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JULY 18, 2012
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In Bend, crime reporting goes online
Testimony begins in Bray rape trial
By Erik Hidle The Bulletin
A new online crime reporting system in Bend went live Tuesday, and a few people have already turned in reports of criminal mischief. “One was a theft from a vehicle, and I can’t remember the others, but we have a couple of reports, I believe, and we will be looking at them tomorrow in more detail,” said Bend Police Lt. Paul Kansky. “We’re still implementing this on a limited basis right now, just to make sure it is all working right.” The reporting system asks basic questions about nonviolent crimes and gathers contact information for five commonly reported property crimes. Residents can use the site to report criminal mischief, lost property, noninjury hit-and-run vehicle damage, theft from a vehicle and basic theft. Online reporting is to be used in cases where damages are less than $1,000, and only in incidents where there is no immediate suspect. Kansky told emergency dispatchers to route eight individuals through to the new system Tuesday. He said he wants to keep the sample size small for a few weeks to make sure everything works as intended. The goal is to cut the time officers spend taking reports, and use it to solve the cases. Kansky said it currently takes about 45 minutes for an officer to respond to a property crime, take the report and input it into the system back at the station. Under the new system, police expect it to take no more than 10 minutes to submit a report online. “Then it will take us five minutes to review it,” Kansky said. “It still gets the same attention, but the outcome we are looking for is that at the end of a week ... officers’ (time) can be spent investigating these crimes. That should get us a lot better results.” To report a crime online, visit http://www.ci.bend.or.us/ index.aspx?page=830. — Reporter: 541-617-7837, ehidle@bendbulletin.com
TOP NEWS SYRIA: Army takes hard line in Damascus, A3 BOY SCOUTS: Will not accept gay members, A3
By Sheila G. Miller The Bulletin
Photos by Pete Erickson / The Bulletin
Archaeological conservator J. Claire Dean rubs a chemical onto a small portion of graffiti sprayed onto the walls of Hidden Forest Cave, which was vandalized last year, as she works Tuesday to clean it off.
Erasing the present to preserve the past • Workers labor to repair vandalism without damaging historic pictographs By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
The painstaking cleanup of spray-paint graffiti started this week at a cave southeast of Bend. Volunteers are using a solvent-based cleaning solution, toothbrushes and rags to slowly remove the vandalism found last April at Hidden Forest Cave. Cliffs flank the sunken entrance of the cave near Arnold Ice Cave off China Hat Road. Vandals chose the base of the south cliff, covering it with spray-painted writing. “This is bad,” said J. Claire Dean, archaeological conservator and head of Dean & Associates Conservation Services of Portland. “This is one of the worst I’ve seen, and I’ve seen some bad ones.” One of just a couple of experts in the country specializing in restoring archaeological sites marred by vandals, Dean is in Central Oregon this week to teach volunteers how to remedy the mess at Hidden Forest Cave. In her more than 30 years of work, Dean has revived archaeological sites around the United States and abroad defaced by vandals. At Hidden Forest Cave, she’s removing graffiti at the cave sprayed over pictographs, or old paintings, on the cliff. “Trying to get the spray paint off without damaging what is beneath is very difficult,” she said. Native Americans painted the pictographs, likely before Europeans were in Central Oregon, said Penni Borghi, forest archaeologist for the Deschutes and Ochoco national forests. There’s one that appears to be the shape of a person, as well as several dots and smears on the cliff. See Cave / A6
Report: States’ cash woes won’t be going away By Mary Williams Walsh and Michael Cooper New York Times News Service
A closer look at one of the pictographs (vertical lines) at Hidden Forest Cave shows how it has been marred by two black stripes of spray paint (horizontal lines).
TODAY’S WEATHER Possible thunderstorms High 78, Low 54 Page C6
A former Central Oregon Community College student testified Tuesday that her anatomy instructor plied her with alcohol, then — without her consent — choked her with his bathrobe belt during sex. The testimony was part of the first day of trial for Thomas Harry Bray, 38, who has pleaded not guilty to 11 felony and misdemeanor counts related to two alleged rapes in February 2011. In another incident, a different woman, alleged victim 1, accused Bray of violently assaulting her in his downtown Bend apartment after she met him on Match. com. The Bulletin is not identifying the women because they are possible victims of sexual assault. Bray has waived his right to a jury trial. Deschutes County Circuit Court Judge Stephen Tiktin will determine Bray’s fate. In his opening statement, Deschutes County District Attorney Patrick Flaherty told Tiktin that Bray preyed on women who trusted him because of his medical degree, his age and his intelligence. “The evidence in this case will show that the defendant, who took an oath to do no harm, has shown complete disdain for that oath, disdain for women and the concept of consent,” he said. Flaherty painted a picture of two women who trusted Bray and paid dearly for it. See Trial / A6
Online: To see video of the cleanup at Hidden Forest Cave, go online to www.bendbulletin.com/cavecleanup.
WASHINGTON — The fiscal crisis for states will persist long after the economy rebounds as states confront financial problems that include rising health-care costs, underfunded pensions, ignored infrastructure needs, eroding revenues and expected federal budget cuts, according to a report issued here Tuesday by a task force of respected budget experts. The severity of the long-term problems facing states is often masked by lax state budget laws and opaque accounting practices, according to the report, an independent analysis of six states released by a group calling itself the State Budget Crisis Task Force. The report said the financial collapse of 2008, which caused the most serious fiscal crisis for states since the Great Depression, exposed a number of deep-set financial challenges that will grow worse if no action is taken by national policymakers. See Report / A4
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New York’s oldest priest still answers his calling at age 92 By Sharon Otterman New York Times News Service
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NEW YORK — It was the bell that first called to him. It was a Sunday afternoon in the mid-1920s, and his family was living in the Pelham Bay section of the Bronx. When his priest rang the bell during Mass, Gerald Ryan, then about 4, thought the beautiful sound was coming from the mon-
strance that held the host. At age 7, he was hit by a car and lost his hearing in one ear. The bell remained in his memory, as if Jesus were calling him in stereo. Now he is a monsignor, and has been a priest for 67 years. He still runs a parish, St. Luke’s, and he is 92, making him the oldest working priest in New York City.
“Maybe in the country,” Ryan said last week in his broad, courtly accent that is part Bronx, part Fred Astaire. “Maybe anywhere! I’ve been here forever.” The priesthood is graying: The average age of Catholic priests in the U.S. rose to 63 in 2009 from 35 in 1970, according to a recent study. See Priest / A6
Jennifer S. Altman / New York Times News Service
Monsignor Gerald Ryan, who at 92 is the oldest working priest in the city, at St. Luke Church in New York. While the formal retirement age is 75, more priests are working past retirement because fewer young men are entering seminaries.
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Los Angeles Times
PASADENA, Calif. — In less than three weeks, an amiable, whip-smart engineer named Ray Baker will be staring into his computer screen at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, hopeful and helpless — or, as he puts it, “sweating blood.” The night will have been 10 years and $2.5 billion in the making, incorporating the work of 5,000 people in 37 states. And then, 154 million miles from home, the fate of the most ambitious machine humans have sent to another planet will rest on a seven-minute landing sequence so farfetched it looks like something Wile E. Coyote devised to catch the Road Runner. After a journey of nearly nine months, the six-wheel laboratory NASA has dubbed Curiosity is scheduled to touch down on Mars at 10:31 p.m. on Aug. 5. Curiosity’s science could captivate the public like no other space mission in recent memory. The robot is equipped with a nuclear-powered lab capable of vaporizing rocks and ingesting soil, furthering the search for signs of life, revolutionizing the study of Mars and potentially paving the way for human exploration. Initially, though, the allure of the mission will come in its daredevil landing on the floor of a crater. In the time it takes to drive to the grocery store, the spacecraft will change shape like a toy Transformer six times, slowing from 13,000 mph to 1.7 mph while using 76 pyrotechnic devices, ropes, knives and the largest supersonic parachute ever built. “When you work through the engineering, it actually makes a lot of sense,” said Baker, who has been an engineer since 2001 at La Canada Flintridge’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which is managing the mission for NASA. “But it looks crazy.”
‘Seven minutes of terror’ What’s more, the entire sequence must run on its own, because Mars is so far away that scientists can’t fly the craft remotely; they will have sent their last command to the spacecraft two hours earlier. Curiosity will send an alert when it enters the Martian atmosphere, but it will take the message roughly 14 minutes to reach Earth. So, by the time the message is received, the craft will have already been on the surface for seven minutes, ei-
It’s Wednesday, July 18, the 200th day of 2012. There are 166 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS • Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke appears before the House Financial Services Committee for the second of two days of his twice-yearly report to Congress on the state of the U.S. economy. Bernanke testified before the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday. E1 • The Tour de France resumes in the Pyrenees with the socalled “Circle of Death,” four brutal climbs topped by the 7,000-foot Tourmalet. D1 • The National Hockey League and its players association resume labor talks.
IN HISTORY
Patrick T. Fallon / Los Angeles Times
Joseph Carsten and Vandi Tompkin of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory watch from underneath the Mars rover Curiosity during a test at the Mars Science Laboratory in the In-Situ Instruments Lab at JPL in Pasadena, Calif., on June 22. The rover is scheduled to touch down on Mars on Aug. 5.
ther intact or wrecked. NASA has labeled this period “seven minutes of terror.” Mars is a notoriously difficult place to land a machine. “It’s known for eating spacecraft,” said Devin Kipp, another of the 30-odd JPL engineers responsible for Curiosity’s landing sequence. Beyond the travel involved, Mars’ atmosphere is 100 times thinner than Earth’s — just enough to cause problems but not enough to slow down a spacecraft to a manageable speed. More than half of missions to Mars, dating to a series of fly-by attempts by the Soviet Union in the 1960s, have failed, and JPL remains the only institution to deposit a successful robot on the Red Planet. The elaborate landing sequence for Curiosity grew out of necessity. As it was being designed, scientists began ratcheting up their ambitions. That meant new gadgets, which begot more gadgets needed to power and protect them. “The rover started to grow,” Baker said. Before long, the plan called for a 2,000-pound rover the size of a small car — five times heavier than NASA’s previous Mars rovers. Landing sequences used in the past wouldn’t work. The contraption that in 2004 allowed the Spirit and Opportunity rovers to bounce in an air bag to resting positions became too heavy to launch when scaled up for Curiosity. Engineers
initially wanted to land Curiosity on a platform, then pilot it down a ramp. But the platform design grew to unmanageable proportions. So the engineers came up with something new — a sequence so odd that even some of the scientists tasked with building the thing were highly skeptical.
The sequence Curiosity, folded inside a heat shield, will hit the Martian atmosphere at 13,000 mph, firing thrusters to stabilize its course and steer it toward the crater. Atmospheric friction will heat the shield to 1,600 degrees and begin to slow the craft. When it reaches about 1,000 mph, an explosive charge will release a massive parachute that is packed to the density of wood and capable of withstanding 65,000 pounds of force. The craft will discard its heat shield, which would otherwise act like a lens cap on a camera — Curiosity’s radar couldn’t “see” the ground to find its target. In less than two minutes, the spacecraft will slow to about 200 mph. It will then jettison the parachute and, for a brief moment, be in free fall. “Here’s where it gets really exciting,” Baker said with a laugh. Eight rocket engines pointed at the ground will erupt, arresting the fall. But the discarded parachute will be falling right behind; Curiosity could stick the landing, only to find itself
smothered by the massive chute. So the craft will use the engines to lurch about 350 yards, out of the chute’s path. The spacecraft will then be about a mile above the ground. In the next 35 seconds, the rockets will slow the craft to less than 2 mph. In theory, the rockets could provide a gentle enough landing to finish the job. But in practice, they would kick up such a dust storm that it could ruin the rover. So at 66 feet, the rover will fall yet again. As the craft descends, Curiosity will be spat out by a “sky crane,” lowered by 25-foot ropes as the rover unfurls its wheels. A last critical moment will come when Curiosity’s wheels touch down, because the spacecraft will suddenly lose half its weight. If it begins to drift, the ropes could drag the rover. So Curiosity has 0.7 of a second to fire pyrotechnic charges that send blades sweeping across the nylon tethers. Once the ropes are cut, the craft above — its job completed — will rocket off, crash-landing a safe 450 meters away. Then, finally, the rover will be alone, and safe, and prepared to begin the mission. “I’ve been trying to imagine it,” Baker said. “I’m looking forward to seeing what my reaction will be. We’ll be celebrating like mad. We’re down safe. The descent stage is over — and it’s game time for the science team.”
Highlights: In 64 A.D., the Great Fire of Rome began. In 1536, the English Parliament passed an act declaring the authority of the pope void in England. In 1982, Guatemalan soldiers aided by members of civilian patrols stormed the highland village of Plan de Sanchez in search of leftist guerrillas, killing some 200 people. (In July 2005, the government of Guatemala accepted responsibility for the massacre, and apologized.) Ten years ago: Accused 9/11 conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui tried to plead guilty to charges that could have brought the death penalty, but a federal judge in Alexandria, Va., insisted he take time to think about it. Five years ago: Senate Republicans torpedoed legislation to force the withdrawal of U.S. combat troops from Iraq. An underground steam pipe exploded on a New York City street, swallowing a tow truck and claiming the life of a woman who suffered a heart attack. One year ago: Gen. David Petraeus handed over command of American and coalition forces in Afghanistan to Gen. John Allen.
BIRTHDAYS Former South African President Nelson Mandela is 94. Actor James Brolin is 72. Baseball executive Joe Torre is 72. Singer Ricky Skaggs is 58. Actor Vin Diesel is 45. Retired NBA All-Star Penny Hardaway is 41. Dance music singer-songwriter M.I.A. is 37. Actress Kristen Bell is 32. — From wire reports
Lines blur between genetic counselors and salespeople By Andrew Pollack
CUTTING EDGE
New York Times News Service
Genetic testing raises some hotly debated ethical questions, like whether it will cause unnecessary anxiety or lead to more medical procedures, including abortions. Now, as the number of tests and the money to be made from them are exploding, another question is being asked by professionals in the field themselves. Is it ethical for genetic counselors, who advise patients on whether to undergo testing, to be paid by the companies that perform the tests? While it might not always be immediately obvious to patients, some counselors offering them advice in hospitals and doctors’ offices work for the commercial genetic testing companies, not for the hospitals or doctors themselves.
A conflict of interest? Critics say the arrangement poses a potential conflict of interest, in that the company-employed counselors might have an incentive to recommend more testing than necessary or not to recommend a test offered by a rival laboratory. The practice, they contend, could undermine trust in the profession just as genetic counselors are poised to play a growing role in medicine, helping patients sift through an ever-increasing ar-
tor of the master’s program in genetic counseling at Boston University. Doctors who defend the arrangement say that they cannot afford to hire counselors on their own because reimbursement for counseling is low.
LabCorp a major player
Yana Paskova / New York Times News Service
Kara Murphy, who saw a genetic counselor employed by Genzyme when she was pregnant with her son, Keegan, said she thought the counselor worked for the hospital.
ray of available genetic tests. “Ultimately, the success of a corporate lab depends on the utilization of their tests, and therefore, so too does the job security of the genetic counselor,” Katie Stoll, a genetic counselor at the Madigan Health Care System, a government medical center in Tacoma, Wash., wrote recently on the DNA Exchange, a website for genetic counselors. Stoll said she worried that in some cases “the line between genetic counselor and sales representative is blurred.” There are genetic tests for more than 2,500 diseases, up from fewer than 800 diseases in
2001, according to Gene-Tests, a database supported by the federal government. UnitedHealth, the big insurer, recently projected that spending on genetic testing in the United States would grow to as much as $25 billion in 2012, up from $5 billion in 2010. Some leaders in the genetic counseling profession say that testing companies have supplied counselors to medical practices for more than 10 years with no evidence that patients have been harmed. “I’ve never heard it being raised as a real issue in the quality of patient care,” said MaryAnn Campion, direc-
About 9 percent of the nation’s approximately 3,000 genetic counselors now work for testing laboratories, up from 2 percent in 1990, according to the National Society of Genetic Counselors. However, the society estimates that only onethird of those directly counsel patients, with many others advising only doctors. The company most known for placing counselors inside hospitals and medical offices is Genzyme Genetics, which was acquired by LabCorp in 2010 and renamed Integrated Genetics. Integrated Genetics says it has about 140 counselors offering services at 200 locations. These counselors deal primarily with prenatal testing. Stephen Anderson, a spokesman for LabCorp, said the counseling was part of the testing service and that counselors were not compensated based on how many tests were ordered.
“Genetic counselors are not salespeople,” he said. “Our counselors are trained professionals that are looking to provide appropriate care, period.” Kara Murphy, of Fanwood, N.J., saw a Genzyme counselor after an ultrasound at a hospital suggested something might be wrong with her fetus. She said she thought the counselor worked for the hospital. “Even if she handed me a card that said Genzyme on it, I have no idea what Genzyme is,” Murphy recalled. The counselor discussed numerous testing options, which Murphy said would have cost her $2,500 out of pocket, and, in retrospect, would not have found what was wrong. She eventually went to Elena Ashkinadze, a genetic counselor at the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and president of the Human Genetics Association of New Jersey. Ashkinadze, after ordering tests from various labs that cost Murphy $600 out of pocket, figured out the rare disease Murphy’s son would have. Ashkinadze said it was not clear if Murphy had received bad advice from the Genzyme counselor. But Ashkinadze said having testing companies provide such advice could raise suspicions among patients. “We shouldn’t be pawns in the marketing scheme,” she said.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
A3
T S N
B Gunman’s rampage leaves 17 injured TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — A gunman stood outside of a crowded downtown bar and opened fire from two different positions early Tuesday, sending patrons running or crawling for cover in a chaotic and bloody scene. At least 17 people were hurt as bullets ricocheted and glass shards and brick chunks fell around the nightclub. Nathan Van Wilkins, 44, surrendered about 10 hours after the 12:30 a.m. shooting near the University of Alabama campus, police said. The rampage started a couple of miles away about 45 minutes earlier, police said, when Wilkins knocked on the door to a home and waited for a person to answer it. He then started firing, wounding the person. Wilkins was also suspected of setting three fires to equipment or property owned by his former employer, an oil and gas company. Police were not sure of a motive.
FBI dogs find scent of missing girls EVANSDALE, Iowa — Authorities searching for two young cousins drained an Iowa lake Tuesday after FBI dogs detected the girls’ scents near where their bicycles were found four days earlier, heightening suspicion from family members that they might have been abducted. FBI spokeswoman Sandy Breault said the reaction from the dogs Monday night indicated a “strong possibility” the girls had been at the lake, less than a mile from their grandmother’s house where they were last reported seen Friday. However, Breault said because there were no confirmed sightings at the lake, authorities couldn’t be certain. Chief Deputy Rick Abben of the Black Hawk County Sheriff’s Office said the case was still considered a missing persons investigation. The decision to drain the lake was made to rule out the possibility the girls were in the water, he said.
FDA bans BPA in baby bottles, cups WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday that baby bottles and children’s drinking cups could no longer contain bisphenol A, or BPA, an estrogen-mimicking industrial chemical used in some plastic bottles and food packaging. Manufacturers have already stopped using the chemical in baby bottles and sippy cups, and the FDA said that its decision was a response to a request by the American Chemistry Council, the chemical industry’s main trade association, that rules allowing BPA in those products be phased out, in part to boost consumer confidence. The FDA declared BPA safe in 2008 but began expressing concerns about possible health risks in 2010.
Court turns down ex-nurse’s appeal MINNEAPOLIS — The Minnesota Court of Appeals on Tuesday upheld the convictions of a former nurse who hunted for suicidal people in online chat rooms and encouraged two to kill themselves, saying his actions were not protected speech. William Melchert-Dinkel, 49, of Faribault, was convicted in 2011 of two counts of aiding suicide. He acknowledged that what he did was morally wrong but argued that he merely exercised his right to free speech. The appeals court disagreed. — From wire reports
SYRIA
Army takes hard line in capital By Neil MacFarquhar and Dalal Mawad New York Times News Service
BEIRUT — Damascus was tense Tuesday as clashes between the Syrian army and rebels near the city center extended into a third day, with government forces throwing a security cordon around some embattled neighborhoods, firing from helicopters and reinforcing the number of tanks on the streets.
