Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1.50
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e icaroCOSS O aionS'260
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IN COUPONS INSIDE
COMMENTARY• F1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
500
New homesgoingupin Bend
400
The city issued 345 permits for
Saving orangetrees
— Florida growers are resorting to genetic modification to protect their crops.A3
single-family homes in the first half of the year, up nearly 80 percent from the same time last year.
300
200 100
0 2007 2 008 2009
i.eVittOWn —With low poverty and rising homeprices,
2 010 2 011 2 012 2 0 13
Source. Bend Community Development Department
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
America's first suburb is doing better than most.A4
DESCHUTES
Audit
Odituary —I indy Boggs, former ambassador and congresswoman, is rememberedas
gets vets
a trailblazer for women.B4
better servlce
WyldWOOdZ —Redmond families start a group for kids
with special needs.C1 Travel —Off the beatenpath
By Shelby R. King
at Yellowstone National Park.C1
The Bulletin
At the park —eend's mobile home boom.E1
Egypt —The military kills at least 72 people protesting the ouster of the country's former Islamist president.A2
And a Wed exclusiveChina has anew breed of whistleblower: Communist officials' jilted mistresses.
bendbulletin.com/extras
EDITOR'5CHOICE
• Drug companies make minor changes to their products to protect their brands and their bottom lines
Former CIA officer accusesU.S. in rendition By Jonathan S. Landay McClatchy Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — A former CIA officer has broken the U.S. silence around the 2003 abduction of a radical Islamist cleric in Italy, charging that the agency inflated the threat the preacher posed and that the United States then allowed Italy to prosecute her and other Americans to shield President George W. Bush and other U.S. officials from responsi-
bility for approving the operation. Confirming for the first time that she worked undercover for the CIA in Milan when the operation took place, Sabrina De Sousa provided new details about the "extraordinary rendition" that led to the only criminal prosecution stemming from the secret Bush administration rendition and detention program launchedafter the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks. The cleric, Osama Mustapha Hassan Nasr, was snatched from a Milan street by a team of CIA operatives and flown to
Egypt, where he was held for the better part of four years without charges and allegedly tortured. An Egyptian court in 2007 ruled that his imprisonment was "unfounded" and ordered him released. SeeCIAiA7
See video
O
coverage of this
story on The
Bulletin's website:
bendbulletin.com/ pill
An internal audit in February of Deschutes County Veterans' Services Department found new clients waiting up to three months for an initial appointment, sometimes causing a delay in receipt of their benefits. Veterans' Services is the local liaison between the federal government's Veterans Affairs Department and the vets who need services, said county department Director Keith MacNamara. "We're here to be their advocates," he said. "We advocate for them for disability, pension, medical or family benefits because the application process can be lengthy and very intimidating." MacNamara requested the county audit his department so he and his staff could learn where they could improve services to their clients. See Veterans/A8
By Markian Hawryluk The Bulletin
i
Two years ago, Erin Matlock spent six months trying different medications to control her newly diagnosed ulcerative colitis. Some didn't work very well, others were too expensive. The 37-year-oldelementary school teacher from Redmond finally settled on a drug called Asacol, an effective therapy that her health insurance would cover. But in June, she learned Asacol was being pulled from the market by the manufacturer, replaced by a similar drug called Delzicol. "That was hard," she said. "It's so difficult to find what will work for you and have everything
tn ',' i I
r
I
i
change." Her doctor wrote a new prescription for Delzicol, which came in a purple capsule. Asacol had been a reddish-brown tablet. The new capsule was difficult for her to swallow, and she could hear something rattling around inside it. She broke open the capsule and found inside a tablet that looked suspiciously like her old Asacol pills. "When I laid the two side by side, they were exactly the same," she said. "The same color, the same size, the same weight, everything." That left Matlock and dozens of other ulcerative colitis patients wondering whether Delzicol was truly a new drug or a shell game meant to stave off generic competition. Was this a new and improved drug orjust another example of a drug company making minor changes to extend the life of a topselling brand-name product? The drug's manufacturer, Dublin-based Warner Chilcott, had only changed an inactive ingredient in the drug and stuck the pill inside a capsule, according to Food and Drug Administration documents. With no new clinical trials, the company secured an expedited review from the FDA and got Delzicol approved six months before Asacol was due to go off-patent. By pulling Asacol from the market, they could get doctors to begin writing prescriptions for Delzicol and patients established on it well before a generic Asacol arrived. The move allowed Warner Chilcott to secure a patent for the outer capsule, giving them a tool to defend Delzicol from generic competition for another seven years. Whether by coincidence or by design, the switch from tablet to capsule form sets up a significant roadblock for any generic company that had been working to bring a generic Asacol to market, effectively protecting a franchise worth nearly $500 million in annual sales. SeeGenerics/A6
Photos by Rob Kerr /The Bulletin
Erin Matlock, 37, of Redmond, takes Delzicol daily for ulcerative colitis. However, when she opened the capsule, she found a tablet that looked nearly identical to Asacol, the medication it replaced.
Students
could get debt help By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
A bill aimed at lowering the federal student loan rate passed the U.S. Senate last week with support from both Oregon senators. The legislation tied the interest rate to the 10-year Treasury note with a cap on how high the rate can rise. Last month the interest rate on subsidized Stafford loans jumped from 3.4 to 6.8 percent. According to Doug Severs, Oregon State University director of financial aid and scholarships, that increase would have added $2,600 to the average $22,000 in debt accrued by an OSU student. See Debt/A8
Worries mount asSyria luresforeign fighters By Eric Schmitt New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — A rising number of radicalized young Muslims with Western passports are traveling to Syria to fight with the rebels against the government of
TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny 4
High 80, Low 48
Page B6
Bashar Assad, raising fears among U.S. and European intelligence officials of a new terrorist threat when the fighters return home. More Westerners are now fighting in Syria than fought in conflicts in Iraq, Afghani-
stan, Somalia or Yemen, according to the officials. They go to Syria motivated by the desire to help the people suffering there by overthrowing Assad. But there is growing concern that they will come back with a burst of jihad-
ist zeal, some semblance of military discipline, enhanced weapons and explosives skills, and, in the worst case, orders from affiliates of alQaida to carry out terrorist strikes. SeeSyria iA4
INDEX
The Bulletin
Business/Stocks E1-6 CommunityLife 01-8 Milestones 02 Pu zzles C6 01-6 Calendar B2 Crosswords 06, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts Classified G 1 - 6L ocal/State B 1- 6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Mot/ies 08
Vol. 110, No. 209, 46 pages,
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LidyaII PriSOn dreak —More than a thousand inmates escaped a prison Saturday in Libya asprotesters stormed political party offices across the country, signs of the simmering unrest gripping a
is
nation overrun by militias and awash in weaponry. It wasn't imme-
diately clear if the jailbreak at al-Kweifiya prison came as part of the
a ro e s
demonstrations. Protesters had massed across Libya over the killing of an activist critical of the country's Muslim Brotherhood group.
Those who escapedeither face or wereconvicted of serious charges, a prison official said.
Fatal duS CraSh —A bus carrying teenagers returning to Indiana from a church camp in Michigan crashedSaturday afternoon just
By Kareem Fahim and Mayy El Sheikh
minutes from home, killing three people, including two adults, and
New York Times News Service
sending 26 others to hospitals, officials said. Thebuscame speed-
C AIRO — E g y ptian a u thorities unleashed a ferocious attack on Islamist protesters early Saturday, killing at least 72 people in the second mass killing of d emonstrators in three weeks and the deadliest attack by the security services since Egypt's uprising in early 2011. The attack provided further evidence that Egypt's security establishment was reasserting its dominance after President Mohammed Morsi's ouster three weeks ago, and widening its crackdown on his Islamist allies in the Muslim Brotherhood. The tactics — many were killed with gunshot wounds to the head or the chest — suggested that Egypt's security services felt no need to show any restraint. "They had orders to shoot to kill," said Gehad el-Haddad, a Brotherhood spokesman. The message, he said, was, "This is the new regime." In Washington, Secretary of State John Kerry called this "a pivotal moment for Egypt" and urged its leaders "to help their country take a step back from the brink." The killings occurred a day after hundreds of thousands of Egyptians marched in support of the military, responding to a call by its commander for a "mandate" to fight terrorism. The appeal by Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, who has
ing off of Interstate 465 in northern Indianapolis, about a mile from the Colonial Hills Baptist Church that passengers attended, strucka retaining wall as it rounded a curve and overturned.
emerged as Egypt's de facto leader since the military removed Morsi from power, was widely seen as a green light
AdOrtian fight —A handful of Republican Party leaders are talking discreetly about how to advance a bill in the Senate to ban abortion at 20 weeks after fertilization. Plans under discussion would involve
bringing the measure upfor avote sometimeafter Congress returns from its August recess. It is almost certain to be defeated, but backers are eager to bring to the floor of the Senate the same impassioned debate over abortion that has been taking place in state legislatures.
Odama On PiPeline —President Barack Obamasaid in an interview that he would evaluate construction of the Keystone XL pipeline on the basis of whether it would significantly contribute carbon to the atmosphere. But he mocked Republicans' arguments that the approval of the pipeline, which would carry oil from Canada to the Gulf Coast, would create many jobs in the United States. The president also disputed the argument that the pipeline would help lower retail gasoline prices. He said most of the oil would be exported.
Hassan Ammar/The Associated Press
Egyptians mourn supporters of Egypt's ousted President Mohammed Morsi who were killed in overnight clashes with security forces, on Saturday in a field hospital in Cairo. Morsi's picture is on the wall behind them.
PriSOner releaSe —Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel to the security forces to increasetheir repression of the Islamists. In the attack Saturday, civilians joined riot police officers in firing live ammunition at the protesters asthey marched toward a bridge over the Nile.
By early morning, the number of wounded people overwhelmed doctors at a nearby field hospital. One doctor sat by himself, crying as he whispered verses
deaths on July 8, when soldiers and police officers fired on pro-Morsi demonstrators. As the deaths have mounted, more than 200 since the government was overthrown, hopes have faded for a political solution to the standoff between the military and the Brotherhood, whose leaders, including Morsi, are impris-
announced Saturday that he had agreed to release104 Palestinian
prisoners, most of whom haveserved 20 years or more for attacks on Israelis, to pavethe wayfor a resumption of Israeli-Palestinian negotiations in Washington in the coming days. Netanyahu tookthe unusual measure of issuing what he called "an open letter to the citi-
zens of Israel" to explain the contentious move, which many Israelis oppose, ahead ofaCabinetvotetoday. NOrth KOrea —Columns of rocket tubes, goose-stepping paratroopers and possible intercontinental ballistic missiles paraded
through the center of the North Koreancapital, Pyongyang, on Saturday, as North Koreaobserved the 60th anniversary of the end of the
oned orpreparing themselves
for jail. In a televised news conferfrom the Quran. Nearby, med- ence hours after the clash, ics tried to revive a man on Interior M i nister M ohamed a gurney. When they failed, Ibrahim absolved his men of he was quickly lifted away any responsibility and made to make room for the many no mention of the high death others. toll. And he suggested that With hundreds of people f urther repression was i m g ravely wounded, th e t o l l minent as the authorities preseemed certain to rise, and pared to break up sit-ins that b y Saturday evening h a d thousands of Morsi's supportsurpassed the more than 60 ers have held for weeks.
Korean War by brandishing its military hardware to the outside world.
Chillasa SOIBr pBIlals —The EuropeanUnion's trade chief said Saturday that a deal had been reached with China to settle a dispute over exports of low-cost solar panels that had threatened to set off a
wider trade war betweentwo of the world's largest economies. The settlement essentially involves setting a fairly high minimum price for
sales of Chinese-madesolar panels in the EUto try to prevent them from undercutting Europeanproducers. ChriStianity in RuSSia —Russian President Vladimir Putin attended religious ceremonies in the Ukrainian capital Saturday to mark the 1,025th anniversary of events that brought Christianity to Russia
and Ukraine, in the latest sign of the deepening ties andcommon agenda of the Kremlin andthe Russian Orthodox Church. Putin's visit also appeared intended in part to highlight the ties that unite the two
countries even asUkraine seeks to formalize its political and economic ties with the EuropeanUnion.
7 dead, includinggunman,in Florida By Christine Armario The Associated Press
HIALEAH, Fla. — A man living with his mother in a South Florida apartment complex set their unit on fire and went on a shooting rampage throughout the building, kill-
ing six people before being shot to death by police. As the eight-hour standoff unfolded, horrified residents hunkered down in their homes, at times so close to the action they could feelthe gunfire or hear negotiations between the gunman and police, authorities and witnesses said Saturday. In the final hours, Pedro Vargas, 42, held two people hostage at gunpoint for up to three hours in their apartment until a SWAT team entered and killed him, police said. The hostages were not hurt. " The crime scene is t h e whole building," said Lt. Carl Zogby, a spokesman with the Hialeah Police Department. Police were called to the aging, five-story apartment building in Hialeah, a working class suburb a few miles northwest of downtown Miami, on Friday at 6:30 p.m. The first calls reporteda fire,but when firefighters arrived,they heard shots and immediately notified police, Zogby said. Vargas, who has no known criminal record, set a combustible liquid on fire in his fourth-floor apartment. Building manager Italo Pisciotti, 79, and his wife, Camira Pisciotti, 69, saw smoke and ran to the unit, Zogby said. When they arrived, Vargas opened the door and fired, killing both. Detectives were investigating whether Vargas had any o ngoing disputes wit h t h e building manager, as some residents believed. His mother was not home at the time. A fter gunning down t h e building m anagers, Vargas went back into his burning apartment and fired 10 to 20 shots from a 9 mm pistol into the street. One of the bullets struck33-year-old Carlos Javier Gavilanes, who was parking his carafter returning home from work. Zogby said his body was found next to his vehicle. The gunman then kicked his way into a third-floor apart-
ment, where he shot to death Patricio Simono, 54; his wife Merly Niebles, 51; and their 17-year-old daughter. Family members said Simono worked at a car w ash and Niebles cleaned hotel rooms. Their daughter wanted to be a nurse. All six people were killed in a short time span, Zogby said, and it's possible they were all dead by the time police arrived. Officers and Vargas then en-
gaged in an hours-long shootout and chase, with police following the gunman from one
— From wirereports
gil arroaoailH
floor to the next. After a standoff and hours of negotiation, officers stormed the building, fatally shooting the gunman inan exchange of
pgTORV IRAlilED, SERVICE CENTER
gunfire. Zogby said Vargas still had several rounds of ammunition when he was killed. "He was ready to fight," Zog-
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by said. The hostages, identified as Zoeb and Sarrida Nek, were shaken up but not hurt, he said. Police and neighbors described Vargas as a quiet man who had only recently moved into the building.
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p REAETOR
SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Sunday, July 28, the 209th day of 2013. There are156 days left in the year.
SCIENCE HAPPENINGS PeaCe talkS —Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will submit to his Cabinet a
formal proposal to resume the diplomatic process, which could start Tuesday.A2
avin oran es
erin
eir
A plant disease called citrus greening is
PaPal ViSit —The pope's
ravaging Florida's orange trees. But growers are
trip to South America ends with a final Mass on Rio de
fighting back.
cally modified crop. Just in th e p revious few months, Whole Foods had said that because of customer demand it would avoid stocking most GMO foods and require labels on them by 2018. The Agriculture Department had issued its final report for this year's orange harvest showing a 9 percent decline from last year, attributable to citrus
Janeiro's Copacabanabeach. By Amy Harmon
HISTORY Highlight:In 1914, World War
I began as Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. In1540, King Henry VIII's
chief minister, Thomas Cromwell, was executed, the same day Henry married his fifth
wife, Catherine Howard. In1794, Maximilien Robespierre, a leading figure of the French Revolution, was sent to the guillotine. In1821, Peru declared its in-
dependence from Spain. In1928,the Summer Olympic games opened in Amsterdam. In1932, federal troops forcibly dispersed the so-called "Bonus Army" of World War I
veterans who had gathered in Washingtonto demand payments they weren't scheduled to receive until 1945. In1943, President Franklin D. Roosevelt announced the end of coffee rationing, which had
limited people to one pound of coffee every five weeks since it began in November 1942. In 1945, a IJ.S. Army bomber crashed into the 79th floor of New York's Empire State Building, killing 14 people. The U.S. Senate ratified the United Nations Charter by a vote of 89-2. In 1959, in preparation for statehood, Hawaiians voted to send the first Chinese-American, Republican Hiram L.
Fong, to the IJ.S. Senate and the first Japanese-American, Democrat Daniel K. Inouye, to
the U.S. House of Representatives. In1973, the Summer Jam at Watkins Glen took place in upstate New York. In1976, an earthquake dev-
astated northern China, killing at least 242,000 people, according to an official estimate. In1990, political newcomer
and upset winner Alberto Fujimori was sworn in for his first
term as president of Peru. In 2002, nine coal min-
ers trapped in the flooded Quecreek Mine in Somerset,
Pa., were rescued after 77 hours underground. Ten years ago:Rebels in Liberia captured Buchanan,the country's second-largest city. Five years ago:President George W. Bush received Pakistan's new prime minister, Yousuf Raza Gilani, at the White House, praising him as
a reliable partner in confronting terrorism. Four suicide bombers believed to be wom-
en struck a Shiite pilgrimage in Baghdad and a Kurdish protest rally in northern lraq,
killing at least 57 people and wounding nearly 300. One year ago:Syria's government launched an offensive to retake rebel-
held neighborhoods in the nation's commercial hub of Aleppo. At the London
Olympics, Chinese swimmer Ye Shiwen set the first world
record, winning the women's 400-meter individual medley in 4:28.43. Ryan Lochte of the IJ.S. won the men's 400-
meter individual medley in 4:05.18.
port did little to reassure Kress about his own genetic engiCLEWISTON, Fla. — The neering project. "The public call Ricke Kress and every will never drink GMO orange other citrus grower in Florida juice," one grower said at a condreaded came while he was tentious 2008 meeting. "It's a driving. waste of our money." greening. "It's here" was all his grove If various polls were to be beBut visiting the field gave m anager needed tosay to force lieved, a third to half of AmeriKress some peace. In some him over to the side of the road. cans would refuse to eat any rows were the trees with no The disease that sours or- transgenic crop. Richard Perry / New York Times News Service new gene in them, sick with "The public is going to be Darryl Ashmore grafts a spinach gene shoot with a normal orange greening. In others were the anges and leaves them half 300 juvenile trees with spinach green, already ravaging cit- more informed about GMOs tree in a test plot in Clewlston, Fla. Florida orange growers are rus crops across the world, by the time we're ready," Kress turning to transgenlc trees after citrus greening began infecting genes, all healthy. In the middle had reached the state's storied told his research director, Mi- millions of them. were the trees that carried his groves.Kress,the president of chael Irey, as they lined up the immediate hopes: 15 mature Southern Gardens Citrus, in five scientists whom Southern trees, 7 feet tall, onto which had charge of 2.5 million orange Gardens would u nderwrite. A growing urgency more pesticideon young trees been grafted shoots of Mirkov's treesand a factory that squeez- And to the scientists, growOther concerns weighed on had come through that day. At spinach gene trees. es juice for Tropicana and Flor- ers and juice processors at a Kress thatspring: Growers in his hotel that night, he slipped There was good reason to ida's Natural, sat in silence for meeting convened by Minute Florida did not liketotalk about a new slide into his standard believe the trees would pass the EPA's tests when they bloom several long moments. Maid in Miami in early 2010, it, but the industry's tripling of talk. "OK," he said finally on that he insisted that just finding pesticide applications to k i ll On the podium the next next spring. And he was gathfall day in 2005, "let's make a a gene that worked had to be the bacteria-carrying psyllid morning, he talked about the ering the data the Agriculture plan." his company's priority. As for was, while within legal limits, growing use of pesticides: Department would need to enIn the years that followed, public acceptance, he told his becoming expensive and wor- "We're using a lot of chemi- sure that the trees posed no risk he and the 8,000 other Florida industry colleagues, "We can't risome. And an increasingly cals, pure and simple," he said. to other plants. When he had growers who supply most think about that right now." vocal movement to r e quire "We're using more than we've fruit, the Food and Drug Adof the nation's orange juice It would cost Southern Gar- any food with genetically en- ever used before." ministration would compare its poured everything they had dens millions of dollars just to gineered ingredients to carry Then he stopped at the new safety and nutritional content into fighting the disease they perform the safety tests for a a "GMO" label had made him slide. Unadorned, it read "Con- to conventional oranges. call citrus greening. single gene in a single variety uneasy. sumer Acceptance." He looked Late this summer Kress will To slowthe spread of thebac- of orange.Of his five researchWhen the EPA informed him out at the audience. plant several hundred more terium that causes the scourge, ers' approaches, Kress had in June 2012 that it would need What these growers wanted young trees with the spinach they chopped down hundreds planned to narrow the field to to see test results for how large most, he knew, was reassur- gene, in a new greenhouse. In of thousands of infected trees the one that worked best over quantities of spinach protein ance that he could help them two years, if he wins regulatoand sprayed an expanding ar- time. But in 2010, with the dis- affectedhoneybees and mice, shouldthe disease spread. But ry approval, they will be ready ray of pesticides on the winged ease spreading faster than any- K ress gladly wrote out t h e he had to warn them: "If we to go into the ground. The trees insect that carries it. But the one anticipated, the factor that $300,000 check to have the pro- don't have consumer confi- could be the first to produce contagion could not be concame to weigh most was which tein made. If these tests raised dence, it doesn't matter what juice for sale in five years or so. tained. They scoured Central could be ready first. One con- no red flags, he would need to we come up with." W hether a n yone w o u l d Florida's half-million acres of tender, Erik Mirkov of Texas test the protein as it appears in drink the juice from his genetigroves and sent search parties A8 M University, had endowed the pollen of transgenic orange Planting cally modified oranges, Kress around the world to find a nat- trees with a gene from spinach blossoms. Then the agency One recent sunny morning, did not know. But he had deurally immune tree. But such a — a food, he reminded Kress, would want to test the juice. Kress drove to a fenced field, cidedto move ahead. For a mothat "we give to babies." The The path ahead was starting to some distance from his office, ment, alone in the field, he let tree did not exist. "In all of cultivated citrus, gene, which exists in slightly clear. and far from any other citrus his mind wander. " Maybe we ca n u s e t h e there is no evidence of imdifferent forms in hundreds of Rather thanwait for Mirkov's tree. He unlocked the gate and munity," the plant pathologist plants and animals, produces 300 trees to flower, which could signed in, as required by Ag- t echnology t o i m p rove o r heading a National Research a protein that attacks invading take several years, they agreed riculture Department regula- ange juice," he could not help Council task force on the dis- bacteria. to try to graft his spinach gene tions for a field trial of a geneti- thinking. ease said. Even so, Mirkov faced skep- shoots to mature trees to hasWith a precipitous decline ticism from growers. "Will my ten the production of pollen in Florida's harvest predicted juice taste like spinach'?" one — and, finally, their first fruit, within the decade, the only asked. for testing. chance left to save it, Kress In fall 2010, Mirkov's trees Driving in October to speak • I believed, was one his industry were put to the test inside a at the California Citrus Growers and others had long avoided padlocked greenhouse stocked meeting, Kress considered how forfear of consumer rejection. with infected trees and psyl- to answercritics.Maybe even a They would have to alter the lids. I n a n in f e ction-filled blanket "GMO" label would be orange's DNA — with a gene greenhouse where every non- OK, he thought, if it would help from a different species. transgenic tree had showed consumers understand he had Oranges are not the only symptoms of disease, the trees nothing to hide. He could never crop that might benefit from with the spinach gene survived prove there were no risks to gegenetically engineered resis- unscathedformore than ayear. netically modifying a crop. But tance to diseases for which Kress would soon have 300 of he could try to explain the risks s tandard t r e atments h a v e them planted in a field triaL of not doing so. proved elusive. Advocates of In spring 2012, he asked Southern Gardens had lost l(emple Memorial Children's Dental Clinic the technology say it c ould the Environmental Protection 700,000 trees trying to control also help provide food for a Agency, the first of three fed- the disease, more than a quarextends a tremendous THANI(Y OU to all f ast-growing population o n eral agencies that would evalu- ter ofits total.The forecast for who participated in the 2013 Brighter a warming planet. Leading ate his trees, for guidance. The the coming spring harvest was Smiles Campaign and helped us raise scientific organizations have next step was safety testing. dismal. The approval to use concluded that shuttling DNA S21,000. Your support means there will be between species carries no inbrighter smiles on the Faces oF hids in trinsic risk to human health or Central oregon whose oral health is at riste. the environment. But the idea of eating plants Dr. Marci Aplin-Scott • Dr. Greg Everson and animals whose DNA has been manipulated in a laboraDr. Marh Jensen. Dr. Marh l(eener tory — called genetically modiContemporary Family Dentistry: Dr. Brad Johnson fied organisms, or GMOsCosmetic and Family Dentistry: Dr. David Fuller still spooks many people. CritBend Dental Group: ics worry that such crops carry Dr. JeF Johnson and Dr. Maureen Porter risks not yet detected, and >• distrust the big agrochemical Bend Family Dentistry: Dr. Brad Hester li companies that have produced Family Dentistry: Dr. James R. Hammett the few inwide use.K ress'boss Mill Point Dental Center: 0 0 worried about damaging the Dr. Mariha Stone, Dr. Blahe Drew image of juice long promoted as "100 percent naturaL" Shyline Dental: Kress, now 61, had no particIf you are 55 or berter, sign up for our free slot Dr. Mehdi Salari, Dr. 1(aren Coe, Dr. Zach Porter ularpredilection forbiotechnoltournament! Sesslons are I IAWI2PM and I PM, Shevlin Dental: Dr. David Cauble, Dr. Matt Faltcenstein ogy. But an emerging scientific with the Championship round at 2 PM. Dr. Steve Timm Dr. Thomas Rheuben consensus held that genetic enFirst Place: 5200 • Second Place: 5100 Timm Family Dentistry: gineering would be required to Third Place: S75 • Fourth Place 550 Dr. JefFrey Timm, Dr. Andrew Timm, Dr. Ryan Timm defeat citrus greening. "People are either going to Fifth through Seventh Places: S25 ln Free Play West River Dental: Dr. Dennis Holly drink transgenic orange juice Contact Bonus Club for complete details and registration Pure Care Dental: or they're going to drink apple Dr. Eric Cadwell, Dr. Adam Veitschegger juice," one University of Florida Dr. Greg Ginsburg Dr. Ianell Ginsburg. Dr. Edward Clarh scientist told Kress. Redmond Dental Croup: If the presence of a new gene in citrus trees prevented Dr. Max Higbee and Dr. Jade Cherrington juice from becoming scarcer Valid for Bend. La Pine and Redmond guests only: local zip codes do not apply. Pa. ' 'Qa LaPine Dental Center: Dr. Robert Moss oMIT ONE COUPON PER PERSON PER VISIT•CO UPON EXPIRES AUG. 28,2013 and more expensive, Kress Pilot Butte Dental: Dr. John Wiley believed, the American public Smile l(eepers: Dr. Stephen Allen, Dr. Bill Guy "The conwould embrace it. Call for reservations, location a times: 541.783.1529 ext.209 Cornerstone Dentistry: Dr. Yoli DiGiulio sumer will support us if it's the only way," Kress assured his boss. 25 Miles North of Klamath Falls New York Times News Service
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 28, 20'I3
TODAY'S READ: LEVITTOWN • I f
mencas irs su ur rivesasimi aors a er
By Frank Bass
in integrated neighborhoods, so Levittown was completely white through the 1950s. LEVITTOWN, NY. — Levittown, America's first Even now, 81 percent of the town's population is w h ite, mass-produced suburb, spawned postwar imitators with another 12 percent Hispanic and 5 p ercent Asian. throughout the nation. These days, it's more like an Blacks, who make up 13 percent of the U.S. population and outlier: While new research shows that suburbs are 10.5 percent of Nassau County, accountfor 0.4 percent of the town's total. getting older, poorer and more ethnic@ly diverse, Vestiges of the legal-segreLevittown's home prices have risen, incomes have gation era remain in Nassau. Robert Moses, New Y ork's dominant urban planner for grown, and poverty levels are far below the national decades and a L ong Island average. resident, instructed that overpasses on county parkways be And the once officially seg- appeal for millions of Ameridesigned so they'd be too low regated town, about 35 miles cans. In the wake of the 2008 Levittown Public Library History Collection for buses to use. Since many east of New York City, remains housing-market collapse that The curved streets of Lev!ttown, N.Y., were captured from above In minorities didn't have cars in more than 80 percent white, erased about $7 trillion worth 1949. America's fIrst mass-produced suburb Is defying trends with the 1940s and 1950s, the unique compared with 63 percent of equity, people are returning rIsIng home values and incomes, and poverty levels far below the design reinforced segregation. nationwide. to cities in record numbers. national average. While Levittown's houseLevittown, which soon turns The slowdown in suburban hold income ishigher because 65, stands apart from many growth was illustrated in a whites are generally paid more suburbswhereforeclosures,gas 2009 study by the U.S. Envi1999. While that's an increase rental homes around the area's than minorities, recent studprices and falling incomes have ronmental Protection Agency, of only 1.8 percent, it defied a potato fields. iesshow that diverse suburbs d amped enthusiasm for t h e which found that 15 percent of national trend, where median The subdivision, started as a tend to do better in harder-tosprawl outside cities. The town residential building permits in incomes across the country fell rental community in May 1947, quantify economic categories. of about 52,000 shows how lo- the New York area were in the 12.1 percent during the same was an i m mediate success, A July 2012 University of Mincation and local comforts can city limits in the early 1990s. period, to $52,762. with as many as 30 homes be- nesota Law School study found overcome the obstaclescurb- By 2007, the EPA said, 55 perAbout 2.2 percent of Levit- ing built per day. When the d iverse suburbs ar e m o r e ing the nation's love affair with cent of new building permits town's population lives below Levitts began selling ranch- walkable, have higher graduasuburbs, which began when were in New York. the poverty line, roughly one- style homes in the subdivision tion rates for minority students, Levittown started selling 800The plunge in housing prices seventh the national rate. two years later, more than better chances at landing a square-foot, ranch-style homes has led to about I in 5 AmeriThe suburb was built as a 1,400 contracts were signed in middle-income job, and greater by the thousands in 1949. cans holding " u nderwater" New York answer to the post- a single March day. civic engagement. "Levittown, for all its schlock m ortgages, those with b a l - war shortage of housing for L evittown, w h ic h w o u l d More than 90 percent of characteristics, was designed ances higher than the market veterans. In the wake of World ultimately include more than Levittown's 17,407 homes were with more internal amenity value of their homes. Poverty War II, more than 6 million 17,000 homes, became the built before 1960. Polly Dwyer, than m ost l a t er-automobile has risen twice as quickly in U.S. families were living with model for the rapid suburban- president of the local historisuburbs," said James Howard suburbs as cities during the relatives or friends, and anoth- ization of the United States fu- cal society, said there's no such Kunstler, author of "The Geog- last decade, according to a May er 500,000had to take shelter eled by easy home financing thing as an original Levittown raphy of Nowhere" who spent report from the Brookings In- in temporary residencessuch from the 1944 GI Bill and the house any more, since they've part of his childhood in the stitution. There are now more as garages or barns, according Interstate Highway S y stem been remodeled or expanded. Long Island suburbs. "Schools, poor people living in suburbs to "Crabgrass Frontier" a 1985 begun in the 1950s. By 2010, The size ofthe homes has playing fields and even some than cities, the Washington- book by Kenneth Jackson, a about half of Americans lived proven only a modest deterrent shops were incorporated with- based research group found. Columbia University historian. in suburbs, according to the to buyers. Aileen Manton, 86, in the subdivision. So I'm sure In Levittown, the median William Levitt, a v eteran Census Bureau. who moved there in 1969, said this is a sell," along with the price of a home climbed to who had sold homes on Long Levittown h a s r e m ained raising six children in a tiny town's proximity to New York $386,600, as of 2011, up from Island before the war for his considerably less diverse than residence was challenging. She City, he said in an email. $252,964 in 2000. The average father's business, used Navy- most suburbs. Federal Hous- agreed with Kunstler that LevWhile suburbs remain home household in the hamlet makes pioneered assembly-line and ing Administration policies in ittown's closeness to New York to the largest share of the U.S. $94,889, compared with t he inventory techniques to begin the 1940s prevented minori- and its parks and schools made population, they have lost their inflation-adjusted $93,242 in building 2,000 Cape Cod-style ties from getting home loans thetrade-offmanageable. Bloomberg News
M anton volunteers at t he Levittown Historical Museum, a collection of town memorabilia ranging from vintage Bendix washing machines and sections of white picket fences to toys that would draw howls of protest from child-safety advocates today. While praising the quality of life, she said the area has undergone profound changes since her family moved there. "The traffic!" she said. "All the cars. And the taxes!" A drive through Levittown's neighborhoods confirms there's no shortage of traffic or cars, parked headlight-totaillight along suburban thoroughfares. Almost one-third of all U.S. households have three or more vehicles; in Levittown, the percentage climbs to almost 45 percent. The days of such car-dependent enclaves may be numbered as a younger generation
looksformore energy-friendly alternatives to distant suburbs, said Lawrence Levy, director of the National Center for Suburban Studies at Hofstra University. Levittown, he s aid, "will p robably continue t o l i m p along with the old-fashioned model of suburbia where you can't walk anywhere, where the streets are choked with cars, and where there are extra
garbage cans along the sidewalk on trash day because of all the renting that's going on under the table. Eventually a new generation is going to realize this isn't a sustainable model." Dwyer, who moved to Levittown in 1954 and raised three children there, said families will likely continue to buy homes in the area for many of the same reasonsher family did. "We loved it," she said. "It was ours. And the best part? It had a washing machine."
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate
Syria
many's interior m i nister, is pushing for an EU-wide regisContinued from A1 try for all foreigners entering "Syria has become really the the blocas one ofthe measures predominant jihadist battlefield that will help better track rein the world," Matthew Olsen, turning radicals. the director of the National While such a registry will Counterterrorism Center, told take time to create and put in a securityconference in Aspen, place, the move reflects the Colo., this month. He added, level of concern and the under"The concern going forward standing among German secufrom a threat perspective is rity leaders that an individual there are individuals traveling country's efforts will be ineffecto Syria, becoming further rad- tive without the assistance of its icalized, becoming trained and European partners, given the then returning as part of really open borders across much of a global jihadist movement to the Continent. Western Europe and, potentialThe German authorities have ly, to the United States." so farfocused domestic efforts Classified estimates from on preventingpeople suspected Western intelligence services of being radicals from leaving and unclassified assessments the country. In the northern from government and indepen- state of Schleswig-Holstein, the dent experts put the number security authorities this month of fighters from Europe, North identified 12 people thought to America and Australia who be radicals, who they said had have entered Syria since 2011 at given "concrete indications" more than600.That represents that they were planning to leave about 10 percent of the roughly for Syria. 6,000foreign fighterswho have P ublic prosecutors in t h e poured into Syria by way of the Netherlands have said that, Middle East and North Africa. while the authorities cannot Most of the Westerners are stop would-be jihadists from self-radicalized and are travel- leaving the country, they can ing on their own initiative to combat recruitment, which is Turkey, where rebel facilitators against the law and carries a often link them up with specific sentence of up to four years groups, terrorism experts say. in jail or a fine of more than Many have joined ranks with $100,000. the al-Qaida-aligned Nusra A precise breakdown of the Front, which U.S. officials have Western fighters in Syria is designated as a terrorist group. difficult to offer, counterterror"The scale of this is com- ism and intelligence officials pletely different from w h at said, but their estimates include we've experienced in the past," about 140 French citizens, 100 Gilles de Kerchove, the European Union's counterterrorism coordinator, said at the conference in Aspen. So far, terrorism experts say, there have been no documented terrorist plots linked to European or other Western fighters returning from Syria, but France's interior minister, Manuel Valls, recently called the threat "a ticking time bomb." Security services across Europe arestepping up their surveillance efforts and seeking ways to make it more difficult for peoplesuspected of being jihadists to travel to Syria. European and other Western Be intelligence agencies are rushme ing to work together to track the individuals seeking to cross the border into Syria from Turkey, although several U.S. officials expressed frustration that Turkey is not taking more aggressive steps to stem the flow of Europeans going to fight in
Syria. Hans-Peter Friedrich, Ger-
Britons, 75 Spaniards, 60 Germans, and as many as a few dozen Canadians and Australians. There are also fighters from Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Italy, Norway, Sweden and the Netherlands, according to a study in April by the International Center for the Study of Radicalization, a partnership of academic institutions based in London, which estimated that 140 to 600 Europeans have gone to Syria. Only about a dozen Americans have so far have gone to fight in Syria, according to U.S. intelligence officials. N icole Lynn Mansfield, 33, of Flint, Mich., a convert to Islam, was killed in May while in the company of Syrian rebels in Idlib province. Eric Harroun, 30, a former Army soldier from Phoenix, was indicted by a federal grand jury last month on two charges related to allegations that he fought alongside the Nusra Front. In February, he bragged about his involvement, posting a photo on his Facebook page saying, "Downed a Syrian Helicopter then Looted all Intel and Weapons!" About 30 French citizens have returned from the front lines in Syria, according to Mathieu Guidere, a professor at Universite Toulouse II and an expert on Islamic terrorism. He said most were stopped by the domestic intelligence service
year that allows charges to be brought for h aving traveled to terrorist training camps or combat zones where terrorist groups are involved. In April, the Belgian authoritiesraided 48 homes across the country and detained six men implicated in what prosecutors described as a jihadist recruitment drivefor the insurgency in Syria. Some of the men have since been released, Eric Van Der Sypt, a spokesman for the federal prosecutor, said by telephone Friday.
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SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
ASK A CENTRAL OREGON HEALTH PROFESSIONAL
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QUEsTION: I h a ve h e ard o f phy s ical therapists refer to themselves as "Manual Therapists". What exactly does this mean?
ANswER: Manual physical therapy is a specialized form o f p h y sical therapy where the practitioners use their hands to put pressure on muscle tissue and mobihze Jomts m an attempt to decrease PT, GCFP pai n c a u sed by m u scle spasm, muscle tension and joint dysfunction.
Manual therapy can be helpful for treating joints that lack normal mobility and range of motion. Joint limitations can cause pain and poor function, posture and movement. By restoring mobility to stiff joints and reducing muscle tension the client can return to more natural movement. Manual physical therapy may provide pain relief both for clients with chronic musculoskeletal problems, and acute pain from a recent injury. Mobilization and various soft tissue techniques are aimed at relaxing tense muscles and restricted joints in order to decrease pain, increase flexibility and facilitate optimal mobility of the joints. For afree 20-minute screening to see if Manual Therapy might help you, call 541-318-7041.
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QUEsTIQN: I ha ve b e en d i a gnosed with endometriosis and have pelvic pain before and during my p eriod. What can I do to feel better? ANswER: Decreasing the p r o b lems caused by endometriosis is done by i m p r ove estrogen M ar y H u n sm t an , finding w ays t o hormone balance.One of the ways t hat is h elpful i s t o l o o k a n d s e e if t h ere ar e signs o f i n s u li n r e sistance. Insulin resistance happens when our bodies are not dealing too well with sugar, and can be the beginning of prediabetes. Insulin resistance increases estrogen which aggravates endometriosis. The next step is to f i nd the reasons why insulin resistance got started in the first place and then take steps to reverse the process. Insulin resistance is t h e b a sis fo r m a n y h e alth problems, so if it is present, working on improving it may not only improve endometriosis pain, it can improve one's overall health.
DENTIN HYPERSENSITIVITY
lifting and tightening my neck. How do I know which is the right treatment for me?
QUEsnoN:What is dentin hypersensitivity?
ANswER:There are many choices to make when determining the right treatment for your needs. Below are some of your choices you might consider
when wanting a neck, jowl or I'ace lift tightening. 1. Plastic Surgery:The benefits of Plastic surgery are that the p rocedure is generallylo n g t e r m. Dr. Elizabeth The downside of plastic surgery is that there is McElligott, ND co n siderable downtime, costs and health risks involved. From a purely financial viewpoint, alternative face and neck lifts can save more than 50-75% of the costs involved with plastic surgery. 2. Laser Skin Tightening:The benefits of Lasers will smooth and tighten the skin, removing sun damage and age spots.The downside of Lasers is that they will not remove skin, such as the "Turkey Neck" or sagging Jowls. Lasers do take a series of treatments (3-10) and do usually require some maintenance. The cost involved with Laser Skin Tightening can be considerable, average cost ranging between $250-$1,000 per treatment. 3. Ultherapy:This treatment involves ultrasound therapy. According to the website, the results are natural and you will not see results for approximately three months. The cost can depend on the amount of laxity involved. Average cost is $2,000-$3,500 per treatment of
just the face. 4. Mini Neck and Jowl Lifts:The benefits to this procedure is that it gives a natural but significant lift and tone to the neck and/or jowl area with just one treatment. This is a minor surgical procedure, with little to no "recovery" time. The results are immediate and will last for years. The average cost for the neck lift is $1,500 and also includes two laser skin tightening treatments to lift and tone the skin. There is never maintenance required.
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QUEsrioN: There are so many treatments for
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QUESTLON:Is there anything natural I can do for my PMS? ANswER: Yes,I usually encourage intake of flax seed meal and evening primrose oil and sometimes magnesium to start. There are a few h erbal preparations Azure Karli, N.D. that c a n be helpful usually all including Chaste Tree Berry. Of course, it is very important to check with your doctor before initiating any herbal therapies. I h ave also found u t i lizing injectable B12 and B6 together around mid-cycle and again 5-7 days before your cycle begins can be very beneficial for decreasing mood swings, sugar cravings and energy dips. Often I am asked about hormone testing to help treat PMS, but typically that is not necessary or helpful if you have a typical monthly cycle. Hope this helps. Feel free to call our office if you want more information on this.
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QUFsTIoN: What can be done about
Accidental Bowel Leakage (ABL)? ANswER:Accidental Bowel Leakage (ABL) also known as fecal incontinence affects 18 million or 1 in 12 US citizens. People with ABL cannot control the passage of gas or Jana VanAmburg, stools which may be li uid or solid. M.D., FACS There are many causes for ABL. The most common cause ismuscle or nerve damage around the rectal walls. Other causes may be poor diet, frequent diarrhea, severe constipation, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, radiation or stroke. Solesta is a quick, non-surgical treatment for ABL that can help give you more control by bulking up the tissue in the anal canal. There may be mild pain and Solesta can be done right in the office without anesthesia. The patient can resume limited physical activities within 24 hours and more strenuous activities within a week. Women are affected twice as often as men. ABL affects quality of life and can be an embarrassing condition. Sadly only 17% of people seek help for ABL when treatment is simple, successful and confidential.
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QUEsTIDN: I used to have long, dark eyelashes but as I have gotten older, my eyelashesare shorter and thinner. Is there any product that can help my eyelashes grow longer?
QUESTIDN:Living in Central Oregon, I e x p erience s u c h b ad al l e r g y problems. Would the pigments used in permanent makeup pose any
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Should any of these conditions exist, it can leave the dentin exposed. When this happens, consuming hot or cold food or drink, or exposing the tooth to cold air, can be painful. If you're sufTering from dentin hypersensitivity, your dentist may be able to put a sealant on your tooth that prevents the heat and cold from penetrating the enamel and stimulating the dentin. Or he or she may prescribe a gel or recommend an over-the-counter desensitizing toothpaste.
It is important to contact your physician to rule out other intestinal problems before seeking treatment for ABL.
Lifestyle Medicine M ary H u n t s m a n M D
ANswER: D entin i s the rel a t ively h a r d p rotective material t ha t l i e s b eneath t h e tooth's enamel. Dentin, in turn, surrounds and protects the pulp, which contains the tooth's nerves and blood vessels. If you have a tooth that is extremely sensitive to hot or cold, you may have the condition that is called dentin hypersensitivity. The condition can develop DDS if the enamel has worn down over time, or gums have receded, exposing the root of a tooth. Also, it is not uncommon over time for enamel to develop microscopic cracks. The tooth's exposure to extremes of hot and cold can make enamel expand and contract, leaving these microscopic fissures.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
Generics
causing problems for patients. "What th e m a n ufacturer Continued from A1 did was put a capsule around Pharmaceutical companies it to delay that dissolving unmaintain that the changes to til it did hit the colon," Fazio brand-name drugs represent said. "To me as a pharmacist, innovations that give patients it seems like a rational justifibetter products or new medi- cation to change that formucation options. Consumer ad- lation, however superficial it vocates argue that such moves may seem." are a blatant manipulation of That explanation, however, the patent system, which drive does not ring true to patients up costs for patients and the like Matlock, who say the caphealth care system. sule falls apart easily in their "Is that what Americans re- hands. And many patients really think a patent is?" asked ported the opposite problem, Laura Etherton, a Portland- that Asacol came through their based health c a r e p o l i cy digestive system partially or analyst with U.S. PIRG, the completely intact. According federation of state public inter- to Asacol's product labeling, est research groups. "They're about 2 to 3 percent of patients taking advantage of the fact experience that problem. that when we think of a drug It is unclear from the FDApatent, we're thinking of the provided documents whether active ingredient, the thing Warner ever tested the new they've invented, the thing we formulation of Delzicol withwant them to do that's actually out the capsule, or how the helpful." capsule affects the delivery of the medication to the colon. Theoretical risks Sara Horst, a gastroenterOnline discussion boards ologist with the Vanderbilt Difor ulcerative colitis patients gestiveDisease Center and a have been buzzing with skep- spokesperson for the Crohn's ticism over the Asacol-Delzi- & C olitis Foundation, said col switch. The Food and Drug such drugs are difficult to perAdministration declined The fect because patients can have Bulletin's requests for an indifferent pH levels in different terview, but shared documents parts of their digestive sysdescribing the rationale for tem. Sometimes it takes trial approving Delzicol as a new and error to determine which drug. According to those doc- medication and what dose will uments, Asacol's enteric coat- work best for each patient. ing was designed to dissolve Doctors have generally been at a certain pH level, allowing switching Asacol patients to a the pill to travel through the similar dosage of Delzicol, aldigestive system intact until it though Horst said the change reached the colon. p rovides an opportunity t o But the coating included a discuss other possible treatchemical, dibutyl phthalate, or ments as well. DBP, a type of plasticizer that
expires and the FDA approves the generic, the companies will often reach a settlement in which thebrand-name manufacturer pays the generic company not to bring a generic to market. Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that such pay-for-delay arrangements could be the basis for antitrust lawsuits. "The industry has had a history of presenting very weak patents and then litigating to protect these weak patents for as long they can," said Daniel Berger, an attorney with Philadelphia-based law firm, Berger 8 Montague. "Because if you can delay generic entry for six months, that's worth billions of dollars." Berger is currently involved in a lawsuit filed by Mylan Pharmaceuticals and several
large drug purchasers alleg-
ing anti-competitive practices by Warner Chilcott. The suit claims that Warner intentionally moved its acne medication Doryx from one form to another three times in order to stymie Mylan's efforts to launch a generic. Just as Mylan was preparing to launch a generic version of Doryx in 2005, Warner switched the product from capsule to tablet form. Because generics must be identical in dosage and form to the brandname drug, it forced Mylan to scrap its capsule and start over on a tablet form. The following year, Warner sought a change in labeling for Doryx allowing it to be broken into pieces and sprinkled over apple sauce. Again Mylan had t o r eformulate its generic to match, delaying it for another 6 to 12 FDA' has been trying to get Pr Otedlng brandS months. Warner then introout of pharmaceutical prodPati e nts may be able to take duced a scored tablet, which ucts for some years. When brand-name alternatives to delayed generic competition given to laboratory rats at ul- A s a col with the same active back until the end of 2010. The tra-high doses, DBP caused i n g r edient, mesalamine, and roadblocks succeeded in dedevelopmental d elays a n d ma n y of those offer more con- laying generic competition for birth defects. Although th e v e n i ent dosing, such as tak- five years. agency was unsure if DBP had i n g one pill instead of three or As long as the company can any clinical effect in humans, f o ur. But insurance companies effectively switch the market it pushed manufacturers to o f t e n negotiate preferred pric- from its old f ormulation to reformulate their drugs with i n gfor one of the brand-name the new formulation before a other compounds. drugs in a class, leaving pa- generic arrives, the strategy In 2009, FDA asked Procter t i e nts the choice of taking that does not even require an ac& Gamble, which manufac- d r u g f or justthecostofa$15to tive patent. Because a generic tured Asacol at the time, to $ 2 5 c opayorpayinghundreds must contain the same dosremove DBP fromtheproduct. o f d o llars a month for a non- age and form as the brandThe foll owing year,the com- preferredbrand-namedrug. name for a pharmacist to fill pany sold its product line t o Gene r i cs,ontheotherhand, a prescription for a b r andWarner Chilcott. are identical to the name drug with a generic, a Warner c overed brand-name drug product switch can effectively TI7~ I~dUS~9' theAsacoltablets at a f r action of eliminate substitution at the with a different g g S gg d g the cost. So when pharmacy counter. That barplasticizer, placed I1 jS]pp pf a br a n d -name rierundercuts the market fora drug's patent ex- generic, it inside a capsule, which generally does renamed it Del- Pr e S e nting pires, t h e cost of not have a heavy marketing zicol and filed for p pl y Wggk the medication for budget. approval as a new pp[8fI[S ppy Patients can drop A similar tactic was taken drug. as much as 90 per- by the drug company Abbott Prior to pull- th e n l i t igating cent. T hat is usu- to squeeze more profits out of ing Asaco' off the ~O prOteCt ~heSe ally d e vastating its cholesterol drug Tricor. As market, W a rner for the sales of the generics were preparing to enk P ~ ~ also changed the brand-name drug, ter the market in 2001, Abbott product's label- fa r a S lOng they whi c h i s why introduced Tricor 2, tweaking ing to include the Cgg ggCgUSg drug c ompanies the available dosages from 67 theoretical risk of vigorously defend and 134 mgpills to 54mg and .f ~ defects. Delzicol whatever patent is 160 mg pills. Three years later, was approved in de l a y gen eriC still i n effect. Abbott introduced Tricor 3, in F ebruary on h e BA~Q/fOt SIX W hen a c o m 48 mg and 145 mg doses, just asts o t o equrv ' pany a p phes o as ageneric Tricor Iwas entero t > I alency stu d i es bring a g e n eric ing the market. After another showing the drug WO I'th billiOnS Of t o ma r k et, t h e four years, Abbott launched dissolves at the dQ I / gf-S " FDA notifies the Trilipix, switching from tablet same rate as Asabrand-name man- to capsule form. col. According to — Attorney u f acturer, w h ich Generics were always one t he FD A d o c uDaniel Berger ca n t hen sue the step behind, and were never ments, "no new generic for patent able to drive down the price safety or efficacy infringement. By for consumers. According to trials were conducted by the l a w , the FDA must then delay an article published in the Arapplicant using the proposed a p proval of the generic for up chives of Internal Medicine in capsule product." to 30 months while the court May, the multiple reformulaBut the documents make no s o rts out the patent issue. tions of Tricor are costing the " Unfortunately, there a r e mention of why the Delzicol U.S. healthcare system $700 tablet was inserted into a cap- t o o m an y m echanisms that million each year. Mylan's suit claims such sule, and Warner Chilcott did a l l o w l i tigation to drag on," not respond to requests for an s a i d Wells Wilkinson, project moves represent an antitrust interview. director for prescription ac- violation an d t h e F e deral According to Joe Fazio, as- c ess litigation at Boston-based Trade Commission agrees. "Such tactics, often referred sistant director of pharmacy c o n sumerinterestgroupComservices at Oregon Health & mu n i t y Catalyst."It's reason- to as product hopping, can be Science University, the use of a b l e that after two and a half an effective way to game the acapsulemayhavebeeninre- y e a rs, even if t hey litigated regulatory structure that govsponse to reports that Asacol h a r d, they still may not have a erns the approval and sale of had been dissolving too quick- r e solution." generic drugs, thereby frusly in t h e d i gestive system, Once t h e 3 0-month delay trating the efforts of federal
Protecting the franchise According to an analysis published in the Archives of lnternal Medicine, Abbott Laboratories reformulated its cholesterol drug, Tricor (fenofibrate), three times. Each change occurred just
before generic competition was due to enter the market.
Evolution of fenofibrate
Pharmaceutical drug manufacturers have used a variety of strategies to extend the life of their brand-
NDA approval
abbreviated NDA (NDA) new drug approval submitted abdreviaied n ew drug N D A application (NDA) Tricor-3 (48-mg, aPPlication approval submitted 145-mg tablets) Market (NDA) launch submitted Tricor-2 (54-mg, Tricor-2 I60-mg tablets) generics Tricor-1 (67-mg, I34-mg 200-mg capsules) Tricor-1
Trilipix (45-mg, 135-mg capsules)
generics
1998 1999 2000 2 001
2 002 2 003 2 004 2 005 2 006 2 007 2 008 2 009 2 010 2 011
$1.6
>, 4 Sales, product availadility of Abdott Laboratories' fenofidrate franchise U.S. sales, millions of dollars
$.8 $.6 $.4 $.2 I998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Tricor-1
~T
Tricor-3
Tricor-2
Lowering low-density lipoprotein
FDA-approved indications
Raising high-density lipoprotein Coadministration
fOr IISe
elth 8 statlII
Source: Archives of Internal Medicine
Greg Cross / The Bulletm
and state policymakers to facilitate price competition," the FTC wrote in an amicus brief filed in the Doryx case. The FTC, however, has no say in whether the FDA can approve a new drug or whether the Patent and Trademark Office issues a new patent for meaningless change of a drug. The commission could sue
are involved in. The game is to engage in whatever shenanigans, stratagems or whatever you can do to postpone the day of generic entry." As Asacol was r emoved from the market, the company stepped up its marketing efforts to shift as many former Asacol patients to Delzicol as possible. Now even if a generic Asacol tablet emerges, the market hasalready moved on to the capsule form. Whether
in cases of product-hopping, but the agency has limited resources and must pick its battles.
by coincidence or by design, the switch has extended the life of the brand. "Will any generic firm bother tomarket a generic version of Asacol, if no doctor is prescribing it any more'?" asked Scott Hemphill, a law professor with Columbia University in New York. "The usual path is to take advantage of auto-
Same tactics Now Warner seems to have dusted off its product-hopping playbook for DelzicoL "You take the tablet and you put it in a capsule, and you call it a new drug," Berger said. "It's the typical circus and charade that the brand manufacturers
matic substitution. But once the product switch has been accomplished, there may be no Asacol prescriptions left to switch." Warner also sells an 800 mg extended-release tablet, Asacol HD, that contains the same enteric coating as in Asacol. Warner holds a patent on that formulation that won't expire till 2021, and has not yet reformulated the drug or pulled it from the market. Part of the problem, said Dr. Michael Carome, director of the healthresearch group at Washington, D.C.-based consumer advocacy group Public Citizen, is the FDA doesn't take into account whether a new drug, like Delzicol, truly represents a s t e p f o r w ard
when granting approval. Continued next page
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name drugs andward off generic competition. Noneare expressly illegal, although somemayviolate antitrust laws.
NEW FORMULATIONS Changes in the formulation of a drug to anewdosage, a newform (tablet or capsule) or an extendedrelease version can provide a new patent for an existing drug. To the extent companies can shift
patients to the newformulation, they can stay onestep ahead of generic manufacturers evenwithout an enforceable patent. MOLEGULAR DIFFERENGES Most active drug ingredients can exist in multiple molecular structures. Somedrug companies have been able to take an active ingredient that is losing its patent protection, and isolate only one form of its
The Bulletin bendbulletin.co m
©t'" BUSINESSNEWS Istudeabsolutel
molecular structure and patent that as anew drug. In some case, the companies can isolate amolecular structure that is more effective than the mixture of multiple structures in the original drug. NEW USES ORINDIGATIONS
Q P +j
A A) • f f l
COMBINED COMMUNICATIONS P END L E T B N N HI S N
Manufacturers can secure additional patents when their drugs are shown to work for new indications or conditions. Companies often pursue the easiest indication first to get the product on the market, then get additional indications approved over time.
COMBINATIONS By combining two drugs into a single pill, drug companies cancreate "new" medications and secure new patents. Companies can combine multiple drugs that have lost patent protection and patent the combination. Source: B>opharm lnternational, Alton and Byrd LLP
J
r i lipix ~
Lowering triglycerides
HEALTH SYSTEM
Extending profits
First abdreviaied new drug application
Abbott Laboratories' fenofibrate franchise relative to generic competition
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SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
CIA
the CIA would not be upfront with them." "I don't have any of the caContinued from A1 Among t h e al l e gations bles with me. Please put that made by De Sousa in a series down," De Sousa added with a of interviews with McClatchy: nervous laugh, her unease re• The former CIA s tation flecting the Obama adminischief in Rome, Jeffrey Cas- tration's unprecedented crackt elli, whom she c alled t he down on leaks of classified inmastermind of the operation, formation to journalists. exaggerated Nasr's t e r rorDe Sousa is one of only a ist threat to win approval for handful of former CIA officers the rendition and misled his who've spoken openly about superiors that Italian military the secret renditions in which intelligence had agreed to the suspected terrorists overseas operation. were abducted without legal • Senior CIA officials, in- proceedingsand then interrocluding t h en-CIA D i r ector gated by other nations' secuGeorge Tenet, approved the rity services. operationeven though there More than 130 people were were doubts about Castelli's "rendered" in t his w ay, accase — Nasr wasn't wanted in cording to a February 2013 Egypt and wasn't on the U.S. study by the Open Society list of top al-Qaida terrorists. Justice Initiative, a U.S.-based • Condoleezza Rice, then group that promotes the rule the White House national se- of law. Many were tortured curity adviser, also had con- and abused, and many, includcerns about the case, espe- ing Nasr, were freed for lack cially what Italy would do if of proof that they were hatchthe CIA were caught, but she ing terrorist plots, said Amrit e ventually agreed to it a n d Singh, the study's author. recommended that Bush apU.S. involvement prove the abduction. De Sousa said her asserThe Bush and Obama adtions are based on classified ministrations have never acCIA cables that she read be- knowledged U.S. involvement foreresigning from the agen- in the Nasr rendition, which cy in February 2009, as well makes De Sousa's decision to as on Italian legal documents speak publicly about it signifiand Italian news reports. She cant, Singh said. " Any p ublic a c count o f denies that she was involved in t h e o p e r ation, t h ough what happened and who was she acknowledges that she u ltimately responsible is of served as the interpreter for c onsiderable i n terest," s h e a CIA "snatch" team that vis- said. "Despite the scale of the ited Milan in 2002 to plan the human rights violations asabduction. sociated with th e r endition "I was being held account- program, the United States able for decisions that some- hasn't held a single individual one else took and I wanted to accountable." see on what basis the decisions The CIA declined to comwere made," she said, explain- ment, but a former senior U.S. ing why she had delved into intelligence o f f icial c a l l ed the CIA archives. "And espe- De Sousa's narrative "fairly cially because I was willing consistent" with the recollecto talk to the Hill (Congress) tions of other former CIA ofabout this because I knew that ficials with knowledge of the
flown to Germany and then to
said. Pollari, she said, wanted to wait until the Italian ParA member of a b a n ned liament passed intelligence v> Egyptian Islamist group, Nasr reform legislation that would was being investigated at the have allowed SISMi broader :: ~4g~~ time by an I t alian anti-ter- counterterrorism powers. ee rorist police unit known as Castelli's superiors at the • t - c. = DIGOS, which had a warrant L angley h e adquarters i n ~ "IL' to eavesdrop on him. He alleg- sisted that SISMi and Prime edly had close ties to al-Qaida Minister S i lvi o B e r lusconi and other Islamist groups and had to agree to the operation, arranged for militants to trav- or "they couldn't go to Condoel to fight in Afghanistan, Iraq leezza Rice and the president and elsewhere. of the United States" for auBut DIGOS made no move thorization, De Sousa said. "So what does Castelli say? to arrest Nasr, De Sousa said, Barbara L. Salisbury/McCtatcby Newspapers because it had no evidence Castelli says, 'Well, I talked to "It's time to talk about this," said former CIA operative Sabrina De that he was plotting any at- Pollari and he's not going to Sousa, who has been convicted in absentia in Italy of the kidnaptacks. He knew that he was put anything in writing. But ping of Egyptian cleric Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr, known as being monitored, she said. wink, wink, nod, nod. You Abu Omar, in Milan in 2003. Castelli, however, was ea- know, wink, wink, he's proger to pull off a rendition, she vided a tacit sort of approval. said, explaining t hat a f t er They are not going to put anyoperation. He asked not to be out of Italy, received a seven- 9/11, "everyone around the thing in writing,'" she said. further identified because the year term. But Italian Presi- world" was being pressed The rendition had another matter remains classified. dent Giorgio Napolitano parby CIA headquarters to "do problem: There was no outDe Sousa, 57, a naturalized doned him in April under U.S. something" against al-Qaida. standing arrest warrant for U.S. citizen from India's state pressure. Castelli, she said, was ambi- Nasr from Egypt, she said. of Goa, was one of 23 AmeriThe Bush and Obama ad- tious and saw a rendition as a To resolve the issue, Castelli cans convicted in a b sentia ministrations, however, have ticket to promotion. asked the CIA's Cairo station "Castelli went to SISMi to in 2009 by a Milan court for refused to ask Italy to do the to request one from Omar N asr's abduction. Sh e r e - same for De Sousa, who inask them to work on the ren- S uleiman, the powerful i n ceived a five-year sentence. sists that she qualified for dip- dition program, and SISMi telligence czar for Egyptian A n appeals court i n 2 0 1 1 lomatic immunity as a second says no," De Sousa recounted. President Hosni M u b arak. added two more years, and s ecretary accredited to t h e That, however, "didn't stop The warrant was issued. LatItaly's Supreme Court upheld U.S. Embassy in Rome. Jeff," she said. er, after Nasr had been turned "It's always the minions of the sentence. Nineteen of the Castelli di d n o t r e spond over to the Egyptians, the CIA Americans, De Sousa said, the federal government who to a McClatchy request for station in Cairo asked Castelli "don't exist," because they are thrown under the bus by comment. for the evidence the Egyptians were aliases used by the CIA officials w h o co n s istently needed to prosecute. Nasr's rendition "Castelli wrote back and snatch team. violate international law and The case drew fresh atten- sometimes domestic law and Castelli "was hell-bent on said, 'I thought you had the intion this month when Panama who are al l i m m une f r om doing a rendition," De Sousa formation. That's why you isdetained Robert Seldon Lady, prosecution," De Sousa said. said, and he pressed the direc- sued the arrest warrant,'" De the CIA's former Milan station "Their lives are fine. They're tor of SISMi at the time, Nicol- Sousa said. Cairo replied that chief, whom the Italian court making millions of dollars sit- lo Pollari, throughout 2002 to Egypt had issued the warrant had sentencedtonine years in ting on (corporate) boards." agree, according to cables De only "because you needed an prison. But Panama released A cleric who preached holy Sousa found between Castelli arrest warrant." him within 24 hours and al- war against the West, Nasr and CIA headquarters. Of her CIA superiors, De "This is very important, be- Sousa said, "They knew this lowed him to fly to the United was living in Italy under a States, rather than wait for It- grant o f p o l i t ical a s ylum cause there is a written trail of ( the rendition) was bull - - , aly to request his extradition. when he was accosted Feb. 17, what was going on," she said. but they were just allowing it. Another convicted Ameri- 2003, by black-suited men on Pollari refused to budge, These guys approved it based can, Air Force Col. Joseph a Milan street as he walked to telling Castelli that the rendi- on what Castelli wa s sayRomano, who oversaw secu- his mosque. He was bundled tion would be "an illegal op- ing even though they knew rity at Aviano, the U.S. base into a white van and driven eration ... unless the magis- it never met the threshold for from which Nasr was flown to Aviano, from which he was trates approved it," De Sousa rendition."
