Bulletin Daily Paper 8-27-13

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75$

TUESDAY August 27,2013

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AT HOME• D1

REDMOND MAGAZINE

bendbulletin.com OSU-CASCADES

TODAY'S READERBOARD

Expanding campus ponders its sa es pitch

Dedt limit — Treasury secretary urges Congress to act quickly. C6

Yosemite wildfire — utility officials scramble as San Francisco's drinking water is threatened. A2

Summer recipes —Fun and different dishes for the grill

and ideas for when produce is at its peak. D1 and D3

• It's unlikely we'll see anything to match Sunday for the rest of the summer, says the National WeatherService,which is predicting more stable weather

BatS —Scientists studying the flying mammals seek to unlock the secret of longevity. A3

Footdall skills — Meet Chris Rubio, the guru of the

long snap. C1

ln world news — Syria's useofchemicalweapons undeniable, Secretary of State Kerry says. A2

And a WedexclusiveOn Wall Street, an old quirk

— in-house shoeshine service — hangs on to this day. bendbnlletin.cnm/extras

Joe Kline i The Bulletin

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Despite backogs, VA gives bonuses

One of the storm's more than 7,300 lightning strikes is visible from Smith Rock on Sunday. Nearly 400 of the strikes were positive — lightning bolts that originate from the ground and shoot up to the clouds — creating concern that fires might pop up later when conditions dry out, according to a spokesman at the Central Oregon Interagency Dispatch Center in Prineville. See Page A4 for tips on avoiding a lightning strike.

By Branden Anderson and Dylan Darling The Bulletin

Jefferson County and other parts of Central Oregon were drying out Monday,

sizing up damage following a massive thunderstorm that brought deadly lightning

and pounding rains. By Mary Shinn, Daniel Moore and Steven Rich News21

While veterans waited longer than ever in recent years for their wartime disability compensation, the Department of Veterans Affairs gave its workers millions of dollars in bonuses for "excellent" performances that effectively encouraged them to avoid claims that needed extra work to document veterans' injuries, a News21 investigation has found. In 2011, a year in which the claims backlog ballooned by 155 percent, more than two-thirds of claims processors shared $5.5 million in bonuses, according to salary data from the Office of Personnel Management. The more complex claims were often set aside by workers so they could keep their jobs, meet performance standards or, in some cases, collect extra pay, said VA claims processors and union representatives. Those claims now make up much of the VA's widely scrutinized disability

The powerful Sunday thunderstorm hit Central Oregon with more than 7,300 lightning strikes Sunday, killing a Madras man, triggeringa three-car crash that left a Washington man in serious condition and leading to 80 reports of possible new wildfires. Bret Hemenway, 50, was struck and electrocuted by lightning around 4:15 p.m. after taking shelter from the storm under a tree on U.S. Highway 97 near the junction with state Highway 293, according to the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office. He-

menway was headed home from a two-day motorcycle ride with his wife, Connie Hemenway, 49, when the couple was caught in the storm. In 27 years with the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office, Sheriff Jim Adkins said he doesn't recall anyone being killed by a lightning bolt in Jefferson County. "I've never heard of anything like this happening," he said. The storm uprooted trees and pushed irrigation line from alfalfa fields onto farm roads near where Hemenway was struck, Adkins said. Connie Hemenway was also hit by lightning but only injured. She was treated and released at St. Charles Madras, said Lisa Goodman, a spokeswoman for St. Charles. Just four miles south of where Bret Hemenway died,

ers should slow down to lower the chance of crashing, said Peter Murphy, spokesman for the Oregon Department of transportation. "We can't just go highway speeds all the time," he said. The storm affected highway conditions from La Pine to Madras. Murphy said such broad, strong storms hit Central Oregon about once ortwice per summer. Many of the potential wildfires sparked by the storm were doused by heavy rains that followed the lightning strikes, said Bruce Prud-homme, spokesman at the Central Oregon Interagency Dispatch Center in Prineville. "There was a fair amount of rain and moisture following the strikes," Prudhomme said. "If it were a dry storm, we would have had a lot more to deal with." See Storm /A4

The Bulletin

As Oregon State University-Cascades Campus prepares to expand into a four-year school, it faces the challenge of attracting and holding onto its first cohort of freshmen. The university will become a four-year institution in fall 2015. Current undergraduates at OSU-Cascades are juniors or seniors, many of whom transferred from Central Oregon Community College. While this "two plus two" model will continue to be important for OSU-Cascades, the university is now tasked with attracting a new population to its campus, a challenge made more difficult by the fact that the campus's expanded location has not yet been announced. "It's a challenge selling something we haven't built yet," said Christine Coffin, O SU-Cascades' directorof communications."Butthese first students are not going to be the typical student; they'll be entrepreneurial and willing to help build something new. I don't want to say they will be risk takers, as we will give them a quality experience, but they'll be something of pioneers." See OSU-Cascades/A4

Iconic secret recipesoften just for show By Candice Choi The Associated Press

ATLANTA — CocaCola keeps the recipe for its 127-year-old soda inside an imposing steel vault that's bathed in red security lights. Severalcameras monitor the areato make surethe fizzyformula stays a secret. But in one of the many signs that the surveillance is as much about theater as reality, the images that pop up on video screens are of tourists waving at themselves. "It's a little bit for show," concedes a guard at the World of Coca-Cola museum in downtown Atlanta. See Recipes/A4

Older, laid off and now left out By Michael Winerip

ognition of his work creating

New York Times News Service

Neighbors-helping-Neighbors

RIDGEWOOD, N.J.— In September 2012, it appeared that the world was John Fugazzie's frozen oyster. He was in chargeofdairy and frozen foods for the A&P supermarket chain, making $125,000 ayear. He was also a guest that month at a White House forum on joblessness, in rec-

USA, a volunteer networking organization with 28 chapters in New Jersey serving 1,200 unemployed, mainly whitecollar, baby boomers. "John has one of the best volunteer organizations out there," said Ben Seigel, a deputy director at the Labor Department. "He's tireless and always upbeat."

Lately Fugazzie has been feeling a little weary and beat down. One morning last October, just before his 57th birthday, he was laid off and, carrying a box of belongings from his office, driven home in a car service hired by the company. In the 10 months since,he has applied for more than 400 positions and had 10 interviews, but still has no job. See Age/A4

INDEX

The Bulletin

+ .4 We userecycled newsprint

At Home D1 - 6 C lassified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Obituaries B 5 C1-4 Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope D6 Sports D6 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies

Vol. 110, No. 239, 30 pages,

claims backlog, defined by the agency as claims pending more than 125 days. "At the beginning of the month ... I'd try to work my really easy stuff so I could get my numbers up," said Renee Cotter, a union steward for the Reno, Nev., local of the American Federation of Government Employees, or AFGE. See Veterans/A5

a three-vehicle crash left three people injured. Alejandro Magana, 39, of Moses Lake, Wash., driving a 1994 Chevrolet Corsica, was hit from behind by Nathan Hamlin, 20, of Prineville, who was driving a 2007 Dodge Pickup, according to Oregon State Police. Magana was knocked into the southbound lane where he was struck by Brian Meece, 63, of Bend, who was driving a 2011 Chevrolet pickup, OSP stated. Magana's 8-year-old daughter was taken to St. Charles Madras. Magana and Hamlin's passenger, 23-year-old Stefane Hamlin, were taken to St. Charles Bend. Magana was in serious condition Monday, Goodman said. Stefane Hamlin was treated and released. During stormy weather like Sunday's highway driv-

By Tyler Leeds

Richard Perry/ New York Times News Service

John Fugazzie, who lost his job with a grocery chain in October, attends a meeting of Neighbors-helping-Neighbors USA, a volunteer networking organization he started, in Rivers Edge, N.J.

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 82, Low 51

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

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NATION 4% ORLD FOrt HOOdShOOting — Jurors deciding whether to impose a rare military death sentence ontheArmy psychiatrist who fatally shot13

er ci esevi ence o c emica wea ons

people at Fort Hood in 2009 heard testimony Monday from victims and their families, including a soldier who was expected to die after

being shot in the head.Staff Sgt. Patrick Ziegler wasamong the first people to testify during the sentencing phase of Maj. Nidal Hasan's trial. Military jurors convicted Hasan last week and are now deciding

whether he deserves to beexecuted. NeW MeXiCO gay marriage —A NewMexico judge on Monday declared same-sexmarriage legal, ordering the clerk of thestate's

By Michael R. Gordon and Mark Landler

U.N. iIIYBStigIItioll —U.N. experts collected samples and

New York Times News Service

testimony from Syrian doctors and victims of an alleged chemical

most populous county to join two other counties in issuing licenses for gay and lesbian couples. State District Judge Alan Malott ruled New

Secretaryof State John Kerry said Monday that the use of chemical weapons in attacks on civilians in Syria last week was undeniable and that the Obama administration would hold the Syrian government accountable for what he called a "moral obscenity" that had shocked the world's conscience. In some of the most aggressive language used yet by the administration, Kerry accused the Syrian government of the "indiscriminate slaughter of civilians" and of cynical efforts to cover up its responsibility for what he called a "cowardly crime." Kerry's remarks at the State D epartment r e inforced t h e administration's t o u ghening stance on the Syria conflict, which is now well into its third year, and indicated that the White House was moving closer to a military response in consultation with America's allies. Administration officials said that although President Barack Obama had not made a final decision on military action, he was likely to order a limited military operation — c r uise missiles launched from American destroyers in the Mediterranean Sea at military targets

weapons attack Mondayfollowing a treacherous journey through

Mexico's constitution prohibits discrimination on thebasis of sexual

government and rebel-held territory, where their convoy was hit

orientation. The Bernalillo County clerk's office in Albuquerque planned

by snipers.

to start issuing marriage licenses tosame-sex couples at 8a.m. today.

As U.S. officials said there was very little doubt that Syria used

chemical weaponsandWestern powers stepped up calls for swift

China trial —Concluding a trial that has riveted China, Bo Xilai,

military action, President Bashar Assad's government vowed to

the former elite Communist Party official, attacked elements of the

defend itself against any international attack, warning that such

prosecution's case Mondayand said his former top deputy and his

an intervention would ignite turmoil across the region. It also would bring the U.S. closer to a conflict that has killed

wife, both of whom provided evidence against him, had a passionate relationship. Bo said the charges of bribery, embezzlement and abuse

more than100,000 peoplesinceAssadcrackeddown onArab

of power against him weredeeply flawed because they dependedon

Spring-inspired protesters in March 2011. Syria's civil war has been increasingly defined by sectarian kill-

evidence from his wife, Gu Kailai, and his former top deputy, Wang Lijun, who he asserted were themselves involved with the abuses.

ings between theSunni-led rebellion andAssad's regime, domiFilipinoprotest — Tens of thousands of Filipinos protested in Manila on Monday,outraged over accusations thatan estimated $141 million had beendiverted into the coffers of politicians and associ-

nated by Alawites, an offshoot of Shiite Islam. — The Nlashington Post

ates. The rally was fueled in part by photographs posted on social in Syria, for example — and not a sustained air campaign intended to topple Bashar Assad, the Syrian president, or to fundamentally alter the nature of the conflict on the ground. In the coming days, officials said, the nation's intelligence agencies will disclose information to bolster their case that chemical weapons were used by Assad's forces. Officials said it was conceivable that military action could still be averted by a dramatic turnabout on the part of the Assad government, or by the Russian government that has been supporting it. But they said there were few expecta-

media sites by the daughter of one of the suspects in the case,showing an extravagance that earned herthe title "the new lmelda."

tions that this would happen. Although the United States was consulting with allies, administration officials said they

MexiCO train derailment —Hundreds of Central Americans riding atop acargo train in hopes of getting to the U.S.were beingthreat-

had largely abandoned hopes of obtaining any authorization for action in the U.N. Security Council, given the all-but certain veto from Russia. Other signs of Western momentum toward a m i l i tary response also took shape on Monday. Britain's prime minister, David C ameron, cut short a vacation to deal with Syria, and the foreign ministers of Britain and Turkey

ened and extorted byarmed menbefore the train derailed and killed at least six, survivors told The Associated Press on Monday. Many

suggested that bypassing the

seek Russian help in leaving Hong Kong, where he was in hiding in order to evade arrest by U.S. authorities on charges that he leaked

who had sneakedonto thetrain known as "The Beast" were thrown loose when eight of its12 cars derailed as it hauled tons of metal junk through a remote, swampy stretch of southern Mexico, witnesses said.

SIIOwdeII Saga —Before American fugitive Edward Snowden arrived in Moscow in June — an arrival that Russian officials have

said caught them bysurprise — hespent several days living at the Russian Consulatein Hong Kong,aMoscow newspaperreported Monday. Thearticle in Kommersant, based onaccounts from several unnamed sources, did not state clearly whenSnowdendecided to

U.N. Security Council was an option.

top-secret documents about U.S. surveillance programs.

ZuriCh prOStitutiOn —Switzerland's largest city on Monday launched anewdimension in drive-through services: prostitution. In an effort to move the sex trade from central Zurich's banking and business districts, city officials have built a cluster of garage-like "sex

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

boxes." A motorist in search of a tryst can troll past a sidewalk lined with licensed hookers and drive the one of his choosing to the relative

TALK TO AN EDITOR

privacy accorded by threewoodenwalls. Prostitution has beenlegal in Switzerland since 1942.

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CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories are accurate. If you know ofan error in a story, call us at 541-383-0358.

382-7434 r

Jae C. Hong / The Associated Press

A fire truck drives past burning trees Monday as firefighters continue to battle the Rim Fire near Yosemite National Park, Calif.

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Yosemite wildfire threatenswater supply The Associated Press TUOLUMNE CITY, Calif. — A raging wildfire in Yosemite National Park rained ash on the reservoir that is the chiefsource of San Francisco's famously pure drinking water, and utility officials Monday scrambled to send more water toward the metropolitan area before it becomes tainted. Nearly 3,700 f i r efighters battled t h e a p p r oximately 2 30-square-mile blaze, t h e biggest wildfire on record in California's Sierra N evada. They reported modest progress, saying the fire was 15 percent contained. "We're not there yet, but we're starting to get a little bit of a handle on this thing," said Lee Bentley, fire spokesman for the U.S. ForestService. "It's been a real tiger. He's been going around trying to bite its own tail, and it won't let go but we'll get there." Utility officials monitored the clarity of the Hetch Hetchy Reservoir and used a massive new $4.6 billion gravity-operated pipeline system to move water quickly t o r eservoirs closer to the bi g c i ty. The Hetch Hetchy supplies water to 2.6 million people in the San Francisco Bay area, 150 miles away. "We're taking a dvantage that the water we're receiving is still of good quality," said Harlan Kelly Jr., general manager of the city's Public Utilities Commission. "We're

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bringing down as much water as possible and replenishing all of the local reservoirs." At the same time, utility officials gave assurances that they have a six-month supply of water in reservoirs near the Bay area. So far the ash that has been raining onto the Hetch Hetchy has not sunk as far as the intake valves, which are about halfway down th e 300-foot O 'Shaughnessy Dam. U t i l ity officials said that the ash is nontoxic but that the city will begin filtering water for customers if problems are detected. That could cost more. On Monday the fire was still several miles away from the steep granite canyon where the reservoir is nestled, but several spot fires were burning closer, and f i r efighters were protecting hydroelectric transmission lines and other utility facilities. "Obviously we're p a ying close attention to the city's water supply," said Glen Stratton, an operations chief on the fire suppression team. P ower generation at t h e r eservoir w a s s h u t d o w n last week so that f i refighters would not be imperiled by live wires. San Francisco is buying replacement power f rom other sources to r u n City Hall and other municipal

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TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Tuesday, Aug.27, the 239th day of 2013. There are126 days left in the year.

RESEARCH HAPPENINGS launCh —The JapanAerospace Exploration Agency

eeixii o ie iomcieauieso ni

is scheduled to send its first

Epsilon rocket into space.

HISTORY Highlight:In1883, the island

volcano Krakatoa erupted with a series of cataclysmic explosions; the resulting tidal waves

in lndonesia's SundaStrait claimed some 36,000 lives in

Java and Sumatra. In1776, the Battle of Long Island began during the Revolutionary War as British troops attacked American forces,

who ended upbeing forced to retreat two days later. In1859, Edwin Drake drilled the first successful oil well in the United States, at Titusville,

Pa. In1908, Lyndon Baines Johnson, the 36th president of the United States, was born near Stonewall, Texas. In1928,the Kellogg-Briand

Pact was signedin Paris, outlawing war and providing for the peaceful settlement of

disputes. In 1939, the first turbojetpowered aircraft, the Heinkel He 178, went on its first full-fledged test flight over

Germany. In1942, the Times ofLondon published an editorial calling on the British government to

promote the production of penicillin, the first mention of the

antibiotic by anewspaper. In1957, the USS Swordfish,

the secondSkate Class nuclear submarine, waslaunchedfrom the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Maine. In1962, the United States

launched theMariner 2 space probe, which flew past Venus in December1962. In1963, author, journalist and civil rights activist W.E.B. Du Bois died in Accra, Ghana, at

age 95. In1967, Brian Epstein, manager of the Beatles, was found

dead in his Londonflat from an overdose of sleeping pills; he was 32. In1979, British war hero Lord Louis Mountbatten and three other people, including his 14-year-old grandson Nicholas, were killed off the coast of Ireland in a boat explosion claimed by the Irish Republican

Army. In1989,the first U.S. com-

mercial satellite rocket was launched fromCapeCanaveral, Fla.— a Delta booster carrying a British communications satel-

Bats have long been associated with nightmarish connotations — Count Dracula being just one

converts and new research. "My interest with bats started with SARS," University of Hong Kong microbiologist KY. Yuen said in his basement office at Hong Kong's Queen Mary hospital complex as he sketched out links between bats and differentviruses on a whiteboard. "If we have another virus jumping into humans, bats should immediately be considered." Flight may m ake bats a threat. It may also be their biggest gift. As people globally live longer lives, diseases related to

example — but the winged mammals are getting a new and more positive take from researchers, who believe the animal's DNA holds the key to how to battle aging, diseases and cancer. By Natasha Khan Bloomberg News

HONG KONG — C o u nt Dracula was onto something. Bats. T he immortal P r ince o f Darkness has been associated with the flying mammals since he first flitted through Bram Stoker's 1897 novel. Now, scientists seek to unlock another trait the vampire shares with bats: the secret of longevity. The volume of published scientific research on bat viruses has doubled in the past decade with the discovery that they're probably a natural reservoir for global killers such as Ebola, severe acute respiratory syndrome and the Middle East respiratory syndrome. Along the way, scientists have been startled by how well they respond to the genetic wear and tear that's a feature of life, aging and diseases such as cancer. "The most outstanding difference we've seen between bats and other mammals has to do with DNA repair," said Linfa Wang, 53, director of the emerging infectious disease program at t h e D u ke-NUS graduate medical school in Singapore. "If the science is as true as we think it is, we can unlock the mechanisms and it can have

a huge, huge impact." Wang, dubbed by some colleagues the "Bat Man," was awarded a grant in April from the National Research Foundation of Singapore and is hiring a team of10 researchers to study the animals' genomics. How some species can live three times longer than other mammals their size may be linked to their ability to carry viruses that are deadly to other animals, as well as their low rates of cancer, he said. It's a positive spin for a group of mammals that's suffered from negative connotations in Western culture for centuries: frombat-winged demons in medieval Christian imagery to a modern association with rabies and other viruses. Since their ancestorsfirst took flight more than 50 million years ago, bats have spread across all continents and into

aging and cell damage, such as cancer and Alzheimer's, are

a growing scourge. There were

,,P

Courtesy Commonwealth Scientific and lndusteal Research Organization

Courtesy U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

A mariana fruit bat, like the rest of its species, may be a natural reservoir for global diseases such es Ebole. every habitat bar the polar extremes. They've evolved into more than 1,100 species, from the bumblebee-sized Kitti's hognosed bat, the world's smallest mammal, to fruit-eating flying foxes with six-foot (1.8 meter) wingspans. Wang's research willfocus on the black flying fox, Pteropus alecto. The ability to fly means bats can spread zoonoses — diseases that transmit from vertebrate animals to humans — across

the globe.

Dubbed "Bet Men" by his colleagues, Linfe Wang, director of the emerging infectious disease program at the Duke-NUS graduate medical school in Singapore, said the "most outstanding difference we'veseen between bets and other mammals hes to do with DNA repair." researching the potential threat from bat-borne viruses. Wang is still chief executive science leader at the Geelong-based animal-health laboratory. About 60 percent of new infectious diseases affecting humans are zoonotic, according to the United Nations' Food and Agricultural Organization. Such viruses have probably been in bats "forever," said Brisbane-basedveterinary epidemiologist Hume Field, who worked closely with Wang's team. Bats are starting to have a bigger impact on humans due to the destruction of their habitats. "Theirfood resources have

got to be less reliable, so they've become urban creatures," he said. Viruses typically transmit from bats to humans through another mammal that is either genetically closer or has more opportunities for exposure, as was the probable case with the civet cat and SARS. When the World Health Organization assembled a team to investigate SARS toward the endofthe outbreak in 2003, Wang was recruited. He suggestedbats might be involved. A few years later, they were found to harbor a coronavirus similar to SARS, bringing a flurry of

It's that feature that first drew researchersat Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization to bat viruses almost two decades ago. In Sep t ember 199 4 , Queensland horsetrainer Vic Rail, a stablehand, and most of his animals fell ilL Within days, Rail and 14 horses were dead. Around the same time, there was another outbreak about 500 miles away. Researchers began testing wild animals in search of a likely source. They found antibodies for the newly discovered Hendra virus in fruit bats. Wang took over the Hendra research two years later, and now has a team of 25 scientists

almost 810 million people older than 60 on the planet in 2012, up from 205 million in 1950, according to the United Nations. Metabolic activity and environmental factors cause damage to DNA in humans. Wang said that newborn babies have almost homogeneously healthy cells, while a 70-year-old may have damage in90 percent of his mitochondria — structures inside cells that produce energy. Bats' cells are adapted to survive surges in metabolism — their hearts can go from 10 beats per minute during hibernation to 1,000 beats in flight. A similar change in humans would create alethal shortage of

oxygen and oversupply of toxic by-products of the metabolic process that damage DNA. "So everything i s i n t erlinked," Wang said. "Bats' ability to do better with DNA dam-

age repair, live longer, have less cancer, carry viruses without disease — we think this is all a different display of the same thing."

III

lite, the Marcopolo 1.

BREAKTHROUGH

Ten yearsago:A granite monument of the Ten Command-

ments that became alightning rod in a legal storm over the separation of church and state

was wheeled from the rotunda of the Alabama Supreme Court building as protesters knelt,

prayed and chanted, "Put it back!"

Glass implantcangrow new bone,engineerssay By Michele Munz

Five yearsago:BarackObama was nominated for president bythe Democratic National

Convention in Denver. Afederal judge in Boise, Idaho, sentenced longtime sexoffender Joseph Edward Duncan III to death for the 2005 kidnapping, torture and murder of 9-year-

old Dylan Groene. One yearago:Republicans opened their national convention in Tampa, Fla., a day late,

then immediately adjournedas Tropical Storm Isaacsurged toward New Orleans and the

northern Gulf Coast.

BIRTHDAYS Cajun-country singer Jimmy C. Newman is 86. Rock singermusician Tim Bogert is 69.

Actress MarianneSagebrecht is 68. Actor Peter Stormare is 60. Actress Chandra Wilson is

44. Rock musician TonyKanal (No Doubt) is 43. Actor Aaron Paul is 34. Rock musician Jon

Siebels (Eve 6) is 34. Actor Shaun Weiss is 34. Actor Kyle Lowder is 33. Actor Patrick J.

Adams is 32. Singer Mario is 27. Actress Alexa Vega is 25. — From wire reports

weeks. The research was published last month in the journal ST. LOUIS — Sometimes Acta Biomaterialia. "You can have the strongest medical advances don't come from the medical field at all. material in the world, but it also Engineers at the Missouri must encourage bone growth in University of Science and Tech- a reasonable amount of time," nology have designed a super- Rahaman said. strong glass implant with a The material could someday scaffolding-like structure that be used to repair large bone deis able to grow new bone. fects that are the result of can"We have good materialand cer, war or auto crashes. engineering skills," said lead Current treatments to strucresearcher Len Rahaman, "and tural bone repair involve either when you put those two togeth- porous metal, which can heal er, it's allowed usto use our skills poorly and become infected; to produce a bioactive glass that or a bone transplant from a is strong enough to repair large cadaver, which carries risk of structural bone defects." disease. Bone also can be taken Bioactive means the mate- from one part of the body to anrial reacts with body fluids and other, but the amount is limited, converts into living bone, so it and the result can be pain and does not need to be removed. poor healing at the donor site. In previous work, the engiThe materials for the glass neers proved the glass implant implant are inexpensive and they developed using robocast- easy to obtain, Rahaman said. ing — a computer-controlled Next, the researchers are technique to ensure a uniform testing the glass implant in the structure — could withstand large leg bones of rats, which the weightand pressure experi- bear more weight. "Now that enced by longbones in the body we know the bone will grow like those in the arms and legs. into the scaffold, we are testing Their latest research using it under more realistic condithe skulls of rats, showed that tions," Rahaman said. the porous scaffolding design The next steps would be quicklybonded tothe bone and studying the implant in larger promoted a significant amount animals and winning approval of new bone growth within six to test the design in humans. St. Louis Post-Dispatch

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Storm Continued from A1 National Weather Service forecasterRob Brooks said the moisture that led to the thunderstorm had been building south of Central Oregon since Friday. "The potential for thunderstorms wasthere," Brooks said. "So it shouldn't have been too much of surprise." Asthe weather system moved north, the Central Oregon heat created a high potential for thunderstorms. Brooks said the weather service issued a severe weather warning on Friday. "It was another one of those afternoons with high enough instability and with moisture," P he said. You get to the afternoon, and bang — a ton of lightning and thunder." Prud-homme said that of the approximately 7,000 strikes that hit in the dispatch's area, nearly 400 of them were positive lightning strikes: lightning bolts that originate from the ground and shoot up to the clouds. The danger in positive strikes, he said, is the intensified heat generated on ground level. "Itcreates concern for fires that stay hot, but don't flame un-

Tips foravoidinglightningstrikes If you feel static in the air, your hair starts to rise andyou hear a buzzing, a lightning strike may be just around the corner says trails specialist for the Deschutes National Forest Chris Sabo. when severe thunderstorms are predicted for the area: • Plan ahead:Make sure to check the weather service for potentially dangerous conditions. • Get inside:Being in a structure will keep you safe. Stay inside for 30 minutes after the last thunder clap. Vehicles are safe as well. lf you're not adle to get inside... • Stay away from open fields, hilltops and tall trees. • If you're in a forest, stand near shorter trees. • If you're camping, put your tent in the lowest area possible. Tents cannot protect you from a lightning strike. • If you have anything metal, drop it. • Shoes with rubber soles will insulate you from a lightning strike

given you don't touch anything else.

middle-aged or older, people who had worked all their lives, but lost jobs in the recession and its aftermath and have not been able to get back to where t hey were. Many o f t h e m worry that they never will, in part because of discrimination by employers against older workers.

Worse than the stats show On the statistical surface, boomers seem betteroff than other age groups. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the unemployment rate for workers 55-64 (the category thatbest matches boomers, who range from 48 to 67) was 5.4 percent in July, compared with 7.4 percent for the general population. But almost e very o t h er number f r o m t h e b u r e au makes it clear that while the economy may be improving, a substantial number of

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til conditions dry up," he said. Brooks said Monday was likely the last unstable day, weather-wise, of the summer. He said we very likely won't see another storm on par with Sunday's intensity, and the weather should begin cooling down in time for autumn. The Pacific Northwest escalated to planning level five on Aug. 20, which means firefight-

ers are asking for help from other regions, Prud-homme said. It is the first time the region has been at that level since 1998. "At this point, we are at a high level of firefighting need," he said. — Reporters: 541-383-0348, bandersen@bendbulletin. com; 541-617-7812,ddarlint P@ bendbulletin.com

months following the bankrupt- concrete on every side — just in cy of Hostess Brands. At the case any would-be thieves try to Continued from A1 time, the new owners promised dig a tunnel to get it. "Like something out of a HolThe ability to push a quaint the spongy yellow cakes would narrative about a product's ori- taste just like people remember. lywood movie,"a press release gins and fuel a sense of nostalA representative for Host- from KFC trumpeted at the gia can help drive billions of dol- ess, Hannah Arnold, said in an time. lars in sales. That's invaluable at email that Twinkies today are KFC may very well be followa time when food-makers face "remarkably close to the origi- ing the basic instructions of the greater competition from small- nal recipe," noting that the first recipe encased in the vault. But er players and cheaper super- three ingredients are still en- the fanfare around its founder's market store brands that appeal riched flour, water and sugar. instructions is despite his disto cash-strappedAmericans. Yet a box of Twinkies now approval of the new owners It's why companies such as lists more than 25 ingredients of the chain after he sold his Coca-Cola and Twinkies' own- and has a shelf-life of 45 days, stake in the company in 1964. er Hostess play up the notion almost three weeks longer than In his book, for example, Wenthat their recipes are sacred, the 26 days from just ayear ago. dy's founder Dave Thomas, unchanging documents that That suggests the ingredients a friend ofSanders, recounts need to be closely guarded. As have been tinkered with, to say how the colonel was annoyed it turns out, some recipes have the least, since they were cre- because they came up with a changed over time, while others ated in 1930. simpler way to drain grease off "When Twinkies first came the chicken by dumping it onto may not have. Either way, they all stick to the same script that out they were largely made wire racks, rather than ladling their formulas have remained from fresh ingredients," notes the grease off by hand. Sandthe same. S teve Ettlinger, author o f ers apparently hated the new Dec o n structed," system because it bruised the John Ruff, wh o f o rmerly "Twinkie, headedresearch & development which traced the roots of the chicken. at Kraft Foods, said companies cake's many modern-day inAccording to the book, Sandoften recalibrate ingredients dustrial ingredients. ers was afraid the new owners for various reasons, including For its part, KFC says it still would ruin the chicken because new regulations, fluctuations strictlyfollowstherecipecreated he said they "didn't know a in commodity costs and other in 1940 by its famously bearded drumstick from a pig's ear." issues that impact mass food founder, Colonel Harland SandA KFC spokesman, Rick production. ers. The chain understood the Maynard, saidthe issue over the "It's almost this mythological power of marketing early on, grease was indicative of Sandthing, the secret formula," said with Sanders originally dying ers' hands-on approach even the president of the Institute of his beard white to achieve a after selling the business. MayFood Technologists, which stud- more grandfatherly look. nard said the important parts ies the science of food. "I would Fast forward to 2009, when of the recipe are the seasonbe amazed if formulas (for big KFC decided the security for ing, using fresh chicken on the brands) haven't changed." the handwritten copy of the bone, hand breading according This summer, the Twinkies recipe needed a flashy upgrade. to standards and frying under c ream-filled c a k e s man y It installed a 770-pound safe pressure. As for the chain's Americans grew up snacking that is under constant video and recently introduced boneless on made acomeback afterbe- motion-detection surveillance Original Recipe chicken, he said ing off shelves for about nine and surrounded by two feet of it uses the recipe's seasoning.

Continued from A1 He and his family are living in his 88-year-old mother's home, and last month he awoke at 4:30 a.m., sweating profusely, in the midst of a heart attack. As happens to many Americans, when he lost his job, he lost his health insurance. He now owes $171,569.44 for the six nights he spent at the hospital. And so on the evening of Aug. 15, at a meeting of the job club he himself started here two years ago, he told the others he was just like them. "I need a job," he said. "I need to make money now." Most of the 15 men and women meeting at the library in this prosperous suburb were

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older workers who lost jobs — even those lucky enough to be re-employed — are still suffering. Two-thirds in that

shaving a decade off her resume and not posting a photo on networking and job search sites to hide her age, Fugazzie age group who found work advised against it. "When you go to the inagain are making less than they did i n t h ei r p r evious terview, you're going to look job; their median salary loss like who you are," he said. "To w aste time h i d ing i t is 18 percent compared with a 6.7 percent drop for 20- to when you're only going to 24-year-olds. lose at the other end makes The re-employment rate for no sense. If they don't want 55- to 64-year-olds is 47 per- someone your age, you don't cent and 24percent for those want them." older than 65, compared with What he does recommend is 62 percent for 20- to 54-year- lowering expectations. "You're olds. And finding another job not likely to be the department takes farlonger: 46 weeks for head," he said, "so sell yourboomers, compared with 20 self as a team player who will weeks for 16- to 24-year-olds. work with younger people and Nor are those who believe help train them." age discrimination was a factor likely to have much luck in Sharing strategies court. In 2009, just as the econAt the Ridgewood meeting, omy was hitting rock-bottom, people discussed job-hunting the Supreme Court issued a strategies. Karen Clements, r uling t hat t o ughened t he a paralegal, said she had four standard for proving bias. resumes ready to go, each "It's easier for younger emphasizing a different skill: workers to bounce back," said bookkeeping, SEC compliSeigel of the Labor Depart- ance, fraud investigation and ment. "Theydon't have many intellectual property rights. financial obligations. Older She described a friend who workers are supporting fami- is dressed in business attire lies; they may be supporting by 4 a.m. Mondays, so she'll parents. They can't afford to be ready the moment an opspend two years going back portunity is posted online. If for adegree to retrain." the firm wants to do a Skype At the A ug. 15 meeting, interview, said Clements, her Barbara Braun, who worked friend is dressed for Skyping. "By Tuesday they'll have 1,000 as a marketing director for a pharmaceutical company, said resumes and the window will she was not able to relocate to be closed." "It's like Wayne Gretzky California when the company says," Braun told them: "You moved. "I have a mother with Alzheimer's; I think it would have to skate to where the have killed her," she said. "Our puck will be." lives are full of complications T hey discussed th e i m we didn't have at 35." portance of following up any They have no doubt that contact with thank-you emails their age is held against them, and handing out lots of busiyet work t o k e ep h opeful. ness cards, though it is tricky When a w o man suggested to identify yourself when you

Oregon State University-Cascades Campus is focusing on two selling points. "Bend is a very, very attractive location for all students, and we'll continue to highlight that," says Christine Coffin, OSU-Cascades' director of communications.RAnd then there's the OSU brand. We're the largest research school in the state, but with a smaller size. It's a smaller slant on the OSU brand."

OSU-Cascades assky.he flies through a clear blue

to other branch campuses to see what's out there. "To get a sense of what our Continued from A1 Director o f Enr o l l ment The university's f ourServices Jane Reynolds dis- students may want, we visited y ear status wil l h el p i t cussed how the Bend lifestyle a branch campus, the Univerbroaden its reach, as it will is affecting the geography sity of W a shington-Tacoma, now have to target the large of the university's recruiting which is about 4,000 students, population of high school campaign. around the size we'll be at," "We'll be looking toward Reynolds said. "They had students who ar e exclusively focused on the traborder and mountain states, developed student spaces in ditional four-year college places with active communi- class buildings, places where experience. The university ties, places like Idaho, north- s tudents could g ather a n d hopes to attract around 100 ern California, Washington do a variety of things. We're of these students, Coffin and Colorado," she said. not there yet. They also had a said. To reach this group, While the university intends bookstore; we currently share the university is using lists to broaden its geographic fo- with COCC." of college-bound students cus, currently 76 percent of Reynolds said O SU-Casfrom the ACT and S AT students are f r o m C e ntral cades is looking to p ubliccollege entrance exams. Oregon. private partnerships to save "We'll continue to develop the university from having to This year's high s chool junior class will p r ovide programs relevant to Central build certain amenities for the the students for OSU-Cas- Oregon to attract local stu- first class. "There's lots of stuff nearby cades' first freshman class, dents, but we'll balance them and the school is already with strong foundational pro- we are looking to form partat work r ecruiting them grams that have a wider ap- nerships with, such as health through mailers and parpeal," Coffin said. and fitnesscenters," Reynolds ticipation at college fairs. As one example, the univer- said. While the freshman class sity is developing a four-year Once all the plans are in offers recruitment c h alhospitality management pro- place for the new campus, the l enges distinct from t h e gram geared toward serving u niversity's marketing w i l l university's graduate and Central Oregon's strong tour- change. "It's all a little nebulous until two-plus-two populations, ism industry. Coffin said the school's two Much of the appeal of a we know where we're at with traditional s e l l ing-points four-program, however, rests the campus," Reynolds said. will remain in place. between the curriculum and "Once we have alocation, we "Bend is a very, very at- campus. It's the student life get a lot we can use. We'll have tractive location for all stu- that happens in campus cof- architectural drawings we can dents, and we'll continue to fee shops and intramural bas- show, and maybe we'll even highlight that," Coffin said. ketball games that brings stu- take prospective students to "And then there's the OSU dents to a school. To this end, new sites." brand. We're the largest re- the university is planning to of— Reporter: 541-633-2160, search school in the state, fer morestudent services and tleeds@bendbutletin.com but with a smaller size. It's programming for all students a smaller slant on the OSU targeted toward facilitating a N QR T H W EST C R O S S IN G brand." campus culture and establishT he u n iversity's b i l l - ing traditions. Students have board campaign makes been askedfor their feedback this case clear. The signs, on what's needed, but the adan d which have been placed ministration has also traveled

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have no job. "Be careful of the title you give yourself — you don't want to sound dated," said Braun, whose business card reads, "Barbara J. Braun, principal, B arbara JBraun LLC , C o n nect Goals to Extraordinary Outcomes." Several mentioned the imp ortance of L i n k edIn, t h e business networking site. "You have to have at least 5 00 c ontacts," s ai d L is a Sepetjian, who has been an accounts manager for banks and small-business lenders. "Any less shows you don't care; you're not in the game." Braun described how she was able to go from 50 LinkedIn contacts to 500 in just a week. "I'm at 4,200," Fugazzie said. "I don't want to know 500 people," Sepetjian said. "But I want people to know I'm not some baby boomer sitting at home eating bonbons."

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"Your hands are tied by the people who actually have the claim in their hands. So you can't do anything more or anything less. It's up to them."

Veterans Continued from A1 Now, claims workers said, they fear the VA's aggressive new push to finish all one-yearo ld claims by Oct. I — a n d eliminate the entire backlog by 2015 — could continue the emphasis on quantity over quality in claims processing that has often led to mistakes. VA workers have processed I million claims ayear forthree years in arow. Beth McCoy, the assistant deputyundersecretary forfield operations for the Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA), saidbonuses forclaims processors were justif ied because, even though the number of backlogged claims was rising, workers were processing more claims than ever. "There are many, many employees who ar e exceeding their minimum standards, and they deserve to be recognized for that," she said. She also said the VBA is improving quality even as it processesmore claims. But documents show that a board of appeals found in 2012 that almost three out of four appealed claims were wrong or based on incomplete information. Approximately 14,000 veterans had appeals pending for more than two years as of November. The VA has promised to reduce wait times and improve accuracy by scanning the piles of paper claims into an electronic system for processing with new software, but the expensive transition has been beset with problems. The workload for VA claims workers also has doubled in the past five years. This included new claims from a quarter-million Vietnam veterans in 2010, when the VA added B-cell leukemias, Parkinson's disease and ischemic heart disease to the growing list of health conditions veterans can claim because of exposure to the toxic chemical Agent Orange in Vietnam. In addition, more than 830,000 Iraq and Afghanistan war veteransreturning home had filed claims as of March, according to VBA data. According to 2012 data, the VA employed more than 11,000 claims processors or assistants.

and sorted in mailrooms and that are sometimes forgotten in file cabinets. The VA has for years tried to alleviate the load on over-

— Damon Wood, veteran

service" ismeasured by the number of complaints against the employee, "productivity" is judged by ASPEN points, the average work credits the employee must earn per day. ASPEN points could transJessica Wilde/News21 late into financial awards at Air Force veteran Damon Wood was diagnosed with post-trauthe endofeach year ifa w orker matic stress disorder after serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. He has earns an "excellent" or "outbeen waiting 21 months for a disability rating from the Department standing" performance. of Veterans Affairs. But News21 found that regionaloffice management gave bonuses to some employees Most handle disability claims, sexual trauma or t r aumatic even as their claims backlogs while some deal with claims brain injury, can require just as grew. During 2012, Office of such as those for education and much effortbecause they can Personnel Management reother benefits. be more difficult to prove than cords show some of the most physical injuries. troubled offices gave their emChange in criteria In April 2010, the VA stopped ployees the most extra pay. In an attempt to encour- giving its employees perforIn 2008, Congress ordered age more productivity, the VA mance credit for "supplemental the VA to review its work-credit changed claims p r ocessors' development," which included system. A 75-page report properformance criteria between tasks such as calling and send- duced by the Center for Naval 2010 and 2012. The changes ing follow-up letters to veterans Analysis in 2009 recommended discouraged them from spend- and follow-up requests for mili- the VA address perceptions that ing time gathering additional tary documents and medical quantityreceives more emphadocuments that could support records. sis than quality, by changing complicated claims, according The change was meant to the tasks that receive points to to vvittenperformance require- encourage processors to finish better reflect the actual work. "This is one of the reasons ments forclaims processors. claims. But a complex disability McCoy, the VBA o ff icial, claim could take all day, while why, as some managers noted, saidshe heard from employees a claim for one or two injuries the inventory of old claims conin the field that they felt the per- could be completed much fast- sists disproportionately of 'diffiformance standards were not er, said David Bump, a national cult' cases," the report said. fair. "Things are changing very representative of the AFGE and A claims processor in Reno quickly, and we're struggling former claimsprocessor at the told News21 that this "breeds a little bit to keep up with the Milwaukee regional office. cheating" and that he has seen "I think after a couple of pace of change as we update employees who aren't making our performance standards," years of seeing things piling enough points go into "survival she said. up, they realized that that didn't mode" and process only easy A processor must gather work," said Bump, a member of claims. Shifting performance medical and military records the bargaining committee that points to reward backlog-relatfor each disability and assign has met three times with the ed work would be more effecdisability ratings based on the VBA in 10 months to discuss tive, said the worker, who, like severity of injury, which then changing the standards. others, requested anonymity determines the monthly check Claims workers can be fired forfear ofreprisals. from the government. or demoted for not meeting The VA paid $44.3 billion in standards in Automated Stan- Claims in limbo disability benefits and $5.5 bil- dardized Performance EleDamon Wood's disability lion to survivors of veterans ments Nationwide, or ASPEN, claim for PTSD, ringing in the with a service-connected dis- the VA's system of awarding ear and a bad back and knee ability, according to its annual a specific number of points has been cycling for 21 months benefits report for fiscal 2012. A daily for each task an employee through a fortified federal office veteran who is rated 10 percent performs. building in a corporate park on disabled receives a standard Performance evaluations for the outskirts of Reno. $129 per month. all claims workers includethe elHe quit checking its staClaims for m u ltiple inju- ements of "productivity," "qual- tus online because it hadn't ries require significant time to ity" and "customer service." c hanged for m ore t han 1 1 gather documentation. Other While "quality" is measured by months. When he tried callclaims, including for post-trau- a random sampling of an em- ing the Reno regional office for matic stress disorder, military ployee'sclaims and "customer more help, he was diverted to

one of VA's eight national call centers. "Your hands are tied by the people who actually have the claim in their hands," Wood said. "So you can't do anything more or anything less. It's up to them." Allison Hickey, VA undersecretaryof benefits,promised veterans in April that the more than 65,000 claims two years old or older would get a temporary or permanent decision by June 19, while those waiting more than a year would be considered by October. For the third consecutive year, the VA mandated 20 hours per month of overtime for employees for part of this year to meet the deadlines, costing the agency approximately$44 million. In June, the VBA processed a record 110,000 claims, officials said. Darin Selnick, a VA political appointee in the George W. Bush administration, called the quickly finished claims an old "sleight-of-hand trick." Selnick said regional office directors and central office staffers misled VA leadership during the past decade with similar numbers games that disguised the problem and kicked the can down the road. "They knew it was coming, and they knew it was going to get worse," Selnick said. "I think the current leadership, Allison Hickey, they do the same thing to her."

