242 ers on The Bu//etin's salary DOE. Fax reFuel 8 Wood • Hauler to deliver bundles of newspapers from The Bulletin recom- & Edging 928-231-4183 web site, www.bendsume including ref1st quality grass hay, Irg Bend to LaGrande, Oregon (with some delivmends checking with • Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly bulletin.com, will be 3'x3'xs' bales, approx erences to ery drops en route) on a weekly basis. Must the CCB prior to con- Maintenance able to click through 541-389-2662 Attn: Buying Diamonds 750lbs ea. $240/ton, barn WHEN BUYING tracting with anyone. •Bark, Rock, Etc. have own vehicle with license and insurance Clinic Administrator, /Gotd for Cash stored. Patterson Ranch, automatically to your Some other t rades FIREWOOD... and the capability to haul up to 6000 lbs. website. Sisters, 541-549-3831 Saxon's Fine Jewelers also req u ire addiCandidates must be able to lift up to 50 lbs. Landsca in To avoid fraud, ~ 541-389-6655 tional licenses and •Landscape Selected candidate will be i ndependently Wanted: Irrigated farm Safety Assistant The Bulletin certifications. contracted. ground, under pivot irConstruction BUYING recommends payTo apply or for more info contact rigation, i n C e n tral •Water Feature Lionel/American Flyer ment for Firewood OREGON DEPARTMENT OF James Baisinger at Concrete Construction Installation/Maint. OR. 541-419-2713 trains, accessories. only upon delivery TRANSPORTATION jbaisinger@bendbulletin.com •Pavers 541-408-2191. and inspection. Want to b u y A l falfa, Safety Assistant (Safety Specialist 1) JJ 8 B Construction, •Renovations • A cord is 128 cu. ft. grass and grain hay, BUYING & SE L LING quality concrete work. •Irrigations Installation 4' x 4' x 8' standing, in C entral Do you like interacting with people and doing a All gold jewelry, silver • Receipts should Over 30 Years Exp. Ore. 541-419-2713 and gold coins, bars, Senior Discounts variety of work? Then you may be a good fit Sidewalks; RV pads; include name, rounds, wedding sets, Driveways; Color & Bonded & Insured for our Safety Assistant position in Bend. This Serving Central Oregon since 1903 phone, price and class rings, sterling sil541-815-4458 position assists the Safety Manager in delivStamp wor k a v a il. Looking for your kind of wood ver, coin collect, vinEm lo ment 0 o r t u nities LCB¹8759 Also Hardwood floorering, auditing, and administration of an occunext employee? purchased. p ational health and safety program. T h e ing a t aff o r dableNOTICE: Oregon Land- tage watches, dental • Firewood ads Place a Bulletin Bill Fl e ming, MUST include Safety Assistant also assists with designing prices. 541-279-3183 Pressroom Roll Tender scape Contractors Law gold. help wanted ad 541-382-9419. and creating instructional materials and evaluAre you interested in learning the entry level CCB¹190612 (ORS 671) requires all species 8 cost per today and ation instruments. The Safety Assistant acts basics of being a pressman? businesses that adcord to better serve COWGIRL CASH reach over as consultant in the area of occupational vertise t o pe r f ormWe buy Jewelry, Boots, I D e bris Removal our customers. Immediate opening for a full time entry-level 60,000 readers health and safety, and Workers' CompensaLandscape Construc- Vintage Dresses & position responsible for the loading of newseach week. tion loss prevention. The Salary range for this tion which includes: More. 924 Brooks St. JUNK BE GONE print rolls and the operation of the reel stands The Bulletin Your classified ad 5er r a central Qregons nce l9re position is $3177 $4628/mo. p lanting, deck s , 541-678-5162 on the press. The work schedule will consist I Haul Away FREE will also fences, arbors, www.getcowgirlcash.com of 4 days at 10 hours per day from 3:30 p.m. to For Salvage. Also appear on For more information and to apply online, water-features, and inapproximately 2:30 a.m. on a rotating schedCleanups & Cleanouts Ali Year Dependable bendbulletin.com please v i s i t www . odotjobs.com (TTY stallation, repair of ir- E ngine s t an d wit h Firewood: Seasoned ule that will allow for every other weekend beMel, 541-389-8107 503-986-3854 for the hearing impaired) for rigation systems to be wheels, for V-s, $50. which currently Lodgepole, Split, Del. ing 3 days off. $10.00 per hour DOE to start. licensed w i t h t he 541-410-1685 Announcement ¹ ODOT13-0514OC. The apreceives over The right person for the job must be able to Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 Handyman Landscape Contracplication deadline is June 27, 2013 at 11:59 1.5 million page Cash, Check move and lift 50 lbs. or more on a continuing tors Board. This 4-digit Wanted- paying cash for$335. PM. views every or Credit Card OK. basis. The position also requires reaching, I DO THAT! number is to be infor Hi-fi audio & stu541-420-3484. month at no standing, sitting, pushing, pulling, stooping, Home/Rental repairs cluded in all adver- dio equip. Mclntosh, ODOT is an AA/EEO Employer. extra cost. kneeling, walking and climbing stairs. LearnSmall jobs to remodels tisements which indi- J BL, Marantz, D y Bulletin ing and using proper safety practices will be a Honest, guaranteed cate the business has naco, Heathkit, Sanpnmary responsibility. Ciassifieds work. CCB¹151573 a bond,insurance and sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Gardening Supplies Nurse Manager: For more information or to submit a resume, Get Results! & Equipment • Dennis 541-317-9768 workers c ompensa- Call 541-261-1808 Pre-Oplpost-Op/Call Room please contact: Al Nelson, Pressroom ManCail 541-385-5809 tion for their employERIC REEVE HANDY ager, anelson@bendbulletin.com.For conor place your ad ees. For your protec- WHEN YOU SEE THIS BENbSURGERY SERVICES. Home & BarkTurfSoil.com sideration all resumes/applications must be reon-line at tion call 503-378-5909 C • e • N • T • l t • R OO ceived prior to June 26, 2013. Commercial Repairs, or use our website: ~ bendbulietin.com hkrc~ I kcnekrrarrkrr Carpentry-Painting, www.lcb.state.or.us to PROMPT D E LIVERY M Ore P i X a t B e n d b u l e t i l , CO m Job Summary: We are looking for a strong Pressure-washing, check license status Advertising Account Executive 54X-389-9663 On a classified ad leader to fill the Nurse Manager role for the 341 Honey Do's. On-time before contracting with We are looking for a Professional and Driven go to Pre-op / Post-Op / Call Room. This position promise. Senior the business. Persons Horses & Equipment Sales and Marketing person to help our cusrequires an individual capable of providing diDiscount. Work guar- doing lan d scapewww.bendbulletin.com tomers grow their businesses with an expandFor newspaper to view additional rect oversight of Pre-Op, Post-Op and the call anteed. 541-389-3361 maintenance do n ot ing list of broad-reach and targeted products. Mini ponies, 1 P i nto delivery, call the photos of the item. room while managing 20-25 FTE's. The posior 541-771-4463 r equire an L C B Stud; $200. 1 P into Circulation Dept. at This full time position requires a background in tion reports directly to the Clinical Director. Bonded & Insured cense. Mare; $200. 1 Dapple 541-385-5800 consultative sales, territory management and Duties will include, but not be limited to, perCCB¹t 81595 $200. Mare; To place an ad, call aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of SPRING CLEAN-UP! formance evaluations and performance manMedical Equipment 541-923-3530. 541-385-5809 media sales experience is preferable, but we Aeration/Dethatching agement as well as new staff orientation. This Landscaping/Yard Care Weekly/one-time service or email will train the right candidate. The position in358 position is a member of multiple committees. Power l i f t rec l iner, classifiedobendbulletin.com avail. Bonded, insured. cludes a competitive compensation package works perfect, light Farmers Column Free Estimates! including benefits, and rewards an aggressive, Qualifications: Must be able to demonstrate beige color. $350. The Bulletin COLLINS Lawn Maint. Call 541-504-6010. customer focused salesperson with unlimited servra centraloregon rnce e03 strong leadership and communication skills. 10X20 STORAGE Ca/l 541-480-9714 earning potential. Zodt'I,'4 Quadrdy Must be a licensed RN in the state of Oregon, BUILDINGS Email your resume, cover letter and salary or able to obtain licensure upon hire. 3-5 years ALLEN REINSCH for protecting hay, Zaurrr grtr e /',, history to: Jay Brandt, Advertising Director of Peri-Operative experience, preferably in an Yard maintenance & I & red , 8" x 4", $ 75. Tools firewood, livestock More Than Service jbrandt@bendbulletin.com clean-up, thatching, 541-383-4231. ASC setting. The ideal candidate will have etc. $1496 Installed. Peace Of Mind management experience in an ASC setting. plugging & much more! 5000 watt generator, 541-617-1133. SUPER TOP SOIL Web Developer Call 541-536-1 294 120/240 Generac, CCB ¹173684. www.hershe soilandbark.com Are you a technical star who can a/so comSpring Clean Up Position details: This is a full time exempt po10hp Tecumseh, $375. kfjbuilders@ykwc.net Screened, soil & comMaverick Landscaping •Leaves municate effectively with non-technical exsition; Monday through Friday. Competitive Call 541-416-0652 or post mi x ed , no M owing, weedeating, yd •Cones ecutives and emp/oyees? I/I/ould you like to 541-233-7777 salary, benefit package, retirement and bonus detail., chain saw work, rocks/clods. High huwork hard, play hardin beautiful Bend, OR, •Needles plan. bobcat excv., etc! LCB B&D elect. 3-in-1 blow- mus level, exc. for CHECK YOUR AD •Debris Hauling the recreation capital of the state? ¹8671 541-923-4324 Please check your ad flower beds, lawns, Then we'd like to talk toyou! er, like new still in box gardens, Email resume to jobs@bendsurgery.com on the first day it runs straight Weed Free Bark Our busy media company publishes numerous $65. 541-241-0237 Villanueva Lawn Care. to make sure it is cors creened to p s o i l. & Flower Beds web and mobile sites and is seeking an expeMaintenance,clean-up, rect. Sometimes inBark. Clean fill. Derienced developer who is a lso a f o rward thatching + more! liver/you haul. s tructions over t h e Accounting Free estimates. thinker, creative problem solver, excellent Lawn Renovation • Building Materials • phone are misunder541-548-3949. A local company is seeking an individual 541-981-8386 communicator, and s elf-motivated profesAeration - Dethatching stood and a n e r ror to join our fast-paced office staff. The ideal sional. We are redesigning all of our websites Overseed Assorted Steel Bldgs can occur in your ad. candidate will be extremely analytical and within the next couple of years and want you in Compost Call a Pro Up to 50% off cost to If this happens to your Lost & Found • be able to focus on details. This position is on the ground floor. Fluency with PHP, Top Dressing put up Erection info ad, please contact us Whether you need a in the accounting field, requiring accuracy HTML5, CSS3, jQuery and JavaScript is a avail. Source¹ 18X Found: the first day your ad Ca n nondale fence fixed, hedges while following strict written procedures must. Experience integrating third-party soluLandscape 800-964-8335 appears and we will Mountain b ik e on tions and social media applications required. without fail. trimmed or a house Maintenance be happy to fix it as 5/25. Call to identify REDMOND Habitat Desired experience includes: XML/JSON, Full or Partial Service s oon a s w e ca n . built, you'll find 541-728-4499 RESTORE MySQL, Joomla,Java, responsive web design, 10-key experience helpful. Computer lit•Mowing ~Edging Deadlines are: Weekprofessional help in Building Supply Resale Found set of 5 keys on days @ 11 a.m. for Rails, WordPress. Top-notch skills with user eracy is required. Ability and willingness to • Pruning ~Weeding interface and graphic design an added plus. Quality at Sprinkler Adjustments The Bulletin's "Call a cross train into other tasks also a plus. a lanyard on Franklin next day's edition. and LOW PRICES Background in the media industry desired but This full time position offers benefits inA ve, Bend; call t o 4 p.m. Friday for SunService Professional" not required. This is a full-time position with 1242 S. Hwy 97 Fertilizer included cluding health, vacation, and a 401-k plan. identify, 541-788-1309 day and Monday edDirectory 541-548-1406 benefits. If you've got what it takes, e-mail a with monthly program tions. 541-385-5809 Compensation between $10-$11 per hour cover letter, resume, and portfolio/work sample Open to the public. Found small coin purse 541-385-5809 Thank you! based upon experience with a monthly inlinks a n d/or re p ository ( GitHub) t o with contents, along Hwy The Bulletin Classified Weekly, monthly centive program. This is a Monday through REMEMBER: If you resume@wescompapers.com 97. Call t o id e ntify: or one time service. Painting/Wall Covering Friday, 8-5 position. have lost an animal, 541-593-6021 don't forget to check These postings are also on the web farm EXPERIENCED WESTERN PAINTING The Humane Society Found: White domestic Wanted: Irrigated For more information, please send your at www.bendbulletin.com under pivot irCommercial CO. Richard Hayman, in Bend 541-382-3537 rabbit w/ black freck- ground, resume and references to: rigation, i n C e n tral Drop off your resume in person at 1777 SW 8 Residential a semi-retired paintRedmond, les, found in yard on OR. 541-419-2713 Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Or mail to PO Box Box 20353011A c/o The Bulletin, ing contractor of 45 541-923-0882 6/1 5, 1043 SE V al6020, Bend,OR 97708; No phone inquiries PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 years. S m a l l J obs Prineville, leywood Pl, off 15th Want to b u y A l falfa, please. Applications are available at the front Senior Discounts Welcome. Interior & 541-447-7178; and Bronswood. Call grass and grain hay, desk.HPre-employment drug testing required. EOE with drug screen required. 541-390-1466 Exterior. c c b ¹51 84. OR Craft Cats, Kelly at 541-647-1247 standing, in C entral EOE/Drug Free Workplace Same Day Response 541-388-6910 541-389-8420. to claim. Ore. 541-419-2713 to the highest bidder for cash, plus
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IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Health Events, E2
Money, E2 Fitness, E3 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
Golfers can
MEDICINE
HowtheVenaSeal Sapheon Closuresystemworks
ease backpaln with stretches By Anne Aurand The Bulletin
At this point in the season, a lot of golfers are beginning to complain about low-back
pain.
