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IT’S ELECTION DAY Election board workers open ballot envelopes and check signatures Monday in the Deschutes County building in Bend. All ballots must be received by 8 p.m. today. For locations and hours of operation for the ballot drop box nearest you, see Page C1, or visit www.sos.state.or.us/dropbox. Voter turnout as of late Monday afternoon, by county: • Deschutes .................24.8 percent • Crook .........................31.7 percent • Jefferson ...................35.4 percent Photo by Pete Erickson / The Bulletin
Portland lands a coveted flight route By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — Portland International Airport will receive one of four coveted daily round-trip direct flights from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, the Department of Transportation announced Monday. Congress approved eight more “slots” (four departures and four arrivals) at the Washington airport in February’s Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization bill. The flights were reserved for cities at least 1,250 miles from Washington with little or no presence at Reagan National. By law, airlines can operate long-distance flights into Reagan National only with the permission of Congress. Alaska Airlines will carry the direct flights between Portland and Washington. “These new flights will provide convenient nonstop service to our nation’s capital for travelers from four major cities,” Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said in a prepared statement. “The flights will increase competition for airlines serving Washington, which can lead to lower fares for consumers.” Alaska Airlines spokeswoman Marianne Lindsey said that it usually takes the Department of Transportation a few weeks to tell airlines approved for new routes into Reagan National what time it wants the new flights to take off and land. After that, Alaska will determine when the route will start operating, but it hopes to have flights up and running well before the Sept. 8 deadline set in the FAA law, she said. See Flights / A5
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CENTRAL OREGON COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Redmond tech center to break ground soon
Courtesy BBT Architects
A rendering shows Central Oregon Community College’s planned Redmond Technology Education Center. The building’s exterior will feature native lava stone and aluminum, among other materials. The 30,000-square-foot building will house a high-performance automotive repair training center, the Center for Entrepreneurial Excellence and Development and a program to train people to test the strength of structures such as bridges. By Patrick Cliff The Bulletin
C
entral Oregon Community College is about to shift its construction focus to Redmond. The college’s next major construction project is the $12.5 million Redmond Technology Education Center. The 30,000-square-foot building will house new programs for Central Oregon, including a high-performance automotive repair training center and the Center for Entrepreneurial Excellence and Development (CEED). The center will also host a program in nondestructive testing and in-
spection, which will train people to test the strength of structures such as bridges. COCC now has a rendering of the building, the exterior of which will feature native lava stone and aluminum, among other materials. The two-story building will sit just across from Redmond Airport’s main exit. Groundbreaking is set for summer. “It’s going to be a beautiful building,” said Karin Hilgersom, COCC’s vice president for instruction. Of the $12.5 million price tag, half will come from state funding, while COCC will pay its share with money from a bond voters approved in 2009. The bond money has also helped pay
By Alexis Okeowo New York Times News Service
Five years ago, on a muggy August morning in Hicksville, N.Y., Ann Kornhauser was out walking her golden retriever when bones in her left foot suddenly cracked. Kornhauser, then in her late 50s, soon
Josh Haner New York Times News Service
The Bulletin Vol. 109, No. 136, 40 pages, 7 sections
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
A settlement with advocacy group 1000 Friends of Oregon has revived a plan to boost the supply of large-lot industrial land in Central Oregon. Supporters of the plan argue that it will attract businesses to the region and create badly needed jobs. Opponents have argued, among other things, that it could prove costly to the public. Following the settlement, which was hammered out on April 30, 1000 Friends is excited to work with Deschutes County and other parties on implementation, said Jason Miner, the group’s executive director. In addition to 1000 Friends, the parties include the area’s cities, counties and Oregon’s land use agency. The settlement was possible, Miner said, because the group was able to get a clearer picture of how Oregon’s land use agency plans to change rules on industrial land. In effect, the agreement limits such industrial-land plans to Central Oregon, at least for a while. “I think the settlement is putting together an innovative approach to large lots and may set a precedent for other areas of the state, and we’re happy to be involved in that,” Miner said. See Industrial / A4
Amputees’ once-unthinkable choice eases as artificial limbs improve
Half of Anne Kornhauser’s left foot was amputated after doctors discovered a rare tumor in it. The prosthetic foot she received left her in constant pain. After two years of discomfort, she decided to have her left leg amputated to make room for a new, high-tech model. “I was able to walk again,” she says. “And it looks real.”
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for projects in Prineville, Madras and on COCC’s main campus. In recent years, COCC has used the money to build the Junger Culinary Center and help pay for classroom spaces in Madras and Prineville. This fall, COCC will open about 100,000 square feet of bond-funded classroom and laboratory space in its science and health careers buildings. The technology center is designed to be a flexible space. One automotive training bay, for instance, may be converted into a training area for unmanned drone repair. See Center / A4
Industrial land plan clears a hurdle
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learned why: Doctors discovered a rare tumor in her foot. They amputated half of it. The prosthetic foot she received afterward left her in constant pain; she often cried in her car after trips to the grocery store because she dreaded carrying the bags
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into the house. Her prosthetist offered a solution. Artificial limbs had greatly improved, he said, and she could benefit from one of the new high-tech models — but it would fit only if her left leg was amputated below the knee. See Limbs / A4
TOP NEWS BANK LOSS: Warnings ignored? A3 SYRIA: Volunteers bring aid, A3
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It sounds like a routine event for NASA: At 4:55 a.m. Saturday, a rocket is scheduled to lift off from Cape Canaveral, Fla., and carry cargo — but no people — to the International Space Station. But if all goes as planned, that morning will mark something transformative for the space industry: a victory for capitalism in what has been for decades a government-run enterprise. The capsule, built by Space Exploration Technologies Corp. — SpaceX, for short — would be the first commercial spacecraft to make it to the space station, and many observers view its launching as the starting gun in an entrepreneurial race to turn space travel into a profit-making business in which NASA is not necessarily the biggest customer. Already, there are some hints of how the era of commercial space travel might unfold. Companies like Virgin Galactic, XCOR and Space Adventures are booking passengers on suborbital joy rides to space, promised for dates within the next few years, and hundreds of people are signing up. And already there are celebrity tie-ins: Among the people who have signed up for Virgin’s first flights are Ashton Kutcher, Angelina Jolie, Brad Pitt, Tom Hanks and Katy Perry.
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Forging ahead
ATK via New York Times New York Times News Service
Technicians work inside a composite crew module designed by Alliant Techsystems.
travel to Mars will eventually become commonplace, and that the ticket price will eventuDreaming big ally — perhaps a decade after On a more mundane note, the first flight — drop to half a the launching of commercial million dollars. That contrasts satellites has been a steady with the more than $60 million business for decades, and a seat that the Russians are SpaceX is among the compa- currently charging NASA to nies competing for contracts. take one astronaut to the space Indeed, SpaceX station. already seems to “Is it possible have built a viable “I think to achieve that?” business here, hav- humanity Musk said in an ing announced interview at his more than $1 bil- needs to get to headquarters in lion of contracts in Mars, one way Hawthorne, Calif. the past few years. “I think it is. My or another.” Then there are calculations show — Elon Musk, that it is.” the longer-term founder and chief dreams, which executive, SpaceX Privatization may sound less To date, space far-fetched as each travel has been landmark in space expensive and, as a governtravel grows nearer. “I think humanity needs ment-managed operation, has to get to Mars, one way or an- had little incentive to streamother,” said Elon Musk, the line. NASA, of course, was the founder and chief executive only game in town for U.S. asof SpaceX, who vows that his tronauts, and most recently it company will send people to operated the shuttles that supMars in as little as 10 years plied the International Space — more likely 15 years, and Station. Big aerospace has been certainly within 20. He said he involved, too: One company, would do this with or without United Launch Alliance, a joint NASA: “I would prefer it would venture between Boeing and be with NASA. If not, we have Lockheed Martin, effectively has a monopoly for launching to find another path.” The International Space Sta- satellites for NASA and the Air tion is only a couple of hundred Force on its Delta IV and Atlas miles up — SpaceX’s rocket V rockets. Only recently have smallhas yet to get there, of course — and Mars is millions of miles er, nimbler companies like away. But Musk predicts that SpaceX, some of them run by
billionaires who proved themselves in other fields, started trying to compete as equals with NASA and its major contractors. (Musk, for example, is an Internet entrepreneur who founded PayPal.) “SpaceX is attempting to build the same class of vehicle, to my mind, only with modern manufacturing techniques and management techniques to reduce the cost,” said Jeff Greason, chief executive of XCOR Aerospace, which is building a two-seat rocket plane to take tourists to the edge of space. Since the end of the space shuttle program, NASA has relied on Russia to take its astronauts to space in Soyuz rockets, but now it is looking to hire commercial companies for space taxi services. So there are incentives for commercial companies both to build the transportation and to offer it at competitive prices. SpaceX, for one, says that it could provide rides to NASA astronauts at $20 million a seat, a third of the Russian price. But the new space companies are relying on taxpayer dollars to finance their research and development. The Obama administration requested $830 million for next year to finance the development of passenger-carrying spacecraft. Proponents argue that the investments will jumpstart a vibrant new business that dwarfs NASA; Congress
Despite the ambivalence on Capitol Hill, the new space competition has drawn both entrepreneurs and the old aerospace giants. Alliant Techsystems, better known as ATK, manufactured the solid rocket boosters for the space shuttles and had the contract to build a longer-range version as the first stage for NASA’s next-generation rocket, the Ares I. That was before the Ares I was canceled in favor of the space taxi approach. ATK has now teamed up with Astrium, a European rocket company, to come up with what is essentially a commercial version of the Ares I, which it called the Liberty. Last week, ATK announced that it was developing its own capsule — based heavily on the Orion capsule that was originally going to sit on top of the Ares I — to carry astronauts for NASA one day. ATK says it, too, would charge less than the Russians. What is not clear is whether there are people and companies interested in buying all those seats to orbit. Currently, the market for taking people into space is small. NASA needs to send only two crews a year to the space station, and if a piece of space debris were to disable the station, there would suddenly be no demand at all. The commercial future of space, while relying on NASA financing in the short run, needs new markets for manufacturers to take advantage of the economies of mass production. “The only way to make a dramatic reduction of price is to assume a dramatic increase of launches,” said Greason of XCOR. “You have to assume there is some market, that there will be enough demand to support that low price.” The current rockets — most of them good for one launching only — are very expensive regardless of whether they are built by entrepreneurs or government. The future of lowcost travel in space hinges on reusable rockets and technologies not yet developed, space experts say. Musk declined to talk about what a profitable business model for sending people to Mars might look like, but said his ultimate goal of a $500,000 trip to Mars depended on a large number of passengers and fully reusable systems. “I’m not going to try to convince people I can do it,” he said. “I’m just going to do it.”
Instead of ruining computers, heat could soon power them By Jon Cartwright ScienceNOW
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has so far remained skeptical. A report by the House committee in charge of NASA’s budget said the program ran the “risk of repeating the government’s experience from last year’s bankruptcy of the solar energy firm Solyndra.”
By Kenneth Chang
Heat is the great enemy of modern electronics — it can spawn errors and fry components. But now scientists have turned heat to their advantage by creating devices that run on heat instead of electricity. The advance could lead to thermal computers that run off of body heat or other waste heat from our surroundings. A heat current is simply the flow of energy from a hotter object to a colder object. Imagine heating a metal pipe at one end: Heat flows from the hot end to the cold end, and at every point along the pipe the temperature diminishes. The heat takes this simple path because the pipe conducts the same amount of heat in every place and in every direction. Yet materials don’t have to conduct heat so simply. If you
BREAKTHROUGH stacked alternating sheets of a material that conducts heat and another that insulates it, the heat would be conducted more freely sideways than in the topto-bottom direction. Electrical engineers are familiar with this principle: It’s the same one that makes resistors, one of the most common electrical components, conduct more when wired in parallel than when wired in series. The breakthrough of the new research is to tailor composite materials so that their thermal conduction is not just side to side or top to bottom, but in a direction that changes throughout. “Heat current, like electric current, should be viewed as a medium that can be manipulated, controlled and processed,” says study author Yuki Sato, a
physicist at Harvard University. Sato and Harvard colleague Supradeep Narayana’s simplest demonstration is of a thermal shield: a device that excludes a heat current from a certain region. It consists of a cylinder containing 40 alternating, concentric layers of natural rubber and boron nitride-infused silicone elastomer. The researchers cast the device in a block of conductive jelly and kept one side warm and the other cold. With no shield in place, the heat would have flowed through the jelly in a uniform temperature gradient, as in the pipe example. However, when the researchers viewed the temperature gradient from above with an infrared camera, they found that their shield almost totally excluded the heat current from the region inside without affecting its flow in the jelly outside.
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HAPPENINGS • Oregon holds its primary elections. A1 • JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon faces shareholders for the first time since the bank’s massive trading loss was disclosed. Also, regulators crafting the Volcker rule meet and are expected to discuss how JPMorgan Chase’s loss should affect the financial regulation. A3, E1 • Greece resumes negotiations on forming a coalition government. A3 • Rebekah Brooks, the former chief executive of News International, finds out if she will face charges over the phone-hacking scandal that has rocked Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. • A free trade agreement between the United States and Colombia goes into effect.
IN HISTORY Highlights: In 1911, the Supreme Court ruled that Standard Oil Co. was a monopoly in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act and ordered its breakup. In 1972, Alabama Gov. George Wallace was shot and left paralyzed by Arthur Bremer while campaigning in Laurel, Md., for the Democratic presidential nomination. (Wallace died in 1998; Bremer was released from prison in November 2007 after serving 35 years of a 53year sentence for attempted murder.) Ten years ago: The White House acknowledged that in the weeks before the Sept. 11 attacks, President George W. Bush was told by U.S. intelligence that Osama bin Laden’s terrorist network might hijack American airplanes, but that officials did not know suicide hijackers were plotting to use planes as missiles. Five years ago: The Rev. Jerry Falwell, who’d built the Christian right into a political force, died in Lynchburg, Va., at age 73. Prime Minister Bertie Ahern became the first Irish leader to address the joint houses of the British Parliament. One year ago: Thousands of Arab protesters marched on Israel’s borders with Syria, Lebanon and Gaza in an unprecedented wave of demonstrations, sparking clashes that left at least 15 dead.
BIRTHDAYS Counterculture icon Wavy Gravy is 76. Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright is 75. Singer-songwriter Brian Eno is 64. Actor Chazz Palminteri is 60. Baseball Hallof-Famer George Brett is 59. Football Hall-of-Famer Emmitt Smith is 43. Actor David Krumholtz is 34. — From wire reports
TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
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Syrians defy government Bank bosses said to ignore to aid those trapped by fighting JPMORGAN CHASE
red flags ington Mutual in 2008 and its more risky credit portfolio. New York Times News Service Despite Dimon’s recent apolIn the years leading up to ogies about the losses — which JPMorgan Chase’s $2 billion will most likely be repeated trading loss, risk managers and today as JPMorgan shareholdsome senior investment bankers ers gather for the company’s raised concerns that the bank annual meeting in Tampa, Fla., was making increasingly large — regulators will scrutinize investments involving complex risk management at the chief trades that were hard to under- investment office. stand. But even as the size Top investment bank of the bets climbed steadiexecutives raised conly, these former employ- Related cerns about the growees say, their concerns • More on ing size and complexthe loss, about the dangers were ity of the bets held by the E1 ignored or dismissed. bank’s chief investment An increased appetite office as early as 2007, for such trades had the according to interviews approval of the upper echelons with half a dozen current and of the bank, including Jamie Di- former bank officials. Within mon, the chief executive, current the investment office, led by Ina and former employees said. Drew, who resigned Monday, Initially, this led to sharply the bets were directed by the higher investing profits, but head of the Europe trading desk they said it also contributed to in London, Achilles Macris. the bank’s lowering its guard. Macris, who is also expected “There was a lopsided situa- to resign, failed to heed contion, between really risky posi- cerns as early as 2009 from the tions and relatively weaker risk unit’s own internal risk officer, managers,” said a former trader said current and former memwith the chief investment office, bers of the chief investment ofthe JPMorgan unit that suffered fice. Macris and Drew were not the recent loss. The trader and available for comment. other former employees spoke Under Dimon’s stewardship, on the condition of anonym- JPMorgan Chase has long had ity because of the nature of the a reputation for its strong riskinvestigations into the trading management abilities — indeed, losses. it came through the 2008 finanInstead, the bank maintains cial crisis largely unscathed, unthat the losses were largely the like many big banks. For their fault of the chief investment of- part, senior bank officials Monfice. Overall tolerance for risky day disputed the assertions that trading did not increase, current the company weakened risk executives said, just the scale of management in recent years the office’s activities because of while seeking higher trading the bank’s acquisition of Wash- profits. By Jessica Silver-Greenberg and Nelson D. Schwartz
New York Times News Service DAMASCUS, Syria — For 48 hours, the two Damascus residents struggled to reach the besieged city of Homs by car, trying to deliver boxes of blood bags so surgeons there could operate on the wounded. But gunfire made the roads impassable. Finally, they strapped their contraband to their backs and, led by a shepherd through back roads and dirt paths, hiked 65 miles to the city. As the violence across Syria reaches a treacherous new phase and the numbers of displaced and injured swell, such individual and ad hoc efforts have grown into an increasingly organized underground network of volunteers willing to brave injury and arrest to deliver relief supplies to those trapped, wounded or displaced by the fighting. The government sees the network as an affront and has detained anyone caught distributing aid, especially medicine. Activists say the government considers any aid, even humanitarian, as a comfort to its enemies and an opportunity for a long-repressed civil society to gain a foothold. The threat of arrest has only forced the operation underground as a growing number of people struggle to provide food, clothing, medicine, shelter, services and money to a population that the Syrian government has victimized and the international community has so far largely failed to help. The Red Crescent said last week that as many as 1.5 million people need help getting food, water or shelter. “All our lives we were raised
Greek president pitching plan for new government By Marcus Bensasson Bloomberg News
ATHENS — Greek President Karolos Papoulias will attempt to persuade divided party leaders today to accept his proposal for a government of prominent non-politicians to steer the country and avert new elections as doubts mount that Greece can avoid an exit from the euro area. Papoulias will meet with all leaders of parties represented in parliament except for an ultra-nationalist party in Athens, said Evangelos Venizelos, the leader of Pasok, the thirdbiggest party. Venizelos, who did not provide further details of the president’s plan, spoke after meeting with Papoulias and the leaders of two other parties Monday. “Pasok is taking a responsible stance,” Venizelos said in comments televised live on state-run NET TV. “We support a government of prominent figures as a necessary solution.”
The new plan threatens to extend the political gridlock that has left the country without a government for more than a week since the inconclusive May 6 elections. Democratic Left leader Fotis Kouvelis, who attended Monday’s meeting, said he was opposed to the new plan and will attend today’s meeting to press for his unity-government proposal, which has already been rejected by the second-biggest party, Syriza. The task of finding agreement among the seven parties that were elected to the Greek parliament on May 6 fell to Papoulias after a week of negotiations led by the three biggest parties foundered. If his efforts fail, new elections will need to be called. Greece’s political impasse has raised the possibility that another vote will have to be held as early as next month, with polls showing that could boost the anti-bailout Syriza to
the top spot. The standoff has reignited concern the country will renege on pledges to cut spending as required by the terms of its two bailouts negotiated since May 2010, and, ultimately, leave the euro area. Syriza, now Greece’s biggest anti-bailout party, defied overtures to join the government, with leader Alexis Tsipras boycotting Monday’s meeting. Tsipras will attend the meeting today, NET reported, without saying how it got the information. Pasok, New Democracy and Democratic Left agreed last week on a government that would last until 2014 and be committed to keeping the country in the euro region and renegotiating bailout conditions from the International Monetary Fund and European Union to boost growth. Syriza’s Tsipras turned down the approach on Friday as the first opinion polls since the elections showed he was gaining support.
Fiscal woes boomerang in California By Adam Nagourney New York Times News Service
By this point in his tenure, Gov. Jerry Brown had hoped to have dispensed with the huge budget shortfalls that greeted him when he took office. Yet Monday, there was Brown in a familiar, if uncomfortable, position: calling for severe spending cuts, this time to deal with a new $15.7 billion shortfall. At the same time, Brown’s campaign to persuade voters in California, the birthplace of the anti-tax movement, to vote for tax increases to head off even more cuts once seemed to have a chance of winning. But now it is threatened by a rival tax plan that went onto the ballot after Brown was unable to persuade its organizers to stand down.
And what is perhaps the most prominent nonbudgetary initiative on Brown’s docket — a high-speed rail line to whisk riders between San Francisco and Los Angeles, the kind of legacy project identified with his father, Gov. Pat Brown — is embattled as well, facing rising opposition and questions about its feasibility and cost. These are not easy days for Brown, a Democrat, as he approaches the midpoint of his term. The promises of his election — to end partisan wrangling, to deal with budget problems that have hamstrung the government of the world’s ninth-largest economy, to establish his own legacy as he approaches the end of his career — have to date been largely
frustrated. After a long and varied career in public life, Brown, 74, finds himself stymied by a governing system that seems impervious to his considerable skills and a budget that defies his vision of the state as a sunny engine of continued growth and reinvention. “The system he has inherited is a very difficult one,” said Bill Whalen, a fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University and a longtime adviser to Republican governors here. “Part of the problem is the political culture. But part of the problem might be Brown himself, in that he can’t seem to close a deal. Does he lack negotiating skills, the bullying capacity to get people to come around?”
Fadi Zaidan / The Associated Press
A rebel runs for cover Monday in Homs, Syria. Syrian troops shelled the rebel-held town, sparking intense clashes that sent bloodied victims flooding into hospitals and clinics, activists said. The violence around the country is eroding an internationally brokered peace plan that many observers see as the last hope to calm the 14-month-old crisis.
to be afraid,” said a university student who is involved in the relief effort. “But you get to a point where you realize you are strong because you can speak and do.” Those involved with the network also say it undermines the government’s effort to divide and conquer, whether on sectarian, ethnic, class or geographical lines. For the past year, the government has been stoking fears of ethnic conflict and the prospect of a militant Islamist takeover as a way to coerce tacit support from Syrians of all sects and ethnicities. The government has also exploited geographical divisions, analysts say, as resent-
ment has grown among residents of the besieged cities toward those of the major cities of Damascus and Aleppo, who have not risen in significant numbers. Aid from those cities, particularly from the relatively unaffected capital, subverts that narrative, supporters say. By taking an active role in the conflict, Damascus residents can push back against the capital’s facade of relative normalcy. Providing relief is “not disallowed in law, but we understood from the security that it was illegal,” said one participant who noted that the most dangerous items to smuggle were medicines. “We began
to fear for our people, so we stopped medicine, stayed to food.” Every stop on what has become a sort of underground railway is shrouded in secrecy: requesting supplies, confirming the needs, delivering goods, fundraising and collecting donations are carried out by separate cells. To safeguard the network, participants know the identities of only the immediate people they deal with. Members estimate that there are hundreds of people working in the network in greater Damascus and that well into the thousands within Syria are contributing money and supplies.
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
W B Afghan market blast kills at least 7 KABUL, Afghanistan — A remote-controlled bomb killed a provincial council member and six other people in a northern province on Monday, Afghan officials said. The bombing comes less than a week before a major summit at which the West is expected to reaffirm plans to wrap up its combat role in Afghanistan. The blast in Faryab province, in Afghanistan’s northwest, came a day after President Hamid Karzai announced that Afghan security forces were preparing to take the lead in safeguarding more areas of the country, in line
with plans for the pullout of most NATO combat troops by the end of 2014.
the northern industrial city of Monterrey. None of the bodies examined so far showed signs of gunshots, Nuevo Leon state security spokesman Jorge Domene told Milenio television.
In Mexico, a struggle to ID headless bodies Palestinian prisoners end hunger strike CADEREYTA, Mexico — Authorities struggled Monday to identify 49 bodies without heads, hands or feet to gain clues into the latest in a series of massacres from an escalating war between Mexico’s two dominant drug cartels, with increasing evidence that innocents are being pulled into the bloodbath along with gang rivals. More than 24 hours after the gruesome discovery, officials had yet to identify any of the mutilated corpses found near
JERUSALEM — Israeli and Palestinian officials announced Monday that more than 1,600 Palestinian prisoners had agreed to end a nearly monthlong hunger strike in exchange for concessions by Israel, including a modification to its practice of detention without charge or trial. The prisoners — all jailed in Israeli military prisons on suspicion or convictions of terror-related activity — agreed to “completely halt terrorist
activity inside Israeli prisons,” Israel’s domestic security agency, the Shin Bet, said in a statement. But it was unclear Monday night whether the deal, which Israeli officials said was mediated by Egypt and Jordan, would end the fasts of the eight detainees who have been on the longest hunger strikes. A lawyer for three prisoners who have been fasting for more than seven weeks said they would continue. Two of those prisoners, Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahleh, have not eaten for 77 days, and human rights organizations say they are near death. The deal came one day before Palestinians are to observe a national day of mourning over Israel’s establishment 64 years ago. — From wire reports
Limbs Continued from A1 The idea of losing the rest of her leg, which was healthy enough, seemed preposterous and frightening. But after two years of discomfort, Kornhauser decided to do it. “All my family said was, ‘You’re going to be sitting there without a leg.’ But they didn’t know what I knew,” she said. “I knew it was going to look like a leg and that people ran marathons on them. I knew that I would have a life.” During a recent interview, the cheerful 63-year-old grandmother pulled up her gray slacks to reveal a prosthetic leg with a fleshlike surface and pedicured toes. Despite its realistic appearance, the leg, with a custom silicone skin and an ankle that can be adjusted for various heel heights, is a marvel of microprocessors, including motion sensors. “I was able to walk again,” she said. “And it looks real.” Approximately 2 million people in the United States are living with amputations, according to the Amputee Coalition, a national advocacy group. But as artificial limbs are infused with increasingly sophisticated technology, many amputees are making a once-unthinkable choice. Instead of doing everything possible to preserve and live with whatever is left of their limbs, some are opting to amputate more extensively to regain something more akin to normal function. Occasionally this choice is made by someone with a missing hand or arm. But more common are amputations below the knee, which permit patients like Kornhauser to take advantage of robotic and fleshlike prosthetics. Bionic, or lifelike, prosthetics with custom skins, motors and microchips that replicate natural human motions are edging older models out of the market. The South African runner Oscar Pistorius, a double amputee, has even been accused of having an unfair advantage over competitors because he runs on J-shaped carbon fiber blades. Amputees “are realizing they can do everything that they did before,” said Amy Palmiero-Winters, 39, a celebrated ultramarathon runner who lost her left leg in a motorcycle accident when she was 24. She now works at A Step Ahead, a Long Island prosthetics clinic. “They look at people today and see the different things that they’re doing and how it’s more out in the open and accepted.” While the loss of a limb remains a medical trauma, many amputees have come to embrace their bionic enhancements. Many “have little desire for the artificial limb to look human,” said Hugh Herr, who heads the biomechatronics research group at the Media Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which is developing wearable robotic devices. “They want it to look interesting and have a machine beauty.”
Regaining active lives One day in the summer of 2003, David Rozelle, an Army captain, lay in a hospital outside Baghdad, his right foot mangled by a land mine. Doctors amputated it just above his ankle. With an artificial foot, Rozelle , who lives near Boulder, Colo., managed to regain part of his old life. He competed in triathlons and returned to duty in Iraq; he is now a major. But two and a half years
Josh Haner / New York Times News Service
Amy Palmiero-Winters, a celebrated ultramarathon runner who lost her left leg in a motorcycle accident, is pictured with her son, Carson, 8, and daughter, Madilynn, 7. She now works at a Long Island prosthetics clinic. “They look at people today and see the different things that they’re doing and how it’s more out in the open and accepted,” she says of artificial limbs.
after his amputation, he told his surgeon that he wanted 9 inches of his leg removed so that he could benefit from a new below-the-knee prosthesis. His doctor was aghast. “The medical community is focused completely on salvaging limbs,” said Rozelle, 39. “There’s actually a disadvantage to having extra limb length, because you can’t fit correctly into prosthetic devices.” He had the operation and now owns several models of sophisticated robotic legs, which he uses for everyday activities and for his favorite sports, like skiing. Many amputees opting for more extensive surgery are athletes like Rozelle hoping to regain active lives. At 21, Tom White was run over by a truck while riding his motorcycle. His left foot was amputated and then reattached, something he said he “begged” his doctors to do. After 19 operations and two years on crutches, he walked with a limp but went on backpacking trips, ran marathons and generally tried to keep in shape and stay happy. But as the years went by, the discomfort grew worse. Arthritis attacked his fused joints, and while there had always been pain when he ran, he simply couldn’t tolerate the new sharp pangs. “The last couple of years, boy, my life started closing in on me because I couldn’t run anymore,” said White, 51, a family physician in Buena Vista, Colo. “It got so that doing something like taking a hike wasn’t fun anymore because it hurt too much.” White had his left leg amputated just below the knee to get a sleek carbon-fiber foot. Three years later, he has started training for races again. “I made the decision to have an elective amputation so that I could have a chance to get back to my life,” he said. “It just dawned on me — the technology is amazing, and I would be better off.” Amputees’ families, who are understandably worried and confused, are rarely as enthusiastic about the drastic procedures, however. For Mi-
chael LaForgia, it took a lot of persuading — and collecting the testimonies of other amputees who had done the same — to get his wife on board. LaForgia, a marathoner and program manager for JPMorgan Chase in Smithtown, N.Y., contracted bacterial meningitis in 2005 and lost the toes of his left foot and the toes, heel and arch of his right foot. Doctors tried to rebuild the right foot with muscle removed from his back, but he couldn’t wear normal shoes, run, bike or continue coaching his children’s baseball and soccer teams. He was constantly hunched over. LaForgia was “relieved and excited” to amputate his right leg a year and a half later to get a high-activity prosthesis. He later got a partial foot prosthetic with a running foot for his left. “I so much wanted to get rid of that foot, because it stood for everything I couldn’t do,” said LaForgia, 46. “I’ve got a $150 pair of Cole Haan shoes I can wear.”
Ever more sophisticated The technology in the newer prosthetics is moving rapidly ahead. Herr, the MIT professor, has founded a startup called iWalk devoted to making next-generation prosthetics. The company’s first product, a bionic foot and ankle, resulted from careful modeling of the muscles, tendons and spinal reflexes used in human walking. The foot can sense the actions of the wearer and the terrain on which the person is walking and adjust accordingly. Its microprocessors help coordinate reflexlike responses to the user’s motions, and
its robotics simulate the action of missing calf muscles and Achilles tendons. According to Herr, an amputee using the foot uses the same amount of energy while walking as someone with biological limbs — a first for a prosthesis. But it is not cheap — about $70,000. While insurers will pay for basic protheses, they generally do not pay for high-end artificial limbs like these. And these devices are likely to become more sophisticated. At Johns Hopkins University, researchers financed by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency have been working to create new prosthetics for soldiers with upper extremity amputations. Until recently, most of them wore only a basic hook. The goal is to build artificial limbs that resemble human arms in dexterity, strength, size and weight — and that veterans one day may control with their brains. The scientists plan to insert a small array of electrodes into the cortex, the brain’s top layer, or into peripheral nerves. The hope is that by capturing these nerve signals and transmitting them to an artificial limb, thought can be turned into motion. Hopkins researchers are even planning to test a limb that might allow amputees to feel pressure, heat and cold. Intelligent artificial limbs like these are still years away, and it will be a long time before the Bionic Man or Woman is a reality. But the improving technology already has provided amputees with one invaluable benefit. “I don’t feel ugly anymore,” White said. “I feel like a normal guy.”
Don’t Replace ... Reface
Center Continued from A1 Eric Spieth, who will run the entrepreneurial center, helped design the CEED’s space. Almost nothing will be permanent in this area, with all furniture mounted on wheels and no partitions between desks. The area is designed to look like a Silicon Valley technology company, Spieth said. There will, for instance, be no barriers between teams
Industrial Continued from A1 In December, the group appealed a Deschutes County strategy to designate more land for large-scale industrial development. At the time, 1000 Friends said the county’s plan, which could be adopted by other local governments, would “open up to 1,900 acres in Central Oregon for large-lot industrial expansion that would require expensive taxpayerfunded road, water and sewer line improvements.” On May 1, Deschutes County asked Oregon’s Land Use Board of Appeals to wait until Dec. 31 to move ahead with the case in order to give the parties time to complete the actions they agreed to in the settlement. The county’s plan, called the regional economic opportunity analysis, was intended to create an inventory of six large industrial lots in cities across Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties. The idea was to expand the supply of land that might attract major companies, said Roger Lee, executive director of Economic Development for Central Oregon, “I think a challenge we have is we can’t get people to fly here or to visit sometimes with just one or two options,” said Lee. The parties reached a settlement on April 30. On May 8, Deschutes County released a list of policies it might adopt as part of the settlement. It appears these would preserve many components of the county’s previous plan, including the identification of six large industrial lots. Deschutes County assistant legal counsel Laurie Craghead said the deal is only a “partial settlement,” and county officials have not determined whether they will adopt the policies later this year. Craghead declined to discuss details of the settlement. Among other things, the settlement would limit the proliferation of such indus-
trial-land plans by creating a pilot program for Central Oregon. That portion of the settlement is moving ahead quickly under the direction of Oregon’s Department of Land Conservation and Development. New state rules that would determine how local cities could add industrial land could be in place by November, said Tom Hogue, economic development specialist with the DLCD. “Our portion (of the settlement) was to actually deliver some rulemaking that implemented the settlement,” he said. Oregon’s Land Conservation and Development Commission, or LCDC, which adopts state planning policies and rules, is not wasting any time getting started. The commission met Friday and set up an advisory committee to draft the rules. That committee will then send the rules to the LCDC for a vote. The new rules will likely allow local cities to absorb a limited number of large industrial lots into their boundaries, based on a regional analysis of the need for this type of land. A city would have to demonstrate it does not already have this specific type of land available for development. Each city currently has to complete its own analysis of the need to add industrial land. “The department thinks cities can do this under state law, but it’s vague, so our contribution to the settlement is to clear that up,” Hogue said, referring to cities using a regional analysis to add industrial land. It’s unclear when, if ever, the pilot program might be expanded to the rest of the state because the settlement does not include that timeline, Hogue said. “Part of the settlement is to narrow this rule-making to just this region,” Hogue said. “We view this as a pilot project, and we want to basically learn from this.” — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
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of students working on different aspects of a project. Accounting people will sit next to marketing staff, he said. But there won’t be any pool tables or other off-beat amenities for which tech companies have become famous, Spieth said. “We want to keep it serious. We’re designing it from the beginning to be incredibly flexible,” he said.
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TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Flights Continued from A1 The airline will use a 737-series aircraft on the route, with about 150 seats aboard each flight. Alaska Airlines runs 640 flights a week out of Portland, but neither it nor any other airline serves this particular route, Lindsey said. “We’re really excited about it,” she said. “We feel like it was one of those markets that needed to be served, and we were the right airline to do it.” Currently, Alaska Airlines runs direct flights to Reagan National from Los Angeles and Seattle, she said. Located three miles from downtown Washington across the Potomac River in northern Virginia, Reagan is much closer than Dulles International Airport, which is more than 25
miles west of the city. Oregon Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden encouraged the Department of Transportation to choose Portland. Monday’s announcement is a win for Oregon businesses and Oregonians who want to travel to the nation’s capitol, Merkley said in a prepared statement. “Getting additional airline slots in the FAA reauthorization bill in February was a huge victory and today all that hard work by the Port of Portland and Alaska Airlines has paid off,” he said. “In today’s global economy, getting quickly across the country is an important tool for any business wanting to locate or expand in Oregon.” Wyden said that the flights will translate into greater economic opportunity for the region. “Right now, the demand for
flights from Oregon to Washington, D.C., far exceeds the current capacity, and with these increased flights between the two destinations will come greater economic growth for Oregon and the Pacific Northwest. Oregon is fast becoming a technology industry hub, and D.C. is the center for technology policy,” he said in a prepared statement. “Connecting these two regions with more direct flights will only serve to improve Oregon’s innovative tech industry while increasing opportunities for more and more residents of the East Coast to take part in Oregon’s excellent recreation industry.” Alana Hughson, president and CEO of the Central Oregon Visitors Association, said the direct flights to Portland also make Central Oregon more attractive to travelers.
“If someone has to change planes twice to get here, it’s a much bigger barrier than if they have to change planes once,” she said. It will also allow Oregon officials to travel more easily to Washington, where they can market the area at the many government meetings in the nation’s capital, she said. Giving a single East Coast market better access to Oregon isn’t going to change the tourism market overnight, but it is a welcome addition, even if travelers don’t immediately take a flight to Central Oregon, she said. “Getting here by driving over the mountains can also be a powerful experience,” she said. The other three cities awarded flights on Monday are San Juan, Puerto Rico; Austin, Texas; and San Francisco. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com
Bedridden postal worker tells of noxious package from Yemen, but USPS is mum By J.J. Barrow and Trevor Aaronson Florida Center for Investigative Reporting
MIAMI — Paz Oquendo, a worker at the U.S. Postal Service’s Orlando, Fla., sorting facility, smelled the noxious odor first. It was Feb. 4, 2011, and the foul stench was coming from one of the large mailbags hanging near the package-conveyor belts. She ran over to Jeffrey Lill, the 44-year-old shift supervisor who was monitoring the sorting from a platform and reported the smell. “I can’t breathe,” Oquendo told Lill. Lill headed toward the center of the sorting floor — an area workers call “the belly” — to investigate the odor. Then he smelled it — a strong chemical stench he couldn’t identify. It was coming from a bag wet with a brown, viscous substance. Lill looked in the wet sack and saw a broken package with tubes and wires sticking out. He remembers reading the return address with surprise: Yemen. Four months earlier, two bombs from Yemen had been sent through FedEx and UPS, and the U.S. Postal Service had alerted everyone to be on the lookout for packages coming from the southern end of the Arabian Peninsula. Fearing the package was a hazard, Lill ordered the 40 postal employees out of the belly and immediately opened the large bay doors to ventilate the facility. Lill then moved the bag to a cart and pushed it outside to the hazardous-materials shed. After the package was out of the building, Lill radioed his manager to notify her of the suspicious spill. She told him the next on-duty supervisor would finish handling the incident. Lill’s throat burned and the gas had given him a headache. He called his mother in Rochester, N.Y. “I want you know what happened at the Post Office,” Janet Vieau, 64, a real estate agent, remembered him telling her. “It might be on the news.” But the incident never made the news. In fact, the Postal Service did not investigate the suspicious package as a security or health threat and did not report it to the Department of Homeland Security, as is the protocol. The package, now missing, has created a mystery — and solving that mystery could be the key to saving Lill’s life. In the weeks after his exposure to the package, Lill fell devastatingly and inexplicably ill. He suffers from extreme fatigue, tremors and liver and neurological problems consistent with toxic exposure. He has become so sick that he cannot work and now must be cared for his by mother in New York. Lill’s doctors say they have no way to treat him without knowing what chemicals were inside the package.
Official denial All the while, the Postal Service has refused to investigate, stating through lawyers that the incident never occurred. But the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting, in partnership with the Investigative Reporting Program at the University of California, Berkeley, uncovered related documents and interviewed two whistleblowers who confirm what happened on Feb. 4, 2011 — showing that the Postal Service has refused
J.J Barrow / Florida Center for Investigative Reporting via Miami Herald
Due to his illness, Jeffrey Lill sleeps up to 16 hours a day in a hospital bed in Rochester, New York. Before he became sick, Lill says he came into contact with suspicious, broken package with a Yemen return address. The package, now missing, has created a mystery — and solving that mystery could be the key to saving Lill’s life.
“I don’t understand why the Post Office won’t admit that it happened and do something to help Jeff.” — Paz Oquendo, who was working at the same sorting facility as Jeffrey Lill and says he came into contact with a noxious package from Yemen
to investigate not only the potential cause for the illness of an employee, but also what could have been a chemical weapon in Florida. “I think they’ve just been protecting themselves,” said George Chuzi, a Washington, D.C., lawyer, who is helping Lill and his family pressure the Postal Service to investigate. “If we’re right, they didn’t do something they were supposed to do.” Today, Lill lives with his mother in Rochester, N.Y. In a bedroom painted blue, with lights off and curtains drawn, Lill sleeps up to 16 hours a day in a hospital bed. “He was so vital, so energetic and so personable,” Vieau, his mother, said. “He would play basketball and the drums.” But now Lill is bedridden. “He can watch a DVD, and that’s about it,” Vieau said. Within two weeks of the Feb. 4, 2011, incident, Lill came down with flu symptoms. He also had insomnia and was disoriented. “It would go away, but each time it came back, it would come back longer,” Lill said, lying in bed with thick curtains blocking out a sunny afternoon in late March — more than a year after the incident. By June 2011, Lill’s symptoms intensified. He had lost 25 pounds from his trim frame. His liver and appendix were inflamed. He wound up in the hospital with a bleeding ulcer and esophagus. The next month, Lill sat in the dark in his home in Lady Lake, Fla., unable to get out of his recliner and spend time with the two teenagers under his care: his own 17-year-old son and the son of a friend under his guardianship. Lill is divorced. In his decade of working for the Postal Service, Lill rarely missed a day on the job. But by August 2011, he began what’s become a permanent medical leave. The next month, Lill’s gallbladder was removed in an attempt to give him relief from his nausea and stomach pain. Days
after the procedure, his symptoms returned. Doctors couldn’t explain why. By the end of September, Lill’s mother realized her son could not take care of himself anymore, and she took him to New York. Vieau now works in a home office next to Lill’s bedroom, constantly listening in case he is stricken with tremors. “I’ll hear things shaking,” she said. “I have to comfort him, to hold him.”
The only answer Lill’s exposure to the suspicious package appears to be the only answer left to his unexplainable health problems. He has seen more than two dozen doctors, including toxicologists and neurologists, and none has been able to diagnose his illness. “Unless we know exactly what Jeff was exposed to, it’s like finding a needle in a haystack,” said Richard Aguirre, one of Lill’s doctors. “If we knew what the toxin is, we could work back and try to find a cure.” But to this day, the Postal Service denies that Lill was exposed to a potentially toxic package from Yemen. In a March 9 letter to Chuzi, Postal Service lawyer Isabel Robison acknowledged that a harmless spill had occurred on Feb. 2, 2011, but said nothing was spilled on Feb. 4, 2011. She wrote: “A review of Postal Service records and multiple inquiries at both the Area and District levels has confirmed — as we previously indicated — that there was no hazardous spill on February 4, 2011 at the Orlando MP Annex.” After her shift at the Postal Service facility in Orlando on an April evening, Paz Oquendo sat on a couch in a hotel room on International Drive. Next to her was co-worker Yolanda Ocasio. At the risk of losing their jobs, Oquendo and Ocasio said the Postal Service is lying and covering up the incident. They were there when Lill removed the noxious package
from Yemen. “I don’t understand why the Post Office won’t admit that it happened and do something to help Jeff,” Oquendo said. In interviews with FCIR, Oquendo and Ocasio confirmed in detail Lill’s recounting of what occurred in Orlando on Feb. 4, 2011. FCIR also obtained a time-stamped email Lill sent to his supervisor, Cynthia Hickman, reporting the exposure to a potentially toxic substance that day. Hickman did not respond to requests for comment. Why, despite paper records and two whistle-blowers’ accounts, the Postal Service refuses to investigate the incident is something of a mystery. But it’s also a national security concern, demonstrating how the Postal Service may not have investigated a potential terrorist attack in Florida. In October 2010, four months before Lill came in contact with the package, authorities intercepted two packages from Yemen with bomb materials hidden inside printer ink cartridges. One was discovered in Britain aboard a UPS cargo plane and the other was found in a FedEx warehouse in Dubai. The Postal Service briefly stopped accepting mail from the country. Yemeni police then arrested a suspect in the case, and deliveries from Yemen to the United States resumed.
A5
GOP kills civil union proposal in Colorado special session By Ivan Moreno and Kristen Wyatt The Associated Press
DENVER — A last-ditch effort by Colorado’s governor to give gay couples in the state rights similar to married couples failed Monday after Republicans rejected the proposal during a special legislative session. Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper had said the special session was needed to address a “fundamental question of fairness and civil rights.” The bill’s demise was expected by Democrats, who have begun using the issue as a rallying cry to topple Republicans in the November elections. Republicans assigned the bill to the House State, Veterans and Military Affairs Committee, which voted 5-4 along party lines to kill the measure. “My family is the same as every one of yours,” said Rep. Mark Ferrandino, the Democrats’ leader in the House and a gay lawmaker who co-sponsored the civil unions bill, moments before it was defeated. Though the ending came as no surprise, the lead-up was emotional. Two Democratic lawmakers choked up before their votes. In the audience, Marq Shafer, 31, put his hand on his partner Cody Shafer’s shoulder and nervously rubbed Cody’s wedding ring. Republican Rep. Don Coram, whose son is gay, cited his reasons for voting against the measure while his wife, Dianna Coram, wiped away tears in the audience. Coram said civil unions are too similar to same-sex marriage, which Colorado voters banned in 2006. He blasted Democrats, accusing them of bringing up the issue to try to gain votes. “The gay community is being used as a political
pawn,” he said. Ferrandino rejected that argument, saying Democrats were pursuing the issue to grant gay families equal rights. He said he was optimistic that civil unions would pass eventually, and it was a matter of when, not if. “I will tell you that ‘when’ keeps getting closer and closer and this will happen soon,” he said. Ferrandino said his party would work this year make sure to “work hard to make sure the public understands what happened, the games that were played.” Republicans hold a 33-32 advantage in the House, but there was enough support for the civil unions bill to pass last week after three different committees gave their approval. The Senate had already passed the measure. Democrats tried to force Republicans who control the calendar to bring up the bill for debate. But it became clear Republicans were filibustering by unnecessarily talking at length about other bills. Republicans then halted work for hours, killing the bill and several others that needed a vote before a key deadline. More than a dozen states allow either gay marriage or civil unions, including several that moved to pass such laws this year.
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A6
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
Questions over what NPR, writer Sedaris call nonfiction By Paul Farhi The Washington Post
Public radio has been good for David Sedaris, and vice versa. In 1992, the then-unknown writer started to turn tales about his quirky upbringing and oddjob work history into the stuff of hilarious, and golden, memoir. Starting with his reading on NPR of a now-beloved story about his experiences as an elf for a Macy’s Santa Claus, Sedaris has grown into one of America’s preeminent humorists, with a string of best-selling story collections. In addition to NPR’s news programs, he is a semi-regular contributor to “This American Life,” a weekly public-radio program that features extensive first-person, nonfiction stories. But in the wake of an episode in March in which a contributor to “This American Life” admitted to fabricating facts and people in his story, Sedaris’ work is undergoing new scrutiny. The immediate question is whether Sedaris’ stories are, strictly speaking, true — an important consideration for journalistic organizations such as NPR and “This American Life.” A secondary consideration is what, if any, kind of disclosure such programs owe their listeners when broadcasting Sedaris’ brand of humor. Then there’s this: Does it matter whether a humorous writer, working on a news or nonfiction program, makes stuff up? Unlike a stand-up comedian or a comic literary stylist such as James Thurber, who engaged in obviously implausible situations, Sedaris’ stories fall into a gray area. They are rooted in real events and populated by presumably real people, with their humor derived from Sedaris’ comic “voice.” These exaggerations and comic interjections are evident to a listener or reader, and Sedaris has attested that they are essentially autobiographical. His best-selling books, such as “Naked” and “Barrel Fever,” have been sold as nonfiction. Except it’s not that simple.
Fact-checking In a lengthy investigative article for New Republic magazine in 2007, writer Alex Heard fact-checked Sedaris’ output and found that he had invented characters and concocted important scenes in some pieces. In one story, for example, Sedaris described working as an orderly in a mental hospital with a co-worker named Clarence. Although Sedaris had once volunteered in the hospital, he told Heard that he hadn’t been an orderly and that Clarence was imaginary. According to Heard, Sedaris also invented parts of a story called “SantaLand Diaries,” about his Christmastime experiences working at Macy’s. The story has become one of NPR’s most requested features and has been replayed on the daily “Morning Edition” program every year around Christmas since 2004. In a note in his most recent book, “When You Are Engulfed in Flames,” Sedaris seemed to concede that not every experience he describes happened. He called his tales “realish.” (Sedaris could not be reached for an interview for this article.) According to host and producer Ira Glass, “This American Life” began discussing Sedaris’ contributions to the program after an embarrassing episode in March, in which it acknowledged that a monologue by writer Mike Daisey contained numerous fabrications. The show “retracted” the program it aired in January, in which Daisey described harsh working conditions in the Chinese factories that make Apple’s iPhone, iPad and other products. Glass told listeners that Daisey had invented scenes, facts and people — which is exactly what Sedaris has said he’s done. While the stories themselves are hardly equals — Daisey’s was a hard-hitting expose about industrial exploitation, Sedaris’ essays are light and personal — they both raise the question of what’s permissible in the context of a nonfiction program.
CAMPAIGN 2012
Obama, Romney scrap over jobs By Ken Thomas The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama tried Monday to tarnish Mitt Romney as a corporate titan who got rich by cutting rather than creating jobs, opening a new effort to undercut the Republican’s claims that his background of business success is just what America needs in a time of deep economic uncertainty. At the center of the Obama campaign effort are a new website, TV ad and online video including interviews with onetime workers at a
Kansas City, Mo., steel mill that Romney’s former private equity firm failed to successfully restructure. Workers lost jobs and health care benefits. Pensions were reduced. “It was like a vampire. They came in and sucked the life out of us,” says steelworker Jack Cobb. Adds John Wiseman: “Bain Capital walked away with a lot of money that they made off this plant. We view Mitt Romney as a job destroyer.” Countering the criticism, Romney’s campaign said the former Massachusetts
governor welcomes an election-season conversation with Obama about jobs. Romney’s campaign has argued that he helped spur tens of thousands of jobs in the public and private sectors and pointed to a net job loss during Obama’s presidency, most of which occurred during the first few months of his administration. Obama has touted the creation of 4.2 million new jobs over the last 26 months as his policies took hold. Both candidates are seeking to pivot to voters’ No. 1 issue, the economy, and away
from the social issues that dominated after the president announced his support for gay marriage last week. Obama steered clear of criticizing Romney during a commencement speech at Barnard College in New York, though he included a passing reference to nearby Wall Street, saying: “Some folks in the financial world have not exactly been model corporate citizens.” He left the more direct skewering to surrogates and dispatched Vice President Joe Biden to Ohio to castigate Romney over his record at Bain.
Andrew Spear / New York Times News Service
E. Gordon Gee, the president of Ohio State University, at his office on campus in Columbus, Ohio, says public colleges and universities need to devise a new business model to pay for the costs of education, beyond sticking students with higher tuition and greater debt.
Colleges begin to confront higher costs and student debt By Andrew Martin New York Times News Service
COLUMBUS, Ohio — In a wood-paneled office lined with books, sports memorabilia and framed posters (including John Belushi in “Animal House”), E. Gordon Gee, the president of Ohio State University, keeps a framed quotation that reads, “If you don’t like change, you’re going to like irrelevance even less.” Gee, who is often identified with a big salary and spendthrift ways, says he has taken the quotation to heart, and he is now trying to persuade Ohio State’s vast bureaucracy, and the broader world of academia, to do the same. At a time of diminished state funding for higher education and uncertain federal dollars, Gee says that public colleges and universities need to devise a new business model to pay for the costs of education, beyond sticking students with higher tuition and greater debt. “The notion that universities can do business the very same way has to stop,” said Gee, who is also the chairman of a commission studying college attainment, including the impact of student debt. College presidents across the country are confronting the same realization, trying to manage their institutions with fewer state dollars without sacrificing quality or all-important academic rankings. Tuition increases had been a relatively easy fix but now — with the balance of student debt topping $1 trillion and an increasing number of borrowers struggling to pay — some administrators acknowledge that they cannot keep putting the financial onus on students and their families. Increasingly, they are looking for other ways to pay for education, stepping up private fundraising, privatizing services, cutting staff, eliminating departments — even saving millions of dollars by standardizing things like expense forms. Colleges can be top-heavy with administrators and woefully inefficient, some critics say, and some have only recently taken a harder look at ways to streamline their operations.
“Schools are very good at adding new things, new programs,” said Sherideen Stoll, vice president for finance and administration at Bowling Green State University in Ohio. “We are not so good at looking at things we have been doing for 20 or 30 years and saying, ‘Should we be offering those academic programs?’” At Bowling Green, 62 percent of graduates have debt that averages $31,515, the highest among Ohio public universities that publish the data. In addition to raising tuition, which has been limited by state-mandated caps, the university has laid off employees, encouraged early retirements, required unpaid furloughs and limited pay increases, Stoll said. The belttightening hasn’t yet reached the point that academic quality has suffered, she said, but Bowling Green may not be able to offer as much in the future. “We’ve done everything and anything to try to operate much more efficiently,” she said. The problems aren’t confined to public colleges. Administrators at some nonprofit private institutions said they too had come to realize they could not keep raising tuition and fees. Families have become more price sensitive since the eco-
nomic collapse and are seeking deeper discounts on the sticker price. “We know the model is not sustainable,” said Lawrence Lesick, vice president for enrollment management at Ohio Northern University. “Schools are going to have to show the value proposition. Those that don’t aren’t going to be around.” Here at Ohio State, where tuition has increased by nearly 60 percent since 2002, there is a gleaming new student union, climbing walls that can accommodate 50 students at a time and $2 billion in construction projects under way. Gee’s compensation package this year, moreover, is worth about $2 million, and he has been called the highest paid public university president by The Chronicle of Higher Education. The Dayton Daily News recently reported that Gee had billed Ohio State for $550,000 in travel in the last two years. The travel expenses prompt-
ed some to question if Gee practices what he preaches. “He’s very capable. He’s a very smart guy, and he’s engaging and all these things,” said Dale Butland, a spokesman for Innovation Ohio, a nonprofit policy research group. But he added, “Students and their parents who are struggling, not just with coming up with the money, but paying off the debt, I think there is a disconnect between what they are being asked to do and what they are seeing the leader of the university doing.” Gee maintains that Ohio State is getting its money’s worth: On his watch, Ohio State has become a more prestigious university, he says, while remaining a relative bargain, even with fewer resources from the state. It now receives just 7 percent of its budget from the state. Ohio State costs about $25,000 a year for in-state residents who live on campus. The average debt for graduates who borrow is $24,480.
Pakistan suggests NATO restart supplies By Sebastian Abbot The Associated Press
ISLAMABAD — Pakistan’s foreign minister suggested Monday that the country should reopen its Afghan border to NATO troop supplies, saying the government has made its point by closing the route for nearly six months in retaliation for U.S. airstrikes that killed 24 Pakistani troops. Reopening the border risks a domestic backlash in Pakistan given Washington’s refusal to apologize for last year’s attack, which it says was an accident. But it could help ensure Pakistan has a role in the future of Afghanistan as NATO prepares to retool its strategy there during a major conference that starts Sunday in Chicago. Pakistan’s presence would benefit the U.S.-led coalition as well, since the country is seen as key to striking a peace deal with the Taliban and their allies in Afghanistan that would allow foreign troops to withdraw without the nation descending into further chaos. The supply line running through Pakistan to landlocked Afghanistan will be key to that withdrawal as NATO pulls out more than a decade’s worth of equipment. It has been critical for shipping in supplies as well, although the U.S. has reduced its reliance on Pakistan in recent years by using a more costly route through Central Asia. Shams Shahwani, a senior official in Pakistan’s Petroleum Tanker Owners Association, said he was contacted Monday by Petroleum Ministry officials who told him the NATO supply route will likely be opened by Wednesday evening. They told him to assemble his tankers in Karachi so they are ready to start transporting petroleum. Pakistani Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar said the government made the right decision to close the border to NATO to send a message to Washington that the attack on its troops in November was unacceptable. “It was important to make a point. Pakistan has made a point and now we can move on,” Khar said at a news conference.
Self Referrals Welcome
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856 NW Bond • Downtown Bend • 541-330-5999 www.havenhomestyle.com
Construction Starts May 18 • Highway Closes June 4-8
COMMUNITYLIFE THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
SPOTLIGHT
www.bendbulletin.com/community
Oregon Encyclopedia Project grows • Online resource seeks Central Oregon topics, writers
Bike committee seeks member The Deschutes County Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee seeks interested candidates to fill one vacancy. BPAC advises Deschutes County officials and local jurisdictions about bicycle and pedestrian transportation. The nine-member committee’s goals include the development of a coordinated system of safe and convenient bikeways and walkways and stimulating public awareness. Members serve three-year terms. Apply by 5 p.m. May 25. Contact: peter .russell@deschutes.org or 541-317-3150. — From staff reports
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TV & Movies, B2 Calendar, B3 Horoscope, B3 Comics, B4-5 Puzzles, B5
By Mac McLean The Bulletin
Bulletin file photo
The Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh and his followers are the subject of one Central Oregon-related entry in the online Oregon Encyclopedia Project.
Bill Lang flashed a picture of Jim Walker up on a screen behind him during a Thursday presentation at Central Oregon Community College’s library and told a half dozen audience members about how the Portlandbased model airplane designer and entrepreneur got his start. “This is the kind of thing that sheds a little light on Oregon,” said Lang, who is a history professor at Portland State University and the executive editor of its Oregon Encyclopedia Project, a website devoted to chronicling significant stories about the state’s past and present. For the past seven years, Lang and the
encyclopedia project’s editorial board have been gathering tales about the people, places and events that make Oregon what it is. They published their first entry in 2007 and will celebrate publishing their 1,000th entry later this month. The group held Thursday’s meeting to get story ideas from Central Oregon’s residents, and see who would be interested in writing them. “What around here do you think is worthy of an encyclopedia entry?” said Kelly Cannon-Miller, who is the Deschutes County Historical Society’s executive director and one of 28 people on the online state encyclopedia’s editorial board. See Oregon / B6
Oregon’s encyclopedia
To learn more about the Oregon Encyclopedia Project, how to submit articles or how you can use its content in the classroom, visit its website at www.oregonencyclopedia.org.
Screenshot
HORSE COUNTRY
YOUR PET
Submitted photo
A survivor, living life to the fullest Say hello to Baylee, a 4-year-old, green-eyed chocolate roan miniature cocker spaniel. When she was 4 months old, Baylee was rescued in Budapest, Hungary. She had bordetella that had turned to pneumonia and was not expected to survive. William and Denise Chadsey, of Redmond, brought her home and did their best to nurse her back to health. She is now living life to the fullest, with the help of inhalers for her breathing. Baylee loves watching Oregon Ducks football with William and barking at bad plays. Her favorite game-day treats are sliced apples and Honey Nut Cheerios. To submit a photo for publication, email a high-resolution image along with your animal’s name, age and species or breed, your name, age, city of residence and contact information, and a few words about what makes your pet special. Send photos to pets@bendbulletin .com, drop them off at 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. in Bend, or mail them to The Bulletin Pets section, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. Contact: 541-3830358.
ADOPT ME
Photos by Joe Kline / The Bulletin
Competitors ride into the Rim Rock Riders Event Center for the Tri-County High School Rodeo event last week. The facility hosts a number of rodeo and equestrian events.
House of horseplay • Central Oregon’s Rim Rock Riders club has 75-year history
Submitted photo
I enjoy chillin’, bird watchin’ Meet Bronwan, a 2½year-old spayed female chocolate point Siamese. She loves lying on the back of a couch and maybe doing a little bird watching. If you would like to visit Bronwan, or any other pet available for adoption at the Humane Society of the Ochocos, contact the shelter at 541-447-7178, or view animals at www.humane societyochocos.com.
By Tom Olsen For The Bulletin
‘H
Competitors wait for their turns in rodeo events during the Tri-County High School Rodeo held in the Rim Rock Riders Event Center last week. The facility includes an outdoor arena, a 2-acre indoor arena with spectator seating and a full-service cafe, attached stock pens and stalls to accommodate more than 200 horses.
orseplay and hoedowns” have been the hallmarks of the Rim Rock Riders club ever since it was formed 75 years ago. RRR moved to its $3 million equestrian center next to Brasada Ranch Resort — midway between Bend and Powell Butte — seven years ago. Brasada calls the club’s facility “one of the finest west of the Mississippi River,” and it has become a regional home to many first-class horse events. The club’s facilities, sporting and social functions are available to an entire house-
hold for dues of $100 a year — $60 for an individual. The club’s founders wanted to make family fun with horses affordable. Two of those founders were Dean Hollinshead and Rube Long, men whose names still echo through High Desert history. They were part of a loose group of locals who loved recreational riding in the 1930s, according to an early club history. Before the rides, Hollinshead made a “buckaroo breakfast” that became so popular the group decided in 1937 to form the club around the rides and the food. For more than 50 years, RRR occupied a site five miles north of Bend on O.B. Riley Road with an open-air arena with limited amenities. Traffic congestion from the club’s events finally forced the move after the turn of the millennium, explained club president Shawna Elsberry. See Arena / B6
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
TV & M
Saying farewell with grace, humor
L M T
FOR TUESDAY, MAY 15
TV SPOTLIGHT
BEND
By Frazier Moore The Associated Press
NEW YORK — There was nothing desperate about this finale. ABC’s “Desperate Housewives� concluded its rocky, racy and macabre eight-season run with a tidy, affectionate sendoff. For those who haven’t yet made their farewell visit to Wisteria Lane, be advised: Plot spoilers from Sunday’s finale await. Suffice it to say, everyone seems destined to live happily ever after. At least, with the exception of Karen McCluskey (Kathryn Joosten), the cranky but lovable senior who was battling cancer. But she dies peacefully at home, the way she wanted, with a favorite Johnny Mathis record serenading her. By this point, she has saved the day for Bree Van de Kamp (Marcia Cross), who was on trial for murder — an accidental homicide that was actually committed by Carlos (Ricardo Antonio Chavira), the husband of Bree’s fellow housewife, Gabrielle (Eva Longoria). Bree was prepared to loyally take the fall for her friends, but, at the last moment, Karen steps in and confesses to the crime. Besides her false confession, Karen voices on the stand a tender summary of life in the “Desperate Housewives� neighborhood: “It’s not just a bunch of houses in the same place. It’s a community — people who care about each other.� The charges are dropped against Bree, who overcomes her fear of commitment and settles down with her cute lawyer, Trip (Scott Bakula), after he assures her that her tarnished past doesn’t bother him: “All those ugly details you’re talking about, they just
Regal Pilot Butte 6 2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend, 541-382-6347
THE ARTIST (PG-13) 4 DELICACY (PG-13) 7 FOOTNOTE (PG) 4:15, 7:15 THE HUNGER GAMES (PG-13) 3:15, 6:15 KID WITH A BIKE (PG-13) 3:45, 6:45 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG-13) 3, 6 ABC via The Associated Press
From left, Felicity Huffman, Eva Longoria, Teri Hatcher and Marcia Cross toasts one another in a scene from ABC’s “Desperate Housewives.�
prove that you’re human,� he says lovingly. Lynette (Felicity Huffman) and Tom (Doug Savant), whose marriage seemed on the rocks, reconcile passionately in the middle of Wisteria Lane in the romantic glow of streetlights. Preparations are afoot for the gala marriage of Renee (Vanessa Williams) and Ben (Charles Mesure), with all the expected hysteria and confusion. For instance, en route to the ceremony in a stretch limo, Renee’s expensive wedding gown is soaked by pregnant Julie seated beside her, whose water inconveniently breaks. But with Gabrielle as an accomplice, Renee steals a replacement gown from a bridal store. Then Julie (Andrea Lauren Bowen), the daughter of Susan (Teri Hatcher), gives birth at the hospital as, in cross-cuts, the wedding reception takes place and Karen breathes her last. Life, nuptials and death: a bittersweet confluence. But Sunday’s two-hour finale (whose second hour was written by series creator Marc Cherry) was a reminder of
why “Desperate Housewives� struck such a chord with its arrival in fall 2004. It burst on the scene as a lighthearted souffle of blackmail, lust, adultery and sisterhood; as TV’s goto address for sexy suburban angst. It hooked America from its first-place premiere airing when, among many twists, its series-long narrator (neighbor Mary Alice Young, portrayed by Brenda Strong) gave a playby-play of her own suicide. Then, as now, at the heart of this throbbing universe are the four titular housewives: overwrought career woman and weary mom Lynette; sexy, spoiled spitfire Gabrielle; goodhearted bubble-head Susan; and wired-too-tight homemaker Bree. All of them have gone through so much, yet managed to stay rooted, as hordes of other characters came and went through the years. (Accelerating things, the time frame skipped forward by five years midway through the series’ eight-season run.) But that’s all over.
THINK LIKE A MAN (PG-13) 3:30, 6:30
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 541-382-6347
21 JUMP STREET (R) 1, 4:20, 7:50, 10:30 THE CABIN IN THE WOODS (R) 1:40, 4:45, 8, 10:25 CHIMPANZEE (G) 10:35 a.m., 1:45, 4:05, 6:20, 9:15 DARK SHADOWS (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 1:10, 2:50, 4, 6:05, 7:25, 9:05, 10:20 DARK SHADOWS IMAX (PG-13) 1:35, 10:15
EDITOR’S NOTES:
MIRROR MIRROR (PG) 12:20, 3:10, 6:30, 9:10 THE PIRATES! BAND OF MISFITS (PG) 2:45, 9 THE PIRATES! BAND OF MISFITS 3-D (PG) 12:10, 6 THE RAVEN (R) 3:50, 10:25 SAFE (R) 1:25, 7:55
McMenamins Old St. Francis School 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562
Madras Cinema 5 1101 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505
Tin Pan Theater 869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271
JIRO DREAMS OF SUSHI (PG) 6, 8
REDMOND Redmond Cinemas
PRINEVILLE Pine Theater
MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 12:30, 3, 3:45, 6:15, 7, 9:25, 10:10
SISTERS
MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS 3-D (PG13) Noon, 12:50, 3:20, 4:30, 6:35, 7:40, 9:45 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS IMAX (PG-13) 10:30 a.m., 4:10, 7:15
MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS 3-D (PG13) 3:30, 6:30 THE LUCKY ONE (PG-13) 4:30, 6:40 THE PIRATES: BANDS OF MISFITS(PG) 5, 7:10 DARK SHADOWS (PG-13) 4:50, 7:20 THE HUNGER GAMES (PG-13) 3:20, 6:30
1535 S.W. Odem Medo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777
THE LUCKY ONE (PG-13) 1:20, 3:55, 7:10, 9:40
THE HUNGER GAMES (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 3:30, 6:45, 9:55
THE FIVE-YEAR ENGAGEMENT (R) 6:30 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG-13) 6:15 UNDEFEATED (PG-13) 6:45
MADRAS
AMERICAN REUNION (R) 9 MAN ON A LEDGE (PG-13) 6 After 7 p.m., shows are 21 and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7 p.m. if accompanied by a legal guardian.
DARK SHADOWS (PG-13) 4:30, 7, 9:30 THE HUNGER GAMES (PG-13) 3:05, 6:10, 9:15 THE LUCKY ONE (PG-13) 4:15, 6:30 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG-13) 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 THE RAVEN (R) 8:45
THE FIVE-YEAR ENGAGEMENT (R) 12:40, 3:40, 6:55, 9:50
• Open-captioned showtimes are bold. • There may be an additional fee for 3-D movies. • IMAX films are $15. • Movie times are subject to change after press time.
214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014
THE FIVE-YEAR ENGAGEMENT (R) 4, 7 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (UPSTAIRS — PG-13) 6 Pine Theater’s upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
Sisters Movie House 720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800
DARK SHADOWS (PG-13) 6:45
Local Service. Local Knowledge. 541-848-4444 1000 SW Disk Dr. • Bend www.highdesertbank.com
for appointments call 541-382-4900
EQUAL HOUSING LENDER
L TV L
TUESDAY PRIME TIME 5/15/12
*In HD, these channels run three hours ahead. / Sports programming may vary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine
ALSO IN HD; ADD 600 TO CHANNEL No.
