Bulletin Daily Paper 7-24-13

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ServingCentral Oregonsince1903 75| t

WEDNESDAY July 24, 201 3

nside OUTDOORS • D1

FAIR GUIDE-

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD 2 area fireS —WarmSprings blaze grows; LaPine-areafire 10 percent contained.B1

cam ire azec ar e asarson, Wyden sounds privacy warning

BEND-LA PINE

Duplexes —Adeveloper wants to put units in overlooking the Deschutes River near

Miller's Landing Park.C6

lincoln archives —Digging for papers related to the

By Andrew Clevenger

former president could come to an end asmoney runs out, researchers say.A4

The Bulletin

By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

Facedook's target —Getting onto the simple phones

that are the norm in thedeveloping world.C6

High Desert Classics — A new event adds excite-

ment to this year's equestrian competition.C1

in natiOnal neWS — Immigration clash underscores difficulties of finding a compromise in the House.A2

And a Web exclusiveThese days, there's a lot happening in the exclusive club of ex-U.S. presidents.

benddulletin.com/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Your dog is a copycat, study says By Virginia Morell ScienceNOW

The next time your dog digs a hole in the backyard after watching you garden, don't punish him. He's just imitating you. A new study reveals that our canine pals are capable of copying our behavior as long as 10 minutes after it's happened. The ability is considered mentally demanding and, until this discovery, something that only humans and apes were known to do. Scientists first discovered that dogs are excellent at imitating their owners in 2006. Or at least, one dog had the talent: Philip, a 4-year-old Belgian Tervuren working with Jozsef Topal, a behavioral ethologist at the Hungarian A cademy of Sciences in Budapest. Topal adapted the method (called "Do as I do") that Keith and Catherine Hayes developed in the 1950s for teaching an infant chimpanzee to copy their actions. Philip was already a trained assistant dog for his disabled owner and readily followed Topal's commands. First, Topal told him to stay, and then commanded "Do as I do." The researcher then performed a simple action,

Bend-La Pine Schools named five schools Tuesday that will host pilot pro-

Which of thesetab ets is best?

WASHINGTON — America couldbecome a permanent surveillance state if it doesn't modify rules governing domestic surveillance, Sen. Ron

grams aimed at replacing

Wyden, D-ore., warned

book-based instruction with iPads. The transition from paper to digital instruction is called digital conversion. In Bend-La Pine, the selected schools in the next academic year will be giving an iPad loaded with instructional material to every student involved. The schools that will host pilot programs are High Lakes Elementary, Juniper Elementary, Rosland Elementary, Summit High School and Mountain View High School. In the elementary schools, only students in grades three through five will be given iPads. All of the students at Summit High School will receive the devices, while Mountain View High School proposed a pilot involving only its ninth-grade class. While other Oregon school districts have embraced the use of iPads, the scale of Bend-La Pine's digital conversion pilot is unusual. The Forest Grove School District in Oregon is also currently implementing a pilot, but it has focused its efforts on one middle school. Nonetheless, Bend-La Pine is not exploring new territory with digital conversion, and is basing its approach on school districts across the country that have had success with the program on such a scale. School districts located in Kent, Wash., and Mooresville, N.C., have been cited by the district as hosting positive examples of digital conversion. The decision to use iPads was based on the availability of educational software, its connectivity capabilities, and its ability to engage students. The Chromebook, a device that resembles a traditional laptop but relies on Web-based software, was also considered. SeeTablets /A5

Tuesday. "If we do not seize this unique moment in our constitutional history to reform our surveillance laws and practices, we are all going to live to regret it," he said. "The combination of increasingly advanced technologies with a breakdown in the checks and balances that limit government actions could lead us to a surveillance state which cannot be reversed." In a speech delivered at the Center for American Progress, Wyden, a member of the Senate Select Intelligence Committee since 2001, laid out his objections to the National Security Agency's bulk collectionof phone records. SeeWyden/A4

~/'

r, ® Photo illustration Photo by Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

The casefortradition

The casefortechnology

• Education experts critical of adding

• Backers — including educators and members of the technology industry — argue that digital devices teach skills necessary for success in

technology to the classroom point to the cost — in the billions — while many school districts continue to struggle with budget and staffing

modern life, allow students to learn at their own

shortages.

pace andappeal to a generation that grew up

• They say there is little proof the learning, arguing that digital proficiency

with such items. • They argue that standardized tests do not gauge all of the skills that working with such

comes at a cost to math, reading and other

devices can help students develop.

fundamental skills.

• Researchers found that writing scores

• Individual case studies, such as the onefrom

improved for eighth-graders in Maineafter

Maine referenced at right, are far from perfect, critics say, pointing to, for instance, the difficulty

they were all issued laptops in 2002. The same researchers, from the University of Southern

of separating the effect of the laptops from the

Maine, found that math performance picked

effect of the teacher training.

up among seventh- and eighth-graders after teachers in the state were trained in using the

technological approach is working to improve

Man to sue, tore ear off

laptops to teach.

QUOTABLE "The datais pretty weak. It's verydifficult when we'repressed to come up with convincing data. We betterput up or shut t/p." — Tom Vander Ark,the former executive

By Sheila G. Miller

QUOTABLE

The Bulletin

"(Technologyin the c/assroomis) one of the three or four biggest thingshappeningin the director for education at the Bill and Melinda world today." — Tom Vander Ark,the former executive Gates Foundation and an investor in educational technologycompanies director for education at the Bill and Melinda

Gates Foundation and aninvestor in educational technologycompanies

"Rather than being a ct/re-all or silver bullet, one-to-one laptop programs may simply amplify what's already occurring — for better or worse." — Bryan Goodwin,spokesman for Mid-

continent Research for Education andLearning "Thereis insufficient evidence to spend that kind ofmoney. Period, period, period. There is no body of evidence that shows a trend line."

— Larry Cuban, education professor emeritus

claimingl8

"In places where we've had a largeimplementing of technologyand scores are flat, I see that as great. Test scores arethe same, but look at all the other things students are doing: learning to use the Internet to research, learning to organizetheir work, learning to use professionalwriting tools, learning to collaborate with others." — Karen Cator,former director of the office

of educational technology, U.S.Department of

at Stanford University

Education New York TimesNews Service; Mugs Scherec TheBulletin

A Bend man who says his ear was torn off by a

police dog during a confrontation in April plans to sue the city. Shawn McCurdy, 43, has filed a tort claim notice McC u rdy through his Eugene attorney, Emily Shack, indicating he plans to sue the Bend Police for personal injury. According to the notice sent to the city June 17, McCurdy was pursued by police and a police dog on April II on Boyd Acres Road in northeast Bend. See K9/A4

Health-care law tied to newcapson part-time hours By Sandhya Somashekhar

pay cut.

The Washington Post

Like many of his colleagues, the adjunct music professor at Northern Virginia Community College had a hefty courseload, despite his official status as a

WASHINGTON — For Kevin Pace, the president's health-care law could have meant better health insurance. Instead, it produced a

part-time employee. But his employer, the state, slashed his hours this spring to avoid a Jan. I requirement that all full-time workers beoffered health insurance. The law defines

"full time" as 30 hours a week or more. "We work so hard for so little pay," he said. "You would think they would want to make an investment in society, pay the teachers back and

give us health care." Earlier this month, the Obama administration delayed the employer insurance requirement until January 2015. SeeWorkers/A5

The Bulletin

+ .4 We t/serecycled newsprint

such as jumping in place, barking, putting an object in a box, or carrying it to Philip's owner. Next, Topal ordered "Do it!" and Philip responded by matching the scientist's actions. See Dogs/A4

TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy High 93, Low 59

Page B6

INDEX Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope D 6 Outdoors D1-6 C1-4 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B 1- 6 Sports Classified E1 - 8 D ear Abby D6 Ob i tuaries B5 TV / Movies D6

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OUR ADDRESS Street

a iescas over immi ra ionin ouse

Virginia gOVernOr —Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell said Tuesday he has repaid amajor political donor more than $120,000 in loans to

By Erica Werner

this group of young people to

the evacuation of 44 workers aboard adrilling rig, authorities said. No

stay in the U.S. legally." House Republican leaders have embraced offering citizenship to such immigrants, and Goodlatte is working on a bill with Majority Leader Eric Cantor toward the goal. It is something of a turnaround for Republicans, many of whom in the past have opposed legalizing immigrants brought here as k i ds. A nd s ome Democrats an d i m migration advocates said it was a welcome development showing the GOP has moved forward since nominating a presidential c a ndidate l a st year, Mitt Romney, who suggested that people here illegally should "self-deport."

injuries were reported in the midmorning blowout and there was no fire as of Tuesday evening at the site, about 55 miles off the Louisiana

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WASHINGTON — H ouse Republicans took a tentative step toward offering citizenship to s ome unauthorized immigrants Tuesday, but hit an immediate wall of resistance from the White House on down as Democrats said it wasn't enough. The d i smissive r e action to the GOP proposal to offer eventual citizenship to some immigrants brought illegally to the U.S. as children underscored the difficulties of finding any compromise in the Republican-led House on the politically explosive issue of immigration. That left prospects cloudy

for one of President Barack Obama's top second-term priorities. Congress is preparing to break for a monthlong summer recess at the end of next week without action in the full House on any immigration legislation, even after the Senate passed a sweeping bipartisan bill last month to secure the borders and create a path to citizenship for the II million immigrants already in the country illegally. At a hearing of the House Judiciary i m migration subcommittee Tuesday on how to deal with immigrants brought here illegally as children, Judiciary Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-va., suggested that "we as a nation should allow

family received from the donor, Jonnie Williams, are at the center of state and federal investigations. No charges have been filed and the Republican governor has said he did nothing illegal.

Natural gaS dlawaut —Natural gas speweduncontrolled from a well off the Louisiana coast on Tuesday after a blowout that forced

coast in the Gulf of Mexico. Experts from Wild Well Control Inc. were to assess the well site overnight and develop a plan to shut down the flow of gas, said Jim Noe, executive vice president of Hercules Off-

shore Inc, owner of the drilling rig where the blowout occurred. EXPliCit 'tSX'tS —Anthony Weiner found himself caught in another sexting scandal Tuesday like the onethat destroyed his congressional career, but stood side-to-side with his wife to say that he won't drop out of the race for mayor of New York. Weiner confirmed sending

sexually explicit photos and messages to a woman online and acknowledged some of the activity took place as recently as last sum-

mer, more than ayearafter he resigned from the House indisgrace for the samesort of behavior with at least a half-dozen women. ROyal daby —lluminated by ablitz of camera flashes, Prince William and his wife, Catherine, Duchess ofCambridge, steppedout of the Lindo Wing of St. Mary's Hospital on Tuesday and briefly introduced the world to their newborn prince, who stands one day to inherit the

British throne. "He'sgot her looks, thankfully," a cheerful William told reporters as he held the baby, still unnamed, in his arms. Asked if his son hashair,he said,"He'sgotway morethan me, thank God." TSBfll88V pilOtOS —A state police photographer who released photos of the bloodied Boston Marathon bombing suspect during his cap-

IN BRAZIL, YOUTH DAY AND THE POPE

smpmosm.

the governor's wife and a business McDonnell owns with his sister. McDonnell's relationship and thousands of dollars in gifts he and his

ture was placed onrestricted duty Tuesday.Sgt. SeanMurphy said he leaked the photos of what he called "the face of terror" to Boston magazine last week to counter a glamorized image of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev on

Dmmmm m~

the cover of Rolling Stonemagazine. Threeof Murphy's14 photos show a battered and blood-streaked Tsarnaev emerging from a boat in a backyard, the red dot of a sniper's laser sight trained on his head.

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Egypt unreSt —At least six people were killed Tuesdaynear a sit-in held by supporters of deposed President Mohammed Morsi,

the latest sign that Egypt's political impasse is devolving into street battles. The deaths brought to at least nine the number of people killed over the last 24 hours during clashes in central Cairo, around

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MallthOI CigIlrattSS —The Foodand DrugAdministration said for the first time Tuesday that menthol-flavored cigarettes appear to

Traci Oonaca ......................

pose a greater risk to public health than standard cigarettes, largely reaffirming the findings of an agency advisory committee two years ago and potentially laying the groundwork for tighter regulations in

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the future. In a153-page "preliminary scientific evaluation," the FDA

x

found that although there is "little evidence" to suggest that menthol cigarettes are more toxic than nonmenthol cigarettes, the mint flavor

of menthol masks the harshness of tobacco, making it easier to get addicted and harder to quit. — From wire reports

Silvia Izquierdo/The Associated Press

Catholics kneel Monday at portable confessionals set up inQuinta da Boa Vista park during World Youth Day events in Rio de Janeiro. Pope Francis is in Brazil on a seven-day visit meant to fan the fervor of the

faithful around the globe. Even though the pope's motorcade ended up stalled on a traffic-choked street and swarmed by thousands of faithful, Brazilian officials said Tues-

day they evaluated security for the pontiff's arrival in Rio as"positive."

ON

+~ —;"~o

The frenzied crowd surrounded the motorcade Monday afternoon-

scenes that alarmed someonlookers, although the popehimself seemed overjoyed with the raucous welcomeand kept his car window down. Francis later moved through the masses in an open-air vehicle. Early Tuesday, Brazilian security forces blamed each other for the

lapse, and noone took responsibility for the traffic fiasco, which began when the driver of the pope's car made a wrong turn. Later though, federal police, who are in charge of most of Francis'

security, took an upbeat tone. "The evaluation was positive, since there was no incident involving the pope or with any of the faithful," an emailed note read. — The Associated Press

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Investigation targets No.2 official at HomelandSecurity By Alicia A. Caldwell

to the inspector general's office, which said that the probe WASHINGTON — P r esi- is in its preliminary stage and dent Barack Obama's choice that it doesn't comment on the to be the No. 2 official at the specifics of investigations. Homeland Security D epartT he program, known a s ment is under investigation for EB-5, allows foreigners to get his role in helping a company visas if they invest $500,000 to run by a brother of former Sec- $1 million in projects or busiretary of State Hillary Clinnessesthat createjobs for U.S. ton, The Associated Press has citizens. The amount of the learned. investment required depends A lejandro M ayorkas, d i on the type of project. Invesrector of U.S. Citizenship and tors who are approved for the Immigration Services, is beprogram can become legal ing investigated for his role in permanent residents after two helping the company secure years and can later be eligible an international investor visa to become citizens. for a Chinese executive, acIf Mayorkas were confirmed cording to congressional ofas Homeland Security's depficials briefed on the investi- uty secretary, he p r obably gation. The officials spoke on would run the department unthe condition of a nonymity til a permanent replacement because they were not autho- was approved to take over for rized to release details of the departing S ecretary J a n et investigation. Napolitano. Mayorkas was named by The email to lawmakers said Homeland Security's Inspec- the primary complaint against tor General's Office as a target Mayorkas was that he helped in an investigation involving a financing company run by the foreigninvestor program Anthony Rodham, a brother run by USCIS, according to an of Hillary Rodham Clinton, to email sent to lawmakers late win approval for an investor Monday. visa, even after the application In that email, the IG's office was denied and an appeal was said, "At this point in our inves- rejected. tigation, we do not have any M ayorkas, a former U.S. atfindings of criminal miscon- torney in California, previously duct." The email did not spec- came under criticism for his inify any criminal allegations it volvement in the commutation might be investigating. by President Bill Clinton of the White House press secretary prison sentence of the son of a Jay Carney referred questions DemocraticParty donor. The Associated Press

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day

It's Wednesday, July 24, the 205th day of 2013. There are 160 days left in the year.

RESEARCH

STUDIES

HAPPENINGS

The elusive pill to mimic workouts

DetrOit —The federal judge overseeing the city's bankruptcy case holds a hearing to determine whether a lawsuit by

retired public employeescan block it.

By Gretchen Reynolds

o us candidates w on't d o . Wrinkles, for example, often have more to do with sun exposure than aging. Markers like age-related increases in blood pressure are similarly problematic, often confounded by f actors unrelated to

Two newly published studies investigate the enticing possibility that we might one day be able to gain the benefits of exercise by downing a pill, rather than by actually sweating. But while some of the researchholds out promise for an effective workout pill, there remains the question of whether such a move is wise. The more encouraging of the new studies, which appears this week in Nature Medicine,expands on a major study published last year in Nature. In that study, a team atthe Scripps Research Institute in Jupiter, Fla., reported that a compound they had created and injected into obese mice increased activation of a protein called REV-ERB, which is known to partially control animals' circadian rhythms and internal biological clocks. The injected animals lost weight, even on a high-fat diet, and improved their cholesterol profiles. Unexpectedly, the treated

aging.

mice also began using more

But recently r esearchers h ave identified some p a r ticularly good indicators of time's largely hidden toll on our bodies and how fast it's

oxygen through the day and expending about 5 percent more energy than untreated mice, even though they were not moving about more than the other animals. In fact, in most cases,they were more physically lazy and inactive than they had been before the injections. The drug, it seemed, was providing them with a workout, minus the effort. Intrigued, the Scripps scientists, in conjunction with researchersfrom the Pasteur Institute in France and other institutions, set out to see what their compound might be doing inside muscles to

the economy during visits to

Galesburg, III., andWarrensburg, Mo.

Biomarkers of age can help in the prediction and prevention of age-related diseases, drug discovery and forensics.

HISTORY Highlight:In1959, during a visit to Moscow, Vice President Richard Nixon engaged in

his famous "Kitchen Debate" with Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev. In 1783, Latin American revolutionary Simon Bolivar was

born in Caracas, Venezuela. In1862, Martin Van Buren, the eighth president of the United States, and the first to have

been born a U.S.citizen, died at age 79 in Kinderhook, N.Y., the town where he was born in1782.

In1866, Tennesseebecame the first state to be readmitted to the Union after the Civil War. In 1911, Yale University history

professor Hiram Bingham III found the "Lost City of the In-

cas," Machu Picchu, in Peru.

In1923, the Treaty of Lausanne, which settled the bound-

aries of modern Turkey,was

concluded in Switzerland. In1937, the state of Alabama

dropped chargesagainst four of the nine young black men accused of raping two white women in the "Scottsboro

Case." In1952, President Harry S.

Truman announced a settlement in a 53-day steel strike. In1969, the Apollo11 astronauts — two of whom had been the first men to set foot

on the moon —splashed down safely in the Pacific. In1974, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that President Richard Nixon had to turn

over subpoenaedWhite House tape recordings to the Water-

gate special prosecutor. In 1983, a two-run homer by

George Brett of theKansasCity Royals wasdisallowed and Brett called out after New York

YankeesmanagerBilly Martin pointed out there was too much pine tar on Brett's bat. American

League president LeeMacPhail later reinstated the home run.

The gamewasre-completed Aug. 18, 1983, with the Royals beating the Yankees, 5-4. In1998, a gunman burst into the U.S. Capitol, killing two po-

lice officers before being shot and captured. (The shooter, Russell Eugene Weston Jr., is

being held in afederal mental facility.) In2002, nine coal miners became trapped in aflooded tunnel of the Quecreek Mine

in western Pennsylvania; the story ended happily 77 hours later with the rescue of all nine.

Ten years ago: TheHouseand Senate intelligence committees issued their final report on the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, citing

countless blunders, oversights and miscalculations that prevented authorities from stop-

ping the attackers. Five yearsago:Ford Motor Co. posted the worst quarterly performance in its history, losing $8.67 billion.

One year ago:In his first foreign policy speech since emerging as the likely Republican presidential nominee, Mitt

Romney called for an independent investigation into claims the White House had leaked

national security information for President Barack Obama's political gain; the White House

replied that the president"has made abundantly clear that he

has no tolerance for leaks."

BIRTHDAYS Comedian Gallagher is 67. Movie director GusVanSant is 61. Actress-singer Kristin Chenoweth is 45. Actress Rose

Byrne is 34. Actress Anna Paquin is 31. — From wire reports

provide this ersatz exercise. They knew that their drug increased the potency of the REV-ERB protein, but no one yet knew what REV-ERB actually does in muscles. So

New York Times News Service

ECOnamy —President Barack Obamadiscusses

By David Stipp New York Times News Service

How fast are you aging'? Don't look to online calculators of "biological age" for an answer. Those focus mainly on risk factors for diseases, and say little about normal aging, the slow, mysterious process that turns children to

codgers. In fact, scientists are still hunting for biological markers of age that reliably register how fast the process is

unfolding. Seemingly obvi-

increasing. Developing an

they began by developing a strain of mice that could not e xpress very much of t h e protein in their muscle cells. Those animals proved to be anti-athletes. One of the hallmarks ofregular aerobic exercise is that in muscles, it increases the number and vigor of the mitochondria, the cellular structures that help t o g e n erate energy while consuming oxygen. But these animals' muscles c ontained w o e fully fe w mitochondria. As a result, the animals had diminished endurance, with a maximal oxygen capacity about 60 percent lower than normaL They reached exhaustion on treadmill testing long before their unaffected labmates. But when, in a separate part of the experiment, scientists added their compound to isolated muscle cells from the deficient mice, the cells began pumping out far more REV-ERB. Those cells, subsequently, began c reating large numbers of new mitochondria and strengthening the existing ones. Finally, the scientists injected their compound into sedentary mice, stimulating t heir production of R E V ERB beyond what would be considered typical. W h en they set the sedentary mice loose on l i t tle t r eadmills, they ran "significantly longer both in time and distance" than untreated animals, the authors wrote, even though they had not been training beforehand.

"easy way to measure biological age will have a wide array of applications in prediction and prevention of age-related diseases, drug discovery and forensics," said Dr. Kang Zhang, f o u nding d i r e ctor of the Institute for Genomic Medicine at the University of California, San Diego. Alex Nabaum / New YorkTimes News Service The quest for truly reveal- Researchers have identified various markers, from contrast sensiing biomarkers of aging could tivity to a molecular aging clock, in our genomes whose speed can tell us a lot about our current be measured via blood testing. and future health. Tracking these indexes beforeand after starting a new diet or ex- colleagues in San Diego re- aging," said Trey Ideker, the erciseprogram, for instance, ported that a kind of molecu- chief of genetics at UCSD and might show you whether it lar aging clock is embedded a co-author of the study with • • 0 • • was actually pushing off your in our genomes whose speed Zhang. "But this opens the decline and fall. Aging-rate can be measured via blood door to an exciting new aptests could h el p s c ientists testing. The moving parts of proach" tothe problem. evaluate possible anti-aging the clock consist of chemical If this continuing research I I I • compounds in humans with- tags on DNA molecules that pans out, aging-rate tests may out prohibitively long studies. control whether genes are ac- someday be standard in antive in cells. The researchers nual physicals, and tracking Defining the search found that the patterns of the the results over time would Come in and enjoy a wonderful chef-prepared Experts on aging gener- tags, called epigenetic mark- offer unprecedented insights summer buffet with prime rib. All proceeds will ally agree t hat a cceptable ers, predictably change with on health risks. But such tests biomarkers of aging should age. In a study published in also may well raise fractious go directly to the Bend Senior Center. f oretell th e r e m aining l i f e January in Molecular Cell, the privacy an d s o cial e q uity span of a middle-aged person scientists scrutinized around issues. more accuratelythan chrono- 485,000 ofthese tags in blood Insurers m i gh t d e m and logical ag e d o es. F urther, cells of 656 people ages 19 to that customers take them in they should offer a consistent 101. Some 70,387 tags were order to set premiums for life picture of biological age, said predictive of c h r onological and health care policies. The Dr. Richard Miller, a geronage, the scientists found. testsmay also reveal how factologist at the University of Collectively these tags spell tors like exposure to environMichigan: "Do those 50-year- out a "signature for age" that mental toxins and the stress olds with the best retention of is "largely not changed by dis- of job loss accelerate aging, immune function also tend to ease or ethnic background," and by how much — fodder have the least cataracts, good said Ronald K ohanski, an for lawsuits. sense of smell, least osteopo- expert on biomarkers of agSome of us will be relativeg OL I Dg ) rosis,lowest blood pressure ing at the National Institute ly short-lived, fast-aging "less s .EYI A s hAEN T and best memory'?" on Aging. That means these fortunate," and others will be P roposed biomarkers o f markers may be less muddied long-lived, slow-aging "more aging haven't yet c onvincby confounders than other fortunates," predicted John ingly cleared these hurdles, factors tied to aging. Davis, a philosophy professor I ndependent Ret i r e m ent L i v i n g he added. But some provocaat California State University, Findings tively telling ones have come Fullerton. And age discrimi1460 NE 27th, Bend, OR 97701 ~ 541-595-3779 to light. Of the markers, 71 most nation will gain an entirely stonelodgeretirement.com In a 2010 study, Miller and indicative o f c h r onological new meaning. 6 ©2013 HARVEST MANAGEMENT SUB LLC 20153 colleagues analyzed m ediage were selectedto measure cal records of 4,097 women, the speed atwhich people are collected over two d ecades growing old. That was calbeginning when they were culated by comparing a subin their 60s, to sift out 13 fac- ject's epigenetic tags to the tors that best predicted funorm for his or her age — a ture mortality from different 40-year-old w h ose p a ttern causes. closely resembled the typical Oddly, contrast s ensitivone for 50-year-olds, for exity — as measured by a test ample, would apparently be of the eye's ability to pick out aging 25 percentfaster than very lightly shaded images normal. on white backgrounds — was Already t h e mol e cular among the most predictive of clock has yielded interesting the 377 factorsevaluated, as findings. Men appear to age ~~ Cash , was the number of rapid step- on average 4 percent faster Pg Pg Yosksvi AER3311WAW AMV1150VAW ups on a low platform that the than women, the scientists Peoe A8TCNWFAW ADB1100AWW subjects could complete in have found, which may large10 seconds. Taken together, ly explain why women's life the 13 factors "characterize expectancy exceeds men's by the clinical presentation of about 6 percent worldwide. healthy aging" in older wom- And the research has shed inen, the study concluded. triguing light on cancer: The Big-city selection, home-town friendliness! More recently, novel tech- clock indicated that t u mor nologies t ha t c a n de t e ct cells have aged, on average, thousands of age-associated 40 percentmore than normal molecular changes in c ells cells taken from th e same have come to the fore in the patients. 571BNEAzure, Hwy20, east of Pilot Butte "We're still far from havbiomarker hunt. wwwj ohnsonbrotherstv.com This year Zhang and his ing a diagnostic for biological •

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TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

IN FOCUS:PRESERVATION

K9

Lacking funds,the search for Lincolnpaperscould end

Continued from A1 McCurdy was "initially bitten on the left arm and after being subdued on the ground, the police dog let go of his arm and latched on to the right side of his head and tore his right ear off," the tort claim states. "The police dog did not respond to the commands of the police officers and had to be physically removed from Mr. McCurdy." According to a search warrant that was returned on April 15, McCurdy was living in a home on Barton Crossing Way in Bend that was searched under the suspicion that drugs were beingmanufactured and sold there. In the search warrant affidavit McCurdy was described by a criminal informant as being a large-scale heroin dealer, and others living in the home were described asselling heroin. The affidavit states McCurdy has been previously convicted of crimes in Teton County, Wyo., and Phoenix. Lt. Chris Carney said the city

The Washington Post W ASHINGTON — P a r ris Griffith wanted President Lincoln to know that his son was a good and true soldier and should not be executed for mutiny. Union Sgt. Thomas Griffith, and others in his company, had refused to serve under a lieutenant they had not elected — having been promised on enlistment they could elect their commanders. The younger Griffith was "as fine a man as lives," his father wrote the president in 1863. He had voted for Lincoln and spent eight months as a prisoner of war. Now, "because he desired a voice in selecting his officers, he must be shot." David Gerleman, assistant editor of the Papers of Abraham Lincoln, came upon this stark Civil War vignette last week at the National Archives. It is one of thousands of Lincoln-related documents, large and small, that the project has been collecting there since 2006. B ut as th e c ountry a p proaches the 150th anniversary of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address in N ovember, the

Dogs Continued from A1 T he experiment was d e signed to explore the dog's imitative abilities, not to measure how long Philip's memory lasted; but his owner used Philip's skill to teach him how to do new, useful behaviors, such as fetching objects or putting things away.

Through the eyes of a dog Despite Philip's abilities, "nobody really cared, or saw that it could be useful for investigating how dogslearn or see their world," says Adam Miklosi, a behavioral ethologist at Eotvos Lorand University in Budapest who was part of Topal's team. And in 2009, another team concluded that dogs were only able to correctly imitate if there was no more than a five-second delay between watching the action and repeating it. With such a short retention span, dogs' vaunted imitation skills seemed useless. But Miklosi didn't fully accept this; he thought that the experiment needed to be adjusted by teaching the dogs more explicitly. There are two b asic commands th e d o gs must learn: "Do as I do," which means they need to pay attention to what is being demonstrated. The second command, "Do it," requires the dog to imitate what they've seen. What was missing was also a command thatthe dog needed to wait before performing the imitation. An Italian dog trainer and graduate student at Eotvos Lorand, Claudia Fugazza, agreed and figured out a new method. "We wanted to see if dogs can do 'deferred imitation,'" Fugazza explains. "So, they needed to learn that they also had to wait." Deferred imitation is considered a sophisticated cognitive skill, because it requires an individual to recall an action after a delay of one minute or more — something that is possible only if the individual has retained a mental representation of the action. Fugazza and Miklosi worked with eight adult pet dogs that ranged inage from 2 to 10 years old and their owners. The canines were all females of various breeds — border collies, a Yorkshire terrier, a Shetland sheepdog, a Czechoslovakian wolfdog, and one mixed breed. The owners trained their dogs using the "Do as I do" method. For instance, an owner would tell her dog to "Stay," and then command, "Do as I do," whereupon the owner might w alk around a traffic cone, or put herhead in a bucket placed on the ground, or ring a bell suspended from a bar. After returning to her dog, the owner would wait five seconds, and then command, "Do it!" The dog was expected to copy her owner's behavior. To see how long the dogs retained the memory, the owners were then asked to add another step to the test. After saying "Do it!" they walked their pets behind a screen 14 meters away that hid the cone or other ex-

Katherine Frey/The Washington Post

A document at the National Archives shows Abraham Lincoln's approval and signature. A project that started in 2006 to collect Lincolnpapers could soon come toan end. project's work at the Archives might soon end. Gerleman and Daniel Stowell, the Papers director, said last week that, barring new funding, money for their Archives research will run out in June of next year, and their work there could stop well before then. The overall project, based at th e A b r aham L i n coln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield, Ill., would continue. But the digging in the Archives, where the vast majority o f L i n coln d ocuments are located, would be

suspended.

perimental objects, so that the animals wouldn't continue to look at them. Then they waited for up to 30 seconds before returning to the starting position. "We just kept slowly increasing the time between the demonstration and the 'Do it!' command," Fugazza explains. Once the dogs could imitate the behavior twice in a row after waiting for 30 seconds, they were ready for the test-

ing phase. Each dog was given 19 tests in eight different conditions, including copying a familiar action, a novel action and a distracting action. All the dogs were shown the same novel action to imitate: Each one watched her owner enter a wooden box. This time, they were expected to wait behind the screen for one full minute before returning to the starting position and being told "Do it!" For the distracting action tests, the dogs watched the owner do something they had seen before. Again, they were led behind the screen, but this time commanded to lie dovm, or fetch a ball. The waiting periods during these sessions lasted from 30 seconds to four minutes.

Doggy smarts The dogs endured their longest breaksafter watching a familiar action — with times varying from 24 seconds to 10 minutes. "They can wait even longer," Fugazza says, "but we really don't expect the owners to stay behind the screen for an hour." The dogs also showed their smarts by repeating the action that they'd witnessed, even when a person other than the demonstrator and who did not know which action the dog was expected to copy gave the "Do it!" command. All the dogs completed 18 trials, scor-

Stowell said a five-year, $1.4 million charitable grant ran out last month, and the project's Illinois state funding has been more than halved. The Papers, which has an annual budget of$775,000 to gather all things Lincoln, gets funding from federal and other private sources, he said, which make uponly about 60percent of its budget. "We need to replace that (charitable) funding... and the now-missing portion of our state funding," Stowell said. If not, "we would have to say come June of next year, 'We can't go on.'"

ing almost perfect marks; six dogs made one error each, one dog made two, and another made six mistakes, the team reports this month in Animal Cognition. "The statistical results are very robust," Fugazza says, "and they show the dogs can do deferred imitation." This suggests, she adds, that dogs have declarative memory — long-term memory about facts and events that can be consciouslyrecalled. Until now, only humans have been shown to have this type of memory. "It is a very nice demonstration of deferred imitation in dogs," says Frans de Waal, a primatologist at Emory University in Atlanta who suggests that now that this ability has been found in our canid pals, it's likely to be found in many other animals. Still, the discovery will likely be a surprise to even the most experienced dog trainers, says Brian Hare, a comparative psychologist at Duke University. "I doubt that they would have predicted that dogs can learn new actions by observing what a human does, remembering the actions, and then repeating those actions, after translating them to their

own doggy body plan." Fugazza and Miklosi hope that trainers, especially those teaching guide and o t her working dogs, take advantage of their willingness to learn by watching our actions. "They do it so naturally,

because dogs are predisposed to learn socially from us," Miklosi says. He and Fugazza advise dog-owners and trainers to think of useful actions for dogs to copy, such as fetching the mail from the mailbox, carrying a tool to the garden, or better yet on these hot sum-

mer days, grabbing a beer for Dad from the fridge.

Wyden Continued from A1 While the PRISM program, which collects Internet communications, has been effective, the collection of phone metadata has not produced any unique intelligence that was not available to the government through less intrusive methods, he said. M oreover, once collected,the data is ripe for abuse that will violate Americans' right to privacy, Wyden said. "If you know who someone calls, when they called, where they called from and how long they talked, you lay bare the personal lives of law-abiding Americans to the scrutiny of government bureaucrats and outside contractors," he said. Tuesday's remarks were the first time Wyden, a longtime critic of the government's interpretation and application of what he calls "secret law" conducted outside of public scrutiny, has discussedatlengthsurveillance and privacy since last month's bombshell leaks. In June, Edward Snowden, a former NSA employee and contractor, disdosed classified documents confirming the existence of widespread do-

mestic spyingprograms. Wyden noted that Senate confidentiality rules previously prevented him from discussing his objections in detail. For years, often in conjunction with Intelligence Committee member and Colorado Democrat Mark Udall, Wyden has tried to check inaccurate descriptions of the way secret law is interpreted in public by senior administration officials. He's had to do so without disclosing the nature of the classified programs. The series of misleading and sometimes false statements by public officials is "indicative of a much larger culture of misinformation" within the intelligence community, which desperately wants to hold onto the surveillance authorities it currently has, he said. "The public was not just kept in the dark about the Patriot Act and other secret authorities. The public was actively misled," he said. At a public hearing in March, James Clapper,the director of National Intelligence, said under oath that the United States does "not wittingly" collect data on millions or hundreds of millions

and police department could not comment on pending litigation, but noted the dog in question is Zlatan, an 8-year-old Belgian Malanois whose handler is Officer Erick Supplee. Zlatan is originally from the Netherlands and works mostly with Dutch commands, according to previous reports from The Bulletin. According to th e O regon Judicial Information Network, after the April arrest McCurdy was charged withtwo counts of attemptingto elude police, three counts ofrecklessly endangering another person, one count each ofreckless driving, possession of methamphetamine and delivery of heroin. D eschutes County c h i ef deputy district attorney Mary Anderson said a felony charge of attempting to elude police means a marked patrol vehicle provided an audible or v i sible signal to stop, and a misdemeanor attempt to elude means McCurdy allegedly got out of his vehicle after he'd been given that signal and attempted to

flee on foot. She said the three counts of reckless endangerment referto another person and two locations. She said she could not provide more information because McCurdy has notbeen sentenced and the case is therefore not yet adjudicated. On April 26, McCurdy entered an Alford plea to the three reckless endangering charges and the delivery of heroin. An Alford plea means he doesn't admit guilt but admits there is enough evidence to convict him. McCurdy was expected to be sentenced on June 4, but failed to appear at his sentencing. There is a bench warrant out for his arrest. Shack said she has not yet receivedany medical records related to the incident and plans to evaluate his claim once she receives those. "We're looking into all the facts leading up to this terrible event," she said. "We're checking tosee if proper procedures were followed."

of Americans. Clapper later said he felt this was the "least untruthful" answer he could give. Last year, Gen. Keith Alexander, who heads the NSA, told a group of computer hackers that the government does not have dossiers on millions of Americans. He also said during public remarks at the American Enterprise Institute that "we don't hold data on U.S. citizens." Wyden called that remark "one of the most false statements ever made about domestic surveillance." In the meantime, the government's authority to collect information on law-abiding Americans is "essentially limitless," Wyden said. The term"business record" has been interpreted so broadly it could include medical records,financial records and credit card purchases, he said. "They could use this authority, for example, to develop a database of gun owners, or readers ofbooks and magazines that are deemed subversive," he said. And it would be foolish to expect the current checks built into the system, including the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, t o a d equately protectAmericans' privacy, he said. Only one side — the government — appearsbefore the court, which would be fine if it were issuing routine warrants, but is highly unusual for a body conducting major legal and constitutional analyses, he said. "I know of no other court in America that strays so far from the adversarial process that has been partofAmerica for centuries,"Wyden said."Seniorpolicy makers and federal judges have deferred again and again to the intelligence agencies to decide what surveillance authorities they need." Thanks to technological advances, smartphones can be turned intophonebugs, listening

devices, location trackers and hiddencameras,he said,before envisioning a future that sounds like something from a movie. "Without adequate protections built into the law, there's no w ay that Americans can everbe sure that the government isn't going to interpret its authorities more and more broadly year after year until the idea of a telescreen monitoring your every move turns from dystopia to reality," Wyden said. John Podesta, the Center for American Progress'chairman and counselor who also served as President Clinton's fourth chief of staff, introduced Wyden. Unlike the controversy surrounding the Bush administration's warrantless wiretap program, revealed by the New York Times in 2006, the current imbroglio centers on legal activities, he said. "Surveillance of an unprecedented scale is not just technologically possible, but it's financially feasible for the first time," Podesta said. He called upon President BarackObamato appoint apresidential commission, like those that followed Pearl Harbor and 9/ll, to make recommendations for updatingthe legal framework for surveillance while protecting Americans'privacy rights.

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A S

Tablets Continued from A1 Education Week reported on a study by I n teractive Educational Systems D esign Inc. that found school district technology officials

o verwhelmingly

pre f e r

iPads to other devices for digital instruction. Out of 27 Bend-La Pine schools, 18 submitted a digital conversion proposal to a panel composed of school board members and district staff. Shay M i k alson, the district's executive director of curriculum and instructional technology, said the proposals varied in their approach to implementing the conversion. The five p r oposals selected were the most highly scored by the selection committee, though M i k a lson said he was "very impressed with al l t h e a p p lications we received." The proposals, limited to f iv e p ages in length, addressed the school's vision and goals, staff development plan, student expectations, support plan for f aculty an d s t udents and timeline. There is also the potential that schools further down t he list could still b e i n volved in the pilot.

"I've engaged in one or

two conversations with private donors that would allow us to expand this project," Superintendent Ron Wilkinson said. M i k alson said this expansion could be finalized and announced by August. Wilkinson estimates the total cost o f i m p lementation at an average-size elementary school is between $125,000 and $150,000. The cost depends on the number of students, as the district plans to spend $379 on each iPad and $90 for digital content per student, Mikalson said. Around 2,400 students will be involved in the pilot. Initially, the school considered a pilot that would have involved 3,500 students. The lower number was decided on in part because ifthe program does not succeed,the number of devices purchased would

still be needed for f uture testing capabilities. According to M i k a lson, an eventual s c hool-wide digital conversion program would be revenue neutral, as it would redirect funds from textbooks and other areas. "We'll be spending dollars on curricular resources no matter what," Mikalson said. "With digital conversion, we'd be repurposing that money to go toward a digital form instead of a paper form." Pilot s c hools w i l l be evaluated not only on how much students learn, but on how iPads change the r ole of the student in t h e classroom. The hope is that students will be more active in the learning experience by moving at their own pace through material on their own device. Teachers, in turn, will have easy access toperformance data on each student, facilitating their ability to offer individualized feedback. District o f f i cials a r g ue that digital conversion will help close the achievement gap between low- and highincome students. Students will be able to take their iPads home, allowing lowincome students to spend as much time with technology as high-income s t udents w ho may ow n a s i m i l ar device. Mikalson stressed how continuous access to an iPad will help all district students a c hieve d i g i t al literacy. The district w il l e v aluate the success of t h ese programs b e f or e d e c i ding on a digital conversion project that would involve all schools, regardless of w hether t hey a p plied t o be pilots. At a board meeting Tuesday, board member Nori Juba questioned why a middle school was not selected to host a pilot program, raising concerns about the effectiveness of a test cohort composed of only elementary and high schools. Mikalson responded that no middle school application reached the top of the list. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com

Workers Continued from A1 But the state of Virginia, like some other employers around the country that capped parttimers' hours in anticipation of the initial deadline, has no plans to abandon its new 29hour-a-week limit. The impact on Pace and thousands of other workers in Virginia is an unintended consequence of the health law, which, as the most sweeping socialprogram in decades, is beginning toreshape aspects of American life. Under the law, companies with 50 or more workers will be required to provide health insurance to all their full-time employees, or face significant fines. The decision to delay that requirementwas welcomed by business groups, which said companies needed moretime to adapt to the law. But the delay has emboldened the law's critics, who say it is evidence the statute is ill-conceived and should be repealed. A new Washington PostABC News poll f i nds t hat the country, which remains deeply divided about the law, is similarly split about the delay in the employer requirement. Fifty-one percent say they support the delay, while 45 percent say they do not. The public is also divided over whether the setback means the law is fatally flawed. The poll, taken at a time of h eightened criticism of t h e law, also finds support has weakened among Democrats since last year. Just under six in 10 Democrats say they support the law, the lowest point for Post-ABC surveys since the law was passed in 2010. When the law was written, advocates hoped the employer requirement would help reduce the ranks of the uninsured. Some employers have indeed said they would offer insurance to additional workers, but others have gone in the opposite direction. Virginia's situation provides a good lens on why. The state has more than 37,000 parttime, hourly w age employees, with as many as 10,000 working more than 30 hours a week. Offering coverage to those workers, who include

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Matt McClain I The Washington Post

For Northern Virginia Community College music professor Kevin Pace, health-care reform could have meant better health insurance. Instead, it produced a pay cut. The state of Virginia cut his hours this spring to avoid a Jan. 1 requirement that all full-time workers be offered health insurance. Pace now supplements his income by giving guitar lessons in his Alexandria, Va., home. nurses, park rangers and adjunct professors, would have been prohibitively expensive, state officials said, costing as much as $110 million. "It was all about the money," said Sara Redding Wilson, director of Virginia's Department of H u man Resources Management. "If we could cover everyone, we would." It is unclear how many companies have already cut staffing hours this year in anticipation of the law. Mercer, a human relations consulting firm that regularly queries public and private entities, found that 12 percent of employers in a survey last year planned to cut staff hours to avoid a jump in costs under the new rules. However, the numbers are higher for the retail and hosp itality i n dustries, as w e l l as for government, because those employers often rely on a largenumber of part-timers but do not already offer them benefits, the firm said. Obama administration officials say there is no evidence that large numbers of businesses are cutting their workers' hours this year. Rather, they say, Bureau of Labor Statistics numbers suggest fulltime hiring has grown despite the employer mandate. "We are seeing no systematic evidence that the Affordable Care Act is having an adverse impact on job growth or the number of hours employees are w orking," said Alan Krueger, chairman of

week," said Timothy Jost, a health policy expert and consumer advocate. Now, business groups and unions are urging Congress to change the rule to define full time as 40 hours, but they face long odds, given both parties' reluctance to tinker with the law. Some Democratic-leaning communities, including Dearborn, Mich., and Long Beach, Calif., have imposed caps on part-time workers to keep them below the30-hour threshold. Officials in U t ah's Granite School District, which includes about 70,000students in the Salt Lake City area, said their new policy limiting parttimers to 29 hours per week affected about 1,200 workers. Extending benefits to all of them would have cost the district $14 million, officials estimated. The biggest impact was felt by substitute teachers, said Gayleen Gandy, president of the school board. The best ones, she said, regularly work more than 30 hours per week. The administration's delay is unlikely to cause the district to review the new cap on hours. "From what I u nderstood, the change simply extended the implementation timeline," she said. "That really doesn't change anything about what we decided. It just put us ahead of the game for next year." Pace, the music professor, said it will be a challenge to make ends meet, even with the odd jobs he does to supplement his college income, which has been cut to $17,000 a year. He gives bassand guitar lessons in his Alexandria, Va., home,

the White House Council of Economic Advisors, adding that "the law is helping make health i n surance c overage more affordable, which supports job growth." W hile a n u mber o f p r i vate businesses cut worker hours this year because of the health-care law, they have been loathe to do it because of fears of public blowback, said Jared Pope, a Texas consultant whose clients include local governments and businesses. Governments havebeen more open because they must make their decisions publicly, he sa>d. He estimated that seven of his 62 clients had capped hours and another 18 were considering it. Those that took the difficult step of curbing part-time hours are not likely to reverse course, only to have to reinstate the limit next year, plays live gigs around the area he said. and runs a nonprofit called "They kind o f s omewhat the D .C. J azz C o mposers (ticked) people off already," he Collective. said. "They don't want to undo He argues that the state it and become a good guy now, should have recognized the only to do it all over again to contribution of workers like be the bad guy." himself and coughed up the Part of the dilemma lies in extra money to offer insurthe definition of " f ull-time," ance. But since that didn't hapwhich diverges from the in- pen, he said, he would have dustry standard of 40 hours preferred tokeep the status per week. Advocates say the quo, rather than to end up with 30-hour bar was supposed to reduced hours and an $8,000 discourage employers from pay cut. "We treat this as our job," simply shaving a few minutes off a full-time worker's hours said Pace, 34. "We devote all of to skirt the law. But it turns our time and love and hours to out that "an awful lot of peo- teaching our adjunct classes. ple work less than 40 hours a This isn't right on any level."

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A6 T H E BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

IN FOCUS: LEGACY OF MISERY

4 eca esa erwar,A entoran esti rava in Vietnamese By Drew Brown McClatchy Foreign Staff

Blameand cover?Agent Orange makers, shielded by courts, point back to the feds

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DA NANG, Vietnam — In many ways, Nguyen Thi Ly is just like any other 12-year-old girl. She has a lovely smile and is quick to laugh. She wants to be a teacher when she grows

By Drew Brown McClatchy Foreign Staff

DA NANG, Vietnam — James Clary was a young Air Force officer and scientist who designed the spray tank for the C-123 cargo

up. She enjoys skipping rope when she plays. But Ly is also very different from otherchildren. Her head is severely misshapen. Her eyes are unnaturally far apart and permanently askew. She's been hospitalized with numerous ailments since her birth. Her mother, 43-year-old Le Thi Thu, has similar deformities and health disorders. Neither of them has ever set foot on a battlefield, but they're both casualties of war. Le and her daughter are second- and third-generation victims of dioxin exposure, the result of the U.S. military's use of Agent Orange during the Vietnam War, when the U.S. Air Force sprayed more than 20 million gallons of Agent Orange and otherherbicides over parts of southern Vietnam and along the borders of n e ighboring Laos and Cambodia. The herbicides were contaminated with dioxin, a deadly compound that remainstoxicfor decades and causesbirth defects,cancerand other illnesses. To this day, dioxin continues to poison the land and the people. The United States has never accepted responsibilityfor these victims — it denies that Agent Orange is responsible for diseases among Vietnamese that are accepted as Agent Orangecaused among Americanveterans — and it's unclear when this chain of misery will end. On T h u rsday, P r esident Barack Obama will meet with Vietnamese PresidentTruong Tan Sang at the White House, only the third meeting between c hief executives of the t w o countries since Vietnam and the United States established diplomatic relations in 1995. The two c ountries share many contemporary concerns. The White House says Obama plans to discuss cooperation on regional issues and trade, plus other U.S. priorities such as climate change and human rights. The two countries share a strong common interest in countering China, which has become increasingly assertive over potentially oil-rich areas of the South China Sea.

planes that dispensedAgent Orangeandother herbicides during the Vietnam War. Thirteen years after the conflict ended, with serious concerns

being raised in Congress about the effects of defoliants on veterans' health, Clary dropped a startling bombshell: Military scientists had known that herbicides shipped to Vietnam were

contaminated with dioxin and had"the potential for damage" to human health.

"However, becausethe material was to beused onthe 'enemy,' none of us wereoverly concerned," Clary wrote to then-Sen. Tom Daschle, D-S.D. "We never considered a scenario in which our own personnel would become contaminated with the herbicide."

Agent Orangewas produced primarily by the Monsanto Corp.

Drew Brown / McClatctty Foreign Staff

Nguyen Thi Ly, 12, a third-generation Agent Orange victim, skips rope in her village south of Da Nang, Vietnam. The Vietnam Red Cross estimates that 3 million Vietnamese have been affected by dioxin exposure because of Agent Orange, including at least150,000 people born with severe birth defects since the war ended in1975. far has amounted to a pittance. According to the U.S. Embassy in Hanoi, only $11 million of the $61.4 million that Congress has allocated since 2007 — a year after then-President George W. Bush pledged to help clean up contaminated areas — has been earmarked for public health programs in Vietnam.

It's unclear how much Congress is willing to do. Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., introduced a bill last month that would commit the United States to cleaning up all remaining sites and would provide assistance to help Vietnam give better health care and other resources to Agent Orange victims. An identical bill introduced two years ago failed to make it out of committee. Searcy, the former intelligence analyst who lives in Hanoi, points out that after nearly 40 years,Vietnam's expectations of the United States remain modest. "The Vietnamese have never demanded that the U.S. do for the Vietnamese what they've done for U.S. veterans," he said. "But the Vietnamese have left the door open to do what's fair." He added: "I think it's possible to bring some closure to this within the next decade."

in Vietnam as an intelligence analyst during the war and has lived in Hanoi since 1998, heading up a project to clear battlefields of unexploded ordnance, which also continues to kill and maim Vietnamese. "It's a glaring disconnect, and it's embarrassing because the whole world can see it." U.S. officials have long held, however, that there's no proof that Agent Orange is to blame for the same diseases and birth defects in Vietnam. "Few independent studies have been conducted in Vietnam to assess possible health effects on the local population," said Chris Hodges, a spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in Hanoi. "The lack of validated data and scientific review makes it difficult to estimate accurately the number of actual or potentially affected people or the extent of related health effects."

'Hypocrisy' U.S. officials caution that the money is to help people with disabilities "regardless of cause," and isn't specifically for Agent Orange victims. This semantic sleight of hand outrages many American veterans of the war, who say the United States has a moral obligation to help Vietnamese victims of Agent

Orange, just as sick and dying U.S. veterans have received government help for the last twodecades. "There's a hypocrisy there," says Chuck Searcy, who served

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Seeking more from U.S. Many Vietnamese say it's time for the United States to do more to address the issue of Agent Orange and its victims, so that the last tragic chapter of the Vietnam War finally can be closed. "During the war, we were hostile, but after the war ended, we normalized our relations and are nowbuilding a strategic partnership between Vietnam and the United States," said retired Col. Thai Thanh Hung, the chairman of the 16,500-member Da Nang Veterans Association. "We no longer have hatred towards the Americans and the U.S. government, but we want this one lingering and remainingissueto be addressed, which is that the United States help solve the Agent Orange and dioxin problem. That's why we're keeping an eye on this issue, to see if the United States is really interested in healing the wounds or not." The most significant event to date occurred last August — 37 years after the war ended — when U.S. contractors began a project to remove dioxin from 47 acres of contaminated soil at the Da Nang International Airport, which was one of the largest U.S. bases during the war. The $84 million effort, which is expected to take until the end of 2016 to complete, has been hailed as an important milestone in U.S.-Vietnamese relations. The airport is one of the most heavily contaminated areas in the world, with dioxin levels measuring more than 365 times the acceptable limits set by the United States and other industrialized countries. Observers say that while the projectrepresents a long overdue first step, more work needs tobe done. Morethantwo dozen other known or potential dioxin "hot spots" have been identified at former U.S. bases. Also left unresolved is the thorny issue of how best to help Vietnamese who've been sickened and disabled because of Agent Orange and dioxin exposure. U.S. aidfor these people so

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6

©

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

BRIEFING

STAGECOACH FIRE

Residents of Bend must now send their utility payments to a

post office box in Seattle. There are two rea-

sons for the change. The city previously paid Bank of the Cas-

cades to process the payments, butthebank stopped offering this service, said city Budget

and Support Services Manager SharonWojda. Bank of the Cascades began using acompany called Retail Lockbox Inc. in Seattle to pro-

cess payments, and the city also switched to Retail Lockbox Inc. in

March. The company used a courier to pick up the payments from the city's post office box in Bend and send them overnight to Seattle. However, after the U.S.

Postal Service closed the Bend mail processing center earlier this year, it tooktoo long for

payments to travel to

the Portland processing center and back to the

city's local post office box, Wojda said. As a

result, the city rented a

post office box in Seattle, so the payments travel directly to the pro-

cessing company.

Man extradited from Mexico

Principal a rsonremains

anc ar e wi

Utility payments now go toSeattle

By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

A La Pine man is charged with arson for allegedly leaving behind a smoldering campfire Monday that later escaped its ring

and became the

(

330-acre Stagecoach Fire, authorities said f Tuesday. Kelly Jera P arke r Parker, 30, was arraigned Tuesday on charges offirst-degree arson and reckless burning, said Klamath County Sheriff's Cpl. Brian Bryson. He said Parker started a fire for warmth and cooking Sunday night with his girlfriend. She

has not been charged in the case. "He's the one that lit the fire," Bryson said. Parker was arrested Monday night and was being held on $25,000 bail Tuesday evening at the Klamath County jail, officials there said. The jail listed an address in the Antelope Meadows subdivision for Parker, but Bryson said he wasn't living there. Parker and his girlfriend had been staying in a camp trailer on land overseen by the Bureau of Land Management south of La Pine for about two weeks, Bryson sald. SeeStagecoach/B5

Blaze continues tospread By Branden Andersen The Bulletin

The Sunnyside Turnoff Fire, located onthe Warm Springs Indian Reservation, expanded on Tuesday northeast near the west bank of the Deschutes River and northwest into the Mutton Mountains, according to Oregon Incident Management Team Four fire information officer Bill Queen.

on paid leave By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin

Joe Khhe /The Bulletin

Rogue River Hot Shots crew membersNick Foey, left, and Cole Siemion work to mop up hot spots along the dozer line of the Stagecoach Fire north of Gilchrist on Tuesday. As of Tuesday evening, the fire had spread to 330 acres and was 10 percent contained. The blazewas determined to be human-caused.

Fire updates

SUNNYSIDE TURNOFF FIRE

Queen said the incident management team was unable to get an accurate reading on the fire's growth Tuesday evening, but said it was larger than the 22,320 acres reported Tuesday morning. He said the fire was 40 percent contained with 529 firefighters and other resourcesdispatched to the area Tuesday night. SeeSunnyside/B5

For the most up-to-date information, visit bendbulletin.com.

Fire statuses as ofTuesdaymorning: 1. Stagecoach • Area: 300 acres; 0.47 square mlies

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• Threatened structures 150

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• Containment: 10%

• Cause: Human 2.S nn s'de

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• Cause: Human

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A Portland manfacing sexabusecharges in Deschutes County

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was arrested last week in Reynosa, Mexico,and will be transported to Bend to await trial, according to Lt. Chris Carney withthe Bend Police

Department. Jeremy LeeShaw,

ttl'

34, is charged with18

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encouragement of child

sex abuse —achild pornography crime. The alleged incidents happened in 2011. A war-

rant was issuedfor his arrest in January 2013.

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transported for safety

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reasons," Carneysaid. Shaw wasarrested in a joint effort with the FBI and the U.S. Border

Patrol, Carneysaid. He is being held at the Hidalgo County Jail in Texas in

preparation for transport.

,gt

— From staff reports

STATE NEWS

A4+,'„, "

• Owls:Wildlife officials

' . .

mtjHjjj$w~

will start killing one

'

species to protect another. Story on B6 Roh Kerr i The Bulletin

Underpass detour The Third Street

Taylor Towell, 7, of Antelope, rests on her calf at the Jefferson County Fairgrounds in Madras on Tuesday. Fair preparations were in full swing as fair rides and games were assembled and the

underpass will be closed

animal stalls were coated in fresh hay. The fair runs today through Saturday. For more information,

from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. nightly throughout

visit wwwjcfairgrounds.org. Check out Page B2 in Saturday's Bulletin for a full-page photo spread

August as city crews work to correct frequent flooding. A signed detour will lead commuters to Franklin Avenue, Ninth Street and Wilson Avenue.

I I- —I

Gre wood Ave

www.bendbulletin.com/local

of the fair. And if you're looking for information on the upcoming Deschutes County Fair 8r Rodeo, see the guide in today's Bulletin.

Matt Montoya remains on paid administrative leave as principal of Bear Creek Elementary following a Bend La PineSchools closed executive session Tuesday morning. On July 9, Montoya, 34, filed a discrimination complaint against the district, citing race and age discrimination. Initially, the Tuesday closed session meeting was to allow the board to review Montoya's case and make a decision regarding his continued employment with the district. However, Montoya was notified last Friday afternoon that nothing would be decided at Tuesday's meeting, said Katherine Tank, Montoya's attorney. "From what we understand, it was postponed while they evaluate the case," Tank said. Tank would not confirm whether she had filed a discrimination complaint on behalf of Montoya. A regular school board meeting was held prior to the session, during which several Montoya supporters spoke to the principal's character and conduct at the school. Jennifer Montoya, Montoya's wife and a teacher at Elk Meadow Elementary, addressed the board. "We continue to pray and hope that you'll carefully consider everything," she said. Katherine James, Bear Creek's PTO president, also voiced her support for Montoya at the meeting along with her 5-year-old daughter who attends Bear Creek and is in the life-skills program at the school. "When you have a special needs child, it's extremely hard to trust people," James said. "You drop them off and trust them to handle your child. And with Matt Montoya, I trust him 100 percent.... Please don't take that away from us." Cheri Helt, school board chairwoman, said the board received and appreciated the numerous emails sent by parents supporting Montoya. Montoya was placed on paid administrative leave June 24 pending an investigation by school officials. Earlier this month, the school board began a second investigation into the discrimination complaint filed by Montoya. Montoya, who was at the adm<ntstratton bulldlng but did not attend either meeting, said he is unable to comment on anything in relation to his time as principal at Bear Creek. SeeMontoya/B5

Finishinghighschool far from home

ranklin Av

By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin

Detour -Thir

Stre Unde ass i lo

v

B I

I

R d Market Greg Cross i The Bulletin

OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS Educational news and

activities, and local kids and their achievements. • School Notes and submission info,B2

Zach Giesler remembers April 21 as the longest day of his life. The Summit High School student paced nervously, chewed at his fingernails, and hovered over his computer for hours on end, waiting for the news that might change his life. "I think that day tookyears off of my longevity," Zach,

16, said. "I almost broke the mouse of my computer because I kept hitting refresh." Though Zach didn't receive the email he was waiting for until the next day, it was, as he found out, worth the wait. Zach was notified that he'd been awarded a twoyear, full-ride scholarship to the United World College, and would be spending his last two years of

high school in Bosnia. "I saw the email, and I was so relieved," Zach said. "And then it was very exciting. I realized that this would be life-changing." Zach, an incoming junior, will be leaving behind school, friends and family

in Bend beginning Aug. 10 to study at the United World College in Mostar, in Bosnia-Herzegovina. SeeZach/B2

~ .iti (

'i/ / x

"(/"

Zach Giesler, 16, is headed to the United World College in Bosnia in August to study for two

years. Submitted Photo


B2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

E VENT TODAY

AL E N D A R MUSIC ONTHEGREEN: A summer 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 IN THE PARK:Featuring Americana rock with The Long Hello; free; 6-8 p.m.; Pioneer Park, 450 N.E. Third St., Prineville; 541-447-6909 or www. crookcountyfoundation.org/events. TOM VANDENAVOND:TheTexasbased alt-folk singer performs; free; 8 p.m.; Blue Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25 S.W. Century Dr., Bend; 541-3892558 or www.bluepinebar.com.

OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS II:A U.S. Equestrian Federation class AA international hunterjumper competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.;J BarJ Boys Ranch,62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-389-1409, tryan©jbarj. org or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. BEND FARMERSMARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket©gmail.com or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. ALIVE AFTER FIVE: LeRoy Bell and His Only Friends performs, with Voodoo Highway; at the north end of Powerhouse Drive; free; 5-8 p.m.; Old THURSDAY Mill District, 661 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-389-0995 or www. OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS aliveafterfivebend.com. II:A U.S. Equestrian Federation

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

class AA international hunterjumper competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 8a.m.-5 p.m.;J BarJ Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-389-1409, tryan@jbarj. org or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. MUNCH & MUSIC:The reggae band Third World performs, with food, arts and crafts booths, children's area and more; dogs prohibited; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; www. munchandmusic.com. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Brooks Geer Ragen reads from his book "The Meek Cutoff"; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 6:30-8 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. "A MIDSUMMERNIGHT'S DREAM":The classic play by

Mountain View High School class of1963willhold a reunion Friday; 5-10 p.m. atPioneerParkpavilion, 1525 Wall St., Bend;$25 per person with kids free; beveragesand light snacks provided; on-site barbecue available for grilling; RSVP on "Mountain ViewHighSchool Class of 2003" facebook page,www.facebook. com/events/227108484100257; Emily Comerford, 503-866-5530 or ecomerford08©gmail.com. Bend High School class of 1963 will holda reunionAug.2-3;6p.m.Aug2at Aspen Hall in Shevlin Park, 18920N.W. Shevlin ParkRd., Bend;$25per person; 5 p.m. Aug 3;no-host gathering at Lava Lanes,1555 N.E.Forbes Rd., Bend;Sue Fountain atfountain.sue©gmail.com. Bend High School class of 1978 will hold a reunionAug. 2-3; 6 p.m. Aug. 2; no-host gathering at Worthy Brewing,495 N.E.Bellevue Dr., Bend; Noon Aug. 3 atCompass Parkin Northwest Crossing; bring your own lunch, chairs andblankets; classes of '77 and '79 areinvited; donations accepted for parkfee andnametags; Lynda Coats-Sellers at 541-408-7096 orvisitFacebookpage,www.facebook. com/groups/BHS78isneverstraight/. Redmond Union HighSchoolclass of1963 will hold a reunionAug. 2-4; 6-8 p.m. Aug. 2;no-host gathering at Pappy's Pizzeria,1655N. Highway 97, Redmond; 2p.m. Aug. 3bustrip to Abbas' Museum,meetat Sleep Inn Motel, 1847 N.Highway97,Redmond and 5:30p.m. dinneratformer Red Rooster Restaurant,1857 N.W.Sixth St., Redmond;$30per person for dinner;

reservations required; 7:30a.m.Aug. 4, BuckarooBreakfastat County Fair; 541-548-4419, Jeannie(Smith) Branin at 541-410-7338 orImcattle©q.com. Bend High School class of 1973 will hold a reunionAug. 9-10; 5:30p.m. Aug. 9 atCruxFermentation Project, 50S.W. Division St.,Bend;free; and 5:30 p.m. Aug.10at BendGolf and Country Club,61045Country Club Dr.; $40; registration required;Jennifer Stenkamp,541-548-0711, Facebook page "Bend High School Classof1973" or https://reunionmanager.net/reunion registration.php?class id=1425458 reun ion= BEND+SENIOR+HIGH+SCHOOL&cl ass of=1973. Bend High School class of 1968 will

hold a reunionAug.10; 6-10 p.m.at Country Catering, 900S.E.Wilson Ave.; $30 per person; registration required; Arlo Young,bendclassof68©yahoo. com, bendclassof68©gmail.com or 503-871-7737. Bend High School class Of 1983 will

hold a reunionAug.17-18;informal gathering at BendBrewfest in Les Schwab Amphitheater during early afternoon Aug.17;McMenamin's Old St. Francis School from 6-11p.m Aug. 17, 700 N.W.BondSt.; and ano-host picnic at PioneerParkfrom12-3 p.m. Aug.18; $45 perperson; RSVPMary StenkampWeinberg,503-703-8283or weinberm@ohsu.edu.