The urban combat in Damascus overshadowed international diplomacy aimed at halting the Syria conflict, which intensified ahead of a U.N. Security Council vote this week on whether to extend the mission of 300 U.N. monitors, who have been basically trapped in their hotel rooms since last month, their work suspended. There was also new evidence, reported by Israel’s
intelligence chief, that President Bashar Assad was moving troops into Damascus from Syria’s border with the disputed Golan Heights territory held by Israel, a possible indication of the seriousness of the fighting that was roiling neighborhoods at the president’s doorstep. The epicenter of the Damascus fighting remained an area in the capital’s southwest where street battles first erupt-
ed Sunday, particularly the Midan neighborhood where rebel fighters concentrated after being chased out of surrounding quarters. “The heaviest clashes are going on in Al-Midan and the neighboring areas,” said one spokesman for an activist group in Damascus. “Regime forces are threatening to bombard the whole area and telling civilians to evacuate their houses.”
Gunmen wound UN doctor in Pakistan attack By Declan Walsh New York Times News Service
ISLAMABAD — Gunmen opened fire on a U.N. vehicle in the southern port city of Karachi on Tuesday, seriously wounding a Ghanaian doctor who was part of an urgent campaign to eradicate polio from Pakistan. The attack was a further blow to the three-day polio vaccination drive, which had already been stymied in some parts of the country by Taliban threats. The U.N. vehicle came under fire as it passed through Gadap, a neighborhood on the northwestern outskirts of Karachi, early Tuesday. The doctor, who was shot in the abdomen, was taken to the private Aga Khan Hospital for emergency treatment, according to Guido Sabatinelli, country director for the World Health Organization, who spoke by phone from Karachi. The doctor’s driver, who was less seriously injured, was also treated and released, Sabatinelli
Fareed Khan / The Associated Press
Pakistani police officers gather by a vehicle that was attacked by gunmen Tuesday in Karachi, Pakistan. A doctor working on a polio immunization program was wounded in the assault, officials said.
said. He said he could not release the victims’ names because his staff had not yet reached the doctor’s family in Ghana. The United Nations said its security officials were investigating the shooting together with the Pakistani police. “We don’t know exactly why this shooting took place, but it is probably related to the
Scouts reaffirm ban on gay members By Erik Eckholm New York Times News Service
The Boy Scouts of America has reaffirmed its longtime policy of barring openly gay boys from membership and gay or lesbian adults from serving as leaders. The decision, announced Tuesday, came after what the organization described as a wide-ranging internal review and despite public protests. The exclusion policy “reflects the beliefs and perspectives” of the organization, the Boy Scouts said in a news release from its national headquarters in Irving, Texas. “While a majority of our membership agrees with our policy, we fully understand that no single policy will accommodate the many diverse views among our membership or society,” said Bob Mazzuca, the chief Scout executive, according to the statement. Under growing public pressure to reconsider the issue, in 2010 the Boy Scouts formed a committee of 11
“volunteers and professional leaders to evaluate whether the policy was in the best interests of the organization,” the statement said. The committee “included a diversity of perspectives” and engaged in “extensive research and evaluations,” the statement said. But the existence of the committee was kept secret until now, and the Scouts declined to reveal its membership or methods. Gay rights groups, who for years have pressed the Boy Scouts for change, said the organization was out of step with society. “The Boy Scouts of America is one of the last cultural institutions to have discrimination as part of their policy,” said Richard Ferraro, vice president for communications with the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, noting that the Girl Scouts, the Boys and Girls Clubs, the 4-H Clubs and now even the military forbid discrimination based on sexual orientation.
VA expands grant program to help homeless veterans By Farah Mohamed McClatchy Newspapers
WASHINGTON — The Department of Veterans Affairs said Tuesday it would award nearly $100 million in grants to groups that help homeless veterans as well as those at risk of becoming homeless. The grants will serve 151 community agencies in 49 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico and are expected to target 42,000 homeless and at-risk vets and their families. The grants represent a major increase from the number of grants awarded last year. “We are committed to ending veteran homelessness in America,” VA Secretary Eric Shinseki said in a news release. He said the grants should help the VA and community orga-
nizations prevent at-risk veterans from losing their homes. The grants announced Tuesday are part of a VA initiative that partners with private nonprofits and consumer groups to provide services for veterans and their families in — or transitioning to — permanent housing. The program is a new approach to ending homelessness among veterans. It focuses on prevention, quickly securing housing and keeping families together, according to VA spokesman Josh Taylor. Last year, $60 million in such grants went to 85 nonprofit community agencies in 40 states and the District of Columbia; the money helped about 22,000 homeless and at-risk veterans and their families.
polio eradication program,” Sabatinelli said. The shooting cast an ominous cloud over a major effort to push back a rising tide of polio cases in Pakistan, one of just three countries where the disease is still endemic; the others are Afghanistan and Nigeria. Pakistan reported 198 new infections in 2011.
Thousands of Pakistani government health workers are walking door to door, administering oral vaccines to children under 5. The United Nations, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and other private donors are helping to finance the effort and providing expert assistance. The campaign is difficult because every vulnerable child must be vaccinated several times to be fully protected, which is especially difficult to achieve in the violent northwestern tribal belt along the Afghan border, the last major reservoir of new infections in the country. It was not clear why the Ghanaian doctor came under attack in Karachi, which has also seen a spike in polio cases, caused in part by an influx of ethnic Pashtuns fleeing fighting in the northwest. Many of the Pashtuns in the city live in cramped, impoverished conditions, which can foster the spread of the disease, particularly in the humid summer.
Needles found in food on 4 Delta flights By Joshua Freed The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — Jim Tonjes was high above North America when he bit into a hot turkey sandwich aboard a Delta Air Lines flight and felt a sudden jab in his mouth. Glancing down, he noticed what looked like a sewing needle in the food. Another passenger on the plane reported the same thing. At first, he thought a toothpick meant to hold the sandwich together had punctured the roof of his mouth. When he pulled it out, “it was a straight needle, about one inch long, with sharp points on both ends.” Now U.S. and European authorities are trying to determine how the needles got into meals served on at least four Delta flights from Amsterdam to the U.S. and why anyone would place them there. The FBI and Amsterdam airport’s police department have opened criminal investigations. The U.S. Transportation Security Administration said it does not view the matter as a threat to national security. A Delta spokeswoman said the needles were found Sunday in six sandwiches on four flights. Passengers discovered four of them. The flights included one to Minneapolis, one to Seattle and two to Atlanta.
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THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
Report Continued from A1 “The ability of the states to meet their obligations to public employees, to creditors and most critically to the education and well-being of their citizens is threatened,” warned the two chairmen of the task force, Richard Ravitch, the former lieutenant governor of New York, and Paul Volcker, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve. The report added a strong dose of fiscal pessimism just as many states have seen their immediate budget pressures ease for the first time in years. It also called into question how states will be able to restore the services and jobs that they cut during the downturn, saying that the loss of jobs in prisons, hospitals, courts and agencies had been more severe than in any of the past nine recessions. “This is a fundamental shift in the way governments have responded to recessions and appears to signal a willingness to ‘unbuild’ state government in a way that has not been done before,” the report said, noting that court systems had cut their hours in more than a dozen states, delaying actions including divorce settlements and criminal trials. The report arrived at a delicate political moment. States are deciding whether to expand their Medicaid programs to cover the uninsured poor as part of the new health-care law — an added expense some are balking at even though the federal government has pledged to pay the full cost for the first few years and 90 percent after that. Many public-sector unions feel besieged, as states and cities from Wisconsin to San Jose, Calif., have moved to save money on pensions. And Washington’s focus on deficit reduction — and a series of big budget cuts scheduled to take place after the fall election — has made cuts to state aid inevitable, many governors believe. If federal grants to the states were cut by just 10 percent, the report calculated, the loss to state and local government budgets would be more than $60 billion a year — which it said would be nearly twice the size of the combined tax increases that states enacted from 2008 to 2011 in response to their deepest fiscal crisis in more than 50 years. Things are worse than they appear, the report contends. Even before the recession, Medicaid spending was growing faster than state revenues, and the downturn has led to even higher caseloads — making the program the biggest single share of state spending, as many states have cut aid to schools and universities. States do not have enough money set aside to cover the health and retirement benefits they owe their workers. Important revenue sources are being eroded: States are losing billions of sales tax dollars to Internet sales and to an economy in which much consumer spending has shifted from buying goods to buying lightly taxed services. Gas tax revenues have not kept up with urgent infrastructure needs. And distressed cities and counties pose challenges to states. While almost all states are required by law to balance their budgets each year, the report said many have relied on gimmicks and nonrecurring revenues in recent years to mask the continuing imbalance between the revenues they take in and the expenses they face in the short term and long term — and that lax accounting systems allow them to do so. The report focused on California, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, Texas, and Virginia, and found that all have relied on some gimmicks in recent years to balance their budgets. California borrowed money several times over the past decade to generate budget cash. New York delayed paying income tax refunds one year to push the costs into the next year and raided state funds that were supposed to be dedicated to the environment, wireless network improvements and home care. New Jersey borrowed against the money it received from its share of the tobacco settlement and, along with Virginia, failed to make all of the required payments to its pension funds. Texas delayed $2 billion worth of payments by a month — pushing those expenses into the next fiscal year. Illinois has billions of dollars
of unpaid bills and borrowed money to invest in its severely underfunded pension funds. When desperate budget officials go looking for money to balance their budgets, they often see public pension funds as an almost irresistible pool of money. One common way of “borrowing” pension money is to not make each year’s required government contribution. Most places use actuaries
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to calculate how much money they must set aside each year to cover future payments — a number known as the “annual required contribution.” But despite the name, there is usually no enforceable law that the state or locality must pay it. As a result, the task force found that from 2007 to 2011, state and local governments had shortchanged their pension plans by more than $50 billion
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— an amount that has nothing to do with the market losses of 2008, which caused even more harm. Ravitch became deeply concerned about the fiscal problems of the states in 2009, after he won an emergency appointment as New York’s lieutenant governor during that year’s budget impasse. As he dug into financial records to devise a fiscal plan, he said,
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he began to see the extent to which officials had been using one-offs and accounting gimmicks year after year to make the budget seem balanced. His plan was rejected. Ravitch spent the remainder of his 17-month term investigating New York State’s finances on his own and trying to compare what he found with the problems emerging in other states. But he could
not find what he considered an adequate source of information to document the problem, so he and Volcker decided to raise money to create one of their own. Last week, Ravitch was in Washington, presenting the task force’s initial findings and recommendations to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke, and others.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
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THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
Cave Continued from A1 The U.S. Forest Service wants to remove the vandalism while preserving the fragile pictographs. “Once you destroy those, they are gone forever,” Borghi said. The weeklong training and supplies for the cleanup are costing $20,000, she said. The cost is being covered by restitution paid by the five vandals, who were caught two months after the vandalism. Damage of cultural and natural resources is unfortunately common in the caves off China Hat Road, said Matt Skeels, a member of the caving club Oregon High Desert Grotto and a volunteer for the Hidden Forest Cave cleanup. “It’s kind of a destruction mentality,” he said. Cavers recently found graffiti in Arnold Ice Cave, Skeels said, which became more accessible two years ago when the ice inside melted. After visiting Hidden Forest Cave to see the cleanup Tuesday, John Allen, supervi-
Trial Continued from A1 Alleged victim 1, then 23, was interested in marriage and was attracted to Bray because of their shared interest in science when she met him on Match.com in February 2011, Flaherty said. The pair first communicated over the dating site three days before meeting for drinks Feb. 25 at then-downtown bistro Tart. According to Flaherty’s opening statement, alleged victim 1 then went to Bray’s apartment to have a glass of wine. “She sets boundaries immediately, she wants to make sure he understands” that she didn’t plan to sleep with him, Flaherty said. She then went on a tour of his apartment, which ended in Bray’s bedroom, where Flaherty said Bray pushed her onto the bed, ripped her clothes off and began spitting, swearing, choking her and raping her. According to Flaherty, Bray took a break to eat cereal and told her to clean up the bed. “She’s terrified, she’s shocked, she doesn’t know what to do,” Flaherty said. “It’s a nightmare for her.” Bray then allegedly forced her to engage in oral and anal sex, telling her, “This is what you get for coming home with a man you don’t know.” Alleged victim 1 went to Bend police to report the incident the next day, Flaherty said, then to St. Charles Bend for a rape exam. According to Flaherty’s opening statement, she had red marks around her neck and other physical signs of rape. Alleged victim 2 had Bray as an anatomy instructor at COCC, Flaherty said. He told Tiktin that while the pair had a consensual relationship, on Feb. 11 Bray got her drunk and surprised her by wrapping a bathrobe belt around her neck and choking her during sex. “She tries to speak, she tries to say stop, she tries to relieve the pressure on her neck,” Flaherty told Tiktin. “Very quickly she was unconscious.” After that, the couple continued to see each other, Flaherty said, but the woman worried Bray would hurt her academic career and ultimately broke things off. That’s when, Flaherty said, Bray moved on to alleged victim 1. But Bray’s defense attorney, Stephen Houze, said evidence would show that both women had consensual sex with his client. Alleged victim 1, Houze told the judge, is an intelligent and well-educated woman who chose to spend five hours with Bray at his home and to have consensual sex with him after meeting him on Match. com. “When she leaves, she goes home, arriving not too much later than midnight. She goes to bed, and about eight hours
Reporting vandalism in the forest To report vandalism found in the Deschutes National Forest, call 541-383-5300 during business hours and ask for law enforcement. Forest officials recommend collecting license plate information if possible, but not confronting vandals.
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Hidden Forest Cave 1820 Greg Cross / The Bulletin
sor of the Deschutes National Forest, said he’s thinking of reviving a cave host program. Years ago, the volunteer program kept someone at caves off of China Hat to discourage vandalism and partying. If started again, the hosts might camp at the caves to protect them at night. “There is a lot of history in those caves,” Allen said. While it may take a vandal just moments to spray graffiti in a cave, it can take hours to remove it. Pressure washing or sandblasting aren’t options, Dean
said, because they would damage the archaeological sites. Instead, chemicals are applied inch by inch to the spray paint to pull it out from the rock. “It is not actually on the surface,” Dean said. “It is in the surface.” The cleanup will continue throughout the summer and may require more volunteer time next summer, Borghi said. “It’s going to take a long time,” Borghi said.
later is up and she engages in communication with a friend of hers,” Houze said in his opening statement. “(She) got on Google, and did a search, did a research project.” The subject of the Google search, according to a search warrant, was the Oregon definition of rape. “She’s expressing concern and doubt about whether what she did the night before counted as rape or not,” Houze said. “She tells (a police officer) a version of events that if true, no person on the planet would have any doubt whatever that it constituted the crime of rape. That’s begging the question, ‘Why the research project?’” Houze also told Tiktin that alleged victim 1 later attempted to destroy her computer’s hard drive, and noted that the woman has now filed a civil lawsuit against Bray seeking $2 million in damages. “When the evidence fully develops in this case, you will see with respect to (alleged victim 2) that she was an absolutely willing participant,” Houze said. “And with respect to (alleged victim 1), she too engaged in consensual sex with him and then upon reflection cast the events she had participated in on consensual basis in a (different) light. ... She has a motive. She has two million motives.” As for Bray’s brief relationship with alleged victim 2, Houze said the pair’s relationship was juvenile but consensual. “This young woman was a willing girlfriend and sexual partner, (as) she said to the police on each occasion that they interviewed her,” Houze said of alleged victim 2. “(The police) asked (alleged victim 2) straight out if any of the sexual contact she had with Mr. Bray was nonconsensual and her answer was an unequivocal no.” Houze told Tiktin that text messages between the pair, as well as an interview the woman conducted with The Bulletin, show that she was “a willing partner, and adventuresome.” After the opening arguments, alleged victim 2 testified. She said she drank at least six margaritas on the night she first slept with Bray after a class gathering to celebrate finishing a midterm examination. She also drank a glass and a half of wine at his apartment that evening, and described herself as very drunk. “I found him very intelligent. I thought he was attractive,” she said. “I thought the fact that he was in a position of authority, not just as a professor but also as a doctor, that led me to believe he was very trustworthy.” When she awoke the next morning, she testified, she found Bray trying to have sex with her. She asked him to stop, and he did.
After their initial encounter, she testified, the pair were in regular contact by text, phone and email. The pair discussed his rape fantasy and Bray asked her to write an email permission slip giving him consent to play out that fantasy. She wrote up the permission slip, she said, because she thought she could trust him. They discussed having a safe word for their roleplay, she said, but never settled on one. On Feb. 11, she went to his apartment and drank nearly a full bottle of white wine, she said, while he had one glass. He then asked permission to bind her hands and blindfold her, to which she agreed, and they began having sex. The woman said he slapped her in the face, but she didn’t like it, so she broke out of the cuffs, took off the blindfold and stopped. Intoxicated, she said the next thing she remembered was him tying his bathrobe belt around her neck while he had sex with her from behind. “I don’t really remember, I was panicked,” she testified. “I tried to pull it off, I wasn’t able to say anything and very quickly I lost consciousness.” She testified she had not given him permission to choke her. After the incident, she passed out, then awoke and vomited in the bathroom. That night, Bray called police to his apartment saying the woman wouldn’t leave his house. He also, she testified, hit her with his cane. After the incident, she continued to spend time with Bray. She said she was concerned she’d get in trouble with COCC if she told anyone about the relationship and the choking incident. The pair traveled to Portland for Valentine’s Day, “I wanted to appease him in any way, just to get through the quarter and then move on at that time when he no longer had power over me,” she testified. The woman testified that she eventually decided she’d drop Bray’s class, but showed up on Feb. 26 anyway. The other woman, alleged victim 1, says she was raped Feb. 25. In class that day, alleged victim 2 testified, Bray appeared frustrated, tired and short with his students, and cut class three hours short. That night, on the phone, Bray told her police were looking for him and he was nervous the woman he’d had sex with the night before, alleged victim 1, might tell police Bray had raped her. The testimony of alleged victim 2 will continue today with the defense’s cross-examination.
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate Every Saturday In
— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com
—Reporter: 541-617-7831, smiller@bendbulletin.com
Photos by Jennifer S. Altman / New York Times News Service
Monsignor Gerald Ryan presides over Mass at St. Luke Church in New York City.
