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WARM SPRINGS
Tee te Green —Local junior golfers get to compete close to home. Bl
evacua e FOOd —Proponents of sustainable agriculture suggest copying nature's methods for growing plants in the woods. A3
ue 0 ire • Prineville's movie spot is trying to raisefunds for switch to digital
•I Cah-Nee-TaalsoemptiedSunday By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
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A rapidly growing wildfire on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation jumped a fireline Sunday afternoon, prompting the evacuation of 40 homes in a pair of subdivisions. The fire also triggered the 2 a.m. evacuation of guests from the Kah-Nee-Ta Resort 8 Spa. The Sunnyside Turnoff Fire had blackened 12,000 to 14,000 acres — nearly 19 to 22 square miles — as of Sunday night, said William Wilson of the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs and the assistant fire management officer on the reservation northwest of Madras. "It is right adjacent to the subdivisions and is making a run toward and around the Kah-Nee-Ta resort," he said. The fire was discovered around 9:30 a.m. Saturday and is human caused, although the exact cause remains under investigation, Wilson said. Burning through a mix of grass, sagebrush and juniper, the fire started small "spot" fires around 3 p.m. Sunday past the northern containment line. Then the winds kicked up, blowing 15 to 20 miles per hour with gusts up to 30 mph. See Fire/A6
DlpeSaufS —Research revealsnew knowledge about the
lumbering sauropod.A3
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Water-skiing tourney
— A fun event for all skill levels on Lake Billy Chinook.A7
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'X-Files' —The Tv show marks 20 years while pondering the future.A9
MermenS —Church grap-
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ples with waves of doubtas
members discover contradictions.A5
In national news — De-
Sunnyside lbrnoff Fire
troit retirees on edge as they
face pension cuts.A2
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• Area:12,000 to 14,000
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Part-time jobs are onthe rise, with some blaming the health
care overhaul. bendbulletin.com/extras
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• Cause:Human; under
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MILES
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Rlack box for the car: data and concerns
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By Jaclyn Trop
NSA geography gI'Qwth in class fueled
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by 9/11
By David Leonhardt
By Dana Priest
New York Times News Service
The Washington Post
New York Times News Service
When Timothy Murray crashed his government-issued Ford Crown Victoria in 2011, he was fortunate, as car accidents go. Murray, then the lieutenant governorofMassachusetts, was not seriously hurt, and he told the police he was wearing a seat belt and was not speeding. But a different story soon emerged. Murray was driving more than 100 miles an hour and was not wearing a seat belt, according to the computer in his car that tracks certain actions. He was given a $555 ticket; he later said he had fallen asleep. The case put Murray at the center of a growing debate over a little-known but increasingly important piece of equipment buried deep in the innards of a car: the event data recorder, more commonly known as the black box. About 96 percent of all new vehicles sold in the United States have the boxes, and in September 2014, if the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has its way, all will have them. The boxes have long been used by car companies to assess the performance of their vehicles. See Black boxes/A5
Rob Kerr /The Bulletin
The Pine Theater in Prineville is coming up on the end of its campaign to raise $80,000 to buy two digital projection systems, which are necessary for the theater to continue showing first-run films. By Scott Hammers
of Friday, owners Ali and Oniko Mehrabi had roughly $20,000 left to go, according to P RINEVILLE — B y t h e en d o f t h e Oniko Mehrabi. "If we don't make it, we're not taking off month, it should be known if there will be yet another sequel in the 75-year story of for Hawaii with it," she said. "The simple Prineville's Pine Theater. fact is, I haven't stuffed my mattress with Reopened five years ago, Crook County's $80,000 over the five years we've been only movie theater is in the final days of a opened." campaign to raise $80,000 to buy two digital As Oniko Mehrabi tells it, she and her projection systems, an essential investment husband never aspired to own their own if the theater is to continue showing first- movie theater. run films. Hollywood studios and distribuUpon moving to Prineville, Oniko Mehtion companies are phasing out the familiar rabi planned on staying home with their spools of 35 mm film in favor of digital — a young son, Michael, but on the side she dabsignificant cost savings for the makers and bled in a few real estate investments in the distributors of movies, but a financial bur- downtown area. Talking with Prineville atden for small theaters like the Pine. torneyJim Van Voorhees one day, she comThe Pine has turned to the community, plained that after being closed for 25 years, seeking contributions online through Kick- the Pine Theater had become an eyesore. starter and with the "horseshoe campaign," Van Voorhees asked Oniko Mehrabi what where a minimum $400 donation is recog- she'd do if she owned the theater, only later nized withan engraved horseshoe to be set revealing that he owned the building. in concrete in the lobby of the theater. As See Theater /A4 The Bulletin
Sunny High 90, Low 51
Page B10
Calendar A8 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 6De ar Abby Comics/Puzzles C3-4 Horoscope
cal spying agency has enlarged all its major domestic sites as well as those in Australia and Britain. Since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, its civilian and military workforce has grown by one-third, to about 33,000, accordingto the NSA. SeeNSA/A5
nomic geography of Atlanta, which is one of America's most affluent metropolitan areas yet also one of the most physically divided by income. SeeMobility/A6
INDEX
TODAY'S WEATHER
Twelve years later, the cranes and earthmovers around the ¹ tional Security Agency are still at work, tearing up pavement and uprooting trees to m ake room for a larger workforce and more powerful computers. Already bigger than the Pentagon in square footage, the NSA's footprint will grow by an additional 50 percent when construction is complete in a decade. And that's just at its headquarters at Fort Meade, Md. The nation's techni-
ATLANTA — Stacey Calvin spends almost as much time commuting to her job — on a bus, two trains and another bus — as she does working part time at a day care center. She knows exactly where to board the train and which stairwells to use at the stations so she has the best chance of getting to work on time in the morning and making it home togreether three children after school. "It's a science you just have to perfect over time," said Calvin, 37. Her four-hour round-trip stems largely from the eco-
C4 Local/State A 7- 8 SporlsMonday B1-10 A9 Movies A9 Tee to Green B7-9 A9 Nation/World A 2 T elevision A9
e P We userecycled newsprint AnIndependent
Vol. 110,No.203,
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Detroit retirees on e e
Japan eleC'tien —Japanese voters handed a landslide victory to the governing Liberal Democratic Party in parliamentary elec-
ast e ace ensioncuts
one-party rule. By securing control of both houses of parliament for
By Zachary A. Goldfarb
tired city workers, police ofThe Washington Post ficers and firefighters will not DETROIT — The battle over see pensions or health benefits the future of Detroit is set to be- reduced for at least six months. gin this week in federal court, But on Sunday, he said those where government leaders will retirement benefits will have to square off against retirees in a be cut down the road. "There are going to be some colossal debate over what the city owes to a prior generation adjustments," Orr said on "Fox of residents as it tries to rebuild News Sunday." "... We don't for the next. have a choice." "This is a question of necesSoon after Detroit emergency manager Kevyn Orr and sity," he added. Gov. Rick Snyder, R, approved But the prospect of cuts has a bankruptcy filing Thursday, sent a deep wave of fear over groups representing the 20,000 D etroit's retirees, who l i k e retirees reliant on city pensions many in the city are skeptical successfully petitioned a coun- of Orr, a corporate lawyer who ty court to effectively freeze previously worked in the Disthe bankruptcy process. trict of Columbia, and Snyder, Now, city and state officials, a Republican unpopular in this who say the court ruling will deeply Democratic city. "It's been a nightmare for all not affect their plans, are asking a federal judge to hold of us," said Shirley Lightsey, hearings early this week to president of the Detroit Retired validate the bankruptcy and City Employees Association. move forward with a strategy "We don'thave that many peofor Detroit to discharge much ple with pensions big enough of its estimated $19 billion debt. for anything to be taken away Orr has promised that re- from them."
tions Sunday, opening the possibility of accelerated changes to its economy and a shift away from its postwar pacifism under effective up to three years, the win offers Prime Minister Shinzo Abe — an outspoken nationalist who promises to revitalize Japan's stuttering
economy andstrengthen its military — the chance to bethe most transformative leader in a decade.
Of Detroit's overall debt, about half — $9.2 billion — representspension andhealthbenefits that the city has promised retirees but that it now says it does not have enough money to fully pay. The lion's share of the remaining debt is owed to bondholders. Orr has discussed a range of steps the city could take to pay off its debts, and some have speculated that it could include selling Detroit's international airport and valuable collections from the Detroit Institute of Arts. For current workers,
MideaSt iaikS —Israeli and Palestinian officials voiced skepticism Sunday that they can move toward a peace deal, as the sides inched toward what may be the first round of significant negotiations
in five years. U.S.Secretary of State JohnKerry announced late last week that an agreement has been reached that establishes the basis for resuming peace talks. He cautioned that such an agreement still
needs to be formalized, suggesting that gaps remain. Syria COnfliCt —Government troops fired mortar rounds that slammed into a mainmarket in atown in northern Syria on Sunday, killing at least 20 civilians, activist groups said. The mortar shells struck the town of Ariha, which is held mostly by opposition fighters,
a few hours ahead of iftar, the meal that breaks thedawn-to-dusk fast during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. The U.K.-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and the Local Coordination Commit-
tees, two opposition groups tracking the violence in Syria, said at
he has proposed stopping pen-
least 20 people were killed including two children and two women.
sion contributions and shifting employees to individual retirement savings accounts. But no part of th e bankruptcy process is stirring as many passions as the potential need toslicepensions and benefits for retirees. Small cities that have filed for bankruptcy protection i n r e c ent y e ars have significantly cut retirees' benefits.
Roller coaster death —A German roller coaster maker is sending officials to a North Texas amusement park to inspect a ride after a woman fell to her death. Tobias Lindnar, a project manager for Gerst-
lauer Amusement Rides in Munsterhausen, Germany,told The Dallas Morning News that the company will investigate what led to Friday's fatal accident at Six Flags Over Texas in Arlington.
China earthquake —A strong, shallow earthquake struck a moderately populated part of western China early this morning, and state
media reported at least three deaths. Thequakehit near the city of Dingxi in Gansu province, a largely desert and pastureland region with a population of 26 million. That makes it one of China's more lightly
populated provinces, although the Dingxi areahas agreater concentration of farms and towns with a total population of about 2.7 million.
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Egypt attacks —Coordinated dayand nighttime attacks Sunday by emboldened militants in Egypt's northern Sinai Peninsula targeted different areas in the main city of el-Arish and a border town, killing
one civilian and four security officers, according to officials. Thepace of attacks on the police and military in northern Sinai has intensified since the July 3 ouster of President Mohammed Morsi from power,
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but assaults havelargely beenconfined to desolate desert areas of the region.
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Morsi's future —A central question hanging over Egypt — what is to become of Mohammed Morsi, the ousted president — turned I
cloudier Sunday asstate institutions conducted a bizarre public argument about his legal status. It started with a report Sundayevening
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in the state newspaper Al Ahram asserting that Morsi, who has been held incommunicado by the military since July 3, would be charged
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with espionage in connection with a plot said to involve the U.S.am1
publishing false information "to serve certain political currents." 4"
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FranCe 'tensiens —Riot police patrolled Sunday in suburbs west of Paris that haveseencars torched and apolice station attacked
•
amid tensions linked to authorities' handling of France's ban on Muslim face veils. Some 20 cars were set ablaze overnight and four
people detained in asecond night of violence, officials said Sunday. ~
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bassador. Then, prosecutors denied the report. And shortly before midnight, the military issued a statement scolding the newspaper for
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Interior Minister Manuel Valls said the overnight incidents targeted the town of Elancourt. — From wire reports
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Tony Delak/The Assoaated Press
Police officers search Sundaynearwhere three bodies were recently found in East Cleveland.
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Local and federal law enforcement authorities searchedabandoned homes and lots in the Cleveland suburb Sunday after the bodies of three
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women wrapped in plastic bags werediscovered. Police officials said they hadarrested a 35-year-old manwho they
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said might be involved in the case Friday after a two-hour standoff at his mother's home in East Cleveland.
As of late Sunday, the man,identified as Michael Madison, had not been charged. Police officials identified Madison as a registered sex offender who had spent time in prison for an attempted rape.
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One woman's bodywas found in East Cleveland onFriday after a
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resident reported a foul smell, and two other bodies were found during
a search Saturday, the police said. Thebodies were discovered near one another in anabandoned home, agarage and abackyard. — New YorkTimes NewsService
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Pakistan fights for ground in waj to eradicate polio trous setback for the global effort against polio. In DecemKARACHI, Pakistan — Us- ber,nine vaccinators were shot m an, who l i mps o n a l e g dead here, and two Taliban bowed by the polio he caught commanders banned vaccinaas a child, made sure that his tion in their areas, saying the first three children were pro- vaccinations could r e sume tected from the disease, but he only if drone strikes ended. In turned away vaccinators when January, 10 vaccinators were his youngest was born. killed i n N i geria's MuslimH e was f urious that t h e dominated north. Central Intelligence Agency, Since then, there have been in its hunt for Osama bin Lad- isolated killings — of an activen, had staged a fake vaccina- ist, a police officer and vaccination campaign, and infuriated tors — each of which has temby U.S. drone strikes, one of porarily halted the campaign. which, he said, had struck the The war on p olio, which son of a man he knew, blowing costs $1 billion a year and is off his head. He had come to expected to take at least five see the war on polio, the lon- more years, hangs in the balgest, most expensive disease ance. When it began 25 years eradication effort in history, as ago, 350,000 people a year, a Western plot. mostly children, were paraIn January, his 2-year-old lyzed. Last year, fewer than son, Musharaf, became the 250 were, and only three counf irst child worldwide to b e tries — Afghanistan, Nigeria crippled by polio this year. and Pakistan — have never "I know now I made a mis- halted its spread at any point. take," said Usman, 32, who, While some experts fear like many in his Pashtun tribe, the killings will devastate the uses only one name. "But you effort here, Pakistan's governAmericans have caused pain ment insists that they will not, in my community. Americans and has taken steps to ensure pay for the polio campaign, t hat. Vaccinators' pay w a s a nd that's good. Bu t y o u raised to $5 a day in the most abused a humanitarian misdangerous areas, police and sion for a military purpose." army escorts were increased Anger like his over U.S. for- and control rooms were creeign policy has led to a disas- ated tospeed crisis responses.
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MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Monday, July 22, the 203rd day of 2013. There are 162 days left in the year.
TRENDING HAPPENINGS POPe —Pope Francis begins his first overseas trip since taking office, heading to Brazil,
the world's most populous Roman Catholic nation.
Trial —Stephen "The Rifleman" Flemmi, the former
Sustainable agriculture proponents say imitating natural growth is a recipe for success.
Organizer Tom Crane shows raspberry plants in an overgrown section at the Glendale Garden in Akron, Ohio.
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partner of reputed mobboss James "Whitey" Bulger, is scheduled to return to the stand to testify in Bulger's trial.
Home sales —TheNational Association of Realtors
releases existing homesales for June.
HISTORY Highlight:In 1943, American
forces led byGen.George Patton captured Palermo, Sicily, during World War II. In1587,an English colony fated to vanish under mysterious
circumstanceswasestablished on Roanoke Island off North Carolina. In1796, Cleveland, Ohio, was
foundedbyGeneralMoses Cleaveland. In1893,Wellesley College professor Katharine Lee Bates visited the summit of Pikes Peak, where she was inspired to write the original version of her poem "America the Beautiful." In1916, a bomb went off during
a PreparednessDayparade in San Francisco, killing 10people. In1933,American aviator Wiley Post completed the first solo flight around the world as he returned to New York's Floyd Bennett Field after traveling for 7 days, 18 and 3/4 hours. In1934, bank robber John Dillinger was shot to death
by federal agents outside Chicago's Biograph Theater, where he had just seen the
Clark Gablemovie "Manhattan Melodrama." In1942, the Nazis began transporting Jews from the Warsaw Ghetto to the Treblinka
concentration camp.Gasoline rationing involving the use of
coupons beganalong theAtlantic seaboard. In1946, Jewish extremists blew up a wing of the King David Hotel in Jerusalem, killing
By Mary Beth Breckenridge
that were a lready growing there. AKRON, Ohio — Few of us The organizers don't try to associate forests with farming. c ontrol what's grown in t h e But some proponents of sus- garden plots, but the gardeners' tainable agriculture say we can differentpreferences have regrow food more successfull y sulted in the diversity of crops and with l ess environmen- that's one of the central tenets tal harm by copying nature's of forest farming. methods for growing plants in That diversity is called polythe woods. culture, which means growThey're advocates of food ing multiple crops in the same forests, gardens that are pat- space. The variety in the plants' terned after a natural forest heights, genetics and flowerecosystem. Like a woodland, ing and fruiting times creates a food forest contains plants of a more stable ecosystem that's different heights, genetic make- less susceptible to problems ups and growth habits, creating such as diseases, insect dama mutually beneficial arrange- age and weeds and is better ment that results is better soil, able to bounce back when probreduced pest pressure and less lems do occur. need for human intervention. The aim of a food forest is to A group of community activ- create an arrangement that' s istsused some aspects of the as close as possible to a selffood forest concept when they maintaining ecosystem, said created the Glendale Commu- Dave Jacke, a Massachusetts nity Garden in West Akron, landscape designer and enviOhio, this spring. They kept the ronmentalist who designs food mulberry treesand the rasp- forests and co-wrote the twoberry and blackberry bushes volume book "Edible Forest that were growing on what Gardens." used to be a vacant lot on South Like a natural forest, the Walnut Street, and they hope to "lumpy" landscape of a food expand by planting more edible forest provides habitat for spelandscaping, said Jan Green, cies that help keep pests in one of the garden's organizers check and makes it harder for and a longtime farmer who insectsand disease to spread. now lives on the street. Plants in a food forest perform Those trees and shrubs ram- multiple functions — producble in a naturalized area along ing food, improving the soil, the back of the lot, whilethe rest providing a continuous source of the area is divided into plots of natural fertilizer and pertended by families, individu- haps provide shade and beauty, als and groups including stu- Jacke explained. dents from nearby St. Vincent Food forests comprise both Elementary School, a group gardens that resemble forests of Nepaleserefugees and fire- as wellas gardens created in fighters from Fire Station No. 3 forests that already exist. just behind the garden. Some of The latter is often called forthe plots are growing food that est farming, and it's a way to will be donated to a food bank. both improveforestsand creThe group has planted black- ate income from them, said Ken berries, raspberries and grape- Mudge, anassociateprofessor vines in the same vicinity as the in the horticulture department chives, mint and other foods of Cornell University. Akron Beacon Journal
Some parts of the garden resemble a "food forest," imitating the way plants grow naturally.
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The foods and other crops that can be grown in an existing forest are limited, but they include fruits such as berries and pawpaws and nuts such as walnuts and hickory, Mudge said. Two particularly lucrative crops that can be grown in that setting are shiitake mushrooms, which can bring in $12 to $16 a pound, and American ginseng, which is more difficult to growbut can command $200 to $300 a pound. Growing in a forest requires thinning trees to let in light, but "managing shade is part of the game," Mudge said. It's also a benefit, because thinning a forest that's overcrowded with young trees helps the remaining plants stay healthier. Most people, however, don't have a mature forest in their backyards, which is where the forest gardening that Jacke advocates comes in. A forestgarden isdesigned to resemble a natural forest, which in its mature state would have a variety of layers — tall and short trees, shrubs, shorter plants, vines and low-growing ground covers. However, Jacke said, a forest garden could be patterned on a forest at any stage of its evolu-
90 people. In1963, Sonny Liston knocked out Floyd Patterson in the first round of their rematch in Las Vegas to retain the world heavyweight title.
In1975,the Houseof Representatives joined the Senate in voting to restore the American
citizenship of ConfederateGen. Robert E. Lee. In1983, Samantha Smith and her parents returned home to
Manchester, Maine,after completing a whirlwind tour of the Soviet Union. In 2011, Anders Breivik massa-
cred 69 people at aNorwegian island youth retreat after detonating a bomb in nearby Oslo that killed eight others in the
nation's worst violence since World War II.
Ten yearsago:Saddam Hussein's sons OdaiandQusai were killed whenU.S.forces stormed a villa in Mosul, Iraq.
Five yearsago:Tropical Storm Dolly spun into a hurricane as it headed toward the U.S.-Mexico
border. One yearago:President Barack Obama made a quicktrip to Colorado to meet with families
of those gunneddown in anAurora movie theater and to hear from state and local officials about the shooting that left12
people deadanddozens more injured.
BIRTHDAYS Former SenateMajority Leader BobDole, R-Kan., is 90. Actor Terence Stamp is 75. Game show host Alex Trebek
is 73. Singer GeorgeClinton is 72. Actor Danny Glover is 67. Singer Mireille Mathieu is
67. Actor-comedian-director Albert Brooks is 66. Rock
singer Don Henley is 66. Movie composer Alan Menkenis 64. Actor Willem Dafoe is 58. Actor John Leguizamo is 49.
Actor-comedian David Spade is 49. — From wire reports
Dinosaurs hadplen of teeth By Brad Balukjian
SCIENCE
Paul Tople Akron Beacon Journal
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tion, not just its mature state. He said a more practical food forest for many people would be one that mimics a younger forest, wit h m e d ium-height trees spaced widely to let in more light, along with shrubs and herbaceous perennials. Annual plants such as broccoli, tomatoes and peas could be mixed in, too, as long as they're positioned where they'll get plenty of sunlight. Jacke recommended growing plants that are naturally resistant to insects and diseases. For example,he'd avoid apples, which are notoriously prone to diseasesin most areas of the country, and instead grow other fruits such as persimmons, elderberries and goji berries. Planning an effective food forest takes some work and research, including clarifying the gardener's goals and understanding the site and the plants that might be grown there, Jacke said. But he said that knowledge also give the gardener a great deal of freedom to play with the design. It's a little like being a jazz musician, he said. You need to hone your skills before you can improvise well. A foodforestalso represents
SiATURILY
FARMER
NARKET
more of a commitment than a typical food garden, because it involves planting trees and shrubs that can't be changed as easily as annual plants. "So you've really got to think these things through," he said. "It can be very involved," said Jacke, who lays out the design process in his books and said he's heard some complaints about setting "a pretty
high bar." But a gardener doesn't have to follow his process completely, he said. It's possible to just plant a mix of species "and see what happens." What he's ultimately trying to accomplish, he said, is helping people see that they're connected to nature instead of separate from it.
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types ofsauropods, they estiPresentedby the GarnerGroup Los Angeles Times mated that one genus called Saturdays ,June 29 -Sept.21110am-2pm D inosaurs a l most b a n kThe next step was to break Nigersaurus replaced its teeth NorthWest Crossing Neighborhood Center • • a rupted the tooth fairy. New apart the jaws and remove not every two weeks, with nine research shows that the lum- only the 30-odd visible teeth spares for every tooth. j NORTHWEST D'Emic also noticed that bering plant-eaters called sau- individually, b u t w ha t ever CROSSING I l~ I ropods produced new teeth as backups were embedded in the more recent sauropods had www.nwxfarmersmarket.com often as twice per month and sockets below. evolved smaller, narrower teeth had up to nine backup teeth in In other words, he needed to that got replaced a lot faster, a single tooth socket. pull some teeth. like Diplodocus. He wondered: "That had to be done by a While the fearsome TyranWhy the shift? nosaurus rex is known as the professional, somebody with a Sauropods didn't actually • a • • s king ofthe dinosaurs,the sau- surgeon's hands and patience," chew their salad — they clipped ropods were the real royalty. D'Emic said. it off with their teeth and then These creatures, including the Patience indeed. B ehind swallowed it whole. Perhaps childhood favorite Apatosau- every visible tooth, the Cama- having teeth turn over faster rus (previously known as Bron- rasaurus had t hree backup kept them fresh for the hard tosaurus), were the largest ani- teeth lined up and ready for use. work of cutting vegetation off mals that ever lived on land. The Diplodocus had even more trees or bushes, D'Emic said. "A big T. rex is maybe 40 or — five spares behind each visAnother theory is that given 45 feet tall, but a big sauropod ible tooth. the limited utility of its teeth, pushes 100feetlong or more," It took six months for the Diplodocus invested its bodily said Michael D'Emic, a verte- dino-dentist to extract the teeth, resourcesin other tissues, prebrate paleontologist at Stony embed them in a special resin, ferring a quantity-over-quality Brook University in New York saw them up, mount them on approach. "All the tooth had to • • • L • and lead author of the teeth slides, sand and polish them do was snip," D'Emic said. study published Wednesday in by hand and then photograph the journal PLOS One. them for study. Havingnever let go of a childIn addition to the large numhood fascination with dinober of teeth in the pipeline, D'Emic and his team were insaurs, D'Emic wondered how the enormous size — and hence terested in how quickly those diet — of sauropods may have teeth would come in. affected the evolution of their C ross-section images r e jaws and teeth. Since they were vealed lines in each tooth's denavowed vegetarians, D'Emic tin, the layer below the enamel. assumed their teeth would be Since a new layer grows each well worn from munching co- day,the researchers could figpious amounts of tough plant ure out the age of a tooth by matter. counting those lines, much like To investigate, he and his counting rings on a tree stump. ~~ Cash , team scoured dozens of muAnd by looking at the intervals Pg Pg You-haul AER3311WAW AMV1150VAW seum collections in search of in age between successive teeth P"ce A8TCNWPAW ADB1100AWW sauropod jaws. Teeth were in a socket, they could estieasy to come by, but persuad- mate how quickly teeth were ing a museum curator to let him replaced. tear apart an entire jaw was Camarasaurus, with its largdifficult. er, broader-crowned teeth, had He lucked out, finding a a new tooth come inabout once Big-city selection, home-town friendliness! Camarasaurus jaw dug up in every two months. Diplodocus, southern Utah and a Diplodo- with smaller, narrower teeth, cus jaw from Colorado. Both had a replacementabout once animals lived about 150 million a month. yearsago inthe Jurassicperiod, When the scientists used 571B NE Azure, Hwy 20, east of Pilot Butte and were types of sauropods a mathematical model to exwwwj ohnsonbrotherstv.com that lived side by side. trapolate their findings to other •
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013
LOOKING AHEAD: POLITICS
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0 ama ans to unvei isa en a oreconom By Mark Landier New Yorh Times News Service
WASHINGTON — With major battles looming in the fall over the federal budget and the debt ceiling, President Barack Obama is trying to regain the initiative, embarking on a campaign-style tour of the Midwest this week to lay out his agenda for reinvigorating the nation's economy, administration officials said Sunday. Obama's offensive will begin Wednesday in Galesburg, Ill., with what his aides are saying will be a major address on economic policy at Knox College. Officials declined to provide details of the president's message, but said he would set his terms for what they expect will be another bruising battle with a Republican-controlled House over the nation's fiscal policies. White House officials liken Wednesday's speech to one he gave in 2011 in Osawatomie, Kan., where he articulated the theme of economicinequalityin American society that became a leitmotif of hi s re-election campaign;and one at Georgetown University soon a fter taking offic e in 2009, when he talked about howthe American economy would recoverfrom the Great Recession. S eptember will m ar k t h e
fifth anniversary of the financial crisis that underscored that recession, and White House officials said Obama wanted to take stock of the economy's r ecovery and chart a p a t h forward. The nature of the economic debate has shifted in recent months, with the budget deficit shrinking rapidly while the economy, though firmly in recovery, struggles to build up a head of steam. But the president clearly expects to encounter the same resistance that has stymied him since Republicans seized control of the House in 2010. "In a couple of months, we will face some more critical budget deadlines that require congressional action, not showdowns that serve only to harm familiesand businesses — and the president wants to t alk about the issues that should be at the core of that debate," Dan Pfeiffer, the president's senior adviser, said in a mass email Sunday. Wednesday's speech, O bama's aides said, will be drawn in broad strokes, reaffirming themes like the need fora prosperous middle class. In a series of smaller speeches after that, they said, Obama will o ffer p o licy p r oposals
— both new and familiar — on health care, housing, the affordability of higher education and how to create more manufacturing jobs. He will also make the caseforthe economic benefits of overhauling the immigration code — legislation that passed the Senate but is now languishing in the Republicancontrolled House. Obama's trip comes after a rare political victory last week, when the Senate, following a protracted stalemate, confirmed his nominees for the Environmental Protection Agency, the Labor Department and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. It also brings the president back to familiar ground, after
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his highly unusual and deeply personal remarks Friday about the verdict in the Trayvon Martin murder case. In contrast to those comments, which Obama made without any w a rning in the White House briefing room, his staff is meticulously orchestrating this economic tour. The choice of Knox College — a small, private liberal arts college in rural Illinois — is laden with symbolism: He spoke there as a senator in 2005, in what was his first major address on economic issues.