FRIDAY OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS II: A U.S. Equestrian Federation class AA international hunterjumper competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 8a.m .-5 p.m.;J BarJ Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-389-1409, tryan©jbarj.

org or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. TOUR OFHOMES:Featuring selfguided tours of homes throughout Central Oregon; free; noon-6 p.m.; Bend location; 541-389-1058 or www.coba.org. SISTERS FARMERS MARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park,W estCascade Avenue and Ash Street; www. sistersfarmersmarket.com. MUSIC IN THECANYON:Featuring the down-home Portland band, Mexican Gunfight; free; 5:30-8 p.m.; American Legion Community Park, 850 S.W. Rimrock Way, Redmond; www.musicinthecanyon.com. "SEUSSICAL JR.": Prineville Music Theatre Camp puts on their rendition of the children's musical; free, donations accepted; 6 p.m.; Pioneer Park, 450 N.E. Third St., Prineville; 541-419-9579. LAST SATURDAY: Event includes art exhibit openings, live music, food and drinks and a patio and fire

Zach

SCHOOL NOTES REUNIONS

Shakespeare is performed by the Bend Experimental Art Theatre; $15 adult, $10 students18 and younger; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558 or www.beatonline.org. THE SOFTWHITE SIXTIES: The California rock 'n' roll band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3888331 or www.silvermoonbrewing. com.

How to submit Teen feats:Kids recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs,

choirs or volunteer groups. (Please submit a photo.) Contact: 541-383-0358,

youth©bendbulletin.com Mail:P.O. Box 6020,Bend, OR 97708

Otherschoolnotes: College announcements, military graduations or training completions,

reunion announcements. Contact: 541-383-0358,

bulletin©bendbulletin.com

Story ideas School briefs:Items and

announcements of general interest. Contact: 541-633-2161,

news©bendbulletin.com

COLLEGE NOTES

Student profiles:Know

Mountain ViewHighSchool graduate Alexa Westberg, of Bend,receivedthe President's GoldMerit Scholarshipfrom Baylor University inWaco,Texas.The schola rshipamountis$40,000-$58,000, according to theuniversity's website.

mkehoe©bendbulletin.com

of a kid with a compelling story? Contact: 541-383-0354,

Zach Giesler,16

Continued from B1 He is one of about 50 studentsfrom across the U.S. to be selected for the presti-

Summit High School

incoming Junior Favorite Movie: "Zoolander"

gious program. United World College has 12 locations throughout the world. It aims to promote intercultural u n d erstanding and educate students in a diverse setting. Zach was interested in going abroad for some of his high school education, and heard about the program from his uncle. He thought it sounded like a long shot, but decided to take a chance and apply

Favorite TV Show:"The Wire"

Favorite Book:"Steve Jobs" biography Favorite Artist:

Macklemore

of 125 finalists, and he was invited to Seattle to attend a daylong interview. Zach was grilled on his application, his academics and his language anyway. ability. Zach said he speaks "I come from a s m all four languages, and after mentown in Oregon that most tioning this on his application people have never heard of," the program judges conducted Zach said. "I don't go to pri- part of the interview in Spanvate school — so I didn't re- ish to make sure he could back ally think I had a chance." up his claims. Zach applied last f all, ln April, Zach found out the filling ou t a n e x t ensive interview had gone well: He application that i n cluded was being sent to Bosnia. "I think they saw that I had a slew of complicated essay questions, along with something to offer to the proteacher recommendations. gram," Zach said. "I'm not your He learned in early spring average high school student." Zach's AP English teacher, that he was selected as one

pit; free; 6-10 p.m.; Old Ironworks Arts District,50 Scott St., Bend; www.j.mp/lastsat. MUSIC IN THEPARK:"Hallelujah Hoedown" with Mud Springs Gospel BandandtheTuckerFam ily Band; free; 6:30 p.m.; Sahalee Park, 7th and B Streets, Madras; www. centraloregonshowcase.com. "A MIDSUMMERNIGHT'S DREAM": The classic play by Shakespeare is performed by the Bend Experimental Art Theatre; $15 adult, $10 students18 and younger; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558 or www.beatonline.org. SCHOLARSHIP BENEFIT CONCERT:Featuring all students and instructors from the Booher Family Music Camp; $5, $25 for families over five people; 7 p.m.; Sisters Community Church, 1300 W. McKenzie Highway; 541-815-3873 or www.boohercamp,com.

Christie McCormick, agrees that Zach stands out. "Zach's very intense and he's very determined," McCormick said. "He's that kid who gets a 98 percent on something and is there asking you what he did wrong. He's very, very bright." Christine said Zach received a perfect score on hi s A P exam, which she said is very uncommon. Aside from academic talents, Zach has been involved with several clubs and activities at Summit High. Last year he was on the speech and debate team and on the school n ewspaper. H e a l s o r u n s cross-country and Nordic skis with school teams. When Zach leaves for Bosn ia next month, he will b e leaving behind a full life in his hometown of Bend. But he says he'smore than ready forit;he's looking forward to becoming a global citizen. "I'm excited for the adventure," Zach said. "I feel like it's my time to go out there and explore and to find myself. The world's a lot bigger than Central Oregon." — Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbuffetin.com

• •

NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 2:52 p.m. July11, in the 61500 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 2:57 p.m. July 12, in the 1200 block of Northeast Burnside Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 3:38 p.m. July 12, in the1800 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at10:33 p.m. July12, in the 300 block of Southwest Century Drive. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 5:08 p.m. July13, in the 2600 block of Northeast Ocker Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 5:41 p.m. July13, in the1500 block of Northeast Eighth Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 11:38a.m. July14, in the100 block of Northwest Oregon Avenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 8:24 p.m. July14, in the area of Northwest Bond Street and Northwest Kansas Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at10:04 a.m. July15, in the 1500 block of Northeast Northview Drive. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at1:25 p.m. July16, in the 63100 block of Britta Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at10:21 a.m. July 18, in the 63200 block of Gallop Court. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:15 p.m. July18, in the 1300 block of Northeast Second Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 3:45 p.m. July

18, in the1800 block of Southwest Turnberry Place. Unauthorizeduse — A vehicle was reported stolen at 4:38 p.m. July18, in the 20500 block of Cooley Road. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 8:23 a.m. July 19, in the 400 block of Northwest Wall Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:46 a.m. July19, in the 62900 block of North U.S. Highway 97. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 4:13 p.m. July19, in the 2500 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Theft — A theft was reported at 7:11 p.m. July 20, in the 300 block of Northeast McCartney Drive. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at12:58 a.m. July 21, in the 63000 block of Marsh Orchid Drive. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 8:11 a.m. July 21, in the 1200 block of Northeast Jones Road. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 9:12 a.m. July 21, in the 61500 block of Summer Shade Drive. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 9:16 a.m. July 21, in the 61200 block of Mountain Vista Drive. DUII — Matthew Glenn Gannon, 26, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:57 a.m. July 22, in the 2100 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Theft — A theft was reported at 7:46 a.m. July 22, in the 2500 block of Northeast Twin Knolls Drive. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 8 a.m. July 22, in the100 block of Northwest St. Helens Place. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 5:39 a.m. July 22, in the 2700 block of Northeast Mesa Court. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at10:35 a.m. July16, in the 500 block of Northeast Azure Drive.

REDMOND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft — A theft was reported

5 and an arrest made at 5:43 p.m.June 29,inthe 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at12:08 p.m. July1, in the 2900 block of Southwest Pumice Place. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 9:54 a.m. July 8, in the100 block of Northwest Sixth Street. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 2:12 p.m. July 9, in the1700 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft — A theft was reported at 6:41 a.m. July15, in the100 block of Southwest Fourth Street. Unauthorizeduse — A vehicle was reported stolen at 7:48 a.m. July15, in the1600 block of Southwest Veterans Way. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at1:43 p.m. July15, in the1200 block of Northwest Upas Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 8:04 p.m. July15, in the 3200 block of Southwest Newberry Avenue. Burglary— A burglary was reported at11:24 p.m. July 15, in the 3100 block of Southwest Peridot Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported at11:46 p.m. July15, in the 3000 block of Southwest Quartz Avenue. DUII —Anna Belinda Quesenberry, 27, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:33 a.m. July16, in the area of Southwest 26th Street and Southwest Quartz Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 6:08 a.m. July16, in the area of Northwest Ninth Street and Northwest Birch Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:41 a.m. July16, in the 800 block of Southwest17th Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 12:09 p.m. July16, in the 100 block of Southwest 26th Street. Theft — A theft and an act of criminal mischief were reported and an arrest made at 6:58 p.m. July16, in the 900 block of Northwest Canal Boulevard. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 7 p.m. July16, in the 400 block of Southwest Rimrock Way.

Continued next page

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

Oil train

AROUND THE STATE NO ChiCken memOrial —Salem's traffic engineer has turned down a proposal to erect a giant statue of a bloodied, bandaged chicken on crutches at the site where acommercial truck hauling

terminal !

more than 5,000 live chickens flipped over recently. Police have said "a considerable number" of chickens died in the July 9 crash

OIC'd on Columbia

The Associated Press V ANCOUVER, W a s h . — Port of Vancouver commissioners voted Tuesday to approve a lease for a Columbia River terminal that would take in crude oil by train from North Dakota and ship it to West Coast refineries. About 60 people were at the port's office for the vote, which followed a public hearing Monday night, The Columbian reported. The project will be r eviewed by the state Energy Facility S i t e E v a luation Council, which will make a recommendation to Washington Gov. Jay Inslee for a final decision. Construction can't begin untiltheproject receives state and federal permits, said port spokeswoman Theresa Wagner. That could be a year to a year and a half away. "After the port haphazardly rushed this lease, we look forward to Gov. Inslee taking a hard look at the threat of Bakken oil trains and the shocking terminal on the Columbia River," said Brett VandenHeuvel, executive director of Columbia Riverkeeper, one of the opponents. Port managers recommended approval of the deal with Tesoro Corp. and Savage Cos. for the economic benefits. Neighborhood and environmental groups oppose it because of safety and ecological risks. Oil trains from the Bakken shale formationin North Dakota would run through the Columbia River Gorge and Vancouver. Demonstrators o u t side Monday's hearing held banners in French and English that read, "In solidarity with Lac-Megantic," a reference to the Quebec town where 50 people were killed July 6 when a runaway train carrying crude oil derailed and exploded. Members of the national environmental group Climate Parents presented the port commissioners with 14,000 signatures demanding they reject the TesoroSavage plan.

and its six-hour cleanup. TheOregonian reports that People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals asked the city Tuesday for permission to erect a 5-foot-5-inch statue of a chicken at the crash site for at

least a month. PETA wanted to commemorate the birds, killed on the way to a Kelso, Wash., slaughterhouse. Salem traffic engineer Kevin Hottman calls the accident unfortunate but says he and Oregon

Transportation Department officials agreed the statue "would be a distraction and possibly a hazard." PETA spokeswoman Danielle Katz said earlier the group hoped the statue would "let people know

that the best way to prevent crashes is to go vegan." Mt. HOOd reSCue —The HoodRiver County sheriff says search and rescue crews headedout Tuesday night to help a10-year-old boy who reportedly fell down an embankment while hiking on Mount Hood. KATU-TV reports that Sheriff Matt English says the boy and

his father were hiking a trail near the White River West Sno-Park Benjamin Brink/The Oregonian

Workers with the Portland Habilitation Center clean the sidewalks in front of City Hall in Portland after Occupy Portland protesters were asked by police to leave the area on Tuesday. The encampment of about 30 people, mostly homeless, was forced out by police five days after city workers hung eviction notices from nearby trees.

Occupycamp isperse outsi e Portlan Ci Hall By Nigel Duara

lation that eventually dominated the protest. PORTLAND — T h e l a st T he protesters, many o f visible remnants of the 2011 whom identified with the OcOccupy Portland movement cupy movement on Tuesday, h eld court in f r ont o f C i t y sought to focus attention on Hall for nearly two years. A Portland's homeless populacommunity of s i gn-holding, tion, who say the city feeds slogan-chanting, pot-banging them bu t d o e sn't p r ovide protestersbrought noise and enough places to stay. attention to the city's acute By early this summer, ochomeless problem. casional catcalls and violence The mostly homeless prodrew complaints from resitesters set up camp after po- dents and business owners lice ordered the removal of who visited City Hall. Mayor tents and o t her s t ructures Charlie Hales said the enfrom the 300-person Occupy campment deterred people Portland encampment in late from entering City Hall and 2011. intimidated t hose w o r king On Tuesday, the encampinside. ment of about 30 people in Portland police spokesman front of City Hall was also Pete Simpson said the protestforced out by police in a much ers dispersed without violence less dramatic fashion, five or resistance,although some days after city workers hung said they plan to return. " Our officers know t h at eviction notices from nearby trees. everything they do is being As the protesters left, some recorded by the media and by crossed the street to yell as the crowd," Simpson said. Pow orkers h osed d ow n t h e lice brought their own recordsidewalk. Shouts of "This is ing equipment to document a police state!" echoed near a the dispersal. "This morning, an o v erpolice press conference. Some p rotesters said whelming amount of governt he police turnout was a n ment funds went into picking overreaction. up trash on th e sidewalk," U ltimately, the City H a l l said Sawyer Sherman, 19, a encampment was plagued protester at the site for the last by the same ills as its prede- four months. cessor: An unclear message, Sherman said the protest c omplaints from t h e c o m - will continue in some form, munity and th e significant and despite the police prespresence of a homeless popu- ence on Tuesday, it's unclear The Associated Press

Southwest Rimrock Way. From previous page Theft —A theft was reported Theft —A theft was reported at 4:07 p.m. July 19, in the 900 at 1:48 p.m. July17, in the 700 block of Southwest 23rd Street. block of Southwest 35th Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was Theft —A theft was reported at reported entered with items 2:20 p.m. July17, in the 600 block stolen and an arrest made at11 of Northwest Hemlock Avenue. p.m. July19, in the 400 block of Theft —A theft was reported Southeast Railroad Boulevard. and an arrest made at11:35 Dtjll —Charles Allen Caison, p.m. July17, in the 300 block 23, was arrested on suspicion of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. of driving under the influence DUII —John Thomas of intoxicants at 2:16 a.m. Groves, 25, was arrested on July 20, in the 1500 block of suspicion of driving under Southwest Odem Medo Road. the influence of intoxicants at Vehicle crash — An accident 3:59 a.m. July 18, in the area was reported at 2:33 a.m. of Southwest11th Street and July 20, in the 900 block of Southwest Forest Avenue. Southwest Canyon Drive. Criminal mischief —An act of Theft —A theft was reported criminal mischief was reported at11:06 a.m. July 20, in the at 10:24 a.m. July 18, in the area 1500 block of Southwest of Southwest 34th Street and Odem Medo Road. Southwest Antelope Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported Criminal mischief —An act of at 4:19 p.m. July 20, in the criminal mischief was reported 1600 block of Southwest at10:44 a.m. July18, in the 300 Odem Medo Road. block of Northwest 16th Place. Theft —A theft was reported Theft —A theft was reported at at 5:21 p.m. July 20, in the 3:50 p.m. July18, in the 800 block 1700 block of Southwest of SouthwestDeschutes Avenue. Wickiup Avenue. Vehicle crash —An accident Theft —A theft was reported was reported at 3:51 p.m. at 2:55 a.m. July 21, in the July18, in the 800 block of 1500 block of Southwest Southwest Rimrock Way. Odem Medo Road. Vehicle crash —An accident was Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 5:16 p.m. July18, in reported at 9:56 a.m. July 21, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 and the area of Northwest Fifth Street Southwest Evergreen Avenue. and Northwest Cedar Avenue. Burglary—A burglary was Theft —A theft was reported at reported at11:13 p.m. July 10:58 a.m. July 21, in the1100 18, in the 1800 block of block of Northwest Eighth Street. Southwest 31st Street. Theft —A theft was reported at Criminal mischief —An act noon July 21, in the 3000 block of criminal mischief was of Southwest 32nd Street. reported at12:54 p.m. Theft —A theft was reported July19, in the 200 block of Southwest Seventh Street. and arrests made at 4:28 p.m. July 21, in the 300 block of Vehicle crash —An accident Northwest Oak Tree Lane. was reported at1:55 p.m. July 19, in the area of Southwest Theft —A theft was reported at Highland Avenue and 5:30 p.m. July 21, in the 2000

block of South U.S. Highway 97.

what effect the dispersal will have. Many protestersremained in the area and some held signs pledging to return. Inmate crews supervised by the M u ltnomah County Sheriff's Office packed the remains of the encampment across the street from the former protest. Toothbrushes, torn pieces of fabric and clothing were stuffed into plastic bags and removed. Relatively lenient city policies and mild weather have long attracted the homeless to Portland, particularly in the summer. Hales said he has had more than 100 police calls to the block around City Hall in the last six months. He said he's heard reports of open drug use and public sex. Trevor Matney, 33, handcuffed himself to a tree next to the protest for five days, but dispersed with the rest of the crowd on Tuesday morning. Matney acknowledges that some protesters may have brought unwanted attention to the encampment by heckling passersby, but says that's part of their First Amendment rights. He said he expects the protest and encampment to resume on Tuesday night. "We're still planning on being here," Matney said. "The goal here is awareness."

14 —Medical aid calls. July17 1:13 p.m.— Smoke odor reported, 8515 W. Antler Ave. 9:45 p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 1953 W. Antler Ave. 3 — Medical aid calls. July18 8:56 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 1818 N.W. Fir Ave. 9:24 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, area of Northeast 21st Drive. 8 — Medical aid calls. July19 12:05 p.m.— Smoke odor reported, 233 N.W. O'Neil Way. 2:07 p.m.— Outside rubbish, trash or waste fire, 5801 Northwest Way. 8 — Medical aid calls. July20 4 — Medical aid calls. July 21 8:29 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, area of South U.S. Highway 97. 5 — Medical aid calls.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at 11:13 a.m. July 22, in the area of Northwest lndustrial Park Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:13 p.m. July 22, in the area of Southeast Second Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at11:41 a.m. July 22, in the area of Northwest Glenwood Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:55 p.m. July 22, in the area of Spruce Lane.

REDMOND FIRE RUNS July15 2:52 p.m.— Brush or brushand-grass mixture fire, 2000 S.W. Highland Ave. 3:37 p.m.— Building fire, 5658 N.W. Lone Pine Road. 6 —Medical aid calls. July16

when the boy fell. The father made his way down to his son, but the boy was injured and not able to get back up the hill. English says the

father started a campfire and called 911.Thetwo were about three miles in from the trailhead, which is about 35 miles from Hood River.

12 dank rodderies in10 years —A44-year-old Oregon woman who was convicted ofeightbankrobberiesadecadeago has been sentenced to prison for another four robberies. The U.S. attorney's office says Lorinda Marie Goodin has beensentenced to 22 years and11 months in prison as partof a plea deal. Two of the robberies were in Lane County and two were in Multnomah County.

She admitted 25 other robberies. Goodin dropped abandanna during a robbery in Eugene. Oregon State Police crime lab analysts matched DNA from the bandanna to Goodin, whose DNA is on file.

During the robberies, Goodin used atoy pistol that looks like a largecaliber handgun. Real bullets were found in her home. Goodin also agreed to plead guilty in state courts to the multiple robberies.

Seaside 'dark sky' ordinance —TheSeaside City Council plans to regulate outdoor lighting through a "dark sky" ordinance.

The Daily Astorian reports the ordinance would require exterior lights to have translucent covers to eliminate glare or shielding that prevents direct light from shining on other people's property. Lights

from lasers or high intensity lights would be prohibited. Outdoor fixtures installed before the ordinance's effective date would be allowed, but if they are directed onto other properties, they could be

declared a nuisance. Among theexemptions are holiday decorations, if the lights are less than15 watts. The council unanimously agreed Monday to the first steps toward approval and expects to take a final vote Aug. 5.

BOtohod tl'BllSIBtlull —A federal court has thrown out the conviction and10-year sentence of a manaccused of dropping off supplies to marijuana growers on the grounds that a detective botched a Miranda rights translation. The Oregonian reports the

9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled last week in the case of Jeronimo Botello-Rosales, a native of Mexico living in California

who grew up with English as a second language. Hewas arrested in 2008 during an investigation into marijuana grows on federal forest lands in Yamhill and Tillamook counties. Officers in Yamhill County read his rights in both English and Spanish. The appeals

court focused on the translation of "free" into the Spanish "libre," saying its potential meaning of "available" didn't convey the

government's "absolute obligation" to provide legal counsel. The Curry County sheriff's department says two men who died after rafting accidents in the Rogue River were killed by heart attacks not drowning.

Roguo Rivof hooft BttBCks —Medical examiner reports say the stress of crashing rafts at the Picket Fence rapids contributed to

the deaths. Both menwere thrown into the water and werewearing life jackets. The Mail Tribune reports 57-year-old Steven D. Hoyer of Spartanburg, S.C., died July12 and 66-year-old Steven Boyd of Walla Walla, Wash., died July17. — From wire reports

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B4

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

The Bulletin

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aving two wells out of commission at the same time didn't imperil water flow in Bend this summer. There's plenty of capacity in the system, even

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for the city's heavy summer use. It did, however, reinforce the i mportance of p r eserving t h e city's two sources of water, an issue that has been central to the controversy about the city's planned surfacewater project. Right now, Bend depends on 23 groundwater wells plus two pipelines delivering surface water from Bridge Creek. One day last week, use was almost evenly split between the two sources, with 12.4 million gallons coming from the wells and 11 million from Bridge Creek. Two of those wells were out of commission at the same time recently. One from the Outback facility ran into trouble in May and is still being repaired. In early July, a pump motor on a well at Pilot Butte failed, with repairs completed Friday. Opponents of the city's plan to upgrade the Bridge Creek system have urged the city to depend more on wells. They say the Bridge Creek plan is unnecessary and too expensive. Some have also made it

clear that increasing water flow in the creek is a high priority. We have no argument with the value of saving money and ensuring healthy water flow, but we think city officials have a critical responsibility to p r eserve both water sources. Things go wrong; regulations change. Either of the two sources might be imperiled in the future. It would be foolish to let either one wither. City officials may well be faulted for failure to engage the public early in the planning for the Bridge Creek upgrade, but they've certainly l i s tened t h o roughly more recently. More than one City Council has decided to go forward with the plan, and we think city officials have made a good case for the need for pipeline and other upgrades to the Bridge Creek system. Opponents' tactics to stop the project have delayed it and likely increased its costs significantly. They have not, however, eliminated the need it addresses.

DeFazio post could help troubled Oregoncounties

w

e don't agree with U.S. Rep. Peter DeFazio, DSpringfield, on e v erything. That said, we do believe his election to the top Democratic spot on the House Natural Resources Committee is good for some of the economically hardest hit counties in Oregon. DeFazio is from one of Oregon's O&C counties. Since 1937 much of their income has come from the sale of timber on land taken over by the federal government after the Oregon 8 California Railroad failed. That money dried up as the timber industry all but disappeared from Oregon in the last 25 years. The 18 08C counties include two, Curry and Josephine, that are nearly bankrupt, and several others, including Klamath and Lane, with severe financial problems. They have survived since 2000 on money allocated through the Secure Rural SchoolsAct, though that money has declined and the program ended earlierthis year. So far, Congress has not seen fit to renew it. DeFazio, a resident of Lane County, is well aware of the financial problems O&C counties face, and he has worked across party

lines with Rep. Greg Walden, RHood River, to try to solve them. Having two members of the state's House delegation, men from opposing padies, in positions of leadership within their respective parties should work to the timber counties'advantage. While Walden can help bring Republicans along, DeFazio's support of a solution may be critical in helping Sen. Ron Wyden persuade members of the Senate to move forward, as well. DeFazio and Walden, along with Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Canby, are working to gain approval of a bill that would set aside some O&C lands permanently, protect old growth and increase timber harvesting on a relatively small portion of the total 2.6 million acres. Committee Democrats' choice of DeFazio to lead them was no slam dunk, meanwhile. He had to fight off a challenge by Rep. Raul Grijalva of Arizona, who had the backing of conservation groups opposed to the 08 C proposal. DeFazioand Walden have their work on an 08 C solution cut out for them, to be sure. But with both men in leadership positions within their parties, the task may just be a bit easier.

M IVickel's Worth Can't manage low chairs at amphitheater

upstream canals. At Drake Park schools taught us not t o stereoand the properties across from it, type and prejudge. I'm comfortable one fast channel flanked by impen- around people of different shades, etrable brushy bogs is what we'd but not around people who strut be left with. Of course we should around with a bad attitude. Ameridredge Mirror Pond! cans have made great stridesin Patricia O>Day obliterating racism, but victim menBend tality grows like mold. Andre Pinette Victimmentality grows Redmond

Dear Bend concert venue planners: When I moved here D years ago, I attended almost every concert in Bend. Now that I am older and arthritis and back problems have set in, I cannot get out of one of those nasty little low chairs that you punish us with. And I don't want to sit way in the back of the venue either! Why don't you change the rule so that everyone needs to bring regular-sized lawn chairs, so that everyone can come to the concerts, instead of just the fittest! I am one of the many people in this area who would love to attend more concerts if I could be comfortable and not afraid to get up from that darn stupid low lawn chair! Linda Bradley Bend

like mold George Z i mmerman a c t ually had an unfair trial; no grand jury, trumped-up murder charge, hostile judge and a rabid prosecution. The media condemned him in the court of public opinion. Thankfully he was acquitted by a jury, because of reasonable doubt, and belief in Zimmerman's claim of self-defense. So now the world implodes. You would think everyone would accept this result while not liking it necessarily and go home and think about it. No, DOJ has to look into it to see if Trayvon's civil rights were violated; what about George Zimmerman's civil rights? We now have race baiters stirring the pot over the verdict. This is predictable, but who are all these others protesting? We have leftist students, progressives, communists, anarchists, occupiers and neo-hippies out in force using this opportunity to foment hot summer riots and lawlessness. Trayvon is supposed to be the reason forthe season, but they are telling the crowds to go get the rich white people and battle the police. They aredestroying property, stealing stuff and hurting people. Trayvon is just an excuse for violent anti-capitalist demonstrations and mayhem. Most of white America is color blind; my parents would not allow racial slurs, swearing or cussing in their presence, and our public

Dredge Mirror Pond Various folks have offered previews of what we can expect Mirror Pond to look like, absent the dam that creates the pond. I would like to add to the picture of Mud'n'Bugs the inevitable Styrofoam trash, etc., that would accumulate and not be reachable by anyone to clean up. And we can expect not just comely cattails to appear but a dense screen of brush and trees over time. I grew up by Sawyer Park where, in the 1950s-'60s, we had lovely views up, down and across the river. The same could be enjoyed from the footbridge. Those views are now occluded by brushy trees (dead and

alive) that sprang up when muddy bogs replaced the clear shallows. At Sawyer, this was due to reduced flow, as more water went into the

Charge for plastic bags I submit we need to change the Oregon state bird to the plastic bag. Driving down the parkway and back up T h ir d S treet yesterday, I counted over 20 plastic bags. I saw them nesting on poles, gliding through the air,perched on trees and flocked against a fence. Here is a simple solution: Have the stores charge for each bag, encouraging people to carry their own reusable bags. I lived in Norway for several years where they charged about 20 cents per plastic bag. It resulted in almost eliminating the bags. Plus it is way more convenient to carry out a big cloth bag rather than several plastic bags. This is a four-for-one special. It will: • Clean up our environment.

• Reduce (in a small way) oil dependence. • Reduce prices (The stores will

pass along their saving, right?). •Make you feel good about contributing to a cleaner environment. This act will allow us to take a tiny step away from the avarice of the consumer culture toward an ethic of altruism. (It's not socialism!) Kermit the frog was wrong. It is

easy being green. Rick Burns Bend

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New sexual harassment rules openly defy reason Ramesh Ponnuru

duct of a sexual nature," including "verbal" conduct, as h a rassment. he new federal guidelines for Such conduct, the Office for Civil how colleges should handle Rights has explained, runs the gamut sexual-harassmentcases aren't from "making sexual propositions" just unreasonable. They're hostile to to "spreading sexual rumors." reasonableness in principle. The universityalso erred, accordThe Justice Department and the ing to the letter, in saying that conduct Education Department's Office for qualified as harassment only when "an objectively reasonable person" Civil Rights set forth the rules in a letter they sent in May. The letter would find it "offensive." Harassment was addressed to the University of may occur, then, when someone's Montana but says it should serve as conduct triggers even an objectively "a blueprint for colleges and universi- unreasonable complaint. The fedties throughout the country." eral government has put universities The letter criticized the university on notice that they need to take any for defining "sexual harassment" too complaint, however little merit it may narrowly. The school had disciplined seem tohave,very seriously. people onlyfor conduct so "severe" The letter went on to instruct coland "pervasive" that it c r eated a leges that "taking disciplinary action "hostile environment." Instead, the against the harasser" may be approfederal government said, colleges priate,and even required, before the should treat "any unwelcome con- investigation into the complaint is BIoomberg News

T

finished — that is, before it is determined that the "harasser" is actually a harasser. Hans Bader,a former lawyer for the Office for Civil Rights, notes that the federal guidelines for universities go well beyond what courts have said is acceptable policy against sexual harassment. The Supreme Court has taken the old-fashioned view that conduct has to be objectively offensive to count as harassment. Asking someone for a date, Bader points out, could theoretically run afoul of the new standard. That scenario seems unlikely, because it's hard to see these rules being applied in any consistent and rigorous manner. But the Obama administration is increasing the risk that professors and students who have done nothing that most people would consider outrageous, or even wrong,

will be done serious injustices. And not for the first time. Two years ago, the Education Department told colleges that they should weaken the presumption of i nnocence for people accused of sexual misconduct, taking action against them even if the evidence of their misconduct is not "clear and convincing." In an essay for Commentary, Walter Olson explains that a lot of universities have steadily stripped away the rightsofaccused harassers in order to comply with the government's commands. "This is a system in which the opportunity to be told that an investigation against you is going forward, to present evidence on your own behalf, and to seek a definite resolution to put the matter behind you, have effectively been dispensed with," he writes. And even when a university finds that an accusation lacks merit, the or-

deal isn't necessarily over: The Office for Civil Rights encourages universities to let the accuser, not just the accused, appeal the decision. No one doubts that some victims of genuine harassment — and worse — get treated badly by university administrators. And sometimes "he said, she said" conflicts just don't generateenough evidence to determine who's in the right, and real misconduct can therefore go unpunished. But there are also false accusations, misinterpretations, ambi g u ities. Whatever the solution to the problem is, the system that President Barack Obama's administration is creating isn't it. — Ramesh Ponnuru is a Bloomberg View columnist, a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a senior editor at National Review.


WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

BS

OREGON NEWS

BITUARIES

NTSB: Noblame in mid-air crash

DEATH NOTICES Linda L. Ulbricht, of Bend May 29, 1928 - July 21, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471. Services: A memorial service will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made

The Associated Press PORTLAND — The pilots of two small planes that collided in midair near Wilsonville in 2011 likely couldn't see each other, according t o a r eport f rom th e N a tional Transportation Safety Board. One pilot, a retired State Police sergeant, was killed. The other pilot and a student in his plane landed safely. The report released last week does not assign blame

and said the conclusion is based on factors such as the planes' positions, courses

Montoya

administrative leave, citing confidentiality laws. Montoya has been principal at Bear Creek for three years. He was offered a new three-year contract earlier this year, said Lora Nordquist, the district's assistant superintendent for elementary education. The district has not set a

and student Henrik Murer Kalberg, 23, of Holmestrand, Norway, landed their twinengine P i p e r P A - 4 4-180 Seminole in a field adjacent to the Champoeg State Heritage Area west of Wilsonville. Neither was hurt. The other plane, a singleengine Beech Bonanza V35, broke apart in midair. Pilot Stephen Watson, 58, of Beaverton, died. The former state trooper had an airlinetransport flight rating.

and speeds. "Unfortunately, we don't have records on small planes to put together the exact way they collided," lead investigator Joshua Cawthra told The Oregonian. "But we do know that both pilots had a lot of structure in t heir view." Flight instructor Travis Thompson, 31, of Beaverton,

to:

Alzheimer's Association, P.O. Box 10051, Portland, OR 97210.

Marguerite Helena Laughlin, of Redmond Mar. 3, 1915- July21, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Celebration of Life: Sat., July 27, 2013 at 3:006:00pm at the home of Dave & Sue Copelan. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701.

Violet M. Wendler, of Bend April 10, 1921 - July 21, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471. Services: A private family service will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701.

Aleese "Lisa" Patricia Faulkner May 7,1936- April17, 2013 E arly in t h e m o r n ing o f A pril 17, 20 1 3 , L i sa Faulkner left the bonds of e arth t o r a c e a c r oss t h e heavens on Autumn Dawn, her favorite mare. L isa w a s b orn in Glendale, CA, graduated fr om Brigham Young University, worked Lisa Faulkner f or L os Angeles County and l i v ed in Shadow Hillys, CA. with her A r a bian H o r ses. She w as active in A K C s h o w s with her Schipperke, Tina, whom Lisa campaigned to Top Dog, 2 years in a row. U pon meeting he r l i f e ' s love, Dan F a u l kner, t h ey b oth m o ve d i n 1 9 7 3 ,t o B end, w h ic h L i s a c a l l e d God's Country. A voracious reader, curious mind, s h arp i n t e llect a nd a l o v e o f ani m a l s , Lisa's life is celebrated by those who knew and loved her. God speed, dear one. There will b e a c e l ebration of l i fe f or L i sa Faulkner, S a t u r da y A u gust 3, 2013, at t h e F i r st P resbyterian C h u r ch, 2 3 0 NE Ninth, B en d a t 1 1 :00 a.m. In lieu of flowers, don ations may b e m a d e t o Partners In Care Hospice.

Hazel Oneita Ellis May 4, 1928 - July 22, 2013 Hazel Oneita Ellis, a long time Bend resident, died at her home on July 22, 2013 at the age of 85. Hazel was born to Henry and Om a ( S i eber) P r ater on May 4, 1928, in Round Springs, MO. She graduated from Bend High School and for many years was employed as a P BX op erator a t B r o o k s Scanlon L u m be r C o . I n 1973, she married Paul W. Ellis, who died in 1990. H azel w a s an ar d e n t bowler a n d h e l d s e v eral b oard positions in th e Or e gon W o m e n' s B o w l i n g Association. I n 1 9 91, sh e was i n d u c te d in t o t h e OWBA's Hall of Fame. She w as m e mber o f V i c t o r y Baptist Church. Survivors i n c l u d e tw o step-daughters a n d on e step-son. A Memorial Service wi l l be held at V i ctory Baptist Church, 12th an d G r e enw ood, o n S a t u r day, J u l y 27th, a t 4 : 3 0 p .m. Please leave on l in e c o n d olences at www .deschutes memorialchapel.com

The Associated Press file photo

Challenger Emile Griffith, right, battles welterweight champian Jose Napoles in a title fight at the Forum in Los Angeles in1969. Griffith died Tuesday at an extended care facility in Hempstead, N.Y.

Emile Griffith, boxer who unleashedfatal barrage, diesat 75 By Richard Goldstein

away rumors about his sexual orientation for years, survived It was the night of March a beating outside a gay bar 24, 1962, a nationally televised in Times Square in 1992 and welterweight title fight at Mad- later acknowledged an attracison Square Garden in New tion to men, died Tuesday in York between Emile Griffith Hempstead, N.Y., his boxing and Benny Paret, known as earnings and his memory long Kid. Griffith was seeking to re- gone. He was 75. capture the crown he had once The causes were k i dney taken from Paret and then lost failure and complications of back to him. dementia, said Ron Ross, the But this was more than a author of "Nine ... Ten ... and third encounter for a boxing ti- Out! The Two Worlds of Emile tle. A different kind of tension Griffith," published in 2008. hung in the Garden air, fed Griffith wo n t h e w e lterby whispered rumors and an weight title three times and open taunt by Paret, a brash the middleweight title twice Cuban who at the weigh-in and briefly held the newly h ad referred to G r iffith a s created junior middleweight gay, using the Spanish epithet title. He was inducted into the "maricon." International Boxing Hall of F ighters squaring of f a l - Fame in 1990. But he was most ways challenge each other's remembered forParet's death. b oxing prowess, but in t h e It followed him for the rest of macho world of the ring, and his life. in the taboo-laden world of But Clancy did not believe 1962, Paret had made it per- that Griffith had gone into the sonal, challenging Griffith's fight looking to make Paret manhood. pay for his slur. "I've always thought that On a Saturday night, about 7,500 fans — not a bad crowd what happened at the weighfor a televised bout in those in had absolutely nothing to years — had trooped to the do with what happened in the Garden to w atch th e f i ght Garden that night," he said. through a haze of cigarette Paret's death brought an ina nd cigar s m oke. B y t h e quiry by the New York State 12th round of a s c heduled Athletic Commission, which 15, Griffith and Paret were absolved the referee, Ruby still standing. But in the 12th, Goldstein, for his delay in stopGriffith pinned Paret into a ping the fight. corner and let fly a whirlwind Griffithlosthiswelterweight of blows to the head. title to L u i s R o driguez i n Griffith delivered 17 punch- March 1963 and then regained es in five seconds with no re- it in a rematch that year. He sponse from Paret, according won the middleweight chamto Griffith's trainer, Gil Clan- pionship by a decision over cy, who counted them up from Dick Tiger in April 1966, but television r e plays. G r i ff ith that required him to give up might have punched Paret at his welterweight crown. least two dozen times in that He lost the middleweight salvo. title to Nino Benvenuti of Italy At last the referee stepped in April 1967, won it back from in, and Paret collapsed with him, then lost it again in their blood clots in his brain. third bout. He briefly held the "I hope he isn't hurt," Griffith new junior middleweight title was quoted as saying in his in the early 1960s. dressing room afterward. "I After losing three consecupray to God — I say from my tive fights, Griffith r e t ired heart — he's all right." in 1977 with 85 victories, 24 Paret died 10 days later at lossesand two draws. He later R oosevelt Hospital i n N e w worked occasionally as a boxYork. ing trainer and lived in HempGriffith, wh o h a d b a tted stead, on Long Island. New Yorh Times News Service

Death Notices are free and will

us or make us re-evaluate," Queen said. "Sometimes that Continued from B1 means that we have to give Firefighterswere deployed up on an area and re-estabo vernight t o c o m bat t h e lish further away." fire in cooler heat, although Queen said the fire is movQueen said the area is not ing from west to east over the likely to see any moisture. mountains. On the other side "The wind has stopped, of the mountains, roughly 40 which helped us a lot," Queen residences sit in the Schoolie said. "But we aren't going to Flat area. get any humidity recovery. The i n c ident m a n ageWe've got our hands full." ment team has been using The fire has spread further Facebook to c onnect with north from the initial burn lo- residents in the Schoolie Flat cation, now burning between area, as well as the concerned the Deschutes River and the public, Queen said. The team Mutton Mountains. has also been conducting live The mountains cause a radio interviews and making new problem for firefighters. multiple phone calls to keep Queen saidtheterrain switch- people updated. The area has es from sagebrush, juniper not been evacuated. and short grass in the surEast of t h e m o u ntains, rounding area to ponderosa firefighters on Tuesday empine, and there is more heat, ployed a t e chnique called wind and potential for fire ac- "back-burning," inducing fire tivity on the mountains. in an area to burn up fuels "If laddering happens, the before the wildfirereaches flames are going to get too tall that area, on the west bank for ground fighters," Queen of the Deschutes to keep the said. "But, if you use water or fire from hopping the river, retardant, then you're creat- Queen said. ing a smoky situation." Because of the fire's proxQueen explained that lad- imity to the river, Bureau of dering — a fire-fighting term Land Management spokesused to describe when fu- woman Lisa Clark said, the els ofdifferent sizes are in a BLM o f f ice i n P r i n eville burning area — is one of the closed a 39-mile stretch of the biggest concerns with the fire Lower Deschutes Tuesday, climbing the mountains. Fires denying 60 permitted recrethat are close to the ground atorsaccess to a segment of have a much better chance the Lower Deschutes River. of reaching the tallest trees Clark said BLM gave recreby progressively working ators the option to go on one up from small fuels to larger of the other four segments, fuels. an option that is not typically "All of these things come granted. together and can discourage The 39-mile stretch is pop-

— From wire reports

lodgepole pine and spread

Deadlines:Death Notices are

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guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They maybesubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to editall submissions. Please include contact information

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ular with overnight rafting and fishing trips, Clark said. Rick Ellis, owner of tour and rental company River Trails Deschutes, said he has an overnight trip planned in the area for Thursday. The trip costs $245 per person, according to their website. Clark said approximately 25 rafters were signed up to take the whitewater rafting trip, potentially costing him $6,000 if the river were to close. "It's part of the risk you have out here," he said. Cory Godell, owner of DeschutesRiver Anglers in Bend, said he has a four-day guided fishing trip starting today. The area that was closed is a popular trout-fishing spot on the tour, Godell said, but he would change the trip's locations or durations to accommodate if the river was closed. A four-day trip with Godell costs $1,600 per person for two people, according to the company's website. "This isn't the first time that t hi s h a s h a ppened," Godell said. "But it doesn't change the fact that it makes the trips difficult." By 6 p.m., BLM had reopened the segment of the river. But an u pdate from Central Oregon Interagency Dispatch w a rn s c a mpers, rafters and anglers that helicopters will be using dip buckets in the area and if the fire threatens again an emergency closure will take place. — Reporter: 541-383-0348, bandersen@bendbulletin.com

Jl/

Stagecoach

and turned its young beauties — including Linda Evangelista, Gisele Bundchen and Naomi Campbell — into celebrities. Died Saturday in Rio de Janeiro.

Obituary policy

— Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbulletin.com

Sunnyside

Continued from B1 They left the camp Monday morning s o P a rker could go to a painting job in Gilchrist, which is about eight miles southwest of the camp, allegedly leaving behind the still-warm remnants of the campfire. Monday afternoon, the fire crept out of the fire ring and grew into a wildfire, Bryson said. Smoke from the blaze was first reported at 3:30 p.m. by the Odell Butte Lookout, burning on land between U.S. Highway 97 and Oregon Highway 31. As the Stagecoach Fire — named after the nearby Old Stagecoach Road — burned through thick

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld: John Casablancas, 70: The b rash upstart w h o t r a n sformed the m odeling business in the late 1970s when he founded the Elite agency

Continued from B1 In June, Jennifer Montoya said her husband was notified that he was facing the termination of his contract because of job-performance issues that related to missing deadlines. The district has not commented on the reason for the

date to further discuss Montoya's status. "It would be unfair to make a judgment in the middle of an investigation," Helt said. "We want to wait and make sure everything i s i n v estigated thoroughly so we can make a fair decision."

to 330 acres on mostly public and some private ground, it caused the evacuation of 120 homes in the A ntelope Meadows a n d Jack Pine Village subdivisions. It also threatened 30 other nearby homes, including some houses in the Split Rail subdivision. The evacuation order was lifted at 10:30 p.m. Monday. During the evacuation of the subdivisions a U.S. ForestService law enforcement officer was injured in a t w o -vehicle wreck, Bryson said. The officer was treated and released for the injuries and the other driver w asn't h u rt , s aid L i sa Clark, spokeswoman for the Central Oregon Interagency Dispatch Center in Prineville.

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The injury t o t h e o f ficer contributed to the decision to charge Parker with f irst-degree arson, Bryson said. While the fire didn't burn any homes, it did destroy a cabin. And, Bryson said, it destroyed Parker'strailer and

pickup. There were 160 firefighters on the Stagecoach Fire Tuesday, and they scratched a preliminary line around the fire, Clark said. The fire was 10 percentcontained as of Tuesday night. Officials were hesitant to increase the amount of containment until seeing if the line held. They also said the fire was still a threat to 150 homes. " That is really if th e f i re were to jump the line and begin moving again," Clark said.

T oday, about t h e s a m e number of f i r efighters will likely be on the fire, dousing hot spots near the fire with the goal of preventing further spread. P atrol Capt. Da n S m i th of the U.S. Forest Service in Bend, who helped with the fire investigation, said a campfire should be stirred, cooled with water and then watched. A campfire should be cold to the touch before being left behind, he said. He said the Stagecoach Fire is a reminder of the importance of taking these steps. "It is too hot and dry," he said. "You need to be careful with fire. You need to make sure it is completely out." — Reporter: 541-817-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com


B6

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

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WATER REPORT a service to irrigators and sportsmen.

Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme

Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 28,965...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . . 96,376..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 70,763.... . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 18,908......47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 114,419..... 153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 214 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,430 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ...... . 149 LOW MEDIUM HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 74.3 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 151 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 1,91 7 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res..... . . . . . NA Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res.... . . . . . 214 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 20.2 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 74.3 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

To report a wildfire, call 911

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Average high.............. 83 Year to date............ 3.1 9" Averagelow .............. 49 Average year to date..... 6.1 5" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.01 Record 24 hours ...0.68 in1935 *Melted liquid equivalent

Redmond/Madras.......High Prinevine...........................Ext

Astoria ........66/52/0.00....66/55/pc......66/55/c Baker City......93/41/0.00....94/55/pc......93/53/s Brookings......66/48/0.00....63/53/pc.....63/52/pc Burns..........97/46/0.00....93/55/pc......95/54/s Eugene........96/52/0.00.....91/48/s......90/50/s Klamath Falls .. 95/53/0 00 ...91/53/pc ... 92/52/s Lakeview....... 97/48/0.00 .... 90/60/t......91/58/s La Pine.........98/42/NA....91/45/pc.....92/41/pc Medford.......95/60/0.00....97/65/pc......98/61/s Newport.......57/50/0.00....62/48/pc.....62/52/pc North Bend......59/48/NA....65/52/pc.....66/53/pc Ontario.......102/57/0.00....99/68/pc.....101/68/s Pendleton......99/57/0.00.....98/60/s......97/58/s Portland .......88/59/0.00.....86/58/s.....85/57/pc Prinevige.......95/50/0.00....93/56/pc......93/52/s Redmond.......98/44/0.00....95/54/pc......95/51/s

+

Death Valley, Calif.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 95/57 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh.......100m1959 Monthtodate..........000" Recordlow......... 31in1953 Average monthtodate... 0.43"

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

68/5~ .

I

• Seattle 82/58

TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....4:29 a.m...... 7:1 6p.m. Venus......8:27 a.m.....10:04 p.m. Mars.......3:42 a.m...... 7:11 p.m. Jupiter......3 39 a.m...... 7 00 p.m. Satum......l:45 p.m.....12:27 a.m. Uranus....11:1 6p.m.....1158 a.m.

FIRE INDEX

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.

I

(inthe 48 (' contiguous states):

New Fi r st Full

PLANET WATCH

Yesterday Wednesday Thursday Bend,westoiHwy97......Ext Si sters...............................Ext The following was compiled by the Central Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend,eastoiHwy.97.......Ext. La Pine................................Ext Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as

o www m extremes

Last

Sunset tomorrow... 8:37 p.m. Moonrisetoday.... 9:38 p.m. Moonsettoday 819 8 m July29 A09. 6 A09. 14 Aug.20

Meacham

92/64

/60

SunsettodaY.... 8 38 P.m,

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

• 3.40

78 48

Sunrise today...... 5:45 a.m. MOOn phaSeS

Yesterday's state extremes

87/59

Frenchglen

• 9i/60

Paisley

• Brooking

96/67

Juntura

w

HIGH LOW

81 50

OREGON CITIES

Jordan Valley

92/51

Grants~ 37

Nyssa

Chr i stmas Valley

l.ake

Port Orford

• 66«4 ~

HIGH LOW

89 51

CENTRAL Partly cloudy with

89/45

Chemult

91/59

Hamjxton • Bul'ns La Pine 3i/ds 04/53+ • R lie y Cr escent • Fort Rock92/49 •• 92/59

83/52

Roseburg

• Brothers 94/54

Lake g

• Bandon

Valeo

99/69

93/ 59

o

• Crescento

88/50 ~

Coos Bay

HIGH LOW

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

EAST Partly cloudy with a slight chance of thunderstorms today.

Paulina 35/55

vsiso

Sunriver

unity

Mostly sunny.

93 56

WEST Coastal fog and clouds early in the day; otherwise mostly sunny today.

a slight chance of thunderstorms today.

Baker Ci 94/55 P

98I57

Yachats• ~

Florence•

91/55

93/61 Un ion gs/57

97/58

Aibany~

0'eP

La Grande•

ondon

89/54•

62/48

Dall e S 86/64 ~o qrlingtun ~ 62 • " »«, • oWasco

84/54

100/62

The Biggs

Sunny.

HIGH LOW

BEND ALMANAC

As t oria 65/54

Sunny.

Becoming partly cloudy.

o*5 . 5

I,

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gs

I I 4

iI

CONDITIONS .v+

-8+++ 0 ++++ ++o

W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms

o4 3 d 4 d' 4

*

*

* *

' ** * * *

:osvo

+xo+Ho+ Rain F l urries Snow * e

Ice

YesterdayWednesdayThursday YesterdayWednesdayThursday YesterdayWednesdayThursday YesterdayWednesdayThursday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX......95/77/000 ..98/73/pc. 99/74/pc Grand Rapids....81/67/001 ..77/56/pc. 80/60/pc RapidCity.......86/58/000..88/60/pc...83/60/t Savannah.......91/76/001... 92/74/t...91/75/t Akron..........83/64/043..74/55/pc. 76/58/pc GreenBay.......73/62/0.00..75/56/pc. 79/62/pc Reno...........86/71/000... 95/67/t...97/67/t Seattle..........88/57/000...82/58/s. 80/57/pc Albany..........83/70/0.92..77/53/pc.. 79/56/s Greensboro......89/71/0.00..90/67/pc. 83/65/pc Richmond.......91/74/000... 91/66/t. 84/67/pc Sioux Falls.......76/58/000 ..81/61/pc. 81/61/pc Albuquerque.....96/70/000...92/69/t...89/71/t Harusburg.......86/72/065..81/60/pc. 79/62/pc Rochester, NY....85/68/0.03 .. 70/57/pc.. 75/61/s Spokane........94/62/0.00... 95/58/s .. 94/58/s Anchorage ......72/56/0.00..73/61/pc.. 73/57/s Hartford,CT .....89/72/0.33..86/58/pc.. 83/65/s Sacramento..... 90/67/trace...93/63/s .. 98/64/s Springfield, MO ..94/72/0.00..85/65/pc. 86/68/pc Atlanta .........85/70/0.11...88/71/t. 89/71/pc Helena..........91/56/0.00...92/58/s. 91/59/pc St. Louis.........92/78/0.00... 82/61/s .. 82/67/s Tampa..........88/75/0.53... 90/77/t. 91/78/pc Atlantic City.....88/74/0.73...87/63/t.. 75/63/s Honolulu........88/75/0.00..89775/pc..89/75/s Salt Lake City...100/72/000 ..95/68/pc. 96/71/pc Tucson..........96/75/000... 98/75/t...96/75/t Austin..........99/77/0.00..99/73/pc. 99/74/pc Houston ........95/79/0.00..96776/pc.97/76/pc SanAntonio.....99/80/000 ..98/77/pc. 99777/pc Tulsa..........100/80/000... 93/74/t...92/75/t Baltimore .......87/72/006..86/62/pc.. 83/66/s Huntsville .......80/72/057...88/64/t. 87/66/pc SanDiego.......75/67/000... 74/66/s.74/66/pc Washington,DC.89/76/000 ..86/65/pc.. 83/67/s Bigings .........92/59/0.00...91/62/s. 87/61/pc Indianapolis.....91/69/0.00..77/58/pc.. 80/60/sSanFrancisco....69/58/000..71/56/pc. 71/55/pc Wichita.........92/73/000..89/70/pc...89/70/t Birmingham .. 81/71/1.14...8I69/t. 88/68/pc Jackson, MS.... 93/76/0.00. 93/74/t. 91/73/pc SaoJose....... 79/62/trace..82/59/pc 83/59/s Yakima........100/65/000...97/62/s .. 96/61/s Bismarck........77/53/000..83/58/pc. 81/55/pc Jacksonvile......91/73/0.00...91/74/t...93/74/t SantaFe........93/63/010..85/61/pc. 82/62/pc Yuma..........103/82/000..104/82/5.105/83/s Boise...........99/61/000..96/64/pc. 98/59/pc Juneau..........68/52/0.00..65/51/sh.63/52/sh INTERNATIONAL Boston..........82/68/1.76..86/62/pc.. 76/64/s Kansas City......87/70/0 00...84/66/s. 87/68/pc BodgeportCT....87/73/045..85/63/pc.. 79/66/s Lansing.........82/69/038..76/54/pc. 80/59/pc Amsterdam......88/63/000 ..76/60/sh 77/64/c Mecca.........108/86/000 109/84/s. 109/84/s Buffalo .........79/67/000..71/58/pc.. 78/61/s Las Vegas.......98/80/000..104/86/s107/86/pc Athens..........88/75/0.00... 95/74/s .. 93/75/s MexicoCity .....79/54/0.11... 75/54/t .. 75/55/1 Burlington,VT....80/68/047..74/51/pc.. 77/52/s Lexington .......87/71/000..80/60/pc.. 82/63/s Auckland........61/48/000 ..59/53/sh.58/48/pc Montreal........81/66/044..69/54/pc.. 75/59/s Caribou,ME.....67/58/060..77/49/sh. 74/49/pc Lincoln..........82/66/0 28...85/63/s...85/65/t Baghdad.......107/84/000 ..111/90/s. 112/89/s Moscow........66/52/004 ..74/54/sh .. 70/56/c Charleston SC ...91/77/0 00...90/77/t...88/75/t Little Rock.......91/73/045...93/71/t. 90/72/pc Bangkok........91/79/0.08 ..89/76/sh.89/76/sh Nairobi.........72/59/0.00... 69/54/c. 74/53/pc Charlotte........88/73/000..90/70/pc. 85/69/pc LosAngeles......73/64/0 00..75/66/pc. 73/65/pc Beiyng..........90/73/000 ..93/79/pc. 98/73/pc Nassau.........88/81/000 ..86/77/pc.83/78/pc Chattanooga.....82/73/0.16...89/67/t. 87/65/pc Louisville........90/73/0.00..81/63/pc.. 84/64/s Beirut..........86/77/0.00...86/73/s .. 85/72/s New Delh/.......93/79/0.00 101/86/pc. 102/85/t Cheyenne.......83/59/001..84/59/pc...80/56/t Madison Wl.....75/66/000..75/56/pc. 79/62/pc Berliu...........82/61/000...88/61/s. 85/67/pc Osaka..........95/77/000..90/76/sh. 88/77/pc Chicago.........78/67/003..76/60/pc. 80/64/s Memphis....... 89/70/0 98 91/69/t.91/70/pc Bogota .........64/50/0.08...68/46/t...63/46/t Oslo............75/48/0.00 ..82/60/pc...79/63/t Cincinnati.......89/65/001..77/58/pc.. 80/61/s Miami..........89/78/027...90/77/t.91/77/pc Budapest........90/55/0.00...93/63/s ..83/63lc Ottawa.........84/59/0.00..68/50/pc. 75/55/pc Cleveland.......86/64/0.57..73/58/pc. 76/60/pc Milwaukee......76/66/0.00..73/59/pc...78/64/t BuenosAires.....50/32/000 ..51/37/pc.. 55/42/s Paris............90/68/003..83/60/pc. 86/69/pc Colorado Spnngs.92/59/000..80/58/pc. 84/58/pc Miuneapolis.....77/63/0.00..77/62/pc...80/62/t CaboSanLucas ..93/77/000..91/77/pc. 95/77/pc Riode Janeiro....68/63/000..67/58/sh. 65/62/sh Columbia,MO...87/71/0.00...82/62/s .. 84/67/s Nashvige........92/70/0.00...86/64/t .. 87/64/s Cairo...........91/73/0.00 .. 98/69/s .. 98/69/s Rome...........88/68/0.00... 85/72/s .. 88/73/s Columbia,SC....92/75/000... 95/73/t. 90/72/pc New Orleans.....92/78/0.00..91/77/pc. 91/77/pc Calgary.........72/55/0.37... 70/54/t .. 73/57/s Santiago........61/28/0.00... 68/37/s .. 62/52/s Columbus, GA....89/72/0.16... 90/72/t. 93/72/pc New York.......87/73/0.31 ..86/64/pc .. 82/65/s Cancun.........88/79/000..88/78/pc.89/77/pc Sao Paulo.......55/45/000..54/52/sh. 59/52/sh ColumbusOH....88/69/001 ..77/56/pc.. 79/60/s Newark NJ......90/73/026..86762/pc..82/64/s Dublin..........73/61/0.00..73/60/pc. 70/55/sh Sapporo ........84/68/0.00... 75/60/r. 68/61/sh Concord,NH.....77/64/2.40..81/53/pc.. 79/54/s Norfolk, VA......90/76/0.00... 91/70/t. 84/71/pc Edinburgh.......68/59/000 ..72/54/sh...71/56/r Seoul...........81/77/000 ..81/71/sh. 85/70/pc Corpus Christi....95/79/000... 95/78/s. 96/78/pc OklahomaCity...97/77/0 00..94/74/pc. 94/75/pc Geneva.........88/64/000... 83/68/t. 82/64/sh Shangha/.......100/84/000..96/80/sh .. 95/81/c DagasFtWorth...99/80/000 101/80/pc101/80/pc Omaha.........84/67/002...84/66/s. 84/67/pc Harare..........68/41/0.00...70/45/s ..70/43/s Singapore.......90/81/0.00 ..87/80/sh.. 90/79/c Dayton.........88/67/0.07..75/56/pc.. 78/59/s Orlando.........86/73/0.00...92/75/t. 94/76/pc Hong Kong......90/82/0.00 .. 85/77/sh.86/78/sh Stockholm.......64/54/0.00... 80/55/s.77/59/pc Denver....... 90/66/000 ..87/63/pc.86/60/pc PalmSprings....106/80/0.00..104/81/s. 106/81/s Istanbul.........86/68/0.00...91/73/s .. 86/72/s Sydney..........63/45/0.00 ..65/48/pc. 61/51/pc DesMoines......79/65/000...81/62/s. 84/66/pc Peoria ..........83/67/0.00..78/59/pc.. 81/63/s lerusalem.......85/66/0.00...86/67/s .. 84/66/s Taipei...........93/82/0.00..86/78/pc. 87/80/pc Detroit..........87/68/054..75/60/pc...79/63/t Philadelphia.....88/71/1 86...86/62/s .. 84/65/s Johannesburg....60/38/0.00...63/41/s .. 65/42/s Tel Aviv.........90/73/0.00...92/70/s .. 90/70/s Duluth..........75/54/000 ..72/53/pc. 7454/pc Phoeuix........102/82/0.00 105/86/pc105/86/pc Lima...........63/59/000 ..68/58/pc. 68/59/pc Tokyo...........91/77/000... 88/75/t. 89/74/sh El Paso..........95/73/0.00 ..93/75/pc. 93/74/pc Pittsburgh.......82/64/0.72..74/55/pc .. 77/58/s Lisbon..........82/61/000.. 82/63/s 79/57/pc Toronto.........81/63/000 72/57/pc.. 73/55/s Fairbanks........78/57/000 ..75/56/sh .. 74/50/c Portland, ME.....70/63/0 94..81/57/pc .. 78/57/s London.........79/63/002..78/56/pc.78/58/sh Vancouver.......73/59/000...75/61/s.. 75/61/s Fargo...........77/50/0.00...79/59/t. 78/56/pc Providence ......88/73/0.04..89763/pc. 80/65/pc Madrid .........93/68/0.00... 96/70/s .. 96/70/s Vienna..........90/57/0.00... 84/61/s.. 85/66/c Flagstaff ........76/55/0.00...78/56/t...79/56/t Raleigh.........91/74/0.00...92/69/t. 85/68/pc Manila..........90/75/057...92/76/r.. 92/77/c Warsaw.........68/50/000...7I59/c.83/63/pc

OREGON NEWS

Fe sa vanceplantokill arre owlsinNort west By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press

GRANTS PASS — Federal wildlife officials plan to dispatch hunters into forests of the Pacific Northwest starting this fall to shoot one species of owl to protect another that is threatened with extinction. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Tuesday released a final environmental review of an experiment to see if killing barred owls will allow northern spotted owls to reclaim territory they've been driven out of over the past half-century. The agency has been evaluating the idea since 2009, gathering p u blic c o m ment and consulting ethicists, focus groups and scientific studies. lt will issue a final decision on the plan in a month. "If we don't manage barred owls, the probability of recovering the spotted owl goes down significantly," said Paul Henson, Oregon state supervisor for Fish and Wildlife.

x.

The Associated Press file photo

A northern spotted owl sits on a tree in the Deschutes National Forest near Camp Sherman. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service plans to start sending hunters into the woods of the Northwest to kill barred owls in an experiment to see if it will help the threatened northern spotted owl rebound.