Priest Continued from A1 The Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University conducted the study. With fewer young men entering seminaries, more priests are working past 75, the formal retirement age under canon law. In the New York Archdiocese, for example, where only one man was ordained into the priesthood this year, about 25 men over age 75 are still working as priests, and several are older than 85. In Ryan’s tiny office, shaded by a burgundy rolldown shade held up with a paper clip, he reflected recently on his nearly 70 years in service. He has been at St. Luke’s since 1966; a certificate from Pope Benedict XVI, awarded on the occasion of 40 years in the parish, was propped up on a brownpainted radiator. An award from Ryan’s previous parish, where he started in 1945, was tucked behind a photograph of him with Pope John Paul II. Ryan lives simply, with no air conditioning or even a fan in his rectory quarters. For breakfast, he has toast, except on Thursdays, when he eats an egg. He buys quarts of soup, which he freezes and defrosts for lunch. A housekeeper fixes dinner. His journey as a priest, he said, has been away from the formalities, trappings and titles of the church, in search of a deeper meaning of the Gospel. “I think I have come a long, long way from when I was ordained,” he said. As a seminarian, he said, he liked the idea of saying Mass, hearing confession and being addressed as “father,” but that was “like a fairy tale.” “It isn’t about serving the church in the way you have envisioned, from the altar, and from the position of authority and power,” he said. “But it is learning what human nature is, and what the struggles of people are. And where Jesus really is.” Ryan was born in 1920 in Manhattan to Irish immigrant parents; two years later, the family moved to Pelham Bay, when his father became a motorman for the IRT. As a boy, Gerald Ryan was an altar server; he began seminary studies in high school. “I never made a decision that I wanted to be a priest,” he said. “I just grew up with the idea.” In the 1960s, he joined the March on Washington, and then stood with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in Selma, Ala. In the 1970s, he grew his thick reddish hair down to his shoulders and helped to build low-income housing for Spanishspeaking immigrants in the South Bronx. His first assignment as a priest — at St. Anthony of Padua on East 166th Street in the Bronx — shocked him. The neighborhood was predominantly black,
Monsignor Gerald Ryan, right, meets with congregation member Ramon Gonzalez.
and he had grown up, he said, “with the idea, being white, that Roman Catholics were white people that went to church and kept the Commandments.” But, he said, he soon fell in love with the parish, with its sense of solidarity, brotherhood and faith. And when the civil rights movement started, he joined it. The Bronx, meanwhile, was changing. A flood of Spanish speakers began to arrive, many from Puerto Rico, so Ryan enrolled in a Berlitz class and started to minister in Spanish. Then he was transferred to St. Luke’s, a parish whose population was changing rapidly to predominantly poor Spanish-speaking residents from predominantly working-class white. Working with the city, he helped lead a church effort to build two housing projects, St. Francis and George Hardy. Then the 1970s arrived, and the South Bronx started to burn. Ryan opened the parish basement as a community center, but mostly his contribution was that he remained as others fled, ministering to local Catholics and keeping open the parish school. “He encouraged the people, stay in the South Bronx, rebuild the South Bronx,” said Felix Santiago, who has been a member of the parish since 1983. “He’s the mayor of 138th Street.” Ryan can still be outspoken sometimes. One subject that bothers him is his own title — officially, he was required to retire as pastor at 75 — 17 years ago — even though his responsibilities have remained the same. He is now called the parish “administrator,” a word that irks him.
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“You don’t do that to people who have served you well, say, ‘Adios’ by sending them down,” he said. Still, he does not think of retiring. He could go to his boyhood home in Pelham Bay at any time and live nicely, but his five siblings are deceased, and he would be alone there. “That kind of scares me, to face a life all by yourself,” he said. “So I would prefer to be overworked but at least employed in something or other in a parish.” He turned off the lights and left the room, shuffling on badly splayed feet to the chapel. He passed a women’s study group — the ladies smiled and greeted him — and entered the soaring yellow sanctuary, where a group of parishioners were fervently chanting prayers. Waiting for him in the small chapel behind the altar were Evelyn and Rafael Guevara, he in a white suit and she in a white halter dress. They had been together for more than 40 years but had never married in a church. Now, at their daughters’ urging, they were asking Ryan to perform the long-delayed ceremony. Ryan slipped his white alb over his black suit and placed his red stole, embroidered with trees and animals, over his shoulders. Then he started the service, pausing occasionally to consult the Post-it note that listed the couple’s names.
for appointments call 541-382-4900
SAVVYSHOPPER
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TV & Movies, B2 Dear Abby, B3 Comics, B4 Puzzles, B5
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
www.bendbulletin.com/savvyshopper
IN BRIEF Shoppers struggle with math Consumers struggle to realize which sales offer the deepest discounts, according to a new study published this month in the Journal of Marketing. The study, by researchers led by Akshay Rao of the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management, found that most shoppers trip up on the math. As reported in The Economist, the study says shoppers assume a buy-one-get-the-second-for-half-off offer is a better deal than onethird off. Yet the former represents a discount of just 25 percent, as opposed to 33 percent. Fractions and math troubled even well-educated subjects in the study.
Humane Society shop relocates The Humane Society of Central Oregon’s store for secondhand furniture and larger household items, Paws and Shop, has a new home. The shop has moved from the Bend Factory Outlets to the Old Mill Marketplace, 550 S.W. Industrial Way, Bend. It opened July 7 and will host a grand opening all day Saturday. Paws and Shop is open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondays through Fridays and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturdays. The nonprofit organization has a second thrift store at 500 N.E. Greenwood Ave., in Bend. Both stores support the Humane Society of Central Oregon. Contact: www.hsco .org or 541-388-3448.
Antiques fair comes to Sisters More than three dozen vendors will be on hand this weekend in Sisters for Antiques in the Park. Shoppers can peruse antique furniture, collectables, prehistoric rocks and more. The event will take place 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday at Creekside Park, on Jefferson Avenue near the intersection of U.S. Highway 20. Food will be available and Tony Madrigal will play ’50s and ’60s rock ’n’ roll both days. It’s free to attend. Contact: 541-4200279 or 541-549-8905.
Watch out for health care scams Now that the U.S. Supreme Court has upheld the majority of the Affordable Care Act, which contains requirements that individuals buy insurance, the Better Business Bureau is warning consumers to be on the alert for possible health care-related scams. The organization is anticipating that scammers might try to send out questionable health insurance offers or government program notifications. Uninsured or underinsured consumers would be prime targets. In a news release, the BBB says consumers should be skeptical of offers, particularly if they seem unexpected, forceful or overly enticing. Be wary of phone calls, letters and emails that sound official. Resources for possible health care programs and providers, the BBB says, are available at www.healthcare .gov. — Heidi Hagemeier, The Bulletin
It’s the
Illustration by Greg Cross / The Bulletin
convenience thatcounts • The popularity of gift registries is expanding from weddings and showers to graduations, birthdays and more By Heidi Hagemeier • The Bulletin
L
ooking for the perfect gift? No events, particularly graduations, holimatter what the occasion, ask days and birthdays. if there’s a registry.
The registry concept is expanding, those in the industry say, because it
In addition, even traditional registries works well for both the gift giver and
Gift registries are increasingly mov- regularly go beyond place settings and the recipient. Shopping becomes a
ing beyond baby and bridal showers. bassinets and can now include requests snap and nobody deals with unwanted In recent years, people have taken
for postpartum pedicures, honeymoon presents.
to creating registries for an array of suites and charitable donations.
See Registries / B6
5 store-brand items to avoid The return of the midriff By Kelli B. Grant MarketWatch
Though grocery shopping experts have long touted buying store brands as a great savings strategy, consumers are finally paying attention. Maybe too much attention. Nearly 40 percent of shoppers purchased more storebrand items over the past year, according to a new survey from research firm Ac-
centure. Two-thirds of shoppers say half of what they buy carries a store-brand label. The main reason: the prices beat those of the big brand names. In most cases, consumers aren’t sacrificing taste, either, because the same big brand producing say, canned veggies, is also responsible for packaging the store’s line. See Store-brand / B6
By Katherine Boyle The Washington Post
Oops, they did it again. They cut the shirt too short and outed our jiggle, signaling an end to America’s prolonged cupcake binge. In 1999, a 17-year-old Britney Spears exposed her taut tummy and inspired an influx of ab-centric trends. Extra-low-rise jeans. Belly
bling. Henna tattoos curling around studded navels. Over a decade later, abdomens are again on display, except by now, teen queens have aged into wiser 20somethings, and pop stars — such as Katy Perry and Rihanna — are resurrecting a milder version of midriff exposure, no crunches required. See Midriff / B6
Rihanna performs at the Wireless Music Festival in London on July 8. Joel Ryan The Associated Press
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THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
TV & M
Everybody knows your name at ‘Sullivan & Son’ TV SPOTLIGHT “Sullivan & Son� 10 p.m. Thursday, TBS By David Wiegand San Francisco Chronicle
Stand-up comics have been doing TV sitcoms since the dawn of the medium, with varying degrees of success. Some made it by simply being themselves, while others were able to display solid acting skills along with their ability to deliver a punch line. Comedian Steve Byrne joins guys like Ray Romano in the latter category with “Sullivan & Son,� a pleasant sitcom premiering Thursday on TBS. Drawing on his own ethnicity in a show he co-created with Rob Long (“Cheers�), Byrne plays Steve Sullivan, a New York corporate lawyer who returns home to Pittsburgh for the 60th birthday of his Irish-American dad, Jack (Dan Lauria, “The Wonder Years�). Jack and his Koreanborn wife, Ok Cha (Jodi Long, “Beginners�), own a bar frequented by a bunch of neighborhood characters including sweet-natured floozy Carol (Broadway veteran Christine Ebersole, “Grey Gardens�), the elderly, cranky barfly Hank (Brian Doyle-Murray, “Groundhog Day�), Carol’s not-so-bright son Owen (Owen Benjamin, “The House Bunny�), and from time to time, Melanie (Vivian Azlynn, “Tropic Thunder�), Steve’s former girlfriend. Thursday’s pilot episode wastes no time setting up the situation: Mom and Dad announce they’re going to sell the bar, Steve realizes he’d rather sling booze and chatter than do corporate law, his relatively
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FOR WEDNESDAY, JULY 18 • 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.
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new girlfriend, Ashley (guest star Brooke Lyons), wants no part of Pittsburgh or any guy who doesn’t aspire to living on Park Avenue and hightails it to New York. The premiere episode probably should have wasted a little more time establishing credibility for Steve’s seemingly out-of-nowhere decision, but “Sullivan & Sonâ€? finds its groove in the second episode, airing directly after the pilot. “Sullivan & Sonâ€? doesn’t break any new ground and you’ll probably have a sense of dĂŠjĂ vu as it evokes “Cheersâ€? and, more subtly, “Everybody Loves Raymond.â€? The latter reference is not only because Byrne and Romano come from stand-up, but because both shows trade heavily on overbearing mothers. In that regard, Ok Cha could probably take Doris Roberts’ Marie Barone in two falls in the maternal wrestling ring, as she ramps up the stereotype of the tough Asian matriarch to new comic heights. “Sullivanâ€? even has a resentful sibling a la Robert Barone in Steve’s sister, Susan (Vivian Bang). The jokes may get a solid B — no more, no less — but the populous cast is able, especially Long and Ebersole. The show has an old-fashioned, inviting warmth, not unlike any neighborhood bar where “everybody knows your name.â€? Cheers, as it were.
Regal Pilot Butte 6 2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend, 541-382-6347
THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN (PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15 THE BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG-13) Noon, 3, 6 MOONRISE KINGDOM (PG-13) 1:15, 4:15, 7:15 SAVAGES (R) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45 TO ROME WITH LOVE (R) 1, 3:55, 7 YOUR SISTER’S SISTER (R) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30
Universal Pictures via The Associated Press
Tin Pan Theater
MADRAS
869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271
MAGIC MIKE (R) Noon, 3:40, 7:20, 10:10 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG-13) 11:20 a.m., 3, 6:45, 10 MEN IN BLACK 3 (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:30
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: LUCIA DI LAMMERMOOR (no MPAA rating) 6:30
THE ADVENTURES OF TINTIN (PG) 10 a.m. THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN (PG-13) 11 a.m., 2:25, 6, 9:20 THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 3-D (PG-13) 11:15 a.m., 2:50, 6:30, 9:45 THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN IMAX (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 3:10, 7, 10:15 BRAVE (PG) 12:45, 4, 6:50, 9:30 ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL DRIFT (PG) 11:10 a.m., 11:40 a.m., 2:45, 3:30, 6:20, 7:10, 9:10 ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL DRIFT 3D (PG) 11:25 a.m., 2:40, 6:15, 8:50 KATY PERRY: PART OF ME (PG) 11:55 a.m. KATY PERRY: PART OF ME 3-D (PG) 2:35, 6:10, 9:15 MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE’S MOST WANTED (PG) 1, 3:55, 6:35, 9
REDMOND Redmond Cinemas
THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN (PG13) 3:40, 9:20
1535 S.W. Odem Medo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777
ROCK OF AGES (PG-13) 12:35, 4:10, 7:30, 10:25
SISTERS
SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN (PG-13) 12:10, 3:20, 6:25, 9:25 TED (R) 12:55, 4:20, 6:55, 9:55
1101 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505
THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 3-D (PG-13) 12:50, 6:30
PUSS IN BOOTS (PG) 10 a.m.
PROMETHEUS (R) 12:25, 3:35, 7:25, 10:20
Madras Cinema 5
The theater is closed Wednesdays.
THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN (PG13) 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL DRIFT (PG) 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 MAGIC MIKE (R) 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 TED (R) 1:45, 4, 6:15, 8:30
PEOPLE LIKE US (PG-13) 9:40
680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 541-382-6347
BRAVE (PG) Noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:15 ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL DRIFT (PG) 12:50, 3, 5:10, 7:20, 9:15 KATY PERRY: PART OF ME (PG-13) 1:05, 3:05, 5:05, 7:10, 9:25 SAVAGES (R) 1:30, 4:10, 6:50, 9:30
PRINEVILLE
Sisters Movie House
Pine Theater
720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800
McMenamins Old St. Francis School 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562
DARK SHADOWS (PG-13) 6 THE PRINCESS BRIDE (PG) 3 WHAT TO EXPECT WHEN YOU’RE EXPECTING (R) 9 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. Change your mind. Change your life.
Self Referrals Welcome
Weekly Arts & Entertainment Inside
Benicio Del Toro, left, and Salma Hayek in a scene from the Universal motion picture “Savages,� directed by Oliver Stone.
EDITOR’S NOTES:
THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN (PG-13) 7 THE BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG-13) 5 ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL DRIFT (PG) 5, 7:15 PEOPLE LIKE US (PG-13) 7:30 TED (R) 5:15, 7:45
214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014
THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN (UPSTAIRS — PG-13) 4, 7 ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL DRIFT (PG) 3:30, 6, 8:10 Pine Theater’s upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
Providing unparalled service across a variety of industries since 1983.
Every Friday
541-706-6900
www.neurofloat.com
FAIR & RODEO
541-389-1505 400 SW Bluff Dr Ste 200 Bend , OR 97702
ONLY WEEKS JULY TWO 29-AUGUST 1 Redmond, Oregon UNTIL THE FAIR!
(541) 728-0505 Visit our website at:
DESCHUTES COUNTY
www.expresspros.com
L TV L
WEDNESDAY PRIME TIME 7/18/12
*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
5:00 KATU News News News KEZI 9 News The Simpsons Electric Comp. NewsChannel 8 Meet, Browns Primal Grill
5:30 World News Nightly News Evening News World News The Simpsons Fetch! With Ruff Nightly News Meet, Browns Kimchi Chron
6:00
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 Crossing South Business Rpt. NewsChannel 8 News King of Queens King of Queens Outnumbered Last of Wine
7:00
7:30
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 ‘PG’ Seinfeld ‘PG’ Midsomer Murders ‘PG’ Ă…
8:00
8:30
9:00
9:30
The Middle ‘PG’ Suburgatory ’ Modern Family Modern Family Off-Rockers Up All Night ‘14’ America’s Got Talent (N) ’ ‘PG’ Big Brother (N) ’ Ă… Criminal Minds ‘14’ Ă… (DVS) The Middle ‘PG’ Suburgatory ’ Modern Family Modern Family So You Think You Can Dance Two contestants are eliminated. ‘PG’ Nature Black bears in Alaska. ‘G’ NOVA ‘G’ Ă… (DVS) Off-Rockers Up All Night ‘14’ America’s Got Talent (N) ’ ‘PG’ America’s Next Top Model ‘PG’ America’s Next Top Model ‘PG’ Doc Martin Ever After ‘PG’ Ă… World News Tavis Smiley (N)
10:00
10:30
(10:02) Final Witness (N) ’ ‘14’ Law & Order: SVU CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (10:02) Final Witness (N) ’ ‘14’ News TMZ (N) ’ ‘PG’ NOVA String theory. ’ ‘G’ Law & Order: SVU Cops ‘PG’ Ă… ’Til Death ‘PG’ Charlie Rose (N) ’ ‘G’ Ă…
11:00
11:30
