Bulletin Daily Paper 6/25/13

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75| t

TUESDAY June 25,2013

usi e ames accin en

Tastysalads

SPORTS• C1

AT HOME• D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

SALEM

Weather —Examining how pollution may calm storm

cycles.A3

RSCt'ultlng —How the Bend Elks becomeBend Elks. C1

Bulletin staff report Seasonally adjusted unemployment rates in Crook and Jeffersoncounties dropped from April to May, while Deschutes County's jobless rate last month remained essentially unchanged, according to figuresreleased Monday by the Oregon Employment

Inside • Unemployment percentages for the three counties,AS Department. However, all three counties saw year-over-year increases in jobs, according to a news release from the Employment

Department. The 1.8 percentage-point drop in unemployment in Crook County from May 2012 to May 2013 was the second greatest year-overyear declineamong Oregon counties, the release stated. Lake County, with a 2 percentage-point drop, topped

the list. Nonfarm employment in Crook County increased by 180 jobs from May 2012 to May 2013, according to the news release. The sector adding the highest number was transportation, warehousing and utilities, with 60 jobs. SeeJobs/A5

Plus: Hitting —Anew study examines whyMajor League hitters show worse

batting eyes astheseason progresses.A3

Marijuana dispensary bill passes state House By Lauren Dake The Bulletin

SALEM — A bill legalizing medical marijuana dispensaries passed the Oregon House of Representatives Monday. The measure, House Bill 3460,squeezedthrough on a 31 to 27 vote, and now heads to the Senate. The bill would

Paula Deen —Droppedby

give the Or-

inSide

Smithfield as other merchan-

• Sentencing bill clears com m ittee, 63

TWinkieS' return —The

egon Health Authority the ability to regulate the state's bur-

countdown is on.C6

geoning cannabis dispen-

disers wait and see.C6

saries and, proponents say,

help clear up legal ambiguHnw tn —Edge your lawn.D1

In national news —Historic immigration legislation

clears a keySenatehurdle. A2

esin ea es a mi OC

And a WebexclusiveNew technologies help disabled people into the workforce.

denddulletin.com/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Student debt eyed as deadline looms

Giving by top donors for 2012 weighed

By Adrlenne Lu Stateline.org

WASHINGTON — College students across the country are watching anxiously as Congress tangles

over competing proposals to keep the interest rate on federal student loans from doubling on July 1. Among those keenly monitoring the debate is Sampson Armstrong III, 18, of Fort Washington, Md., a rising sophomore studying finance at Howard University. To pay for college, he is taking out the maximum amount of subsidized and unsubsidized Staffordloans each semester, while his parents work long hours to help him cover the balance. Armstrong said he thinks of the estimated $100,000 to $110,000 he will owe by graduation as a brick house that he will have to tear down. "It's a huge hurdle," said Armstrong, who hopes to one day own his own venture capital firm. "It's scary at times, but I believe that when I leave college I will hopefully be in a position to start paying it back

By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

Photos courtesy George D. Lepp

eorge D. Lepp, a professional nature photographer, has been working in cooperation with rangers at Smith Rock State Park for some three months to document a bald eagle nest there. Lepp used a vantage point from cliffs above the nest — some 200 feet away — combined with highresolution long-lens capture technology to photograph the eagles without disturbing them. Smith Rock ranger Scott Brown says this pair of eagles has nested there for each of the last three years. The above photos show an eaglet at 2 weeks old dwarfed by the adult standing behind it and, later, an adult feeding a fish to one of the eaglets as the second looks on. At 9V weeks, the

regularly." Nationwide, more than 38 million people owe money through student loans. Together, they owe about $1 trillion, up from $550 billion at the start of the recession in late 2007, according to a new report by Congress' Joint Economic Committee, which means Americans now owe more in student loans than in credit card debt. See Debt/A5

ity for the some 200 clubs that already exist. State law currently allows anyone with valid medicalmarijuana cards to grow the productthemselves orhave someone else grow it for them. In recent years, clubs emerged as go-betweens forgrowers and clients. Technically, the clubs can't charge for the product, but clubmembers can use the club free or leave a donation. The dispensaries are not licensed and operate in a legally questionable arena. About 53,000 Oregonians have medical marijuana cards. The bill would create state-regulated dispensaries where cardholders could purchase medical marijuana. See Marijuana/A5

youngsters are nearly as large as their parents and have developed the speckled, dark-brown feathers Of juveniles. Video by Lepp showing the eagles is regularly featured at the Smith Rock Visitor Center.

TODAY'S WEATHER Chance of showers High 68, Low 49

The Bulletin

INDEX At Home D1 - 6 C lassified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Obituaries Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope D6 Sports Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies

B5 C1-4 D6

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 110, No. 176, 30 pages, 5 sections

WASHINGTON — A tiny fraction of donors, including a handful in Central Oregon, accounted for more than a quarter of disclosed campaign contributions made in 2012, according to a new analysis of campaign finance filings. Nationwide, the top 31,385 donors gave almost $1.7 billion in 2012, accounting for 28 percent of the total amount given, according to the Sunlight Foundation, a nonpartisan, nonprofit group based in Washington, D.C., that advocates greater transparency in government. In a nation of 313.85 million people, those 31,385 donors represent the top I percent of the top I percent. Of the $1.7 billion, $669 million went to party committees, $500 million to super PACs and $408 million directly to candidates for Congress. SeeDonors/A5

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013

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NSA leak —Edward Snowden,sought on espionage charges after bringing secret U.S.surveillance programs to light, receded still further

mmi ra ion

into the shadows Monday as the United States strenuously called on

Russia to turn him overfor prosecution. Snowden, aformer government contractor who hasnot beenseen in public since hewassaid to

cears enae es

have arrived in Moscow on Sunday after slipping out of Hong Kong, set off a flurry of diplomatic activity around the globe as frustrated U.S. of-

By David Espo and Erica Werner

Afghan attaCk —Suicide attackers blew up acar bomband

The Associated Press

EMAIL

N EW S R O O M

NATION 4% ORLD

WASHINGTON — Historic immigration legislation cleared a key Senate hurdle with votes to spare on Monday, pointing the way to near-certain passage within days for $38 billion worth of newsecuritymeasures along the border with Mexico and an unprecedented chance at citizenship for millions living in the country illegally. The vote was 67-27, seven more than the 60 needed, with 15 Republicans agreeing to advance legislation at the top of President Barack Obama's second-term domestic agenda. The vote came as Obama campaigned from the White House for the bill, saying, "now is the time" to overhaul an immigration system that even critics of the legislation agree needs reform. Last-minute frustration was

ficials tried to interrupt his flight to asylum. The 30-year-old fugitive has asked for refuge in Ecuador and other countries, according to Julian Assange, theWi kiLeaksfounder,who said he wasadvising Snowden.

evident among opponents. In an unusual slap at members of his own party as well as Democrats, Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas said it appeared that l awmakers on both sides of the political aisle "very much want a fig leaf" on border security to justify a vote for immigration. Senate passage on Thursday or Friday would send the issue to the House, where conservative Republicans in the majority oppose citizenship for anyone living in the country

related to immigration, action that ordinarily is a prelude to votes in the full House. "Now is the time to do it," O bama said a t t h e W h i t e House before meeting with nine businessexecutives who support a change in immigration laws. He added, "I hope that we can get the strongest possible vote out of the Senate so that we can then move to the House and get this done before the summer break" beginning in early August. He said the measure would illegally. be good for the economy, for Some GOP lawmakers have business and for workers who appealed to S p eaker John are "oftentimes exploited at Boehner not to permit any im- low wages." migration legislation to come Opponents saw i t o t h erto a vote for fear that whatever wise. "It will encourage more its contents, it would open the illegal immigration and must door to an unpalatable com- be stopped," Cruz exhorted promise with the Senate. At the supporters via email, urging same time, the House Judiciary them to contact their own senaCommittee is in the midst of ap- tors with a plea to defeat the proving a handful of measures measure.

SHOOTING TRIAL OPENS IN FLORIDA

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Monday night are:

f s O~~ O as OsO ~~ OaO The estimated jackpot is now $16.3 million.

MiSSing panda —A Twitter photo and phone tip from a resident helped animal keepers track down a red panda in a Washington neighborhood Monday after it went missing from the Smithsonian's National Zoo. The male named Rusty was captured in a tree near a home in the Adams Morgan neighborhood Monday

afternoon, said National Zoo spokeswoman Pamela Baker-Masson. IRS SCreening —The Internal RevenueService's screening of groups seeking tax-exempt status was broader andlasted longer than has beenpreviously disclosed, the new headof the agency acknowledged Monday.Terms including "Israel," "Progressive" and "Occupy" were used byagency workers to help pick groups for closer examination, according to an internal IRS document obtained by The

Associated Press. Ir8q bOmblllgS —A series of evening bombings near markets in and around Baghdadandother blasts north of the capital killed at least 42 people and wounded dozens of others Monday in the latest eruption of bloodshed to rock Iraq.

MBIIEISIB COlldifiOII — Former South African president Nelson Mandela remains in critical condition in a Pretoria hospital, President

Jacob Zumatold journalists at a packed press briefing Monday, calling on people to pray for his recovery and the media not to demand details of his treatment or condition.

3

AssiiB

TALK TO AN EDITOR

CORRECTIONS

Hamid Karzai was expected to talk about ongoing efforts to open peace talks with the militant group.

ban abortion in Texas. Opponents of abortion said the legislation was aimed at protecting women's health and unborn children.

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

REDMOND BUREAU

were gathering for a newsevent on Afghan youth at which President

Advocates for abortion rights said the measureswould effectively

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army said the attackers were killed but knew of no other deaths. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack that came as reporters

would ban abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy and hold abortion clinics to the same standards as hospital-style surgical centers.

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Business Tim Doran..........541-383-0360 City Desk Joseph Oitzler.....541-383-0367 CommunityLife, Health Julie Johnson.....................541-383-0308 EditorialsRichard Coe......541-383-0353 GO! Magazine Ben Salmon........................541-383-0377 Home, All Ages AlandraJohnson................541-617-7860 News EditorJan Jordan....541-383-0315 PhotosDeanGuernsey......541-383-0366 SporlsBill Bigelow.............541-383-0359 State Projects Lily Raff McCaulou ............541-410-9207

today after infiltrating one of the most secure areas of the capital. The

TeXaS abartiOIIS —The Republican-dominated TexasLegislature inched closer on Monday to passing some of the toughest abortion restrictions in the country as the state Houseapproved a bill that

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battled security forces outside Afghanistan's presidential palace early

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Qatar leaderShip —Sheik Hamadbin Khalifa Al Thani, the absolute ruler and emir of Qatar, who used his tiny nation's oil and gas

'

wealth to alter the course of events across the Middle East — siding with rebels in Syria and Libya, negotiating peace in Lebanon, hosting a U.S. military base and backing the militant group Hamas — told his

family he would abdicate andtransfer power to his 33-year-old son, a Qatari official confirmed on Monday. — From wire reports

Joe Burbank/ pool via New York Times News Service

George Zimmermanwaits for his defense counsel to arrive in court Monday in Sanford, Fla. Sixteen months after the fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin convulsed

thenation,openingargumentsbeganMondayinZimmerman'sseconddegree-murder trial. The basic question for the jury is: Did Zimmerman, who is Hispanic, mur-

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der Martin, an unarmedblack17-year-old, or did heshoot in self-defense? Prosecutors portrayed Zimmerman, 29, as reckless, a man with a vigilante streak and a concealed weapon. Defense lawyers will paint their

client, a volunteer neighborhood watch organizer in his condominium community, as a dutiful citizen on high alert after a string of burglaries and asthe kind ofm an anyone would want asa neighbor.

In Florida, second-degree-murder trials are heard by a jury of six people, not the customary12, and the jurors who were seated last week, all women, include one Hispanic and no African-Americans. They will spend

their days in the courtroom andtheir nights in a hotel under ajudicial se-

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questration order. The trial is expected to last two to four weeks. If convicted, Zimmerman, who is married and worked at a fraud-de-

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tection company before the shooting, could face amaximum sentence of life in prison. — New YorkTimes NewsService

I EW 2013 RAM15

High court compromises on college affirmativeaction

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The Supreme Court brokered a compromise on affirmative action i n c o l lege admissions Monday, telling courts to look more closely at the justifications for such programs but keeping alive for now theuse of race to achieve diversity. T he court voted 7 to I t o send the University of Texas's race-conscious admissions plan back for further judicial view, and told the lower court to apply strict scrutiny, the toughest judicial evaluation of whether a government's action is allowed. "A university must make a showing that it s p lan i s narrowly tailored to achieve t he only i n terest that t h i s Court has approved in this c ontext: the b enefits o f a student body diversity that ' encompasses a . . . b r o a d array of qualifications and characteristics of which racial or ethnic origin is but a single though i mportant element,'" wrote Justice Anthony Kennedy. The decision could spawn challenges of race-conscious admissions decisions e lsewhere, but stopped short of ruling out the use of race, as affirmative action opponents

SupremeCourt ruled on

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TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

M ART TODAY

A3

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

It's Tuesday, June 25, the 176th day of 2013. There are 189 days left in the year.

STUDIES HAPPENINGS EnViranment —President Barack Obamagives aspeech at Georgetown University in which he will detail his plan for

confronting climate change. HOuSing —The U.S.Commerce Department releases new homesalesforMay.

ere o itters'ees o? Dirtier air seen A Vanderbilt study found that as the baseball season progressed, swinging at pitches outside the strike zone tended to rise. The researcher suggested

By Justin Gillis

that — as with many activities — fatigue may be a factor.

New York Times News Service

By Nicholas Bakalar

HISTORY Highlight:1973,former White

House CounselJohn W.Dean began testifying before the

Senate Watergate Committee, implicating top administration officials, including President

Richard Nixon aswell as himself, in the Watergate scandal

and cover-up. In 1788, Virginia ratified the U.S. Constitution. In1876, Lt. Col. George A. Custer and his 7th Cavalry

were wiped out by Sioux and Cheyenne Indians in the Battle of the Little Bighorn in Montana. In1888, the Republican National Convention, meeting in

Chicago, nominated Benjamin Harrison for the presidency. (Harrison went on to win the election, defeating President

Grover Cleveland.) In1910, President William Howard Taft signed the WhiteSlave Traffic Act, more popu-

larly known asthe MannAct, which made it illegal to trans-

port women across state lines for "immoral" purposes. In1938, the Fair Labor Stan-

dards Act of1938 wasenacted. In1943, Congress passed,over President Franklin D. Roosevelt's veto, the Smith-Connally Anti-Strike Act, which allowed the federal government to seize

and operate privately owned war plants facing labor strikes. In1950, war broke out in Korea

as forces from the communist North invaded the South. In 1962, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Engel v. Vitale, ruled 6-1 that recitation of a state-

sponsored prayer in NewYork State public schools wasunconstitutional. In1988, American-born Mil-

dred Gillars, known as"Axis Sally" for her Nazi propaganda broadcasts during World War II, died in Columbus, Ohio, at

New York Times News Service

Even the best hitters succumb. The season marches on, game after game, and they begin to flail. Picky in spring, they are ever more undiscerning come summer and fall. According to a study by researchers at Vanderbilt University, the further the major league baseball season progresses, the more often batters swing at bad pitches. The reason is uncertain. In May 2012, Robinson Cano swung at 27percent of pitches outside the strike zone. In June, that rate was 37 percent, then up to 41 percent in July, 36 percent inAugust and 37 percent in September. The three-time most valuable player Albert Pujols' rate of errant swings went up every month last season

The Associated Press file photo

Dr. Scott Kutscher, a sleep specialist, says he has no proof that fatigue is the culprit in batters' declining discipline throughout the season, but he believes that's what the numbers indicate.

their 0-swing rate to 33 percent in Septemberfrom 34 percent in April. "It would be interesting to see if a team's won-lost record goes down as they're swinging out from May (32 percent) through of the strike zone more," New September (40 percent), except York Mets catcher John Buck for a dip in July. said. Dr. Scott Kutscher, a neurolKutscher's numbers saynothogist, and his colleagues used ing about how 0-swing rates data from Fangraphs' database might correlate with won-lost for 2006 to 2011 to calculate the records. As the Chicago Cubs so-called0-swing percentage limped to a 61-101 finish in 2012, — the percentage of swings at their 0 -swing r ate actually balls outside the strike zone. dropped to 30 percent in SepThe rate, they determined, rises temberfrom 35 percent in May. steadily over the season. An in- Vladimir Guerrero hit 429 cacrease ofabout half a percent- reer home runs and batted 318 age point a month was typical. while swinging at more than Based on the 2006-11 data, 40 percent of pitches that never Kutscher also predicted results entered the strike zone. On the for 2012 and found that 24 of other hand, the wild-swinging 30 teams hadpoorer plate dis- Astros wound up withthe worst cipline at the end of the season record in baseball last season, than at the start. Overall, bat- while the Giants improved their ters swung at 29.2 percent of plate discipline and won the bad pitches in April and 31.4 World Series. percent of them in September, Kutscher, a sleep specialist, with monthly increases that says he believes the trend is revaried slightly from the predict- lated to fatigue, even if he caned curve on Kutscher's graph. not prove it. "A lot of factors go into the With some teams, the difference was drastic. The Houston Astros, for example, had an 0swing rate of less than 26 perHIGH DESERT BANK cent in April and of 34 percent in September. At the other end of thescale,the 2012 San Francisco Giants actually improved II I I I •

I •

age 87. (Gillars hadserved 12 years in prison for treason.) In 1998, the U.S. Supreme

Court rejected a line-item veto lawas unconstitutional, and ruled that HIV-infected people

are protected by theAmericans with Disabilities Act.

In2009,death claimed Michael Jackson, the "King of Pop,"

in Los Angeles atage 50and actress FarrahFawcett in Santa Monica, Calif., at age 62.

Tenyearsago:TheRecording Industry Association of Ameri-

ca threatened to suehundreds of individual computer users who were illegally sharing mu-

sic files online. Five years ago:A divided U.S.

Supreme Court struck down a Louisiana law that allowed

capital punishment for people convicted of raping children under 12; the ruling also invalidated laws in five other states

that allowed executions for child rape that did not result in the death of the victim.

One yearago:A divided U.S. Supreme Court threw out

Receiving a cancer diagnosis is difficult at any age. But the phrase "you have cancer"is never something you expect to hear at age 37. In August 2011, after a few strange, mild symptoms, Steffany Woolsey was diagnosed with an aggressive and malignant brain tumor. Although most of the tumor was removed through surgery, her physicians believe it will recur. And now,after different types of chemotherapy, infusions and radiation therapy, Steffany is out of medical treatment options. She spends each day with her young family focusing on what she can do — including eating well and exercising — and leans in to the faith that has carried her from the beginning of her cancer journey.

major parts of Arizona's tough

crackdown onpeople living in the U.S. without legal permission, while unanimously upholding the law's most-

discussed provision: requiring police to check the immigration status of those they stop for

other reasons, but limiting the legalconsequences.

Even if her journey ends tomorrow, Steffany says she has never felt fear. Her faith allows her to see clearly beyond the cancer diagnosis and be thankful for each memory and each moment. St. Charles Cancer Center, honored to be part of your story in the fight against the Big G.

BIRTHDAYS Civil rights activist James Meredith is 80. Singer Carly Simon is 68. Actor-comedian

Jimmie Walker is 66. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor is 59. Actor-writer-director

Ricky Gervais is 52. Rock singer George Michael is 50.

ar es CANCER CENTER

Former NBA player Dikembe

Mutombo is 47.Rapperproducer Richie Rich is 46. — From wire reports

StChariesHeaithCare.org/cancer SB

'

to soothe storms

numbers, but that they've been so consistent year to year is striking," he said. "There's no instance averaged over a few years where teams vary much fromthis. This strongly suggests that fatigue is playing a role." Could the increase in the major leagues' average 0-swing rateto 30.8percentlastyear from 23.5 percent in 2006 have something to do with an increase in strikeouts over the same period? All that wild swinging suggests that poor strike zone judgment might be one factor, and that fatigue may play a role thatplayers should consider. "Athletes take great care in what they eat, how they train," Kutscher said, "and to me, looking at the data, it also makes sense that they start thinking about how they sleep in the same way."

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To the ever-growing list of ways humanity seems to have altered the Earth, add another candidate: Air pollution may have had a major soothing influence on storm cycles in the North Atlantic. That is the finding of a paper published this week, suggesting that industrial pollution from North America and Europe through much of the 20th century may have altered clouds in ways that cooled the ocean surface. That, in turn, may have suppressed storms, and particularly major hurricanes, below the level that would have existed in a purely natural environment. If the authors are right, the upturn in storms over the last couple of decades may be no accident. It could, instead, be at least partly a consequence of the clean air acts that have reduced pollution around the North Atlantic basin, thus returning the storm cycles to their more natural state. The possible impact on storms emerged from sophisticated new computer analyses of the climate that attempt to take account of the indirect effects of particles in the air; it is leading-edge science that may or may not hold up over the long hauL "Our results show changes in pollution may have had a much larger role than previously thought," said Nick J. Dunstone, a researcher with Britain's meteorological ser-

vice and the lead author of the new paper. He acknowledged, however, that "this is all quite new" and the science remains uncertain. As many people will recall, the North Atlantic was quiescent in the 1970s and 1980s,

especially for major hurricanes,creating a false sense of security and encouraging c oastal development. B u t starting in the 1990s, storminess increased sharply, and the new study says that may be because clean air laws had started to take effect. Previous work had sugg ested pollution could b e playing a significant role in storminess, but the new paper is the most detailed exploration yet of the possible mechanism. It was published online Sunday by the journal Nature Geoscience. The alternative to this new view is the one most climate experts have long held, that the variability in storminess in the North Atlantic is a function of large-scale natural oscillations in the ocean circulation. Five scientists not involved in the new work said they found the findings believable in principle — "entirely plausible," in the words of Kerry Emanuel, an a t m ospheric scientist at th e M assachusetts Institute of Technology. Severalofthe experts added, however, that the effect of pollution on s torms, even if real, could turn out to be smaller than the new paper

proposes.

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 20'I3

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TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A S

jobs Continued from A1 While Deschutes County's seasonally adjusted j obless rate for May changed little compared to April's revised rate, its unemployment rate

year over year dropped more than 1.5 percentage points. Deschutes County a dded 2,080 jobs between May 2012 and May 2013. The three sectors showing the highest job growth were leisure and hospitality, 600 jobs; educational and health services, 590; and

mining, logging and construction, 310.

Debt

Donors

Unemploymentrates May 2013 Crook County 12.5% Deschutes County 10.0% Jefferson County 10.7% U.S. 7.6% Oregon 7.8%

April 2013 May 2012 12.8% 14.3% 10.1% 11.6% 11.2% 12.2% 7.5% 8.2% 7.9% 8.8%

Source: Oregon Employment Department

Jefferson County's one-half p ercentage-point decline i n unemployment from April to May was one of the largest in the state, the news release stated. Year over year, the rate has

dropped 1.5 percentage points. From May 2012 to May 2013, Jefferson County added 70 jobs, with the largest growth occurring in the manufacturing sector.

Continued from A1 In a blog post on Monday, Sunlight Foundation senior fellow Lee Drutman noted that every c andidate elected to Congress in 2012 received some money from this group of wealthy donors. "Money from the nation's 31,385 biggest givers found its way into the coffers of every successful congressional candidate," he wrote. "And 84 percent of those elected in 2012 took more money from these I percent of the I percent donors than they did from all of their small donors (individ-

uals who gave $200 or less) tunities for young adults aged 18 to 34. The College Board estimates that the average debt for those who took out student loans and earned bachelor's degrees in 2010-2011 from the four-yearcolleges where they began their studies rose 18 percentfrom a decade earlier, after adjusting for inflation. Vermont Gov. Peter Shumlin, a Democrat, has pushed a number o f i n i t iatives to make higher education more affordable. "Like most governors in the country, I'm focused on jobs," Shumlin said in an interview. "While we are enjoying the third-lowest u n employment i n America, when I t alk t o employers, they tell me they don't have enough students graduating with the skills to fill our jobs." S humlin's budget for t h e

Continued from A1 About two-thirds of those who graduated in 2011 had student l o a ns , a c c ording to The Institute for College Access and S u ccess, also known as TICAS, a nonprofit based i n O a k l and, C a l if., which aims to make higher education m o r e a v a i lable and affordable. The average amount of debt for borrowers was $26,600. "It makes no sense to let interest rates on subsidized loans double when .. . st udents are facing a tough job market an d r i s ing c o llege costs," said L auren A sher, president of TICAS. "We've seen student loan debt keep rising because college costs have outpaced both family incomes and available grant ald. Although much of the cur- upcoming rent debate about r ising stud e n t debt i s h a p pen- "Someone ing at the federal used to be level, th e s t ates played a c e ntral able to go to role i n b a l l o on- school, work

legislatures across the country have passed a number of bills aimed at making college more affordable. The Indiana General Assembly, for example, approved a bill earlier this year to make more state loans available to students at-

combined." In Oregon, 191 top donors gave $8,406,867, ranking 21st in both categories nationwide. (Oregon ranks 27th in p opulation.) The top five states for total giving were California ($239

tending college.

million), New York ($210 million), Texas (almost $199 million), Florida ($119

Many states have created o r expanded eligibility f o r state scholarships: • The A r k a nsas General Assembly voted to raise the maximum amount of money on scholarships funded bythe state lottery for nontraditional students, from $12 million to $16 million. The legislature also approved legislation to make students who receive GED c e r t i ficates e l i g ible for the Arkansas Academic Challenge Scholarship, which is paid for through the state lottery and this year expects to raise net revenues of about fiscal year chan- $90 million for scholarships. n eled a n a d d i • Maryland l aw m a k e rs t ional $2.5 m i l created a ne w s c holarship lion, or 3 percent, for students who are the first into the base ap- in their f a milies to a t tend p ropriation fo r college. higher education, • N orth D a kota n ow a l the first raise in lows homeschooled students ing college costs. full time over f ive years. T h e to receive state-funded caS ince th e s t a r t entire bump will reer and technical education of the r ecession, the summer go t o f i n a ncial scholarships or academic many states have and pay for aid to students. scholarships. slashed f u n d i ng their local On J u n e 6, • New Mexico's legislature for public colleges Shumlin s i gned increased the maximum famand u n iversities, public state i nto l aw the ily income from $30,000 to university. Now " Flexible P a t h - $60,000for students applying prompting instituways" i n itiative, for a state scholarship. tions to raise tu- they do that ition. At the same which i n creases • A nd l egislatures in I n time, some states and save up funding for a pro- diana and Oregon voted to have e x p a nded for a fraction g ram a l l o w i ng grant in-state tuition rates at loan and scholar- of tuition." high school ju- the state's public institutions ship p r o g rams niors and seniors for veterans from any state. to help s t udents — Jen Mishory, to earn c o llege But in some states, budget m anage the r i s Young Invincibles credit. The legis- realities have prompted cuts ing cost of higher lation also allows that will further add to stueducation. more col l e ges dent debt. In New Jersey, for States are now spending to create "early college" pro- e xample, after G ov. C h r i s $2,353 less per student, or grams accepting high school Christie threatened to elimi28 percent less, on h i gher seniors, which is intended to nate a popular financial aid education than they did five make college more affordable p rogram i ntended t o h e l p years ago, adjusted for infla- for students.Both are free to keep top students in the state, tion, according to a March re- students. l awmakers saved th e p r o port by the Center on Budget In F l o r i da , R e p ublican gram but cut by more than and Policy Priorities, a non- Gov. Rick Scott last month half the amount of m oney partisan think t a nk . CBPP vetoed a 3 p e r cent tuition students can receive. found that every state except hike at s t ate colleges and Ultimately, how the federal for North Dakota and Wyo- universities that had been ap- government and th e states ming now spends less per proved by lawmakers. Now, address the growing student student on higher education he is urging the institutions l oan dilemma w il l h av e a than before the recession to absorb an automatic cost- significant impact on t h eir of-living bump of 1.7 percent, economies. and that Arizona and New Hampshire have cut higher so that tuition does not rise. Unless Congress steps in education spending per stu- According to the Palm Beach before the July I d e adline, dent in half. Post, tuition at Florida's pub- the interest rate on s ubsiThe impact of the cuts can lic universities has g r own dized Stafford loans is set to be clearly seen in rising tu- 72 percent over the past five jump from 3.4 percent to 6.8 itions at public colleges and years. percent. (Interest does not universities. T h e a v e r age "Higher education in Floraccrue on subsidized loans p ublished t u ition a t f o u r - ida should be affordable so during periodsof deferment; year public colleges grew by it is accessible to as many it does accrue on unsubsi$1,850, or 27 percent, since Florida families as possible," dized loans.) More than 7 2007-08, after adjusting for Scott said earlier this month, m illion b o r r owers w o u l d inflation. Increases topped 70 responding to a r e port as- owe more money with a rate percent in Arizona and Cali- sessing Florida's public colincrease. fornia, according to CBPP. leges and universities. The pending Stafford loan "Someone used to be able In Alaska, Republican Gov. rate hike would cost those to go to school, work full time Sean Parnell counts among who borrow the m aximum over the summer and p ay his top achievements workamount in subsidized Staffor their l ocal public state ing with the state legislature ford loans an extra $4,500. university. Now they do that to create t h e m e r it-based Last year, facing the same and save up for a fraction of Alaska Performance Schol- deadline, and, like this year, tuition," said Jen M i shory, arship, which awards Alasunder pressure from Presideputy director of Young In- kan students up to $4,755 per dent Barack Obama, Convincibles, a n ational youth year for college or training in gress voted at the last minute o rganization d e dicated t o Alaska. to extend the lower rate for expanding economic opporOver the past year, state one year.

Continued from A1 The legislation would require th e d i spensaries, or whatevername they choose to

go by, to pay a $4,000 licensing fee. The state w o ul d c r eate a registry o f d i s pensaries, which would allow it to track the amount of marijuana that flows between growers and cardholders.The state could also check dispensary owners' backgrounds and test the quality of the product. The b il l i n c ludes o t her regulations as well, such as ensuring dispensariesare at least 1,000 feet from a school and 1,000 feet from another dispensary. Rep. Peter Buckley, D-Ash-

What it would do: Give the Oregon Health Authority the ability to regulate the

state's medical marijuana dispensaries. What's next: The bill

passed the Houseand heads to the Senate.

land, who backed the bill, said it will help the elderly, i n particular, who h ave a hard time f i n ding m edical marijuana. "This bill focuses on one thing, safe access to medical

marijuana for people legally qualified to access it," Buckley sa>d. S unday Comlinson, w h o

owns the cannabis club Bend Best Buds, said she's in favor of state regulation. Comlinson, who has been in business for two years, said regulation would ensure people "aren't getting it off the street." Rep. Andy Olson, R-Albany, a former Oregon StatePolice officer, spoke against the bill. He worried it doesn't go far enough to stop the black market, and he urged lawmakers to wait until 2014 to come up with m o r e c o m prehensive legislation. He said he's concerned that the bill provides insufficient oversight of marijuana dispensaries. "I'm just a little frustrated with t h i s whole bill right now," Olson said. — Reporter,541-554-1162 ldakeC<bendbulletin.com

most generous 31,385 campaign donors from 2012 represent the top 1 percent of the top 1 percent. All told, they gave gave almost $1.7 billion in 2012.

Minimum contribution to becomepart of the1% of the1% (in 2012 dollars)

$13,054

$10,000 $5,000

$3,560 0

1990 '92 '94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 2012

Giving in federal elections • 1% of the1% giving A l l other giving — Trend line 100'/ 75% 50% 25%

0 1990 2000 2002 2004 2 006 2 008 2 010 2 112 (Presidential (Presidential (Presidential (Presidential election) ele ction) ele c tion) ele c tion)

million). Many of the top donors are concentrated in big cities, according to the Sunlight Foundation's figures. T he U.S. cities with t h e most big contributors were New York (where 2,259 top donors gave almost $153

Total contribution by donor partisanship The vast majority of donors gaveonly along party lines. • Democrats • Republicans $500M

$400M

million) and Washington,

$300M

D.C. (814, almost $31 million), followed by Houston

$200M

(664, $68 million) Chicago

$100M

(603, almost $46 million)

and Los Angeles (598, $40 million). The same trend holds true in Oregon, where 102 of the 191 total top donors live in Portland and contributed $5,001,161 total. There were seven from C entral O r egon, al l o f w hom r eside i n B e nd. Those s even in d i v iduals contributed a total of $171,237. Of the total contributionsfrom Bend, $52,988 (or 31 percent) went directly to candidates, $113,749 (66 percent) to party committees, and $4,500 to political action committees (3 percent). "Our data also cast doubt on the stereotype about big money being p olitically pragmatic," Drutman wrote. "Less than 4 percent of the most generous political donors spread their money close to evenly between the two parties (a 60-40 split or less). Four out of five I percent of the I percent donors were pure partisans, giving all of their money to oneparty or the other." Of th e 4 3 5 m e mbers elected to the House of Representatives in 2012, only two — Reps. Luis Gutierrez, D-III., and Jose Serrano, D-N.Y., received less than $10,000 from the very top donor, the Sunshine Foundation found. In the Oregon delegation, both Rep. Peter DeFazio, DSpringfield, collected less from top donors ($65,262,

100

80 / 2 0 I 6 0 /40 60 / 4 0 I 8 0 /2 0 100 9 0/10 7 0 /3 0 50 / 5 0 70 / 3 0 90 / 10 Donor/partisan split

or 5 percent of his total campaign contributions) than from small donors ($370,568, or 28.2 percent) and Suzanne Bonamici, D-Beaverton, ($286,765, 12.6 percent vs. $407,003, 17.9 percent). Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, collected $304,459, or 11.2 percent, from the I percent of 1 percent and $145,812, or 5.4 percent, from small donors. Reps. Earl Blumenauer, D-

T

Clas'stfiecCs

— Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com

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Portland, ($148,987, 12.6 percent vs. $49,595, 4.2 percent) and Kurt Schrader, D-Canby, ( $210,266, 11.9 percent v s. $146,814, 8.3 percent) also benefited more from top donors than from small contributions. Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden, both D-Ore., were not part of the Sunlight Foundation's analysis as neither ran for re-election in 2012.

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6

©

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013

STATE NEWS

BEAR CREEKELEMENTARY •

At the coast, local teacher becomes a lifesaver

Salem Corvaiiis

• MOntoya, OffiCialS • Legislature:A revised bill aimed at flat-lining the state's prison

mum OnreaSOning for district's action

By Branden Andersen The Bulletin

population advances to the House floor. • Corvallis:Professional

brewers hopeto become better through Oregon State classes. • Plus:An annual ranking of the well-being of American children

ranks Oregonrelatively low on the list. Stories on B3

Well shot! reader photos • We want to seeyour best photos of water

sports for another special version of

Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section.

Submityour best work at www.bendbulletin

.com/watersportsand we'll pick the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number.Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

Stacy Neil stayed calm Saturday afternoon despite the vision of her husband, Nathan Neil, heading into the Beverly Beach surf, near Newport, on a rescue mission. In the water, four young swimmers

By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin

On the third floor of the Bend-La Pine Schools office Monday evening, parents, children and family members waited anxiously for two hours to hear that Bear Creek Elementary School Principal Matt Montoya was placed on paid administrative leave. "Hearing that he might lose his job was just devastating," Bear Creekparent Lauren O'Sullivan said. "It's just baffling. I can't understand what would cause this. Everybody loves him, so it's

yy

struggled

shocking."

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

About 150 people turned out to support Montoya, who said he was notified by the district last week that he could be fired at an evaluation meeting Monday afternoon. Instead, he was placed on leave pending further investigation by the district, according to his lawyer, Katherine Tank of Bend, and school district spokeswoman Julianne Repman. Another meeting has not been scheduled, Repman said. Montoya declined to talk about what transpired at the meeting. Many of his supporters wore purple shirts, the school color, carried pompoms and held signs with slogans such

www.bendbulletin.com/local

Bear Creek Elementary Principal Matt Montoya addresses a crowd of his supporters Monday on the steps of the Bend-La Pine school district building before his meeting with district officials.ui hope to be there with all of you the first day of school," Montoya said; he was later placed on paid administrative leave.

"Hearing that he might lose his job was just devastating. It's just baffling. I can't understand what would cause this. Everybody loves him." — Lauren O'Sullivan, a parent

as "Bear Creek Loves Mr. Montoya" and "A bilingual school needs a bilingual principal." Montoya met with his supervisor and a representative from the district human resourcesoffice.N either the district nor Montoya would comment on the grounds for

his being placed on leave. Repman said the district is barred by law from releasing any information about the case. Montoya'swife,Jennifer Montoya, said Friday that the district had told her husband that the grounds for his pos-

sible termination were related to his job performance. School officials declined comment on that statement. Hired as principal of Bear Creek in 2010, Montoya was described by many Bear Creek parents at the rally as being a well-liked, interactive and caring principal. A few of his supporters work at the school. Melanie Kent, a third-grade teacher who has been there two years, held a sign saying "Will Work for Montoya." See Bear Creek/B5

against a rip tide. Nathan's father tossed h im a boogie N e i l board and with it he pulled two swimmers from the surf, then returned and rescued a third, Nathan Neil recounted in an email to The Bulletin. He coached the fourth young swimmer to swim parallel to shore, and the young man saved himself. Stacy, watching from the beach with the rest of the family, recalled her sister-in-law asking how she was able to stay so calm as her husband went willingly into a rip current. "I was never really worried about him," she said. "I know he's a really strong swimmer and I didn't even question that he would be able to take care of the situation." See Rescue/B6

Have astory idea or submission? Contactus! The Bulletin

WHAT'S HAPPENING WITH ...

Call a reporter: Bend ...................541-617-7829 Redmond ...........541-548-2186 Sisters ................541-548-2186 La Pine...............541-383-0367 Sunriver............. 541-383-0367

CRIMINAL CASES Bret Biedscheid was charged with criminally Biedscheid negligent homicide and failure to perform the duties of a driver in connection with the hit-and-run death of Tony Martin in January 2011.

Deschutes......... 541-383-0376 Crook.................541-383-0367 Jefferson........... 541-383-0367 State projects ....541-410-9207 Salem .................541-554-1162 D.C.....................202-662-7456

Kevin O'Connell

Business ...........541-383-0360 Education.......... 541-383-0367 Health..................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety........541-383-0387 Special projects...541-617-7831

Kevin and Tami

Sawyer

Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.cdm

The Sawyers were charged with a variety

of financial crimes stemming from allegedly bilking real estate investors out

marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: Details: The Milestones page publishesSunday in Community Life. Contact: 541-383-0358

: Sawyers haveappealed The pair were sentenced :The : their sentences. Kevin Sawyer on April 30 in federal : 'is currently housed at afederal court in Eugene.Kevin Sawyer was sentenced ' prison in Littleton, Colo., and

c

Luke Wirkkala

Wirkkala is charged with one count of murder after he allegedly shot and killed his houseguest, 31-year-old David Ryder, Feb. 4 in Bend.

Wirk kala pleaded not g u i lty on June 7 and is being held in the : Oeschutes County jail.

Loeffler is charged with one count of murder after he allegedly shot and killed his wife of 39 years, 83-year-old Betty Jane Loeffler, in a January domestic dispute at their home outside La Pine.

. Loeffler pleaded not guilty . Loeffler is expected to go to trial . on April 2 and is being held: ,on Sept. 17. : in the Oeschutes County jail.

Anderson andJohnson werecharged

sentenced to 24years in prison. ' Attorneys are expected to meet

:Wednesday tosetatwo-week , : 'trial date.

OTHER STORIES Kevin Perry : Perry shot and killed Shane Munoz in June 2012, after : Perry allegedly returned

home to find Munoz in his home. Summit1031: Local company allegedly ' misappropriated $44 million , inclientfunds;itfiledfor

. :bankruptcy in 2008. Desert Sun Thirteen employeesand Management:associateswereaccusedof

: multimillion-dollar loan fraud in 2009.

Bend City Councilor Doug Knight said Monday he might enter settlement talks with the state later this summer regarding a dispute over

his professional engineer license. The state Board of Exand Land Surveying

left his body in anold railroad tunnel in Madras.

Loeffler

By Hillary Borrud

aminersforEngineering

James R. Johnson

Lawrence

l(night dispute with the state: He may enter talks to settle The Bulletin

Jr. and

Anderson

• School news andnotes:

• Births, engagements,

: :O'Connell is expected to go to : trial on Aug.13.

. :'The pair are being held at the . Both pleaded guilty to with one count of murder each after they first-degree manslaughter . :Coffee Creek lntake Center. allegedly killed Dennis Jones in May and on June11 andwere

Steven

Email event information to news@bendbulletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" in the subject, and include acontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

Email event information to communitylife©bend bulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www .bendbttlletin.com. Allow at ieast10 days before the desired date of publication. Details: Thecalendar appears inside this section. Contact: 541-383-0351

sentence.

time.

of his trust shortly before his death in 2009.

• Civic Calendar notices:

• Community events:

Biedscheid reported to the

In a separate case,TamiSawyer is charged to 27 months in prison, ' Tami Sawyer is being held at a while Tami Sawyerwas : :federal prison in Dublin, Calif. with theft and criminal mistreatment charges stemming from business dealings sentenced to nine years in with an elderly man who put her in charge federal lockup.

• Letters and opinions:

Details on theObituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.cdm

and was sentenced to jail

The former Bulletin employee was arrested O'Connell pleaded not in August on suspicion of prostitution and guilty March 18.

of more than $4.4 million.

• Obituaries, Death Notices:

Biedscheid pleadedguilty

to failing to perform the Oeschutes Countylail on duties of a driver last week June12 and is serving a 90-day

second-degree sexabuse.

Submissions:

Email news items and notices of general interest to news@bendbttlletin.cdm. Email announcementsof teens' academicachievements to youth@bendbttlletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduations andreunion info to bttlletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO ...

Following up on Central Oregon's ongoing stories.

The Deschutes County District Attorney's Office asked the Bend Police Department in April to re-examine the events surrounding the case. According to an email, the OA's office

No charges have been filed or

arrests made.

considers the case"open indefinitely." Trial is underway for three executives of the company: Lane Lyons,Mark Neuman and Timothy Larkin.