BROADCAST/CABLE CHANNELS
BD PM SR L ^ KATU KTVZ % % % % KBNZ & KOHD ) ) ) ) KFXO * ` ` ` KOAB _ # _ # ( KGW KTVZDT2 , _ # / OPBPL 175 173
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KATU News News News KEZI 9 News The Simpsons Electric Comp. NewsChannel 8 Meet, Browns Christina Cooks
World News Nightly News Evening News World News The Simpsons Fetch! With Ruff Nightly News Meet, Browns Hey Kids-Cook
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6:30
KATU News at 6 (N) ’ Å NewsChannel 21 at 6 (N) Å Access H. Old Christine KEZI 9 News KEZI 9 News Two/Half Men Two/Half Men This Old House Business Rpt. NewsChannel 8 News King of Queens King of Queens New Tricks Half Life ’ Å
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Jeopardy! ‘G’ Wheel Fortune Jeopardy! ‘G’ Wheel Fortune How I Met 30 Rock ’ ‘14’ Entertainment The Insider ‘PG’ Big Bang Big Bang PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Ă… Live at 7 (N) Inside Edition Seinfeld ‘G’ Seinfeld ’ ‘G’ Shelter Me ’ ‘G’ Ă…
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Cougar Town Cougar Town Dancing With the Stars (N) ‘PG’ (10:01) Private Practice (N) ‘14’ America’s Got Talent Hopefuls perform for the judges. (N) ’ Ă… Fashion Star Finale (N) ‘PG’ NCIS Till Death Do Us Part ‘14’ NCIS: Los Angeles The team pursues a master criminal. (N) ’ ‘14’ Cougar Town Cougar Town Dancing With the Stars (N) ‘PG’ (10:01) Private Practice (N) ‘14’ Glee Props; Nationals The club prepares for nationals. (N) ‘14’ Ă… News TMZ (N) ’ ‘PG’ Martin Clunes: Horsepower ‘PG’ Horse Power Oregon Exper (10:02) Frontline ’ ‘PG’ Ă… America’s Got Talent Hopefuls perform for the judges. (N) ’ Ă… Fashion Star Finale (N) ‘PG’ 90210 (N) ’ ‘14’ Ă… The L.A. Complex (N) ’ ‘14’ Cops ‘PG’ Ă… ’Til Death ‘PG’ Legacy: Austria’s Influence World News Tavis Smiley (N) Charlie Rose (N) ’ Ă…
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KATU News (11:35) Nightline News Jay Leno News Letterman KEZI 9 News (11:35) Nightline Family Guy ‘14’ Family Guy ‘PG’ Moyers & Company ’ ‘G’ Ă… NewsChannel 8 Jay Leno ’Til Death ‘PG’ That ’70s Show PBS NewsHour ’ Ă…
BASIC CABLE CHANNELS
Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars *A&E 130 28 18 32 The First 48 ‘14’ Ă… CSI: Miami Cyber-lebrity Horatio’s life CSI: Miami Inside Out Horatio goes in CSI: Miami Former colleague may still ››› “Death Wishâ€? (1974, Crime Drama) Charles Bronson, Hope Lange. A › “Death Wish IIâ€? (1982, Crime Drama) Charles Bronson, Jill Ireland, Vincent *AMC 102 40 39 is endangered. ’ ‘14’ Ă… search of his son. ’ ‘14’ man turns vigilante after a brutal attack on his family. Ă… Gardenia. Vigilante architect loose in L.A. Ă… be alive. ’ ‘14’ Ă… Call of Wildman Call of Wildman Frozen Planet Spring ‘PG’ Ă… Frozen Planet ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Yellowstone: Battle for Life ’ ‘G’ Ă… Frozen Planet ’ ‘PG’ Ă… *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Gator Boys ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Pregnant in Heels ‘PG’ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Orange County Social (N) Housewives/OC Pregnant in Heels (N) Housewives/OC BRAVO 137 44 (10:15) ››› “Blazing Saddlesâ€? (1974) Cleavon Little. ’ Ă… CMT 190 32 42 53 Extreme Makeover: Home Edition Extreme Makeover: Home Edition Extreme Makeover: Home Edition ›› “National Lampoon’s Vacationâ€? (1983) Chevy Chase. ’ Ă… 60 Minutes on CNBC Renegades 60 Minutes on CNBC (N) Mad Money 60 Minutes on CNBC Renegades 60 Minutes on CNBC Insanity! Vacuum CNBC 51 36 40 52 Crime Inc. Stolen Goods Piers Morgan Tonight (N) Anderson Cooper 360 Ă… Erin Burnett OutFront Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Ă… Erin Burnett OutFront CNN 52 38 35 48 Anderson Cooper 360 (N) Ă… South Park ‘14’ Daily Show Colbert Report Jeff Dunham: Arguing Workaholics South Park ‘MA’ (8:59) Tosh.0 Tosh.0 ‘14’ Tosh.0 ‘14’ Tosh.0 ‘14’ Daily Show Colbert Report COM 135 53 135 47 Always Sunny Dept./Trans. City Edition Talk of the Town Local issues. Redmond City Council Get Outdoors Visions of NW The Yoga Show The Yoga Show Talk of the Town Local issues. COTV 11 Capitol Hill Hearings CSPAN 58 20 12 11 Capitol Hill Hearings Phineas, Ferb Shake It Up! ‘G’ Good-Charlie A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ Austin & Ally ’ Good-Charlie “Phineas and Ferb: The Movieâ€? Phineas, Ferb Jessie ‘G’ Ă… A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ Wizards-Place *DIS 87 43 14 39 Phineas, Ferb Deadliest Catch Weak Links ‘14’ Deadliest Catch The Hook ’ ‘14’ Deadliest Catch ’ ‘14’ Ă… Deadliest Catch Vital Signs ‘14’ The Devil’s Ride (N) ’ ‘14’ Ă… (11:02) Deadliest Catch ‘14’ Ă… *DISC 156 21 16 37 Deadliest Catch Turf War ’ ‘14’ The E! True Hollywood Story ‘14’ Fashion Police ‘14’ E! News (N) Khloe & Lamar Khloe & Lamar Khloe & Lamar Khloe & Lamar Khloe & Lamar Mrs. Eastwood Chelsea Lately E! News *E! 136 25 NFL Live Ă… Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… ESPN 21 23 22 23 SportsCenter 30 for 30 Ă… NFL Live (N) Ă… SportsNation Ă… Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) Ă… NBA Tonight (N) SportsNation Ă… ProFILE: 60 (N) ESPN2 22 24 21 24 30 for 30 Ă… Boxing Bay City Blues Ă… Horse Racing Charismatic Ă… Horse Racing Bay City Blues Ă… MLB Baseball From Sept. 28, 2011. ESPNC 23 25 123 25 Boxing SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. ESPNN 24 63 124 203 SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… ›› “Bring It Onâ€? (2000, Comedy) Kirsten Dunst, Eliza Dushku. › “Leap Yearâ€? (2010) Amy Adams, Matthew Goode, Adam Scott. The 700 Club ‘G’ Ă… FAM 67 29 19 41 (4:30) ›› “Blue Crushâ€? (2002) Kate Bosworth, Matthew Davis. Hannity (N) On Record, Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Ă… Hannity On Record, Greta Van Susteren The Five FNC 54 61 36 50 The O’Reilly Factor (N) Ă… Paula’s Cooking Chopped Yuzu Never Know Cupcake Wars Rock of Ages Cupcake Champions Chopped Make a Splash! ‘G’ Chopped The Big Scoop ‘G’ Chopped Jitters & Giant Eggs *FOOD 177 62 98 44 Best Dishes How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met Two/Half Men Two/Half Men ›› “Death at a Funeralâ€? (2010, Comedy) Keith David. Premiere. ›› “Death at a Funeralâ€? (2010) Keith David, Loretta Devine. FX 131 My First Place My First Place My First Place Hunters Int’l House Hunters Celeb-Home Million Dollar The White Room Challenge ‘G’ House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters World Tour ‘G’ HGTV 176 49 33 43 My First Place Modern Marvels ‘G’ Ă… Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Swamp People Scorched ‘PG’ United Stats of America (N) ‘PG’ (11:01) Ancient Aliens ‘PG’ Ă… *HIST 155 42 41 36 Modern Marvels ‘PG’ Ă… Reba ‘PG’ Ă… Dance Moms ‘PG’ Ă… Dance Moms ‘PG’ Ă… Dance Moms ‘PG’ Ă… Dance Moms ‘PG’ Ă… Dance Moms: Miami (N) ‘PG’ Dance Moms: Miami ‘PG’ Ă… LIFE 138 39 20 31 Reba ‘PG’ Ă… The Rachel Maddow Show (N) The Last Word The Ed Show The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word Hardball With Chris Matthews MSNBC 56 59 128 51 The Ed Show (N) Punk’d ’ ‘PG’ Money Strang. Money Strang. The Substitute The Substitute Ridiculousness Ridiculousness 16 and Pregnant Hope ‘14’ Ă… 16 and Pregnant Sarah (N) ‘14’ 16 and Pregnant Sabrina (N) ‘14’ MTV 192 22 38 57 Punk’d ’ ‘14’ SpongeBob Victorious ‘G’ Victorious ‘G’ iCarly ‘G’ Ă… iCarly ‘G’ Ă… That ’70s Show That ’70s Show George Lopez George Lopez Friends ’ ‘14’ Friends ’ ‘PG’ Yes, Dear ‘PG’ Yes, Dear ‘PG’ NICK 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob Double Life (N) ’ ‘PG’ Double Life Aryan Nation ’ ‘PG’ Solved Blood Money ‘14’ Ă… Dateline on OWN (N) ’ Dateline on OWN (N) ’ Solved Blood Money ‘14’ Ă… OWN 161 103 31 103 Double Life (N) ’ ‘PG’ MLS Soccer Portland Timbers at Houston Dynamo (N) (Live) MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Boston Red Sox From Fenway Park in Boston. Bensinger The Dan Patrick Show ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Timbers in 30 Ways to Die Ways to Die Ways to Die Ways to Die Ways to Die (8:15) 1,000 Ways to Die ’ ‘14’ Ways to Die Ways to Die Repo Games ’ Repo Games ’ Repo Games ’ Repo Games ’ SPIKE 132 31 34 46 Ways to Die Dream Machines Ă… Fact or Faked: Paranormal Files Fact or Faked: Paranormal Files Fact or Faked: Paranormal Files Dream Machines (N) ‘PG’ Ă… Fact or Faked: Paranormal Files SYFY 133 35 133 45 Dream Machines Behind Scenes Joyce Meyer John Hagee Rod Parsley The Passion of The Christ Changed Lives With Ben Haden. Creflo Dollar Praise the Lord Ă… TBN 205 60 130 Friends ’ ‘14’ King of Queens King of Queens Seinfeld ’ ‘G’ Seinfeld ‘PG’ Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) ‘14’ *TBS 16 27 11 28 Friends ’ ‘14’ ››› “Gun Crazyâ€? (1950, Crime Drama) Peggy Cummins, (6:45) ››› “Remember the Nightâ€? (1940) Barbara Stanwyck, Fred MacMur- (8:45) ›› “The Moonlighterâ€? (1953, Western) Barbara (10:15) ›››› “The Ox-Bow Incidentâ€? (1943, Western) “Across the Wide TCM 101 44 101 29 John Dall, Berry Kroeger. ray. An assistant DA takes a shoplifter home for the holidays. Stanwyck, Fred MacMurray. Premiere. Henry Fonda, Dana Andrews. Ă… Missouriâ€? Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Little Couple Little Couple Little Couple Little Couple Little Couple Little Couple Little Couple Little Couple Little Couple Little Couple *TLC 178 34 32 34 Extreme Cou NBA Basketball Los Angeles Clippers at San Antonio Spurs (N) (Live) Ă… Inside the NBA (N) (Live) Ă… Franklin & Bash ‘14’ Ă… Law & Order ‘14’ Ă… (DVS) *TNT 17 26 15 27 (4:00) NBA Basketball Indiana Pacers at Miami Heat Johnny Test ’ Regular Show Regular Show Regular Show Adventure Time Wrld, Gumball Level Up ‘PG’ Adventure Time King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy ‘14’ Family Guy ‘PG’ *TOON 84 Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Mysteries at the Museum ‘PG’ Mysteries at the Museum (N) ‘PG’ Mysteries at the Museum ‘PG’ Off Limits (N) ‘PG’ Ă… *TRAV 179 51 45 42 Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ Bourdain: No Reservations M*A*S*H ‘PG’ (6:32) M*A*S*H (7:05) M*A*S*H (7:43) Home Improvement ’ ‘G’ Home Improve. Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Hap. Divorced Hot, Cleveland TVLND 65 47 29 35 Bonanza The Rescue ‘G’ Ă… Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU CSI: Crime Scene Investigation USA 15 30 23 30 Law & Order: SVU Mob Wives Omerta ’ ‘14’ Ă… Tough Love: New Orleans ’ ‘14’ Tough Love: New Orleans (N) ‘14’ 100 Greatest Songs of the ’90s 100 Greatest Songs of the ’90s Tough Love: New Orleans ’ ‘14’ VH1 191 48 37 54 Basketball Wives ’ ‘14’ PREMIUM CABLE CHANNELS ›› “Johnny Be Goodâ€? 1988, Comedy ’ ‘R’ Ă… ›› “Tango & Cashâ€? 1989 Sylvester Stallone. ‘R’ (9:45) ››› “The Other Guysâ€? 2010 Will Ferrell. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… Army-Darkness ENCR 106 401 306 401 (4:50) ›› “Nowhere to Runâ€? 1993 ’ ‘R’ Ă… › “Jumperâ€? 2008 Hayden Christensen. ‘PG-13’ FXM Presents ›› “Aliens vs. Predator: Requiemâ€? 2007 Steven Pasquale. ‘R’ Ă… › “Jumperâ€? 2008 Hayden Christensen. ‘PG-13’ FXM Presents FMC 104 204 104 120 “Aliens vs. Predator: Requiemâ€? UFC Fight Night UFC: Korean Zombie vs. Poirier From Patriot Center in Fairfax, Virginia. (N) (Live) Ă… UFC: Korean Zombie vs. Poirier UFC: Korean Zombie vs. Poirier UFC Fight Night UFC: Korean Zombie vs. Poirier Ă… FUEL 34 Golf Central Feherty Big Break Atlantis Learning Center Inside PGA GOLF 28 301 27 301 Golf (N) Little House on the Prairie ‘PG’ Little House on the Prairie ‘PG’ Little House on the Prairie ‘PG’ Little House on the Prairie ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ HALL 66 33 175 33 The Waltons The Spirit ‘G’ Ă… Rock and Roll (5:45) ››› “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2â€? 2011, Fantasy Daniel Radcliffe. Harry The Weight of the Nation Part 3: (9:10) The Weight of the Nation Part Battleship: HBO Veep Chung ’ Game of Thrones Jaime meets a HBO 425 501 425 501 Hall of Fame may have to make the ultimate sacrifice. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… Children in Crisis (N) ‘PG’ Ă… 4: Challenges (N) ‘PG’ Ă… First Look ‘PG’ ‘MA’ Ă… relative. ’ ‘MA’ Ă… ››› “The Perfect Stormâ€? 2000, Suspense George Clooney. Premiere. ‘PG-13’ (7:45) ››› “The Perfect Stormâ€? 2000, Suspense George Clooney, Mark Wahlberg. ‘PG-13’ ››› “Open Waterâ€? 2003 Blanchard Ryan. ‘R’ IFC 105 105 (4:30) ›› “Days of Thunderâ€? 1990 Tom Cruise. Upstart (6:20) ››› “Men in Blackâ€? 1997, Action Tommy Lee “The Pool Boysâ€? 2009, Comedy Matthew Lillard, Efren The Girl’s Guide ›› “Stuck on Youâ€? 2003, Comedy Matt Damon, Greg Kinnear. Conjoined MAX 400 508 508 stock-car driver goes to the edge. ‘PG-13’ Jones, Will Smith. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… twins star on a TV show with Cher. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… Ramirez, Tom Arnold. ’ ‘R’ Ă… to Depravity ’ Only for God: Inside Hasidism Amish: Out of Order ‘PG’ Amish: Out of Order (N) ‘PG’ Only for God: Inside Hasidism Amish: Out of Order ‘PG’ Amish: Out of Order ‘PG’ Wild Justice ‘14’ NGC 157 157 Odd Parents Odd Parents Odd Parents Odd Parents Dragonball GT Supah Ninjas SpongeBob SpongeBob Fanboy-Chum Fanboy-Chum Planet Sheen T.U.F.F. Puppy NTOON 89 115 189 115 Dragonball GT Supah Ninjas Ted Nugent Hunt., Country Most Wanted Hunting TV Workin’ Man West. Extremes Hal & Len Truth Hunting Hunt., Country Driven TV Steve’s Outdoor Whitetail Nation Hunter Journal OUTD 37 307 43 307 Driven TV (4:00) “Wombâ€? 2010, Science Fiction ››› “Fair Gameâ€? 2010, Drama Naomi Watts, Sean Penn. Valerie Plame is The Borgias Day of Ashes Alexander The Big C Life Nurse Jackie ’ The Borgias Day of Ashes Alexander The Big C Life Nurse Jackie ’ SHO 500 500 Eva Green. ’ ‘NR’ Ă… revealed as a CIA agent. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… begins a Lenten fast. ’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ Ă… begins a Lenten fast. ’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ Ă… Rights ’ ‘MA’ Rights ’ ‘MA’ Supercars Pimp My Ride Pimp My Ride My Ride Rules My Ride Rules NASCAR Race Hub Supercars Supercars Pimp My Ride Pimp My Ride My Ride Rules My Ride Rules SPEED 35 303 125 303 Supercars (6:32) ›› “View From the Topâ€? 2003 ’ ‘PG-13’ Magic City Suicide Blonde ‘MA’ Magic City ’ ‘MA’ Ă… ›› “Priestâ€? 2011 Paul Bettany. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… Magic City ‘MA’ STARZ 300 408 300 408 (4:40) ›› “The Last Songâ€? 2010 Miley Cyrus. (4:20) ›› “The Final Cutâ€? 2004 Robin ›› “Pumpkinâ€? 2002, Comedy Christina Ricci, Hank Harris, Brenda Blethyn. A ››› “Blue Valentineâ€? 2010, Drama Ryan Gosling. A couple cannot halt the ›› “The Burning Plainâ€? 2008, Drama Charlize Theron. Flashbacks reveal a TMC 525 525 Williams. ’ ‘PG-13’ sorority girl falls in love with a disabled student. ’ ‘R’ downward spiral of their marriage. ’ ‘R’ Ă… fatal affair and its effect on family. ’ ‘R’ Ă… NHL Hockey Los Angeles Kings at Phoenix Coyotes (N) (Live) NHL Live Post Sports Talk Cycling Poker After Dark ‘PG’ Ă… NHL 36 ‘G’ VS. 27 58 30 209 NHL Live (N) (Live) ›› “Beauty Shopâ€? 2005, Comedy Queen Latifah, Alicia Silverstone. ‘PG-13’ Ghost Whisperer ’ ‘14’ Ă… My Fair Wedding *WE 143 41 174 118 ›› “Beauty Shopâ€? 2005, Comedy Queen Latifah, Alicia Silverstone. ‘PG-13’
TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
A & A
Golfer who improves his lie must learn to tell the truth Dear Abby: One of my friends, “Max,� cheats at golf. Otherwise he’s witty, interesting and fun to be around. He moves his ball closer to the hole on the green and “improves� his lie when he thinks no one is looking. I have tried to overlook Max’s transgressions, but others in our golf group talk and joke behind his back. How should I go about stopping the problem without stressing our friendship? — Florida Golfer Dear Golfer: What you have described is considered a terrible breach of golf etiquette. What it shows about Max is a serious lack of ethics. Because you feel close to him, take him aside and tell him privately as a friend that it’s time to knock off the cheating because the others are onto him, and he’s making himself a laughingstock. Dear Abby: I have been part of a book club for almost 20 years. We began as a group of six teachers who wanted to share our friendship and love of reading. Over the years, members have come and gone, but five of the original group remains. We’re now a group of nine. Our dilemma is that many of the women don’t bother to read the monthly selection but still attend the meetings. Granted, the meetings are very social. Everyone brings food to enjoy while we discuss books and anything else going on in our lives. However, the core group finds it annoying when some members don’t even attempt to read. It happens month after month. We have said on many occasions we expect everyone to read. Our discussions are livelier and more interesting when everyone shares her thoughts, but some don’t make the effort or threaten to drop out of the book club. We don’t want anyone to drop out. We are all friends. Are we expecting too much because as teachers we regard
DEAR A B B Y it as a “homework assignment� not being completed? What can we do? I’d like your opinion so I can share it at the book club. — Pennsville, N.J., Reader Dear Reader: If certain members of your book club are no longer doing the required reading and regard the gatherings as social affairs, why not make some of the meetings — say, every other month — devoted solely to discussing the book you are reading, while the rest will be strictly social? There will be less disappointment for the readers, and you can still meet as friends without anyone being inconvenienced. Dear Abby: I have a good friend, “Renee,� who is Canadian and a permanent resident of the United States. We don’t always agree on things, but one thing really bugs me about her. She’s always saying how “nice� Canadians are and how rude Americans are. On a recent trip we took to Canada, she commented about a cashier who was nice to us by saying, “That cashier wouldn’t have been so nice if we were in America.� When I try to point out evidence to the contrary, Renee shrugs it off and calls it an exception to the rule. How should I politely ask her to knock off bashing Americans? — Love It Or Leave It Dear Love It Or Leave It: Do it by “politely� pointing out to Renee that it is rude to make comments that make others uncomfortable, and if Canadians are as “nice� as she says they are — and that includes her — she’ll quit putting down Americans because you find it offensive. — Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Horoscope: Happy Birthday for Tuesday, May 15, 2012 By Jacq u eline Bigar This year you have two different themes running through your life. The first few months, you focus on expanding your horizons and realizing an important goal. In this same time period, you also could meet someone significant to your life history. The second period will start in the summer. You will tend to go within more to process your thoughts. If you are single, you meet people whom you carefully want to check out. If you are attached, the two of you will want more time alone as a couple. ARIES knows how to trigger a reaction from you. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH Much more can be accomplished when you are upbeat. Others tend to work with you, with the exception of a key person who cares a lot about you and vice versa. Strap on your seat belt, as this person enters a period of the grumpies. Tonight: Hang with a friend. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH You have an enormous wealth of information and a well of creativity. Mix these traits together, and you’ll seem unstoppable. You could feel let down in some odd way. Stay nonreactive. Tonight: Do for you. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Handle a personal or domestic matter first. Make sure you do not overspend, especially in an effort to appease someone or appeal to others. Take a few hours to slow down, and you will revitalize yourself. Tonight: Act like a kid again. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You are likely to speak your mind, and you’ll be heard, up to a point. Someone makes an implicit demand that you play his or her game, or else he or she might not “get� your method of communication. Think carefully about this first. You need to decide whether it is worth playing this game. Tonight: Mosey on home. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You recently have been skimming through your life when dealing with various people. Somehow you manage to get your message across and receive their responses, but at what cost? Work on being gentler and more caring to yourself. Tonight: Allow your mind to drift. You can decide whether to
follow it. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Others recently have played a dominant role in your life. You wonder when you need to say “enough.� Perhaps you have been too receptive. A partner needs and wants more of your time. If you said “no� more often to others, you could say “yes� with greater frequency to this person. Tonight: Dinner for two. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Plunge into each task at hand. You might note that someone or something could be pulling you back. Honor that restriction now and for the next few weeks. On some level, you might subconsciously be working through the issue. Tonight: Decide to visit with a favorite person. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHHH Enjoy the people you encounter. Though you might not want to start a new relationship, a proclivity to revamp a current one or to work through a problem emerges. Go with this inclination. You finally are willing to open up to new ideas. Tonight: Let the fun and games begin. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH You move from a place of concern or feeling a bit off to a great sense of self and a source of creativity. A meeting might appear to be going in one direction, but it actually could flip and point to a new path. Plan on flying solo at the present moment. Tonight: Act like it is the weekend. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Sometimes you feel as if you must make the first move, but how many times must you? Clearly this activity brings you some happiness, or the result makes it worthwhile. Be careful with a touchy elder or boss. Tonight: Get some quiet time. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH You might want to indulge someone but feel like you can’t because you will want to go overboard. Know that you can stay within your budget — you just have to be creative. Your intuition points to creating greater security by letting someone know he or she is valued. Tonight: Out and about. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Your magnetism attracts many people and results in odd reactions. Do not be surprised if you suddenly have difficulty relating to a loved one. Let this person know how much you care. Tonight: Your treat. Š 2011 by King Features Syndicate
B3
C C Please email event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event� at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
TODAY STUDENTS SPEAK — A WATERSHED SUMMIT: Local students share their watershed projects in art, science, videography and hands-on restoration; free; 9:30 a.m.2 p.m.; Mt. Bachelor Village Resort Conference Center, 19717 Mount Bachelor Drive, Bend; 541-389-5900 or kyake@ restorethedeschutes.org. “OREGON STATE ARCHIVES RECORDS COLLECTION�: Bend Genealogical Society presents a program by Lane Sawyer; free; 10 a.m.; Rock Arbor Villa, Williamson Hall, 2200 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541317-9553 or www.orgenweb .org/deschutes/bend-gs. ROB WYNIA & THE SOUND: The Floater musician performs ambient alternative music; $7 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; 9 p.m.; Players Bar & Grill, 25 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-389-2558 or www.p44p.biz.
WEDNESDAY THE INDIAN WAR ERA IN EASTERN OREGON: Eric Iseman talks about “Captain Jack and the Modoc War of 1872-73�; free; 2 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-617-4663 or ruthh@ uoregon.edu. “IF THESE HALLS COULD TALK�: A screening of the film about struggles and opportunities for students of color, with a discussion; free; 4-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Campus Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; kroth1@cocc.edu. “SIEGFRIED�: The Metropolitan Opera presents the third opera in Wagner’s “Ring� cycle; $15; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541382-6347 or www.fathom events.com. “SORDID LIVES�: Stage Right Productions presents the black comedy about a woman whose death causes chaos in a Texas town. Q & A with some of the cast after the show; $18 or $16 students and seniors in advance, $20 at the door. Wednesdays only: purchase tickets online for $13 with promo code LOCAL; 8 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. SOCIAL DISTORTION: The California-based punk rockers perform, with The Toadies and
Lindi Ortega; $35; 8 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.randompresents.com.
Oregon Trail Alliance; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-385-8080.
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
AN EVENING WITH PAUL LIEBHARDT: The photographer shares his work and presents his photography book; free; 7-9 p.m.; Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-749-2010. CENTRAL OREGON SYMPHONY CHILDREN’S CONCERT: The Central Oregon Symphony performs a children’s concert under the direction of Michael Gesme; preceded by a hands-on instrument exploration; free; 7 p.m., interactive session 6 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-317-3941, info@cosymphony.com or www.cosymphony.com. COMEDY NIGHT: David Testroet and P.J. McGuire perform; $10; 7:30 p.m., doors open 6 p.m.; The Original Kayo’s Dinner House and Lounge, 415 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-323-2520. HIGH DESERT CHAMBER MUSIC — CROWN CITY STRING QUARTET: String musicians play selections of chamber music; $35, $10 children and students; 7:30 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-306-3988, info@ highdesertchambermusic.com or www.highdesertchambermusic .com. “SORDID LIVES�: Stage Right Productions presents the black comedy about a woman whose death causes chaos in a Texas town. Q & A with some of the cast after the show; $18 or $16 students and seniors in advance, $20 at the door. Wednesdays only: purchase tickets online for $13 with promo code LOCAL; 8 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. 4 PEAKS PRE-FUNK WEEKEND: Featuring a performance by High Beamz; free; 8 p.m.; The Summit Saloon & Stage, 125 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; www.4peaksmusic.com. AN EVENING WITH LINDSEY BUCKINGHAM: The Fleetwood Mac guitarist and songwriter performs; $62 or $96, plus fees; 8 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. LAST BAND STANDING: A battle of the bands competition featuring local acts; free; 8 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; Century Center, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; www .lastbandstanding.net. “PEDAL-DRIVEN�: A screening of the documentary about trail user conflicts; proceeds benefit Central
PLANT SALE: The Redmond Garden Club hosts its annual plant sale of annuals, perennials, shrubs and vegetables; proceeds benefit community projects sponsored by the club; free admission; noon6 p.m.; 2614 S.W. Quartz Ave., Redmond; 541-788-8510 or http:// redmondoregongardenclub.org. VFW DINNER: A dinner of fish and chips; $7; 5 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. UPSTREAM FUNDRAISER: Featuring dinner, live music, a conservation program and a silent auction; proceeds benefit The Upstream Project of the Upper Deschutes Wastershed Council; $45; 6-9 p.m.; The Barn in Sisters, 68467 Three Creeks Road; 541-382-6103, ext. 33 or www .restorethedeschutes.org. BENEFIT CONCERT: Featuring performances by The Substitutes, Selfless Riot, Sagebrush Rock and students in the rock band class; proceeds benefit the class; $6, $10 couples, $20 families; 7-11 p.m.; Culver High School, 710 Fifth St.; 541-546-2251. “MIDNIGHT IN PARIS�: A screening of the PG-13-rated 2011 film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www.jcld.org. “SORDID LIVES�: Stage Right Productions presents the black comedy about a woman whose death causes chaos in a Texas town. Q & A with some of the cast after the show; $18 or $16 students and seniors in advance, $20 at the door. Wednesdays only: purchase tickets online for $13 with promo code LOCAL; 8 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. 4 PEAKS PRE-FUNK WEEKEND: Featuring a performance by Huckle; music giveaway with donation of two cans of nonperishable food; donations accepted; 8 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www.4peaksmusic.com.
SATURDAY PLANT SALE: The Redmond Garden Club hosts its annual plant sale of annuals, perennials, shrubs and vegetables; proceeds benefit community projects sponsored by the club; free admission; 9 a.m.3 p.m.; 2614 S.W. Quartz Ave.,
Redmond; 541-788-8510 or http:// redmondoregongardenclub.org. POLE PEDAL PADDLE: Participants will race through multiple sports from Mt. Bachelor to Bend; the Les Schwab Amphitheater, which marks the end of the race, will host a festival with music and vendor booths; free for spectators; 9:15 a.m. start time on Mt. Bachelor; 10:45 a.m. booths open; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-3880002 or www.mbsef.org. ICEBREAKER POKER RUN: South Central Oregon Outreach and Toy Run hosts a benefit featuring a poker ride open to all street-legal vehicles, followed by games and live music at Wickiup Station; $10 per hand; 10 a.m.; Harvest Depot, 51453 U.S. Highway 97, La Pine; 541-5362644 or www.scootr.org. REDMOND SATURDAY MARKET: Vendors sell arts and crafts; free admission; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Ambiance Art Co-op, 435 Evergreen Ave.; 541-480-7197. “GOTTERDAMMERUNG�: The Metropolitan Opera presents the fourth opera in Wagner’s “Ring� cycle; $15; noon; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-3826347 or www.fathomevents.com. JAPANESE FESTIVAL: Featuring a silent auction, family activities, food and a performance by the Hokule’a Polynesian Dancers; proceeds benefit Japanese earthquake orphans; free; noon-4 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-355-4053 or ami. zepnewski@bend.k12.or.us. PRINEVILLE RESERVOIR STAR PARTY: Professional and amateur astronomers share telescopes with novice stargazers, preceded by a night sky tour; daytime activities include exhibits, activities and presentations; free; 1 p.m., star gazing begins at 10 p.m.; Prineville Reservoir State Park, 19020 S.E. Parkland Drive; 541-923-7551. COOL CATS CASINO NIGHTS: Featuring casino games, a silent auction, food and more; proceeds benefit the Humane Society of Redmond; $25; 6-10 p.m.; Eagle Crest Resort, Conference Center, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-923-0882 or www.redmondhumane.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Jane Kirkpatrick talks about her book “Where Lilacs Still Bloom�; RSVP requested; free; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Books & Music, Sunriver Village Building 25C; 541-593-2525 or sunriverbooks@sunriverbooks.com. TERRY HOLDER: The Washingtonbased Americana musician performs; $10; 7 p.m., doors open 6 p.m.; The Sound Garden, 1279 N.E. Second St., Bend; 541-633-6804 or www.thesoundgardenstudio.com.
P C GENERAL PET LOSS GROUP: Drop-in support group for anyone experiencing or anticipating the loss of a pet; free; 6-7:30 p.m. Tuesdays; Partners in Care, 2075 N.E. Wyatt Court, Bend; Sharon Myers at 541-382-5882.
DOGS BEHAVIORAL TRAINING: Cost by quotation; times by appointment; Wednesdays; Lin’s School for Dogs, 63378 Nels Anderson Road, Suite 7, Bend; Lin Neumann at 541-536-1418 or www.linsschoolfordogs.com. AKC RING-READY COACHING: Cost by quotation; times by appointment; Wednesdays; Lin’s School for Dogs, 63378 Nels Anderson Road, Suite 7, Bend; Lin Neumann at 541-536-1418 or www .linsschoolfordogs.com. PUPPY 101: Puppies ages 8 to 13 weeks may join any week; $85; 6-7 p.m. Thursdays; Dancin’ Woofs, 63027 N.E. Lower Meadow Drive, Suite D, Bend; Mare Shey at 541-312-3766 or www.dancinwoofs.com. PUPPY KINDERGARTEN CLASSES: Ongoing training, behavior and socialization classes for puppies 10 to 16 weeks; $80 for four weeks; 6:15-7:30 p.m. Thursdays; Pawsitive Experience, 65111 High Ridge Drive, Tumalo; Meredith Gage at 541-3188459, trainingdogs123@ bendbroadband.com or www .pawsitiveexperience.com. OBEDIENCE CLASSES: Sixweek, drop-in classes; $99.95; 5 and 6 p.m. Mondays, 6 p.m. Fridays, and 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Saturdays; Petco, 3197 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; Loel Jensen at 541-382-0510. OBEDIENCE FOR AGILITY: Six weeks; $120; 4 p.m. Saturdays; Desert Sage
Agility, 24035 Dodds Road, Bend; Stephanie Morris at 541-633-6774 or www .desertsageagility.com. PUPPY MANNERS CLASS: Social skills for puppies up to 6 months; $110 for seven-week class, cost includes materials; 6-7 p.m. Mondays; preregister; Friends for Life Dog Training, 2121 S.W. Deerhound Ave., Redmond; Dennis Fehling, 541-350-2869 or www .friendsforlifedogtraining.com. GRAB BAG CLASS: Basic manners, nose work, agility, Tellington T Touch, exerball and more; $15 per session; 6-7 p.m. Fridays; preregister; Friends for Life Dog Training, 2121 S.W. Deerhound Ave., Redmond; Dennis Fehling, 541-350-2869 or www .friendsforlifedogtraining.com. PRIVATE TRAINING: For aggression and other serious behavior problems and one-onone training; cost by quotation; times by appointment; Friends for Life Dog Training, 2121 S.W. Deerhound Ave., Redmond; Dennis Fehling, 541-350-2869 or www .friendsforlifedogtraining.com. PRIVATE BEHAVIORAL COUNSELING: Cost by quotation; times by appointment; Dancin’ Woofs, 63027 Lower Meadow Drive, Suite D, Bend; Mare Shey at 541-3123766 or www.dancinwoofs.com. PRIVATE TRAINING: Cost by quotation; times by appointment; Chris Waggoner, 541-633-0446; www.DeschutesRiverDogs.com. NOSE WORK: Catch dogs having fun using their noses; $15 per session; 6-7:30 p.m. Fridays; preregister; Friends for Life Dog Training, 2121 S.W. Deerhound Ave., Redmond; Dennis Fehling at 541-350-2869 or www.friendsforlifedogtraining.com. MUTTS ABOUT YOU: Positive methods for basic training, all age groups; $115 for five weeks; class size limited; call for class hours; The Dog Patch Boutique, info@thedogpatchboutiqueinc.com or 541-678-5640. SOLVE CHALLENGING BEHAVIOR: S.A.N.E. Solutions for challenging
dog behavior, private lessons; cost by quotation; times by appointment; Kathy Cascade, 541-516-8978 or kathy@sanedogtraining.com. TELLINGTON TTOUCH: Learn tools to reduce stress and reactivity, help your dog become more confident and improve social skills; cost by quotation; times by appointment; Kathy Cascade, 541-516-8978 or kathy@sanedogtraining.com. FIX LEASH AGGRESSION: Cost by quotation, times by appointment; Dogs Ltd & Training, 59860 Cheyenne Road, Bend; Linda West at 541-3186396 or www.dogsltdtraining.com. A BETTER-BEHAVED DOG: Individual marker training with positive reinforcement; cost by quotation, times by appointment; Anne Geser at 541-923-5665. PUPPY MANNERS: Social skills, manners, problem solving, basic commands, for puppies 10- to 16 weeks-old; $68 for five weeks; 6:30-7:45 p.m. Tuesdays, starts today; preregister; La Pine Training Center, Diann Hecht, 541-536-2458 or diannshappytails@msn.com or www.oregondoglady.com. CHARM SCHOOL FOR ROWDY DOGS: Training to help exuberant and overly friendly dogs learn to be calm; $135 for six sessions; 2 p.m. Tuesdays, starts May 15; preregister; Dogs Ltd & Training, 59860 Cheyenne Road, Bend; Linda West at 541-3186396 or www.dogsltdtraining.com. GRUMPY DOGS SOCIAL HOUR: Designed for dogs that are “grumpy� or aggressive on leash but are otherwise friendly; $175, six sessions, includes one private session; 6-7 p.m. Tuesdays, starts May 15; preregister; Dogs Ltd & Training, 59860 Cheyenne Road, Bend; Linda West at 541-318-6396 or www.dogsltdtraining.com. OFF LEASH PLAY CLASS: For social dogs or dogs that need more confidence around new dogs; $10 per dog; 7-8 p.m. Thursday; register by Wednesday; La Pine Training Center, Diann Hecht, 541-536-2458 or diannshappytails@msn.com or www.oregondoglady.com.
HORSES ROLLING RANCH IN SISTERS: Open for trail-course practice and shows; $10 per horse; 69516 Hinkle Butte Drive, Sisters; Shari at 541-549-6962. JACKS OR BETTER TRAIL RIDE: A fundraiser for the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Posse, 7.2 mile ride around Pine Ridge; $15/hand or $25 for two; 9 a.m. registration, 9:30 a.m. ride Saturday; Skull Hollow National Grasslands, Culver; John Cox, 541-647-7613. PRACTICE AND PLAY: Obstacle trail; $15 per horse; 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday; preregister; Sky Hawk Ranch, 6287 N.E. 33rd St., Redmond; 541-639-7030, madison@skyhawkranch.biz GAIT CLINIC: Learn how to evaluate and naturally improve gaits of your walking horse; $65; Saturday; Contact Carol Cole for Sisters location, 541-383-4487 or theresa@ junipermeadow.com. BOLENDER’S MOUNTAIN TRAIL CHALLENGE: Second of six in a buckle competition series; $35 class or $120 day; May 27; preregister; Sky Hawk Ranch, 6287 N.E. 33rd St., Redmond; 541-639-7030, madison@skyhawkranch.biz or www.bolenderhorsepark.com. SADDLE UP FOR ST. JUDE TRAIL RIDE: A benefit for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, sponsored by Central Oregon chapter of Oregon Equestrian Trails; donations accepted; registration at 9 a.m. June 2; Sisters Cow Camp, Forest Road 15, three miles west of state Highway 242; contact 541-815-9398 or hrsnarnd@ webformixair.com. JOE LYNEIS TRAIL CLINIC: Covers approach, execution and departure of trail obstacles; $225; June 29July 1; preregister; Sky Hawk Ranch, 6287 N.E. 33rd St., Redmond; 541-639-7030, madison@ skyhawkranch.biz.
B4
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
TUNDRA
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
HEART OF THE CITY
SALLY FORTH
FRAZZ
ROSE IS ROSE
STONE SOUP
LUANN
MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM
DILBERT
DOONESBURY
PICKLES
ADAM
WIZARD OF ID
B.C.
SHOE
GARFIELD
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
PEANUTS
MARY WORTH
TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
BIZARRO
B5
DENNIS THE MENACE
SUDOKU Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.
SOLUTION TO YESTERDAY’S SUDOKU
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB
GET FUZZY
NON SEQUITUR
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five games weekly at www.bendbridge.org.
CANDORVILLE
SAFE HAVENS
LOS ANGELES TIMES DAILY CROSSWORD
SIX CHIX
ZITS
HERMAN
B6
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
Renew your dog’s license — or get one By Marc Morrone Newsday
Now that the nice weather is here, with long daylight hours, pets are going to be out and about and in the public eye. Most jurisdictions have some sort of dog licensing program or registration. Now is the time to check your dog’s registration to see if it is current. This may seem like a small issue in the big scheme of things, but the funds from pet registrations allow communities to provide animal control services and spaying and neutering programs and to collect important data. One year I confess that I did not renew my dogs’ licenses when they were due and, while my wife was in the park with the two of them one evening, an enforcement agent asked her if the dogs’ licenses were current. When he found out that they were not, my wife got a summons and had to go to court. A whole lot of family drama
Pet license info in Deschutes County $27 for unaltered animal (annual fee) $12 for spayed or neutered animal (annual fee) $4 for a replacement tag $4 for a pet ID tag — not a license Source: www.deschutes.org/ Finance/Dog-Licenses.aspx
could have been avoided had I remembered to fill out a form and send it to town hall with a small fee.
Having patience through the puppy years As a child, I had a Labrador, and he was the Q: love of my life — after he hit 2 years old, that is. Up until then, he destroyed our home and drove us nuts. My neighbor has a Lab that just had a litter of puppies, and my kids
are begging for one. With the summer almost here, I find it hard to say no, as I am a teacher and will have the time now to train a puppy. However, at this point in my life, I just cannot go through what my mother had to do with my childhood Lab. Could you offer any suggestions that would make my life easier before I tell everyone “yes” to the puppy? Whole books have been written on this subject, so it is very hard to give you a single answer. Here are my two best bits of advice: Treat the puppy with the same patience and acceptance you would a human child. I am not saying that the dog is like a human, though. Realize that when a puppy makes a mess or destroys something, it is not trying to be bad. You would not yell or scream at a toddler who spilled something or made a mess when your eyes were averted, and a puppy is just the same in this respect. The point here is to show the dog
A:
the same patience and acceptance you would a child. This goes a long way in your opinion of the puppy’s behavior. If the puppy does not have the opportunity to do something wrong, it will never think of it as an option. If the dog takes food off the counter or chews up the couch, then it has gotten rewarded for it and does not understand why you are yelling at it. If the dog does not have the opportunity to eliminate in the house at all, then it will decide for itself that the only option is the area outdoors that you keep bringing it to. Putting away all items forbidden to the puppy or limiting the dog’s access to them prevents all sorts of drama. All these problems can be prevented with the use of training crates and gates and just common sense. If you anticipate “bad” behavior and eliminate the dog’s chance to engage in it, you have solved the problem before it has even begun.
Arena Continued from B1 Jerry Anders, the CEO at Eagle Crest and an RRR member, was instrumental in working out a lease with Brasada on the 29 acres the club occupies now, Elsberry said. Its facilities now include an outdoor arena, a 2-acre indoor arena with spectator seating and a full-service cafe, attached stock pens and stalls to accommodate more than 200 horses; they also include contestants’ showers, heated horse washes and outside trailer spaces with electrical hookups. The club’s list of current activities is a testimonial to the broad scope of those facilities, and includes a lot of Western equine sports and a few riding sports that are not. Western horse events include barrel racing, pole bending, steer daubing, calf and team roping, and occasional trail rides. “Gaming series” events allow participants in the competitive activities to pay modest additional entry fees to vie for monetary “jackpots” and Western trophies such as belt buckles, bridles and saddles awarded at the end of the season, Elsberry added. Dressage, the venerable European “horse ballet,” is one of the newer, non-Western activities added to the club’s activity roster in response to members’ requests, said five-year board member Jon Page. “If our members have an interest in something, we’ll do what we can to get it organized,” he said. Another newer club activity is the women’s mounted drill team, also organized at the members’ request. “The Drill Team has been in existence three or four years,” according to Sharie Forde, a club trustee for more than 20 years. “They’ve
Oregon Continued from B1
The project Supported by the Oregon Council of Teachers of English, the Oregon Historical Society and Portland State University, the Oregon Encyclopedia project’s website — www.oregon encyclopedia.org — contains more than a thousand 250- to 750-word entries telling stories of Oregon life. “We’re designed to give you a basic sense of the subject and tell you where you can go to learn more about it,” Cannon-Miller said, adding that each encyclopedia entry must be easy to read and include a mini-bibliography describing where the author got his or her information. Lang said the editorial board collects entry ideas through its website and determines whether the topic is something that “reflects what the board thinks is representative of Oregon.” The board then decides if it should let the submitter write the entry or assign it to someone else. Once an entry has been completed, three board members review its contents and send any questions or concerns they have back to the author. Writers are paid a small stipend for each entry, Cannon-Miller said, adding that most of them waive the money and “give it back to the cause.” “It’s really a labor of love,” Lang said of the project, which is an all-volunteer effort outside of its 1½ paid positions. He said the editorial board is currently reviewing 1,000 submitted but unpublished entries. It has logged more than 5,000 potential entries that need someone to write them.
The classroom Joe Kline / The Bulletin
Michael Casey leaves the chute during a saddle bronc ride at the Tri-County High School Rodeo held in the Rim Rock Riders Event Center. The rodeo is one of many hosted each year by the Rim Rock Riders, a local equestrian club.
worked really hard and have done really well.” The team placed recently in a statewide competition and this summer will appear in the La Pine and Spray rodeos and at the Deschutes County Fair. The club rents its facilities to other regional horse associations for their events and generates money to help cover operating expenses for the not-for-profit organization, Page said. “The Northwest Reined Cow Horse Association (competition) in July is the club’s biggest event of the year,” Forde said. “People come from all over the Northwest with multi-million-dollar horses. They are running for the big money (here) for seven days.” The NWRCHA competition will be July 16-22. Another regional competitive group — the Cascade Team Penning Association
— holds events at the center three times a year, with the next slated for May 26-27, Forde added. Other major annual events at the RRR facilities include the Tri-County High School Rodeo over the weekend, the Central Oregon Dressage Classic scheduled June 9-10, and later in the year barrel races sanctioned by the Oregon Barrel Racing Association. The public is invited to all events — they are posted on the club’s website, www. rimrockriders.org — and for most there is no charge for admission. RRR is a family-friendly organization, said Forde, and there are often two and even three generations of one family among the 233 members, including Forde’s children and grandchildren. Two club traditions supporting its family values are
the annual selection of a RRR queen and the award of academic scholarships. Nominees for the queen must be accomplished young horsewomen and active in the community. This year’s queen is Courtney Starr, a competitive barrel racer who attends Redmond Proficiency Academy and is active in her church and 4H, according the club’s website. — Reporter: tom.olsen71@gmail.com
Lang can tell the encyclopedia’s most-common users are students just by looking at the project’s recent Google Analytics reports; the website sees its highest hit counts when school is in session, he said, and the length of page views also increase during the school year. One of the reasons behind the increased traffic could have something to do with the project’s lesson plans that teach students in elementary and middle school the skills they need to meet state standards for reading, writing, speech, history and art.
But the increased schoolyear traffic could also be the result of a new program where students at Oregon State University, Portland State University and Portland’s Riverdale High School research topics and submit entries to the project’s editorial board for possible publication. “Our focus has been to get students at these schools involved in the process,” Lang said, adding that depending on the success of this initiative, the board may expand its work to include students at other colleges and high schools in the state. He said each student-submitted research project will be vetted by the encyclopedia project’s editorial board just like any other entry and published on the site if it meets the board’s approval. The project’s board is also working with students from Madras High School who live on the Warm Springs Reservation and students at the Umatilla Indian Reservation’s Nixyaawii Community High School to research entries about the state’s native peoples.
The future Lang hopes he can take the encyclopedia project in two separate directions — one lowtech and one high-tech — as its board continues reviewing submissions and posting them on its website. First, he’d like to select about 1,200 of the encyclopedia’s most-important entries and publish them into a print encyclopedia the board can sell to raise money for its efforts. He sees this effort as coming out in a single print edition that will feature all of the selected entries, or a multivolume set where the content is split up and organized by region or by topic. “It’s just a matter of finding someone to underwrite that,” Lang said, adding that the encyclopedia project’s budget is limited and currently doesn’t have enough money to make the proposed print edition a reality. At the opposite end of the technology spectrum, Lang said, the project’s board is working to make a digital map featuring the locations of each encyclopedia entry on a state map. He hopes to combine this map with a mobile version of the encyclopedia so people can have access to it when they travel across the state. This mobile version would also feature video and audio clips to go along with an entry’s text, he said. “This is a pretty ambitious undertaking,” Lang said. “But there’s nothing that can keep us from doing it.” — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com
NATIONAL ALLIANCE ON MENTAL ILLNESS – CENTRAL OREGON May Meeting
SPECIAL NEEDS TRUSTS When: Tuesday, May 15, 2012 at 7 PM Where: St. Charles Medical Center Bend 1st floor, Room “B” Topic: “Special Needs Trusts & Finances” Guest Speakers: Lisa Bertalan, Attorney & Mark Mintz, F.A. Ms. Bertalan & Mark Mintz will discuss providing through guardianships, conservatorships and outright gifts. All are welcome for this free informative evening! NAMI-CO Family Support Group, 3rd Tues of every month, 5:30 - 7:00 PM, SCMC-Bend See our website www.namicentraloregon.org for other programs
LOCALNEWS
Reader photo, C2 Editorials, C4
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
LOCAL BRIEFING La Pine man accused of abuse A La Pine man was arrested on suspicion of sexually abusing an underaged girl, the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office said. Kendall Jourdan, 64, was arrested last month after a police investigation into a number of allegations. Several other allegations surfaced during the investigation indicating that Jourdan may have committed additional sex-related crimes in La Pine. The Sheriff’s Office is asking that anyone with information about Jourdan and possible criminal activities to contact them at 541388-6655. Jourdan has lived in the La Pine area for about 10 years. Before that, he lived in the Portland area. — Bulletin staff reports
More briefing and News of Record, C2
www.bendbulletin.com/local
BMC, ST. CHARLES BEND
St. Charles leader honored Hospitals coordinating critical care By Markian Hawryluk The Bulletin
Photos by Joe Kline / The Bulletin
Jim Lussier accepts the 2012 Citizen of the Year award at the Bend Chamber of Commerce’s SAGE Awards Dinner on Monday evening at The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center in Bend.
• Bend Chamber of Commerce names Jim Lussier Citizen of the Year By Rachael Rees • The Bulletin
Where to drop off your ballot today There are several locations in Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties where you can drop off your ballot today. Ballots must be deposited in an official election drop box by 8 p.m. to be counted.
DESCHUTES COUNTY Bend • Deschutes Service Center; 1300 N.W. Wall St.; open until 8 p.m. • Drive-by drop site; corner of Wall Street and Lafayette Avenue; 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. • County Road Department; 61150 S.E. 27th St.; open until 8 p.m. • County Clerk’s office; 1300 N.W. Wall St.; 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. La Pine • Drive-by drop site; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; open until 8 p.m. Redmond • Redmond City Hall; 716 S.W. Evergreen Ave.; 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. • Drive-by drop site; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; open until 8 p.m. Sisters • City Hall; 520 E. Cascade Ave.; 8 a.m. - 8 p.m. Sunriver • Drive-by drop site; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Terrebonne • Terrebonne Sheriff Substation; 8154 11th St., Suite 3; 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. to 8 p.m.
JEFFERSON COUNTY All locations are 24-hour drop boxes. Ballots must be deposited by 8 p.m. Culver • City Hall; 200 W. First St. Madras • County Clerk’s Office; 66 S.E. D Street Metolius • City Hall; 636 Jefferson Street Crooked River Ranch • Administration Area Warm Springs • 2112 Wasco Street Crook County locations, C2
C
Obituaries, C5 Weather, C6
J
im Lussier, who helped transform St. Charles from a hospital located in downtown
St. Charles Bend and Bend Memorial Clinic have reached an agreement to better coordinate the availability of the doctors who care for patients in the hospital’s critical care unit. Both organizations employ teams of pulmonologists who are also board certified as critical care specialists. Until recently, the groups had operated independently. BMC pulmonologists cared for BMC patients and a share of unassigned patients, while St. Charles pulmonologists cared for the rest. But that meant a pulmonologist on any given day might see patients in the critical care unit, patients with pulmonary problems admitted to other parts of the hospital, and pulmonary and sleep disorder patients in his or her own clinic. Doctors also alternated with others on their teams to provide nighttime call coverage for emergency cases. “We had two separate teams working like mad, with every other night or every third night on call,� said Dr. Johnathan Brewer, a BMC pulmonologist. “Our patients are best served if we can find a way to work together.� See Hospitals / C6
Bend to a regional medical center, was named 2012 Citizen of the Year on Monday night at the Bend Chamber of Commerce’s annual SAGE Awards Dinner.
“I love Central Oregon and Bend, but mostly I love the people,� said Lussier after receiving
the award. “To me, that award is a way of thanks that I appreciate.� About 300 people dressed for the Western theme — in jeans, cowboy hats and boots — gathered at The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center. They turned out to honor Lussier, along with Webfoot Painting Co., which was named Distinguished Small Business; 10 Barrel Brewing Company, named Distinguished Large Business; and Healthy Beginnings, the Outstanding Organization of the Year. For nearly 40 years, Lussier has been part of the health care community in Central Oregon, and he’s also served as a management consultant for agencies in the region. “He’s done a lot for the community,� said Oran Teater, Citizen of Year for 2011. “He’s helped a lot of nonprofits get organized by donating countless hours.� Lussier, 69, served as the president and CEO of St. Charles Health Systems — which owns and operates St. Charles Bend and St. Charles Redmond — for 15 years, according to The Bulletin’s archives. During Lussier’s leadership, he oversaw the merger of St. Charles with Central Oregon Community Hospital in Redmond and started what was the largest expansion in the medical centers’ history, according to the archives. “His goal is to make the community a better place to live,� Teater said. “We are fortunate here to have the medical community that
Bend diabetic to serve 1 year for fatal crash By Erik Hidle The Bulletin
Courtney Linville, right, of the Bend Chamber of Commerce, photographs Gavin Hepp, from left, and Travis Olrich of Webfoot Painting Co., with Tim Casey, executive director of the chamber of commerce. Hepp and Olrich were awarded the Distinguished Small Business of the Year award at the 2012 SAGE Awards Dinner on Monday.
we have, and much of that can be credited to him.� Lussier, who has called Bend home since 1970, currently serves on the board for Volunteers in Medicine Clinic of the Cascades. He is also the chairman of Research and Development for The Facility Guidelines Institute — a nonprofit organization that helps develop design and construction guidelines
for health care facilities, according to its website. “Like many of our former Citizens of the Year, this individual has a long history of giving back to our city, region and state,� said Teater in prepared remarks, “truly embracing the theme, giving back to Bend is the rent you pay to live here.� See SAGE Awards / C6
A Bend man who caused a fatal 2009 crash after suffering a diabetic episode was sentenced to one year of prison Monday evening as part of a plea agreement. Dodd Ernest Hook, 50, had previously agreed to plead guilty to criminally negligent homicide, a class B felony. By doing so, he avoided the more serious charge of manslaughter, which carries a sentence of more than six years. According to prosecutors, Hook was driving north on U.S. Highway 97 on the afternoon of Nov. 23, 2009, near Bend, when he began driving erratically. He lost control and struck two cars, killing Jeanne Coward, 69, of Bend. Deschutes County Deputy District Attorney Kari Hathorn said at the start of Monday’s sentencing that Hook chose not to manage his diabetes properly. That choice, she said, was the root cause of the crash. “This isn’t a tragic accident,� Hathorn said. “This is criminal behavior.� Hook’s attorney, Jon Springer, argued that Hook’s diabetic condition is so severe that the Deschutes County jail will not be able to cope with his many needs. He urged Judge Stephen Forte to consider an alternative. See Crash / C2
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BEND 2030
Accelerating the vision • Organizers holding events to reaffirm 247 goals for the city By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
After a few years out of the spotlight, Bend 2030 is returning for a second act. Launched in 2005, Bend 2030 was a wideranging “visioning� plan
that produced a long list of projects and goals — nearly 250 in all — for the city’s next 25 years. On May 24, Bend 2030 will hold the first in a series of events to reintroduce Bend 2030 to the public and launch a new
round of workshops to review and improve the list of proposals adopted six years ago. The kickoff, dubbed “Accelerate Bend,� will take place at 7 p.m. at the Tower Theatre. See Bend 2030 / C2
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C2
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
Well shot! READER PHOTOS
LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from C1
RPA geography teacher honored Redmond Proficiency Academy teacher Sara Dean recently won an award from the National Council for Geographic Education. Dean, a geography teacher, was deemed the organization’s distinguished teacher for Oregon in recognition of her ability to make geography lessons relevant and engaging for her students. She will attend the 2012 National Conference on Geographic Education in the fall to accept the award.
Can you work a camera, and capture a great picture? And can you tell us a bit about it? Email your color or black and white photos to readerphotos@bendbulletin.com and we’ll pick the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
New leader for Bend-La Pine The Bend-La Pine School District board of directors appointed Mike Jensen to its board Monday night. Jensen will replace Tom Wilson, of La Pine, who will retire from the board on July 1. The position represents a region including La Pine and Sunriver. The decision was made after a round of interviews with three candidates held Monday.
Missing Bend man found Bend resident David Paul Marks, who was reported missing last week, has been located. Bend police did not supply further details Monday, but thanked the community for its efforts in the investigation. On May 9, Marks’ family contacted police to say they had not heard from him since May 7. They told police that Marks, 44, likes to camp and hunt for rocks in remote areas near Burns and Lakeview. — Bulletin staff reports
BALLOT DROP LOCATIONS Continued from C1
CROOK COUNTY Prineville • County Courthouse; 300 N.E. Third St.; 24-hour drop box; ballots must be deposited by 8 p.m. • County Clerk’s Office; 300 N.E. Third St., Courthouse Room 23; 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. • County Library; 175 N.W. Meadow Lakes Drive; open until 8 p.m. • Crook County Treasurer’s Office; 200 N.E. Second St., Suite 100; open until 8 p.m. Powell Butte • Powell Butte Elementary School; 13650 S.W. State Highway 126; open until 8 p.m. Post • Post General Store; 28550 S.E. Paulina Highway; open until 8 p.m.
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CATCHING A QUICK BREAK During a visit to Lowell, Freeda Endicott, of Redmond, took this photo of a rufous hummingbird. She used a Canon Rebel XTi. “After many shots of trying to catch a photo of him, he landed to take a drink/rest after chasing all the other hummingbirds off,� Endicott wrote. “Very busy little creature.�
Bend 2030 Continued from C1 Marika Smiley, a member of the original Bend 2030 task force and the organizer of this summer’s events, said many of the proposals included in the original Bend 2030 plan have been adopted or are in progress. As a nonprofit with no independent funding or authority, the group’s primary purpose has been mobilizing community support for policy changes and influencing local governments and nonprofits to adjust their goals to be more in line with those of Bend 2030, Smiley said. In many cases, Bend 2030 has endorsed efforts already under development, Smiley said. Bend 2030’s list of successes include the city’s decision to adopt mixeduse zones, the expansion of Bend’s airport, congressional legislation to create the Skyline Forest and Project Connect — a one-day annual event to connect the homeless with various services. Bruce Abernethy, a former member of both the Bend City Council and the Bend Park & Recreation District Board, and current member of the Bend 2030 board, said many of the goals of Bend 2030 are “aspirational.� They won’t happen unless the timing is right and the appropriate governments and other players are on board. The process is a long-term undertaking, he said, and the fact
The Bulletin
“I’m sympathetic to what (Bend 2030 is) doing, and the reason is I don’t think the city itself or other institutions have done a good job of really laying out what the vision of this area is or should be. So I think having a communitybased group like this work on it is a good idea.� — Jim Clinton, member, Bend City Council
the entire 247-item list conceived in 2005 has not been adopted should not be viewed as a setback. “It’s called Bend 2030 for a reason. It’s not called Bend 2015,� Abernethy said. While local governments engage in extensive planning efforts of their own, said Abernethy, they tend to be too narrowly focused to encourage extensive public participation. “I think there’s value in allowing individuals to come in and weigh in completely independent of elected officials and representatives,� he said. Jim Clinton, who has served on the Bend City Council since 2004, said he thinks an effort like Bend 2030 can address long-term issues in a way the city
has not. The city and other local governments tend to be overburdened with highly detailed policy decisions, he said, giving them little time to consider the larger picture. “I’m sympathetic to what they’re doing, and the reason is I don’t think the city itself or other institutions have done a good job of really laying out what the vision of this area is or should be,� Clinton said. “So I think having a community-based group like this work on it is a good idea.� Clinton referenced the street improvements proposal brought to the city by residents and business owners along Galveston Avenue as an example of the kind of bottom-up planning he’d like to see Bend 2030 pursue. Clinton and Abernethy both said they’d like to see this summer’s process create a pared-down, more specific list of proposals. Much of what Bend 2030 has proposed is “too amorphous,� Clinton said, and thus difficult for the city or other entities to act on. “When you say ‘We want to have a healthy population,’ or ‘We want to have a clean environment,’ well, who doesn’t?� Clinton said. The Accelerate Bend event is free and open to the public, and preregistration is strongly encouraged. Visit www.bend2030.org to register, or email accelerate bend@gmail.com for more information. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com
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Call a reporter: Bend ................541-633-2160 Redmond ........ 541-617-7837 Sisters............. 541-617-7837 La Pine ........... 541-383-0348 Sunriver ......... 541-383-0348 Deschutes ...... 541-617-7829 Crook ............. 541-504-2336 Jefferson ....... 541-504-2336 Salem ..............541-419-8074 D.C. .................202-662-7456 Education .......541-633-2161 Public Lands ....541-617-7812 Public Safety ....541-383-0387 Projects .......... 541-617-7831
Submissions: • Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: Details: The Milestones page publishes Sunday in Community Life. Contact: 541-383-0358
POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
area of Northwest 10th Street. Burglary — A burglary and theft were reported at 12:08 p.m. May 13, in the area of Southeast Second Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 3:35 p.m. May 13, in the area of Southeast Second Street.
Prineville Police Department
Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office
Theft — A theft was reported at 1:52 p.m. May 11, in the area of Southeast Lynn Boulevard. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:56 p.m. May 11, in the area of Northeast Seventh Street. DUII — Josh Tankersley, 28, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:53 p.m. May 12, in the area of Northwest Madras Highway. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered and items stolen at 10:13 a.m. May 13, in the
Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported damaged and entered May 7, in the 9500 block of Northeast Old Church Road in Madras. Theft — A theft was reported at 11:11 a.m. May 8, in the 300 block of Southwest Dover Lane in Metolius. Theft — A theft was reported May 8, in the 7800 block of Southwest Shad Road in Terrebonne. Burglary — A burglary, theft and criminal mischief were
reported at 10:23 p.m. May 8, in the 1400 block of Southeast Alice Street in Madras. Theft — A generator and other items were reported stolen May 10, in the 12600 block of Southwest Airfield Lane in Culver. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported May 10, in the area of Northwest Boise Drive and Northwest Gumwood Lane in Madras. DUII — Terry Dale Ayres, 61, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants May 10, in the area of Northwest Boise Drive and Northwest Gumwood Lane in Madras. Oregon State Police
DUII — Michael Dallasta, 48, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:44 p.m. May 11, in the area of state Highway 58 near milepost 83.
Hook Continued from C1 Forte disagreed, saying the jail would rise to the challenge of monitoring Hook’s medical needs. Forte told Hook his actions rose to the level of a crime because he put others at risk by not properly monitoring his condition. “There are millions and millions of people who suffer from diabetes who don’t put ... (other) people at risk,� Forte said. “It’s your responsibility to not put the community at risk if you have a medical condition.� Coward’s daughter, Susie Lambert, read a prepared statement for the family.
After describing the pain of losing her mother, she said of Hook, “I want to hear him say ‘Sorry.’� A distraught Hook spoke twice during the hearing. He struggled to put full sentences together, but was able to deliver an apology. “Just wanted to apologize for their loss,� Hook said before he was sentenced. “I am deeply sorry for that. I’m just really sorry.� Hook must report to the Deschutes County jail on May 23. He will be placed on three years’ probation upon his release. The court also revoked his driving privileges for life. — Reporter: 541-617-7837, ehidle@bendbulletin.com
P O For The Bulletin’s full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials.
CONGRESS U.S. Senate
Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore.: 107 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.
223 Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 107 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-330-9142 U.S. House of Representatives
Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River 2182 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov/
TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
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O N Lane fire prevention program facing cuts The Associated Press EUGENE — A victim of the impending cutoff of federal subsidies to Oregon timber counties could be aid for rural Lane County residents to protect their homes against forest fires. The Firewise program pays for removing brush and trees to create what firefighters call a “defensible space” around a house and for replacing roofs made of wood shakes with fireproof material, the Eugene Register-Guard reported Monday. It also pays for a staff to provide advice to homeowners. The county is spending $1.2 million on the program this year. Officials say the tentative plan for the next budget, beginning in July, calls for phasing out the program by spending $400,000 leftover from previous years. The phase-out is part of the reason for cutting four jobs in the land management department, Senior Planner Kier Miller said. The timber payments require some money to be used to benefit federal forests. Lane County has been using that money for the Firewise program on the theory that if houses on nearby private land are well-protected, firefighters can focus on containing blazes on federal land. Congress is considering an extension of the timber county payments. It’s not clear whether that will succeed or how much money would be available. County commissioners have been preparing budgets with sharp budget reductions. Miller said the most common work paid for by the program is fuels reduction and landscaping. “It’s cutting back brush and trees, taking out junipers, flashy fuels,” he said. “Next after that is trying to push folks to replace wood shake roofs.” The program theoretically can provide up to $15,000 toward work on a single property, he said. “But nobody’s ever really come close to that,” he said. The program helps people regardless of their income or ability to pay for the work themselves. In the 2010-11 budget year, the county provided $408,000 in aid to 114 homeowners, or $3,580 per home. It spent $1.1 million that year, including nearly $500,000 on salaries and benefits for four county employees, as well as accounting and information services overhead costs.
2 petitions under way to help build casino near Portland The Oregonian Backers of a proposed casino at the old greyhound track in Wood Village are collecting signatures at a fast rate and look like they have a good chance of making the November ballot. Matt Rossman and Bruce Studer, the Lake Oswego businessmen who have pursued the casino project for years, recently began collecting signatures on their latest two petitions — one that amends the constitution to allow a private casino and another that lays out the legal parameters for their project. By the end of April, they reported that their paid canvassers had collected more than 112,000 signatures for the constitutional measure and nearly 105,000 for the statutory measure.
EAGLE POINT STUDENTS RETURN TO CLASS
AG candidates trade last-minute political barbs By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press
Jamie Lusch / The Mail Tribune (Medford)
Spanish teacher Sarah Sievert, left, mans the picket line with other teachers as students arrive at Eagle Point High School in Eagle Point on Monday. With employees striking, the school district resumed classes Monday, with substitute teachers crossing picket lines. The district said 55 union members had returned to work. About 2,250 students were assigned to attend classes in the morning and 1,369 attended, according to the school district. It said buses ran into problems: one break-
down, a late arrival and a street’s worth of students missed. The strike began May 8, and classes were canceled last week. Bargaining is expected to resume today. Class sizes and health insurance are at issue. The Medford-area district has 328 employees, including 186 teachers, and about 4,100 students. The district says it will focus on core academics and provide meals, transportation and special education during the strike. Athletics and graduation remain on schedule.
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OSP: Stop nets 60 pounds of pot LAKEVIEW — Oregon State Police say it was a simple stop for a traffic violation — but it netted more than 60 pounds of marijuana valued at $150,000. Sgt. Steve Yates says a trooper stopped a rented white car with Nevada license plates as it traveled southbound on Highway 395 near Lakeview, in south-central Oregon. Further investigation found the pot in the trunk. Arrested last Friday for investigation of unlawful possession and distribution of a controlled substance was 27-year-old Brandon Ace Colby, of Veneta.
Portland dog saved from sinkhole PORTLAND — An elderly Portland man called firefighters for help when his dog disappeared in a sinkhole in his backyard.
Portland Fire and Rescue says firefighters found the dog Sunday at the bottom of a 6-foot hole. They carefully widened the hole until the dog could be lifted out and reunited with its owner. The hole may have been an old cistern that suddenly gave way.
Potato truck crash closes I-5 lane GRANTS PASS — A collision involving two trucks sent spuds spilling across Interstate 5 in southern Oregon, closing one lane of traffic for about an hour. The Grants Pass Daily Courier reported that much of a trailer full of potatoes spilled Monday morning. A front-end loader was used to clear the freeway. Truck driver Jose Gonzalez, of Hanford, Calif., tells the newspaper he was headed north in the slow lane when a second truck collided with the rear of his trailer. No injuries were reported.
Neighbors recall days leading up to woman’s suspicious asphyxiation By Damian Mann The Mail Tribune (Medford)
A 31-year-old woman died under suspicious circumstances in the 2300 block of Table Rock Road, police investigators determined after searching her apartment Friday and Saturday. Maria Victoria McDonald was found dead from asphyxiation, but investigators haven’t determined the manner of her death. Medford police detectives and the Jackson County Medical Examiner’s Office responded to the scene after 6 p.m. Friday. An autopsy was performed Saturday. “It’s horrible that she got murdered,” said Benjamin Samuel, a 51-year-old neighbor. “She was always laughing. She was always outgoing.” He said he would often talk to McDonald while the two were smoking cigarettes outside their apartments. Samuel thought McDonald’s body had been in the apartment for days before it had been removed. “I could smell the death,” he said. Samuel and other neighbors said they’d heard McDonald was asphyxiated with a T-shirt, though that wasn’t confirmed by investigators. “I just want to find out who did it,” Samuel said. Karma Nitowlski, a 29year-old neighbor, said the
situation has been troubling, particularly after a stranger came to her apartment at 3 a.m. Saturday night. “Someone was banging on our door screaming for help,” she said. Nitowlski said she didn’t want to answer the door on Saturday because she was fearful. She described McDonald as “too kind,” always ready to help people. Nitowlsi said McDonald had lots of visitors to her apartment but was getting ready to move out so she could be closer to her children. Neighbors said McDonald had four children — three girls and a boy. “It’s sad. She was a nice lady,” said Douglas Chapman, a 31-year-old neighbor. Chapman, who expressed concern about continuing to live in the apartment complex, said he’d heard yelling from McDonald’s apartment a couple of nights before the discovery of her body. However, he said he didn’t hear any altercation or unusual noises before the time police came on the scene. “You would think you would hear somebody screaming,” he said. Neighbors said they saw a man and a woman, who discovered the body and then called police, go to the apartment. The man apparently was taken into custody because he had warrants for his arrest, neighbors said.
Suit accuses blogger of defamation BEAVERTON — A former member of the Beaverton church who started an online blog is being sued by the pastor. Julie Anne Smith says he Beaverton Grace Bible Church Survivors blog is a place for former members and others to share their opinions and experiences. The lawsuit filed in March by Pastor Charles O’Neal claims words including “creepy” and “control tactics” amount to defamation.
Data center trouble downs state sites SALEM — Some State of Oregon websites were down for much of Monday. Department of Administrative Services spokeswoman Amy Velez says the outage was related to trouble at the Texas data center that stores their content. Websites were functioning by mid-afternoon. — From wire reports
Rebecca Nonweiler, MD, Board Certified
(541) 318-7311
www.northwestmedispa.com
SALEM — A month ago, Oregon attorney general candidate Dwight Holton was taking heat for campaign contributions from out of state. Now, he’s the one giving it. Holton says his rival, Ellen Rosenblum, is wrong to say she’ll make marijuana enforcement a “low priority” after taking money from pro-marijuana interests. His criticism of Oregon’s medical marijuana law has emerged as a surprising issue in the Democratic primary, and one pro-pot group has pumped at least $140,000 into Rosenblum’s campaign. Other marijuana groups have spent thousands more on independent efforts like radio ads not tied to Rosenblum’s official campaign. The candidates for attorney general and other races are making a final push to rally supporters and sway undecided voters as the clock ticks closer to today’s 8 p.m. deadline for ballots to be returned. Holton has called Oregon’s medical marijuana law a “train wreck,” saying it provides cover to criminals who want to grow weed for the black market. Rosenblum also has said the law needs work but said she won’t devote many resources to marijuana cases. A campaign arm of the New York-based Drug Policy Alliance has given Rosenblum $70,000, state campaign finance records indicate. She got another $70,000 from John Sperling, chairman of Apollo Group Inc., the parent company of University of Phoenix who has financed pro-medical
marijuana causes. The Sperling contribution appeared in campaign finance records as a second check from Drug Policy Alliance, but a campaign officials said that was a clerical error. The two contributions are about 22 percent of Rosenblum’s total cash haul. “I don’t think you should go to any special industry group ... and promise to make the law that regulates them a low priority,” Holton said Saturday. “As a person who’s been in law enforcement for 15 years, I just find it really remarkable.” He also wants Rosenblum, a retired appeals court judge, to disclose her last-minute campaign donors immediately. He says voters should know if she’s received any more money from pro-marijuana interests. Cynara Lilly, a Rosenblum spokeswoman, said the campaign has followed the law, which requires candidates to disclose contributions within seven days of receiving them. “That’s sort of political game-playing to make those kinds of claims, and I would expect nothing less of Dwight Holton in his campaign,” she said. Until Rosenblum’s recent influx of money from drug policy groups, Holton had a significant cash advantage, and Rosenblum criticized his fundraising from donors living outside Oregon. Holton, the son of a former Virginia governor who worked in President Bill Clinton’s administration, has strong political connections. He has raised about half his money from outside Oregon.
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
E Police should ditch officer volunteer incentive program
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end’s police chief wants to tighten up the requirements for volunteering by unionized officers who participate in an incentive program.
That’s good, but we’d go a step further: Let’s dump the program altogether. The incentive program involves more than volunteering. It can reward a patrolman for taking a college class, passing a fitness exam or meeting training goals, among others. Add in some volunteering and the cop can increase his pay by a much as 14 percent. It costs the city $575,000 each year, which — if equally distributed — would average out to a bonus of about $7,800 each for the 74 eligible employees. That volunteering can range from wielding a hammer for Habitat for Humanity to helping feed the hungry for Bend’s Community Center to coaching the officer’s own kid’s soccer team. Chief Jeff Sale wants to limit the program so officers don’t get rewarded for doing something they would have done anyway. “The idea of the program is very good,� Sale told The Bulletin, but “it’s just that it’s been around for a long time, and it’s morphed over time.� To that end, he’s formed a committee to evaluate officers’ plans, letting them know up front if they would be approved. Sale wants volunteer efforts to be focused on public safety, and to make officers more
It’s not clear why officers should be rewarded financially for volunteering in the community. In fact, that conflicts with the very meaning of the word “volunteer.� visibly present in the community by doing their volunteering in uniform. While we think tightening up the requirements is a smart move, it’s not clear why officers should be rewarded financially for volunteering in the community. In fact, that conflicts with the very meaning of the word “volunteer.� If having an officer in uniform at a public gathering serves the department — and we agree it could — the department can target that expenditure by choosing the best instances and assigning an officer to be there on the clock. If the department needs an officer to have a particular kind of knowledge, it can pay for training and education. The total cost would surely be lower, and the department would get what it needs, which might not always be the same as what an officer wants.
Vote in person today
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lthough Oregon has been a vote-by-mail state since 1998, it’s now too late to depend on the post office to deliver your ballot for today’s primary election. To be counted, your ballot must be delivered to one of the many drop boxes by 8 tonight. If you haven’t noticed the signs, you can find the nearest location at the Oregon Secretary of
The Bulletin endorsements FEDERAL • President, Republican primary: Mitt Romney • Representative District 2, Democratic primary: Joyce Segers
STATE • Secretary of State, Democratic primary: Kate Brown • Attorney General, Democratic primary: Ellen Rosenblum • Court of Appeals Judge, nonpartisan: Tim Volpert • Supreme Court Justice, nonpartisan: Timothy Sercombe • Senator District 28, Republican primary: Doug Whitsett • Senator District 27, Republican primary: Tim Knopp
State’s locator site (www.sos.state .or.us/dropbox/#). Below are The Bulletin’s endorsements for contested races. Additional information is available from the League of Women Voters (www.vote411.org), the Oregon Bar Association (www.osbar.org), or the Oregon Secretary of State (www.sos.state.or.us).
CROOK COUNTY • Judge, Republican primary: Craig Brookhart • Commissioner, Republican primary: Ken Fahlgren
DESCHUTES COUNTY • Circuit Court Judge, nonpartisan: Thomas Spear • Commissioner, Position 2, Republican primary: Tom Greene • Commissioner, Position 2, Democratic primary: Alan Unger (Dallas Brown’s name appears on the ballot, but he has withdrawn.) • 911 measure creates new district with permanent tax rate: Yes
JEFFERSON COUNTY • School bond provides funds to build a school in Warm Springs and make extensive enhancements to existing schools: Yes
My Nickel’s Worth Telfer cares A vote for Sen. Chris Telfer is an easy yes. She represents accountability and collaboration in state government, particularly during a time when confidence in our legislative process is at an all-time low. Telfer gets it ‌ recognizing change needs consensus, not defiance. My own experience in reaching out to my state senator has been a thoughtful and educational exchange. My husband and I are relatively new residents to Oregon. Telfer helped us understand the complexities of Measure 50 as it relates to our property taxes and best next steps to exhaust our options. Telfer cares, so vote yes for Chris Telfer. Noel Lucky Bend
Be more respectful of others’ opinions Bullying is a big problem in our schools and with our young people. Where do they learn bullying? From our politicians, from adults. Adults need to be respectful of each other. Your editorial cartoons are not funny but disrespectful to everyone. The Eastmont Community School just gave out awards for kindness. What schools teach kindness? What adults practice kindness? In our society today, in our present democratic society, in our election process today — the most
nasty people are the winners, not the most positive. Why cannot our politicians get together and solve our problems and stop wasting time being nasty? It takes a lot of intestinal fortitude to run for public office today. A lot of very intelligent people do not even try because of bullying at an adult level. Let us try to be more respectful of others’ opinions. Vivian Bristol Bend
Questions answered on landfill gas project I am writing regarding the proposed renewable energy project at Knott Landfill. As a concerned citizen, I took the liberty of calling Timm Schimke, Deschutes County’s director of solid waste, to ask him questions about the project. Schimke took the time to explain to me how the project would work and addressed my concerns about any adverse impacts to the environment. I can also say that I was initially concerned about the health and safety aspects of the project. He assured me that, if anything, the management of the landfill gas — as proposed — would make the neighborhood safer. It was clear to me that Schimke had spent a great deal of time and effort investigating this opportunity. I have to wonder why the county is spending so much time and money trying to placate one disgruntled neighbor who will never be satisfied despite every effort to address his concerns.