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Theater Continued from A1 Van Voorhees had o n ce hoped to reopen the Pine as a performance hall for live theater, but challenges over the city's fire code stopped him. Over the years, the building deteriorated. "It was a mess. The roof leaked; there was stuff growing in the carpet. It was not an attractive piece of property," he said. Van Voorhees had turned down a h a ndful o f b u yers who'd planned to turn the Pine into something other than a theater. Satisfied the Mehrabis had the right idea about what to do with the building, he agreed to sell. "It was truly a divine accident," Oniko Mehrabi said. The accident quickly turned into a full-time job. Ali Mehrabi quit his job and set to renovating the Pine, opening the doors in late 2007. In 2011, the Mehrabis added a second screen. Adding a second screen was not in the Mehrabis' original plans. The years since they opened the theater have been a sometimes bumpy education in how the movie business works, Oniko Mehrabi said, and she counts the decision to add the second screen as one of the toughest and most costly lessons. In many instances, Hollywood distributors won't send a theater a movie unless it can commit to regularly screening it for four to six weeks, Oniko Mehrabi said. With a single screen,the Pine Theater faced the choice of featuring a single film long enough for everyone in Prineville to see it multiple times, or getting such movies weeks after theaters in Madras, Redmond and Bend. The transition t o d i g ital was already underway when the Mehrabis bought the Pine Theater but has recently accelerated. Looking to move the switch f orward, Hollywood studios helped many of the larger theater chains pay for their costly digital projection systems but offered nothing to smaller operators like the Pine Theater, Oniko Mehrabi said. Thoughthey initiallyviewed the theater as simply a business, through the fundraising push the family has learned how the theater fits in to the lives of their neighbors. Oniko Mehrabi riffs off several of the stories she's heard in the last few months — the Facebook employee who decidedto buy a house in Prineville rather than Redmond because there was a place he could take his family to the movies, the employees of the P rineville Les Schwab Tire Center who passed the hat to purchase a horseshoe, and the M adras woman in her 90s who sent an "inspirational" letter describing her experiences working
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Ali Mehrabi loads film into one of the projectors at the Pine Theater. The renovated theater opened under the Mehrabis in 2007, and in 2011 they added a second screen. at the theater decades ago. "It's so much more important than Ali and I and Michael," Oniko Mehrabi said. "It's the community. We've had so many people that have moved to the community that don't know this theater was ever closed." Van Voorhees said having a movie theater up and running again in Prineville has been a boon for businesses of all sorts. Back in the 1980s, his family would often journey to Bend to see a movie, spending a good bit of their time and disposable income outside Prineville. "If we went there, to justify the cost of gas in our minds, we'd go to all the big box stores in Bend," he said. "A lot of people did that. It drew a lot of retail out of the community." Van Voorhees said he understands there are people in the community uneasy about the idea of a for-profit business seeking donations to keep its doors open, but he views the theater differently. The Pine Theater can b e c o m pared to the recently-added flight between Redmond and Los Angeles, he said, which only came about because area residents and businesses agreed to buy $350,000 worth of tickets up front. Prineville C i t y Co u n cil president Steve Uffelman said Prineville's small population and lack of t h rough traffic
makes for a challenging business environment even in the best of times. Since its re-
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opening, the Pine Theater has helped draw residents downtown, he said, and once there they'll often get a meal at a nearby restaurant or do other
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shopping. "I find having that available to the community pretty darned important," he said. "It's community. It's fine to watch movies at home on the TV, but to see it on a big screen with other people, it's just the social aspect of it." Crook County Sheriff Jim Hensley said he remembers going to the Pine Theater as a child, and the stir created when the sights and sounds of the counterculture came to Prineville with the screening of the "Woodstock" documentary while he was in high school. By the time Hensley got his first job in law enforcement with the Prineville Police Department in the early 1980s, the theater had closed, and the teens he met on patrol often recited the same complaint: there's nothing to do in this town; we need a movie theater. "This town r e ally n eeds s omething like that, and i f that was to leave, here we go again," Hensley said. "We're going to have to drive 20 miles to the nearest theater, at the best, which is in Redmond. I think it would be a tragedy to lose that, for the kids' sake and for families, and for this community." — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammersCbendbulieti n.com
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MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A S
IN FOCUS:RELIGION
ome ormons searc e e iscover OLI By Laurie Goodstein New York Times News Service
In the small but cohesive Mormon community where he grew up, Hans Mattsson was a solid believer and a pillar of the church. Hefollowed hisfather and grandfather into church leadership and finally became an "area authority" overseeing the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints throughout Europe. When fellow believers in Sweden first began coming to him with information from the Internet that contradicted the church's history and teachings, he dismissed it as "anti-Mor-
mon propaganda," the whisperings of Lucifer. He asked his superiors for help in responding to the members' doubts, and when they seemed to only sidestep the questions, Mattsson began his own investigation. But when he discovered credible evidence that the church's founder and prophet, Joseph Smith, was a polygamist, and that the Book of Mormon and other canonical scriptures were rife with historical anomalies, Mattsson said he felt that the foundation on which he had built his life began to crumble. Around the world and in the United States, where the faith was founded, the M o rmon Church is grappling with a wave of doubt and disillusionment among members who encountered information on the Internet that sabotaged what they were taught about their faith, according to interviews with dozens of Mormons and those who studythe church. "I felt like I had an earthquake under my f eet," said Mattsson, now a n e m eritus area authority. "Everything I'd been taught, everything I'd
Black boxes Continued from A1 But data stored in the devic-
es is increasingly being used to identify safety problems in cars and as evidence in traffic accidents and criminal cases. And the trove of data inside the boxes has raised privacy concerns, including questions about who owns the information, and what it can be used for,even as critics have raised questions about its reliability. To federal regulators, law enforcement authorities and insurance companies, the data is an indispensable tool to investigate crashes. The black boxes "provide critical s a fety i n f o rmation that might not otherwise be available to NHTSA to evaluate what happened during a crash — and what future steps could be taken to save lives and prevent injuries," David Strickland, the safety agency's administrator, said in a statement. But to consumer advocates, the data is only the latest example of g overnments and companies having too much access to p r ivate i n formation. Once gathered, they say, the data can be used against c ar owners, t o f i n d f a u l t in accidents or i n c r i m inal investigations. "These cars are equipped with computers that collect massive amounts of data," said Khaliah Barnes of the Electronic P r ivacy I n f ormation Center, a Washington-based consumer group. "Without protections, it can lead to all kinds of abuse." What's m o re, c o nsumer advocates say, government officials have yet to provide consistent guidelines over how the data should be used. "There are no clear standards that say, this is a permissible use of the data and this is not," Barnes said. Fourteen states, including New York, have passed laws that say that, even though the data belongs to the vehicle's owner, law enforcement officials and those involved in civil litigation can gain access to the black boxes with a court order. In these states, lawyers may subpoena the data for criminal investigations and civil lawsuits, making the information accessible to third parties, including la w e n f orcement
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"Everything I'd been taught, everything I'd been proud to preach about and witness about, just crumbled under my feet. It was such a terrible psychoiogicai and nearly physical disturbance," says Hans Matteson, who used to oversee the Mormon Church in Europe, with his wife, Birgitta, in New York. been proud to preach about and witness about, just crumbled under my feet. It was such a terrible psychological and nearly physical disturbance." M attsson's decision to g o public with his disaffection, in a church whose top leaders commonly deliberate in private, is a sign that the church faces serious challenges not just from outside but also from skeptics mside. Greg Prince, a Mormonhistorian and businessman in Washington who has held local leadership positions in the church, shares Mattsson's doubts. "Consider a Catholic cardinal suddenly going to the media and saying about his own church, 'I don't buy a lot of this stuff,'" Prince said. "That's the level we're talking about here." He said of Mattsson, "He is, as far as I know, the highest-
ranking church official who has gone public with deep concerns, who has had a faith crisis and come forward to say he's going to talk about it because maybe that will help us all to resolve it." Every faith has its skeptics and detractors, but the Mormon Church'shistory creates special challenges. The church was born in America only 183 years ago, and its founder and prophet, Joseph Smith, and his disciples left behind reams of papers that still exist, documenting their work, exposing their warts and sometimes contradicting one another. "The Roman C a t h olic Church has had 2,000 years to work through the hiccups in its history," said Terryl Givens, a professor of English, literature and religion at the University of Richmond, and a Mormon believer. "Mormonism is still an adolescent religion." Givens and his wife, Fiona, recently presented what they called "Crucible of Doubt" sessions for questioning Mormons in England, Scotland and Ireland. Hundreds attended each event. "Sometimes they are just this side of leaving, and sometimes they are simply faithful members who are looking for clarity and understanding to add to their faith," said Givens, who hosted a similar discussion in July in Provo, Utah, and has others planned in the United States. The church is not sponsoring the sessions, Givens said, but local bishops give their permission. Eric Hawkins, a c h u rch spokesman, said that "every church faces this challenge" adding, "The answer is not to try to silence critics, but to provide as much information and
as much support as possible to those who may be affected." Hawkins also said the Mormon Church, which counts 14million members worldwide, has consistently added about I million members every three years. But Mattsson and others say the disillusionment is infecting the church's best and brightest. A survey of more than 3,300 Mormon disbelievers,released last year, found that more than half of themen and4in 10of the women had served in leadership positions in the church. The first doubts filtered up to Mattsson from members who had turned to the Internet to research a Sunday school talk at their church. There are dozens of websites other than the Mormons' own that present critical views of the faith. The questions were things like: • Why does the church always portray Joseph Smith translating the Book of Mormon from golden plates, when witnesses d e scribed hi m looking down into a hat at a "peep stone," a rock that he believed helped him find buried treasure? • Why were black men excluded from th e p r iesthood from the mid-1800s until 1978'? • Why did Smith claim that the Book of Abraham, a core scripture, was a translation of ancient writings from the Hebrew patriarch Abraham, when Egyptologists now identify the papyrus that Smith used in the translation as a common funerary scroll that has nothing to do with Abraham? • Is it true that Smith took dozens of wives, some as young as 14 and some already wed to other Mormon leaders, to the great pain of his first wife, Emma?
investigations into the crashes caused by sudden, unintended acceleration in some Toyota vehicles. Until recently, crash investigators needed an automaker's proprietaryreader as well as the expertise to analyze the data. The safety administration's regulations wil l h e lp enable universal access to the data by using a commercially available tool. At th e same time, police departments are receiving training on the new regulations. In Romulus, N.Y., Heather AinswoNh / New York Times News Serwce last week, the Collision Safety Andrew McNeiii looks under the hood of a vehicle used in a test Institute, a consultancy in San crash training session for New York State Police investigators in Diego, helped teach New York Romuius, N.Y. To federal regulators, Iaw enforcement authorities State Police investigators how and insurance companies, the data collected by so-caiied black to read the devices. boxes is an indispensable tool to investigate crashes. But privacy advocates have e xpressed concern that t h e data collected will only grow or insurance companies that form in the real world, and to include a wider time frame could cancel a driver's policy one of our priorities for EDRs and other elements like GPS or raise a driver'spremium continues to b e p r eserving and location-basedservices. "The rabbit hole goes very based on the recorder's data. consumer privacy," said Wade In Murray's case, a court Newton, a spokesman for the deep when talking about this order was not required to re- trade association. "Automak- stuff," said Thomas Kowalick, lease the data to investigators. ers don't access EDR data an expertin event data recordMassachusetts is not among without c onsumer p e rmisers and a f o rmer co-chairthe states to pass a law govern- sion, and we believe that any man of the federal committee ing access to the data. Asked government requirements to that set the standard for black about the case, Murray, who install EDR's on all vehicles boxes. did not contest the ticket and must include steps to protect T oday, th e b o xe s h a v e who resigned as l ieutenant consumer privacy." spawned a cottage industry governor in June to become The origins of black boxes, for YouTube videos on how to head of the Chamber of Com- which are the size of about two expunge the data. And Kowm erce in Worcester, Mass., de- decks ofcards and are situated alick, seeing an opportunity, clined to comment. under thecenter console, date invented a device that safeCurrent regulations require to the 1990 model year, when guards access to i n-vehicle that the presence of the black General Motors i n troduced electronics networks. It is conbox bedisclosed in the owner's them to conduct quality stud- trolled by the vehicle's owner manual. But the vast majories. Since then, their use and with a key and is useful in the ity of drivers who do not read the scope of the data they col- event of theft, he said. "For most of the 100-year the manual thoroughly may lect has expanded. not know that their vehicle The lack of standardization history of the car, it used to be 'he said, she said,'" Kowalick can capture and record their a mong m anufacturers h a s speed, brake position, seat belt made it difficult to extract the said. "That's no longer going use and other data each time data, most notably during the to be the way." they get behind the wheel. Unlike the black boxes on airplanes, which continually A Free Public Service ~> < Orepan Newspeper record data including audio QIQ~+ vumishera aseociation and video, the cars' recorders I capture onlythe few seconds surrounding a crash or air bag deployment.A separate device e xtracts the data, which is then analyzed through comOver 80 Oregon Newspapers, puter software. The Alliance of Automobile from 36 Counties, Manufacturers, a W a shington-based trade association ' I I I i I I I that represents 12 automakers including General Motors and Chrysler, said it supported the 0 ©X5(gllj939EI+ I3 iil or use the mandate because the recordo QKg f~ g ) service to be ers helpedto monitor passenautomatically emailed of notices ger safety. "Event data recorders help that match your needs. Pa our engineers and researchM~ kmnESI R M ers understand how cars per•
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The story of the NSA's postSept. 11 history could begin in many places, including the parking lot of the CIA. There, in late 2001, a burly Navy SEAL paced inside a trailer with a telephone to his ear. The trailer had been hastily converted from a day-care facility to an operations center for the CIA's covert armed drone program, which was about to kill one of its first al-Qaida targets, 8,000 miles away in Afghanistan. On the line with the SEAL was the drone operator and a "collector," an NSA employee
Continued from A1 Its budget has roughly doubled, and the number of private companies it depends on has more than tripled, from 150 to close to 500, according to a 2010 Washington Post count. The hiring, construction and contracting boom is symbolic of the hidden fact that in the years after the Sept. 11 attacks, the NSA became the single most important intelligence agency
in finding al-Qaida and
at the agency's gigantic base
other enemies overseas, according to current and former counterterrorism officials and experts.
at Fort Gordon in Augusta, Ga. The collector was controlling electronic surveillance equipment in the airspace over the Information demand part of Afghanistan where the The story of the NSA's CIA had zeroed in on one pargrowth, obscured by the ticular person. agency's extreme secrecy, The SEAL p l eaded with is directly tied to the insa- the collector to locate the celltiable demand for its work phone in A f g hanistan that product by the rest of the matched the phone number U.S. intelligence commu- that the SEAL had just given nity, military units and the him, according to someone FBI. with knowledge of the incident The NSA's broad reach in who spoke on the condition of servicing that demand is at anonymity because of the senthe heart of the controversy sitivity of the issue. swirling around the agency The collector had never bethese days. Both Congress fore done such a thing. Before and the public have been even intercepting a cellphone roiled by t h e d i sclosure conversation, he was accusof top-secret documents tomed to first confirming that detailing the collection of the user was the person he had U.S. phone records and the been directed to spy on. The monitoring of emails, so- conversation would then be cial-media posts and other translated, analyzed, distilled Web traffic of foreign ter- and, weeks later, if deemed to rorism suspects and their be interesting, sent around the enablers. U.S. intelligence community Lacking a strong infor- and the White House. mant network to provide On that day, though, the mindetails about al-Qaida, U.S. utes mattered. "We just want you to find the intelligence andthe military turned to the NSA's technol- phone!" the SEAL urged. No ogy to fill the void. The de- one cared about the conversamand for information also tion it might be transmitting. favored the agency's many The CIA wanted the phone surveillance t e c hniques, as a targeting beacon to kill its which try to divine the in- owner. tent of people by vacuumThe NSA collector in Georgia ing up and analyzing their took what was then considered communications. a gigantic leap — from using "There was nothing that the nation's most sophisticated gave you more insight into spy technology to record the the inner workings of these words of presidents, kings and organizations as the NSA," dictators to using it to kill a sinsaid Michael Leiter, former gle man in a terrorist group. director of t h e N a tional The revolutionary signifiCounterterrorism Center. cance of that and other similar "I can't think of any terror- operations was quicklygrasped ist investigation where the by intelligence officials. With NSA was not a preeminent analysts and technicians from or central player." the National Geospatial-IntelOne top-secret d o cu- ligence Agency, the NSA subment recently d i sclosed sequently assembled a team in by former intelligence con- the basement of its headquartractor Edward Snowden, ters called the Geolocation Cell, w ho is on the run f r om or Geo Cell. Its purpose was to U.S. authorities, revealed track people, geographically, in that 60 percent of the pres- real time. ident's daily i n telligence The cell opened up chat briefing came from the rooms with military and CIA NSA in 2000, even before officers in Afghanistan — and, the surge in the agency's eventually, Iraq — who were capabilities began. directing operations there. To"The f o r eign s i g nals gether they aimed the NSA's that NSA collects are in- many sensors toward individvaluable to national secu- ual targets while tactical units rity," the agency said in a aimed their weaponry against statement released Friday them. to The Washington Post. A motto quickly caught on at "This i n formation h elps Geo Cell: "We Track 'Em, You the agency determine Whack 'Em." where adversaries are located, what they're planning, when they're planSAVE $50 or $100 per unit ning to carry it out, with on select motorized whom t h ey're w o r k ing, Hunter Douglas products and the kinds of weapons with PowerRise® they're using."
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A6 T H E BULLETIN • MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013
Fire
of the Charley Canyon and Wolfe Point subdivisions, he Continued from A1 said. In all, there are 40 homes "When the winds hit them, and about 120 people in the we couldn't stop them," Wil- spread-out subdivisions. son said. The fire was moving to the Around 4 p . m., f irefight- east, he said, pushed by strong ers called for the evacuation winds. Wilson said Sunday
night that he d idn't expect any more evacuation orders. There were eight handcrews, 20 wildland fire engines, and about 15 structure engines all fighting the fire. OregonIncidentManagement Team 4 is set to take over com-
mand of the fire today, according to the Northwest Interagency Coordination Center website. Air tankers were also helping the fight Sunday, droppingretardant ahead of the flames, induding close to the resort. As of Sunday night the fire
— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarli ng@bendbulleti n.com
tremendous variation across the U.S. in the extent to which kids can rise out of poverty."
Continued from A1 The low-income neighborhoods here often stretch for miles, with rows of houses and low-slung apartments, interrupted by the occasional strip mall, and lacking much in the
— Nathaniel Hendren, Harvard economist
way of good-paying jobs. This geography appears to play a major role in making
• .n
David Walter Banks/ New York Times News Service
Stacey Calvin, who commutes four hours round-trip to work part time at a day care center, plays Scrabble with her three children in their home in Stone Mountain, Ga., an Atlanta suburb. The odds of rising to another income level are notably low in certain cities, like Atlanta and Charlotte, N.C., and much higher in New York and Boston. That variation does not stem
people's chances of rising be- simply from the fact that some yond the station of their birth, including education, f amily structure and the economic layout of metropolitan areas. Climbing the income ladder occurs less often in the Southeast and industrial Midwest, the data shows, with the odds notably low in Atlanta; Charlotte, N.C.; Memphis, Tenn.; Raleigh, N.C.; Indianapolis;, Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio.By contrast, some of the highest rates occur in the Northeast, Great Plains and West, including in New York, Boston, Salt Lake City, Pittsburgh, Seattle and large swaths of California and Minnesota. "Where you grow up matters," said Nathaniel Hendren, a Harvard economist and one of the study's authors. "There is tremendous variation across the U.S. in the extent to which kids can rise out of poverty."
the Kah-Nee-Ta website. A separate, unrelated fire started Thursday in a kitchen at the resort and caused extensive fireand water damage, forcing the closure of the main lodge.
"Where you grow up matters. There is
Mobility
Atlanta one of the metropolitan areas where it is most difficult for lower-income households to rise into the middle class and beyond, according to a n ew study that other researchers are calling the most detailed portrait yet of income mobility in the United States. The study — based on millions of anonymous earnings records and being r eleased this week by a team of top academic economists — is the first with enough data to compare upward mobility across metropolitan areas. These comparisons provide some of the most powerful evidence so far about the factors that seem to drive
hadn't damaged any homes or the resort, Wilson said. "There isn't any reports of fire in the (resort) compound," he said. Along with 30 guest rooms, the resort has 20 teepees and 51 RV campsites, according to
areas have higher average incomes: Upward mobility rates, Hendren added, often differ sharply in areas where average income is similar, like Atlanta and Seattle. The gaps can be stark. On average, fairly poor children in Seattle — those who grew up in the 25th percentile of the national income distribution — do as well financially when they grow up as middle-class children — those who grew up at the 50th percentile — from Atlanta. Geography mattered much less for well-off children than for middle-class and poor children,accordingtotheresults.In an economic echo of Tolstoy's line about happy families being alike, the chances that affluent children grow up to be affluent are broadly similar across metropolitan areas.
The team of researchers initially analyzed an enormous databaseofearnings records to study tax policy, hypothesizing that different local and state tax breaks might affect intergenerational mobility. What they found surprised them, said Raj Chetty, one of the authors and the most recent winner of the John Bates Clark Medal, which the American Economic Association awards to the country's best academic economist younger than 40. The researchers concluded that larger tax credits for the poor and higher taxes on the affluent seemed to improve income mobility only slightly. The economists also found only modest or no correlation between mobility and the number of local colleges and their tuition rates or between mobility and the amount of extreme wealth in a
region. But the researchers identi-
fied four broad factors that appeared toaffect income mobility, including the size and dispersion of the local middle class. All else being equal, upward mobility tended to be higher in metropolitan areas where poorfamilies were more dispersed among m i xed-income neighborhoods. Income mobility was also higher in a reas with m o re two-parent households, better elementary schools and high schools, and more civic engagement, including membership in religious and community
groups. Regions with larger black populations had lower upwardmobilityrates. But the researchers' analysis suggested that this was not primarily because of their race. Both white and black residents of Atlanta have low upward mobility, for instance. The authors emphasize that their data allowed them to iden-
tify only correlation, not causation. Other economists said that future studies will be important for sorting throughthe patterns in this new data. Still, earlier studies found that education an d f a m ily structure have a large effect on the chances that children escape poverty. Other researchers, including the political scientist Robert Putnam, author of "Bowling Alone," have previously argued that social connections play an important role in a community's success. I ncome mobility ha s b e come one of the hottest topics in economics, as both liberals and conservatives have grown worried about diminished opportunities after more than a decade of disappointing economic growth. After years of focusing more on inequality at a moment in time, economists have more recently turned their attention to people's paths over their lifetimes. Polls show that Americans are worried about whether living standards will rise for most
in family income, according to the new study. Among adults who grew up in the bottom half of the income distribution, only one out of 25 had family income of at least $100,000 by age 30. Yet the parts of this country with the highest mobility rates — like Pittsburgh, Seattle and Salt Lake City — have rates
they have for nearly all of the nation's history. In previous studies of mobility, economists have found that
able in the local residents — are
roughly as high as those in Denmark and Norway, two countries at the top of the international mobility rankings. In areas like Atlanta and Memphis, by comparison, upward mobility appears to be substantially lower than in any other rich country, Chetty said. Especially intriguing, Chetty said, is the fact that children w ho moved at a young age from a low-mobility area to a highmobility area did almost as well as those who spent their entire childhoods in a higher-mobility area. But children who moved as teenagers did less well. That pattern makes economists more confident that the characteristics of different re-
gions — as opposed to somepeople in coming decades, as thing inherent and unchange-
a smallerpercentage ofpeople escape childhood poverty in the United States than in several other rich countries, including Canada, Australia, France, G ermany andJapan. The latest study is consistent with those find>ngs. Whatever the reasons, affluent children often remain so: One ofevery three 30-year-olds who grew up in the top 1 percent of the income distribution was making at least $100,000
helping cause the varying mobility rates. Lawrence Katz, a labor economist who did not work on the project,said he was struck by the fact that areas with high levels of income mobility were also those that established high school earliest and have long had strong school systems. Katz,a Harvard economist and former Clinton administration official, called the work "certainly the most comprehensive analysis of i ntergenerational mobility in the contemporary U.S."
MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
A7
LOCAL 4 T A TE BRIEFING
Bend maninjured in dicycle accident A Bend man was seriously injured Sundayafternoon when he fell from his bike near Tumalo State Park.
The man,whomdeputies declined to identify pending notification of his family, was riding
his road biketoward townon O.B. Riley Road shortly after 3
p.m. when hecrashed, said Sgt. DekeDeMarsoftheDeschutes County Sheriff's Office.
The man,67, wascarrying a pair of shoes onhis bike, according to the Sheriff's Office.
BEND-LA PINE SCHOOLS
oar o a eu
o n o aissu
• ClosedsessiononTuesdaywilldiscusssuspension of Bear CreekElementary School's principal in June By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin
The Bend-La Pine Schools Board of Directorsis scheduled Tuesday morning to discuss in executive session the reason Bear Creek Elementary School Principal Matt Montoya was put on ad-
istrative leave by the district June 24 for reasons that remain undisclosed, had beenprincipalatBear Creek since 2010. The district has not commented on ministrative leave, according to district the reasons he was placed on admincommunications d i r ector J u l ianne istrative leave, citing confidentiality Repman. laws. Repman did not say whether a deciSchool board member Andy High sion would be made regarding Mon- said Montoya sent the school board a toya's employment with the district. letter July 9. "We're t rying t o Montoya,who was placed on adminre s erve a n y
judgment," High said. "He's received a lot of support, and we've seen a lot of emails from parents. We want to hear both sides of the story and go from there." The contents of M ontoya's letter have yet to be shared by the district. The district is processing a public records request filed by The Bulletin for correspondence between Montoya and the school board. SeePrincipalIA8
One of theshoescameloose and wedgedbetweenthe front wheel and fork, sending him over the handle bars and onto
the pavement. Hewaswearing a helmet.
The wreck happenedto occur along the final stagecourse for the CascadeCycling Classic, DeMars said, but the man was not affiliated with the annual race. The man fell before the
racers went by,andanambulance took him toSt. Charles Bend.
Paraglider crash hurts Springfield man The crash of a fan-propelled paraglider Sundaymorning on Santiam Passseriously injured a Springfield man. James Carter, 55, had just lifted off around 10:15 a.m. in the powered aircraft, based on a modified parachute, when
he lost power andfell100 feet to the ground, according to the Oregon State Police.
He crashednear the Oregon Department of Transportation
compoundatSantiam Junction about 25 miles west of Sisters. An ambulance took Carter
to St. Charles Bend,where he was listed in serious condi-
tion Sunday night, according to a nursing supervisor at the hospital.
Hay darn durns in CrookCounty Crook County Fire & Rescue crews were sent to abarn fire on Northwest Lone PineRoad around 8:30 p.m. Saturday. When crews arrived, the hay
barn was fully involved. The barn was half full of hay, and the owners were out of town.
The fire had spreadto nearby fuels andhad burned two power poles, so Central Electric disconnected power in the area. No other structures were
threatened, andthe fire was contained. The cause of the fire
Photos by Joe Kline /The Bulletin
Gabe Chadek skis through buoys while competing in the Sundance Watersports Club water-ski tournament Sunday at Lake Billy Chinook.
remains under investigation. — Bulletin staff reports
More briefing, AS
• Novices and experts hit LakeBily Chinookfor SundanceWatersports Club'swater-ski tournament By Dylan J. Darling
Underpass detour The Third Street
underpass will be closed from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. nightly
through August as city crews work to correct frequent flooding. A
signed detour will lead commuters to Franklin Avenue, Ninth Street
and Wilson Avenue. Gre wood Av Franklin Ave.
Detour Thir Sfre
Rima Givot skis through the course while competing in the water-ski tournament Sunday at Lake Billy Chinook. Givot said she's skied recreationally for
six years. "I just like it a lot," Emma said. Annual membership in the Sundance Watersports Club is $25,and a boat isn't necessary to be a member, Brewer said, adding it "just
wants skiers." New to competition like Hoke, John Holt, 20, of Bend, said he was thinking of joining the club. SeeWater-skiiing /A8
as ilson Av
J
said Russ Brewer, 54, of Redmond, past president of the club. LAKE BILLY CHINOOKThe club maintains the course, a ter-skiers new t o t h e which is in the water throughout sport, folks returning to summer, just north of the Jordan it, and experts were all Road bridge on the Crooked River able to take a turn behind arm of Lake Billy Chinook. Club the boat Sunday at a friendly, annu- members often meet Wednesday al competition put on by Sundance a fternoons and evenings at t h e Watersports Club. course to practice. A boat pulled waEmma Hoke, 15, of Culver, was ter-skiers one at a one of those Sunday who were • More info time through a sla- fairly new to the competitive side onthe lom course, marked of water-skiing. She started when Sundance b y a series of buoys. she was 3 and goes "free skiing," Watersports Novices were most- or skiing just for fun, three or four Club,AS ly t ryi n g to stay up- times a week. right and cut smooth While other kids her age may turns while experts went through opt to go wakeboarding, which is the course at increasingly higher akin to snowboarding, Emma said speeds and on ever-shorter ropes. she preferswater-skiingbecause of "That increases the difficulty be- the flat water, speed and thrill of a cause you have to do things faster," good turn. The Bulletin
R d Market Rd
OSBA dismayed bylegislature, PERSreform bill By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Submissions: • School news andnotes: Email news itemsand noticesof generalinterest to news©bendbulletin.com. Email announcementsof teens' academ icachievem ents toyouth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes,military graduations andreunion info to bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358
The Oregon School Boards Association gave the past legislative session a tepid review foritsw ork addressing Oregon K-12 education at the group's summer board conference this weekend in Bend. Developments that the OSBA welcomed, including an increase in the share of the state's general fund directed toward education, were far overshadowed by what the OSBA saw as an inadequate reform bill addressing the Public Employee
Retirement System. "The way I see PERS is that we bought a Hummer when we have the budget for a Volkswagen," said Jim Green, OSBA deputyexecutive director. Rep. Mark Johnson, R-Hood River, who is a school board member in his district, echoed these sentiments in an address to the conference. "The overall funding level this year was a milestone," he said. "But it's not enough to put
$6 (billion) or $7 billion in our budget if PERS is going to take a lot more."
The OSBA opposed Senate Bill 822, the PERS reform bill that was signed by Gov. John Kitzhaber in May. While the OSBA did support that bill's provision to adjust how the cost of living for PERS recipients is calculated, it opposed its 1.9 percent rate collar. A rate collar is used to limit the amount an employer's contribution increases each biennium to meet the system's costs. "We decided not to support SB 822largelybecause ofthe rate collar," Green said. "It's kicking the can down the
road, or like missing a mortgage payment. It may save us around $35 million now, but it could cost an additional $100 million in the long term." The OSBA, along with various business associations and Stand for Children, an education advocacy group, pushed its own PERS reform bill, Senate Bill 754. "One of our big additions was that only money from actual public sources could be counted to calculate an employee's salary to determine their benefit," Green said. To drive home the impor-
tance of this addition, Green claimed this change would have prevented former University of Oregon football coach Mike Bellotti from receiving a nearly $500,000 annual pension from PERS. Additionally, OSBA's reform bill would have eliminated the Oregon tax benefit for out-of-state residents. The bill also offered additional limits on cost-of-living adjustments, though Green says a lawsuit targeting SB 822's cost-of-living clause threatens this component.
SeeoSBA/A8
A8
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013
BRIEFING
E VENT
Continued from A7
AL E N D A R
Names released in Friday's fatal crash
Email events at least 10days before publication date to communitylife®bendbulletin.com or cliclz on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
TODAY POP-UP PICNIC:Live music with food and beverages; bring a blanket and canned food for Neighbor lmpact; free admission; 5-7 p.m.; The Cosmic Depot, 342 N.E. Clay Ave., Bend; 541-385-7478 or www.thecosmicdepot.com. "MOSQUITA YMARI": A screening of the film for LGBT movie night; $5; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. "SPRINGSTEEN II I":A screening of a compilation of the personal insights and reflections of Bruce Springsteen fans; $15; 7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. JOHNNY WINTER: Theblues-rock artist performs; $29.50-$44.50 plus fees in advance; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3170700 or www.towertheatre.org.
TUESDAY REDMOND FARMERS MARKET:Free admission; 3-6 p.m.; Centennial Park,
Submitted photo
Blues-rock artist Johnny Winter will perform tonight at the Tower Theatre in Bend. Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue; 541-550-0066 or redmondfarmersmarket1© hotmail.com. TUESDAYFARMERSMARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.; Brookswood Meadow Plaza, 19530 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541323-3370 or farmersmarket@ brookswoodmeadowplaza.com. STORIES ATSUNSET:Features professional storyteller and author, Susan Strauss; free; 6:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-6177099 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar.
OSBA
rector Paul Cleary on an early morning walk, he was told Continued from A7 public employees were retiring "The legality of changing the "like never before." cost of living is not a million Despite these challenges, the dollar question, it's a billion OSBA and Johnson are optidollar one," he said. mistic that additional PERS Another p r oblem f a cing reforms will happen. OSBA's plans to increase PERS "There have even been consavings is the so-called "silver versations this morning about tsunami," the large number of the grand bargain," Johnson public employees rushing to said on Saturday, referencretirebefore any change could ing a plan that would increase lower their pensions. PERS savings further while Green said that after run- also increasing revenue. "It ning into PERS Executive Di- needs to get done before Feb-
OREGONHIGHDESERTCLASSICS II:A U.S.Equestrian Federation class AA international hunter-jumper competition; proceedsbenefit J Bar J Youth Services; freeadmission; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; JBarJ Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road,Bend;541-389-1409,
ruary, though, when it's an election year and everything is politics." Reflecting on the legislative session as a whole, Green gave the legislature a "B-." He was kinder to his own organization, giving its lobbying efforts "a solid B" for its work on the general fund and other bills. The target of his frustration, however, was clearly Kitzhaber. "Votes are there on the PERS side of the bargain," Green said. "They are getting there on the governor's revenue side."
' •
•
.
— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tfeeds@bendbulletin.com
old Warren Chester Ward, of Chula Vista, Calif., tried to pass
a commercial truck traveling southbound on U.S. Highway 97 seven miles north of Madras
Water-skiing Continued from A7 "I don't have any buddies who waterski, so it is nice to know people with boats," he said. The c l ub , w h i c h i s based in R edmond and has about 30 members, is also open to wakeboarders. On Saturday, it held a competition at the course for wakeboarders. Some of the competitors were as
young as 5.
killed in the accident. Curtis'
passenger, Elizabeth A. Samul, 68 and of Antelope, wastaken to Mountain View Hospital in Madras with non-life-threaten-
ing injuries. — Bulletin staff report
Watery Wednesdays Members of theSundance Watersports Club
regularly meet Wednesday afternoons andevenings to water-ski at a slalom course just north of the
Jordan Roadbridge on the Crooked River arm of Lake Billy Chinook. For more information about the club go to www.
sundancewatersports.com.
"Their boots came up to their knees," Brewer said. S ean Shriver, 46 , o f B end, was r eturning t o w ater-skiing, t h e s p o r t he did in college. He was on the water-ski team at what is now Texas State University in San Marcos. Drawn to Central Oregon by downhill skiing, he is water-skiing again to enjoy the scenery. "I've never seen anywhere as pretty as this," he said, gazing up fr om the boat to the cliffs flanking the arm of Lake Billy Chinook. In all, the Sunday event had about 25 waterskiers, with ages ranging fr om 10 to 65, Brewer said. The club started the a n nual competition, held on the t hird w eekend o f J u l y ,
For more information on
the Wednesdaygatherings, call Russ Brewer, past club president, at 541-4800410. Annual membership in the club is $25. No boat
needed. about 30 years ago. Sunday was the first time that Rima Givot, 37, of Sisters, had been in a water-ski competition. She said she's done the sport recreationally for six years. She likes the challenge of it. "It is a great physical and mental combination," Givot said. " You have to b e r e ally focused and you have to be really strong because it works every muscle in your
body."
— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com
See the Official Fair Guide in The Bulletin and Redmond SpokesmanJul y 24th
-•
An old-fashioned affordable Count Fair with something FUN for everyone!
The Bulletin qe, Qnceyeu'vepaidfor general admission, comeenjoy Iames, contests, shows,andmore! Andil's all FREE!
Petting Zoo and Pnny Rides
C UTE S T
Shovv
on
Sponsored byCentral OregonRanchSupply
COlltral Oreilbn
sponsored byMobile Cat8 DogVet obi"e
E art h
W Ranch Supply LIL' BUCKAROOS CAN HONE ' THEIR WILD WEST SKILLS
Cat ' Dog Vet
A high-energy showdesigned to get family members playing together. Kidsdress upand become star performers in a livetheater experience of "Let's PretendFarmTimeTour". Each showfeatures upto18 kids of all ages chosen from theaudience.
with fun activity stations such
as gold panning, roping, horse saddling and more. MILK A COW! (It's not reol but it's reallycool!)
PEDAL TRACTOR AREA! DRESS LIKE A COWBOY OR COWGIRL!
Performances each day at noon, 3 p.m.,5 p.m.and 7 p.m.
Return this year from the DD Ranch in Terrebonne. BROWNIE THE STEER WILL BE THERE TOO!