Egypt
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From previous page "The law doesn't require that they do that," he said. "It did meet the requirements for the approval of a new drug despite not being a major innovation. It really isn't an innovation at all, and there are probably better products out there." Analysts who track Warner Chilcott believe the motivation for the switch is more financial than clinical. "It's definitely an attempt to delay generic competition," said David Krempa, an analyst with Morningstar in Chicago. "We don't even know if there would be generic competition here if the patent expired, but this is another preventive measure to help them in case there would have been." The FDA does not reveal which companies have filed applications for generics, but according to financial and legal filings, at least three companies have started down that road, and Warner Chilcott has settled at least one Asacol patent case. The company did not respond to The Bulletin's requests for comment. But in a conference call with analysts in February, transcribed by the website Seeking Alpha, Warner CEO Roger Boissonneault was asked about how the switch would impact a generic competitor. The description seemed to match closely the product-hopping scenario outlined by the FTC. "Generally, t h e ge n e ric doesn't even ge t l a unched because the reference product will be Delzicol," he said. "There won't be any Asacol out there. We've seen that happen with Doryx, when the genericcompany got the product approved. And by that time, the product had moved on ... As the reference product has changed and then moved on to either tablet or new dose form, there really isn't much to be substituted there." That will l i kely leave patients paying higher drug prices for Delzicol for a number of years until a generic emerges. That is, unless the company moves the g o alposts back
again. Matlock now pays $25 a month for her Delzicol. She would have to pay $125 a month for A p r i so, another brand-name m es alamine product, which would cut the number of pills she has to swallow daily from 12 to four. She would likely pay only $8 if a generic were available. "I would really like just to be able to get what my doctor feels I need," she said. — Reporter: 541-617-7814 mhawryluk@bendbulletin.com
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Veterans
Williamson recounted a time when he and another Continued from A1 officer had been flown by / "It was kind of self-imposed Vietnam helicopter to the base in Da because I wanted to find out if Naval Veteran Nang. By being "boots on there was a better way to do Edward "Wilthe ground" at that time, Iie" Wilthings," he said. "The more cliWilliamson is presumed by ents wecan see and the better liamson, of the VA to qualify for disabill services we can provide, the Bend, said he ity benefits. "The difficult part is that more money comes into Desalmost gave chutes County and is spent up trying to the burden of proof is on here." get disability you," he said. "They wanted MacNamara said byadoptbenefits. But me to remember, down to ing some of the audit recomwith the help within a 30-day window, mendations, he and his staff of the local when I went. I can't even have streamlined their servicVA office, he remember what happened es and gotten more money to said he is now last week, let alone 40 years ago." more clients. About 16,000 vetcovered. The erans live in Deschutes County paperwork in Williamson at fir s t alone, and the department emfront of him c ouldn't remember if t h e ploys a staff of just three. documents trip to Da Nang happened "We have 4,300 cli ents we some of in 1971 or 1972. Once he are actively working with, so the lengthy determined the year, he the case load is tremendous," process he thought the trip was someMacNamara said. "Because the overcame. where between November county was supportive with our Rob Kerr and April, but didn't think The Bulletin he'd be ableto remember budgetthisyear, we were able to bring our assistant service m ore specifi cs. "They served as my coach officer up to full time and have County office — about 11 per- if the person is elderly, or on a reduced first-time-visit waits to cent of total clientele — was fixed income." and knew what questions between 30 and 40 days." another reason localveterans Bend resident Edward "Wil- to ask to jog my memory," lie" Williamson is one of the he said. "If it wouldn't have were experiencing long wait First notice times for appointments. people who MacNamara and been for them, I definitely "Providing services to non- his staff helped guide through would have gotten frustratBy sending a n i n f ormal claim to the state Veterans' Deschutes veterans is a likely the maze of filing a disability ed and given up." Affairs office on the day new contributor to longer wait times claim with the VA. Williamson Once Williamson w as clients indicate they'd like to for getting an appointment," graduated from the U.S. Naval able to determine the trip make a claim, MacNamara is Givans wrote i n t h e a udit. Academy in 1970 and served happened either in Novemable to prevent the wait time "Deschutes County Veterans' two tours in Vietnam between ber or December, the staff from reducing the amount of Services Office is only sup1971 and 1973. He left the Navy at Veterans' Services went benefits due to a veteran. posed to deal with Deschutes in 1976. so far as to request the ship "The day the VA gets the County veterans." Williamson was diagnosed logs from the Navy, poring claim is the date from which MacNamara said he's been with Type 2 diabetes in 1975. over them day-by-day to they'll begin to receive benefits working closely with the Vet- Later in life he developed heart find any record of a helicopwhen their claim is approved," erans' Services offices in sur- disease and Crohn's disease. ter taking off from the ship. "About three y ears a go, "They called me in April MacNamara said. "We reserve roundingcounties to encourage their date by submitting a for- clients to visit the departments while I was still covered by pri- of this year and said they'd mal claim, which only takes in their county of residence. vate health insurance, I began found it," Williamson said. "Some of the people who getting worried about what I "After that, things started five to 10 minutes to fill out." Once the informal claim is were coming to us travel often was going to do when I lost it," moving really rapidly with made, the client has to prove to Bend, so it was more conve- Williamson said. "I wanted to the VA." they're eligible for b enefits nient to come to our office," he get in with the VA before that After nearly two years of by providing the VA with evi- said. "I don't care what side of happened." researching the case and dence, such as a diagnosis of the road they live on, we don't Williamson met with Mac- presenting evidence, Wildisability, dates of service or want to refuse services to any- Namara, and they began the liamson was awarded 70 any other evidence the VA one, but we have reduced the lengthy process of proving to percent disability. He said requests. The process can be number o f non - Deschutes the federal government that the money he receives has lengthy and tedious, especially County veterans we're see- Williamson served when and made a huge difference in for veterans who served years ing by working with the other where he said he did. his life. He suffered from or decades ago. offices." MacNamara asked William- severe medical issues a few "Gathering the evidence can son if he'd ever been "boots years ago, wiping out most be very time consuming," Mac- 'Boots on the ground' on the ground" — on land in of his savings and retireNamara said. "The problem MacNamara said despite the Vietnam — or had he always ment to pay for treatment. "It's everything," he said. isn't the time it takes to see the heavy case load and the com- been on a Navy ship. The VA's client, it's the hours of work that plexity of researching evidence "boots on the ground" policy "When the disability checks goes into verifying their claim." to get services to veterans in states that any combat veteran started to arrive, it lifted a The audit, conducted by need, he loves the workhe does. who touched Vietnam soil was huge weight off my shoulcounty auditor David Givans, "When people start receiving exposed to dangerous herbi- ders. I can pay my b i lls determined a high number of benefits, it changes their lives," cides, such as Agent Orange, now." out-of-countyveterans request- he said. "Their quality of life which were widely used in the — Reporter: 541-383-0376, ingservices fromthe Deschutes can go up so much, especially war. sking@bendbultetin.com
Burnt Orange
Debt Continued from A1 For the upcoming year, the rate may be lowered to3.86 percent if the House passes the bill, which it is expected to do before the August recess. If the economy continues to improve, in future years the, rate could riseto as high as 8.25 percent. Unsubsidized Stafford loans for graduate students will be capped at 9.5 percent. "It's good there is a cap," Severs said. "When we're out recruiting, it helps to tell students that, yes, the rate is variable, but there is a limit to where it can go." Fearing that the rates could rise to their upper limits in a few years, many o f t h e Senate's Democrats opposed the bill. In a statement on her blog, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Massachusetts, said, "It's shocking to me that the United States Senate would offer its own teaserrate for ourstudent loan system — a system that is scheduled to make more than $184 billion in profits over the next 10 years. That's not the business the U nited States government should be in." In a statement to The Bulletin on Thursday, U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, said: "I'm pleased that the Senate has joined the House in passing a bill to provide a permanent, market-based solution on student loans that is affordable, predictable, and fair. "This bill is a victory for students, parents, and taxpayers, and it is consistent with the bill I supported in the House in May. I look forward to the House swiftly considering and passing this c ommon-sense plan." Walden had previously supported a House bill that would have tied the interest rate to the 10-year Treasury note plus 2.5 percent. The Senate's bill lowered thatnumber to 2.05 percent for undergraduates. U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, DOregon, supported the bill but believes an overhaul of the student loan system is still needed long-term. "It's a good deal for the next two to three years," he said. "An undergraduate goes from arateof6.8percent to about 3.9 percent, obviously that's much better, but we need to come
Green
back and change the structure moving forward." While the senator expressed frustration over the rate's ability to climb, he also echoed Warren's concern about the profitability of the system. "The most objectionable part is that the spread between what the loans cost the government and what the student pays guarantees profit for the government," he said. "We should not be in the business of making money off of our students." Merkley cited his concern for students taking out loans this fall as his reason for supporting the bill. "For this deal it depended on how you viewed it, and in my mind I envisioned students getting ready for school right now and heading back to class this autumn, and for them it's a huge deal," he said. "I had a picture of people throwing a lifeline to students in the water, but after saving them we must go to work on modifying the boat to have a better vehicle for student loans." M erkley said the bill i n cludes money for a Government Accountability O ff i ce report on the cost of defaults a nd administrative work i n the loan program. He hopes this study will allow the government to better understand how it can reduce the gap between what the loans cost the government and what t hey cost students. In a similar vein, Severshopes to see any profits from the student loan program reinvested into the Pell Grant
program.
"We'd like to see any money made off of students go back to students," Severs said. Sen. Merkley insisted that lowering the cost of college is the best way to ensure the nation's future workforce is highly educated. "We don't want students to see $60,000 to $70,000 debts
weighing on people's necks," Sen. Merkley said. "We don't want them to feel there's no path for them to get to college. I was first in my family to go, and there were concerns about costs, but my parents told me not to worry, they'd figure it out. All parents want to be able to say that." — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com
Brown
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F IN E
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
BRIEFING
Minor injuries in Sisters crash A vehicle crash on the west side of Sisters
Saturday afternoon blocked a portion of U.S. Highway 20 and
caused minor injuries for the occupants of one vehicle.
According to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, David Elliot, 20, of Sisters, was attempting to cross the highway at Barclay Drive
SUNNYSIDE TURNOFF FIRE
Fire updates
Containment at 90 percent By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
Containment of the Sunnyside Turnoff fire on the Warm Springs Reservation reached 90 percent on Saturday, just over a week after it ignited a few miles north of the town of Warm Springs and east of U.S. Highway 97. In an 8 p.m. update, fire managers announced the area burned had grown slightly
since Friday, reaching an estimated49,039 acres.Lines around the entire perimeter of the fire were completed Friday. Nearly 800 firefighters were assigned to the Sunnyside Turnoff fire as of Saturday evening, though managers
expect to begin reassigning personnelto other fires currently burning in Oregon and Washington.
www.bendbulletin.com/local
For the most up-to-date information, visit bendbulletin.com. Fire statuses as of Saturday: 1. Sunnyside Turnoff 'Bend
• Area: 49,039 acres; 76.62 square miles • Threatened structures: 50
All roads that had been closedbecause ofthe fire were reopened as of 10 a.m. Saturday. An evacuation alert that had beenissued toresidents of the Schoolie Flat area was lifted. Ka-nee-Tah Resort is open, though the lodge is closed because ofan unrelated structure fire. SeeSunnyside/B6
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• Containment: 90%
• Cause: Human 2. Stagecoach • Area: 330 acres; 0.52 squar miles • Threatened structures: 150
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• Containment: 100%
• Cause: Human
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shortly after12:30 p.m. As he crossed, Elliot's
Volkswagen Bugstruck the rear driver's side tire of an eastbound Toyota Sequoia driven by Brent Wilson, 34, of Bend. The Toyota spunand
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rolled over on to the
driver's side, while the Volkswagen came to rest in the middle of the
highway. Wilson and his four
passengersweretreated for minor injuries andre-
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leased at the scene, while Elliot was uninjured. Elliot was cited on suspicion of driving
By Tyler Leeds The Buuetin
Michael Giamellaro has the data to back what many children merelyhope tobetrue — classroom instruction is more effective when delivered on a mountainside or kneedeep in a stream. An assistant professor of science and math education at Oregon State University-Cascades Campus, Giamellaro studies how children learn science when they are surrounded by their subject matter. "When you learn in-context, the content knowledge that is being learned is everywhere around you and can easily be applied back within that environment," Giamellaro said. "If you're in the immersive environment, everything around you can give you more information about the content you are learning, and it can react to the level of your understanding; in the classroom, the level is dictated by the teacher." Instead of quizzing students on their ability to recall information following an incontext learning experience, Giamellaro examines how students organize their science knowledge in a particular subject, such as ecology. After he collects information on how students relate scientific concepts to one another, he is able to reference data on how experts organize their own knowledge. Following a week in the field, some high school students have shown, on average, growth comparable to what one finds after a typical semester-long college science course. Although assessing how much students learn is important to Giamellaro, he is more concerned with how they are learning and what about being in-context facilitates learning. SeeOutdoors/B5
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Photos by Joe Kline /The Bulletin
WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON — The
House of Representatives on Wednesday approved $595 billion in funding for the Defense
Department next year, including provisions that
give the Pentagon more flexibility to deal with sequestration. This year,
Ethan Allison, 14, of Bend, foreground, and Gene Hyde, also of Bend, take aimat targets with air rifles while participating in the Powdr Shot biathlon event on Saturday morning at the Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center west of Bend.
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The measure passed by a 315-109 vote, with 220 Republicans and 95
Democrats voting yes.
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Eight Republicans and 101 Democrats voted against the bill.
U.S. HOUSEVOTE • Bill to provide $595 billion in funding for
Defense Department
penalty loop issued to every competitorforevery missed i th each pull of t h e shot. trigger, Alex Martin Though he hung on to win grew m or e v i s ibly the race, Alex was mystified frustrated. as to how his accurate shootThe Bend 15-year-old ing deserted him on his final held a comfortable lead visit to the range. "I hit four, four, five, five, finishing the fifth and final mile of Saturday's Powdr and then, nothing," he said. Shot biathlon, a summer Saturday's event was a twist on the sport that joint project of Powdr Corp., swaps trail running for the company that owns Mt. cross country skiing. But on Bachelor and eight other ski his last trip to the air rifle resorts, and Euclid Timber range nearthe Mt. Bachelor Frames, a Utah design and Nordic Lodge, Alex couldn't construction firm headquarhit a thing. tered down the road from Five shots. Five misses. Powdr's Park City Mountain And so, five laps around Resort. the roughly 200-yard long See Biathlon/B5 The Bulletin
W
cuts that went into effect in March. The new bill provides $82.3 billion in
operations funding for active wars and$512.5
By Scott Hammers
Jennifer Alexander, of Bend, and fellow competitors in the expert category, run in Saturday's Powdr Shot biathlon event at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center.
I/I/alden (R)...................Y
Blumenauer (D)........... N OeFazio (D)................... N Bonamici (D)................ N Schrader (D) ................ N The Housealso voted on anamendment to the defense funding bill that
Millican Valley a popular spot for homesteaders acentury ago
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would have restricted the National Security Agency's authority to
collect data on Americans under Section 215 of the Patriot Act. SeeWeek/B6
Correction A report headlined, "School-based health
clinic proves popular," which appearedTuesday, July 23, onpage B1, incorrectly reported
the status of a grant program supporting the health clinic at a
Redmond elementary school. The grant is still available to Deschutes
County and used tocertify and support schoolbased health clinics. The
Bulletin regrets the error.
Compiled by Don Hoiness from archived copies of The Bulletin at the DesChutes Historical Museum.
100 YEARS AGO For the week ending July 27, 1913
Sections described by settlers — Millican by B.E. Davis Less than three years ago, there were but one or two homesteaders living in the whole Millican valley, 20 to 30 miles southeast of Bend. Less than two years ago, there were only eight or ten homesteaders throughout this territory. Today the entire valley is dotted with the cabins of those who have come to stay. There are now in the neighborhood of 60
YESTERDAY homesteaders located in the valley and a considerable number more, having filed this year, will move on their claims this fall, which will swell the total to about 80 homesteaders. The majority of this number have families, some with six and seven children. The homestead land in this immediate vicinity has now practically all been taken up. A school district (No. 87) has recently been organized and a school house will be erected in the near future. There are at present some 30 children of school age awaiting school privileges. So far this year, about 500 acres have been cleared of sage brush and put in cultivation, having been
planted principally to rye and wheat. Some experiments have been made with alfalfa and flax, with very good success, and it is now fully believed that dry land alfalfa is well adapted to this soil and will be a leading crop. A large acreage will be planted next spring. Considerable garden truck has also been planted and is doing well. About 75 acres were planted this spring to apple, peach, pear, plum, nut and othertrees,one homesteader alone having started a commercialorchard of 60 acres. A number of others have set out family orchards of from 100 to 500 trees. All fruit trees that have been given a reasonable amount of care are doing exceptionally well. SeeYesterday/B2
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
E VENT
AL E N D A R Bend location; 541-389-1058 or www.coba.org. "A MIDSUMMERNIGHT'S DREAM":The classic play by Shakespeare is performed by the Bend Experimental Art Theatre; $15 adult, $10 students18 and younger; 2 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-4 l9-5558 or www.beatonline.org. SUMMER SUNDAYCONCERT:The W ashington-based one-man rock act Tony Smiley performs; free; 2:30 p.m., gates open at noon; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-3185457 or www.bendconcerts.com. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Southern Oregon poets Jonah Bornstein and Steve Dieffenbacher will read from their work; free; 3-4 p.m.; Dudley's BookshopCafe,135 N.W .M innesota Ave., Bend; 541-749-2010. WILLOW GROVE: The Portland country band performs as part of Turf Tunes concert series; free; 5-7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; www.sunriversharc. com. THE DIRKQUINN BAND:The Pennsylvani abasedjazz-funk guitarist performs; $7 in advance, $12 at the door; 6 p.m.; The Sound Garden,1279 N.E. Second St., Bend; 541-633-6804 or www. thesoundgardenstudio.com.
TODAY
OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS II:A U.S. Equestrian Federation class AA international hunterjumper competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.;J BarJ Boys Ranch,62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-389-1409, tryan©jbarj. org or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. RUN FOR THE BIRDS: 8K and children's 1K flat and scenic runs, prizes, post-race celebration, and free entry to the nature center; proceeds benefit the Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory; $25 in advance, $35 day of race, $15 for children's 1K; 8 a.m. race start, 7 a.m. late registration, 9:30 a.m. children's race; Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Drive; 541-593-1000 or www.sunriver-resort.com/birds. PASSPORT TONATURE: Featuring interpretive stations, activities and stamps for event passport; shuttle provided to/from the resort or Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic and Recreation Center; free; 10 a.m.-1 p.m.; Sunriver Nature Center 8 Observatory, 57245 River Road; 541-593-4394. SISTERSARTS &CRAFTS FESTIVAL:Featuring arts, crafts, food, entertainment, a classic car cruise (Saturday only) and a silent auction benefiting the Make-AWish Foundation of Oregon; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Creekside Park, U.S. Highway 20 and Jefferson MONDAY Avenue; 541-420-0279 or www. centraloregonshows.com. POP-UP PICNIC:Live music with TOUR OFHOMES:Featuring selffood and beverages; bring a blanket guided tours of homes throughout and canned food for Neighbor Central Oregon; free; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Impact; free admission; 5-7 p.m.;
Yesterday
Oregon anthropologist, who p assed through B end t h i s Contlnued from B1 morning en route to Eugene, A well d r ill ha s r ecently after excavating in the Fort been put in operation and as it Rock cave. In June and earis owned by a Millican Valley lier in July, Dr. Cressman and homesteader will remain in his field party, working under this vicinity until all who care a Carnegie Institution and to drill are supplied with water. University of Oregon grant, A splendid county road 60 feet studied various other caves of wide running through the en- south-central Oregon. tire valley was completed last The Fort Rock cave was summer and at present numer- brought to the attention of Dr. ous side roads are being built Cressman by Walter J. Perry to accommodate those living of Bend. This month the uniback from the main highway. versity scientist and his field Considerable fencing has also crew establisheda base camp been done. A number of the at Cabin Lake and started exsettlers have enclosed their en- cavation. Under the pumice tire claims. layer were found more than 70 Two grocery stores have moccasins, made from woven been established since the first sagebrush bark. Every one of the year — one at mile post of these moccasinshas been 23 and one at mile post 28, so partly burned. Many artifacts, the settlers now enjoy a regu- shipped from obsidian were lar mail service. also found in the cavern, which The homesteaders are all once faced the farreaching good boosters and the devel- Fort Rock lake of Pleistocene opment of the valley from now times. Some of the artifacts on will likely be by leaps and were crude in design, indicatbounds. ing considerable antiquity. Several layers of h u man habitation were found in the 75 YEARS AGO cave, and a great abundance For the week ending of bone was unearthed. Most July 27, 1938 of thesebones were obviously refuse from meals. The cavern Cave in Fort Rockcountry floor was carefully excavated yields early Indian relics in cross sectionsand perfect A little known cave of the stratigraphy was found. Fort Rock country, used by Human occupation of the rangestock as a storm shelter, cave apparently ended very has yielded data which may suddenly, with t h e co m ing prove that Indians inhabited of volcanic pumice. There is Central Oregon prior to the some indication that the pumlast volcanic eruptions, it was ice might have entered the learned here today. Indian ar- mouth of the cave in a hot contifacts have been found in the dition, and might have been cave, under a layer of volcanic responsible for the fire which pumice. apparently swept the cavern. The preliminary announceWaters from th e a n cient ment relative to the important lake apparently reached into discovery was made by Dr. the cave, now well above the L.S. Cressman, University of Fort Rock basin, and deposited
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vffvffw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
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The Bulletin file photo
Fairgoers watch the acrobatics of one of the several rides at the 2009 DeschutesCounty Fair.The 2013 version begins Wednesday at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center in Redmond. Carnival rides, games, rodeo and a free Cheap Trick concert are on the schedule for opening day. redmondfarmersmarket1©hotmail. com. TUESDAYFARMERSMARKET:Free admission; 3-7 p.m .;Brookswood Meadow Plaza, 19530 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541323-3370 or farmersmarket@ brookswoodmeadowplaza.com. MOUNTAINSTANDARD TIME: The Colorado bluegrass band performs; free admission; 6 p.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541TUESDAY 728-0749 or www.facebook. com/events/150546488460842/. REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-6 p.m.; Centennial TWILIGHT CINEMA:An outdoor Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen screening of "Ice Age"; bring Avenue; 541-550-0066 or low-profile chair or blanket; free; The CosmicDepot,342 N.E.Clay Ave., Bend; 541-385-7478 or www. thecosmicdepot.com. SARAH DONNER:The East Coast singer-songwriter performs at a house concert; location provided after ticket purchase; $10; 7 p.m.; Bend location; 541-480-5813 or www.elisemichaelsmedia. com/sarah-donner-concert.
6:30 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-585-3333 or www.sunriversharc.com. OREGON ENCYCLOPEDIA HISTORY NIGHT:"Seeing the Elephant: Songs Inspired bythe Oregon Trail" presented by The Quons; free; 7 p.m., doors open at6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. "SPRINGSTEEN & I": A screening of a compilation of the personal insights and reflections of Bruce Springsteen fans; $15; 7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. JIVE COULIS:The Ashland rock band performs, with the Mondegreens; free; 10 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116 or www. astroloungebend.com.
Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket©gmail.com or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. PICKIN' AND PADDLIN' MUSIC SERIES:Includes boat demonstrations in the Deschutes River; Polecat, the Bellingham bluegrass-Americana band performs, with John Hise; 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. WHERE'S WALDOPARTY: A wrap-up party for the month long W here's Waldo hunt;cakeand activities; free; 4-6 p.m., raffle drawings at 5:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. WHERE'S WALDO PARTY: A wrapup party for the month long Where's Waldo hunt; cake and activities; free; 4-6 p.m., raffle drawings at 5:30p.m.;PaulinaSpringsBooks, 422 S.W. Sixth St.,Redmond; 541-526-1491. ALIVE AFTERFIVE: Junior Toots performs, with Sagebrush Rock; at the north end of Powerhouse Drive; free; 5-8 p.m.; Old Mill District, 661 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-389-0995 or www. aliveafterfivebend.com. MUSIC IN THE CANYON: Featuring bluegrass and blues music from Burnin' Moonlight; free; 5:30-8 p.m.; American Legion Community Park, 850 S.W. RimrockWay, Redmond; www.musicinthecanyon. com.
WEDNESDAY DESCHUTESCOUNTY FAIR8I RODEO:Carnival rides, games, rodeo and a free CheapTrick concert; $6-$10 daily passes,$11$19 season passes, free for children 5 and younger; 10 a.m.-10 p.m., concert at 7 p.m., gates open at 5:30p.m.;DeschutesCounty Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711 or http://expo.deschutes.org/index. php/fair expo/fair/. BEND FARMERSMARKET:Free admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks Alley, between Northwest
wave rounded rocks. Geologists agree that Fort Rock lake once swept the southern base of the Paulina mountains. It was during the lake epoch that Indians apparently lived in the basin in great numbers. It is estimated that more than 100,000 arrow po ints have been found in the Fort Rock and Silver Lake valleys.
McNair, Princess Linda with Hal Peck and princess Ania with Richard Maudlin. Junior attendants were Julie Maudlin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Maudlin, and Bruce Reynolds, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Reynolds. Kessler Cannon, m a ster of ceremonies, outlined the event-packed schedule for the three-day celebration period,
found a blue chip prospect in little ol' Redmond, Ore. D.W. Frommer II, a l ocal custom bootmaker, said his boots will be t he o nly pair made by acontemporary bootmaker on display at Autry's new museum. "I was r eally s urprised," said Frommer. "I didn't even know how they got my name. I've been isolated in Central
for quite some time, he forgot about the whole thing. Then a few months ago, the curators called back and said they liked one pair — a style of boot popular in the early 1800s and the forerunner of the modern cowboy boot. The art of making Torrerjostyle boots spread and flourished until other styles became
50 YEARS AGO
highlighted by the pageants
Oregon for a number of years.
Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings.
I like the country and all that, but most of your good cust om bootmakers are in t h e Southwest." Autry, a famous movie cowboy and now president of the California A n gels b aseball team — the parent club of the Bend Bucks — expects to finish the museum this fall. The museum will feature mostly antiques, including antique cowboy boots. A p ai r o f T o r r erjo-style boots handcrafted by Frommer will be under glass at the museum. He was paid $600 to make the boots. Curators at t h e m u seum firsttelephoned Frommer after seeing some of his handmade boots featured in Sunset Magazine. Frommer sent the curators pictures of several styles of boots, but when he didn't hear back from them
"It's a very difficult technique," Frommer said. "It was the apex of the custom bootmaker's art to make a boot like this." The low-heel Torrerjo boot is made with just two pieces of leather, instead of the four pieces that go into styles popular today. Forming the front piece into an L-shape to fit around the foot is very difficult, Frommer said. Although he hasn't received a formal invitation, Frommer plans to visit the Gene Autry museum after it opens to see how his boots stack up against the craftsmen's work of the past.
For the week ending July 27, 1963
Sonny KO'sFloyd, Anne Brandis crowned will face 'Lippy' queen of1963 BendWater With Floyd Patterson now Pageant by Ila Grant Hopper demolished as a challenger, Blonde A n n e Bra n d is, 1 7-year-old daughter of M r . and Mrs. R.W. Brandis, was crowned queen of the 1963 Bend Water Pageant. She began her reign after
being crowned by Queen Eunice Fix of the 1962 fete. Surrounded by Princesses Ramona A d ams, R o chelle Anderson, Linda McPhee and A nia VanGorder, the n e w queen was revealed to her subjects when the stage curtains were opened following an interval during which Pageantarians cast their ballots. Earlier in the program, each court member made a short talk, telling what it has meant to herto be a Pageant princess. Pageantarians were escorts for the r oyal r etinue. B.A. "Dutch" Stover and W.A. Lackaff, who have been active in many pageants, including the first one 30 years ago, were escorts for Mrs. H.R. Bostelman,
heavyweightchampion Sonny Liston turned his attention to-
day to zipping the lip of young Cassius Clay. Big Sonny, whose ham-like fists floored ex-champion Patterson in a first round knockout will formally sign for his
defense against cocky young Clay, it was learned today. T hus w il l L i s to n m a k e good on a promise — or was it a threat — he made months ago when he told Clay, "You're next, loud mouth."
25 YEARS AGO For the week ending July 27, 1988
Boots head for Autry Museum When singingcowboy Gene Autry scouted for a bootmaker for his new Western Heritage Museum near Los Angeles, he
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REGON AROUND THE STATE
s oria museum's i ra reserves mari ime em
Willamette fraternity house scandal —Thesigmachi fraternity at Willamette University has lost its on-campus house in-
definitely following an investigation into Facebook comments that became public. The scandal erupted in early May after comments from
a private Facebook group of fraternity members wereposted online. They included conversations that usedsexually explicit and degrading language to describe women students and faculty members. The
Statesman Journal newspaper reports the school announcedThursday that its investigation was finished andthe chapter was found to
By Lori Tobias
location on i t s r o ute f r om The Oregonian Kamchatka Peninsula to the ASTORIA — J ef f S m i th Columbia River," Smith said. "Knowing th e s peed, their fields calls in the Columbia River Maritime Museum lic ourse, they could chart i t a, brary all the time — from all across the ocean and know ~ %L over the globe. So he wasn't each was or wasn't anywhere ~ U iR particularly surprised when near where the Japanese conthe gentleman called f r om voy was. It was a fascinating Thailand looking fo r s o me bit of detective work." information. Albeit not necessarily conWhat floored the library cuclusive. The two men came rator was when a second call up with different answers and "agreed to disagree," Smith came a week later from the ~ N k~ East Coast seeking the very said. same information. The Oregonian, Beth Nakamura/The Associated Press In addition to the ColumAnd no, the two di d n ot The Columbia River Maritime Museum in Astoria has an extenbia River Bar Pilot logs datknow each other. But they did sive collection of rare and first-edition ship journals and books, ing back to 1918, the library know that if y ou're looking including copies of Cook's voyages and an original ship log from also houses original copies for resources on the Pacific the1700s. It is believed to be the most extensive collection in the of Lloyd's Register of London Northwest's maritime history, Pacific Northwest. — the official record of comthere are few places better to m ercial ships — d a ting t o find your answers. 1889 and replicas as far back H ere, r e s earchers wi l l frequently have no clue the sian ships had crossed the Co- as 1764. There's the set of the find Captain James Cook's resource lies just around the lumbia River bar in the winter Encyclopedia Brittanica from Journalsfrom his three voy- corner. of 1941. If so, he was curious if the crew room on the USS "There are people living they had encountered the Jap- Oregon, a periodical collecages around the world, John Meares' journal of his voyage here in town who don't real- anese Fleet en route to bomb tion that includes hundreds of to the northwest in 1788 and ize the library is there," said Pearl Harbor. issues of Motor Boating since 1789 and an original ship log Smith, library curator. "It's not As a matter of fact, as reg- 1913, and 3,189 photos from from the fur trade era in the on the letterhead, not on the istered on page eight of the the Columbia River Packers 1770s. sign on the door. Unless you December 194 1 C o l umbia Association, which eventually That's along with thousands are looking for it, you are not River Bar Pilot ledger, there became Bumblebee. "The company at the time of otherdocuments and 30,000 going to know it is here. What had been two such ships: the historic photos. it comes down to is if we put Uritskey and the Klara Zitkin. hired a photographer to cap" It's definitely one of t h e out the welcome mat and put A week later, when Martin ture the day-to-day activities finest research libraries on out the neon sign, we are con- Bollinger, author of "Stalin's in the early 1940s," Pearson the West Coast," said David cerned we will be inundated Slave Ships," called with the said. "He just captured the Pearson, museum deputy di- with requests and we wouldn't same query, Smith was ready people. They trusted him. It rector. "Over the years, I've be able to meet them." — albeit a bit nonplussed. documents an era. He pho"I thought this is really bi- tographed for about three or given tours and there seems But when those requests tobe asense of awe. To aper- come, meetthem they do. zarre," recalled Smith. "I've four years." son they are always genuinely Such as the two gentlemen got two people separated by The library is open only impressed bythe scope of the separated by t h ousands of 12,000 miles, asking the same one day a week — Tuesdays collection." miles, but bonded by a singu- question." — and visits are by appointWhile it's a grand 51 years lar question. He asked if the two knew ment only. old, the Ted M. Natt Research It was about four years ago each other,then made the And while it may not be acLibrary at th e museum rewhen Hak Hakason found the introductions. cessible to a large number of "With all that information visitors, those who have acmains one of the best kept library on th e I nternet and secrets on the Oregon Coast. sent in his request. Hakason compiled, it gave them an ac- cessed the collection count Even visitors to the museum wanted to know if any Rus- curate record ofthe vessels' themselves as fortunate.
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RoseburgVeteransAffairs counselor aggravated by year-long investigation The Associated Press ROSEBURG — A Veterans Affairs counselor i n R o seburg has been idle for close to a year as officials investigate whether she had an intimate relationship with a v e teran who attended support groups for those with post-traumatic stress disorder. Jamie Carlson, 33, has remained on the payroll during the investigation, collecting her $65,000 annual salary while spending her workday on Facebook and YouTube. Although her work l if e m i ght sound cushy, Carlson said she'd rather be meeting with patients. "They have made it intolerable for me," she told the Roseburg News-Review.
Carlson denies any improper behavior with the veteran, whom she describes as an old friend, and a union representative says the entire case is based on rumor. Roseburg VA spokeswoman Carrie Boothe said officials will not discuss employee issues with the press. The case, however, appears to be reaching a conclusion. Carlson said she was given a document July 15 that alleges that she failed to notify the VA about a "dual relationship" with the veteran. Roseburg VA Director Carol Bogedain will make a decision about Carlson's status within 30 days, according to the notice. Carlson has been employed
by Roseburg VA Medical Center for six years and has supportfrom some veterans. Bud Bessey, Vietnam War veterans,said Carlson helped him with post-traumatic stress disorder and that his condition has worsened without her. "I am not getting the care I got when Jamie was there," Bessey said. "I have had to double up on my meds. My home life has been affected. I'm taking twice as many 'nice guy' pills as I'm supposed to." Bessey,chiefofthe Roseburg branch of the Fleet Reserve Association, also said he was an advocate for Carlson's friend and helped him qualify for VA care. He said that the man was never Carlson's patient.
have violated university conduct standards. The chapter also lost its recruiting privileges indefinitely.
POliCe ID ShOOter —Police haveidentified18-year-old Jared Leone asthe man accused of taking an officer's gun andfiring one shot into a wall atBeaverton City Hall lateFriday.Leonewasbooked into the Washington County Jail on charges of resisting arrest, assaulting a pub-
lic safety officer andunlawful use of aweapon. PolicesayLeonetold a City Hall records clerk hewasoverdosing from drugs. Theclerk alerted officers in the building. Leone allegedly grabbed an officer's gun during the ensuing struggle and fired a shot. No one was hit.
Credit rePOrt miStake —Afederal jury in Oregon hasawarded $18.6 million to awoman who spent two years unsuccessfully trying to get Equifax Information Services to fix major mistakes onhercredit report. The Oregonian reported that Friday's award is likely to be appealed. Equifax is one of the nation's major credit bureaus. Julie Miller
of Marion County wasawarded$18.4 million in punitive damagesand $180,000 in compensatory damages.Thejury was told she contacted Equifax eight times between 2009 and 2011 in an effort to correct inac-
curacies, including erroneousaccounts andcollection attempts, as well as a wrong Social Security number and birthday. — From wire reports
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
BITUARIES OREGON NEWS
DEATH NOTICES Joan Alee
Beckley Daryle Ashcraft, of Prineville Aug. 6, 1933 - July 25, 2013 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, 541-447-6459 Services: Visitation will be at Prineville Funeral Home on Monday, July 29 from 4PM-8PM. Funeral services will be on Tuesday, July 30, 2013 at 9:30AM at Prineville Funeral Home 199 NE 10th St., Prineville, Oregon.
Elvira Anne Chantry, of Crooked River Ranch Oct. 13, 1921 - July 25, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Per Elvira's request, no services will be held. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701.
John Loring, of Sisters Mar. 14, 1933 - July 20, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Friday, August 2, 2013 10:30 A.M. at Sisters Community Church, 1300 W. McKenzie Hwy., Sisters, Oregon 97759. Contributions may be made to:
Sisters Community Church P.O. Box 309, Sisters, Oregon 97759.
Kenneth "Ken" E. Hall, of La Pine Dec. 13, 1963 - June 29, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: An informal, Celebration of Life Gathering/BBQ will be held on Sunday, August 4, 2013 at 1:00PM at Bayside Joinville Park, located at 2111 Kehoe, in San Mateo, California.
Mary Katherine Matthews, of Bend Dec. 8, 1932 - July 22, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No Services will be held at this time.
Randall"Randy" Corey Tacker, of La Pine June 16, 1956 - July 16, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Private services will be held.
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific g Uidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeralhomes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
Dec. 6, 1928 - May 28, 2013 Joan Alee Beckley (pron ounced Joann) o f B e n d , OR, passed away May 28, 2013 at St. Charles Medic al Center i n B e n d . S h e w as 84 years old. J oan w a s born on a dalry farm in
tween PaJoan Beckley and Cloverdale, Oregon to Alva and Margie (Walton) L earned o n D e c ember 6 , 1928. She graduated from Nestucca High School, att ended Oregon State Uni v ersity, an d m ar r i e d Charles L . Bec k l e y on June Zl, 1948, before they m oved t o B e n d i n 1 9 5 2 . She remained a resident of Bend until her death. Joan w o r k e d f or th e B end School D i s t r ict f o r many years as an element ary school s ecretary b e g inning w it h t h e f i r s t r o tating school secretary for Y ew L a ne , Y o u ng , M a r shall and K i n gston Grade Schools. She then m o v ed on t o Rei d - T h o mpson, K enwood, J e w e ll , B u c k i ngham and back t o K e n w ood b e f or e r e t i r in g i n 1 987. She w a s a n a we s ome secretary a n d s h e l oved th e k i d s a n d t h e y loved her. Over th e y ears she was involved in many a ctivities som e o f w h i c h i ncluded: volunteering f o r t he B e n d Fi l t e r Ce n t e r d uring t he Col d W ar ( tracking u n identified ai r craft), 4-H, Campfire Girls, First Un i t e d M et h o d i st Church, PTA, Beta Sigma P hi, L a dies o f t h e E l k s , E agles an d M o o s e . S h e w as a n am a z i n g s e a m s tress an d c o ok , f a m o u s f or h e r p ea n u t b r i t t l e w hich s h e m a d e ea c h Christmas. Sh e l ov ed f lowers a n d gar d e n i n g, knitting, walking, reading, crossword puzzles, watching f o o t b al l ( e s p ec ially t h e B e a v ers) a n d spending t i m e w i t h h e r family and f r i ends. Those who knew her enjoyed her quick wi t a n d h e r w e a lth o f knowledge of t h e h i s tory of our community. S he is s u r v ived b y h e r children, M a r ilee Beckley Carson (Ed) of B e nd, and Bill B e c k le y of Ben d ; g randchildren , A sh l e y C arson Cottingham ( C ar r oll), o f Por t l a nd , C o l e Carson of LA and A n drew B eckley ( K a f iat) o f V a n couver, WA ; g r e at-grandchildren, A l e x is , F e l a na, a nd Aminah B eckley a n d C hester Cottingham; h e r s isters, D o n n a Hat f i e l d ( Jim) of L i n c oln C it y a n d D orothy Y a t e s o f Be n d ; a nd h e r m any n i e c e s , nephews and friends. S he w a s p r e c e ded i n death by he r p a rents, her brothers, A r d e n L e a r n ed a nd G l en n L e a r n ed, h e r sister Mardaneen Learned a nd h a l f - sister G e r t r u d e Learned. A Celebration of L ife for f amily and f r i ends will b e held at the Moose Lodge in B end at I :0 0 p .m. on A u gust 3, 2013. I n l i e u o f fl o w e rs , t h e f amily i s r e q u esting t h a t d onations be made to t h e Leukemia Society, 9320 S W B a r bu r B l v d . , S u i t e 350, Portland, OR 97219.
DEATHS
researc re o warns a ou c enziewa ers e By Samuel Stites
is because the supply side is changing, we need to rethink the demand side and re-evaluate our use," said Sproles, who led the study as a doctoral student at OSU. "Some of the decisions are going to be ones we don't want to make." "We have irrigation, we have municipal use, we have endangered species, hydropower and r ecreation that we're all using this water for," he said. "This isn't a doomsday tale, it's more of a cautionary advice note." Sproles said th e w a tershed's future could have implications on the entire Willamette Valley, home to more than 70 percent of Oregon's population, not just the McKenzie River basin. This is because almost25 percent of the Willamette River's flow comes from the McKenzie, he said. Officials at the Eugene Water and Electric Board said
erage temperature increase. It concluded that areas such EUGENE — The average as the Willamette Valley, that temperature on Earth could rely on low elevation snowincrease by 3.6 degrees by packs formuch oftheirwater, the middle of this century, ac- face special risks that need to cording to data from climate be planned for. change researchers in nearly In low elevation mountain 20 countries. ranges,snow often falls near And that increase is enough the freezing point so it takes to potentially affect the main only a small rise in temperasource o f E u g ene-Spring- ture for snow to change to field's drinking water, accord- rain. "As more precipitaing to a study by Oregon State tion falls as rain, there will University scientists. be more chance of w i nter T he McKenzie River i s flooding as well as summer the major source of drinking drought in the same season," water in the Eugene-Spring- the OSU study said. feld area. The s ingle-digit And Oregonians need to increasein temperatures pre- be thinking and planning for dicted worldwide means the these future changes, said snowpacks thatfeed the river Eric Sproles, a researcher for could drop by 56 percent be- the Oak Ridge Institute for tween 2040 and 2060, accord- Scienceand Education,which ing to the OSU study. is part of the U.S. Department The study simulated snow- of Energy Institute. "The timing and delivery of packs of the McKenzie watershed using 20 years of data, water is projected to change in factoring in the 3.6-degree av- the future. What that means The Register-Guard
FEATURED OBITUARY
Lindy Boggsusedconfidence, authority and graciousness to win overWashington By Stephanie Hanes
Lindy Boggs speaks during a 2000 news
The Washington Post
Lindy Boggs, a Democratic Party doyenne from Louisiana whose magnolia charm and political acumen helped her husband rise to U.S. House majority leader, and who then launched her own congressional and diplomatic career after his disappearance in an airplane crash, died Saturday at her home in Chevy Chase, Md. She was 97. The death was confirmed by her daughter, broadcast journalist Cokie Roberts, who said the medical cause of death was not immediately known. Politics had been central to
conference in Rome. Boggs, of Louisiana, who fought for civil rights during nearly 18 years in Congress after succeeding her late husband in the House
of Representatives, died Saturday at her home in Maryland.
Lindy Boggs' life long before she won a special election in 1973 to succeed her husband, Thomas Hale Boggs Sr. Her family, the Claibornes, traced its roots to colonial Jamestown and became one of the country's early political dynasties. She arrived in Washington in 1941, the 24-year-old wife of the youngest freshman in the House ofRepresentatives; she quickly delved into the campaigns, politics and strategies of the Capitol, acting as a Democratic hostess,campaign manager and adviser to her husband, who was known as Hale, and scores of other politicians. Her children followed in her footsteps. Her son, Tommy Boggs, is one ofthe marquee partners of the law firm and lobbyist group Patton Boggs; her youngest daughter, Cokie Roberts, is a journalist who has worked for National Public Radio and ABC-TV; her oldest daughter,
Massimo Sambucetti / Associated Press file photo
the late Barbara Boggs Sigmund, was mayor of Princeton, N.J. With the Southern graciousness of her plantation upbringing, Lindy Boggs was said to charm, flatterand persuade even the most curmudgeonly of congressmen. As a representative for nine terms, she used those skills to support civil rights, eventually becoming the only white lawmaker elected from a majority black district, and to pass legislation that helped women and children. As a member of the Appropriations Committee, she helped shape an amendment to the 1974 Equal Credit Opportunity Act — which made it illegal for creditors to discriminate against applicants based on race and other fac-
tors. Boggs hand-wrote "sex or marital status" into the text and then passed out new copies of the bill with the phrase included. She suggested sweetly that the omission "must have been an oversight." The amendment passed. "Different politicians have different techniques, but not many could get away w ith Lindy's technique," Rep. Bob Livingston, R-La., who served with Boggs on the House Appropriations Committee, told The New York Times in 2000. "It w as ' Dahlin' t his' a n d
— From wire reports
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Dorothy Elizabeth Overlund, 92, passed away peacefully at St. Charles Hospital in Redmond, OR. Born to Emanuel and Jennie Jesson September 22, 1920 in Corvallis, 0 g h h r p dg d l d from C orvallis High School in 1938.
Dorothy's second marriage was to Harold N. Overlund on July 7, 1948. They raised theircombined family in Oregon starting in Toledo, then Oakridge, Walterville, Gilchrist and Crescent. After Harotd's death La i994, shemoved to Redmondwhere shehas resided for 18 years.
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She loved to read, cook, feed the wild birds, hear about her many grandchildren and follow her favorite team, the Boston Red Sox. She never missed a game on television.
Dorothy is preceded in death by her husband Harold, her sister Iona Perkins, brothers Dude and Gordon Jess (au of Corvaltis), her daughter Ann Stewart of Redmond, and her son-in-law Roger Cowart of Portland. She leaves behind five children: Judy Jones (Dan) of Portland, Wally Overlund (Joye) of Clatskanie, Dotti Cowart of Portland, Norm Overtund (Kathy) of Eugene,and Darreu Overtund of Redmond, 15 grandchildren and 24great-grandchildren.
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'Sweetie that.' And she usually walked out with what she came in to get and never mentioned it again." She continued working with philanthropic, civic and cultural institutions after she retired from Congress in 1990. She was Catholic, and in 1997 President Bill Clinton appointed her U.S. ambassador to the Holy See at the Vatican, a position she held until 2001. Boggs, Clinton joked, was "maybe the only person on Earth wh o c o uld c onvince the pope I am worth dealing with." Throughout her career, she insisted, she truly liked almost everyone she met — P residents Richard Nixon and John F. Kennedy, Democrats and Republicans, staff and lobbyists, journalists and campaign w orkers. Most people said they liked her, too — no common praise in Washington.
Dorothy Elizabeth Overlund
ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld: J.J. Cale, 74: Singer and g uitarist who wrote two of Eric Clapton's biggest hits. Influenced Mark Knopfler and also Clapton, who covered his songs "After Midnight" and "Cocaine." Th e O k l ahomaborn musician worked with acts such as Delaney & Bonnie before starting a solo career. Died Friday in La Jolla, Calif. Jon Leyne, 55: BBC foreign correspondent who spent more than 25 yearscrossing continents and covering conflicts for thebroadcaster,has died. He joined the BBC in 1985 and worked as a United Nations c orrespondent and was t he U.S. State Department correspondent during the Sept. 11 attacks and covered the 2006 conflict between Israel and Lebanon's Hezbollah.
they're not too worried about the OSU report's findings, and that they plan to continue to seek new ways to promote responsible and sustainable use of water from the McKenzie watershed. EWEB recently sponsored its own study, which found the geomorphology of the McKenzie Riverbasin provides for a much slower water flow system that is less affected by climate change and snowpack melt due to the sponge like qualities of the volcanic rocks in the upper cascades, according to J il l H o yenga, EWEB water resource and system planner. "Snow and rain soak into that spongy rock formation," she said. "The snowpack is important but the rain will also soak into the ground water. We don't anticipate that climate change will have a huge effecton our water supply in the next few decades."
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Arrangementsare through Redmond Memorial Chapel with internment at Redmond Memorial Cemetery. She will be remembered fondly by family and friends at a Celebration of Life in September. Please sign our online guestbook www.redmondmemoriahcom.
LOCALLY FAMILY OWNED ts.OPERATED We honor all pre-arranged plans including Neptune Society. 0
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SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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Submitted photo
A team of Rimrock Expeditionary Alternative Learning Middle School students measure stream health by classifying aquatic invertebrates at Tumalo Creek.
Outdoors
While some have to make duewiththeirbuilding, GiamelContinued from B1 laro acknowledges that CenTo approach this topic, he tral Oregon is an easy place to is attempting to gather every- take advantage of a traditional thing he can about a student's in-context l earning e x periexperience, including their ac- ence. He pointed to a class oftual point of view. feredlastyear by Culver High "I'm designing a study where School as a great example. In I'm planning on placing point- the course, students from the of-view cameras on students," class designed and built a padGiamellaro said. "With a study dlewheel hydroelectric generalike that, you'd be able to see tor at Cove State Park. Culver what they're paying attention School District Superintendent to, what they are hearing and StefanieGarber said the key how they're verbally reacting was having students move to other students. You'd also be from understanding a concept able to see what they're looking to actually putting something at when a teacher is teaching they learned in the classroom and what, if anything, is dis- to work. This jump, she said, tracting them." enlivened her students. "I was mentoring a student at These cameras will allow Giamellaro to get closer to risk of not graduating who was overcoming what he calls the in the class, and his eyes just "fundamental problem of edu- lit up when he talked about his cation research" — the inabil- work out at the park," Garber ity to directly access a student's said. " But when he would comthought process. pare it to his math class, where Speaking about his f i eld, he'd be assigned problems one Giamellaro more oftenpoints to through 30 on page 34 or somequestions than answers, a sign thing like that, he just wasn't as of how difficult a project it is to excited." study how and why we learn. Giamellaro also highlighted There is progress being made, the work of Rimrock Expedihowever, and Giamellaro said tionary Alternative Learning that a big step involved recog- Middle School, a public charter nizing the importance of social school in Bend. The school's interactions in learning. director, Roger White, said "We fully accept that social the seventh- and eighth-grade interactions are important at classes are involved in longthis point, but years ago it was term environmental studies. just accepted that there was a Seventh graders are studying teacher talking and students the implications of a project at learning," he said. "But we Ryan Ranch Meadow to inunare social learners and social date part of the meadow. creatures." The eighth-grade class has been focused on restorati on 'Eyes just lit up' efforts near Tumalo Creek. BeGiamellaro is quick to ad- yond the educational benefits mit that schools are not about of working in the field, White to fully embrace in-context discussed the emotional benlearning. As a result, he is in- efits of fieldwork. "Whenever they go out in terested in how teachers can recreate the conditions that en- the field, they also do some rich learning in the field back sort of art project and reflecwithin the classroom. Part of tion, and this helps them dethis includes acknowledging velop a sense of place and an that some context always sur- emotional connection to the rounds us. planet they are studying," he "It's not necessarily about said. "As future stewards of the going to exotic places or ex- planet, this is important." p eriencing context that a r e Giamellaro is familiar with far away from ou r c u rrent the emotional impact of workexperience," Giamellaro said. ing in the field. As a college stu"The context can be in our dent at the University of Wyoclassroom, think of engineer- ming, he was drawn to field i ng principles. You're in an courses. engineered building, and that This passion eventually led relates to what students are to a job with the U.S. Fish and learning." Wildlife Service. From there,
Biathlon
new ones on both public and private land. For Saturday's race, runners completed three to five laps of the nearly one-mile course, followed by five shots with a scoped pellet rifle from 10 to 15
he entered education, and after student teaching in a school that e m b raced i n - context learning, Giamellaro says he "became addicted to it."
Standardized learning Despite encouraging findings about the effectiveness of this teaching, Giamellaro says there are obstacles. "There is a perception that w e have toprepare students for the test, and it's a terrible stereotype now, but the 'gestalt' of education thought has moved toward p r eparing s t udents for tests and that has changed how teachers teach," he said. "Privateschools are more free to take an in-context approach because they're not locked into standardized testing. Funding is definitely an issue, too." F urther hurting th e m i ssion of science education is the nature of standardized tests. Giamellaro says that m o st tests that aim at assessing a student'sscience knowledge are primarily language arts exams, testing their ability to read and understand the questions. Nonetheless, he is positive about recent developments that are advancing science education. "There's a lot o f e xciting
things happening right now, including the Next Generation Science Standards, which is a national movement to create some coherence in science education," Giamellaro said. "It definitely takes a back burner to language arts and math, science education can be all over the place, hopefully the NGSS will provide guidance to teachers and districts on how to have a more coherent line of inquiry throughout the K-12 experience." Giamellaro is also encouraged by what he sees as an obvious argument for in-context
learning. "We would never send a teacher out to be a t eacher without having them l earn in-context. We always send a teacher out to a classroom to experienceteaching as a student teacher. That experience in the classroom in the context of education is the most important thing we offer student teachers." — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com
biathlon events could catch on as people come to know that Continued from B1 such a thing exists. "It's still a new event. Kids The two haveteamed up to stage a series of summer bilove it, they love to shoot pellet athlons at Powdr resorts this guns," Nyberg said. "For a lot summer — they've been to Kilof people, it's their first experilington in Vermont and Gor- yards — and any penalty laps ence shooting a rifle." goza Park in Utah, and from assessed. Racing c ontinues Likemostcompetitors, Saturhere, they'll head to Colorado's today with a mountain bike day'srace was the firstsummer Copper Mountain, Boreal near biathalon, run in identical fash- biathlon for Ashly Hoffman of Reno, and back to Park City. ion but with an approximately Bend. Hoffman, 33, said it was Tyson Apostol, son of Euclid two-mile loop for riders. tricky to shoot while breathing Timber Frames head Kip AposEthan Allison, 14, won the heavilyfrom the run, the crosstol, said the idea came about intermediate class on Saturhairs of her scope bobbing up because of his father's desire to day, and said accurate shooting and down as she tried to zero develop an event to raise funds is critical, even if it takes time in on the target. Just the same, to promote sustainable forestry. to line up a shot. she hit three of five targets on " Hitting the shots i s t h e her first two turns through the The company f r equently uses timber killed through in- thing, because those penalty range, five of five on her third sect infestations, he said, and laps are tough," he said. — and then, just one of five on views theuse ofdead timber as Chris Nyberg, president of her last time through, tacking a way of reducing wildfire risk Powdr Corp„ h a s c ompeted on four penalty laps between and sequesteringthe carbon di- in all three running biathlons herself and the finish line. "That one, ooh, I really startoxide that would otherwise be h eld this summer. He w on released into the atmosphere the inaugural race in Killing- ed to question myself," Hoffas dead trees decompose. ton, but concedes low turnout man said. Today's mountain bike biathWith around 30 entrants, the — just eight competitors — was M t. Bachelor race was the larg- key to his victory. lon starts at 9 a.m. near the Mt. est Powdr Shot event yet, Tyler Nyberg said the sustainable Bachelor Nordic Lodge, and Apostol said, though still far forestry mission of the event competitors can register online too small to pay for any signifi- meshes well with Powdr's ef- or at the race site until shortly cant degree offorest cleanup. forts to minimize its environ- before the start. Information In partnership with Powdr, he mental impact. Powdr has com- about the event is available at said they're hoping the race mitted to supporting the race mtbachelor.com. series can grow large enough series for the next few years, he — Reporter: 541-383-0387, to remove dead trees and plant said,and he suspects summer shammersCbendbulleti n.com
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
SPOTLIGHT
Fair seeks plant entries Growing somegoodlooking broccoli or have a show-stopping chrysanthemum in your garden? Consider entering it in the Deschutes County Fair. The fair
association will accept entries in the land products and floral depart-
ments onTuesdayfrom noon to 6 p.m. To find out what can
be entered, check out the list of categories and exhibit criteria in De-
partments I and J in the Premium Book, available at local Les Schwab
Tire Centers or www. expo.deschutes.org. Make sure entries are in good condition and have uniformity. For best results, consider
consulting "Selecting and Preparing Vegetables for Exhibit" at the
'k»'
Oregon State University Extension Service.
Fair entrants can earn $5 first place, $4 second and $3 third.
Residents can register through the fair website, above, although that is not required.
New local fitness contest set
»
»
s r
Photos by Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
After much planning and work, Redmond residents, from left, Valerie Grindstaff, Chelsea Ramsey and Shannon Pugerude recently launched Wyldwoodz Resource Center, a group aimed at helping children with emotional and social special needs as well as their families. One of the group's first efforts was an art camp in Redmond.
Anyone in Central Oregon who needsmotivation can join a new "Get Fit Central Oregon
Challenge" by KardioFit, a provider of personalized, incentive-based
health and wellness programs. This 12-month health
improvement program incorporates activity tracking, biometric data
and meal planning. More than $25,000 is
available to encourage positive lifestyle and behavior changes. The program comeswith a lottery-style cash reward system. For example, if participants get eight hours of sleep,
ea s o or ami ies
Aunallie Schmidt looks on as Wyldwoodz camp participant Kaitlynn Davenport, left, looks at a craft she was working on.
they are entered into a lottery system that pays
out rewards and prizes, drawing. A participant's chance to win will in-
Wyldwoodz ResourceCenter
crease the more they
Events:Science daycamp,
including a $1 million
participate. Nearly 70 percent of KardioFit members have improved their
eating habits, 60 percent are walking more
frequently, and almost 40 percent have lost weight, according to a
press release from Bend Memorial Clinic, a supporter of the program.
To learn more or to
join, visit www.getfit
centraloregon.com. In-
Aug. 5-7; Family Fun Night, Aug. 22; Parents Night Out, Aug. 30. Find more details at the group's website.
• 3 Redmondmomsstart newgroupfor kids with specialneedsandtheir families By Alandra Johnson • The Bulletin
livia Pugerude looks like a cute,
Board members: Wyldwoodz is looking
typical 12-year-old girl. But inside,
for board members to help create the nonprofit.
she is far from typical.
Board members should be able to donate10 to 15 hours per month and
share a belief in the group's mission. Those with skills
or a background in finance, legal affairs, fundraising,
Olivia has psychosis. According to her mom, Shannon Pugerude, this means Olivia can experience delusions and often doesn't
com, or email thekrew© kardio.com.
public relations or strategic
understand what is real and what is not. On
planning are particularly encouraged to apply.
a typical day, several times a day, Olivia loses
Ghost Tree starts soon
Contact:www.
The Ghost Tree Invitational Golf Tourna-
gmail.com,541-977-6808.
formation: www.kardio.
ment and Dinner will
wyldwoodzresource.com, wyldwoodzredmond©
touch with reality and drifts. She believes things have happened to her that haven't and she can't remember whathas actually occurred.
Olivia also has big meltdowns — the kind of giant tantrums thrown by toddlers. Pugerude says during one recent breakdown Olivia ended up on the ground between double doors at a grocery store, with people walking around her. Another just a few days back led neighbors, trying to be helpful, to call the
police. "This is our normal," said Pugerude, who is also a special education teacher with the Redmond School District. She has worked hard over the years to learn as much as she can about how best to help her daughter, who is intellectually and academically strong, but lacks emotional and social skills. Sometimes Pugerude feels worn out. Having a child with extremeneeds can be an isolating experience. But Pugerude has forged a strong bond with two other Redmond moms — Chelsea
Ramsey and Valerie Grindstaff — who are also raising children with complicated social and emotional needs. They share their frustrations, fearsand funny stories. "By coming together and supporting each other, we can give each other the support we need," said Pugerude. The trio has also spent a great deal of time together dreaming of what could be, and now, those dreams have evolved into tangible plansbinders full of curriculum and a business plan with a name, Wyldwoodz Resource Center. This summer, the first few Wyldwoodz programs have started. The group teamed with the Redmond Area Park and Recreation District to offer a series of summer camps aimed at children with special needs. They also have plans for a parents' night out and a family night. See Support/C3
take place at the Crosswater Club in Sunriver
Aug. 23 and24. The event will start on Aug. 23 with a
four-person scramble tournament that begins in double shotgun style
at7:30a.m. and1 p.m.
T ewon erso Ye owstone,o t eroa
at the Crosswater Club's golf course. It will then
By Amy Bertrand St. Louis Post-Dispatch
feature a dinnerwhere guests cansample22 dishes preparedby16 chefs the nextevening
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK — As we walked along the trail, partly shaded by towering and
from 4 to 10:45 p.m.
ubiquitous lodgepole pines,
To learn moreabout the event or purchase tickets to the golf tournament and dinner, visit
www.ghosttree invitational.com. Proceeds will benefit
the Ronald McDonald House of Central Or-
egon and theAssistance League of Bend. — From staff reports
Brien Sirimeturos / St. Louis Post-Dispatch
The Thumb Geyser Basin features a boardwalk that takes you past a number of steaming, colorful hot springs.
I turned and looked around. We were alone, had been for a couple of miles. Backpack loaded with raincoats, sunscreen and cameras, and bear spray on my belt buckle, I was on a tour of our country's first national park, Yellowstone, with my family and a guide from the Yellowstone Association Institute. When I madethe observa-
tion, guide Carolyn Harwood gave us this fascinating tidbit: Of the park's 33 million annual visitors, only about l percentever leave the developed areas (visitors centers, pullouts, boardwalks). Our hike, a 4.5-mile loop that started on the Clear Lake trail, took us through open pastures, where we saw elk, to wooded areas where we were on the lookout for bears, to a spot that looked like the moon with boiling pots of mud and steamy hot springs. Our hike was like walking through a "Star Wars" movie, from Naboo to Endor to Tatooine.
After a couple of miles, we emerged at Artist Point. It's not hard to see how the lookout got its name: A gorgeous view of the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, a deep canyon, its walls painted with a palette of yellow, red, orange and black, the result of hydrothermal alterations to the rocks. It also affords a spectacular view of the Lower Falls, a gushing waterfall that plunges 308 feet, nearly triple the height of the Upper Falls, just up the river, and twice as high as Niagara Falls. See Yellowstone /C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
M II E STONE ~
Formvfor engagement wedding anniversary orbiribday announcementsareavailabieat TheBtdietitt I777SW CbattdierAve.,Bend or by emailing milestones@bendbulletin.com.Forms and photos must be submitted within one month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383-0358.
ANNIVERSARIES
ENGAGEMENTS
I
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Il. ij' g, /Iwg t .
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Kaylin Elms and Bradly Larson
Lisa and Todd Ainsworth
Ainsworth Todd and Lisa (Kyle) Ainsworth, of Sunriver, will celebrate their 25th anniversary. The couple were married Aug. 6, 1988, at First Presbyterian Church in Portland. They have four children, Kathryn, of Vicksburg, Miss., and Sam, Will and Kayann, all of Sunriver.
Mr. Ainsworth works as an administrative law judge for the State of Oregon. Mrs. Ainsworth works as a b usiness loan officerfor Central Oregon Intergovernmental Coun-
Elms — Larson
ogy and pre-pharmacy at
Kaylin Elms and Bradly Larson, both of La Pine, plan to marry Aug. 18 at Elk Lake Resort. T he future bride is t h e daughter of Daniel and Carla Elms, of Bend. She is a 2010 graduate of La Pine High School and is studying biol-
OSU-Cascades. She is also a math tutor. The future groom is the son of Ron and Dana Larson, of La Pine. He is a 2005 graduate of La Pine High School and attended Central Oregon Community College. He works as a lumber grader for Interfor in Gilchrist.
cil. The couple enjoy camping trips, skiing and everyday activities as a family. They have lived in Central Oregon for 11 years.