Other struggles In addition to a mounting pile of claims filed by the veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, claims processors struggle with understaffing, an incomplete software system and paper claims that must be shipped around the country in boxes

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whelmed offices by shipping backlogged claims around the country to other offices. Hickey ordered this "brokering" of old claims as a way for some offices to meet her deadlines. According to internal documents, the VA has shuffled more than 50,000 claims

among regional offices since January, including 16,000 in June. But workers say the practice is unfair to local veterans filing claims when their local office has to shoulder the load

for poorly managed offices. Workers in Milwaukee received more than 5,000 old claims from Houston and Los Angeles beginning June 11. Sioux Falls r eceived 2,600 claims from St. Louis, Houston and Portland. Meanwhile, Reno completed just more than 1,000 old claims after shipping off 4,500 claims in its inventory to offices in Louisville, Sioux Falls and elsewhere. "We're looking like we're making progress ... but in ways that aren't sustainable," said one claims processor, who declinedto be named for fear of reprisals. "We're not actually doing anything to fix problems that are actually causing the backlog.... At some point, that overtime's got to end and you can't continue to broker out work, and what happens at that point? Nothing's been fixed, and thesame problem persists." — This article is part of a project produced by News21, a national investigative reporting project involving top college j ournalism students across the country and headquartered at the Walter Cronhite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University. 5

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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST27, 2013

BRIEFING

WILDFIRE SPENDING

en: revention e tomr in costs

Scheduled outage in south Bend Approximately 4,900 Pacific Power customers in south Bend will

experience anelectricity outage between 11 p.m.

Wednesdayand 5a.m. Thursday, Pacific Power announced Monday. The outage will occur

while overheadwires are moved to makeway for a joint state and city

road project involving U.S. Highway 97, Third Streetand Murphy

Road, the powercompany explained in anews release. Pacific Power said it has individually notified customers who will be affected.

www.bendbulletin.com/local

By Dylan J. Darling

end this "broken system" by doing three things. He called for providing firefighters with advanced tools, such as heat-sensing equipment to detect lightning-caused fires early from the air; putting an emphasis on wildfire prevention rather than fire suppression; and increasing the size of the federal air tanker fleet by converting retired military cargo planes. Wyden declined to go into specifics about how much money should be focused on wildfire prevention. In the latest diverting of funds, the Forest Service is moving $600 million nationally into the firefight-

The Bulletin

Federal lawmakers need to focus on preventing wildfires to end the cycle of shifting funds to fight them, Oregon's senior U.S. senator said Monday during a visit to Bend. "What we have got to show is there is a choice," said U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. This year is the seventh out of the last 11 in which the U.S. Forest Service has diverted funds away from construction on other forest projects to pay for firefighting. Wyden said lawmakers could

ing budget. The move comes after the agency was down to $50 million in the firefighting budget, and after spending $967 million so far this year to fight fires. Wyden met Monday morning with leaders from Bend and Deschutes County in a thinned patch of woods next to a cluster of homes off Skyliners Road west of town. Most of the about 25 people who attended are involved with the Deschutes Collaborative Forest Project, the group that helped guide the thinning and is planning more in the woods near Bend. SeeWyden /B3

Ryan Brennecke/ rhe Bulletin

U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden addresses the crowd during his Monday visit to discuss wildfire prevention efforts by the Deschutes Collaborative Forest Project off Skyliners Road.

The outagewill affect a 5-mile-long areaalong both sides of Highway

WHATEyER

97 from Pinebrook Boulevard in the north to Deschutes River Woods in the south. In addition

to residencesand businesses in thearea, all traffic signals will be out

FORMER OREGON HOUSE REP.BEV CLARNO

and should be treated

ee in a Han a em

as four-way stops, as dictated by Oregonlaw. Pacific Power saidit is working with Bend of-

ficials to install a generator at the key Highway 97-Bend Parkway inter-

section so that the junction will have a signal.

"Pacific Powerappreciates the understanding of our customers for the

inconveniencenecessary to allow the state and

city project to proceed," said Angela Price, Pacific

Power regional community manager. "The road

work has beenongoing, and at this point Pacific Power needs to shut off

power temporarily to safely movethese overhead lines. Wehave timed the outage to

minimize inconvenience to our customers, while still making way for the

road improvements to continue." The utility suggests

customers maywant to use a battery-operated clock or a cellphone alarm and chargemobile devices in advance. Customers with questions about the planned outage can call Pacific Power toll free at 888221-7070. Any outages during that time outside the affected area should

• Former Central Oregon politician is no longer in the game,but shekeepsan eyeon the Capitol By Lauren Dake The Bulletin

SALEM — It's been a decade since Bev Clarno left state politics, but she's still keeping tabs on what's happening at the Capitol. "I follow politics closely," she said. "Sometimes it's very painful." Clarno stepped onto the Oregon political scene in 1988, when she ran forthe House of Representatives. She was 50 years old and had spent years as a hog rancher in Central Oregon. She became the first female Republican Speaker of the House, and later led her party in the upper chamber in the Senate as well. She quickly carved out a reputation as being tough but fair and willing to work across the aisle. "I'm a Democrat. She's a Repub-

lican. She's from rural Oregon. I'm from the Valley," said longtime Senate President Peter Courtney. But, Courtney said, the two hit it off and became close colleagues. "It was Bev and Peter. She was a card-carrying conservative and I'm a moderate Democrat and we just related. That's the kind of person she is, she is totally solid," Courtney said. "She was straight up ... I wish she was still in the Legislature." She even had a Democrat on her staff. Former reporter M ik e B e ard remembers when he got the call asking if he wanted to be part of Clarno's staff. "I said, 'Geez, but I'm a Democrat," Beard said. SeeClarno/B5

~r

M

i I'' '

Submitted photo

Former Central Oregon politician Bev Clarno left state politics a decade ago, but she still follows the happenings in Salem with a critical eye.

Montana Marlatt faces charges of murder and first- Marlatt has pleadednot

Marlatt is expected to go to trial guilty to the charges and is on Sept. 9. currently being held in the

shooting targets in April.

Jefferson County jail. Thef o rmer Bulletin employee was arrestedO'Connell pleaded not

Kevin O'Connell i n August on suspicion of prostitution and guilty March 18.

More briefingand News of Record, B2

O'Connell is expected to goto trial on Nov. 19.

second-degree sexabuse.

FIRE UPDATE

Kevin

The Sawyers werechargedwith a variety

The pair were sentenced

The Sawyers haveappealed

and Tami

of financial crimes stemming from allegedly bilking real estate investors out

on April 30 in federal

their sentences and are

court in Eugene.Kevin Sawyer was sentenced

currently housed in separate federal prisons. Tami Sawyer's theft case is still open, but no newhearings have been set.

Sawyer

of more than $4.4 million. In a separate case,Tami Sawyer is charged to 27 months in prison,

Reported for Central

and Eastern Oregon. For

with theft and criminal mistreatment

the latest information, visit www.nwccweb

while Tami Sawyer was

charges stemming from business dealings sentenced to nineyears in with an elderly manwhoput her in charge federal prison.

.us/information/ firemap.aspx.

of his trust shortly before his death in 2009. y„e ' in'

Luke W irkkala

~

Wirkk ala is charged with one count of mu r der after he allegedly shot and killed his houseguest, 31-year-old David Ryder, Feb. 4 in Bend.

Lawrence Loeffler is charged with one count of Loeffler

Tami Sawyer is writing a blog

from prison, www.tamisawyer. wordpress.com. Wirkkala pleaded not guilty on June 7 and is being held in the Deschutes County jail.

Wirkkala's trial is scheduled for Jan. 7, and a hearing to set bail in his case is set for Sept. 16.

Loeffler pleaded not guilty Loeffler is expected to go to trial

mur d er after he allegedly shot and killed on April 2 and is being held on Sept. 17. his wife of 39 years, 83-year-old Betty in the Deschutes County

Jane Loeffler, in a January domestic

jail.

dispute at their home outside La Pine.

1. Government Flat • Acres: 12,070 • Containment: 45%

• Cause: Lightning 2. Vinegar • Acres: 1,220 • Containment: 20% • Cause: Lightning

OTHER STORIES Kevin Perry Perry shot and killed Shane : The Deschutes County District Attorney's Office asked the : No charges have Munoz in June2012, after Bend Police Department in April to re-examine theevents : beenfiled or Perry allegedly returned surrounding the case. According to an email, the DA's office : arrests made. home to find Munoz in his considers the case"open indefinitely." home. Summit1031 Local company allegedly Threeexecutivesofthecompany,LaneLyons,MarkNeuman The trio are

• Containment: 50%

misappropriated $44 million and Timothy Larkin, went on trial in June, and a jury found all scheduled to be in client funds; it filed for : three guilty of wire fraud andconspiracy charges. They have sentenced Dec.16. : since filed a motion requesting a new trial. bankruptcy in 2008. Desert Sun Thirteen employeesand All charged in the case, including Desert Sun President Tyler . 'The remaining11

• Cause: Lightning

Management associ ateswereaccusedof

3. Sagehen Gulch • Acres: 290

4. Olympus • Acres: 2,200 • Containment: 40%

• Cause: Lightning

L

Fitzsimons, have pleadedguilty. Two havealready been

multimillion-dollar loan fraud : sentenced. . in 2009.

Former student returns as teacher The Bulletin

CRIMINAL CASES

Power at 877-508-5088. — Bulletin staff report

deoddoffetfn.com /dack2schoof

By Megan Kehoe

Following up on Central Oregon's ongoing stories.

Silk Marlatt degree manslaughter, for allegedly killing Devon Moschetti, 19, with whom he was

scH00L

/i

WHAT'S HAPPENING WITH ...

be reported to Pacific

BACK TO

Following up on Central Oregon's most interestingstories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news@bendbulletin.com. O» To follow the series,visit www.bendbulletin.com/updates.

: participants are to . :be sentenced in

: October.

Bend High School's room S4 has always been a special place for Molly Ziegler. It's the classroom where she first learned to properly dice a vegetable. The room where she learned just how much hard work it takes to be a winner. The room that introduced her to a new and exciting world. And now, nine years after first stepping into room S4, Ziegler has returned to it with hope that she can help make the classroom as meaningful to her students as it was to her. "When I got to Bend High, cooking was still just a hobby for me," Ziegler said. "But winning nationals really changed it from being a hobby to being something that I could actually do one day. It was like the whole food industry just

opened up for me." Ziegler, a 2007 graduate of Bend High School, is taking over the school's award-winning culinary program this September.Ziegler,a graduate of the Culinary Institute of America in New York, got her culinary start as a sophomore in Bend High's classroom kitchen. Under culinary teacher Louise Markland, Ziegler was a member of the Bend High team that won the National ProStart High School Culinary Competition in 2005. She was also part of the Bend High's winning2006 team, and helped put Bend High on the map as a high school culinary powerhouse. As a member of the winning team, Ziegler received a scholarship to attend CIA in New York, one of the most prestigious culinary schools in the country. Ziegler spent three and a half years at the institute before working at restaurants in Massachusetts, South Carolina and Washington, D.C. While working in D.C., part of her job involved educational outreach with area students and teaching them about food, nutrition and cooking. "That started being the best part of my day," Ziegler said. "I love people, and I love food, and I thought teaching would be a good way to combine those." Ziegler attended George Fox University for her m aster's degree, and this past spring had the opportunity to student-teach at Bend High under her former teacher, Markland, with whom she'd stayed in close contact over the years. SeeTeacher /B2


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

E VENT

AL E N D A R

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

McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com.

TODAY REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-6 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue; 541-550-0066 or redmondfarmersmarket1©hotmail. com. TUESDAYFARMERSMARKET:Free admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brookswood Meadow Plaza, 19530 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541323-3370 or farmersmarket@ brookswoodmeadowplaza.com. TWILIGHT CINEMA: An outdoor screening of "Soul Surfer" (2011); bring low-profile chair or blanket, your own picnic, no glass or pets, snacks available; free; 6:30 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-585-3333 or www. sunriversharc.com. OREGON ENCYCLOPEDIAHISTORY NIGHT:R. Gregory Nokes presents "Holmes v. Ford: Slavery on Trial in the Oregon Territory"; free; 7 p.m., doorsopenat6 p.m .;M cMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com.

WEDNESDAY BEND FARMERSMARKET:Free admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket©gmail.com or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. PICKIN' ANDPADDLIN'

THURSDAY

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

The Little Woody Barrel Aged Brew and Whiskey Fest will be staged for the fifth time this Friday and Saturday at the Des Chutes Historical Museum. Craft beer and whiskey tastings from Oregon breweries and live music are among the activities on the schedule. Visit www.thelittlewoody.com for more information. MUSIC SERIES:Includes boat demonstrations in the Deschutes River; Wayward Vessel, the Portland-based bluegrass band performs; proceeds benefit Bend Paddle Trail Alliance; $5, free for children12 and younger; 4-6 p.m. demonstrations, 5-9 p.m. music; Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; 541-317-9407 or 411@tumalocreek. com. MUSIC IN THE CANYON: The concert series finale with The Stunt Poets; free; 5:30-8 p.m.; American LegionCommunity Park,850 S.W . Rimrock Way, Redmond; www.musicinthecanyon.com.

END OFSUMMER CRUZ: Event features classic cars, live music by the Taelour Project and a barbecue; proceeds benefit the High Desert A's COCC automotive scholarship fund; free admission; 6-8 p.m., barbecue begins at 5:30 p.m.; Jake's Diner, 2210 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-419-6021. PICNIC IN THE PARK: Featuring the1930-50s Big Band sound with The Notables; free; 6-8 p.m.; Pioneer Park, 450 N.E. Third St., Prineville; 541-447-6909 or www. crookcountyfoundation.org/events. CRAIG CAROTHERS: The Nashville singer-songwriter performs; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.;

THE30TH ANNIVERSARYSHOW OF INTERNATIONALARTIST JENNIFERLAKE:A celebration of the artist's career and new show, "The Flowers of My Life" including a silent auction and a screening of a movie about her career; free;10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center,57250 Overlook Road; 541-383-2676 or tgfubend©gmail.com. SMART ATTHE LIBRARY: Learn what it takes to volunteer to read in local elementary schools and create a book-inspired art piece; free; 3:305:30 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-355-5601 or www.getsmartoregon.org. DIXIELANDPARTY BANDAND FRIENDS REHEARSAL: A preview of the band open to the public; free, donations accepted; 5-8 p.m.; Ponderosa Pizza Parlor, 52574 U.S. Highway 97, La Pine; 541-548-0679. FUNDRAISERCONCERT:Music performed by Mark Ransom's The Mostest, Shireen Amini, Dennis McGregor and more; proceeds benefit Laurel Braun's medical costs; donations accepted;6-9 p.m.; Spirit of the Willow, 501 N.W. Riverfront, Bend; www. j.mp/braunsbenefit. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Gregory Nokes will present from his book,

"Breaking Chains: Slavery on Trial in the Oregon Territory," with a slide show; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. TWILIGHT CINEMA: An outdoor screening of "Back to the Future" (1985); bring low-profile chair or blanket, your own picnic, snacks available; free; 6:30 p.m.; Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; 541585-3333 or www.sunriversharc. com.

with food vendors and live music; free; 6 p.m., movie begins at dusk; Compass Park, 2500 N.W. Crossing Drive, Bend; 541-382-1662 or www. northwestcrossing.com. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Gregory Nokes will present from his book, "Breaking Chains: Slavery on Trial in the Oregon Territory," with a slide show; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. HoodAve., Sisters; 541-540-0866. "JUNGLEBOOK":The play is presented by the Sunriver Stars Community Theater; proceeds benefit scholarships for children to Fun After School Time Camp; $5 general admission, $15 dinner theater; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541593-4150 or www.sunriverstars.

FRIDAY DIXIELANDPARTYBANDAND FRIENDS:Musicians from the Northwest and California perform in an organized jam session; refreshments available; free, donations accepted; 1-10 p.m.; La Pine Moose Lodge, 52510 Drafter Road;541-548-0679. SISTERS FARMERS MARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park,W estCascade Avenue and Ash Street; www.sistersfarmersmarket.com. THE LITTLEWOODY BARREL AGED BREW AND WHISKEY FEST: Craft beer and whiskey tastings from Oregon breweries, with live music; ages 21 and older only; a portion of proceeds benefits the Deschutes County Historical Society; $7 entry with glass, $15 tasting package with glass and10 tokens; 5-10 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 N.W. Idaho Ave., Bend; www. thelittlewoody.com. MUNCH & MOVIES:An outdoor screening of "Life of Pi" (2012);

Ol'g.

PATRICKHAMMOND:The soul and pop singer-songwriter performs; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.com.

SAVE $50 or $100 per unit on select motorized Hunter Douglas products with powerRisee

d~a glASSip COVERINGS

541-388-4418 www.classic-coverings.com

ygi aFFI0ABH

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

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft — A theft was reported at 4:30 p.m. Aug. 22, in thearea ofWall Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:35 a.m. Aug. 23, in the100 block of Northwest Congress Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:30 a.m. Aug. 23, in the 500 block of Northeast Dekalb Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:07 p.m. Aug. 12, in the 3100 block of North U.S. Highway 97. Theft — A theft was reported at 2:51 p.m. Aug. 21, in the19400 block of Tam LakeCourt. Burglary —A burglary was reported and an arrest madeat1:26 p.m. Aug. 22, in the 21300 block of Livingston Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:15 p.m. Aug. 23, in the 2500 block of Northwest Ordway Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 2:49 p.m. Aug. 23, in the1600 block of Northwest John

Fremont Street. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 6:10p.m. Aug. 23, in the 61100 block of ConeFlower Street. Theft —A theft was reported at10:14 p.m. Aug. 23, in the 500 block of Northeast Eighth Street. DUII —Ashley Nicole Conley Carey, 27, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:03 a.m. Aug. 24, in the area of Northeast GreenwoodAvenue and Northeast SecondStreet. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:49 a.m. Aug. 24, in the 300 block of Southwest Powerhouse Drive. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 10:54 a.m. Aug. 25, in the 61000 block of Larkspur Loop. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at11:01 a.m.Aug. 25, in the 20000 block of Elizabeth Lane. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at1:15 p.m. Aug. 25, in the 61100 block of Hitching Post Lane.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 6:46 a.m. Aug. 24, in the area of Northeast Ochoco Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was

reported at 2:04 p.m. Aug. 24, in the areaof George Millican Road. Theft —A theft and an act of criminal mischief were reported at11:21 p.m. Aug. 24, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 2:13a.m. Aug. 25, in the area of Southeast Seventh Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:10 a.m. Aug. 25, in the area of Southeast Fifth Street.

DUII —Raymond Sterling Torres, 23 was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:26a.m. Aug. 25, in the100 blockof Northeast CedarStreet in Madras.

fgIORVIRAINEB yRICE CE NER I

i

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I

'I

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OREGON STATE POLICE

I

CALL TODAY

Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 7:16 p.m. Aug. 25, in the area of area of U.S. Highway 20 near milepost 78.

ST

„5 41.382.6769

.

131 N.E. Greenwood www.starkstreet.com

JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Burglary —A burglary was reported at7:00a.m.Aug.20,inthe8800 block of Southwest Shad Road inCrooked River Ranch. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 3:56 p.m. Aug. 20, in the 5800 block of Southwest Bozarth Lane in Culver. Theft —A theft was reported at 10 a.m. Aug. 22, in the 5000 block of Southwest Clubhouse Roadin Crooked River Ranch. Burglary —A burglary and atheft were reported at11:54 p.m. Aug. 23, in the 5700 block of Southwest Elbe Drive in Madras. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:23 a.m. Aug. 24, in the areaof North U.S. Highway 97and Dogwood Lane in Madras.

R

II Q

Pl

Teacher Continued from B1 With Markland's retirement last year, Ziegler became a natural choice as her successor. "You just couldn't write up a better script," said Bend High Principal H.D. Weddel. "It's what you'd want for all of our

Qi E

FURTHER MARKDOWNS!

programs,especially for one as big as this. It's a huge commitment to run this kind of pro-

gram, but she (Ziegler) knows it, she knows what it takes, and the program won't miss a beat." Walking into the classroom earlier this month, Ziegler said almost everything was just as it had been when she first walked in nine years ago, down to the s ilverware a r rangement i n the drawers. But that doesn't necessarilymean she's going to keep it that way. Ziegler has spent most of this month freshening up the classroom with a new coat of paint and covering up some outdated wall designs that she's been itchingto get rid ofsince her days as a student. "The chili peppers have to go," she said, shaking her head at the wall stencils throughout the room. "They're so 1950s." But when it comesto change in the program itself, Ziegler

says she's not planning any-

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Nine years after first stepping into room S4 as a student, Molly Ziegler is the new culinary instructor at Bend High School. thing too drastic. "I'm really in a fortunate position to be able to come in like this," Ziegler said. "There's already such a great foundation here. I'm so lucky to be able to follow in M s. M arkland's footsteps." Ziegler's goal is simple: She wants to inspire a love of cooking in her students, the very same thing Markland did for her. Markland saidthatthroughout her years of teaching, she always teased her students about coming backto Bend High and

taking over her job. "Molly's taking over was one of the reasons why I was ableto retire," Markland said. "I'm so proud that I had that much influence on a youngperson." Ziegler s aid h er t i m e i n Bend High's culinary program taught her lessonsthat are still relevant to this day. "It really shaped everything for me," Ziegler said. "My time inthis classroom taught me that hard work really does pay off."

I' •

BRIEFING

the Deschutes, Fremont-Winema,

a half-season permit, or $8 aday

Umpqua and Willamette na-

with a three-day minimum pur-

Continued from Bf

tional forests. Theseason will run

chase. Harvesters must be atleast 18 years or older andhave avalid

The Matsutake mushroom har-

vest season will begin Sept. 3 in

through Nov. 3. Those who harvest mushrooms on national forest

land must purchase acommercial harvest permit. Permits cost $200

for the 62-day season,$100 for

— Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoeC<bendbulletin.com

DMAN Matsutake mushroom season opensSept. 3

I

ID to obtain a permit. Permits can be purchased at the Chemult and Crescent Ranger District offices. — /3u/letin staff report

f ine furnit u r e D OW N T O W

N BEND

1020 NW Wall St Bend, OR ph 541-617-9799 SPecial SaleHours: Mon-Sat 20-6 Sun 12-5

Pictured items are subiect to prior sale andlor may not be available for purchase.


TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

Transient sought in Pendleton attack

Assault rifle death case —A Southern Oregonmancharged

The Associated Press

was back in court Monday.Theattorney for Jon MeyerJr. askedfor a

Lastweek, Roberts said DNA evidence on a piece of galvanized pipe used to bludgeon the woman matched DNA from a knife at last year's killing of 19-year-old Amy-

thorities consider the man such PENDLETON — Pendleton a threat to the community. "I think it's absolutely impolice are looking for a transient labeled a "person of inperative based on how little terest" in an attack on is known about him and how a woman walking on dangerous he can be," Roberts a river trail, an attack jane Brandhagen. She sa>d. now linked to a 2012 was killed at her job in Neither this month's attack killing. a hotel across the street nor the killing of Brandhagen In run-ins before the from Pendleton's City involved sexual assault or robAug. 9 assault, the man W u Hall. bery, Roberts said, leaving inidentified himself to offiRoberts said Monday vestigators with one other pocers as 23-year-old Danny Wu. the Oregon State Police will tential motive. "It really is about the vioBut the man has never had examine DNA from personal identification, and police have items and clothing of the man lence," he said. found nothing to verify what left from his arrests for such ofRoberts said s urveillance he told officers, Chief Stuart fenses as trespassing and ille- video shows the man following Roberts said. The man has gally living along the Umatilla the victim Aug. 9 and coming since vanished. River levee where this month's out of a restroom where police The victim, a 5 3-year-old attack occurred. believed he cleaned up after woman, remains hospitalized Roberts said he's released an the attack. in critical condition at a Port- unusual amount of informaInvestigative avenues such land hospitaL tion about the case because au- as checking states that use

facial r ecognition s oftware for driver's licenses has led to dead ends, Robert said. So has checking with military authorities — the man has a "Semper Fi" tattoo on his left forearm. P olice have gone t o t h e homes of Pendletonresidents who could be considered vulnerable to a home invasion and found no trace of the man, Roberts said. While the man frequented the levee w here h omeless people have congregated, they considerhim a loner,Roberts sald. Other factors set him apart, the chief said: He was better groomed and fed, and there was evidence such as movie ticket stubs that he had means of some sort.

AROUND THE STATE with firing his assault rifle while using it as a crutch, killing a little girl, delay at the hearing in Grants Pass. Defense lawyer Gary Berlant said he has not received all the police reports from the shooting that killed

5-year-old Alysa Bobbitt of ShadyCove.Thenext hearing onchargesof manslaughter, assault andunlawful possession of amachine gun will be Sept. 30 in Grants Pass. Authorities have said Meyer was using the

assault rifle as acrutch to help him get upfrom a couch whenit fired a burst into an upstairs room, killing the girl and wounding a woman.

COV8f Oi'Bgnn Bd CBmpnlgn —Cover Oregon is launching a second series of television ads to promote the online marketplace

where consumers canshop for health insurance under the federal health care overhaul. Thethree ads launched Mondayare designedto educate the public about Cover Oregon. One highlights the ability to compare insurance plans. Another touts federal subsidies that lower

the costs for somepeople. Thethird says nobody can be excluded for pre-existing conditions. The narrated ads don't have images; they just show text on a colorful backdrop. That's in contrast to Cover

Oregon's first round of commercials, which featured local musicians singing catchy tunes. Nearly all Americans are required to have health

insurance next year or pay afine. People without insurance canshop for it on CoverOregon.com beginning in October. Marijuana duSt in Lane COunty —Authorities say they seized about 3,000 marijuana plants from sites in theWillamette National Forest over the weekend after jailing 16 people. Lane County sheriff's Sgt. Steve French said the marijuana was in terrain inaccessible by

New superintendent for Lewisand Clark park

regularly maintained trails and not visible from roads. Hesays the plants were watered from lines concealed under vegetation. About 40 local, state and federal officers removed the plants on Sunday. A he-

licopter provided byfederal agencies mademultiple trips, hauling out plants in a net. The16 peoplearrested were booked Friday.

"This is a destination visit,' Longview Daily News Tucker said, noting visitors LONGVIEW, Wash. — Scott take in exhibits, stroll through Tucker hadn't been to Oregon's the restored cabin sites and Fort Clatsop when he applied hike trails at the park. "People to be superintendent of the come for several hours and Lewis and Clark National Hismake a day of it." torical Park, but you could say Tucker, 39, grew up visiting he'sbeen headed to the histornational parks with his paric winter encampment since ents and said a trip during his his junior year in college. junior year in college to Mesa Tucker, who took over in Verde National Park in ColoJuly, is now in charge of sevrado convincedhim to change eral Lewis and Clark sites his major from teaching to soalong the Columbia River and cial science. "I decided I wanted to teach the Pacific Coast. He said he's loved getting to know both the in the parks," he said. park and the area in the past Bill Wagner/Longview Daily News His first job was at Klondike two months and makes a point Scott Tucker stands in one of the restored Lewis and Clark Expedi- Gold Rush National Historito walk at least part of the tion cabins at Fort Clatsop, which is located near Astoria and is cal Park in Skagway, Alaska, park every day, sometimes in one of sites he now oversees as superintendent of Lewis and Clark and Tucker said he knew then his National Park Service uni- National Historical Park. he wanted to work at smallform, sometimes as a civilian. er, community-based parks "For me, it's the adventure rather than the large tourist and the unknown," he said Tucker comes to the park from Egg Roll at the White House. meccas like Yellowstone or about the lure of Lewis and the White House, or more ac- There, he said,it was more Yosemite. He said he likes the Clark. "It's about putting your- curately President's Park sur- about creating "snapshot mo- connectionssmaller parks can self in their shoes, and in the rounding the White House. He ments" for visitors who make make with the surrounding shoes of the Native commu- managed the park for several a quick stop before taking in community. nities they encountered, and years, overseeing the 54 acres several other D.C. sites. After Alaska, he worked at facing the unknown.... And I of park grounds as well as T rips to t h e L e wi s a n d the Smithsonian Institution's knew this was a story I want- special events, including light- Clark N a t i onal H i s t orical National M u seum o f the ed to be a part of." ings of the National Christmas Park, though, are a different American Indian and later at L ike L e wi s a n d C l a r k , Tree and the annual Easter experience. the White House. 1

By Barbara Laboe

Curry County tax levy —Hoping to stave off bankruptcy and a state takeover, Curry County commissioners areagain asking voters to approve atax increase to keep sheriff's patrols on the road and the jail open. County Commission ChairmanDavid Brock Smith said Monday that he hopes two things that have happened since a tax hike was voted down in the southwestern Oregon county last May

will make adifference come November. Thecounty is asking for less this time — $3.2 million over three years, rather than $4 million over five years. The new amount is the minimum necessary to keep the jail

open and six deputies on patrol. — From wire reports

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Sheriff's Office spokesman Dwes Hutson said in a statePORTLAND — The body ment. The death was being of an Arizona teenager miss- investigated as a suicide. ing since last week was Hutson didn't immefound Monday evening diately return a call for near the spot where his additional c o m ment. SUV was abandoned His statement said no in a wooded area of more information was S outhern O r egon, a being released Monday sheriff's s p o k esman Croom night. said. The Apache JuncThe body o f 1 8 -year-old tion, Ariz., teen had talked Johnathan Croom was dis- with his parents about the book "Into the Wild" and told a covered about1,000 feet from his vehicle, Douglas County friend he wanted to run away. The Associated Press

Croom's SUV was f ound Wednesday in Riddle, a town of 1,200 people just off Interstate 5. His mother, Monica Croom, had said he w a s t r aveling alone and on his way back from Seattle, where he visited a friend. The teen was due in Arizona on Aug. 17 to start college in Mesa. M onica C r o om's p h o ne rang u n answered M o nday night after the Sheriff's Office announced the teen's death.

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Showershelpcrewstamp downwildfires The Associated Press PORTLAND — Un u sual late-summer rains are helping crews battle wildfires in southwestern Oregon and the Columbia Gorge — and even driving some from soaked tents to bed down indoors. Some firefighters at the Government Flats Complex southwest of The Dalles reported leaky tents and wet bedding on Sunday, the Oregon Departm ent of Forestry said. They were given dry sleep-

ing bags and moved indoors to sleep in the gym at Wahtonka High School, where the department observed in its daily fire summary Monday that the "floor may be harder, but it is dry and warm." The fire has destroyed four homes. It's burning on about 19 square miles, or 12,000 acres. The state agency says the cool, wet weather has helped the crews in the Gorge, and the firesare considered 45 percent contained.Fire crews are being

redeployed to other parts of the fire, demobilized or sent to another fire, the agency said. In southwestern Oregon, rain on Sunday amounted toabout a third of an inch in Medford, and slightly more than that in Ashland. Fire officials said the rains provided at least a short-term improvement in air quality, too. Fire crews say the Douglas Complex of fires north of Grants Pass is now nearly 90 percent contained.

Wyden

10-year window and a $10 million budget. D eschutes County C o m mission C h a i r ma n A l a n Unger said the group can't d o thinning a r ound t o w n soon enough, and that thunderstorms like the one that rumbled over Central Oregon this w e e kend u n d erscore that point. The thunderstorm brought more than 7,300 lightning strikes, all of which Unger said could start a wildfire. "... Every one is scary," he sa>d. Wyden called their work a "textbook model as how to do fire prevention right."

He said he would take what he learned in Bend back to W ashington, D.C., an d h e wants to use the Deschutes Forest Collaborative Project as an example when lawmakers are reworking budgets this fall. Living off Skyliners Road, n ear t h e t h i n n ing, M a r k Schulz, 42, said the work has h elped protect his home and his family of five — from wildfire. "It has really cut down the immediate fire danger here," Schulz said.

Continued from B1 Started in 2009, the group is made up of local leaders and one-time opponents in debates over forest management, such as environmentalists and timber interests. Rather than fight out their differencesin a courtroom, the sidesnow come toagreements as they make forest management plans together. It is one of 20 projects the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which oversees the Forest Service, is funding around the country. The project has a

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

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will likely make a decision in the next months. The wrong decision is to encrypt the radio traffic. The department says it's concerned about the safety of its officers. Criminals can listen in and use the information to their advantage. Unconfirmed information can lead to false rumors. Confidential information can be shared unintentionally. But public safety should not be a secret. Bend Police already have some encrypted channels. They have cellphones. If they need to rapidly share information without the public knowing about it, they can do it. There's no need to encrypt everything they do. There's also good reason not to. Public safety is not just what the police do. It's a partnership with the community. The public needs timely, regular, reliable information about what's going on. Shutting the public out creates a void

for rumors to blossom. No encryption system is perfect. The public may not be able to listen to radio traffic anymore after encryption. Sophisticated criminals could still find a way. This is the second time recently we have seen the Police Department tilt toward becoming a more secret police. You may remember a year ago when Deschutes County got a new records system. When the new system came online in April 2012, the daily police log of DUIIs, thefts and other crimes stopped. Bend Police suggested it might just release news about notable events of its choosing. It t o o k s o m e c o n vincing, but months later the police logs resumed. Bend Police should be stopped before it makes a mistake with encryption and filches the public's ability to know.

Obama college plan would give feds too muchcontrol residentObama proposed a path last week to make college accessible and affordable. It's a well-intentioned goal to restrain soaring tuition and unmanageable student debt. Unfortunately, the plan involves a massive increase in f ederal control of higher education, both public and private. Most damaging would be his plan to tie federal money for higher education to a rating system that would be mindnumbingly complex and full of unintended consequences. The White House fact sheet for the proposal reports that public four-yearcolleges have increased tuition by an average of 250 percent over three decades, while family income went up only 16 percent. Part of the cause is reduced revenue from states to public universities, with tuition doubling its share of revenues and students graduating more than $26,000 in debt. The details of that may be shocking, but the overall problem is well-known. But here's one you've heard less about: Of students who started college full time in 2004, only 58 percent earned a four-year degree within six years. Although some may earn a degree later, others are left with debt but no degree. Also burdened are those who do gain a degree in six years or less, but find their earnings insufficient to pay their debt and launch an adult life. Obama wants the U.S. Department of Education to develop a method by 2015 to rate colleges

on affordability, graduation rates and graduate earnings. By 2018, he wants to provide financial rewards to colleges that do well on the ratings. Students who go to these government-approved schools would get bigger grants and more affordable loans. Providing more information to prospective students to guide their choices is an excellent idea, but letting the federal government judge what works and control where the money goes is not. The soaring cost of higher education results in large part from the well-intentioned federal decision in the 1960s to make student financial aid easily available. Market forcesdisappeared from campuses and the predictable result was higher and higher tuition and less investment by states in their public universities. It's frightening to imagine all the perverse incentives that would result from federal bureaucrats creating measures to judge what constitutes an effective college education. Lowered standards to increase the graduation rate, for example, would be hard to resist if money were directly tied to that rate. Obama's new, well-intentioned program isn't designed to solve the problems createdby the earlier well-intentioned program. The nation's higher education system includes a multitude of unique institutions that serve a multitude of needs. More government control would damage, not enhance.

M Nickel's Worth Call for a vote on Mirror Pond I'm sick of hearing about Mirror Pond and ail the hand-wringing. What to do? What to do'? Dredge or restore, restore or dredge, or leave it alone'? Let's settle it once and for all time. Since ownership of the bottom of the river is not at issue, let's quit wringing our hands and get on with it. I believe it's up to the people and not the Bend City Council to make the decision as to what to do, since it's the people who are going to be paying for whatever is done. Again, since o w nership i sn't an issue, the city needs to put it on the ballot with three ways to vote. Restore, dredge, or leave it alone. Attach a levy for doing the work

(dredging as opposed to restoring

ed over 200 pieces of legislation that have become iaw in many states. (Business Week, May 2012). On its wish list: reduce corporate regulation; tighten voter ID rules; streamline, minimize environmental protections; promote gun rights. If this is a list that meets your needs, you will be relieved to know that Central Oregon's Gene Whisnant is the Oregon state chair. If ALEC does not address your idea of a just society, inform yourself and your friends, speak out and vote for what you believe in. For more information, simply type ALEC on your search bar. Janet Whitney Bend

cases, a filling will not be needed. Also, when using silver products on cavities once the infection is under control, the fillings can last longer. Silver also works well on elderly people who have atendency to get root cavities, which are almost impossible to fill. A downside of using silver products is it can turn the cavity dark. Fixing a cavity in the presence of an out-of-control dental infection is like calling the carpenters when your house is on fire. R. Mike Shirfciiff Redmond

Silver used in treating cavities

A recent article written by Bulletin writer David Jasper (Old Boat, Great Float) has prompted me to discuss another side to the story. We live on the Big Deschutes River about two miles above the Harper Bridge and enjoy watching the myriad boats, tubes, air mattresses, etc., floating down the river and people having a great time. Unfortunately, along comes the beer cans, pop cans, plastic bottles, plastic sacks and other garbage also floating down the river. I wish I could say this sad spectacle was incidental, but it is not. We sit on the deck observing the floaters threeto four times a week during the summer, usually for an hour or so at a time. We almost never fail to see five or six items float by that have been thrown into the river. The record so far this summer is 19 in about an hour. Multiply the short time we actually observe the garbage by more hours in the day over an entire summer and you get the picture.

the river) to the ballot so everyone is aware of what it is going to cost either way. The vote will be the deciding factor. Once a vote is taken and the levy is in place, go for it. But, for God's sake, quit wringing your hands and spending endless time and money on countless studies and indecision.

I read with great interest the article about the medical uses of silver that was published in the June 22 issue. Silverhas been used for years to treat dental cavities in many parts of the world. Silver nitrate was used in the United States until the 1950s, when it fell out of favor because of Diana Hopson improved dental anesthetics and Bend filling materials. Silver fluoride is still used in ALEC represents China, Japan, Australia, Argentina and other countries. The silver can, corporateinterests when painted on the cavity, arrest Are you aware of A L EC, the the decay by eliminating the bacteAmerican L e gislative E x change rial infection in the cavity. Council, and its impact on some of Because the out-of-controi infecour state legislators? tion called caries is raising its ugly ALEC re p r esents c o r p orate head again, especially in younger special interests. Its membership children, silver products are startconsists of multinational corpora- ing to be used again because it is tions who work with conservative a less invasive and less expensive state legislators by providing them form of treatment. The nice thing with model policies to customize about using silver is many times the legislation. cavity can be treated without havALEC is powerful, having enact- ing to give an injection and, in some

Trash in the river along with floaters

Roger Fellows Sunriver

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The need mntinues for Bend's Volunteers in Medicine clinic By Rod Ray n May 2004, Volunteers in Medicine opened its doors in Bendanotherprogressive step forward for our region. The construction and startup of the VIM clinic was funded completely by donations from the community. Since that time, more than 10,000 working but low-income, uninsured patients have received state-of-the-art, integrated and coordinated health care from volunteer physicians, nurses and staff. VIM is based on volunteer time, but it does cost money to run the clinic. Over the last decade, funding and resources necessary for running VIM have comefrom money donated by the community, donated services of local medical specialists and support from organizations like St. Charles and the Bend Memorial Clinic. We all know that our federal and state legislators and leaders are work-

t

IN MY VIEW ing to sort out how a national health care system will work, who will be eligible, and how much we can afford as a country. The transition to more broadly available medical care is just

While our leaders continue to work to find a long-term solution to national health care, I urge you to join me in continuing your support for Volunteers in Medicine — a

critical part of the progressive and amazing community we ca/I home.

beginning. In the meantime, there is a continuing critical need for financial and other support from the community for Volunteers in Medicine. At present, there are between 20,000 and 30,000 county residents who would qualify for care at VIM, and indeed, there are more than 1,500 patients at any one time. The bottom line is this: On the ground in Deschutes County, the need for health care for our uninsured working neighbors persists, and is, in fact, increasing. The VIM model works. The goal is to provide health care for those working people with income levels below 200 percent of the federal poverty level

— about $47,000 for a family of four. Since many of these folks have long been uninsured, they often have multipie medical problems and diagnoses — that are getting worse as they remain untreated. Without VIM, each medical problem must be dealt with as it becomes serious, resulting in "immediate" or "emergency" care being r equired. Many, out of desperation, end up in the emergency room where they legally must be treated. This care is often unaffordable for the working poor, and therefore puts a financial burden on

our medical system, with the medical problem(s) often much worse than if it was treated earlier. Breaking this "cycle" is the Voiunteers in Medicine core mission. The steady, integrated, and coordinated care VIM provides for patients is best for patients and families as it gets the breadwinner back to work faster, allowing them to maintain their pride, and atthe same time reduce costsfor the regional medical system — and, therefore, for us all — with an overall healthier community as the result. What's the cost? It takes $800,000 to

run VIM for one year, which equates to $419 per patient. This is for an entire year of care that includes primary and specialty medical care, prescription medication, basic dental care and mental health care, as needed. This is a lot of money to raise each year from our community. However, the annual value of this care to the community is almost $10 million due to the volunteer time and other donated services from organizations like Bend Memorial Clinic, St. Charles and many other local providers. This is a very efficient use of money but still a daunting fundraising task each

year. While our leaders continue to work to find a long-term solution to national health care, I urge you to join me in continuing your support for Volunteers in Medicine — a critical part of the progressive and amazing community we call home. — Rod Ray livesin Bend


TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013 • THE BULLETIN r

Clarno

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Carol Ann Peters, of Redmond Jan. 1, 1943 - Aug. 21, 2013 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to serve the family. 541-548-3219. Please sign our guest book www.redmondmemorial.com

Services: Grave side service Thursday August 29, 2013 at 1:00 PM at Redmond Memorial Cemetery A celebration of life for Carol will follow and will be held at the home of her granddaughter, Athena, located at 610 Green Forest Circle, Redmond. Contributions may be made to:

Hospice of Redmond 732 SW 23rd, Redmond, Oregon 97756 or a charity of ones choice in Carol Peters name.

Lori Ann Nelson, of Redmond May1,1973- Aug. 24,2013 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our online guestbook www.redmondmemorial.com Services: Family Memorial at LDS Church in Redmond, OR, Tuesday Evening August 27, 2013. Contributions may be made to:

NAMI Oregon, 4701 SE 24th Ave., Ste. E, Portland, OR 97202-4783

Harvey Grant Acree, formerly of Bend June 17, 1938 - Aug. 20, 2013 Services: No services will be held. Contributions may be made to: American Heart Association, PO Box 742030, Los Angeles, CA 90074-2030

Lucille M. Endicott, of La Pine Dec. 22, 1925 - Aug. 22, 2013 Services: No services at this time. A memorial will be held at a future date.

Marcia Jean Mackey, of Redmond Jan. 14, 1917 - Aug. 24, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services are planned at this time.

Ellis Leonard Jones, Jr., of Bend Nov. 27, 1922 - Aug. 23, 2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, (541)382-5592; www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com

Services: 3:00 PM, August 28, 2013, The Summit, 'l27 SE Wilson Avenue, Bend, OR 97701. Private Interment will be at Willamette National Cemetery, Portland with Military Honors. Contributions may be made to:

Veterans of Foreign Wars No. 1643, 1503 4th St., Bend, OR 97701.

Carol Ann Peters Jan. 1, 1943 - Aug. 21, 2013 Carol Ann Peters, 70 yrs, peacefully passed away in her sleep in her home in Redmond, Oregon, on August 21, 2013. A devoted w i fe, m other, a nd g r a n dmother, C a r o l was born i n N e w J e r sey, r aised her f a m ily i n C a l i fornia, and called Central Oregon home for th e past 31 years. D edicating h e r l i f e to h elping others, Carol b e g an w o r k in g f o r C e n t r a l Oregon D i s t r ic t H o s p ital shortly after moving to the area in 1982. For 26 years, Carol touched the lives of countless patients and staff m embers as a L P N . H e r p assion for c aring of o t h e rs and fo r n u r sm g w e r e surpassed only by her love for family. Carol i s p r e c e de d i n d eath b y h er h us b a n d , A llen o f 35 yea r s ; a n d d aughter, Lind a . Sh e l eaves beh i nd th r ee daughters, Debra, T a mra, Donna; six g r andchildren, D onald, D e r r ek , D e v i n , Athena, Nickie, Jacob; 12 great-grandchildren. Services for Carol will be held Thursday, August 29, 2013, at 1:00 p.m., at Redmond Memorial Cemetery. A c elebration o f l i f e f o r C arol will f o l low an d w i l l be held at the home of her g randdaughter, A th e n a , l ocated a t 6 10 Gr ee n Forest Circle, Redmond. R edmond M em or i a l C hapel i s p r i v i l eged t o have Carol Peters and her family in ou r c a re. Please sign o u r gu e s t b oo k at www.redmondmemorial.com.

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They maybesubmitted 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. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.

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DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld: Julie Harris, 87: A luminous stage actress who appeared in 30 Broadway plays and was nominated 10 times for Tony awards, winning five. However much she may have welcomed the money that television and movies provided over the years, Harris remained devoted to the theater. Harold Clurman, who directed Harris in four Broadway plays, likened her to "a nun whose church is the stage." Died Saturday at her home in West Chatham, Mass. Sheila Walsh, 83: One of the most reliable characters in the California capital of S acramento, Walsh was a lobbyist and a nun who wanted social justice for people living at the m argins. Better k n ow n a s Sister Sheila, the woman who scurried around the Capitol in Birkenstock sandals, knew everybody by name and lobbied relentlessly for the rights of the needy. Died of a heart attack Aug. 15 at Mercy General Hospital in Sacramento.