Other contests throughout the day. Some with cash prizes, some with ribbons, some with carniva1 tickets as prizes. Including: ABODI".'
• Watermelon Eating Contest, Wednesday,1:30 p.m
Il l( L M N o l ORsTltvwxY7. s
• pje Eating Contest, Saturday, 3:30 p.m. • APPle BObbing eVeryday 2 to 5 P.m. by Bobbje Strome Real EState • Humane SOCiety Of Central OregOn
~H7IAJQ WASH Qe
— Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoeNbendbulletin.com
• Games and contests by Rjdgefjeld High Lacrosse Team • Smokey Bear Birthday Party, Saturday, 4 p.m.
Sudsy s Sarn It's an interactive water station built likea mini-theme park with animals that talk! Washing your hands has never been so fun! Awarded one of the most popular Fair attractions in the West.
Weekly Arts Sr
Entertainment In
I
THE BULLETIN FAMILY FUN ZONE IS MADE POSSIBLE BY THE SUPPORT OF THESE FINE SPONSORS:
MAGAZINE TheBulletin
.
A fter me n t ioning K it zhaber's 40-40-20 plan, which calls for every Oregon high school student to g r aduate, Green said, "we still need the resources for the plan." Green, a Sal e m -Keizer School District board member, emphasized the fact that the money is not yet there. "Even with this year's higher budget, it's still a cuts budget," he said. "In Salem we're still in a $17 million hole."
According to police, 91-year-
Harold M. Curtis, 71 and from
Antelope. Curtis and Wardwere both
JULY 31$T THROUGH AUSUST 4TH DESCHUTESCOUNTY FAIR 8 EXPO CENTER
D •
tryan@jbarj.org or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. BENDFARMERSMARKET:Free admissi on;3-7 p.m.;Brooks Alley, betweenNorthwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket©gmail.com or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. ALIVEAFTERFIVE:LeRoy Belland His Only Friendsperforms, with VoodooHighway;free;5-8p.m.;Old Mill District, 661 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend;541-389-0995 or www. aliveafterfivebend.com. MUSIC ONTHEGREEN:Asummer concert series featuring the funky, jazzy Jacob Merlin Band, food, crafts, retail and more; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; Sam Johnson Park, S.W. 15th St. and S.W.Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-923-5191 or www. visitredmondoregon.com. PICNIC INTHEPARK:Featuring Americana rock with TheLongHello; free; 6-8 p.m.; Pioneer Park, 450 N.E. Third St., Prineville; 541-447-6909 or www.crookcountyfoundation. org/events. TOM VANDENAVOND: The Texasbased alt-folk singer performs; free; 8 p.m.; BluePine Kitchen andBar, 25 S.W.Century Dr.,Bend;541-389-2558 or www.bluepinebar.com.
identified the two men killed Friday afternoon in a two-vehicle head-on crash north of Madras.
with a Ford Explorer driven by
Aaffordable CountyFair with somethingFUNfor the whole herd!
t%otttttrtttry tttte IIIIÃ DttistNthttttttI@~
Continued from A7 Montoya attorney Katherine Tank said her client is declining to share the letter with The Bulletin to satisfy an earlier order by the district instructing Montoya not to act or speak as principal of Bear Creek while on administrative leave. In June, Montoya's wife, Jennifer Montoya, said t h e district told her husband he may lose his position because of job performance-related issues that had to do with missing deadlines. Several Bear Creek parents continue to be upset with the situation, specifically with the district's inability to tell them why Montoya may be fired. Katherine James, Bear Creek Elementary P a r ent-Teachers Organization co-president, estimates that dozens of parents have sent letters to the district and the school board. James said most have not received responses. "We just don't know why they want him gone so badly," James said. "It seems that if he did something that huge to get terminated, the public should know. It's just not adding up." James saidseveral parents who send their children to Bear Creek are considering pulling their children out of the school next year if Montoya is fired. Tuesday's executive session is closed to the public. Still, James and a group of parents are planning to stand in the administration building's hallway d u ring t h e m e eting, which is scheduled for 9 a.m., to show their support for Montoya. Duringthe June 26 evaluation meeting in which Montoya was placed on paid administrative l eave, m o re than 100 Bear Creek teachers and students stood in the administration building hallway to show their support. "I don't know if we can fight this," James said. "The district makes adecision, and itseems like there's not much we can
••
WEDNESDAY
lES SCHrNIB
Principal
®
TOMMY CASTROIlt THE PAINKILLERS:The California blues and rock band performs; $20 in advance, $25 day of show; 7 p.m.; The Sound Garden, 1279 N.E. Second St., Bend; 541-633-6804 or www. thesoundgardenstudio.com.
Oregon State Police have
on Friday. Ward, driving a rented Subaru, collided head-on
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MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A 9
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT '
- ies'mar
ears, on ers uure
TV SPOTLIGHT By Blake Hennon Los Angeles Times
SAN DIEGO — The question that was posed to "The X-Files" creator Chris Carter throughout the hit sci-fi investigation drama's 20th anni//" versary celebration panel last 'P week at Comic-Con Interna/ // g tional in San Diego was, will I'f there be more — will there be l I' a third movie? 4 "I have to say just being here today and seeing all these people — you need a reason to get excited about going on and doing it again." Chris Carter told a packed ballroom, interrupted by sustained applause and hollering. "This is very inspirational." So stay tuned on the franchise's future. But most of the hourlong gathering was about its conspiracy-laden,freaky past and it s l asting effects — from FBI Agent and scientist Dana Scully inspiring one audience member to earn a doctorate in physics to making possible writer-producer 20th Century Fox Film Corporation /The Associated Press Vince Gilligan's Emmy-win- The truth may still be out there for fans of the nearly decadelong ning (and again nominated) TV drama "The X-Files." Gillian Anderson, left, starred as Special AMC drama "Breaking Bad." Agent Dana Scully and David Duchovny starred as Special Agent Gilligan, whose first relaFox Mulder. tionship with " The X -Files" was as a fan watching in Virginia, said h i s e x p erience met "Breaking Bad" star Bry- vny and Gillian Anderson and working on the show was "like an Cranston via "The X-Files" writer-producers Darin Morgoing to film school except — the actor appeared in the gan, Glen Morgan, Jim Wong, getting paid to attend, and I'm episode "Drive." John Shiban, Howard Gordon lucky as hell I was part of it." Carter and Gilligan were and James Amann in discussHe also noted that he first joined by stars David Ducho- ing their days on the Fox series. /
was so flexible and could incorporate so many ideas that we could do it forever. I always thought whenever we can get back together, we would — we will, as much as we can." Another member of the "XFiles" family made an appearance on stage — Shiban's son, who at 6 weeks old was onscreen as Scully's baby (the red hair helped in casting). The panel also paused to /x recognizetwo departed memof the family — John \""-, /i! i///t bers Neville, who played the sinChns P>zzello/Inths>on/AP ister Well-Manicured M a n, Chris Carter was the creator of a nd producer-director K i m "The X-Fil es," which became Manners. a sci-fi sensation from the moThe S cully-Mulder r e l ament it began airing in 1993. tionship continues to f ascinate fans. Asked by an audience member what the two A nderson w a s pla y f u l would do for a date, Anderson throughout the panel. Asked said, "Have sex." Duchovny ifshe had a different perspec- shrugged and s a id, "Then tive on anything in the show maybe dinner, I don't know." 20 years later, she replied, And w hen t h e m o d era"I didn't realize that Mulder tor, TV Guide's Michael Schwas so cool until a few years neider, passed along a queslater, and I thought, 'Damn, I tion from Twitter about when should've gotten there soon- the characters realized they er,'" to a hooting crowd. (Her were in love, Carter said, "I Scully and Duchovny's Agent think it was when (she) first Fox Mulder did eventually get walked into his office in the together and were seen livbasement," referring to the seing together in 2008's "The ries' pilot. X-Files: I Want t o B elieve," Toward the end of the event, the franchise'slast on-screen Anderson called out for bids story.) for a life-size cardboard cutout Asked about the show's ap- of Scully and Mulder together. peal, Duchovny suggested She had said it was for charity, a willingness to r eturn t o but Duchovny quipped, "This the par a n o rmal-obsessed is how we're going to get the "Spooky" Mulder: "The show movie made, by the way."
a I"' ~ -
Beac ouseisno icnic orwie Dear Abby: My husband retired and we thought we were fulfilling our lifetime dream when we moved to the beach, but our dream has turned into a nightmare. Our family never wanted to visit us this often before. When they come, no one even brings DEAR along so much as a ABBY bottle of water. My
grocery bill has skyr ocketed, and I ' m sick of playing the role of cook and maid while they have a wonderful time. I'm ready to move back to our hometown. At least there I had a life besides cooking and cleaning. My husband wants to live here because it's his dream, but I can't take another year of this. The workload
is killing me. I have been a fool for putting up with everyone having a carefree vacation at my expense. I'm so angry I'm ready to leave my husband with his dream. The last three years have been hell. When friends and family ask why I left, should I tell them, or keep my mouth shut and build a peaceful life by myself? — Running for My Life
Dear Running: Leaving y o ur husband is not the solution. Telling the individuals who are taking advantage of your hospitality that the rules have changed is. Set rules before guests arrive. If it's not convenient for you to entertain, speak up and say so when the relatives call to say they'recoming. Make it clear that they will be doing their own laundry, buying their own groceries, etc. And whileyou're at it, understand that the reason this has gotten out of hand is partly your husband's fault. He's retired; he can lend a hand. The good Lord gave you the gift of speech. For the sake of your sanity and your marriage, I'm suggesting you use it. Dear Abby: Seven years ago, I was in a relationship with a man I thought was my soul mate. (I'll call him Louis.) We were together for two years and had planned on getting married right after college. Louis ended up breaking the engagement and six months later m arried another woman. I w a s shocked and h e artbroken. We
went our separate ways. Louis contacted me recently. He apologized for the past and said he was out of his mind for losing me. He also said he was recently divorced and wants to see me to "catch up." I have healed from the heartache and moved on, but I am not currently in a relationship. I am content with my life. The problem is, my curiosity and my heart are tripping me up. I'm wary of falling back in love with Louis and don't want to reopen any old wounds. What doyouthink, Abby? Should I meet him and see what happens, or let the past stay where it is'? — Over Him? In New York Dear Over Him?: Louis may be a cad — or he may have become more mature in the last seven years. Because you are curious, I think you
should go. But if he starts wooing you again, do not get serious unless you have had couples counseling. It's important that you clearly understand what went wrong in your romance the first time so it doesn't happen again. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069
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MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movietimes are subject to changeafter press time. I
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JULY 22, 2013: This yearwill be nothing less than a dynamic year. At times, you'll slow down and become more philosophical. You often consider what would make your life work even better. You can tinker around only so much with a difficult situation. Stars show the kind Consider letting of day you'll have i t go. Something ** * * * D ynamic better is coming ** * * P ositive yo u r way, but not ** * A verage until you take care ** So-so of this. If you are * Difficult single, check out anyone you meet with care, as some people might not be what they appear. If you are attached, the two of you will benefit from taking several weekends away together. Treat your sweetie as your best friend. AQUARIUS can push your buttons. ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * Your pace will changeaccording to the dynamic of your present circumstance. Though youmight head out the door with the intention of running a lot of errands, your focus will shift to a creative opportunity instead. It is clear that your strengths are needed.Tonight: As you want.
YOUR HOROSCOPE By Jacqueune Bigar
months. Err on the side of caution with spending, even if a risk seemsextremely appealing. It just won't be worth it. Tonight: Relax. Play a game orsurf the Web.
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * Your ability to understand others allows you to have greater give-and-take. Understanding evolves only if you know full well what you want to happen. Your emotions behind a decision could change. Sit on your feelings, as difficult as that might be. Tonight: Share with a loved one.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** * * You might walk out the door feeling insecure, yet return in the evening as an empowered individual. You could be weighing the impact of a Full Moon asyou look at relationships and their possibilities. Recognize how much youhave goingfor you. Tonight: Toss away insecurity.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-ltlov. 21) ** * * S omeone at a distance will be encouraging you to do something differently. Howyou approach amatter could change dramatically. You might want to havealong-overdue chat.Youcouldbe surprised to find thatyou are not so vested in the outcome. Tonight: Happy to go home.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.21) ** * * L lse care with your finances. You might be taken aback byeverything that is occurring around you. Return calls and emails. Remain sensitive to a vulnerable person who is close to you. You might feel as if you have too much to do. Tonight: Juggle your plans.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * You'll feel some kind of shift midday, and you might wonder where it is coming from. Try not to question what is happening within your immediate circle so much — you will find out soon enough. Afinancial risk might not pan out for you right now. Say "no." Tonight: Your treat.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fed. 18)
** * * Y ou'll perk up and take different a approach. Your originality could cause ** * * You might want to use the some strong responses, and perhaps even morning to the max, especially when a minor hassle with a relationship. Know dealing with others. The afternoon would that this, too, will pass. A boss or someone be best for doing research or for working TAURUS (April 20-May20) you feel you need to answer to could be ** * * Be sure that there are alternatives on an independent project. You are to what you are doing. Someone's attitude processing a lot, and you might not be sure closed down. Tonight: As you like it. where you will land. Tonight: Make it yours. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) couldbecome annoying.The realissue is how to handle the situation. Explore ** * T he early hours are significant. You LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) different possibilities before automatically ** * * A t first, you might be dragging soon will come to a fork in the road, where reacting; you will be empowered by the you will need to make achoice. You will your heels, but by midafternoon, you will process. Tonight: In the whirlwind of life. know what to do. The morning is better feel energized and ready for anything. for interpersonal matters, whereas the GEMINI (May 21-June20) Solutions seem to emerge, andyou finally afternoon points to getting more done. might be able to approach a loved onewith ** * How you see a personal matter Tonight: Keep it a secret. could change with more information. You whom you have had a tiff. Tonight: If at first are gaining more clarity about the past few you don't succeed, try again. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
B p.m. on (CW),"Hart of Dixie" — After George's (Scott Porter) parents discover he's dating Tansy (Mircea Monroe), his mom hatches a plan to force him and Zoe (Rachel Bilson) to face their feelings for each other. Lemon (Jaime King) gets a shock of her own when she learns the identity of Brick's (Tim Matheson) love interest. Lavon (Cress Williams) resolves to unmaskthe British stranger who's stolen Annabeth's (Kaitlyn Black) heart in "Islands in the Stream."
9p.m. onH C3, "GetOut Alive With Bear Grylls" — In the new episode "Leave NoMan Behind," Bear drops the eight remaining teams off in the middle of a bay, and they must swim ashore. Once there, they then must navigate waterfalls, where events take a surprising turn, and one team will be sent home. 9 p.m. on (CW), "Breaking Pointe" — The unscripted series about the inner workings of Salt Lake City dance company Ballet West returns for its second season. In the opener, "It's Not Brain Surgery, It's Ballet!" the dancers prepare as they begin auditions for "Cinderella." Expect more jealousy, drama and ramped-up emotions to ensue. 9 p.m. on BRAVO,"The Real Housewives of Orange County"— Alexis has managed to make amends with all the other women, but her luck is about to run out when she tries to make up with Gretchen. Lydia immerses herself in Bible study following the drama in Whistler, while Terry and Heather receive an offer they might not be able to refuse. Also, Vicki tries to keep things professional during a business trip with Brooks, and Gretchen plots a surprise proposal for Slade in the new episode "Crossroads." 9 p.m. on LIFE,"Dance Moms" — In the special episode "Abby's So FarThis Season," Abby Lee Miller recounts memorable moments from Season 3, looking back on the conflicts, mom inci dentsand bestdances in never-before-seen footage. 9:30 p.m. onl3, "Mike & Molly" — Retail therapy — gotta love it. Molly and Mike (Melissa McCarthy, Billy Gardell) get into an argument at the mall, and Mike storms off. She reacts by going on a shopping spree in "Molly's New Shoes." Gerald McRaney guest stars. ©Zap2it
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Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • DESPICABLE ME2 (PG)5:15 • THE HEAT (R) 7:30 • RED 2 (PG-13) 5:15, 7:45 • R.I.P.D. (PG-13) 5:45, 8 • TURBO (PG) 5, 7: I5 Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • DESPICABLE ME(PG) 2 Noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7:05, 9:25 • GROWN UPS 2(PG-I3)12:35,2:50,5:05,7:20,9:40 • PACIFIC RIM (PG-13) 1:30, 4:10, 6:50 • PACIFIC RIM 3-D (PG-13) 9:20 • RED 2 (PG-13) 1:50, 4:25, 7, 9:30 • TURBO (PG) 2:45, 7:10, 9:30 • TURBO 3-D (PG) 12:30, 5 •
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TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013
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IN THE BACI4: WEATHER > Scoreboard, B2 MLB, B3
Community Sports, B5-6
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013
A rundown of games and events to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:
Wednesday
Thursday
Saturday
Saturday/Sunday
Sunday
Equestrian, OregonHighDesert Classics:The second andfinal week
FootZone's Float Run,5:30 p.m.:Runners start from
Summercollegiate dasedall, Wenatchee AppleSox vs.Bend Elks,
Mountain biking,Oregon24, starts11 a.m. Saturday, Wanoga Sno-park:Teamsofup
Auto racing, NASCAR Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis, 10 a.m. PDT,ESPN:After
of Central Oregon's 24th annual
FootZonein Bend,runthree miles, then float down the river
6:35p.m.,Vince Genna Stadium: The top two teams in the West Coast
to five knobby-tire riders, and some hearty individuals, race through the night on a13-
a midsummer week off, NASCAR action
to Tumalo CreekKayak &Canoe
League kick off a three-gameseries
mile course of doubletrack andsingletrack
in this noncompetitive event.
that could affect playoff seeding. The Elks lead the WCL South Division with
that starts and finishes at Wanoga Sno-park southwest of Bend. The 24-hour event
hunter/jumper showcaseevent gets under way at the JBar JBoys Ranch in northeast Bend. Highlighting the week will be a $25,000 Grand Prix,
slated for Saturday at 5:30 p.m. Events
Beer, root beer, ice creamanda raffle are at the finish. For event
start at 8 a.m. each day. Spectators are
logistics and registration, visit
welcome; admission is free.
www.footzonebend.com.
I
a 23-14 record, while the AppleSoxare tied with Walla Walla atop the North Division with a 22-17 mark.
resumes at lndianapolis Motor Speedway, where Jimmie Johnson is afavorite. He has
concludes at11 a.m.Sunday. Spectators are welcome. Info: www.oregonmtb24.com, mike© mudslingerevents,com, or 541-225-7946.
won this race four times in the past seven
years, including last year. DanicaPatrick, who has driven in seven lndy 500s on Indianapolis Motor Speedway, will race in the Brickyard 400 for the first time.
Juniorgolfersprepfor bigtournament: TheCentral OregonJunior, anOregon
WCL BASEBALL
Junior Golfmajorchampionship, beginstoday at MeadowLakesGolf Course,87 Golf Rot)ndop,87 • Calendar,88 • Scoreboard,89
Elks win with
lNgiDE QNf37f39 ' GOLF: BRITISH OPEN
CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC
the road. Trailing 3-2 heading into the top of the ninth, Bend sent11 hitters to the plate in the final inning. The big blow was a three-run double by Derek Dixon. Tyler Servais added an RBI single, and Turner Gill had
a run-scoring double for the Elks in the inning.
Seth Spivey also forced home a run whenhe
• Mickelson wins his first claret jug after shooting a 66 at Muirfield
was hit by a pitch with the basesloaded.
The Elks (23-14 WCL) scored first in the contest, as Cullen O'Dwyer hit a solo home run in the second inning — his
By Doug Ferguson
second of the series. Cowlitz (18-18) took
The Associated Press
e
8ARcotrs
the lead with a pair of runs in the fifth before Bend tied it in the eighth
on a sacrifice fly by Dixon. The Black Bears took the lead once again in the bottom of the eighth before the Elks' big final inning. O'Dwyer led Bend at the plate with three hits,
and Spivey andChase Fields both had a pair of Joe Khne i The Bulletin
Serghei Tvetcov cruises into the finish of the Awbrey Butte Circuit Race of the Cascade Cycling Classic on Sunday. Tvetcov won the overall men's title.
• Serghei Tvetcov keepsa narrow leadto win the overall in aclose CCCmen's race By Mark Morical The Bulletin
Jon Super/The Associated Press
Phil Mickelson holds up the claret jug after winning the British Open at Muirfield, Scotland, Sunday.
LONGVIEW, Wash. — The Bend Elks scored six runs in the ninth inning to defeat the Cowlitz Black Bears 8-3 on Sunday in a West
Coast Leaguebaseball game, completing a three-game sweepon
Acareer roun or Le ty
GULLANE, Scotland — One of the greatest final rounds in a major. Two of the best shots he ever struck with a 3-wood. The third leg of the Grand Slam. Phil Mickelson never imagined any of this happening at the British Open. No wonder he never took his hand off the base of that silver claret jug as he talked about the best Sunday he ever had at a major. See Lefty/B10
ninth-inning rally
Serghei Tvetcov admitted that he was anxious. He did not want to let his teammates down after they had worked so hard for him. The Jelly Belly cyclist hung on to his narrow lead Sunday to finish as the pro men's overall winner of the 34th annual Bend Memorial Clinic Cascade Cycling Classic. See Men's/B4
HOn the web For coverage of the CCC, visit www.bendbulletin.
com/ccc
• I(ristin McGrath hangs onto win the women's overall title for adepartedfriend By Mark Morical The Bulletin
singles. The Elks head into
theWest CoastLeague all-star break with the best recordin the league and a1/2-game lead over Corvallis in the South Division. Bend plays the Thur-
ston County Senators in nonleague action on Tuesday at 6:35 p.m. before resuming WCL play on the road on Thursday. — From wire reports
CYCLING
Kristin McGrath looked up and pointed to the sky as she crossed the finish line on a sweltering Sunday afternoon. McGrath had just wrapped up the overall title of the sixday Bend Memorial Clinic Cascade Cycling Classic pro women's race — and she wanted to share her victory with a departed friend. "I had a good friend pass away in March, and I've definitely been riding with him all year," McGrath explained. SeeWomen's/B4
COMMUNITY SPORTS
Stand-uppaddleboarding
2013 Tour de France winner Christopher Froome celebrates on the podium of the 100th edition of the Tour de France in Paris, France, Sunday.
• With origins in surfing, SUP hit Central Oregon by storm a decadeago and is popular in lakes and rivers
Froome takes Tour de France
By Elise Gross
ceremony on Sundayin
to venture beyond Central Oregon's The Bufletin staple summer pastimes, dozens of Reporter's prelude: Summer is a other fair-weather sports and activitime for adventure. Vacation from ties await. work or school — coupled with favorJoin me as I tr y some of the reable weather — creates the perfect gion's more offbeat athletic offerings combination for trying new things out- — some for the first time. This week, side. And Central Oregon is a hot spot I try stand-up paddleboarding on the for summer sports and recreational Deschutes River. activities. This time of year, outdoors aficiof the many ways to travel down Bend's Deschutes River, standnados flock to the area for a variety Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin of pursuits, among t hem g o lfing, up paddleboarding offers argu- Sue Fox, a stand-up paddleboarding instructor with Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, mountain biking, running, kayaking ably the best perspective. right, gives Bulletin reporter Elise Gross tips on her stroke while paddling together and rock climbing. For those willing SeePaddleboarding/B5 last Monday on the Deschutes River.
In what was mostly Paris, the British cyclist claims his first Tour de
France victory,B4
EQUESTRIAN Oregonian claims title An Oregon City woman beats out 30
competitors at Sunday's High Desert Classics,BS
B2
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013
SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY Time TV/Radio
BASEBALL MLB, New York at Yankees at Texas MLB, Cleveland at Seattle
4 p.m.
ESPN
7 p.m.
Roo t
COREBOARD EQUESTRIAN Oregon HighDesert Classic I Saturday's Results Class winners With place, horse, owner, rider
TUESDAY BASKETBALL WNBA, New Yorkat Indiana BASEBALL
Time TV/Radio 4 p.m.
ESP N2
MLB, NewYorkYankees atTexas
5 p.m.
MLB
MLB, Cleveland at Seattle
7 p.m.
Root
Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by N or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF MOTOR SPORTS logano winsNationwide raCe — Joey Loganoheld off
third overall. She lost to Sjmona Halep jn Budapest last week and
to Francesca Schjavone jn Bad Gastejn sjx years ago.
Sam Hornjsh Jr. to win the NAS-
CAR Nationwide race atChicagoland Speedway jn Joliet, III., on
Sunday. Logano, the loneSprint Cup regUlar jn the race,earned hjs second Nationwide win of the year and No. 20 for hjs career. He
FOOTBALL Florida linedacker arrested, SuSpended —Florjda linebacker Antonio Morrison has
also won at Dover jn June.Horn-
been suspendedfor at least the
jsh held on for second, giving
first two games of the regUlar
car owner RogerPenskethe top
season after being arrested for
two spots. Austin Dillon finished third, earning a $100,000 bonus. Elljott Sadler, who led for much
the second time jn five weeks.
of the race before faltering on a late restart, was fourth, followed by Brian Vjckers.
Morrison was arrested early Sunday for barking at a police dog and resisting arrest. Both charges are mjsdemeanors. Later Sunday, Gators coach Will
MuschampannouncedthatMor-
Johnson wins Mile-High
rjson would be held out of the
NHRA —Defending Pro Stock championAllenJohnsonwon
opener against Toledo (Aug. 31) andtheroadgame thenextweek
the Mile-High NHRA Nationals for the fifth time Sunday jn
against Miami.
Morrison, Colo., holding off
ROmOreturnS — Tony Romo
Colorado native V. Gajnes jn the final round. Making hjs seventh
was waiting jn California when the Dallas Cowboys arrived for
straight final-round appearance
training camp. Romo,who didn't
jn the event, Johnson raced to hjs fourth victory of the year with
take a real snap jn offseason workouts after signing the rich-
a 6.989-second run at196.87
est contract jn franchise history,
mph jn a Dodge Avenger. He has two straight victories at the
finally returned for the first train-
Colorado trackand four jn the past five years. Spencer Massey won the Top Fuel division, Cruz
Pedregon topped theFunny Car field, and Shawn Gann won jn Pro Stock Motorcycle.
jng camp practices Sundayafter "uniquely running mountains" on the West Coast. That's how
owner Jerry Jones described hjs quarterback's efforts to get back jn shapeafter a procedure to have a cyst removed from hjs
back jn April. Romosays hetried
Italian rider killed at Mos- to cram a full offseason of conCOWraCe — Raceorganizers say an Italian rider died jn acrash at the World Supersport race. Kawasaki Go Eleven rider Andrea Antonellj died Sunday after losing control of hjs Kawasaki ZX-6R bike jn rainy weather and
djtjonjng into the last month and
a half and "that helped meget ready for today andhopefully for the beginning of the season."
saidTatjana Makhjna,a spokes-
BASEBALL Manager defendsBedard
woman for the MoscowRaceway organizers. After crashing, the
— Houston manager BoPorter js defending Erik Bedard's deci-
25-year old Antonellj was struck by a fellow rider. Antonellj was
sion to remove himself from
quickly treated by anemergency
Seattle with a no-hjtter jn the seventh inning because of a high pitch count and says he wouldn't have let the left-hander stay jn
crashing during the opening lap,
medical team, but died of injuries shortly after. The organizers can-
celled the remaining events.
Saturday night's gameagainst
much longer. Bedard choseto leave the game with one out jn
TENNIS Serena winsSwedish OPen — SerenaWilliams won
the seventh because hehad109 pitches, saying "I've had three
shoulder surgeries. I'm not gojng over 110 (pjtchesj. I'd rather pitch a couple moreyears than
her 53rd WTA title by beating Johanna Larsson 6-4, 6-1 jn the
face another batter." On Sunday
final of the SwedishOpenon
Porter said hewould have pulled
Sunday jn Bastad, Sweden. The 24-year-old Swede broke to lead 3-1 jn the first set before Wjlljams fought back to 3-3. Lars-
Bedard at120 pitches. Porter says when jt comes to health
son advanced to 4-3 before cav-
else.
jng jn to the Amerjcan's strong serve and losing the next three games. Williams dominated the
A-Rod to keepsitting out
issues, he always leanstoward protecting the player above all
— New York Yankees third base-
second set, breaking Larsson's
man Alex Rodriguez isn't ready
serve twice.
to rejoin the team any time soon. The team said jn a statement
Karlovic winsClaro Open
issued on Sundaynight that Ro-
— Croatja's Ivo Karlovjc won the
drjguez has a Grade1 strain of Claro OpenColombia on Sunday hjs left quadriceps muscle and jn Bogota, spoiling hometown fa- won't be able to return this week vorjte Alejandro Falla's bjd for hjs jn Texas, as had been planned. first ATP Tour title. The 34-yearInstead, Rodriguez will return old Karlovjc, the tallest player to Tampa, Fla., "for rest and reon tour at 6-foot-10, beat Falla habilitation." The three-time AL 6-3, 7-6 (4) on thehard court MVP will remain on the disabled at Centro de Alto Rendjmjento list. The team said jt may petifor hjs fifth career title. Karlovjc tjon Major League Baseball for missed three months this season an additional rehab assignment
because of viral meningitis, re-
because of the newinjury.
turning this month at Newport.
Fognini winsHamburg final —Fabjo Fognjnj saved three match points before beat-
jng Argentine qualifier Federjco Delbonjs 4-6, 7-6 (8), 6-2 Sunday to win the German Tennis
Championships jn Hamburg, Germany, for hjs second title jn two weeks. The 12th-seeded
Italian extended hjs winning run to10 matches. He won hjs first career title, also on clay, last week jn Stuttgart.
SOCCER U.S. defeats El Salvador in GoldCupquarters
— Clarence GoodsonandJoe Corona scored during aneightminute span of the first half, and the United States beat El Salvador 5-1 on Sunday jn Baltimore to advanceto the CONCACAF Gold Cup semjfjnals. Eddie
Johnson,Landon Donovanand
Austrian gets first career
Mjx Djskerud added second-half goals for the Americans, who will play Honduras jn Arlington,
title — Yvonne Meusburgerof
Texas, on Wednesdaynight.