Trial is expected to last through this

week.Story onC6 All but two charged in thecase, including Desert Sun President Tyler Fitzsimons, have pleaded guilty.

Two expect . sentencing in July, four in October.

says Knight falsely stated on hls May 2011 K night l icen s e renewal form that he took specific online classes to fulfill a continuing education requirement. A January 2012 audit revealed that Knight had not taken the classes, according to the state case summary, and the board's law enforcement committee voted last summer to fine Knight $1,000 for failing to comply with continuing professional development standards. It also imposed another $1,000 fine and revocation of his license for violating state law by providing "untruthful statements" on his renewal application. Knight said last fall that the state had previously allowed him in 2008 to "retroactively" accumulate the continuing education hours necessary to renew his license. See Knight/B6


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013

E VENT

AL E N D A R

www.bendfarmersmarket.com. PICKIN' AND PADDLIN' MUSIC SERIES:Includes boat "THE STORY":A screening of the demonstrations in the Deschutes sports film on a number of famous River; bluegrass act Pitchfork and obscure sports stars; benefits Revolution performs, with Laurel the 2013-14 Oregon Adaptive Brauns; proceeds benefit Bend Sports Scholarship Fund; $10; 2 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Paddle Trail Alliance; $5, free for Century Drive, Bend; 541-306-4774 children12 and younger; 4-7 p.m. or www.oregonadaptivesports.org. demonstrations, 5-9 p.m. music; Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; Free admission; 3-6 p.m.; Centennial 541-317-9407, 411@tumalocreek. Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen com or www.tumalocreek.com. Avenue; 541-550-0066 or redmond MUSIC ONTHEGREEN:A summer farmersmarket1©hotmail.com. concert series featuring the country TUESDAYFARMERSMARKET:Free band TKO, food, crafts, retail admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brookswood and more; free;6-7:30 p.m.;Sam Meadow Plaza, 19530 Amber Johnson Park, Southwest15th Meadow Drive, Bend; 541-323-3370 Street, Redmond; 541-923-5191 or or farmersmarket@brookswood http://visitredmondoregon.com. meadowplaza.com. JOHN PRINE:Thecountry-folk ENCOREPRESENTATION: A singer-songwriter performs, with screening of the best of the Bend Carrie Rodriguez; $38, $78 (dinner Bicycle Film Festival films; proceeds and show); 6:30 p.m., doors open 6 benefit the Bend Endurance p.m.; Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 Academy; $10, $5 for children12 Athletic Club Drive; 541-385-3062 and younger; 4 p.m. and 7 p.m.; or www.c3events.com. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-388-3300 "POETRY OUTLOUD":Poetry readings by three poets followed or www.theoutsidegames.com. by anopen mic;free;7-9 p.m.; OREGON ENCYCLOPEDIAHISTORY The WineShop and BeerTasting NIGHT:Explore the visual and Bar, 55 N.W. M innesotaAve., documentary history of Oregon's Bend; 541-389-2884 or www. Chemawa lndian School, presented thewineshopbend.com. by Rebecca Dobkins; screening "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: of short film made by Chemawa students in 2012; free; 7 p.m., doors IL TROVATORE":An encore presentation of Verdi's drama open at 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old starring Sondra Radvanovsky, St.FrancisSchool,700 N.W. Bond Dolora Zajick, Marcelo Alvarez and St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. Dmitri Hvorostovsky; $12.50; 7 mcmenamins.com. p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 OREGON BACHFESTIVAL:BACH'S IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, CIRCLE:The Los Angeles ensemble Bend; 541-382-6347. performs a concert of music of J.S. FULL DRAW FILMTOUR: A Bach and his contemporaries; $21 plus fees, $10 students and children, screening of bow hunting films; $12 plus fees, $10 children; 7 p.m., $28 at the door; 7:30 p.m., doors doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3170700 or www.towertheatre.org. 0700 or www.towertheatre.org. WORTH:The Portland bohemianblues-hop singer performs; free; WEDNESDAY 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W. BondSt., BEND FARMERSMARKET:Free Bend; 541-382-5174 or admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks www.mcmenamins.com. Alley, between Northwest "THE FOXON THE FAIRWAY": Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, CascadesTheatricalCompany bendfarmersmarket©gmail.com or presents a comedy about the

TODAY

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

vary; 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; 503-644-6822 or www.aasports Itd.com/events/pacificcrest. TAXIDERMISTSSHOWAND COMPETITION: Featuring a show, competition andnewtechniques by the Oregon Association of Taxidermists at CareyFoster Hall; $5 for adults, free for children ages12andyounger; 10 a.m.-3:30 p.m.; CrookCounty Fairgrounds,1280 S.MainSt., Prineville; 541-382-0379 or www. oregonassociationoftaxidermists.com. COUNTRY QUILT SHOW OF PRINEVILLE:The 18th annual show's theme is "Those Painted Hills"; raffle; $2, free for children under12; noon7:30 p.m.; Crooked River Elementary School, 640-641 N.E. Third St.; Submitted photo 541-693-4975 or conniescorner333O Seattle's alt-rock band The Presidents of the United States of crestviewcable.com. America will perform Thursday at Bend's Century Center. HULLABALOO: A street festival with food, bicycle racing, live music by Blind Pilot and more; free; 3-10 denizens of a private country club; Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. $24, $18seniors older than 60, $12 6347 or www.fathomevents.com. Washington and Northwest Crossing students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood "THE FOXON THE FAIRWAY": drives, Bend; www.nwxevents.com. Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood CascadesTheatricalCompany Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: presents a comedy about the www.cascadestheatrical.org. 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West denizens of a private country club; $24, $18 seniors older than 60, $12 Cascade Avenue andAsh Street; www.sistersfarmersmarket.com. students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood THURSDAY Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood SPLASH, PEDALANDDASH: EXHIBIT OPENING: A celebration Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. A triathlon for kids ages12 and cascadestheatrical.org. of the museum's 20th anniversary younger; proceeds benefit the Three and the opening of "Indigenous Rivers Care for Kids Foundation; AMY LAVERE: TheTennessee Elements: The Life & Art of $25, registration requested; 4 p.m., singer-songwriter performs Apolonia Susana Santos"; features 1- 3 p.m. registration; Sunriver Americana; $5; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation an artist village, native dancing Brewing & Taproom, 24N.W. and traditional salmonbake; free; Greenwood Ave.,Bend;541-388-8331 Center, 57250 Overlook Road; events©aasportsltd.com or 5:30-7:30 p.m.; The Museum At or www.silvermoonbrewing.com. Warm Springs, 2189 U.S. Highway www.racecenter.com/pacificcrest. 26; 544-553-3331 or www. CROWS FEET"CUTTERS" AT FRIDAY museumatwarmsprings.org. THE TIN PAN THEATRE: Ascreen printing party followed by an urban PRESIDENTS OFTHEUNITED MT. BACHELORKENNELCLUB bide shred ending at the Tin Pan STATES OF AMERICA: The Seattle ALL-BREED DOGSHOW:Featuring Theater for a screening of "Breaking alternative-rock band performs, obedience, rally and agility events Away"; $7, shirt extra; 6-11 p.m.; with special guests; $30 in advance, with lure coursing Friday and $35 at the door; 6 p.m., doors Saturday; over1,000 competitors and Crow's Feet Commons, 875 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-728-0066 or open 5 p.m.; Century Center, 100 breeds; free; 8 a.m.; Deschutes 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; County Fair & ExpoCenter,3800S.W. www.crowsfeetcommons.com. www.randompresents.com. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548STEVE MILLERBAND:The classic 2711 or www.mbkc.org. rock band performs; $39 general or "MUNCH: MUNCH 150": A $79 reserved, plus fees; 6:30 p.m., screening of the documentary PACIFICCREST WEEKEND SPORTS gates open 5 p.m.; Les Schwab showcasing the Edvard Munch art FESTIVAL:A weekend of sports Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin exhibit at the National Museum and races, health 8 fitness expo, live Munch Museum in Oslo, Norway; music, food booths and more; time Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-318-5457 or $12.50; 7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill listed for health & fitness expo only; www.bendconcerts.com. Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. free health & fitness expo, entry fees "THE FOXON THE FAIRWAY":

PUBLIC

CascadesTheatricalCompany presents a comedy about the denizens of a private country club; $24, $18 seniors older than 60, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. TATER FAMINE:The Santa Cruz Calif., Americana band performs, with Country Trash and Boxcar Stringband; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. facebook.com/thehornedhand.

SATURDAY "BE THEDINOSAUR: LIFE IN THE CRETACEOUS"EXHIBIT OPENS:Featuring interactive video simulations with traditional physical exhibits and fossil specimens; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4and younger;; HighDesertM useum, 59800 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. MT. BACHELOR KENNELCLUB ALL-BREEDDOG SHOW: Featuring obedience, rally and agility events with lure coursing Friday and Saturday; over1,000 competitors and 100 breeds; free; 8 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair & ExpoCenter, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-5482711 or www.mbkc.org. PRINEVILLEFARMERS MARKET: Free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 541-447-6217 or prinevillefarmersmarket©gmail.com. COUNTRY QUILTSHOW OF PRINEVILLE: The18th annual show's theme is"Those Painted Hills"; raffle; $2, free for children under12; 9 a.m.5 p.m.; Crooked River Elementary School, 640-641 N.E.Third St.; 541693-4975 or conniescorner3330 crestviewcable.com. DOG GONE RUN:Features a dogfriendly 5K fun run/walk, prizes and a raffle; proceeds benefit BrightSide Animal Center; $30 in advance, $35 on race day; 9 a.m. race, 7-8:30 a.m. registration; The Weigand Family Dog Park, 1500 W. Antler Avenue, Redmond; www.brightsideanimals. org/events/dog-gone-run.

NEWS OF RECORD

OFFICIALS Find a full list at bendbulletin.com/officials.

CONGRESS U.S. Senate • Sen.Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building, Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208, Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. RonWyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building, Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 W eb: http://wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite107, Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142

U.S. House • Rep. GregWalden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building, Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone:202-225-6730 W eb: http://walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 N.W. BondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452

STATE OF OREGON Governor • John Kitzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov

Senate • Sen. TedFerrioli, R-District 30 900 Court St. N.E., S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. TimKnopp,R-District 27 900 Court St. N.E., S-423 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. DougWhitsett, R-District28 900 Court St. N.E., S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett

House • Rep. Jason Conger, R-District 54 900 Court St. N.E., H-477 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. JohnHuffman, R-District 59 900 Court St. N.E., H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. Mike McLane, R-District55 900 Court St. N.E., H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane@state.or.us Web: wwwueg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-District53 900 Court St. N.E., H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnantOstate.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant

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 Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at12:34 p.m. June 11, in the 1800 block of Northeast Purcell Boulevard. DUII —Carlos Alberto Mendoza Zacarias, 21, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:11 a.m. June18, in the areaof Northeast Eighth Street and Northeast lrving Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 8:03 a.m. June18, in the100 block of Northwest Oregon Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 8:50 p.m. June19, in the 61200 block of Larkspur Loop. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:25 p.m. June 20, in the 200 block of Northeast Sixth Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at12:25 p.m. June 20, in the area of Northwest Portland Avenue and Northwest Wall Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at1:35 p.m. June 20, in the1200 block of Northwest Ogden Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:54p.m.June 20,inthe400 block of Northwest Delaware Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 6:44 p.m. June 20, in the 2400 block of Northeast Ravenwood Drive. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 7:42 p.m. June 20, in the 19700 block of Dartmouth Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:51 p.m. June 15, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at noon June17, in the 900 block of Northwest Bond Street. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 2:28 p.m. June18, in the 2600 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 8:52 p.m. June 18, in the 400 block of Northeast Seward Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 9:47 p.m. June 18, in the100 block of Northeast Bend River Mall Avenue. DUII —Shan Vincent Dieringer, 34, was arrested on suspicion of driving

under the influence of intoxicants at12:47 a.m. June19, in the 900 block of Southeast Third Street. DUII —Ryan Martyn Green, 39, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:34 a.m. June 20, in the area of Northeast Fifth Street and Northeast Kearney Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported and arrests made at 3:21 p.m. June 20, in the1300 block of North U.S. Highway 97. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at11:56 p.m.June 20,inthe600 block of Northeast Sixth Street. DUII —Peter Kent Vanderbogart, 25, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:27 a.m. June 21, in the 60800 block of Windsor Drive. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:20 a.m. June 21, in the 100 block of Northwest Idaho Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at11:23 a.m. June 21, in the 1400 block of Northwest Newport Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at12:20 p.m. June 21, in the 63300 block of Eastview Drive. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at1:35 p.m. June 21, in the1000 block of Northwest Roanoke Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:03 p.m. June 21, in the 63700 block of Wellington Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:11 p.m. June 21, in the 20600 block of Wild Rose Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:28 p.m. June 21, in the1100 block of Southwest Silver Lake Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at11:09 a.m. June 22, in the 20200 block of Ellie Lane. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at12:16 p.m. June 22, in the100 block of Northwest Saginaw Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 10:17 a.m. May 31, in the 600 block of Southeast Woodland Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:15 a.m. June 11, in the 2500 block of Northeast Neff Road. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at12:14 p.m. June 13, in the 3100 block of Northeast Manchester Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:26 p.m. June15, in the 61900 block of Southeast 27th Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:30 a.m. June 17, in the 2900 block of 0 B Riley Road. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported

at4:20a.m.June18, inthe100 block of Northwest Allen Road. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 6:35 a.m. June 18, in the 1400 block of Northwest Lexington Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:36 a.m. June18, in the1000 block of Northwest Wall Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at9:57a.m.June18, inthe1100 block of Northwest Wall Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:18 p.m. June18, in the 2600 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Unauthorizeduse —A vehicle was reported stolen at 7:21 p.m. June 21, in the 800 block of Southwest Bond Street. DUII —Chi Karin Carson, 30, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:08 a.m. June 22, in the area of Northwest Bond Streetand Northwest Oregon Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported and an arrest made at 5:02 a.m. June 22, in the 2500 block of Northwest Upper Rim Place. DUII —Michael Keith Engstrom, 24, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:28 p.m. June 22, in the 21700 block of U.S. Highway 20. Unauthorizeduse —A vehicle was reported stolen at 4:43 a.m. June14, in the 2500 block of Northeast Twin Knolls Drive. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:38a.m.June18,inthe 400 block of Southwest Powerhouse Drive.

DUII —Juan Carlos Padrongomez, 43, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:45 p.m. June 21, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost123. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 6:57 p.m. June 22, in the area of state Highway 31 near milepost 8. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 8:02 a.m. June 23, in the area of North Alfalfa Road and Shumway Road in Powell Butte.

Northwest Birch Lane in Madras. Theft —An AT&Tsmart phone was reported stolen at 7 p.m. June 22, in Madras.

OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Laura Ann Phillips, 36, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:47 p.m. June 21, in the area of U.S. Highway97and Tomahawk Street in Redmond.

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Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at1:02 a.m. June 23, in the area of Northwest Fourth Street.

JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Theft —A theft was reported at 8:32 a.m. June 17, in the 800 block of Southeast Tumbleweed Drive in Madras. Unauthorizeduse— An act of criminal mischief and a stolen vehicle were reported and an arrest made at 9:43 a.m. June17, in the 700 block of Southwest Holly Lane in Culver. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 5:05 a.m. June 22, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost112 in Culver. Theft —A 2005 black, flat deck trailer with full-sized tires was reported stolen at10:36 a.m. June 22, in the 700 block of

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TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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REGON AROUND THE STATE MOunt HOOdSearCh — Badweather forced volunteer crews to suspend Monday's search for aSalem climber missing on Mount Hood. Kinley Adams, a59-year-old dentist, was reported missing by family Saturday night, roughly six hours after his expected return from a climb on the west side of the mountain. The Clackamas

County Sheriff's Office found his vehicle at Timberline Lodge.After an empty search Sunday, volunteers returned to the mountain Monday, but rain, snow, wind and low visibility stopped the crews by early

afternoon. Thesearch will resume today, if the weather cooperates. The skies, however, are not expected to clear until Thursday.

By Lauren Gambino The Associated Press

SALEM — An Oregon legislative committee tasked with flat-lining the state's growing prison population advanced a revised bill M onday that committee members say will meet that goal for the next five years. The Joint Committee on Public Safety passed House Bill 3194 with one lawmaker dissenting. The legislation reflects nearly two years of work by lawmakers and members of the governor's Commission on Public Safety that produced a report that found the state's

growing prison population unsustainable in the long term. The original bill would have repealed mandatoryminimum sentences for offenders who commit three violent crimes. Amid backlash from law enforcement, later drafts of the bill have been significantly

it didn't go further to overhaul criminal sentencing for juveniles. What it does:Modifies "Part of justice is helping sentences imposed for people change their ways and felony marijuanaand for grow and I think we have a driving-while-suspended ways to go with some of our offenses, and reduces adolescents," said Sen. Arnie sentences for somedrug Roblan, D-Coos Bay. and property offenses. Sen. Betsy Close, R-Albany, What's next:The bill now years. told lawmakers she couldn't goes to the full House. The savings from the policy support the measure because changes would be reinvested it overturned parts of a law apinto community corrections proved by voters. watered down. programs that drive down reThe proposal falls short of Among other changes, the cidivism and keep people out Gov. John Kitzhaber's initial draft of the bill unveiled and of prison. Garrett added that goal to flatten prison growth approved Monday would rebudget writers intend to raise over the next 10 years. But the duce sentencesforcertain drug additional funding for l ocal Democraticgovernor applaudand property crimes. The bill programs. ed the committee's progress. "I'm encouraged by the colwould also lower penalties for Sen. JackieWinters, R-Sasome driving with a suspended lem, said the Legislature would laboration amongstakeholders license and marijuana-related have to revisit this discussion to challenge the status quo and charges. These policy changes in five years if the changes are come up with a comprehensive would expire after 10 years. unsuccessful. public safety package," Kitz"This is a l ong-negotiated Despite their support f or haber said in a statement. resolution that goes farther the b i ll , s om e l a w makers The measure goes next to than some people would think expressed dis a ppointment the House floor.

HouseBill 3194

appropriate and doesn't go as far as others would like," said Rep. Chris Garrett, D-Lake Oswego, who helped broker the deal. Garrett s ai d t h e p o l i cy changes wil l h o l d p r i s on growth for the next five years, generating a savings of nearly $17 million over the next two

Glllllet biiShleSS —While the OregonCourt of Appeals weighs the case of gillnetters who say they're being regulated out of busi-

ness, the shopsand stores that supply the fishery say they've begun to hurt. The Daily Astorian is reporting that the business owners say the gillnetters aren't so quick to get their equipment repaired or

replaced, or to pick upand payfor nets they've ordered. Gillnets snag fish by the gills and arethe main tool for about 500 permit holders on both sides of the Columbia River. But Oregon and Washington have both adopted rules to move gillnetters to tributaries from the main

stem of the Columbia, although gillnetters say they can't make a living on the tributaries. The appeals court has stayed the rules while it considers the gillnetters' challenge.

COOS Bey IED erreStS —A 38-year-old has beenarrested in a case that began earlier this month when an Oregon State Police

bomb squad destroyed improvised explosive devices found in aCoos Bay home. CoosCounty sheriff's deputies arrested Jay Yarbrough, 38,nearPowers,southeastofCoosBay.Hehadbeensoughton explosives and other charges, including domestic assault. Tina Rossback, 48, of CoosBaywas also arrested, accused of harboring a fugitive. The devices came to the attention of Coos Bay officers June

12 as they were investigating a domestic violence report. OLCC direCtOr —Gov.John Kitzhaber's choice to lead the Oregon Liquor Control Commission haswithdrawn her namefrom consideration. A Kitzhaber spokesman says Kendall Clawson decided to keep

her current job as thegovernor's executive appointments director. The OLCC has beenwithout a permanent director since the governor forced Steve Pharo into retirement last year. The five-member OLCC board will ultimately decide whether to hire Kitzhaber's choice.

Stateis32outo 50 or i s'we- ein The Associated Press SALEM — An annual ranking of the well-being of American children shows Oregon's kids suffer f r o m p o v erty, underemployment and h i gh housing costs. The annual Kids Count survey from the Annie E. Casey Foundation puts Oregon at 41st in economic well-being and 32nd overall. The rankings, which track 16 indicators of child w ellbeing, are in their 25th year. This year's, released Monday, showed that about 37 percent of Oregon children have parents who lack secure employment and 24 percent live in poverty, defined as a family of four that makes less than $22,811. Oregon's child poverty rate is up from 18 percent in 2005. "We are encouraged to see signs of an economic recovery overall, but the increase in childhood poverty tells us that jobs are not adequately supporting families," said Robin Christian, executive director of ChildrenFirstfor Or egon, a children's advocacy nonprofit in Portland. "As we emerge from the worst recession in a generation, we need to ensure that those of us hit hardest by the economic downturn have access to supports that protect children, stabilize struggling families, and create a pathway to financial security." The foundation is a private nonprofit in B a ltimore that advocates for disadvantaged children. Most of the statistics used in this year's study come from 2011 figures released by government agencies.

Plane crash death —Authorities say the pilot of a small plane who enjoyed flying in Eastern Oregon's canyon country hit a high-voltage power line anddied in the crash. The Malheur County sheriff's department says the crash Sunday was about half a mile below Owyhee Dam near the Idaho border. The pilot was identified as

Edward Wilson Claugus, 52, of lncline Village, Nev. He wasthe only person aboard. The Federal Aviation Administration has begun an investigation.

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Motorcycle death —Oregon State Police say a motorcycle rider from Washington was killed in a collision with a deer Sunday on

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Highway19 west of the town of Spray in WheelerCounty. Police say Randall Upshaw, 63,ofLynnwood, Wash.,died atthescene.

FOSterabuSe laWSuit — Lawyers for11 young children who reportedly suffered sexual abuse at a Salem foster home have filed nearly $23 million in lawsuits against the state's Department of Hu-

man Services. Thelawsuits represent one of themost sweeping cases brought against the state child-welfare agency over abuse by one fos-

ter parent. JamesEarlMooneywas sentenced last year to 50years in prison after pleading guilty to five counts of first-degree sodomy; his wife wasn't charged with any wrongdoing, and the two have divorced. From 2007 to 2011, 50 babies and toddlers lived in the foster home.

Retirement home vandalism —Police are asking for tips to track down vandals who attacked a retirement community at Wood-

burn, not only spray-painting homesbut also cutting vehicle brake lines and loosening tires. Dozens of homes were hit in the early hours Saturday at the Estates Golf and Country Club community, a develop-

ment for residents 55 andolder. Oneresident who spotted a couple of the vandals said they appeared to be in their early teens. Susan MontoyaBryan/The Associated Press

Agricultural injury lawsuit —AMultnomahCounty jury has

Volunteers man the canned food station at a New Mexico food bank last week before distributing thousands of pounds of food to organizations that help low-income families. It doesn't appear to be enough — an annual survey released Monday shows more children are living without, and it ranked New Mexico the worst in the nation when it comes to child well-being. Overall, Oregon ranked 32nd.

awarded more than $6 million to a 21-year-old Oregon agricultural worker who was paralyzed from the waist down when his torso was

crushed in a haybale-cutting machine. The jury found that Double Press Manufacturing, a California company that makes the equip-

"We are encouraged to see signs of an economic recovery overall, but the increase

Studyfindings

in childhood poverty tells us thatjobs are not adequately supporting families."

devote more than 30

—," said Robin Christian, executive director of Children First for Oregon, a children's advocacy nonprofit in Portland

As state budgets for 2013-15 are nearing final form, advocates for children and social servicescontinue to push Oregon lawmakers to increase funding for job-training programs, e m p loyment-related day care and cash assistance

On theWed

ment, was 60 percent responsible for injuries suffered byZeferino Vasquez onMarch 31, 2010, in Junction City. — From wire reports

• 45 percentof children live in households that

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have low birth weights, lower than the 8.1 percent nationally.

Read morefrom the Annie E Casey Foundation at www.aecf.org

• 70 percentof fourthgraders are not proficient in

for needy families. A human services budget is expected in the next two weeks.

68 percent nationally.

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Source: Annie E. Casey Foundation

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A Ii I V V C I

FOr PrO beer makerS,OSUiSbeCOming BreWU By Bennett Hall

said Maher, whose family also owns Maher's Irish Brew Pub CORVALLIS — With a clink in Lake Oswego. of glass, a hiss of compressed Jesse Watterson, a threeair and a chunk of machinery, year v eteran o f A l l a gash a line of beer bottles moved — Jesse Watterson, of Allagash Brewing in Portland, Maine Brewing in Portland, Maine, through the automated prosaid he was looking for a midduction line at Oregon State career refresher course. "I know a lot about the proUniversity's small on-campus S ome 18 s t udents f r o m brewery. One by one, the bot- around the United States and cess, but it's good to reinforce tles were filled with frothing Canada converged on Corvalmy knowledge with science," For more on thecourses, amber liquid and then capped lis last week for the culminathe said. "I've learned a lot in visit Oregon State as a group of people in white ing sessions of this session's my week here." University's webpageat lab coats and beer-spattered intensive c l a sses. "These Melinda Reis works on the dit.ly/19xmnf J safety glasses looked on. courses were designed with manufacturing side of the beer Welcome to OSU's Brewing t he professional brewer i n biz at Marks Design & MetalAnalytics Series, a trio of short mind," said Tom Shellhamworks, a Vancouver, Wash., courses for working brewers mer, a professor in OSU's fer- science program has grown outfit that builds productionand serious amateurs look- mentation science program along with Oregon's reputa- scale tanks for m i crobrewing to break into the industry: and the lead instructor for the tion as a leader in the craft eries.She came looking for Microbiologyfor the Brewer, Brewing Analytics Series. brewing field, with more than ways to improve the compa"It doesn't really show you Beer Analyses and Quality 200 undergraduate students ny's product line and ended Assurance. so much how to brew as how enrolled last term. up learning from her fellow The first two combine on- to do it right." Mark Maher just opened students as well as the course line course materials with labAnd a growing number of Feckin Brewery i n O r egon instructors. "It was good to step into our work, while the third involves professionalbeer makers are City with his father. "I've been a tour of university and com- looking to OSU for expertise home brewing for a couple customers' shoes for a week," mercial hop and barley breed- in th e p r oduction p rocess. of years — no formal train- Reis said. "It's been extremely ing operations. The university's fermentation ing, just books and YouTube," valuable." Corvailis Gazette-Times

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The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

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ould a single 100-foot monopole destroy the scenic views in Alfalfa?

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That's the argument being made by those who want to prevent an AT8ET cell tower from being built along

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Alfalfa Market Road. Although the language of the Deschutes County code does provide some support for the objections, we think it's a stretch. Commissioners need to carefully consider, as Commissioner Tammy Baney said, just howto interpret the code's language about the vistas. A county hearing officer turned down American Tower Corp. and AT&T Mobile when they sought a conditional-use permit to build the tower, saying they didn't satisfy code requirements addressing visual impact. The code says applicants must limit damage to scenic views, using vegetation and topography for screening. Trouble is, the Alfalfa area in question is flat, with no vegetation tall enough to help. Addressing that possibility, the code states: "Towers or monopoles shall not be sited in locations where there is no vegetative, structural or topographic screen available." In its appeal to the County Commission, American Tower said there's a significant service gap in the area, and the proposed site is the only one available that can address it. (Full disclosure: The Bul-

letin site in west Bend is home to an AT8 T tower, for which the company receives compensation.) Deschutes County p l a nner Kevin Harrison has said that even without the neighbors' objections, the code is clear that it's the applicant's responsibility to meet the requirements for camouflage. There's no doubt that mountain views and open vistas are important to us in Central Oregon. Remember the huge fuss about the golf nets in north Bend back in 1999-2000? Whatever the merits of that case, the public reaction surely demonstrated the value locals place on a clear view of the mountains. In the wide-open spaces of Alfalfa, though, a single monopole — more like a flagpole than a tower — will all but disappear into the vista. It won't ruin the view. Commissioners are taking comment on the issue through Friday and plan to announce a decision Aug. 6. If they decide the county code blocksthis proposed tower, it may be time to consider revising the code.

Oregon shoulddiscuss, vote on death penal regon's Supreme Courtruled last week that Gary Haugen does not have the right to reject the reprieve from execution granted by Gov.John Kitzhaber more than 18 months ago. Now, as Kitzhaber has said more than once since, it is time for Oregonians to take part in a serious discussion of the issue. Haugen is far from a nice guy. He murdered a former girlfriend's mother in 1981, an act that earned him a life sentence in the Oregon State Penitentiary. Then, after murdering a fellow prisoner there in 2007, he was sentenced to death. In early 2011 he decided to quit fighting his execution. Kitzhaber stepped in just about two weeks before Haugen's scheduled Dec. 6, 2011, execution. He announced there would be no executions on his watch, not of Gary Haugen or of anyone else. He did not grant Haugen clemencyHaugen still faces the death penalty — but merely a reprieve until the governor leaves office. Haugen appealed, and his law-

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yer cameup with anovelargument. The reprieve doesn't count, he said, because Haugen rejected it. The court, in turn, rejected that argument, as it should have. Haugen is a prisoner in the Oregon corrections system and as such he has forfeited the right to make such judgments about his life. Moreover, the state Constitution, which gives the governor the power to grant clemency and reprieves, does notgiveprisoners the right to reject them. So Haugen will continue to sit on death row at least until Kitzhaber leaves office. Meanwhile, the Legislature made a not-terribly-serious attempt earlier this year to ask voters whether the state should keep the ultimate punishment. It never got out of committee. That does not mean the matter should be dropped, however. Rather, it should serve as impetus to move the discussion out of the Legislature to the people of Oregon. They may not be ready for a change, but no one knows that for sure. That kind of certainty can come only after discussion and, ultimately, a statewide vote.

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No villains in this shoeshine story By Dan DewItt Tampa Bay Times

The woman whose usual job is to put a smiling

oor Brenda Frazier. She had to tell a polite, industrious 12-year-old boy that it was time to pack up his shoeshine box and leave the Hernando County Government Center in Florida. The woman whose usual job is to put a smiling face on government had to reveal its other side — callous, s mall-minded and, according t o some of the comments on the Tampa Bay Times' website, tampabay.com, anti-Christian and anti-business. The county's community relations coordinator had to play the heavythe villain — in this morality tale. F or those unfamiliar with t h e story, Patrick MacGregor, a pastor's son raising money for a mission trip, showed up at the government center on Monday with his rags, brushes and cans of polish in an old-time wooden box. He put up a sign advertising shines for the really old-time

face on government had to reveal its other side — callous, small-minded and, according to some of the comments on the Tampa Bay Times' website, anti-Christian and anti-business. words, and we can't let public spaces become ad hoc fleamarkets. It sounds reasonable to me but not to a lot of the other readers who made this one of the most-commentedupon, most-shared stories on the Times' website. The story took off because its hero is an especially handy and familiar symbol of industrious youth. Horatio Alger's famous character, Ragged Dick, started off as a "boot black." A cheerful shoeshine boy is the subject of Johnny Cash's rousing "Get Rhythm." Opie Taylor never shined shoes, as far as I know, but he certainly could have. Pitted against t hi s a d m irable child was Frazier, representing the loathsome state. To read some of the more mean-spirited comments, you'd think she and the county are intent on closing lemonade stands and shutting down production of cupcakes from Easy-Bake Ovens. Not to mention singling out Patrick because of his religion. None of that is true. Frazier, 58, spends most of her days writing

price of $2. He did a brisk business, collecting $200, including tips, in about the only place in Hernando where a decent percentage of folks still wear shiny shoes. He charmed them with his quality work, by opening doors for adults and addressing them as "sir" and "ma'am,"by not being anotheryoung "Call of Duty"-addicted zombie. Frazier was the one who had to tell him that, sorry, son, we have a policy against this sort of thing. Seven years ago, inundated with requests from outside groups, the county limited where these groups can set up shop and required them to carry liability insurance. This isn't quite Mayberry, in other

upbeat news releases and hosting feel-good shows on the government broadcasting channel. She's a mother of three adult children whom she remembers selling candy to raise money for school activities. She calls herself a"born-again Christian." Certainly, Patrick's parents don't blame Frazier. And if you're tempted to blame them — and, yes, maybe they should have checked with somebody before dropping him off — consider that an older son was able to shineshoes atthe government center for several weeks shortly before the policy forbidding it went into place in 2006. Plus, Patrick's parents get a

pass for raising such a good kid. So, instead of blaming anybody, maybe we should look at the community response. C ounty C o m missioner D i a ne Rowden has invited Patrick to lead the Pledge of Allegiance at the commission's next meeting. A Brooksville charity, Love Your Neighbor, offered to cover Patrick under its insurance policy. The county cleared this arrangement with its lawyers, which means that, starting next week, he should be able to shine shoesin the designated space for such activities at the government complex — in front of the county's historic courthouse. So, we showed that our government isn't all bad, that our community isn't too large and impersonal, that we appreciate good qualities in kids and can bend a little bit to encourage them. If this means Brooksville is still a little bit like Mayberry, that's OK by me. — Dan Dewittis a columnist

for the Tampa Bay Times.

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Obama's legacy may hinge on summer's achievements By Albert R. Hunt Bloomberg News

T

here aretwo widely discussed scenarios that could unfold in Washington this summer. The first, embraced by the White House and some Democrats, is upbeat: The immigration bill passes the Senate with a big margin, making it almost impossible for House Republicans to resist; more people start signing up for President Barack Obama's health care law; and even though no fiscal grand bargain is in the offing, an improving economy gives the president a stronger hand in dealing with Republicans on extending the debt ceiling and on spending bills. The so-called scandals recede: It becomes clear there was no political interference with the Internal Revenue Service, and the other controversies don't resonate. The Middle East is still a cauldron, but it hasn't gotten worse, and the administration's pivot

to Asia seems sensible. The second sequence of events, foreseen by many Republicans and a few Democrats, is more dire: The once bright hopes for an immigration bill this year slip amid the usual petty partisanship; all other legislation and appointments are stalled; and an ugly fight over the debt ceiling rattles markets and hampers the economy. Interest in the health care exchanges remains lackadaisical as insurance premiums increase in anticipation of the law taking effect. An investigation of the IRS controversy by the Justice Department lacks credibility and the scandal persists. In Syria and Iran, either the United States becomes embroiled in dangerous confrontations or Obama is seen as a feckless wimp. Republicans are licking their chops about winning control of the Senate next year and increasing their majority in the House, making the final Obama

years a nightmare of recrimination, investigations and veto fights. Obama, who prides himself on taking the long view, rejects the notion of such make-or-break moments. Only a little more than 10 percent of the second term is complete. Yet it isn't unusual to establish a framework forsuccess or failure of presidencies by the end of the first summer ofthe second term. Eight years ago, George W. Bush's post-re-election high h o pes w ere dashed by Labor Day after an illconsidered effort to overhaul Social Security, a botched response to Hurricane Katrina and an increasingly discredited war in Iraq. Two decades earlier, Ronald Reagan, despite the subsequent IranContra debacle, set the benchmark for success: He was guided by Treasury Secretary Jim Baker on the domestic front, and a sweeping tax reform measure was on course.In

foreign policy, Secretary of State George Shultz, working p rivately with first lady Nancy Reagan, was taking control of a more measured, less bellicose approach. There are,to be sure, events that could change the dynamics of the final threeyears: a realscandal, a war or terrorist act, or a national tragedy that rallies the public. Nevertheless, if the bad-case scenario plays out, it's hard to see how the presidentrecovers momentum. Alternatively, if he is able to make progress in carrying through two of the m ost significant domestic achievements in years — health care and immigration reform — while presiding over an economy recovering from the worst crisis since the Depression and the ending of two wars, the question might be: Which coin or dollar denomination will eventually bear his likeness? In general, there's not that much

Obama can do this summer to affect the outcome. The administration has been slow in the critical task of enlisting people to sign up for the health exchanges. Ultimately, success will depend on the psychology of healthy young people, whether they see a need for insurance. On immigration, success or failure largely rests with inside calculations on Capitol Hill. There also isn't much in the president's toolbox to improve the economy. Congressional Republicans are interested only in thwarting Obama. What matters are the Federal Reserve and consumer confidence. It may be that on all these issues, he comes out even, doing better in some, less well in others. It's just as likely that the next three months will be eitherObama's seminal season or his summer of discontent. — Albert R. Hunt is a Bloomberg View columnist.


TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

BS

Bear Creek

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Daniel Pederson, of Bend Sept. 29, 1950 - June 21, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Per Dan's request, no services will be held. Contributions may be made to:

Humane Society of Central Oregon 61170 SE 27th Street Bend, Oregon 97702 www.hsco.org

Janet Ries, of Sisters Nov. 11, 1944 - June 22, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend, 541-318-0842, www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 11:00 am on Saturday, June 29, 2013 at St. Edward the Martyr Catholic Church in Sisters. Contributions may be made

Continued from B1 "All I'll say is that I supp ort h i m , " K e n t s a i d . "Bear Creek has come a long ways since he's been there." Before the meeting, Montoya thanked his supporters for coming, and said he wanted to finish what he started at Bear Creek. "I hope to be there with all of you the first day of school," Montoya said. About 35 parents and children waited in the hallway outside the c loseddoor meeting, taping protest signs to the walls. "I think he's a really great principal," said Kole Harris-Jenkins, a third-grader who was at the rally with his mom. "If this happens again, I'm always here to support our principal. He's nice, kind, and he's never rude."

'I Am Legend' author leavesa sci-fi legacy FEATURED OBITUARY

Hitchcock Hour," "Rod Serling's Night Gallery," "The MarLOS ANGELES — Richard films, including 1953's "Hell tian Chronicles" and "Amazing Matheson, the prolific sci-fi House," 1956's "The Shrinking Stories." His "Twilight Zone" Man," 1958's "A Stir of Echoes" installments included "Nightand fantasy writer whose "I Am Legend" and "The Shrink- and 1978's "What Dreams May mare at 20,000 Feet,"which ing Man" were transformed Come." featured William Shatner as an into films, has died. He was 87. Matheson's 1954 sci-fi vam- airplane passenger who spots a A spokesman for the Acad- pire novel " I A m L e g end" creature on a plane's wing, as emy of Science Fiction, Fanta- inspired three different film well as "Steel," which inspired sy and Horror Films said late adaptations: 1964's "The Last the 2011 film "Real Steel" starMonday that Matheson died Man on Earth" starring Vin- ring Hugh Jackman. Sunday in Los Angeles. No cent Price, 1971's "Omega Matheson influenced severMan" starring Charlton Heston al generations of storytellers. other details were provided. With a c a r eer s panning and 2007's "I Am Legend" star- Among them were Stephen more than 60 years, Matheson ring Will Smith. King, who dedicated his 2006 crafted stories that deftly tranMatheson was also respon- novel "Cell" to Matheson, and sitioned from the page to both sible for writing several epi- Steven Spielberg, whose first the bigand small screens. Sev- sodes of "The Twilight Zone" as f eature-length film wa s t h e eral works were adapted into well as editions of "The Alfred made-for-TV movie "Duel," By Derrik J. Lang

The Associated Press

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based on the Matheson short story of the same name. "Richard Matheson's ironic and iconic imagination created seminal science-fiction stories and gave me my first break," Spielberg said in a statement. "... For me, he is in the same

category as (Ray) Bradbury and (Isaac) Asimov." Matheson was scheduled to receive the visionary award at the Academy of Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy F ilms' Saturn A w a rds o n Wednesday. The organization said the award will be presented posthumously. Matheson is survived by his wife and four children.

Changes Katherine James, a parent who will be co-president of Bear Creek's Parent Teacher Organization next year,said she is stumped as to why Montoya may lose his job. She said a very small contingent of parents, and possibly a handful of teachers at the school, have been unhappy with some of the changes that have taken place over the past few years,but she declined to go into detail. Choked wit h e m otion after the meeting, Montoya

e ues' ies

to:

The Friends of the Sisters Library.

Polly Landson, of Bend Dec. 1, 1942 - June 19, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private family gathering will be held at a later date to celebrate Polly's life. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701, www.partnersbend.org or Alzheimer's Association, 1650 NW Naito Parkway ¹190, Portland, OR 97209, www.alz.org/oregon

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeralhomes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

By Bill Friskics-Warren New York Times News Service

Bobby "Blue" Bland, the debonair b a l ladeer w h o se sophisticated, emo t i onally fraught performances helped modernize the b l ues, died Sunday at his home in Germantown, Tenn., a suburb of Memphis. He was 83. His death was confirmed by his son Rodd, who played drums in his band.