KATU News (11:35) Nightline News Jay Leno News Letterman KEZI 9 News (11:35) Nightline Family Guy ‘14’ Family Guy ‘14’ History of Science ’ ‘G’ Ă… NewsChannel 8 Jay Leno ’Til Death ‘14’ 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 Barter Kings (N) Barter Kings (N) Barter Kings Barter Kings *A&E 130 28 18 32 The First 48 ‘14’ Ă… CSI: Miami Dishonor Horatio’s son CSI: Miami Investigating three differ- CSI: Miami Backfire Murder victim’s ›› “Basicâ€? (2003, Suspense) John Travolta, Connie Nielsen, Samuel L. Jackson. A DEA agent › “Exit Woundsâ€? (2001) Steven Seagal. A cop encounters *AMC 102 40 39 seeks his help. ’ ‘14’ Ă… ent murders. ’ ‘14’ Ă… spirit haunts Calleigh. ‘14’ probes the fate of a much-hated Army officer. Ă… corruption in Detroit’s roughest precinct. River Monsters: Unhooked ‘PG’ Hillbilly Handfishin’ ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Gator Boys ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Gator Boys Love at First Bite ‘PG’ Call of Wildman Call-Wildman Gator Boys ’ ‘PG’ Ă… *ANPL 68 50 26 38 North Woods Law ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Around the World in 80 Plates Housewives/OC Million Dollar LA Around the World in 80 Plates (N) What Happens Around-World BRAVO 137 44 Teen Mom 2 ’ ‘PG’ Teen Mom 2 ’ ‘PG’ Blue Collar Comedy: Ten Years Ron White’s Comedy Salute to the Troops 2012 ’ Ron White’s Comedy Salute to the Troops 2012 ’ CMT 190 32 42 53 Teen Mom 2 ’ ‘PG’ Industrial Light & Magic: American Greed Mad Money Industrial Light & Magic: American Greed Paid Program You Breathe! CNBC 51 36 40 52 Mark Zuckerberg: Inside Face. 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’ (5:56) 30 Rock (6:27) 30 Rock Colbert Report Daily Show South Park ‘14’ South Park ‘MA’ (8:59) Futurama Futurama ‘14’ Futurama ‘14’ South Park ‘MA’ Daily Show Colbert Report COM 135 53 135 47 Always Sunny Dept./Trans. City Edition Bend City Council Work Session Bend 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 Wizards-Place Phineas, Ferb Good-Charlie Good-Charlie Austin & Ally ’ Good-Charlie Shake It Up! ‘G’ ›› “Bedtime Storiesâ€? (2008) Adam Sandler. ’ Phineas, Ferb Gravity Falls ’ Jessie ‘G’ Ă… *DIS 87 43 14 39 Jessie ‘G’ Ă… Fast N’ Loud ’ ‘14’ Ă… Fast N’ Loud ’ ‘14’ Ă… Fast N’ Loud ’ ‘14’ Ă… American Guns (N) ’ ‘14’ Ă… Fast N’ Loud (N) ’ ‘14’ Ă… American Guns ’ ‘14’ Ă… *DISC 156 21 16 37 Fast N’ Loud ’ ‘14’ Ă… Keeping Up With the Kardashians Opening Act ‘PG’ E! News (N) ›› “She’s Out of My Leagueâ€? (2010) Jay Baruchel, Alice Eve. The Soup ‘14’ The Soup ‘14’ Chelsea Lately E! News *E! 136 25 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 (4:00) MLB Baseball New York Mets at Washington Nationals (N) NFL Yearbook Soccer Seattle Sounders vs. Chelsea From Seattle. (N) (Live) SportsNation Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) Ă… NFL Live Ă… MLB Baseball: Mets at Nationals ESPN2 22 24 21 24 SportsCenter Special (N) Ă… Golf Ă… Golf Ă… Golf Ă… Golf Ă… Golf Ă… Golf Ă… ESPNC 23 25 123 25 2000 British Open Film Ă… 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… Beverly Hills Nannies ‘14’ Ă… The 700 Club ‘G’ Ă… FAM 67 29 19 41 Baby Daddy ’ Baby Daddy ’ Melissa & Joey Melissa & Joey Melissa & Joey Melissa & Joey Melissa & Joey Baby Daddy (N) Beverly Hills Nannies (N) ’ ‘14’ 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 Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible ‘G’ Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible (N) Restaurant: Impossible *FOOD 177 62 98 44 Best Dishes (4:00) ›› “You Don’t Mess With the Zohanâ€? Anger Two/Half Men Two/Half Men ››› “Star Trekâ€? (2009) Chris Pine. Chronicles the early days of the starship Enterprise and her crew. ››› “Star Trekâ€? (2009) FX 131 My First Place My First Place My First Place Hunters Int’l House Hunters Income Prop. Kitchen Cousins Property Brothers Amber (N) ‘G’ House Hunters Hunters Int’l Property Brothers ‘G’ Ă… HGTV 176 49 33 43 My First Place Pawn Stars Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Cajun Pawn Cajun Pawn Picked Off (N) ‘PG’ Ă… (11:01) American Restoration ‘PG’ *HIST 155 42 41 36 Picked Off Cagey Strategy ‘PG’ Trading Spouses: Mommy Trading Spouses: Mommy Wife Swap ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Wife Swap Collins/Matlock ‘PG’ Wife Swap Order for chaos. ‘PG’ Coming Home (N) ‘PG’ Ă… LIFE 138 39 20 31 Trading Spouses: Mommy 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) Jersey Shore ’ ‘14’ Ă… Jersey Shore ’ ‘14’ Ă… Jersey Shore One Shot ‘14’ Ă… Jersey Shore ’ ‘14’ Ă… The Real World (N) ’ ‘14’ Ă… (11:02) The Real World ‘14’ Ă… MTV 192 22 38 57 Jersey Shore ’ ‘14’ Ă… SpongeBob Victorious ‘G’ Victorious ‘G’ Figure It Out ‘Y’ Splatalot ’ Victorious ‘G’ Victorious ‘G’ Hollywood Heights ’ Ă… Yes, Dear ‘PG’ Yes, Dear ‘PG’ Friends ’ ‘14’ Friends ’ ‘14’ NICK 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob Breaking Down the Bars ’ ‘14’ Breaking Down the Bars ’ ‘14’ 48 Hours: Hard Evidence ’ ‘14’ 48 Hours: Hard Evidence ’ ‘14’ 48 Hours: Hard Evidence ’ ‘14’ 48 Hours: Hard Evidence ’ ‘14’ OWN 161 103 31 103 Breaking Down the Bars ’ ‘14’ Mariners Post. MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Kansas City Royals From Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. Dan Patrick ROOT 20 45 28* 26 MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Kansas City Royals From Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. (N) Diamond Divers ’ ‘14’ Diamond Divers Mutiny ’ ‘14’ Diamond Divers (N) ’ ‘14’ Diamond Divers ’ ‘14’ SPIKE 132 31 34 46 Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Diamond Divers ’ ‘PG’ Haunted Highway School Spirits Haunted Collector Haunted Collector (N) School Spirits (N) Haunted Collector SYFY 133 35 133 45 Fact or Faked: Paranormal Files Behind Scenes Turning Point Joseph Prince End of the Age Macedonian Call Annual fundraising event. Always Good Jesse Duplantis Easter Exper. Creflo Dollar Macedonian Call TBN 205 60 130 Seinfeld ‘PG’ Family Guy ‘PG’ Family Guy ‘14’ Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) ‘14’ *TBS 16 27 11 28 Friends ’ ‘PG’ Friends ’ ‘PG’ King of Queens King of Queens Seinfeld ‘PG’ ››› “A Face in the Crowdâ€? (1957, Drama) Andy Griffith, Patricia Neal. A (7:15) ››› “No Time for Sergeantsâ€? (1958, Comedy) Andy Griffith, Myron McCormick, Nick Ad- ››› “Hearts of the Westâ€? (1975) Jeff Bridges. Pulp writer (11:15) ›› “Onionheadâ€? (1958) Andy TCM 101 44 101 29 homespun philosopher becomes an overnight sensation. Ă… ams. A naive Georgian joins the military and creates mayhem. Ă… turns stuntman in ’30s Hollywood. Griffith, Felicia Farr. Toddlers & Tiaras ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Cheer Perfection ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Toddlers & Tiaras ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Toddlers & Tiaras (N) ’ Ă… Virgin Diaries (N) ’ ‘14’ Ă… Toddlers & Tiaras ’ Ă… *TLC 178 34 32 34 Four Weddings ’ ‘PG’ Ă… The Mentalist Bloodhounds ‘14’ The Mentalist Red Alert ’ ‘14’ The Mentalist ’ ‘14’ Ă… Dallas Collateral Damage (N) ‘14’ The Mentalist ’ ‘14’ Ă… Dallas Collateral Damage ‘14’ *TNT 17 26 15 27 The Mentalist Bloodsport ’ ‘14’ NinjaGo: Mstrs NinjaGo: Mstrs NinjaGo: Mstrs NinjaGo: Mstrs NinjaGo: Mstrs NinjaGo: Mstrs NinjaGo: Mstrs Level Up ‘PG’ King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy ‘PG’ Family Guy ‘14’ *TOON 84 Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ Food Paradise: London (N) ‘G’ Best Sandwich Best Sandwich Bggage Battles Bggage Battles Man v. Food Man v. Food ‘G’ *TRAV 179 51 45 42 Bourdain: No Reservations M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ Home Improve. Home Improve. Love-Raymond Love-Raymond The Soul Man The Exes ‘14’ Retired at 35 King of Queens TVLND 65 47 29 35 Gunsmoke The Predators ‘PG’ NCIS Endgame ’ ‘14’ Ă… NCIS Citywide blackout. ’ ‘14’ NCIS Kill Screen ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Royal Pains About Face (N) ‘PG’ (10:01) Necessary Roughness (N) (11:02) Suits Discovery ‘PG’ USA 15 30 23 30 NCIS Bait ’ ‘14’ Ă… Single Ladies Is This Love? ‘14’ Hollywood Exes ’ ‘14’ Hollywood Exes (N) ’ ‘14’ Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ ‘14’ Mama Drama (N) ’ ‘14’ VH1 191 48 37 54 ›› “Malibu’s Most Wantedâ€? (2003) Jamie Kennedy, Taye Diggs. ’ PREMIUM CABLE CHANNELS
(5:50) ›› “Phenomenonâ€? 1996, Drama John Travolta. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… ››› “Octopussyâ€? 1983, Action Roger Moore. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… (10:15) › “The Postmanâ€? 1997, Drama Kevin Costner. ’ ‘R’ Ă… ENCR 106 401 306 401 (4:05) ›› “Man of the Houseâ€? FXM Presents ››› “Walk the Lineâ€? 2005, Biography Joaquin Phoenix. ‘PG-13’ Ă… FXM Presents ››› “The Wrestlerâ€? 2008 Mickey Rourke. ‘R’ FMC 104 204 104 120 ››› “The Wrestlerâ€? 2008, Drama Mickey Rourke. ‘R’ Ă… UFC Reloaded UFC 140: Jones vs. Machida Jon Jones faces Lyoto Machida. Clean Break (N) UFC Tonight UFC Tonight Countdown to UFC 149 UFC: In the Moment The Rise of Jon Jones ‘14’ FUEL 34 Live From Live From 19th Hole European Tour Inside PGA GOLF 28 301 27 301 (4:00) Live From (N) (Live) 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 Firestorm ‘G’ › “Something Borrowedâ€? 2011 Ginnifer Goodwin. A tipsy attorney lands in Derek Jeter 3K ’ ‘PG’ Ă… ›› “The Big Yearâ€? 2011 Steve Martin. Three men com- (9:45) 2 Days: True Blood Hopeless Sookie has a ›› “Final Destination 5â€? 2011 NichoHBO 425 501 425 501 bed with the fiance of her best friend. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… pete in a prestigious bird-watching contest. ‘PG’ Adrien Broner sense of foreboding. ‘MA’ Ă… las D’Agosto. ’ ‘R’ Ă… ››› “Fight Clubâ€? 1999 Brad Pitt. Men vent their rage by beating each other in a secret arena. ‘R’ ›› “The Boondock Saintsâ€? 1999, Crime Drama Willem Dafoe. ‘NR’ (10:15) ›› “The Boondock Saintsâ€? 1999 Willem Dafoe. ‘NR’ IFC 105 105 (4:00) ›› “Dinner for Schmucksâ€? ›› “Road Houseâ€? 1989, Action Patrick Swayze, Kelly Lynch. A legendary ›› “The Girl Next Doorâ€? 2004, Romance-Comedy Emile Hirsch. A teen falls ››› “Die Hard With a Vengeanceâ€? 1995 Bruce Willis. A New York cop must MAX 400 508 508 2010 Steve Carell. ’ bouncer agrees to tame a notorious gin mill. ’ ‘R’ Ă… for a woman who used to be a porn star. ’ ‘R’ Ă… stop a mad bomber’s game of revenge. ’ ‘R’ Ă… America’s Lost Treasures ‘PG’ America’s Lost Treasures ‘PG’ Locked Up Abroad ‘14’ America’s Lost Treasures ‘PG’ America’s Lost Treasures ‘PG’ Locked Up Abroad ‘14’ Border Wars ‘PG’ NGC 157 157 Avatar: Air. Avatar: Air. Avatar: Air. Dragonball GT Iron Man: Armor SpongeBob SpongeBob Fanboy-Chum Fanboy-Chum Planet Sheen T.U.F.F. Puppy NTOON 89 115 189 115 Dragonball GT Iron Man: Armor Legend-Korra Shooting USA Ă… Best Defense Amer. Rifleman Impossible Gun Stories Gun Nuts Shooting USA Ă… Best Defense Gun Stories Impossible Amer. Rifleman OUTD 37 307 43 307 Gun Stories (4:30) ›› “The Undeservedâ€? 2004, Drama Paul Sado, The Franchise: Weeds ’ ‘MA’ Ă… The Franchise: Episodes ’ ››› “Thunder Soulâ€? 2010 Members of a 1970s high››› “The Italian Jobâ€? 2003, Crime Drama Mark Wahlberg. A thief and his SHO 500 500 Autumn Dornfeld, Alexandra Geis. ‘NR’ Ă… school jazz band reunite. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… crew plan to steal back their gold. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… Miami Marlins Miami Marlins ‘MA’ Ă… Supercars 101 Cars 101 Cars-Drive Barrett-Jackson Special Edition Pinks - All Out 101 Cars 101 Cars-Drive Barrett-Jackson Special Edition Unique Whips ‘14’ SPEED 35 303 125 303 Supercars ››› “Peter Panâ€? 2003, Adventure Jason Isaacs. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… › “The Smurfsâ€? 2011, Comedy Hank Azaria. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… (10:50) “Shanghai Knightsâ€? 2003 STARZ 300 408 300 408 (4:50) › “Baitâ€? 2000, Action Jamie Foxx, David Morse. ’ ‘R’ Ă… (4:45) ››› “Outsourcedâ€? 2006 Josh Hamilton. A man ›› “Dr. T & the Womenâ€? 2000 Richard Gere. A married › “Texas Rangersâ€? 2001, Western James Van Der Beek, ››› “As Good as It Getsâ€? 1997, Comedy-Drama Jack Nicholson, Helen Hunt, Greg Kinnear. A TMC 525 525 trains his replacement in India. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… Dylan McDermott. ’ ‘PG-13’ mean-spirited New York author finds love with a waitress. ’ ‘PG-13’ gynecologist falls in love with a golf pro. MLS Soccer FC Dallas at San Jose Earthquakes (N) (Live) NBC Sports Talk IndyCar 36 ‘PG’ NBCSN 27 58 30 209 2012 Tour de France Stage 16 - High Mountains From Pau to Bagnères-de-Luchon. Distance 197 km. Bridezillas Jeanine & Callie ‘14’ Bridezillas ‘14’ Bridezillas Rochelle & Ashanti ‘14’ Bridezillas Ashanti & Liza ‘14’ Ghost Whisperer ’ ‘PG’ Ă… L.A. Hair Wigged Out *WE 143 41 174 118 Bridezillas Marlene & Jeanine ‘14’
WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
A & A
Talking to kids about sex is an ongoing conversation Dear Abby: How do you tell a young girl about sex, and what’s the best way to go about telling her? My niece is 12 and hasn’t had her first period yet. But she has a serious crush on an older boy, and kids grow up real fast in our neighborhood. You’d be shocked if you knew how young they are when they start fooling around. This is a difficult subject to discuss, but I know that our talk will have to happen pretty soon. She is closer to me than to her mom. When I was growing up, the word “sex� wasn’t mentioned, and one of my cousins got pregnant in her sophomore year of high school. I don’t want that same mistake made again. Please help. I heard you have a book about this. How can I get one? — Almost Ready in Louisiana Dear Almost Ready: Kids grow up fast all over these days — not just in your neighborhood. “The talk� with your niece should have started long ago as part of an ongoing discussion because young people are maturing earlier than they did years ago, for a variety of reasons. Because it hasn’t already started happening, your niece should be told that there will be changes in her body and that they are normal. She should also be assured they are nothing to fear. You heard correctly that I publish a booklet about what teens should know about sex (and drugs) that covers a variety of important topics. Adults and parents sometimes find the subject difficult to discuss. My booklet was written to help “break the ice� and begin the discussion more easily. It can be ordered by sending your name and address, plus check or money order for $7 to DearAbby Teen Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL, 61054-0447. Shipping and handling are included in the price. It could be very helpful to you if you review it
DEAR ABBY before starting the discussion with your niece so you can prepare beforehand to answer her questions or guide the conversations. Important topics that are included are “How old must a girl be before she can get pregnant?� ‘’How old must a boy be before he can father a child?� ‘’What time of the month is a girl 100 percent safe?� and “Can a girl get pregnant the first time she has sex?� In addition, there is a section on various sexually transmitted diseases and what to do if you think you may have one. It is extremely important that they be treated right away, because not doing so can have lifelong consequences. Knowledge is power, and the more information your niece has, the better she can be prepared for making the decisions that lie ahead of her. But most of all your niece needs to know that becoming a woman is a cause for celebration — and I hope you will present that to her and make it clear. Dear Abby: I have a lighted doorbell at my front door. But nine out of 10 people who come here still knock rather than use the bell. Sometimes I don’t hear them, so then they’ll start pounding with a lot of force until they can get my attention. They never resort to using the doorbell. Why are people so stubborn? — At Home in Melbourne, Fla. Dear At Home: I’m not sure it’s stubbornness. They simply might not think to use it. However, I may have a solution for you. Post a sign over your doorbell that reads: PLEASE RING BELL! — Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Horoscope: Happy Birthday for Wednesday, July 18, 2012 By Jacqueline Bigar This year use care, as often out-ofthe-blue anger erupts. Someone you have counted on could become most unpredictable. You cannot stabilize this person, but you will want to claim your power and maintain an independent profile. If you are single, who you attract might not be what you want on a deep level. Know that there is someone better around the corner. If you are attached, accept your significant other for better or for worse. You could criticize or ignore this person, but that behavior will get you nowhere. CANCER can be provocative. 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 Tension weaves through your plans, domestic life and important interactions. As a result, you might take the most unexpected course of action. Remember that despite the initial shock, there could be long-term reactions. Tonight: Mosey on home. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH You will make an effort to get past any negativity that enters your day. The smart Bull will pull back in order not to catch this attitude. Recognize that someone is explosive. Even if this person loses his or her temper, it might not be directed at you. Tonight: Visit with a friend. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH Be aware of the cost of heading in a certain direction. Resist taking a risk, no matter how sure it might seem. You could be jolted by events surrounding work or someone you look up to. Be careful. Tonight: Let off steam. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You are all smiles, and it makes a big difference in many people’s days. Understand that they might not let you know right away because of the stress they are experiencing. News from a distance could jolt you at first, but you’ll use it well. Tonight: It’s your call. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH Use today’s New Moon for some reflection on your long-term desires. An element of difficulty could be coloring this process, but not every day is sunny. The unexpected might occur when dealing with an important person in your life. Tonight: Take a break from your normal pace. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Zero in on your priorities.
You feel a restriction, at least mentally, surrounding your funds. Though this attitude could be helpful at times, it might create more negativity than is necessary. A partner or friend will act the way he or she wants to, no matter what you do. Tonight: Indulge without breaking the bank. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH Take a stand and listen to feedback. You might want to anchor in and stay calm, despite a certain amount of chaos that enters your plans. You could be angrier or a lot more hurt than you think. Make it OK if you lose your temper. Tonight: Sit back and observe. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Keep reaching out for someone at a distance. You might take his or her lack of responsiveness personally. Don’t — at least not until you have the whole story. Listen to your sixth sense when dealing with an associate. Tonight: An explosive situation could develop, unless you stay mellow. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Deal with one person at a time. You could be more irritated by a situation involving a friend or loved one than you realize. The unexpected occurs with a child. Incorporate your innate creativity into anything you do. Tonight: Let off steam. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH Defer to others, and know your limits. You cannot handle all the responsibilities all the time. Be smart and learn to delegate more often, even if it is just at home getting the chores done. Pressure builds surrounding an authority figure, and you respond. Tonight: Finally, time to relax with friends. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH Remain even, despite a situation that seems to keep building or creating stress. You still could be surprised by an unanticipated development or a change of plans. Do not throw yourself into what appears more and more negative. Tonight: Relax. You need a stress-buster. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Let your creativity emerge, despite any present tension. A partner seems to close down one more time. You could be pushing way too hard to please this person, especially with money. Use care with financial matters. Tonight: Stir some sugar into a bitter situation. Š 2011 by King Features Syndicate
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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 OREGON HIGH DESERT CLASSICS I: A class AA hunterjumper equestrian competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541610-5826, agow@jbarj.org or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC: The 74-mile McKenzie Pass Road Race stage begins at Maxwell Sno-park for women and Big Springs Sno-park for men; both end at Three Creeks Sno-park; free for spectators; 10 a.m. 541-388-0002 or www.cascade-classic.org. LEAPIN’ LOUIE — READ! FUN! NOW!: Leapin’ Louie presents a high-energy comedy show; free; 11:30 a.m.; M.A. Lynch Elementary School, 1314 S.W. Kalama Ave., Redmond; 541-617-7050 or www .deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. BATS!: Meet live bats and learn about their survival and their role in the ecosystem; $10 plus museum admission, $7 museum members; 12:30 and 3:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.; Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@gmail.com or http://bendfarmersmarket .com. LEAPIN’ LOUIE — READ! FUN! NOW!: Leapin’ Louie presents a high-energy comedy show; free; 3 p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary .org/calendar. ALIVE AFTER FIVE: Featuring a performance by reggae act Toots and the Maytals, with Mosley Wotta; located off of northern Powerhouse Drive; free; 5-8:30 p.m.; Old Mill District, 661 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-389-0995 or www.c3events.com. MUSIC IN THE CANYON: Leroy Newport performs Americana music; free; 5:308 p.m.; American Legion Community Park, 850 S.W. Rimrock Way, Redmond; www .musicinthecanyon.com. PICNIC IN THE PARK: Featuring a bluegrass performance by Kathy Boyd and Phoenix Rising; free; 6-8 p.m.; Pioneer Park, 450 N.E. Third St., Prineville; 541-447-6909. “HOW DID WE GET HERE?� LECTURE SERIES: Jon Erlandson talks about “Kelp Forest, Estuaries, Mangroves and Coral Reefs: The Ecology of Coastal Migration by Anatomically Modern Humans�; $10, $8 Sunriver Nature Center members, $3 students, $50 for series; 6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-593-4394. “THE METROPOLITAN OPERA, LUCIA DI LAMMERMOOR�: Starring Anna Netrebko, Mariusz Kwiecien and Piotr Beczala in an encore presentation of Donizetti’s masterpiece; opera performance transmitted in high definition; $12.50; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. FREAK MOUNTAIN RAMBLERS: The Portland-based Americana group performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www .mcmenamins.com. RICHARD GREEN: The singersongwriter performs; free; 7 p.m.; Niblick and Greene’s, 7535 Falcon Crest Drive #100, Redmond; 541-548-4220.