Varicose vein
(Tendonitis and other overuse injuries in the elbows, shoulders and wrists typically show up later in the season.)
Low-back pain in golfers is
Varicose veinsareimpaired veins in the legs due to valves not closing properly. As aresult, blood that should flow to the heart flows
FI T NE55
often related to a lack of flexibility in the hip sockets and thoracic (midback) spine, said Chris Cooper, a physical therapist at Therapeutic Associates at the Athletic Club of Bend and Titleist Performance Institute-certified golf fitness instructor. The lumbar spine (lower back) is not built for much rotation, Cooper said. Rather, it exists for stability. SeeStretches/E3
Normal vein
backward, pooling in the legs, causing swelling andenlargedveinsknownasvaricoseveins.
• Procedure using medical adhesive to treat varicose veinsunder trial at Bendclinic By Markian HawrylukeThe Bulletin
ive years ago, Dr. Rodney Raabe was in the middle of a
Get dackintotheswingofthings
delicate brain operation, closing off a congenital malforma-
TheVenaSealSapheon ClosureSystem usesanadvanced medicaladhesiveto close the damagedvein section.
tion in the brain with a type of glue, when he had a brainstorm of his own: Could he use a similar glue in his practice sealing off damaged blood vessels in the legs that cause varicose veins'?
seconds.
"If we can do this in the brain, why can't we close off an abnormal blood vessel in the leg?" Raabe, an interventional radiologist from Spokane, Wash., recalls thinking. "It was that kind of 'aha' moment." That insight led to the VenaSeal veinclosing adhesive that device manufacturer Sapheon is now testing in a Phase III clinical trial in 12 sites across the U.S., including at the Inovia Vein Specialty Center in Bend (see "Clinical trial"). And it's just one more example in a growing list of medical problems that are being solved not with scalpel and stitches, but with glue.
STANDINGGLUTEALSTRETCH
Giue's stick
Lift right knee toward chest
Medical-grade adhesives, mainly a compound called cyanoacrylate,have been in used by doctors for more than 50 years. "It's almost like Super Glue," said Dr. Brandon Hawkins, a p odiatrist from Bakersfield, Calif., and a board member of the American Association of Wound Care. "It's the same material, only they have some substrates in the glue so it doesn't burn as much as Super Glue does. According to A l ina Maleski Smith, an associate analyst with t h e m edical product research firm MD Buyline, cyanoacrylate dates back to 1942, when Dr. Harry Coover, of Kodak Laboratories, was trying to develop a clear plastic for gun sights. He inadvertently discovered a strong, fast-acting adhesive that
s
THORACIC(MIDDLE)AND LUMBAR (LOWER)SPINE ROTATION STRETCHES Lie on your back with arms spread out to the side. Keep knees and feet together and gently rotate
them left to right. Hold one to two seconds on each side, and repeat rotations five to10 times. Hold the final repetition on each side for 20 to 30
and grab it.
4
Pull toward your body until the stretch is felt in the right glut. Hold for one to two
seconds,then step forward and repeat on the left side. Walk forward,
alternating legs for five to10
times on each leg. HIP FLEXORROTATION STRETCH Drop the left knee to the
~~II'
l
A catheter is insertedthrough the skin and into
the damagedvein, requiring only local anesthesia. The catheter is then advanced to the juncture
where thegreatsaphenousveinbranchesoff from the femoral artery in the upper leg.
Using ultrasound, thecatheter is positioned just below that juncture. The vein is compressed with the ultrasound device, and the
first injection of adhesive is put into place.
The catheter ispulledback1 cm and asecond injection is made. The catheter is then pulled
back another 3 cm,andgentle compression is Roh Kerr/The Bulletin
applied by the doctor's free hand.
Dr. Andrew Jones holds a Venaseal kit in one of the clinic patient rooms at The Center in Bend. A different, older technology device sits on a stand behind him.
eventually was sold in th e consumer market as Super Glue or Krazy Glue. In 1959,Coover suggested the glue could be used as a surgical adhesive, and it was widely used during the Vietnam War to seal battle wounds. See Glue/E6
Courtesy Sapheon
This continuesalongthe length of the vein until the damaged portion is sealed. The
catheter is then removed, requiring only a bandage to seal the opening.
ground and
Clinical trial
place the right foot out in front. Tilt the pelvisas
The Venaseal clinical trial is open to patients between the ages of 21 and 70, experiencing pain, swelling or other noncosmetic symptoms, and who have never been treated for varicose veins. All treatment costs will be covered by the clinical trial, including a second treatment procedure if needed
after three months. Patients interested in participating in the trial should contact Inovia VeinSpecialty Center at 541-385-1564.
though youare tucking your tail
glide your hips forward
until you feel a stretch in the front of the left
hip. Exhale and
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
rotate the upper body toward the right. Inhale and rotate back to neutral. Do the same on the opposite side. Do five to10 flowing repetitions on
each side to warm upbefore golfing, or to improve hip mobility. Hold 20 to 30 seconds, two to three
times a day athome.
STANDINGTHORACIC SPINE ROTATIONSTRETCH Place your right hand behind
your headand yourlefthand on the inside of your left knee. Rotate your trunk to the right while
holding your lower body steady. Do the opposite rotation by switching hand placement. Hold three to
five seconds and repeat five to10times on
each side. Photos by Anne Aurand I The Bulletin
A taste for food journaling • A little tech couldmakeabig differenceinweight loss By Rene Lynch
how much weight someone is going to Los Angeles Times lose is how well they adhere to the selfYou already know you should keep a m o nitoring protocol." food journal if you want to lose weight, Th at ' s good news for people who aren't thrilled about dieting or going right? So why don't you do it? to the gym. Just carefully logging your One weight-loss expert think s he f o o d intake is enough to build up the knows the answer. kind of awareness that will help you "It's just not sexy enough," bypass those M&Ms in the ofsaid J. Graham Thomas, a re- NUTRITION fi cec»dyja' "People are shocked by search professor at the Brown Alpert Medical School who what has a lot of c alories, helps oversee the National W eight w h a t has a lot of fat and carbohyControl Registry, the nation's longest- d r ates," Thomas said. "They just have running weight-loss research study."It n o i d ea. They think they're dieting. can feel like homework." Once they have that awareness, it's The registry studies thousands of e a sier to say no." Americans wh o h a v e m a i ntained A lso g ood news: the seemingly endweight loss for at least one year and l e ss array of free online food journals looks for common denominators that a n d smartphone apps that keep track can help the public. of your favoritefoods and recipes. And that's where food journ aling M a n y a pps can instantly upload a comes in. product's nutritional information by "It's extremely effective," Th omas s c anning its barcode. said. "One of the best ways to predict SeeJournal /E5
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E2 THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
HEALTH
MONEY
EVENTS SLEEP WELLWORKSHOP: Learn sleep and relaxation techniques to quietyour mind; bring pads and pillows to lie on; donation accepted, registration required; noon-1:30 p.m. Wednesday; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133.
os-savin c an escomin By Lauran Neergaard The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — M e d icare begins a major change next month that could save l. • older diabetics money and I. time when they buy crucial supplies to test their blood sugar — but it also may cause some confusion as patients figure out the new system. On July I, Medicare opens a national mail-order program that will dramatically drop the prices the government pays for those products but patients will have to use designated suppliers. The goal is to save taxpayers money but seniors should see their co-pays drop, too. Don't care about the convenience of mail delivery? Just over half of the 4.2 million diabetics with traditional Medicare coverage used mail-order The Assooiated Press file photo last year, but starting July I Medicare will open a national mail-order program July1 for diabetes testing supplies that will cost beneficiaries also can get the less for taxpayers and seniors in the program. new, lowerprice atdrugstores enrolled i n t he Me d i care program. pricing nationally by 2016. Here are some questions and well as generics — and you're "Those who like the faceThe diabetes initiative is the answers about the program: not required to change your t o-face interaction with t h e first to go nationwide — and existing monitor. But you may pharmacist have that choice," Blum said it should put an end • What's the big change'? need to shop around or get a s tressed J o nathan B l u m , to unscrupulous practices such • Q . Un t i l n o w , h u n - doctor's note that specifies you Medicare deputy administra- as shipping cartons of supplies M . d r ed s o f mai l - need a specific type, so plan tor. "We want to preserve both to diabetics who haven't run order companies could bill ahead. options." out yet and billing Medicare Medicare for the test strips, It's the biggest expansion for the cost. W hat's th e pr ice lancets and other supplies that yet of a larger, and somewhat The c oncern: P otentially diabeticsuse to measure and • difference? controversial, initiative that's hundreds of t h o usands of track their blood sugar. Under . Medicare has paid about predicted t o s a v e t a x pay- older patients may have to the new n ational program, . $78for100teststripsand ers nearly $26 billion over switch mail-order suppliers. Medicare patientscan order lancets, just over a month's the next decade by cracking The American Diabetes Asso- from only 18 mail-order com- supply for someone who tests down on waste and fraud in ciation worries it won't get the panies that won government his or her blood sugar three the medical equipment indus- word before its supplies run contracts and will be subject to times a day. Remarkably, that try. Diabetics aren't the only short — or might be pressured more oversight. (The change rate was higher than other Medicare patients affected. to switch to a cheaper brand of doesn't apply to Medicare Ad- insurers typically pay. StartDepending on where they live, blood-sugar monitor and the vantage patients.) ing July I, that reimbursement patients who rent home-oxy- matching supplies even though Check the list at www.medi- will drop to about $22. The pagen gear and hospital beds, that's against the rules. care.gov/supplier or by c all- tient co-pay is 20 percent, so "We're sort of torn, truthor who need power wheeling I-800-MEDICARE. Some it will drop from about $15 to chairs, walkers and certain fully," said Krista Maier, the companies operate under mul- less than $5. other equipment also could association's associate direc- tiple names. see changes in their suppliers tor of public policy. "It will • What if I w ant to buy and lower prices as a pilot test save the Medicare program What if the new com• at my l o cal drugstore of this so-called competitive money, which is good for its . panies don't sell m y instead'? bidding p r ogram e x p ands sustainability. The challenge brand? Ask if it accepts "Medifrom nine metro areas to a to- is ensuring that beneficiaries' . Medicare's list s h ows • care assignment," meantal of 100 on July 1. Medicare testing of their blood glucose . different suppliers sell ing it has to honor the July is supposed to apply the lower isn't disrupted." a mix of top-selling brands as 1 prices. Some large chains
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are reassuring customers that they're participating. But pharmacies that aren't enrolled in Medicare are allowed to charge patients more.