The agency's preferred course of action calls for killing 3,603barred owls in four study areas in Oregon, Washington and Northern California over the next four years. The plan is expected to cost about $3 million and requires a special permit under the Migratory Bird T reaty A ct, which prohibits killing nongame birds. Neither the timber industry nor the Audubon Society was pleased with it. "Shooting a few isolated areas of barred owl isn't going to help us as forestmanagers, nor is it going to help the forest be protected from wildfires, and catastrophic wildfire is one of the big impediments to spotted owl recovery," said Tom Partin, president of the American Forest Resource Council, a timber industry group. Bob Sallinger, conservation director for the Audubon Society of Portland, said saving the spotted owl is of paramount importance, bttt the focus must

remain on protecting habitat. nTO m Ove fOrward w i t h killing barred owls without addressing the fundamental cause of spotted owl declines, from our perspective, is not acceptable," he said. Henson said the Northwest Forest Plan, which cut logging by 90 percent on national forests in the 1990s, has done a good job of providing habitat for the spotted owl. But the owls' numbers have continued to slide. Henson said unless barred owls are brought under control, the spotted owl in coming decades might disappear from Washington's northern Cascade Range and Oregon's Coast Range, where the barred owl incursion has been greatest. It has taken the federal government a long time to get to this point. The California Academy of Sciences killed some barred owls in spotted owl territory on the Klamath National Forest in Northern

California in 2005, and the owner of some redwood timberlands in Northern California regularly kills barred owls to protect spotted owls. The idea of killing one type of owl to protect another underscoresthe fragile balance of nature that biologists have struggled with for years. Between 2000 and 2006, wildlife officials captured and removed more than40 golden eagles from the Channel Islands off Southern California to protect the island fox. They also hired a company to kill 5,000 feral pigs on Santa Cruz in a controversial program to restore the island's ecosystem. ln Oregon, officials have used lethal injections to kill selected California sea lions that feast on protected salmon in the Columbia River. And in Yosemite National Park, saving bighorn sheep has meant hunting protected mountain lions. The northern spotted owl is an icon of bitter disputes between the timber industry and environmentalists over the use of Notthwest forests. Because of it s d w i n dling n u mbers, the little bird was listed as a threatened species in 1990, which resulted in logging cutbacks and lawsuits. Barred owls a r e b i gger,

more aggressive and less picky about food. They started working their way across the Great Plains in the early 1900s, and by 1959 were in British Columbia. Barred owls now coverthe spotted owl's range, in some places outnumbering them as much as 5-to-l. The Fish and Wildlife Service'spreferred plan calls for a combination of killing and capturing barred owls. But capturing owls is fa r m o re expensive and difficult. And the agency has found only five zoos or other facilities willing to take a barred owl if it's captured, said Robin Bown, the wildlife biologist in charge of the evaluation.

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16-18 2012 llt IIIIIIII AM PHITHEATER

PublishingDate: Friday, August 9

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BEND BREWFEST THECOMPLETEGUIDETOTHE BREWE RIES,THEBEERSANDALL THEFUN. The Bend Brewfest is a celebration of the craftsmanship and artistry of beer making across the Northwest, offering fine brews, food and entertainment while supporting Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon. Held in Bend's Old Mill District, the event honors the success of local brewers and spotlights their roles in the vitality of Central Oregon's economy. This official booklet, designed as an interactive reference guide as well as a beer lover's keepsake, is distributed to all Bulletin readers and the thousands who attend the festival.

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Bdtarday.septeo/Txeztvo,grn OREGON FESTIVAL OF FESTIVA B CARS +. C A R S THEGUIDETOCENTRALOREGON'S EXCLUSIV EEXOTICCARSHOW

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The Oregon Festival of Cars features the world's most rare and exotic automobiles. Both new and vintage models are featured in this show that attracts spectators from across the region who dream of sitting behind the wheel of such sophisticated machinery. The guide includes photos and descriptions of each car featured in the show as well as additional event details.

>L J< CARS • FOOD • MUBIC • Fstw FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY

wwwuregonfoxtlvalofuors.«om

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PudlishingDate: Wednesday, September 11

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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 ML B , C3 Sports in brief, C2 NFL, C4 College football, C2

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN ¹ WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

LOCAL GOLF

WCL BASEBALL

Thnrston rallies to beat Elks 8-3 Bend tookan early 3-2 lead over Thurston County, but the Sena-

aem o erwins entra re on unior

tors rode four runs in

By Zack Hall

the eighth inning to

The Bulletin

take an 8-3 nonleague victory over the Elks

REDMOND — Bend's Madison Odiorne canonly hope that Deanna Salvatori plays this way next week when the budding golfers are teammates. Salvatori — a Salem junior golfer who will join Odiorne next week in New Mexico on the Oregon team in the Girls Junior America's Cup — shot a blistering3-under-par 69 Tuesday at Juniper Golf Course to win the 36-hole Central Oregon Junior at 3 under. Odiorne, a 16-year-old junior-to-be at Summit High School, finished in third place at 9 over. And playing in the final group with Salvatori, Odiorne could only marveL "That was fun to watch," said Odiorne, who shot a 4-over 76 that on most days would have kept her in contention in a high-level junior tournament like this. "I was rooting for her, for sure." How good was Salvatori? Taking a five-stroke lead over Odiorne into the second round, Salvatori shot a 3-under 33 on the front side of Juniper, which was playing at some

Tuesday night at Vince

Genna Stadium. The two teams went back and forth in the

early innings before the Elks went on top in the third off a Landon Frost RBI double that scored Grant Newton. But

Thurston scored a run in each of the fifth and sixth innings to take the

lead for good. Also on Tuesday, the

West Coast LeagueAllStar gamewas playedin Victoria, British Columbia, and the Elks' South team held off a late North rally for a 7-5 victory.

The Elks' ClayGartner and Hunter Raley each

pitched one inning for the South, with Gartner going in the second in-

Salvatori bogeyed the par-3 16th, but she made par on her final two holes to postthe best score of heryoung career. "It is really exciting," said Salvatori, who is a prospect to play NCAA Division I golf when she graduates from Sprague High School next year. "That's the best I played ever. Now I know I can do it." In the boys open division, Alex Wrenn beat Jake Reiff on the first hole of a sudden-death playoff after both Lake Oswego golfers finished at 4 under to win. Bend's Ryan DeCastilhos finished in a tie for seventh place at I over. Bend's Megan Mitchell won the girls division (played at shorter tees than the open girls division) at 28 over par, and Sam Nielsen, of Bend, was edged Ryan Brennecke iThe Bulletin by a stroke in the junior boys division Deanna Salvatori watches her ball after teeing off on the first hole at Juniper Golf to Joash Farlow Jr., of Hlllsboro. Course during the final round of the Central Oregon Junior on Tuesday in Redmond. In the pee wee division, 11-year-old Redmond golfer Isaac Buerger outplayed the field by posting a 2-over 74 6,000 yards for the entire 18 holes. h o le to drop her back even for the day. in the 18-hole tournament. — Reporter: 541-617-7868, Then Salvatori's day really got crazy. Th e n she proceeded to birdie the next zhatlC<bendbutletin.com. She triple-bogeyed the par-5 10th f o u r h oles.

ning and giving up one hit and recording one strikeout, while Raley threw in the sixth and

HIGH DESERT CLASSICS

NFL

struck out one. Chase Fields, Turner Gill, Derek Dixon and Seth Spivey all took turns at the plate for Bend. Fields, Dixon and

Coaches, players feeling

h

Spivey each hadtwo hits for the South. The Elks will be off

today before heading

¹

to Klamath Falls for a

two-game WCLseries starting Thursday. Bend

practice

will return home for a

six-gamehomestand with Wenatcheeand Cowlitz. The three-game series with Wenatchee

dilemma

h

begins Saturday night at 6:35. — Bulletin staff report

GOLF

Fans to pick hole location at PGA

h

315th at Oak Hill in the final round of the PGA

Championship, they

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GULLANE, Scotland — If Phil Mickelson and lan Poulter don't like the

hole location for the par-

• Limits on contact at training camp makes it harderto evaluate talent

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By Barry Wilner

The Associated Press

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Looking perplexed, Tom Coughlin stood on the field watching a minicamp practice. No pads, no real blocking, no power football for the New York Giants, as mandated bythe labor agreement between the league and the

L a I aI s "a.c

might want to take it up with the fans.

After all, the fans are going to decide where to put the pin.

The PGA ofAmerica announced acontest

called "PGA Champion-

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Emma Glaunert clears a jump while riding My Thoughts Exactly during competition in the USHJA National Hunter Classic during the Oregon High Desert Classics at J Bar J Ranch on Friday in Bend.

ship Pick the HoleLocation Challenge Hosted by Jack Nicklaus."

Fans can go to the PGA's website — www. PGA.com/pickthehole

— through Aug. 10 to vote for one of four options for the hole

location. The idea is to educate fans on how a course setup affects strategy, show themthe

• New equestrian competition classes arefeatured for the first time at thisyear's OregonHigh Desert Classics

kind of information on hole locations the play-

By Emily Oller

ers are given eachday

A relatively new equestrian event has brought the athleticism and excitement back to show hunters. In 2008, the United States Hunter Jumper Association (USHJA) High Performance Hunter Committee created the International Hunter Derby in an effort to bring the tradition and art of horsemanship back to the hunter-jumper

and let them take part in their own way in the

PGA Championship. The final major is Aug. 8-11.

"The idea cameup, we spoke to Jackand he was very excited about it," said Kerry Haigh, the

The Bulletin

world. USHJA has developed a course that features natural-looking fences and demands athleticism as well as flawless technique from both horse and rider. Hunter events are judged subjectively on manners, style and movement. Conversely, jumper events are timed events and are judged objectively on faults, such as poles knocked down, time faults, and

horsesrefusing ajump. Oregon City's Megan Jordan, winner

of the first of two International Hunter Derbies at this year's Oregon High Desert Classics, says the sport and skill are what draw her to the derbies. "The derbies have really intrigued me," says Jordan, 41. "The derbies make it fun for me, because it adds an element of skill. It brings it back to what hunters used to be, and I enjoy that." Jordan rides primarily in jumper competitions and stocks few hunter horses in her barn, but she says that her skill as a jumper is the primary reason for her success in the derbies. SeeDerbies/C4

chief championships officer for the PGA of

America.

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

The 15th hole is 181 yards with bunkers to

the left and water along

Braun reaction:Fed-upplayersfeel 'sick'

the right side. The fans won't be able to put the flag wherever they want. Haigh said the 15th

By Mike Fitzpatrick

green has anumber of

The Associated Press

options for pins, and

They felt sick, angry, cheated, deceived. Not only did Ryan Braun let down scores of baseball fans Monday, he riled up players all around the majors. The guys who used to be in his corner. The guys who make up the union membership. "Watching him talk right now makes me sick," Skip Schumaker of the Los Angeles Dodg-

he has selected four from which the fans can choose. They will not affect where he sets

the hole location for the other three rounds. — The Associated Press

ers said. "I have an autographed Braun jersey in my baseball room that I'll be taking down. I don't want my son identifying what I've worked so hard to get to and work so hard to have — I don't want him comparing Braun to me." The Milwaukee Brewers slugger accepted a 65-game suspension Monday for unspecified "violations" of baseball's drug program and labor contract. SeeBraun/C4

The Associated Press file

Milwaukee Brewers Ryan Braun has been suspended without pay for the rest of the season.

players. It's difficult enough when the players can hit each other to evaluate whether NFL wannabes have what it takes, or if veterans still can carry the load pro football demands. Now, with lots of offseason availabilities but virtually no contact allowed, followed by training camps in which two-a-days are outlawed unless one practice is a walkthrough, the appraisal process won't get much easier. "Well, it is pro football. It is the way it is today," Coughlin

says. Success has to be built, he

says, by "doing a good job with our evaluations — bringing the right people in here and getting them integrated intoour offense, defense and special teams, the way we do things, what our expectation levels are, what our values are. And the more we can be with them and around them, then the better you are going to feel about it." Coaches and players will be around each other plenty over the next month, whether it's in training camps or at exhibition games, or back at the home facilities when teams that go away early in camp return as the regular season approaches. Tons of classroom study is ahead, even for teams whose offensive and defensive schemes have been established for years. Lots of breakout sessions with position coaches, too. Enough video watching to, well, make

your eyes spin. See Practice /C4


C2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY BASEBALL MLB, Cleveland at Seattle

Time

MLB,Tampa BayatBoston

4 p.m.

COREBOARD

TV / Radio

1 2:30 p.m.

Roo t ESPN

GOLF OREGON GOLFASSOCIATION

THURSDAY GOLF Champions Tour, Senior British Open PGA Tour, Canadian Open

Time

TV / Radio

Web.com Tour, BoiseOpen

3:30 p.m.

Golf

BASEBALL MLB, New York Yankees at Texas M LB, TampaBay atBoston MLB, Minnesota at Seattle FOOTBALL

11 a.m. 4 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB MLB Root

CFL, Edmonton at Montreal

4 :30 p.m.

ES P N2

5 p.m.

NBCSN

9 a.m. 11:30 a.m.

ESPN2 Golf

BEACH VOLLEYBALL

World Series, quarterfjnals (taped)

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by N or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL

The Seahavvksnow haveseven tight ends on the roster heading

Jefferson Gounty falls to into camp. HaWaii — Jefferson County's 50/70 (jntermedjate, ages1113) baseball team lost jts third game jn the Regional Little Leag UeAll-Star Tournament,

falling to Hawaii. The gamevvas close until Jefferson County

Ex-NFLplayer sentenced — Former NFLrunning back Larry Johnson pleaded no contest Tuesday to charges that he choked an ex-gjrlfrjend

into unconsciousness and left

changed pitchers jn the fourth inning, according to Phil Fine,

her only jn her underwear jn a Las Vegas hotel hallway. The

Jefferson County's manager.

33-year-old was convicted of

After the switch, Hawaii began hitting and ended Up winning

domestic violence battery and assault, which are both mjsde-

19-1. Central Oregon's 50/70

meanors. A felony chargevvas dropped as part of a pleadeal. Johnson vvassentenced to one year of probation and ordered to pay a $345 fine. Hemust also perform 48 hours of community service and attend sjx months of counseling.

team will play jts fourth and

final game against California District 55 today at12:30 p.m. jnjrvjne, Calif.

M's manager staying in hOSPital —Mariners manager Eric Wedge missed hjs

second straight game, aday after suffering a dizzy spell during batting practice that landed him jn the hospital. Seattle general manager Jack Zdurjencjk an-

BASKETBALL WNBA All-Star game

reSerVeS Ilamed —Minnounced before Tuesday's game nesota teammates Ljndsay against Cleveland that Wedge Whalen and Rebekkah Brunson was to spend another night jn the hospital while doctors try to determine the cause of hjs

headline the WNBA All-Star

dizzi ness.WedgespentMonday

Lynx have four AII-Stars, with

night at a hospital and visited with Zdurjencjk on Tuesday morning, but doctors wanted

Whalen and Brunson joinjng starters Maya Moore and

to continue tests. Wedgewas

reserves announced Tuesday night. The league-leading

Sejmone Augustus. It's the second straight All-Star game

Central OregonJunior at MeadowLakes, July 23 at Juniper GolfCourse,July 24 Top five in eachdivision andlocals 38-Hole StrokePlay Boys Open — 1(tie), JakeReiff, LakeOswego, 71-69—140 AlexWrenn,LakeOswego,68-72—140.

3, HunterWescott, Beaverton,70-71 141. 4, David

Ganz,Portland,72-71—143. 5 (tie), TrevorWarner, Port land,74-70— 144;Ben Wanichek,Eugene, 7272 — 144. Locals: 7 (tie), Ryan DeCastilhos, Bend, 73-72—145. 24, Maxwell Higlin, Bend,79-75—154. 25 (tie), Jack Loberg,Bend, 79-76 155; Declan Watts, Bend,78-77—155. 32 (tie), JackKlar, Bend, 83-75 — 158 39, RileyGoldstein, Bend,77-84—161.

43 (tie),TK.Wasserman, Bend,79-88—167 45(tie), JamesSeeley,Redmond, 79-93— 172. 48,Mason Krieger,Bend,83-90 173. 50 (tie), MattKlar, Bend, 89-90 — I79 Girls Open — 1, DeannaSalvatori, Salem, 72-69 —141. 2, Kaitlin Cogom,KlamathFalls, 7773— 150.3,Madison Odiorne,Bend,77-76— 153. 4,SophiaSchiavone,Gresham,78 76— 154.5,Helen Davis, Portland,81-76—157. Junior Boys — 1, JoashFarlowJr., Hillsboro, 71-79—150. 2, SamNielsen, Bend, 73-78—151. 3, BlakeHudson,Portland, 79-76—155. 4, Connor Drath,Eugene,78-81 159. 5, BryceOlson, Eugene, 82-81—163.6(tie), Levi Dean,Eugene,80-85—165; LoganHansen,Camas, Wash., 81-84—165; Bend Clohe sey,Minneapolis,82-83— 165;SpencerJohnson, Portland,83-82—165.10, TrentonWarner, Portland, 86 83 169 11, KristopherMcCormick,West Linn 96-89 —185. Boys — 1, KevinOrr,Portland,75-69 144. 2, DavrsWalter,Eugene, 80-74—154. 3, Mathew Hart, HappyValley,75-80—155. 4 (tie), Jaiveer Singh, Clackamas, 75-81 156; NickConway, LakeOswego, 76-80 — 156. 6, MaysonTibbs, Prineville, 84-76160. 7 (tie), Elijah Lai, Tigard,83-79—161; Richie Mrkesell, Albany,82-79—161. 9, ChaseSnodgrass, The Dalles,82-81—163. 10 (tie), BenWasserman, Bend,75-89—164;Jacob Silver, Estacada,83-81164. 12(tie), ColinAlexander,Portland,76-89—165; Vincent Huynh-Wa tkins, Eugene, 79-86—165. 14 (tre), TimothyLee, LakeOswego, 76-90—166; Jack RodewaldPortl , and,80-86—166. 16 (tie), Jackson Shank,Portland,86-81—167; JonHolzgang, Tigard, 88-79 — 167. 18,Jack Marrs, Portland,85-86—170. 19 (tie), Cole Stockton,West Linn, 82-90—172; ClaytonRalewich, Vancouver,Wash.,89-83—172.21, SethSilver Estacada,86-87—173. 22,JackNevige, La Pine, 83-92 —175. 23, CabeGoehring, Prinevile, 8493 — 177.24, NicholasTimm,Portland, 98-84—182. 25, JakeWiley, Portland, 94-90—184. 26, MarkFelderman,TheDales, 98-92—190. Bailey Ortega,The Dages,104-92—196. Girls — 1,Megans Mitchell, Bend,87-85—172.2, StephaniMi e ler, Portland,86-88—174.3 (tie), Alyssa Kerry,Bend,85-90—175; McKenna Henderson, Eugene,89-86—175. 5(tie), ChloeBarnes, West Linn, 81-95—176; Rachel Drgastin, Bend,90-86—176. 7, AdrienneJohnson,Corvagis, 91-90—181. 8, Jennae Lecor nte,Vancouver,Wash.,97-85— 182.9,Madison Miller Camas,Wash., 96-91—187. 10, HalleCreswick, Corvagis,88-101 —189.11, KateHibbs,Albany, 97-95—192.12, BrooklynDobson, Boring,98-101199 13 (tie),KaelaWorden,McMinnvile,114-108222;Sydney Dobson,Boring,115—107—222. Intermediate Boys — 1, CraigRonne,Klamath Fags,75-69—144.2, JohnPollock, Eugene,78-74152. 3 (tie), JosephBrundan, Eugene, 77-80—157, BenjaminGruher,Camas, 74-83—157. 5, NateStember, Portland,78-81—159. Locals: 8, LukeSimoneau, Bend,87-89—176 Intermediate Girls — I, EllieSlarna,Salem, 7078 — 148.2,MadalynArdueser,Eugene,80-80—160. 3, SummerMarshall, WestLinn,76-86—162. 4, DelaneyTalovic,Lake Oswego,80-83— 163 5,Camille Dozois,LakeOswego, 77 88—165. 6, Olivia Loberg, Bend, 83-85— 168.7,TaylorVigfusson,LakeOswego, 84-87—171. 8 (tie), EliseFiluk, Camas, Wash., 7995 — 174; Victoria Gailey,Tigard, 87-87—174. 10, Kamryn Ford, Medford, 91-88 —179. 11, Staesha Flock,EaglePoint,88 93 181 12,KatieFilion, West Linn, 93-89 —182. 13(tie), BellaMarconi, Portland, 88-98—186;McKennaVanko, Portland, 89-97—186. 15, Hailey Oster,Camas, Wash., 90-97—187. 16, lliana Teges,TheDalles, 105-84—189. 17, Hannah Archuleta,WestLinn, 9199—190 Sara Parker, Beaverton,93-105—198

helped off the field and into the Seattle clubhouse about halfway through the Mariners' hitting

with four Minnesota players

session on Monday. Bench

Nneka Ogvvumjke from the

coachRobby Thompson filled

Los Angeles Sparks, Danjelle

Pee WeeDivisions Division winnersandlocals 18-Hole StrokePlay Boys 10-11 — I, IsaacBuerger,Redmond, 3737 — 74.Locals: 9, DonnieBagley Jr., WarmSprings, 61-52—113 10, ChanderSlater, Bend,61-59—120. Girls 10-11 —1, AlexaUdom,Portland, 45-

jn as manager for the second straight game.

Robinson of San Antonio and Tulsa's Glory Johnson round

Boys 8-9 — I, Arthur Venderby,WestLinn, 46-38—84.Locals. 3, LucasHughes, Redmond, 44-

on the Western Conference squad. Krjstj Toljver and

out the West reserves. Chicago

Wrigley upgrade on to

final aPPrOval —Aproposed

has three players on the East team: reserve Sylvia Fovvles

$500 million renovation of historic Wrigley Field received

and starters Elena Delle Donne and Epjphanny Prince. Other

crucial backing Tuesdayfrom

reserves for the East include

the local alderman and a Chj-

Connecticut's Tina Charles and Allison Hjghtovver, Washing-

cago City Council committee, clearing a path for final approval. ton's Ivory Latta and Crystal Alderman Tom Tunney said he signed off on the deal after

winning concessions from the Chicago Cubsowners, vvhoalso

49 94

60—104. Girls 8-9 —1,JadeGruher,Camas,61-61—122. Locals:3,Zoey Huntley,Bend,83 77 160.

BASEBALL WCL WESTCOAST LEAGUE

Leaguestandings North Division

Wenatchee AppleSox WallaWallaSweets Begingham Bells VictoriaHarbourCats Kelowna Falcons South Division BendElks CorvagisKnights MedfordRogues CowitzBlackBears KlamathFagsGems KitsapBlueJackets Tuesday'sGames x-Thurston 8,Bend3 x-WCL AI-StarGame,South 7,North 5 Today'sGames VictoriaatKitsap, 635pm. WallaWallaatCowlitz, 6:35p.m. MedfordatCorvagis,640pm. Belhn gham atWenatchee,7:05p.m.

W 22 22 20 17 14

L 17 17 18 18 25

W 23 21 20 18 17 13

L 14 15 19 18 20 26

x-nonleagu e

BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION All Times POT

Eastern Conference Chicago Atlanta Washington Indiana NewYork Connecticut

W 12 10 8 7 7 4

Pct GB 750 667 1'/z 9 471 4'4 9 438 5 1 0 412 5'/z 1 1 267 P/~

4 5

L

Western Conference W 13 12 9 6 6 5

Mrnnesota Los Angeles Phoenix Seattle

Tulsa SanAntonio

3 5

L

8 10 13 12

Pct GB 813 706 1'Iz 529 4'/z

375 7 31 6 8'/~ 294 8'4

Tuesday'sGame

NewYork77,Indiana72

Today'sGames

Chicag oatWashington,830a.m. PhoenixatMinnesota,10am. ConnecticutatAtlanta,4 p.m. Thursday'sGames NewYorkatSanAntonio, 9:30a.m. Indiana atTulsa,9:30a.m. SeattleatLosAngeles,12:30 p.m

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times POT

Saturday'sGames

ColumbusatTorontoFC,11a.m. SportingKansasCity at Montreal, 4 p.m. PhiladelphiaatVancouver, 4p.m. RealSaltLakeatNewYork, 4 p.m. Los Angeleat s Colorado, 4p.m. NewEnglandatD.C.United 4p m.

Chicag oatHouston,6p.m. Portand atSanJose,730p.m Sunday'sGame ChivasUSAat Seattle FC,8p.m.

TENNIS Professional Bank of theWest Classic

Tuesday

At The TaubeFamily TennisCenter Stanford, Calif. Purse: $795,000(Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor

Singles

First Round Varvara Lepchenko(6), UnitedStates, def Michelle LarcherdeBrito, Portugal,6-2, 6-4. Tamira Paszek,Austria, def Alla Kudryavtseva, Russia,6-1,6-7(4), 3-0, retired. CoCo Vande weghe, United States, def. Monica Nicul escu,Romania,6-0,6-3. VeraDushevina,Russia, dei.MarinaErakovic, New Zealand,6-2,6-1. DanielaHantuchova,Slovakia, def. YaninaWickmayer, Belgium,6-2,4-6,6-0.

Yen-hsunLu (5), Taiwan,def. KevinKing, United States,6-3,7-5 LleytonHewitt(7), Australia, dei. EdouardRogerVasselin,France,6-4,6-4. EvgenyDonskoy (8),Russia,dei.Rajeev Ram, UnitedStates,6-3,6-4. Santiago Giraldo, Colombia,def.JackSock, United States,7-5,6-4. Denis IstominUzb , ekistan, dei. LukasLacko, Slovakia,6-1,6-3. MardyFish(6), UnitedStates,leads MichaelRussell, United States,6-4, 2-4,susp.,rain James Blake,UnitedStates, vs. Tim Smyczek, UnitedStates,susp.rain. Croatia Open Tuesday At ITC Stella Maris Umag, Croatia Purse: $614,700(WT260) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Aljaz Bedene,Slovenia, def. BoyWesterhof, Netherlands,6-2,6-2. TommyRobredo(5),Spain,dei.JanHajek,Czech Republic,6-3,6-2.

AlbertMontanes,Spain,def. DusanLajovic,Serbia, 7-6 (3),6-1. AndreasHaider-Maurer,Austria, def. Jiri Vesely, Czech Republic,6-4,6-4. Viktor Troicki, Serbiadef. , Antonio Veic, Croatia, 7-6 (6),6-1. Martin Klizan(6),Slovakia,def.Paolo Lorenzi,ltaly, 6-2,6-1. Blaz KavcicSl , ovenia,dei. FlorianMayer(7), Ger-

many,6-7(5), 6-0,7-5 Carlos Berlocq(8), Argentina,def.JoskoTopic, Croatia,6-0,6-1. Gael Monfis, France, def. MatePavic, Croatia,75,6-2.

Horacio Zebagos,Argentina, def. BornaCoric, Croatia,6-7(5), 6-4,6-0. Suisse Open Tuesday At RoyEmersonArena Gstaad, Switzerland Purse: $614,700(WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round RobertoBautistaAgut(8), Spain,def. Henri Laaksonen,Switzerland,6-2, 6-3. DanielGimeno-Traver,Spain,def. KennydeSchepper, France,6-4,6-4. PabloAndujar,Spain, def. VictorCrivoi, Romania, 6-1,6-2.

GuillermoGarcia-Lopez, Spain, def. AdrianUngur, Romania6-4, , 6-7(2), 6-1. FedericoDelbonis,Argentina,def.ThomazBegucci, Brazil, 7-5,7-6(2). Victor Hane scu, Romania, def. DustinBrown,Germany,7-6(6) 6-2. RobinHaase, Netherlands, def.JoaoSouza, Brazil, 6-4,7-6(7). Daniel Brands,Germ any, def. MarcoChiudinegi, Switzerland,6-3,3-6,6-2. Baku Cup Tuesday At Baki TennisAkademiyasi Baku, Azerbaijan Purse: $235,000(Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round ShaharPeer, Israe, def.IlonaKremen, Belarus,3-6,

6-2 6-3.

MagdaLinette, Poland,def. Juia Cohen,United States,6-2, 6-3.

MandyMinega,Luxembourg, def. KamigaFarhad, Azerbaijan,6-0,6-0 TetyanaArefyeva, Ukraine,def. VeronikaKapshay, Ukraine,6-7(6), 6-0,6-0. BojanaJovanovski (1), Serbia,det NiginaAbduraimova,Uzbekistan,6-3, 6-3.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

Norcross, Ga. Purse: $623,730(WT260) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round RicardasBerankis,Lithuania, def. MischaZverev, Germany, 7-6(4), 2-6,7-6(8).

LOS ANGELESANGELS— Optioned LHP Michael Roth toArkansas(TL). Reinstated RHPTommyHanson from the15-dayDL.Assigned38 BrendanHarris outright toSaltLake(PCL). NEWYORKYANKEES—AssignedINFAlberto GonzalezoutrighttoScranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL). SEATTLE MARINERS SentOFMichael Morseto Tacoma(PCL) for arehabassrgnment. Optioned LHP

At The Atlanta Athletic Club

ATLANTABRAVES— Placed LHP PaulMaholm on the15-day DL,retroactiveto Sunday. CHICAGO CUBS—OptionedRHPJustin Grimmto

lowa(PCL). CINCINN ATIREDS—Selectedthe contract oi RHP GregReynoldsfromLouisville (IL). OptionedINFNeftali Soto toLouisvile.TransferredLHPSean Marshall to the60-dayDL.AddedLHPTonyCingranito theroster asadoubleheader 26thplayer.ReturnedCingranito the Reds(Arizona). LOSANG ELESDODGERS—Selected thecontract of RHP Carlos Marmol fromChattanooga(SL). MIAMIMAR LINS—Seected the contracts of OFs ChristianYelichandJakeMarisnickfrom Jacksonvile (SL). MILWAU KEEBREWERS RecalledOFKhris Davis

from Nashvile(PCL). SentRHPAlfredo Figaroto the ArizonaLeagueBrewersfor arehabassignment. NEW YORKMETS— Waived RHP Shaun Marcum for the purposeof giving hrmhrs unconditional release. PHILADE LPHIA PHILLIES—Placed LHPJoe Savery on the15-dayDL retroactive to July14 Recalled LHPRaulValdesfromLehighValey (IL). PITTSBU RGHPIRATES—Placed RHPJason Grili on the 15-dayDL DesignatedINFBrandonInge for assignment.Reinstated28 Neil Walkerfromthe 15day DL SANDIEG DPADRES OptionedRHPMiles Mikolas to Tucson(PCL). Recal edRHPTyson Ross from Tucson SANFRANCISCOGIANTS—DesignatedRHPHunter Stricklandforassignment. Purchasedthecontract of RHPYusmeiro Petit fromFresno(PCL). Optioned RHP GeorgeKontosto Fresno.Recalled LHPEric Surkamp from Fresno.

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association CHICAGOBULLS— WaivedF Malcolm Thomas. DALLAS MAVERICKS—SignedGMontaElis. GOLDENSTATE WARRIORS— Signed C Jermaine O'Neal. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONACARDINALS— Signed WR RobbyToma. ReleasedTEKyle Auffray and RBWiliam Powell. Waived-injuredWRMichael Rios. ATLANTA FALCONS—ReleasedWRTimToone. BUFFALO BILLS—Released DEMark Anderson. Placed DLChris Hairston onthe PUP ist. CLEVELANDBROWNS— Agreed totermsOLJohn Grecoonafive-year contract. DENVERBRONCOS— ReleasedI.BJoeMays GREENBAY PACKERS— ReleasedQB MattBrown. HOUSTO N TEXANS—Signed S D.J. Swearinger and OT BrennanWiliams. NEWYORKJETS—Signed PKBilly Cundrff, LSPat ScalesandOT JeffreyShugarts. ReleasedPKBret Maher, WR Thomas MayoandTMarkPopek. OAKLAND RAIDERS—SignedQBTyler Wilson. SEATTLESE AHAWKS—Released CB Ray Polk. SignedTEMichael Palmer. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS— Reeased RB Matt Brown.SignedRBPeytonHilis to aone-year contract. HOCKEY

NationalHockeyLeague

BUFFALO SABRES—Signed G Matt Hackett to a

one-yearcontract. LOS ANG ELES KINGS—Agreed to terms with F TrevorLewisonaone-yearcontract. NEW JERSEYDEVILS—SignedRWJaromir Jagr. Dolonc(8),Serbia, 6-1,6-2. OTTAWASENATORS— Re-signedF Corey Cowick TerezaMartincova,CzechRepublic, def. Oksana to a one-year,two-waycontract. Kalashnikova, Georgia,6-3,6-7(I), 6-1. WINNIPEG JETS—Agreed to termswith F Eric NastassjaBurnett, Italy,def.AnnaTatishvili, Georgia, O'Dell on aone-year, two-waycontract.

Tuesday

Atlanta Open

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Optioned LHPEury

De LaRosatoReno(PCL). Recalled LHPTyler Skaggs fromVisalia(Cal).

6-2,6-0. Kristyna Pliskova, CzechRepublic, def. Vesna

COMMISSI ONER' S OFFICE— Suspended Tampa Bay C MarkThomas(Montgomery-SL)50gamesfor a secondviolation ofthe Minor LeagueDrug Prevention andTreatmentProgramfora drugofabuse. American League BALTIMOR EORIOLES—Acquired RHPFrancisco Rodriguezfrom Milwaukeefor INFNick Delmonico. TransferredOFNolan Reimold to the60-day DL. CLEVELAND INDIANS— OptionedRHPC.C.Leeto Columbus(IL). ReinstatedRHPZach McAgister from the15-dayDL

SecondRound Dlga Govortsova,Belarus, dei. SamStosur (2), Australia,6-2, 6-4.

Bobby LaFromboise to Tacoma (PCL). Recaled RHP ErasmoRamirezfromEverett (NWL) TEXASRANGERS— Optioned RHP CoryBurnsand LHP JosephOrtiz to RoundRock (PCL). Reinstated RHPAlexi Ogandoiromthe15-day DL. National League

COLLEGE ARIZON A—Announced sophomore SPatrrck Onwuasorhasbeencutfromthefootball teamafter being arrested. HOFSTR A—Named Emily Mansurassistant volleybag coach. INDIANA STATE—Named Aaron Archie linebackers coach. KANSASSTAT E—Promoted graduate assistant equestriancoachKateChesley to full-time assistant coach. RICE —Named Brran Eskildsen men's assistant basketball coach. Promoted video coordinator and director ofplayerdevelopmentAdamGierlachtomen's assistantbasketball coach.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement ofadult chinook,jackchinook,steelheadandwild steelheadatselectedColumbia RiverdamslastupdatedonMonday.

Chnk Jchnk Bonneville 56 4 126 The Dalles 53 2 93 J ohn Day 64 8 119 McNary 5 50 70

Stlhd Wstlhd 2 , 374 1,453 1,6 4 8 1 ,036 1 , 118 6 2 6 457 258

Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonMonday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 170,787 58,795 33,066 17,555 The Dages 148,804 51,864 17,151 9,310 John Day 125,803 47,529 11,759 5,672 McNary 121,526 35,812 7,642 3,129

Langhorne, and lndiana's

Shavonte Zellous. The game will be played Saturday jn Connectjcut at Mohegan Sun.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

own the ballpark. Among them

vvas anagreement not to erect any outfield signs jn addition to an electronic Jumbotron jn left

HOCKEY

field — a first for the 99-year-old DevilS Sign Jagr —The ballpark — and another large New Jersey Devils replaced sign jn right. Tunney said the

Cubs also agreed to postpone indefinitely a proposed bridge over adjoining Clark Street. The

their best player with one of the NHL's greatest of all time. Less than two weeks after the stunning defection of llya

City Councjl's zoning committee

Kovalchuk back to Russia,

approved the renovation project and sent jt to the full council for

the Devils signed two-tjme

a vote today.

NHL Mr/P Jaromjr Jagr to a

Pedroia close to new deal

on Tuesday. There is no doubt thatthatthe 41-year-old Jagr js in the twilight of hjs career, and he certainly will never fill the void left by Kovalchuk, vvho decided to retire from the NHL at 30 so he can play jn his native Russia.

with Red Sax — Aperson with knowledge of the talks

saysAll-Starsecondbaseman Dustjn Pedroja js jn the process of agreeing to a deal with the Boston Red Sox adding $100

million over sevenseasons

Stanley Cup winner and former one-year, $2 million contract

through 2021. The person spoke to The Associated Press on

condition of anonymity Tuesday becausetheagreement wasnot yet complete.

FOOTBALL SeahaWkSSign tight end

SOCCER Suspicious scores lead tO dBllS —Players, team officials and referees were banned for life and four amateur clubs for10 years after Nj-

— The Seattle Seahavvks have

gerja's soccer federation found they fixed two lower-league

added depth at aposition of

playoff games that ended with

need by signing former Atlanta tight end Michael Palmer just

scores of 79-0 and 67-0. In findings of an investigation

two days before the start of

sent to The Associated Press

training camp. The Seahavvks

on Tuesday,the Nigerian Football Federation ruled that there

madetherostermoveTuesday. The team released Undrafted rookie defensive back Ray Polk

to clear a roster spot. Palmer played jn 43 gamesover the past three seasons with the Falcons

after signing with them asan Undrafted free agent in 2010. He started five games and had 21 receptions for123 yards and three touchdovvns with Atlanta.

was "a fraudulent conspiracy among the teams" to fjx the games after Plateau United

Feeders and Police Machine figured out that they needed to boost their goal tallies to beat the other to promotion to the lowest tier of Njgerja's professional leag Ue. — From wire reports

Will 5 power conferencesbreak awayfrom FBS? By Ralph D. Russo

powerful and w ealthy FBS conferences. NEW YORK — Th e f i ve And NCAA expert John Inpower conferences are tryfante, who writes the ByLaw ing to redefine what it takes Blog at a t h leticscholarship. to operate a Division I college com, says the best solution for athletic program, with their the schoolsin those conferenccommissioners calling out the es is not leaving Division I, but NCAA at media days around reshaping it in a way where the country. some smallerschools choose Big 12 Commissioner Bob to leave. B owlsby an d f e l low c o m The lightning rod issue at missioners Mike Slive of the the heart of this debate has Southeastern Conference and been the proposed stipend to John Swofford of the Atlantic college athletes that w ould Coast Conference have taken add about $2,000 to an athturns critiquing the N CAA letic scholarship to cover the over the past week, and it's full cost of attendance. All the likely Jim Delany of the Big commissioners from the maTen and Larry Scott of the jor conferences have pushed Pac-12 will follow suit in the for it, but it could not be passed coming days. because smaller schools said The schools in th e m ost they couldn't afford it. powerful and wealthy leagues So, a possible solution for want more freedom to be able the powerful, wealthy schools to run their programs the way is to set up a level of football they want, without the less at which all the participating powerful schools standing in schoolsgave players stipends — and let the smaller schools the way. Does this mean the end of play each other. the NCAA as we know it is The programs that would be near? Or will there be a new most affected by the big five division of c o llege football isolating itself from the rest of — Division 4 as Bowlsby calls collegesports would be from it? Not necessarily. the lesser leagues in college Former Big 1 2 C o mmis- football's top tier: the Mounsioner Dan Beebe says he tain West, the American Aththinks Atlantic Coast Confer- letic Conference (formerly the ence, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 Big East), Conference USA, and Southeastern Conference the Sun Belt and the M i dcan get the power to govern American Conference — aka themselves without cutting off the group of five. all ties to schools from the less Those schools still want to The Associated Press

compete against the big five on the field, cash in on the monster pay days that usually come with playing those games and capitalize on the attention that c omes when they occasionally win one. The FBS conferences will share, though not equally, the $5.6 billion ESPN is set to pay over 12 years for broadcast rights to College Football Playoff.The big five conferences will take 75 percent of that money, but the 25 percent left over for the other five to split still represents a big raise from what they were making under the BCS. Presumably, the power conferences would make even more breaking away. BLtt it might not be that easy. "What happens when these 70 schools break away and form Division 4? Might happen. I don't think it's going to happen," Mountain West Conference Commissioner Craig Thompson told reporters at his league's football media day in Las Vegas. MAC Commissioner John Steinbrecher said at m e dia day in Detroit: "The question is, can we come to agreement on a set of rules that allows us to co-exist amicably? I tend to believe we can." Beebe thinks so, too. He said the big five will ultimately be allowed to allocate their enormous resources toward

providing more money for student-athletes and they will be able toincrease academic standards the way they see fit. "It's going to be done but the competition is going to go on on the court and field," said Beebe, who now heads a sports consulting firm called the Dan Beebe Group. Infante said if the big five gets its way, it c o uld lead t o a c u lling o f D i v ision I , which currently includes 349 schools, with some of the 125 FBS schools dropping down to FCS, major college football's second tier. Infante added the big five creating a ne w d i vision of college athletics might not be so well-received by the lowerrevenue members oftheirown leagues, schools such as Iowa State and M ississippi State that would become the new have-nots of m ajor c o llege football. Also, the potential backlash from FBS schools in the group of five who were no longer considered majorcollege football schools could be also blunt movement toward the big five separating from the rest of Division I. "You're going to have governors and attorneys general in states that are going to be ticked off," he said. "Not sure (the big five conferences) are going to want to invite more antitrust lawsuits."


WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL with his second big league homer

Standings

Boston TampaBay Baltimore NewYork Toronto

AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L 61 41

59 57 53 45

Central Division

Detroit

Cleveland Kansas City Minnesota Chicago Oakland Texas Seattle Los Angeles Houston

42 44 47 54

Pct GB .598 584 1'/z .564 3'/z 530 7 .455 f 4t/r

Pct GB .556

46 51 43 54

.474 8 443 11 402 15

48 52 46 52 34 65

.520 3t/r

Pct GB .580 .550 3 .480 10 .469 11 .343 23'/z

Tnesday'sGames L.A. Dodgers10,Toronto9 Boston 6,TampaBay2 N.Y.Yankees5,Texas4 Kansas City 3, Baltimore2 Detroit 6,ChicagoWhite Sox2 Houston5,Oakland4 Minnesota10,L.A.Anges3, 10innings Seattle 4,Cleveland3 Today's Games Oakland (Griffin 8-7)atHouston (B.Norris 6-9),11:10 am. Minnesota(Pelirey4-7) atLA. Angels(Weaver 4-5), 12:35 p.m.

Cleveland(Kazmir5-4) at Seattle (J.Saunders9-8), 12:40 p.m

LA. Dodgers(Nolasco6-9) at Toronto(Rogers 3-4), 4:07 p.m. Tampa Bay(Price4-5) atBoston(Doubront 7-3), 4.10 p.m. N.Y.Yankees(Petitte 7-7)at Texas (Garza0-0), 5:05 p.m. Baltimore(W.chen5-3) at Kansas City (E.Santana66), 5:10p.m. Detroit (Ani.Sanchez 7-7) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Joh. Danks2-7), 5:10p.m. Thursday's Games N.Y.YankeesatTexas, 11:05a.m. Detroit atChicagoWhite Sox,11:10a.m. Houston at Toronto,4:07 p.m. TampaBayatBoston,4:10 p.m. Baltimoreat KansasCity, 5:10p.m. L.A. Angelsat Dakland, 7:05p.m. Minnesotaat Seatle, 7:10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Atlanta 56 44 Philadelphia 49 51 Washington 48 52 NewYork 44 52 Miami 37 61 Central Division W L St. Louis 60 37 Pittsburgh 59 39 Cincinnati 57 44 Chicago 44 54 Milwaukee 41 58

West Division W 52 52 48 46 45

Los Angeles Arizona Colorado SanFrancisco SanDiego

L 47 48 53 54 56

Totals 3 3 1 7 1 Totals 3 34 114 P hiladelphia 0 0 0 0 0 0 100 — 1 St. Louis 100 200 10x — 4 DP — Philadelphia1, St. Louis1. LOB—Philadel-

City's Luke Hochevar last Sept.1.

W L 55 44 52 48

39 58 West Division W L 58 42 55 45

Diekmnp 0 0 0 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Frndsn ph 1 0 0 0 Rosnthl p 0 0 0 0 LuGarcp 0 0 0 0 Descalsph-3bI 0 0 0

DODGERS HEATING UP

and Minnesota's first grand slam since Mauer's shot off Kansas

All Times PDT

Minnesota Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi D ozier2b 6 0 1 1 Shucklf 5 0 1 0 C arrog3b 6 1 2 0 Troutcf 5 0 2 0 Mornea1b 4 2 2 0 Pujolsdh 5 1 3 I

.458 10 .378 18

Pct GB .619 .602 1'/z 564 5 449 16t/r

.414 20

Pct GB 525 .520

t/r

.475 5 .460 6'/z .446 8

Tnesday'sGames Cincinnati 9,SanFrancisco3, 1stgame Pittsburgh5,Washrngton1 L.A. Dodgers10,Toronto9 N.Y.Mets4, Atlanta1 San Diego 6, Milwaukee2 St. Louis 4, Philadelphra1 Miami 4,Colorado2 Arizona10,ChicagoCubs4

T homsli 4 2 2 0 Trumolb 4 I 2 I CHrmnc 5 1 3 4 Congerc 2 0 0 0 Hickscf 3 1 1 0 lannettph-c 1 0 0 0 Flormnss 5 2 2 3 Cowgigrf 3 0 1 0 A ybarss 3 0 0 I Totals 4 3 101510 Totals 3 7 3 103 Minnesota 0 0 1 000 110 7 — 10 L os Angeles 000 200 001 0 — 3 DP —Minnesota3.LOB—Minnesota7, LosAnge-

les 8. 28 —Doumit 2(19), Thomas(6), Florimon(11), Trumbo (20). HR C.Herrmann(2), Florimon(6), Pujols (17), Trumbo(22). SB—Trout (22). S—Hicks2. Minnesota IP H R E R BB SO 6 5 2 2 1 4 Gibson Burton 1 1 0 0 0 1 Fien H,13 I 2 0 0 0 PerkinsW,2-0BS,3-27 1 1 1 1 3 Roenicke 1 1 0 0 0

DDe LaRosa BS2 2 1 2 Jepsen 1 2 Richards 1 1 1-3 4 5 Frieri L,0-2 2-3 2 Buckner T—3:38. A—39,177(45,483).

Today'sGames

give Houston a winover Oakland. Houstonendeda10-game losing and a six-game skid overall. Houston ab r hbi ab r hbi C rispcf 4 I 2 0 Vigarss 4 2 3 0 Jasoc 1 0 0 0 Altuve2b 3 0 1 1 DNorrsc 1 0 0 0 Jcastroc 4 0 1 1 Lowriess 4 1 1 0 Carterdh 4 0 0 0 Dnldsn3b 3 1 3 0 Wagac1b 3 0 0 0 Moss1b 4 1 1 2 JDMrtnlf-rf 4 0 1 0 R eddckrf 4 0 0 0 Elmorelf 0 0 0 0 CYounglf 3 0 0 0 Maxwgrf-cf 3 I I 0 S.Smithdh 2 0 0 0 MDmn3b 3 1 1 2 Cespdsph-dh2 0 1 0 BBarnscf 2 1 0 0 Sogard2b 4 0 1 0 Krausslf-rf 2 0 0 0 T otals 3 2 4 9 2 Totals 3 25 8 4 Oakland 1 01 000 020 — 4 Houston 1 00 010 003 — 6

Doolittle H,15 1 0 0 0 0 Balfour L,0-2BS,1-27 1-3 3 3 2 1

1 0

7 1 1

4 0 2

7 2 1 3 1 2 2 1 1 0 0 1

HBP —byJ.Parker(Wagace), byCisnero(Donaldson). WP—J.Parker 2. T—3:36. A—32,249(42,060).

Atlanta(Hudson7-7) at N.Y.Mets (Hefner 4-7), 4:10 p.m. San Diego (O'Sullivan 0-1) at Milwaukee(Lohse6-7),

ARLINGTON, Texas — Eduardo Nunez hit a tying triple, Brent Lillibridge followed with a go-

ahead single andNewYork rallied against All-Star closer Joe Nathan in the ninth inning for a victoryover Texas. New York's

comeback got started when Vernon Wells drew aone-out walk against Nathan (1-1) andscored on Nunez's triple to deep center. Nunez stumbled on his way to

third and practically flopped into the bag, then scored on Lillibridge's single to left. Texas

New York

Mariners 4, Indians 3 SEATTLE — Kyle Seager had three

hits, Mike Zunino drove in the go ahead run for the second straight night, and surging Seattle won its eighth straight with a victory over Cleveland. Playing withoutailing

manager Eric Wedgefor a second straight game, the Mariners took

advantage of defensive miscues by the Indians and received solid pitching to extend the longest current win streak in baseball. Cleveland Seattle ab r hbi ab r hbi Bourncf 5 0 1 0 BMilierss 3 0 0 0 Swisherrf 4 0 1 0 Frnkn2b 3 1 0 0 Kipnis2b 4 I I 0 Ibanezlf 4 I I 0 Acarerss 4 0 2 1 Enchvzlf 0 0 0 0 Brantlylf 3 0 1 0 KMorlsdh 4 0 2 1 CSantn dh 4 0 0 0 Seager 3b 4 1 3 1 MrRynllb 3 0 1 0 Smoak1b 4 0 I 0 Stubbs pr 0 0 0 0 MSndrs rf 4 1 1 0 C hsnh03b 4 1 2 0 Zuninoc 3 0 1 1 A vilespr 0 0 0 0 Ackleycf 3 0 0 0 YGomsc 4 1 2 2 T otals 3 5 3 I I 3 Totals 3 2 4 9 3 C leveland 120 00 0 0 0 0 — 3 Seattle 103 000 00x 4 E—Chisenhal 2 (8), Kipnis (9). DP—Cleveland I , Seattle 3.LOB —Cleveland7, Seattle 7. 28—Kip-

ab r hbi ab r hbi Gardnrcf 4 0 1 0 Kinsler2b 4 0 I 0 ISuzukirf 4 0 1 1 Profar3b 2 0 0 0 C ano2b 4 0 0 0 N.cruzrf 4 1 0 0 Overay1b 4 0 0 0 ABeltredh 3 1 I I V Wegsdh 3 2 I 0 Przynsc 4 0 0 0 Nunezss 4 1 2 1 Andrusss 4 1 1 1 Ligirdg3b 4 0 1 2 Mornd1b 3 1 1 2 M esali 4 I I 0 Gentryci 3 0 I 0 AuRmnc 3 1 1 1 LMartnph 1 0 0 0 H afnerph 1 0 0 0 EBeltrelf 2 0 1 0 CStwrtc 0 0 0 0 JeBakrph 0 0 0 0 DvMrpph-If 2 0 0 0 Totals 3 5 5 8 5 Totals 3 24 6 4 N ew York 002 1 0 0 0 0 2 — 6 Texas 0 00 004 000 — 4 E—Ligibridge (1). DP—New York 1, Texas1. LOB —NewYork4, Texas5. 28—VWegs(11), Mesa

E.RamirezW,1-0 52-3 8 3 3 2 MedinaH,7 21-3 I 0 0 0 WilhelmsenS,23-28 1 2 0 0 0 WP — McAgister. T—2:44.A—16,308 (47,476).

4 I 1

four errors in a victory over

Chicago. With MVP and Triple

Crown winner Miguel Cabrera sidelined by a hip problem, the AL

leaders again got all the Twins 10, Angels 3 (10 innings) Central help they neededfrom Chicago. ANAHEIM, Calif.— Chris

Herrmann, makinganemergency start behind the plate for

expectant father Joe Mauer, hit his first career grand slam in a seven-run 10th inning that sent

Minnesota pastLosAngeles.Ryan Doumit snapped a3-all tie in the 10th with an RBI double against

Angels closer Ernesto Frieri (0-2). Herrmann followed aone-out intentional walk to Clete Thomas

Royals 3, Orioles 2

KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Bruce Chen

tossed six strong innings, Greg Holland pitched out of a ninth-

in the ninth to Nick Markakis and

a run-producing triple to Adam Jones with noneout. Baltimore KansasCity ab r hbi ab r hbi M cLothlf 4 0 0 0 AGordnlf 5 1 1 0 Machd3b 4 1 1 1 Hosmer1b 4 0 2 0 M arkksrf 4 I 2 0 L.caincf 3 I I 0 A.Jones cf 4 0 1 1 BButler dh 4 0 1 0 CDavis1b 4 0 1 0 Mostks3b 4 0 2 1 H ardyss 4 0 0 0 Loughrf 4 1 1 0 Valencidh 2 0 0 0 Kottarsc 3 0 0 0 Urrutiaph-dh 2 0 0 0 S.Perezc 0 0 0 0 BRorts2b 3 0 0 0 AEscorss 4 0 2 0 T egrdnc 2 0 0 0 Getz2b 2 0 I I Totals 3 3 2 5 2 Totals 3 33 112 B altimore 001 0 0 0 0 01 — 2 Kansas City 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0x — 3 E—Moustakas(12). DP—Baltimore1. LOB —Baltimore 5, Kansas City 12. 28—Moustakas 2 (15). 38 A.Jones (1). HR Machado (8). SB Lcain

(12), Getz 2 (8). S—Getz. Baltimore IP H R HammelL,7-7 6 10 3 McFarland 1231 0 1-3 0 0 Asencio KansasCity B.chenW4-0 6 K.HerreraH,10 1 CrowH,15 1 G.Hogand S,25-27 1

WP — K.Herrera. T—2:43.A—I 9,072 (37,903).

3 0 0 2

1 0 0 1

One night after matching what was a season-high with three errors in a 7-3 loss to the Tigers, the White Sox managed to outdo themselves. Detroit AJcksncf TrHntr rf TuiasspIf Dirks ph-If Fielder1b VMrtnzdh JhPerlt ss

ab r hbi 5010 4010 3100 2010 400 0 4110 4222

Chicago

ab r hbi De Azacf 4 0 1 0 AIRmrz ss 4 0 0 0 Rios rf 3110 A.Dunn1b 2 1 0 0 Konerkdh 3 0 1 2 C.Wegspr 0 0 0 0 Kppngr2b 4 0 0 0

Phigips2b 5 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 4 1 2 2 B rucerf 5 2 3 0 Pencerf 4 0 2 1 F razier I-3b 5 1 3 1 Belt1b 40 0 1 H annhn3b 1 0 0 0 Francrlf 4 0 0 0 Heise yph-If 2 0 0 0 Romop 0 0 0 0

Hoover

BOSTON — Jon Lester matched

his season high with eight strikeouts and overcamehomers by Wil Myers and Evan Longoria as Boston remained in first place with a win over Tampa Bay. The Red Sox moved1f/z games ahead of the Rays in the AL East and stayed atop the division for the 58th consecutive day. TampaBay Boston ab r hbi ab r hbi DJnngscf 4 0 1 0 Victorncf 5 1 1 0

J.Wright 1-3 0 0 Farnsworth 23 4 3 Boston LesterW,9-6 61- 3 7 2 ThorntonH,19 1 - 3 0 0 Tazawa H,17 11-3 0 0 Uehara 1 0 0

San Francisco Cincinnati ab r hbi ab r hbi Choocf 3 0 0 0 GBlanccf-If 4 0 0 1 Clztursss 5 0 0 0 Abreu2b 5 2 2 0 V otto1b 4 0 2 0 Poseyc 3 1 0 0

GReynoldsL,0-1 5

Red Sox 6, Rays2

0 0 3 0

0 I

2 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 2 HBP by Ro Hemande z (Pedroia). WP Ro.Heman dez. T—3.06.A—34,609(37,499).

National League

Reds 9, Giants 3 (First Game) SAN FRANCISCO — Pablo Sandoval hit a two-run double to help Bruce Bochy earn his

1,500th win as amanager, and San Francisco split a straight doubleheader with Cincinnati with a victory in the nightcap. Hunter Pence hit an RBI single,

Gregor Blanco had asacrifice fly, and Brandon Belt added anRBI

inning that helped the Mets beat Atlanta's Kris Medlen (6-10) for the first time in eight starts. New York ab r hbi ab r hbi S mmnsss 4 1 1 1 EYonglf 4 0 1 0 Heywrdcf 3 0 1 0 DnMrp2b 4 1 1 0 Atlanta

J.Uptonrl 4 0 0 0 DWrght3b 4 0 2 0 F Frmnlb 4 0 0 0 Byrdrf 3 10 0 Mccnnc 3 0 1 0 IDavis1b 4 1 1 1 G attislf 4 0 1 0 Buckc 3 0 2 1 Uggla2b 3 0 2 0 Lagarscf 2 1 1 1 CJhnsn 3b 4 0 I 0 Quntng ss 3 0 0 0 M edlenp 2 0 0 0 CTorrsp 2 0 1 1

Padres 6, Brewers 2 M ILWAUKEE — Nick Hundley and Will Venable each homered, and Tyson Ross won for the first

time in over ayear in SanDiego's victory over Milwaukee. Hundley was 3 for 4 with three runs batted

in for San Diego, which won backto-back games for the first time since June 20-21.

Dcrpntp 0 0 0 0 Ardsmp 0 0 0 0 L oep 0 0 0 0 Ricep 0 0 0 0 RJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0 Niwnhs ph 1 0 0 0 Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 Pamegp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 2 1 7 1 Totals 3 04 9 4 Atlanta 1 00 000 000 — 1 New York 001 003 Ogx — 4 DP — Atlanta 1 LOB—Atlanta 9, NewYork 4.

San Diego Milwaukee ab r hbi ab r hbi E vcarrss 5 1 1 0 Aokirf 4010

28 Mccann (9), C.Johnson(21), I.Davis (5), Lagares(13). HR—Simmons (10). SB—Uggla (1). CS — E.Young(8). S—Medlen.SF—Lagares. Atlanta IP H R E R BB SO

Milwaukee

three hits for Pittsburgh, which

A marstcf 5 0 0 0 LSchirli 3 0 0 0 MedlenL,6-10 5 1 - 3 74 4 1 4 Headly3b 5 1 2 0 Haltonph 1 0 0 0 12-3 1 0 0 0 1 D.carpenter Alonso1b 3 0 2 1 Hndrsnp 0 0 0 0 Mesorcc 4 1 3 3 Bcrwfrss 3 0 1 0 Loe 1 1 0 0 0 1 Gyorko2b 5 0 1 0 Segurass 4 0 0 0 Cingrnp 3 0 1 1 Surkmpp 1 0 0 0 New York V enalerf 5 2 3 1 l.ucroyc 3 0 0 0 Simonp 1 0 0 0 Petitp 20 0 0 C .Torres W, 1 -1 6 7 1 1 2 6 Kotsaylf 4 1 3 I CGomzcf 3 0 0 0 T anakalf 1 0 0 1 AardsmaH,2 23 0 0 0 1 0 Denorfilf 1 0 0 0 Weeks2b 4 0 0 0 Totals 4 0 9 159 Totals 3 3 3 8 3 Rice H,10 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Hundlyc 4 1 3 3 JFrncs1b 3 0 1 0 C incinnati 043 01 0 1 0 0 — 9 T.Rossp 2 0 0 0 Bianchi3b 3 1 1 0 HawkinsH,9 1 0 0 0 0 1 S an Francisco 100 100 001 — 3 Guzmnph I 0 0 0 D.Handp 0 0 0 0 P amel S,19-23 1 0 0 0 0 2 DP — San Francisco 1. LOB —Cincrnnati 6, San HBP —byC.Torres(Uggla). Francisco8. 28—Phillips (18), Bruce(29), An.Torres V incentp 0 0 0 0 Thrnrgp 1 0 0 0 0 Gindlph 0 0 0 0 T—2:54. A—24,355(41,922). (16), Quiroz (6). HR —Votto(16), Cozart (8), Mesora- H ynespp 00 00 00 0 KDavis ph-If 1 1 1 1 co (6). SB —Bruce(3), Francoeur (1). SF—Sandoval, Grgrsn Totals 4 0 6 156 Totals 3 0 2 4 1 Quiroz. S an Diego 100 1 0 2 2 00 — 6 Pirates 5, Nationals1 Cincinnati IP H R E R BB SO 001 0 0 0 0 1 0 — 2 CingraniW4-I 6 2 - 3 52 2 3 2 M ilwaukee E—T.Ross (2). DP—Milwaukee 1. LOB—San WASHINGTON — Gerrit Cole Simon 2 1-3 3 1 1 0 0 Diego10,Milwaukee4.28 Headley(19). HR VenSan Francisco able (12), Hundley(7), K.Davis (1). SB—Alonso pitched sevenstrong innings to SurkampL,0-1 2 2 -3 97 7 0 0 end a personal three-game losing Petit 5 1-3 6 2 2 0 7 2 (5), Aoki (12), Bianchi(2). CS—C.Gomez (4). Machi 1 0 0 0 0 1 S—T.Ross. streak, and added an RBI single San Diego IP H R E R BB SO HBP —bySurkamp(Choo, Bruce). as Pittsburgh beatWashington. T .Ross W, 1 -4 6 2 1 1 2 6 T—2:52. A—0 (41,915). Vincent 1 1 0 0 0 2 Pedro Alvarez homered and Hynes 1 1 1 1 0 I singled, and Russell Martin had Giants 5,Reds3 (Second Game) Gregerson 1 0 0 0 0 0

C Migerc 3 0 I 2 Bcrwfrss 3 I I 0 M esorcph-c 2 0 0 0 Zitop 10 10 GRynldp 1 0 0 0 Dunnngp 0 0 0 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 Tanakaph 1 0 0 0 Cozartph 1 0 0 0 Mijaresp 0 0 0 0 E R BB SO P artchp 0 0 0 0 Scasillp 0 0 0 0 3 4 4 DRonsnph 1 0 1 0 J.Lopezp 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 M Parrp 0 0 0 0 AnTrrscf 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 8 3 103 Totals 3 4 5 9 5 S an Francisco 310 010 000 — 5 1 0 4 C incinnati 020 0 1 0 0 00 — 3 0 0 I E—Sandoval (12), Pence(5). LOB —San Fran0 1 1 cisco 6, Cincinnati 14 28 —Frazier 2 (19), C.Miger 1 0 1 (1), Sandoval(15), B.crawford(18). SB—Belt (5), An.Torres(4) S—G.Reynolds, Zito. SF—G.Blanco. San Francisco I P H R ER BB SO

(1), Au.Rom ine(5), Kinsler(18), ABetre (23), Gentry (7), E.Beltre(I). 38—Nunez(2). HR —Moreland(14). SB —Lilibridge (1). S—Profar. 4I 10 New York IP H R E R BB SO Zobrist2b 4 0 0 0 Navarl Longori 3b 4 1 1 1 Pedroia2b 2 0 0 1 5 2-3 4 3 0 3 P.Hughes WMyrsrf 4 1 2 1 DOrtizdh 4 02 0 LoganBS,I-I 0 2 1 I 0 0 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Joyce dh 4 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 4 2 2 0 Claiborne 3011 ChamberlainW,2-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Y Escorss 4 0 0 0 Carp lf L oney1b 4 0 1 0 JGomslf 1 1 1 0 MRweraS,32-34 I 0 0 0 0 2 JMolinc 3 0 1 0 Sltlmchc 3 0 2 0 Texas Ogando 5 6 3 3 0 2 S Rdrgzli 3 0 1 0 Drewss 4 I 1 1 lglesias3b 4 0 1 2 Wolf 1 0 0 0 0 2 Totals 3 4 2 7 2 Totals 3 46 125 FrasorH,7 I 0 0 0 0 I T ampa Bay 0 1 0 0 0 1 000 — 2 Cotts H,B 1 0 0 0 0 0 011 010 03x — 6 NathanL,1-1BS,2-33 2-3 2 2 2 1 1 Boston E—Y.Escobar (5). LOB —Tampa Bay5, Boston 7. R.Ross 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2B — W.Myers(6), J.Molina (8), Victorino(13),Nava Loganpitchedto2 baters inthe6th. (15), Napol (25), i Sal t al a ma cchia (25). HR —Longoria WP —Nathan. (21) W.Myers (5). SB—Victorino (14), Pedroia (14), T 3:00. A 42,739(48,114). Drew (3). SF Pedroia. TampaBay IP H R ER BB SO Tigers 6, White Sox 2 Ro.HernandezL,5-11 5 7 3 3 I I AI.Torres 2 1 0 0 0 2

nis (24), Ibanez(12), K.Morales(23), Seager (25), M.Saunders (13). HR —YGomes(7). CHICAGO — Rick Porcello pitched Cleveland IP H R E R BB SO McAgisterL,4-6 5 8 4 3 3 5 four-hit ball over sevenscoreless Albers 2 1 0 0 0 0 innings, Jhonny Peralta homered Allen 1 0 0 0 0 1 and Detroit took advantage of Seattle

groundout in San Francisco's first win in six tries against the Reds this season after being outscored 34-6 in the first five meetingsincluding 11-0 on Monday night

DP — Detroit1, Chicago1.I.OB—Detroit6, Chicago6 and 9-3 in the openerTuesday. 28 — V.Martinez (22), Konerko(10). 38—H.Perez(I). HR — Jh.Peralta(9). SB—Rios(21). CS—A.Jackson Cincinnati San Francisco (3). SF H Perez. ab r hbi ab r hbi Detroit IP H R E R BB SO PorcegoW,7-6 7 4 0 0 3 1 C hoocf 3 0 0 0 AnTrrscf 4 1 1 0 Alburquerque 1 0 2 2 2 1 DRonsncf 1 0 0 0 Scutaro2b 4 0 2 0 Benoit 1 1 0 0 0 1 H eiseylf-rf 5 0 2 0 Abreu2b 1 0 0 0 V otto1b 5 1 I I Poseylb 3 0 0 0 Chicago 10 0 0 H.SantiagoL,3-6 6 5 6 3 5 6 P higips2b 5 1 1 0 Belt1b Axelrod 3 3 0 0 0 2 Brucerf 3 2 1 0 Sandovl3b 2 1 0 1 P aulli I 0 0 0 Pence rf 4 0 20 Alburquerque pitchedto 2baters inthe9th. F razier3b 5 1 2 2 Machip 0 0 0 0 T—3:01.A—25,919(40,615). Cozartss 4 3 4 2 Francr f-rf 4 0 1 0 Clztursss 0 0 0 0 Quirozc 3 I I I

Oneoutwhenwinnrng runscored. inning jam, and Kansas City held E— Baliour (1), J.Parker (3), D.Norris (3), M.Dominguez(11). DP—Houston 4. LOB—Oak- on to beat Baltimore. The loss land 7, Houston 8. 28 Donaldson (24), Cespedes snapped theOrioles' season-best, (12), Sogard(16), Villar 2 (2). HR—Moss (17), five-game winning streak. Holland, M.Dominguez(12). SB—Altuve (23). S —Vilar. SF — Altuve. who logged his 25th save in 27 IP H R E R BB SO chances, gave up a Oakland leadoff single J.Parker 7 5 2 1 2 4

4:07 p.m.