Though he possessed gifts on a par with his most accomplished peers, Bland never achieved the popular acclaim enjoyed by c o ntemporaries like Ray Charles and B.B. King. Buthe was nevertheless a mainstay on the rhythm-andblues charts and club circuit for decades. And his nickname was "Sinatra of the blues." His vocals, punctuated by the occasional squalling shout, were restrained, exhibiting a

crooner's delicacy ofphrasing and a kind of intimate pleading. He influenced everyone from soul singers Otis Redding and Wilson Pickett to rock groups like the Allman Brothers and the Band. Rapper JayZ sampled Bland's 1974 single "Ain't No Love in the Heart of the City" on his 2001 album, "The Blueprint." B land's signature mix o f

blues, jazz, pop, gospel and country music was a good decade in the making. His first recordings,made in the early 1950s, found him working in the lean, unvarnished style of King, even to the point of employing falsetto vocal leaps patterned after King's. Bland's mid-'50ssingles were more accomplished; hits like "It's My Life, Baby" and "Farther Up the Road" are now regarded as hard-blues classics, but they still featured the driving rhythms and stinging electric guitar favored by King and others. It wasn't until 1958's "Little Boy Blue," a record inspired by the homiletic delivery of the Rev. C.L. Franklin, that Bland arrived at his trademark vocaltechnique. " That's where I g o t m y squall from," Bland said, referring to the sermons of Franklin — "Aretha's daddy," as he called him — in a 1979 inter-

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

collective whose members at various points included Johnny Ace, Rosco Gordon, Earl Forest and King, all of whom went on to become popular blues performers as solo artists. Bland also traveled as a part of the Johnny Ace Revue and recorded for the Chess, Modern and Duke labels before being drafted into the Army in 1952. After his time in the service, Bland worked as a chauffeur, valet and opening act for his fellow Memphis rhythm-andblues singer Junior Parker, just as he previously had for King. He toured as a headliner The Associated Press file photo throughout the '60s, playing Bobby "Blue" Bland, left, performs with B.B. King in1982. Bland as many as 300 one-night ennever broke out in the industry as King or other contemporaries gagements a year, a demandlike Ray Charles did, but he nevertheless topped the rhythm-anding schedule that exacerbated blues charts for years. his struggles with alcohol. He performed widely, in the United States and abroad, until view with author Peter Gural- Top 40, Bland's recordings shortly before his death. nick. "After I had that I lost the resonated with the era's bluesIn addition to his son Rodd, high falsetto. I had to get some leaning rock acts. The Grate- Bland's survivors include his other kind of gimmick, you ful Dead made "Love Light" a wife, Willie Mae; a d aughknow, to be identified with." staple of their live shows. The ter, Patrice Moses; and four The corresponding softness Band recorded his 1964 single grandchildren. Rodd B l and in Bland's voice, a refinement "Share Your Love With Me" for said his father had recently matched by the elegant formal their 1973 album, "Moondog learned that blues singer and wear in which he appeared Matinee." Van Morrison includ- harmonica player James Cotonstage, came from listening ed a version of "Ain't Nothing ton was his half-brother. to records by pop crooners You Can Do" on his 1974 live Bland's synthesis of Southlike Nat King Cole, Tony Ben- set, "It's Too Late to Stop Now." e rn vernacular music a n d nett and Perry Como. Bland was inducted into the classy big-band arrangements Just as crucial to the evo- Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in made him a stylistic pioneer, lution of Bland's sound was 1992 and receiveda Grammy but whatever he accomplished his affiliation with t r umpet Award for l i fetime achieve- by way of formal innovation player and arranger Joe Scott, ment in 1997. u ltimately derived from h i s for yearsthe director of artRobert Calvin Brooks was underlying faith in the emoists and repertory for Duke born on Jan. 27, 1930, in Miltional power of the blues. "I'd like to be remembered Records in Houston. Given to I ington, Tenn., j us t n o r t h dramatic,brass-rich arrange- of Memphis. His father, I.J. as just a good old country ments, Scott, who died in 1979, Brooks, abandoned the family boy that did his best to give supplied Bland with intricate when Bobby was very young. us something to listen to and musical backdrops that set his His mother, Mary Lee, marhelp them through a lot of sad supple baritone in vivid relief. ried Leroy Bridgeforth, who moments, happy m o ments, The two men accounted for also went by the name Leroy whatever," he said in a 2009 more than 30 Top 20 rhythm- Bland, when Bobby was 6. interview with the syndicated a nd-blues singles for D u k e Bland dropped out of school "House of Blues Radio Hour." "Whatever moments you from 1958 to 1968, including in the third grade to work in the No. 1 hits "I Pity the Fool" the cotton fields. Although he get of happiness, use it up, you and "That's the Way Love Is." never learned to write music know, if you can, because it Steeped in vulnerability and or play an instrument, he cited don't come that often." emotional candor, his perfor- the music of pioneering blues mances earnedhim a devoted guitarist T-Bone Walker as an female audience. early influence. AIss'xsu3vg ,ot s» Though only four of his sinAfter moving to Memphis in «sI(), I~ s glesfrom theseyears — "Turn 1947, Bland began working in But t xer r t r f e ty ( e On Your Love Light," "Call on a garage and singing spirituRetire with us Today! Me," "That's the Way Love Is" als in a group called the Min541-312-9690 and "Ain't Nothing You Can iatures. In 1949 he joined the Do" — crossed over to the pop Beale Streeters, a loose-knit

ed in the deaths of 34 people in 1965; the arrest of her son put her in the spotlight. Died of natural causes June 10 in Los Angeles. Stephen Marriott, 54: Eldest son of the founder of the Marriott chain of hotels and once considered an heir to the empire; held the title of executive vice president for culture for years, in which he helped employees with training and job promotion opportunities. Died Sunday after a long battle with a degenerative mitochondrial disease. Chet Flippo, 69: One of the deans of pop music journali sm, whose profiles of a r tists like Dolly Parton, Willie Nelson, W a ylon J e n nings and Tanya Tucker for Rolling Stone magazine in the 1970s heralded vast new popularity for country music among mainstream audiences in the United States. Died Wednesday in Nashville, Tenn. — From wire reports

ers. He did not comment on anything regarding what took place at the meeting, or what led to him being put on leave. "I just don't know what I should or shouldn't say at this point." He said he would continue to fight for his job at the school. "I can't turn my back on the kids," Montoya said. — Reporter: 541-383-0354, mhehoe@bendbulletin.com

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Deaths of note from around theworld: Gary David Goldberg, 68: Television p r o d ucer and writer who created the sitcom "Family Ties," which made a star of Michael J. Fox as a briefcase-toting R e publican teenager in frequent and affectionate confrontation with his hippie parents; Fox and Goldberg reunited in 1996 for "Spin City," a sitcom starring the actor as deputy mayor of New York City. Died Saturday in Montecito, Calif., of a brain tumor. Michael Baigent, 65: Co-author of th e 1982 nonfiction book "The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail," which explores theories that Jesus married Mary Magdalene and had a child; sued author Dan Brown, contending that "The Da Vinci Code" stole his ideas. Died June 17 in Brighton, England. Rena Price, 97: A reluctant figure at the center of the Los Angeles Watts riots that result-

hugged each of his support-

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FUNERALsi BURIALs i CREMATIQN LOCALLY FAMILY OWNED 6L OPERATED Wehonor all pre-arranged plans including Neptune Society.

TAsolufI> l958

Ernest Sandoval, Area Director II, Don and Hazel Griffith, Grants Pass Chapter ¹102 officers invites you to join them for a pasta and a green salad buffet served at 11:30 a.m. and an informational meeting June 26, 2013, at Veterans of Foreign Wars Hall, 1503 NE 4th Street, Bend Oregon. B ehind Cash 8 C a r ry



IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2

MLB, C3

NHL, C3 Tennis, C3

Golf, C4 College baseball, C4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013

GOLF: PGA PROFESSIONAL NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP

PREP SPORTS

Cougars fill baseball position

ome awa rOm ome

Longtime college coach Joe Dominiak,

who is serving as head coach of the BendElks this summer, has been hired to take over the

baseball program at Bend's Mountain View High School. Dominiak, who this past spring was the head baseball coach at

Madras High, guided the baseball program at Saint Martin's University, an NCAA Division II

school in Lacey,Wash.,

from1999 to 2008. He

has also spent time as an assistant at the University of Washington, the University of Puget

Sound (Tacoma,Wash.) and ChemeketaCommunity College (Salem).

Chip Sullivan, of Troutville, Va., reacts after making a birdie on the ninth hole at Sunriver's Meadows course on Monday during the second round of the PGA Professional National Championship.

• Virginia golfer ChipSullivan, a former champion,hadanother great round playing atSunriver to move into asecond-placetie By Zack Hall The Bulletin

SUNRIVER — If Chip Sullivan keeps it up he may have to buy a second home here in Central

Oregon. Sullivan, a 48-year-old pro from Troutville, Va., climbed the leaderboard into a tie for second place Monday during the second round of the 2013 PGA Professional National Championship with a 4-under-par 67 at Sunriver Resort's Meadows course.

Inside •A not ebookfrom Monday'ssecond round,C4 • Complete results in Scoreboard,C2 At 7 under through 36 holes and tied with Pennsylvania pro Mark Sheftic, Sullivan finds himself in a familiar position — in contention at Sunriver. Six years ago Sullivan dominated the field of the 2007 PNC, the last time Sunriver Resort hosted this tournament, earning a four-stroke win. And playing well again is no coincidence, he said. "It is a good feeling to be back here," Sullivan said Monday afternoon off Meadows' ninth green, where he had just holed a 10-foot birdie putt to end his round. "I feel like I have never left. I feel like I have the wave going." SeeHome/C4

Dominiak, 52, takes over at Mountain View

Rob Kerr/ The Bulletin

ADVENTURE SPORTS

for Dave McKae,who

SubaruofBend Outsid eGames

resigned after the 2013

season. TheCougars finished the year 5-17 overall and went just1-8

The schedule of

in Intermountain Conference play.

information, including locations and times, visit www.

events; for more

— Bulletin staff report

theoutsidegames. com. Today:Oregon

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Big Ten, Pac-12 agree on bowls

Adaptive Sports and Bend Bicycle film festivals. u"

Wednesday:

u.

SAN FRANCISCOThe Big Ten and Pac-12 are strengthening their

Deschutes Whitewater

.rp

t

Experience Pickin'

postseason ties with a

hF

. '

.

and Paddlin'.

'.* '

Thursday:

.

pair of matchups in Cali-

Wanderlust's kayak

fornia bowl games.

and canoe tour of Sparks Lake; Deschutes Brewery

The Holiday Bowl in San Diego and the Kraft Fight Hunger

25th anniversary

Bowl in SanFrancisco announced six-year agreements Monday for teams from each conference to playeach

street party. Friday:Soleja Boarding Co. Longboard Cruise; Pacific Crest

a

other starting in 2014.

Weekend Sports Festival in Sunriver.

The Big Tenreplaces the Big12 in the Holiday Bowl, where the Pac-12 already had an affiliation. The Fight Hunger Bowl will have the Pac12's fourth selection after the College Football Playoff, of which the

.t e,

Saturday:Pacific

r@

?„

Crest Weekend tre r

, h ti t rrr ,

gt'f y r I

'

Sports Festival in

I

Sunriver; Cog Wild's

mountain bike demos; free-ride clinic with

Christopher Cooper/ Submitted photo

The Deschutes Whitewater Experience is one of the many events scheduled for the Subaru of Bend Outside Games.

pro mountain bikers Kirt and Lindsey

Rose Bowl is apart of, the Alamo Bowl in San Antonio, Texas, and the

Voreis; Bend brewers' cruiser crawl and

Holiday Bowl.

poker ride; the

The Fight Hunger Bowl, which is moving

Universe Invitational

Champions of the

from the Giants' home at ATBT Park to the 49ers' new stadium in Santa Clara in 2014, had been sixth. The Big Ten is not locking in a selection order with its bowl partners in the

hopes of keeping the process flexible and giving more teams a chance to play in more places. "Our objective entering negotiations for the

next bowl cycle was

• Events includepaddling, mountain biking, skateboarding, running, triathlon andgeocaching By Mark Morical The Bulletin

The Subaru of Bend Outside Games are not so much about competition — they are simply about enjoying outdoor sports. "There will be a race or two, but for the most part, we want people to just show up, try some new equipment, talk with some pros, have some fun, learn some things, and not be standing there," says Bend's Jim Gross, who came up with the idea for

the Outside Games. "We want to try to get people all excited about ... what we get all excited about." And what we get excited about is Central Oregon's myriad opportunities for outdoor recreation. In their second year, the Outside Games maintain a goal of bringing together cyclists, paddlers, runners, skateboarders, triathletes and many more in a six-day celebration that includes two other local favorites: craft beer and live music.

The Outside Games start today with the Oregon Adaptive Sports and Bend Bicycle film festivals and conclude on Sunday with the Floatchella Water Parade on the Deschutes River. In between, the days are jampacked with an array of outdoor sporting events, including mountain biking, whitewater and flat-water paddling, skateboard-

Cycle Pub Races. Sunday:Oregon Adaptive Sports adaptive cycle andOlympicDay Celebration; Pacific Crest Weekend Sports Festival in Sunriver;

Wanderlust's High Desert Eco Challenge

and Geocaching; Floatchella Water

ing, geocaching, swimming, road cycling

Parade; J.D. Platt's Barks, Brews and

and running.

Bands. SeeOutside/C4

to elevate the game," Fight Hunger Bowl

Executive Director Gary Cavalli said in a statement. "Specifically, we

i (lII

WEST COAST LEAGUE BASEBALL

wanted to move upin the Pac-12 and secure the highest quality op-

ponent possible. We're thrilled that we've been able to achieve both

goals. With a Pac-12vs. Big Ten matchup and

Trust and personal relationships are a big part of Elks' recruiting

a new world-class stadium, we've positioned our game very well for

By Grant Lucas The Bulletin

the future."

The Fight Hunger Bowl has had tie-ins with the Atlantic Coast

Conference, the service academies andBYU over the years. — The Associated Press

NHL

Blackhawksclaim Stanley Gup title Two late goals help lead Chicago to its second

championship in four seasons,C3

Joe Kiine/The Bulletin

Pitcher Tanner Ring is one of two players from Arkansas State University to join the Elks this season.

Last season, after the Bend Elks finished the 2012 summer campaign with a record of 24-30 and out of the West Coast League playoffs for the first times since 2007, team owner and general manager Jim Richards met with t hen-interim h ead c o ach J o e Dominiak. The recruiting process for the 2013 season was about to begin, and Richards an d D o m i niak needed to set certain objectives to avoid repeating a disappointing season. The Elks had gone 6-20 on the road in 2012, a record that Richards knew was not acceptable. SeeElks/C3

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C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY TENNIS Wimbledon, early rounds Wimbledon, early rounds SOCCER Under-20 WorldCup,Mexicovs.Paraguay GOLF PGA Professional National Championship BASEBALL MLB, Texasat NewYorkYankees CollegeWorld Series, final, UCLAvs. Mississippi State MLB, Pittsburgh atSeattle BASKETBALL WNBA, Phoenix atSanAntonio

Time

TV/Radio

4 a.m. noon

ESPN ESPN

GOLF 7:45 a.m.

ESPN2

1 p.m.

Golf

4 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB ESPN MLB, Root

5 p.m.

ESPN2

Time

TV/Radio

4a.m. noon

ESPN2 ESPN2

12:30 p.m. 1 p.m. 4 p.m.

Root MLB ESPN2

WEDNESDAY TENNIS Wimbledon,early rounds Wimbledon,early rounds BASEBALL MLB, Pittsburgh atSeattle MLB, Coloradoat Boston MLB, Texasat NewYorkYankees College WorldSeries, final, UCLA vs.Mississippi State (if necessary) GOLF PGA Professional National Championship

5 p.m.

ESPN

1 p.m.

Golf

Listings arethemostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changesmade by TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL Nuggets to hireShawas

Jim Kelly says he has been told

by doctors that he won't need to Undergo chemotherapy or radiation treatment after having

COaCh —A person with knowledge of the negotiations tells The surgery to remove cancerous Associated Press that Indiana

Pacers assistant coach Brian Shaw hasagreed to succeed George Karl as coach of the Denver Nuggets. Theperson spoke to The AP oncondition of ano-

cells in his jaw. The former Buffalo Bills star made the

announcement at his football camp inBuffaloon Monday and his comments were posted on the Bills' website. Kelly says he

nymityMonday nightbecause the deal hadn't been officially

foundoutthe news on Wednes-

announced. TheNuggets called a news conference for today to

ACC to play inPinstripe

introduce their new coach. The

BOWI —The Atlantic Coast

day.

Denver Post first announced the

Conference hasreached an

agreement with Shaw, and the former Phil Jackson pupil told

agreement to send a team to the Pinstripe Bowl at Yankee

the newspaper he's been"pre-

Stadium. Thedealannounced

pared by the best of the best" for his first NBA head coaching job.

Monday by the Yankees will begin in 2014. The Pinstripe

Shaw is a former NBAguard and

Bowl announced asimilar agree-

longtime assistant NBA coach who has interviewed about a

ment with the Big Ten earlier this month. ACC Commissioner

dozen times for headcoaching

John Swofford is scheduled to

positions but kept coming up short until Monday.

be in New York today for a news

Fight involvingPippen inVeStigated —Former Chicago Bulls star Scottie Pippen was questioned Monday

conference atYankeeStadium with team officials. The ACC replaces the American Athletic

Conference (formerly the Big East), which helped start the 4year-old game.

about a fight that occurred over

theweekend between him and an autograph seekeroutside a Malibu restaurant, authorities

said. Pippen came involuntarily to a substation after he was

namedasasuspectinan investigation of an assault with intent to commit great bodily injury,

Los Angeles County sheriff's officials said. Pippen, 47,was

cooperating with the investiga-

tion, sheriff's spokesmanSteve Whitmore said.

NGAAexpands replayAn NCAApanelvoted Mondayto expand the use of replay review in college basketball, and instituted the10-second backcourt rule for the women's game. The

Playing Rules Oversight Panel also approved atweak to the charging-blocking foul in the

men's gameand gave referees leeway when it comes to penal-

OLYMPICS Russia to send torch into SPaCe —The Olympic torch has gone underwater at the Great Barrier Reef, flown on the Concorde and traveled on the back of a camel. Now Rus-

sia is taking the torch to new heights — space. As part of a four-month torch relay ahead of

the 2014 Winter Games inSochi, the torch will make its first

trip into space using aSoyuz TMA-11M mannedspaceship

provided by the Russian Federal

Space Agency, organizers said Monday.Russiancosmonauts Sergei Ryazansky andOleg Kotov will take the Olympic

torch on a spacewalk. Thetorch will be unlit for safety reasons during its visit to space in No-

vember.

ties for accidentally elbowing an

opponent above the shoulders. The approved changes from the panel's conference call are ef-

Istanbul mayor: Protests

fective immediately. Under the

replay change, officials can use

longed protests in Turkey could hurt the city's chances

video review to confirm a shotclock violation or determine

of hosting the 2020 Olympics. Kadir Topbas says the bid could

who caused the ball to go out of

end up "being nothing but a

bounds on a deflection involving

dream" if the anti-government protests — that have largely

Can harm bid —Istanbui's mayor has warned that pro-

two or more players in the final two minutes of regulation or

abated — were to persist.

overtime.

Istanbul is making its fifth bid

Kentucky forward to

for the Olympics and competing against Madrid and Tokyo.

tranSfer —Kentucky forward

The IOC will select the host city

Kyle Wiltjer is transferring to

find a "significant" role elsewhere. The 6-foot-10 Wiltjer posted a letter on Kentucky's athletic department website

Sept. 7 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Images of violence during the protests included police fir-

ing tear gas and water cannons at protesters.

Monday afternoon, saying he will seek a situation to help

him "compete the way I know( can.... wherever that may be." Kentucky has signed eight in-

SOCCER U.S. ties France inUnder-

coming freshmen, including six

20 WOrld CuP —TheUnited

MCDonald's All-Americans. The

States improved its chances of

Oregon native, whose father is a Canadian andhasdual citizen-

reaching the knockout stage of the Under-20 World Cup,tying

ship, averaged10.2 points and

France 1-1 Monday in Istanbul on an 85th-minute goal by sub-

4.2 rebounds per game asa sophomore. Wiltjer was second on the team with 55 3-pointers

last season andmade90over his two-year Kentucky career.

stitute Daniel Cuevas. Franceappeared set to beat the Americans

and advanceafter YayaSanogo scored his second goal of the tournament. His penalty in the 48th minute came after Dimitri

FOOTBALL Kelly won'tneed chemo — Hall of Famequarterback

COREBOARD

Foulquier was sideswiped by America's Javan Torre in the

penalty area. — From wire reports

PGA Professional National Championship Sunriver Crosswater Club(par 72) and

Meadows course (par 71) Monday Secondround -8

RodPerry Chip Sullivan Mark Sheftic CoreyPrugh Rob Labritz Jeff Sorenson Mike Small BobGaus RyanPolzin Kirk Hanefeld CaineFitzgerald Chris Black Scott Erdm ann GregBisconti Carl Cooper RobMoss JeffreyCranford KyeKely Bob Sowards Rick Lewallen Bill Murchison DonBerry Tim Feenstra Mark Brown Jim Empe y SonnySkinner SteveOrrick RyanBenzel JeffreyAnderson DavidMcNabb CraigHocknuI DavidMuttitt RyanHelminen Daniel Kinn Danny Balin Chris Starkjohann JerrelGrow Mike Northern FaberJamerson LeeRhind CaseyMcCoy MartyJertson Tim Fleming Brett Jones Jerry Haas JeffreyMartin

-7 -7

-6 -5 -5 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -2 -2 -2

-2 -2 -1

-I -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -I E

e1 a1 a1 e1 a1 tl

JC Anderson

e1 e1 a1 a1 e1 a1 a1 e1 e1

Alan Morin

OliverPeacock BrianCairns Tim Weinhart SamArnod Mitch Lowe

Jeff Coston Matt Nice Matt Erger SeanMcCarty Scott Moran Brian Brodell JasonSchmuhl JeffreyTempleton Scott Berliner Scott Hebert BradLardon FrankHohenadel StuartSmith PrestonOtte Jim McGo vern Scott Shapin

tl

a1 e1 +2 +2 +2 +2 t2

+2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2

Kelly Mitchum CraigSmith Eric Chiles

DavidCarr StuartDeane John Faidley Jeff Seave y JohnGuyton CharlesRaulerson FrankDobbs Dirk Schultz Brian Dixon MikeBarge TravisJohns

t2

+2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2

74-71 145

71-75 — 146 69-77 — 146 74-72 — 146 67-79 — 146 76-70 — I46 74-72 — 146 73-73 146 70-76—146 77-69—146 75-71 — 146 72-74 — 146 72-74—146 70-76—146 68 78 146 73-73—146 73-73 — 146 75-71 — 146 73-73 — 146 73-73 — 146 71-75 — 146 71-76 — 147 70-77 — I47 73-74 — 147 73-74 — 147 79-68 — 147 71-76 — 147 75-72 — 147 76-71 — 147 71-76 — 147 73-74 — 147 74-73 147 72-75—147 76-71—147 73-74 — 147 72-75 — 147 76-71 — I47 78-69 — 147 74-73 147 73-74—147 72-75—147 72-75—147 78-69—147 73-74—147 75-72—147 74-73 147 72-75—147 73-74—147 75-73—148 75-73—148 73-75 — I48 73-75 — 148 69 79 148 72-76—148 71-77—148 76-72—148 75-73—148 74-74—148 76-72—148 73 75 148 76-72—148 77-71—148 75-73 — 148 69-79 — 148 78-70—148 75-74—149 73-76—149 77-72—149 79-70—149 76-73—149 74-75—149 78-71 — 149 81-68 — 149 75-74 — 149 73-76 — I49 75-74 — 149 69 80—149 75-74—149 69-80—149 76-73—149 76-73—149 75-74—149 75-74—149 74-75 149 75-74—149 76-73—149 71-78—149 73-76—149 73-76—149 74-76—150 76-74 150 78-72—150 77-73 — 150 75-75 — 150 71-79—150 74-76—150 78-72—150 71-79—150 75-75 — I50 77-73 — 150 75-75 — 150 72-78 — 150 77-73—150 76-74 — 150 81-69 — 150 79-71 — I50 73-77 — 150 72 78 150 74-76—150

t5

lan Ziska CharlesMeola ChadAyres Kyle Martin CraigCzerniejewski GideonSmith CraigBerner Paul Poandl ShawnMcEntee

69-76—145 74-71—145 72-73—145 78-67 145 71-74—145 77-68—145 72-73—145 76-69—145 69-76—145 72-73—145 69-76—145 72-73—145 75-70—145

e3 a3 e3 e3

MarkEvenson TomHarding AudieJohnson MatthewBrock JamesKane CraigStevens DarregKestner JakobGerney DennisMiler Jim Sobb ToddRickenbach Tim Hobby JamesWahl SteveStone Zachary Street DwayneRandag Stephen Schneiter SimonAgan TroyDenton ChrisHapp JeffJordan BlakeGraham Tim Yelverton EdKirby Jim Garrison Boomer Erick TroyWatkins DougRohrbaugh TrentRommann Chris Peterson MichaelDugas Kris Kroetsch John Thomson p Kyle Baehler John DalCorobbo DavidHutseg Matt Seitz TJ Roberts Eric Kennedy BrianJanty

72-72 144 71-73—144 71-73—144 71-73—144 75-69 — 144 72-72 — 144 71-73 — 144 70-74 144 71-73—144 70-74 — 144 71-73 — 144

74-71—145

e3 e3 e3 a3 e3 e3 a3 e3 e3

Will Frantz

75-69 — 144 72-72 — 144 71-73 — 144 70-74—144

+2

t3

t3

a3 e3 e3 a3 e3 +4 t4

a4 +4 a4 a4 +4 a4 t4

a4 +4 a4 a4 +4 +4 t4

a4 +4 a4 a4 +4 a4 t4

a4 +4 a4 a4 +5 a5 t5

+5 +5 a5 a5 +5 a5 a5 +5 +5

a5 +5 a5 a5 +6 +6 t6

+6 +6 +6

+6 +6 +6 t6

+6 +6 +6 +6 +6 +6 t6

+6 +6 +6 +6 +6 +6 +6 +7 +7 t7

+7 +7

+7 +7 +7

+7 t7

+7 +7

+7 +7 +7

+7 t7

+7 +7

+7

NHL

STANLEYCUPFINALS

EXCR0C IATiHG

CF,ep;

NEXt. 5 RI LkS

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Chicago 4, Boston2 Wednesday, June12: Chicago4, Boston3(3OT) Saturday, June15: Boston2, Chicago1, OT Monday, June17: Boston2, Chicago0 Wednes day,June19:Chicago6,Boston5(OT) Saturday, June22: Chicago3, Boston1 Monday, June24: Chicago3,Boston2 NHL Scoring Leaders PLAYOFFS i Through Monday GP G A PTS DavidKrejci, Bos 2 2 9 17 26 PatrickKane,Chi 2 3 9 10 19 NathanHorton, Bos 22 7 12 19 Milan Lucic,Bos 2 2 7 12 19 BryanBickell, Chi 2 3 9 8 17 PatrickSharp,Chi 2 3 10 6 16 MarianHossa,Chi 2 2 7 9 16 EvgeniMalkin, Pit 1 5 4 12 16 Kris Letang,Pit 15 3 13 16 PatriceBergeron,Bos 22 9 6 15 SidneyCrosby,Pit 1 4 7 8 15 ZdenoChara, Bos 2 2 3 12 15 Jonathan Toews, Chi 23 3 11 14 4tied with13pts.

SOCCER

73-70—143 74-69—143 69-74—143 71-72—143 75-68—143 75-68—143 72-72 144 71-73—144 73-71 — 144

HOCKEY NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH Times POT

71-70—141 66-75—141 69-72—141 71-71 142 72-70—142 67-75—142 72-70—142 69-73—142 75-67 — 142 73-69 — 142 70-72—142 68-74—142 70-73—143 73 70—143

t2

JamieBroce DanielRodgers DevinGee Jay Westerlund BrentSnyder FrankEsposito TommyBrannen Keith Ohr Stu Ingraham KevinShields GeoffMontross Matt Pesta SeanKenily Mike San Filippo SamKang DonnyLee RyanKennedy Scott Frisch FrankBensel John Setzer MicahRudosky RonPhilo Matt Dobyns Curtis Malm FrankDully AaronKrueger ChadProehl BrianGaftney JonathanClark JordanSchroeder ClaytonWonneg Scott Heyn ChadKurmel CaseyFowles Rich Steinmetz Barry Milstead ScottJohnson DavidVonHofmann PatrickSteffes RonSkayhan Scott Mallory John Hickson Jaysen Hansen MichaelHopper John Bierkan RobHunt Jeff Yurkiewicz ChristopherKaufman SeanEnglish Gene Fieger MarkFaulkner ShawnKoch JoshSpeight

In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucltck www.gocotmcs.conumthebleachers

63-72 — I35 69-67—136 69 67 136 63-74 — 137 71-67—138 64-74 — 138 69-70—139 69-70—139 72-67—139 68-71 139 71-68—139 70-69—139 72-68 — 140 70-70—140 72-68—140 72-68—140 69-71 140 72-68—140 69-72 — 141 65-76—141

75-70—145 75-70—145 73-72—145 72-73—145 71-74—145

Cut players

geliqueKerber(7), Germany Giles Simon(19), France,vs. FelicianoLopez, Spain

IN THE BLEACHERS

MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AH TimesPDT

EasternConference DavidPaeglow BradySharp MatthewMcKeon Chris Hantla TomHerzan ChadLydiatt ChristopherLisk GarrettChaussard John Panek Paul Dietsche DavidDeSantis BrockShafer Rick Witt

76-74 — 150 79-71 — I50 75-76—151 74-77—151 77-74—151 78-73 151 78-73—151 74-77—151 77-74—151 78-73—151 79-72—151 82-69 151 73-78—151

+7 t7

+8 +8 +8 +8 +8 +8 +8 +8 +8

+8 +8

BASEBALL College NCAACollegeWorld Series At TOAmeritrade ParkOmaha Omaha, Neb. AH TimesPDT

x-if necessary

Mikhail Youzhny(20), Russia,def.Robin Haase,

Netherlands,6-4,7-5, 7-5. VasekPospisil, Canadadef.MarcGicquel, France,

6-3, 6-2,7-6(3). Kenny deSchepper, France,def. Paolo Lorenzi, Italy, 7 6 (6), 6-4,6-2. Jo-WilfriedTsonga(6), France,def. DavidGofin, Belgium,7-6(4), 6-4,6-3. Viktor Troicki, Serbiadef. , JankoTipsarevic (14), Serbia,6-3,6-4, 7-6(5). Adrian Mannarino, France,def. Pablo Andujar, Spain,6-1, 6-2,6-3. ErnestsGulbis,l.atvia, def.EdouardRoger-Vasselin, France,7-6(I), 6-4, 7-5. Dustin Brown,Germany, def. GuilermoGarcia-Lopez,Spain,6-3,6-3, 6-3. AndreyKuznetsov, Russia, del. Albert Montanes, Spain,6-3, 6-4,3-6,6-3. JuanMonaco(22), Argentina,def. BastianKnitte, Germany, 6-4,6-2, 6-3. FernandoVerdasco, Spain, def. Xavier Malisse, Belgium,6-7(5), 6-1,6-4, 6-3. RadekStepanek, CzechRepublic, def.MattReid, Australia, 6-2,6-2, 6-4.

ChampionshipSeries (Best-of-3)

Monday,June24: UCLA3, Mississippi State1 Today,June25: Mississippi Statevs. UCLA,5 p.m. x Wednesday, June26: Mississippi Statevs.UCLA, 5 p.m.

NicolasAlmagro(15), Spain,def. JurgenZopp, Estonia,6-4,7-6(2), 7-5. SteveDarcis, Belgium,def. RafaelNadal(5), Spain, 7-6 (4),7-6(8), 6-4. RajeevRam,United States, def. LukasLacko, Slovakia, 7-5, 64, 6-7(2), 6-2. Nicol asMahut,France,def.JanHajek,CzechRepublic, 6-2,6-4,6-3.

Andy Murray(2), Britain, def. BenjaminBecker, Germany, 6-4,6-3, 6-2. Julien Bennteeau(31), France,del. TobiasKamke, Germany, 6-4,6-7 (5),6-4, 6-2. TommyRobredo(32), Spain,def. AlexBogomoov Jr., Russia6-2, , 6-2,6-4. Yen-hsun Lu,Taiwan,def.JamesWard, Britain, 6-7

WCL WESTCOASTLEAGUE

Leaguestnndings North Division VictoriaHarbourcats Begingham Bells Wa laWalaSweets Wenatchee AppleSox Kelowna Falcons South Division BendElks CorvagisKnights KlamathFalls Gems CowlitzBlackBears MedfordRogues

W 10 10 9 8 3

7 6 5 4 L 12

W 12 10

KitsapBlueJackets Monday'sGames Wa laWala atKelowna, ategame Begingham 7, Kitsap 4 Cowlitz 4,KlamathFags3 Today's Games CorvagisatBend,6:35p.m. WallaWallaatKelowna,6:35pm. Begingham atKitsap, 6:35p.m. Wenatchee atMedford,6:35 p.m. Cowlitz atKlamathFals, 6:35p.m. Wednesday'sGames Begingham atKitsap, 6.35p.m. CorvagisatBend,6:35p.m. Cowlitz atKlamathFals 635 pm WallaWallaatKelowna,6:35p.m. Wenatchee atMedford, 6:35p.m. Thursday's Games CorvagisatBend,6:35p.m. Wenatchee atKlamathFalls, 6:35p.m WallaWallaatBegingham,7:05p.m Fridny's Games Wenatchee atKlamathFalls, 6:35p.m. Corvallis atKitsap,6:35 p.m. WallaWallaatBegingham,7:05p.m.

9 7 6 4

7 8 6 L 12 15

BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION AH Times PDT

EasternConference Atlanta Chicago NewYork Washington Connecticut Indiana

W 7 5 4 4 2 1

L 1 3 3 4 6 6

Pct GB .875 .625 2

W 6 5 4

L 2 2 4

4

4

3 3

5 8

Pct GB .750 .714 '/z .500 2 .500 2 375 3 .273 4'/~

WesternConference

Minnesota Los Angeles Phoenix Seattle SanAntonio Tulsa

.571 2'/z .500 3 .250 5 143 5'/~

Monday's Games No games scheduled Today'sGames IndianaatAtlanta, 9a.m. Phoenixat SanAntonio,5 p.m.

TENNIS Professional Wimbledon Monday AtTheAHEnglandLawnTennis& Croquet Club London Purse: $34.9 million (GrandSlam) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles Men First Round StephaneRobert, France,def. AlejandroFaga,Colombia,6-3, 7-6(5), 7-5. Sergiy Stakhovsky,Ukraine,def. Rogerio Dutra Silva Brazil, 6-4,6-0, 6-4.

BenoitPaire(25), France, def.AdrianUngur, Roma-

nia, 6-4, 4-6,6-3,6-1. Jurgen Melzer,Austria, def. Fabio Fognini (30), Italy, 6-7(5), 7-5, 6-3,6-2.

RogerFederer(3), Switzerland, def.Victor Hanescu, Romania6-3, , 6-2,6-0. Marin Cilic (10),Croatia,def.MarcosBaghdatis, Cyprus,6-3,6-4, 6-4. Jerzy Janowicz(24), Poland,def. KyleEdmund, Britain,6-2,6-2, 6-4. LukaszKubot,Poland,def. IgorAndreev,Russia, 6-1, 7-5,6-2.

Julian Reister,Germany, def. I.ukasRosol, Czech Republic,6-3, 4-6,7-6 (5),6-7 (4), 6-4. John Isner(18), UnitedStates, def. EvgenyDonskoy,Russia,6-1, 7-6(5), 7-6(3). GuillaumeRulin, France,def. MarinkoMatosevic, Australia,6-1, 4-6,6-4, 6-3.

W 9 7 NewYork 7 S porting KansasCity 6 5 Houston 6 Columbus 5 NewEngland 5 Chicago 5 TorontoFC 2 D.C. 2

Montreal Philadelphia

L 3 5 6 5 6 5 7 7 11

T 2 4 4 5 5 5 5 3 6 3

P t sGF GA 2 9 24 17 25 25 24 25 23 22 2 3 20 15 23 19 16 20 19 18 20 18 13 18 15 21 12 14 20 9 8 26

WesternConference

W L T P t sGF GA 7 1 9 30 28 16 5 3 30 26 16 8 3 5 29 25 20 7 6 3 24 23 18 6 5 4 22 25 24 6 5 3 21 19 17 5 7 5 20 17 19 SanJose 4 7 6 18 15 25 ChivasLISA 3 10 2 1 1 14 30 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie. Portland RealSaltLake 9 FC Dallas Los Angeles Vancouver Seattle Colorado

Saturday's Games RealSalt IakeatTorontoFC,10 am. FC Dallas at Philadelphia,2:30 p.m. Colorado atMontreal, 4p.m. VancouveratD.C.United,4 p.m. Columbus at Sporting KansasCity, 5:30 p.m. Los AngelesatSanJose, 730p.m. NewEnglandat Chivas USA,730p m. Snnday's Game Houston at NewYork,11 a.m.

DEALS Transactions

BASEBALL American League BALTIMOREORIOLES Optioned RHP Freddy Garcia toNorlolk (IL). RecalledRHPKevin Gausman from Norfolk. CLEVELANDINDIANS —Sent RHPs Brett Myers and BlakeWoodto MahoningValley (NYP)for rehabassignments. OptionedRHPCarlos Carrasco to Columbus(IL). Recalled LHPTJ. Houselrom 6-4, 6-1. Columbus. Karin Knapp,ltaly,def.LucieHradecka, Czech ReHOUSTO N ASTROS—OptionedINFMarwin Gonpublic, 6-3,6-4. zalez toOklahomaCity (PCL). ReleasedLHPWade Eva Birnerova,CzechRepublic, def.VarvaraLepl . eBlanc chenko(26), UnitedStates,6-2,4-6, 6-4. LOS ANG ELES ANGELS—Agreed to terms with Lesia Tsurenko,Ukraine, def. LaraArruabarrena, LHP HunterGreenonaminor leaguecontract. Spain,6-1, 6-3 M INNES O TA TWINS—OptionedLHPPedro HerEugeni eBouchard,Canada,def.GalinaVoskobo- nandez to Rochester (IL). eva,Kazakhstan,5-7, 7-6(5), 6-4. OAKLAND ATHLETICS—OptionedRHPDanStraily Alize Cornet(29), France,def. Vania King,United to Sacram ento(PCI.). States,4-6,6-3, 6-1. SEATTLE MA RINERS—Agreed to terms with SS Silvia Soler-Espinosa,Spain,def. MisakiDoi, JaTy erSmithona minor leaguecontract. pan, 1 6,6-4, 6-1. National League l.ucie Safarova(27), CzechRepublic, def.Lauren ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS— Optioned LHP Joe Davis, UnitedStates,6-4,6-0. Patersonto Reno(PCL). MonicaPuig,Puerto Rico,def. SaraErrani(5),ltaly, SAN DIEGOPADRES— Recalled LHP Tommy 6-3, 6-2. PMiles MikoVictoria Azarenka (2), Belarus, del. Maria Joao LaynefromTucson(PCL). Optioned RH lasto Tucson. Koehler,Portugal,6-1,6-2. SAN FRAN CISCOGIANTS—Optioned INF Nick Mirjana Lucic-BaroniCroatia, , def.Sofia ArvidsNoonanandRHPJean Machi to Fresno(PCL). Reson, Sweden, 6-1, 6-4. instated 38 Pabl o Sandoval fromthe15-day DL.ReHsiehSu-wei,Taiwan,def. Tatjana Maria, Germany, ca ledRHPGeorgeKontos fromFresno. 6-1, 6-0. FOOTBALL VesnaDolonc,Serbia,del. YaninaWickmayer,BelNational Football League gium, 3-6,6-2, 6-4. NFL — S us pen ded Indianapolis WRLaVonBrazil Carla SuarezNavarro (19), Spain,def. Lourdes and NewYorkGiants WRBrandon Collins for four Domingue zLino,Spain,6-2,6-2. CamilaGiorgi,Italy, def.Samantha Murray, Britain, gameseachfor violating theleague'ssubstance-abuse 6-3, 6-4. po Icy. CLEVEL ANDBROWNS—NamedZakGilbert direcJelenaJankovic(16), Serbia, del. JohannaKonta, Britain,6-2,7-5. tor ot comm unications. DETROIT LIONS—Signed SChris Hope.Released Sorana Cirstea (22), Romania, def. Stefanie WR BrianRobiskie. VoegeleSwi , tzerland,7-5, 7-6(3). O AKLAND RAIDERS— Waived LBMarioKurn. Maria Sharapova (3), Russia,def. KristinaMladenovic,France,7-6(5), 6-3. HOCKEY NationalHockeyLeague Michelle LarcherdeBrito, Portugal, def.Melanie ANAHEIMDUCKS—Acquired DAlex Grant from Oudin,UnitedStates,7-6(7), 1-6,6-4. CarolineWozniacki (9), Denmark, def. EstregaCa- the PittsburghforLWHarry Zolnierczyk. bezaCandela, Spain,6-0, 6-2. DALLASSTARS— Signed F MattFraser and D Yaroslava Shvedova, Kazakhstan, det. KikiBertens, Cameron Gaunceto oneyear contracts. Netherlands,6-4,6-3. FLORIDA PANTHERS—Agreed to terms with F EkaterinaMakarova(25), Russia, def. Johanna BobbyButleronatwo-year contract andFEric SeReck Larsson,Sweden,6-3, 6-3. on a one-yearcontract. PetraCetkovska,CzechRepublic, def. DonnaVekic, MINNES OTAWILD—Agreed to termswith GNikCroatia,6-3, 6-1. las Backstrom onathree-year contract. ChristinaMcHale,UnitedStates,def.AlexaGlatch, WINNIPEG JETS—Signedcoach ClaudeNoel to a UnitedStates,6-4,6-4. one-yearcontract extension. SloaneStephens(17), UnitedStates, del. Jamie TENNIS Hampton,UnitedStates,6-3, 6-3. United StatesTennis Association Petra Kvitova (8), CzechRepublic, def. Coco USTAPLAYER DEVELOPMENT— Named Jamea Vandeweghe, United States, 6-1, 5-7,6-4. Jackso nnationalcoach,women'stennis. AndreaPetkovic, Germany, det. Pauline Parmentier, COLLEGE France,6-3, 6-2. ATLANTIC10 CONFERENCE— Signed commisBojanaJovanovski, Serbia, def. AjlaTomljanovic, sionerBernadtete V.McGladeto acontract extension Croatia, 3 6,6-1,9-7. through2018. Garbin eMuguruza,Spain,defAnneKeothavong, ALABAMA Announced sophomore men's Britain, 6-4,6-0. basketball F DevontaPollard haswithdrawnfrom Marion Bartoli (15), France, def. ElinaSvitolina, school. Ukraine,6-3, 7-5. CARROLL (WIS.)—Named Stein Rear baseball KirstenFlipkens(20), Belgium,del. YuliaPutint- coach. seva,Kazakhstan,7-5, 6-4. CENTRALCONN ECTICUT STAT E—Agreed to termswithwomen's volleyball coachLindaSagneli Show Courl Schedules on a three-yearcontractextensionthrough the2015 Today season. AtTheAH England Lawn Tennis& Croquet DETROI — TNamed Sean Wiliamson strength and Club conditioningcoach. London ILLINOISSTATE—Dismissed men'ssenior basPlay begins onCentre Court nnd No. 1Court ketbag G Bryant Allenfor an unspecifiedviolation of at 5 a.m. POT; aHother courts nt 3:30 a.m. teamrules. Centre Court JACKSON VILLE STATE NamedRick Pietri womSerena Wiliams(1), UnitedStates,vs. MandyMien's basketballcoach. nega,Luxembourg KENTUCKYAnnouncedmen's junior basketball Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, vs Florian Mayer, FKyleWiltjer is transferring. Germany LEESMCRAE Named Darry Thomton men' s DavidFerrer(4), Spain,vs. MartinAlund,Argen- lacrosse coach. tina MICHIGAN STATEMranted freshmanWRKyle No. 1Court Kerrick rel a easefromhisscholarship. AlbertRamos, Spain, vs.JuanMartin delPotro (8), TEXAS W O ME NS ' Announcedtheresignation of Argentina Maria Kirilenko(10), Russia,vs. LauraRobson, soccercoachFleurBenatar, effectiveJune30. Britain Martin Klizan,Slovakia, vs. TomasBerdych (7), FISH COUNT CzechRepublic Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook, jack Nn.2 Court HeatherWatson, Britain, vs.MadisonKeys, United chinook,steelheadandwild steeheadat selected Columbia Ri v er dam s l a st upda tedonSunday. States Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Dmitry Tursunov,Russia, vs.Tomm y Haas (13), Bonneville 2,143 7 3 4 206 68 Germany RichardGasquet (9), France,vs. MarcelGranol- The Dages 2,360 4 9 3 100 28 John Day 1,698 6 6 3 81 29 lers, Spain AgnieszkaRadwanska (4), Poland, vs. Yvonne McNary 1 ,702 4 7 2 42 14 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, Meusburger,Austria jack chinook,steelheadandwid steelheadatselected No. 3 Court ColumbiaRiverdamslastupdatedonSunday. AnnaSchm iedlova, Slovakia,vs.SamStosur(14), Australia Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd BernardTomic, Australia, vs. SamQuerrey (21), Bonneville 132,360 48,667 5,723 1,527 T he Dages 110,123 42,973 1,764 5 8 0 UnitedStates Bethanie Mattek-Sands, U nited States, vs. An- J ohn Day 90,216 37,946 1,682 7 0 2 M cNary 81,210 28,675 2,112 8 3 8

(4), 6-4,7-6 (11), 7-6(4). LleytonHewitt, Australia, dei. StanislasWawrinka (11), Switzerland,6-4,7-5, 6-3 Women First Round Ana Ivanovic(12), Serbia,def.Virginie Razzano, France,7-6(1), 6-0. Flavia Pennetta,Italy, def. ElenaBaltacha, Britain,


TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

NHL: STANLEY CUP FINAL

TENNIS: WIMBLEDON

Latera a so orBac aw s By Jimmy Golen

The Associated Press

BOSTON — An NHL-record unbeaten streak to start the lockoutshortened season. Three straight victories to clinch the title. From beginning to end, the Chicago Blackhawks skated away from the rest of the league. Bryan Bickell and Dave Bolland scored 17 seconds apart in the final 1:16 and the Blackhawks struck quickly to win Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final 3-2 on Monday night for their second NHL championship in four seasons. "I still can't believe that finish. Oh my God, we never quit," said goalie C orey Crawford, who m ade 2 3 saves. "I never lost confidence. No one in our room ever did." Jonathan Toews returned from

injury to add a goal and an assist in the first finals between Original Six teams since 1979. Patrick Kane, whose overtime goal in Game 6 beat Philadelphia to win the 2010 championship, was voted the Conn Smythe Trophy winner as this year's playoffs MVP. "In 2010, we didn't really know what we were doing. We just, we played great hockey and we were kind of oblivious to how good we were playing," said Toews, who scored his third goal of the playoffs to tie it 1-1 in the second period, then fed Bickell for the score that tied it with 76 seconds to play. "We played great hockey and we were kind of oblivious to how good we were

Nadal falls in opener

back here and this is an unbelievable group," Toews said. "We've been through a lot together this year and this is a sweet way to finish it off." Trailing 2-1, Crawford went off for an extra skater and the Blackhawks converted when Toews fed it in front and Bickell scored from the edge of the crease to tie the score. Perhaps the Bruins expected it to go to overtime, as three of the first four games in the series did. B ecause they s eemed t o b e

playing. "This time around, we know definitely how much work it takes and how much sacrifice it takes to get

C3

By Stephen Wilson The Associated Press

te

caught off-guard on the ensuing

.! Ik <

faceoff. Chicago skated into the zone, sent a shot on net and after it deflected off a player and the post it went right to Bolland, who put it in the net and started the Chicago celebration with 59 seconds left in the game.