If the landfill gas that we are now burning and that is polluting our atmosphere can be safely collected and sold, why wouldn’t we do that? Am I missing something? Katherine A. Macready Bend
Why pay for public relations? We are spending an estimated $280 million on infrastructure projects here in Bend. Wake up, City Council, we are in a recession. We already pay our communications manager, Justin Finestone, $140,000 per year including benefits. Why are we paying another $48,000 or more to a public relations firm to sell us on an already done deal? Is Bend hiring the right management teams? Listen up, City Council, an election is on its way. We are all tired of paying for outside expertise when we should have hired it in the first place to manage our great city, Bend. Alice Stephens Bend
Why not cover Merkley? Sen. Jeff Merkley just had a town hall meeting in Bend, as well as several other locations throughout Central Oregon, and The Bulletin does not cover any of it. How do you justify this? Could it be because the senator is a Democrat? Has this paper given up even the appearance of objectivity? Mark Dean Camp Sherman
Letters policy
In My View policy
How to submit
We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250 words and include the writer’s signature, phone number and address for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhere and those appropriate for other sections of The Bulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece every 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550 and 650 words, signed and include the writer’s phone number and address for verification. We edit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating with national columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece every 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel’s Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Write: My Nickel’s Worth / In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804 Email: bulletin@bendbulletin.com
‘Obamacare’ will create overburdened health care system By Glenn Petry read with interest the April 18 letter by Loretta Slepikas, who lamented the fact that her doctor dropped all Medicare patients. My response is, “You ain’t seen nothing yet.� “Obamacare,� if not thrown out by the Supreme Court, will make current access to medical providers look like a “Sunday picnic.� Under “Obamacare,� medical care will also become much more expensive, especially for those on Medicare and Medicaid. There are at least four reasons for this gloomy outlook. “Obamacare� will add 33 million people with insurance to the system. People with insurance use a lot more medical services. Couple that with rising obesity — a third of U.S. adults; an aging population on Medicare — which
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will double in the next 30 years; and increasing disabilities — all of which require more medical expenditures; and you have the ingredients for an overwhelmed medical system. When this unprecedented demand occurs, the patients represented by the lowest payers, like Medicare, will be jettisoned from the system. Unless the Democrats want to become a tiny minority party, they will agree to huge hikes in provider pay to regain access. This capitulation will ignite medical inflation and will cost taxpayers dearly. Insurance companies are basically cost-plus providers with limited incentives to control costs. In fact, insurance companies make greater profits when prices rise. The only way to keep costs down is to have a single-payer government system, which itself has many
IN MY VIEW drawbacks. Our large private medical system is the main reason that nearly all medical procedures in this country are much more expensive than in all other countries, yet the quality as measured by many standards — such as child death rates — isn’t very high. People, here aren’t sicker or go to the doctors more; it is simply that we charge more. I do feel sorry for people without insurance, since medical providers usually charge their highest rates to people without insurance, and unpaid medical bills are a significant cause of bankruptcies. In any case, if one wanted to pass a comprehensive medical plan, it should have been bipartisan. On my blog (http://financejock.com/blog/
?p=22), I have outlined 29 changes in “Obamacare� that would have dramatically reduced the cost of it if the Republicans had supported it. Unfortunately, the money in politics eliminates the possibility that any optimal cost/benefit plan will ever be enacted. This is especially true now that the Supreme Court enabled vote buying with its 2010 decision Citizens United v. the Federal Elections Commission, which permitted unlimited campaign contributions to super PACs. The vote was 5-4 and — you guessed it — the conservatives appointed to the Supreme Court by President George Bush provided the margin of victory. This fall, super PACs will raise hundreds of millions of dollars, with most spent on negative ads. I can safely say that the U.S. has the best political system that money
can buy. You will see the unprecedented spending and its influence in the November elections. Paint a big orange mark on your “mute� button. The only hope is that a constitutional amendment will limit campaign spending and influence peddling. “Obamacare� will be a national disaster of staggering proportions. It will dramatically raise medical costs, have huge cost overruns and contribute to our disgraceful national debt. Let us hope that the Supreme Court strikes down the law. Though I am a registered Independent and frequently vote for both parties, “Obamacare� is one reason for me to vote against the Democrats. If the Supreme Court strikes down the law, then I won’t have to be a singleissue voter. And I prefer not to be. — Glenn Petry, emeritus professor of finance, lives in Bend.
TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
OREGON NEWS
O D N Kelly Nicole Goff June 26, 1976 – May 10, 2012
Jean Taylor, of Mitchell, OR Jan. 7, 1926 - May 11, 2012 Arrangements: Whispering Pines Funeral Home, 541-416-9733 Services: A graveside service will be held at the Lower Mitchell Cemetery in Mitchell, OR on Thursday, May 17, 2012 at 2:00 PM. Contributions may be made to:
Pioneer Memorial Hospice, 1201 NE Elm St. Prineville, OR 97754 or Mitchell Assembly of God Church, 300 Hwy 26 Mitchell, OR 97750.
Marjorie "Marg" Eleanore Beech, of Redmond Sept. 5, 1926 - May 10, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend, (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Private Celebration of Marjorie's life will take place at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Pioneer Memorial Hospital Hospice, 1201 NE Elm Street, Prineville, OR 97754, (541) 447-6254.
Lou Carolyn Shive April 3, 1913 - April 28, 2012 Lou Carolyn Shive, 99, of Redmond passed away Saturday, April 28, 2012 at the home of her son and daughter-in-law in Prairie City, Oregon. Her son, Bob and daughter-i n-law Ginger, were with her at the time of passing. Lou Shive Born in Council Bluffs, Iowa, to John F. Dinkel and Carolyn Hansen Dinkel, where she attended Thomas Jefferson High School and graduated from Baylers Business College in Omaha, Nebraska. She married Neil M. Shive on June 10, 1935, in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and they established their first home in LeMars, Iowa. They had two sons, John Robert Shive born June 26, 1942, and William Martin Shive born December 4, 1946. The family moved to Oregon in August, 1953. In Iowa, Lou was a member of Beta Sigma Phi and rode in the Ak-Sar-Bin Horse show for two years. In 1930, she preformed with the Consolidated Orchestra in Omaha, Nebraska as violin concert Mistress. In Le Mars, she was a active member of St. Johns Lutheran church and sung in the choir and was President of the Lady’s Aide. In Redmond, she was District Clerk for the School District for 1956 to 1972. For two years Lou was secretary of the Oregon State School District Clerks Association and after retirement she continued to serve on the school district budget committee. She was a member of Juniper Literary Club, active in the Redmond Hospital Auxiliary and Central Oregon Retired Educators and an active member of Zion Lutheran Church. Lou was preceded in death by her husband, Neil; son, William; and sister, Ester Grosjean. She is survived by her son, Bob and daughter-in-law, Ginger, with whom she lived the last two and one half years; her daughter-in-law, Mary Kay Shive of Madras; grandchildren, Saron Shive of Redmond; Tekla Shive Doehrmann of Gilbert, AZ; and Kyler Shive and his wife, Linda of Bend, OR; brother, John Dinkel of Florida; greatgrandchildren, Ashley Shive of Redmond, OR; London Stoes of Gilbert, AZ; Evan and William Shive of Bend, OR and Jordan and Zachery Nance of Bend, OR. Memorial Service will be held at Zion Lutheran Church in Redmond at 11 a.m. on May 22, 2012. Memorial contributions may be made to Zion Lutheran Church.
Kelly Nicole (Morris) Goff, of Bend, died Thursday. She was 35. A Celebration of Life for Kelly will be held at 2:00 p.m., on Tuesday, May 15, at the Bend First Presbyterian Church, where Kelly was a member. A reception immediately following will be Kelly Nicole held in the Goff church commons. Kelly was born in Fallbrook, California, and spent the first 20 years of her life living in the small rural community, graduating from Fallbrook High School in 1994. A few years later, she moved to Las Vegas, where she worked at Planet Hollywood as an Accounting Department Manager. She moved to Bend, Oregon, in 1998, where she met and married James Goff in November 2000. Survivors include her parents, Paul Morris of Bend and Katherine Wagner of Tigard, Oregon; stepmother, Kim Clifford of Bend; sister, Kimberly Barth of Bend; stepbrother, Travis Lambert of Prineville; children, Austin, Wyatt and Annika, all of Bend. She is preceded in death by three grandparents, Russell, Delores and Mark Sr. Kelly’s dedication to the lives of children had her involved as PTA President at Ponderosa Elementary School and Board Member of Bend-La Pine school district. She was also very active as a photographer to the Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep non-profit. She was also the owner of KG Photography where she specialized in children’s and family portraiture. Donations may be made for Kelly’s children in care of The Goff Memorial fund at any SELCO Credit Union. Kelly will be deeply missed not only by her children, family and friends, but also by the community of Bend where she was so well known. Kelly is now at peace in Heaven. Baird Funeral Home of Bend is in charge of arrangements 541-382-0903 www.bairdmemorial.com.
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They 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 noon Saturday. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for 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
Heymann’s best-selling biographies were often disputed By Elaine Woo Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — C. David Heymann, a best-selling biographer whose titillating accounts of famous lives often were criticized as inaccurate or dishonest, including a book on heiress Barbara Hutton that was recalled because of factual disputes, has died. He was 67. Hey ma n n died Wednes- FEATURED day after colOBITUARY lapsing in the lobby of his New York City apartment building, said his agent, Mel Berger. The cause was believed to be cardiopulmonary failure. Initially a poet and critic, Heymann wrote books on Ezra Pound and Robert Lowell before turning to popular biography with “Poor Little Rich Girl: The Life and Legend of Barbara Hutton,� published in 1983. The Hutton book had broad appeal, offering “minute reconstruction� of the life of the Woolworth dime-store heiress, who was married seven times and died a nearly penniless recluse in a Beverly Wilshire Hotel suite in 1979. Featured by the Book-of-the-Month Club and excerpted in Vanity Fair, it immediately hit the best-seller list. But shortly after it arrived in bookstores, a Beverly Hills doctor disputed Heymann’s depiction of him as having prescribed “excessive drugs� to Hutton as early as 1943. The doctor, it turned out, was only 14 in 1943 and did not start treating Hutton until 1969. That was only one of many problems that surfaced about Heymann’s Hutton research, but it was enough to persuade Random House to recall and destroy nearly 60,000 copies of the 399-page book. Heymann went on to produce six more biographies. They included the best-sellers “A Woman Named Jackie� (2000), about the life of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis; “Liz: An Intimate Biography of Elizabeth Taylor� (1995); and “Bobby and Jackie: A Love Story� (2009), in which Heymann alleged the former first lady and her brother-in-law, Robert F. Kennedy, commenced an affair just months after her husband’s assassination. The books on Onassis and Taylor also were adapted for television. Though some critics gave Heymann points for assiduous research and engrossing subject matter, others found major flaws, including his reliance on single sources giving accounts of important events they did not witness and on sources who could not be questioned because they were dead. Controversy also surrounded his first two biographies. Critic Hugh Kenner charged that quotes in “Ezra Pound: The Last Rower� (1976) were lifted from an obscure Italian journal, not obtained by Heymann, who said he had interviewed Pound before he died in 1972. Reviewers said serious errors were rife in “American Aristocracy: The Lives and Times of James Russell, Amy, and Robert Lowell� (1980). His books on Pound and the Lowells taught him that poetry was not the road to riches. “Obviously, I couldn’t continue to write literary biography and support a family,� he told the Hartford Courant in 1989. “I don’t mean to suggest I write just for money, but a person does have to make a living.�
D E
Deaths of note from around the world: Everett Lilly, 87: Largely credited, along with his brother Burt and their bandmates Don Stover and Tex Logan, with introducing bluegrass music to New England. Died May 8 in Clear Creek, W. Va., of a heart attack.
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Frank Knight, 103: Caretaker of New England’s tallest elm as the Yarmouth, Maine, tree warden until it was cut down in 2010. Died Monday in Scarborough, Maine. Wood from the elm was made into a casket for Knight, a secret that was kept from him. — From wire reports
Public school golf programs tee up at the chopping block By Mike Tokito The Oregonian
As high school golfers from around Oregon gathered at four courses Monday to compete in OSAA state tournaments, the forecast called for clear skies and warm weather. But the behind-thescenes forecast is far less sunny for the sport, which is facing funding challenges on a scale it has never seen. Soon after this season’s champions are crownedtoday, officials at the Portland area’s two largest school districts — the Beaverton School District and Portland Public Schools — will finalize budgets that are expected to cut funding for golf for next school year. They would join the Hillsboro district’s four high schools, North Clackamas’ three schools and others in not funding golf. “Tough time,� said Greg Ross, athletic director of Portland Public Schools. “It really is.� The most telling cut could be in the Beaverton district, which is the state’s third largest and is made up of five of the state’s 11 biggest high schools by enrollment. Traditionally, the Beaverton schools have been highly competitive at the state level in most sports, including golf. Beaverton schools have won eight team titles and have had eight individual champions in golf. Ben Crane, a fourtime winner on golf’s most prestigious stage, the PGA Tour, is a graduate of Beaverton High School. The Beaverton district cutting golf, to some, is a true sign of the economic times. “We’re in new territory,� Sunset High School’s athletic director Pete Lukich said. “We haven’t had to go here. We don’t want to, but it’s just the way things are right now.� The Beaverton district flirted with cutting golf a year ago, but did not. This time, however, the budget shortfalls are far deeper, and most officials believe the ax will fall. Although Beaverton’s
“I call it the ‘all or none’ — they will all offer the opportunity to participate or there will be no golf in the school district. We’ll all be in it together.� — Pete Lukich, athletic director, Sunset High School
2012-13 budget won’t be finalized until early June, the district’s athletic directors and coaches have already been discussing how to keep the sport going without district funding, with another meeting scheduled for Thursday. Lukich, the district chair for golf, says the initial plan is to find a way to fund the sport for all five schools. “I call it the ‘all or none’ — they will all offer the opportunity to participate or there will be no golf in the school district,� Lukich said. “We’ll all be in it together.� If Beaverton’s five schools do not compete in golf, it would dramatically change the landscape of Class 6A golf. The Metro League’s current golf configuration would be left with two schools, likely forcing the OSAA to redraw districts or change enrollment parameters for golf classifications. Beaverton officials, however, say they are determined it won’t come to that. “We’re definitely committed to helping the parents and coaches raise money to keep the sport going,� Westview athletic director Mike Sanderson said. Lukich said there are many details to work out, including what type of fundraisers to use, who and how many officials would be assigned to oversee the efforts, and what items would be paid for. Lukich said that if teams have normal turnouts of golfers who pay the district’s $225 participation fee (the set amount for all sports), he estimates that the golf teams would need about $40,000 to $50,000 to hold a normal season. The state’s largest school district, Portland, is expected to cut stipends for golf coaches out of its budget for next school year, part of a larger series of cuts that is expected to include 55 coaching positions at the
district’s nine high schools. Not all Portland schools field golf teams each year, but Portland schools have produced plenty of outstanding golfers, including arguably the best in state history, Peter Jacobsen, who won the 1972 state title while at Lincoln. Ross said he believes a combination of fundraising, donations and volunteers can keep the sport alive among the Portland Interscholastic League schools. “I imagine there will be golf in the PIL next year,� he said. “How it’s organized and run is really an unknown at this time.� The Beaverton and Portland districts would be the largest districts to cut golf funding recently, but hardly the first. The Salem-Keizer district — the state’s second biggest behind Portland — cut funding for golf in 2002 but has kept the sport going thanks greatly to contributions from the Salem Area Youth Golf Foundation. Gresham and Barlow have continued to field teams despite the Gresham-Barlow School District cutting funding two years ago. Gresham athletic director Ric Elsberry said a strong group of parents has led fundraising efforts to keep the four teams alive. The North Clackamas District cut funding for coaching stipends for golf, tennis, swimming, cross country, cheerleading and dance for its three high schools this school year, but has kept those going through fundraising to cover any shortfall that activities fees don’t cover. This year, the Hillsboro School District reduced golf and water polo to what it calls “tier 2� sports, with coaches, athletes and parents doing the fundraising individually at the district’s four high schools. Glencoe, in fact, thrived on the course as both its boys and girls teams qualified for state. But Crimson Tide athletic director Scott Ellis says he’s concerned that while the teams kept themselves going this year, in the long-term, donors and sponsors could dry up, and coaches could quickly tire of the constant fundraising, often with the awkward goal of trying to raise money to pay for their own salaries. “That’s tough when you ask the coaches to do it every year,� Ellis said. “That wears on the longevity of coaches.�
Embattled official’s son crusades against Lincoln County officials By Bryan Denson The Oregonian
Don’t mess with Matt Zekan’s dad. When Lincoln County officials put veteran environmental manager William Zekan on administrative leave two years ago, his son fought back. He produced 29 posters urging officials not to fire his father and taped them to their office windows. One of Matt Zekan’s posters depicted a woman dancing under a limbo bar with the headline, “How low can you go?� Another, depicting Muppet character Oscar the Grouch inside his garbage bin, read, “Don’t can Zekan.�
Civil rights suit The younger Zekan’s protest — which began in May 2010 — launched a broadside of testy letters from the county, trespassing orders, arrests and jail. Zekan, now 26, claims in a federal civil rights lawsuit that county officials slandered his name, had him falsely arrested, then maliciously prosecuted him. The suit, filed last week in Eugene, accuses the county, Assistant County Counsel Kristin Yuille, Planning and Development Director Valerie Soilihi, Community Justice Director Suzanne Gonzales and county commissioners Bill Hall, Don Lindly and Terry Thompson of depriving him, among other things, of his constitu-
tional right to free speech. “Lincoln County disagrees with the characterization of the events as claimed by Mr. Zekan and will be responding as appropriate through the courts,� wrote County Counsel Wayne Belmont in a request for comment. On May 13, 2010, as William Zekan remained on administrative leave after an argument with a superior over a personnel matter, his son delivered a letter to some of the county officials. He wrote that his 81⠄2-by-11-inch posters weren’t intended to threaten or harass them, and that he was honoring their request to stop taping them to their building. His new plan was to deliver one poster every day they kept his dad on leave. “The letter emphasized that the purpose of submitting the posters was as an expression of support for his father as a longtime public employee and as a good-natured satire of (the) county’s treatment of his father,� the lawsuit alleges. Later that May, Matt Zekan got a letter from Yuille, the county lawyer, demanding that he cease delivery of the posters and that he refrain from entering the county planning or personnel departments. Meanwhile, according to the lawsuit, the county made an attempt to fire his father, William Zekan, who had labored there 31 years. The following day, the younger Zekan delivered the last round of posters to Soilihi in a sealed envelope, which he dropped into a mail slot outside
the personnel office. His lawsuit alleges that a county employee then called Newport police to tell them he had trespassed. Officer Tom Lekas had a talk with Zekan, according to the lawsuit, saying the county had banned him indefinitely from the Department of Planning and Development building and an adjoining parking lot. So Zekan launched another round of correspondence, accusing Yuille of making false accusations to the police. Yuille fired off a letter that July warning Zekan that she and another employee would obtain stalking orders against him if he kept communicating with them.
Arrests Zekan turned to county commissioners, asking them to lift the trespass order. But they denied his request and, he alleges, ignored letters seeking an explanation. On the first Wednesday of last May, he drove his car onto the lot of the planning building intent on getting arrested. There he opened a book and waited until a Newport officer pulled up and arrested him. Zekan spent a night in the county jail and was charged with misdemeanor trespassing. He was stopped again by police as he drove across a parking lot at the county courthouse, a piece of property he says was not subject to the order. But he spent another eight hours in jail. Eventually the American Civil Liberties Union stepped in on his behalf, and the county lifted the order.
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
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W E AT H ER FOR EC A ST Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2012.
TODAY, MAY 15
WEDNESDAY
Today: Mostly sunny and warm.
Ben Burkel
Bob Shaw
Tonight: Mostly clear.
HIGH
LOW
84
43
HIGH LOW
Astoria 64/46
52/46
Cannon Beach 58/46
Hillsboro Portland 78/50 77/46
Tillamook 68/44
Salem
63/43
82/47
85/51
Maupin
88/46
Corvallis Yachats
81/38
Prineville 84/42 Sisters Redmond Paulina 79/38 84/40 86/41 Sunriver Bend
62/47
Eugene
Florence
78/44
60/47
83/40
79/46
Coos Bay
84/38
Oakridge
Cottage Grove
Crescent
Roseburg
58/47
Silver Lake
82/35
Port Orford 64/48
86/53
56/48
Baker City 83/46
John Day
Unity 81/46
86/48
Vale 89/55
81/38
Juntura
Burns Riley
86/49
84/39
81/45
85/40
83/50
Brookings
Klamath Falls 82/46
Ashland
61/48
83/50
WEST Skies will be partly cloudy today. Expect partly cloudy skies tonight. CENTRAL Skies will be mostly sunny today. Partly cloudy skies tonight.
OREGON CITIES
Yesterday’s state extremes • 95° The • 34°
McDermitt
82/53
Baker City
86/43
-30s
-20s
-10s
Yesterday’s extremes
0s
Vancouver 69/50
10s Calgary 79/51
20s
30s
Saskatoon 72/50
Seattle 74/49
40s Winnipeg 64/44
50s
60s
Thunder Bay 69/41
70s
80s
90s
100s 110s
Quebec 66/55
Halifax 67/51 P ortland Billings To ronto Portland 60/51 88/57 69/55 78/50 St. Paul Green Bay Boston 77/49 76/47 • 109° Boise 66/57 Buffalo Rapid City Detroit 86/52 70/53 78/56 New York Yuma, Ariz. 79/58 71/57 Des Moines Cheyenne • 21° Philadelphia 84/54 Columbus Omaha Chicago 78/49 72/60 85/55 77/55 Kremmling, Colo. 81/54 San Francisco Washington, D. C. Salt Lake 67/52 City • 2.35” 75/60 Las Denver Louisville 87/58 Kansas City Vegas Del Rio, Texas 83/51 79/55 83/58 St. Louis 99/73 Nashville 83/59 81/56 Albuquerque Charlotte Los Angeles Oklahoma City 80/58 Atlanta 80/57 67/58 82/57 81/62 Phoenix Little Rock Honolulu Birmingham 106/75 85/70 Dallas 82/57 Tijuana 80/61 81/59 72/57 New Orleans 84/70 Orlando Houston 87/69 Chihuahua 81/65 81/52 Miami 87/73 Monterrey La Paz 81/64 97/64 Mazatlan Anchorage 88/64 54/38 Juneau 48/35
(in the 48 contiguous states):
Sunrise today . . . . . . 5:38 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . 8:26 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . . 5:37 a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . . 8:27 p.m. Moonrise today . . . . 2:53 a.m. Moonset today . . . . 3:40 p.m.
Moon phases New
First
Full
May 20 May 28 June 4 June 11
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Precipitation values are 24-hour totals through 4 p.m. Astoria . . . . . . . .58/43/0.00 Baker City . . . . . .84/34/0.00 Brookings . . . . . .58/48/0.00 Burns. . . . . . . . . .82/37/0.00 Eugene . . . . . . . .70/51/0.00 Klamath Falls . . .84/48/0.00 Lakeview. . . . . . .84/52/0.00 La Pine . . . . . . . .84/39/0.00 Medford . . . . . . .83/57/0.00 Newport . . . . . . .55/45/0.00 North Bend . . . . .59/48/0.00 Ontario . . . . . . . .87/42/0.00 Pendleton . . . . . .87/52/0.00 Portland . . . . . . .88/55/0.00 Prineville . . . . . . .83/45/0.00 Redmond. . . . . . .86/39/0.00 Roseburg. . . . . . .68/54/0.00 Salem . . . . . . . . .80/53/0.00 Sisters . . . . . . . . .87/47/0.00 The Dalles . . . . . .95/47/0.00
Last
. . . . .64/46/s . . . . .58/45/pc . . . .83/46/pc . . . . .81/47/pc . . . .61/48/pc . . . . .61/47/pc . . . .83/46/pc . . . . . .81/47/s . . . .78/44/pc . . . . .74/47/pc . . . .82/46/pc . . . . .80/45/pc . . . .77/46/pc . . . . . .74/47/s . . . .84/37/pc . . . . . .79/35/s . . . .88/54/pc . . . . .85/53/pc . . . . .62/44/s . . . . . .58/44/c . . . . .57/48/s . . . . .60/45/pc . . . . .88/54/s . . . . . .87/54/s . . . . .87/51/s . . . . . .84/53/s . . . . .78/50/s . . . . .75/50/pc . . . . .84/42/s . . . . . .82/45/s . . . .85/40/pc . . . . . .83/45/s . . . .83/51/pc . . . . .79/51/pc . . . . .79/47/s . . . . .77/47/pc . . . . .84/40/s . . . . . .79/41/s . . . . .85/51/s . . . . . .85/51/s
SKI REPORT
The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Index is for solar at noon.
LOW 0
MEDIUM 2
4
HIGH 6
8
V.HIGH
8
PRECIPITATION
10
ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level and road conditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key: T.T. = Traction Tires.
Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Hoodoo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Mt. Ashland. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Mt. Bachelor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . .105-142 Mt. Hood Meadows . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Mt. Hood Ski Bowl . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Timberline . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . . . . . 175 Warner Canyon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Willamette Pass . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report
Pass Conditions I-5 at Siskiyou Summit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No restrictions I-84 at Cabbage Hill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No restrictions Aspen, Colorado . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass . . . . . . Carry chains or T. Tires Mammoth Mtn., California . . . . . 0.0 . . . . . .18-48 Hwy. 26 at Government Camp. . Carry chains or T. Tires Park City, Utah . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide . . . . . . . . . . . No restrictions Squaw Valley, California . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass . . . . Carry chains or T. Tires Sun Valley, Idaho. . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake . . . . Carry chains or T. Tires Taos, New Mexico. . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass . . . . . . . . Closed for season Vail, Colorado . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report For links to the latest ski conditions visit: For up-to-minute conditions turn to: www.skicentral.com/oregon.html www.tripcheck.com or call 511 Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation, s-sun, pc-partial clouds, c-clouds, h-haze, sh-showers, r-rain, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, rs-rain-snow mix, w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace
TRAVELERS’ FORECAST NATIONAL
NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS -40s
70 39
Yesterday’s weather through 4 p.m. in Bend 24 hours ending 4 p.m.*. . 0.00” High/Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82/46 Month to date . . . . . . . . . . 0.01” Record high . . . . . . . . 88 in 1939 Average month to date. . . 0.36” Record low. . . . . . . . . 19 in 1943 Year to date . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.63” Average high . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 Average year to date. . . . . 4.49” Average low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.29.99 Record 24 hours . . .0.24 in 1969 *Melted liquid equivalent
Rome
Fields
77/46
HIGH LOW
63 31
TEMPERATURE
Dalles
Lakeview
HIGH LOW
67 31
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury . . . .5:11 a.m. . . . . . 7:18 p.m. Venus . . . . . .6:56 a.m. . . . . 11:00 p.m. Mars. . . . . . .1:31 p.m. . . . . . 2:53 a.m. Jupiter. . . . . .5:37 a.m. . . . . . 8:09 p.m. Saturn. . . . . .5:21 p.m. . . . . . 4:37 a.m. Uranus . . . . .3:43 a.m. . . . . . 4:05 p.m.
81/43
88/54
Mostly to partly sunny and warmer.
Mostly sunny and pleasant.
Partly to mostly cloudy, significantly cooler, breezy.
PLANET WATCH
83/49
Chiloquin
SATURDAY
BEND ALMANAC
83/47
Paisley
Medford
77/48
Frenchglen
HIGH LOW
FRIDAY
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
Ontario EAST 88/54 Skies will be mostly sunny, an Nyssa isolated afternoon 87/54 thunderstorm over the far southeast.
Jordan Valley
84/42
Grants Pass
Gold Beach
78/37
Christmas Valley
Chemult
83/51
Hampton
Fort Rock 84/39
82/36
76/31
Bandon
85/48
Brothers 83/37
La Pine 84/37
Crescent Lake
60/47
84/43
83/46
Union
Mitchell 85/43
86/44
Camp Sherman
82/45
82/44
Joseph
Granite Spray 90/48
Enterprise
Meacham 86/47
82/49
Madras
77/39
La Grande
Condon
Warm Springs
Wallowa
78/37
83/52
86/48
88/45
82/45
87/51
Ruggs
Willowdale
Albany
Newport
Pendleton
88/54
82/48
79/47
62/44
Hermiston 91/51
Arlington
Wasco
Sandy
Government Camp 67/41
77/45
91/53
The Biggs Dalles 85/51
78/48
McMinnville
Lincoln City
Umatilla
Hood River
Partly cloudy, slightly cooler, afternoon breezes.
78 40
FORECAST: STATE Seaside
THURSDAY
Bismarck 75/48
FRONTS
Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX . . . . . .77/61/0.00 . .78/56/pc . . 85/61/s Akron . . . . . . . . . .74/55/0.00 . .75/52/pc . 74/49/pc Albany. . . . . . . . . .73/57/0.12 . . . 67/56/r . . .79/48/t Albuquerque. . . . .72/49/0.00 . . . 80/57/s . . 84/58/s Anchorage . . . . . .49/35/0.00 . .54/38/pc . . 56/41/s Atlanta . . . . . . . . .69/64/0.66 . . . 81/62/t . . .82/58/t Atlantic City . . . . .72/62/0.00 . . . 73/61/t . . .70/60/t Austin . . . . . . . . . .85/60/0.00 . . . 79/60/t . . 85/61/s Baltimore . . . . . . .70/62/0.10 . . . 73/61/t . . .79/61/t Billings . . . . . . . . .83/47/0.00 . . . 88/57/s . 85/56/pc Birmingham . . . . .73/63/0.00 . . . 80/61/t . 82/57/pc Bismarck. . . . . . . .86/38/0.00 . . . 75/48/s . 82/54/pc Boise . . . . . . . . . . .88/50/0.00 . .86/52/pc . . 84/54/s Boston. . . . . . . . . .61/53/0.09 . . . 66/57/r . . .71/56/t Bridgeport, CT. . . .70/61/0.01 . . . 65/57/t . . .75/54/t Buffalo . . . . . . . . .76/52/0.00 . .70/53/pc . 66/48/pc Burlington, VT. . . .75/53/0.00 . .66/54/sh . . .71/46/t Caribou, ME . . . . .65/48/0.00 . .65/50/sh . . .65/44/t Charleston, SC . . .84/67/0.14 . . . 83/68/t . . .83/64/t Charlotte. . . . . . . .75/64/1.09 . . . 80/58/t . . .81/59/t Chattanooga. . . . .78/63/0.20 . . . 80/56/t . . 81/56/s Cheyenne . . . . . . .76/38/0.00 . . . 78/49/s . 76/49/pc Chicago. . . . . . . . .82/43/0.00 . . . 81/54/t . . 67/52/s Cincinnati . . . . . . .76/60/0.00 . . . 77/54/s . 80/51/pc Cleveland . . . . . . .70/51/0.00 . . . 72/55/s . . 70/52/s Colorado Springs .74/37/0.00 . . . 78/46/s . 81/49/pc Columbia, MO . . .78/53/0.00 . . . 81/57/s . . 81/59/s Columbia, SC . . . .83/66/0.23 . . . 84/64/t . . .84/62/t Columbus, GA. . . .75/65/1.33 . . . 82/62/t . 83/60/pc Columbus, OH. . . .74/57/0.00 . . . 77/55/s . 79/48/pc Concord, NH. . . . .66/53/0.06 . . . 69/53/r . . .75/47/t Corpus Christi. . . .85/67/0.00 . . . 81/65/t . 85/66/pc Dallas Ft Worth. . .83/62/0.00 . .81/59/pc . . 84/61/s Dayton . . . . . . . . .76/57/0.00 . . . 77/55/s . 79/50/pc Denver. . . . . . . . . .77/43/0.00 . . . 83/51/s . 84/51/pc Des Moines. . . . . .81/52/0.00 . .84/54/pc . . 81/59/s Detroit. . . . . . . . . .76/51/0.00 . . . 79/58/s . . 68/51/s Duluth. . . . . . . . . .83/54/0.00 . .65/43/pc . . 66/47/s El Paso. . . . . . . . . .78/58/0.00 . . . 82/59/s . . 88/65/s Fairbanks. . . . . . . .56/30/0.00 . .55/31/pc . . 59/37/s Fargo. . . . . . . . . . .89/47/0.00 . .78/48/pc . . 79/59/s Flagstaff . . . . . . . .74/33/0.00 . . . 78/38/s . . 77/38/s
Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Grand Rapids . . . .75/43/0.00 . .79/49/pc . . 69/49/s Green Bay. . . . . . .80/46/0.00 . . . 76/47/t . . 69/48/s Greensboro. . . . . .70/62/0.92 . . . 77/59/t . 78/58/pc Harrisburg. . . . . . .66/60/0.56 . . . 73/56/t . 81/53/pc Hartford, CT . . . . .73/61/0.00 . . . 66/59/r . . .76/55/t Helena. . . . . . . . . .82/42/0.00 . . . 88/52/s . 84/50/pc Honolulu. . . . . . . .79/66/0.00 . . . 85/70/s . . 85/73/s Houston . . . . . . . .87/63/0.00 . . . 81/65/t . 85/67/pc Huntsville . . . . . . .74/62/0.46 . . . 80/57/t . . 82/55/s Indianapolis . . . . .78/56/0.00 . . . 80/58/s . . 78/56/s Jackson, MS . . . . .82/58/0.00 . . . 84/59/t . 85/58/pc Jacksonville. . . . . .85/66/1.72 . . . 86/68/t . . .88/66/t Juneau. . . . . . . . . .47/40/0.02 . .48/35/sh . . 51/37/c Kansas City. . . . . .78/52/0.00 . . . 83/58/s . . 83/61/s Lansing . . . . . . . . .75/43/0.00 . .78/50/pc . 69/49/pc Las Vegas . . . . . . .97/71/0.00 . . . 99/73/s . . 99/75/s Lexington . . . . . . .70/57/0.27 . .77/54/pc . 78/57/pc Lincoln. . . . . . . . . .83/44/0.00 . . . 88/54/s . . 85/62/s Little Rock. . . . . . .83/61/0.00 . . . 82/57/s . . 84/59/s Los Angeles. . . . . .70/57/0.00 . . . 67/58/s . . 67/59/s Louisville. . . . . . . .75/61/0.00 . . . 79/55/s . 82/58/pc Madison, WI . . . . .80/43/0.00 . . . 79/48/t . . 70/46/s Memphis. . . . . . . .82/59/0.00 . .82/61/pc . . 85/64/s Miami . . . . . . . . . .87/75/0.00 . . . 87/73/t . . .88/73/t Milwaukee . . . . . .79/52/0.00 . . . 78/50/t . . 62/47/s Minneapolis . . . . .85/55/0.00 . .77/49/pc . 75/56/pc Nashville. . . . . . . .76/63/0.00 . .81/56/pc . . 82/56/s New Orleans. . . . .82/69/0.00 . . . 84/70/t . 85/65/pc New York . . . . . . .70/63/0.00 . . . 71/57/t . . .77/59/t Newark, NJ . . . . . .71/63/0.00 . . . 72/56/t . 78/57/sh Norfolk, VA . . . . . .79/66/0.00 . . . 80/66/t . . .77/62/t Oklahoma City . . .79/59/0.00 . . . 82/57/s . . 85/60/s Omaha . . . . . . . . .83/51/0.00 . . . 85/55/s . . 86/62/s Orlando. . . . . . . . .84/72/0.00 . . . 87/69/t . . .89/70/t Palm Springs. . . .105/69/0.00 . .102/70/s . 106/72/s Peoria . . . . . . . . . .79/44/0.00 . .83/58/pc . . 77/55/s Philadelphia . . . . .70/64/0.01 . . . 72/60/t . . .79/58/t Phoenix. . . . . . . .102/74/0.00 . .106/75/s . 105/75/s Pittsburgh . . . . . . .66/55/0.05 . .76/50/pc . 77/52/pc Portland, ME. . . . .63/49/0.03 . .60/51/sh . . .64/50/t Providence . . . . . .74/57/0.00 . . . 68/56/r . . .74/54/t Raleigh . . . . . . . . .75/63/0.37 . . . 78/61/t . . .79/58/t
Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Rapid City . . . . . . .85/44/0.00 . . . 78/56/s . 87/58/pc Reno . . . . . . . . . . .85/50/0.00 . . . 82/53/s . . 86/54/s Richmond . . . . . . .75/61/0.11 . . . 79/64/t . . .80/59/t Rochester, NY . . . .74/52/0.00 . .75/52/pc . 69/46/pc Sacramento. . . . . .73/50/0.00 . . . 86/56/s . . 87/55/s St. Louis. . . . . . . . .80/54/0.00 . . . 83/59/s . . 84/60/s Salt Lake City . . . .84/48/0.00 . . . 87/58/s . . 82/61/s San Antonio . . . . .85/63/0.00 . . . 79/61/t . . 87/62/s San Diego . . . . . . .71/61/0.00 . . . 68/59/s . . 68/60/s San Francisco . . . .66/55/0.00 . . . 68/52/s . . 67/51/s San Jose . . . . . . . .72/53/0.00 . . . 78/53/s . . 79/53/s Santa Fe . . . . . . . .72/41/0.00 . .77/48/pc . 80/49/pc
Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Savannah . . . . . . .80/69/0.01 . . . 85/66/t . . .84/65/t Seattle. . . . . . . . . .80/55/0.00 . . . 74/49/s . 65/47/pc Sioux Falls. . . . . . .83/46/0.00 . . . 80/49/s . 80/61/pc Spokane . . . . . . . .85/49/0.00 . . . 84/54/s . . 77/51/s Springfield, MO . .75/51/0.00 . . . 79/54/s . . 81/57/s Tampa. . . . . . . . . .87/76/0.00 . . . 86/69/t . . .85/67/t Tucson. . . . . . . . . .99/64/0.00 . .100/67/s . 100/68/s Tulsa . . . . . . . . . . .80/54/0.00 . . . 80/54/s . . 83/60/s Washington, DC . .73/62/0.24 . . . 75/60/t . . .80/60/t Wichita . . . . . . . . .81/51/0.00 . . . 84/58/s . . 85/61/s Yakima . . . . . . . . .93/44/0.00 . . . 87/51/s . . 84/52/s Yuma. . . . . . . . . .109/72/0.00 . .107/71/s . 104/71/s
INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam. . . . . .59/45/0.00 . .53/44/sh . 52/44/sh Athens. . . . . . . . . .75/62/0.00 . .75/59/pc . . 73/59/s Auckland. . . . . . . .66/55/0.00 . .59/51/sh . 56/45/sh Baghdad . . . . . . . .93/75/0.00 . . . 94/69/s . . 96/71/s Bangkok . . . . . . .100/82/0.00 . . . 99/80/t . . .98/79/t Beijing. . . . . . . . . .81/48/0.00 . . . 77/57/s . 78/58/pc Beirut . . . . . . . . . .77/66/0.00 . . . 77/65/s . . 79/66/s Berlin. . . . . . . . . . .61/37/0.00 . .61/43/pc . 55/39/sh Bogota . . . . . . . . .66/50/0.00 . .67/51/sh . 66/50/sh Budapest. . . . . . . .55/46/0.00 . .58/48/pc . 59/35/pc Buenos Aires. . . . .70/52/0.00 . .66/55/pc . 64/55/pc Cabo San Lucas . .97/70/0.00 . . . 95/70/s . . 95/68/s Cairo . . . . . . . . . . .86/70/0.00 . . . 92/74/s . 97/77/pc Calgary . . . . . . . . .70/48/0.00 . .79/51/pc . 75/48/pc Cancun . . . . . . . . .86/77/0.00 . . . 84/75/t . . .85/75/t Dublin . . . . . . . . . .54/39/0.00 . .54/31/sh . 51/42/sh Edinburgh. . . . . . .54/39/0.00 . .51/33/sh . 51/38/pc Geneva . . . . . . . . .66/37/0.00 . .61/37/pc . 56/35/pc Harare. . . . . . . . . .73/54/0.00 . .71/54/pc . . 70/44/s Hong Kong . . . . . .90/81/0.00 . . . 87/78/t . . .85/77/t Istanbul. . . . . . . . .68/57/0.00 . .76/66/sh . 72/61/sh Jerusalem . . . . . . .73/59/0.00 . . . 79/59/s . . 82/60/s Johannesburg. . . .70/52/0.00 . .68/48/pc . . 67/45/s Lima . . . . . . . . . . .73/64/0.00 . .74/65/pc . 74/63/pc Lisbon . . . . . . . . . .82/61/0.00 . . . 84/63/s . . 86/62/c London . . . . . . . . .54/43/0.00 . .56/37/sh . 56/45/sh Madrid . . . . . . . . .90/57/0.00 . . . 85/54/s . 86/57/pc Manila. . . . . . . . . .95/81/0.00 . . . 92/81/t . . .92/81/t
Mecca . . . . . . . . .108/82/0.00 . .110/83/s 111/84/pc Mexico City. . . . . .77/57/0.00 . .76/52/sh . . .76/51/t Montreal. . . . . . . .75/46/0.00 . .67/56/sh . . .66/45/t Moscow . . . . . . . .54/45/0.00 . .60/50/sh . . .74/50/t Nairobi . . . . . . . . .75/61/0.00 . . . 72/61/t . . .71/60/t Nassau . . . . . . . . .90/77/0.00 . . . 85/75/t . . .85/74/t New Delhi. . . . . . .91/77/0.00 . .107/85/s . 110/88/s Osaka . . . . . . . . . .75/52/0.00 . .70/61/sh . 72/58/pc Oslo. . . . . . . . . . . .54/41/0.00 . .54/41/sh . 56/44/sh Ottawa . . . . . . . . .77/45/0.00 . .69/55/sh . . .67/44/t Paris. . . . . . . . . . . .68/41/0.00 . .55/43/sh . 60/44/sh Rio de Janeiro. . . .75/66/0.00 . .75/66/sh . 77/65/sh Rome. . . . . . . . . . .66/50/0.00 . . . 71/53/s . 69/50/pc Santiago . . . . . . . .72/37/0.00 . .64/46/pc . 64/47/pc Sao Paulo . . . . . . .61/57/0.00 . .67/62/sh . 65/61/sh Sapporo . . . . . . not available . .64/54/sh . 63/51/sh Seoul. . . . . . . . . . .63/59/0.00 . .71/52/pc . 71/56/pc Shanghai. . . . . . . .73/63/0.00 . .77/65/pc . 81/67/pc Singapore . . . . . . .93/81/0.00 . . . 87/81/t . . .88/80/t Stockholm. . . . . . .57/45/0.00 . .63/42/pc . . 63/47/c Sydney. . . . . . . . . .61/48/0.00 . .65/48/pc . 66/50/pc Taipei. . . . . . . . . . .93/77/0.00 . . . 89/76/t . 85/73/sh Tel Aviv . . . . . . . . .79/63/0.00 . . . 81/62/s . . 84/63/s Tokyo. . . . . . . . . . .75/57/0.00 . .70/61/sh . 74/61/sh Toronto . . . . . . . . .70/52/0.00 . . . 69/55/s . 64/47/pc Vancouver. . . . . . .64/50/0.00 . . . 69/50/s . 67/50/pc Vienna. . . . . . . . . .55/46/0.00 . .65/47/pc . . 57/38/c Warsaw. . . . . . . . .61/43/0.00 . .57/49/sh . 59/44/sh
SAGE Awards
WASHINGTON
Continued from C1 Outside of health care, Lussier serves on the board of the Oregon Environmental Council. He is also the former president of the City Club of Central Oregon. Previously, he served as both a board member and president of the State Board of Higher Education, which oversees seven public universities in Oregon. In July 2013, Teater said, Lussier will also be district governor of Rotary District 5110, which encompasses a large portion of the state. Looking at the past citizens who have won the award, Lussier said they are people who have worked hard to build Bend into the community that we enjoy. “It is a huge honor,” he said. “You do things just for the contribution, but it is still nice to be recognized by your peers.”
Jury deliberating in faith-healer trial
— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
Hospitals Continued from C1 In September 2011, the two groups began sharing on-call responsibilities, limiting the number of nights each individual pulmonologist was on call. Starting this month, the call schedule will be replaced with a nighttime shift assigning a doctor to the critical care unit every night. The doctors will take turns working the night shift for one week at a time, allowing them to become familiar with the patients.
Joe Kline / The Bulletin
Laurel Case, left, and Holly Remer, both of Healthy Beginnings, stand with Tim Casey, the Bend Chamber of Commerce’s executive director, after receiving the Outstanding Organization of the Year award during the 2012 SAGE Awards dinner on Monday evening at The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center in Bend.
“These are the most critically ill patients in the hospital,” said Dr. Jeff Absalon, chief physician officer at St. Charles. It’s a “big thing,” he said, to have a doctor present in the hospital “rather than waking someone up in the middle of the night at home.” The round-the-clock staffing will also allow doctors to continue active care of the patients through the evening hours. The two groups also agreed to implement a critical care checklist, to ensure that all patients are receiving care
according to evidence-based practice guidelines. “If there are things that need to be done into the evening, they can now be done with better quality,” said Absalon. The sharing of call and the nocturnal position are just the first steps in better coordinating care for patients, according to Absalon. The groups have an agreement to fully integrate the two groups in August, after another two pulmonologists are hired. That will allow the groups to staff the critical care unit with one
doctor during the day and one doctor a night, while having a third doctor dedicated to treating pulmonology patients in other parts of the hospital. “Us coming together is, we hope, just a first step toward a lot of future collaboration for other departments as well,” Brewer said. “We are one of the groups that have the highest call burden in the community. If we are going to try to improve our care, this is the best way to do it.” — Reporter: 541-617-7814, mhawryluk@bendbulletin.com
Washington city opens park to seasonal workers By Rick Steigmeyer The Wenatchee World
MONITOR, Wash. — The migrant farmworker camp at the Wenatchee River County Park in Monitor could open by early June. Tent housing went up at the park last week in preparation for the local cherry harvest that will begin in June. “We open based on demand, but we plan to be ready June 1.
Things will be earlier this year than last,” said camp manager Donn Etherington. He said the camp opened June 11 last year because of an unusually late harvest. “It looks like it’s going to be a big crop statewide so we’re expecting a lot of workers,” said Ron Walter, Chelan County commissioner. County commissioners oversee operation of the camp.
The Monitor camp can house up to 380 workers in 25 trailer homes and up to 30 large tents. The camp charges $4 per night for single men or $12 per night for families. Walter said he expects people to start showing up for the harvest in the next couple of weeks. The county works closely with the Washington Growers League, which operates the Sage Bluff farmwork-
er camp near Malaga, and the Housing Authority of Chelan County, which operates three housing projects. Workers may be diverted to the other agencies until there is enough need for housing to efficiently open the Monitor camp. The Sage Bluff camp can house up to 270 workers in 41 housing units. That government-financed, grower-owned camp opened last week.
The Wenatchee World OKANOGAN, Wash. — Greg and JaLea Swezey did not know their 17-yearold son, Zachery, was dying, until just before he died from a ruptured appendix on March 18, 2009, a defense attorney told an Okanogan County jury Monday. By then, it was too late to call an ambulance to their remote Carlton home. Throughout three days of testimony last week, Ellensburg attorney Chelsea Korte tried to drive home the point that the Swezeys, who believe in faith healing, thought their son had the flu. He pushed that point during closing arguments Monday before the jury began deliberations. The Swezeys are charged in Okanogan County Superior Court with second-degree murder, or first-degree manslaughter in the alternative, for failing to seek medical care for Zachery during the days he was ill. Prosecutor Karl Sloan
argued that all the testimony, including statements taken from Greg Swezey the day his son died, and the Swezeys’ actions in the days leading up to his death, points to parents that knew or should have known Zachery was in dire need of medical care. Sloan said the jury doesn’t have to consider whether the Swezeys knew that their son had appendicitis, which is life threatening if left untreated. “Common sense, or reasonableness is required: Do not let your kid suffer and die,” he told jurors.
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SPORTS THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
www.bendbulletin.com/sports
NBA PLAYOFFS
PREP GIRLS GOLF COMMUNITY SPORTS
Heat’s Bosh out indefinitely MIAMI — Chris Bosh and the Miami Heat were relieved by the diagnosis. It’s the prognosis — or lack of one — that’s a source of worry now. And suddenly, the Indiana Pacers may be even more of a threat. Bosh strained a lower abdominal muscle in Game 1 of the teams’ Eastern Conference semifinal series, that original diagnosis confirmed Monday after an MRI exam. The team said Bosh is out “indefinitely,” though coach Erik Spoelstra and others say the injury could have been worse. Either way, Bosh is out for Game 2 tonight, and sounds like he probably won’t play again in this series. “This season has to be extended for me to play again,” Bosh said. “So that’s what’s on my mind.” Bosh was hurt late in the first half as he drove for a dunk and got fouled by Indiana’s Roy Hibbert. The foul almost certainly played no role in the injury, as Bosh fell forward to his hands and knees after landing and stayed down for a few seconds. He got up and made his free throw, but dropped to the court again on the ensuing possession, leaving the game for evaluation. Without Bosh, Miami rallied behind LeBron James and Dwyane Wade, who outscored the Pacers 42-38 in the second half themselves and fueled a seriesopening 95-86 win. — The Associated Press 76ers Celtics • Series tied, 1-1
82 81
Thunder 119 Lakers 90 • Thunder lead series, 1-0
Thunder throttle Lakers in opener Oklahoma City turns the first game of the conference semifinals into a laugher, D3
Summit, Bend, Crook County all in mix at state tourneys • Storm, Bears are first, second in Class 5A; Cowgirls open up big lead in Class 4A/3A/2A/1A event
Pete Erickson / The Bulletin; submitted photos
Down and dirty
Above, some of the D&D Down and Dirty Girls Pole Pedal Paddle team members — (from left) Lisa Nye, Marcy Monte, Elayne Logan Currie, Carrie Carney and Michelle Crook — hold up mugs they have received for winning their division in the PPP. Below are photos of the team over the 20 years they have competed in the multisport event.
PREP SPORTS Local umpires to officiate at state Two Central Oregon Baseball/Softball Officials Association umpires have been selected to officiate upcoming Oregon School Activities Association state championship finals. Ken White, of Bend, has been chosen to work the Class 5A softball final on June 2 at the Oregon State University Softball Complex in Corvallis. And Jude Quilter, also of Bend, has been selected to work the Class 4A baseball final, set for June 2 at Volcanoes Stadium in Keizer. Bob Reichert, commissioner of the local umpires association, announced the selections Monday. —Bulletin staff report
Bulletin staff report The golf is good in Central Oregon. Summit, Bend High and Crook County are all poised for top finishes at their respective girls golf state championships after strong opening-round scores Monday. The Storm shot a 340 during the first day of the Class 5A state tourney at Trysting Tree Golf Club in Corvallis, which was good enough Inside for an 11-stroke lead over their • More prep crosstown rivals, the Lava Bears, coverage, who ended the opening round in results, second place with a 351. Summit D3 freshman Madison Odiorne carded an 8-over-par 80 — she is in fourth place heading into today’s final round — to pace the Storm, who are looking for their fourth consecutive 5A state title. Three-time defending state champion Caroline Inglis of Eugene’s Churchill High led the tournament after Monday’s round with a 1over 73. “We’re in good position,” Summit coach Jerry Hackenbruck said. “I was really, really pleased after a subpar first nine holes; everyone improved by several strokes (on the back nine).” See Girls golf / D3
PREP BOYS GOLF
• At this year’s Pole Pedal Paddle multisport event, the D&D Down and Dirty Girls will race for the 20th time
Summit boys in contention in Class 5A
“D
on’t let the gray hair fool you.” That is the sage advice of Elayne Logan Currie, the most veteran member of the veteran and highly successful D&D Down and Dirty Girls women’s team, which this Saturday will be competing in its 20th consecutive Pole Pedal Paddle multisport race. (Over the years, the team has gone by names with minor variations, but the general theme is maintained in the one used here.) Most of the members of this year’s quintet, all Bend residents, probably can no longer call themselves spring chickens and be honest about it: Logan Currie, the team’s cyclist, is 56, downhill skier Marcy Monte is 52, runner Michelle Crook is 47 and paddler Meg Chun is 52. Nordic skier Carrie (Morales) Carney is the baby of the group at 37. See PPP / D5
• Storm are tied for second place after first round of state tourney Bulletin staff report The start was not quite what Summit High wanted, but regardless, the Storm are in title contention after the first day of the Class 5A boys state golf championship. Summit ace Dylan Cramer struggled to an 8-over-par 80 on Monday, but the Storm still managed to card a 29-over-par 322 to land in a second-place tie with Corvallis, five strokes behind Marist of Eugene. Bend High is in sixth place, 28 strokes behind Marist, after the first round of play at Emerald Valley Golf Club in Creswell. “It’s a fistfight on that golf course,” Summit coach Mark Tichenor said. “Coming off a great district, to struggle as much as this course makes you struggle, it’s a great challenge.” The Storm got help from its No. 3 starter, Ryan Blackwell, who carded a 79 to place in a tie for seventh. Cole Ortega, Summit’s No. 2, is in a tie for 14th place after shooting 81. “We’re excited about tomorrow,” Tichenor said. “We didn’t come for second, third, or fourth. We’ve done that the last three years. So we’re going to go for it tomorrow and see what happens.” See Boys golf / D3
2012 Pole Pedal Paddle Oklahoma City’s Nick Collison dunks in front of Los Angeles’ Pau Gasol on Monday.
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Scoreboard, D2 Prep sports, D3 NHL, D2 MLB, D4, D5 NBA, D3 Community Sports, D5, D6 Motor sports, D3
What: 36th annual multisport race with downhill skiing, nordic skiing, cycling, running, paddling and sprinting legs Where: Start is at Mt. Bachelor ski area and finish is at Les Schwab Amphitheater in Bend When: Saturday; elite wave begins at 9:15 a.m. and waves continue until 11:30 a.m. Who: About 3,000 participants competing as individuals, in pairs or in teams More info: pppbend.com
Closing time? Many ninth-inning pitchers already demoted By Janie McCauley The Associated Press
OAKLAND, Calif. — Closer by committee is taking on new meaning during this mix-andmatch May. Big names like Heath Bell and Francisco Cordero recently lost their ninth-inning relief jobs. Same with a handful of others around baseball, including Oakland’s Grant Balfour just this past week. Both Los Angeles clubs demoted their closers, too. Many pitchers responsible for recording those final three outs are in a state of flux, with several managers already moving them into the less-pressured roles of middle relief or setup duties. It has been a muddled month to say the least as far as the back end of bullpens are concerned. “I found out firsthand how hard it is — I lost a game this year with a two-run lead in the
Not a good save Here’s a look at the leaders in blown saves among relief pitchers considered to be “closers” headed into the season, with saves, blown saves and number of appearances (through Sunday’s games): Player, team Saves BS App. Heath Bell, Miami 3 4 14 Francisco Cordero, Toronto 2 3 13 Javy Guerra, L.A. Dodgers 8 3 17
ninth,” Detroit ace Justin Verlander said Sunday. “I think closers are one of the toughest pitching positions there are in the game. Mariano (Rivera) and (Trevor) Hoffman made it look so easy for so long. Those last three outs are the toughest to get in baseball.” See Closing / D5
Jeff Chiu / The Associated Press
Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Francisco Cordero walks off the field as the Oakland Athletics celebrate after Brandon Inge hit a walk-off grand slam against Cordero on May 8.
D2
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
O A
SCOREBOARD
TELEVISION Today
Wednesday
HOCKEY 10 a.m.: IIHF World Championships, United States vs. Switzerland, NBC Sports Network. 6 p.m.: NHL playoffs, conference final, Los Angeles Kings at Phoenix Coyotes, NBC Sports Network. BASEBALL 1 p.m.: MLB, Seattle Mariners at Boston Red Sox, Root Sports. 4 p.m.: MLB, New York Yankees at Baltimore Orioles or Cincinnati Reds at Atlanta Braves, MLB Network. 7 p.m.: MLB, Arizona Diamondbacks at Los Angeles Dodgers or Colorado Rockies at San Francisco Giants, MLB Network. CYCLING 2 p.m.: Tour of California, Stage 3, NBC Sports Network. BASKETBALL 4 p.m.: NBA playoffs, conference semifinals, Indiana Pacers at Miami Heat, TNT. 6:30 p.m.: NBA playoffs, conference semifinals, Los Angeles Clippers at San Antonio Spurs, TNT. SOCCER 5:30 p.m.: MLS, Portland Timbers at Houston Dynamo, Root Sports.
SOCCER Midnight: Beach Soccer, Barcelona vs. Seattle Sounders (same-day tape), Root Sports. CYCLING 2 p.m.: Tour of California, Stage 4, NBC Sports Network. BASEBALL 4 p.m.: MLB, Boston Red Sox at Tampa Bay Rays, ESPN. 4 p.m.: MLB, Seattle Mariners at Cleveland Indians, Root Sports. BASKETBALL 4 p.m.: NBA playoffs, conference semifinals, Boston Celtics at Philadelphia 76ers, TNT. 6:30 p.m.: NBA playoffs, conference semifinals, Los Angeles Lakers at Oklahoma City Thunder, TNT. HOCKEY 5 p.m.: NHL playoffs, conference final, New Jersey Devils at New York Rangers, NBC Sports Network.
RADIO Today BASEBALL 5:30 p.m.: College, Portland at Oregon State, KICE-AM 940. Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations.
S B Baseball • MLB fires arbitrator from Braun case: Major League Baseball management has fired Shyam Das, the arbitrator who overturned Ryan Braun’s drug suspension in February. MLB informed Das and the players’ association of its decision last week. Das had been baseball’s permanent arbitrator since 1999, part of what technically is a three-man panel that also includes a representative of management and labor. “Shyam is the longest-tenured panel chair in our bargaining relationship,” union head Michael Weiner said. “For 13 years, from the beginning to the end of his tenure, he served the parties with professionalism and distinction.” Das, a graduate of Harvard and Yale University Law School, also has been an arbitrator for the NFL since 2004 and is scheduled to hear a grievance in the New Orleans Saints bounty case on Wednesday. • Oregon sweeps USC: The sixth-ranked Oregon baseball team completed a three-game sweep of USC on Monday night at Eugene’s PK Park with a come-from-behind 6-3 victory. Trailing 3-1, Oregon manufactured a three-run inning in the sixth to take its first lead of the game before adding two insurance runs in the bottom of the eighth. Oregon starter Jeff Gold improved to 7-3 for the Ducks, holding USC (22-24, 7-16 Pac-12) to three runs – just one earned – on five hits and two walks while matching a career high with six strikeouts in six innings. Aaron Payne, Aaron Jones and Brett Hambright led the Ducks with two hits apiece. Oregon (38-14, 19-8) will take a weekend off from conference play, hosting Seattle starting Friday. • Ellsbury moved to 60-day list: The Boston Red Sox have transferred Jacoby Ellsbury to the 60-day disabled list. Ellsbury, a former standout at Madras High School and Oregon State University, was placed on the 15day disabled list on April 14 with a partial dislocation of his right shoulder. The 28-year-old center fielder played in Boston’s first seven games this season and was batting .192 before he was injured in a game against Tampa Bay in Boston on April 13. The Red Sox announced the transfer on Sunday.
Basketball • Murder conviction in college player’s stabbing: A jury on Monday convicted the roommate of Middle Tennessee basketball player Tina Stewart of seconddegree murder in the athlete’s
2011 stabbing death. Jurors spent about two hours deliberating before reaching a verdict against 19-year-old Shanterrica Madden in the March 2, 2011, stabbing of Stewart at an offcampus apartment they shared in Murfreesboro, Tenn. Madden also was convicted of tampering with evidence for trying to hide the knife used in the stabbing of the 21-year-old Lady Raiders player. The defendant could face 15 to 60 years in prison for the murder conviction at sentencing, scheduled for July 16.
Cycling • Spaniard wins Giro stage: Francisco Ventoso of Spain won the ninth stage of the Giro d’Italia in a sprint finish Monday after several other contenders fell at the last turn. Ryder Hesjedal, a Canadian with Garmin-Barracuda, kept the overall lead for a third day. Ventoso, who rides for the Movistar team, was timed in 3 hours, 39 minutes, 15 seconds for the 108-mile leg from San Giorgio Del Sannio to Frosinone, south of Rome. Fabio Felline of Androni and fellow Italian Giacomo Nizzolo of RadioShack were second and third, both with the same time as Ventoso. Hesjedal remained nine seconds ahead of Spain’s Joaquin Rodriguez and 15 seconds in front of Italy’s Paolo Tiralongo. • Sagan wins stage of Tour of California: Peter Sagan of Slovakia won his second straight stage with a powerful and unchallenged sprint and retained the overall lead Monday in stage 2 of the Amgen Tour of California. The Liquigas-Cannondale rider was timed in the 117.1-mile road race from San Francisco in 5 hours and 2 minutes. He now leads the eight-day event by 8 seconds over Heinrich Haussler of Australia, a former Tour de France stage winner who was second for the second straight day. Leigh Howard of the OricaGreenEDGE team was third in the stage that took the starting field of 128 along the California coastline. Defending champion Chris Horner, of Bend, finished safely in the main field for the second straight day.
Hockey • Caps’ coach quits: Dale Hunter quit as coach of the Washington Capitals on Monday after less than one full season in the job, telling the team he wants to return to his family in Canada. Hunter went 30-23-7 in the regular season after agreeing to a one-year deal to take over for the fired Bruce Boudreau, helping the Capitals squeeze into the playoffs. — From wire reports
ON DECK Today Boys golf: Class 6A state tourney at Emerald Valley in Creswell, 12:15 p.m.; Class 5A state tourney at Emerald Valley in Creswell, 7:30 a.m.; Class 4A state tourney at Quail Valley in Banks, 7:30 a.m. Girls golf: Class 6A state tourney at Trysting Tree in Corvallis, 12:15 p.m.; Class 5A state tourney at Trysting Tree in Corvallis, 7:30 a.m.; Class 4A/3A/2A/1A state tourney at Eagle Crest in Redmond, 8 a.m. Baseball: Sisters at Bend (Vince Genna Stadium), 4:30 p.m.
Sofia Arvidsson, Sweden, def. Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez, Spain, 6-3, 6-2. Ekaterina Makarova, Russia, def. Francesca Schiavone (10), Italy, 6-3, 6-4.
IN THE BLEACHERS
DEALS Transactions
Wednesday Track and field: Redmond at Class 6A Central Valley Conference championships in Keizer, 3 p.m. Baseball: Clackamas at Summit, 4 p.m. Softball: Redmond at Clackamas, 3 p.m.; Culver at Western Mennonite, 4:30 p.m. Thursday Baseball: Culver at Kennedy, 4:30 p.m.; Class 4A playin, Crook County at Baker, 4 p.m. Softball: Kennedy at Culver, 4:30 p.m.; Class 4A playin, TBA at Crook County, 4 p.m. Track and field: Sisters, La Pine at Sky-Em League championships in Sweet Home, TBA Boys tennis: Class 6A, 5A state tourneys in Beaverton, 9 a.m.; Class 4A/3A/2A/1A state tourney in Eugene, 5 p.m. Girls tennis: Class 6A, 5A state tourneys in Beaverton, 9 a.m.; Class 4A/3A/2A/1A state tourney in Eugene, 5 p.m. Friday Track and field: Class 2A, 1A state meets in Monmouth, 11 a.m.; Redmond at Class 6A Central Valley Conference championships in Keizer, 3:30 p.m.; Bend, Mountain View, Summit at Class 5A Special District 1 Championships in Bend, TBD; Madras at Tri-Valley Championships in Molalla, TBA; Crook County at Greater Oregon League championships in La Grande, 3 p.m. Boys tennis: Class 6A, 5A state tourneys in Beaverton, 9 a.m.; Class 4A/3A/2A/1A state tourney in Eugene, 8 a.m. Girls tennis: Class 6A, 5A state tourneys in Beaverton, 9 a.m.; Class 4A/3A/2A/1A state tourney in Eugene, 8 a.m. Saturday Track and field: Class 2A, 1A state meets in Monmouth, 11 a.m.; Bend, Mountain View, Summit at Class 5A Special District 1 Championships in Bend, TBD; Crook County at Greater Oregon League championships in La Grande, TBA; Sisters, La Pine at SkyEm League championships in Sweet Home, TBA Boys tennis: Class 6A, 5A state tourneys in Beaverton, 9 a.m.; Class 4A/3A/2A/1A state tourney in Eugene, 8 a.m. Girls tennis: Class 6A, 5A state tourneys in Beaverton, 9 a.m.; Class 4A/3A/2A/1A state tourney in Eugene, 8 a.m.
BASKETBALL NBA NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION NBA Playoff Glance All Times PDT (x-if necessary) (Best-of-7) ——— CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS EASTERN CONFERENCE Boston 1, Philadelphia 1 Saturday, May 12: Boston 92, Philadelphia 91 Monday, May 14: Philadelphia 82, Boston 81 Wednesday, May 16: Boston at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Friday, May 18: Boston at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. x-Monday, May 21: Philadelphia at Boston, TBD x-Wednesday, May 23: Boston at Philadelphia, TBD x-Saturday, May 26: Philadelphia at Boston, TBD Miami 1, Indiana 0 Sunday, May 13: Miami 95, Indiana 86 Today, May 15: Indiana at Miami, 4 p.m. Thursday, May 17: Miami at Indiana, 4 p.m. Sunday, May 20: Miami at Indiana, 12:30 p.m. x-Tuesday, May 22: Indiana at Miami, TBD x-Thursday, May 24: Miami at Indiana, TBD x-Saturday, May 26: Indiana at Miami, TBD WESTERN CONFERENCE Oklahoma City 1, L.A. Lakers 0 Monday, May 14: Oklahoma City 119, L.A. Lakers 90 Wednesday, May 16: L.A. Lakers at Oklahoma City 6:30 p.m. Friday, May 18: Oklahoma City at L.A. Lakers, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 19: Oklahoma City at L.A. Lakers, 7:30 p.m. x-Monday, May 21: L.A. Lakers at Oklahoma City, TBD x-Wednesday, May 23: Oklahoma City at L.A. Lakers, TBD x-Sunday, May 27: L.A. Lakers at Oklahoma City, TBD San Antonio vs. L.A. Clippers Today, May 15: L.A. Clippers at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, May 17: L.A. Clippers at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. Saturday, May 19: San Antonio at L.A. Clippers, 12:30 p.m. Sunday, May 20: San Antonio at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m. x-Tuesday, May 22: L.A. Clippers at San Antonio, TBD x-Friday, May 25: San Antonio at L.A. Clippers, TBD x-Sunday, May 27: L.A. Clippers at San Antonio, TBD Monday’s Summaries
Thunder 119, Lakers 90 L.A. LAKERS (90) World Peace 4-10 2-2 12, Gasol 5-11 0-0 10, Bynum 7-12 6-6 20, Sessions 1-7 0-0 2, Bryant 7-18 5-7 20, Blake 0-1 0-0 0, Hill 2-5 0-0 4, Barnes 3-6 0-0 8, McRoberts 1-3 0-0 2, Goudelock 2-3 0-0 5, Ebanks 1-3 0-0 2, Murphy 0-0 0-0 0, Morris 2-2 0-0 5. Totals 35-81 13-15 90. OKLAHOMA CITY (119) Durant 8-16 7-8 25, Ibaka 3-5 0-0 6, Perkins 2-2 0-0 4, Westbrook 10-15 6-6 27, Sefolosha 3-3 0-0 7, Harden 4-11 9-10 17, Collison 2-4 0-1 4, Mohammed 3-5 1-2 7, Fisher 2-8 0-0 5, Cook 3-7 0-0 8, Aldrich 3-4 1-2 7, Ivey 1-3 0-0 2, Hayward 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 44-83 24-29 119. L.A. Lakers 23 21 24 22 — 90 Oklahoma City 30 29 39 21 — 119 3-Point Goals—L.A. Lakers 7-16 (Barnes 2-4, World Peace 2-4, Morris 1-1, Goudelock 1-1, Bryant 1-3, Blake 0-1, McRoberts 0-1, Ebanks 0-1), Oklahoma City 7-17 (Cook 2-4, Durant 2-5, Sefolosha 1-1, Westbrook 1-1, Fisher 1-1, Ivey 0-1, Harden 0-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—L.A. Lakers 47 (Bynum 14), Oklahoma City 45 (Durant 8). Assists—L.A.
Lakers 14 (Blake 4), Oklahoma City 20 (Westbrook 9). Total Fouls—L.A. Lakers 20, Oklahoma City 19. Technicals—Ebanks, Ibaka, Ivey. A—18,203 (18,203).
76ers 82, Celtics 81 PHILADELPHIA (82) Iguodala 5-11 2-7 13, Brand 3-5 1-2 7, Hawes 4-9 0-0 8, Holiday 7-15 0-0 18, Turner 4-11 2-2 10, L.Williams 3-13 2-2 8, L.Allen 4-7 2-2 10, T.Young 03 4-4 4, Meeks 1-2 2-2 4. Totals 31-76 15-21 82. BOSTON (81) Pierce 2-9 2-2 7, Bass 5-15 2-2 12, Garnett 7-12 01 15, Rondo 4-12 0-0 8, Bradley 3-6 0-0 8, Stiemsma 1-3 0-0 2, R.Allen 7-14 1-2 17, Pietrus 3-5 0-0 8, Hollins 1-1 2-2 4, Dooling 0-2 0-0 0, Daniels 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 33-79 7-9 81. Philadelphia 21 15 21 25 — 82 Boston 25 13 11 32 — 81 3-Point Goals—Philadelphia 5-14 (Holiday 4-6, Iguodala 1-3, Meeks 0-1, Turner 0-1, L.Williams 03), Boston 8-18 (Bradley 2-3, Pietrus 2-3, R.Allen 2-6, Garnett 1-1, Pierce 1-4, Dooling 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Philadelphia 55 (Hawes 10), Boston 44 (Garnett 12). Assists—Philadelphia 17 (Iguodala 7), Boston 23 (Rondo 13). Total Fouls— Philadelphia 13, Boston 22. A—18,624 (18,624).
HOCKEY NHL NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PDT (x-if necessary) (Best-of-7) ——— CONFERENCE FINALS EASTERN CONFERENCE N.Y. Rangers 1, New Jersey 0 Monday, May 14: NY Rangers 3, New Jersey 0 Wednesday, May 16: New Jersey at NY Rangers, 5 p.m. Saturday, May 19: NY Rangers at New Jersey, 10 a.m. Monday, May 21: NY Rangers at New Jersey, 5 p.m. x-Wednesday, May 23: New Jersey at NY Rangers, 5 p.m. x-Friday, May 25: NY Rangers at New Jersey, 5 p.m. x-Sunday, May 27: New Jersey at NY Rangers, 5 p.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE Los Angeles 1, Phoenix 0 Sunday, May 13: Los Angeles 4, Phoenix 2 Today, May 15: Los Angeles at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Thursday, May 17: Phoenix at Los Angeles, 6 p.m. Sunday, May 20: Phoenix at Los Angeles, noon x-Tuesday, May 22: Los Angeles at Phoenix, 6 p.m. x-Thursday, May 24: Phoenix at Los Angeles, 6 p.m. x-Saturday, May 26: Los Angeles at Phoenix, 5 p.m.
SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT ——— Eastern Conference W L T Pts GF GA New York 7 3 1 22 23 16 Sporting Kansas City 7 3 0 21 13 7 D.C. 5 4 3 18 20 16 Chicago 4 2 3 15 11 10 New England 4 6 0 12 12 13 Montreal 3 5 3 12 12 16 Houston 3 3 2 11 8 9 Columbus 3 4 2 11 8 11 Philadelphia 2 6 1 7 7 12 Toronto FC 0 8 0 0 6 18 Western Conference W L T Pts GF GA Real Salt Lake 8 3 2 26 19 12 San Jose 7 2 2 23 22 12 Seattle 7 2 1 22 13 4 Vancouver 5 3 2 17 10 11 Colorado 5 5 0 15 15 12 FC Dallas 3 6 3 12 11 18 Los Angeles 3 5 2 11 12 15 Chivas USA 3 6 1 10 6 12 Portland 2 5 2 8 9 13 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. ——— Today’s Game Portland at Houston, 5:30 p.m. Wednesday’s Game Colorado at D.C. United, 4:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games Seattle FC at Vancouver, 2 p.m. Toronto FC at D.C. United, 4:30 p.m.
Houston at New England, 4:30 p.m. New York at Montreal, 4:30 p.m. Philadelphia at FC Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Sporting Kansas City at Colorado, 6 p.m. Columbus at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. Los Angeles at Chivas USA, 7:30 p.m. Sunday’s Game Chicago at Portland, 4 p.m
BASEBALL College Pacific-12 Conference All Times PDT ——— Conference W L Oregon 19 8 Arizona 16 8 UCLA 15 9 Arizona St. 14 10 Stanford 14 10 Oregon St. 13 11 Washington 11 13 Washington St. 9 14 California 9 15 USC 7 16 Utah 7 20 Monday’s Games x-California 13, Washington State 8 Oregon 6, USC 3 Today’s Games x-San Francisco at Stanford, 5:30 p.m. x-Portland at Oregon State, 5:35 p.m. x-UCLA at Cal State Fullerton, 6 p.m. x-Utah at Utah Valley, 6 p.m. Wednesday’s Games x-UC Riverside at USC, 6 p.m. x-Arizona at Arizona State, 6:30 p.m. x-nonleague
All Games W L 38 14 33 15 35 13 32 17 32 14 32 17 26 21 24 24 26 22 22 24 13 35
TENNIS Professional Italian Open Monday At Foro Italico Rome Purse: Men, $3.14 million, (WT1000); Women, $2.17 million (Premier) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Men First Round Gael Monfils (13), France, def. Alex Bogomolov Jr., Russia, 6-4, 6-1. Fernando Verdasco, Spain, def. Alexandr Dolgopolov, Ukraine, 6-0, retired. Bernard Tomic, Australia, def. Santiago Giraldo, Colombia, 4-6, 6-2, 6-4. Fabio Fognini, Italy, def. Marcos Baghdatis, Cyprus, 6-2, 6-2. David Nalbandian, Argentina, def. Albert Ramos, Spain, 6-3, 6-4. Stanislas Wawrinka, Switzerland, def. Robin Haase, Netherlands, 6-1, 4-6, 7-5. Carlos Berlocq, Argentina, def. Blaz Kavcic, Slovenia, 6-1, 6-3. Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic, def. Juan Ignacio Chela, Argentina, 2-6, 6-0, 6-3. Nicolas Almagro (12), Spain, def. Marin Cilic, Croatia, 6-2, 3-6, 6-0. John Isner (9), United States, def. Philipp Kohlscreiber, Germany, 2-6, 7-6 (3), 6-2. Women First Round Anabel Medina Garrigues, Spain, def. Zheng Jie, China, 6-2, 6-1. Chanelle Scheepers, South Africa, def. Jarmila Gajdosova, Australia, 6-4, 7-6 (3). Vania King, United States, def. Tsvetana Pironkova, Bulgaria, 6-0, 6-1. Christina McHale, United States, def. Monica Niculescu, Romania, 6-4, 6-4. Iveta Benesova, Czech Republic, def. Yanina Wickmayer, Belgium, 6-4, 5-7, 7-6 (5). Ana Ivanovic (13), Serbia, def. Svetlana Kuznetsova, Russia, 6-4, 6-3. Julia Goerges, Germany, def. Aleksandra Wozniak, Canada, 6-1, 6-7 (1), 6-3. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Russia, def. Ksenia Pervak, Kazakhstan, 6-2, 6-4. Shahar Peer, Israel, def. Peng Shuai, China, 7-6 (4), 4-6, 3-1, retired. Angelique Kerber (12), Germany, def. Anastasia Rodionova, Australia, 4-6, 7-5, 6-2.