THURSDAY OREGON HIGH DESERT CLASSICS I: A class AA hunterjumper equestrian competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541610-5826, agow@jbarj.org or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC: The 20-mile Time Trial stage begins and ends at Crooked River Park; free for spectators; 10 a.m.; Crooked River Park, Amphitheater, 1037 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-388-0002 or www.cascade-classic.org. TREEHOUSE PUPPETS IN THE PARK: With a performance of “Yipes, Stripes! I’m a Chipmunk!�; followed by a coordinated activity; free; 11 a.m.-noon; Pilot Butte Neighborhood Park, 1310 N.E.
Photo courtesy of Leaetta Mitchell
Actors perform a scene from “Honk,� a musical adaptation of “The Ugly Duckling� being produced by Bend Experimental Art Theatre.
U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-3897275 or www.bendparksandrec.org. GOOD CHAIR, GREAT BOOKS: Read and discuss “Friday Night Knitting Club� by Kate Jacobs; free; noon; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-312-1090 or www .deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. BATS!: Meet live bats and learn about their survival and their role in the ecosystem; $10 plus museum admission, $7 museum members; 12:30 and 3:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www .highdesertmuseum.org. TUMALO FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-6 p.m.; Tumalo Garden Market, off of U.S. Highway 20 and Cook Avenue; 541-728-0088, earthsart@gmail.com or http:// tumalogardenmarket.com. MUNCH & MUSIC: Event includes a performance by pop-rock act Modern English, with Leaves Russell; with food and arts and crafts booths, children’s area and more; dogs prohibited; free; 5:30-9 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; www .munchandmusic.com. RICHARD GREEN: The singersongwriter performs; free; 5:30 p.m.; Niblick and Greene’s, 7535 Falcon Crest Drive #100, Redmond; 541-548-4220. “HONK!�: Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents a musical adaptation of “The Ugly Duckling�; $15, $10 ages 5-18; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558, beat@bendbroadband.com or www.beattickets.org. TRUCKSTOP HONEYMOON: The roots-rock act performs; $5-$10; 7 p.m.; Angeline’s Bakery & Cafe, 121 W. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-5499122 or www.angelinesbakery.com. DIEGO’S UMBRELLA: The San Francisco-based pirate polka band performs; $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.
FRIDAY BALLOONS OVER BEND CHILDREN’S FESTIVAL: Balloons launch over Bend, weather permitting; followed by a Night Glow; free; 6 a.m. launch, 8:30 p.m. Night Glow; Riverbend Park, Southwest Columbia Street and Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive; 541-323-0964 or www .balloonsoverbend.com. OREGON HIGH DESERT CLASSICS I: A class AA hunter-jumper equestrian competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 8 a.m.-9 p.m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-610-5826, agow@jbarj .org or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. PROJECT MOBILE CONNECT: Medical, dental and social services assistance for low-income and homeless individuals; free; 9 a.m.2 p.m.; City Center Foursquare Church, 549 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-385-8977 or shellie@volunteerconnectnow.org. CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC: The 90-mile and 68-mile Cascade Lakes Road Race stage begins and ends at Mt. Bachelor ski area; free for spectators; 10 a.m.; Mt. Bachelor ski area, 13000 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-388-0002 or www.cascade-classic.org. TOUR OF HOMES: Featuring selfguided tours of homes throughout Central Oregon; free; noon-6 p.m.541-389-1058 or www.coba .org. BATS!: Meet live bats and learn about their survival and their role in the ecosystem; $10 plus museum admission, $7 museum members; 12:30 and 3:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www .highdesertmuseum.org.
BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 2-6 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@ gmail.com or http://bendfarmers market.com. SISTERS FARMERS MARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenue and Ash Street; www .sistersfarmersmarket.com. MUSIC IN THE CANYON: Voodoo Highway performs rock ’n’ roll music; free; 5:30-8 p.m.; American Legion Community Park, 850 S.W. Rimrock Way, Redmond; www .musicinthecanyon.com. “HONK!�: Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents a musical adaptation of “The Ugly Duckling�; $15, $10 ages 5-18; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558, beat@ bendbroadband.com or www .beattickets.org. RICHARD GREEN: The singersongwriter performs; free; 7 p.m.; Niblick and Greene’s, 7535 Falcon Crest Drive #100, Redmond; 541-548-4220. MARV ELLIS: The Portland-based hip-hop artist performs, with Cloaked Characters and Top Shelf; free; 9 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend.
SATURDAY BALLOONS OVER BEND CHILDREN’S FESTIVAL: Balloons launch over Bend, weather permitting; followed by a festival with activities, food, crafts, a balloon blast race and more; a portion of proceeds benefits Saving Grace; free, fees for activities; 6 a.m. launch, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. festival, 1:30 p.m. balloon blast; Riverbend Park, Southwest Columbia Street and Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive; 541-323-0964 or www.balloonsoverbend.com. OREGON HIGH DESERT CLASSICS I: A class AA hunter-jumper equestrian competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 8 a.m.-9 p.m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-610-5826, agow@jbarj .org or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. PRINEVILLE FARMERS MARKET: Free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 503-739-0643 or prinevillefarmersmarket@gmail .com. HIGH DESERT GARDEN TOUR: View six gardens in the Bend area in a self-guided tour; $10, free ages 16 and younger; 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 541548-6088 or http://extension .oregonstate.edu/deschutes. MADRAS SATURDAY MARKET: Free admission; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, B and Seventh streets; 541-489-3239 or madrassatmkt@ gmail.com. NEWBERRY’S ANNUAL GARDEN SHOW: Featuring plants that can be grown in Central Oregon and water features; free; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Newberry home, 1968 N.E. Hollowtree Lane, Bend; kingsrazor@ yahoo.com. ANTIQUES IN THE PARK: Vendors sell antiques, with live music and a barbecue; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Creekside Park, U.S. Highway 20 and Jefferson Avenue, Sisters; 541420-0279 or centraloregonshows@ gmail.com. GLORY DAZE CAR SHOW: Open to all makes and models through 1989; with live music; $25 to register, free for spectators; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; downtown Sisters; 541-549-0251 or jeri@sisterscountry.com. NORTHWEST CROSSING FARMERS MARKET: Free; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives, Bend; 541-3821662, valerie@brooksresources .com or www.nwxfarmersmarket .com. TOUR OF HOMES: Featuring self-
guided tours of homes throughout Central Oregon; free; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.541-389-1058 or www.coba .org. WAKEBOARD AND WATER-SKI CONTEST: With wakeboarding, an awards ceremony and barbecue for contestants; spectators welcome; proceeds benefit the Sundance WaterSports Club; $25 or $30, free for spectators; 8:30 a.m. registration, 10:30 a.m. start; Lake Billy Chinook, Crooked River Bridge and Jordan Road, Culver; 541-480-0410 or http:// sundancewatersports.com. PIONEERS’ PICNIC: Bring a lunch and meet with queens from the Deschutes Pioneers’ Association; free; noon; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 N.W. Idaho Ave., Bend; 541-389-1813 or http:// deschutespioneers.org. BATS!: Meet live bats and learn about their survival and their role in the ecosystem; $10 plus museum admission, $7 museum members; 12:30 and 3:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www .highdesertmuseum.org. “HONK!�: Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents a musical adaptation of “The Ugly Duckling�; $15, $10 ages 5-18; 2 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558, beat@ bendbroadband.com or www .beattickets.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Pauls Toutonghi talks about his book “Evel Knievel Days�; RSVP requested; free; 5 p.m.; Sunriver Books & Music, Sunriver Village Building 25C; 541593-2525 or www.sunriverbooks.com. FARM TO FORK DINNER: Eat and drink locally produced food and tour the farm; $75 by check, $85 by credit card; 5 p.m.; Fields Farm, 61915 Pettigrew Road, Bend; 503-473-3952 or www .farmtoforkevents.com/purchase. OREGON HIGH DESERT CLASSICS GRAND PRIX: A class AA hunterjumper equestrian competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 5:30 p.m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-610-5826, agow@ jbarj.org or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC: The Twilight Downtown Criterium takes place on Wall and Bond streets, between Oregon and Idaho avenues; free for spectators; 5:45 p.m.; downtown Bend; 541-388-0002 or www.cascade-classic.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Kim McCarrel presents a new edition of her book “Riding Central Oregon Horse Trails�; free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. CHRIS ISAAK: The Californian crooner performs; $39 or $69 reserved, plus fees; 6:30 p.m., gates open 5 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-318-5457 or www.bendconcerts.com. “HONK!�: Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents a musical adaptation of “The Ugly Duckling�; $15, $10 ages 5-18; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558, beat@ bendbroadband.com or www .beattickets.org. RICHARD GREEN: The singersongwriter performs; free; 7 p.m.; Niblick and Greene’s, 7535 Falcon Crest Drive #100, Redmond; 541-548-4220. SHOW US YOUR SPOKES: Featuring a performance by The Mostest and The JZ Band; proceeds benefit Commute Options; $5; 7 p.m.; Parrilla Grill, 635 N.W. 14th St., Bend; 541-617-9600. HIVEMIND: The Portland-based rock band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-7280879 or www.reverbnation.com /venue/thehornedhand.
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THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 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
WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
BIZARRO
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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 • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
Registries Continued from B1 “With all the graduations this year, I was so thankful to my friends who registered their children,” said Nancy Lee, president of gift registry website MyRegistry.com. “Then I was able to shop in three minutes and get them something they want.” The Internet has played a significant role in the evolution of gift registries. Instead of relying on a few department stores, people can now use websites to cherry-pick items from a variety of purveyors and consolidate them into one online place. Lee said weddings and babies are still MyRegistry.com’s mainstays, yet nontraditional registries are one of the fastest-growing segments of the site’s business, with more than 10,000 users registering for graduation this year alone. “We started out in the early stages with a smattering of sweet 16s and graduations,” she said. “Now Christmas has exploded. This year we had an enormous growth in graduation registries.” Brick-and-mortar stores are also in on the act. Kohl’s offers a registry option called Special Days. Target has registries for any occasion called Target Lists. Bed Bath & Beyond customers can register for college, retirement and more. Smart marketers are seeing gift registries as a relatively untapped opportunity. President Barack Obama’s re-election campaign made national headlines in late June when it created Obama Event Registry as an option for gifts. United Airlines recently created gift registries for both cash contributions toward travel and buying and gifting award miles. The upside of the trend is gift-givers have options. “In general, registries are very, very helpful,” said Peggy Post of the Emily Post Institute. She’s the great-granddaughterin-law of the etiquette expert and co-authored the latest edition of “Emily Post’s Etiquette.” “They give clues,” she continued. “It’s really the giftgiver’s prerogative. There’s no
Midriff Continued from B1 “This midriff is different than the one of a decade ago,” said Lourdes Font, a professor at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York. “The previous trend was ... so extreme that pants barely covered the lower body. Now, fashion is anchoring the waistline at the natural waist, and it’s shifting our eyes above the navel.”
pects of their honeymoon — consumers didn’t understand it. “I just see it becoming more and more acceptable now,” she said. “In the old days we had to fight for the concept.”
Guidelines for registries
New York Times News Service
A screen capture of a gift list on MyRegistry.com. The popularity of gift registries has expanded beyond weddings and showers to include graduations, holidays and more.
rule that they have to select a gift from the registry.”
The right gift Recent research shows the expansion of gift registries might be a good thing. While gift givers might feel their present is more considerate based on how much time and money they spent on it, a 2011 study says the recipients aren’t likely to appreciate it any more than if it came from a registry. In fact, the study — conducted by researchers from Stanford University and Harvard University — found that recipients like gifts they specifically requested more than those they did not. In addition, it found that the surprise gift might also be less appreciated than cash. Researchers suggested in the study that people might get frustrated when gift-givers don’t take note of their suggestions. The findings might be reflecting what some families already intuitively know. Lee said November has become a big month at MyRegistry.com: Instead of hinting at what they
But raising the waistline means a resurrection of the hourglass figure. Font hopes that this incarnation of belly madness will lead to a healthier shape for women and the industry. “You can’t emphasize the natural waist of a woman without curves,” Font said. “I hope these new proportions lead to curvier hips, actual breasts, an ideal body that exists in nature.”
want for Christmas and Hanukkah through email and phone calls, relatives are posting their wish lists online. “Very often, they start out with us for a traditional event,” Lee said. “And they say, ‘That worked so well, let’s do it again.’” Gift registry sites are also branching out into Pinterest, the social scrapbooking website that allows users to create “pinboards” with images of their favorite things. MyRegistry .com created a Web tool that allows people to tag something they like on Pinterest and add it to their gift registries. Kristin Stark, founder of HoneymoonWishes.com, said she expects the variety of gift registry options to only keep growing. In 2004, when she launched her website — which allows couples to register for meals, outings and other as-
In terms of etiquette, Post sees only a few problems with the growth of gift registry options. She doesn’t believe children should create gift registries. Retailers like Toys R Us offer options for birthday or holiday registries. “It emphasizes the entitlement, the ‘What’s in it for me,’” she said. Instead, she said, it’s better for parents to take mental note of what children prefer and then offer that information verbally if asked. Also, some retailers and gift registry websites offer to send out emails to alert people to their registries or to print cards with registry information to include in announcements or invitations, with the exception of showers. Post regarded these as no-nos. “That’s something that most people find offensive,” she said. “It alters the emphasis from ‘Hope you can join us’ to ‘Buy us a gift.’” Any registry should include a variety of items or services at different prices, she said. It should also not be pushed upon people, regardless of the occasion. Rather, registry information should only be offered when requested. Post said it’s also acceptable to include it on an event website. “It’s all in the delivery of the information,” she said. Make sure any registry allows for a way to track who gave what, Post added. That ensures gift recipients can send the all-important thankyou notes.
“The right coupon and sale combo is key. I still do better on the whole buying national brand instead of house brand.” — Jill Cataldo, founder, Super Couponing
Store-brand Continued from B1 “Quality has really gone up, “said Jill Cataldo, founder of Super Couponing workshops. Stephanie Nelson, the founder of CouponMom.com, agreed. “Some stores actually have several tiers of private labels,” including gourmet and organic products, she said. But in some cases, consumers are better off sticking with the brand names they know and love. Those trying out store brands should “start small,” Cataldo said. “Buy one, not 12, to make sure you like it.” Here are five product categories that may warrant caution:
Paper products Store-brand paper towels, paper plates and other goods can be of varying quality. The toilet paper rolls are often smaller and lighter, said Teri Gault, founder of price-tracking site TheGroceryGame .com. Plates might be flimsier, and towels or tissues may be less absorbent, meaning you’ll need to use more than you might with a brand name, negating savings.
Cleaning products Consumers tend to prefer brand-name laundry detergent and other cleaning products, Nelson said. The risk: the store brands sometimes are often not as strong, she said.
Coupon-heavy items Store-brand items might not be cheaper after all. “The right coupon and sale combo is key,” Cataldo said. “I still do better on the whole buying national brand instead of house brand.” That combination beats even low store-brand prices. Some stores do offer coupons on their own brands, too, so be sure to compare prices, she said.
Macaroni and cheese Boxed macaroni and cheese is one of the few categories where shoppers across the board tend to be brand loyal, said Nelson. “It’s Kraft all the way,” she said. Gault said complaints she has heard fault store brands for being “too orange” and not that cheesy.
Diapers Some parents love store brands, Nelson said, but others complain of leaks. Retailers and manufacturers market heavily to new parents with coupons and loyalty rewards, too, so buying store-brand diapers may not be the cheaper option.
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
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A SHOWCASE OF THE FINEST HOMES IN CENTRAL OREGON JULY 20, 21, 22 AND 27, 28, 29 Fridays: Noon – 6 pm, Saturdays and Sundays: 10 am – 6 pm Official Sponsors:
The Bulletin presents the Official Tour Guide, to be published Wednesday, July 18. Extra copies of the guide will also be distributed at the homes during the Tour.
LOCALNEWS
News of Record, C2 Editorials, C4
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
www.bendbulletin.com/local
Mirror Pond gets cash boost
LOCAL BRIEFING OSU-Cascades prof wins award
• Park district to contribute $100,000 to study the silt problem
An Oregon State University-Cascades Campus associate professor was recently given Oregon State University’s highest teaching award. Ron Reuter has taught in the campus’ natural resources program since arriving in Bend in 2003 from Humboldt State University in California. Reuter, who holds a Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota, was named the Elizabeth P. Ritchie Distinguished Professor for 2012. The award is named after a former Oregon State library staff member and comes with a $2,500 award. Another $500 is given to Reuter’s department.
put up for the study. Mirror Pond — which is considered a part of Bend’s identity — is in danger of becoming mudflats if nothing is done to dredge two decades of accumulated silt. The nearby hydroelectric dam slows the water and sediment through the pond, causing some of the sediment to settle along the edges and
By Holly Pablo The Bulletin
The Bend Park & Recreation District voted Tuesday to spend $100,000 to study a solution to the silt problem in Mirror Pond. Don Horton, the district’s executive director, said in a staff recommendation that the money would match the $100,000 the city of Bend has
build up over time. Horton said he believes the combined $200,000 will be enough for an internal planning and development team to conduct an analysis to find a solution to the siltation problem. The Mirror Pond Management Board originally wanted to hire outside consultants, a job estimated at $500,000.
They can reduce this cost and expedite the overall analysis process by using internal staff, Horton said. The actual dredging project is expected to cost between $2 million and $5 million. Now that the group has the initial funding, Horton said it can make the project a priority and begin an analysis within the next few months. See Pond / C5
BATS! LIVE AT THE HIGH DESERT MUSEUM
Bend man jailed on Utah warrant A Bend man was arrested on a Utah warrant and taken to the Deschutes County jail on Monday on suspicion of sexual exploitation of a minor, according to The Deseret News in Salt Lake City. Daniel Dean Divine, 30, is charged in Utah’s 8th District Court and will remain in the Deschutes County jail until he is extradited. The charges stem from an incident in which Divine allegedly sent an iPhone to a 13-year-old Utah girl and asked her to send him nude photos of herself, The Deseret News reports.
Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin
Rob Mies, director of the Organization for Bat Conservation, holds Congo, a straw-colored flying fox, in between his Bats! Live shows Tuesday at the High Desert Museum outside Bend. Mies is introducing museum visitors to live bats such as the strawcolored flying fox, Malayan flying fox and golden fruit bat. Shows continue daily through July 22 and take place at 12:30 and 3:30 p.m. For ticket information, visit www.highdesertmuseum.org.
Students learn about food in ‘Top Chef’ camp By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin
— Bulletin staff reports
UPCOMING
OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS
• Redmond Patriots meeting, featuring a presentation titled “Assault on American Sovereignty and Individual Liberty”; 6:30 p.m. Monday; Highland Baptist Church, 3100 S.W. Highland Ave., Redmond; 541-6397784 or rdmpatriot@ gmail.com.
Educational news and activities, and local kids and their achievements. • School Notes and submission info, C2
— Contact: 541-383-0354, news@bendbulletin.com. In emails, please write “Civic Calendar” in the subject line. Include a contact name and number.
Students learned Thursday that working in a bakery can be a sweltering, tiring and cramped experience. They also learned that the hard work has its benefits. “It tasted like it came just out of the oven,” Megan Anderson, 11, said, pulling apart a slice of pipinghot bread. “It’s way better than any other bread I’ve ever had.” Last week, Bend Park & Recreation District’s Clubhouse, a weekly summer camp for students entering grades 5 and 6, toured several local food-industry businesses as part of its “Top Chef” theme. Students toured Cold Stone Creamery in Redmond, Goody’s factory, and Great Harvest Bread Co. in Bend. See Camp / C2
Andy Tullis / The Bulletin
At Great Harvest Bread Co. in downtown Bend on Thursday morning, owner Cloyd Robinson, right, explains how bread is baked to a group of students in a Bend Park & Recreation District summer camp program with a “Top Chef” theme.