Chicago Bleckhawks right wing Patrick Kane hoists the Stanley Cup after the Blackhawks beat the Boston Bruins 3-2 in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Finalson Monday inBoston.

4vt

Elise Amendola/The Associated Press

LONDON — For the second straight year, Rafael Nadal is leaving Wimbledon early after a stunning loss to a little-known player ranked in the hundreds. In one of t h e t ournament's greatest upsets, an ailing Nadal was knocked out in straight sets Monday by 135th-ranked Steve Darcis of Belgium — the S paniard's first l o s s i n

the opening round of any Grand Slam event. The free-swinging Darcis defeated the two-time

champion 7-6 (4), 7-6 (8), 6-4

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings All Times PDT AMERICANLEAGUE

East Division

Boston Newyork Baltimore TampaBay Toronto Detroit

W L 45 33 41 34 42 35

40 37 3B 37

Central Division W L

Cleveland Kansas City Minnesota Chicago Texas Oakland Seattle Los Angeles Houston

42 39 35 34 31

32 36 3B 30 42

West Division W L 44 32 44 34 34 43

33 43 29 40

Pct GB 577 .547 2'A .545 2'/t .519 4'It 507 5 1/2

Pct GB .56B .520 3'/t 479 Btd

472 7 425 t Dtd

Pct GB .579 .564 1 .442 t 0'/t 434 11 377 15rd

Monday's Games Cleveland 5, Baltimore2 Tampa Bay4,Toronto 1 Today's Games Cleveland (Masterson9-5) atBaltimore (Tittman8-2), 4:05 p.m. Texas(Darvish7-3) at N.Y.Yankees(Kuroda7-5), 4:05 p.m. L.A. Angels(C.Wilson6-5) at Detroit (Porcetto4-4), 4:DBp.m. Colorado(Nicasio 4-3) at Boston (Dem pster 4-0), 4:10 p.m. Minnesota(Correia 6-4I at Miami (Fernandez4-4), 4:10 p.m.

Toronto(Buehrte4-4) atTampa Bay (M.Moore 9-3), 4:10 p.m. Atlanta(Medlen4-7) at KansasCity (E.Santana5-5), 5:10 p.m N.Y.Mets(Z.Wheeler1-0) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Sale 5-6), 5:10p.m. St. Louis(Westbrook3-2) at Houston(Harrett 5-7), 5:10 p.m. Cincinnati(Arroyo6-5Iat Oakland(Mitone 6-7), 7:05 p.m. Pittsburgh(Locke6-1) at SeattleIJ.Saunders5-7), 7:10 p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Atlanta 44 33 Washington 37 30 Philadelphia 36 41 NewYork 30 42 Miami 25 50 Central Division

St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Chicago Milwaukee Arizona Colorado SanDiego SanFrancisco

LosAngeles

W 47 46 45 31 31

L 29 30 32 43 43

West Division W L 41 34

39 30 39 3B 3B 30 33 42

Pct GB .61B 605 1 504 2td

.419 15 .419 15

Pct GB 547 506 3 506 3 500 3 1/2

.440 B

Monday's Games San Diego 4, Philadelphia 3, 10innings LA. Dodgers 3, SanFrancisco1 Today's Games Arizona(Cahitt 3-8)at Washington (G.Gonzatez 3-3), 4:05 p.m. Colorado(Nicasio 4-3) at Boston(Dempster 4-B), 4:10 p.m. Minnesota(Correia6-4) at Miami(Fernandez4-4), 4:10 p.m. At anta(Medlen4-7) at KansasCity (E.Santana5-5), 5:10 p.m. ChicagoCubs(E.Jackson3-9) at Milwaukee(Lohse 2-6), 5:10p.m. N.y. Mets(Z.Wheeler 1-0) atChicagoWhite Sox(Sale 5-6), 5:10 pm. St. Louis(Westbrook3-2) at Houston(Harrett 5-7), 5:10 pm. CincinnatiIArroyo6-5) atOakland(Mitone6-7), 7.05

p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 6-4) at SanDiego (Marquis 9-2), 7:10p.m. Pittsburgh(Locke6-1) at Seattle(J.Saunders5-7), 7:10 p.m. San Francisco(KickhamD-t) at LA. Dodgers (Fife 1-2), 7:10p.m.

American League

.571

.493 6 .46B B .417 t t'/t

.333 1B

Elks

U.Jimenez W,6-4 51-3 B 2 2 2 R.Hill H,B 1 0 0 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 0 ShawH,5 J.SmithH,B 1 0 0 0 0 PestanoS4-6 1 1 0 0 1

6 1 1 0 1

Britton L1-2 5 6 3 Tom.Hunter 2 0 0 O'Day 0 2 2 Matusz 1 1 0 Ji.Johnson 1 0 0 Britton pitched to 5baters in the6th. 0'Day pitched to 2 baters inthe0th. HBP —byBritton (Kipnis). T—3:14.A—10,544(45,971).

5 1 0 2 2

Baltimore

3 1 0 0 0

Rays 4, Blue Jays1 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Jeremy

Hellickson allowed onehit in seven shutout innings and rookie Wil Myers homered in his home

debut, helpingTampa Baybeat the Blue Jays to end Toronto's

BALTIMORE — Michael Brantley

TampaBayhomers inthesecond,

homered andhadfour RBls to lead Cleveland past Baltimore for its ninth win in12 games. Brantley

connecting in his first at-bat at

put the Indians ahead with a two-

ab MeCarr lt 4 RDavispr-If 0 Bautist rf 4 Encrnc dh 3 Lind1b 4 CIRsms cf 1 Arencii c 4 Mfzturs3b-ss4 Bonifac 2b 3 Kawsk ss 2

Cleveland Baltimore ab r hbi ab r hbi Bourncf 5 0 0 0 McLothtf 5 0 1 0

hit the second of three straight

Tropicana Field. Toronto

bilities have changed hands, the approach did not deviate. Richards Continued from C1 points out that acquiring players "What are the root causes of why is a relationship-driven process. we didn't play well on the road?" He has contacts with coaches at Richards recalls asking d uring Creighton and Arizona State who the postseason meeting. "Same were former coaches with Washguys, same game, same distance ington State, for example. If either between first and second (base). of them says they have a guy who How we travel, who we travel with could produce for the Elks while — those were important issues." developing as a player, Richards Another issue was how the Elks will trust those coaches enough to selected their players. Richards check out the prospect's statistics says callsfrom coll ege coaches and consider the player as a future were already pouring i n a b out Elk. Bend's 2013 roster, and it was only It is about that trust, Richards August. Sensing that a change was says, and personal relationship. in order, Richards did something And Dominiak agrees. that had not been done in his team's "A lot of the coaches that I refirst 13 seasons: The recruiting cruited kids from all know me and reins were passed from Richards know what I'm l i ke," Dominiak to Dominiak, who was named the says. "So they tried to match my Elks' head coach for 2013. personality with the kids', and it reWhat resulted in 2013 was a 12-6 ally has blossomed." start, most wins in the WCL three What began with players from weeks into the season. about 80 schools, by Richards' esti"I asked Jim, 'What do you want'? mation — upward of 200 prospects What would you want help with'?' " — was boiled down to fewer than recalls Dominiak, an 18-year col- 40 players,a roster that reaches legiate coaching veteran who this more than 1,700 miles east of Cenpast spring served as head base- tral Oregon. ball coach at Madras High School As for the players who in many and recently was named new head cases traveledfrom far regions of coach at Bend's Mountain View the country to take the field in the High. "When he mentioned recruit- Pacific Northwest, not much pering, I just smiled, like, 'Good.' suasion was needed. B y October, virtually a l l o f Take Abilene Christian's Seth Bend's 2013roster was complete, Spivey, for example. His assisand it became the most eclectic tant coach, Elliott Cribby — who group of players Richards had seen played for the West Coast League's as the front man of the Elks. Wenatchee (Wash.) AppleSox for Players from as nearby as Or- several years — suggested that the egon State (Corvallis) and George senior-to-be consider playing in Fox (Newberg) universities would the WCL, one of the nation's more be joined in the Elks' clubhouse by highly regarded summer collegiate those coming in from as far as Ar- baseball leagues. "I did some research on it (the kansas State and Abilene Christian (Texas) University. Players from WCL) after he told me," says SpivSeattle University would mix with ey, an infielder. "I looked it up and the Elks' first-ever recruits from everything. I had no hesitation in Creighton University in O maha, coming." Neb. Spivey discovered that p l ayWhile the recruiting responsi- ers such as current Major League "

3 0 2 0 0

11-game winning streak. Myers

the sixth inning and made it 5-2 with a two-rttn shot in the eighth off Darren O'Day.

DeRosaph-3b0 0 0 0 YEscorss 3 0 0 0 Totals 2 9 1 4 1 Totals 3 04 B 4 Toronto 0 00 000 010 — 1 Tampa Bay 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0x — 4 DP — Toronto 1, TampaBay2. LDB—Toronto 6, TampaBay5. 2B Scoit (7). HR Loney (9),

TampaBay r hbi ab r hbi 0 1 0 Joycelf 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 SRdrgzph-It 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 Zobrist2b 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 Scottdh 4 0 1 1 0 0 0 Longori3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 Loneytb 4 1 1 1 0 2 0 WMyrsrf 4 1 2 1 0 0 0 DJnngscf 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 Fuldcf-rf 3 1 1 1 0 0 0 Loatonc 3 0 1 0

Stults

7

7 2 2 0

4

Layne 0 1 1 1 0 0 Vincent 1 1 0 0 0 0 Brach 1 1 0 0 0 2 Gregerson 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 T hatcher W,3-1 1- 3 0 0 0 0 0 WMyers(2), Fuld(2). CS—W.Myers(1). Laynepitchedto1 batterin the8th. Toronto IP H R E R BB SO Lee pitched to 2 baters inthe9th. E.RogersL,3-3 6 7 4 4 3 2 HBP—byPapetbon(Guzman), byDe Fratus(Quen1 1 0 0 0 2 JPerez tin). PB —Ruiz. Oliver 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—3:12.A—26,265 (42,524). TampaBay HellicksonW6-3 , 7 1 0 0 4 4 AI.Torres 1 2 1 1 1 1 Dodgers 3, Giants1 RodneyS,16-21 1

T—2:36. A—t 1,407(34,07B). ers It0). SB —StubbsIB). CS—A.Jones(1). IP H R E R BB SD Cleveland

Indians 5, Orioles 2

rttn single off Zach Britton (1-2) in Pct GB

Avilesss 5 0 0 0 Machd3b 5 0 0 0 K ipnis2b 4 1 1 0 Markksrf 4 1 2 1 Swisher1b 4 1 2 1 A.Jonescf 4 0 2 0 CSantnc 5 1 1 0 C.Davis1b 4 0 0 0 MrRynl3b 2 0 1 0 Hardyss 4 0 1 0 JMcDnlpr-3b0 1 0 0 Wietersc 3 1 1 1 Brantty f 4 1 2 4 ishikawdh 1 0 0 0 Raburndh 3 0 0 0 Valenciph-dh 1 0 0 0 Giambiph-dh1 0 0 0 ChDckrph 1 0 0 0 Stubbsrf 3 0 2 0 Flahrty2b 3 0 2 0 Totals 3 6 5 9 5 Totals 3 52 9 2 C leveland 000 0 0 3 0 20 — 5 B altimore 100 1 0 0 0 00 — 2 LDB —Cleveland 9, Baltimore 9. 2B—Kipnis (19), C.Santana(19).HR—Brantley(5I, Markakis(B),Wiet-

1 0 0 0

2

National League

LOS ANGELES — Rookie

sensation Yasiel Puig hit his seventh home rttn in 20 major

league gamesandadded

Padres 4, Phillies 3 (10 innings) a tiebreaking single in the SAN DIEGO — Kyle Blanks singled

eighth inning against Madison

home the winning run in the 10th inning for his fourth hit of the

Bttmgarner, leading Los Angeles

to a victory over SanFrancisco.

game, andSan Diegorallied from

San Francisco ab r hbi

a three-run deficit in the ninth to beat Philadelphia. Philadelphia San Diego ab r hbi ab r hbi Rollinsss 4 0 1 1 Forsyth2b 5 0 0 0 U ttey2b 5 1 2 1 Denorficf 4 1 0 0 Myong3b-lb5 0 0 0 Quentinlf 4 1 2 0 DBrwnlf 5 0 1 0 Headly3b 4 1 2 0 F rndsn1b 4 0 0 0 Blanksrf 5 1 4 3 Galvi s3b 0 0 0 0 Guzmntb 3 0 0 0 D yongrf 3 0 1 0 Grandlc 3 0 1 0 Reverecf 1 0 0 0 Ciriacoss 3 0 0 0 Mayrrycf-rf 4 2 3 0 Kotsayph 0 0 0 0 R uizc 4 0 3 1 Grgrsnp 0 0 0 0 L eep 4 0 0 0 Thtchrp 0 0 0 0 P apelnp 0 0 0 0 Stultsp 20 10 D eFrtsp 0 0 0 0 Laynep 0 0 0 0 Vincent p 0 0 0 0 Venale ph 1 0 0 0 B rachp 0 0 0 0 Amarst ph-ss 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 9 3 113 Totals 3 54 103 P hiladelphia 010 010 010 0 — 3 S an Diego 0 0 0000 003 1 — 4 Oneoutwhenwinning runscored. E—Denorfia 2(4). DP—Philadelphia 3,SanDiego 1. LDB Philadelphia7, SanDiego9. 2B Mayberry

Los Angeles ab r hbi

GBlanccf 5 0 1 0 M.Ettis2b 3 1 0 0 S cutaro2b 5 0 1 0 Puigrf 4132 Poseyc 3 0 1 0 AdGnzttb 4 0 0 0 Pencerf 3 0 2 0 HRmrzss 4 0 1 1 Sandovl3b 4 0 2 0 HrstnJrlf 4 0 0 0 Arias ss 1 1 0 0 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 B Crwfrss 3 0 0 0 Ethierct 3 0 0 0 A nTrrslf 4 0 1 1 Uribe3b 3 0 1 0 B elt1b 2 0 0 0 PRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 Bmgrnp 3 0 0 0 Schmkrlf 0 0 0 0 K ontosp 0 0 0 0 A.Ettisc 2 0 0 0 J .Lopez p 0 0 0 0 Ryu p 2000

SRosari p 0 0 0 0 Belisari p 0 0 0 0 Abreuph 1 0 0 0 Punto3b 1 1 1 0

T otals 3 4 1 B 1 Totals 3 03 6 3 S an Francisco 010 000 000 — 1 Los Angeles 10 0 000 02x— 3

E Bumgarner(2). DP Los Angeles2 LDB San Francisco 10, LosAngeles 5. 2B—Posey (2II, An.Torres (15), Punto(B). HR —Puig(7). S—M.Ettis. San Francisco I P H R ER BB SD BumgarnerL7-5 7 5 3 2 1 5 Kontos 0 1 0 0 0 0 J.Lopez 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 SRosario 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Los Angeles Ryu

62-3 B 1 1

4

2-3 0 0 0 0 Belisario PRodriguezW2-2 2-3 0 0 0 0 H R ER BB SD JansenS,5-7 1 0 0 0 0 B 2 2 1 7 Bumgarner pitchedto 2batters intheBth. 1 1 0 1 0 Kontospitchedto 1baterin the 0th. 1 1 1 2 0 WP—J.Lopez,Jansen. T—3:03.A—40,994 (56,000).

(13I, Headle(11), y Grandal(5), Stults(1). HR —Utley (B). SB —Mayberry 2(5). SF—Rollins. Philadelphia IP Lee B PapelbonBS,4-10 1 De FratusL,2-1 1 - 3

San Diego

Baseball stars Jacoby Ellsbury and Chris Davis had come through the WCL as an early steppingstone to the big leagues. Arkansas State's Adam Grantham did similar research, finding that the WCL had helped to develop a plethora of MLB-bound talent in recent years — 160 former WCL players were on the rosters of affiliated professional clubs last summer, according to the league's website. From there, Grantham's decision was

simple, he says. "Really, it was about gaining experience," says Grantham, a pitcher and outfielder who will be a sophomore in the fall. "As a freshman, you only get a few innings, a few spot times. It was gaining experience — hitting experience, pitching experience — and develop

as a player." Experience is a selling point for many college coaches, Richards and Dominiak agree. Players who may not have logged many innings pitched or turns at bat are sent to Bend and other summer collegiate clubs to get their repetitions and improve their game before the fall season begins back at school. The Elks will not accept just any player, Richards notes. But withthe strength of the relationships he and Dominiak have established with college coaches around the country, with the trust that the team, the coaches and the players have with each other, the right fit is found.

"They really had a good idea of

what they wanted to send me," Dominiak says of the college coaches. "We have a couple of kids that were supposed to go to the (New

England-based) Cape Cod League, which is the No. 1 collegiate league in the United States ... and (we're) very blessed with having that. The guys know what they want and what I want to do with them." — Reporter: 541-383-0307; glucas@bendbulletin.com.

WCLRoundup Standings Merth Division Victoria HarbourCats

Bellingham Bells Walla Walla Sweets

WenatcheeAppleSox Kelowna Falcons South Division Bend Elks

Klamath Falls Gems Corvallis Knights Cowlitz Black Bears

Medford Rogues Kitsap BlueJackets

10-4 10-5 9-6 8-7 3-12 12-6 9-7 10-8 7-6 6-12 4-15

ELKS STANDINGOUT Player ef the week:Infielder Derek Dixon batted .333 in the past six games, driving in eight runs to bring his WCL-leading RBI total to 20.

Pitcher of theweek: ClayGartner improved to 30 on the season — tied for best record in theWCL — after scattering seven hits and allowing just three runs in a14-3 rout of Kitsap last Wednesday. Game of the week:The Elks scored five runs oft just one hit and six walks in the top of the ninth inning last Wednesday to secure a10-5 win at Kitsap (Wash.j and earn their fourth straight win.

2 2

1 3

on Court 1, ending Nadal's 22-match winning streak and eliminating one of the Big Four of men's tennis on the very first day of the grass-court Grand Slam. A fter serving a n a c e down the middle on match point, D a r cis c o nceded he was as surprised as everyone. "Nobody was expecting me to win," he said. "So I had toplay a good match, relax, and enjoy the game. That's what I did." There were no surprises for the other big names: Defending champion Roger Federer, bidding for a record eighth Wimbledon title, an d s econd-seeded A ndy Murray both w o n in straight sets on Centre Court. Nadal was sidelined for seven months with a left knee injury after losing in the second round of Wimbledonlastyear.H e seemed

to be struggling physically Monday. "I don't ... talk about my knee this afternoon," Nadal said. "Only thing that can say today is congratulate Steve Darcis. He played a fantastic match. Everything that I will say today about my knee is an excuse, and I don't like to put any excuse when I'm losing a match like I lost today." Ten years after his first Wimbledon championship, F ederer opened play o n Centre Court as defending champion and looked right as home as he dismantled Victor Hanescu of Romania 6-3, 6-2, 6-0. In women's play, there was an early upset as fifths eeded Sara Errani w as eliminated by Puerto Rican teenager Monica Puig6-3, 6-2. In other women's matches, second-seeded Victoria Azarenka overcame a right knee injury from a scary fall beating M aria J oao Koehler of Portugal 6-1, 6-2. Third-seeded Mari a Sharapova,the 2004 Wimbledon champion, came through a first-set tiebreaker and beat 37th-ranked K ristina M l adenovic o f

France 7-6 (5), 6-3. Other women's winners M onday included No. 9 Caroline Wozniacki, No. 12 Ana Ivanovic and No. 16 Jelena Jankovic. A dvancing among t h e men were No. 6 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, No. 10 Marin Cilic, No. 15 Nicolas Almagro and No. 18 John Isner.

LOOKINGAHEAD Cervallisat Bend, today-Thursday:TheKnights, WCL champs in 2011 and rttnners-ttp last season, bring one of the league's strong pitching staffs

(3.19 teamearned-run average, No. 3 in theWCL) to face off against the Elks, the top rttn-prodttcing offense in the WCL.

Kelewna at Bend,Saturday-Monday:Former Elk Stetson Olson returns to Bend as a Falcon. Olson led Division II Minnesota State with eight home

runs and 37 RBls in the spring and is batting .292 with a homer so far with Kelowna. KlamathFalls atBend,July 2-3:Dem psey Grover and Tyson Dahl lead the Gems into Bend with two of the top batting averages in the WCL. As a team, Klamath Falls sits atop the league with

a.302 average.

Kirsty Wtggtesworth / The Associated Press

Steve Darcis reacts as he defeats Rafael Nadal in their men's first-round singles match at Wimbledon in London on Monday.


C4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 20'I3

Pron orn C u ro ma es cut in Sunriver PGA PNC NOTEBOOK

By Zack Hall The Bulletin

three-putt bogey on Crosswater's par3 seventh, and he had to get up and down from the greenside rough on the par-4 10th to card a 5. And a poor tee shot into the rough on the par-4 15th dropped him to 2 over for the day. The good news for Grow is that his goals are not out of reach. The top 20 after Wednesday's final round qualify for the 2013 PGA Championship in August. And at Crosswater, eight strokes are not insurmountable. First things first, Grow said. "It is too early to start thinking about winning or qualifying for the PGA (Championship)," Grow said. "I have to go out and try to play my way back into contention." Familiar face One of the interesting aspects of the PNC is who is caddying for the pros. Unlike the PGA Tour, many of the

SUNRIVER — Two shots could have made all the difference for Jerrel Grow. The 35-year-old Bend professional birdied the par-4 first hole at Crosswater Club on Monday, but Grow bogeyed three holes down the stretch to card a 2-over74 in the second round the PGA Professional National Championship. After firing a 2-under 69 at Meadows on Sunday, Grow sits at even par through 36 holes. That was safely inside the cut and good for a tie for 33rd place, but the Pronghorn Club pro is eight strokes back of leader Rod Perry. "You want to put together four solid rounds," Grow said under gray skies just off Crosswater's 18th. "I'm (complaining) over two shots. If I shoot 72 today I probably feel a little better. But for the way I hit it, I probably didn't deserve much better." G row's struggles began w it h a

312 club professionals in the PNC do not employ their own caddies. Some pros have hired CentralOregon residents who can offer some local knowledge. One of those caddies is Cole Ortega, who is caddying for Craig Smith, a New Jersey pro who narrowly made the cut Monday. In 2010, Ortega was involved in a terrible accident while surfing near Pacific City. Ortega's right arm was severed by a dory boat, and was later surgically reattached. That didn't stop Ortega from becoming atop golfer for Summit High School before graduating in 2012. Ortega just completed his freshman year at the University of Denver (he does not play golf at DU) and is home for the summer, he said. "I'm doing well," he said in passing beforeSmith teed offhis second round at the Meadows. "I just finished school and now I'mout here carrying a bag."

Ashton Eaton, the Olympic goldmedal winner in the decathlon and Mountain View High School graduate, will be at Crosswater Club today. Eaton will be interviewed live on the Golf Channel at approximately 3 p.m. today duringthe network's live coverage of the third round of the PNC. Eaton, 25, is promoting the PGA of America's fivelesson Get Golf Ready program, which he completed earlier this month at Emerald Valley Golf Club in Creswell. Northwest pros still playing Of the 10 professionals from the PGA's Pacific Northwest section in the 312-player field at the PNC, seven were among the 78 players who scored 2 over or better to make the 36-hole cut. Oregon pros Scott Erdmann (-3) and Grow were safely in, joining Washing-

OMAHA, Neb. — Adam Plutko limited Mississippi State to a run on four hits in six innings, and UCLA survived s ome a n x i ous moments to beat the Bulldogs 3-1 in Game 1 of the College World Series finals Monday night. P lutko r e t i re d ni n e straight to start, worked out of trouble twice and turned the game over to the bullpen in the seventh.

"Crosswater is playing pretty tough," said Perry, who made the cut at the PGA Tour's Arnold Palmer Invitational earlier this year. "It's pretty tough to get it close to the hole. "There are a lot of good players at the top. No lead is safe, that is for certain." Corey Prugh, a 32-year-old pro from Spokane, Wash., who shared the first-round lead with Perry, appeared to be destined for the 36-hole lead much of the second round. But Prugh bogeyed Crosswater's 17th hole and made doublebogey on 18 after hitting his tee shot into a water hazard to drop three shots and fall to 6 under. "I just probably got a l i t tle ahead of myself," said Prugh, who won the 2008 Oregon Open I nvitational a t A s p e n L a k es Golf Course in Sisters. "That happens sometimes in golf. "I'm happy about that (not falling f ro m c o ntention)," he added. "It's easier coming from behind than it is as a frontrunner sometimes." Like Sunday's first round, rain fell off and on all day, though it

professionals from around the country who qualified through 2012 section

championships or exemptions. Where:Sunriver

Wednesday, tee times are 6:30 a.m. to11

a.m. at Crosswater. Spectator information:

Spectators are welcome free of charge. Freespectator Rob Kerr /The Bulletin

Rod Perry, of Port Orange, Fla., chips onto the18th green at Crosswater Club on Monday during the second round of the PGA Professional National Championship in Sunriver. seemed to come down the hard-

est during a soggy morning. Still, players raved about the course conditions. "The course has held up awesome," said Lake Oswego pro Scott Erdmann after carding a 3-under 68 on Monday to move to 3 under for the tournament and in a tie for 12th place. "There was a couple of spots where (water) might have pooled up in the fairway, but the ball was never

plugging or anything like that. The greenswere beautiful." Sullivan, for one, had little trouble negotiating the weather. B ut the director of g olf a t Hanging Rock Golf Club in Salem, Va., has more than a golf course and it s c onditions to battle to be in contention at the PNC. The former PGA Tour professional has hemochromatosis, a genetic disease that causes the body to absorb too much iron,

and diabetes. The diabetes is never far from his mind, he said. That holds true even on the course, where he wears an electronicdevice on his belt that monitors his

blood sugar. "I woke up in the middle of the night with my blood sugar too low and I had to go to the refrigerator and get some food to bring it back up," said Sullivan of his Sunday night. "It's a constant management of keeping your blood sugar intact. If you can do that, it's a piece of cake." He certainly seemed in good

shape Monday. S ullivan — w h o t i e d w i t h three othersfor the low round Sunday at Crosswater with a 3under-par 69 — jumped up the leaderboard on his first hole of the second round. B eginning hi s r o und w i t h the par-5 10th hole, Sullivan drained his chip from behind

several pro kayakers take on whitewater just a couple of miles upstream from Bend. Saturday at t h e S eventh Mountain Resort, mountain bike legend Kirt V oreis, of Bend, and his wife, Lindsey Voreis, will offer free clinics on free-ride mountain biking at a pump track and skills trail with wood features. Gross says that eventua lly he w o uld l i k e t o e x pand the Outside Games to

the greensidebunker for eagle. He made two more birdies in his first seven holes to get to 7 under and played the rest of his round at even par. Now he returns to Crosswater for the final two rounds in contention. And he goes to the course carrying a truckload of confidence playing at what is becoming his home away from home. "I like Crosswater," said Sullivan, who has finished in the top 10 three times in 16 PNC appearances. "Last year (at the 2012 PNC in Seaside, Calif.), I lost three balls in the trees and didn't feel like I hit that bad of a tee shot. Here, it is a big course and I don't have to worry about that. "I like big courses like this where I feel like I can air it out and hit my targets. It's a target course. Itdoes present a nice look for my eye."

I i

Plutko (10-3) walked in

to watch action on

t he Bulldogs' run i n t h e fourth. UCLA is 40-0 when leading after seven innings. There was drama all the way to the end. The estimated 8,000 Mississippi State fans at TD Ameritrade Park started the "Maroon and White" chant in the bottom of the ninth after C.T. Bradford and pinch-hitter Sam Frost singled to put runners on first and second with one out against closer David

the Meadows course should use parking at Sunriver's Main

Lodge. No cellphones or cameras permitted during competition

days. Golf Channel droadcasts:Today: 1-4 p.m.; Wednesday: 1-4 p.m. On the web:For tee times, complete

results and more information, visit

www.pga.com/ nationalchampionship

Berg. Nick Ammirati flew out, and p i n ch-hitter J a cob Robson ended the game with hi s c omebacker to Berg, who sprinted toward first base before underh anding the ball t o P a t Gallagher.

• See Scoreboard on C2for scores from Monday's second round.

body together. It draws more people and we can raise more "We're hoping as time goes money." Proceedsfrom beer sales at on, it will slowly but surely get bigger and bigger and Outside Games events will go create more o f a r e g i onal to the Bend Endurance Acaddraw," Gross says. "It's really emy, the Central Oregon Trail being built up by th e comAlliance, the Deschutes Land munity, which was the whole Trust, the Bend Paddle Trail idea of it. Bend is so unique, Alliance, Deschutes County with so many events going Search and Rescue and Oron, we wanted to corral them egon Adaptive Sports. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, a nd help them, and in t h e process, kind of latch everymmorical@bendbulletin.com.

fly-fishing.

. 47" P

Open to the public at Pronghorn-,e

Qj, II I

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5:00 - 6:00pm

$30 Donation Wine, BeerandBottled WaterProvided

P ' ~ ~N I '

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Widgi Creel< G OLF C L U B

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Spectators wishing

July 2, 2015

gCTORV IRAINED ygICE CENER I

shuttles will run all day between Crosswater and the La Pine Fire Station, south of Crosswater's main gate on South Century Dnve.

include rock c l imbing and

vouaarrioABLE i

The Bruins (48-17) are one win from their f irst national championship in baseball and the school's r ecord 109th i n a t e a m sport. "Not much to get excited about," Savage said. "It comes down to tomorrow." Mississippi State must w in Game 2 t o n ight t o keep alive its hopes for its first NCAA title in any sport. U CLA made it 3- 0 i n the fourth on Eric Filia's two-out, t w o-run s i ngle off Chad Girodo, who replaced starter Trevor Fitts (0-1) in the second. That was the last of the Bruins' six hits.

Resort's Meadows and Crosswater courses. When:Today and

tain Games are more about competition. Continued from C1 Central Oregon is home to "The second y e a r i s many pro mountain bikers smoother, and people know and paddlers, and the Outwhat to expect," Gross says. side Games offer more of a "People have reallywarmed c hance to mingle with t h e to it, and they see a long-term pros than to compete against opportunity, which is really them. Gross notes that for what it's all about." t hose who t h rive more on The Outside Games are ba- competition, the Pacific Crest sically a bunch of established Weekend S p ort s F e stival, adventure sports events all which takes place this Saturrolled into one week in June. day and Sunday in Sunriver, G ross, as o wner o f t h e features highly competitive Bend Radio G r oup, h elps endurance races, including market the Outside Games. triathlons, duathlons and a He says he hopes that within marathon. "They've been doing that a few years they will become as big a spectacle as the Go- and pulling huge numbers, Pro Mountain Games in Vail, but largely r egional," says Colo., where professional and Gross of th e Pacific Crest amateur athletes from around races. "But ironically, they t he world compete in n i n e haven't pulled as much from sports and 25 disciplines for Bend. They're involved with more than $100,000 in prize us this year. We'll be promoting and incorporating that." money. The p r imary d i f f erence, W ednesday's Out si d e though, is that the Outside Games schedule includes the Games are more about parD eschutes Whitewater E x ticipation, while the M oun- periences, a chance to watch

i

runners in scoring position four of the last six innings. "We dodged some bullets, no doubt about it, but you have to give credit to our defense," UCLA coach John Savage said. "Kind of a Bruin game. Tight game, and at the end of the night we were fortunate to come out with the win."

Who:312 top club

Outside

I

The Bulldogs (51-19) left

Professional National Championship

played steady.

ST

The Associated Press

PGA

Continued from C1 The top 20 finishers at this week's PNC secure a spot in the 20D PGA Championship this August and the winner earns $75,000and six exemptions over the next 12 months on the PGA Tour. Sullivan needs to keep riding that wave if he is to overcome the group of 11 golfers he is among who rest within four shots of second-round leader Rod Perry, a Florida pro who shot an even-par 72 at Crosswater Club to take the 36-hole lead at 8 under. Perry, a 39-year-old pro from Port Orange, Fla., and the 2012 PGA of America Player of the Year, traded a birdie with a bogey on both nines but largely

i

By Eric Olson

ton pros Corey Prugh (-6), Ryan Benzel (-2), Tim Feenstra (-2), Casey McCoy (+I) and Jeff Coston (+1).

Home

I

UCLA gets victory in opener of CWS finals

Ashton Eaton picking up an11th event?

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

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013

+

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THC Close:$43.73&1.88 of 4.5% The hospital operator plans to buy rival Vanguard Health Systems for about $1.8 billion. The deal will expand Tenet's reach. $50

Abercrombie & Fitch

Dividend Footnotes: 8 Extra - dividends were paid, t7ut are not included. t7- Annual rate plus stock 5 - Liquidating dividend. 8 - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was mcreased bymost recent dividend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. l - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dwuend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pad th>syear, a cumulative issue with dividends m arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. 7 - Declared or paid in precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, appro76matecash value on ex-distrit7ution date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is 8 closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 9a dd - Loss in last12 months

$48.05

-.0 0 1 5

StoryStocks

'

ALK 32.69 ~ 68.00 50.96 1.19 -2.3 w w AVA 22 78 ~ 29 26 26.43 V BAC 6. 9 0 ~ 13.99 12.30 -.39 -3.1 w w BBSI 1988 ~ 62 82 55.13 2.44 -4.2 w v BA 6 9 .03 ~ 1 04.15 97.85 2.13 -2.1 w w CascadeBancorp CACB 4 50 ~ 718 5.70 +.02 +0.4 v Columbia Bukg CDLB 16.18 — 0 22.55 22.41 13 -0.6 w Columbia Sporlswear COLM 47.72 ~ 62.99 60.71 81 -1.3 CostcoWholesale COST 89.91 115.77 109.64 +.99 $.0.9 4 w Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 8.92 8 .0 4 + .14 $-1.8 4 k FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 27.16 25 .46 27 -1.0 w 4 Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 25.87 23 .43 72 -3.0 V V Home Federal BucpID HOME 9.64 14.00 12 .29 07 -0.6 w a Intel Corp INTC 19.23 26.90 23 .58 62 -2.5 V V Keycorp K EY 7 . 38 11.06 10 .44 -.10 -0.9 w w Kroger Co KR 2 0 .98 35.64 33 .99 +.22 +0.7 4 V 4yLattice Semi LSCC 3.17 5 .71 4 . 8 4 -.02 -0.4 w w LA Pacific L PX 9 . 8 7 ~ 22.55 1 5.2 0 -.01 -0.1 w v 4yMDU Resources MDU 19.59 27.14 24 .75 + . 16 +0.7 a w Mentor Graphics MENT 13.21 ~ 19.9 5 1 9. 0 8 -.04 -0.2 V A 4y- 35.78 33 .72 +. 4 5 +1.4 L W Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 Nike Iuc 8 NKE 4 2.55 ~ 66.07 5 9.9 5 -.62 - 1.0 V V 4y- 61.81 57 .45 -.75 -1.3 w w NordstromIuc JWN 47.04 Nwst NatGas NWN 41,01 o — 50,8 0 41. 2 8 -.52 -1.2 W W OfficeMax Iuc DMX 3 . 71 ~ 13.17 1 0.1 8 -.22 -2.1 w w PaccarIuc PCAR 35.21 ~ 55.0 5 5 1. 1 4 -1.19 -2.3 V W Planar Systms P LNR 1.12 ~ 2.36 1 .57 ... ... w Plum Creek PCL 37.62 ~ 54.62 4 5. 0 1 -.28 - 0.6 V V Prec Castparts PCP 150.53 ~ 221.9 0 20 9.69 -2.05 -1.0 w w Safeway Iuc S WY 14.73 ~ 28.42 2 2. 7 4 -.08 -0.4 w v Schuitzer Steel SCHN 23.07 33.03 24 .00 -.63 -2.6 w w Sherwin Wms SHW 122.79 194.56 173.82 +.72 + 0.4 4 V Staucorp Fucl SFG 28.74 49.93 47 .60 41 -0.9 w 4 StarbucksCp SBUX 43.04 67.48 64 .01 68 -1.1 w A Triquiut Semi TQNT 4.30 7.29 6 .7 2 13 -1.9 w w UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11.17 — o 14.90 14 .76 03 -0.2 W A US Baucorp USB 30.89 ~ 36.00 3 5. 3 9 -.18 -0.5 w w Washington Fedl WA F D15.22 ~ 18.25 17. 6 1 +. 2 0 +1.1 L A Wells Fargo 8Co W F C 3 1 . 25 ~ 41.69 3 9.8 0 -1.16 -2.8 w w Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 0.12 ~ 33.24 2 7.0 1 -.41 -1.5 V W

chief executive of wireless carrier L.S. Cellular, Mary Dillon, as its new CEO. Dillon, whose appointment is effective July 1, will also serve as a board member,Ulta announced Monday. She will take over from interim CEO Dennis Eck, who took on that role in February when CEO Chuck Rubinresigned to become

"" ~

1.3124

Stocks fell again on Monday, and the Standard & Poor's 500 index lost more than 1 percent in a day for the third time in its last four sessions. Stocks have been falling since Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said last week that the Fed may pull back on its stimulus later this year. Worries about stresses in China's banking industry also hurt stockmarketsaround the world.The S&P 500 was down as much as 2 percent in morning trading, but it pared its loss as the day progressed. Financial stocks and raw-material producers had the sharpest drops. They've also been among the biggest losers since the S&P 500 set a record high on May 21.