BASEBALL Major League Baseball MLB—Announced the 100-game suspension issued to Colorado minor league C Eliezer Alfonzo (Colorado Springs-PCL) on Sept. 14, 2011 has been rescinded. Suspended Baltimore 3B Billy Rowell (Aberdeen-NYP) 50 games after a second violation of drug abuse under the minor league drug prevention and treatment program. American League CLEVELAND INDIANS—Selected the contract of RHP Jeremy Accardo from Columbus (IL). Designated RHP Dan Wheeler for assignment. LOS ANGELES ANGELS—Placed OF Torii Hunter on the restricted list. Called up OF Ryan Langerhans from Salt Lake (PCL). TAMPA BAY RAYS—Placed OF Desmond Jennings on the 15-day DL, retroactive to May 12. Recalled COF Stephen Vogt from Durham (IL). TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Recalled LHP Evan Crawford from Las Vegas (PCL). Optioned RHP Joel Carreno to New Hampshire (EL). National League LOS ANGELES DODGERS—Placed 3B Juan Uribe on the 15-day DL. Designated INF Trent Oeltjen for assignment. Purchased the contract of INF-OF Elian Herrera from Albuquerque (PCL). ST. LOUIS CARDINALS—Released LHP J.C. Romero. Recalled RHP Eduardo Sanchez from Memphis (PCL). SAN DIEGO PADRES—Activated RHP Tim Stauffer from the 15-day DL. Optioned LHP Josh Spence to Tucson (PCL). BASKETBALL Women’s National Basketball Association TULSA SHOCK—Waived C Vicki Baugh and G Lorin Dixon. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS—Signed S Eddie Elder, RB Javarris James, CB Larry Parker and K-P Ricky Schmitt. BUFFALO BILLS—Signed FB Dorin Dickerson, OT James Carmon and S Nick Saenz. CHICAGO BEARS—Waived OT Levi Horn, TE Andre Smith and G Reggie Stephens. CINCINNATI BENGALS—Signed FB Jourdan Brooks and LB Emmanuel Lamur. CLEVELAND BROWNS—Signed LB Emmanuel Acho, LB JoJo Dickson and RB Adonis Thomas. Waived RB Armond Smith. Placed LB Andrew Sweat on the reserve/retired list. DENVER BRONCOS—Announced the retirement of defensive line coach Wayne Nunnely. Promoted Jay Rodgers to defensive line coach. GREEN BAY PACKERS—Signed OT Shea Allard, WR Jarrett Boykin, G Grant Cook, WR Curenski Gilleylen and CB Otis Merrill. Waived OT Chris Campbell. HOUSTON TEXANS—Signed C Ben Jones, WR Keshawn Martin, DE Jared Crick, K Randy Bullock, OT Nick Mondek, QB Case Keenum, WR Dwight Jones, S Eddie Pleasant, NT Loni Fangupo, TE Logan Brock, LB Derrell Bryant, FB Jason Ford, RB Jonathan Grimes, NT David Hunter, WR Jerrell Jackson, LB Delano Johnson, LB Shawn Louiseau, WR Mario Louis, S Desmond Marrow, RB Davin Meggett, OT Nathan Menkin, DE Rennie Moore Jr., DE Tracy Rebertson, TE Phillip Supernaw, G Cody White and LB Greg Williams. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS—Signed K Brandon Coutu. waived CB Dontrell Johnson. MINNESOTA VIKINGS—Signed G Tyler Holmes. Waived WR Kris Adams. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS—Signed OT Hutch Eckerson, CB Nick Hixson, G DeOn’tae Pannell and LB Lawrence Wilson. Waived OT Dan Hoch, G Nick Howell, LB Stephen Johnson, OT Phil Trautwein and CB Josh Victorian. NEW YORK GIANTS—Signed WR Brandon Collins, LB Jake Muasau and S Will Hill. Waived S Chad Jones. OAKLAND RAIDERS—Signed K-P Eddy Carmona, DE Wayne Dorsey, TE Kyle Efaw, OT Kevin Haslam, CB LeQuan Lewis, FB TreShawn Robinson and WR Travionte Session. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES—Signed DB Wade Bonner. Released WR Darnell Williams. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS—Agreed to terms with S Brandon Taylor on a four-year contract. Signed DL Garrett Brown to a one-year contract and CB Arthur Hobbs to a three-year contract. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS—Signed LB Eric Bakhtiari to a two-year contract and DB Ben Hannula to a three-year contract. Released WR John Matthews and OT Kevin Murphy. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS—Signed LB Najee Goode and DB Keith Tandy to four-year contracts. WASHINGTON REDSKINS—Re-signed RB Tim Hightower. HOCKEY National Hockey League COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS—Signed coach Todd Richards to a two-year contract. WASHINGTON CAPITALS—Fired coach Dale Hunter. SOCCER Major League Soccer TORONTO FC—Promoted Jim Brennan to assistant coach and Bob de Klerk to technical manager. COLLEGE ARKANSAS—Released freshman WR Kane Whitehurst from his scholarship. MOREHEAD STATE—Named Sean Woods men’s basketball coach. MCMURRY—Named Chris Beard men’s basketball head coach. SETON HALL—Announced men’s freshman basketball G Sterling Gibbs has transferred from Texas. WEST VIRGINIA—Named Ron Everhart men’s assistant basketball coach. WINGATE—Named Ann Hancock women’s basketball coach.
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Monday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 8,786 518 60 16 The Dalles 5,819 316 7 1 John Day 8,746 338 6 0 McNary 8,053 162 3 1 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Monday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 110,514 3,138 4,678 1,455 The Dalles 61,359 2,308 1,642 912
Rangers shut out Devils in East finals opener The Associated Press NEW YORK — After 14 games and two nail-biting playoff series wins, the New York Rangers insist they have plenty left to make a run at the Stanley Cup. If any proof was needed, Henrik Lundqvist provided it with a shutout victory over the well-rested New Jersey Devils in the opener of the Eastern Conference finals on Monday night. Lundqvist made 21 saves in his fifth career playoff shutout. Rookie Chris Kreider, defenseman Dan Girardi, and Artem Anisimov all had a goal and an assist in the third period as the Rangers turned a scoreless game into a 3-0 win. It came two days after New York outlasted the pesky Washington Capitals in Game 7 of the sec-
NHL PLAYOFFS ond-round series. “I don’t know where you guys get all this stuff about being tired,” Rangers coach John Tortorella said. “If we’re tired this time of the year, there’s something the matter. We still have a month to play. You might as well not even ask me questions about being tired.” The Rangers said during their one day off before facing the Devils that they liked the rhythm of playing every other day, and didn’t think the quick turnaround would affect them. The Devils, however, had been off for five days since they knocked out the Philadelphia Flyers in five games. “It’s always tough to come from a Game 7. So emotional,
and everything around it, and then start over,” Lundqvist said. “(Sunday) was all about regrouping, and move your focus to a new team and just a different type of game. “I didn’t really know what to expect from this game, honestly.” No team forced to play seven-game series in each of the first two rounds has gone on to win the Stanley Cup, but the Rangers are determined to be the first. The Rangers slogged through two scoreless periods and pulled out a win with a dominating third period. The Rangers are in the conference finals for the first time since 1997, and they haven’t reached the Stanley Cup finals since 1994, when they beat 22-year-old goalie Martin Bro-
deur and the Devils in a classic seven-game series that backed up captain Mark Messier’s guarantee. Brodeur and the Devils are making their first conference finals appearance since 2003, the year they won the Cup for the third time. Game 2 is Wednesday night in New York. Girardi, who struggled at times with his defensive duties, got a perfect setup from Kreider and scored 53 seconds into the third period. Playing in just his 13th NHL game, all in these playoffs, Kreider sent a pass back from the right circle in the Devils’ zone to the point. Girardi took long strides as he charged up ice and stepped into a shot that ripped through a screen in front by teammate Derek Stepan.
TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Cougs hold off Buffs in nonleague softball
NBA PLAYOFF ROUNDUP
Larry W. Smith / The Associated Press file
Oklahoma City Thunder forward Kevin Durant, right, dunks in front of Los Angeles Lakers center Andrew Bynum, left, in the first quarter of Game 1 of a playoff series in Oklahoma City on Monday.
Thunder blow out Lakers by 29 to start semifinals The Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY — When the Los Angeles Lakers and Oklahoma City last met, Metta World Peace delivered an elbow that sent the Thunder’s James Harden home with a concussion. It’s the Lakers who are smarting after the playoff rematch. Russell Westbrook had 27 points and nine assists, Kevin Durant added 25 points and the Thunder blasted the weary Lakers 119-90 on Monday night in the opening game of the Western Conference semifinals. The Thunder took a 15-point halftime lead, opened the third quarter with a 15-2 blitz filled with crowd-pleasing three-pointers and dunks and never looked back. “From then on, it was cruising for us,” Westbrook said. “When our team plays like that throughout the game, we put ourselves in a good opportunity to win.” Kobe Bryant and Andrew Bynum scored 20 points each for the Lakers and Bynum had 14 rebounds. Two games after trailing by as many as 28 points in a blowout loss in Game 6 in Denver, it got even worse as the Lakers were down by as many as 35. They responded to their last loss by beating the Nuggets 96-87 in a thrilling Game 7 on Saturday night.
They’ll need another big bounce back for Game 2 in Oklahoma City on Wednesday night. “We got beat tonight. You can say anything you want to about a seven-game series and us having a day or whatever,” Los Angeles coach Mike Brown said. “The bottom line is this is the playoffs, we’ve got to come to play and we didn’t. We got beat. “It’s one game, so we’ve got to bounce back for the next one.” The Thunder didn’t need any dirty tactics to get even for World Peace’s suspension-worthy transgression. The league’s most turnover-prone team — committing 16.4 per game in the regular season — gave it away only four times, a record low for the franchise. “I think that’s huge,” coach Scott Brooks said. “Four — we’ve had that the first 6 minutes of games at times.” While the Lakers were making a quick turnaround less than 48 hours after ending the first round, the Thunder had eight full days off following their firstround sweep of defending NBA champion Dallas. It got out of hand just after halftime, in highlight-reel fashion. Durant lobbed the ball to Westbrook for a two-handed slam, then connected on a three-pointer from the left wing to draw a
timeout from Brown. That still didn’t slow down Oklahoma City, which got what could have been a costly twohanded dunk from Perkins on its next trip and then another three from Durant before Thabo Sefolosha swiped the ball from Bryant and ran out for a layup that made it 74-46 with 8:39 left in the period. Brooks said Perkins could have returned to play in the game but would be re-assessed on Tuesday. Perkins had missed most of the week of practice after straining a muscle in his right hip in the final game of the Dallas series. Also on Monday: 76ers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 Celtics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 BOSTON — Evan Turner made the go-ahead layup with 40.4 seconds left and Philadelphia held off Boston the rest of the way with six straight free throws as the 76ers evened the second-round Eastern Conference series. Turner finished with 10 points, including his layup that put the Sixers up 7675. He added two free throws with 12 seconds to go. Jrue Holiday scored 18 points and Andre Iguodala added 13 points, seven assists and six rebounds for the Sixers. Kevin Garnett had 15 points and 12 rebounds and Ray Allen scored 17 points for the Celtics.
NASCAR nation: Stop hating on Danica By Jenna Fryer The Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — anica Patrick raced 513 laps around Darlington Raceway last weekend. What did you do? Chances are, if you’re an ardent NASCAR fan, you might have snickered at the very mention of her name. You probably grumbled about the attention she received all weekend, and your level of anger likely grew every time her bright GoDaddy green car was shown on TV. It’s OK; Patrick learned to ignore the haters long ago. If she paid attention, she never would have chased her dreams of being a professional race car driver. If she listened to the criticism, she probably would have hung up her firesuit years ago. And now, with Twitter? The vile spewed at her in 140-character bursts, well, a weaker woman might crawl under the covers and never come out again. But that’s not Patrick. She strong and she’s brave and she rolled into Darlington, NASCAR’s oldest superspeedway and the track known historically for separating the men from the boys, and didn’t back down from the challenge. She’s not celebrated for any of that, at least not among the majority of racing fans. They instead fixate on her one win in 115 IndyCar starts, and now her struggles in NASCAR. Sure, her progress in NASCAR has been slow, but people seem to forget that racing cars is hard. If just anyone could do it, that guy zipping down the interstate with his flashy rims could have run at Darlington on Saturday night. Patrick didn’t pick Darlington for her second Sprint Cup Series start. The bright idea belonged
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MOTOR SPORTS COMMENTARY to Tony Stewart, a three-time NASCAR champion generally regarded as one of the most versatile drivers on the planet. Even so, his 13-year resume lacks a Cup win in 20 career starts at Darlington. But in Stewart’s desire to get Patrick ready for an eventual full-time move to the Cup Series with Stewart-Haas Racing, her team owner picked some of the hardest tracks in the series for her 10-race schedule this season. So that’s how she got to “The Track To Tough Too Tame,” where she moved back and forth between the Nationwide and Cup garages. She picked up her first career “Darlington stripe” in her first practice session, but so did five-time champion Jimmie Johnson, who proudly tweeted a picture of his damaged car after smacking the wall in Friday’s practice. Johnson went on to win Saturday night’s Cup race. Nobody thought Patrick would compete for a victory, and Stewart did a masterful job all weekend of lowering expectations to the point he basically said he didn’t expect anything at all. “I want her to just as run as many laps as possible,” he said. “The more time she can spend on track the more experience she is going to get. The good thing running both divisions ... and not have too many problems, then it’s a lot of valuable experience that when we come back here next year, doing it full-time, it should be very valuable.” In the end, Patrick finished a respectable 12th in the Nationwide race, her Darlington debut. She was 31st the next night, six
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laps down from winner Johnson. But a 172-lap green-flag run put her a lap down early, and her mission from that moment on was to stay out of the way of traffic while also trying to turn fast laps and not let the track itself defeat her. All in all, it was a successful weekend. Sadly, not everyone views it that way. There’s a strong resentment toward Patrick that really has to end. It’s mean-spirited — sexist in some cases — and even though it doesn’t bother her, it is harmful to little girls everywhere who may dream of being race car drivers. With Patrick in NASCAR now and Sarah Fisher, proud mother of one, now a team owner, this year will mark the first Indianapolis 500 since 1999 without an American woman in the field. Both of NASCAR’s full-time female drivers, Patrick and Nationwide regular Johanna Long, are American. But they are the only two women competing regularly at NASCAR’s national level. Just 19, Long has yet to experience the full wrath of an angry NASCAR nation. And she caught a bit of break this year, as many fans have championed her as the anti-Danica and the female driver worthy of some of Patrick’s exposure. But the way Patrick gets treated, why would Long ever want that attention? Why would anyone? You don’t have to love Patrick, and just like any other driver, it’s OK to hate her, too. But she deserves respect for what she’s trying to do from the people watching from their couches and hiding behind a computer screen. Patrick completed two races at Darlington last weekend. What did you do?
Bulletin staff report Sparked by a four-run first inning, Mountain View topped visiting Madras 6-5 on Monday afternoon in nonleague softball action. Singles by Mackenzi Serbus and Quincy Mate highlighted the Cougars’ big at-bat. The White Buffaloes rallied and briefly led 5-4 after scoring two runs in the top of the fifth inning, but Mountain View brought home two runs in the bottom of the fifth and held on for the win. “We continue to bounce back,” Mountain View coach Mike Durre said. Shelbee Wells picked up the victory for the Cougars (12-12 overall), scattering seven hits over seven innings. Jamie Moe, one of three White Buffaloes who pitched Monday, took the loss for Madras. Cheyenne Parsons paced the White Buffalo offense with a double. Class 5A Mountain View and 4A Madras both will compete in play-in games later this week. Also on Monday:
PREP ROUNDUP SOFTBALL Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Madison Weaver hit a two-run home run in the first inning to give the host Lava Bears into an early lead in the nonleague contest. Bend’s Kaitlynn Brown logged a double, while Meredith Berrigan earned the win for the Bears. Bend (14-11 overall) will host a Class 5A state play-in game on Thursday. La Pine concludes its regular season with a 2-23 overall record. Culver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18-14 East Linn Christian . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-2 LEBANON — The visiting Bulldogs swept a Class 2A/1A Special District 3 doubleheader, both in five innings. Mariah Hill logged two doubles in the first game and a triple in the second, while Ashley Wilda and Kelsie Stafford each hit a double in the twin bill. Culver (11-11 overall, 5-7 Tri-River) plays at Western Mennonite in Salem on Wednesday.
PREP SCOREBOARD Softball Monday’s results ——— Nonconference (6 innings) ——— La Pine 100 000 — 1 2 1 Bend 400 421 — 11 10 0 Meredith Berrigan and Sylvester; K. Parrish and Fisher. W—Berrigan. L—Parrish. 2B—Bend: Brown. HR—Bend: Weaver. ——— Nonconference ——— Madras 210 020 0 — 5 7 2 Mountain View 400 020 0 — 6 9 2 Parsons, Martin (4), Moe (5) and Hulsey; Wells and Serbus. W—Wells. L—Moe. 2B— Madras: Parsons. ——— Class 2A/1A Special District 3 ——— First Game (5 innings) Culver 741 15 — 18 8 0 East Linn Christian 010 12 — 4 4 2 Hill and McKinney; Barreto and Snyder. W—Hill. L—Barreto. 2B—East Linn Christian: Barreto; Culver: Hill 2, Wilda. ——— Second game (5 innings) Culver 038 12 — 14 14 1 East Linn Christian 001 10 — 2 2 1 Donnelly and Stafford; Reardon and Barreto. W—Donnelly. L—Reardon. 2B—Culver: Lopez, Stafford. 3B— Culver: Hill.
Golf Boys ——— Monday’s Results ——— Class 6A 2012 OSAA State Championships At Emerald Valley Golf Club, Creswell First Round, Par 72 Team scores — Lake Oswego 307, Sprague 315, South Eugene 316, West Linn 320, Southridge 320, Jesuit 326, Tualatin 330, West Salem 333, Central Catholic 334, Sheldon 343, Glencoe 348, David Douglas 356. Individual leaders (top 10) — 1, Sulman Raza, South Eugene, 70. 2, Zach Foushee, West Linn, 71. 3 (tie), Justin Lee, Southridge, 72 and Cole Madey, Lake Oswego, 72. 5 (tie), Trey Pflug, Sunset, 74 and Mitchell Stewart, Thurston, 74. 7, Clayton Madey, Lake Oswego, 76. 8 (tie), Tommy Fruin, South Eugene, 76; Ryan Pickthorn, Clackamas, 76; Austin Spicer, Gresham, 76, Reed Suthers, Sprague, 76. REDMOND (inc.) — Mason Rodby, 3941—80; Ben Moore, 44-43—87. ——— Class 5A 2012 OSAA State Championships At Emerald Valley Golf Club, Creswell First Round, Par 72 Team scores — Marist 317, Summit 322, Corvallis 322, West Albany 326, Sherwood 344, Bend 345, Wilsonville 350, Hermiston
356, Churchill 356, Pendleton 366, Cleveland 377, Wilson 386. Individual leaders (top 10) — 1, Chase Lamothe, Corvallis, 72. 2 (tie), Nate Krause, Marist, 74, and Conner Kumpula, West Albany, 74. 4, Brent Pollock, Marist, 75. 5, Matt Hedges, Ashland, 76. 6, Chad Sherwood, West Albany, 78. 7 (tie), Ryan Blackwell, Summit, 79; Mark Geniza, Crescent Valley, 79; Pyper McCallum, Pendleton, 79. 10 (tie), Dylan Cramer, Summit, 80; Eddie Martinez, St. Helens, 80; Gabe Reed, Sherwood, 80; Michael Reid, Wilson, 80. SUMMIT (322) — Ryan Blackwell, 3742—79; Dylan Cramer, 40-40—80; Cole Ortega, 40-41—81; Declan Watts, 41-41—82; T.K. Wasserman, 45-46—91. BEND (345) — Ryan Crownover, 41-42— 83; Chapin Pedersen, 39-45—84; Jack Klar, 45-44—89; Carter McGowan, 44-45—89; Jaired Rodmaker, 47-45—92. ——— Class 4A 2012 OSAA State Championships At Quail Valley Golf Course, Banks First Round, Par 72 Team scores — La Grande 325, North Valley 325, La Salle 339, North Bend 341, Sisters 344, Scappoose 353, Sutherlin 357, Stayton 358, Crook County 360, Central 369, Klamath Union 373, Seaside 382, Molalla 390, Cottage Grove 397. Individual leaders (top 10) — 1, Ryan Melnychuk, North Valley, 67. 2, T.J. Barber, Estacada, 73. 3, Zach Cummings, Sisters, 77. 4, James Kirkpatrick, North Bend, 78. 5 (tie), Brandon Ellwanger, Baker, 79; Mavric Goss, La Grande, 79; Dan Seymour, La Grande, 79; Levi Smucker, Junction City, 79. 9 (tie), Paul Bundy, La Salle, 80; Nathan Ladendorf, La Grande, 80; Chuck Moore, South Umpqua, 80. SISTERS (344) — Zach Cummings, 3839—77; Nate Pajutee, 43-42—85; Tyler Berg, 45-55—89; Jaxon Stark, 45-48—93; Nolan Ferwalt, 51-51—102. CROOK COUNTY (360) — Ben McLane, 40-42—82; Shae Ross, 43-48—91; Hadley Reece, 46-47—93; Kody Kuk, 46-48—94; Billy Dockins, 50-49—99. ——— Class 3A/2A/1A 2012 OSAA State Championships At Quail Valley Golf Course, Banks First Round, Par 72 Team scores — St. Mary’s 320, Catlin Gabel 337, Reedsport 338, Westside Christian 339, Rogue River 345, Bandon 346, Heppner 353, Kennedy 353, Blanchet Catholic 365, Valley Catholic 380, Enterprise 387, Salem Academy 392, Grant Union 396, Wallowa 416. Individual leaders (top 10) — 1 (tie), Montana Frame, Reedsport, 72 and Dylan Wu, St. Mary’s, 72. 3, Kevin Murphy, Rogue River, 75. 4, Greg Ong, Valley Catholic, 76. 5, Ben Lindsay, Bandon, 77. 6, Conor Oliver, Catlin Gabel, 78. 7 (tie), Justin Barnett, Amity, 80; Jared Darby, Neah-Kah-Nie, 80; Will Street, St. Mary’s, 80; Andrew Wall, Reedsport, 80. ——— Girls ——— Class 6A 2012 OSAA State Championships At Trysting Tree Golf Club, Corvallis
Girls golf Continued from D1 Marist (364 strokes), Crescent Valley (385) and Wilsonville (388) rounded out the top squads in the 5A team standings after the first day of play. Kristen Parr (85), Madi Mansberger (87) and Megan Mitchell (88) all broke 90 for Summit. Trysting Tree played especially tough on Monday, as no 5A golfers shot or broke par in the opening round. “It was a good but fair test of people’s golf game,” Bend High coach Lowell Norby said. “The greens were double cut and there were some real tricky pin placements. It was set up for a good test.” Heidi Froelich highlighted Norby’s team with an 84, the sixth-best mark of the day. Kayla Good added an 87 and Madeline Rice contributed an 89 for the Lava Bears. “We’re really pleased with where we’re at after Day One,” Norby said. “It’d be nice to be closer to Summit. Eleven strokes is a lot to gain on them.” Individually, Mountain View’s Hailey Ostrom tees off today in ninth place following her first-day score of 86. On the other side of the Cascades on Monday, Crook County fired a 356 at the Class 4A/3A/2A/1A state championships at Eagle Crest Resort’s Ridge Course in
Boys golf Continued from D1 Bend’s Ryan Crownover shot an 11-over 83, besting teammate Chapin Pedersen by one stroke. But with a team score of 57over 345, the Lava Bears are a long shot to climb into contention. “Tomorrow we are playing for pride,” Bend coach Rusty Clemons said. Elsewhere Monday, Sisters ended the opening day of the Class 4A tournament at Quail Valley Golf Course in Banks in fifth place with a 344, three strokes off North Bend, which tees off today in fourth place (341 strokes). La Grande and North
First Round, Par 72 Team scores — Jesuit 336, Tualatin 338, Sheldon 351, Beaverton 357, Central Catholic 369, St. Mary’s Academy 370, Roseberg 374, West Linn 381, Sprague 404, Glencoe 407, South Salem 412, Lake Oswego 414. Individual leaders (top 10) — 1, Gigi Stoll, Beaverton, 70. 2, Ashlee Pickerell, West Salem, 77. 3, Haleigh Krause, Sheldon, 79. 4 (tie), Sarah Salvatori, Sprague, 81 and Connie Zhou, Lakeridge, 81. 6 (tie), Katie Nolan, Tualatin, 82 and Deanna Salvatori, Sprague, 82. 8 (tie), Sarah Archuleta, West Linn, 83; Katie Craven, Jesuit, 83; Tess Jennings, Jesuit, 83; Hayley Mortensen, Tualatin, 83. REDMOND (inc.) — Chelsea Driggers, 46-48—94. ——— Class 5A 2012 OSAA State Championships At Trysting Tree Golf Club, Corvallis First Round, Par 72 Team scores — Summit 340, Bend 351, Marist 364, Crescent Valley 385, Wilsonville 388, Liberty 396, West Albany 401, Hermiston 422, Marshfield 430, Wilson 435, Hood River Valley 452. Individual leaders (top 10) — 1, Caroline Inglis, Churchill, 73. 2, Breanna Murphy, Crescent Valley, 78. 3, Juhee Lee, Wilsonville, 79. 4, Madison Odiorne, Summit, 80. 5, Sam Miller, Liberty, 81. 6, Heidi Froelich, Bend, 84. 7 (tie), Kristen Parr, Summit, 85, and Kalyn Thayer, West Albany, 85. 9, Hailey Ostrom, Mountain View, 86. 10 (tie), Kayla Good, Bend, 87; Madi Mansberger, Summit, 87; Sami Pitts, Marist, 87. SUMMIT (340) — Madison Odiorne, 43-37—80; Kristen Parr, 47-38—85; Madi Mansberger, 46-41—87; Megan Mitchell, 4543—88; Ashley Dolinar, 52-49—101. BEND (351) — Heidi Froelich, 39-45— 84; Kayla Good, 43-44—87; Madeline Rice, 44-45—89; Lili Bornio, 44-47—91; Danae Walker, 45-47—92. ——— Class 4A/3A/2A/1A 2012 OSAA State Championships At Eagle Crest Ridge Course, Redmond First Round, Par 72 Team scores — Crook County 356, Molalla 373, Seaside 380, Catlin Gabel 380, Ontario 383, Sutherlin 390, Blanchet Catholic 393, Reedsport 393, La Pine 396, Taft 409, Heppner 416, Scappoose 451, North Valley 472. Individual leaders (top 10) — 1, (tie) Kaitlin Collum, Henley, 71 and Hannah Reynolds, Mazama, 71. 3, Monica Vaughn, Reedsport, 73. 4, Kylie Collum, Henley, 74. 5, Kirsti Kelso, Crook County, 76. 6, Jessi Weaver, Taft, 77. 7 (tie), Katy Kawasoe, Seaside, 78 and Amanda McCall, Blanchet Catholic, 78. 9, Jessica Young, Gold Beach, 80. 10, Riley Helmick, Ontario, 82. CROOK COUNTY (356) — Kirsti Kelso, 39-37—76; Kalie Solomon, 46-45—91; Sierra Morgan, 46-47—93; Jaci McKenzie, 45-51— 96; Chelsea Shank, 53-49—102. LA PINE (396) — Samantha McPherson, 44-41—85; Haley Clark 49-48—97; Bridget McDonald 51-53—104; Ashley Ferns 5555—110; Taylor Tavares, 57-59—116.
Redmond to stake a 17-stroke lead over second-place Molalla (373) heading into today. Cowgirl senior Kirsti Kelso is in the hunt for medalist honors — she is currently five strokes back of first-day co-leaders Kaitlin Collom of Hensley and Hannah Reynolds of Mazama, who both shot 71 — after posting a career-best 4-over-par 76. “Hopefully we can come back (today) and shoot another good score,” said Crook County coach Grant Patterson, whose Cowgirls tied for third at state a year ago. Kalie Solomon (46-45—91), Sierra Morgan (46-47—93) and Jaci McKenzie (96) also shot scoring rounds for the Cowgirls. La Pine ended the first day of play at the 4A/3A/2A/1A championship in ninth place with 396 strokes. The Hawks were led by Samantha McPherson, who shot an 85 and enters today in a three-way tie for 14th. Victoria Sample of Bend’s Trinity Lutheran posted an 86 and sits alone in 17th place. Redmond’s Chelsea Driggers is the lone Central Oregon golfer at the Class 6A state tournament, which is also being played at Trysting Tree. Driggers carded a 94 on Monday and was tied for 38th after the opening round of competition. The second and final rounds of the 6A, 5A and 4A/3A/2A/1A girls state golf championships take place today.
Valley shared the first-day lead as each team posted a 325. The Outlaws’ Zach Cummings led the way for Sisters, shooting a 5-over-par 77 to end the first round alone in third place. Crook County starts today in ninth place after carding a 360. At the Class 6A championship, which was also staged at Emerald Valley, Redmond’s Mason Rodby ended Monday tied for 24th place with an 80. Ben Moore, the Panthers’ only other golfer at the 6A tourney, shot an 87 and concluded openingday play tied for 54th. The 6A, 5A and 4A boys golf state championships conclude today.
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Oakland J.Weeks 2b Pennington ss Reddick rf J.Gomes dh S.Smith lf Donaldson 3b Barton 1b K.Suzuki c Cowgill cf Totals
AB 4 4 4 3 5 3 2 4 4 33
R 0 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 5
H 0 1 1 0 2 1 0 2 1 8
BI 0 0 1 0 2 1 0 1 0 5
BB 0 1 1 2 0 0 2 0 0 6
SO 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 6
Avg. .198 .212 .289 .236 .253 .105 .182 .227 .111
Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Trout cf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .283 M.Izturis 2b 4 0 3 0 0 0 .294 Hester c 0 0 0 0 0 0 .500 Pujols 1b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .197 K.Morales dh 3 0 0 0 1 1 .303 Trumbo rf 4 0 2 0 0 0 .330 Callaspo 3b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .225 V.Wells lf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .233 Aybar ss 4 0 0 0 0 0 .193 Bo.Wilson c 2 0 0 0 0 0 .250 a-Bourjos ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .193 H.Kendrick 2b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .280 Totals 34 0 8 0 1 5 Oakland 100 120 010 — 5 8 0 Los Angeles 000 000 000 — 0 8 0 a-grounded out for Bo.Wilson in the 8th. LOB—Oakland 9, Los Angeles 8. 2B—S.Smith 2 (4), Donaldson (1). HR—Reddick (9), off Haren. SB— K.Suzuki (1), Cowgill (1), M.Izturis (7), Aybar (2). DP—Oakland 1; Los Angeles 1. Oakland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA T.Ross W, 2-3 6 5 0 0 1 2 94 6.25 Balfour 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 4.00 Norberto 1 2 0 0 0 1 22 3.44 R.Cook 1 1 0 0 0 1 15 0.00 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Haren L, 1-4 6 6 4 4 4 5 106 4.41 Takahashi 1 0 0 0 1 1 16 7.27 Isringhausen 1 2 1 1 0 0 16 2.84 Walden 1 0 0 0 1 0 19 4.00 T—2:56. A—32,851 (45,957).
White Sox 7, Tigers 5 Detroit AB A.Jackson cf 4 Dirks lf 2 a-R.Santiago ph-2b 1 Mi.Cabrera 3b 5 Fielder 1b 5 D.Young dh 5 Raburn 2b-lf 5 Boesch rf 4 Jh.Peralta ss 2 1-Worth pr 0 Laird c 2 b-Avila ph 1 Totals 36
R 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 5
H 1 0 0 3 3 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 12
BI 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 5
BB 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 6
SO 1 0 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
Avg. .318 .361 .154 .305 .278 .236 .149 .232 .252 .176 .281 .237
Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. De Aza cf 4 1 1 0 0 2 .285 Beckham 2b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .202 A.Dunn dh 4 1 1 2 0 3 .250 Konerko 1b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .331 Rios rf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .281 Pierzynski c 4 1 1 0 0 0 .257 Al.Ramirez ss 3 2 2 0 1 0 .209 Viciedo lf 3 1 2 4 0 0 .210 Lillibridge lf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .171 Morel 3b 4 0 1 1 0 1 .184 Totals 34 7 10 7 2 11 Detroit 302 000 000 — 5 12 0 Chicago 200 023 00x — 7 10 1 a-struck out for Dirks in the 8th. b-grounded out for Laird in the 9th. 1-ran for Jh.Peralta in the 9th. E—Z.Stewart (1). LOB—Detroit 13, Chicago 5. 2B—A.Jackson (10), Fielder (4), D.Young (6). HR—A.Dunn (12), off Smyly; Viciedo (4), off Smyly. SB—Mi.Cabrera (1), Al.Ramirez (3). DP—Chicago 1. Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Smyly 5 5 4 4 1 4 69 2.31 Putkonen L, 0-2 1-3 4 3 3 1 1 23 12.46 Below 2 0 0 0 0 4 24 2.12 Dotel 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 14 3.46 Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Danks 3 9 5 5 3 0 80 6.46 Z.Stewart W, 1-1 3 1 0 0 1 2 39 2.19 H.Santiago H, 2 1 0 0 0 1 1 20 4.85 Thornton H, 6 1 1 0 0 0 1 9 4.30 Reed S, 3-3 1 1 0 0 1 1 22 4.76 Danks pitched to 2 batters in the 4th. Z.Stewart pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. T—3:01. A—23,538 (40,615).
Yankees 8, Orioles 5 New York Jeter ss Granderson cf Al.Rodriguez dh Cano 2b Teixeira 1b Swisher rf Ibanez lf 1-Wise pr-lf Er.Chavez 3b Martin c Totals
AB 5 4 5 5 4 3 4 0 4 2 36
R 0 1 2 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 8
H 1 1 3 2 2 1 0 0 1 0 11
BI 0 1 0 0 2 2 1 0 1 0 7
BB 0 1 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 2 6
SO 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 5
Avg. .367 .257 .292 .303 .231 .277 .261 .182 .310 .178
Baltimore AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Avery lf 5 2 2 1 0 0 .222 Hardy ss 5 2 2 3 0 1 .245 Markakis rf 5 0 1 0 0 1 .252 Ad.Jones cf 5 0 2 1 0 1 .295 Wieters c 3 0 1 0 1 1 .275 Betemit 3b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .236 C.Davis 1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .274 N.Johnson dh 2 0 0 0 2 2 .167 Andino 2b 3 1 1 0 1 1 .285 Totals 36 5 10 5 4 10 New York 000 212 201 — 8 11 1 Baltimore 200 030 000 — 5 10 1 1-ran for Ibanez in the 9th. E—Er.Chavez (2), C.Davis (3). LOB—New York 10, Baltimore 8. 2B—Cano (12), Teixeira (8), Swisher (11), Avery (1), Ad.Jones (8). 3B—Avery (1). HR— Granderson (12), off Hammel; Teixeira (5), off Ayala; Hardy (9), off Nova. RBIs—Granderson (21), Teixeira 2 (19), Swisher 2 (26), Ibanez (22), Er.Chavez (6), Avery (1), Hardy 3 (15), Ad.Jones (22). SF—Er.Chavez. DP—New York 2; Baltimore 2. New York IP H R ER BB SO NP Nova 5 1-3 7 5 5 3 4 92 Rapada 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 12 Phelps W, 1-1 1 3 0 0 0 1 26 Logan H, 3 1 0 0 0 0 3 15 Wade H, 3 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 3 R.Soriano S, 2-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 15 Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP Hammel 5 7 5 4 3 3 95 Ayala L, 1-1 BS 2 2 2 2 1 1 41 Eveland 1 2-3 2 1 1 2 0 34 O’Day 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 6 Hammel pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. T—3:42. A—16,492 (45,971).
ERA 5.44 3.60 2.96 2.30 1.59 2.57 ERA 2.68 1.86 4.70 1.56
Royals 3, Rangers 1 Kansas City Dyson cf Hosmer 1b Butler dh A.Gordon lf Francoeur rf Moustakas 3b B.Pena c Getz 2b A.Escobar ss Totals
AB 3 4 4 4 3 4 3 3 3 31
R 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 3
H 0 0 1 1 2 1 0 0 1 6
BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2
BB 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2
STANDINGS, SCORES AND SCHEDULES
DP—Texas 2.
AL Boxscores Athletics 5, Angels 0
SO 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 4
Avg. .292 .174 .284 .256 .250 .306 .237 .282 .297
Texas AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Andrus ss 4 0 1 0 0 0 .326 M.Young 1b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .288 Hamilton lf 3 0 1 0 1 0 .400 Beltre 3b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .300 N.Cruz rf 4 1 1 1 0 3 .273 Torrealba c 4 0 0 0 0 1 .220 B.Snyder dh 3 0 0 0 0 2 .310 a-Moreland ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .264 Alb.Gonzalez 2b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .242 b-Dav.Murphy ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .272 Gentry cf 2 0 0 0 1 1 .308 c-Napoli ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .259 Totals 34 1 7 1 2 11 Kansas City 000 020 100 — 3 6 1 Texas 000 100 000 — 1 7 1 b-singled for Alb.Gonzalez in the 9th. c-struck out for Gentry in the 9th. E—Moustakas (3), Beltre (2). LOB—Kansas City 3, Texas 8. HR—N.Cruz (4), off B.Chen. SB—Dyson (4), Getz (6). CS—Francoeur (3).
Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA B.Chen W, 2-4 6 2-3 5 1 1 2 7 106 4.34 K.Herrera H, 5 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 10 3.44 Mijares H, 4 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 1 2.40 Crow H, 7 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 8 2.65 Broxton S, 8-9 1 1 0 0 0 2 16 1.32 Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Feldman L, 0-1 4 2-3 3 2 0 1 1 81 3.00 R.Ross 2 1-3 2 1 1 1 2 32 2.65 Adams 1 0 0 0 0 1 11 1.98 D.Holland 1 1 0 0 0 0 9 3.78 T—2:50. A—38,702 (48,194).
Indians 5, Twins 4 Cleveland Choo rf Kipnis 2b A.Cabrera ss Hafner dh C.Santana c-1b Brantley cf Jo.Lopez 3b Kotchman 1b 2-Marson pr-c Duncan lf Cunningham lf Totals
AB 4 5 3 3 2 4 4 4 0 3 1 33
R 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 5
H 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 8
BI 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 5
BB 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
SO 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 0 6
Avg. .236 .281 .316 .252 .252 .261 .192 .198 .095 .200 .217
Minnesota AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Span cf 4 1 1 0 1 0 .292 Dozier ss 3 0 0 0 1 0 .242 Mauer 1b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .276 Willingham lf 4 1 1 1 0 0 .294 Doumit dh 3 1 1 2 1 0 .252 Plouffe 3b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .133 1-A.Casilla pr-3b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .247 Mastroianni rf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .214 Butera c 3 0 0 0 0 0 .200 a-Parmelee ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .185 J.Carroll 2b 3 0 1 0 1 0 .226 Totals 32 4 5 3 5 4 Cleveland 000 220 001 — 5 8 1 Minnesota 001 000 030 — 4 5 0 a-struck out for Butera in the 9th. 1-ran for Plouffe in the 8th. 2-ran for Kotchman in the 9th. E—C.Santana (4). LOB—Cleveland 6, Minnesota 6. 2B—A.Cabrera (12), Hafner (5), Jo.Lopez (2), Willingham (11). HR—Kotchman (3), off Pavano; Doumit (5), off Hagadone. SB—Span (4). DP—Minnesota 1. Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP J.Gomez 7 3 1 0 3 2 96 Pestano H, 9 2-3 1 2 2 1 1 22 Hagadone BS, 1-2 0 1 1 1 1 0 13 J.Smith W, 3-1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 1 C.Perez S, 12-13 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP Pavano 6 6 4 4 0 3 72 Liriano 2 0 0 0 3 3 42 Capps L, 0-2 1 2 1 1 0 0 16 Hagadone pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. T—2:43. A—32,313 (39,500).
ERA 3.75 3.07 1.74 2.81 3.68 ERA 5.14 8.79 3.86
Rays 7, Blue Jays 1 Tampa Bay Zobrist rf B.Upton cf Joyce lf C.Pena 1b Scott dh S.Rodriguez 3b Rhymes 2b Gimenez c E.Johnson ss Totals
AB 4 3 5 4 5 4 3 4 2 34
R 2 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 7
H 1 1 0 0 1 2 1 0 1 7
BI 1 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 6
BB 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 6
SO 2 2 2 3 3 1 0 0 1 14
Avg. .218 .260 .274 .225 .236 .238 .250 .220 .273
Toronto AB R H BI BB SO Avg. K.Johnson 2b 5 0 2 1 0 1 .259 Y.Escobar ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .248 Vizquel ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 .125 Bautista rf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .194 Lind 1b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .184 Encarnacion dh 3 0 0 0 1 0 .270 Thames lf 3 0 1 0 1 1 .259 Lawrie 3b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .288 Rasmus cf 2 1 0 0 1 0 .221 a-B.Francisco ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .238 Arencibia c 3 0 0 0 1 2 .222 Totals 31 1 4 1 6 9 Tampa Bay 000 060 001 — 7 7 0 Toronto 010 000 000 — 1 4 2 a-struck out for Rasmus in the 9th. E—Lind 2 (5). LOB—Tampa Bay 7, Toronto 9. 2B—S.Rodriguez (3), Rhymes (2). HR—Zobrist (6), off Villanueva. SB—B.Upton (5), E.Johnson (6), K.Johnson (4). DP—Toronto 1. Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO NP Niemann 1 1 0 0 1 0 23 C.Ramos W, 1-0 3 2 1 1 3 3 57 W.Davis 2 0 0 0 1 1 31 Howell 1 0 0 0 0 1 13 Badenhop 1 0 0 0 0 1 11 McGee 1 1 0 0 1 3 24 Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP Morrow L, 4-2 5 4 6 1 4 7 90 L.Perez 1 0 0 0 1 1 17 E.Crawford 1 1 0 0 0 3 17 Cordero 1 1 0 0 0 1 12 Villanueva 1 1 1 1 1 2 15 T—3:21. A—15,289 (49,260).
ERA 3.38 2.25 2.04 2.08 4.50 2.31 ERA 2.22 2.45 3.60 8.10 5.79
Red Sox 6, Mariners 1 Seattle Ackley dh C.Wells lf I.Suzuki rf J.Montero c Smoak 1b Seager 2b Liddi 3b M.Saunders cf Ryan ss Totals
AB 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 34
R 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
H 1 0 2 1 2 0 1 1 0 8
BI 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
SO 1 1 0 1 1 0 2 0 0 6
Avg. .248 .216 .291 .262 .214 .284 .293 .223 .140
Boston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Aviles ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .254 Pedroia 2b 3 1 0 0 1 0 .313 Ortiz dh 4 1 1 1 0 0 .346 Ad.Gonzalez 1b 3 0 1 1 1 0 .293 Middlebrooks 3b 4 1 1 0 0 2 .304 C.Ross rf 4 1 2 0 0 0 .256 Nava lf 2 1 1 2 2 0 .583 Byrd cf 3 0 1 1 0 0 .284 Shoppach c 4 1 2 1 0 1 .265 Totals 31 6 9 6 4 4 Seattle 000 000 001 — 1 8 0 Boston 200 300 01x — 6 9 0 LOB—Seattle 6, Boston 6. 2B—Smoak (2), Ortiz (15), Ad.Gonzalez (14), C.Ross (8). HR—Nava (1), off Vargas; Shoppach (1), off Vargas. DP—Boston 1. Seattle IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Vargas L, 4-3 6 7 5 5 3 3 103 3.28 Kelley 2 2 1 1 1 1 34 5.40 Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lester W, 2-3 9 8 1 1 0 6 119 3.71 T—2:25. A—37,334 (37,495).
NL Boxscores Giants 3, Rockies 2 Colorado Scutaro 2b-ss Colvin cf b-Fowler ph-cf C.Gonzalez lf Tulowitzki ss 1-Nelson pr-3b Helton 1b Cuddyer rf W.Rosario c J.Herrera 3b-2b Friedrich p Brothers p Belisle p c-Giambi ph 2-White pr Totals
AB 4 3 1 3 2 1 3 4 4 4 3 0 0 0 0 32
R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2
H 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 5
BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
BB 1 0 1 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 8
SO 0 2 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
Avg. .254 .311 .219 .301 .262 .219 .242 .270 .236 .268 .000 --.000 .240 .200
San Francisco G.Blanco rf Arias 3b Me.Cabrera lf Posey c Pagan cf Pill 1b Culberson 2b Burriss 2b B.Crawford ss Vogelsong p a-Schierholtz ph Ja.Lopez p
AB 4 3 4 4 4 4 4 0 3 2 1 0
R 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
H 3 1 0 2 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 0
BI 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
BB 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
SO 1 0 2 0 1 1 2 0 1 2 0 0
Avg. .286 .255 .338 .289 .277 .255 .125 .231 .212 .000 .276 ---
American League Baltimore Tampa Bay New York Toronto Boston
W 22 22 20 19 16
L 14 14 15 17 19
Cleveland Detroit Chicago Kansas City Minnesota
W 19 17 17 14 10
L 16 18 19 20 25
Texas Oakland Seattle Los Angeles
W 23 19 16 15
L 13 17 21 21
East Division Pct GB WCGB .611 — — .611 — — .571 1½ 1½ .528 3 3 .457 5½ 5½ Central Division Pct GB WCGB .543 — — .486 2 4½ .472 2½ 5 .412 4½ 7 .286 9 11½ West Division Pct GB WCGB .639 — — .528 4 3 .432 7½ 6½ .417 8 7
Monday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 8, Baltimore 5 Tampa Bay 7, Toronto 1 Boston 6, Seattle 1 Kansas City 3, Texas 1 Cleveland 5, Minnesota 4 Chicago White Sox 7, Detroit 5 Oakland 5, L.A. Angels 0
National League
L10 5-5 4-6 7-3 4-6 5-5
Str Home Away L-2 11-9 11-5 W-2 13-3 9-11 W-1 11-8 9-7 L-2 8-8 11-9 W-4 8-11 8-8
L10 5-5 4-6 5-5 6-4 3-7
Str Home Away W-1 8-10 11-6 L-1 9-9 8-9 W-1 7-11 10-8 W-3 4-13 10-7 L-1 6-13 4-12
L10 6-4 6-4 5-5 5-5
Str Home Away L-1 10-7 13-6 W-1 9-10 10-7 L-1 7-8 9-13 L-2 9-9 6-12
Today’s Games Cleveland (D.Lowe 5-1) at Minnesota (Marquis 2-2), 10:10 a.m. Detroit (Scherzer 2-3) at Chicago White Sox (Peavy 4-1), 11:10 a.m. Seattle (Beavan 1-3) at Boston (Beckett 2-4), 1:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 5-0) at Baltimore (W.Chen 3-0), 4:05 p.m. Oakland (Colon 3-3) at L.A. Angels (E.Santana 1-6), 4:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (Price 5-2) at Toronto (H.Alvarez 3-2), 4:07 p.m. Kansas City (Mazzaro 0-0) at Texas (Lewis 3-2), 5:05 p.m.
Washington Atlanta New York Miami Philadelphia
W 22 22 20 18 17
L 13 14 15 17 19
St. Louis Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago Houston Milwaukee
W 20 18 17 15 15 15
L 15 16 18 20 20 20
Los Angeles San Francisco Arizona Colorado San Diego
W 24 18 15 13 12
L 11 17 21 21 24
East Division Pct GB WCGB .629 — — .611 ½ — .571 2 — .514 4 2 .472 5½ 3½ Central Division Pct GB WCGB .571 — — .529 1½ 1½ .486 3 3 .429 5 5 .429 5 5 .429 5 5 West Division Pct GB WCGB .686 — — .514 6 2 .417 9½ 5½ .382 10½ 6½ .333 12½ 8½
Monday’s Games Chicago Cubs 6, St. Louis 4 Philadelphia 5, Houston 1 Washington 8, San Diego 5 Cincinnati 3, Atlanta 1 N.Y. Mets 3, Milwaukee 1 Pittsburgh 3, Miami 2 L.A. Dodgers 3, Arizona 1 San Francisco 3, Colorado 2
L10 6-4 7-3 7-3 7-3 4-6
Str Home Away W-1 13-4 9-9 L-1 8-6 14-8 W-1 11-6 9-9 L-1 8-7 10-10 W-2 8-9 9-10
L10 4-6 6-4 6-4 6-4 4-6 4-6
Str Home Away L-4 8-8 12-7 W-2 9-8 9-8 W-3 10-8 7-10 W-2 9-10 6-10 L-3 10-8 5-12 L-2 9-9 6-11
L10 7-3 6-4 2-8 1-9 3-7
Str Home Away W-5 16-3 8-8 W-3 9-7 9-10 L-3 7-12 8-9 L-4 8-10 5-11 L-2 9-14 3-10
Today’s Games Houston (Lyles 0-0) at Philadelphia (Cl. Lee 0-1), 10:05 a.m. San Diego (Bass 1-4) at Washington (Strasburg 3-0), 10:05 a.m. Chicago Cubs (Maholm 4-2) at St. Louis (Lohse 5-1), 10:45 a.m. Cincinnati (Cueto 4-0) at Atlanta (T.Hudson 1-1), 4:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Greinke 3-1) at N.Y. Mets (Gee 2-2), 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Correia 1-3) at Miami (Jo. Johnson 0-3), 4:10 p.m. Arizona (Miley 3-1) at L.A. Dodgers (Billingsley 2-2), 7:10 p.m. Colorado (Guthrie 2-1) at San Francisco (Lincecum 2-3), 7:15 p.m.
American League roundup
National League roundup
• Red Sox 6, Mariners 1: BOSTON — Jon Lester pitched his second complete game of the season and Daniel Nava and Kelly Shoppach each homered, leading Boston past Seattle. David Ortiz and Adrian Gonzalez added consecutive RBI doubles for the Red Sox, who won their fourth straight. • Rays 7, Blue Jays 1: TORONTO — Cesar Ramos got his first career win after replacing the injured Jeff Niemann, and Ben Zobrist homered in Tampa Bay’s win over Toronto. Luke Scott and Sean Rodriguez each had two RBIs for the Rays, who have won two straight after losing six of their previous seven. • Indians 5, Twins 4: MINNEAPOLIS — Shin-Soo Choo hit the go-ahead RBI single in the ninth inning to back Jeanmar Gomez’s seven superb innings and lift Cleveland to a victory over Minnesota. Choo’s base hit off Twins closer Matt Capps (0-2) scored pinchrunner Lou Marson from second base, bailing out an Indians bullpen that squandered a 4-1 lead in the eighth inning. • Yankees 8, Orioles 5: BALTIMORE — Mark Teixeira hit a tiebreaking two-run homer in the seventh inning, Curtis Granderson also connected, and New York got three hits from Alex Rodriguez in a victory over Baltimore. • Royals 3, Rangers 1: ARLINGTON, Texas — Bruce Chen pitched into the seventh inning for his second straight win and Kansas City took advantage of Adrian Beltre’s throwing error for a win at Texas. • White Sox 7, Tigers 5: CHICAGO — Dayan Viciedo homered and hit a go-ahead two-run single to finish with four RBIs, helping the White Sox rally for a victory over Detroit. Adam Dunn hit his 12th home run of the season in the first inning for Chicago, surpassing his total from all of last year. • Athletics 5, Angels 0: ANAHEIM, Calif. — Tyson Ross allowed five hits in six strong innings to snap a three-start skid, Josh Reddick homered and Seth Smith hit a two-run double in Oakland’s victory over the Angels. Dan Haren (1-4) yielded six hits and four runs during another poor start for the Angels, who were shut out for the eighth time in 31 games.
• Nationals 8, Padres 5: WASHINGTON — Bryce Harper hit his first big league home run and Chad Tracy and Xavier Nady each connected in the eighth inning, leading Washington over San Diego. Harper became the youngest major leaguer to homer since 1998, going deep on a solo shot to straightaway center field in the third inning off right-hander Tim Stauffer. • Dodgers 3, Diamondbacks 1: LOS ANGELES — Clayton Kershaw outpitched Ian Kennedy after exchanging brushback pitches with his fellow ace, leading Los Angeles over Arizona without injured star Matt Kemp. The Dodgers center fielder was placed on the 15-day disabled list following the game because of a strained left hamstring. Kemp had played 399 consecutive games, the longest active streak in the majors. • Phillies 5, Astros 1: PHILADELPHIA — Joe Blanton pitched seven-plus strong innings and Placido Polanco homered for his 2,000th career hit to lead Philadelphia over Houston. Blanton (4-3) allowed six hits and one run, struck out seven and walked one. Reds 3, Braves 1: ATLANTA — Brandon Phillips drove in the go-ahead run with a double off the centerfield wall and Cincinnati scored two runs off Jonny Venters in the eighth inning to beat Atlanta. • Mets 3, Brewers 1: NEW YORK — Miguel Batista pitched seven shutout innings of four-hit ball and Daniel Murphy supplied the offense, sending New York past Milwaukee. • Pirates 3, Marlins 2: MIAMI — Brad Lincoln pitched six innings to earn a victory in his first start of the season, and Pittsburgh ended a streak of eight consecutive losses against the Marlins. • Cubs 6, Cardinals 4: ST. LOUIS — Alfonso Soriano singled in the go-ahead run in the eighth inning and Chicago sent St. Louis to its fourth straight loss at home. • Giants 3, Rockies 1: SAN FRANCISCO — Buster Posey hit a go-ahead RBI single in the eighth inning, and San Francisco beat Colorado to match its best winning streak of the season at three games.
Romo p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --S.Casilla p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 33 3 10 3 1 10 Colorado 000 100 001 — 2 5 1 San Francisco 000 001 02x — 3 10 1 a-flied out for Vogelsong in the 7th. b-walked for Colvin in the 8th. c-walked for Belisle in the 9th. 1-ran for Tulowitzki in the 8th. 2-ran for Giambi in the 9th. E—W.Rosario (1), Arias (2). LOB—Colorado 11, San Francisco 7. 2B—C.Gonzalez (6), Pagan (6). HR—W.Rosario (5), off Vogelsong; G.Blanco (1), off Friedrich. RBIs—W.Rosario (11), G.Blanco (8), Posey (13), Pill (9). CS—Scutaro (2). Runners left in scoring position—Colorado 7 (Helton, Cuddyer 4, Nelson 2); San Francisco 5 (Posey, Vogelsong, Pill 2, Culberson). RISP—Colorado 0 for 7; San Francisco 2 for 9. Runners moved up—Helton. GIDP—Posey. DP—Colorado 1 (Tulowitzki, Scutaro, Helton). Colorado IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Friedrich 7 6 1 1 1 10 93 1.38 Brothers L, 1-2 0 1 1 1 0 0 6 4.26 Belisle 1 3 1 1 0 0 21 2.50 San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Vogelsong 7 3 1 1 5 3 117 2.66 Ja.Lopez 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 15 1.23 Romo W, 2-0 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 5 0.00 S.Casilla S, 8-9 1 1 1 0 2 1 28 1.29 Brothers pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Inherited runners-scored—Belisle 1-1, Romo 20. IBB—off S.Casilla (C.Gonzalez). T—3:09. A—41,254 (41,915).
Dodgers 3, Diamondbacks 1 Arizona Bloomquist ss A.Hill 2b J.Upton rf Kubel lf Goldschmidt 1b M.Montero c R.Roberts 3b Pollock cf I.Kennedy p a-Ransom ph Breslow p Totals
AB 4 3 4 3 4 4 4 3 0 1 0 30
R 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
H 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 5
BI 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
BB 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3
SO 1 0 1 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 7
Avg. .214 .246 .226 .296 .218 .261 .204 .262 .000 .289 ---
Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. D.Gordon ss 4 1 1 0 0 2 .212 M.Ellis 2b 4 0 0 1 0 1 .263 Abreu lf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .296 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Ethier rf 4 1 2 1 0 1 .308 A.Ellis c 4 1 1 0 0 1 .314 Loney 1b 3 0 2 0 1 1 .245 A.Kennedy 3b 2 0 0 1 0 0 .171 Lindblom p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Van Slyke lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.000 Gwynn Jr. cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .258 Kershaw p 1 0 0 0 1 1 .154 b-Sellers ph-3b 1 0 0 0 0 1 .167 Totals 30 3 7 3 2 8 Arizona 000 000 010 — 1 5 1 Los Angeles 100 002 00x — 3 7 0 a-struck out for I.Kennedy in the 7th. b-struck out for Kershaw in the 7th. E—I.Kennedy (1). LOB—Arizona 6, Los Angeles 6. HR—A.Hill (5), off Lindblom; Ethier (8), off I.Kennedy. SB—J.Upton (6), R.Roberts (3). Arizona I.Kennedy L, 3-3 Breslow Los Angeles Kershaw W, 3-1 Lindblom H, 8
IP 6 2 IP 7 1
H 6 1 H 4 1
R 3 0 R 0 1
ER BB SO NP ERA 2 2 5 98 3.81 0 0 3 26 1.45 ER BB SO NP ERA 0 3 6 108 2.22 1 0 1 15 2.33
Jansen S, 4-5 1 0 0 0 0 0 14 2.29 T—2:39. A—24,312 (56,000).
Cubs 6, Cardinals 4 Chicago AB R H DeJesus rf 6 0 2 Campana cf 5 2 1 S.Castro ss 5 1 2 LaHair 1b 4 1 3 A.Soriano lf 4 0 1 Dolis p 0 0 0 I.Stewart 3b 4 1 2 Soto c 4 0 2 Barney 2b 2 1 1 Dempster p 3 0 0 c-Re.Johnson ph 1 0 0 Camp p 0 0 0 d-Mather ph-lf 1 0 0 Totals 39 6 14
BI 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 5
BB 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 5
SO 3 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 7
Avg. .274 .338 .333 .356 .250 --.203 .167 .254 .000 .204 --.256
St. Louis AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Furcal ss 5 0 0 0 0 2 .370 Jay cf 4 1 1 0 0 0 .343 Holliday lf 4 1 1 0 0 2 .255 Craig rf 4 0 2 0 0 1 .372 Berkman 1b 4 1 2 1 0 0 .344 Freese 3b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .283 Y.Molina c 4 1 2 2 0 0 .303 Schumaker 2b 4 0 2 1 0 1 .325 Westbrook p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .143 a-Descalso ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .203 E.Sanchez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-M.Carpenter ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .274 V.Marte p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Boggs p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --e-Beltran ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .295 Totals 36 4 10 4 1 8 Chicago 000 040 011 — 6 14 0 St. Louis 000 004 000 — 4 10 3 a-flied out for Westbrook in the 5th. b-struck out for E.Sanchez in the 6th. c-struck out for Dempster in the 7th. d-grounded into a fielder’s choice for Camp in the 9th. e-flied out for Boggs in the 9th. E—Schumaker (1), Holliday (2), Freese (1). LOB—Chicago 14, St. Louis 6. 2B—I.Stewart (5), Barney (7), Craig (4), Berkman (3), Y.Molina (13). HR—LaHair (9), off Westbrook. SB—Campana (9), LaHair (1). DP—St. Louis 2. Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Dempster 6 9 4 4 1 5 95 1.74 Camp W, 2-1 2 1 0 0 0 1 21 3.15 Dolis S, 4-6 1 0 0 0 0 2 9 3.22 St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Westbrook 5 11 4 4 2 2 107 2.35 E.Sanchez 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 0.00 V.Marte 1 1 0 0 2 2 23 4.02 Boggs L, 0-1 2 2 2 1 1 2 46 2.81 T—3:15. A—44,276 (43,975).
Reds 3, Braves 1 Cincinnati Cozart ss Stubbs cf Votto 1b B.Phillips 2b Bruce rf Heisey lf Frazier 3b Valdez 3b Mesoraco c H.Bailey p Ondrusek p Chapman p b-Costanzo ph Marshall p
AB 5 4 2 4 4 3 4 0 3 3 0 0 1 0
R 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
H 0 1 0 1 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BI 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BB 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
SO 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0
Avg. .254 .241 .313 .252 .302 .233 .273 .189 .213 .067 ----.000 ---
Totals
33 3 7 2 3 6
Atlanta AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Bourn cf 5 1 1 0 0 1 .331 Prado lf 4 0 2 1 0 1 .288 Freeman 1b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .277 J.Wilson ss 1 0 0 0 0 0 .146 Uggla 2b 3 0 0 0 1 2 .275 McCann c 2 0 0 0 2 0 .231 C.Jones 3b 3 0 1 0 1 1 .300 Heyward rf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .252 Pastornicky ss 3 0 1 0 0 0 .269 Venters p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --L.Hernandez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 c-Diaz ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .324 Delgado p 2 0 1 0 0 0 .250 Durbin p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --a-Hinske ph-1b 2 0 0 0 0 0 .341 Totals 33 1 8 1 4 6 Cincinnati 000 100 020 — 3 7 0 Atlanta 000 010 000 — 1 8 1 a-grounded into a fielder’s choice for Durbin in the 7th. b-struck out for Chapman in the 9th. c-singled for L.Hernandez in the 9th. E—Pastornicky (3). LOB—Cincinnati 7, Atlanta 10. 2B—B.Phillips (4), Bruce (10), Heisey 2 (4). 3B—Bourn (2). DP—Atlanta 1. Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA H.Bailey 6 2-3 6 1 1 2 3 114 4.35 Ondrusek W, 3-0 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 15 0.00 Chapman H, 4 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 12 0.00 Marshall S, 6-7 1 1 0 0 0 2 12 4.15 Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Delgado 6 2-3 4 1 0 3 4 107 3.79 Durbin 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 7.62 Venters L, 2-2 1 3 2 2 0 1 27 3.29 L.Hernandez 1 0 0 0 0 1 8 3.22 T—3:02. A—19,697 (49,586).
Nationals 8, Padres 5 San Diego Maybin cf Denorfia rf Guzman lf Alonso 1b Headley 3b Hundley c O.Hudson 2b Bartlett ss d-Venable ph Stauffer p a-Suppan ph Mikolas p Thatcher p Gregerson p e-Darnell ph Totals
AB 4 4 5 4 4 4 4 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 33
R 0 0 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
H 0 1 1 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7
Washington Desmond ss Bernadina lf b-Nady ph-lf Zimmerman 3b LaRoche 1b Harper rf Espinosa 2b Ankiel cf Leon c Flores c Detwiler p Stammen p Clippard p c-Tracy ph H.Rodriguez p S.Burnett p Totals San Diego
AB R 5 2 3 1 2 1 2 0 4 0 4 1 4 0 2 1 1 0 3 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 33 8 010
H 3 2 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 11 310
BI 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4
BB 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4
SO 1 0 2 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7
Avg. .210 .269 .277 .300 .250 .171 .209 .133 .255 .000 .200 ------.222
BI BB SO 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 3 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 2 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 5 7 000 — 5
Avg. .271 .246 .138 .241 .325 .232 .216 .268 .000 .238 .000 .000 --.293 ----7 2
Washington 103 002 02x — 8 11 2 a-sacrificed for Stauffer in the 6th. b-flied out for Bernadina in the 6th. c-homered for Clippard in the 8th. d-walked for Bartlett in the 9th. e-fouled out for Gregerson in the 9th. E—Headley 2 (4), Desmond (6), Harper (2). LOB—San Diego 7, Washington 7. 2B—Guzman (9), Alonso (12), Headley (8), Desmond (11). HR—Harper (1), off Stauffer; Tracy (3), off Gregerson; Nady (2), off Gregerson. SB—O.Hudson (3), LaRoche (1). DP—San Diego 1; Washington 1. San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Stauffer 5 7 4 3 3 5 91 5.40 Mikolas L, 0-1 1-3 2 2 2 1 0 10 13.50 Thatcher 1 2-3 0 0 0 1 2 22 2.89 Gregerson 1 2 2 2 0 0 16 3.18 Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Detwiler 5 7 5 4 1 3 87 2.75 Stammen W, 3-0 2 0 0 0 0 3 22 1.29 Clippard H, 9 1 0 0 0 0 1 9 3.38 H.Rodriguez H, 1 1-3 0 0 0 3 0 21 4.60 S.Burnett S, 1-1 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 6 0.90 T—3:04. A—19,434 (41,487).
Mets 3, Brewers 1 Milwaukee Morgan cf c-R.Weeks ph Fr.Rodriguez p Lucroy c Braun lf Ar.Ramirez 3b Hart rf Green 1b Conrad 2b C.Izturis ss d-Kottaras ph Gallardo p Veras p b-Aoki ph-cf Totals
AB 3 1 0 4 4 3 4 3 4 3 1 1 0 1 32
R 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
H 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 6
BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
BB 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
SO 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 6
Avg. .202 .157 --.323 .304 .233 .254 .278 .000 .208 .290 .067 --.239
New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Torres cf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .260 Nieuwenhuis lf 3 1 0 0 1 1 .302 D.Wright 3b 3 1 1 0 1 1 .398 Duda rf 2 0 0 0 2 0 .255 Dan.Murphy 2b 4 1 2 1 0 0 .333 I.Davis 1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .168 Cedeno ss 3 0 0 1 0 1 .208 Nickeas c 2 0 0 0 1 0 .212 Batista p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .000 a-Valdespin ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .125 Byrdak p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Parnell p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --F.Francisco p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 27 3 3 2 6 8 Milwaukee 000 000 001 — 1 6 1 New York 100 001 01x — 3 3 1 a-struck out for Batista in the 7th. b-grounded out for Veras in the 8th. c-grounded out for Morgan in the 8th. d-flied out for C.Izturis in the 9th. E—Ar.Ramirez (5), Duda (2). LOB—Milwaukee 7, New York 7. 2B—Ar.Ramirez (11), D.Wright (9), Dan. Murphy (10). SB—Braun (6), Nieuwenhuis (2). Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Gallardo L, 2-4 6 2 2 2 6 6 109 5.04 Veras 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 6.75 Fr.Rodriguez 1 1 1 0 0 1 25 4.96 New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Batista W, 1-1 7 4 0 0 1 5 108 4.26 Byrdak H, 9 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 3.38 Parnell H, 7 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 5 2.16 Francisco S, 9-11 1 2 1 1 1 1 22 8.59 T—2:55. A—20,061 (41,922).
Pirates 3, Marlins 2 Pittsburgh Tabata rf Walker 2b A.McCutchen cf P.Alvarez 3b McGehee 1b Presley lf Barajas c Barmes ss Lincoln p a-Navarro ph J.Hughes p Grilli p Hanrahan p Totals
AB 4 4 3 4 3 3 3 3 2 1 0 0 0 30
R 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
H 1 0 1 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 6
BI 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
BB 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
SO 1 1 1 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 7
Avg. .242 .269 .339 .216 .218 .226 .182 .167 .000 .171 .000 -----
Miami AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Reyes ss 3 0 1 0 1 0 .261 Infante 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .304 H.Ramirez 3b 4 1 2 1 0 0 .221 Morrison lf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .283 Stanton rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .280 G.Sanchez 1b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .198 Cishek p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Choate p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Webb p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 c-Kearns ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .263 Bonifacio cf 4 0 1 1 0 0 .255 J.Buck c 4 0 1 0 0 0 .202 A.Sanchez p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .133 b-Dobbs ph-1b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .273 Totals 34 2 7 2 1 5 Pittsburgh 110 001 000 — 3 6 1 Miami 100 100 000 — 2 7 0 a-flied out for Lincoln in the 7th. b-grounded out for A.Sanchez in the 7th. c-lined out for Webb in the 9th. E—McGehee (2). LOB—Pittsburgh 3, Miami 6. 2B—Tabata (6), P.Alvarez (6), Barajas (5), Morrison (2). HR—Barajas (2), off A.Sanchez; H.Ramirez (7), off Lincoln. SB—Bonifacio (18). Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lincoln W, 3-0 6 4 2 2 1 3 80 1.33 J.Hughes H, 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 11 1.45 Grilli H, 8 1 2 0 0 0 2 18 2.57 Hanrahan S, 7-8 1 0 0 0 0 0 17 3.55 Miami IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA A.Sanchez L, 2-1 7 6 3 3 1 5 92 2.28 Cishek 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 1.56 Choate 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 12 1.00 Webb 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 3.00 T—2:41. A—25,666 (37,442).
Phillies 5, Astros 1 Houston AB R Altuve 2b 4 0 Schafer cf 3 0 b-Maxwell ph-cf 1 0 Lowrie ss 3 0 Ca.Lee 1b 4 0 Bogusevic rf 4 0 C.Johnson 3b 4 0 T.Buck lf 4 0 C.Snyder c 4 0 Harrell p 2 0 W.Lopez p 0 0 Abad p 0 0 a-M.Gonzalez ph 1 1 Davi.Carpenter p 0 0 Totals 34 1
H 1 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 7
BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1
BB 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
SO 1 0 1 2 0 3 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 12
Avg. .321 .244 .238 .275 .285 .234 .298 .241 .154 .214 ----.229 ---
Philadelphia AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Rollins ss 3 0 0 0 1 1 .225 Pierre lf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .337 Wigginton 1b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .264 Victorino cf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .259 Pence rf 4 0 1 0 0 2 .243 Ruiz c 3 1 2 1 0 0 .340 Polanco 3b 3 3 1 2 1 0 .281 Mayberry 1b-lf 4 0 2 0 0 1 .247 Galvis 2b 4 0 3 2 0 0 .231 Blanton p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .083 Bastardo p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Qualls p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Fontenot ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Papelbon p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 32 5 10 5 2 6 Houston 000 000 010 — 1 7 1 Philadelphia 000 012 02x — 5 10 0 a-homered for Abad in the 8th. b-struck out for Schafer in the 8th. c-flied out for Qualls in the 8th. E—Lowrie (3). LOB—Houston 7, Philadelphia 7. 2B—Mayberry (5). 3B—Victorino (2). HR— M.Gonzalez (1), off Blanton; Polanco (1), off Davi. Carpenter. RBIs—M.Gonzalez (2), Ruiz (23), Polanco 2 (8), Galvis 2 (15). SB—Altuve (6). S—Blanton. DP—Houston 1. Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Harrell L, 2-3 5 2-3 5 3 2 2 3 81 4.40 W.Lopez 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 4 1.66 Abad 1 0 0 0 0 1 13 6.00 Davi.Carpenter 1 4 2 2 0 2 26 4.02 Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Blanton W, 4-3 7 6 1 1 1 7 106 2.96 Bastardo H, 7 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 11 1.64 Qualls H, 7 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 2.84 Papelbon 1 1 0 0 0 3 14 2.40 Blanton pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. T—2:38. A—43,824 (43,651).
TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Former trainer testifies against Clemens The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Speaking softly, nervously and in detail, Brian McNamee testified about the life-changing moment when, he said, he first gave Roger Clemens a “booty shot” of steroids. The government’s star witness in the Clemens perjury retrial took the stand Monday and told the jury that he injected one of baseball’s most successful pitchers with steroids about eight to 10 times when they were with the Toronto Blue Jays in 1998. “I knew what I was doing was illegal,” McNamee said. “I wish to God I could take it back.” Clemens is charged with lying to Congress when he testified in 2008 that he had never used steroids or human growth hormone. The first attempt to try him last July ended in a mistrial when prosecutors showed the jury a snippet of videotaped evidence
Closing Continued from D1 From Bell in Miami to the Cubs’ Carlos Marmol and into Canada with Toronto’s Cordero, these typically reliable arms have been pulled from their late-game gigs and put on a short leash. “Plain and simple, if you look at the bad month I had in April, if I throw strikes, I get the job done,” said Bell, who has pitched better of late and soon could be back in his old job. “So I’m focusing on just throwing strikes.” Athletics manager Bob Melvin went with former closer Brian Fuentes to finish Saturday night’s 3-1 victory against the Tigers. He might stick with this unless Fuentes does not do the job — and Balfour has been told he could return to the ninth inning. Dodgers skipper Don Mattingly dropped Javy Guerra from closer and replaced him with Kenley Jansen. The Angels’ Mike Scioscia bumped Jordan Walden in favor of Scott Downs. “Evidently in a situation like that, somebody’s just not liking what they’re seeing,” Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. Even last summer, Francisco Rodriguez went from closer to setup man when he was traded by the Mets to Milwaukee at the All-Star break — and K-Rod is still having problems. In fairness to Cordero, the longtime closer with Texas, Milwaukee and
PPP Continued from D1 But if anything, these ladies have gotten better with age. “We’ve talked about retiring a number of times, and then we always say, ‘Oh, one more year, one more year, one more year,’ and suddenly, we’re 20 years into it,” Chun said, chuckling. Just how good, exactly, have the D&D Down and Dirty Girls been over the past 19 years? According to Logan Currie’s diligently maintained records, her squad has placed first among all women’s teams 12 times and second on four other occasions, all since 1996. (The team placed fifth, Logan Currie’s records report, among women’s squads in its first three years of existence.) “You don’t have any special vision that this is going to become what it’s become,” offered Logan Currie, a math teacher in her 25th year at Bend High School. “It’s been a really special team to be a part of.” Logan Currie has been with the team every pedal stroke of the way. Monte, an art teacher at Bend’s Marshall High School and Cascade Middle School, missed only last year’s PPP with the D&D, and Chun, who co-owns KIALOA Canoe Paddles, Inc., in Bend, has been absent for just two. Crook, a health teacher at Sky View Middle School, has served as the team’s runner almost every year since 1999. The nordic skiing slot had been in flux for several years until recently, but Carney, who joined in the fun after a call from Monte, is now in her third year with the team and has offered some stability. “If you’re on the team, you get to be on the team next year — the following year — if you choose, and if not, then somebody else gets it,” Monte said, explaining the squad’s long-established rule of how spots are decided. “But if somebody replaces you, they get the choice to stay on or not.” The women — minus Chun, who was in Hawaii at the time, and plus Central Oregon running standout Lisa Nye, who has filled in from time to time — gathered for an interview on a recent sunny Sunday at Club D&D Bar & Grill, whose owner, Judie Bell, has sponsored the team since its inception. Though seldom do they all get together, from the frequent peals of laughter that punctuated the conversation, it was evident these teammates enjoy each other’s company. Carney, a former teacher who now works as a vision therapist, delightfully recounted the reaction she sometimes has received after telling others she races with the D&D Down and Dirty Girls.
that had been ruled inadmissible. The retrial took until its fifth week to get to the heart of the government’s case: McNamee is the only person who will claim firsthand knowledge of Clemens using performance-enhancing drugs. In his thick New York accent, McNamee covered a lot of ground in about four hours on the stand — and he still has much more to tell when he returns today. He recalled how he met Clemens when McNamee was the strength and conditioning coach of the Blue Jays during the 1998 season. He said Clemens gave him a $1,000 tip at the end of spring training, that Clemens approached him one day in the clubhouse and asked him to get rid of a bag of some 20 to 30 bottles of steroids.