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Barbara and Gary Elms
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Elms
grandchildren a n d one great-grandchild. Gary and Barbara (Smith) M r. E lm s w o r ke d f o r Elms, o f R e d mond, c el- Roto-Rooter until his retireebrated their 50th wedding ment in 2006. Mrs. Elms anniversary. worked for Midstate ElecT he couple w ere m a r - tric for 22 years until her r ied J un e 2 8 , 1 9 63, i n r etirement i n 2 0 06 . T h e Lompoc, Calif.They have couple enjoy hunting, fishtwo children, Alecia (and ing and spending time with Donald) Atwood, of Gold- their grandchildren. endale, Wash., and Daniel They have lived in Cen(and Carla), of Bend; four tralOregon for27 years.
Ig Eliza Broehl and Travis Harper
Broehl — Harper Eliza Broehl and Travis Harper, both of La Pine, plan to marry Sept. 7 at Long Hollow Ranch in Sisters. T he future bride is t h e daughter of James and Karen Broehl, of The Dalles. She is a 2007 graduate ofThe Dalles Wahtonka HighSchool and a 2012 graduate of Oregon Institute of Technology, where
Bruce and Judy Carpenter
Carpenter Bruce and Judy (Fest) Carpenter, of Bend, will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary with an open house from I:30 to 4:30 p.m. Aug. 25 at the Bend Church of the Nazarene. They are also planning a trip this fall. The couple were married Sept. 7, 1963, in Dallas, Ore. They have two children, Vince
and (Karissa) and Brenda
and (Danny) Graham, both of Bend; nine grandchildren; and one great-grandchild. Mr. Carpenter worked for the Bend Church of the Nazarene until his retirement in 2004. Mrs. Carpenter worked for the Bend School District until her retirement in 2003.
The couple enjoycamping, traveling and spending time with family and friends. They have lived in Central
Oregon for 31 years.
Paul and Barbara MacMillan
she studied dental hygiene. She works as a dental hygienist for Pilot Butte Dental and Advantage Dental. The future groom is the son John and Doris Harper, of Mount Vernon. He is a 2003 graduate of Grant Union High School and a 2004 graduate of Northwest Lineman College in Oroville, Calif. He works as a journeyman lineman for Midstate Electric Cooperative.
lES SCHNIB
Find It All Online
BESlllRE VAI.IIE PRQMISE
bendbulletin.com
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MacMillan
ology professor at Hanover College in Hanover, Ind., for Paul and Barbara (Pinker- 32 years until his retirement ton) MacMillan, of Bend, will in 2001. Mrs. M a cMillan celebrate their 50th wedding was a mental health couna nniversary w it h a fa m - selor at a nonprofit agency ily reunion and dinner party in Indiana for 20 years until hosted by the couple in July her retirement in 2000. He at Mt. Bachelor Village Re- is an Oregon State Universort in Bend. sity master gardener. She is The couple were married a volunteer with Habitat for Aug. 24, 1963, in C a rmi- Humanity. They also both chael, Calif. They have two v olunteer w i t h SM A R T . children, Ann, of Jackson- The coupleare members of ville, Ill., the late Brian and First Presbyterian Church his surviving w i fe , S a n- in Bend and enjoy traveling, dra, of St. Louis; and two hiking and nature. grandchildren. They have lived in Central Mr. MacMillan was a bi- Oregon for 12 years.
BIRTHS Delivered at St. Charles Bend
Lance and DawnHoptowit, a girl, Karishma Serenity Hoptowit, 12 pounds, 6.5 ounces, July 8. Delivered at St. Charles Redmond
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Support
C3
learn social, emotional and self-care skills, while also conContinued from C1 necting families and helping In addition, they are workthem find other resources in ing with local families to help the community. them navigate available reAnother important benefit is sources and offer assistance a connection between children, however they can. both those with special needs "This is what we wish we and their siblings. The chilhad," said Grindstaff, although dren can provide much-needed they hope their kids will be able friendship for each other. a "They can see they are not to take advantage of some of e the new opportunities as well. alone and they are not freaks," All three women are teachsaid Grindstaff. t ers or former teachers who unEventually, the women hope derstand the education system, to have their own building and its resources and limitations. facility to h ost classes and They have thought about the events. Longer term, the trio services they wish existed for hopes to create a respite retreat their families, such as aftercenter, a place where entire school programs for kids like families can receive needed intheirs, family nights that kids formation and relaxation. and parents could attend toAnd they also hope to work gether, assistance navigating on Wyldwoodz full time. resources available through Their hope isto make serthe schools or county, respite vices available to everyone, nights so parents could spend regardless of i n come level. time alone, and much more. Rather than taking insurance, I Ramsey is hard at work apr which would force them to do plying for grants and trying to a lot of paperwork and to conrecruit a board of directors to form to certain regulations, get Wyldwoodz qualified as a they intend to offer services on rr nonprofit. While funding may a sliding scale. Those with the n be uncertain, the women seem lowest incomes would be able entirely undeterred in making Roh Kerr /The Bulletin to trade services, such as worktheir vision a reality. During Wyldwoodz camp, Connor Smicz, 5, smiles as he is wrapped in a blanket, a treatment which provides a calming effect for those ing as a greeter at an event in "We're stubborn. This will with sensory needs. Connor's mom Camille Smicz has received a wide range of help from Wyldwoodz end calls the group "a lifeline." exchange for services. "Every happen," said Ramsey. family has something to give," said Ramsey. Helping others out all these feelers," Smicz military right before Sept. 11, wouldn't remember. Finally, Kids, a program within MasG rindstaff h o pe s W y l d Camille Smicz only c on- said. "I don't even know what 2001, and served in Iraq. He she was diagnosed with psy- sachusetts General Hospital. woodz can give some families nected with Wyldwoodz about resources are ou t t h ere. I sustained a traumatic brain in- chosis. And even though that Too often, kids with these who are in a desperate place a a month ago, but already she don't know what we need or jury when a bomb blew up un- term may sound frightening, kind of p r oblem behaviors glimpse of hope. So far, it has what's available. They've been der his vehicle. Ramsey says the diagnosis brought relief to don't get the help they need, provided that for at least one calls it "a lifeline." Smicz and her husband Ron through it before. They can he came home a different man Pugerude. She could finally ex- says Pugerude. They act out local mom. "I felt so l ost an d o verhave a daughter Piper, 8, and point us in the right direction. than when he left. plain Olivia's behavior and be- in class and are punished, but twin 5-year-old boys, Connor It's been the biggest blessing." Her middle son, Daniel, now gin to help her more effectively. never endup receiving the in- whelmed," said Smicz. "Some and Quinn. 9, has had developmental chalstruction they need to change days, I still feel overwhelmed. I don't know how we're going to Connor has a sensory pro- Been there lenges from the start. He was Understanding their root behavior. cessing disorder and Attention Grindstaff un de r stands diagnosed with g eneralized One problem that all of the But the three women believe get through this. Then I think, Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, what it is l ike to not know anxiety disorder. Ramsey says moms face is feeling judged that "for these kids, all hope is 'I have (Wyldwoodz). They as well as other emotional is- where to turn for help or what he runs away from school, and misunderstood by other not lost," said Grindstaff. are there to help us with whatsues. Because of his sensory to do. She married her hus- doesn't have any friends and people. Part of the issue is that Wyldwoodz will not provide ever comes up. I know we'll get issues, Connor likes to p ut band, Mike, 12 years ago and has "Chernobyl meltdowns." their children all look typical. academic skills, nor will it of- through it with them.'" things in his mouth, like rocks, became a full time stepmom to Most worrisome, he has tried Ramsey calls it " i nvisible fer diagnosticanswers. The — Reporter:541-617-7860, eggs and Legos. his two children, Damon, now to hurt himself, and the family disability." center's goal is to help children ajohnsonC<bendbulletin.com "He is a sensory seeker, he 14, and Jessika, now 17. The now has to keep knives locked People often told Pugerude is always seeking input," said couple now also has a daugh- away. Ramsey's y o ungest, that Olivia just wanted attenSmicz. ter, Piper, 5. Connor, has a form of epilepsy tion or was exaggerating. The family can't go to festiDamon struggled for many, and struggles with some basic Some suggested that Damon vals or parades because they many years while the Grind- skills. was manipulating Grindstaff Exploring an FDA-approved are too loud, with too many staffs worked to help him, not Ramsey worries about her or that he is just defiant. treatment for MS relapses "You feel judged by everypeople, Smicz said. Connor knowing what w a s w r ong. older, typical daughter. Kids likes to spin over and over, or He would run f rom school, at school have teased her that body, by teachers, by family she's the only normal person in members, by friends, by peocan wake up feeling anxious hit other children and blow If you're looking to learn about differentoptions for treating your MS and need to line up all of his up. He underwent evaluation her family, saying "you come ple you don't even know at the relapses, you plus one caregiver or friendare invited te this FREE toys. Sometimes he can be- after evaluation — it wasn't from a family of freaks." park," said Grindstaff. educational sessionwhere MS healthcare professionals will discuss: come violent or break things. a utism, i t w a s n' t A D H D . Meanwhile, she struggles to She wishes people underBut Connor is also sweet: "He's They went through behavior find the right medications to stood that "these kids are not e The dif ference between MS relapses and pseudo-relapses just got the biggest heart and programs and trieddifferent help her children. defiant, they are not naughty." e The importance of treatingyour MS relapses he's very cuddly and loves to medications. "You almost need a degree Wyldwoodz operates under e How to talk about your MS relapses with your healthcare be affectionate," said Smicz. After Piper was born, Dain pharmaceuticals to r aise a philosophy set out by child provider Connor's needs can make mon worried about the baby these kids," said Ramsey. psychologist Ross Greene: e Available treatmentoptions for MS relapses life challenging for the family. constantly. Grindstaff says the Pugerude felt s o mewhat "Kids do well when they can." e Insights shared by others living with MS "It can be kind of isolating," situation soon reached a break- prepared to raise a child with Therefore, if a child is not Smicz said. eMy friends don't ing point. Damon was violent special needs. She had always doing well, there must be a necessarily know how to help at home and Grindstaff started been drawn to kids who need- reason why, said Grindstaff. Register by Tuesday, August 6, 2013. Locauon The Oxford Hotel "No kid wants to be bad; us or how to relate." sleeping on the couch. They ed extrahelp,gotherdegree in 10 Northwest Minnesota Avenue Call 1-877-219-0410 or She was excited to see a worried he might hurt himself special education and worked maybe one-halfofone percent. Bend, OR 97701 visitwww.msrelapseprogram.com listing for the Wyldwoodz art and they put alarms on the with high-needs families with Most kids want to be good," Date Wed n esday, August 7, 2013 Uee Program ID ¹ 9108. camp on the Redmond parks windows and doors. "We were many issues. So when she and she said. "No kids wants to be Check-in 5:30 PM website. About a week later, she at a loss," said Grindstaff. her husband, Matt, decided to this kid; kicked out of class lime e00 PM Complimentary meal and parking sent the group an email, asking So they made a di fficult adopt two sisters who were with no friends." Presented by Boyd A DNryer MD will be provided. for additional assistance. decision and put Damon in a born addicted to meth, cocaine Ultimately, Pugerude says Fredenck, MD Pugerude met with her and residential treatment facility and heroin, Pugerude thought they hope to help children delearned about the family's his- for seven months. There, they she was prepared and would velop the emotional, social and tory. Connor and Quinn were diagnosed him w it h s evere be able to help them. behavioral skills they need, adopted from Ethiopia when anxiety disorder, a sensory While Maria, now 10, is a like sticking with tasks, being they were 6 months old; some disorder and depression. Da- typical girl, "bright, shy and able to have multiple thoughts Remember:You and aguestare welcome atthisFREEeducationalsession. of Connor's issues likely stem mon is now back home and quiet," her sister Olivia is not. and understanding time. Their All MS relapse therapy decisions should be made under the guidance of your from his experiences as an doing much better, although Looking back, Pugerude says, approach will be built on methhealthcare professional. infant. he still has challenges. "Some "we had no idea what we were odology outlined by T h ink: c20I2Queslcorpharmaceulcals.I nc pM-524-02nn2 Q+t QUESTCOR' Smicz felt a connection with days are great, some days are getting into." As a preschooler, Pugerude and relief. horrible," said Grindstaff. Olivia would have five or six "(Pugerude) had tons of He is acting out less and also 45-minute tantrums per day. resources for us. She was so his outlook has shifted. In one particularly bad epi"For years, Damon thought helpful and so understanding," sode, when Matt was carrying said Smicz. he was a terrible kid, that he a flailing, screaming Olivia Pugerude offeredinforma- would never be able to do any- to the car, a passerby accused tion on respite care as well as thing," said Grindstaff. She be- him of trying to abduct the a psychiatrist and an occupa- lieves his progress shows that little girl and threatened to call tional therapist to try. Smicz "you can change, parents can the police. was also excited to borrow change." She and her husband Then around age 6, she had sensory supplies from Wyld- had to change their parenting a psychotic break. At first they ~4 ee+ woodz. Connor loves a Lycra style. For instance, she was didn't know what it was. Olivia full-body suit they borrowed, brought up to believe if you got started telling elaborate stories which Smicz says looks like a in trouble at school, you also about things that happened at 4/t Gumby suit. It puts pressure on got in trouble at home. But they school, some of which sounded ~4~db4 his body, which Connor likes. realized that wouldn't work for frightening. They took her on Pugerude has also visitedthe Damon. special outings that later she "We can't keep him in troufamily's home several times to help them set up a home senso- ble 24 hours a day," she said. SOLUTION TO ry gym and is set to help them Ramsey and her husband, FREE 2013 FAIR BUS SCHEDULE work with the local elementary M ark, married right out of TODAY'S SUDOKU school this fall. high school and had a daughDESCHUTES COUNTY FAIRAND RODEO 4 31 8 7 9 6 2 5 l "Before it was like throwing ter soon after. Mark joined the /~
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3QMRHEX.
MT VIEW HIGH SCHOOL 2755 NE 27th Street LEAVE MTVHS
L E AVE FAIR
9:30AM 11:30AM 3:30PM 5:30PM 10:00PM 11:00PM(F/Satl
SISTERSELEMENTARY SCHOOL
611 EastCascade,Sisters REDMOND HIGHSCHOOL 757 SWRimrock Way,Redmond
10:30AM 2:30PM LEAVE SES LEAVE RHS LEAVE FAIR 4:30PM 9:30AM 10 : 00AM 9:OOPM 1 I:30AM N OO N 3:30 P M 10:30PMiW/TH) 4:30PM 5: OOPM 5:3 0 PM 1 1 :30PMiF/Satj (Last btts on Sun) NOTE:Sunday August 4th schedule 6:15PM 6: 4 5P M 10: 3 0PM 9:30AM 10:30AM (Wed/Th) 11:30PM 11:30AM 3:30PM (Fri/Sat) 4:OOPM
5:30PM
Answer:
H APPEN IMMUN E IRO N IC GENDER PALACE S L UDGE After being served a bagel in first
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"PLANE" CREAM CHEESE JUMBLE IS ON C6
Check CET/BATschedules fg tES SCHtNttS ~ u for arrival times at Mt. View eh. 50<tti ~~-mlhetee~etreettr High School. • •
All times include
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At Signal Mountain Lodge, you can rent a boat for a day or book chartered fishing excursions.
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Geyser Basin and the Lower, Midway and Upper Geyser Basins to the west, are great for exploring. See geysers, mudpots, fumaroles and colorful hot springs. Don't miss Steamboat Geyser in the Norris Basin, the tallest — though unpredictable — geyser in the park, which on our visit hissed and spit so much we were sure
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Photos by Brian Sirimaturos / St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Mammoth Hot Springs has been described as "geology in overdrive" because of the way the travertine steps change color and shapes so often.
Yellowstone Continued from C1 With several steep climbs and m u l t ipl e e d u cational breaks where we learned to identify trees by needles and animals by scat, the hike took about 4 hours. The Yellowstone Association works with the National Park Serviceto connect people to the park through education. "The best way to really see Yellowstone is to explore it, and that's what we help you do," said Harwood. The heart of Yellowstone is a caldera surrounded by the spires of the Rocky Mountains. It's actually a giant sleeping volcano. When my 6-year-old heard this, he looked alarmed and asked, " Is it g oing t o erupt?" Harwood paused and sat us down to explain. Yes, it could go off. In the past, it has created massive explosions. It is in fact, due to go off again. However, scientists will have plenty of advanced warning, and we're not there yet. That sleeping volcano isn't really so sleepy either. The hot springs, geysers, mudpots and fumaroles (steam vents) are everydayreminders ofthe dangers that lurk beneath the earth's surface. But they make magnificent sites for tourists. Y ellowstone is big, as i n 3,500 square miles big. A windy, two-lane road takes you through the high points of
Ifyou go Where: The park is in W yoming, Idahoand Montana, with five
entrances andtwo main interior loop roads. Cost:Admission is $25 per car(goodforseven days and also in Grand Teton
National Park) Mere info:nps.gov/yell; yellowstoneassociation.org Yellowstone National Park. It actually makes a figure eight, out of about 154 miles of roadway. If you only had one day, you could drive it and see the high points. But I'd r ecommend at least three. One day for the upper loop; one day for the lower loop and a third day to get off those roads and really explore the park on foot. While nothing beats coming upon a majestic waterfall or a lily-pad-covered pond on a hike, there is plenty to see from your car or a short walk on the boardwalk.
book, author Carter G. Walker says as many as 70 percent of American adults have seen the famous geyser. Old Faithful isn't the tallest geyser, but it is more predictable than most, going off every 30 minutes to two hours. Television screens in the area give you an estimated time of the next eruption. Each eruption shoots nearly 4,000 to 8,000 gallons of water about 130 feet into the air. Unfortunately, on our trip, we got caught in a downpour that happened about one minute after Old Faithful erupted. I've heard the eruptions last two to five minutes, but I didn't stick around long enough to find out if that's true.
eral overlooks throughout the park. Or take one of the other hikes, such as ours, around it. You can also take Uncle Tom's trail 328 steps down to the bottom (Warning: It's dangerous and strenuous). • Yellowstone Lake: North America's largest h igh-altitude lake is simply breathtaking. We took a sunset tour
($35) on a 1936-restored "Yel-
l owstone Bus" through t h e area. We ended inLake Butte at an elevation of 8,348 feet, for a gorgeous sunset over the mountains that frame the lake. The area is also prime habitat for birds and mammals. We saw bears, a beaver (or maybe it was a muskrat), pronghorn • Mammoth Hot Springs area: deer and waterfowl. In warmVisit Mammoth Hot Springs er months,catch a cruise or to walk the self-guided trail rent a boat. around F o r t Ye l l owstone, • The geyser basins: Yelloww hich chronicles th e U . S . stone is home to the majority Army's role in protecting the of the world's geysers. Several park. Then drive or walk over basins, notably the T humb to the hot springs area. The Geyser Basin in the Yellowterraces are quite different stone Lake area, the Norris from the other thermal areas in the park. These step-like travertine formations grow
and the aptly named Grand Prismatic in the Midway Geyser Basin. And don't miss the Mud Volcano and Dragon's Mouth Spring near Fishing Village; they are just as amazing as their names sound. • Hayden Valley: Aside from the geothermic activity, most people come to Yellowstone for the w i ldlife. Two areas a re well-known for t hi s i n the park: Lamar Valley and Hayden Valley. We didn't have time to make it to the first, but Hayden Valley provided not only bison and pronghorn but also a good look at a coyote who had just caught a bird of prey for dinner and a possible wolf sighting (it was awfully far away). Staring out over Hayden Valley was like
watching an episode on the National Geographic Channel. I'll also note that we came way too close to a grizzly who had wandered near the Visitor Center at nearby Fishing Village. • LeHardys Rapids: One of our first stops was at a short trail leading down to the LeHardys Rapids, a gushing portion of the Yellowstone River. In June and July, the native cutthroat trout leap over the rocks on their way to spawning grounds upstream. Watching the green and red spotted fish leaping in water was a highlight of the trip for my 6year-old son.
SATURDAY
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NorthWest Crossing Neighborhood Center I
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much more rapidly (as much
7 don't-miss sites This is by no means an exhaustive list, rather things we did and loved. • Old Faithful: Perhaps the most famous site in all of Yellowstone is the erupting geyser of Old Faithful. And it's certainly popular. In the Moon "Montana 8c Wyoming" guide-
as 2 feet per year) and are constantly changing shapes and color. The book "Yellowstone: Expedition Guide" calls the
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stone: This 20-mile-long canyon, including the Upper and Lower Falls of the Yellowstone River, can be seen from sev-
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The Washington Post I bought Allianz in. surance for th e a i r for a trip to India. The trip was canceled because the weather and seas for a portion of it were dangerous. I expected Allianz to honor this reason, but it wasn't a named peril in the insura nce agreement, so t h e company didn't. Be aware t hat e xcept f o r d e a t h, medical emergencies and similar issues, many of the general things that can go wrong aren't covered. • T hank you f or t h e • warning. U n f o r t unately, this is a fairly common problem. Travel insurance usually has to say that something is covered
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ou e ooe o a By Stephanie Rosenbioom New Yorh Times News Service
Last month, a group of high s chool students an d t h e i r chaperons were ordered off a flight to Atlanta for refusing to sit down and turn off their cellphones. In May, six friends were removed from a flight to Las Vegas allegedly for talking loudly. In April, a 340pound man said he was told to leave a Denver-bound plane because of his size. Every few weeks we seem to hear about passengers being escorted off planes for the sorts of infractions that once only sent you to the principal's office. Is this normal? Might you someday find yourself be-
ing taken off a plane for being uncooperative, kicking a seat back or caviling with a flight attendant (all real reasons that
you can be removed)? The number of passengers classified as "unruly" cannot be accurately quantified. The Federal Aviation Administration tracks only the incidents that crew members choose to report. And it s database does not i n c lude s ecurity violations (the T r ansportation Security Administration handles those). That said, the number of unruly passengers reported to th e FA A s i n ce 1995 (the earliest date in the online database) appears to be at an all-time low. There were 129 such passengers in 2012, down from 140 in 2011. The high was in 2004, when crew members reported 330 unruly
passengers. And then there's the data f rom the I n ternational A i r Transport Association. The trade group said its most recent available figures show that reported i n stances of unruliness increased about 29 percent between 2009 and 2010 (the FAA's figures show a decline in that period). Whateverthe numbers, the association and flight attendants say it is a continuing problem. "Which is why we were so outraged with the thought of knives coming back onboard," said Veda Shook, international president of the Association of Flight Attendants, referring to the TSA decision, since rescinded, to allow small knives in cabins. "The plane in my view is just a microcosm of where we're at in society today," Shook said. Gone are the days of halfempty aircraft an d u n hurried travel. "Now the planes are packed. Everybody's got to wait in lines." That makes
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it imperative that passengers follow instructions.
No one wants surly passengers on a flight. And there is no telling how many terrible Airplane authority situations have been avoided The Association of Flight because perceptive flight atAttendants refers to its union tendants have had passengers members as "aviation's first removed from p l anes. But responders," and indeed their consumer advocates say that actions can save lives. Con- the broad and vague language sider the flight attendants who that airlines use to define unhelped evacuate the Asiana ruly behavior (found in their Airlines plane t ha t c r ash- Contract of Carriage) is unlanded in San Francisco this fair to passengers because it m onth, or th e A l aska A i r - is unclear what can get them lines attendants who in May tossed off a plane and renrestrained a passenger after ders them unable to defend he allegedly tried to open an themselves. "We have heard of p a semergency exit row window during the plane's descent into sengers being told to get off Portland. a plane because of a 'look' or Yet consumer advocates and being too 'anxious' or having passengers who have been or- too 'tense a tone' when they dered off planes for seemingly answer a f l i ght a ttendant," petty infractions think th at said Kate Hanni, the founder some flight attendants abuse of FlyersRights.org, the largtheir power and that the broad est nonprofit airline consumer language airlines use to define group in the country. unruly behavior makes it difHanni said it has tried unficultfor passengers to know successfully to persuade the how to behave and, if neces- FAA to createa setof rules or sary,defend themselves. legal standards so that pasShook said removing pas- sengers know precisely which sengers from planes is a last behaviors to avoid. Currently, recourse. However, there are a flight attendant can remove consequences for those who a passenger for not obeying do not follow a rule like turninstructions or if a passenger ing of f p o r table electronic presents a risk. " But 'risk' i s completely devices. "For us that's the biggest subjective," she said, "and challenge," Shook said. "That when you have flight attenis where we're seeing some dants and crews from differunruly behavior." Some pas- ent backgrounds and cultures sengers have the attitude that you get a different set of rules "those rules might be for ev- that no one knows on every erybody but me." flight." A p assenger m ight n o t A guide to preventing and think refusing to shut off a managing u n r ul y p a s senphone is a big deal, but not ad- gers by the International Air hering to a simple request on Transport Association says the ground suggests that you that "incidents are occurring might not be cooperative in a regularly, on all airlines and more serious situation. in every cabin class." Pub"If they refuse to turn off lished late last year, it is the their phone," Shook said, "we group's first effort to bring todon't want to p r edict what gether information in various w ould happen i n f l i ght. I t documents and manuals. It could be far worse if you're up defines unruly passengers as in the air." those who fail to follow crew On the ground, passengers instructions a n d on b o ard can be turned over to airport rules of conduct. authorities. Inthe air, the plane Examples of disruptive bemight have to be diverted or havior listed in the manual the passenger restrained. go beyond not complying "We're there to protect the with safety procedures like safety of p a ssengers," she fastening your seat belt. Such said. behavioris also described as appearing agitated or numb Judgment calls or using profane language. It When deciding whether a can be "communicating dispassenger should be removed pleasure through voicetone from a p l ane, cabin crews or rude gesture, provoking are encouraged to trust their an argument or making unjudgment. That leaves them reasonabledemands," like rewith the job of trying to parse fusing to "give up on a denied i mpolite behavior o r t r a i ts request." (like talking loudly) from po(Also unruly: belting out tentially dangerous behavior. the Dolly Parton song "I Will
ane? Always Love You," which a woman did i n M a y d u r ing an American Airlines flight to New York until it was diverted to Kansas City, Mo., where she was escorted off
(a so-called "named peril") in order for it to work. But you can also buy a "cancel for any reason" policy that pays a percentage of the cost of the trip. — Christopher Elliott
the plane.)
'Conditions of carriage'
ts damaged thecompany can charge you full r ental fees while it's out of service. But if the company has unused cars sitting on its lots, having one in the shop isn't costing it any revenue. What prevents the
company from pulling a car out ofservice for as long as possible?Open-ended "loss of use" seems like an invitation to fraud. I've had long arguments • with car rental companies over "loss of use." Basically, rental companies believe that they can charge you for the daysa carwas in the repair shop, as if it was rented. This assumes that the car would have been rented the entire time, and they don't need to prove it. The good news: If you protesta loss-of-use charge, a company will almost always remove it from your bill. — Christopher Elliott
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The Moysian fit By FRANK STEWART Tribune MediaServices GJ O
If you have nine trumps to t he
from dummy. East was surprised to score his five, but South won the heart return with the ace, ruffed a club, took the king of trumps and led to the king o f d i amonds to draw trumps with the A-Q. He could then run the diamonds to make the slam. North dealer Both sides vulnerable
opponents' four, you're in good shape. Eight against their five is adequate and may beideal:At a 4-4 fit, you can ruff something in either hand and draw trumps in the other. If you have only seven trumps, the advantage of owning the trump suit is diminished. S t i ll , t o p l a y a t a
Moysian 4-3 fit (so named because Alphonse "Sonny" Moyse, long-time e ditor o f The Br i d g e W o r l d magazine, was an advocate) may offer the best chance. In today's deal, six ( o r s e ven) diamonds would havehad a play, and m aybe North-South should h a v e WEST reached a diamond slam. Instead, 4 J 1 0 S 3 they landed at six spades, and South QQ6 had to cope with a 4-3 fit. West led 0 72
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(C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols LeWIS 78 Signature song I I6 Driver's lfcn e.g 12 Sewerlines for Sammy 117 Herb Usedwith 13 Metallic byDavis Jr. potatoes product ACROSS 82 Psychfc's verb Ife Benediction 14 Followed a I Mature 83 Soldiers under opener Lenten routine 6 One ofatypical Lee 119 Oodles 15 Big name in schooner'spair 84 Flordel amor 120 Lfke marshes SIIIIllg 16 sFair forecast 10 Water holders 85 Great Basin 121 Operation 14 Seeseye to native Overlord time I7 Hardly dim 86 Oktober 122 Hinged bulbs eye? 19 Patty Hearst's endings entrance 18 Hallucinate 87 Fancy molding 123 "The 28 Hoity-toity sort SLA alias 20 Alice's ee *Pracfically Gondolfersn girl 29 Type starter 34 Cleaned, as a immortalizer guaranteed 21 Inclusive 93 -relief DOWN deck 94 Schoolsupport I Lfke some 36 Low benders ending retired 37 Try a new 22 Kate's TV mate QP 95 A fourih of doce racehorses shade on 23 Bug-hits38 "High Voltage" 96 Carrion 2 Apollo's nymph windshield rockers SOUnd consumer 3 Conditional 100 Futbol cheer wortI 39 Bean who 24 Lab gel medium 102 Computer info 4 One maybe played Boromfr In "The Lord of exposed during 25 Stage highlight 104 nWow" n npart? 105 Homer's crossthe Rings" films 26 cel n 27 *nperhapg neighbor examination 42 Neat 5 Ore-Ida morsel 106 Closecall 43 Sutra 30 wedding 107 *Ambushed 6 Kettles from 44 Waterfront gp. proposal? 112 Trig function Cape Rattery 45 Supermodel 31 You-: rural 113 Nolonger 7 Jason'svessel born Melissa addresses Miller happening 8 Shutter part 32 Fight unit: Abbr 114 Places 9 Sped 46 Stage aid 33 Connection 115 Beetles, 10 Gives a hand 47 Charged Iacilitators, perhaps 11 Anchorposition atoms briefly 34 Fireplace place I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 1 35 Computer in a cubicle 20 37 Wild talk 39 Roll on the ball 23 24 25 field 40 " Mir Bist DU 27 28 29 Schoen" (Andrews Sisters hit) 32 33 41 *Snacks not needing an 37 38 35 oven 45 Tiger's ex 42 46 Chem lab tube 49 Well-coiffed 4 6 47 4 8 49 50 Byrnes 50 Cupid's wings 52 55 56 51 bean: sproutssource 59 52 Cast member's 58 part 53 * nWhen I say so,n militarily
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As an occasional Utah visitor, I've v iewed downtown Salt Lake City like many other travelers who find themselves in the area: as a place to gas up the rental car as I race to the airport after a ski vacation in Park City or Alta. The word "interesting" rarely found itself in the same company with "downtown Salt Lake." Its urban core was nearly vacant after dark, with few residents and even fewer restaurants and attractions. The doublelength blocks and yawning streets hardly welcomed tourists or residents, either — the streets platted so wide, history tells, so pioneers could easily turn around their four-ox teams. Now, though, a n a scent renaissance has taken hold in downtown Salt Lake City,
Cayce Chfford/ New York Times News Service
City Creek Center, with more than 100 stores, is a catalyst in the renaissance of downtown Salt Lake City.
car. This past winter a public ski bus ran from six stops downtown to the resorts each morning, a ride of about an h our, and r eturned i n t h e making a stop appealing even evening.Skiers can also ride outside ski season. TRAX from downtown to the Roughly 12 5 b u s inesses 6200 South station and hop of all kinds have opened or on resort-bound ski buses all moved there since 2009, or are morning (also included free about to open — not counting with the Ski Salt Lake Super 100 in the newest shopping Pass). Here's another reason c enter — according to t h e to consider staying downtown Downtown A l l iance, which and using public transportapromotes the a r ea. A b out tion: Hotel rates downtown, 5,000 people now live there, even for high-end hotels like too, a 35 percent jump since the Grand America, can be 2010, said Jason Mathis, the dramatically lower than at ski group's executive d i rector. areas. No one will mistake it for the Restaurants East Village, but downtown is starting to become a place There's been an explosion people actually seek out to eat of places to eat in downtown and play. One fact captured Salt Lake. Some 40 restauthe change as well as any, ap- rants and other eating estabparent on a recent visit: Four lishments have opened since craftbreweries now operate 2010 or are poised to open within 10 blocks of Temple — from Taste of Red Iguana, Square, the historic center of the latest outpost of the Mexiboth downtown and of the tee- can mini-empire in the food totaling Mormon world. court of City Creek Center, "Salt Lake is really ascend- to the Copper Onion, which ing, and all the stars seem to Salt Lake magazine recently be aligned" for th e f u ture, anointed the city's best resMathis said. "There's good taurant. Ryan Lowder, the lostuff going on." cal chef and owner, who had The single biggest catalyst worked in the Jean-Georges of this change, strangely, is a V ongerichten a n d Mar i o shopping mall. In March 2012 Batali empires i n M a n hatCity Creek Center opened, a tan, opened the Copper Onsprawling, 23-acre mall adion (thecopperonion.com), jacent to Temple Square that which serves American food was financed by a develop- with what he calls "a pretty ment arm o f t h e M o r mon decent Mediterranean influence" and lots of house-made Church. City Creek Center (shop ingredients, from the noodles citycreekcenter.com) i s a in the beef stroganoff to some handsome monument tocon- cheeses. A popular small plate sumption. Many of the stores is Utah oyster mushrooms are high-end and new to the with julienne Idaho potato market — Tiffany, Nordstrom, sticks, a fried egg and fresh Coach. The development also salsa verde ($9). has Las Vegas-like fountains L owder's s e c on d r es (music! jets of flame!), a fully taurant, Plum A l ley ( p lum r etractable glass roof t h at alley.com) opened downtown closes in inclement weather in December 2011 and was and a river that runs through named one of the Top 50 Best it (OK, a stream; the epony- New Restaurants by Bon Apmous, reimagined City Creek, petit magazine. Named for its with actual trout). A "Passport location on East Broadway, to Savings" with special offers a now-vanished seedy street and discounts for t r avelers in the city's turn-of-last-cencan be picked up at the cen- tury multiethnic Chinatown ter's customer service desk district, Plum Alley is "white and area hotels. guys cookin' A s ian f o od," T he project isn't s o i m - Lowder said wryly — and ofportant for the Porsche sun- fers ramen with homemade glasses that you can now buy noodles and a b one broth, downtown as for what else (starting at $11), or Pleasant it brought: vitality. The comCreek Ranch zabuton steak plex, which covers some 2.5 with local greens ($16). city blocks, also has 1.2 milAnother very popular newlion square feet of office space comer i s P a l let ( eatpallet. and three residential towers com), whose name is a nod housing 800 units (with one to the restaurant's location more tower planned) and will in the former loading dock incorporate an existing, soon- of the Salt Lake Valley's first t o-be-renovated Mar r i o t t creamery. The dining room's hotel. decor ofbrushed steel-meetsSpurred by the investment reclaimed wood is fitting for a and the excitement, restaura- New American menu featurteurs and other entrepreneurs ing appetizers like quail with have focused their attention plum sauce ($14) and entrees a new on downtown i n t h e like bison osso buco ($30). lastfew years.Here are some Museums highlights: A state with such tremenNewairport connection dous natural assets deserves I n m i d -April t h e Ut a h a museum of natural history Transit Authority opened a fit to contain it. Now it has one light-rail connection between — the Natural History MuSalt Lake City International seum of Utah at the Rio Tinto Airport and downtown. The Center (nhmu.utah.edu), high 6-mile Trax line (rideuta.com) in the Wasatch hills overlookincludes six new stations and ing downtown. Sheathed in takes about 20 minutes from copper and designed to blend Temple Square to the airport. with the m ountainside, the A ride costs $2.50. The line dramatic building houses 10 connects to the system's exist- galleries of fearsome skulls, ing 140 miles of track (includ- a ncient moccasins and i n ing the 90-mile Frontrunner teractive displays. Ramps let train system, which connects you see eye-to-eye with giant Ogden, Salt Lake City and monsters in the dinosaur hall. Provo). And continuing research isn't This connection opens up far away here: I was able to an intriguing possibility for stare through glass windows skiers: staying d o w ntown, and watch scientists cleaning riding transit to th e slopes dinosaur bones. and never bothering with the Inspired by L eonardo da expense or trouble of a rental V inci, t h e L e o nardo ( t h e
leonardo.org) is an interactive museum of science, technology and creativity that's housed in the former public-library building downtown. Although it also features major traveling exhibitions (to Sept. 15: "101 Inventions That Changed the World," in its f irst U.S. stop; November: "The Dead Sea Scrolls"), the m useum emphasizes hands-on learning. When I first visited one year ago, the museum felt a bit unsure of its mission. My visit this spring found a more assured experience,including a fascinating mummies exhibition and an ongoing gene experiment that visitors could participate in.
Concerts and farmers markets A summer highlight for residents is the Twilight Concert Series (twilightconcertseries. com), mostly held Thursday evenings July through early September i n do w n t own's Pioneer Park. Some 16,000 people regularly turn out to hear acts like the Black Keys, the Roots and My M orning Jacket. The summer's lineup includes Erykah Badu (Aug.
8) and MGMT (Sept. 5). Tickets: $5. The Downtown Farmers' Market (slcfarmersmarket.
org) is another popular standard, a 3 00-vendor market held Saturdays from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., June to October in Pioneer Park. A second evening market starts in the harvest months, typically around August, from 5 p.m. to dusk. In a nod to the energy downtown, t he Downtown A l l iance is pursuing the idea of a more permanent, year-round market, analogous to S eattle's Pike Place Market. If you're downtown on a Thursday, jump on what some locals call the "saints to sinners" program: Head to Temple Square and the tabernacle to see the Mormon Tabernacle Choir (mormontabernacle
choir.org) rehearse from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. (every Thursday) unless otherwise noted. Afterward visit the downtown mainstay Squatters Pub and B eers (squatters.com) a n d plunge into Outer Darkness (named for the Mormon concept of eternal punishment for the wicked): a Russian imperial stout that at 10.5 percent is the strongest beer it brews.
Bike sharing In April the city introduced itsGreenbike bike-share pro-
gram (greenbikeslc.org). The program is similar to those in Washington, D.C., and Madison, Wis. A 24-hour pass that gets user unlimited 30-minute tripscosts $5; a seven-day pass costs $15. There's more to come: The city and county have agreed to finance a 2,500-seat, $110 million performing arts center (newperformingartscenter
.org) scheduled to open in 2016 and expected to attract touring Broadway shows and other entertainment. A 1,000room convention-center hotel is being debated, and another 1,000 condos and apartments are expectedto appear in the downtown core in the next few years, said Mathis of the Downtown Alliance. Yet for all these changes, d owntown Salt L a k e C i t y isn't a flashy destination, nor does it want to be — and that's probably a great thing. Yet this surging city seems more confident than ever, so much that it's seriously building a bid to host the Winter Olympics, again, in 2026.
SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN C 7
FBYB 0
BF S 0
• More aspiring writers are chasing the dreamof sponsoredtravel By Dan Saltzstein
probable sponsored trips. It put New York Times News Service her onestep closer to her goal: When Keith Jenkins plans a "to be able to balance a worktrip, he doesn't have to cobble slash-writing career without together vacation days or fre- selling my soul." The weekquent flier miles, or scour the end, she said, amounted to a Web for deals on big-ticket success. items like hotels. Jenkins, the There are more in the crowd Amsterdam-based blo g ger like Holmes, for whom travel behind Velvet Escape (velvet blogging is a part-time job and escape.com), finds sponsors. full-time dream, than Jenkins. Last year, he planned a trip But by most accounts, since to Cape Town with a handful TBEX was started by blogger of other bloggers and pitched Kim Mance in 2009, when it it to the local tourism agency, drew about 125 attendees, the which agreed to foot the bill. focus at the conference has He estimated that the resulting changed, particularly since it itinerary — including a stay at was acquired by New Media a villa with ocean views, shark- Expo in March 2012, a few cage diving, visits to winer- months before the Keystone ies and spa massages — was event. "To me, the shift boils down worth about 5,000 euros (about $6,440) but ended up costing into one word: marketing," said him little beyond the nerve it Pam Mandel, who started her took to board a ferry to Rob- blog, Nerd's Eye View (nerds ben Island. The tourism office eyeview.com), in 1997. later told him that he and the Mandel, for years a panelist fellow bloggers had kicked off and participant in the TBEX its most successful conference (she social media cammoderated the "Content Strategy" paign to that point, "PeOPIe have
featuring a Twitter gSkgg hashtag —.loveca- Qgy I
me how been petown — that is SUCCBSsful. still in use. Initially, Jenkins g/gll O ne, I've
panel),
If there is a single rule of thumb for how to choose which blogs to make time for, it is to measure them on a scale ofhow driven they are by business concerns. The recent TBEX conference in Toronto, with its rah-rah keynote speeches and panels on "Content Strategy" and "The Intersection of Mar-
fist — even those like Jenkins who do take generous perks. "Most successful bloggers are 'successful' because they earn enough to travel on a very travel bloggers she began as a tight budget, an amount that generalist and isn't sure how would not allow them to live she would fare in today's more in North A m erica, Western competitive and f r agmented Europe or Australia," Baron environment. She and others wrote in an email from Buchaacknowledge that they bene- rest, Romania, adding, "I don't fited greatly from the so-called have expenses such as a mortfirst-mover advantage — that is, gage, car payments and other theybegan blogging in a much monthly bills that I would have less complicated space. if I lived back in the U.S., so that "People have asked me how certainly helps." have Ibeen successful," Arndt In order to make a go of it, said. "Well, one, I've been doing s ome are branching out i n it longer. Second, I travel more ways that take them beyond than they do." the pages of their blogs, includMost bloggers, though, are ing contractual partnerships not making money hand over with outfitters like G Advencrowd. Although Ettenberg's focus is now on food (her business card reads "author, traveler and soup expert"), like most early
tures,which created Wanderers in Residence in 2010. The
program includes five bloggers, who lead tours, do speaking engagements and write blog posts
for the company (the bloggers are compensated monthly). One of those Wanderers is Ettenberg. In 2008, after five y ears working for a firm i n New York and having saved a small nest egg, she quit, thinking she was headed out on a yearlong trip. It's been five years. For her, whatever popularity she has developed is directly related to her passion for travel and writing. "It comes down to your personality," she said. "I would be writing for myself even if no one was reading."
. US. Cellular.
a c cepts
sponsored trips but is also the first to call herself a "writing snob" and besaid of his blog's lieves that sponsorfocus, "I didn't re- t) 6 6 A 6 oing ships have resulted ally think of it as it / O ngeI: in an increase in l uxury travel. I $ g c O f6,I l w hat s h e c a l l s "junk content." just thought this more is the way I like to The posts and than th ey do." social media activtravel." J enkins, w h o ity that result from "Y worked as an inthose trips can also blogger walk a thin legal vestment banker before turning to l ine. I n Ma r c h , travel blogging in the Federal Trade late 2008, added: "Backpacking Commission had seen enough is something I did as a student." digital content that blurred the Jenkins' approach to blog- line between editorial and adging — and travel — speaks vertising that it issued a clarivolumes about the state of a fication document stating that medium that began as intimate disclosuresof free trips need and creative. The paradigm to beclear,concise and toward has shifted across the board, in the top of posts. Some blogareas like food, parenting and gers eschew these disclosures so-called lifestyle blogs. entirely or bury the disclosure But nowhere has the shift line at the end of posts. (Polibeen as jarring as it is for travel- cies onfree trips vary across ers. "I want to travel the world" the print media landscape. The is no longer an idealistic state- New York Times ethics policy ment; it is a transactional one. states that writers may not acIt's impossible to estimate the cept them.) number of independent travel Many successful bloggers blogs. Thousands of writers and believe that the best way to photographers now travel the both thrive and maintain a levworld registeringtheir thoughts el of professionalism is to keep through platforms like Word- the focus on the reader. Earl Press and Blogger. But there Baron's site, Wandering Earl is indication that the ranks of (wanderingearl.com), is both the bloggers whose aspira- very popular and justly named: tions are not just creative have Baron has, in one form or angrown: Bloggerattendance at other, been on the road since the annual conference known 1999. He began the blog — tagas TBEX was about 1,000 this line: "the life of a permanent year, more than double that of nomad" — in 2009. He started last year's event in Keystone, by commenting on other blogs Colo., and the "speed dating" and noticed that he received sessions in which bloggers seek few responses. " That became sort of my sponsors grew to 3,629 from 206 last year. strategy," he said. "I want to The proliferation of t hese help my readers, and the only blogs, and what is becoming a way to do that is to interact with go-to way of financing them, them. So I made a deal with would seem a boon to the dar- myself: From now on, I answer ing people who want to keep every email myself and I reply logs of life on the road and the to everycomment." readers who want to consume That, he said, led to an inthem. But as travel blogging crease in attention and readcomes of age, the landscape has ership, and, ultimately, two become vastly more complicat- e-books that he created largely ed and morefragmented. Itcan out of his responses. He estiall be daunting — and increas- mates that he now spends three ingly difficult for both bloggers to four hours a day answering and readers to navigate. reader questions, which aver-
All about marketing
vided the blogger with services (for example, a site offering cheap airfares), and that relationship isn't disclosed, be skeptical of the resulting content. Ettenberg also noted that niche travelblogs are becoming i n creasingly i m portant, since readersare more likely to trust sources knowledgeable on a specific subject. "When I look for food information," she said, "I want to find a blog of someone who's obsessed with food and see what they have to say." Niche blogs can also feature more unusual approaches that can differentiate them from the
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age 100 to 150 daily. (Although he now asks for a suggested donation for incoming questions, he refunds the donation if the answer is contained in one of his e-books and the reader
buys the book.)
Filtering the deluge But outside of bloggers who have ambitious approaches to reader engagement like Baron,
keting and Blogging," made how do you discern if a blogger one thing clear: Those waters
is only a small step removed from being the publicity arm of N owhere was t hi s m o r e a local tourism bureau'? evident t ha n t h e po p ular Gary Arndt, whose blog, Evspeed-dating sessions. Blog- erything Everywhere (every gers signed up for eight-minute thing-everywhere.com),is rousessions with 138 sponsors. At tinely cited as a model for sucthe end of each appointment, cess, had a simple tip: "Check chimes sounded, and a melliflu- the 'about'page on the blog and ous femalevoice echoed across find out about the person," he the sprawling convention hall: wrote in an email from the tiny "It is now time to move to your Caribbean island of Saba. "How much experience and next appointment." With that, bloggers said their goodbyes knowledge do they have about and thank-yous and scrambled travel or their particular subject to get to their next potential matter? How long have they
are increasingly murky.
sponsor.
been blogging? Have they got-
Amid the scrum was Michelle Holmes, a travel blogger
ten any recognition for their work?" Jodi Ettenberg, a former lawyer who runs Legal Nomads
(wanderingoff.ca) and writer — her day job is as a parks manager in Toronto — who went on about 20 speed dates in all, which led to a handful of f o llow-up c o nversations with marketers and a couple of
(legalnomads.com), suggested c hecking outbound links that is, where a blogger's links are headed. If they tend to be to businesses that probably pro-
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C8
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
uc e a eso o iro's a or oo TV SPOTLIGHT
American viewers will be able to watch the new episodes By Henry Chu next year on PBS, where the Los Angeles Times show draws an audience of G ALMPTON, Engl a n d about 5 million, and a national — The final push to the top of rating about 80 percent higher his personal Everest consisted than th e p u blic n e twork's of about 50 dainty steps, in prime-time average. "Agatha the precise and idiosyncratic Christie: Poirot" is also popugait hehas perfected over 25 lar in Brazil, Finland and Jayears. pan, among other countries, David Suchet paced up to making Suchet, 67, an internathe door of the house, glanced tional star. (There have been around, gave a tip of his hat other memorable Poirots, noand the ghost of a smile, and tably Albert Finney in "Murdisappeared inside. When the der on the Orient Express" cameras stopped rolling, he The Associated Press file photo and Peter Ustinov in "Death emerged and raisedhis arms David Suchet has played Heron the Nile," but most fans rein triumph as a crew member cule Poirot, Agatha Christie's gard Suchet's portrayal as the called a wrap on one of the famous detective, for a quarter- definitive Poirot.) He'sgratefulforthatbecause most remarkable achieve- century. ments in recent British televiit has afforded him the luxury sion history. of pursuing less lucrative jobs It was the last day of filming tryside of her native Devon. in between, particularly on the "Extraordinary, absolutely — ever — for Suchet as Agatha stage, where he has built up a Christie's famous d etective extraordinary," said Suchet, sterling resume. Critics showHerculePoirot,a character he who waved away any sugges- ered praise on his 2010 turn in first played in 1988 and that tion of grief over the end of his Arthur Miller's "All My Sons" has become the definingrole life with Poirot. "I don't think i n London's West End, i n of his career. you can ask anybody who's which Suchet performed with No one could've guessed reached the summit of Everest Zoe Wanamaker, who also then that th e series would whether they're sad." plays his sidekick in several of span a quarter-century or that The climb h a s e n t ailed the recent "Poirot" programs. "'Poirot' ... has literally subthe classically trained Suchet 70 episodes, with dead bodwould complete th e e n tire ies littered all over the world sidized the other side of my cacatalog of whodunits featur- — mostly in England, but also reer, which is my theater side," ing the eccentric Belgian in- on the Orient Express, a Nile he said. "One has paid for the vestigator, including 33 novels steamer and a plane bound other, so I come out not broke, and dozensof shortstories.O r from Paris to London. Film- which is very lucky." that, with a sense of poetic jus- ing of the final five full-length It was only about eight years tice, the final shot would take features finished at the end of ago, after he had starred in place at Christie's own sum- June; one of them, "Elephants about 50 episodes, that Suchet mer home here in southwest Can Remember," has already realized he was approaching England, a Georgian manor aired on Britain's ITV, with the striking distance of completset in the gorgeous green coun- rest to follow in the fall. ing the canon of Poirot stories.
Labors of Hercules," "Dead Man's Folly" and " C urtain: Poirot's Last Case," in which the detective dies after an illustrious career stretching from the mid-1920s till just before Christie's own death in 1976. S he wrote "Curtain" in t h e '40s, but it was locked away in a vault before being published in 1975, a literary event that prompted the New York Times to run its first front-page obituary of a fictional character. Early on in the TV series, the makers decided to set every episode in the 1930s no matter when it was written. That allowed them to pour on the fabulous Art Deco details — "we have people who watch 'Poirot' for the cars," said Rebecca Eaton, executive producer of PBS' "Masterpiece" — and that lends the series a comforting nostalgia, a sort of "Downton" of death. It also enabled producers to shoot the stories out of their w ritten sequence, as h a p pened with the final five adaptations. "Curtain," which will be the last to air, was filmed first, because it was easier for Suchet to lose weight to play an aged, frail Poirot and then gain it back for the remaining episodes. There were emotional reasons too. "I would've hated to leave the character dead," Suchet said. "Now I can leave him alive and kicking and feeling well."
He soon made it his personal ambition. By then, he'd already spent more than a third of his adult life getting used to the extravagant fake mustache and extra padding — he calls it his "armadillo" suit — along with the fussy mannerisms, outsized vanity, Belgian accent and penguin-like walk of Poirot. The series had become enough of an i n stitution to attract big names from both sides of the Atlantic, including Elliott Gould, Jessica Chastain, Barbara Hershey, Hugh Bonneville, Michael Fassbender and Greta Scacchi. But even as the list of outstanding works shrank and the fi nishing l i n e l o omed, there was never a guarantee t hat "Poirot" would b e r e newed whenever it went on hiatus, which sometimes lasted two years or more. In 2011, speculation swirled that the series was done for, until ITV announced that it would commission the remaining five episodes after all, to the relief of both Suchet and his fans. "I was always anxious that it would never happen, right until the end," the actor said, his real voice a much richer baritone than his character's. "I have not known any year whether I was going to do it the next year. It was literally touch and go." In addition to " Elephants Can Remember," the new episodes are "The Big Four," "The
A unt oramissin we in
MOVIE TIMESTDDAY
Dear Abby:My daughter was married recently and has been sending out her thank-you notes. When she checked her registry to determine if all her gifts had been accounted for, she saw thather stepbrother and his wife purchased a gift, but it was not mailed by the departDEAR ment store. ABBY We're a s suming that it was brought to the wedding, but it's nowhere to be found. How can we resolve this delicate situation'? She wants to tell her sister-in-law, but she is concerned it might have been an oversight and be embarrassing. She plans to contact the wedding venue, but it has been three weeks and you'd think if something had been left behind that they would have contacted her.We are also going to check with the friends who packed up the cars. Any other ideas? — Steve in Florida Dear Steve:Because your daughter knows a gift was purchased by her stepbrother and his wife, she should ask them how it was to be delivered because it might have been lost en route. Such things have been known to happen, which is
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • THE CONJURING (R) Noon, 3:25, 7:40, 10:20 • GROWNUPS 2(PG-13) l2:30, 4: IO, 7:45, IO: l5 • DESPICABLE ME2 (PG)10:45 a.m., 1:20, 4, 6:30, 9:15 • THE HEAT (R) 12:05, 3, 7:05, 9:55 • THE LONE RANGER(PG-13) 11a.m., 2:25, 6:10, 9:35 • MONSTERS UNIVERSITY (G)11:15a.m., 2:55 • PACIFIC RIM(PG-13) 12:45 • PACIFIC RIMIMAX3-0 (PG-13) 12:25, 3:35, 7, 10:05 • RED 2(PG-13) 11:25a.m., 3:10, 6:25, 9:10 • R.I.P.D.(PG-13) I2:40, 4:25, 7:25 • R.I.P.D. 3-D (PG-13) 9:50 • THIS IS THE END(R) 7:50, IO:25 • THE TO 00 LIST(R) 11:35 a.m., 2:35, 6:50, 9:20 • TURBO (PG) 11:50 a.m., 2:50, 6:05, 9 • WHITE HOUSE DOWN(PG-13) 10:50 a.m., 2:40, 6:35, 9:45 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 3:15, 4:15, 6:45, 7:30, 9:45, 10:20 • THE WOLVERINE 3-0 (PG-13) 12:15, 3:45, 7:15, 10:15 • WORLDWARZ (PG-13) 11:10a.m., 2:20, 6:15, 10 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.
why it is always wise to request that a merchant provide proof of delivery. That way the recipient signs for the package, and everyone is assured it didn't "fall off the truck." I doubt the stepbrother and his wife, having gone to the expense of buying something, would have forgotten to give it to your daughter. I also doubt the couple who packed up the gifts would have overlooked one. Dear Abby:We recently moved to another neighborhood. Most of the residents are elderly. Our closest neighborsare a very nice couple in their 70s. We've gotten along well, but a problem has arisen and I'm not sure how to handle it. I am a keen do-it-yourself enthusiast. When I get home from work at 2 p.m., I love to go into my workshop and work on one of the many projects I always have going. I'll do this for a couple of hours until my wife and kids get home. I admit, it probably gets a bit noisy with all the power tools, hammers, etc., and I usually leave the door open to let some air in. My neighbor approached me today and told me his wife usually
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013:This yearyouenter a phase in which you would prefer not to be found so easily. You might have unusual demands that require your attention. Whether they have to do with your professional life or Stars showthe kind your community, of day you'll have yo u will like the ** * * * D ynamic results so much ** * * P ositive th at you will not ** * A verage mind the lack of ** So-so personal time. If * Difficult you are single, you meet people with ease. A relationship could develop from a friendship. If you are attached, the two of you often will be seenacting as newfound lovers in public together. TAURUSpushes your buttons.
ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * * Afamily member or roommate seems to be so buoyant that you might do adouble-take.Sharethe moment.The more upbeat this person is, the more you will tend to overindulge. Days like this do not happen often. Tonight: It might be hard to stop the good times.
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
and more centered than you havebeen as of late. Enjoy some time just for yourself. Tonight: Shh! Don't tell.
CANCER (June 21-Jufy22)
naps from 2 to 4 every afternoon, and the noise I make is disturbing her. Until he told me that, I had no idea their downstairs bedroom is only a few feet from our communal fence. Would it be rude to suggest she find another time to nap or maybe sleep in another room? I can't imagine having to sit around and waste time every afternoon waiting for her to finish her nap, especially since she has most of the day to nap while I'm at work. This doesn't seem fair to me. My wife thinks I'm being a bit hard, so we agreed to accept your opinion on this. — D.I.Y.Guy Dear D.I.Y. Guy: I'm pretty sure your neighbor's wife takes her naps at the time of day when she needs one, and she would be unable to adjust her sleep schedule to accommodate you. However, your idea of
suggesting she try sleeping in another part of the house so she won't be disturbed is a good one. Or you mightagree to a compromise so she starts her mid-day rest period a little earlier, and you start your projects a little later. That way you wouldboth getwhat you need. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com
orP0. Box 69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
** * * Feedback comes your way. How you feel has much to do with the present moment. Whatyou dislike is disruption. There is little purpose in dealing with a difficult or irritating situation right now. Put some di stance betweenyouand the issue. Tonight: Say "yes."
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * By the afternoon, you could be worn out. Takecare of yourself and allow the pace to slow down. If you push, you could become disagreeable. If you stay mellow, you might discover just how good you are capable of feeling. Tonight: Organize your schedule.
** * * * R esponsibilities call in the morning, and you will be more than happy to tackle them. Others will be in aweof your follow-through. Join friends in the afternoon. It will bring a smile to your face. Tonight: The party goes on. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** * T he morning works well, as you are able to return calls and catch up on news. A trip might be in the offing in the near future. The more exotic the location, the more you will enjoy your vacation. Share your mellow mood when out and about. Tonight: A force to be dealt with.
** * Finish dealing with a family member. Allow more fun into your life, and you will find thatyour energy levels soar. Do only what you love, and throw yourself 100 percent into it. You easily could be surprised by who you meet andwhat happens. Tonight: Just go with the flow.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb. 18)
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19)
** * * Reach out to a loved one and ** * * L isten to news more openly. enjoy breakfast out. Relaxed conversations A close friend will share his or her vulnerability; honor that openness. Pack up becomepossiblewhenyouareonthe same pageassomeone else.You might the family and go to afavorite spot by the TAURUS (Aprif20-May20) be invited to learn a newgame or pastime. water. A picnic could add to the fun. You ** * * * Y ou'll perk up by the afternoon. Say "yes" — you will be glad you did. will see a loved one bemore responsive. Others surround you or seekyou out. Tonight: Let the good times roll. Tonight: Stay present in the moment. Clearly, you are in aposition where you PISCES (Feb.19-March20) LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22) can pick and choose your company. Your ** * * Determine your budget before ** * * You could be feeling the effect charisma attracts others, some of whom going out. Whetheryou plan to makea of others seeking you out. Do yourself a you would like to push away. Bediplomatic. special purchase or go out for a big brunch, favor and free up somepersonal time. Do Tonight: Forget tomorrow. you will be able to kick back and relax. If what you want, but be willing to do it alone. GEMINI (May21-June20) you are single, romance is in the air. If you Avoid putting yourself among crowds. ** * Use the morning for anything that are attached, you will feel the warmth of A discussion could be quite deep. Listen is critical. By the afternoon, you will be in your bond. Tonight: Let it all hang out. carefully. Tonight: Dinner out. the mood to vanish, and you won't want to SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) be found for a while. You aremuch quieter © 2013 by King Features Syndicate
• There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to changeafter press time. f
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TV TODAY Sp.m. on HE), "Celebrity Wife Swap" —The artists behind two memorable 1990s songs are the featured participants in this new episode. Gerardo Mejia, better known as just Gerardo, swaps spouses with Mark Andrews, aka Sisqo. To refresh your memory, Gerardo had a hit with "Rico Suave" in1991, and Sisqo topped the charts with his "Thong Song" in1999. This isn't Sisqo's first time on a reality show; he did "Celebrity Big Brother" in 2010. 9 p.m. on E3, "Unforgettable" — Carrie Wells (Poppy Montgomery), the NYPDdetective with the amazing memory, is back in Season 2 of this drama after a long hiatus. The new season finds her and partner Al Burns (Dylan Walsh) working in Manhattan undera new boss (Dallas Roberts). Tawny Cypress and James Liao join the cast as fellow detectives, and Jane Curtin returns from Season 1 as medical examiner Joanne Webster. 9 p.m. on H, "Masterpiece Mystery!" —Morse (Shaun Evans) tries to fit in studying for the sergeant's exam around his investigation of the hit-and-run death of a professor. With more pressure on him from his father's illness and a nemesis threatening to reveal Thursday's (Roger Allam) secrets, Morse finds himself torn between his job and loyalty to his mentor in the new episode "Endeavour, Series1: Home." 9 p.m. on ESPN2,"NASCAR Racing" — The historic 2.5mile quad oval of Indianapolis Motor Speedway is the scene today as the Sprint Cup revs up with the Samuel Deeds at the Brickyard 400. A field including Carl Edwards, Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart, Brad Keselowski and Paul Menard will take to the track to challenge Jimmie Johnson, who bagged his third win of 2012 here a year ago, in the process tying Gordon's NASCAR record of four victories at Indy. 10 p.m. on H E3, "Crossing Lines" —While searching for a criminal mastermind, Hickman (William Fichtneri is taken hostage at a bankand comes to realize it may not be money that the robbers are after. As the rest of the team tries to figure out their true motive, Tommy (Richard Flood) is forced to deal with a secret from his past that could put his career in danger in the new episode "The Animals." Marc Lavoine also stars. ©Zap2it
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Rllie here! I om o Shepherd mix about three Vears old ondI am sohoppy Vov stopped by to learn more about me. Unrortunotely my oUjner possed oway ond I found myself with the kind staFF ot HSCO. It took me o couple days to get vsed to the routine but noUj thot I feel sofe, ond I connot get enough love From oll the people! IF Vov think thot Vov can provide the stobility I so crave, come odopt me today!
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Scoreboard, D2 Mot o r sports, D3 Sports in brief, D2 Baseball, D4, D5 Golf, D3 NFL, D6 College football, D3 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
O» www.bendbulletin.com/sports
BASEBALL
Summit reaches tournament final
EQUESTRIAN: OREGON HIGH DESERT CLASSICS
gon Junior Baseball As-
Oregon Ci 's Jordan takes Grand Prix title
sociation Division I state
By Emily Oller
MONMOUTHSummit of Bend
drubbed McNary of Keizer 10-1 on Saturday to advance to the Ore-
championshi pgame. Summit will play either Willamette of Eu-
gene or Crescent Valley of Corvallis today at 3 p.m. at Western Oregon University in the final
game of the 16-team tournament. In Saturday's semifi-
The Bulletin
Oregon City's Megan Jordan had an impressive evening on Saturday, placing both first and third in the $25,000 Sheri Allis Memorial Grand Prix at the Oregon High Desert Classics at Bend's J Bar J Boys Ranch. Jordan, 41, was the first of eight contestants to jump a clean round and
Megan Jordan rides Atlantis to victory in the Sheri Allis Memorial Grand Prix at the Oregon High Desert Classics on Saturday evening at J Bar J Boys Ranch in Bend.
qualify for the jump-off, doing so on her 9-year-oldCzech Republic Warmblood, Atlantis. Jordan qualified again with last week's Grand Prix runner-up, Top Shelf. "Atlantis is l ik e r i ding a f r eight train," said Jordan, who also won a grand prix at the High Desert Classics in 2012. See Classics/D4
Scott Hammers / The Bulletin
nal contest, Josh Cherry and Nolan Juhl were the offensive standouts
for Summit. Cherry
WEST COAST LEAGUE BASEBALL
was 4-for-5 with three doubles, and Juhl was 2-for-5 with four runs batted in. Troy Viola and Chris Mason added two
MOTOR SPORTS
NASCAR ce ebrates anniversary at home of Indy 500
hits apiece in support of winning pitcher Matt Hicks, who tossed a
seven-inning complete game, allowing four hits and striking out five.