American League

Los Angeles Dodgers players, from left, Adrian Gonzalez, Jerry Hairston Jr., Nick Punto and Mark Ellis celebrate their 10-9 win over the Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday in Toronto. It was the fifth straight win for the Dodgers and their 22nd victory in 27 games.

E—A.Dunn(6), Rios(3), Gigaspie (6), Viciedo(2).

streak against the A's this season

Yankees 5, Rangers4

Philadelphia(l.annan2-3) at St. Louis (Westbrook 6-4), 5:15p.m. Miami(Ja.Turner3-2) atColorado(J.DeLaRosa9-5), 5:40 p.m. ChicagoCubs(Samardzija 6-9) at Arizona(Kennedy 3-7), 6 40 p.m. Cincinnati(Leake9-4) at SanFrancisco(Gaudin4-1), 7:15 p.m. Thursday'sGames Atlanta atN.Y.Mets, 9:10a.m. PittsburghatWashington, 9:35a.m. SanDiegoatMilwaukee,11:10am. Miami atColorado, 12:10p.m. Philadelphiaat St Louis,415p.m. Chicag oCubsatArizona,6:40p.m. Cincinnati atLA. Dodgers,7:10 p.m.

double in a three-run sixth and New York beat Atlanta. John Buck

had a run-scoring single andJuan Lagares a sacrifice fly in a sixth

Avilac 2 1 0 0 Gigaspi3b 4 0 2 0 D .Kegy3b 2 0 0 1 Viciedolf 3 0 0 0 H Perez2b 3 1 2 2 Pheglyc 3 0 0 0 T otals 3 3 6 8 5 Totals 3 02 5 2 Detroit 0 00 303 000 — 6 Chicago 0 00 000 002 — 2

bad throw on the same play to

6 0 1 I 1

single, Ike Davis turned anangry crowd in his favor with a go-ahead

/:sjj4,

Jon Blacker/The Associated Press

second base in the ninth inning when catcher DerekNorris had apassedballandthenmadea

1 0 0 0 0

as a fill-in starter and had an RBI

0

HOUSTON — RookieJonathan Villar scored the winning run from

0 0 1 0 0

NEW YORK — Carlos Torres pitched six impressive innings

0 0 0 1 0

Astros 5, Athletics 4

ER B B SO 3 3 4 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 2

Mets 4, Braves1

8

1 1 0 1 I 0 0 0 0 5 1 2 2 0

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5:10 p.m.

p=

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FieldsW,1-1

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, gtiLPQg'

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Houston Cosart Cisnero

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Philadelphia IP H R PettiboneL,5-4 5 7 3 Valdes 11-3 2 1 De Fratus 1-3 1 0 1-3 0 0 Diekman Lu Garcia 1 1 0 St. Louis S.MigerW106 6 3 0 Choate H,11 1-3 0 0 Maness H,B 2-3 2 1 RosenthalH,23 I 0 0 Mujica S,29-31 1 2 0 T 2:51. A 44,780(43,975).

n

Doumitrl 5 1 2 2 HKndrc2b 5 0 I 0

Oakland Pct GB .560 .490 7 .480 8

phia 6,St.Louis10.28—RoRins(19), Mayberry (16), Jay (13),Craig(23), YMolina(29). 38 Beltran (3). SB — Kozma(2). S—S.Miger.

1 2 1

8 0 0 1

5 0 0 0

5 0 0 0

1 0 0 0

Partch M.Parra Cincinnati Zito 4 2-3 6 3 3 3 DunningW,1-1 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 MijaresH,6 2-3 I 0 0 I

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2-3 1 0 0 0 1-3 10 0 0

1 0 1 1 4 0 I

2 1 4

HBP—byDunning (Heisey), byG.Reynolds(Posey). WP — Romo. T—3:22. A—42310(41,915).

Diamondbacks10, Cuds4 PHOENIX — A.J. Pollock doubled, tripled and drove in three runs, and Patrick Corbin scattered four hits over six innings to help Arizona beat Chicago. Corbin

(12-1 j allowed onerun, struck out six and walked three for the Diamondbacks, who won forthe

second time in five gamessince the All-Star break to remain a halfgame behind the first-place Los

Angeles Dodgers in the NLWest. Chicago

Arizona ab r hbi ab r hbi L akeci 5 1 3 1 Eatonlf 4 3 3 0 Stcastrss 4 0 0 0 Pogockcf 5 2 2 3 Rizzo1b 4 0 1 1 Gldsch1b 3 1 2 1 ASorinli 3 I 0 0 C.Rossrf 5 0 0 0 Ransm3b 4 0 0 0 Erchvz3b 4 1 2 3 DNavrrc 4 0 1 0 DHmdzp 0 0 0 0 Gigespirf 3 0 0 0 GParraph 1 0 0 0 S chrhltph-rf 1 1 1 2 Sippp 00 0 0 Barney2b 4 0 0 0 Prado2b-3b 3 1 2 2 T rWoodp 2 1 1 0 Nievesc 4 0 I I Guerrirp 0 0 0 0 Gregrsss 3 1 1 0 B orbonph 1 0 0 0 Corbinp 2 0 0 0 H Rndnp 0 0 0 0 Begp 00 0 0 Bowden p 0 0 0 0 Kubelph 1 1 1 0 Sappeltph I 0 0 0 Pnngtn 2b 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 6 4 7 4 Totals 3 6101410 Chicago 0 01 000 021 — 4 Arizona 000 013 33x — 10 E—Beli (1), Gregorius (7). DP—Chicago1. LOB Chicago9,Arizona7.28 Pollock (24), Goldschmrdt(25), Kubel(7). 38—Pollock (3), ErChavze (2). HR —Lake (2), Schierholtz (12), Prado (9).

CS Eaton(1). Chicago

TrWoodL,6-7 Guerrier H.Rondon Bowden

Arizona

CorbinW,12-1 6 BegH,6

IP H R 52 - 3 8 4 1-3 0 0 2-3 3 3 1133 3 1

DHemande z 1 Sipp 1 WP — Corbin2,Sipp. T—3;30. A—21,278(48,633).

4 1 1 1

1 0 2 1

D.HandL,0-2

4

7 2 2 1

Thornburg 4 7 4 4 1 Henderson 1 1 0 0 0 HBP —byTRoss(D.Hand). T 3:03 A 28,242(41,900).

1 2 2

Marlins 4, Rockies 2 DENVER — Rookie Jose

Fernandez tossedseven strong innings and Christian Yelich went 3 for 4 with two RBls in his major league debut, lifting Miami to a victory over Colorado. Making his

first start since appearing in the All-Star game, Fernandez(6-5j baffled the Rockies all evening as

has won three straight. Pittsburgh Washington ab r hbi ab r hbi S Martelf 5 0 0 0 Harperlf 4 0 1 0 Tabatarf 4 0 0 0 Rendon2b 4 0 0 0 Morrisp 0 0 0 0 Zmrmn3b 4 0 0 0 M elncnp 0 0 0 0 AdLRclb 4 0 0 0 M cctchcf 4 0 1 0 Werthrf 2 0 0 0 PAlvrz3b 4 2 2 1 Dsmndss 2 0 0 0 R Martnc 4 2 3 0 Spancf 3 0 1 0 G Joneslb 2 0 0 0 WRamsc 3 I I I GSnchzph-1bl 0 1 1 Jordanp 2 0 0 0 Walker2b 4 1 0 1 Krolp 00 0 0

Mercerss 4 0 1 1 Berndn ph 1 0 0 0 C olep 3 0 2 1 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 S niderrf I 0 0 0 Totals 3 6 5 105 Totals 2 9 1 3 1 P ittsburgh 030 0 0 0 020 — 6 W ashington 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 00 — 1 E—W.Ramos(5), Rendon(9). DP—Washington2. LOB—Prttsburgh 5, Washington3. 28—GSanchez (11). HR PAlvarez(25), WRamos(5). SB RMartin

he pitched out of several jams and limited one of the league's top(8), Werth (4). CS—Harper (4). Pittsburgh Cole W,5-3 Morris

hitting teams to five hits and two runs. He also struck out eight. Miami

ab r hbi

Colorado

ab r hbi

H chvrrss 5 1 2 1 Fowlercf 3 0 0 0 Yelrch f 4 0 3 2 LeMahr2b 4 1 2 0 S tantonrf 4 1 1 1 CGnzlzlf 3 0 0 1 Morrsn1b 4 0 1 0 Tlwtzkss 4 0 1 0 MDunnp 0 0 0 0 Cuddyrrf 4 0 0 0 Cishekp 0 0 0 0 Helton1b 4 1 1 1 L ucas3b-lb 4 0 0 0 WRosrc 3 0 0 0 Mrsnckcf 4 0 0 0 Arenad3b 3 0 1 0 DSolan2b 4 0 2 0 Chacinp 1 0 0 0 M athisc 4 1 2 0 Outmnp 0 0 0 0 F rnndzp 3 1 0 0 Escalnp 0 0 0 0 Polanc3b I 0 I 0Blckmnph 0 0 0 0 Pachec ph 1 0 0 0

Belisle p 0 0 0 0

IP H R E R BB SO 7 2 I I I 4 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0

Melancon Washington JordanL,0-3 72 - 3 9 5 4 1 Krol 1-3 1 0 0 0 Clippard 1 0 0 0 0 HBP —byCole(Werth). T—2:42. A—32,976(41,418).

4 0 2

Interleague

Dodgers10, Blue Jays 9 TORONTO — Adrian Gonzalez hit a three-run homer, Andre Ethier

T otals 3 7 4 124 Totals 3 0 2 5 2 Miami 0 01 020 010 — 4 Colorado 0 10 001 000 — 2

and Jerry Hairston Jr. added solo shots and streaking Los

M.DunnH,13 CishekS,19-21 I

road game, matching their longest

E—Morrison (2). DP—Miami 1, Colorado 2. Angeles beat Toronto for its fifth LOB —Miami 6, Colorado4. 28—Hechavarria (9), straight victory and 22nd in 27 D.Soano(4). 38—LeMahieu (2). HR—Stanton (11), Helton (7). SB —Hechavarria (6), CGonzalez (19), games. Gonzalez, Ethier andMark Tulowitzki(1).CS—Fowler (4). Miami IP H R E R BB SO Ellis each had three RBls as the Fernandez W,6-5 7 5 2 2 2 8 Dodgers won their ninth straight 1

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I

2 I

7

8 3 3 0

4

1-3 2 1 1 0 2-3 0 0 0 0 Belisle I 2 0 0 0 T—2:43.A—34,223(50,398).

0 0 I

Colorado ChacinL,9-5 Dutman Escalona

Cardinals 4, Phillies1 ST. LOUIS — Shelby Miller threw

six shutout innings andAllen Craig drove in a pair of runs to lead St. Louis to a win over Philadelphia. Miller (10-6) broke out of a three-

start slump with one of his finest efforts of the season. He had given up10 earned runs in12/a

innings over his previous three starts. He was working on12 days rest and gave up three hits while striking out six and walking one.

Philadelphia St. Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi E R BB SO Rogins ss 4 0 1 0 Mcrpnt2b 4 1 1 0 4 2 2 MYong 3b 3 0 0 0 Jaycf 5020 0 0 0 Utley 2b 4 0 3 0 Beltranrf 4 1 1 0 3 2 0 DBrwn If 4 0 0 0 Craiglf 3122 3 1 1 DYong rf 4 0 1 0 YMolinc 4 1 1 1 Ruf1b 4 1 1 0 MAdms1b 3 0 1 0 I 3 6 Mayrry cf 4 0 1 1 Freese3b 4 0 1 1 0 0 2 Ruiz c 3 0 0 0 Mulicap 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 Pettion p 1 0 0 0 Kozmass 4 0 2 0 1 0 2 L.Nix ph 1 0 0 0 SMigerp 0 0 0 0 Valdes p 0 0 0 0 BPtrsnph 1 0 0 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0

streak since July 2004. Los Angeles Toronto ab r hbi ab r hbi Crwfrdlf 6 1 1 0 Reyesss 5 2 2 3 Puigrf 3 2 2 0 Mecarrlf 4 0 0 0 AdGnzl1b 4 3 2 3 CIRsmscf 1 0 1 0 H Rmrzdh 4 2 I 0 Bautistrf 4 1 2 2 Ethierci 4 1 2 3 Encrnclb 5 0 1 0 M .Egis2b 5 0 2 3 Linddh 5 1 1 0 HrstnJr3b 4 1 1 1 DeRosa3b 2 1 1 1 Fdrwczc 5 0 2 0 Mlztursph-2b3 0 0 0 Puntoss 5 0 0 0 Bonifacpr 0 0 0 0 RDavicf-If s 5120 A rencii c 5 1 3 1 Lawrie2b-3b 2 2 2 2 Totals 4 0 101310 Totals 4 1 9 159

Los Angeles 0 0 0 2 0 1 340 — 10 Toronto 0 02 213 001 — 9 E—Hairston Jr. (4), Federowicz(4). LOB—Los Angeles 9,Toronto 9. 28—Ethier (21), Federowicz (5), Reyes (6), Lind(21), R.Davis (8), Arencibia(14). HR — AdGonzalez (15), Ethier (7), HairstonJr. (2), Reyes (5), Bautista(23), DeR osa(6) SB Puig (6), R.Davis(26). CS—MIzturis (3). SF—Lawrie. Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO Capuano 4 137 5 5 1 2 12-3 4 3 3 1 0 Marmol 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Howell LeagueW,4-3 2 3- 1 0 0 0 Belisario H,10 I 1 0 0 0 JansenS,12-15 1 2 1 I 1

Toronto Redmond 52-3 7 3 3 1 2-3 2 3 3 2 Cecil H,6 McGowan H,3 2 - 3 I 0 0 0

1 2 0 6 I 1 2 0

Dliver L,3-2BS,3-3 1 3 4 4 1 J.Perez 1 0 0 0 0 HBP —by McGowan (Hairston Jr.), by Redmond (Puig). WP —Marmol, Cecil. T—3:33. A—32,158(49,282).


C4 TH E BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

Derbies Continued from C1 "I think my setup at home is more designed forthe derbies," Jordan says. "I don't have as many hunter lines (the direction the horse takes toward the jump) or those sort of things. I have a lot more difficult lines — bending lines — set up at home. So on a daily basis I do more angles, jump more and gallop." Fences in the International Hunter Derby areset between 3 feet6 inches and 4 feet, with high-option fences set at a minimum of 4 feet 3 inches. (Optional fences are offeredin hunter classes to increase a competitor'soverall score awarded by

judges.) The International Derby at the Oregon High Desert Classics is judged by four judges, two each stationed at opposite ends ofthe course. The derby includes three rounds: The Classic Hunter Style Round is judged like a normal hunter event on style, temperament, fluidity and movement.The Handy Hunter Round features riding over simulated natural obstacles that could be encountered in the countryside and requires competitors to make tightturns, increase and decrease speed on cue, and navigate different tracks to the jumps. Finally, the top scorers from the previous two rounds compete in the Jump-Off Round, which combines the Classic Hunter Style and Handy Hunter. Last week in the first week of the 2013 High Desert Classics, Jordan was wildly successful in the Handy Round. In Sunday's International Derby, she scored in the 90s (out of 100) in the second round. "I really like the Handy Rounds," Jordan says. "I think the Handy Rounds are where you can reallyseparate yourself as far as the training in your horse. The first round shows quality, but you're not awarded as much for pace, turning and that sort of thing." The popularity of t h e I n ternational

Today attheClassics The Oregon High Desert Classics will resume today in the second and final

week of the horse show.Today's events will begin at 8 a.m. and conclude at about 6 p.m. This is the second week for TAKE2

hunter competition classes. Theclasses will take place in theStellar Sport Horses 8 French Hill Farm Hunter Ring

2 beginning at 8 a.m. Also beginning at 8 a.m. In the Swan Training Grand Prix Ring there will

be six consecutive jumper classes. Fences in the first class will be set at 1.15-meters and will increase until the fifth class which will have fences set at 1.40-meters. Megan Garcia, the winner of the USHJA National Hunter Derby, will compete in the sixth class with 1.10-

meter fences.

ternational Derby against Jordan and was in first place going into the final round. She did not get the points needed to win and placed fifth on Duck Duck Goose. Garciaobserves that some hunter horses will never advance to the International Derby. "Some horses are specialized in the National and some in the International because ofthe fence height," Garcia says. "The horse I won on last week will never do the International Hunter Derby. He's never going to be able to jump at that height." Garcia's barn houses more hunter horses than Jordan's. Garcia is drawn equally to jumper and hunter competitions. "When you ride a good hunter, there's nothing like it," Garcia reflects. "To feel a horse jumping and being as athletic as they are with so little help, versus the jumper, where you have to help them so

much because you're jumping so big ... but the feeling of raw power of jumping

The annual High Desert Classics are being staged for the 24th year at J

Bar J Boys Ranch onHamby Road in northeast Bend. Spectators are

welcome; admission is free. On the web: www.jbarj.org/ohdc/ — Bulletin Staff Report

Hunter Derby persuaded USHJA to create the National Hunter Derby (or National Hunter Classic, as it is referred to at the Oregon High Desert Classics). The National Hunter Derby is geared toward upand-coming horsesand riders because it gives competitors a chance to gain derby experience at a lower height and difficulty level, according to USHJA. Fences are set at 3 feet, with four high-option fences set at 3 feet 5 inches. Megan Garcia, 35 and of Beaverton, won the National Hunter Classic last Friday on Xanthos, a horse owned by one of her clients. Garcia also competed in the In-

hugefencesisam azing." This is the first year in which the Oregon High Desert Classics, in its 24thyear, is addingtwo $10,000 International Hunter Derby events to the prize list. Only Double-A-rated shows can host International Derby events, according to the rules and regulations on the USHJA website. The first-place finisher receives $3,000 of the purse. This week at the High Desert Classics, the USHJA National Hunter Classic will take place Friday at about 4 p.m. in the Side By Side Hunter Ring. The USHJA International Hunter Derby will take place Sunday starting at 8 a.m. in the Swan Training Grand Prix Ring. " The International Hunter Derby is bringing back the sport into hunters," Jordan says. "Hunters have, until these derbies came along, lost a bit of their draw from the public because it's considered boring. And so this has allowed it to be m ore of a spectator sport." — Reporter: 541-383-0375, eoller@bendbulletin.com.

'Hawks set to open training camp By Tim Booth

NFL

The Associated Press

RENTON, Wash. — Pete Carroll is used to the glare. It was part of the deal coaching atUSC. When his Seattle Seahawks b egin t r a ining c am p t h i s week, they'll feel the glare of a spotlight that's never shined through the clouds this bright in the Pacific Northwest. They aren't just plucky upstarts with l i ttle regard on a national scale. These Seahawks begin camp knowing they area popular choice not just to win the NFC West, but to reach the Super Bowl. Carroll basked in the glow of such expectations when he was at USC and the Trojans were the dominant power in college football. But this is Seattle, where expectations are usually met with disappointment. And with a team that relies so much on youth, the Seahawks will have to watch from becoming overwhelmed by the attention. "I make my own expectations so I don't really worry about what the media says or what other people say to be honest with you," quarterback Russell Wilson said. "My only

expectation is to work as hard as I can, to be consistent, for our football team to be consistent, and for our football team, to play as hard as we can every Sunday, every practice and then we'll see what happens." Five things to watch as Seattle opens training camp: 1. RW3: the sequel: A year ago, Wilson wasn't even the starter when camp began and fans were still worried if he was too short to be an NFL quarterback. Now fans are angry when he's not considered among the top 10 QBs in the NFL and ranked behind San Francisco's Colin Kaepernick by one organization. Wilson is the clear-cut leader of the Seahawks entering camp. Will it be more of the Wilson the league saw the final five weeks of last season and again in the playoffs when he put up dizzying numbers running and throwing? Or will Seattle rely more on M arshawn Lynch, putting Wilson less at risk'?

2. Secondary to none: All-Pro safety Earl Thomas is the reason Seattle's secondary works. You might not know that with all the attention All-Pro corner-

back Richard Sherman gets. Thomas and Sherman are deserving of the accolades, but most of the attention has fallen to Sherman for his confident, borderline cocky attitude, his willingness to jaw with any opponent — on and off the field — and his overturned PED suspension from lastseason. Throw in safety Kam Chancellor, cornerback B randon Browner and new arrival Antoine Winfield, and it's hard to argue against Seattle having the league's best secondary. 3. Hit the quarterback: If there was a weakness defensively a year ago it was the inability to consistently pressure the quarterback. Seattle finished the regular season tied for 18th with 36 sacks, but eight of those came against Green Bay in Week 3. Outside of Chris Clemons and Bruce Irvin, no Seattle defender had more than three sacks. Clemons' value became even more apparent in the NFC playoffs against Atlanta. With Clemons out due to a knee injury, the Seahawks had no sacks on Matt Ryan. The solution was a major revamp of its defensive front. Seattle signed Cliff Avril, Michael Bennett and Tony

McDaniel, and drafted Jesse W illiams and J o rdan H i l L

Once back from his four-game suspension for using banned substances, Irvin is likely to transition to outside linebacker, but still rush from that position. The lingering question is where Clemons is at in his recovery from ACL surgery. 4. Suspension central: Irvin became the latest to be caught by the NFL for using a banned substance. The Seahawks have seen five players get suspended for using PEDs since 2011. It's created a stigma for the team and even San Francisco coach Jim Harbaugh made mention of Seattle's problems in June. The Seahawks need a preseason without off-field issues to quiet some of the murmurs. 5. Handle the hype: Seattle will be a very popular place for every national publication during training camp, looking to swoop in and document what could be an u nprecedented season. Carroll's ability to demand focus and avoid distraction over the next six weeks could be just as important as solving any on-field questionsbefore the opener in Carolina.

Braun

New York Yankees pitcher C.C. Sabathia, Braun's former Continued from C1 teammate in Milwaukee, said Just last year, the 2011 he was shocked. N ational L e a gue M o s t "I never would have thought Valuable Player dodged a it, but I g u ess yo u n ever 50-game penalty when an know," Sabathia said arbitrator overturned his Some players were more positive test for elevated forgiving. "He stepped up. It's just like testosterone because the urine sample had been im- when you get a ticket, a speedproperly handled. ing ticket," Tigers outfielder T hen he held a n e w s Torii Hunter said. "You know conference at spring train- you were speeding. You get a ing in Phoenix and read a ticket and you go and you do defiant statement, insisting your time or pay your speedhe was innocent and "the ing ticket, then you're doing truth" was on his side. what you're supposed to do. Jason Bay watched it on That's what Braunie is doing. television, just like every- Everybody makes mistakes. one else. It takes a man to forgive him. " I think f o r m e w h a t If you don't forgive him, then makes me mad," the Se- are you a man'?" attle outfielder said, "baBay thinks B r aun c ould sically it just kills all the have handled his situation credibility of anybody." differently. "If you look at th e g uys Reaction poured in after Major League Baseball who have done stuff and just banned Braun without pay come out and admit it, a lot for therest of the season of guys don't remember who and the postseason, the those guys were," Bay said. beginning o f sa n c tions "But the guys who run up and involving players report- down and say, 'No, no,' and edly tied to a Florida clinic then it gets drug through the accused o f d i s t r ibuting mud 10 times worse, it makes performance-enhancing it tougher on themselves and drugs. the rest of us." Much of t h e r e action It appears more penalties was harsh. are coming, too. "I think e v erybody's B raun was one o f m o r e frustrated, especially the than a dozen players targeted players. I think we all feel by MLB, i n cluding injured a little bit cheated," Mari- Yankees star Alex Rodriguez, ners pitcher Joe Saunders following a report by Miami said. New Times in January that Schumaker th in ks they hadbeen connected with Braun should hand over Biogenesis of America, a nowhis MVP award to Dodg- closed anti-aging clinic. "The guys that are cheaters outfielder Matt Kemp, who finished second in the ing or whatever are taking 2011 balloting. s omething away f r o m t h e "In m y o p i nion, h e other players. They're lying to should be suspended the fans, they're lying to their lifetime ban. One strike, teammates, they're lying to you're out. It's enough. It's their GMs, their owners, and ridiculous," S c h u maker they're going to get caught," said. "He lied to a lot of Angels pitcher C.J. Wilson people. I was convinced, sald. a fter that M VP, that h e Braun add r essed hi s didn't do it." stunned Brewers teammates Braun, struggling Monday afternoon. Second through an injury-plagued baseman Rickie Weeks deseason, will miss Milwau- scribedthe slugger as "somkee's final 65 games, cost- ber" and "embarrassed." "I've s aid al l a l on g h e ing him about $3 million of his $8.5 million salary. But doesn't need that stuff to perhis punishment probably form," catcher Jonathan Luwill not affect the Brew- croy said. "I don't know why ers'playoff chances much he ever took it." — they are last in the NL Lucroy acknowledged that Central, already far out of he initially felt deceived. But wild-card contention. he said Brewers players were "I talked to a lot of the supportive and that he forguys and we think the pen- gives Braun. "I don't think anybody here alties aren't harsh enough," Seattle's Saunders said. "I is going to hold a grudge," Luthink it should have been a croy said. "He was depressed, year's suspension, at least. but at the same time he felt Just my take on it. I don't a lot of weight come off his get why guys have to do shoulder, come off his chest. That's a tough burden to bear, that stuff." Braun issued a statement withholding the truth for so long." Monday saying he is not perfect and realizesnow that he has made some mistakes. He apologized " to anyone I m a y h a v e d isappointed" an d s a i d he was happy to have the matter behind him "once and for all." bendbulletin.com But that does not mean there is no fallout for others in the game. "It's a sad day," Los An-

Find It All

Online

geles Angels manager

Practice Continued from C1 And not all that much time on the practice fields. No contact or pads are allowed during the first three days of camp, with the reporting date limited to physical exams, meetings and classroom work. Running and conditioning is allowed. Throughout training camp, players can't be on the field for more than four hours per day; only one practice a day can be in pads and is restricted to three hours or less, followed by a three-hour break; and

players get one day off per week. That all makes for a safer game, but how can newcomers make a sharp impact'? Denver running back Montee Ball felt he already did so even without a ball in his hands. "I made sure to leave a little impression on the conditioning test ..." the record-setting second-round draft pick from Wisconsin said. "I just want them to remember that I came in working since Day 1, and I really attacked the playbook since Day 1. I made a lot of progress with it." Ball will get a shot at being a starterfor the Broncos after veteran Willis McGahee was cut. It's much more difficult for lower draft picks or rookie free agents to get long looks these

days, though it does happen. Alfred Morris came out of Florida Atlantic of th e not-

so-mighty Sun Belt Conference as a sixth-round pick last year. He ran around, over and through just about everyone but Mike Shanahan last spring and summer in Washington, and the Redskins not only kept him, they started him. Morris rushed for 1,613 yards and D touchdowns and helped the Skins make the

first real opportunity to make changes since Korey," he said, referring to Vikings offensive tackle Korey Stringer dying f rom complications due t o heat stroke on Aug. I, 2001 during training camp. At 27, he was the first professional f ootball player to di e f r o m the illness. "After the CBA, when they o verhauled the playoffs. heat guidelines, did away with "Alfred's a b e a st," Red- two-a-day practices, modified skins offensive coordinator some heat treatment recomKyle Shanahan says. "I think mendations, it created a safer one guy or about three guys environment." all year tackled him on the Even as c o aches praise f irst tackle. That guy r u n s such developments, they also as hard as anyone I've ever bemoan all those snaps and seen. Most of his yards came blocks and tackles that have on outside zone, not the zone disappeared. "It's cut down on the opporread, so Alfred is as good of a back as I've ever had. He's the tunities to see them in those real deal." situations," says Browns firstBut discovering th e r e al year head coach Rob Chudzdeal is even more of a chore inski, a l ong-time offensive with practice time in pads and assistant in the league. "By scrimmaging so limited com- t he same token I t hink t h e pared to before 2011. The play- preseason games are so imers association insisted on the portant as well in that process, cutbacks during CBA negotia- but you do ... only get them so tions, and with player safety a many times in pads and hitting major issue, the NFL agreed. anyway. It puts a premium on Doug Casa, professor of ki- the reps that they do get." nesiology at the University of But the coaches also recConnecticut and the lead re- ognize everyone plays by the searcher for the Korey String- same setof rules. "It's a level playing field, so er Institute, already has seen many health benefits resulting there's no difference between from the 2011 CBA. our team and every o ther A leader in heat illness de- team," Jets coach Rex Ryan tection and prevention, Casa says. "But there are o ther advised the league and the things that you do. I think havplayers' union on establishing ing opportunity days where practice guidelines during the maybe at the end of practice hottest time of the year. you put the ball down and "For certain, 2011 was the you let the young guys go at

it. You're going to see them in preseason games as welL That's why those games are critical, (as well as) the greenand-white scrimmage. Even if we have to create our own live scrimmage situations, they'll have the opportunity to show what they can do." They'd better do so quickly.

Mike Scioscia said. "It's a black eye when something like this happens."

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C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com/business. Alsoseearecapin Sunday's Businesssection.

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

+'

NASDAO

15,567.74

3,579.27

+

S&P 500

+

2~

Toda+

GOLD ~ $1,335.10

S&P 500

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Homes sales monitor

1,68o

The Commerce Department reports data today on how sales of new homes fared last month. Economists project that sales picked upin June from May, when they increased at the fastest pace

in five years. An improving economy, low interest rates, solid job growth and a limited supply of previously occupied homes on the markethas helped stoke demand for new homes this year. Sales hit an annual rate of 476,000 in May.

New home sales Seasonally adjusted annual rate est.

485

500

10 YR T NOTE 2.51% ~

3 q4

1,692.39

400

.

-

10 DA Y S

15,240 .

16,000

1,650

15,500

1,600

15,000

1,550

14,500

1,500

Close: 15,567.74

15 440 .

1,700

Change: 22.19 (0.1%)

10 DA Y S

14,000 F

M

StocksRecap NYSE NASD

Vol. (In mil.) 3,020 1,562 Pvs. Volume 2,723 1,459 Advanced 1743 1147 Declined 1320 1318 New Highs 2 66 2 8 7 New Lows 28 12

A

M

DDW DDW Trans. DDW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

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A

HIGH LOW C LOSE C H G. 15604.22 15544.06 15567.74 +22.19 6586.08 6511.04 6515.40 -62.61 509.24 505.33 507.50 + 1 . 18 9676.94 9644.13 9659.62 + 9 . 03 3606.70 3576.96 3579.27 -21.12 1698.78 1691.13 1692.39 -3.14 1242.59 1236.55 1239.73 + 0 . 54 18006.55 17926.65 17940.00 -28.46 -1.21 1056.86 1050.87 1052.20

M

J

%CHG. WK MO OTR YTD +0.14% L L +18.80% -0.95% L L +22.78% +0.23% L T +12.01% L L +14.40% +0.09% -0.59% L +18.54% -0.19% L +18.67% +0.04% L +21.49% -0.16% L +19.64% -0.11% L +23.88%

NorthwestStocks 300 J

F

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A

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Source. Facteet

NAME

ALK 32.69 AVA 22.78 BAC 6 . 90 BBSI 19.99 BA 6 9 .03 Revved-up expectations CascadeBancorp CACB 4.50 Booming sales of pickup trucks Columbia Bukg CDLB 16.18 likely gave Ford a boost in North Columbia Sporlswear COLM 47.72 America in the April-June period. Costco Wholesale COST 93.20 Ford also saw big gains in China Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 thanks to new vehicles like the FLIR Systems FLIR 18.55 Kuga and EcoSport SUVs. There's Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 a sense that the European market Home Federal BucpID HOME 9.64 Intel Corp INTC 19.23 is finally stabilizing after years of KEY 7. 71 — sales declines. That all adds up to Keycorp Kroger Co KR 209 8 — some high expectations for the Lattice Semi LSCC 3.17 automaker when it reports LA Pacific L PX 9 . 87 second-quarter earnings today. MDU Resources MDU 19.59 — Mentor Graphics MENT 13.21 — Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 Nike Ioc 8 NKE 44.83 Nordstrom Iuc JWN 50.90 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.01 OfficeMax Iuc DMX 3 . 71 ~ PaccarIuc PCAR 35,44 —

Traffic update Wall Street anticipates Delta Air Lines' earnings improved in the second quarter. The airline is due to issue its latest quarterly report card today. Delta's traffic was flat the first half of this year versus the same period in 2012. The airline cut flying capacity by nearly 1 percent, so its planes were fuller, although the airline carried fewer passengers. That can sometimes boost profits, even if more people aren't flying. $20

DAL

15

PLNR 1.12

10

Operating

$0.90i 2Q '12 2 Q '13

Price-to-earnings ratio:

19

based on past 12 months' results

Dividend: $0.24 Div. Yield: 1.2% Source: Facreet

o

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PCL 39.17 ~ PCP 150.53 ~ SWY 14.89 ~ SCHN 230 7 ~ 3 S HW 127.92 ~ SFG 28.74 SBUX 43.04 TQNT 4.30 UMPQ 11.17 USB 30.96 WAFD 15.34 WFC 31.25 WY 2 2.55

37.74

37 . 54 + . 1 9 $ .0.5

22.76 22 .41 + . 36 +1.6 L L 44.78 44 .57 -.06 -0.1 33.24 29 .33 -.17 -0.6 W L

w +4 2 . 0 + 34.6 2220 dd +43.2 +34.2 8 2 8 1 8 0 .60f +17.5 +1 3.6 7613 13 L +32. 8 +4 0 .6 9 5 4 1 6 +30.4 +34.9 13046 12 L + 5.4 +30 . 9 3 4 54 3 3

0 . 92f 0. 3 6 1 .20f 0 . 80f

Dividend Footnotes: 2 Extra - dividends were paid, ttut are not included. tt - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. 9 - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, wtt>ctt wasmcreased bymost recent div>dendannouncement. i - Sum ct dividends pa>dafter stock split, nc regular rate. I - Sum of d>vidends pad tns year. Most recent dMdend was omitted cr deferred k - Declared cr pad tns year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate nct known, y>eld nct shown. 7 - Declared cr paid in precedme t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, apprctcmate cash value cn ex-distrittuticn date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is a clcsed-end fund - no P/6 ratio shown. cc - P/6 exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last t2 months

Company

RSH Close:$2.78 V-0.1 5 or -5.1% The struggling electronics retailer said that its second-quarter loss widened. It is bringing in consultants to help improve results.

$5

35

30

A

M J 52-week range

$1.90 ~

BkofAm 1094230 AMD 752287 S&P500ETF 709935 iShEMkts 681754 Microsoft 629890 Sprint tt 449390 MicronT 378599 MktVGold 367932 iShJap0m 356536 BariPVix rs 347245

14.94 +.02 3.66 -.24 169.14 -.36 40.10 + . 43 31.82 —.19 5.85 -.07 -.19 13.64 28.35 + . 91 11.97 —.01 15.75 -.08

Gainers NAME

CHG %CHG

Itttelliph

+1.12 + 5 6 .0 +.62 + 3 6.0 +16.41 + 2 7.8 +.45 + 2 6 .9 +.61 + 2 2 .5 +2.14 + 2 1 .8 +.80 + 2 1.5 +.36 + 2 0 .8 +.38 + 1 5 .6 +.92 + 1 4 .5

LAST 3.12 Uroplasty h 2.34 Sourcefire 75.49 SGDCD 2.12 SupcndT rs 3.32 CapitlSrce 11.97 Biocryst 4.52 CountrPth 2.09 NovaGld g 2.82 Drganovo 7.25

Losers LAST 18.17 AlaskCom 2.67 AmpioPhm 5.85 AllegiatttT 94.50 ChinaHGS 8.98

CHG %CHG -5.77 -24.1 —.45 -14.4 —.91 -13.5 -12.40 -11.6 -1.16 -11.4

Foreign Markets LAST CHG %CHG -16.83 -.43 3,923.09 London 6,597.44 -25.73 —.39 Frankfurt -16.83 —.20 8,314.23 Hong Kong 21,915.42 t 498.92 t 2 . 3 3 Mexico 40,788.23 +670.56 +1.67 Milan 16,238.58 + 5.03 + . 03 Tokyo 14,778.51 + 120.47 + . 8 2 Stockholm 1,216.68 + 3.30 + . 2 7 Sydney + 15.70 + . 3 1 5,004.60 Zurich 7,896.52 -30.93 —.39

7

J $4.28

Vold9.1m (2.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$277.12 m

PE: . Ye i ld: .

NFLX Close:$250.26 T-1 1.70 or -4.5% The Internet video setvice's second-quarter profit more than quadrupled, but its new subscriber additions fell short of expectations. $300 250

A

M J 52-week range

Total return YTD: 63%

1-Y R :86%

AP

FundFocus

J

$16.1 • ~

$38.74

Vol35.2m (5.6x avg.) P E: 30 .1 Mkt. Cap:$2.3 b Yiel d : 3 . 3 %

VVendy's

WEN Close:$7.23 %0.55 or 8.2% The fast-food chain's quarterly net income beat Wall Street expectations and said it's selling 425 of its restaurants to franchisees.

$8

200

A

M J 52-week range

$62.81 ~

J $270.3 1

5

A

M J 52-week range

J

$4.09~

$7.60

Vold11.0m (3.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$14.05 b

PE : 5 95.9 Vol327.6m (6.0x avg.) P E : 361.5 Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$2.84 b Yiel d : 2. 2 %

Texas Instruments

Sourcefire FIRE Close:$75.49%16.41 or 27.8% Cisco Systems, the networking equipment company, is buying the computer network security company for about $2.37 billion.

TXN Close:$38.93 %1.51 or 4.0% The semiconductor company said that second-quarter profit rose 48 percent on cost cutting and demand

for computer chips. $40

$80

38

60

36

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$26.21 ~

J $39.74

A

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J

$39. 50

$75. 95

Vol321.6m (2.6x avg.) P E: 24.2 Vold12.3m (16.1x avg.) PE:471.8 Mkt. Cap:$43.18 b Yiel d : 2. 9% Mkt. Cap:$2.35 b Yield:...

Array BioPharma

ARRY Close:$6.14 %0.58 or 10.4% The drug developer said that its potential allergic asthma treatment fared much better than a placebo in mid-stage testing.

$7

Capella Education

CPLA

Close:$47.93 A3.96 or 9.0% The onlineeducation company's stock hit a two-year high after posting a 12.7 percent jump in new enrollments in the second quarter.

$50 45 40

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M J 52-week range

$3.26~ Vold11.4m (7.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$717.36 m

J $6.64 PE: . Ye i ld: .

A

M J 52-week range

$26.81 ~ Vol3 267.8k (2.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$594 m

J $49.68 PE: 1 8 . 2 Yield:... AP

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill

percent to $725 million. Analysts polled by FactSet predicted profit of 31

cents per share on revenue of $707 million. TD Ameritrade says its trading revenue surged as the average number of trades it handled per day grew 12 percent to 399,216. Ameritrade's asset-based revenue grew 2 percent to $384 million as interest rates crept higher.

0045

Lexmark LXK Close:$36.43L1.86 or 5.4% The printer maker said that its second-quarter earnings more than doubled on higher demand for its print management software. $40

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.51 percent Tuesday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.

. 01 .02 . 0 6 .07 .11 .09

-0.01 w w

w

.09

-0.01 -

W

W

.14

+0. 02 L

W

L

.15

W W W W

L L L L

.21 .56 1.43 2.5 0

2 -year T-note . 31 .31 ... V 5-year T-note 1 .3 1 1 .30 + 0.01 W 10-year T-ttote 2.51 2 .48 + 0 .03 W 3 0-year T-bond 3.58 3.55 +0.03 W

BONDS

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO

Barclays LottgT-Bdldx 3.33 3.30 +0.03 W L BondBuyerMuni Idx 5.11 5.04 +0.07 L W L Ann. dividend: $0.36 Price-earnings ratio Div. yield: 1.3% (trailing 12 months):24 Barcl ays USAggregate 2.30 2.30 ... W W L PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.83 5.87 -0.04 W W L 3-Y R*: 23% 5-Y R * :9% Market value:$15.0 billion RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.29 4.30 -0.01 W W L *annualized total returns through July 23 Source: FactSet YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.53 1.50 +0.03 W W L 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3 .17 3.24 -0.07 W W L 1 YR AGO3.25 .13 SelectedMutualFunds

TD Ameritrade Holding (AMTD) 52-WEEK RANGE Tuesday's close:$27.20 $15 ~ ~ ~ ~ 28

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 22.95 +.01 +13.5 +20.6 +14.3 +8.3 A A A BondA m 12.54 -.01 -2.0 -0.9 +3.8 + 43 D D E CaplncBuA m 56.37 -.01 +8.7 +14.7 +11.0 + 48 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 41.33 +.05 +12.8 +27.4 +11.8 + 40 C C D EurPacGrA m 44.20 +.23 t 7.2 +24.5 +7.9 + 25 D D A FttlnvA m 47.86 -.02 +18.0 +30.0 +16.0 + 67 8 C C Davis OppA m RPEAX GrthAmA m 40.78 -.07 +18.7 +32.4 t15.9 + 67 A C C IttcAmerA m 19.78 +.03 +11.4 +18.2 +13.2 + 76 8 A A VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH IttvCoAmA m 35.54 -.04 +18.8 +27.7 t15.1 + 69 C D C NewPerspA m35.48 +.02 t13.5 +28.4 +13.6 + 63 8 8 8 cC o 00 WAMutlnvA m37.27 +.05 +20.6 +27.1 +18.2 + 81 D A B 0O $L Dodge &Cox Income 13.57 -.01 -0.6 +1 .5 +4 .7 +6.9 8 8 8 IntlStk 38.84 +.10 +12.1 +36.5 +9.9 +2.8 A 8 A Stock 150.56 +.01 + 24.6 +40.5 +18.8 +7.3 A A C 6L cC 00 Fidelity Contra 89.94 -.49 + 17.0 +23.7 +16.5 +7.8 C 8 8 C0 GrowCo 112. 06 - .79+ 20.2 +27.8 +19.6 +9.5 8 A A LowPriStk d 48 .10 +.01+ 21.8 +36.1 +19.0+10.9 8 8 A Fidelity Spartan 500l d xAdvtg 60 .02 -.11+ 20.0 +28.1 +17.8 +8.1 C 8 8 «C 00 FrankTemp-Fraukliu Income C m 2. 3 9 +.01+9.0 +16.2 +11.0 +7.1 A A 8 IncomeA m 2.3 6 . .. +8 . 9 + 1 6.5 +11.3 +7.6 A A A «C FrankTemp-Tem letouGIBottdAdv 13 . 13 +.01+ 0.7 + 9 .1 + 6.8 +9.8 A A A 0O RisDivA m 20. 13 - .05+16.4 +24.4 +15.2 +6.2 E D D Mornittgstar Ownership Zone™ Oppeuheimer RisDivB m 18. 22 - .05+ 15.7 +23.3 +14.1 +5.2 E E E e Fund target represents weighted O RisDivC m 18 . 13 - .05+ 15.8 +23.5 +14.3 +5.4 E D E average of stock holdings SmMidValA m40.44 -.06 + 24.8 +40.5 +14.5 +5.1 A E E • Represents 75% of futtd's stock holdings SmMidValBm 33.99 -.04+24.2 +39.4 +13.5 +4.3 B E E 0. 0 + 4 .3 +7.2 C C B CATEGORY Large Growth PIMCO TotRetA m 10 . 83 -.02 -2.5 MORNINGSTAR T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 31.58 + .01+20.4 +31.2 +16.9 +8.1 C C B RATING™ * * * A A GrowStk 44.3 5 - . 23+ 17.4 +24.8 +18.0 +8.6 C A 8 HealthSci 53.8 4 - . 41+30.6 +38.6 +32.0+16.9 C A A ASSETS $264 million Newlncome 9. 4 8 -. 01 -2.3 - 1.0 +3.6 +5.9 D D C EXP RATIO 1.02% Vanguard 156.15 -.29 +20.0 +28.1 +17.8 +8.1 C A 8 500Adml MANAGER Christopher Davis 500lnv 156.14 -.29 +20.0 +28.0 +17.7 +8.0 C 8 8 SINCE 1999-01-01 CapDp 42.83 -.29 t27.4 +44.2 $.17.9 t9.4 A A A RETURNS3-MD +9.9 Eqlnc 28.81 . . . +20.9 +28.2 $.19.9 t9.7 D A A YTD +25.6 StratgcEq 26.76 -.05 +24.8 +39.2 +21.0 +9.0 A A C 1-YR +36.5 Tgtet2025 15.02 . . . +10.5 +18.7 +11.8 +6.3 C 8 8 3-YR ANNL +17.3 TotBdAdml 10.70 -.01 -2.1 -1.7 +3.4 t5.4 E D D 5-YR-ANNL +8.4 Totlntl 15.60 +.08 +5.8 +24.6 +7.2 +0.7 D D C TotStlAdm 42.62 -.07 +20.7 +29.6 +18.2 +8.6 8 A A TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 42.61 -.07 +20.6 +29.5 +18.1 +8.5 8 A A Google, Ittc. Class A 7.71 USGro 24.88 -.10 +17.0 +26.7 +17.3 +7.6 8 8 C Berkshire Hathaway lttc Class 8 5.49 Welltn 37.78 +.01 +13.0 +19.5 +13.2 +8.2 8 A A Walt Disney Co 4.28 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs 1spaid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, cr redemption PACCARInc 3.19 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales cr Wells Fargo & Co 3 redemption fee. Source: Mcrn1ngsta7.

One of the fund's managers, F. Jack Liebau, recently left. Marketsummary Morningstar says experienced Most Active analysts and managers remain NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG and the departure isn't critical. A. Veiga, J. Sohn • AP

NAME Paris

0

The Standard & Poor's 500 index continues to set new records; and a rise in trading activity helped TD Ameritrade in its fiscal third-quarter. The online brokerage reported that its profit jumped nearly 20 percent. The Omaha, Neb.-based company said Tuesday that it generated $184 million in net income, or 33 cents per share. That's up from $154 million, or 28 cents per share, in the April-June period of 2012. Revenue rose 9

$26.44

NAME CmpTask

0

+ 43 9 +73 5 6 4 9 1 4 0 8 0 + 19.8 + 8. 9 1 7 6 2 1 1 . 22 L + 28 . 7 + 111.610942327 0 . 0 4 + 58.9 +192.8 4 2 34 0. 5 2 + 43.0 +47.1 5064 2 0 1 . 94 +4 3 +18 5 12 44 L +40 . 1 +3 9 .9 2 8 9 2 0 0. 4 0 + 17.5 +20.0 41 20 0. 8 8 L +20 . 6 +3 2 .0 1 057 2 6 1. 2 4 +44.0 +12.5 40 +30.0 +53.7 7 6 0 1 9 0 . 36f +80.6 +40.0 11066 dd 0 .58 +15.8 +47.5 43 cc 0 . 24a w + 1 0.3 -7.2 27804 12 0 .90 L + 46.0 +59 .5 12419 14 0 .22f L +49.6 +84 . 5 3 4 18 1 3 0. 6 0 L +31.3 +47 . 7 1 2 55 d d L -8.7 +60.5 2092 25 L + 34.5 +27 .7 3 8 1 cc 0.6 9 L +20.3 +3 9 .4 3 5 0 2 2 0. 1 8 w +19. 1 +9. 2 6 2989 12 0 . 9 2 V + 22. 5 +3 7 .7 2 1 19 2 4 0. 8 4 L +15. 0 +2 0 .5 1 484 1 7 1. 2 0 L +1.9 - 4.8 9 1 21 1. 8 2 L +35.8 +1 91.0 7 8 3 2 0.0 8 a L + 26. 6 +5 9 .6 2 990 20 0 .80a L +35 0 +21 9 12 dd L +11.6 +2 8 .6 3 6 4 3 5 1. 7 6f L +24.5 +42 .5 68 4 2 4 0. 1 2 L + 41.3 +7 0 .7 3 4 67 1 2 0 . 80f L -13.0 - 9.1 26 4 9 4 0 . 7 5 V + 11. 7 +3 1 .7 1 1 34 2 5 2. 0 0 +41.8 $.68.4 2 7 1 1 5 0 . 93f L + 26. 2 +3 4 .4 4 1 79 3 4 0. 8 4

+

1.3232

StoryStocks

$20.45 '13

'12

EPS

Planar Systms Plum Creek Prec Castparts Safeway Iuc Schuitzer Steel Sherwin Wms Staucorp Fucl StarbucksCp Triquiut Semi UmpquaHoldings US Baucorp WashingtonFedl Wells Fargo &Co Weyerhaeuser

0

68.00 62 .00 -.16 -0.3 29.26 28 .89 + . 0 1 14.99 14 .94 + . 0 2 +0.1 L 62.82 69 .51 -.03 108.15 107.79 + .93 +0.9 7.18 6.5 3 +. 0 1 +0 .2 25.55 25 .14 -.92 -0.1 L 66.69 62 .69 118.83 119.10 +1.05 +0.9 L 10.00 9 . 3 3 -.19 -2.0 w 29.58 29 .00 -.98 -0.3 26.71 25 .73 + . 2 2 +0.9 14.81 14.40 ... ... w 26.90 22 .75 -.02 -0.1 v 12.38 12 .29 08 -0.6 L L 39.05 38 .93 12 - 0.3 L L 5.71 5 .2 4 +.10 + 1.9 L L 22.55 17 .64 +.19 +1.1 V L 28.58 28 .56 +.16 +0.6 L L 20.78 20 .47 -.22 -1.1 V L 36.43 31 .82 19 -0.6 L w 66.07 63 .19 10 -0.2 V L 63.34 61 .51 56 -0.9 w L 50.80 45 .05 +.05 +0.1 L L 13.17 11.7 0 +.0 4 +0 .3 L L 58,57 57 .25 -.56 -1,0 V L 2.36 1.93 02 -1 0 w L 54.62 49.53 16 -0.3 V L 2 70.0 0 235.74 +.73 +0.3 L L 28.42 25.57 32 -1.2 V L 3 03 26.39 +.84 +3.3 L L 194. 5 6 171.80 +.25 +0.1 V V 53.20 52 .01 + . 1 8 +0.3 69.90 67 .66 -1.36 -2.0 V L 7.29 6 .8 6 -.05 -0.7 w w 16.77 16 .88 + . 19 $ -1.1

EURO

' 32

Stock indexes were mixed Tuesday. A modest gain for the Dow Jones industrial average was enough to carry it to a record closing high for the 28th time this year. The Standard 8 Poor's 5DD, meanwhile, dipped modestly. It was just the second time that the S&P 500 has fallen in the last 14 days. The S8 P 500 flipped between small gains and losses throughout the day. Telecoms had some of the day's biggest gains, and energy companies rose on higher prices for crude oil and natural gas. That wasn't enough to offset losses for stocks in technology and other sectors that make up the S&P 500 index.

Netflix

52-WK RANGE oCLOSE Y TD 1Y R VO L TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG %CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co

+

RadioShack

.....J. . 13 500 .J. ' "F ' " ' M' J. .' .'

J

$107.23

Dow jones industrials

Clos e : 1,692.39

Change: -3.14 (-0.2%)

1 ,640

CRUDEOIL

-.25

$20.25

FAMILY

Commodities Natural gas rose nearly 2 percent and recovered more than half the loss it incurred on Monday. Crude oil and the wholesale price of gasoline rose, while gold and other metals fell.

Foreign Exchange The dollar fell against the euro, British pound and other major currencies. It dropped to its lowest level against the

Canadian dollar in four and a half weeks.

h5N4 QG

2 .2 3

4. 24 1.74 7 0. 1 3 3. 0 .81 2 9. 6

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 107.23 106.91 t 0.27 t t 6 . 8 Ethanol (gal) 2.37 2.43 - 0.25 + 8 . 4 Heating Dil (gal) 3.07 3.07 + 0.09 + 0 . 8 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.74 3.68 t 1.79 t t 1 . 7 Unleaded Gas(gal) 3.06 3.06 + 0.13 + 8 . 8 FUELS

METALS

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)

CLOSE PVS. 1335.10 1336.40 20.25 20.50 1442.10 1447.00 3.20 3.19 738.55 749.55

%CH. %YTD -0.10 -20.3 -1.23 -32.9 -0.34 -6.3 +0.27 -12.2 - 1.47 + 5.1

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -6.2 1.22 1.22 +0.02 1.26 1.25 +0.64 -12.3 5.23 5.41 -3.37 -25.2 Corn (bu) Cotton (Ib) 0.86 0.86 -0.60 +14.0 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 326.90 336.90 -2.97 -12.6 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.42 1.46 -2.81 + 22.4 Soybeans (bu) 14.63 15.20 - 3.80 + 3 . 1 Wheat(bu) 6.54 6.60 -0.91 -16.0 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5388 +.0036 +.23% 1 .5521 C anadian Dollar 1.0 2 8 1 —.0062 —.60% 1.0176 USD per Euro 1.3232 +.0046 +.35% 1 . 2125 —.16 —.16% 78.40 Japanese Yen 99.45 Mexican Peso 12. 4 952 —.0120 —.10% 13.5772 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5713 +.0017 +.05% 4.0383 Norwegian Krone 5.8688 —.0710 -1.21% 6.0806 South African Rand 9.7036 —.1289 -1.33% 8.4508 6.4422 —.0464 —.72% 6.9348 Swedish Krona 0017 —. 18% Swiss Franc . 9348 —. .9906 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0759 -.0059 -.55% . 9 742 Chinese Yuan 6.1415 -.0037 -.06% 6.3870 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7576 -.0008 -.01% 7.7571 Indian Rupee 59.646 -.080 -.13% 55.925 Singapore Dollar 1.2630 +.0026 +.21% 1 .2622 South Korean Won 1116.79 -2.16 -.19% 1146.65 Taiwan Dollar 29.96 + .08 +.27% 30 . 05


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

BRIEFING

u exes anne neatnew ar

6 businesses to opendowntown Downtown Bend's leased occupancy rate held at 95 percent dur-

ing the second quarter of 2013, with six new

businesses leasing space, the Downtown Bend Business Association announced Tuesday. Northwest Bond

Street gained three new food-related stores: Taste Oregon, featur-

ing Oregon-made food and wines; Supervillain Sandwiches, a sandwich shop located in the

former NewYork Sub location; and 11 Roast-

ers, a coffee roasting company that provides beans for ThumpCoffee and other retailers,

according to a news release. The Oregon Store, offering Oregon-branded souvenirs, openedon

By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

h

An Oregon Coast resident and longtime developer is eyeing property near the new Miller's Landing Park for a series of hillside duplexes overlooking the Deschutes River. Sean Lee filed preliminary planning documents with the city of Bend on July 15 outlining plans for three duplexes with rooftop decks and gardens, as well as a shared courtyard area. The project would sit on about 12,700 square feet of land along Northwest Riverside Boulevard, overlooking the river near the Colorado Avenue Dam spillway. A resident of Depoe Bay, Lee said he hopes to break

III

Franklin Avenueand Northwest Wall Street.

Bishop's Barbershop and Wild RoseThai Resto open on Northwest Oregon Avenue inthe upcoming months, the

news release stated.

Investors say$5M makes yourich Sometimes $1 million isn't enough. According to a quarterly UBS Investor

Watch survey, nearly

70 percent of investors polled said a million

bucks didn't make

them wealthy. To feel "wealthy," most inves-

tors said they'd needat least $5 million, according to the report.

The poll also found that half of investors define wealth as being able to live without financial constraints. — Staffand wire reports

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Be safe fromanylegal attack: Presentation by David McCauley,president and founder of Leaders Without Limits, Inc.; registration required; to register, call 877-652-1868; free; 9-11:30a.m.; Broken Top Club, 62000 BrokenTop Drive, Bend; 541-383-0868. • BusinessAfter Hours: AAAOregon/Idaho; RSVP at www.bendchamber. org; $20 for members, $30 for nonmembers; 5 p.m.; 20350 Empire Blvd., Bend; 382-1303. THURSDAY • Realizing thePotential of Natural Gas:Educational opportunity for businesses toexaminecompany power pricing; registration required; RSVPby July 22; register at www.edcoinfo. com/event s/eventscalendar/; $10; 11:30a.m.-1 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W.MinnesotaAve.,Bend; 541-382-8436. MONDAY • Real Estate Career Discovery Night:Jim Mazziotti, principal managing broker and franchise owner of Exit Realty Bend, presents an introductionto acareer in real estate, covers costs, incorne, training and lifestyle of a career in real estate, RSVPat soarwithexit@gmail.com or call Jim at 541-4808835; free; 6 p.m.; Exit Realty Bend, 354 N.E. Greenwood Ave., No. 100; 541-480-8835. JULY31 • Nonprofit GrantWriting: Discover tips on research, effective writing, board involvement, grant managementandreporting; students areencouraged to bring a current grant project; identify funding sources,especially in Oregon; registration required; $69; 9a.m.-4 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building,1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270.

For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbulietin.comlbizoal

Rendering by Yadira Fuentes, courtesy of Sean Lee

This rendering shows a preliminary concept of a plan to build three duplexes on Northwest Riverside Boulevard. ground on the duplexes next

application meeting, an early stage in the building process. "I'm trying to do a really nice-looking, unique project," Lee said on Tuesday. "It's a fabulous location with its proximity to downtown and the Old Mill District."

spring. It's a preliminary timeline that depends on his conversations with city planners. He's set to meet with Bend Community Development Department staff Thursday for a pre-

"Parents are willing to stretch themselves. It's not that they're not willing to pay. It's that their income is not keeping up."

the corner of Northwest

taurantare scheduled

flgiI ~I> i II!i~a ggg III

He's made a living for about 25 years building speculative homes, mostly in the Portland area and Arizona. He started eyeing Bend for a new project in 2010, and settled on the Riverside Boulevard property last year. Lee purchased the site in December for $235,000, according to Deschutes County property records. One of the duplexes would include a pair of three-bedroom units, each about 1,600 square feet, planning documents show. One would include a pair of two-bedroom units, and those in the third would be one bedroom each. Solarpanels may be placed on the roofs. Lee said all of the plans are preliminary at this point, but

— Sarah Ducich, senior vice president for public policy, Sallie Mae

inanciaconcernsare rIVlll

co

KISIOIlS, S U

sas

By Philip Elliott The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — College costs are driving decisions about which schools to attend, what to study and even where to live, according to a report from loan giant Sallie Mae. Parents no longer foot the largest portion of the bill, according to the lender's annual survey. That role goes to grants and scholarships, with student loans coming in third. While the recession has largelypassed, economic worries have not and many

families are making college choices driven by fears of tuition hikes and job losses, according to the survey. "Parents are willing to stretch themselves," said Sarah Ducich, Sallie Mae's senior vice president for public policy. "It's not that they're not willing to pay. It's that their income is not keeping up."

r

The Associated Press file photo

Prospective students and their parents tour Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., earlier this month. Grants and scholarships are taking a leading role in paying college bills, surpassing the traditional role parents long have played in helping foot the bills, according to a report from Sallie Mae.