Austria won her first WTA title by defeating Andrea Hlavackova of Czech Republic 7-5, 6-2 at the Gastejn Ladies on Sunday jn her
Honduras beat Costa Rjca1-0
on Sunday night as part of a doubleheader before asellout crowd at the home stadium of
home country. It was Meusburg- the Baltimore Ravens. er's second straight final and — From wire reports
$1000 Some OayFarmPro/AmTeamRelay, 1.10m: Lebu,LongFarms,Kenneth Long $2,500 USHJA NationalHunter Classic: Xanthos, Kathleen Lewis, MeganGarcia $25,000 Oxford Hotel Group Grand Prix: Djakarta,AndreaStrain, AndreaStrain Adult Amateur Working Hunters, 18-30: Rabelais,GretchenRice, LeighDarling; Corvino, Peggy Crane,BrookeMcLeod Adult AmateurWorking Hunters, 18-30-U/S: Eugenius,ErinRurak,ErinRurak Adult Amateur Working Hunters, 31-49: Cassini'sWings,AndreeStow,Sigmund(Bo) Masters; HydePark,Patty Osberg, Patty Osberg Adult AmateurWorking Hunters, 50 &Over: Konigsberg,KimberlyLane,Kimberly Lane,MiAmor, MaureenHowe, MaureenHowe Adult AmateurWorking Hunters, 50 &OverU/S: Simplicity,LeslieThornton,LeslieThornton Amateur Owner Working Hunter, 18-35: SmokeAndMirrors, Emily Ose,Emily Ose Amateur Owner Working Hunter, 18-35Handy: Smoke AndMirrors, Emily Ose,Emily Ose Amateur OwnerWorking Hunter 36 &Over: Fleetstreet Lisa Wiliams, LisaWiliams Amateur OwnerWorking Hunter 36 &Over: Handy:After Dark,LonMathews,Lori Mathews Amateur OwnerWorking Hunter 36 & Over U/S: Juilliard,LisaWiliams,LisaWiliams AmateurOwnerWorking Hunter18-35,-U/S: Rodeo Bay,MaiaRobbins,MaiaRobbins Ariat National Adult Medal: Maureen Howe ASPCA Horsemanship Class: HaleyStradling Children's Jumpers, 14 & Under 1.10m: Winston,KatiePrudent,TashaOtto Children's Pony Working Hunters: Lalique, Payton Potter, PaytonPotter, Petunia, Tara Evans, Kaitlyn Brown Children's PonyWorking Hunters U/S:Petunia, TaraEvans, Kaitlyn Brown Children's Working Hunters, 14 & Under: Carlos,ChloeGreen,ChloeGreen;ChancesAre, Kaylyn Mcgrady, Kaylyn Mcgrady Children's WorkingHunters, 14 &Under-U/ S: Rejoice,SusanMassey,Tiffany Martin Children's Working Hunters, 15-17: Best Regardcz, Lois Fetveit, Lois Fetveit; SnowPatrol, CarolineJones,Caroline Jones Children's Working Hunters, 15-17-U/S: SnowPatrol,CarolineJones,Caroline Jones Cloverleaf Medal: MichelleGaubert Cross Rail Equitation: Anna Semter; Christine Eberhardt;SabrinaMcdonnell; KaylynMcgrady Pony Equitation: Sam anthaFinnegan Equitation,13 & Under:MckenzieMils Equitation,13 & UnderFlat: Emm aGlaunert Equitation, 14-15 Flat: Hanna Krista Norris Equitation, 16-17 Flat: KatieSteiner Hopeful Jumpers, Fences 2': At Last, Alex Heintz,AlexHeintz Jumpers, 0.70m: EasyStreet, Alyssa Smith, AlyssaSmith Jumpers, 0.85m:Pacm an, Shea Morgan,Shea Morgan Jumpers, O.ggm: Ulene, Emily Slusher, Kaitlyn Charlton Take 2 Thoroughbred Jumpers, 1.00m: Mambo,Elizabeth Lindsay, Elizabeth Lindsay;ForresterFound,Jessica Fogerty,JessicaFogerty Jumpers, 1.00m: Wenatchee,Georgia Dilon, Georgia Dilon Jumpers, 1.05m: LimitedEdition, ClaireBick, Claire Bick Jumpers,1.15m: Tora,MargauxChannell, MargauxChannell Jumpers, 1.20m: Osophia, MaplewoodInc, KevinWinkel Jumpers, 1.25m: WH Chico, BedaWachter, BedaWachter Junior Working Hunters: GoidenCadilac, TanyaHardy,TiffanyOdgers Junior Working HuntersHandy:Truman,Katie Aoki, Katie Aoki Junior Working Hunters U/S: Kourage E.P., Kendall Pedigo,Kendall Pedigo Limit Jumpers, 1.00m: Reveile, LindaBurke Culligan,LindaBurkeCulligan Long Stirrup Working Hunters: Donetello, Hunter'sRunl.lc, MaraMuligan;HappyJack,Jennifer Baum,Jan O'Brien Long Stirrup Working Hunters U/S: Night Song,ShannonStrecker,ShannonStrecker Low Adult Working Hunters: Rossini, Mary Richter MaryRichter Low Children's Working Hunters: Isidoro,Lucie Meier,LucieMeier,Mister, LisaPleasance, Lauren Pleasance LowJumpers,0.80m:Vinyasa,AexandraPotter, Alexandra Poter Low Working Hunter, Fences18": Sparkling Cider,AlexandraSnapp,SaraPetersen Low Working Hunter, Fences 2'3": Honor Roll, GaiStuart-Bowl l es,CatherineGregory Low Working Hunter, Fences 2'6": Gentlemen'sQuarterly, MichaelChechik, JessicaChechik; Spellbound,Taylor Vadset,Taylor Vadset Low Working Hunter, Fences 2'9": Maple, MarthaHowe-Crowley, Patti Laird,DannyBoy, Wendy Subotich,Emm aGlatte Medium/Larg e Pony Hunters Model:Madeline,MargaretMcGovem, Margaret McGovem Medium/LargePonyHunters Conformation: Paint The Town,Katie Kotler, KatieKotler Medium/Large Pony Hunters Handy: Madeiine, MargaretMcgovern,Katie Aoki Medium/Large PonyHunters U/S: Southern Belle HeatherDuke,KennedyDuke Modified Amateur/Junior Jumper, 1.15m: Voila, Reed Cowles, ReedCowles Modified Junior/Amateur Owner Working: HuntersTruman, Katie Aoki, KatieAoki; Truman,Katie Aoki, Katie Aoki OHJA Junior/Senior Medal: Taylor VanderZanden PCHA Horsemanship/Victor Hugogidah MckenzieMils PerformanceWorking Hunters-3'6" Handy: Tetley,WendyValdes, WendyValdes Pessoa/USEF National Hunter Seat Medal: Lurana Crowley Platinum Performance/USEF Show Jumping Talent Search:LuranaCrowley Pony Equitation: KatieAoki; Emm aSmith Pony Equitation Flat: Sam antha Finnegan Pre Adult Working Hunters: Hampton, Betsy McCoolBetsy , McCool; Quintessential, Robin GlaunertTaylorBrown Pre Adult Working Hunters U/S:Quintessential, Robin Glaunert,Taylor Brown Pre-Adult Equitation: CindyFolkerson Pre-Children's Equitation: Rachel Waddell; KayleeCannon Pre-Children's Equitation Flat: TayloVad r set Pre-Children's Working Hunters: Cabernet, MadelineCristy,MadelineCristy Pre-Children's Working Hunters: Athena,Rachel WaddellRachel , Waddell Pre-Children's WorkingHunters U/S:Gentlemen'sQuarterly,MichaelChechik, JessicaChechik Pre-GreenWorking Hunters: Popstar,Michelle Seaver,Philippa Fraser Regular Conformation Hunters-Model: C. Quito, MargotSnowdon,JessieLang Schooling Jumpers, 0.05m: FreeFall, Alle Carter,AlleCarter Short Stirrup Working Hunters, Horses: Reminisce,Kendal Gaylord, Kendal Gaylord Short Stirrup WorkingHunters, Horses:Dirty Harry,MargaretKolata, HollandHartman Short Stirrup WorkingHunters, HorsesU/S: Dirty Harry,MargaretKolata HollandHartman Short Stirrup Working Hunters, Ponies: Cardiff Prwate Affair, isabellaMullan IsabellaMullan Short Stirrup WorkingHunters, Ponies U/S: Madeline,MargaretMcgovern,SamanthaFinnegan Special Jumpers, O.ggm:Fool'sGold,Nicole Vickers,SophiaAnguila Taylor Harris Insurance Services Children's Medal: MckenziMi e ls Training Jumpers, 1.05m: Anka, Annika Faught,AnnikaFaught Walk Trot Equitation: AddisonMathias; Malia Lockrem Walk Trot PleasureHorse: GingerSnap,Malia Lockrem,MaliaLockrem,I-luckleberry Finn,Joshua Caine-Welch,JoshuaCaine-Welch; StateOf Grace, AnnaSemer,AnnaSemter Wishful Jumpers, Fences 2': Easy Street, AlyssaSmith,AlyssaSmith YJC FiveYearOldQualifying Class, 1.15m: Keyman, SarahHermanski, JenniferCox YJC 6,7,8YearOldQualifying Class, 1.25m: KilkennyColbert, KilkennyCrestLlc, Jeff Cook
CYCLING CascadeCycling Classic Sunday's Results
NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint fortie.
IN THE BLEACHERS
Saturday's games ColumbusatTorontoFC,11 a.m. SportingKansasCity at Montreal, 4p.m. PhiladelphiaatVancouver, 4p.m. RealSaltLakeatNewYork, 4 p.m. Los Angeleat s Colorado, 4 p.m. NewEnglandatD.C.United,4 p.m. Chicag oatHouston,5p.m. PortlandatSanJose, 7:30p.m.
In the Bleachers © 2013 steve Moare. Dist. uy Unwersal Uclrck www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers
TENNIS Professional GermanTennisChampionships Sunday At Rothenbaum Sport GmbH Hamburg,Germany Purse: $1.44million (WT500) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Championship Fabio Fognini (12), Italy, def.FedericoDelbonis, Argentina,4-5,7-5(8), 6-2. Claro Open Sunday At Centro deAlto Rendimiento
Bogota, Colombia Purse: $727,685(WT250) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Championship Ivo Karlovic,Croatia,def. AlejandroFalla, Colombia, 6-3,7-5(4).
"... 'Brilliant'? Ha! I'd be a brilliant coach
too if I took brain-enhancing drugs!!" Stage 5,AwbreyButte Circuit Race Pro MenStage(top 10) 1, JoeyRosskopf, Hincapie,3hours, 4minutes, 16 seconds.2, Oscar Clark, Hincapie,sametime. 3, FranciscoMancebo,5hr Energy,s.t. 4, Griffin Easter, D3Devo, st., 5, TyMagner, Hincapie, 3:04:21. 6,JasperStuyven, Bontrager,s.t. 7,ErikSlack, CanyonBicycles,s.t. 5,Travis McCabe,Elbowz,s.t. 9, ChadHaga, Optum, s.t. 10, LoganOwen,California Giant, s.t. Pro MenOverall (top10) 1, SergheiTvetcov,Jelly Bely,10 hours,50minutes, 36 seconds 2,JoeyRosskopf, Hincapie,:06 back.3, ChadHaga,Optum,:08.4,Jakub Novak,BMC,:09.5, FranciscoMancebo,Shr Energy,:16. 6, Philip Gaimon , Biss ell,:30.7,TaylorEisenhad,BMC,:39.8,JesseAnthony,Optum,110.9,Gavin Mannion, Bontrager,113. 10, ChrisBaldwin,Bissell,1:15.
Pro Women Stage(top10)
1, Amanda Miler, Tibco, 2hours, 10 minutes,54 seconds .2,JadeWilcoxson,Optum,2:10:58.3,Lauren RauckKomanski, NO Wand Novarlis for MS,2:11:00. 4, Julie Emm erman, Rally Sport, 2:11:35.5, Joanne M Kiesanowski,2:12:11. 6, FlaviaOliveira, DNA,s.t 7, LexAlbrecht, s.t. 8, LaurenM. Stephens, Tibco, s.t 9, ClaudiaHaeusler, Tibco,s.t.10, AlisonPowers,NOW and NovartisforMSs.t. Pro Women Overall (top10) 1, Kristin McGrath,Exergy, 9hours, 48 minutes, 13 seconds.2, ClaudiaHaeusler,Tibco, 2:17 back.3, MaraAbbott, Exergy,3:14. 4,Alison Powers, NOWand Novartistor MS,4:03. 5,JasminGlaesser, Tibco, 5:37. 6, AndreaDvorak, Exergy, 5:16.7, FlaviaOliveira, DNA, 6:28. 3,JoanneM.Kiesanowski,Tibco,5:30.9,Amanda Miller, Tibco, 7:06.10,JessicaCutler, Vanderkitlen, 5:19.
Tour deFrance Sunday 21st (Final) Stage At Paris An 83-mile, largely ceremonial ride fromthe Chateau ofVersailles to theChamps-Elysees in Paris 1 Marcel Kittel, Germany,TeamArgos-Shimano, 3 hours, 6minutes,14 seconds. 2. AndreGreipel, Germany,Lotto-Belisol, sametime. 3. Mark Cavendish,England,Omega Pharma-QuickStep,sametime. 4. PeterSagan,Slovakia, Cannondale, sametime. 5. RobertoFerrari, Italy,Lampre-Merida, sametime. 6. Alexander Kristoff, Norway,Katusha,sametime. 7.KevinReza,France,TeamEuropcar,sametime. B.YohannGene,France,Team Europcar,sametime. 9, DanieleBennati, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff, sametime 10. Murilo Fischer,Brazil, FrancaisedesJeux, same time. 11. DarylImpey,SouthAfrica, OricaGreenEdge, same time. 12. MattGoss,Australia, OricaGreenEdge, sametime. 13. RubenPerez,Spain,Euskaltel-Euskadi,sametime. 14. LarsYttingBak,Denmark, Loto-Belisol, sametime. 15. JuanJoseLobato, Spain,Euskaltel-Euskadi, same time. 16. KoendeKort, Netherlands,TeamArgos-Shimano, sametime. 17. BoyvanPoppel, Netherlands,Vacansoleil-DCM, sametime. 18. SamuelDumoulin, France,AG2RLa Mondiale, sametime. 19. Jose JoaquinRojas, Spain, Movistar, sam etime. 20. EgoitzGarcia, Spain, Cofidis, sametime. Also 31. Roman Kreuziger, Czech Republic, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff,10 secondsbehind. 35. AlbertoContador,Spain, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff, same time. 39. AndrewTalansky,United States, Garmin-Sharp, sametime. 48. NairoQuintana,Colombia, Movistar, sam etime. 51. JoaquinRodriguez,Spain, Katusha, sametime. 72. BrentBookwalter, UnitedStates, BMCRacing,same time. 105 TomDanielson, UnitedStates, Garmin-Sharp,:34. 128.ChrisFroome,England,SkyProcycing, BOhours, :53. 149. TejayVanGarderen, UnitedStates, BMCRacing, 1:18. Final Overall Standings 1. ChrisFroome,England,SkyProcycling, 83hours,56 minutes,40seconds. 2. NairoQuintana,Colombia, Movistar,4:20. 3.JoaquinRodriguez,Spain,Katusha,5:04. 4. AlbertoContador,Spain, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff, 6:27. 5. RomanKreuziger, CzechRepublic, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff, 7:27.
6. BaukeMollema, Netherlands,Belkin ProCycling, 11:42. 7 Jakob Fuglsang,Denmark, Astana,12:17. B. Alejandro Valverde,Spain, Movistar,15.25. 9. DanielNavarro,Spain,Cofidis,15:52. 10. AndrewTalansky,United States, Garmin-Sharp, 17:39.
ll. Michal Kwiatkowski, Poland,OmegaPharmaQuickStep,t 8:59. 12. MikelNieve,Spain, Euskaltel-Euskadi, 20:OL 13. Laurens ten Dam,Netherlands, Belkin ProCycling, 21 '39. 14. MaximeMonfort, Belgium,RadioShack Leopard, 23:38. 15. Romain Bardet, France,AG2RLaMondiale,26:42. 16. Michael Rogers,Australia, TeamSaxo-Tinkoff, 26:51. 17. DanieMoreno, l Spain, Katusha, 32:34 18 Jan Bakelants,Belgium,RadioSh ack Leopard, 35:51. 19. RichiePorte,Australia, SkyProcycling, 39:41. 20. AndySchleck,Luxembourg, RadioShack Leopard, 41:46. Also 45. TejayVanGarderen, UnitedStates, BMCRacing, 1;38:57. 60. Tom Danielson, United States, Garmin-Sharp, 2:05.28. 91. Brent Bookwalter,UnitedStates, BMCRacing, 2:45 05.
Stage Winners June 29 — FirstStage:Porto-Vecchio to Bastia, Corsica,flat (213km-1324miles) (Stage:MarcelKihel, Germany; YelowJersey:Kittel) June 30 — SecondStage: Bastia to Ajaccio, Corsica,mediummountain(156-95.9) (JanBakelants, Belgium;Bakelants) July 1 — ThirdStage:Ajaccio to Calvi, Corsica, mediummountain f145.5-90.4) (SimonGerrans, Australia; Bakelantsl July 2 — FourthStage:Nice, France,teamtime trial (25-155) lorica GreenE dge; Simon Gerrans, Australia) July 3 — Fifth Stage:Cagnes-sur-Mer to Marseille, rolling (228.5-142.0)(MarkCavendish, England;Gerrans) July 4 — SixthStageAix-en-Provenceto Montpellier, flat (176.5-109.7)(AndreiGreipel, Germ any; Daryl Impey,SouthAfrica) July 5 — Seventh Stage:Montpellier to Albi, roll-
ing (205.5-127.7)(PeterSagan,Slovakia; Impey) July 6 —EighthStage:Castresto Ax3Domaines, high mountain(195-121.2)(Chris Froome,England; Froome) July 7 — NinthStage:Saint-Girons to Bagneresde-Bigorre,highmountain (165.5-104.7j (DanielMartin IrelandFroome ) July 8 —Restday,Saint-Nazaire/l.oire-Atlantique July 9 — 10th Stage:Saint-Gildas-des-Bois to Saint-Malo,flat (197-122.4)(Kittel; Froome ) July 10 — 11thStage:Avranchesto Mont-SaintMichel, individual timetrial (33-20.5) (TonyMartin, Germany;Froome) July 11 — 12thStage: Fougeres to Tours,flat (218-135.5l(Kittel;Froome) July 12 — 13th Stage:Tours to Saint-Aman dMontrondflat (173-107.5)(Cavendish, Froome) July 13 —14thStage:Saint-Pourcain-sur-Sioule to Lyon, rolling (191-1187) (MatteoTrentin, Italy; Froome) July 14 — 15thStage:Givorsto MontVentoux, high mountain(242.5-150.7j (Froome;Froome) July15 — Restday,Vaucluse July16 — 15th Stage:Vaison-la-RomainetoGap, mediummountain (165104.4j (RuiCosta, Portugal; Froome) July17 — 17thStage:Embrunto Chorges, individual timetrial (32-19.9j (Froome;Froome) July 18 —18thStage:Gapto L'Alped'Huez, high mountain(172.5-107.2)(ChristopheRiblon, France; Froome) July 19 — 19th Stage:Bourg-d'Oisansto Le Grand-Bornand,highmountain(204.5-127.1) (Costa; Froome) July 20 —20thStage:AnnecytoAnnecy-Semnoz, high mountain(125-77.7) (NairoQuintana, Colombia; Froome) July 21 — 21stStage: Versailesto Paris, ChampsEiysees,flat (133.5-83.0)(Kittel; Froome) Total — 3,403.5 kilometers(2,114.8 miles)
BASEBALL WCL WESTCOAST LEAGUE
Leaguestandings North Division WenatcheeAppleSox WallaWallaSweets Bellingham Bells VictoriaHarbourCats KelownaFalcons South Division BendElks CorvallisKnights MedfordRogues CowlitzBlackBears KlamathFals Gems KitsapBlueJackets Sunday'sGames Bend8,Cowlitz 3 Victoria 6, Wenatchee5 Kelowna 6, Kitsap1 Medtord8, KlamathFalls 2 WallaWalla3,Belingham1 Today'sGames No gamesc sheduled
W 22 22 20 17 14
L 17 17 15 15 25
W 23 21 20 18 17 13
L 14 15 19 15 20 26
NuernbergerGastein Ladies Sunday At Hotel EuropaischerHof Bad Gastein, Austria Purse: $235,000(Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Championship YvonneMeusburger,Austria,def. AndreaHlavackova, CzechRepublic, 7-5, 6-2. Swedish Open Sunday At BastadTennisStadium gastad, Sweden Purse: $220,000(Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Championship SerenaWiliams(tj, United States,det. Johanna Larsson (8), Sweden,5-4, 6-1.
MOTOR SPORTS NHRA NATIONALHOT ROD ASSOCIATION Mile-High Nationals
Sunday At BandimereSpeedway Morrison, Colo. Final Finish Order Top Fuel 1, SpencerMassey. 2 BobVandergriff. 3, Shawn Langdon .4,TonySchumacher.5,Brittany Force.6, DougKalitta. 7,BrandonBernstein. 8, MikeStrasburg. 9, Khalid alBalooshi. 10, AntronBrown.11, David Grubnic.12,MorganLucas.13, ClayMilican.14, Terry McMillen.15,SteveTorrence.16, ScottPalmer. FunnyCar l. CruzPedregon.2, BobTasca II. 3, Robert Hight. 4, Del Worsham.5, JackBeckman. 6, RonCapps. 7, Tim Wilkerson.8, CourtneyForce.9, MattHagan.10, JohnnyGray.11. JohnForce.12, Alexis DeJoria. 13, TerryHaddock.14,TonyPedregon.15, ToddSimpson. 16,JeffArend. Pro Stock 1.Allen Johnson.2,V.Gaines.3,ShaneGray.4, RickieJones.5, MikeEdwards. 6,Jasonl.ine. 7,Vincent Nobie.8,SteveKent. 9,Jeg Coughlin.10, Rodger Brogdon.11.GregAnderson. 12 DericKramer.13, LarryMorgan.14,SteveKalkowski. 15,MattHarfford. Pro StockMotorcycle 1i Shawn Gann.2, I-lector AranaJr.3, AndrewHines. 4,MikeBerry.5,Adam Arana.6,SteveJohnson.7,Eddie Krawiec.8, MattSmith. 9, ScoN yPollacheck. 10, HectorArana.11. JohnHal. 12,AngieSmith. 13,LE Tonglet.14,JimUnderdahl. 15, MichaelRay.16,Katie Sullivan. Final Results TopFuel—Spencer Massey,3 974seconds,30927 mphdef.BobVandergriff ,4.029seconds,304.67mph. Funny Car Cruz Pedregon,Toyota Camry, 4.233, 29546def.BobTascaIII,Ford Mustang,4ADB, 257.04. Pro Stock —AllenJohnson,DodgeAvenger,6.989, 196.87def.V.Gaines,Avenger,7.015,196.67. Pro Stock Motorcycle Shawn Gann,Buell,7.351, 181.08def.Hector AranaJr,Buel, 7.376,182.11. CompetitionEliminator — ToddPaterson, Chevy Cobalt, 8520,16004def.ClintSallee,Dragster,7084, 192.17. Super Stock Dan Fletcher, ChevyCamaro, 11.113,115.52def.Justin Lamb,ChevyCobalt, 9.346, 145.14. Stock Eliminator —Justin Lamb,Chevy Camaro, 11.622,110.91 def. JeffCunningham,Chevy Corvete, 12.153,10869. SuperComp— Chris Bombard, Dragster,9.475, 154 05def.LindseyCramsey,Dragster,9458, 15302.
Super Gas — TrevorLarson,Chevy Corvehe, 10.520, 140.71 def. Robert Powledge,FordEXP , 10.496,13372. Top Dragster—Jeff Koron,Dragster, 7.121,191.00 def. Phil U
Sunday'sSummary
Elks 8, Black Bears 3 Bend 010 000 016 — 8 13 3 Cowlitz 000 020 010 — 3 6 2 Brown,Anderson(5), Murillo f7j, Ring (gj and Servais.Mazza, Omana(8), McAfee(8)andRecio W — Murillo. L — McAfee. 2B—Bend; Dixon, Gil. HR —Bend:0Dwyer.
DEALS
BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION AU TimesPDT
EasternConference Chicago
Atlanta Washington Indiana NewYork Connecticut
Minnesota Los Angeles Phoenix Seattle Tulsa SanAntonio
W 12 10 8 7 5 4
L 4 5 9 5 10 11
Pct Gg .750
W 13 12 9 5 5 5
L 3 5 5 10 13 12
Pct Gg .813 .706 1'/~
Western Conference
.66/ 1'/z .471 4'/~ .457 4'/~
.375 5 .257 P/z
.529 4'/z .375 7 .316 8'/z .294 8'/z
Sunday'sGames
Indiana55,Washington 52 Tulsa90,Atlanta63 Minnes ota82 Phoenix77 Today's Games No gamesscheduled
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AU TimesPDT
Eastern Conference W L T Pts S porting KansasCity 10 5 5 35 Montreal 9 5 5 32 NewYork 9 7 5 32 Philadelphia 8 6 7 31 Houston 8 6 5 29 NewEngland 7 7 6 27 Chicago 7 9 3 24 Columbus 6 9 5 23 TorontoFC 2 10 8 1 4 D.C. 2 14 4 1 0
GF 31 31 29 32 22 25 24 23 17 9
GA 20 29 24 30 19 15 29 25 28 33
W L T Pts 11 6 4 37 8 2 1 0 34 10 8 3 33 9 6 5 32 8 5 8 32 8 7 7 31 7 7 4 25 6 9 6 24 4 ll 5 1 7
GF 33 30 32 33 27 25 22 21 18
GA 20 15 25 28 27 24 21 32 35
Western Conference
RealSaltLake Portand Los Angeles Vancouver FC Dallas
Colorado Seattle SanJose ChivasUSA
FISH COUNT
MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings
ROBBED
All Times PDT 6
AMERICANLEAGUE
East Division Boston TampaBay Baltimore NewYork Toronto Detroit Cleveland Kansas City Minnesota Chicago Oakland Texas Los Angeles Seattle Houston
W 60 58 56 52
L 40 41 43 46
45 52
Central Division W L 53 44
52 46 45 50
41 54 39 56 West Division W L 57 41 54 44 46 50 46 52 33 64
Pct GB 600 .586 1'/z ,566 3r/v .531 7 .464 13'/z
Pct GB .546 ,531 I'/z .474 7 .432 11 .411 13
Pct GB 582 .551 3 479 10
.469 11 .340 23'/x
Sunday's Games Tampa Bay4,Toronto 3 Chicago WhiteSox3, Atlanta1 Cleveland 7, MinnesotaI Detroit 4,KansasCity1 Seattle12,Houston5 Oakland 6, L.A.Angels0 Baltimore4, Texas2 Boston 8,N.Y.Yankees7,11 innings Today's Games N.Y.Yankees(Nova4-2) atTexas(Darvish 8-4), 4:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers(Ryu7-3) atToronto(Jo.Johnson 1-5), 4:07 p.m. Tampa Bay(M.Moore133)at Boston(Workman0-0), 4:10 p.m. Baltimore (Feldman1-1) at KansasCity (W.Davis4-8), 5:10 p.m. Detroit (Scherzer13-1) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Sale 6-8), 5:10p.m. Oakland (Milone8-8) at Houston(Keuchel 4 5),5:10
/e c
,a
Watsonpitchedto1 batter inthe7th. HBP —by Partch (Mercer). WP —Locke, H.Bailey. PB — C.Miger. T—3:18.A—40824 (42,319).
Diamondbacks 3,Giants1 SAN FRANCISCO — Paul
Goldschmidt hita sacrifice fly and a double against All-Star Madison
Bumgarner, CodyRossaddeda late two-run single, and first-place
Arizona held off a late rally by San Francisco to avoid a three-
game sweep.TheDiamondbacks snapped a three-gameskid with their first victory of the second half.
(12). HR —D.Wright(15), Byrd(17), Lagares(2). Philadelphia CI.LeeL,104 Bastardo
Papelbon New York
IP 6 I 1
H 7 0 0
R 5 0 0
ER B B SO 5 1 6 0 0 2 0 0 1
HarveyW,8-2 7 3 0 0 0 10 Atchison 2 1 0 0 0 2 HBP—byHarvey(Utley). PB—Buck. T—2:33. A—32,127(41,922).