FEATURED OBITUARY

Louisa Jo Killen, 79: An English folk singer known for most of his life as Louis Killen was a bawdy, bearded pioneer of the 1950s British folk revival, a member of the Clancy Brothers and a soloist admired for giving voice to forgotten miners and sailors in traditional ballads. In 2010, when he was 76, Killen surprised his fans and many of his friends by resolving to give voice to another sort of lost life. He began living

openly as a woman, performing in women's clothing and a wig. In 2012, he underwent a sex-change operation. Died Aug. 9 at her home in Gateshead, England, from a recurrence of a cancer diagnosed six years ago. William Kieschnick, 90: A chemical engineer who in the 1980s led the Atlantic Richfield oil company and used his executive skills to help s tabilize the f l edgling M u seum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles. Died Aug. 21 in Napa, Calif., his home since 1990. — From wire reports

The Associated Press file photo

Muriel Siebert, seen on the trading floor of her discount brokerage and underwriting firm in New York in 1995, started as a trainee on Wall Street and became the first woman to own a seat on the New York Stock Exchange. She died Saturday of complications from cancer at age 80.

Siebert was 1stwoman to buya seaton NYSE By Laurence Arnold Bloomberg News

Muriel Siebert, whose success as one of Wall Street's early, influential female analysts earned her the contacts and nest egg to become the first woman to buy a s e at on the New York Stock Exchange, has died. She was 80. She died Saturday at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center i n M a n h attan, according t o a sta t ement from Siebert Financial Corp., which she founded and led. The cause was complications from cancer. In paying $445,000 for one of the NYSE's 1,366 memberships on Dec. 28, 1967, "Mickie" Siebert broke up the allmale bastion of the Big Board, which until then had permitted women on th e t r ading floor only as clerks and pages to fill shortages during World War II and the Korean War. The lack o f e n t husiasm for welcoming a female colleague was evident, Siebert said, in her search for the two sponsors she needed under membership rules. After several rejections, she got James O'Brien, a partner at Salomon Brothers 8 Hutzler, and Kenneth Ward, a partner at Hayden Stone & Co., to back her. Much of the opposition was couched as kindness. "There was all manner of concern for my delicateears — with several articles postulating that a woman couldn't

handle the rough language of Wall Street — and many comments about the absence of a ladies' room on the Stock Exchange floor," Siebert recalled in her 2002 memoir, "Changing the Rules: Adventures of a Wall Street Maverick," written with Aimee Lee Ball. "Not since I was a baby had so many people been so interested in my bathroom habits," she wrote. Siebert's revolution was at least partly symbolic, since s he did most of h e r w o r k away from the floor, researching companies and advising clients of her sole-proprietor firm. Her stock-exchange membership meant that she could, when she desired, handle the actual buying and selling of securities, giving her a larger share of commissions. Siebert was the only wom-

an of the 62 traders, brokers and investors profiled by Martin Mayer and photographed by Cornell Capa for the 1969 book, "New Breed on Wall Street," subtitled, "The young men who make the money

go. In 1975, when the Securities and Exchange Commission moved Wall Street from fixed commissions t o n e gotiated ones, Siebert retooled Muriel Siebert 8 Co. into a discount brokerage, cutting her rate in half for individual investors. She went on toserve five years as New York State's first female superintendent of banks. Following an unsuccessful bid for the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate in 1982, she returned to her brokerage, which she took public in 1996 under the holding company Siebert Financial. The brokerage offered clients the option to trade online, and for two brief periods in 1999, as I nternet-related stocks soared, her 90-percentplus ownership stake made her, on paper, a billionaire. Within months, some $700 million of that disappeared. Siebert, who had seen similar bubbles burst before, said she hadn't let her hopes ride with the share prices. "The d ay-traders g i veth and the day-traders taketh away," she said in a November 1999 interview. Of h er paper billion, she added, "At least I didn't write a check for that amount." Siebert was born Sept. 12, 1932, in Cleveland, the daughter of Irwin Siebert, a dentist, and th e f o r mer M a r garet Roseman. In her memoir, she wrote that she left home for the first time in 1953 for a summer trip to New York City with tw o friends and "a busload of other gawking tourists." During a guided tour of the NYSE, she remembered looking d own from the visitor's gallery at a "sea ofmen in dark suits." Siebert never married. Starting in 1999, she developed and promoted an academic curriculum t o t e ach personal-finance skills to high school students. "Do not be afraid to go into uncharted territories," she told Wagner College graduates at their commencement. "You might find some pretty good things there."

Continued from B1 And she said, "We just won't tell anybody ... it was always a joke, but it worked fine and it worked well. I loved working for Bev." Clarno gained a reputation as the taxpayer's protector. She wanted oversight on how dollars were being spent and she wanted state agencies to run more efficiently. She spent eight years in the Oregon House and later ran unsuccessfully for state treasurer. She took a fouryear break and came back to the Senate, where she served until being appointed by the Bush administration to serve for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. On a r e c ent m o r ning, she was heading to breakfast with her husband near their home in Eagle Crest. It's clear th e 7 7-year-old hasn't slowed down. She checked off a handful of organizations she volunteers for and boards she sits on. She helps young students with their college applications, and she's active on the Redmond Chamber of Commerce b o ard . S h e 's researching her family history and spending a lot of time in Clarno, Ore., at the h istoric Grange Hall s h e bought with her husband. Oh, and there'sher consulting business through which she advises those setting out to run for office. She's keeping a careful eye on the so-called "grand b argain" t h a t c o u l d b e struck between raising taxes and slashing state pension benefits. The governor will decide soon whether to call lawmakers back into a special session to hash out a deal to raise more state revenue by making changes to the public pension system and raising taxes. "I'm worried about them raising t axes," sh e s a i d. "Too many business people I've known have downsized and I worry we're never go-

Find It All Online bendbulletin.Com

My only regret is

I couldn't change more things, but I

don't regret serving." — Former Oregon House Rep. Bev Clarno

ing to have a strong econo-

my in Oregon." S he's talked t o H o u se R epublican L eader M i k e McLane, she said. "I've told Mike McLane to hold strong and not vote for taxes. He's an up-and-coming leader in our state." But, she said, controlling a caucus is sometimes akin to "herding cats." "All the Democrats need is one or two Republicans that go sideways, and then you have a tax i n crease," Clarno said. McLane's current chief of staff, Shawn Cleave, worked for Clarno a decade ago In 2003,the Senate membership wa s s p li t 1 5 -15. There were tense moments. At the end of the day, she would call her staff into her office, pour them a d r i nk and say, " How do we f i x this?" he said. Clarno's priority was often building trust with other l awmakers. T h at's w h a t

produced good policy. "Building strong relationships and trust with people, regardless of party, that's what I really learned from her," Cleave said. These days, Clarno is enjoying some more f amily time, if not more down time. She misses politics and still says "never say never" when it comes to the possibility of

running again. And she's still working on her memoir, titled "Pigs to Politics." "My o nl y r e g ret i s I couldn't cha n g e more things, but I d o n't r egret serving," she s a id. "And what I tell people is don't be so critical of our politicians; they are trying hard to do their best, and if you don't like it, run for office yourself." — Reporter, 541-554-1162 Idalze@bendbultetin.com

E LEVATIO N Klevation Capital Strategies 775 SW BonnetWay Suite 120 Bend Main: 541-728-0321 www.elevationcapltal.blz

2013 Labor Day DEADLINES For Monday, September 2, 2013 and Tuesday, September 3, 2013 PAID OBITUARIES

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Tuesday 9/3 ........................... Friday 8/30 1 p.m. DEATH NOTICES

Sunday 9/1 .... Tuesday 9/3 ...

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B6 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013.

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CONDITIONS

FRONTS

~A L A S XA

Cold

SunsettodaY...... 7 49 P.m, Last New p i r st Full Sunrise tomorrow .. 6:24 a.m. Sunset tomorrow... 7:48 p.m. Moonrisetoday...11:30 p.m. Moonsettoday .... 1:42 p.m. Aug. 28 SePt. 5 SePt.12 Sept. 19

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 75/48 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........95m1934 Monthtodate.......... 0.39" Recordlow......... 30in1976 Average monthtodate... 0.40" Average high.............. 79 Year to date............ 3.58" Average low .............. 44 Average year to date..... 6.68" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m29.96 Record 24 hours ...0.56 in1983 *Melted liquid equivalent

FIRE INDEX

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W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow

The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as Redmond/Madras.........pxt. Prineviue.........................High a service to irrigators and sportsmen. Mod. = Moderate; Ext. = Extreme

Astoria ........66/52/0.14....70/56/sh.....68/57/sh Reservoir Acre feet C a p acity Baker City......88/40/0.00....90/49/pc.....91/52/pc To report a wildfire, call 911 Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 29,645...... 55,000 Brookings......66/52/0.00....64/54/pc.....66/56/pc Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . . 58,643..... 200,000 Burns..........84/36/0.00.....87/44/s......87/49/s Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 62,371...... 91,700 Eugene ........82/55/0.00 ....82/55/pc......82/55/c Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 12,645 . . . . 47,000 Klamath Falls .. 76/43/000 ....80/44/s ... 80/46/s The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . . 98,640..... 153,777 Lakeview.......79/36/0.00 ....81/48/s..... 82/50/s R iver flow St at i o n Cubic ft./sec La Pine.........73/44/NA.....80/40/s.....81/41/pc the need for eye and skin protection. Index is Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 216 Medford.......83/59/0.00.....88/60/s.....89/61/pc Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,450 Newport.......68/50/0.01 .....64/54/c......63/54/c Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ...... . 140 LOW MEDIUM North Bend......77/52/NA.....69/56/c.....69/58/pc Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 272 Ontario........91/56/0.00.....94/65/s......93/66/s 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 164 Pendleton......81/50/0.00.....88/56/s.....91/57/pc Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 1,939 Portland .......80/62/0.00....81/59/pc......80/59/c Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res..... . . . . . NA Prineville.......76/48/0.00.....84/52/s.....84/53/pc Crooked RiverBelow Prinevige Res..... . . . . 218 Redmond.......77/50/0.00.....84/48/s.....85/53/pc Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 5.56 Roseburg.......84/57/0.00.....84/59/s.....84/61lpc Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 272 Salem ....... 82/58/0 00 .83/58/pc ... 82/57/c Sisters.........73/46/0.02....80/47/pc.....82/48/pc Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM The DaRes......82/57/000.....87/61/s.....87/64/pc or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

6

Ice

Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......97/72/0 00...94/72/t. 96/74lpc GrandIlapids....84/68/0.00..90/72/pc. 88/65/pc RapidCity.......98/65/000..90/68/pc. 89/67/pc Savannah .......85/68/0 00...86/70/s. 91/70/pc Akron ..........86/63/0.00...87/70/t...81/65/t GreenBay.......89/67/0.28..89/67lpc. 86/64/pc Reno...........86/57/0.00...90/60/s.. 90/61/s Seattle..........76/61/0.01..75/59/sh. 76/58/sh Albany..........78/65/0.03..85/64/pc...84/65/t Greensboro......83/56/0.00..90/68/pc...86/70/t Richmond.......85/57/000 ..92/71/pc...88/70/t SiouxFalls.......91/75/000... 96/71/s. 92/70/pc Albuquerque.....87/67/0.03..88/65/pc. 89/65/pc Harnsburg.......86/62/0.00...88/68/t...87/68/t RochesterNY....79/64/043 ..84/69/pc...83/65/t Spokane........80/55/002 ..85/58/pc. 89/59/pc Anchorage ......65/47/0 00...62/50/c...57/48/r Hartford,CT.....77/67/0 04..86768/pc...84/67lt Sacramento......88/60/000...93/63/s .. 94/63/s Springfield, MO ..91/70/000...91/68/s .. 92/70/s Atlanta .........82/62/000...85/68/s.. 88/69/s Helena..........92/54/000...90/58/s. 89/58/pc St.Louis.........97/69/0.00..97/75/pc. 99/74/pc Tampa..........90/75/0.05... 91/73/t...91/74/t Atlantic City .....85/61/0.00... 84/72/t...83/72/t Honolulu........88/77/0.00...87/72/s...86/70/t Salt Lake City....89/68/000... 88/71/t. 94/73/pc Tucson.........100/74/002 ..100/76/s.97/75/pc Austin..........95/73/0.00..95/75/pc.. 98/75/s Houston ........89/74/0.59..94776/pc.95/75/pc SanAntonio....100/75/001... 94/75/t. 98/74/pc Tulsa...........94/73/000...94771ls. 96/73/pc Baltimore .......89/61/000...8572/t...89/70/t Huntsville.......87/63/0 00 ..90/64/pc. 91/69/pc SanDiego...... 79/69/trace..82/71/pc .. 81/71/s Washington,DC..90/64/000 ..89/73/pc...89/72/t Bigings.........94/65/0.00..97/63/pc...92/62/t Indianapolis.....90/64/0.00..92/73/pc.93/70/pc SanFrancisco....70/60/000..72/59/pc. 73/60/pc Wichita.........93/72/000...94/73/s. 94/73/pc Birmingham .. 85/65/0.00 ..89/66/pc. 91/66/pc Jackson,MS.... 90/71/0.00. 93/66/pc 94/68/pc SanJose........77/64/000,,79/6upc 79/61/pc Yakima.........81/52/013. 85/56/s. 88/64/pc Bismarck........97/65/001 ..94/65/pc. 92/66/pc Jacksonvile......86/71/014..87/69lpc. 90/71/pc SantaFe........87/59/004..80/56/pc. 81/56/pc Yuma.......... 97/75/trace 104/80/pc104/83/pc Boise...........93/61/000..91/61/pc.. 90/62/s Juneau..........65/52/006...64/51/c .. 62/49/c INTERNATIONAL Boston..........84/67/0.01 ..80/68/pc...80/68/t KansasCity......94/71/0.00...96/71/s .. 97/73/s BndgeportCT....80/71/001 ... 84/68/t...84/66/t Lansing.........85/68/0 00..92/72/pc. 87/65/pc Amsterdam......73/59/000 ..79/59/pc 73/54/pc Mecca.........104/84/000 104/83/5. 105/83/s Buffalo.........77/70/070... 83/70/t...83/66/t LasVegas.......76/71/006 ..91/78/pc. 95/79/pc Athens..........91/75/0.00...93/74/s .. 93/74/s Mexico City .....73/57/000... 67/53/t 72/50/t Burlington, VT....74/64/000 ..84/65/pc...82/62/t Lexington.......88/66/0 00 ..89/70/pc. 89/72/pc Auckland........59/46/000..60/47/pc. 59/42/sh Montreal........75/63/000..81/64/pc.81/64/sh Caribou,ME.....70/56/001..77/59/pc. 78/60lsh Lincoln..........97/73/000 ..98/72/pc .. 98/71/s Baghdad.......104/78/0.00 ..109/90/s. 110/89/s Moscow........68/50/0.00... 69/46/s .. 67/54/s Charleston, SC...86/68/0.00...86/70/s.89/70/pc Little Rock.......92/72/0.00...94/72/s.. 96/74/s Bangkok........91/79/0.00... 90/75/t...92/75/t Nairobi.........77/50/0.0075/52/pc .. .. 71/53/c Charlotte........84/55/000...88/66/s.88/71/pc LosAngeles......78/62/0.00 ..80766/pc.. 78/66/s Beiyng..........93/68/000... 91/68/c. 93/64/pc Nassau.........84/73/000... 88/78/t. 85/80/pc Chattanooga.....86/65/000 ..89/66/pc. 92/70/pc Louisvile........90/71/0.00..93/74/pc...94/75/t Beirut..........88/79/000...85/76/s .. 88/76/s New Delhi.......91/81/000 ..98/85/pc. 97/80/pc Cheyenne.......90/58/013..89/60/pc.. 87/59/s Madison WI.....90/71/000..93/74/pc. 85/65/pc Berlin...........72/54/000 ..78/55/pc. 76756/pc Osaka..........84/72/000 ..86/75/pc. 86/78/sh Chicago...... 92/70/000 ..92/76/pc. 86/71/pc Memphis....... 91/73/0 0095/74/pc96/77/pc Bogota .........64/46/0.00...63/48/t...65/46lt Oslo............70/43/0.00 .. 70/51/pc.. 72/48/c Cincinnati.......90/61/0.00... 90/69/t...93/72/t Miami..........86/75/0.00... 87/78/t. 87/80/pc Budapest........68/59/000... 76/53/t.83/6ush Ottawa.........77/64/000..84/68/pc. 82/59/sh Cleveland.......87/68/0.00... 86/72/t. 84/70/pc Milwaukee......90/68/0.00 ..89/72/pc .. 78/69/s BuenosAires.....50/28/000 ..56/4upc.. 66/46/s Paris............73/52/000..77/56/pc. 77/56/pc ColoradoSpnngs.87/58/000..89/62/pc. 86/61/pc Minneapolis.....97/80/0.00 ..96/71/pc. 93/72/pc CaboSanLucas ..90/75/000... 86/79/t...84/stlt Riode Janeiro....75/68/000 ..73/62/sh...67/59/t Columbia, MO...95/677000...95/69/s .. 98/74/s Nashvige........89/65/0.00..91/70/pc. 92/72/pc Cairo...........90/73/000.. 94/67/s .. 98/70/s Rome...........82/70/0.00... 83/73/t.. 82/68/t Columbia,SC....86/56/000...88/67/s. 90/72/pc New Orleans.....86/75/0.06..90/75/pc. 90/75/pc Calgary.........79/54/000..77/52/pc .. 77/52/s Santiago........66/30/000...62/60/s .. 70/62/s Columbus, GA....85/65/0.00... 87/67/s .. 89/67/s New York.......84/68/0.00... 87/72/t...80/71/t Cancun.........88/73/035... 87/77/t...87/78/t Sao Paulo.......75/59/000..57/53/sh. 57/51/sh Columbus, OH....90/63/0.00... 89/72/t...91/70/t Newark, Nl......86/67/0.00... 88/71/t...86/69/t Dublin..........64/46/000..69/49/sh .. 67/57/c Sapporo ........72/66/000 ..76/65lsh. 79/67/pc Concord,NH.....78/60/006..84/63/pc.82/63/pc Norfolk,VA......82/58/000..92/7upc...89/71/t Edinburgh.......70/50/000 ..65/54/sh.. 65/52/c Seoul...........88/72/000 ..86/63/pc. 83/65/sh Corpus Christi....96/77/020... 86/77/t. 86/76/pc Oklahoma City...94/71/0.00 ..95774/pc.. 96/74/s Geneva.........72/48/0.00...66/52/t. 67/50/sh Shanghai........82/79/0.00..87/80/pc. 91/73/sh DallasFtWorth...98/7$/000 ..96/77/pc100/78/pc Omaha.........97/74/000 ..99/74/pc.. 97/75/s Harare..........75/48/000... 75/44/s .. 75/48/s Singapore.......86/81/000... 88/79/t...88/78/t Dayton .........89/65/000... 89/71/t...91/71/t Orlando.........88/75/044..91/74/pc...92/76/t HongKong......88/81/0.00... 86/77/t...86/78/t Stockholm.......73/45/0.00 ..73/51/pc. 72/53/pc Denver....... 92/59/006 ..91/62/pc.91/62/pc PalmSprings.... 84/76/0.04 104/79/pc107/83/pc Istanbul.........90/73/0.00...84/73/s .. 83/72/s Sydney..........68/54/0.00 ..68/50/pc. 77/54/sh Des Moines......99/73/000 102/73/pc. 98/73/pc Peoria..........93/66/0.00..97/74/pc.. 94/70ls lerusalem.......85/67/0.01...86/69/s .. 91/71/s Taipei...........95/79/0.00..88/77/pc.. 86/79/s Detroit..........89/67/0.00... 88/74/t. 86/68/pc Philadelphia.....86/65/0.00... 89/73/t...87/72/t Johannesburg....69/48/0.00... 70/48ls .. 72/53/s Tel Aviv.........88/77/0.00... 92/70/s .. 95/7us Duluth..........94/70/006... 85/65/t .. 85/64/s Phoenix....... 100/81/trace107/86/pc106/84/pc Lima...........63/59/0 00.. 72/61lpc.. 73/61/s Tokyo...........84/75/0 00.. 87/73/pc. 85/78/pc El Paso..........94/72/0.00 ..90/72/pc. 89/72/pc Pittsburgh.......85/63/0.00...85/71/t...81/66/t Lisbon..........82/61/000.. 88/64/s 83/63/s Toronto.........77/70/000 86/70/sh 86/63/sh Fairbanks........66/39/000...67/43/s...61/46/r Portland,ME.....82/62/024..80/63/pc. 73/63/pc London,,,...,,,77/59/000,. 77/5upc, 74/54/pc Vancouver.......72/59/000 ..6I61/sh. 69/63/sh Fargo...........95/69/000..95/67/pc...93/68/t Providence......81/66/000...82/66lc...81/67/t Madrid .........88/64/000 ..87/68/pc. 87/60/pc Vienna..........63/57/000... 75/56/t. 78/57/sh Flagstaff........69/56/0.39... 74/53/t...75/56/t Raleigh.........83/55/0.00..91/69/pc...90/7ut Manila..........82/77/0.00... 93/79/t...89/77/t Warsaw.........66/50/0.0075/56/pc. .. 74/56/sh

i

WATER REPORT

Y esterday Tuesday W e d . Bend, westof Hwy 97....High Sisters.............................High Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend,eastofHwy.97.....High LaPine..............................High

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

sea>le

(in the 48 contiguous states):

Sunrisetoday......623a.m. MOOn phaSeS

TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....6:41 a.m...... 8:04 p.m. Venus......9:48 a.m...... 9:10 p.m. Mars.......3:17 a.m...... 6:18 p.m. Jupiter......1:57 a.m...... 5;13 p.m. Satum.....ll;41 a.m.....10:13 p.m. Uranus.....9:01 p.m......9:41 a.m.

Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation, s-sun,pc-partial clouds,c-clouds,h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, snsnow, i-ice, rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace

o www m 9/ancouver

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

PLANET WATCH

LOW0

Burns

~

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

Yesterday's extremes

77 49

IPOLLEN COUNT

• 91o

92/54

80/51

Chiloquin

Ash l and

' eusa

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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 Te n nis, C2 Sports in brief, C2 MLB, C3

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST27, 2013

GOLF

TENNIS

James Blake

Blake to retire

after U.S. Open NEW YORK — James Blake rested his white baseball hat on the table at the front of the U.S. Open's main interview

room,smiled,andbegan speaking Mondayabout his impending retirement from tennis. The former top-five

player was relaxed, composed andmatterof-fact.

Redmond golfer qualifies for the U.S. Mid-Amateur By Zack Hall

spot against Jay Poletiek, of Portland, and Jason Goldsworthy, of Okotoks, SISTERS — Tim Sundseth says that Alberta. jumpy nerves are a natural byproduct Then on a cool, cloudy afternoon of not playing enough golf. on the par-4 f i rst h ole a t A s p en /(g / Lakes Golf Course, Sundseth calmly Well, if the Central Oregon native was nervous during a sudden-death drained a 12-foot birdie putt on the first playoff hole to punch his ticket to playoff Monday at a U.S. Mid-Amateur Championship qualifier, it cer- the Mid-Am, scheduled for Oct. 5-10 tainly did not look like it. at the Country Club of Birmingham Sundseth, a 3 0 -year-old f ormer in Alabama. Redmond High School golf stand"That was a surprise," Sundseth, out, shot an even-par 72 to end one who now lives in Corvallis, stated Joe Kline/The Bulletin simply of his run in the playoff. "I just Tim Sundseth drives on the first hole during a sudden death playoff in the qualifystroke behind medalist Tim Tucker, ing round for the U.S. Mid-Amateur Championship on Monday at Aspen Lakes Golf of Coos Bay, and enter into a three- felt like I had nothing to lose." way playoff for the final qualifying SeeMid-Amateur/C4 Course in Sisters. The Bulletin

1/'

"No real surprise here. This is my last tournament," the 33-year-old

American said onDay1

PREP BOYS SOCCER:SEASON PREVIEW

of the year's last Grand Slam. "I have had14

pretty darn goodyears on tour, lovedevery min-

Members of the Sisters boys soccer team warm up together during practice at Sisters High School last week. The Outlaws look to make a Class 4A state playoff run in 2013.

ute of it, and I definitely couldn't have asked for a better career." As Blake continued with his opening state-

ment, discussing why he decided to leave the tour after the U.S. Open, he explained: "There

are so manyathletes that say they can never replace that feeling of having thatadrenaline rush, but I get more of

Ryan Brennecke/ The Bulletin

an adrenaline rush now seeing my daughter wake up in the morning. That's something that I'm truly looking forward to — being able to spend more time with my wife and daughter." Blake, who attended Harvard before turning pro in1999, reached

il

I

a career-high ranking of No.4in 2006. He is currently100th and has a 9-13 record this season heading into his first-round match in the U.S. Open against Ivo Karlovic. Blake joined Andy Roddickand twins Bob and Mike Bryan to help the United States beat Russia in the 2007 Davis Cup final in Portland, giv-

ing the Americans their first title in that international competition in 12

years, their country's longest gap between

Sisters, at aglance

victories.

Head coach:Ron Jensen (seventh season)

"My proudest mo-

ment was Portland, without a doubt," Blake sald.

He won 10singles titles, most recently in 2007. At Grand Slam tournaments, he reached the quarterfinals three

times, including twice at the U.S. Open. — The Associated Press

2012 record:12-3 overall, 8-0

Sky-Em (first); lost in first round of Class 4A state playoffs

• Sisters returns a strong boyssoccerteam after falling early in the playoffs last season By Mark Morical The Bulletin

After a disappointing finish to the 2012 boys soccer season, Sisters is ready to make a state championship run in 2013. The Outlaws fell to Ontario 2-1 in overtime in the first round of the Class 4A playoffs last year after star midfielder Jake McAllister received two yellow

cards and Sisterswas forced to play most of the second half without him. McAllister, now a senior, and Evan Rickards, a senior forward, are back to lead the Outlaws this season. "I think we were just as good as a lot of the teams that went farther," says Sisters coach Rob Jensen. "We had some good possibility there, but that's how the ball bounces sometimes."

But Jensen says this year's side is shooting for a state championship appearance. The return of McAllister and Rickards, who combined for 28 goals last season, make that a realistic goal. McAllister was a f i rst team all-state player last season and th e S ky-Em League player of the year, while Rickards made the all-state second team. SeeOutlaws /C4

Outlook:The Outlaws return two all-state players in midfielder Jake McAllister and forward Evan Rickards. After a disappointing finish to the 2012 season, Sisters has its eyes on a state championship run in 2013.

Inside For capsules onevery Central Oregon boys soccer team, seeC4.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL Serena Williams pumps her fist after winning a point against Francesca Schiavone during the first round of the U.S. Open on Monday.

Serena cruises to first-roundwin The No. 1-ranked

player beats Francesca Schiavone 6-0, 6-1 at the U.S. Open,C2

MLB

Rangers beat Mariners 8-3 Seattle's woes continue as it falls to division rival

Texas,C3

uruo t e on sna • Colleges are offering scholarships to those who can accurately hike the ball a longdistance By Scott Cacciola

New York Times News Service

AUBURN, Mass. — Chris Rubio was dissecting the art of long snapping for the benefit of 23 teenagers and their parents on an unseasonably cool morning last month. He used words like "balance" and "extension" as he dabbled in the minutiae of a craft that he considers a science. "What's he going to do after this'?"

I I

I r

f~i. $+

Rubio asked his audience as one of his campersdemonstrated the proper technique for hiking a football be-

tween his legs at an alarmingly high rate of speed. "He's going to sit down on the toilet. There it is. Oh, this is

gorgeous."

Mannion will start at QB for Qregon State The Associated Press

Rubio, 38, who has a goatee and the stocky build of a steamer trunk, is one of the country's foremost instructors of an unusual skill. He spends a good chunk of the year traveling the country to stage clinics like this one at Auburn High School, just outside of Worcester, Mass., where he

preached the gospel of long snapping to young players whose abilities are being valuedby college coaches now more than ever.

SeeLong snap/C4

.:=:.=. 8$L

,=: -

ComingThursday • The Bulletin is putting outa 2013 football preview in this Thursday's edition. The guide will

break down college, including previews for the University

of Oregon andOregon State University squads, aswell as schedules andpreviews for the NFL. Ready for some football?

CORVALLIS — Oregon State football coach Mike Riley has named Sean Mannion the starting q uarterback for the No. 25 Beavers ahead of their season opener Saturday against Eastern Washington. The announcement Mon- Mannion day was the culmination of the preseason camp competition between Mannion and Cody Vaz,who both played at quarterback for the Beavers last season. See Mannion/C4


C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY Time 8 a.m. 10 a.m. 4 p.m.

TENNIS U.S. Open, first round U.S. Open, first round

U.S. Open, first round

Tennis ESPN2 ESPN2

SOCCER

UEFAChampions League, Arsenal FC vs. Fenerbahce SK

11:30 a.m. Fox Sportsq

BASEBALL MLB, Texas at Seattle

7 p.m.

Root

Time 8 a.m.

TV/Radio Tennis

WEDNESDAY TENNIS

U.S. Open,early rounds U.S. Open,early rounds U.S. Open,early rounds

COREBOARD

TV/Radio

10 a.m. 4 p.m.

ESPN2 ESPN2

SOCCER

Champions League, playoff round, AC Milan vs. PSV Eindhoven BASEBALL MLB, Texas at Seattle MLB, Baltimore at Boston YACHTING

11:30a.m. Fox Sports1

4 p.m.

Root ESPN

America's Cup, Race11and12

2 p.m.

NBCSN

12:30 p.m.

ON DECK Friday Football: Pendletonat Bend,7 p.mzRedmond at SweetHome,7 p.m.; Summit at NorthEugene,7 p.m.; Lebanon at Mountain View,7 p.m.; Bakerat Ridgeview,7p.m.;CrookCounty atHenley, 7p.m.; Madras atStayton, 7p.mzMcLoughlin atSisters,7 p.mzCulveratNorth Douglas, 7p.m. Volleyball: l.ong Creek/Ukiahat Trinity l.utheran,

MingWangfor assignment. National League

IN THE BLEAcHERs

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS— Activated CMiguel Monteroand 3BEric Chavezfromthe 15-day DL. Optioned 3BMatt Davidson andCTufty Gosewisch to

in the Breachers © 2013 steve Moore. Dist. uy Universal Uciick www.gocomrcs comnnttleuleachers

Reno(PCL).

ATLANTABRAVES Sent 2B Dan UgglatoGwin-

nett (IL)forarehabassignment. MIAMIMARLINS—OptionedINFGil Velazquezto NewOreans(PCL).

PHILADEL PHIA PHILLIES — PlacedOF Casper Wells onthe15-day DL Selectedthecontract of INF/ OF Pete Orrfrom LehighValley(IL). Transferred)B RyanHowardto the60-day DL. SAN DI EGO PADRES— Recaled OFReymond FuentesandRHPAnthonyBass fromTucson (PCL). Opti onedOFJaff DeckerandRHPBradBrachtoTuc-

4:15 p.m. Saturday Volleyball: Culverat Warrenton tournament, TBA Girls soccer:Sandyat Summit, noon

GOLF

son.

Local U.S. MID-AMCHAMPIONSHIPQUALIFIER 1B-Hole StrokePlay Aug. 26

at par-72 AspenLakesGolf Course Qualifers CoosBay 71 L Tim Tucke r * 2(tie),TimSundseth Redmond 72 Alternates 72 2 (tie), Jay Poletie k P o rtland 2 (tie), Jason Goldsworthy Okotoks, Alberta 72 Locals 76 16 (tie),JamesChrisman Bend 24, Tyral Petersen R e dmond 79 26 (tie), Roger Ei c hhom Bend 84 * Wonplayoff

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

SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL

the past two months, adding to the departures of first baseman

Big nameS CIit in NFL

Yozzen Cuesta, andpitchers

— Donte' Stallworth's NFL comeback from a hot air bal-

Misael Siveiro and Odrisamer

Despaigne.

loon accident might haveended Monday when hewas released by the Washington Redskins. Stallvvorth could catch on with another team, especially with so

many injuries at wide receiver throughout the leagueduring

BASKETBALL MCGrady retiring fram

NBA —Tracy MCGradysays he is retiring from theNBA.The

the preseason. But, for novv, the 32-year-old veteran of 10 NFL

seven-time All-Star announced his decision on ESPNand Twitter

seasonsisunemployed.Also

on Mondaymorning.MCGrady

cut Mondayas NFL teams reduced their rosters — they must

spent16seasons inthe NBA

be down to 75 today —were receiver Braylon Edwardsand running back-kick returner Joe MCKnight by the Jets; receiver Derek Hagan and fullback

Spencer Larsen byTampa Bay; linebacker andspecial teams ace Niko Koutouvides by New

England; and receiver Jordan Norwood by Cleveland.

BASEBALL MetS aCe haS torn ligament —Matt Harvey has a

partially torn ligament in his right elbow, a potentially devastating injury for the pitcher that had given the foundering New

York Mets reason to behopeful about its future. For novv, the 24-year-old Harvey and the Mets hope that he will be able to

avoid reconstructive surgery on the ulnar collateral ligament. A full prognosis will not be made

until swelling in the elbow goes down in about two weeks. The

playing for the Raptors, Magic, Rockets, Knicks, Pistons and Hawks. He finished his career last

his start Saturday against the Detroit Tigers, when he allowed a career-high13 hits.

Cuban first baseman

(30), Latvia,3-6,6-3,1-6,7-6(4),6-4. Ivan DodigCroati , a, def. FemandoVerdasco (27),

lia, 7-5,6-3, 6-2.

averaged19.6 points, 5.6 rebounds and4.4 assists per game

TommyRobredo()9), Spain,def.MarinkoMatosevic, Australia,6-3, 6-7(6), 6-3,6-2. Dudi Sela,Israel,def.AndreyKuznetsov, Russia, 7-6 (2),6-3,6-7 (2),5-7, 6-4. Vasek Pospisil, Canada,leadsRogerio Dutra Silva, Brazil, 6-4,6-3, 6-7(9), 0-4,susp., rain. SantiagoGiraldo,Coombia, eadsCarlos Berlocq, Argentina, 3-6, 6-3, 7-6(6), 2-1,susp., rain. Women First Round CarlaSuarezNavarro (16), Spain,def. LaurenDavis, UnitedStates,6-0,6-0. Li Na (5), China,def.OlgaGovortsova, Belarus, 6-2, 6-2. Maria-TeresaTorro-Flor, Spain,def Marina Erakovic,NewZealand,6-0, 6-4. AgnieszkaRadwanska (3), Poland, def. Silvia Soler-Espinosa, Spain,6-L 6-2. LauraRobson(30), Britain, def.LourdesDominguezl.ino,Spain,7-5,6-0. CoCoVandeweghe, United States,def. Aleksandra Krunic,Serbia,6-4,7-6(5). Sofia Arvidsson,Sweden, def. PetraCetkovska, CzechRepublic,1-6, 6-4, 6-1. VenusWifflams, UnitedStates, def. KirstenFlipkens(12),Belgium,6-1, 6-2. Patricia Mayr-Achleitner,Austria, def. Magdalena Rybarikova (29), Slovakia,ZL6(2), 6-3i Kaia Kanepi(25), Estonia,def. VaniaKing, United States,4-6,7-6(4), 6-1. CarolineGarcia, France,def. Shelby Rogers, United States,6-3,6-2. JamieHampton (23), UnitedStates, def. LaraArruabarrena, Spain, 6-4, 6-2. SabineLisicki (16),Germany, def.VeraDushevina, Russia,6-2, 7-6(3). AnnaSchmiedlova, Slovakia,def. StefanieVoegele, Switzerland,6-L 5-7, 7-6(4). Yaros lava Shvedova,Kazakhstan,def.Olga Puchkova,Russia6-1, 6-0. AnastasiaPavlyuchenkova(32), Russia, def.Virginie Razz ano, France, 7-5, 6-0. Urszula Radw anska, Poand, def. Irina-Cam elia Begu,Romania, 6-1,6-3.

in a career that vvas curtailed by injuries. MCGrady said on ESPN that it's been "a great run. But it's time for it to come to an end." MCGrady didn't rule out continu-

ing his careeroverseas. Before coming to theSpurs last season, MCGradyplayed inChina.

NGAAapproves player tranSfer —Southern California has added a transfer from Maryland to its men's

basketball team under new coach Andy Enfield, giving the

Trojans three transfers for the upcomingseason.Pointguard Pe'Shon Howard received a legislative relief waiver from the NCAA that allowed him to return home to be closer to his ailing grandmother. The 6-foot-

MOTOR SPORTS Kurt BIISChjOining SteW8it-H88S — Kurt Busch said

Mondayhehassignedwith Stevvart-Haas Racing, which is

season with the addition of the 2004 NASCAR champion. The

League Baseball. Theweekly Trabajadores newspaper report-

deal vvasfirst reported by Fox Sports and ESPN. A news confer-

Cuba "illegally and silently" for

ence wasscheduled for today by SHR. Busch recently receivedan

a Caribbean nation, most likely Haiti or the Dominican Republic.

offer from SHR co-owner Haas to leave Furniture Rovv Racing. He

No further details were provided. will be teammateswith co-ovvner The 26-year-old Abreu played Tony Stewart, who is out the rest of this year with a broken leg,

World Baseball Classic in March, Danjca Patrick andKevin Harvick, fourth Cuban player to defect in

States,6-4,6-2, 6-2. Andreas Haider-Maurer,Austria,def.Ernests Gulbis

lands,7-6(5),3-6, 7-5,7-6(3). DavidFerrer(4), Spain,def. NickKyrgios, Austra-

man Jose Darjel Abreu has defected to try to play in Major

hitting .383 with three home runs and nine RBls. Abreu is the

FelicianoLopez(23), Spain, def. Forent Serra, France, 6-7(4), 6-2, 6-3,6-3. Guillaume Rufin, France, def. Jan-LennardStruff, Germany, 7-6(4), 6-3,2-6, 2-6,6-L RichardGasquet (6), France,def. MichaelRussell, UnitedStates,6-3,6-4,6-2. StephaneRobert, France, def. Albano Olivetti, France, 6-3, 6-3,6-4 BernardTomic, Australia, def.Albert Ramos, Spain, 6-3, 3-6,4-6,7-6(1), 6-3 BradleyKlahn,UnitedStates,def. KennydeSchepper, France, 6-7(5), 6-2,7-6(0),7-6(4). Mikhail KukushkinKa , zakhstan,def. AndrejMartin, Slovakia,6-4, 7-6(2), 7-5. JankoTipsarevic(16), Serbia, def. PabloCuevas, Uruguay,6-3,6-7(5), 6-3, retired. NikolayDavydenko, Russia, def. RhyneWiliams, UnitedStates,6-3,4-6, 1-6,7-5, 6-0. RafaelNadal(2), Spain,def. RyanHarrison, United

ter being drafted by Toronto out of high school jn1997, MCGrady

rapidly developing into asuperteam andwill havefour cars next

in all six games for Cuba in the

pan,6-4, 6-4,6-2. Dmitry Tursunov(32), Russia,def. AljazBedene, Slovenia,7-5,4-6,6-3, 6-0.

Spain,6-3, 7-5,1-6,4-6, 6-3. RobertoBautistaAgut, Spain,def.ThomazBeffucci, Brazil, 6-3,6-2, 6-2. Frank Dancevic,Canada,def RobinHaase,Nether-

EISfeCtS —An official Cuban newspaper says star first base-

ed Monday that Abreu departed

U.S. Open Monday At The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center New York Purse: $34.3 million (GrandSlam) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Men First Round DanielEvans,Britain, def.KelNishikori (11), Ja-

season by signing with theSan Antonio Spurs late in theyear. Af-

National League's All-Star game starter on his homefield this 3, 190-pounder started 44 of July, Harvey hasbeenexpe83 games in three seasons at riencing forearm tenderness Maryland. for some time but hecould not pinpoint exactly when it began. The discomfort increased during

Professional

who is leaving Richard Childress Racing to join SHR. — From wire reports

SoranaCirstea(19), Rom ania, def. SharonFich-

man,Canada,7-5i 5-7, 6-L

ZhengJie, China,def. Kiki Bertens, Netherlands,

6-1, 6-3. AshleighBarty,Australia, def. EstreffaCabezaCan-

dela,Spain,6-1,6-4. Paula Ormae chea, Argentina, def. Kimiko DateKrumm,Japan,6-3,t-6(7). KurumiNara,Japan, def. AlexandraCadantu, Romania,6-2,6-2. SloaneStephens(15), UnitedStates, def. Mandy Mineffa,l.uxembourg, 4-6, 6-3,7-6 (5). Kristina MladenovicFrance, , def. Anabel Medina Garrigues,Spain,6-1, 1-6,6-1. EkaterinaMakarova (24), Russia,def. PolonaHercog, Slovenia6-2,6-4. , Galin a Voskoboeva, Kazakhstan, def. Monica Nicul escu,Romania 6-4,6-3. Bethanie Mattek-Sands, UnitedStates,def. Mathilde Johansson, France,6-3,6-L Alisa Kleybano va,Russia,def. MonicaPuig, Puerto Rico, 6-4,3-6, 7-5. EugenieBouchard,Canada,def. KarolinaPliskova, CzechRepublic,4-6, 6-4, 7-5.

JelenaJankovic (9), Serbia,def.MadisonKeys, UnitedStates,6-3,6-4. AngeliqueKerber(6), Germany, def. LucieHradecka,Czech Republic,6-1,6-L SerenaWiliams (1), UnitedStates,def. Francesca Schiavone, Italy, 6-0,6-1.

"First I'll hit out, then we'll report it to the police."

U.S. OpenShowCourt Schedules Today At The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center New York All Times PDT Play begins onall courts at Ba.m. Arthur AsheStadium Petra Kvitova(7), CzechRepublic, vs. Misaki Doi, Japan Not before1p.mzCaroline Wozniacki(6), Denmark,vs. DuanYing-Ying,China RogerFederer (7), Switzerlandvs. GregaZemlja, Sovenia Night Session (4 p.m.) NovakDjokovic (1), Serbia, vs. RicardasBerankis, Lithuania DinahPfizenmaier, Germany, vs. Victoria Azarenka(2), Belarus LouisArmstrongStadium ThomasFabbiano, Italy,vs. MilosRaonic (10),Canada GuidoPeffa,Argentina, vs. SamQuerrey(26), United States OliviaRogowska,Australia, vs.SaraErrani (4), Italy Not before5p.m.: Victoria Duval, UnitedStates, vs.Sam Stosur(II), Australia Grandstand Ana Ivanovic(13),Serbia, vs.AnnaTatishvili, Georgia Julia Goerges, Germany,vs. ChristinaMcHale, United States John Isner(13), UnitedStates, vs. FilippoVolandri,

FAR WEST UtahSt.atUtah,5p.m. Monmouth(NJ)at MontanaSt., 6:05p.m.

Paolo Lorenzi, Italy, vs. TomasBerdych (5), Czech Republic Court17 VarvaraLepchenko,UnitedStates, vs.AlexandraDulgheru, Rom ania AdrianUngur,Romania, vs.Gael Monfils, France Tommy Haas (12), Germany, vs. Paul-Henri Mathieu, France SvetlanaKuznetsova(27), Russia, vs. Malory Burdete, UnitedStates

W L T P t sGF GA Montreal 12 7 5 4 1 41 35 NewYork 1 1 9 6 3 9 36 34 S porting KansasCity 11 9 6 3 9 36 26 Philadelphia 10 6 6 36 37 37 NewEngland 1 0 9 6 36 34 24 Houston 10 6 6 3 6 29 26 Chicago I O IO 4 34 30 34 Columbus 6 12 5 2 9 29 34 TorontoFC 4 12 9 21 22 34 D.C. 3 17 5 1 4 15 41

FOOTBALL

W L T P t sGF GA RealSaltLake I 3 6 6 45 46 33 Los Angele s I 2 9 4 40 40 32 Portland 9 4 1 2 3 9 37 26 Colorado 1 0 7 9 3 9 33 27 FC Dallas 9 7 1 0 3 7 36 36 Seattle 1 1 6 4 3 7 31 26 Vancouver I O 9 6 3 6 36 33 SanJose 9 10 7 3 4 26 37 ChivasUSA 5 14 6 21 24 45 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie.