NEW ROUNDABOUT AT SIMPSON AVENUE
The intersection of 18th Street and Empire Avenue will be closed through October for the construction of a new roundabout. This is one of three roundabout projects funded by the city bond that voters approved in 2011.
The construction of the new roundabout at Simpson Avenue and Mt. Washington Drive will result in road closures and a detour.
Brinson Blvd. Bu tle
rM
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Planners back change to Prineville boundary By Joel Aschbrenner The Bulletin
PRINEVILLE — In a move to open more industrial land to development — possibly another data center — the Crook County and Prineville planning commissions Tuesday recommended redrawing the city’s urban growth boundary near the Prineville Airport. The plan is to add an 80-acre plot into the urban growth boundary while taking out a nearly identical adjacent plot. It’s a relatively minor adjustment, but will make the industrial plot inside the boundary more square in shape and more attractive to potential developers, planning officials said. See Boundary / C5
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The Oregon Department of Transportation is doing major paving work on Century Drive. Contractor Knife River plans to pave from 3 p.m. to 7 a.m., Sunday through Friday, until the project is finished, according to ODOT. Drivers can expect delays of up to 20 minutes. Paving will begin at the Bend city limit and progress toward Mount Bachelor. Paving will stop during special events scheduled on the road.
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Loan to nonprofit could be extended A nonprofit that builds affordable housing wants to renegotiate a 2008 deal with the city of Bend to swap one piece of land for another. The city loaned Cascade Community Development more than $320,000 to purchase city-owned land on Butler Market Road, but the developer would now prefer a parcel on Daggett Lane, said city finance director Sonia Andrews. A representative of the nonprofit declined to comment Tuesday. The City Council is scheduled to vote tonight on whether to extend the loan to allow more time for negotiations. If councilors do not extend the loan, the nonprofit would be in default because a portion of the loan — roughly $210,000 — was due in 2010. The loan has been extended repeatedly so that negotiations could continue. See Land / C5
The Redmond Proficiency Academy will be offering its students a new form of online high school credit. RPA will be offering courses through Udacity, an online open course provider. Students enrolled in the courses meet two times per week with an instructor while concurrently working online.
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THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
Camp
N R POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358. Bend Police Department
Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 12:30 p.m. July 11, in the 400 block of Southwest Powerhouse Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 9:58 a.m. July 2, in the 3000 block of Northeast Christina Lane. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:29 a.m. July 2, in the 300 block of Southeast Roosevelt Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 12:22 p.m. July 2, in the 2500 block of Northeast Twin Knolls Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 8:47 a.m. July 3, in the 600 block of Northeast Irving Avenue. Unauthorized use — A vehicle was reported stolen at 6:02 a.m. July 4, in the 800 block of Northwest Florida Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 3:09 p.m. July 4, in the 61100 block of Kepler Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 3:40 p.m. July 4, in the 63400 block of Hunnell Road. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:18 p.m. July 5, in the 3300 block of Northwest Panorama Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:09 p.m. July 5, in the 200 block of Northwest Columbia Street. Unauthorized use — A vehicle was reported stolen at 12:49 p.m. July 6, in the 63000 block of Sherman Road. Theft — A theft was reported at 3:20 p.m. July 6, in the 61500 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft — A theft was reported at 8:13 a.m. July 7, in the 61200 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 4:24 p.m. July 8, in the 1000 block of Southeast 15th Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:50 a.m. July 9, in the 100 block of Northwest Oregon Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 12:53 p.m. July 9, in the 20300 block of Murphy Road. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 3:46 p.m. July 9, in the 1500 block of Northwest Newport Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 7:51 p.m. July 9, in the 61000 block of Brosterhous Road. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 3:43 a.m. July 10, in the 2000 block of Northeast Jackson Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 11:27 a.m. July 10, in the 200 block of Northwest Delaware Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 1:30 p.m. July 10, in the 600 block of Southwest Powerhouse Drive. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 3:13 p.m. July 10, in the 61100 block of Magnolia Lane. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 6:03 p.m. July 10, in the 500 block of Southeast Woodland Boulevard. DUII — Dennis Noel, 47, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:59 p.m. July 10, in the area of Mahsie Court and Mowitch Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:16 a.m. July 11, in the 20300 block of Shetland Loop. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:34 a.m. July 11, in the 2500 block of Northeast Neff Road. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 2:46 p.m. July 11, in the 61100 block of Chuckanut Drive. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 4:14 p.m. July 11, in the 61800 block of Avonlea Circle. DUII — Jimmy Mauldin, 42, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:39 a.m. July 12, in the area of Carl Street and Dean Swift Road. Theft — A theft was reported at 9:16 a.m. July 12, in the 2400 block of Northeast Twin Knolls Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 12:32 p.m. July 12, in the 800 block of Northeast Sixth Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:38 p.m. July 12, in the 200 block of Northwest Jefferson Place. Theft — A theft was reported at 8:41 p.m. July 12, in the 600 block of Southeast Third Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 1:03 a.m. July 13, in the 800 block of Northeast Greenwood Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 7:15 a.m. July 13, in the 20700 block of Beaumont Drive. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 7:57 a.m. July 13, in the 61300 block of U.S. Highway 97. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:43 a.m. July 13, in the 800 block of Northeast Franklin Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 2:58 p.m. July 6, in the 1000 block of Northeast Fifth Street. Theft — A theft was reported
at 1:34 p.m. July 12, in the 2600 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 8:40 p.m. July 12, in the 600 block of Southeast Third Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:41 a.m. July 13, in the 600 block of Northwest Bond Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 2:09 p.m. July 14, in the 1200 block of Northeast 12th Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 5:29 p.m. June 14, in the 61100 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:30 p.m. June 28, in the 100 block of Southeast 16th Street. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 9:37 a.m. July 12, in the 63400 block of Hunnell Road. DUII — Kevin Jay Johnson, 52, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 6:17 p.m. July 13, in the 700 block of Southeast Third Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 8:48 p.m. July 13, in the 800 block of Northeast Sixth Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 9:18 a.m. July 15, in the 20300 block of Murphy Road. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 3:48 p.m. July 14, in the 61300 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 7:10 p.m. July 14, in the 400 block of Southwest Powerhouse Drive. DUII — Pedro Molina Aleman, 33, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:36 a.m. July 15, in the 700 block of Southeast Fifth Street. Theft — A theft was reported and arrests made at 4:29 p.m. July 15, in the 61500 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Redmond Police Department
Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 4:28 p.m. May 21, in the 2600 block of Southwest Indian Lane. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 11:06 a.m. July 9, in the area of Southwest Third Street. and West Antler Avenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 3:34 p.m. July 9, in the 800 block of Southwest Rimrock Way. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 8:10 a.m. July 10, in the 1700 block of Southwest 23rd Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 9:14 a.m. July 10, in the 900 block of Southwest Veterans Way. Theft — A theft was reported and arrests made at 11:10 a.m. July 10, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft — A theft was reported at 1:32 p.m. July 10, in the 2600 block of Southwest 17th Place. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:09 p.m. July 10, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft — A theft was reported at 5:59 p.m. July 10, in the 2000 block of Southwest 34th Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 7:04 p.m. July 10, in the 1400 block of Southwest Evergreen Avenue. DUII — John Compton, 58, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:24 p.m. July 10, in the area of Southwest 31st Street and Southwest Black Butte Boulevard. Theft — A theft was reported at 12:37 a.m. July 11, in the 500 block of Southwest Sixth Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 1:24 a.m. July 11, in the 300 block of Southwest 11th Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 6:02 a.m. July 11, in the area of Southwest Fifth Street and Southwest Cascade Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 11:14 a.m. July 11, in the Southwest Seventh Street and Southwest Black Butte Boulevard. Theft — A theft was reported at 11:47 a.m. July 11, in the 100 block of Southeast Fifth Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 12:08 p.m. July 11, in the 700 block of Northwest Sixth Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 12:49 p.m. July 11, in the 1600 block of North U.S. Highway 97. Theft — A theft was reported at 1:03 p.m. July 11, in the 900 block of Northwest Canal Boulevard. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 3:37 p.m. July 11, in the 1600 block of Southwest Salmon Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:36 p.m. July 11, in the 500 block of Southeast Black Butte Boulevard. Theft — A theft was reported at 9:09 a.m. July 12, in the 1800 block of Southwest 17th Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 11:17 a.m. July 12, in the 1500 block of
Northwest Eighth Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 11:33 a.m. July 12, in the 2900 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:36 p.m. July 12, in the 600 block of Southwest Rimrock Way. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 5:36 p.m. July 12, in the 3000 block of Southwest Juniper Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 6:24 p.m. July 12, in the 900 block of Southwest Rimrock Way. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 7:27 p.m. July 12, in the 1900 block of Southwest Reindeer Avenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 11:14 p.m. July 12, in the 2000 block of Southwest 33rd Avenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 1:28 p.m. July 12, in the 2000 block of of Southwest 33rd Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 7:15 a.m. July 13, in the area of Southwest Fifth Street and Southwest Evergreen Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 12:22 p.m. July 13, in the area of Northwest Jackpine Avenue and North U.S. Highway 97. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 5:13 p.m. July 13, in the area of Southwest Ffith Street. and Southwest Evergreen Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 7:04 p.m. July 13, in the 2500 block of Southeast Jesse Butler Circle. Theft — A theft was reported at 12:18 a.m. July 14, in the 800 block of Northwest Fifth Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 10:26 a.m. July 14, in the 800 block of Northwest Jackpine Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 1:14 p.m. July 14, in the 900 block of Southwest Veterans Way. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 3:41 p.m. July 14, in the 2200 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 4:25 p.m. July 14, in the 500 block of Northwest 10th Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 7:16 p.m. July 14, in the area of Southwest Seventh Street and Southwest Glacier Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 7:33 p.m. July 14, in the 1200 block of Southwest 27th Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 9:16 p.m. July 14, in the area of Northwest 19th Street and Northwest Cedar Avenue. DUII — Clark Fitton, 28, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:11 a.m. July 15, in the area of Southwest 13th Street. and Southwest Indian Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 7:58 a.m. July 15, in the 3100 block of Southwest 35th Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 11:17 a.m. July 15, in the 1200 block of Southwest Highland Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 1:18 p.m. July 15, in the 2000 block of Southwest 33rd Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 2:13 p.m. July 15, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft — A theft was reported at 3:18 p.m. July 15, in the 800 block of Southwest Evergreen Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:25 p.m. July 15, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 7:34 p.m. July 15, in the 2300 block of Southwest Salmon Avenue. Prineville Police Department
Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:30 a.m. July 16, in the area of Northeast Seventh Street. Oregon State Police
DUII — Chris William Peterson, 26, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants July 16, in the area of Southwest Veterans Way and Southwest Canal Boulevard in Redmond.
BEND FIRE RUNS Monday 7:35 p.m. — Unauthorized burning, 22210 East U.S. Highway 20. 26 — Medical aid calls.
Continued from C1 “It’s a really fast-paced camp that keeps kids busy and exposes them to things they’ve never been exposed to before,” Molly Morton, a club instructor, said. About 20 students spent the morning in the back area of the Great Harvest Bread Co. in downtown Bend, learning the ins and outs of being a professional bread baker. Space was tight as Cloyd Robinson, owner of the business, took the students on a tour. They got a chance to see just how hot the bakery gets on warm summer mornings, and see the hard work that goes into each loaf. “I can’t wait to try making some,” Alice Lulich, 11, said. “I have a breadmaker at home that I’ve never used. I’d love to make some this weekend with
“I’ve ended up hiring several people who came here for tours as kids.” — Great Harvest Bread Co. owner Cloyd Robinson
my mom.” Students watched as bakers took giant armfuls of dough from mixing vats, and started dividing and kneading it. Alice said she didn’t know that bakeries made bread in such large batches. The bakery’s massive slot oven intrigued students. “How do you bring the bread out of the oven?” one student asked, peering into the heated, cavernous space. Robinson showed the kids how bakers remove the bread from the oven, and told them a bit of useful wisdom from his many years as the owner of Great Harvest. “You learn that you can’t tell by looking at a pan how hot or
cold it is,” Robinson said. “And hopefully, you don’t have to learn that the hard way.” Robinson then removed a loaf of honey wheat bread from a rack that had just come out of the oven and divided it up on the table. For students, the best part of the tour had finally arrived. Robinson said he gives tours like this at least a few times each year. “I’ve ended up hiring several people who came here for tours as kids,” Robinson said. “I think they see that it’s a fun place to work, and they remember that when they grow up.” —Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbulletin.com
Email: bulletin@bendbulletin.com
How to submit Teen feats: Kids recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Please submit a photo.) Phone: 541-383-0358 Email: youth@bendbulletin.com Mail: P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 Other school notes: College announcements, military graduations or training completions, reunion announcements. Phone: 541-383-0358
Story ideas School briefs: Items and announcements of general interest. Phone: 541-633-2161 Email: pcliff@bendbulletin.com Student profiles: Know of a kid with a compelling story? Phone: 541-383-0354 Email: mkehoe@bendbulletin.com
S N REUNIONS Bend High School and Mountain View High School classes of 1981-91 happy hour reunion and fundraiser for the Tower Theatre; $10; 6-9 p.m. Thursday; Cowgirl Cash, 924 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; contact Rebecca, 541-678-5162. Bend High School Class of 1977 will hold a reunion July 20-21; $35-45; for registration, visit www.bhs1977.com or contact Maureen Renwick Barteling, 541420-3015 or Kathy Ingraham Rowles, 541-350-6298. Crook County High School Class of 1972 will hold a reunion July 20-21; no-host social at Prineville Golf and Country Club on Friday, picnic, dinner and music Saturday; to register or for more information, contact Carolyn Puckett at 541-447-5291, or Fred Gerke, 541-312-0188. Mountain View High School Class of 2002 will hold a reunion July 28-29; $40 per person or $70 per couple for dinner and dancing July 28; preregister; free kickball game 1-5 p.m. July 29 at Big Sky Park, 21690 N.E. Neff Road; contact mvhsreunion2002@gmail.com. Redmond High School Class of 1987 will hold a reunion Aug. 3-5; $30 per person plus $8 for Sunday Buckaroo Breakfast; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center; contact Lara Chan, 541-526-1626. Crook County High School Class of 1962 will hold a reunion Aug. 3-5; hors d’oeuvres, picnic, dinner at Meadow Lakes Golf Club and golfing; register by July 1; contact Janice Wood Anderson, 541-419-2436. Redmond High School Class of 1962 will hold a reunion Aug. 4 at Eagle Crest; to register or for information, contact Janet (McKinnon) Hodgers, 541-6171498, Jim Pierce, 541-548-2644, or Cherie (Hebert) Douglas, 541-279-1730. Crook County High School Classes 1940-49 will hold a reunion Aug. 4; $23 per person; 5-6:30 p.m. no-host bar, 6:30 p.m. dinner; A.R. Bowman Memorial Museum, 246 North Main Street, Prineville; for information, contact Gwen Boothe at 541-447-4155. Bend High School Class of 1962 will hold a reunion Aug. 10-12; for information, visit www.bshs62 .com or contact Mike Stenkamp at 541-382-1739 or Susie Chopp Penhollow at 541-382-2724. Bend High School Class of 1972 will hold a reunion Aug. 10-11; $25 per person; visit www .bendclassof72.com to register; contact Patty Smiley Stell at 541388-1325 or stell@bendcable
.com. Bend High School Class of 1992 will hold a reunion Aug. 10-12; formal dinner Aug. 11 at Awbrey Glen; for registration information, contact Emily Anderson Stewart at 541-8151414, eanderson@blackbutteranch .com or quicksilvermonk@gmail .com. The Second (Indianhead) Division Association; for anyone who served in the Second Infantry Division at any time; Aug. 23-26, Reno, Nev.; for information or to register, contact Bob Haynes, 224-225-1202 or 2idahq@comcast.net or visit www.2ida.org. Bend High School Class of 1967 will hold a reunion Aug. 24-25; dinner at Awbrey Glen and more; register by July 1; for registration information, contact Frank Wilson at 541-3892363 or email bendclassof67@gmail. com. Bend High School Class of 1952 will hold a reunion Sept. 7-9; hors d’oeurves and tours Friday, class picnic and catered dinner Saturday; brunch Sunday; $30 per person; register by July 31; contact Joanne Lubcke at 541-389-1075, JoAnn Austin at 541-306-3181 or Darlyne Haynes at 541-382-1560. USS Columbus CA-74/CG-12/SSN762 reunion; Sept. 12-16; Holiday Inn Portland Airport; for registration information, contact Allen R. Hope, president, 3828 Hobson Road, Fort Wayne, Ind., 46815-4505, 260486-2221 (8 a.m.-5 p.m. EST) or hope4391@frontier.com.
MILITARY NOTES Navy Seaman Lacie M. Carlson graduated with honors from Basic Electronics Technician School at the Center for Surface Combat System Unit, Great Lakes, Ill. Carlson is the daughter of Lewis and Debbie Short, of Bend. Air National Guard Airman Phillip Stoltz graduated from basic military training at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio. Stoltz is a 2011 graduate of Redmond High School and the son of Kevin Stoltz, of Redmond.
COLLEGE NOTES Krista Shofstall received an associate of arts and an associate of science degree from Cottey College in Nevada, Mo., and was named to the President’s List for the spring 2012 semester. Shofstall is the daughter of Tracy Sampson, of Bend. Ann Lewis was named to the spring 2012 dean’s list at Pacific Northwest College of Art in Portland. Lewis is a 2011 graduate of Summit High School and the daughter of Chuck and Eliza Lewis, of Bend. Lisa Dolinar, of Bend, was named to the spring 2012 honor roll at University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh.
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WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
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O N Prospector hopes clay will be used for health, beauty The Associated Press MEDFORD — Clay from a volcanic eruption 8,000 years ago may become a beauty product or health aid. Ray Huckaba, of Grants Pass, has filed plans with the Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest to excavate and test a thick deposit of the sulfur-enriched clay mineral from a mine near the town of Prospect. The mineral, epithermal argillite, was left after Mount Mazama erupted, the Medford Mail Tribune reported. The newspaper was unable to reach Huckaba, but a forest official said he’s discussed his plans. “Some of the things he mentioned to us that he wants to use it for would be as a beauty products and for medicinal purposes,” said Kerwin Dewberry, ranger in charge of the High Cascades Ranger District. “To have someone looking at this mineral for a beauty product or a health aid is very interesting.” Preliminary research has shown the material may have anti-bacterial properties, officials said. In plans filed with the government, Huckaba said he wants to remove and test some 20,000 cubic yards from the site. About 31⁄2 acres of the 5acre mining site already have been cleared of vegetation by previous mining activities. The mine’s five-month op-
erating season would be from June 1 to Nov. 1 and last up to five years. Dump trucks would take the material to White City, where it would be placed in a semitrailer and taken to a processing plant. A 30-day public comment period on the proposed operating plan ends Saturday. The material, part of a large deposit of sulfurized mineral created by volcanic action during the time when Mount Mazama erupted to create Crater Lake, contains naturally cooked sulfur, iron, silica and trace elements. Huckaba originally filed a claim in the area in 1981 and had his operating plan approved, but it expired, said Kevin Johnson, mining geologist for the Rogue River-Siskiyou and Fremont-Winema national forests. In the past, clay from the area has been offered as a soil additive and for making roofing tiles. Now, officials are trying to figure out which mining and minerals laws regulate the uses that Huckaba has proposed. The minerals are subject to different restrictions depending on the intended use, officials said. When Huckaba’s mining operation is finished, he will have to rehabilitate the site to avoid erosion that could pollute the watershed, Dewberry said.
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Josephine releasing burglary suspects GRANTS PASS — The Josephine County jail has stopped holding burglary suspects. Sheriff Gil Gilbertson tells the Grants Pass Daily Courier that suspected burglars are being cited and released due to budget cuts at the jail. In one recent case, four people were cited for stealing $10,000 worth of equipment from a local nonprofit. Two of the four skipped their court appearances. In late May, the jail cut the number of local inmates it holds to about 30, down from 120 earlier this year. Josephine County is struggling with the loss of federal subsidies to make up for the decline of the timber industry. Grants Pass police officer Dave Daniel says the “criminal justice system is failing” because the public continues to deal with felony suspects who would typically be locked up.