Summitadvancedby beating Sprague ofSalem 5-3 in a first-round
game on Thursday and defeating Thurston of Springfield 13-1 in
a quarterfinal game Friday. — Bulletin staff report
By Dan Gelston F
The Associated Press
< i q tiiilsl't g t
MIXED MARTIAL ARTS
Johnson defends title in Seattle SEATTLE — Demetri-
ous Johnson could have coasted for the final round, knowing hewas comfortably aheadon the scorecards andeasily on his way to retaining the UFC flyweight title. Johnson wanted
Photos by Joe Khne /The Bulletin
The Bend Elks' Landon Cray slides in safely to second for a stolen base past the tag of Wenatchee's Joe Mello during Saturday night's game at Vince Genna Stadium in Bend. The game was the opening contest of a West Coast League homestand for the Elks.
more. So eventhough it put him at risk, Johnson made sure he finished with a flourish.
Johnson successfully defended his title on Saturday night, using
an armbar on John Moraga late in the fifth
round for a submission victory before a partisan hometown crowd. Mak-
ing the second defense of the flyweight crown, Johnson controlled most of the fight, then ended it at 3:43 of the fifth round, bending
Moraga's right arm to the point referee Herb Dean stopped the fight.
Johnson (18-2-1) leaped to his feet with four spinning kicks in the center of the ring to celebrate his title
defense. "EventhoughI was
ahead on the scorecards,l've neverjust relaxed and just coasted
by," Johnson said. "My job is to finish and to
push the pace. I just took it and so happened it happened." — The Associated Press
MLB
Bulletin staff report After a couple of rough games on the road that saw Bend relinquish the best record in the West Coast League, the Elks bounced back with a convincing win to start a six-game homestand. Bend batted around in both the seventh and eighth innings to break open a tie game on its way to a 9-4 victory over the Wenatchee AppleSox on Saturday night at Bend's Vince Genna Stadium. The win allowed the Elks to keep pace with the Corvallis Knights, who also won Saturday night, in the WCL's South Division. Bend (24-16) trails
Corvallis (25-15) by a game for both the division lead and the WCL's top record. With the game tied at 3-3 in the seventh, Bend took the
AL posts rarity: Three1-0 games Tamp BayRays rookie Chris Archer helped American Leagueteams pitch a trio of1-0 games Saturday, the first time that has happened on
A~
Q ALe. g
ers shut out the Chicago White Sox by the same
1-0 score. — The Associated Press
Roundup, DS
and a run batted in. Bend scored nine runs and had11 hits in the contest.
The Associated Press
1965, STATS said.
blanked Texas and Wade Davis and Royals reliev-
scored
By Will Graves
games ended1-0 on the same daywas Sept. 4,
the Cleveland bullpen
with a pitch on Saturday. O'Dwyer went 2-for5for Bend at the plate with a run
Former Beaver playing catch-up as Steelers begin
The last time three AL
at Yankee Stadium, Justin Masterson and
connects
NFL
the same day innearlya half-century.
Archer andTampa Bay edgedNewYork
Bend's Cullen O'Dwyer
lead for good on a run-scoring single by Seth Spivey. Later in the inning, Turner Gill and Grant Newton drew bases loaded walks to put the Elks ahead 6-3. The Elks added three more runs in the eighth on an RBI triple by Keach Ballard, an RBI single by Cullen O'Dwyer and an error that scored Austin Guzzon. Spivey, O'Dwyer and Derek Dixon all had two hits for Bend. Turner Gill knocked in three runs, and Spivey had two RBIs. Elks starter Martin Brown went six innings, giving up three earned runs, for the nodecision. Cam Booser worked a scoreless seventh inning in relief for the victory. Bend hosts Wenatchee again today at 5:05 p.m.
Keith Srakocic/The Associated Press
Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Markus Wheaton makes a catch during training camp in Latrobe, Pa., on Saturday. The Oregon State product missed minicamp because of NCAA bylaws.
LATROBE, Pa.— The practice field at Saint Vincent College is long deserted. The veterans on the Pittsburgh Steelers have already showered for dinner, and the rest of the rookies and the last-chancers are close on their heels. Markus Wheaton, however, is just getting started. Standing near the corner of theend zone, Wheaton spends 15 minutes catching passes off a machine, clapping his hands together when the ball buzzes
through his gloves and onto the artificial turf. NCAA rules cost the third-round draft pick out of Oregon State a chance to make a first impression. Instead, Wheaton will settle for making a lasting one. The player tasked with providing the speed lost by the Steelers when Mike Wallace took his fast feet to Miami finds himself playing catch-up. The trimester system used at Oregon State didn't end until after the completion of organized team activities and minicamp. See Wheaton /D6
INDIANAPOLIS — Traditionalists balked and some were downright outraged at the mere suggestion stock cars daresettheirfenders on the sacred ground of Indianapolis. Stage a NASCAR race at the home of the Indianapolis 500? May as well make Indy 500 winners swig orange juice in Victory Lane or have the track install lights for a night race. Heck, make it the Indtanapohs350. None of it could have been worse • Newman than big, bad grabs NASCAR stormpo l e with record ing into their city — an open wheel city. "I think Indy cars belong at Indy and stock cars belong at Daytona," 1986 Indy winner Bobby Rahal said more than 20 years ago. "I think it's a big mistake because Indy has all that tradition and romance and I don't believe it should be tampered with," said Johnny Rutherford, also a former Indianapolis 500 champion. Romance? What is this, a love story? Well, sort of. It's time to pucker up and kiss the bricks once again when NASCAR runs its 20th Cup race today at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon are as much a slice of Indy racing history as A.J. Foyt and Rick Mears. There's a generation of drivers coming up who dreamed of racing at Indianapolis for 400 miles, not 500. The Brickyard may not be the marqueerace to win on NASCAR's schedule. Rahal was on to something, the Daytona 500 is still No. 1. But Indy is a close runner-up. cYou have the Daytona 500 and then the Brickyard 400," Gordon, a four-time Indy winner, said. "Some people may rank it different than that, but that's how I look at it. There was a time, maybe back in 1994, where I would have ranked this No. l." Then the next big thing in NASCAR, a 23-year-old Gordon won the inaugural race in 1994. See NASCAR /D4
"I think Indy cars belong at Indy and
stock cars belong at Daytona." — 1986 Indy winner Bobby Rahal, talking more than 20 years ago, before NASCAR starting racing at Indy
D2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
SPORTS ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY MOTOR SPORTS
Time TV/Radio
Formula One,Hungarian GrandPrix
5 a.m. N BCSN 10 a.m. E S PN 1 p.m. N BCSN 5 p.m. E S PN2
NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Brickyard 400
GP2 Series, Hungary (taped) NHRA, SonomaNationals (taped)
BASEBALL WCL
GOLF
WESTCOAST LEAGUE
Champions Tour, Senior British Open PGA Tour,Canadian Open PGA Tour,Canadian Open Web.com Tour, BoiseOpen
9 a.m. E S PN2 1 0 a.m. Gol f
BASEBALL MLB, Boston at Baltimore MLB, Minnesota at Seattle MLB, St. Louis at Atlanta SWIMMING
noon
CBS
4 p.m.
Golf
10:30 a.m. TBS
1 p.m. 5 p.m.
World championships (taped)
R o ot ES P N
11:30 a.m. N BC
TENNIS ATP, Atlanta Open, final WTA, Bank of the West Classic, final SOCCER CONCACAF GoldCup,final,U.S.Vs.Panama MLS, Chivas USA at Seattle BEACH VOLLEYBALL
Long BeachGrand Slam
noon
ES P N2
2 p.m. ESPN2 12:30 p.m. Fox 8 p.m. Roo t 1 :30 p.m. N BC
MONDAY BASEBALL M LB, Los Angeles Angels atTexas
4 p.m.
ES P N
Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by Nor radio stations.
Leaguestandings North Division
W 23 23 23 18 14
L 19 19 20 21 26
W CorvagisKnights 25 BendElks 24 CowlitzBlackBears 20 KlamathFalls Gems 20 MedfordRogues 21 KitsapBlueJackets 15 Saturday's Games Bend 9,Wenatchee4 Begingham 6, Kelowna1 KlamathFalls 8, Kitsap5 Medford 9, Cowlitz 5 Corvagis5,Victoria 1 Today's Games KlamathFalls atKitsap,1.05 p.m. CorvagisatVictoria,1:05 p.m. Wenatc heeatBend,5:05p.m. Cowlitz atMedford,5:05p.m. Begingham at Kelowna,6:05 p.m.
L 15 16 20 20 22 28
WallaWallaSweets Begingham Bells WenatcheeAppleSox VictoriaHarbourcats KelownaFalcons South Division
SOCCER TimderS fall —Victor Bernardez andSteven Lenhart scored three minutes apart in thesecondhalfand the San Jose
Earthquakes earned a 2-1 victory against the Portland Timbers
on Saturday in Santa Clara, Calif. Bernardez, acenter back, stepped up in theabsence of
back of the endzonevying for a pass from JoeFlacco. The receiver lay pronefor several minutes before thecart arrived. The Ravensbegin defense of their Super Bowl title on Sept. 5 in Denver. Pitta will at least miss that game, Harbaugh said, but the severity of the injury could
keep the tight endout for much longer than that.
forward Chris Wondo)owski and
converted a 55th-minute penalty kick to give San Jose the lead. Lenhart slipped in behind the
BASKETBALL
Timbers' defense to touch home SOOS trade SCOla to a long free kick by Shea Salinas in the 58th minute. Dar)ington
Nagbe scored for the Timbers in the 83rd minute, but Portland couldn't find an equalizer even
PBCOfS —The Indiana Pacers have bolstered their front-line depth with the acquisition of Luis Scola from the Phoenix Suns. The Pacers sent forward Gerald
after San Jose midfielder Marvin Green, center Miles Plumleeand Chavez was given two yellow
cards and wasejected in the 86th minute. TheTimbers (8-310) lost for the second time in four games since their 15-match
vvinless streak endedearlier this month.
a lottery-protected first-round draft pick to the rebuilding Suns.
Scola, a 6-foot-9 forward from Argentina, appeared in all 82
games for the Sunslast season, averaging 12.8 points and6.6 rebounds.
BodCatS Sign HenderSOn
TENNIS Isner advances atAtlanta
— Charlotte shooting guard Gerald Henderson and the Bob-
cats have agreed to athree-year,
—Top-seeded JohnIsnerand second-seededKevin Anderson
$18 million contract, said a person familiar with the situation.
set up what Atlanta Open officials say will be the "tallest" final in ATP Tour history. The 6-foot10 Isner beat Lleyton Hewitt 6-4,
The person saysHenderson,
4-6, 7-6 (5) on Saturday,andthe 6-8 Anderson topped American
Ryan Harrison 6-3, 7-6 (3) in the night semifinal. Isner is 5-3 as a
pro against Anderson, andthey played several times before that. Isner lost in the Atlanta finals in 2010 and 2011 to fellow Ameri-
25, has the option to become an unrestricted free agentafter the 2014-15 season. The 12th overall pick in the 2009 NBA draft by the Bobcats, Henderson
averaged15.5 points per game lastseason,second bestonthe team.
Parker SCOreS 23 to lead
can Mardy Fish.
WOSt —CandaceParker scored a record 23 points in her
CidulkOVa, RadWanSka in
WNBA All-Star debut to lead the West to a102-98 win over the
final —Dominika Cibu)kovaand
East on Saturday in Uncasville, Conn. Her LosAngeles Sparks
Agnieszka Radvvanska will meet in a WTA Tour final for the second
teammate Kristi Toliver added 21
time this year.Cibulkovacoasted
points, scoring 19 in thesecond
past Sorana Cirstea 6-4, 6-0 in the Bank of the West Classic
half. Epiphanny Prince and Ivory Latta each scored15 points to lead the East.
semifinals Saturday inStanford, Calif. A fevv hours later, the top-
seeded Radvvanskaovercame a shaky start to beatAmerican Jamie Hampton 6-3, 6-2 with relative ease. The third-seeded
CYCLING Frenchman wins classic
Cibulkova hasvvontwice ontour
— Tony Gallopin of Francevvon
and last advanced to a final in
the one-day San Sebastian
January in Sydney,where she
classic on Saturday in Spain, the 25-year-old cyclist's first
lost 6-0, 6-0 to Radvvanska.
68-68 68 —204 70-65-70—205 70-68-69—207 69-68-70—207 67-70-70—207 68-71-69—208 69-71-69—209 70-72-68—210 70-72 68—210 72-68-71—211 69-69-73—211 72-75-65—212 72-71 69 212 70-72-70—212 71-68-73—212 73-70-70—213 71-72-70—213 70-72-71—213 70-68-75—213 70-67-76—213 74-72-68—214 76-69-69—214 71-73-70—214 75-69-70—214 72-72-70—214 71-73-70—214 74-68-72—214 72-68-74—214 70-69-75—214 75-72-68—215 74-72-69—215 71-74-71 216 73-70-73—216 71-72-73—216 71-76-70—217 75-70-72 217 73-72-72—217 75-70-72—217 72-73-72—217 74-70-73 217 73-71-73—217 69-75-73—217 74-69-74—217
SteveJones RodSpittle TomKite RoccoMediate MarkMcNulty FredCouples DesSmyth RussCochran JamieSpence TomLehman Larry Mize MarkO'Meara BarryLane GregTurner Peter Mitchell
BobTway SteenTinning AndersForsbrand KatsuyoshiTomori John Inman EduardoRomero Saturday's Summary PedroLinhart MichaelAllen Elks 9, APPieSox 4 David J.Russell Carl Mason Wenatchee 00 2 001 001 — 4 10 4 TomWatson Bend 011 100 33x — 9 11 0 GaryHagberg Kems,McDowel (7)andHuting. Brown,Booser BradFaxon (7), Murigo (8), Ring(9) andServais, Wildung.W a-ChipLutz — Booser. L— Kerns. 2B—Wenatchee:Spencer, Kirk Hanefeld Real,Stephens.Bend:O'Dwyer. 3B—Bend: Balard. DuffyWaldorf MarkJames Santiagol.una GOLF FrankieMinoza Jeff Sluman
PGA Tour
SPORTS IN BRIEF
DavidFrost MarkWiebe SandyLyle PeterFowler GeneSauers PeterSenior CoreyPavin StevePate GaryWolstenholme SteveElkington Jeff Hart MiguelAngelMartin Colin Montgomerie TomPerniceJr. Kohki Idoki
0anadian Open Saturday At Glen AbbeyGolf Club Oakville, Ontario Purse: $5.6 million Yardage: 7,253; Par:72 Third Round a-amateur 70-69-63—202 BrandtSnedeker 67-71-65—203 David Lingmerth 66-74-64—204 Matt Kuchar 70-68-66—204 JasonBohn 75-67-63—205 DustinJohnson 68-71-66—205 KyleStanley 70 68-67 205 GregOwen 69-69-67—205 CharleyHoffman 71-62-72—205 JohnMerrick MarkWilson 70-69-67 206 RobertoCastro 69-70-67—206 JamesHahn 69-68-69—206 PatrickReed 68 68-70—206 TrevorImmelman 68-73-66—207 FabianGomez 72-68-67—207 WilliamMcGirt 71-69-67 207 Jeff Maggert 72-67-68—207 Alistair Presnell 72-67-68—207 Jim Furyk 72-67-68—207 BubbaWatson 68-67-72—207 Vijay Singh 69-73-66—208 GregChalmers 73-68-67—208 Chris Kirk 68-69-71—208 Charl Schwartzel 73-70-66—209 71-72-66—209 ChadCampbell 71-71-67—209 Matt Every 68-73-68—209 ChezReavie 72-68-69—209 JasonKokrak 69-69-71—209 HidekiMatsuyama 69-69-71—209 JamesDriscoll 68-68-73—209 AaronBaddeley 71-72-67—210 Justin Leonard 71-72-67—210 EmieEls 71-70-69—210 MarcelSiem RichardH.l.ee 72-69-69—210 71-69-70—210 DavidMathis Casey Wittenberg 71-69-70—210 AndresRomero 69-70-71—210 Justin Hicks 72-71-68—211 NicholasThompso 73-70-68—211 DavidHearn 70-73-68—211 Y.E.Yang 75-68-68—211 StuartAppleby 69-73-69—211 LukeList 72-69-70—211 MorganHoffmann 70-70-71—211 RorySabbatini 69-71-71—211 TommyGainey 73-64 74 211 KevinChappell 68-75-69—212 Jeff Gove 71-70-71—212 CameronBeckman 70-71-71 212 Billy Horschel 71-69-72—212 RyanPalmer 70-70-72—212 J.J. Henry 73-67-72 212 72-67-73—212 Cameron Tringale 71-72-70—213 AndrewSvoboda 69-72-72—213 GaryWoodland Sang-MoonBae 71-70-72—213 71-69-73—213 Tim Petrovic 72-68-73—213 ScottVerplank 73-67-73—213 MikeWeir 74-65-74—213 CamiloVigegas 73-70-71—214 SteveLeBrun Scott Langley 71-72-71—214 RogerSloan 71-71-72—214 CameronPercy 71-70-73—214 Brendan Steele 65-75-74—214 Will Claxton 69-74-72—215 BrianGa y 72-71-72—215 Scott Piercy 71-71-73—215 Bob Estes 73-68-74—215 RobertAllenby 72-69-74—215 ScottGardiner 66-74-75—215 ScottBrown 66-72-77—215 Made cut did not finish Graeme McDowel 76-65-76—217 Seung-YulNoh 70-73-75 —218 BrianStuard 72-71-75—218 72-71-80—223 Ryo Ishikawa
Champions Tour Senior British Open Saturday At Royal Birkdale Southport, England Purse: $2million Yardage: 7,082;Par:70 Third Round a-amateur BernhardLanger 68-67-66 —201
71-71-75 217
73-75-70—218 76-72-70—218 74-73-71—218 72-74-72—218 68-78-72—218 71-75-72—218 75-71-72—218 72-73-73—218 73-72-73—218 71-74-73—218 71-77-71—219 74-74-71—219 73-74-72—219 73-73-73—219 73-69-77—219 75-72-73—220 74-73-73—220 74-72-74—220 70-76-74—220 69-79-73—221 75-73-73—221 76-72-73—221 70-77-74 221 74-72-75—221 70-76-75—221 76-72-75—223 74-72-77 223 75-71-78—224 74-71-79—224
Willie Wood
Dick Mast Seiki Dkuda Mike Goode s Lu ChienSoon Philip Golding BruceVaughan BoonchuRuangkit Bill Longmuir MarkCalcavecchia MarkBrooks EstebanToledo PaulWesselingh John Cook Joe Daley PeterDahlberg MassyKuramoto Andrew Dldcorn Philip Walton HendrikBuhrmann Mitch Kierstenson FredFunk PhilGressweg
BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION
Saturday'sGame
All-StarGame,West102, East98 Today's Games No games scheduled
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT
Eastern Conference
W L T P t sGF GA S porting KansasCity 10 6 6 3 6 31 21 NewYork 1 0 7 5 3 5 33 27 Montreal 10 5 5 3 5 32 29 Philadelphia 9 6 7 34 33 30 NewEngland 8 7 6 30 27 19 Houston 8 6 6 30 23 20 Chicago 7 9 4 25 25 30 Columbus 6 10 5 2 3 24 27 TorontoFC 3 10 8 1 7 19 29 D.C. 2 15 4 1 0 10 35 Western Conference W L T P t sGF GA RealSaltl.ake 1 1 7 4 37 36 24 Portland 8 3 1 0 3 4 31 20 Colorado 9 7 7 34 28 24 Los Angeles 1 0 9 3 3 3 32 27 Vancouver 9 7 5 32 33 29 FC Dallas 8 5 8 32 27 27 SanJose 7 9 6 27 23 33 Seattle 7 7 4 25 22 21 ChivasUSA 4 11 5 1 7 18 35 NOTE:Threepoints for victory, onepoint for tie.
Saturday'sGames
TorontoFC2, ColumbusI Colorado2, LosAngeles 0 Newyork4, Real Salt Lake3 Philadelphia1,Vancouver0 NewEngland2, D.C.United1 Montreal1,SportingKansasCity 0 Houston1,Chicago1,tie San Jose2,Portland1 Today's Game ChivasUSAat Seattle FC,8p.m.
TENNIS Professional Bank of theWest Classic Saturday At The TaubeFamily TennisCenter Stanford, Calif. Purse: $795,000(Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Dominika Cibulkova(3), Slovakia, def. Sorana Cirstea(5), Romania, 6 4, 6-0. AgnieszkaRadwanska (I), Poland, def. Jamie Hampton(4), UnitedStates,6-3,6-2.
Saturday At The Atlanta Athletic Club Norcross, Ga. Purse: $623,730(WT250) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals John Isner(1), UnitedStates, def. Lleyton Hewitt (7), Australia,6-4,4-6, 7-6(5). KevinAnderson(2), SouthAfrica, def. RyanHarrison,UnitedStates,6-3,7-6(3). Croatia Open Saturday At ITC Stella Maris
Umag, Croatia Purse: $614,700(WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Semifinals FabioFognini(3), Italy, def. GaelMonfils, France, 6-0, 3-6,7-6(3). Tommy Robredo(5), Spain,def.AndreasSeppi(2), Italy, 6-3,2-6,6-4.
Swiss Open Saturday At RoyEmersonArena Gstaad, Switzerland Purse: $614,700(WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Mikhail Youzhny(6), Russia,def. Victor Hanescu, Romania6-3, , 6-3. RobinHaase, Netherlands, def.Feliciano Lopez(5), Spain,4-6, 6-1,6-4. Baku Cup Saturday At Baki TennisAkademiyasi Baku, Azerbaijan Purse: $235,000(Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals ElinaSvitolina(7), Ukraine,def.AlexandraCadantu (4), Roma nia,6-1, 6-4. ShaharPeer,Israel, def. Magdal.inette, Poland, 6-1, 6-1.
MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Brickyard 400Lineup After Saturdaypuattfytng; race today At Indianapolis Motor Speedway Indianapolis Lap length: 2.5 miles
(Car numberin parentheses)
1. (39)RyanNewman, Chevrolet,187.531 mph. 2. (48)JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet,187438. 3. (99)Carl Edwards, Ford,187.157. 4. (11)DennyHamlin, Toyota, 187122. 5. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet,186.827. 6. (78)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,186 722. 7. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevroet,186 633. 8. (42)JuanPablo Montoya, Chevrolet,186.536. 9. (24)JeffGordon,Chevrolet,186.474. 10. (9)MarcosAmbrose,Ford,186.281. 11. (22)JoeyLogano, Ford,185954. 12. (2)BradKeselowski, Ford,185.92. 13. (20)MattKenseth, Toyota,185.789. 14. (51) A JAllmendinger, Chevrolet,185 655. 15. (88)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevroet,185.621. 16. (31)JeffBurton,Chevrolet,185.448. 17.(15) ClintBowyer,Toyota,185.437. 18. (1)JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet,185181. 19. (18)KyleBusch, Toyota, 185.101. 20. (33)AustinDilon, Chevrolet,184.961. 21. (43)AricAlmirola,Ford,184.794. 22. (93)TravisKvapil, Toyota,184.676 23.(27) PaulMenard, Chevrolet, 184.646. 24.(29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 184593. 25.(17) RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,184.536 26. (55)MarkMartin, Toyota, 184.305. 27. (16)GregBiffle, Ford,184.045. 28. (21)TrevorBayne,Ford,183.906. 29. (40)LandonCassill, Chevrolet,183.816. 30. (13)CaseyMears, Ford, 183.752. 31. (83)DavidReutimann, Toyota,183.329. 32. (35)JoshWise,Ford,183.046. 33. (10)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet,182938. 34. (47)BobbyLabonte,Toyota,182.826. 35. (98)MichaelMcDowell, Ford,182.819. 36. (34)DavidRagan,Ford, 182448. 37. (30)DavidStremme,Toyota, owner pornts. 38. (56)MartinTruexJr.,Toyota, ownerpoints. 39. (36)J.J.Yeley,Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 40. (87)JoeNemechek,Toyota,ownerpoints. 41. (7)DaveBianey,Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 42. (38)DavidGigiland,Ford,ownerpoints. 43. (32)TimmyHil, Ford,ownerpoints. Failed to Qualify 44. (19)MikeBliss, Toyota,181.881. 45. (95)ScottSpeed,Ford,177.235.
Formula One Hungarian GrandPrix Lineup After Saturdaypuattfytng; race today At Hungaroring Budapest, Hungary Lap length: 2.722miles Third Session 1. Lewis Hamilton, England,Mercedes, 1 minute, 19.388seconds. 2. Sebastian Vetel, Germany,RedBull,1:19426. 3. RomainGrosjean,France, Lotus, I:19.595. 4. NicoRosberg,Germany,Mercedes,1.19.720. 5. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari,1:19.791. 6. KimiRaikkonen,Finland,l.otus,1:19851. 7. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Ferrari, I:19.929. 8. DanielRicciardo,Australia, ToroRosso,1:20.641. 9. SergioPerez,Mexico, McLaren,1:22.398. 10. MarkWebber, Australra, RedBull, notime. Eliminated after secondsession 11. AdrianSutil, Germany, ForceIndia,1.20.569. 12. NicoHukenberg, Germany, Sauber,1:20.580. 13. Jenson Buton, England,McLaren,1:20.777. 14. Jean-EricVergne,France,Toro Rosso,121.029. 15. Pastor Maldonado, Venezuela, Williams, 1'21.133. 16. ValtteriBottas,Finland,Wiliams,I:21.219.
Eliminated after first session 17. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexico, Sauber,1:21724 18. Pauldi Resta, Scotland,ForceIndia, 1:22.043. 19. CharlesPic,France,Caterham,1:23.007.
20. Giedovander Garde, Netherlands, Caterham , 1'23.333.
21. JulesBianchi, France,Marussia, I:23.787. 22. MaxChilton, England,Marussia,1:23.997.
NHRA NATIONALHOT ROD ASSOCIATION
Atlanta Open
SonomaNationals Pairings
Saturday At Sonoma(Calif.) Raceway Top Fuel 1 David Grubnic,3.765 seconds,324.28 mph vs 16. TerryMcMilen,3.903,317.79; 2. SteveTorrence, 3.766,323.27vs. 15. TommyJohnson Jr., 3.875, 303.71; 3.DougKalitta, 3780, 32483 vs 14. BrittanyForce,3.863,316.67; 4. KhalidalBalooshi, 3.789, 322.96 vs. 13. BrandonBernstein, 3.841, 319.14; 5 SpencerMassey,3.793, 32135 vs. 12. TonySchumacher, 3.838, 323.89,6. ShawnLangdon, 3.797,321.96vs.11. BobVandergriff,3.836,319.14; 7. AntronBrown,3 803,320.66vs. 10.Clay Milican, 3.830,318.84, 8MorganLucas, 3.811,323.66 vs. 9. TJ. Zizzo,3.821, 319.37. Did NotQualify: 17 TroyBuff, 3.906,303.91; 18. StevenChrisman,4 242,264.18. FunnyCar 1. MattHagan,DodgeCharger, 3.986, 320.51vs. 16. AlexisDeJoria,ToyotaCamry, 4.188, 303.71;2. Jack Beckm an, Charger, 3.994, 319.67vs. 15. Todd Lesenko, Charger, 4.165, 304.87; 3. Ron Capps, Charger,4.012,312.50vs. 14.DelWorsham,Camry, 4.157, 306.26; 4.JohnForce, FordMustang, 4025, 316.60vs.13. TonyPedregon,Camry,4.145, 298.27; 5. Tim Wilkerson,Mustang,4.026, 314.09vs. 12. JohnnyGray,Charger,4.112, 306.46; 6. GaryDensham, Charger,4.055, 304.32 vs. 11. Jeff Arend, Charger,4107,30723; 7. CourtneyForce,Mustang, 4.057, 31446vs. 10. CruzPedregon, Camry, 4.102 302.89; 8.Robert Hight, Mustang,4.058, 311.41vs. 9. BobTascaIII, Mustang,4.078,309.13. Did NotQualify.17. JonCapps, 4.251,283.49;18. Jeff Diehl, 4.448,274.61; 19. JoshCrawford, 4.457, 264.55.
Pro Stock 1. Mike Edwards,ChevyCamaro, 6.526, 212.56 vs. Bye; 2. ShaneGray,Camaro, 6532, 211.93vs. 15. DericKramer, DodgeAvenger, 6.648, 208.17; 3. Allen Johnson,Avenger, 6.536, 211.66 vs. 14. Chris McGaha,Avenger, 6.604, 209.62;4. GregAnderson, Camaro,6545,21057vs.13.JRCarr,FordMustang, 6.596, 209.49; 5. V.Gaines,Avenger, 6.551, 211.69 vs. 12. SteveKent, Camaro, 6.592, 20988; 6 Rickie Jones,Cam aro, 6.554, 211.63vs. 11. LarryMorgan, Mustang ,6.583,209.95;7 Jeg Coughlin,Avenger, 6.557, 211.30 vs. 10. RodgerBrogdon, Camaro, 6.568, 211.06; 8. VincentNobile, Avenger, 6.558, 211.03vs.9.JasonLine, Camaro, 6.568,211.30. Pro StockMotorcycle 1. MattSmith,Bueg,6.838, 195.73vs. 16.Shawn Gann,Buell,6.952,193.43;2. HectorAranaJr, Bueg, 6.840, 195.73vs. 15.Scotty Pollacheck,Buell, 6942, 190.65; 3.Michael Ray,Bueg,6.841, 195.34vs. 14. KatieSullivan,Suzuki,6.942,191.21, 4.Hector Arana, Buell, 6.865,195.87vs. 13.JohnHall, Buell, 6925, 191.87; 5. LE Tonglet, Suzuki, 6.879,194.10vs 12. KarenStoffer, Suzuki, 6.916,193.32;6. AngieSmith, Buell, 6.893,192.17vs. 11. SteveJohnson, Suzuki, 6.908, 19293;7. JerrySavoie, Suzuki, 6898, 19413 vs. 10. AdamArana, Buell, 6.902, 194.63, 8. Eddie Krawiec,Harley-Davidson, 6.898,192.47vs. 9. AndrewHines,Harley-Davidson,6.899,193.99. Did NotQualify:17. JimUnderdahl,6975,19318; 18. FreddieCama rena, 7.067, 189.07; 19. James Surber, 7.102,187.96;20. Daryl Meadows,7.184, 182.65.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague
CLEVELAN DINDIANS— Sent RHPJoshTomlin to
the AZLIndransfor arehabassignment. DETROITIG T ERS—Agreedto termswith RHPJair Jurrjensonaminor leaguecontract. HOUSTONASTRDS— PlacedDFJ.D.Martinezon the15-dayDL.DptionedRHPPaul Clemensto OklahomaCity(PCL).Recalled LHPBrett Oberholtzer and DF Robbie GrossmanfromOklahomaCity.
MINNESOT ATWINS Sent DF Darin Mastroianni to theGCLTwins for a rehabassignment. SEATTLE MARINERS — DptionedRHPHectorNoesi to Tacoma (PCL). Recaled RH P BrandonMaurer fromTacoma. National League COLOR ADOROCKIES Dptioned RHPMitchell Boggsto ColoradoSprings (PCL). Recaled RHPCollin McHugh fromColoradoSprings. MII.WAUKE EBREWERS—Dptioned1BSeanHalton to Nashville(PCL).Selectedthecontract of RHP RobWootenfromNashvile. NEW YORKMETS — SentLHPJon Niese to the GCLMetsfor arehabassignment. Optioned DFKirk Nieuwenhuis toLasVegas(PCL). TradedDFJulio Concepcioto n the I..A. Angels. ST.LOUIS CARDINALS— DptionedDFBrockPeterson toMemphis (PCL). Reinstated DFMatt Hogiday from the15-dayDL. WASHINGTONNATIDNALS — Dptioned RHP DrewStorentoSyracuse(IL). BASKETBALL National Basketball Association DENVERNUGGETS — Resigned 0 Timofey Mozgov to athree-year contract. PHOENIS XUNS Traded FLuisScolato Indiana for F GeraldGreen,CMiles Plumleeandafirst-round draft pick. FOOTBALL National Football League NFL — SuspendedOakland WRAndre Holmes four gamesfor violating the NFL'spolicy on perfor-
manceenhancingsubstances.
ARIZONACARDINALS — Signed WR Nicholas Edwards. BUFFALO BILLS— Released TEMickey Shuler and DLChrisScott. INDIANAP OLIS COLTS— Placed LBPatAngerer and DEFili MoalaonthePUPlist. NEWYOR KJETS— Placed CBAaron Berry on injuredreserve.SignedRBChadSpann. Activated DT Junior Auma vae and CBMike Edwardsfromthe PUP list. Removed CBDarrin Walls fromthe non-footbag injury list. SEATTLESEAHAWKS — Released DT Jake Bscherer.ClaimedLBO'Brien Schofield off waivers from Arizona.
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement ofadultchinook, jackchinook,steelheadandwrldsteeheadatselectedColumbia RiverdamslastupdatedonFriday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonnevi le 65 0 13 3 3 ,582 2,128 The Dalles 61 9 10 5 2 , 350 1,563 McNary 32 82 700 427 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected Columbia Riverdamslast updatedonFriday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 173,009 59,275 46,704 25,887 The Dages 150,629 52,208 24,175 13,741 John Day 127,848 47,775 14,562 7,344 McNary 123,148 36,112 10,521 4,742
major win. Gallopin, riding for
FOOTBALL Eagles WR Maclin tears
RadioShackLeopard,completed the mountainous race in 5hours, 39 minutes, 2 seconds after breaking away on the final climb.
SWIMMING: WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS
wide receiver Jeremy Maclin tore the ACL in his right knee during
verde of Movistar, Czech rider Roman Kreuziger of SaxoBank
Lochte puts TVcareer on hold to hit the pool
practice Saturday andcould miss
and local favorite Mikel Nieveof
By Paul Newberry
the season. Maclin went down at the end of a non-contact drill
Euskatel-Euskadi crossed the finish line next, 28 seconds behind
The Associated Press
and appeared to be inpain while he was on theground for several
Gallopin. Tour deFrance runner-
minutes. He vvas helped onto
Gallopin's pace.
ACL —Philadelphia Eagles
The 2008 winner Alejandro Val-
up Nairo Quintana was 3:20 off
a cartand neededassistance getting off it and going into the team's practice facility. Philadel-
BARCELONA, Spain Ryan Lochte has put his TV career on hold. It's time to go swimming
again.
American wins BMXworld
derson, Nev., finished his lap at the Vector Arena in Auckland in
The American star will lead another powerhouse men's team into the swimming portion of the world championships, which begins today at the Palau Sant Jordi. He hopes to compete in seven events and doesn't have to w o rry about being overshadowed by longtime rival Michael Phelps, who retired after the London
coach John Harbaughcalled "a
22.598 seconds, holding off 2011
Olympics.
serious injury." Pitta vvas carted off the field after colliding with
elite champion Joris Daudet of
Lochte never c onsidered quitting, but he did try some new things, including his own
phia is in its second full practice under new coach Chip Kelly. The first practice with pads is today.
RaVenS TEdiSIOCateS hiP — Baltimore Ravens tight end Dennis Pitta dislocated his hip in practice Saturday and will be sidelined indefinitely with what
safety James)hedigbo in the
title — Connor Fields of the United States wonhis second straight BMX time trial world
championship onSaturday in Auckland, NewZealand,while Olympic champion Mariana Pajon of Colombia captured the
women's title. Fields, of Hen-
France by0.103 seconds. — From wire reports
reality show, "What Would Ryan Lochte Do?" "After t he O l ympics, I wanted to take a break from the swimming pool," Lochte said. "I wanted to do things that other O l ympians just dreamed about. I had a lot of fun, doing a bunch of TV appearances. I had my own reality TV show. Everything I did was different. "But," he added, "the biggest goal was always the 2016 Olympics. I knew I had to get back in the water eventually." At the midway point of the FINA worlds championships, the American have only two medals — both in open water. Their count should start to go up dramatically when Lochte,
Missy Franklin 8 C o . t a ke over the pooL Last summer, the U.S. team won 16 golds and 31 medals overall, far more than any other nation. F ranklin, wh o w o n f o u r g olds and a b r onze at t h e Olympics, plans to increase her workload f r o m s e ven to eight events at the world championships. Lochte will be nearly as busy, though he has changed up his London
Clos — who is best known for handing Phelps a shocking loss in the 200 fly at London. Lochte's other i n dividual events are the 200 IM, t he 200 backstroke and the 200 freestyle.Plus, he hopes to be picked for all three relays. But, given the lack of training time leading up to t h is meet because ofhis extracurricular activities, Lochte is realistic about his chances. "Any other year, my expecprogram. tations would definitely be Even though he won gold medaling in every race,"he in the grueling 400-meter in- said. "I want to do that at this dividual medley, he's dropped meet, but it's been an off year. that event for this meet. In- I really don't know what's gostead, he'll take on the 100 ing to happen. If I can just step b utterfly, where h e 'll f a c e on the blocks and race tough, I South African star Chad le think I'll be all right."
SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP
COLLEGE FOOTBALL COMMENTARY
GOLF ROUNDUP
Newman
-
knocks
®™
S
off pole The Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS — The Rocket Man got his fuel back. Finally. Ryan Newman snatched the pole away from Jimmie Johnson with a blistering lap of 187.531 mph around Indianapolis Motor Speedway to set a track record for NASCAR races at the Brickyard. Newman was the l ast of the 45drivers to make a qualifying attempt Saturday as Johnson's No. 48 was atop the scoring tower for well over an hour with a lap of 187.438. Driver after driver had failed to knock Johnson from the pole, and the four-time B r ickyard winner watched and waited to see if Newman could get the job done. Newman, an Indiana native, pulled it off as Johnson smiled his approval. "You can't count Ryan out, and he put up a whale of a lap," Johnson said. Added team co-owner Tony Stewart, "They don't call him 'Rocket Man' for no reason. He had an awesome lap." I t's the 50th p ole f o r Newman, who established himself as an elite qualifier with six poles his rookie season. He set a NASCAR record with 1 1 p oles in 2003, and won at least one pole a year for 11 seasons. But he'd b ee n i n a drought of late, and Newman's last pole was late in the 2011 season. "I just am ecstatic. It's awesome because it's my 50th.It's awesome because it's Indy, and it's a track record on top of that, so it's like a double triple bonus," Newman said. The normally stoic Newman admitted he got emotional on the backstretch of his cool-down lap. "It's more special to me because it's the Brickyard, because it's Indy, because of the history of auto racing at this facility," he said. "So many drivers who are my heroes, so many drivers I've admired, so many drivers that have worked so hard in their career to get to here on this day, to be the fastest one, that's what's the most special to me." Carl Edwards qualified third a t 1 8 7.157. Denny H amlin was f ourth a n d was followed by Stewart, a two-time Indy winner. Also on Saturday: Busch wins: I N D I A NAPOLIS — Kyle Busch dominated to win the Nat ionwide Series race a t Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Busch had the fastest car to win for the eighth time in 15 races. Busch led 92 of 100 laps but had a late scare after he fell back to third on the final restart before charging back to the lead. Brian Scott had a career-bestsecond-place finish. Joey Logano was third. Hamilton takes pole:Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton will start from the pole position for the fourth time this season after setting the fastest time at the end of
qualifying for the Hungarian Grand Prix in Budapest. Hamilton clocked I minute, 19.388 seconds, just ahead of t h ree-time d efending Formula Onechampion Sebastian Vettel's best lap of I:19.426.
Hagan tops Funny Car: Matt Hagan topped Funny Car qualifying at the NHRA Sonoma Nationals in California. No one bettered Hagan's track-record run of 3.986 seconds at 320.51 mph in his Dodge Charger from Friday, giving the Virginia driver his third No. 1 of the year and 13th overall. David Grubnic led the Top Fuel field, Mike Edwards was the fastest in Pro Stock, and Matt Smith topped the Pro Stock Motorcycle division.
,zP
'4
Johnson
D3
Snedekerin front after second-rOLlnd
leader Mahan withdraws The Associated Press
Photosby Jae C. Hong /The Associated Press
Coaches and players participating in the Pac-12 media day gather for a group photo on Friday in Culver City, Calif.
I
Si
C B I l e IIl BIF, BC-
0 in on 0 0
Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott talks to the
By Bud Withers The Seat tle Times
CULVER CITY, Calif. ews has a way of coming more slowly t o t h e W e st Coast, and so it was Friday as the Pac-12 Conference staged its annual football media day, well after the SEC and Big 12 and Big Ten have created headlines. No matter, some of us figured. The czar of his increasingly robust league, Larry Scott, would surely deliver some smoking quotes on the state of college athletics. There was even a whiff in the air that he had some welcome, long-awaited news on the conference's impasse with DirecTV. No, and no. Scott is taking a conservative position on th e fl avorof-the-month topic, NCAA governance, and the increasing national groundswell that i t m a kes l ittle sense for Washington and Whitman to be regulated by the same rules. While he called for a "new vision" of a more nimble NCAA, he didn't echo the siren sounded earlier this week by Bob Bowlsby, Big 12 commissioner, who said "transformative" change needs to happen. "I'm an optimist," Scott said, indicating he's not of the breakawayfrom-the-NCAA p e r suasion. "I think we're going to be able to do this within the system." As for DirecTV, drat. Still nothing. And it's obviously sticking in Scott's craw, enough of an annoyance that he again called for fans to dump Direct — prominent in the first half of his state-of-the-league address. "We'reno closerthan we were last football season," Scott said. "Unfortunately, it's become clear they don't intend to take the (Pac-12) Networks this year." As one ofthe beleaguered souls still suffering from DirecTV's bull-
imi S m
-
N
press dunng Pac-12 media day on Friday. Scott addressed the push for changein the NCAA but tooka conservative stance. headedness, I may not be unbiased, but the array of characters, styles and story lines that descended on Sony Studios here leads me to wonder if the Pac-12 has ever been more intriguing. Yeah, the league has been more contentious. From 1994-2000,seven different programs went to the Rose Bowl. But only two of those won in Pasadena. It looks different now. You've got a Stanford team that people are talking about as a national-title contender — yet a media pick to finish second behind Oregon in the Pac-12 North. (Just look at the foundation Buddy Teevens laid.) Eclectic?The league has four head coaches with drawls. You've got a Washington team that thinks it's capable of winning nine or 10 games this year, except somebody needs to tell the Ducks, Stanford and O r egon State, all picked ahead of the Huskies. There'sUSC, in the curious position of lying in the weeds, selected No. 3 in the Pac-12 South. Maybe that's because Lane Kiffin spent time last year doing things like deflating game balls and playing tricks with jerseys on opponents.
Even at downtrodden Colorado, there's suspense in an ominous way, because the cash-strapped Buffs went out and named a new coach, Mike MacIntyre, and six months later, decided to fire the guy who hired him, athletic director Mike Bohn. Of course, you've got Mike Leach at Washington State, always good for a r a ised eyebrow. That was Leach confirming Friday that, because of construction on their football-operations building, the Cougars will practice for the first 10 days of fall camp at Sacajawea Junior High in Lewiston (Husky fans: Insert punch line here.) A Leach disciple, Sonny Dykes, has landed at Cal — Texas twang meets Telegraph Avenue. Somehow that doesn't add up, evidenced by a story Dykes told CBSSports.com last spring about a recollection from Berkeley when he once attended a Nike camp there. "I'm driving down Telegraph and I see this guy riding his bicycle totally naked," said Dykes. "Well, except for his sandals and sunglasses." Bottom line: No above-the-fold newsmaking by the commish on this day. His league has pushed him to the back pages.
Reduction of'payday'games means David andGoliath will meet lessoften By Ralph D. Russo The Associated Press
NEW YORK — College football's Davids will get fewer chances to knock off the Goliaths in the com-
ing years. Part of the fallout of the sweeping changes coming to college sports will be a decrease in so-called guarantee games in football, where a power conference school pays hundreds of thousands of dollars to have a team from a lesser league play at its stadium. The result will be far fewer opportunities for embarrassing blowouts (Oklahoma State 84, Savannah State 0) and startling upsets (Appalachian State 34, Michigan 32). Pac12 Commissioner Larry Scott said it would be good for college football and that he is "not very sympathetic" to the potential loss of revenue to the schools on the receiving end of the checks. The commissioners of the lowerrevenue conferences say losing the pay days won't kill their leagues, and that giving players from smaller schools a chance to compete on the big stage has value. "Traditionally, we play the Big Ten a lot," Mid-American Conference CommissionerJon Steinbrecher said in a phone interview Friday. "We're in the neighborhood so that makes a lot of sense." MAC teams will play 13 games against Big Ten teams this season, plus four against the SEC and two each against the Big 12 and Atlantic Coast Conference, and many of them fall into the category of guarantee games. The shift to nine-game conference schedules, along with an increased emphasison strength ofschedule for the coming College Football Playoff,
all but guarantee fewer opportunitiesfor the other five conferences (MAC, Sun Belt, Mountain West, American Athletic and Conference USA) in FBS to play the top five. Add in the need for the power conferences to beef up their schedules to create made-for-TV matchups to justify the millions they are getting in media rights deals, plus a possible reconfiguration of Division I, and it leads to speculation that the big five will be playing exclusively among themselves at some point. Scott shot down that idea and Steinbrecher doesn'tsound overly concerned about his teams not getting morethan a few shots per season to knock off marquee programs. Steinbrecher said it's more likely for the big five to trim FCS teams — the old Division I-AA — from their schedules than the other FBS leagues. The Big Ten has said it would like eliminate all FCS games soon. And if schools from the big five are getting tired of cutting those big checks for home games, Steinbrecherhas another solution. "We'd gladly give up the guarantee game and start a home-andhome," he said. Patty Viverito runs the FCS Missouri Valley Conference football as senior associate commissioner. MVC teams such as Northern Iowa and North Dakota State frequently play Big Ten teams. Losing that revenue will be a challenge for her schools, she said. "But at this juncture there seems to be plenty of willing hosts," she said. "We haven't had too much difficulty in finding alternate opponents." She added: "We think that those games havebeen good forthe game of college football. I think I would like to have a more considerate ap-
proach to the good of the game be part of the conversation." She noted some of the top FCS programs often have teams comparable or better to the bottom teams in FBS, and have fans that make road trips and buy tickets. Big South Commissioner Kyle Kallander said it's hard to predict what not having FBS games and the money that comes with them would do to his members. "There aresome that rely on the revenue to improve facilities and fund their programs," he said. "But it's not like the sky would fall and wouldn't be able to play anymore." Viverito wondered whether the big five conferences could stomach the consequences of playing only games against each other. "That's a zero-sum game where 50 percent ofthe teams lose," she said. "None of those teams want to be 6-6. They all want to be 9-3 or 10-2." Southern Mississippi coach Todd Monken at Conference USA media days said he'd like to see how coaches in the big five would handle playing schedules with only five or six home games in some seasons and nothing but opponents with relatively equal resources. "Just have a nice NFL crossover where you play each other," Monken told the South Florida Sun SentineL "Then when you fire up a nice 7-5, and you're ata pretty good place and they fire you, they won't be real excited about it, because you won't have those games that they've been able to win. Plain and simple." "Some of those teams that get bowl eligible when they go 2-6 in their league and they go 6-6. Well, you'll be 2-10, or 3-9, and it won't feel so damn salty."
OAKVILLE, Ontario — Brandt Snedeker was on seventh tee when he noticed something wasn't quite right. He couldn't find Hunter Mahan's name at the top of the Canadian Open leaderboard. "I looked at my caddie, and I go, 'What's going on?'" Snedeker said. "He goes, 'I think Hunter had to leave because (his wife) went into labor.'" His caddie was right. Mahan, the second-round leader at 13 under, withdrew Saturday to rush home to Dallas for the birth of his first child Saturday, leaving a big opening for Snedeker. "Kind of left the tournament wide open," Snedeker said. "Hunter was going to be hard to catch because he was playing so good. The way he drives the golf ball on this golf course, he was going to play really well on the weekend. For me to catch him, I knew I was going to have to shoot something really low." Snedeker had a 9-under 63 at rainy Glen Abbey to take the lead after the third round. He won the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am in February for his fifth PGA Tour victory. "I know how to handle it and I know what to expect tomorrow especially on a golf course like this," Snedeker said. "I'm not too concerned about my number right now. I know what I have to do tomorrow." The 2012 FedExCup champion had nine
birdies in a bogey-free round, playing the frontnine in 6-under 29. "You always feel like you're exactly one swing away from hitting something off the planet or something like that," Snedeker said. "I felt like I managed my game really well today." Mahan withdrewbefore he was scheduled to tee off Saturday in the round that was delayed 80 minutes because of lightning. "I received exciting news a short time ago that my wife Kandi has gone into labor with our first child," Mahan said in a statement. "Kandi and I are thrilled about the addition to the Mahan family and we look forward to returning to the RBC Canadian Open in the coming years." Sweden's David Lingmerth was a stroke back aftera 65,and Matt Kuchar and Jason Bohn were 12 under. Kuchar had a 64, and Bohn shot 66. "The birth of a child is a truly magical, special thing. You may get it once in your lifetime. It just doesn't happen that often," Kuchar said. "Hunter right now is playing some of the best golf in the world. It kind of gives the rest of us a chance with him not in the field." Also on Saturday: Langer leads at Senior British: SOUTHPORT, England — Germany's Bernhard Langer took a three-shot lead in the Senior British Open, mastering Royal Birkdale with superb links play for a 4-under 66. Langer, the 2010 winner at Carnoustie, had a 9-under 201 total. South Africa's David Frost was second after a 68. American Mark Wiebe, tied for the second-round lead with Langer, had a 70 to drop four strokes back. Californian takes girls title:FORT WAYNE, Ind. — Gabriella Then won the U.S. Girls' Junior, spoiling Lakareber Abe's bid to become the first black female individual champion in U.S. Golf Association history. Then, the 17-year-old Upland, Calif., player who will be a freshman at Southern California, beat Abe 2 and 1 in the 36-hole final at Sycamore Hills. Texan triumphs at U.S. Junior Am: TRUCKEE, Calif. — Scottie Scheffler won the U.S. Junior Amateur, beating Davis Riley 3 and 2 in the 36-hole final at Martis Camp Club. The 17-year-old Scheffler, from Dallas, won the last four holes. Hoey shoots 65 for lead: MOSCOW — Northern Ireland's Michael Hoey shot a 7-under 65 to open a five-stroke lead in the Russian Open. The four-time European Tour winner had a 14-under 202 total at Tseleevo Golf & Polo Club. England's Matthew Nixon
(68) and Sweden's Rikard Karlberg (72) were tied for second.
Nathan Denette /The Canadian Press via The Associated Press
Brandt Snedeker reacts to the crowd on the 18th green during the third round of the Canadian Open in Oakville, Ontario, on Saturday. Snedeker leads the tournament.
D4 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 28, 20'I3
Classics
MLB
Continued from 01 "It's just like a rocket and you're along for the ride. He is 150 percent every time he walks into the ring. He never loses concentration." Among the top eight was last year's Sheri Allis Memorial Grand Prix winner, Brian Morton, of Langley, British Columbia. Morton, 27, had a nearly winning jump-off round atop his horse, Spitfire. The two were the last of the eight in the jump-off to ride, and they put up a 32.301-second round with no faults — just barely missing out on the win. "The course they used in the jumpoff was unique," Morton said. "You could really only use a quarter of the field. So a lot of it was just on the turns. It was hard for me to get my speed up. So I tried to be very sharp and accuScott Hammers/The Bulletin rate on the turns but was never really Megan Jordan, and her horse Atlantis, wait for the awards ceremony at Saturday able to get the ground speed up." evening's grand prix at the Oregon High Desert Classics in Bend. Jordan was the first to go into the jump-off round, atop Atlantis, and she went in with a risky gallop. But the risk paid off, and she set the winning Leading off today's Oregon HighDes- DVM Mini Grand prix jumper class at 4 pace with a time of 32.164 seconds. ert Classics is the final $10,000 USHJA p.m. Professional andamateur riders "Atlantis is fast and he's careful," International Hunter Derby at 8 a.m. Rid- will jump 1.20-meter fences in a timed Jordan saidafter her ride. "Top Shelf ers will jump picturesque fences ranging event. is fast, but Atlantis is fast AND carefrom 3 feet, 6 inches to 4 feet. Four opThe Take2Thoroughbred Classic, the ful, so I thought that I could lay it tional fences will range in heights from 4 headliner class for the Take2 competidown. feet to 4 feet, 3 inches. tors, will take place around11 a.m. in The riders who followed Jordan's The USHJA International Hunter Kilkenny Crest Jumper Ring 1. leadoff performance were unable to Derby — located in the Swan Training This is the final day of the annual jump clean rounds until Jordan herGrand Prix Ring — is judged on perforHigh Desert Classics being staged for self came back in the sixth spot with mance, hunter pace, style, quality and the 24th year at J Bar JBoys Ranchon 16-year-old Grand Prix veteran Top movement. Hamby Roadin northeastBend.SpectaShelf. The warmblood gelding jumped Also in the Swan Training Grand Prix tors are welcome;admission is free. the second clean round and put up a Ring will be the $2,500 Jennifer Sparks, — Bulletin staff report time of35.086 seconds. When Jordan came up on Top Shelf, she said, she was told that no additional clean rounds had been recorded and Arguably the ride of the day came eliminated her from the jump-off. "I landed off of fence 3 and I heard that no other rider had gone under 38 from last week's United States Hunter seconds. "So my goal," she said, "was Jumper Association National Derby a pop and I thought, 'Did I lose a stirto be clean and faster than 38." winner, Megan Garcia.The 35-year- rup?' I looked down and it was gone!" Jordan, who a week earlier placed old from Beaverton rode Bijole Vanel Garcia said. "It was a sinking feeling. second in the Classics' Oxford Hotel in the first round. After the third jump, It was definitely a mind-over-matter Group Grand Prix, earned $7,500 for she lost her left stirrup and completed thing. I knew I didn't have a choice but her first-place finish this week and an- the remaining 10 jumps on sheer hope for the best." other $3,250 for placing third — a total strength. Garcia cleared all but the fi— Reporter: 541-383-0375, of $10,750. nal jump, where a knocked-over pole eoller@bendbulletirLcom
I>lkm
Today atthe Classics
With renewed lovefor game, Donovangives LJ.S.spark By Nancy Armour
SOCCER
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Burned out and exhausted from more than a decade as the standard bearerfor the U.S. soccer team, Landon Donovan needed a break. For four months last winter, soccer was the last concern for the Americans' career scoringleader.He spent time with family and friends, making up for all those holidays and get-togethers he missed overthe years. He traveled to far-flung places, reveling in his respite from the harsh glare of the spotlight. And somewhere along the way, he rediscoveredhis love for the game he had been so desperate to escape. The rejuvenated Donovan is a big reason the Americans are in the CONCACAF Gold Cup final today, where they will face Panama. He has five
goals in five games, tied for a tournament high, and seven assists. Those 12 goals are one more than Panama's entireteam has scored;the Americans lead the tournament with a total of 19
goals.
"I've enjoyed myself tremendously," Donovan said Saturday. "I've enjoyed helping with the younger guys. I've enjoyed being a part of a team that really doesn't have ego, that's really excited about this opportunity. It's been really fun to be a part of, and I've enjoyed it a lot." Donovan wasn't enjoying much after helping the Los Angeles Galaxy win their second straight MLS title on Dec. 1. Saddled with the title of "best player the U.S. has ever produced" since he
scored twice at the 2002 World Cup, Donovan was understandably drained after the Galaxy hoisted the trophy and wasn't sure if he wanted to keep playing. Never mind that he only turned 31 on March 4, and the World Cup was less than two years away. While the Galaxy told him to take the timehe needed, U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann wasn't quite so understanding. He left Donovan off the squad for a series of World Cup qualifiers, saying Donovan needed to work his way back onto the team. In Donovan's first game back with the Americans after an 11-month absence, he scored twice in an exhibition against Guatemala and became the first U.S. player to crack the 50-goal mark. He has been simply dazzling in the Gold Cup, scoring or having an assist in each of the Americans' games.
Rays'sudden rise supports thinking inside the triangle By Benjamin Hoffman New Yorh Times News Service
Pythagoras, it would seem, is having amoment. The pride of Samos, he was in the news last week when Jason Garrett, coach of the Dallas Cowboys, said he had been quizzing his standout wide receiver Miles Austin on the mathematician and philosopher's famous theorem for determining the length of the hypotenuse of a right triangle. "It's A-squared plus B-squared equals C-squared isthe theory," Austin said. "It's the longest angle of the triangle." Garrett, a Princeton graduate, was using the work of Pythagoras to help Austin run his routes more efficiently. In baseball, the Pythagorean t heorem, in the form of a B i l l James riff to determine a team's expected win-loss record, has been giving Las Vegas oddsmakers arun fortheirmoney. Like the method of squaring the two sides of a right triangle that form a 90-degree angle to determine the squared length of the longest side, Pythagorean Winning Percentage is determined by squaring a team's runs scored, then dividing that by the sum of the team's runs scored squared plus its runs allowed squared. The James formula is often maligned for being thrown off
by high-scoring games, and for
not accounting for a team's ability to win close games, but it had exactly predicted the records of four teams through Friday: Boston, Kansas City, Minnesota and Arizona. Only five teams had a record morethan three games differentfrom the expected record, with Detroit (five games worse) and Philadelphia (five games better) being the greatest outliers. The most interesting case for the r un-differential a r gument, however, has been the Tampa Bay
record.Their offense was nothing special, and their pitching ace, David Price, was recovering from injury. There was no reason to believe they were suddenly going to morph into the best team in baseball. Since then, they were 18-3 entering Saturday's game, outscoring their opponents 107-53. The expected record for that run differential would be 16-5, proving that the streak has not been about luck, but rather has just been a
team playing phenomenal baseball for the better part of a month. The question is to what degree that hot streak is sustainable. In terms of pitching, the great performances are no t e x actly unexpected, even if they will be difficult to keep up. Price has returned, and looks like the reigning Cy Y oung Award w i nner that he is, having gone 4-1 with a 1.76 earned run average in July. That qualifies him as only the third-best starter for the Rays this month, with Matt Moore (4-0, 0.91 ERA) and Chris Archer (3-0, 0.96 before his start Saturday) emerging as the team's top two starters,
and Jeremy Hellickson (3-0, 2.63) not far behind. But for the Rays, strong pitch-
ing performances are nothing new. It is offense, besides Evan Longoria, that the team has historically struggled with. And it may be offense that eventually ends this streak. Longoria has not been part of the July fun, hitting .187 in 20 games. The team's offense has instead been led by three players who had been given up on by other clubs: James Loney, Kelly Johnson and Luke Scott.
Loney (29 years old), Johnson (31) and Scott (35) have all had
moments of offensive prowess in the past, but to expect a group of castoffs to continue to carry the team, particularly after the pitchRays. ing comes back to earth some, After a win June 30, the Rays would be unwise. were 43-39, six games behind diFor the Rays, sustained sucvision-leading Boston. With a win cess may be all about timing. As over the Yankees on Friday night, those hitters and the team's startin the first of a three-game series ing pitching regress to the mean, in New York, they took over first the Rays will need Longoria and place, completing a remarkable Ben Zobrist to start hitting again turnaround. to balance things out. What makes the Rays interestWhether or not that will haping is that on June 30 they were pen is something even Pythagofundamentally a 4 3 -3 9 t e am. ras could not predict. In f airTheir 378 runs scored and 360 ness to him, he died more than runs allowed produced an expect- 2,300 years before baseball was ed record matching their actual invented.
See us for retractable
NASCAR
I didn't want to see anything different come to it. To me, it Continued from 01 was the Indy 500 and that's all A n e stimated c r owd o f it was supposed to be." 250,000 f a n s abs o l utely That feeling didn't last for jammed the place and Gordon long. Stewart won in 2005 and recalled the die-hards lined up 2007 and was won over that 10 deep around the garage just NASCAR could truly call Into get a peek at the drivers that dianapolis home. "It was everything to me," would soon usher NASCAR into a boom period. NASCAR he said. "My whole life, since I hadn't just raced at Indy — it was a kid, that's what I wanted took it over. to do. Not that I had some fasciDale Earnhardt won in 1995 nation with kissing bricks as a and then Dale Jarrett started a child. But my fascination to do celebration with his 1996 win it here was pretty obsessive." that lasts to this day, and even NASCAR first kicked the carried over to Indy. Jarrett tires of running in Indianapoand crew chief Todd Parrott lis in the early 1990s. By 1992, knelt down and planted a big the stock car series was ready ol' kiss on the bricks, the start- to take a dip in the Indy pool finish line for the race. Who with two days of tire testing. needs milk? An estimated 30,000 fans Tony Stewart, a former open at th e S p eedway c hanted "We want a race," as the cars wheel champion, never got to fulfill his boyhood dream roared from the pit p ast a of winning an I n dianapolis hand-lettered sign, "Indy fans 500. But the Indiana native love NASCAR." has twice won the Brickyard, In 1993, former IMS presiputting an emphatic end to dent Tony George extended his skepticism that winning a the official invitation for NASNASCAR race in Indy would CAR to come aboard. never mean as much had it On Aug. 4, 1994, NASCAR happened in open wheel. hit the track for its first prac"The first time they came, tice on the 2'/z-mile track. I'll be honest, I was 100 percent So it began — and there against it," he said. "When you was no turning back. Gordon, grow up in the state of Indiana, Mark Martin, Jeff Burton and the Indianapolis Motor Speed- Bobby Labonte have raced in way is the Holy Grail to you. all 20 Brickyards.
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IMS later added Formula One, Grand-Am, and motorcycles to the racing schedule. With IMS set for a $100 million makeover, there's even talk of adding lights. N ASCAR at IM S got of f track, though, after the Goodyear tire debacle in the 2008 Cup race that soured fans on attending. Tickets once hotter than the Memorial Day sun are available at bargain prices, and today'srace is far from sold out. Crowds and interest have waned as the novelty of stock car racing faded, a problem at most tracks on the circuit. rI
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There were empty sections all down the frontstretch for Saturday's Nationwide Series race. IMS P r esident Doug Boles said the track would have around 100,000 fans today. "It's still six figures, it's still a great, big event," he said. "Daytona's tearing down their down grandstands and they're coming up out of the ground with 101,000 seats. Because the Indianapolis 500 has a significant crowd, we don't have the ability to eliminate seats." Because the track o ozes racing history, winning still means the same to drivers, —
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even if the checkered flag is grabbed in front of 100,000 fans insteadof250,000. "It's a pretty big deal and there is a good amount of envy to the guys that have won this race before,more so than I feel at other race tracks that I haven't won at," Dale Earnhardt Jr. said. "I would say it's a pretty important race, it ranks right up there."