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information tohealthevents© bendbulletin.com or click on "Submitan Event" at
Howdidtheprogram Q . .work in the nine test
www.bendbulletin.com.
cities?
Allow at least10 days before the desired date of
. Medicare says pa. tients had plenty of
publication. Ongoing class
supplies. But surprisingly
listings must be updated monthly and will appear at
mail-order claims dropped the first year. The Department of Health and Human Services'inspector general discoveredthat some suppliers werebilling Medicare for drugstore-soldsupplies — which at the time were reimbursed at a higher rate — even though they actu-
www.bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. People:Email info about local people involved in health
issues to healthevents© bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.
ally shipped cheaper mailorder supplies. Congress later closed that loophole, mandating the same reimbursement for drugstores and m ail-order s t arting July 1.
Find Your Dream Home In
What's happening Q . .with other medical
Real
Estate
equipment? . That part of the ini. tiative has hit some b umps. M e d icare h a d awarded contracts to nearly 800 suppliers of those i tems but i t t u r ned o ut that some didn't have certain licenses required by state authorities. Medicare says it has voided 30 of 96 supplier contracts in Tennessee, but that enough remain to do the job. It is investigating the situation in Maryland. The home supply industry's American A ssociation for Homecare, which opposes Medicare's competitive bidding program, says the licensing issue is a symptom of broader problems. Members of Congress last week asked Medicare to delay the program's expansion, but that's not expected to happen.
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Health law raisesquestions about mlorectal screening Special to The Washington Post
No one looks forward to screening tests for colon and rectalcancers. But under the Affordable Care Act, patients are atleast supposed to save o n out-of-pocket costs f o r them. Coverage is not always clear; however, and despitethe federal government's clarifications, consumers still have questions. Under the law, most health plans are required to cover a range of preventive health services without any cost-sharing by patients if the services are recommended by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, an independent group of med-
ical experts. (The only exception is for health plans with grandfathered status.) The task force recommends colorectalcancer screening for most adults starting at age 50. Thesetests include colonoscopy, sigmoidoscopy and fecal occult blood testing (which examines the stool for traces of blood). A colonoscopy is the most thorough of t h e s c reening tests and is favored by many c linicians. About h a l f t h e time, polyps are discovered and removed during the test to determine whether they are cancerous. This removal can create billing problems, says KatieKeith,a research professor at Georgetown University who co-authored a report on screening colonoscopy coverage under the Affordable Care Act. According t o t h e s t u dy, some insurers judged that
dividual health plans, polyp removal during a screening colonoscopy was an integral part of the screening test and should be covered without patient cost-sharing. However, the guidance doesn't apply to Medicare beneficiaries. Other s c reening c o v erage questions remain murky. What happens, for example, if someone gets a positive result on a fecal occult blood test? In that case, the task force says a colonoscopy isrequired to examine the colon. But insurers vary inwhether they consider such a followup colonoscopy a separate diagnostic test, according to the report by Keith and others, including the Kaiser Family Foundation. "In many c o m munities, stool testing may be common because people can't get an
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People who are at higher risk for colon cancer because of family history or their own history of p olyps also face a gray area in cost-sharing. These patients are often advised to get a c o lonoscopy m ore often than every 1 0 years, the recommended fre-
a colonoscopy with polyp removal was a t h e rapeutic rather than a screening procedure, and subsequently billed patients for some or all of the test's cost, which can reach $2,000 or more. In February, the O bama a dministration s t ated t h a t for people in group and in-
Presented by:
colonoscopy."
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Sunnysfde Sports
appointment for a c o lonoscopy for months," said Robert Smith, senior director of cancer screening at the American Cancer Society, another co-author of th e r eport. "If they have a positive stool test, they face the uncertainty of what it would cost to get the
risk.In February, the federal g overnment c l a r ified t h a t high-risk patients could qualify for more frequent screening without cost-sharing.
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By Michelle Andrews
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CAMP COURAGE Campers, Children's Grief Support
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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013 E3
To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809
FITNESS ROAD TO FITNESS
Tone the back ofyourarmswith the lyingtriceps extension By Marjie Gilliam
The lying tricepsextension is anexercise thatstrengthens and tones the back
Hold dumbbells with palms facing one another and arms straight.
Downwardphase: Slowly begin
of the upperarm. Responsible for extension of theelbowjoint, the triceps muscle
bending the elbows, lowering the dumbbells until they lightly touch the
allows the arms to straighten. Most everydayactivities do not use the triceps to
should be pointing toward the ceiling.
a significant degree,making it important to add exercises to work this area.
TECHNIQUE Starting position: Lie face up with your knees bent and feet on the floor.
shoulders. In this position, the elbows Upward phase:Slowly begin pressing the dumbbells back upuntil your arms are straight. You should feel the
back of the arm tightening (contractingi. Although your arms should be straight, avoid a hyperextension, or full
lockout, of the elbow joint. For maximum benefit, maintain strict form. With each repetition, the elbows should be kept shoulder-width
apart, and the upper armsshould not move. Speedofmovementshouldbe slow and controlled. Beginners:Start with one to two
sets of eight to12 repetitions, performed every other day.Add sets, reps or weight as you becomestronger. — Ntajrie Giiiiamisa personaltrainer and fitness consultant.
O Sure oinerSan i • Improve your body alignmentby adding somehabits and losing others
aS
New York Times News Service
Numbers tbat can
indicate condition By Marjie Gilliam Cox Newspapers
r/
/
• Although I consider • m yself h e a lthy, I took your advice and got a checkup beforestarting
my new exercise program. By Danielle Braff Chicago Tribune
We've been told to stand up straight as long as we've been able to stand, but sometimes Iup~ ~ ~/ g it's harder than it seems. cvr We know why we should do v c' r it: Good posture looks good, feels good and makes us look slimmer. On the flip side, studies have linked poor posture with lower self-esteem, depression and back pain. But, sometimes, p osture pointersare confusing. 'W Remember when we were all supposed to use Pilates Jerry Tomaselli /Chicago Tribune balls instead of office chairs? When sitting at a computer your monitor should be one to two feet away from your face, and your Well, claims that doing so im- eyes should be level with the top of the monitor, said Janice Novak, author of "Posture, Get lt Straight! proved posture were recently Look TenYears Younger, Ten Pounds Thinner and FeelBetterThan Ever." disputedby researchers atthe University of Waterloo in Ontario. They found that it didn't For proper your sciatic nerve and may help — or hurt — posture. posture put you in a slouched position But there are still s o me while driving without supporting your back. things you can do to help your move your A better alternative would be stance, as well as some things seat close to rest with both knees bent. you can avoid to keep it from enough to the getting worse. pedals so that •Softcouches your knees Y ou should not b e a b l e Helps: are bent. A to sink into a couch, Wilm• Reposition your monitor 90-degree arth said. "It needs to be firm Your monitor should be one angle would enough to give you support." to two feet away from your be too bent, If your couch doesn't support face, and your eyes should be and anything your lower back, you can use level with the top of the monimore than extra pillows to assist it. tor, said Janice Novak, author 130 degrees of "Posture, Get It Straight! would be too • Obliviousness Look Ten Years Younger, Ten straight. Notice where your head is at Pounds Thinner and Feel BetJohn Dziekan this very moment. Chicago Tribune "Is it completely focused on ter Than Ever." This will prevent your head from leaning the page or the screen? What's forward and away from your going on with your shoulders shoulders. right now? Any tension there'? Is your chin jutting forward?" Hurts: • Lumbar rolls is actually resting against it. said Lindsay Newitter, spokesPlace a lumbar roll behind This position places your head • Highheels woman for the Alexander the small of your back when directly over your spine and Heels higher than one inch T echnique and c ertified i n you're sitting in a chair, ac- allows your neck and upper increase your sway backward, teachingthe Alexander Techcording to Dr. Richard Guyer, back muscles to relax while which can lead to lower back nique, an educational method orthopedic surgeon and co- you drive, Novak said. Finally, discomfort, Novak said. Your studied by musicians, actors founder of th e Texas Back when holding th e s teering foot slides to the front of the and athletes aimed at improvInstitute. wheel, your elbows should be shoe, which puts too much ing posture that's been in prac"It helps to m aintain the bent at 120 degrees. p ressure on the ball of t h e tice for more than 100 years. "There's a learning process normal curvature in the back foot and your toes. High heels when sitting," he said. "There • Strengthen your core also shortenthe muscles and involved in unlearning habits, is a tendency for the lower muscles through exercise tendons on the back of your but a great first step is to start curve to flatten, which can Do three sets of basic and ankle, and stretch and weaken developing an awareness of c ause fatiguing w i t h p r o - side planks daily, holding each the muscles on the front of yourself in the midst of activlonged sitting." pose for 30 seconds, said Dr. your ankle, which can lead to ity," she said. Levi Harrison,orthopedic sur- shin splints. Heels on shoes • Reposition yourself in your geon in Los Angeles and au- also get in the way of the natcar while driving thor of "The Art of Fitness: A ural stride, which is to place M ove y ou r s e a t cl o s e Journeyto Self Enhancement." your heel down first, then roll enough to the pedals so that Start in a pushup position with through the ball of your foot. your knees are bent. A 90-de- your arms directly under your If you must wear heels, don't gree angle would be too bent, shoulders (you may bend your wear them for longer than four and anything more than 130 a rms if n ecessary) for t h e hours at a time. degrees would be too straight. center plank. Keep your head (Make sure your body is at aligned with your neck. After • Ottomans least 13 inches away from the 30 seconds, turn to one side by When you're resting your steering wheel in case your air lifting your left arm and stack- legs in a straight extension, bag deploys.) Your lower back ing your body over your right you're placing stress on your should be against the back of leg, keeping your right arm lower back, said Mary Ann the seat. Sit in an upright or extended on the ground. You Wilmarth, chief of p hysical slightly reclining position. Ad- may bend your right arm if therapy at Harvard Univerjustthe headrest so your head necessary. Then switch sides. sity. Sitting this way can stress i
Stretches Continued from E1 The hip sockets and midback are the areas that should be able to bend, twist and move. But if they are tight, a golfer might try to get some rotation out of the low back, and that's when pain and injuries start. "The injury is usually not the fault of the structure that is breaking down, but rather an adjacent segment," Cooper sa>d. Cooper saidsome stretches
can help.