Then came the fateful day in June when he was asked by Clemens to come to Clemens’ apartment in the Blue Jays’ Skydome stadium after a game. McNamee said he found alcohol, needle and gauze and the anabolic steroid Winstrol laid out in the bathroom. He said he felt “a little uncomfortable” while preparing the shot because he’d never done anything like it before. He said he then walked into Clemens’ bedroom. “Roger pulled down his pants, exposing his right buttocks cheek to me,” McNamee said. A few seconds later, Clemens said he was ready. McNamee said he then “plunged the fluid in into his buttocks.” After it was done, they “exchanged pleasantries,” according to McNamee. “That,” McNamee concluded softly, “was the first time I injected Roger Clemens.”
Cincinnati was expected to be a setup man for the Blue Jays when he signed with Toronto during the offseason. The Blue Jays already had traded for Sergio Santos, who converted two of his four save chances this season before going on the disabled list with a sore shoulder. “I understand it’s me,” Cordero said. “They gave me a chance and I’m not doing my job. Obviously, I’m not happy.” Detroit’s Jose Valverde has a rare blown save April 5 against Boston, snapping a streak of 51 straight he had converted dating to the 2010 season, and Leyland faced questions about whether he might consider moving Octavio Dotel into the ninth inning in place of his inconsistent closer. For Leyland, at least, the sample size at this early stage of the season is still too small to justify a switch with a high-profile, proven closer. “I decided to put Dotel in there to close one and got chewed out, so I don’t pay much attention to that stuff,” Leyland said. “Valverde’s my closer and I assume he’ll be my closer all year. Unless something drastic happened, obviously we’ll make an adjustment, but I have no intention of that.” The 34-year-old Bell, who received a $27 million, three-year contract with the big-spending Marlins in December, had 40-plus saves each of the past three seasons with the San Diego Padres, including 43 in 48 chances last
year with a 2.44 ERA. He leads the majors with 135 saves over the past three-plus seasons. But Bell has hardly looked like his former dominant self. He threw 46 pitches and walked four in the ninth inning of a 3-2 loss to the Mets in New York on April 26. Manager Ozzie Guillen is encouraged by Bell’s recent progress. He earned wins on Friday and Sunday against the Mets and is 2-3 with a 10.03 ERA in 14 games spanning 112⁄3 innings. Guillen figured Bell might bounce back from a rough opening month when the burly right-hander produced a 1-2-3 ninth in a 2-1 win at San Francisco on May 1. But three days later against his former San Diego club, Bell blew a save for the fourth time in seven opportunities and was demoted the following day — but now he might be headed back toward his old role. “I want him to be there. I’m going to give him a shot. He deserves another shot,” Guillen said. Blue Jays manager John Farrell also would consider putting Cordero back in his former job once he shows he is ready. “A lot of this is still confidence and the mental side of it,” Farrell said. “We want to build positive outings to get him some momentum, so when those opportunities later in the game arise, he’s had some positive reinforcement to go into that.”
“They pause, and then they look at you and they go, ‘Like the bar?’” Carney said. “Every time. And I say, ‘Yes. The bar.’” That bar, in some ways, is what brought the team together. For a few years prior to 1993, the team’s first PPP together, Monte had competed on another D&D-sponsored PPP team. That squad did not last, so Monte gathered together five women — all educators at the time — in addition to herself for the new team and Bell continued her sponsorship. Monte’s mission was simple at first. “You guys, I just want a mug,” Logan Currie recalled Monte saying of the mugs awarded as prizes for those who place in the top three in their PPP division. Of course, thanks to the D&D Down and Dirty Girls’ success, Monte has won spades of mugs. While not all of the D&D women are necessarily Central Oregon household names, their athletic careers speak for themselves. Crook boasts a marathon personal best of 3 hours, 6 minutes. Monte said she still holds the long jump record at her high school (Mead High School in Spokane, Wash.) and played volleyball at Eastern Washington University. Carney was a track star at Mountain View High School and eventually competed in the 2000 Olympic Trials for track and field in the 3,000-meter steeplechase. Logan Currie competed in volleyball and track at the University of Oregon. Chun has paddle experience dating back to 1986. And Nye, one of a number of other women who have filled in or competed intermittently for the team, is a former national champion and American record holder in the steeplechase who competed against Carney in those 2000 trials, placing second. “I was telling these gals that — they’re just a little bit older than me — and I was just in awe when I first started competing, because they were so competitive and they were so intense,” Crook remembered. “And I felt this obligation to them, but … with time just being awestruck that they are so competitive, these beautiful, healthy, strong women. And now, here I am.” For the D&D Down and Dirty Girls, 20 years of PPPs have produced a number of outstanding memories. For example, in year No. 3, Logan Currie incurred a flat tire early in the bike leg and was not carrying any equipment to fix or change it. But a fellow competitor stopped and offered her own repair equipment, which allowed Logan Currie to eventually get rolling again.
And in 2001, the D&D finished as the second women’s team behind the Elusive Zipperheads, a rival squad whose stalwart nordic skier had unexpectedly died of a brain aneurysm the previous fall. A week before the race, the Zipperheads finally secured a replacement — who turned out to be none other than future Olympic gold medalist Beckie Scott. Valiant in defeat, the D&D ladies were pushed to what was at that point was their personal-best PPP time. For Nye, just being asked by Logan Currie — her former middle school track coach — to compete with the D&D team stands out, even with all of her athletic success. “So here I’m out of high school, I’m out of college, and I get a phone call from my coach, who asks me to run on her team,” the 43-year-old Nye recalled. “I think, ‘What greater honor is there than that?’ Seriously.” After all of their success, this longrunning PPP team is not conceding to age quite yet. The D&D women have broken 2 hours on three occasions, and their fastest time, 1:55:40, came in 2008. Experience and an intimate knowledge of the course, according to Logan Currie, have assisted in counteracting the added years. “People come up, and they’ll go, ‘Oh, you did so well for your age,’ Monte said. “And I go, I want to be humble … and just go, ‘Yeah,’ but I can’t. I just go, ‘No, we won (among) ALL women. All ages.’” So fellow competitors on Saturday would be wise to remember Logan Currie’s advice about silver locks, as her team has the track record to back those words up. So early Saturday morning, as has become tradition, the five women of the D&D team will meet for breakfast at their sponsor’s downtown establishment. Logan Currie will eat a hamburger with grilled onions and mushrooms, as she does every year. “I’ve told so many people, and everybody goes, ‘She eats a BURGER at 6:30 in the morning?’” Carney said of her teammate. A few hours later in the PPP, Monte will lead the team off, flying down the slopes of Mount Bachelor. “I scream the whole way down,” she said. And in roughly a couple of hours, the D&D Down and Dirty Girls will make their way from the mountain to the Les Schwab Amphitheater in Bend. From Monte to Carney to Logan Currie to Crook to Chun — and then the final sprint to the finish line. What a team.
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
— Reporter: 541-383-0393, amiles@bendbulletin.com.
D5
COMMUNITY SCOREBOARD Multisport Up the Crooked River Duathlon May 13, Prineville 5K run/40K bike/ 5K run Individual — 1, John Craft, Bend, 1:43:30. 2, Jake Akerberg, Prineville, 1:51:49. 3, Michael Frede, Bend, 1:57:19. 4, Kevin Lair, Bend, 1:58:40. 5, Bill Cooley, Prineville, 2:01:56. 6, Daniel Hammer, Prineville, 2:03:23. 7, Dan Broyles, Redmond, 2:05:07. 8, Ericka Luckel, Bend, 2:06:55. 9, Dave Pickhardt, Prineville, 2:11:58. 10, Brian Pew, Prineville, 2:22:56. 11, Tony Collins, Bend, 2:23:13. 12, Jeannie Groesz, Redmond, 2:26:15. 13, Monica Watson, Bend, 2:33:37. 14, Dennis Kostelecky, Prineville, 2:35:29. 15, Camdon Hammer, Prineville, 2:36:48. 16, John Marsh, Prineville, 2:39:14. 17, Lew Hollander, Redmond, 2:49:23. 18, Dawn Kessi, Prineville, 3:03:59. Team — 1, Rod Thompson and Janet Thompson, 2:04:28, Bend. 2 Mile Run/10 Mile Bike/2 mile run Individual — 1, Monique Davis, Prineville, 2:03:30. 2, Carol Rooney, Bend, 2:53:15. 3, Jackie Bowlby, Culver, 2:28:58.
Softball Bend Park & Recreation District Adult league standings as of May 11 Coed competitive — 1, Mountain’s Edge/RC, 3-0. 2, Cascade Tel, 3-0. 3, Rockchucks, 2-1. 4, Rivals, 2-1. 5, Triple Threat, 1-2. 6, Seven Nightclub, 1-2. 7, Ladies and Dents, 0-3. 8, Snaggletoothz, 0-3. Men’s Competitive American — 1, Naideen’s Boyz, 3-0. 2, Fox’s BilliardLounge, 3-0. 3, D & D Bar & Grill, 2-1. 4, Supply Depot, 2-1. 5, PBDI, 2-1. 6, Red Cloud, 2-1. 7, Antioch, 2-1. 8, Ohana, 1-2. 9, Amerititle, 1-2. 10, Newman Brothers, 1-2. 11, Southside Hacks, 1-2. 12, Brew Crew, 1-2. 13, Good Wood, 0-3. 14, Bend Research, 0-3. Men’s Competitive National — 1, River Roofing, 30. 2, Different Strokes, 2-1. 3, Double R DesertDawgs, 2-1. 4, Exxagerations, 2-1. 5, Eastmont Eagles, 2-1. 6, Goodlife Brewing Co., 2-1. 7, Cascade Thunder, 2-1. 8, Mountain View Heatin, 2-1. 9, Caldera Grille, 2-1. 10, Mike’s Mobil Mix, 2-0. 11, Bohica, 1-2. 12, The Bucks, 1-2. 13, Player’s Bar & Grill, 1-1. 14, Last Minute, 0-3. 15, Mike Warren Const., 0-3. 16, Cable Guys, 0-3. 17, Bud Light/Kelly D’s, 0-2. Senior Men’s Competitive — 1, Bear Prints Sr., 3-0. 2, PacificSource 3-0. 3, Southside P.T., 3-0. 4, Sidelines, 2-1. 5, Eagle Wealth Mgt., 1-2. 6, Bend Riverside Motel, 0-3. 7, Line-X, 0-3. 8, Kozak, 0-3. Women’s Competitive — 1, Mikes Fence Center, 3-0. 2, Spinal Tap, 3-0. 3, Rivals & Co, 2-1. 4, Ogre Knights, 1-2. 5, Warm Springs, 1-2. 6, Quickway Market, 1-2. 7, Spooky Dawson, 1-2. 8, Cascade Tel, 0-3.
Swimming Central Oregon Masters Aquatics COMA Spring Meet May 12, Bend COMA results (Long-course meters) Women 25 29 Annie Muske-Dukes-Driggs — 50 free, 36.84 (1st); 100 free, 1:34.85, (1st); 200 free, 3:30.76 (1st); 400 free, 7:59.76, (1st); 800 free, 15:54.10 (1st). 35-39 Elizabeth Strausbaugh — 100 free, 1:17.19, (1st); 400 free, 6:05.41 (1st); 800 free, 12:21.61 (1st); 100 breast, 1:41.09 (1st); 200 IM, 3:16.97 (2nd). 40-44 Cheryl Morgen — 100 free, 1:14.52 (1st); 50 Fly, 34.55 (1st); 100 Fly, 1:22.04 (1st). Jayna Tomac — 50 free, 32.50 (1st); 800 free, 10:59.15 (1st); 50 breast, 38.17 (1st, COMA record); 100 breast, 1:26.64 (1st, COMA record). 50-54 Kris Denney — 400 free, 5:26.99 (1st, COMA record); 200 split, 2:40.22 (COMA record); 800 free, 11:00.26 (1st COMA record). 55-59 Connie Shuman — 50 free, 51.30 (1st); 100 free, 1:55.47 (2nd); 200 free, 3:58.74 (2nd); 400 free, 8:10.06 (1st); 800 free, 16:12.59 (1st). 60-64 Janet Gettling — 50 fly, 46.50 (1st); 50 back, 45.31 (1st, COMA record); 50 breast, 46.14 (1st); 50 free, 36.89 (1st); 200 IM, 3:38.95 (1st). 65-69 Peggy Whiter — 200 free, 4:08.93 (2nd, COMA record); 800 free, 17:49.17 (1st, COMA record); 400 split, 8:46.49 (COMA record); 50 breast, 1:07.67 (3rd). 75-79 Kaleo Schroder — 50 free, 1:05.37 (1st); 100 free, 2:24.46 (1st); 50 back, 1:11.51 (1st, COMA record); 100 back, 2:48.06 (1st, COMA record); 50 breast, 1:33.23 (1st, COMA record). 80-84 Bev L’Esperance — 100 free, 3:04.75 (1st); 200 free, 6:08.21 (1st, COMA record); 50 back, 1:23.04 (1st, COMA record); 100 back, 3:07.99 (1st, COMA record); 200 back, 6:39.02 (1st, COMA record). Men 35-39
Brian Hemphill — 50 fly, 32.86 (3rd); 50 back, 37.34 (2nd); 50 breast, 42.01 (3rd); 50 free, 31.36 (2nd); 200 IM, 2:58.13 (4th). 40-44 Chris Tujo — 200 fly, 2:57.73 (1st); 200 back, 3:03.64 (1st); 200 breast, 3:16.66 (1st); 200 free, 2:28.46 (1st); 400 IM, 6:16.97 (1st). 45-49 Steve Wursta — 100 free, 1:14.63 (1st); 100 breast, 1:32.22 (1st); 100 fly, 1:40.07 (1st); 200 IM, 3:08.33 (1st, COMA record). 50-54 Jim Ivelich — 50 free, 26.58 (1st); 100 free, 1:01.08 (1st); 200 free, 2:23.60 (1st); 400 free, 5:25.69 (1st); 800 free, 11:19.97 (1st). Ron Thompson — 50 free, 33.01 (4th); 100 free, 1:15.41 (4th); 200 free, 2:39.50 (2nd); 400 free, 5:38.08 (2nd); 800 free, 11:32.50 (2nd). 55-59 Mark Lane — 50 free, 42.51 (3rd); 100 free, 1:38.95 (2nd); 200 free, 3:42.55 (2nd); 400 free, 8:01.57 (2nd); 800 free, 16:19.29 (2nd). Peter Metzger — 50 fly, 32.69 (1st); 50 back, 33.56 (1st); 50 breast, 40.38 (1st); 50 free, 30.12 (1st); 200 IM, 3:01.18 (1st). 60-64 Bob Bruce — 800 free, 11:59.29 (1st). Mike Carew — 50 free, 37.42 (2nd); 100 free, 1:21.85 (1st); 200 free, 2:55.52 (1st); 400 free, 6:23.73 (1st); 800 free, 12:49.67 (2nd). Steve Mann — 50 free, 28.11 (1st, COMA record); 50 back, 35.31 (1st); 100 back, 1:22.11 (1st, COMA record); 50 breast, 37.56 (1st, COMA record); 200 IM, 2:50.53 (1st, COMA record). 70-74 Tom Landis — 50 fly, 33.14 (1st, COMA record); 100 fly, 1:25.80 ((1st, NW Zone record); 200 IM, 2:56.72 (1st, national record). Ralph Mohr — 400 free, 6:43.43 (1st); 800 free, 13:53.63 (1st); 200 IM, 3:54.05 (2nd). John Spence — 100 free, 1:26.65 (1st); 200 free, 3:16.21 (1st); 100 back, 1:51.70 (1st).
Auto Racing Madras Dragstrip ——— May 12 Results (ET, MPH, dial) High School — W: Jeffery Taylor, Salem, 11.8, 58.98, 11.90. R: Casey Ladd, Welches, 2006 Halfscale, 11.0, 64.01, 11.10. Sportsman — W: Ken Green, Happy Valley, 1967 Chevelle, 8.60, 80.07, 8.67. R: Vicki McKelvy, Madras, 1973 Camaro, 9.32, 73.17, 9.29. Semis: Rob Moore, Bend, 2006 Ford F-350 Diesel, 11.4, 61.31, 11.45. Pro — W: Rob Kennard, Redmond, 1982 S-10 Chevy, 6.94, 98.04, 6.95. R: Larry Holm, Eagle Creek, 1966 El Camino, 6.97, 98.04, 6.99. Semis: Joe Kirkwood, Madras, 1969 Dart, 7.74, 88.41, 7.81. Super Pro — W: Tom Stockero, Bend, 1967 Camaro, 7.24, 90.54,7.20. R: Andy Uppendahl, Bend, 1965 Mustang, 6.54, 107.9, 6.49. Semis: Garen Ballard, Redmond, 1970 Plymouth Cuda, 7.57, 96.15, 6.65; Lindsay Keever, The Dalles, 1967 Camaro, 6.43, 105.6, 6.43. Motorcycle/Snowmobile — W: Evan Taylor, Madras, 2003 Skidoo, 6.72, 102.9, 6.72. R: Jeffery Taylor, Salem, 7.44, 91.65, 7.38. Semis: James Taylor, Salem, 1985 Honda, 8.58, 54.22, 7.64. Jr. Lightning — W: Shelby Smith, Redmond, 10.4, 60.73, 10.46. R: Casey Ladd, Welches, 2006 Halfscale, 8.00, 80.65, 7.95. Semis: T.J. Smith, Redmond, Jr. Dragstar, 11.3, 56.75, 11.35. Jackpot — W: James Love, Bend, 1970 Buick Grand Sport, 8.35, 82.12, 8.36. R: Billy Ledford, Powell Butte, 1970 Ford F100, 9.89, 72.12, 9.97. Semis: Bryan Dawson, Bend, 1972 Vega, 6.80, 101.5, 6.75; Ken Hudson, Mosier, 1957 Chev, 8.19, 84.11, 8.21. May 13 Results (ET, MPH, dial) High School — W: Preston Conroy, Madras, 1969 Chevelle, 12.7, 63.38, 9.60. R: Casey Ladd, Welches, 2006 Halfscale, 11.1, 62.94, 11.12. Semis: Jeffery Taylor, Salem, 11.8, 58.82, 11.85. Sportsman — W: Jamie Ladd, Welches, 2007 Ford, 11.2, 61.56, 11.20. R: Vicki McKelvy, Madras, 1973 Camaro, 9.31, 72.35, 9.34. S: Lydia Smith, Bend, 1972 Chevelle, 11.5, 60.32, 11.55. Pro — W: Annie Hausinger, Madras, 1970 Plymouth GTX, 7.02. R: Marty Edwards, Crooked River Ranch, 1965 Chev Nova, 8.12, 82.57, 8.12. Semis: Rob Kennard, Redmond, 1982 S-10 Chevy, 6.96, 98.25, 6.97. Super Pro — W: Warren Regnier, Bend, 1963 Nova, 6.61, 101.3, 6.60. R: Garen Ballard, Redmond, 1970 Plymouth Cuda, 6.59, 104.9, 6.57. Semis: Rodney Gregg, Madras, 1963 Dodge 440, 6.55, 105.1, 6.49. Motorcycle/Snowmobile — W: Jeffery Taylor, Salem, 7.53, 90.73, 7.45. R: Mitch Taylor, Madras, 6.40, 94.94, 6.40. Semis: Buffy Taylor, Salem, 1991 Yamaha, 6.84, 101.1, 6.92. Jr. Lightning — W: Casey Ladd, Welches, 2006 Halfscale, 7.96, 82.42, 7.98. R: T.J. Smith, Redmond, Jr. Dragstar, 11.3, 56.60, 11.40. Semis: Shelby Smith, Redmond, 10.5, 60.24, 10.43. Jackpot — W: Bob Hensell, Redmond, 1971 Camaro, 7.09, 93.17, 7.06. R: George Fix, Molalla, 1977 Nova, 8.50, 79.79, 8.45. Semis: John Farlow, Bend, 1975 Datsun 280Z, 7.37, 92.59, 7.33; Larry Holm, Eagle Creek, 1966 El Camino, 7.03, 97.61, 6.96.
C S B Football • Youth league registration available: Registration for the Bend Park and Recreation District’s 2012 youth tackle football program is currently being accepted. The program, scheduled to begin Aug. 13 and continue through Oct. 21, is open to all youths who will be in grades four through six during the 2012-13 school year. Teams are expected to be formed in the communities of Bend, Prineville and Sisters, and in Jefferson County. Games will be played on Sundays beginning in September. Helmets, shoulder pads, pants and mouth guards will be supplied; players need to provide their own shoes. Weight limits for ball carriers will be implemented. Registration fee is $95 for park district residents, $115 otherwise. The registration deadline is June 13. To register, go to https://register.bendparksandrec.org, or register in person at the park district office, 799 S.W. Columbia St. For more information, call the park district at 541-389-7275.
Youths • Olympic celebration on tap in Prineville: More than 600 elementary school students from Crooked River and Cecil Sly elementary schools are scheduled to participate in an Olympic Storyline celebration, set for 6 p.m. on May 31 at Ward Rhoden Stadium in Prineville. The celebration is to be the culmination of an eight-week study of the Summer Olympics. The 2012 Summer Games will take place in London starting July 27. Students will be participating in an opening ceremony that will include a parade of nations and the Olympic oath and competition in track and field events, for which medals will be awarded. Former track and field Olympian Tracy Smith, cross-country coach at Crook County High School in Prineville, will serve as torchbearer for the opening ceremony.
Nordic skiing • Girls event slated: The Fast and Female XC Dryland girls sports program is making an appearance in Bend on Sunday. The event, scheduled from
3 p.m. to 6 p.m. at the Athletic Club of Bend, is for girls ages 9 to 19, parents and coaches, and will include activities led by 2012 World Cup sprint champion Kikkan Randall. Chandra Crawford, a Canadian cross-country skier and 2006 Olympic gold medalist, launched Fast and Female seven years ago and will also be attending the Bend event. While the girls are scheduled to take part in activities led by Randall, coaches and parents will attend a seminar that includes topics such as physiological, developmental and nutritional issues for girls in endurance sports, and an in-depth look at developing high school skiers as endurance athletes. Cost is $10 for the youth activity, $20 for the adult seminar. Registration is available at http://ffmay20bend.eventbrite.com and at fastandfemale.com. For more information, contact Tim Gibbons at 541-306-8448 or timothypgibbons@yahoo.com.
Swimming • Masters swimmer breaks record: Central Oregon Masters Aquatics swimmer Tom Landis broke a national record for his age division Saturday at the COMA Spring Meet in Bend. Landis, of Camp Sherman, swam to first place in the 200-meter individual medley and was timed in 2 minutes, 56.72 seconds, a national record in the men’s 70-74 division. Landis also set a club record in the 50 butterfly and a Northwest Zone record in the 100 butterfly. For complete results of COMA swimmers at the Spring Meet, see Community Sports Scoreboard, above. • Cover coming off at Juniper: The cover of the 50-meter pool at Juniper Swim & Fitness Center in Bend is scheduled to be removed this week. The process began on Monday and is expected to continue through this Friday. The pool will remain open for use while the cover is being removed, and the rest of the facility will be open for normal hours and scheduled fitness classes. For more information and specific schedules, call 541-389-7665 or go to juniperswimandfitness.com. —Bulletin staff reports
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
COM M U N I T Y SP ORTS
C S C
Please email Community Sports event information to sports@ bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event� on our website at bendbulletin.com. Items are published on a spaceavailability basis, and should be submitted at least 10 days before the event.
AUTOS AUTOCROSS CLUB OF CENTRAL OREGON MONTHLY MEETING: Wednesday; 6 p.m. social, 6:30 p.m. meeting; Pappy’s Pizza Parlor, Bend; all welcome; www.autoxclub. org.
BASEBALL BEND WIFFLE BALL ASSOCIATION: Looking for players and team managers for the 2012 season, which starts in mid-June; teams are of eight players, with four on the field at a given time; can sign up as a team or be placed on one; $20 per person; managers meeting scheduled for 6 p.m. today; 541977-1726; bendwiffle.info. BEND ELKS BASEBALL CAMPS: Boys and girls ages 7-14; with Elks coaches and players; Monday, June 18-Wednesday, June 20; $63 for Bend Parks and Recreation District members, $82 otherwise; Monday, July 9-Thursday, July 12; $80 for Bend Park & Recreation District members, $108 otherwise; both sessions 8:30 a.m.-noon and at Vince Genna Stadium, Bend; bring baseball glove each day; www.bendparksandrec.org. COUGAR SUMMER BASEBALL CAMP: For boys entering grades four through eight; Tuesday, June 26-Thursday, June 28; 10 a.m.-1 p.m.; Mountain View High School varsity baseball field; camp will be coached by MVHS head coach Dave McKae and Cougars baseball players; $50 through May 25, otherwise $60; email Kory.bright@ gmail.com or call 541-420-6266 for registration forms. REDMOND PANTHERS BASEBALL CLUB: Now seeking players ages 7-14; emphasis is to prepare players for high school baseball; opportunities include camps and instructional training; players do not need to live in Redmond to participate; age is based as of April 30; 541-788-8520; derisman@ unitedplanners.com; www. leaguelineup.com/redmondbluesox. PRIVATE PITCHING INSTRUCTION: With Dave McKae; drills, techniques and exercises to increase arm strength and velocity; $35 per lesson, plus a check on your Bend Fieldhouse card; 541-480-8786; pitchingperfection@gmail.com. PRIVATE LESSONS: With Ryan Jordan, a graduate of Bend High School and a former Bend Elk who played at Lane Community College and the University of La Verne; specifically for catching and hitting, but also for all positions; available after 3 p.m. on weekdays, open scheduling on weekends; at the Bend Fieldhouse or an agreed upon location; $30 per half hour or $55 per hour; discounts for multiple players in a single session, referrals or booking multiple sessions; cash only; 541-788-2722; rjordan@ uoregon.edu.
BASKETBALL ALL PRO SHOOTING CAMP: Twoday camp for players in grades four through eight; Saturday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Sunday, 1 p.m.-5:30 p.m.; learn shooting, free throw and ball-handling techniques; participants should bring a lunch on Saturday and a basketball; Bend Boys & Girls Club; $75 for both days; Mike Phelps; 860-336-6137; mikephelps@allproshooting.com; allproshooting.com. MOUNTAIN VIEW GIRLS BASKETBALL SUMMER HOOPS CAMP: For girls in grades four through nine; Monday, June 18Thursday, June 21; 1 p.m.-4 p.m.; west gym, Mountain View High School, Bend; $45, includes T-shirt, prizes and snacks; Steve Riper, steve.riper@bend.k12.or.us, 541355-4527; registration form and waiver available at goladycougs. net. JR COUGAR BASKETBALL CAMP: For boys and girls entering grades three through nine; Monday, June 18-Wednesday, June 20; 9 a.m.-noon; Mountain View High School, Bend; instruction by MVHS boys program staff and current varsity players; $49 through June 1, $69 otherwise; Craig Reid; 541-318-8014. BEND LAVA BEARS BOYS BASKETBALL CAMP: Open to all boys in grades three through eight; Monday, June 18-Thursday, June 21; 8:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m.; Bend High School; presented by Bend High School coaching staff, and past and present varsity players; $60 through June 1, $65 after, or $50 per player for multiple participants from same family; Don Hayes; 541-948-5335. SUMMIT GIRLS YOUTH BASKETBALL CLINIC: For players in grades two through nine; Monday, June 18-Thursday, June 21; $30-$50 per player, depending on grade level; Ryan Cruz; email ryan. cruz@bend.k12.or.us for times and registration forms.
COBO LITTLE DRIBBLERS FUNDAMENTAL BASKETBALL CAMPS: Grades two through five; Monday, June 25-Thursday, June 28; Mountain View High School, Bend; Monday, July 23-Friday, July 26; Pilot Butte Middle School, Bend; 9 a.m.-noon both sessions; $75 for Bend Park & Recreation District members, $101 otherwise; www.bendparksandrec.org. COBO MIDDLE SCHOOL BASKETBALL CAMPS: Grades five through nine; Monday, June 25-Thursday, June 28; Mountain View High School, Bend; Monday, July 23-Friday, July 26; Pilot Butte Middle School, Bend; 10 a.m.-1 p.m. both sessions; $75 for Bend Park & Recreation District members, $101 otherwise; www. bendparksandrec.org.
CLIMBING BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY CLIMBING: Competition team; ages 10-18; focuses on rope/sport climbing with opportunities to compete in USA Climbing’s Sport Climbing Series; 4-6 p.m.; Mondays through Thursdays through July 2; mike@ bendenduranceacademy.org; www. BendEnduranceAcademy.org. BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY CLIMBING: Development team; ages 10-18; focuses on rope/sport climbing with trips to regional bouldering/climbing areas; 4 p.m.-6 p.m.; Mondays and Wednesdays through July 2; mike@ bendenduranceacademy.org; www. BendEnduranceAcademy.org.
HORSES ROSE CITY OPENER: Hunter/ jumper show; Thursday, May 24-Sunday, May 27; 65875 Cline Falls Road, Bend; entries close Monday; alliedshows@gmail.com; franklinshows.com.
MISCELLANEOUS GOLF FOR SCHOOLS: Limited number of half-price rounds available; fundraising effort for the education foundations of Bend-La Pine Schools and the Redmond, Crook County and Jefferson County school districts; participating courses are Awbrey Glen, Brasada Ranch, Crooked River Ranch, Eagle Crest, Juniper Golf Course, Meadow Lakes, Prineville Country Club, Pronghorn, River’s Edge, Sunriver Resort and Tetherow; Heather Vihstadt; 541-355-5660; education.foundation@bend.k12. or.us. HIGH DESERT FENCING EPEE TOURNAMENT: Saturday; junior epee, 10 a.m.; mixed open epee, 12:30 p.m.; D and under epee, 3:30 p.m.; High Desert Fencing, Bend; Randall, 541-389-4547; Jeff, 541-419-7087. BEGINNING SKATE CLASS: Tuesdays and Thursdays, todayMay 31; 4:15 p.m.-5:15 p.m.; Redmond Skate Park; learn to ride, turn, push, switch turn, ride fakie and more; emphasis on skate park safety; $40; 541-548-7275; www. raprd.org. FRISBEE GOLF: Grades two through five; Wednesday; 3:15 p.m.-4:45 p.m.; join staff for some tips and a fun, possibly competitive game of disc golf in Redmond; meet at the Redmond skate park; $7; 541-548-7275; www.raprd.org. OREGON STATE “WILD BUNCH� CHAMPIONSHIPS: Saturday, June 1- Sunday, June 2; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; watch gunfighters compete using 1911 semiauto pistols, 1897 pump shotguns, and rifles featured in the famous 1969 film; free; Central Oregon Sports Shooting Association range; U.S. Highway 20 at milepost 24 east of Bend; 541385-6021; www.hrp-sass.com. FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN ATHLETES NW SPORTS CAMP: Grades seven through 12; Monday, June 25-Friday, June 29; Northwest Nazarene University, Nampa, Idaho; all high school sports offered; transportation from Central Oregon to camp provided; $350, some scholarships available; Dennis Legg; DLegg@fca.org; 541-815-1274.
MULTISPORT MINI DUATHLON SERIES: Third race in series is Wednesday, June 6; heats at 4:15 p.m., 5:15 p.m. and 6:15 p.m.; Bend; simulated 20K Pacific Crest bike course on CompuTrainer and 3K or 5K run outside; Powered by Bowen, 143 S.W. Century Drive; $15 adults, $10 juniors; poweredbybowen.com; 541-585-1500. POLE PEDAL PADDLE: Saturday; Mt. Bachelor ski area to Bend; downhill and nordic skiing, cycling, running and paddling; individuals, pairs and teams; $42-$190; www. pppbend.com. KID’S MINI PPP: Grades one
through five; Sunday; Bend; 9 a.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater; teams of six; rafting, cycling, running and obstacle legs; $150 per team; registration deadline is Monday; 541-388-0002; mbsef. org/events/minippp. DUEL IN THE DESERT: Saturday, June 2; 10 a.m.; Bend; options of 5K run-18-mile road bike ride-5K run or 5K run-13-mile mountain bike ride-5K run; also kids Mini Duel Run with age-appropriate distances; individual and team options; $10-$55; bendduel.com. OYSTER OFF ROAD ADVENTURE RACE: Saturday, June 30; 8 a.m.; Bend; compete on teams of two to four members; race may include bikes, running, water and smart phones components; $75; www. oysterracingseries.com.
PADDLING PPP PADDLING CLINIC: Thursday; 4-6 p.m.; learn faster, more aggressive paddle strokes, how to read the river, and work with the current’s rivers and eddies; $45; Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe; www.tumalocreek.com. POST POLE PEDAL PADDLE DEMO DAY: Sunday; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, Bend; boating experts on hand for assistance and kayaks, canoes and paddleboards available to demo; 541-317-9407; laurel@ tumalocreek.com. SUP MORNING SOCIALS: Mondays through June 11; 9:30 a.m.; Bend; group stand-up paddleboard excursions on the Deschutes River; $25 includes use of personal flotation device, board and light instruction for beginners; meet at Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe; www.tumalocreek.com. MBSEF JUNIOR PADDLE BOARD PROGRAM: For juniors age 12 and older; main focus will be stand-up paddleboarding, but participants may also learn skills in outrigger and prone paddling, basic lifesaving and water safety; three session options, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, June 18-29, July 9-20 and Aug. 13-24; 9:30-11 a.m.; Riverbend Park, Bend; $120, includes all equipment, 10 percent discount on multiple sessions; mbsef@mbsef.org; mbsef.org.
PICKLEBALL BRING ON SUMMER PICKLEBALL TOURNAMENT: Friday and Saturday; Lakeside Sports Center at Eagle Crest Resort, Redmond; open to all ages and skill levels; men’s and women’s doubles, mixed doubles; $6 per event; entry forms available at the resort’s sports center or by contacting Sue Boyle at 541-410-1237 or Phil McCage at phillymac@bendbroadband.com.
RUNNING WILDLAND FIREFIGHTER FOUNDATION PRINEVILLE HOTSHOT MEMORIAL: Saturday; 8:30 a.m.; 5K run/walk and 1K Jr. Firefighter Kids Fun Run (age 12 and younger); Ochoco Creek Park, Prineville; $26 5K, $12 kids run; Shad Sitz; 541-588-0840; runningwildfire.org. CORK YOUTH JUNIOR OLYMPIC
TRACK & FIELD: Practices Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursday, starting May 21 through July 5; 5:30-7 p.m.; Cascade Middle School track; practices free, CORK and USATF memberships required; with USATF-certified coaches; cork. youth.running@gmail.com; Kevin Cornett; kcornett1@msn.com. INTRO TO TRAIL RUNNING GROUP RUN: Monday; 5:30 p.m.; meet at FootZone in downtown Bend to carpool to trailhead; dress appropriately for the weather and come explore area trails; bring water and any after-run items; free; register in advance; melanie@ footzonebend.com. THE JUNGLE RUN/WALK: Thursday, May 24; 5:30 p.m.; COCC track, Bend; 2-mile run/walk and 4-mile run with singletrack trails, mud bogs, steep ascents and descents, and log crossings; free for COCC and OSU-Cascades students and staff, $5 otherwise; registration 4:30 p.m.-5:15 p.m. at the track; bdouglass@cocc.edu. HAPPY GIRLS HALF: Sunday, May 27; Riverbend Park, Bend; half marathon, 5K and Happy Little Kids 1.5K runs; $40-$110, depending on event and date of registration; 541323-0964; www.happygirlsrun. com. HEAVEN CAN WAIT: Sunday, June 3; 9 a.m.; Drake Park, Bend; 5K run/walk; benefit for Sara’s Project, which raises funds for breast health education; $20 online, $40 day of event; 541-706-6996; heavencanwait.org. LIL’ PANTHERS TRACK CAMP: Monday, June 4-Wednesday, June 6; 4:15 p.m.-5:30 p.m.; Redmond High School track; for elementary school-age students during the 2011-12 school year; learn jumps, throws and sprints/ hurdles/relays with RHS track and field members; $20 ($45 maximum per family); Scott Brown; scott. brown@redmond.k12.or.us; 541923-4800, ext. 2110. STORM THE STAIRS: Thursday, June 7; 5:30 p.m.; COCC track, Bend; 2-mile run/walk; free for COCC and OSU-Cascades students and staff, $5 for participants age 18 and younger, $8 all others; registration 4:30 p.m.-5:15 p.m. at the track; bdouglass@cocc.edu. THREE SISTERS MARATHON: Saturday, June 9; 7 a.m.; Eagle Crest Resort, Redmond; marathon, two-person and fiveperson marathon relays, and 5K fun run/walk; $25-$225; www. threesistersmarathon.com. DIRTY HALF: Sunday, June 10; 8 a.m.; half-marathon race on singletrack trails has reached 800-runner limit but transfers are allowed through May 31; 541-317-3568; superdave@ footzonebend.com; footzonebend. com/dirty_half. STORM TRACK CAMP: For boys and girls in grades four through eight; Monday, June 18-Thursday, June 21; 9 a.m.noon; Summit High School, Bend; for all ability levels; with SHS coaching staff and team members; bring running shoes, appropriate clothing, snack and water bottle each day; $64 Bend Park & Recreation District residents, $84 otherwise; www. bendparksandrec.org.
SCUBA DIVING BASIC BEGINNER SCUBA CLASSES: Central Oregon Scuba Academy at Cascade Swim Center in Redmond, ongoing; scuba certification available for adults and kids age 12 and older; refresher and dive industry career classes for certified divers; cost varies; Rick Conners, 541-312-2727 or 541-287-2727.
SNOW SPORTS MBSEF POLE PEDAL PADDLE PREP NORDIC SKATE CLINICS: For those with at least some nordic skiing experience; Thursday; 10 a.m.; Nordic Center, Mt. Bachelor ski area; led by Dan Simoneau, three-time PPP champion; focus on body position, timing; strength and tactics; $20 per clinic; register through MBSEF; signed waiver required; 541-388-0002; mbsef@ mbsef.org; mbsef.org. FAST AND FEMALE XC SKI DRYLAND: For girls ages 9-19, parents and coaches; Sunday; 3-6 p.m.; Athletic Club of Bend; day of athletic activities, dance and inspiration; education on current issues in physiology, nutrition and coaching; $10 youths, $20 parents and coaches; 541-306-8448; timothypgibbons@yahoo.com; fastandfemale.com. BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY NORDIC SUMMER PROGRAMS: Twice weekly and five days weekly summer training programs for local skiers ages 13-23 and for summer visiting skiers ages 1823; practices Mondays through Fridays, May 29-August 14; $200 for twice weekly option, $500 for five times weekly option; 541-678-3864; ben@ bendenduranceacademy.org. MBSEF ALPINE, NORDIC AND FREERIDE SUMMER CAMPS: Friday, June 15-Friday, June 29; Mt. Bachelor ski area; 541-3880002; mbsef@mbsef.org;www. mbsef.org. BEND ON-SNOW MINI CAMP: For outside skiers who want to join in on a block of skiing; Friday, June 15-Tuesday, June 19; Ben Husaby; 541-678-3864.
SOCCER PORTLAND TIMBERS YOUTH CAMP: For kids ages 5-13; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Monday, Aug. 20Wednesday, Aug. 22; Big Sky Park, Bend; learn technical skills, meet a Timbers player and learn from Timbers TREES life skills and life values program; registration deadline Aug. 16; Erik Lyslo; elyslo@portlandtimbers.com; 503-553-5575; portlandtimbers. com/youth/portland-timberscamp-program.
is looking for one or two more girls; prospective players must have turned 11 years old after Jan. 1, 2012, to be eligible; Jeremy; 541-325-3689. CASCADE ALLIANCE SOFTBALL: Forming girls teams at the 10and-under, 12-and-under, 14and-under, 16-and-under, and 18and-under levels for tournaments in the spring and summer of 2012; visit website or Facebook for upcoming tryouts for the 12U and 14U teams, open gyms for all ages, upcoming clinics, and coaching opportunities; www. cascadealliance.org. SKILL INSTRUCTION: Age 10 and older; with Mike Durre, varsity softball coach at Mountain View High School; lessons in fielding, pitching and hitting; $30 per hour or $50 per hour for two players; mdurre@netscape.net; 541-480-9593.
SWIMMING COSMIC SWIM: For middle school students; Saturday; 8-10 p.m.; student ID required; Cascade Swim Center, Redmond; $2.50 drop-in fee; 541-548-7275, www.raprd.org.
VOLLEYBALL OREGON VOLLEYBALL ACADEMY CAMP: For players in grades five through eight; Wednesday, June 6; 5 p.m.-7 p.mm.; Cascade Indoor Sports, Bend; will be led by OVA director Turner Waskom and coaching staff; skills and drills about volleyball fundamentals and instruction for more advanced players; $40; 541-419-1187; turner@oregonvolleyballacademy. com; registration form and information available at oregonvolleyballacademy.com. TLHS VOLLEYBALL CAMP: For grades three through eight; Monday, July 16-Thursday, July 19; Trinity School, 2550 N.E. Butler Market Road, Bend; 9 a.m.-noon grades three through five; 1 p.m.-4 p.m. grades six through eight; improve skills by working on fundamentals through demonstration, guidance, repetition and correction; with Trinity Lutheran coaches; bring knee pads and wattle bottle; $68 for Bend Park & Recreation District residents, $92 otherwise; www. bendparksandrec.org. SAND VOLLEYBALL CAMP: For grades five through eight; Monday, July 30-Wednesday, Aug. 1; 9:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m.; outdoor courts in Old Mill District, Bend; staged by Bend High School coaching staff; passing, serving, setting, spiking and agility drills; $51 for Bend Park & Recreation District residents, $69 otherwise; www.bendparksandrec. org.
SOFTBALL HIGH DESERT YELLOWJACKETS: Redmond-based 10-and-under ASA fast pitch girls softball team Change your mind. Change your life.
(541) 728-0505 www.neurofloat.com
Show off your high school grad in our special edition of CENTRAL OREGON
Graduation Graduate’s Name Parents’ Names School
Graduate’s Name Parents’ Names School
Send us a BABY photo to include in our 2012 Graduation Edition, which will publish on Wednesday, June 13. Just bring in or mail your graduate’s baby photo along with the information requested below and a $25 fee by Tuesday, May 29. Photos will be returned only if accompanied by a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Graduate’s Name Parents’ Names School
P L E A S E T Y P E O R P R I N T C L E A R LY O N LY T H E F O L L OW I N G I N F O R M AT I O N :
Graduate’s Name Parents’ Names School
Graduate’s Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Parents’ Names _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ School _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ (Please print graduate’s name on back of photo.) Phone # _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
CLASS OF Graduate’s Name Parents’ Names School
Mail to: Bulletin Grad Tab Attn: Stacie Oberson
1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702
Graduate’s Name Parents’ Names School
BUSINESS
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Stock listings, E2-3 Calendar, E4 Deeds, E4
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
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IN BRIEF No severance for Yahoo CEO Yahoo ended Scott Thompson’s four-month stint as its CEO without giving him a severance package. The struggling Internet company disclosed in a regulatory filing on Monday that it isn’t paying Thompson anything more. Thompson stepped down Sunday in a management shake-up triggered by inaccurate information in his official biography. He’ll keep a $1.5 million bonus and restricted stock valued at $5.5 million that Yahoo paid him when he joined the company to compensate him for benefits he gave up leaving his job running PayPal, the online payment service owned by eBay Inc. Yahoo Inc. required Thompson to surrender unvested stock awards valued at $16 million.
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www.bendbulletin.com/business CLOSE 12,695.35 CHANGE -125.25 -.98%
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CLOSE 1,338.35 CHANGE -15.04 -1.11%
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10-year Treasury
CLOSE 1.76 CHANGE -4.35%
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$1,560.60 GOLD CLOSE CHANGE -$23.00
Judge strikes down union rule A federal judge on Monday struck down new regulations governing union elections, saying the National Labor Relations Board did not follow proper voting procedures when it approved the rules last year. U.S. District Judge James Boasberg said the board never had a quorum when it voted on the rules that speed up the pace of union representation elections. He did not address the merits of the rules and said the NLRB could simply take a new vote to approve them. — From wire reports
Manufacturing uptick Manufacturing output rises in the United States year after year. But manufacturing’s share of the gross domestic product has been declining until recently.
MANUFACTURING’S SHARE OF G.D.P. 30%
20
10
0
2009: 11.0%
’50 ’60 ’70 ’80 ’90 ’00 ’10
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis New York Times News Service
CLOSE $28.319 CHANGE -$0.539
Facebook What happened No sign of shareholder at JPMorgan? And IPO shares revolt against Dimon should you care? a tough buy for small Q: investors By Pallavi Gogoi
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon owned up to stock analysts and went on TV to accept blame for a $2 billion trading mistake. Next he faces shareholders, who are considerably less wealthy since the blunder was disclosed. While Dimon may be greeted by colorful protesters and tough questions at the JPMorgan annual meeting in Tampa, Fla., today, shareholders are unlikely to call for his head. For them, facing the
crisis without Dimon might be a bigger nightmare than the trading loss itself. “When a bank is dealing with this sort of a challenge, you want someone of his caliber to shepherd it through,” said longtime JPMorgan shareholder Michael Holland, chairman and founder of money manager Holland & Co. That has not been a universal opinion since Thursday, when Dimon disclosed to analysts that the bank had lost $2 billion by making a bad bet with so-called credit derivatives. See JPMorgan / E4
By Ezra Klein
The Washington Post
How did they make this mistake?
No one really knows yet. Matt Levine, A: the editor of Dealbreaker, wrote last week that he thinks they simply messed up
By Dave Carpenter
the math that was governing the trade.
The Associated Press
Q: We don’t know. We probably won’t A: know for awhile. See Q&A / E4 How much did JPMorgan lose on it?
EXECUTIVE FILE
Andy Tullis / The Bulletin
Dump City Dumplings food cart co-owner Keith Shayon serves dumplings at Northwest Bond Street and Northwest Oregon Avenue in downtown Bend.
Dumpling cart finds big appetites in Bend By Ashley Brothers • The Bulletin In the summer of 2010, three friends needed money for a road trip and decided to start a food cart business in Bend. Today, Dump City Dumplings has expanded to Eugene and employs six people. College buddies Keith Shayon, 25, and Dan Butters, 26, met Reid Frumkin, 25, when they joined a Bend kickball team together. They all agreed that it’s hard to find good food in Bend after 10 p.m., said Shayon, and saw an opportunity. “We were just a couple of kids thinking, ‘Let’s start a business!’” Shayon said. But their plan to raise roadtrip money quickly turned into a growing business. “It’s taken on a life of its own,” Shayon said.
The name Dump City Dumplings just sounded right, said Shayon. The trio thought the name would either gross people out or make them laugh. Dump City isn’t a comment on Bend, although Shayon has heard that some people think it refers to dumping snow. Within days of coming up with the initial idea, they answered a Craigslist ad placed by a Eugene man who said he could build a custom food cart for them. After meeting, planning and communicating for several weeks with the builder,
the cart was finished and towed from Eugene to Bend. But when the cart arrived, Shayon, Frumkin and Butters realized it would never pass a health inspection. It had unfinished stainless steel with sharp edges, internal pipes that had broken on the trip and wire connections exposed to water. “It was a death trap,” said Shayon. The cart cost $2,500, which was Shayon and Frumkin’s savings and the starting capital for the business. See Dumpling / E3
The basics What: Dump City Dumplings Where: Corner of Northwest Bond Street and Northwest Oregon Avenue, Bend; Wednesdays and Thursdays 11 a.m.-2 p.m., TuesdaySaturday 10 p.m.-2 a.m., Sundays 6-9 p.m. at GoodLife Brewing, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend Employees: Six Phone: 203-644-7701 Email: bendevents@ dumpcitydumplings.com
A voice processor that listens, then harmonizes
1953: 28.3% 2011: 12.2%
SILVER
JPMORGAN CHASE FALLOUT
Best Buy founder, chairman resigns Best Buy said Monday its founder Richard Schulze is stepping down as chairman after an investigation found that he knew that the CEO was having a relationship with a female employee and failed to alert the audit committee. The company also said that despite the fact that its audit committee found that then-CEO Brian Dunn violated company policy by having a “close personal relationship” with a female employee, he gets a severance package worth about $6.6 million. The inquiry showed that Schulze acted inappropriately when he found out about the relationship. He is resigning and will be replaced by Hatim Tyabji, chairman of its audit committee.
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By David Pogue New York Times News Service
The Internet hit pop music hard. Without the Net, we’d still be buying songs from record stores. Apple would still be just a computer company. And Justin Bieber would probably be working in a Burger King in Ontario. In the online world, you can take your music straight to the public. No more gatekeepers, record executives or rejection letters. If you’re any good,
TECH FOCUS you’ll soon win your fame and fortune — or at least sky-high view counts. But these days, a great voice isn’t enough; you also need great processing. There’s not a song on the radio today that hasn’t been digitally massaged with effects like reverb (echo), compression (evening out the volume spikes) and autotune (fixing notes that were
sung sharp or flat). You can do this sort of work using software like GarageBand or Audacity. But the VoiceLive Play ($250 online), a new gadget from the vocal-processing company TC Helicon, offers all of those effects and more. The twist: It’s a rugged metal box with foot-stompable buttons, so that you can turn those effects on and off even during a live performance. See VoiceLive / E3
CHICAGO — Hoping to get in on Facebook’s hotly anticipated public stock offering? You’ll need Facebook friends at very high levels — or a lot of money. Most people who like the idea of owning Facebook’s stock will have difficulty getting it at the offer price, currently expected at $28 to $35 a share. Unless you know the right people at Facebook, you’ll likely need to have a large, active account with one of the big banks or brokerage firms directly involved in the stock sale. Otherwise, you can take your chances by buying shares after the initial public offering is completed, when Facebook begins trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market under the ticker symbol “FB.” That’s likely to happen Friday. Doing it that way typically means paying much more for the stock, however. And heavy demand skews the early stock price, leaving an investor vulnerable to the risk of a big drop. Jerome Cleary isn’t deterred. One of a legion of Facebook fans, he has never wanted to own a stock as much as he wants to buy this one. Cleary, a standup comedian in Los Angeles, says he has already signed up for an account with a discount online brokerage so he’ll be ready. “I know you should buy stock in what you know and like,” Cleary says. “I feel that because they have an incredible mass of wealth and such growing popularity, the stock really may pay off.” Facebook Inc.’s IPO is expected to be the largest ever for an Internet company. It’s expected to raise as much as $11.8 billion for Facebook and its early investors — far more than the $1.67 billion raised in Google Inc.’s 2004 IPO. Analysts say there’s so much interest in Facebook’s stock that some underwriters are closing their books as early as today. This means they won’t be taking any more orders from potential buyers. The IPO is expected to be completed late Thursday, with shares available for trading Friday. Scott Sweet, the owner of advisory firm IPOBoutique, says the high demand also means that Facebook might raise the per-share price above $35, the high end of the range Facebook currently expects. Facebook and the IPO’s lead underwriter, Morgan Stanley, declined to comment. If you’re thinking of investing in Facebook, here are some things to consider.
IPO shares
New York Times News Service
The VoiceLive Play Processor has foot-controlled buttons for effects like reverb and autotune.
Facebook and its early investors are selling more than 337 million shares, but those shares are parceled out very carefully, away from the public’s eyes. Typically individuals get to buy no more than 10 percent to 20 percent of shares sold at an IPO’s offering price. See Facebook / E3
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
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A-B-C-D ABB Ltd 0.71 ACE Ltd 1.64 ACI Wwde AES Corp AFLAC 1.32 AGCO AGIC Cv 1.08 AGIC Cv2 1.02 AGL Res 1.84 AK Steel 0.20 AMC Net n AOL ASML Hld 0.59 AT&T Inc 1.76 ATP O&G AU Optron 0.14 AVI Bio AVX Cp 0.30 AXT Inc Aarons 0.06 Aastrom AbtLab 2.04 AberFitc 0.70 AbdAsPac 0.42 Abiomed AbitibiB AboveNet Abraxas AcaciaTc AcadiaPh AcadiaRlt 0.72 Accenture 1.35 AccoBrds AccretivH Accuray Accuride Achillion AcmePkt AcornEngy 0.14 ActiveNt n ActivePw h ActivsBliz 0.18 Actuant 0.04 Actuate Acuity 0.52 Acxiom AdobeSy Adtran 0.36 AdvAuto 0.24 AdvEnId AMD AdvSemi 0.11 AdvOil&Gs Adventrx AdvActBear AecomTch AegeanMP 0.04 Aegon 0.13 Aegon cap 1.59 AerCap Aeropostl AEterna g Aetna 0.70 AffilMgrs Affymax Affymetrix Agenus rs Agilent 0.40 Agnico g 0.80 Agrium g 0.45 AirLease AirProd 2.56 AirTrnsp Aircastle 0.60 Airgas 1.60 AkamaiT Akorn AlaskAir s AlaskCom 0.20 AlbnyIn 0.52 Albemarle 0.80 AlcatelLuc Alcoa 0.12 Alere AlexBld 1.26 AlexREE 1.96 AlexcoR g Alexion s Alexza h AlignTech Alkermes AllegTch 0.72 Allergan 0.20 AlliData AlliBInco 0.48 AlliantEgy 1.80 AlliantTch 0.80 AlldNevG AllisonT n 0.24 AllosThera AllotComm AllscriptH Allstate 0.88 AlphaNRs AlpGPPrp 0.60 AlpTotDiv 0.66 AlpAlerMLP 1.00 AlteraCp lf 0.32 AlterraCap 0.56 Altria 1.64 Alumina 0.24 AmBev 1.23 AmTrstFin 0.40 Amarin Amazon Amdocs Amedisys Ameren 1.60 Amerigrp AMovilL s 0.28 AmAxle AmCampus 1.35 ACapAgy 5.00 AmCapLtd ACapMtg n 1.90 AEagleOut 0.44 AEP 1.88 AEqInvLf 0.12 AmExp 0.80 AFnclGrp 0.70 AGreet 0.60 AIG wt AmIntlGrp AmPubEd ARltyCT n 0.70 AmRepro AmSupr AmTower 0.84 AVangrd 0.10 AmWtrWks 1.00 Amerigas 3.20 Amrign Ameriprise 1.40 AmeriBrgn 0.52 Ametek 0.36 Amgen 1.44 AmkorT lf Amphenol 0.42 Amtech Amylin Amyris Anadarko 0.36 Anadigc AnalogDev 1.20 Ancestry AnglogldA 0.49 ABInBev 1.57 AnikaTh Anixter 4.50 Ann Inc Annaly 2.37 Ansys AntaresP AntheraPh Anworth 0.90 Aon plc 0.60 A123 Sys Apache 0.68 AptInv 0.72 ApolloGM 1.15 ApolloGrp ApolloInv 0.80 ApolloRM n 1.05 Apple Inc 10.60 ApldMatl 0.36 AMCC Approach AquaAm 0.66 ArQule Arbitron 0.40 ArcelorMit 0.75 ArchCap ArchCoal 0.12 ArchDan 0.70 ArchLearn ArcosDor 0.24 ArcticCat ArdeaBio ArenaPhm AresCap 1.48 AriadP Ariba Inc ArkBest 0.12 ArmHld 0.16 ArmourRsd 1.20 ArmstrWld 8.55 ArrayBio Arris ArrowEl ArthroCre ArtioGInv 0.08 ArubaNet AsburyA AscenaRt s AshfordHT 0.44 Ashland 0.70 AsiaInfoL AspenIns 0.68 AspenTech AssistLv s 0.40 AsscdBanc 0.20 Assurant 0.84 AssuredG 0.36 Astec AstexPhm AstoriaF 0.16 AstraZen 2.80 athenahlth AtlPwr g 1.15 AtlasEngy 1.00 AtlasPpln 2.24 AtlatsaR g Atmel ATMOS 1.38 AtwoodOcn AuRico g Aurizon g AutoNatn Autodesk
16.47 75.48 40.27 12.22 42.73 42.77 8.92 8.20 38.29 7.09 42.35 26.08 47.16 33.53 5.98 4.29 .76 11.33 3.85 26.71 2.39 61.68 45.91 7.42 23.14 11.00 83.22 2.69 36.62 1.59 22.99 58.81 10.25 11.40 6.41 5.78 6.89 24.71 10.49 14.00 .85 12.64 25.78 6.80 52.83 13.05 32.23 29.72 82.34 13.48 6.75 4.84 2.98 .54 23.66 17.78 5.13 4.45 23.87 11.40 19.40 .55 41.53 105.83 14.18 4.98 6.32 38.90 35.76 80.94 23.61 82.88 5.60 11.75 90.96 29.66 12.95 33.93 2.06 19.65 60.97 1.46 8.92 18.59 49.70 74.07 5.03 86.02 .41 30.59 17.98 38.88 91.60 126.10 8.22 44.77 53.20 25.74 19.26 1.79 23.48 11.03 34.40 13.16 6.25 4.42 16.12 33.77 23.06 31.69 3.67 38.79 28.40 11.23 222.93 29.99 10.17 32.60 60.84 24.70 9.42 44.63 32.16 9.54 23.28 19.38 38.26 11.40 58.42 39.15 14.58 11.85 31.30 26.98 10.79 5.07 3.91 67.20 24.52 33.86 38.45 13.44 49.66 36.65 49.76 70.20 4.62 53.46 5.11 25.65 1.90 66.75 2.00 37.19 22.57 32.22 71.49 13.29 61.71 27.42 16.53 62.50 3.10 2.12 6.74 47.83 .91 85.05 27.22 11.89 31.93 7.12 18.76 558.22 10.95 5.47 29.29 22.73 6.47 35.96 15.61 38.66 8.19 33.05 11.09 13.65 42.31 31.71 6.61 15.44 17.01 38.25 13.13 23.39 6.90 45.55 3.48 12.44 36.66 24.55 3.17 16.33 25.76 20.11 8.07 65.53 11.51 28.00 22.06 16.02 12.89 37.78 13.10 29.74 1.67 9.08 42.86 72.89 13.91 34.99 32.43 .26 7.59 32.65 39.91 7.44 4.41 34.85 35.93
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Autoliv 1.88 AutoData 1.58 AutoZone Auxilium AvagoTch 0.52 AvalnRare AvalonBay 3.88 AvanirPhm AVEO Ph AveryD 1.08 AvidTch AvisBudg Avista 1.16 Aviva 0.83 Avnet Avon 0.92 Axcelis AXIS Cap 0.96 B&G Foods 1.08 BB&T Cp 0.80 BCE g 2.17 BE Aero BGC Ptrs 0.68 BHP BillLt 2.20 BHPBil plc 2.20 BJsRest BMC Sft BP PLC 1.92 BPZ Res BRE 1.54 BRFBrasil 0.42 BabckWil Bacterin BadgerMtr 0.64 Baidu BakrHu 0.60 BallCorp 0.40 BallyTech BanColum 1.12 BcBilVArg 0.57 BcoBrad pf 0.81 BcoSantSA 0.82 BcoSBrasil 0.36 BcpSouth 0.04 BkofAm 0.04 BkAm wtA BkHawaii 1.80 BkIreld rs BkMont g 2.80 BkNYMel 0.52 BkNova g 2.20 Bankrate n BarcUBS36 BarcGSOil BiPCop Barclay 0.39 Bar iPVix BarVixMdT Bard 0.76 BarnesNob Barnes 0.40 BarrickG 0.80 BasicEnSv Baxter 1.34 BaytexE g 2.64 BeacnRfg Beam Inc 0.82 BeazerHm BebeStrs 0.10 BectDck 1.80 BedBath Belden 0.20 Belo 0.32 Bemis 1.00 BenchElec Berkley 0.32 BerkH B BerryPet 0.32 BestBuy 0.64 BigLots BBarrett BioDlvry lf Biocryst BioFuelE h BiogenIdc BioMarin BioMedR 0.86 BioSante h BioScrip BlkHillsCp 1.48 BlkRKelso 1.04 BlackRock 6.00 BlkDebtStr 0.32 BlkEEqDv 0.68 BlkGlbOp 2.28 BlkIntlG&I 0.88 BlkRlAsst 1.09 BlkSenHgh 0.30 Blackstone 0.40 BlockHR 0.80 Blount BlueNile BdwlkPpl 2.13 Boeing 1.76 Boise Inc 0.48 BonTon 0.20 BonaFilm BonanzaC n BorgWarn BostPrv 0.04 BostProp 2.20 BostonSci BoydGm Brandyw 0.60 Braskem 0.65 BreitBurn 1.82 BridgptEd BrigStrat 0.44 Brightcv n Brightpnt BrigusG g Brinker 0.64 Brinks 0.40 BrMySq 1.36 Broadcom 0.40 BroadrdgF 0.64 BroadSoft BroadVisn Broadwd h BrcdeCm Brookdale BrkfldAs g 0.56 BrkfldOfPr 0.56 BrklneB 0.34 BrooksAuto 0.32 BrwnBrn 0.34 BrownShoe 0.28 BrukerCp Brunswick 0.05 Buckeye 4.15 BuckTch 0.32 Buckle 0.80 Buenavent 0.63 BuffaloWW BungeLt 1.00 C&J Egy n CA Inc 1.00 CBL Asc 0.88 CBOE 0.48 CBRE GRE 0.54 CBRE Grp CBS B 0.40 CEVA Inc CF Inds 1.60 CH Robins 1.32 CIT Grp CLECO 1.25 CME Grp 8.92 CMS Eng 0.96 CNH Gbl CNO Fincl 0.08 CPFL En s 1.84 CSG Sys CSX s 0.56 CTC Media 0.52 CVB Fncl 0.34 CVR Engy 0.32 CVR Ptrs 2.09 CVS Care 0.65 CYS Invest 2.00 Cabelas CblvsNY s 0.60 Cabot 0.80 CabotOG s 0.08 CACI Cadence CalDive CalaGDyIn 0.74 CalaStrTR 0.84 CalAmp Calgon Calix CallGolf 0.04 Callidus CallonPet Calpine CalumetSp 2.24 Cambrex CamdenPT 2.24 Cameco g 0.40 Cameron CampSp 1.16 CIBC g 3.60 CdnNRy g 1.50 CdnNRs gs 0.42 CP Rwy g 1.40 CapOne 0.20 CapProd 0.93 CapitlSrce 0.04 CapFedFn 0.30 CapsteadM 1.84 CpstnTrb h CarboCer 0.96 CardnlHlth 0.95 Cardiom gh CardiumTh Cardtronic CareFusion CareerEd CaribouC CarlyleG n CarMax Carnival 1.00 CarpTech 0.72 Carrizo CarrolsR s Carters Caseys 0.60 CashAm 0.14 CastleAM CatalystH Caterpillar 1.84 CathayGen 0.04 Cavium CelSci Celanese 0.30 Celestic g Celgene CellTher rsh Cellcom 2.21 CelldexTh
C 59.22 53.40 377.62 18.97 31.13 1.63 143.70 3.07 12.55 30.20 7.16 15.45 25.52 9.28 33.03 20.96 1.16 34.51 23.03 31.14 40.29 44.99 6.50 67.46 57.49 45.93 43.92 38.86 2.69 51.60 16.79 25.28 1.69 37.30 121.83 41.58 40.48 46.00 63.42 6.42 14.49 6.02 7.98 13.52 7.35 3.60 48.40 4.99 55.88 21.40 52.37 18.33 39.35 23.37 44.87 12.22 18.45 47.44 100.61 18.84 24.38 36.53 12.93 53.46 46.97 25.27 58.40 2.76 6.05 76.48 71.02 33.69 6.42 31.00 14.25 38.75 80.53 39.37 19.56 35.74 23.40 4.46 3.78 .36 136.87 38.51 19.14 .42 7.73 32.70 9.61 176.49 4.16 7.32 13.24 7.19 10.56 4.18 12.19 14.59 13.45 28.68 27.14 73.12 7.19 4.56 6.45 19.98 76.32 9.06 107.52 6.23 7.03 11.80 12.17 17.47 19.21 17.22 14.29 5.55 .77 31.16 23.86 32.91 33.05 21.05 29.10 15.19 .35 5.05 17.11 32.29 18.12 8.97 10.25 26.25 8.57 15.32 23.03 49.64 29.11 41.65 36.57 84.79 62.52 18.88 26.09 18.34 25.00 7.88 17.01 31.77 16.44 165.78 60.45 36.45 40.54 260.11 22.76 43.10 6.94 25.72 16.57 21.54 9.91 11.21 30.35 22.15 45.12 13.82 36.23 12.36 41.20 35.22 46.46 10.80 2.98 8.24 9.45 6.51 14.05 8.14 5.46 5.03 4.83 17.66 23.71 6.99 67.48 21.07 47.04 34.44 71.44 81.59 30.19 72.90 52.31 7.79 6.72 11.91 13.80 1.03 82.34 42.76 .52 .24 28.99 25.50 6.43 11.77 21.03 28.70 31.63 50.65 27.94 5.75 50.50 58.64 44.83 11.75 87.42 93.60 16.62 24.27 .53 43.69 7.67 71.11 1.03 10.45 4.40
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Celsion Cemex 0.32 Cemig pf s 1.18 CenovusE 0.88 Centene CenterPnt 0.81 CnElBras pf 0.87 CenElBras 0.65 CentEuro CEurMed CFCda g 0.01 CentAl CntryLink 2.90 Cenveo Cepheid Cereplast h Cerner s CerusCp ChRvLab ChrmSh ChartInds CharterCm ChkPoint Checkpnt Cheesecake ChelseaTh Chemtura CheniereEn ChesEng 0.35 ChesGran n 1.97 ChesMidst 1.62 Chevron 3.60 ChicB&I 0.20 Chicos 0.21 ChildPlace Chimera 0.48 ChinaLife 0.55 ChinaLodg ChinaMble 2.14 ChiNBorun ChinaUni 0.16 ChipMOS Chipotle Chiquita ChrisBnk Chubb 1.64 ChungTel 1.91 ChurchD s 0.96 CienaCorp Cigna 0.04 Cimarex 0.48 CinciBell CinnFin 1.61 Cinemark 0.84 Cintas 0.54 Cirrus Cisco 0.32 Citigroup 0.04 Citigp wtA CitiTdecs 7.50 CitzSoBk 0.04 CitrixSys CityNC 1.00 ClaudeR g CleanEngy CleanH s ClearChn s 6.08 Clearwire CliffsNRs 2.50 Clorox 2.40 CloudPeak Coach 1.20 CobaltIEn CocaCola 2.04 CocaCE 0.64 Coeur CogentC Cognex 0.44 CognizTech Cogo Grp Coinstar ColdwtrCrk Colfax ColgPal 2.48 CollctvBrd ColonPT 0.72 ColBnkg 0.32 ColumLb h Comcast 0.65 Comc spcl 0.65 Comerica 0.60 CmcBMO 0.92 CmclMtls 0.48 CmwREIT 2.00 CmtyHlt CommVlt CBD-Pao 0.22 CompDivHd 1.44 CmplGnom Compugn CompSci 0.80 Compuwre ComstkRs Comtech 1.10 Comverse Con-Way 0.40 ConAgra 0.96 Concepts ConchoRes ConcurTch ConocPhil s 2.64 ConsolEngy 0.50 ConslCm h 1.55 ConEd 2.42 ConstantC ConstellA ContlRes Cnvrgys 0.20 Cooper Ind 1.24 CooperTire 0.42 CopaHold 2.10 CopanoEn 2.30 Copart s Copel 0.94 Corcept CoreLabs 1.12 CoreLogic CorinthC CornPdts 0.80 CorOnDem CornstProg 1.10 CornstTR 1.17 CornerstStr 1.33 Corning 0.30 CorpOffP 1.10 CorrectnCp 0.80 Cosan Ltd 0.28 CostPlus Costco 1.10 CtrySCkg CousPrp 0.18 Covance CovantaH 0.60 CoventryH 0.50 Covidien 0.90 CowenGp Crane 1.04 Cray Inc Credicp 2.30 CSVS3xInSlv CS VS3xSlv CSVS2xVxS CSVelIVSt s CSVSVixST CredSuiss 0.82 CrSuiHiY 0.32 Cree Inc CreXus 1.17 CrimsnExp Crocs CrosstexE 0.48 CrosstxLP 1.32 CrwnCstle CrownHold Ctrip.com CubeSmart 0.32 CubistPh CullenFr 1.92 Cummins 1.60 CumMed Curis CurEuro 0.26 CurAstla 3.98 Cyberonics Cymer CypSemi 0.44 CytRx h Cytec 0.50 Cytokinet DCT Indl 0.28 DDR Corp 0.48 DFC Glbl DHT Hldgs 0.08 DNP Selct 0.78 DR Horton 0.15 DSW Inc 0.60 DTE 2.35 DanaHldg 0.20 Danaher 0.10 Darden 1.72 Darling DaVita DeVry 0.30 DealrTrk DeanFds DeckrsOut DeerConsu 0.20 Deere 1.84 DejourE g Delek 0.15 Dell Inc DelphiAu n DelphiFn 0.48 DeltaAir Deluxe 1.00 DemndMda DenburyR Dndreon DenisnM g Dennys Dentsply 0.22 Depomed DeutschBk 1.07 DBGoldSh DBGoldDL DBGoldDS DevonE 0.80 DexCom Diageo 2.68 DiamndF lf DiaOffs 0.50 DiamRk 0.32 DianaCont 1.00 DianaShip DiceHldg DicksSptg 0.50 Diebold 1.14 DigitalGen DigitalRlt 2.92 DigRiver DigitalGlb
C 1.99 6.12 17.54 32.00 36.43 20.08 10.53 7.87 4.37 7.12 19.27 7.54 39.15 1.84 37.24 .58 79.23 3.70 34.22 7.31 67.02 66.23 52.74 8.48 31.79 2.19 15.80 16.25 15.52 21.50 24.17 101.94 39.80 14.42 45.16 2.86 37.27 12.26 55.43 2.70 16.19 13.43 399.92 5.51 1.61 73.26 30.23 53.19 13.27 44.74 61.70 3.59 35.56 23.86 38.41 26.37 16.71 28.14 .35 87.75 6.22 78.19 50.67 .67 15.44 61.31 6.86 1.23 54.48 69.07 16.27 67.15 22.00 76.87 28.83 17.53 17.04 36.35 60.04 2.00 59.09 .87 29.15 99.01 21.32 22.06 19.46 .67 28.89 28.64 30.52 39.59 13.25 18.55 22.61 52.76 42.47 12.60 1.87 3.94 26.59 8.31 17.27 30.57 6.41 34.98 25.61 17.19 92.02 61.91 52.93 33.53 17.43 59.02 22.29 19.32 74.45 13.33 59.02 14.80 83.79 28.53 25.88 22.45 3.95 136.64 17.25 2.60 55.00 18.31 6.22 6.22 7.04 13.31 23.43 26.94 12.95 21.90 84.30 8.10 7.51 45.39 16.23 30.08 55.15 2.43 40.00 11.11 124.02 44.41 25.04 7.61 10.54 39.97 20.56 3.13 31.15 10.09 4.55 17.06 14.81 16.33 54.38 36.17 18.96 12.16 42.06 57.63 103.66 3.09 4.95 127.73 99.78 39.21 51.47 13.55 .40 63.13 .90 5.95 14.50 15.88 .68 10.75 16.90 55.43 56.28 13.66 53.07 50.43 15.01 81.99 29.55 30.35 14.50 53.03 2.84 77.33 .32 15.82 15.44 28.01 45.44 11.43 23.31 8.45 16.82 9.05 1.51 3.96 39.08 5.60 38.15 12.75 46.02 5.24 63.77 10.25 99.07 23.32 61.67 10.31 7.68 7.41 10.40 47.24 37.18 7.84 72.52 15.44 16.36
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Dillards 0.20 Diodes DirecTV A Dx30TBr rs DxEMBll rs 2.24 DxFnBull rs DrxTcBull DirSCBear DirFnBear DirLCBear DirDGldBr 1.98 DirDGldBll 1.02 DrxTcBear DrxEnBear DrxSOXBll DirEMBear DrxREBull 2.00 DirxSCBull DirxLCBull DirxEnBull Discover 0.40 DiscCm A DiscCm C DishNetwk 2.00 Disney 0.60 DrReddy 0.65 DolbyLab DoleFood DollarGen DollarTh DollarTree DomRescs 2.11 Dominos 3.00 Domtar g 1.80 Donldson s 0.32 DonlleyRR 1.04 DoralFncl DougDyn 0.84 DEmmett 0.60 Dover 1.26 DowChm 1.28 DrPepSnap 1.36 DrmWksA DresserR DryHYSt 0.48 Dril-Quip DryShips 0.12 DuPont 1.72 DuPFabros 0.60 DukeEngy 1.00 DukeRlty 0.68 DunBrad 1.52 Dunkin n 0.60 DurectCp h Dycom Dynavax Dynegy DynexCap 1.12
C 69.02 20.14 46.93 62.46 77.01 87.29 50.46 20.71 24.82 22.86 68.85 8.97 10.82 12.04 30.65 16.37 71.52 51.04 74.11 39.91 33.60 50.61 46.81 30.59 45.17 30.47 44.82 9.65 46.82 79.98 99.72 52.27 32.56 79.62 34.06 10.92 1.47 12.73 22.96 58.34 31.67 40.81 17.54 47.49 4.59 63.50 2.51 50.84 26.33 21.69 14.33 68.04 32.49 .78 22.42 4.01 .46 9.52
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2.13 1.13 0.80
0.56 2.50 3.58 0.28 2.16 0.58 1.50 3.32 2.51 3.00 0.72 0.88 1.58 0.37 0.53 0.36 0.80 1.92 0.16 0.41 0.10 2.10 0.36 0.56
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0.28 0.72 0.48
0.24 1.24 0.08 0.84 0.68 0.52 2.76 0.96 2.00 0.56 0.80 1.15 0.32 0.24 0.32 0.20 0.04 0.04 0.32 0.80 0.13 0.18 0.33 0.03 0.08 0.33 0.08 2.20 0.64
0.60 1.44 0.64 0.14 1.21 0.72 0.20
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6.76 5.75 9.22 40.25 26.10 28.02 42.15 101.04 48.76 7.91 154.23 58.32 1.00 34.87 8.97 8.42 22.85 48.25 7.16 44.22 24.76 16.22 10.23 13.60 9.23 8.57 10.57 19.35 64.26 61.76 8.77 44.31 11.23 84.07 4.00 29.23 32.73 12.80 10.91 14.38 31.18 47.79 1.31 6.47 7.66 29.51 40.04 20.51 7.89 8.07 33.48 6.84 5.72 45.16 74.43 2.20 39.33 46.16 32.31 3.26 15.39 19.09 31.76 48.16 8.03 64.26 50.17 .77 44.07 3.96 46.12 158.79 20.93 62.73 8.71 57.44 28.01 21.50 24.82 102.37 10.49 1.38 7.29 10.96 5.06 38.82 2.01 2.50 41.40 38.49 23.20 54.42 12.42 2.68 29.43 3.56 82.12 40.74 24.73 125.53 45.56 21.08 103.99 43.07 10.96 4.35 31.65 5.45 9.83 106.33 41.04 13.46 67.05 43.43 87.78 100.47 5.15 21.41 6.51 4.48 16.52 4.96 7.10 19.11 32.49 9.39 13.76 14.18 21.06 16.08 6.24 8.97 11.85 14.02 10.41 8.48 12.43 33.22 16.16 21.23 24.10 14.55 30.13 23.74 21.50 17.34 16.17 47.91 28.69 16.74 66.04 .81 39.34 6.59 12.09 3.14 20.00 111.06 52.61 21.51 81.34 28.94 10.32 1.80 14.86 34.03 10.06 6.15 23.77 3.36 23.74
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TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Dump City Continued from E1 A friend, Michael Weeks, helped rebuild the cart and made it safe for food service. Weeks also helped build the second Dump City cart, now based in Eugene. Shayon calls it the “flagship of the fleet.” In Bend, the Dump City Dumplings cart can usually be found downtown on the corner of Northwest Oregon Avenue and Northwest Bond Street. On the cart, water heated on burners produces steam, which cooks the fresh dumplings in stacked bamboo baskets. Butters and Shayon discovered dumplings on separate trips to China and thought people in the U.S. would love them. They saw plenty of hot dog carts in America, so they wanted to offer something different that people could get excited about. The trio creates the soft, doughy pockets filled with various ingredients at a kitchen space rented from Fresh Indulgence Catering in Bend. They make dumpling dough fresh daily and use organic meats and vegetables from local sources whenever pos-
VoiceLive Continued from E1 It’s like a guitar stomp box, but for singers. (You can also use it in the studio, of course.) You can even create a sort of playlist of effects that correspond to the songs you’ll be performing, and hop from one effect to the next by tapping switches with your toe. Now, vocal processors aren’t new. But programming most of them seems to require a degree in acoustical engineering, or possibly space shuttle cockpit design. The thought behind the VoiceLive Play is to put spectacular audio features into a box that’s about as difficult to use as elevator buttons. You plug the box into the wall. You connect headphones — or speakers, or a computer. You plug in a microphone (it requires one with a pro-style XLR connector). Then you can start to explore. You turn a knob to click through the 237 presets. Each emulates the vocal processing of a well-known pop song. Each is identified by a sneaky, lawyer-thwarting name like “In Air 2Night” (the creepy me-
sible. The Eugene cart serves a slightly different menu based on ingredients available there. All three owners pitch in to make the dumplings and then rotate shifts manning the cart. Butters is the head chef and finds new recipes and sources for local ingredients. For the owners of Dump City, it’s about “keeping money as close to Bend as we can and also minimizing the distance between where the food starts out and the customer,” Shayon said. Fillings include Chinesestyle pork, four-cheese pizza and pad thai, and coming soon will be South African sweet curried ostrich, with meat from a farm in Redmond. Lamb dumplings, which they serve on Fridays, have been the most popular. The owners aim to provide a new flavor every two weeks to keep the product fresh. “We’re just making sandwiches with a different kind of bread, so our options are unlimited,” said Shayon. Dump City has moved beyond its initial purpose of raising road-trip funds. “We could never deprive the people of Bend of their dumplings. We have to be out there
tallic echo of Phil Collins’ “In the Air Tonight”), “Hey Jude-y” (doubles your voice in the classic Beatles style), and “Cali Hotel” (the three-part harmony of the Eagles’ “Hotel California”). That’s right: three-part harmony. On this box, the result is amazing. If you know anything about vocal music, you know that no singers blend quite as well with your own voice as your own voice. (Or your siblings’ voices, which is why family groups from the von Trapps to the Jonas Brothers sound so great in harmony.) But what kind of dark voodoo magic could possibly be capable of that stunt? After all, there are at least three notes in a chord. If you sing a middle C, there’s no way for a computer chip to know what harmony notes to play with it; a middle C could belong to any of several different chords. And if the computer picks the wrong notes, the resulting clash would make even the most tone-deaf listener wince. There’s only one way for a piece of electronics to know what harmony notes to generate — and that’s by listening. And sure enough: the Voic-
kicking it with everybody,” said Shayon. “We want to be there late at night, sell food that is inexpensive, be as local and do business as local as we can.”