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Tryouts m Deschutes County Fairgrounds, 5:00 pm, Monday, September 16, 2013
Mon-Wed.
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041
I I I I I
~ Applications are available at www.expo.deschutes.org and must be returned to the Fair Administrative Office at 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond by 5 p.m. September 6, 2013
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~ Selection based on horsemanship, interview and speech
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For moreinformation, call Kathy Ruaell, Deschutes County Fair d'Rodeo QueenAdvisor
Bring In This Ad For Either Offer Good Through July 31, 2013
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SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D S
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PAPI'S NOT HAPPY
Standings AH TimesPOT
TampaBay Boston Baltimore NewYork Toronto
Dodgers 4, Reds1 LOS ANGELES — Hyun-Jin Ryu
AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB 62 42 596 62 43 590 I/2 58 47 .552 4'/t 54 50 .519 8 47 56
Central Division W L 58 45 55 48 50 51
Detroit Cleveland Kansas City Minnesota Chicago
45 56 40 61
West Division W 61 56 49 48 35
Oakland Texas Seattle Los Angeles Houston
L 43 48 55 54 68
gave up two hits over seven innings and retired his last13
batters, Skip Schumaker hit a tiebreaking two-run homer, and
(Vr~ Tgg~
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.471 12 471 12 .340 25'/z
Saturday'sGames
Tampa Bay1, N.Y.Yankees0 Houston8,Toronto6 Oakland 3, L.A.Angels1 Minnesota4,Seatle 0 Boston 7, Baltimore3 Cleveland1,Texas0 Detroit10, Philadelphia0 KansasCity1, ChicagoWhite Sox0
erix
Today's Games TampaBay(M.Moore14-3)at N.Y.Yankees(PHughes 4-9), 10:05a.m. Texas(Ogando 4-2) at Cleveland(U.Jimenez7-5), 10:05 a.m.
Houston (Cosart 1-0) at Toronto(Redmond 1-1), 10:08 a.m.
Monday'sGames
TampaBayatBoston,3:10 p.m. Chicago WhiteSoxat Cleveland, 4.05p.m. LA. Angelat sTexas,4:05 p.m. TorontoatOakland, 7:05p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Atlanta 59 45 Washington 51 54 Philadelphia 49 55 NewYork 46 55 Miami 39 63 Central Division W L St. Louis 62 39 Pittsburgh 61 41 Cincinnati 59 46
Chicago Milwaukee
.486 8'/z .471 10 455 11t/t
.382 19 Pct GB .614 .598 H/t
562 5
47 55
.461 15'/z
43 60
.417 20
W 55 54 50 47 46
Pct GB .534
West Division
Los Angeles Arizona Colorado SanDrego SanFrancisco
Pct GB 567
L 48 50 55 58 57
.519 H/t
.476 6 448 9 447 9
Gail Burton/The Associated Press
Boston Red Sox designated hitter David Ortiz, right, reacts and is held back by manager John Farrell after being ejected by home plate umpire Tim Timmons, left, in Saturday's game against the Baltimore Orioles in Baltimore. J Moinc 3 0 0 0 CStwrtc 3 0 0 0 YEscor ss 4 0 1 0 Totals 3 5 1 8 1 Totals 2 90 2 0 T ampa Bay 0 0 0 0 0 1 000 — 1 New York 0 00 000 000 — 0 E—Longoria (6). DP—TampaBay1. LOB—Tampa Bay10,NewYork 2 28 WMyers (7), YEscobar
(15), D.Norris(7). SB—Trout (23). Los Angeles IP H R ER BBSO
(17),Gardner(23). SB—Zobrist (9). Tampa Bay IP H R ER BBSO ArcherW,6-3 9 2 0 0 0 6 New York
Oakland
NovaL,4-4 D.Robertson
7 1
6 I 1 3 1 0 0 0
Kegey 1 1 0 0 0 T—2:46. A—43,424(50,291).
8 2 2
Red Sox 7, Orioles 3 BALTIMORE — Stephen Drew hit
two homers, drove in five runs and scored three times to power Boston past Baltimore. Red Sox slugger David Ortiz was ejected from the game in the seventh
inning by homeplate umpire Tim Timmons for arguing a called strike during an at-bat that ended in a strikeout. Ortiz destroyed the
Saturday'sGames Washrngton 4, N.Y.Mets1 Atlanta 2,St.Louis 0 Detroit 10,Philadelphia0
covers of two dugout phoneswith
Pittsburgh7, Miami4
Milwaukee 7,Colorado5 San Diego 12,Arizona3 Chicago Cubs1, SanFrancisco0 L.A. Dodgers 4, Cincinnati1 Today's Games Philadelphia(Pettibone5-4) atDetroit (Porcego7-6), 10:08a.m. Pittsburgh (Cole5-3) atMiami(Fernandez6-5),1010 am. N.Y.Mets(C.Torres1-1)at Washington (Jordan0-3), 10:35 a.m.
ChicagoCubs(TWood 6-7) atSanFrancisco(Lincecum 510),1:05p.m. Cincinnati (Cingrani4-1) at L.A.Dodgers(Capuano 3-6),1:10p.m. Milwaukee(D.Hand0-2) at Colorado(Chacin9-5), 1:10 p.m.
SanDiego(TRoss1-4) atArizona(Corbin12-1),1:10 p.m. St. Louis (S.Miger10-6) at Atlanta(Medlen6-10), 5:05 p.m. Monday'sGames St. LouisatPittsburgh,4:05 p.m. Colorado atAtlanta, 4:10 p.m. N.Y.Metsat Miami,4:10p.m. Milwaukee atChicagoCubs, 5:05p.m Cincinnati atSanDiego,7:10 p.m.
his bat, then charged onto the field and had to be restrained by
manager JohnFarrell and bench coach Torey Lovullo. Boston
Baltimore ab r hbi ab r hbi Ellsurycf 5 0 1 0 McLoth f 4 0 2 0 Victorn rf 5 I I 2 Machd 3b 4 0 0 0 P edroia2b 4 0 0 0 Markksrf 4 1 1 0 DOrtizdh 2 0 0 0 A.Jonescf 4 1 1 0 BSnydrph-dh1 0 0 0 C.Davis1b 3 0 I 0 N apoli1b 4 0 0 0 Wietersc 4 0 0 I C arplf 4 1 3 0 I-lardyss 4 1 2 1 Navapr-f 0 0 0 0 Urrutiadh 4 0 1 0 S ltlmchc 4 2 I 0 BRorts2b 4 0 I I Drewss 4 3 3 5 Iglesias3b 4 0 1 0 Totals 3 7 7 107 Totals 3 5 3 9 3 Boston 0 01 302 100 — 7 B altimore 000 01 1 0 1 0 — 3 DP Boston 1. LOB Boston 6, Baltimore 9 2B — Carp (14), McLouth(22). HR —Victorino (5),
Justin Morneau homered, Samuel
Deduno pitched sevenscoreless innings and Minnesota got its
Indians1, Rangers 0
Twins 4, Mariners 0 SEATTLE —Brian Dozier and
fifth shutout of the season. Aaron Harang (5-9) threw105 pitches in five innings for Seattle, the ninth time in17 starts he has gone five
innings or less. Minnesota Seattle ab r hbi ab r hbi Dozier2b 5 1 1 1 BMigerss 4 0 2 0 CHrmnrf 4 0 0 0 Frnkln2b 4 0 0 0
M ornea 1b 4 2 2 1 IbanezIf 3 000 D oumitc 4 0 I 0 KMorlsdh 4 0 I 0 Colaeg dh 4 1 2 0 Seager 3b 3 0 2 0 Thomslf 3 0 0 1 Smoak1b 3 0 0 0 Plouffe3b 3 0 0 0 Enchvzrf 4 0 0 0 Hicks ci 3 0 0 1 Quinter c 2 0 0 0 Bernierss 3 0 1 0 MSndrs ph 1 0 1 0 HBlancc 0 0 0 0 Ackleycf 3 0 0 0 T otals 3 3 4 7 4 Totals 3 10 6 0 M innesota 000 1 0 1 2 0 0 — 4 Seattle 0 00 000 000 — 0 E EnChavez(3).DP Minnesota2.LOB Min-
Richards 5 3 0 D .De La RosaH,9 I 1-3 I I S.Downs L,2-3 BS,3-3 1-3 3 2 1 -3 0 0 Jepsen Blanton I 0 0
0 I 2 0 0
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MiloneW,9-8 7 4 1 1 4 CookH,15 I 1 0 0 0 BalfourS,28-29 1 0 0 0 0 T—3:03 A—32,333(35,067).
6 2 0
Royals1, White Sox0 CHICAGO — Wade Davis pitched four-hit ball into the eighth inning, and Kansas City beat Chris Sale and the Chicago White Sox for its fifth consecutive victory.
Astros 8, Blue Jays 6 TORONTO — Chris Carter hit a three-run home run, Justin
1-3 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0
Seattle HarangL,5-9 5 3 I 2-3 1 1 Furbush 2-3 2 2 Medina 12-3 0 0 0 Farquhar Luetge 1 1 0 WP — Deduno,Luetge.PB— Quintero.
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CLEVELAND — Michael Bourn
homered to leadoff the first inning for the only run of the game, and Justin Masterson took a shutout into the eighth inning, outdueling Texas' Yu Darvish in Cleveland's
win. Texas
Cleveland ab r hbi ab r hbi K insler 2b 3 0 0 0 Bourn cf 2 1 1 1 EBeltrelf 4 0 2 0 Swisher1b 4 0 0 0 N.cruzrf 4 0 I 0 Kipnis2b 4 0 0 0 ABeltre 3b 3 0 0 0 ACarer ss 4 0 1 0 P rzynsdh 4 0 0 0 Brantlylf 3 0 1 0 Andrusss 4 0 I 0 CSantnc 2 0 0 0 Morlnd1b 4 0 0 0 Giambidh 3 0 0 0 G.Sotoc 3 0 1 0 Chsnhg3b 1 0 0 0 LMartncf 3 0 0 0 Avilesph-3b 1 0 0 0 S tubbsrf 3 0 0 0 T otals 3 2 0 5 0 Totals 2 71 3 1 Texas 0 00 000 000 — 0 Cleveland 100 0 0 0 Ogx — 1 LOB —Texas 7, Cleveland 6 2B—Brantley (15).
DarvishL,9-5
Cotts Cleveland
6 2
3 1 1 4 11 0 0 0 0 2
MastersonW,12-7 72-3 5 0 0 1 J.SmithH,12 1-3 0 0 0 0 C.PerezS,14-16 1 0 0 0 0
HBP—by Masterson (Kinsler). T—2:37. A—24,422(42,241).
T—3:15.A—24,524(47,476).
Athletics 3, Angels1
Rays1, Yankees0
OAKLAND, Calif.— Derek Norris had a pinch-hit two-run home run in the bottom of the seventh,
NEW YORK — Chris Archer threw a two-hitter for his second shutout
in three starts, outpitching Ivan Novaand leadingTampa Baypast New York. Kelly Johnsonhad an
RBI single off Nova (4-4) in the sixth to help the AL East-leading Raysimproveto 24-5 since June 23, when they were in last place. TampaBay ab DJnngs cf 5 Longori3b 5 WMyrs rf 4 Loney1b 3
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New York
0 1 0 Gardnrcf
0 1 0 ISuzukirf 0 1 0 Cano2b 0 2 0 ASorin dh Zobrist 2b 4 1 1 0 Overay1b Joyce dh 3 0 0 0 VWegslf KJhnsnIf 4 0 1 1 Nunezss Fuld If 0 0 0 0 Ligirdg3b
ab r hbi 401 0 4000 3000 3000 3010 3000 3000 3000
6
2 1 1 0
2
2 3 1 1 0 2 A.Ramos 1 0 0 0 0 0 HBP —byMorton (Morrison). WP —Da.Jennings. T—3:16.A—22,410 (37,442).
8 0 1
leading Oakland to its second straight win and fifth in the past
seven. Los Angeles Oakland ab r hbi ab r hbi S hucklf 4 0 0 0 Crispcf 4 I 2 0 Cowgigrf 4 0 1 0 Lowriess 4 0 1 1
Troutci 3 0 1 0 Dnldsn3b 3 0 0 0 T rumo1b 4 0 0 0 Mosslb 3 0 I 0 HKndrc2b 4 0 I 0 Cespdsdh 3 0 0 0 Hamltndh 4 1 1 1 Reddckrf 3 0 1 0 Calasp3b 3 0 1 0 CYounglf 4 1 0 0 l annettc 1 0 0 0 Vogtc 2000 Conger ph 1 0 0 0 DNorrs ph-c 1 1 1 2 Aybarss 3 0 0 0 Sogard2b 3 0 1 0 Totals 3 1 1 5 1 Totals 3 03 7 3 L os Angeles 0 1 0 0 0 0 000 — 1 Oakland 000 000 30x — 3
DP — Los Angeles1, Oakand1. LOB —Los Angeles 7,Oakland7. 28—Lowrie (25). HR —Hamilton
homered, powering Washington past NewYork. Dan Haren(5-11) pitched seven innings for his first win since May 9, allowing one run and three hits.
Grzlnyp 3 0 0 0 Pachecph 1 0 0 0 Kintzrp 0 0 0 0 Ottavrnp 0 0 0 0 Axiordp 0 0 0 0 CDckrsph 1 0 1 0 KDavisph 1 0 1 0 Outmnp 0 0 0 0 H ndrsnp 0 0 0 0 Escalnp 0 0 0 0 JHerrr ph 1 0 0 0
T otals 3 5 7 127 Totals 3 55 8 5 M ilwaukee 312 0 0 0 100 — 7 Colorado 0 00 004 010 — 5
E YBetancourt(10),JFrancisco(12),WRosario (7). DP —Milwaukee1 Colorado2. LOB—Milwaukee 4, Colorado4. 28 Weeks(16), Lucroy(13), Gindl (3), LeMahieu(12). HR—Lucroy (15), J.Francisco (13), Tulowitzki (18), WRosario (14). SB Aoki
Washington (14), Segura(31), C.Gomez 3 (25). S—Aoki. SFab r hbi ab r hbi C.Gomez . E Yonglf 4 1 1 0 Harperlf 4 1 2 2 Milwaukee I P H R E R BB SO DnMrp2b 4 0 1 0 Rendon2b 4 0 0 0 GorzelannyW,2-4 51-3 6 4 4 1 4 DWrght3b 4 0 2 1 Zmrmn3b 4 0 0 0 KintzlerH,11 12-3 1 0 0 0 0 Byrdrf 4 0 0 0 AdLRc1b 3 0 0 0 Axiord H,17 1 1 1 1 0 1 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 I Davis1b 4 0 0 0 Werthrf 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 Totals 2 8 1 2 1 Totals 3 04 104 Buckc 3 0 0 0 Dsmndss 3 1 1 1 HendersonS,12-15 1 C incinnati 010 0 0 0 0 00 — 1 L agarscf 3 0 0 0 Spancf 3 I 1 1 Colorado McHughL,0-2 5 9 6 6 I 2 Los Angeles 1 0 0 0 2 0 1 0x — 4 Quntngss 2 0 0 0 WRamsc 3 0 0 0 Ottavino 2 1 1 1 0 1 DP — Cincinnati 1. LOB —Cincinnati 2, Los G eep 1 0 0 0 Harenp 2 1 1 0 Outman 1 1 0 0 0 I Angees 5. 2B —Schumaker (11), H.Ramirez (15) Satinph 1 0 0 0 Berndnph I 0 0 0 Escalona 1 1 0 0 0 0 3B — Heisey (1). HR—Bruce (22), Schum aker (2). Edginp 0 0 0 0 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 T — 2:59 (R ai n del a y 1:45). A — 38,012(50,398). SB — Puig (7). S—Heisey,Ryu. A tchisnp 0 0 0 0 RSorinp 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati IP H R E R BB SO T otals 3 0 I 4 I Totals 30 4 6 4 ArroyoL,9-8 51- 3 8 3 3 2 I New York 0 00 001 000 — 1 Simon 12-3 2 1 1 0 1 Washington 022 000 Ogx 4 Interleague Ondrusek 1 0 0 0 0 2 E—Rendon(11). DP—Washington1. LOB —New Los Angeles York 4,Washington2. 2B—Haren (3). HR —Harper RyuW,9-3 7 2 1 1 1 9 (15), Desm ond (16), Span(1). SB E.Young(21). Tigers10, Phillies 0 BelisarioH,11 2 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 S—Gee. PRodriguezH,12 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 New York IP H R E R BBSO DETROIT — Miguel Cabrera JansenS,14-17 I 0 0 0 0 0 GeeL,7-8 7 6 4 4 0 2 T—2:37. A—52,675(56,000). Edgin 1-3 0 0 0 0 I homered in his first at-bat after Atchison 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 returning from a hip injury and Washington Padres 12, Diamonddacks3 Detroit's Max Scherzer held HarenW,5-11 7 3 1 1 1 6 ClippardH,19 1 0 0 0 0 2 Philadelphia to one hit in six PHOENIX — Andrew Cashner R.SorianoS,26-30 1 1 0 0 0 1 innings to become baseball's first T—2 17(Rain delay:1:02).A—37464(41,418). threw six solid innings and hit his
first career home run to help lead San Diego over Arizona. San Diego Arizona ab r hbi ab r hbi E vcarrss 5 1 0 0 Eatoncf 5 0 1 0 Denorficf-rf-If3 3 I 2 GParrarf 1 1 0 0 Headly3b 2 3 1 1 Cgmntrp 0 0 0 0 Quentinlf 4 2 2 2 WHarrsp 0 0 0 0 Thayerp 0 0 0 0 C.Ross ph 0 0 0 0 Guzmn rf 3 I 0 I DHrndz p 0 0 0 0 S tauifrp 0 0 0 0 Begp 0000 Amarstph-cf 0 1 0 0 Pnngtn ph 0 0 0 0 A lonso 1b 5 0 3 4 G dsch 1b 4 I I 2 Gyorko 2b 5 0 0 0 Erchvz 3b 3 0 0 0 Hundly c 5 0 0 0 Prado 2b 3 0 0 0 C ashnrp 2 1 1 1 Kube If 4 0 1 0
New York
15-game winner. The visiting Phillies lost their seventh in a row.
Cobs1, Giants 0 SAN FRANCISCO — Nate
Schierholtz homered off former teammate Sergio Romo with one out in the ninth inning to lift
Chicago over SanFrancisco. Chicago
San Francisco
ab r hbi ab r hbi L akecf-lf 3 0 0 0 AnTrrscf 3 0 0 0
Pirates 7, Marlins 4
two hits and three of Milwaukee's
MIAMI — Michael McKenry had
five stolen bases, JuanFrancisco and Jonathan Lucroy homered,
a career-best four hits and drove in two runs and Neil Walker and Garrett Jones each added two RBls in Pittsburgh's victory over Miami.
streak.
Philadelphia Detroit ab r hbi ab r hbi MYong3b 2 0 0 0 AJcksncf 4 0 0 0 S usdorflf 2 0 0 0 TrHntrrf 4 2 3 1 Frndsn1b-2b4 0 1 0 Dirkspr-rf 0 0 0 0 Roginsss 2 0 0 0 Micarr3b 3 2 2 3 JMcDnlss 1 0 0 0 RSantg3b 2 0 0 0 Utley2b 2 0 0 0 Fielder1b 4 1 1 0 Mayrrycf 1 0 0 0 DKegy1b 1 0 0 0 DYongdh 3 0 0 0 VMrtnzdh 4 1 3 2 Ruflf-1b 2 0 1 0 JhPerltss 4 1 2 1 L .Nixrf 3 0 0 0 Tuiassplf 4 I 1 3 Kratzc 3 0 0 0 HPerez2b 4 1 1 0 Mrtnzcf-3b 3 0 0 0 Avilac 4 I 20 Totals 2 8 0 2 0 Totals 3 8101510 P hiladelphia 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 0 Detroit 530 110 Ogx — 10 E—L.Nix (I). DP—Detroit l. LOB—Philadelphia 2, Detroit 6. 28 —Ruf (5), TorHunter (25), VMartinez
Toronto
ab r hbi ab r hbi Vigarss 3 2 1 0 Reyes ss 4 1 1 0 A ltuve2b 3 I 1 0 Mecarrlf 4 2 2 0 E moreph-2b 2 0 0 0 Bautistrf 4 I 2 3 Jcastroc 4 1 1 1 Encrnc1b 4 0 4 1
Milwaukee
Miami ab r hbi ab r hbi SMarte if 5 2 2 0 Hchvrr ss 4 0 0 0 W alker2b 5 2 3 2 Yelichlf
Colorado
P
Toronto Jo.JohnsonL,1-7 5 2-3 7 7 J.Perez 21-3 I 1 1
7 2 1 2
8 4
0 0 0 0
2
HBP—byJo.Johnson(Maxweg). WP—Keuchel. T—2;49. A—34,317(49,282).
National League
1Q~+
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o >< Oreuon Newspaper
5220
Publishars Associatian
I
Mcctchcf 4 1 2 0 Stantonrf 4 1 3 1
PAlvrz3b 5 1 1 1 Morrsn1b 4 1 3 1 G Joneslb 4 I 2 2 DSolan2b 4 0 I 1 JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 Polanc3b 4 0 1 1 C arterdh 3 I 1 3 Linddh 4 0 0 0 Morrisp 1 0 0 0 Mrsnckcf 3 0 1 0 Walac1b 4 0 1 1 DeRosa2b 3 1 1 1 Krausslf 4 0 0 0 Mlztursph-2b1 0 0 0 W atsonp 0 0 0 0 Brantlyc 4 0 0 0 Barmesss 0 0 0 0 Koehlerp 2 0 0 0 Maxwgrf 3 2 1 1 CIRsmscf 4 I 1 1 M cKnrc 5 0 4 2 Webbp 0 0 0 0 M Dmn3b 4 1 2 2 Arenciic 3 0 0 0 Sniderrf 3 0 0 0 Rugginph 1 0 0 0 BBarnscf 4 0 0 0 Lawrie3b 4 0 0 0 Tabataph-rf 2 0 0 0 DJnngsp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 4 8 8 8 Totals 3 56 11 6 Mercerss 3 0 0 0 Dobbsph 1 0 0 0 Houston 4 00 201 100 — 8 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 Toronto 1 10 010 030 — 6 DP —Houston 3.LOB— Houston 4,Toronto 3. Mortonp 3 0 0 0 1000 HR — Carter (19), Maxw ell (2), M.Dom inguez (13), GSnchz1b 4 1 7 147 Totals 3 6 4 114 Bautista(24), DeRosa(7), Col.Rasmus(17). SB—Vil- Totals P ittsburgh 302 0 0 1 0 10 — 7 lar 2 (3),Maxwell (4). CS—Villar (2). Miami 1 03 000 000 — 4 Houston IP H R E R BB SO E—Mccutchen (4), S.Marte(5). DP—Pittsburgh KeuchelW,5-5 7 1 -3 10 6 6 1 6 2. LOB Pittsburgh10,Miami9. 2B S.Marte(21), VerasS,l9-22 12 - 3 I 0 0 0 0 Walker 2(14), G.Jones(21), McK enry (6), Stanton Oliver
and the Brewers held on to beat Colorado on a rainy night.
Pittsburgh
Houston
(14). 38 —Mccutchen(2). Pittsburgh IP H
R E R BB SO MortonW,3-2 5 9 4 3 0 6 Ju.WilsonH,10 1 2 -3 I 0 0 1 2 Morris H,3 1 0 0 0 1 0
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beat St. Louis in a matchup of NL
division leaders. Teheranallowed two hits in seven innings, striking out six and walking one. Sl. Louis
Atlanta
ab r hbi ab r hbi Mcrpnt2b 4 0 0 0 Heywrdcf 3 0 0 0
B eltran rf 4 0 0 0 J.Upton rf 4 0 I 0 Hogidylf 4 0 1 0 FFrmn1b 2 1 0 0 C raig1b 2 0 0 0 Gattislf 4 0 1 0 Y Molinc 3 0 0 0 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 Freese3b 3 0 0 0 Mccnnc 4 1 2 0
Manessp 0 0 0 0 Uggla2b 3 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 CJhnsn3b 3 0 2 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 Smmnsss 4 0 2 2 Jaycf 3 0 1 0 Tehernp 2 0 0 0 Descalsss-3b3 0 0 0 Trdslvcph 1 0 1 0 J Kegy p 2 0 0 0 Avian p 0 0 0 0 Kozmass 1 0 0 0 Constnzph-Ii 1 0 0 0 T otals 2 9 0 2 0 Totals 3 12 9 2 St. Louis 0 00 000 000 — 0 Atlanta 000 000 02x — 2 DP — St. Louis 2. LOB —St. Louis 3, Atlanta 10.
2B — Hogiday(16), Jay(14), Simmons(12), Terdoslavich(2). St. Louis IP H R E R BBSO J Kelly 61-3 7 0 0 3 3 Maness 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 ChoateL,1-1 1-3 I Rosenthal 2-3 1 Atlanta Teheran 7 2 AvilanW,30 1 0 KimbrelS,30-33 1 0 T—2:31. A—48,312(49,586).
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Braves 2, Cardinals 0
nesota 10, Seattle 7. 2B —Momeau (25), Doumit ATLANTA — Andrelton Simmons (20), K.Morales(25). HR —Dozier (9), Morneau(8). hit a two-run double in the eighth CS — Bernier (1). HR — Bourn(4). SB—A.cabrera2 (7), Brantley(11), inning and Atlanta, boosted by Minnesota IP H R E R BB SO CSantana (2). DedunoW,7-4 7 3 0 0 3 6 Texas IP H R E R BB SO Julio Teheran's sharp outing, 2-3 2 0 0 0 I Roenicke BurtonH,17 Swarzak
9 5 5 3
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ab r hbi ab r hbi W eeks2b 5 1 1 0 Fowlercf 4 0 0 0 Aokirf 4 1 1 0 LeMahi2b 4 1 1 0 Segurass 3 I 2 2 Tlwtzkss 4 2 3 2 Bianchiss 1 0 0 0 Cuddyrrf 3 1 0 0 L ucroyc 4 2 2 I WRosrc 4 I 2 3 CGomzcf 3 1 2 1 I-lelton1b 4 0 0 0 Gindllf 4 0 2 I Arenad3b 4 0 0 0 JFrncs1b 3 1 1 2 Blckmnlf 4 0 1 0 Y Btncr3b 4 0 0 0 McHghp I 0 0 0
R ansm3b 4 0 0 0 Romop 0 0 0 0 Rizzolb 4 0 0 0 J.Lopezp 0 0 0 0 D Navrrc 4 0 I 0 Abreuph I 0 0 0 Stcastr ss 4 0 2 0 Scutaro 2b 4 0 2 0 V enale cf-rf 2 0 1 0 MMntr c 3 1 2 1 S chrhltrf 4 1 1 1 Poseyc 3 0 0 0 Gregrs ss 4 0 1 0 Gigespilf 2 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 4 0 0 0 KansasCity Chicago Skaggsp 1 0 0 0 D eJessph-cf 1 0 0 0 Pencerf 3 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi S ipp p 0 0 0 0 B arney2b 4 0 1 0 Francrlf 4 0 0 0 AGordnlf 4 0 0 0 DeAzacf-If 3 0 2 0 Pogock ph-rf 3 0 0 0 R usinp 3 0 0 0 Ariasss 4 0 2 0 (23). HR —Mi.cabrera(32), Tuiasosopo(7). SF—Tor. Hosmer1b 4 1 2 0 AIRmrzss 3 0 0 0 Totals 3 6 12911 Totals 3 1 3 6 3 BButlerdh 3 0 2 0 Riosri 4020 San Diego 104 3 0 1 003 — 12 S tropp 0 0 0 0 Belt1b 3 0 0 0 Hunter. G reggp 0 0 0 0 Bmgrnp 2 0 0 0 Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO S.Perezc 4 0 0 0 A.Dunn1b 2 0 0 0 Arizona 0 10 020 000 — 3 GBlanc ph-cf 0 0 0 0 ValdesL,1-1 32-3 12 9 9 0 3 L.caincf 4 0 1 1 Konerkdh 4 0 0 0 E—Goldschmidt (4). DP—San Diego 2, Arizona J.Ramirez 2 13 2 I 1 I I Dysoncf 0 0 0 0 C.Wegspr 0 0 0 0 1. LOB SanDiego6, Arizona9. 2B Quentin (21), T otals 3 3 1 5 1 Totals 3 10 5 0 Chicago 0 00 000 001 — 1 Diekman 1 0 0 0 0 0 Loughrf 4 0 0 0 Kppngr3b 4 0 0 0 Alonso(9),Kubel(8), Gregorius(13). HR—Denoria S an Francisco 000 000 000 — 0 De Fratus 1 1 0 0 0 0 MTe)ad3b 3 0 1 0 Viciedolf 3 0 1 0 (8), Headley(8), Cashner(1), Goldschmidt(23), E—Scutaro (11), Sandovai (14). DP—Chicago Detroit Mostks3b 1 0 0 0 Tekottepr-cf 0 0 0 0 M.Montero(9). SB—Ev.cabrera (36), G.Parra(7). 1, San Franci s co 1. LOB — C hic ago 7, San FranS cherzer W ,15-1 6 1 0 0 0 7 CS—Ev. c abrera (9). AEscorss 4 0 1 0 Gigaspiph 1 0 0 0 —Pence (24). HR—Schierholtz (14). Alburquerque 2 1 0 0 1 1 Getz2b 1 0 0 0 Bckhm2b 3 0 0 0 San Diego IP H R E R BB SO cisco 10. 2B S — An. T orr es . EReed 1 0 0 0 0 0 P heglyc 3 0 0 0 CashnerW,7-5 6 4 3 3 5 5 Chicago IP H R E R BB SO W P — V alde s T otals 3 2 1 7 1 Totals 3 00 5 0 Stauffer 2 0 0 0 2 1 Rusin 7 3 0 0 2 3 T 2:25. A 41,970 (41,255). K ansas City 0 0 0 0 0 1 000 — 1 Thayer 1 2 0 0 I 1 StropW,1-0 1 1 0 0 1 1 Chicago 0 00 000 000 — 0 Arizona GreggS,21-24 1 1 0 0 2 0 E—SPerez(6). DP—Kansas City 2. LOB —Kan- SkaggsL,2-3 32- 3 3 7 7 5 5 San Franci s co 11-3 I 1 1 0 3 sas City 7,Chicago7. 2B—L.cain (18). SB—Rios Slpp B umgame r 8 4 0 0 2 7 Cogmenter 2 I 1 1 1 1 (22). CS —Tekotte(3). S—Getz2. 1-3 1 1 1 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 RomoL,3-6 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO W.Harris 2 -3 0 0 0 0 1 23 2 3 3 2 2 J Lopez W.DavisW,5-9 7 1 - 3 4 0 0 3 4 DHernandez 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:54.A—41,953(41,915). Coleman H,1 2 3- 0 0 0 0 0 Bell —by Skaggs (Headley). WP—D.Hernandez 2. G.Ho landS,26-28 1 1 0 0 1 1 HBP PB M Montero. Chicago Brewers 7, Rockies 5 Sale L,6-10 9 7 1 1 1 7 T—3:16. A—30,033(48,633). T—2:32 A—26,172(40,615). DENVER — Carlos Gomez had
Maxwell and Matt Dominguez Drew 2(7). SB—Egsbury(38), Iglesias(3). Boston IP H R E R BB SO added solo shots andHouston DempsterW6-8 5 1-3 6 2 2 2 4 snapped a three-game losing
Breslow 12-3 0 Tazawa 1 2 Uehara 1 1 Baltimore FeldmanL,2-2 5 6 Patton 1 2 Asencio 1 1 Matusz I I Fr.Rodriguez 1 0 HBP by Breslow (McLouth). T—3:21. A—44,765(45,971).
American League
5
lan Desmond and Denard Span all
Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi Choocf 3 0 0 0 Schmkrlf 4 2 2 2 H eiseyli 3 0 1 0 Puigrf 3120 Votto1b 4 0 0 0 AdGnzl1b 4 0 2 1 Cincinnati
Pct GB .587 .538 5
Boston(Lester9-6) atBaltimore(Hammel7-7),10:35 a.m. KansasCity (B.chen4-0) at Chicago White Sox (H.Santiago 3-6),11:10am. LA. Angels(Hanson4-2) at Oakland (J.Parker6-6), 105 p.m. Minnesota(Gibson2-2) at Seattle(E.Ramirez 1-0), 1:10 p.m.
1 0
Nationals 4, Mets1 (9-3) had nine strikeouts in a span WASHINGTON — Bryce Harper, of 13 batters.
Pct GB .563 .534 3 495 7 .446 12 .396 17
Philadelphia(Pettibone5-4) atDetroit (Porcego7-6),
1-3 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 I
Los Angeles beat Cincinnati. Ryu
,456 14r/t
10:07a.m.
WatsonH,14 MelanconS,4-5 1 Miami KoehlerL,2-6 Webb Da.Jennings
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D6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
Wheaton
NFL
Beating the heat first task
for players at trainingcamp By Barry Wilner The Associated Press
Korey Stringer died of heat stroke during t h e M i n n esota Vikings' training camp 12 years ago. Since then, the NFL's summer conditioning ritual has changed a lot, and for the better. Players have learned there
is no courage in challenging the energy-sapping heat and humidity. Coaches have recognized that pushing the guys in uniform — even when they are wearing only shorts and no pads — is foolhardy. Doctorsand trainers have discovered every conceivable way to keep everyone hydrated and acclimated to the sweaty conditions. Yet it is a constant struggle that actually begins long beforeplayers report to team facilities in late July, as they are now doing. Once offseason
Steve Helber/The Associated Press
Washington Redskins center Will Montgomery takes a drink while stretching during training camp in Richmond, Va., on Friday.
Continued from D1 NCAA b y l aw s p r e vent players from practicing with professionals until their academic year is over. While the rest o f P i ttsburgh's rookies got a feel for their new job, Wheaton was 2,600 miles away getting near daily missives from Steelerswide receivers coach Richard Mann and relying on Oregon State quarterbacks Sean Mannion an d C o dy Vaz to serve the role of Ben Roethlisberger. Ideal? Hardly. For all the hard work he put in, Wheaton admitted to more than the typical jitters when he arrived at training camp Friday. "I felt like I was behind because I missed that camp," Wheaton said. "But really, we all start from scratch. Mentally they're teaching (the offense) as if no one knows it." Wheaton hardly appeared b ehind w h il e j o i ning h i s teammates for the first day of practice, drawingpraise from coach Mike T o mlin a f t er Wheaton sprinted through a sea of defenders to make a fingertip grab during a seven-on-seven drill. "I like that urgency," Tomlin shouted. It's one of the reasons the Steelers selected Wheaton with the 79th pick in the draft. That and the 91 receptions and 11 touchdowns he scored as a senior and the 4.5-second time in the 40-yard dash that Wheaton believes should have been at least a tenth — if not two-tenths — better. And it's why they did what they could while Wheaton waited for class to break. Wheaton did make a brief trip east to work out w ith Roethlisbergerand receivers Antonio Brown and Emmanuel Sanders in mid-June. Saturday, however, was the first time he had an opportunity to show Tomlin and Mann that he didn't spend his time away from the team just hanging out. Mann helped
Billsopenwithout formerDuck PITTSFORD, N.Y. — The Buffalo Bills are
preparing to open training camp minus former University of Oregon player Jairus Byrd. And with contract talks at a stalemate, the team has no indication when the two-time Pro Bowl safety
plans to report. "Hopefully soon," general manager Doug Whaley said Saturday, a day before the Bills were set to hold their first practice in suburban Roches-
ter. Whaley acknowledged that's essentially a guess because Byrd and his
agent, EugeneParker, haven't informed the Bills of their intentions.
"They haven't said any-
thing," Whaley said. The Bills prevented Byrd from testing free
agency by retaining his
The expectations aren't quite as high for Wheaton, though. Mann has little doubt his newest pupil can exceed them. "It's up to us to get him the reps that he needs, get the success that he needs so he don't go down the tubes," Mann said. "Has he learned it all? No." Yet Wheaton appears to be on his way. He met faceto-face with Mann on Friday night, with the veteran coach giving Wheaton a series of things to work on before a walkthrough Saturday morning. In the span of a dozen hours, Mann could already see progress. "He remembered it, just a bout everything," M a n n said. "He wasn't perfect, but he was trying." For the moment, that's all that matters. Barring injury, it's unlikely Wheaton will see extensive time with the starters during camp. Then again, things can change quickly. Wallace arrived with r elatively little fanfare as a thirdround pick out of Mississippi in 2009 and led the NFL with 19.4 yards per catch. Wheaton understands the comparisons to the former Pro Bowlers are inevitable, so long as everyone understands Wheaton is not the one making them. "I just want to make the team," he said. Even if it means not mak-
time for p l ayers, especially upstate New York or down in rights in March. That's those coming off injuries. Casa Louisiana or out in Arizona. when they designated him recommends practicesof no Players are encouraged to their franchise player by longer than two hours in the consume water and Gatorade offering him a one-year, first week of camp. in meetings, during meals, and $6.9 million contract. Very "I think it helps a tremen- in the evening. Players generallittle has happened since. programs begin, and especial- dous amount, codifying this, ly weigh in before practice and Byrd, selected in the ly during minicamps in June a nd eliminating contact i n weigh out afterward, giving second round of the 2009 when the temperatures begin two-a-days is a very big deal," trainers an idea of who may be draft out of Oregon, has to climb, players are reminded says Dr. Thom Mayer, the NFL at risk for developing heat illyet to sign the one-year to drink up and keep cool. Players Association medical ness. Such procedures provide contract, and the two "Heat illness is 100 percent director. "We talk about that a blueprint for how much fluid sides failed to negotiate a long-term contract extenpreventable, and that is the from the concussion side, ap- playersneed as a replacement message wetry to send to our propriately so, and from the following activity. sion. ing people forget about — The Associated Press players," says New York Giants heat-related side. Then there's the coolingWallace. Mann describes "Since Korey's death, I think assistant athletic trainer and down process. Players are Wheaton as "fast enough" physical therapist Leigh Weiss. this has improved a tremen- encouraged to remove their even if he lacks the "blur" "Each summer prior to our first dous amount. The awareness helmets in between drills to make sure of it, giving Whea- factor Wallace provided for practice, (senior vice president of club physicians, having a allow for ventilation. Trainers ton a detailed rundown of the four seasons. Wheaton ran of medicalservices and head document that is clear for club provide cold towels or sponges playbook, the route trees and track at Oregon State and athletic trainer) Ronnie Barnes physicians who must make during practice, and the everthe blocking assignments. once zipped through the 100 presents to the players on the sure a coaching staff and train- popular ice tubs after practice, T his isn't the f i rst t i m e meters in 10.58 seconds. Not prevention of heat illness and ing staffs are aware of heat-re- with a goal of reducing a playMann has been forced to quite world class, but world maintaining adequate hydra- lated illnesses. Many (coaches) er's core body temperature. teach from afar. He was the class isn't a requirement to "You have to be a pro and tion during training camp. We came up in the era of when you wide receiverscoach for the find the end zone. "Give m e a g uy li ke educate them about the signs shook it off, you are just a little part of that is to keep yourself New York Jets in 1996 when and symptoms of heat illness hot. I think we have made a lot hydrated," says Panthers linetop pick Keyshawn Johnson M arkus t h at's g o t g o o d and let them know that dehy- of progress, but that does not backer Luke Kuechly, the 2012 held out during camp. John- speed, I can give him techdration may not only decrease mean vigilance has changed. It DefensiveRookie of the Year. son arrived a few days before nique and fundamentals that "It's really up to you, and it's performance and promotein- is a necessity." the season opener and con- get him over," Mann said. That vigilance begins long not hard to stay hydrated or to tributed a 50-yard reception "You don't have to be a burnjury, but can have very serious consequences." before players take the field in find something to drink." in his first game as a pro. er-burner to have speed." Few current NFL p layers were around when Stringer passed away, but many know l jS SCHWAB his story and his legacy. The Korey Stringer Institute was created in 2010 at the Neag School of Education at the University of Connecticut, and it works with the NFL, NCAA and various youth sports orSee the Official Fair Guide in The Bulletin and ganizations to e n sure t h at • Redmond SpokesmanJul y 24th athletes are well-educated on the dangers of not being heat acclimatized. Most problems occur at the youth level, particularly at high schools in poorer areas w here funding forthe most efficient safety measures is not available. Doug Casa, professor of kinesiology at UConn and thelead researcher forthe Korey Stringer Institute, fears receiving phone calls about a teenager who died of heat-related problems during a summer football practice. And he getsone or more of those calls nearly every year. "There a re still a s c a r y amount of high schools that don't have emergency action plans," Casa says, noting that just 10 states have met a national guideline for heat acclisponsored byMobile Cat8 DogVet Sponsored byCentral OregonRanchSupply matization while 20 more are COllttQI OtlobN ob<"' closing in on the standard. W Ranch Supply On the college level, 2003 was a landmark moment because the NCAA became the LIL' BUCKAROOS CAN HONE ' first major sports organization Return this A high-energy showdesigned to get family THEIR WILD WEST SKILLS to mandate heat acclimatizayear from the with fun activity stations such members playing together. Kidsdress upand tion. Casa says the NCAA has DD Ranch in as gold panning, roping, become star performers in a livetheater been making constant progTerrebonne. horse saddling and more. ress in that area ever since. experience of "Let's PretendFarmTimeTour". "That was a huge change BROWNIE MILK A COW! Each showfeatures upto18 kids of aii ages and they have had that in place THE STEER (It's nat reol but it's reallycool!) chosen from theaudience. for 10 years and there was WILL BE PEDAL TRACTOR AREA! only one heat-stroke death in Performances each day THERE DRESS LIKE A COWBOY preseason practices. Before at noon, 3 p. m., 5 p. m. and 7 p. m. TOO! OR COWGIRL! that, we were averaging two a year," he said. "So there's a rule change that has basically saved 20 lives." As for the NFL, while there Other contests throughout the day. has been nothing close to a Some with cash prizes, some with ribbons, some repeat of Stringer's death, it wasn't until the 2011 collecwith carniva1 tickets as prizes. Including: tive b argaining a g reement • Watermelon Eating Contest, Wednesday,1:30 p.m between the players and ownrXBCDI".' Il l( LM N O I ORSTUVWXY7. ~ ers that significant safety cut• Pie Eating Contest, Saturday, i:30 p.m. ~Hr1AJQ backs in the preseason became • APPle BObbing eVeryday 2 to 5 P.m. by Bobbie Strome Real EState the rule. WASH • Humane SOCiety of Central OregOn Under t h e n e w CBA , throughout t r a ining c a m p, Qe • Games and contests by Ridgefield High Lacrosse Team players can't be on the field for • Smokey Bear Birthday Party, Saturday, 4 p.m. more than four hours per day; only one practice a day can be in pads and is restricted to three hours or less, followed by It's an interactive water station built like a mini-theme park with a three-hour break; and playanimals that talk! Washing your hands has never been so fun! ers get one day off per week. No contact or pads are alAwarded one of the most popular Fair attractions in the West. lowed during the first three days of camp, with the reporting date limited to physical exTHE BULLETIN FAMILY FUN ZONE is MADE POSSIBLE BY THE SUPPORT OF THESE FINE SPONSORS: pae ams, meetings and classroom sMDLlcH ~sj~ BOBBIE STROME work. Running and condition~awc> Suyyly r ~ w n~ g gg D, s Tn, c r „ , . „ „, .„„„, „,....„. Cat Dog V e t ~ RE0 MQHO ~ ~II RH 0 M E s IT IO t O f S ing is allowed. That is the most vulnerable
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An old-fashioned affordable Count Fair with something FUN for everyone!
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
Gotta cracked
CONSTRUCTION ON THERISE
screeA~ • As housing permits nearly double 2012pace, building officials confident worst of slump haspast By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
The pace of new home construction is on a sharp rise in Bend, giving some local builders the most work they've seen since the hous-
By Lorraine Mirabella The Baltimore Sun
ing boom. But an increase in construction employment has been slow to follow. The city's Community Development Department issued 345 permits for singlefamily homes in the first six months of the year. That's up nearly 80 percent from 2012, when 192 were issued between Jan. 1 and June 30. Since bottoming out in 2009, when just 68 permits were issued in the first half of the year, homebuilding activity has risen each year. Getting a permit doesn't necessarily mean a home is going to be built. But the numbers this year have some building officials confident the worst of the housing slump is in the rear-view mirror. SeePermits/E3
• Repair shops spring up tocash in on damaged SmartPhanes Some peopledrop them. Others leave their mobile phone on the roof of the car and drive off. Or they slip the device into a purse or pocket — and miss. Whatever the cause, smartphones with cracked screens seem to be nearly as common as cellphones themselves. The phenomenon — particularly frequent among the glasscased iPhones — has prompted repairservices to mushroom at mall kiosks, computer shops and
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Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Construction workers build a home Wednesday afternoon in a Bend subdivision near Northeast Avro Place and Northeast De Haviland Street.
Over the course of a year, nearly a third of iPhone users damaged their device, according to the results of a survey released last September by SquareTrade, which sells protection plans for electronics. Owners spent $6 billion in the previous six years to repair or replace phones that had been cracked, dropped, kicked, waterlogged or otherwise
damaged.
Bendmodile homeparks
• State helpresi s dents buy71-lot property Cooley R
By Eion Giuckiich •The Bulletin
oody Mines didn't want to fork Chnstian Gooden / St. Louis Post-Dispatch
The new LED Budweiser sign was installed earlier this year, replacing the old 150-foot sign above the Anheuser-Busch brewery in downtown St. Louis.
Big newBLid has taste for
focus, risk By Lisa Brown Sr. Louis post-Dispatch
ST. LOUIS — Five years ago this month, AnheuserBusch Cos. agreed to be acquired by Belgian brewer InBev, creating the world's largest brewer and setting off ripples of worry as uncertainty loomed over one of St. Louis' most revered homegrown businesses. In the years since the $52 billion deal was announced on July 13,2008, much has changed at AB's corporate offices at One Busch Place. The Busch family that ran AB for morethan a century would ultimately exit the company whose beers had become iconic symbols of Americana, marking an end of an era. Now, St. Louis is the North American headquarters for the combined AB InBev, responsible for U.S. and Canadian operations, and the company's world headquarters is in Belgium. And cut loose to help pay forthe massive merger: Busch Entertainment. In 2009, AB sold Busch Entertainment's 10 theme parks, including Busch Gardens and Sea World, to private equity firm Blackstone Group. But doomsday scenarios of St. Louis losing its place as the epicenter for the company's U.S. operations failed to materialize. See AB/E3
over much more than $400 a • C losed parks
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Closed in 2006 62 lots
A retired grocery store owner from Hermiston, Neff Rd Mines picked a lot in the ow ott Century Drive Mobile Greenwood Ave. P ilot Bnne state l Home Park, near SouthPark IyononA west Simpson Avenue FionklinAvo and Southwest 15th Sun Country Street. Cascade Modiie Closed in 2007 Then he listened Home Park tmpsoe Ave. 85 lOtS in' y as rumors spread: A Closed in 2006 developer was looking 53 lots ReedMnrkntRd. to buy the 71-lot park, ReedMarketBd~ with an eye for push8 Cascade Juniper Hiiis ing the tenants out and replacing them with a mix View Estates 0owernR Modiie Home of apartments and retail : Closed in 2007 Park buildings. The rumor was ; 55lots Closed in 2006 iii rook Iv true, though the developer 49 lots iooknwood Iy ultimately backed out. But it got park residents ill oyyny talking. Last week, they took a Pondiioia Di. KnodRd. bold step to put fears of BockCan onRd. a. MILES losing their homes to rest. i 0 u2 They purchased the moSource: Oregon Housing and Commhfiity Services Greg Cross /The Bulletin bile home park for them-
selves, tapping into a state grant and a series of loans to form a mobile home cooperative. A board of directors, made up of park tenants, will set rent rates and help ensure tenants keep up the property. "There are a lot of lowincome people here, who can't really afford to live somewhere else," Mines said. "This is the cheapest place around. I checked." For people like Mines, the number ofplaces to check in Bend has steadily dechned. Developers bought and leveled five large mobile home parks in the city between 2005 and 2007, envisioning bigger, more expensive homes for Bend's booming population. See Mobile homes/E5
And it's not just the iPhone. Consumers have spent well over $7 billion on damaged Android phones since 2007, SquareTrade said in April. "It's not a malfunction. It's not the product's fault. It's the klutz in us," said JessicaHoffman, a spokeswoman for SquareTrade, which she said covers accidental or lifestyle damage, such as "my son threw it in the bathtub" or "my pet tripped over the power col d. At some shops, screen repairs on certain iPhone models start at $70, a cheaper alternative than buying a new one, which can cost $400 or more. Apple discourages consumers from going anywhere other than an Apple store or Apple-authorized center to avoid voiding warranties. New iPhones come with a one-year warranty that covers two incidents of accidental damage,fora $49 fee each time. Consumers can pay $99 to extend that warranty for an additional year, again to cover two accidents for a $49 fee each time. Once warranties expire, repairs to damaged screens run from $149 to $299, depending on the model. In March, iFix2Go set up a kiosk in a corridor at Towson (Md.) Town Center mall, where technician Kendal Robinson fixes some of the more than 100 phones and tablets that come inforscreen repair each month. "There's high demand because a lot of people are
ineligible for a (phone) up4
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grade, and they don't want to pay the substantial fee for a new device," Robinson said. "This is an option to get it repaired and reuse the same device." Consumers who drop off an iPhone 4 at the iFix2Go kiosk can expect to pay $100 for a new screen and get the phone back in an hour or less. A screen on an iPhone 3G costs
$50.
w:~~ r -rttyn
5 Nr'-"~" Andy Tullis /The Bulletin file photo
Residents of the Century Drive Mobile Home Park, seen here, bought the west-side park last week with help from a state grant.
A subsidiary of GreenLoop IT Inc., a technology company with businesses that extend the life of IT equipment, iFix2Go repairs iPhones, iPads and iPods in one hour or less. SeeCracked /E5
E2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 28, 20'I3
BUSINESS CALENDAR Email events at least10 days before publication date to business©bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
SUNDAY No Business events listed.
MONDAY REAL ESTATECAREERDISCOVERY NIGHT: Jim Mazziotti, prinicpal managing broker and franchise owner of EXIT Realty Bend, presents a introduction to a career in real estate, covers costs, income, training and lifestyle of a career in real estate; free; 6 p.m.; RSVPat soarwithexit©gmail.com or call Jim at 541-480-8835; Exit Realty Bend, 354 N.E. Greenwood Ave., No. 100; 541-480-8835.
TUESDAY OPEN COMPUTERLAB:3-4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050.
WEDNESDAY NONPROFITGRANT WRITING: Discover tips on research, effective
writing, board involvement, grant management and reporting; students are encouraged to bring a current grant project; identify funding sources, especially in Oregon; registration required; $69; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270.
THURSDAY No Business events listed.
FRIDAY No Business events listed.
SATURDAY SISTERSSUMMERCOMMUNITY BLOCKPARTY: Acelebration of Sisters with a showcase of local businesses, games,livemusicand strawberry shortcake; demonstrations at sponsoring businesses; free admission; noon-3 p.m.; Barclay Park, West CascadeAvenue and Ash Street; 541-549-0251 or john@ sisterscountry.com.
Stale listings frustrate homebuyers By Paul Owers Florida Sun Sentinel
The five-bedroom house in Parkland, Fla., was listed for sale last week on Zillow. com for $700,000. Except that it wasn't really available. The home, a short sale, had been under contract since last August and finally closed Friday. Expired listings always have been a minor annoyance in the world of real estate, but the problem is taking on greater significance amid a shortage of homes for sale. A h ousing r esurgence has buyers an d a g ents scrambling f o r li s t i ngs. Buyers doing their own Internetsearches are finding homes in their price ranges on Zillow, Trulia.com and other websites and can't u nderstand w h y th e i r agents haven't shown them the properties. In many cases, it's because the listings are stale. And that's creating tension between buyers and their
Beach counties. "A home is a
Mortgagerate falls to 4.31%
ing agent for the property. The
big purchase, and people have flyer often goes on a website
WASHINGTON —Average rates on U.S. fixed mort-
gages fell for thesecond straight week, a welcome
sign for homebuyershoping to lock in lower rates that had spiked earlier this month.
Mortgage buyer Freddie Mac says theaverage on the 30-year loan fell to 4.31 percent. That's down from 4.37 percent last week but
nearly a full percentage point higher than in early
May. The rate reacheda two-year high of 4.51 per-
cent two weeksago. The average onthe15-year fixed loan declined to 3.39 percent, down from 3.41
percent last week. — The Associated Press
agents.
"They say, 'Michael, I see five houses that you haven't shown me. What gives?'" said Michael Citron, an agent in Florida's Broward and Palm
to have trust and confidence in their agent. With some of these, I feel like I have to earn their trust all over again." Michelle Marchand Canseco has been looking to buy in since May. She's fed up dealing with expired listings. "I'm a motivational speaker, so I'm trying to be positive, but it's really hard," she said. Home listings are entered into multiple listing service databases, where they're viewed by agents. When a home goes under contract, the listing is supposed to be updated in real time to let potential buyers know of the change in status. But some agents are slow to update or intentionally leave the listing open t o a t t ract backup offers. Meanwhile, websites such as Zillow and Trulia are fed listings t h r ough s o - called syndication. In some cases, an agent looking to represent buyers will create an online flyer for a specific home and falsely claim that he or she is the list-
such as Zillow-owned Postlets. com, which sends the listing to other real estate sites. Because the agent who originally made the flyer isn't the listing agent, he or she usually isn't aware when the home goes under contract or is sold, so the change in status isn't updated. Zillow m o n itors l i s tings and does its best to take down those t ha t h a v e e x p i red, spokeswoman Katie Curnette said. "We're working really hard to find creative ways to keep the listings accurate," she said. "But you have to depend on agents to be honest and make sure it's a good listing that will be helpful to buyers." Trulia spokesman Matt Flegal said in a statement that listing accuracy is an industrywide problem. Flegal said the firm has "invested heavily in delivering quality data to consumers," with such offerings as Trulia Direct Listings, which receives listings straight from MLS databases.
P.U.D., Phase1, Lot 57, $175,000 • James L. and Ann Marie Peck, trustees for the James L. Peckand Ann Marie Peck Trust, and Gary J. and June W.Miller, trustees of the Gary J. Miller and June W.Miller Revocable Trust, to UYB RanceLLC, Brasada Ranch 2, Lot 228, $337,000 • Michael E. and Karen A. Stone to William S. Epstein, Brasada Ranch2, Lot 273, $298,000 • Markand Vickie L. Westwood to Mark K. Stafford, Michael Stafford and Samuel J. Stafford co-personal representatives of the Estate of Willis E. Stafford, Partition Plat 2009-12, Parcel 1, $700,000 • Mark K. Stafford, Michael Stafford and Samuel J. Stafford to Mark and Vickie L. Westwood, First Addition to Prineville, Lots 4-6, Block 2, $700,000 • Karen E. Stark to Timothy L. and Kelly N. Stafford, Vista View Estates, Lot 10, $305,000 • Robert M. Sacks to James P. Creekmore Jr. and DebraS. Creekmore, Township 16, Range14, Section 15, $610,000
• Manon L. Potthoff to Kathleen H. and W. Bruce Peet co-trustees of the 2003Kathleen H.Peetand W .Bruce Peet Trust, Ochoco Heights, Lots1 and 2, $199,500 • S.D. Deacon Corporation to Wolf Narlan Group LLC,Township14, Range14, Section 8, Tracts1-5, $1,200,000 • Alfred J. and Cynthia H. Donati to Galan L. Carter and Chelsie E.Myers, Township 15, Range 15, Sections 29 and 32, Partition Plat 2003-06, Parcel 1, $301,000 • Raymond L. and Renee M. Fahlgren to Matthew R. Burkhead, Township 15, Range16, Section 5, Partition Plat1992-05, Parcel1, $250,000 • Denny F. andO. Lousie Denson to Paul J. and Connie J. Peterson, Meadow Lakes, Phase1, Lot15, $207,000 • Brett M. Puckett to Dwayne Dunaway, Northwest Townsite Company's First Addition, Lots 7-9, Block 6, $202,070 • Margaret L. Yates and Barry D. Clarno to George B.and Lori L. Webb, Brasada Ranch 2, Lot 214, $415,000
DEEDS Deschutes County
• Signature Home Builders LLC to Mary Walker, Gannon Point, Lot15, $204,900 • Ronald H. and Joyce H. Peterson to St. Charles Health Systems lnc., Township17, Range12, Section 27, $575,000 • William H. and Lisa Clifford to Tyler andNicole Honzel,Stonehaven, Phase 2, Lot 56, $339,900 • Michael and Margaret Boll to Cynthia R. Hardie, trustee forthe W. Richard Hardie and Cynthia R. Hardie Living Trust, Aspen Village at Mountain High, Lots 26 and 27, $285,000 • Victoria D. Pitts to Steven M. and Kristina M. Yoder, 27th Street Addition, Lot 20, $215,000 • Theodore C. Nicholson Sr. and Susan G. Nicholson, trustees for the Theodore C. Nicholson Family Trust, to Ralph A. and Josephine M. Lawler, trustees for the Lawler Community Property Trust, Broken Top, Lot44, $800,000 • RD Building and Design LLC to Jade E. and Trinda L. East, Breckenridge, Lot 27, $314,700 •TimothyJ.and Cynthia C.Young, trustees for the Young Intervivos Trust, to Alton and Ernastine Jamison, First Addition to Chaparral Estates, Lots 4 and 5, Block1, $460,000 • Wood Hill Enterprises LLC to Pensco Trust Company fbo Phillis Ehlers-Hardie, Eagles Landing, Lot 71, $319,950 • James M. and Pamela S. Dickson to Richard H. Fixott, Valleyview, Lot 73, $250,000 • David H. and Debbie A. Challburg to Jeremiah N. andLaura J. Beckert, Providence, Phase 5, Lot16, Block 6, $244,000 • Albert G. and Janice A. Kozeliski to John and Carol A. Zancanella, Forest Hills, Phase 2, Lot10, $417,500 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Linda A. Pick, Badger Forest, Phase1, Lot 40, $198,000 • Pahlisch Homes lnc. to Danny R. and Amanda S.Proudfoot, Badger Forest, Phase1, Lot 38, $198,400 • George Bair to Brian T. Pence, Sun Meadow No. 4, Lot119, $275,000 • Innovative Developments LLC to Scharpf lnvestments LLC, Partition Plat 2002-22, Parcel 2, $550,000 • Christine M. Jensen, trustee for the Jensen Revocable Living Trust, and Kilhe J. and Deirdre E. Bealey to James P.Olmsted, Mountain Village East 2, Lot19, Block13, $280,000 • Paul F. Imwalle and Joann I. Knutzen to Payam and Genesta Zarehbin, Holliday Park, First Addition, Lot 26, Block1, $315,000 • Pacwest II LLC to Nicholas L. and Tina M. Schneider, Northcrest, Lot 43, $207,833.16 • Signature Homebuilders LLC to Lester L. and Kathryn J. Morton, McKenzies Meadow, Lot5,$152,000 • John H. Saraceno to Fred M. and Joyce C. Hershenson, trustees for the Hershenson Family Trust, Westside Meadows, Lot 34, $350,000 • Thomas M. Tapscott to Ronald R. and Rayla B. Fadenrecht, Rivers Edge Village, Phase1, Lots11 and12, Block 1, $265,000 • Matthew B. Lindleyto Janice C. Wright, RiverRim P.U.D., Phase 5, Lot 395, $229,000 • Steven M. Duncan to Katherine L. Diener, Taylors Addition, Lots 5 and 6, Block15, $155,000 • Ulrich J. and Janet L. Seibold to Albert R. and Shanan L.Arceo, Township 15, Range 11,Section 19, $322,000 • Lands Bend LLC to Franklin Brothers LLC, South Deerfield Park, Lot 48, $263,300 • Lands Bend LLC to Franklin Brothers LLC, South Deerfield Park, Lots 7 and 8, $241,000 • John S. and Linda L. Simpson, trustees for the John S. Simpson and Linda L. Simpson Revocable Trust, to Mathew J. McGowan andKathryne E. McPherson, Cascade View Estates, Phase 8, Lot 271, $385,000 • David C. and Peggy L. Barnett to Bend Park and Recreation District, Township18, Range12, Section 3, $600,00 • Jay A. Yowell and Lila A. Transue to Richard W. and Judy E.Caldwell, trustees for the Caldwell Family Living Trust, Deschutes River
Recreation Homesites, Unit 8, Part 2, Lots17and18, Block95, $207,500 • Mark D. and Dorothy E. Clark, trustees for the Dorothy Elaine Clark Living Trust, to Bradley J. and Kirstin A. Connolly, Elkai Woods Townhomes, Phase 6, Lot 8, $410,000 • Donna J. Bergstrom, trustee for the Donna J. Bergstrom Trust and the Roland E. Bergstrom Trust, to Douglas A. and Carley E. Drake, Fairway Point Village 2, Lot13, Block 10, $271,000 • Roger E. and Irene L. Vlach to Stephen R.and Brenda J. Potwin, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase15, Lot 3, Block18, $165,000 • Barry N. and Sherri L. Maroni, trustees for the Maroni Family Trust, to Scott M. and Elisa R. Fairbanks, Ski House 2 Condominium, Section Mt. Bachelor Village, Phases 8 and C, Unit 246, $162,000 • Teresa Contreras to Lloyd K. and Patricia A. Albright, Stonehedge on Rim, Phase1, Lot11, $152,000 • Nicholas J. and Cheryl P. Milo and Dennis C. andMelinda M. Teach to Stanely P. Duyck, Golf Course Homesite, Section Second Addition, Lot 41, $234,954.31 • Betty J. Cimino, trustee and Toni R. A. Fagen to James R.and Amy J. Shores, Terrango GlenEast, Phase 2, Lot 24, $265,000 • Alan C. and Helen P. Stewart to Matthew D. Vogel, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase19, Lot39, Block 6, $467,900 • Derek C. and Rosemary A. Orchard to Manuel S. andSandra K. Nunes, Ponderosa Pines, Second Addition, Lot 44, Block 4, $220,000 • Josephine Davis to John A. Alarcon IV, Partition Plat 2008-47, Parcel 2, $329,000 • Guy and Petra Vernon to Codyand Andrea Rombach, Boones Borough No.1, Lot11, Block4, $430,000 • Bend Apartment lnvestors LLC to Bend Dalton Street Land LLC, Township 17, Range12, Section 35, $300,000 • Scott T. Harrin, personal representative for the Estate of William R. Harrin and Scott T. Harrin, to Ronald Thienes, Parkridge Estates, Phase 2, Lot 5, $205,000 • Richard P. and Crystal L. Morton to Martin C. and Roberta M. Cranswick, RiverRim P.U.D., Phase 4, Lot 324, $365,000 • Robert G. and Linda S. Dodd to David K. and Cathy H. Sewall, Partition Plat1999-46, Parcel 1, $625,000 • Larry C. Barker and Jo AnnB. Ray to Christopher L. Rhoads, trustee for the Rhoads Revocable Trust, Winchester Park, Lot 7, $390,000 • DouglasA.andJessica N.J.Kelly to Patrick C. and Kelly D. Ayres, Township 16, Range 12, Section 20, $420,000 • Larry W. and Darby S. Gilkison to Gary J. Enochs andSiobhan Sullivan, Cimarron City, Lot12, Block3, $267,500 • Amy J. Price to Dustin E. and Melissa A. Mitsch, Stonehaven, Phase1, Lot16, $305,000 • Laird T. and Melanie J. Adams to Brookfield Relocation lnc., Pine Ridge Estates, Lot17, $329,900 • Brookfield Relocation lnc. to JeremyD.and KindraK.Maestas, Pine Ridge Estates, Lot17, $329,900 • Timothy P. Martin and Melissa A. Monahan to Jeremy andAnne M. Holbrook, Wiestoria, Lots 6 and7, Block 35, $155,000.80 • Hillery N. Johnson to David L. and Elisabeth A. Morton, Bend View Addition, Lots 11 and 12, Block14, $330,000 • Patrick and Laura Albright to Derek J. and Lara P.Bickel, Skyliner Summit at Broken Top, Phase3, Lot14, $245,000 • Olivia Boswell fka Olivia B. Lanter to Allen R. Helmuth, Dale Acres, Lot 2, $215,000 • Justin and Tamara Reimerto IbrahimM.Shehadehand Echo Lappin, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites lnc., Unit 5, Lot 31, Block 30, $160,000 • Donovan M. Childers to Sandra D. Roethler, Canyon Park, Lot 9, Block 4, $154,500 • Harold D. Weddel to Jerry L. and Kathryn A. Kooistra, River Canyon Estates, No. 2, Lot167, $326,000
• Wm. T. and Patricia A. Cook, trustees for the Wm. T.Cook Family Trust, to James L. Walters and Marcia A. Buckley, Tollgate, Fourth Addition, Lot157, $160,000 • Brian T. and Carolyn K. Case to Lewis V. and Eileen V.Rothrock, trustees for the Lewis VerneRothrock Revocable Trust and the Eileen Virginia Rothrock Revocable Trust, Golf Course Estates at Aspen Lakes, Phase1, Lot 41, $250,000 • Mark R. and Julee Schwarzburg to Ted W. and Lara J. Rooneyand Stephen andCarol Rooney, Indian Ford Ranch Homes, Plat No. 1, Lot 6, Block 2, $217,500 • James R. Parry, trustee for the James R. Parry Revocable Trust, and Mary L. Parry, trustee for the Mary L. Parry Revocable Trust, to Victor and Andrea Gonsalves, Eagle Crest, Lot 17, Block 7, $467,000 • Bradley C. and Julie R. Saxton, trustees for the Brad and Julie Saxton Revocable Trust, to Tim J. andJody L. Metcalf, Partition Plat 2005-4, Parcel 1, $475,000 • Marcus B. and Adena M. Glassowto Arthur L. Anderson, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites, Unit 6, Parts1 and 2, Lot 9, Block 66, $180,000 • Michael D. and Darlene M. DeBois to Gregory R. andDonna R. Vanderzanden, Ridge at EagleCrest 50, Lot 206, $241,000 • Marie A. McKee to Larry and Darby Gilkison, Morningstar, First Addition, Lot13, Block1, $270,000 •Redmond ZipLLC to Kent Rookstool and Angelina Rodriguez, Partition Plat 2001-2, Parcel 1, $171,000 • Joseph R. Johnston, trustee for the Joe and Peggy Johnston Revocable Living Trust, to Wells Fargo Bank N.A. and Rhonda Brice as cotrustees for the David Bruce Steel Trust under agreement fba David B. Steele, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites, Unit 6, Part 2, Lot12, Block 75, $180,000 • Michael E. and Keri L. Podell to James A. Jernberg, Terrebonne Estates, Phase1A, Lot 59, $157,900 • Robert W. Muzzy Jr., trustee for the Robert W. Muzzy Jr. Trust, to Peter J. Steiner, Partition Plat1990-67, Parcel 2, $850,000 • Hayden Homes LLC to Bruce E. and Anna K. Miller, Antler Ridge, Phase2, Lot 27, $181,490 • Ronald D. and Sonya K. Masseyto Albert J. and Carol S. Smith, Skyline Ridge, Lot 4, Block1, $256,500 • Daniel P. Zerbe to Michael P. and Peggy L. Fisher, Township15, Range 13, Section 6, $230,000 •LeeS.Stensethand Lisa Dow to William B. Dow Jr. and Lisa K. Dow, South Meadow Homesite, Section Second Addition, Lot197, $307,998 • Janet L. L. Giordano to Robert E. and Paula Killion, Mountain High, Lots 7 and 8, Block1, $405,000 • Raymond G. and Sheila R. Schmitz to Michael T. andKathleen M. Love, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase 21, Lot31, Block18, $225,000 • Joanne K. Palmer and Patricia J. Huber, trustees for the Palmer Huber Revocable Trust, to Brooks andSheri Hilton, trustees for the Brooks and Sheri Hilton Living Trust, Compass Gardens, Lot 3, $332,000 •Michael F.and KateW .Thomasto Deborah L. Quinlan, Wiestoria, Lot 3 and12, Block31, $186,900 • Denise Seymour to Wesley M. Archibald, Holmes Acres, Lot 30, $159,000 • Annunziata Gould to John T. Raisin, Park Addition to Bend, Lot 8, Block 13, $515,000 • Pahlisch Homes lnc. to Bert G. and Debra K. Harr, Badger Forest, Phase 1, Lot41, $197,000 • John S. and Lenore B. Oster, trustees for the J. and L. Oster Family Trust, to Tyler M. and Krystal A. Simmons, Wildflower, Lot14, $255,000 • Joan Chambers to Bradley C. and Julie R. Saxton, Eagle Ridge, Lot 8, Block 2, $340,000 • Charles D. and Rebecca L. Bealto LesleyS.Kannier,Oakview,Phase 6, Lot 24, $234,000 • Richard W. and AnneL. Roe, trustees for the RoeFamily Trust, to Janine T. Keys, CopperCanyon, Phase1, Lot 7, $270,100 • Matthew S. and Brenda M. Usher to James C.and PamelaS.Ferguson,
Awbrey Park, Phase 2, Lot 71, $665,000 • Kelly and Kristen Simpson to Benjamin J. and Alyson R. Bartness, Deschutes River Crossing North, Lot 19, $325,000 • Jonathan A. and Joni L. Spencer to LoisJ.and Kenneth M.Mulkey,Ridge at Eagle Crest 54, Lot 55, $215,000 • Samuel A. Deleoneto Phillip L. and Danielle A. Hebener, Cline Falls Oasis, Lot1, Block1, $170,000 • Patrick and Elizabeth Sireta to Timothy D. and Julie A. Schmidt, Woodside Ranch, Phase 5, Lot 22A, Block 9, $170,000 • Daniel and Alison Hodgson to Laura K. Wilke, ReedMarket East, Second Addition, Lot13, Block3, $215,730 • Bruce L. and Judy K. Carpenter to Janet L. Giordano, Homestead, Second Phase, Lot1, Block 3, $267,000 • Bend Equity Group LLC to Bruce L. and Judy K. Carpenter, Brookland Park, Lot17, $219,900 Crook County • Paul J. and Constance J. Peterson toJames E.Bates,Ochoco Point
I.