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

Ulta Beauty has tapped the former

+1.49 '

Close: 1 4 ,659.56 Change: -139.84 (-0.9%)

NorthwestStocks NAME

$95.18

Dow jones industrials 1 0DAY S

HIGH LOW C LOSE C H G. 14795.79 14551.27 14659.56 -139.84 6095.66 5952.18 5990.79 -119.64 474.31 464.81 470.89 -0.88 8966.11 8814.76 8892.03 -126.52 3344.66 3294.95 3320.76 -36.49 1588.77 1560.33 1573.09 -19.34 1133.96 1114.04 1124.70 -12.49 16788.83 16442.14 16587.78 -201.05 942.79 -12.63 958.38 951.05

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

47

$19.49

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 2 1.64 22 +7 0 +15.5 $-13.0 + 68 A A A BondA m 1 2.3 8 05 -3.4 -0.8 +3.7 + 36 D 0 E CaplncBuA m 53.25 47 $.2.7 +10.3 +10.2 + 32 8 A 8 CpWldGrlA m 38.30 49 $ 4 5 +19.0 +10.8 + 22 8 0 D EurPacGrA m 40.66 67 -1.4 +14.7 +6.5 + 04 D D A FulnvA m 4 4. 5 2 57 +9 8 +22.4 +14.4 + 42 8 C D GrthAmA m 37 .45 43 +9.0 +22.0 +13.6 + 40 A C C IncAmerA m 18.69 19 +5.3 +13.7 +12.3 + 61 8 A 8 IuvCoAmA m 32.93 33 +10.1 +19.6 +13.6 + 49 D D C NewPerspA m32.78 48 +4.9 +18.8 +11.9 + 42 0 B 8 WAMutlnvA m34.68 37 $.12.3 +20.5 +16.6 + 63 D A B Dodge &Cox Income 1 3.54 . . . -1.6 +2.0 +4.8 +6.5 IntlStk 35.84 . . . + 3 . 5 + 24.0 +7.7 +1.0 Stock 140.84 . . . +16.0 +33.3 +15.6 +5.7 Fidelity Contra 83.84 -.90 + 9.1 + 15.5 +14.4 +5.3 0 C 8 GrowCo 102. 36 -1.24+ 9.8 +16.6 +17.0 +6.5 0 A A LowPriStk d 44 .41 -.46+ 12.4 +27.0 +16.7 +8.9 8 B A Fidelity Spartan 500l d xAdvtg 55 .98 -.68+ 11.4 +20.5 +16.0 +6.0 0 A 8 FrankTemp-FraukliuIncome 0m 2.26 -.02+2.6 +11.0 +9.7 +5.3 A A 8 IncomeA m 2.2 4 - . 02 + 2.9 +11.7 +10.4 +5.9 A A B FrankTemp-TemletouGIBoudAdv 12.66 -.08-3.3 + 7 .5 + 5 .8 +9.2 A A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 18 . 85 - .25+9.0 +17.8 +13.9 +4.6 E D 0 RisDivB m 17 . 08 - .22+ 8.5 +16.6 +12.9 +3.7 E D D RisDivC m 16 . 99 - .22+ 8.6 +16.8 +13.1 +3.8 E D D SmMidValA m37.07 -.53 + 14.4 +29.6 +12.4 +2.3 A E E SmMidValB m31.17 -.45 + 13.9 +28.5 +11.4 +1.5 B E E PIMCO TotRetA m 10 . 65 -.04 -4.2 + 0 .1 + 4.1 +6.7 C C B T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 29.38 - . 39+ 11.6 +24.0 +15.0 +6.4 8 B B GrowStk 40.8 5 - . 41 + 8.1 +14.5 +15.5 +6.1 D B 8 HealthSci 48.0 7 - . 29+ 16.6 +26.5 +26.3+15.4 0 A A Newlncome 9 .37 -.04 -3.7 - 0.6 +3.5 +5.6 D D C Vanguard 144.93 -1.78 $-11.4 +20.5 +16.0 +6.0 0 A 8 500Adml 500lnv 144.94 -1.78 $-11.3 +20.3 +15.9 +5.9 0 8 8 CapDp 39.65 -.50 $-17.9 +33.4 +15.8 +6.6 A A A Eqlnc 26.99 -.30 +12.5 +21.5 +18.3 +8.0 D A A StratgcEq 24.37 -.32 $-13.6 +28.5 +18.4 +6.2 8 A 0 Tgtet2025 14.12 -.15 $3.9 +12.7 +10.6 +4.6 C C 8 TotBdAdml 10.60 -.03 -3.2 -1.3 +3.4 $-5.1 D D D Totlntl 14.25 -.26 -3.4 +13.3 +5.8 -1.5 E D C TotStlAdm 39.37 -.49 +11.5 +21.2 +16.2 +6.4 0 A A TotStldx 39.36 -.49 +11.4 +21.1 +16.1 +6.3 0 A A USGro 22.95 -.34 +7.9 +16.8 +14.9 +5.2 8 8 8 Welltn 35.95 -.32 $6.9 +14.7 +12.0 +6.6 8 A A FAMILY

6.58 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs 1$paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption 5.69 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 4.97 redemption fee. Source: Mornngstar.

A M 52-week range

44

J

52-week range

$28.64~ $55.23 $385.16 ~ $705.07 Vol33.2m (1.7x avg.) P E: 15 . 8 Vold16.6m ( 1.1x avg.) P E:9. 6 Mkt. Cap:$3.4 b Yiel d : 1. 8 % Mkt. Cap:$377.84b Yield:3.0%

Keynote Systems

KEYN Close:$19.82 A6.31 or 46.7% Keynote, which monitors company websites, said that it will sell itself to a private equity firm for about $369 million in cash. $20

Hercules Offshore

HERO

Close:$6.83%0.38 or 5.9% The offshore drilling company bought a majority stake in Discovery Offshore and will sell its Domestic Liftboat assets for about $54 million.

$8

15

10

A M 52-week range

$10.85

J

$19.86

A M 52-week range $3.57~

$7.83

Vol33.7m (25.8x avg.) P E : 1 32.1 Vol3 4.7m (1.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$365.66 m Yi eld: 1.4% Mkt. Cap:$1.09 b

Breitburn Energy

BBEP

Close:$17.36 V-0.55 or -3.1% The energy company said that it will acquire interests in a pair of oil fields for about $860 million from Whiting Petroleum. $22 20

J

P E: .. . Yield: ...

Stec STEC Close:$6.71 X3.12 or 86.9% Western Digital said that one of its subsidiaries has agreed to buy Stec, the data storage device maker, for about $320.7 million. $8

18

A M 52-week range

J

A M 52-week range

$3.31 ~ $16.56~ $21.75 Vold1.2m (2.1x avg.) P E: ... Vold20.8m (28.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.73 b Yie l d: 10 .9% Mkt. Cap:$314.43 m

J $8.38

P E: . . . Yield :... AP

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

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

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note held steady at 2.54 percent Monday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.

. 05 .04 . 0 9 .08 .13 .11

+0 .0 1 L L + 0 .01 L L +0. 02 L i

2-year T-note . 39 .37 +0 . 02 L i 5-year T-note 1 .45 1 .42 + 0.03 L A 1 0-year T-note 2.54 2.5 4 ... X L

30-year T-bond 3.55 3.59

BONDS

-0.04 a

Gold fell to its lowest settlement price since 2010. It's down 24 percent in 2013 amid low inflation and expectations that the Federal Reserve will pull back on its economic stimulus.

w L

.08 .14 .17

L .30 L .76 X 1.68

a 2.76

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO IlTRAGO

Barclays Long T-Bdldx 3.32 3.32 ... Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.19 4.96 +0.23 Barclays USAggregate 2.39 2.32 +0.07 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.62 6.56 +0.06 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.43 4.44 -0.01 YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.62 1.57 +0.05 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays USCorp 3 .36 3.29 +0.07 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

Commodities

a

-

L L L L L L L

L L L L L L

L

L L L L L L L

2.47 4.39 1.99 7.51 3.61 .98 3 28 .

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 95.18 93.69 $ -1.59 $ - 3 .7 Ethanol (gal) 2.44 2.47 -0.24 + 11.2 Heating Dil (gal) 2.85 2.84 +0.37 -6.3 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.74 3.77 -0.85 + 11.6 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.74 2.76 -0.87 -2.7 FUELS

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. 1276.80 1291.60 19.49 19.96 1329.10 1369.50 3.03 3.10 656.10 673.25

%CH. %YTD -1.15 -23.8 -2.33 -35.4 -2.95 -13.6 -2.28 -16.9 -2.55 -6.6

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -6.9 1.21 1.21 -0.25 1.19 1.19 +0.63 -16.9 6.62 -1.28 -6.4 Corn (bu) 6.53 Cotton (Ib) 0.83 0.85 -2.55 + 10.4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 292.00 288.90 +1.07 -21.9 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.40 1.41 -0.64 +20.6 Soybeans (bu) 15.12 14.93 + 1.26 + 6 . 6 Wheat(bu) 6.79 6.98 -2.72 -12.7 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

Foreign Exchange The dollar was mixed against other major currencies. It fell slightly against the Japanese yen and British pound, but it was up modestly against the euro.

h5N4 QG

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5441 +.0013 +.08% 1 .5586 Canadian Dollar 1.04 9 6 + .0040 +.38% 1 .0250 USD per Euro 1.3124 —.0015 —.11% 1.2561 —.05 —.05% 80.45 Japanese Yen 97.71 Mexican Peso 13. 2 915 —.0051 —.04% 13.8355 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6255 —.0120 —.33% 3.8998 Norwegian Krone 6 . 1 272 +.0517 +.84%5.9575 South African Rand 10.0557 -.1141 -1.13% 8.4112 Swedish Krona 6.75 2 4 + . 0679 +1.01% 7.0082 Swiss Franc .9330 —.0013 -.14% .9560 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0786 -.0026 -.24% . 9 928 Chinese Yuan 6.1470 +.0095 +.15% 6 .3652 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7575 -.0008 -.01% 7.7611 Indian Rupee 59.816 +.543 +.91% 5 7.065 Singapore Dollar 1.2746 -.0003 -.02% 1.2751 South Korean Won 1160.44 $-3.33 $-.29% 1157.15 -.02 -.07% 2 9 .94 Taiwan Dollar 30.18


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013

on umm

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Linux Essentials: Beginner class; understand essentials of Linux; registration required; class continues Tuesdays and Thursdays through Aug. 8; $499; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College's CrookCounty Open Campus,510S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-383-7270. WEDNESDAY • Conversation about proposedincreaseto Bend's transient room tax rate:Hosted by Dave Rathbun of Mt. Bachelor ski area and Doug LaPlaca of Visit Bend; to learn more call 541-382-8048; 5 p.m.; Bend Municipal Court/ Bend Police Department, 555 N.E. 15ih St. • Be safe fromanylegal attack:Protectyour business, real estate and personal assets; free; reservations requested; to RSVP, call 877-652-1868 or visit www.leaderswithout limits.biz; 9-11:30 a.m.; Broken TopGolf Club, 62000 BrokenTop Drive, Bend; 541-383-0868. • BusinessAfter Hours: Register at www.bend chamber.com; free; 5 p.m.; Awbrey Glen Golf Club, 2500 N.W. Awbrey GlenDrive, Bend; 541-388-8526. THURSDAY • Build a BasicBudget, the Five-Step Spending Plan:Bob Mullins of Money Management International will present; call 541-382-1795 to reserve a seat; free; 6 p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union, 1386 N.E. Cushing Drive, Bend; 541-382-1795. • June AdBite, smallbusinesswebsite review: Industry professionals review and critique business websites in front of AdBite audience, reservation deadline noon June 25; to register call 541-385-1992 or visit Advertising Federation of Central Oregon website, www.adfedco.org; $25 for members, $45 for nonmembers; 11:30a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Charles Bend conference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road.

By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

PORTLAND — In the months after Bend company Summit 1031 Exchange filed for bankruptcy, federal agents pored over thousands of documents outlining Summit owners' transfer of client money into a shell company, the agents testified Monday. The documents revealed a web of affiliated companies existing solely on paper, set up by Summit's four co-owners between 1999 and 2008. They showed dozens of cases where client money was ultimately used for the Summit principals' own real estate loans and loansforbusiness associates and friends,despite assur-

Deschutes County • Robert S. andNancy A. Oaiker to Kenneth K.and Sharon E.McGrady, Turner Tracts, Lot 4, $799,999 • Patrick Carney to Charles G. Steltenpohl, trustee for Steltenpohl Revocable Trust and Robert O.Cole, Antler Point, Lots1-4 and 6-1 2, $288,000 • JLS Rental Real Estate LLC to Tracy A.and Lyn D. Paris, Quail Run,Phases1 and 2, Lot13, $224,000 • Jeffery J. and Christina M. Pickensto Michael S. and Nichole M. Ludwig, Whitehorse Phase2-5, Lot 16, $150,000 • Margaret E. Thompson to Jeffery J. andChristina M. Pickens, Westerly II, Lot12, $249,900 • George R. andDonna J. Jennings to DavidW. Blakkolb, Yardley Estates, Phase1, Lot 3, $245,000 • Pacwest LLC to Herbert J. Westlake Jr. andCarolyn R. Westlake, Gardenside P.U.O., Phase 2,Lot 70, $234,947 • David C. Bohning, personal representative for the Estate of Eleanor C. Bohning, to Cyril L. and Nancy L. Faries, trustees for Cyril L. andNancy L. Faries Family Trust, Rivers Edge Village, Phase 2,Lot 27, Block1, $300,000 • Pacwest II LLC to Robert and HeddyRadkey, Gardenside P.U.D.,Phase2, Lots 76 and77, $244,950 • Curt A. and Claudia F. Christopher to John C.and Mary M. Reilly, Partition Plat 2002-23, Parcel 1, $521,950 • Jeremy S. Sanchezand Heather M. Mcllhinney, trusteesfor Heather M. Mcllhinney Revocable Trust, to David E.Pistor, Braeburn, Phase 2, Lot 54, $510,000 • Skylight Homebuilders Inc. to David andMary Oietrich, NorthWest Crossing, Phase16, Lot 731, $484,000 •PaulJ.Kaufmanand Beth A. Ugoretz, trustees for the Kaufman-Ugoretz Family Trust, to Roger W.and Aine

FBI agent Clayton Smith and IRS Special Agent Katherine Fearn testified Monday on their review of more than 300 loan files after Summit's 2008 bankruptcy. They testified to finding paper trails from Summit to the shell companies set up by the principals. Assistant U.S. Attorney Seth Uram alleged that Summit misled clients by investing their funds instead of placing them in bank accounts. Neuman and Brian Stevens, who pleaded guilty in May 2012 to wire fraud and moneylaundering conspiracies and was sentenced to four years in prison, founded Summit as an exchangeaccommodation company. Such businesses al-

low clients who sell property for a profit to offset capital gains taxes by holding sale proceeds until the clients purchase a new property, within 180 days. The process is listed under section 1031 of the federal tax code. Defense attorneys countered Monday that Smith and Fearn didn't have a complete record of documents, and that many of the real estate loans Neuman, Larkin and Lyons took out were repaid without a loss to clients. No laws forbid the use of client funds for personal loans during the period Summit made the transactions. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, egluchlich@bendbulletin.com

Shanghai stocks plunge amidfears The ShanghaiComposite Index fell 5.3

percent Monday,notching its largest single-day drop since August 2009, amid fears that some

Chinese banksarefacing a liquidity crunch and the

overall economy isslowing. Most of China's other stocks reboundedtoday. Confidence inChinese markets hasbeenshaken in recent days byspikes in the short-term inter-

est rates bankscharge to lend money to one

another; onThursday the rate briefly surged as high as 25 percent. China's central bank in-

sisted Mondaythere was amplecash inthe bank-

ing system butstressed that the country's com-

EXECUTIVE FILE

Others wait

and seeas Smithfield drops Deen

What:The Well Traveled Fork LLC What it does:Culinary

tours, cooking classes, catering and personal chef services Pictured:Bette Fraser, ~ founder

Where:Bend Employees:Four Phone:541-312-0097 Website:www.well traveledfork.com

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Do you think Q •• the local-

— 0- OI OUI'

For the complete calendar, pickup Sunday's /3ulletin or visit bendbulletin.corn/bizca/

DEEDS

ances the client funds would sit in insured bank accounts, federal prosecutors alleged. Emails between several of the principals also showed a growing fear among some in the firm that clients were being misled, and that one of the principals felt the firm had "a bona fide addiction" to real estate investments. Summit principals Mark Neuman, ofBend, Timothy Larkin, of Redmond, and Lane Lyons, of Bend, are on trial in U.S. District Court, charged with wire fraud and money laundering conspiracies. They are accusedof funneling more than $44 million in client funds into real estate deals over the life of the company.

BRIEFING

food movement is

growing in Central Oregon? . Ithinkit'snot

ie

• only blossomed in Central Oregon, but around the

country. Whenever I go to a culinary conference, that's what

the chefs,cookbook

By Rachaei Rees ~The Bulletin

Since she was a little girl, Bette Fraser has had a passion

R. Mansfield, Township 16, Range11, Section 22, $650,000 • Alana E. Hughson, who acquired title as Alana Audette, to Paul J. KaufmanandBeth A. Ugoretz, trustees for Kaufman-Ugoretz Family Trust, ThreePines P.U.D., Phases1-4, Lot 9, $575,000 • Chia-Chiu and Rebecca B. Hsiao, trustees for ChiaChiu Hsiao andRebecca Hsiao1993 Declaration of Trust, to H. E.and Alana E. Hughson, Broken Top, Phase 3H, Lot 329, $720,000 • Gary L. McCabe,trustee for McCabeFamily Trust, to ShermanandCarol Lee, Township 14, Range12, Section 23, $290,000

When she first took guests out on culinary tours, she said, some of them didn't know what to do with farm-freshproduce and grass-fed meat. So, she started offering cooking classes out of her Bend home as well. And about a month ago, she starteda personal chef service. "A lot of people are just too busy to cook for themselves, so we take care of that for them," she said. "We come to their homes and prepare freshmeals for them ...put it in their refrigerators, and they heat it up for themselves." Using fresh ingredients to transform traditional recipes into new creations is her specialty, she said, noting that she partners with local businesses including Primal Cuts Meat Market, Volcano Vineyards and Rainshadow Organics for her

supplies. "Not only as a personal customer, but as a professional customer, I knowexactlywhere myfood comes from — which is the purpose of The Well Traveled Fork," she said. "Know where your food comes from, and you will eat better."

• Thomas andJeniffer Hunziker andSherry Brooks to William W.and Shawn M. Davis, Pinesat Pilot Butte, Phase 5, Lot 41, $165,000 • Scott H. and Bonnie M. Campbell, trustees for Scott H. Campbell and Bonnie M. Campbell Living Trust, to RogerandAnn Miracle, Ridge atEagle Crest 53, Lot 4, $220,000 • Robert P. Ryan, trustee for Ryan Family Revocable Trust, to RaymondTien, Champion Ridge, Phase1, Lot 12, $480,000 • Partick A. and Constance L. Hammack to John D. and Vicki G. Bayless, Township16, Range12, Section 8, $430,000 • Gary N. and Bonnie Vogel to Lauren L. Brantand

— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees~bendbulletin.com

Robin Welch, NorthWest Crossing, Phase19, Lot 795, $187,500 • Jeanie F. Carmichael, trustee for Margot D. Wyatt Trust, to James J. and Karole R. Ampe, Bilyeu Heights, Lot 4, $236,500 • Levi Miller to Wolfgang and DonnaGartner, Quail Pine Estates, Phase 9, Lot 81, $260,000 • John H. and Patricia M. Peckham, trustees for Peckham Family Trust, to Martien and Suzanne Verhaeg, Mountain High, Lot 3, Block 6, $319,000 • Structure Development N.W. LLC toStacie Bearden andJennifer Topinka, NorthWest Crossing, Phase13, Lot 659, $563,994

trying to takeback our food from the

forfood — in particular,farm-fresh localfood. "I remember as a young teenager my parents taking us to Norway to see my relatives and having milk fresh from the cow. What an eye opener that was," she said. "My cousin milked the cow, and then he poured some from the pail into glasses for us. The milk was still warm." Today she's trying to give Bend tourists and residents similar experiences through her business, The Well Traveled Fork, taking them to Central Oregon farms, ranches and food vendors. "I realized we had lost a whole generation of young people to fast food," she said. "I wanted to teach people about the small American farm and teach people the importance of where our food comes from." After catering in Southern Californiafor 22 years, Fraser moved to Bend and startedher business in 2009 with the Farm and Ranch Tour. Since then, she's added four more tours, including the most recent, Follow the Fork Fermentation Tour, which launched June 10. It's for those who want to learn about localbrews and other fermented foods.

writers and farmers are talking about:

big (agricultural) businesses.... It's important for not only us in the food business, butthe

average American family to eat healthy.

Q •.Wheredo you hope The Well Traveled Fork will be in the

next five years? . Iwouldlike A • to take it into other states. I would like to spread the work of The Well Traveled Fork be-

cause then wecould promote other small family farms. The

idea is to get people back to the table. A lot of people in this

country don't know how to cook for themselves or their family. But if we can rebuild the structure of the small family farm, then we as a country will be much better off.

• John L. and Carolyn M. Fitzsimmons to Gary A. Metternich, TheGreensat Redmond, Phase3C, Lots 276 and 277, $345,000 • Francis J. and Stacy S. Stranickto Bryan W. and Jennifer L. Eichhorn, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase 29, Lot 6, $225,000 • Donald G. andJanet C. Wright, trustees for Wright Family Trust, to Joann Buzunis, Timber Creek, Lot1, $230,000 • Theodore L. and Keri Eady to Kenneth M. Scott, Davidson Addition to Sisters, Lots 11 and12, Block 7, $395,000 • Bruce C. Tysonand Margot V. Tsakonasto Joesph and Stephanie Welsh, William R. and Sandra B. Gingell andTim

The Associated Press NEW YORK — Paula D een lost another part ofher empire on Monday: Smithfield Foods said it is dropping her as a spokeswoman. The announcement camedays after the Food Network said it would not renew the celebrity cook's contract in the wake of revelations that she used racial slurs in the past. Smithfield sold Deenbranded hams in addition to using her as a D ee n spokeswoman. In a statement, the company said it "condemns the use of offensive and discriminatory

language and behavior of any kind." QVC also said it was reviewing its deal with Paula Deen Enterprises to sell the star's cookbooks and cookware.Several retailers, which sell Paula Deen cookware, were taking a wait-

and-see approach. Sears Holdings Corp. said it "is currently exploring next steps as they pertain to Ms. Deen's products." Target Corp. said it is "evaluating the situation." Meyer Corp., which produces the cookware under the Paula Deen brand, declined to comment. Marty Brochstein, senior vice president of The Licensing IndustryMerchandisers' Association, said stores may have a tougher time determining whether to cut ties. Brochstein said they are likely watching sales of the merchandise and monitoring social media as they gauge how consumers respond. Deen's rapid fall from favorcame afterthe 66-yearold Food Network star admitted in a deposition in a discrimination lawsuit that she used racial slurs in the past. Deen has apologized. She is scheduled to appear Wednesday on NBC's "Today."

Baker, Forest Park II, Lot 6, Block11, $315,000 • Dennis A. and Jeri E. Doakto Ramonaand Tracy Hackbart, First Addition to Bend Park, Lots19 and 20, Block106, $294,000 • Lisa A. Pearson to Thomas D.andStormy L. White, Partition Plat 2001-53, Parcel 3, $350,000 • Jon A. and Lori L. Layton to Brian and Laurie Crouser, Township16, Range12, Section10, $460,000 • Caldera Springs Village LLC to Bella Villa Homes Corporation, Caldera Springs, Phase 3,Lots 7-8 and 21-23, $439,000 • Logan P. andSarah V. Brooks to LeanneT.

Roberts, Vista Ridge, Lot 32, $ I70,200 • Kenneth W. andThelma D. Kinne, trustees for Kinne1986 Family Trust, Daniel R. Schnell and Tara C. Hackler, Eagle-Air Estates, Lot 6, $380,00 • Lloyd C. andJulia N. Olson to James D.and Joyce E. Kreminski, Partition Plat 2004-71, Parcel 3, $659,900 • Gary R. Oiefenderfer, trustee for Gary R. Oiefenderfer Trust, to Oimitri G. and Maria I. Sanarov, First Addition to Whispering PinesEstates, $167,000 • Dorothy S. Wylie, trustee for Dorothy Sayward Wylie Revocable Trust, to Roben L. Cahoon, Nottingham Square, First

mercial banks needed to

be better managed.

PRNewsFoto

Twinkie's return: Countdown ison Hostess is bringing back its popular snack cakes on July15 after

going bankrupt last year and selling its brands to various bidders. Popular products such as Twinkies, HoHos, Ding DongsandCupCakes will return to

shelves nextmonthunder the new ownership of private equity firms

Apollo Global Management and C. Dean Met-

ropoulos & Co.,which picked upseveral Hostess namesthis spring for $410 million.

A clock posted on the Hostess website is

counting down theseconds until what the company calls "the greatest treats the world has ever

known will triumphantly return." Some 427,000

people havegiventhe site a thumbs-up on Facebook.

Neiman Marcus plans $100M IPO Luxury retailer Nei-

man Marcus plans to raise up to $100 million by returning to the stock market with an initial

public offering. The plan to go public,

announced in aregulatory filing Monday, comes about eight years after private equity firms

bought for $5.1 billion the retailer that has benefited from affluent

shoppers who arewilling to drop $1,000 for a pair of stilettos.

During the recession,

Neiman Marcus was not as hurt by the consumer

spending pullback as other retailers, because the wealthy suffered

less in the poor economy. Still, the IPO comes ata time when the stock

market has become volatile. — From wire reports

Addition, Lot 7, Block12, $166,000 • Charles O. andElouise Mattoxto Jason C.and Sarah A. Mattox, Scenic Country Estates, Lot 2, Block 3, $250,000 • Thomas E. andMarilyn J. Larsen, trustees for Larsen Family Revocable Trust, to Charles D.and Elouise A. Mattox, Bouder Ridge, Phase1, Lot25, $316,000 • Patrick Campbell to Jason J. andKatherine W. Eggert, Awbrey Village, Phase1, Lot 38, $420,000 • Christopher M. and Jennie O. Stoaks, who acquired title as Christopher M. andJennie O.Stoakes,to Oeborah M. Turner, Canyon Park, Lot 35, Block 2, $180,000


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013

O» www.bendbulletin.com/athome

HOME

AT THE MARKET A weekly look at produce

FOOD

Create

at local farmers markets.

a simpe payhoL!se for kids By Linda Turner Griepentrog For The Bulletin

A man's home may be his castle, as the

iva e

saying goes, but a kid's home can be so much more ... it's a private space where children can be anything they want to be. It can be as simple as a blanket tossed over a chair or a sheet over a card table — it's a personal space filled with robust imagination. But if you want to really please your little tyke, create a simple playhouse that's held in place on tension rods to fill a hallway or door

Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

What: Raspberries

Season:Summer About:The raspber-

ries are here! The raspberries are here! While these berries may not get quite the level of attention that Oregon strawberries (rightfully) bring, their ar-

rival should be heralded nonetheless. Raspberry season is upon us, a bit early this year, thanks

to a warm late spring.

While raspberries can grow in Central Oregon,

h

opening.

most of the ones you'll find at the farmers mar-

This house isn't just

a house; depending on

kets are likely to arrive

the fabrics and trims, it can be a circus tent, a royal princess castle, a school, a church, a library, a puppet theater or even a pet store filled with stuffed animals. Made in camouflage fabric, it becomes a fort where any small solider can hunker down. The portable playhouse simply rolls up and stores in the closet when play is done, or it can be easily transported to grandma's house to while away the hours.

from the Willamette Valley, especially this

time of year. Raspberries — when perfectly

ripe — pack a punch of flavor, a mix of sweet and tart. Raspberries

can be temperamental, however, and don't keep well. Look for berries that are without

their hulls (the inside portion) — if the hull is there, the berries were

picked too soon and Photos by Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Warm Kale Salad from 900 Wall in Bend features kale, roasted eggplant, cherry tomatoes and croutons among other ingredients. See recipe, Page D2.

Getting started By Alison Highberger •For The Bulletin

Measure the opening where the playhouse will go, then head to the fabric or discount store to purchase two tension curtain rods. The rods are available in size ranges, such as 24 inches to 48 inches, 48 inches to 72 inches, etc., so pick one that suits your measurements and will fit the area snugly. Tension rods unscrew to hold themselves in place against the walls where the playhouse will hang. Another option is to set up the house on a staircase, posting the rods against a wall on one side and a banister on the other. Setting the house on the stairs creates a multilevel loft "home," but be careful of this if children are very small and not adept with stairs.

here's nothing better for dinner on a hot summer night than a cool, crisp salad. Come to think of it, 900 Wall Restaurant and Bar's Warm Kale Salad, which is on their menu all summer, is also appealing: fresh, roasted eggplant and cherry tomatoes, combined with raw kale, crunchy sourdough croutons and a spicy homemade anchovychili vinaigrette. It's also a perfect, light meal for a warm evening. Add a glass of chilled white wine, lemonade or an icy beer and life is good. We've gathered some Northwest-inspired salads to add to your recipe file this summer. They come from local restaurants 900 Wall, Sweet Saigon and Pho Viet and Cafe, and Jen's Garden, as well as two from the "Best Places Northwest Cookbook, 2nd Edition" from Sasquatch Books. What they have in common is big, fresh flavors, seasonal ingredients and locally sourced products. As you shop at farmers markets this summer and enjoy the abundant fresh produce in the grocery store, you'll want to keep these salads in mind. Cliff Eslinger, executive chef at 900 Wall in Bend knows what makes a great salad, and shared his ideas for how home cooks can get restaurant-style results in their own kitchens. SeeSalads/D2

berries into a storage container or zip-top bag. Raspberries are a perfect topper for ice cream, granola, cereal or yogurt. — Atandra Johnson, The Bulletin

Bend restaurant owner Tan Vo says this chicken salad reminds him of summers in Vietnam. See recipe, Page D2.

TODAY'5 RECIPES OregonStrawberry Goat CheeseSaladwith Toasted OregonFilberts

Before

By Marielle Gallagher

02

Vinaigrette:From Jen's Garden restaurantin Sisters,

The Bulletin

Moresalads:Warm Kale Salad, Chicken Salad (Goi Ga),

One way to create a tidy, manicured-looking lawn is by cutting out

Northwest Caesar Salad,02; Endive and Hood River Apples with

grass that's encroaching over the sidewalks, curbs andgarden beds. An

Spiced Pecans,Goat CheeseandSherry Vinaigrette, D3

edging tool, either gas-powered or manual, makes the job of creating

After

Time:To edgeanaverage-sized yard, including sweeping, would take about an hour, according to Marrone. Difficulty:Easy

Before you begin to carve out your overgrown garden bed, or sculpt a new one, play with different shapes bylaying out a garden hose.Try a curved or straight line or a line that jumps agarden pathand continues

Produce purchased from Agncultural Connections, which distributes goods from regional farms (www. agriculturalconnections.comt

How tocreate an edge between a lawn and a garden bed.

and Strawberry-Thyme

Cost:Free if using a shovel; to rent an edgerat Central Oregon Lawn Center it's $20 for two hours, $35 for four hours and$50 per day. Supplies: • An edger or an edging shovel • Ear protection • A hula-hoe or shovel for re• Safety glasses moving cut-away grass

mouth. Raspberries won't keep more than a few days and should be eaten as close to purchase as possible. Raspberries do freeze

frozen solid, scrape the

Editor's note:Check back every other week for do-it-yourself projects.

defined edges acinch. Chris Marrone, owner of Central Oregon Lawn Center, walked us through the process of edging alawn.

ping them into your

spread a single layer of berries on a cookie sheet and place them in the freezer. Once

An edgedgardenbed

Do it: Edgeyour awn

Also keep aneye out for shriveled or soft berries (they can look almost crumpled), as these will be past their prime and overly sweet and mushy. Preparation:Berries need no preparation, other than perhaps a quick rinse before pop-

beautifully. Simply

SeePlay space/D4

GARDEN

are likely to be unripe.

First

Spicy Lamb Sausage with Grilled Onions and Zucchini:

Cut straight down along desired edge with a straight-edged, flat shovel or gas-powered edger. Make sure the edge is sharpened so it cuts the turf easily.

Something other than hamburgers for summer grilling,03

...then Cut toward the sod from the garden side at an angle. Remove turf.

g(irs/ilritf]tr •o

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'

vy(iiJ(fjjr fu/<trt 0

• oo

0

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GARDENBE0

on the other side for continuity. SeeEdging/D4

Source: Chris Marrone, Central Oregon Lawn Center

Gre g Cross/The Bulletin

Recipe Finder:Crunchy crust on a beloved Baltimore cake,D3


D2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013

Fooo

Next week: Simple recipes for summer

Salads

'AT&T' for a perfect salad

Continued from D1

Chef T.R. McCrystal of Jen's Garden restaurant in Sisters told

Best ingredients

us he alwaysthinksofATBT whenhe'scooking— appearance,

texture and taste. To make a salad really "pop," he said be bold with The reason why restaurant the dressing. "Don't be afraid for it to be slightly acidic. Balance that salads often taste better than with fruit and toasted nuts or fried shallots or something that adds the oneshome cooks create is flavor and that crunchy texture that makes a better mouthfeel, and twofold, Eslinger told us. Part then it's visually more interesting too," McCrystal said. of the reason is presentation. On hot days, McCrystal suggested weget our cooking or grillTop restaurants knock theming done in the morning. Grill meat or veggies before the day gets selves out to give you a beautitoo hot. Slice it at dinnertime, and add it to a salad. ful plate and, as we all know, "Warm it up in the microwave for 30 seconds to get the chill the old adage that "we eat first off, but don't overdo the microwaving. Summer salads are a great with our eyes" is true. way to use upleftovers too," he said. "Partly i t ' s p r e sentation, — Aiison Highberger and the other reason is we're pickier about what i ngredients we're using. I don't want sourcing the right ingredients s o we don't end up with tomato sound arrogant, but we put at the right time, and we work t o es that taste like cardboard. a lot of time and effort into with food purveyors we trust, I f i t's not something I'm going

to eat, it's not going to end up on the menu," Eslinger said. So shop for great food, and visit farmers markets in the summer for the freshest ingredients at their peak ripeness.

Not green-centric Throughout the year, 900 Wall features a few s alads without greens. Try changing up your salads at home and make a single fruit or vegetable the star. "We always have a couple of funky salads on the menu, like a carrot salad that's great because the carrots are super sweet, having been in the ground over winter. Another one is a roasted peach salad

with goat cheese, prosciutto and Marcona almonds with balsamic vinegar. Focus on one main ingredient and don't confuse it with a lot of other flavors. You don't want to cover up the peaches; they should be the highlight," Eslinger said.

Splurge Spend a little more money on the ingredients that will make your salad stand out and be remembered. «Our roasted peach salad has a 30-year-old balsamic vinegar on it. We just use a tablespoonful of it. It's so intensely flavored and aromatic, you don't need much of it. Explore different olive oils. The

more you taste them, the more you'll realize what you like. Some arebuttery;others have a grassy flavor,"Eslinger said.

Less ismore Finally, don't throw in every kind of green or vegetable that you have on hand. Pare down the number of salad ingredients for a better dish. "Fewer ingredients are often better, especially with produce that's seasonal and ripe. If you don't have good, ripe tomatoes,don't serve them. We don't have tomatoes in the restaurant except in July, August and September," Eslinger said. — Reporter: ahighberger@mac. com.

Oregon Strawberry Goat Cheese Salad with Toasted Oregon Filberts and Strawberry-Thyme Vinaigrette Makes 4 sidesalad servings. This salad is on the menu right now at Jen's Garden restaurant in Sisters and will be served for most of July, while strawberries are in season. 4-6 oz organic spring lettuce mix 12 sliced Oregon strawberries 4 oz fresh Juniper Grove Chevre Blanc cheese, or similar local cheese

2 TBS toasted Oregon filberts (hazelnuts) 2 oz Strawberry-Thyme Vinaigrette (see recipe) Lemon zest

In a large bowl, place the mixed greens and sliced strawberries and drizzle half of the vinaigrette over them. Toss with tongs until the lettuces

are well coated with vinaigrette. Portion the salad onto four salad plates, or on a large plate, and sprinkle with toasted filberts. Crumble the cheese on top, and add just a little hint of lemon zest. The leftover vinaigrette

can be savedfor the future (it'll keep for a few days in the refrigerator), or served at the table for you and your guests to add to the salad to taste.

Strawberry-Thyme Vinaigrette 2 TBS white wine vinegar 1 tsp balsamic vinegar /2 tsp chopped fresh thyme

Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper 4 or 5 fresh or frozen and thawed strawberries 6 TBS light olive oil (not extra virgin, the lighter the better)

leaves /2 tsp Dijon mustard '/2 tsp honey

In a blender, place all the strawberries, vinegars, thyme, mustard, honey, a pinch of salt ('/4tsp), and /2tsp pepper. Blend and then slowly drizzle

over your salad.

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

— Jen's Gardenrestaurant,403 E.HoodAve.,Sisters, This salad at Jen's Garden in Sisters includes goat cheese, Oregon filberts and Oregon strawberries, among other ingredients. The 541-549-2699,Mrl4rwintimatecottagecuisine.com restaurant serves it as long as strawberries are in season.

Warm Kale Salad

Chicken Salad (Goi Ga)

Makes 4 to 6servings.

Makes 4 servings.

1 loaf crusty sourdough bread (900 Wall uses a miche from Sparrow Bakery) 2 bunches Lacinato kale,also known as Tuscan kale 3 C cherry tomatoes 2 med eggplant /2 C coarsely grated Pecorino Romano cheese

1 C vegetable stock '/4 C Anchovy-Chili Vinaigrette ANCHOVY-CHILI VINAIGRETTE: 1'/2 C extra virgin olive oil 4/4 C Calabrian chilies (packed in oil in jars, available at Newport Avenue Market), seeded and sliced thin

1 TBS oil-packed anchovy fillets, chopped very fine '/4 C garlic, sliced thin 1 C yellow onion, julienne (cut into thin, matchstick strips) 1 C red wine vinegar 2 tsp black pepper, finely ground Salt to taste

Tan Vo, owner of Sweet Saigon and Pho Viet and Cafe, told us this salad reminds him of summers at his grandmother's house in the Mekong Delta in southwestern Vietnam.

He helped her harvest mangos in the summer, and she'd make this salad."I'd pick all kinds of herbs from the

garden for it. It's a good memory," Vo said. This refreshing, flavorful salad is available at both of Vo's restaurants in Bend. CHICKEN: 2 boneless,skinless chicken breasts (about 2 Ibs) 1 clove garlic, smashed

1 (1-inch) piece ginger, For the dressing:Cookthe chilies and anchovies in the olive oil over medium heat for about 5 minutes. Once

smashed the chilies turn brick red in color, add the garlic and onion and cook until tender. Add the vinegar, black pepper '/2 yellow or white onion and salt. Cool. 1 green onion, cut into several For the salad:Makethe vinaigrette, and then set your oven to broil. pieces Cut 3 cups of1-inch croutons from the loaf of sourdough bread, and toss them with salt, pepper and a gener- 2 tsp sugar '/2 tsp salt ous amount of extra virgin olive oil.

Cut the eggplant into1-inch pieces with the skin left on, and toss with salt, pepper and a generous amount of extra virgin olive oil. Toss the tomatoes with extra virgin olive oil, and then place them on a baking sheet under the broiler until they

split and are lightly charred, about 5 minutes. Set themaside somewherewarm.

SALAD: 1 head green cabbage, finely shredded /2 yellow or white onion, thinly sliced 1 carrot, finely cut or shredded 1 daikon radish, finely cut or shredded Juice of 1 lime VIETNAMESE FISH SAUCE SALAD DRESSING: 2 TBS Vietnamese fish sauce

2 TBS rice vinegar

2 tsp sugar 4/4 tsp chili paste 2 cloves garlic, finely chopped 1-inch piece of fresh ginger, peeled and finely chopped 2 TBS warm water GARNISH: Chopped, roasted peanuts or

sesame seeds Fresh cilantro, spearmint or basil

To cook the chicken, put it in a pot and cover with water. To the water, add the smashed garlic, smashed

Set the oven to 425. Roast the eggplant cubes on a baking sheet until they start to caramelize around the ginger, the onion, green onion, sugar and salt. Bring the mixture to a boil and then simmer until the chicken is edges, about 20 minutes. Remove them from the oven and set them somewhere warm. well cooked. Cool the chicken by submerging it in a bowl of ice water. When cool, pull it into bite-sized shreds.

At the same time that the eggplant is roasting, put the croutons in the oven and cook them until they are (You can usethe leftover broth as a soup.) browned, but still chewy in the center, about10 minutes.

To make the salad, finely shred or thinly slice the cabbage, onion, carrot and daikon. Toss them together in a

While the croutons andeggplant are in the oven, put 2 large saute pans over medium-high heat on the stove. Once the pansare hot, add half of the vinaigrette and half of the vegetable stock to each panand bring them to a

bowl and refrigerate, so they're cold and crispy. To make the Vietnamese fish sauce salad dressing: In a small bowl, combine the fish sauce, rice vinegar,

simmer. Once the liquid begins to simmer, add half of the kale and eggplant to each pan, and cook while stirring sugar, chili paste, garlic, ginger and warm water. Stir until all ingredients are well mixed. to wilt the kale to half of its original volume. When ready to serve, squeeze the juice of1 lime over the salad and toss. Add the pulled chicken, and pour

Divide the croutons, cheeseandtomatoes betweeneach panand toss. TheWarm Kale Salad is ready to serve. — Executive chef Cliff Esiinger,900 Wall Restaurant tt Bar 900 N I/I Wall St., Bend,541-323-6295, i4rMri4900Mral r l com

the Vietnamese fish sauce salad dressing over the salad and toss. Garnish with your choice of cilantro, spearmint or basil leaves andchopped, roasted peanuts or sesameseeds. — ran I/o, owner of SweetSaigon, 915N Irt/ Wall St., Bend, 5413820772, yrrylrwsyrreetsaigoncom and Pho Viet and Cafe, 1326N.E. Third St., Bend,541-382-2929, wl4ryirphovietandcafe com (rhis saladis served at both restaurants)

Northwest Caesar Salad Makes 2 to 4 servings.

i I„

]

I

— "Best Places Northwest Cookbook, 2ndEdition"

4 C cubed day-old bread /2 C unsalted butter, melted 4 or 5 cloves garlic, minced 1 tsp thyme leaves 1 tsp minced flat-leaf (Italian) parsley 1 tsp minced tarragon

' I lll' I •

Tuesday,July 9,2013- Doorsopen6pm SistersHighSchool

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Door Prizes • Dessert Tasting Meet the Filmmakers

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Lighter and easier to prepare than the classic Caesar salad, this variation is made without the raw egg used in most Caesar dressings. You could substitute sauteed squid or scallops for the shrimp or smoked salmon.