However, he noted, doing held static, or still, for a longer these suggested stretches at period of time. Static stretchhome calls for a different ining can improve general flextention than doing them on the ibility and muscle length. But course. this kind of stretching should If you're stretching right be done after a round, or at before the golf swing on the home. c ourse, i n c orporate y o u r Recent evidence has shown breath with your stretch in a that static stretching prior to a gentle, flowing motion. This dynamic activity can actually betterprepares the body for hinderperformanceratherthan a ctivity b y m i m i cking t h e enhance it, according to Coopositions and movements in- per. A person might feel slower volved with the game. (No or outof sync if he or she does bouncing or aggressive move- a lot of static stretches before a ments, Cooper said.) motion like the golf swing. To expand your range of — Reporter: 541-383-0304, motion, the stretches should be aaurand@bendbulletin.com
I was surprised to hear that my BMI was higher than it should be, and that this might influence my health in other ways. I'm interested in knowing more. Can
you help?
A
• Body m a ss i n d e x, • developed by the ¹ tional Institute of Health, estimates percentage of body fat using height and weight. A BMI of 25 or higher is thought to increase risk of Type 2 diabetes, hypertension and cardiovascular disease. If your BMI is 25 or higher, take a look at lifestyle habits such as exercise and diet. Other important numbers to keep an eye on: • Blood pressure:This is a measure ofthe pressure of the blood against the walls of the arteries. An optimal blood pressure reading for adults is below 120 over 80, while a reading of 140 over 90 or greater is considered
elevated (high). • Cholesterol levels: Cholesterol is a fatty substance that builds in arteries, leading to heart disease. Your d octor ca n c h eck y o u r HDL, LDL and triglycerides, and total cholesterol levels. In general, total cholesterol numbers should
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be below 200, with 240 considered high cholesterol, and anything b etween 2 00-239 considered borderline. Triglycerides above 200 are considered high and may need treatment. An LDL above 130159 is considered borderline high, 160-189 high, and 190 and above is considered very high. • Waist circumference: One if the very best ways to keep track of body fat levels is by simply taking your waistline measurement on a regular basis. A waist size of 40 inches or more for m en and 35 inches or more for women is considered high risk. • Weight: I advise using the
scale as only a general guideline, because it does not tell you anything about your actual health or body fat percentage. Fluid levels can also cause body weight to fluctuate; for some this can be as many as 3 to 5 pounds in a day. That said, if you do decide to weigh, one method often used for calculating what is known as ideal body weight: Men: Start with 106 pounds for 5 feet of height and add 6 pounds for every inch above this. W omen: Start w i t h 1 0 0 pounds for 5 feet of height, plus 5 pounds for each additional inch.
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Now available, early morning lab hours and appointments until 7pm. With our new expanded AccessClinic hours we can provide the care you need at a time that better fits your schedule. Call us at 541 382 6447 to learn more.
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+c-BendUrolo
5413826447 2090NEWyattCourt Suite101 Bend Oregon 97701 be n durology.com
E4 THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809
ASK A CENTRAL OREGON HEALTH PROFESSIONAL
Ask one of our Health Professionals on the following categories Dentistry • Urology • Eye Care Plastic Surgery • General and Specialty Surgery • Dermatology, Holistic Medicine Physical Therapy • Pain Management Chiropractics • Health & Beauty Send your questions to Ask A Health Professional The Bulletin By fax: 541-385-5802 Email: kclark@bendbulletin.com Mail:P.O. Box 6020, Bend, Oregon 97708
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QUESTIDN: I'm 27 years old, I weigh 155 lbs. and I'm 5 ft. even. I have tried diets and some have worked. However, when I lose weight I usually gain a little bit more than what I lost. I have love handles at the front and back and want to know if Adam Angeles, liposuction or a tummy tuck be the best M.D. option? ANswER: A comprehensiveplan needs to be created to completely address your problem. The procedures you mentioned are helpful, while liposuction removes excess fat an abdominoplasty (tummy tuck) removes both fat and loose skin. A consultation with a nutritionist and physical trainer would be a good start. If those interventions are not effective, then either liposuction or an abdominoplasty would be a good option. A consultation with a board certified plastic surgeon would help determine which would be best for you.
My question is:
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QUFsrloN:
I used to be able to sleep through the night, but lately I've been getting up at least 4 times per night to use the bathroom. Help! ANswER: Getting up at n ight (called nocturia) i s a com m o n p r o blem. Sometimes it can be due to o bvious behavioral issues such a s d r i n king fluids too close to bedtime. Doctors usually recommend restricting fluids up to 3 hours before bedtime. Nocturia can also be a sign of an enlarging prostate or overactive bladder. Although it may seem unrelated, increased urination at night can be related to Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) or even heart failure. Talk to your doctor and get checked out. It may result in more than just a good night's sleep.
A dam A n g e l e s , M . D . B end Pla s t i c S u r g e r y M edica l D i r e c t o r , S t. Cha r le s W o u n d 8 O s t o m y C a r e C e n t e r
2460 NE Neff Rd., Suite B • Bend 541-749-2282 www.bendprs.com, drangeles@bendprs.com
~>~BendUrolo B end U r o l o g y 2090 NE Wyatt Court, Suite 101 • Bend 541-382-6447 www.bendurology.com
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QUESTION: I h a v e s t ruggled with p a i n for years. Some doctors have said I h ave fibromyalgia, while others are not sure. I've been to all kinds of doctors, chiropractors, and physical therapy. Is there anything I can do that might help me? ANSWER: Yes! There are multiple reasons why you are sull having chronic pain. Al PT, GCFP Healing Bridge Physical Therapy, in addition to implementing treatments to decrease your specific pain, we focus on the following 3 pillars of education and training. First is education. Understanding the mechanisms in your brain that contribute to your pain experience does improve your pain levels aud activity tolerance. Next is stress management. A healthy body needs regular opportunities Lo pause and relax to resume balance. However, too often we are expected to go, Go GO! This can create a constant state of tension which can heighten the pain messages in the brain as well as your pain sensitivity. Finally, there's exercise. Expectations for movement, activity and yes, exercise, should be much different for the chronic pain population. Coaching to progressively create tolerance to gentle activities takes skill and supervision to be successful.
Free Classes on Chronic Pain are olfered at Healing Bridge Physical Therapy and are open to the public. Call 541-318-7041
~It Il <( Aeal'ixg 9ridgr Acck/i 4 X'c&cr~
A llison S u r a n , PT , G C F P 404 NE PennAve, Bend, OR 541-318-7041 www.Healing Bridge.com
ANSWER: Candida aibicans is a fungus (yeast) that is normally present in small amounts on the skin and in mucous membranes such as the vagina, mouth, or g us can also travel through the intestines. Kerie Raymond, intestines. The fun N.D. It b e comes an infectious agent when there is somechange in the body environment (such as the pH or normal Ilora) that allows it io grow oul of control. A common cause of infection may be the use of antibiotics that destroy beneficial, as well as harmful, microorganisms in the body, permitting yeast io multiply iu their place. Symptoms of Candida can range from skin infections to other non-specific symptoms such as gas, indigestion, insomnia, sweats, craviugs, allergies, sinus congestion, tired/fatigued, depressed, memory problems, vision disturbances, aud rectal or nasal itching.
If the number of friendly bacteria is decreased in relation to a number of Caudida, the immune systems is weakened. Caudida will shift from yeast to mycelial I'ungal form and start to invade the body. Iu fungal state it is invasive aud can produce rhizoids, which can penetrate mucosa or intestinal walls, leaving microscopic holes and allowing toxius, undigested food particles and bacteria and yeast to enter the bloodstream.
QUESTION: What are the functions of the tongue?
as well as skin cancer aud signs of aging. SPF l5 blocks 94% of the burning rays, while SPF 30 blocks 97% and SPF 45 blocks 98% of UVB rays. IncreasingSPF higher will increase benefits only by fractions of a percent, and can sometimes lead to the misconception that reapplying every 2 hours is no longer necessary.
The tongue is a very sensitive organ. It's kept moist by saliva aud is the home of your taste buds. Taste buds combine with the sense of smell to let us experience taste. The taste buds are on the back portion and the sides of the tongue They can identify only four distinct flavors: sweet, sour, salty and bitter. Every other taste sensation is a combination of two or more of those.
One way to assure "broad spectrum" protection is to use sunscreen containing Zinc Oxide, the active ingredient in sunscreens most recommended by Dermaiologists. My personal favorite brand of sunscreens is Elta MD. These sunscreens are carried at our office aud more information can be found at our website, www.CentralOregonDermatology.com.
The tongue is subject to a variety of conditions, including burning mouth syndrome and tumors both benign and malignant. When you visit your dentist, he will examine your tongue as well as your teeth and the rest of the tissue inside your mouth.
Sunscreens are only a part of protecting yourself from the suu. I also advise wearing hats, sunglasses, and suu protective clothing, as well as avoiding the sun if possible during the peak UVB times of I lam-2pm. Hopefully this will help to protect you from suu damage in the future. If youare concerned about skin cancer or abnormal moles,please be evaluated by your Dermatologist.
D r Dondo D e n t a l E x c e l l e n c e D r Carlo A r r e d o n do , D D S
oDoNDO EXCELLENCE
660 NE 3rd Street, Suite 3, Bend, OR 97701 541-241-1 299 www.DrDondoBend.com
QUESTION:Can Using an Infra-Red Sauna help me lose weight? ANSWER: Yes. In the Journal of the American College of Cardiology a study found that a 30 minute infrared sauna session can burn 300 -600 calories. (Running a mile burns about 100 calories.) A Canadian Journal of Diabetes study found that Infra-red sauna therapy can lead to weight loss and a smaller waist size. * Mary Huntsman, During each session the bodyscoretemperature increases. This causes the body to work harder to cool itself, and io burn more calories. Sauna therapy increases heart rate, metabolic rate, and cardiac output. It is a "passive" cardio workout. In other words, it has the benefit of a cardio workout, without actually working out. This can be great for people who have trouble tolerating physical exercise. Infra-Red Saunas are cooler than traditional steam or dry saunas, so are more comfortable and can be used by people who have trouble with the high heat of the other saunas. The deeppenetrating heat causes relaxation and many find ii a great place to meditate or listen to music. Other benefits of Infra-Red Sauna are that it helps with detoxification of chemicals that can get in the way of weight loss, and it supports the immune system to help decrease inflammation, another possible hindrance to losing weight.
For my oflice, after much research, I chose an Infra-Red sauna that emits almost no EMF (Electro Magnetic Field) which growing research suggests might be harmful. Call today to arrange an appointment or to discuss if our Infra-Red Sauna is right for you and your health goals.
Mark Hall, M.D.
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D r Kerie R a y m o n d , N . D .