Brewers1, Marlins 0 (13 innings) MILWAUKEE — Caleb Gindl hit
his first career home run in the
San Francisco ab r hbi ab r hbi Pogockcf 4 0 0 0 Gelanccf 4 0 0 0 Prado3b 4 2 3 0 Scutaro2b 2 0 0 0 G ldsch1b 1 1 1 1 Poseyc 3 0 0 0 Arizona
A.Hig2b 4 0 M Mntrc 3 0 C .Rosslf 3 0 G Parrarf 3 0
L.Nixph 1 0 0 0 ABrwnph 1 0 0 0 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 Atchisnp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 1 0 4 0 Totals 3 15 7 5 P hiladelphia 00 0 0 0 0 000 — 0 N ew York 200 3 0 0 0 0x- 5 LDB—Philadelphia 5, New York 3. 28—D.Young
I 0 2 0
Pnngtnss 4 0 I D elgadp 2 0 0 EDLRsp 0 0 0 Eatonph 1 0 0
0 Sandovl3b 4 0 I 0 0 Pencerf 3 1 0 0 2 Belt1b 4020 0 Tanakalf 4 0 1 0
0 0 0 0
Bcrwfrss 3 0 I 0 Bmgrnp 1 0 0 0 Abreuph 1 0 0 0 SRosarip 0 0 0 0 Bellp 0 0 0 0 J Lopez p 0 0 0 0 D Hrndzp 0 0 0 0 Machip 0 0 0 0 Erchvz ph 1 0 0 0 Dunnng p 0 0 0 0 Zieglerp 0 0 0 0 Francr ph 1 0 0 0 T otals 3 0 3 8 3 Totals 3 0I 5 0 Arizona 1 00 000 020 — 3 S an Francisco 000 000 001 — 1 E—A.Hil (1), Ziegler(2). DP—San Francisco 2. LOB —Arizona7,SanFrancisco 8. 28—Goldschmidt
bottom of the13th inning and Milwaukee shut out punchless Miami for the third consecutive
game.Miami hasgoneaclubrecord 37 innings without a run,
the longest drought by amajor league team in 28years. Miami
ab r hbi
Milwaukee ab r hbi
Hchvrrss 5 0 2 0 Aokirf 50 10 L ucas3b-2b 4 0 1 0 LSchfrcf 5 0 1 0 Stantonrf 4 0 0 0 Segurass 5 0 1 0 Morrsn1b 4 0 0 0 JFrncs1b 5 0 0 0 Dzunacf 5 0 0 0 Weeks2b 4 0 0 0 D ietrch2b 5 0 0 0 Maldndc 5 0 1 0 W ebbp 0 0 0 0 Gindllf 5 12 1 Rugginlf 4 0 0 0 Bianchi3b 4 0 1 0 B rantlyc 4 0 0 0 WPerltp 2 0 0 0 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 Lucroyph 1 0 0 0 (24), Sando val (14). 3B—Prado(1). CS—Pollock(3), Polanc3b I 0 0 0 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 p.m. Prado(5). S—Bumgarner.SF—Goldschmidt. HAlvrzp 2 0 1 0 McGnzlp 0 0 0 0 Minnesota(Deduno5-4) at L.A. Angels(Blanton 2Arizona IP H R E R BBSO Dobbsph 1 0 0 0 Hndrsnp 0 0 0 0 Charles Cherney i The Assomatcd Press 12), 7:05p.m. DelgadoW,2-3 5 2 - 3 3 0 0 4 2 MDunnp 0 0 0 0 Braunph 1 0 0 0 Cleveland(U.Jimenez7-4) at Seatte (Harang4-8), Chicago White Sox left fielder Casper Wells robs Atlanta Braves' Reed Johnson of a home run in the E.De LaRosa H,1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Quagsp 0 0 0 0 Axfordp 0 0 0 0 7:10 p.m. eighth inning as the White Sox defeated the Braves 3-1 on Sunday. BegH5 1 0 0 0 0 0 Mathisc 2 0 0 0 D.Hemandez H,12 1 0 0 0 1 1 T otals 4 1 0 4 0 Totals 4 21 7 1 NATIONALLEAGUE ZieglerS,4-4 1 2 1 0 0 0 Miami 000 000 000 000 0 — 0 East Division San Francisco Milwaukee 000 000 000 000 1 —1 lSuzuki rf 5 1 1 0 Victorn rf 5 0 2 2 Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO W L Pct GB BumgarnerL,10-6 7 5 1 1 3 6 No outswhenwinning runscored. Cano2b 5 0 3 2 Pedroia2b 6 1 1 1 M asterson W,11-7 7 1 1 1 0 8 Atlanta 55 43 .561 SRosari o 1 3 2 2 2 1 0 Rays 4, Blue Jays 3 1-3 0 0 0 2 I E—Weeks (9), Segura(11). DP—Miami 1, MiC.C.Lee 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia 49 50 .495 6'/v O veraylb 6 0 0 0 D.Ortizdh 4 I I 0 J.Lopez 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 —Miami 6, Milwaukee6. 28—Gindl VWegslf 4 I 1 I Napoli1b 6 2 2 4 Allen 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 waukee3. LOB Washington 48 50 .490 7 Machi H afnerdh 3 0 0 0 JGomslf 4 1 1 1 TORONTO — Luke Scott and Kel l y C.Perez 1 1 0 0 0 1 (1). HR Gindl(1).SB Segura(30). CS Ruggiano NewYork 43 51 .457 10 Dunning 1 0 0 0 1 0 Ligirdgph-dh 3 0 1 0 Sltlmchc 5 0 1 0 Minnesota (4) S — Lucas. Miami 35 61 .365 19 Johnsonhitback-to-backhome HBP —byBumgarner(M.Montero). N unezss 6 2 3 0 Drewss 3 1 0 0 Diamond L,5-9 4 2 - 3 7 6 5 3 0 Miami IP H R E R BB SO Central Division T—3:00.A—41,949 (41,915). runs, Evan Longoria also went Swarzak 11-3 0 0 0 0 0 H.Alvarez 7 5 0 0 1 1 W L Pct GB CStwrtc 3 2 1 0 Iglesias3b 5 1 1 0 L.cruz3b 5 0 0 I Thielbar I 0 0 0 0 0 M.Dunn 1 0 0 0 0 0 deep andTampaBaysurvived St. Louis 59 37 .615 Totals 4 4 7 135 Totals 4 2 8 118 Roeni c ke 1 0 0 0 0 2 Rockies 4, Ctibs 3 Quags 1 0 0 0 0 2 Pittsburgh 57 39 .594 2 a late scare to beatToronto, N ew York 210 002 200 00 — 7 Pressly 1 2 1 1 1 0 A.Ramos 2 0 0 0 0 2 Cincinnati 55 43 .561 5 — 8 B oston 004 2 1 0 000 01 HBP —byMasterson (Hicks). WebbL,1-4 1 2 1 1 0 2 completing a three-gamesweep. Chicago 43 53 .448 16 DENVER — Tyler Chatwood Two outs when w i n ni n g run scored T 2:38. A 31,753 (39,021). Milwaukee Milwaukee 41 56 .423 18'/r pitched six solid innings, Nolan E—L.cruz (3), Dem pster (3), Saltaamacchia (6), The surging Rayshavewon13 of W.Peralta 8 2 0 0 2 7 West Division Iglesias (4). DP — N e w Y ork1, Boston2. LOB—New their past14 gamesand 20 oftheir Fr.Rodriguez 1 1 0 0 1 0 Arenado hit a go-ahead single and W L Pct GB York 12,Boston10. 28—Egsbury (22). HR—Napoli Mic Gonzale z 1 0 0 0 0 1 Arizona 51 47 .520 National League Colorado beat Chicago to win the s(8). SB—Gardner 2(17), Nunez(4), past 24. After starting the season Henderson 1 1 0 0 0 2 Los Angeles 50 47 .515 '/z 2 (13),J.Gome 14-18, Tampa Bay is a maj o r E gsbury (37), Vi c torino 2 (13), D O r ti z (4). CS — N u ne z A xford W, 4 -3 2 0 0 0 0 1 three-game series. Chatwood (6Colorado 48 51 .485 3'/z (2). S Victorino. Webbpitchedto1 batter inthe13th. league-best 44-23sinceMay8. SanFrancisco 45 52 .464 5'/r Dodgers 9, Nationals 2 3) went the distance his last time IP H R E R BBSO T—3:33. A—30,073(41,900). SanDiego 43 56 .434 8'/z New York Sabathia 5 9 7 7 2 5 out but was a tough-luck loser to TampaBay Toronto Claiborne I 0 0 0 2 2 WASHINGTON — Matt Kemp Sunday's Games ZackGreinke and the LosAngeles ab r hbi ab r hbi Interleague Logan 1 0 0 0 0 3 N.Y.Mets5, Philadelphia0 returned to the lineup with a Dodgers1-0. This time, he allowed D.Robertson 1 1 0 0 1 0 DJnngscf 5 0 0 0 Reyesss 3 0 2 2 Pittsburgh3, Cincinnati2 Z obristss 4 0 0 0 Bautistrf 5 0 0 0 Kegey 2 0 0 0 0 5 home run and a double in the seven hits and two runs — one L.A. Dodgers 9,Washington 2 White Sox 3, Braves1 WarrenL,1-1 2-3 1 1 1 0 0 Longori3b 3 1 1 1 Encrnc1b 5 0 0 0 same inning,and LosAngeles Chicago WhiteSox3, Atlanta1 L oney1b 4 1 1 0 Linddh 3 0 1 0 earned. Boston Milwaukee I, Miami0,13innings Scottdh 3 1 1 2 RDavispr 0 0 0 0 completed a sweep of Washington Dempster 51-3 6 5 3 4 4 CHICAGO — Left fielder Casper St.Louis 3,SanDiego2 BreslowH,9 1 3 2 1 1 0 K Jhnsn2b 4 I 3 I Mecarrlf 4 I I 0 Colorado that kept the Dodgers a half-game Chicago Arizona 3,SanFrancisco 1 W ells robbed ReedJohnsonofa Tazawa BS,4-4 2 - 3 1 0 0 1 0 Joycerf 3 0 1 0 CIRsmscf 4 0 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Colorado 4, ChicagoCubs 3 SRdrgzph-If 0 0 0 0 Mlzturs2b 4 0 0 0 behind first-place Arizona in the Thornton 1 0 0 0 0 2 Valuen3b 4 0 0 0 Fowlercf 4 0 0 0 home run in the eighth inning to Today's Games L oatonc 4 0 0 0 Tholec 2 1 1 1 Uehara 1 1 0 0 0 2 Stcastrss 5 1 4 0 Bckmnrf 4 1 1 0 NL West. Activated from the15Pittsburgh(Morton1-2) at Washington(Haren4-10), help Chicago top Atlanta. With D.Britton I I 0 0 I 0 Fuldlf-rf 4 0 1 0 Lawrie3b 4 1 1 0 Rizzo Ib 4 1 2 1 Tlwtzk ss 4 0 0 0 405 p.m. day disabled list before the game, BeatoW,1-0 1 1 0 0 0 0 T otals 3 4 4 8 4 Totals 3 43 8 3 A Sorinlf 5 0 1 1 CGnzlzlf 3 2 2 1 the White Sox leading 3-1, Wells L.A. Dodgers (Ryu7-3) at Toronto (Jo.Johnson1-5), Sabathiapitchedto 1baterin the 6th. T ampa Bay 0 0 0 1 0 3 000 — 4 Kemp led off the second with a Schrhltrf 3 1 1 0 Cuddyr1b 2 1 1 1 leaped up against the left-field wall 4:07 p.m. Toronto 0 10 000 002 — 3 pitchedto 1 baterin the7th. Ransmph 0 0 0 0 Arenad3b 3 0 1 1 E—Longoria (5). DP—Tampa Bay 1, Toronto 1. homerandthendoubl ed home Atlanta(Teheran7-5) at N.Y.Mets(Gee7-7), 4:10 Claiborne HBP by Sabathi a (Egsbury, Drew), by Demp s t e r L akecf 5 0 I 0 Torreaic 3 0 0 0 to make aspectacular catch and LDB — T a m p a B ay 7, T or ont o 11. 28 — K .Jo hnson (9 ), p.m. Andre Ethier in a seven-run inning Barney2b 2 0 0 1 JHerrr2b 3 0 0 0 ) rob Johnson of the game-tying San Diego(Cashner5-5) at Miwaukee(Gorzelanny (I.Suzuki Reyes (5), Col.Rasmus(20), Thole(1) HR Longoria T—4:46. A—38,138(37,499). Castigoc 1 0 0 0 Chatwdp 2 0 0 0 1-3), 5:10p.m. (20), Scott(9),KJohnson(15). SB—Scott (1), Reyes against Jordan Zimmermann homer. It was one ofseveral great DNavrrph-c 1 0 0 0 Outmnp 0 0 0 0 Miami (Koehle1-5) r at Colorado(Pomeranz0-3), (10), R.Da vis (25). (12-5j, quickly turning a muchEJcksn p 2 0 0 0 Escaln p 0 0 0 0 defensive plays by theWhite Sox. 5:40 p.m. TampaBay IP H R E R BB SO Borbon ph 1 0 1 0 Pachecph 1 0 0 0 ChicagoCubs(Garza6-1) at Arizona(Skaggs2-1), Drioles 4, Rangers 2 ArcherW,5-3 7 5 1 1 4 1 anticipated matchup of All-Star Russegp 0 0 0 0 Belislep 0 0 0 0 Atlanta Chicago 6.40 p.m. J.WrightH,2 1 1 0 0 0 2 aces into a rout. Clayton Kershaw Guerrirp 0 0 0 0 Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 r hbi ab r hbi Cincinnati(Arroyo8-7) at SanFrancisco(Lincecum ARLINGTON,Texas— Chris RodneyS,24-29 1 2 2 2 2 1 (9-6j allowed only two hits — solo T otals 3 3 3 103 Totals 2 9 4 5 3 Smmnsssab 4 0 1 0 DeAzacf 3 2 1 0 5-9), 7:15p.m. Toronto Chicago 0 00 002 001 — 3 Tillman pitched into the ninth homers by JaysonWerth — over CJhnsn3b 5 1 1 0 AIRmrzss 3 0 0 0 DickeyL,B-II 6 7 4 4 I 8 200 002 00x - 4 J .Uptonrf 4 0 0 0 Riosrf 4 12 1 J.Perez I 1 3 1 0 0 1 0 seven innings with nine strikeouts Colorado inning in his return from the E — Lake (2), Chatwood (I). DP — C olorado 1. American League 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 4 0 2 0 A.Dunn1b 4 0 1 1 Loup LOB —Chicago12, Colorado3. 28—St.castro (21), FFrmn1b All-Star game, andsurging HBP—by Archer(Lind), by J.Perez(Scott), byLoup and no walks, putting his major Mccnndh 3 0 1 0 Kppngr2b 3 0 0 0 Blackmon(2), Cuddyer(19). HR —Rizzo (14). SBGattislf-c 4 0 2 1 Viciedodh 2 0 0 I (S.Rodriguez).PB Thole Baltimore beat Texas to sweep league-best ERA at 2.01. C.Gonzalez2(18).CS A Soriano(5) S E.Jackson. Uggla2b 3 0 0 0 C.Wegslf 3 0 1 0 Mariners12, Astros 5 T—3'01.A—41,247(49,282). SF — Barney. a three-game series between RJhnsncf 4 0 1 0 Morel3b 3 0 0 0 Los Angeles Washington Chicago IP H R E R BB So G .Lairdc 1 0 1 0 Flowrsc 3 0 0 0 2012 playoff teams. Matt Wieters HOUSTON — Nick Franklin hit ab r hbi ab r hbi Tigers 4, Royals1 E.JacksonL,6-11 7 5 4 3 2 5 Trdslvcpr-If 2 0 0 0 had two hits and scored twice to C rwfrdlf 5 1 3 1 Harpercf 4 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 his first career grand slam in Russell 2 83 5 3 Punto3b-ss 4 1 I 0 Rendon2b 4 0 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 3 4 1 9 1 Totals Guerrier help the Orioles (56-43) move a KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Miguel Atlanta 0 00 010 000 — 1 Seattle's big second inning to AdGnzl1b 4 I 2 0 Zmrmn3b 4 0 0 0 Colorado — 3 Chicago 101 001 00x season-high13 gamesover.500 Cabrera and Andy Dirks homered U ribe3b 1 0 0 0 Werthrf 32 2 2 back up ascoreless start by Felix ChatwoodW,6-3 6 7 2 1 4 2 E—Simmons (8). DP—Chicago2. LOB—Atlanta HRmrzss 4 2 2 3 AdLRc1b 3 0 0 0 O utman H,6 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 with their seventh victory in eight as Detroit beat Kansas City to Hernandez, and the Mariners 11, Chicago4. 28—De Aza (20). SB—Rios (20). H rstnJr3b-1b1 0 0 0 Tracy1b 1 0 1 0 EscalonaH,6 2 3- 0 0 0 0 0 CS — AI.Ramirez(6). SF—Viciedo. games. avoid being swept. Doug Fister rolled past Houston for their Ethierrf 3 1 0 1 Dsmndss 4 0 0 0 Belisle H,14 1 1 0 0 1 2 Atlanta IP H R E R BB SO S chmkrrf-cf I 0 0 0 Hairstnlf 3 0 0 0 BrothersS,5-6 1 1 1 1 1 1 (8-5) picked up the victory with season-best sixth straight victory. Baltimore Minor L,9-5 8 5 3 2 2 8 Texas K empcf 4 1 3 3 KSuzukc 3 0 I 0 T 3:11. A 43,108(50,398). Chicago six strong innings, yielding a run, Puigrf 0 0 0 0 Zmrmnp 0 0 0 0 Franklin's slam, Seattle's fifth this ab r hbi ab r hbi QuintanaW,5-2 5 2 - 3 9 1 1 3 4 McLothlf 4 0 2 0 Kinsler2b 4 0 2 1 while allowing six hits and striking A.Egisc 5 1 1 0 Ohlndrfp 2 0 0 0 season, came offJordanLyles TroncosoH,1 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Cardinals 3, Padres 2 Machd3b 4 0 1 1 Gentrycf 3 0 1 0 M.ERis2b 5 1 3 0 Lmrdzzph 1 0 0 0 out five and walking one. Veal H,2 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 (4-4) in a seven-run second. Markksrf 4 0 0 0 N.cruzdh 4 0 0 0 K ershwp 4 0 0 1 Abadp 00 0 0 N.Jones H,5 1 0 0 0 1 2 A .Jonescf 5 0 0 0 ABeltre3b 4 I I I League p 0 0 0 0 Hernandez (11-4j scattered four ST. LOUIS — Adam Wainwright A.Reed S,25-29 1 0 0 0 0 1 Detroit Kansas City .Davis1b 4 I 1 0 Przynsc 4 0 0 0 T otals 4 1 9 15 9 Totals 3 2 2 4 2 hits with seven strikeouts over six C HBP—byQuintana(G.Laird). WP—Minor. ab r hbi ab r hbi Wietersc 4 2 2 1 Morlnd1b 3 0 0 0 L os Angeles 0 7 0 2 0 0 000 — 9 worked eight sharp innings for T 2:37 A 27,729 (40,615). AJcksncf 4 0 1 0 AGordnlf 4 0 0 0 innings to lower his AL-leading Hardyss 4 0 2 1 Profarph 0 0 0 0 W ashington 0 1 0 0 0 0 100 — 2 his National League-leading 13th TrHntrrf 4 0 0 0 Hosmer1b 4 0 0 0 Valencidh 3 0 0 0 Andrusss 2 1 1 0 E H Ramirez (5) LOB Los Angeles10,WashERAto2.43. He is6-Oinhis past Micarr3b 4 1 1 1 BButlerdh 4 0 1 0 U rrutiaph-dh1 0 0 0 DvMrplf 4 0 1 0 ington 4 28 —C.crawford (13), Kemp(12), M.EIis win and Allen Craig ended the Leaders 10 starts and hasn't lost since May B Rorts2b 4 I 2 I LMartnrf 3 0 0 0 Fielder dh 4 I 2 0 S.Perez c 3 0 I 0 (5). HR —H.Ramirez (10), Kemp(5), Werth 2 (12). game with a leaping catch at the SB — C.Crawford(10). ThroughSunday'sGames 3 7 4 104 Totals 3 12 6 2 V Mrtnz1b 4 0 2 0 L.cainrf 4 0 1 0 left-field wall as St. Louis beat San 25. Brad Miller, Dustin Ackley and TB otals JhPerltss 4 1 2 0 Mostks3b 4 0 1 0 AMERICANLEAGUE altimore 021 10 0 0 0 0 — 4 LosAngeles IP H R ER BB SO Michael Saunders drove in two BATTING —Mrcabrera, Detroit,.359; DOrtiz,BosTexas 0 00 010 001 — 2 Dirkslf 4 1 2 1 MTeiad2b 3 1 1 1 KershawW,9-6 7 2 2 2 0 9 Diego. Craig has12 hits and six ton,.321;Trout,LosAngeles,.321; Mauer,Minnesota, E Andrus (10), Burns (1). DP Baltimore 1. B.Penac 2 0 0 2 AEscorss 4 0 1 0 League 2 2 0 0 1 2 runs each to help the Mariners RBls during a seven-gamehitting LOB —Batimore 11, Texas6. 28—C.Davis (29), R Santg2b 4 0 1 0 Dysoncf 3 0 1 0 .320; Loney,TampaBay, .314; ABeltre, Texas,.313; Washington wrap up a three-gamesweep. streak for the Cardinals, who took T otals 3 4 4 114 Totals 3 3 I 7 I CDavis,Baltimore,.312. Wieters(20),Hardy(17), B.Roberts (4), Kinsler(17), Zimmermann L,12-5 2 8 7 7 2 I Detroit 1 00 010 101 — 4 Ohlendorf RUNS —Micabrera, Detroit, 75; CDavis, BaltiGentry (6). HR —A.Beltre (22). CS—Machado (5). 6 6 2 2 1 6 two of three in both series against K ansas City 0 1 0 0 0 0 000 — 1 Abad Seattle Houston S—McLouth. more,72;AJones,Baltimore, 68; Trout, LosAngeles, 1 1 0 0 2 0 the Padres this season. ab r bbi ab r hbi 67; DeJennings,TampaBay,65; Bautista, Toronto, 63; Baltimore IP H R E R BB SO E Mccabrera(11). DP—Detroit 2, KansasCity WP Kershaw,League. BMigerss-3b 5 1 2 2 Altuve2b 5 0 2 1 Egsbury,Boston,61; Encarnacion, Toronto, 61. TigmanW123 8 6 2 2 3 7 2. LOB Detroit 5, KansasCity 7. 2B VMartinez T 2:59. A 34,758(41,418). San Diego St. Louis Frnkln2b 6 1 2 4 Wagac3b 4 0 1 0 (26). HR —Mi.cabrera(31), Dirks(7), RBI — Micabrera, Detroit, 96; CDavis,Baltimore, MatuszH,12 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 (21), Jh.Peralta ab r hbi ab r hbi 94; Encarnacion,Toronto, 74; Fielder, Detroit, 70; Ibanezlf 3 1 1 0 MDmnph 0 0 0 1 O'DayS,2-4 2-3 0 0 0 0 I M.Telada(3).SB—Dirks(7), L.cain(11), Dyson(13). S F — B.P en a 2. Evcarrss 3 1 1 0 Mcrpnt2b 4 I 2 0 Enchvzrf 1 0 0 0 Jcastrodh 5 0 0 0 Cano,NewYork,69; Ncruz,Texas, 69; AJones, BaTexas Pirates 3, Reds 2 Detroit IP H R E R BB SO H eadly3b 4 0 1 0 YMolinc 3 1 1 0 KMorlsdh 4 2 2 1 Carter1b 2 0 0 0 timore,69. MPerezL,3-3 6 1-3 9 4 4 1 5 Quentinlf 4 1 1 0 Craigrf-If 4 1 1 1 S eager3b 3 2 0 0 Corpmc 5 0 I 0 Cotts 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 FisterW,8-5 6 6 1 1 1 5 HOMERUNS —CDavis, Baltimore,37; MicaR yanph-ss 1 1 0 0 Krausslf 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 CINCINNATI — Jeff Locke allowed Alonso1b 4 0 3 1 Freese3b 4 0 2 2 brera, Detroit, 31;Encarnacion,Toronto,26; ADunn, Soria 1 0 0 0 1 0 Smyly H,11 V enal e rf 3 0 0 0 Mulicap 0 0 0 0 Smoak1b 5 0 2 0 JDMrtnph 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 only an infield single through Chicago, 24; Ibanez,Seatle, 24;Bautista, Toronto, 22; Burns 1 1 0 0 1 0 B.RondonH,1 1 Amarstcf 4 0 1 0 MAdms1b 4 0 0 0 Benoit S,9-9 I I 0 0 0 0 six innings and Pittsburgh beat ABeltre,Texas,22;Ncruz, Texas,22. MSndrs rf-cf 3 2 1 2 Maxwll rf 4 1 1 0 Tillmanpitchedto I batter inthe 9th. F orsyth2b 4 0 1 0 BPtrsnlf 3 0 0 0 Ackley cf-If 4 I 3 2 BBarns cf 4 1 1 1 WP —M.Perez. Kansas City STOLENBASES— Ellsbury,Boston,37;RDavis, Shields L,4-7 7 9 3 3 0 6 Homer Bailey to salvage the final R Riverc 3 0 1 0 Jaycf 1 0 0 0 Toronto,25,McLouth, Baltimore,25;Altuve, Houston, HBlancc 4 1 0 1 Elmoress 3 2 2 0 T—3:05. A—39,907(48,114). K.Herrera 2 2 1 1 0 3 game of its series with Cincinnati. Guzmnph I 0 I 0 SRonsncf-rf 3 0 I 0 Totals 3 9 121312 Totals 3 6 5 9 3 21; Kipnis,Cleveland,21;Trout, l.osAngeles,21; AlHBP by Fi s ter (S.Perez ). Stultsp 1 0 0 0 Kozmass 3 0 1 0 Ramirez,Chicago,20;Rios, Chicago,20. Seattle 070 030 110 — 12 The second-place Pirates left town Kotsayph 1 0 0 0 Wnwrgp 3 0 0 0 T—248.A—20,513 (37,903). Houston 0 00 000 104 — 5 Athletics 6, Angels 0 PITCHING —Scherzer, Detroit, 13-1; MMoore, Vincentp 0 0 0 0 Descals3b 0 0 0 0 E—H.Blanco (2), B.Miller (3), Elmore (5). with a three-gamecushion over Tampa Bay,13-3; Colon, Oakland,13-3;Tilman, BaT htchrp 0 0 0 0 DP — Seattle1, Houston1.LOB—Seattle 8, Houston ANAHEIM, Calif.— Bartolo Colon timore,12-3;FHernandez,Seatle,11-4. the NL Central-rival Reds, who Gyorkoph 1 0 0 0 9. 2B — Ibanez (11), M.Saunders (12), Elmore(3). ERA—FHemandez, Seattle,2.43; Colon,Oakland, pitched a four-hitter for his third Indians 7, Twins1 Totals 3 3 2 101 Totals 3 2 3 8 3 HR — Franklin (7) SF—Ackley,M.Dominguez won the first two games of the 2.52; Kuroda,NewYork, 2.65; Sale, Chicago,2.85; S an Diego 100 0 0 1 000 — 2 AniSanchez,Detroit, 2.85;Lackey,Boston,2.95; IwaSeattle IP H R E R BBSO shutout this season and center series. St. Louis 003 000 00x — 3 MINNEAPOLIS — Justin FHernandezW,11-4 6 4 0 0 1 7 fielder Coco Crisp robbed Albert kuma,Seaftle, 2.99. E — H ea dl e y (4). DP —St. Louis 3. LDB—San Noesi 1 2 1 1 0 1 STRIKEOUTS —Darvish, Texas, 157, Scherzer, Masterson tooka no-hit bid Cincinnati Pittsburgh Pujols of a home run to help Diego 7, St Louis 6. 28 Ev.cabrera (14), Quen tin Luetge 1 0 0 0 0 2 Detroit, 152, FHernandez,Seattle, 147; Masterson, ab r hbi ab r hbi into the seventh inning, Michael (19), Guzma n (12), M.carpenter (31), Freese(14). Cleveland,145Sale,Chicago,131; Verlander,Detroit, LaFrombois e 1 3 3 4 3 1 1 Oakland beat Los Angeles. Eric S Martelf 5 0 0 0 Choocf 3 0 2 0 S—Stults. Farquhar 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 128; DHolland,Texas, 127. Brantley hit a bases-loaded triple Sogard hit a two-run homer to S niderrf 4 0 0 0 Heiseylf 3 0 0 0 SanDiego IP H R E R BB SO Houston NATIONALLEAGUE Mcctchcf 4 0 0 0 Votto1b 3 0 0 0 StultsL,88 6 8 3 3 1 2 LylesL,4-4 4 8 1 0 9 2 3 back Colon (13-3j, who struck out and Cleveland beat Minnesota BATTING — YM oli n a, St. Louis, .336; Craig, St. PAlvrz 3b 4 0 0 0 Phillips 2b 4 0 0 0 12-3 0 0 0 0 1 Vincent Harreg 32-3 5 2 2 3 0 five and walked one. to avoid a three-gamesweep. Louis, .332;Cuddyer,Colorado, .329; Mcarpenter, G Jones1b 3 1 1 1 Brucerf 3 0 0 0 Thatcher 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 W.Wright 11-3 0 0 0 0 2 St.Lours,.325;Segura,Milwaukee,.325;Posey,San Masterson (11-7) had facedthe GSnchzlb 0 0 0 0 Frazier3b 4 0 I 0 St. Louis Lylespitchedto 4baters inthe5th. Francisco,.323;Votto,Cincinnati,.317. Los Angeles M cKnrc 4 I 2 0 Cozartss 3 I 0 0 WainwrightW,13-5 8 8 2 2 2 7 minimum through six, allowing HBP—byFHernandez (Carter), by Lyles(H.Blanco, Oakland RUNS —Mcarpenter, St. Louis, 75; CGonzalez, Mercer2b 3 1 1 1 CMigerc 1 0 0 0 ab r bbi ab r hbi Mulica S,28-30 1 2 0 0 0 0 Seager).WP—FHernandez, Farquhar, Harreg. Colorado,71;Choo,Cincinnati, 68;Votto,Cincinnati, only a hit batter, when Brian B armesss 2 0 1 0 Paulph 0 0 0 0 C rispdh 4 1 1 1 Shucklf 4 0 1 0 T — 2: 5 3. A — 44,033 (43, 9 75). T—3.29.A—38,838(42,060). 68; Hogiday,St. Louis,64; Goldschmidt,Arizona,62; Lockep 2 0 1 0 NSotoph 1 0 0 0 S .Smithlf 5 0 0 0 Troutcf 4 0 1 0 Dozier led off the seventh with a JUpton,Atlanta,61. Tabataph 1 0 1 1 Mesorcc 1 0 0 0 Lowriess 4 0 0 0 Pulolsdh 4 0 0 0 RBI — Goldschmidt, Arizona,78;Philips, Cincinbroken-bat blooper to center field Mets 5, Phillies 0 Red Sox 8,Yankees7 W atsonp 0 0 0 0 HBailyp 1 0 0 0 D nldsn3b 4 0 0 0 Hamltnrf 4 0 0 0 nati, 78; CraigSt. , Louis,77;DBrown,Philadelphia, Moss1b 4 0 3 1 HKndrc2b 3 0 0 0 that dunked in under the glove of a Morrisp 0 0 0 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 69; Bruce,Cincinnati, 66; CGonzalez, Colorado, 66; (11 innings) JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 DRonsnph 0 1 0 0 Jasoc 4 0 1 0 Trumo1b 3 0 0 0 sliding Drew Stubbs for a double. NEW YORK — Matt Harvey struck FFreeman, Atlanta, 64. M elncnp 0 0 0 0 Partchp 0 0 0 0 Reddckrf 4 1 1 0 Cagasp 3b 3 0 0 0 HOME RUNS—CGonzalez, Colorado,26; PAlvaout10 in sevenoverpowering I ngeph 1 0 0 0 BOSTON — MikeNapoli homered C Young cf 3 2 1 0 lannettc 3 0 2 0 rez, Pi t tsburgh, 24; DBrown,Philadelphia, 24;GoldCleveland Minnesota G rigip 00 0 0 S ogard2b 4 2 2 2 Aybarss 2 0 0 0 innings, and DavidWrightand with two outs in the11th inning schmi d t, Ari zona,21; Beltran,St. Louis, 19; Bruce, ab r hbi ab r hbi T otals 3 6 6 9 4 Totals 3 00 4 0 T otals 3 3 3 7 3 Totals 2 72 3 0 Juan Lagares eachhit a homerun Cincinnati,19;Uggla,Atlanta,19. Stubbscf 4 0 1 0 Dozier2b 4 1 2 0 — his second of the game — to Oakland 0 02 022 000 — 6 P ittsburgh 010 0 0 0 2 0 0 — 3 STOLENBASES—Ecabrera, SanDiego,34; Se5 1 0 0 CHrmnc 4 0 0 0 C incinnati 000 01 0 0 1 0 — 2 upheld by video review to lead L os Angeles 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 0 Acarerss send Boston over New York. The gura, Milwaukee, 30; SMarte, Pittsburgh, 28; Revere, 4 2 2 3 Mauerdh 4 0 0 I DP — Pitsburgh1. LOB —Pittsburgh 7, Cincinnati E Cagaspo (11), lannetta (5) Trumbo (6). Kipnis2b New York over Philadelphia. Philadel phia,22; CGomez, Milwaukee,21; MccutchSwisherdh 5 I 1 0 Mornea1b 4 0 0 0 Red Sox scored sevenruns after 6 28 McKenry(5). HR G.Jones(10) CS Choo DP — Oakand 1, l.os Angeles1. LOB —Oakland 6, en, Pittsburgh,21; CGonzalez, Colorado, 18; Pierre, C Santnc 3 1 1 0 Doumitrf 3 0 0 0 (8). S —Barmes,H.Baiey. Los Angeles4. 28—C.Young(12). HR —Sogard (2). falling behind 3-0, thanks in part Miami,18 EYoung, NewYork,18. MrRynl1b 3 1 0 0 Plouffe3b 2 0 0 0 New York SB — Reddick (7), C.Young(7). Pittsburgh IP H R E R BB SO Philadelphia PITCHING —Wainwright, St. Louis, 13-5; Zimto Napoli's three-run homer in the Oakland ab r hbi ab r hbi IP H R E R BB SO Brantlylf 4 0 1 3 Bemier3b 0 0 0 0 LockeW,9-2 6 1 1 1 4 6 mermann, Wa s hi n gton, 12-5; Corbin,Arizona,11-1; R aburnrf 4 0 2 0 Thomslf 3 0 0 0 Rogins ss 4 0 1 0 EYonglf 4 0 0 0 Watson 0 0 0 0 1 0 third. But they coughed up the ColonW,13-3 9 4 0 0 1 5 A viles3b 3 I I I H ickscf 1 0 0 0 3b 4 0 I 0 DnMrp2b 4 0 0 0 Lynn St.Louis,11-5; CILee,Phi adelphia,10-4. Morris H,1 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 MYong Los Angel e s lead when New York scored two in WiiliamsL,5-6 ERA —Kershaw, LosAngeles, 2.01; Locke,PittsFlormnss 3 0 0 0 Ju.WilsonH,8 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 Utley2b 3 0 1 0 DWrght3b 4 2 2 1 5 8 6 4 3 4 T otals 3 5 7 9 7 Totals 2 81 2 1 412 1 burgh, 2.11;Harvey,NewYork, 2.23; Corbin, Arizona, the sixth and two in the seventh to Richards MeanconH,26 1 1 1 1 2 0 DBrwn If 4 0 0 0 Byrdrf 2 I 0 0 0 2 C leveland 012 0 3 0 0 01 — 7 DYong rf 4 0 1 0 Satin1b 3 1 1 0 2.35; Wai nwright,St. Louis, 2.44;Fernandez, Miami, Grigi S,30-31 I 1 0 0 0 I Kohn I 0 0 0 0 2 tie it 7-all. 000 0 0 0 100 — 1 Cincinnati Frndsn I b 3 0 0 0 I.Davisph-1 b 100 0 2.75; TWood,Chicago,2.79;Leake,Cincinnati,2.79. Roth 1 0 0 0 0 0 M innesota E—Kipnis (8), Plouffe (7). DP—Cleveland 1, H.BaileyL,5-9 Mayrry cf 3 0 0 0 Buckc 300 0 STRIKEOUTS —Harvey, New York, 157; Ker6 1 - 3 7 3 3 1 12 Williamspitchedto 2baters in the6th. New York Boston Minnesota 2. LOB —Cleveland 6, Minnesota 3. Kratz c 3 0 0 0 Lagarscf 3 1 2 3 shaw,LosAngeles,148, Wainwright, St. Louis,137; 12-3 0 0 0 1 2 WP Williams. Hoover 28 — R aburn (12), Dozi e r 2 (17). 38 — Br an t l e y (2). ab r hbi ab r hbi CI.Lee p 2 0 0 0 Quntnl ss 2 0 0 0 Samardzi i a, Chi c ago, 134; HBailey,Cincinnati, 133; Partch T—2:48. A—37,441(45,483). 1 0 0 0 0 2 HR — Kipnis (15). CS—Hicks(3). SF—Aviles. G ardnrcf 4 I 3 I Egsurycf 4 I 2 0 Bastrd p 0 0 0 0 Harveyp 2 0 0 0 Latos,Crncinnati,132; CILee,Philadelphia,131.
B4
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013
CYCLING
r oomeri eS ovi 0
in
By John Leicester
lakes like mirrors, spurting fountains and statues looking on stonily. Before the pace picked up sharply on the Champs-Elysees, Sunday's 82mile ride was largely leisurely. The 169 finishers — from 198 who started — savored thepleasure of surviving the three-week ordeal. Quintana, the 2 3 -year-old Colombian who secured second place behind Froome with an impressive win on Saturday's penultimate Stage 20, laughed as third-placed Rodriguez tried to spark up a cigar in the saddle. Froome's clear physical superiority made him the overwhelming favorite going into the Tour and carried him through it. His winning margin of 4 minutes, 20 secondswas the largestsince 1997, when Jan Ullrich — who has since admitted to doping — beat Richard Virenque — who also confessed to
The Associated Press
PARIS — I won't let you down like Lance Armstrong. This Tour de France champion is for real. That, in so many words, is the promise Chris Froome made as the newest winner of cycling's showcase race so badly hurt over the years by riders who doped to win it. Because of their deceit, Froome faced a series ofquestions as he dominated rivals over three weeks of racing, all centered on the same key concern: Can we believe in you? Yes, he insisted. The sport is changing, he argued. He handled the scrutiny politely and adroitly. He said he understood the skepticism. And on the podium in Paris, his wiry frame
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wrapped in his canary yellow jersey, Froome asked the guardians of the 110-year-old race and all those who love it to trust him. "This is one yellow jersey that will stand the test of time," he said. In two years, Britain has had two winners: Bradley Wiggins in 2012 and now Froome, a cooler,calmer, more understated but no less determined character than his Sky teammate with famous sideburns. Froome rode into Paris in style: Riders pedaled up to him to offer congratulations; he sipped from a flute of champagne; a Tour organizer stuck an arm from his car window to shake Froome's hand. He dedicated his victory to his late mother, Jane, who died in 2008. "Without her encouragement to follow my dreams I would probably be at home watching on TV," he said. Froome took the race lead on Stage 8 inthe Pyrenees, never relinquished it and vigorously fended off rivals whose concertedchallenges turned this 100th Tour into a thriller. Froome and his Sky teammates linked arms as they rode for the line. "This is a beautiful country with the finest annual sporting event on the planet. To win the 100th edition is an honor beyond any I've dreamed," he said. Five-time winners Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault and Miguel Indu-
using performance-enhancers — by 9:09. Armstrong had l arger margins of victory than Froome but those no longer count. Froome's three stage victories — in Thibault Camus/The Associated Press the Pyrenees, on Mont Ventoux in Christopher Froome, second from right, rides in the pack during the final stage of the100th edition of the Tour de France in Provence and in a mountainous time Parison Sunday. Froome won the event. trial — were the most for a Tour winner sinceArmstrong gotfive in 2004, results now annulled. rain joined Froome on the podium. now," Froome said. "I feel I've been Because of the unique late-afterSkyteam manager Dave Brailsford Missing,of course, was Armstrong. able to deal with it reasonably well noon start for the final Stage 21, the said the Tour is seeing "a new generation" of young riders who "have never Stripping the serial doper of his sev- throughout this Tour, and h ope- riders raced on the cobbles of the en wins tore a hole in the Tour's roll fully that's sent a strong message to Champs-Elysees as the sun cast lived in an era of doping." of honor as large as that left by World the cycling world that the sport has golden hues over the peloton and Cycling's future "is in good hands War II, when the race didn't take changed — and it really has." shadows lengthened over the dense, with Chris, because he is an ex"The peloton's standing together, cheering crowds. Marcel Kittel won ceptional rider and an exceptional place from 1940-46. None of the 100th edition's podium the riders are united and it's not go- the final sprint on the avenue, the character." finishers — Froome, Nairo Quintana ing tobe accepted anymore." German's sprinter's fourth stage win Unlike some other riders who cut and Joaquim Rodriguez — have ever The spectacular nighttime ceremo- of this Tour. short questions about doping and failed a drug test or been directly im- nies, with the Eiffel Tower in glitterFrench Air Force jets in formation bristled, Froome said he was happy plicated in any of cycling's litany of ing lights and the Arc de Triomphe trailed red, white and blue smoke in during the Tour to discuss the issue doping scandals. That is an encour- used as a screen for a flashing light- the skies. The riders circled like a that has so poisoned his sport. He aging and notable departure both show, capped what has been a visu- necklace around the Arc de Triomphe said he, too, felt let down by his cheatfrom the Armstrong era and many ally stunning Tour. in their bright colored team jerseys. ing predecessors. other Tour podiums before and It started with a first-ever swing After setting off from the magnifiFroome argued that hissuccess since. through Corsica,France's so-called cent Versailles Palace, the former res- demonstrates that cycling's anti-dop"In a way, I'm glad that I've had to "island of beauty," before veering idence of three kings and their seat ing system — now among the most face those questions. That after all the through the Pyrenees to Brittany and of power until the French revolution rigorous, invasive and sustained of revelations last year and just the tar- then across France to the race's cre- of 1789, the riders were granted the any sport — must be working, benished history over the last decade, scendo in the Alps — 2,115 grueling privilege of meandering through the cause otherwise he wouldn't be able all that's been channeled toward me miles in total. chateau's manicured gardens, past to win.