How is Dump City Q: Dumplings different from other food carts? The dumplings. From the A: beginning, it’s always been about the dumplings. We
Q: A:
want to make our atmosphere a big part of it. The idea of offering something food-wise that is totally different from what people have had in town or are expecting.
What is the most challenging part of running a food cart business? I think it’s the notion that there is a lot less structure to it than your typical job. There are the requirements put on you by the county, in terms of health and sanitation, and the city as far as business practice, but beyond that it’s you and the product and the customer. We’re doing stuff where there are ways to tell if you’re doing it right or wrong very easily. The only people who can screw it up are us.
AlaskAir s Avista BkofAm BarrettB Boeing CascdeBcp CascdeCp ColSprtw Costco CraftBrew FLIR Sys HewlettP HmFedID Intel Keycorp Kroger Lattice LaPac MDU Res MentorGr Microsoft
Div PE ... 1.16 .04 .44 1.76 ... 1.40f .88 1.10f ... .28 .48 .22 .90f .12 .46 ... ... .67 ... .80
14 16 ... 37 13 ... 9 17 25 14 15 8 ... 11 8 24 8 ... 21 18 11
YTD Last Chg %Chg 33.93 -.23 -9.6 25.52 -.25 -.9 7.35 -.20 +32.2 19.82 -.72 -.7 73.12 -.44 -.3 5.11 -.24 +16.7 46.73 +.03 -.9 46.93 -.40 +.8 84.30 -.30 +1.2 7.63 -.04 +26.7 21.08 -.31 -15.9 22.97 -.19 -10.9 9.35 -.30 -10.1 27.02 -.62 +11.4 7.67 -.22 -.3 22.52 -.45 -7.0 4.77 -.31 -19.7 9.42 -.12 +16.7 22.97 -.01 +7.0 14.05 +.02 +3.6 30.68 -.48 +18.2
Metal NY HSBC Bank US NY Merc Gold NY Merc Silver
Price (troy oz.) $1560.00 $1560.60 $28.319
What are your goals Q: in the near future for Dump City? Well, we’ve got dreams A: and we’ve got goals. The goal right now is to open a new location by the end of the year. The dream? Well, if you tell people your dreams they can’t come true, sometimes. We want to bring the dumplings to as many people as we can, and we think that might be a whole lot of people.
we buy our food to the people we sell it to — even the really, really drunk ones. We get to do stuff we love so much, and that people have responded the way that they have, it’s just silly how amazingly well it worked out.
— Reporter: 541-383-0323, abrothers@bendbulletin.com
eLive Play actually listens to the band, samples the current chord and calculates the correct auto-harmonies for your voice in milliseconds. It “hears” the band — or your guitar, or your piano — either from an audio cable or through built-in microphones right on the box. Those mics, which the company calls RoomSense, are also a great way to get the sound of the room and the band into your earbud mix. (RoomSense is one of several features that rival boxes, like the similar Boss VE20, lack.) Every now and then, usually on quick notes in a moving melody, the box guesses wrong about a chord, and you get a brief, passing moment of dissonance. In general, though, the harmonies are lush and amazing. A YouTube music video at j.mp/JcdbVG features a more expensive VoiceLive model, but it’s a great demo of auto-harmonies. The only VoiceLive letdown is the Voice Cancel feature. The theory is that you can connect your iPod, phone or computer and start playing some pop song, and the VoiceLive will magically remove the singer
from the mix, leaving behind only the original band — it’s karaoke on steroids. You’d feel like Taylor Swift’s understudy on the night she gets laryngitis. Unfortunately, it doesn’t work. Like earlier boxes that purport to have this feature, the VoiceLive Play works by deleting whatever’s in the center of the left-to-right stereo mix — which is where the lead vocal appears in most pop songs. Trouble is, other things may also appear in the middle of the mix, like drums. Conversely, the lead vocal isn’t always in the center. And its reverb usually isn’t in the center, so you might wind up getting rid of the voice but not its echo — a bizarre effect, to be sure. The box usually reduces the singer at least somewhat, but the bottom line is, don’t get your hopes up. It’s also worth pointing out that even though this is among the easiest-to-use vocal boxes, that’s not necessarily saying much. Anything you do beyond playing with the presets will require immersion in the online-only user manual and a good deal of pleasant experimentation.
Continued from E1 The vast majority will go to company insiders, institutional investors, the underwriters selected by the company to handle the process and preferred clients of all of them. Morgan Stanley leads the team of 33 underwriters selected for the Facebook offering, followed by JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs. The inclusion of online broker E-Trade Financial Corp. as an underwriter was seen as a glimmer of hope that Facebook might make more shares available than usual for retail investors through discount brokerages. But chances of getting any are very slim regardless.
Eligibility The big online brokerages have been taking formal requests from customers for Facebook’s IPO. They anticipate they’ll get their own allocations from one source or another, such as one of the underwriters. E-Trade, Fidelity Investments, Charles Schwab and TD Ameritrade, among others, have been fielding abundant queries. But the requirements they set on who gets them eliminate most small investors. Fidelity, which will be getting an undetermined number of shares from underwriter Deutsche Bank, says customers should have $500,000 in their accounts and have made 36 trades in the past year to be eligible. Ameritrade’s account requirements are at least $250,000 and 30 trades in three months. Schwab’s are a minimum $100,000 or 36 trades in the past year, but the firm says it also has other requirements. Even meeting the requirements is no guarantee of getting shares. Joshua Freeman, an information technology professional in New York, knows investing in Facebook is risky, but he believes “it’s got a pretty good shot to make some money.” He has been investing with E-Trade since the mid-1990s and has about $200,000 in his account. But he’s pessimistic about his request for 100 Facebook shares at the IPO price, given the frenzy over the offering. “I’m hoping to get some but I’m guessing that I won’t,” Freeman says. “I’m hoping it follows the trend and goes
Market recap
Name
Div PE
NikeB Nordstrm NwstNG OfficeMax Paccar PlanarSy PlumCrk PrecCastpt Safeway Schnitzer Sherwin StancrpFn Starbucks TriQuint Umpqua US Bancrp WashFed WellsFargo WstCstB rs Weyerhsr
1.44 1.08 1.78 ... .80f ... 1.68 .12 .58 .75f 1.56 .89f .68 ... .28 .78f .32 .88 ... .60
Precious metals
a tremendous amount of options, so we want to focus on the dumplings.
In your opinion, what is Q: the best part of running a food cart business? Working with the people. A: And being a part of the community, from the places
Northwest stocks Name
Any plans to expand the Q: menu to more than just dumplings? Maybe. But we really A: want to focus on being about the dumpling. It offers
YTD Last Chg %Chg
22 107.47 -.79 +11.5 15 50.20 -.76 +1.0 19 45.60 -.48 -4.9 17 5.18 +.12 +14.1 12 39.39 +.03 +5.1 ... 1.75 +.05 -8.4 34 38.34 -.30 +4.9 21 168.90 -.58 +2.5 11 18.91 -.06 -10.1 11 34.91 -.90 -17.4 27 120.54 -2.18 +35.0 12 36.85 -.16 +.3 31 53.67 -1.34 +16.6 21 4.93 -.12 +1.2 17 12.96 -.12 +4.6 12 31.56 -.65 +16.7 15 17.63 -.25 +26.0 11 32.41 -.90 +17.6 12 19.38 -.35 +24.2 30 19.43 -.64 +4.1
Prime rate
Pvs Day
Time period
Percent
$1581.00 $1583.60 $28.858
Last Previous day A week ago
3.25 3.25 3.25
NYSE
Most Active ($1 or more) Name
Vol (00)
Last Chg
BkofAm S&P500ETF SPDR Fncl ChesEng JPMorgCh
1624206 1433327 869613 735613 696038
7.35 -.20 134.11 -1.50 14.51 -.31 15.52 +.71 35.79 -1.17
Gainers ($2 or more) Name
Last
ETr2xSSD DrxBRICBr PrUVxST rs DrxRsaBear CSVInvNG
30.86 29.37 16.56 34.46 66.39
Chg %Chg +5.88 +3.57 +1.73 +3.48 +5.99
+23.5 +13.8 +11.7 +11.2 +9.9
Losers ($2 or more) Name
Last
Chg %Chg
NQ Mobile E-House Kemet ChinaGreen DxRssBull rs
9.04 -1.31 -12.7 5.75 -.74 -11.4 5.38 -.68 -11.2 3.35 -.42 -11.1 26.04 -3.20 -10.9
Amex
Most Active ($1 or more) Name
Vol (00)
CheniereEn NwGold g NovaGld g Rentech NA Pall g
Gainers ($2 or more)
Nasdaq
Most Active ($1 or more) Name SiriusXM Cisco PwShs QQQ Microsoft Intel
Last Chg
898362 563917 442584 394043 382413
2.02 -.11 16.71 +.20 63.58 -.60 30.68 -.48 27.02 -.62
Gainers ($2 or more)
Chg %Chg
Name
Last
MGTCap rs NovaCpp n Versar AmDGEn SparkNet
4.56 3.40 2.76 3.04 5.15
+.42 +10.1 +.30 +9.7 +.20 +7.8 +.20 +7.0 +.33 +6.8
Golfsmith CitzSoBk Groupon n Synacor n XenoPort
6.04 6.22 11.74 10.54 5.93
Chg %Chg +1.33 +1.22 +1.84 +1.30 +.72
+28.2 +24.4 +18.5 +14.1 +13.8
Losers ($2 or more)
Name
Last
Chg %Chg
Name
Last
ExtorreG g MAG Slv g CornstTR CornstProg CornerstStr
2.68 7.72 6.22 6.22 7.04
-.44 -.98 -.72 -.69 -.77
Ancestry Burcon g AnikaTh ChinaBio Cogo Grp
22.57 -3.59 -13.7 6.10 -.90 -12.9 13.29 -1.75 -11.6 8.47 -1.11 -11.6 2.00 -.26 -11.5
-14.1 -11.3 -10.4 -10.0 -9.9
Diary 480 2,602 86 3,168 33 97
Vol (00)
Last
Losers ($2 or more)
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows
Chg %Chg
Diary 117 349 32 498 9 37
crazy and then dips a little bit. If it does that, I may buy some on the open market.”
Open market If you strike out as an insider, it will still be easy, but expensive, to buy shares on the open market. Open and fund an account with a brokerage. Then for a transaction fee of as little as $7, you can buy Facebook stock at whatever price the market demand has driven it. Be aware that the price could jump significantly by the time you place your order. Among last year’s hottest IPOs, Groupon Inc. soared in the opening minutes and gained 31 percent on the first day of trading. Zillow Inc. jumped 79 percent and LinkedIn Corp. more than doubled. Investors buying on the open market miss much or perhaps all of any first-day “pop.” The first-day market price of newly issued stocks during the past decade has been an average 11 percent higher than the offer price, according to University of Florida finance professor Jay Ritter. For investors buying at the offer price, Facebook is likely to produce a gain on the first day, he says. But once it starts trading, investors should think of it as just another stock that’s as likely to go down as up. Consider this: Groupon, which went public at an IPO price of $20 six months ago, soared as high as $31.14 on the first day. It closed Monday at $11.73, 41 percent below the offer price. As for the idea of buying the stock at a low point a few months from now, Ritter says that has not worked historically as a reliable strategy with IPOs. And this one’s starting at a very high price, he emphasizes, with optimistic expectations of future growth built into it. The only sure winners, he says, will be Facebook employees and venture capitalists who invested in the company when it was private. James Breyer and his Accel Partners firm, investors since 2005, stand to make up to $1.34 billion from the 38.2 million shares they are offering. Zynga Inc. CEO Mark Pincus, a Facebook investor since 2004, stands to make up to $35 million on 1 million shares. “The time to buy Facebook was five years ago,” Ritter says.
Indexes
Name
Diary Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows
Last Chg
70165 16.25 -1.15 38374 7.68 -.32 36350 5.36 -.05 32237 1.87 +.02 18961 2.31 -.25
E3
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows
609 1,914 114 2,637 33 108
52-Week High Low
Name
13,338.66 10,404.49 5,627.85 3,950.66 474.18 381.99 8,563.08 6,414.89 2,498.89 1,941.99 3,134.17 2,298.89 1,422.38 1,074.77 14,951.57 11,208.42 860.37 601.71
Dow Jones Industrials Dow Jones Transportation Dow Jones Utilities NYSE Composite Amex Index Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000
Last
Net Chg
%Chg
YTD %Chg
52-wk %Chg
12,695.35 5,100.33 470.23 7,705.45 2,294.17 2,902.58 1,338.35 14,052.53 778.95
-125.25 -40.37 -1.78 -110.44 -34.17 -31.24 -15.04 -165.40 -11.11
-.98 -.79 -.38 -1.41 -1.47 -1.06 -1.11 -1.16 -1.41
+3.91 +1.61 +1.19 +3.06 +.69 +11.42 +6.42 +6.54 +5.13
+1.17 -5.07 +7.71 -7.57 -1.47 +4.32 +.67 -.19 -5.34
World markets
Currencies
Here is how key international stock markets performed Monday. Market Close % Change
Key currency exchange rates Monday compared with late Friday in New York. Dollar vs: Exchange Rate Pvs Day
Amsterdam Brussels Paris London Frankfurt Hong Kong Mexico Milan New Zealand Tokyo Seoul Singapore Sydney Zurich
t t t t t t t t s s t t s t
Australia Dollar Britain Pound Canada Dollar Chile Peso China Yuan Euro Euro Hong Kong Dollar Japan Yen Mexico Peso Russia Ruble So. Korea Won Sweden Krona Switzerlnd Franc Taiwan Dollar
+7.3
WdsrIIAd 48.77 -0.63 Vanguard Fds: CapOpp 31.07 -0.26 DivdGro 16.07 -0.11 Energy 55.87 -1.17 EqInc 22.73 -0.23 Explr 76.83 -1.04 GNMA 11.05 GlobEq 16.90 -0.25 HYCorp 5.88 -0.01 HlthCre 135.27 -0.86 InflaPro 14.55 +0.07 IntlGr 17.22 -0.29 IntlVal 27.29 -0.53 ITIGrade 10.22 +0.01 LifeCon 16.73 -0.07 LifeGro 22.21 -0.23 LifeMod 20.01 -0.15 LTIGrade 10.60 +0.08 Morg 19.30 -0.21 MuInt 14.30 +0.01 PrmcpCor 14.01 -0.13 Prmcp r 64.72 -0.56 SelValu r 19.50 -0.22 STAR 19.71 -0.14 STIGrade 10.77 StratEq 19.83 -0.31 TgtRetInc 11.88 -0.02 TgRe2010 23.34 -0.11 TgtRe2015 12.84 -0.08 TgRe2020 22.70 -0.18 TgtRe2025 12.88 -0.12 TgRe2030 22.01 -0.24 TgtRe2035 13.20 -0.15 TgtRe2040 21.65 -0.26 TgtRe2045 13.59 -0.17 USGro 19.93 -0.23 Wellsly 23.58 -0.05 Welltn 32.65 -0.20 Wndsr 13.66 -0.17 WndsII 27.47 -0.36 Vanguard Idx Fds: MidCpIstPl104.79 -1.37 TotIntAdm r22.39 -0.45
298.05 2,134.55 3,057.99 5,465.52 6,451.97 19,735.04 38,351.25 13,660.87 3,555.36 8,973.84 1,913.73 2,864.12 4,351.87 5,495.76
-2.37 -2.28 -2.29 -1.97 -1.94 -1.15 -1.38 -2.74 +.21 +.23 -.18 -.67 +.21 -1.29
.9973 1.6105 .9973 .002029 .1582 1.2847 .1288 .012522 .073190 .0329 .000870 .1422 1.0694 .0339
1.0031 1.6074 1.0001 .002056 .1584 1.2925 .1288 .012516 .073851 .0332 .000872 .1437 1.0759 .0340
Selected mutual funds YTD Name NAV Chg %Ret Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapInst 19.98 -0.30 +7.5 Amer Century Inv: EqInc 7.47 -0.07 +3.1 GrowthI 27.07 -0.32 +10.2 Ultra 24.95 -0.24 +8.9 American Funds A: AmcpA p 20.33 -0.19 +8.0 AMutlA p 26.92 -0.22 +4.7 BalA p 19.13 -0.14 +5.6 BondA p 12.77 +0.01 +2.8 CapIBA p 50.53 -0.45 +3.6 CapWGA p 33.64 -0.59 +5.2 CapWA p 20.97 -0.06 +3.1 EupacA p 36.80 -0.77 +4.7 FdInvA p 37.37 -0.48 +5.9 GovtA p 14.49 +0.02 +1.0 GwthA p 31.27 -0.37 +8.8 HI TrA p 11.04 -0.03 +6.4 IncoA p 17.14 -0.13 +3.2 IntBdA p 13.72 +1.4 ICAA p 28.67 -0.31 +6.3 NEcoA p 26.46 -0.35 +11.3 N PerA p 28.17 -0.45 +7.7 NwWrldA 48.65 -0.94 +5.5 SmCpA p 36.77 -0.71 +10.8 TxExA p 12.95 +0.01 +4.8 WshA p 29.52 -0.26 +4.5 Artisan Funds: Intl 21.62 -0.33 +9.0 IntlVal r 26.16 -0.45 +4.3 MidCap 37.38 -0.55 +13.5 MidCapVal 20.42 -0.15 +3.7 Baron Funds: Growth 53.98 -0.76 +5.8 Bernstein Fds: IntDur 14.00 +0.01 +2.0 DivMu 14.91 +0.01 +1.8 BlackRock A: EqtyDiv 18.86 -0.20 +4.4 GlAlA r 18.66 -0.19 +2.8 BlackRock B&C:
GlAlC t 17.34 -0.18 BlackRock Instl: EquityDv 18.91 -0.19 GlbAlloc r 18.76 -0.19 Calamos Funds: GrwthA p 49.76 -0.67 Cohen & Steers: RltyShrs 67.91 -0.92 Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 29.96 -0.48 AcornIntZ 37.32 -0.64 LgCapGr 13.09 -0.16 Credit Suisse Comm: ComRet t 7.71 -0.10 DFA Funds: IntlCorEq 9.45 -0.20 USCorEq1 11.47 -0.14 USCorEq2 11.26 -0.15 Davis Funds A: NYVen A 34.61 -0.47 Davis Funds Y: NYVenY 34.99 -0.48 Delaware Invest A: Diver Inc p 9.31 Dimensional Fds: EmMCrEq 18.09 -0.41 EmMktV 26.92 -0.68 IntSmVa 14.18 -0.33 LargeCo 10.58 -0.12 USLgVa 20.11 -0.27 US Small 21.77 -0.30 US SmVa 24.62 -0.32 IntlSmCo 14.48 -0.31 Fixd 10.33 -0.01 IntVa 14.58 -0.34 Glb5FxInc 11.15 2YGlFxd 10.13 Dodge&Cox: Balanced 71.07 -0.68 Income 13.70 IntlStk 29.89 -0.58 Stock 107.88 -1.39 DoubleLine Funds: TRBd I 11.23
+2.4 +4.5 +2.9 +7.3 +12.2 +8.7 +8.8 +8.9 -5.7 +2.2 +6.8 +6.5 +6.5 +6.6 +3.0 +4.9 +3.7 +4.4 +7.2 +5.4 +6.1 +6.3 +4.7 +0.5 -0.9 +2.2 +0.5 +6.0 +4.0 +2.2 +6.6 NA
TRBd N p 11.23 Dreyfus: Aprec 42.01 -0.48 Eaton Vance A: LgCpVal 18.02 -0.24 Eaton Vance I: FltgRt 9.04 GblMacAbR 9.88 -0.02 LgCapVal 18.08 -0.24 FMI Funds: LgCap p 16.31 -0.14 FPA Funds: NwInc 10.66 FPACres 27.61 -0.18 Fairholme 28.33 -0.54 Federated Instl: TotRetBd 11.48 +0.01 StrValDvIS 4.85 -0.03 Fidelity Advisor A: NwInsgh p 21.57 -0.29 StrInA 12.42 -0.03 Fidelity Advisor I: NwInsgtI 21.85 -0.30 Fidelity Freedom: FF2010 13.61 -0.09 FF2010K 12.47 -0.08 FF2015 11.37 -0.08 FF2015K 12.52 -0.08 FF2020 13.70 -0.11 FF2020K 12.86 -0.10 FF2025 11.34 -0.10 FF2025K 12.92 -0.12 FF2030 13.47 -0.14 FF2030K 13.03 -0.13 FF2035 11.10 -0.13 FF2035K 13.04 -0.15 FF2040 7.74 -0.09 FF2040K 13.07 -0.16 Fidelity Invest: AllSectEq 12.09 -0.16 AMgr50 15.70 -0.10 AMgr20 r 13.07 -0.02 Balanc 19.14 -0.17 BalancedK 19.14 -0.17
NA +4.0 +5.5 +4.3 +2.1 +5.6 +7.0 +0.8 +3.1 +22.4 +3.1 +0.9 +9.4 +4.4 +9.5 +4.2 +4.3 +4.3 +4.4 +4.7 +4.7 +5.2 +5.2 +5.2 +5.3 +5.4 +5.5 +5.3 +5.4 +7.7 +4.8 +3.2 +5.6 +5.7
BlueChGr 46.87 CapAp 27.92 CpInc r 9.17 Contra 74.01 ContraK 73.99 DisEq 22.57 DivIntl 26.79 DivrsIntK r 26.76 DivGth 27.85 Eq Inc 43.28 EQII 18.34 Fidel 33.83 FltRateHi r 9.85 GNMA 11.90 GovtInc 10.84 GroCo 90.84 GroInc 19.50 GrowthCoK90.80 HighInc r 9.05 IntBd 11.01 IntmMu 10.63 IntlDisc 28.80 InvGrBd 11.85 InvGB 7.84 LgCapVal 10.61 LowP r 38.40 LowPriK r 38.39 Magelln 68.38 MidCap 28.64 MuniInc 13.43 NwMkt r 16.46 OTC 57.64 100Index 9.47 Puritn 18.81 PuritanK 18.81 RealE 31.19 SAllSecEqF12.10 SCmdtyStrt 8.44 SCmdtyStrF 8.46 SrsIntGrw 10.77 SrsIntVal 8.17 SrInvGrdF 11.86 STBF 8.54 StratInc 11.12
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Quality 23.08 -0.17 Goldman Sachs Inst: HiYield 7.16 -0.02 MidCapV 36.09 -0.44 Harbor Funds: Bond 12.66 +0.01 CapApInst 41.37 -0.48 IntlInv t 55.08 -1.12 Intl r 55.63 -1.14 Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 30.90 -0.47 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 39.87 -0.57 Div&Gr 20.30 -0.21 Hussman Funds: StrGrowth 11.71 IVA Funds: Wldwide I r15.44 -0.15 Invesco Funds A: Chart p 16.84 -0.18 CmstkA 16.15 -0.18 EqIncA 8.73 -0.06 GrIncA p 19.59 -0.18 HYMuA 9.89 +0.02 Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 23.15 -0.36 AssetStA p 23.89 -0.37 AssetStrI r 24.11 -0.38 JPMorgan A Class: CoreBd A 12.00 +0.01 JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBd 11.99 +0.01 HighYld 7.94 -0.03 ShtDurBd 10.99 -0.01 USLCCrPls 21.29 -0.23 Janus T Shrs: PrkMCVal T20.99 -0.22 John Hancock Cl 1: LSBalanc 12.88 -0.11 LSGrwth 12.66 -0.15 Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 17.97 -0.46 Longleaf Partners: Partners 28.27 -0.32
+5.3 +6.9 +7.5 +4.4 +12.1 +5.9 +6.1 +7.2 +7.2 +5.0 NA +0.5 +4.9 +6.6 +5.4 +5.8 +7.5 +7.0 +7.3 +7.4 +2.3 +2.4 +6.5 +0.8 +7.9 +4.0 +5.8 +6.3 +7.0 +6.1
Loomis Sayles: LSBondI 14.58 -0.07 +6.4 StrInc C 15.03 -0.09 +5.3 LSBondR 14.52 -0.07 +6.2 StrIncA 14.95 -0.09 +5.6 Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdY 12.37 -0.02 +5.2 Lord Abbett A: AffilA p 11.07 -0.16 +5.4 BdDebA p 7.91 -0.02 +6.0 ShDurIncA p4.59 -0.01 +2.7 Lord Abbett C: ShDurIncC t 4.62 -0.01 +2.4 Lord Abbett F: ShtDurInco 4.59 -0.01 +2.7 MFS Funds A: TotRA 14.54 -0.09 +4.5 ValueA 23.84 -0.24 +6.9 MFS Funds I: ValueI 23.95 -0.24 +7.0 Manning&Napier Fds: WldOppA 6.96 -0.15 +5.0 MergerFd 15.79 -0.02 +1.3 Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.66 +0.01 +4.4 TotRtBdI 10.65 +0.01 +4.3 MorganStanley Inst: MCapGrI 35.74 -0.36 +8.6 Mutual Series: GblDiscA 27.98 -0.33 +3.1 GlbDiscZ 28.35 -0.33 +3.2 SharesZ 20.94 -0.22 +5.0 Neuberger&Berm Fds: GenesInst 47.89 -0.54 +3.1 Northern Funds: HiYFxInc 7.32 -0.01 +6.8 Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 28.25 -0.24 +4.4 Intl I r 17.32 -0.30 +4.7 Oakmark 45.33 -0.52 +8.7 Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 7.11 -0.04 +4.9 GlbSMdCap14.42 -0.18 +7.1 Oppenheimer A:
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+6.9 +3.9 +5.2 +2.8 +8.1 +5.3 +1.5 +5.0 +1.2 +5.0 +10.1 +7.0 +3.1 +5.6 +4.8 +5.9 +4.9 -1.9 +6.1 +3.4 +5.3 +6.1 +6.0 +2.9 +4.7 +1.9 +4.9 +4.5 +4.8 +4.5 +4.8 +4.9 +1.7
Pioneer Funds A: PionFdA p 40.04 -0.43 Price Funds: BlChip 43.48 -0.56 CapApp 21.90 -0.17 EmMktS 29.59 -0.52 EqInc 24.30 -0.28 EqIndex 36.15 -0.40 Growth 35.96 -0.47 HlthSci 38.32 -0.31 HiYield 6.76 -0.01 InstlCpG 17.97 -0.23 IntlBond 9.84 -0.03 Intl G&I 11.81 -0.22 IntlStk 12.91 -0.20 MidCap 56.94 -0.89 MCapVal 22.68 -0.32 N Asia 15.22 -0.11 New Era 40.54 -0.95 N Horiz 34.17 -0.47 N Inc 9.80 +0.01 OverS SF 7.57 -0.14 R2010 15.77 -0.11 R2015 12.22 -0.10 R2020 16.87 -0.17 R2025 12.32 -0.14 R2030 17.66 -0.21 R2035 12.47 -0.16 R2040 17.74 -0.23 ShtBd 4.84 -0.01 SmCpStk 33.91 -0.42 SmCapVal 36.50 -0.45 SpecIn 12.63 -0.03 Value 23.90 -0.28 Putnam Funds A: GrInA p 13.44 -0.18 Royce Funds: PennMuI r 11.23 -0.15 PremierI r 19.22 -0.30 Schwab Funds: 1000Inv r 37.97 -0.44 S&P Sel 20.98 -0.23 Scout Funds: Intl 29.48 -0.46
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Sequoia 156.09 -2.62 Templeton Instit: ForEqS 17.16 -0.33 Thornburg Fds: IntValA p 24.94 -0.34 IntValue I 25.50 -0.35 Tweedy Browne: GblValue 22.93 -0.27 Vanguard Admiral: BalAdml 22.83 -0.14 CAITAdm 11.65 +0.01 CpOpAdl 71.76 -0.61 EMAdmr r 32.96 -0.71 Energy 104.91 -2.18 EqInAdm n 47.66 -0.46 ExtdAdm 42.69 -0.59 500Adml 123.62 -1.38 GNMA Ad 11.05 GrwAdm 34.76 -0.39 HlthCr 57.08 -0.36 HiYldCp 5.88 -0.01 InfProAd 28.58 +0.13 ITBdAdml 11.98 +0.03 ITsryAdml 11.74 +0.03 IntGrAdm 54.77 -0.95 ITAdml 14.30 +0.01 ITGrAdm 10.22 +0.01 LtdTrAd 11.19 LTGrAdml 10.60 +0.08 LT Adml 11.68 +0.02 MCpAdml 96.18 -1.26 MuHYAdm 11.11 +0.01 PrmCap r 67.16 -0.58 ReitAdm r 91.73 -1.21 STsyAdml 10.78 STBdAdml 10.65 ShtTrAd 15.94 STIGrAd 10.77 SmCAdm 35.68 -0.49 TtlBAdml 11.09 +0.02 TStkAdm 33.50 -0.39 WellslAdm 57.14 -0.12 WelltnAdm 56.39 -0.34 Windsor 46.10 -0.58
+0.7 +3.8 +4.0 +4.9 +5.3 +3.8 +5.3 +4.1 -5.2 +4.6 +8.5 +7.2 +1.2 +9.6 +5.2 +5.9 +3.4 +3.4 +1.5 +5.3 +3.2 +4.3 +1.0 +5.2 +4.6 +7.9 +5.2 +4.9 +12.6 +0.3 +1.0 +0.6 +2.2 +6.9 +2.0 +7.5 +3.7 +4.9 +7.0
+6.6 +5.3 +4.2 -5.2 +4.5 +7.5 +1.1 +6.2 +5.8 +5.2 +3.4 +5.3 +2.5 +4.3 +3.6 +5.3 +4.4 +5.2 +10.5 +3.1 +3.9 +4.8 +4.9 +5.2 +2.1 +8.1 +3.4 +4.1 +4.4 +4.7 +5.0 +5.2 +5.5 +5.6 +5.6 +10.4 +3.7 +4.9 +7.0 +6.6 +7.9 +2.5
TotIntlInst r89.56 -1.77 +2.6 TotIntlIP r 89.59 -1.77 +2.6 500 MidCap
123.61 -1.37 +7.2 21.19 -0.27 +7.8
SmCap
35.64 -0.50 +6.8
TotBnd
11.09 +0.02 +1.9
TotlIntl
13.39 -0.26 +2.5
TotStk 33.49 -0.39 +7.5 Vanguard Instl Fds: BalInst
22.83 -0.14 +5.3
DevMkInst 8.59 -0.16 +2.0 ExtIn
42.68 -0.60 +8.5
FTAllWldI r 79.60 -1.55 +2.4 GrwthIst 34.76 -0.38 +9.6 InfProInst 11.64 +0.05 +3.4 InstIdx
122.82 -1.37 +7.2
InsPl
122.83 -1.37 +7.2
InsTStPlus 30.32 -0.35 +7.6 MidCpIst 21.25 -0.27 +7.9 SCInst
35.68 -0.49 +6.9
TBIst
11.09 +0.02 +2.0
TSInst
33.51 -0.38 +7.5
ValueIst 21.46 -0.25 +5.5 Vanguard Signal: 500Sgl 102.12 -1.13 +7.2 MidCpIdx 30.35 -0.40 +7.9 STBdIdx 10.65
+1.0
TotBdSgl 11.09 +0.02 +2.0 TotStkSgl 32.34 -0.37 +7.5 Western Asset: CorePlus I 11.38 Yacktman Funds: Fund p
+3.6
18.26 -0.05 +4.3
Focused 19.52 -0.04 +3.9
E4
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
M N R
If you have Marketplace events you would like to submit, please contact Ashley Brothers at 541-383-0323, email business@bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event� at www.bendbulletin.com. Please allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication.
B C
TODAY
DEEDS Deschutes County
Wachovia Bank to Mark S. and Jacqueline A. Richardson, Township 15, Range 12, Section 23, $500,000 Vergent LLC to Michael and Ann H. Rosenfield trustees for Rosenfield Revocable Trust, Three Sisters, Lot 17, $180,000 Sherman O. Cline to Marques H. and Jane K. Hase, Rim Rock West Estates, Lot 27, Block 2, $163,000 Jennifer L. Smith who took title as Jennifer L. Bergelin to Mindy L. Briggs, Hampton Park Subdivision, Phase 2, Lot 19, $180,250 Sunriver Cabin LLC to Sidney T. and Katherine E. Crenwelge, Mountain Village East 1, Lot 2, Block 7, $215,000 Judd L. and Patricia A. Browne to Karen D. and Peter F. Terzo, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase 32, Lot 8, $394,000 Barbara A. Ross Affiant of the Estate of Wynfred E. Bergstralh to Leah Persichilli and Andrew Barnes, Bonne Home Addition to Bend, Lots 10 and 11, Block 20, $220,000 Daniel H. and Brenda G. Sallee to Jennifer Eales, Skyliner Summit at Broken Top, Phase 10, Lot 232, $450,000 Phillip J. and Helen L. Olson to Ricky Saunders, Cascade View Estates, Phase 2A, Lot 197, $185,000 J. Thomas and Katherine D. Atkins to Kathleen A. Delhagen and Denise M. Burdick, Shevlin Commons P.U.D., Phases 4 and 5, Lot 64, $320,000 McClain Investments LLC to Richard and Vickie Kotyluk, Shevlin Ridge, Phase 5, Lot 104, $150,000 Cynthia A. and Stephen J. Harder trustees for Cynthia A. Harder Trust and Stephen J. Harder trustee for Stephen J. Harder Trust to Donald G. and Kimberli A. Macpherson, Golf Course Homesite Section Fourteenth Addition, Lot 287, $1,300,000 Andy and Wendy Laakmann trustees for Laakmann Living Trust to Jeffrey B. and Patricia J. Katz, Golden Butte, Phase 2, Lot 65, $593,000 Robert J. and Sharon L. James to Cheryl A. Noncarrow and Timothy F. Hoops, Champion Ridge, Phase 4, Lot 55, $625,000 Kelli Rossetto to Mark L. Cain, Foxborough, Phase 1, Lot 10, $175,000 Dennis King to Brian and Vikki C. Staudinger, Mountain Peaks, Phase 4, Lot 68, $174,000 Bank of America N.A. successor by merger to BAC Home Loans Servicing LP fka Countrywide Home Loans Servicing LP to Dave and Tara Henderson, Northwest Townsite Companys Second Addition to Bend, Lot 7, Block 28, $352,100 Michael H. and Lisa S. McGean to Jennifer L. Egan and Philip Miscovich, First Addition to West Hills, Lot 15, Block 1, $295,000 Bank of New York Mellon fka Bank of New York to Christopher D. Ridenour, Bend Cascade View Estates, Tract 2, Unit 3, Lot 77, $304,000 Richard D. and Denise L. Chick to Laura E. Lockwood-McCall and Randall L. McCall, Tollgate, Eighth Addition, Lot 427, $250,000 Reg Delperdang to Cindy J. Daoust, Awbrey Village, Phase 2, Lot 28, $305,000 Capital One N.A. to Joshua and Tammie Ybarra, Vista Meadows, Phase 2, Lot 19, $156,000 Fannie Mae aka Federal National Mortgage Association to Tom W. Moore Jr. and Yvonne M. Halvorson, Township 17, Range 14, Sections 21 and 22, $440,000 Michael V. and Ina V. McLean to Jesse N. and Erin L. Felder, Mill Quarter Arizona Phase, Lot 15, $620,000 William N. and Tina M. Everett to Rebekkah V. Amezcua and Yoni J. Serano, Deschutes River Woods, Lot 145, Block PP, $175,000 John W. and Evelyn A. Neasham to Scott G. and Vicki R. Morris, Partition Plat 2003-74, Parcel 1, $150,000 Peter M. and Bette Richards trustees for Peter M. Richards and Bette Richards Revocable Trust to Stephen T. and Kathleen M. Wells, Broadway, First Addition, Lots 8 and 9, Block 1, $295,000 Tyler E. and Jennifer C. Westby to J. Scott and Melody A. Gibson, Ridge at Eagle Crest 36, Lot 101, $395,000
BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL HIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7:15 a.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-420-7377. NETWORKING SOCIAL: Crooked River Ranch-Terrebonne Chamber of Commerce; co-hosted by Sunview Motel and Resort and Mercy Dental; free; 5:30 p.m.; SunView Motel & Resort, 5010 S.W. Clubhouse Road, Crooked River Ranch; 541-923-2679 or www.crrchamber.com. BE WATTSMART WORKSHOP: Understand how to save energy and money on your electric bills; registration required; contact 503813-5642 or www.pacificpower .net/bewattsmart; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711. COMPUTER ESSENTIALS I: Registration required; class continues May 17; $55; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Madras Campus, 1170 E. Ashwood Road, Madras; 541-3837270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. PHOTOSHOP FOR WEB AND PRINT: Registration required; class continues May 22; $89; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or http:// noncredit.cocc.edu. SOCIAL MEDIA, MANAGING YOUR SITES: Class continues May 17; $59; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu.
WEDNESDAY BUSINESS NETWORKING INTERNATIONAL BEND CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors welcome; free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-749-0789. YOUNG PROFESSIONALS NETWORK: 5 p.m.; Seventh Mountain Resort, 18575 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-382-8711. UNDERSTANDING AND MANAGING CREDIT: Registration required; free; 5:30 p.m.; NeighborImpact, 20310 Empire Ave., Suite A110, Bend; 541-3187506, ext. 109. UNDERSTANDING AND MANAGING CREDIT: Call 541-3187506, ext. 309 to reserve a seat; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; NeighborImpact, 20310 Empire Ave., Suite A110, Bend; 541-318-7506. BE WATTSMART WORKSHOP: Understand how to save energy and money on your electric bills; registration required; contact 503-813-5642 or www .pacificpower.net/bewattsmart; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541389-3111. QUICKBOOKS PRO INTERMEDIATE: Registration required; class continues May 23; $59; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Library, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-3837270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. WORD 2010 BEYOND THE BASICS: Registration required; class continues May 23; $59; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu.
THURSDAY BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MEETING: Free; 7 a.m.; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541-610-9125. FAMILY BUSINESS RECEPTION: Co-sponsored by OSU Open Campus and OSU-Cascades for family business owners, educators, and advisers; registration required; 5:30 p.m.; The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center, 3075 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 800-859-7609. SOROPTIMIST INTERNATIONAL OF BEND: Presentation by Ruth Williamson and Robin Laughlan on “What’s Happening with Bend Parks — The Big Picture�; $15; 5:30 p.m.; Boston’s, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 140. WRITING A WEBSITE THAT SELLS: Registration required; class continues May 24; $69; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or http:// noncredit.cocc.edu.
FRIDAY TOWN HALL FORUM: With state treasurer Ted Wheeler; registration required; $30 for members and $45 for nonmembers; 7:30 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org. SHAREPOINT FOR COLLABORATION: $285; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way,
Bend; 541-383-7270 or http:// noncredit.cocc.edu. MANAGE YOUR EMAIL WITH OUTLOOK: Registration required; $59; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Library, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or http:// noncredit.cocc.edu. NONPROFIT GRANT WRITING: Registration required; class continues May 25; $59; 9 a.m.noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or http:// noncredit.cocc.edu. FAMILY BUSINESS STUDENT CONFERENCE: For students from family businesses; registration required; $20 includes lunch; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center, 3075 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 800-859-7609. CENTRAL OREGON REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT CLUB: Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile@windermere.com. FREE TAX FRIDAY: Free tax return reviews; schedule an appointment at 541-385-9666 or www.myzoomtax .com; free; 2-4 p.m.; Zoom Tax, 963 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite 100, Bend; 541-385-9666.
SATURDAY EXCEL 2010 BEGINNING: Registration required; $59; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, Redmond; 541-3837270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMIT TRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit; registration required; contact 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com; $35; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541447-6384 or www.happyhour training.com. CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAY MARKET MEETING: All current members and interested parties are encouraged to attend; free; 1 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541420-9015.
MONDAY FORECLOSURE PREVENTION CLASS: Learn about NeighborImpact’s Housing Center tools and services, which can assist individuals struggling to pay their mortgages; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; NeighborImpact, 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; 541-318-7506, ext. 109, karenb@neighborimpact. org or www.homeownership center.org. BLOGGING FOR BUSINESS AND BEYOND: Registration required; class continues May 21; $59; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or http:// noncredit.cocc.edu.
TUESDAY May 22 BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL HIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7:15 a.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-420-7377. THE NAME GAME: Overview on developing business and product names; registration required; $59; 9 a.m.-noon; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-383-7270 or http:// noncredit.cocc.edu. THE GREAT BALANCING ACT — FINANCE, FOOD & FAMILY PART 2: Reservations required; $25 for Chamber members and $45 for nonmembers; 11 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org. COMPUTER ESSENTIALS II: Registration required; class continues May 24; $55; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Madras Campus, 1170 E. Ashwood Road, Madras; 541-3837270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. GOOGLE ADVANCED: Registration required; $39; 6-9 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-383-7270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. HOW TO DEVELOP A BUSINESS PLAN: Registration required; class continues May 29; $59; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290 or http:// noncredit.cocc.edu. HOW TO START A BUSINESS: Call to reserve your seat; 6 p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union, 1386 N.E. Cushing Drive, Bend; 541382-1795. BANKING FOR GENERATIONS OF SUCCESS: Business for Breakfast for family business owners and educators; registration required; $25; 7:30 p.m.; The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center, 3075 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 800859-7609.
WEDNESDAY May 23 BUSINESS NETWORKING INTERNATIONAL BEND CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors welcome; free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-749-0789. EXCEL 2010 BEGINNING: Registration required; class continues May 30; $59; 9 a.m.noon; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-3837270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu.
THURSDAY May 24 BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MEETING: Free; 7 a.m.; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541-610-9125. MANAGERS BREAKFAST — COLLECTIONS: Homeowner Association Managers May Breakfast; registration required; $10 for CAI-CORC members and $15 for nonmembers; 7:30 a.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-3828436 or www.caioregon.org. ADVICE AT SCHWAB: Registration required; free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1794 or luiz.soutomaior@schwab.com. SBA LOAN BRIEFINGS SEMINAR: Registration required; free; noon-1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7290 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. BUILDING PHONE APPS WITH BUZZTOUCH: Registration required; class continues June 7; $79; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. QUICKBOOKS PRO BEGINNING: Register by May 18; class continues May 31; $59; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270 or http:// noncredit.cocc.edu. SBA LOAN BRIEFINGS SEMINAR: Registration required; free; 6-7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290 or http:// noncredit.cocc.edu.
FRIDAY May 25 EDWARD JONES COFFEE CLUB: Current market and economic update including current rates; free; 9 a.m.; Ponderosa Coffee House, 61292 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 105, Bend; 541-617-8861. CENTRAL OREGON REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT CLUB: Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile@windermere.com. FREE TAX FRIDAY: Free tax return reviews; schedule an appointment at 541-385-9666 or www.myzoom tax.com; free; 2-4 p.m.; Zoom Tax, 963 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite 100, Bend; 541-385-9666.
TUESDAY May 29 BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL HIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7:15 a.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-420-7377. OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMIT TRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit; registration required; contact 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com; $35; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541447-6384 or www.happyhour training.com. LEVERAGING FACEBOOK FOR BUSINESS: Registration required; class continues June 5; $89; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or http:// noncredit.cocc.edu.
WEDNESDAY May 30 BUSINESS NETWORKING INTERNATIONAL BEND CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors welcome; free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-749-0789.
JPMorgan Continued from E1 Investors lopped almost 10 percent off JPMorgan’s stock price the next day, and 3 percent more on Monday. Since Dimon made the announcement, almost $20 billion in market value has evaporated. Shareholders rarely lash out against Dimon. Vikram Pandit of Citigroup and Brian Moynihan of Bank of America are not so fortunate: Shareholders at those banks take the slightest opportunity to call for them to step down. Dimon’s reputation has been severely damaged now. But shareholders still appear to be believe he should be given the chance to prove himself again.
Q&A Continued from E1 The number $2 billion is floating around. But it could easily be closer to $5 billion when all is said and done. The key here is that the trade isn’t over. JPMorgan Chase is still trying to get out of its positions. How quickly they do that, and where the market moves between now and then, will decide the extent of their total losses. Will JPMorgan need a Q: No. bailout? It’s hard to beA: lieve, but $2 billion, or even $5 billion, just isn’t that much money to the bank. In 2011, JPMorgan’s profits were $19 billion in 2011. And CEO Jamie Dimon called that “mildly disappointing� at the time. So does this matter at Q: Yes. all? A: Why? Q: For one thing, JPMorA: gan was known as the best manager of risk on Wall Street. That’s largely because they made it through the financial crisis mostly unscathed. But it turns out that even the best manager of risk isn’t very good. This trade, in fact, looks a lot like the financial crisis: They bet on something unlikely as if it was impossible. That’s what all those banks did when they made bets on the belief that the housing market never goes down everywhere all at once. It’s a reminder that this is a kind of mistake that even “good� banks make. And remember: JPMorgan made this mistake less than four years after the fall of Lehman Brothers, so this came at a time when the lessons of the crisis are fresh in everyone’s mind, and when regulators are watching closely.
“He’s earned enough market respect to have the opportunity to correct this,� said Benjamin Wallace of investment firm Grimes & Co., a longtime shareholder that sold its JPMorgan shares six months ago. “I don’t think anyone else can do a better job than him, and we would not be calling for his ouster,� Wallace said. Dimon said on Sunday that the bank had “made a terrible, egregious mistake� and that there was “almost no excuse for it.� Yet there have been no signs of a shareholder insurrection against Dimon, and no member of the board of directors has spoken out against him since he disclosed the loss.
thing dumb? No. There’s a political dimension here, too. JPMorgan has used its sterling reputation to fight the Volcker rule. That’s the regulation that says that banks that take commercial loans and get federal insurance to protect those loans — banks that you might open a checking account with, like JPMorgan — can’t make speculative bets on their own behalf. The problem is that it’s very hard to say when a bank is betting on its own behalf and when its betting on its clients’ behalf. JPMorgan says that this trade was a “hedge�: It was there to reduce risk, not make money. But given how exquisitely it blew up in JPMorgan’s face, now regulators are going to make sure that the Volcker rule would stop trades like this one from happening. Otherwise, they’ll get the blame next time. That means a much tighter Volcker rule — which in turn means JPMorgan (and other banks) won’t make as much money in the coming years. And the government may not stop with the Volcker rule. The Securities and Exchange Commission has opened an investigation. And remember: this is an election year. If a few congressmen band together to propose some much more stringent regulations on the banks, there’s some chance that they could sail through as both parties try to show they’re tougher on the banks.
A:
What else could they do? Q: Lots. If you look hard A: enough, you can find many, many regulatory changes that were left out of Dodd-Frank. For instance, Eliot Spitzer points out on Slate that Dimon “sits on the board of the New York Federal Reserve Bank — the very organization that is supposed to oversee his bank’s financial practices ‌ The Fed conflict is so obvious that it defies any possible rationalization or explanation.â€?
So that’s it? The naQ: tional media is engaged in a collective attack of post-traumatic stress because the only bank it kinda-sorta trusted did some-
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FOOD
HOME GARDEN
Keep it simple; keep it smart By Jan Roberts-Dominguez For The Bulletin
Recommendations are risky propositions. So many variables between my likes and yours. With that said, I absolutely love potato salad from Old World Deli in Corvallis, both for what it is and what it isn’t. On the surface, it’s a humble preparation consisting of a mere eight ingredients: potato, celery, onion, hard-cooked egg, black olive, salt, pepper and mayonnaise. A classic All-American production. On the surface. But after talking with owner/chef Ted Cox about his wife Veronica’s creation, it’s clear that each one of those ingredients — and the method in which they’re assembled — was thoughtfully formulated to produce a subtle yet flavorful offering. The Coxes are talented cooks who understand the power of good food prepared mindfully. Which leads to what this dish isn’t: an overstatement. It’s The Simple Black Dress of potato salads. In fact, it was a brave and confident cook who put such an unassuming preparation on the deli’s lineup instead of something more robust and, well, mustardy. When I talked with Ted about the salad, he admitted that there’s nothing fancy about it. The ingredients are basic and few. “It’s all about salt management,” he stressed. “Too little and the flavor just won’t develop. Too much and you’re screwed.” Which underpins an essential culinary fact: Even the most simple recipe can derail a cook. Fabulous one time, completely flat the next — for no apparent reason. Until you backtrack and examine your ingredients and execution. On any given shopping excursion, you have to choose between good and lesser foods. Everyone knows that local, vineripened tomatoes are going to bring far more flavor and juicy texture to a salad than out-of-season imports; that real cheese and sour cream outshine their no-fat impersonators; and that if the fishmonger hems and haws when you ask if the salmon is wild or farmed, you should opt for lamb. Sometimes using the lesser is perfectly OK. But the simpler the recipe, the more essential the need for good ingredients and thoughtful preparation. Death by a thousand cuts. That’s essentially what happens to a wonderful recipe when a cook begins to compromise on ingredients and execution. See Simple / F2
color Alive with
In the kitchen with ... Bend-o Bento Editor’s note: “In the kitchen with ...” features people in the local culinary scene at home in their own kitchens. To suggest someone to profile, contact athome@ bendbulletin.com. By Penny Nakamura For The Bulletin
Co-owner of Bend-o Bento Japanese Kitchen Keiko Wysuph opens the door to her home and greets us in Japanese, “Konnichiwa! Irasshaimase!” Which, in English, translates to hello and welcome. This is a traditional greeting that Wysuph and her business partner Yukiko McLaughlin say to all their customers Monday through Friday, and here at home it’s no different. Wysuph leads us to her home kitchen, where the two new restaurant entrepreneurs are busy rolling sushi on their day off for a friend’s going-away party later in the day. Though their little restaurant has only been open for two months, the two friends have found there’s a big demand for their bento box lunches. “We’ve been very busy since we opened in March; the first few weeks we would sell out,” says Wysuph. The first weeks they donated a portion of their proceeds to aid Japanese victims impacted by last year’s tsunami. “We just want to say thank you to Bend for being so supportive of this fundraiser, the money we raised went to Project Fumbaro in Eastern Japan.” As members of the Japanese American Society of Central Oregon (JASCO), both McLaughlin and Wysuph were busy cooking last year for the Japanese tsunami fundraising dinner. From that dinner, an idea was born for McLaughlin and Wysuph, who saw a demand for Japanese cuisine in Central Oregon. “At first we thought, ‘Maybe we’ll just do a food cart on the street,’” said McLaughlin, who was dressed in a traditional Japanese cotton kimono. “But then we thought, ‘Maybe that would be too cold in the winter with the snow.’ And then we were able to find this building, and this would allow us to be open year-round.” These two women aren’t just moms who like to cook for their families, they’re food industry professionals. See Bento / F4
• What to consider when choosing plants to create a flower basket By Marielle Gallagher The Bulletin
F
lower baskets, planters and pots are perfect for creating instant displays of bright flowers. Central Oregonians can dress up a porch or a set of stairs with pots of annuals in a rainbow of colors. Giovanna Cloward, owner of Galveston Gardens on Bend’s west side, showed off the nursery’s greenhouses full of hanging baskets and flowers and shared her knowledge and techniques for
putting one together. Whether you choose to plant a basket, pot or planter, the planting process and the drainage requirements are the same. To get started, choose a pot that has adequate drainage. If it doesn’t drain, the roots are prone to rot. Next, decide where you’re going to put the flowers to determine if you’ll be choosing plants that need lots of sun, shade or a mix. “Usually you don’t mix them in the same pot,” said Cloward. See Baskets / F5
Photos by Andy Tullis / The Bulletin
FROM TOP: A single petunia, a hanging basket filled with petunias and million bells, and a hanging basket filled with geraniums, petunias, biden, parrot’s beak and lobelia, all at Galveston Gardens.
Thinkstock
TODAY’S RECIPES
Joe Kline / The Bulletin
Sushi rolls prepared by Yukiko McLaughlin and Keiko Wysuph at Wysuph’s home in Bend.
• Lemon Poppy-Seed Pancakes with Greek Yogurt and Jam, F2 • Chicken Salad with Fresh Dill, F2
• Old World Deli’s Potato Salad, F2 • Jan’s One-Pot Chicken with Noodles, Ginger and Lemon , F2
• Baked Eggs with Onion And Cheese, F3 • Oven French Toast, F3
• Baked Eggs in a Cheese Sauce, F3 • Bacon and Egg Crispy Bread Tarts, F3
• Elway’s Charred Red Pepper Soup, F6
F2
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
F
Next week: Frozen treats
Simple
Andrew Scrivani / New York Times News Service
Lemon zest pancakes with Greek yogurt and jam — dotted with poppy seeds — are fruity and sweet, more like a dessert.
Pancakes that aren’t so flat (artistically) By Melissa Clark New York Times News Service
Chances are, if you have a reliable pancake recipe, you rarely stray. After all, pancake recipes are relatively similar to one another, and most are good. When pancakes are warm and buttered with amber syrup sliding down the sides, the subtleties of the pancake itself are muted by the maple. Then there’s the fact that most of us make pancakes on weekend mornings, knocking around the kitchen on
autopilot before we are fully charged and caffeinated. In this state, experimenting with something new is not only bothersome but also downright risky. But recently I was inspired to branch out and try something new. A jar of homemade rhubarb compote had been staring pinkly at me from its spot in the fridge. I felt it needed a canvas more majestic than a mere bowl of yogurt or slice of toast. What it really wanted, it seemed to be saying, was a fluffy pan-
Lemon Poppy-Seed Pancakes with Greek Yogurt and Jam Makes 6 servings. 11⁄3 C Greek yogurt, more for serving 2 ⁄3 C whole milk 4 lg eggs 6 TBS unsalted butter, melted, more for frying 2 TBS honey
260 g all-purpose flour (about 2 C) 12 g baking soda (about 2 tsp) 12 g kosher salt (about 1 tsp) 21⁄2 TBS poppy seeds Finely grated zest of 2 lemons Jam, for serving
In a bowl, whisk together the yogurt, milk, eggs, butter and honey. In a separate, larger bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda and salt. Make a well in the dry ingredients and fold in the wet ingredients until just combined. Fold in the poppy seeds and lemon zest. Heat a large skillet over medium heat. Add a pat of butter to the skillet and swirl to coat. Working in batches, drop 1⁄4 cup batter into the pan. Cook until bubbles form on the surface of the pancakes, 2 to 3 minutes; flip and continue cooking until golden and firm, 1 to 2 minutes more. To serve, slather each pancake with a dollop of yogurt and a spoonful of jam.
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cake on which to shine. As pleasing as my standard pancakes are, they didn’t seem special enough for homemade compote. But some honey and lemon zest stirred into the batter, enriched with Greek yogurt and extra melted butter, elevated them nicely. So did a sprinkle of poppy seeds. (Sour cream and sesame seeds would have worked, too.) Then for serving, I slathered the pancakes with more Greek yogurt before gilding everything with a dollop of rosy compote. The pancakes were fruity and sweet and really more like dessert, which was just fine with me. In fact, if you substitute creme fraiche, whipped cream or ice cream for the Greek yogurt, they would be special enough to serve to company. They would be exotic, too, because while crepes are universally accepted as dessert fare, pancakes rarely show up at the table post-brunch. For the most elegant dessert presentation, consider making the pancakes silver-dollar size, both because they are quite filling and they are cuter that way. Otherwise, frying bigger pancakes is easier and more efficient. And if you don’t happen to have homemade rhubarb compote beckoning from the fridge, any good jam or preserves would work nicely, too. But I would stay away from maple syrup, which could overpower the delicacy of the lemon. Save the syrup for your regularly scheduled Sunday-morning fare.
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Chicken Salad with Fresh Dill
Continued from F1 One evening I was reprising a chicken stew recipe that I had created a few weeks prior. The first go-around had culminated in a delightful dish, something to be admired for its richness of flavor and ease of preparation. But the second run-through wasn’t hitting the mark. It lacked “something.” Not until I remembered that the original version had simmered with a slice of fresh lemon was I able to put my finger on the missing layer of flavor. I easily remedied the situation by adding a bit of grated lemon zest and squeeze of fresh lemon. Different approach. Same result. And it drives home my belief that cooks need to develop an intuitive nature for what they’re cooking. In the chicken stew creation, for example, when I finalized the recipe, I had to pay careful attention to every ingredient. Even then, I wasn’t sure it was a recipe that should end up in my column, because even if I could fine-tune directions down to the very last teaspoon of shredded ginger, it was particularly fraught with variables capable of undermining another cook’s chance for success: the quality of the chicken broth, the potency of the ginger, the style of the chili-garlic paste, to name just a few. In other words, the most critical ingredient may well be the cook’s intuition. Yet, armed with that and a little knowledge, one is able to look between the lines of the recipe, interpret what the creator was aiming for, and even take it to another level. Sort of like that humble little salad at Old World Deli. — Jan Roberts-Dominguez is a Corvallis food writer, cookbook author and artist. Contact: janrd@ proaxis.com.
Here’s an elegant but subtle offering that relies on good-quality ingredients. Once summer rolls around, consider adding a few slices of gardenripened tomatoes alongside the salad. 1 whole chicken, poached Salt and freshly ground black pepper About ¼ to ½ C chopped green onion
About 1 tsp fresh snipped dillweed Equal amounts of sour cream and mayonnaise Fresh salad greens tossed with vinaigrette
To poach the chicken, add one whole, uncooked chicken to a pot, filled halfway with water. Throw in some salt and pepper, a chopped onion, 1 stalk of chopped celery (or a handful of the celery leaves) and a chopped head of garlic, if you’ve got it. Bring to a boil, cover, and simmer about 30 to 40 minutes, or until the chicken is done. This may be done 1 to 2 days ahead; just cover the chicken and refrigerate. Around dinnertime, and long after the poached chicken has cooled its heels in the fridge, pull enough white and dark meat from the bird to feed two to four people and cut it into bite-sized chunks. Season the chicken lightly with a little salt and pepper and add some finely minced green onion and snipped fresh dill, along with enough sour cream and mayonnaise to barely hold the mixture together. You don’t want to drown out the pure flavor of the chicken or dill. In another bowl, toss together some baby lettuce with a simple vinaigrette. Divide the salad between plates, then cozy a serving of the chicken salad up against the greens.
Thinkstock
Dill and lemon are key ingredients to coax full flavor out of simple recipes.
Old World Deli’s Potato Salad Most potato salads call for “new” potatoes, which are a waxy variety that retain a firm texture after cooking. But this potato salad is made with russets (“baking potatoes”), which have great potato flavor but will fall apart if not handled properly, so pay attention to the directions. Also, salt plays an integral role in this recipe: too little and the salad will lack flavor; too much and, in the words of owner Ted Cox, “You’re screwed!” So taste as you go. 2 lbs med russet potatoes (about 6) ¾ C chopped celery (¼-inch cut)
¾ C chopped white onion 1 ⁄3 C chopped black olives Salt and pepper
3 hard-cooked eggs, diced 1 to 1½ C good-quality mayonnaise
Place the unpeeled potatoes in a large pot with enough water to cover. Replace lid, bring the water to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer until tender. This will take approximately 15 to 22 minutes, depending on the size and shape of your potatoes. (Hint: To determine “tender,” instead of poking the spuds with a fork, I insert a cake tester, which is considerably more slender. When the tester goes in with just a slight amount of resistance on the part of the potato, it’s done. If, when you poke the tester in, the potato continues to “push back,” it needs a few more minutes.) Some potatoes cook faster than others; keep a slotted spoon handy so you can fish out the done ones and let the undone ones continue cooking. When the potatoes become cool enough to handle, remove the peel by holding the potato and scraping its surface with the sharp edge of a straight knife. The peel will slide off in large segments. Let the potatoes cool further before cutting. The cooling period is essential because it helps the potato firm up and hold together when cut into chunks. So don’t cut them until the potatoes stop steaming. Once cool to the touch (but still slightly warm in the center), cut the potatoes into ½- to ¾-inch chunks and place them in a large bowl. Salt the potatoes generously before proceeding, then gently toss the chunks to distribute the salt. Add the celery, onion and olives, then salt the mixture again and gently toss. Add the eggs and gently toss again to distribute the egg throughout the mixture. Fold in 1 cup of the mayonnaise. Add additional mayonnaise as necessary to attain a moist but not overly sauced mixture. Taste and adjust for salt and pepper. Refrigerate before serving to develop the flavors.
Jan’s One-Pot Chicken with Noodles, Ginger and Lemon Makes 2 servings, but can easily be doubled. This is a delightful dish, something to be admired for its richness of flavor and ease of preparation. Just remember that it is fraught with variables that will affect its ultimate success, including the quality of the chicken broth, the potency of the ginger root and the style of the chili-garlic paste, to name just a few. In other words, the most critical ingredient in this dish may well be cook’s intuition. Yet, armed with that and a little knowledge, one will be able to look between the lines of the recipe, interpret what I was aiming for and even take it to another level. Part of its success relies on the fine quality of your chicken broth. I keep batches of it on hand in my freezer, made from other times when I’ve cooked up chickens with water and plenty of chopped onions, celery, carrots and a coarsely chopped mid-sized head of garlic (a small head contains about 15 cloves; I throw the garlic in skins and all). Also, don’t overlook the addition of my “secret ingredient,” which is a spicy homemade dumpling sauce. 2 chicken breast halves, skin removed/bones in (about 1½ lbs total weight) 2 tsp vegetable oil 4 C good-quality chicken stock or broth ¾ C chopped green onions (about 5 or 6 med, using all the white and pale green portion and about 2 inches of the green)
2 slices of fresh lemon (about ¼-inch thick, or slightly thicker) Scant 1 TBS optional “secret ingredient” (see note) 2 tsp grated fresh ginger 2 tsp commercially prepared chili-garlic sauce 1 ⁄8 tsp freshly ground black pepper Salt to taste
1 (7.7-oz) package yakisoba noodles (also called “stir fry noodles;” check the refrigerated section in produce department of most supermarkets)
Using kitchen shears or a very sharp knife, cut each chicken breast half into two portions (since you’ll be cutting through rib and breast bone, shears are very effective). Cut through at the meatiest portion of each breast so you end up with four relatively equal-sized portions. In a deep-sided, heavy-bottomed pot, brown the chicken pieces in the oil over medium-high heat, turning once to brown on both sides (note: skinless breast meat can be tricky to fry, tending to stick if you flip it too soon. Be patient; once the meat has browned sufficiently, it practically releases from the pan bottom by itself). Reduce the heat slightly, remove the chicken pieces to a plate, then pour in the broth, stirring and scraping with a flat-sided utensil to dissolve all of the caramelized chicken juices. Return the browned chicken pieces to the pot, and add the onions, lemon slices, ginger root, chili-garlic sauce and black pepper. Cover, and cook just until the chicken is tender and cooked, about 40 minutes. Adjust the seasonings, adding salt if desired. The chicken may be prepared to this point up to 24 hours ahead and refrigerated. Five or 10 minutes before serving, bring the mixture to a boil, then remove the chicken pieces with a slotted spoon. Add the yakisoba, breaking the soft block of noodles apart with a fork or spoon so they’ll cook evenly and quickly in the broth (this only takes about 3 minutes). When the noodles are cooked, return the chicken pieces to the pot and heat through. Adjust seasonings. If you remember, fish out any remaining pieces of lemon (it will be almost disintegrated by now, though) before serving. Serve in large soup bowls or pasta bowls. Note on optional secret ingredient: I used to use a dumpling sauce from one of my favorite Corvallis Restaurants, China Blue. But the restaurant changed hands and no longer offers the original version. By luck, however, I ran into the former owners one day and they shared the basic ingredients used to make their sauce. With that information, I’ve been able to cobble together my own spicy dumpling sauce: In a small saucepan, whisk together ¼ cup soy sauce (or Kikkoman’s Tempura Sauce, if you can find it), ¼ cup water, 3 tablespoons apple cider vinegar, 3 tablespoons sesame oil, 1 tablespoon red pepper flakes and 1 teaspoon sugar (omit the sugar if using the tempura sauce). Simmer for 3 minutes, then remove from heat. In a small dish, whisk 2 teaspoons of corn starch into 1 tablespoon of water. Scrape that mixture into the sauce, whisking constantly, then place the pot over a medium-high burner and stir until thickened and clear; remove from heat. Makes about 2⁄3 cup of sauce (the sauce freezes well).
FOOD
TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
F3
Eggs made easy, for a crowd By Sharon K. Ghag
Baked Eggs with Onion And Cheese
McClatchy Newspapers
One look at the mess in the kitchen and that special-day meal the children made for you can lose its appeal. We all remember the wonder of being old enough to cook for Mom and Dad. As parents, we want to encourage the same excitement in our little darlings — only without the mess. A make-ahead breakfast lets you manage the chaos in the kitchen while allowing your children to take ownership of a piping hot meal and brightening everyone’s day. Overnight French toast couldn’t be easier to make and is perfect for little helpers. Soak the bread overnight, leaving space between slices for it to puff up, and bake in the morning. The two baked egg dishes are a bit more complicated. One cradles the eggs in a cheese sauce and is elegant enough to serve for dinner — just add steamed vegetables. The other, from Mark Bittman’s “How to Cook Everything: The Basics” (Wiley, $35), uses caramelized onions and cheese as the base for the eggs. The baked egg tarts are scrumptious, but also a lot of work. Our recipe tester offers several suggestions to ease preparation. Pillsbury’s signature crescent roll dough is easier to mold into oiled cupcake pans than flattened bread slices. Bake the crescent roll crust alone for about 12 minutes, let cool, then fill and bake again according to recipe directions. Taco-size tortillas are another option. Heat them on both sides in a frying pan with olive oil, then mold into oversize muffin pans. Bake empty about 12 minutes, cool, fill and bake according to directions. The recipe calls for cherry tomatoes, but grape tomatoes are a bit more manageable. Cut in half, squeeze out a little of the juice and place cut side down on the tart filling.
Makes 4 to 8 servings. 4 TBS (half stick) butter 4 onions (about 1⁄2 lb) sliced 1 C bread crumbs, preferably fresh 2 C grated Gruyere, fontina or other melting cheese
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Put the butter in a large skillet over medium heat. When the butter has melted, add the onions and cook, stirring occasionally, until soft and tender but not browned, at least 15 minutes. Spread the onions over the bottom of a 9-by-13-inch baking dish. Sprinkle half the bread crumbs over the onions, then sprinkle on half the cheese. Use the back of a spoon to make eight nests in the mixture. Crack an egg into each indentation. Top with a sprinkle of salt and pepper and the remaining bread crumbs and cheese. Bake 15 to 20 minutes or until the cheese is melted and the egg whites opaque. The eggs should be a little more jiggly than you want them because they’ll continue cooking after you take them out of the oven. Serve with toast. — From “How to Cook Everything: The Basics: All You Need to Make Great Food, With 1,000 Photos,” by Mark Bittman (Wiley, $35)
Oven French Toast Makes 8 servings. 2 TBS butter 8 slices raisin bread from a 1-lb loaf, sliced 1-inch thick 4 eggs 4 egg whites 1½ C milk
Photos by Joan Barnett Lee / Modesto Bee
A new way to try eggs is backed, such as in a cheese sauce.