M ary H u n t s m a n M D
H awt h or n H e a l i n g A r t s C e n t e r
H olistic W o m e n s H e a l t h c a r e
39 NW Louisi ana Ave.,Bend,OR 97701
497 SW Century Drive - Ste. 120, Bend, OR 97702
www.Hawt hornCenter.com 541-330-0334
M ark H a l l , M . D . Central Oregon Dermatology
Dermatology 388 SW Bluff Dr., Bend, OR 97702 541-678-0020 www.centraloregondermatology.com
•
QUEsTIDN: If I need surgery, how do I know the surgeon is right for me? ANswER: Meet w i t h t h e su r g e o n a nd have a c o n s u l t a t io n t o m a k e s ure you are comf o r table. The f i r st question to ask is whether the surgery Ian»»Amb«g is necessary and what oth er opt i o ns M.D., FACS
you have. Have the surgeon give you a thorough and u n d erstandable explanation o f the surgery. If you choose surgery as a course of treatment, you have a choice as to which surgeon you will see. Ask the surgeon how many times in their career they have performed the p a r t i cular surgery and how th e number compares to other surgeons. Ask t h e s u r geon w ha t t h ei r s u ccess, compli c a t io n a n d f a i l u r e r a t e s a r e f o r t h e particular surgery. Find out if the surgeon is board c ertified by c o n t acting th e A m e r i can B o ar d o f S urgery a t 2 1 5 - 5 6 8-4000 o r c h e c k o n l i n e a t h ttp//www.absurgery.orgl. S u rgeons must p a ss written and oral exams and they must be accepted by their peers to become board certified.
Lifestyle Medicine of Central Oregon PC
HAWTHORN
ANSWER: T h e A m e r ican A c ademy of Dermatology recommends the use ol' a broadspectrum sunscreen with an SPF of 30 or higher, reapplied every 2 hours. SPF (Sun Protection Factor) measures the ability to block UVB rays which lead to sunburn and skin cancer, but not UVA rays which are more responsible for tanning,
ANSWER: The tongue, of course, is essential to speaking and eating. You could speak without teeth, but you could not speak without your tongue as to eatingthe ton gue moves food to Carlo Arredondo, where the teeth can chew it and then helps form the ball of food, called a bolus, for swallowing, The tongue also helps with the cleaning of the mouth, spreading saliva around and dislodging pieces of food that might be left after eating. The tongue also exerts pressure on the teeth from inside the mouth, just as the cheeks and lips press on the teeth from the outside. This helps move new teeth into their proper positions.
Treatment can be challenging and is multi dimensional to include removing the
food source (sugar), changing terrain and pH, and killing the Candida. Call our oflice today for a consult and personalized treatment plan.
•
QUESTION: How do I know what to look for in a sunscreen?Is there a recommended SPF,ingredient, or brand that works best?
THE TONGUE
•
QUESTION:I suspect I have a yeast problem. Could you explain the symptoms and treatments available for Caudida albicaus?
•
541-51 6-8440 LifestyleMedce ntralOR.com
D r. Jana M . V a n A m b u r g , M D V anAm b ur g S u r g e r y C a r e 2275 NE Doctors Dr., Bend OR 97701 541-323-2790 Offices inBend 8 Redmond
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
NUTRITION RESEARCH
Sugary drink consumptiondownamongAmerican youth andadults Americans are drinking less
and adults between 1999-00 and 2009-10 and found that they ap-
the duration of the study. Surveys
Nutrition Examination Survey,
pear to be drinking less of it.
showed decreases in calories from soda and fruit drinks butnot for
according to a study published in the American Journal of Clinical
American youth and adults lowered their intake of sugar-
sports drinks and energy drinks. The information, from the
showed the decreasesacross a wide range of sex, ageand race. However, somegroups, such as
Nutrition in May. Researchers
sweetened beverages by 68and 45 calories per day respectively over
Centers for DiseaseControl and
of sugar-sweetened beverages such as soda and fruit drinks,
surveyed more than 22,300 youth
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inputting y ou r e x ercise, My Fitness Pal has lots to choose f r om , i n c luding Wii games. L IV E E T R G N G C O M
MY CALORIE GOAL Is
2,281
Losert.com
Lose It! www.loseit.com Why we're fans: Especially e asy for those who like t o know w hat p e rcentage of carbs, proteins and fat they are taking in, such as adherents to th e Z one Diet's 40-30-30 approach. A l lows you to easily duplicate meals and foods from one day to the next, convenient for people who tend to eat the same meals day-to-day. If you enjoy community support, Lose It! encourages accountability through challenges, forums and more, and can email weekly progress reports, if you like that sort of t h ing. Logs your workout activities as well. Especially easy to navigate on a smartphone. My Fitness Pal www.myfitnesspal.com Why we're fans:One of My Fitness Pal's strengths is its hefty catalog of foods. The w ebsite claims m ore t h a n 2 million foods, and it shows. Like many other food journals, it boasts the ability to connect to a variety of fitness trackers, such as the Fitbit. That allows you to easily calculate calories burned, steps taken, etc., and how that off-
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Livestrong.com
My Plate www.Livestrong.com Why we're fans: T h e Livestrong brand has been t arnished a bi t b y y o u know-who. But moving on: My Plate offers an easyto-use, at-a-glance dashboard, where some of the other applications require a few more clicks to get the same data. It also includes an impressive database of exercises and calories burned, among them: indoor skiing. But the true benefit of My Plate is the Livestrong website. Click around on the site, with its real-time take on nutritional news and array of motivational articles, and
you'll find yourself jumping up off the couch and heading out the door for a workout.
Tips forkeepingafoodjournal Ditch the judgment:
It will make food journaling
Awareness alonewill help you clean upyour eating
much easier and giveyou room to splurge. Gome upwith a reward system:Sounds silly, but
habits. Use that to your
advantage. Commit to writing it all down, without
beating yourself up over the results. Write it deforeyou eat it: Calculating the caloric damage of a fistful of Mff Ms before you toss them back might be all you need to keep you walking past the office
candy jar. OK, then log it immediately after you eat it:If you wait until the end of the day, you
might conveniently forget that 3 p.m. vending machine run. Invest in plastic:Doing your best to weigh andmeasure your food will help control portion sizes. One shortcut:
what about gold stars on
every day you faithfully keep your journal? Andmaybe a movie or a manicure for every10 stars? And a
massage or a round of golf for every 30?
Investigate defore dining out:Many restaurants put their menus online
and include calorie counts that can easily transfer to your food journal. Use that information strategically:
When your buddies areall standing around wondering
where to go for grub, you can suggest the place that suits yourneeds. Don't sweat the unknown:If
Buy inexpensive food storage you end up being winedand containers int/4cup, f/2 cup dined at anexotic restaurant and1 cup sizes. Usethem and find yourself puzzling to portion out your favorite
over how best to calculate
foods (and packmeals and those unfamiliar ingredients snacks) so you're not always and dishes, don't panic. And, hunting for a clean set of
whatever you do, don't ditch
measuring cups. Commit to just 90 days: In three months, you'll be a
the journal just because it's
calorie-counting savant. Embrace routine:Calculate the calories on a handful of healthful breakfast, lunch
and snack recipes thatyou enjoy. Then stick to them.
significant declines.
Prevention's National Health and
— Anne Aurand, TheBulletin
The Associated Press file photo
Do diet changeshelp ADHDchildren?
Journal Continued from E1 Choosing an online or mobile food journal is mainly a matter of personal preference. Here, we highlight three free services that we like. (Many offer premium memberships, but you get all the basics with the free versions.) Do not hesitate to try them all out to find the one that suits you. After all, the best food journal for you is the one you will actually use.
40- to 59-year-olds, did not show
not100 percent perfect. Just
do your best. Rememderthe 80/20 rule: If you can keep faithful track
of your meals at least 80 percent of the time, you're already ahead of the weight-
loss game.
By Nara Schoenberg
too small to be important, according to a 2012 article in CHICAGO — Dylan Jerrell Neurotherapeutics. ADHD diets are basically Adolescent Psychiatry found was having a tough time in Fellows says that b efore elimination diets; you remove diets are more effective when kindergarten. she put her son on the diet, the foods or ingredients most they restrict other foods as The e n ergetic, o u tgoing she was your typical suburlikely to trigger or heighten well. The authors estimated Bigfoot fan was easily frusban mom, treating her son to symptoms,and ifyouseean that 30 percent of kids with trated, and he responded to cherry limeades and never reimprovement, you try adding ADHD experienced a reducchallenges with disruptive meltally questioning the chemical back foods one byone, nixtion in symptoms whenthey downs. He wouldn't hit anyone, additives in foods. ing the ones that bring back initially eliminated foods such but he'd break down and cry or But she had a friend whose symptoms. as wheat, rye, barley, eggs, yell at his teachers. For a week son had seen a marked imThe chief suspects are dairy, corn, yeast, soy, citrus, in mid-September, he was in the provement in a behavioral tick artificial food colorings and eggs, chocolate andpeanuts. principal's office every single — involuntarily sniffing — on Study co-author Joel Nigg preservatives, but the authors day. His mom, Jacqueline Felthe Feingold diet, and, with of a recent research analysis recommends consulting with a Dylan's pediatrician saying lows, considered home-schoolin the Journal of the Amerinutritionist before embarking ing. His pediatrician offered her son was a candidate for canAcademy ofChildand on this type of diet. medication for attention deficit medication, Fellows figured hyperactivity disorder. she had nothing to lose. But then Fellows, a health Seven months l ater, she writer in M c K inney, Texas, "I started the Feingold panel voted against recom- says, Dylan can still be a handful — he's 6, after all — but his put Dylan on the Feingold diet, diet on a Saturday, the mending warning labels on which e l i minates a r t ificial weekend after he'd been foods with artificial dyes and behavior is much better. Becolors and flavors and some in the principal's office calledformore research. fore thedietary changes, Felpreservatives. According to a recent state- lows volunteered regularly in every day, andhe's "I started the Feingold diet ment released by the FDA, his school cafeteria and saw only been back to the "the a gency continues t o on a Saturday, the weekend afDylan popping up and dovm, ter he'd been in the principal's principal's office once, and study the matter in various spinning in his seat, yelling office every day, and he's only that was when (someone) populations, including chil- and not really eating his lunch. been back to the principal's of- fed him a hOt dOg. dren, and will report its findShe dropped by during lunch ings." The FDA did not say time a few months after the fice once, and that was when — Jacqueline Fellows, mother (someone) fed him a hot dog," when those findings would dietary change, and he was sitFellows said. be reported. ting down, eating his lunch and "It was amazing. It's not a sil- out that t h e B r i tish study Popularized i n B e njamin talking quietly to the little girl ver bullet, but it's the most pow- found that artificial food dyes Feingold's best-selling 1974 next to him. " He didn't go f rom ' w i l d erful tool that I have for him." and preservatives increase book, "Why Your Child Is HyParents of children with at- hyperactivity in th e general peractive," the Feingold diet man' to calm," Fellows said. tention deficit hyperactivity population of children, not just eliminates artificial colors and "He was just able to really lisdisorder (ADHD) have been kids with ADHD. flavors and three preservatives, ten and comprehend what you "It makes sense for all kids and it t emporarily removes said. He could learn." reporting marked behavioral improvements due t o d i ets to reduce the amount of dye foods containing natural sae liminating a r t i f icial f o o d they take in," said Arnold, who licylates, such as oranges and coloring and other additives says that per capita consump- apples. The foods with natural for decades now, but those re- tion of artificial food dyes has salicylates may later be reinports have gained traction in quadrupled in the last 50 years. troduced. The diet fell out of the past decade, with recent But in 2011 an advisory pan- favor with scientists after a studies suggesting that scien- el for the FDA concluded that 1983 meta-analysis concludtists may have been too quick although artificial food dyes ing that the overall effect was to dismiss dietary triggers for may trigger hyperactivity in ADHD in the 1980s and '90s. a small percentage of children =-l In 2007, a landmark British with b e h avioral p r o blems study published in The Lancet such as ADHD, there isn't Elevation Capital Strategies medical journal found that ar- enough evidence to claim that EVERGREEN 400 SW BluADrive Suite 101 Bend In-Home Care SerEtces tificial food colors and preser- food dyes cause hyperactivity Main: 541-728-0321 Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. vatives increase hyperactivity in the general population. The s41-389-0006 www.elevationcapital.biz www.evergreeninhome.com in children, leading the European Union to require warning labels on foods containing any ofsix specific food colors. This set off renewed debate in the U.S., but the Food and Drug Administration declined to take regulatory action. Now, scientists are getting intriguing results from sophisticated analysis techniques that allow them to pool findings from multiple studies. A meta-analysis of 3 4 s tudies that appeared in the Journal of the American Academy of ~u Child and Adolescent Psychiai try in 2012 found that artificial food colors had a small but s ignificant effect on A D H D symptoms. The overall effect was equivalent to about onefifteenth to one-thirtieth the effect ofmedication, accordBMC SURGE~RY EAM ing to study co-author Joel Nigg, a professor of psychiatry at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland. And when patients followed Our board-certified surgeons now have more options than ever before for treating broader elimination diets — excluding not just artificial colors patients with routine and complex general surgical problems. and preservatives,but other Our services include evaluation and treatment for a full range of general surgery suspected triggers such as eggs — the effect was larger: about conditions, such a s a b d o minal, c o lon/rectal, e ndocrine/thyroid, p e diatric, one-third to one-sixth the effect breast, vascular and cancer-related operations. We provide the latest in surgery of medication, Nigg says. techniques, including robotic assisted surgery fo r m an y p r ocedures done The authors of t h e 2 012 traditionally through an open o r l aparoscopic approach utilizing the DaVinci study estimated that as many surgical system. a s 8 percent of k i d s w i t h ADHD may have symptoms With Mastery of Breast Surgery and Breast Ultrasound certifications, multiple BMC related to artificial food colors surgeons also offer special expertise in breast surgery. and 30 percent of kids with ADHD may have symptoms In case of emergency, we're on call 24 hours a day. Timothy Beard, MD, FACS that improve when they follow To learn more about our surgical services, Dara Christante, MD more comprehensive diets that Gary Frei, MD, FACS eliminate suspected allergens visit bendmemorialclinic.com. Darren Kowalski, MD, FACS as well. "It has a chance of working Erin Walling, MD, FACS Andrew Sargent, PA-C, MS — a less than 50-50 chance, Jennifer Turk, PA-C, MS but it's a chance. It's going to JeanneWadsworth, PA-C, MS take some effort, so (if you want to try it) get a good nutritionist to advise you and Primary Care. Specialty Care. Urgent Care. Total Care. talk to your child and give it a couple of months of effort," Nigg said. Bend Eastside Clinic I Redmond Clinic + b m C TotaleareL. Eugene Arnold, a profesBend Memorial Clinic EG bendmemorialclinic.com I 541-382-4900 6 0 sor emeritus of psychiatry at Ohio State University, points Chicago Tribune
What's anADHDdiet?