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Joe Kline/The Bulletin
line I The Builetin
Serghei Tvetcov holds up the Classic Cycling Classic trophy after triumphing as the men's overall winner of the five-stage race in Central Oregon on Sunday at Bend's Summit High School.
Kristin McGrath holds up the trophy on the podium after winning the pro women's division of the Cascade Cycling Classic on Sunday at Bend's Summit High School.
Men's
Women's
Continued from B1 "It was an amazing job working together," Tvetcov said. "Everybody was incredible covering moves and riding smart. I was still worried. The guy who won (the stage) was close, but it wasn't a big gap, so I was happy." Joey Rosskopf of Hincapie Sportswear won the 83-mile Awbrey Butte Circuit race Sunday, outsprinting Francisco Mancebo of 5-hour Energy to the finish line at Bend's Summit High School. In doing so, Rosskopf earned a 10-second time bonus and moved up to second place overall, just six seconds behind Tvetcov. Chad Haga of Optum finished third overall, eight seconds back. A break of about 20 riders held a decent lead for much of the race, but that break was absorbed and riders began attacking on the final steep climb up Archie Briggs Road. Mancebo, the twotime defending Cascade champion, waited until after the climb to make his move just before the Mt. Washington Drive-Shevlin Park Road roundabout. Oscar Clark of Hincapie Sportswear followed, and Rosskopf followed Clark. "Mancebo pretty much rode it to the line, just going for time (in the overall standings)," said Rosskopf, 23 and of Athens, Ga. "Oscar was able to lead me out for the sprint for the time
PRO MEN'SFINAL OVERALL TOP THREE 1, Serghei Tvetcov, Jelly Belly
2, Joey Rosskopf, Hincapie 3, Chad Haga,Optum King of the Mountain winner:Flavio De Luna, SmartStop Sprints winner:Yannick Eckmann, Cal Giant Best Young Rider: Taylor Eisenhart, BMC Top teamoverall: Bontrager AMATEUR RACESOVERALL WINNERS Masters 40+ Cat1-2:Andrew Sargent, Evolution Racing Team
Masters 40+ Gat3-4: Eric Balog, Hoback
Continued from B1 "He was here," McGrath added. "He's given me wings. So it's very special." Joe Philpott was a longtime friend of McGrath's and the bestfriend of her brother, s he said. Philpott was 2 6 when he died in an avalanche while skiing in Colorado this
past spring. "He was basically a little brother to me," McGrath said of Philpott. "We grew up together. His family are some
of my biggest fans, always
Sports Men Cat 2:Kaler Marshall, Audi
s upporting me. I k now h e was there flying along (with
Men Gat 3:Jonathan Christensen, Bear
McGrath, who r i des for Exergy, had such a big lead coming into Sunday's final stage of the CCC — the 51mile Awbrey Butte Circuit Race — that it would have taken a serious breakaway to pose any threat to her title. A four-rider break got away on the final lap of three on the 17-mile circuit through the Tumalo State Park area and northwest Bend, but it posed
Development Team
Men Cat 3-4:Killian Bailey, Beaverton Bicycle Club
"We just need to race together like a team," he said, "and this race was good practice." Tvetcov said he hopes to one day be racing bonus. I'm higher up in the (overall) so I need- in the Tour de France, whose 2013 edition coned the bonus, but he was flying. No one would cluded on Sunday in Paris. "This is a great team to develop," Tvetcov said have been able to beat him today. I'm glad he's my teammate." of Jelly Belly. "Everybody has a chance to show Sunday's win marked the second straight results. I hope (to race in Europe) soon. But you stage victory for Hincapie Sportswear, as Ty never know. It's really hard at my age, because Magner won the Downtown Criterium on Sat- teams are looking for really young guys." urday night. But Tvetcovproved he can be a dominant cy"It shows how hard everyone's working," clist in one of the biggest stage races in the UnitRosskopf said. "It's really rewarding." ed States, winning two stages — the Prineville Tvetcov, 24 and from the Eastern European Time Trial and the Cascade Lakes Road Race country of Moldova, said the Cascade Cycling — and then riding smart on the final two days Classic was good preparation for big upcom- to seal the yellow jersey. ing races like the Tour of Utah and the USA Pro —Reporter: 541-383-0318, Challenge in Colorado. mmorical@bendbulletin.com.
me) today."
PRO WOMEN'SFINAL OVERALLTOPTHREE 1, Kristin McGrath,
Exergy 2, Claudia Haeusler, Tibco 3, Mara Abbott, Exergy King of the Mountain
winner:Claudia Haeusler, Tibco Sprints winner:Leah Kirchmann, Optum Best YoungRider: Jasmin Glaesser, Tibco Top Team Overall: Tibco
claiming the overall title by 2:17 over Haeusler. Mara Abbott of Exergy finished third overall, 3:14 back. With the support of h er teammates, McGrath sat in the main pack for most of the afternoon as t emperatures soared into the mid-90s. "Claudia made me earn
the yellow (jersey, worn by
the race leader), but the team was so strong all day, and all week," McGrath said. "We just calmly kept her in check, and the goal was to keep the yellow, and we did it, so it was awesome. It was hot, but we've had quite a few hot racno dangertoMcGrath. es this year, and I just made Amanda Miller of T i bco sure I stayed hydrated, and won the stage, finishing at my team made sure I stayed Bend's Summit High School hydrated." four seconds ahead of secondMcGrath admitted that it place Jade Wilcoxson of Op- had not quite sunk in yet that tum. Lauren Rauck Komanski she had just won her first of NOW and Novartis for MS USA Cycling National Racwas third, six seconds back. ing Calendar stage race. "It's a great feeling," she McGrath, 30and ofDurango, Colo., started Sunday with said. "The team was amazing a huge 2:20 lead over second- all week, so it's great to repay place rider Claudia Haeusler them with the yellow jersey." of Tibco. She lost only three — Reporter: 541-383-0318, seconds in the final stage, mmorical@bendbulletin.com.
CCC, ataglance SUNDAY The fifth and final stage for the pro men and women was the Awbrey Butte Circuit Race. The hilly stage started and finished at Summit High School in west Bend. The course passed by both Shevlin
Park and TumaloState Parkand included a stiff climb up Archie Briggs Road. Themenracedfive laps of the circuit for 83 miles, and the women raced three laps for 51 miles.
MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Paddleboarding
BS
Quicktips:Theessentials
Continued from B1 Standing at full height, paddleboarders can take in views of the horizon and the river alike. With origins in s u rfing, stand-up paddleboarding (or as paddlers refer to it: SUP) is a sport in which participants stand on a 10- to 14-foot long board (slightly larger than a standard surf-
1. Relax.
Beginning paddleboarders tend to tense up,which canthrow off one's balance andmakethe experience stressful, says Sue Foxof Tumalo Creek Kayak 8 Canoe. If youarenewto the sport, "be easy onyourself and relax," she says. "At first, you're just trying to get used tostanding on water." If you happen to fall in, Fox says it is important to remain calm while swimming toward the board, holding on to the paddle if possible. Then,
board) and use a long paddle (recom-
"put your hands onthe board andhuck (pull) yourself" up onto the
mended length: about 9 inches longer than the paddler's height) to navigate almost any body of water — from rivers to oceans to lakes. Paddleboarding gained popularity in Bend over the past 10 years according to Sue Fox, a SUP instructor at Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe in Bend. "There's great weather," she notes. "It's a yearround sport here." Additionally, SUP-friendly sections of the Deschutes River are only a short drive away for most Central Oregon residents, a factor that has aided the sport's growth, says Fox. And the nearby Cascade lakesoffer serene options forpaddleboardersleery ofthe river's current. "The beauty of paddleboarding is that it is so user-friendly," Fox notes. A board, a paddle, a personal flotation device (Oregon state law requires paddleboarders to wear or carry one on their board) and a body of water are all you need to get a peaceful and effective workout.
board," notes Fox. "There's no pretty way to do it."
2. Go barefoot. When it comes toSUP,barefoot is best, says Fox.Wearing shoesor sandals on theboard mayseemlike a good idea, but the heel lift from footwear canactually knockyou off of your center of balance, shenotes. "Connecting with the board is essential," adds Fox. "You want to be able to feel the board (with your feet)." Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
A board, a paddle and a personal flotation device are all you need to get out on the water. Gear courtesy of Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe. Choosing the r i ght p a ddleboarding attire depends on the time of year. "Dress to get wet," notes Fox, who suggests wearing long or short wet suits during colder months, and a swimsuit or shorts and a tank top in warmer months.
cles to generate power." After practicing my strokes while standing on a chair outside the Tumalo Creek shop, we headed to the water. First, Fox showed me an easy way to get on the board. I walked the board out to waist-high water beforemounting the board on my knees while holding my paddle with My turn both hands. Next, I pushed myself up to "Physically, (paddleboarding) is such Prior to last week, I had been stand- a standing position, centering myself on greatexercise,"says Fox. "It w orks the up paddleboarding four times — three the board. This method proved much core (deep torso muscles), biceps, tri- times on the Deschutes River. While I more effective than my previous atceps, hamstrings and gluteus muscles." found it relatively easy to stand up on tempt, which involved stepping onto the SUP can be a relaxing activity, but the board, I could paddle for only about board one foot at a time while someone paddleboarders should be able to meet 20 minutes before my arms and shoul- else held it steady. several physical demands, says Fox. ders began to ache. I knew my paddling Once standing, I used the forward eYou need to be able to stand up from technique needed help, but I was not stroke technique that I had just learned a squatting position, and you need to sure how to improve it. to move the board. Soon, I found myhave a little upper-body strength for As a remedy, I decided to take a basic self gliding along against the current, paddling in a current and for pulling skills paddleboarding lesson at Tumalternating strokes on my right and left yourself back up onto the board if you alo Creek, located on the Deschutes in sides. Bend's Old Mill District. fall in," she explains. With temperatures in the mid-80s While Fox says the sport is relatively For the first 30 minutes of my private and blue skies, it was the perfect day for easy to pick up, she recommends taking lesson, Fox discussed proper SUP tech- an early-afternoon paddle. The water a basic skills class to learn proper tech- nique and terminology. glittered in the sunlight; a flock of geese nique and safety measures. Luckily, a I was given a brief tutorial on board floated nearby. number of local stand-up paddleboard anatomy; Fox held up a b oard and After a few minutes, Fox gave me companies offer both private and group identified the top end ("nose"), back some pointers. "Try not to bend your arms when lessons as well as paddleboard rentals end ("tail"), sides ("rails") and top side on the Deschutes River (see "If you go"). ("deck"). She flipped the board over to paddling," she said. Those looking to invest in a board of show me the fin, which provides the I looked down at my arms to realize their own have plenty of options. Begin- board stability when submerged in that my bottom hand had migrated up ners may want to consider purchasing a water. to my top hand instead of halfway down recreational paddleboard (as opposed to She then held up her paddle and iden- the paddle's shaft. Once I adjusted my a faster, less-stableperformance board). tified each part: the top ("grip"), the long hands, it was easier to keep my arms Recreational boards offer stability middle portion ("shaft"), the spoon- straight. and buoyancy, and they range in price shaped bottom end ("blade"), and the We traveledup the river for roughly from about $900 to $1,800. The materi- point where the blade and shaft meet 45 minutes before turning around at als used to construct the board usually ("throat"). Riverbend Park to paddle downstream. determine the price, and lighter boards Next, Fox demonstrated a basic for- I was pleasantly surprised to find that tend to cost more, says Fox. ward stroke, which involves wrapping my arms and shoulders were not achBuyers should consider how much your top hand over (not below) the grip ing with fatigue, thanks to my new padweight they are comfortable carrying, of the paddle, and circling your bottom dling technique. as owners sometimes must transport hand roughly midway down the shaft, By the end of my lesson, I did notheir board more than a short distance with the blade angled away from you. tice that my hands felt raw in several from their vehicle to the water. Then, "place your paddle straight places from clenching the paddle. Yet a Paddles range in price from $130 to down into the water next to your board, couple of blisters seemed a small price $400 depending on materials, notes Fox. submerged up to its throat," she ex- to pay for a relaxing — and efficient Lighter, carbon fiber paddles will cost plained. "Stroke three to four times on — workout. more, but they are often more efficient each side of the board, keeping your — Reporter: 541-383-0393, and easier to handle, she adds. arms straight ... engage your core musegross@bendbttlletin.com.
COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF HORSESHOES
Pitchers Association World Horseshoe Tournament, set for today through July 31 in St. George, Utah. Bob Bender and Dave King, both
of Bend, will compete in the Elder Men(short-distance) division, while Devon Kurtz, of Bend, will compete in the Open Men division.
NORDIC SKIING LOCal SkierS attend elite training CamPS — Several members of Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation (MBSEF) recently attended an elite U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association (USSA) train-
ing camp. Bendresidents Skyler Kenna(18), Alex Wiltz (18), Leo Lukens (15) andEmily Hyde(16) participated in the Western Region Elite Group camp in Park City, Utah, in late June. The camp is for top
skiers ages 9 1and younger who are chosen based onJunior National results and USSA national rankings. Additionally, Lukens and Zeb Millslagle (16 and of Bend) are scheduled to attend the National Elite
J2 camp in August at Northern Michigan University. The two MBSEF skiers were selected for the camp based on their performance at the 2013 Junior National Championships in March.
SOCCER YOuth COaCheS needed —Volunteer soccer coaches are needed for the Bend Park and Recreation District and Bend FC Tim-
bers 2013 BendUnited Recreation Soccer League (BURSL). The 10-week season runs from Aug. 19 to Oct. 26. The program is open to boys and girls in first through eighth grade. Typically, two practices
areheldeachweek,andgamesareplayed in BendonSaturdays. Coaches may select their own practice times, days and locations. The time commitment for coaches is about five hours each week. Free
The Bulletin
Megan Jordan, the secondplace finisher at Saturday's Oxford Hotel Group Grand Prix, c am e b a c k S u n day morning to win the $10,000 United States Hunter Jumper Association Inte r n ational Hunter Derby atthe Oregon High Desert Classics at Bend's J Bar J Ranch. Jordan, 41 and of Oregon C ity, competed against 3 0 other riders in the first round and received a score of 171 out of 200. Out of the 12 riders in the second and final round, it was Jordan and her w armblood gelding, City Boy, that had the strongest ride, posting a score of 360. Jordan received $3,000 of the $10,000 purse for her first-place finish. "He was awfully good," Jordan said of her horse. "I can almost not fault him." The USHJA International Hunter Derby is critiqued by four judges o n m o vement, jumping ability, fluidity and temperament. While the USHJA Interna-
regional pentathlon, 1,600-meter relay, triple jump, 200 hurdles, 400),
Sarah Reeves (1 5-16 age division; 800, 1,500), Olivia Brooks (13-14 age division; 1,500, 3,000), Piper Flannery (13-1 4 age division; 400, 1,600 relay), EmmaStevenson (15-16agedivision; long jump) and Hilary Wyllie (13-14 age division; 1,600 relay). Male qualifiers include
Bring in this AD and receive: Golf,Cart, Dog, and Draft Beer or Soda
Course is in GREAT shape! Expires July 31, 201'3
541-447-7113
MAD>OM 4gggIiB 1 = ef
Jack Strang (9-10agedivision; 800, 1,500) and BenStrang (age 8 and under; javelin). Complete Region13 results for CORK members are available at usatf.org. — Bulletin staff reports
Multiple stand-up paddleboarding services offering lessons and rentals are based in Central Oregon. Some of them are:
Elk Lake Resort 541-480-7378
What:Board and paddle rentals Where:Roughly 30 miles west of Bend on Century Drive
Cost:$20 an hour, $45 per dayrentals Stand On Liquid 541-639-4596
What:Board and paddle rentals and sales, private lessons, instruction Where:1320S.E. Reed Market Road, Suite180, Bend
Cost: $50-$75perdayrentals;$55-$65one-hourlessons StandUpPaddle Bend 541-323-3355
www.standuppaddlebend.com What:Board and paddle rentals and sales, public and private lessons Where:550 S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 1 1 5,Bend
Cost:$15 an hour, $45 per dayrentals; $45-$701.5-hour lessons Son CountryTours 541-382-6277
www.suncountrytours.com What:Board and paddle rentals and sales, public and private lessons, tours Where:Riverbend Park, 799 S.W. Columbia St., Bend
Cost:$15-$20 an hour, $65 per dayrentals; $55-$105 two-hour lessons Tomalo GreekKayak &Canoe 541-317-9407
www.tumalocreek.com What:Board and paddle rentals and sales, public and private lessons, tours Where:805 S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend
Cost:$40 for two hours, $60 per day rentals; $55 two-hour lessons
week for most points earned in my division."
Celebrating 20Yearsof Golf for Everyone!
— Reporter: 541-383-0375, eoiler@bendbulletin.com.
trophy was 16-year-old Sidney Stefani, who rides for Arbor Grove Barnin Portland. "This is one of my most successful weeks that I've had," Stefani said. "I won my first class, then I won one the sec-
iPPure Crradk Co.
ond day. I (also) received a
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championship at the end of the
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Golf Clinic: Led byOSU Women's Golf Coaches Rise Alexander - Head 12:30pm .... Shotgunstart with dox Coach 8, Kailin Downs lunches in carts —Assistant Coach, OSU 4:30pm ..... AwardsReception Tournament participants and raffle are invited to take part Format:Scramble: 4-person in a clinic presented by I
10:30am .... Check-in 11:00am .... Clinic
teams.
TRACK & FIELD
Seattle. Femalequalifiers include MeganCornett (13-14 age division;
If yougo
tional Hunter Derby started off the final day of the first week of the Classics, it was the $2,500 Jennifer Sparks, DVM Mini Grand Prix that concluded Sunday's events. The Mini Grand Prix had 27 riders, with 12 competitors finishing with a clean round and qualifying for the jumpoff. The overall winner was Heather Northup, 27 and of Portland, atop her Holsteiner gelding, Alchemy, with a time of 32.096 seconds. "This horse is probably one of the most fun jumpers I've ever ridden," Northup said, "and I know he's capable of winning." With the conclusion of the first week of the Oregon High Desert Classics, the h o rse s how awards the Max v on Zimmerman Perpetual Trophy, which is given to the individual with the most points in the j umper competitions of 1.15 meters or higher. The rider with the most cumulative points and the recipient of the
be screened for a criminal background. For more information, contact Rich Ekman at 541-706-6126 or email rich©bendparksandrec.org.
July 28 in Greensboro, N.C. Eight CORK members qualified for nationalsat the Region13 Junior Olympic Championships, held July4-7 in
side of the board, or deck) shesays.
EQUESTRIAN:HIGH DESERT CLASSICS
coaching clinics will be offered in August. Prospective coacheswill
LOCalS qualify fOr natianalS —Several members of the Central Oregon Running Klub (CORK)recently qualified for the USATrack & Field National Junior Olympic Championships, set for today through
ward, hip-distance apart over the handle (located in the center of the top
Oregon Ci woman wins Hunter Derby By Emily Oller
LOCalS tO COmPete at WOrld tOurney —Three members of the Bend HorseshoeClubwill compete in the National Horseshoe
3. Perfect yourposture. Balancing on the paddleboard is mucheasier with correct posture and foot placement. "Your kneesshould not bebent or locked out," Fox explains. "Your body will absorb micro (subtle) changes onthe water more efficiently if your legs are loose." To find a stable basestance onyour board, placeyourfeet facing for-
the coaches ofthe OSU
Women's Golf team. The Cost.$125 per piayery$5PP clinic is for players of all per team. Entries must be skill levels. accompanied by full payment or completed credit card information to be considered enrolled. Teams:it is recommended that teams of four register together, however individual registrations are also welcome. If registering as an individual, please contact us and we will do our best to find a team for you.
Information:osucascades.edu/womens-golf-scramble Email: shawn.t aylor© osucascades.edu Phone: 541.322.3113
MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
T EE TO
B7
R EEN BRITISH OPEN COMMENTARY
,o'i
• Central Oregon junior golfers get a rare chancethis week to compete in abig tournament close to home By Zack Hall The Bulletin
From Medford to New Mexico, Bend's Madison Odiorne will spend much of her summer this year on the road. That is a simple fact of life for an elite junior golfer from Central Oregon. The 16-year-old, a two-time Class 5A state champion for Summit High School, does not mind the travel, she said. But it is always, she admits, nice to play closer to home. She does not get many chances to play both at home AND against the state's best young golfers — except for the tournament this week. The Central Oregon Junior, an Oregon Junior Golf major championship, will tee off today at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville and finish Tuesday at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond. And Odiorne and her fellow Central Oregon golfers — 26 in all out of 190 golfers playing in 11 divisions — get a rare opportunity. "I get to sleep in my own bed and not a hotel, so that's nice," said Odiorne, who coincidentally wa s t r aveling between tournaments in Medford and Klamath Falls when reached last week for this story. "I do wish there were a few more tournaments closer t o home so I didn't have to go back and forth as many times," she added. Odiorne is far from alone on the highways that connect this region to the golf courses west of the Cascade Range. Few outsiders know just how much a junior golfer from Central Oregon can travel during the summer months chasing the Northwest's best competition. So far this summer, Bend's Declan Watts has made two trips to Medford and three to the Portland area, and next month he will be traveling to Canada. He may even play another tournament on the Oregon Coast before school begins in September, he said. Ryan DeCastilhos, a standout golfer at Bend High School, has traveled to Eugene, Portland, Woodburn, Spanaway, Wash., and Pleasanton, Calif., since school let out in June. Both Watts and DeCastilhos
The Central Oregon Junior Whe:190 junior golfers
ages 8 to18 playing in11 divisions
Where:First round at Meadow LakesGolf Course in Prineville; second round
at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond
When:Today andTuesday Format:36 holes of stroke piay Admission: Free for spectators
will tee it up in Central Oregon this week. "It is definitely special to be able tobe home and compete with all the kids from Oregon," said DeCastilhos, who will be a high school junior this fall. "With the l ocal tournaments (such as the Central Oregon Junior Golf Association) there are always the same kids. With the bigger ones like the (Central Oregon Junior) it's a lot of different kids and a lot more competition. They are a lot of fun." Traveling, of course, is part of being a competitive golfer at almost every level. Like most golfers, Watts enjoys the experience of playing against the best, regardless of location. But he said he would prefer more opportunities to play at home. "I just don't really understand why there aren't more competitive OJGA tournaments in Central Oregon," said Watts, a senior-to-be at Summit. "We have so many amazing courses around us, yet we have to travel to the (Willamette) Valley or to Southern Oregon to p l ay competitive golf, and that does kind of bother me. I don't mind traveling, but I wish the tournaments were more evenly spread out over Oregon, and not just mainly in the Portland area." Dan Odiorne, Madison's father, who often travels with his daughter to tournaments, said he spends thousands of dollars each year on travel expenses for golf tournaments. And each of those trips requires a drive of more than two hours, he added. That is part of being a parent of an elite junior golfer, and the
schedule will prepare Madison for college golf, Dan Odiorne said. But a reprieve is welcome. "We are stoked," said the elder Odiorne about the Central Oregon event, adding that Madison spent five nights in hotels just last week playing in two Southern Oregon tournaments. "She can sleep in her own bed. She never gets to do that." Declan Watts' mother, Julie, said she also welcomes the break. "With three boys, we fi nd ourselves driving all over Oregon for sporting events," said Julie Watts. "Having an event 20 minutes away allows the whole family to spectate and support Declan as he prepares for college, and allows his local friends, family and classmates to see his accomplishments up close." So why are there not more top-level junior tournaments in Central Oregon'? Certainly the region's relatively small population plays a part. But it also comes down to scheduling, according to Robyn Lorain, director of Oregon Junior Golf for the Oregon Golf Association. "We would certainly be interested in more golf in that region, it's just a matter of working with schedules and courses to see what may be best for OJG," Lorain said. Regardless, for at least one time a year Central Oregonians get to compete on familiar turf. But that does not necessarily
m ean change a in theway agolfer approaches the tournament. "Even though it is only a halfhour from home, you still have to prepare like you always do," Madison Odiorne said. eYou don't change anything because you are playing close to home." Still, both DeCastilhos and Watts agree that there is an advantage in familiarity. Whether that means either golfercards a better score than normal is yet to be seen. But they will at least enjoy finding out. " The familiarity o f b e i n g here helps me feel more confident," said DeCastilhos. "Just knowing that I know how to get around the course pretty well, that will help me a lot."
Jon SuperI The Associated Press
Phil Mickelson celebrates after his final putt on the 18th green during the final round of the British Open at Muirfield, Scotland, Sunday.
ic esonsoves i n s o u z ze By Jim Litke The Associated Press
GULLANE, Scotlandis coach was all business before the round. His caddie was in tears afterward. Only Phil Mickelson seemed to know how many magical moments he was capable of unfurling in between. "I said, "Even-par or I under could win this thing.' He said, 'I'm going to be better than that,' " coach Butch Harmon recalled. Harmon was standing near the 18th green in the fast-fading light of a cool Scottishsummer afternoon. The roars from one of the great closing rounds in
H
JIM LITKE
was zero-for-42 in that department and a dozen years into an otherwise stellar career when he finally won the Masters in 2004. Another major came the next year at the PGA Championship. Then two more at the Masters. Along the way, he collected a record sixrunner-up finishes at the U.S. Open, the last just a month ago at Merion Golf Club, when Englishman Justin Rose zoomed by major championship golf was still ring- him on the final few holes. ing in his ears. He paused long enough Those were heartbreaks, to be sure, to crack a wide smile. but at least Mickelson knew he had a "He wasn't lying." shot on any golf course where boomLittle more than 10 yards away, just ing drives and sky-high lob shots could after exiting the front door of the Muir- decide the outcome. Despite playing field clubhouse, caddie Jim "Bones" on this side of the Atlantic for 20 years, Mackay was still trying to regain his though, he struggled trying to keep the composure. ball under the wind and his temperaSomeone asked about the tears he m ent in check whenever he got a crazy kept choking back. Instead, they start- bounce — and there were dozens of ed falling again. those. For the longest time, links golf "Because," Mackay b egan, t h en appeared to be one puzzle he was nevturned away for nearly a half-minute. er going to unlock. "It's been the last eight or nine years "When you work with someone for so many years, it's pretty cool when you I've started to playing it more effecsee him play the best round of golf he's tively, I've started to hit the shots more ever played in the last round of the Brit- effectively," Mickelson said. "But even ish Open." then it's so different than what I grew This was the one major champion- up playing. I always wondered if I ship Mickelson never thought he could would develop the skills needed to win win. He came out on tour in 1992 ooz- this championship. "And to f i nally capture this," he ing talent, a prodigy who won his first pro tournament while still in college, added a moment later, referring to only to become another golfer once la- the claret jug he was holding, "it feels beled the "next Nicklaus" who couldn't really, really good." break through in a major. Mickelson SeeLinks/B8
— Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com.
GOLF ROUNDUP
Recari hangs on for Marathon Classicwin By Rusty Miller The Associated Press
Bend's Madison Odiorne hits a tee shot during the 2012 Central Oregon Junior. Odiorne, who plays in tournaments across the Pacific Northwest, gets to play at home for this week's C.O. Junior, an Oregon Junior Golf I -,„~j " . . . : Association major tournament. ',, otiK rr' 'f'e ulre'tinfie 'I
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SYLVANIA, Ohio — The head-tohead duelbetween Beatriz Recari and Paula Creamer in the final round of the Marathon Classic on Sunday was great theater. Don't be surprised if there's a sequel. Recari rolled in a 12-foot birdie putt on the 14th hole to take the lead for good and hung on to hold off Creamer for her third LPGA Tour title. They started the day tied and spent most of the day trading the lead — as if it were match play. The duel in the heat in suburban Toledo might have been foreshadowing for when both players participate in next month's Solheim Cup at the Colorado Golf Club, Recari for the European side and Paula Creamer for the United States. "Back and forth, back and forth," Recari said of their Sunday showdown. "It totally felt like the Solheim Cup." Recari and Creamer, who won the tournament then known as the Jamie Farr Toledo Classic five years ago, started the day tied for first, three shots ahead of their nearest pursuers. They traded thelead — never separated by more than one stroke — and were still even until Recari birdied the par-3 14th.
Rick Osentoski/The Associated Press
Beatriz Receri putts on the first hole during the final round of the Marathon Classic at Highland Meadows Golf Club in Sylvanie, Ohio, Sunday. The 26-year-old Recari closed with a 5-under 66 to finish at 17-under 267. She missed a 6-foot birdie putt on the 17th, but made a clutch 5-footer for par at the 18th. SeeMarathon/B9
BS TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013
T EE TO
The Bulletin welcomes contributions toits weekly local gotf events calendar. Items should be mailed to PO. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; faxed to the sports department at 541-385-0831; oremailed to sports@bendbulletin.com.