(
Aaron Meyer Rock Violinist A nd H i s T h r e e P i e c e B a n d at Broken Top Club
THURSDAY, AUGUST 15 " 7:00 — 9:00 pm Doors open at 6:00 pm • su nrise Patio General Admission Seating C oncert Rock Vi o l i n ist Aaron M e yer p e r f o r m s cu t t in g ed g e original m u sic and ar r a n g em e nts with vi r t u o sity and passion. Aaron br i ngs his fresh and i n v i g o r at ing i n st r u m e n tal style to the stage and genu i n ely con n e cts with au d i e n ces of all ages.
Tickets on Sale Now $15 — BTG Members • $2 2 — Non BTG Members
Everyone is Welcome Food and beverage will be available for purchase, beginning at 6:00 pm Tickets can be purchased by calling 541-383-8200 or emailing reception@brokentop.com
SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
AB
Latin America and Asia, despite declining U.S. sales. Last year marked the first time that more than half of Budweiser production s old — 51 percent — was outside of the U.S., versus 28 percent in 2009. AB InBev recently acquired the half of Mexicobased Grupo Modelo it didn't a lready own , a d d ing C o rona to its stable of "global brands" alongside Budweiser, Stella Artois and Beck's. Victor, N.Y.-based Constellation Brands acquired the Corona license and other Grupo Modelo brands in the U.S. to gain antitrust approval.
Continued from E1 In 2011, AB said it planned to invest more than Sl billion in its U.S. facilities from 2011 to 2014, including upgrades to modernize operations at its St. Louis brewery. AB InBev remains the largest brewer in the country, with its market share accounting for close to half of al l U.S. beer sales. Bud Light remains t he best-selling beer in t h e country. T his y e ar , t h e br e w er marked the 80th anniversary of its iconic association with Clydesdales, and th e c o m-
Saving water, the planet
pany says it's exploring ways to extend the horses' visibility internationally. "There was a tremendous a mount o f co n c er n t h a t something bad for St. Louis
was going to happen, like them closing th e b r ewery or getting rid of the Clydesdales," said Glenn MacDonald, an economics and strategy professor at Washington University's O li n B u s iness School. "The fear was that AB would be downsized to oblivion, an d t h a t c l e arly hasn't happened."
Acquired, upgraded MacDonald said some of the changes made after the sale have helped solidify the company's long-term viability. "It had the trappings of a
family company before, and AB clearly did become a trimmer, more modern company," he said. "In a way, AB being less efficient was probably a much bigger risk to St. Louis than InBev." In January 2012, Luiz Edm ond, president o f N o r t h America for A B I n Bev, assumed l eadership o f t he brewery's U.S. operations in St. Louis upon the departure of President David Peacock, a former head of marketing at AB who became president after the 2008 sale. In front of more than 100 employees in May at a groundbreaking for a new 300-seat biergarten at th e St . L ouis b rewery, Edmond said t h e company remains committed to investing in St. Louis. "We guarantee you that this is just a first step in a threeor four-year project that will bring new news every year and will make this a real attraction," Edmond said of the new biergarten. Referring to the Budweiser sign that's been atop the Bevo building since the 1940s, Edmond said: "We hope it'll be here for another 100 years." A fter t h e me r g er, t h e combined companies w ent through an integration period
E3
Permits Continued from E1 " We'll p r obably b u i l d three times as many homes this year than last year," said Jay C a mpbell, coowner of Bend company WoodHill Homes. His company got permits to build 10 houses in the first half of the year, after receiving 13 all of last year. But it's taking WoodHill a bit longer to finish projects than in the housing boom years. Many subcontractors left Central Oregon when the market tanked in 2008, and haven't returned. Deschutes County had about 87 5 c o n struction businesses at the end of 2012, down from 1,430 at the end of 2007, according to U.S. Bureau of Labor Stat>st>cs data. In March, 3,000 county residents worked in construction, according to the most recent Oregon Employment Department data available. Six years ago, in March 2007, Deschutes County had 7,800 construction workers. Even as far back as March 2001, the county had nearly 4,200. For local builders, however, 2013 has been the best market in more than f ive y e ars, s ai d A n d y High, vice p r esident of g overnment affairs w i t h the Central Oregon Builders Association. Large projects like the Oregon State UniversityCascades Campus expansion could ensure a stream of work i n t h e p ipeline, and a four-year university could also spur new housing and apartment buildings to accommodate the students. "I think you can drive to just about any corner of Bend and Redmond, even Jefferson and Crook County, and see that housing
As AB InBev grows, ideas g enerated in St . L o uis a r e finding their way around the world. Margarita Flores, AB's vice Photos by Christian Gooden / St. Louis Post-Dispatch president of community afAn Anheuser-Busch bottling and packaging worker stands by as bottles of Bud Light Platinum are put fairs, said a 25-year-old partin boxes on the line at the downtown St. Louis brewery. nership between the brewer and the American Red Cross to provide canned drinking water in emergencies is being replicated where the company has operationselsewhere, including Western Europe. The St. Louis brewer also has become a model for other AB InBev facilities as the parent company seeks to reduce the use of water in plant operations worldwide. Bottles of Bud Light Platinum In 2007, the last full calendar move alongduring the packagyear before InBev acquired ing process at Anheuser-Busch AB, the St. Louis brewery used brewery. 6.3 hectoliters of water for every hectoliter of beer production. The gauge includes every "Budweiser's best summer in drop of water used — from :t the past 10 years," said Rob cleaning beer tanks to water Anheuser-Busch's St. Louis brewery campus has been a fixture of McCarthy, vice president of used in brewing beer; a hectoSt. Louis' economic identity for generations. Bud Light brands, who over- liter is equal to 26.4 gallons. By saw Budweiserfrom late2009 comparison, this ratio was 10until January. to-I in 1997. followed by what executives management committee. So far this year, its U.S. Prompted by a c o rporate call "optimization." Some of AB's training pro- product l a u nches i n c lude push to reduce water and enOne of the changes after the grams have been rolled out to Beck's Sapphire, Budweiser ergy use companywide, the merger included adding ele- employees from around the Black Crown, Bud Light Lime St. Louis brewery's water usments of Six Sigma — a man- world, and a long-term incen- Straw-Ber-Rita and Stella Arage ratio was cut nearly in agement philosophy that uses tive program for compensa- tois Cidre, in addition to the half to 3.3l-to-l at the end of data to cut waste and make tion developed at AB also has bowtie-shaped Bud w e iser 2012. improvements — throughout been adopted companywide, can. Those new additions folThe St. Louis brewery was AB, even in human resources. he pointed out. lowed the launches of Bud able to achieve the lower level has picked up," High said. "It's a new company," said "Just look at the amount Light Platinum and Bud Light by simple fixes such as turnTom Pirko, president of Bev- New products, packaging Lime Lime-A-Rita last year, ing off a h ose immediately of dump trucks and heavy mark, a food and beverage The change in ownership which helped AB InBev's beer after a floor is washed, said equipment you see drivi ndustry consulting firm i n also has made AB less risk- volume in the U.S. grow in Jeff Pitts, general manager of ing around. There's a lot of Buellton, Calif. "The culture's averse, executives say. Faced 2012 for the first time in four the St. Louis brewery. More activity." changed. The philosophy's with competition from craft years. complex engineeringchanges — Reporter: 541-617-7820 "The new company is about include the deployment of new changed. The p s ychology's beer and l o wer c o nsumer egluchlichC<bendbulletin.com changed. It's a m ore d isci- spending during the economic taking big bets," said Pat Mc- technology o n r e c lamation p lined company no w a n d downturn, A B' s i n novation Gauley, vice president of insystems. "Before, when we were AB, more a philosophy of a global pipeline fo r n e w p r o ducts novation and new p roducts company. We've seen a sea and packaging has been in at Anheuser-Busch. " If w e it was a big deal, but our new change. I hardly recognize it." overdrive. believe we have the proper c ompany has taken it up a Yet the change hasn't been In 2010, AB added red, white data, we're willing to make a notch," Pitts said of water and OFFICE SYSTEMS one-way. and blue stars and stripes to bet behind it, and I think that energy reduction goals. " A lot o f p e ople say I n - Budweiser cans. During the d ifferentiates us f r o m o u r Low-Cost, High Quality B ev changed AB, bu t A B summer months, the packag- competitors." Compatible Print Cartridges also changed I nBev," said ing has helped spur Budweiser Under CEO Carlos Brito, Free Business Delivery and Printer Vice President of people Jim sales, which have been declin- AB InBev has set out to grow service B rickey, a 24-year AB e m ing each year in the U.S. since Budweiser and other brands DESCHUTESCOUNTY ployee who oversees human the 1980s. to a broader worldwide audiresources and is a member of The year after the red, white ence. Budweiser volume grew Localsince1989 the North American Zone's and blue cans debuted marked 6.4 percent in 2012, boosted by
Email 'phishing' attacks by hackersareincreasing ment databases. Nearly every i n cident of LOS ANGELES — At least online espionage in 2012 in2 million people received the volved some sort of a phishing email May 16 notifying them attack, according to a survey that an order they had just compiled by V erizon Commade on "Wallmart's" website munications Inc., the nation's was being processed, though largest wireless carrier. none of them had done any Several recent breaches at such thing. financial institutions, media Still, thousands of people outlets and in the video game c licked on th e l i n k i n t h e i ndustry have started w i th email, taking many of them someone's log-in information to a harmless Google search being entered on a false website results page for "Walmart." that was linked to in an email. Others weren't so fortunate. As technology firms fi nd The link led to the invisible ways to make emails safer download of malware that co- for consumers, some security vertly infected their personal experts suggest treating evcomputers, turning them into ery link skeptically. So if you remotely controlled robots for can never click on a link in an hackers, according to email email again, what options are left'? Here are some suggessecurity firm Proofpoint Inc. These sorts of "phishing" tions from security experts: attacks are not only becomOpen links on an email app ing more common but also are on Apple Inc.'s iPad or iPhone. getting more lethal, with fake These devices have fewer vulemails becoming harder to nerabilities so malware is undistinguish from real ones. likely to stick or get attached In the fake-Wal-Mart attack, by clicking on a bad link. Anpeople missedclear warning droid devices aren't as foolsigns — such as the company proof, but smartphones cername being misspelled and tainly have fewer holes than the sender's address being personal computers. very long and strange. But in A few tech companies are another case a month later, promoting a n e w t e c hnolan email claiming to be from ogy known as Domain-based American A i r l ines c a r ried Message A ut h e n tication, n o visible hints that it w a s Reporting 8r. Conformance, illegitimate. or DMARC, that offers usThe sophisticated attacks ers a visual indication that an are targeting the likes of at- email is coming from the letorneys, oil executives and gitimate vendor. For example, managers at military contrac- real emails from EBay Inc. in tors. The phishers are increas- Gmail include a key next to ingly trying to get proprietary the "from" field. In Microsoft documents and pass codes to Corp.'s Outlook, a green key is access company and govern- the sign.
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TheBulletin
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Los Angeles Times
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SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Mobile homes
retail shops on t h e 2 -acre site. Ultimately, the company Continued from E1 rejected the idea because it By 2011, each of the five couldn't get city approval for properties had been foreclosed the entire plan before closing on. Today, all but one of them the deal, Fratzke said. are bare land. No new mobile State laws passed in 2007, home parks have been built requiring compensation from since. $5,000 to $9,000 for park ten"It's a real problem," Jim ants displaced by redevelopLong, B e n d' s af f o r dable ment, also played a part. " Redeveloping a mo b i l e housing manager, said of the decline in mobile home home park in Oregon is next parks. Oregon Housing and to impossible" because of the Community Services lists 20 laws, Fratzke said. mobile home parks w i t hin Even with c ompensation the Bend city limits today. r equirements, h ow e v e r , For towns with lower land B end M ayor J i m C l i n t on values and ample affordable sees theingredients for a rehousing, fewer mobile homes peat of 2004 to 2007. Mobile may not be aproblem, Long home parks can be attracsa>d. tive candidates for redevelBut Bend hasn't been one opment, zoned for residenof those communities since tial use and equipped with the 1990s. The recession gut- i nfrastructure l i k e w a t e r ted land values and cut home and electricity. "Landowners can make a prices in h alf b etween the height of the bubble and the lot of money when properbottom of t h e c r ash. Still, ties are redeveloped," Clinprices have risen steadily for ton said. Just like the boom the last year. years, rising land values toAnd developers have been day "create a huge potential poking around. for development." As recently as the start of The city took its own steps the year, Century Drive Mo- to address the issue last time bile Home Park nearly joined the market was hot and park the list of closed parks with tenants were being pushed displaced residents. out. Brian Fratzke, owner and I n 2 006, r e sponding t o principal broker of Fratzke a group of displaced park Commercial R e a l Es t a te, residents across the city who spent the last 18 months try- formed Tenants United for ing to sell the mobile home Fairness, the Cit y C o uncil park on behalf of the owner. passed an ordinance forcing He got interest from develop- property owners to pay park ers throughout the latter part tenants the cost of moving of 2011, all of 2012 and the their mobile homes, or the start of this year. fair market cost of the moA Willamette Valley com- bile homes. The local law was pany was looking at clear- whittled down following legal ing out Century Drive Mochallenges and the passage of bile Home Park to build 220 the state law. mixed-use apartments and Clinton, who was serving
on the council at the time, remembers it as one of the more complex andcontroversial issues brought up during his tenure, and one that could return to the forefront if land values keep rising. "It's a conflict of two sets of property rights," Clinton sald. The owners of a piece of l and can d evelop i t h o w ever they want, so long as it meets zoning and other city requirements. But mobile home park tenants, who often own their homes but rarely the land they sit on, have few options if they get evicted, potentially f a c ing homelessness or th e p r o spect of leaving town. From a city planning perspective, "sometimes we get a little overly focused on single-
sus Bureau figures.Builders added more than 3,500 multifamily units to the city over that time. But the number of mobile home lots decreased by 300. As th e h o u sing m a rket heats up, contractors start building m o r e ex p e nsive homes, said Long, Bend's affordable housing manager. A mobile home tenant losing his or her home today would find few alternatives. Of the 2,085 mobile home park spaces i n D e schutes County, just 68 are vacant, according to state figures. Apartment vacancies are scant, and prices are on the rise. The average monthly rentfor a two-bedroom Bend apartment is$705, according to a Central Oregon Rental Owners Association survey family (homes) and subdivi- released earlier this year. sions," Clinton said. "The city H ousing Works, th e r e shouldn't lose sight of other gional housing authority that types of housing." issues Section 8 rental vouchOften, though, Bend has ers, has 1,800 families on its forgotten. waiting list, 500 more than the D evelopers b u i l t ab o u t total getting assistance from 12,000 single-family homes the agency. — Reporter: 541-617-7820 in Bend between 2000 and 2010, according to U.S. Cenegluchlich@bendbulletin.com
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— are often the least able to afford a repair orreplaceContinued from E1 ment. They are looking for The kiosks h ave b een low-cost alternatives. opening in shopping malls, T hat w a s t h e m a r k et train stations and business Harrison Baum went after conference centers. The com- when he started on Campus pany said its seven kiosks in Repairs at t h e U n iversity four statesrepair more than of Maryland-College Park 1,000 devices a day. more than a year ago. "Whoops. You d r opped Robinson said he has seen it all, including the customer your iPhone," the service's who left an iPad on top of her website says. "That's cool car then ran over it. though, we can fix that! ActuIn a case like that, he said, ally, we kinda like doing it." "it's fixable but not guaranBaum, a senior economics teed to be fixed." major,describes himself as a Even when a cellphone is tech "nerd" with a knack for cracked but in working or- taking apart and rebuilding der, "it can be complicated," devices. "When I got to college, I saw Robinson said. "It is timeconsuming. You have to tear cracked phones everywhere," down the phone, meaning said the 22-year-old Rockville, take off all the parts that Md., native. "Every other permake the phone work." son had a cracked screen. I Those who tend to damage kept fixing them, and more the fragile iPhones the most and more people kept break— teens and college students ing them and coming to me."
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$1,190,000 • Po n d erosa Properties Carol Daeis, Broker • 54 1 .588.9217
COMPANY
TICKER
FB
Facebook lnc
FB
34.01
8.13
31. 4
3 6.7
TripAdvlsor Inc
TRIP
73.95
13.33
22 . 0
21.5
ONEOK
OKE
52.16
8.61
19 .8
26.3
VMW
82. 36
11.7 3
16.6
22.9
-4.2
BostonScientific ActivisionB lizzard A
BSX TVI
1 0.96 1 7.46
1.29 1.93
13.3 12.4
1 8.2 22.4
103.2
lllumina Inc
I LMN
81. 44
7.13
96 .
8.8
93.9
PFG
42.99
3.31
83 .
Friday close: $34.01 >
30.9
ssp
64.9
14.8
TeslaMotors lnc
T SLA
129 . 3 9
9.71
8 .1
20.5
328.6
DeltaAir Lines
DAL
21.90
1 .61
79
17 0
126.8
S ilver Wheaton Corp S L W
23.13
1.70
79
17.6
-10.4
T eck Resources Ltd
24.44
1.79
79
14.4
TCK
.ek Change ~ $8.13 or 31.4%
companysaid that advertising on mobile devices helped 17.1 its revenue jump 53 percent to 96.5 $ < 8<billipn last quarter frpm a Z7 9 yea rearlier.
VMware Inc
Principal Fncl Grp
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M J 52-week range $ 175 5 ~
J $34 88
-7 9 Wk. vol.: 531.em (2.4x a~: 3401.0 Mkt. Cap:$59.5 b Yield: ...
BarrickGold
ABX
1 7 82
1.28
77
13 2
Air Products
A PD
104. 1 2
7.13
74
13.7
39.2 Broadcom
starbucks cp
S BUX
73. 3 6
4.57
66 .
12.0
36 8 1-week change W $6.39 or -19.0%
Broadcom Corp
B RCM
27. 3 0
-6.39
-19.0
-19.2
seagate Tech
STX
41.05
-6.47
-13.6
-8.4
66.2
Cameron Intl WstnDigital
C AM W DC
57.1 8 62.6 3
-8.58
-13.0
-6.5
33.8
-7.16
-10.3
0.9
98.7
SI
54.26
-5.59
-9.3
-6.0
15.6
MotorolaSolutions M
SanDiskCorporation
S N DK
57.00
-5.71
-9.1
-6.7
52.4
Vertex Pharm
VRTX
8 0.71
-7.80
-8.8
0.8
78.5
MicronTech
MU
1z59
-1.14
-8.3
-1z1
127.6
Equinix lnc KC Southern
EQIX
183 . 75
-14.26
-72
-0.5
14.3
K SU
110 . 1 3
-8.17
-6.9
3.9
Welcome „... surprises""'"" Reportingseasons for cor porate earnings areoften better than expected, butthis one has been even moreso. Nearly twoout of every three companies in the Standard 8 Poor's 500index that havereported their second-quarter resultshavetopped financial analysts'ex pectations: 66 percent, accordingto SBP Capital IQ. That'shigher than the10-year average of 62percent for the index. Thisscreen shows companies that weresome ofthe biggest surprises
BRCM
The company reportedweaker revenuefor the latest quarter than financial analysts expected, and its forecast for this quarter also fell short.
10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS
Friday close: $27.30
$35 30
M J 52-week range $26 58 ~
J $37.85
Wk. vol.: 138.7m (3.2x avg.PE: 19.2 Ss.S Mkt. Cap: $14.44 b Yiel d :1.6%
COMPANY
TICKER
BiocrystPhar
ACTUAL E PS
DI F FERENCE
$ 0.08 0.13 0.40 0.41 0.32 1.37 1.65 0.09
$0. 2 8 0.21 0.61 0.58 0.43 1.77 2.13 0.12
1.30 2.08
1.64 2.60
EST. EPS
Forest Laboratories (FRX) E*TRADE Financial (ETFC) Cincinnati Financial (CINF) Texas Instruments (TXN) Teradyne (TER) Chubb(CB) Travelers (TRV) Boston Scientific (BSX) Raytheon (RTN) WellPoint(WLP)
NAsDAQ 3,613.17
+
+25.56
s&P 500
+
1,691.65
44
%CHG % RTN 1MO 1YR
4.62
216
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1 98 1
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3.26 1.02
1.12 0.2 7
52. 3 36.5
3 07. 5 36.0
398.6 -70.0
2.87
0 .61
27 0
36.0
-47.6
Z42
0.50
26. 0
1-weekchange + $4.56 or 24.1%
inesBrands saidthat it will ouy the 91-year-old maker of bras and underwear for $23.50 per share incash. Friday close: S23.48-I
106.8 1 0 2.9
Maidenform Brands
M FB
23.48
4.56
24.1
35.5
16.5
Brightcove Inc
B COV
11. 1 5
2.13
2 3.6
27.3
-34.3
FrontlineLtd
FRO
Z79
0.53
23.5
57.6
16 1
Nam Tai Elec
NTE
810
1.52
2 31
44 6
36.5
Ambit Biosciences Cp AMBI
14.7 1
27 .1
22.6
1 10.1
0.0
TearLab Corp T EAR Uranerz Energy Corp URZ Goodrich Petrol GDP I mmunocellular Thera IMUC Alderon lron Ore AXX
14. 60
Z68
2 2.5
37.5
287.4
1.43
0.26
22.2
30.0
-6.3
17.67
3.14
21.6
38.0
49.1
ZBO
0.46
19.7
44.3
1 .09
0.17
18.5
18.5
-54.9
10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
20 18
M J 52-week range $1650 ~
The maker ofdiagnostic tests used in clinical research reported a larger net loss for the latest quarter than financial analysts ex pected.
-1.37
-29.8
-23.5
-6.3
-1.59
-29.5
-19.7
3 15 . 9
O nCOMed Pharma
OM E D
19.3 1
-7.39
-277
-29.0
0.0
S4 SO
P lngtan Marine Ent
PM E
1.90
-0.67
-26.1
-54.8
-79.2
4 OO
Computer Task
CTG
18.77
-5.90
-23.9
- 18.3
RT
7.76
-1.96
-20.2
-15.9
27.1
Entravision Comm
EVC
5.26
-1.25
-19.2
-14.5
3 90 . 7
Walter Energy
WLT
1 114
18 7 -176
71 -3.1
64 3 0.0
-175
-1Z7
38.7
Abaxls Inc
41.4 7
-8.82
A BAX
Friday close: $3.22
30. 1
Ruby Tuesday
23.1 0
SQNM
1-week change W $1.37 or -29.8%
3.22 3.80
S temllne Therapeutic STM L
$26 37
Sequenom
SQNM HTCH
256 -4.93
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Wk. vol.:9.2m (7.2x avg.) PE:20.6 Mkt. Cap: $546.76 m Yield :...
sequenom Inc Hutchinson Tech
g2 65 ~
52-week range
S5 36
Wk. vol.:42.8m (2.9x avg.) PE: ... Mkt. Cap: $370.79 m Yield : ...
Note: stocks classified by marketcapitalization, the product of the current stock price andtotal shares outstanding. Ranges are $100million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greaterthan $8 billion (large).
CL O S E
1-YR PRICE CHANGE
266% 67 54 41 34 30 29 28
$43. 9 9 14.69 48.89 39.25 16.64 86.42 82.85 10.83
31.6% 104.6 31.8 47.4 23.7 25.2 35.9 103.2
26 25
69 75 85.90
26.6 59.0
RUSSELL2000 ~ I,O4S.5I
$ CHG %CHG 1WK 1 W K
+
Maidenform BrandsMFB
BCRX
for analysts andinvestors. Each earned28 cents per share after net income fellfrom a year earlier. reportedearnings per share that was excludinga loan write-off andother But the better-than-expected at last 25percent more than analysts one-time charges.That was m ore p e rformance sentits stock u p1.1 expected. than tripleanalysts' expectationsof 8 pe rcent theday it reportedits Forest Laboratories (FRX), for cents per share. earnings, whenthe S&P 500fell 0.2 example,said on Tuesday that it Tobe sure, Forest also said that its percent. COMPANY
m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m
Zhone Technologies ZHNE Banro Corp BAA NovaGold Resources NG China Recycllng Engy CREG
1 97
GlobalMarkets INDEX SB P 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100
Hong Kong Hangseng
AVG . BROKERParis CAC-40 RATING*
Tokyo Nikkei 225
LAST FRI. CHG 1691.65 +1.40 8244.91 -54.07 6554.79 -33.16 21968.95 +67.99 3968.84 +12.82 14129.98 -43z95
FRL CHG WK MO QTR YTD +0.08% j j +18.61% -0.65% +8.31% -0.50% j +11.14% -3.04% +0.31% +0.32% +9.00% -z97% +35.93%
1.7
2.0 2.1 1.9 1.2 1.7 1.6 1.7 1.7 1.7 Source: FactSet
Indexclosing and weekly net changes for the week ending Friday, July 26, 2013
+
CLOSE
I
www.wbu.com/bend
+w
FRIDAY
*1=buy;2=hold; 3=sell Datathrough July25
I5,558.83
541-61 7-8840
15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS scHG %cHG %cHo %RTN 1wK 1w K 1Mo 1YR
Qi i( dZachWkie(ted
Nature Shop I I g ForumCenter, Bend (Across from Barnes & Noble)
7 (W
I
Weekly Stock Winners and Losers FRIDAY CLOSE
* valid at the Bend Wild Birds Unlimited throughJuly 31. I Offernot valid on previous purchases.
WILSHIRE 5000 17,942.75 ~
SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA Buenos Aires Merval Mexico City Bolsa
saopaoloBovespa Torontos&p/Tsx
3423.19 -3.25 41064.58 +312.49 49422.05 +355.30 12647.90 -21.24
-0.09% +0.77% +0.72% -0.17%
+19.93% -6.04% -1 8.92% +1.72%
EUROPE/AFRICA
Amsterdam Brussels Madrid Zurich Milan Johannesburg Stockholm ASIA SeoulComposite SingaporeStraits Times Sydney All Ordinaries Taipei Talex Shanghai Composite
368.31 2638.99
-2.05 -4.74
843.98 7796.84 16421.51 40497.81 1227.86
+6.97 -68.54 -10.46 -145.03 -5.09
1910.81 3236.10 5023.80 8149.40 2010.85
+1.20 +0.42 +5.50
-14.18 -10.32
-0.55% -0.18% +0.83% -0.87% -0.06% L -0.36% -0.41%
+0.06% +0.01% L +0.11% -0.17% -0.51%
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E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
UNDAY DRIVER
Smell ofburning oil? a 0 environmen Checkfor any leaks
AUDI A8L TDI
Il Llll I By Terry Box The Dallas Morning News
By Paul Brand
Rich guys rarely get stuck behind wobbly minivans dawdling along at 52 mph in the fast lane — with crooked "COEXIST" bumper stickers plastered on the back. They don't get frisked, fondled and violated at airports; they stroll onto t heir Gulfs treams w it h REQ)EW champagne in hand f o r the jaunt to Carmel. "What should we toast today — cloud formations?" Moreover, I've been told, their stocks and testosterone don't fall, and their wives don't
Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
Q
age. Where do I go to catch some of that sunshine — besides somewhere far, far away from the shadowy newspaper biz? But wait, kids. Here's the latest slap for us Kohl's and Wal-Mart types: Their luxury diesel-powered sedans don't clatter or stink and get better mileage than our old Malibus. Honest. Maybe the last diesel-powered luxury car you recall was one of those wretched Cadillac diesels from the late '70s — a really bad car with an engine that sounded like someone was rolling a trash can down the street filled with marbles. "Is that Dad pulling into the driveway or are we being invaded?" But none of my neighbors even looked up when I rolled into our alley in scenic North Dallas recently in the huge 2014 Audi A8L TDI. As you probably know, "TDI" designates Audi's latest version of clean diesel — in this case, a turbocharged three-liter V-6 diesel that has been scrubbed, plugged and silenced for the 21st century. It's not just hype, either. I drove through several parking garages in the Audi with the windows down and Dale Watson turned way low on the jukebox, and all I heard was a faint growl. And get t his: The 4,400pound, limo-sized Audi was rated at an astounding 24 miles per gallon in the city and 36 on the highway. But that's what 100 grand buys you these days, kids. Let's hope it, uh, trickles down quickly to us Visa card peasants. W hile h a ndsome i n a high-end, subtly refined way, my white A8 attracted little attention. As with all Audis, an enormous eight-bar grille left little doubt that I was driving — and sometimes living — well. Fittingly, conservative head lamps
Audi / McClatchy-Tritrune News Service
The diesel-powered version of the 2014 Audl ASL weighs more than 4,000 pounds but yields 24 miles per gallon in the city and 36 on the hlghway.
2014 Aulli Asl TDI Base price:$82,500 As tested:$99,445
Type:Five passenger, allwheel-drive, full-size luxury sedan Engine:Three-liter turbocharged V-6 diesel with 240 horsepower and 406 pound-feet of torque
Mileage:24 mpg city, 36 mpg highway
abutted a large, flat hood. The Audi's mostly slab sides were punctuated by doors that could double as gates at the Double-0 Ranch. Even with really meaty 26 5/40 tires on 20-inch wheels, though, the A8 appeared largely unremarkable. But look a little closer. Besides the impressive little diesel, the A8 sported a largely aluminum platform and body. Although the one I had was the "stretched" version, longer overall than one of GM-Arlington's Cadillac Escalade SUVs, it weighed about as much as a well-equipped Ford Taurus. Diesels offer great low-end torque, so they always feel bigger than they actually are. Press on the gas in the A8, and you get a nice shove back into the seat, the engine staying surprisingly smooth to its 4,200 rpm red line. Put your foot all the way into it, and 60 comes up quickly in 6.4 seconds, Audi says. The engine is tied to a ZF 8-speed automatic that mostly kept the diesel percolating along pretty
speeds could induce a millisecond or so of turbo lag. But you have to work at both. And because the A8 is about 700 pounds lighter than a comparable all-steel car, it can rip around corners with the grace of a midsize. Like most modern all-wheeldrive cars, the A8 tended to steer heavily at slow speeds. Here's what you do: Switch the suspension setting from normal to dynamic with a knob on the console. In that mode, the steering felt quicker and more alive — though it seemed to require more effort — and the suspension a bit stiffer. Even bending into corners at twice their posted speed, the Audi's suspension held body movements to a minimum. The ride, of c ourse, was pure German — a silent, athletic glide that kept the driver involved and aware, but with little intensity. No matter how hard I work — and I'm kind of averse to real
labor at this point — I could never aff ord the Audi's $99,445 window sticker. But it sure was a nice place to visit. A broad, long dashboard was covered in black leather, looking like a field of soft ebony on some exotic farm. Broad black leather seats with perforated centers provided pretty good support, though I f i dgeted some because I rarely found the right gear the first time with Audi's electric lever. Likewise, I always enjoyed seeing the a u dio/navigation screen rise from the center of the dash when the car was started. But even armed with the owner's manual, I could not get the car's active cruise control to operate — a system that will supposedlydrive,steerand stop the car in traffic up to about 35
mph. I had hoped it would take me around the block while I lounged in back with a beer, but I never got the chance to test it. s
i
I
•
s
I
. I have a 2005 Mazda . 6 with the 3-liter V-6 engine and 70,000 miles. I do my own oil changes and for the past several changes have noticed a strong smell of burning oil when stopped at lights or in traffic, lasting three weeks after I have done the oil change. I am very careful not to spill any oil onto the exhaust when removing the filter, and to eliminate this possibility I left the filter in place after the last change. This failed to eliminate the problem. T he engine burns n o o i l between changes, and no smoke is visible from the exhaust. Any help would be
under engine vacuum, the c rankcase m a y b e c o me somewhat pressurized and force oil and vapors past the piston rings and into the combustion chambers. • I have an '83 Jeep C J-7 • with the 258 six-cylinder engine. The oil pressure gauge was showing about 50 pounds per square inch when it suddenly went to zero.I connected a mechanical gauge to the engine block and it showed 60 psi. Is this an easy fix? How does the electrical gauge work? • Could you mount the • m echanical g auge in or under the dash? If so, you've "fixed" your p r oblem. I've always preferred
A
greatly appreciated.
mechanical gauges anyway
A
for two reasons — they are instant and accurate, and not subject t o e l e ctrical
• In most cases, smell• ing hot oil at idle indicates some type of external leak or spillage that drips onto the hot exhaust. In addition to the exhaust components near or under the oil filter, check to make sure no oil is dripping from the valve cover gaskets onto the exhaust manifolds, particularly from the front valve cover with the oil filler cap. Perhaps enough oil collects against the gasket when you refill the engine with fresh oil that it slowly migrates past the gasket and drips on the manifold. The other system to focus on is the positive crankcase ventilation, o r P C V , s y stem. Your engine features a PCV valve plumbed into the induction system downstream of the throttle plate, meaning engine vacuum pulls crankcase vapors into the combustion chambers where they are burned. If the PCV valve is stuck or clogged and doesn't open
• I
gremlins. To determine w h ether the problem is the gauge or the electrical sending unit on the engine, disconnect the wire from the sending unit and connect a 12-volt test light from this wire to ground. Turn on the ignition. If the lamp flashes, the instrument voltage regulator is good. If the lamp stays lit, the regulator is bad. If the lamp doesn't light, check the regulator's connections and ground. And check for an open circuit in the connection from the regulator to
the gauge. And finally, if the lamp flashes as it should but the gauge isn't a ccurate, the gauge is the likely culprit. — Brand is an automotive troubleshooter andformer race car driver. Email questions to paulbrand@startribune. com. lnclude a daytime phone number.
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happily. If I accelerated flat-out, the sophisticated tra n s mission slurred some shifts. In addition, booting the Audi hard at slow
Patient testing cantrack ~ down a battery drain By Brad Bergholdt McClatchy-Tribune News Service
I grew up in the '50s, Q . .when th e h u g e "car craze" started. I stilltryto do my own maintenance to our cars. I am now working on a relative's 1979 Corvette that is in need of some TLC. It has what you call a phantom battery drain. The battery goes dead unless I drive the car every two days. I've had it in two shops, and both say there is no battery drain. I rebuilt the alternator, and it has a new battery. I think the problem is in the interior courtesy light system. How can I diagnose this problem to be sure? Will you help me with this annoying and frustrating problem? — Dan Wiles . Dan, if this problem is . happening consistently, it'll be easy to track down. Your phantom battery drain is being caused by something in the car that is converting electricity to light, heat, magnetism or sound. All vehicles will lose a tiny amount of battery energy to such things as computer and radiomemories over time when parked, but there is clearly a large drain occurring with the Corvette. The method I'll propose is simple, but works only on older,
pre-computerized vehicles. Start by obtaining a $5-$10 unpowered automotive test light, which resembles an ice pick with a bulb inside the clear handle, and a wire with alligator clip at the end leading from it. Disconnect the negative battery terminal. Connect the test light between the battery, by inserting a bolt into the vacated side-terminal threaded hole, and the removed cable, so that the test light is serving as a batterycable extender. Now close both doors and the hood, and wait a couple of minutes. If the test light illuminates brightly, this means the battery drain is presently occurringa good thing, since you're trying to find it. Next, you'll want to removeeach ofthe Corvette's fuses one at a time until you find the one that extinguishes the light. Once a particularfuse has been identified, a wiring diagram or other service information will list the components protected by th e f use. The clock/courtesy/dome light fuse is often the one, and the fault could be an always-on underhood, glove box or other convenience light. — Bergholdt teaches automotive technology. Email questions to under-the-hood@earthlinh.net.
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INSIDE: BOOICSW Editorials, F2
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
NICHOLAS KRISTOF
COMMENTARY
Genocide in Darfur
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ABGADAM REFUGEE CAMP, Chadaltouma Ahmed cried softly as she told why she fled Darfur this spring: Armed men in uniforms attacked her village, shooting her 13-year-old son dead, burning her home and then stripping and raping her. As the men raped her, she said, they shouted insults against her ethnic group, the Salamat Arabs. "We'll exterminate the Salamat men, and Salamat women will become slaves," she quoted one of the attackers as saying. Darfur isn't in the headlines anymore, partly because there has been a lull in the killing in recent years and partly because so much elseis happening worldwide. The Sudanese government, which tends to calibrate its brutality to the degree of attention it receives, is taking advantage of
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the lack of scrutiny by stepping up its decadelong campaign in Darfur of mass murder, burned villages and sexual violence. We're at the 10-year anniversary of the beginning of the genocide in Darfur, yet, instead of subsiding, it has been amplified this year. Just in the first five months of 2013, according to the United Nations, another 300,000 people in Darfur have been driven from their homes — and untold numbers killed or raped. Rape happens all over the world, of course, but,for 10 years,the Sudanese government has used rape as a weapon of war to humiliate the ethnic groups that it targets. This strategy is effective because it terrifies villagers into fleeing and is so stigmatizing that women are extremely reluctant to talk about it. Yet six brave women who are refugees from just one Darfur village, AbJaradil, were courageous enough to speak out about having been raped. They say that it is their way of fight-
ingback. Timoma Abdurahman, 25, said thather ordeal began when armed men in Sudanese military uniforms from thegovernment-backed Miseriya tribe surrounded her house. "You Salamat are slaves," she recalls a leader of the attackers shouting. "This land does not belong to
you." As Timoma watched, the attackers then killed her father. "They ran over him with a vehicle, over and over, until he was dead," she said, breaking down. When she had composed herself, she continued her story:She and her sister were then force-marched to a military camp and raped, as attackers mocked them and the Salamat tribe. This is the last stop on my annual win-a-trip journey, in which I take a student with me on a reporting trip to the developing world. The winner, Erin Luhmann of the University of Wisconsin, and I interviewed these brave survivors from Darfur here at the Abgadam Refugee Camp in eastern Chad. (You can read Erin's reports from the trip, and see her video on my blog at nytimes.
com/ontheground.) The survivors whom Erin and I interviewed say the Sudanese government is behind the attacks, noting that many of the attackers wore government-issued military uniforms and arrived in trucks with mounted machine guns, sometimes with government license plates. And, after all, this is the same script that Sudan's president, Omar Hassan al-Bashir, has foll owed fora decade allacross Darfur (and, before that, in South Sudan and the Nuba Mountains). Granted, there are no magic wands to end the horrors of Darfur, but groups like the Enough Project have outlined solid proposals to put pressure on Sudan. Bipartisan legislation now in Congress — the Sudan Peace, Security and Accountability Act of
Thomas Patterson i New York Times News Service
Hannah Lobingier, left, who works in a program that aims to divert patients to less expensive settings than emergency rooms, advises Robert Cooper about local clinics at Providence St. Vincent Medical Center in Portland. In Oregon, the state and federal government have wagered nearly $1.9 billion on a project intended to improve the health of low-income people and to lower the rate of spending growth.
By Robert Kuttner •The Boston Globe
The cost of Medicare, the top driver of runaway entitlement outlays, seems to be stabilizing at last. For the past three years, Medicare inflation has moderated to an annual average of 3.9 percent. But if you look more deeply, a lot of these supposed savings are actually a shift in costs to patients. As Congress and the administration devise new ways to restrain Medicare, this disguised form of rationing is likely to worsen. I had a vivid glimpse of this trend in my own family this past winter. In late February, mymother, age99, had abad fall.She was taken by ambulance to the closest hospital, Mass. General. Miraculously, she broke no bones, but her face was so badly swollen and bruised that she was unrecognizable and in severe pain. My mother ended up staying four days. A couple of days in, we got an unpleasant financial surprise. Even though she was placed in the MGH's maxillofacial inpatient unit, where she got excellent care, my mother was classified as being there "for observation" — meaning that she was considered an outpatient for billing
purposes. This meant that the bill — over $20,000 — was coded under the Medicare outpatient category (Part B) with a 20 percent patient copay. Being classed as an outpa-
— Nicholas Kristofis a columnist for The New Yorlz Times. John Costa's column will return.
Medicare does this through outside, forprofit vendors known as "recovery audit contractors," who are paid based on how much they save Medicare.They achieve savings by punishing hospitals after the fact if a patient who might have been booked as an outpatient is classified by the admitting doctor as an inpatient. The contractor only gets paid when it overturns a medical decision — which sure seems like a gross conflict of interest. So if the emergency room doctors make the medical judgment that a patient needs to be admitted, and the audit later concludes that the condition turned out to be not serious enough and the patient should have been considered an outpatient, the hospital not only doesn't get paid at the inpatient rate, it doesn't get reimbursed at all. SeeCostsiF5
Patients are carried into the emergen-
cy entrance at Bayonne Medical Center in Bayonne, N.J. The center
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2013 — might help. Even speeches, news coverage and other expressions of international interest tend to curb the brutality a bit. And Sudan's leaders are particularly sensitive to revelations about their policy of rape. So let's hope that these women's courage and outspokenness will lead us to find our own voices.
tient also disqualified my mother from any Medicare benefits in a rehab facility or skilled nursing home after she was discharged. How could a 99-year-old badly injured woman on an inpatient unit be an "outpatient?" And why would Mass General, one of our most distinguished community resources, do such a thing'? The culprit, it turns out, is Medicare cost containment. In order to cut costs — actually shift them, partly to hospitals and partly to patients — Medicare applies extreme financial pressure on hospitals to book admissions as outpatients whenever possible. This shifts them from Medicare Part A (the hospital program) to Medicare Part B, which is designed to cover only doctor bills. The hospital gets paid a lot less and the patient gets stuck for a lot more.
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of the most common hospital treatments, a New York Times analysis of 2011 data showed. Nadav Neuhaus i New York Times
News Service
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
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s it a pilot or phase one'? Both terms are used when Bend-La Pine Schools staff talks about handing iPads to approximately 2,400 students in the next school year. The language is important as a reflection of the staff's mindset as it launches this major initiative. This needs to be a true pilot, with careful examination of the results before decisionsare made about further expansion. The district announced Tuesday that five schools have been selected to make the digital conversion in 2013-14, giving iPads to students in grades 3-12. If it goes well, the district will consider expanding to all its schools the following year, replacing textbooks with digital devices for students in those grades. Administrators have calculated that a districtwide project would be revenue neutral, because money otherwise spent on textbooks and related costs would pay for the digital devices and educational materials. Experimentation with digital devices is widespread in the nation's schools, but full digital conversion is still rare. Unanswered questions about costs and effectiveness abound. Still, some benefits are obvious and exciting. We're particularly impressed with the potential gains for disadvantaged students who don't have modern digital opportunities at home and therefore are not learning skills essential to their success. The chance for instruction targeted
Schools also need to be wary of corporate influence of those selling the digital
devices — and be sure they are armed with independent advisers. to individual students' capability is another important potential benefit. It's unknown, however, if digital education will actually improve learning, or whether the financial costs are fully anticipated. Schools also need to be wary of corporate influence of those selling the digital devices — and be sure they are armed with independent advisers. Bend-LaPinemadeasmartmove earlier this year in scaling back the first year's effort so the number of iPads purchased wouldn't exceed the number needed anyway for new testing procedures in spring 2015. The district also is working on an evaluation system designed to help determine the success of the first year. That's good but will be insufficient if d ecision-makers have already made up their minds and are thinking of this as phase one, instead of as a pilot that needs to prove itself.
Landfill project needs cautious approach
L
ook out across Deschutes County's landfill at night and you'll likely see a blue flame. That's the county burning off the methane gasproduced in the decomposition of garbage. The Knott Landfill has never produced enough gas tomake it worth anyone's while to sell it. But Deschutes County commissioners are moving closer to a promising deal to sell the gas, create space in the landfill and earn the county a handsome monthlypaycheck. The proposal by Waste to Energy would inject steam into the landfill. That accelerates decomposition. The methane would becaptured, and Waste to Energy plans to use a process to turn that gas into liquid diesel fuel. The fuel would be sold. Commissioners and county staff have taken some sound steps. They don't have the expertise in this technology. They hired a consultant to evaluate the risks — environmental and financial. The resulting report from HDR Engineeringseemedthorough,butit
was based on Waste to Energy shipping off the gas into a pipeline, not transforming it into diesel. County Administrator Tom Anderson told us the countyis goingto ask HDR to do some more analysis. The countydoes need to see financial statements from Waste to Energy to give confidence that it is, at least, stable. The county also needs to seek a bond to cover possible expenses if Waste to Energy collapses. The size of the bond should assume the worst — whatever Waste to Energy installed is worthless and the county has a mess to clean up. The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality will i n stall monitoring equipment. There are other things that are different about this project. There were no bids. It's a special procurement. And the technology that Waste to Energy is using is new. So far, the county has shown the appropriate mix of caution and optimism.
Don't trust Anthony Weiner's wife By Robin Abcarian
give him," Abedin said. "Anthony's made some horrible mistakes, both
Los Angeles Times
ate to say it, but you can't trust a woman whose husband has b een s crewing around. A year ago, Anthony Weiner and Huma Abedin posed for People magazine, and talked about how they'd worked to repair their marriage after his first sexting scandal forced him to resign his congressional seat in 2011. "Anthony has spent every day since trying to be the best dad and husband he can be," Abedin told People, as the couple launched a carefully orchestrated lead-in to W einer's announcement that h e would run for mayor of New York. Right around the time he was
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beforehe resigned from Congress
and after, but I do very strongly believe that this is between us and our marriage. We discussed all of this before Anthony decided to run for mayor, so really what I want to say is I love him, I have forgiven him, I believe in him and as we have said from the beginning, we are moving forward." It might be persuasive to New York City voters that Abedin believes enough in her husband to finally take the microphone and address them directly. And how nice for Weiner that the mother of his 20-month-old son has weighed her choices and decided that staying in the marriageis herbestcourse. I 'm g l a d the y ' r e "moving photographed for People holding his young son, Jordan, as his loving forward." wife perched next to them, Weiner But her assurances mean nothhad begun a new sexting relation- ing about his future behavior. Hisship, with a 2 2-year-old woman. tory shows that wives who vouch for The photo he sent her, published their badly behaving political husTuesday by a raunchy gossip web- bands do so at their own peril. site called The Dirty, was even more Take the Clintons. graphic than the one that drove him In 1992, when the revelation of from office. Bill Ciinton's affair with Gennifer It's fascinating how Abedin, who Flowers threatened to sink his first must now be described as Weiner's presidential campaign, the Arkan"long-suffering" wife even though sas governor sat with his wife for a they've been married for only three a60 Minutes" interview. "You know, I'm not sitting here, years, is retracing the life of her boss and mentor, Hillary Rodham some little woman standing by my Clinton, another woman whose as- man like Tammy Wynette," Hillary surances about her husband's char- Clinton said. "I'm sitting here beacter ultimately came back to haunt cause I love him, and I respect him, her. and I honor what he's been through In a hastily called news confer- and what we've been through toence Tuesday, Abedin stood ner- gether. And you know, if that's not vously in front of a microphone and enough for people, then heck, don't read a note of support for her hus- vote for him." band, who stood at her side: "Our Voters responded to that. marriage, like many others, has had Six years later, her husband was its ups and its downs. It took a lot impeached, a direct result of his inof work and a whole lot of therapy ability to keep his libido in check. to get to a place where I could forSo, good for Hillary. I'm glad she
Her assurances mean nothing about his future behavior. History shows that wives who vouch for their badly behaving political husbands do so at their own peril. stuck it out with her cad of a husband. But the ammunition he gave his political enemies allowed loony Republicans to paralyze the country for months. A nd yo u c a n' t o v erlook t h e Schwarzeneggers. In 2003, even before 11 women came forward to accuse Republican gubernatorial candidate Arnold Schwarzenegger of sexually groping them, lots of detractors had accused him of vile behavior toward women. To sway reluctant female v oters, Schwarzenegger and h i s wife, Maria Shriver, sat down with Oprah Winfrey, where Shriver praised her husband. Calling her husband "the exact opposite" of a woman hater, she said he was the "most gracious, supportive man I've ever met." Two weeks later, the Los Angeles Times published its explosive stories
about his groping. A couple of days later, Shriver gave a spirited defense
of her husband during a speech to Republican women in Newport Beach. "You can listen to all the negativity and you can listen to people who have never met Arnold, who met him forfive seconds 30 years ago," she said. aor you can listen to me." We all know how that turned out. — Robin Abcarian isa columnist for the Los Angeles Times.
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Tumalo Creek water should remain with Tumalo Creek By Paul Dewey and Mike Tripp
ing for irrigation and municipal uses. umalo Creek is a cherished Fortunately, for the past decade natural resource in Central Or- or sothere has been a kind of social egon. The headwaters springs compact involving i r r igation di sare a wonderland ofscattered seeps tricts, the tribes, conservation groups and springs that become a full-blown and local governments where all creek. The majestic Tumalo Falls have agreed that getting more water is one of the most photoback into Central Oregon's
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g raphed and visited sites I N M Y in the area. The creek is the heart of Shevlin Park. Mountain bikers, runners and hikers alluse the creek's trails. Tumalo Creek is also a vital part of the ecosystem. It is the sole tributary to the Middle Deschutes for more than a 60-mile stretch of that river. It provides cold water that is critical to the health of the Middle Deschutes native redband trout. Unfortunately, Tumalo Creek's history over the past 100 years has been one ofdegradation through dewater-
Whychus Creek has achieved 25 cfs in flows or nearly 75 percent of the minimum target flow of 33 cfs set by ODFW. In contrast, only about 8 cfs of Tumalo Creek has been achieved toward the target flow of 32 cfs, or 25 percent. Progress has been slow for Tumalo Creek — from 2005 to the VIEW c r e eks and rivers is a end of2012, less than 3 cfs has been shared objective. Irrigation permanently protected. During the districts have been piping canals and same time frame 19 cfs was protected returning some of the water to the in Whychus Creek and 70 cfs in the creeks, and local governments like Deschutes River. Also, now the city Sisters are switching from surface of Bend plans to take more water water to groundwater. from Tumalo Creek. The Central Oregon ConservaA July 14 editorial in The Bulletin tion Network initiated the campaign is critical of the COCN's campaign, to increase flows in Tumalo Creek accusing it of no t b eing "careful because the creek's progress has with the facts." Despite the accusalagged behind that of other Cen- tion, the editorial later admits that tral Oregon waterways. Not count- the Network's statements are "not ing the variable amounts of water factually incorrect." It turns out that rights temporarily "leased" instream, the editorial is actually critical of
what it says are "omissions." One such alleged "omission" is that Tumalo Irrigation District takes more waterout ofthe creek than does the city of Bend. We discussed that with The Bulletin's reporter when he called, but what we said about TID did not get into the July 12 article, "Campaign supports higher flow." That is not the Network's omission. At its informational meeting (that COCN announced in its press release but which The Bulletin did not attend), the Netw ork addressed the important role of TID and supporting TID projects that viably restore the creek's flows. The second alleged "omission" asserted by the editorial is that the city "is not going to take more water from Bridge Creek than it can now, 18.2 cubic feet per second." Though such use of Tumalo Creek water will be more than double the current use, the edi-
torial excuses the increase by saying "that would be because Bend's population will grow." But just because an irrigation district or local government "can" take more Tumalo Creek water does not mean they should take more water from Tumalo Creek. That is particularly the case when groundwater and conservation are viable alternatives. Using more water runs counter to the social compact to get more flows back in Central Oregon's creeks and rivers. We need more of Tumalo Creek's cold, clear water kept instream and that is why the Central Oregon Conservation Network adopted that goal as a priority. — Paul Dewey is the executive director of Central Oregon LandWatch and Mike Trippis the conservation chair of the Deschutes chapter of Trout Unlimited. They both live in Bend.
SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
-cen ur u ure
ac o our e maybe inthe era of Facebook and f r acking. But 2013 is still beginning to look a lot like the cataclysmic century we just left behind. More people probably died from the wars of the 20th century than from the battles of the prior 2,500 years combined. The bloodiest century sawthe rise of fascism, Nazism, communism and jihadism. Capitalism almost collapsed during the Great Depression. What followed was a Big Government antidote not unlike our own experience after the panic of 2008. The end of most colonialism and imperialism was also a 20th-century development. So was the rise of modernist and p o stmodernist culture, along with civil rights, feminism and nationalism. No wonder that despite the promise of the 21st century, we keep trying to make sense of the last 13 years by looking back through the lenses of the last action-packed 100. Take the present chaos abroad. The riseand new assertiveness of China is eerily like that of Japan in the 1930s. Japan also once tried to adopt Western-style i n dustrial c a pitalism without consensual government. For a time, that nation grew
w
rapidly. The rising sun of Japan felt slighted by the supposedly weak and corrupt twilight Western powers after World War I. America and its European allies were not willing to grant
VICTOR DAVIS HANSON Japan regional influence commensurate with its rising global power. What followed was a decade-long Japanese war in Asia. Does thesame depressing lesson now apply to China'? Can Beijing square the circle of capitalism without democracy?Can ithave much of the world's cash without the world's largest military? Will China, like 1930s Japan, resent established Western powers to the point of another war in the Pacific? The situation in Syria seems a lot like the Spanish Civil War of 19361939. Almost every regional power
and world superpower is flooding Syria with either weapons, troops or both — Iran, Hezbollah, the Gulf sheikdoms, Russia, Europe and the United States. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is a sort of Franco-type thug, propping up his fascist effort with foreign arms and troops. If Syria follows the Spanish blueprint for a wider war, what follows will be even worse. Talking loudly while carrying a small stick became infamous last century, after the British capitulation to Hitler at Munich in 1938. The same sort of"peace for our time" complacency characterizes Western sanctions in response to Iranian
nuclear proliferation. It is eerie how most responsible nations loudly condemn Iran's race to get a bomb, but they are just as reluctant to face down Iran as the early 20th-century democracies were to confront Hitler before he became too powerful and confident. Once again we are understandably unsure whether the bad choice of using force now is preferable to the nightmare of using even greater force later. The wobbly European Union was based on the same 20th-century idealism that once launched the League of Nations and the United Nations. And Europe seems to be following the same tired script of the 1930s. Weak democracies are once again offering moral lectures to r i sing powers while disarming. The 20thcentury's "German problem" was supposed to be a distant memory. But a reformed and democraticGermany nevertheless is once again earning both the envy and fear of its weaker neighbors. L ike 1938 Britain, most of t h e European Union has no clue how to prevent German economic dynamism from eventually leading to military and political dominance. In early-20th-century fashion, the volatile European street is swinging from hard left to hard right. Vladimir Putin's Russia is as authoritarian as ever. As in the last century, Israel and the Palestinians still have no peace. Brazil still has unlimited but never-realized potentiaL Argentina remains the same
s elf-destructive mess. The A r a b Spring ended in the same old Middle East chaos. The 21st-century United States is in a 20th-century fit of depression — with the decline of America the same cultural motif. In the 1930s, fascism was purported to be more efficient than American democracy. Then Nazism was said to create more idealistic and disciplined citizens. After World War II, the new communist man was announced as the wave ofthe future. Then came thesuperior 20th-century model of postwar "Japan, Inc." Next was the all-powerful European Union. The ruthlessly efficient Chinese
Bloomberg News
he recent revelation that J.K. Rowling is the author of the critically acclaimed and — until now — commercially unsuccessful crime novel "The Cuckoo's Calling" has electrified the book world and solidified Rowling's reputation as a genuine writing talent: After all, if she can impress the critics without the benefit of her towering reputation, then surely her success is deserved. And yet what this episode actually reveals is the opposite: that Rowling's spectacular career is likely more a fluke of history than a consequence of her unique genius. Whenever someone is phenomenally successful, whether it's Rowling as an author, Bob Dylan as a musician or Steve Jobs as an innovator, we can't help but conclude that there
is something uniquely qualifying about them, something akin to "genius," that makes their successes all but inevitable. Even when we learn about their early setbacks — Rowling's original manuscript for "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" was rejectedby no fewer than 12 publishers; Columbia Records initially refused to release Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone"; Jobs was booted from Apple in the mid-1980s — we interpret them as embarrassingoversights that were subsequentlycorrected rather than evidencethattheirsuccess may have somehow been aproduct of luck or happenstance. Several years ago, my colleagues
Matthew Salganik and Peter Dodds at Columbia University and I challenged this conventional wisdom with an unusual experiment. We set out to prove that market success is driven less by intrinsic talent than by "cumulative advantage," a rich-getricher process in which early, possibly even random events are amplified by social feedback and produce large differences in future outcomes. To test our cumulative-advantage hypothesis, we r e cruited almost 30,000 participants to listen, rate and download songs by bands they had never heard of. Unbeknownst to the participants, they were randomly assigned to one of two groups: an "independent" group, which saw only the names of the bands and the songs, and a"social influence" group, whose participants could see how many times songs had been downloaded by others in the group. What we found was highly consistent with the cumulative-advantage hypothesis. First, when people could see what other people liked, the inequality of success increased, meaning that popular songs became more popular and unpopular songs become less so. Second and more
surprisingly, each song's popularity was incredibly unpredictable. In the real world, of course, it's impossible to travel back in time and start over, so it's much harder to argue that someone who is incredibly successful may owe their success to a combination of luck and cumulative advantage rather than superior talent. But by writing under the pseudonym of Robert Galbraith, an oth-
erwise anonymous name, Rowling came pretty close to re-creating our experiment, starting over again as an unknown author and publishing a book that would have to succeed or fail on its own merits, just as Harry Potterhad to 16 years ago — before anyone knew who Rowling was. Rowling made a bold move and, no doubt, is feeling vindicated by the critical acclaim the book has received. But there's a catch: Until the news leaked about the author's real identity, this c r itically acclaimed book had sold only 500 to 1,500 copies, depending on which report you read. What's more, had the author actually been Robert Galbraith, the book would almost certainly have continued to languish in obscurity, probably forever. "The Cuckoo's Calling" will now have a happy ending, and its success will only perpetuate the myth that talent is ultimately rewarded with success. What Rowling's little experiment has actually demonstrated, however, is that quality and
TRLIDY RUBIN
barrassed Putin — and still could, since his name is already on the ballot. So first they jailed him, then they suddenly freed him after 24 hours,
pending appeal. Just look at the case of Navalny, Russia's most promising opposition leader and a new kind of Russian politician. He came to prominence after mounting a series of Internet investigations of his country's staggering official corruption. When I interviewedthe tall, blond, 35-year-old Navalny in Moscow last year, he told me: "This regime is based on corruption." He was referring to the massive wealth funneled to Kremlin favorites and the disrespect for law that pervades the system. "I focus on this issue," he said, "and that's why people appreciate my efforts." This crusade made Navalny an icon for Moscow's growing middle class. The a n ti-corruption c ampaigner was set to run for mayor of Moscow in September. No question, the incumbent (a favorite of the Kremlin's) would win. But a strong Navalny showing might have em-
"Maybe theyfeared more people would vote for him because he was imprisoned," says Russian journalist Natalia Gevorkyan, who has written books on Putin and Khodorkovsky. However, at any moment, Navalny could be tossed back in jail. The Navalny tale illustrates Putin's blatant indifference to domestic and international opinion. Which brings us to the question of whether Obama should cancel the summit in Moscow, where he is scheduled to stop before attending a September meeting of leaders of the G-20 (the major industrialized and developing nations) in St. Petersburg. Just as Putin imagines he can manipulate Russians, he seems to believe he can manipulate Obama as well. After Putin was re-elected president early last year, Obama attempted (for a second time) to reset U.S.Russian relations. Yet, in a put-down to Obama, Putin declined to attend a May 2012 meeting of the leaders of
t
f you're looking for any silver lining in what is happening in
Egypt today, I suggest you go
success are even more unrelated than we found in our experiment. It might be hard for a book to become a runaway bestseller if it's unread-
ably bad (although one might argue
felt they were living in a rigged sys-
that the Twilight series and "Fifty Shades of Grey" challenge this constraint), but it is also clear that being good, or even excellent, isn't enough. As one of the hapless editors who turned down the Galbraith manuscript put it, "When the book came in, I thought it was perfectly goodit was certainly well-written — but it didn't stand out." Ironically, that's probably how those 12 editors felt about the original "Harry Potter" manuscript. Now, of course, they look like idiots, but what both our experiment and Rowling's suggest is that they might have been right all along. Had things turned out only slightly different, the real Rowling might have met with the same success as the fake Robert Galbraith, not the other way around. As hard as it is to imagine in the Harry Potter-obsessed world that we now inhabit, i t's entirely plausible that in t h i s parallel universe, "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" would just be a "perfectly good" book that never sold more than a handful of copies; Rowling would still be a struggling single mother in Manchester, England; and the rest of us would be none the wiser.
tem, where they had no chance of realizing their full potential, under a leader with no vision. After some 30 years of Mubarak's rule and some $30 billion in American aid, roughly one-third of Egyptians still could not read or write. The g e nerals w h o r ep l aced Mubarak, though, were deadheads not up to governing — so dead that many liberal Egyptians were ready to vote for the Muslim Brotherhood's Morsi over a former Mubarak-erageneral in the June 2012 election. But Morsi proved more interested in consolidating the Brotherhood's grip on government rather than governing himself, and he drove Egypt into a dead end — so dead that Egyptians took to the streets on June 30 and virtually begged the military to oust Morsi. There is a message from the Egyptian majority: No more dead hands; we want a government that aspires to make Egypt the vanguard of the Arab world again. No more deadheads; we want a government that is run by competent people who can restore order and jobs. And no more dead ends; we want a government that will be inclusive and respect the fact that two-thirds of Egyptians are not Islamists and, though many are pious Muslims, they don't want to live in anything close to a theocracy. Yes, it would have been much better had Morsi been voted out of office. But what is done is done. We need to make the best of it. The right thing for President Barack Obama to be doing now is not only to ignore calls for cutting off economic aid to Egypt — on grounds that the last revolution amounted to a military coup. We should be trying to get everyone in the world to help this new Egyptian government succeed. People are worriedthat Egypt's military could stay in power indefinitely. I am worried about something else: Egyptians defining the right path and getting a majority to follow that path. I am not sure Egypt can ever get to that level of consensus. But this government offers the best hope for that. Its job will be much easier if the Muslim Brotherhood can be reintegrated into politics, and its war with the military halted. But the Brotherhood also needs to accept that it messed upbadly — and that it needs to re-earn the trust of the people. This is no time for America to be
juggernaut followed and seemed destined to outpace 20th-century America — which was suffering everything from stagflation to a short-
age of oil. But o nc e m o re , 2 1st-century America is confounding its critics by reinventing itself as it did last century. The U.S. may soon become the world's largest gas and oil producer. Food exports are booming as never b efore. A m erican b r ands f r o m iPhones and Starbucks to Google and Twitter flood the world. To find answers for this chaotic young century, just look back at the past one. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
— Duncan J. Wattsis a principal researcher at Microsoft Research and author of "Everything ts Obvious (Once You Know the Answer): How Common Sense Fails Us."
It's time for President Obama to tell Putin 'nyet' n the latest political show trial in Moscow, Alexei Navalny, the anticorruption activist and charismatic opposition leader, was sentenced to five years in jail — for corruption. Apparently there is no move too cynical for Russian leader and former KGB operative Vladimir Putin. Only last week a dead man — Sergei Magnitsky, a w h i stle-blower who was jailed and beaten to death in prison — was judged guilty of the very embezzlement scheme he had exposed (which was committed, in reality, by top government officials). Then there's Mikhail K h odorkovsky, the former oil magnate, who has been repeatedly jailed in another seriesof show trials— because he mounted a political challenge to Putin. These trials — even more than the games Putin is playing with the American leaker and asylum-seeker Edward Snowden — should signal to President Obamathat it's time to cancel a planned summit with Putin in September. The same mind-set that drives the Russian leader to lock up any political opponent ensures that a summit would be a waste of time.
Egypt's 3 revolutions up 30,000feet and look down. From that distance, the events in Egypt over the past two and a half years almost make sense. Egypt has actually had three revolutions since early 2011, and when you add them all up, you can discern a message about what a majority of Egyptians are seeking. The first revolution was the Egyptian people and the Egyptian military toppling President Hosni Mubarak and installing the former defense minister, the aging Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, as the de facto head of state. Tantawi and his colleagues proved utterly incompetent in running the nation and were replaced, via a revolutionary election, by the Muslim Brotherhood's party, led by President Mohammed Morsi. He quickly tried to consolidate power by decapitating the military and installing Brotherhood sympathizers in important positions. His autocratic, noninclusive style and failed economic leadership frightened the Egyptian center, which teamed up last month with a new generation of military of ficers for a third revolution to oust Morsi and the Brotherhood. To put it al l i n s i m pler terms: Egypt's first revolution was to get rid of the dead hand, the second revolution was to get rid of the deadheads and the third revolution was to escape from the dead end. The first revolution happened because a large number of mostly nonIslamist Egyptian youths grew fed up with the suffocating dead hand of the Mubarak era — a hand so dead that way too many young Egyptians
Rowling: Fluke of history or literary genius? By Duncan J. Watts
THOMAS FRIEDMAN
the G-8 (eight of the most powerful industrial countries), which was held at Camp David. The excuse he gave was so silly as to be demeaning. The White House, and Secretary of State John Kerry, has invested much effort in urging Moscow to help mediate a compromise solution to the Syrian civil war, yet Putin has steadfastly backed President Bashar al-Assad. Obama dearly wants to negotiate another round of nuclear arms cuts with Putin, but the Russian has made clear he is not interested. "There is nothing on the (Moscow summit) agenda that they can make progress on," says the Brookings Institution's Fiona Hill, co-author of "Mr. Putin: Operative inthe Kremlin." "Why would Obama bother going?" There are plenty of transparent excuses for bowing out of a pointless summit. And Vice President Biden could certainly fill in for Obama at the G-20 meeting. Putin seems to believe that Obama will come calling, no matter how many times he insults him. It's long past time to show him he is wrong. — Trudy Rubinis a columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer.
punishing Egyptians or demanding quick elections. Our job is to help the new government maximize the number of good economic decisions it makes, while steadily pressuring it to become more inclusive and making it possible for multiple political parties to form. If that happens, Egypt will have a proper foundation to hold democratic elections again. If it doesn't happen, no number of elections will save it. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New Yorlz Times.
F4 © www.bendbulietin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
'Visitation' a gritty tale of an area in struggle "Visitation Street" by Ivy Pochoda (Dennis Lehane Books/Ecco, 320
pgs., $25.99) By Connie Ogle The Miami Herald
Ivy Pochoda's impressive and atmospheric second novel arrives with a certain set of expectations, which she swiftly t r a n scends. " Visitation Street" is t h e second release from Dennis Lehane Books, the imprint of HarperCollins with one of the genre's best at the creative helm (Lehane is the author of such classics as "Gone Baby Gone," "Mystic River" and "Shutter Island"). Considering his works, you might imagine Pochoda's book is also a gritty crime n ovel. "Visitation Street" is definitely gritty, but it's less about solving a mystery than taking the pulse of an urban waterfront community teetering on the brink of change. Set in Brooklyn's Red Hook district, the story begins on a sultry night when bored teenagers June and Val set off in search of fun, lugging a pink rubber raft. But in the morning, only one girl is found, setting off events that rock the neighborhood and alter the lives of many residents. Among those most troubled by the disappearance are Jonathan, the formerly wealthy, o n - the-verge-of s uccess performer n o w reduced to a lcoholic excess and teaching music to bored students at the nearby Catholic school, and Cree, whose mother's grief has kept him from filling out his community college application though he longs to flee Red Hook's projects. Both men are stuck in a place that seems less and less like home. Pochoda, also author of "The Art of Disappearing," writes in an urgent yet eloquent style, and she offers poignant insights into the characters as they h ope and fail and struggle on.
'& SONS'
ea is asawrec 0 aman 0
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• Gilbert's ambitious novelrevolvesaround literary lion whohasmined livesof family
them seem shiny, untainted by the everyday corrosions of ambition," Gilbert writes. Andrew Dyer is a confounding, l a rgely u n sympathetic "& Sons" son is rereading grandfather character who e ncapsulates Dyer's famous novel, and abso- all the contradictions of New by David Gilbert (Random House,448 pgs., $27) lutely loving it. York intellectual society. His "What's that line from 'Am- humanity a n d h o p efulness By Hector Tobar persand,' Dad?" the son asks. give his books a huge followLos Angeles Times "'Give it time and shame even- ing (Gilbert has great fun givT he fictional writer A . N. tually clambers back as pride.'" ing us excerpts of Dyer's many Dyer — Andrew to his familyIn "& Sons," all the pride of opuses), but he'll do just about is dying as David Gilbert's new Dyer'sliterary career has clam- anything to achieve his literary novel "& Sons" opens. Dyer is a bered back as personal shame. ends (including violating confiNew York writer in the mold of Dyer is the bard of the Upper dences shared by his children). J.D. Salinger: When West Side, and he's a And when he achieves great he was in his 20s, he wreck. Once a writer success,even that leaves him wrote a book about with an undeniable embittered. But "& Sons" has bigger his New England gift of language and prep school, a novel observation, Dyer is ambitions than being a mere whose portrait of now a septuagenar- character study. Gilbert is tryteenage angst and lan ensconced m hls ing to write a sweeping novel white pri v i lege j a p artment overlook about a family and the times it Ni was a success riQ ~' i n g Central Park that lives in — and a work that says valing that of "The is itself the legacy of something about filial love and e.: I h i s we l l -heeled New the creative process. UnfortuC atcher i n th e Rye." York patrician p a rnately, when the legendary auD yer i s "the ents. We A m e rican thor steps off stage in "& Sons," quintessential New York writreaders have been fed the narrative Gilbert builds er." And hisgloomy presence is a steady diet of art about these around the rest of the Dyers at the heart of "8 Sons," whose kinds of Manhattanites over can meander and isn't quite as most notable achievement is its the past century. And Gilbert, compelling. portrait of that most respected the author of the novel "The Gilbert's long descriptions and mysterious of artistictypes: Normals," is at his best and is of the Brooks Bros.-inspired the great novelist. Dyer's suc- most intriguing when he dives contents ofone son's closets, cess and the way he achieved into the myth of the specialness for example, and the details of it — by isolating himself from of Gotham and dissects it. the book parties of preternatu"I slipped further into A.N. rally talented New York writers his family and mining their lives — has shaped the fate of Dyer's world," says the nar- would be a lot more interestanyone who's ever loved him, rator of "8 Sons," Philip Top- ing if they weren't so familiar including his sons, Andy, Jaime ping. Philip is the son of the to us already. Hollywood has and Richard. late Charles Topping, Dyer's its usual cliched cameo. And "You know how many cop- lifelong friend — they went to when we're in Manhattan, "& ies 'Ampersand' has sold since prep school together and raised Sons" often treats the city itself its publication'?" a Hollywood families together. When Dyer with too much nostalgia and producer asks Richard, a for- agrees to read the eulogy at the reverence. Nor is Gilbert nearly mer addictand aspiring screen- elder Topping's funeral, Philip as ruthless with his secondary writer who's the oldest of the gets sucked back into the Dyer characters as the fictional Dyer Dyer progeny. "Over forty-five drama. (or Salinger) might have been. million.... And every year it Behind every bright, hopeful, As a result, they often lack an sells about a hundred thousand too-special thing about the New edge to match the gravity of the more." York lives ofthe Dyers and the themes he's taken up. The producer wants to buy Toppings — the amateur tenNone of this, however, should a screenplay Richard has writ- nis champion grandfather, the detract too much from the largten, but only if Richard can get enchantments of Central Park er achievement of "8 Sons." his famously reclusive father — there's something empty and Gilbert has great narrative gifts to give him an option to bring sad. and a wonderful eye for the "Ampersand" to film. This is Richard's wife and children madness of families and the one of many deliciously com- have never met his famous fa- madness of writers. In the end, plicated an d c r i nge-worthy ther, and when he brings them "& Sons" is a novel that creates moments in "8 Sons," and it to New York from Los Angeles, an imaginary author who is so comes with an additional twist they are "tourists," and "for that real and flawed that the reader — because as Richard travels reason theirfaces lacked a cer- feels he understands American to New York with his family to tain patina, of the city in their literature itself a little better afmake this request, his teenage blood, I suppose, which made ter reading his story.
Rakoff's unusuallast book is anovel inverse "Love, Dishonor, Marry, Die, Cherish, Perish" by David Rakoff (Double-
Publishers Weekly ranks thebestsellers for week ending July 21. Hardcover fiction
1. "The English Girl" by Daniel Silva (Harper) 2. "First Sight" by Danielle Steel (Delacorte) 3. "Inferno" by DanBrown (Doubleday) 4."And theMountains Echoed"by Khaled Hosseini lRiverheadj 5. "Hidden Order" by BradThor (Atria) 6."Second Honeymoon" by Patterson/Roughan (Little, Brown) 7. "Bombshell" by Catherine Coulter (Putnam) 8. "Hunting Eve" by lris Johansen iSt. Martin'sj 9. "The Ocean atthe End of the Lane" by Neil Gaiman(William Morrow) 10. "Bad Monkey" byCarl Hiaasen iKnopfj Hardcover nonfiction
1. "Happy, Happy,Happy" by Phil Robertson (Howard Books) 2. "Lean In" by Sheryl Sandberg iKnopfj 3."ThisTown" byMarkLeibovich (Blue Rider Press) 4. "Fantasy Life" by Matthew Berry (Riverhead) 5. "The DuckCommander Family" by Willie and Korie Robertson (Howard Books) 6. "Life Code" by Phil McGraw (Bird Street Books) 7. "Zealot" by RezaAslan (Random House) 8. "Let's Explore Diabetes with Owls" by David Sedaris iLittle, Brown) 9. "American Gun" byChris Kyle iWilliam Morrow) 10. "Dad Is Fat" by Jim Gaffigan (Crown) — McClatchy-TribuneNewsService
By Leziie Patterson McClatchy-Tribune News Service
As Mary Balogh fans eagerly await the second story in her new "Survivors Club" series, the author has whetted those hungry appetites with a very short novella that ties in with "The Arrangement," which is due to be released Aug. 27. It is hoped the fans aren't starving. While another (albeit much smaller) example of Balogh's flawless writing and storytelling skill, the plot just wasn't sufficient. Readers will keep waiting for something intriguing to happen (thanks to that storytelling skill) but it really never does. It almost does — then it doesn't. The hero of t h e c oming book, Vincent, was blinded in the Napoleonic war and has a family full of females who are determined to marry him off. His grandmother sends for Philippa, who she has determined will be a suitable wife for Vincent. Philippa's parents are relieved and thrilled, because Vincent (and his fortune) will help fund her sisters' society debuts and e n hance their searches for husbands. While Philippa feels forced to assist her family in such a way, her heart has secretly belonged to Julian for two years. They met when she was an
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its opposite. Twelve-year-old Margaret, brutalized by her stepfather and rejected by her mother, rides the rails westward to start a new life. On the train, she briefly meets a hobo who wraps her in his coat and sings her to sleep in Yiddish. C lifford, introduced in t h e next section, is that erstwhile hobo's son. Young Cliffie takes a photograph of his cousin Helen that becomes a touchstone as moving through Chicago, it passesfrom one character S eattle, Burbank, M a n - to the next. Helen goes on to hattan, S a n Fr a n cisco suffer in the sexist office culand points unnamed. The ture of 1950s Manhattan; later author's cleverlyrhymed Clifford finds himself artisticouplets bring to mind both cally and sexually in gay San Ogden Nash and Cole Por- Francisco. ter, as we see in this excerpt Then comes the fairly awset in the 1980s: ful Susan, she of the ChrisSusan had never donned tian Lacroix, who will change quite so bourgeois her name to Sloan and then A garment as Thursday Shulamit and treat two difnight's Christian Lacroix. ferentmen badly before she's In college — just f ive through. Then it's AIDS, and years gone — she'd have Alzheimer's and Zion — honabhorred it estly, I had to read the book But now, being honest, twice to follow all the threads. she ... adored it. But because it was so amusOr this, from the time of ingly made, that was no trouAIDS in San Francisco: ble at all. And what could one say Out loud it is even better: about poor lovely Marty? Try it and see. Whose fever spiked high at his own dinner party Weekly Arts & Between the clear soup Entertainment Inslde and the rabbit terrine Msa~gg By eleven that night he I• TheBulletin was in quarantine. As the half-dozen main characters randomly cross paths, the story is carried vPure Crrakk/"o. forward by their interactions, sometimes gestures of kindness and other times
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The death from cancer of 47-year-old David Rakoff — best-selling essayist and contributor to public radio's "This A m erican Life"— broke fans'hearts last summer. Fortunately, he left behind an unusual last book billed as a "novel in verse" and designed by Chip Kidd with illustrations by the cartoonist Seth. But first — not to quibble — are we sure this is a novel and not anepic poem? One-hundred-plus p a ges of iambic tetrameter seems like the latter to me, as terrifying as that designation may be from a marketer's perspective. Epic it certainly is — a series of vignettes taking us through more than a century of American life,
'The Suitor' is a romanceappetizer However, as its own story it's just boring. The only smidgen of conf lict i s w h e n P h i lippa i s whisked away for Vincent's perusal, but the tension is very short-lived. There just isn't much that happens. But the good news is, not much happens in a very short story. In short, don't read this unless you plan to read "The Arrangement." But if the coming book is as good as the first in the series, it will be worth reading, which makes this a worthy supplement.
•
Newsday
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unsuitable age 16, and he was an unsuitable suitor because of his rakish reputation. So he left London to reform, and wait for Philippa to turn 18. They secretly write letters during that time. Just as Julian makes plans to come to London to court Philippa, she's faced with having to marry Vincent. The idea of this novellatakinga scene from a book and expanding it with its own short story — is a good one. Using ebook technology to offer it for $1.99 is another good idea.
,
By Marion Winik
•
"The Suitor" by Mary Balogh (Random House, $1.99, e-novella)
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SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Lan ua eist e rea 'ewe int is
an ster nove "Men in Miami Hotels" by Charlie Smith (Harperperennial, 288 pgs.,$14.99 paper) By David I. Uiin Los Angeles Times
Perhaps my f avorite moment in Charlie Smith's terrific new novel, "Men in Miami Hotels," comes not too far from the end. The protagonist, a Miami hoodlum named Cotland Sims, has snuck into Havana, on the run from a relentless line of gangsters who keep tryingtokillhim, asifhis life had become an existential game of Whack-a-Mole. Cot is accompanied by Marcella, his l ongtime on-and-off girlfriend, who is traveling with an agenda of her own. "You're a r e al killer, baby," he tells her, in a classic line from the noir novelist's playbook — but just as we think we know where this is going, Smith turns it around on us. "He felt — somehow felt — that what they were saying had been said a million times before," he w r ites of his character, "as if the words had been scraped up from the grotty carpets of twenty-dollar bedrooms and second-run movie houses, and not even dusted off, not even looked at or sorted, used again. Old familiar scuds and wrake." That striking observation brings the author directly into the story by acknowledging that, yes, we all may recognize the conventions but there is something more beneath the surface, aself-conscious awareness of the r oles life forces us to play. This, in turn, etches in stark relief one of the central tensions of the novel, which walks a line between genre and something considerably wilder, a fictional territory where acharacter might lose his or her soul. C ertainly, these ar e t h e stakes for which Cot is play•
ing, even (or especially) if he doesn't know exactly w h y. As the book opens, he steals a cache of emeralds from his employer, the brutal mob boss Albertson, only to lose this tainted treasure beforethe first chapter comes to a close. Albertson doesn't care that Cot has no idea where the gems are; he wants his property back. As Cot tries to stay one step ahead, Albertson sends waves of k i llers in p ursuit, first to Key West, where he has retreated to his mother's Craftsman, and then to Miami and to Cuba, where the novel winds up in an unexpected, but inevitable, denouement.
'You can't see a gangster' More conventions? Yes, but Smith subverts them almost immediately, not least by creating a complex life for Cot. He may be on the run from mob assassins, but he is also, in the most specific sense imaginable, home, in the town where he grew up, attempting to help his mother, who is living in the crawl space under her house
because the structure has been red-tagged after the most recent hurricane, and reestablishing his connection with Marcella and with his oldest friend from high school, a drag queen named C J. Everywhere he goes, people recognize him, from Marcella's husband, Ordell, the county prosecutor, to the police themselves. "You can't see a gangster," Smith writes, describing Cot's connection to this place, to these people, "without hearing about that at least once or twice a day: the dull, inevitable, unenviablestoniness. Yet a s oftness remains, supple, slowly undulating, a nexus
like a jungle bridge flexing in breeze, a worry and substantiation, anchored in coral rock, huma n ness, spotty an d r e eking, still apparent — that's another way of putting it — Hey, Sheriff, don't you know me?" As it turns out, such a question occupies the center of Smith's story, which is less about crime than identity, despite the emerald theft and all those hit men. Indeed, the novel's violence, although pervasive, ends up feeling almost incidental; people fight or get shot with the matter-of-factness of shaking hands, and
tense scenes (a kidnapping, a chase that leaves both cops and criminals dead on the Key West streets) dissipate almost without consequence, as Cot simply walks away.
Think poetry It's a strategy reminiscent, in some ways, of Elmore Leonard, who often treats brutality lightly, or Jim Thompson's surreal1958 chase novel"The Getaway." But more to the point, Smith is operating in Denis Johnson territory, where narrative arises out of language, and scenesare important less for what happens in them than for how they are described. That makes sense, for like Johnson, Smith started as a poet; his seventh collection, "Word Comix," came out in 2009. He has also written six previous works o f f i c t ion, including "Three D e l ays"
(2010). In this regard, it may make the most sense to read "Men in Miami Hotels" as an extended tone poem, in which the language of crime, of violence, informs the language of inner life. Cot, tobe sure, is one com-
plicated gangster, "making mistake after mistake ... after taking the stones, after getting Albertson's operative locked up, after running around here like he knew what he was doing, after putting his mother at risk, and Marcella too and who know who else ... sticking his head in a noose. But it's like he doesn't care — or not that exactly: it's as if he's only half awake, only half there." That, of course, is how we lose ourselves, and yet, you don't have to be a criminal to recognize the way Cot feels.
Edgycrimenovel misses on good action scenes "No Regrets, Coyote"
The titular Coyote is Wylie Melville, a therapist who 352 pgs., $25.95) doubles as a volunteer forensic consultant because of his abilBy Oiine H. Cogdiii ity to read a crime scene. Sun SentineI (Florida) Wylie is asked by his old South Florida author John friend Detective Sgt. Carlos D ufresne's first f o ray i n t o O'Brien with the Eden, Fla., pocrime fiction delivers an edgy, lice department to view a viodialogue-rich t al e r e m i nis- lent crime scene. Local restaucent ofElmore Leonard and rateur Chafin Halliday killed Charles Willeford. his wife and three children Best known for novels such before committing suicide. The as "Louisiana Power & Light" police want Wylie to sign off on and "Love Warps the Mind a the murder-suicideso they can Little," Dufresne shows an af- close the case. But Wylie befinity for creating complicated, lieves the killings look staged yet realistic characters in "No and that the typed suicide note Regrets, Coyote."ButD ufresne, is phony. who teaches creative writing in The intriguing plot's twists the master's program at Florida work w ell, bu t t h e a c tion International University, falls scenes don't gel and the endshort in the action scenes and a ing isn't as crisp as the rest of protracted finale. the novel. by John Dufresne (Norton,
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Costs Continued from F1 The hospital can appeal, but appeals are often more expensive than just eating the cost. They typically take three or four years before they get to an administrative law judge. The patient can also appeal, but this is so unusual that the quality organization that supposedly monitors the process did not know how tohandle my mother's appeal. Mass. General reviewed my mother's case and concluded that given Medicare rules, the "outpatient" classification was appropriate even though my mother was not discharged for four days. A recent study by t h e journal Modern Healthcare reported that Medicare reimbursements for complex "outpatient" pr o c edures, such as pulmonary treatments and ultrasounds, paid the hospital as little as two cents on the dollar for its charges. Hospitals, needless to say, hate this system, and for good reason. "It makes no
4 ATEHCNN
Angel Franco/New York Times News Service
De Marcus Brooks puts a blanket on a patient awaiting treatment at the Montefiore Medical Center in New York. With pressure for the government to reach an agreement on deficit reduction, some consensus has built around the idea that the largest Medicare savings should come from hospitals and other institutional providers of care.
Gimmicks that working the rules. patients. But that policy costs In addition to imposing gim- take money out of over $3,000 a year, and most micks to shift costs to patients, elderly people can't afford such C ongress works w i t h t h e Medicare are the extrainsurance. wrong means to health industrial complex to Medicare has been one of sensemedically,"saysJohn deny Medicare far more con- address the federal the crown jewels of American Belknap, Mass. General's sequential savings. The privasocial policy. Historically, it director of corporate compli- tized Medicare drug benefit, deficit. The reform of has been far more cost-effecance. "We deliver the same enacted in 2003, explicitly pro- Medicare is properly tive than the commercial parts care to patients whether the hibits Medicare from negotiat- part of the larger of the system because it has far classification is inpatient or ing bulk discounts with pharfewer middlemen. Today, howobservation. There is the maceutical companies. Medi- project of getting ever, instead of being a model presumption that the case care Part C allows commercial a comprehensive of a comprehensive national is different, but it's the same HMOs to target healthy seniors and universal health system that provides Medicare bed and the same nurse." and reap big profits. These two for all, Medicare is at risk of The American Hospital gifts to big commercial players coverage system. being pushed into the commerAssociation has a lawsuit cost Medicare hundreds of bilcialized model that has made pending against Medi- lions of dollars. the rest of America's health care to overturn the whole The latest fad in the ideology the fixed sum would likely system such a costly and inefconcept. Medicare, in an of using commercial incentives cover only a bare-bones plan, ficient mess. effort to s ettle th e s uit, and intermediaries to contain and many seniors would have The risk is that as Congress partly modified its policy costsgoes under the name of to bearmore of the expense of seeks Medicare savings, it will last March and hospitals consumer-directed care. The getting sick — or forgo neces- require the Centers for Medidenied claims by auditors idea is to combine tax-favored sary care. The affluent could care and MedicaidServices to "health savings accounts" with pay out of pocket or buy more come up with more such selfwill now be permitted to rebill in a less expensive high-deductible health insur- expensive policies. Unless Con- defeating c o s t-containment category. But the suit is go- ance plans and to rely on the gress devises more sensible tricks. Gimmicks that t a ke ing forward. A n o f f icial consumer's capacity to shop and fundamental reforms, cost- m oney out of Medicare are the of the American Hospital around for the most suitable cutting by cost-shifting is our wrong means to address the Association told me that as plan. But as the system be- likely future. federaldeficit. The reform of hospitals have responded comes ever-more convoluted, H appily, my m o ther h a s Medicare is properly part of defensively to avoid getting the idea of consumers having fullyrecovered, and recently the larger project of getting a punished, doctors end up the knowledge or market pow- celebrated her 100th birthday. comprehensive and universal getting second-guessed. er to intelligently navigate it is Happily, too, she avoided the healthcoverage system. This system was the re- laughable. out-of-pocket costs associated — Robert Kuttner's new boolz is "Debtors'Prison: The Politics sult of two George W. BushConverting Medicare to a with her "observation" status, era laws aimed at reducing voucher would make the cost- because she isone of a miof Austerity Versus Possibility." Medicare costs using "mar- shifting trend explicit. People nority of seniors with suppleHe is co-editor of The American ket incentives." In 2003, the would get a fixed sum to buy mental insurance that covers Prospect and asenior fellow at Medicare M o d ernization private health insurance. But bills that Medicare shifts to Demos. Act directed Medicare to conduct a d e monstration project to use outside auditors to recover excessive hospital costs after the fact. After the three-year demonstration, held in five states including M a ssachusetts, recovered $900 m i l l ion, Congress made it national and mandatory in the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006, to take effect in 2010. Today, hospital resources are wasted in complying with these arbitrary rules, V and a lot of money goes into the pockets of the Medicare contractors or is absorbed by patients. The system doesn't deter patients from seeking unnecessary treatment, since the process is one of bewildering complexity and patients typically learn about it only when they get the bill. T hough M edicare a d1. Students develop a love for learning through small class sizes and m inisters t h e s e rul e s , Medicare of ficials d on't one-on-one instruction. necessarily consider them 2. We engage our StudentS in digital ClaSSrOOmS frOm 5th thrOugh 8th a sensible way to balance g ood medical care w i t h grade With e-CurriCulum and a I to I l a PtOP initiatiVe. cost containment. Don Berwick, an expert on cost-ef3. An enriched education is provided with Spanish, German, music, fective medicine, was inart and electives including snowboarding, xc skiing, kayaking, rock terim national head of the climbing, mountain biking, archery, swim team, skateboarding, Medicare program in2010 and 2011 until Republicans cooking, finance, and farming. blocked his confirmation 4. Students learn to engage their community through relevant field trips as the permanent appointee. Berwick, who is now a and impactful service projects, such as orphans in Rwanda, seniors at candidate for governor of Aspen Ridge, and the homeless at The Bethlehem Inn. M assachusetts, is a critic of the current use of the cat5. We teaCh tO the WhOle Child thrOugh an innOVatiVe aPPrOaCh of egories of observation and instruction in academics, spirituality and creativity. inpatient to contain costs. "It's a blunt instrument," he 6. We are at the fOrefrOnt of imPlementing innOVatiVe STEM CurriCulum told me. "The way it often in our ClaSSrOOm frOm Kindergarten thrOugh Middle SChOO1. nets out is that the patient pays more. The patient has We provide Bus Service, far less sophistication and power in the system than Early drop Off — 7:30, Late Pick Up - 5:30 the hospitals and the medical specialty societies." • We use current research based best practices to instruct
E nroll toda y VYi thout Regret!
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Top 6 Reasons Why Families Choose Morning Star Christian School
The big players in the system — hospitals, doctors, insurers — spend a small fortune working to game it, while patients remain in the dark. Thirty years of cost containment efforts using market incentives, beginning with the creation of health maintenance organizations in the Nixon era, have not altered the fundamental inefficiencies in the system. The more complications the forces of cost containment add, the more
money the big players spend
students according to their many different learning styles. • We use efficient interactive SMART boards to keep our instruction relevant, flexible and excellent. • Teachers partner with parents to develop passionate learners in a safe and friendly classroom environment.
p ORMSLg STAI R www.mscsbend.org • 541.382.5091 • 19741 Baker Road
F6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013
This guru drops the fantasy football
Camping coo ooks ort e oo ieinthewoo s By Michell Eloy Camping and gourmet cooking: two pastimes that are seemingly mutually exclusive. Yet three new cookbooks are trying to shuck the notion that communing with nature has to come at the expense of quality, nutritious food — or at least need not be limited to hot dogs
"Fantasy Life: The Outrageous, Uplifting, and Heartbreaking World of Fantasy Sports From the Guy Who's Lived It" by Matthew Berry (Riverhead
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If only there were more of that. Hey, Matthew, be that guy.
more minimalist outdoor experience,
stew). The recipes are ingredient-heavy.
$19.95) offers more of a traditional approach to campfire cuisine. Written by canoe enthusiast Kevin Callan and dietitian Margaret Howard, the book includes tips on dehydrating, living off the land and at-home steps for meal preparation to cut down on the packing list.
yogurt chicken and cioppino (a seafood "The New Trailside Cookbook" (Firefly,
"Family Camping Cookbook" offers chine, "Campfire Cuisine" (Quirk Books, $15.95) and"FamilyCamping Cookbook" the same style of recipes, but tailored (Duncan Baird, $14.95) boast recipes crafted with the foodie in mind. In the former, author Robin Donovan skews her book more toward adults,
to families. Still, the ingredient lists for things like paella and risotto primavera lean toward the lengthy side. For campers looking for a slightly
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By Chris Erskine
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with recipes like Indian-style curried
• A K I B KA I S • E Z H I B I T S • F O O D • Q A S KE S • SKORE
Books, 338 pgs., $27.95)
Matthew Berry's book sure makes a lousy first impression. The ESPN fantasy guru introduces us to a league where, each year, the last-place finisher is forced to get a humiliating t a t t oo. Look, I'm all for tribal hazing; I went to seventh grade t oo. I st o p s hort at t h e permanent desecration of my friends, however, even in the name ofa good time. Berry's book comes at an opportune time, in the first stirrings of another fantasy season, as emails begin to shoot back and forth about upcoming drafts. The N F L-based l eagues, in which participants choose players from throughout the sport, and win based on their players' real-life statistical performances, usually begin in late August and run through the playoffs. Berry, one of the nation's foremost authorities on the topic, purports to entertain and enlighten us with the hijinks of the leagues and fantasy players he's run across while reporting extensively on the topic for ESPN. Like fantasy league experiences themselves, Berry's storytelling is a little uneven, sometimes hilarious, other times exasperating, occasionally even cringe-worthy. "The average fantasy player spends 18 hours a week with ESPN." he gushes. A former scriptwriter, Berry spends a lot of time making a case for hisbeloved fantasy world. The book notes that 13 percent of all Americans play some sort of fantasy league. To not know someone who participates in this would be like not knowing a golfer, or someone who Facebooks. Now in its third decade, the world of fantasyleagues even includes spelling bees and stock clubs. Part of Berry's purpose here, he says, is to help us understand the worldwide phenomenon. Not that he does. Mostly, he makes a case for how a fun hobby, full of friendship and camaraderie, can easily become an addiction. He over packs the book with stories of fantasy teams becoming an obsession, then warns of the dangers of obsession. "Don't be that guy," he cautions, while pretty much being that guy. A bit more self-awareness on that front would've certainly paid off. At times, he just seems tonedeaf to the obnoxiousness of it all, as in this explanation of the pastime's appeal: "College is over and this is our fraternity now," one hard-partying player explains. I play fantasy football — last year, intwo leagues, including a father-son league that we tried to sell to our wives as a fledgling Cub Scout troop. I love draft night, the trade debates, the end-of-season team banquet. So, you don't have to sell me on the bonding benefits of fantasy football, and all the other fantasy sports. Just entertain me. And I sure wouldn't mind a few more tips on running backs versus receivers. Problem is, ESPN has a significant fantasy site all its own, making it uncomfortable for Berry to talk about alternative sites. Instead, we get case after case of how guys screwed up a wedding because they were preoccupied with picking their team, or how they rescheduled their 7-year-old's birthday party to accommodate their league's draft. Berry comes into this book with an i m pressive resume, having succeeded in TV and movie w r iting. T h roughout "Fantasy Life," there are hints of this earlier skill set, as in his collection of funniest team names - "Luck Be a Brady Tonight" or "Pete Carroll-ine
and cans of baked beans. For those heading out to a campsite with access to a refrigerator or ice ma-
Chicago Tribune
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CHEAPTRICK 7pm Wednesday, July31
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July 31st through August 4th Comeandenjoy theold-fashioned American tradition of yourcountyfair. Lookfor awidevariety offun activitiesandbooths: including TheBulletin FamilyFunZone, Brad'sWorld Reptiles, CowboyBoot Camp, the rodeo,animals, 4-Handopenclass exhibits, carnivalgames,plus food, food,food &more!
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Ages12 and under are admitted to the Falr for FREE! 12 years and under IIIO CO UPONREQUIRED *One FREECarnival Ride Ticket * iILL OIIVFRO M 11 iIM IIL 10 PM Visit www.evenls.ktvz.com for details! Rodeo—gatesopenat5:30pm,performance One freeticket per person. starts at 7:00 pm.RodeoFreewith Fair Rodeo -gates openat 5:30 pm, performancestarts at 7:00 pm. Rodeo Freewith Fairadmission.
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Visitwww.kohd.com forvoucher. $25 wristband buys all therides you canride from11 am to 5 pm.
Chute ¹9 rodeo dance to follow. All Carnival Games $2.00 Chate ¹9 rodeo dance to follow.
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Antiques & 97 off Cool e y . $495. 541-382-4470 248- Health and Beauty Items Lionel/American Flyer be selective about the 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery 541-382-0956, Jerry. trains, accessories. 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs new owners. For the Collectibles 316 - Irrigation Equipment 541-408-2191. 251 - Hot TubsandSpas protection of the ani325- Hay, Grain and Feed mal, a personal visit to • TV, Stereo & Video 253- TV, Stereo andVideo og , „., 1 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies How to avoid scam BUYING 8( SE L LING NEW CARPET, 13'x15', the home is recom255 - Computers Largest 3 Day 341 - Horses and Equipment and fraud attempts D irecTV - O v e r 1 4 0 All gold jewelry, silver clove color, $200 obo. mended. 256- Photography GUN 8g KNIFE v'Be aware of interchannels only $29.99 and gold coins, bars, 541-815-1562 345-Livestockand Equipment 257- Musical Instruments SHOW rounds, wedding sets, a month. Call Now! national fraud. Deal 347 Llamas/Exotic Animals Servrng Central Oregon srnte 1903 258 - Travel/Tickets Triple savings! class rings, sterling sil- New carpet remnants locally wh e never I July 26th, 27th, 28th 350 Horseshoeing/Farriers coin collect, vin- 56x48", 83x80". $35. 259- Memberships POODLE Toy pups & Portland Expo $636.00 in Savings, ver, possible. 358- Farmer's Column 260- Misc. Items teens. Also, POMAPOOS V Watch for buyers Free upgrade to Ge- tage watches, dental 541-382-4289 Center gold. Bill Fl e ming, 375- Meat and Animal Processing Call 541-475-3889 261 - MedicalEquipment 1-5 exit ¹306B nie & 2013 NFL Sun- 541-382-9419. who offer more than 383 - Produce andFood Admission $10 day ticket free!! Start 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. Palm Tree plant, 11 ft. your asking price Queenslend Heelers saving today! Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, and who ask to have tall, health, 50+ yrs. 263- Tools Standard & Mini, $150 GENERATE SOME Sun.10-4 1-800-259-5140 old. Commercial or m oney w ired o r & up. 541-280-1537 EXCITEMENT 208 (PNDC) h ome. $500 O B O . to I 1 -800-659-3440 I www.rightwayranch.wor handed b ac k IN YOUR 541-388-9270 Pets 8 Supplies them. Fake cashier I CollectorsWest.com~ DISH T V dpress.com NEIGBORHOOD. Ret a i ler. checks and money g Starting at Plan a garage sale and * REDUCE YOUR A pet sitter in NE Bend, orders are common. don't forget to adver246 $19.99/month (for 12 DO YOU HAVE warm and loving home Y N ever g i ve o u t CABLE BILL! Get an tise in classified! mos 3 8 High Speed Guns, Hunting SOMETHING TO with no cages, $25 day. All-Digital Sat e llite personal f i n ancial 541-385-5809. I nternet starting a t SELL & Fishing Linda at 541-647-7308 system installed for information. $14.95/month (where FOR $500 OR Y T rust y o u r inGET FREE OF CREDIT FREE and programBOXER AKC puppies, LESS? Spinning fishing available.) SAVE! Ask CARD DEBT NOW! ming s t a rting at Yorkie pups AKC, par- stincts and be wary (4) About SAME DAY Inreat litter, 1st shots, Non-commercial poles, six d i fferent stallation! CALL Now! Cut payments by up $ 24.99/mo. FRE E ents in home, health guar. of someone using an 700. 541-325-3376 advertisers may reels, lures & plus lots 1-800-308-1563 to half. Stop creditors HD/DVR upgrade for $650 8 up. 541-777-7743 escrow service or place an ad with of extra fishing equip. agent to pick up your from calling. new callers, SO CALL ~ Want to Buy or Rent Cavalier King Charles 2 oui' W orth o ve r $ 5 0 0 . (PNDC) 210 merchandise. 866-775-9621. NOW (877)366-4508 females 8 wks AKC "QUICK CASH Asking $295 O BO. (PNDC) SAVE on Cable TV-In- (PNDC) Furniture & Appliances 2-door refrigerator with $1200. 541-678-3724 SPECIAL" 541-388-9270. ternet-Digital Phonet op freezer, go o d 1 week 3 lines 12 Serving Central Oregon stnre tgte Satellite. You've Got working order. ~k g eot A1 Washers&Dryers Are you a year-round A C hoice! O ptions 541-383-7603 Ad must include $150 ea. Full warfrom ALL major serhunter? Protect your price of single item Say ngoodbuyn ranty. Free Del. Also investment! Cevice providers. Call us CASH for dressers, of $500 or less, or wanted, used W/D's to learn more! CALL to that unused ramic coating prodead washers/dryers multiple items 541-280-7355 tects your high-end Today. 888-757-5943. 541-420-5640 whose total does item by placing it in Cavalier King Charles (PNDC) firearms from not exceed $500. Spaniel purebred puppy Ethan A l le n F r e nchThe Bulletin Classifieds weather and moiswormed, shots, health Provincial L o w -Boy ture. Certified CeraI Pe ts & Supplies guar; some trainin, $650 Call Classifieds at c hair, t u fted s o l i d kote applicator. • Computers 541-385-5809 5 41-385-580 9 'z// ~/ wood, cream color, Coating options from www.bendbulietin.com like new. Must see to traditional black to T HE B U L LETIN r e The Bulletin recomEstate Sales • Sal e s Redmond Area l appreciate. $300 obo. mends extra caution custom camo. Call quires computer adfor an estimate on when purc h asvertisers with multiple Look What I Found! Multi-Family Sale! German Shepherds AKC 541-280-2538. ing products or seryour project. ad schedules orthose You'll find a little bit of www.sherman-ranch.us F ridge 25 cu. ft . G E 2340 NW Antler Ct. Commercial vices from out of the ALSO - 2-yr old female, 541-281-6829 selling multiple sysFri. to Sun. 9-6. Toys, everything in side-by-side, almond area. Sending cash, $1000. 541-408-5909 Ceramic Coating, tems/ software, to distools, furn. antiques, The Bulletin's daily $200. 541-388-8434 lnc. 541-332-2902 electronics, A/C unit. checks, or credit inclose the name of the garage and yard sale German Shorthair f ormation may b e business or the term Pointer pups AKC, section. From clothes Beautiful hand"dealer" in their ads. Sat-Sun, 7/27-28, 10-4, subjected to fraud. white/ liver. exc. hunt to collectibles, from Bend local pays CASH!! carved coffee table 1151 NW 21st Place. For more i nforman x 19aan x 17ye") Private party advertisor gentle family dog. housewares to hardfor all firearms 8 (44 Furniture, small Dgvlgn tion about an adver$350. 541 389-6899 ers are defined as ware, classified is ammo. 541-526-0617 and 2 matching end appliances, books, tiser, you may call Visit our HUGE n those who sell one always the first stop for tables (shown) 24aA hand-crafted items! n the O r egon State G erman S hort H air home decor CASH!! computer. cost-conscious x 15 x 24tA". Built in Attorney General's Chihuahua puppies, tea- Pointer loving sweet consignment store. For Guns, Ammo & consumers. And if Taiwan between 257 Reloading Supplies. Office Co n s umer cup, shots & dewormed, 7-yr. female free to New items you're planning your 1940-1950, all glass 541-408-6900. Protection hotline at arrive daily! $250. 541-420-4403 good home, in exc Musical Instruments own garage or yard Sales Other Areas covered, in excel1-877-877-9392. health. 541-848-7747 930 SE Textron, sale, look to the claslent condition. $1000 Coleman 2-bu r ner Chihuahua/Yorkie Bend 541-318-1501 call before 2 p.m. sifieds to bring in the Moving Sale - Entire OBO. 541-382-6731 camp stove, little use 1968 Kimball Classic Puppy, Female, shots, www.redeuxbend.com Baby Grand piano buyers. You won't find household and barn Serving Central Oregon since tggg $30. 541-330-0733 loving, sweet, t i ny, Golden Retriever female, 5'10 n long, imported a better place 8-4 Fri.-Sun. Aug. 2-4. apricot. With kennel. 9 yrs old, up to date on GENERATE SOME The Bulletin reserves Schwander action for bargains! Mt. Vernon, 5 mi. west the right to publish all DQN'I MI SS T HI S Adopt a nice cat from $250 541-815-4052 shots, etc. Free to good EXCITEMENT in your Call Classifieds: $1200 obo. of John Day, then 5 PetSmart or Tumalo home. 541-548-4574 541-385-5809 or neighborhood! Plan a ads from The Bulletin 541-548-1160 mi. so. on Laycock newspaper onto The rescue! Fixed, shots, Donate deposit bottles/ email garage sale and don't Creek Rd/CR49, left DO YOU HAVE Elect. guitar - Schecter claeaifiedObendbulletin.ccm at junction, first right, ID chip, tested, more! cans to local all vol- Jack Russell/Black Lab forget to advertise in Bulletin Internet webunteer, non-profit res- mix p u ppies. 1 0 classified! site. Sanctuary open Sat/ SOMETHING TO Diamond. Red finish. follow signs. Antiques, 286 SELL $200. 541-419-9251 Sun 1-5, other days cue, to h e l p w / cat weeks o l d . $75 . 541-385-5809. housewares, Sales Northeast Bend trunks, by appt. 65480 78th, spay/neuter vet bills. FOR $500 OR Please call Sernng Cent al Oregon srnre l903 c anning, tools, a n Yamaha electric base Cans for Cats trailer NEED TO CANCEL LESS? Bend. Photos, map at 541-233-6872 or tique f ar m e q u ip., uitar, natural finish. at Jake's Diner thru email YOUR AD? www.craftcats.org. Non-commercial 240 horse tack & packing 200. 541-419-9251 ** FREE ** The Bulletin 7/30, then at R ay's 541-389-8420, or like advertisers may kayla.millard@hdesd. gear, child's & side Crafts & Hobbies Foods on Century Dr. org for more info. Classifieds has an us on Facebook. place an ad Garage Sale Kit saddle, camping gear, D onate Mon-Fri a t "After Hours" Line with our Place an ad in The and split firewood. H-V quilt machine made Adult b arn/shop/work- Smith Sign, 1515 NE Kittens 3 fixed males, Call 541-383-2371 "QUICK CASH Misc. Items Bulletin for your ga• in Sweden quilt frame, 24 hrs. to cancel ing cats, fixed, shots, 2nd; or at CRAFT in SPECIAL" rage sale and reshots 8 wormed. access. $1200 obo some friendly, some Tumalo anytime. 541- 1st your ad! Advertise V A CATION ceive a Garage Sale 1 week3lines 12 FREE Ready to go to 541-548-1160 SPECIALS to 3 m ilnot. No fee 8 free de- 389-8420. Info/map, forever OI' Kit FREE! homes. Panasonic microwave, Irg livery. 541-389-8420 www.craftcats.org lion P acific N o rthk got ~g 541-420-0097 countertop type, works 241 westerners! 29 daily Ad must KIT I NCLUDES: fine! $25. 541-383-4231 Bicycles & newspapers, six • 4 Garage Sale Signs include price of KITTENS! F o s t ered, Dog Food Monthly Specials states. 25-word clas- • $2.00 Off Coupon To tt t g e oo Accessories friendly, fixed, shots, Refrigerator, 26 cf Frigidsified $540 for a 3-day Use Toward Your water/ice in door, or less, or multiple Taste of the Wild Do Food ID chip, more! Vari- aire, a d. Cal l (916) Next Ad K-2 Street Cruiser, like items whose total ety of colors & per- $200. 541-379-3530 30lbs. = $41 2 88-6019 o r vis i t • 10 Tips For "Garage new multi-gears, acdoes not exceed sonalities. Adopt from Round maple table w/ www.pnna.com for the Sale Success!" cess. $300. $500. Diamond Do Food Lamb & Rice foster h o me Find them in (see leaf, $49. Dropleaf table, Pacific Nor t hwest 40 lbs. - $26.99 TomTom Motel Mgr, $65. Nice! 541-420-2220 541 -330-0733 Daily Con n ection. Call Classifieds at The Bulletin across from Sonic) or Washer/Dryer, Frigidaire PICK UP YOUR Canidae Do Food All Life Sta es 541-385-5809 (PNDC) 242 GARAGE SALE KIT at sanctuary (65480 78th Classifieds! Gallery HD, Stackable, www.bendbulietin.com (Buy 12 get 1 FREE) 44 lbs. - $46. Exercise Equipment 1777 SW Chandler St., Tumalo), Sat. & Exc. $400. 541-549-6036 TURN THE PAGE Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Sun. 1-5 PM. Just $25 Quarry Ave. Hay & Feed per kitten; adopt a pair Washer/dryer Whirlpool 2 Exercise heart rate Ruger .380 LCP with 3 4626 SW Quarry Ave., Redmond For More Ads for $40! 3 8 9 8 420, HD, 5 yrs runs great. monitors cheststraps, mags 8, pocket holster, 541-923-2400 www.quarryfeed.com The Bulletin www.craftcats.org. $350. 541-350-1201 $50 ea. 541-330-0733 $250. 541-598-4279
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541-385-5809
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G2 SUNDAY JULY 28 2013 • THE BULLETIN
T HE NE W Y O R K T I M E S C R O S S W O R D ARTFUL THINKING By Tracy Bennett / Edited by Will Shortz
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I Whammy
54 Daughter of James II
5 Where les enfant s might play
5 5 Where there's W i - F i a vailabi l i t y
9 Rendered speechless
5 7 Get ready to d r i v e
15 Female lob sters
6 0 Former si x - t e r m s enator f r o m Indiana 6 1 More yang t han y i n : Abbr.
Across
1 9 Every which wa y 20 Subject fo r a mariachi band 2 1 Insubstant i a l 2 2 Lik e V o l d e m o r t
6 2 Monetary b r i b es, i n slang
2 3 Art i s t ' s f a v o r i t e
6 4 What a s t a r
s p i r i t u a I?
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3 0 Food i t e m a c o o k
m ight f l i p 3 2 Prescri p t i o n medication
112 How the expert artist passed her exam? 116 "The Cosby Show" boy
pain
3 5 Nos. i n a d i r e c t o r y 3 7 Look f o r
1 22 Predoct o ra l t e s t s , for shor t
1 23 Appro x i m a t el y
4 0 Cool w i t h w h a t o thers are doi n g
8 1 Mic h i gan co l l e g e 82 gen er i s
4 7 Bat ma n v i l l a i n
83 Part of an umpire's count
51 What M i s s i s si p p i cheerleaders ask for a lo t
8 6 Put in w r i t i n g 8 7 Parts of an o r r e r y 89 Arti s t' s ex p r ession f or "Such i s l i f e " ?
5 2 How yo u m i g h t d o something gr o ss
53 Cagney or Lacey: Abbr.
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1 6 "On T hi s N i g h t o f a T housand St ar s" musical
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3 4 What M o r e h o u s e C ollege lack s
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h ad at the b a r ?
2 What' s bi g a t t h e movies?
4 2 Liz o f " G a r f i e l d , "
3 Like ol d u n r e c y c l a b l e bottles
4 4 Pay to c r o s s t o w n ,
4 Certain Jaguar
4 5 First c h im p t o o r b i t
5 Pre-exam feel i n g , maybe
4 6 Pay to c r o s s t o w n ,
maybe Earth
maybe
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4 8 "The Odd C o u p l e " role
8 Buffet c a b i n e t
9 4 Snorkel in g a i d s 95 "Tsk!"
9 Key of S c h u ber t ' s " Trout " Q u i n t e t : Abbr.
98 Finger
10 Bronze
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5 6 What th e a r t i s t confused peopl e w ith ?
66 "Congress n o law . . . "
5 8 Norse source fo r L oki l o r e
6 9 Prefix w i t h p o i s e
49 Daf t
6 0 Dairy c o n s umer ' s enzyme 62 Eroti c 6 3 Good w if e i n " T h e Good Earth"
5 0 "Phooey ! " 5 3 Gauntle t t h r o w e r ' s
challenge
make
6 5 Org. prot ect i n g m ustc cop y r i g h t s
88 Watchful o n e s? 8 9 Holy c i t y o f
6 7 Actr ess H a y e k
59 Dash
4 7 Pop ic o n ?
7 South K o r e a ' s Tae Woo
9 3 Worth al l t h e h y p e , a s a fil m
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92 Easter purchase
For any three answers, call from a touch-tone hone: 1-900-285-5656, 1.49 each minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800814-5554.
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1 5 Arti s t ' s l i n e o f w eary resignati o n ?
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4 1 What th e t i p s y a r t i s t
I Tatoo in e r ace i n t h e " Star Wars" s a g a
7 7 Roman of f i l m
4 3 Chri s t mas song l i n e f rom an art i s t ?
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3 9 Li t t l e m u c h a c h o
Down
76 Vista opener?
42 Go (for )
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38 Home of K i n g s Peak
7 5 Defro c ked v i l l a i n o n " Buff y t h e V a m p i r e Slayer"
3 8 Several, i n S e v i l l e
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1 4 "Good po i n t "
31 Reposed
C l ub
1 21 River t ha t " s w e a t s o il and tar " i n T . S . E lio t' s " T h e W a s t e Land"
72 Atlantean superhero o f DC C o m i c s 73 F iel d
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convenience
1 19 Incli n a t i o n
Z ul u ( w a r r i o r d ubbed Af r i c a ' s Napoleon)
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1 18 Rain m a n ?
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17 Capone's top henchman
1 17 Last w or d i n t h e Torah
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1 3 Patchw or k q u i l t s h ave lots of t h e m
108 Sedona maker 111 The Roman way
B roadway mu si c al ? 7 0 Revi va l m e e t i n g miracles
vu
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1 07 Rough posi t i o n ?
6 8 Art i s t ' s f a v o r i t e
2 8 Summer Ol y m p i c s h ost after L o n d o n
1 03 "Zero D ar k T h i r t y " 1 05 Castaway' s c onstruc t i o n
65 N.R.A. pi ece?: Abbr.
27 Firef i g h t e r ' s need, maybe
11 Topper
locale
probably has
2 6 Ablu t i on , e . g .
99 Cuts some slack
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1 00 Phycolo g i s t ' s s f. U cly
Iran
101 Some templegoers
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7 4 Pain and suffer i n g 7 7 "Gay" c a p i t a l
9 1 Debatable
7 8 Summer l aw n s i g h t 79 New Jersey' s U niversit y
9 5 Blurts (o u t )
sighting
9 3 Words to l i v e b y
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8 0 QB mi st akes: A b b r . 82 HoI y m I I e. 8 4 Turn to b o n e 8 5 Apiari s t' s w o e
1 04» r d b r » n 106" fair 109 Discoveries of Michael Faraday
yo ga
110 Regarding
97 Arabic name m eaning " w i s e "
113 Easter pu r c h a se
9 8 J. Carr o l , O scar nominee for "Sahara"
'easter 114 1 15 "Boardw al k E mpire" n e t w o r k
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . Tuesday .. . . . . . . . . Wednesday.. . . . . . . Thursday.. . . . . . . . . Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Saturday Real Estate .. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . Sunday.. . . . . . . . . .
Starting at 3 lines "UNDER'500in total merchandise
... 5:00 pm Fri ... . Noon Mon Noon Tues .. . Noon Wed ... Noon Thurs ... 11:00 am Fri ... 3:00 pm Fri ... 5:00 pm Fri
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Place a photoin your private party ad for only $t5.00 perweek.
OVER'500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1.50
Garage Sale Special
4 lines for 4 days... . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Bo x i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since t903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
C©X
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 al anytime, classify and index any advertising based onthe policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall nol be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 ormoredays will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday. 265
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Misc . Items
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Building Materials
Gardening Supplies • & Eq u i pment •
Small uti l . carl , 3'x20"x27" with shelf. $15 5 41-382-4289
The Bulletin Offers Free Private Party Ads • 3 lines - 3 days • Private Party Only • Total of items advertised must equal $200
or Less
FOR DETAILS or to PLACE AN AD, Call 541-385-5809 Fax 541-385-5802 T ONNEAU A .R.E. f i t s
COV E R '07
present Toyota 6 .5' Box. S late Metallic. All hardware included $500 541-536-3045 Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi audio & studio equip. Mclntosh, J BL, Marantz, D y naco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1 808 Wild bird feeder w/ 6 feeder stations, NIB. $35. 541-678-5407. 261
Medical Equipment Medical Alert for Seniors - 24/7 monitoring. FREE Equipment. FREE Shipping. Nationwide Ser v i ce. $ 29.95/Month C A LL Medical Guardian Today
8 5 5 - 345-7286.
(PNDC)
Steel Buildings. Big or Small. Save up to 50%. For best deal with contract construction to complete. Source¹18X 800-964-8335
For newspaper
ROBBERSON
541-385-5800
541-385-5809
Heating 8 Stoves
classified@isendbulletw com
or email
Hay, Grain 8 Feed5
NOTICE TO
The Bulletin
Baler Twine Most Common Sizes
Sen ne Central Oregon smre reea
ADVERTISER
Since September 29, Prompt Delivery 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has Rock, Sand & Gravel been limited to mod- Multiple Colors, Sizes els which have been Instant Landscaping Co. 541-389-9663 c ertified by the O r egon Department of SUPER TOP SOIL Environmental Qual- www.herehe ity (DEQ) and the fed- Screened, eoilandbatk.com soil & comeral E n v ironmental post mi x ed , no Protection A g e ncy rocks/clods. High hu(EPA) as having met mus level, exc. for smoke emission stan- flower beds, lawns, dards. A cer t ified straight w oodstove may b e gardens, s creened to p s o i l . identified by its certifi- Bark. Clean fill. Decation label, which is liver/you haul. permanently attached 541-548-3949. to the stove. The Bulletin will no t k n owingly accept advertisi ng for the s ale o f uncertified F ound se t o f ke y s woodstoves. Honda car keys + 8 267 others, at Todd Lake. 54I -383-5982 Fuel & Wood
Found; tailgate for a pickup on Horse Butte Rd, on 7/20. Call to identify, 541-389-2420
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin
recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' Commercial s t ainless • Receipts should s teel 30x30 x 30 cooler, pre v iously include name, price and used b y b e v erage phone, kind of wood distributor. Also smaller cooler avail- • purchased. Firewood ads able. 541-749-0724. MUST include species 8 cost per cord to better serve Tools our customers. 17" floor mod. drill press 3/4 hp, 5/8 and ¹2 mt. senrna cenrral nregan s ncerses c huck. $ 395, e x c .
The Bulletin
LOST between 7/11-12. womans 10-diamond anniversary ring. Very sentimental. Reward! Sisters, 541-549-1132
Quarry Ave. Hay 8 Feed 541-923-2400
www.quarryfeed.com Poultry Rabbits & Supplies
FREE Young roosters many to choose from. Not for the stew pot. Call Donna ,541-382-6890
421
Schools & Training Oregon Medical Training PCS — Phlebotomy classes begin Sept. 3, 2013. Registration now P ":~
medicaltrainin .com 542-343-3100 476
Employment Opportunities
541 -382-3537
Redmond
541-923-0882
pu e ille
541-447-7178;
ers on The Bulletr'n's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website. FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN
Your future is just 8 page away. Whether you're looking cond. 541-330-5516 for 8 hal or a place to hang il, All Year Dependable The Bulletin Classified is Firewood: Seasoned To the lady who lost her Generac 5000W I Ohp your best source. Split, Del. sunglasses/ reading generator, new! Tecum- Lodgepole, Every day thousandsof seh engine, 5 gal fuel Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 glasses at the Three tank, 120/240V plug-ins, for $335. Cash, Check S isters L ions y a r d buyers and sellers of goods Credit Card OK. sale l as t w e e kend and services do business in m anual, $ 37 5 ob o . or 541-420-3484. 7 /I 9-20, they h a ve these pages.They know 541-480-7024, anytime. been found! Please you can't beat TheBulletin Young man willing to split P edestal moun t e d /stack firewood. Wage call Hel e n at Classified Section for bench grinder, 8" 3/4 negotiable. 541-419-6651 541-595-6967 selection and convenience HP, 3450 rpm wl ac- every item is just 8 phone c ess. $ 225., e x c . 269 call away. Call a Pro cond. 541-330-5516 Gardening Supplies The Classified Section is Whether you need a easy to use. Every item & Equipment fence fixed, hedges is categorized andevery I Building Materials 20" Reel Mower with carlegory is indexed onthe trimmed or a house section's front page. catcher, new c ond, built, you'll find REDMOND Habitat $57. 541-389-4092 Whether youarelooking for RESTORE professional help in 8 home or need 8service, Building Supply Resale The Bulletin's "Call a Quality at BarkTurtsoil.com your future is in the pagesof Service Professional" The Bulletin Classified. LOW PRICES 1242 S. Hwy 97 Directory PROMPT D E LIVERY 541-548-1406 The Bulletin 541-389-9663 541-385-5809 Open to the public. •
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or Craft Cats
541-389-8420.