Italy

NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE

Preseason

AN TimesPDT Thursday'sGames IndianapolisatCincinnati, 4 p.m. Detroit atBuffalo,4p.m. PhiladelphiaatNY.Jets, 4p.m. New OreansatMiami, 4.30p.m. Washin gtonatTampaBay,4:30 p.m. Jacksonville atAtlanta, 4:30p.m. N.Y.Giantsat New England,4:30p.m. PittsburghatCarolina, 4:30p.m. Tennes seeatMinnesota,5p.m. Cleve andatChicago,5p.m. GreenBayatKansasCity, 5p.m. HoustonatDalas, 5 p.m. Baltimoreat St.Louis,5 p.m. ArizonaatDenver, 6p.m. OaklandatSeatle, 7p.m. SanFranciscoatSanDiego 7pm End of Preseason

College

Sacramento St.at SanJoseSt., 7p.m. E. Oregon at PortlandSt., T:05p.m. RutgersatFresnoSt, t:30 p.m. SouthernCalatHawan,6p.m

Friday's Games EAST MorganSt.atArmy,4p.m. SOUTH Samford atGeorgiaSt.,4 p.m. FAUatMiami,5 p.m. MIDWEST W.MichiganatMichigan St., 5p.m. N. DakotaSt.atKansasSt., 5:30p.m. SOUTHWES T TexasTechat SMU,5p.m SouthernU.atHouston, 5:30pm. FAR WEST N. ArizonaatArizona, 7p.m.

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT

EasternConference

WesternConference

Friday's Games

NewEnglandatTorontoFC,4 p.m. Portlandat RealSalt Lake,7p.m. Saturday's Games Seattle FC at Columbus, 4:30p.m. Montrealat Philadelphia,4:30 p.m D.C. UnitedatNewYork,5p.m. Colorado atSporting KansasCity, 5:30p.m SanJoseatLosAngeles,7:30 p.m. Sunday'sGames

Houstonat Chicago, noon ChivasUSAatVancouver,4p.m.

BASKETBALL WNBA

Schedule

AN TimesPDT

(Subject to change) Thursday'sGames

EAST RhodeIslandatFordham,4 pm. JacksonvilleatDelaware, 4:30p.m. TowsonatUConn,4:30 p.m. SOUTH NorthCarolinaatSouthCarolina, 3p.m. PresbyterianatWakeForest, 3:30p.m. UT-Martinat Chatanooga,4p.m. RobertMorrisatE.Kentucky,4 p.m. Pikeviffe at Morehead St., 4p.m. Akron atUCF,4 p.m. W. Carolinaat MiddleTennessee,4:30 p.m. S. Utah atSouthAlabama,4:30p.m. SE MissouriatSELouisiana,5 pm. Cumberand(Tenn.) atTennesseeTech,5p.m. Jacks onStatTulane 5pm Mississippi atVanderbilt, 6:15p.m. MIDWEST Liberty atKentSt., 3p.m. fflinoisSt.atBall St.,4 p.m. TulsaatBowling Green,4p.m. GrandViewatDrake,4 p.m. Indiana St.at Indiana,4p.m. UNLVatMinnesota,4p.m. NorthwesternSt.atMissouri St., 4p.m. HamptonatW.Illinois,4 p m. DaytonatYoungstownSt, 430pm. ValparaisoatNorth Dakota 5p.m. SOUTHWES T IncarnateWord atCent. Arkansas,5 p.m.

WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION All Times PDT

Monday'sGames No games schedued Today's Games MinnesotaatNewYork, 4p.m. Seattle atSanAntonio, 5p.m. ConnecticutatLosAngeles, 7:30p.m.

son.

DEALS

TEXAS-PAN AMERICAN Named RobHansen assistantdistancetrack coach. WINTHRO P— Promoted MarkProsser to mens' associateheadbasketball coach.

Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association SAN ANTONID SPURS — G-FTracyMcGradyannouncedhis retirement. FOOTBALL National Football League NFL —SuspendedNewYorkJets RBMike Goodson the first fourgamesof theregular seasonand MinnesotaFBJeromeFelton thefirst threegames of the regulasea r sonfor violating theleague'ssubstance abusepolicy. ATLANTAFALCONS — WaivedWRRashad Evans, WR Marcu sJacksonandWR MarcusSales BUFFALO BILLS—ReleasedDBDominiqueEllis, CB JumalRoffe,WRDa'Rick Rogers, WRDeMarco SampsonandCRyan Turnley. PlacedOTChris Hairston onthereserve/non-footbaffilness list. Reached an injurysettlementwith GKeith Wiliams. CLEVELANDBROWNS — WaivedDBVernonKearney, DLDaveKruger, WRCordeff RobersonandLB TommySmith. Terminatedthe contract of WRJordan Norwood.PlacedRBDionLewis oninjured reserve. DALLASCOWBOYS — ReleasedDTJerisPendleton. GREENBAY PACKERS — Released K Giorgio Tavecchio. MINNESOTAVIKINGS — Wawed WR LaMark Brown, WR Erik Highsmith, G Tyler Holmes, DE Lawrenc eJackson,DEMarquisJackson,LB Stanford Keglar, CBGregMcCoy, RBBradley Randle, WR Chris Summ ers, QBJamesVandenberg, CCamden Wentz, RB Jerodis Wi iamsandCBRoderick Williams. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS — Re-signed CB StephonMorrisand DLScottVaff one.ReleasedWRKamar Aiken, CBBrandonJones, LBNiko Koutouvides, CB LeQuanLewis andLSMike Zupancic. PlacedDLCory GrissomandOTMarkus Zusevics on injured reserve. PlacedDLArmond ArmsteadandWRMarkHarrison on thereserve/non-footbaI injury list. NEWYORKGIANTS—ActivatedDEJasonPierrePaul offthePUPlist. NEWYOR KJETS — Released WRJoe Cofflns, WR BraylonEdwards, DBDonnie Fletcher, GPatrick Ford, OL TreyGiffeo, SBret Lockett, RBJoeMcKnight, G StephenPeterman, LB SeanProgar-Jackson, P RyanQuigley,WRMarcus Rucker, LSPatrick Scales, RB ChadSpann, WRK.J. StroudandWRRahsaan Vaughn. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS — Placed LB Melvin Ingram onthe PUPlist. PlacedCBSteveWiliams and DT Byron Jerideauoninjured reserve. SAN FRANCISCO49ERS Waived RBD.J.Harper, LBJoeHoffand, GAl Netter, PColton Schmidt and QB ScottTolzien. SEATTLESEAHAWKS — ReleasedWR Perez Ashford, LBKyle Knox,TEJameson Konz,TEAndrei Lintz,TE/LSKyleNelson, DTMartin Parkerand LB Craig Wilkins. Terminatedthe contract of WR Brett Swain. PlacedDTJesseWiliams on injured reserve ST. LOUISRAMS— WaivedK-PBrett Baer,WRDemetriusFields,WRAndrewHelmick, LSJorgenHus, QB TimJenkins, DTAl Lapuaho, LBJosephLebeau, TE ColbyPrince,WRRaymondRadwayand CBRobert Steeples.Waived/injured OLGrahamPocic. TAMPABAY BUCCANEERS — Waived WRCarlton Mitchell, DE Ernest Owusu,QBAdamWeber, DEMarkus White, WR DerekHagan,FBSpencer LarsenandSTroy Nolan.PlacedCBAnthonyGaitorand RBMichaelSmith on injuredreserve.SignedTEMikeShanahan. TENNESSEE TITANS— Waived KMaikonBonani, WR Justin Hilton, WRRoberto Wallace, WRDiondre Borel, STracyWilson, LB Kadarron Anderson, TE Martell Webb, OLBarry Richardson, OLOscar Johnsonand OL Eloy Atkinson.Reached an injury settlementwith TEDeMarco Cosby Waived-injured LB GregJones. WASHINGTON REDSKINS — ReleasedWR Donte Staffworth,I.B RickyElmore,FBEric Kettani, KJohn Potter, WRChip Reeves and LB QuanSturdivant. Waived/injured CB-PRRichard Crawford and LB JeremyKimbrough. Paced S Philip ThomasandLB Keenan Robinsononinjured reserve. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NEWJERSEYDEVILS—Re-signed CAdamHenrique to amultiyear contract. COLLEGE BIGEASTCONFERENCE — Named Ann Wells Crandaff chief marketing officer. LA SALLE — Named Susan KimHired assistant volleyballcoach. MANHATTAN — Named Amanda McEntirewomen's tenniscoach. MIAMI —NamedJasmanMarksassistant strength coachforwomen'sbasketball andswimming teams. DKLAHOM A — Suspended OL Jacob Reed indefinitely afterbeingchargedwlth hitting his exgirlfriend afterbreakinginto herapartmentover the weekend. OKLAHOMASTATE — Named Mason Cathey assistantdistancetrackcoach. QUINNIPIAC —PromotedJohn Delaneyto associate headbaseballcoach. RADFOR D — Named Mark McQueen assistant basebaland l pitching coach. RHODEISLAND COLLEGE — Named Troy Silvia men's assistantsoccercoach SAINTROSE—NamedJeffSpalti assistantathletic trainer. SDUTH ERNCAL— Announced senior men'sbasketbaff G PeS ' honHoward received a legislative relief waiver fromthe NCAAthat wil allow himto transfer from Mary andandbeeligible for theupcomingsea-

NEWYORKYANKEES ReinstatedSSDerekJeter from the15-dayDL OptionedRHPPreston Claiborne to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). OAKLANDATHLETICS— PlacedOFJoshReddick on the 15-dayDL. Selectedthe contract of 1B Daric BartonfromSacramento (PCL). Designated RHPPat Neshekfor assignment. RecalledRHPEvan Scribner fromSacramento SEATTLE MARINERS — Activated OF Franklin Gutierrezfromthe15-day DL.Designated RHPAaron Harangforassignment. TAMPABAYRAYS—Announced OFJasonBourgeois cleared waiversandacceptedanoutright assignment toDurham(R.), TORONTOBLUEJAYS — Reinstated LHP Aaron Loup fromthe paternity list. DesignatedRHPChien-

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement ofadult chinook,jackchinook,steelheadand wild steelheadatselectedColumbia RiverdamslastupdatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd B onneville 6 431 L 364 2,450 7 4 6 T he Daffes 5,451 1,064 1,140 4 4 6 John Day 2,039 4 6 7 677 250 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadatselected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 252,350 7L763 169,926 79,443 The Daffes 191,097 59,910 69,042 19,730 John Day 146,617 51,62B 38,751 19,730 McNary 137,154 36,801 33,592 16,644

Both Williams sisters advance after first day at U.S.Open By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press

NEW YORK — For y ears and years, a first-round victory by Venus Williams at a major tournament would hardly merit a mention. She is, after all, a seven-time Grand Slam singles champion. She's been the runner-upanother seven times. She was ranked No. 1, owns Olympic gold medals, and is second to her younger sister Serena among active women in several key categories, including Grand Slam match wins, with 215. And yet nowadays, at age 33, two years removed from b eing d iagnosed with an autoimmune disease

that saps energy, hampered much of this season by a bad lower back, and her ranking down to 60th, Williams entered Day 1 at the 2013 U.S. Open having won a total of three matches over the past five Grand Slam tournaments. Plus, she was facing 12thseeded Kirsten Flipkens, who was a semifinalist at W i mbledon last month and beat Williams on a hard court this month.

Looking very much like the player she used to be, Williams smacked serves at up to 120 mph, returned superbly, covered the court well enough to hit a handful of swinging volley winners, and beat Flipkens 6-1, 6-2 Monday to reach the second round at

TENNIS

champion Francesca Schiavone, was prompted in a brief moment of levity

Flushing Meadows. Flipkens, for one, was not surprised in the least to see Williams play that way. To Flipkens, this was not an upset — no matter what the rankings indicate. "If Venus is there — if she's fit, if she's focused — she's a top-10 player," Flipkens said. "Everybody who knows a little bit of the game of tennis can see that. Today, she was like a top-10 player." Serena Williams began her title defense with a 6-0, 6-1 victory, a performance so thoroughly impressive thather opponent, 2010 French Open

to seek comfort by hugging a ball boy. "i don't need a hug in that moment, Ineed a game," joked Schiavone, who was trailing 6-0, 2-0 at the time. Asked which meant more on this day, her own victory or her sister's, Serena replied: "They're equal. I definitely was happy to see Venus win. I really was happy for her. I know she's been working hard. I know she had a tough opponent. For her to come through was just awesome. Obviously, I want to do well, too." The victory over Schiavone lasted exactly an hour, and light rain began falling right after it ended. Eventu-

ally, play was called off for the day, postponing 17-time major champion Roger Federer's match against 62ndranked Grega Zemlja of Slovenia until today. Earlier on A she, 12-time major champion Rafael Nadal delivered a straightforward, straight-set victory over 21-year-old American Ryan Harrison, part of a series of smooth performances by top players. Flipkens was one of two seeded women to lose, along with No. 29 Magdalena Rybarikova of Slovakia. Three seeded men exited during Monday's afternoon session: No. 11 Kei Nishikori, No. 27 Fernando Verdasco and No. 30 Ernests Gulbis.


TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL his 25th birthday with three hits and an RBI. Kyle Seager hit his

Standings AH TimesPOT

Boston TampaBay Baltimore NewYork Toronto Detroit Cleveland

Kansas City Minnesota Chicago Texas Oakland Seattle Los Angeles Houston

AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB 77 55 .583 74 55 .574 1'/z 70 59 543 5 1/2 69 62 527 7'/r 59 73 .447 18

Central Division

W L 77 54

Pct GB 588

71 59

.546 5'/r .508 101/r 442 19 .415 22'/z

66 64 57 72 54 76 West Division W L 76 55 73 57 59 71 58 71 44 86

Pct GB .580 .562 2'/z 454 161/z

.450 17 .338 31'/z

Monday's Games KansasCity11, TampaBay1 Toronto 5,N.Y.Yankees2 Oakland 8, Detroit 6 Houston10,ChicagoWhite Sox8 Texas 8, Seattle 3 Today's Games N.Y.Yankees(Petitte 9-9) atToronto(Happ3-3), 4.07 p.m. Oakland(Milone9-9) at Detroit (Verlander 12-9), 408 p.m. Baltimore(W.chen7-6) at Boston(Doubront 9-6), 4:10 p.m. Cleveland (Salazar1-1) atAtanta(AWood 2-2), 4:10

p.m. LA. Angels(C.Wilson13-6) at Tamp a Bay(Ro.Hernandez6-13),4.10p.m. Houston(Clemens4-4) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Quintana 7-4),5:10p.m KansasCity (Shields8-8) at Minnesota(Correia 810), 5:10p.m. Texas (D.Holland9-6) at Seatle (Iwakuma12-6), 7:10 p.m. Wednesday'sGames Texas at Seatle,12:40 p.m. N.Y.YankeesatToronto,4:07 p.m. Oakland atDetroit, 4:08p.m. BaltimoreatBoston,4:10 p.m. ClevelandatAtlanta 4:10p.m. L.A. Angelat s TampaBay, 4:10p.m. Houstonat ChicagoWhite Sox, 5:10p.m. Kansas City atMinnesota,5:10 p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Atlanta 78 52 Washington 65 65 Philadelphia 60 71 NewYork 58 71 Miami 49 80

Central Division

St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Milwaukee Chicago

Los Angeles Arrzona Colorado SanDiego SanFrancisco

W L 77 54 76 54 74 58 57 73 55 76 Wast Division W L 77 54

67 62 59 58

63 71 72 73

Pct GB 600 .500 13 458 18'/z .450 19'/r .380 28'/r

Pct GB .588 .585 '/z 561 3 1/r

.438 19'/z 420 22

Pct GB

588 .515 9'/z .466 16 .450 18 .443 19

Monday's Games St. Louis 8, Cincinnati 6 Philadelphia2, N.Y.Mets1 Colorado 6, SanFrancisco1 Arrzona 6,SanDiego1 L.A. Dodgers6, ChicagoCubs2 Today's Games Miami (Eovald2-4) i atWashington (Ohlendorf 2-0), 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee(Lohse9-8) at Pittsburgh (Locke9-4), 4:05 p.m. Cleveland (Salazar1-1) atAtlanta(A.Wood2-2), 4.10 p.m. Philadelphia(K.Kendrick 10-10) at N.Y.Mets(Niese 5-6), 4:10p.m. Cincinnati(Latos13-4)atSt. Louis(J.Kelly 5-3), 5:15

p.m. San Francisco(Petit 0-0) at Colorado(Bettis 0-2), 5:40 p.m. San Diego(Kennedy5-9) at Arizona(Holmberg 0-0), 6:40 p.m. ChicagoCubs(TWood 7-10) at L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw13-7),710 pm. Wednesday'sGames Chicago Cubsat L.A.Dodgers,12:10 p.m. Miami atWashington, 4.05 p.m. Milwaukee atPittsburgh, 4:05 p.m ClevelandatAtlanta 4:10p.m. Philadelphiaat N.Y.Mets, 4:10 p.m. Cincinnati atSt.Louis, 5:15p.m. SanFranciscoat Colorado, 5:40p.m. SanDiegoatArizona,6:40 p.m.

American League

Rangers 8, Mariners 3 SEATTLE — A.J. Pierzynski hit a three-run homer, Mitch Moreland

had a solo shot andTexas beat Seattle. Alex Rios had two hits and two RBls as the Rangers picked up their sixth win in eight

games. Elvis Andrus celebrated

20th home run of the season for the Mariners, who have lost four in a row.

Villarss 1 0 0 0 Kppngr3b 3 2 2 1 V iciedolf 4 1 1 0 P heglyc 4 2 2 1 Totals 3 7 10137 Totals 3 8 8 145 Houston 030 121 102 — 10 0 01 025 000 — 8 Chicago

E—Hoes(3), DeAza(7), AGarcia(2). DP—Hous-

WWright

2 1-3 1 1

KansasCity

GuthrieW,13-10 5 6 Collins 2 0 Coleman 1 1 Crow 1 0 T—3:11. A—20,546(37,903).

1 0 0 0

1 0

2

I 0 0 0

5 1 2 0

3 0 0 1

and Charlie Blackmon also homered for the Rockies. Buster

Posey singled and reachedbase for the 49th straight gameagainst Colorado.

M Yong1b 4 1 2 0 ABrwnlf 3 0 1 1 R uflf 3 1 0 0 Flores3b 3 0 0 0 A sche3b 3 0 2 2 TdArndc 3 0 I 0 Mayrryrf 3 0 1 0 JuTrnrss 3 0 0 0 C I.Leep 3 0 0 0 ZWhelrp 2 0 0 0 D Brwnph 1 0 0 0 Felicrnp 0 0 0 0 P apelnp 0 0 0 0 Ricep 00 0 0

CTorrsp 0 0 0 0 Duda ph 0 0 0 0 San Francisco Colorado Germnp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi T otals 3 2 2 6 2 Totals 3 01 5 1 Gentryct 3 0 1 0 Frnkln2b 4 0 0 0 GBlanccf 5 0 1 0 Fowlercf 1 0 1 0 P hiladelphia 0 0 0 2 0 0 000 — 2 Andrus ss 5 1 3 1 BMiller ss 4 0 2 2 S cutaro2b 3 0 1 0 Blckmncf 3 I 1 2 0 10 000 000 — I K insler 2b 4 1 1 0 FGtrrz rf 4 0 0 0 Belt1b 3 0 1 0 LeMahi2b 4 0 2 0 New York DP — Philadelphia 2. LOB—Philadelphia 7, New ABeltre3b 3 2 I 0 KMorlsdh 4 0 0 0 Poseyc 3 0 1 0 Cuddyrrf 4 0 1 0 51-3 8 5 4 I 3 Oberholtzer Przynsc 5 1 1 3 Seager3b 4 1 1 1 LOS ANGELES — ZackGreinke P encerf 4 0 1 0 WRosrc 4 0 1 0 York 3. 28 Mayberry(22), Byrd(26). 38 Asche D.Martinez W, 1 -0 22-3 5 3 3 0 1 R iosrf 4 1 2 2 Morself 2 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 4 0 0 0 Arenad3b 4 2 3 0 (I) CS — Utey(3). 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 came within one strike of his fifth Zeid H,3 Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO JeBakrlf 3 0 1 0 Smoak1b 2 1 0 0 Bcrwfrss 4 0 0 0 Helton1b 3 2 1 2 K.chapman 0 0 0 0 1 0 career shutout, Hanley Ramirez CI.LeeW,11-6 8 5 1 1 1 7 D vMrplf 1 0 0 0 Ackleycf 3 1 I 0 FPegurlf 4 1 1 0 Culersnlf 3 0 1 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 LylesS,1-1 0 0 0 0 1 Morlnd1b 4 1 1 1 Quinterc 3 0 1 0 Zitop 1 0 0 0 WLopezp 0 0 0 0 PapelbonS,22-28 1 and Yasie l Pui g homer ed , and Los Chicago New York Profar dh 4 1 0 1 Pillph 0 0 0 0 RWhelrph 1 0 0 0 Rienzo 6 9 7 5 3 4 Angeles defeated Chicago, ending Z .Wheel e r L,6-3 6 2 -3 5 2 2 1 7 T otals 3 6 8 I I 8 Totals 3 03 5 3 Moscosp 0 0 0 0 Francisp 0 0 0 0 PetrickaBS,1-1 2 - 3 1 1 1 1 1 a two-game skid. The Cubs lost Feliciano 13 0 0 0 0 1 Texas 2 00 200 310 — 8 Kschncph 1 0 0 0 JHerrrss 3 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Rice 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 Seattle 0 02 100 000 — 3 Veal M ijaresp 0 0 0 0 Nicasiop 2 0 I I for the eighth straight time to the N Jones 1 1 0 0 0 1 C.Torres 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 DP —Texas1.LOB— Texas6,Seattle2.28— GenAriasph 1 0 1 1 CDckrslf 1 1 1 0 A .Reed L,5-2 1 2 2 2 0 2 Germen 1 0 0 0 2 1 Dodgers, including a four-game try (10),Kinsler(24), Rios(24). HR—Pierzynski (15), Totals 3 3 1 7 1 Totals 3 36 135 KChapmanpitchedto 1baterin the9th. Moreland (19), Seager (20).CS—Andrus(6), B.Miler S an Francisco 000 000 001 — 1 WP —Germen sweep at Wrigley Field earlier this WP—Rienzo 2, Petricka. Balk—D.Martinez T—2:53. A—25,784(41,922). (2) S Kinsler. Colorado 021 200 10x — 6 T — 3.30. A — 1 3,40 4 ( 40, 6 15). month. The Dodgers equaled their Texas IP H R E R BB SO E—Mijares (2). DP—San Francisco 2, Colorado BlackleyW,2-1 6 5 3 3 1 4 —San Francisco 9, Colorado4. 28—Scutaro longest winning streak against the 1. LOB Leaders Cotts 1 0 0 0 1 2 Arias (9),W.R osario (19) 38—Cuddyer (3). Blue Jays 5, Yankees2 Cubs in franchise history, set from (21), ThroughMonday's Games Soria 1 0 0 0 0 1 HR — Blackmon (4), Helton(9). SB—LeMahieu (15). AMERICANLEAGUE Scheppers I 0 0 0 0 1 June 9, 1974-May19, 1 975. CS — Fowler (9). TORONTO — R.A.Dickey pitched Seattle San Francisco I P H R E R BB SO BATTING —Mrcabrera, Detroit, .359; Trout, Los Angel e s,.330; ABel tre,Texas,.327; Mauer,Minnesota, J.Saunders L,10-13 7 9 7 7 3 0 into the seventh inning, Jose Zrto L,4-10 4 9 5 5 1 1 Chicago Los Angeles Medina I 2 1 1 0 I Moscoso 2 1 0 0 0 1 .324; DOrtizBoston,.318; , Cano,NewYork,.305; Jhab r hbi ab r hbi Reyes sparked Toronto's offense O.Perez 1 0 0 0 0 2 Mijares 2 3 1 0 0 1 Peralta,Detroit,.305. S tcastrss 4 0 1 0 Crwfrdlf 4 0 1 2 HBP —byJ.Saunders(Gentry). RUNS — Mi c abrera, Detroi t, 94; CDavis, Baltiand the BlueJayssnapped a10L akecf 4 0 1 0 Puigrf 5 1 3 1 Colorado T—2;40. A—15,995(47,476). 6 4 0 0 2 9 more,94,Trout, LosAngeles, 89; AJones, Baltimore, Rizzo1b 4 I 1 0 AdGnzlIb 5 0 0 0 NicasioW,8-6 game losing streakagainst New W.Lopez 2 1 0 0 0 3 87; AJackson,Detroit, 84; Bautista, Toronto,82; En3 1 0 0 HRmrzss 4 1 1 1 York. Alex Rodriguez hit his 650th Schrhltrf Francis I 2 I I 0 0 carnacion,Toronto, 80. B ogsvclf 4 0 1 2 Ethiercf 2 0 1 0 Athletics 8, Tigers 6 RBI — Micabrera, Detroit,130; CDavis, Baltimore, HBP —byNicasio (Pill, Belt). WP —Francis. home run, a leadoff drive in the DMrph3b 3 0 I 0 A.Ellisc 3I I 0 T 2 49 A 30 364 (50,398) 118; Encarnacion, Toronto, 97;AJones,Baltimore, 95; Castilloc 2 0 0 0 M.Ellis2b 3 1 0 0 fifth, but the Yankees lost for the DETROIT — Coco Crisp and Fielder,Detroit, 88;Cano,New York, 85; Trumbo, Los B arney2b 3 0 0 0 Punto3b 3 2 1 1 Angeles,84. ninth time in 13 road games this A rrietap 2 0 0 0 Greinkp 2 0 1 1 Cardinals 8, Reds Daric Barton each drove in two 6 HITS — Micabrera, Detroit, 170; ABeltre,Texas, V illanvp 0 0 0 0 BWilsnp 0 0 0 0 month. Rodriguez is10 homers runs, and Oakland beat Miguel 166; Machado,Baltimore, 163; AJones, Baltimore, DNavrrph 1 0 0 0 away from tying Willie Mays for 159; Trout,LosAngeles, 159; Pedroia, Boston,156; ST. LOUIS — Allen Craig hit his Cabrera and Detroit. Cabrera hit Bowden p 0 0 0 0 Ellsbury,Boston,154. fourth on the career list, which T otals 3 0 2 5 2 Totals 3 16 9 6 first career grand slam with two his 43rd homer, bolstering his DOUBLES — Machado, Baltimore, 44; CDavis, 0 00 000 002 — 2 Chicago would secure a $6 million bonus out in the seventh inning, helping Ba timore,36;Lowrie, Oakland, 36;Mauer Mrnnesota, pursuit of another Triple Crown, Los Angeles 0 0 0 2 0 2 11x— 6 35; AIRami r ez, Chicago, 35; Saltalamacchia,Boston, for the third baseman. DP — Los Angeles 1. LOB —Chrcago 4, LosAnSt. Louis rally for a win over but Barton had a tiebreaking 34 Trout LosAngeles,34. geles 9. 28 — R iz zo (33), Bogu s e vi c (5), C.crawford Cincinnati. Matt Holliday also had RBI single in Oakland's two-run TRIPLES —Ellsbury, Boston, 8; Gardner,New (23), Puig(18), Ethier(27), Punto(13). HR—Puig New York Toronto York, 8; Trout, Los Angeles, 8; Drew,Boston, 6; sixth inning. Crisp also had a ab r hbi ab r hbi (13), H.Ra mirez (14). SB—M.Ellis (4) CS—St.castro a long three-run homer as St. A Gordon, Kansas City, 6; DeJennings,Tampa Bay, Gardnrcf 3 1 2 0 Reyesss 3 2 1 0 (6). S —Greinke.SF—C.crawford. Louis moved into sole possession 5; Kawasaki,Toronto, solo homer during his three-hit 5; LMartin, Texas,5; BMiler, VWellsph-rt 1 0 0 0 Goins2b 4 1 2 0 Chicago IP H R E R BB SO Seattle,5. of first place in the NL Central for performance. Arrieta L,1-1 5 6 4 4 5 3 Jeterss 3 0 0 0 Encrncdh 3 1 1 2 HOME RUNS — C D avis, Baltimore, 46, MicaVillanueva 2 2 I I I 3 C ano2b 4 0 0 1 Lind1b 4 0 1 1 the first time since July 29. The brera, Detroit, 43;Encarnacion,Toronto,33; ADunn, Bowden 1 1 1 1 0 0 Oakland Detroit A Sorinlt 4 0 I 0 Lawrie3b 3 I I 0 Cardinals lead idle Pittsburgh by Chica go,30;Trumbo,LosAngeles,29;Bautrsta,ToG rndrs dh 4 0 1 0 Sierra rf 2 0 0 1 Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi ronto, 28;Longoria,TampaBay, 28. A Rdrgz3b 4 1 1 1 Tholec 3 0 0 0 GreinkeW13-3 8 2 - 3 5 2 2 2 9 a half-game and Cincinnati by 3f/a Crispcf 6 2 3 2 AJcksncf 3 1 1 0 S TOLEN BASES— Ellsbury,Boston,47;RDavis, 8 Wilson 1-3 0 0 0 0 I L owriess 4 0 1 1 TrHntrrf 4 0 2 0 Overay1b 3 0 0 0 Arenciiph-c I 0 0 0 games in the top-heavy division. Toron to,40;Andrus Texas,35;Altuve,Houston,30; I Suzukirf-cf 4 0 1 0 Pillarlf 4011 Arrietapitchedto 2baters inthe6th. Dnldsn 3b 5 1 1 1 Micarr 3b 4 1 I 2 Rios, Texas, 30; LMartin, Texas,29; McLouth, Balti—byGreinke(Schierholtz). Mossrt 3 1 1 0 Fielder1b 5 1 1 0 A uRmnc 3 0 1 0 Gosecf 2 0 0 0 HBP Cincinnati St. Louis more,29. T otals 3 3 2 7 2 Totals 2 95 7 5 T—3:12. A—40965(56,000). Cespdslf 5 0 0 1 VMrtnzdh 5 1 4 1 PITCHING —Scherzer, Detroit, 19-1; MMoore, ab r hbi ab r hbi New York 1 00 010 000 — 2 S .Smithdh 1 1 0 0 Dirks f 3 1 1 0 Chooct 4 0 0 0 Mcrpnt2b 3 2 1 0 TampaBay,14-3; Tillman,Baltimore, 14-4; Colon, Toronto Freimnph-dh1 1 1 0 Tuiasspph-Ii 2 0 0 1 011 030 00x — 5 F razier3b 4 0 1 2 Jaycf 3111 Oakland,14-5;Masterson,Cleveland,14-9; CWilson, E I.Suzuki (3), Sierra (1). DP NewYork1, Diamottdbacks 6, Padres1 Callasp2b 4 1 2 1 Infante2b 5 1 1 2 V ottoIb 3 0 0 0 Hollidylf 3 2 1 3 Los Angeles,13-6;Guthrie,KansasCity,13-10. Barton1b 5 0 2 2 B.Penac 4 0 1 0 Toronto1. LOB —NewYork 7,Toronto 6. 28—Reyes ERA—AniSanchez, Detroit, 2.61; FHemand ez, P hillips2b 4 0 0 0 Craigrf 4134 Vogtc 4 I I 0 I glesiasss 4 0 I 0 (10), Lind (24). HR —A.Rodriguez(3). SB—A.Sorrano PHOENIX — Brandon McCarthy B rucerf 4 2 2 I YMolinc 4 0 0 0 S eattle,2.63;Darvish,Texas,268; Kuroda,NewYork, Totals 3 8 8 128 Totals 3 96 136 (5), Granderson(6), Gose(3). SF—Encarnacion, turned in sevenstrong innings, Ludwcklt 4 0 0 0MAdms1b 4 0 0 0 2.71, Scherzer,Detroit, 2.73, DHolland,Texas,2.95; Sierra. Oakland 2 01 102 110 — 8 Dndrskp 0 0 0 0 Freese3b 4 1 1 0 Colon,Dakland,297 IP H R E R BB SO and Paul Goldschmidt drove in Detroit 0 20 020 011 — 6 New York M esorcc 4 2 I 0 Mulicap 0 0 0 0 STRIKEOUTS —Darvish, Texas, 225; Scherzer, 5 3 3 3 two runs to lead Arizona to a DP — Oakland 1, Detroit 1. LOB—Oakland 11, P.HughesL,413 4 2-3 7 Cozartss 4 1 2 3 Descalsss-3b4 0 0 0 Detroit, 196, FHernandez,Seattle, 192, Masterson, 31-3 0 0 0 1 5 Detroit10. 28—Crisp (17), Lowrie(36). HR —Crisp Huff victory over San Diego. After a Clevel a nd,182; Sal e,Chicago,181; Verlander,Detroit, L eake p 2 1 0 0 Lyons p 1 0 0 0 Toronto (14), Mi.cabrera (43), VMartinez(11), Infante(7). 166; DHoland,Texas, 162. MParrp 0 0 0 0 Wongph 1 0 0 0 Oakland IP H R E R BB SO DickeyW,10-12 6 1-3 6 2 1 3 6 shaky first inning, the 6-foot-7 SAVES —JiJohnson, Baltimore, 40; MRivera, Hooverp 0 0 0 0 CMrtnzp 0 0 0 0 Griffin W,11-9 5 7 4 4 1 4 Loup H,7 1131 0 0 0 3 McCarthy (3-Bj allowed only four New York, 38; N a t h an, Texas,37; AReed, Chicago, 35; Heiseylf 1 0 0 0 Beltranph 1 1 1 0 12-3 1 0 0 2 1 S.SantosH,3 1 3- 0 0 0 0 1 OteroH,2 GHolland,KansasCity, 35; Balfour, Oakland, 33; RodManessp 0 0 0 0 runners over his final six innings. JanssenS,24-26 1 0 0 0 0 Dooittle H,19 2 3- 1 1 I 0 0 ney, TampaBay,30;Perkins,Minnesota,30. Kozmass 0 0 0 0 PHughes. PB—Thoe. 2-3 2 0 0 1 1 WP — CookH,19 It was his first win since he beat Totals 3 4 6 6 6 Totals 3 28 8 8 BalfourS,33-34 1 2 1 0 0 0 T—2:33.A—35,241(49,282). NATIONALLEAGUE San Diego on May 28. His other C incinnati 040 00 1 0 1 0 — 6 Detroit BATTING — YMohna,St.Louis,.332;CJohnson, Louis 003 000 Bgx — 8 Ani.Sanchez 5 5 4 4 3 6 Royals11, Rays1 victory was a shutout at Miami on St.E— Descalso(13). LOB—Cincrnnati 5,St. Louis3. Atlanta, .331,Cuddyer,Colorado, .328;Mccutchen, J.Alvarez L,1-4 1 - 3 4 2 2 0 0 May 18. Pittsburgh, .321 Craig, St. Louis, .317;FFreem an, 28 — Cozart (24), Craig(28), Beltran(25). 38—FraAlburcuerque 1 2 -3 1 1 I 2 2 zier (3), Cozart(3). HR Bruce(25), Holliday (18), Atlanta, .313; Mcarpenter,St. Louis, .313; Votto, Bonderman 2 2 1 1 3 0 KANSAS CITY, Mo.— The Royals' Cincinnati,.313. Craig (13). San Diego Arizona Griffin pitchedto1batter in the6th. Jeremy Guthrie held down Wil —Mcarpenter, St. Louis, 99;Goldschmidt, Cincinnati IP H R E R BB SO RUNS ab r hbi ab r hbi WP — Balfour. PB —Vogt. Leake 6137 5 5 1 3 Arizona,86;Votto, Cincinnati, 86; Choo,Cincinnati, Myers and Tampa Ba y over f i ve Venalerf-cf 4 1 2 0 Campncf 4 1 2 0 T 3:34. A 34,778(41,255). 85; Holliday, St. Louis, 85 Mccutchen,Pittsburgh, M.ParraL,1-3H,13 1-3 0 I I I 0 A marstlf-cf 3 0 1 0 Eatonlf 3 2 1 0 innings and KansasCity rolled HooverBS,1-4 1 - 3 1 2 2 1 0 80; JUpton,Atlanta,80. Guzmnph-If 1 0 0 0 Gldsch1b 4 1 1 2 RBI — Goldschmidt, Arizona,103; Craig,St.Louis, Astros10, White Sox8 to a victory in the makeup of a Dndrusek 1 0 0 0 0 2 Alonso1b 4 0 0 0 Erchvz3b 2 0 0 0 95; Phillips, Cincinnati,95;PAlvarez,Pittsburgh, 85; St. Louis Gyorko2b 3 0 0 0 Prado2b 3 0 1 3 snowed-out gamefrom early F Freeman, Atlanta, 85; Bruce,Cincinnati, 82;AdGonLyons 5 3 4 1 2 7 H eadly3b 4 0 1 0 MMntrc 4 0 0 0 CHICAGO — Matt Dominguez May. Guthrie (13-10) allowed six Ca.MartinezW,1-1 2 2 1 1 0 1 zalez,LosAngeles,81. Forsythss 3 0 0 0 GParrarf 4 1 1 0 hit a tiebreaking solo homer with HITS —Mcarpenter, St Louis, 158;Segura, MiManessH,14 I 1 1 1 0 I hits and three walks but twice Fuentscf 3 0 0 0 Gregrsss 3 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 waukee, 155; Mccutchen, Pittsburgh, 153; Craig, two outs in the ninth inning and Bassp 0 0 0 0 Mccrthp 1 0 0 0 MujicaS,35-37 1 delivered timely strikeouts. He HBP —byLyons(Votto), byCa.Martinez(Frazier). St. Louis, 152,Votto, Cincinnati, 150;Goldschmidt, H undlyc 3 0 0 0 Kubelph 0 0 0 0 Chris Carter followed with his Arizona,145;DanMurphy,NewYork,144. fanned Kelly Johnson with two T .Rossp 2 0 1 0 A.Hillph 0 1 0 0 T—2:49.A—35,159 (43,975). DOUBLES —Mcarpenter, St. Louis, 43; YMosecondhome runofthegame aboard to end the third inning, and Hynesp 0 0 0 0 EDLRsp 1 0 0 0 lina, St. Louis,37;Bruce,Cincinnati, 34, Desm ond, Denorfilf-rf 1 0 0 0 to lift Houston to a victory over Phillies 2, Mets1 then struck out David DeJesus on T otals 3 1 1 5 0 Totals 2 96 8 5 Washin gton,33;Rizzo,Chicago,33;Mccutchen, Chicago. TheAstros squandered Pittsburgh, 32; GP arra, Ari z ona, 32. S an Diego 100 0 0 0 000 — 1 a called third strike to leave the TRIPLES —SMarte, Pittsburgh, 10; CGomez, NEW YORK — Philadelphia's Cliff Arizona 000 202 20x — 6 a five-run lead and trailed 8-7 bases loaded in the fourth. Milwaukee, 9, Segura, Milwaukee,9, Span,WashingE—Hundley(7), Gregorius(12). DP—San Diego Lee outpitched Zack Wheeler after before tying the score onCarter's ton, 9;Hechavarria, Miami,7; Venabe,San Diego, 7; 2, Arizona1. LOB SanDiego4, Arizona6 28 TampaBay KansasCity CGonzalez,Colorado,6; DWright,NewYork,6. RBI single in the seventh inning. G.Parra(32). 38—Goldschmidt (1). SB—Campana the Mets learned All-Star starter ab r hbi ab r hbi HOME RUNS —PAlvarez, Pittsburgh, 31; Gold(5), Eaton (2). S — M ccar t h y. SF — P ra do. Matt Harvey has a partially torn White Sox reliever Addison Reed DeJesscf 4 0 I 0 AGordnlf 4 2 2 I schmidt, Arizona, 31; DBrown, Philadelphia, 27; San Diego IP H R E R BB SO ligament in his right elbow, Cody CGonzalez,Colorado,26;Bruce,Cincinnatr,25; JUp(5-2) struck out Jose Altuve and Z obrist2b-ss 4 0 1 0 Loughlf 1 0 0 0 T.RossL,3-7 6 7 6 4 2 6 Longoridh 4 0 0 0 Bonitac2b 5 1 3 0 ton Atlanta,24; Beltran,St.Louis, 23. Hynes 1-3 0 0 0 I 0 Asche had atwo-run triple, and Jason Castro to open the ninth STOLEN BASES —Segura, Milwaukee, 38; Joycelf 3 1 3 0 Hosmer1b 4 1 0 0 Bass 12-3 1 0 0 1 0 the Phillies beat New York. Lee before Dominguez put Houston WMyrs rf 4 0 0 0 BButlerdh 3 3 3 3 Ecabrera,SanDiego, 37; SMarte, Pittsburgh,35; Arizona L oneylb 4 0 I I Mostks3b 4 I 2 2 MccarthyW,3-8 7 CGomez, Milwaukee, 30;EYoung,NewYork, 29; Mc5 1 0 0 5 (11-3j gave abullpen taxed by an back ahead with his19th homer, Loatonc 4 0 1 0 Carrollpr-3b 1 I 0 0 Cutchen,Pittsburgh,26; Revere,Philadelphia,22. E.De LaRosa 2 0 0 0 0 4 18-inning loss Saturday a mucha shot to left field on a1-0 pitch. KJhnsn3b 4 0 0 0 S.Perezc 3 1 1 4 PITCHING —Zimmermann, Washington, 15-7; T.Rosspitchedto2 batters inthe7th. Wainwright, StLouis, 15-7;Liriano,Pittsburgh, 14-6; Y Escorss 1 0 0 0 Maxwllrf 3 0 1 1 Carter then added his 25th of the HBP —by TRoss (Eaton), by Mccarthy (Gyorko) needed rest. Heallowed a run and SRdrgzph-2b1 0 0 0 AEscorss 4 0 0 0 LaRosa, Colorado,14-6; 7 tied at13. WP — T.Ross, Hynes. five hits in eight innings to win for JDeERA season. —Kershaw,LosAngeles, 1.72; Harvey,New Dysoncf 4 1 1 0 T—2:33. A—16871(48,633). the first time in seven starts since York, 2.27;Fernandez,Miami, 2.30;Wainwright, St. Totals 3 3 I 7 I Totals 36 1 11311 Houston Chicago T ampa Bay 0 0 0 1 0 0 000 — 1 Louis, 2.58;Corbin, Arizona,2.79; Bumgarner, San July 5. Healso madeseveral nice Rockies 6, Giants1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Kansas City 1 0 4 0 0 5 0 1x — 11 Franc isco,2.84;Greinke,LosAngeles,2.86. plays in the field. GrssmnIf 5 0 1 0 De Azacf 5 1 4 1 DP KansasCity1. LOB—TampaBay9, Kansas STRIKEOUTS —Harvey, New York, 191; KerHoesrf 5 0 0 0 Bckhm2b 4 0 0 0 shaw,LosAngeles, 188;Wainwright, St.Louis, 182; City 6. 28 —Joyce2 (21), l.obaton(12), Moustakas DENVER — Todd Helton homered Altuve2b 5 0 1 0 AIRmrz ss 5 0 0 0 New York Samardzija,Chicago, 175; HBailey,Cincinnati, 166; (19). 38 —A.Gordon(6). HR —B.Butler (13), S.Perez to move within three hits of 2,500, Philadelphia Jcastroc 4 2 2 1 Konerk1b 4 1 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi AJBurnett,Pittsburgh,166;Latos,Cincinnati,166. (7). SB —Bonitacio (20), Maxw ell (5), Dyson(25). MDmn3b 4 3 2 1 LeGarcpr 0 0 0 0 SF — S.Perez. Bemdncf 4 0 1 0 l.agarscf 4 0 1 0 SAVES —Kimbrel, Atlanta, 41; Mulica,St. Louis, and Colorado beatSanFrancisco. Carterdh 4 3 3 4 A.Dunndh 41 1 2 Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO Roll insss 3 0 0 0 DnMrp2b 4 0 0 0 35; Achapm an,Cincinnati,33; RSoriano,Washington, Juan Nicasio tossed six shutout Wallac1b 5 1 1 1 JrDnkspr 0 0 0 0 HellicksonL,108 22-3 7 5 5 2 1 U tley2b 4 0 0 0 SatinIb 4 0 0 0 33; Romo,SanFrancisco, 31; Grilli, Pittsburgh, 30; BBarnscf 4 1 3 0 AGarcr rf 502 0 CRamos 3 5 5 5 2 1 innings and added anRBIsingle, R uizc 4 0 0 0 Byrdrf 4 1 2 0 Cishek,Miami, 28. ton 2,Chicago1.LOB —Houston 6, Chicago7. 28-

Texas

Seattle

Grossman (12), B.Barnes(16), DeAza (26), Konerko National League (14), Viciedo (17). HR—J.castro (18), M.Dominguez (19), Carter 2(25), Wallace(11), A.Dunn(30), Keppinger (4). CS —AI.Ramirez (8). S—Villar 2, KepDodgers 6, Cubs2 pinger Houston IP H R E R BBSO

Davisstan sinwa o a By David Ginsburg

Most important, he has three more homers than Cabrera, who last year became the first player to win the Triple Crown since Carl Yastrzemski did it in 1967. Davis understands the significance of the accomplishment. "Obviously when somebody does something like that, not only is it extremely hard to do, but it doesn't happen very often," he said. "You have to appreciate that." Only two players in baseball history have won it twice: Rogers Hornsby in 1922 and 1925, and Ted Williams in 1942 and 1947. "One is pretty special to have. It's a pretty impressive feat to win it once," Orioles catcher Matt Wieters said. "So, I'm going to root for Chris

The Associated Press

BALTIMORE — Only Chris Davis stands between Miguel Cabrera and baseball history. As he heads toward the conclusion of another sensational season with the Detroit Tigers, Cabrera has a decent shot at becoming the first major league player to win the Triple Crown in successive seasons. After Detroit's 8-6 loss to Oakland on Monday, Cabrera comfortably led the AL with a .359 batting average, 29 points higher than runner-up Mike Trout of the Los Angeles Angels. Cabrera's DO RBIs were best in the league, too, 12 better than Davis. In home runs, though, Davis held a 46-43 advantage. And if the Baltimore Orioles slugger can make that lead stand up, then Cabrera's bid for a repeat performance will be denied. "As far as me being the obstruction for him doing it again, I hope he does do it again," Davis said. "That would be awesome. He's a great hitter. He deserves everything that he gets. "My goal is not to go out there and keep Miguel Cabrera from winning the Triple Crown. It's to do everything I can to put us in position to win, whether that means I hit 10 more home runs or two more home runs. I've had a productive year so far, but if we don't make the playoffs,

rera's Tri e rown i

L

to keep rolling. Whether Miggy wins Frank Frankun rr /The Associated Press file

Detroit's Miguel Cabrera has a shot at becoming the first player to win the Triple Crown in successive years.

it doesn't really mean a lot." A productive year? That's putting it mildly. Davis ranks 10th in the American League with a.302 batting

average, has already surpassed his previous career-high RBI total by 33 and leads everyone in both leagues in home runs.

the Triple Crown or not, I don't think anybody's going to doubt what kind of a player and hitter he is." No one will argue that Cabrera is among the finest right-handed hitters ever to play the game. In most years, 43 homers with a week to play in August would be good enough for the

league lead. Not this year. Cabrera has been in catch-up mode for months behind the man nicknamed "Crush." "We don't worry about him," Cabrera insisted. "We focus on what we can do here in Detroit."