R EEN
PUBLIC LEAGUES
weekly events on Wednesdays Allison, Juniper's director of and Thursdays throughout the golf instruction. Clinic begins at 9 a.m. season. For more information, call Cost is $20 per class and each is ASPENLAKESMEN:The Men's Lost Tracks at 541-385-1818 or visit open to the public and space is Club at Aspen Lakes Golf Course in www.losttracks.com. limited. For more information or Sisters plays on Wednesdays at 8 to register: call 480-540-3015, MEADOW LAKES MEN: Men' s Gol f a.m. through the golf season. New 541-548-3121, or email pro© Association at Meadow Lakes Golf members are welcome. For more Course in Prineville plays weekly on stuartallisongolf.com. information, call Aspen Lakes at Wednesdays. All men are welcome. THURSDAYS:18-hole ladies 541-549-4653. For more information, call Zach golf clinic at Juniper Golf Course BLACKBUTTERANCHWOMEN: Lampert at 541-447-7113. in Redmond. Students will be Black Butte Ranch Women's Golf introduced to the fundamentals QUAIL RUN WOMEN: Quail Run Club accepts women golfers of all of golf by Stuart Allison, Juniper's Golf Course women's18-hole golf levels for Tuesday tournaments director of instruction. Clinic begins league plays at 8 a.m. during the each week. For more information or at 9 a.m. Cost is $20 per class and to register, call the Big Meadow golf golf season. Interested golfers are welcome. For more information, call each is open to the public and space shop at 541-595-1500. is limited. For more information Penny Scott at 541-598-7477. CENTRAL OREGONSENIOR MEN: or to register: call 480-540-3015, RIVER'S EDGE MEN: The Men's The Central Oregon Senior Golf 541-548-3121, or email pro@ Club at River's Edge Golf Course Organization meets on a Monday stuartallisongolf.com. in Bend plays weekly tournaments each month at golf courses across JULY 22-24:Women-only on Tuesday. Members ofthe the region. Series is open to men's lessons at Lost Tracks Golf Club men's club and other interested club members of host sites. Cost in Bend offered by the Bend Park River's Edge Golf Club men with is $150 for the season plus $5 per & Recreation District. Sessions an established USGAhandicap are event. For more information: Ted are 6-7:30 p.m. and are taught invited to participate. For more Carlin at 541-604-4054. by PGA professional Bob Garza. information or to register, call CENTRAL OREGON GOLFTOUR: Each session includes on-course River's Edge at 541-389-2828. A competitive series held at golf instruction and a maximum courses throughout Central Oregon. RIVER'SEDGE WOMEN: The student/teacher ratio of 8-to-1. Women's Club at River's Edge Gross and net competitions open Equipment will be provided for Golf Course in Bend plays each to amateur golfers of all abilities. those students without their own. Wednesday during the golf season. Cost is $55 for residents of the Prize pool awarded weekly and arewelcome and should membership not required. For more Members Bend Park 8 Recreation District, sign up by the preceding Saturday information or to register: 541$74 for others. To register, call for the tournaments. For more 633-7652, 541-318-5155, or www. 541-389-7275 or visit www. information, or to register, call centraloregongolftour.com. bendparksandrec.org. River's Edge at 541-389-2828. DESERT PEAKSLADIES: Ladies JULY 22-25, JULY 29-AUG. 1: SUNRIVER RESORTMEN: Men's Club at Desert Peaks in Madras. Pee Wee golf clinic at Juniper Golf club at Sunriver Resort plays Times vary each Wednesday. For Course in Redmond designed more information, call Desert Peaks Wednesday tournaments at the for beginning golfers ages 5-7. Meadows or Woodlands courses at 541-475-6368. Students will be introduced to the with shotgun starts around 9 a.m. fundamentals of golf by Stuart EXECUTIVEWOMEN'S GOLF Cost is $55 for annual membership. Allison, Juniper's director of ASSOCIATION: The Central Oregon For more information, email Robert instruction. Each four-day session Chapter of the Executive Women's Hill at rhill@taftcollege.edu or visit begins at noon each day and will Golf Association meets multiple www.srmensgolf.com. last 30 to 40 minutes each. Cost is times each week — including SUNRIVERRESORT WOMEN: $25 per four-day session, which weeknight leagues and Saturday Women's club at Sunriver Resort is open to the public and space is play — during the golf season. playsWednesday tournaments limited. For more information or Events are open to anyone at the Meadows or Woodlands to register: call 480-540-3015, interested in joining the EWGA. courses with shotgun starts 541-548-3121, or email pro@ For more information or to join the approximately 9 a.m. There stuartallisongolf.com. EWGA: Eileen Haas at edhaas@ are both nine-hole and18-hole bendbroadband.com or visit www. AUG. 5-7:Youth golf lessons for groups. For more information on ewgaco.com. children ages 8 to 14 at Lost Tracks nine-hole group: Vicki Doerfler at Golf Club in Bend offered by the JUNIPER LADIES: Juniper vickilynn49©yahoo.com or call Bend Park 8 Recreation District. Ladies Golf Club meets weekly 541-598-8467; 18-hole group: Three-day clinics held 9 a.m. to on Wednesday morning. All Shenny Braemer at sbraemer4© noon each day and are taught by women players welcome. For gmail.com or call 541-593-4423. PGA professional Bob Garza and more information, visit www. WIDGI CREEKMENANDWOMEN: his staff. Each session includes onjuniperladies.com. Widgi Creek Men's Club and course instruction, lesson on golf LADIES OFTHE GREENS:Ladies Women's Golf Association at etiquette and a maximum student/ of the Greens women's golf club Widgi Creek Golf Club in Bend are teacher ratio of 8-to-1. Equipment at The Greens at Redmond golf weekly golf leagues that play each will be provided for those students course plays weekly on Tuesdays Wednesday. For more information, without their own. Cost is $58 through October. New members are call the Widgi Creek clubhouse at for residents of the Bend Park & welcome. For more information, 541-382-4449. Recreation District, $78 for others. call the Greens at Redmond at To register, call 541-389-7275 or 541-923-0694. visit www.bendparksandrec.org. LADIES DFTHELAKES: Ladies CLINICS OR AUG. 5-7:Adult coed golf lessons of the Lakes golf club at Meadow at Lost Tracks Golf Club in Bend CLASSES Lakes Golf Course is a weekly offered by the Bend Park & women's golf league that plays on TUESDAYS:Nine-hole ladies Recreation District. Sessions Thursdays at 9 a.m. Season runs golf clinic at Juniper Golf Course are 6-7:30 p.m. and are taught through September. All women by PGA professional Bob Garza. in Redmond. Students will be players with a GHIN handicap introduced to the fundamentals Each session includes on-course welcome. For more information, of golf by Stuart Allison, Juniper's instruction and a maximum call the Meadow Lakes pro shop at director of instruction. Clinics student/teacher ratio of 8-to-1. 541-447-7113 or Karen Peterson at begin at 8:15 a.m. Cost is $20 per Equipment will be provided for 541-447-5782. class and each is open to the public those students without their own. LOSTTRACKSLADIES: The Ladies and space is limited. For more Cost is $55 for residents of the League at Lost Tracks Golf Club in information or to register: call 480- Bend Park & Recreation District, Bendplaysweekly on Tuesdays.All 540-3015, 541-548-3121, or email $74 for others. To register, call women golfers are welcome. For 541-389-7275 or visit www. pro@stuartallisongolf.com. more information, call the pro shop WEDNESDAYS:Men's golf clinic at bendparksandrec.org. at 541-385-1818. Juniper Golf Course in Redmond. SEPT. 10, 17 AND24: Adult golf LOST TRACKS MEN: Men's club Students will be introduced to the education for beginners at Awbrey at Lost Tracks Golf Club holds fundamentals of golf by Stuart Glen Golf Club in Bend offered by
the Bend Park & Recreation District. Three-day clinic runs from 5-6:30 p.m.each day.Classesaretaught by PGA professional Tim Fraley and his staff. Clinics include lessons on etiquette, rules, putting, chipping, pitching, mid-irons and full swings. Equipment will be provided for those students without their own. Cost is $149 for residents of the Bend Park & Recreation District. Price includes three return trips after graduation to Awbrey Glen's learning center and its five-hole loop course. To register, call 541-389-7275 or visit www. bendparksandrec.org.
or to register: call Meadow Lakes at 541-447-7113.
Links
elson said to laughter, "but I think that's the sign. I think there's five players that have done that. And those five players arethe greats ofthe game. You look at them with a different light. "And if I were able to ever win a U.S. Open, and I'm very hopeful that I will — but it has been elusive for me. And yet,"
he said finally, "this championship has been much harder for me to get."
Continued from B7 Just lastweek, 3 ' /~ hours drive up the coast from here, he won the Scottish Open, his first-ever win on the continent. But Castle Stuart wasn't a true links, and even an openinground 69 acrossthe fast,firm ground here failedto erase nearly two decades of doubt — especially when Mickelson complained about the condition of the course afterward. But Mackay sa w t h i n gs differently. "Whenhegotto 18on Thursday, he hit the best shot he hit all day and then three-putted. I think that kind of reinforces that stuff happens over here that you really can't control," Mackay said. "That you're going to hit good shots and it's not going to work out, and you suck it up and you move on. "And the tournament could have gotten away from him, too, in the fairway bunker on 15 yesterday. And he didn't let it, you know what I mean? Suck it up and move on. That's what he did. He was just in a great place all week." Yet if Mickelson was going to crack, the place and time to do it Sunday would have been at the par-3 16th. He had already clawed his way back from a 5-shot deficit and into the lead. His iron off the tee pierced the wind with a low trajectory and scooted onto the green at just th e r i ght speed to hold. Instead, it skittered off the right side and into a bunker.
36-hole tournament for two-person coed teams at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond. For more information JULY29:Central Oregon Junior or to register, contact 541-548Golf Association tournament at 3121 or www.playjuniper.com. Awbrey Glen Golf Club in Bend. For more information, call Woodie AUG.11:Central Oregon Junior Thomas at 541-598-4653, email Golf Association Tournament of cojga©hotmail.com, or visit www. Champions at Eagle Crest Resort's cojga.com. Ridge Course in Redmond. For more information, call Woodie AUG. 1:Central Oregon Golf Tour Thomas at 541-598-4653, email individual stroke-play tournament cojga©hotmail.com or visit www. at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in cojga.com. Prineville. The Central Oregon Golf Tour is a competitive series held AUG.11:Couples Golf and Grub at golf courses throughout Central tournament at Meadow Lakes Golf Oregon. Gross and net competitions Course in Prineville. Four-person open to amateur golfers of all LasVegas scramble begins at abilities. Prize pool awarded weekly 3 p.m. Cost is $55 per couples and membership not required. For without an annual pass, $35 for TOURNAMENTS more information or to register: couples with annual passes that 541-633-7652, 541-318-5155, or do not include cart, and $25 for JULY 22-23:Central Oregon Junior www.centraloregongolftour.com. couples with annual passes that do at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond not include cart. Nine holes of golf, AUG. 2-3:Phil Wick Memorial is a major championship on the Tournament at Prineville Golf Club. cart, dinner, drink ticket and prizes Oregon Golf Association junior golf are included. For more information For more information, contact schedule. For more information or or to register: call Meadow Lakes at to register, call the OGA at 866-981- Prineville GC at 541-480-3566. 541-447-7113. 4653 or visit www.oga.org. AUG. 4:Couples Golf and Grub AUG.15:Couples golf outing at tournament at Meadow Lakes Golf JULY 22-23:Oregon Chapter of the Aspen Lakes Golf Course in Sisters. Course in Prineville. Four-person PGA pro-am tournament. Format Nine-hole scramble begins at 4 Texasscramble beginsat3 p.m. for both days is a net Stableford. p.m. Cost is $90 per couple and Cost is $55 per couples without This two-day event is held at includes a three-course dinner at an annual pass, $35 for couples Sunriver Resort's Crosswater Club Aspen Lakes' Brand 33 restaurant. with annual passes that do not and Tetherow Golf Club in Bend. include cart, and $25 for couples For more information or to register: Cost for amateurs is $200 per 541-549-4653 or visit www. with annual passes that do not golfer. Contact: 800-574-0503 or include cart. Nine holes of golf, cart, aspenlakes.com. www.pnwpga.com. dinner, drink ticket and prizes are AUG. 15:Central Oregon Golf JULY 23:Central Oregon Junior included. For more information or Tour individual stroke-play Golf Association's looper to register: call Meadow Lakes at tournament at Sunriver Resort's tournament at Awbrey Glen Golf 541-447-7113. Meadows course. The Central Club's Loop Course in Bend. Event Oregon Golf Tour is a competitive is for 6- to 8-year-olds. Golf begins AUG. 5:Central Oregon Junior Golf Association tournament at River's series held at golf courses at 4 p.m. Cost is $15 to register for Edge Golf Course in Bend. For more throughout Central Oregon. Gross three events, plus an $8 per-event information, call Woodie Thomas and net competitions open to fee. For more information, call at 541-598-4653, email cojga@ amateur golfers of all abilities. WoodieThomas at541-598-4653, hotmail.com, or visit www.cojga. Prize pool awarded weekly and email cojga©hotmail.com, or visit com. membership not required. For more www.cojga.com. information or to register: 541AUG. 5: Central Oregon Seniors JULY 25:Central Oregon Golf Tour 633-7652, 541-318-5155, or www. Golf Organization event at Valley individual stroke-play tournament centraloregongolftour.com. at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond. Golf Course in Burns. The format is individual gross and net best AUG. 16:23rd Annual Redmond The Central Oregon Golf Tour is ball, as well as team best ball. Chamber Golf Tournament at a competitive series held at golf courses throughout Central Oregon. Cash prizes awarded at each event. Juniper Golf Course in Redmond. Tournament series is open to men's Four-person scramble will begin Gross and net competitions open club members at host sites and with 8 a.m. shotgun. Cost is $100 to amateur golfers of all abilities. participants must have an Oregon per person and includes catered Prize pool awarded weekly and breakfast, drinks, snacks and membership not required. For more Golf Association handicap. Cost is $150 for the season plus a $5 percatered barbecue lunch. For more information or to register: 541event fee. For more information, call information, call 541-923-5191 or 633-7652, 541-318-5155, or www. Ted Carlin at 541-604-4054. email karen©visitredmondoregon. centraloregongolftour.com. com. AUG. 8: Central Oregon Golf Tour JULY26:The 32nd annual St. individual stroke-play tournament AUG. 17-18:Cowboy-Cowbelle Charles Medical Center Golf couples tournament at Prineville Tournament at Eagle Crest Resort's at Black Butte Ranch's Glaze Meadow course. The Central Golf Club. Couples competition Resort Course. This tournament Oregon Golf Tour is a competitive is played in a scotch-ball format. is a four-person Texas scramble series held at golf courses Tournament includes a Friday with awards for men, ladies and mixed doubles. Prizes for men's and throughout Central Oregon. Gross practice round and evening nineand net competitions open to hole fun and feast. To register or for women's long-drive competition. amateur golfers of all abilities. more information, call Prineville at Shotgun start at 8:30 a.m. Entry Prize pool awarded weekly and GC 541-447-5891. fee is $100 per player and includes membership not required. For continental breakfast, golf, cart, AUG. 18:Wildhorse Harleymore information or to register: range balls, prizes and catered Davidson Golf Tournament at Eagle 541-633-7652, 541-318-5155, or lunch. For more information, call Crest Resort's Ridge Course in www.centraloregongolftour.com. June at 541-504-8860 or Pat at Redmond. Four-person scramble 541-923-9937. AUG. 10:Twenty-Year Anniversary tees off at 8 a.m. and benefits The Tournament at Meadow Lakes Golf JULY28:CouplesGolfand Grub Rode House, an area church for Course in Prineville celebrates bikers. Motorcyclists can drop tournament at Meadow Lakes Golf the public golf course's inception Course in Prineville. Two-person off and pick up their golf clubs in1993. Four-person scramble is "criers and whiners" best ball at Wildhorse Harley-Davidson open to the public and begins with in Bend, allowing golfers to ride begins at 3 p.m. Cost is $55 per a9a.m. shotgun. Cost is $64 per couples without an annual pass, their motorcycle to the course. $35 for couples with annual passes player, and includes golf, cart, range Cost to play is $94, and includes that do not include cart, and $25 for balls, post-round meal, tee prizes golf, cart, range balls and more. couples with annual passes that do and contests. For more information Deadline to register is Aug. 3. For or to register, call the Meadow not include cart. Nine holes of golf, more information or to register, call Lakes pro shop at 541-447-7113. cart, dinner, drink ticket and prizes Kelly at 541-330-6228 or email at are included. For more information AUG. 10-11:Juniper Man-Gal is a rentals@wildhorsehd.com.
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Phil Mickelson gestures after making his final putt on the 18th green during the final round of the British Open at Muirfield, Scotland, Sunday. "That was a bad break, but I was probably more bothered by it than he was," Mackay said. "We walked up there. He saw it and said, 'I can get it up and down.' Pretty matter of fact. So I went, 'CooL' " Mickelson did, then birdied No. 17, and walked up with a chance to do the same at the 18th. A crowd of thousands packing the grandstands on either side of the fairway rose to their feet as one, clapping wildly. Mickelson made that curling left-to-right 10-footer to slam the door on the field behind him. Somehow, at43, Mickelson isn't simply holding his own, he appears to be turn-
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THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013 C3
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Will Sh ortz
22,2013 Monday,July
es "First, draftwise harm" 32 Writer Jong and ee Warm 59-Down others greeting 3e Voting group e7 Senate majority leader Harry 3s Madrid Mrs. es Conclusions 4o Wild's opposite es Easy-to-catch 42 eSee ya!e hit... or 44 Ones under what 1-, 21-, sgts., in the 26-, 48- and Army 55-Across all do 47 Fan setting of 1, say 4s Vehicular DOWN antitheft s Record for later devices viewing, in a sz More nutty way s4 Old geezer 2 Not a copy: Abbr. ss Purchase from Google 3 Swiss river s7 Swelled heads 4 Mouse's sound s" ez Deuce topper, the in cards season to be jolly" e2 Dumbstruck e lnfuses with e3 New York's water Memorial -Kettering 7Adidas alternative hospital s Dwell e4 Bronte's "Jane 9Give credit (to) ao Way out in an ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE emergency S A L A D BA R B A O B A B aa Tums targets A D E U AT E E S S E N E 12 Train station V U V U Z EL A C A S I T A 13 Does' mates E LE A Z I L C H O N I T 22 Ivy League school in Philly S T E P S T R E E E S P L0 UD O U T S R E O 22 Stravinsky or Sikorsky D I S A S TE R S T O RR E E MA N U E L H E A D O U T 24 de J a n eiro A NN E E I C E S T O R M S 2e Steve of Apple
ACROSS
Telling your troubles By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services
and he bids one spade. What do you say? ANSWER: You might survive a leap to 3NT, but that would be a nervous affair if dummy put down AK 3 2 , 8 6 2 , K Q 1 0 7 6 , 3.Youcan look around for y our best game contract, but you need not jump. Bid two clubs, forcing. If partner next bids 2NT, you'll raise to 3NT. If he bids two hearts, you'll try four hearts. North dealer N-S vulnerable
I must admit that I get tired of hearing Unlucky Louie complain about his luck. But I'm not as jaded as Cy the Cynic. "Why tell your troubles?" Cy said after listening to Louie lament. "Half the world doesn't care. The other half is glad it happened to you and not them." It might help if Louie played better. Against his slam, West led a trump, and Louie took the A-K. West threw a club, so Louie took the ace of
diamonds (not his best chance), led a club to his ace and ruffed a diamond. NORTH He came to the king of clubs, took the 4764 queen of trumps and started the Q AKQ 5 3 hearts.East ruffed the second heart, OA and Louie went down two and wailed AJ98 4 about his luck while Cy w ore a pained look. WEST EAST 43 4 J 1098 CONTROL 9 1 097 6 2 Q4 0 Q1062 O K 85 3 After Louie won Trick One, he was 4 5 3 2 4 Q 107 6 sunk! He must duck, keeping trump control. SOUTH If East shifts to a diamond, Louie 4 AKQ 5 2 wins, leads a club to his hand, ruffs a 'vi J8 diamond and draws trumps. He is 0 J97 4 home with four trumps, four hearts, 4AK two clubs, a diamond and a diamond ruff. N orth E as t S outh W e s t 1 ~vi Pass This week: trump control. 1 41 Pass 24 2 4o P
DAILY QUESTION
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RO T MUL E DE MT A E LA L A HA B T H I CK D E N A L I C ON A R N H E AL I 0 M M E A N T S A T
You hold: 4 7 6 4 Ivi A K Q 5 3 Opening lead — 41 3 O A 4 I 9 8 4. Your partner opens one diamond, you respond one heart (C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
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PUZZLE BYJOHANNA FENIMORE AND ANDREA CARLA MICHAELS
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puzzles, nytlmes.com/crosswords (S39.95 a year). Share tips: nytlmes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learnlng/xwords.
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ACROSS 4 Broad-antlered 1" toyou, deer buddy!" 5 On the double, in 5 Mon. Dr Jan., e. g. me m os 9 Ringo of the Fab 6 L a t ino corner Four store 14 Fan club focus 7 Prickly shrub 15 Painfully tender 8 Vi n t age touring 16 f o r : sublime car 17 Genre with 9 Swing and a listener miss, say 10 Incisor, for one participation 19 Cook in an oven 1 1 See 61-Down 20 Clean air org. 12 Choir plafform 21 Olympics sword 1 3Nostalgically 22 Harboring a styled grudge 18 Edit considerably 23 Milkshake insert 2 2 All-purpose 25 Homeric answer to eWhy'?» protagonist 27 Den piece 24 Sneaker brand 29 Pitching whiz 26 Lawman Wyatt 30 Ouffielder Suzuki 28 Butler's 33 Mexican Mrs. underling 34 Ice cream drink 30 P rez after Harry 38 Some fight 31 MSNBC rival endings, and a 32 Sweltering hint to the word 3 3 Pig's place endings in 1734 Racing shell 25-, 46- and 6035 Sounds of Across surprise 41 Tonsillitis-treating 36 Barely passing MDs grade 42 Have a bite Df 37 Donkey 43 Boozehounds 1 2 3 4 44 " Believer": Monkees hit 14 45 "Class dismissed" sound 17 18 46 Three-time Masters winner 20 21 51 Very very 23 24 55 Like some clothing patches 27 56 Grand-scale tale 58 Have a bite 30 3 1 32 59 Eva of Argentina 60 Enter forcibly, as 38 a home 62 Leaving nothing 41 out
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THE BULLETIN • MONDAY , JULY 22 2013 C5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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Boats & Accessories
Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 -Houses for Rent NEBend 652- Housesfor RentNWBend 654- Housesfor RentSEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 -Houses for RentFurnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space
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RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real EstateWanted 719- Real EstateTrades 726 -Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos&Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746- NorthwestBendHomes 747 -Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
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You Keep The Cash! 14' a luminum On-site credit bo a t Beautiful h o u seboat, w/trailer, 2009 Mercury $85,000. 541-390-4693 approval team, 15hp motor, fish finder, www.centraloregon web site presence. $2500. 541-815-8797 houseboat.com. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. GENERATE SOME exBIG COUNTRY RV citement in your neig- Bend: 541-330-2495 borhood. Plan a gaRedmond: rage sale and don't 541-548-5254 forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809. 14' Seadoo 1997 boat The Bulletin's twin modified engines "Call A Service Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 210hp/1200lbs, fast Professional" Directory $5500. 541-390-7035 875 is all about meeting Watercraft yourneeds.
The Bulletin
-.+kk-.P";4Q
1994 Yamaha Wave T o w n Raider, low hrs exc.
16' O ld C amper ca n o e, $2250. 541-480-3937 exc. cond, $ 750. (2) 14' Necky kayaks with 541-312-8740 spray skirts, $200 each. .
Call 541-416-9686
What are you looking for? You'll find it in
Ads published in eWatercraft" include: Kay- Winnebago Suncruiser34' aks, rafts and motor- 2004, on1y 34K, loaded, Ized personal too much to list, ext'd watercrafts. For warr. thru 2014, $54,900 The Bulletin Classifieds "boats" please see Dennis, 541-589-3243 Class 870. 881 541-385-5809
541-385-5809
17.5' Glastron 2002,
745
Homes for Sale
Call on one of the professionals today!
The Bulletin
Chevy eng., Volvo outdrive, open bow, stereo, sink/live well, w/glastron tr a i ler, incl. b oa t c o v er, Like new, $ 8 500.
Travel Trailers
880
Motorhomes
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Cano pies & Campers
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
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WEEKEND WARRIOR Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior.
Lance 80/9' camper, 1991
Great cond; toilet & fullsize bed. Lightly used. Recently serviced, $4995. 503-307-8571 Justbought a new boatO Sell your old one in the
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1987 Freightliner COE 3axle truck, Cummins engine, 10-spd, runs! $3900
Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/ obo. 541-419-2713 appearancein good condition. Smoke-free. classifieds! Ask about our 2009 26' Load Max flatbed gooseneck trailer, Tow with t/9-ton. Strong Super Seller rates! $4000. 541-416-9686 suspension; can haul 541-385-5809 ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great price - $8900. Call 541-593-6266 Lance Camper 1994, fits long bed crew cab, tv, a/c, loaded. $6200 Weekend Warrior Toy OBO. 541-580-7334 Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, fuel station, exc cond. sleeps 8, black/gray 0 i nterior, u se d 3X , 00 • 0 $19,999 firm. 541-408-0273
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Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Backhoe 2007 John Deere 310SG, cab 4x4, 4-in-1 bucket Extendahoe, hydraulic thumb,
loaded, like new, 500 hours. New $105,000. Sell $75,000. 541-350-3393
Mitsubishi Fuso 1995 14' box truck with lift gate, 184,000 miles,
needs turbo seal. $3500 or best offer. 541-420-2323
sf NOTICE eere All real estate advertised here in is subCougar 33 ft. 2006, 1/3 interest in Columbia ject to t h e F e deral 541-447-4876 14 ft. slide, awning, 400, $150,000 (located Peterbilt 359 p o table F air H o using A c t , easy lift, stability bar, © Bend.) Also: Sunri- water t ruck, 1 9 90, which makes it illegal bumper extends for 5hp ver hangar available for 3200 gal. tank, to advertise any prefe hoses, 627 Brougham 1978 motor extra cargo, all acsale at $155K, or lease, p ump, 4 - 3 erence, limitation or camlocks, $ 2 5,000. home Dodge chassis cess. incl., like new © $400/mo Vacation Rentals discrimination based 541-820-3724 17' coach, sleeps 4, condition, stored in 541-948-2963 on race, color, reli& Exchanges RV barn, used less rear dining. $4500. gion, sex, handicap, ( 2) 2000 A rctic C a t Fif t h Wheels than 10 t imes lo- • status or na- Z L580's EFI with n e w 17' Cris Craft Scorpion, 541-602-8652. Utility Trailers Ocean front house, familial c ally, no p et s o r tional origin, or intenfast & ready to fish! I/O 8 CHECK YOUR AD each walk from town, tion to make any such covers, electric start w/ trolling motor. Lots of exsmoking. $20,000 reverse, low miles, both 4'x8' util. trailer 26" 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, obo. 541-536-2709. preferences, l i m ita-excellent; with new 2009 tras! $5000. 541-318-7473 Fireplace, BBQ. $95 sides, tailgate ramps, n tions or discrimination. Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, 15 spare tire, $480. per night, 3 night MIN. We will not knowingly drive off/on w/double tilt, Advertise your car! 1/3 interest i n w e l l541-318-8503. 208-342-6999 accept any advertis- lots of accys. Selling due Add APicture! equipped IFR Beech Bothousands of readers! ing for r ea l e s tate to m e dical r e asons. A36, new 10-550/ 632 Alfa See Ya 2005 40' Reach on the first day it runs nanza Call 541-385-5809 $6000 all. 541-536-8130 which is in violation of excellent cond, 1 owner, The Bulletin Classifieds to make sure it is cor- prop, located KBDN. Automotive Parts, Apt./Multiplex General this law. All persons $65,000. 541-419-9510 4-dr frig w/icemaker, gas rect. nSpellcheck" and Service & Accessories Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L stove/oven, convection are hereby informed CHECK YOUR AD human errors do octhat all dwellings ad- short track, variable Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 oven, washer/dryer cur. If this happens to 20" polished alloys with vertised are available exhaust valves, elec- hp Bowrider w/depth combo, flatscreen TV, all your ad, please con2 95/5R-20 tires, G M on an equal opportu- tric s t art, r e v erse, finder, radio/ CD player, electronics, new tires, tact us ASAP so that 6-hole bolt pattern. $495. rec o rds, rod holders, full canvas, many extras. 7.5 diesel nity basis. The Bulle- manuals, corrections and any 541-330-5714 new spare belt, cover, EZ Loader trailer, exclnt /' tin Classified gen, lots of storage, adjustments can be heated hand g rips, cond, $11,500. basement freezer, 350 made to your ad. nice, fast, $999. Call 707-484-3518 (Bend) Cat Freightliner chassis. 1/5th interest in 1973 on the first day it runs Have an item to Creek Side 20' 541-385-5809 Antique & Asking $86,500. See at Tom, 541-385-7932, to make sure it isn corCessna 150 LLC 18.7' Sea Ray Monaco, Crook 2010, used 8 sell quick? a The Bulletin Classified County RV Park, Classic Autos rect. Spellcheck and 150hp conversion, low times, AC, flat 1984, 185hp, V6 MerIf it's under • Yamaha 750 1999 ¹43. 520-609-6372 time on air frame and human errors do ocscreen TV, oven, Mountain Max, $1400. Cruiser, full canvas, life cur. If this happens to '500you can place it in engine, hangared in vests, bumpers, water microwave, tub/ • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 Bend. Excellent peryour ad, please conBOUNDER 1993 skis, swim float, extra •u shower, awning, The Bulletin EXT, $1000. tact us ASAP so that 34.6', 43k miles, formance & affordprop 8 more. EZ Loader been stored, • Zieman 4-place corrections and any loaded, $13,900. able flying! $6,500. 1921 Model T trailer, never in saltwater, Classifieds for: non-smokers, no trailer, SOLD! adjustments can be Info - Call 541-410-6007 Delivery Truck always garaged, very All in good condition. clean, all maint. records. pets, 1 owner. 541-536-8816. Fleetwood Prowler 32' made to your ad. Restored 8 Runs '10 3 lines, 7 days Located in La Pine. $13,900 obo. 541 -385-5809 2001, many upgrade $5500. 541-389-7329 $9000. Call 541-408-6149. 541-410-2360 options, $14,500 obo. The Bulletin Classified '16 -3 lines, 14 days 541-389-8963 541-480-1687, Dick. M~~ (Private Party ads only) 860 Take care of 1952 Ford Customline Motorcycles & Accessories 750 your investments Coupe, project car, flatu w -~ a . Redmond Homes head V-8, 3 spd extra • with the help from Hariey Davidson SoftL 1974 BeHanca parts, 8 materials, $2000 Tail Deluxe 2 0 07, 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, Fleetwood D i scovery 1730A The Bulletin's obo. 541-410-7473 white/cobalt, w / pas- inboard motor, g r eat 40' 2003, diesel moLooking for your next "Call A Service senger kit, Vance & cond, well maintained, torhome Keystone Challenger 2180 TT, 440 SMO, emp/oyee? w/all Hines muffler system $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 options-3 slide outs, Jayco Eagle 2004 CH34TLB04 34' Place a Bulletin help Professional" Directory 180 mph, excellent & kit, 1045 mi., exc. wanted ad today and satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, 26.6 ft long, 2000 fully S/C, w/d hookups, condition, always cond, $16,9 9 9, new 18' Dometic awreach over 60,000 etc. 3 2 ,000 m i l es. 634 hangared, 1 owner 541-408-0273 ning, 4 new tires, new for readers each week. Wintered in h e ated Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide 35 years. $60K. Apt./Multiplex NE Bend awning, Eaz-Lift Kubota 7000w marine Your classified ad shop. $89,900 O.B.O. Chevy C-20 Pickup stabilizer bars, heat diesel generator, 3 will also appear on 541-447-8664 ** **No Application Fee HO Fat Bo 7996 In Madras, slides, exc. cond. in1969, all orig. Turbo 44; & air, queen bendbulletin.com 2 bdrm, 1 bath, s ide & o ut . 27 " T V call 541-475-6302 auto 4-spd, 396, model walk-around bed, which currently re19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O CST /all options, orig. $530 8 $540 w/lease. dvd/cd/am/fm ent. very good condition ceives over new upholstery, new elec owner, $19,950, center. Call for more Carports included! 