541-549-0989 sls't&rsoU'tdoorqUII'tshow.org

Take a peek

pepper

1 sm head romaine lettuce, rinsed and dried 1 sm head green-leaf lettuce, rinsed and dried 4/4 C grated Parmesan cheese 1 C cooked shrimp or flaked

smoked salmon (about 6 oz)

To make croutons:preheat the oven to 325. Scatter the bread cubes in an even layer on a baking sheet. In a small bowl, combine the butter, 1 teaspoon of minced garlic, thyme, parsley and tarragon. Drizzle the butter

mixture over the bread cubesand stir to evenly coat the bread. Bakefor about18 minutes, stirring once after 8 minutes, until nicely browned and crunchy. Set aside to cool. Meanwhile, combine the olive oil, remaining garlic, lemon juice, Worcestershire sauce, mustard and salt and

pepper to taste in ajar with a tight-fitting lid and shakewell to mix. Tear the romaine and green-leaf lettuce into large pieces and put them in a large bowl. Add the Parmesan cheese, shrimp and cooled croutons and toss. Shake the dressing to mix, drizzle it over the salad, and toss to

coat well. Serve immediately. — Colophon Cafe,Bellingham, Wash. Reprinted from "Best Places Northwest Cookbook, 2nd Edition: Recipes from the Outstanding Restaurants and inns of Washington, Oregon, andBritish Columbia,"by Cynthia Nims, Lori McKeanand Lara Ferroni, with permission from Sasquatch Books.

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/2 C olive oil 1 TBS freshly squeezed lemon juice, plus more to taste 2 tsp Worcestershire sauce 1 tsp Dijon-style mustard Salt and freshly ground black

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FOO D

TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

By David Tanis

Briefly grilled sweet onion and zucchini

New Yortt Times News Service

I have nothing against hamburgers; a well-made one can be terrific, and of-

accompany

ten (or a couple of times ayear, anyway)

Courtesy Lara Ferroni

For this endive and apple salad, the chef at RiverPlace Hotel in Portland recommends the oldest sherry vinegar you can find to use in the dressing.

Endive and Hood River Apples with Spiced Pecans, Goat Cheese and Sherry Vinaigrette Makes 6 servings. Noted for its slightly bitter, nutty

flavor, Belgian endive (or witloof chicory) is a small, cone-shaped salad green with slender 5- to 6-

inch leaves that are tightly packed. Look for creamy white leaves with

pale yellow tips and no blemishes. The chef at RiverPlace suggests experimenting with different goat cheeses, as they all have different

characters. Also, he recommends seeking out the oldest sherry vine-

gar you can find, as thesevinegars mellow with age. — "Best PlacesNorthwest Cookbook, 2nd Edition" SPICED PECANS: 1 TBS unsalted butter 1 TBS honey /2 tsp ground coriander /2 tsp ground fennel seed /2 tsp ground cardamom t/4 tsp ground cinnamon t/4 tsp ground mace t/4 tsp salt /s tsp ground cayenne /s tsp ground cloves 4 oz pecan pieces SHERRY VINAIGRETTE: t/4 C walnut oil t/4 C vegetable oil 2 TBS aged sherry vinegar 2 TBS freshly squeezed orange juice Salt and freshly ground white or black pepper SALAD: 6 heads Belgian endive (about 1'/2 Ibs)

2 red apples, preferably Gala or Fuji, cored and cut into thin strips 6 oz goat cheese, crumbled Crushed pink peppercorns, for garnish Minced chives, for garnish

lightly greased baking sheet. Bake until the nuts are crisp, 12 to 15

minutes. Set aside to cool. For the vinaigrette: Combine the walnut oil, vegetable oil, vin-

egar and orange juice in a small bowl. Whisk to mix well, then add

salt and pepper to taste. Set aside. Trim the cores from the endive and remove three large outer

leaves from each head. Arrange three ofthe leaves,like the spokes of a wheel, on each of 6 plates. Cut the remaining endive into julienne

strips and put it in a large bowl with the apples, goat cheese and

spiced pecans. Whisk the vinaigrette to mix, then pour about /s cup of it over the endive mixture. Toss to mix

well so that some of the goat cheese blends with the vinaigrette to thicken it slightly (the chef sug-

gests using your hands to toss the salad). Taste the salad for seasoning, adding more dressing to taste.

Pile some of the salad in thecenter

Spicy Lamb Sausage with Grilled Onions and Zucchini Makes 24 (2-ounce) sausages, 6 to 8servings. SAUSAGE: 3 Ibs ground lamb, or a mixture of half lamb and half beef or veal 2 tsp toasted cumin seeds 2 tsp toasted coriander seeds 1 tsp black peppercorns 6 allspice berries 2 tsp salt, more as needed /2 tsp cayenne Pinch cinnamon 4 TBS mild paprika 8 Ig garlic cloves, smashed to a paste

VINAIGRETTE: /2 tsp toasted cumin seeds /2 tsp toasted coriander seeds /2 tsp toasted caraway seeds 1 tsp paprika Cayenne, to taste 2 garlic cloves, smashed to a paste 2 TBS red wine vinegar 1 TBS lemon juice '/4 tsp salt 4 TBS olive oil

ASSEMBLY: 2 sweet onions, such as Vidalia, in /sinch crosswise slices Olive oil

Salt and pepper 4 med zucchini, in '/s-inch lengthwise slices 2 heads bibb or other lettuce, washed 3 or 4 Ig ripe tomatoes, cut in wedges 2 TBS roughly chopped cilantro 2 TBS roughly chopped mint Pita breads, optional

To make the sausage, put ground lamb in a mixing bowl. Using a spice mill or mortar and pestle, grind cumin, coriander, black pepper and allspice. Add to lamb, along with salt, cayenne, cinnamon, paprika and garlic. Mix well with hands to incorporate. Fry a little piece of the mixture in a small skillet. Taste for seasoning and adjust salt if necessary. Mix again and refrigerate at least 2 hours or, preferably, overnight. Form mixture into 242-ounce patties.

To make the vinaigrette, grind cumin, coriander and caraway. Combine with paprika and agood pinch of cayenne in a small bowl. Add garlic, vinegar, lemon juice and salt. Whisk in olive oil. Light a charcoal grill or use a grill pan. The heat should be moderate. Grill sausages, in batches if necessary, for about 2 minutes per

ad. (To add a dab of something saucy, side, until just done. Keepwarm. Paint onion slices with a little olive oil, season with salt and pepper, and grill until softened slightly, about stir some chopped mint and scallions into a pint of plain yogurt and spoon it over.) Either way, it's a flavorful alternative to a humdrum hamburger.

2 minutes per side. Repeat with zucchini. Keep at room temperature.

Line a large platter with lettuce leavesand pile sausages in the middle. Arrangeonions and zucchini around the platter. Salt the tomatoes and distribute. Whisk the vinaigrette, then drizzle over everything. Sprinkle with cilantro and mint; serve with warm pita, if desired.

A closed bakejy'scake lives on ... andit's tasty By Julie Rothman The Baltimore Sun

was made by the long-ago

the pecans evenly on anonstick or

Fred R Conrad New York Times News Service

sweet red pepper (paprika) and a goodly amount of hot red pepper (cay-

thehoneyinasmallsaucepanand

pieces and stir until thoroughly coated in the spice mixture. Spread

large platter garnished with cilantro and mint. Accompany with pita bread if desired.

ing). It's no trouble to mix up a batch of farmstead-style breakfast sausage with ground pork and a little chopped sage. Italian sausage is just as simple, but takes fennel seed, garlic and red pepper instead. For this lamb sausage recipe, a few more spices are required. It is modeled after North A f rican merguez, which is sometimes served as part of an elaborate couscous meal, but good on a bun, too. For its deep rust-red color, merguez relies on lots of dried

Mary Quinn from Baltimore was looking for the recipe for the Louisiana Ring Cake that

cardamom,cinnamon, mace,salt, cayenne andcloves. Add the pecan

Serve on a

egg or onion; no browning and brais-

For the pecans: Preheat the oven to 350. Melt the butter with stir in the coriander, fennel seed,

spicy lamb sausage.

it's just what I want. For the most part, though, I find sausages more interesting, and more fun to make at home. Making sausage isn't really so difficult. If it seems daunting, think of sausage as seasoned ground meat: a step up from plain burgers and even easier than meatballs (no bread crumbs,

enne). Garlic, cumin and coriander are strong supporting players. Traditional merguez is made from ground lamb or goat, though sometimes you do find all-beef versions; you can combine both if you want a somewhat milder flavor. Like all sausage mixtures, merguez is best prepared a day ahead, to let the flavors mingle. I usually don't put the meat in casings. Rather, I just form the mixture into patties or flattened oval shapes, which simplifies matters enormously. I use lean meat if possible, so with these sausages it's important to grill them carefully. If overcooked, they will be dry, so I keep them a bit pink at the center. To accompany the spicymerguez, I like slices of briefly grilled sweet onion and zucchini along with ripe tomatoes and lettuce leaves, drizzled with a garlicky harissa-flavored vinaigrette. Stuffed into a warm fresh pita, it's definitely a crowd pleaser. If you don't want a sandwich, eat it as a sal-

RECIPE FINDER= Looking for a hard-to-find recipe

or can answera

request? Write to Julie closed Rice's Bakery. She said Rothman, Recipe Finder, the tube cake had a crunchy The Baltimore Sun, 501 outer crust and the cake itself N. Calvert St., Baltimore, had a slightly orange flavor. MD 21278, or email The bakery cake clearly was baltsunrecipefinder© one that was enjoyed and regmnai.cco. Namesmust membered by many in the accompany recipes for area, and over the years the them to be published. Sun has publishedthe recipes for it several times dating as far back as the 1960s. Claudia Reynolds from Es- can say with certainty that sex, along with several other this is one very tasty coffee readers,sent in copiesofa Rec- cake indeed. ipe Finder column published in 1986 in the Evening Sun that Requests offered two versions of the popEster Kidd from Owings ular cake. Of the two recipes, Mills, Md., is looking for most readers agreed that the recipe she has lost from version with the crunchy top- about 20 years ago from ping — as opposed to the one "Mr. Food" for oven-fried with the glazed topping — was turkeywings. the most reminiscent of the Mary Sloan Roby from popular bakery cake. When B altimore would l ik e t o I tested the recipe I decided to h ave the recipe for t h e add '/2 cup of chopped pecans crab casserole from the and some orange zest to the old Robinson's Cafeteria topping mixture for a little add- in Charleston, S.C. It was ed crunch and flavor. While I served in a small china casnever had the pleasure of eating serole dish and had some the Louisiana Ring Cake from cheddar cheese melted on Rice's Bakery to know whether top and a slice or two of this one is an exact replica, I pimento.

a

of each plate. Sprinkle the crushed

peppercorns and chives over the salad and serve. — RitrerPlace Hotel, Portland. Reprinted from "Best PlacesNorthwest Cookbook 2ndEdition: Recipes from the Outstanding Restaurants and lnns of Washington, Oregon,and British Columbia,"by Cynthia Nims, Lori McKeanand LaraFerroni, with permission from Sasquatch Books.

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D3

Louisiana Ring Cake Makes 10-12 servings. BATTER: 2'/4 C flour t/2 tsp salt 2 tsp baking powder 1s/4 C sugar 1 C shortening (Crisco) s/4 C milk 1 tsp orange extract t/4 tsp almond extract 3 eggs, unbeaten

TOPPING: '/4 C batter 2 TBS flour 3 TBS brown sugar 3 TBS confectioners' sugar t/4 tsp orange extract '/2 C chopped pecans

(optional) /2 tsp grated orange rind

(optional)

Preheat ovento 375degrees.Greaseandflour a10 to12 cuptube pan. To prepare batter: Sift flour, baking powder and salt into a large mixing bowl. Add sugar and blend. Cut in shortening (like making a pie crust

I a

• '

e

• '

J

dough). Addmilk, extracts and eggs, beat thoroughly. Setaside. To prepare topping: Takes/4cup of reserved batter and add flour, sug-

e

• '

• •

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ars, extract and choppednuts and rind (if using). Mix well. Spreadtopping mixture in bottom of prepared tubepan. Pour remaining better on top. Bake for 45 minutes to1 hour or until cake tester comes out clean. Remove from pan immediately or topping will stick. Cool.

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D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013

H OME 4

A R DEN locations. "They should be at least three

it's easier to maneuver in tight curves and circles. The solid blade edger is a

inches from the curb, but sometimes

fixed blade onwheels.

they're not," said Marrone.

Step1:To set a hard edge,useeither a mechanical edger, like asolid blade edger or stick edger, or anedging shovel,

Step 2:To make the first pass and establish the hard edge, position the blade just inside the line you want to cut with the blade positioned straight up

which is shaped like a half moon. The

and down. For the second pass, adjust

stick edger is bestfor free-form edging around trees andgarden bedsbecause

the blade to be at a slight angle into the turf.

Marrone. Also beaware of sprinkler head

Edging Continued from D1

The garden hose is agreat wayto

decide where you want to set a hard

edge because it's malleable andeasy to remove, unlike spray paint. Before edging, remember to wearsafety glasses and ear protection "especially when you're up against the concrete," said

Next week: A storybook home

Step 3:Once the edge is set, the cut

grass can beremovedwith a hula-hoe. Step 4:Perform maintenance with a string trimmer at mowing times.

"You can turn a string edger on its side so that the string is moving vertical, instead of horizontal," said Marrone. Be sure to operate the string trimmer

shrub bed. Step 5:When filling in the shrub

beds after edging, Marrone said to be sure to leave the roots of the turf's edge

exposed to the air. Becausegrass is rhizomatous it spreads via its root system. If the roots are exposed, it will help to

diminish encroachment.

so that the grass clippings are being thrown into the garden and not into the

Play space

— Reporter: 541-363-0361 or mgallagher@bendbulletin.com

on both long edges to finish; sew, glue or fuse the hems in place. If the lower house edge needs a hem, turn under t/~ inch twice. Cut out openings for a door and windows, depending on the style you select. Adding fabric trim around the openings is optional, but it adds to the decor. Windows can have curtains orshades for more

Continued from D1 The house itself is made from fabric, either print or solid, depending on the desired look. The fabric could also be an old sheet cut to size. If you plan to put windows into the house, use clear vinyl from the fabricstore for the "panes," simply leave them as an open space, or just indicate windows with fabric rectangles. If you opt for the latter, it leaves room for adding some window animals, like on the featured house. The playhouse can be sewn, glued or fused together, depending on your skill. If you plan to glue it together, look for

privacy.

As you plan the house details, look to fun fabric prints for ideas — you can add a pet dog, a little frog hiding in the bushes, birds on the roofline, etc. Back the fabric portion with fusible web, then trim the outline and fuse in place following the manufacturer's glue designed specifically for instructions. fabric so that it doesn't soak Add a 2-inch-wide casing to through the surface and damthe house at the place where age the detailing. To fuse the you want to insert the first architectural features, look for rod — at the roofline. A casing fusible web at the fabric store, is simply a channel sewn or available by the yard or in preglued in place to hold the rod. cut sheets, depending on the It should be the width of the size needed. On the featured house. At the top roof edge, house, all the embellishments turn under a 2-inch hem and are simply fused in place using sew or glue in place to hold the a fusible web called Steam-Asecond rod. Seam 2. It's paper-backed so Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin When you set up the house, you can draw your designs on A playhouse made using fabric and tension curtain rods can be set up in a hallway and stored in a closet when not in use. position the rod so that the it beforefusing, for accurate lower edge of the house just cutting. barely skims the floor. The Detailing can b e a ccom- bers (every house needs an ad- involve them i n t h e h o use tract home to a customized ad- the height of the playhouse, second rod ca n b e p l aced plished with f a bric p a ints, dress) and for press-on letters planning an d c o nstruction. dress in no time. plus 2 inches for the casing slightly above and behind the markers or c r ayons and/or (for a mailbox, name, etc.) They might want to include a The featuredplayhouse is58 that holds the roof rod. Many first rod to create a slanted s ewing t r i ms . C h eck o u t The house can have a door mailbox, some flowers, cur- inches tall and 40 inches wide. fabrics are 60 inches wide, roof, or directly behind the rod stores like Dollar Tree or other that opens, or simply an open- tains, a door mat, etc. The Look for duck, canvas, twill so you can purchase just the to make a flat roof, or directly discountersfor accoutrements ing cut for a door as shown. concept of the playhouse is a or other sturdy fabrics that width of the house plus hems. above the first rod to create a like faux flowers and other acsimple one, but the embellish- will hold their shape. If you're Cut the fabric the width of tall, townhouse look. cents. Notion departments are House plans ment and personalization can starting with a sheet, starch it the playhouse plus 2 inches for — Reporter: gwizdesigns@aol. a good source for iron-on numIf children are old enough, take it from a run-of-the-mill to add more body. You'll need side hems. Turn under I inch com

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tips for navigating the real estate market. At a time when the economy and housing bust have made it tougher to get out of a place that's not right for you, it's more important than ever to pick the right home, Cusato

says.

• •

Cusato spoke recently about how to make the best housing choices. An edited transcript follows:

— Marianne Cusato, author

people who lost their homes in Hurricane Katrina, and you've also designed houses in a walkable neighborhood. Do you think t h ere's more of an interest in these kinds of walkable neighborhoods and m aybe e ve n s m a ller

that's led to a lot of isolated

spaces?

of changes to housing policy,

A have designed, people some-

such as allowing for denser development? • Zoning laws are usually • quite well intended but they have consequences that

• Because of the size of • some of the h ouses I

times mistake what I say as "everyone should live in 300 • What are some of the y ou start to r eally look at square feet." That's not the • m ost c o m m on m i s - those elements, you're going message. The m essage is: takes people make when buy- to get closer to the home that's Live in the space that works ing a home'? the best fit. for you. • T hey l o o k i n s i de a A ll square feet ar e n o t . home and they read off You say t hat b uyers made equal. When you have a checklist: "It has this, it has . need to look at t hree the ceiling height that's 9 or that, it's got the granite and t hings: function, cost a n d 10 feet and windows on multhe stainless." But we don't delight. tiple walls and connections to think about the experience of • W hen you l ink a ll o f the outdoors, and when you living there and how that's re• these together, you end can actually use the space in ally going to touch everything up with the most sustainable your yard because you have we do in the day. home in terms of l ivability. private outdoor living space, Another mistake is buying Does it work, does it have the then the space that you have a house for resale. In real- number of bedrooms I need, feels so much larger. It's not a ity, if everybody just bought is it close to where I need to be matter of square footage, it's the house they wanted, un— that's the function. If you're more about how that square less they have really extreme focusing on cost, i f y o u're footage is utilized. needs — like they love that or- looking at a price point, you ange tile or whatever — if you can get a price point. Delight In the book you say pick what you want to live in, — that's the piece that's not • that a sm a l ler b a c k most likely that's going to be always allowed a seat at the yard, if it's designed well, can a reallygood house forresale. table. If you add that in and be more useful than a larger We're pulled in a certain balance it with cost and func- yard. direction because we think tion, if you get the right mix of • If y ou c an w a lk o u t that's what we should do, but those, you hit a sweet spot. • doors and feel that your we don't always listen to what neighbors are not just staring actually would fit best in our • When you talk a bout down at you, you'll go outside. lives. • delight, can you g ive When the space doesn't work, me some examples? you're not going to use it. You • I've occasionally inter• For me, I love the way can plant trees and help to de• viewed people who ex• t he l i ght h i t s i n my fine the space. It's learning to read a house panded their house or moved a partment. I l o v e w a k i n g into a big house when their up and having the light just and knowing w ha t y o u 're children are in high school, streaming in. I was talking to l ooking f or . O t he r t h i n gs and I'm thinking, "In five or someone who had been living to look for: How the house 10 years, you're going to have in the suburbs and moved to flows. Is there privacy bea lot of extra space because the city and was really wortween rooms? Can you have the kids will be gone." ried about giving up the yard. a privateconversation? Does • Exactly. Take the long She found a place with a little the furniture fit? • view of w h e re y ou're terrace and she l oves her living and how your family terrace. What should p e ople might shift — both in terms of It might be your proximity . lookfor onthe street'? the downsizing when the kids to a park. It could be inside • One of the big things move away or even getting your house; it could be out• is: Does the streetscape biggerbecause maybe elderly side. In some cases, delight form an outdoor room? Eleparents might be moving in. might be that you got a great ments like pushing the gaOne of the things we try to deal on it. Some people choose rage back and the porch forencourage in the book is re- to spend less than they can af- ward — that actually helps ally looking at how you're go- ford and then have more mon- the space because it puts the ing to live in your space. What ey left over for other things. person as a primary element do you do on weekends, what and the ca r i s s e condary. Y ou've d esi g n e d When the car is primary it's do you do in evenings, where do you eat your meals? When • small h ou s e s for hard to get out and walk, and

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Diane Weishaupt Bulletin Subscriber

T o subscribe, c al l 5 4 1 - 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 0 The Bulletin bendbulletin.com

Q•

places. • You mention mother• in-law apartments, but zoning laws often p rohibit them. Do you find that zoning sometimes stands in the way

A

go deeper than people would plan on . T h e re's n o t hing greater to enrich a community than being able to have a mix of incomes — which doesn't mean we're bringing housing projects in. It means you could have an accessory apartment in the back of your house for an aging parent, or a young professional or your

college-age kid who's home for the summer and needs a little more privacy. When you add those demographics into a community, you enrich the community. It can also help the homeowners offset their mortgage costs.

Q

. Housing c onstruction . seems to be picking up again after years of very low levels. What trends do you see in home construction for the next couple of years? . I t h in k w e 've seen a . much s a v v ie r co n sumer. When anything will sell, anything will b e built. And that's what we ran into, up till the housing bust. Now we're seeing consumers who are asking for something different. If you look at Millennials, they're not asking for their parents'homes. They don't want to l ive the w ay they grew up. That's natural; most generations react against where they've come from. They have college debt. They want their house to be efficient. They want a home that makes sense and is livable and has proximity to the things you do in a day. There is also a shift toward more urban and dense areas, especially in places where the formula alreadyexists.You're in an area where there's precedent for that, and people like living like that.

A


TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DS

ASK MARTHA

l0 4

• O O • 0 • Cj< l

Photos by Drew Kelly/ New York Times News Service

Jayson Fann sits in a nest he designed and constructed at the Loma Vista Inn in Big Sur, Calif.

Twi itecture: iant nests

are avin amoment By Penelope Green New Yorh Times News Service

•I

BIG SUR, Calif. — Last w eek, I spent a n ight i n a nest. Woven from eucalyptus branches, it bloomed high on the side of a cliff overlooking the Pacific Coast Highway, a great whorl of sticks atop four gnarly pillars. The north wind hissed through the gaps in the branches and the fog settled on

ls

Tony Cenicola/ New York Times News Service

Keep rubber gloves, a putty knife, a sponge and a stainless-steel grill brush on hand for grill cleaning.

ee in our ri cean an sae orsummer

my face and sleeping bag, but I could see the stars through the nest's oculus entry and hear the elephant seals miles below honking and braying in a lullaby like no other. Designed and built by Jayson Fann for the Treebones

"glamping" resort here (mostly yurts with a fantastic view), the nest, which costs $110 a night, is always booked. Fann, 40, a nest maker, artist, community m~N' @ educator and musician, said the nest is so popular, there have been nest marriages and, l inevitably, nest babies. Proud I y parents send him photos. From New Age cocoons and backyard playthings of the rich Vesi yr to public installations made from the wood of hurricanefelled trees to contemporary art objects that you can buy along with your Richters and Oldenburgs, human nests are having Another of Fann's nests — this one at Treebones Resort in Big Sur, a bit of a moment. Calif. — costs 8110 a night to stay in and is always booked. This spring, a South African nest maker named Porky Hefer, who was formerly a creative di- a r chitecture students are helpJanine Benyus, the biologist rector at Ogilvy 8 Mather and l e ss without." and author who won a National Bozell, took his nests on a tour Prehumans, of course, were Design Award last year for her of the design fairs, from De- b o r n in nests, and we used to work on biomimicry (that is, sign Miami/Basel and Collec- b e pretty good at making them. design that looks to nature for tive I in Manhattan to Design G r eat apes like chimpanzees inspiration an d i n n ovation), Days in Dubai, where a sti- a n d b onobos still make com- said she envied sleepovers like letto-heeled fairgoer climbed p l ex and lovely ones. The best this and mine in the Treebones into his leather off-cut nest and m o dern architecture, like the nest. stayed for a half-hour. "I think h o u ses of Frank Lloyd Wright, "Oh, my God, I want one," it was because she succeeds because she said. "The light through didn't quite realize it offers new mod- the branches. For 99.9 percent "BirdS Were she was wearmg els of the nest and of our time on Earth, we were a dress," he said of the original its surrounds, what hunters and gatherers. We were the British geogra- arboreal. We lived in t rees. architectsr there. pher Jay Appleton What you were experiencing Chee Pearlman, Cr eatlng called "prospect by looking up at those branches adesignconsultant fa n t a StiC and refuge" — cozy in the nest was a set of fractal and curator, vennooks and open patterns that we evolved und t tured that nests are vistas — that are der a millennium ago. Biology "probably the pur- ex a m p l eS Of famili a r b e cause says we are tuned by evolution est antidote to the Q/OgiteCture of our e volutionary to prefer landscapes that have heavy s t eel-andcod>ng. those fractal patterns." dP" " concrete building In 2011, three Benyus went on to describe footprints t h at, deS i gn lOng grown men , a an experimentby Judith Heercity by mega-city, be f O re any natural i st, an or- wagen, anenvironmental and a e overtaking the nithologist and an evolutionary p syc h ologist arChiteCture globe." engineer, built a who has written extensively But it is not just CI 'Itlc lat)eled man-s i zed h u m- on biophilic design, that tested e appev o'the thesestyles. mtngbtrd the visual characteristics of ofhandmade object the Lincoln Park fice cubicles. Working on the — twig and daub — Chee Pearlman, Zoo in Chicago theory that humans evolved as a rebuke to glass desig n consultant an d camped out in on the African savanna, Heerand steel — that it, as part of the Nat wagen printed photographs of makes a nest so Geo Wildtelevision that setting (long, distant views desirable. It is the sophisticated s eries "Live Like an Animal." framed by acacia trees) and padesign models they are based R eached by phone at his home pered some cubicles with that on. For nests like Fann's and i n E n g land r ecently, James image. Others were swathed H efer'sare hardly crude ob- Cooper, the engineer, recalled in an abstracted pattern of the jects. Like the birds' nests that h o w t hey built the nest with same photograph, and a third inspired them (weaver birds, b u ngee cords and bean canes group wore the usual gray. In in Hefer's case), these human a n d stuffed it with "duvets and tests involving creativity, mood pods are keenly engineered f e athers and pillows and lovely and memory, workers in the structures made from materials s oft nest-y stuff." savanna-papered pods had the at hand. Design blogs are pepHe a d d ed: "Basically, it was highest scores. pered with enticing examples. t h ree stupid Englishmen tryBiology teaches that any Fann's nests, for example, are i n g t o behave like humming- structure we make is a nest, as sturdyas a concrete bunker; birds. We drank a lotof nectar, Benyus added. "Including the eucalyptus, plentiful in North- w h i ch does strange things to Hampton Inn that I'm staying ern California, is not just lovely y o u r m o od. Th e i nteresting in right now," she said. "As a bibut doughty, and cures as hard t h i ng about trying to live like ologist, my concern is whether as metal. a bird is that when you're high or not the structure is well "Birds were the original ar- up,surroundedbyallthesezoo adapted or maladapted. To the chitects," Pearlman said, "cre- animals, you felt you were in extent that this hotel guzzles ating fantastic and extreme t h e safest, warmest spot. The energy, is full of toxic material examples of blobitecture and l a s t t hingyouwantedwastobe and when it is knocked down parametric design long before d o wn, out of the thing, among it won't decompose, I see it as any architecture critic labeled t h e animals." not well adapted. But your nest, t hese styles. They are als o But the n e s t w a sn't b i g made from local materials that summa cum laude engineers, e nough for all three men, he have been foraged or pruned, able to transform cheap, insub- s a id, and he was evicted early I find incredibly beautiful. At stantialbuildingmaterials into o n . H e spent the rest of the the end of its life, it will decay the most durable and cozy of n i g h t o n a b ench, trying to into the earth and be food. For homes. All this without a single s l eep through the roaring of the me, that is a great biological CAD rendering, which today's l i o ns. structure." "J.

MARTHA STEWART should I deepQ ..How clean my grill?

A flare-ups caused by grease • A dirty grill puts you • at risk for f r e quent

and grime, so do an annual

deep-cleaning before grilling season. You'll need rubber gloves, a putty knife, a sponge and a stainless-steel grill brush to get started. Jamie Purviance, author of "Weber's New Real Grilling," and Steven Raichlen, who wrote "The Barbecue Bible," help us break down the cleaning process for gas and charcoal grills.

Gas grill how-to l. Unhook the gas line; remove all grates. 2. Wearing rubber gloves and using a putty k n ife,

scrape off any grease and carbonized food inside the cookbox. Wash the cookbox

and drip pan using a sponge with water and dish soap; clean the inside of the lid. 3. Discard the drip pan's foil liner, and scrape away any debris. Replace the liner (do this monthly to prevent flare-ups). 4. Rinse everything with a hose. 5 . If th e h oles in t h e cookbox's burner tubes are

clogged, use a grill brush to clean them, scrubbing across the tube openings. If the blockage is deeper inside the tube, excavate it with an unbent coat hanger.

6. Tackle any metal bars above the burner tubes with the grill brush, then put back the cooking grates and reattach the gas line. 7. Turn all burners to high and close the lid. Wait until the temperature hits 500 degrees, about 15 minutes, then scrape the grates with the grill brush. Wear oven mitts.

a year, in either spring or fall, with superphosphate, which promotes plant growth and health, and with sulfur, which adds acidity to the soil, helping blueberry plants grow. Another option: Mix in organic material that's high in acidity, such as peat moss, decomposed leaves or pine bark, to raise soil acidity, says Barbara Damrosch, co-author of "The Four Season Charcoal grill how-to Farm Gardener's Cookbook." 1. Remove both grates. Us- Consult your local cooperative ing the grill's ash sweeper, extension office (csrees.usda. push ashes and food into the gov/extension) about having ash catcher; discard debris. your soil tested if you suspect it 2. Scrub inside the grill's is especially low in acidity. Afbowl using a grill brush with ter planting, mulch with bark, water and dish soap. leavesorpineneedles.For extra 3. Replace th e c h arcoal nutrients, top-dress the soil with grate. Fill the grill's bottom compost ormanure tea once the with charcoal and light it. Re- plants have blossomed. place the cooking grate. Water b l ueberry b u shes 4. With the lid off, preheat only when the soil is dry. The the grill to 500 degrees, about addition of compost will natu15 minutes. Scrape with the rally keep plants moist in dry grill brush. Wear oven mitts. conditions and will help soil drain properly when it's wet. Growing blueberries Prune the bushes once anThe blueberry bushes nually to allow light and air to . on Martha's farm are penetrate. Martha thins out her quite large. How d oes she bushes in early spring, when grow and care for them? they are still leafless. Cut out • The size of a blueberry dead stems, long stems with• bush d epends m ostly out many buds and older stems on the species. At Martha's that are no longer producing Bedford farm, you can find much fruit. tall varieties such as ' Dar— Questions of general interest row,' 'Chandler' and 'Jersey.' can be emailed to msiletters@ She also grows 'Bluegold' and marthastewart.com. For more 'Patriot,' which aren't known information on this column, visit fortheirsize but do produce a www.marthastewart.com. great deal of fruit. Blueberry bushes are low maintenance; most of the work is done up front when planting them, and this time of year I I is best. Fertilizing the soil will encourage growth. Martha ferPROMPT DELIVERY tilizes the bushes once or twice 541-389-9663

Q.

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

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garry Glen Ross"), in indie films and as third leads in big-budget Hollywood movies like "Salt" and "X-Men Origins: Wolverine." Starring on a television serieswas never part ofthe plan, he said, until he read the pilot script for "Ray Donovan" and then met with the persuasive Biderman. "There's something about the male subconscious that she gets really w ell," Schreiberexplained. "Every other group in the world has kind of

By Margy Rochlin New York Times News Service

L OS ANGELES — On a set so authentically dressed to resemble a boxing gym that you could almost smell the mildewed towels, a man on the floor was howling in pain as two burly-looking goons

dragged him by the ankles. Anyone familiar with the work of Ann Biderman, the creator of the series being shot, "Ray Donovan," w ould i n s tantly recognize that the scene incorporated three of her favorite subjects: violence, Los Angeles and thugs. "I seem to love writing about crime and tortured men," said Biderman, whose "Southland," a recently canceled drama about Los Angeles patrol officersand detectives, was beloved by critics and those in law enforcement for its unwavering realism. But if "Southland" existed primarily in t h e b edraggled streets of Los Angeles' east side, "Ray Donovan" which begins Sunday on Showtime, unfolds in neighborhoods of crazy excess like Malibu and Beverly Hills. The brusque title charac-

Kevm Scanlon / New York T>mes News Serwce

Ann Biderman,center,has a new series,"Ray Donovan," beginning Sunday on Showtime. The show stars Jon Voight, left, and Liev Schreiber as the title character.

stantly distracted by the needs of his wife and children, his two befuddled thug brothers and the looming threat of his dad (Jon Voight), a murderous excon trying to slither back into his old spot as family patriarch. Biderman said she'd been thinking about placing a fixer at the center of a television series for years. But "Ray Donovan" was born when she decided to embed the character in an unruly working-class family shadowed by the sex abuse ter (Liev Schreiber) specializes scandal in the Catholic Church. in cleaning up after celebrities When asked why Los Angeles — a dead girl found in an ath- appealed to her as a setting, she lete's bed, a closeted actor being wrinkled her brow. "Where blackmailed. Whether whis- else would it be'?" she asked. pering orders into his cellphone "It's a town I know." or speeding across the city in Judging from the familiar his Mercedes, Donovan is con- faces on the set last month, she

knows a lot of people, too. They included the respected British characteractor Eddie Marsan, who plays Ray's brother, Terry, a retired pugilist fluttering with early onset Parkinson's. The bespectacledgentleman peering closely at one of the camera monitors was the Oscarnominated screenwriter Ron

Nyswaner ("Philadelphia"), a writerand co-executive producer on "Ray Donovan." Even the actorbeing hauled across the grimy floor of the boxing club has a pedigree: He's the actor and playwright Michael Cristofer, who won a Pulitzer Prize for his play, "The Shadow Box." As for the star of the series, Schreiber's brutish intensity has served him well on Broadway (he won a Tony for "Glen-

musicians, artists and gifted wordsmiths like he r m o t her's longtime lover, the Beat poet Gregory Corso, whom she refersto as her "spiritual stepfather." Stability, financial or otherwise, was in short supply, however. When money was tight, they'd return to Miami. "We'd move into these little mafia hotels," she said. "Lots of rough men, who worked on boats, lived there." After attending the Universiprogressed psychological ly, ty of Southern California's film spiritually and politically. The school, Biderman a nalyzed average man is still playing off mountains of screenplays as a a 19th century sense of honor, reader at United Artists in the duty and that hunter-gatherer mid-1970s and inadvertently thing. And Ann gets that. She got a crash course in story gets how displaced a lot of men structure. Though she'd disfeel, and the psychology of vio- tinguish herself as the screenlence and sexuality and that we writer of "Primal Fear," "Public are desperate for an upgrade." Enemies," and "Copycat," her Asked why she's so good at first crack at television should writing about emotionally com- have told her something: In the plicated men, Biderman said, mid-'90s a brief stint at "NYPD "Other kids watched 'Gigi,' and Blue" won her an Emmy for I watched 'The Detective."' (It's best writing in a drama. a 1968 Frank Sinatra movie.) It was back in 2008 that BiBut maybe she's also seen derman was hiredto create a more than her fairshare of series about police in Los Ansuch men. She was born in Mi- geles. She devoted more than a ami, but when she was 8 her half a year to riding along with businessman fatherand free- a police gang unit. On her first spirit mother divorced and she night, the detectives left her moved with her mother to Man- alone with the body of a murhattan and the legendary Chel- der victim. "He was so young sea Hotel. "Wildly bohemian," and had this huge tattoo across is how Biderman described her his chest that said 'MARIA'S mother, Peggy Biderman, who CHILD,'" Biderman said. That introduced her daughter to the searing image made its way world of film and avant-garde into the "Southland" pilot, theater and a life swirling with which aired the next year.

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MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to changeafter press time. I

Dear Abby:I have written to you before, and your advice served me well. I have another problem now, and I don't know what to do about it. I am a childless man, but I have owned my dog for 12 years. I work from home and we a re t ogether c o nstantly. Hon e stly, DEAR Abby, he is the joy of

mylife.

ABBY

My problem is I live in constant fear of losing him. I know it will break my heart, and I'm not sure I can deal with it. At night, when I rub his belly at bedtime and see the love in his eyes, I can't sleep for thinking about the day when he will no longer be withme. I know he's "just a dog," but he has been my kid for all this time. Do you have any advice for me? — Afraid of theLoss Dear Afraid: I understand your feelings. I doubt there is any pet owner who hasn't had one special departedpetwho lives on forever in his or her heart. My advice to you is to not spoil one more precious second you have with your dog by worrying about what will eventually happen. You knew going in that your dog would

have a certain life span. When the time comes, talkto your veterinarian about support groups in which you can share your feelings. And don't be surprised when you find out you are one of many. Dear Abby: I have this co-worker, "Sam," who is no longer performing 100 p ercent at work. It started shortlyafter he moved out of town and he was forced to start commuting. Sam complains a lot about the commute because he doesn't allow enough time for it and he ends up being late to work. Lately I have noticed that he has also started to slack off on his daily tasks. He'll sit down, prepare to do something, then get up and disappear for 20 to 25 minutes. He'll come back for a few minutes, then disappear again.We generally have to pick up the slack. Is this something I should report to my managers? I feel it's unfair that Sam gets paid for the same amount of time that I do. — Frustrated Co-Worker in Illinois Dear Frustrated:If it won't have a negative impact on your job ratings,

you should stop picking up the slack. It will become apparent to your managers that Sam is not doinghis share, and he will cook his own goose. Dear Abby:When I was 11, I lived with my dad and stepmom. My 14year-oldbrotherlived with ourgrandparents in another town, but they would visit every couple of months. After one visit, as they were leaving, my grandmother said, "Come here and give your brother a kiss andtell himyou love him." Mybrother and I looked at each other and, in typical kid fashion, said, "YUCK!!" Abby, I never saw my brother again. He died the next week from a congenital brain aneurysm. It taught me a lesson. The words we say to our loved ones should be sweet, because they may be the last words from us they will ever hear. My brother died 55 years ago and I miss him still. — Still Missing Him Dear Still Missing Him:Please accept my sympathy for your loss. The life lesson you learned from your brother's untimely death was an important one. I am sorry it is one you had to learn at such a ten-

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

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JUNE 25, 2013:This yearyou have many exciting options appear, yet a sense of negativity might come forward. You will need to pinch yourself in order to believe your good fortune with some of the events that occur. You Stars showthe kind start a new 12-year of day you'll have li f e cycle, and you ** * * * D ynamic will feel and see ** * * P ositive th e difference. If ** * A verage youare single and ** S o-so want to change * Difficult your status, you will meet someone appropriate. If you are attached, what would make your bond more perfect? Know that whatever it is could happen. AQUARIUS is challenging, but he or she is a good friend.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * S omeone whom you deal with regularly could be out of sorts. Steer clear of this person for now. In the meantime, focus your attention on what counts for you. Check out a real-estate investment in the next few weeks. Tonight: Hang out with friends at a favorite place.

TAURUS (April20-May20) ** * * * D efer to a boss who a has strong vision of what he or shewants. In fact, the more responsibility this person has, the happier he or shewill be. Weigh the pros and cons of anew purchase, whether it is a car or something involving communication. Tonight: Speakyour mind.

GEMINI (May21-June20) ** * * * Y ou will be more willing to venture out than you havebeen inyears. Consider your options carefully regarding a financial matter. You might want to talk

YOURHOROSCOPE

SCORPIO(oct. 23-Nov.21)

tosomeone who knows morethanyoudo about this. You could beoverly optimistic! Tonight: Follow the music.

** * * You'll want to rethink a tensiondriven reaction. You might not want to thinkthrough the issue, but it would benefit you to do so. If nothing else, try to look at the situation from other people's point of view. A change in perspective will help you. Tonight: Entertain from home.

CANCER (June 21-Jnly22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

By Jacqueline Bigar

** * * J upiter enters your sign today. This transition brings you good luck, and it also marks the beginning of a newlife cycle. Use it well. Right now, a discussion with a partner or close friend has aunique intensity. Listen carefully and revise your plans if need be.Tonight: Dinner for two.

** * * You will be more open with someone — apartner or loved one —than you have been inthe past. This person will become more transparentas a result. With gentleness and care, this relationship could open up. Tonight: Visit with friends, but first check in with a loved one.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19)

** * * You might feel as if you are the center of attention, until you have to bendtokeepthepeace.In any case,the cards are not stacked in your favor. Avoid taking any risks. News from someone at a distance could leave you wide-eyed. Tonight: Enjoy the moment with friends.