College spending per student was about $21,000 during 2012, down from a peak of $24,000 in 2010, according to the Sallie Mae-Ipsos Public Affairs report. The annual survey of student financial aid found students earned about $6,300 in grants and scholarships to pay for college costs in 2012, taking the top spots from parents. Parents chipped in $5,727 on average, a decrease of 35 percent since 2010.

.

~

Student loans were the third most common source to pick up the bill for courses, housing and books. The average student borrowed $8,815 in federal loans. The rateforthose loans was the subject of debate in the Senate last week, as lawmakers considered a compromise that would offer some studentslower ratesfor the next few years but would

prescribe higher rates for future classes. The Senate is expected to vote on that White House-backed compromise this week. The White House estimates the average undergraduate student would save $1,500 in interest charges if Congress acts before leaving town for the August recess. A vote has not been scheduled. Last year, the average

family turned to grants and scholarships to cover 30 percent of college costs. Parents' income and savings covered 27 percent of the bill and student borrowing covered 18 percent. Parents' enthusiasm for college has not shriveled, though. The survey found 85 percent of parents saw college bills as an investment in their children's future.

the duplexes would hit the market asrentalsfor higherincome tenants. He and his wife will likely live in one of the units. The lot's hillside slope could also present building challenges, though Lee said he's been studying the property and has the expertise to build there. The plans include setbacks — keeping the duplexes a setdistance from surrounding properties — and parking

garages. It's up to developers to determine whether building housing units on a hillside is feasible before starting construction, said Amy Barry, associate planner with the city of Bend. — Reporter:541-617-7820 eglucklich@bendbulletin.com

Senate Iooks into the role of banks in commodities By Edward Wyatt New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — Significant risks to the nation's financial system and to taxpayers are the potential consequences of continuing to allowthe country's largest financial institutions to own commodities units that store and ship vast quantities of metals, oil and the other basic building blocks of the economy,severalwitnesses warned a Senate panel on Tuesday. The ability of those bank subsidiaries to gather nonpublic information on commodities stores and shipping also could give the banks an unfair advantage in the markets and cost consumers billions of dollars, the witnesses said. The Senate Financial Institutions and Consumer Protection subcommittee convened the hearing to explore whether financial companies should controlpower plants,warehouses and oil refineries. Although Congress removed post-Depression era barriers that separated commercial banking and traditional commerce in the late 1990s, a group of bipartisan senators has lately been advocating the reinstatement of those walls in part to impose tighter regulation on such actions. Because the giant banks receive the benefit of low-rate borrowing from the Federal Reserve, taxpayers could be left on the hook for losses caused by a collapse in commodities prices or in the event of an environmental disaster.

Facebook eyesgrowth in developing world

~i'

By Vindu Goel New York Times News Service

Iis

MENLO PARK, Calif. — Facebook has been quietly working for more than two years on a project that is vital to expanding its base of 1.1 billion users: getting the social network onto the billions of cheap, simple "feature phones" that have largely disappeared in America and

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Europe but are still the norm in developing countries like India and Brazil. Facebook soon plans to announce the first results of the initiative, which it calls Facebook for Every Phone: More than 100 million people, or roughly 1 out of 8 of its mobile users worldwide, now regularly access the social network from more than 3,000 differ-

Facebook has been working on its software for simple "feature phones," which are the norm in developing countries. Jim Wilson / New York Times News Service

ent modelsof feature phones, some costing as little as $20. Many of those users, who rank among the world's poorest people, pay little or nothing to download their Facebook news feeds and photos, with the data usage subsidized by phone carriers and manufacturers. Facebook has only just begun to sell ads to these customers, so it isn't making money from them yet. But the countries in which the simple phone software is doing the best — India, Indonesia, Mexico, Brazil and Vietnam

— are among the fastest-growing markets for use of the Internet and social networks, according to the research firm eMarketer. Analysts say that Facebook has a powerful opportunity to win the long-term loyalty of millions of new global users by giving them their first taste of Internet through Facebook on a simple cellphone. "In a lot of foreign markets, people think that the Internet is Facebook," said Clark Fredricksen, a vice president at eMarketer.

BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed July16 • Theresa A. Shodin, 412 E Jefferson St., Burns • James M. Miller, 1241 Sweeping View Court,

Redmond • Janelle L. Hicks, 20912 Journey Ave., Bend • Erin A. Roberts, 62155 Cody Road, Bend Filed July17

• Earl L. Miller, 15947 S.E. Pecos Road, Prineville • Charles I. Fischer, Jr., 20925 Greenmont Drive, Bend • Teresa D. Anderson, 149177Ahern Drive, La

Pine Filed July 18 • Douglas V. Bristow, 2193 N.W. Rolla Road, Prineville • Isaac J. Binder,1130 N.E. Barnes Road, Prineville

• Susan R Wright, 815 N.W. Locust Ave., Prineville • Sara K. Reynolds, 1160A N.W. Portland Ave., Bend • Kenneth J. Neel, 620 N.E Quince Ave., Redmond

Filed July 22

• Albert L. Slaughter, 807 N.E Eighth St., Prineville • Kristine S. Smith, 60928 Aspen Drive, Bend • Margaret F. Ramlow,

15909 Woodland Drive, La Pine Chapter 13 Filed July 22 •Steven R.Gonzalez,21589 Bear CreekRoad, Bend


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Reader photos, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Fly-tying Corner, D5 THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

O www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors

WATER REPORT For water conditions at local lakes and rivers, seeB6

BRIEFING

Odell to host water races The Pioneer Cup Canoe andKayak races

OUTING

La e eservesa ause • Hand Lake, located near Mcl(enziePass,offers big payoff for little effort

are scheduled for Odell

By Alandra Johnson

Resort on Saturday.

If the payoff for a hike comes easily, can it be enjoyed just as much as if you reached the spot after hiking arduously for hours? That was the question I asked myself as my husband and I stumbled, almost too quickly, upon a pristine alpine lake tucked into the southern edge of the Mount Washington Wilderness. Just a half-mile from the McKenzie Pass Highway sits Hand Lake. It's a

Lake's Shelter Cover

The races begins at 11 a.m.; registration is from 8to10a.m. Entry

fee is $16 per person and includes aT-shirt or hat.

Race classes include canoe, kayak, surf ski, outrigger and stand-up paddleboard. Contact: 541-7822815.

Kids odstacle challenge set

The Bulletin

small lake that seemingly has it all. Views of the Three Sisters as well as Mount Washington? Check. Lush meadow brimming with wildflowers'? Check. Lava rock to explore? Beach area perfect for picnicking? Sweet breeze lifting the hot summer sun? Check, check,check. The setting was everything we could have asked for during our quick weekday picnic outing. It almost felt too easy. Normally when I encounter a spot of such loveliness, it is after a big workout of scaling some mountain or scrambling through wilderness for at least an hour. But nothing about this expedition was grueling, not even the drive. Alandra Johnson/The Bulletin SeeOuting /D3 H and Lake is a small, easily accessible alpine lake with views of the Three Sisters.

"We wanted to connect all these wilderness-quality lands together with a trail ..

The Subaru Kids

and openpeople's eyes to some reall y amazing places."

Obstacle Challenge,a kid-specific adventure

— Brent Fenty, of Oregon Natural Desert Association

mud run with military-de-

signed obstaclesfor ages 5 to16, is set for Aug.3. The event will run

from10 a.m. to noonat R.E. Jewell Elementary

/

School in Bend.

Entry fee is $25 per child; parents can participate at no charge.

n"

Sage Clegg smiled while chatting about her nearly five-week hike through some of Eastern

Oregon's most

For more informa-

spectacular landscapes.

tion, call 541-288-3180, email eight18product

ions©gmail.com or visit www.kidsobstacle challenge.com.

RiverFeast set RiverFeast, a benefit forthe Deschutes River

• Experienced hikerSageClegg, of Bend,first to experience800-mile OregonDesert Trail

Conservancy, will be

hree years ago,

Saturday at Mary McCallum Park in Sunriver.

The event will run

Brent Fenty spent

from 4:30 to 9:30 p.m. and will include dinner

a sleepless night

by Tate & TateCatering, music and morealong

trying to envision

the banks of the Upper

Deschutes River. Cost is $65 per person or $120 per couple. Make reservations at www.deschutesriver.org by Thursday.

a trail that would encompass all the hidden jewels of the !

For a map to thepark,

Months later, Fenty, director of the Oregon Natural Desert

volved/events/riverfeast or 541-382-4077. — From staff reports

Association, had worked up a

In a calendar list-

ing for the Runfor the Birds event, which

appeared Friday, July 19, on Page18 of GO! Magazine, the location and website were listed

incorrectly. The event takes place July 28 at Sunriver Resort, 17600

Center Drive. Thewebsite is www.sunriverresort.com/birds.

The Bulletin regrets the errors.

TRAIL UPDATE WITH CHRISSABO SUMMER FUN Large numbers of users are expected at area lakes and trails throughout the week as

warm weather continues. Be sure to hydrate and carryappropriate supplies. WILDERNESSTRAILS The Pacific Crest Trail

hasamoderateamount of blowdownbetween Mount Jefferson and Three Fingered Jack with

patchy snow athigher elevations. The snow is passable for hikers but

may be roughfor stock. Matthieu Lakes, Black Crater Trail and Newberry

Caldera havebeen cleared of blowdown.

SeeTrail update/D5

h /'

Sage Clegg stands atop a pinnacle in Lake Owyhee State Park, the eastern terminus of the roughly 800-mile Oregon Desert Trail. She completed the trail in 36 days.

rough map of the route and had volunteers scouting the area to

Correction

rt/

Eastern Oregon High Desert.

visit the website below. Contact: www.des

chutesriver.org/get-in-

HUNTING & FISHING

MARIC

MORICAL~

t

confirm accessibility and water sources. "I realized there were a lot of areas that were very much unknown to Oregonians," Fenty said. "We wanted to connect all these wilderness-quality lands together with a trail ... and open people's eyes to some really amazing places."

Once the basic route was established via GPS, Fenty had many hikers approach him to be the first to thru-hike (hike from end to end) the 800-mile Oregon Desert Trail. But Sage Clegg was the clear choice. The 33-year-oldfrom Bend had completed hiking's triple crown — the Pa-

Bend's Sage Clegg, joined for a segment of her trip by boyfriend, Adam Drummer, climbs out of Big Indian Gorge on Steens Mountain in late June along the Oregon Desert Trail. Photos courtesy Oregon Natural Desert Association

cific Crest Trail, Appalachian Trail and Continental Divide Trail — in a mere 18 months from July 2009 to December 2010. And as a seasonal wildlife biologist who researches tortoises in Southern California' sMojave Desert,she was familiar with the terrain. "We needed someone who could help us understand what we k n ow and what we don't know," Fenty said. "Someone who understands the potential conservation value of a trail corridor like this." SeeTrail /D3

GARY =~r LEWIS

Peekinto an expert's tackle box • Top anglersattend annual fishingtrade show in LasVegas ack when I was a kid, what a person had in his or her tackle box was a guarded secret. There was an unwritten rule: You didn't peek into the other guy's tackle box unless he invited you. The privacy of the tackle box was sacrosanct, at least that was what we told each other. Let Greg or Joe or Mike or Todd or Grant leave his gear unprotected and therestofusswarmed all over it. What was the secret weapon? What did he have too much of, things like snap swivels, jig heads and split shot? He didn't have too much of it after the rest of us got a look inside. The annual fishing trade shows offer a sneak peek into the tackle boxes of some of the best anglers in the world and it all happened again in Las Vegas last week. The words Las Vegas and fishing seldom occur in the same sentence. But this year the International Convention of Allied Sportfishing Trades (ICAST) and the International Flyfishing Trade Dealers (IFTD) held their annual product showcases in the desert. Thousands of guide-shirted, baseball

cap-wearing anglers from all over the world landed in the city beneath a sky filled with the smokes of wildfires burning in the Spring Mountains. As soon as the doors opened, I saw one of several booths devoted to fishing from stand-up paddleboards. If you have tried paddleboarding, you probably got wet. You will have to work at it to fall off these purpose-built boards. They come in various interpretations, but offer more stability, as well as a place to lash down a tackle box or cooler. Kayaks, too, are hot right now. Boats range from sparetofeaturepacked. Options include rod holders, depth finders, pole anchor systems, pedal/paddle propulsion and outriggers. SeeLewis/D5


D2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

I •

t'i,»

I

Next month's topic is garden. Submit at www.bend bulletin.coml garden

Aaron Selig

"Skimboarding," taken with a Nikon d3000.

Three Outward Bound instructors run the notch at the Big Eddy Rapids. "I shot it with a Nikon D300 and 80-200 Nikor ED lense at 1/640, f7.1 ISO1400 and did some 'synthetic HDR' enhancing with Lightroom and Photomatix Pro since it wasan overcast, rainy day.

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"Last Ride of the Day"

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Marcus Hansen

The Hansen family enjoys some crystal-clear kayaking on Fall Creek slightly above the confluence into the Deschutes River. Can you work a camera, and capture a great picture? And can you tell us a bit about it? Submit your color or black-and-white outdoors photos at bendbulletin.com/ gardenand tell us a bit about where and when you took them. All entries will appear online, and every week we'll run a stellar local photo in this section. Once a month, we'll publish a whole photo page like this one. Requirements:Include in yourcaption as much detail as possible — who, what, when, where, why; any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number.Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

|

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Hilary Kenyon

This was shot on Hosmer Lake two weeks before it got crowded.


WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

D3

Outing Continued from D1

Getting there Getting to Hand Lake is a pleasure, as it is located along the McKenzie Pass Highway. This old highway, which you can pick up in Sisters, used to be the main thoroughfare between Eugene and Central Oregon. Now, the twisting, high elevation road is open just a few months a year. The only reason to head down this highway is recreation. And just like the Cascade Lakes Highway, simply driving along the road can be recreation enough. The curves are so extreme, they force meandering. And the views are simply incredible. As the highway cuts between the Three Sisters and Mount Washington, the m ountains seem tantalizingly close. The scenery also help remind visitors that the Cascade range is made up of volcanoes. The road winds its way through giant lava fields and passes by the Dee Wright Observatory,a tower constructed out of lava rock. Just past the observatory, the road begins to descend, and as it does, the landscape becomes a little more green and lush as it heads closer to the wetter side of the state. A few miles from the observatory, we found our parking spot on the left-hand side of the road. Parking next to a lovely alpine meadow peppered with flowers boded well

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Photos by Alandra Johnson /The Bulletin

The trail at Hand Lake cuts through a large meadow, dotted with wildflowers and buzzing with insects.

The hike

shores of Hand Lake. We cut t hrough th e m e adow a n d marsh area, dotted with white,

orange and purple flowers.

The trail is a quick half-mile hike through pine trees. It's a shady, fairly flat hike. Soon enough we came to Hand Lake Shelter. It's a threesided wooden structure that sits on a small knob overlooking a large meadow. From the shelter, one trail leads down to the lakeshore and another continues on, connecting to a trails that lead to Scott Lake or to the Deer Butte trail. First, we went down to the

The trail peters out, but it was easy to pick our way to the dirt and rock lakeshore. Hand Lake is a small, crystal clear lake. I dipped my feet into the water and found it warmer than I would have expected. We walked along the edge of the lake and admired views of the mountains. We found two l a rge flat rocks, perfect for a picnic spot. We ate peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, sipped water and

Wildernessg

enjoyed an ideal mix of hot summer sun combined with a cool breeze coming off the lake. Big bugs buzzed around us, but none were mosquitoes. Just a half-mile from the highway, this spot felt isolated and like a special find. After our lunch, we had a bit of time to explore another trail that headed around the back side of the lake. We made it to the lava beds that line the north edge of the lake. We wanted to keep going to see what other fun wonders we could find.

• NATIONAL I IL M LAND FOREST • WILDERNESS • NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE

Oregon

HadjandS

Area of detail

Getting there:From Sisters, go west on state Highway 242, the

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After you pass Dee Wright Observatory, begin looking for mile markers. The parking spot is on the left side of the highway betweenmiles72 and 73. The trail begins on the right side of the highway. Difficulty: Easy

• Campus

Trailhe

Three Sisters Wilderness

Scott

Lake

MILES 0

I/ 2

Cost:Free

I

Contact:541-822-3381

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

But sometimes the demands of home and work force you to cut short an outing. I guess that's when it's good to head to places like Hand Lake, where

just a little bit of effort can lead to a beautiful payoff. — Reporter:541-617-7860, ajohnson@bendballetin.com

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Greg Cross/The Bulletir

Sage Clegg pausesto

packher backpack while preparing to leave on her 800mile trip along the Oregon Desert Trail, at the Tumulus Trailhead at the edge of the Badlands.

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enjoy someday, too ... bigger

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Photos by Andy Tulhs The Bulletin

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to a large map of Oregon on

"And then it just got hotter and hotter and hotter. Whenever I knew it was going to be hot, I would try and do earlymorning, early-evening hiking. But I still needed to get somewhere, and there's not that much shade. I had an uming bighorn sheep, pronghorn brella; it's a reflective umbrella that's silver on top. I had my and deer. "It's really rugged and super own little portable shade unit. steep and up and down," Clegg But I would have to hide out sard. every now and then." She maintained her ow n Clegg got most of her water track log on her GPS, and out of cow ponds, treating it plans to balance it with ON- with a water purification sysDA's route to refine the trail. tem called SweetWater. "I treated every bit of water No doubt the route will change as more hikers take it on, but I drank," Clegg said. "On cold the idea is to identify a route days, I drank 3 liters and on that will t ak e it s f o llowers hot days I drank almost 10. It to some of the region's most was hard to plan and predict." breathtaking places. Clegg kept her camping " Oregon's H i g h De s e rt gear minimal. Without food or doesn't really get the atten- water in it, she says her backtion and care that it deserves," pack weighed just 15 pounds. It Fenty said. included a ground sheet made Clegg loves the desert, but of window insulation film, a she knew going in what the sleep pad and a prop-up tarp. constant challenges w ould She would use the umbrella to b e: finding w ater an d n o t block any wind or rain.

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Source: Oregon Natural Desert Association

the high 80s," Clegg recalled.

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West Little

Pueblo Mountains~

overheating. As expected, she encountered temperatures over 100 degrees, but she also got rain — and even snow near Hart Mountain, east of Lakeview. "It was dumping rain on me on my way intothe Pueblos, and by the time I exited them (the temperature) was in

:

,

Clegg right, looks over maps with Jeremy Fox, the trail coordinator from Oregon Natural Desert Association.

ome

teens Mountain Wilderness

Hart Mountain National Wil dlife Reiree

'I

sagebrush," Clegg said.

the wall of her living room. "That was a great grand finale. That was the place I felt the most lonely." C legg hiked about 30 o f the days by herself, and the other seven either with her boyfriend, Adam D r ummer, or other friends. She says she averaged about 23 milesper day, taking one day off. She saw about five parties of hikers in the Steens, she recalls, the most people she saw along the way, except for when she passed through tiny outposts of Field and Rome. The Pueblos were crawling with wildlife, she says, includ-

Where:Hand Lake

ML Washington Wilderness

McKenzie PassHighway. for our trip. The trail starts on the other side of the highway.

Clegg jumped at the oppor-

than myself, and that was nice to know." The highlights of the trip included the Diablo Rim just east of Summer Lake, the Fremont and Abert Loop, Steens Mountain, the Pueblo Mountains south of S teens, and most spectacular, the West Little Owyhee River Canyonlands in Oregon's far southeast corner. "Mind-blowing," Clegg said of the canyon lands, pointing

If you go

Te Sisters

Continued from D1

Clegg, who f o llowed the route using a handheld GPS but had to veer off when it became unnavigable, was back in Bend last week to tell her story of37 days in some ofthe most remote areas of the state. "I feel like hiking's usually kind of selfish," Clegg said. "It was nice to know that maybe I'm helping create a trail for other people to come out and

r

r

Trail tunity. She left the western t erminus of the trail in t h e Badlands, east of Bend, June 5. On July 11, she reached Lake Owyhee State Park, the eastern end of the trail. She hiked about 600 miles of the trail and biked about 200 miles. The Oregon Desert Trail is not a continuous piece of singletrack trail. It is merely a GPS route over existing trail, dirt r o ads and a reas where walking cross-country through the desert is possible. "Most of the time you're just cruising along through the

The Hand Lake Shelter sits at the top of a small slope just above the lake. It is just a half-mile hike from the highway but feels like a world away.

, t

In small towns where Drum- could do it." mer or otherfriends were not The trail along the West meeting her w i t h s u pplies, Little Owyhee, from Anderson Clegg had prepacked boxes Crossing to Three Forks, was of supplies shipped to post of- deep in the river canyon — a fices or stores before the trip. canyon so narrow that Clegg Drummer hiked with Clegg was forced to swim in certain for six days. He says he was spots. Much of the way along not surprised how quickly she the river also was choked with completed the thru-hike, and beaver dams. She called it the that he never had a doubt she most challenging section of would make it. the 800-mile route. "Well, it's the shortest trail "It was really hard, but it she's ever done," Drummer was really beautiful," Clegg said, smiling. "It's just that said. "Being in that kind of when she left, it was 100-and- canyon country is just ... I kept some degrees. I knew weeks having to remind myself I was of that would wear her down. in Oregon. It felt like I was in B ut physically, I k new s h e the Southwest canyoneering.

Enchantment Trail, another 800-mile route, which r u ns from Albuquerque, N.M., and through Arizona to Phoenix. Yes, Clegg has also thru-hiked that one. super-rewarding." Now back in Bend and reThree Forks is a popular covering from her desert adput-in l ocation f o r r a f t ers venture, Clegg is planning to who dare to take on the Class return to Southern California V rapids of the Middle Fork and the tortoises in the winter. of the Owyhee. In that area, She hopes that her effort Clegg was able to hike out of will spark the interest of other the canyon and up onto the thru-hikers to consider taking rim. She hiked along the rim on the Oregon Desert Trail, or from Three Forks into Rome. at least day hikers who want " It gets crazy narrow i n to see one of the many natural spots," she said. "It seemed like wonders through which she I could stand on the rim that I walked. "I'll feel really successful if was on and throw something to the other side. Each canyon somebody else wants to thruhas its own flavor." hike it," Clegg said. "I hope Clegg says the f eeling that happens." was anticlimactic when she — Reporter: 541-383-0318, reached the eastern end ofthe mmoricalC<bendbulletin.com trail at Indian Creek Campground in Lake Owyhee State Park. "But that's how it always is," & HEARING AID CUNK she said. The savvy hiker notes that www.centraloregorauditdogycom t he Oregon Desert Trail i s Bend• Redmond• P-ville • Burns quite similar to t h e G r and 541.647.2884

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TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

U TDOORS

A L E NDAR

communications©deschutestu.org, www.deschutestu.org. BEND CASTINGCLUB:Agroup TREK DIRTSERIES:Series of of fly anglers from around Central women's instructional mountain Oregon who are trying to improve bikecamps makes stop in Bend; their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; Aug. 3-4; Sunnyside Sports, Bend; club meets on the fourth Wednesday www.dirtseries.com. of each month; location TBA; 541306-4509 or bendcastingclub© gmail.com. EQUESTRIAN THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB: TRAIL COURSE PRACTICE:The 7 p.m.; meets on the third Deschutes County Sheriff's Posse is Thursday of each month; Sunriver holding a trail course practice, open Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation to the public; 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Aug. Center; www.sunriveranglers.org. 10; $15 donation per horse; 65432 THE CENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERS DeschutesPleasantRidge Road, CLUB:7 p.m.; meets on the third Redmond; Sue Cox at 541-977-8808 W ednesday ofeach month;Bend or Debbie Brix at 541-639-9334. Senior Center; www.coflyfishers.org.

CYCLING

FISHING CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; www.cobc.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For membersto meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; 6 p.m.; meets on the first Monday of each month; Oregon Natural Desert Association offices, Bend; 541-306-4509,

Email events at least 10days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event"at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.

deschuteschildrensforest.org; deschuteschildrensforest.org.

OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.;meets the second W ednesday ofeach month;King Buffet, Bend;ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.

PADDLING PIONEERCUPCANOEAND KAYAK RACES:Registration from 8-10 a.m.; race begins at11 a.m.; entry fee is $16 and includes a T-shirt or hat; race classes include canoe, kayak, surf ski, outrigger and stand-up paddleboard; Saturday; Odell Lake's Shelter Cove Resort; 541-782-2815. TUMALO CREEK'SPICKIN'8r PADDLIN' MUSICSERIES:Series continues with boat and stand-up paddleboard demos from 4 to 7 p.m., live music from Tumalo Creek's John Hise at 5 p.m. and Polecatfrom 7to 9 p.m.; July31; $5, children12 and younger are free; back lawn of Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, Bend; 541-317-9407 or laurel©tumalocreek.com. KAYAKINGCLASSES:W eeklyclasses and open pool; $3; 4-6 p.m. Sundays; equipment provided tothose who preregister, first-come, first-served; CascadeSwim Center,Redmond; 541-548-7275, www.raprd.org. NATIONALPADDLESPORTS CONFERENCE:Conference includes events for paddlers of all experience

MISCELLANEOUS

SUBARUKIDSOBSTACLE CHALLENGE: A kid-specific mud run with military designed obstacles for ages 5-16; $25 per child, parents are free; 10 a.m. to noon Aug. 3, at Jewell Elementary HUNTING School, Bend; 541-288-3180, LEARN THE ART OFTRACKING eight18productions©gmail.com, ANIMALS:Guided walks and www.kidsobstaclechallenge.com. workshops with a certified PREDATORSANDPREY:Discover professional tracker to learn howto Nature Days are presented by identify and interpret tracks, signs the partners of the Deschutes and scat of the animals in Central Children's Forest; learn about the Oregon; 8 a.m. to noon; two or more diverse critters that call Central walks per month; $35; 541-633Oregon home through exciting 7045; dave@wildernesstracking. games and interactive science com, wildernesstracking.com. activities; free; 11 a.m. to noon; THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE Aug. 15; Hillside Park, Bend; katieO

levels as well as educational sessions 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Thursdays and and the Reel Paddling Film Festival; Sundays; milepost30,U.S.Highway Sept. 27-29; Mt. Bachelor Village 20, Bend; Bill Grafton at 541-383Resort, Bend; www.americancanoe. 1428 or www.bendtrapclub.com. org. CENTRALOREGON SPORTING CLAYSANDHUNTINGPRESERVE: 13-station, 100-target course and SHOOTING five-stand; 10 a.m. to duskSaturday and Sunday,11 a.m. to dusk Monday, COSSA KIDS:Coaches are on hand Tuesday, Thursday andFriday; 9020 to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear S. U.S. Highway 97,Redmond;www. and eye protection are provided; birdandclay.com or 541-383-0001. parent or guardian must sign in REDMOND ROD 8( GUN CLUB: for each child; fee for each child is $10; 10 a.m.; third Saturday of each Archery, pistol, rifle, skeet, sporting clays and trap; club is open to the month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost community and offers many training programs; three miles east of 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. Redmond on the north side of state Highway 126; www.rrandgc.com. BEND BOWMENHUNTER'S CLASSIC 3DARCHERY PINEMOUNTAIN POSSE: TOURNAMENT: Shots will be Cowboy act<onshoot>ng club; hunting situations; ODFWwill be second Sunday of each month; offering a bowhunter education Central Oregon Shooting Sports class in tandem with this shoot; Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Aug. 9-11; Bend Bowmen outdoor Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-8199, range; www.bendbowmen.com. www.pinemountainposse.com. BEND BOWMEN INDOORARCHERY HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: LEAGUE:Traditional league; Cowboy action shooting with Wednesday evenings; Lenny at pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 541-480-6743;indoor3-Dleague a.m.; first and third Sunday of each Thursday; 7 p.m.; Bruce at 541-410- month; Central Oregon Shooting 1380 or Del at 541-389-7234. Sports Association range, milepost BEND TRAPCLUB:Trap shooting, 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541five-stand and skeet shooting; 408-7027 or www.hrp-sass.com.

DIRTY DASH RACE

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By Craig Hill

less intense. Before plunk-

The News Tribune

ing down $40-$125, check

MCCLEARY, Wash. — Spider-Man had seen better days. He'd lost his mask, revealing himself to be a mi ddleaged man wit h a sa l t-andpepper mustache. His red and blue suit with sewn-in abs was covered with filth. And somehow his spidey senses failed to alert him that two boys were stuck in a nearby pond. But what co n cerned m e most as I careened down an inflatable chute known as the Slop 'n' Slide was that I was seconds away from crashing face first into the superhero's

therace website tom ake sure you know what you're getting yourself into.

Coed outdoor showers

muddybackside. "Spider-Man!" Iscreamed. "Look out!" Just when all seemed lost, the web slinger rolled to his side with the agility of a turtle and I zi p ped past, landing safely in a pile of hay. We were a league of more than 5,200 superheroes, women in prom dresses,men in hot pants and even a few people in regular workout clothes — all participatingin the Dirty Dash near McCleary on June 23. We'dbe hard-pressed tocall this racing. But that's kind of the point behind the booming fad of mud and obstacle adventure racing. No clock. No trophies. Just fun, beer and an excuse to play in the mud like you're 3 again. "It is the best way to introduce people to the ru nning community," said Dirty Dash promoter T r udy S c hug, o f Kent. "It's totally unintimidating and unthreatening. And once people realize running is about going out there and having fun and being healthy and that nobody is judging them for what they look like, how fast they are or what they're wearing, they're more likely to try running." But not necessarily. Marie Landon, of Puyallup, and her family will do at least three mud runs this summer but they have no interest in trying a traditional 5K. "Just straight running?" she s a i d , "No. Thank. You." Mud runs m ight be t h e best known of th ese adventure races, but they come in many forms. Foam runs. Color runs. Electric runs on courses adorned with neon lights. And even races requiring you to avoid brain-eating zombies. "It is so mu ch fun," said Schug, an avid runner who logged 40 miles on her birthday. "And what's best about it that anybody and everybody, no matter their age andfitness level, can have a great time being active, outside and challenging themselves."

Buddy system When I decided to try to the Dirty Dash, I also decided I wasn't going to do it alone. There's a fine line between fun and crazy, and best as I could tell it lies somewhere between a grown man wallowing in the mud by himself and

Photos by Dean Koepfler/The Associated Press

Participants get dirty during the Dirty Dash, a race where people wallow through a 5K mudcourse in McCleary, Wash. The event draws the super fit, the not-so-fit and families. doing it with friends. Devereux loved splashing in "But people definitely do it puddlesand playing in mud. "I don't think of it as a mud by themselves," Schug said. "They want to challenge them- run," said Clark Ba rton, of selves or just can't find some- Puyallup. "I think of it as a mud body to run with. There are mask, both face and body. It's plenty of people there to run more therapeutic than the spa. with, but, yes, 99 percent of You get your frustration out people are there with some- and you get nice smooth skin. It's beautiful." body else." Landon and her familywere on a team of 18. And Shug Help! says some teams are aslarge Somewhere past the ironias 100. cally soapy first obstacle and So, I called fellow rookie the two sternum-deep ponds, mudder Brian Devereux and Devereux and I rediscovered we formed a team of two and the joy of mud. headed to the Straddline ORV As I slipped my way up a Park. hill, I f e lt s omething gooey on the back of my neck. DeFearfactor vereux had launched a grimy There was never really any attack that would last the rest fear we wouldn't be physically of the race. capable of co m pleting t h e The mud-flinging stopped course. briefly when we came across a Participants ra nged fr o m man stuck I n shin-deep mud. "Help!" he sa id. "I can't sculpted from granite to molded from Jell-O. We heard more move my feet." talking about cigarettes and Where's Spider-Man when fried foods than we did about you really needed him'? negative splits and personal The man put his right arm records. And with all day to across my shoulders and I had cover the 5K course,not fin- to grab each leg by the knee to ishing is rare. help him pull free. "It's all-inclusive, but I was Later, at a series of two 10kinda scared at fi r s t," said foot walls that required climbJohn Dobra, of Maple Valley. ing over using a rope and "I thought people were going whatever upper-body strength to go all in and be racing. But I you can muster, participants stopped worrying after a cou- were quick to help push and ple 100yards when I realized pull each other up and over. "That's one of the fun things most people were walking." The most co mmon fe ar, you see," Schug said. "People Schug said, is that of the un- always stop to help." known. What will the obstacles

be like (many mud runs keep

Safety first

them secret)? And just how gross will it feelto be that dirty? Participants are we lcome to skip any obstaclethey don't want to do. The fear of getting dirty, on the other hand, is so mething y o u're li k e ly to overcome in a m a tter of minutes. Devereux and I w a t ched racersfor a while before the start of our heat and I admit I was little wary. Then Devereux started reminiscing about the days before society brainwashed us into believing mud was bad. When he was a kid, like most kids,

The only injury I sustained during the run came about 30 feet from the finish. Wedecided to race through the final tvvo mud pits and when Devereux emergedfrom the second with a slight lead, I attempted to pull him back into the mud. Instead, I sli p p ed a nd scuffed up my right shin. That's typically as bad asinjuries get, Schug said. "Maybe a cut on a branch or twisted ankles," she said. "But it's rare. When you take the competitive piece out, people do a better job of taking care of themselves."

Injury is still possible and participants are required to sign waivers. In De cember, three women sued organizers of a Silverdale mud run, claiming they sustained foot and ankle injuries that required surgery. Not all mud runs are created equal. While some are short 5K affairs with obstaclesthat are moderately demanding, others are longer than 10 miles and include monkey bars, electrical shock and flaming hurdles. Some ofthese are tim ed races with prizes for the winners. But even the most challenging races often have mi ldmannered options for those looking for something a little

The last obstacle to any mud run is figuring out how to get clean. Some races offer to collect, clean and donate your dirty sneakers.Soiled clothes can be seenstuffed into trash cans. Some people just pack their filthy clothes into plastic bags. Regardless, there i s no avoiding the co ed o u tdoor showers. While that probably sounds horrifying to a nybody w h o ever took a high school P.E. class, really, it's just hilarious. While some mud runs offer massive his and hers cleaning tents, the McCleary dash set up a structure with about 100

hanginggarden hoses. Filthy men, women and children stood side by side hosing each other down, trying to get clean without removing their mud-soaked clothes. Ev e n with the multitude jokingly passing around a tiny bar of soap, this is no easy task. A mud puddle formed in the shower area and, inevitability, you'll have to make several

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David Lindberg, of Olympia, Wash., takes a quick beer break during the Dirty Dash. trips back into the showers before your friends deem you clean enough to ride home in their car. I made three trips into the shower b e f ore Dev e reux stopped laughing at me. And even after two more showers at home, when we attended a party that evening people still asked why we had dirt in our ears. This, I figure, is why parents eventually start telling their kids not to play in the mud. They figure it couldn't possibly be fun enough to warrant all the cleanup and they're certain the boys will forget to wash behind their ears. They're wrong, of course. At least about the first part.

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Could new rules onfossils bury citizen paleontology? • Forest Service wants to limit 'casual collecting' to 25 pounds a year By Brett Prettyman and Brian Maffly The Salt Lake Tribune

Some kids grow up collecting baseball cards. Glade Gunther spent h i s family time as a youngster collecting fossils. Not at a museum play pit. Not in a backyard sandbox but on remote public lands. Gunther has unearthed ossified remains of ammonites, trilobites and other ancient invertebrates that ended up in museums, research facilitiesand classrooms across the world. Now he and other amateur collectors say their ability to contribute to knowledge of ancient life is jeopardized by the way public land agencies are interpreting the 2009 Paleontological Resources Preservation Act. The U.S. Forest Service r ecently g a t h ered p u b l i c comments on proposed regulations that l i mi t " c asual collecting." The regulations cover most fossils from dinosaurs to leaves found on federal lands. But it is restric-

tions on invertebrates, those spineless creatures that proliferated in Cambrian seas, which have amateurs crying foul. The Forest Service rules would limit collectors' annual take to 25 pounds, or about what fits in a one-gallon bucket. In a calendar year, they could collect no more than five

specimens of any one type of invertebrate. A fossil hunter could exhaust that limit before lunch, critics say. "You can't get people interested in science if they can't go out and pick things up. It is going tomake a whole bunch of law-abiding citizens, myself included, criminals," Gunther said. "Bureaucrats sitting in a room who nevercollected a fossil in their lives write these rules." Those bureaucrats are paleontologists Scott Foss, who is helping draft the Bureau of Land Management's fossil rules, and Mike Fracasso, of the ForestService. Both have lots of field experience. Foss agreed that amateurs

and Gunther i n p a r t icular have advanced invertebrate paleontology, but federal law mandates the agencies to "actively manage" fossil resources on public lands. "That means they have to partner with us to continue. And we hope they do continue," said Foss, BLM's chief Utah paleontologist, who recently moved to Washington, D.C., to serve as senior national paleontologist. "Amateurs have done an enormous contribution to the science, a lot more than the agency has done. There is not an intention to stop that." The 2009 law requires the agencies to coordinate their regulations and the BLM's are due out for public comment soon. Other federal land agencies, namely National Park Service, Bureau of Reclamation and Fish and Wildlife Service, do not allow collecting without a permit. Fracasso was not available last week, and the Forest Service could not provide anyone else to comment.

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Gary Lewis / For TheBulletin

More and more people must be fishing from kayaks if the offerings at the ICAST show are any indicator. Bellingham-based Nucanoe offers a line of roto-molded boats with a lot of options for the solo angler.

Lewis Continued from 01 Unlike a lot of rod manufaciINIl turers, B'n'M is not shy about calling their p r oducts fish" YC,4X~- I . ing poles. Their latest are endorsed by Duck Commander and come in green and yellow, convenient for O r egon an7h glers who are Duck fans. The '" l. longest poles are d esigned for finesse presentations with small "line holder" reels with spools of about one-and-a-half inch in diameter. In the Frabill booth, I met Brian Brosdahl, a guide from Minnesota. With temps outside that reached north of 110 Gary Lewis/ For The Bulletin degrees, he was excited about The latest in a series of swim ice fishing. "It's a doggone baits from Denmark's Fairpoint hoot," he said. Frabill has a Outdoors. line of, dare I say cute, rod and reel combos designed to be held in hand for ease of twitchAlso in the realm of the seing tiny baits through holes in cret weapon, I found a product solid water. from Lip Ripperz, which is A few bass baits caught my made to enhance dough baits eye for their application to with a powder that replicates brown trout, while others in- the scent of the hatchery trout terested me from that old, se- food pellet. Quit peeking in my cret weapon angle. tackle box! In the TTI Blakemore booth, On the fly-fishing side, I Dan Dannenmueller showed met Martin Bawden, CEO of me the latest bass setup, tiny Flymen, who showed me his swim baits in tandem called Nymph Head line of fly-tying the Bang Shad Buffet Rig that beads and the Fish Skull prodhad me thinking smallmouth uct which has changedthe way and big crappie. fly-tiers look at streamers. At a booth called Stinky Ashland-based Bauer has Fingers, I met two guys mar- redesigned the popular Rogue keting a series of soft plastics fly reel and is calling it the Rx, into which a sponge is insert- a prescription for your steeled. The sponge soaks up scent head and saltwater fly-fishing from the bag. In the water, the illness. bait oozes odor and, when it Ray Chang and John Bonk, needs to be recharged, it can b oth o f S o l itude Fl y C o . , be put back into the bag and showed me their latest patsqueezed to soak up the scent terns. Watch for the Rubber again. Leg Prince, Super Chernobyl |

Trail Update Contlnued from 01 The northern and southern parts of the Metolius-Windigo Trail have also been cleared though the

middle is in progress. Lucky and Cultus lakes also haveblowdown clearing in progress. FIRE UPDATE The fire between La Pine and

. ®"

cially designed propellers fore and aft. There is no shortage of secret keepers in th e f i shing tackle business. You d on't have to talk to a guide or a tournament pro for very long beforehe lowers hisvoice and whispers about some hot bait he is holding back. Most of my fishing friends grew up to be lawyers. I wonder if there's a connection. — Gary Lewis is the host of "Adventure Journal" and author of "John Nosler — Going Ballistic," "Blaclz Bear Hunting," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Lewis at www. GaryLewisoutdoors.com.

suspect a wildfire, report it immediately and have anexit plan.

on SouthSister ClimbersTrail, Todd Lake, SodaCreek,BrokenTop, Green Lakes andMoraine Lakebetween

TRAIL CLOSURE

South Sister Climbers Trail and Fall Creek. A leash exception is permitted

Four to five miles of the Flagline Trail, on the northeast side of Tumalo Mountain, are closed to hikers and bikers until Aug. 15 for

wildlife purposes. Anyonecaught on the trail will be issued a citation.

LEASH REMINDER Until Sept.15, leashes are required Forest Service trails. Smoke may be heavy in some areas. If you within trails, trail corridors andbasins Crescent is not affecting any

Purple and the Tungsten Jig line. Late in the day, worn out from walking the concrete, I spotted a jerk bait in a booth called Lunkerhunt. The Mosquito sports a 2.5-inch profile, bulging eyes and a rattle. It is no secret that I like jerk baits; this one I hope to put to use as soon as I can get my hands on one. At the Yakima Baits booth, I ran into Rob Phillips, who showed me my ne w f avorite muskie l ure, a H u s k ie Tail. Why do I need a muskie l ure'? Because ODFW h a s just stocked tiger muskies in Phillips Reservoir in Eastern Oregon to knock down the numbers of yellow perch that have taken over that formerly productive trout water. At the Duo booth, I ran into David Swendseid, of Bend, and lure designer Masahiro Adachi, who explained the s py-baiting concept. I t o o k away a sample of the new Spin Bait 80, a stick bait with spe-

FISHING REPORT Forthewaterreport,turneachday totheweatherpage,today onB6 Here is the weekly fishing report for selected areas in and around Central Oregon, provided by fisheries biologists for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife:

FLY-TYING CORNER

CENTRAL ZONE ANTELOPEFLATRESERVOIR: The reservoir has been very turbid, which has negatively impacted fishing. Anglers trolling hardware seem to be having the mostsuccess. Recentsampling suggests most of the trout average around 12inches long with a good number of trout around 20-inches long available. BEND PINENURSERYPOND: The pond has been stocked and fishing is good for bluegill and fair for trout. A small number of bass are also available. BIG LAVALAKE:Anglers are having success with rainbow trout in the 12- to 18-inch range. All gear types are producing fish. CRANE PRAIRIERESERVOIR: Anglers are catching large brook, kokanee and rainbows. Anglers are reporting success with flies, lures and bait. Kokaneein the 16-to 18-inch range are showing up in good numbers. With the warmer weather, anglers should concentrate their efforts in the old channels. CRESCENTLAKE:Opportunities for rainbow and brown trout are good. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMANDAM:Fishing for 10- to 16-inch rainbows has been excellent. Recent sampling by ODFW indicates strong populations of both rainbow trout and mountain whitefish. Trout over 20 inches are considered steelhead. DAVIS LAKE:Anglers are catching trout near the mouth of Odell Creek. EAST LAKE:Rainbow trout fishing has been excellent. Brown trout are also available with all gear types are resulting in success. ODFW is continuing its chub removal efforts. Catch-and-release only on all nonadipose fin-clipped rainbow trout — all rainbows with an intact adipose fin must be released. ODFWreleased a predacious strain of redband trout native to the Blackwater River in British Columbia. Blackwater redband trout grow quickly and should provide a trophy fishery in years to come. In the short term, catch-andrelease regulations will allow the Blackwater trout to grow large enough to prey on the chub. Blackwater trout have not been adipose fin clipped. All other stocks of rainbow are adipose-clipped and available forharvest. HAYSTACK RESERVOIR: Fishing has been good for warmwater species with anglers still catching some trout and kokanee. HOSMER LAKE:Rainbows and cutthroat trout are available with anglers reporting good action on both. These species are available for harvest. Opportunities for Atlantic salmon and brook trout continue to be good. LAKE BILLYCHINOOK: Opportunities for 8- to 10-inch long smallmouth bass are excellent. Bull trout fishing continues to be excellent with good numbers of fish in the 18- to 24-inch range. Kokanee angling is fair. A tribal angling permit is required in the Metolius Arm. Please check the special regulations for this area.

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Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Long-Tail Damsel, tied by Pete Ouellette.

In some lakes,damsel nymphs are avery important partof the food chain, which

they rest for a while after every foot or so of travel. To imitate the movement of the natural,

is why the Long-TailDamsel

an angler can position a sequin

deserves a spot in a stillwater

on the line to impart that back and forth wiggle.

angler's fly box. Tieoneon when fishing lakeswith a lot of aquatic plants. Use a floating

line or a slow-sink dependenton thedistanceabovetheweeds.

Tie the Long-Tail Damsel with olive thread on a No. 8-10 long shank hook. For the tail,

use olive marabou. Wrapthe

As they swim, damsel

body with blackand olive or a

nymphs keeptheir legs tucked variegated olive chenille. Finish underneath the body; they wig- with a palmered olive hackle. gle back and forth. Note that

— Gary Lewis, For TheBulletin

LOST LAKE:The lake has been stocked and should be great fishing for newly stocked and hold over trout. METOLIUS RIVER:Troutfishing has beengood.Insecthatchesshould offer lots of opportunities for good, dry fly fishing. Fishing for bull trout should be excellent. Large streamer flies fished in the deeper pools and slots are the best bet. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Fishing for trout has been good. Anglers are reporting trout up to 18-inches long. Recent sampling indicated there is a good number of trout averaging 12- to14-inches long available, and some nice bass and crappieonthe south shore. ODELL LAKE:Kokanee angling is fair with mostfish in the11- to13inch range. Lake trout are available in the deeper water. Bull trout are also present and must be released unharmed. Anglers are reminded to be familiar with the difference between these two species. PAULINA LAKE:Kokanee and rainbow fishing is very good. Catchand-release only on nonfin clipped rainbow trout. Large brown trout are

also available. PRINEVILLERESERVOIR: Fishing has been good and the trout that have been caught were large. Bass and crappie fishing has been picking up in the east end of the reservoir. PRINEVILLEYOUTHFISHING POND:Bassfishing hasbeengood. SUTTLE LAKE:Anglers are reporting good numbers of large brown trout. Trolling in approximately 30 feet of water is effective. Kokanee are abundant but the average size is small. WALTONLAKE:Fishing has been good for catchable and larger-sized trout. There are also some holdover fish up to 20-inches long available. WICKIUP RESERVOIR:Fish are scattered, but anglers are reporting catches of 18 to 20 kokanee aswell as a few large brown trout.

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only whendogsare swimming or cooling off. If youencounter awork

closed with roadmaintenancein progress. Apossible opening is set for early August.

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TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

Pop revenge antasies, rom heroic to ironic TV SPOTLIGHT "Axe Cop" and "High School USA!" 11 p.m. Saturday, Fox By Mike Hale

P gPI

New York Times News Service

It's probably in the nature of short-form animation to be hit or miss. The bars for entry in terms of money, technology and resume arerelatively negotiable. And when you're making 10-minute cartoons for less than it costs just to pay the voice cast of "The Simpsons"foran episode, it's easier to throw stuff up on the wall and see if it adheres. That dynamic is evident in Fox's late-night A n i m ation D omination H i gh-Def p r o gramming block. "Axe Cop," based on a popular Internet comic createdby the brothers Malachai and Ethan Nicolle when they were 5 and 29, respectively; and "High School U SA!," c reated a n d w r i t ten by Dino Stamatopoulos, best known for playing the d isreputable Star-Burns o n "Community." " High S chool U S A !," a broad and dull spoof of the Archie gang, slides down the wall quickly. Stamatopoulos' humor inthe premiere episode last week, a satire of the antibullying movement, feels unfocused and past its expiration date — there's funny business involving e m oticons, g i r ls' kissing and the meaning of

"Axe Cop" features an ax-wielding hero who sleeps just two minutes a night and subsists on birthday cake.

Fox's new late-night Saturday animated programming block will include "High School USA!," described as being like Archie Comics with a "dark, dirty humor."

"ironic," none of it very funny. Of course when the Betty and Veronica characters, now named Cassandra and Amber, make out at the diner, it's a reminder that the whole point of late-night animation is to get young men to watch television. Likewise the moment involving the Reggie character, a steroidal jock named Brad, beating up a nerd who voluntarily sticks his head through a hole in a men's room stall. Not much glory for Fox there. The tone-deafness of Stamatopoulos' attempt to lampoon both bubbleheaded modern thinking a n d aft e rschoolspecial p reachiness comes through in this exchange after one of Brad's Neanderthal pronouncements: "That sounds a little rapey, Brad." "No, it's worse than rape,

story, surreal digressions explaining the histories of other characters, and a full-fledged rescue mission involving flying, brain-eating dinosaurs. The animation is serviceable, and the show gets a vital boost from the voice performance of Nick Offerman, whose mock solemnity works as well for a mildly fascistic superhero as it did for a middle-American bureaucrat in "Parks and Recreation." Fox will introduce more series astime goes on, some of which may move away from the relatively straightforward narrative styles of "Axe Cop" and "High School USA!" They probably won't stray into the sometimes Dada-like regions explored on cable by Adult Swim's short-form animated series, however, even though

Courtesy Fox

Amber. Brad's a bully."

Happily,

"High

School USA!" is balanced by "Axe Cop," based on the Nicolle brothers' characters but writtenby Dave Jeser and Matt Silverstein. It's a nonsensical but inventive and purely entertaining takeoff on superhero tales, with the ax-wielding protagonist and his buddies — Flute Cop, Bat Warthog Man, Army Chihuahua — battling buglike aliens and a b u i lding-sized villain to rescue Bat Warthog Man's friends, who turn out to be the cast of a fondly remembered TV show. "Axe Cop," based on the imaginings of a 5 - y ear-old boy, combines sophomoric body-function humor with a dream-logic approach to storytelling. Into 10 minutes, the pilot packs Axe Cop's back

oo mencan't e oun onine Dear Abby:I have an awful time meeting men. I'm not considered beautiful by any means, so that means meeting any good guys won't happen. I use Craigslist a lot to meet sexual partners. I am so

tired of giving up my body for a few minutes of pleasure and DEAR then feeling empty ABBY on the inside. — Where Are The Good Guys? Dear Where: I'll try, but first let me tell you where the good guys AREN'T. They are not on Craigslist trolling for sex partners. As my grandfather used to say, "If you're looking for trout, don't go fishing in a herring barrel." Your problem isn't your looks; it is your extremely low level of self-esteem. It's important that you discuss this with apsychologist who can help you recognize the positive qualities you have to offer, because until you do, you will only repeat these empty, depressing encounters. Dear Abby:I'm a 17-year-old girl who was raised tobe polite. When I meet someone, I offer a handshake and a smile and make eye contact. However, I have found that because I'm female, adults — especially men

— will go in for a hug even when I offer my hand to shake. This is followed by comments like, "You're too sweet to just shake hands," or, "Girls don't shake hands." I like hugs, but they make me uncomfortable when they're from someone I don't know well, and I find the comments insulting. How do I avoid this awkward moment and respond to the comments? — Teen In New York Dear Teen:The next time someone lunges forward, take a step back and say, "I prefer to shake hands!" Say it with a smile and don't be confrontational, but DO defend your personal space if you feel it is being invaded. It is not impolite to do so. Dear Abby: I'm single, have no kids and I'm about toturn 62. I own my own home and have no debts. After years of earning a modest but steady income and watching my expenses, I have saved enough and I am eligible for good retirement benefits. So what's my problem'? Friends and family insist I'm crazy to leave a job at which I could work for another five to 10 years. I know retirement is practical for me

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR

ARIES (March21-Apr!119) ** * * You might have pushedthe limits with a closeassociate. Yourability to manifestyour ideasallows greater adaptability, and it also givesyou thestrength to deal with problems. Howyou seea situation could changebecause of apartner's feeling. Tonight: Keep it light andeasy.

— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

Tonight: A force to be dealt with.

CANCER (June21-July22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21)

By Jacqueline Bigar

Stay close to home, and honor ** * * Use your creativity. You have the ** * * your bottom line when dealing with others. ability to visualize a different solution or outcome based on a newtype of thinking. You have away of looking at a situation that remains unique. If you need to get Break past any personal limitations. You past a problem, the time to do so is now. will be able to make the correct decision Recognize what is happening with a close if you are able to tune in to your intuitive family member. Tonight: Headhome. side. Tonight: Whatever feels right.

LEO (July23-Aug. 22)

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19)

** * * S omeone around you will be inspiring. Brainstorming together unleashes unusual creativity, and one-onone relating takes you to the next level. This person is very different. Please note his or her vagueness in certain matters. Tonight: Happiest out of the house.

** * * Be discreet in handling a personal matter. Return calls, and schedule a meeting if possible. It appears that an associate or friend wants to headoff on his or her own crusade. Emphasizewhat is important to you in a long-overdue talk with this person. Tonight: Feeling let down.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18)

** * D thers seekyou out, butyoumight opt to close yourdoor andscreenyour calls. You can dealwith only so muchenergy right TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * Dealing with someone who is as now. Realizewhat could happenwithout sufficient structure andtime. You might find stubborn as you are could be difficult. You that to be ascary thought, on somelevel. will stand your ground, but so will he or Tonight: As youwish. she. Involve a third person to help both LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) of you get off your positions. Friends or associates will pitch in and try to point to ** * Emphasize the structure of your day-to-day lifestyle. As you evolve to a the solution. Tonight: Till the wee hours. new level of understanding, you'll come GEMINI (May 21-June20) to terms with other possibilities. Consider ** * * Decide how much confidence you making a change to your environment have in someone's mental processes. If in order to get yourself out of a rut. Use you become triggered, detach. A serious caution with funds. Tonight: Out late. discussion could point to a more effective way of handling an issue. Beresponsive to an elder or a boss who needsextra time.

Dear Ready:They may be jealous, or they may b e genuinely concerned about you. Not knowing them, I can't answer for them. I can, however, suggest this: Before quitting your job and the steady, modest income it provides, talk with another f i nancial planner and get a second opinion. You'd do that with a doctor if you had a serious question about your physical health, and I'm recommending you do it because this decision will affect your financial health for the rest of your life. If you wait a few more years, you won't be over the hill, and you will have even more money to enjoy in your retirement.

shutdown you havebeenas oflate.Your intuition could take you down a newpath, if you simply learn to go with the flow. Tap into your intellectual side, but do not deny the power of your feelings. Tonight: Add more romance to your life.

YOURHOROSCOPE

WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013:This year you'll rely on your intuition, and you'll land well. If you are single, you are likely to meetmany people onyourpath.Check out each person with care, and make sure that he or Stars showthe kind she is emotionally of day you'll have av ailable. If you ** * * * D ynamic are attached, be ** * * P ositive a w are of what is ** * A verage motivating you, ** So-so and understand the * Difficult roleyour significant other plays. Give this person asm uch acknowledgmentas possible. PISCESis a dreamer, but he or she can sort realityfrom fiction.

because I have gotten professional financial planning advice. There are many things I really want to do — classes, hobbies, volunteer work and travel before I'm too old. Myfriends needto workto support their extravagant lifestyles, lavish vacations, expensive restaurants, plus their new cars, clothing and electronics. I did things my way and can afford to retire now, so why can't my friends keep their mouths shut and let me enjoy what I have worked for? — Ready To Retire

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * *

W hat soon will be evident is how

** * * U se the morning to finish extra work, but try not to get too caught up in a project. You might be concerned about a financial matter, as you can't seem to get enough clarity. Don't take a risk if a money offer feels unusually dicey. Tonight: Work within your budget, and set limits.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * L et your personality melt barriers, especially with someone at a distance. An ongoing problem needs to come to aconclusion,so have alongoverduediscussion.Be opentofeedback, even if you feel as though the person has a rigid point of view. Tonight: A favorite pastime. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

Fox has brought in an Adult Swim alumnus, Nick Weidenfeld, to run this new block.

(High-Def does produce looser, more experimental work, which can be seen at Fox's website. Weidenfeld was i n volved in some good shows at Adult Swim, including "Children's Hospital," "Black Dynamite" and "The Boondocks," which might bode well for the Fox p roject, depending on h o w much freedom (and money) a broadcast network is really willing to give him. Maybe he can even manage to change the unwieldy and ugly label Animation Domination HighDef, or ADHD, the only title I can think of that combines an existing corporate trademark with a punning reference to a

chan).

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 andIMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. f

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • THE CONJURING (R) 12:45, 3:30, 7:30, 10:15 • DESPICABLE ME2 (PG) 10:50 a.m., 11:50 a.m., 1:30, 2:45, 4:10, 6:05, 7:15, 9:10, 9:50 • GROWNUPS 2(PG-13) 12:50, 4:20, 7:50, 10:20 • THE HEAT (R) 12:05, 3:55, 7:40, 10:25 • JOURNEY2:THEMYSTERIOUS ISLAND (PG)10a.m. • THELONE RANGER (PG-13)11a.m.,2:25,6:20,9:40 • MAN OFSTEEL(PG-13) 2:35, 10 • MONSTERSUNIVERSITY (G)1020 a.m.,2:55,6,9:05 • PACIFIC RIM(PG-13) 12:10, 3:40, 6:40, 9:45 • PACIFIC RIM IMAX 3-D (PG-I3) 12:25, 4, 7, 10:05 • RED 2(PG-13) Noon, 3:15, 6:45, 9:35 • R.I.P.D.(PG-13) 3, 9:25 • R.I.P.D. 3-D (PG-13)12:35, 6:30 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) 11:10a.m., 6:55 • THIS IS THE END(R) 7:45, 10:20 • TURBO (PG) 10:45 a.m., 1030 a.m., 1:20, 3:45, 6:15 • TURB03-D(PG) 2:20,9:I5 • WHITE HOUSE DOWN(PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 3:25, 7:10, 10:10 • WORLDINARZ(PG-I3) I2:20,3:10,7:25, IO:I5 • YOGIBEAR (PG) 10a.m. • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.