Frank Franklin rr /The Associated Press file

Baltimore's Chris Davis has three more home runs than Miguel Cabrera with five weeks to play this season.

Cabrera and Davis have not been in touch since the All-Star game, when Detroit's third baseman had some meaningful words of advice for Davis, who was in the midst of a career year. "One of the things he told me was, 'Don't let the talking heads get to

you,' " Davis said. "Down the stretch everybody is going to compare us and say that this guy is doing this or this guy is doing that. But the biggest thing is to go out there and continue to play. He said, 'You're having a great year. You have something to be proud of. It's not whether you finish with better numbers than I do, because you've still had a great year.' I really appreciated that." Davis will not measure his success in 2013 by the numbers of home runs he hits. He is more focused on the numbers in the victory column for Baltimore. "Chris is a huge team guy," Wieters said. "He's about winning more than anything. We're all rooting for him because ofthat, because he cares more about us winning than any kind of home run title. Everybody in this clubhouse is rooting for him to keep going because, one, it's going to help us win and, two, because he deserves it." Said Davis: "There's going to be a different home run king every year. Somebody is going to come along and break somebody else's record. For me, the individual awards are nice, but at the end of the day, I play for the ultimate team award. To say that you were part of a winning team, or even a championship team, is something thatnobody can ever take away from you. That's how I feel about it."


C4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

Mid-Amateur

off. "I started decent and I just started getting nervous. That's Continued from C1 just not playing. You get the Sundseth hit h i s p l ayoff jitters." tee shot into the red-cinder Tucker and Sundseth were fairway bunker guarding the the only two to qualify for the far side of the dogleg left. But Mid-Am out of a field of 36 Goldsworthy had hooked his golfers at Aspen Lakes. tee shot out of bounds, ending But Tucker's route was far his chances. And Poletiek's easier. 140-yard approach left him 20 His 71 cleared the field, and feetforbirdie. the 45-year-old Bandon Dunes From the bunker, Sundseth G olf Resort caddie got t o hit wedge to 12 feet. And af- watch the playoff from a safe ter Poletiek missed his birdie perch. "I'm glad I am not in that," chance, Sundseth drilled his putt, picked the ball up and T ucker, who wil l m ake h i s flashed a smile that clearly t hird appearance in a U . S. Mid-Am, said in the moments showed his relief. "Even though I tried to not before the playoff. "You never feelthe pressure, I was very want to do that." nervous on t hat l ast p utt," Sundseth, who played golf Sundseth confessed. "I was at Oregon State University, jittery. It was an easy read ... a ppears to b e m a k ing t h e it was just a matter of getting most out of some newfound started on line. I did, and it freedom. was perfect, right down the In June, he r esigned as middle." OSU's assistant men's golf Sundseth had gone as low coach because of what he deas 3 under par after he bird- scribed as "burnout." That deied the par-4 10th hole. But he cision gave him the opportuwas shaky down the stretch, nity to try for the Mid-Am, the bogeying the next two holes autumn date of which, he said, and then falling back to even has always conflicted with his with a bogey on the par-4 16th college golf schedule. hole. S undseth, wh o h a s n o t "I was not feeling comfort- worked since his resignation, a ble," said S undseth, w h o does not know what his next made a 5-footer for par on the career path will be. But he is par-5 18th to get into the play- hopeful that it will allow him

to play more competitive golf. "Ideally I would like to (play more)," said Sundseth, who married another R edmond High graduate, the f o rmer

Lindsey Repp, two years ago. "I'm still considering a few

things (including teaching). But I'm still trying to figure out what I want to do when I

grow up." T he Mid-Am w i l l m a r k Sundseth's fourth appearance in a United States Golf Association championship. He played in the U.S. Amateur Championship in 2 006 and in 2011, and he was selected t o represent Oregon in t h e 2007 USGA Men's State Team

Championship. Sundseth fell short of match play in both U.S. Amateur appearances. But the Mid-Am is different. There, every golfer will be 25 and older, and the vast majority of them must balance golf with work and family life, as Sundseth does. But he still has some brushing up with his golf game to do before heading to Alabama. "Hopefully, I'll get out and play a little more," Sundseth said. "And hopefully, I can feel more comfortable in a tournament situation." — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com.

Long snap

Rubio'srankings as a primer forrecruiting. This is not something Rubio attempts to shield Continued from C1 from his campers, or from their parents. In fact, "Try sleeping the night before a game without he broadcasts it. While his camps are primarone," said Paul Chryst, the coach at Pittsburgh. ily about instruction, he said, they also provide Long snappers have exactly one job: snap the an opportunity to get noticed by someone who ball on extra points, field goals and punts. And has connections. "Maximum exposure," Rubio while a long snapper will never win the Heis- calls it. One parent asked Rubio if it was too late man Trophy, the role is a trapeze act. The only in the recruiting process for a college to offer a time anyone notices a snap is when it rockets scholarship to his son, a senior. "Absolutely not," Rubio said. "You're being past the punter or the holder. Anything short of a 100 percent success rate is catastrophic. The seen by menow, and coaches are going offmy very best long snappers, though, can send the lists." There is an economic side to the equation, of ball spiraling in a sharp arc at 52 mph. "A coach once told me that long snapping is course. Long snapping is Rubio's livelihood, and like brain surgery," Rubio said during a quiet mo- he typically charges each of his campers about ment at his camp, a daylong affair that included $300 to attend his camps. Many of the boys on-field instruction, a recruiting seminar and who traveled to Auburn came from out of state, film analysis. "As long as everything goes right, and the entire enterprise can get expensive in a you're good. You mess up one time, you're dead." hurry. Rubio organizes roughly 35 camps over Not so long ago, college coaches would not the course of the year. He also offers private leshave dreamed of putting long snappers on sons at his home in Lewiston, Idaho. full scholarship. A lineman could moonlight "When you goto a Rubio camp, you getRubio," at the position. Why waste a scholarship on a Rubio said. "And that's a big-time thing. If you're long snapper'? Conventional wisdom was that paying top dollar, you better get Grade A meat." coaches were better off recruiting an extra Rubio's path to self-styled guru happened quarterback, or three. more or less by accident. As a teenager growing The landscape has changed. Paul Johnson, up outside Los Angeles, he was a quarterback the coach at Georgia Tech, cited redshirt sopho- until he reached high school. The problem, he more Sean Tobin as the first long snapper he said, was his size — specifically, the 270 pounds had ever signed to a scholarship out of high he was hauling around on his 6-foot-2-inch school. Johnson knew he would eventually frame. His coach turned him into a lineman, need a replacement for Tyler Morgan, and he but Rubio saw little action as a sophomore. He could not afford to gamble. said he was not particularly enamored with his "A bad snap can change the game faster than role or with his coach. "He was a yeller," Rubio said. "I'm not a anything," Johnson said in a recent interview. Boston College coach Steve Addazio said yeller." innovative punting schemes had also underThe following summer, Rubio was throwscored the position's importance. More teams ing the football around when a friend decided have adopted spread formations that put a pre- to snap a few from 15 yards. Rubio tried it and mium on having a long snapper who can sprint liked it. He seemed to have a natural feel for the downfield and help cover the return. skill. He spent the next two seasons as his high "You need a guy who can snap well but is school's long snapper and drew mild interest also an athlete," Addazio said. "It's a field-posi- from collegecoaches. tion game. The fewer return yards you give up, He enrolled at UCLA, where he earned a spot the better your starting position is. The better onthe team as a walk-on. Everythingthat Rubio your starting position is, the better chance you understood about the position was self-taught, have to score." he said. He studied video and devised drills for Rubio, a former long snapper at UCLA, be- himself in his dorm room. As a sophomore, Rugan his business about 10 years ago with Chris bio began to wonder why Terry Donahue, the Sailer, his best friend from college. Sailer was team's head coach, had never said a word to the team's place-kicker, so the two have always him. Did Donahue even know his name? Rubio been especially close. At last month's camp, said he finally worked up the nerve to ask. "Rubio," Donahue told him, "if I never speak Sailer instructed his kickers and punters on one side of the field while Rubio used the other. Ru- to you again, you've done a fine job." Donahue never spoke to him again, a fact bio was prone to describing Sailer's students as morons, although it was a calculated move. Rubio regards as a point of pride. "Rubio does a good job of making long snapThese days, Rubio markets the entire Rubio pers feel important," said Clayton Jackson, a experience as entree into the long-snapping fraRubio acolyte from Cottonwood Falls, Kan., ternity. Each camper gets his email address and where he is a senior at Chase County High cellphone number — "If I don't respond right School. "Before I got involved, you just felt like away, I'm either on a plane, sleeping or at a you were on your own. You didn't know there camp," he said — along with an evaluation and were other people who did it. You didn't know that all-important ranking. therewere people who were supportive." The country's top-ranked senior, according Rubio is known simply as Rubio. He does not to Rubio, is Tanner Carew, a 6-foot-2, 215-pound respond to "Chris." (Even his wife calls him Ru- wizard from La Verne, Calif., who has orally bio.) His obsession with long snapping is such committed to play at Oregon on a full scholarthat he never watches games live on television, ship. Carew said he had attended more Rubio he said. Instead,he records them so he can scan camps than hecould remember. them in three minutes. He skips ahead a lot. "Colleges look at his rankings," Carew said "Fourth down, fourth down, fourth down," in a telephone interview. "He knows people. I he said. wouldn't be in this position without him." The ideal long snapper, Rubio said, has long Last month's camp concluded with an accuarms and a substantial backside. racy contest. The finals pitted Jackson against "Look at that big old butt," Rubio said of one Zach Hubbard, a 6-foot-5, 240-pound senior camper. "All the power comes from the butt. from Tampa, Fla., who had arrived that day hopBoom!" ing to improve his Rubio ranking. Hubbard said With college scholarships suddenly available, his goal was to use long snapping to enhance his the secret is out: Being a good long snapper, or college choices and then parlay it into a career. "I want to make $800,000 doing nothing in even an adequateone, can pay off.Enter Rubio, who is something of a power broker. Each the NFL," he said. After ousting Jackson, Hubbard was happy camper receives a ranking, which Rubio posts on his website. Because long snapping is such to settle for a Camp Champion T-shirt. Rubio an esoteric skill, many college coaches lean on was off to his next stop in Chicago.

Prepboyssoccer ataglance A look at the Central Oregon teams for the upcomingseason:

GLASS 5A Bend Head coach:Nils Eriksson (18th season)

Summit

Head coach:RonKidder (ninth season)

2012 record:5-8-1 overall, 2-4 IMC (third); lost in

2012 record:12-2-3 overall, 5-0-1 IMC (first); lost in Class 5A semifinals Outlook:After reaching the state semifinals the

Class 5A play-in game Outlook:The Lava Bears hope to improve this

season behind acore of juniors and sophomores. Top returners include senior goalkeeperTony

past two seasons, the Storm are hoping to takethe next step. Summit lost nine seniors but should find leadership from seniors Alex Arnis and Cameron

Watters and juniors Scott Bracci, Sam Nelson and Zach Hite. "I think we'll be a little more competitive than last year," Eriksson says. "We had a lot of one-

Weaver aswell as juniors Eli Warmenhoven and Alex Bowlin.

goal losses last year." Redmond Mountain View

Head coach:Chris Rogers (fourth season)

Head coach:Ansel Evans(second season) 2012 record:3-11 overall, 0-6 IMC (sixth)

2012 record:11-5-2overall, 4-1-1 IMC (second); lost in Class 5A state championship

Outlook:A strong returning sophomore class will lead the Panthers as they look to improve from last

Outlook:TheCougars face a rebuilding year but

season. Senior midfielder Daniel Lopezwas all-

will still look to challenge Summit for the top spot in the Intermountain Conference. Midfielders Taylor

IMC honorable mention last season. "Our program continues trying to rebuild after the opening of

Willman andZel Reyand forward Zach Emerson

thenew highschoolinRedmond,"Evanssays, referencing Ridgeview. "Wearewelcoming players

will lead the way.

new to soccer to try and fill a JV team, as this will

help us in our future." CLASS 4A Ridgeview Head coach:Keith Bleyer (second season)

Madras Head coach:Clark Jones (fifth season) 2012 record:3-11 overall, 3-7 TVC(fourth)

2012 record:5-7-1 overall, 2-0 Special District1

(first); lost in Class 4Aplay-in game Outlook:Offseason work should help the Ravens improve this season. Without a senior class last year, Ridgeview has eight seniors on its roster now. Senior leaders include Raul Segoviano, Nate Kandle and Chase Bennett. "I think we can do more than just make the playoffs," Bleyer says. "We want to upset a team or two, and we've got the boys to do it."

Outlook:Junior midfielders Mario Urieta and Oved Felix will lead the White Buffaloes as they look to

improve from last season. "We're slowly getting our numbers up to wherethey need to beandthe intensity is getting better," Jones says. "Several players have grown upover theyear andare stepping up." La Pine

Crook County

Head coach:SamRamirez (second season) 2012 record:3-4-1 overall (played a JVschedule)

Head coach:Joel Carillo

(fourth season, second tenure)

Outlook:Seniors Zach Smith and Sam Wieber

2012 record:2-9 overall, 0-2 Special District1

accounted for about 90 percent of the Hawks' goals

(second) Outlook:ZaneAbrams is the only senior on the Cowboys' roster. Abrams will look to lead avery

last season, according to Ramirez. They will lead La Pine as it fields it first varsity team. "It's still a young

team, but we have acouple seniors," Ramirez says. "They'r emostlyfreshman andsophomores.The kids are ready for improvement."

young Crook County team. "They're looking better

than last year," Carillo says. "They're young, but they have alot of skills." CLASS 3A/2A/1A Gulver Head coach:Tom Kirk (ninth season)

Central Christian Head coach:Drew Roberts (first season)

2012 record:3-8-3 overall, 1-6-1 Special District 4

2012 record:1-7-2 overall, 0-7-1 Special District 4

(fourth)

(fifth)

Outlook:The team is still learning to play together behind the leadership of two returning seniors: defender Arturo Vasquez and midfielder Isaias Gutierrez. "We have to figure out how to trust each other and how to play together," Kirk says. "We

Outlook:Returning seniors Garrett Simpson and Caleb Stewart will lead the Tigers as they play an independent schedule. "We're trying to get a

few extra players," Roberts says. "With our new independentschedule,wecan playsomelocalJV teams."

need to get good teamplay, movethe ball quickly, and share the ball."

Outlaws

ship game.

(semifinal) games. I think as

M ountain V i e w c o a c h a program we've tasted sucChris Rogers says this will cess, and I think they want be a rebuilding year for his more. They're still h ungry, team, which lost seven se- for sure." — Reporter: 541-383-0318, niorsfrom the 2012 squad. S till, Rogers l i kes t h e mmorical@bendbulletin.com.

Continued from C1 "The attitude of our players, and the work ethic, all of that type of stuff is right there," Jensen says. "And I think (a state championship) Cougars' chances of being is one of our goals. You've competitive behind a core got to win league and get of three returning players: some luck in the playoffs, sophomore midfielder Taybut I think we're definitely lor W i l l man, s o phomore going to make a run at that. forward Zach Emerson, and We want to be playing on junior midfielder Zel Rey. the last day." "Those three comingback Jensen calls 2013 a "regive us a very dynamic, atloading year" and says his tacking advantage," Rogers team has the potential to says. "In any game we're in be better than last season. we should be able to score He says the Outlaws — who goals. We lost a lot of senior were 10-0 in th e Sky-Em leadership, but we still have League last season — are some players who can definitely still ball. We just have again the favorites to win their league, though they t o build around what w e could face stiff competition know works, and find the from Cottage Grove and pieces to fill some holes, like Junction City. we did last year." O ther players who w i l l Summit's situation is simhave big roles this season, ilar to Mountain View's. The a ccording t o J e nsen, i n - Storm graduated nine seclude junior Justin Harrer, niors from last year's team, who will see time at both seven of whom were startsweeper and striker, and ers. Summit hopes to reload sophomore m i dfieldersbehind the play of senior Jadon Bachtold and Colton defender Cameron Weaver, Manhalter. j unior defender El i W a r "They're crafty, so they'll menhoven, and midfielders Alex Arnis, a senior, and distribute well for us in the middle there,"Jensen says Alex Bowlin, a junior. of Bachtold and Manhalter. Storm coach Ron Kidder Senior J a rdon W e ems says he thinks the defending w ill lead th e O utlaw d eIMC champions can have fense, Jensen says. another strong year after the E lsewhere i n Cen t r a l Cougars "got the last laugh" Oregon boys s occer, the last season by beating them Intermountain Conference i n t h e s e m i finals. T h a t marked the second straight race will likely once again come down to Summit and year Summit was eliminated Mountain View. The Storm in the state semifinals. "I think we're knocking won the league last season, but the Cougars defeated on the door (of a state chamtheir crosstown rival 1-0 in pionship)," Kidder s ays. "It's just getting over the a state semifinal before falling to Woodburn 2-1 in the hump. Some of these kids Class 5A state championhave been in both of those

lES SCNNAB

Mannion Contlnued from C1 Both players shared first-team reps for the past several weeks. Mannion started Oregon State's first four games last season but injured his left knee and required arthroscopic surgery. Vaz stepped in and led the team to victories in its next two games, giving the Beavers their best start since they also

went 6-0 in 1907. Oregon State finished a better-than-expected 9-4 and earned a trip to the Alamo Bowl, where it lost to Texas 31-27. "Sean's attributes are obviously his ability to get the ball just about wherever you want on the field," Riley told reporters gathered after practice on Monday, "along with his knowledge about where we're going and what he should do with the ball." Mannion passed for 2,446 yards and

15 touchdowns with eight starts in 10 appearances, while Vaz, hampered late in the season by a left ankle injury, passed for 1,480 yards and 11 touchdowns in seven games with five starts. Riley said he did not know yet whether both quarterbacks would play in the opener. He said Vaz took the news well. "That's never fun. I was really proud of his response," Riley said. "I know he'll be ready when called upon."

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C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com/business. Alsosee3recapin Sunday's Businesssection.

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST27, 2013

+

+

+

NASDAD

14,946.46

3,657.57

Toda+

$8$P500

1 720

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

S&P/Case-Shiller

1,660 "

The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller home price index, which tracks prices of typical single-family homes in 20 large cities, will be released today. Last month, the index reported that U.S. home prices in May were up 12 percent from the year before, and 2 percent from the previous month. All 20 cities showed gains. Prices in Dallas and Denver reached the highest level since records dating back to 2000. That marked the first time since the housing bust that any city had reached an all-time high.

.

'

"

-

1,600 '

156.1 152.4 151

'

3

GOLD

$1,393.00/

270

S&P 500

Dow jones industrials

Close: 1,656.78

Close: 14,946.46

Change: -6.72 (-0.4%)

Change: -64.05 (-0.4%)

1,750

16,000 "

1,700

15,500

1,650

.

15,000

1,600 14,500 .:.

1,550

14,000

1 500 1'450

M

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StocksRecap Vol. (in mil.) Pvs. Volume Advanced Declined New Highs New Lows

2,375 2,535 1259 1804 92 18

J

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C H G. -64.05 -0.49 -3.68 -42.31 -0.22 -6.72 + 0 . 40 -54.85 + 0 . 23

%CHG. WK MO OTR YTD -0.43% T T +14.06% -0.01% L L +22.10% -0.76% T T +5.78% -0.45% T T $-11L71% -0.01% $-2%13% -0.40% +16.17% +0.03% +19.34% T -0.31% +17.60% +0.02% +22.27%

148.6 146 2 146.6

NorthwestStocks Alaska Air Group Source: Factset Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co

ALK 32.69 ~ A VA 22.78 ~ BAC 7 . 83 BBSI 24.64 BA 6 9 .03 Consumer Confidence CascadeBancorp CACB 4.65 Columbia Bnkg CDLB 16.18 for August Columbia Sporlswear COLM 47.72 The Conference Board releases its CostcoWholesale COST 93.51 ~ monthly consumer confidence Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5 62 — 0 survey, which measures the public's FLIR Systems FLIR 18.58 — 0 confidence in the health of the Hewlett Packard H PQ 11.35 ~ economy. The index was 80.3 in Home FederalBncpID H OME 9.90 ~ July, down from 82.1 the month Intel Corp INTC 19.23 ~ before. Though that is still above Keycorp K EY 7 . 81 levels compared to the year before, Kroger Co KR 21. 7 3 it's a sign that people are nervous Lattice Semi LSCC 3.46 LPX 12.19 about the economy and their jobs. LA Pacific MDU 19.59 In the latest survey, just 12 percent MDU Resources Mentor Graphics MENT 13.21 — o of respondents said jobs were Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 ~ "plentiful," while 36 percent said Nike Inc 8 NKE 4 4.83 ~ jobs were "hard to get." NordstromInc JWN 50.94 ~ Nwst NatGas NWN 41,01 o — OfficeMax Inc DMX 4 . 75 ~ PaccarInc PCAR 38.76 ~ Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 Plum Creek PCL 40.51 Prec Castparts PCP 157.51 Safeway Inc SWY 15.00 Schnitzer Steel SCHN 23.07 Sherwin Wms SHW 138.36 Stancorp Fncl SFG 30.45 StarbucksCp SBUX 44.27 Triquint Semi TQNT 4.30 UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11.17 US Bancorp USB 30.96 WashingtonFedl WAFD 15.56 Regis earnings Wells Fargo 8 Co WFC 31.25 Regis, the owner of Supercuts and Weyerhaeuser WY 2 4.35 J

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other hair salons, will report results for its fourth fiscal quarter this morning. Investors expect revenue to be lower compared with a year ago, though that's partly because the

company hasbeen selling assets. Since last fall, it has gotten rid of its stake in the European hair salon giant Provalliance as well as its stake in the hair replacement service Hair Club for Men and Women. RGS

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$17.74

Operating EPS

est.

I 't

4 Q '12

Amgen(AMGN )

4Q ' 1 3

Amgen said it will use $8.1 billion in committed bank loans to finance the deal. Onyx rejected an offer from Amgen worth $120 per share in June. Amgen is the biggest

Price-earnings ratio: lost money based on past 12 months' results

Dividend: $0.24 Div. yield: 1.4%

52-WEEK RANGE

MOnday'SCIOSe: $113.75

$81~

Total return YTD:34%

~

~

5-YR*: 13%

116

FundFocus

biotech drug company in the world. The Thousand Oaks, Calif., company reported $17.27 billion in revenue in 2012. It said Onyx will start adding to its adjusted net income in 2015.

Ann. dividend: $1.88 Yield: 1.7%

10- Y R*: 6%

Total returns through Aug. 26

AP

Source: FactSet

~

3-YR*: 33%

1.3374+

-.0008

StoryStocks

BTU

Close:$18.25%0.40 or 2.2% Stock of the coal miner jumped following a glowing analysis of the company in an article in Barron's over the weekend. $25 20

Intrepid Potash

IPI

Close: $12.61 %0.20 or 1.6% The potash producer rose on the arrest of the head of Russia's largest potash producer weeks after it exited a pricing cartel. $20 15

15

J J 52-week range $14.34~

J J 52-week range

A

$29.84

$1$$0 ~

$24.70

Vold9.4m (1.3x avg.) P E: .. . Vold4.1m (2.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$4.92 b Yiel d : 1. 9% Mkt. Cap:$955.43 m ARO

Close:$8.71 V-0.05 or -0.6%

A

P E: 12 . 9 Yield :...

3D Systems

DDD

Close:$51.90 A3.46 or 7.1%

"Enough beating of baby seals," said Shares of 3D printing companies jumped as Citigroup initiated cover+40. 0 +7 9 .8 6 4 4 1 4 0. 8 0 Brean Capital, which upgraded the teen apparel retailer after the stock's age of two, one of them being 3D +10. 0 +9. 8 23 6 1 8 1. 2 2 recent slump. Systems. +24. 8 +7 9 .367604 26 0. 0 4 $20 $55 + 68.2 + 1 74.1 3 7 31 0.5 2 15 50 +4 0 . 0 + 5 2.6 2 4 28 1 9 1. 9 4 10 4 -0.2 +29.7 10 6 „ L J ~ 4 +33. 4 + 3 8 .0 11 6 1 9 0. 4 0 J J A V +7 6 +16 1 7 4 18 0 88 52-week range 52-week range 4 +13 . 3 + 2 8.0 1033 2 4 1 . 24 $$.59 ~ $17.10 $21.57 ~ $54.0$ i +70 8 +45 1 53 cc Vol.: 8.3m (3.2x avg.) P E : 62 .2 Vol.: 10.4m (2.8x avg.) PE: 76.3 +45 0 + 64 2 8 0 9 2 0 0 3 6 Mkt. Cap: $683.47 m Yie l d: ... Mkt. Cap:$5.27 b Yield: ... V +56. 3 +3 0 .1 17342 dd 0 . 5 8 L +12. 8 +4 3 .7 13 cc 0. 2 4a Tesla TSLA Amgen AMGN w +8.0 -6.8 22055 12 0 .90 Close:$164.22 %2.38 or 1.5% Close:$113.75 L8.15 or 7.7% 4 +43. 8 +4 9 .4 7 807 14 0 .22f The market value of the electric car Shares of the biotech giant rose af4 + 41.7 +7 5 .8 3 1 21 1 3 0. 6 0 maker jumped above $20 billion on a ter it snaps up cancer drug maker w +23. 6 +2 7 .0 6 4 8 d d favorable sales report from CaliforOnyx Pharmaceuticals for $10.4 bil4 - 21.6 +14.4 1870 9 nia dealers. lion. a +28. 9 + 2 9 .9 3 0 5 c c 0. 6 9 $200 $120 4 +32.7 +3 7 .7 7 9 2 2 4 0. 1 8 150 110 w +27. 9 +1 7 .971443 13 0 . 92 100 100 X + 23. 9 +3 6 .2 2 635 2 4 0. 8 4 w +7.1 +2.4 18 2 9 1 5 1. 2 0 J J A J J A W -5.4 -9.7 5 1 20 1.8 2 52-week range 52-week range L +25.9 +1 28.3 1734 2 0 . 0 8a $2$.$$~ $17$.$0 $$0.$0 ~ $u $.2$ 4 + 21. 2 +4 1 .9 8 1 0 1 9 0 . 80a Vol.:24.0m (2.2x avg.) P E: . . . Vold11.5m (3.4x avg.) P E: 1 9 . 1 4 + 32 9 + 42 3 42 dd Mkt. Cap:$19.94 b Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$85.69 b Yiel d : 1. 7% V + 1.1 +16 . 1 58 5 3 0 1. 7 6 w +14. 2 + 3 5 .0 3 8 9 2 1 0. 1 2 Hasbro HAS C.H. Robinson CHRW i +44.9 +79 .1 2 8 72 1 2 0. 8 0 Close:$46.39 %0.28 or 0.6% Close:$58.83 %1.63 or 2.8% X -8.4 -4.6 19 0 9 9 0 . 7 5 Citigroup said the toymaker's latest The trucking company ups its share V + 11. 7 +2 4 .7 4 3 3 2 5 2. 0 0 slate of products should accelerate buyback plans; earlier this month it sales growth, including a new Elmo fell short of second-quarter earnings 4 +49.0 +82 . 3 19 6 13 0. 9 3f expectations. i +34. 0 +5 2 .0 2 409 34 0 . 8 4 doll. $48 $65 4 +61.1 +3 6 .1 1 042 d d 4 + 43. 6 +4 0 .1 3 3 2 1 8 0. 6 0f 46 60 4 +15. 6 +1 6 .4 4 145 13 0 .92f 44 55 4 +32. 1 +4 2 .7 2 1 2 1 6 0. 3 6 4 +24. 0 $- 2 9.2 9935 11 1. 2 0 J J A J J A 52-week range 52-week range V +0.5 +15. 8 3 4 13 2 6 0 . 88f

Amgen's $10.4 billion acquisitionl;.;l;",l I

+ -.50 '

Foreign affairs weighed on the stock market Monday. Stocks started the day higher after a handful of corporate deals were announced. But the market headed lower in afternoon trading after Secretary of State John Kerry ratcheted up pressure against Syria. Kerry called last week's alleged use of chemical weapons a "moral obscenity," increasing the U.S.'s criticism of the regime. The Dow Jones industrial average fell as much as 65 points shortly after Kerry's remarks. It was up almost 30 points just before. Ultimately the Dow closed down less than 1 percent. The broader Standard 8 Poor's 500 index also dipped just slightly; less than 1 percent.

$$4.91 ~

Biotech drugmaker Amgen is making a deal to add several cancer drugs to its stable and add to its pipeline of new drugs. The company will buy Onyx Pharmaceuticals for about $10.4 billion in cash. Amgen said Sunday it will acquire Onyx for $125 per share, and it expects to complete the deal at the beginning of the fourth quarter. The companies value the deal at $9.7 billion excluding Onyx's cash, and

$105.92

x v 4 4 4

Dividend Footnotes:a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid tn tast12 months. f - Current annual rate, wtttctt was mcreased by most recent dtvtdend announcement. t - Sum ot dividends patd after stock split, no regular rate. I - Sum of dtvtdends patd tttts year. Most recent dtvtdend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or patd thts year, acumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - tmttat dividend, annual rate not known, yteld not shown. r - Declared or paid tn precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid tn stock apprcxtmate cash value on ex-dtstrtbutton date.Fe Footnotes:q - Stock ts a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds Sa dd - Loss tn last t2 months

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$24.01

Peabody Energy

15049.98 14945.24 14946.46 6523.07 6474.12 6479.36 483.71 479.16 479.26 9494.53 9425.83 9432.51 3684.22 3652.26 3657.57 1669.51 1656.02 1656.78 1224.06 1215.28 1217.83 17759.18 17617.95 17633.57 1044.66 1036.02 1038.47

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

NYSE NASD est. 159.4

2.79%

1 0 DA Y S

Case-Shiffer home price index 162

10 YR T NOTE ~ 0

1,656.78

Pric e -earnings ratio (trailing 12 months): 19

Market value: $85.7 billion *Annualized

Source: FactSet

SelectedMutualFunds

$4$.97

$53c 4 ~

$$7.9$

Vol.:1.5m (1.3x avg.) P E: 18 . 9 Vol.:3.6m (2.8x avg.) P E: 16 . 1 Mkt. Cap:$6.02 b Yiel d : 3 .4% Mkt. Cap:$9.37 b Y ield: 2.4% 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 fell to 2.79 percent Monday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.

. 0 3 .02 . 0 6 .05 .12 .12

2-year T-note . 3 7 .38 5-year T-note 1 .59 1 .62 10-year T-note 2.79 2.82 30-year T-bond 3.77 3.79

BONDS

+ 0 .01 w + 0 .01 w ... ~ -0.01

i

L i

w w +

. 09 . 13 .17

L

.27

-0.03 w

A

i

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-0.03 W

L

X 1.69

-0.02 w

a

a 2.80

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO IlTRAGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.60 3.61 -0.01 w L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.28 5.29 -0.01 L L Barclays USAggregate 2.54 2.59 -0.05 L L PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.41 6.44 -0.03 L L RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.60 4.69 -0.09 w L YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.73 1.76 -0.03 w L 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3 .45 3.51 -0.06 L L 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

L L L L L L L

2.50 4.23 1.83 6.78 3.47 .97 2 97 .

AP

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK This fund aims to capture momenFAMILY FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 tum, by investing in stocks that Marketsummary BalA m 22.43 - . 0 5 + 10.9+14.4 +14.0 +7.8 A A A have recently done better than the American Funds Most Active CaplncBuA m 55.47 -.07 + 7.0 + 9 .6 +10.7 +5.2 8 A B market, following the premise they CpWldGrlA m 41.25 +.01 +12.5 +19.6 +12.9 +5.2 C C C NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG will continue to do so. S&P500ETF Microsoft BkofAm iShEMkts

Cisco

MktVGold BariPVix rs SPDR Fncl iShJapan

GenElec

166.00 —.62 34.15 -.60 14.49 -.08 AOR MmntL 38.23 —.42 23.83 —.03 VALUE 30.41 +.27

773068 714434 676043 398258 356959 334695 315863 289292 278826 256534

15.29 + . 49 19.93 —.13 11.19 —.13 23.61 -.17

AMOMX BL EN D

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Gainers NAME IntriCon

LAST 3.96 ResponGen 2.39 Spherix rs 13.55 BioAmbr n 4.87 Cimatron 7.38 ZhoneTech 2.97 Mannatech 25.00 VertexEn 3.30 NwstBio wt 2.31 AccelrDiag 10.24

CHG %CHG +1.05 $-.51 +2.48 +.82 +1.18 +.47 +3.84 +.46 $ ..31 +1.35

+ 3 6 .1 + 2 7 .1 «C + 2 2 .4 $$ + 2 0 .2 «C + 1 9 .0 $o + 1 8 .8 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ + 1 8.1 + 1 6 .2 O e Fund target represents weighted + 1 5 .5 average of stock holdings + 1 5 .2 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings

Losers NAME NoahHldgs RigelPh ChiYida rs PacBkrM g NuverraE

LAST 13.69 3.14 4.20 4.14 2.40

CHG %CHG -2.81 -17.0 —.49 -13.5 —.63 -13.0 -.60 -12.7 -.32 -11.8

CATEGORY Large Growth MORNINGSTAR

RATING™ * ** * V r ASSETS $680 million

EXP RATIO 0.50% MANAGER Ronen Israel SINCE 2009-07-09 RETURNS3-MD +1.9 Foreign Markets YTD +18.6 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +21.2 Paris -2.34 -.06 4,067.13 3-YR ANNL +18.4 London 6,492.10 + 45.23 + . 7 0 5-YR-ANNL NA Frankfurt + 18.16 + . 2 2 8,435.15 Hong Kong 22,005.32 + 141.81 + . 6 5 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico 40,419.93 -505.20 -1.23 Google, Inc. Class A Milan 16,977.76 -364.49 -2.10 Tokyo -24. 27 —.18 Bank of America Corporation 13,636.28 Stockholm 1,245.99 $ 2.17 $.1 7 Citigroup Inc Sydney $.11.90 $ . .23 Pfizer Inc 5,127.10 Zurich 8,022.20 + 15.30 + . 19 Berkshire Hathaway lnc Class B

EurPacGrA m 44.28 . . . + 7 . 4 + 16.7 +9.1 +4.1 D D A FnlnvA m 46.9 9 - . 13+15.9 +21.2 +17.0 +6.7 C D C GrthAmA m 40.46 ... +17.8 +23.9 +17.6 +6.8 A C C IncAmerA m 19.38 -.04 + 9.2 +12.7 +12.8 +7.7 8 8 A InvCoAmA m 35.20 -.02 +17.7 +20.0 +16.7 +7.0 C D C NewPerspA m 35.24 -.04 + 12.7 +20.0 +14.9 +7.2 C 8 8 WAMutlnvA m36.39 -.14 + 17.8 +19.9 +18.5 +7.7 D 8 8 Dodge 8 Cox Income 13.46 +.02 - 1.5 + 0.5 + 4.0 +6.6 A 8 8 IntlStk 38.70 -.19 +11.7 +24.6 +11.1 +4.2 A A A Stock 1 48.46 -.55 +22.8 +29.2 +20.8 +7.6 A A B Fidelity Contra 90.06 -.21 + 17.2 +18.9 +18.1 +8.2 C C 8 GrowCo 113. 53 +.17+ 21.8 +20.8 +21.9+10.5 8 A A LowPriStk d 47 .86 -.04+21.2 +27.4 +20.5+11.3 C 8 A Fidelity Spartan 500l d xAdvtg 58 .89 -.24+ 17.8 +20.0 +19.0 +7.8 C 8 8 FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 34 .. . +7 . 2 + 11.2 +10.4 +7.2 IncomeA m 2.3 2 .. . +7 . 6 + 1 1.8 +11.0 +7.7 FrankTemp-Templeton GIBondAdv 12.76 ... -1.9 +3 .8 + 5 .2 +9.1 Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19. 85 - .07+14.7 +17.2 +16.4 +6.0 E D D RisDivB m 17 . 96 - .05+ 14.1 +16.2 +15.4 +5.0 E E E RisDivC m 17 . 87 - .06+ 14.2 +16.3 +15.5 +5.2 E D E SmMidValA m40.21 -.05 + 24.1 +33.1 +16.5 +5.2 A E E SmMidValB m33.76 -.05+23.3 +32.0 +15.5 +4.3 A E E PIMCO TotRetA m 10 . 67 +.03 -3.7 -1.3 +3.1 +6.5 C C B T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 30.79 - . 1 5+17.4 +22.3 +17.9 +7.9 C C 8 GrowStk 44.5 2 - . 08+ 17.8 +19.6 +20.4 +9.0 C A 8 HealthSci 55.3 2 + .55+ 34.2 +37.9 +34.1+17.6 8 A A Newlncome 9. 3 4 +.02-3.5 - 2.0 +2.6 +5.3 D D C Vanguard 500Adml 153.21 -.62 +17.8 +20.0 +19.0 +7.8 C 8 8 500lnv 153.18 -.62 $-17.7 +19.9 +18.9 +7.7 C 8 8 CapDp 43.12 +.20 +28.3 +36.3 +21.0 +9.2 A A A Eqlnc 28.07 -.18 +17.8 +20.2 +20.1 +9.6 D A A StratgcEq 26.52 -.06 +23.6 +30.2 $.23.7 $.9.2 8 A 8 TgtRe2020 25.68 -.05 +7.8 +11.2 +11.5 +6.3 8 A A Tgtet2025 14.83 -.03 +9.1 +13.0 +12.5 +6.3 8 8 8 TotBdAdml 10.57 +.02 -3.0 -2.2 +2.4 $-4.9 D D D Totlntl 15.44 -.09 +4.7 +14.5 +7.9 +2.3 E E C TotStlAdm 41.97 -.13 +18.8 +21.9 +19.7 +8.4 8 A A TotStldx 41.95 -.13 +18.7 +21.8 +19.5 +8.3 8 A A USGro 25.01 -.03 +17.6 +21.2 +20.0 +7.5 8 A C Welltn 37.15 -.09 $-11.2 +14.4 +13.2 +8.0 A A A

PCT 3.76 2.31 2.19 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption 2.08 fee. f - front load (satescharges). m - Multiple fees arecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 1.7 redemption fee. Source: Mornngstac

Commodities Gold for December delivery ended the regular trading session down, but in evening trading crossed above $1,400 for the first time since June. The price of crude oil slipped.

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 105.92 106.42 -0.47 + 15.4 Ethanol (gal) 2.50 2.45 -0.33 + 14.2 Heating Dil (gal) 3.08 3.10 - 0.52 + 1 . 1 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.51 3.49 + 0.80 + 4 . 8 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.95 3.01 - 1.85 + 5 .0 FUELS

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. 1393.00 1395.70 24.01 23.73 1544.50 1541.60 3.32 3.35 745.55 750.35

%CH. %YTD -0.19 -16.8 +1.16 -20.4 + 0.19 + 0 . 4 -8.8 -0.89 - 0.64 + 6 . 1

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -5.0 1.23 1.23 +0.24 1.14 1.13 +0.88 -20.7 5.16 4.96 +4.09 -26.1 Corn (bu) Cotton (Ib) 0.93 0.93 +24.2 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 310.40 313.50 -0.99 -17.0 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.37 1.35 +1.07 +17.7 Soybeans (bu) 14.28 13.65 + 4.58 + 0 . 6 Wheat(bu) 6.55 6.35 +3.19 -15.8 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

Foreign Exchange The dollar was mixed against other major currencies Monday. It rose against the euro currency but fell against the Japanese yen and British pound.

h5N4 QG

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5579 +.0004 +.03% 1 .5810 C anadian Dollar 1.0 5 04 —.0007 —.07% .9912 USD per Euro 1.3374 —.0008 —.06% 1.2519 —.02 —.02% 78.70 Japanese Yen 98.64 Mexican Peso 13.1 760 + .1644 +1.25% 13.1886 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6075 +.0115 +.32% 4.0232 Norwegian Krone 6. 0 397 + .0214 +.35% 5.8264 SouthAfrican Rand 10.3293 +.0876 +.85% 8.3896 Swedish Krona 6.51 3 8 + .0241 +.37% 6.5994 Swiss Franc .9231 +.0011 +.12% .9592 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.1074 + .0003 +.03% .9 6 06 Chinese Yuan 6.1205 -.0000 -.00% 6.3557 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7557 -.0003 -.00% 7.7567 Indian Rupee 64.200 +.910 +1.42% 55.495 Singapore Dollar 1.2810 +.0017 +.13% 1 .2501 South Korean Won 1114.64 +.69 +.06% 1134.98 Taiwan Dollar 30.01 + .06 +.20% 29 . 96


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST27, 2013

BRIEFING

Companygets forgivable loan Vantage Clinical So-

lutions has received a $10,000 forgivable loan from Deschutes County to help pay for new employees, servers and other computer equipment, thecompanyannounced Monday. Underterms ofthe loan, Vantage, ahealth care consulting, man-

Warning issued on debt ceiling

EXECUTIVE FILE What: Circle of Friends Artand

Academy

iU,

What it does:Sells locally made art and offers art classes

Pictured:Michael Eberitzsch, marketing director, and Jae

+

Yost, co-owner Where:19889 Eighth St., Tumalo

Employees:Five Phone:541-706-9025

Website:www.circleoffriendsart. com

By Jim Puzzanghera Los Angeles Times

agement and marketing

company based in Bend, must hire five full-time

employees over the next two years, and the jobs must be maintained through March 2016,

Elon Glucklich /The Bulletin

according to a newsrelease from Vantage. The

. What sort

company hasmadetwo hires that comply with

• ofchanges has new owner-

the agreement, bringing its total employee count

ship brought to Circle of Friends

to13, said Tannus Qua-

Art and Academy?

tre, president andCEO. If companies receiving forgivable loans

. Michael

meet the terms, the

loans are forgiven. If they do not, they could

reaC in Ou

• Eberitzsch: We want this to be a destination

for vacationers who are passing

be required to payback the loan amount, plus interest. Deschutes County

commissioners approved the loan request June 26, according to meeting minutes.