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EXCEPTIONAL SURGICAL CARE
E6 THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
MEDICINE SAFETY TIPS
Goingfor aswim?These tips will helpyouavoid illnessesthis summer Summertime is all about taking a dip in the pool, but it's no fun when it makes you sick.
Everyyear, thousands of Americans get sick from recreational water illnesses caused bygerms spread from swallowing, breathing in mists or coming into contact with shared bodies of contaminated water. That water can be in backyard
weakened immune systems are most at risk for these illnesses," said Dr. Kevin Sherin, Director of
the Department of Health in OrangeCounty, in a statement. Anyone who is ill should avoid swimming until
their symptoms havepassed, Sherin added. "Just one diarrheal incident can release enough
swimming pools and hot tubs, public water parks germs into the water that swallowing a mouthand interactive fountains or in natural lakes, rivers ful can cause diarrhea lasting up to two to three and even oceans. weeks," said Dr. Swannie Jett, Health Officer for Diarrhea is the most common infection,
but recreational water illnesses also can lead to skin, ear, respiratory, eye, neurologic and wound infections, according to the Department
the Department of Health in Seminole County, in a statement. A key to healthy summers starts with the back-
of Health in Orange and Seminole counties in
yard swimming pool. • To keep the water free of illnesses, check
Florida.
chlorine and pH levels before entering the water,
"Children, pregnant womenand thosewith
Glue
according to county health departments. Even
ting for long periods of time, or who are overweight, are at greatest risk.
that spreads quickly. That's ideal for covering a topical Continued from E1 wound, but not for sealing off Eastman Kodak tried to get the inside of a vein. "So what we needed was approval to market the glue Improved treatments for medicalpurposes in 1964, Traditionally, varicose veins something very viscous, very but its application was reject- were treated by stripping out thick, sort of like honey, so it ed due to problems with tis- the saphenous vein, a brutal wouldn't travel or migrate to sue irritation and brittleness. procedure that often damaged the places we wouldn't want it Ethicon, a Johnson & Johnson the nerves alongside the vein to go," Raabe said. "It sets very subsidiary, eventually refor- and had a high rate of blood fast, but more importantly, it mulated the product and was clots. has a lot of elasticity or plas"People would get this neu- ticity, so that when it's in the able to bring it to market as Dermabond in 1998. It's avail- ropathic p a i n , re c u rrence body, people can't feel it." able in a number of over-the- rates were high, patient satisThe product had to be in counter liquid bandage prod- faction was super low, people that sweet spot — thin enough ucts as well. just didn't like it," said Dr. Ed- that it would flow freely from Smith said sealing wounds ward Boyle, a vein specialist a catheter inside the vein, but with glue carries a number of with Inovia. thick enough that it w o uld advantages, including elimiThe technique had such stay precisely where it was nating stitches, speeding up poor results that patients be- placed. healing time and sealing out came reluctant to do anything Raabe said the glue takes bacteria. While a small per- about their varicose veins at about two years to be fully centage of people can have all. Then, about a decade ago, reabsorbed. an allergic reaction or experi- new techniques were develence some irritation from the oped usinglasers or radio fre- Slick procedure Carolyn Fauerso, 55, was glue, cyanoacrylate generally quency to seal off veins from doesn't cause any harmful ef- the inside. one of the f irst patients in "It's r evolutionized t h e Bend to undergo the procefects inside the body. "Your b o d y bi o a bsorbs way we do procedures," said dure. Over a year ago, she it over a t wo-week period," Dr. Andrew Jones, Boyle's was experiencing swelling Hawkins said. partner. and aching in her left ankle. That makes it ideal to treat Treatment suddenly H er doctor referred her t o varicose veins in a noninva- changed from a difficult, ex- Jones, who diagnosed dams ive way. According to t h e pensive surgical technique us- age in her great saphenous Mayo Clinic, about 20 to 25 ing general anesthetic with a vein. He gave her two options percent of A m ericans have lot of collateral damage, to an — try to control the problem varicose veins, including about office-based procedure using with compression stockings 6 percent who have more seri- local anesthetic only. or undergo treatment to seal ous cases that can lead to skin Jones and Boyle said the off the vein. changes or ulcers. VenaSeal procedure could At the time, Fauerso couldn't Varicose veins occur when turn out to be a further imafford to pay for the procethe one-way valves within a provement. Usingultrasound, dure. The clinic contacted her vein are damaged, allowing the doctor guides a tiny cath- to see if she would be interestblood to flow backward and eter into the vein through a ed in participating in the clinipool in the veins. It begins a small incision in the leg. The cal trial, which covers all the vicious cycle. As more blood d octor can d eliver a v e r y treatment costs. "I wa s p r etty i n t r igued, builds up, more valves are small amount of medical glue damaged. And, as the veins using a sort of glue gun to when he told me the study docage and lose elasticity, they close the vein. Once the af- tors who designedthis where become less able to control the fected vein is closed, blood going to be there. I was fascipooling. The great saphenous flow i s n a t urally r e routed nated with the information," v ein, which r uns f rom t h e through other healthy veins she said. "So I'll be a guinea ankle to the groin, is most of- in the leg. pig; that sounds great." ten the culprit. Blood from this Hawkins w asn't f a m iliar Fauerso said the entire provein often pools in a number of with th e V enaSeal product cedure took less than 20 minsuperficial veins that branch but said that the key would utes.She drove herself to and off of it. be to find an adhesive formu- from the clinic. The procedure The veins near the surface lation that would allow some was painless, other than the can then bulge outward in scar tissue to form. That way, needlestick to put in the local ugly, dark purple, tangled and when the glue was reabsorbed anesthetic. "It was maybe 30 seconds of twisted cords. by the body, the vein wouldn't While varicose veins are reopen. pain and it was minimal. Then T hat's p r e c isely wh a t there was just a bit of discomgenerally considered a cosmetic problem, they can have the VenaSeal product is infort because you can kind of painful symptoms. They can tended to do. Over time, the sense some tugging as they go cause the legs and feet to swell. glue inside the vein creates a up your leg," she said. "I can't Leg muscles can feel fatigued honeycomblike str u c t ure. tell you how slick and easy it or heavy, and the skin can itch Tissue then grows through was." or burn. the o p e nings, e s sentially Fauerso took a couple of If the b lockage becomes creating a long scar inside days off work but said she severe, i t co u l d p r e clude t he body once the glue i s could have gone back to work blood from returning to the reabsorbed. the next day. She was told to heart. And if the skin tissue Raabe said while products take ibuprofen if she felt any around the vein is not receiv- like Dermabond were effec- pain, but she never needed ing enough nourishment due tive for sealing wounds, they any. She has been wearing to a lack of blood flow, pain- weren't ideal for sealing off a c ompression stockings t h e ful sores or skin ulcers can vein. Those glues dry slowly first week under the study prodevelop. and become very hard and tocols, but hasn't experienced People with a family history brittle, which would be uncom- any swelling yet. And she has of varicose veins, with jobs fortable inside the leg. Derma- recovered some sensationin that involve standing or sit- bond is also a fairly thin liquid her leg, which had been numb
though chlorine isn't enough to keep pools illness-
free, proper levels maximize germ-killing power. • Don't swallow the water you swim in. • Parents of small children should take young-
sters on bathroom trips every hour andcheck diapers every 30 to 60 minutes. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
also recommends theseguidelines for a healthy swim: • Don't swim when you have diarrhea.
• Shower with soap before you start swimming. • Take a rinse shower before you getback into the water. • Take bathroom breaks every 60 minutes.