Baked Eggs in a Cheese Sauce Makes 4 servings. 2 TBS butter 2 TBS all-purpose flour Salt, pepper and nutmeg to taste 1 tsp dried mustard
2 C milk 1¼ C shredded cheddar or Monterey jack cheese 2 C diced, cooked chicken or other cooked meat
Makes 4 servings. 3 eggs ½ C whipping cream 2 TBS freshly grated Parmesan cheese
Salt and pepper 8 vine cherry tomatoes
Spray muffin tins lightly with oil. Cut the crusts off the bread and discard. Flatten each bread slice with a rolling pin. Brush each slice with the melted butter and place one slice in each of eight muffin tins. Place the remaining eight slices diagonally in each of the eight tins. Carefully press the bread slices into the muffin tins to form the base. Bake in a preheated 400-degree oven for 12 to 15 minutes until crisp and golden. Alternately, mold Pillsbury’s crescent rolls or whole-wheat tortillas heated in a frying pan with oil into the tins and bake 12 minutes. Cool before filling. Meanwhile, heat a dry frying pan until hot, add the bacon and cook for two to three minutes until crisp and golden. Divide the bacon among the muffin tins. Beat together the eggs, cream, cheese and salt and pepper to taste in a bowl. Spoon into the Using a pre-made bread dough, such as crescent muffin tins and top each with a cherry tomato or roll dough, makes egg tarts an easier dish to put one or two grape tomatoes. Bake for 15 minutes or together. until set. Another idea: Line the muffin tins with partially cooked bacon or ham slices from the deli. Crack an egg in the base, brush the top with butter and bake at 350 degrees or until the egg is set and the white opaque, about 15 to 20 minutes. — Adapted from “365 Ways to Cook: Delicious Variations on Favorite Foods” (Firefly Books, $19.95)
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4 eggs Nonstick cooking spray 1 lb asparagus, steamed
Place medium cast-iron skillet over medium heat and melt the 2 tablespoons butter. Stir in flour and mustard and cook until bubbly. Gradually stir in the milk and cook, stirring constantly, until thick and smooth. Stir in cheese until it is melted and the sauce is smooth. Taste, adding salt and pepper and nutmeg as needed. Stir in chicken and remove from heat. Make four indentations in the sauce and break an egg in each. Lightly spray each egg with nonstick cooking spray. Bake uncovered for 15 to 20 minutes in a 375-degree oven. Serve with steamed asparagus.
Bacon and Egg Crispy Bread Tarts Olive oil spray for oiling 16 slices white bread ½ C butter, melted 5 oz smoked bacon, diced
8 eggs Salt and ground black pepper Toasted bread or English muffin for serving
¼ C sugar ½ tsp cinnamon 2 TBS maple syrup 1 tsp vanilla ½ tsp salt Powdered sugar, for dusting
Butter shallow baking pan and arrange the bread in a single layer. Beat together the eggs, egg whites, milk, sugar, cinnamon, syrup, vanilla and salt in a large bowl. Pour mixture over bread. Turn slices to coat. Cover with plastic and refrigerate overnight. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Bake the French toast for 20 minutes or until a tester inserted in the center comes out clean. Turn the bread and continue baking until golden, about four minutes longer. Transfer to a warm plate and sprinkle with powdered sugar. Baked French toast is an easy Testers note: Eggnog makes make-ahead recipe. amazing overnight French toast. Add two whole eggs, lightly beaten, to 2 cups of eggnog. Pour over thick slices of bread. Turn bread to coat. Bake in the morning, as instructed above. — From “Let’s Get Together,” by DeeDee Stovel and Pam Wakefield (Storey Publishing, $14.95)
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
H
Next week: Help from an interior designer
Bento Continued from F1 “I was a schoolteacher in Japan, but I’ve always loved to cook, so then I became a teacher of cooking. It is my passion. I used to teach Western cooking in Japan, teaching Japanese how to cook American and European foods,” says Wysuph, giggling at the irony. She met her Americanborn husband Todd Wysuph in Kofu, Japan, where he was working as a Japanese-English translator. Wysuph says her first real cooking test came when her husband asked if she could make a deep dish pizza like the one he got from his favorite California Italian restaurant. Wysuph took up the challenge, making her dough from scratch, and was able to not only replicate the pizza, but, according to Todd, make it better than the restaurant’s original version. McLaughlin, who is a registered dietitian, worked at a large hospital preparing special menus and meals for patients. She originally moved from Japan to Boston before she came to Bend. While working in Bend, she met her husband, Joe McLaughlin, who was an accountant for one of the restaurants where she was employed. Though already an expert cook, McLaughlin says her husband introduced her to a new type of cuisine, Cajun. “My husband, Joe, is from New Orleans, and he makes the best jambalaya and gumbo. It really is my favorite meal,” said McLaughlin with a laugh. “I love spicy food.” Though they both have adventurous and exotic tastes in food, the cuisine they know best is traditional Japanese food, which is what they serve up. “Bento is a meal consisting of rice with meat or fish, paired with pickled plums or other vegetables,” said McLaughlin, who likens it to Japanese comfort food. “We are really trying to use foods that are local, and our pork comes from local Pono Farms.” McLaughlin and Wysuph became fast friends after meeting in Bend. In Wysuph’s home kitchen, the two women speak animatedly in Japanese, and
Photos by Joe Kline / The Bulletin
Friends and business partners Yukiko McLaughlin, right, and Keiko Wysuph make sushi rolls for a party in the kitchen in Wysuph’s home in Bend on a recent Saturday morning. Wysuph and McLaughlin recently opened the Bend-o Bento Japanese Kitchen.
they say when they’re in their restaurant kitchen, they only speak Japanese to one another, but, except for greetings, they speak English to their customers. McLaughlin praises her business partner for her special talent with fish. “Keiko’s grandfather was a commercial fisherman in Japan, and Keiko can expertly fillet a large fish, like the salmon we serve,” said McLaughlin, spreading her arms wide to show the size of salmon Wysuph regularly fillets. Wysuph pulls out her special knife, which she estimates costs about $200 but will probably last a lifetime of filleting fish and cutting meats. McLaughlin and Wysuph say their day at Bend-o Bento starts at 4:30 a.m., and though they’re open mainly for a lunch crowd, they work till 8 p.m. prepping for the next day. Their hard work and long days seem to be paying off, as their little restaurant on Wil-
son Avenue has exceeded their initial expectations. The two friends say they’re also catering for large groups and companies who order bento boxes ahead of time. Occasionally, they will roll California roll sushi, but because of permit issues, they’re not allowed to serve sushi with raw fish. Eventually they’d like to get a permit for that, but for now both Wysuph and McLaughlin say they’re keeping busy and doing what they love best, cooking “oishi” (delicious) food for Central Oregon. The three ingredients you’ll always find in my home cupboard or refrigerator are ... Wysuph: Ginger, wild salmon and pork. McLaughlin: Rice, miso and soy sauce. Favorite home meal you like to prepare? Wysuph: For breakfast, it’s waffles; lunch, sushi; and dinner, pizza. McLaughlin: Breakfast is cooked rice and miso soup; for lunch, soba or udon noodles with vegetables and poached egg; and dinner is Japanesestyle curry on rice. What is your favorite home kitchen appliance? Wysuph: Japanese rice cooker. McLaughlin: Kitchen Aid
Wysuph assembles a sushi roll.
mixer and my juice-maker What is your favorite hand tool or cooking utensil in your home kitchen? Wysuph: My knives from Japan; especially, I love my Yanagiba knife for sashimi. McLaughlin: I also love my knives from Japan. Have you done any major kitchen remodeling? What did you change and why? Wysuph: Yes, when I used to live in Japan with my family, my husband and I decided to remodel my grandparents’ kitchen, which was about 90 years old. We made the concrete countertops; I helped with the mixing! We also did the cabinets. We picked out the (paint)
colors from a local Starbucks coffee shop because we liked the colors in there. What is your ideal kitchen? What would you improve, if you could? Wysuph: I like a lot of sunshine in a kitchen, which would allow me to grow Japanese herbs year-round. McLaughlin: My ideal home kitchen would be a lot like our commercial kitchen at Bendo Bento. It would be big, with lots of storage space. It would also have lots of refrigeration and big appliances such as a six-burner stove, deep fryer and meat slicer, etc. Spice of choice? Wysuph: Ginger. McLaughlin: Basil, cumin
and ginger! What chefs do you admire most? Wysuph: Morimoto (The Iron Chef) and Michiba. McLaughlin: Joe Kim at 5 Fusion & Sushi Bar restaurant in Bend. What restaurants do you enjoy other than your own? Wysuph: Ariana and 5 Fusion. McLaughlin: El Burrito, Summit Saloon & Stage, McMenamins Old St. Francis School and of course, 5 Fusion. Do you have a favorite cooking memory? Or favorite memorable meal? Wysuph: My most memorable meal was a homemade bagel with salmon and cucumber, because it was the first date I had with my husband. McLaughlin: When I was in the third grade, I made the first decorated cake for my mother as a surprise. That was the very first time I used a gas oven all by myself to make this sponge cake. I clearly remember that it was thrilling and fun. Favorite area you like to take your meals? Wysuph: In the summer, we love to eat our meals on the patio with the kids Trevor, 10, and Alyssa “Momoko,” 7. They love to eat my salmon. McLaughlin: We like to eat in the living room together with my husband, Joe, and my 6-year-old daughter, Naomi. Best meal you’ve ever eaten in your life? Wysuph: I love to eat my father-in-law’s teriyaki chicken and rice. McLaughlin: Always my husband’s jambalaya and gumbo soup. Guilty food pleasures? Wysuph: Cheesecake. McLaughlin: Sushi. What do you like to do outside of the kitchen? Wysuph: Gardening. McLaughlin: Knitting, sewing, jewelry-making, flower arranging, music and summer camping. If you couldn’t be a chef or in the food industry, what profession would have chosen? Wysuph: Teacher. McLaughlin: Teaching Japanese language or child care worker. Favorite food quote, or philosophy you often repeat to yourself? Wysuph: Food tastes better with loved ones. Always try to be happy when you’re cooking because emotions are reflected in the food. McLaughlin: Keep it simple! — Reporter: pnakamura@ bendbulletin.com
Wh en selling a house, paint should be spiffy Drapery • Bedding • Upholstery We have a fabric for that. Kravet Fabricut Robert Allen Ralph Lauren
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By Al Heavens The Philadelphia Inquirer
The one thing I enjoy most about visiting the Paint Quality Institute in Spring House, Pa., is adding to my knowledge of paint and painting. This advice is actually designed for people who are listing their houses for sale: A recently applied, highquality acrylic latex paint
can last 10 years or more and “translates into many years of freedom from maintenance for prospective buyers.” Remember, buyers today have a lot of houses from which to choose and the less work they have to do, the better chance you have to sell your house quickly and for the right price. Want more? Here goes: • When selecting an exterior coat, be conservative. White and neutral colors are often the safest choices, since they will appeal to the greatest number of prospective buyers. When painting for a potential sale, “it is often not the time to have the most striking paint scheme in the neighborhood.” • Include quality surface preparation in the work. Properly preparing the surface for painting will produce the best appearance and add to the life expectancy of the paint job. • Finally, finish painting before putting the home on the market. A completed and attractive paint job will assist with that critical first impres-
sion as potential buyers consider and view your home. More advice at www .paintquality.com.
The garage floor stain should offer protection from oil and paint and other spills, however.
Concrete stain
Outdoor gas cooking
Speaking of paint, Reading, Pa., reader Sandy Duffy has a question about painting the basement or garage floor: “Would concrete stain be a better choice than paint? I used a concrete stain on my outside patio which is exposed to the elements and has held up quite well for 10 years now.” From what I am told, that would be an excellent choice, but I would recommend strongly that you do your research on surface preparation and determine how wet that floor can get, because any moisture might compromise performance over the long run. For advice on the kind of paint, I would recommend talking to the folks at your neighborhood paint retailer. They should know your area and all of its requirements, and should be able to guide your decision.
Now you’re cooking with gas. Some advice for outdoor grilling season, from the testing and certification group CSA International: • Make a clean start. Before firing up the barbecue for the first time, carefully inspect burners and burner tubes for blockages due to dirt, grease, insects or rust buildup. Clean or replace any blocked parts or have a certified technician make repairs. • Blowing bubbles. Check for cracked, brittle or leaking hoses. To check for leaks, apply a 5 0/50 solution of soap and water to hoses and fittings and turn on the main gas or propane valve while leaving burners off. Any leaks will show up as bubbles. Replace any damaged hoses or fittings. • Old gas? Take a pass. Propane cylinders must be inspected and requalified a minimum of every 12 years in the United States. A date stamp on the cylinder indicates when it was last qualified. Do not use a rusty or damaged cylinder. If in doubt, have your tank replaced. • Breathing fire. Keep grills and barbecues away from combustible materials such as fences, trees, buildings, awnings, and carports. Never use a barbecue in a garage.
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TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
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Next week: Butterfly-friendly gardening
Baskets
of the dirt is lower than the top of the pot. “Leave a lip from the top of the pot, because otherwise the water won’t collect there,” said Cloward. “If the dirt is even with the top, the water will just run out.” Potted plants require different spacing than flower bed plants. “When it’s jammed in there, they like it even better,” said Cloward. “Constricting the root growth promotes the cascading growth.” When the pot is planted, you shouldn’t see much surface dirt, if any.
See it built ...
Continued from F1
Plant types A plant arrangement should have three elements, according to Cloward: a focal point, a midpoint and a cascading plant. The focal point is often the plant in the middle and is the tallest. In order to choose the proper height for your focal plant, you must first determine the height of the pot. “Whatever the height of the pot, you go double (for the plant),” said Cloward. For example, a 6inch-tall pot should have a tallest plant of 12 inches. The midpoint foliage should stand up to about the middle of the tallest plants. And the cascading plant will grow over the side of the pot, offering airborne tendrils of vine and flowers. Cloward’s technique for choosing flowers is to build the display on a tray. “I get an empty tray and I first pick up my tallest plant that goes in the middle, and I pick up my in-between and then my cascading. I make my pot in my tray,” said Cloward. Cloward uses annuals for her baskets because they bloom all summer. “Usually I like to put one perennial in the planter for height.” Cloward also recommends adding edible plants to the arrangement. Nasturtiums, pansies and violas are all colorful flowers that are also edible. Another option is making a basket entirely of herbs. Sage or mint would make a good focal point, rosemary could be used as a midpoint and thyme grows in a cascading pattern. “I do ones all with cabbage or lettuce, too. The deer don’t eat a lot of the herbs.” The more you clip and use
F5
Water and maintenance Watch Cloward assemble this planter of geraniums, petunias, million bells, parrot’s beak and bacopa at www .bendbulletin.com/flowerbaskets.
Photos by Andy Tullis / The Bulletin
Giovanna Cloward, owner of Galveston Gardens, holds a hanging basket full of petunias in one of the greenhouses at the nursery.
the herbs, the better they grow. “And they smell so nice,” said Cloward. “I like to mix the herbs with the flowers and pansies and violas you can eat.”
Color Color schemes are completely personal preference. Cloward recommends trying unusual combinations like pink and orange for a unique
look. Another combination she likes is burgundy, pink and yellow. “I like to stick to an easy-on-the-eyes contrast. Different shades of like colors,” she said and pointed to a basket of pansies in three shades: dark blue, light blue and white with blue veins.
Planting Cloward sells Filthy Rich Natural & Organic Potting
A planter filled with sage, apple mint, oregano, rosemary, thyme and pansies.
Soil, which includes Hemlock bark fines, peat moss, compost and pumice. After she’s selected the plants for a pot, she adds enough potting soil to fill the base of the pot so that when the plant is placed in the dirt, the top of the root mass is
approximately ½-inch below the top of the pot. If you’re using a wire basket, make sure to line it before adding soil. Cloward uses moss. Another option is coco fiber. Cloward prepares a hole in the soil just big enough to accommodate the plant’s root mass. She suggests gently holding the plant’s stem and tipping the plant upside down and tapping or squeezing the bottom of the plastic container to knock the plant free. Before placing it in the hole, “stimulate the roots by moving them around and making sure they’re not solid, or break down some of the roots,” said Cloward. Place the plant and add potting soil until it’s even with the plant’s root mass. “I don’t like to press it down a lot. A lot of people think you need to do that to get the air out. But I like to do it softly. That way when you water it, it presses it down gently,” explained Cloward. As you plant the rest of the plants, make sure the surface
Watering every morning, drenching the soil completely and avoiding watering the leaves and flowers are techniques that Cloward recommends for keeping plants healthy. She advises watering right into the dirt and avoiding the foliage to keep mold from growing. Thoroughly drenching the soil in the morning keeps the plants hydrated, even in hot temperatures. In addition, Cloward adds fertilizer. “I like to fertilize once a week, and it can be diluted, not as strong as the box suggests,” said Cloward. Some flowers, including petunias, need their dead blossoms removed. Cloward said just plucking the blossom doesn’t do the job. The head needs to removed behind the blossom at the stem. “If you just remove the blossom, the seeds are still there and it prevents it from growing another flower,” said Cloward. Flowers need to be covered or brought indoors when temperatures dip below freezing. For cold nights, Cloward drapes a lightweight frost protection material over outdoor plants. — Reporter: 541-383-0361, mgallagher@bendbulletin.com
Dirty work or dress-up, the sunflower is ready By Michael Tortorello New York Times News Service
NEW YORK — The difference between a vacant lot and a community garden comes down to a single thing: a sunflower. Helianthus annuus is not just a plant but a kind of logo, said Deborah Greig, 30, an urban agriculture coordinator at East New York Farms. She seems to have a knack for brand management. Once you’re shoveling manure, advertising is a logical next step. “They’re a really iconic way to make people notice that you’re trying to make a change in the community,” Greig said. “There’s not a lot of green space in East New York.” The half-acre plot she helps manage, the United Community Centers Youth Farm, lies almost in the shadow of a commuter train stop. The main mission here is to help the neighborhood grow its own nourishing food. But a perimeter of brilliant sunflowers, towering over the cyclone fence, seems to function like commercial signage, she said. The sturdy sunflower does not shrink from a little “hard labor, too,” Greig added. “I think they do some catching of the trash that blows in.” At the South Bronx community garden La Finca del Sur, she said, growers are experimenting with sunflowers in a soil-treatment practice called phytoremediation. In field tests last summer, the plant’s deep taproots seemed to pull heavy metal contaminants like mercury and lead from the garden’s polluted soil. When the sunflower isn’t doing dirty work, it dresses up nicely. This year, Greig and her friend Molly Culver, 31, will include sunflowers in designs for a half-dozen weddings as part of a side business called Molly Oliver Flowers. Many of these blooms will come from the Youth Farm at the High School for Public Service in Brooklyn, where Culver is a manager. “We’re planting around 150, or more, every other week through the end of June,” Culver said. (The farm supplies an on-site market and a cut-flower Community Supported Agriculture operation.) All told, Culver will be raising more than 1,000 sunflowers in the concrete heart of
Brooklyn. As it turns out, this is a perfectly natural place for a sunflower to be. When Greig and Culver — and I — stocked up on sunflower seeds this winter, we were joining a gardening tradition that goes back some 5,000 years. Helianthus annuus is the quintessential American flower. And its path to the garden each year is a kind of tall, shaggy tale, rather like the sunflower stalk itself.
Deep roots Sunflowers are likely the second-oldest domesticated seed crop in eastern North America. (Squash came first.) Archaeological digs in the river valleys of Appalachia (sites with names like Cloudsplitter and Napoleon Hollow) have identified the burned hulls of cultivated sunflower seeds from 4860 BP (or before present). Other sites in Mexico may be older still. New York’s pre-colonial dwellers, the Lenape, likely planted sunflowers at the edges of the maize fields alongside their camps. From the accounts and detailed drawings of European explorers along the Eastern Seaboard, these sunflowers were of the common cultivated variety, macrocarpus. The plants reached seven or eight feet tall and formed a single large head. (Wild sunflowers grow with a branched habit and form numerous smaller heads.)
Sunflowers are likely the second-oldest domesticated seed crop in eastern North America. Archaeological digs in the river valleys of Appalachia have identified the burned hulls of cultivated sunflower seeds from 4860 BP (or before present).
The sunflowers go by names like the Joker (which has a motley ruffle like a fool’s collar), Moulin Rouge (burgundy), Moonshadow (pale) and Kong (which Heaton has grown to 19 feet). And there’s the ProCut line, which might be the hardest-working sunflower in the floral trade. A recent weekday morning found Heaton, 61, puttering around his seedlings. “We typically plant 4,000 or 5,000 different kinds of sunflowers that we breed with different heights, different petal types, different colors and other characteristics,” he said.
New York Times News Service file photo
Any 4-year-old can get a sunflower to grow. Little hands do well with big seeds. But I’m not 4 and I’ve failed at the task plenty of times. So a few weeks ago, I dropped by Red Barn Farm in the St. Croix River Valley of Wisconsin, where Debbie and Jim Barron grow 5,000 sunflowers a year. Or you could say that Debbie grows 5,000 sunflowers a year and Jim grows 120 varieties of
Writing in 1951, the eminent U.S. sunflower taxonomist Charles Heiser Jr. concluded that oil from the crushed seeds “was used chiefly to anoint the hair.” This practice could still be observed in the Iroquoian tribes of Ontario in the 1940s. On other occasions, the seeds “were roasted over a fire, then pounded and cooked with roasted white corn, sweetened with maple sugar and used in somewhat the same way we use lard.” The sunflower packets in the seed rack at the hardware store did not come directly from America’s pre-colonial stock. In the 16th century, the plant began a grand tour of Europe: The Flemish botanist Rembert Dodoens recorded an accurate drawing as early as 1568. In the centuries of European breeding that followed, the sunflower probably learned how to curtsy before royalty and wear a powdered wig and dance a gavotte. It is mostly the repatriated sunflower that we grow today. (Heiser reports that the plant made its homecoming debut in C.W. Dorr’s seed catalog in 1880.) The search for the modern sunflower might lead you to Tom Heaton’s breeding nursery in Woodland, Calif., on the outskirts of Sacramento. Some of the most popular ornamental cultivars came into existence here, and in 100 acres of seed-production fields spread across the valley.
Planting seeds
tomatoes. “He was always against the flowers,” said Debbie Barron, 53. “I thought when the economy went bad, people would want to eat, not buy flowers,” replied Jim Barron, 58. Many of their flowers are pollenless by design. But leave the mammoth, open-pollinated varieties in the yard to set seed and you’ve got a 12-foot-tall bird feeder. Alternately, tie a paper bag on, like a muzzle, to catch the crop. These are the familiar seeds with the bootlegger’s grayand-white pinstripe down the sides. The marking, it seems, is purely ornamental. As Heaton said: “A black sunflower seed hides a lot of blemishes in handling. I think it’s just product presentation: It’s what the customer likes.” Native people would have
found a different shell when they harvested wild seeds to roast, grind into flour and then prepare as “cakes or mush,” Heiser writes. Ultimately, he admits to being baffled by the sunflower’s most enduring mystery. The “hulls of the wild sunflower are very fibrous and probably not very palatable,” he muses. “Although their removal would be a difficult and tedious task.” It’s not hard to imagine the first American gardener, standing at the edge of a meadow while pondering a palmful of sunflower seeds: What could go wrong if I swallowed the shell?
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F6
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
RECIPE FINDER
Editor’s note: The Recipe Finder feature will return. If you are looking for a hard-to-find recipe or can answer a request, write Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, The Baltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder@gmail.com. Names must accompany recipes for them to be published.
Bring clippings from your garden to help you select new plants that will fit right in.
CULINARY SOS
Super charred soup By Noelle Carter
Navigating the nursery
Los Angeles Times (MCT)
Dear SOS: I get to Denver a few times a year, and at Elway’s restaurant in the RitzCarlton, they serve a terrific charred red pepper soup. Can you get the recipe?
Raymond Hom New York Times News Service
Ricard DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times
Charred red pepper soup.
MARTHA STEWART
—Dave Wohl, Sudbury, Mass.
Dear Dave: Elway’s was happy to share its recipe for this flavorful (and completely vegan) charred red pepper soup. I liked adding a little
crumbled fresh cheese for garnish (which makes it not vegan but still vegetarian), but you can top it however you wish.
Elway’s Charred Red Pepper Soup M a k e s 6 to 8 servings. 4 red bell peppers 5 TBS vegetable or canola oil, divided Salt and freshly ground pepper 2 onions 3 lg carrots, chopped
3 lg cloves garlic, coarsely chopped 1 (28-oz) can whole peeled tomatoes 6 C water 3 TBS sherry vinegar, or as desired
Heat the broiler. Core the bell peppers and place them, skin-side up, on a baking sheet. Drizzle over 2 tablespoons oil and season with a generous pinch of salt and pepper. Broil the peppers until they are well-charred but not burnt, 3 to 5 minutes depending on the heat of the broiler. Heat a grill or grill pan over medium-high heat until hot. Meanwhile, peel the onions and halve them lengthwise. Coat the onions with 1 tablespoon canola oil and season with a pinch each of salt and pepper. Grill the onions on all sides until well-charred. Set aside until cool enough to handle, then trim off the root end and coarsely chop the onions. In a large, heavy-bottomed pot, heat the remaining 2 tablespoons of oil over medium-high heat until hot. Add the onions and stir around the pot for a minute to soften, then add the carrots. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the onions are translucent. Stir in 2 teaspoons of salt and one-half teaspoon of pepper, along with the garlic. Continue to cook, stirring frequently, until the carrots are softened slightly and the garlic is aromatic, 1 to 2 minutes. Stir in the tomatoes and peppers. Cook, stirring frequently, for about 10 minutes to develop the flavors. Add the water and bring the soup to a simmer. Reduce the heat to a gentle simmer, loosely cover the pot and cook for 45 minutes. Blend the soup using an immersion blender, or in batches using a stand blender, and strain. Add the sherry vinegar, and season to taste with salt and pepper. This makes a generous 2 quarts of soup. — Adapted from Elway’s at the Ritz-Carlton Denver
S
pring fever can lead to all kinds of impulsiveness, especially at the garden center. With hundreds — maybe thousands — of pretty plants already in bloom and aisles overflowing with new products, it’s easy to get a little carried away. After a winter’s worth of anticipation, it’s hard to avoid walking out with too much (or too little) of what you actually need. The antidote: a few simple strategies that help you size up the inventory with the ease and confidence of a professional. All it takes is some planning and shopping savvy. Armed with these helpful tips, you can head out to your favorite nursery secure in the knowledge that when you return, you’ll have exactly what you need to make your garden grow.
Know before you go A little research and deliberation at home will help make your trip a success (and minimize stress). 1. Take stock, make a list and set a budget. Look around your garden to note plants that are dead or damaged. See how much potting soil, fertilizer and other material you have, checking the expiration dates. Inspect tools and test them, listing items that
need to be replaced or repaired. Last, decide on your budget so you can prioritize. 2. Photograph and measure containers. Place your pots in their garden locations, and then take photographs. Print the photos, and note the diameter and the depth of each pot on the paper. This way, you’ll buy the perfect plants in the right quantities. Determine how much potting soil you’ll need, using an online calculator like the one at jollylane.com/greenhouse/growing-tips/soil-calculators.php. 3. Review last year’s garden. Refresh your memory with photographs you (hopefully) took when the garden was at its best. These images will remind you of lackluster plants you wanted to replace or those that should be moved, divided or added to. If you kept a journal, consult that too. Your experience will inform this year’s gardening. 4. Choose hues. Selecting a color scheme is key when making your choices, particularly for containers. Get inspiration from a famous garden or an unexpected source: a favorite outfit, a painting or a magazine. 5. Bring photos. Most nursery staff can help you find what plant you need, but common names vary from gardener to gardener, as do people’s ways of pronouncing them. If you bring in images of the plants you want, you’ll get an instant identification. Maga-
zines and catalogs are often excellent resources. You can also search online for a specific plant and print a clear image of it. 6. Make a bouquet. As plants wither and die, they leave gaps in the border. Before you go shopping to fill those holes, cut samples of the leaves and flowers that are already established. Tie the clippings together with twine, and take the bouquet with you to the nursery. As you shop, compare your sample with the plants you’re considering and make sure that your selections will work in harmony with your garden’s existing colors and textures.
Make the most of your visit It’s time to put your plan into action. Grab a cart and start shopping, beginning with your highest-priority plants. 1. Assemble your grouping at the nursery. Instead of going back and forth between plants, place the ones you like in your cart as you find them. Make part of the cart your “audition” space, arranging plants as you would in your garden border or container. Whenever you discover interesting new plants, swap them in to see which you like best. 2. Walk the whole store. To create bodacious containers, venture beyond the annuals section. Explore the houseplants, tropicals and succulents.
Look for attractive flowers, fruit, and foliage in perennials, vegetables and herbs. In the woody-plants section you may find dwarf shrubs to add just the right accents for your plantings. Remember, at the end of the season, you can move hardy plants to garden beds, and houseplants can be potted and brought indoors. 3. Try a new plant each year. This is a great time to be a gardener, with hundreds of tempting new species and varieties available. Even if you’re intimidated, increase your confidence and broaden your repertoire by purchasing at least one plant you’ve never tried before. 4. Shop all season. While nurseries are beststocked in spring, they offer plants all season — even all year. Many restock with annuals in July, after earlier plantings have tired. Make a point of browsing at the nursery to become familiar with the offerings. You may even happen upon a sale. 5. Make your own mixes. Many centers fill aisles with large pots brimming with their own colorful combinations. As pretty as they are, there is no reason to buy them (unless you want the container). Economize by finding the plants used, and make your own. — Questions of general interest can be emailed to mslletters@ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.com.
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DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines, $12 or 2 weeks, $20! Ad must include price of single item of $500 or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500.
202
Want to Buy or Rent Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.I buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006 208
Pets & Supplies The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to fraud. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.
AKC German Shepherd Puppies Emily 541-647-8803
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Kahr PM45,compact .45 auto, extra magazine, like new, $850, 541-419-7001 Poodle pups, toy, for SALE. Also Rescued Poodle Adults for adoption, to loving homes. 541-475-3889 Poodles, Apricot, 1st shots, dewormed, $300, 541-977-0035 Pug, AKC, black female, 7 weeks old, $500, 541-598-5375 Queensland Heelers standard & mini,$150 & up. 541-280-1537 http://
rightwayranch.wordpress.com
Rescued adult companion cats FREE to seniors, disabled & veterans! Tame, altered, shots, ID chip, more. Will always take back if circumstances change. Photos, info at www.craftcats.org. F1b Labradoodles $800 541-389-8420, Born 3-26-12. Call 541-647-2181. 541-977-2942 Sat/Sun 1-5, other days by appt. 65480 78th St., Bend.
Felix needs a caring home! Adorable Himalayan, loves people & OK with other cats. Inside only. Found abandoned. Altered, has shots, ID chip. $75 rehoming fee. 647-2181, 389-8420.
Visit our HUGE home decor consignment store. New items arrive daily! 930 SE Textron, Bend 541-318-1501
OREGON’S LARGEST GUN AND KNIFE SHOW
May 19 & 20
Sat 9-6 • Sun 9-4 ADM: $9 www.redeuxbend.com Portland Expo Center I-5 Exit 306B Shirley Temple Col- For Info: 503-363-9564 lectible Dolls (15), wesknodelgunshows.com never been out of box, Rem. auto 12 ga 2 bbls, 541-678-8249. $350. JC Higgins mdl 583-18 16 ga, $150. The Bulletin reserves 541-617-5997. the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin Remington 760 30-06 newspaper onto The Pump, $300; Stirling Bulletin Internet web25 ACP, $125, site. 541-771-5648.
242
Exercise Equipment Free Precor Treadmill, works great! 541-510-6624 245
Remington Model 48, 20 ga, auto, $230; Marlin Model 778 12 ga. VR Pump, $250, 541-771-5648 Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items. Call 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746
Golf Equipment Rescued kittens/cats. 247 65480 78th St., Bend, Sporting Goods Sat/Sun 1-5; other Taylor Made 2.0 Superfast White Driver, 10.5 days by appt. 541- Misc. reg. flex, $100; New 647-2181. Altered, Taylor made Rocket 14’ Army tent w/arctic shots, ID chip, more. balls, 3 wood, stiff Info: 541-389-8420. pkg, all ropes incl, shaft, $125, Taylor Map, photos, more at great cond, all set up, Made Ghost Putter, www.craftcats.org ready to view. $450. $60, 541-420-6613. 541-923-5920/550-9225 Spring is here and so are baby kittens, Cen246 Canvas Cabin tent, tral Ore is in desper15x15, w/wood burnGuns, Hunting ate need of Foster ing stove, used twice, & Fishing parents, very knowl$1300. 541-389-3232 edgable people who can help you with this Beretta 22 target, $325. 255 Moss. 12g home def, process. 541-306Computers $275. 541-647-8931 8462. 541-815-3966
FREE-Young mom calico w/4-week-old female kitten. Mom is litter-box trained and very loving. Bandit, gorgeous, so541-480-7793 cial Snowshoe, found abandoned. Good w/ jbonomo74@gmail.com GSP Pups 2 male 1 fepeople & other cats. CASH!! kodakool1@gmail.com, male Black/white, Inside only. Altered, For Guns, Ammo & $750. 503-566-8105 has shots, ID chip. 210 Reloading Supplies. $75 rehoming fee. Havanese, 2.5 yr. old Furniture & Appliances 541-408-6900. 647-2181, 389-8420. male, not fix, moving must sell, loving comDO YOU HAVE Barn cats ready to work A1 Washers&Dryers panion, great w/kids & SOMETHING TO in your barn, shop or $150 ea. Full warother pets, $300, SELL home in exchange for ranty. Free Del. Also 541-610-2286 or FOR $500 OR safe shelter, food & wanted, used W/D’s 541-788-0771. LESS? water. Altered, shots. 541-280-7355 Non-commercial We deliver! advertisers may 541-389-8420 GENERATE SOME explace an ad citement in your with our Boxer, AKC, pups, born neighborhood! Plan a "QUICK CASH 3/4, $700, awesome garage sale and don't SPECIAL" pups! 541.306.1504 forget to advertise in 1 week 3 lines $12 HAVANESE puppy classified! or AKC, Dewclaws, UTD 541-385-5809. 2 weeks $20! shots/wormer, nonAd must shed, hypoallergenic, Moving sale – lots of include price of $850 541-460-1277. great stuff: Hot single item of $500 Springs Prodigy hot Labradoodles - Mini & or less, or multiple tub, new cover with Boxer/ Bulldog (Valley med size, several colors items whose total lift, excellent condiBulldog) new litter,CKC 541-504-2662 does not exceed tion $3500; Toro Reg., taking deposits. www.alpen-ridge.com $500. Power Clear 180 $700. 541-325-3376 snow blower like new Call Classifieds at Chihuahua Pups, 1 $300; 3-piece lighted 541-385-5809 white female, 1 male, bookcase great con- www.bendbulletin.com $250, 541-536-1955. dition $250; entertainment center with DVD storage good BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS FIND YOUR FUTURE MALTESE PUPS, AKC, condition $150 Search the area’s most toy, champion blood HOME IN THE BULLETIN 541.317.8808 comprehensive listing of lines, All shots, potty classiied advertising... Your future is just a page training started, well Recliner With Ottoreal estate to automotive, socialized, 1-male man, large Stress- away. Whether you’re looking merchandise to sporting avail. now. 1 female & less (Ekornes),beige, for a hat or a place to hang it, goods. Bulletin Classiieds The Bulletin Classiied is 1 male avail June good cond., $500, appear every day in the 21st. 541-233-3534 your best source. 541-383-3786. www.maiasminisupremes.com print or on line. Every day thousands of Call 541-385-5809 Maremma Guard Dog The Bulletin buyers and sellers of goods www.bendbulletin.com pups, purebred, great r ecommends extra and services do business in dogs, $300 each, caution when purthese pages. They know 541-546-6171. chasing products or you can’t beat The Bulletin services from out of Classiied Section for beautiful pupChihuahua Pups, tea- Papillon the area. Sending selection and convenience pies exceptionally wellcup,1st shots, wormed, cash, checks, or - every item is just a phone cared for. Registered, $250,541-977-4686 credit information call away. vet checked. $350may be subjected to $450. 541-367-7766. The Classiied Section is FRAUD. For more easy to use. Every item information about an Pit Bull pups, Adoris categorized and every able, Black w/white advertiser, you may cartegory is indexed on the chests & feet, first call the Oregon section’s front page. shots, 8 weeks, great State Attorney natured parents. $150, General’s Office Whether you are looking for Chi/Pugs (50-50) 1 boy 541-382-3751. Consumer Proteca home or need a service, @$250; 1 girl @$300; tion hotline at your future is in the pages of 2 little girls @$350. People Look for Information 1-877-877-9392. The Bulletin Classiied. Best of both breeds in About Products and one cute pup! No tire kickers/no dog kickers! Services Every Day through The Bulletin Classifieds 541-389-2517
THE BULLETIN requires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer. 260
Misc. Items
Buying Diamonds /Gold for Cash
2 scaffold boards, 16’ and 24’, $200 & $300. SUPER TOP SOIL 541-617-5997 www.hersheysoilandbark.com 4200 watt generator, Screened, soil & compost mixed, no Subaru motor, less rocks/clods. High huthan 100 hours, mus level, exc. for Homelite, $350. flower beds, lawns, 541-388-1781/771-8791 gardens, straight 265 screened top soil. Bark. Clean fill. DeBuilding Materials liver/you haul. 541-548-3949. 32’x44’ Doug fir custom made log shell, $39,500 270 obo. Vacation prop avail Lost & Found at Lake Billy Chinook. 541-595-0246 FOUND computer Bend Habitat charger. RESTORE 541-771-2500. Building Supply Resale Found male, not neuQuality at LOW tered orange striped PRICES cat, friendly, about 1 740 NE 1st year. on Smith Rock 541-312-6709 Way 541-548-4674. Open to the public. Found on 5/10 in morning, large item in Closing Sale middle of Butler Mkt Discounts, Lumber, Rd. and Hamehook Hardware, Fixtures Rd. Call to identify. & Trucks,Backstrom 541-410-8866 or Builders CenterMon541-389-6220. Fri 7-5, Sat. 8-2. 224 NE Thurstone, Bend Found wedge, Greens 541-382-6861 at Redmond golf course, call to I.D. 541-388-1533 Sisters Habitat ReStore Building Supply Resale REMEMBER: If you Quality items. have lost an animal, LOW PRICES! don't forget to check 150 N. Fir. The Humane Society 541-549-1621 in Bend 541-382-3537 Open to the public. Redmond, 541-923-0882 266 Prineville, Heating & Stoves 541-447-7178; OR Craft Cats, NOTICE TO 541-389-8420. ADVERTISER Since September 29, Just too many 1991, advertising for collectibles? used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been Sell them in certified by the Or- The Bulletin Classiieds egon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the fed541-385-5809 eral Environmental Protection Agency 286 (EPA) as having met Sales Northeast Bend smoke emission standards. A certified woodstove may be HH FREE HH identified by its certification label, which is Garage Sale Kit permanently attached Place an ad in The Bulletin for your gato the stove. The Bulrage sale and reletin will not knowceive a Garage Sale ingly accept advertisKit FREE! ing for the sale of uncertified KIT INCLUDES: woodstoves. • 4 Garage Sale Signs 267
Saxon’s Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655
Fuel & Wood
BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191.
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD...
BUYING & SELLING All gold jewelry, silver and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, class rings, sterling silver, coin collect, vintage watches, dental gold. Bill Fleming, 541-382-9419.
Kenmore beltless upright vacuum cleaner. Rarely used. All attachments and manual. $100. Contact 541-318-7279.
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’ • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species and cost per cord to better serve our customers.
• $1.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For “Garage Sale Success!” • And Inventory Sheet PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at
1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702
269
Gardening Supplies & Equipment
Stepping Stones, 16x16x2, 100 at $2/ea OBO, 541-306-8631.
For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800 To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 or email
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Farm Market
9 7 7 0 2 Employment
300 400 308
Farm Equipment & Machinery
421
Schools & Training
TRUCK SCHOOL John Deere Model 40 1955, nearly 100% Orig, runs good, exc. tin, 3 point hitch, hydraulics, light, $2000, 541-504-2891 or 541-977-3120
www.IITR.net Redmond Campus Student Loans/Job Waiting Toll Free 1-888-438-2235 454
Looking for Employment
Wanted Used Farm Current COCC 4.0 GPA Equipment & Machingraduate in Bus. Adery. Looking to buy, or ministration/Accountconsign of good used ing, looking for entryquality equipment. level bookkeeping or management position. Deschutes Valley 541-610-7040. Equipment 541-548-8385 325
Hay, Grain & Feed
470
Domestic & In-Home Positions
1st quality grass hay for horses. Barn stored, no Full-time live in caregiver wanted for Eldrain, 2nd cutting, $220/ ton. Patterson Ranch, erly man, room & Sisters, 541-549-3831 board + salary. 541-554-2149. 3A Livestock Supplies •Panels •Gates •Feeders 476 Now galvanized! •6-Rail 12’ panels, $101 Employment •6-Rail 16’ panels, $117 Opportunities Custom sizes available 541-475-1255 Want to buy Alfalfa CAUTION READERS: standing, in Central Ore. 541-419-2713 Ads published in "Employment OpportuniWheat Straw: Certified & ties" include emBedding Straw & Garden ployee and Straw;Compost.546-6171 independent positions. Ads for posiFind exactly what tions that require a fee you are looking for in the or upfront investment must be stated. With CLASSIFIEDS any independent job opportunity, please Looking for your investigate thoroughly. next employee?
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme caution when responding to ANY online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws: Oregon Bureau of Labor & Industry, Civil Rights Division, 971-673-0764
345 If you have any quesHUGE MOVING SALE tions, concerns or FRI. & SAT. 5/18-19, Livestock & Equipment comments, contact: 9-5. Home decor Kevin O’Connell items, sports equip. Beef Feeder Steers, Classified Department healthy, wormed & stock tank and gates, Manager vaccinated, call some tack, radial arm The Bulletin 541-382-8393. saw, table saw, 541-383-0398 Nascar memorabilia Simco 17” roping and much much more. saddle, $375. 26100 Horsell Rd. (In 541-447-4576 Alfalfa)- it’s worth the drive look for signs. . 358 AV Tech - Swank Audio Visuals is seeking Farmers Column a PT Audio Visual Technician in Sunri10X20 STORAGE ver. For more inforBUILDINGS mation or to apply for protecting hay, please visit firewood, livestock www.swankav.com etc. $1496 Installed. Become a 541-617-1133. Team Member. EOE CCB #173684. kfjbuilders@ykwc.net Find them in Take care of Horse Pasture for rent, 2.5 acres, irrigated The Bulletin your investments w/cover, $369 for with the help from Classiieds! season, Redmond. 541-610-4006. The Bulletin’s “Call A Service Want to buy Alfalfa standing, in Central Professional” Directory Ore. 541-419-2713
Garage Sales
Need:2 Used 8-10’ steel pipe for gate posts, 4-6”, square,548-9619
Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi audio & studio equip. McIntosh, JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808
O r e g o n
Garage Sales
Garage Sales
541-385-5809
G2 TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
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THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Edited by Will Shortz
PLACE AN AD
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Noon Sat. Tuesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Noon Mon. Wednesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Tues. Thursday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Wed. Friday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate . . . . . . . . . . . .11:00 am Fri. Saturday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3:00 Fri. Sunday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Sat. Starting at 3 lines
Place a photo in your private party ad for only $15.00 per week.
*UNDER $500 in total merchandise
OVER $500 in total merchandise
7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days ................................................ $16.00
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(call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. SATURDAY by telephone 10:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
*Must state prices in ad
is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
PLEASE NOTE: Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday. 476
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Apt./Multiplex Redmond
Houses for Rent NE Bend
Banking Branch Manager
John Day, Oregon Advanced knowledge & experience in finance & operations. See Old West Federal Credit Unions website for job description & online application. www.oldwestfcu.org
EOE DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW?
Nurse Practitioners Part Time (24 hours per week) position available at our On-Site Chronic Disease Management Clinic Located in Bend, OR. • Must by proficient in Phlebotomy • Must be licensed as a Nurse Practitioner and in the state of Oregon. • Must have Two - Five years of professional clinical experience. Contact Genni Fairchild at 704-529-6161 for more info. Please fax to 704-323-7931 or email to genni.fairchild@healthstatinc.c om
Powell Butte Community Charter School has an opening for a primary elementary certified teacher with 541-385-5809. a self-contained enVIEW the dorsement and a Classifieds at: strong science backwww.bendbulletin.com ground. Please visit www.powellbutteCheck out the charterschool.org to classiieds online apply. All applications www.bendbulletin.com are due 12:00 noon, Friday, May 18th. Updated daily Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day!
Medical Assistant Remember.... Experience required. Add your web adWe are looking for a dress to your ad and energetic dependable readers on The and outgoing person Bulletin' s web site to join our team. We will be able to click offer a superior salary, through automatically excellent benefit to your site. package and a four day work week. Typing and computer FIND YOUR FUTURE skills beneficial. Dermatology experience HOME IN THE BULLETIN a plus. Outstanding Your future is just a page patient care, team away. Whether you’re looking player and attention to for a hat or a place to hang it, detail a must. PosiThe Bulletin Classiied is tion involves a variyour best source. ety of job duties in a fast paced work enviEvery day thousands of ronment. Fax your buyers and sellers of goods resume with a cover and services do business in letter to 541-323-2174 these pages. They know or email you can’t beat The Bulletin jodi@centraloregonClassiied Section for dermatology.com. selection and convenience No phone calls - every item is just a phone please. call away.
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence ixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you’ll ind professional help in The Bulletin’s “Call a Service Professional” Directory
The Classiied Section is easy to use. Every item is categorized and every cartegory is indexed on the section’s front page.
Resort
Join our team at Central Oregon’s Finest Resort. The Ranch has the following current positions available:
GOLF SHOP
•Administrative/ Merchandising Assistant -Full-Time positionBenefit Eligible
GLAZE MEADOW SPA • Nail Technician Seasonal (Correction from Sunday, May 13, 2012 publication)
500
LODGE & ROBERT’S PUB
Loans & Mortgages
SNACK SHOPS •Grill Cooks -all shifts
SPECIAL EVENTS •Servers
LAKESIDE BISTRO
•Attendants
All F & B positions require a food handlers card (OLCC is required for servers). Excellent seasonal benefits. Apply online at http://www.jobs@bla ckbutteranch.com or contact HR at 541-595-1523. Black Butte Ranch is a drug-free workplace. EOE
The position offers a competitive compensation package including benefits, and rewards an aggressive, customer focused salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Please send your resume, cover letter and salary history to: Sean L. Tate Advertising Manager state@bendbulletin.com You may also drop off your resume in person or mail it to: 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97701. No phone inquiries please. EOE / Drug Free Workplace
528
WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392. LOCAL MONEY:We buy secured trust deeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13. 573
Business Opportunities Good classiied ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view - not the seller’s. Convert the facts into beneits. Show the reader how the item will help them in some way.
Retail Sales Design Oriented
Advertising Account Executive
The Bulletin is looking for a professional and driven sales and marketing person to help our customers grow their businesses with an expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of media sales experience is preferable, but we will train the right candidate.
Finance & Business
FACILITIES
•AM/PM Servers •Line Cooks Glaze Meadow & Big Meadow
Furniture Outlet, part-time, experience is helpful. Serious applicants with professional appearance apply in person at: 1735 NE Hwy 20, Bend. SALES - RAISE $ FOR THE POOR. Redmond phone center, up to $12/hr for qualified indidividuals. No cold calls. Mark, 503-257-0100
600
1811 SW 21st Quiet spacious 2/2 duplex, gorgeous fenced yard w/garage. Mint cond! W/S/G pd, pet ok. $715. 541-409-2175
630
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales
Rooms for Rent Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro & fridge. Utils & linens. New owners.$145-$165/wk 541-382-1885 634
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
Safely select, evaluate, finance & succeed in a Franchise Business. www.frannet.com/msipe 541-610-5799 Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Get your business
GROWIN
Find them in The Bulletin Classiieds
541-385-5809 Alpine Meadows Townhomes
•Night Full-Time Janitorial Staff
Whether you are looking for a home or need a service, your future is in the pages of The Bulletin Classiied.
541-385-5809
The Bulletin Recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to FRAUD. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.
Rentals
1, 2 & 3 bdrm apts. Starting at $625. 541-330-0719
648
Houses for Rent General
Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.
PREPRESS TECHNICIAN The Bulletin is seeking a part time Prepress Technician to work weekend evening shifts. Familiarity with CMYK prepress workflows preferred, and a fundamental proficiency using Macintosh and PC operating systems is a must. This is a part time position with benefits. The Bulletin is a drug free workplace and is an equal opportunity employer. Send a resume with qualifications, skills, experience and a past employment history to The Bulletin, attention: James Baisinger, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 by end of day 5/18/12.
652
Houses for Rent NW Bend
Alfalfa area, 2BR, 1 BA on 2 fenced ac. Quiet; Clean small 2 bdrm. Large yard. Wood pets considered. $750 heat. $750+ last + + last + dep. ReferClose in 2 bdrm, 1 bath dep. Local ref. No ences. 541-383-9074 WSG, yard maint. incl. pets. 1015 NW Ogden. PUBLISHER'S No smoking/No pets. NOTICE $725 per mo. with Say “goodbuy” All real estate adverdep. 541-382-0088 tising in this newspato that unused Call for Specials! per is subject to the item by placing it in Limited numbers avail. Fair Housing Act 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. which makes it illegal The Bulletin Classiieds W/D hookups, patios to advertise "any or decks. preference, limitation MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-385-5809 or discrimination 541-383-9313 based on race, color, Professionally religion, sex, handi656 managed by Norris & cap, familial status, Houses for Rent Stevens, Inc. marital status or naSW Bend tional origin, or an inPilot Butte Village 55+ tention to make any senior retirement such preference, 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, W/D, community rentals. fenced yard, clublimitation or discrimiCall 541-388-1239 house & pool, $1000/ nation." Familial stacascadiapropertymgmt.com mo., 12 mo lease, tus includes children SPRING IN FOR A 503-798-1595. under the age of 18 GREAT DEAL!! living with parents or 658 $299 1st months rent! ** legal custodians, 2 bdrm, 1 bath pregnant women, and Houses for Rent $530 & 540 people securing cusRedmond Carports & A/C incl! tody of children under Fox Hollow Apts. 18. This newspaper Terrebonne remodeled (541) 383-3152 will not knowingly ac3 bedroom, 1 bath, Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co cept any advertising garage, fenced back *Upstairs only with lease* for real estate which is yard. Pets considered. in violation of the law. 636 $795 + last and deOur readers are posit. 541-420-9432. Apt./Multiplex NW Bend hereby informed that all dwellings adver659 Fully furnished loft Apt tised in this newspaHouses for Rent on Wall Street in per are available on Bend, with parking. All Sunriver an equal opportunity utilities paid. Call basis. To complain of 541-389-2389 for appt discrimination call In River Meadows a 3 bdrm, 1.5 bath, 1376 HUD toll-free at 638 sq. ft., woodstove, 1-800-877-0246. The Apt./Multiplex SE Bend brand new carpet/oak toll free telephone floors, W/S pd, $895. number for the hearA Sharp Clean 2 bdrm, 541-480-3393 ing impaired is 1.5 bath apt., NEW or 541-610-7803 1-800-927-9275. CARPETS, neutral colors, great storage, Call The Bulletin At 682 private patio, no pets/ 541-385-5809 Farms, Ranches smoking, $530 incl. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail & Acreage W/S/G, 541-633-0663 At: www.bendbulletin.com 640 Tumalo 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 650 2000 sw.ft. home with Apt./Multiplex SW Bend Houses for Rent horse property. Large arena- barn houses NE Bend Spacious 2 bdrm 1½ 72x180 indoor arena, bath townhouse, w/d 25 stalls, 2 offices, 2 hkup, fenced yd. NO A quiet newer 3 bdrm, tack rooms, guest PETS. Great loc! 2.5 bath, 1692 sq.ft., quarters, exercise $565 & up. 179 SW mtn views. dbl. garoom, game room & Hayes 541-382-0162; rage w/opener. $1195 viewing area w/ bar. 541-420-0133 541-480-3393,610-7803. Large outdoor arena Paddocks w/horse safe fencing & shelters, beautiful pond. $3000/mo. 541-327-8100
G
with an ad in The Bulletin’s “Call A Service Professional” Directory
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com, currently receiving over 1.5 million page views, every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
687
AVAILABLE BEND AREA RENTALS
Commercial for Rent/Lease
•Spacious 2 Bdrm/1 Bath SE Duplexes - Sgl. ga- Office/Warehouse lorage. Large fenced back deck. All new appl. carcated in SE Bend. Up pet, paint. W/D hook-ups. No pets. $695 WST. to 30,000 sq.ft., com•3 Bdrm/1.5 Bath Close to River/Downtown petitive rate, Townhome style in quad. Back deck + extra stor541-382-3678. age. W/D Hook-ups. Prefer no pets. $750 WST. •3 Bdrm/2.5 Bath Townhome near Bend HS New The Bulletin is your carpet, paint. Fenced back yard. Sgl. garage. W/D Hook-ups. No pets. 1288 sq. ft. $775 WS Employment •2 Bdrm /1.75 Bath Duplex. Great NW Location 1 block from river. Huge screened in back Marketplace porch. Split level. Gas fireplace. W/D hookups. Sgl. garage. $775. WS Call •3 Bdrm/2 Bath NE Home - Sgl. garage. Covered back porch with mtn. views. Open field in back. Fenced back yard. W/D hookups. End of 541-385-5809 cul-de-sac. $850. to advertise. •Newer 3 Bdrm/2.5 Bath NE home. Just off Hwy 20. Fenced, natural back yard. Double garage. Tenant provides own fridge. GFA heat. 1719 www.bendbulletin.com sq.ft. $1025 mo. *** FOR ADDITIONAL PROPERTIES *** CALL 541-382-0053 &/or Stop By the Office at 587 NE Greenwood, Bend
Real Estate For Sale
Boats & RV’s
700 800 740
850
Condo/Townhomes for Sale
Snowmobiles
Polaris 2003, 4 cycle, fuel inj, elec start, reSplendid View, Furverse, 2-up seat, nished, 1 bdrm, 2 bath cover, 4900 mi, $2500 condo, $85,000. obo. 541-280-0514 Fronts on River, scenic balcony vistas. All 860 utilitiess. paid. including cable tv, internet, Motorcycles & Accessories 541-326-7063 after 6 pm. Harley Davidson SoftTail Deluxe 2007, 745 white/cobalt, w/passenger kit, Vance & Homes for Sale Hines muffler system & kit, 1045 mi., exc. 4270 sq ft, 6bd, 6ba, cond, $19,999, 4-car, corner, .83 ac, 541-389-9188. mtn view, by owner. $590,000 541-390-0886 Harley Heritage See: bloomkey.com/8779 Softail, 2003 $5,000+ in extras, BANK OWNED HOMES! $2000 paint job, FREE List w/Pics! 30K mi. 1 owner, www.BendRepos.com bend and beyond real estate For more information 20967 yeoman, bend or please call 541-385-8090 or 209-605-5537 Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the HD FAT BOY help of a professional 1996 Completely rebuilt/ from The Bulletin’s customized, low “Call A Service miles. Accepting ofProfessional” Directory fers. 541-548-4807
NOTICE: HONDA CRF 250X All real estate adver2006, senior citizen tised here in is subbought new in 2007, ject to the Federal trail riding only in Fair Housing Act, Camp Sherman, low which makes it illegal hours, not ridden last to advertise any prefyear, JD jetting kit, radiator & trans. guards, erence, limitation or exc. cond., $3200 discrimination based OBO, 541-595-2559 on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly Honda Shadow Arrow accept any advertis2006, exlnt cond, low ing for real estate mi, always garaged, which is in violation of $3900. 541-420-4869 this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportuHonda VT700 nity basis. The BulleShadow 1984, 23K, tin Classified many new parts, battery charger, 750 good condition, $3000 OBO. Redmond Homes 541-382-1891 Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
865
ATVs
Yamaha YFZ450 Sport Quad, 2005, new pipe & jet kit, too much to list, fast, fun bike, $3200 obo. 541-647-8931 870
Boats & Accessories
12.6’ Smoker Craft ‘92, 15HP Evinrude ‘95; 30# thrust MinnKota 773 trolling motor, all perf. cond.!!! E-Z Load Acreages trailer, Hummingbird fish finder, oars, rod *** holders, seats, 2 anCHECK YOUR AD chors & boat cover. Please check your ad $2450obo. 541-408 5256 on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes instructions over the phone are misunderstood and an error can occur in your ad. If this happens to your 12’ alum. Sea King with ad, please contact us NEW: seats, cover, 6hp the first day your ad Nissan 4-stroke; also appears and we will trolling, fish finder, trlr. be happy to fix it as $1500. 541-312-4504 soon as we can. Deadlines are: Week- 12' Smokercraft days 11:00 noon for 2000 & trailer. 2007 next day, Sat. 11:00 9.9 HP Johnson a.m. for Sunday and w/less than 5 hrs Monday. use, Exc. shape. 541-385-5809 $3200, Call Thank you! 360-903-7873 to The Bulletin Classified view. In town. ***
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012 G3
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Boats & Accessories
Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
Antique & Classic Autos
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Companion 19’ Ads published in the Gulfstream Scenic Kit Sundance 29’ 2009, 2001, A/C, mirco, Escaper 29’ 1991, "Boats" classification Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, with 3 slides, super 2 slides, A/C, $7000, 541-447-0706. include: Speed, fishCummins 330 hp dieChevy 3/4 ton 4x4, clean. $29,950; also elec/gas fridge, walk sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 ing, drift, canoe, 1995, extended cab, 2008 Dodge 250 around queen bed, in. kitchen slide out, SPRINGDALE 2005 house and sail boats. Chrysler SD 4-Door long box, grill guard, diesel, hitch, brakes, elec. front jacks, new tires,under cover, For all other types of 27’, has eating area 1930, CDS Royal running boards, bed additional $31,500, $4000 OBO, hwy. miles only,4 door watercraft, please see slide, A/C and heat, Standard, 8-cylinder, rails & canopy, 178K exc. cond., 541-382-8939 or fridge/freezer iceClass 875. new tires, all conLincoln Mark IV, 1972, miles, $4800 obo. body is good, needs 541-610-5178 541-777-0999. maker, W/D combo, 541-385-5809 tents included, bedneeds vinyl top, runs 208-301-3321 (Bend) some restoration, Interbath tub & ding towels, cooking good, $3500. runs, taking bids, 885 shower, 50 amp proand eating utensils. 541-771-4747 541-383-3888, Need help ixing stuff? Canopies & Campers pane gen & more! Great for vacation, 541-815-3318 A Project: 1971 21’ Fi$55,000. fishing, hunting or Call A Service Professional berform, cabin style, For sale or trade to541-948-2310 living! $15,500 Look at: i nd the help you need. good 2 axle trailer, wards 24’-26’ trailer 541-408-3811 Bendhomes.com with slide. Lance $450 OBO, www.bendbulletin.com 16’ Driftboat, like new Squire 9’10” cabover, for Complete Listings of Fleetwood Wilderness 541-382-2577 cond., lots of upgrades, ‘96, elec. jacks, solar Area Real Estate for Sale 36’ 2005 4 slides, rear Plymouth Barracuda Dodge 1500 2001 4x4 6 HP LS motor, $6500, GENERATE SOME ex- Hunter’s Delight! Packpanel, 2-dr refrig, bdrm, fireplace, AC, age deal! 1988 Wincitement in your neig1966, original car! 300 call/text, 541-480-8075. sport, red, loaded, freezer, awning, outW/D hkup beautiful nebago Super Chief, borhood. Plan a gahp, 360 V8, centerrollbar, AND 2011 door shower, exc. unit! $30,500. 17' Lowe 1994, 60HP 38K miles, great rage sale and don't lines, (Original 273 cond, $7000 obo. Moped Trike used 3 541-815-2380 Mercury 4-stroke, shape; 1988 Bronco II forget to advertise in eng & wheels incl.) 541-549-1342 months, street legal. electric troll motor, 4x4 to tow, 130K Springdale 29’ 2007, classified! 385-5809. 541-593-2597 call 541-433-2384 slide,Bunkhouse style, GPS fishfinder, 3 Lance 9.5’ 1994, X-cab mostly towed miles, 933 sleeps 7-8, excellent camper, sleeps 5, A/C, FIAT 1800 1978 5-spd, batteries, two gas nice rig! $15,000 both. condition, $16,900, furnace/catylitic heater, tanks, trailer w/spare. 541-382-3964, leave door panels w/flowers Pickups fantastic fan, in/outside 541-390-2504 $7000 541-389-7535 Merc standard shaft 7½ msg. & hummingbirds, showers, manual jacks, white soft top & hard hp outbrd mtr. Best 19.5’ 1988 373V very good cond., top, Reduced! $5,500. Komfort 24’ 1999, 6’ CAN’T BEAT THIS! offer. 541-416-0758 Ranger Bass Boat, $5500, 541-408-0538 541-317-9319 or slide, fully loaded,never Look before you Mercury 115 Motor, or 541-408-3118. Dodge 3500 2007 Quad used since buying, 541-647-8483 buy, below market Used out-drive Ranger trailer, trolling Cab SLT 4x4, 6.7L $8500, 541-923-0854. Lance-Legend value ! Size & mile990 elec. motor, fish finder parts - Mercury Cummins 6-spd AT, age DOES matter, 11’3" 1998, w/ext-cab, & sonor, 2 live wells & OMC rebuilt maafter-market upgrades, Chevy 1500 Z71 1994, Class A 32’ Hurri- Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 exc. cond., generator, all accessories, new Montana 34’ 2003, rine motors: 151 superb truck, call for 5.7 V8, New tires, cane by Four Winds, 29’, weatherized, like solar-cell, large refrig, batteries & tires, great details, $28,000 OBO. 2 slides, exc. cond. $1595; 3.0 $1895; 120K miles, $3200. 2007. 12,500 mi, all cond., $6500. new, furnished & AC, micro., magic fan, 541-385-5682 throughout, arctic 4.3 (1993), $1995. 541-279-8013 amenities, Ford V10, 541-923-6555. ready to go, incl Winebathroom shower, lthr, cherry, slides, 541-389-0435 winter pkg., new gard Satellite dish, removable carpet, Ford Galaxie 500 1963, like new, can see 10-ply tires, W/D $26,995. 541-420-9964 custom windows, out- 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, Need to get an ad anytime, $58,000. 875 ready, $23,000, 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & door shower/awning 541-548-5216 in ASAP? 541-948-5793 set-up for winterizing, radio (orig),541-419-4989 Watercraft Ford F150 2006, elec. jacks, CD/ste- Ford Mustang Coupe crew cab, 1 owner, reo/4’ stinger. $9000. Ads published in "Wa79,000 miles, 1966, original owner, Fax it to 541-322-7253 Bend, 541.279.0458 tercraft" include: Kay19-ft Mastercraft ProV8, automatic, great $13,900. Weekend Warrior Toy aks, rafts and motorStar 190 inboard, shape, $9000 OBO. The Bulletin Classiieds 541-408-2318. Hauler 28’ 2007,Gen, ized personal 1987, 290hp, V8, 822 530-515-8199 fuel station, exc cond. watercrafts. For Autos & hrs, great cond, lots of sleeps 8, black/gray "boats" please see Monaco Dynasty 2004, extras, $10,000 obo. Transportation interior, used 3X, MONTANA 3585 2008, Class 870. loaded, 3 slides, 541-231-8709 $24,999. exc. cond., 3 slides, $159,000, 541-923- 8572 541-385-5809 541-389-9188 king bed, lrg LR, Arcor 541-749-0037 (cell) tic insulation, all options $37,500. Looking for your 541-420-3250 next employee? Place a Bulletin help 908 wanted ad today and 19’ Glass Ply, Merc reach over 60,000 Aircraft, Parts cruiser, depth finder, 1000 1000 1000 readers each week. National Sea Breeze & Service trolling motor, trailer, Your classified ad 2004 M-1341 35’, gas, Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices $3500, 541-389-1086 Inflatable Raft,Sevylor g will also appear on 2 power slides, upor 541-419-8034. Fishmaster 325,10’3”, 389-0123, Fax (541) bendbulletin.com graded queen matLEGAL NOTICE Pilgrim 27’, 2007 5th complete pkg., $650 389-1549, or email at Prequalification is a which currently retress, hyd. leveling CITY OF BEND wheel, 1 slide, AC, Firm, 541-977-4461. admin@plansonfile.co requirement. Bidders ceives over 1.5 milsystem, rear camera Collection Line TV,full awning, excelm. Bidders are remust have a prequalilion page views ev& monitor, only 6k mi. Rehabilitation - Watson lent shape, $23,900. 20.5’ 2004 Bayliner sponsible for making fication approval letery month at no A steal at $43,000! Area Improvements 541-350-8629 205 Run About, 220 sure they have all adter from ODOT or the extra cost. Bulletin 541-480-0617 SW11EA 1/3 interest in ColumHP, V8, open bow, denda before submitCity of Bend on file Classifieds Get Rebia 400, located at RV CONSIGNMENTS TURN THE PAGE exc. cond., very fast ting bids. with City at the time sults! Call 385-5809 NOTICE OF Sunriver. $138,500. Kayak, Eddyline WANTED w/very low hours, the bids are opened. or place your ad For More Ads INVITATION TO BID Call 541-647-3718 Sandpiper, 12’, like We Do The Work, You lots of extras incl. A mandatory Pre-Bid Prequalification forms on-line at new, $975, The Bulletin Keep The Cash, 1/3 interest in welltower, Bimini & Conference will be may be obtained from bendbulletin.com The City of Bend in541-420-3277. On-Site Credit equipped IFR Beech custom trailer, held on May 24, 2012, Gwen Chapman at vites sealed Bids for Approval Team, Bonanza A36, lo$19,500. at 11:00 AM at the 541-385-6677. New construction to reha882 880 Web Site Presence, cated KBDN. $55,000. 541-389-1413 Council Chambers at applications for the bilitate approximately Fifth Wheels We Take Trade-Ins. 541-419-9510 Motorhomes Bend City Hall, 710 City of Bend prequali7,000 lineal feet of Free Advertising. NW Wall Street, fication must be delivsanitary sewer pipeBIG COUNTRY RV Bend, Oregon. An opered to: City of Bend lines through the Bend 541-330-2495 tional project site visit Purchasing, 710 NW trenchless technoloRegal Prowler AX6 ExRedmond: 541-548-5254 will take place immeWall St, Bend, Orgies application of treme Edition 38’ ‘05, 20.5’ Seaswirl Spydiately following the egon 97701 at least slip-lining and pipe 4 slides,2 fireplaces, all der 1989 H.O. 302, pre-bid meeting. five days before the bursting. Work is to maple cabinets, king 285 hrs., exc. cond., bid deadline. Alpha “See Ya” 30’ 1969 Cesena 182 0520include residential size bdrm./bed sepastored indoors for 2002 Country Coach 1996, 2 slides, A/C, P-Ponk, 3BLD Stol, service line reconnec- The deadline for subrated w/sliding glass dr, life $11,900 OBO. Intrigue 40' Tag axle. mitting bids is: June 6, This project is subject nice panel, $70,000, heat pump, exc. cond. tions and the installaloaded,always garaged, 541-379-3530 400hp Cummins Die541-884-6567 or 2012, at 2:00 PM. to the provisions of for Snowbirds, solid tion, replacement, or only lived in 3 mo., sel. Two slide-outs. Southwind 35.5’ Triton, 541-881-1519 pm. Bids will be opened ORS 279C.800 oak cabs day & night brand new $54,000,still rehabilitation of 37 41,000 miles. Most 2008,V10, 2 slides, Duand read at Bend City through 279C.870 reshades, Corian, tile, like new only $28,500 concrete manholes. 916 options. $110,000 pont UV coat, 7500 mi. Hall Council Chamgarding payment of hardwood. $12,750. OBO, will deliver, Cory, Avg NADA ret.114,343; OBO 541-678-5712 Trucks & 541-580-7334 bers (located on 1st prevailing wages. 541-923-3417. The invitation to bid, asking $104,000. Floor) immediately plans, specifications, Heavy Equipment Call 541-923-2774 after the deadline. Published May 15, 2012 addenda, planholders Bids must be physilist, mandatory pre-bid 25’ Catalina Sailboat cally received by the Gwen Chapman attendees, and notifi1983, w/trailer, swing City at the location Purchasing Manager cation of bid results keel, pop top, fully listed below by the for this project may be loaded, $9500 call for Beaver Patriot 2000, deadline. No faxed or viewed, printed or orCarri-Lite Luxury 2009 Road Ranger 1985, PUBLIC NOTICE details, 541-480-8060 Walnut cabinets, soelectronic (email) bids The Four Rivers Vecdered on line from by Carriage, 4 slide24', catalytic & A/C, 1982 INT. Dump w/Arlar, Bose, Corian, tile, Winnebago Outlook 32’ shall be accepted. Central Oregon Buildouts, inverter, sateltor Control district will fully self-contained, 4 door fridge., 1 slide, 2008, Ford V10 eng, borhood, 6k on rebuilt ers Exchange at lite sys, fireplace, 2 be flying a helicopter $2795. 541-389-8315 W/D. $75,000 Wineguard sat, TV, surSealed bids shall be 392, truck refurbished, http://www.plansonflat screen TVs. on Tuesday, May 15th round sound stereo + 541-215-5355 delivered to: Gwen has 330 gal. water file.com by clicking on $60,000. and Wednesday May Snowbird by Nu-Wa more. Reduced to Kim, Chapman, Purchastank w/pump & hose. "Public Works 541-480-3923 16th between 6:00 1999, 2 slides, lot of $49,000. 541-526-1622 When the next estate Coachman ing Manager, City Everything works, Projects" and then on a.m. & 7:00 p.m., apextras, $9800; also sale has worn you Hall, Administrative Reduced - now $5000 881 "City of Bend" or in plying a biological 2005 Dodge 3500 Freelander 2011, COACHMAN 1997 out, take a chance. Office, 2nd floor, 710 OBO. 541-977-8988 person at 1902 NE mosquito control Dually 4x4 Cummins Travel Trailers 27’, queen bed, 1 Catalina 5th wheel They say Columbus Wall Street, Bend, 4th St, Bend, Oregon. product called B.T.I., 5.9, HD, 22k mi., extra 23’, slide, new tires, slide, HD TV, DVD did, and look what he Oregon 97701 or 40 gal tank, tool box, to the Marshes along extra clean, below player, 450 Ford, Jayco Eagle 2000 26’, found - a whole new mailed to her at: City Entities intending to $26,900; both in exc. the Little Deschutes 14’ slide, awning, air, book. $6,500. world. You just might $49,000, please of Bend, PO Box 431, bid should register cond. 503-307-8455 in River from Burgess heat, gently used. 928-345-4731 do the same. Give me call 541-923-5754. Bend, Oregon 97709. Prineville with the Central Or$12,000. 541-595-2003 Road to Sunriver and a call. --Steve The outside of the enegon Builders Exthe Marshes along the Peterbilt 359 potable velope or box conchange as a planBig Deschutes River; water truck, 1990, taining the bid shall holder in order to from State Rec. Road 3200 gal. tank, 5hp include the bidders receive addenda. This to Benham Falls Day pump, 4-3" hoses, name and be marked: can be done on-line or use area. The prodcamlocks, $25,000. Collection Line Rehaby contacting Central uct poses no danger 541-820-3724 bilitation - Watson Oregon Builders Exto humans, pets, fish, Area Improvementschange at: (541) or birds. Call 541-385-5809 to promote your service • Advertise for 28 days starting at $140 (This special package is not available on our website) THRUCKS ‘85 InterSW11EA. national 10 Wheel 1000 1000 1000 46,000 GVW,‘89 GMC 30,000 GVW, ‘91 Ford Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Building/Contracting Handyman Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care 33,000 GVW, ‘01 Frieghtliner 33,000 GVW LEGAL NOTICE OREGON NOTICE: Oregon state ERIC REEVE HANDY NOTICE: Maverick Landscaping All Dump Flatbed. Mowing, weedeating, TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Landscape Contraclaw requires anySERVICES. Home & Backstrom Builders yard detailing, chain T.S. No.: T10-67411-OR tors Law (ORS 671) one who contracts Commercial Repairs, Center 541-382-6861 saw work & more! requires all busifor construction work Carpentry-Painting, LCB#8671 541-923-4324 Reference is made to that certain deed made by, SHAUN M BENKOVER nesses that advertise to be licensed with the Spring Clean up. Pressure-washing, 925 AND JEANNE S BENKOVER as Grantor to AMERITITLE, as trustee, in to perform LandConstruction ConBi-weekly & monthly Holmes Landscape Maint Honey Do's. On-time favor of SOUTH VALLEY BANK & TRUST, as Beneficiary, dated scape Construction tractors Board (CCB). maint., debris hauling, promise. Senior Utility Trailers • Clean-up • Aerate 05-12-2005, recorded 05-17-2005, in official records of DESCHUTES which includes: An active license property clean-up, Discount. Work guar• De-thatch • Free Est. County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. - at page No. -, fee/ file/ instruplanting, decks, means the contractor bark decoration. anteed. 541-389-3361 • Weekly / Bi-wkly Svc. ment/ microfile/ reception No. 2005-30372, and Re-recorded on fences, arbors, is bonded and inor 541-771-4463 Residential & call Josh 541-610-6011 06-06-2005, Book, Page, Instrument 2005-35046 (indicated which), covwater-features, and sured. Verify the Commercial. Bonded & Insured Big Tex Landscapering the following described real property situated in said County and installation, repair of contractor’s CCB liFree Estimates. CCB#181595 Painting/Wall Covering ing/ ATV Trailer, State, to-wit: irrigation systems to cense through the Magic Touch. Since dual axle flatbed, APN: 200383 be licensed with the CCB Consumer I DO THAT! All About Painting 2002. Weekly yard 7’x16’, 7000 lb. LOT EIGHT (8), WOODCREST, PHASE 3 AND 5, IN THE CITY OF BEND, Landscape ContracWebsite Home/Rental repairs Interior/Exterior/Decks. care, cleanups, sprinwww.hirealicensedcontractor. GVW, all steel, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. tors Board. This Small jobs to remodels Mention this ad get com kler start up & adjust$1400. Commonly known as: 4-digit number is to be Honest, guaranteed 15% Off interior or or call 503-378-4621. ment, bark, thatching 541-382-4115, or 3030 NE STONEBROOK DRIVE BEND, OR 97701 included in all adverwork. CCB#151573 exterior job. The Bulletin recomand aeration. Pruning, 541-280-7024. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real tisements which indimends checking with Dennis 541-317-9768 fertilizer and more. Restrictions do apply. property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice cate the business has Free Estimates. the CCB prior to conChris 541-633-6881 has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised a bond, insurance and 931 CCB #148373 tracting with anyone. Landscaping/Yard Care Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: INworkers compensa- Call The Yard Doctor 541-420-6729 Some other trades Automotive Parts, STALLMENT OF PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST PLUS IMPOUNDS tion for their employfor yard maintenance, also require addiService & Accessories AND/OR ADVANCES WHICH BECAME DUE ON 06/01/2010 PLUS LATE ees. For your protecthatching, sod, sprin- WESTERN PAINTING tional licenses and CHARGES, AND ALL SUBSEQUENT INSTALLMENTS OF PRINCIPAL, tion call 503-378-5909 CO. Richard Hayman, kler blowouts, water certifications. 245/70R17 108S hwy INTEREST, BALLOON PAYMENTS, PLUS IMPOUNDS AND/OR ADor use our website: a semi-retired paintfeatures, more! tires-40%, $125. VANCES AND LATE CHARGES THAT BECOME PAYABLE. Monthly www.lcb.state.or.us to Just bought a new boat? ing contractor of 45 Allen 541-536-1294 541-447-4576. Sell your old one in the Payment $1,151.71 Monthly Late Charge $44.12 By this reason of said check license status years. Small Jobs LCB 5012 classiieds! Ask about our More Than Service default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed before contracting Welcome. Interior & We Buy Junk Super Seller rates! of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, with the business. Aeration / Dethatching Exterior. ccb#5184. Peace Of Mind Cars & Trucks! 541-385-5809 to-wit: The sum of $181,100.00 together with interest thereon at the rate of Persons doing land541-388-6910 BOOK NOW! Cash paid for junk 6.125% per annum from 05-01-2010 until paid; plus all accrued late scape maintenance Weekly / one-time service Spring Clean Up vehicles, batteries & Debris Removal charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums do not require a LCB avail. Bonded, insured, Where can you ind a •Leaves catalytic converters. advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. license. free estimates! •Cones Serving all of C.O.! JUNK BE GONE helping hand? Whereof, notice hereby is given that FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURCOLLINS Lawn Maint. •Needles Call 541-408-1090 ANCE COMPANY the undersigned trustee will on 08-06-2012 at the hour I Haul Away FREE Call 541-480-9714 •Debris Hauling From contractors to USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! of 11:00 AM Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, OrFor Salvage. Also 932 •Aeration B & G Lawncare, egon Revised Statues, at FRONT ENTRANCE OF THE COURTHOUSE, Cleanups & Cleanouts yard care, it’s all here •Dethatching Antique & Door-to-door selling with accepting new clients. 1164 N.W. BOND STREET, BEND, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, Mel, 541-389-8107 Compost Top Dressing in The Bulletin’s Spring Clean-up. Classic Autos fast results! It’s the easiest State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the Weekly Maintenance. interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had Domestic Services way in the world to sell. Weed free Bark “Call A Service 541-408-5367 power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, Chevy 1951 pickup, & flower beds 541-410-2953 together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest Shelly’s Cleaning & Much The Bulletin Classiied Professional” Directory restored. $13,500 obo; acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing ob541-504-3253 or More. Quality service at ORGANIC PROGRAMS 541-385-5809 UGLY YARD? 503-504-2764 an affordable price. No ligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a Retired Master RV/Marine job too big or small - Just reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person Landscape Gardener make-overs call 541-526-5894 or named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have Nelson Landscape Maintenance Starting at $499. 406-670-8861 the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by Advantage RV Maintenance Full or Partial Service 541-633-9895 payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such For all of your Home is Where the Dirt Serving Central Oregon •Mowing •Edging portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default RV Repairs! Is! 10 yrs exp. Clean VaOrganicscapes, Inc. Residential •Pruning •Weeding occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and cur•All Makes & Models cant residences & busiLCB#8906 & Commercial Sprinkler Adjustments ing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering •Chassis Repair & Chevy Wagon 1957, nesses. Refs. Crecencia 541.771.9441 •Sprinkler the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time Service 4-dr., complete, & Norma, 541-306-7426 www.bendorganiclandFertilizer included Activation & Repair prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, •Appliance/Electrical $15,000 OBO, trades, scaping.com with monthly program •Back Flow Testing the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular Repair & upgrades please call Excavating includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the •Interior Repair & •Thatch & Aerate 541-420-5453. Weekly, monthly Need to get an grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the perforUpgrades • Spring Clean up Levi’s Dirt Works: All or one time service. mance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and •Exterior Repair Chrysler 300 Coupe •Weekly Mowing your excavation needs: ad in ASAP? "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. For •Collision Repair 1967, 440 engine, Small jobs for Home•Bi-Monthly & Monthly EXPERIENCED sales information, please contact AGENCY SALES AND POSTING at •Mobile Service auto. trans, ps, air, owners - job or hr., UtilYou can place it Maintenance Commercial WWW.LPSASAP.COM or 714-730-2727 Dated: April 02, 2012 FIRST available in the frame on rebuild, reity lines,Concrete, Public •Flower Bed Clean Up & Residential online at: AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY AS TRUSTEE C/O CR Central Oregon Area painted original blue, Works, Subcontracting, •Bark, Rock, Etc. TITLE SERVICES, INC. P.O. Box 16128 Tucson, AZ 85732-6128 PHONE original blue interior, Years of Experience Custom pads, Driveway •Senior Discounts www.bendbulletin.com Free Estimates NUMBER 866-702-9658 REINSTATEMENT LINE 866-272-4749 LAURA original hub caps, exc. 541-728-0305 grading - low cost-get rid Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured M. SOZA, Authorized Signer 62980 Boyd Acres Rd., chrome, asking $9000 of pot holes & smooth out 541-390-1466 Building B, Suite 2 or make offer. 541-815-4458 your drive,Augering,ccb# 541-385-5809 Same Day Response A-4228404 04/24/2012, 05/01/2012, 05/08/2012, 05/15/2012 LCB#8759 194077, 541-639-5282 Bend, Oregon 541-385-9350. 13’ Smokercraft 1997, Alaskan Fish Boat w/ 9.9 Merc & elec. motor, swivel seat, fish finder, anchor, cover & top, trailer, $2450, 541-977-2644.