Greece on track for more aid With Greece andits

continuing debt crisis an issue ahead ofGermany's national election next month, the highest-

ranking German in the European Central Bank said Monday that Athens could be eligible for additional aid and debt relief next year if it continued to fulfill promises made for assistance it is

already receiving. "The Eurogroup will

support Greecefor the lifetime of the current

program, and beyond," said Jorg Asmussen, a member of the central

bank'spolicymakingexecutive board, referring to the group of eurozone finance ministers. — Staff and wire reports

DEEDS Deschutes County • Steve Buettner, trustee of the Steve Buettner Revocable Living Trust, to Mark J. andShannon M. Chambers, North Canyon Estates, Lot14, Block1, $348,900 • Cedar CreekVillage Partners LLC to Maureen M. Goldberg, Cedar Creek Village Condominiums, Units 2, 4-10, 12-18, $685,000 • Joshua R. White and Robert E Baxter to John E and Maureen A.Zelnar, Park Place, Phase1, Lot 2, $198,700 • Sebastian Lopez-Otero to John P.and Elizabeth A. Skaggs, trustees for the John Patrick Skaggs and Elizabeth Ann Skaggs Revocable Living Trust, Parks at BrokenTop, Phase 2, Lot 79, $365,000 • Wood Hill Park15 LLC to Chris Anderson, Parkway Village, Phases1-3, Lots 28-45, $420,000 • Talents LLC, formerly knownasChackelFamily LLC, andChuckand Katheryn Chackelto Full Access, Hampton Park Subdivision, Phase1, Lots 13and14, $538,000 • Sharon K. Arms to Aaron Ashbaugh, Second Addition to BendPark, Lot 12, Block159, $189,500 • Richard and Mary Braem to John andRosemary Christiansen, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites Inc., Lot 40, Block 33, $170,000 • Gerald D. and Marilyn L. Gerdes to Terry D. Gilbert, Deschutes River Woods, Lot 33, Block S, $209,900 • Eric P. Knowlton to Alan J. and Pamela L.Fortier, Boulevard Addition to Bend, Lot8, Block32, $430,000 • Tova K. Kauffman to Richard A. Larsen Jr. and Lois J. Larsen, Township

through. We also want to make it

By Elon Glucklich •The Bulletin

more of an afford-

TUMALO — Circle of Friends Art and Academy has a three-pronged approached to business success. The Tumalo art studio mixes locally made, high-value sculptures, paintings and glasswork with bargain-priced artwork for $50 or less. It offers beginner classes for aspiring artists across multiple mediums, with class prices ranging from $40 to nearly $300. But the third prong represents a leap of faith for the 2-year-old studio, explains Michael Eberitzsch, Circle of Friends' marketing director. The academy's owners, who purchased the studio in June, are reaching out to the real estate community, betting that a rebounding market will offer new opportunities for local artists and woodworkers to put their pieces in new homes and businesses. For instance, a couple from Texas recently bought several paintings at the gallery to hang in the home they're building at Eagle Crest Resort.

Circle of Friends joined the Bend Chamber of Commercethis summer to network with residential and commercial Realtors. A section of the gallery is devoted to local, handmade furniture. The primary focus at Circle of Friends is still the artwork. More than 75 artists, including 60 from Central Oregon, use the 5,000square-foot studio to sell their work. The pieces include a $50,000 wooden sculpture of a horse, emblazoned with arrowheads, one of which is more than 11,000 years old. Other artwork in the gallery includes oil paintings, photographs,ceramics and jewelry. Jae Yost and her husband, Lynn, purchased the art gallery in June. They brought in Eberitzsch and his wife, Debe, to handle marketing and outreach. — Reporter: 541-617-7820 eglucklich@bendbulletirt.com

able art gallery. We still have the fine art, but we also want to gear it toward people

coming in off of the highway,

who can pick up a great piece of artwork for a low

price. . Wheredo

• you see the business in several years? . Jaeyost: ~t

• We want to keep trying to fill

in some of the mediums we're a bit

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — J.C. Penney's largestinvestor and former board member is bailing out. William Ackman of Pershing Square Capital Management is selling his nearly 18 percent stake, or 39.1 million shares, in the struggling retailer, according to regulatory documents filed late Monday. The move comes two weeks after Ackman resigned from J.C. Penney's board as part of a deal to resolve an unusually public battle between the activist investor and the struggling department store operator. The news sent Penney shares down nearly 3 percent to $13per share in after-hours trading after closing the regular session down 15 cents to $1335. Penney's shares

17, Range12, Section 22, $213,000 • Signature Homebuilders LLC, who acquired title as Signature HomeBuilders LLC, to Jeremy and Danielle Hamilton, Gannon Point, Lot 20, $218,300 • Elizabeth Nysson to Kevin CarmanandErika M. Wooler, Meerkat Meadows, Lot 8, Block1, $185,000 • Gina McNeill to Selena McNeill, BonneHome Addition to Bend, Lots 6 and 7, Block14, $300,000 • 2363 Glacier Place LLC to Harden IncomeProperty LLC, Partition Plat199818, Parcel1, $400,000 • Scott and Chiho Gray to Collin P.andCarolyn Chow, Chestnut Park, Phase 2, Lot 61, $207,300 • Eva L. Blair, Gayle A.

have lost nearly 70 percent of their value since early February 2012, when investor enthusiasm over former CEO Ron Johnson's retail strategy pushed the stock to around $43. That includes a 36 percentdrop in value so far this year. Some analysts say they were surprised by Ackman's plan to sell his shares so

quickly. "I didn't expect it to be so fast, but I canunderstandthat he wants to put it behind him," said New York-based retail consultant Walter Loeb. Belus Capital Advisors CEO Brian Sozzi agreed, noting, "(Ackman) wants to cut bait and move on to something else." Citigroup, the sole underwriter of the shares, will be shopping the stock around to prospective buyers. A price

Kreckman, Linda E.Rose and Sandra B.Ellingboe to Michael A.andWendy J. Greene,Township18, Range12, Section12, $254,500 • Wade M. and GinaM. Miller to Jeffrey D. Arker and Cheryl A. Lelli, Hawks Ridge, Phase1, Lot17, $530,000 • Madelyn M. Driver to Erick D. andMonica R. Banks, Woodcrest, Phases 1 and 2, Lot 27, $215,000 • Hilary McCue to Timothy W. Tolmsof and f Roseanne Carter, CanyonPoint Estates, Phase 6,Lot 80, $229,900 • Michael R and Suzanne M. Kelso, who acquired title as Suzanne M.Lord, to Thomas A.Gardner and Madelyn M. Driver, Orion Estates, Lot 13, Block 6, $274,000

• Joseph L. Lovejoy to Jeremiah R. Mattson and Gretchen R. Ulrich, Rimrock West, Phase2, Lot4, Block5, $495,000 • U.S. Bank N.A., astrustee on behalf of the holders of the Terwin Mortgage Trust, to Sonja Morgenthaler, Sterling Point, Phase2, Lot 40, $226,000 • Mark E. and Jewel A. Kaupp to Rick A.andLinda M. Richardson, Township 22, Range10, Section 8, $278,000 • Leo A. and NovaD. Dibala to DeborahA. Taylor, SecondAddition to Woodland ParkHomesite, Lot1, Block 3, $180,000 • Sidney A. and KarenL. Bosterto James T.Rash Jr. and Linda C.Rash, Cimarron City, First Addition, Lot 4, Block 9, $210,000

quences" and urged Congress to act quickly to "remove the threat of default." "Protecting the full faith and credit of the United States is the responsibility of Congress because only Congresscan extend the nation's borrowing authority," Lew wrote to House and Senate leaders, with copies sent to all lawmakers.

light on. But in the

long term, we'd like to create more of a studio atmo-

sphere, where artists are creating unique offerings to sell right here.

Investor bails out of j.C. Penney By Anne O'Innocenzio

WASHINGTON — The U.S. will run out of borrowing authority under the nation's $16.7 trillion debt limit in mid-October, Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew formally told Congress on Monday as he implored lawmakers to act soon to avoid a government default. Lew had last updated Congress on the debt limit in May, saying that he expected the Treasury to be able to continue borrowing until at least Labor Day. The new deadline comes as lawmakers prepareto return to Washington next month to battle over government spending. Republican leaders have demanded budget cuts in exchange for raising the debt limit, and some lawmakers want President Barack Obama and Democrats to agree toother policy concessions as well. But Lew warned that a standoffrisked "dire conse-

range wasn't revealed in the prospectus. Ackman's sell-off comes as the beleaguered chain is trying to recover from a botched transformation plan spearheaded by its former CEO that led to disastrous financial results. The board ousted Johnson in April after only 17 months on the job and rehired Mike Ullman, who had been CEO of the retailer from 2004 to late 2011. Ackman resigned from the board on Aug. 13, after he went public with statements saying he'd lost confidence in Penney's board and that Chairman Thomas Engibous should be replaced. Ackman and the retailer's board also were bickering over how quickly the company should replace Ullman, who is expected to be an interim CEO.

• Kim D. Hadechekand Carole J. Adamsto Vishnu N. Benkert, Township 16, Range 12,Section 12, $315,000 • Gary L. and Eileen F. Stein to Robin D.and Wendy J. Meeter, Tollgate, Fourth Addition, Lot167, $327,000 • Karen Carson to Donna K. Trussell, trustee for the Donna K.Trussell Revocable Trust, Northpointe, Phase1, Lot 26, $191,000 • Michael K. Sipe to Mark W. and Mary E Ford, Forest Grove Estates, Phases 3 and 4,Lot 2, $199,000 • Dave and Crystal Light to Deborah N.Boyd, to Pleasant View, Phase2, Lot 3, $151,000 • Marianna Wiper, trustee

Exchanges announce merger plan By Michael J. de la Merced and Nathaniel Popper New Yorh Times News Service

BATS Global Markets and Direct Edge announced their plans to combine under the BATS name in an all-stock deal on Monday. The goal: to displace the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq atop the world of stock markets. Combining the two will vault the new company past Nasdaq to become the secondlargestexchange operator in the United States. "It pretty much guarantees you're going to have a significant force to be reckoned with in the

global exchange placefordecades to come," said William O'Brien, the Direct Edge chief executive. The deal, the terms of which were not disclosed, is the latest in the world of market operators, as companiesseek more efficiencies and broader global reach by combining.

for the MariannaWiper Revocable Living Trust, to Gregory A. andSusan A. Warnick, Skyliner Summit at Broken Top,Phase4, Lot 40, $520,000 • David S. andAlice B. Davies, trustees for the David and Alice Davies Revocable Trust to John K. James,Tyrion Sky, Phase 2B, Lot 531, $435,000 • Averytt A. and Judith R. Brewster to Cherie M. lannucci, Replat of Orion Estates, Lot 7, Block 4, $300,000 • Russell M. Donegan, Michael A. and Priscilla M. Klass, trustees for the1990 Klass Trust Revocable Living Trust, to Frank H. andKathleen A. Baker, trustees for the Kathleen A. Baker Revocable Trust, Empire Estates, Lot 53, $179,000

• Alan Dietrich to John Evered, Park Addition to Bend, Lots23and 24, Block19, $265,000 • Steven and Andrea Nordahl to Ronald H.and Jennifer L. Clugston, North Ridge, Lot 3, $183,000 • Farl M. and Etsuko Jennings to Roger A. Kryzanek andPamelaG. Duncan, Tanglewood, Phase 3, Lot 32, $308,000 • Kevin C. andDarcy L. Miller to Jay Kolar, First Addition to Bend Park, Lots15and16, Block114, $160,000 • Hilma L. Vanderwilt, Lola J. Trussell and LauraJ. Smith to Sean M.Pettis, Red Hawk, Unit One, Lot 67, 8160,000 • Gene A. Klopfenstein, trustee for the GeneA. Klopfenstein Trust, to Paul

BRIEFING

Durable goods orders drop Orders for airplanes, computers and other

durable goods, a key indicator of future economic growth, dropped more than expected last month in a badsign for the strength of the vital

manufacturing sector. The CommerceDepartment said Monday that orders were down

7.3 percent in July from the previous month,the first drop since March

and the biggest falloff since August 2012.

Survey: Fedaid expected to slow Many business economists in the U.S. ex-

pect the Federal Reserve to begin to slow bond

purchases before the end of the year, perhaps starting in September. A majority also thinks the Fed will move to raise short-term interest rates before the end

of 2014, according to a twice-a-year survey by the National Association

of Business Economists. — From Mire reports

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • ProfessionalEnrichment Series: Re-evaluateyour approach tosales,presented by Rich Rudnick,Smart Sales Solutions headsales coach/trainer; registration required; $20for members, $30 for nonmembers;7:30 a.m.; Volcanic TheatrePub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. bendchamber.org WEDNESDAY • BusinessAfter Hours: Hops, VinesandFinds: learn about promotional marketing; registration required; free; 5 p.m.; Southwick Specialty Advertising, 20520 Bowery Lane, Bend; 541-382-5406 or www.bendchamber.org. THURSDAY • BusinessAfter Hours: Hosted by Fitch LawGroup; 4-7 p.m.; 210 S.W.Fifth St., Ste. 2, Redmond; 541-316-1588. SEPT. 3 • Be a TaxPreparer: Preparation for the Oregon Board of TaxPractitioners preparer exam;CFUs included; registration required; $429; Sept. 3, 5:30-9:30 p.m., Tuesday evenings through Nov.19, alternating Saturdays, 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270. • La Pine Chamber Toastmasters:Humorous speechcontest; 8-9 a.m.; Gordy's Truck Stop, 17045 Whitney Road, LaPine; 541-771-9177. • Highnooners Toastmasters:Humorous speech contest; noon-1 p.m.; Classroom 0, New Hope Evangelical Church, 20080 S.W.Pinebrook Blvd., Bend; 541-382-6804. SEPT. 4 • Prime Time Toastmasters:Humorous Speech Contest; 12:051 p.m.; HomeFederal Bank, 555 N.W.Third St., Prineville; 541-447-6929.

For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbulietirtcomkizcal

E. and Alice Southard, Canyon Point Estates, Phase 2, Lot 27, 8168,750 • Richard F. andShelia K. Dawson, trustees for the Dawson Trust, to Gary and Denise Lopez,Pine Canyon, Phase 4,Lot 47, $595,000 • Herbert L. and Mary J. Ramseyto Jerry L. and Yvonne Lawson,Boones Borough, No. 2, Lot4, Block 6, $340,000 • R. Wayne Smith and John Melendez to Blaine K. and Katie L. Cheney, Fairway Crest Village, Phase 3, Lot30, Block15, $300,000 • Eric L. and Patti S. Weber to Gary L. andKathryn Heckendorn, Jefferson Meadow Condominium, Unit 8, Building A, $200,000


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST27, 2013

O» www.bendbulletin.com/athome

AT THE MARKET A weekly look at produce atlocalfarmers markets. What:Armenian cu-

cumber Season:Summer About:English cu-

cumbers have become fairly

mainstream. In the supermarket,

you can find these long, crisp cucumbers wrapped

A

IJ '

-~ ~t

• »I,

tightly in plastic.

4

»

,

. • Aj,,

They are easy to eat, with mini-

1

mal seeds inside and skins so thin they don't need to

Alandra Johnson

The Bulletin

be peeled

'+I

befOre

eating. I am a fan. When I passed by a bin at a local farmers market

~t'

filled with a mix of

English cucumbers and some other kind

I had never seen before, I was intrigued. What were these long,

striped, curved cucumbers? Turns out,they

are called Armenian cucumbers. I was surprised to learn these

are actually a variety of muskmelon — and not really a vegetable at all. Either way, the taste is similar to that

of an English cucumber. Some Armenian cucumbers are smooth on the outside; the one I picked up was a bit

hairy, what I believe is a Painted Serpent variety. Experimenting with

new varieties of foods you already know and love is one of the joys of visiting the farmers market.

Preparation:Slice and eat is the only real preparation you need for this one. My mom always taught me to slice the very end off of

a cucumber, and then rub that snub portion against the remaining

cucumber. Supposedly this removes any bitterness. I buy into this method and do it every time. I'm not sure the

Photo illustration; photo byAndy Tulhe/The Bulletin

Diane Lozito opens the grill in the outdoor kitchen at her and husband David Jenkins' home perched above the Deschutes River. "We eat out there year-round," says Lozito.

O

See additional photos onThe Bulletin's website: beudbulletiu.cum/athumetour

procedureis necessary with these sweet, crisp,

By Marielle Gallagher• The Bulletin

lovely cucumbers, but I keep it up out of tradi-

or most Central Oregonians, the end of

tion. Consider placing a few slices into a pitcher

summer marks the end of grilling on the

of water alongside some thinly sliced lem-

patio. But we found a few households that,

on. Or make asimple cucumber salad with

fresh herbs (thyme and oregano or parsley and mint are good choices), olive oil, perhaps a few cherry tomatoes and some feta cheese. — Alandra Johnson, The Bulletin

GARDEN

thanks to some clever design work, are perfectly comfortable slicing, dicing, roasting and grilling in their outdoor cooking spaces throughout the blustery winter months.

TODAY'S RECIPES Grilled Vegetable Platter with Fresh Basil Vinaigrette:

An easy and impressive vegetarian appetizer,D2

More grilling recipes:Grilled Shrimp, Scallops or Squid, Grilled Greek-Style Zucchini,

Grilled Salmon with Barbecue Sauce, Barbecue Sauce for Fish, Grilled Summer Vegetables,D2

Tomatoes Niquise:A recipe for when the produce is at its summer peak,D3

Peppers, Smoky Eggplant Soup,Coconut-CardamomPanna Cotta, D3

lege, regularly picks kale from his backyard garden, adds a little onion and olive oil and has it sauteing minutes later in his wood-fired oven. Erickson spent a year building the oven, which also has a double-sided

FOOD

HOME

Still time toexperience Make fabricframes to hold specialmoments the thrill ofthe grill By Alison Highberger For The Bulletin

Grilling season is still going strong, but maybe you're just cruising along, cooking the same meat the same way. If grilled chicken, steak,

burgers and dogs are always

More summer produce recipes:Sweet Corn Blini, Feta-Stuffed

For now, though, the summer nights are the time for these spaces to shine. Thor Erickson, chef instructor at Cascade Culinary Institute at Central Oregon Community Col-

fireplace, just out his back door. Melinda and Michael Peterson, who live east of Bend, have a gableroofed kitchen enclosed in glass and situated like a peninsula in a foliagefilled garden bed. Diane Lozito and David Jenkins' outdoor kitchen is perched above a stretch of the Deschutes River. Their kitchen includes a 700-pound smoker where Jenkins, a Texas native, barbecues brisket and spareribs "low and slow," taking four to 10 hours tocook meats at220 degrees. SeeOutdoors/D4

on your menu, and branching out to grill fish, vegetables and fruit sounds like fun, we've got you covered. Local professional foodies Greg Donnelly, meat and seafood manager at Newport Avenue Market; Ryan Cook, deli clerk at C.E. Lovejoy's Brookswood Market; and Dianne Bernert, owner of Kitchen Complements, have ideas to help you expand your repertoire. We've alsogathered recipes for you from barbecue ex-

perts' cookbooks, so you can grill produce and fish with the same aplomb you show with your usual backyard favorites.

Fish tricks Cooking scallops, shrimp, fish and squid on the grill is actually quicker and easier than cookingmeat.The key to grilling any kind of fish or seafood is high heat. "Have that grill hot before the fish goes on. Most of the sticking problems are from a grill that's not hot enough or extremely dry fish going on," said Donnelly, meat and seafood manager at Bend's Newport AvenueMarket(wwwnewport avemarket.com, 1121 NW. Newport Ave., 541-382-3940). SeeGrilling/D2

By Linda Turner Griepentrog For The Bulletin

The first day of school, be it preschool or middle school, can create moments to be treasured. A quick photo snap makes capturing memories easy. But look beyond your store-bought runof-the-mill picture frames to showcase these photos in style. Look for inexpensive wood frames at local craft stores and dress them up with fabrics related to the moment. The featured frames wereonly Sl each at a local craft store, but as the television ads say, "the resultsare priceless." A trip to the fabric store offers novelty print options

sure toplease,from crayons to cars, lipstick to cell phones — whatever is relevant.

What you'll need Selecta frame size and shape to fit your photos. The flatter and wider the frame area, the more the fabric print will show. Keep the print scale in relation to the frame size. Pad the frame with lightweight cotton batting. This helps give it some softness, and helps keep the wood grain from showing through any light-color fabric. Both the fabric and the batting need to be 2 inches larger than the frame on all sides. See Frames/D5


D2 TH E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

Fooo

Nextweek:Late-summer dishes

Grilling

(Korean barbecue, chimichurri, a classic bourbon barbecue and sometimes a carne asada flavor, Donnelly said), and sell them for $8.99 per pound. Put them on skewers and fire up the grill. "Have your grill really, really hot, and grill them about three to four minutes and they eat like meat candy. They are fantastic. You'll get about five or six servings per pound. A dainty lady might eat t w o, and a linebacker could easily eat a whole pound. We figure a pound to a pound and a half for two adults," Donnelly said.

Continued from D1 Donnelly said a little canola oil on the fish and the grill is also important. "I really like the flavor of canola oil, and I cheat and buy Scott's Garlic Oil (sold at Newport Avenue Market). If you use olive oil, you'll get a lot of smoking," Donnelly warned. Scallops are easy to grill. Newport Avenue Market sells very large, fresh,diver caught, dry pack (which means no preservatives) scallops from Massachusettsfor $26.99 per pound. "You get six or eight per pound, and a pound will serve two adults, since they're so rich. We also sell a baconwrapped scallop kabob, and they grill up in six to eight minutes, three or four minutes on each side, tops," Donnelly sard. You can buy b acon and scallops separately and wrap your own, but either way, don't expect the bacon and scallops to be done at the same time on the grill. "The bacon is there as flavor, and underdone bacon is usually the same texture as the cooked scallop, so they taste good together, but if you prefer crisper bacon, pan sear it before you grill it," Donnelly said.

Pineapple on the grill Instead of the usual hamburger, you might like to serve H awaiian-style b u rgers a t your next c o okout. Grilled pineapple slices add that tropical touch. "Slice pineapple r ounds, about a quarter inch t hick or so for a hamburger, and throw them directly on the grill. They don't tend to stick because they're so moist. Grill them for about two minutes per side, and I like to put them in a teriyaki marinade right after grilling. Since teriyaki sauce has sugar, it tends to burn on the grill," said Cook, deli clerk at C .E. Lovejoy's Brookswood Market (www. c elovejoys.com, 19530 Am ber Meadow D r i ve, B end, 541-388-1188). To assemble a H awaiian burger, spread a little mayonnaise on the bun, and top the meat with a s l ice of Swiss cheese, crowned with a grilled pineapple round.

'Meat candy' One of Donnelly's favorite things to grill at home is short ribs. At Newport Market, they slice short ribs thinly, marinate them in different sauces

Grilled peaches Cook said that peaches cook up beautifully on a grill, and aren't just for dessert. Think about a spoonful of g r i lled peaches over grilled pork. "Sliceup ripe peaches, make a pocket out of foil, put in the peaches plus a little extra sugar or maple syrup, and put the foil packet on the top shelf of the grill, if you have one. Keep it as far away from the flames as possible. Serve the peaches over vanilla ice cream, or drizzle over pound cake. They're great over pork," Cook said.

Corn on the cob One of the big sellers at the Kitchen Complements store at 137 N.W. Minnesota Ave. in downtown Bend is the nonstick corn holder. "It's really neat. It holds four ears, and the top cover snaps in place, so you can grill one side and then turn it over," said Dianne Bernert, who has been selling kitchen supplies for 29 years. (The "corn basket" re-

"I cut zucchini at an angle, on the bias, to get larger, thicker slices. I put slices of squash, red and green pepper, onions and carrots in a bowl with a little olive oil or the oil you prefer — grapeseed, canola, sunflower — plus a little garlic, and salt and pepper. Toss them, and then put them directly on the grill. Cook time is quick — a minute or two. Move them around with tongs or a spatula," Cook said. Sometimes he puts sliced veggies on the grill, and then squirts a little oil over them to make the flame jump up. "They're flame-kissed that way. Some people like their vegetables very crisp, so that flame-toasting on the grill is great," he said.

Before or after meat? Vegetables can be grilled after the meat is done and resting for a few minutes, beforeit' s served, or they can be grilled first.

"Some people grill the veg-

tails for $15.99.)

etables ahead of time, and put Bernert carries a large se- them in CorningWare and finlection of grilling gadgets in ish them in the oven, or they her store, from a stainless steel could be the last thing you grill wok ($27.50) and grilling grill because it's so fast," Cook grids that look l ike baking said. sheets with little holes in them We hope you enjoy grill(about $25-30), to a rib and ing something new before the roast holder ($18.99). summer is over. "I try absolutely anything. Take a look at the grilling section ofcooking stores for There are so many recipes on inspiration and ideas. the Internet. Try something new on the grill that you've Grilled veggies never tried before. If you don't Grill pans, woks and grids try it, you won't know," Cook are great, but you can just toss said. — Reporter: ahighberger@mac. cut-up vegetables directly on your grill, too. Com.

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Cook squid for about two minutes on the grill.

Grilled Shrimp, Scallops or Squid Makes 4 servings. Choose from shrimp of all sizes (from medium-size to those hugeAlaskan spot prawns), large seascallops and squid (also called calamari). The trick is to not overcook them or the texture will be rubbery. (If necessary, pop not-quite-done shellfish in the microwavefor 30 seconds on high to finish cooking.) Use a hot fire and a perforated grill rack to cook the fish. Size does matter when it comes to timing. Smaller shrimp and thin-bodied

squid will cook in 2 to 3minutes total, turning once. Large, meatyseascallops (the smaller bayscallops are too small for the grill, unless you want to toss them in a grill wok) and Alaskan spot prawns will take about 6 minutes.

We prefer to grill shellfish more on oneside than the other. For example,grill large sea scallops for 4 minutes on one side, then grill on the other side for1 to 2 minutes. This technique results in a top "crust" and a softer bottom. — Karen Adler and Judith Fertig 1 Ib any size shrimp, peeled and deveined, large sea scallops or cleaned squid (about12 bodies and12 tentacles)

Olive oil Fine kosher or sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

Brush or spray the shellfish with olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Prepare a hot fire in a grill.

Place the shellfish on a perforated grill rack and grill, turning once, until opaque but still translucent in the center. Smaller shrimp and squid will take

about 2 minutes, seascallops and large prawns about 6 minutes. Servehot. — "The 13SO Queens'13ig Bookof Sarbeque,"by KarenAdlerand Judith Fertig, The Harvard CommonPress, 2005

Grilled Greek-Style Zucchini Makes 6 servings. 4 sm zucchini, thinly sliced 1 med tomato,seeded and chopped t/4 C pitted ripe olives, halved 2 TBS chopped scallion 4 tsp olive or canola oil

2 tsp fresh lemon juice /2 tsp dried oregano /2 tsp garlic salt ~/4 tsp black pepper 2 TBS fresh grated Parmesan cheese

Prepare agrill for medium heat. In abowl, combine thezucchini, tomato, olives and scallion. Combine the oil, lemon juice, oregano, garlic salt and

pepper; pour over thevegetables and toss to coat. Place on adouble thickness of heavy-duty aluminum foil (about 23 by 18 inches). Fold the foil around the vegetables and seal tightly. Grill, covered, for10 to15 minutes, until the vegetables are tender. Open the packet carefully to avoid being

burned by thesteam. Sprinkle with Parmesancheese andserve at once. — "The KansasCity BarbequeSociety Cookbook,"by Ardie A. Davis, Chef Paul Kirkand Carolyn Wells, Andrews McMeel Publishing, LLC,2010 f .j

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Grilled Salmon with Barbecue Sauce Makes 6 servings. If you think you've had good salmon, wait until you try it like Bob makes it .g

at the Wildcatter (Wildcatter Ranch,Graham,Texas). Although this doesn't seem like a usual fit for cowboy cooking, you may besurprised at how the

I

barbecue sauce and the grill turn this fish into a hearty, satisfying supper. — Grady Spears 3 Ibs salmon fillets

3 C Barbecue Sauce for Fish

(see recipe) Place the salmon fillets in a long glass dish and cover with 1t/2 cups of the

barbecuesauce. Coverthe dish with plastic wrap andallow thefillets to marRyan Brennecke /The Bulletin

A Grilled Vegetable Platter with Fresh Basil Vinaigrette makes for an impressive presentation.

inate in the refrigerator for 2 hours. Remove them from the refrigerator 30 minutes before grilling time. Discard the marinade before cooking the fish.

Prepare coals or agas grill to medium heat. Oil the grate sothe fish won't

Grilled Vegetable Platter with Fresh Basil Vinaigrette Makes 8 to10 servings. Easy to prepare andassemble, this vegetarian appetizer, salad or main dish platter has a rustic appearance and

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a vibrant flavor. It can be prepared hours ahead and kept at room temperature. It can also be doubled or tripled

easily. Accompaniments include crusty bread andfresh goat cheese.

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stick. Place the marinated salmon fillets on the grill and cook for 6 to 8 min-

utes per side; baste with /~ cup of the barbecue sauceduring cooking, if desired. Servethefish with the remaining 1 cupbarbecue sauce. — "Cooking the CowboyWay:Recipes Inspired by Campfires, Chuck Iylagons and Ranch Kitchens,"by GradySpears with June Nayloc Andrews McMeel Publishing, LLC,2009

— Karen Adler andJudith Fertig

ClaS'S'ifledS 2 Ibs baby bok choy 8 baby eggplants

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4 Ig red bell peppers

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2 Ibs baby yellow pattypan squash

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Barbecue Sauce for Fish Makes 4t/2 cups.

You can usethis sauce ontilapia, catfish or shrimp. It keeps in the refrig-

to taste 2 pints cherry tomatoes

erator for 4 or 5 days.

4 C of your favorite bottled sweet barbecue sauce Prepare the vegetables. Slice the bok choy in half and rinse thoroughly. Trim the ends of the eggplants and cut 2 TBS brown sugar each lengthwise into /~-inch thick slices. Seedthe red bell peppers and cut each lengthwise into /2-inch strips. 2 TBS red wine vinegar Place the bok choy, eggplant slices and bell pepper strips on the prepared grill racks. Place the squash in the 2 TBS soy sauce prepared grill wok. Spray the vegetables with olive oil and season with salt and pepper. 2 TBS Worcestershire sauce

1 TBS minced garlic 2 chipotle chilies, finely

chopped /2 C finely chopped fresh cilantro

Have a large bowl ready near the grill. Toss the squash in the grill wok, using wooden grill paddles or a grill spatula, until tender, about10 minutes. Meanwhile, grill the vegetables on the grill racks, turning with grill tongs, Combine all the ingredients in a large bowl. Working in batches, prountil tender and slightly charred, 4 to 5 minutes per side. When the squash are done, transfer to the bowl and add cess the mixture in a blender or food processor until smooth. Store in an

the cherry tomatoes to the grill wok. Grill until the skins just begin to crack, about 5 minutes. When the bok choy,

airtight container in the refrigerator.

eggplant and bell peppers are done, transfer to the bowl. Add the tomatoes and set aside to cool slightly.

— "Cooking the CowboyWay:Recipes Inspired by Campfires, Chuck VY agonsand Ranch Kitchens,"by Grady Spears with JuneNayloc Andrews McMeel Publishing, LLC,2009

Arrange the vegetables on alarge platter in a pleasing pattern or just a jumble, your preference. Garnish with the basil. Drizzle the vinaigrette over everything. Serve immediately, or cover with plastic wrap and let sit at room temperature for up to 2 hours.

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freshly ground black pepper

Fresh basil sprigs for garnish Fresh Basil Vinaigrette (see

Prepare a hot fire in a grill. Coat two perforated grill racks or hinged grill baskets and grill a wok with nonstick cooking spray andset aside.

SATURDAY

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Olive oil Fine kosher or sea salt and

Mov e m e n t s

Makes about 2 cups.

Grilled Summer Vegetables

Makes 4 servings. ers' market, use it to make this addictive vinaigrette. You'll need a very large bunch (or three or four packages from the grocery store) to make 1 1 sm zucchini, sliced t/2 inch When fresh basil is luxurious and aromatic in your garden or at the farmcup chopped basil, but this luscious vinaigrette is worth it. Because basil

can discolor quickly, makethis right before serving. 1'/~ C extra virgin olive oil /2 C fresh lemon juice (3 to 4 lemons) 2 cloves garlic, minced 1 TBS Dijon mustard

1 C finely chopped fresh basil Fine kosher or sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

Combine all the ingredients in a medium-size jar with a tight-fitting lid.

Coverandshaketo blend.Useassoonasyoumakeit. — Adapted from "TheBBQQueens'Big Book of Barbeque,"by KarenAdlerand Judith Fertig, TheHarvard CommonPress, 2005

thick on the bias 1 sm yellow squash, sliced t/2 inch thick on the bias 1 med onion, slicedt/2 inch thick 1 red, green or yellow bell pepper, cut into 2-inch pieces

2 plum tomatoes, quartered 4 oz fresh button or shiitake mushrooms, cut or whole Italian dressing or teriyaki sauce, for marinating

Prepare the grill for high heat. Combine all the vegetables in a bowl. Toss with the dressing or teriyaki sauce. Marinate for 5 to 10 minutes. Grill on a vegetable grill topper or in a fish basket for 5 to 10 minutes.

Serve immediately. — "The KansasCity BarbequeSociety Cookbook,"by Ardie A. Davis, Chef Paul Kirkand Carolyn Wells, Andrews McMeel Publishing, LLC,2010


FOO D

TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D 3

By David Tanis New Yorit Times News Service

NEW YORK — We are led to believe that summer produce is available all summer long, but in truth it arrives piecemeal. Yes, thereare early ripening fruits and jump-started zucchini, new garlic and the first green beans that are in the market in June. But it's really not until mid to late August that simply everything appears in magnificent abundance. Now is the time, people, and it is glorious. Only now do we

see incredibly colorful eggplants and long-awaited tomatoes that actually taste like something. At last, sweet peppers grown outdoors! Corn! Melons! The mere sight can make a cook giddy. And it's more than just good looks — these babies are undeniably tasty after so many weeks of soaking up sunshine. It doesn't get much better than this, at least until this time next

year. I wanted to celebrate that freshness with a little dinner

party, or maybe a big one. And I was inclined to banish meat altogether. With this kind of summer produce, it won't be missed. So, here is the menu: four savory vegetable dishes and a fruity dessert. I designed the recipes for six, but they can

easily be scaled up for a larger crowd. You can prepare this as a summer buffet or as snacks for a cocktail-type affair, but it works equally well for a sitdown meaL As an h ors d'oeuvre, it's sweet corn blini, l ittle dollar-size pancakes made with cornmeal and fresh corn. You prepare the batter ahead and griddle them at the last minute. (For that matter, even if you cook them in a dvance, they won't suffer much when

reheated.) I am a fan of eggplant soup, and this one i s a w i n n er, creamy-textured and b r i ght tasting. Charring the eggplant gives it a smoky flavor, but as opposed to some rusticversions, the soup has a smooth texture and a lovely pale color. It gets a good squeeze of lemon juice, a drizzle of olive oil and a sprinkling of the Middle Eastern spicemixture za'atar,made with wild thyme and sesame, now widely available. Make sure to choose small, firm

eggplants. A salad of stellar tomatoes is essential, and this one has a distinctly n igoise profile. Thick slices are arranged on a platter, then topped with a garlicky chopped olive vinaigrette and colorful h alved cherry t omatoes. A fl ourish of a n chovy plays against the sweet ripeness, and scattered basil leaves are decorative as well as edible. F or something with a b i t more heft and a s a tisfying main-course feeling, I stuffed extra-small bell peppers with a mild feta cheese and baked them with a generous handful of herbaceous breadcrumbs. As for d e ssert, custardy chilled panna cotta satisfies like ice cream, but doesn't melt, and so is easier to serve. The addition of coconut milk and cardamom is a nice twist, and juicy berries and nectarines, with a hint of ginger, a delicious accompaniment.

Photos by Fred R. Conrad/New YorkTimes News Service

Tomatoes Niqoise: A platter of stellar tomatoes topped with garlicky chopped olive vinaigrette, sweet halved cherry tomatoes, a scattering of basil leaves and anchovies.

Sweet Corn Blini

Tomatoes Niqoise Makes 6 servings.

Makes about 30 blini. t/s C flour /2 C cornmeal 1 tsp baking powder 1 tsp salt 1 TBS sugar 2 C corn kernels, from about 4 ears corn

1 egg, beaten

1 C thick plain yogurt, plus a few TBS milk if necessary 8 TBS melted butter, plus more for greasing griddle

Salt and pepper

1 sm shallot, finely diced 2 garlic cloves, grated Salt and pepper 2 TBS red wine vinegar 3 TBS olive oil

8 anchovy fillets, 2 finely chopped and 6 for garnish 2 TBS roughly chopped black nigoise or oil-cured olives, plus whole olives for garnish

6 sm red tomatoes 12 cherry tomatoes in assorted colors 1 TBS small capers, rinsed 12 basil leaves

'/4 C creme fraiche 2 TBS snipped chives for garnish

Make the vinaigrette: Put the shallot in a small bowl. Add garlic, salt and pepper and cover with red wine vinegar. Macerate10 minutes, then whisk in olive oil, chopped anchovy and chopped olives.

Cut each tomato crosswise into 2 thick slices. Place slices on a platter in one layer and season with salt and Put flour, cornmeal, baking powder, salt and sugar in a mixing bowl.

pepper. Season cherry tomatoes with salt and dress with vinaigrette. Spoon evenly over tomato slices. Grind 1 cup corn kernels to a rough puree in a food processor, then add Top each tomato slice with half an anchovy filet, then sprinkle with capers. Garnish with basil leaves and

egg and yogurt, and pulse to mix. Add corn mixture to flour mixture and whole olives. Serve at cool room temperature. stir together until just mixed to make a thick batter. Stir in 4 tablespoons melted butter. Set aside for 5 minutes. Thin with a little milk if necessary.

(Batter may beprepared several hours ahead.) Warm remaining 4 tablespoons butter in a saucepan over medium heat. Add remaining 1 cup corn kernels. Season with salt and pepper, Makes 6 servings. then cook for1 minute or so to heat through. Keepwarm.

Feta-Stuffed Peppers

Put greased griddle or cast-iron pan over medium heat. Using 1 ta- 61-inch-thick slices day-old blespoon batter, make pancakes about 2/2 inches in diameter. Cook French bread, crust removed for 1 minute, until bubbles appear on surface and pancakes are lightly 3 TBS olive oil browned. Flip and cook for 30 seconds more. (Besure to keepheat mod- 3 garlic cloves, grated

erate or else the pancakes will blacken.) Pancakesmay becooked in advance and reheated.

3 TBS chopped parsley 2 tsp chopped thyme 1 tsp chopped rosemary 1 oz grated Parmesan

Salt and pepper 6 sm sweet peppers, about1 Ib 6 oz mild feta cheese

Heat oven to 350degrees. Cut breadinto1-inch cubes andpulse in food processor in batches to makecoarse,

To serve, place 3 hot pancakes on small plate. Top with spoonful of cooked corn and some of the butter from the pan. Drizzle with creme fra-

soft crumbs. (It should yield about 3 cups.) Toss crumbs with olive oil and spread on a baking sheet. Bake, stirring frequently, until crisp and barely browned, about 15 minutes. Put baked crumbs in a bowl and add garlic,

iche and sprinkle with chives.

parsley, thyme, rosemary andParmesan. Seasonwith salt and pepperand toss well to combine. Set aside. Cut peppers in half lengthwise and remove seeds. Place in a low-sided baking dish in one layer. Season cut side lightly with salt. Fill each pepper half with /s ounce crumbled feta and press in cheese with fingers. With a

spoondividetheseasonedcrumbs evenlyamongthepepperhalves.

Smoky Eggplant Soup

Bake for about 30 minutes, until crumbs are golden and cheese is softened. Serve warm from the baking dish.

Makes about 6 cups. 2 Ibs small firm eggplants 5 TBS olive oil 2 C sliced white or yellow onion Salt and pepper 6 garlic cloves, minced Pinch cayenne

6 C chicken broth or mild vegetable broth 3 to 4 TBS lemon juice /s tsp lemon zest 1 TBS za'atar, available in Middle Eastern groceries 2 tsp chopped parsley

Poke 2 or 3holes in eggplants with a paring knife, then place on abaking sheet under hot broiler, about 2 inches from flame. Cook for 3 or 4 minutes, allowing skins to blacken and char. Turn and cook on other side until egg-

plants have softened completely, about 4 minutes more. Setaside to cool, then remove and discard skins and roughly chop eggplant flesh. Meanwhile, put 3 tablespoons olive oil in a heavy-bottomed stainless or

enameled souppotovermedium-highheat.Addonion,seasongenerously with salt and pepper, and cook until softened and beginning to color, 5 to

7 minutes. Add garlic, cayenneand reserved eggplant and cook1 minute more, then addbroth and bring to abrisk simmer. Reduceheatand simmer gently for10 minutes. Check seasoning of broth and adjust salt. Puree soup in batches in blender. Strain through fine-meshed sieve and

discard solid debris and seeds. Add 3 tablespoons lemon juice to pureed soupandtasteagain,adding moreasnecessary.Soupshould bewellseasoned andrather lemony. Mix lemon zest with remaining 2 tablespoons olive oil for garnish. Ladle soup into small bowls, topping each bowl with1 teaspoon lemon oil,t/s tea-

spoonza'atarandsomechoppedparsley.Maybeservedhotorcold. Custardy

panna cotta

canbe

c

served with berries and nectarines.

Coconut-Cardamom Panna Cotta Makes 6 servings. FOR THE PANNA COTTA: 1 /2 C half-and-half '/4 C plus 2 tablespoons sugar 3 cardamom pods, smashed /s tsp salt

1 C coconut milk(unsweetened) 1/s tsp powdered gelatin

2 tsp sugar '/s tsp grated ginger

2 sm nectarines or peaches, FOR GARNISH: /2 C blackberries or raspberries

optional

In a small saucepan,warm the half-and-half over medium-low heat. Donot allow to simmer.Add sugar, stir to dissolve, then add cardamom and salt. Turn off heat and let cool. Stir in coconut milk. Put gelatin in a small bowl and add 2 tablespoons cold water. Let dissolve, about 5 minutes, then add to half-

and-half mixture; stir well. Strain through a fine-meshed sieve into a pitcher. Pour mixture into six 4-ounce ramekins or custard cups. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate until firm, about 2 hours. (May be made several

eJUST-PICKED+

hours or up to aday in advance.) Put berries in a bowland sprinkle with the sugar and grated ginger. Mix gently and macerate10 minutes. Add

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slices of nectarine or peach, if desired. To serve, run a knife around edge of ramekin, then invert ramekin over dish. Shake gently to unmold. Surround panna cotta with fruit, or serve in ramekin with fruit on top.

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D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

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Melinda Peterson works in the outdoor kitchen at her and husband Michael's Bend home. "We built (the frame) out of 6-by-6 posts and beams because we wanted that stout look. Especially with all the rock and tile," says Melinda.

Outdoors

Beyond the room are unobstructed views of mountains Continued from D1 and the Deschutes River. "We eat out there year-round," said Kitchen with a view Lozito. "It's really comfortable L ozito an d J e n kins d e - because of the wall that blocks signed their outdoor kitchen the wind. The breeze is always to be part of a room, complete from the n orth, n orthwest. with hot tub, sitting area and And you still get the fresh air a table for eight. On the west off the river." side of the room, a wall that Lozito, who cooks mostly looks like an extension of the Italian dishes, uses the dual house serves as a wind break. range burner for searing ahi French doors set into the wall tuna, a dish she says is great open the space to a porch that for cooking outside because runs the length of the house. it doesn't set off the smoke The room glows even on a alarm. A 3 6 -inch Frontgate cloudy day because of the rich- gas grill is capable of high ly hued mahogany deck and heat grilling, and they use it cedar siding.Teak furniture for meat,fish and vegetables. dressed inwhite cushions of- C ooking vegetables on t h e fers comfortable seating. The high heat adds a crispness to kitchen space is delineated by the exterior, says Lozito. slate flooring. Jenkins, who was born and

Thor Erickson, chef instructor at COCC's Cascade Culinary Institute, prepares cast-iron skillets of biscuit dough and sausage links to go in his wood-fired outdoor oven. Erickson says the oven allows him to get out of the kitchen when he and his wife have guests over.

raised in Texas, cooks primarily in a behemoth smoker. Behind big swinging doors is a gas starter to get the wood burning. Jenkins uses hickory for making pulled pork and spareribs, "never short ribs," said Lozito, and uses hickory and mesquite for brisket. All meats are cooked with a can of water in the smoker to add moisture to the air. Jenkins uses dry rubs and fresh herbs on the smoked meats. "It falls off the bone," said Lozito. "And you can taste the herbs. David

says you only use sauce if you Diane Lozito places hickory are covering up your barbecue. So it's against the rules in this house."