• Wash your hands after using the toilet or changing diapers. — Colleen Wright, Orlando Sentinel
Andy Tulhs /The Bulletin file photo
for some time. "So I'm pretty pleased so far," she said.
ablation those things are all Just last w e ek , d o ctors possible, but almost unheard a t the U n iversity o f K a n of. I think the risk profile (with sas Hospital in Kansas City, VenaSeal) is probably identi- Kan., sealed off a near-fatal Trial numbers cal, but that's what the study aneurysm in the brain of 3Inovia has now treated 16 will show." week-old girl using a drop of It's still unclear how much sterile glue delivered by cathpatients in the clinical trial, and can enroll up to 50 pathe procedure would cost if eter through an opening in tients as long as the entire approved, but Raabe said it her hip. It is believed to be the trial hasn't met its 244 patient would likely be slightly more first time adhesive has been total. Patients will receive ei- expensive than radiofrequen- used to repair an aneurysm in ther radiofrequency ablation cy ablation. Current o f fice a newborn. or the VenaSeal treatment, so treatments usually run about Treating v a r icose v e i ns researchers can compare the $4,000 to $5,000. Insurance might not carry the same imeffectiveness of the new progenerallycovers varicose vein portance as sealing a brain cedure to what is now consid- treatment if the patient is ex- aneurysm, but the doctors at ered standard practice. Alperiencing pain or swelling, Inovia say it's rewarding to see though the VenaSeal doesn't but not solely for cosmetic pur- new approaches offer a potenrequirethe use of compres- poses. The clinical trial is also tially better way of treating an sion stocking, test subjects in open only to those with more age-old problem. "It's fun in medicine when the trial will be asked to wear than cosmeticconcerns. them the first week regardRaabe said medical adhe- you're exposed to things that less of what procedure they sives are likelyto treat a broad- are revolutionary and it just had so the study can make an er range ofmedical problems transitions the w h ole f i eld accurate comparison of the in the future. from something people avoid"It's a very noninvasive way ed to something people really two techniques. Once the trial is full, howto do very complicated proce- seek out," Jones said. "That's ever, Inovia won't be able to dures," he said. what r a diofrequency a blacontinue using the VenaSeal Instead of having to cre- tion did. That's changed our technique until it is approved ate large incisions to open the industry. Now this is the next by the Food and Drug Admin- body and fix problems with step where we can improve on istration for use in the U.S. needle and thread, doctors can the procedure, by eliminating Raabe said that will take at now snake a catheter through some of the unpleasant asleast a year and a half. the circulatory system, and pects of this." Approval has already been delivery a drop of glue to hard— Reporter: 541-617-7814, granted i n E u r ope, w here to-reach places. mhawrylulz@bendbultetin.com doctors have now completed about 1,000 cases. Raabe said they'veachieved closure rates of close to 100 percent in Europe, with no significant complications. Last year, Sapheon ' I I I , announced the results of an earlier study with 38 patients, What ould you do with FREE timeaway in which 94 percent of patients still had complete closure of from ome of the daily worries and burden their vein one year after the of treating diabetes? procedure. The clinical trial will also FREEDOM-1 is a clinical research study investigating an innovative approach to delivering treatment for type 2 diabetes that doesn't pay for patients to undergo a require needles or evenpills. This study is now enrolling. second procedure if their veins You may beable to take part if you: aren't completed sealed after • are between 18 and 80 years of age three months. • havebeen diagnosedwithtype2 diabetes So far, results with the Veformore than 3 months. naSeal have been comparable The study of this investigational new drug will to those with radiofrequency last for approximately t year,andyou will receive or laserprocedures, but with care from a dedicated team of medical staff. several advantages. Those There will be 10 visits to the study center. other procedures require loInvestigational product, examinations, and cal anesthetic to be injected medical care relating to the study will be all along the vein being treatprovided at no cost to you. ed, and can sometimes injure If you would like to help us in our research the nerve alongside the vein. to develop a diabetes treatment that has V enaSeal requires onl y a the potential to be simpler andmoreconvenient, single shot of local anesthetic please contact: and has not been shown to cause any nerve problems so Bend Memorial Clinic +tt' bm C Totalcarefar. (855) 637-1852 "Stripping had a much higher rate of infection, much higher rate of blood clots, much FREEDOM-1 higher rate of bleeding," Boyle said. "With (radiofrequency) I Q~
«
An art-based camP that P r o vides children with a fun and safe environment for learning how to exPress feelings of loss and grief
UI' to regulatee-cigarettes asmedicines By Maria Cheng
pletely, I realize that not every smoker can, and it is much L ONDON — B r itain w i l l better to get n icotine from start r e g ulating e l ectronic safer sources such as nicotinecigarettes and other products replacement therapy," s aid containing nicotine as medi- Britain's Chief Medical Officer cines, according to the coun- Sally Davies in a statement. "It's only right (e-cigarettes) try's top regulator. In a statement on Wednesday, are properly regulated to be the Medicines and Health Regu- safe and w or k e f fectively." latory Agency said it would treat Cigarettes are exempt from e-cigarettesas medicines "so the regulation. that people using these products Last week, Britain's indehave the confidencethey are pendent health watchdog said safe, are of the right quality and smokers unable to go cold turwork." E-cigarettes are battery- key should be encouraged to operated products that turn nic- use nicotine products like gum otine into a vapor that is inhaled and patches to help them cut by the user. down. It hadn't recommend"While it's best to quit com- ed e-cigarettesbecause they The Associated Press
weren't yet regulated. Experts say smokers are at risk from the toxins and tar in cigarettes, not the nicotine.
Smoking is th e
b iggest
cause of preventable deaths in England, killing about 80,000
people every year. In the U.S., the Food and D rug A d m i nistration a n nounced in 2011 that it would r egulate e-cigarettes as t o bacco products and won't try to regulate them under stricter rules for drug-delivery devices following a legal battle. The FDA plans to assert regulatory authority over the fastgrowing categoryin the near future.
July 16- 19, 2013 Hollinshead Barn R Historic Park Bend, Oregon For additional information and registration: Call EileenGrover at 541-382-5882. To see a video on the program and more details: www.partnersbend.org
(Grief and Losstab/CampCourage)
2075 NE Wyatt Court
Bend, OR 97701 541-382-5882 wtww.partnersbend.org
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ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT TV TODAY
Working hisway up to 'White House Down' TV SPOTLIGHT
Lance Reddick plays the military coordinator at the Pentagon in the new film, "White House Down," due in theaters June 28.
By Luaine Lee McClatchy-Tribune News Service
P ASADENA, C a l i f . Though he always felt something was pushing him toward acting, Lance Reddick ignored it. His dad was an attorney, and Lance was on his way to becoming a classical music composer. Then s omething went awry. "I always knew I had a thing when it came to acting but never took it seriously. I just thought people who wanted to be actors were silly," he said. It may have been silly, but Reddick has managed to parlay that tomfoolery into a fullblown careerwith memorable performances in T V s h ows like "Oz," "Fringe," "Lost" and "The Wire" and the new movie, "White House Down," due June 28. For a guy who was too shy to evenconsider performing, he somehow beat the odds. He studied music composition at the prestigious Eastman School of Music, the piano his instrument. "Because my parents wanted to give me what they d idn't have, I grew up around a bunch of affluent white kids," said Reddick. "So everybody's parents were lawyers and d o ctors, bankers an d a r c hitects. I didn't really get it. Now I do." He developed his first taste for music at an Episcopal elemen-
Mcclatchy-Tnhune News Service
all that. "I was lifting a big bundle of newspapers, but it black people grow up singing wasn't the lifting itself, it was gospel music. I grew up sing- the exhaustion. I'd come from ing Gregorian chants and 16th a double shift of waiting tables century motets." to a double shift of delivering Still, he left Eastman before newspapersand Ideliveredthe he graduated. "I realized I was Wall Street Journal in downin denial and I really wanted town Boston ... I just cranked to be a rock star," he said. it up for about 24 hours, and I "So I got married straight was just exhausted and someout of school, moved to Bos- thing went," he said. "At the time I was used to ton because my wife at the time was f rom t h ere. Two working on adrenaline and I years later my daughter was worked out every day — even born. And I f o u n d m y self with all I had going on. So working t h ree j obs, seven when I was in pain or exhaustdays a week." ed I just ignored it and kept He still wasn't sure what he going." wanted to do. But an excruTwo weeks later he awoke ciating back injury changed unable to get out of bed. Fourtary school when he started singing with the choir. "A lot of
Dear Abby:The letter you printed from "Gun-Shy in South Carolina" (March 5), about the antics of her gun-toting, alcoholic father-in-law, caught my attention. I'm a former mental health clinician and program inspector. I discussed that letter with a friend who is a psychiatrist. "Grandpa" h as DEAR probably al r e a dy ABBY violated a municipal ordinance r e g ard-
and the thousands of first responders who demonstrate their bravery by saving human lives, not threatening them. In fact, many Medal of Honor recipients earn the award not by th e n umber of enemies killed, but lives saved. — Responsible Gun Owner in Pennsylvania
someone shoots a gun into the air, the bullet comes down somewhere. A child near my hometown died last New Year's Eve when she stepped outside with her grandmother to watch the fireworks and a bullet fell to earth and lodged in her brain. The police believe the gun may have been fired from a few miles away. — Christina In Maryland Dear Responsible: Dear Abby:Why didn't you sugI agree. Some read- gest a family intervention for the ers felt I should have g randfather's a l coholism? T h e ing discharging a been t o u gher in family could be helped by going firearm in corporate limits. I agree my response, and that Gun-Shy to Al-Anon to learn how to detach with you that he has endangered and her children should not visit with love from his disease. Alcohis grandchildren. My friend ad- Grandpa at all. Failure to act on her holics need to understand how vised that, according to the local fears is called child endangerment their drinking affects them and interpretation of m e ntal h ealth and could result in the children be- others. statutes, Grandpa might be eligible ing taken away. — Steve C. in San Francisco for involuntary commitment and Dear Abby:Your answer to "GunDear Abby: My friend Michelle evaluation in a psychiatric facility. Shy" was off the mark! For adults died last July Fourth. She was He could be disarmed by the po- to watch a drunk adult fire a gun in killed because someone fired a lice, if necessary. the air around his family and not gun into the air. She was beautiful, "Gun-Shy" s hould heed h e r call 911 was ignorant and danger- talented and left behind a fiance, a motherly instincts, stay home and ous. ALL states have laws about mother, a sister and many friends. refuse to visit Grandpa until he en- firing guns in the air (illegal), fir- She was receiving her Ph.D., was ters treatment. Otherwise there's ing guns while drunk (illegal), un- a brilliant researcher for the CDC a high probability that she will secured loaded weapons (illegal), and had just picked up her wedmourn the loss of one or more dead and firing guns around children in ding gown. She was the victim of a children. a home environment (illegal). That senseless act caused by someone's Grandpa seems to think t h at jerkshould have been arrested! carelessness. — Smokey in Florida — Marsha in Michigan booze and guns make him brave. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com A brave person is a military medic, Dear Abby: Thank you for rea member of the U.S. Coast Guard minding your readers that when or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
HAPPYBIRTHDAYFOR THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013: Thisyear you have aglib quality that creates agreat deal of flow for you. Yourverbal command of languagedefines your success. Youwill be unusually fortunate this year. If youare single, you could Stars showthekind meetsomeone of day you'll have si gnificant in the ** * * * D ynamic next few months ** * * P ositive w h o becomes ** * A verage imp o rtant toyour ** S o-so life history. If you * Difficult are attached, this year could marka new beginning for you as acouple. SCORPIO finds you intriguing but odd.
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
CANCER (June21-July22) ** * * Y our creativity seems endless to many people. You'll hear news in a more open manner than usual;however, sometimes you can't help but close down. Honor your unusual ingenuity, and toss it into the mix. You could be surprised by what you hear. Tonight: Ever full of fun.