TV TODAY 8 p.m. on BRAVO,"Chef Roble & Co." —In the season finale, Chef Roble and his team are in for a memorable night when they throw a seafood extravaganza for Sports lllustrated swimsuit model Chrissy Teigen's 27th birthday. As the chef and his team party it up with Chrissy and her fiance, singer John Legend, Artie begins to feel like the odd man out. 8:30 p.m. on FAM, "Baby Daddy" —In the new episode, when Tucker (Tahj Mowry) rekindles a relationship with an old girlfriend (Meagan Tandy), she proceeds to make life miserable for Ben (Jean-Luc Bilodeau), who works for her at the bar. Danny (Derek Theler) tries to set up Riley (Chelsea Kane) with a teammate (Antonio Sabato Jr.) who has the hots for Bonnie (Melissa Peterman). 9 p.m. on FAM, "Spell-Mageddon" —Are you a good speller but easily distracted? If so, then you might not want to be on this new game show, in which contestants must spell common words while being challenged with such distractions as getting dunked in a tank, being zapped by a dog training collar, or splattered by slime or slush. 9:31 p.m. on H C), "The Neighbors" —The Bird-Kersees don't know what to make of it whentheWeavers catch colds. Larry (Simon Templeman) in particular can't understand why Debbie (Jami Gerfz) would willingly expose herself to the others' germs by taking care of them. It gets worse when he discovers there's no cure for the illness. 10 p.m. on BRAVO,"TopChef Masters" —This competitive reality series in which world-renownedchefs compete against one another in weekly challenges returns for a fifth season. Professionals taking part this round include Bryan Voltaggio, Lynn Crawford, Richard Sandoval, Franklin Becker and David Burke. 10:01 p.m. on A C3, "Camp" — The annual mixer with nearby Camp Ridgefield has Buzz (Charles Grounds) pumped, as he hopes to use his first gig as event DJ to get in with the female campers. Mack (Rachel Griffiths) considers putting up a cell tower after learning she lost a longtime guest family to the rival camp because of the lack of one. Kip (Thom Green), still crushing on Marina (Lily Sullivan), helps her cope with the camp's mean girls. ©Zap2tt

DESCHUTESCOUNTY

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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLESM The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com To place an ad call 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 208

Pets 8 Supplies

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Commercial/Office Equipment & Fixtures

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CATV Maintenance Housekeeper private RESTAURANT MCMENAMINS REMEMBER: Ifyou Tech homes cleaning team OLD ST. FRANCIS have lost an animal, Prineville Maintenance member needed, week POODLE Toypups 8 is now hiring don't forget to check & Broadband Tech days only. No weekteens. Also,POMAPOOS LINE COOKS! The Humane Society Position A n nounce- ends, eves or holidays. Call 541-475-3889 f July 26th, 27th, 28th Qualified apps must Bend ment Crestview Cable 541-815-0015 Portland Expo 528 Queensland Heelers have an open & flex able. 541-749-0724. 541-382-3537 Communications Center Want to Buy or Rent Standard & Mini, $150 Redmond seeks a n ex p eri- People Look for Information schedule i n c luding, Loans & Mortgages 1-5 exit ¹306B & up. 541-280-1537 days, eves, w e ek541-923-0882 enced CATV MainteAbout Products and Admission $10 2-door refrigerator with www.rightwayranch.wor Tools Pi nance & Broadband Services Every Day through ends and h o lidays. 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Kimberly, Oregon us on Facebook. egon Department of & Training Available! the Perso n nel Patio set w/ umbrella Send cover letter tails, please visit our U-pick HUNTERS Environmental QualCall:1-800-796-3234 Department at 335 Adult b arn/shop/work- $300, m isc. t o o ls, and resume to: job posting at: in Silvies Hunt Unit. ity (DEQ) and the fed- • Early semi cling NW H e s s St., ing cats, fixed, shots, OBO. 541-317-1681 SGA CPAs, 499 www.ubs.com/ Sweet Scarlet peaches Cabin in the pines, runeral En v i ronmental Madras OR 97741. some friendly, some SW Upper Terrace, careers/ Ready-picked water, green yard, Protection A g e ncy Pre emp l oyment not. No fee & free de- Washer/dryer Whirlpool ning Dr., Suite A, Bend, professionals/ amenities. Or need pri• Early semi-cling HD, 5 yrs runs great. (EPA) as having met drug test required. livery. 541-389-8420 americas vate place for camp trail- smoke emission stan- Sweet Scarlet peaches OR 97702 $400. 541-350-1201 Equal O p portunity (lob reference BOXER AKC puppies ers? Call 541-589-1130 dards. A cer t ified• Santa Rosa Plums Employer. ¹96817BR) reat litter, 1st shots View at w oodstove may b e (ready by Sat. 7/27) The Bulletin 700. 541-325-3376 elkridgecabin.com identified by its certifi- BRING CONTAINERS recommends extra which is for U-PICK Cavalier King Charles 2 p. — INew Voodoo tactical 36" cation label, attached The Bulletin Open 7 days week, 8 females 8 wks AKC chasing products or, gun case, $65. Matching permanently I Recommends extra ~ to the stove. The Bultact. range bag, $45. a.m. to 6 p.m. ONLY! $1200. 541-678-3724 services from out of I caution when purammo, 500 rnds, letin will not k now627 541-934-2870 the area. Sending I[ 9mm chasing products or I Advertising Account Executive $165. 600 rnds .45 cal, ingly accept advertisLook for updates on Fac ash, c hecks, o r ~ services from out of ' Vacation Rentals ing for the sale of cebook. We are at the f credit i n f o rmation $220. 541-306-0166 f the area. Sending 8 Exchanges Bend Farmers Market on The Bulletin is looking for a professional and may be subjected to Old Stevens d o uble uncertified c ash, checks, o r driven Sales and Marketing person to help our Wednesdays, 3-7 p.m. f FRAUD. For more barrel with hammers, woodstoves. f credit i n f o rmation customers grow their businesses with an Ocean front house, information about an t $199. 541-410-6845 expanding list of broad-reach and targeted ~ may be subjected to ~ each walk from town, advertiser, you may I Taurus Judge, 50 rnds, FRAUD. Chihuahua puppies, tea products. This full time position requires a Fuel & Wood • 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, For more informacall t h e Or e gon / $450. .223 480 rnds, cup, shots 8 dewormed background in consultative sales, territory State Attor n ey ' $200. 7.62x39, 800 rnds, tion about an adver- ~ Fireplace, BBQ. $95 $250. 541-420-4403 management and aggressive prospecting per night, 3 night MIN. O f f i c e $300. 9mm 500 rnds, WHEN BUYING skills. Two years of media sales experience is / tiser, you may call Donate deposit bottles/ f General's 208-342-6999 Consumer Protec- • $140. 541-306-0166 the Oregon State preferable, but w e w i l l t r ai n t h e r i g ht FIREWOOD... cans to local all vol- t ion ho t l in e at I candidate. In c l udes a compe t itive Attorney General's 632 unteer, non-profit res- i 1-877-877-9392. Wanted: Collector To avoid fraud, Office Co n s umert compensation package including benefits, and cue, to h e l p w /cat Apt./Multiplex General seeks high quality Protection hotline at I The Bulletin rewards an aggressive, customer focused spay/neuter vet bills. fishing items. recommends payI 1-877-877-9392. salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Cans for Cats trailer Call 541-678-5753, or CHECK YOUR AD ment for Firewood at Jake's Diner thru 503-351-2746 ttlletf'Tt 421 LThe B only upon delivery Email your resume, cover letter 7/30, then at R a y's 212 Weatherby V a nguard and inspection. Schools & Training and salary history to: Foods on Century Dr. compact 243 Win- • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Antiques & Jay Brandt, Advertising Director D onate Mon-Fri a t 4' x 4' x 8' chester, blued, comOregon Medical Trainjbrandt©bendbulletin.com Smith Sign, 1515 NE Collectibles Looking for your next • Receipts should ing PCS - Phlebotomy posite stock with 3x9 or drop off your resume in person at 2nd; or at CRAFT in employee? include name, classes begin Sept. 3, Burris s c o pe , 2 on the first day it runs 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Tumalo anytime. 541Place a Bulletin help 2013. Registration now phone, price and stocks, 1 youth, 1 full to make sure it is corOr mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; 389-8420. Info/map, wanted ad today and kind of wood P ":~ l ength, e xc . c o n d . rect. "Spellcheck" and No phone inquiries please. www.craftcats.org reach over 60,000 medicaltrainin .com purchased. $495. 541-382-4470 human errors do ocEOE / Drug Free Workplace readers each week. 541-343-31 00 • Firewood ads cur. If this happens to Winchester mdl 50 12 Your classified ad DO YOU HAVE MUST include your ad, please conga. auto., $275. Winwill also appear on SOMETHING TO species 8 cost per Need to get an Credit tact us ASAP so that chester mdl 20 pump, bendbulletin.com SELL Beautiful handcord to better serve Central Billing corrections and any ad in ASAP? 12 ga., $250. Dave, which currently FOR $500 OR our customers. carved coffee table cl+~k adjustments can be 541-788-8791 tggHWA$ You can place it receives over 1.5 LESS? (44" x 19~/4" x 17~/2") made to your ad. million page views Non-commercial and 2 matching end online at: 54I -385-5809 Servtng Central Oregon irnce l903 every month at advertisers may tables (shown) 24'/4" The Bulletin Classified www.bendbulletin.com no extra cost. place an ad with x 15" x 24~/4". Built in Responsibilities include posting payments and Bulletin Classifieds our 634 Taiwan between Year Dependable invoices, researching and resolving billing isB U LLETIN r e - AII 541-385-5809 Get Results! "QUICK CASH 1940-1 950, all glass T HE Firewood: Seasoned sues, collecting on past due accounts, mainApt./Multiplex NE Bend quires computer adCall 385-5809 SPECIAL" covered, in excelSplit, Del. taining customer account information and provertisers with multiple Lodgepole, or place Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 470 lent condition. $1000 **No Application Fee ** viding customer support. Requires knowledge ad schedules or those for$335. Cash, Check your ad on-line at o 2~ eeks 20! OBO. 541-382-6731 of Microsoft Office, strong verbal and written Domestic 8 2 bdrm, 1 bath, selling multiple sysbendbulletin.com Ad must include communication skills, excellent customer ser$530 & $540 w/lease. tems/ software, to dis- or Credit Card OK. In-Home Positions price of single item vice skills and ability to negotiate. Les Schwab Disney memorabilia work close the name of the 541-420-3484. Carports included! of $500 or less, or has a reputation of excellent customer service of art "Walt's Music Makbusiness or the term Young man willing to split Caregiver needed for multiple items Good classified ads tell FOX HOLLOW APTS. ers" print, ¹ 2 86/1800, and over 400 stores in the Northwest. We of"dealer" in their ads. /stack firewood. Wage elderly bedridden whose total does the essential facts in an fer a competitive salary, excellent benefits, re(541) 383-3152 certificate of authenticity, Private party advertis- negotiable. 541-419-6651 lady. SE Bend. not exceed $500. interesting Manner. Write t irement, and c ash b onus. Visit u s a t : Cascade Rental framed, very good cond, ers are d efined as 3 shifts, Fri. 4:30-9pm; from the readers view - not Management. Co. $450. 541-620-1461 www.LesSchwab.com. those who sell one Sat. 7:30am-12:30 & Call Classifieds at the seller's. Convert the Gardening Supplies 4-9 pm. Background 541-385-5809 Call forSpecials! The Bulletin reserves computer. Resumes will be accepted through facts into benefits. Show Limited check. 541-419-3405 www.bendbulletin.com & Equipment • numbers avail. the right to publish all July 29, 2013. Please send resume the reader how the item will 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. ads from The Bulletin and salary requirements to: Misc. Items 476 help them in some way. W/D hookups, patios German Shepherds AKC newspaper onto The • ZYLSHuman. Resources O lesschwab.com. BarkTurfSoil.com This Employment or decks. www.sherman-ranch.us Bulletin Internet web- Beautiful mother-of-the Emails must state "Central Billing advertising tip MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541 -281 -6829 site. Opportunities Clerk" in the subject line. bride long gown, size PROMPT D E LIVERY brought to youby 541-383-931 3 No phone calls please. med., c h a mpagne. German Shorthaired 54X-389-9663 Professionally The Bulletin Sewing Central Oregons>nre 1903 Orig. p r ice $298, Pointers AKC white/ CAUTION: managed by Norris & EOE asking $160 cash only liver, ready 7/13. $350. Ads published in Stevens, Inc. 242 to see call (541) 389-6899 or " Employment O p For newspaper 541-382-7573. 350-7829 Exercise Equipment delivery, call the portunities" in clude Circulation Dept. at employee and indeBuying Diamonds G erman S hort H a i r Teeter Inversion Table, 541-385-5800 pendent positions. Pointer loving sweet /Gold for Cash NXT-4, new! $150, To place an ad, call Ads fo r p o sitions 7-yr. female free to Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-389-9919 541-385-5809 that require a fee or 541-389-6655 good home, i n exc or email upfront i nvestment health. 541-848-7747 245 classifiedobendbulletim.com BUYING must be stated. With call before 2 p.m. Lionel/American Flyer any independentjob Golf Equipment trains, accessories. Jack Russell/Black Lab Servtng Central Oregon since l903 opportunity, please 541-408-2191. mix p u p pies. 10 2005 Yamaha golf cart, i nvestigate tho r 288 w eeks o l d . $75 . 6 batteries w/charger, BUYING & SE L LING Mantis garden tiller (9") oughly. Use extra call Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend Sales Redmond Area Please $1950. 541-977-1974 All gold jewelry, silver 21.2cc gas 2 c y cle c aution when a p541-233-6872 or and gold coins, bars, with border e d ger. plying for jobs onCHECK YOUR AD email line and never pro- Fri. Sat. Sun., 8-3 p.m. California Pottery, lin- G ARAGE SALE. 2 7 1 MULTI-FAMILY SALE rounds, wedding sets, $295. 541-593-2909 kayla.millard@hdesd. 708 N W Ri v e rside ens, tins, crates, home S E A M A NDA C T . Fri. 8 Sat. 8-4, class rings, sterling silvide personal infororg for more info. B lvd. D rake P a r k, decor some furn. holi- Tons of great stuff! 5402 NW 49th St., ver, coin collect, vinPrompt Delivery mation to any source Redmond. Household tage watches, dental Rock, Sand 8 Gravel clothing, h o usehold day items, D isney, SAT. 9-2 ONLY you may not have KITTENS! F o s tered, sporting goods, fun. bottles, misc. 1676 NE items, quilting, stampgold. Bill Fl e ming, Multiple Colors, Sizes researched and friendly, fixed, shots, 541-382-9419. Instant Landscaping Co. deemed to be repuCackler, Fri & Sat. 8-3 Stonehaven neighboring, & much more. ID chip, more! Vari541-389-9663 table. Use extreme on the first day it runs 286 hood Garage Sale, MULTI-FAMILY SALE Full luxury bedspread 2 ety of colors 8 perc aution when r e - Sales Northeast Bend Community Sale! Guns, Sat., 9am - 2:30pm, Fri./Sat. 9-4 no earlysonalities. Adopt from to make sure it is cor- shams, 3 pillows, $35. SUPER TOP SOIL s ponding t o A N Y tools, tackle, trailers, www.hershe soilandbark.com Corner of Murphy & bird sales! Proceeds foster home (see rect. "Spellcheck" and 458-206-4825 eves. furniture, collectables. Country Club. human errors do ocScreened, soil & com- online employment all for charitable orgaTomTom Motel Mgr, Just bought a new boat? post ad from out-of-state. Fri. 8 S a t . , 3 6 0 16 cur. If this happens to m i x ed , no nizations. Convenient ** FREE ** across from Sonic) or Sell your old one in the Terry Dr., follow signs. rocks/clods. High hu- We suggest you call your ad, please con- classifieds! location @ 4197 SW sanctuary (65480 78th 290 Ask about our mus level, exc. f or Garage Sale Klt the State of Oregon tact us ASAP so that Tommy Armour Ln. by St., Tumalo), Sat. 8 Super Seller rates! Place an ad in The Sales Redmond Area flower beds, lawns, Consumer H o tline corrections and any Garage Sale Thursday, T he G r eens G o l f Sun. 1-5 PM. Just $25 541-385-5809 Bulletin for your gaadjustments can be gardens, straight at 1-503-378-4320 9-2, at 6 4790 per kitten; adopt a pair Garage Sale Course. rage sale and rePalm Tree plant, 11 ft. s creened to p s o i l . For Equal Opportumade to your ad. McGrath Rd . in 4-Family for $40! 3 8 9 8420, 5 760 NW 4 9t h S t . , ceive a Garage Sale nity Laws c o ntact 54I -385-5809 tall, health, 50+ yrs. Bark. Clean fill. DeBoonesBorough. www.craftcats.org. Tetherow C r ossing, Kit FREE! liver/you haul. Oregon Bureau of Sales Other Areas The Bulletin Classified old. Commercial or Redmond, 8-5, 7/26 & h ome. $500 O B O . 541-548-3949. Labor & I n d ustry, Lab Pups AKC,black 8 Huge 3-family sale! KIT I NCLUDES: 2 7. Drive west o n Moving Sale Fri/Sat 8-2 yellow, Master Hunter Left Hand Golf Clubs, 541-388-9270 Civil Rights Division, 8-2 Fri. 7/26 off Boyd • 4 Garage Sale Signs Maple, onto N o rth- 11350 SW Powell Butte sired, performance pedi- Lion brand, 3 woods, T ONNEAU 971-673- 0764. A cres n e a r Elk s COV E R • $2.00 Off Coupon To w est Way, l eft o n Hwy. Misc. h o usegree, OFA cert hips & el- 9 irons, Jef cart and A .R.E. f i t s '07 Lost & Found • Use Toward Your Lodge. Follow signs. Coyner, right on 49th. hold, ATV parts, toolMiller bag, $75. Exc. bows, 541-771-2330 5er ng Central Qregonince l9tB Next Ad www.kinnamanretrievers com present Toyota 6 .5' Found air mattress in a 8th driveway on right. boxes, whls/tires. cond. 541-419-8877 • 10 Tips For "Garage 541-385-5809 Box. S late Metallic. 288 Everything from soup 7/18. Call to idenLabrador purebred pupSale Success!" PRE-moving Sale! All hardware included bag, tify, 541-312-9500. Sales Southeast Bend to nuts & in between! pies, yellows & blacks, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! $500 541-536-3045 Mechanic tools, dog Add your web address males & females, ready grooming supplies, Found black tiger striped to your ad and readPICK UP YOUR G arage/Moving S a l e 7/26 8 27, 9-1. Housenow! $300. 541-771-5511 Door-to-door selling with Wanted- paying cash cat, in Terrebonne. Call (cages, dryers, pens, GARAGE SAI E KIT at ers on The Bulletin's Sat.7/27 9 : 0 0-3:00, h old items, se t o f fast results! It's the easiest for Hi-fi audio & stu- 541-548-8931 to identify. shampoos, etc), coldio equip. Mclntosh, web site, www.bend1777 SW Chandler Pool Table, Video Ar- dishes for 8, Keltcraft lectibles, antiques, lots way in the world to sell. Ave., Bend, OR 97702 J BL, Marantz, D y - F ound; tailgate for a bulletin.com, will be cade, power tools and by Noritake pattern more! July 26-27 8-5 Manx kittens, a s st'd naco, Heathkit, Sanable to click through more. 20539 Rolen Kilkee pattern, some pickup on Horse Butte 1018 Chapman Rd, The Bulletin Classified colors, short tails, $30 sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Rd, on 7/20. Call to automatically to your Ave., off Brosterhous gardening equip., etc. Gilchrist, OR 541-385-5809 Cash. 541-678-7599 Call 541-261-1808 identify, 541-389-2420 website. Rd. by Hwy 97. 710 NW 21st Ct. (Jackpine Village). 541-977-0035

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E2 WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5500 pm Fri •

Tuesday•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mona Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon Tuess a

870

880

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

18.7' Sea Ray Monaco, 1984, 185hp, V6 MerCruiser, full canvas, life vests, bumpers, water skis, swim float, extra prop & more. EZ Loader trailer, never in saltwater, always garaged, very clean, all maint. records. $5500. 541-389-7329

Place a photoin your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.

Starting at 3 lines

"UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500in total merchandise

7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days..................................

(call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

*Must state prices in ad

C®X

bendbulletimcom

is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 648

745

775

Homes for Sale

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

PUBLISHER'S

6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, view. By owner, ideal for

LOT MODEL NOTICE LIQUIDATION family. All real estate adver- extended Prices Slashed Huge tising in this newspa- $590,000. 541-390-0886 Savings! 10 Year per is subject to the Where can you find a conditional warranty. F air H o using A c t Finished on your site. helping hand? which makes it illegal ONLY 2 LEFT! "any to a d vertise From contractors to Redmond, Oregon preference, limitation yard care, it's all here 541-548-5511 or disc r imination JandMHomes.com in The Bulletin's based on race, color, religion, sex, handi"Call A Service cap, familial status, Professional" Directory marital status or national origin, or an in750 tention to make any such pre f erence, Redmond Homes limitation or discrimination." Familial sta- Newer large home on a c r es. tus includes children almost 1/ 4 under the age of 18 3000 sq. ft., 3 bdrm, living with parents or 2t/abath, landscaped legal cust o dians, and fenced with RV pregnant women, and gates. $299,999. MLS

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KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motor-

home, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

$25,000.

Just too many collectibles?

(photo aboveis of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)

Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds

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

Fifth Wheels

r

+

Montana 2006 3400

RL, 37', 4 slides, Ar-

I tic options, K/bed, I

w/d combo. M ust ~ sell $22,990.OBO. ~ Call f o r det a i ls 805-844-3094

LLa Pine Address J I - =- t

i

MONTANA 3585 2008,

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250

541-548-0318

Fifth Wheels

Nuyya297LK HitchHiker 2007,All sea-

sons, 3 slides, 32' CHECK YOUR AD perfect for snow birds, 19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O left kitchen, rear new upholstery, new elec 541-385-5809 lounge, extras, must tronics, winch, much more see. Prineville $9500. 541-306-0280 Roadranger, 1996 541-447-5502 days & 20' 1993 Sea Nympf Pish clean, solar unit, 6 volt 541-447-1641 eves. & Ski, 50 hrs on new batteries. $5000 obo on the first day it runs 541-416-1042 engine, fish finder, chart to make sure it is corWindsor, 2001, plotter & VHP radio with Monaco rect. "Spellcheck" and (was $234,000 antenna. Good shape, loaded! human errors do ocnew) Solid-surface RV full cover, heavy duty counters, convection/ cur. If this happens to CONSIGNMENTS a trailer, kicker and electric your ad, please conmicro, 4-dr, fridge, WANTED motors. tact us ASAP so that washer/dryer, ceramic We Do The Work ... $7500 or best offer. corrections and any Pilgrim 27', 2007 5t h tile 8 carpet, TV, DVD, You Keep The Cash! 541-292-1834 wheel, 1 s lide, AC, adjustments can be satellite dish, leveling, On-site credit TV,full awning, excelmade to your ad. s-airbags, power cord approval team, lent shape, $23,900. 541-385-5809 reel, 2 full pass-thru web site presence. 541-350-8629 trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 We Take Trade-Ins! The Bulletin Classified 20.5' Seaswirl Spy350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 Free Advertising. Diesel gen set. $85,000 der 1989 H.O. 302, RV BIG COUNTRY RV obo.541-233-7963 285 hrs., exc. cond., CONSIGNMENTS Bend: 541-330-2495 stored indoors for WANTED Redmond: life $11,900 OBO. 541-548-5254 We Do The Work ... 541-379-3530 You Keep The Cash! On-site credit Starcraft Galaxy 1999 Fleetwood Prowler 32' approval team, pop-up camp trailer, 2001, many upgrade web site presence. exc. cond. sleeps 6-8, options, $14,500 obo. We Take Trade-Ins! NATIONAL DOLPHIN extra tires & wheel, 541-480-1687, Dick. Free Advertising. 37' 1997, loaded! 1 partial trades considBIG COUNTRY RV slide, Corian surfaces, e red. $ 2 900 o b o . 20' Seaswirl 1992, 4.3L Bend: 541-330-2495 V6 w/OMC outdrive, open wood floors (kitchen), 541-549-9461 Redmond: bow, Shorelander trlr, nds 2-dr fridge, convection 541-548-5254 some interior trim work. microwave, Vizio TV & roof satellite, walk-in $4500. 541-639-3209 new queen bed. 21' 2001 Skiers Choice shower, White leather hide-aKeystone Challenger Canopies & Campers I Moomba Ou t b ack, bed & chair, all records, 2004 CH34TLB04 34' 383 stroker engine, no pets or s moking. fully S/C, w/d hookups, $8500 o r c o nsider $28,450. new 18' Dometic awTrail Sport 2013 trade for good vehicle Call 541-771-4800 ning, 4 new tires, new 23' Travel Trailer with low mileage. Kubota 7000w marine Like new, used twice. Call 541-604-1475 or diesel generator, 3 Tow with SUV or RV 541-604-1203 (leave slides, exc. cond. in- Lance 8/a' camper, 1991 small pickup. Queen CONSIGNMENTS msg if no answer) s ide & o ut . 27 " T V bed, air, TV, micro, cond; toilet 8 fullWANTED dvd/cd/am/fm ent. Greatbed. Ads published in the built-in stereo, electLightly used. We Do The Work ... center. Call for more size "Boats" classification Recently serviced, ric awning, barbecue, You Keep The Cash! details. Only used 4 include: Speed, fishextras. Non-smoker. $4995. 503-307-8571 On-site credit t/a times total in last 5 ing, drift, canoe, Selling due to health; years.. No pets, no approval team, house and sail boats. Sacrifice, web site presence. smoking. High r etail For all other types of $16,000 obo. We Take Trade-Ins! $27,700. Will sell for watercraft, please go Call Jim, 541-401-9963 $24,000 including slidFree Advertising. to Class 875. BIG COUNTRY RV i ng hitch that fits i n 541-385-5809 Bend: 541-330-2495 your truck. Call 8 a.m. Redmond: to 10 p.m. for appt to Lance Camper 1994, 541-548-5254 see. 541-330-5527. Serving Central Oregon smce 1903 fits long bed crew cab, tv, a/c, loaded. $6200

4 r'~-.-

ATVs •

Honda TRX 450R sport quad 2008, low hrs, new

wheels 8 DNC perf. pipe $4250. 541-647-8931 Need help fixing stuff?

Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com 870

Boats & Accessories

I a~

The Bulletin

s

OBO. 541-580-7334

12t/a' HiLaker f i shing Beautiful h o u seboatWinnebago Suncruiser34' Pa m boat with trailer and $85,000. 541-390-4693 2004, only 34K, loaded, Lester, Principal Bro (2) 2000 A rctic C at www.centraloregon too much to list, ext'd newly overhauled 18 ker Century 21 Gold Z L580's EFI with n e w warr. thru 2014, $54,900 houseboat.com. Country Realty, Inc. covers, electric start w/ h.p. Johnston o u tDennis, 541-589-3243 reverse, low miles, both b oard, $ 85 0 ob o . GENERATE SOME ex541-504-1338 excellent; with new 2009 Eves 541-383-5043, citement in your neig881 Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, days 541-322-4843 borhood. Plan a gaLooking for your next drive off/on w/double tilt, Travel Trailers rage sale and don't O ur r e aders a r e emp/oyee? lots of accys. Selling due 13' SmokerCraft, 15 hp to advertise in 22' Kit Companion 1979 hereby informed that Place a Bulletin help to m edical r e asons. Yamaha, M i nnekota forget all dwellings adver- wanted ad today and $6000 all. 541-536-8130 trolling, d o wnrigger, classified! 385-5809. travel trailer, awning, tised in this newspasuper clean extras, reach over 60,000 micro., and full bath. per are available on Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, $3200. 541-416-1042. Serving Central Oregon since 1903 readers each week. $2,150. 541-788-8791 an equal opportunity short track, variable Your classified ad basis. To complain of exhaust valves, elecwill also appear on discrimination cal l tric s t art, r e v erse, Watercraft bendbulletin.com HUD t o l l-free at manuals, re c o rds, which currently re1-800-877-0246. The 1994 Yamaha W a ve new spare belt, cover, ceives over toll f re e t e l ephone heated hand g r ips, 14'8" boat, 40hp Mer- Raider, low hrs exc. 1.5 million page $2250. 541-480-3937 number for the hearnice, fast, $999. Call views every month cury outboard (4-stroke, ing im p aired is Tom, 541-385-7932, at no extra cost. Ads published in "Wa- Cougar 33 ft. 2006, electric trim, EPI, less 1-800-927-9275. Bulletin Classifieds than 10 hrs) + electric tercraft" include: Kay- 14 ft. slide, awning, • Yamaha 750 1999 Get Results! Rent /Own Mountain Max, $1400. trolling motor, fish finder, aks, rafts and motor- easy lift stability bar Call 385-5809 or personal bumper extends for 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes $5000 obo. 541-548-2173 Ized • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 $2500 down, $750 mo. place your ad on-line watercrafts. For EXT, $1000. cargo, all acat "boats" please see extra OAC. J and M Homes • Zieman 4-place cess. incl., like new 541-548-5511 bendbulletin.com Class 870. trailer, SOLD! condition, stored in 541-385-5809 All in good condition. RV barn, used less 658 Located in La Pine. 753 than 10 t imes loHouses for Rent Call 541-408-6149. c ally, no p et s o r serving cenvai oregon since 1903 Sisters Homes Redmond 14' a luminum bo a t smoking. $20,000 860 w/trailer, 2009 Mercury obo. 541-536-2709. Creek Canyon Motorcycles & Accessories 15hp motor, fish finder, Country Home 2 miles Squaw Motorhomes 70075 Sorrel NE of Redmond. 1600+ Estates $2500. 541-815-8797 sq ft, 3 Bdrm 1 Bath, all Dr. (corner of Sorrel & kitchen appls incl. Wood Mt. View) completely HDFatBo 1996 & propane gas stoves, renovated over 3000 1-car garage. $750/mo + sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 full dep. incl sewer & water. bath home, new enTaking applications. Also ergy eff. furnace & available, 42'x36' shop! heat pump, wide plank wood floors, walk-in 14' LAZER 1993 sail- Brougham 1978 motor Call 541-419-1917 Creek Side 20' Dodge chassis, closets and p a ntry, boat with trailer, exc. home, 2010, used 8 Neat, clean 2 Bdrm 1 17' coach sleeps 4 Completely stone fireplace w i th c ond., $2000 o b o . rear dining. $4500. times, AC, flat Bath home in country woodstove insert, 1 i/a Rebuilt/Customized 541-312-4168. screen TV, oven, setting of NE Redmond. acres, fenced, cov541-602-8652. 2012/2013 Award microwave, tub/ $600/mo + deposit, incl ered decks, 2-car gaWinner sewer/water. Taking ap- rage, mtn. views. Just Showroom Condition shower, awning, plications, 541-419-1917 been stored, Many Extras reduced! $ 3 8 5,000. non-srnoker, no Call (503) 786-7835 Low Miles.

people securing cus-

Orbit 21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $15,000 OBO. 541-382-9441

Travel Trailers •

©©©

The Bulletin

Houses for Rent General

T r a vel Trailers

JAMEE 1982 20',

low miles on it, self-contained. Runs Great, everything works. $3 000. 541-382-6494

Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, motor, g reat Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • inboard cond, well maintained, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 Saturday • • • •. . . . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri. • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Sunday. • • • • PRIVATE PARTY RATES

WEEKEND WARRIOR Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-con-

tained. Systems/ appearancein good

201304622

tody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law.

condition. Smoke-free.

Tow with t/a-ton. Strong

suspension; can haul ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great price - $8900. Call 541-593-6266

Keystone Montana 2955 RL 2008,

2 slides, arctic insulation, loaded, excellent never used condition. $33,500 541-923-4707

Lance Camper, 2011 ¹ 992, new cond, 2 slides, 2 awni n gs, built-in ge n & AC, power jacks, wired for solar, t i e-downs incl. $28,500. 541-977-5358

Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

The Bulletin

Call54I 385 5809totramote yourservice'Advertise for 28daysstarting at ' I4) irtit speci alpatksgesetrailabteonourwebstd

.

The Bulletin

Building/Contracting

Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care

NOTICE: Oregon state law r equires anyone who con t racts for Zedf',7', Z gaa8rip construction work to be licensed with the Za~g ge-e /,. Construction Contrac- More Than Service

NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that a dvertise t o pe r form Landscape Constructors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Peace Of Mind active license p lanting, decks , means the contractor fences, arbors, Fire Protection is bonded 8 insured. water-features, and inFuels Reduction Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir•Tall Grass CCB li c ense at rigation systems to be www.hirealicensed•Low Limbs licensed w i t h the contractor.com •Brush and Debris Landscape Contracor call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit The Bulletin recomnumber is to be i nProtect your home mends checking with with defensible space cluded in all adverthe CCB prior to contisements which inditracting with anyone. cate the business has Landscape Some other t r ades a bond,insurance and Maintenance also req u ire addiworkers c o mpensaFull or Partial Service tional licenses and tion for their employ•Mowing ~Edging certifications. ees. For your protec• Pruning «Weeding tion call 503-378-5909 Sprinkler Adjustments or use our website: Concrete Construction www.lcb.state.or.us to Fertilizer included check license status JJ & B Construction, with monthly program before contracting with quality concrete work. pets, 1 owner. the business. Persons Over 30 Years Exp. $13,900 obo. doing land s cape Its not too late Sidewalks; RV pads; 541-410-2360 maintenance do not Driveways; Color & for a beautiful r equire an L C B Stamp wor k a v a il. cense. landscape ,4 NL Also Hardwood floor•Lawn Restoration ing a t aff o r dable •Weed Free beds ALLEN REINSCH ..I, a . prices. 541-279-3183 •Bark Installation Yard maintenance & CCB¹190612 clean-up, thatching, plugging 8 much more! EXPERIENCED Call 541-536-1 294 Debris Removal Commercial Jayco Eagle & Residential Maverick Landscaping 26.6 ft long, 2000 JUNK BE GONE Senior Discounts Mowing, weedeating, yd I Haul Away FREE 541-390-1466 detail., chain saw work, Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, For Salvage. Also Same Day Response bobcat excv., etc! LCB awning, Eaz-Lift Cleanups & Cleanouts ¹8671 541-923-4324 stabilizer bars, heat Mel, 541-389-8107 TURN THE PAGE & air, queen BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS For More Ads walk-around bed, Search the area's most very good condition, • Concrete/Paving The Bulletin comprehensive listing of $10,000 obo. Doug Strain classified advertising... 541-595-2003 Nelson Construction, Inc. real estate to automotive, Landscaping & Concrete Division merchandise to sporting Maintenance Call The Bulletin At Residential & goods. Bulletin Classifieds Serving Central Commercial concrete; 541 -385-5809 appear every day in the Oregon Since 2003 print or on line. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail foundations, driveways, Residental/Commercial sidewalks & curbs. Call 541-385-5809 At: www.bendbulletin.com Call Chris for appt. www.bendbulletin.com Sprinkler 541-280-0581 Activation/Repair CCB¹109532 Back Flow Testing

.Ip; I-

(recording)

762

Homes with Acreage 2 Bdrm 2 Bath on 2 acres - Large shop/

garage, fenced yard,

cabin. LaPine $83,000. 705

Real Estate Services Boise, ID Real Estate

For relocation info, call Mike Conklin, 208-941-8458 Silvercreek Realty 745

Homes for Sale

NOTICE

541-390-7394 or 541-771-0143 763

Recreational Homes & Property 637 Acres with recreation cabin and stream. in forest, west of Silver Lake, OR

$1 7,000

541-548-4807

HD Screaming Eagle Electra Glide 2005, 103" motor, two tone candy teal, new tires, 23K miles, CD player, hydraulic clutch, excellent condition. Highest offer takes it. 541-480-8080. Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

.541-480-7215

All real estate adverCall a Pro tised here in is subject to t h e F e deral Whether you need a F air Housing A c t , fence fixed, hedges which makes it illegal trimmed or a house to advertise any prefbuilt, you'll find erence, limitation or discrimination based professional help in on race, color, reli- The Bulletin's "Call a gion, sex, handicap, familial status or na- Service Professional" tional origin, or intenDirectory tion to make any such 541-3B5-5809 preferences, l i m itations or discrimination. 775 We will not knowingly accept any advertisManufactured/ ing for r ea l e s tate Mobile Homes which is in violation of this law. All persons Delivered and Set up are hereby informed 3/4 bd, 2 ba. 42,900 that all dwellings ad- 02 bd, 2 ba. 47,900 vertised are available 10 2/3 541-350-1 782 on an equal opportuSmart Housing LLC nity basis. The Bulletin Classified FACTORYSPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, Check out the $46,500 finished classifieds online on your site. www.bendbulletin.com J and M Homes Updated daily 541-548-5511

Honda Shadow/Aero 750, 2007 Black, 11K mi, 60 mpg, new detachable windshield, Mustang seat 8 tires; detachable Paladin backrest 8 luggage rack w/keylock.VanceHines pipes, great sound. Cruise control, audible turn signals for safety. $4495 obo. Jack, 541-549-4949

Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5500 or P artial Trade/firearms 541-647-4232

14' Seadoo 1997 boat Alfa See Ya 2005 40' twin modified engines excellent cond, 1 owner, 210hp/1200lbs, fast 4-dr frig w/icemaker, gas $5500. 541-390-7035 stove/oven, convection oven, washer/dryer combo, flatscreen TV, all electronics, new tires, many extras. 7.5 diesel 16' gen, lots of storage, O ld T o w n Camper c a n oe, basement freezer, 350 Cat Freiqhtliner chassis. exc. cond, $ 7 50. Asking $86,500. See at 541-312-8740 Crook County RV Park, ¹43. 520-609-6372 17.5' Glastron 2002, BOUNDER 1993 Chevy eng., Volvo 34.6', 43k miles, outdrive, open bow, loaded, $13,900. stereo, sink/live well, Info - Call w/glastron tr a i ler, 541-536-8816. incl. b oa t c o v e r, Like new, $ 8 500.

-+444;®:%.'

541 -447-4876

17' Cris Craft Scorpion, fast 8 readytofish! I/O & trolling motor. Lots of extras! $5000. 541-318-7473

17' STARCRAFT 60 hp

Fleetwood D i scovery 40' 2003, diesel motorhome w/all options-3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. Wintered i n h e ated shop. $89,900 O.B.O.

and 9.9 Merc motors, 541-447-8664 exc. f i shing b o a t , $6000. 541-815-665,

18.5' Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 hp Bowrider w/depth finder, radio/ CD player, rod holders, full canvas, EZ Loader trailer, exclnt cond, $11,500. 707-484-3518 (Bend)

G ulfstream S u n sport 30' Class A 1988 ne w f r i dge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelc hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0 W g enerator, Goo d condition! $18,000 obo 541-447-5504

The Bulletin servtng central0 non 5 nce s03

Han d yman

Maintenance

.Thatch & Aerate • Spring Clean up Home/Rental repairs •Weekly Mowing Small jobs to remodels & Edging •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Honest, guaranteed Maintenance work. CCB¹151573 Dennis 541-317-9768 •Bark, Rock, Etc. I DO THAT!

Keystone Sprlnter 31', 2008

King size walkaround bed, electric awning, (4) 6-volt batteries, plus many more extras, never smoked in, first owners, $19,900.

Call 541-410-5415 Mallard by F leetwood, 1995, 22' long, sleeps 7, twin beds, fully equipped, clean, good cond, $6500 obo. 541-678-5575

Landsca in

~ ERIC REEVE HANDY •Landscape SERVICES. Home & Construction Commercial Repairs, •Water Feature Carpentry-Painting, Installation/Maint.

Pressure-washing, •Pavers Honey Do's. On-time •Renovations promise. Senior •Irrigations Installation Discount. Work guaranteed. 541-389-3361 Senior Discounts or 541-771-4463 Bonded & Insured Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 CCB¹181595 LCB¹8759

Painting/Wall Covering( WESTERN P AINTING

CO. Richard Hayman, a semi-retired painting contractor of 45 years. S m all Jobs Welcome. Interior & Exterior. c c b ¹ 5184. 541-388-6910

Remodeling/Carpentry SILVER LINING

CONSTRUCTION Residential const., remodels, maint. & repair. CCB ¹199645 Cody Aschenbrenner 541-263-1268



E4 WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DAILY BRI DG E C LU B

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

ACROSS 1Hasbro action figure 6Pile up 11Excite, with "up" 14Grenoble's river 150ne of the "Honeymooners" 16Whoma guy do-si-dos with 17Face value? 19Detergent name 200rg. with launch parties? 21 Dissection class 23 Blind as 25 Face value? 28 Nancy Drew findings 30 Some Monopoly properties: Abbr. 31Homeof Cherokee Natl. Forest 32 cli p (bike attachment) 33 Reason to cram 35Viejo: Sp.:: : Ger.

Conceding a ruff By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services

I continue a s e ries o n t r u mp control: declarer's effort to draw trumps so he can profitably work on the other suits. Against four spades, West leads the ace and a low heart. In real life, South ruffed and assumed a friendly lie of the trumps. He led to the ace and returned a trump. When East showed out, South took the king and started the diamonds. West ruffed the third diamond, cashed his high trump and led his last heart. South ruffed with his last trump, took his ace of clubs and retired. Down three.

divided. One group opens one club, preparing an easy second bid of one spade if partner responds in a red suit. The other, to which I belong, opens one spade. I ge t t h e m ajor suit mentioned quickly, make it harder for the opponents to bid and avoid some rebid problems. I would open one club only if the clubs were much stronger. North dealer N-S vulnerable

NORTH 41A72 9 J875 0 A Q J1 08 7 o8 None

G OOD DIAM O N D S South has options in the play but will surely succeed if he can use dummy's diamonds, hence he must focus on maintaining trump control in case of a 4-1 break. He cashes the king of trumps at Trick Three and next starts the diamonds. To keep control, he is willing to concede a possiblyunnecessary ruff. West ruffs the third diamond and leads his last heart, and South ruffs, l eads a t r um p t o t h e a c e a n d continues diamonds. The defense gets two trumps and a heart.

WEST 4 Q 108 5 9A62 O43 49853

EAST 44 9 KQ1094 O652 4K J 106 SOUTH 45 K J963 93

A B B R S ER A

4AQ742

DAILY QUESTION

70Where Hercules slew a lion 71 Stellar grade

squares in Scrabble

JFK

46 b uc o 49 Lobster catcher 50 Boot camp routine 52 Face value? 56 Many Monopoly properties: Abbr. 57 Virginia's Luray 58 Scale amount 60 Hl-strung instrument? 61 Face value? 66 Stew tidbit 67 Eskimo 68Placefor a coatrack 69 Abbr. before "truly"

East South 19 1 45 ass 4 oEo AII Pa s s

West 2Q P ass

O NS A L E E L L Y T OS I R A T M F E E A F L A T RA I N D E L A Y T W O R A N D D E R R

R I NG A WG E N CH A I R I VE U F O 2 I N

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org.

D A N E Z A R C R R D E V ID S N O

C E H A I M O A L L T A IO T O Z E

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13

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12

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37

steps, often 12 Place to doodle 13 Not stop a musical gig 18"Well, -di-dah" 22Game with a multiplier 23Comportoneself 24 Soviet 26 Sea (greatly shrunken body of water) 27Toon voiced by Jim Backus 29 Golf's Ballesteros 34 Marked wrong 35Wood-shaping tool 36 Perjured oneself 38Jagged,as a leaf's edge 39Grp. whose initials in French are the reverse of its English initials

10

16

20

5 Cartoon squeals 6 D-backs, in box scores 7 Playing piece 8 Cover stories 9 Give away, as a movie ending 10"I'm all ears!"

8

15

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alternative to

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T H A W R O D E O D R IV E R A Y D A V I E S H I E S

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BIZARRO

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

CI K9 North 10 2 4I P 44

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NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD )/)/'llshortz

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PUZZLE BY RICHARD F. MAUSSER

40Toon with size

59Big name in 48 Computer photography, command under "File" once

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650rg. in a 2013 scandal

For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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SIDAY I li ~

50 Snow coasters 51 Versifier's art 52 Varied mixture 54"The Fox and the Hound" fox 55 Very hot and dry 59 Big bird 62 Megastar 64 What the answers to starred clues are 66 Ad writer's award 67 Actress Petty 68 Military divisions 69 Get rid of, in a

way 70 Omar of "House" 71 Peeling device

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"What's 13 hours off 65 years?"

Answer " here: (AnoWero tamarrOW) J umbles: BUNCH CA R A T LOA D E D FA I R LY Answer: Thanks to the fender-bender, 8IIe met her future husband — BY ACCIDENT

DOWN 1 Fare dealers? 2 Like Humpty Dumpty 3 "No beast so fierce but knows some touch of ": "King Richard III"

35 "Oh,fudge!" 4 9 Chuck of "The 39 Prefix with center Del t a Force" 41 Color in a 53 Youngster Crayola eight56 N o t all thumbs 57 Cager's target pack 42 Has too much, 58 5 0 -and-up group for short 59 Arabian 44 Light beams chieftain 46 Consuming 60 Do l e (outj entirely 61 Cold War inits. 47 Eye doctor's 63 Te x t er's chuckle science 65 Gasteyer of "SNL" 48 Curly-haired dog

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

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By MaryEIIen IJthlaut (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

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THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY JULY 24 2013 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 935

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

o

Antique & Classic Autos

975

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles «W a.Jij,i~pliI-

Ford Escape XLT 2005 V6-auto, 4wd, 75k mi..

-

¹A29034 $10,995 Oregon AutoSnuree

Ford Taurus Wagon 2004, 120K miles, loaded! engine, power every541-598-3750 or trade for motorthing, new paint, 54K aaaoregonautosource.com $4200 home. 541-815-9939 original m i les, runs great, excellent condi- Want to impress the Mercury Marquis 1992, tion in & out. Asking 4 door, V8 , $ 4 25. relatives? Remodel $8,500. 541-480-3179 541-923-0254 your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390

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

1/3 interest in Columbia

400, $150,000 (located @ Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, I $400/mo.

Ford Thunderbird 1955, new white soft top, tonneau cover and upholstery. New chrome. B e a utiful Car. $25,0 0 0 .

Say "goodbuy" to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-948-2963

Ford Excursion 2004

541-548-1422

5 41 -385-580 9 1/3 interest i n w e l lequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510

Mitsubishi Fuso 1995 14' box truck with lift gate, 184,000 miles, needs turbo seal.

$3500 or best offer. 541-420-2323

One owner, Turbo Diesel, Eddie Bauer 4WD, 46,400 miles,

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales

1/5th interest in 1973

Cessna 150 LLC

150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,500. 541 -41 0-6007

Peterbilt 359 p o table water t ruck, 1 9 90, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4-3" h o ses, camlocks, $ 2 5,000.

4'x8' util. trailer 26" sides, tailgate ramps,

In Madras, call 541-475-6302

Antique & Classic Autos

$495. 541-330-5714 932

Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' deep, 1921 Model T w/55' wide x 17' high biDelivery Truck fold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent Restored & Runs to Frontage Rd; great $9000. visibility for aviation busi541-389-8963 ness. Financing available. 541-948-2126 or 1952 Ford Customline email 1jetjockoq.com Coupe, project car, flatPiper A rcher 1 9 8 0,head V-8, 3 spd extra based in Madras, al- parts, & materials, $2000 ways hangared since obo. 541-410-7473 new. New annual, auto pilot, IFR, one piece windshield. Fastest Archer around. 1750 total t i me . $6 8 ,500. 541-475-6947, ask for Rob Berg. Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; auto 4-spd, 396, model Take care of CST /all options, orig. your investments owner, $19,950, 541-923-6049 with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

DON'7MISS THIS

k

Mustang 1966 2 dr. coupe, 200 cu. in. 6 cyl. Over $12,000 invested, asking $9000. All receipts, runs good. 541-420-5011 Mustang 5.0 1 990 one owner, 5 spd, low m ileage, very f e w made of this model $6,900. Good invest-

Must Sell! Health forces sale. Buick Riviera 1991, classic low-mileage car,

garaged, pampered, non-smoker, exclnt cond, $4300 obo 541-389-0049

gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 obo. 541-419-2713 2009 26' Load Max flatbed gooseneck trailer, $4000. 541-416-9686

RUN UNTIL SOLD For

only $99 Or uP to 52 weeks -whichever comes first!

Includes up to 40 words of text, up to 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold italic headline and price!* Plus the following publications:

The Bulletin daily publication with over 76,000 subscribers. The Central Oregon Marketplace weekly publication DELIVERED to over 31,000 non-subscriber households. The Central Oregon Nickel Ads weekly publication - 15,000 distribution throughout Central and Eastern Oregon.

I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 t on dually, 4 s p d. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.

*Private party merchandise ads only, excludes pets, real estate, rentals, and garage sale categories.

Porsche 911 Turbo

2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality t i res, and battery, Bose premium sound ste-

541-589-4047

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...

Sport Utility Vehicles

Chevy Equinox LT Sport AWD 20 10. Auto, 6-Spd w/Overdrive, 29 Hwy mpg, 41K miles, traction control, keyless entry, moonroof, air, power e v erything, X M S a tellite e n gaged, OnStar avail. MP3. $21,500. Call

CORVETTECOUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport - 4 LT

541-419-0736.

loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $45,000.

Chevy Suburban

503-358-1164.

immaculate. Have maint. records. $5,500.

Ford Focus S 2007 2dr hatchback, 4cyl. 5 spd, 81,500 mi., ¹211801 $6,399

2003 i/a ton 4WD, white, 135k miles,

541-280-7299.

T he City o f R e dmond is s e e king quotes for a Wildlife Hazard Ass e s sment (WHA) and a W ildlife Haza r d Management Plan (WHMP). WHA and WHMP m us t be conducted b y a qualified wildlife biologist, who meets the re q u irements outlined in FAA Advisory Circ u l ar

Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928

Oregon

Toyota Camryst 1984, SOLD; 1985 SOLD; 1986 parts car only one left! $500 Call for details, 541-548-6592

1

bate proceeding refe renced above i s pending in the Circuit Court for the State of O regon f o r Des chutes County. 2. The name of the decedent is Keith D. Sampson. 3. The personal representative appointed is J an e S a mpson claims may be presented to Jane Sampson, care of Michael B . McCord, 65 NW Greeley Ave., Bend, OR 97701. 4. All persons having against the e stat e must present them to t he personal representative at the address set f orth above wi t h i n four months after the date of first publication of this notice or they may be barred. 5. The date of f irst publication of this notice is July 10, 2013. 6. All persons whose r ights may b e a f fected by t h e p r oceeding may obtain additional in f o rmation form the records of the Court, the personal representative or the attorney for the personal representative. Michael B. McCord, OS B 7 8 300, Attorney for the Personal Representative. Jane Sampson c/o Michael B. McCord, 65 NW Greeley Avenue, B e nd , OR 97701 Personal Representative. Michael B . M c Cord, O S B ¹ 78300 Attorney a t Law, 65 NW Greeley A venue, Bend, O R 97701, Phone number: (541) 388-4434, Fax number: (541) 388-5089, Email address: mccord I bendbroadband.com A t t orney For Personal Representative.

Wildlife Hazard Assessment (WHA) and Wildlife Hazard Management Plan (WHMP) for Redmond Municipal Airport

$11,000.

CORVETTE Convertible 2005 Automatic LS2 high performance motor, only 29k miles, Sterling S ilver, b l ack leather interior, Bose premium sound stereo, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Rec e ntly factory serviced. Garaged. Beautiful car, Perfect cond. $29,700

Sampson, Deceased.

Proposals

541-589-4047

541-923-1781

LEGAL NOTICE C IRCUIT CO U R T , STATE OF OREGON, C OUNTY OF D E SCHUTES D EPARTMENT OF PROBATE, In the Matter of the Estate of K e it h D.

LEGAL NOTICE City of Redmond Request for

reo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. G araged, perfect condition $5 9 ,700.

garaged, premium Bose stereo,

...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

Ford Bronco 1981

*A $290 valuebased on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications.

541-589-4047

1996, 350 auto, 132,000 miles. Non-ethanol fuel & synthetic oil only,

935

outside shower, E-Z lift stabilizer hitch, like new, been stored. $10,950. 541-000-000

viced, garaged,

looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700

541-419-5480.

FleetMrood 31 ' WildernessGl 1999 12' slide, 24' awning, queen bed, FSC,

quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully ser-

Chevrolet Corvette Coupe 2007, 20,700 mi., beautiful cond. 3LT loaded, victory two-tone led, leather, powerseats, with logos, memory, headsupdisplay, nav., XM, Bose, tilt, chrome wheels, upgraded drilled slotted brake r o tors, extra insulation, always garaged, serious only $36,500.

Pickups

Ford Ranchero 1979

541-420-4677

1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto transmission Silver blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new

Plymouth B a r racuda 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, centerlines, 541-593-2597 PROJECT CARS: Chevy 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & Chrysler Newport Chevy Coupe 1950 (2) 1962 4 door sedans, rolling chassis's $1750 $2500 and $5500. ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, La Pine, 541-602-8652. complete car, $ 1949; Cadillac Series 61 1950, "My little red 2 dr. hard top, complete w/spare f r on t cl i p ., Coryette" Coupe $3950, 541-382-7391

j .",' ~

with 351 Cleveland modified engine. Body is in excellent condition, $2500 obo.

Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e

541-771-2852.

Chevy 2500 HD 2003 Economical flying 4 WD w o r k tru c k , in your own 140,000 miles, $7000 Chevy Wagon 1957, IFR equipped obo. 541-408-4994. 4-dr., complete, Cessna 172/180 HP for $7,000 OBO / trades. only $13,500! New Please call Garmin Touchscreen 541-389-6998 r. avionics center stack! Exceptionally clean! Chrysler 300 C o upe Hangared at BDN. 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, Call 541-728-0773 auto. trans, ps, air, Ford F250 S uperCab frame on rebuild, re- 2001, Triton V8, May '15 T-Hangar for rent painted original blue, tags, ONLY 89K miles, at Bend airport. original blue interior, $6495 obo 541-610-6150 Call 541-382-8998. original hub caps, exc. chrome, asking $9000 916 or make offer. Trucks & 541-385-9350 Heavy Equipment Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, V8, automatic, great FORD RANGER, XLT shape, $9000 OBO. 1993 4x4 Super Cab, 530-515-8199 4L auto., AC, 64k mi., $4995. 541-848-7478 1987 Freightliner COE 3axle truck, Cummins en-

2006 Sports sedan, low miles, all the nice features you'll want, truly an exc. buy at $8000. Come & see no charge for looking. Ask Buick Bob, 541-318-9999

ment! 541-382-7689

Chevy Nova - 1976, • $3,400. Rebuilt 327 engine. Call Matt 541-280-9463.

SuperhaM/k Ownership Share Available!

'10 - 3 lines, 7 days '16 - 3 lines, 14 days 541-598-3750 aaaoregonautosource.com (Private Party ads only) Oregon

Olds Aurora 1999, white Buick Century Limited 4-dr, 134K miles, front 2000, r un s g r e at, wheel drive, leather, beautiful car. $3400. air, CD/radio, excellent condition. $4000 541-312-3085 or best offer. Buick Lucerne CXS 541-548-5886

15" spare tire, $480. 541-318-8503.

Service & Accessories

Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

Automobiles

541-385-5809

Utility Trailers

20" polished alloy wheels with 295/50R-20 tires, GM 6-hole bolt pattern.

Toyota Sequoia SR5 2005 Loaded! Superb service history. 90k mi ¹249399 $17,995

Classifieds

925

2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

Call (206) 849-4513 in Bend.

541-390-6081

AutoSouree

Find them in The Bulletin

541-820-3724

1974 Bellanca

$26,500

GMC Veton 1971, Only $19,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171

150/5200-36A.

I

Toyota Yaris 2010 wonderful little car, 40 mpg on hwy, $8,500. 541-410-1078

E -mail q u otes t o : ben.wolfe@flyrdm.c om with a copy to kelly.morse@ci.red mond.or.us and state " Quote fo r Wildlife Hazard Ass essment" i n t h e s ubject l i ne . Al l quotes must be received no later than 2:00pm PT on Friday August 9, 2013.

Q uotes and all a c companying docum ents s h al l b e come the property of the City of Redmond and shall not Volkswagen Karmann b e returned. L a te Ghia 1970 convertible, quotes will not be very rare, new top & inteaccepted. Redrior upholstery, $9000. 541-389-2636 mond Municipal Airport may r e quest VW Passat GTI 2013, addition information 2k miles. $28,000. if needed. 619-733-8472 I a

The Objective, Scope o f Services, a nd Statement of Qualif ications ma y b e d ownloaded f r o m RDM's website at www.flyrdm.com or the City's website at www.ci.redmond.or. us. Publish: www.ci.redmond.or.us Monday, July 15, 2013

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

www.flyrdm.com Monday, July 15, 2013 Bend Bulletin Sunday, July 21, 2013

I The Bulletin recoml extra caution i I mends when p u r chasing i i products or servicesi from out of the area. i S ending c ash ,i checks, or credit inI formation may be I

i subject toFRAUD. For more i nformai tion about an advertiser, you may call

i

I the Oregon State I 4 speed 4x4, 302 AutoSource Attorney General's f engine, low miles, 541-598-3750 Office C o n sumer h eaders, roll b a r , aaaoregonautosource.com i Protection hotline at hitch kit, good tires, 1 -877-877-9392. straight body, runs Ford Taurus 2003 SSE s edan, e xc . c o n d great, $950. 63,000 miles. $5,000 Sew>ngCentral Oregon zrnce 1903 541-350-7176 541-389-9569

I

I i

The Bulletin

CASE NO. 13PB0023. NOTICE TO INT E RESTED PERSONS. Date of D eath: August 2 9 , 2011. To I n t erested Persons: 1.The pro-

Nissan 350Z 2005 Black, excellent condition, 22,531 gently driven miles, 1 owner, non-smoker, $15,500.

jttwl~rjw~

1000

Legal Notices

Daily Journal of Commerce Once the week of July 15, 2013

L e g al Notices LEGAL NOTICE

IN TH E

C I R CUIT

COURT FOR THE STATE O F OREGON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF DESCHUTES. U.S BANK N A TIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR J.P.

M ORGAN M O RTGAGE TRUS T 2 006-A3, its s u c cessors in interest and/or ass i gns, Plaintiff, v . UNKNOWN HEIRS OF

NONDA S U N DAY CLARK AKA NONDA SUNDAYCLARK FKA N ONDA L . H A R W ICK; DA R W I N EUGENE SUNDAY AND DA N I ELLE BETH SMITH INDIVIDUALLY AND AS SUCCESSOR

CO-TRUSTEES OF

THE NONDA SUNDAY CLARK LIVING TRUST DATED SEPTEMBER 7, 2006; JPMORGAN

C HASE BANK , N .A.; RIV E R ' S EDGE O W N ERS ASSOCIATION, I NC 4 STATE O F O REGON; OC C UP ANTS O F T H E P REMISES; A N D THE REAL PROPERTY L O C ATED AT 3148 NORTHWEST Q UIET RIVER LANE, BEND, O R E GON 97701, Defendants. Case No. 1 3CV0111. S U M MONS BY PUBLICATION. TO THE DEFENDANTS: UNKNOWN HEIRS OF NONDA SUNDAY CLARK AKA NONDA SUNDAYCLARK FKA N ONDA L . H A R WICK: In the name of the State of Or-

egon, y o u are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above-entitled Court a nd cause on o r before the expiration of 30 days from the date of the first p ublication of t h is summons. The date of first publication in this matter is July, 17, 2013. If you fail timely to appear and answer, plaintiff will apply to the above-entitled court for the relief prayed for in its complaint. This is a ju d icial foreclosure o f a d eed of t r us t i n which the p l aintiff r equests that t h e plaintiff be allowed to foreclose your interest in the f ollowing de s c ribed real property: LOT THIRTY-NINE (39), R IVER'S EDG E VILLAGE, P HASE DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly k nown a s : 31 4 8 N orthwest Qui e t River Lane, Bend, Oregon 97701. NOTICE TO D EFENDANTS: READ T HESE PA P E RS CAREFULLY! A

l awsuit has b e e n started against you in th e a b ove-entitled court by U.S Bank National Association, as trustee for J.P. MORGAN M ortgage Trus t 2006-A3, p l a intiff. Plaintiff's claims are stated in the written complaint, a copy of which was filed with the a b ove-entitled C ourt. You mus t "appear" in this case or the other side will win a u tomatically. To "appear" you m ust file with t he court a legal document called a "motion" or "answer." The "motion" or "answer" (or "reply") must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publ i cation s pecified her e i n along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof o f service on t h e plaintiff's a t t orney or, if t h e p l aintiff does not have an a ttorney, proof o f service on the plaintiff. If you have any questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney you may contact the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Ref e rral S ervice online a t www.oregonstatebar.org or by calling (503) 684-3763 (in the Portland metrop olitan a rea) o r toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. This

Get your business

G ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

summons is issued pursuant to ORCP 7. RC O L E G AL, P.C., Michael Botthof, OSB ¹113337, mbotthoforcolegal. com, Attorneys for P laintiff, 51 1 S W 10th Ave., Ste. 400, Portland, OR 97205, P: (503) 977-7840, F: (503) 977-7963.

Legal Notices •

Legal Notices

f arming o r for e st practices on the propof COURT O F THE erty; (e) Rights neighboring property STATE OF OREGON owners; and (f)EnviFOR THE COUNTY OF DES C H UTES ronmental laws and regulations that affect U.S. Bank, National Association as trustee the property. Attorney: o n behalf o f N e w- Michael T h ornicroft, castle Inv e stment OSB ¹981104, RCO Trust 2011 - MH1, Legal, P.C., 511 SW Plaintiff, v. D e anne 10th Ave., Ste. 400, Fratini and Dana Fra- Portland, OR 97205, tini, et al, Defendants. 503-977-7840. CondiCase No.: 13CV0182 tions of Sale: PotenSUMMONS BY PUB- tial bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior LICATION N O TICE TO DEF E NDANTS to the auction to allow R EAD THESE P A - the Deschutes County PERS CAREFULLY! Sheriff's Office to reYou must "appear" in view bidder's funds. this case or the other Only U.S. c urrency cashier's side will win automati- and/or c ally. T o "appear" checks made payable you must file with the to Deschutes County court a legal paper Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a y ment called a "motion" or "answer." The "momust be made in full tion" or "answer" must immediately upon the be given to the court c lose of t h e s a l e. clerk or administrator LARRY B L A NTON, Deschutes C o u nty within 30 days of the date of first publica- Sheriff. Anthony Ration, 07/0 3 / 2013, guine, Civil Technia long with th e r e - cian. Date: July 13, q uired filing fee. I t 2013. must be i n p r oper LEGAL NOTICE form and have proof IN T H E C UIT o f service o n t h e COURT O F CI R THE Plaintiff's attorney or, STATE OF OREGON if the Plaintiff does not DESCHUTES have a n at t orney, Wells proof of service on the COUNTY. Fargo Bank, N.A., its Plaintiff. The subject in interest of this action is a judi- successors assigns, Plaincial foreclosure of real and/or tiff/s, v. C harles property c o mmonly Johnson; Bonnie R. J. known as 51439 RivJP Morgan erland Avenue, Lap- Johnson; Chase Bank, N .A 4 i ne, OR 9 7 739 f o r Rim Village non-payment of mort- Canyon Homeowners Assog age debt. I f y o u ciation, Inc.; Occuhave questions, you pants of the Premises; should see an attor- and the Real Propn ey immediately. I f Located at 1630 y ou need h el p i n erty Hi c k ory finding an a ttorney, Northwest Place, Redmond, Oryou may call the Or- egon 977 5 6-0295, e gon S t at e Ba r ' s D efendant/s. C ase Lawyer Referral SerNo.: 11CV0988. NOvice at (503) TICE OF SALE UN684-3763 or toll-free DER WRIT OF EXin Oregon at (800) ECUTION - REAL 4 52-7636. DA T E D : PROPERTY. Notice is July 2, 2013. /s/ Kathereby given that I will rina E . G l o gowski, on August 22, 2013 at O SB ¹ 0 35386, G IAM in the main o gowski La w F i r m 10:00 l obby of t h e D e s PLLC, 506 2nd Ave chutes Ste 2600, Seattle, WA Sheriff's Office,County 63333 98104 (206) Highway 20, Bend, 903-9966. Fax (206) W. Oregon, sell, at public 405-2701. o ral auction t o t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s h ier's FIND YOUR FUTURE check, the real propHOME INTHE BULLETIN erty commonly known as 1630 NW Hickory Your future is just a page Place, Redmond, Oraway. Whetheryou're looking egon 977 5 6-0295, for a hat or a place tohangit, and further described The Bulletin Classified is as, Lot One Hundred your best source. Thirteen (113), CanEvery daythousandsof yon R i m Vil l age, buyers and sellers of goods Phase 5, Deschutes and services do business in County, Oregon. Said these pages.Theyknow sale is made under a you can't beat TheBulletin Writ of Execution in Classified Section for Foreclosure i s s ued selection and convenience out o f t h e Ci r c uit - every item isjust a phone Court of the State of call away. Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated The Classified Section is June 14, 2013. The easy to use. Every item Notice of Sale will be is categorized andevery published in The Bulcartegory is indexed onthe letin, a newspaper of section's front page. general circulation in Whether youare lookingfor Deschutes C o unty, a home or need aservice, Oregon, on the folyour future is in the pagesof lowing dates: July 10, The Bulletin Classified. 2013; July 17, 2013; J uly 24 2 0 1 3 a n d July 31, 2 013. B EThe Bulletin FORE BIDDING AT THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE B I DDER LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CIR C UIT SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY I N V ESTICOURT O F THE GATE: (a)The priority STATE OF OREGON of the lien or interest DESCHUTES t h e jud g ment COUNTY, C i t iMort- of (b) Land use gage, Inc., its succes- creditor; laws and regulations sors in interest and/or applicable to the assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. T revor J . Ost b y ; property; (c)Apuses for the Megan A. Berg; US proved (d)Limits on Bank, NA; Deschutes fproperty; arming r for e st County; and O c cu- practicesoon pants of the Premises, erty; (e) Rightsthe propof D efendant/s. C a s e neighboring property No.: 12CV0560. NOand (f)EnviTICE OF SALE UN- owners; ronmental laws and DER WRIT OF EXregulations affect ECUTION - REAL the property.that Attorney: PROPERTY. Notice is Michael T h ornicroft, hereby given that I will OSB ¹981104, RCO on August 27, 2013 at egal, PC, 511 S E 10:00 AM in the main L l obby of t h e D e s - 10th Avenue, Suite chutes County 4 00, P o rtland, O R (503) Sheriff's Office, 63333 97205, Conditions W. Highway 20, Bend, 977-7840. of Sale: Pot e ntial Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction t o t h e bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the h ighest bidder, f o r auction to allow the cash o r ca s hier's Deschutes u n ty check, the real prop- Sheriff's OfficeCo to reerty commonly known view bidder's funds. as 3427 NE SandalU.S. c urrency wood Drive, B end, Only and/or cashier's Oregon 97701, and made payable further described as, checks Deschutes County LOT T H R EE (3), to Sheriff's Office will be SANDALWOOD accepted. P a y ment PHASE 1, DESmust be made in full CHUTES COUNTY, upon the OREGON. Said sale cimmediately lose of t h e s a l e. is made under a Writ LARRY B L A NTON, of Execution in ForeDeschutes C o u nty closure issued out of Sheriff. Anthony Rathe Circuit Court of Civil Technithe State of Oregon guine, ian. Date: July 8 , for the County of Des- c2013. chutes, dated June 26, 2013. The Notice of Sale will be published in The Bulletin, a newspaper of general circulation in Deschutes County, Oregon, on the following dates: July 24, 2013; July 31, 2013; August 7, 2013; and August LEGAL NOTICE

IN

THE

CIR C U IT

GarageSales

GarageSales

GarageSales

14, 2013. B E FORE B IDDING A T TH E SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY I N V ESTI-

GATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of t h e j ud g ment creditor; (b)Land use laws and regulations applicable t o the property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d)Limits on

Find them in The Bulletin ClaSSifiBdS!