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wood in the smoker in her and husband David Jenkins' outdoor kitchen.

Glass kitchen In 2008 Michael and Melinda Peterson replaced a rarely

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UP TO LAUNDRY PAIR REBATE by mailwiththe purchase of qualifying GE TopLoad DrFront Load Washer with matching Dryer from August1 to October2, 2013.

5

used hot tub on their back patio with a g l ass enclosed k itchen, complete with b a r seating for three. "Mike loves to build, and I love to design, so that's how things like the kitchen come about," said Melinda."We make a good team. We did absolutely everything out there." Before the kitchen addition, the patio was long and disjointed with seating at one end and the hot tub on the other. After the kitchen was added, the flow of the space changed. People congregate in the kitchen where there is a full grill and a sunken areain the counter for dutch oven cooking. The Petersons wanted a relaxed vibe that incorporated the colors associated with Mexican aesthetics like terra cotta and other warm hues. So when Melinda, who loves to visit garage sales, found stacks of terra cotta tile at the Jacksonville Garage Sale Days, it set the tone for the kitchen's palette. T h e w r a p a round kitchen counters extend out to glass walls, making it feel as though you are actually cooking in the garden. "We built (the frame) out of 6-by-6 posts and beams because we wanted that stout look. Especially with all the rock and tile," said Melinda. Rounding out the space is a fire pit and fence covered in

hops. In the w i nter, a w i ndow can hang on the beam above the island to create another windbreak. "Mike puts on his

UP TO

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Melinda Peterson found the terra cotta tiles for her and her husband's outdoor kitchen at Jacksonville Garage Sale Days. They matched the relaxed vibe the Petersons wanted to create. jacket and cooks out there and it's actually warm, unless it's howling," said Melinda.

with masonry and different calculations related to building a fireplace, like amount of oxygen and air flow it needs Wood-fired oven for the carbon monoxide to and fireplace escape properly ... it was an Just after 9 am. on a r e- interesting adventure," said cent morning, Thor Erickson Erickson. slipped a cast-iron skillet of For almost a year, Erickbiscuit dough and another of son worked to build the oven, handmade sausage links into which features a double-sided a wood-fired oven to prepare fireplace below the oven. A breakfastfor his son. natural stone veneer finishes As a professional chef, Er- the exterior and a vine of Joi ckson has worked in m u lhannisberg riesling grapes tiple restaurant kitchens with grows across the oven dome. wood-fired ovens. So when The dome is 14 inches thick Erickson and his wife, Cathy and made of refracting materiC arroll, m oved i n t o t h e i r als so it's able to hold heat for home in 2003,they decided days. Even 24 hours after Erto build one of their own. "I'm ickson extinguishes the fire, familiar with the type of math the oven is still hot enough to it takes to run a restaurant bake bread. and to cook, but doing math Continued on next page

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The seating space attached to Diane Lozito and David Jenkins' outdoor kitchen.


TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D S

ASK MARTHA 'J

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Photos by unda Turner Gnepentrog / For The Bulletin

A view of the back of a fabric-wrapped frame as work progresses. At left, the fabric is trimmed and affixed along the outer edge. At center, the opening in the middle is wrapped and trimmed. At right, ribbon is glued over the raw edges.

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Frames Continued from 01 For example, an 8-by-10inch frame begins with fabric that's 12 inches by 14 inches. Other items you'll need include small, sharp scissors, spray adhesive, fabric glue stick an d e n ough ' /s-inchwide ribbon to fit the frame perimeter.

Tony Cenicola/ New York Times News Service

Keep towels smelling fresh by storing them in a cool, dry closet with sweet-smelling sachets or dryer sheets.

torin inens, ac in ewer, nonstic coo in

Getting started Remove any glass and/or cardboard from the frame so the center portion is open. Set those things aside for reassembly. Spray the frame face with spray adhesive and c enter it face down on the batting. Smooth out any wrinkles and trim the batting close to the outerframe and center open-

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Packing jewelry

. MARTHA

ing edges. Press the fabric to remove any wrinkles. Lay the fabric right side down on a work surface andcenterthe frame batting side down over it. Run glue around the back side of the frame perimeter within a half-inch of the edge. Pull the fabric tautly around the frame and finger-press it into the glue lines. If the frame has rounded corners, ease the fabric around the curves to avoid making pleats. Be sure the fabric is securely anchored on the underside and that it is taut. Let dry. Trim the outer frame fabric leaving '/2 to '/4 inch.

Middle management Trim the fabric in the center frame opening, leaving '/2 inch

Joe Kline /The Bulletin

Finished frames display pictures. on all sides. Clip diagonally into the corners. Run glue around the opening perimeter on the frame underside. Depending on the f rame, this area may be a narrow recessed "shelf" only about '/4-inch wide. Carefully pull t h e f a bric edges tothe frame underside and finger-press into the glue. Clip the corners more if needed to create a smooth turn. Set aside to dry. Trim the inner opening fabric edges to '/4 inch.

Finishing Glue the ribbon over the

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fabric raw edges around the frame underside, folding the ribbon at the corners. The inner opening edges will be covered by the photo. If you prefer to finish the entire back, cut a piece of fabric to fit the frame back and glue it in place covering the front fabric raw edges. Insert the glass, photo and any cardboard backing into the frame.

Going beyond While fabric-covered frames are ideal for hallmark school m oments from f irst day t o graduationand prom, they're

The greenthattrees provide goes beyond the beauty of their foliage. Part of your home's market value is rooted in the quality and quantity of healthy trees on your property. That's why it's so important to takegood care ofyour trees. After all, they grow very slowly, so it's not easy — or cheap — to replace them. Our research team, after interviewing arborists and other tree experts who are highly rated by members of Angie's List, recommends these tips for keeping trees in good shape for aslong as possible: Get an expert evaluation. Start by h aving your t rees pruned and evaluated regularly for signs of dead wood, i nsect damage an d o t h er problems. Remove dead or problem branches. One important part of tree maintenance is periodic crown cleaning, which is the removal of dead wood. In addition to looking unsightly, dead wood can cause a tree to not produce enough sugar, can make it more attractive to insects and can lead to structural damage when limbs fall.

Be especially attentive to trees that are not yet mature. They require more care, and water, compared with established trees. Another process, known as crown thinning, is the removal of selectedbranches from the tree's crown to allow more light to pass through and decrease wind resistance, which will help the tree weather storms. Other reasonsto prune trees include r e moving b r a nches that hang over or brush against the house or block visibility near streets and intersections. Also, it's wise to remove branches that cross and rub against each other. The right p r u ning t echniques will help the tree develop strong roots so it can weather the storms. Pruning is also a great way to enhance the shape and stimulate fruit production. The best time to prune is in the late fall or winter, when sap isn't running, so the tree is lessstressed.Because in many parts of the country insects are dormant at that time of year, pruning in late fall or winter helps prevent infestation.

In many cases, pruning is best left to professionals, but if you do it yourself, be sure to cut branches at a node, or the point where the branch connects to another branch. The cut should be just outside the ridge of bark that develops at this intersection. Angle the cut down, creating as little branch stub as possible. A void topping. Many a r borists and other tree experts frown on the practice of tree topping, which involves the removal of large branches or the tops of trees. The practice can significantly damage a tree if too much is cut. If tree topping has already occurred, experts suggest that the tops continue to be cut, since, as sprouts emerge,the area is prone to insect damage. Treat for i n sect damage. Trees indifferent areas of the country can be victim to different insect infestations, such as those from emeraldash borer in the Midwest and pine bee-

From previous page "When I shut the oven down in the evening, I like to take advantage of that heat so I'll put a couple sweet potatoes in there and in the morning they're completely roasted in their skins and it's like candy. All those natural sugars are concentrated in there." A 15-pound Thanksgiving turkey takes an hour and 20 minutes and results in a juicy meat with a seared, brown skin. "The first time I did it I was absolutely amazed," said Erickson. E rickson s a y s c o o k i n g with fire creates a closeness between chef and food. "It's almost like the person who is using the oven as a cooking tool ha s t o d e velop a relationship with it . I d o n 't have a thermostat with it. I've learned to stick my hand in there very quickly and learn what different temperatures

— Reporter: gwizdesigns@aol. Com

our ro er 's rees

By Angie Hicks wvrrw.angieslist.com

also perfect for many other occasions. Frames covered in fabric to match bridesmaid dresses make ideal gifts for wedding attendants. Add some ribbons, bling or faux flowers to create a treasured keepsake. Cover frames in wool plaid, fishing fabric or other sports motifs to make a special gift for dads, and don't forget the pet-motif fabrics to commemorate a new addition to the family. Check the scrapbooking department for miniature findings related to the occasionand use as frame accents.

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Biscuits and sausage cook in Thor Erickson's outdoor oven. He can cooka Thanksgiving turkey in the oven in one hour and 20 minutes. feel like.... I know when it's going to the heat available to cook different things," said Erickson. Using newspaper, Erickson gets a few pieces of hardwood

burning. He chooses woods like oak, maple, apple, cherry or alder. Once the fire is going it takes about an hour to get up to 600 degrees. In addition to t h e t h inly

tles in the West. Insects can bore into trees and weaken their structure. Take care with young trees. Be especially attentive to trees that are not yet mature. They require more care, and water, compared wit h e s tablished trees. Also, make sure you're using the right type of soil for the tree you plant. Experts

suggest pruning and maintaining early on so a younger tree doesn't d evelop p o or structure. Hire right. As always with hiring a service provider, get several bids, ask for and check references,never pay in full up front, and confirm that the

company is properly insured and licensed. Consider hiring a company that employs a certified arborist. Check the websites of the International Society of Arboriculture, the American Society of Consulting Arborists or the Tree Care Industry Association to see if the company you're considering hiring is listed as an accredited member. — Angie Hicksis the founder of Angie's List, a resource for local consumer reviewson everything from home repair to health care.

sliced potatoes or crisps and cobblershe makes in cast iron skillets, Erickson says he also smokes meat in the oven. "I can get a very small fire going and smoke a whole side of salmon. Then I can pull it out and get my fire warm and finish it for the guests, and it has a nice smoky flavor." Erickson grew up i n San Francisco and Sonora, Calif., and his father was also a chef and is a metal artist. As a finishing touch to the oven, his father made a gate for the front of the oven with L'Oven, the oven's name, written into the metalwork. Erickson says the oven lets him get out of t h e k i tchen when they have guests over for dinner. "It's a little bit of a show. It gets me out of the kitchen so I can interact with guests while I'm cooking." — Reporter: 541-383-0361or mgallagher@bendbulletin.com

• Do you have any tips

• on packing jewelry for

i STEWART

traveling'? • Thin herringbone or ser• pentine-chain jewelry is . How do I k eep m y often the first to tangle during .linens smelling fresh travel. The secret to keeping w hen storing them i n a your delicate pieces unknotted closet? when on the go is likely right • Moist air and warm in your kitchen: Use drinking • temperatures e n- straws, says packing expert courage mildew to grow on Anne McAlpin. organic materials such as Take a standard-size straw cotton and wool, resulting w ithout a n a d j u stable e l in musty linens. To prevent bow and slide your necklace this, keep the linens in a through it so the ends dangle cool, dry and well-ventilat- out each side. Then clasp the ed closet. If you must store necklace back t ogether. If them in a bathroom or sim- you're packing a short neckilarly humid setting, wire lace or a bracelet, cut the straw shelving will help the items down to half the chain's length breathe. After a shower or so you're able to clasp it. This bath, turn on an exhaust method prevents the chain fan for at least 20 minutes from twisting around itself or to dehumidify the room. If other items. Store the strawyou don't have a fan in your encased jewelry inside a travel bathroom, try placing mois- toothbrush case. ture-absorbing p r o ducts, Pack chunkier pieces sepasuch as silica-gel packets, a rately in snack-size resealable bundle of chalk or a box of plastic bags. Lay each flat inbaking soda, in the space side its own bag, squeeze the with your linens. Another air out, and zip the bag shut, option: Install an i n can- leaving only the clasp hangdescent light bulb; the heat ing out the top. (Immobilizing from the bulb will dry the the loop of each piece prevents air. If these measures still movement a n d tan g l ing.) aren't' enough, consider in- Stack them inside a plastic vesting in a dehumidifier. container. If moisture isn't the problem, and y o u're s imply Cooking with nonstick pans looking to maintain that ShouldItrustanonstick j ust-laundered scent, t r y . pan not to stick without making homemade no-sew a little spritz of something? sachets filled with cedar . The smooth,t plasticlike shavings or d ried laven. material coating on most der, cloves, spearmint or nonstick cookware, commonly thyme. Put whichever of made from carbon and fluorine these fresheners you prefer atoms, has a naturally slippery into small cotton muslin texture, so your nonstick pan bags ($4 for 10, mountain- will live up to its name without roseherbs.com) — the type cooking spray. Still, it's smart c ommonly used t o m u l l to use some oil or other fat to spices and make tea. Once prevent the items in your pan t hey're filled, cinch t h e from drying out and help carabags closed and place one melize them, as well as amplify on each shelf of the closet. both flavor and texture. (As an added bonus, every The surface of your nonone of these natural ingre- stick pan is fragile; damage to dients is considered to be the coating will create rough moth-repellent.) patches, which food will stick Or for a quick store- to. When the coating starts to b ought s o l ution, l a y e r break dovm, throw the pan scented dryer sheets be- away. To avoid scratches, cook tween towels and sheet with wooden or silicon utensils, sets, says Stephen Cardi- and avoid coarse sponges and n o, vice p r esident a n d harsh cleaning products. Stackfashion director of Macy's ing the cookware may also Home Store. If you are al- leave scratches; hang it instead. lergic or sensitive to per— Questions of general interest fumes, place an opened can be emailed to mslletters~ box of dryer sheets in the marthastewart.com. For more closet, so the sheets aren't information on this column,visit directly touching your linwww.marthastewrart.com. ens. Replace the sheets or the box every few months, or when they are no longer fragrant. A lt e r n atively, y ou can s tore a n u n l i t I I scented candle or a bar of soap in the closet to keep PROMPT DELIVERY everything fresh.

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School andTomMcCall School. This is a family friendly event.Food,local beer,andof course wineavailable forpurchase (by the glass or bottle). Picnicking alsowelcome(but no beveragesplease). For detail s or to purchase tickets, www.maragaswinery.com or call 541-546-5464

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

eonar 'svoice ivesonin'us i ie ' TV SPOTLIGHT

with Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins' likable criminal anBy Robert Lloyd tagonist), whom the author had Los Angeles Times killed off in "Fire in the Hole," LOS ANGELES — Elmore the novella that became the piLeonard, the highly popular lot for "Justified." (Leonard had and well-regardedcrime novelwisely suggested to Yost that ist who died last week at age 87, he keep the character alive for also left his mark on television. the series.) Reciprocally, Yost Compared with his books has used material from "Raylan" in "Justified." and the movies that continue to be wrought from them, it's the A column Leonard wrote „"dvq . tE smallest of the marks he made: for The New York Times in ( Two of the three TV series 2001, much cited over the last 'e. r based on his writing, "Maxifew days,offered 10 rules "to mum Bob" (ABC, 1998) and help me remain invisible when "Karen Sisco" (ABC, 2003), I'm writing a book." They boil didn't survive even a single down to simple prose without season, though they deserved The Associated Press file photos Elmore Leonard's mark on much detail or description and more. (Both came from Barry Timothy Olyphant portrays U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens in a scene the TV world may be small leaving out "the part that readSonnenfeld, who produced the from "Justified," based on Elmore Leonard's 2001 novella "Fire in compared with his books and ers tend to skip." big-screen Leonard adaptation the Hole." movies that were adapted from To Leonard, this meantusing "Out of Sight," another Karen them, but the "Justified" series dialogue to define character Sisco story; and directed "Get is justifiably well-known. and carrythe story.His people Shorty," the film that by Leon- 1997 TV movies, made from highly speakable dialogue. He acquit themselves ultimately ard's own reckoning made him his "Gold Coast" and "Pronto," was like Agatha Christie in that through their actions, but sura household name.) the latter the book that intro- way: straightforward, sugges- eastern Kentucky) — captures rounding and accompanying But the third series is FX's duced "Justified" main charac- tive and made for television. brilliantly. The show is an act that action i s c o nversation, "Justified," based on Leonard's ter Raylan Givens (played there His legacy to the medium, of imitation and extrapolation, with every voice making its 2001 novella "Fire in the Hole." by James LeGros, and now by however, is less a matter of as in an Old Master's workown particular music. Before The series has won a Peabody Timothy Olyphant). raw material than of a voice. shop: School of Leonard. the bullets or the fists fly, there Award and has lasted four Yet, with some signal excep- As crime writers go, LeonShow runner Graham Yost is talk, and there is talk afteryears with a fifth on the way. tions, including the original ard strikes me as not so much gave his w r iters L eonard's ward, and sometimes during. And is great. teleplays for the 1980 "High hard- as medium-boiled: He novels so they could learn his On cursory inspection, RayLeonard's association with Noon Part Two: The Return of wrote with a sense of fun and voice and bracelets inscribed lan may look like the strong, "WWED" for " W hat Would television goes all the way back Will Kane" (with Lee Majors an amused affection for his silent archetype — one way to to 1956 and the "Schlitz The- in the Gary Cooper role) and villains as well as his heroes Elmore Do." Leonard, for his describe him is as a man who ater" adaptations of his Satur- the 1987 "Desperado" (a failed — they just h ave different is continually drawn into conpart,seems to have been more day Evening Post short story, pilot that spawned four non- wavelengths on a spectrum of than usually available and versations he'd rather not have "Moment of Vengeance,"one Leonard sequels), he did little flawed humanity. involved. and that go on longer than he'd It's a voice that "Justified" of the many Western tales he screenwriting himself. For his 2012 novel "Raylan," like. Everyone on "Justified" wrote before turning to crime To be sure, he gave his adapt- — which combines the two inspired by the series that he likes to have the last word. fiction in the late 1960s. Later, ers everything they needed strains of Leonard's writing life inspired, Leonard i n cluded So the master is gone. But inthe afterglow of"Get Shorty," — vivid characters, colorful (Raylan is essentially a frontier characters that had been cre- t he pupils remain. And t he there were tw o s erviceable situations and an abundance of marshal in m o stly m odern ated by the TV writers, along voice maintains.

Woman must onest ace uture

MOVIE TIMESTODAY

Dear Abby:I am a 65-year-old active woman who still works. I play tennis several times a week and have a loving relationship with my kids. I know with certainty that I have many good things in my life. However, since my sister died last year, I have been having DEAR second tho u g hts ABBY about a lot of the decisions I have made over the years — es-

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • 2 GUNS(R) 1:30, 4:15, 7:30, 10:05 • BLUE JASMINE (PG-13) 12:25, 2:50, 6:20, 9:10 • DESPICABLE ME2 (PG)1:20, 3:55, 7: IO • ELYSIUM(R) 12:55, 4: IO,6:55, 9:50 • THE HEAT (R) 1:40, 4:25, 7:25, 10:10 • JOBS(PG-13) 12:05, 3:25, 6:40, 9:35 • KICK-ASS 2 (R) 1:25, 4:30, 7:40, 10:15 • LEE DANIELS'THEBUTLER(PG-13) Noon, 3,6:15, 9:20 • THEMORTAL INSTRUMENTS: CITY OFBONES (PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:30, 9:30 •THE MORTAL INSTRUMENTS: CITY OFBONES IMAX (PG-13) 1, 4, 7,10 • PARANOIA (PG- I3) 9:40 • PERCYJACKSON: SEAOF MONSTERS (PG)12:35,3:10, 6:05, 9 • PLANES(PG) I2:20, 3:05, 6, 8:50 • WE'RE THE MILLERS (R) 1:10, 4:05, 7:35, 10:15 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) 12:10, 3:35, 6:50, 9:45 • THE WORLD'SEND(R) I2:45, 3:45, 7:15, 9:55 • YOU'RE NEXT (R) 1:35, 4:35, 7:45, 10:10 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.

what friends do for each other. You are lucky to be vital and active, because it means your world doesn't have to shrink any more than you want it to. Because you say you're lonely, perhaps it's time to consider enlarg-

We teach children to respect authority, be kind to others and be leaders — butwe don't teach them healthy confrontation, which is something we all encounter in our lives. — Talking ft Out in fndiana Dear Talking It Out: I agree with ing your circle of you. The kind of communication acquaintances. you're describing is a skill. It reThe loss of your quires not only a strong ego on the sister i s pr o b ably part of the "confronter," but also tact w hat started y o ur and diplomacy. And the "confronre-evaluation of your tee" needs to have the ability to listen pecially regarding relationships and life and choices, and that's normaL without responding with hostility to my choice of jobs. But please remember that regret is what is being said. I realize now that more than a few the cancerof life.You can't change Dear Abby:In my university classof my decisions were based on low the past, and you mustn't allow it to room, students place their feet on self-esteem, although I don't come cloud your future. While you may chairs, teachers lecture while sitting acrossthatway. I'mfeel ingdepressed be having second thoughts about on their desks, and the dean of the and lonely, and it's hard to be positive. choices you made when you were schoolherselfsits atop herdesk and I feel like my world is shrinking, and younger, the lessons you learned placesher feeton a chair in front of I don't know howto get back ontrack from them have made youthe per- her. Please tell me that this is NOT and be a positive and happy person son you are today. OK! — Proper in Washington again. As it is, I'm faking it with my Dear Abby:I think our culture is children, and my friends have no severelylacking whenwe don't teach Dear Proper:It appears you come idea how I really feel. How do I im- our children howto politely and non- from a generation or culture in prove my life at this late stage? aggressively stand up for themselves which the atmosphere has always — Depressed in San Diego when the need arises. People suffer been quite formal. I can tell you it's Dear Depressed: Onewaywouldbe in all sorts of relationships — work, "not OK" if it will make you feel betto be more honest with your friends family, friends — because they're ter, but if it's acceptable to the teachand fake it less. If they are good afraid of confrontation. Raising a er, the dean and the school, then it's friends, they'll be willingto listen and subject that may be embarrassing time for you to loosen up. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com giveyou an honest perspective orthe and risking angering someone isn't benefit of their life experience. That's fun, but it's COMMUNICATION. or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

HAPPY BIRTHDAY FORTUESDAY, AUG. 27, 2013:This yearpeopleoften don't know which way you will go in situations where your opinion is needed. Sometimes you will be stubborn, as you believe that your idea is the best. Other times, you will Stars showthe kind want a selection of of day you'll have ma ny ideas to toy ** * * * D ynamic around with. If you ** * * P ositive a r e single, others ** * A verage could be confused ** So-so yet intrigued by * Difficult you. Establishing a steady relationship will be dependent on anaccepting partner. If you are attached, you could confuse your sweetie. Sometimes you might be insistent thatyou are right; other times, you could care less. GEMINIadoresyour diversity.

SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)

with a loved oneonly when you feel energized and creative. Tonight: Return calls, then decide.

** * * * Y ou might not be comfortable with everything that others are saying. Don't automatically deny whatyou hear, as you will get confirmation to the validity of at least part of the message.Tonight: State your feelings in anappropriate discussion with a partner.

CANCER (June 21-Jnly22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

** * * Focus your attention on others, on ** * * C o ntinue with your focus on work. Little will be able to distractyou until an important business meeting and/or on midday. Whether you call it networking or an opportunity to head in anew direction. socializing, you will become more peopleYou might be difficult to stop once you oriented. Hopefully you can learn how to start moving. A midafternoon break from really enjoy yourself. Tonight: Reachout to the daily grind will allowyou to do some a friend at a distance. thinking. Tonight: Make it early.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

** * * You tend to take on more than your fair share of work and responsibility. The good news is thatyou know when ARIES (March 21-April 19) to kick backand start enjoying yourself. ** * * You are surrounded by several Understand that others are not as people who are quite self-indulgent. You spontaneous asyou are. Let them follow will want to initiate a serious discussion, but their own paths. Tonight: Where theaction the playfulness around you might create a Is. somewhat chaotic atmosphere. Try another VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) time for an important talk. Tonight: Throw ** * * L ook at the big picture, and yourself into the moment. consider your options. If there is asituation TAURUS (April20-May20) that is stopping you, look at the reason why, ** * * Use the morning for anything and see if it is really worthholding on to. major you must do. Youwill feel more No matter what your decision is, you will empowered than you have in along time. need to take the lead.Tonight: A force to be By midafternoon, you could encounter a dealt with. hassle that emerges either at work or within LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.22) your personal life. Walk away, if needbe. ** * * You might want to look past the Tonight: Start or finish a project at home. obvious with a partner. Try to root out the GEMINI (May21-June20) real cause of this person's interpersonal ** * * I f you feel like moving slowly, you issue. Know that the situation is resolvable, have the right idea. In fact, it won't be until though you might have to break precedent midafternoon thatyou will feel back upto to find a solution. Tonight: Listen to a great snuff. Initiate a long-overdue conversation piece of music.

• There may beanadditional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t

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TV TODAY 9p.m. onH, "The March"There have beenmany marches on Washington, D.C., but when people talk about "the march," they mean the one that took place 50 years ago this week andwas the setting for Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech. This new documentary recalls the march through the words of those who helped organize it, thosewho took partandthose whose lives were changed by it. 9 p.m. on TNT,"Rizzoli & Isles" —Jane (Angie Harmon) investigates a death at a late-night amateur drag race and discovers it was no accident. In fact, she suspects it was an attempt to cover up drug trafficking. She turns to Lt. Martinez (Amaury Nolasco) and his drug unit for help, butheseems benton thwarting her efforts in the new episode "Built for Speed." Sasha Alexander also stars. 10 p.m. on H A, "Bodyof Proof" —A teenage girl with schizophrenia is found murdered at the psychiatric hospital where shewas a patient.Megan and Tommy (Dana Delany, Mark Valley) interview another young patient (Hannah Leigh) who says she saw the killer and that he meant to murder her, not the actual victim. Suspicion falls on the doctor (Craig Bierko) in charge of the ward, who's throwing roadblocks in the way of the investigation, in "Committed." 10 p.m. on l3, "Personof Interest" —Finch and Reese (Michael Emerson, Jim Caviezel) have to spread themselves thin when the numbers of two people — who happen to be husband and wife — come up at the same time in "Til Death." Mark Pellegrino ("Supernatural") and Francie Swift ("Law & Order: Special Victims Unit") guest star. 10:01 p.m. onUSA, "Suits"As Harvey (Gabriel Macht) butts heads with Stephen (MaxBeesley) over Ava's (Michelle Fairley) case, he works with Jessica (Gina Torres) on their defensestrategy. Patrick J. Adamsalso stars in the new episode "She's Mine." 11 p.m. on BRAVO,"Property Envy" —In the new episode "The Hamptons," the panelists dissect three unique properties located in the Long Island enclave. They include an exclusive island compound,a beach bunkerdesigned to withstand all kinds of weather and a19th-century windmill that's been converted to a living space. Stephen Collins hosts. ©Zap2it

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Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E LI.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347

• FRUITVALE STATION(R) 3:30 • THE LONE RANGER(PG-13) Noon, 3, 6 • PACIFIC RIM(PG-13) 12: I5, 3: I5, 6:15 • RED2(PG-13) 1,4, 6:45 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) 12:30, 6:30 • THE INAY WAYBACK(PG-13) 1:15, 4:15, 7 • WORLD WAR (P Z G-l3)12:45,3:45,6:45 I

Auoio~ & HEARING AID CUNK www,centraloregonaudiology.com Bend• Redmond• P-ville • Burns 541.647.2884

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • THE INTERNSHIP(R) 9 • NOW YOUSEE ME (PG-I3)6 • After 7 p.m., shows are 21and older only. Younger than21 may attend screenings before 7 pm. if accompanied by a legal guardian. I

Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • CRYSTALFAIRY(no MPAArating) 8 • MORE THAN HONEY(no MPAArating) 6 I

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • KICK-ASS2 (R)2: l5,4:30, 6:45,9 • LEE DANIELS'THEBUTLER(PG-I3) 3, 5:45, 8:30 • PLANES (PG) 2,4:15, 6:30, 8:45 • WE'RE THE MILLERS(R) 2, 4:30, 7,9:30

See us for retractable

awnings, exterior solar screens, shade structures. Sun ehen you eantit, shade ehen you needit.

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541-389-9983 www.shadeondemand.com

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * * Review a recent decision before approaching a lovedone.A changeofmind is not out of the question. Youhavegreater impact than you realize. Approach others with care. Youwill need to do your share of integrating different opinions. Tonight: Relax — you need to unwind.

Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • BLUE JASMINE (PG-13) 5:45, 8 • ELYSIUM(R) 5:30, 7:45 • JOBS(PG-13) 7:30 • LEE DANIELS'THEBUTLER(PG-13) 5, 7:30 • PLANES (PG)5:30

AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb. 18) ** * * I f you are able to, try to work from home ... at least through the morning hours. A key situation will encourage you to deal with itfirst. Once that has been handled, your rambunctious nature might emerge. Tonight:No onecan denythatyou are a "people person."

PISCES (Feh.19-March20) ** * * B rief calls could turn into lengthy conversations. You might feel as if your whole schedule is being taken over! Resist feeling pressured. Look at the value of these conversations. Important solidifying of different bonds will occur. Tonight: Head home. Face it — you aretired. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. LI.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • ELYSIUM(R) 7:20 • JOBS(PG-13) 7:10 • THEMORTAL INSTRUMENTS: CITY OFBONES (PG-13) 4, 6:40 • PARANOIA (PG-13) 4:50 • PERCYJACKSON: SEAOF MONSTERS (PG)5 • PLANES(PG)4:50, 6:50 • WE'RE THE MILLERS(R) 4:30, 7 •

Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., 541-416-1014

• As ofpresstime, completemovie times for today were unavailab/e.For more information, visit tvwwtpinetheater. com. • Theupstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibility.

Pa/fo Wnrld 222 SE Reed Market Rd. 541-388-0022

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John Day Burns Lakeview


TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

THE BULLETIN

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

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbL! Iletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

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Includeyour name, phone number and address

: Monday — Friday : 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

: Classified telephone hours:

Subscribe or manage your subscription

: Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

Place, cancel or extend an ad

T h e

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17 7 7

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Heating & Stoves

Fuel & Wood

Fridge, side by s ide Piano, early 1900 up- Wanted- paying cash DON'7 Year Dependable MISS THIS All Kenmore, a l m ond Round solid oak pedes- Compound Bows: Alpine right Gramer-Emerson, for Hi-fi audio & stuFirewood: Seasoned $250. 541-633-7342 cond, $2000 obo. dio equip. Mclntosh, Lodgepole, Split, Del. Sil v erado,good tal table 8 5 chairs, $395 split-limb SELL 541-233-6709 after 5pm. J BL, Marantz, D y 500 Gallon used Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 obo. 541-280-7999 or loaded w/accessories, FOR $500 OR for $335. Cash, Check 60-70 lb., super quiet, Yamaha 6'1 n Grand Pi- naco, Heathkit, San- propane t a n k, 541-610-4613 LESS? or Credit Card OK. sui, Carver, NAD, etc. $900. like new, $350. Older Non-commercial Antiques wanted: tools, Darton wheel-bow, 60-70 ano, immaculateebony Call 541-261-1808 541-420-3484. /t Cottgtgtt „C rtcgpt Dgftgrt finish, beautiful t one, advertisers may 541-382-0217. furniture, marbles, beer Ib, $80. 541-771-2424 202 WHEN YOU SEE THIS Visit our HUGE $11,000. 541-788-3548 place an ad with cans, early B/W phoSeasoned Juniper fireWant to Buy or Rent oui' home decor tography, Western Compound Bows: Parker w ood d e livered i n 260 Oo "QUICK CASH consignment store. ~ items. 541-389-1578 Hunter Mag, single cam, D ON'T MI S S T HI S C entral Ore . $ 1 7 5 CASH for dressers, SPECIAL" New items Misc. Items cord. 541-419-9859 60-70 lb., $225. Golden M ore P i x at te t n ( t i ) i j l e ti n . c o m The Bulletin reserves dead washers/ dryers 1 week 3 lines 12 arrive daily! Eagle Raptor sinqle cam, the right to publish all On a classified ad 541-420-5640 Monitor Empire ~ g k 20 ! 930 SE Textron, limb, 60-70 Ib, $225. 2 burial plots, sect C ¹945 ads from The Bulletin split go to Bend 541-318-1501 propane stove, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Ad must include Both like new; some ac- 8 946 Redmond Memorial, www.bendbulletin.com Wanted: $Cash paid for newspaper onto The www.redeuxbend.com price of single item cessories. 541-771-2424 $500 each. 509-630-8348 p ipe incl., e x c . vintaqe costume jewDoor-to-door selling with to view additional Bulletin Internet webof $500 or less, or elry. Top dollar paid for cond., $900. fast results! It's the easiest site. photos of the item. 500 gal. fuel tank, with multiple items Gold/Silver.l buy by the G ENERATE SOM E DON'T MISSTHIS meter, $250; or trade for 541-382-0217 way in the world to sell. Estate, Honest Artist whose total does EXCITEMENT in your The Bulletin 16-30 gal. propane hot Elizabeth,541-633-7006 not exceed $500. aer ng Central Qregnn t nre lggg neighborhood! Plan a water htr. 541-923-4071 • Commercial/Office The Bulletin Classified NOTICE TO garage sale and don't DO YOU HAVE Want two Nubian or 240 Equipment & Fixtures Call Classifieds at ADVERTISER 541-385-5809 forget to advertise in BBQ Weber Genesis, SOMETHING TO Saanen goats at 541-385-5809 Crafts & Hobbies classified! premium ss grill, exc. Commercial s t ainless Since September 29, SELL reasonable price. www.bendbulletin.com 1991, advertising for 541-385-5809. $350. 541-390-2912 541-388-3535 FOR $500 OR s teel 30x30 x 30 used woodstoves has Bleached cow skull with LESS? cooler, pre v iously horns, ready to paint. Budweiser neon sign, used b y b e v erage been limited to mod- Gardening Supplies Non-commercial German Wirehaired AKC, & Equipment $50. 541-408-5926 bow tie, works great, distributor. els which have been pointers, parents OSA advertisers may I I t e ms for Free Also c ertified by the O r $150 obo. 541-408-0846 certified hips 8 elbows, Stamp Collector place an ad smaller cooler availegon Department of with our Desk 60nx30 n + L-shaped great hunting ancestry, Cash buyer for new or able. 541-749-0724. BarkTurfSoil.com Buying Diamonds Environmental Qualg o ! $ 8 0 0. "QUICK CASH r eturn 4 8 nx21", good ready to used postage stamps. /Go/d for Cash ity (DEQ) and the fed541-247-2928, eves. SPECIAL" cond, free! 541-610-9918 Albums, singles or Find exactly what High Quality King Saxon's Fine Jewelers eral En v ironmental PROMPT D E LIVERY shoe boxes. 541-389-6655 you are looking for in the Protection Bedroom Set with 542-389-9663 Ag e n cy BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Important note! Cats & 541-279-0336 or Storage 1 yr old, in other pets are being CLASSIFIEDS (EPA) as having met ~ g a a k a 2 0 t Search the area's most BUYING p oisoned i n loc a l PERFECT condition! smoke emission stanAd must comprehensive listing of Lionel/American Flyer Beautiful medium oak dards. A cer t ified neighborhoods. Visit For newspaper classified advertising... Golf Equipment • include price of trains, accessories. hardwood bedframe www.facebook.com/ w oodstove may b e delivery, call the k~la ta nt $ 500 541-408-2191. real estate to automotive, Tools • with storage drawers, identified by its certifiCraftCats for info. Circulation Dept. at merchandise to sporting CHECK YOURAD or less, or multiple king pillow-top matlabel, which is 541-385-5800 BUY/NG & S E LLING Coleman items whose total goods. Bulletin Classifieds People Lookfor Information p o w ermate cation tress, 2 night stands, All gold jewelry, silver p ulse 1 8 50W g e n . permanently attached To place an ad, call appear every day in the does not exceed 2 lamps, 1 5-drawer About Products and to the stove. The Buland gold coins, bars, $195. 541-385-8049 541-385-5809 print or on line. $500. dresser, 1 dresser+ letin will no t k nowServices Every Daythrough rounds, wedding sets, or email Call 541-385-5809 mirror, ALL for only claggified@bendbulletin.com Steel forms, p recast ingly accept advertisclass rings, sterling silCall Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Classiffeds $3000. 541-410-1010 i ng for the sale of ver, coin collect, vinconcrete, parking lot 541-385-5809 The Bulletin on the first day it runs tage watches, dental wheel stops, 2 @ $45 uncertified Fostered for gerrrng Central Oregonsrnte 1903 The Bulletin KITTENS! & Sofa, $250; to make sure it is cor- www.bendbulletin.com gold. Bill Fl e ming, each; Chicago pneu- woodstoves. tenmg Central Oregon \nre fg03 local nonprofit rescue Loveseat n big screen TV, $150. n rect. nSpellcheck and 541-382-9419. matic 1 impact group. Fixed, friendly, OBO. 541-706-1785 MANTIS TILLER human errors do ocGUN SHOW wrench, 8" anvil, 2 tire shots, ID chip, tested, File cabinet, tan metal cur. If this happens to Aug. 31-Sept. 1, 2013 $150 sockets, very little use more! Variety of coln Fuel & Wood Pets 8 Supplies 4-drawers, 26 t/g'Dx15 Call 541-312-2448 your ad, please con- Deschutes Fairgrounds $175; 10' roller panels ors. Se e T o mTom Wx52"H Buy! Sell! Trade! $89. for f eeding c u t-off tact us ASAP so that Motel Mgr , a c ross SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 541-923-8271 SUPER TOP SOIL corrections and any The Bulletin recomsaws, rollers 8" long; from Sonic, B end. WHEN BUYING www.herghe gotlandbark.com $8 Admission, mends extra caution adjustments can be spacing 5 t/gn 9 I $20 Sat/Sun 1-5 PM or by FIREWOOD... Screened, soil & com12 & under free! made to your ad. when purc h as- appt. 5 4 1-815-7278. ea. 541-416-9686 OREGON TRAIL GUN post mi x ed , no To avoid fraud, 541 -385-5809 ing products or serwww.craftcats.org rocks/clods. High huSHOWS, 541-347-2120 MOVING, 1 The Bulletin The Bulletin Classified vices from out of the mus level, exc. for or 541-404-1890 MUST SELL! recommends payarea. Sending cash, Labrador Puppies, $300 • Building Materials flower beds, lawns, Golf bag carrier, hard Custom made secment for Firewood 8 $350. 8 w ks, 1 st checks, or credit instraight gardens, case, w/ wheels, $25. L H Rem 700 B DL tional 8 ottoman only upon delivery shots. 541-416-1175 REDMOND Habitat f ormation may b e 541-647-1247 FOUNTAIN. Must sell s creened to p s o il. -orig. $5,000, now and inspection. 7mm Mag Leupold RESTORE subjected to fraud. lovely patio or inside Building Supply Resale • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Bark. Clean fill. De$850. NEW queen For more i nforma- Mixed: Maltese/ChihuaVX II 3X9. $1,000; water fountain. $199 liver/you haul. 4' x 4' x 8' 2 males born 2009. mattress, box spring Quality at tion about an adver- hua, LH Rem 700 BDL obo. 541-382-9295. 541-548-3949. Guns, Hunting and frame $300. • Receipts should LOW PRICES tiser, you may call Also 1 female AKC York22-250 Leupold VX Terrier, born 2007. Call Steve at & Fishing include name, III 6.5x20. C o mp 1242 S. Hwy 97 the O r egon State shire Honda Elite motor are small dogs. No 503-585-5000. 541-548-1406 phone, price and Attorney General's All S tock $1,800. A l l scooter, low mileage, calls, please! Lost 8 Found 1000 rnds .556 ammo, Exc. kind of wood Open to the public. Office C o n sumer A.M. Cond. $400 obo. 541-350-5106 ** $550. 600 rnds 45acp, 541-923-5568 541-389-2636 purchased. Protection hotline at Queen 6 pc. • Firewood ads Found IPhone at 8/21 $280. 600 rnds .40 S&W, 1-877-877-9392. Bedroom Set POODLE Toypups & MUST include Farmer's Market downHow fo avoid scam Heating & Stoves teens. Also,POMAPOOS $2400...503-812-2391 $240. 541-647-8931 Wanted: Collector town Bend. Call to idenspecies & cost per and fraud attempts The Bulletin 600 rnds of .380, $300. Call 541-475-3889 Serving Central Oregon ance t903 seeks high quality tify, 541-390-5336 cord to better serve Rocker recliner La-Z 150 rnds of .357 mag, 2009 L e nnox p e l let gg'Be aware of internafishing items. Boy, exc. cond., $150. $120. 541-647-8931 tove, M o de l PS 4 0 our customers. Queens/and Heelers tional fraud. Deal lo- sw/new Call 541-678-5753, or Found Rabbit, s mall, 541-312-4341 control board & A dog sitter in NE Bend, Standard & Mini, $150 503-351-2746 cally whenever posbrown, short ears, on SiAR-15 with 2 m a gaigniter + 48 nx48n hearth warm and loving home The Bulletin & up. 541-280-1537 sible. erra Dr. in Bend, 8/20 with no cages, $25 day. www.rightwayranch.wor Stove, elect., glasstop, z ines, 2 b o xe s o f Wanted: used shotguns gg'Watch for buyers pad, light brown, $1600 am. 541-788-4981 works s/c oven $100. ammo. $1250. Linda at 541-647-7308 all. 541-815-2406 dpress.com 410 ga. 8 20 ga., who offer more than 541-604-1908 Used E nfield 3 0 - 06 over 8 under. Adopt a rescued kitten Rodent issues? Free your asking price and Deer Rifle with SimCall Al, 541-526-5559 or cat! Dozens availwho ask to have mons 2.8X10 Scope. adult barn/shop cats, money wired or able. Fixed, shots, ID fixed, shots, s o me $395. 541-480-0469 247 chip, tested, more! handed back to them. riendly, some n o t . Bend local pays CASH!! Fake cashier checks Nonprofit s a nctuary fWill Sporting Goods deliver. 389-8420 for all firearms & open Sat/Sun 1 - 5, and money orders Misc. ammo. 541-526-0617 are common. other days by appt. SHIH-TZU PUPS We're selling half a 65480 78th, B e nd. Winn Pro2 Upright ten PNever give out perMale, $350. CASH!! house full of very nice Photos, m a p at sonal financial infor2 Females, $500/ea For Guns, Ammo 8 nis stringing machine furniture! Teak sidewww.craftcats.org. mation. tesslovespets@gmail.com board, $400; with hutch, Reloading Supplies. $275. 541-923-8271 541-389-8420, or like YTrust your instincts 541-408-6900. 541-416-3630 $800. Large maple exus on Facebook. and be wary of 255 ecutive corner desk, someone using an Yorkie pups AKC, cute, $1000. Brass bed, $400. FIND YOUR FUTURE Computers escrow service or big eyes, socialized, potty 3 Tiff any lamps, $125 ea. HOME INTHE BULLETIN training, health guarantee, Oak computer desk 8 agent to pick up your T HE B U L LETIN r e - merchandise. $650 & up. 541-777-7743 Your future is just a page chair, $350. Small anquires computer adtique painted desk, $100. away. Whether you're looking vertisers with multiple The Bulletin We will be closedMonday,Labor Day,Sept. 2, 2013 210 Large beautiful area rug, for a hat or a place to hangit, ad schedules or those The Bulletin Classified is Chihuahua puppies, tea- Furniture 8 Appliances $700. 541-593-8921 or RETAIL 8 CLASSIFIED DISPLAYADVERTISING selling multiple sys- Men's shirts, brand new, 541-410-2911 your best source. cup, shots 8 dewormed, tems/ software, to dis- size XXX tall, Cabella's & DAY DEADLINE $250. 541-420-4403 Every day thousandsof close the name of the other good brands, 10 @ A1 Washers&Dryers The Bulletin buyers and sellers of goods business or the term $15 ea. 541-279-9995 Monday9i2....................................W ednesday,8i28 4 p.m . Donate deposit bottles/ $150 ea. Full warrecommends extra ' and services do business in "dealer" in their ads. cans to local all volranty. Free Del. Also At Home9i3...................................W ednesday,Si28 4 p.m . Private party advertisthese pages.They know unteer, non-profit reswanted, used W/D's l caution when purchasing products or • you can't beat TheBulletin ers are d efined as The Bulletin is your cue, to help w/feral 541-280-7355 Tuesday 9i3.........................................Thursday, Si29 Noon services from out of I those who sell one Classified Section for cat s p ay / n e u ter Employment t the area. Sending t selection and convenience computer. W ednesday 9/4.........................................Friday,Si30 Noon costs. Cans for Cats ' cash, checks, or trailer at Ray's Foods - every item isjust a phone Marketplace call away. on Century Dr. Or dol credit i n f o rmation 257 may be subjected to nate Mon-Fri at Smith Musical Instruments The Classified Section is Call Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or l FRAUD. For more to use. Every item at CRAFT in Tumalo information about an g iseasy categorized and every anytime. 3 8 9 -8420 advertiser, you may I cartegory is indexed onthe 5 41 -385 - 5 8 0 9 www.craftcats.org I call t h e Ore g onI Dining table 42nx58 n Tuesday 9/3..............................Noon Friday 8/30 section's front page. ' State Attor ney ' to advertise. English Bulldog pups, (42 nx94 n with three Whether you are l o oking for l General's O f fi c e Classifieds• 541-385-5809 AKC reg, 1st s hots. 12 n leaf extensions), at Consumer P r otec- • a home orneed aservice, www.bendbulletin.com 4 straight back and 2 $2000. 541-325-3376 t ion ho t l in e at I your future is in the pagesof captains chairs. Piano, Baldwin upl 1-877-877-9392. The Bulletin Classified. Exotic & Oriental ShortAsking right, with b e nch, hair cats-$150-450 $165 obo exc. cond. $ 600. www.phatkat.bravesThe Bulletin 541-419-5060 541-410-4087 Serving Central Oregonsince t903 ites.com 279-3018 DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO

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E2 TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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

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AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mon.