Medford doctor gets 60-day suspension MEDFORD — A Medford doctor who diverted opiates for his own use and administered drugs to an employee without her consent will have his medical license suspended for 60 days. The Mail Tribune newspaper reports that Dr. Shawn Sills could lose his license altogether if he fails to follow the requirements of a 10-year probationary term ordered by the Oregon Medical Board. Sills has been assigned a compliance officer who will review his medical records. Sills and the officer will meet quarterly and Sills will be interviewed by the medical board annually. The doctor assured the board he is now clean and sober.
Arrest in Portland stabbing death PORTLAND — Police have made an arrest in the death of a man who was killed outside a northeast Portland apartment complex last week. The Portland Police Bureau says 43-year-old Michael Leonard was booked into the Multnomah County jail. Officers responding to a disturbance outside the Village
Garden Apartments on Thursday found 40-year-old Dion Matthews suffering from stab wounds. Paramedics tried to save Matthews, but he died at the scene.
Man gets 21⁄2 years for drug trafficking CORVALLIS — An Albany man has been sentenced to two-and-a-half years in prison for his role in major drug trafficking operation in the midWillamette Valley. The Gazette-Times reports that 37-year-old Ricardo Viramontes pleaded no contest to a racketeering charge in Benton County Circuit Court. Viramontes was arrested as part of a multiagency sting operation called “Icebreaker II.” Authorities say a trafficking network distributed as much as 4 pounds of methamphetamine and 2 pounds of heroin throughout the mid-Willamette Valley on any given week. Twenty-seven people were arrested in the raid. A defense attorney said Viramontes has a wife and children and he is looking forward to serving his time and returning home to them. — From wire reports
INJURED OCCUPIER SUES PORTLAND POLICE
Springfield businessman wants shopping district to cash in on ‘Simpsons’ The Associated Press SPRINGFIELD — One Springfield businessman says it’s time for the city to embrace its most famous fictional residents and create a shopping district with a theme of “The Simpsons.” Jack Koehler, owner of Sweety’s Frozen Yogurt, credits a set of Simpson statues in front of his store with boosting business, and he says they can do the same for others. Koehler wants the city to get involved, but an official says there’s no demand from the public. “I think this would turn downtown Springfield into a landmark that would put a peg in the map,” Koehler told KVAL. Simpsons creator Matt Groening told Smithsonian magazine in April that Springfield was the setting for television’s longest-running sitcom, putting to rest decades of speculation about which of the many Springfields was the true home for the Simpsons characters. Koehler’s store features
life-size statues of Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa and Maggie Simpson, and he says they’ve driven 250 new customers to his store in 23 days. He wants to designate several blocks of downtown as “Simpsonsville.” “I’ve had people from Japan, Australia, New Zealand, Switzerland — they’re coming here because this was declared Simpsontown, Springfield, the town of the Simpsons, so people are coming here,” he said. But Niel Laudati, Springfield community relations manager, said the plan could cost millions in licensing fees alone — and there’s probably not a lot of interest in using tax dollars for that. “If there’s money to be made, if that’s what he’s looking at, then the private sector is the best way to get into that,” Laudati said. “They would be the ones to put together the business plan, and they’re free to do that.”
The Associated Press file photo
A police officer drags off Justin Bridges, 28, as police and demonstrators clash in November at the Occupy Portland encampment. Bridges, an Occupy Portland protester, has filed a federal lawsuit accusing police of excessive force, saying his back was injured. Bridges says he was swept up in a crowd as police pushed demonstrators out of a downtown park. The Oregonian reports he says police dragged him across a street, choked him with his bandanna and beat him with batons. City Attorney James Van Dyke declined to comment on the suit, citing pending litigation. — The Associated Press
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www.northwestmedispa.com
Hood River Fruit Loop’s
CHERRY CELEBRATION July 21 & 22 in Hood River Our Cherry Celebration is an adventure with activities for the entire family. Farms offer many varieties of fresh-picked and U-pick cherries, wines, lavender, jams and other cherry treats. Many farms feature picnic areas. For a map or more information, call 541-386-7697 or visit www.hoodriverfruitloop.com HIGHLIGHTS INCLUDE: Packer Orchards & Cookie Stop Many varieties of sweet, dark and yellow cherries will be available. Cherry pies, warm cobbler ala mode and our creamy cherry milkshakes. From fresh cherries to cherry jam, you will find it at Packers Place.
3900 Hwy 35 541-234-4481 Fruit Loop #14
Rasmussen Farms...the tradition continues Best selection of cherries in the valley. We also ship cherries! Lots of cherry recipes, Oregon cherry products to sample, fresh early summer vegetables and a sale in the greenhouse. Open daily 9am - 6pm.
Fruit Loop # 7 3020 Thomsen Rd (541) 386-4622 www.RasmussenFarms.com
Draper Girls Country Farm U-pick and already picked cherries - many varieties even pie cherries. Homemade cherry pie! U-pick raspberries, non-pasteurized cherry cider along with apple, apple-raspberry and cherry-apple. Apricots and many kinds of vegetables. Petting zoo and picnic area will be open.
6200 Hwy 35 541-352-6625 Fruit Loop #15
Apple Valley’s Cherry Celebration! Fresh baked cherry pies, crisps, cobblers, & hand pies. Cherry milkshakes and Cherry ice cream. 50+ varieties of jams, syrups, pepper jellies and pie fillings. Cherry wood smoked BBQ pulled pork and chicken sandwiches, pork ribs, and polish sausages, all served with cider baked beans and pear coleslaw. Open 10-6 Fruit Loop #21 2363 Tucker Rd. Hood River, 97031 541-386-1971
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THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
E Support Walden’s Bowman Dam bill
T
The Bulletin
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
B M C G B J C R C
Chairwoman Publisher Editor-in-Chief Editor of Editorials
he clock is ticking for Crook County’s Bowman Dam and those who hope to pass a bill to move a line wrongly drawn through its center years
ago. The Central Oregon Jobs and Water Security Act, sponsored by Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, made it through the U.S. House of Representatives, but a Senate version of the bill cannot pass without changes, officials say.
Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., is working on those changes now. He understands the difficulty of starting from scratch if the bill is not approved this year, but negotiations among the various groups interested in the bill take time. Walden’s version of the bill does a couple of things. Most importantly, it moves the line marking the start of the wild and scenic portion of the Crooked River from the center of the dam a quarter of a mile downstream. The boundary was placed in the dam by mistake when the river was designated wild and scenic in 1988, according to officials at the federal Bureau of Land Management. A second change would allow the city of Prineville to pump more groundwater for city use because it would increase stream flow in the river by seven cubic feet per second. Prineville cannot add new wells without replacing what water it takes, and the additional stream-
flow would do that. Walden’s version of the bill is unacceptable to the Democratically controlled Senate, however, in part because it gives irrigators an absolute right to first claim on the water behind the dam. Environmentalists and fishermen, in particular, worry that would mean no additional instream flows during drought years. They want a portion of what is stored behind the dam set aside for fish and wildlife. Juggling the different interests in the river and the water in it is no easy task, as you might imagine. Yet without some agreement ahead of time, no version of Walden’s bill can make it through the Senate. Even in an election year, it isn’t nail-biting time yet. Merkley understands the need for speed — Oregon’s other senator, Ron Wyden, no doubt does, too — and is moving as quickly as possible.
Time is right for states to levy online sales taxes
D
espite their aversion to taxes, GOP leaders are warming to the idea that online purchasers should pay state sales taxes. Self-interest prompts the change, but fairness makes it the right move. The Wall Street Journal reported this week that some Republican governors and legislators are joining their Democratic brethren in supporting the taxes, and federal legislation to permit them is gaining steam. In 1992, the Supreme Court said online retailers didn’t have to collect state sales taxes unless they had a physical facility in the purchaser’s state. However, the decision did leave room for Congress to change that, the Journal reported. Since then, online retail has grown into a $200-billion-ayear industry, leaving bricks-andmortar retailers at a significant disadvantage. That disadvantage has grown with the online industry’s expansion. Now, managers see customers use their stores to examine and compare products, but then head home to order online and avoid paying sales tax. Although
Oregon doesn’t collect a sales tax, in other states the savings can be significant, unfairly penalizing physical retail outlets. As they struggle with budget shortfalls, states are also attracted to the potential income. The National Conference of State Legislatures estimates the additional revenues at $23 billion a year if state sales taxes were extended to all Internet transactions, according to the Journal. Amazon, which like other online companies has in the past opposed the tax collection, has decided to support it, according to the Journal. Amazon is seeking to open distribution centers in more locations to cut delivery time, and it would benefit if federal legislation brought consistency of rules across the states. Most other online retailers remain opposed. In its early years, the online industry had good reason to oppose the complexity of collecting taxes for multiple states. Its huge growth, though, means it’s time to correct that unfair advantage. However, many small online retailers could suffer unreasonable burdens, and any legislation must address their issues as well.
My Nickel’s Worth Stop borrowing Where have all the fiscal conservatives gone? We are in the midst of an economic crisis. Almost 40 percent of our property owners are underwater. City and state governments are challenged to set realistic budgets, yet some residents still seek to fulfill their need to go shopping with other people’s money. Yes, it’s a pretty wish list. I’ve got one, too. Let’s stop the cycle of debt in Bend, and just say no to the expensive habit of borrowing. If there is a strong interest in passing the $29 million park bond, then all the residents who want to vote yes on this bond should host a fundraiser and fund the projects themselves. Ron Boozell Bend
Fix Mirror Pond Hooray for my new best old friend Dennis Flannery for his letter bringing to light the folly of the Mirror Pond dredging problem. I have lived here for over 20 years and have never seen the “gee whiz, golly� approach to a problem more apparent than in this case. The pond is in the city — fix it! We don’t need or want another “study� to the tune of $400,000 or $500,000. It’s mud. Aren’t river deltas pretty fertile? Sell it as topsoil! There is probably enough there to fund the entire project! My God, I read with amazement in the newspaper that Bend has had an “unexpected windfall of revenue� recently and that, golly, we need to decide what to spend it on. Certainly the police need some vehicles and there are road repairs which need to be commenced, but what of the leftover million or so? Stop the “woe is me� mentality, take some of this
windfall money and get this thing started. It’s embarrassing how long this discussion has gone on. Mirror Pond is the crown jewel of our community and it’s time we got this project under way! Let’s hold a bake sale. We recently started construction on three (or four, I lose count) roundabouts, and after all, they didn’t cost us anything. I can even suggest contacting the folks at Lake Wildwood, Calif. (near Sacramento), for help in solving this problem. Theirs is a similar problem and they just deal with it. John Speckmann Bend
Ruling and the election I suspect there was a deal understood among the five conservative justices to throw a wrench into the upcoming November elections. In construing “Obamacare� as a tax, Chief Justice John Roberts availed himself a great opportunity to educate the voters of America. He warned that it is not the job of the Supreme Court to protect voters electing bad people to Congress or the Oval Office. What Roberts didn’t say is within the message of the decision, it being: “You voters really screwed up when you voted to elect a bunch of power mongers to Congress and the White House. You have the chance to do better this coming November.� So now the largest tax increase in American history is the dead Albatross hanging around the neck of a lot of incumbent politicians who pushed “Obamacare� through Congress. That will be a huge liability for them in November, an especially good campaign tool for those opposed to this huge tax and running against the incumbents, if the challengers ex-
ploit the issue well. Further, a wooden stake is driven through the heart of the theory that Congress may force people to buy stuff they don’t want under the guise of regulating commerce among the states. Finally, because “Obamacare� is now clearly defined as a tax, it makes yet again a grand liar out of President Barack Obama, it raises the pressure for Congress to repeal the entire package. Tim Fox La Pine
Bad transportation bill The recently passed federal transportation bill will provide the benefit of funding certainty for paving suppliers, but we should ask how this legislation serves the American public. Unfortunately, Senate negotiators abandoned many reforms in their own bipartisan, forward-looking bill in favor of regressive House changes. The resulting legislation takes a major step backward on accountability. The deal hands states a blank check without proper assurances that roads will get safer, traffic congestion will improve, people can get to work or bridges will get fixed. Local access to a tiny sliver of community-based transportation funding to make streets safer for people walking and biking was slashed by about 45 percent. While this stopgap bill avoids a shutdown, we will have to wait until 2014 for Congress to restore public confidence and trust in the federal transportation program. Maybe then we will see a new bill that serves all people, whether they are walking, biking, riding transit or driving. Jeff Monson Executive director of Bend’s Commute Options
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
Republicans need to stop pointing finger at Obama I By Carlos Wysling n this age where a devastating economic disaster was visited upon our country starting in 2007, we had the foresight to elect in 2008 a president with the intellect, balance and long-range purpose as Barack Obama. Since then, despite the overt declaration of Republican leaders (right after the election) that their No. 1 goal was to ensure that Obama would have a one-term presidency, Obama has steadfastly maintained a course based on solid policies to set the country on the road to recovery. Many of these policies were crafted with the idea of bipartisanship, much to dismay of some of his liberal base. Often, the rabid opposition cries out that “Obama had two years of majorities in the Congress and accomplished nothing.� The concrete list of accomplishments notwithstanding, the president maintains an honorable and respectful atti-
tude towards all. From the stimulus packages that helped rescue the stock market from the edge of the precipice to the bailout of the U.S. auto industry to the Equal Pay Act for Women to the Affordable Care Act, the administration has kept its eye firmly on what is good for the country. A large number of Republicans denounce Obama for persistently reminding Americans of the disaster he found upon arriving at the White House: “Stop blaming Bush,� they demand. But the reminder of the Bush years is prescient and carries a larger message than simple “blame.� It links the current clamor of the right, “cut taxes, eliminate regulations and free up the corporations� to exactly what was done during the Bush years that ultimately culminated with the disastrous results we have experienced. No matter what amount of written articles and taped interviews show the contradictions of Republicans in the pre- and post-Obama era, they in-
IN MY VIEW
sist that they are right. Regardless of having strongly supported Bush-era bailouts, unfunded pharmaceutical benefits and the unfunded invasion of Iraq, they unapologetically continue to attack Obama with juvenile epithets of “Marxist� and “socialist.� Perhaps, the recent Supreme Court decision which was crafted by Chief Justice John Roberts in a surprise move could show the way in these acrimonious and divided times. A very conservative judge all his life, Roberts saw that it was not the court’s role to make or eliminate laws. He emulated opinions of chief justices past that searched for aspects of the law that could be preserved and thus reaffirmed the ever-important constitutional principle of separation of powers between the three branches of government. The United States did not be-
Perhaps, the recent Supreme Court decision that was crafted by Chief Justice John Roberts in a surprise move could show the way in these acrimonious and divided times.
come great because of small and petty thinking. It became great because its leaders have, throughout our history, been able to allow the visionaries to lead the way with their inspired ideas. The good politicians (and there are so many from both political parties) have been able to allow opponents their say and consider the value of their contributions ,and in that way arrive at a position that could satisfy the reasonable. The fringes, either on the right or the left (and I include myself in this group) will often feel misrepresented in some major decisions, but the final product would often be good for the country as a whole.
Unfortunately, reality brings us Mitt Romney, who leads the pack in contradicting documented Republican positions, by adding the biggest of them all: “Romneycare� that he instituted in Massachusetts with great success and that eventually became the basis for “Obamacare�! Romney is fond of saying the he “will repeal ‘Obamacare’ on his first day,� despite clear evidence that both programs are virtually the same. It is like the poster circulating on the Web these days: “If President Obama came out in support of oxygen, the Republicans would asphyxiate themselves.� God bless us all. — Carlos Wysling lives in Bend.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Firefighters enjoy temporary reprieve
Contributions may be made to:
Zion Lutheran Church or Hospice of Redmond.
Dawn Marie (Workman) Way, of Prineville Oct. 12, 1979 - July 16, 2012 Arrangements: Dallas Mortuary Tribute Center, (503) 623-2325 Services: A memorial service and potluck will be held at 11:30 am Saturday, July 21st in the Ochoco Creek Park near the Fire Fighters Memorial in Prineville. Contributions may be made to:
Help with funeral expenses or to the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure Dawn Way Team in care of the Dallas Mortuary Tribute Center at 287 SW Washington St. Dallas, Oregon 97338.
Donald K. Crowell, of Bend Jan. 6, 1926 - July 14, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471, www.niswonger-reynolds.com
Services: A memorial service will be held 2:00 PM on Monday, July 23, 2012 at the Niswonger-Reynolds Chapel, 105 NW Irving Ave., Bend. Contributions may be made to:
Grandma's House, PO Box 6372, Bend, OR 97708 or Kiwanis of Bend.
Stella Geneva Royse, of Bend Nov. 4, 1917 - July 12, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services are planned at this time.
Leslie Andrew Faber, of Prineville June 11, 1922 - July 15, 2012 Arrangements: Whispering Pines Funeral Home, 541-416-9733 Services: A Graveside service will be held at 10AM Wednesday, July 18, 2012 at the Juniper Haven Cemetery in Prineville, OR. Contributions may be made to:
Pioneer Memorial Hospice, 1201 NE Elm St., Prineville, OR 97754.
Donelda "Donna" Whitcomb, of Prineville Mar. 23, 1920 - July 16, 2012 Arrangements: Whispering Pines Funeral Home, 541-416-9733 Services: A Celebration of Life will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Humane Society of the Ochocos in Donna's name, 1280 SW Tom McCall Rd., Prineville, OR 97754.
Walker D. Nicholson, of Bend Feb. 23, 1926 - July 13, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services are planned at this time. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Larraine Wibbens Hubler, of Bend Oct. 9, 1927 - July 13, 2012 Arrangements: Please sign guest book at www.niswonger-reynolds. com Contributions may be made to: Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, in her name, or a cancer research of your choice.
Lois Marilyn Fenderson Sept. 23, 1930 - July 16, 2012 Lois Marilyn Fenderson, wife of Willard Fenderson, passed away peacefully on July 16, 2012, at her home in Prineville. She was 81 years old. A 45-year resident of Prineville, Lois was born on September 23, 1930, in Worcester, MA, Lois Fenderson to Herbert and Myrtle (Carlson) Lundell. She attended school in Worcester and graduated in 1948 from the High School of Commerce, and in 1950, she graduated from the Salter Secretarial School and went on to work at the Worcester County Courthouse as a title examiner. Later, Lois would work for the Crook County School District for 17 years, retiring in 1989. She married Willard Fenderson on June 25, 1954, at Tiller, OR. The couple then moved to Canyonville, OR, for two years followed by nine years in Brookings, OR. Lois moved to Prineville with her family in 1967, where her husband was pastor at Prineville Community Church for 27 years. Willard and Lois recently celebrated their 58th wedding anniversary on June 25. Her greatest joy was working with children at school and at church. She taught Sunday school for 50 years and greatly enjoyed music, flowers, and her family. She played organ and piano at church and nursing homes for many years. She was an active participant in the Prineville Christian Women’s Club and for over 15 years, Lois was a volunteer at the Crook County Christian School. In addition to her husband, Willard, survivors include daughters Wendy Knottingham (Dennis) of Yuba City, CA; Laurie McAlister (Randy), of Tualatin, OR; Heidi Feely (Don), of Canby, OR; Kathy March (Monte), of Prineville, OR; and Rose Lopez (Greg), of Dundee, OR, sons, Brian Fenderson (Ann) of Salem, OR; and Kevan Fenderson (Wendolyn), of Lewisville, TX, and 17 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Lois was preceded in death by her parents. A private family graveside will be held for the family at Juniper Haven Cemetery and a memorial service will be held 11:00 a.m., July 19, at the Prineville Nazarene Church, followed by a reception. Memorials, in lieu of flowers, may be directed to the Crook County Christian School. Arrangements are in the care of Prineville Funeral Home. Please visit www.PrinevilleFuneralHome.com to share your memories or express your condolences by signing the on-line Guest Book.