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
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Pickups
Vans
Automobiles
Automobiles
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Automobiles
AUDI QUATTRO CABRIOLET 2004, extra nice, low mileage, heated seats, new Michelins, all wheel drive, $12,995 503-635-9494.
Buick LeSabre LTD 1995, leather, 115k, 3.8 litre V-6, $3000. 2006 Lucerne CX 65k, 3.8 V6, cloth int., $7500. Both get 30 mpg hwy. Call Bob, 541-318-9999 Ask about the Free Trip to Washington, D.C. for WWII Veterans?
Ford F-350 XLT 2003, Chevy 1/2 Ton work van 1997, 96K mi,, exclnt 4X4, 6L diesel, 6-spd cond, full bins, appearmanual, Super Cab, ance pkg., cruise, synth short box, 12K Warn oils only, 2 sets wheels winch, custom bumper /tires, must see! $4995. & canopy, running Pix/info: 541-382-9222 boards, 2 sets tires, wheels & chains, many extras, perfect, ONLY 29,800 miles, $27,500 OBO, 541-504-8316. Chrysler Town & Country 2003 LX ready to use at $3900. Also my pet 1996 Nissan QuestGMC ½-ton Pickup, GXE. Call Bob at 1972, LWB, 350hi 541-318-9999. motor, mechanically Did you know about A-1, interior great; the free trip to D.C. body needs some for WWII vets? TLC. $4000 OBO. Call 541-382-9441
BMW 525i 2004
New body style, Steptronic auto., cold-weather package, premium package, heated seats, extra nice. $14,995. 503-635-9494.
The Bulletin’s “Call A Service Professional” Directory is all about meeting your needs. Call on one of the professionals today!
Buick Special “SJ” 1996, Super low miles. $3,999 Vin 409112 • Dlr #366
HYUNDAI
541-749-4025
Chevy Monte Carlo Mazda 3 2008, Hatch- Mitsubishi 3000 GT Z-34 1999, Low Miles. 1999, auto., pearl back, perfect, 13K mi, $3,999 white, very low mi. bought 10/09, 2 sets $9500. 541-788-8218. Vin 245970 • Dlr #366 wheels/tires, synth oils only, sunroof, 6 disc Nissan Sentra 4-dr changer, mp3 port, 1997, fuel efficient, $15,995. 541-382-9222 HYUNDAI AT, FWD, CC, $2200 obo. 541-420-8831 541-749-4025
The Bulletin
Advertise your car! Ford Escape Hybrid Add A Picture! 2006, 4WD, 97,000 Reach thousands of readers! miles, avg 31 mpg, Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds great rig for skiing and travel, $8500, Chevy Cavalier Sedan Mercedes S550 2007, PORSCHE 914, 1974 541-701-9883 2004, Low miles. Roller (no engine), only 46K mi., always $4,999 garaged, immac. cond lowered, full roll cage, Vin 339617 • Dlr #366 FIND IT! in/out, 4 new studded 5-pt harnesses, racBUY IT! snow tires. Price reing seats, 911 dash & duced to $32,000! instruments, decent SELL IT! 541-388-7944 HYUNDAI shape, very cool! The Bulletin Classiieds $1699. 541-678-3249 541-749-4025 To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
Saab 9-3 SE 1999 convertible, 2 door, Navy with black soft top, tan interior, very good condition. $5200 firm. 541-317-2929. Find It in The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-385-5809 Toyota Corolla CE 1999, Great fuel sipper. $3,999 Vin 187276 • Dlr #366
HYUNDAI
541-749-4025
International Flat Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 spd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, % new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480. 1000
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Mazda B4000 2004 Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Cab Plus 4x4. 4½ yrs or 95,000 miles left on PUBLIC NOTICE ext’d warranty. V6, TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE 5-spd, AC, studded T.S. No.: OR-10-376682-SH tires, 2 extra rims, tow pkg, 132K mi, all Reference is made to that certain deed made by CHRISTOPHER HODGES as Grantor to WESTrecords, exlnt cond, ERN TITLE AND ESCROW COMPANY, as trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC $9500. 541-408-8611 REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR METLIFE HOME LOANS, A DIVISION OF METLIFE BANK, N.A., as Beneficiary, dated 6/5/2009, recorded 6/15/2009, in official records of 935 DESCHUTES County, Oregon, in book / reel / volume number fee / file / instrument / microfile / reSport Utility Vehicles ception number 2009-25116, , covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: Acura MDX 2010 $38,995. #507629 APN: 135195 LOT 4, BLOCK 1, INDIAN FORD RANCH HOMES, PLAT NUMBER ONE, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON.
541-598-3750
aaaoregonautosource.com
Buick Rainier 2006 4x4, leather, $13,000. 541-383-4907
CHEVY SUBURBAN LT 2005, low miles., good tires, new brakes, moonroof Reduced to $15,750 541-389-5016. Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 4x4. 120K mi, Power seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd row seating, extra tires, CD, privacy tinting, upgraded rims. Fantastic cond. $9500 Contact Timm at 541-408-2393 for info or to view vehicle. Ford Eddie Bauer Explorer 1992, Low Miles. $3,999 Vin A31480 • Dlr #366
HYUNDAI
541-749-4025
Commonly known as: 16076 CATTLEDRIVE ROAD, SISTERS, OR 97759 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 1/1/2010, and all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent property taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preserve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Monthly Payment $2,246.25 Monthly Late Charge $89.85 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: The sum of $332,221.11 together with interest thereon at the rate of 5.0000 per annum from 12/1/2009 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will on 8/31/2012 at the hour of 1:00:00 PM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statutes, At the front entrance to the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond St., Bend, OR County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-573-1965 or Login to: www.priorityposting.com.
What are you
In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any looking for? other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to You’ll ind it in Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality The Bulletin Classiieds Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If there are any irregularities discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, that the trustee will rescind the sale, return the buyer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is 541-385-5809 unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been Ford Excursion released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note 2005, 4WD, diesel, holder's rights against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A exc. cond., $19,900, DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required call 541-923-0231. by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Grand Cherokee “Limited” 1997, Low miles. Dated: 4/23/2012 $4,999 Vin 684939 • Dlr #366 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as Trustee HYUNDAI
541-749-4025
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
PUBLIC NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-11-441423-NH Reference is made to that certain deed made by TY T HUMPHREYS & SARAH R HUMPHREYS, TENANTS IN THE ENTIRETY as Grantor to WESTERN TITLE AND ESCROW, as trustee, in favor of METLIFE HOME LOANS, A DIVISION OF METLIFE BANK, N.A., as Beneficiary, dated 8/25/2009, recorded 08/28/2009, in official records of Deschutes County, Oregon, in book / reel / volume number fee / file / instrument / microfile / reception number 2009-37069, , covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to wit: APN: 240843 LOT 39, WILLOW SPRINGS, PHASE 2, CITY OF REDMOND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON Commonly known as: 3117 JUNIPER AVE SW , REDMOND, OR 97756 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 1/1/2011, and all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent property taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preserve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Monthly Payment $821.30 Monthly Late Charge $25.23 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: The sum of $110,651.11 together with interest thereon at the rate of 5.3750 per annum from 12/1/2010 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will on 8/31/2012 at the hour of 01:00 PM , Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statutes, at At the front entrance to the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond St., Bend, OR 97701 County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-573-1965 or Login to: www.priorityposting.com. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If there are any irregularities discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, that the trustee will rescind the sale, return the buyer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holder's rights against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 4/23/2012 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as Trustee
Signature By: Brooke Frank, Assistant Secretary
Signature By: Brooke Frank, Assistant Secretary
Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101
Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101
For Non-Sale Information: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 Fax: 619-645-7716
For Non-Sale Information: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 Fax: 619-645-7716
Jeep Cherokee 1990, 4WD, 3 sets rims & tires, exlnt set snow tires, great 1st car! $1800. 541-633-5149 NOTICE TO RESIDENTIAL TENANTS The property in which you are living is in foreclosure. A foreclosure sale is scheduled for 8/31/2012. The date of this sale may be postponed. Unless the lender that is foreclosing on this property is paid before the sale date, the foreclosure will go through and someone new will own this property. After the sale, the new owner is required to provide you with contact information and notice that the sale took place. The following information applies to you only if you are a bona fide tenant occupying and renting this property as a residential dwelling under a legitimate rental agreement. The information does not apply to you if you own this property or if you are not a bona fide residential tenant. If the foreclosure sale goes Jeep Willys 1947 cstm, through, the new owner will have the right to require you to move out. Before the new owner can small block Chevy, PS, require you to move, the new owner must provide you with written notice that specifies the date by OD, mags + trlr. Swap which you must move out. If you do not leave before the move-out date, the new owner can have for backhoe. No a.m. the sheriff remove you from the property after a court hearing. You will receive notice of the court calls, pls. 541-389-6990 hearing. PROTECTION FROM EVICTION IF YOU ARE A BONA FIDE TENANT OCCUPYING AND RENTING THIS PROPERTY AS A RESIDENTIAL DWELLING, YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO Range Rover 2005 CONTINUE LIVING IN THIS PROPERTY AFTER THE FORECLOSURE SALE FOR: o THE HSE, nav, DVD, REMAINDER OF YOUR FIXED TERM LEASE, IF YOU HAVE A FIXED TERM LEASE; OR o AT local car, new tires, LEAST 90 DAYS FROM THE DATE YOU ARE GIVEN A WRITTEN TERMINATION NOTICE. 51K miles. If the new owner wants to move in and use this property as a primary residence, the new owner can $24,995. give you written notice and require you to move out after 90 days, even though you have a fixed 503-635-9494 term lease with more than 90 days left. You must be provided with at least 90 days' written notice after the foreclosure sale before you can be required to move. A bona fide tenant is a residential tenant who is not the borrower (property owner) or a child, spouse or parent of the borrower, and whose rental agreement: o Is the result of an arm's-length transaction; o Requires the payment of Range Rover, rent that is not substantially less than fair market rent for the property, unless the rent is reduced or 2006 Sport HSE, subsidized due to a federal, state or local subsidy; and o Was entered into prior to the date of the nav, AWD, heated foreclosure sale. seats, moonroof, ABOUT YOUR TENANCY BETWEEN NOW AND THE FORECLOSURE SALE: RENT YOU local owner, SHOULD CONTINUE TO PAY RENT TO YOUR LANDLORD UNTIL THE PROPERTY IS SOLD Harman Kardon, OR UNTIL A COURT TELLS YOU OTHERWISE. IF YOU DO NOT PAY RENT, YOU CAN BE $23,995. EVICTED. BE SURE TO KEEP PROOF OF ANY PAYMENTS YOU MAKE. SECURITY DEPOSIT 503-635-9494 You may apply your security deposit and any rent you paid in advance against the current rent you owe your landlord as provided in ORS 90.367. To do this, you must notify your landlord in writing that you want to subtract the amount of your security deposit or prepaid rent from your rent payment. You may do this only for the rent you owe your current landlord. If you do this, you must do so before the foreclosure sale. The business or individual who buys this property at the foreclosure sale is not responsible to you for any deposit or prepaid rent you paid to your landlord. ABOUT YOUR TENANCY AFTER THE FORECLOSURE SALE The new owner that buys this property at the foreclosure sale may be willing to allow you to stay as a tenant instead of requiring you to move out after 90 days or at the end of your fixed term lease. After the sale, you should receive a written notice informing you that the sale took place and giving you the new owner's name and contact information. You should contact the new owner if you would like to stay. If the new owner accepts rent from you, signs a new residential rental agreement with you or does not notify you in writing within 30 days after the date of the foreclosure sale that you must move out, the new owner becomes your new landlord and must maintain the property. Otherwise: o You do Whether you’re not owe rent; o The new owner is not your landlord and is not responsible for maintaining the looking for a hat or a property on your behalf; and o You must move out by the date the new owner specifies in a notice to you. The new owner may offer to pay your moving expenses and any other costs or amounts place to hang it, you and the new owner agree on in exchange for your agreement to leave the premises in less your future is just than 90 days or before your fixed term lease expires. You should speak with a lawyer to fully a page away. understand your rights before making any decisions regarding your tenancy. IT IS UNLAWFUL FOR ANY PERSON TO TRY TO FORCE YOU TO LEAVE YOUR DWELLING UNIT WITHOUT FIRST GIVING YOU WRITTEN NOTICE AND GOING TO COURT TO EVICT YOU. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR RIGHTS, YOU SHOULD CONSULT A LAWYER. If you believe you need legal assistance, contact the Oregon State Bar and ask for the lawyer referral service. Contact information for the Oregon State Bar is included with this notice. If you do not have enough money to pay a lawyer and are otherwise eligible, you may be able to Thousands of ads daily receive legal assistance for free. Information about whom to contact for free legal assistance is in print and online. included with this notice. Oregon State Bar: (503) 684-3763; (800) 452-7636 Legal assistance: To place your ad, visit www.lawhelp.org/or/index.cfm www.bendbulletin.com or call 541-385-5809 P943814 5/1, 5/8, 5/15, 05/22/2012
Where buyers meet sellers
1000
Legal Notices
NOTICE TO RESIDENTIAL TENANTS The property in which you are living is in foreclosure. A foreclosure sale is scheduled for 8/31/2012. The date of this sale may be postponed. Unless the lender that is foreclosing on this property is paid before the sale date, the foreclosure will go through and someone new will own this property. After the sale, the new owner is required to provide you with contact information and notice that the sale took place. The following information applies to you only if you are a bona fide tenant occupying and renting this property as a residential dwelling under a legitimate rental agreement. The information does not apply to you if you own this property or if you are not a bona fide residential tenant. If the foreclosure sale goes through, the new owner will have the right to require you to move out. Before the new owner can require you to move, the new owner must provide you with written notice that specifies the date by which you must move out. If you do not leave before the move-out date, the new owner can have the sheriff remove you from the property after a court hearing. You will receive notice of the court hearing. PROTECTION FROM EVICTION IF YOU ARE A BONA FIDE TENANT OCCUPYING AND RENTING THIS PROPERTY AS A RESIDENTIAL DWELLING, YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO CONTINUE LIVING IN THIS PROPERTY AFTER THE FORECLOSURE SALE FOR: o THE REMAINDER OF YOUR FIXED TERM LEASE, IF YOU HAVE A FIXED TERM LEASE; OR o AT LEAST 90 DAYS FROM THE DATE YOU ARE GIVEN A WRITTEN TERMINATION NOTICE. If the new owner wants to move in and use this property as a primary residence, the new owner can give you written notice and require you to move out after 90 days, even though you have a fixed term lease with more than 90 days left. You must be provided with at least 90 days' written notice after the foreclosure sale before you can be required to move. A bona fide tenant is a residential tenant who is not the borrower (property owner) or a child, spouse or parent of the borrower, and whose rental agreement: o Is the result of an arm's-length transaction; o Requires the payment of rent that is not substantially less than fair market rent for the property, unless the rent is reduced or subsidized due to a federal, state or local subsidy; and o Was entered into prior to the date of the foreclosure sale. ABOUT YOUR TENANCY BETWEEN NOW AND THE FORECLOSURE SALE: RENT YOU SHOULD CONTINUE TO PAY RENT TO YOUR LANDLORD UNTIL THE PROPERTY IS SOLD OR UNTIL A COURT TELLS YOU OTHERWISE. IF YOU DO NOT PAY RENT, YOU CAN BE EVICTED. BE SURE TO KEEP PROOF OF ANY PAYMENTS YOU MAKE. SECURITY DEPOSIT You may apply your security deposit and any rent you paid in advance against the current rent you owe your landlord as provided in ORS 90.367. To do this, you must notify your landlord in writing that you want to subtract the amount of your security deposit or prepaid rent from your rent payment. You may do this only for the rent you owe your current landlord. If you do this, you must do so before the foreclosure sale. The business or individual who buys this property at the foreclosure sale is not responsible to you for any deposit or prepaid rent you paid to your landlord. ABOUT YOUR TENANCY AFTER THE FORECLOSURE SALE The new owner that buys this property at the foreclosure sale may be willing to allow you to stay as a tenant instead of requiring you to move out after 90 days or at the end of your fixed term lease. After the sale, you should receive a written notice informing you that the sale took place and giving you the new owner's name and contact information. You should contact the new owner if you would like to stay. If the new owner accepts rent from you, signs a new residential rental agreement with you or does not notify you in writing within 30 days after the date of the foreclosure sale that you must move out, the new owner becomes your new landlord and must maintain the property. Otherwise: o You do not owe rent; o The new owner is not your landlord and is not responsible for maintaining the property on your behalf; and o You must move out by the date the new owner specifies in a notice to you. The new owner may offer to pay your moving expenses and any other costs or amounts you and the new owner agree on in exchange for your agreement to leave the premises in less than 90 days or before your fixed term lease expires. You should speak with a lawyer to fully understand your rights before making any decisions regarding your tenancy. IT IS UNLAWFUL FOR ANY PERSON TO TRY TO FORCE YOU TO LEAVE YOUR DWELLING UNIT WITHOUT FIRST GIVING YOU WRITTEN NOTICE AND GOING TO COURT TO EVICT YOU. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR RIGHTS, YOU SHOULD CONSULT A LAWYER. If you believe you need legal assistance, contact the Oregon State Bar and ask for the lawyer referral service. Contact information for the Oregon State Bar is included with this notice. If you do not have enough money to pay a lawyer and are otherwise eligible, you may be able to receive legal assistance for free. Information about whom to contact for free legal assistance is included with this notice. Oregon State Bar: (503) 684-3763; (800) 452-7636 Legal assistance: www.lawhelp.org/or/index.cfm P943810 5/1, 5/8, 5/15, 05/22/2012
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012 G5
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% LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-12-498084-SH
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-11-476978-SH
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-11-484369-SH
Reference is made to that certain deed made by RYAN L BLOEDEL AND, MARK E FARROW AND, LISA M FARROW AND RODGER L BLOEDEL AND BETTE LEA BLOEDEL, as Grantor to DESCHUTES COUNTY TITLE CPMPANY, as trustee, in favor of WASHINGTON MUTUAL BANK, FA, as Beneficiary, dated 10/11/2006, recorded 10/19/2006, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book / reel / volume number fee / file / instrument / microfile / reception number 2006-70050,, covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 136722 LOT FOUR, BLOCK TEN OF OVERLOOK PARK II, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON Commonly known as: 57379 LOST LN, SUNRIVER, OR 977070000 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 11/1/2011, and all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent property taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preserve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Monthly Payment $4,160.90 Monthly Late Charge $208.05 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $597,517.10 together with interest thereon at the rate of 6.8500 per annum from 10/1/2011 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will on 9/5/2012 at the hour of 11:00:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, At the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: www.lpsasap.com In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If there are any irregularities discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, that the trustee will rescind the sale, return the buyer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 4-30-12 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as trustee Signature By: Brian Souza, Assistant Secretary Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 For Non-Sale Information: Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 Fax: 619-645-7716
Reference is made to that certain deed made by GEORGE M MCNEIL, AND TAMI L MCNEIL, AS TENANTS BY THE ENTIRETY, as Grantor to DESCHUTES COUNTY TITLE COMPANY, as trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., ("MERS") AS NOMINEE FOR COUNTRYWIDE HOME LOANS, INC., as Beneficiary, dated 8/17/2005, recorded 8/26/2005, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book / reel / volume number fee / file / instrument / microfile / reception number 2005-56731, covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 184937 LOT SIX, BLOCK FOURTEEN, HAYDEN VILLAGE, PHASE VIII, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 2247 SW 33RD ST, REDMOND, OR 97756 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 6/1/2011, and all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent property taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preserve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Monthly Payment $686.19 Monthly Late Charge $34.31 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $122,696.01 together with interest thereon at the rate of 4.2500 per annum from 5/1/2011 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will on 8/28/2012 at the hour of 11:00:00 AM , Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, At the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: www.lpsasap.com In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If there are any irregularities discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, that the trustee will rescind the sale, return the buyer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 4/16/2012 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as trustee Signature By: Brooke Frank, Assistant Secretary Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington C/O Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 For Non-Sale Information: Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 Fax: 619-645-7716
Reference is made to that certain deed made by DAVID SUTHERLAND, AND PATRICIA SAMPSON, AS TENANTS IN COMMON, as Grantor to WESTERN TITLE & ESCROW COMPANY, as trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., ("MERS") AS NOMINEE FOR COUNTRYWIDE HOME LOANS, INC., as Beneficiary, dated 7/20/2006, recorded 7/26/2006, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book / reel / volume number fee / file / instrument / microfile / reception number 2006-51140, covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 161653 LOT 4, CULLEY, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 2423 SW 24TH ST, REDMOND, OR 97756 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 8/1/2011, and all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent property taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preserve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Monthly Payment $753.02 Monthly Late Charge $37.65 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $165,521.60 together with interest thereon at the rate of 3.1250 per annum from 7/1/2011 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will on 9/4/2012 at the hour of 11:00:00 AM , Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, At the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: www.lpsasap.com In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If there are any irregularities discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, that the trustee will rescind the sale, return the buyer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 4/23/2012 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as trustee Signature By: Brooke Frank, Assistant Secretary Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington C/O Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 For Non-Sale Information: Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 Fax: 619-645-7716
A-4239088 05/15/2012, 05/22/2012, 05/29/2012, 06/05/2012
A-FN4231617 05/01/2012, 05/08/2012, 05/15/2012, 05/22/2012
A-FN4235884 05/08/2012, 05/15/2012, 05/22/2012, 05/29/2012
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-12-497808-SH
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-11-484457-SH
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-12-498678-SH
Reference is made to that certain deed made by RICHARD HENSLEY, REGAN HENSLEY, as Grantor to DESCHUTES COUNTY TITLE, as trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., ("MERS") AS NOMINEE FOR AMERICAN BROKERS CONDUIT, as Beneficiary, dated 3/15/2007, recorded 3/20/2007, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book / reel / volume number fee / file / instrument / microfile / reception number 2007-16457, , covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 208240 LOT THIRTY-SIX, CHESTNUT PARK, PHASE 1, CITY OF BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON Commonly known as: 20213 MORGAN LOOP, BEND, OR 97701 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 11/1/2011, and all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent property taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preserve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Monthly Payment $1,095.92 Monthly Late Charge $54.80 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $223,839.99 together with interest thereon at the rate of 5.8750 per annum from 10/1/2011 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will on 8/30/2012 at the hour of 11:00:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, At the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: www.lpsasap.com In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If there are any irregularities discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, that the trustee will rescind the sale, return the buyer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 4/23/2012 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as trustee Signature By: Brooke Frank, Assistant Secretary Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington C/O Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 For Non-Sale Information: Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 Fax: 619-645-7716
Reference is made to that certain deed made by RODOLFO I CRUZ, AND KIMBER L CRUZ, HUSBAND AND WIFE, as Grantor to FIRST AMERICAN TITLE, as trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., ("MERS") AS NOMINEE FOR COUNTRYWIDE BANK, N.A., as Beneficiary, dated 10/26/2006, recorded 11/1/2006, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book / reel / volume number fee / file / instrument / microfile / reception number 2006-72794, , covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 246256 LOT 17 OF BELLA VISTA, CITY OF REDMOND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 2535 NW 10TH ST, REDMOND, OR 97756 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 1/1/2011, and all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent property taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preserve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Monthly Payment $1,166.61 Monthly Late Charge $58.33 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $181,487.02 together with interest thereon at the rate of 6.1250 per annum from 12/1/2010 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will on 9/4/2012 at the hour of 11:00:00 AM , Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, At the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: www.lpsasap.com In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If there are any irregularities discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, that the trustee will rescind the sale, return the buyer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 4/23/12 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as trustee Signature By Brooke Frank, Assistant Secretary Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 For Non-Sale Information: Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 Fax: 619-645-7716
Reference is made to that certain deed made by STEVEN C PETERSEN, AND MARY M PETERSEN, AS TENANTS BY THE ENTIRETY, as Grantor to FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE, as trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., ("MERS"), AS NOMINEE FOR COUNTRYWIDE HOME LOANS, INC, as Beneficiary, dated 9/21/2006, recorded 9/27/2006, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book / reel / volume number fee / file / instrument / microfile / reception number 2006-65282,, covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 249959 LOT 24 OF FOREST MEADOW, PHASE 1, CITY OF BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON Commonly known as: 19760 DARTMOUTH AVE, BEND, OR 97702 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 5/1/2011, and all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent property taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preserve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Monthly Payment $1,573.71 Monthly Late Charge $78.69 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $243,278.88 together with interest thereon at the rate of 6.1250 per annum from 4/1/2011 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will on 9/7/2012 at the hour of 11:00:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, At the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: www.lpsasap.com In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If there are any irregularities discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, that the trustee will rescind the sale, return the buyer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 4-27-12 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as trustee Signature By: Brian Souza, Assistant Secretary Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 For Non-Sale Information: Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 Fax: 619-645-7716
A-4235876 05/08/2012, 05/15/2012, 05/22/2012, 05/29/2012
A-4235882 05/08/2012, 05/15/2012, 05/22/2012, 05/29/2012
A-FN4238494 05/15/2012, 05/22/2012, 05/29/2012, 06/05/2012
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 1134019861 T.S. No.: 11-02103-6 Reference is made to that certain Deed of Trust dated as of March 16, 2006 made by, KAMERON K. DELASHMUTT AND LISA L. DELASHMUTT, as the original grantor, to AMERI-TITLE, as the original trustee, in favor of NEW CENTURY MORTGAGE CORPORATION, as the original beneficiary, recorded on April 6, 2006, as instrument No. 2006-23674 of Official Records in the Office of the Recorder of Deschutes County, Oregon (the "Deed of Trust"). The current beneficiary is: US Bank National Association as Trustee for Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc. 2006-NC1, Asset-Backed Pass-Through Certificates Series 2006-NC1, (the "Beneficiary"). APN: 191601 LOT NINETEEN (19), CANYON POINT ESTATES PHASE 1, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON Commonly known as: 2447 N.W. CANYON DRIVE, REDMOND, OR Both the Beneficiary and the Trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the Deed of Trust and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default(s) for which the foreclosure is made is that the grantor(s): failed to pay payments which became due; together with late charges due; together with other fees and expenses incurred by the Beneficiary; and which defaulted amounts total: $32,714.83 as of May 2, 2012. By this reason of said default the Beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: The sum of $277,100.87 together with interest thereon at the rate of 4.87500% per annum from January 1, 2011 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all Trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the Beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as the duly appointed Trustee under the Deed of Trust will on September 13, 2012 at the hour of 11:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution of the Deed of Trust, together with any interest which the grantor or his successor(s) in interest acquired after the execution of the Deed of Trust, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the Trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, Trustee's or attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Deed of Trust, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, 1920 Main Street, Suite 1120, Irvine, CA 92614 949-252-4900 FOR SALE INFORMATION CALL: 714.730.2727 Website for Trustee's Sale Information: www.lpsasap.com TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Deed of Trust, the words "Trustee" and "Beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: May 8, 2012 FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, Trustee Michael Busby, Authorized Signature A-4243108 05/15/2012, 05/22/2012, 05/29/2012, 06/05/2012 1000
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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-12-493388-SH
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Reference is made to that certain Line of Credit Trust Deed (the "Trust Deed") dated November 25, 2005, executed by John M. Cosgrave and Jennifer L. Cosgrave (the "Grantor") to U.S. Bank Trust Company, National Association (the "Trustee"), to secure payment and performance of certain obligations of Grantor to U.S. Bank National Association (the "Beneficiary"), including repayment of a U.S. Bank Home Equity Creditline Agreement dated November 25, 2005, in the principal amount of $665,000 (the "Agreement"). The Trust Deed was recorded on December 14, 2005, as Instrument No. 2005-85701 in the official real property records of Deschutes County, Oregon. The legal description of the real property covered by the Trust Deed is as follows: PARCEL 2 OF PARTITION PLAT 1999-24, FILED JUNE 14, 1999 AND LOCATED IN THE SOUTHWEST ONE-QUARTER (SW1/4) OF SECTION 7, TOWNSHIP 18 SOUTH, RANGE 12 EAST OF THE WILLAMETTE MERIDIAN, CITY OF BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. No action has been instituted to recover the obligation, or any part thereof, now remaining secured by the Trust Deed or, if such action has been instituted, such action has been dismissed except as permitted by ORS 86.735(4). The default for which the foreclosure is made is Grantor's failure to pay the Agreement in full at maturity. By reason of said default, Beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the Trust Deed immediately due and payable which sums are as follows: (a) the principal amount of $642,648.42 as of February 20, 2012, (b) accrued interest of $29,923.58 as of February 20, 2012, and interest accruing thereafter on the principal amount at the rate set forth in the Agreement until fully paid, (c) late charges in the amount of $50.00 as of February 20, 2012, plus any late charges accruing thereafter and any other expenses or fees owed under the Agreement or Trust Deed, (d) amounts that Beneficiary has paid on or may hereinafter pay to protect the lien, including by way of illustration, but not limitation, taxes, assessments, interest on prior liens, and insurance premiums, and (e) expenses, costs and attorney and trustee fees incurred by Beneficiary in foreclosure, including the cost of a trustee's sale guarantee and any other environmental or appraisal report. By reason of said default, Beneficiary and the Successor Trustee have elected to foreclose the trust deed by advertisement and sale pursuant to ORS 86.705 to ORS 86.795 and to sell the real property identified above to satisfy the obligation that is secured by the Trust Deed. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Successor Trustee or Successor Trustee's agent will, on July 31, 2012, at one o'clock (1:00) p.m., based on the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, just outside the main entrance of 1164 N.W. Bond, Bend, Oregon, sell for cash at public auction to the highest bidder the interest in said real property, which Grantor has or had power to convey at the time of the execution by Grantor of the Trust Deed, together with any interest that Grantor or the successors in interest to Grantor acquired after the execution of the Trust Deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by payment to Beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Trust Deed and, in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, together with Trustee and attorney fees not exceeding the amounts provided by ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, and the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest of grantor, as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the Trust Deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. In accordance with the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, this is an attempt to collect a debt, and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. This communication is from a debt collector. For further information, please contact Jesús Miguel Palomares at his mailing address of Miller Nash LLP, 111 S.W. Fifth Avenue, Suite 3400, Portland, Oregon 97204 or telephone him at (503) 224-5858. DATED this 29th day of March, 2012. /s/ Jesús Miguel Palomares, Successor Trustee. File No. 080090-0750. Grantor: Cosgrave, John M. and Jennifer L. Beneficiary: U.S. Bank National Association.
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Reference is made to that certain deed made by ELAINE K LARSON AND SILISAK PHAISAVATH, as Grantor to AMERI TITLE;, as trustee, in favor 1000 1000 1000 of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices ("MERS") AS NOMINEE FOR M&T BANK, as Beneficiary, dated 10/16/2008, recorded 10/21/2008, in official records of DESCHUTES LEGAL NOTICE County, Oregon in book / reel / volume number fee / file / instrument / miTRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE crofile / reception number 2008-42656, covering the following described T.S. No.: OR-11-482677-SH real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 144815 Reference is made to that certain deed made by BENJAMIN L WILLIS, LOT SEVENTY-ONE (71), CROSSROADS SECOND ADDITION, AND TERRY L WILLIS, HUSBAND AND WIFE, as Grantor to RECONRECORDED MAY 19, 1973, IN CABINET B, PAGE 31, TRUST COMPANY, as trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., ("MERS") AS NOMINEE FOR COUNCommonly known as: TRYWIDE BANK, FSB, as Beneficiary, dated 2/11/2008, recorded 14883 BLUEGRASS LOOP, SISTERS, OR 97759 2/29/2008, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book / Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real reel / volume number fee / file / instrument / microfile / reception number property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice 2008-09114, , covering the following described real property situated in has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised said County and State, to-wit: Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The APN: 109256 installments of principal and interest which became due on 6/30/2011, and A PORTION OF THE EAST HALF OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of (E1/2 SE1/4) OF SECTION 20, TOWNSHIP 17 SOUTH, RANGE 13 this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent propEAST OF THE WILLAMETTE MERIDIAN, erty taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, taxes DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs BEGINNING AT A POINT WHENCE THE SOUTHEAST CORNER arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preOF SECTION 20, TOWNSHIP 17 SOUTH, RANGE 13 EAST OF THE serve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of reinstateWILLAMETTE MERIDIAN, BEARS SOUTH 23 DEGREES 16 EAST, ment, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or 1661.3 FEET; THENCE NORTH 89 DEGREES 52' 14' WEST 660.47 FEET; pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees THENCE SOUTH 0 DEGREES 09' 46" EAST, 330 FEET owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of THENCE SOUTH 89 DEGREES 52' 14" EAST, 660.47 FEET; the loan documents. Monthly Payment $1,233.36 Monthly Late Charge THENCE SOUTH 0 DEGREES 09' 46" WEST 330 FEET TO THE POINT $61.67 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obliOF BEGINNING, EXCEPTING THEREFROM THE EASTERLY 25 FEET gations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said WHICH US RESERVED FOR ROADWAY PURPOSES. APN# 109256 sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $399,824.20 together with Commonly known as: interest thereon at the rate of 5.8750 per annum from 5/30/2011 until paid; 62925 SANTA CRUZ AVENUE, BEND, OR 97701 plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Serhas been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised vice Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will on 8/20/2012 Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The at the hour of 11:00:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section installments of principal and interest which became due on 8/1/2011, and 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, At the front entrance of the Courtall subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of house, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the property taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest and preserve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obreinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement ligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes ha s the right to the loan documents. Monthly Payment $2,466.71 Monthly Late Charge have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated $123.34 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default ocsaid sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $397,604.77 together curred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing with interest thereon at the rate of 5.8750 per annum from 7/1/2011 until any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that 714-730-2727 or Login to: www.lpsasap.com In construing this notice, the Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular inwill on 9/4/2012 at the hour of 11:00:00 AM , Standard of Time, as cludes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, At the front grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the perforentrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, OR 97701 mance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuhighest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property ant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution deed has been issued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washingby him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor ton. If there are any irregularities discovered within 10 days of the date of or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust this sale, that the trustee will rescind the sale, return the buyer's money deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reaand expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. son, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Benthe entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as eficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been retrustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in leased of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. THIS obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMAset for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: TION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by www.lpsasap.com In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 4/16/2012 Quality Loan Serother persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by vice Corporation of Washington, as trustee Signature By: Brooke Frank, said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respecAssistant Secretary Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington C/O Qualtive successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will ity Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 For not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality Non-Sale Information: Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If there are any irregularities c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, that the trustee will res619-645-7711 Fax: 619-645-7716 cind the sale, return the buyer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee A-4231611 05/01/2012, 05/08/2012, 05/15/2012, 05/22/2012 is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 4/23/2012 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as trustee Signature By: Brooke Frank, Assistant Secretary Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington C/O Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 For Non-Sale Information: Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 Fax: 619-645-7716 A-4235889 05/08/2012, 05/15/2012, 05/22/2012, 05/29/2012
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.. OR-12-502238-SH Reference is made to that certain deed made by DARWYN M. MIDDLETON AND SHEILA F. MIDDLETON, as Grantor to FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as trustee, in favor of BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., as Beneficiary, dated 1/6/2006, recorded 1/13/2006, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book / reel / volume number fee / file / instrument / microfile / reception number 2006-02757,, covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 164057 LOT 10, BLOCK 4, CREST RIDGE ESTATES, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON Commonly known as: 6625 NW POPLAR DR, REDMOND, OR 97756 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 12/1/2011, and all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent property taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preserve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Monthly Payment $3,046.60 Monthly Late Charge By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $383,349.14 together with interest thereon at the rate of 6.2500 per annum from 11/1/2011 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will on 8/22/2012 at the hour of 11:00:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, At the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: www.lpsasap.com In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If there are any irregularities discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, that the trustee will rescind the sale, return the buyer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 4/16/2012 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as trustee Signature By: Brooke Frank, Assistant Secretary Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 For Non-Sale Information: Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 Fax: 619-645-7716 A-4231605 05/01/2012, 05/08/2012, 05/15/2012, 05/22/2012 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-12-504850-SH Reference is made to that certain deed made by MARK A HOWLETT, as Grantor to WESTERN TITLE & ESCROW COMPANY, as trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., ("MERS") AS NOMINEE FOR COUNTRYWIDE HOME LOANS, INC., as Beneficiary, dated 4/21/2006, recorded 4/28/2006, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book / reel / volume number fee / file / instrument / microfile / reception number 2006-29581, , covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 141930 LOT 3 IN BLOCK 6, OF TIMBER HAVEN FIRST ADDITION, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. HUD LABEL ORE ORE 377284, FLEETWOOD BERKSHIRE, 1999, ORELW48AB52270BS13 " WHICH IS AFFIXED TO AND MADE PART OF THE REAL PROPERTY." Commonly known as: 51991 CULTUS LANE, LA PINE, OR 97739 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 12/1/2011, and all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent property taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preserve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Monthly Payment $859.11 Monthly Late Charge $42.96 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $124,903.07 together with interest thereon at the rate of 6.5000 per annum from 11/1/2011 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will on 9/7/2012 at the hour of 11:00:00 AM , Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, At the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: www.lpsasap.com In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary'" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If there are any irregularities discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, that the trustee will rescind the sale, return the buyer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 4/27/12 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as trustee By: Brian Souza Assistant Secretary Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 A-4238484 05/15/2012, 05/22/2012, 05/29/2012, 06/05/2012
CENTRAL OREGON MARKETPLACE
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THE BULLETIN • COMMUNITY SAVINGS
THE BULLETIN • COMMUNITY SAVINGS
SAVE SOME MONEY & TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE GREAT DEALS OFFERED BY OUR LOCAL BUSINESSES!!
LUNCH/ 541-382-3173 of America DINNER BehindonBank 3rd Street 1230 NE 3RD • BEND, OR Buy 1 Get 1 Free
Got le? Troub
Chem-Dry of Central Oregon Serving Deschutes, Crook & Jefferson Counties Independently Owned & Operated
20% OFF
FEATURING:
Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning
Specialty Omelets Prime Rib • Lobster Dungeness Crab & Salmon
Valid Monday thru Saturday only. Cannot be used with other promotional offers or lounge menu. One coupon per couple. Dine in only. Prime Rib now served Friday & Saturday Only.
LUNCH 11:30–2:30, MON–FRI DINNER 4–9, MON–SAT
Expires 5/31/12 *Offer Void Mothers Day
OFFERS VALID WITH COUPON ONLY. EXPIRES 5/31/12
www.chemdrybend.com
541-388-7374
Special Oil Change Price!
$
99
Expires 5/31/2012
BW0412
2 Rooms Cleaned
$
74
With Coupon. Room is Considered 250 Sq. Ft. One Coupon per Customer. Fuel surcharge may apply. Expires 5/31/2012
BW0412
Whole House Cleaning
$
149
OXI Fresh of Central Oregon 541-593-1799
Up to 5 Rooms Cleaned
With Coupon. Room is Considered 250 Sq. Ft. One Coupon per Customer. Fuel surcharge may apply. Expires 5/31/2012
BW0412
$
1998 OIL CHANGES! CUSTOMER LOYALTY KEY TAGS ARE HERE!
d Street and Fran Right on the Corner of Thir Right on the Price.
Covers most vehicles. Diesels extra. Coupon expires 5/31/12.
Includes 5 quarts of oil, (blend of synthetic oil) replace oil filter, 21-point inspection, discounts up to 10%, roadside assistance, 12/12 warranty.
$
1998 each
Special Oil Change Price!
20% 80 OFF JERKY or
100 OFF
913 NE 3RD STREET • BEND, OR • 541.383.1694 CORNER OF GREENWOOD & 3RD STREET (ACROSS FROM WELLS FARGO)
RV Battery Sale! 10% OFF • Interstate • Trojan • Centennial
BATTERIES
Thursday, May 25th 6-7 pm Bodywise Wellness Center • 2100 Neff Rd., Bend • 541-419-1947
Expires 5-31-12
$300 Minimum
541-728-0305
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62980 Boyd Acres Rd., Building B, Suite 2 (Boyd Acres Joint Venture)
PROMOTIONAL PRICES START AT
$ EXPIRES JUNE 30, 2012
50 OFF of $300 or more
DELI & PUB
Free Seminar
$
ANY DECK RESTORATION of $500 or More
ON DISPLAY
SAUSAGE PRODUCTS
Coupons expire 5/31/12
“Because weekends WERE NOT made for yard work!”
Offer valid with coupon only. Not including RVs & stairs. Not valid with other offers. Minimums apply. Payment due at time of service. Expiration date: 6/1/2012
OREGON MADE SAUSAGE & JERKY E V O R VARIETIES
EXPIRES 5/31/12
GET THE SKINNY ON LOSING BELLY FAT
Dethatching & Aeration Plus FREE Fertilizing
$
The key tag includes 3 lube, oil & filters. The cost is only $ 5995 per tag.
Special Oil Change Price!
20% OFF 541-382-3883
3 Oil Changes (Gas)
klin in Bend.
S SERVICE HOUR 5:30pm M–F 7:45am to
Lawn & Landscape Maintenance
Serving Central Oregon for Over 20 Years
541-382-2222
murrayandholt.com
J.L. Scott with NEW Seasonal Mowing Service
Special Oil Change Price! Special Oil Change Price!
With Coupon. Room is Considered 250 Sq. Ft. One Coupon per Customer. Fuel surcharge may apply.
Residential & Commercial
Let Chem-Dry of Central Oregon clean up after your little ones!
3 Rooms Cleaned
Spring ! l Specia
FIRST MONTH
Hot Carbonating Extraction
May 13th at 11:30
Fish House
1/2 Price
SAVE SOME MONEY & TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE GREAT DEALS OFFERED BY OUR LOCAL BUSINESSES!!
Open Mothers Day!
Special Oil Change Price!
of equal or lesser value, with purchase of two beverages.
TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
1999 mo for 12 Months with 24-month agreement
Beyond Carpet Cleaning CARPET | TILE & GROUT | HARDWOOD | FURNITURE
Serving Central Oregon 541-706-9390 • 1-800-STEEMER Schedule Online at www.stanleysteemer.com
541-389-8715
Must present coupon at time of cleaning. An area is defined as any room up to 300 square feet. Baths, halls, staircases, large walk-in closets and area rugs are priced separately. Offer does not include protector. Residential only. With coupon only. Some restrictions may apply. Expires 5/31/12
Locally Owned - Giving Excellent Service!
INTERNET & SATELLITE
$
541.923.3234 1715 SW Highland Ave., Redmond www.linkpointnw.com
GET UP TO
80
®
®
OFFERS END 5/31/12
DOUBLE YOUR MAIL-IN REBATE UP TO
OR
by Mail-In Rebate when you purchase a set of four select Goodyear® or Dunlop® tires.
$
160
when you make the purchase on the Goodyear Credit Card.1
1. Mail-In Rebate paid in the form of a Visa prepaid rebate card. To double your Mail-In Rebate, qualifying purchase must be made on the Goodyear Credit Card. Subject to credit approval. Offers valid on purchases between 03/01/12 - 05/31/12. Allow 6 to 8 weeks for delivery. See store associate for complete details and Rebate form. Additional terms and conditions apply.2
NO INTEREST IF PAID IN FULL WITHIN 6 MONTHS* on purchase of $250 or more made from March 1, 2012 to May 31, 2012. Interest will be charged to your account from the purchase date if the purchase balance is not paid in full within 6 months or if you make a late payment. Minimum payment required. See this ad for details.
GOODYEAR AUTO CARE • 61343 S. HWY 97 • BEND • 541-388-4189 Tails are wagging & pets are bragging about U-Wash Pets & Grooming
On-Site ALTERATIONS at the Westside location! CARPET & UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
541-549-9090 ANTI-ALLERGENS & GREEN PRODUCTS • Most advanced truck mount extraction system • Recommended by carpet manufacturers • FAST Drying
Family owned and operated since 1986
SEE MORE OFFERS ON BACK
ANY 2 AREAS
$109 95
(UP TO 300 SQ. FT.)
INCLUDES PRE-TREATMENT & SPOT REMOVAL PRESENT COUPON AT TIME OF SERVICE. EXPIRES 6/16/12. DOES NOT COMBINE WITH OTHER OFFERS. STAIRS EXTRA.
FREE UWASH Buy One Self Serve U-Wash and Second Dog is Free! With Coupon - Expires May 31, 2012
3405 N. Hwy 97 • Bend • Next to Chevron Food Mart • 541-318-1602
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THE BULLETIN • COMMUNITY SAVINGS
THE BULLETIN • COMMUNITY SAVINGS
SAVE SOME MONEY & TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE GREAT DEALS OFFERED BY OUR LOCAL BUSINESSES!!
SAVE SOME MONEY & TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE GREAT DEALS OFFERED BY OUR LOCAL BUSINESSES!! LUNCH/ 541-382-3173 of America DINNER BehindonBank 3rd Street Buy 1 1230 NE 3RD • BEND, OR Get 1 Free
Superior Carpet and Tile & Stone Cleaning
Our Hot Carbonating Truck Mount Extraction cleans deep! We use one-fifth the amount of water compared to steam cleaners so carpet DRIES FAST! Our cleaner, The Natural®, is green certified, non-toxic, so it’s safe for your family and pets who are allergy sensitive! Leaves no sticky residue! Using Chem-Dry resists re-soiling so your carpet fibers stay cleaner, longer! Don’t forget your area rugs & upholstery too!
of equal or lesser value, with purchase of two beverages. Valid Monday thru Saturday only. Cannot be used with other promotional offers or lounge menu. One coupon per couple. Dine in only. Prime Rib now served Friday & Saturday Only.
Chem-Dry of Central Oregon 541-388-7374 Bend
Expires 5/31/12 * Offer Void on Mothers Day
Serving Deschutes, Crook & Jefferson Counties • Independently Owned & Operated
5
$ 00 VOUCHER
murrayandholt.com
Corner of 3rd & Greenwood • Bend • 541-383-1694
EXTERIOR RE-SEAL 10% OFF Expires 5-31-12
• All Makes and Models • Chassis Repair and Service • Appliance and Electrical Repair and Upgrades • Interior Repair and Upgrades • Exterior Repair • Collision Repair • Mobile Service available in the Central Oregon area
$49.95 (CARS/SMALL SUVS) $59.95 (FULL SIZE TRUCK/SUV) INCLUDES: Hand Wash & Dry Wash System Applied Wax Tires & Wheels Cleaned Door Jams Wiped Out Tire Protect & Shine
62980 Boyd Acres Rd., Building B, Suite 2 (Boyd Acres Joint Venture)
of Central Oregon
541-382-2222
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541-419-1947
Bodywise Wellness Center. 2100 Neff Rd., Bend, OR
00 *
$
150 CASH
CARPET | TILE & GROUT | HARDWOOD | FURNITURE
Serving Central Oregon 541-706-9390 • 1-800-STEEMER
J.L. Scott
Lawn & Landscape Maintenance
Complete Landscape Maintenance Commercial & Residential * Mowing Services * Lawn Reseeding * De-thatching
• We Bundle Dish Network & CenturyLink Hi-Speed Internet • RV Setup & Installation • FREE Installation up to 6 rooms • FREE HD/DVR Upgrade for existing customers
Schedule Online at www.stanleysteemer.com
Locally Owned - Giving Excellent Service!
®
®
541.923.3234
INTERNET & SATELLITE
OFFERS END 5/31/12
*Aeration *Fertilization * Spring & Fall Clean Up * Edging & Bed Reshaping
* Trimming *Bark Installation * Top Dressing
20%Off De-Thatching & Aeration Serving Central Oregon WE DO IT ALL! 541-382-3883 for Over 20 Years
ALLERGIES…
*$100 Cash for Dish Network *$50 Visa Cash Card for Century Link
Must present coupon at time of cleaning. An area is defined as any room up to 300 square feet. Baths, halls, staircases, large walk-in closets and area rugs are priced separately. Offer does not include protector. Residential only. With Valpak® coupon only. Some restrictions may apply. Expires 5/31/12
IICRC Certiied Technician
SERVICE HOURS M–F 7:45am to 5:30pm
Right on the Corner of Third Street and Franklin in Bend. Right on the Price.
WE WILL PAY YOU Beyond Carpet Cleaning
Specialty Omelets Prime Rib • Lobster Dungeness Crab & Salmon
OFFERS VALID WITH COUPON ONLY. EXPIRES 5/31/12
541-593-1799
Vacuum Interior Wipe Dash, Doors & Center Console Clean Glass Treat Dash-Vinyl & Leather
If you are ready to create a New Sexier You, without crazy diets or spending long hours in the gym, this FREE seminar is for YOU.
541-728-0305
FEATURING:
WAX PLUS
541-382-2222
Sadly most diets & exercise programs work against you, they can set you up for a lifetime of weight issues.
Includes Roof components & Exterior Accessories
LUNCH 11:30–2:30, MON–FRI DINNER 4–9, MON–SAT
May 13th at 11:30
Expires 5/31/12
Towards custom processing of GAME or FARM meat TAYLOR’S SAUSAGE DELI AND PUB
Fish House
Open Mothers Day!
1715 SW Highland Ave., Redmond www.linkpointnw.com
you can breathe better air $
50 to $100 OFF
Air Duct Cleaning! (541) 389-8715
$
20 Off Dryer Vent or Chimney Cleaning
DID YOU KNOW? Poor Indoor Air Quality can: Result in Illness • Including: Nausea Eye & Skin Irritation • Headaches • Allergic Reactions • Respiratory Problems
EXPIRES 6/30/12
Call today for your FREE ESTIMATE! *Video Inspection Available 541-389-8715 | LICENSED • BONDED • INSURED | www.masterstouchblend.com
MONEY-SAVING COUPONS! BRAKE
MAINTENANCE Install new disc pads/shoes, resurface drums/rotors. Most cars per axle. Ceramic or carbon metallic pads extra if required. Starting at
$
99
119
Bearing Repack Extra Most cars & light trucks. Expires 5/31/12
Lube, Oil, Filter & Tire Rotation
$
99
29
We Use Synthetic Blend Motor Oil
• Chassis Lube • Wash Exterior Front • New Oil Filter Window • Up to 5 Qts of 5W30 • Vacuum Front Kendall Synthetic Blend Floorboards • Tire Rotation • Top off most Fluids under the hood Most cars & light trucks. 3/4 & 1 Ton may require extra fee. Expires 5/31/12
GOODYEAR AUTO CARE | 61343 S. HWY 97 • BEND • 541-388-4189
U-WASH PETS
& GROOMING
541-318-1602 E AVE
ANY 5 AREAS $
149
95
(UP TO 500 SQ. FT.)
BEND PARKWAY BEND PARKWAY
Sherman Rd.
7
HWY 9
PRESENT COUPON AT TIME OF SERVICE. EXPIRES 6/16/12. STAIRS EXTRA.
ANY 7 AREAS INCLUDES PRE-TREATMENT & SOAP-FREE PRODUCTS
Mervin Samples Rd.
HWY 97
O.B. RILEY RD
U-WASH PETS
M&J CARPET & UPHOLSTERY CLEANING • 541-549-9090
INCLUDES PRE-TREATMENT & SOAP-FREE PRODUCTS
EMPIR
EMPIRE AVE
Y RD
We also offer professional grooming on site.
Next to Chevron Food Mart
ILE O.B. R
U-Wash Pets & Grooming will provide you with everything you need to clean your dog and we’ll clean up the mess too!!
3405 N. Hwy 97 • Bend
$
179 95
(UP TO 650 SQ. FT.)
PRESENT COUPON AT TIME OF SERVICE. EXPIRES 6/16/12. STAIRS EXTRA.
SOFA CLEANING
$
99
95
PRESENT COUPON AT TIME OF SERVICE. EXPIRES 6/16/12.
ALL ORIENTAL & AREA RUG CLEANING
20% OFF
PRESENT COUPON AT TIME OF SERVICE. EXPIRES 6/16/12. STAIRS EXTRA.
your first order of $15 or more!
your first order of $25 or more!
TUESDAY, MAY 15, 2012
THE BULLETIN
C
C
THE BULLETIN • COMMUNITY SAVINGS
THE BULLETIN • COMMUNITY SAVINGS
SAVE SOME MONEY & TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE GREAT DEALS OFFERED BY OUR LOCAL BUSINESSES!!
LUNCH/ 541-382-3173 of America DINNER BehindonBank 3rd Street 1230 NE 3RD • BEND, OR Buy 1 Get 1 Free
Beyond Carpet Cleaning CARPET | TILE & GROUT | HARDWOOD | FURNITURE
Fish House
of equal or lesser value, with purchase of two beverages.
Serving Central Oregon 541-706-9390 • 1-800-STEEMER Schedule Online at www.stanleysteemer.com Must present coupon at time of cleaning. An area is defined as any room up to 300 square feet. Baths, halls, staircases, large walk-in closets and area rugs are priced separately. Offer does not include protector. Residential only. With coupon only. Some restrictions may apply. Expires 5/31/12
OFFERS END 5/31/12
®
®
Valid Monday thru Saturday only. Cannot be used with other promotional offers or lounge menu. One coupon per couple. Dine in only. Prime Rib now served Friday & Saturday Only.
LUNCH 11:30–2:30, MON–FRI DINNER 4–9, MON–SAT
Expires 5/31/12 *Offer Void Mothers Day
OFFERS VALID WITH COUPON ONLY. EXPIRES 5/31/12
GET THE SKINNY ON LOSING BELLY FAT
Open Mothers Day!
SAVE SOME MONEY & TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE GREAT DEALS OFFERED BY OUR LOCAL BUSINESSES!!
CARPET & UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
May 13th at 11:30
541-549-9090
FEATURING:
ANTI-ALLERGENS & GREEN PRODUCTS
Specialty Omelets Prime Rib • Lobster Dungeness Crab & Salmon
• Most advanced truck mount extraction system • Recommended by carpet manufacturers • FAST Drying
Family owned and operated since 1986
SEE MORE OFFERS ON BACK
ANY 2 AREAS
$109 95
(UP TO 300 SQ. FT.)
INCLUDES PRE-TREATMENT & SPOT REMOVAL PRESENT COUPON AT TIME OF SERVICE. EXPIRES 6/16/12. DOES NOT COMBINE WITH OTHER OFFERS. STAIRS EXTRA.
Tails are wagging & pets are bragging about U-Wash Pets & Grooming
On-Site ALTERATIONS at the Westside location!
FREE UWASH
Free Seminar
Buy One Self Serve U-Wash and Second
Thursday, May 25th 6-7 pm
Dog is Free! With Coupon - Expires May 31, 2012
Bodywise Wellness Center • 2100 Neff Rd., Bend • 541-419-1947
100 OFF
3405 N. Hwy 97 • Bend • Next to Chevron Food Mart • 541-318-1602
$
ANY DECK RESTORATION of $500 or More $
50 OFF of $300 or more $300 Minimum
EXPIRES JUNE 30, 2012
$
GET UP TO
DOUBLE YOUR MAIL-IN REBATE UP TO
80
OR
$
160
when you make the purchase on the Goodyear Credit Card.1
by Mail-In Rebate when you purchase a set of four select Goodyear® or Dunlop® tires.
1. Mail-In Rebate paid in the form of a Visa prepaid rebate card. To double your Mail-In Rebate, qualifying purchase must be made on the Goodyear Credit Card. Subject to credit approval. Offers valid on purchases between 03/01/12 - 05/31/12. Allow 6 to 8 weeks for delivery. See store associate for complete details and Rebate form. Additional terms and conditions apply.2
NO INTEREST IF PAID IN FULL WITHIN 6 MONTHS*
541-389-8715
on purchase of $250 or more made from March 1, 2012 to May 31, 2012. Interest will be charged to your account from the purchase date if the purchase balance is not paid in full within 6 months or if you make a late payment. Minimum payment required. See this ad for details.
GOODYEAR AUTO CARE • 61343 S. HWY 97 • BEND • 541-388-4189 PROMOTIONAL PRICES START AT
$
1999 mo for 12 Months with 24-month agreement
Locally Owned - Giving Excellent Service!
INTERNET & SATELLITE
$
Special Oil Change Price!
98
19 OIL CHANGES! CUSTOMER LOYALTY KEY TAGS ARE HERE!
murrayandholt.com
541-382-2222
d Street and Franklin in Right on the Corner of Thir Right on the Price.
3 Oil Changes (Gas)
Bend.
S SERVICE HOUR 5:30pm M–F 7:45am to
The key tag includes 3 lube, oil & filters. The cost is only $ 5995 per tag.
Covers most vehicles. Diesels extra. Coupon expires 5/31/12.
Special Oil Change Price!
Includes 5 quarts of oil, (blend of synthetic oil) replace oil filter, 21-point inspection, discounts up to 10%, roadside assistance, 12/12 warranty.
$
98
19
Special Oil Change Price!
Special Oil Change Price!
Special Oil Change Price!
541.923.3234 1715 SW Highland Ave., Redmond www.linkpointnw.com
each
J.L. Scott
Hot Carbonating Extraction
Chem-Dry of Central Oregon Serving Deschutes, Crook & Jefferson Counties Independently Owned & Operated
20% OFF Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning www.chemdrybend.com
541-388-7374 Let Chem-Dry of Central Oregon clean up after your little ones!
Residential & Commercial Offer valid with coupon only. Not including RVs & stairs. Not valid with other offers. Minimums apply. Payment due at time of service. Expiration date: 6/1/2012
10% OFF
Lawn & Landscape Maintenance
1/2 Price
Dethatching & Aeration Plus FREE Fertilizing
FIRST MONTH with NEW Seasonal Mowing Service Serving Central Oregon for Over 20 Years
• Interstate • Trojan • Centennial
20% OFF 541-382-3883
BATTERIES Expires 5-31-12
Coupons expire 5/31/12
“Because weekends WERE NOT made for yard work!”
541-728-0305
Years of Experience for all of your RV Repairs!
62980 Boyd Acres Rd., Building B, Suite 2 (Boyd Acres Joint Venture)
Special Oil Change Price!
Got le? Troub
RV Battery Sale!
OREGON MADE SAUSAGE & JERKY OVER VARIETIES
20% 80 OFF JERKY or SAUSAGE PRODUCTS EXPIRES 5/31/12
3 Rooms Cleaned
Spring ! l Specia
$
Expires 5/31/2012
913 NE 3RD STREET • BEND, OR • 541.383.1694 CORNER OF GREENWOOD & 3RD STREET (ACROSS FROM WELLS FARGO)
BW0412
2 Rooms Cleaned
ON DISPLAY
DELI & PUB
99
With Coupon. Room is Considered 250 Sq. Ft. One Coupon per Customer. Fuel surcharge may apply.
$
74
With Coupon. Room is Considered 250 Sq. Ft. One Coupon per Customer. Fuel surcharge may apply. Expires 5/31/2012
BW0412
Whole House Cleaning
$
OXI Fresh of Central Oregon 541-593-1799
149
Up to 5 Rooms Cleaned
With Coupon. Room is Considered 250 Sq. Ft. One Coupon per Customer. Fuel surcharge may apply. Expires 5/31/2012
BW0412
C
C
THE BULLETIN • COMMUNITY SAVINGS
THE BULLETIN • COMMUNITY SAVINGS
SAVE SOME MONEY & TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE GREAT DEALS OFFERED BY OUR LOCAL BUSINESSES!! M&J CARPET & UPHOLSTERY CLEANING • 541-549-9090
SOFA CLEANING
ANY 5 AREAS $
$
149 95
(UP TO 500 SQ. FT.)
INCLUDES PRE-TREATMENT & SOAP-FREE PRODUCTS
PRESENT COUPON AT TIME OF SERVICE. EXPIRES 6/16/12.
PRESENT COUPON AT TIME OF SERVICE. EXPIRES 6/16/12. STAIRS EXTRA.
ANY 7 AREAS $
179
95
99
95
ALL ORIENTAL & AREA RUG CLEANING
(UP TO 650 SQ. FT.)
20% OFF
INCLUDES PRE-TREATMENT & SOAP-FREE PRODUCTS
PRESENT COUPON AT TIME OF SERVICE. EXPIRES 6/16/12. STAIRS EXTRA.
PRESENT COUPON AT TIME OF SERVICE. EXPIRES 6/16/12. STAIRS EXTRA.
U-WASH PETS
Fish House
Valid Monday thru Saturday only. Cannot be used with other promotional offers or lounge menu. One coupon per couple. Dine in only. Prime Rib now served Friday & Saturday Only.
LUNCH 11:30–2:30, MON–FRI DINNER 4–9, MON–SAT
Expires 5/31/12 * Offer Void on Mothers Day
Next to Chevron Food Mart
EMPIRE AVE
CARPET | TILE & GROUT | HARDWOOD | FURNITURE
FEATURING:
Serving Central Oregon 541-706-9390 • 1-800-STEEMER
Specialty Omelets Prime Rib • Lobster Dungeness Crab & Salmon
OFFERS VALID WITH COUPON ONLY. EXPIRES 5/31/12
Schedule Online at www.stanleysteemer.com Must present coupon at time of cleaning. An area is defined as any room up to 300 square feet. Baths, halls, staircases, large walk-in closets and area rugs are priced separately. Offer does not include protector. Residential only. With Valpak® coupon only. Some restrictions may apply. Expires 5/31/12
OFFERS END 5/31/12
®
®
your first order of $25 or more!
Stop Dieting & Start Losing Weight
FREE Seminar
• Frustrated with diets that only work short term? • Tired of spending endless hours on the treadmill? • Sick of spending money on useless diet pills?
The Metabolic Effect
EMPIR
Sadly most diets & exercise programs work against you, they can set you up for a lifetime of weight issues.
How to Burn Fat, Reshape your Body & Create a New You in 10 Weeks
If you are ready to create a New Sexier You, without crazy diets or spending long hours in the gym, this FREE seminar is for YOU.
$150 Off!
E AVE
97
BEND PARKWAY
HWY
Join Dr. Michael Wise & get the facts & science on how to truly shed pounds, lose belly fat & restore your vitality naturally eating foods you love & exercising in a way that is fun & sensible. Call to reserve your seat ...
Mervin Samples Rd.
BEND PARKWAY
HWY 97
O.B. RILEY RD
U-WASH PETS
Beyond Carpet Cleaning
May 13th at 11:30
your first order of $15 or more!
541-318-1602
Y RD
We also offer professional grooming on site.
of equal or lesser value, with purchase of two beverages.
Open Mothers Day!
3405 N. Hwy 97 • Bend
ILE O.B. R
U-Wash Pets & Grooming will provide you with everything you need to clean your dog and we’ll clean up the mess too!!
LUNCH/ 541-382-3173 of America DINNER BehindonBank 3rd Street Buy 1 1230 NE 3RD • BEND, OR Get 1 Free
Sherman Rd.
& GROOMING
SAVE SOME MONEY & TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE GREAT DEALS OFFERED BY OUR LOCAL BUSINESSES!!
541-419-1947
Present this coupon and take $150 off our 10 Week Fat Loss Program.
Bodywise Wellness Center. 2100 Neff Rd., Bend, OR
MONEY-SAVING COUPONS! BRAKE
MAINTENANCE Install new disc pads/shoes, resurface drums/rotors. Most cars per axle. Ceramic or carbon metallic pads extra if required. Starting at
$
99
119
Bearing Repack Extra Most cars & light trucks. Expires 5/31/12
ALLERGIES…
Lube, Oil, Filter & Tire Rotation
$
99
29
you can breathe better air $
We Use Synthetic Blend Motor Oil
• Chassis Lube • Wash Exterior Front • New Oil Filter Window • Up to 5 Qts of 5W30 • Vacuum Front Kendall Synthetic Blend Floorboards • Tire Rotation • Top off most Fluids under the hood Most cars & light trucks. 3/4 & 1 Ton may require extra fee. Expires 5/31/12
GOODYEAR AUTO CARE | 61343 S. HWY 97 • BEND • 541-388-4189
50 to $100 OFF
Air Duct Cleaning! (541) 389-8715
$
20 Off Dryer Vent or Chimney Cleaning
DID YOU KNOW? Poor Indoor Air Quality can: Result in Illness • Including: Nausea Eye & Skin Irritation • Headaches • Allergic Reactions • Respiratory Problems
EXPIRES 6/30/12
Call today for your FREE ESTIMATE! *Video Inspection Available 541-389-8715 | LICENSED • BONDED • INSURED | www.masterstouchblend.com
WE WILL PAY YOU $
00 *
150 CASH
• We Bundle Dish Network & CenturyLink Hi-Speed Internet • RV Setup & Installation • FREE Installation up to 6 rooms • FREE HD/DVR Upgrade for existing customers *$100 Cash for Dish Network *$50 Visa Cash Card for Century Link
Locally Owned - Giving Excellent Service!
INTERNET & SATELLITE
EXTERIOR RE-SEAL
541.923.3234 1715 SW Highland Ave., Redmond www.linkpointnw.com
J.L. Scott
Lawn & Landscape Maintenance
10% OFF Includes Roof components & Exterior Accessories
Complete Landscape Maintenance Commercial & Residential
Expires 5-31-12
• All Makes and Models • Chassis Repair and Service • Appliance and Electrical Repair and Upgrades • Interior Repair and Upgrades • Exterior Repair • Collision Repair • Mobile Service available in the Central Oregon area
* Mowing Services * Lawn Reseeding * De-thatching
541-728-0305
62980 Boyd Acres Rd., Building B, Suite 2 (Boyd Acres Joint Venture)
*Aeration *Fertilization * Spring & Fall Clean Up * Edging & Bed Reshaping
* Trimming *Bark Installation * Top Dressing
20%Off De-Thatching & Aeration Serving Central Oregon WE DO IT ALL! 541-382-3883 for Over 20 Years
5
$ 00 of Central Oregon
541-593-1799
IICRC Certiied Technician
VOUCHER
Towards custom processing of GAME or FARM meat TAYLOR’S SAUSAGE DELI AND PUB Corner of 3rd & Greenwood • Bend • 541-383-1694
murrayandholt.com
541-382-2222
WAX PLUS Expires 5/31/12
$49.95 (CARS/SMALL SUVS) $59.95 (FULL SIZE TRUCK/SUV) INCLUDES: Hand Wash & Dry Wash System Applied Wax Tires & Wheels Cleaned Door Jams Wiped Out Tire Protect & Shine
Vacuum Interior Wipe Dash, Doors & Center Console Clean Glass Treat Dash-Vinyl & Leather
Right on the Corner of Third Street and Franklin in Bend. Right on the Price.
SERVICE HOURS M–F 7:45am to 5:30pm
541-382-2222
Superior Carpet and Tile & Stone Cleaning
Our Hot Carbonating Truck Mount Extraction cleans deep! We use one-fifth the amount of water compared to steam cleaners so carpet DRIES FAST! Our cleaner, The Natural®, is green certified, non-toxic, so it’s safe for your family and pets who are allergy sensitive! Leaves no sticky residue! Using Chem-Dry resists re-soiling so your carpet fibers stay cleaner, longer! Don’t forget your area rugs & upholstery too!
Chem-Dry of Central Oregon 541-388-7374 Bend Serving Deschutes, Crook & Jefferson Counties • Independently Owned & Operated