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Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Saturday • • • • 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Starting at 3 lines

Place a photoinyour private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.

"UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500in total merchandise

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

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Schools & Training

Employment Opportunities

B2B Service Franchise Promo, Digital Print 8 Advertising. Well Established, Owner Retiring. No Exp. Necessary! Financing & Support Call: 1-800-796-3234

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Journeyman Electrician, Oregon Lice n se, Portland area. Commercial and Residential. Fax Resume to

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208-342-6999

r.=.-"-,.— .a products or I I chasing services from out of I I the area. SendingI c ash, checks, o r I credit i n f o rmationI I may be subjected to FRAUD. I more informaI For tion about an adver- I I tiser, you may call I the Oregon State I Attorney General'sI Co n s umerf I Office Protection hotline at i I 1-877-877-9392. I ll

627

Vacation Rentals & Exchanges Ocean front house, each walk from town, 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, Fireplace, BBQ. $95 per night, 3 night MIN.

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin 632

Apt./Multiplex General CHECK YOUR AD

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

AptiMultiplex NE Bend

Snowmobiles

4.63 Acre Gentlemens • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 Ranch. H o us e & EXT, $1000. guest house, paved • Yamaha 750 1999 Mountain Max, SOLD! rd., exc. cond. Newer m etal r o ofs, B L M • Zieman 4-place trailer, SOLD! across rd. In the big All in good condition. pines. $159,000. Call Located in La Pine. Pat 541-420-9095. Call 541-408-6149.

Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-647-4232 865

ATVs

NOTICE 2000 A rctic C at All real estate adver- (2) Z L580's EFI with n e w tised here in is sub- covers, electric start w/ ject to t h e F e deral reverse, low miles, both F air H o using A c t , excellent; with new 2009 which makes it illegal Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, to advertise any pref- drive off/on w/double tilt, Suzuki powered custom erence, limitation or lots of accys. Selling due Dune Buggy, twin 650 cc discrimination based to m edical r e asons.motor, 5-spd, with trailer, on race, color, reli- $6000 all. 541-536-8130 $3500. 541-389-3890 gion, sex, handicap, Yamaha Badger 1992 Look at: familial status or na4-wheeler, YFM80, $450. tional origin, or intenBendhomes.com 541-312-8879 or tion to make any such for Complete Listings of 541-350-4622 preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. Area Real Estate for Sale We will not knowingly Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, accept any advertis- short track, variable ing for r eal e state exhaust valves, elecwhich is in violation of tric s t art, r e verse, this law. All persons manuals, rec o rds, Banshee 2001 are hereby informed new spare belt, cover, Yamaha 350 custom sports quad that all dwellings adheated hand g rips, $4500 obo. vertised are available nice, fast, $999. Call 541-647-8931 on an equal opportu- Tom, 541-385-7932, nity basis. The Bulletin Classified 860 Boats & AccessoriesI Motorcycles & Accessories 746

Small clean studio Old Mill Dist. area, $495 mod $475 d e p. All Northwest Bend Homes utilities paid. No pets, no smoking. 541-3309769, 541-480-7870

Motorcycles & Accessoriesj

oQ00

503-981-4643

employee?

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Lost & Found

Hay, Grain & Feed

Employment Opportunities

Looking for your next

PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.

LOST DOG!!!! Charlie was lost during the thunderstorm on July 3 1, 2013. She is a black terrier mix, 11

476

BMW

1 1 5 0 RTP

2004, 31K mi., electric windshield, heated grips, f uel injected, three stor-

age bags, new bat-

12t/a' HiLaker f ishing boat with trailer and newly overhauled 18

t eri es, $4000 . 2 003 N W 4 t h S t . , 541-389-7691. h.p. Johnston o utCall for Specials! Bend Tr aditional, 3 b oard, $ 85 0 ob o . Limited numbers avail. Eves 5 4 1-383-5043, bdrms, master bdrm. Harley Davidson Heri1, 2 and 3 bdrms. o n main l evel 2 . 5 tage 2004, 35K miles, days 541-322-4843 W/D hookups, patios baths, 1690 sq. f t ., lots of extras, must see! or decks. family room, hobby $10,000. 541-306-9866 MOUNTAIN GLEN, room, gas fireplace, 541-383-9313 central air, 30 yrs. old, Professionally 2 -car g arage, c i t y HDFatBo 19 9 6 managed by Norris & view, 10,000 sq ft lot, 14'8" boat, 40hp MerStevens, Inc. Private cul de sac locury outboard (4-stroke, cation and sunroom 648 electric trim, EFI, less C ompletely ref u r - J, than 10 hrs) + electric Houses for bished paint, roof and trolling motor, fish finder, driveway. Rent General $5000 obo. 541-548-2173 Completely Offered at $405,000 Rebuilt/Customized 541-390-3442 PUBLISHER'S 2012/2013 Award NOTICE Winner 755 All real estate adverShowroom Condition tising in this newspa- Sunriver/La Pine Homes Many Extras per is subject to the Low Miles. F air H o using A c t 2 Bdrm 2 Bath on 2 14' a luminum bo a t $17,000 which makes it illegal acres. Large shop/ga541-548-4807 w/trailer, 2009 Mercury to a d v ertise "any rage, fenced yard, 15hp motor, fish finder, preference, limitation cabin. LaPine $83,000. or disc r imination Call 541-390-7394 or HD Screaming Eagle $2500. 541-815-8797 based on race, color, 541-771-0143 Electra Glide 2005, 103" motor, two tone religion, sex, handicap, familial status, candy teal, new tires, 763 marital status or na- Recreational Homes 23K miles, CD player, tional origin, or an inhydraulic clutch ex& Property tention to make any cellent condition. such pre f erence, Highest offer takes it. 14' LAZER 1993 sail637 Acres in forest boat with trailer, exc. 541-480-8080. limitation or discrimiwest of Silver Lake c ond., $2000 o b o . nation." Familial staOR, with recreation Call 503-312-4168 tus includes children cabin and stream. under the age of 18 541-480-7215 living with parents or legal cust o dians, 775 pregnant women, and Manufactured/ people securing cusHonda Shadow/Aero tody of children under 14' Smokercraft, 15hp Mobile Homes 750, 2007 Black, 11K 18. This newspaper Merc + Minn Kota trollmi, 60 mpg, new dewill not knowingly ac- FACTORY SPECIAL tachable windshield, ing motor, fish finder, cept any advertising New Home, 3 bdrm, Mustang seat & tires; many extras, must see. for real estate which is detachable Paladin $3750. 541-389-3890 $46,500 finished in violation of the law. on your site. backrest 8 luggage O ur r e aders ar e J and M Homes rack w/keylock.Vance17.5' Glastron 2002, hereby informed that 541-548-5511 Hines pipes, great Chevy eng., Volvo all dwellings adversound. Cruise control, outdrive, open bow, tised in this newspaLOT MODEL audible turn signals stereo, sink/live well, for safety. $3,995. per are available on LIQUIDATION w/glastron tr a i ler, an equal opportunity Prices Slashed Huge Jack, 541-549-4949 incl. b oa t c o v er, basis. To complain of Savings! 10 Year Like new, $ 8 500. discrimination cal l conditional warranty. Street Glide 2006 black 541-447-4876 HUD t o l l -free at Finished on your site. cherry metal f l ake, 1-800-877-0246. The ONLY 2 LEFT! good extras, 8 ,100 toll f re e t e l ephone Redmond, Oregon miles, will take some number for the hear541-548-5511 trade of firearms or ing im p aired is JandMHomes.com small ironhead. 1-800-927-9275. $14,000. Rent /Own 541-306-8812 652 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes 17' Cris Craft Scorpion, $2500 down, $750 mo. United Motors Moped fast & ready to fish! I/O & Houses for Rent OAC. J and M Homes Scooter, 2005, 280 miles, trolling motor. Lots of exNW Bend 541-548-5511 $475. 541-536-5859 tras! $5000. 541-31 8-7473 Awbrey Glen golf course 3br 2.5 ba home, granite counters, 2 f ireplaces, walk-in closet, 3-car gar,

K0000

orchard grass hay, Oregon Medical Train- Construction y rs old and 8 l b s . Exc. 0 Ibs bales , Grading & und e rPlease call with ANY 7 ing PCS - Phlebotomy 528 8 mi. east of g round utility c o n classes begin Sept. 3, information!!! Re- $215/ton, Bend. 5 41-306-1118 tractor looking for pipe Loans & Mortgages 2013. Registration now ward! 541-408-4884 or 206-954-8479. foreman, operators, P WARNING grade checkers & pipe Lost: Grill 8 l i c enseGrass hay, e xcellent medicaltrainin .com l ayers. Good p a y , The Bulletin recomplate (779 ECP), Neff q uality, $ 20 0 to n . 541-343-3100 benefits. Fax resume mends you use cau8 Purcell. Tues, 8/13 541-788-4539 tion when you proto 1-503-649-1 71 7 at 2:20 pm., following 470 vide personal accident. Please reCall a Pro information to compaDomestic & Executive Director turn to R o n's A u to Crook County Parks & nies offering loans or Body, SE Armour Rd., Whether you need a In-Home Positions credit, especially Recreation is looking Bend, Oregon. fence fixed, hedges those asking for ad541-633-7509. Live-in, full time care for for an Executive Divance loan fees or trimmed or a house elderly woman in LaPine rector. This person is Lost: Me d i terranean companies from out of built, you'll find area. Help with mobility, responsible for overd resser drawer, S state. If you have grooming, meal prepara- all management and professional help in Hwy 97, around Big R concerns or question, transportation, med- operation of the Disi n R e dmond. C a l l The Bulletin's "Call a i cations, s om e tions, we suggest you li g ht trict, and works un541-420-9372. consult your attorney Service Professional" housekeeping, house- der the guidance of or call CONSUMER hold errands and com- an e lected b o ard. Directory panionship. Wages ne- Refer to HOTLINE, 541 -385-5809 otiable and will include w ww.ccprd.org f o r 1-877-877-9392. ree rent. R e ferences salary, a p p lication TURNED YOU required. For interview procedure, c r iteria, BANK SPECIAL OFFER DOWN? Private party Beautiful green mixed call 916-216-0162. benefit package, and will loan on real eshay, barn-stored, $230/ job desc r iption. tate equity. Credit, no ton. Patterson Ranch Deadline to apply is Lost: Tan/White 476 problem, good equity Sisters, 541-549-3831 Chihuahua Friday Monday, September Employment is all you need. Call night (8/2) in Crooked 16, 2013, 5:00 pm, Oregon Land MortOpportunities River Ranch. PST. Looking for your gage 541-388-4200. Male, 8 years old, next employee? about 7 lbs. $2000 LOCAL MONEY:Webuy Wildland Firefighters Place a Bulletin CAUTION: cash reward, no secured trustdeeds & To fight forest fires. help wanted ad Ads published in questions asked. note,some hard money Must be 18 years old "Employment Optoday and Call 503-805-3833. loans. Call Pat Kelley & drug free. Apply portunities" in clude reach over 541-382-3099 ext.13. between 9 a.m. to 3 employee and inde60,000 readers p.m., Mon. thru Thurs. pendent p o sitions. Bring each week. two forms of ID fill Garage Sales Ads fo r p o s itions Your classified ad out Federal 1-9 form. that require a fee or REMEMBER: If you will also No ID =No Application. upfront i nvestment have lost an animal, appear on must be stated. With don't forget to check bendbulletin.com any independentjob The Humane Society which currently opportunity, please Bend receives over i nvestigate tho r 541-382-3537 1.5 million page oughly. Use e xtra Redmond P ATR l c K views every c aution when ap541-923-0882 1199 NE Hemlock, Find them in month at no plying for jobs onP de ille Redmond, OR extra cost. line and never pro541-447-7178; The Bulletin (541) 923-0703 Bulletin vide personal inforor Craft Cats mation to any source Classifieds! Classifieds 541-389-8420. you may not have Get Results! Horticulture researched and Check out the Call 541-385-5809 deemed to be repuclassifieds online or place your ad Foliage table. Use extreme tNww.bendbutfetfn.com on-line at Maintenance c aution when r e bendbulletin.com Updated daily Specialist s ponding to A N Y online employment Call54I 3855809topramcte yourservice 'Advertise for 28daysstarting at ' I4I lrtit speci alpatksgesetavoilableonourwebste) Career 0 o r t u nities 286 333 Immediate opening ad from out-of-state. Night Pressman Sales Northeast Bend for part-/full-time poWe suggest you call Poultry, Rabbits, The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Orsition. Requires the State of Oregon egon. is seeking a night-time Pressman. & Supplies expert plant care Consumer H o tline Handyman • L andscaping/Yard Carej We are part of Western Communications, Inc. Building/Contracting knowledge and ** FREE ** 1-503-378-4320 which is a small, family owned group consist5 laying hens, $30 all. at experience at For Equal OpportuGarage Sale Kit Evenings or leave mesI DO THAT! NOTICE: Oregon Landing of 7 newspapers - 5 in Oregon and 2 in NOTICE: Oregon state nity Laws c o ntact various project sites. law r equires anyone Home/Rental repairs scape Contractors Law Place an ad in The sage, 541-389-6570 California. Ideal candidate must be able to Send resume & work Oregon Bureau of who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all Bulletin for your gaSmall jobs to remodels learn our equipment/processes quickly. A history via e-mail to: Labor 8 I n d ustry, construction work to businesses that a dHonest, guaranteed rage sale and re341 hands-on style is a requirement for our s t/a info@evergreen Civil Rights Division, be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form work. CCB¹151573 ceive a Garage Sale tower KBA press. In addition to our 7-day a Horses 8 Equipment plantscapes.com 971-673- 0764. Construction Contrac- Dennis 541-317-9768 Landscape ConstrucKit FREE! week newspaper, we have numerous comtors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: mercial print clients as well. Competitive wage Older 2-horse M i ley The Bulletin active license ERIC REEVE HANDY p lanting, decks , KIT INCLUDES: trailer with tack room; Housekeeper private and benefit program, and p otential for ad• 4 Garage Sale Signs means the contractor SERVICES. Home 8 fences, arbors, vancement in a stable work environment. If new floor & brakes. 541-385-5809 homes cleaning team • $2.00 Off Coupon To is bonded & insured. Commercial Repairs, water-features, and in$1600. 541-447-3332 member needed, week you provide dependability, combined with a Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irUse Toward Your Carpentry-Painting, positive attitude and are a team player, we days only. No weekNext Ad CCB li c ense at Pressure-washing, rigation systems to be 383 Add your web address ends, eves or holidays. would like to hear from you. • 10 Tips For "Garage www.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the Honey Do's. On-time to your ad and read- 541-815-0015 Produce & Food Sale Success!" contractor.com Landscape Contracpromise. Senior For more information or to submit a resume, ers on The Buiietin's or call 503-378-4621. Discount. Work guar- tors Board. This 4-digit please contact: Al Nelson, Pressroom Manweb site, www.bendTHOMAS ORCHARDS JANITOR The Bulletin recom- anteed. 541-389-3361 number is to be i nPICK UP YOUR bulletin.com, will be Morning janitor wanted ager, anelson@bendbulletin.com. ApplicaKimberly, Oregon mends checking with cluded in all adveror 541-771-4463 GARAGE SALE KIT at able to click through 541-934-2870 4 days week. Apply @ tions are also available at the front desk at The the CCB prior to contisements which indiBonded & Insured 1777 SW Chandler automatically to your M&J Tavern, corner of Bulletin, 1777 Chandler Ave., Bend, OR. tracting with anyone. cate the business has CCB¹181595 ~U- ick Pre-employment drug testing required. EOE Ave., Bend, OR 97702 website. Hill & Greenwood. Some other t r ades a bond,insurance and • Freestone canning also req u ire addi-Landscaping/Yard Care workers c o mpensapeaches:Angelus The Bulletin Eibertas, tional licenses and tion for their employZeeLady Sales certifications. ees. For your protecTimberProducts Company • Nectarines Nelson tion call 503-378-5909 T i E II K H 0 0 U S • Bartlett Pears Independent Contractor Sales Landscaping & or use our website: FIND YOUR FUTURE Read Picked Concrete Construction We are seeking dynamic individuals. www.lcb.state.or.us to ~ Maintenance HOME INTHE BULLETIN • Freestone Electricians & Millwrights canning check license status Serving Central Timber Products Company, a leader in diversified DOES THIS SOUND LIKE YOU? JJ 8 B Construction, Oregon Since 2003 before contracting with Your future is just a page peaches: Angelus wood product sales, manufacturing and transporta• OUTGOING & COMPETITIVE quality concrete work. Residental/Commercial the business. Persons away. Whether you're looking Eibertas, ZeeLady tion, has maintenance openings for Journeyman • PERSONABLE 8 ENTHUSIASTIC doing land s cape Over 30 Years Exp. for a hat or a place to hangit, • Nectarines Level Electricians& Millwrights who: have wood Sprinkler Repair maintenance do not • Bartlett Pears • CONSISTENT & MOTIVATED Sidewalks; RV pads; The Bulletin Classified is products or manufacturing setting experience; are Back Flow Testing r equire an L C B • Plums Driveways; Color & your best source. able to work shift work and weekends; have a cense. Stamp wor k a v a il. BRING CONTAINERS strong commitment to safety excellence; and work Our winning team of sales & promotion Maintenance Every daythousandsof Also Hardwood floorfor U-PICK!!! well in a team environment. Must pass drug screen. professionals are making an average of buyers and sellers of goods Open 7 days week, 8 ing a t aff o rdable Thatch & Aerate ALLEN REINSCH $400 - $800 per week doing special Summer Clean up and services do business in a.m. to 6 p.m. ONLY! ELECTRICIAN openings in Grants Pass, White Yard maintenance & prices. 541-279-31 83 ••Weekly events, trade shows, retail & grocery Mowing these pages.They know clean-up, thatching, Look for updates on City, and Medford: Current Oregon general or CCB¹190612 store promotions while representing & Edging you can't beat TheBulletin plugging & much more! Facebook. We are at manufacturing plant electrical license required; 2-3 • Bi-Monthly & Monthly Classified Section for THE BULLETIN newspaper years experience including PLC. Call 541-536-1 294 the Bend Farmers MarMaintenance selection and convenience ket on Wed., 3-7 p.m. • D e bris Removal as an independent contractor •Bark, Rock, Etc. - every item isjust a phone MILLWRIGHT openings in Grants Pass and Yreka: Remodeling/Carpentry • Lot clearing/brush cut call away. Minimum of two years lourneyman level experience. JUNK BE GONE yyE OFFER: * Get your • Solid Income Opportunity I Haul Away FREE The Classified Section is SILVER LINING Timber Products offers a competitive wage and ~Landsca in business *Complete Training Program" For Salvage. Also easy to use. Everyitem •Landscape CONSTRUCTION benefit package including health, dental, vision, life * *No Selling Door to Door Cleanups & Cleanouts is categorized andevery Construction Residential const., insurance, and 401K. Relocation package proMel, 541-389-8107 cartegory is indexed onthe •Water Feature remodels, maint. *No Telemarketing Involved* vided to successful candidate. G ROW I N G & repair. CCB ¹199645 section's front page. Installation/Maint. Please submit resume and cover letter: *Great Advancement Opportunity* Cody Aschenbrenner * •Pavers Email: SorhumanresOtimber roducts.com * Full and Part Time Hours Whether youarelooking for • Decks 541-263-1268 with an ad in •Renovations (Subiect: Position/Location) a home orneed aservice, Fax: 541-618-3804 •Irrigations Installation The Bulletin's your future is in the pagesof FOR THE CHANCE OF A Oregon Decks & Fencing Just bought a new boat? Mail:ATTN:Human Resources "Call A Service The Bulletin Classified. LIFETIME, Expert installation,all types Senior Discounts Sell your old one in the TIMBER PRODUCTS COMPANY Excellent work! Over 50 Bonded & Insured classifieds! Ask about our Professional" PO Box 1669, Medford OR 97501. Call Adam Johnson Timber Products is an equal opportunity employer yrs exp. Serving all of CO 541-815-4458 Super Seller ratesi The Bulletin 541-410-5521, TODAY! Directory supporting a drug and tobacco-free workplace. ccb 20010• 541-526-1973 LCB¹8759 541-385-5809

I-

GarageSales

GarageSales

54g 385 58Q9

-




THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 27 2013 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 931

~Boats & Accessories

Motor h omes

T r a vel Trailers •

Fifth Wheels • 00

0

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories 3 -P195/65R15 Cooper

•s

Trendsetter SE $50. 541-388-1533.

18'Maxum skiboat,2000, G ulfstream S u n inboard motor, g r eat sport 30' Class A cond, well maintained, 1988 ne w f r i dge, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 TV, solar panel, new

refrigerator, wheelc hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W g enerator, Goo d condition! $18,000 obo 541-447-5504

19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, new upholstery, new electronics, winch, much more. $9500. 541-306-0280

PRIdFRBUdN/ 20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for l ife $ 9900 O B O . 541-379-3530

JAMEE 1982 20',

low miles on it, self-contained. Runs Great, everything works. $3,000.

1994 37.5' motor-

20' Seaswirl 1992, 4.3L V6 w/OMC outdrive, open bow, Shorelander trlr, nds some interior trim work. $4500. 541-639-3209

Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will help them in someway. This

advertising tip brought to youby

The Bulletin ur ng centaloregonince i903

21' Crownline Cuddy Cabin, 1995, only 325 hrs on 4.3L engine with Merc outdrive. Bimini top & moorage cover, $7500 obo.

fettgr

Keystone

$25,000.

(photo above is of a similar model 8 not the actual vehicle)

Mallard 22' 19 9 5 , ready for h unting

541-548-0318

Keystone Montana 2955 RL 2008,

2 slides, arctic insulation, loaded, excellent never used condition. $29,900

541-678-5575

541-923-4707

obo. 541-410-7473

gg~ia» m 58 — II'

•5 Monte Carlo 2012 Limited Edition, 2 slides, 2 A/Cs, 2 bdrm, sleeps 6-8 comfortably, has w/d, dishwasher, many extras, fully l o aded. $29,600 obo. Located

Monaco Lakota 2004 1974 Bellanca 5th Wheel 1730A 34 ft.; 3 s l ides; immaculate c o ndition; l arge screen TV w / 2180 TT, 440 SMO, entertainment center; 180 mph, excellent reclining chairs; cencondition, always ter kitchen; air; queen hangared, 1 owner bed; complete hitch for 35 years. $60K. and new fabric cover. $22,900 OBO. ln Madras, (541) 548-5886 call 541-475-6302

I

Wat e rcraft

Ads published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For

"boats" please see Class 870. 541-385-5809

The Bulletin Motorhomes

Brougham 1978 motor home, Dodge chassis, 17' coach, sleeps 4, rear dining. $4500. 541-602-8652.

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in

The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

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 Bend: 541-330-2495

TV,full awning, excellent shape, $23,900. 541-350-8629

Redmond:

541-548-5254

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...

Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th wheel, 1 s lide, AC,

541-548-5254

~

' eRecreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft.

Top living room 5th wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment WEEKEND WARRIOR fireplace, W/D, Toy hauler/travel trailer. center, garden tub/shower, in 24' with 21' interior. great condition. $42,500 Sleeps 6. Self-conor best offer. Call Peter, tained. Systems/ 307-221-2422, appearancein good ( in La Pine ) condition. Smoke-free. WILL DELIVER Tow with '/g-ton. Strong suspension; can haul RV ATVs snowmobiles, CONSIGNMENTS even a small car! Great WANTED price - $8900. We Do The Work ... Call 541-593-6266 You Keep The Cash! On-site credit Where can you find a TIFFIN PHAETON QSH approval team, helping hand? 2007 with 4 slides, CAT web site presence. 350hp diesel engine, From contractors to We Take Trade-Ins! $129,900. 30,900 miles, yard care, it's all here Free Advertising. great condition! BIG COUNTRY RV Extended warranty, in The Bulletin's Bend: 541-330-2495 dishwasher, washer/ "Call A Service Redmond: dryer, central vac, roof 541-548-5254 Professional" Directory satellite, aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays & 3 TV's. Just too many Looking for your Falcon-2 towbar and next employee? collectibles? Even-Brake included. Place a Bulletin help Call 541-977-4150 wanted ad today and Sell them in reach over 60,000 The Bulletin Classifieds readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on 541-385-5809 bendbulletin.com which currently reWinnebago Suncruiser34' 885 ceives over 1.5 mil2004, only 34K, loaded, lion page views evtoo much to list, ext'd Canopies & Campers warr. thru 2014, $54,900 ery month at no Dennis, 541-589-3243 extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 Have an item to or place your ad sell quick? on-line at If it's under bendbulletin.com Lance 80/e' camper, 1991 Great cond; toilet & full'500you can place it in size bed. Lightly used. Recently serviced, The Bulletin Fifth Wheels $4500. 503-307-8571 • ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

—. %fl~j

0 0

Alfa See Ya 2005 40' excellent cond, 1 owner, 4-dr frig w/icemaker, gas stove/oven, convection oven, washer/dryer combo, flatscreen TV, all electronics, new tires, many extras. 7.5 diesel

gen, lots of storage,

basement freezer, 350 Cat Freightliner chassis. Asking $86,500. See at Crook County RV Park, ¹43. 520-609-6372 BOUNDER 1993 34.6', 43k miles,

Classifieds for:

loaded, $13,900. Info - Call 541-536-8816.

'10 - 3 lines, 7 days '16 -3 lines, 14 days 199 3 , (Private Party ads only)

B ounder 2 8 ' Chevy 454, 66K mi.,

solar, inverter & converter, Hyd. leveling jacks, back up camera, air, twin beds, awnings, New micro, TV, $10,500.

881

Travel Trailers

Alpenlite 2002, 31' with 2 slides, rear kitchen, very good condition.

Non-smokers, no pets. $19,500 or best offer. 541-382-2577

CHECK YOUR AD

541-388-6941

Arctic Fox 2004 29V-

One owner, perfect for on the first day it runs snowbirds, very livto make sure it is corable, 2 slides, AC / E rect. "Spellcheck" and furnace, added cataFleetwood D i s covery lytic heater, front human errors do oc40' 2003, diesel mocur. If this happens to kitchen large fridge, torhome w/all your ad, please conseparated bath, awoptions-3 slide outs, ning, spare tire, great tact us ASAP so that satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, corrections and any storage, outside etc. 3 2 ,000 m i l es. shower, well mainadjustments can be Wintered in h e ated tained, no smoking, made to your ad. 541-385-5809 shop. $89,900 O.B.O. $13,500 541-447-8664 541-410-6561 The Bulletin Classified

Where buyers meet sellers.

Easily. The Classified Section is easy to use. Every item is categorized and every category is indexed on the section's front page.

Classifieds Thousands ofadsdaily in print andonline. •

.

i

•I »

Advertiseyourcar! Add A Picture! Reach thousandsof readers!

MorePixat Bendbuletin,com

garaged, pampered, non-smoker, exclnt cond, $4300 obo 541-389-0049

Chevrolet Corvette Coupe 2007, 20,700 mi., beautiful cond. 3LT loaded, victory two-tone red, leather, powerseats, with logos, memory, headsupdisplay, nav., XM, Bose, tilt, chrome wheels, upgraded drilled slotted b rake r o tors, extra insulation, al-

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

541-771-2852.

Chrysler Newport (2) 1962 4 door sedans, $2500 and $5500. La Pine, 541-602-8652.

Plymouth B a r racuda 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, centerlines, 541-593-2597 PROJECT CARS: Chevy 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & Chevy Coupe 1950 1996, 350 auto, rolling chassis's $1750 132,000 miles. ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Non-ethanol fuel 8 complete car, $ 1949; synthetic oil only, Cadillac Series 61 1950, garaged, premium 2 dr. hard top, complete Bose stereo, w /spare f r on t cl i p ., $3950, 541-382-7391

Call 541 385 5809 The Bulletin Classifieds

ways garaged, serious only $34,995.

"My little red Coryette" Coupe

Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in 1929 Ford Phaeton in Bend. Excellent per- beautiful condition. Cover for top when down. Some formance & affordextras. $25,000. able flying! $6,500. 541-420-5303. Serious 541 -41 0-6007 inquiries only. 1952 Ford Customline Coupe, project car, flathead V-8, 3 spd extra parts, & materials, $2000

Automo b iles

Cadillac E l D o r ado WHEN YOU SEE THIS 1994, T otal C re a m Puff! Body, paint, trunk ~Oo as s howroom, b l ue leather, $1700 wheels On a classified ad w/snow tires although go to car has not been wet in 8 years. On t rip t o www.bendbulletin.com to view additional Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., photos of the item. $5400, 541-593-4016.

~OO

1/5th interest in 1973

Monaco Windsor, 2001, loaded! (was $234,000 Need to get an new) Solid-surface counters, convection/ ad in ASAP? micro, 4-dr, fridge, You can place it washer/dryer, ceramic tile & carpet, TV, DVD, online at: satellite dish, leveling, www.bendbulletin.com 8-airbags, power cord reel, 2 full pass-thru 541-385-5809 trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 Diesel gen set. $85,000 obo. 503-799-2950

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...

MGA 1959 - $19,999 Convertible. O r iginal body/motor. No rust. 541-549-3838

Greenlee Tool box, fits van or l arge truck. $125. 541-322-9463 Pickup - 5th wheel tailgate, fits Ford, Chev, like new $225. 541-504-8666

Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

$4 00 .

Ch allenger

slide, Corian surfaces, wood floors (kitchen), 2-dr fridge, convection in Bend. 682-777-8039 microwave, Vizio TV & roof satellite, walk-in Serving Central Oregon since 1903 shower, new queen bed. I White leather hide-aMONTANA 3585 2008, bed & chair, all records, exc. cond., 3 slides, no pets or s moking. king bed, Irg LR, $28,450. Arctic insulation, all Call 541-771-4800 Orbit 21' 2007, used options $35,000 obo. only 8 times, A/C, 541-420-3250 Beautiful h o u seboat, oven, tub s hower, $85,000. 541-390-4693 Nuyya 297LK Hitchmicro, load leveler www.centraloregon Hiker 2007, All seahitch, awning, dual houseboat.com. sons, 3 slides, 32' batteries, sleeps 4-5, perfect for snow birds, EXCELLENT CONGENERATE SOME ex- Pontiac G6 2007, low left kitchen, rear citement in your neig- miles, excellent tow car, DITION. AII acceslounge, extras, must borhood. Plan a ga- has Brake Buddy, shield, sories are included. see. Prineville rage sale and don't T owmaster to w b a r , $15,000 OBO. 541-447-5502 days & 541-382-9441 forget to advertise in $10,000. 541-548-1422 541-447-1641 eves. classified! 385-5809.

The Bulletin

2 25/60R16, 541-536-1080

Take care of interest in Columbia fully S/C, w/d hookups, 1/3 your investments 400, $150,000 (located new 18' Dometic aw- O Bend.) Also: Sunriwith the help from ning, 4 new tires, new ver hangar available for Kubota 7000w marine sale at $155K, or lease, The Bulletin's diesel generator, 3 Mustang 1966 2 dr. @ $400/mo. "Call A Service slides, exc. cond. incoupe, 200 cu. in. 6 541-948-2963 s ide & o ut . 27 " T V cyl. Over $12,000 inProfessional" Directory dvd/cd/am/fm entertain vested, asking $9000. center. Call for more All receipts, runs 932 details. Only used 4 good. 541-420-5011 Antique & times total in last 50/3 years.. No pets, no Classic Autos smoking. High r etail $27,700. Will sell for 1 /3 interest i n w e ll$24,000 including slid- equipped IFR Beech Boi ng hitch that fits i n nanza A36, new 10-550/ Must Sell! Health forces your truck. Call 8 a.m. prop, located K BDN. 1921 Model T to 10 p.m. for appt to $65,000. 541-419-9510 sale. Buick Riviera 1991, Delivery Truck classic low-mileage car, see. 541-330-5527.

season! Sleeps 7, two twin beds, fully equipped, very good cond, $4850 obo or trade for Subaru Outback or PT Cruiser,

NATIONAL DOLPHIN 37' 1997, loaded! 1

Pl

2004 CH34TLB04 34'

Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, awning, Eaz-Lift stabilizer bars, heat

& air, queen walk-around bed, very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003

541-382-2577

Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809

IliI,.-me.

Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft long, 2000

home, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

908

Aircraft, Parts 8 Service

541-480-1687, Dick.

Automobiles •

MorePixatBendbuletin.com

.

(4) Yokohama snow tires on rims,

Fleetwood Prowler 32' 2001, many upgrade options, $14,500 obo.

541-382-6494

KOUNTRY AIRE

g".E.

Cougar 33 ft. 2006, 14 ft. slide, awning, easy lift, stability bar, bumper extends for extra cargo, all access. incl., like new condition, stored in RV barn, used less t han 10 t i mes l o c ally, no p ets o r smoking. $20,000 obo. 541-536-2709.

I

975

Antique & Classic Autos

$11,000.

541-923-1781

r-

-

-

-

The Bulletin recomH mends extra caution l when p u rchasing I products or services

I

I from out of the area. I I S ending c ash ,I checks, or credit inI formation may be I I sublect toFRAUD. For more informa-

I tion about an adver-I tiser, you may call

I the Oregon State I

General's f I Attorney Office C o nsumer I I Protection hotline atI 1-877-877-9392. The Bulletin gerwiig Central Oregon since 0903

Pickups 0

A lfa R o meo 2 0 0 0 'tIIb)iftw Spider 1977, 50,780 mi., 1,280 mi. on factory rebuilt eng., exc. CORVETTE COUPE cond. $12,000 Cash Glasstop 2010 Only. 541-383-2921 Chevy 2500 HD 2003 Grand Sport - 4 LT 4 WD w o r k tr u c k, loaded, clear bra 140,000 miles, $7000 hood & fenders. 1000 Executive Hangar obo. 541-408-4994. New Michelin Super Legal Notices at Bend Airport (KBDN) Sports, G.S. floor 60' wide x 50' d eep, mats, 17,000 miles, w/55' wide x 17' high biLEGAL NOTICE Crystal red. PUBLIC HEARING fold dr. Natural gas heat, Chevy C-20 Pickup $42,000. I nternational Fla t offc, bathroom. Adjacent 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; NOTICE 503-358-1164. Bed Pickup 1963, 1 to Frontage Rd; great auto 4-spd, 396, model CITY OF BEND ton dually, 4 s p d. visibility for aviation busi- CST /all options, orig. HEARINGS OFFICER FIND IT! trans., great MPG, ness. Financing availP ROJECT N U M owner, $19,950, could be exc. wood ggy /T I able. 541-948-2126 or B ER: P Z 13 - 3 26 541-923-6049 hauler, runs great, email 1jetjock@q.com SELL IT/ APPLICANT: Steve new brakes, $1950. 1955 PROJECT Eric h The Bulletin Classifieds Toomey, Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0,Chevy car. 2 door wgn, 350 541-419-5480. S hultz. OW N E R: based in Madras, al- small block w/Weiand Mustang convrtble 1994, Michael Kendrick. ways hangared since dual quad tunnel ram economic V6, 2nd owner, NATURE OF T HE 935 new. New annual, auto with 450 Holleys. T-10 $2200 obo. 541-633-6662 The pilot, IFR, one piece 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Sport Utility Vehicles Ford Taurus 2003 SSE APPLICATION: applicant is proposwindshield. Fastest Ar- Weld Prostar wheels, s edan, e xc . co n d ing to amend the cher around. 1750 to- extra rolling chassis + 63,000 miles. $5,000 Medical Dist r i ct tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. extras. $6500 for all. 541-389-9569 Overlay (MDOZ) 541-475-6947, ask for 541-389-7669. Honda Prelude, 1991, text to allow the 4 Rob Berg. fl o ating clean car, tinted win- acres o f dows, 5-spd, bad clutch. service commercial Ford Explorer 1995 Ed- $850 obo. Call/text for use to develop anydie Bauer V6 4.0Ltr pix: 541-279-9995 w here within t h e 16"whls 130 0 00mi overlay zone. APMustang GT 1995 red BlueBook C o nd:VG PLICABLE CRITE133k miles, Boss 302 RV tow ready: baseChevy Nova - 1976, RIA: Bend Develmotor, custom pipes, plate, S M I br a k e, opment Code Superhavvk $3,400. 5 s p ee d m a n ual, d rive-discon $ 4 7 50 Rebuilt 327 engine. Section (a) Chapter Ownership Share power windows, cusOBO 650-465-5936 Call Matt 541-280-9463. Land Use DisAvailable! tom stereo, very fast. 4.6; t rict and Text Economical flying $5800. 541-280-7910 Amendments, Say "goodbuy" in your own Chapter 2. 7 .500; IFR equipped to that unused Porsche 911 Medical Dist r i ct Cessna 172/180 HP for Carrera 993 cou e Overlay Zone , only $13,500! New item by placing it in C hapter 4.70 0 ; Garmin Touchscreen The Bulletin Classifieds Transportation avionics center stack! Infiniti FX35 2 012, Analysis, O r e gon Exceptionally clean! Platinum silver, Administrative Rules Hangared at BDN. 5 41 -385-580 9 24,000 miles, with 660-012-0060; Plan CalI 541-728-0773 factory war r anty, and L a n d Use f ully l o aded, A l l T-Hangar for rent 1996, 73k miles, Regulation AmendWheel Drive, GPS, at Bend airport. Tiptronic auto. ments, Oregon Adsunroof, etc. Call 541-382-8998. transmission. Silver, ministrative R u les $37,500. blue leather interior, Chapter 660, Diw541-550-7189 916 moon/sunroof, new sion 15 , O r e gon quality tires and Statewide Planning Trucks & Chevy Stepside 1963 0/~ battery, car and seat Goals, and B e nd Heavy Equipment ton One owner, good Isuzu Axiom 2 004 covers, many extras. Urban Area Geninside & out. $9,999 4wd, auto trans, new Recently fully sereral available in City 541-382-7515. tires & brakes. New viced, garaged, Hall or at the Comluggage rack. Silver looks and runs like munity De v e lopwith silver w/leather new. Excellent conment D e partment interior. 77K miles & dition $29,700 portion of the City's in excellent condi541-322-9647 w ebsite. PRO P tion $7000. ERTY LOCATION: 541-41 9-6433 1979 580C Case Medical Dis t r ict Backhoe Chevy Wagon 1957, Porsche 911 Turbo O verlay. DAT E , Enclosed heated cab, 4-dr., complete, TIME, PLACE AND 80" front bucket, $7,000 OBO / trades LOCATION OF THE 18" hoe bucket, exc. Please call HEARING: rubber, plumbed for 541-389-6998 Wednesday, Sephammer, hardly used tember 18 , 2 0 1 3, Ford Pickup 1940, 98% during 12 yrs I've 7 :00 p.m. a t 7 1 0 auto parts avail., no owned it. Extra hoses, Grand 2003 6 speed, X50 NW W al l S t r eet, rust. 35 1 W i n dsor Jeep parts & 8' screen in1 9 9 9 , added power pkg., Bend, OR, in City motor, $12,500 obo. C herokee cluded. $10,500 obo. 1 59,970 mil e s . 530 HP! Under 10k Hall Council Cham541-815-3224 541-389-4092 miles, Arctic silver, bers. ADDITIONAL 4WD, au t omatic gray leather interior, INFORMATION: transmission, cloth Ford Ranchero 1965 new quality t i res, The application, all interior, power evRhino bedliner cusand battery, Bose documents and evierything, A/C, tom wheels, 302V-8 premium sound stedence submitted by trailer hitch. Well a uto. Runs g o o d reo, moon/sunroof, or on behalf of the maintained & runs $9,995. car and seat covers. a pplicant and t h e great. $3850. 541-771-4778 Many extras. Gaapplication c riteria 541-385-5286 1987 Freightliner COE 3raged, perfect conare available for inaxle truck, Cummins endition $5 9 ,700. spection at City Hall gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 Ford Ranchero The Bulletin 541-322-9647 at no cost and will obo. 541-419-2713 1979 To Subscribe call b e provided at a with 351 Cleveland r easonable c o s t . 541-385-5800 or go to modified engine. Porsche Carrera 911 Seven days prior to www.bendbulletin.com 2003 convertible with Body is in the hearing a copy hardtop. 50K miles, excellent condition, p/' of the staff report new factory Porsche $2500 obo. will b e sim i larly motor 6 mos ago with 541-420-4677 a vailable. CON 18 mo factory warTACT PE R SON: ranty remaining. Backhoe Wendy R o binson, $37,500. 2007 John Deere Senior Planner at 541-322-6928 Nissan Pathfinder SE 310SG, cab 4x4, (541) 38 8 - 5598, 1998, 150K mi, 5-spd 4-in-1 bucket 4x4, loaded, very good Subaru Outback 2008 wrobinson ObenExtendahoe, doregon.gov Send tires, very good cond, Immaculate! hydraulic thumb, written testimony to $4800. 503-334-7345 Original owner. 82K loaded, like new, GMC Veton 1971, Only the Hearings Ofmiles, 2 new sets of 500 hours. $19,700! Original low tires, service records, ficer c/o CDD, 710 New $105,000. mile, exceptional, 3rd • Au t omobiles NW Wall St. 97702, new brakes & struts, Sell $75,000. owner. 951-699-7171 or attend the meet541-350-3393 leather seats loadedi AUDI 1990 V8 Quating and state your $16,900. tro. Perfect Ski Car. views. The hearing 541-693-3975 LOW MILES. $3,995 will be conducted in Mitsubishi Fuso obo. 541-480-9200. a ccordance wi t h Get your 1995 14' box truck B DC Secti o n BMW X5 2007, 1 owner, with lift gate, 4.1.800. Any party is exc. 30K mi., sunroof, business 184,000 miles, entitled to a hearing Mercedes-Benz SL380 $27,500. 541-389-1128 needs turbo seal. or record continu1 983 Roadster. V - 8 . $3500 or best offer. Lots of power in this Buick Century Limited ance. Failure of an 541-420-2323 gr e at, issue to be raised at beautiful car with hard 2000, r un s beautiful car. $3400. a nd soft t o ps, A l so the hearing, in per541-312-3085 c omes with hard t op son or by letter, or stand. 54 0 0 0 m i les. Buick Lucerne CXS failure t o p r o vide With an ad in $14,000. 429 NW 24th statements or evi2006 - 93K, silver, Pl, Redmond. dence sufficient to The Bulletin's black leather, North541-420-5303. Serious afford the decision star engine, $36,000 maker an opportuPeterbilt 359 p o tableinquiries ONLY! new; no doubt Buick's "Call A Service nity to respond prebest! Seeing's worth a water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, Need help fixing stuff? cludes appeal to the 3200 gal. tank, 5hp Call A Service Professional thousand words. UnProfessional" Land Use Board of pump, 4-3" h o ses, der $10,000. camlocks, $ 2 5,000. find the help you need. Buick Bob!s car, Appeals on that isDirectory www.bendbulletin.com 541-820-3724 541-318-9999 sue.

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E6 TUESDAY AUGUST 27 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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"Little Red Corvette"

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length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace — DELIVERED to over 30,000 households. • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.


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$3455 Hwy. $7 N. 541-388-2100 PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, AUG 27,2013 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND

• Food Stamps • W IC Vou c h e r s • M anu f a c t u r e r ' s We reserve the right te limit quantities

Coupons


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