LEO (Joly23-Aug. 22)
** * You might encounter more obstacles than usual. Perhapsyou aremore sensitive right now. Initiate a conversation with a ARIES (March 21-April19) close family member. Understand what this ** * * * O t hers will get your message person expects, then make a decision about loud and clear. For the most part, you whether you want to fulfill his or her desires. should expect to hear an open, unfiltered Tonight: Mosey onhome. response. Your kindness and willingness VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) to let another eccentric person express ** * * K eep a conversation moving. Be him- or herself will be greatly appreciated. willing to letyour guard down and put all Tonight: Know when to call it a night. your cards on the table. The conversion TAURUS (April 20-May29) that ensues will allow greater give** * * O t hers will be testing their limits. and-take. Know what you expect from You might not be sure which way to head. someone else. Are there any boundaries Understanding evolves quickly if you being crossed? Tonight: Chat up a storm. deflect others' energy and force those LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) around you to take responsibility. Your ** * Honor your limits, as you might clarity in a discussion helps. Tonight: not want to get mixed up in a financial Start making weekend plans. situation. You know how to say "no." It GEMINI (May 21-June20) is important to let others know where ** * * Your playful nature attracts you stand and how you feel. Listen to many people, yet others might really your instincts regarding an emotional misunderstand whereyou arecoming from. situation. Tonight: Treat a friend to dinner Knowyour limits with people, andrecognize and a movie. whatisneeded to proceed.Open uptonew SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) possibilities that are presented by aloved ** * * * D o not hesitate to express your one. Tonight:Squeezeinsomeexercise.
kept participating," he said. "I was different when I came out of the workshop. I'm shy, an introvert. I was so withdrawn, so self-conscious, but when I came out I was'Whoa!' Suddenly all this stuff I'd been suppressing since I was 7, I let
teen days of bedrestforced him to re-evaluate his life. " It sounds crazy, bu t I thought, ' Well, I k n o w t h e recording studio I' m w o r king with is taking me for a ride. It's time for me to admit that to myself. So let me start from scratch. I can sing and I can act. So let me try to act ...' I went on a couple of musical theater auditions and realized that wasn't me, so I started going on straight auditions and getting cast and getting cast and getting cast." Reddick thinks his period with Erhard Seminars Training — especially a workshop on communication — gave him the ability to ace those early auditions. "I led seminars for about two years when I was in college. My participation had a profound effect on my acting later, and my ability as a seminar leader allowed me to fill in the gaps in my training that I didn't have in auditioning," he said. "Because I was used to figuring out how to read a room and being myself in front of people — even though I hadn't really studied auditioning — I was able to audition well and that made a big difference ... When I did EST and that was over — I didn't want to think it — but I was thinking, 'What the heck was that? I want my money back.' All these people were, like, 'Wow.' I didn't get it. But there was something there that I was curious about, so I
I(eep kidsawayfrom gun-toting grandpa
feelings. Others naturally will focus on what you have to say.Evaluate what is happening beyond the obvious. Address any issues you encounter. Share aspecial event with a dear friend. Tonight: Demonstrate that the world really is your oyster.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21j ** * Know when to call it a day.You could get easily exhausted or perhaps even aggravated by someonewho is fundamental to your life history. Let this person take the lead. Youwill be able to work through a problem at a later date. Indulge yourself. Tonight: Whatever works.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * Af riend might reach out to you. Could this person have strong feelings about you? You will want to detach in order to see what is going on with him or her. Be careful, especially if you do not feel the same. You do not want to lead this individual on. Tonight: Where your friends are.
AauARIuS (Jan.20-Feb. 18) ** * Don't let someone ruin your day by giving too much power to his or her statement. Avoid playing his or her words over and over again in your mind. You will gain a new perspective in a conversation with a friend. Be sure not to take this for granted. Tonight: A force to be dealt with.
PISCES (Fed. 19-March20) ** * * L i sten to a friend's perspective. Someone at a distance often serves as a trusted adviser. Seek this person out in order to get feedback on what appears to be a touchy issue. A child or loved one expresses his or her feelings in an unthreatening way. Tonight: Let romance in. © 2013 by King Features Syndicate
5 p.m. on NGC, "Mountain Movers" —Gunny and the SPT team have beencontracted to design and build the prestigious U.S. Open course in Vail, Colo. They find themselves pressured by time, uneven terrain and lack of snow as they attempt to build a one-of-a-kind re-entry setup. 8 p.m. on l3, "Hell's Kitchen" — The remaining chefs are presented with the coveted black jackets and receive a special surprise from members of their families. Then Gordon puts their originality to the test, with the winners getting a family meal and the losers assigned to recycling and tree-planting duty. The next dinner service includes a shocking twist.
go of." Though at one time he was co-starring in three shows at once, it wasn't always so easy. Married with a daughter, 24, and a son, 19, he and his first wife split in '97. (He has since remarried). "She made three times the money I d i d," h e r e called. "God rest her soul, she passed away a couple years ago, but she was a brilliant artist, really talented. We didn't make it, but she was a great lady." "Six months after she left, I got 'The Siege' and I was ducking the l andlord. And I had the kids every other week, so I w a s b o rrowing money to bu y g r oceries. I got 'The Siege' then I got 'I Dreamed of Africa' then went to the Guthrie and got to play Mark Antony (in "Julius Caesar.") I came back home to New York and didn't work for six months. For somebody who's always doing a side job or has a trust fund or savings, it's one thing. But I didn't ... The only reason I didn't quit was I didn't have any alternatives. What was I going to do, wait tables'? The only way to get out of the situation I was in was to make it."
9 p.m. on l3, "Does Someone Have to Go?" —Thefrustrated CEO of True HomeValue, a home remodeling operation based in St. Louis, gives his staff a chance to try fixing the troubled company. The employees takea hard look at what's causing the problems in the workplace — and if that "what" turns out to be a "who," they have a tough call to make in the new episode. 9 p.m. on USA,"BurnNotice" — Michael !Jeffrey Donovanl summonsSam andJesse!Bruce Campbell, CobyBell) to help him with a high-stakestrade involving an international bomber.Back home, Fiona !Gabrielle Anwarl steps in whenMadeline (Sharon Glessl becomes thetarget of a bookie with extortion on his mind in the newepisode "Down Range." 10 p.m. on BRAVO,"Tadatha Takes Over" —The staff at Nadia's Family Salon in New Jersey used to be one big, happy ... well, family. Now it's a big, unhappydysfunctionalone.The owner, Kevin, lost his passion for the business and developed a gambling problem. He's seldom at the salon, but when he is, his anger and poor communication skills make things worse. It's up to Tabatha to help him get back in control of himself and his business.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after presstime. I
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Regal Old Mill Stadium t6 8 IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • 42(PG-13) 11:35 a.m. • AFTER EARTH (PG-t3) 11:25 a.m., 3: l0, 6:25, 9:20 • EPIC!PG!12:15,2:50 • EPIC3-D(PG)tt:50a.m. • FAST 5 FURIOUS 6 (PG-13) I2:10, 3:25, 6:40, 9:55 • THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) 11:15a.m., 2:30 • THE HANGOVER PARTlll (R) 1t:05 a.m., 1:35 • THE INTERNSHIP!PG-13j12:20,3:55,7:20, to:05 • IRON MAN 3(PG-t3) 12:35, 3:40 • MAN OF STEEL!PG-13) t 1 a.m.,11:30 a.m., 2:35, 3, 6, 6:30, 9:15, 9:45 • MAN OF STEEL3-0 (PG-13) t 1:45 a.m., 2:45, 3:15, 6:15, 6:45, 9:30, 10 • MAN OFSTEELIMAX (PG-13) 3:30 • MAN OF STEELIMAX3-0 (PG-13) Noon,7,10:15 • MONSTERS UNIVERSITY (G) 8 • MONSTERSUNIVERSITY3-0 (G)8 • NOW YOUSEE ME! PG-13j12:30,4:05,7:30,10:20 • THEPURGE(R)2:10,4:25,7:45, t0:25 • STARTREK INTO DARKNESS (PG-t3)12:45,3:45,7:10, 10:15 • THIS IS THE END(R) 12:55, 4:10, 6:50, 9:40 • WORLDWARZ (PG-13! 8 • WORLD WARZ3-0 (PG-13)8 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. t
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10 p.m. on FX, "Wilfred" —The off-kilter comedy returns for its third season as Ryan !Elijah Wood) tries to pick up the pieces from his last relationship, which ended with his girlfriend being taken away by the authorities. But as always his best pal, Wilfred (Jason Gannj, is there for Ryan, even if everyone else actually just sees Wilfred as a dog. The first of two new episodes air tonight. ©Zap2ll
iPPure Crradk Co.
rdU a~ B~ Bend Redmond
t
Regal Pilot Butte 6, 27t7 N.E. U.S.Highway 20, 54t-382-6347
John Day
• BEFORE MIDNIGHT(R) 1,4, 7 • THE GREAT GATSBY(PG-13) Noon, 3, 6 • LOVEISALLYOU NEED (Ri12:45,3:45,6:45 • MAN OFSTEEL(PG-t3) l2:15, 3:15, 6:15 • MUD(PG-I3) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 • THE SAPPHIRES (PG-13) 1:15, 4:15, 7 I
Burns Lakeview
See us for retractable
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McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 54I-330-8562 • OBLIVION (PG-13) 6 • "Ridethe Divide"screensat9tonight. • After 7 p.m., shows are2f and older only. Younger than 2f mayatt endscreeningsbefore 7pm.ifaccompaniedby a legal guardian.
awnings, exterior solar screens, shade structures. Sun ehen you eantit, shade ehen you needit.
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Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271 • No movies are scheduled to screen today.
541-389-9983
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www.shadeondemand.com
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 54 I-548-8777 • THE INTERNSHIP!PG-13!1:30, 4 • MAN OFSTEEL (PG-13)2:30,5:45,9:t5 • MONSTERS UNIVERSITY (R) 8 • NOW YOU SEEME!PG-13) 2, 4:30 • THIS IS THE END(R) 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 • WORLD tNAR Z (PG-13! 8
Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt,541-549-8800 • THE INTERNSHIP (PG-13) 5:15 • MAN OFSTEEL(PG-13) 4:30, 7:30 • MONSTERS UNIVERSITY (G) 8 • MUD(PG-t3) 5 • THIS IS THE END(Rl 5:45, 8 • WORLDWARZ (PG- l3) 8 i/
5
IN l
WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066 Adjustable Beds
MM'TRESS G allery- B e n d 541-330-5084
• i
lES SCHNIB
Madras Cinema 5,110t S.W. U.S. Highway97, 54t-475-3505 • AFTER EARTH (PG-13) 5, 7:20, 9:35 • FAST& FURIOUS 6 (PG-t3)3:50,6:40,9:30 • THE INTERNSHIP (PG-13) 4:35 • MAN OF STEEL(PG-13) 3:45, 6:50, 9:55 • THIS IS THE END(R) 4:40, 7:10, 9:40 • WORLD tNARZ3-0 (PG-t3! 8 •
B iSllli i VAEIIi PROMISE
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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 54t-416-10t4 • MAN OFSTEEL (UPSTAIRS — PG-13)7:20 • MONSTERSUNIVERSITY (G) 8 • Theupstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibility.
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When Jeff Scott beganbuilding furniture with wood, the boards hechosewere pristine, flawless. Now, after successfully battling breast cancerandsupporting his wife Penny through thyroid cancer,Jeff unconsciously looks for woodthat has encountered obstacles — wood that is gnarled, knotted andbeautiful. Much like cancer patients are changed bytheir diagnosis andtreatments, the woodreveals its true nature andbeauty through aprocess of survival andhealing.
The cancerjourneyfor eachpersonis different. Somelives arelost. Some lives are forever changed.At St. Charles Cancer Center, webelieve each
personwhohasthe courageto faceacancer diagnosis, whethertheyarein treatment or out, is asurvivor. Ourrole is to provide not only the medical care,
ar es CANCER CENTER
StCharlesHealthGare.org/cancer SQ
but also the emotional, physical andspiritual support that our survivors need.
St. CharlesCancerCenter, honored to bepart of yourstory in the fight against theBigC.