541-385.5809


E6 WEDNESDAY JULY 24 2013 • THE BULLETIN

NOTICE

BOEDER LEONARD BOGART RAYMOND W BOHN MARY A BOLCE ELLA M BOLCE NANCY M

BOLDT ROBERT

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 CALDWELL SYLVIA M CALEEN GARRISON CALVERT LORETTA L CAMARILLO THOMAS L CAMERON SHARON CAMERON WILEY

COLVIN DAVID P COMBS DAVID W COMBS PAUL W COMPTON LAURENCE R COMPTON RONALD D

DENTON ROBIN M DENTON WAYNE E DEPOT BUILDING DERBYSHIRE DON DERIEUX LARRY E

COMSTOCK DOUGLAS D DERR JANICE M

CAMMACK LOIS I COMSTOCK ROBERT DERR LARRY A Central Electric Cooperative, Inc. gives BOLEN CHARLOTTE A BOLLARD TERESA A CAMOMILE BETTY CONANT EATON H DERRICK FLOYD J notice t hat u n c laimed c apital c r edit BOLT RUSS CAMP SHERMAN STORE CONBOY MELVIN H DERSHAM RANDY M BOLTINGHOUSE CAMPBELL ANNA M CONKLIN EVELYN M DESCHUTES FRIENDS payments have b een a v ailable since WILLIAM A CAMPBELL BOB C CONLEY MARGUERIT E CHURCH BOLTON ROBERT S CAMPBELL DARBY A CONLEY MITCH H DESULLY JAMES E December 11, 2008 at the office of the CAMPBELL GARY R BOND THOMAS CONNER LINDA J DEVINE PEGGY Cooperative, at 2098 N . H i ghway 97, BONHAM HARRY S CAMPBELL JOHN R CONNER WILLIAM P DEVIVO ERNEST L CAMPBELL KIM L CONNERS THOMAS E DEVORE LILLIAN Redmond, Oregon to the member's names BONIFACE RICHARD M BONISLAWSKI WALTER J CAMPBELL KIRK R CONNOLLY BRIAN J DEXTER DAVID R CONNOLLY MICHAEL J DEZOTELL ROBERT W hereunder of membership and payments BONNIEVIEW RANCH INC CAMPBELL LLOYD BONS KRIS CAMPBELL MALCOLM L CONNOR SARA R DIAZ ANTHONY R which have been authorized for more than BONS REBECCA N CAMPBELL MELISSA CONRAD KIT S DIAZ RICHARD E BOONE ERICA A CAMPBELL SCOTT E CONRAD RONALD J DIBBLE JANET E 4 years. BOONE KAY H CAMPBELL VALERIE J CONTI GLORIA M DICKENS DAVID L BOONE MICHAEL S Unless said members or heirs claim said BOOTHE RONALD G OLETA I payments not later than Jan I, 20I4, they BORDEAUX BORDEN CLARA CARL D will be forfeited to the Cooperative. These BORDERS BORDERS EDGAR W payments are retired capital credits for BOSTIC JOHN E BOTTS JAMES R patronage for the years: 1984, 1985, k. BOUBEL RICH W ROBERT E 2007. To claim the capital credit payment BOUCHARD BOUCHE PARRIS BOWEN AVERY C please phone or write our office. BOWEN JEAN E BOWEN LADONNA B 4-D'S UNLIMITED BOWEN PAUL BARBOUR STEPHEN BOWER JAY L 69550 HOLMES/WELL BARCLAY JOSEPH J BOWERS MARION E A BAR D PINTO RANCH BARCLAY LINDA K BOWSER CHRISTINE R ABBOTT OLETHA M BARCLAY BOWSER DONALD L ABBY JOHN D CONTRACTORS ABENDSCHEIN G D BARD N THOMSON BOYANOVSKY-KUTSCH ABOULAFIA KAREN S BARIL JANE E RON ABRIEL RAYMOND D BARKDOLL AGNES I BOYD CHARLES T ABRUZZO FRED PEGG L BARKER DARRELL W BOYD DEBORAH J BOYD JEFF ACHILLES LLOYD K BARKER G GLEN BOYD NANCY D ACKERMAN BARBARA J BARKER KAREN L BOYD ROBERT G ACORD DONALD L BARKER LEROY E BOYLE CHRIS D ACOSTA MARCIA A BARKER REED A BOYLE DANIEL J ADAIR RICHARD BARKER ROBERT R BOYLE NATHAN M ADAME RAY M BARLUP GERALD L BOYLE ROBERT J ADAMS DEVIN T BARNARD ROBERT H BOYNTON DAVID L ADAMS FRANK R BARNES EDWARD E BOZARTH CHRISTE A ADAMS JOEY L BARNES GAYLA A BOZARTH JOHN N ADAMS KEITH R BARNES LOYD C BRADBURY HAROLD W ADAMS KENARD BARNES MARIE S BRADBURYJOSEPH H ADAMS KENNETH D BARNES R E BRADBURY LOIS ADAMS LEWIS E BARNETTJAMES E BRADFORD CAROL A ADAMS NORMAN BARNETT LOU E BRADLEY BONNIE ADAMS SHERRY A BARNEY KENNETH W BRADLEY KEVIN K ADAMS TED G BARNUM JAMES A BRADSHAW JACK C ADAMS WENDELL S BARRATT JIM BRAKEMAN MINNIE ADDINGTON ROBERT L ENTERPRISES BRALLY DUANE L ADDISON STEVE BARRETT CHARLES BRALY DAVID V ADUDELL KENNETH S BARRETT EDWIN BRAMBILA BIONECIO AFAR RANCH BARRETT KEN AFFOLTER CHRIS W BARRETT RODERICK D BRAND MALCOLM L BRANDENBURG AGGEN ROBERT 0 BARRY OLIVE M AGUE DENISE BARTH HERBERT E ELIZABETH A AHERN ROBERT A BARTLETT FRANK W BRANDER ALEX G AHRENS RICHARD B BARTLETTVERN R BRANDT ERNEST R AITKEN JIM N BARTO CRAIG A BRANDT FORREST AKIN DAVID H BARTON GARY A BRANSON LORRI J AKINS GIFFORD J BARTON RICK M BRANSTETTER VIRGINIAM ALBERTINI ALAN F BARTSCHER LYLE BRATLEY C M ALBINGER JOSEPH Z BARWIS LEON BRAVO BONAFACIO M ALBRIGHT BETTY J BASS CHARLES L BRAY JANET C ALDER CREST HOMES BASSETT CHARLES S BREADON CHRIS G ALDOR KATHRYN BASSETT MARK BREADON GARY J ALDOUS EDGAR J BASSETT RALPH H BREADON ROBERTW ALDOUS JOHN E BASSFORD PAUL S BREADON TIMOTHY E ALEXANDER DAVID J BATEHAM KELLEN A BREEDEN JOHN P ALEXANDER MAX E BATEMAN DALE L BRENDLE HARRY L BRENIMAN LARRY D ALFONSO RICKE M BATES CARYL B BRENIMAN S KEYES L ALFORD ALMOUTH A BATES DAVID L BRENNAN CINDY M ALGER RICHARD B BATES DOROTHY D BRENNAN MICHAEL A ALLAN ALASTAIR M BATES EUGENE W BRESNAHAN HARRY L ALLAN FRED W BATES KAREN J BREUSER PHILLIP D ALLBEE WILLIAM J BATES RAY B BREWER DENISE A ALLDREDGE LLOYD G BATHA JON W BREWER DONALD L ALLDRIDGE D JEAN BAUER KEITH J BREWER ROY B ESTATE OF BAUMAN CHARLES BREWER SHARON J ALLEN DENNIS L BAUMAN JOHN S BRIDGE DANIEL R ALLEN DOUGLAS P BAUMANN RODDY K BRIER FRANK D ALLEN KENNETH V BAUNACH FRANCES V BRILES JUDITH M ALLEN MARJORIE S BAXTER CARRIE E BRINKLEY THOMAS H ALLEN RICHARD D BAXTER JOHN T BRINKLEY TOM G ALLEN STEVE R BAXTER SANDRA K BRISCOE DON M ALLEN WILLIS E BEALL PAULINE BRISLIN JOHN A ALLEN ARNOLD BEALS JEANNE A ALLEN ONETA BEAN CURTIS D BROADDUS ROBERT S ALLMON LEONARD H BEAN DENNIS BROADDUS RONALD L ALMASIE LARRY P BEAN LOIS M BROCKJOHN ALTENBURG GRANT C BEARD JOHN R BROCK TERRY V ALTIG SUZANNE M BEARD PAUL D BROCKETT DAURA L AMARAL GREGORYT BEATY PAT M BROKKEN BETH P AMARALJOELJ BEAUDIN DENNIS BRONSON ROBERT P AMENS ROBERT D BEAVERS TED J BROOKHART TIM F AMERICAN FED BEBB EDWARD E BROOKS CONLEY SAVINGS BECK JOHN E BROOKS JASMINE J AMES A GARY BECK MARGARET BROOKS LORI AMES RONALD K BECKETT GERALD N BROOKS & SHERMAN AMSBERRY H MEL BECKMAN KENT I BROOKSHIRE RICK B ANCELL CELESTE C BECKMAN TERI R BROOKTREE REALTY ANDASOLA RICHARD BECKWITH JEFFERY D BROSSARD KEITH BROSWICK BRUCE I ANDERHO INC BECRAFT HARRY R BROTHERS PAUL ANDERSEN ANTHONY C BEEBE STAN P BROUGHTON HAL F ANDERSEN CONSTANCE BEEBE WILLIAM A BROW UNA W ANDERSEN DAVID A BEFUS ALICE G BROWN ALICE A ANDERSEN RALPH V BEHARJUVENAL BROWN ALVIN R ANDERSEN STEPHANIE L BELDEN MILLIE BROWN BARBARA M ANDERSON BEN L BELDING MICHAEL T BROWN CHARLES C ANDERSON BRUCE P BELEW JOHN M & BROWN CRAIG E ANDERSON CARL BEVERLY BROWN DONALD G ANDERSON CARL G BELL ARTHUR T BROWN ERIC M ANDERSON DARRELL D BELL H BRADFORD BROWN HAZEL F ANDERSON DAVID C BELL JOHN C BROWN HUGH N ANDERSON DEL R BELL MIKE S BROWN J W ANDERSON DON B BELL RANDALL N BROWN J SCOTT ANDERSON DUANE G BELL ROGER G ANDERSON ERNA BELLEMORE PAUL H BROWN JANET R ANDERSON G SCOTT BELLINGER GROVER L BROWN L ROSS ANDERSON JENNIFER I BELTRAN LUIS BROWN LESLIE A ANDERSON JOLENE C BELZEL JOHN BROWN RICHARD C ANDERSON LLOYD W BEND REDI-MIX BROWN ROBERT N ANDERSON MARY E CONCRETE BROWN ROBERT L ANDERSON NORM J BENDELE PAUL A BROWN RON L ANDERSON RAINSE E BENDER RUSS E BROWN RUSSELL K ANDERSON RICHARD F BENDIS HOMES BROWN SHAWN ANDERSON RON BENHAM GORDON T BROWN SUSANNA M ANDERSON RUTH F BENJ FRANKLIN BROWN TAMMY L ANDERSON SCOTT D SAVINGS BROWN TONYA L ANDERSON TRIXIE K BENJAMIN ROBERT M BROWN TRACY F ANDERSON VINCENT B BENNETTJOSEPH W BRUCKER M ANDERSON WM R BENNETTJULIE A BRUINGTON ANNA M ANDERSON B L CONST BENNETT ROBERT L BRUNE LEROY A BRUNER GARY G ANDRES MARIA BENSCOTER FRANK M BRUNMEIER R J ANDRESEN DARVON M BENSON CECIL G BRUTSCH DOUGLAS J ANDREWS AUDRE C BENSON GARY G BRYAN JOYCE A ANDYKE LEANN M BENSON HELEN M BRYAN KENNETH M ANGELL MILLARD BENSON RON L BRYAN RONALD D ANGLER KATHRYN M BENTLEY JAMES F BRYAN TIM G ANSELL RICHARD M BERG GARY M BRYANT WAYNE E ANSTETT GARY F BERG STEVEN BRYANT WILLIAM M ANTHONY PAUL M BERGER CHARLES D BUCHANAN L A APOSTOLAKIS PETER P BERGER DAVID BUCHANAN LEWIS L APPLEGATE LOUIS A BERGER JOSEPH H BUCHMAN ED H APPLEGATE WILLIAM R BERGSMA GEORGE ARCH PAGING BERGSMA RODDY G BUCKENDORF PAT ARCHER WALTER BERKSON EVE C BUCKLE HARVEY H ARENZJOHN BERLAND KENNETH BUCKNER AUGUSTA ARIAIL JAMES M BERNDT MERLE H BUCKNER GRACE ARIZZI ERMANNO BERNERT DIANNE BUCKNER ROBERT D ARMITAGE JANET E BERNHARDSTAILOR BUCKNER VIRGINIA A ARMSTRONG J W SHOP BUCKNER W A ARMSTRONG WILLIAM C BERRY CAROL E BUDKE DALE G ARNETT DICK E BERRY DAVID A BUEHLER KARL ARNETT NANISCHA BERRY HERSCHAL A BUEHLER ROY E ARNOLD BERNICE BERRY RONALD L BUELL BILL ARNOLD DOYLE D BERRY SUSAN J BUELL DIANA L ARNOLD JUNE A BERTINOIA EDWARD A BUERMANN WILLIAM L ARNOLD MIKE C BERTRAND EDWARD P BUIGI THOMAS J ARNOLD STEVE J BERTSCH JUNE BULGERJOSEPH E ARONSON DAVID J BERY KATHY S BUNCH DAN ARREDONDO BUNDOCK HUGH M BESS GREG S CHRISTINE BESSEY FLOYD J BUNDOCKW E ARROYOS RUBEN K BESSEY KURT L BUNDY DAN BUNNELL LOREN K ART MERCHANT BEST ROBERT D BURCELLTRACY L GALLERY BETTUCCI FRANK A BURCH JAMES A ARVIDSON CARL G BETZER NIKI ASH LAWRENCE M BEVERIDGE ROBERT A BURCH ROBERT F BURDICK JOYCE G ASH MARY E BEYERLEIN DAVID A BURGER BETH ASHBAUGH R E BEYMER BILL P BURGESS DALE E ASHBY LORI A BIDIMAN ORRIN W BURING RICHARD M ASSOCIATES FINANCE BIG W RANCH ASTON EDWIN L BIGGS SUSAN G BURK RICHARD H AT&T BIGHAM ELIZABETH A BURK ROBERT B ATENCIO PATRICIA M BIGHAUS TOM A BURKE BONNIE M ATKINSON DANIEL L BILLHYMER HELEN J BURKE GREG P ATKINSON JEFFREY L BILLINGS DAN M BURKERT GABY AUGUSTINE FRANK E BINA VICTORIA A BURKHART BONNIE F AUGUSTINE RUTH A BINFORD LINDLEY BURKHART EVERETT B AUGUSTYNOVICH RON BIRCHFIELD J KAY BURKHART GEORGE AURDAL MARTIN K BISHOP BRYAN C BURKHART RAYMOND H AUZENNE ALLEN J BISHOP FRED H BURKHOLDER SELA B AUZENNE RONALD J BISHOP LARRY D BURLESON ROBERT W AVERILL JOAN ESTATE OF BISHOP PAUL E BURNAM LONNA D AVEY FRANK D BISSELL EDITH L BURNETT J L AYALA BRENDA L BITRICH RICHARD A BURNS ALLEN K AYERS RICHARD K BLACK JAMES E BURNS DERALD W AYLWARD ERNEST M BLACKBURN HELEN M BURNS JANET M B & K FARMS BLACKSHEAR L RAY BURNSJOYCEJ BABBITT ANDREW E BLACKWELL D WES BURNUM DOROTHY BABBITT JAMES M BLACKWELL HENRY B BURRELL JAMES H BABCOCK ARCHIE BLACKWOOD JEFF D BURT DEBRA R BABCOCK NORMAN P BLAGG-HAWES ELLEN A BURT MARIE M BABLER CHUCK BLAIR GARY L BURTIS RAY BACHELOR BLAIR KRISTIE K BURTON JEFFREY S BURTON MICHAEL A BROADCASTING BLAKE SHARON S BACHMAN THOMAS L BLANCHARD EUNICE F BURTON ROBERT D BURWELL KIRBY J BACHMEIER MICHAEL S BLANCHARD FRANK BURWELL TODD V BACKUS GREGORY BLANCHER ANN BUSCHE MICHAEL W BADER MICHAEL BLANCHFIELD FRED J BAFFORD RONALD A BLANK MARY C BUSHARD PAUL BAGLEY ROBERT R BLATCHLEY KENNETH C BUSS RONALD M BAILEY AL L BLAYLOCK DONALD BUSSARD SUE BAILEY MICHAEL J BLEVINS DOROTHY J BUTCHER LORRIE M BAILIN RICHARD A BLISS DIXON L BUTLER EUGENE BAKER ALICE M BLISS MIKE C BUTLER MARY F BAKER DENNIS A BLOCH BONNIE J BUTLER PHILLIP N BAKER EDWIN M BLOCH KEITH W BUTLER ROBERT D BAKER HARVEY W BLOCH MARIANA T BUTLER RON J BAKER JENNIFER S BLODGETT JOHN T BUTTE VIEW MEADOWS BAKER VANCE L BLOMQUIST DAIN E BUTTERFIELD PATRICK L BALDRIDGE ROGER H BLONDHEIM BRANDON BUTTERWORTH RAPLH BALES ANNA L BLONSKI ARTHUR S BUTTKE CARL H BALL DON BLOOM WILLIAM H BUTTRAM WILBUR G BALLARD SARAH A BLOSS LOIS J BUXTON DAVID L BALLARD THOMAS E BLUE SKIES BUZARD JULIA BALLENGER COLLEEN DEVELOPMENT BUZZARD WILLIAM G BALLIN RUTH E BLUMER ROGER L BYERLY FORREST G BALTZOR ARTHUR L BOARDMAN PHYLLIS M BYERS BRUCE J BAMBUUMI BOB GODFREY PONTIAC BYERS GEORGE J BANKERS REALTY INC BYFIELD JOHN R BANKOFIER JOE J BOBBITT WAYNE R BYRD JOHNNIE BANNON RHONDA D BOCCI ROBERT L BYRD WALTON E BANTA OREN C BOCHSLER GERALD J C & L RANCH BAPTISTA RICHARD P BOCHSLER SYDNE K CAIN TILLIE BARBER JAMES S BODWIN WAYNE J CALDWELL EDWARD P BARBER MURL S CALDWELL FRANKLIN H BOE MARY A BARBER PAM E BOEDECKER JANET M CALDWELL LOUIS

CAMPBELL WESLEY R CAMPER TRAILER MFG CANDY RICHARD L CANEPA CRAIG CANNARD WALTER C

CONTRERAS RICHARD M COOK ALMA A COOK DENNIS D COOK GARY A COOK SHAWNNA L

CANNON RICHARD R CANNON ROBERT C CANOY ELIZABETH A CANOY RICHARD L CANTRELL TERESA L CANTRELL VIRGINIA J

COOL WAYNE A COOLEY ROBERT L COONCE LEE F COOPER DARREN J

CANNON KIMBERLY A

CANYON COURT

COOKTINA L COOK WINONA COOKE ROBERT A

COOPER EDWARD A

CAPP BRIAN H CARBAUGH PAUL B CARDEN TIM J CAREY ANDREW G CAREY LUCILLE E CARGO KARINE

COOPER EDWARD L COOPER JAMES H COOPER LEAH COOPER ROBERT M COPELAND MARIE J COPLEY JULIE R

CARLEY MARGARET V CARLSON A B CARLSON APRIL S CARLSON CINDY L

COPP ROBERT S CORBARI ROBERT S CORBETT GLEN

CARLSON ERIK CARLSON MICHELLE M CARMICHAEL RALPH C CARMICHAEL VERNON D CAROLUS VIRGIL L CARPENTER ANDREW CARPENTER BETH CARPENTER JAMES R CARPENTER LARRY K

CORDELL SAM W CORDES CONNIE S CORDON DONALD W CORDON MARIE

CORNELIA DOROTHY J

CARR RANDY J CARRIAGE TRADE APARTMENTS CARRICK MARVIN R CARRIERE ROBERT D

CORNELIA KEVIN M CORNELL ROBERT D CORNER BERNICE CORNO MICHAEL L CORNOG CHESTER CORNWALL JERRY L CORRA BRIAN D CORRIGAN PATRICIA A CORRIGAN ROBERT CORUM ALLEN COSCIA ANDREW P COSNER FRED R

CARROLL JAMES D CARSON LEWIS E CARSON MIKE D CARSTENSEN LEROY CARTENSEN MIKE B

COUNTRY SUNSET MOBILE PRK COURSEY LINDA M

CARR LESLIE D CARR MICHELLE

CARRIGAN CARROLL E CARROLL BONNIE S

CARTER ALBERT L CARTER BEULAH M CARTER BILLY J CARTER DAVID E CARTER GEORGE W CARTER GREG A CARTER STEWART L

CARTER TONI M

CARTNER WILLIAM W CARTY ROBYN D CARUSO JOHN R CARVER CHERI CARY MARIE N CASARRUBIAS JAVIER

CASCADE BAY VENTURES CASCADE DEV INC

COSSETTE JACKT COUCH ALETA G COUNTRY COLLECTIONS

COWAN RICK W COWLES JOHN N COWLES MILES A COX GREGORY D COX JAMES R COX JAN G COX SANFORD S

COYLE MARK J COYLE MIKE B COZBY BETSY E COZBY ROBERT G CRAFTING PATCH THE CRAIG DALE D CRAKES GEORGE G

CRAM AND RHOADS CRAMER CHARLES W

CASCADE PINE SPECIALTIES CASCADE RENTALS CASE JUDSON E

CRAMER RICHARD C CRAMER WALDO H CRANE IVA A CRATER JOHN S CRAVENS JAMES A

CASEY KATHY A CASEY OTIS J CASEY RVERN CASLER BEATRICE P CASSELJOSEPH W CASSELS SCOTT L

CRAWFORD ROBIN D CRAWLEY ROBERT D CREASEY DOUGLAS K CREASEY OPAL 0 CREE DEBBIE CREEL J LEROY

CASE KURT D

CASSLE MICHAEL A

CASTANEDA MARTIN CASTEEL SID M CASWELL BURNEY CASWELL JOSEPH H CASWELL SYLVIA R

CATER MICHAEL E CATES EDWIN C

CATES MARY A CAUDELL KENNETH R CAUDLE CAROL L CAUFIELD JOSEPH CAVENDER DIANE M

CRAWFORD ILA L

CRENSHAW MICHAELP CRESCENZI EDGAR J CRESS LINDA E CRIDER JAMES B CRISAFULLI LINDY W CRISMAN WILLIAM G CRISP JACK L

CRITZ JAMES A CROCKER RICHARD L

CROFTS FRANKLIN P CROGHAN ANDREA K CROMWELL WILLIAM T CRONIN GEORGE R CENARRUSAJOE E CROSBY HEATHER A CHADWICK DIANA CROSS TRUST HOWARD E CHALMERS WILLIAM C CROSSAN TERRY G CHAMBERLAIN CHUCK CROSSETT ADA J CHAMBERLAIN CRAIG D CROTHERS LEONARD C CHAMBERLAIN JOHN C CROWE DAVID V CHAMBERLAIN ROSE M CROWLEY GREG A

CHAMNESS ARTHUR W CRUM R C ASSOC CHAMNESS DAN W CRUMLEY JOHN A CHANDLER COLLEEN F CHANDLER SIDNEY D CHANEY DEANNA G CHANEY NATHAN CHAPMAN HOWARD C

CRUSE DAVID L CRYSTAL CORRAL CTRL OR SUN COUNTRY INC CUBERO TONYA A

CHASE DEBRA J CHASE JAMES R CHASE NINA M CHASE PHIL W CHASTAIN RENEE L

CULLEN ALLISON M CULLER LETA M CULLEY KEVIN R CULVER CHARLIE A CULVER JOSEPH G CUMBERLAND PAMELA J

CHATTIN ELIZABETH A CHAVEZ MANUEL CHAVEZ TOMMY J CHENEY MARY CHESHIRE MICHAEL N

CUNNINGHAM MINNIE CUNNION JOHN J CURRIE JAMES A CURTIS MARCELLA R CURTIS MICHAEL J

CHIAPUZIO ROBERT CHICHENOFF GERALD P CHILDERS ALBERT D CHILDERS DENNIS B CHILDERS RONALD E CHILLESS TEDD CHOFFEL LEONARD K CHOPPING ROBERT CHOTARD MARILYN L CHRISMAN ROBERT E CHRISMAN ROSS C CHRISTENSEN GERALD M

CURTIS ROBERT D CUSHING DONALD CUTANEO EUGENE C CUTSFORTH DAVID H CUTTING PAT J CYRUS ALVIN ESTATE OF D & R RENTALS D H M DEVELOPMENT CO D&M ENTERPRISES DACHENHAUSEN ROBERT D DAGGETT JOHN B

CHRISTENSEN MELANIE A CHRISTENSEN WAYNE A CHRISTENSEN RUBY E ESTATE OF CHRISTIE ALEXANDER V CHRISTOPHERSON

DAHL KEITH W DAHLEN R SCOTT DAHLSTROM VIRGINIA M DAILEY JAMES B DALESSI MIKE J DALTON ERNEST B

BONNIE K CHRISTOPHERSON ARLENE H H CHRISTOPHERSON CARRIE L CHUBB H L CHURCHILL JULIET N CICEU KATHIE C CIRCLE 5 TRAILER PARK CIRCLE F RANCHES INC CIRESA TOM B CISNA JOSEPH A CLAES THOMAS E CLAFLIN PETER E CLAPP MARTIN A CLAREY DUVEEN 0 CLARK DARWIN H CLARK DAVID L CLARK KENNETH W CLARK KENNETH H CLARK MATTHEW C CLARK PAMELA Y CLARK RICHARD I CLARK ROBERT D CLARK RUSSELL B CLARK STEVE CLARK TERRY L CLARKTHOMAS L CLARK VIOLET E CLARKE EDWARD W CLARKE JAMES H CLAUSSEN RITA C CLAYPOOL DIANE K CLEAVES WINIFRED CLECKER MARIA P CLEMENS CECILE CLEMENS MARY V CLEMENT BRAD D CLEMMONS RUTH CLEVELAND DONALD E CLINE FALLS MOBILE HOME PARK CLINE FALLS OASIS IMP DIS CLINTON VALERIE A CLOSE DANIEL A CLOSE MARLYCE CLOUD JOHNNY B CLOYD D MIKE CLUSMAN HENRY W CLUSMAN RAY M CMC CONSTRUCTION CNOSSEN OWEN P COATS KATHLEEN K COBB DAVID R COBLANTZ RAY J COBUN KEVIN C COBURN KARALYN L COBURN PAM J COCHRAN LESLIE A COCKBURN TIM COE CHARLIE COE MERILYN COEY KATHLEEN R COFFEY KATHRYN N COFFEY LEONA D COFFMAN PAULINE T COLANTINO BETTY L COLDWELL BANKER COLE GLORIA J COLE HAROLD E COLE STEVEN W COLEMAN LOIS COLEMAN LULA I COLEMAN TROY COLLEARY JIM F COLLIER LORRI COLLIER ROBERT L COLLINS ALLEN M COLLINS CHERYL D COLLINS GEORGE A COLLINS PATRICIA A COLLINS VELMA F COLVARD GLENDA S

DALTON MILTON C DALY-RUNGE CONST CO

CHAR-BARB RANCH CHARPILLOZ EDNA M

CHASTEEN WILLIAM L CHATFIELD DEE A

CUELLAR JUDY K

CUMINS JAMES E CUNNINGHAM JOHN S

CHEWNING CONSTANCE V CURTIS MIKE C

CHRISTENSEN HEIDI G

DAHL CLYDE

DAMMANN CARL L DAN DEWITT DRYWALL DANIEL BOB N DANIELS JACK DANIELS KENNETH R

DANIELS NORMAN P DANIELS 0 ROY DANIELS R JOSEPH DANLEY JAMES H DANNA A E DANNEN W E DARR COREY J

DARR PATRICIA A DAUGHERTY ELDRED D DAUGHERTY J RICHARD DAVENPORT CARL B DAVENPORT STONEY L DAVID KEN E DAVIDSON GERALD 0

DAVIDSON RONNIE DAVIES JULIE A DAVIS ALBERT W DAVIS ANDREA P DAVIS CAROLE DAVIS CLAUDE L DAVIS COLEMAN E

DAVIS DAVID B DAVIS FREDERICK A DAVIS HARRY L DAVIS JAMES R DAVIS JOE W DAVIS JOHN F DAVIS JOHN W

DAVIS KENNETH DAVIS RICHARD E DAVIS TED G DAVIS THOMAS L DAVIS WES DAVISON BILLIE DAVISON ROBERT L DAY DREENA C DAY FLOYD D DAY GERALDINE B DAY LESTER A DAY MICHAEL H DAZEY LEON R

DE BEAUMONT JAMES DE KONING EDWIN DE MERCADO KEN DEADMOND DEBRA M DEAN HOWARD R DEASCENTIS JOSEPH DEASON GERALD C

DEASON MARY M DEBERNARDI GARY L DEBLANDER ED DEBOER STEVE E DECKER PENNY A DEERINGER SHARON M DEFREMERY MARY S

DEGARMO MELVIN M DEGERMAN KENNETH DEGROSSE DEBORAH L DEIGNAN LORETTA M DEJANIKUS MIMI S DEKAY CHARLES W DELAMATER ROBERT E

DELANEY PATRICK A DELEO JOHN A DELGADO JON DELL GERALD C DELLER DAVID J DELONG DENNIS G DEMAIN RANDY J

DEMAR KO

ENTERPRISES DEMARIS MARTY A DEMASTERS JAMES G DEMING MARTIN R DENINGTON JAMES W DENISON SHARON L

DENNEY R B

EVEREST ELMER C EVERETT ROGERW EVERGREEN DANCE & EXERCISE EVERGREEN FAMILY

TRUST

GIBBONS JAMES H

EVERHART CHARLES S EVETT ROBERT E EWING LEON FAGG FRED D FAIR ANDREA S FAIRBROTHER DONALD W

GIBBS DEBBIE L GIBSON LINDA D GIBSON RAY W GIBSON STANLEY M GIBSON WARREN N GIEFFELS MONTE J

FAIRCHILD HELEN J FALLERT EVELYN L

GIERKE JAMES T

FALLON DAN J FALTYS RANDY FANKELL JOBY R FANNING CURTIS H FAR WEST FEDERAL

BANK FARIS JAMES C FARLEIGH JAMES H FARLEY ARNOLD FARLEY DANIEL C FARLEY DANNA FARLEY JOHN L DILLON JOYCE G FARLEY PAUL DIMMITT ROBERT FARLOW GLENDA DIRGA ELAINE A FARMERS HOME ADMIN DISCHER WESLEY D FARNEY JAMES M DISNEY BERSETTA M FARRW M DITMORE DEAN FARRA JAMES S DITMORE KENNETH E FARRIS RICHARD H DIXON FLOYD L FARROW WILLIAM DIXON JERRY 0 FASSETT RICHARD J DIXON LILLIAN 0 FAST JEFFREY A DIXON MIKE L FAUX CAROLE V DIXON ROBERT G FEARRIEN BARBARA L DIXON W B FED LAND BANK OF DLUEHOSH RICHARD J SPOKANE DLUGOSCH CARROL L FEHLMAN AVALYN L DOBKINS JOHN V FELDSCHAU LAWRENCE DOD EUGENE C FELIX CAROL A DODD KATHYRN FENDER DEANNA M DODD LESLIE FENNELL DENNIS E DODD NEAL J FENNIMORE MICHAEL J DODGE LYNN F FERGUSON ROBERT A DODGE MARK FERGUSON SAMUEL E DODSON JAMES B FERRERA BART R DOE NEVA I FERRY WILLIAM M DOGGETT WAYNE M FERTSCH ARON W DOHERTY RAY E FETZ LAURA A DOLECHEK BETS P FIELDS CYRUS L DOLLARHYDE KEVIN D FIELDS NANCY J DOLLENS BOBBY L FIELDS RAYMOND DOMES TERRI A FIENE EDMOND DOMIN LUANA J FINCHER HAROLD M DOMINGUES PAUL H FINDLAY HUGH G DONACA RAYMOND C FINDLEY COLLEN DONALDSON JIMMIE P FINE ANGELA K DONNELLY ALLEN W FINEGAN LESLIE M DONNELLY DALE L FINK ALVIN H DONOHO WOODROW W FINK ANNE H DONOVAN ROYDAL F FINN RALPH E DOOLIN FRED FINNESTAD CHRIS A DORIGAN FRANCIS FINNESTAD DWIGHT F DORR ROBERT D FINUCANE DUANE B DORRIS WILLIAM C FIRST INTERSTATE DOSSER DARRELL E BANK DOUGLAS DONALD E FISHER FRANK A DOUGLAS JEFFREYW FISHER GEORGE A DOUTHIT PAULA M FISHER MARK R DOVER JAMES W FISHER MICHAEL L DOWD ROY B FISHER OLIVE E DOWELL LARRY G FISHER ROBERT J DOWERS DEBI K FISHER RODGER A DOWERS MARK A FISHER SHARON K DOWNER KENNETH A FISHER THOMAS C DOYLE MARK W FISHER STANFILL DR TURNER-SPRANG ET AL CONST DRAHEIM BETH A FITCH HARRY L DRAKE CHARLES W FITZGERALD THOMAS F DRAKE HENRY A FIVECOAT GLADE R DRAKE PAMELA D FIX JANET L DRAKE STEVEN A FIX JESSE DRAPER A DEAN FLAIG KELLY B DRAYER DAVID M FLANDEY MEYER F DREW DAVID L FLEGEL WINSTON M DREW HELEN L FLEISCHMAN HORST G DRINKER SHIRLEY E FLEMING BONNIE M DRY CANYON FARMS FLEMING JOHN W DUCHETT ERIC FLESHER RICK A DUCKWORTH CAROL A FLETCHER DAVID L DUFF GREG R FLETCHER H K DUFFY TOM FLETCHER 8 FITCH DUGAN BRYCE D ASSN DUGGAN LYNN FLINT LARRY B DUGGAN PATRICK J FLOYD JEFF H DULIN GLENN FLOYD PAUL M DULONG JACK FLOYD WAYNE S DUNAGAN KEN A FLOYD JIM CO DUNAWAY 0 E FLURIE BETTY DUNBAR ARLO W FOILES LEWIS L DUNBAR EDITH D FOLEY ROBERT H DUNCAN DAVID L FOLK JACK L DUNCAN EDWARD N FOLLETT LYNN P DUNCAN ELIZABETH V FOLSTON LARRY T DUNCAN ELIZABETH A FOLSTON LYLA M DUNCAN LARRY FOOTE ROBERT C DUNCAN N B FORBES CINDY DUNCAN NANCY FORD CLAUDIA F DUNLAP NORMAN J FORD EVELYN E DUNN EUGENE R FORD ROBERT N DUNN GENE FORE STEVEN E DUNN JULIUS H FOREMAN C J DUNN PHILIP G FOREMAN LYLE G DUNN ROBERT M FOREMAN MARTHA B DUNN SHIRLEY A FORESTER PATRICK L DUNN STEVEN W FORSMAN RICK DUNN W LEE FORTH CHRISTENIA DUNN WILLIAM C FOSBACK CORKY DUNNE ERIC N FOSTER A L DUNNE RICHARD D FOSTER GRANT DUPONT CHARLENE R FOSTER JAY A DURAN MONSE FOSTER JULIE D DURFEE WILLIAM W FOSTER KENDALL R DURHAM WILLIAM C FOSTER RICHARD W DURR CORA M FOSTER RICHARD H DURR RALPH E FOUCAULT JAMES DUTCHER ROBERT D FOUMAL WALTER L DUVAL MICHELLE D FOUNTAIN TIMN DWYER DANNY S FOURNIER SHERRI D DYE ROY E FOUST GARY A DYER MARK D FOWLER DONALD B DYER MIKE FOWLER STEVE C DYKEHOUSE ROD D FOWLS CAROLINE A EAKIN HAROLD D FOX RODNEY G EARL CLAYTON C FOX STEPHEN P EARL RAY J FOY DWIGHT D EARLYWINE WILLIAM E FRADES LES S EARTH INDUSTRIES FRALEY KATHRYN E EARWICKER JON A FRAMBES RICHARD D EASLON GERTRUDE FRANC RANCH EAST PORTLAND FRANCE ALLEN H INVESTMENT FRANCE JIM L EASTERBROOKJANE W FRANK EDWIN L EASTERBROOKS SKIP W FRANK J R EASTMAN DARWIN C FRANK MICHAEL E EASTON KENNETH C FRANK RICHARD L EATON GARY E FRANKE HERBERT P EATON SHERRILL L FRANKLIN EDITH M EAVENSON LARRY P FRANKS R MINOR EBNOTHER CARL L FRASER PAUL ECKBERG CHRIS J FRATZKE FERN ESTATE OF ECKLES G W FRAZEE D BRUCE ECKMAN PAUL FRAZEE NONA ESTATE OF EDDINGS GARY R FRECHETTEJOSEPH D EDER CYNTHIA A FREDERICKS RICHARD R EDGINGTON JESSE C FREDRICKSON DONALD R EDMONDSON MUSETTA FREEMAN JACK N EDMONSON JIM W FREEMAN ROBERT J EDMUNDS WALTER I FREIGHTLINER INC EDWARDS C B FRENCH MURREL M EDWARDS C CHICK H FRIDLUND MIKE C EDWARDS C THOMAS FRIEDLUND MIKAL R EDWARDS DONNA M FRISCHMAN SANDY EDWARDS EUGENE L FRITZ GEORGIA EDWARDS H A FROLICK PATRICIA M EDWARDS J NELSON FROMONG GILBERT E EDWARDS JAMES M FRYE DELMER E EDWARDS JERRY M FRYE MARGARET E EDWARDS LEE E FULLBRIGHT VIRGIL M EDWARDS MIKE FULLER VICKI J EDWARDS RONALD E FULS CHARLES EDWARDS RUSSELL H FULS JACK M EDWARDS T RANDY FULS OMER L EDWARDS WALLACE R FULTON IZETTA L EDWARDS WILLIAM J FULTON LAMOINE EGAN VIRGINIA G FUNKHOUSER DONALD R EGELINE STEVEN C FUQUA DONALD K EGGERT LARRY FUQUA GREGORY L EHNI ROBERT B FURMAN LOUISE Y EICHLER E L G & R RANCH EIDE MELVIN D G G PAPER CO EIDEMILLER DOROTHY D GABEL CHRISTOPHER J EKLUND WALTER E GAEDE FRANCIS L EL TORO EXPRESS INC GAETZ PALMA M ELBERS JULIANNE M GAGE THOMAS M ELK CREEK TRUCKING GAGNON WILLIAM ELLER WENDELL L ESTATE OF ELLINGSON RANDY D GALE JOHN E ELLIOTT BART GALE WESTON W ELLIOTT CHARLES R GALES COLLENA M ELLIOTT CUE W GALLO CLAIRE C ELLIOTT DEBRA L GALLOWAY JOHN C ELLIOTT DONALD P GANDER DAVE C ELLIOTT JAMES S GANGER LAWRENCE ELLIOTT ROBERT L GANT MARY ANN ELLIS CLIFF R GARCIA ADOLFO ELLIS EDMUND GARCIA LOLA ELLIS FRED W GARDEN HOME ELLIS NANCY I PROPERTIES ELLIS ROBERT D GARDINER GAIL ELLISON DAVID G GARDNER DONALD L ELLISON MICHELLE M GARLAND RICHARD D ELLISON WILLIAM H GARNER C A ELLSWORTH RUSSELL J GARNER RALPH J ELSTON JUDY K GAROUTTE JOSEPH A ELY JOSEPH B GARRETT DALE EMEHISER MARY L GARRIS DONALD E EMERSON DEBORAH S GARRISON CALEEN A EMMONS NEIL L GARRISON JAMES G EMRICK AL ESTATE OF EMRICK ROD A GARSIDE STAN ENDICOTT CHARLES GASCON JOSEPH F ENEBO J K GAST MICHAEL G ENGLE GLADYS GASTON LEO W ENGLISH JOHN W GATCHET GEORGE E ENGSTLER CAROLE L GAUT BAZIL W ENOS LEWIS W GAWLEY CONST CO INC ENTLER RANDY S GAYLORD EDSON C EPPERSON GEORGE T GEBELIN EDNA E EPSTEIN MICHAEL P GECK HAL E ERCOLIN DIANE E GEHRKE CLARENCE A ERDMAN HENRY M GEHRMANN BERNHARD ERICKSEN JEFF S GEIGER GREGORY P ERICKSON HERBERT H GEORGE DAVID R ERICKSON JOHNNIE C GEORGE ERNEST ERICKSON K GLENN GEORGE MARY A ERLAND BOB D GEORGE MELODY L ESKELSON DANNY A GERALD A COFFMAN ESSIG WILLIAM C GERARDO WALTER H ESTERGREEN ALICE GERBERJOHN C ESTRADA JESS GERBER ROBERT D ETHREDGE LOIS M GERBER THERESA L EVANS BILL GERKE EUNICE EVANS REUBEN W GERMAN LARRY L EVANS ROBLEY C GERRY ANDREW J EVANS TONY B GERVAIS WALLY A EVERED MARGARET J GERVING DON DICK'S LINOLEUM & TILE DIGIORGIO PHILIP P DILLEY PATRICK W DILLIN WILLIAM J DILLMAN JUDY M

GESIK KELLEY A GESSNER RAY A GETTMANN JEFFREY P GHIRARDO LOUIS J GIBB TOM R

GILBERT DORATHY GILBERT TED D GILCHRIST EDITH GILCHRIST F RUST GILL LARRY M GILLILAND ANN G

GILLILAND GLORIA J GILMAN TIM B GILMER JERRY L GILMORE BERNADETT L GILMORE VIRGLE F GILPIN CLARENCE H GILPIN EILEEN

GILPIN MICHAEL E GILSON SHIRLEY M GINTHER JOHN B GISH ED J GITTINGS EMMA H GITTINS BILL J GLASPELL BRIAN

GLASPEY ANDREA L GLASPEY SUSAN L GLASSOW MARCUS A GLAZIER HOWARD L GLEASON TAFFY S GLENN RICK A GLENNS UPHOLSTERY

GLIEBE THOMAS E GLOVER BILLIEK GLOVER REX F GOANA DELFINO GOBLE WILBUR M GODAT CARYL E GODBY RUEBEN B

ESTATE GODDARD LAVONNE G GOERES ANN M GOERTZEN WALTRAUT K GOETTE RUDOLF P GOETZ R L GOLD RENA GOLDBERG SARA G GOLDSMITH RICHARD E GOLDSTRAND LUCY GOLPL ANNE M GOMPERTZ KATHLEEN A GONZALES DANIEL C GOOD LARRY W GOODELL HEIDI M GOODING PHILLIP A GOODMAN JOHN J GOODNIGHT ROY G GOODRICH THORPE D GOODRIGHT JERRI V GOODWIN DONALD A GORDENIER STEPHEN C GORDON EVELYN GORDON HARRY A GORDON JOHN R GORDON RICHARD L GORDON ROBERT C GORDON WAYNE L GORMAN NANCY J GORMAN SUSAN H GOSS JAMES L GOSSIN FRANK R GOTCHY CLARENCE E GOTCHY TROY M GOUDY ANGELA M GOUDY RANDY D GOUGE HAROLD I GOULD ALTA M GOULD C RAY GOULD ROBERT L GOURLEY ROBERT H GOURMET GOODIES GOWAN DARRELL GOWIN STEVE C GOYAK NICK I GRABENHORST RICHARD GRABOYES JEROME GRADY ROBERT M GRAGE DENNIS H GRAHAM BONNIE GRAHAM DUANE K GRAHAM STEVE L GRANT CLOYCE J GRANT VICKI J GRAVES REBECCA K GRAVES ROBERT D GRAVLEY JAMES GRAY ALVIN J GRAY CHARLES E GRAY CLAIRE M GRAY HARLAND G GRAY HELEN B GRAY JAMES P GRAY JEROME A GRAY MICHAEL J GRAY ROYAL M GREEN DIANE GREEN LESTER D GREEN MARY J GREEN RICHARD W GREEN WILLIAM D GREENBLAT ALAN P GREENE CORDELL F GREENE ROBERT GREENFIELD WM H GREENOUGH ED GREENSTREET CRERYL A GREER JEFF L GREGG MARGARET E GREGOIRE JOHN J GREGORY DAVID F GREKEL EDWARD GRENNAN DENNIS P GRIBBLE DEBORAH L GRIESMAN MICHAEL P GRIFFIN DAVID GRIFFIN E M GRIFFIN LOUISE B GRIFFIN MARLIN GRIFFITH JIM D GRIFFITH LAWRENCE S GRIFFITH THOMAS GRIFFITH TRADING CO INC GRIFFITHS SALLE M GRIGGS DAN D GRIMSHAW MAX


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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 JOHNSTON ARLENE JOHNSTON CLARA A JOHNSTON EVERETT L JOHNSTON GERALD B JOHNSTON HELEN M

LANGFIELD FARM LANGLEY TRAVIS E LANIER SUSAN K LANTER ROBERT T LANZA JAYNE M

MANSFIELD JEANNE L MANSFIELD ROBERT W MANZANARES DIANA R MARCUM JOYCE K MARCUS ASHTON D MARIONS REPAIR

MARIPOSA FARMS LTD

JOKELA BRIEN A JOLLY KAREN V JOLMA KEN

LARISCH RUDY LARKIN JEFF A LARKIN KENNY M LAROQUE PAUL LARSEN AGNES F LARSEN MARK S

JONAS BOB W JONAS C WAYNE

LARSEN SHIREEN M LARSON KORY R

MARQUARDT GARY A

JONAS DANIEL T JONES ANGELA M JONES ARVIN L JONES DAVID L JONES DON C

LARSON KURT M LARSON LEAH J LARSON LEONARD LARSON REX A LARSON RICHARD A

JOHNSTON MARGARET M JOHNSTON ROBERT W JOHNSTON ROBERT H JOHNSTON SANDRA

JONES DOUGLAS JONES GLENN E

JONES HANNAH E JONES ILSE JONES JAMES H JONES JERRY M JONES KATHLEEN

JONES LANE

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MARJAMA MARVIN L MARKEN RICHARD D MARKEY BRIAN L MARKS RUSSELL J MARKS CREEK LODGE INC MARSH LEORA F MARSTON GILBERT M MARTENS BRUCE R MARTENS THOMAS J MARTIN BYARD S MARTIN C DENNIS

LASHBROOK CLAIRE H MARTIN FRANK T LASHBROOK HAROLD R MARTIN GARY A LASS DENNIS E MARTIN JIM LATOURETTE FRANCES S LAUBER BYRAN M LAUDERDALE RAY LAURENT ETHEL

LAVENDER JANICE M

MARTIN JOSEPH H MARTIN LOREN MARTIN LOTTIE D MARTIN RALPH W

MARTIN ROBERT L

JONES LARRY D JONES LUELLA K JONES MEREL V JONES NANCY A JONES OLIVER R JONES ROGER

LAVOIE MARK E MARTINEZ ELIAZAR LAWRANCE VANCE E MARTINO JUDY LAWRENCE RAYMOND G MARTINSON LLOYD M LAWSON ROBERTW MARYBROOK CORP LAWTON WILLIAM C MASCIARELLIGEORGE D LAYTON FRANK P MASON BETTY S

LAYTON GLEN R

MASON JEFFERY A

JORGENSEN DEAN JORGENSEN IRENE H JOSEPH-ARNTSON JUHOLA JAMES JUNGWIRTH JOHN P K C K PROPERTIES INC

LAYTON STEPHANIE B LBK RANCHES LEADER ESTHER W LEAF LYNETTE M LEAGJELD-STORCH TRICIA J

MASON LAURA A MASSEY BURL V MASSEY STEVE L MAST JOHN R MASTON ANN MATHENY JERROLD G

JORDAN DAVID R

KACZMAREK RICHARD A LEASIA STEPHEN H

MATHENY RONALD G

KAHL ROBIN M KAHN RUTH E KALBERER HOTEL SUPPLY KALEBAUGH HEIDI L KALEIALOHA ANNE

LEATHERMAN EDWARD G LEAVELL GARY W LECKBAND EVA LECKBEE MERVIN LEDBETTER GARY A LEDBETTER T NORMA KALISZEWSKI JOSEPH V LEDGERWOOD KANGAS J M LADONNA J KANSKI REBECCA A LEE BILLW KARLEN TOM H LEE DOREEN STAPLE KASIAK JEAN S LEE K L KASZA IMRE LEE MONROE A KAUFFMAN KEN H LEE PAMELA A KAUFFMAN WALTER I LEE SHERMAN E KAVANAGH DEVEREUX L LEE TERRI J KEALIHER LEE WALTER J KEARNS GEORGE W LEE WILLIAM F KEATHLEY SCOTT W LEFORS LAURIE J KEATHLEY LEGG GALEN L ENTERPRISES LEHMAN ALBERT S KEELE W SCOTT LEHMAN PATTI G KEENER JAMES P LEHMAN ROBERT L KEETON DENNIS L LEHMAN WILBUR G KEETON GERALD J LEIS ARNOLD W KEGLE RAND W LEISURE KELLAR JAYN DEVELOPMENT CO

MATHER DEMING P MATHES HERBERT A MATHES RONALD L MATHEWS CRAIG C MATHEWS LEO R MATHEWS VALERIE G MATHIESON WALTER D MATHISON JAMES A MATHISON TIMOTHY C MATHSEN RAYMOND M MATSON J W MATSON JIM

KELLER SUSANNE R KELLEY LORRAINE M

LEITH ADELAIDE F LEITH ANNA E

MAY FRED A MAY REBECCA S

KELLEY WILLIAM J KELLY DOROTHY E KELLY MICHEAL J KELLY RAYMOND L KELLY THEODORE C

LELACHEUR TIM E LEMSKE RUBEN G LENGELE LYNDON C LENHARDT CECELIA C LENT GARY A

MAYES HUBERT MAYES LEROY M MAYFIELD ROBERT M MAYFIELD RON MAYHUGH ROBERT D

KELSEN STEVEN KEM HARRY H KEMPER KATHLEEN L KEMPTON JERRY A KENDALL DOUGLAS D KENDALL ROBERT W

LENZ ROSEMARY H LEONARD JAMES N LEROUE TIM J LESLIE BILL R LESSERT WALDRON LETZ ROY

MAYO JEAN M MAYS HENRY J MAZOROL ERNEST J MCADAMS LLOYD C MCALLISTER ROBERT J MCALLISTER TODD

KENNEDY BASIL C KENNEDY BOBBY F KENNEDY FRANK W KENNEDY H LEON KENNEDY LOUIE L

LEVI FLOYD LEWALLEN DENNIS L LEWIN JULIE A LEWIS MICHAEL L LEWIS R L

MCBETH LEWIS A MCBETH ROBERTT MCCAHAN ESTHER MCCAIN ELVA G MCCAIN GARY A

KENT ALAN R KENT AUDREY KENT HARRIET J KENTNER TODD W KENTNER VIOLA M KENYON STANLEY J

LEWIS STEPHEN L LEWIS WILLIAM E LIBERTY WILLIAM T LIBOLT RICHARD E LIEN JEANNE D LIETZOW HARRY F

MCCALEB J FRED MCCALL RICHARD L MCCALLISTER ROYAL H MCCALVY DALE MCCANN RICHARD E MCCARTHY T M

KERESZTURY ROXANNE KERN HAROLD KERNS ROBERT E KERR RANDLOPH W KESSEL DON W KESSELJOYCE

LILLIG EVERETT H LILLYWHITE HEROLD S LINCOLN SAVINGS & LOAN LIND DAVID L

MCCAW LEONARD F MCCAW CABLEVISION MCCAWLEY EDGAR MCCAY DENNIS M MCCLAIN LUKE M MCCLAIN RUSTY L

KELSCH LISA G

KENDRICK CHARLES P KENDRICK MICHAEL M

KENNEL ROB R

KEPHART HORACE

KESSLER DOUGLAS C KESTELL OLIVER J KETCHUM RICHARD KEUDELL ROBERT A KEYES WALTER E KEZELE NICK V KIDWELL PAUL E

KIEWIT PACIFIC CO KIGHTLINGER HUGH KILE DOUGLAS D KILIAN NADINE R KILLIAN GEORGE KILLIAN RITA KIMBALL EDWARD L

KIMBALL MARK V

KIMBOKO ANDRE KIMMEL C E KINCH PHYLLIS KINDRED DOROTHY A KINE KAYE KING DELMER W

KING PAUL E KING SHARON R

KINGERY JACK W KINGREY CHESTER S KINGSBURY DOROTHY W KINGSMITH LAUREL A

KINNEY GLEN M KINNEY JOE M KINNEY VELMA KINSER VIRGINIA M KINTZ JOE T KIPPER DEBRA J KIPPER ROBERT M

KIRK NANCY M

KIRK RAYMOND L KIRKBRIDE GORDON V KIRKELIE MARK A KIRKPATRICK GLADYS J KIRKWOOD MARIETTA L KIRSCH CINDY L

KITCHELL LONNY S

KITE KELSEY R KITTO B J KJOS OLGA KLAHN HORACE M KLEAVER KENNETH K KLECKER H ALTA KLEIN DAVID A KLEINHEINZ MAXINE E KLEINHEINZ WILLIAM C KLINE INA M KLINE RODNEY T KLOCK C E

KNAPP W H

LENTZ JOHN W

LEVEILLE WILLIAM D LEVI COLIN T

LEWIS RICHARD D

LIGHT ROBERT C LILLEBO CHRIS H

LIND HILL A

LINDAHL DENNIS L LINDE DAVID J LINDH RONALD CO EST LINDLEY EARL F LINDSAY C R LINDSEY JERRY L

MATTHEWS EMORY A MATTHEWS LOUIS A MATTISON JON D MATTSON FLOYD G MATTSON LYNNE MATUJEC MARY J MATZKE WILLIAM T

MAULT WALTER L MAUPIN JOHN H MAWHIRTER MARIE J MAXWELL ARTHUR L MAXWELL DONALD A MAXWELL MARION M MAY A DANIEL

MAYHUGH TIMOTHY L

MCAULAY ROBERT C MCBEE DANIEL L

MCCAIN JANICE E

MCCARY JAMES C

MCCLAUGHRY LYLE MCCLAUGHRY SHARON

MCCLELLAN DAVID MCCONAGHY JOHN A MCCONNELL COLVIN S MCCONNELL MARION G MCCONNELL NANCY R LINDSEY MARILYN F MCCONVILLE LAVERNA L LINK DONALD A MCCORMACK G M LINTON PAMELA D MCCORMACK TERESA L LINVILLE MABELL L MCCOY DANIELLA C LIPPINCOTT MICHAEL R MCCOY DAWN LISIUS MATT MCCRADY FRANK LISKA BARBARA J MCCRARY PAMELA C LIST VIRGINIA E MCCREIGHT DONALD L LISTON FRED R MCCULLEY TERRI L LITTLE RICHARD D MCCULLOUGH JOHN D LIVINGSTON RUTH F MCCULLOUGH RON LLOYD HERBERT G MCCULLY PHILLIP E LLOYD LOUISE P MCCUTCHEN MARK

LOBUE MILDRED V

MCDANIEL LAVINA M

LOCHEN EUGENE J LOCKER JAMES R LOCKYEAR MAX L LOEB ALFRED A LOEKS RICK E LOFQUIST MARTIN R

MCDANIEL MARY M MCDARMENT RICHARD W MCDONALD B K MCDONALD CHARLES A MCDONALD D B MCDONALD DOTTIE J

LOMAX AMY M LOMAX CHRIS J LOMBARDO JOSEPH T LONBORG KENNETH A

MCDONALD RANDY L MCDONALD SANDY MCDONALD SUZANNE MCDOW ELL MAXINE E MCDUFFIE & YORK

LOOP BARBARA LOOP CHERIE G LOPEZ DARCI R

MCEWEN BARBARA M MCEWEN CHRISTINA M MCFADDEN GREGG G MCFADDEN JAMES H MCFADDEN WILLIAM M MCFARLAN STEVEN D

LOG MODE CONSTRUCTION LOGAN NORMAN D

LONG BOB D LONG JOHN C LONG RON R LOOMIS MARION H

LOPEZ STEVEN LORENZ EUGENE R LORETZ LEE G LOTT B J LOUDERBACK & ASSOC LOVE HOMER L LOVE LEO F

LOVEGREN GRANT A LOVEGROVE JAMES L LOVELACE CHARLES R LOWE LEON A LOWE ROBERT I LOWE SHARLYN R LOWE THOMAS R

MCDONALD KATIE E MCDONALD PATRICK

MCELMURRY BILL J

MCFARLANE JOHN W MCGEE JAMES A MCGHEE LLOYD M

MCGIBBEN PATRICK J MCGILL ROBERT D MCGILLAN JANET L MCGINNIS FRANK 0 MCGINNIS MORRIS B MCGINNIS THOMAS E MCGLOTHLIN ROSELINE A MCGRATH BETH MCGUIRE MARY J MCHENRY-HOLLAND

MARIE MCHUGH COLLIN T MCINTOSH DONAL W LOWNDES DARLENE D MCINTOSH GENE LUCAS VIRGINIA V MCINTOSH J STUART H LUCAS WILLIAM A MCINTYRE MICHELLE R LUCERO LEONA M MCKAY CHARLES B KNOPSNYDER LARRY R LUCKENBACK DONALD J MCKAY HARLEY KNOUSE IRENE LUCKMAN MARJORIE S MCKAY JAMES R KNOWLES MICHAEL T LUDEMAN SHIRLEY MCKAY JEFF A KNOX BRUCE C LUDLOW JERRY C MCKECHNIE ROBERT P KNOX BUCKLEY G LUDLOW SHIRLEY A MCKELVY THELMA N KNOX LONNY W LUDWICK ALAN L MCKEMIE BERT D KNUPP DONALD E LUDWIG BRUCE D MCKENZIE EARLINE L KNUTZ SCOTT W LUDWIG KATHRYN L MCKENZIE MARK W KNUTZEN DON H LUDWIG ROWLAND J MCKIBBIN JOHN S KOBASIC JOHN I LUECKER KATHERINE Z MCKINNEY GARY F KOCER BUILDERS LUEDERS MARLENE L MCKINNEY MERLAND F KOCHERA JACK C LUFF EVERETT MCKINNEY RAY KOEHLER PETER H LUGO MARCIA MCKITRICK BARBARA L KOHFIELD ROBERT M LUNAK FRANK E MCLAIN ALFRED H KOHLER JACK L LUND KENNETH M MCLAIN DOUGLAS KOLDE JAMES LUNDGREN FERN L MCLANE ORVILLE J KOMAR CLARA F LUNDGREN GARLAN R MCLAREN BARBARA J KOON KEN LUNDGREN JOHN A MCLAREN JOHN J KOPLAU ROBERT 0 LUNDY DAVE MCLAUCHLIN RUTH S KOPP KLAUS LUTHER MICHAEL J MCLAUGHLIN ANDREW C KORB WALTER LUTON ROBERT C MCLAUGHLIN COLLEEN L KOSINSKI GLADYS LUTSCHG ROBERT C MCLEAN DONALD T KOTILA LINDA LUTZ ELLEN K MCLEAN NANCY M KOUE MONIQUE J LYLE JAMES A MCLINN DIANA L KOUTSOURIS PETER T LYMAN DAVID K MCMANAMA JANICE M KOVACH ROBERT S LYMAN STEVE K MCMICKEN MARGARET L KOVACHEVICH LARRY LYNAM ZYLPHA MCMILLAN JUDY A KRAH DOROTHY W LYNCH BARBARA A MCMILLAN 0 E ESTATE OF LYNCH CHARLES B MCMILLAN ROBERT C KRAJCIK MAX J LYNCH GARY S MCMILLIN R D KRALOVEC WILLIAM P LYNCH LARRY A MCMINN STEPHANIE L KRAMER DONNA M LYNCH LESLIE J MCMURRAN JOHN D KRAMER TED W LYNN BARBARA MCMURRAY LYNN L KRAMM WOODY W LYON LEON MCNAMEE MARTY A KRAUTH CHRIS LYON LEONARD L MCNELLIS JIM KREBS ROGER M LYTLE E JOANNE MCNELLIS LILLY 0 KREHBIEL NORM G LYTLE JIM P MCNICHOLS WILLIAM E KRESHON TOM L LYTLE PATTY K MCPHERREN JENNIE L KROPF LAWRENCE MABEE LINDA J MCPHERSON ALAN R KUBISHTA ANTON F MAC FARLANE M MCPHERSON DONALD KUEHN ROBERT 0 MACBEAN DONALD E MCSHATKO HAROLD F KUHLMAN ALBERT L MACDONALDJOHN MCSWAIN MALCOLM M ESTATE OF MACK LAURIE M MCSWAIN MARY E KUHN CHRISTIAN MACKAY FAITH E MCVAY SHAWN T KUMLEY IRA G MACKAY JUDY M MEADOWS BYRON D KUPER JOE A MACLEANJOANNA MEADOWS LARRY J KURTZ MARLA E MACMURRAY FRANK G MEDEIROS LOUIS J KURTZ NANCY MACNEIL JOHN W MEDLIN ROBERT L MACY JAMES D KYLE CHARLES D MEEKER BARBARA L LA MEAR KENNETH MACY TERRY L MEEKS LUCILLE M LA VEAU BRUCE MADDEN DALE A MEIER DAVID H LADUE STEPHEN B MADDOX JERRY MEIER ROBERT F LAFFERTY L F MADDOX MICHAEL L MEJDELL HARRY H LAFFIN LUKE L MADRAS VET CLINIC MELENDY KIRK A LAKE LARRY L MADRON MICHAELJ MELHORN THOMAS D LAKE CREEK CORRAL MADSENJOSEPH P MELTEBEK BOB LAKESHORE LODGE MAGARE M L MELTON JEFF K LAKESIDE MAGBY JULIETV MELZER LARRY W MANAGEMENT INC MAGEE DOUGLAS R MENDENHALL ELBERT H LALICKER EVERETT MAGEE RONALD S MENDEZ MARTHA LAMB TAMMI A MAGEE S R MENDONCA EDWARD D LAMBERT EDNA 0 MAGGIORA KEVIN D MERCER D E LAMKIN GLORIA MAGILL PATRICK M MERILO OLAV LAMPHERE DONALD H MAHONEY AL F MERIWETHER AL LANCASTER LINDA A MAIN TAMARA L MERLICH STUART K LANCASTER RICHARD A MAJOR PATRICIA A MERRICK STEVEN LANCASTER ROBERT H MAJOR RALPH J MERRIFIELD GEORGE E LAND ELDORA MALCOLM GAYLE MERRILL MAX LANDIS ROY S MALIN JERI L MERRILL LYNCH LANDRUM DARRELL MALLOY TOM W RELOCATION LANDRY CINDY S MANES JOSEPHINE A MERRITT GENE W LANDS JIM MANESS DEBBIE MERTSCHING GALEN L LANDS RONALD C MANION DOUG MERWIN JOHN W LANE TOM MANN GLENN MESTON SHARON W LANG MICHAEL G MANN HARLAN A METCALF MARY E LANGENDOERFER MANN STEVE A METKE J PAT ARNOLD L MANOS U E METTEER KNECHT CARL H KNICKERBOCKER M E KNIGHT GLADYS KNIGHT HAYNIE G KNOLES SHARON D KNOLL TOM A