1.5 million page $10,000 obo. tronics, winch, much more Executive Hangar 541-923-6049 details. Only used 4 541-595-2003 views every month at Bend Airport (KBDN) $9500. 541-306-0280 FOX HOLLOW APTS. times total in last 51/9 60' wide x 50' deep, at no extra cost. People Look for Information (541) 383-3152 years.. No pets, no w/55' wide x 17' high biBulletin Classifieds Want to impress the About Products and Cascade Rental smoking. High r etail Completely G ulfstream S u n Get Results! fold dr. Natural gas heat, Management. Co. relatives? Remodel Rebuilt/Customized $27,700. Will sell for offc, bathroom. Adjacent Services Every Day through sport 30' Class A Call 385-5809 or $24,000 including slid- to Frontage Rd; great TheBulletin Classifieds 2012/2013 Award your home with the 1988 ne w f r i dge, 648 place your ad on-line i ng hitch that fits i n visibility for aviation busiWinner help of a professional TV, solar panel, new at Houses for your truck. Call 8 a.m. ness. Financing availShowroom Condition refrigerator, wheelbendbulletin.com from The Bulletin's to 10 p.m. for appt to able. 541-948-2126 or Many Extras Rent General c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0 W "Call A Service see. 541-330-5527. Low Miles. email 1jetjock©q.com g enerator, Goo d Keystone Sprinter The Bulletin Professional" Directory PUBLISHER'S condition! $18,000 $77,000 31', 2008 Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, To Subscribe call NOTICE 541-548-4807 obo 541-447-5504 King size walkbased in Madras, al20' 1993 Sea Nympf Fish All real estate adver- 541-385-5800 or go to around bed, electric ways hangared since Chevy Nova - 1976, tising in this newspa- www.bendbulletin.com & Ski, 50 hrs on new awning, (4) 6-volt $3,400. new. New annual, auto HD Screaming Eagle engine, fish finder, chart per is subject to the JAMEE 1982 20', batteries, plus many Rebuilt 327 engine. 753 Electra Glide 2005, plotter & VHF radio with pilot, IFR, one piece F air H o using A c t low miles on it, n more extras, never windshield. Fastest Ar- Call Matt 541-280-9463. 103 motor, two tone antenna. Good shape, which makes it illegal self-contained. Runs Sisters Homes smoked in, first cher around. 1750 tocandy teal, new tires, full cover, heavy duty to a d vertise "any Keystone Montana Great, everything owners, $19,900. tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. preference, limitation Squaw Creek Canyon 23K miles, CD player, trailer, kicker and electric 2955 RL 2008, works. $3,000. 541-475-6947, ask for hydraulic clutch, ex- motors. or disc r imination Estates 70075 Sorrel 2 slides, arctic 541-382-6494 Call 541-410-5415 $7500 or best offer. Rob Berg. cellent condition. based on race, color, Dr. (corner of Sorrel & insulation, loaded, 541-292-1834 Highest offer takes it. religion, sex, handi- Mt. View) completely excellent never used 541-480-8080. Mallard by F leetwood, cap, familial status, renovated over 3000 condition. $33,500 1995, 22' long, sleeps 7, Chevy Wagon 1957, marital status or nasq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 full 541-923-4707 twin beds, fully equipped, 4-dr., complete, bath home, new entional origin, or an inclean, good cond, $6500 tention to make any ergy eff. furnace & 20.5' 2004 Bayliner $7,000 OBO / trades. obo. 541-678-5575 Please call such pre f e rence, heat pump, wide plank 205 Run About, 220 Find It in 541-389-6998 limitation or discrimi- wood floors, walk-in HP, V8, open bow, Superhavvk The Bulletin Classifieds! KOUNTRY AIRE nation." Familial sta- closets and p antry, exc. cond with very Ownership Share Chrysler 300 C o upe 541-385-5809 1994 37.5' motortus includes children stone fireplace with Honda Shadow/Aero low hours, lots of Available! 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, 0/9 woodstove insert, 1 home, with awning, under the age of 18 extras incl. tower, 750, 2007 Black, 11K Economical flying auto. trans, ps, air, and one slide-out, living with parents or acres, fenced, covmi, 60 mpg, new deBimini & custom Montana 2006 340 0 in your own frame on rebuild, reOnly 47k miles legal cus t o dians, ered decks, 2-car gatachable windshield, trailer, $17,950. RL, 37', 4 slides, ArIFR equipped painted original blue, mtn. views. Just Mustang seat 8 tires; 541-389-1413 and good condition. pregnant women, and rage, I tic options, K/bed, I Cessna 172/180 HP for original blue interior, Orbit 21' 2007, used people securing cus- reduced! $ 3 8 5,000. detachable Paladin $25,000. w/d combo. M ust only $13,500! New original hub caps, exc. only 8 times, A/C, ~ sell $22,990.OBO. ~ tody of children under Call (503) 786-7835 backrest 8 luggage 541-548-0318 Garmin Touchscreen chrome, asking $9000 oven, tub s hower, 18. This newspaper (recording) rack w/keylock.Vance(photo above is of a Call f o r det a i ls avionics center stack! or make offer. micro, load leveler I 805-844-3094 will not knowingly acHines pipes, great similar model & not the n Exceptionally clean! 541-385-9350 actual vehicle) hitch, awning, dual Say agoodbuy sound. Cruise control, cept any advertising La Pine Address Hangared at BDN. 20.5' Seaswirl Spybatteries, sleeps 4-5, audible turn signals for real estate which is Ford Mustang Coupe to that unused Call 541 -728-0773 der 1989 H.O. 302, EXCELLENT CONfor safety. $4495 obo. in violation of the law. 1966, original owner, 285 hrs., exc. cond., DITION. All accesO ur r e aders ar e item by placing it in Jack, 541-549-4949 T-Hangar for rent V8, automatic, great stored indoors for sories are included. hereby informed that The Bulletin Classifieds at Bend airport. shape, $9000 OBO. life $11,900 OBO. $15,000 OBO. all dwellings adverCall 541-382-8998. 530-515-8199 541-379-3530 541-382-9441 tised in this newspa5 41-385-580 9 per are available on Monaco Windsor, 2001, an equal opportunity MONTANA 3585 2008, RV basis. To complain of loaded! (was $234,000 762 exc. cond., 3 slides, new) Solid-surface CONSIGNMENTS discrimination cal l king bed, Irg LR, counters, convection/ WANTED HUD t o l l-free at Homes with Acreage Arctic insulation, all Victory TC 2002, micro, 4-dr, fridge, We Do The Work ... 1-800-877-0246. The options $35,000 obo. runs great, many 20' Seaswirl 1992, 4.3L washer/dryer, ceramic You Keep The Cash! toll f re e t e l ephone 2 Bdrm 2 Bath on 2 541-420-3250 w/OMC outdrive, open tile & carpet, TV, DVD, On-site credit Fieetwood 31' number for the hear- acres - Large shop/ accessories, new V6 bow, Shorelander trlr, nds satellite dish, leveling, WildernessGi approval team, ing im p aired is garage, fenced yard, NuWa 297LKHitchtires, under 40K some interior trim work. cabin. LaPine $83,000. 8-airbags, power cord 1999 web site presence. Hrker 2007, All sea1-800-927-9275. miles, well kept. 541-390-7394 or $4500. 541-639-3209 reel, 2 full pass-thru 12' slide, We Take Trade-Ins! sons, 3 slides, 32' $5500 or Partial Rent /Own 541-771-0143 Cummins ISO 8.3 24' awning, Free Advertising. perfect for snow birds, 21' 2001 Skiers Choice trays, 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes Trade/firearms 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 queen bed, FSC, BIG COUNTRY RV left kitchen, rear or up to Moomba Ou t back, 763 Diesel gen set. $85,000 $2500 down, $750 mo. 541-847-4232 outside shower, lounge, extras, must Bend: 541-330-2495 383 stroker engine, obo. 541-233-7963 52 weeks OAC. J and M Homes Recreational Homes E-Z lift stabilizer Redmond: see. Prineville $8500 o r c o n sider 541-548-5511 541-548-5254 541-447-5502 days & hitch, like new, & Property -whichever trade for good vehicle 541-447-1641 eves. been stored. with low mileage. Need to get an ad comes first! $10,950. 637 Acres with recreCall 541-604-1475 or Starcraft Galaxy 1999 541-000-000 in ASAP? ation cabin and 541-604-1203 (leave pop-up camp trailer, stream. in forest, west msg if no answer) 0. • si exc. cond. sleeps 6-8, of Silver Lake, OR extra tires 8 w heel, Fax it to 541-322-7253 Ads published in the .541-480-7215 Includes up to 40 words of text, up partial trades consid"Boats" classification to 2" in length, with border, red. $ 4 90 0 o b o . 775 include: Speed, fish- The Bulletin Classifieds e 541-549-9461 Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th full color photo, bold italic ing, drift, canoe, • Manufactured/ wheel, 1 s lide, AC, Honda TRX 450R sport headline and price!* house and sail boats. Mobile Homes TV,full awning, excelquad 2008, low hrs, new For all other types of lent shape, $23,900. Plus the following publications: wheels & DNC perf. pipe watercraft, please go 705 541-350-8629 The Bulletin daily publication with over FACTORY SPECIAL $4250. 541-647-8931 to Class 875. • Real Estate Services New Home, 3 bdrm, 76,000 subscribers. 541-385-5809 • $46,500 finished The Central Oregon Marketplace weekly RV 870 Boise, ID Real Estate on your site. publication DELIVERED to over 31,000 CONSIGNMENTS For relocation info, Boats & Accessories Trail Sport 2013 J and M Homes non-subscriber households. NATIONAL DOLPHIN WANTED 23' Travel Trailer call Mike Conklin, 541-548-5511 37' 1997, loaded! 1 The Central Oregon Nickel Adsweekly We Do The Work ... Avon 12.5' inflatable w/ 208-941-8458 new, used twice. slide, Corian surfaces, Like publication - 15,000 distribution throughout You Keep The Cash! wood floorboards & LOT MODEL Tow with SUV or Silvercreek Realty floors (kitchen), Central and Eastern Oregon. On-site credit transom, incl 9.8 hp wood LIQUIDATION small pickup. Queen fridge, convection approval team, Merc and Highlander 2-dr 745 Prices Slashed Huge bed, air, TV, micro, Vizio TV & *A $290 valuebased on an ad with the same web site presence. trailer. All for $950. microwave, Savings! 10 Year built-in stereo, electHomes for Sale roof satellite, walk-in extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the We Take Trade-Ins! 541-385-5094. conditional warranty. 14'8n boat, 40hp Mershower, new queen bed. ric awning, barbecue, above publications. Free Advertising. extras. Non-smoker. White leather hide-a6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, Finished on your site. cury outboard (4-stroke, FIND IT! BIG COUNTRY RV ONLY 2 LEFT! Selling due to health; 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, electric trim, EFI, less bed 8 chair, all records, I *Private party merchandise ads only, Bend: 541-330-2495 augv /7 Redmond, Oregon Sacrifice, view. By owner, ideal for than 10 hrs) + electric no pets or s moking. Redmond: excludes pets, real estate, rentals, SELL IT! 541-548-5511 extended family. trolling motor, fish finder, $28,450. $16,000 obo. 541-548-5254 and garage sale categories. JandMHomes.com $5000 obo. 541-548-2173 The Bulletin Classifieds Call 541-771-4800 Call Jim, 541-401-9963 $590,000. 541-390-0886
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The Bulletin
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
C6 MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013• THE BULLETIN 975 •
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BOATS &RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890- RVsfor Rent
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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 -Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
Kia Roi LX 2011, Auto, fphoto forillustration only) gas saver, sat radio, Toyota Avalon Limited A/C. Vin ¹721194 2011, Beautiful c ar, compare to new at $10,988 $43,500. Vin ¹384729
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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. S UB ARU. BUBARUOFBRNO COM 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Mercury Marquis 1992, Dlr ¹0354 4 door, V8 , $ 4 25. 541-923-0254
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the relief sought to be You must "appear" in o btained therein i s The City may provide this case or the other fully set forth in said s olicitation d o c u side will win automati- complaint, a n d is ments by electronic (RFI) Toyota Camrysr means available on The College is seeking c ally. T o "appear" briefly stated as fol1984, SOLD; lows: Foreclosure of a the City of Redmond information on a Se- you must file with the Sport Utility Vehicles Auto m obiles 1985 SOLD; court a legal paper Deed of T rust/Mortwebsite. curity Camera Sysor gage. 1986 parts car Gran t ors: www.ci.redmond.or. tem for its Residence called a "motion" " answer." T h e Rmo- Stanley A. D obson, us only one left! $500 Hall currently under tion" or "answer" must Paula J. Dobson, and design. The purpose Ford Ranchero Call for details, (photo for illustration only) be given to the court Persons or P a rtiesAll interested of this request is to 54 I -548-6592 1979 Mercury Milan Pr e provide the College clerk or administrator Unknown C l a iming respondents m u st with 351 Cleveland mier 2006, V6, auto, with sufficient infor- w ithin t h irty d a y s any Right, Title, Lien formally request the modified engine. for loaded, 55 K m i les, Chevy Tahoe 1995, 89k Chevrolet Corvette mation regarding se- a long with t h e r e - o r I nterest i n th e Request Find exactly what Body is in Must Se e ! Vin q uired filing fee. I t Property Described in Qualifications which mi., 4wd, exc. cond, Coupe 2007, 20,700 curity cameras to alexcellent condition, you are looking for in the low fo r s u ccessful must be i n p r o per the Complaint Herein. will register them as ¹605072 $3,950. 541-306-5161 mi., beautiful cond. $2500 obo. CLASSIFIEDS add r ess: a respondent on the or 209-993-6518. $12,988 3LT loaded, victory planning, implemen- form and have proof Property 541-420-4677 Eld e r berry project. All requests tation, and s u stain- o f service o n t h e 52344 red, two-tone SueARU. plaintiff's attorney or, Lane, La Pine, OR s hall be made t o leather, powerseats, R UB RUOFBRNO C O M able operations of a Ford Bronco 1981 system while meeting if the plaintiff does not 97739. P u b lication: Heather R ichards, with logos, memory, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 4 speed 4x4, 302 at t o rney, The Bulletin. DATED Community t he criteria o f t h e have a n headsupdisplay, 877-266-3821 engine, low m iles, Development College. All informa- proof of service on the this 16 day of May Dlr ¹0354 h eaders, roll b a r, nav., XM, Bose, tilt, plaintiff. IF YOU 2013.Craig Peterson, Director at ( 5 4 1) chrome wheels, uption received will be hitch kit, good tires, used to gain a com- HAVE ANY Q U ES- O SB ¹ 1 20365, Z a - 923-7756, graded drilled slotFord T-Bird, 1966, 390 straight body, runs YOU c hary Bryant, O S B heather.richards@ci ted b rake r o tors, Toyota Corolla 2011, piete u n derstanding TIONS, engine, power every- great, $950. Br a ndon .redmond.or.us. successful S HOULD SE E A N ¹113409, extra insulation, alauto, air, tilt, MP3. Vin for thing, new paint, 54K 541-350-7176 I M M E - Smith, OSB ¹124584, ways garaged, seri¹630707 pre-wiring of e quip- A TTORNEY original m i les, runs ment and p l anning DIATELY. If you need Robinson Tait, P.S., All equipment must $13,588 great, excellent condi- Ford Escape XLT 2009 ous only $36,500. help in finding an at- Attorneys for Plaintiff. meet and or exceed 541-771-2852. what type of equiption in & out. Asking all federal, CPSC, V6, 4WD. ¹ C02890. S UB A R U . m ent/technology i s torney, you may call LEGAL NOTICE $8,500. 541-480-3179 the O regon S t ate ASTM, and IPEMA $16,495 current industry INVITATION TO Nissan 350Z 2005 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. the Bar's Lawyer Referral guidelines. standard. ConstrucPROPOSE Black, excellent 877-266-3821 (503) (AS PUBLISHED) D ocumentation o f tion on the Residence S ervice a t condition, 22,531 Oregon Dlr ¹0354 compliance must be H all facility i s e x - 684-3763 or toll-free AuloSourae gently driven miles, in Oregon at (800) Sealed proposals for provided to the City pected tocommence 1 owner, 541-598-3750 452-7636. The object with the Suppliers in the winter of 2014. the design and innon-smoker, www.aaaoregonautoproposal. A complete set of RFI of the said action and stallation of the City fphoto for illustration only) source.com $15,500. d ocuments may b e the relief sought to be of Redmond, Sam Ford Th underbird Chevy M a i ibu L T Z o btained therein i s All equipment must o btained f ro m t h e 1955, new white soft Johnson Park ImV6, auto BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS 2010, comply with 541-390-6081 Purchasing C o ordi- fully set forth in said top, tonneau cover w/overdrive, leather, provement Project, is a ddressed to t h e Americans with Search the area's most and upholstery. New (photo forillustration only) nator Office by email- complaint, a n d loaded, 21K m i les, briefly stated as folDisabilities Act chrome. B e a utiful comprehensive listing of Toyota Corolla S 2012, ing: City Recorder, City Vin ¹103070 lows: Foreclosure of a of Redmond, O r(ADA). The designs classified advertising... moon roof, s poiler, jmosier@cocc.edu. Car. $25, 0 0 0. $18,988 s ubmitted b y t h e real estate to automotive, navigation. Vin Response are due no Deed of T r ust/Mort- e gon will b e r e 541-548-1422 DON'TII SS THIS merchandise to sporting © Gran t ors: ceived until 2:00 PM Supplier must S UBA R U ¹885116 later t ha n 5 : 0 0pm, gage. Steven L . H a i nes. incorporate either a goods. Bulletin Classifieds August 8, 2013. ReOlds Aurora 1999, white $17,588 local time at the City 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Property add r ess: transfer platform or appear every day in the 4-dr, 134K miles, front sponses should be Recorder's o ff ice, 877-266-3821 ramp in each design print or on line. S UB A R U . submitted via email to 20008 Powers Road, wheel drive, leather, City Hall, 716 SW Dlr ¹0354 B end, O R 97 7 0 2 . Evergreen Avenue, when necessary. Call 541-385-5809 air, CD/radio, excel- 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. jmoseirOcocc.edu This is not a bid or pro- Publication: The Bulwww.bendbulletin.com lent condition. $4000 Redmond, Oregon, 877-266-3821 letin. DATED this 8 or best offer. posal; therefore, no on August 30, 2013. The supplier installer Dlr ¹0354 i s required to b e Thf: Bullcti 541-548-5886 standard bid t e rms day of J u ly, 2 013. Proposals shall be GMC Vzton 1971, Only FFFFtORCF UaloFRO AM«FaOF Door-to-door selling with licensed and a nd c o nditions o r Brandon Smith, OSB clearly labeled Sam $19,700! Original low ¹ 124584, Email : bonded contractor in fast results! It's the easiest contractual language Johnson Park Immile, exceptional, 3rd Call a Pro Porsche 911 bsmith@robinsontait.c the State of Oregon. is contained herein, owner. 951-699-7171 Ford Excursion way in the world to sell. provement Project. Carrera 993cou e Whether you need a Bidder m us t be nor is it required in om, Robinson Tait, 2004 r P .S., Attorneys f o r registered with the fence fixed, hedges your response. The The Bulletin Classified Scope of Work: Plaintiff, Tel: ( 2 06) Construction College reserves the trimmed or a house 541-385-5809 Contractors Board right to request clarifi- 676-9640, Fax: (206) The City of Redmond built, you'll find (ORS 701.055) or cation or a d ditional 676-9659. (City) is requesting l icensed with t h e professional help in information from any LEGAL NOTICE q ualification p r o - State L a n dscape r espondent a t an y CIRCUIT COURT OF Must Sell! Health forces The Bulletin's "Call a posals to d esign, Contractor 1996, 73k miles, B o a rd sale. Buick Riviera 1991, time during this RFI One owner, Turbo OREGON FOR DESprovide, and install Service Professional" Tiptronic auto. (ORS 671.530), or classic low-mileage car, Diesel, process. It is the inCHUTES C O UNTY. custom playground transmission. Silver, the bid will not be Directory garaged, pampered, tent of the College to WELLS Eddie Bauer 4WD, FA RGO equipment in conChrysler Newport OI' blue leather interior, received non-smoker, exclnt cond, 46,400 miles, proceed with a soliciBANK, N. A . , AS nection with the re541-385-5809 moon/sunroof, new (2) 1962 4 door sedans, considered. $4300 obo 541-389-0049 tation at some point in TRUSTEE FOR THE placement of exist$26,500 $2500 and $5500. quality tires and the future after evalu- STRUCTURED ASing pla y g round Call (206) 849-4513 La Pine, 541-602-8652. battery, car and seat ation of the materials SET S E C U RITIES equipment located This is a Public Works in Bend. covers, many extras. and received. CORPORATION, at Sa m J o hnson Contract Recently fully sersubject to Oregon MMy little red SASCO MORTGAGE Park. The City will viced, garaged, Bureau of Labor and LOAN TRUST 1999select one supplier Mazda CX9 2009 All FIND YOUR FUTURE Corvette" Coupe looks and runs like Industries (BOLI) wheel dr., DVD system. B C4, M O R T G A G E to design and proHOME IN THE BULLETIN new. Excellent conP revailing W a g e PASS-THROUGH vide equipment and F y t Y a i 2 0 1 0 Plymouth B a r racuda ¹1 75588. $21,995 dition $29,700 Rates Effe c tive Your future is just a page CERTIFICATES, SEm aterials fo r t h e wonderful little car, 1966, original car! 300 541-589-4047 January 1, 2013 and away. Whetheryou're looking RIES 1999 - BC4, park as outlined in 40 mpg on hwy, hp, 360 V8, centerApril 1, 2013 Oregott Plaintiff, v. STANLEY this request. T he lines, 541-593-2597 $8,500. 541-410-1078 for a hat or a place to hangit, AutoSourae Amendments for The Bulletin Classified is A. DOBSON; PAULA funding source for Porsche 911 Turbo I • Region 10. 541-598-3750 PROJECT CARS:Chevv your best source. J . D OBSON; A N D this project is City of 1996, 350 auto, 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & www.aaaoregonautoPERSONS OR PARR edmond Par k s Every day thousandsof 132,000 miles. City reserves the source.com Chevy Coupe 1950 T IES UNKN O W N F unds an d R e d - The i Non-ethanol fuel & buyers and sel l ers of goods r ight to r e ject a l l rolling chassis's $1750 R CLAIMING ANY m ond Kiwa n i s ,V arid services do business in RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN Foundation Funds. synthetic oil only, p roposals or a n y ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, these pages.Theyknow proposals no t in complete car, $ 1949; garaged, premium Volkswagen Karmann O R I NTEREST I N All equipment will be Bose stereo, you can't beat TheBulletin compliance with all Cadillac Series 61 1950, Ghia 1970 convertible, THE PRO P E RTY assembled and in2003 6 speed, X50 Classified Section for the requirements of 2 dr. hard top, complete very rare, new top & inte$77,000. DESCRIBED IN THE stalled by the Supselection and convenience w/spare f r ont cl i p ., added power pkg., t he R equest f o r rior upholstery, $9000. 541-923-1781 COMPLAINT plier. - every item is just a phone $3950, 541-382-7391 530 HP! Under 10k 541-389-2636 Qualifications, and HEREIN, Defendants. call away. Subaru Baja S p ort miles, Arctic silver, may reject for good NO. 13CV 0 0 89. This project consists 2005, 4 d r., l eather, gray leather interior, SUMMONS BY PUB- of the c onceptual cause all proposals The Classified Section is Looking for your moon roof, tow pkg., new quality t i res, upon finding of the Pickups easy to use. Every item LICATION. TO : design, ph a sing, C next employee? 35K miles, like new. and battery, Bose ity that is i n t h e PAULA J. DOBSON, budgeting, final dei s categorized and every Place a Bulletin help Vin¹101442 premium sound stepublic interest to do cartegory is indexed onthe AND PERSONS OR sign, p rocurement wanted ad today and $17,988 reo, moon/sunroof, so, and reserve the PARTIES UNand installation of a section's front page. reach over 60,000 car and seat covers. right to postpone the KNOWN C LAIMING playground system readers each week. CORVETTE 4i+ S UBA R U . Many extras. GaWhether you are looking for ANY awarding o f the RIGHT, TITLE, l ocated within t he Your classified ad Convertible 2005 raged, perfect cona home orneed aservice, contract for a period 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Automatic LS2 high LIEN OR INTEREST Sam Johnson Park, will also appear on dition $5 9 ,700. of not more than 30 your future is in thepagesof 877-266-3821 IN THE PROPERTY Redmond, Oregon, bendbulletin.com performance motor, Chevy 2500 HD 2003 541-589-4047 The Bulletin Classified. days from the bid Dlr ¹0354 DESCRIBED IN THE replacing an existwhich currently re4 WD w o r k tru c k , only 29k miles, SterCOMPLAINT ing play s y stem. opening date. ceives over 1.5 milling S ilver, b l ack 140,000 miles, $7000 a l. • R R The Bulletin HEREIN. IN THE C onstruction w o rk lion page views obo. 541-408-4994. leather interior, Bose FFCAUFCentral Oregon since FFOF PUBLISH: Porsche Carrera 911 NAME OF THE includes installation every month at premium sound ste2003 convertible with Daily Journal of STATE OF OREGON: of commercial grade LEGAL NOTICE no extra cost. Bullereo, new quality tires hardtop. 50K miles, CommerceCIRCUIT COURT OF You are hereby replayground equiptin Classifieds and battery, car and new factory Porsche Once the week of quired to appear and ment eq u i pment OREGON FOR DESGet Results! Call seat covers, many motor 6 mos ago with July 15,2013 footings, la n d ing CHUTES COUNTY. defend against t he 385-5809 or place Rec e ntly 18 mo factory warOnce the week of Subaru Tribeca 2009, extras. H SBC BANK U S A, allegations contained mats, and fall proranty remaining. your ad on-line at factory serviced. July 22, 2013 3.6, AWD, mp3, well N ATIONAL A S S O- in the Complaint filed tection materials. $37,500. Garaged. Beautiful bendbuiiefin.com equipped. Vin 541-322-6928 CIATION AS a gainst you i n t h e car, Perfect cond. Ford F250 4X4 2007 Bend Bulletin¹403118 TRUSTEE FOR LU- above entitled pro- The concept involves Super cab. White, $29,700 Monday, July 15, $17,888 ceeding within thirty a long rock wall with M INENT MORT 541-589-4047 44,300 miles, V-8, 2013 - Monday, Get your an accessible ramp GAGE TRUST 2006-7 (30) days from the long bed, 6 speed July 22, 2013 4 @)S U B A R U . business date of service of this on one side repreMORTGAGE manual, 9400 GVW, Summons upon you. senting the walls of LEGAL NOTICE PASS-THROUGH 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. AC, Cruise, camper If you fail to appear the Dry Canyon and Notice of Public Hear CERTIFICATES, SE877-266-3821 tie-downs, 14,000¹ a ROWI N G RI ES 2006-7, and defend this matgeological f o r ma- ing Meeting T ype: Dlr ¹0354 hitch, extra set mag ter within thirty (30) tion of the nearby Public Hearing by PoPlaintiff, v. S T EVEN (photo for illustration onlyi wheels and tires. lice Chief Jeff Sale as Toyota Venza 2012 L . H A INES; P E R - days from the date of Smith Rock State Subaru Legacy 2.5 GT with an ad in $1 6,950. XLE AWD wagon, 9k the J u stice A s s isS ONS AN D P A R - publication specified Park. Slides repre2005, Turbo, m o o n 541-389-4092 The Bulletin's CORVETTE COUPE tance Grant manager. $29,988 ¹031994 TIES UNK N OWN herein along with the senting water outroof, spoiler, AWD. Glasstop 2010 "Call A Service r equired filing f e e, falls come off of the Meeting Date: TuesVin ¹210360 CLAIMING A NY Grand Sport - 4 LT day July 30, 2 013. RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN Wells Fargo B a nk, rock wall. B ridges Professional" $16,988 loaded, clear bra c onnect nea r b y Meeting Time 9am. O R I NTEREST I N N.A., as Trustee for Oregon Directory hood & fenders. structures t o th e Location: Bend Police THE PRO P E RTY the Structured Asset S UBA R U . AutoSoarce New Michelin Super Securities C o rporarock wall and proDepartment 555 NE DESCRIBED IN THE 541-598-3750 Sports, G.S. floor 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. vide an accessible 15th Street, B e nd, COMPLAINT tion, SASCO M ortI The Bulletin recoml aaaoregonautosource.com 877-266-3821 mats, 17,000 miles, Tr u s t r oute o nt o o t h e r Oregon. Pur p ose: HEREIN, Defendants. g age L o a n mends extra caution I Ford F250 S uperCab Crystal red. Dlr ¹0354 The P ublic h earing f o r NO. 13CV0 1 14. 1999-BC4, Mortgage equipment. 975 when p u r chasing ~ 2001, Triton V8, May '15 $45,000. Pass-Through Certifi- r ock w a l l ho s t s written and oral views BY PUBtags, ONLY 89K miles, f products or services SUMMONS Automobiles 503-358-1164. caves with p etroto the City of Bend for LICATION. TO: cates, Series 1999from out of the area. $6495 obo 541-610-6150 BC4 will apply to the glyphs and i n ter- the proposed use of L. HAINES; J S ending c ash , STEVEN Court for th e r e lief the 2013 Justice AsPERSONS AND pretational p a nels Ford Taurus 2003 SSE checks, or credit inUN- demanded i n the describing the difsistance Grant for the PARTIES s edan, e xc . co n d formation may be I City of Bend Police KNOWN CLAIMING Complaint. The first ferent layers of rock 63,000 miles. $5,000 / subject toFRAUD. found in th e w a ll Department. You can 541-389-9569 ANY RIGHT, TITLE, date of publication is I nternational Fla t Subaru Legacy 3.0 R For more i nformad irect questions o r LIEN OR INTEREST J uly 1 , 2 0 13 . N O - a nd the t ypes o f Bed Pickup 1963, 1 I' Limited 2008, AWD, f tion about an adver« ~ v I DEF E N - animals that inhabit comments on the IN THE PROPERTY T ICE T O ton dually, 4 s pd. t leather, moon roof, tiser, you may call 1977 Fiat READ the walls. All of the above date by calling trans., great MPG, a lloys, spoiler, V i n I the Oregon State I DESCRIBED IN THE TDANTS: HESE PAPE R S equipment and 5 41.322.2992 fro m could be exc. wood Spider 124 ¹207281 Attorney General's I COMPLAINT CAREFULLY! You structures are cus9am to 9:30am. ConTHE hauler, runs great, 5-speed. ConvertOffice C o n sumer HEREIN. IN $23,988 must "appear" in this tom-designed to tact f o r ad d i tional NAME OF THE new brakes, $1950. ible top is 4 years f Protection hotline at STATE OF OREGON: case or the other side represent the geoquestions prior to this 541-419-5480. S UBA R U 1-877-877-9392. old. New brakes, Ford Taurus Wagon 2004 meeting please call You are hereby re- will win automatically. logical and ecologi120K miles, loaded! 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. K ristel Muirhead a t battery, upholstery quired to appear and To "appear" you must c al habitat of t h e $4200 or trade for motor877-266-3821 SCFFtng Central Oregon NUOB1903 file with the court a le- Redmond Dry Can541.322.2994. Acces& carpet. Body defend against t he home. 541-815-9939 Dlr ¹0354 ~Sport Utility Vehicles straight; no engine sible meeting inforallegations contained gal paper called a y on a n d Smi t h $45 0 , 000 mation - this meeting in the Complaint filed "motion" or "answer." Rock. leaks. Runs great; The "motion" or "anhas been budgeted event/location is aca gainst you i n t h e U all records. $3250. swer must be given for the playground cessible Sign L anabove entitled pro~ E P U B LI C 541-420-7734 equipment and acceeding within thirty to the court clerk or guage, in t e rpreter service, assistive lis(30) days from the administrator w i t hin cessible flooring. N O T I C E S Buick LeSabre Custening devises, matedate of service of this thirty days along with tom 2004, rare 75k, info r mation rials in alternate forI M P O R TA N I '~ Summons upon you. the required filing fee. More E $6000, worth way If you fail to appear It must be in proper about the history of mat, such as Braille, Chevy Equinox LT form and have proof the project can be large print, electronic more. leather, and defend this matSport AWD 20 10. o f service o n t h e found at formats and any other An important premise upon which the principle of ter within thirty (30) heated seats, nice Auto, 6-Spd w/Overplaintiff's attorney or, www.samjohnsonpa accommodations are days from the date of drive, 29 Hwy mpg, wheels. Good tires, democracy is based is thatinformation about a vailable upon a d 41K miles, traction publication specified if the plaintiff does not rk.com. 30 mpg, white. at t o rney, vance request. Please government activities must be accessible in order herein along with the have a n control, keyless enConvinced? Call Bob c o n sidered contact Kristel Muirof service on the To b e try, moonroof, air, 541-318-9999 for the electorate to make well-informed decisions. r equired filing f e e, proof YOU respondents s h all head no l ater than H SBC B an k U S A , plaintiff. IF power e v erything, July 2 5 , 2 0 1 3 at Public notices provide this sort of accessibility lo National Association HAVE ANY Q U ES- provide a maximum X M S a tellite e n - Buick Century Limited YOU of two 541.322.2994 kmuiras Trustee for Lumi- TIONS, (2) gaged, OnStar avail. 2000, r un s g r e at, citizens who want lo know more about government S HOULD SE E A N conceptual full head@bendoregon.g nent Mortgage trust MP3. $21,500. Call beautiful car. $3400. activities. I M M E - build-out d e s igns ov providing at least 5 2006-7, Mor t gage A TTORNEY 541-41 9-0736. 541-312-3085 days notice prior to Pass-Through Certifi- DIATELY. If you need a nd b u dget fo r help in finding an at- each. A wi n n ing the event will help enBuick Lucerne CXS cates, Series 2006-7 Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin respondent will be sure availability. will apply to the Court torney, you may call 2006 Sports sedan, Chevy Suburban classifieds or go fo wvvvtr.bendbulletin.comand low miles, all the nice f or th e r e l ief d e - the O regon S t ate s elected who w i l l 2003 t/a ton 4WD, a manded in the Com- Bar's Lawyer Referral t hen work w ith a features you'll want, click on "Classified Ads white, 135k miles, (503) stakeholder g roup truly an exc. buy at plaint. The first date of S ervice a t immaculate. Have $8000. Come & see publication is July 15, 684-3763 or toll-free on a f inal design. Find It in maint. records. in Oregon at (800) The f inal p r oject The Bulletin Classifieds! no charge for looking. 2 013. NOTICE T O $5,500. 452-7636. The object should be installed DEFENDANTS: Ask Buick Bob, The Bulletin 541-280-7299. 541-385-5809 541-318-9999 R EAD THESE P A - of the said action and by May 15, 2014.
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The Bulletin
LEGAL NOTICE 1437-13 REQUEST FOR INFORMATION
PERS CAREFULLY!