** * * You'll feel more comfortable relating to others. What hadbeen aproblem in the past will be resolved easily. You might have more choices than you realize. Be sensitive to others in a discussion. Know whatyou want — do not play around. Tonight: Sort through invitations.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb. 18)

** * * Z ero in on priorities in your dayto-day life. You might have alot of energy that's being focused on organizing and making your life easier. Donot cancel an appointment. Some good fortune will stem from it — maybe not immediately, but soon. Tonight: Hang with friends.

** * * You need to understand what is happening around you. Observation helps. In the next few weeks, you might notice that you'll havemoreenergythanyouhavehad for a while. This news will makeyou smile, as you could havemore to doevery day. Tonight: Do your own thing.

LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.22)

PISCES (Feh.19-March20)

** * * Taming your imagination will help you funnel your creativity appropriately. You know the virtues of finding solutions and showing compassion to others. Losing your temper won't help. A misunderstanding does not need to go any further. Tonight: Act as if there is no tomorrow.

** * * A l low your imagination to lead the way. A loved onemight delight in your humor and lightheartedness. Youwill see a situation from a different perspective as you learn what it's like to walk in someone else's shoes. Tonight: You might want to vanish with a loved one. © 2013 by King Features Syndicate

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8 p.m. on H A, "Extreme Weight Loss" —Since losing his arm in a car accident, Ryan, 23, has lost a great deal of selfesteem and gained agreat deal of weight. While visiting the Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame, he learns that he's beenchosen to embark on a weight-loss journey with Chris Powell. Along the way, he learns some disturbing news from a medical test, vows to overcome his fear of riding a bike, and is visited by Packers linebacker Clay Matthews and former wide receiver Donald Driver. 8 p.m. on FAM,"Pretty Little Liars" —Hanna (Ashley Benson) fears that her mother (Laura Leighton) is keeping a dangerous secret and vows to protect her, which leads to an awkward encounter with Detective Holbrook (Sean Faris). The girls follow a clue found in Ali's things to a creepy mask maker who develops an interest in Emily (Shay Mitchell). Spencer andToby (Troian Bellisario, KeeganAllen) continue looking into Toby's past in the new episode "Cat's Cradle." 8:30 p.m. on H C3, "Betty White's Off Their Rockers" — In this new episode, senior pranksters direct traffic inside a grocery store, give moviegoers bad reviews of the films they're about to see andcut loose with a dance machine in anarcade. Other pranks involve a girl getting a ticket for an absurd "violation" and shoppers getting bubbles blown on them. Betty White hosts. 9 p.m. on TNT,"Rizzoli 8 Isles" —Returning for a fourth season, Jane andMaura (Angie Harmon, SashaAlexander) find themselves helping each other through more family troubles as they investigate more troublesome cases, including a deadly shooting of a state senator, the brutal killing of a young andearnest journalism student, and the pending murder trial of Maura's mob boss father, Paddy Doyle (guest star John Doman). 10 p.m. on TNT,"Perception" — Eric McCormack returns for Season 2 aseccentric neuroscience professor Daniel Pierce, whose paranoid schizophrenia helps the FBIsolve crimes. This season, Pierce's personal life is even more complicated. He finds it difficult to walk away from his imaginaryfriendship with Natalie Vincent, but he must do so in order to embark on a romancewith his doctor, Caroline Newsome. Kelly Rowan ("The O.C.") plays both Natalie and Caroline. ©Zap2lt

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ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbLllletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013

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ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free ltems 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212 - Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - MedicalEquipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

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GENERATE SOM E ProForm XL680 Cross T HE B U LLETIN r e Bend Habitat EXCITEMENT in your Trainer, heart r ate, quires computer adRESTORE neighborhood! Plan a pulse, weight, speed, vertisers with multiple Building Supply Resale 264-Snow RemovalEquipment garage sale and don't inclines 8 more. Paid ad schedules or those Quality at LOW forget to advertise in $1250, asking $425 selling multiple sysPRICES 265 - Building Materials 740 NE 1st classified! obo. 541-416-3606. tems/ software, to dis266- Heating and Stoves 541-385-5809. close the name of the 541-312-6709 Reebok 190RS Tread267- Fuel and Wood or the term Open to the public. m ill, fol d u p wi t h business 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers "dealer" in their ads. Sisters Habitat ReStore wheels, 10 s p eed, 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment Private party advertis- Building Supply Resale $ 700+ n e w $19 5 ers 270 - Lost and Found are defined as OBO. 541-388-9270 Quality items. those who sell one GARAGESALES LOW PRICES! 245 computer. 150 N. Fir. 275 - Auction Sales Golf Equipment 541-549-1621 257 280 - Estate Sales Patio Table & 6 chairs Open to the public. 281 - Fundraiser Sales (two swivel) BRAND Musical Instruments CHECK YOUR AD NEW and UNUSED. 282- Sales Northwest Bend Tropitone Brand sells 1 940s S u pe r Ol d s Heating & Stoves 284- Sales Southwest Bend in Bend for $3,900. Coronet, rare, original 286- Sales Northeast Bend Will sell for $2,900. owner, good cond., NOTICE TO 288- Sales Southeast Bend $495 OBO. Call (210) 508-0077 ADVERTISER 290- Sales RedmondArea 541-388-9270 Since September 29, on the first day it runs 292- Sales Other Areas The Bulletin 1991, advertising for to make sure it is correcommends e xtra FARM MARKET used woodstoves has rect. "Spellcheck" and ~ • p..l 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery been limited to modhuman errors do occhasing products or x els which have been 316 - Irrigation Equipment services from out of I cur. If this happens to c ertified by th e O r 325- Hay, Grain and Feed your ad, please conthe area. Sending II egon Department of tact us ASAP so that 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies c ash, c hecks, o r • Beautiful Yam a ha Environmental Qualcorrections and any 341 - Horses and Equipment i credit i n f o rmation Console piano, like •

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Farmall cub, runs/ starts great, good paint, blade, mower, Lost & Found • plow, cultivators, hyd raulic l i ft , pto , Found: Can n ondale manuals, & asMountain b ik e on s orted extra s . 5/25. Call to identify $3,500. 541-728-4499

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541-815-4214

Found small coin purse with contents, along Hwy SITREX HM 300 hay 97. Call t o id e ntify: tedder, $2000.

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541-548-3949.

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Screened, soil 8 compost m i x ed , no rocks/clods. High humus level, exc. f or flower beds, lawns, gardens, straight s creened to p s o i l . Bark. Clean fill. Deliver/you haul.

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Find exactly what you are looking for in the ity (DEQ) and the fedadjustments can be CLASSIFIEDS may be subjected to new cond. $ 3 200. eral 345-Livestockand Equipment En v ironmental made to your ad. 541-318-7279 i FRAUD. For more Protection A g e ncy 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 541 -385-5809 information about an s (EPA) as having met Found: White domestic 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 260 advertiser, you may I The Bulletin Classified smoke emission stan- rabbit w/ black freck358- Farmer's Column Misc. Items I call t h e Ore g onI Golf cart, 2000 Yamaha dards. A cer t ified les, found in yard on 375- Meat and Animal Processing ' State Att or n ey ' gas, custom top, runs w oodstove may b e 6/1 5, 1043 SE V al383 - Produce andFood i General's O f f i c e good. $1500 f i r m, Buying Diamonds identified by its certifi- leywood Pl, off 15th and Bronswood. Call Consumer Protec- • 541-280-3780 /Gold for Cash cation label, which is t ion ho t l in e at I Saxon's Fine Jewelers permanently attached Kelly at 541-647-1247 246 208 541-389-6655 i 1-877-877-9392. to the stove. The Bul- to claim. Guns, Hunting letin will no t k n owPets 8 Supplies BUYING & Fishing ingly accept advertisLionel/American Flyer 0 Cavalier red 8 w h iteGerman She p herd i ng for the sale of trains, accessories. REMEMBER: If you male 2 years, with TLC pups, males, $300; 1000 rnds of .556 ammo, uncertified 541-408-2191. have lost an animal, and training will be an females $350. $650. 500 rnds of 45acp, BUYING & SE L LING woodstoves. don't forget to check exc. companion. $475. 541-382-3838 Antiques & $300. 750 rnds of 9mm, All gold jewelry, silver Where can you find a 541-788-0090 $300. 541-647-8931 The Humane Society Collectibles and gold coins, bars, Bend helping hand? 200 rnds of .44 mag, rounds, wedding sets, 541-382-3537 $180. 340 rnds of 30-30, class rings, sterling silFrom contractors to Redmond Maine Coon kittens, as$320. 541-647-8931 ver, coin collect, vin- yard care, it's all here 541-923-0882 s orted c o lors $ 3 0 / Want to Buy or Rent tage watches, dental 500 rnds .40 S8W, $230. Pi in The Bulletin's cash. 541-678-7599 Fl e ming, 550 rnds of 38spl, $270. gold. Bill 541-447-7178; Old fence boards or "Call A Service 541-382-9419. 541-647-8931 POODLEPups, Toy. or Craft Cats lumber. C a l l Ro n Chihuahuas! Awesome Also, Professional" Directory POMAPOOSCOWGIRL CASH 541-389-8420. 750 rnds .223 Reming541-41 9-5060 asst'd colors, all meds, So cute! 541-475-3889 Beautiful handton new factory ammo, We buy Jewelry, Boots, Wanted: $Cash paid for $250. 541-362-1977 carved coffee table $500. 541-647-8931 Vintage Dresses & Queensland Heelers vintage costume jew(44" x 19s/~" x 17'/a") Fue l 8 Wood More. 924 Brooks St. • Auction Sales • CASH!! elry. Top dollar paid for Dachshund Very RARE Standard & Mini, $150 and 2 matching end 541-678-5162 Longhaired Standard For Guns, Ammo & 8 up. 541-280-1537 Gold/Silver.l buy by the tables (shown) 24sA" www.getcowgirlcash.com ONE DAY AUCTION! G O R - www.rightwayranch.wor x 15" x 24'/4". Built in Reloading Supplies. Estate, Honest Artist s ize, A KC , WHEN BUYING 541-408-6900. Wanted- paying cash Sunday June 30 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 GEOUS, sweet boy! dpress.com Taiwan between FIREWOOD... for Hi-fi audio 8 stuat 10 a.m. $650. 541-316-8382 Red-Tailed Boa Snake, 1940-1950, all glass 121 Oeady Crossing, dio equip. Mclntosh, To avoid fraud, DON'T MISSIHIS covered, in excelDonate deposit bottles/ adult female, e x c. The Bulletin Sutherlin, OR Pets 8 Supplies J BL, Marantz, D y condition. $1600 cans to local all vol- temperament - eater. lent naco, Heathkit, Sanrecommends payEquipment, Trucks, OBO. 541-382-6731 unteer, non-profit res- $145. 541-410-8590 ment for Firewood DO YOU HAVE sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Trailers, Guns, Farm, The Bulletin recomcue, to h e l p w / cat Rodent control experts Call 541-261-1808 only upon delivery SOMETHING TO Ranch, and More! mends extra caution spay/neuter vet bills. and inspection. SELL For complete details WHEN YOU SEE THIS • A when purc h as- Cans for Cats trailer is (barn cats) seek work cord is 128 cu. ft. FOR $500 OR in exchange for safe visit T-5auctions.com ing products or serat Bend Petco until 4' x 4' x 8' LESS? Oo shelter, basic care. tlactttrr ~ vices from out of the 6/25, then at Jake's • Receipts should Non-commercial Fixed, shots. Will de286 Visit our HUGE area. Sending cash, Diner on Hwy. 20 at include name, advertisers may liver! 541-389-8420 home decor checks, or credit inSales Northeast Bend Purcell. Donate Monphone, price and place an ad On a classified ad consignment store. f ormation may b e Fri at S m ith S i gn, Scottish Terrier AKC kind of wood with our go to New items subjected to fraud. 1515 NE 2nd; or at "QUICK CASH purchased. born 4/2. Shots www.bendbulletin.com arrive daily! For more i nforma- CRAFT i n T u m alo 8pups, ** FREE ** • Firewood ads wormed, parents on to view additional SPECIAL" tion about an adver930 SE Textron, anytime. 3 8 9 -8420. site, Ready now! MUST include 1 week 3 lines 12 photos of the item. Garage Sale Klt tiser, you may call Bend 541-318-1501 For i nfo/map, v i sit 541-31 7-5624. species 8 cost per Place an ad in The or www.redeuxbend.com the O r egon State www.craftcats.org cord to better serve k 2 0! Bulletin for your ga~2 Attorney General's Wolf-Husky-Malamute our customers. Ad must Medical Equipment rage sale and reOffice C o n sumer pups, only 1 girl left! The Bulletin reserves include price of ceive a Garage Sale DO YOU HAVE Protection hotline at $300! 541-977-7019 the right to publish all r t $500 Power l i f t rec l iner, SOMETHING TO Kit FREE! 1-877-877-9392. ads from The Bulletin ren ne central oregon r nre r903 works perfect, light or less, or multiple SELL Yorkie pups, AKC, big newspaper onto The beige color. $350. KIT INCLUDES: FOR $500 OR items whose total eyes, short-nosed, health Bulletin Internet web• 4 Garage Sale Signs Call 541-504-6010. AH Year Dependable Serrrog Central Oregon snce 1903 does not exceed LESS? guar. Potty training; ready site. • $2.00 Off Coupon To Firewood: Seasoned Non-commercial 6/28. 541-777-7743 $500. 263 Lodgepole, Split, Del. Use Toward Your advertisers may Adopt a nice cat from Yorkies, beautiful pups, 4 Tools Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 Next Ad Call Classifieds at Ser ing CentralOregon swre l903 P etco, PetSmart o r place an ad with males/2 fem., ready now! for $335. Cash, Check • 10 Tips For "Garage 541-385-5809 our Tumalo s a n ctuary! Sale Success!" $600 firm. 541-460-3884 Vintage Japanese glass www.bendbulletin.com 5000 watt generator, or Credit Card OK. "QUICK CASH Fixed, shots, ID chip, 541-420-3484. floats, asst. sizes, $5+ 120/240 Generac, SPECIAL" tested, more! Sanc210 ea. 541-388-9270 Tecumseh, $375. tuary open Sat/Sun 1 week 3 lines 12 New Winchester SXP 10hp PICK UP YOUR Call 541-416-0652 or Furniture & Appliances 1 -5, other days by ~ 2 k 20 ! GARAGE SALE KIT at 12 ga. shotgun. $350 541-233-7777 Gardening Supplies Ad must include appt. 6 5480 7 8 t h, 541-385-6202 1777 SW Chandler Crafts & Hobbies • & Eq u i pment price of single item Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Bend. Photos, map at Look for Information • A1 Washers&Dryers Ruger 223 good shape People of $500 or less, or www.craftcats.org. About Products and $150 ea. Full war1 00% COTTON FAT 1 400 rnds 223, + 3 $25 Lawn Mowing 541-389-8420, or like multiple items ranty. Free Del. Also QUARTERS, 50C ea. mags, $2000 or best. Services Every Day through Service (most lawns) whose total does us on Facebook. wanted, used W/D's or bundle deal. Jew541-508-9133 The Bulletin Classiffeds see if you qualify. not exceed $500. 541-280-7355 A pet sitter in NE Bend, elry making supplies, Winchester 541-848-2457 model Air Compressor Husky warm and loving home beads, some metal 1897 E-series shotCall Classifieds at Sell an Item Pro 7 HP 60 gal Tank. with no cages, $25 day. items, cheap! StampBed - full size with mat541-385-5809 un, pretty good cond. $375.00 BarkTurfSoil.com Linda at 541-647-7308 ing 8 s c rapbooking t ress; 8-Dr a w er www.bendbulletin.com 275. H omelite 2 50 0 W a t t supplies, very cheap. Remington dresser; TV and EnBOXER AKC puppies, Model 700, Generator $150.00 541-41 9-5394. PROMPT D E LIVERY tertainment c e n ter; reat litter, 1st shots, 300 Winchester mag, Snow Blower Yard Ma542-389-9663 Couch and loveseat; exc. cond. Leupold chine 22in. $160.00 Like new gas BBQ; If it's under $500 scope, $450. All items in Asking $125 for all! 907-750-8842 excellent condition! For newspaper 541-923-7384. you can place it in 541-389-7385 delivery, call the 251 The Bulletin Circulation Dept. at D esk, c h a ir , la m p 20" Redline bike, nice 265 Hot Tubs & Spas E nglish Mastiff A K C Mid-century modern 541-385-5800 Classifieds for: c ond. $ 7 5 OBO . Building Materials puppies, dam & sire $175. 541-593-3014 To place an ad, call 541-279-6136. Hot tub, older, 110W, Cavalier King Charles fully OFA tested, litter 541-385-5809 $10- 3 lines, 7 days Spaniel purebred pup- is champion sired with Fridge, Ingils by Whirl- Just bought a new boat? comes with top. Seats Assorted Steel Bldgs or email classifiedObendbulletimcom 4. In p erfect cond. Up to 50% off cost to pies, wormed, parents incredible pedigrees! p ool, w h ite, s i d e - Sell your old one in the $16 • 3 lines, 14 days on site. health guaran- S mall litter, only 5 by-sided, ice/water in classifieds! Ask about our Must see to appreciput up Erection info tee, $800. 5 4 1-548- pups avail. $ 1700. door, mint cond $250. Super Seller rates! ate. $500 OBO. You avail. Source¹ 18X Servwg Central Oregonsrncr 1903 (Private Party ads only) 4574. 541-408-5909 Chris, 503-577-7185. 701-595-4867 (Bend) haul. 541-408-8611 800-964-8335 541-385-5809 •

9

FAST!

541-771-9607

Hay, Grain & Feed 1st quality grass hay, Irg 3'x3'x8' bales, approx 750lbs ea. $240/ton, barn stored. Patterson Ranch, Sisters, 541-549-3831

Wanted: Irrigated farm ground, under pivot irrigation, i n C e n tral OR. 541-419-2713

Want to

b u y A l falfa, grass and grain hay, standing, in C entral Ore. 541-419-2713

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 541-385-5809

or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

Horses & Equipment I Mini ponies, 1 P i nto Stud; $200. 1 Pinto Mare; $200. 1 Dapple Mare; $200. 541-923-3530.

Farmers Column 10X20 STORAGE BUILDINGS

for protecting hay, firewood, livestock etc. $1496 Installed. 541-617-1133.

CCB ¹t 73684. kfjbuilders@ykwc.net

Wanted: Irrigated farm ground, under pivot irrigation, i n C e n tral OR. 541-419-2713

Want to b u y A l falfa, grass and grain hay, standing, in C entral Ore. 541-419-2713

Get your business

G ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory


E2 TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

541 e385-5809

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 476

or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

v

Employment Opportunities

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Monday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 : 0 0 pm Fri. professional to Join O r e gon's T uesday•• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •Noon Mons Central largest n e w car 616 d ealer Subaru of Want To Rent Bend. O ffering Wednesday • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • Noon Tues. 401k, profit sharing, Responsible businessplan, split man, clean & quiet. Thursday • . •• • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • Noon Wed. medical s hifts, a n d pai d will pay premium rent training. Please apfor room this summer. at 2060 NE Hwy Friday. • • • . •• • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. ply (800) 248-8840 20, Bend. 630 Saturday Real Estate. . . . . . . . . . . 1 1 : 0 0 am Fri. Rooms for Rent Saturday • • • • 3:00 pm Fri. FREE RENT TO RIGHT PERSON IN LA PINE chasing products or I Sunday. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri. I services from out of I Seeking mature perto share 3 bdrm, I the area. SendingI son 2 bath home with Viet c ash, c hecks, o r Place a photoin your private party ad Nam Vet in exchange P RIVATE PA RT Y R A T E S I credit i n f ormation I for home-health care for only $15.00 perweek. Starting at 3 lines I may be subjected to and light housekeepFRAUD. I ing. N/S, *UNDER '500in total merchandise OVER '500 in total merchandise N/D, and no For more i nforma7 days .................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 I tion about an adver- I drugs. (702) 686-1556 or (830)-708-9802 for 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 I tiser, you may call I interview. the Oregon State *Must state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 I Attorney General's I 632 28 days .................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special Co n s umerl (call for commercial line ad rates) 4 lines for 4 days.................................. I Office Protection hotline at l Apt./Multiplex General

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I 1-877-877-9392.

A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS B ELOW M A R K E D W ITH A N (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

CSO

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

The Bulletin bendbulletin.com 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 Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday.

t [~Ji')32j'J~)'lj'j'L~ JQD~ ~ Can be found on these pages : EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions

FINANCEANO BUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans and Mortgages 543- Stocks and Bonds 558- Business Investments 573- Business Opportunities

476

Employment Opportunities LABORATORY/ MANUFACTURING Nutraceutical manufacturer in Sisters, O R has

CHECK YOUR AD

gThe BLtlletiii g 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 466

Independent Positions

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 The Bulletin Classified 634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 2210 NE Holliday. A 3 bdrm, 2 bath, new carpet, gas heat, fireplace, quiet; no smoking. $800 mo; 541-317-0867

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RENTALS 603- Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636- Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638- Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640- Apt./Multiplex SW Bend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 660- Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Housesfor Rent Prineville 662- Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664- Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675- RV Parking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

X'Drj0rj 705

Real Estate Services Boise, ID Real Estate For relocation info, call Mike Conklin, 206-941-8458 Silvercreek Realty 740

Condo/Townhomes for Sale

Call for Specials! 3 B EDROOM s ingle Limited numbers avail. story condo, 841 sq', 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. remodeled, $81,500, W/D hookups, patios 541 -81 5-7707 1 700 or decks. NE WELLS ACRES MOUNTAIN GLEN, ¹54, Bend Call The Bulletin At 541-383-9313 Professionally 541-385-5809 745 managed by Norris & Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Homes for Sale Stevens, Inc. At: www.bendbulletin.com 6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, 636 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, Apt./Multiplex NW Bend view. By owner, ideal for tflliEK Q extended family. Small c l ea n S t u d io$590,000. 541-390-0886 downtown area, $495 mo.; $475 d e p . All utilities paid. No pets, no smoking. 541-3309769, 541-480-7870 Choose your hours, income 8 rewardChoose Avon. Patty, 541-330-1836, Avon independent sales rep.

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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705- Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 - Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750 - RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756 - Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763 - Recreational HomesandProperty 764 - Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 745

762

Homes for Sale

Homes with Acreage

NOTICE All real estate advertised here in is subject to t h e F e deral F air H o using A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any pref- 4 bdrm, 3 bath on 4.96 Redmond. For p i cs erence, limitation or discrimination based and more info go to http://bend.craigslist.o on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, rg/reo/3774892552.ht ml or call for appt. to familial status or national origin, or inten- view 541-548-9975 tion to make any such 775 preferences, l i m itations or discrimination. Manufactured/ We will not knowingly Mobile Homes accept any advertising for r ea l e s tate FACTORY SPECIAL which is in violation of New Home, 3 bdrm, this law. All persons $46,500 finished are hereby informed on your site. that all dwellings adJ and M Homes vertised are available 541-548-5511

opening f o r QA on an equal opportuManager. 5 Y e ars nity basis. The BulleLOT MODEL experience QA/QC, tin Classified LIQUIDATION fluency w/regulatory Prices Slashed Huge affairs, cGMP's 21 Savings! 10 Year 476 476 CFR part 111 preconditional warranty. ferred. Ful l time 750 Employment Employment Finished on your site. w/benefits. S a l ary Redmond Homes Opportunities Opportunities ONLY 2 LEFT! commensurate with Redmond, Oregon education/experiDirector o f N u r sing ence. Send resume: 541-548-5511 Looking for your next Automotive Services/RN JandMHomes.com emp/oyee? connie@metabolicWeneed an H armony House o f maintenance.com Place a Bulletin help Auto Tech Bend. To apply send wanted ad today and USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! resume to: B r enda tojoin our team! reach over 60,000 Garage Sales readers Purvis, Avamere Re- Materials Manager Small shop in Bend. each week. Door-to-door selling with 470 cruiting Manager at Most work is on our Weiser, ID Your classified ad fast results! It's the easiest Domestic & BPurvis@avamere.com M ateria's Mana g e r lot vehicles. Flat will also appear on way in the world to sell. Call 971-224-2068 rate pay depending n eeded for a fa s t bendbulletin.com In-Home Positions 646 paced manufactured on skill level. Health 528 which currently reThe Bulletin Classified Food Service - Bruno's h ousing plant. J o b Houses for insurance and 401 ceives over is taking duties include but not Loans 8 Mortgages 541-385-5809 C aregiver Av a i l K. Full time position. Grocery/U-bake 1.5 million page Rent General for Cashier 8 Pizza limited to: managing able to hire to help We are looking for a apps views every month WARNING Maker. Apply: 1709 NE purchasing staff, mayou. 20+ yrs. (Live tech who just wants 6th, at no extra cost. PUBLISHER'S Find them in The Bulletin recomI • Bend. No phone calls t erial h andlers, i n i in, hospice, short flag hours and fit in I Bulletin Classifieds NOTICE mends you use cauand l on g t e r m). ventory control , a nd The Bulletin with our crew. Get Results! All real estate adverCheck out the tion when you proSend e m ai l to Fax resume to t he ordering of a l l Call 385-5809 or tising in this newspavide personal classifieds online Classifieds! hank you, St . A n merebrockett© production m aterial. 541 306-3264. place your ad on-line T thony, per is subject to the information to compafor finding my www.bendbuffetin.com gmail.com o r c a ll Bachelor's D e g ree nies offering loans or at F air H o using A c t — J.S. lost items. 660-635-0297. Updated daily preferred with 5 years which makes it illegal bendbulletin.com credit, especially Thank you St. Jude & experience. in materito a d v ertise "any those asking for adals management. Sacred H e ar t of preference, limitation vance loan fees or E xperienced hou s e Accounting Jesus. j.d. Respond if interested to companies or disc r imination from out of keeper, reliable w ith A local company is seeking an individual pclark@championhobased on race, color, state. If you have references. 541-977-2450 to join our fast-paced office staff. The ideal mes.com religion, sex, handiconcerns or quescandidate will be extremely analytical and Need woman to help tions, we suggest you cap, familial status, be able to focus on details. This position is low income h a n di- in the accounting field, requiring accuracy marital status or naconsult your attorney Sales capped female Sr. tional origin, or an inor call CONSUMER Furniture salesperwhile following strict written procedures c itizen for r oom & tention to make any HOTLINE, s on n eeded f u l l without fail. board. 541-382-4464. such pre f e rence, call54I-385 5809topromoteyourservice Advertisefor 28daysstarting at 'I40 tftatpedtipackageit etavailableonosweat 1-877-877-9392. v t ime, r etail e x p . limitation or discrimiWILL DO- inBend: 10-key experience helpful. Computer litp referred. S o me BANK TURNED YOU nation." Familial staPrivate (elderly) in-home h eavy lifting r e eracy is required. Ability and willingness to DOWN? Private party tus includes children care, 20 yrs hospital excross train into other tasks also a plus. q uired. Apply i n will loan on real esunder the age of 18 perience in local hospital. tate equity. Credit, no living with parents or Building/Contracting L a ndscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care This full time position offers benefits inperson at 2145 S. Light housekeeping, problem good equity legal cus t o dians, cluding health, vacation, and a 401-k plan. Hwy 97, Redmond, meal prep, Drs. appts, Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landis all you need. Call pregnant women, and NOTICE: Oregon Compensation between $10-$11 per hour law r equires anyone scape Contractors Law have dependable car Oregon Land Mortpeople securing cusTues Sat., 10-6. based upon experience with a monthly inw/ins. 9-5 Mon-Thurs. who contracts for (ORS 671) requires all gage 541-388-4200. tody of children under construction work to Zorfdd' z gaaEiip Ask for Stephen or Person must be somecentive program. This is a Monday through businesses that adwhat independent. fax resume LOCAL MONEYtWe buy 18. This newspaper be licensed with the vertise to pe r form Friday, 8-5 position. Za~g gma /,. will not knowingly ac- Construction ContracW ages nego. Available Landscape Construc541-923-6774. secured trustdeeds & More Than Service cept any advertising July 1. 541-383-2651 Board (CCB). An tion which includes: For more information, please send your Great American note,some hard money for real estate which is tors Peace Of Mind active license p lanting, decks , Furniture resume and references to: loans. Call Pat Kelley in violation of the law. means the contractor fences, arbors, BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS 541-382-3099 ext.13. Spring Clean Up Box 20353011A c/o The Bulletin, O ur r e aders ar e is bonded 8 insured. water-features, and inSearch the area's most •Leaves hereby informed that Verify the contractor's PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 stallation, repair of ircomprehensive listing of •Cones Safety Assistant all dwellings adverCCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be classified advertising... • Needles tised in this newspa- www.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the EOE with drug screen required. real estate to automotive, • Debris Hauling OREGON DEPARTMENT OF per are available on contractor.com Landscape Contracmerchandise to sporting TRANSPORTATION an equal opportunity or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit goods. Bulletin Classifieds Weed Free Bark The Bulletin recomSafety Assistant (Safety Specialist 1) basis. To complain of number is to be inappear every day in the 8 Flower Beds discrimination cal l mends checking with cluded in all adverprint or on line. tisements which indiHUD t o l l-free at the CCB prior to conDo you like interacting with people and doing a Call 541-385-5609 cate the business has 1-800-877-0246. The tracting with anyone. Lawn Renovation variety of work? Then you may be a good fit www.bendbulletin.com EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES a bond,insurance and toll f re e t e l ephone Some other t r ades Aeration - Dethatching for our Safety Assistant position in Bend. This also req u ire addiworkers c o mpensanumber for the hearOverseed position assists the Safety Manager in delivThe Bulletin tional licenses and tion for their employCompost ing im p aired is servingcenuai oregon smce tss Advertising Account Executive ering, auditing, and administration of an occucertifications. Top Dressing ees. For your protec1-800-927-9275. We are looking for a Professional and Driven p ational health and safety program. T h e tion call 503-378-5909 476 Sales and Marketing person to help our cusSafety Assistant also assists with designing or use our website: Rent /Own and creating instructional materials and evaluLandscape tomers grow their businesses with an expandConcrete Construction Employment www.lcb.state.or.us to 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes ing list of broad-reach and targeted products. ation instruments. The Safety Assistant acts Maintenance Opportunities check license status $2500 down, $750 mo. as consultant in the area of occupational Full or Partial Service This full time position requires a background in JJ 8 B Construction, before contracting with OAC. J and M Homes health and safety, and Workers' Compensa• Mowing aEdging quality concrete work. consultative sales, territory management and the business. Persons 541-548-5511 tion loss prevention. The Salary range for this • Pruning aWeeding CAUTION: aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of Over 30 Years Exp. doing land s cape position is $3177 - $4628/mo. Sidewalks; RV pads; Sprinkler Adjustments Ads published in media sales experience is preferable, but we maintenance do not "Employment O p will train the right candidate. The position inDriveways; Color & Say "goodbuy" r equire an L C B For more information and to apply online, Stamp wor k a v a il. Fertilizer included portunities" in clude cludes a competitive compensation package cense. to that unused please v i s i t www . odotjobs.com (TTY employee and indeincluding benefits, and rewards an aggressive, Also Hardwood floor- with monthly program 503-986-3854 for the hearing impaired) for SPRING CLEAN-UP! ing a t aff o r dable pendent p ositions. customer focused salesperson with unlimited item by placing it in Announcement ¹ ODOT13-0514OC. The apAeration/Dethatching Ads fo r p o sitions earning potential. Weekly, monthly prices. 541-279-31 83 The Bulletin Classifieds CCB¹190612 plication deadline is June 27, 2013 at 11:59 that require a fee or Email your resume, cover letter and salary or one time service. Weekly/one-time service PM. avail. Bonded, insured. upfront i nvestment history to: Jay Brandt, Advertising Director Free Estimates! must be stated. With jbrandt@bendbulletin.com EXPERIENCED 541 -385-5809 Debris Removal COLLINS Lawn Maint. ODOT is an AA/EEO Employer. any independentjob Commercial Ca/l 541-480-9714 opportunity, please Web Developer & Residential JUNK BE GONE i nvestigate tho r Are you a technical star who can a/so comI I I I I Haul Away FREE Need to get an oughly. Use extra municate effectively with non-technical exFor Salvage. Also c aution when a pSenior Discounts ad in ASAP? ecutives and employees? Would you like to Cleanups 8 Cleanouts plying for jobs onwork hard, play hard in beautiful Bend, OR, 541-390-1466 You can place it Mel, 541-389-8107 line and never prothe recreation capital of the state? Same Day Response online at: vide personal inforThen we'd like to talk to you! Nelson mation to any source www.bendbulletin.com Our busymedia company publi shes numerous USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! you may not have Landscaping & web and mobile sites and is seeking an experesearched and Maintenance rienced developer who is also a f orward Door-to-door selling with 541-385-5809 deemed to be repuServing Central thinker, creative problem solver, excellent fast results! It's the easiest table. Use extreme Oregon Since 2003 communicator, and s e lf-motivated profesALLEN REINSCH way in the world to sell. c aution when r e Residental/Commercial sional. We are redesigning all of our websites Yard maintenance & s ponding t o A N Y within the next couple of years and want you in clean-up, thatching, The Bulletin Classified Sprinkler online employment on the ground floor. Fluency with PHP, plugging 8 much more! Activation/Repair ad from out-of-state. 541-385-5809 HTML5, CSS3, jQuery and JavaScript is a Call 541-536-1 294 Back Flow Testing We suggest you call must. Experience integrating third-party soluthe State of Oregon tions and social media applications required. Maverick Landscaping Maintenance • Hand y m an Consumer H o tline Desired experience includes: XML/JSON, Mowing, weedeating,yd .Thatch & Aerate at 1-503-378-4320 MySQL, Joomla,Java, responsive web design, detail., chain saw work, • Spring Clean up I DO THAT! For Equal OpportuRails, WordPress. Top-notch skills with user bobcat excv., etc! LCB Home/Rental repairs •Weekly Mowing nity Laws c o ntact interface and graphic design an added plus. ¹8671 541-923-4324 & Edging Small jobs to remodels Oregon Bureau of Background in the media industry desired but It takes a special person to become a Home •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Honest, guaranteed Labor & I n d ustry, not required. This is a full-time position with Villanueva Lawn Care. Instead CAREGiver™ not a special degree. Maintenance work. CCB¹151573 Maintenance,clean-up, Civil Rights Division, benefits. If you've got what it takes, e-mail a Working with seniors in their homes can be • Bark, Rock, Etc. Dennis 541-317-9768 thatching + more! 971-673- 0764. cover letter, resume, and portfolio/work sample challenging but, at the same time, tremendously Free estimates. links a n d/or re p ository ( GitHub) t o LandSCa i m rewarding. Enjoy training, support,flexible shifts ~ 541-981-8386 The Bulletin ERIC REEVE HANDY •Landscape s clv gce t a o e g o s c e a t e resumeOwescompapers.com thatfi t your life,and a job that nurtures the soul. SERVICES. Home & 541-385-5809 Construction Commercial Repairs, •Water Feature Painting/Wall Coveringj These postings are also on the web Carpentry-Painting, at www.bendbuffetin.com Installation/Maint. Add your web address Pressure-washing, WESTERN PAINTING Drop off your resume in person at 1777 SW •Pavers • No medical degree necessary to your ad and readHoney Do's. On-time •Renovations CO. Richard Hayman, Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Or mail to PO Box • Training and support provided F lexible shifts ers on The Bulletin's promise. Senior a semi-retired paint•Irrigations Installation 6020, Bend,OR 97708; No phone inquiries web site, www.bendDiscount. Work guaring contractor of 45 Find out more at homeinsteadaend.com, please. bulletin.com, will be anteed. 541-389-3361 Senior Discounts years. S m al l J obs Applications are available at the front desk. e Become a CAREGiver link m l ~ able to click through or 541-771-4463 Welcome. Interior & Bonded & Insured Pre-employment drug testing required. lz uc xci reerrswrz~/ automatically to your Call 54 l.330.6400 Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 Exterior. c c b ¹51 84. EOE/Drug Free Workplace website. Each Home Instead Senior Care~ office e mde endentl owned and o ensea © 2013 Home Instead Inc CCB¹181595 LCB¹8759 541-388-6910

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E4 TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services

In the IMP Pairs at the ACBL Spring NABC, Joel Wooldridge, one of the world's top p layers, was declarer in today's deal (reported by Phillip Alder). North's bid of t wo diamonds was an artificial heart raise. South's 2NT was supposedly natural and forcing. His four hearts was bold. Wooldridge won the second club and led the queen of spades: king, ace. Hethrew a diamond on thejack of spades, ruffed a spade, ruffed a club in dummy and led a f ourth spade. East, who couldn't gain by ruffing in, pitched a diamond, and South ruffed.

diamonds, you bid three clubs and he tries 3NT. What do you say? ANSWER: To p ass would be reasonable. Your bid of three clubs (a "high reverse") suggested extra strength, but partner made no move toward slam. Still, a dull hand for him such as A J 4, 4 2, A Q 10 7 6, J 9 3 w i l l o f fer a p lay fo r s i x diamonds, so one try for slam is appropriate. Bid four diamonds. North dealer Both sides vulnerable

NORTH 4 tAJ 8 7 5 9 J64 0 J73 A72

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West ruffedand took the ace of diamonds, but Wooldridge won the last two tricks with his K-9 of trumps over East's 10-7. That excellent t iming h e lped h i m a n d K e n t N orth Mignocchi win the event. P ass 2 CI 3Q

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For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a mlnute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscrlptlons 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 nytlmes.com/mobllexword for more information. Onllne subscrlptlons: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytlmes.com/crosswords (S39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay.

Crosswords for young solvers; nytlmes.com/learnlng/xwords.

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5He CAt2 et2 IN —to farm the SurPriSe anSWer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

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ACROSS 3 Celestial streaker 36 Reverse pic 50 Rimes of 38 "Yay, me!" 1 Praline nut 4 Citrus drink country 6 Grueling grad 5 Most closely 39 Three, to Angela 51 Borden mascot related Merkel 52 Religious grillings ceremonies 11 Nebraska 6 Eccentric senior, 41 Cartoonist panhandle hrs affectionately Browne 57 Big bang cause, 14 Wear down 7 Classified 42 Rather and an informal worned hint to 17-, 23-, 15 Jousting weapon 8 S i nger Baker 44 Dating letters 47- and 5716 Irish actor Stephen 9 D igital scale Across 17 Proverbially, they disp l ay, for short 46 Hopping mad 10 "Understand?" 47 Tough guys 58 Needle-threader's wait for no one target 19 Separating space 11 Hershey's treat in 48 Knick or Celt 59 "... q u it!" 20 Rocks in a bar a yellow wrapper 49 Mild oaths 21 It's often usedas 1 2 Shore cooler ANSWER TQ PREVIOUS PUZZLE: a synonym for 13 Putter's gimme 'thesaurus" U S O F A E S T B A S E S 18 Standard 22 Desert largelyin 2 2 Pontiac muscle carP I N E S M E H A R E S O Mongolia 24 Beach shirts S T E E P I D E A L I Z E D 23 Ragged 25 Dozes off H A I L C O L U M B I A 27 Salinger heroine 2 6Forensic O R D E A L C O B S MU 28 Battery terminaI evide nce letters T S A R I C E B R E A K E R 29 Two foursomes 29 R ower's need E V A S TW I T S 32 Rock legend 30 George R A I N M A N S N OW P E A Frank Washington's O R N O T S T UN 35 Revolutionary favorite fruity Franklin dessert? WI N D S P R I N T T A S E 37 "Gotcha!" cries 31 Stressful reviews SD S R E M RA I S E D 38 Birth state of twD for f i lers S TO R M W A R N I N G presidents 33 Tool for the Tin D U T C H D OO R C EA S E 39 Bowl over Woodman U N D U E O N A E A G E R 40 Stout of 34 Like verbs G I S M O T S P D RO S S whodunits describing what 06/25/1 3 xwordeditor Naol.com 41 Takes the risk happened 42 Sale rack abbr 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 1 2 13 43 Overzealous 14 15 16 45 Spork point 47 Semi 17 18 19 53 Jekyll's alter ego 54 2010 Super Bowl 20 21 22 MVP 23 24 25 26 55 Connecticut collegian 27 28 56 Press initials 57 Simple breakfast 29 3 0 31 32 3 3 34 35 36 60 " Along, Little

I Jumbles: BQTGH Y O U T H KET T L E sEPTlc I Answer. when he asked, "should we harvest the strawberries or the blueberries?", 8he said — YOU plCK

DOWN f o ur: small cake 2 Susan's "All My Children" role

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By C.C. Burutkel (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Ine.

06/25/13


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

:o.