La Pine Economic Development Manager Part Time Position
QB~I~ I i)QA Can be found on these pages: •
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EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions
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FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities
Robberson Ford, PURPOSE OF Central Oregon's ¹I POSITION: D ealership i s a c - To execute the plans cepting applications and programs of for both an experibusiness retention/ enced Import Serand re476 476 476 vice Tec h nician, expansion cruitment for Employment Employment Employment Mazda pr e f erred, projects within the and an experienced Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities reater L a Pin e full l i m e S e r vice g area, and t hereby Technician, Ford exassist in creating or Ranch Manager for 400 General perience preferred, retaining pr i mary acre ranch in Central Orat our Bend location. Jefferson Count Job 0 o r t u nit egon. Responsible for employment in the Our growing quality operations 8 community o f La day-to-day Maintenance Worker I — Public Works, organization o f fers Pine. Assist E c o- management of staff, un$2,366.31 to 2,661.88 — DOQ g reat benefits i nder direction of board of nomic Development cluding medical & Closes August 2nd, 2013 5:00 p.m. Must provide for Central Oregon directors. dental insurance, vaexceptional 8 p r o fes- F or c o mplete j o b des c ription a n d (EDCO) and local cation, 401k, profit service to ranch leaders with attract- sional form go to sharing, etc. and guests, Will application ing new primary em- owners Email resume to serwww.co.jefferson.or.us; click o n H uman provide maintenance of ployers to the com- equipment 8 e n v iron- Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call vice@robberson.com m unity. M u s t b e mental stewardship of or Apply in person at 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson r esident of S o u th property. Must have 5 County Application forms to: Robberson Ford Deschutes County. Mazda years' ranch manageS alary Rang e : ment or related experi2100 N.E. 3rd Street Jefferson County Human Resources, Bend, OR 97701 $29,000 - $ 3 4,000 ence & high school di66 SE D Street, Suite E, DOE ploma. No calls. Send Robberson Ford is a Madras, OR 97741. resume: ranchmanagerO drug free workplace. Go to www.barrett aperionmgmt.com Jefferson Countyis an Equal Employment EOE. Opportunity Employer business.com/ RESTAURANT branches/location/ Caregiver, PT, w eekMCMENAMINS OR/bend end mornings, $10.20 OLD ST. FRANCIS hour. 5 4 1-382-7614 or call 541-382-6946 is now hiring for more information for information. and application. LINE COOKS! Qualified apps must Advertising CPA-TAXJ G rowhave an open & flex Special Projects Editorial Assistant ing, team-oriented schedule i n c luding, The Bulletin is seeking a motivated, energetic, Bend, OR CPAI I aere Rrvnnr ntrtrere Creta n days, eves, w eekcreative and skilled editorial assistant to join Consulting firm hirends and h olidays. the Special Projects team. This part-time posiing a Staff AccounWe are looking for tion will support in the production of magatant. Bachelor's applicants who have zines, tabloids, event guides and other special degree, CPA certifiprevious exp. related publications by offering writing, photography cation and 2-3 exp. and enjoy work- and general editorial assistance 20 hours each years recent public CAUTION: ing in a b usy cus- week. accounting tax exAds published in tomer ser v ice-ori- The successful candidate will contribute by: perience required. "Employment O p ented enviroment. We • Being a Storyteller — The editorial assisSend cover letter portunities" in clude are also w illing to tant must prove to be a s avvy storyteller and resume to: employee and indetrain! We offer oppor- whether writing copy, constructing a feature SGA CPAs, 499 pendent positions. tunities for advance- story or photographing subjects/topics covSW Upper Terrace, Ads fo r p o s itions ment and e x cellent ered in our publications. Candidate must show Dr., Suite A, Bend, that require a fee or benefits for e l igible he/she can create solid content on a variety of OR 97702 upfront i nvestment employees, including levels, both visually and via the written word. must be stated. With vision, medical, chiro, • Sharing Ideas — We're seeking a creative any independentjob dental and so much thinker as well as a creative doer. Contribute Heavy equipment opportunity, please more! Please apply to our team by sharing a part of yourself — your operator position. i nvestigate thor online 24 /7 at ideas, your personality and your flair for turnCentral Oregon oughly. Use e xtra www.mcmenamins.com ing ideas into stories and/or visual concepts based excavation c aution when a p or pick up a paper app (e.g. feature photography). The ideal candiand site work complying for jobs onat any McMenamins date will be eager to work toward his/her full pany looking for a line and never prolocation. Mail to: 430 potential both independently and as a memmotivated, honest vide personal inforN. Kill i ngsworth, ber of the team. hard working permation to any source Portland OR, 97217 • Serving as a Team Player — Expect to do a son to join the team. you may not have or fax: 503-221-8749. little bit of everything, from writing feature stoFun, hard working, researched and Call 503-952-0598 for ries, photographing interesting subjects and healthy work envideemed to be repuinfo on other ways to assisting with community events to formatting ronment. Applicant table. Use extreme a pply. P l ease n o calendars, managing a database and proofmust be willing to c aution when r e phone calls or emails reading lines of copy. The editorial assistant work full time, have s ponding t o A N Y to individual locations! will wear several hats. a minimum of 2 online employment E.O.E. This is an entry level position offering the ideal years experience ad from out-of-state. for an up-and-coming creator of running heavy We suggest you call SEAMSTRESS: Manu- opportunity quality content to discover his/her full potential equipment with a the State of Oregon facturing c o m pany while publishing work within some of Central valid drivers license Consumer H otline seeks person comOregon's most successful publications. Qualiand transportation. at 1-503-378-4320 mitted t o p r o viding fied candidates must possess good writing and Pay DOE. Please For Equal Opportuquality work in a rebasic photography skills, be computer savvy, fax all resumes to nity Laws c ontact laxed at m osphere. and have access to reliable transportation 541-548-0130 Oregon Bureau of Experience in produc- (proof of insurance required). Hours are flexLabor & I n d ustry, tion sewing preferred, ible, and benefits will be offered with the posiCivil Rights Division, Housekeeper private however will train the tion. right person. Please homes cleaning team 971-673- 0764. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace. EOE. member needed, week come t o 5 3 7 SE To apply, send a cover letter, resume and The Bulletin Glenwood Dr, Bend, days only. No weekwriting/photography samples to: ends, eves or holidays. OR 97702 to fill out an 541 -385-5809 bmontgomery@bendbulletin.com. 541-815-0015 application.
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Add your web address to your ad and readREMEMBER: If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend
476
Employment Opportunities
AUTOMOTIVE
delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at
To place an ad, call
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476
Employment Opportunities
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
u
Employment Opportunities •
Secretary ll Provides administrative a n d cl e r ical support to Healthy Beginnings in Bend. 40 Hr/wk temporary position. N o l l e ss than $13.07 per hr., benefits package inc luded. Fo r i n f o . contact Holly Remer, 541-383-6357 or holly.remer@hdesd.
Credit
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Central Billing aer"
Responsibilities include posting payments and invoices, researching and resolving billing issues, collecting on past due accounts, maintaining customer account information and providing customer support. Requires knowledge of Microsoft Office, strong verbal and written communication skills, excellent customer service skills and ability to negotiate. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service and over 400 stores in the Northwest. We offer a competitive salary, excellent benefits, ret irement, and c ash b onus. Visit u s a t : www.LesSchwab.com. Resumes will be accepted through July 31, 2013. Please send resume and salary requirements lo: ZYLSHuman.Resourcesolesschwab.com. Emails must state "Central Billing Clerk" in the subject line. No phone calls please. EOE
Resort
Black Butte Ranch
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For details & application: www.hdesd.org
Security See our website for our available Security positions, along with the 42 reasons to join our team! www.eecurityproebend.com
@ sealwrraos
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each walk from town, 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, Fireplace, BBQ. $95 per night, 3 night MIN.
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Apt./Multiplex General
514
General
Central Oregon Community College
has o p enings l i sted b e l ow. Go to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383-7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer. Office Specialist 3, Deer Ridge Correctional Facility Provide clerical support for the COCC Education programs at DRCI. Perform data entry, fiscal responsibilities, produce reports, create
forms and correspondence. Requires Associate degree + 1-yr. exp. 20hr/wk $12.91 $15.38. Closes August 4.
Payroll Specialist Provide support with all phases of payroll processing. Reconcile and submit federal and state tax deposits, quarterly reports, and W-2's. Requires Associates degree + 1-yr. exp.$2,549-$3,034/mo. Closes July 31 CAP Center Academic Advisor, Nursing 8 Allied Health Provide academic advising for pre-nursing and allied health students. $18.43-$21.94 30hr/wk. Closes Aug. 5
Insurance
SAVE $$$ on AUTO INSURANCE from the m ajor names y o u know and trust. No forms. No hassle. No obligation. Call READY F O R MY QUOTE now! CALL 1-888-706-8256. (PNDC) What are you looking for? You'll find it in
CHECK YOUR AD
528
Loans & Mortgages WARNING
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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. 541-305-5809 The Bulletin Classified
**No Application Fee **
2 bdrm, 1 bath, $530 & $540 w/lease. Carports included! FOX HOLLOW APTS.
The Bulletin recom(541) 383-3152 mends you use cauCascade Rental tion when you proManagement. Co. vide personal Call for Specials! information to companies offering loans or Limited numbers avail. 1,28 3bdrms credit, especially w/d hookups, those asking for adpatios or decks. vance loan fees or companies from out of Mountain Glen 541-383-9313 state. If you have
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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 - Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748 - Northeast BendHomes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763 - Recreational HomesandProperty 764 - Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 744
Houses for Rent Sunriver
Open Houses
Sunriver, Three Rivers, La Pine. Great Selection. Prices range $425 - $2000/mo. View our full inventory online at Village-Properties.com 1-866-931-1061
U T A H A S C A P S P I T S
I N X M O K A D E X E P E N O S I S T N I 0 T S M S S 0 H A K A L E L M A L A N D H A M A K I T E R H E 0 A M S
P A I N R I R C
H 0 P A C A B E Y E S
R C 0 R H EW D E C E T O N B E Z A D A R S B O E L L Q U A U E N I 0 U M U S A M E N R T H F R A E A M E
A M T 0 0
E N 0 S
C A T C H A B S U T S E N T A W I I S T H
NorthWest Crossing Shelley Griffin Broker 541-280-3004
744
Open Houses
Open 10-6 20528 Avro Place Tour of Homes Award Winner
ga'r"rier. wwwdhegarnergroup.com
Open 10-6 2487 NW DrouiHard Ave. Tour of Homes Award Winner Matt Garner, Broker 541-610-6446
FOR SALE
ga'r"rier. wwwdhegarnergroup.com
N E R T S
S P R I N K L E R
K E A N
I N T S
I 0 N S
A S T O
FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes Check out the classifieds online www.bendbultetin.com Updated daily
Call The Bulletin Al 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com
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
'02 3/4 bd, 2 ba. 42,900 '10 2/3 bd, 2 ba. 47,900 541-350-1782 Smart Housing LLC
541-548-5511
753
renovated over 3000 sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 full bath home, new energy eff. furnace 8 heal pump, wide plank wood floors, walk-in closets and p antry, stone fireplace w i th woodstove insert, 1ye
637 Acres with recreation cabin and stream. in forest, west of Silver Lake, OR 771
Lots
The Bulletin
Beautiful b u ilding lot just st e p s fro m Meadow Lakes Golf Call 541-385-5809 to C ourse, $95, 0 00 place your 541-480-3937 Real Estate ad. Seming Cenrral Oregon stnce 1903
concerns or ques- Professionally managed by Facilities Maintenance Manager Norris & Stevens, Inc. tions, we suggest you Plan, schedule, direct, and supervise the work The Bulletin is your consult your attorney SUBSIDIZED UNITS of crews engaged in the building maintenance or call CONSUMER functions of the college. Responsible for preStudio, 1 8 2 bedroom Employment Find exactly what HOTLINE, paring specifications and drawings, negotiat628 over you are looking for in the 1-877-877-9392. ing and administering bids for minor construcand/or Disability. Marketplace CLASSIFIEDS tion and remodeling projects. Bachelor's req. + BANK TURNED YOU Multi-Family Housing/ 5-yr. e x p . CE F P ce r t ified p r eferred. DOWN? Private party Project-based. 747 Call Manor Apts $4,536-$5,400. Closes Aug 0 will loan on real es- Greenwood 2248 NE 4th SL Southwest Bend Homes tate equity. Credit, no Bend, OR 97701 Part Time lnstructors 541-385-5809 problem, good equity 541-389-2712 New: Developmental Writing, Widgi Creek golf course is all you need. Call TDD 800-735-2900 Library Science, and MATC home, 3 b d rm, 2ye Oregon Land Mortto advertise. Find them in www.gres.com Looking for t alented individuals to t e ach b ath, 2355 s q . f t . , gage 541-388-4200. Equal Housing part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our t urn-key, f u lly f u r The Bulletin Web sile https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay Cut you r S T UDENT =.== Opportunity www.bendbulletin.com nished, oversized 3 LOAN payments in Classifieds! $500 per load unit (1 LU= 1 class credit), with car garage. 6th tee 648 HALF or more Even if additional perks. box, views of pond & Houses for Late or in Default. Get fairway. $5 2 9 ,000. Relief FAST. Much Rent General Contact B r ian I LOWER p a yments. Metcalfe Real Estate Call Student Hotline P U BLI SHER'S 541-420-2638 Transportation Operations Utility Worker li 855-747-7784 NOTICE (PNDC) All real estate advertising in this newspaLOCAL MONEY:We buy Public Works Department per is subject to the secured trust deeds & Salary: $3,120 - $3,835 note, some hard money F air H o using A c t which makes it illegal Non-Exempt, Represented loans. Call Pat Kellev +e so to a d v ertise "any 541-382-3099 exL13. preference, limitation 573 or disc r imination Business Opportunities based on race, color, Performs a variety of unskilled, semi-skilled religion, sex, handiand skilled tasks in the Public Works Transporlalion Operations Division and related work WARNING The Bulletin cap, familial status, recommends that you marital status or nain the Public Works Department as required. investigate every tional origin, or an inOccasionally provides informal equipment and procedural training t o o t he r e m ployees, phase of investment tention to make any opportunities, espesuch pre f e rence, occasionally directs small task groups. c ially t h os e fr o m limitation or discrimiout-of-state or offered nation." Familial sta'I MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS: by a p e rson doing tus includes children High school diploma, or GED equivalent, and a business oul of a lounder the age of 18 minimum three (3) years of experience and Iml cal motel or hotel. In- living with parents or training in street maintenance, repair and convestment o ff e r ings legal cus t o dians, struction which has provided specific knowlmust b e r e gistered pregnant women, and edge in the area assigned; or any equivalent with the Oregon Depeople securing cuscombination of experience and training which EaSy, fleXible, Clnd affOrdable ad PaCkageS partment of Finance. lody of children under demonstrates the ability to perform the above 18. This newspaper We suggest you condescribed duties. sult your attorney or will not knowingly accall CONS U MER cept any advertising SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS: HOTLINE, for real estate which is Possession of, or must obtain, a valid Oregon 1-503-378-4320, in violation of the law. driver's license within thirty (30) days from To place your Bulletin ad with a photo, 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. O ur r e a ders ar e date of hire. Possession of, or must obtain hereby informed that within six (6) months from date of hire, a valid A Classified ad is an ViSit WWW.bendbulletin.Com, CliCk On dwellings adverOregon CDL license of the required classificaEASY W A Y TO all tised in this newspa"Place an ad" and follow these easy steps: tion to operate Public Works Department REACH over 3 million per are available on vehicles and equipment. Must have and Pacific Northwestern- an equal opportunity Choose a category, choose a classification, maintain a safe driving record. Possession of, ers. $5 4 0 /25-word To complain of or ability to o btain, any c ertifications or c lassified ad i n 2 9 basis. Cfnd then SeleCt yOur Cid PaCkage. cal l licenses required by City, State, or Federal daily newspapers for discrimination HUD t o l l -free at agencies to work in the position assigned. 3-days. Call the Pag Write your ad and uPIOad your digital Photo. 1-800-877-0246. The Must obtain and keep current all certifications cific Northwest Daily toll f ree t e lephone pertinent to traffic control in work zones. Connection (916) Create your account with any major credit for the hear2 88-6019 o r e m a i l number ing im p a ired is DESIRABLE REQUIREMENTS: card. elizabeth@cnpa.com 1-800-927-9275. Possession of, or ability to obtain, a Public for more info (PNDC) Herbicide/Pesticide Applicators license within Rented your All ads appear in both print and online 6 months of employment, ODOT Flagger Extreme Value AdverProperty? tising! 29 Daily news- The Bulletin certificate, First Aid/CPR certification. Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your Classifieds papers $540/25-word has an ad appears in print and online. classified 3-d a ys. "After Hours" Line. HOW TO APPLY: Reach 3 million PaRequest application packet from DeAnne Call 541-383-2371 W akefield, C it y of Red m on d H u m a n cific Northwesterners. 24 Hours to For more information Resources Department, via email only c~a cel o a d ,' To place your photo ad, visit us online call (916) 288-6019 or deanne.wakefieldOci.redmond.or.us. at .be n db lleln.com email: Rent /Own elizabeth@cnpa.com 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes C omplete application packets m ust b e www.bendbulleun.com for the Pacific North- $2500 down, $750 mo. submitted by Friday, August 23, 2013, by 5pm. west Daily Connec- OAC. J and M Homes EOE tion. (PNDC) 541-548-5511
Garage Sales
GarageSales
GarageSales
The Bulletin
I N A N E
LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year conditional warranty. Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! Redmond, Oregon 541-548-5511 JandMHomes.com
.541-480-7215
When buying a home, 83% of Central Oregonians turn to
U N G E R
Delivered and Set up
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000
All real estate advertised here in is subject to t h e F e deral acres, fenced, covF air H o using A c t , ered decks, 2-car gawhich makes it illegal rage, mln. views. Just to advertise any pref- reduced! $ 3 8 5,000. erence, limitation or Call (503) 786-7835 discrimination based (recording) on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, 762 familial status or na- Homes with Acreage tional origin, or intention to make any such 2 Bdrm 2 Bath on 2 preferences, l i m ita- acres - Large shop/ tions or discrimination. garage, fenced yard, We will not knowingly cabin. LaPine $83,000. accept any advertis541-390-7394 or ing for r ea l e state 541-771-0143 which is in violation of this law. All persons 753 are hereby informed that all dwellings ad- Recreational Homes vertised are available & Property tin Classified
S L E E T
775
745
on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulle-
N I T T I
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
Squaw Creek Canyon Estates 70075 Sorrel Dr. (corner of Sorrel 8 Mt. View) completely
NOTICE:
L A C T A S E U F Y 0 E A H B O
E V I T A
775
Sisters Homes
6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, view. By owner, ideal for extended family. $590,000. 541-390-0886
L A I N
H E R E W E G A U G U I N
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
wwwahegarnergroup.com
Homes for Sale
H A S T A G E R T E A U O M E E L S R D V E P E D E T E U P L E S A L I N C I P 0 L B A L L E R A S E E S E A S T L I I N G K N O A H G R E S
750
place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
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G E T A T O A N N E T E O D 0 D M A A N0 E S T S I A F L Y L S
Redmond Homes
Get Results! Call 385-5809 or
ga'rrier.
A M A J
PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2
emp/oyee?
Open 10-6 Tour of Homes 2355 NW Floyd Ln.
VILLAGE PROPERTIES
J A W A
Looking for your next
659
Erin Campbell, Broker 541-41 0-0872
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
541-385-5809
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I
Black Butte Ranch is a drug free work place / EOE
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627 Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630 - Roomsfor Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638- Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Housesfor Rent NEBend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SWBend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Housesfor Rent La Pine 661 - Housesfor Rent Prineville 662 - Housesfor Rent Sisters 663 - Housesfor Rent Madras 664- Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675- RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space
For more i nformaOne of c entral Oregon's premier Golf tion about an adver- ~ R esorts is c u r rently s earching fo r a f you may call Catering Sales a n d E v e n t M a nager. tiser, Oregon State Responsibilities include selling, planning, I the General's budgeting, operations an d o v erseeing Attorney C o n sumer x "Special Events" in c l uding Weddings, Office Protection hotline at I Family Reunions, Business meetings, etc. I 1-877-877-9392. The Catering Sales and Event Manager will solicit new and existing accounts to meet LTlae Bttlletira g 616 and exceed revenue goals through outside sales calls, site tours, telephone solicitation, Trucking Want To Rent networking and written communication. Class B Driver Immediate openings, Mature, quiet s ecure Ideal Candidate Qualifications: straight truck, with 2 Christian male seeks years experience. M-F room. 541-420-4276 •B.S. in sales, marketing, hospitality pref. nights. Some l ifting 627 • 1-3 years of catering sales & banquet exp. required. Benefits. Vacation Rentals • Proven track record with Catering Staff Mgmt E-mail resume to & Exchanges kellym@ftlinc.com Variable work schedules, evenings 8 weekends req. Full time, year round positionOcean front house, competitive salary and e xcellent benefits package! Visit our website and apply online today al: www.blackbutteranch.com or contact HR at 541-595-1523 for more information.
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541-385-5809
Advertise with a full-color photo in The Bulletin Classifieds and online.
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are also available on our Web site.
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0
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST I Employment Specialist, Behavioral Health Division. Part-time position 30-hrs/wk. Deadline: DEADLINE DATE EXTENDED, OPEN UNTIL FILLED. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST I — Assertive Community Treatment Team, Behavioral Health Division. Full-time position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS Olg FRIDAY, 08/16/13. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPEGIALIST II — Adult Outpatient, Behavioral Health Division. Full-time position. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON TUESDAY, 07/30/13. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPEGIALIST II — Assertive Community Treatment, Adult Treatment Program, Behavioral Health Division. Full-time position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPEGIALIST II
Community Assessment Team, Behavioral Health Division. Full-time p osition. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST IIIChild 8 Family Program, Behavioral Health Division. Full-time position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. CLINICAL PROGRAM S UPERVISOR — Family Partnership Team, Public Health Division. Part-time position 75% FTE to
begin, however, dependent upon program needs, may become full-time in the future. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON MONDAY, 08/05/1 3. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER, Behavioral Health Division. One full-time
and one part-time position, will also consider a Personal Services Contract. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE II, Cacoon with Maternal Child Health, Public Health Division. Full-time position. Bilingual Spanish/English required. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE II, Nurse Family Partnership with Maternal Child Health, Public Health Division. Full-time position, bilingual S p anish/English r e quired. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. RESERVE DEPUTY SHERIFF, Sheriff'5
Office. On-call positions. Deadline:THIS IS Alg ON-GOINGRECRUITMENT. COMING SOON:
Community Justice Program Manager — Juvenile Justice Division. DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS APPLICATIONS ONLINE. TO APPLY FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS,PLEASE VISITOUR WEBSITE AT www.deschutes.
org/jods. All candidates will receive an email response regarding their application status after the recruitment has closed
and applications have been reviewed. Notifications to candidates are sent via
email only. If you need assistance, Please contact the Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201,
Bend, OR 97701 (541 l 617-4722. Deschutes County provides reasonable accommodations for p ersons with disabilities. This material will be furnished in alternative format if needed. For hearing impaired, please call TTY/TDD 711. EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G4 SUNDAY, JULY 28, 2013 • THE BULLETIN •
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Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
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Tra v el Trailers
Travel Trailers •
Fifth Wh e els
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BOATS & RVs 805- Misc. Items 850- Snowmobiles 860- Motorcycles And Accessories 865-ATVs 870- Boats & Accessories 875- Watercraft 880- Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882- Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent
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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908- Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925- Utility Trailers 927- Automotive Trades 929- Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940- Vans 975- Automobiles 860
870
Motorcycles & Accessories Boats 8 Accessories
21' 2001 Skiers Choice Moomba Ou t back, 383 stroker engine, $8500 o r c o n sider trade for good vehicle with low mileage. Call 541-604-1475 or
541-604-1203 (leave
msg if no answer) Ads publishedin 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
low miles on it, self-contained. Runs Great, everything works. $3,000.
The Bulletin
gerrmg Central0 a g o o o o r a 1903
541-382-6494
:Qs's
+k4% 9-
The Bulletin
$6000 all. 541-536-8130
manuals, re c o rds, new spare belt, cover, heated hand g r ips, nice, fast, $999. Call Tom, 541-385-7932,
860
Motorcycles & Accessories
HDFaf Bo 1996
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.
$17,000
541-548-4807
HD Screaming Eagle Electra Glide 2005, a 103 motor, two tone candy teal, new tires, 23K miles, CD player, hydraulic clutch, excellent condition. Highest offer takes it. 541-480-8080.
Honda Shadow/Aero 750,2007 Black,11K mi, 60 mpg, new detachable windshield, Mustang seat & tires; detachable Paladin backrest & luggage rack w/keylock.VanceHines pipes, great sound. Cruise control, audible turn signals for safety. $4495 obo. Jack, 541-549-4949
Watercraft
17.5' Glastron 2002,
Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, short track, variable exhaust valves, electric s t art, r e v erse,
Chevy eng., Volvo outdrive, open bow, stereo, sink/live well, w/glastron tr a i ler, incl. b oa t c o v e r, Like new, $ 8 500.
Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5500 or Partial Trade/firearms 541-647-4232
541-447-4876
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1994 Yamaha Wave Raider, low hrs exc. $2250. 541-480-3937 .
KOUNTRY AIRE 199437.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
$25,000.
541-548-0318 (photo aboveis of a similar model & not the
actual vehicle)
Ads published in aWatercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorized personal
watercrafts. For " boats" please s e e Monaco Windsor,2001, Class 870. loaded! (was $234,000 541-385-5809 new) Solid-surface counters, convection/ micro,4-dr, fridge, 17' Cris Craft Scorpion, geroog Central0 a g o o tmra 1903 washer/dryer, ceramic 865 fast 8 ready to fish! I/O & tile & carpet, TV, DVD, trolling motor. Lots of exATVs satellite dish, leveling, tras! $5000.541-318-7473 Motorhomes • B-airbags, power cord 17' STARCRAFT 60 hp reel, 2 full pass-thru a and 9.9 Merc motors, trays, Cummins ISO8.3 e xc. f i shing b o a t , 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 $6000. 541-815-0665 Diesel gen set. $85,000 obo. 541-233-7963 18.7' Sea Ray Monaco, Honda TRX 450R sport 1984, 185hp, V6 Merquad 2008, low hrs, new Cruiser, full canvas, life Brougham 1978 motor wheels 8 DNC perf. pipe vests, bumpers, water home, Dodge chassis, $4250. 541-647-8931 skis, swim float, extra 17' coach, sleeps 4, prop & more. EZ Loader rear dining. $4500. 870 trailer, never in saltwater, 541-602-8652. Boats & Accessories always garaged, very NATIONAL DOLPHIN clean, all maint. records. 37' 1997, loaded! 1 $5500. 541-389-7329 slide, Corian surfaces, Ig wood floors (kitchen), 2-dr fridge, convection microwave, Vizio TV & g roof satellite, walk-in Alfa See Ya 200540' shower, new queenbed. excellent cond,1owner, White leather hide-a12t/g' HiLaker fishing boat with trailer and 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, 4-dr frig w/icemaker, gas bed 8 chair, all records, newly overhauled 18 inboard motor, g reat stove/oven, convection no pets or smoking. oven, washer/dryer $28,450. h.p. Johnston o u t- cond, well maintained, combo, flatscreen TV, all Call 541-771-4800 b oard, $ 85 0 o b o . electronics, new tires, Eves 54 1 -383-5043, many extras.7.5 diesel RV days 541-322-4843 gen, lots of storage, CONSIGNMENTS basement freezer, 350 13' SmokerCraft, 15 hp WANTED Cat Freightliner chassis. Yamaha, Minnekota We Do The Work ... Asking $86,500. See at trolling, d o wnrigger, You Keep The Cash! super clean extras, 19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, Crook County RV Park, On-site credit ¹43. 520-609-6372 $3200. 541-416-1042. approval team, new upholstery, new elecweb site presence. tronics,winch, much more. BOUNDER1993 We Take Trade-Ins! $9500.541-306-0280 34.6', 43k miles, Free Advertising. 20'1993 Sea Nympf Fish loaded, $13,900. BIG COUNTRY RV & Ski, 5 0 h r s on n ew Info - Call Bend: 541-330-2495 engine, fish finder, chart 541-536-8816. Redmond: 14'8" boat, 40hp Mer- plotter & VHF radio with 541-548-5254 cury outboard (4-stroke, antenna. Good shape, electric trim, EFI, less full cover, heavy duty WANTED! than 10 hrs) + electric trailer, kicker and electric RV Consignments trolling motor, fish finder, motors. Paid for or Not! $5000 obo. 541-548-2173 $7500 or best offer. 541-292-1834 E. BIG ~~ .
The Bulletin
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541-312-4168.
$4500. 541-639-3209
g
i
Building/Contracting
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:
541-548-5254
23' Salem Lite, 2004, 6' slide, very clean, extras, $10,000. 541-233-9197
Cougar 33 ff. 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 than 10 t imes loc ally, no p et s o r smoking. $20,000 obo. 541-536-2709.
BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every dayin the print or on line.
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletinhelp wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809
or placeyourad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Fifth Wheels
t
Keystone Montana 2955 RL 2008, 2 slides, arctic insulation, loaded, excellent never used condition. $29,900 541-923-4707
r-
—
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+
Montana 2006 3400
RL, 37', 4 slides, Artic options, K/bed, w/d combo. M ust sell $22,990.OBO. Call f o r det a i ls 805-844-3094
LLa Pine Address J
CHECK YOURAD l'.Sa
Call 541-385-5809
www.bendbulletin.com
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. aSpellcheck" and Ser agCaatratOregontratet903 human errors do ocStarcraft Galaxy 1999 cur. If this happens to your ad, please conpop-up camp trailer, exc. cond. sleeps 6-8, tact us ASAP so that corrections and any extra tires & wheel, adjustments canbe partial trades considmade to your ad. e red. $ 2 900 o bo. 541-549-9461 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
The Bulletin
MONTANA 35852008,
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250
NuWa297LKHitchHiker 2007,All seasons,3 slides, 32' perfect for snow birds, left kitchen, rear lounge, extras, must see. Prineville 541-447-5502 days & 541-447-1641 eves.
Creek Side 20' 2010, used 8 times, AC, flat screen TV, oven, microwave, tub/ shower, awning, been stored, non-smokers, no pets,1 owner. $13,900 obo. 541-410-2360
Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft long, 2000 Sleeps 6,14-ft slide, awning, Eaz-Lift stabilizer bars, heat & air, queen walk-aroundbed, very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003
•g;-iIj~is~< -'-"
Trail Sport 2013 23' Travel Trailer Fleetwood Prowler 32' Like new, used twice. 2001, many upgrade options, $14,500 obo. Pilgrim 27', 2007 5t h Towwith SUVor 541-480-1687, Dick. small pickup. Queen wheel, 1 s lide, AC, bed, air, TV, micro, TV,full awning, excelbuilt-in stereo, electlent shape, $23,900. ric awning, barbecue, 541-350-8629 extras. Non-smoker. Selling due to health RV Sacrifice, CONSIGNMENTS $16,000 obo. WANTED Call Jim, 541-401-9963 Keystone Challenger We Do The Work ... 2004 CH34TLB04 34' Keep The Cash! fully S/C, w/d hookups, YouOn-site credit new 18' Dometic awapproval team, ning, 4 new tires, new web site presence. Kubota 7000w marine We Take Trade-Ins! diesel generator, 3 Free Advertising. slides, exc. cond. inBIG COUNTRY RV WEEKEND WARRIOR s ide 8 o ut . 27 " T V Toy hauler/travel trailer. dvd/cd/am/fm ent. Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 24' with 21' interior. center. Call for more 541-548-5254 details. Only used 4 Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/ times total in last 5 t/g years.. No pets, no appearancein good condition. Smoke-free. smoking. High r etail Canopies & Campers Tow with t/g-ton. Strong $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including slidsuspension; can hau i ng hitch that fits i n ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to price - $8900. see. 541-330-5527. Call 541-593-6266 Lance Bt/g'camper,1991 Great cond; toilet 8 full-
Keystone Sprinter 31',2008 King size walkaroundbed, electric awning, (4) 6-volt
batteries, plus many more extras, never smoked in, first owners, $19,900.
Call 541-410-5415 Mallard by F leetwood, 1995, 22' long, sleeps 7, twin beds, fully equipped, clean, good cond, $6500 obo. 541-678-5575
Orbit 21'2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $15,000 OBO. 541-382-9441
541-815-6144
i"
V. -
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
$2,150. 541-788-8791
Lookat: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listingsof Area Real Estate for Sale
Fleetwood D i s covery COUNTRY RV NICE RNUCN~ 40' 2003, diesel mo- • 90% of all RV buyers torhome w/all are looking to finance 20.5' Seaswirl Spyoptions-3 slide outs, or trade. der 1989 H.O. 302, satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, • We have a dozen 14' a luminum bo a t 285 hrs., exc. cond., etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. finance options. w/trailer, 2009 Mercury stored indoors for Wintered in h e ated• We take anything on 15hp motor, fish finder, l ife $ 9900 O B O . shop. $89,900 O.B.O. trade, paid for or not. 541-379-3530 • • t I $2500. 541-815-8797 541-447-8664 • We do all of the workyou ettheCASH Meet singles right now! Need to get an ad No paid o p erators, just real people like in ASAP? you. Browse greet20' Seaswirl 1992, 4.3L ings, exchange mes- 14' LAZER 1993 sail- V6 w/OMCoutdrive, open Fax it to 541-322-7253 sages and c o nnect boat with trailer, exc. live. Try it free. Call bow,Shorelander trlr, nds c ond., $2000 o b o . some interior trim work. The Bulletin Classifieds Call Safari Cliff at now: 8 7 7 -955-5505.
(PNDC)
541-416-1042
WinnebagoSuncruiser34' G ulfstream S u n - 2004, on1y 34K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd sport 30' Class A 1988 ne w f r i dge, warr. thru 2014, $54,900 TV, solar panel, new Dennis,541-589-3243 refrigerator, wheel881 c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W g enerator, Goo d Travel Trailers condition! $18,000 22' Kit Companion1979 obo 541-447-5504 travel trailer, awning, micro., and full bath. JAMEE198220',
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Protect your engine and exhaust syst ems! Cera m ic coating is the ideal, long lasting t reatBeautiful h o u seboat, ment for high heat 14' Seadoo 1997 boat, $85,000. 541-390-4693 and heat sensitive twin modified engines. www.centraloregon 850 parts. Cert i f ied 210hp/1200lbs, fast. houseboat.com. Snowmobiles Cerakote applicator. $5500. 541-390-7035 GENERATE SOME exA wide variety of citement in your neig( 2) 2000 A rctic C at colors t o c h o ose borhood. Plan a gaZ L580's EFI with n e w from. Call for an esrage sale and don't covers, electric start w/ timate on your reverse, low miles, both project. forget to advertise in 16' O ld T o w n classified! 385-5809. excellent; with new 2009 Commercial Camper c a n oe, Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, Ceramic Coating, exc. cond, $ 7 50. drive off/on w/double tilt, lnc. 541-332-2902 Sewing CentralOregonsrota 1903 lots of accys. Selling due 541-312-8740 to m e dical r e asons.
• Yamaha 750 1999 Mountain Max, $1400. • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, $1000. • Zieman 4-place trailer, SOLD! All in good condition. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.
s:' tgr j
Roadranger, 1996 clean, solar unit, 6 volt batteries. $5000 obo
RUN UNTIL SOLD For
only $99
or up tO 52 weeks -whichever comes first!
size bed. Lightly used. Recently serviced, $4500. 503-307-8571
Fleefwood31' WildernessGl 1999 12'slide, 24' awning, queen bed, FSC, outside shower, E-Z lift stabilizer hitch, like new, been stored. $10,950. 541-000-000
Includes up to 40 words of text, up to 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold italic headline and price! * Plus the following publications: The Bulletin daily publication with over 76,000 subscribers. The Central Oregon Marketplace weekly publication DELIVERED to over 31,000 non-subscriber households. The Central Oregon Nickel Ads weekly publication -15,000 distribution throughout Central and Eastern Oregon. *A $290 valuebased on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications.
Lance Camper 1994, fits long bed crew cab, tv, a/c, loaded. $6200 OBO. 541-580-7334
Lance Camper, 2011 ¹ 992,new cond, 2 slides, 2 awni n gs, built-in ge n & AC, power jacks, wired for solar, t i e-downs incl. $28,500. 541-977-5358 0 gi
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'OI 908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
*Private party merchandise ads only, excludes pets, real estate, rentals, and garage sale categories. 1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located @Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, @$400/mo. 541-948-2963
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Call 54 I-385-5809 to prOmOte yOur SerViCe• AdVertiSe fOr 28 dayS Starting at I 4 0 (This special package is not available on our website) Handyman
Debris Removal
NOTICE: Oregon state law r equires anyone who con t racts for construction work to be licensed with the Construction Contractors Board (CCB). An Will Haul Away active license dt( means the contractor is bonded & insured. For Salvage " Verify the contractor's Any Location CCB li c ense at . www.hirealicensedt4Removal, contractor.com Also Cleanups or call 503-378-4621. A& Cteanouts i The Bulletin recommends checking with the CCB prior to contracting with anyone. Some other t rades also req u ire addiConcrete/Paving tional licenses and certifications.
Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care Painting/Wall Covering
NOTICE: Oregon LandMAVERICK scape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all ANDSCAPING Zoof"f z guadiip businesses that a dLCBgt671 vertise t o pe r f orm *utensed 4Bonded *Insgml Zacu41 e e t,g. Landscape Construc• Specializingin More Than Service tion which includes: FirePerimeter Clearing Peace of Mind p lanting, deck s , • MowinglYardDetailingServices fences, arbors, •Weedeaong/ChainsawWork Bandyman/Remodeltng SERVING CENTRALOREGON Fire Protection water-features, and in- • Bndscape,Construction/Installs Since 2003 Residential/Commercial Fuels Reduction stallation, repair of ir• Fencing & More! Painter Residential & Commercial •Tall Grass rigation systems to be Stnatt Jobsto Bend/Redmond/PowellButte Repaint • Low Limbs licensed w i t h the Entire Rnntn Retttodeiv LANDSCAPIIVG Terrebonne/CrookedRiver Ranch •Brush and Debris Landscape ContracGarnge Organizatiott Specialist! e Landscape construction Senior CVeteranDi s counts tors Board. This 4-digit Hotnefttspegtion Repairs e Water Feature number is to be i nProtect your home BretStormer Oregon License Quality, Honest Work Instaiiation/Mainc cluded in all adver- Cell:(503) 302-2445 with defensible space ¹186147 LLC e pavers tisements which indiDennis541.317.976B <Xegtgtggg Strtgerl/Irttttrerr e Renovations cate the business has Oflice: (54I) 923-4324 Landscape a bond,insurance and e Irrigations Installation Maintenance workers c o mpensaFull or Partial Service Sprinkler tion for their employ- painting/Waii Covering Remodeling/Carpentry Need to get an • Mowing aEdging Activation/Repair ees. For your protec• Pruning «Weeding ad in ASAP? tion call 503-378-5909 ccsr 109532 Back Flow Testing Sprinkler Adjustments or use our website: You Can PlaCeit www.lcb.state.or.us to MAllNEIYMCE spl Fertilizer included check license status onlineat: e Thatch & Aerate o." " ' t CONSTRUCTIONtac with monthly program before contracting with Qll I Hll I + Spring Cleanup the business. Persons CONCRETE DIVISION www.bendbulletin.com Censtruction,tlC
1 FREE®
MARTIN JAMES
I DO THAT!
1 /3 interest i n w e l lequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510
European Professional
• ,
INL
c- "
t. c- . t - t" "
00aQ (ggf ~
t
'R)~ t Over 30 Years Experience a Sidewalks a RV pads a Driveways a Color & Stamp
Work Available A/so — Hardwood f1ooring at affordable prices! CCB ¹190612
Call Grant
541-219-3183
Cessna 150 LLC
150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangaredin Bend. Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,500. 541-410-6007
l)5C l)ttrinet
Awardwinningconcretecompany. Wespecializeinallformsof residentialScommercialconcrete; foundations,driveways,sidewalks, curbs,specialtyFinishesavailable. Guaranteedhighqualitywork atreasonableprices! Welookforwardtobidding yourupcomingprojects!
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•
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest Just bought a new boat? way in the world to sell. Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our The Bulletin Classified
Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
541-815-2888
1/5th interestin 1973
541-385-5809
541.385.5809
ERIC REEVE HANDY SERVICES AllHome& Commercial Repairs Carpentry-Painting Honey Do's. Small orlargejobs, noproblem. Senior Discount Allwork guaranteed.
541-389-3361 541-771-4463 Bonded -Insured CCB¹149468
lts not too late for a beautiful landscape • Lawn Restoration
4 weekly Mowing & Edging e Bi-Monthly & Monthly Maintenance e Bark, Rock, Etc.
aWeed Free Beds • Bark Installation
Senior Discounts Bonded and Insured
EXPERIENCED
Commercial & Residential Senior Discounts 541-390-1466
Same Day Response
541-815-4458 LCB¹8759
Where can you find 8 helping hand'? From contractors to
PeopleLookforInformation yard care,it's all here AboutProductsand jn The Bulletjn's "Call A Service ServicesEveryDaythrough
TheBulletinClassitfeds
Professional" Directory
doing land scape m aintenance do n ot r equire an L C B cense.
ALEEN IIEINSCH — Providing-
Yard Maintenance & Clean-up, Thatching, Plugging & much more!
ContactAllen
541-536-1294
Western Painting Co
— Richard Haymana semi-retired painting contractor of 45 years Smalljobs welcome. Interior & Exterior
• Residential Construction • Remodels • Maintenance • Home Repair ccs¹ 199645
541-388-6910
CallCody Aschenbrenner
Fax: 541-3884737
541-263-1268
CCB¹5184
Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
s
1974 Bellanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared,1owner for 35 years. $60K.
In Madras, call 541-475-6302
Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) Take care of 60' wide x 50' deep, w/55' wide x17' high biyour investments fold dr. Natural gas heat, with the help from offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great The Bulletin's visibility for aviation busi"Call A Service ness. Financing avail541-948-2126 or Professional" Directory able. email 1jetjockoq.com
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
Antique & Classic Autos
Aircraft, Parts & Service
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 28 2013 G5
Antique & Classic Autos
935
975
975
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Chevrolet Equi-
Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0,Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe nox 2006 LT, 4-dr based in Madras, al- 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, Silver exterior/ ways hangared since auto. trans, ps, air, graphite interior, new. New annual, auto frame on rebuild, re59,706 miles, V6 3.4 pilot, IFR, one piece painted original blue, liter, auto, AWD, windshield. Fastest Ar- original blue interior, sunroof, tow B a r racuda leather, cher around. 1750 to- original hub caps, exc. Plymouth pkg, alloy wheels, tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. chrome, asking $9000 1966, original car! 300 power windows, hp, 360 V8, center541-475-6947, ask for or make offer. 4-wheel ABS, tilt, lines, 541-593-2597 Rob Berg. 541-385-9350 power door locks, cruise, roof rack, F ord Model A 1 9 3 1 The Bulletin traction control, AC, Cpe, All new rebuilt & To Subscribe call AM/ FM premium balanced eng. Asking 541-385-5800 or go to sound multi-disc CD. $6500. 541-408-4416 Below Blue Bookat www.bendbulletin.com Ford Mustang Coupe $10,850. Call Neal, 541-385-3085 1966, original owner, PROJECT CARS: Chevy Superhawk V8, automatic, great 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) 8 Ownership Share shape, $9000 OBO. Chevy Coupe 1950 Available! rolling chassis's $1750 530-515-81 99 Economical flying ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, in your own The Bulletin's complete car, $ 1949; IFR equipped Cadillac Series 61 1950, "Call A Service Cessna 172/180 HP for Professional" Directory 2 dr. hard top, complete w/spare f r on t cl i p ., only $13,500! New is all about meeting Garmin Touchscreen $3950, 541-382-7391 Chevrolet Tahoe avionics center stack! yourneeds. 2003 4WD with 933 Exceptionally clean! LT Preferred Call on one of the Hangared at BDN. Pickups Equipment Group, professionals today! Call 541-728-0773 very good condition 178,000 hwy miles. T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Ford Ranchero $5,900 Call 541-382-8998. 1979 (503) 332-0870 with 351 Cleveland 916 modified engine. Trucks 8 Body is in Chevy 2500 HD 2003 Heavy Equipment excellent condition, 4 WD w o r k tr u c k, $2500 obo. 140,000 miles, $7000 541-420-4677 obo. 541-408-4994.
1987 Freightliner COE 3axle truck, Cummins en-
Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390
gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 obo. 541-419-2713 2009 26' Load Max flatbed gooseneck trailer, $4000. 541-416-9686
CRAMPED FOR CASH? Use classified to sell those items you no longer need. Call 541-385-5809
engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs greati excellent condi- Dodge 1-ton dually, 2001 tion in & out. Asking Cummins diesel, Knap$8,500. 541-480-3179 heide service box, new tires, great cond, $7100.
gThe Bulleti
541-280-4671
Backhoe 2007 John Deere 310SG, cab 4x4, 4-in-1 bucket Extendahoe, hydraulic thumb, loaded, like new, 500 hours. New $105,000. Sell $75,000. 541-350-3393
Ford Thunderbi rd 1955, new white soft top, tonneau cover fpaoto for illustration only) and upholstery. New Ford F-150 Lariat 2011, chrome. B e a utiful Loaded, super crew, Car. $25,00 0 . 88 miles,YES ONLY 541-548-1422 88, o riginal M S RP $47,960. Vin ¹D15232
$36,988
©
Need help fixing stuff?
Call A Service Professional find the help you need. GMC Vston 1971, Only www.bendbulletin.com Mitsubishi Fuso 1995 14' box truck with lift gate, 184,000 miles, needs turbo seal. $3500 or best offer.
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Peterbilt 35 9 p o table water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4-3" h o ses, camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. 541-820-3724
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories
t
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.
One owner, Turbo Diesel, Eddie Bauer 4WD, 46,400 miles,
MorePixat Bendboletin.com
Ford F250 S uperCab 2001, Triton V8, May '15 tags, ONLY 89K miles, $6495 obo 541-610-6150
ton dually, 4 s pd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.
eew"
g+
935
Porsche 911 Turbo
and place an ad today! Ask about our "Wheel Deal"! for private party advertisers
2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior new quality t i res, and battery, Bose premium sound stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, perfect condition $5 9 ,700.
lThe Bulletin l
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seat covers, many extras. Rec e ntly factory serviced. Garaged. Beautiful car, Perfect cond. $29,700 541-589-4047
CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport -4 LT loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $45,000.
The Bulletin Classifieds!
541-390-6081
fphoto for illustration only)
t il t.
$10,988
$26,688
9UBARUOlBRND COM
DON'TMI SSTHIS
541-389-6998
FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN
Your future is just a page away. Whether you're looking for a hat or a place to hangit, The Bulletin Classified is your best source. Every daythousandsof buyers and sellers of goods and services do business in these pages.They know you can't beat TheBulletin Classified Section for selection and convenience - every item isjust a phone call away. The Classified Section is easy to use. Everyitem is categorized andevery cartegory is indexed onthe section's front page. Whether youarelooking for a home orneed aservice, your future is in the pagesof The Bulletin Classified.
The Bulletin
385-5809 or place
877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
~~ a j P =-
your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
I The Bulletin recoml
mends extra caution t when p u r chasing ~ Ford Taurus 2003 SSE Olds Aurora 1999, white f products or services s edan, e xc . co n d 4-dr, 134K miles, front from out of the area. 63,000 miles. $5,000 wheel drive, leather, Subaru lr nrrza WRX J S ending c ash , 541-389-9569 STI 2005, 6 s p e ed, checks, or credit inair, CD/radio, excelpower windows, formation may be I lent condition. $4000 Hyundai Elantra 2011 power locks, Alloys. J subject to FRAUD. Touring SE 24,710 mi. or best offer. Vin ¹506223 541-548-5886 For more informa¹113392 $ 17 , 9 88 $20,988 f tion about an advertiser, you may call
' RLt~
Oregon Aernsoerce
(photo for illustration only)
Chevy M a l ibu L T Z 541-598-3750 www. aaaoregonauto2010, V6, auto source.com w/overdrive, leather, loaded, 21K m i les, Vin ¹103070
$17,988 S UB ARU. SUllNCIH)PIIHHI) COM 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.
Jeep C herokee 1 59,970
fphoto for illustration only)
Hyundai Elantra Touring GLS Wagon 2011, 5 Spd, air, tilt, cruise. Vin ¹121821 $13,888
Grand 1 9 99, mil e s . 4WD, au t o matic S UBA R U . transmission, cloth Chrysler Newport interior, power ev2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 1962 4 door sedans, erything, A/C, (2)$2500 877-266-3821 and $5500. trailer hitch. Well Dlr ¹0354 maintained & runs La Pine, 541-602-8652. great. $4250. FIND IT! 9UBARUOPBRND COM
I-
Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $7,000 OBO / trades. Please call
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
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend 877-266-3821 Subaru BRZ Limited Dlr ¹0354 2013, manual, spoiler, premium wheels. Vin USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! ¹600209
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
00+ 'Little Red Corvette"
~gppg~g gp MifNCr~ Ntonaco Dyna 2pp4. ~LOADED! solid F atures include rs, 4-dr Surface counter, cm, 1 d e, conuectionrni rn' ceer, ui - washer/dry, built-in ramic tile floor, TU,DVD, satenite dish, air leuel ing, storage ass-through d aking tray, an ' size bed - An for only $149,000 541-000-000
Looking for your next employee?
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000
Door-to-door selling with ©s UB A R U. Vin fast results! It's the easiest 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. way in the world to sell.
BUBARUOPBRND COM
FOR ONLY
Chevy Nova- 1976, $3,400. Rebuilt 327 engine. Call Matt 541-280-9463.
On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.
SUBARUOFBEND COM
4j+) sUBARU.
SUBARUOFBEND CON
541-923-6049
MorePixatBendbuletin,com
sU B A RU.
The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
•
Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; auto 4-spd, 396, model CST /all options, orig. owner, $19,950,
Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500.
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541-322-6928
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Porsche 911
Carrera 993 cou e
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Your auto, RV, motorcycle,
boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months
Convertible CouPe,350, auto with132rnii«gets 26-24 rnpgAddlots more description and interesting facts for $99! Look how much fun a girl could have in a sweet car like thisI
$12,500 541-000-000
(whichever comes first!) Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in 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.
I the Oregon State I
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Attorney General's t Office C o n sumer 877-266-3821 f Protection hotline at Dlr ¹0354 1-877-877-9392.
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The Bulletin
sewing ceneai oregons>nce 1903
1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new
quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700
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Toyota Avalon Limited 2011, Beautiful c ar, compare to new at $43,500. Vin ¹384729
$24,988
a ROW I N G
877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Legal Notices •
Legal Notices
©~ s U B ARU. 9UBARUOlBRtlDCOM
541-589-4047
Get your business
with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.
Mustang 1966 2 dr. 541-385-5286 coupe, 200 cu. in. 6 Sport Utility Vehicles SUV IT! cyl. Over $12,000 inSELL IT! 20" polished alloy wheels vested, asking $9000. ACURA RL 2005 3.5 Jeep Wrangler 1989. The Bulletin Classifieds with 295/50R-20 tires, AWD sedan, nav. All receipts, runs A utomatic, 2 do o r , GM 6-hole bolt pattern. ¹C012227 $16,495 71,094 miles. $1,925 good. 541-420-5011 Kia Roi 2011, Auto, gas $495. 541-330-5714 (503) 862-8175 "My little red saver , 14K miles. Vin Mustang 5.0, 1990 Oregon t Cofvefte Coupe ¹927546 Convertible, 1 owner, 5 Antique 8 Aurosource $11,888 spd, low miles, very few 541-598-3750 Classic Autos made of t h i s m o del www.oregonauto$6900. Good investment! 4 @ s U B A R U • Le g al Notices source.com 541-382-7689 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. LEGAL NOTICE 877-266-3821 Audi A4 2 0 1 1 A vant Jeep Wrangler X 2004, Dlr ¹0354 City Of Bend 2 .0T Q uattro P r e 4.0. 4x4, hard t o p, 1921 Model T 1996, 350 auto, mium wagon, AWD. MUST S E E ! Vin Mercury Sable 2000 4-dr CDBG Program 132,000 miles. Delivery Truck ¹040927 $33,995 ¹749542 Non-ethanol fuel & sedan, good condition, Restored & Runs I $15,888 $2750. 808-640-5507 Notice of Funding synthetic oil only, $9000. Must Sell! Health forces garaged, premium Availability Oregon 541-389-8963 sale. Buick Riviera 1991, Just bought a new boat? 4@s U BARU. Bose stereo, AureSoarce Sell your old one in the classic low-mileage car, 541-598-3750 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $11,000. classifieds! Ask about our The City of Bend is garaged, pampered, 1 952 Ford Customline now accepting proaaaoregonauto877-266-3821 541-923-1781 Super Seller rates! Coupe, project car, flat- non-smoker, exclnt cond, www.source.com posals fo r f u n ding Dlr ¹0354 541-385-5809 head V-8, 3 spd extra $4300 obo 541-389-0049 through th e Ci t y 's parts, & materials, $2000 Community D evelopment Block Grant •
WHEN YOU SEE THIS
$11,988
©
Ford Focus SE Sedan 2009, 5 s p d, M P 3,
541-385-5809
¹397598
541-385-5809
cruise, ¹130071
Need to get an ad in ASAP? Volkswagen Karmann Ghia 1970 convertible, You can place it very rare, new top & inteonline at: rior upholstery, $9000. www.bendbulletin.com 541-389-2636
Nissan Versa S 2011, Gas saver, auto, air, CD, a lloys, Vin
Find It in
Toyota Yaris 2010 wonderful little car, 40 mpg on hwy, $8,500. 541-410-1078 I •
541-589-4047
Nissan 350Z 2005 Black, excellent condition, 22,531 gently driven miles, 1 owner, non-smoker, $15,500.
503-358-1164.
Toyota Camrys: 1984, SOLD; 1985 SOLD; 1986 parts car only one left! $500 Call for details, 541-548-6592
f
877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
International Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1
CORVETTE Convertible2005 Automatic LS2 high performance motor, only 29k miles, Sterling S ilver, b l ack leather interior, Bose premium sound stereo, new quality tires and battery, car and
Automo b iles
I
Call (206) 849-4513 in Bend.
MGA 1959 - $19,999 Convertible. O r iginal body/motor. No rust. 541-549-3838
CHECK YOUR AD Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes ins tructions over t h e phone are misunderstood and a n e r ror can occur in your ad. If this happens to your ad, please contact us the first day your ad appears and we will be happy to fix it as s oon a s w e ca n . Deadlines are: Weekdays 12:00 noon for next day, Sat. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. If we can assist you, please call us: 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
Advertise your car! Add A Picture! Chevy Equinox LT Reach thousands of readers! Sport AWD 2010. Call 541-385-5809 Auto, 6-Spd w/Over- The BulletinClassifieds dnve 29 Hwy mpg 41K miles, traction control, keyless entry, moonroof, air, power e v erything, X M S a tellite e n gaged, OnStar avail. MP3. $21,500. Call Chevrolet Corvette 541-41 9-0736. Coupe 2007, 20,700 mi., beautiful cond. 3LT loaded, victory Ford Bronco 1981 two-tone red, 4 speed 4x4, 3 02 leather, powerseats, engine, low miles, logos, memory, h eaders, roll b a r, with headsupdisplay, hitch kit, good tires, nav., XM, Bose, tilt, straight body, runs chrome wheels, upgreat, $950. graded drilled slot541 -350-71 76 ted b rake r o tors, extra insulation, always garaged, seriFord Excursion ous only $36,500. 2004 541-771-2852.
$26,500
541-420-2323
Buick Lucerne CXS 2006 Sports sedan, low miles, all the nice features you'll want, truly an exc. buy at $8000. Come & see no charge for looking. Ask Buick Bob, 541-318-9999
Automobiles •
Vehicle? Call The Bulletin
541-312-3085
SUBARUOPBEIID COM
$19,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171
Au t o mobiles
r-..;„;..;,.v
Buick Century Limited 2000, r u n s gr e at, beautiful car. $3400.
s U B A RU. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
•
1000
tion is "Renews for five years Capital Ross Griggs as Per- and Operations Losonal Representative cal Option Levy". o f the Es t at e o f The full text of this G eneva Bern i c e ballot measure is the Griggs, deceased. All available a t persons having claims Jefferson C o u nty against said e state Clerk's office, 66 SE are re q uired to D Street, Suite C, present the s a me, Madras, OR 97741. with proper vouchers to the Personal Rep- An elector may file a resentative, c/o Melpetition for review of (CDBG) P r ogram. issa P. Lande, Bryant, this ballot title in the Through this program, Lovlien & Jarvis, PC, Jefferson C o u nty approximately 5 91 SW M i l l V i e w C ircuit C o urt n o $200,000 w i l l be Way, Bend, Oregon later than 5:00 p.m. available t o fun d 9 7702 w i t hin f o u r August 6, 2013. housing and commu- months from the date nity dev e lopment of first publication of Kathleen B. Marston Jefferson County projects in the City of this notice as stated Clerk Bend. below, or they may be barred. Al l p ersons Publish July 28,2013 The Request for Pro- whose rights may be LEGAL NOTICE posals will be avail- affected by this proTO INTERESTED able beginning July ceeding may obtain PERSONS 29, 2013. Pr oposals additional information Linda Jean Olson has for funding will be due from the records of the court, the P e rbeen appointed Adby 5:00pm at the City sonal Representative, ministrator of the esA dministration O f fice in City Hall on or the Attorney for the t ate o f Fr i eda M . Personal Representa- Rainey, deceased, by W ednesday, S e p tive. the C i rcuit C o u rt, tember 4, 2013. State of Oregon, DesDated and first chutes County, Case Federal r e g ulatlons published: N o. 13PB0072. A l l require that CDBGJuly 21 2013. persons having claims f unded projects b e against the estate are "eligible activities" unPersonal required to p r esent der CDBG Program Representatlve them, with vouchers regulations, and that attached, to the attorthey b e c o n sistent Gerald Ross Grig' Trail Cr~~k D . ney for the Adminiswith the housing and Redmond, Oregon trator, Patricia community develop97756 Heatherman, 250 NW ment goals outlined in F ranklin Aven ue, the City of Bend ConSuite 402, Bend, OR s olidated Plan. F o r Attorney for Personal Representative: 9 7701. w i thin f o u r more information on months after the date eligible acti v ities, MelissaP. Lande, OSB ¹91349 of July 14, 2013, the p lease contact J i m Long at 541-312-4915 Bryant, Lovlien & Jarvis, first publication of this P.C. notice, or the claims ot' jlong@ci.bend.or.us. 591 S.W. Mill View Way may be barred. AddiBend, Oregon 97702 tional information may Telephone: be obtained from the To obtain a Request records of the court, (541) 382-4331 for Proposals, please Fax: (541) 389-3386 the Administrator, or contact Jim Long or Email: t he lawyer fo r t h e call the City Administ ration Of f ic e at lande@bljlawyers.com Administrator. 541-388-5505. LEGAL NOTICE
Para mas informacion porfavor
comuniquese con Ofelia Santos al
numero 541-388-5515.
LEGAL NOTICE Estate of Geneva Bernice Griggs NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS Case Number: 13PB0075
County of Deschutes, has appointed Gerald
NOTICE OF DISTRICT MEASURE ELECTION Notice i s h e r eby given that a ballot title for a measure referred b y the Crooked River Ranch Rural Fire Protection D i strict was filed with the Jefferson C o u nty Clerk on July 25,
Notice: T h e Ci r c uit 2013. Court of the State of Oregon, f or the The ballot title cap-
Get your
business
sROWING With an ad in The Bulletin's
"Call A Service Professional" Directory
To PLACE AN AD CALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809
G6 SUNDAY JULY 28 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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2013: Ht fl OLHIICE: Presenting our 2013 calendar at a glance with all of our scheduled specialty publications. You'll also receive grocery inserts every Tuesday; our arts and entertainment section, GO! Magazine, every Friday; and look for a wide variety of shopping inserts every Saturday and Sunday. You'll also enjoy the national magazine, PARADE, which highlights the world of entertainment, games and comics every Sunday. r
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2013:SPECIHLPUBLICHTIONSBVNONTII
*PUBLIC ATIONDATESARE SUBJECTTO CHANGE.
January
March (cont.)
May (cont.)
July
August (cont.)
November
• 9 Book of Love • 12 Picture Your Home • 31 Ageless
• 29 Sisters Magazine
• 13 High Desert PULSE • U.S. Bank Pole Pedal Paddle • 18 Ageless • 24 Sisters Magazine
• 13 Picture Your Home Cascade Cycling Classic • U Magazine • 17 Tour of Homes™ • 24 Deschutes County Fair Guide • 27 Ageless
• 23 Sisters Magazine • 28 Redmond Magazine
• • • • •
February • • • •
6 Baby Book 9 Picture Your Home 11 High Desert PULSE 16 U Magazine
March • • • •
2 Central Oregon Living 4 C.O. Sportsmen's Show 9 Picture Your Home 16 Ageless
April • • • • •
6 U Magazine 12 Summer Youth Directory 13 Picture Your Home 17 Redmond Magazine 27 Home and Garden Show Guide • (TBA) 110 Ways to Discover Central Oregon
June
• 1 U Magazine • 5 Deschutes County Fair Premium Book • 8 Picture Your Home • 12 Graduation 2013 May • 19 Redmond Magazine • 11 Picture Your Home • 12 Central Oregon Golf Preview • 28 Sisters Magazine • 29 Central Oregon Living
August I 9 Bend Brewfest Guide • 10 Picture Your Home • 12 High Desert PULSE 14 School Directory • 20 Remodelin g,Design 8 Outdoor Living Show™
September • 7 U Magazine • 14 Picture Your Home • 21 Ageless
October • • • • •
5 Central Oregon Living 12 Picture Your Home 19 U Magazine 25 The Nature of Words (TBA) 110 Ways to Discover Central Oregon
9 Picture Your Home 11 High Desert PULSE 13 Redmond Magazine 15 Sisters Magazine 16 Ageless
December • 7 Central Oregon Living • 14 Picture Your Home • 25 Connections
Weekly I Grocery (Tuesdays) Sale Inserts (Saturdays) I Sale Inserts/Parade (Sundays)