LOWE W F LOWE WYNONA M

CHRISTOPHER L MEYER ARTHUR B MEYER C FRED MEYER JOHN R MEYER KENNETH L MEYERS VIRGINIA MEYERS DON ETRUST"B" MEZZANATTO JACK A MICHAEL THOMAS W MICHALSEN ROGER C MICHEL LOREEN P MICHETTE RICHARD F MIDDLEBROOK OPAL L MIDWAY PLUMBING MIKESELL MARY L MILES VADA L MILLAR BRANFORD P MILLER B R MILLER BENNETT B MILLER CHARLES R MILLER CRAIG R MILLER DON M MILLER EDNA R MILLER EMILY J MILLER FRANCES F MILLER FRANK E MILLER GLENN MILLER HARLAN R MILLER HELEN A MILLER JEFFERY C MILLER JERRY I MILLER JOHN A MILLER KENNETH C MILLER KENNETH W MILLER L VIVIAN MILLER LEE E MILLER MICHAEL E MILLER MORRIS M MILLER RALPH E MILLER RAYMOND L MILLER ROBERT L MILLER STANLEY F MILLER STEVE M MILLER CLARENCE TRUST MILLIS MAX R MILLS KENT MILLS RAY A MILLS REBECCA S MILLS ROCKY MILLS STEPHEN H MILLS WILLARD C MILLS WILLIAM F MIMLER GABRIEL K MINAHAN ROBERT D MINER RON MINKLER T G MINMAC CO MINNICK PAULINE MINSON MARLIN MIRROR POND MGMT MIRSKY ROSALIND MISCHEL ROD D MISNER BRIAN L MITCHELL GERALD R MITCHELL JILL MITCHELL JIM J MITCHELL JOELLEN MITCHELL JOHN R MITCHELL MARSHA W MITCHELL RUTH M MITTS LINDA & JOHN MLASKO RUDOLPH R MOE DARLENE E MOE JEROME A MOELLER DEBRA A MOEN THOMAS D MOFFATT BRUCE L MOLLENHAUER RUTH E MOLONEY JOHN D MONAHAN BEVERLY K MONDAY MILTON G MONFILS DON G MONICAL OLIVE G MONKELBAAN THOM MONROE B CHARLES MONROE BARBARA MONSON CHARLES A MONTAGUE RICHARD 0 MONTEL DONALD R MONTGOM ERY DEAN L MONTGOMERY EVANS MOODY JO ANN MOOERS CLINTON R MOON RONALD E MOORE DELLA M MOORE FRANCES N MOORE GARY T MOORE GERTRUDE A MOORE LIN G MOORE PANSY L MOORE SHARON K MOORE THOMAS I MOORE CLEAR CO MOORMAN JEANNETTE M MORAN CLIFF MORE JOHN H MORELLI RICHARD E MORELLI SUE A MORGAN BOB J MORGAN CARL E MORGAN HAROLD R MORGAN HAZEL L MORGAN REVA L MORGAN RUSSELL G MORILON R D MORITZ ANDREW B MORLEY MARGARET B ESTATE OF MORNINGSTAUR JONN MORRELL RICHARD L MORRIS ARCHIE J MORRIS C L MORRIS EVERETT R MORRIS GEORGE J MORRIS JERRY L MORRIS JOHN W MORRIS LYDIA C MORRIS LYNN D MORRIS MURRAY D MORRIS B MORRISON HARRY A MORRISON L J MORRISON MILDRED M MORRISON MONTE C MORRISON NANCY J MORRISON ROBERT N MORRISON WAYLAND E MORRISSEY ROBERT S MORT TRACIE L MORTENSON NEIL E MORTGAGE BANCORPORATION MORTON DANIEL E MORTON FRANK E MOSCHETTI RON MOSER TOM 0 MOSES 0 PATRICK MOSIER JERRY E MOSS DIANA L MOSS PAMELA J MOSS SHELDON D MOTTNER JOHN E MOUILLESSEAUX HARRIET MOULDER JOHN M MOUNTAIN TIMES INC MOUSER OLEN J MOWDAY RICHARD W MOWLDS J D MOYER ERNEST G MOYER SAM MOYES DANIEL C MOYES MARK A MOYLAN MICHAEL D MUD SPRINGS RANCHES MUELLER FRED A MUHLHAUSER CONRAD C MUIR DIANE L MUIR EUGENE MUIR MICHAEL W MULE SHOE CATTLE CO MULKEY VICTOR MULLARD PHILLIP G MULLENS MICHAEL L MULLINS RICHARD D MUMMERT A EUGENE MUNGER JERRY F MUNKERS HAZEL J MUNSON W E MURDOCH THOMAS L MURPHY AL MURPHY LOIS L MURPHY MARJORIS B MURPHY MIKE G MURRAY ARTHUR E MURRAY H GLENN MURRAY JAN MURRAY JOHN J MURRAY RICHARD M MURRAY STANLEY R MUSENGO JEANETTEESTATE MUSTARD A C MUZGAY PERRY MUZZEY FRANK D MYERS BRENDA L MYERS HANNAH MYERS JULIE I MYERS KARLIN S MYERS LYNN MYERS MARTY A MYERS MONTE K MYERS PAUL R NAEGELI DONALD M NAGELJOHN E NAGELJOHN K NAIRN RAY NAKAMURA STEPHEN R NANCE FREDW NASH FRANK E NASH JOHN J NASHLUND RACHEL A NASON D SCOTT NASON DENNIS R NATL HOME EQUITY NAYLOR ROBERT M NEAL ELIZABETH C NEALEIGH JIM NEEDHAM HARLEY M NEFF KENT E NEHL JOHN T NEILL WAYNE A NEILSEN DEANNE M NEILSON WILLIAM A NEITZ GEORGE E NELMS WOOD SIGNS NELSEN JOHN W NELSON A TED NELSON DAVID W NELSON E ALAN NELSON ELWIN W NELSON ERIC D NELSON HARLEY L NELSON HARRY NELSON JENNIFER L NELSON JOHN R NELSON LYLE C NELSON NED

NELSON ROBERT D NELSON SAMUEL H NELSON STAN NELSON W DAVID NELSON WENDY J

PAULL ERNIE L PAULS AUDREY PAULSON DONALD M PAULSDNENTERPRISESINC PAULY RANCH

NESPECHAL RONALD J NESS STEVEN A NETH RICKEY C NETH SANDRA L NETHERCUTT CARL S

PAYNE HAROLD PAYNE MARTHA K PAYNE WILMA L PEARCE CARMAN PEARCE JR GEORGE F PEARSON IVAN J

NEUMEISTER VERA NEVILLS RALPH E NEWBERRY JOHN NEWBERRY JOSEPH A NEWMAN JIMMIE F NEWMAN SONDRA J

PEASE MARKW PEASLEY ROBERT N PECKTOM H PEDDICORD DENNIS PEDERSON GERALD R

NESBIT FRANK M ESTATE OF

NETTLES MARVIN R

NEWPORT MARILYN NEWTON MARVIN M NEWTON THEODORE E NICHOLAS NORMAN H NICHOLS BETTY J NICHOLS REID NICHOLSON GARY A

NICHOLSON NORTON J NICHOLSON SCOTT L NICKERSON GARY NICKESON SCOTT L NICKOLAS KAREN M NICKS GARY N NICOLAI THEODORE

NICOSON WILLIAM L NIELSEN GLEN D NIELSON ELSA M NIENDORF JOHN E NIENDORF RICHARD W NIERMANN ALVIN H NIESS DAVID R

NILL JERRY L NIX STEPHEN P NMS FINANCE NOAH G KENNETH NOBLE DONNA M NOBLE MARGARET NOE JACOB

NOLAN DANIEL D

NOLAN KEN J NOLEN EDWARD C NORDBY ROBERT H NORDMEYER MICHAEL S NORDSTROM RAY A

NORMAN CHARLES B

NORMAN TELFER E NORMAN BROS CONST NORRIS MICHAEL R NORRIS RANDLOPH D NORTH NANCE F NORTH SHORE

DEVELOPMENT

NORTHAM MICHAEL B NORTHWEST SUN CONTRACTORS NOVOTNY MARIANNE Y NOW & THEN SHOP NOWLIN JEFFREY L

NOWLIN TAMMY N-THREE CORPORATION NUGENT ROY C NUGENTTHOMAS F NUNES LAWERANCE B NUNNELLY RUSSELL D NW BAPTIST INSTITUTE

NYQUIST TED A NYSTROM FRED E OAK K R OAR KATE A OATMAN ROY D OBENDORF THERESA OBERG RANDALL T

O'BREIN JAMES N OBRIEN PATRICK F

OBRIEN ROBERT M O'BRIEN EDWARD J O'BRIEN JOHN S O'BRIEN PATRICK J OCHOCO TELECASTERS

INC OCONNELL MICHAEL OCONNER SHANNON L OCONNOR DONAL ODENTHALJO M OFFICER JIM OFFIELD DONALD F OGGG ALFALFA PARTNERSHIP OGLE THOMAS F OHIO KNIFE CO OHOLLAREN JOHN ESTATE OF OLDHAM ALLEN P OLDS, MRS KEN C ESTATE OLEARY CLARENCE OLHEISER NICK OLIVER GARY E OLIVER JAMES A OLIVER KEITH OLIVER LARRY L OLMSTEAD PAUL E OLMSTED VERNON OLSEN DAVID S OLSON CORA E OLSON GARY L OLSON GLENN L OLSON LINDA D OLSON LOUIS M OLSON PAM L OLSON PATRICK K OLSON SCOTT G OLSON TED B OLSON/RYAN PROP OLSONOWSKI EUNICE L OLTMAN TONI L OMLEY DAVID A OMLEY KEN B OMOHUNDRO PAUL H ONEEL WESLEY G ONEIL CONNIE L ONEIL LESTER H O'NEIL HOWARD F O'NEILL DANIEL & SHARMON ONG BENEDICT L OPAL PARR LOVING TRUST OPIE HAZEL OPOKA KAROL ORBANCO REAL ESTATE OREGON SUN RANCH INC ORLANDO JOSHUA J ORMSBY STEPHEN D ORR E F ORR JODY L ORTLOFF ROD OSBORN RICHARD M OSBORNE BILL R OSBORNE VIOLETTA R OSKO GEORGE E OSTRANDER EUNICE C OSTROM DENNIS F OSUNA KAREN M OSWALD MAGEE J OTTER HELENA OTTERSON MELVIN P OVENBURG ELAIN M OVERBY H E OWEN GENE OWEN KELLY OWEN MICHAEL T OWEN MILDRED L OWEN RACING SHELLS OWENS E L OWENS EDWARD R OWENS GARY D OWENS NEIL D OWENS WILLIAM B OWINGS LEONARD V OWNBEY BILL PACIFIC 1ST FEDERAL PADGET RAYMOND E PADGETT ALLEN J PAGE ALICE L PAGE ERNEST J PAGE PRESTON E PAGE ROBERT L PAGEL ALBERT F PAGET AILEEN A PAHL CLIFFORD E PAIGE ROBERT PALADIJCZUK GORDON S PALANDRI JERRY PALERMO JANIS E PALFY STEVE P PALLIN SUSAN L PALMER DONALD M PALMER E EUGENE PALMER MERRITT W PALMER MICHAEL R PALMER SHANE PALMER VERNON W PALMER WILLIAM W PANGLE MICHAEL PANKOW JERRY PARADISE CUSTOM BLDRS PARAMORE DAVID W PARCELL ROBIN J PARK JESSE L PARK RONALD A PARK MOTEL PARKER CHRISTINE PARKER EMERY E PARKER GARY W PARKER GEORGE A PARKER IRENE R PARKER JANICE M PARKER JEANETTE E PARKER JOSEPH B PARKER THOMAS A PARKEY WANDA M PARKS BYARD W PARKS GARY A PARKS LOUISE PARKS RICK E PARKS VALERIE A PARRISH R BRUCE PARRY JAMES W PARSLEY FOY PARSONS S D PARTNEY G L PASCHALL GARY W PASCHALL SAMUEL PASCHALL W ELOISE PASQUIER BERNARD P PATRICK JUNIOR T PATRICK MARJORIE J PATT OLNEY PATT RALPH 0 PATTEE MARY E PATTERSON ALMA L PATTERSON EMMITT C PATTERSON LOWELL L PATTERSON SANDY K PATTERSON WAYNE E ESTATE OF PATTON BEN C PATTON LOWELL E

PAXTON C R

PEARSON SALLY J PEARSON TODD

PEIL LEONA GEO PELHAM JACK L PELKEY FRED A PELL VICTOR T PENCE LORETTA J PENDERGRAFT ERNEST D

PENHOLLOW BILL 8 TEDDIE PENINGER CAROL J PENNEY ARTHUR W PENNINGTON DANIEL C PENNINGTON DAVID N PENUEL HEATHER L PEPITONE ANDY J PEREIRA MONIKA M PERIN BETTY H PERIN LARRY A PERKINS GARY M PERKINS KIM A PERKINS LINDA J PERRETT MARKJ PERRY CHARLES L PERRY KATHY L PERRY MELINDA A PETE TENOS M PETE WILSON REALTY PETERS CHARLES W PETERS RICHARD L PETERSEN GARY W PETERSEN JACK 0 PETERSEN LAWRENCE W PETERSEN MICHAEL S PETERSEN MORRIS J PETERSEN RICHARD L PETERSEN RONALD A PETERSEN WALTER F PETERSON ALETHA E PETERSON BETTY L PETERSON CAMILLE M PETERSON HOWARD M PETERSON JACK B PETERSON JAMES L PETERSON JOHN P PETERSON JUSTIN W PETERSON KEN PETERSON LOUIS F PETERSON PAUL D PETERSON RICHARD T PETERSON ROBERT R PETERSON ROLF R PETERSON THELMA PETFORD CHRIS PETRIE TOM PETTIT ANDREW K PETTIT RUTH PETTNER CHARLES A PETTY MARY PETTYJOHN MARILYN PFAFF HENRY V PFEFFER EDITH PFLAUM MICHAEL L PFLUGRAD W L PHEIFER KATHLEEN R PHELPS HENRY J PHILLIBER WILLIAM R PHILLIPS BEVERLY PHILLIPS DIAN L PHILLIPS LESLIE C PHILLIPS MICHAEL D PHILLIPS RON PHILLIPS RUBY H PHILLIPS TOM E PHILLIPS WILBURN A PHIPPS JEFF K PICARD PAUL D PICKARD BOB N PICKETT JAMES F PICKETT ROBERT E PIELSTICK SHANE C PIEPER DEAN M PIEPER HERMAN J PIEPER ROBERT L PIERCE DERRY L PIERCE DONALD E PIERCE GARY PIERCE HARRY PIERCE JAMES H PIERCE JOHN D PIERCE PATRICIA J PIERCE PAUL PIERCEY JACK E PILAND JOE C PILANT CHARLES A PILLION PAT PINA DAVID A PINSTER ROBERT H PINTER NANDOR I PIONEER INDUSTRIES PITTS CARROLL E PITZL MICHAEL J PIUBENI HARRIETT PLAGMANN GLEN W PLATT PATTY A PLUNKETT MARIA A POBANZ DONALD E PODOREAN GREY V POINDEXTER JEFF T POKOYOWAY RENEE POLLY LOIS C POND ELMER S PONTON KENNETH F POOLE ALBERT R POOLE FLORENCE E POOLE KATHY M POOLE STANLEY D POPE C EVERETT POPE TIM L PORTER CECIL L PORTER DARREN W PORTER DOUGLAS D PORTER KIM J PORTER MIKE E PORTER TRACIE R POTTER BRIAN P POTTER FRANK POTTER TRISH A POTTS RICHARD POULTON JUDITH M POVEY HAROLD B POWELL GARY E POWELL JAMES W POWELL MARVIN R POWELL MICHAEL L POWELL VIRGINIA L POWERS GENE F POWERS MICHAEL J PRALL DOUGLAS S PRATHER WILLIAM C PRATZ WARREN W PRENTICE BRUCE G PRICE BRIAN L PRICE JACK M PRICE JOHN E PRICE LINDA D PRICE LINDA K PRICE RHODA S PRICE STEVE D PRICE WESLEY B PRIEST KARL J PRINEVILLEHIGHLANDS LTD PRINZEN CHARLES PRITCHETT ROBERT J PRIVETT CLAUDE PRO QUALITY BODY SHOP PROPHET JESSE L PROSSER DAVID E PROSSER FRED L PROUGH WILLIAM W PRO-VEND SERVICES PROVINCE E C PUCKETT DONALD PUCKETT R JIM PUETT MARVIN L PUGH RONALD W PUGSLEY JOHN A PUNCHES WILLIAM A PUSHEE VIRL E PUTNAM GARY D PYLINSKI LARRY QUEARY LOUIS B QUEENER JAMES L QUINCY JAMES E QUINTANA JOE H QUIROS DAVID L QUITMEIER ROBERT P R AND T TRUCKING RAASINA K DIANA RABY MARGARET L RADER 0 CARL RAEBURN TOM J RAGSDALE KENNEDY RAILSBACK WILLIAM F RAINBOW COIN-OP LAUNDRY RAINBOWS END RANCH RAINEY JOHN RAMBERG CAROL A RAMER JOHN V RAMER STEVE D RAMGE RUTH J RAMSEY ALBERT L RAMSEY LLOYD F RAMSEY WILMA E RAMUS TERRY D RANCH HOUSE DELI RANKIN JOHN A RANKIN ROBERT M RANTSCHLERJOHN F RANYARD BONNIE R RAPACZ MARION RAPP STEPHEN M RAPUE KARON Y RASBERRY KORRINE M RASCHKE GLEN W RASK KENNETH R RASMUSSEN ROD D RASTER GRAPHICS INC RATH CHARLES F RATHBUN LELAND R RAU GEORGE A RAU STEVE P RAWLINS GARY RAWLINS GERALD S RAWLINSON RONALD F RAWLS CRAIG A RAYC N RAY DONALD A RAY NIAL A RAYBURN MARVA L RAYBURN WILLIAM S

SANDER C V SANDERCOCK PHYLLIS A SANDERS DUANE SANDILANDS JOHN R SANDNER K E FARMS SANDO MARY A REAM DAN SANFORD MARGUERIT E REARDON JEANNE SANSERI DEBBIE A REAVES WARREN SANTIAGO ALBERT RECLA SUSAN R SANTILLI GUIDO RECTOR AUDREY SANVILLE DAVID K RED CARPET SARGENT WAYNE H REDDICK MARK G SAUL IVAR REDDING DALE R SAUNDERS CAROLYN E REDDING CONST SAUNDERSTYLER M REED FRANK A SAVA D MICHAEL REED JOSEPHINE K SAVAGE MARILYN A REED LLOYD SCANNELL LEONARD W REED SANDRA A SCHAEFERSJOHN M REED WILLIAM C SCHAFFER JOE E REED WILLIAM M SCHAFFNER PAT REEKIE JOAN S SCHALKA KARL A REEVE FARIL SCHALOCK DAVID J REGISTER MARLENE G SCHAUB BRIAN C REHERMANN NORBERT SCHAUB DARIAN P REHN WARREN SCHECHTEL DAVID H REID OPAL K SCHLAGERJOHN REIFSCHNEFOER SCHLANGEN NANCY P JEFF R SCHLAUCH WILLIAM H REIGLES JOHN L SCHMAHL STEVE S REINHARDT JAN A SCHMELZ JOHN W REISWIG CAROL D SCHMELZ STANLEY C REITZ DAVID K SCHMID JOHN H RELCO BUILDERS SCHMIDT C MICHAEL REMSING ANTONE M SCHMIDT CHARLES W RENCHER FRANK L SCHMIDT LAURETTA RENFRO JOE SCHMIDT VERLIN E RENFROW DEAN L SCHMIDT VINCENT RENHARD C PAUL SCHMITH D H RENKEN GLEN P SCHMITT CARRIE RESPINI D RACHAEL SCHNABELE STEVE L RETZLAFF SANDRA SCHNEIBEL RICHARD R REX JOHN M SCHNEIDER ALAN C REYNEKE ROBERT SCHNEIDER MARTIN J REYNOLDS ANN L SCHNEPPER RHEA J REYNOLDS DON R SCHOLL MARY V EST REYNOLDS DOUGLAS R SCHOLLMEYER RUTH E REYNOLDS GEORGE SCHOONOVER REYNOLDS J R CHARLES L REYNOLDS LOIS SCHOR STEPHEN J REYNOLDS MIKE D SCHORSCH MARJORIE A REYNOLDS PENNI E SCHOSSOW GORDON F REYNOLDS RAYMOND L SCHOSSOW KAREN E REYNOLDS RICHARD S SCHRADER LAURENCE G REYNOLDS STEVE B SCHREIBER LISA J REYNOLDS TRACY SCHREINER GENE 0 RHEINHOLDT MARVIN SCHROEDER MERLE W RHINEHOLDT MARVIN SCHUDAWA WOLFGANG RHODEN DEBBIE L SCHUKART TERRY L RHODEN JACK E SCHULTZ JAMES L RHODEN RUSSELL L SCHULTZE GERALD W RHODES MARYANNE SCHUMAN WILLIAM RIBYAT JOANNE SCHUYLER ROBERT L RIC CONST CO SCHWEIGERT KENNETH M RICCI MARY L SCHWIEGER GEORGE B RICE DAVID R SCOFIELD ART E RICE J E SCOTT AUBREY W RICE JOHN L SCOTT AUDELL I RICE RICHARD A SCOTT DAVID R RICE TOM A SCOTT DESSAL L RICH CHARLES R SCOTT EMILY RICHARDS BERTHA J SCOTT JIM J RICHARDS DONNA M SCOTT KIM M RICHARDS WILLIAM M SCOTT STEVEN H RICHARDSON CLYDE R SCRIVENS TERRY A RICHARDSON RICHARD L SCROGGINS DOYLE B RICHARDSON WILMA SCROGGINS MIKE V RICKARD WILLIAM F SCRUGGS JAMES V RICKMAN ABE SEAL LOUISE RICKMAN STEVE SEALS CARL A RICKNER RICHARD H SEARCY DENICE RICO ALBERT SEARLES RONALD N RICO GARY L SEBASTAIN PEGGY RIDENOUR JANE E SEBER PATRICK R RIDGESTONE WATER SEDBERRY JOHN W SYSTEM SEDEY JANET L RIEMENSCHNIEDER SEE KEITH M RON SEEVERS TERRENCE L RIERSON ELIZABETH SEGALL ELLIOT RIGNEY R LEE SEGO WILLIAM J RILEY ERROLL F SELF BRENDA S RILEY MAX E SELINSKI LARRY RILEY THOMAS C SEPENUK NORMAN RING DON L SEPUT WALTER RIPS RESTR & LOUNGE SERAFIN LISA MARIE RISTAU WARD W SERAFIN NADINE RITCHEY MARTIN S SERBUS ROZANNA M RITCHIE FERN M SESSIONS GERALD RITTER JAMES L SETHE DARREN K RITTHALER MICHAEL T SETON F ANN RIVERA THOMAS E SETTLEMYER COLLEEN M RIX JAMES H SEVEN STAR RANCH ROACH B ANNE SEVERY LAWRENCE D ROACH KENNETH W SEXTON LEONARD E ROADENBAUGH JOE SHACKELFORD JOANNE L ROADENBAUGH JOHN A SHAFFER GENE E ROBART GREGORY P SHAFFER ROBERT D ROBB BETTY J SHAKESPEARE NANCY A ROBBEN JACK SHAKESPEARE VERNA S ROBBINS LAURA D SHANNON JULIE A ROBERT RHEN CONST SHANNON SANDRA ROBERTS A WILLIAM SHAPIRO STEVEN D ROBERTS ANTHONY SHARER ROY H ROBERTS BOB G SHARFF ALFRED J ROBERTS BURTON W SHARP PAMELA A ROBERTS DEL S SHARPNACK ERIC P ROBERTS GEORGE P SHATTO RHONDA C ROBERTS JANICE M SHAW KEITH ROBERTS L ROBIN SHAW MAXINE ROBERTS MICHAEL E SHAW PHILIP M ROBERTS PHILLIP F S ROBERTS RUSSELL C ROBERTS TIM P ROBERTS TOM H ROBERTSON GLENN C ROBERTSON GLENNA M ROBERTSON JOHN W ROBERTSON ORAN B ROBERTSON TERRY L ROBIDEAU RON R ROBINS DON ROBINSON CHERYL S ROBINSON DONALD D ROBINSON GREG L ROBINSON PAMELA R ROBINSON RICHARD H ROBINSON RITA ROBINSON SHEA T ROBINSON SUSAN J ROBISON DARLENE ROBISON PAUL T ROBY DONALD E ROCHEFORT JOSEPH R ROCKWELL JEANNE RODGERS NEIL H ROELKE JOHN ROES ALFRED P ROGERS BRIAN S ROGERS DANA L ROGERS DOUGLAS L ROGERS LELAND T ROGERS R L ROGERS STEVE M ROGERS TERRY L ROGERS TIMOTHY J ROGERS WILLIAM E ROGERS CONSTRUCTION INC ROGERSON RONALD G ROHAN JAMES B ROLFE JEANETTE G ROLLINS EDWARD D ROMBOUGH RUSS C RONCERAY MAURICE RONNE HARVEY D ROOPER BARBARA D ROOT GAIL H ROOT KENNETH A ROSE DAVID P ROSE DONALD ROSE DOROTHY A ROSE ELLEN E ROSE MICHAEL D ROSE RODNEY L ROSE WILLARD P ROSEBROOK RONALD E ROSENBERG CAROLE W ROSENBERG GLENN ROSENOW BARRY L ROSENSTIEL DENNIS R ROSENTHALJOHN C ROSES DELMAR R ROSIN MAUDIE S ROSS GEORGE W ROSS JAY K ROSS MIKE R ROSS R S ROSSA BRAD L ROSTAD MICHAEL P ROTH RUEBEN ROTHBALLER BETTY-JO ROWDEN KATHLEEN J ROWLAND JOSEPH M ROWLAND MARGARET A ROWLES GARY E ROY FC ROY THOMAS E ROYDON 0 M RRSS CORP RUBIO BONNIE L RUBY JASON L RUDD JOSEPH H RUDDELL BILL E RUDDIMAN R W RUEGG F CHARLES RUEGG FRANK C RUFKAHR ROSEMAE B RULE CHESTER RUNDELL RON A RUNDLE TOM C RUNNING SANFORD E RUNYON STEVEN A RUPE BETTY L RUSH DEBBIE J RUSHING CHARLES R RUSHING JON A RUSSELL H MICHAEL RUST ED F RUTHERFORDJOHN A RUTHERFORD ROBERT C RUTLEDGE CHIP A RUTSCHOW CHARLES 0 RUTTENCUTTER JOHN L RYSDAM FRANCIS E S & B FARMS WEST S AND H TIMBER CO ST B RETREAT CO SABIN PENNY M SADDLER GEORGE D SADER SUSAN A SALGADOLOZADA JESUS SALINAS JOE M SALING R L SALOMONE KAREN J SAMPSON BARBARA A SAMSON DENNIS C SAMSON DWAYNE A SAMUEL STEVE SAMUELS R R RAYMOND FREDRICK H RAYMOND JOHN P READ KENNETH L H READ & OHLDE FARMS INC READS CENTURY


E8 WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

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L e gal Notices

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LEGAL NOTICE

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THE

CIR C U IT IN

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L e g al Notices • D ER WRIT OF E X ECUTION - REAL P ROP E RTY. Notice is

CIR C U IT

COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for M eritage M ort-

Legal Notices • exclusion: "Approval, modification, or cont inuation o f mi n o r special uses of NFS lands that require less than five contiguous a cres of l and". A project file has been prepared to assess resource c o nditions and t he Dist r i ct Ranger has found that based on those ass essments, n o e x traordinary c i r cums tances exist. T h i s project is not subject to appeal per 36 CFR 215.12(e)(1) because a 30-day public comment period was offered and only supportive com m ents were received. T herefore, imp l e mentation of this decision may occur immediately. The Decision Memo and project file are available for review at the Crescent Ranger Station, 136471 Highway 97 N., Crescent, Oregon 97733. For more inf o rmation, contact Meria Page, Special Uses Administrator,

COURT O F T HE STATE OF OREGON hereby given that I will o n September 1 0 , DESCHUTES COUNTY. Deutsche 2013 at 10:00 AM in Bank Trust Company the main lobby of the Americas as Trustee Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office, 63333 R ALI 2005QA3, i t s 2005-2, successors in interest W. Highway 20, Bend, gage Plaintiff/s, v. Gonzalo and/or assigns, Plain- Oregon, sell, at public O. Najar; R a mona tiff/s, v. Martin Kuba; o ral auction to t h e Najar; Mort g age Pheasant Run Home- h ighest bidder, f o r cas h ier's Electronic R egistra- owners Association; cash o r tion Systems, Inc. as Wells Fargo B a nk, check, the real propN ominee C/0 M e r - N.A.; and Occupants erty commonly known itage Mortgage Cor- of the Premises, De- as 20632 R edwing poration, an Oregon fendant/s. Case No.: Lane, Bend, Oregon Corporation; and Per- 12CV0405. NOTICE 97702, an d f u r ther sons or Parties Un- O F S AL E U N D ER d escribed as, L O T (70), known Claiming Any WRIT O F E X ECU- SEVENTY FOXBOROUGH-PHA Right, Title, Lien or TION - REAL PROPInterest in the Prop- ERTY. N o t ic e is SE 2, D ESCHUTES erty Described in the hereby given that I will COUNTY, OREGON. Complaint He r e in, on August 6, 2013 at Said sale is made unD efendant/s. C a s e 10:00 AM in the main der a Writ of ExecuNo.: 11CV1072. NO- l obby of t h e D e s - tion in Foreclosure isTICE OF SALE UNchutes County sued out of the Circuit DER WRIT OF EXSheriff's Office, 63333 Court of the State of ECUTION - REAL W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon for the County P ROP ERTY. Notice is Oregon, sell, at public of Deschutes, dated hereby given that I will o ral auction t o t h e June 25, 2013. The Notice of Sale will be on September 3, 2013 h ighest bidder, f o r a t 10:00 AM i n t h e cash o r ca s h ier's published in The Bulletin, a newspaper of main lobby of the De- check, the real props chutes Coun t y erty commonly known general circulation in Sheriff's Office, 63333 as 61192 Lodgepole Deschutes C o unty, W. Highway 20, Bend, Drive, Bend, Oregon Oregon, on the folOregon, sell, at public 97702, an d f u r ther lowing dates: July 24, 541-433-3200. o ral auction t o t h e described as, Lot 2 of 2013; July 31, 2013; h ighest bidder, f o r Pheasant Run Phase August 7, 2013; and LEGAL NOTICE cash o r ca s h ier's I, City of Bend, Des- August 14, 2013. BEFORE BIDDING AT NOTICE OF PUBLIC check, the real prop- chutes County, OrTHE SALE, A PROAUCTION erty commonly known e gon. Said sale i s WRIGHT MINI a s 1364 N W 1 9 t h made under a Writ of SPECTIVE B I DDER STORAGE Street, Redmond, Or- Execution in Foreclo- SHOULD INDEPENegon 97756, and fur- sure issued out of the DENTLY I N V ESTIt her d escribed a s , C ircuit Court of t h e GATE: (a)The priority The contents of the following storage units LOT 1 , F O R REST State of Oregon for of the lien or interest t h e jud g ment will be auctioned to C OMMO NS , DES - the County of Des- of collect unpaid storCHUTES COUNTY, chutes, dated J une creditor; (b) Land use laws and regulations age fees on Saturday, OREGON. Said sale 17, 2013. The Notice applicable t o the July 27, 2013 at 10:00 is made under a Writ of Sale will be puba.m. of Execution in Fore- lished in The Bulletin, property; (c)Apclosure issued out of a newspaper of gen- proved uses for the WRIGHT MINI the Circuit Court of eral circulation in De- property; (d)Limits on for e st STORAGE the State of Oregon schutes County, Or- f arming o r for the County of Des- egon, on the following practices on the prop- 1835 S. HIGHWAY 97 of REDMOND, OR 97756 chutes, dated April 29, dates: July 3, 2013; erty; (e) Rights 2013. The Notice of July 10, 2013; July 17, neighboring property (541) 548-2138 owners; and (f)EnviSale will be published 2013; and July 24, ronmental laws and UNIT ¹'s: i n Th e B u l letin, a 2013. BEFORE BIDnewspaper of general DING AT THE SALE, regulations that affect ¹20 McCann, Christopher c irculation i n D e s - A PRO S PECTIVE the property. Attorney: ¹29 Leggett, Natasha chutes County, Or- BIDDER S H O U LD Michael T h ornicroft, ¹53 Johnson, Ronald OSB ¹981104, RCO ¹A8 Evans, Gerald egon, on the follow- INDEPENDENTLY ing dates: July 24, INVESTIGATE: (a) Legal, P.C., 511 SW ¹A12 Ruder, Steven 10th Ave., Ste. 400, ¹A14 Sauer, Cindy/ 2013; July 31, 2013; The priority of the lien Barrer, Robert August 7, 2013; and o r i nterest o f th e Portland, OR 97205, August 14, 2013. BE- judgment creditor; (b) 503-977-7840. Condi- ¹B57 Copeland, Kelly tions of Sale: Poten¹B60 Hahn, Gerald FORE BIDDING AT Land use laws and ¹B61 Perez, Eric THE SALE, A PROregulations applicable tial bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior ¹B80 Wilsie, Dezere SPECTIVE BIDDER to the property; (c) ¹B93 Kane, Dawn SHOULD INDEPENApproved uses for the to the auction to allow the Deschutes County ¹B96 King, Matthew DENTLY I N V ESTI- property; (d)Limits on Sheriff's Office to re¹C15 Peters, Kathina/ GATE: (a)The priority f arming o r for e s t Rose, Edward of the lien or interest practices on the prop- view bidder's funds. ¹E6 Evans, Gerald of t h e jud g ment erty; (e) Rights of Only U.S. c urrency cashier's ¹E16 Kral, Becky creditor; (b)Land use neighboring property and/or checks made payable ¹E36 Riedell, Elijah laws and regulations owners; and (f)Enviapplicable t o the ronmental laws and to Deschutes County ¹E42 Cowger, Ashley property; (c)Apregulations that affect Sheriff's Office will be ¹E103 Dickson, Phillip proved uses for the the property. Attorney: accepted. P a y ment property; (d)Limits on Michael T h ornicroft, must be made in full LEGAL NOTICE immediately upon the Notice of Public Hearf arming o r for e st OSB ¹981104, RCO c lose of t h e s a l e . ing Meeting T ype: practices on the prop- Legal, PC, 511 SW LARRY B L A NTON, Public Hearing by Poerty; (e) Rights of 10th Avenue, Suite neighboring property 4 00, P o rtland, O R Deschutes C o u nty lice Chief Jeff Sale as owners; and (f)Envi97205, (503) Sheriff. Anthony Ra- the J u stice A s s isronmental laws and 977-7840. Conditions guine, Civil Techni- tance Grant manager. Meeting Date: Tuesregulations that affect of Sale: Po t e ntial cian. Date: July 23, the property. Attorney: bidders must arrive 15 2013. day July 30, 2 013. Meeting Time 9am. Craig A. P e terson, minutes prior to the LEGAL NOTICE OSB ¹120365, Robin- auction to allow the Location: Bend Police Notice of Decision Department 555 NE son Tait, P.S., 7 10 Deschutes Co u n ty 2013 Recreation Second Avenue, Suite Sheriff's Office to re- Residences Projects15th Street, B e nd, Oregon. Pur p ose: 7 10, S e a ttle, W A view bidder's funds. Odell Lake and 98104, 206-676-9640. Only U.S. c urrency P ublic h earing f o r Crescent Lake written and oral views Conditions of S a l e: and/or cashier's Crescent Ranger Potential bidders must checks made payable to the City of Bend for District, Deschutes the proposed use of arrive 15 minutes prior to Deschutes County National Forest to the auction to allow Sheriff's Office will be the 2013 Justice Asthe Deschutes County accepted. P a y ment On July 18 , 2 0 13, sistance Grant for the Sheriff's Office to re- must be made in full Crescent City of Bend Police Dist r i ct Department. You can view bidder's funds. immediately upon the Ranger Holly Jewkes Only U.S. c urrency close of t h e s a l e. signed a irect questions o r De c ision d comments on the and/or cashier's LARRY B L A NTON, Memo for four recrechecks made payable Deschutes Co u n ty date by calling residence above 5 41.322.2992 f ro m to Deschutes County Sheriff. Anthony Ra- ation Odell Lake Sheriff's Office will be guine, Civil Techni- projects: 9am to 9:30am. Concabin X-11 a house tact f o r ad d i tional accepted. P a yment c ian. Date: July 2 , remodel due to struc- questions prior must be made in full 2013. to this tural integrity issues, meeting please call immediately upon the LEGAL NOTICE cabin T-3 a well inclose of t h e s a l e. IN T H E CIR C U IT stallation due to failKristel Muirhead at 541.322.2994. AccesLARRY B L A NTON, ure an d C r e scent COURT O F T HE Deschutes Co u n ty STATE OF OREGON Lake cabins CL-1 and sible meeting information - this meeting Sheriff. Anthony Ra- DESCHUTES CL-53 installation of guine, Civil Techni- COUNTY. Deutsche s ealed vaults. T h e event/location is acLancian. Date: July 23, l o c ation is cessible. Sign Bank Trust Company legal 2013. in t e rpreter Americas as Trustee Township 23S, Range guage, service, assistive lisfor RALI 2006QA4, its 6 E, Sections 7 8 18 devises, mateSell an Item successors in interest and T 24S R6E, Sec- tening rials in alternate forand/or assigns, Plain- t ions 14, 1 6 & 2 1 . mat, such as Braille, tiff/s, v. Adam Peter- Willamette Meridian, large print, electronic Klamath County, Ors on; Samantha D . formats and any other Loza; Fo x borough egon. accommodations are Homeowners AssoIf it's under $500 vailable upon a d ciation, Inc.; JPMor- T his project i s e x - a vance request. Please you can place it in gan Chase Bank, as cluded f ro m d o c u- contact Kristel MuirSuccessor to Wash- mentation in an envi- head no l ater than The Bulletin ronmental ington Mutual Bank; July 25 , 2 0 1 3 at Classifieds for: Wadden Research 8 assessment or envikmuirW riting ASC, L L C ; r onmental imp a c t 541.322.2994 head@bendoregon.g and Occupants of the statement. The Deci$10 - 3 llnes, 7 days providing at least 5 sion Memo cites cat- ov Premises, notice prior to $16 • 3 llnes, 14 days D efendant/s. C a s e egory 36 CFR days event will help enNo.: 12CV0575. NO220.6(e)(3) as the ap- the sure availability. (Private Party ads only) TICE OF SALE UNpropriate category of

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Property Ad d r ess: Hearing Room prior to 1 7270 B r an t Dr. , 2:00 p . m . No B end, O R 977 0 7 , admittance after 2:00 Minimum Bid: p.m. will be allowed. $ 20,000.00, Com ments: Residential lot. Cash is defined as all Sewer is a v ailable. legal U.S. currency. Buyer must treat wild- C ashier's che c k s fire fuels. Assessor must be payable to sale of real property Account: 126086, As- Deschutes C o u nty. checks under ORS 271.310 sessor Market Value: Cashier's and 275.110, notice is $35,000.00, Map and must be drawn on a Taxlot: financial in s t itution hereby given that, on that is authorized to August 9, 2 013, at 201119C002600, Add r ess: do business under the 10:00 a.m. in the Bar- Property laws of Oregon or the nes Hearing Room, 55642 Snow Goose Rd., Be n d , OR United States. If any 1300 NW Wall Street, 97707, Minimum Bid: part of the purchase Bend, Oregon, the Com - price is paid with a Sheriff or his desig- $ 20,000.00, ments: Residential lot. cashier's check the nee shall proceed to be sell, at public auction Sewer is a v ailable. purchaser w il l A c c ount: given a receipt in lieu to the h ighest and Assessor Ass e ssor of a certificate of sale best bidder, for cash, 113760, Value: until verification from c ashier's check o r Market terms, or combination $38,825.00, Map and the financial institution that final settlement thereof, the right and Taxlot: has been made on the title to and interest in 211022C000100, Property Ad d r ess: cashier's check. of Deschutes County 16187 Dawn Rd., La Upon receiving such in the real property 977 3 9 , verification, the listed below: Asses- P ine, O R Minimum Bid: purchaser will receive sor Account:127496, Com - a certificate of sale. If A ssessor Mark e t $ 44,000.00, ments: SOLD AS IS. any p ar t of the Value: $71,305.00, Map a n d Ta x l ot: Older one-story home purchase price is paid with attic (1024 sf) through the contract 151316AA00600, ter m s , the Property Add r ess: and shops. Assessor for Account: 114978, Aspurchaser w il l be 205 SW Black Butte given a certificate of Blvd., Redmond, OR sessor Market Value: 97756, Minimum Bid: $21,550.00, Map and sale that includes the Taxlot: t erms and w i l l b e $68,000, Comments: r equired to s ig n a SOLD AS IS. O l der 221014BD02601, Property Add r ess: p romissory note f o r one-story home with attic, 1100 sf. Asses- 51416 Evans Way, La which a trust deed will P ine, O R 977 3 9 , be recorded. sor Account:150790, Bid: A ssessor Mark e t Minimum $5,000.00, The highest offer for Value:$170,000.00, a ny parcel t hat i s Map a n d Tax l ot: Comments: Vacant l ot. May n o t h a v e equal to or exceeds 1611250001200, access. the minimum bid price Property Add r ess: legal A c c ount: shall be conditionally 64835 Bill Martin Rd., Assessor Ass e ssor a ccepted as o f t h e B end, O R 977 0 1 , 152289; Market Value: close of bidding for Minimum Bid: $53,660.00, Map and t hat p a rcel. U p o n $ 136,000.00, C o m conditional ments: Includes Con- Taxlot: acceptance of an offer ditional Use Permit for 2219000001200, Ad d r ess: at the time of the sale, nonfarm dwelling. As- Property sessor Acco u n t: Unassigned address, the sale as t o t h at sh a l l be 267308, Ass e ssor Deschutes C o u nty, parcel Bid: deemed closed. The Market Value: Minimum $38,400.00, B oard o f Cou n ty $170,000.00, Map Commissioners may and Taxlot: Comments: Vacant land. May not have authorize the sale of 1611250001201, Property Ad d ress: l egal a c c ess. Al l any real property not 64815 Bill Martin Rd., prospective b i dders sold at this auction to be sold by private sale B end, O R 97 7 0 1 , shall register the day pursuant t o ORS Minimum Bid: of the sale or with the Co u n ty 275.200. Additionally, $ 136,000.00, C o m - Deschutes Property S p e cialist Deschutes C o u nty ments: Includes Conreserves the right to ditional Use Permit for a ny b usiness d a y remove any property nonfarm dwelling. As- b etween August 1 , from the auction list at sessor Acco u nt: 2013 and August 7, Re g i stration or before the auction. 202728, Ass e ssor 2013. Market Value: may be in person at ALL PARCELS ARE 14 N W Kea r n ey SOLD AS IS. $12,270.00, Map and Avenue, Bend, P otential bidd e rs Taxlot: Oregon, between the should tho r oughly 171229AD00399, investigate all aspects Property Add r ess: hours of 9:00 a.m. Unassigned address, and 4:00 p.mx by fax of a property prior to bidding. D e s chutes Division St., Bend, OR at (541) 317-3168; or E-m a i l to County has not sur97701, Minimum Bid: by the $5,000.00, Com- teresa.rozic@deschut veyed es.org, by providing aforementioned real ments: Unbuildable bidderls legal name, properties and makes strip. Assessor Acphysical add r ess, no representation as c ount: 131690, A s mailing address and to boundaries, sessor Market Value: n u m ber. encroachments or $68,990.00, Map and telephone Bidders must provide encumbrances. Taxlot: an acceptable picture Deschutes C o u nty 1714210001900, does not guarantee or Property Add r ess: I.D. prior to bidding. warrant t h a t any 25340 Bachelor Ln., 4 0 0 p m . parcel is b u ildable, B end, O R 977 0 1 , Prior t o August 9, 2013, the suitable fo r s e p tic Minimum Bid: le g a l $ 54,500.00, Com - highest bidder will pay s ystem, ha s the full b alance of access, is vacant or is ments: SOLD AS IS. f or any Older manufactured bidder's provisionally usable home on 4+ a cres. a ccepted high b i d , particular p u r pose. The County shall not Alfalfa area. Asses- plus recording and sor Account: 151204, certificate of sale fees, warrant or defend the A ssessor Mar k e t in cash or cashier's fee simple title of real check or, for property offered for Value: $15,850.00, Map a n d Tax l ot: properties on which s ale to b e f r e e o f OI' financing is available defects 1916160000600, Property Ad d ress: per the above list, the e ncumbrances, b u t terms : w ill only s e l l a n d Unassigned Address, f ollowing either equal payments convey such interest Millican area, M iniover 10 years with a as the Coun t y mum Bid: $8,500.00, acquired by Comments: V a cant fixed interest rate of 5 .25%; o r , dow n foreclosure or other land. May not have payment and means and holds at legal access. Assessor Account: 151220, second/final payment the time of sale. FurA ssessor Mar k e t in 30 days; both with a thermore, conveyance is subject to all valid, Value: $ 1 3 ,560.00, nonrefundable cash recorded easements, Map a n d Tax l ot: down payment of not less than 20% of the r oad right o f w a y 1916160002100, price , dedications and t he Property Ad d ress: p urchase r ecording fees a n d right of any municipal Unassigned Address, certificate of sale fees, c orporation t o p u r Millican area, M inisecured by a chase such property mum Bid: $6,000.00, pursuant to State law Comments: V a cant promissory note and land. May not have trust deed. Copies of a nd subject to t h e legal access. Asses- the complete contract right of the Board of sor Account: 116359, terms may be found at County to A ssessor Mar k e t www.deschutes.org or Commissioners Value: $ 3 5 ,000.00, a c o p y wi l l be reject any and all bids. provided at $.25 per SOME P R OPERTY Map a n d Tax l ot: page upon request to WILL BE S OLD 201013A008000, TO Property Ad d ress: the County Property SUBJECT liste d BUYER AGREEING 5 6319 S t ellar D r . , S pecialist TO ELIMINATE THE B end, O R 97 7 0 7 , above. Minimum Bid: WILDFIRE F U ELS. $6,400.00, Com- On the sale date, Bid- A n example of t h e ders with t he Fuels Management ments: Vacant lot . is Assessor A c c ount: provisionally accepted Agreement 125971, As s e ssor high bid may leave available for review on Market Value: the premises to obtain the Deschutes County ca s h ier's website $25,000.00, Map and cash o r c hecks b u t mus t (www.deschutes.org) Taxlot: return to the Barnes and at the office of 201119B016000, LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE By virtue of Order No. 2013-025 adopted by the Board of County Commissioners of Deschutes C o u nty, Oregon, on June 12, 2013, authorizing the

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Legal Notices VANORSOW EUGENE J VANOSDOL DAVID L VANVOORST JAMES A VANYI DOROTHY M VARGAS LUCIANO R VARNER GILFORD C VARNEY VIRL G VARNON JACK VARNON JUDITH VAUGHAN JEFFREY C VAUGHN BENNY w VAUGHN HAZEL M VCELIK JAMES T VECQUERAY RICHARD C VEHLEN ARTHUR H VELA PAUL P VENN STEVEN A VENNER ARLENE M VERTZ C H VETTERICK ARNOLD E VICKERS WILLIAM v VIERLING LYNN T VIGGERS JUNE M VILES JOHN w VINCENT DOUGLAS G VINCENT TIMOTHY L viNSON JAMES A VIRGERY INC VIRTUE MAGAZINE VITITOE MARY E VLCEK JAMES J VOELKER CONNIE L VOGT JACK N VOISS DANIEL VOLKENAND ROBB C & KAREN VOLLE DEBRA VOLZ CHARLES G VON DESTINON LEONA VON WOGi OM WESLEY VORPAHL VERA VRANIZAN JAMES M w J RANCH iNC WACHTEL SHARON E WADDELL RICHARD N WADDELL STEPHEN A

Legal Notices

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Deschutes C o u nty Property Management, 14 NW Kearney Ave n ue, Bend, Oregon. P ackets of t a x l o t maps may be viewed through the website a ddress above o r purchased from the Deschutes Co u n ty Property Ma n agement Department at the above address. For information on the la n d sale auction, contact Deschutes C oun t y Property Management at f541) 330-4656. The sale lo c ation is wheelchair accessible. Materials are a v a i lable in alternative f o r mats. For the deaf or hard of hearing, an interpreter or assistive listening system will also be provided w i t h 48 hours notice. To a rrange fo r th e s e s ervices, plea s e contact Risk Management at (541) 3 30-4631. LAR R Y BLANTON, Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff. By A n t hony Raguine, Civil Technician. Published in Bend Bulletin. Date of Fir st and Successive Publications: July 10, 2013, July 17, 2013, July 24, 2013. Date of Last Publication: July 31, 2013. LEGAL NOTICE On Monday, August 5th at 1pm, 2 Units will be auctioned off to the highest bidder. A Plus Mini S t orage, 541-383-0081 LEGAL NOTICE Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by David C. Lepez, as grantor, to First American Title Insurance Company, as trustee, in favor of South Valley Bank & Trust, as beneficiary, dated June 2, 2010, recorded on June 7, 2010, in I n strument No. 2010-22152, covering the following described real property situated in that country and state, to-wit: L ot 8 in Block 1 o f TETHEROW C ROSSING, D eschutes County, Oregon. Wa s h ington Federal (current ben-

eficiary) is the successor e n t it y by merger to South Valley Bank and Trust. James R. U e rlings appoin

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Legal N otices

Legal Notices

wiLSON BARBARA J wiLSON BOBBIE WiLSON BRENDA L wiLSON CHARLES E ESTATE OF wiLSON CHARLES K WILES DONALD R wiLSON DAN WAGGONER RUSSELI R WARREN EDWARD H WEISZ JOHN w WHITAKER JEFF A WILES PATTY S WILSON DANA F WAGGONER TUESDAY N WARREN ROXANNE L WELCH RAYMOND WHITAKER KENNETH K WILEY ROBERT K wiLSON DARLE C WAGNER JOHN F WARREN SUE A WEi CH RONALD E WHITCHURCH NANCY E WILHELMI WALTER w wiLSON DAVID w WAGNER MARILYN A WARRINGTON ERNEST WELDON GERDA E WHITE BARBARA D WILHOUR RAYMOND G wiLSON DENNIS D WAGNER wiLL w WARRIOR RAY F WELDY VERA i WHITE BYRON D WILKINSON WILLIAM J wiLSON DICK R WAITZ BUD WARTON GERALD B WELLE MICHAEL J WHITE CLARENCE H WILLAMETTE SVNGS wiLSON DOUGLAS H WALDEN JAMES L WASCHGAU J A WELLER PATRICK WHITE DALTON D s LOAN wiLSON E E WALDEN SUSAN J WASMUNDT HARRY F WILLEFORD FRANCES E wiLSON GEORGE WELLS FLOYD H WHITE DEBBi WALDORF STEVE J WATER PROS WELLS H GENE WHITE DOUGLAS A WILLIAM DAVID J WILSON GRETCHEN C WALDRAM DAVID w WATER HOLE NBR 1 WELi S MIKE P WHITE ETHEL L WILLIAMS AUDREY M WiLSON HARLAN L WALKER Biuu R WATER SPORTS WELLS NANCY D WHITE JOSEPH T WILLIAMS BESSIE L wiLSON HAROLD w WALKER GERALD OUTFITTERS WELLS FARGO LAND CO WHITE JOSEPHINE C WILLIAMS CLIFFORD A wiLSON JACALYNN s WALKER GRAYSON A WATERS PATTY J WENDE COLLEEN WHITE LYNN A WILLIAMS DONALD L wiLSON JACKIE WALKER HOMER R WATKINS JIM H WENDT DAVID K WHITE MARTIN w WILLIAMS DOUGLAS w wiLSON JAMES 0 WALKER THOMAS A WATKINS JOHN C WENKER GEOFF J WHITEAKER HOWARD C WILLIAMS ELMER F wiLSON JON T WALL JEFF A WATKINS ROGER D WERTH GENE 0 WHITEID TROY D WILLIAMS GARRY A wiLSON JULIET C WALL MAX A WATSON CHRIS A WEST JOAN A WHITMAN CHARLES G WILLIAMS HELEN WILSON LEI AND D WALLACE JAMES WATSON JAMES H WEST JOCELYN G WHITMIRE DWAYNE WILLIAMS JOHN F wiLSON LEONARD H WALLACE RANCH CO WATSON JAMES L WEST KATHERINE A WHITMORE SYLVIA L WILLIAMS JUANITA G wiLSQN Lois E WALLENBURG M s WATSON RICHARD WEST RICHARD C WHITNEY EMERSON R WILLIAMS KEITH wiLSON MAX B WALLis CHARLENE WATSON ROBERT J WEST STEVEN A WHITNEY JACK C WILLIAMS LARRY J wiLSON NEVADA WALLS KATHLEEN WATTS CARL v WESTBROOK GLENN WHITSETT L W WILLIAMS LONNIE D wiLSON PATRICIA G WALSTER DON B WAUDBY MICHAEL 0 Assoc WHITTED OLIVER H WILLIAMS MICHAEL M wiLSON RALPH M WALTER N GORSON WEASER A R WESTCOAT STEVE M WHITTINGTON JANET E WILLIAMS RAY G wiLSON RICHARD E WALTERS DICK J WEATHERMAN WAYNE P WESTER TERI WIBORG ROGER C WILLIAMS ROBERT C WILSON ROBIN WALTERS ODIE WEATHERS LOU H WESTERN HERITAGE WICHE RICHARD H WILLIAMS ROGER E wiLSON ROY N WALTERS RANDY D WEBB CLINTON L WESTERN BANK WICK LESTER WILLIAMS SHARON wiLSON STEVE A WALTON BT WEBB FRED E WESTFALL JOHN M WICK MARY WILLIAMS THERESA wiLSON STEVEN H WALTON MARY J WEBB GERALD K WESTGATE FREDRICK E WICKERSHAM REX WILLIAMS TONY A WILSON VERA ESTATE OF WALTONEN EVERETT D WEBB STANLEY L WESTMORELAND WICKERSHAM RON G WILLIAMS W L WILT JAN M WALTRIP JEFF WEBB STEPHEN M CALVIN C WIEDEN JAMES G WILLIAMS WILLARD C WINANS RAY C WAMBAUGH DIANA J WEBB TAMARA J WESTPHAL DAVID 0 WIEDENMANN KURT R WILLIAMS WILLIAM E WINDLINX RICHARD S WAMPER SUE WEBB THOMAS H WESTSIDE TIMBER INC WIEGAND ADELINE C WILLIAMSON RALPH WINDOI PH JAMES H WAMPi ER BEVERLY A WEBB TRUDY WESTT MARY J WIENS MONTE L WILLIE i AVERN J WINES LEON E WANZO CHARLES M WEBER CHRisTiAN J WESTWQQD pRop wiESE IRVIN H WILLINGHAM LETHA P wiNG WALTER 8 WARBURTON ROBERT E WEBER DONALD L WETER 0 B WIESE JOE C wiuuis JAMES R wiNG RANCHES INC WARD BARBARA E WEBSTER KATHY A WEYGANDT TED 0 WIESE RICHARD L WILLOUGHBY STAN WININGER ROBERT A WARD DEBRA A WEDDLE ROBERT P WHEATLEY SUSAN M WIGGINS RONALD E WILi OWDALE STORE WINKLER BROOKE M WARD ELMER s WEDGE CiNDY s WHEELER DANIEL T wiGGS RICHARD B wiLSON ALICE F wiNN CHARLES R WARD MONTY U WEEKS W SCOTT WHEELER LYLE L wiKLUND WALLY WILSON ALVIN P WINSLOW JOHN B WADE DAVE A WADKINS JAMES R WADMAN v KEITH WAGENBLAST MARK WAGER BRIAN K WAGGONER PAUL R

L e g al Notices

WARE BRUCE D WARE EVERTON E WARNER DENNIS w WARNOCK MARGARET A WARPALA EDWIN v WARREN CHARLES r

WEIGEL DON WEISBERG JAMES B WEISLER MELANIE K WEISS LARRY R WEISS MAE T WEISSERT WESLEY R

WHEELER ROBERT A WHEELER-BART GEOFFREY H WHELAN RICHARD D WHISLER MARIE WHITAKER EVAN E

WILBER N E wiLCOX HAROLD E

wiucox LAWRENCE A wiucox AMELIA R/

Legal Notices WINTER JOE J WINTER MERYLE J WINTERBURN ROBERT G WINTERS ANITA WINTERS CARL r WINTERS EVERETT 0

Legal Notices • WRAY ORVILLE L WRiGHT BARBARA WRiGHT CAROL WRiGHT CHARLES U WRiGHT DWAIN R WRIGHT GARY E

Legal Notices ZARTMAN PAUL 0 ZAVACKI MYRA J ZEHNER PAUL C ZEILER JOHN E ZEITLER EDGAR A ZEKO STEVEN P

WINZ ROGER w

WRIGHT GARY M

ZEMKE JOYCE Y

WIRGES DOUGLAS L WIRTH GEORGE WISBECK STEVEN w WISDOM JACK L WISE MOLLY A WISER FRANK & ASSOCIATES WISNER W L WITKOWSKI STEPHEN L WITT GORDON E WOJTOWYCH JULIAN WOLCOTT BETTY G WOLF LINDA K WOLFE FLORINE M WOLFE HELEN i WOLFE LAUREL S WOLFE LEONARD J WOLFE MICKEY K WOLFF ROBERT WOM ACK SHANNON M WOOD DONALD G WOOD JOSEPH B WOOD MICHAEL w WOOD PAULA R WOOD ROBERTW

WRiGHT JEFFREY D WRiGHT LENA D WRiGHT MADELAINE C WRiGHT ORVILLE L WRiGHT RICHARD s WRiGHT SUSAN P WRIGHTMAN FRANK T

ZIEBART DAVID L ZIEBART ROGER A ZIEGLER A JACK ZIKA JAMES W ZIMICK RICHARD A ZIMMER ROBERT E ZIMMERLY ROY P

WRISTON HALTON L

ZIMMERMAN JOYCE F ZIMMERMAN THOMAS w

WUERFEL TIMOTHY D WYE LOIS B WYLAND SARA A WYNE LESLIE F WYNGARDEN JAY A WYNIA viRGiL R WYNVEEN WILLIAM G

YAHR VIC R YANCEY ROBERT 0 YATES ET YATES RICHARD A YOCOM GEORGE w YOHN JANET

YONGE w E

YORK BENNIE N

YORK DALE G

YORK KENNETH A YOUMANS RICHARD E WOOD WANDA M YOUNG DONALD E WOODBRIDGE RANDY w YOUNG G VANCE WOODLEY MARK C YOUNG HAROLD E WOODS CHARLOTTE A YOUNG KARLA D WOODS MIKE J YOUNG KATHLEEN A

wooD scoTT H

WOODWARD WILLIAM R YOUNG ROBERT WOOLLEY MICHAEL J YOUNGBERG WAYNE E WORCESTER JAMES A YUKL CHARLES w WORKINGER MARGIE M ZACK JOHN WORKMAN HAROLD WORKMAN WILLIAM A WORTHiNGTON 0 WADE ESTATE

ZAGARELLA CRIS N ZAHL NANCY L ZAHLER RICHARD ZAPF ERNEST

ZIMMERSHIED ANNIE F ZINGG TOM ZINK ALLAN P ZIRKLE DENNY R ZIRKLE NANCY ESTATE OF ZNEROLD R MICHAEL

ZOBRIST DONALD R ZOLLNER KENNETH E ZORBAS DAN N ZUFELT DONALD L ZULA E G ZUPAN JOHN J ZURFLU LYLE D ZYBACH JAMES J

ZYBACH JOHN

ZYLEWITZ BETTY


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