THE I3ULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 E5

Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

Q

Watercraft

880

881

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

• Ji

18.7' Sea Ray Monaco, Ads published in eWaI~ %5 i . 1984, 185hp, V6 Mertercraft" include: KayCruiser, full canvas, life aks, rafts and motor.I ~ L4ia,h vests, bumpers, water ized personal skis, swim float, extra watercrafts. For prop & more. EZ Loader " boats" please s e e Yamaha Classic 1973 trailer, never in saltwater, Class 870. Southwind 35.5' Triton, 250 Eunduro. All original, always garaged, very 541-385-5809 2008,V10, 2 slides, Du- Outdoors RV 29' street legal, 11K miles, clean, all maint. records. pont UV coat, 7500 mi. Wind River 250 Snowmobiles Bought new at $995. 541-382-7515 $5500. 541-389-7329 RLSW 2011 gerrmg Central 0 egnn tmre 1903 $132,913; (2) 2000 A rctic C at 865 asking $91,000. One owner Garage Sales Z L580's EFI with n e w Call 503-982-4745 ATVs Lightly used covers, electric start w/ Garage Sales reverse, low miles, both Motorhomes • Perfect condiSuncrest 28' 1 9 89 excellent; with new 2009 ATV Kenda Bear Claw tion Sleeps 6 with gene r ator, Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, tires, chrome rims, Garage Sales n eeds ne w e n t ry drive off/on w/double tilt, 25x10x12 6-ply, 250 $23,900 Find them door and minor relots of accys. Selling due miles, fits Yamahas 541-317-3991 to m edical r e asons. $400. 541-771-9607 pair, 30,485 original in miles, runs g ood, $6000 all. 541-536-8130 The Bulletin $3000 firm - CASH! Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, RV Brougham 1978 motor 541-548-5452 Classifieds short track, variable CONSIGNMENTS home, Dodge chassis, exhaust valves, elecWANTED 17' coach, sleeps 4, Two roof A/C units for 541-385-5809 tric s t art, r e verse, We Do The Work ... rear dining. $4500. RVs 1 Coleman, cool manuals, rec o rds, You Keep The Cash! 541-602-8652. 8 heat; 1 D o metic new spare belt, cover, Yamaha Banshee 2001 On-site credit cool only. $450 each. heated hand g rips, custom built 350 motor approval team, 541-549-1736. nice, fast, $999. Call race-ready, lots of extras web site presence. $4999/obo 541-647-8931 Tom, 541-385-7932, We Take Trade-Ins! tr Free Advertising. • Yamaha 750 1999 870 18' Maxum ski boat , 2000, Mountain Max, $1400. BIG COUNTRY RV Boats & Accessories inboard motor, g r eat Bend: 541-330-2495 • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 D odge 22' 19 7 8 , Redmond: EXT, $1000. 12' Aluminum Boat cond, well maintained, class C, 67K mi., 541-548-5254 • Zieman 4-place $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 SHP motor & access good cond.$3500. Winnebago Adventurer trailer, SOLD! $375. 541-388-6795 541-389-4873 2003, 35U - 20,800 All in good condition. miles, Chevy Workhorse Located in La Pine. chassis, Allison transCall 541-408-6149. 18' Seaswirl 1984 mission, larger 22.5 inch open bow, V6, en Michelin tires, 50amp svc Just too many gine & outdrive re w/heat pump, easy care collectibles? built, extras, $2495 fiberglass roof, 2 slides, Springdale 27' 2005, 4' 14'8 e boat, 40hp Mer- 541-546-6920 4-dr refrig, inverter, rear slide in dining/living area, E Sell them in cury outboard (4-stroke, Fleetwood D i scovery camera - the list goes on sleeps 6, low mi,$13,000 trim, EFI, less 40' 2003, diesel mo- and on! Always stored obo. 541-408-3811 The Bulletin Classifieds electric than 10 hrs) + electric inside exceptionally torhome w/all trolling motor, fish finder, options-3 slide outs, clean & well maintained. $5000 obo. 541-548-2173 $49,900. 541-549-2282 541-385-5809 satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. 860 19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, Wintered i n h e ated 4otorcycles & Accessories $89,900 O.B.O. new upholstery, new elec- shop. Weekend Warrior Toy tronics, winch, much more. 541-447-8664 Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, $9500. 541-306-0280 fuel station, exc cond. Harle / Davidson Winnebago Suncruiser34' sleeps ~ 14' a luminum b o a t20' 1993 Sea Nympf Fish 2004, only 34K, loaded, i nterior,8,ublack/gray se d 3X , w/trailer, 2009 Mercury 8 Ski, 50 hrs on new too much to list, ext'd 15hp motor, fish finder, engine, fish finder, chart warr. thru 2014, $54,900 $19 999 firm 541-389-9188 plotter & VHF radio with Dennis, 541-589-3243 antenna. Good shape, full cover, heavy duty KOUNTRY AIRE Take care of trailer, kicker and electric Custom Softail 1994 37.5' motormotors. your investments 1991 w/ only 39k home, with awning, $7500 or best offer. miles, garaged, with the help from and one slide-out, 541-292-1834 bags, cover, Vance Only 47k miles The Bulletin's exhaust, LOTS of Look at: 14' Seadoo 1997 boat, and good condition. WEEKEND WARRIOR Chrome, SS bars, "Call A Service Toy hauler/travel trailer. twin modified engines. Ben d homes.com $25,000. windshield and 24' with 21' interior. 210hp/1200lbs, fast. f o r Complete Listings of 541-548-0318 Professional" Directory extras! Sleeps 6. Self-con$5500. 541 390 7035 Area Real Estate for Sale (photo aboveis of a $6,500. similar model & not the tained. Systems/ 881 541-788-3144 actual vehicle) appearancein good Call a Pro Travel Trailers condition. Smoke-free. Harley Davidson Soft- Whether you need a Tow with t/g-ton. Strong Tail D e l uxe 2 0 0 7, 20.5' 2004 Bayliner Forest River 2005 25 suspension; can haul fence fixed, hedges Tick, Tock white/cobalt, w / passleeps 6, $6000 obo. 205 Run About, 220 ATVs snowmobiles, trimmed or a house senger kit, Vance & 541-385-8976 HP, V8, open bow, even a small car! Great Tick, Tock... Hines muffler system built, you'll find exc. cond with very price - $8900. 8 kit, 1045 mi., exc. low hours, lots of Call 541-593-6266 ...don't let time get professional help in c ond, $16,9 9 9 , extras incl. tower, away. Hire a The Bulletin's "Call a 541-389-9188. Bimini & custom Looking for your Service Professional" trailer, $17,950. professional out next employee? 541-389-1413 HDFatBo 19 9 6 Directory of The Bulletin's Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and 541-385-5809 "Call A Service Jayco Eagle reach over 60,000 Professional" 26.6 ft long, 2000 readers each week. 15' older Seaswirl, Directory today! Your classified ad 35HP motor, cover, Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, will also appear on awning, Eaz-Lift d epth f inder, a s bendbulletin.com Completely stabilizer bars, heat sorted live v e sts, which currently reRebuilt/Customized & air, queen $1400. OBO. 20.5' Bayliner Capri 1994 ceives over 1.5 mil2012/2013 Award walk-around bed, 541-548-7645 or 2050LS Bowrider, Merlion page views evWinner Cruiser stern drive, good 541-408-3811. very good condition, ery month at no Showroom Condition c ondition, l o w ti m e , $10,000 obo. extra cost. Bulletin $7900. 541-410-8704 Many Extras Monaco Windsor, 2001, 541-595-2003 Classifieds Get ReLow Miles. loaded! (was $234,000 sults! Call 385-5809 $17,000 new) Solid-surface or place your ad Need help fixing stuff? 541-548-4807 counters, convection/ on-line at Call A Service Professional micro, 4-dr, fridge, 16' 20.5' Seaswirl Spybendbulletin.com O ld T o w n find the help you need. washer/dryer, ceramic HD Screaming Eagle C amper ca n o e, der 1989 H.O. 302, tile 8 carpet, TV, DVD, www.bendbulletin.com Electra Glide 2005, 285 hrs., exc. cond., exc. cond, $ 750. n 882 satellite dish, leveling, 103 motor, two tone stored indoors for 541-312-8740 8-airbags, power cord candy teal, new tires, Fifth Wheels life $11,900 OBO. reel, 2 full pass-thru 23K miles, CD player, 541-379-3530 trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 hydraulic clutch, exCHECK YOUR AD 17.5' Glastron 2002, 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 cellent condition. 21' Crownline 215 hp Diesel gen set. $85,000 Chevy eng., Volvo Highest offer takes it. in/outboard e n g ine obo. 541-233-7963 outdrive, open bow, 541-480-8080. 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin stereo, sink/live well, Keystone Sprinter w/glastron tr a i ler, sleeps 2/ 3 p e o ple, 31', 2008 incl. b oa t c o v e r, portable toilet, exc. cond. Asking $8,000. Like new, $ 8 500. King size walkon the first day it runs OBO. 541-388-8339 541-447-4876 around bed, electric to make sure it isn corawning, (4) 6-volt rect. "Spellcheck and Ads published in the batteries, plus many human errors do oc"Boats" classification Honda Shadow/Aero NATIONAL DOLPHIN more extras, never cur. If this happens to 750, 2007 Black, 11K include: Speed, fish- 37' 1997, loaded! 1 smoked in first your ad, please conmi, 60 mpg, new deing, drift, canoe, slide, Corian surfaces, owners $19900 tact us ASAP so that tachable windshield, house and sail boats. wood floors (kitchen), corrections and any Mustang seat 8 tires; For all other types of 2-dr fridge, convection Call 541-410-5415 adjustments can be detachable Paladin watercraft, please go microwave, Vizio TV & made to your ad. backrest & luggage 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 to Class 875. roof satellite, walk-in 541-385-5809 rack w/keylock.VanceVolvo Penta, 270HP, 541-385-5809 Nomad Lite 2001 25' shower, new queen bed. Hines pipes, great low hrs., must see, 1 slide, exc. cond., The Bulletin Classified White leather hide-asound. Cruise control, $15,000, 541-330-3939 bed & chair, all records, $8500 obo. 541-536~e r e rngCentral Otegnn nnre 190 audible turn signals no pets or s moking. 3889 5 4 1-420-6215 for safety. $4495. TURN THE PAGE $28,450. Jack, 541-549-4949 Call 541-771-4800 For More Ads The Bulletin RV Fleetwood Prowler 32' CONSIGNMENTS 2001, many upgrade Beautiful h o u seboat, WANTED options, $14,500 obo. $85,000. 541-390-4693 We Do The Work ... Orbit 21'2007, used 541-480-1687, Dick. www.centraloregon You Keep The Cash! only 8 times, A/C, houseboat.com On-site credit oven, tub s hower, Victory TC 2002, Want to impress the approval team, micro, load leveler runs great, many 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L GENERATE SOME exrelatives? Remodel web site presence. hitch, awning, dual citement in your neigaccessories, new Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 borhood. Plan a gaWe Take Trade-Ins! batteries, sleeps 4-5, your home with the tires, under 40K hp Bowrider w/depth rage sale and don't Free Advertising. EXCELLENT CONhelp of a professional miles, well kept. finder, radio/ CD player, forget to advertise in BIG COUNTRY RV DITION. All accesfrom The Bulletin's Bend: 541-330-2495 $6000 OBO. Par- rod holders, full canvas, classified! 385-5809. sories are included. "Call A Service Redmond: t ial Trade/ C a ll EZ Loader trailer, exclnt $1 6,000 OBO. cond, $11,500. 541-548-5254 Professional" Directory 541-382-9441 541-647-4232 707-484-3518 (Bend) Serving Central Oregonsince 1903

oQ00

The Bulletin

'.~g@ji

OO©

Fifth Wheels

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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles 0 0 D

,

I

' OU m-

Keystone Montana 2955 RL 2008, 2 slides, arctic insulation, loaded, excellent never used condition. $33,500

Aircraft, Parts & Service

931

Automotive Parts, Service 8 Accessories

Nggg

~•• Q

1/3 interest in Columbia BMW Stock W heels, 400, $150,000 (located b lack, 1 5 x7 , $ 1 2 5

© Bend.) Also: Sunri-

Komfort 2003 6' Slideout, 13' awning, A/C, large storage tanks, gas/ electric water heater, LED TV, DVD, frig/ freezer, microwave, pantry, extra counter space, tub/ shower bathroom, Queen bed, 2 skylights, ceiling fan, Clean, Good Condition. $9500 541-325-2220

ver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, O $400/mo

OBO. 541-279-8013

541-948-2963

$65,000. 541-419-9510

1952 Ford Customline Coupe, project car, flathead V-8, 3 spd extra parts, & materials, $2000 obo. 541-410-7473

MONTANA 3585 2008,

1/5th interest in 1973

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35 000.

Cessna 150 LLC

150hp conversion, low time on air frame and

engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance 8 affordable flying! $6,500.

541-420-3250

NuM/a 29 7LK H i t chHiker 2007, All seasons, 3 s l ides, 32' perfect for snow birds, l eft k i t chen, re a r lounge, extras, must see $25999 Prineville 541-447-5502 days 8

1974 Bellanca 1730A

Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; auto 4-spd, 396, model CST /all options, orig. owner, $19,950,

2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

Chevy 1955 PROJECT car. 2 door wgn, 350 small block w/Weiand dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Holleys. T-10

fg) j~

i~g. =I

Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th wheel, 1 s lide, AC,

TV,full awning, excellent shape, $23,900. 541-350-8629 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...

You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV

Chevrolet Cameo Pickup, 1957, disassembled frame powder coated, new front sheet metal, cab restored. $9995 firm. Call for more info, 541-306-9958 (cell)

541-410-6007

541-447-1641 eves.

In Madras, call 541-475-6302

541-923-6049

4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar wheels, extra rolling chassis + extras. $6500 for all. 541-389-7669.

Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN)

60' wide x 50' deep, w/55' wide x 17' high bi-

fold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great Chevy Wagon 1957, visibility for aviation busi4-dr., complete, ness. Financing avail$7,000 OBO / trades. Bend: 541-330-2495 able. 541-948-2126 or Please call email 1jetjock©q.com Redmond: 541-389-6998 541-548-5254 P iper A rcher 1 9 8 0 Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe based in Madras, al1967, 44 0 e n g ine, The Bulletin ways hangared since auto. trans, ps, air, To Subscribe call new. New annual, auto frame on rebuild, re541-385-5800 or go to pilot, IFR, one piece painted original blue, windshield. Fastest Ar- original blue interior, www.bendbulletin.com cher around. 1750 to- original hub caps, exc. 885 tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. chrome, asking $9000 541-475-6947, ask for or make offer. Canopies 8 Campers Rob Berg. 541-385-9350 Trucks 8 Heavy Equipment

Lance Camper 1994, fits long bed crew cab, tv, a/c, loaded. $6200 OBO. 541-580-7334

• !. .

Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

FAST '66 Ranchero! $7500 invested, sell for $4500!

.

1987 Freightliner COE 3axle truck, Cummins engine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 obo. 541-419-2713

G KE A T

'10 - 3 lines, 7 days '1 6 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)

u . e

Hyster H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, $3500, call 541-749-0724

o ur

Call 541.382.9835

FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, door panels w/flowers & hummingbirds, white soft top & hard

top. Just reduced to

$3,750. 541-317-9319 or 541-647-8483

u .

Full Color Photos For an additional GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,

('Special private party rates apply to merchandise and autOmOfit/e CategOrieS,)

We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for acaring home. Please call right away. $500.

QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! Modern amenities and all the quiet you will need. Room to grow in your own little paradise! Call now.

' . a i 'i i i e To

p la c e

y o u r

a d , v is it w w w .b e n d b u ll e t in .c o m

1921 Model T Delivery Truck 1 /3 interest i n w e l l - Restored & Runs equipped IFR Beech Bo $9000. nanza A36 new IO 550/ 541-389-8963 prop l ocated K BDN

In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds.

'15 per week * '40 for 4 weeks *

.

Peterbilt 359 p o table water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4-3" h o ses, camlocks, $ 2 5,000. 541-820-3724

541-923-4707

Zhe Bulleti

The Bulletin

BOATS & RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890 - RVs for Rent

NON!

• h+ g

FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4,

and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!

s o r

c a l I 5 4 1-3 8 5 -5 8 0 9


E6 TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 • THE BULLETIN Antique & Classic Autos

Sport Utility Vehicles • Ford Bronco 1981, 4 speed, 4x4, 302 engine with 43K mi., roll bar, good tires and straight body, am/fm cas s ette.

Legal Notices • LEGAL NOTICE Administrative School District ¹1 Bend La Pine Schools Maintenance Department

Sports, G.S. floor

mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $45,000. 503-358-1164.

541-408-4416

530-515-8199

Aut o m obiles

CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport - 4 LT loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. New Michelin Super

$950. 760-715-9123 Ford Gaiaxie 500 1963, 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & Ford Excursion radio (orig),541-419-4989 2004 F ord Model A 1 9 3 1 Cpe, $6500. SOLD!

Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, V8, automatic, great shape, $9000 OBO.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

Request For Proposals Controls Services

One owner, Turbo Diesel, Eddie Bauer 4WD, 46,400 miles,

The Adm i nistrative School District ¹ 1

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

tions do so solely at their own expense. Angus Eastwood Facilities Development Supervisor Administrative School District ¹1 Bend La Pine Schools

eral or to schedule an inspection of the Collateral, p l e ase contact Se c u red Party's representative, Mr. K.C. Short, b y t e lephone a t (541) 617-3596 or via ema i l at kshort@botc.com. PLEASE TAKE

Publish Date: FURTHER NOTICE that (1 ) S e cured Bend La Pine Schools DJC- June24th & P arty's sale of i t s Call (206) 849-4513 26th, 2013 Maintenance Departwith 351 Cleveland Ford Taurus Wagon 2004, ment requests proin Bend. Bend Bulletinright, title, and intermodified engine. 120K miles, loaded, in e st in and t o t h e posals from qualified June 25th-26th, 2013 Body is in nice shape, $3,900. Collateral i s exfirms for controls serToyota Highlander 2008 excellent condition, LEGAL NOTICE 541-815-9939 pressly and for all vices. The basic pro- NOTICE OF SEIZURE red, 86,342 miles. $2500 obo. purposes a sale of 541-420-4677 ¹010378 $1 7 ,988 Hyundai Elantra 2011 gram outline is as folFOR CIVIL the Collateral in its Touring SE 24,710 mi. lows: The Owner is FORFEITURE TO ALL then present condiseeking to select a ¹113392 $ 17 , 9 88 POTENTIAL t ion, o n a str i c t firm to act as the sole CLAIMANTS AND TO Oregon "as-is and wherecontrols co n t ractor ALL UNKNOWN AutoSource Oregon who will perform ser- PERSONS READ THIS as" basis, with all AuloSource 541-598-3750 faults, and (2) Sevice, construction and CAREFULLY 541-598-3750 c ured P a rt y e x renovations at all DisFord T-Bird, 1966, 390 aaaoregonautosource.com www. aaaoregonautod i s claims trict facilities. engine, power everyIf you have any inter- pressly 940 source.com makes no warRequest for a c o mthing, new paint, 54K est i n t h e s e i z ed and Vans ranties and/or reppiete RFP Package property d e s cribed original m i les, runs i ncluding proj e ct below, you must claim resentations of any great, excellent condiNeed to get an ad wha t soever tion in & out. Asking Ford 1-ton extended van, scope, specifications, that interest or you will kind in ASAP? and clarifications shall automatically lose that concerning the Col$8,500. 541-480-3179 1995, 460 engine, set-up f or c o n tractor w i t h in c l uding, b e directed t o t h e interest. If you do not lateral, shelves & bins, fold-down but not limited to, Maintenance Depart- file a c laim for t he ladder rack, tow hitch, Fax it to 541-322-7253 ment, Bend La Pine property, the property warranties of condi180K miles, new tranny & t e l ephone may be forfeited even t ion, fitness for a brakes; needs catalytic The Bulletin Classifieds Schools, particular purpose, (541) 355-4700 or via if you are not conconverter 8 new windfacsimile (541) victed of any crime. ownership a n d /or shield. $2200. 3 55-4710 to th e a t - To claim an interest, title, existence and/ 541-220-7808 Ford Thunderbird tention of Mike Tiller, you must file a written or priority of liens 1955, new white soft Ford Aerostar 1994 Director of Facilities claim with the forfei- and other encumtop, tonneau cover Eddie Bauer Edition (mike.tiller@bend.k12 ture counsel named brances of e v e ry and upholstery. New Fully Loaded, . or.us) a n d An n e below, Th e w r itten kind an d n a t ure, chrome. B e a utiful Birky, Ope r ations claim must be signed possession, q u iet Mint Condition! Nissan Sentra 2012 Car. $25, 0 00. and the Manager Runs Excellent! by you, sworn to un- enjoyment Full warranty, 35mpg, 541-548-1422 like. PLEASE TAKE (anne.birkyObend.k1 $3000. der penalty of perjury 520 per tank, all power. 2.or.us). Sealed pro- before a notary public, FURTHER NOTICE 541-350-1201 $13,500. 541-788-0427 p osals shall be r e - and state: (a) Your that any purchaser Co l lateral ceived no later than true name; (b) The of t h e Porsche 911 2:00 p.m., current lo- address at which you takes the Collateral Carrera 993 cou e cal time, July 18, 2013 will a c cept f u t u re in its then present subject all at: m ailings f ro m th e condition, claims, i n t erests, Administrative School court and f o rfeiture GMC V~ton 1971, Only and liens, if any and District ¹1 counsel; and (3) A $1 9,700! Original low Lumina Va n 1 9 9 5 , in addition to Bend La Pine Schools s tatement that y o u that, mile, exceptional, 3rd X LNT c o nd., w e l l the price paid for the Maintenance have an interest in the cared for. $2000 obo. owner. 951-699-7171 the purDepartment seized property. Your Collateral, 541-382-9835. chaser of the Col1996, 73k miles, 1410 SE Wilson Ave. MOVING - NO ROOM! deadline for filing the Tiptronic auto. lateral shall be reFIND IT! Administration claim document with sponsible 1 for transmission. Silver, Building SUY IT! forfeiture cou n s el payment o f all blue leather interior, Bend, Oregon 97702 n amed below is 2 1 SELL IT! moon/sunroof, new The Ad m i nistrative days from the last day taxes, an d s a l es The Bulletin Classifieds transfer quality tires and School District ¹1 may of publication of this and cos t s , battery, car and seat reject any p roposal notice. Where to file c harges, 975 covers, many extras. not in compliance with a claim and for more documentation and GMC 1977 Sierra Automobiles Recently fully serprescribed pr o c e- i nformation: Classic 4x4 Da i n a t ransfer fees a n d viced, garaged, dures and r e quire- Vitolins, Crook County costs, costs of reOriginal owner, a show Buick LeSabre Cusmoval and t r anslooks and runs like ments and may reject District Attorney Oftruck. Never restored or tom 2004, rare 75k, new. Excellent confor good cause any fice, 300 N E T h i rd p ortation, and r e off-road. AT, 400 V8, ex$6000, worth way dition. $31,500 and a l l pr o posals Street, Prineville, OR lated expenses of cellent mechanical conmore. leather, 541-589-4047 every kind and naupon a finding of the 97754. dition, many extras + AlAdministrative School Notice of r easons ture. PLEASE TAKE p ine c a nopy. N o n - heated seats, nice FURTHER NOTICE wheels. Good tires, District ¹1 that it is in smoking owners. ColF o rfeiture: The that Porsche 91 1 Turbo Secured Party the public interest to for lectors welcome! Sorry, 30 mpg, white. property d e s cribed no trades. Firm, cash. Convinced? Call Bob do so. The Adminis- below was seized for reserves the absolute right to accept trative School District $6995.503-880-5020 541-318-9999 because it: or reject any bids in ¹1 is not responsible forfeiture Constitutes t he Buick Century Limited its sole and absofor any costs of any (1) of the viola- lute discretion. Po2000, r un s g r e at, P proposers i n c urred proceeds tion of, solicitation to beautiful car. $3400. while submitting pro- v iolate, a ttempt t o tential bidders are 541-312-3085 2003 6 speed, X50 posal; all proposers violate, or conspiracy a dvised t ha t t h e added power pkg., who respond to so- to violates, the crimi- only forms of payLeSabre 1996. 530 HP! Under 10k ment acceptable to licitations do so solely nal laws of the State Mercedes 450SL, 1977, Buick Good condition, miles, Arctic silver, Secured Party are at their own expense. 113K, 2nd owner, gaof Oregon regarding 121,000 miles. gray leather interior, (a) cash [cash bids Mike Tiller r aged, b o t h top s . the manufacture, dis- are Non-smoker new quality t i res, subject to posDirector of Facilities $10,900. 541-389-7596 tribution, or possesand battery, Bose sible reporting by $2200 OBO. Administrative School sion of controlled subpremium sound steS ecured Party t o 541-954-5193. District ¹1 stances (ORS federal reo, moon/sunroof, ag e ncies Bend La Pine Schools Chapter475); and/or car and seat covers. pursuant to 31 USC Publish Date: Buick Lucerne CXS (2) Was used or inMany extras. Gaand/or June 24 & 25, 2013 2006 sedan, V8, t ended for u s e i n 5318(g)(3)], raged, perfect con(b) cashi e r's Northstar 4.6L encommitting or f acili- check(s) dition $63,500. LEGAL NOTICE in a form tating the violation of, and drawn on a loPlymouth B a r racuda gine, silver, black 541-589-4047 Administrative leather, new $36,000; solicitation to violate, 1966, original car! 300 92K miles, 18" wheels r e cognizable School District ¹1 attempt to violate, or cally hp, 360 V8, centerfinancial i nstitution Bend La Pine & much more, best lines, 541-593-2597 conspiracy to violate Porsche Carrera 911 a cceptable to S e Schools Request offer over $7900. the criminal laws of 2003 convertible with cured Party in SeFor Proposals Good classified ads tell Bob, 541-318-9999 the State of Oregon hardtop. 50K miles, cured Party's sole Architectural the essential facts in an regarding the manunew factory Porsche and absolute disServices interesting Manner. Write motor 6 mos ago with facture, distribution or PL E A SE New Middle School from the readers view - not 18 mo factory warp ossession of c o n- cretion. TAKE F U R THER ranty remaining. the seller's. Convert the trolled sub s tances The Administrative N OTICE that S e $37,500. facts into benefits. Show (ORS Chapter 475). c ured P a rty r e S chool District ¹1 541-322-6928 the reader how the item will Bend La Pine serves the absolute help them in someway. Chevrolet Corvette right to purchase the Schools r e quests IN THE MATTER OF: This Coupe 2007, 20,700 Collateral by means proposals from (1)US Currency in the mi., beautiful cond. advertising tip o f one o r m o r e q ualified firms f o r amount of 29,470.00, "credit b i ds " in 3LT loaded, victory brought to you by comprehensive deCase No 13000282, I'ed, two-tone amounts c o mprissign services for the s eized J anuary 4 , ing all or a portion of The Bulletin leather, powerseats, c onstruction of a Ser ngCent alOregon s me t9ie 2013 from David and with logos, memory, the I n d ebtedness new middle school. Suzuki Grand Vitara Miriam Tyson. PROJECT CARS: Chevv headsupdisplay, The basic program Debtor owes to Se2006 luxury sport. V6, nav., XM, Bose, tilt, 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & cured Party that is outline is as follows: LEGAL NOTICE 4x4, auto, leather, air, chrome wheels, upChevy Coupe 1950 A new 800 student NOTIFICATION OF secured by the Col5 CD's, sunroof, tow rolling chassis's $1750 graded drilled slotlateral. DATE D middle school with PUBLIC DISPOSIpackage, 59,050 mi., ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, ted b rake r o tors, THIS 19TH DAY OF supporting athletic TION OF COLLAT... more! $11,500 complete car, $ 1949; extra insulation, alJUNE, 2013. FOR: fields, as required, ERAL - PUBLIC 541-280-3835 Cadillac Series 61 1950, ways garaged, serioff site construction, AUCTION BANK O F THE (Non 2 dr. hard top, complete ous only $36,500. on approximately 25 Consumer C o l lat- CASCADES, an Orw/spare f r ont cl i p ., 541-771-2852. Toyota Camrys: a cres, site t o b e egon st a t e-chareral). REGARDING: $3950, 541-382-7391 1984, SOLD; tered c o m mercial determined. ReAndrew W. Engel, Chevy Corvette 1984, D MD P C (the bank. JEFFREY C. 1985 SOLD; quest for a c o mnew glass top, $5000 "Debtor") dba Awe GARDNER, ESQ., piete RFP Package 1986 parts car obo. 541-385-8976 including pro j ect D ental Spa, A w e OSB NO . 9 8 054, only one left! $500 ATTORNEYS FOR scope, s p e cifica- Dentistry c/o JoCall for details, What are you tions, and clarificaseph A. Field, Esq. BANK O F THE 541-548-6592 C ASCADES, B a l l t ions shall b e d i Field Jerger LLP, looking for? Janik LLP, 101 SW rected to the Office 621 SW M orrison, VW BUG 1972 rebuilt WHEN YOU SEE THIS Main Street, Porteng, new paint, tires, You'll find it in of Facilities DevelSuite 1225, Porto pment, Bend La land, Oregon chrome whls, 30 mpg, l and, Orego n The Bulletin Classifieds 97204-3219, T elePine Schools, tele9 7205. PLE A S E $3800. 541-233-7272 TAKE NOTICE that phone: (503) (541) MorePixatBendbuletin,com phone 9 44-6048, Te le 355-1173 or via facBank of the CasOn a classified ad 541-385-5809 simile cades ("Secured copier: (503) Pickups (541) go to Party"), will sell all of 2 95-1058, Em a i l: 355-1179 to the atwww.bendbulletin.com t ention o f A n g u s Secured Par t y 's jgardner@balljanik.c 2008 Chevy Silverado to view additional om 2500 HD diesel LT Eastwood, Facilities right, title, and interphotos of the item. D evelopment S u est in and to all of 4x4, 47k miles. ¹ 131041 $36, 9 9 5 pervisor Debtor's Accounts, LEGAL NOTICE Looking for your C hattel Pape r , TRUSTEE'S NOTICE (angus.eastwood I next employee? bend.k12.or.us). E quipment, Fix OF SALE Chevy Nova - 1976, Place a Bulletin help Sealed p r oposals tures, General InThe Trust Deed to be $3,600. Aurnsnurce wanted ad today and shall be received no t angibles, and I n foreclosed pursuant to Rebuilt 327 engine. 541-598-3750 reach over 60,000 later than 2:00 p.m., ventory owned by O regon law i s r e aaaoregonautosource.com Call Matt 541-280-9463. readers each week. current local time, Debtor i n c luding, ferred to as follows Your classified ad Chevy Silverado 1997, July 18, 2013, at: but not limited to, all (the "Trust Deed"): will also appear on ext. cab, full size, 350 of t h e fo r egoing G rantor: Steven W . bendbulletin.com Administrative School Cameron and Nancy eng., g o o d ti r e s, personal p r operty which currently re$6000. 541 -447-3674. District ¹1 owned by D ebtor Cameron, as tenants ceives over 1.5 milBend La Pine Schools and used in the opby t he enti r ety. Ford F350 1993 lion page views Office of Facilities eration of the dental Trustee: Deschutes 4WD CrewCab with 'My Little Red Corvette" every month at Development C ounty Title C o mpractice located at canopy. One owner, Coupe, 1996, 350, no extra cost. Bulle- 520 N.W. Wall Street, 550 N W F r anklin pany. Beneficiary: Mi123k miles, immacutin Classifieds 26-34 mpg, 132K, Room 330 Avenue, Suite 268, dOregon Fed e r al late cond., $6,000 obo. auto,Price reduced! Get Results! Call Bend, Oregon 97701 Bend, Oregon, also Credit Union, PO Box 541-526-5477 385-5809 or place $11,000 541-923-1781 known a s Awe 6749, B e n d , OR your ad on-line at The Administrative Dental Spa and/or 97708. Date: June 12, bendbuliefin.com S chool District ¹ 1 Awe Dentistry (col2007. Reco r ding may reject any prolectively, the "ColDate: June 18, 2007. I nternational Fla t lateral") as a single Recording Reference: posal not in compliI The Bulletin recoml Bed Pickup 1963, 1 a nce w i t h pre lot, publicly, to the 2007-33909. County mends extra caution ~ t on dually, 4 s p d. scribed procedures highest qua l ified o f Recording: D e s when p u r chasing I and r e q uirements bidder vi a p u b lic chutes County. The trans., great MPG, CORVETTE could be exc. wood f products or services and may reject for auction, to be held Successor Trustee is Convertible2005 from out of the area. hauler, runs great, good cause any and at 9:00 a.m. (Pacific Patrick L . S t e vens Automatic LS2 high f S ending c ash , new brakes, $1950. all proposals upon a Daylight Time) on and the mailing adperformance motor, checks, or credit in541-41 9-5480. finding of the A dM onday, J ul y 8 , dress of the Succesonly 29k miles, Stersor Trustee is: Patrick 2013, in the conferling S ilver, b l ack formation may be I ministrative School to FRAUD. District ¹1 that it is ence room at the L. Stevens, Succesleather interior, Bose J subject For more i nformain the public intersor Trustee, HutchinBend, Oregon ofpremium sound ste- f tion about an adver[Sport Utility Vehicles e st to do so. T h e fices of Ball Janik son, Cox, Coons, Orr reo, new quality tires you may call Administrative & Sherlock, P.C., PO LLP, located at 15 and battery, car and I tiser, the Oregon State I School District ¹1 is SW Colorado AvBox 10886, Eugene, Chevy Suburban seat covers, many General's ~ not responsible for OR 97440. The Trust enue, Suite 3, Bend, 2003 ~/~ ton 4WD, extras. Rec e ntly Attorney Office C o n sumer a ny costs of a n y Oregon 97702 (for Deed covers the folwhite, 135k miles, factory serviced. hotline at d irections, tele lowing described real proposers incurred immaculate. Have Garaged. B eautiful f Protection 1-877-877-9392. while sub m itting phone property in the County maint. records. car, Perfect cond. 541-617-1309). For o f D eschutes a n d proposal; all p r o$6,500. $32,500 posers wh o re i nformation con State of Oregon, ("the 541-280-7299. 541-589-4047 Servmg Central Oregon sm<e 1903 spond to s o l icita- cerning the CollatProperty"): Lot Nine,

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The Bulletin

L e g al Notices Block Two, SUMMIT ACRES, D e schutes C ounty, Oreg o n. Commonly known as: 16486 Sprague Loop, LaPine, OR 9 7 739. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy th e o b ligations secured by said trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3). The default for which forec losure is m ade i s G rantor's failure t o p ay when due t h e following sums: The monthly i n s tallment payments of $1,062.29 beginning J une 1 , 2 0 1 2 a n d continuing through the installment due April 1, 2013; plus interest and late charges; real property taxes, plus interest and penalties; and other liens and penalties. Total def ault as o f A p ril 1 , 2013 is $ 11,685.19. The sum owing on the o bligation t ha t th e Trust Deed secures the "Obligation") is:

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

court hearing PROTECTION FR O M E VICTION: IF Y O U

ARE A BONA FIDE TENANT O C CUPYING AND RENTING THIS PROPERTY AS A RESI D E NTIAL DWELLING, YOU HAVE THE R I GHT TO CONTINUE LIVING IN THIS PROPE RTY AFTER T H E FORECLOSURE SALE FOR: • TH E REMAINDER OF YOUR FIXED TERM LEASE, IF YOU HAVE A FIX ED TERM LEASE; OR • AT LEAST 90 DAYS F ROM TH E D A T E YOU ARE GIVEN A WRITTEN TERMINATION NOTICE. If the

new owner wants to move in and use this

property as a primary r esidence, the n e w owner can give you written notice and require you to move out after 90 days, even though you have a fixed term lease with more than 90 days left. You must be provided with at least 90 days' written notice

after the foreclosure sale before you can be required to move. A bona fide tenant is a resents unpaid con- residential tenant who tractual interest, fees is not the borrower and l a t e c h a rges (property owner) or a through and including child, spouse or parA pril 15, 2 0 13, t o - ent of the borrower, gether with interest on and w hose r e ntal the principal sum of agreement: • I s t h e $ 157,760.02 at t h e result of a n a r m'srate of 4.00% per an- length transaction; num from April 16, R equires th e p a y 2013 until paid, toment of rent that is not gether with insurance substantially less than paid by the Benefi- fair market rent for the ciary on the property, property, unless the late charges and pen- r ent is r e duced o r alties, trustee f ees, subsidized due to a attorney fees, foreclo- federal, state or local sure costs and any subsidy; and • W a s sums advanced by entered into prior to the Beneficiary pursu- the date of the foreant to the trust deed. closure sale. ABOUT TEN A N CY By reason of the de- Y OUR fault, the Beneficiary BETWEEN NOW and the Trustee elect A ND T H E FO R E to sell the Property to C LOSURE SA L E : satisfy the Obligation RENT YOU and to foreclose the SHOULD CONTINUE Trust Deed by adver- TO PAY RENT TO t isement an d s a l e YOUR L A N D LORD pursuant t o ORS UNTIL THE P R OP86.705 to 86.795. At ERTY IS SOLD OR p ublic auction, t h e U NTIL A CO U R T Trustee shall sell to T ELLS YO U O T H the highest bidder for ERWISE. IF YOU DO cash the interest in N OT P A Y RE N T , the Property which the YOU CAN BE Grantor had, or had EVICTED. BE SURE the power to convey, TO KEEP PROOF OF at the time of the exANY PAY M E NTS ecution by Grantor of YOU MAKE. SECUthe Trust Deed, toRITY DEPOSIT: You gether with any inter- may apply your secuest Gra n to r or rity deposit and any Grantor's successors rent you paid in adin interest acquired vance against the current rent you owe your after the execution of t he Trust Deed, t o landlord as provided satisfy the Obligation. in ORS 90.367. To do The date, time and this, you must notify place of the sale is: your landlord in writD ate: September 4 , ing that you want to 2013. Time: 11:00 subtract the amount of o'clock a.m. P lace: your security deposit Deschutes C o u nty or prepaid rent from Courthouse, 1100 NW your rent p ayment. Bond St., Bend, OR You may do this only 97701. NOTICE TO for the rent you owe RESIDENTIAL TENyour current landlord. ANTS: The property in If you do t his, you which you are living is must do so before the in foreclosure. A fore- foreclosure sale. The closure sale is sched- business or individual uled for September 4, who buys this prop2013. The date of this erty at the foreclosure sale may be p ost- sale is not r esponp oned. Unless t h e sible to you for any lender that i s f o re- deposit o r p r e paid closing on this prop- rent you paid to your erty is paid before the l andlord. ABOU T TEN A N CY sale date, the foreclo- Y OUR sure will go through AFTER THE FOREand someone new will CLOSURE SALE: The own this property. Af- new owner that buys this property at the ter the sale, the new owner is required to foreclosure sale may provide you with con- be willing to allow you tact information and to stay as a tenant innotice that the sale stead of requiring you took place. The folto move out after 90 lowing inf o rmation days or at the end of applies to you only if your fixed term lease. you are a bona fide After the sale, you tenant occupying and should receive a writrenting this property ten notice informing as a resi d ential you that the sale took dwelling under a leplace and giving you gitimate rental agree- the n e w own e r's ment. The i nforma- name and contact intion does not apply to formation. You should you if you own this contact t h e new property or if you are owner if you would not a bona fide resi- like to stay. If the new dential tenant. If the owner accepts rent foreclosure sale goes from you, signs a new through, t h e new r esidential rent a l owner will have the agreement with you or right to require you to does not notify you in move out. Before the writing within 30 days new owner can reafter the date of the quire you to move, the foreclosure sale that new owner must pro- you must move out, vide you with written the new owner benotice that specifies c omes y o u r ne w the date by which you l andlord an d m u s t must move out. If you maintain the property. do not leave before Otherwise: • You do the move-out d ate, not owe rent; • Th e the new owner can new owner is not your have the sheriff relandlord and is not remove you from the sponsible for m ainproperty after a court taining the property on hearing. You will reyour behalf; and • You c eive notice of t h e must move out by the 157,760.02, t oether with the sum of 6,008.09, which rep-

date the new owner specifies in a notice to you. The new owner

may offer to pay your moving expenses and a ny other costs o r amounts you and the new owner agree on in exchange for your agreement to l e ave the premises in less than 90 days or before your fixed term l ease expires. Y o u should speak with a lawyer to fully understand your rights before making any decisions regarding your t enancy. IT I S U N -

L AWFUL FOR A N Y PERSON TO TRY TO FORCE Y O U TO LEAVE YOUR D WELLING UN I T W ITHOUT FI R S T GIVING YOU WRITT EN NOTICE A N D G OING TO C O U R T TO EVICT YOU. FOR M OR E I N FORMATION ABOUT YOUR RIGHTS, YOU SHOULD CONSULT

A LAWYER. If y o u believe you need le-

gal assistance, contact the Oregon State Bar and ask for the

lawyer referral service. Contact information for the Oregon State Bar is included with this notice. If you do not have enough money to pay a lawyer and are otherwise eligible, you may be able to receive legal assistance for f r ee. I nformation abo u t whom to contact for free legal assistance is included with this n otice. R IGHT T O CURE: The right exists u n d e r ORS 86.753 to h ave t his foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by doing all of the following at any time that is not later than five days before the date last set for the sale: (1)Paying to the Beneficiary t h e en t i re a mount t he n du e (other than such portion as would not then be due, had no default occurred); (2) Curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering t h e pe r formance required under the Trust Deed; and (3) Paying all costs and expenses a ctually incurred i n enforcing the Obligation and Trust Deed, together with Trustee's and a ttorney's fees n o t exceeding the amounts provided by ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, t h e word "Grantor" includes any successor in interest to the Grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the Trust Deed, and the words "Trustee" and "Beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, ifany. We are a debt collector attempting to collect a debt and any information we obtain will be used to collect the debt. Cashier's checks for the foreclosure sale must be payable to M i dOregon Federal Credit Union. Dated: April 23, 2013. /sl P atrick L. Stevens. Patrick L. Stevens, Successor Trustee, Hutchinson, C ox, Coons, Orr 8 Sherlock, P.C. Attorneys at Law, PO Box 10886, Eugene, OR 97440, Phone: (541) 686-9160, Fax: (541) 3 43-8693. Date o f First Publication: June 25, 2013. Date of Last Publication: July 16, 2013.

PUBLIC NOTICE AUCTION NOTICE ON JULY 1, 2013 AT 12:00 PM , T H E RE W ILL BE A F O R E CLOSURE SALE OF PERSONAL P ROPERTY, AT S O UTHSIDE STO R A GE, 2 0205 BA DGE R ROAD, BEND, OREGON, 97702. THE CONTENTS OF THESE UNITS WILL BE SOLD U NLESS PAYMENTS IN FULL IS MADE PRIOR TO THE TIME OF SALE. C ASH O N LY. N O CHECK - NO CREDIT CARDS. UNITS TO BE SOLD: ¹169 M.J. Lee.

A RE P U B LIC N OT I CES •MP © R TA N T 2 An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is that information about government activities must be accessible in order for the electorate fo make well-informed decisions. Public notices provide this sort of accessibility to citizens who want to know more about government activities.

Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin classifieds or go to www.bendbulletin.com and click on "Classified Ads"

The Bulletin


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4 Quart Pail Selected Varieties

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1/2 Gallon Selected Varieties

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RADISHES8 GREEN ONIONS

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STRAWSERRIES

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FOSTERFARMS WHOLEBAGGED FRYERS

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