The Washington Post file photo
William Raspberry attends the Raspberry Roast at The Washington Post in Washington, D.C., on June 26. Raspberry, a Pulitzer Prize-winning Post columnist and one of the most widely read black journalists of his generation, died Tuesday at 76.
Venerable columnist William Raspberry was a Pulitzer winner By Dennis Hevesi New York Times News Service
William Raspberry, a Pulitzer Prize-winning syndicated columnist for The Washington Post who for 39 years in more than 200 newspapers brought a moderate voice to social issues, including race relations — sometimes to the ire of civil rights leaders — died Tuesday at his home in Washington. He was 76. His wife, Sondra Raspberry, who confirmed the death, said Raspberry had prostate cancer, The Post reported. Raspberry wrote his column for The Post from 1966 to 2005. Initially under the title “Potomac Watch� and later under his own name, it steered clear of Washington’s power brokers to focus on street violence, drug abuse, criminal justice, poverty, parenting, education and civil rights, often quoting ordinary people he interviewed and asserting his belief in individual responsibility in dealing with social issues. “Words matter,� he wrote in a 1993 column about the raw lyrics of rap music. “And because I know words matter, I wish my children, and kids younger than my children, would get back to innocent, hopeful lyrics. I wish their music was more about love and less graphically about intercourse. I wish their songs could be less angry and ‘victimized’ and more about building a better world.�
Controversial stands His writing could spur controversy. In a column about violence in the streets of Washington in 1993, shortly after a shooting at an elementary school, Raspberry was criticized for calling for federal troops to restore order. “If we can deploy American soldiers in Mogadishu to protect the Somali people from violent ‘warlords,’� he wrote, “is it beyond reason to deploy a few hundred troops here, at least until the streets are calm enough for ordinary law enforcement to take over?� Raspberry defied conventional labels. In 1974, Time magazine wrote that he had “emerged as the most respected black voice on any white U.S. newspaper.� “Neither a Pollyanna nor a raging militant,� Time continued, “he considers the merits rather than the ideology of any issue. Not surprisingly, his
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.
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Mail: Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
judgments regularly nettle the Pollyannas and militants.� NAACP officials were nettled by a 1989 column in which Raspberry criticized civil rights leaders as dwelling on racism rather than pressing for practical solutions to the problems faced by blacks. “I don’t underestimate either the persistence of racism or its effects, but it does seem to me that you spend too much time thinking about racism,� he wrote. “It is as though your whole aim is to get white people to acknowledge their racism and accept their guilt. Well, suppose they did: What would that change?� “Well, quite a lot, as a matter of fact,� replied Roger Wilkins, a former colleague of Raspberry’s at The Post and later publisher of the NAACP journal, The Crisis, writing in Mother Jones magazine in 1989. “The issue isn’t guilt. It’s responsibility.� “Like it or not,� Wilkins continued, “slavery, the damage from legalized oppression during the century that followed emancipation and the racism that still infects the entire nation follow a direct line to ghetto life today.� To which Raspberry responded, “Just for the hell of it, why don’t we pretend the racist dragon has been slain already — and take that next step right now?� Raspberry won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary in 1994. That year, the National Association of Black Journalists presented him with its Lifetime Achievement Award. “Raspberry’s clarity of thought and his insistence on speaking the truth as he sees it — even when others disagree — have kept his column fresh, unpredictable and uncommonly wise,� the citation said. William Raspberry was born on Oct. 12, 1935, in the small Mississippi town of Okolona, where, he said, “We had two of everything — one for whites and one for blacks.� His parents, James and Willie Mae Raspberry, were schoolteachers. In 1962, after serving as a public information officer in the Army, Raspberry was hired by The Post as a teletypist. But when an editor spotted his writing talent, he was promoted to reporter and was soon covering civil rights issues and turmoil in black communities.
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Deaths of note from around the world: Jon Lord, 71: Keyboardist of the pioneering British hard-rock band Deep Purple, known for hits like “Smoke on the Water,� “Hush� and “Child in Time.� Died Monday in London of a pulmonary embolism. Antonin Holy, 75: Renowned Czech scientist whose research significantly contributed to the development of antiviral drugs. Died Monday of an unspecified long-term disease. — From wire reports
Fire crews in Oregon are enjoying a reprieve as they mop up the large fires that scorched hundreds of thousands of acres of rangeland and focus on three other large blazes that are not fully contained. The weather has helped, with lower temperatures and precipitation in parts of the state. Temperatures in southeast Oregon, charred by the largest fire in the state in nearly 150 years, were forecast to range in the upper 80s and lower 90s on Tuesday, compared to triple digit heat last week.
Land Continued from C1 “They haven’t paid because we’re in the middle of this negotiation,� Andrews said. In May 2006, the city purchased land on Northeast Butler Market Road from the Bend Park & Recreation District for more than $484,000. The city needed land to extend 27th Street to Empire Avenue, but it purchased more than the right-of-way required for the street, according to a November 2007 meeting document. The city sold the extra land to Cascade Community Development for more than $419,000. By the end of 2011, the land was valued at half that amount, according to a city document prepared for tonight’s meeting. Cascade Community Development planned to build an 80-unit affordable housing project on the Butler Market property, said Bend Affordable Housing Manager Jim Long. Cascade Community Development also received a $110,000 loan from the city’s affordable housing fund to help pay for the project, Andrews said. The nonprofit
Boundary Continued from C1 Companies looking to build a data center in Prineville have said the industrial plot’s narrow rectangular shape is not conducive to building there, said county assistant planning director Phil Stenbeck. Some companies have said building on such a rectangular plot would increase infrastructure and utility costs as much as $1 million, compared to building on a more square plot, said Planning Director Bill Zelenka. The City Council and County Court are scheduled to vote on the recommended boundary adjustment in a joint session Aug. 1. The state Department of Land Conservation and Development will then review the change. The two plots are just south of the Prineville Airport, between state Highway 126 and Southwest Millican Road. One is owned by Premier West Bank and the other by the state. If the city and county approve the boundary adjustment, there are plans for the bank and the state to swap land and for the city to annex part of the land. That would leave both the bank and the state with 160-acre plots: the bank’s inside the city limits and the boundary, and the state’s outside both boundaries. Charles Bauman, a project manager for Premier West CLSO Consulting, said the urban growth boundary adjustment would
Pond Continued from C1 “My instinct is always that staff will do it better than a consultant,� said Ted Schoenborn, a park and recreation director. “I think it’s a great model for a community-wide project. It’s exactly the kind of thing we’ve always thought was appropriate.�
“That’s a relief,� said Carol Connolly, spokeswoman for the Northwest Interagency Coordination Center. “I think we’ve turned the corner.� Firefighters have contained the Long Draw Fire in the southeast corner of the state at nearly 560,000 acres, as well as the Bonita Complex Fire northwest of Westfall, covering more than 18,000 acres. But the fire season is far from over. Connolly said forecasters expect the return of extreme weather in 10 days. On Monday, 24 new fires ignited in Oregon but all but one were put out by local crews, Connolly said.
Developer seeking loan extension Bend city councilors will decide tonight whether to extend a 2008 loan agreement with Cascade Community Development for another year. The city sold land on Northeast Butler Market Road to the nonprofit for more than $419,000, and loaned it more than $320,000 for the purchase. Bend Pine Nursery Yeoman Rd.
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Deschutes Mkt. Rd.
Services: Memorial July 25, 2012 at 1pm at Zion Lutheran Church, Redmond, OR
Oct. 4, 1932 - July 14, 2012 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held.
The Oregonian
27th St.
www.redmondmemorial.com
Johnny Washington Foley, of Crooked River Ranch
By Lynne Terry
Purcell Blvd.
Nov. 23, 1934 - July 13, 2012 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our guestbook
FEATURED OBITUARY
tle
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Bu
O Dale Dwayne Schult, of Redmond
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Proposed affordable housing development
Greg Cross / The Bulletin Source: City of Bend
Scott Steussy / The Bulletin
only has to pay interest on the loan until it begins construction of the project, and so far that has not happened, Long said. Andrews said, “We respect the efforts they’re making in our community, and we want to work with them to find a win-win resolution.� — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
make the bank’s land more marketable. Doug Parker, an asset planner with the Oregon Department of State Lands, said he favors the land swap, noting that it would provide highway access for both the state and the bank land. “I think it’s a win-win situation for all parties involved,� he said. But not all were satisfied with the adjustment. Jim Waetjen, a Prineville resident and recreational pilot, asked if city and county officials were concerned that the industrial site was just beyond the airport’s secondary runway. “I don’t oppose this change but I do oppose putting a big, humongous building right there in the flight path of the runway,� he said. City planning officials said any new building there would not impact flights and would have to comply with Federal Aviation Administration standards on structures near airports. While the recommended boundary adjustment will maintain the current overall size of the urban growth boundary, the long-term plan is to expand the boundary to incorporate more industrial land, Zelenka said. The state requires cities to maintain a 20-year supply of all kinds of land, but much of Prineville’s remaining industrial land has been used up in recent years as Facebook and Apple have bought hundreds of acres to build data centers, he said. — Reporter: 541-633-2184, jaschbrenner@bendbulletin.com
Community members have suggested dredging the pond immediately for aesthetic purposes, removing the dam entirely to fix the silting problem or doing nothing about the silt. The last time the pond was dredged was in 1984 at a cost of $312,000. — Reporter; 541-633-2160, hpablo@bendbulletin.com
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 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, JULY 18
THURSDAY
Today: Partly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms.
HIGH
Tonight: Partly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms.
LOW
78
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Astoria 68/55
61/56
Cannon Beach 60/53
Hillsboro Portland 78/58 76/55
Tillamook 65/54
Salem
63/52
79/58
86/65
Maupin
84/60
Corvallis Yachats
76/54
65/54
78/62
76/53
Coos Bay
78/50
Oakridge
Cottage Grove
Crescent
Gold Beach
Vale 95/64
Juntura
Burns
76/50
Riley 84/50
Jordan Valley 88/54
Rome
Klamath Falls 75/47
Ashland
63/55
• 93°
89/53
Ontario
71/48
78/61
Brookings
Yesterday’s state extremes
80/53
Chiloquin
Medford
64/54
84/53
Frenchglen
Paisley
75/56
CENTRAL Chance of thunderstorms today. Isolated thunderstorms tonight.
92/56
79/51
80/46
Grants Pass
WEST Isolated showers possible today. Mostly cloudy tonight.
EAST Ontario Chance of thun94/64 derstorms today. Isolated thunderNyssa storms tonight. 92/62
85/53
86/55
80/52
Silver Lake
77/47
Port Orford 63/53
88/51
Unity
Christmas Valley
Chemult
76/56
Hampton
Fort Rock 80/51
77/48
72/43
Roseburg
64/54
Baker City John Day
Brothers 78/49
La Pine 79/49
Crescent Lake
65/53
Bandon
Spray 88/57
78/54
89/57
78/46
Prineville 83/54 Sisters Redmond Paulina 79/50 79/52 81/53 Sunriver Bend
Eugene
Florence
85/56
Union
Granite
76/50
63/55
85/54
Joseph
Mitchell 84/55
82/58
Camp Sherman
78/55
Enterprise
Meacham 87/58
83/55
Madras
82/53
La Grande
Condon
Warm Springs
Wallowa
80/48
85/58
87/61
83/59
79/54
93/61
Ruggs
Willowdale
Albany
Newport
Pendleton
93/66
86/59
77/55
62/53
Hermiston 94/64
Arlington
Wasco
Sandy
Government Camp 67/49
77/55
94/64
The Biggs Dalles 87/62
78/57
McMinnville
Lincoln City
Umatilla
Hood River
72/54
• 34°
Fields
Lakeview
McDermitt
87/57
77/48
Lakeview
89/50
-30s
-20s
Yesterday’s extremes (in the 48 contiguous states):
• 106°
-10s
0s
Vancouver 73/59
10s Calgary 82/56
20s
Billings 97/66
Portland 78/58
Hill City, Kan.
Boise 90/59
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
Sunny.
HIGH LOW
79 52
Sunny.
HIGH LOW
83 54
86 54
BEND ALMANAC
PLANET WATCH
TEMPERATURE
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury . . . .7:10 a.m. . . . . . 8:59 p.m. Venus . . . . . .2:55 a.m. . . . . . 5:29 p.m. Mars. . . . . .11:56 a.m. . . . . 11:35 p.m. Jupiter. . . . . .2:10 a.m. . . . . . 5:09 p.m. Saturn. . . . . .1:06 p.m. . . . . 12:22 a.m. Uranus . . . .11:30 p.m. . . . . 12:00 p.m.
Yesterday’s weather through 4 p.m. in Bend 24 hours ending 4 p.m.*. . 0.00” High/Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79/54 Month to date . . . . . . . . . . 0.04” Record high . . . . . . . . 96 in 1979 Average month to date. . . 0.33” Record low. . . . . . . . . 31 in 1957 Year to date . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.53” Average high . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 Average year to date. . . . . 6.05” Average low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.29.88 Record 24 hours . . .0.83 in 1983 *Melted liquid equivalent
Sunrise today . . . . . . 5:40 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . 8:43 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . . 5:40 a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . . 8:42 p.m. Moonrise today . . . . 5:21 a.m. Moonset today . . . . 8:14 p.m.
Moon phases New
First
Full
Last
July 18
July 26
Aug. 1
Aug. 9
OREGON CITIES
FIRE INDEX
Yesterday Wednesday Thursday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Precipitation values are 24-hour totals through 4 p.m.
Bend, west of Hwy. 97...Mod. Bend, east of Hwy. 97....Mod. Redmond/Madras ......Mod.
Astoria . . . . . . . .63/55/0.00 Baker City . . . . . .89/52/0.00 Brookings . . . . . .61/54/0.03 Burns. . . . . . . . . .85/49/0.00 Eugene . . . . . . . 81/55/trace Klamath Falls . . .72/47/0.00 Lakeview. . . . . . .79/34/0.00 La Pine . . . . . . . .79/45/0.00 Medford . . . . . . 78/60/trace Newport . . . . . . .59/54/0.09 North Bend . . . . .63/55/0.00 Ontario . . . . . . . .93/59/0.00 Pendleton . . . . . .87/58/0.07 Portland . . . . . . .81/65/0.00 Prineville . . . . . . .78/54/0.00 Redmond. . . . . . 83/51/trace Roseburg. . . . . . .75/59/0.11 Salem . . . . . . . . .81/57/0.00 Sisters . . . . . . . . .82/55/0.00 The Dalles . . . . . .90/64/0.00
Mod. = Moderate; Ext. = Extreme
. . . . .68/55/c . . . . .69/54/sh . . . .88/51/pc . . . . .87/49/pc . . . .63/55/sh . . . . .64/53/pc . . . .86/50/pc . . . . .86/50/pc . . . . . 76/54/t . . . . .75/55/pc . . . .75/47/pc . . . . . .75/45/s . . . .77/48/pc . . . . . .78/48/s . . . . . 79/49/t . . . . .75/44/pc . . . . . 78/61/t . . . . .81/58/pc . . . . .62/53/c . . . . .61/54/pc . . . . .65/53/c . . . . .64/54/pc . . . .94/64/pc . . . . .94/63/pc . . . . . 93/61/t . . . . .86/58/pc . . . .78/58/pc . . . . .78/57/pc . . . . . 83/54/t . . . . .79/52/pc . . . . . 81/56/t . . . . .80/52/pc . . . .76/56/sh . . . . .77/54/pc . . . .77/55/pc . . . . .76/55/pc . . . . . 79/52/t . . . . .75/47/pc . . . .86/65/pc . . . . .80/61/pc
PRECIPITATION
WATER REPORT Sisters .............................Mod. La Pine.............................Mod. Prineville........................Mod.
The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen.
Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie . . . . . . . . . . . . 39,995 . . . . . . 55,000 Wickiup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164,050 . . . . . 200,000 Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . 78,565 . . . . . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir . . . . . . . . 33,326 . . . . . . 47,000 Prineville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124,000 . . . . . 153,777 The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Index is River flow Station Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie . . . . . . . 482 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup . . . . . . . . . . 1,490 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake . . . . . . . 145 LOW MEDIUM HIGH V.HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . 186 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls . . . . . . . . . 2,280 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . . 7 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . 220 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. . . . . . . . . . 14.4 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne . . . . . . . . . . . 114 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 LOW MEDIUM HIGH or go to www.wrd.state.or.us
To report a wildfire, call 911
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 7
POLLEN COUNT
TRAVELERS’ FORECAST NATIONAL 30s
Saskatoon 85/64
Seattle 74/57
Mostly sunny.
SUNDAY
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
NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS -40s
SATURDAY
Partly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms.
80 53
FORECAST: STATE Seaside
FRIDAY
40s Winnipeg 84/73
50s
60s
70s
80s
St. Paul 85/73
Green Bay 84/63
100s 110s
Quebec 71/52
Thunder Bay 74/52
Bismarck 89/68
90s
Halifax 82/57
To ronto 80/59
Portland 85/61 Boston 87/69
Buffalo
Detroit 81/65 New York Chicago 86/70 Rapid City 94/74 90/74 • 34° 93/72 Cheyenne Philadelphia 87/62 Columbus Lakeview, Ore. 97/77 Omaha Des Moines 94/73 San Francisco Salt Lake Washington, D. C. 98/73 98/75 • 4.10” 64/53 City 98/78 Las Denver Crystal River, Fla. Louisville 91/69 Kansas City Vegas 90/63 95/77 102/79 St. Louis 98/78 Charlotte 103/80 93/72 Albuquerque Los Angeles Oklahoma City Nashville Little Rock 93/70 70/62 100/75 96/75 97/76 Phoenix Atlanta 103/85 Honolulu 93/73 Birmingham 86/74 Dallas Tijuana 92/74 97/77 75/61 New Orleans 92/80 Orlando Houston 95/78 Chihuahua 93/77 94/68 Miami 91/80 Monterrey La Paz 99/73 98/74 Mazatlan Anchorage 88/76 69/52 Juneau 65/50
FRONTS
Yesterday WednesdayThursday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX . . . . . .95/73/0.00 . .97/75/pc . 97/75/pc Akron . . . . . . . . . .97/71/0.00 . . . 90/68/t . 85/60/pc Albany. . . . . . . . . .98/70/0.00 . . . 87/63/t . . 82/61/s Albuquerque. . . . .93/67/0.00 . . . 93/70/t . 92/69/pc Anchorage . . . . . .66/51/0.00 . .69/52/pc . 70/54/pc Atlanta . . . . . . . . .93/74/0.01 . . . 93/73/t . . .91/73/t Atlantic City . . . . .99/72/0.00 . . . 86/77/t . . .85/74/t Austin . . . . . . . . . .89/73/0.00 . .96/74/pc . 97/74/pc Baltimore . . . . . .100/74/0.00 . . . 98/78/t . . .93/71/t Billings . . . . . . . . .88/61/0.00 . . . 97/66/s . . 99/66/s Birmingham . . . . .92/74/0.00 . . . 92/74/t . . .92/74/t Bismarck. . . . . . . .78/66/0.05 . .89/68/pc . . .95/71/t Boise . . . . . . . . . . .99/64/0.00 . . . 90/59/s . . 89/57/s Boston. . . . . . . . . .97/76/0.00 . . . 87/69/t . 82/63/pc Bridgeport, CT. . . .93/75/0.00 . . . 91/73/t . 87/66/pc Buffalo . . . . . . . . .88/76/0.00 . . . 81/65/t . 77/61/pc Burlington, VT. . . .93/69/0.12 . . . 85/56/s . . 76/54/s Caribou, ME . . . . .69/61/0.35 . .72/50/pc . 70/49/pc Charleston, SC . . .92/72/0.19 . . . 92/76/t . . .93/77/t Charlotte. . . . . . . .94/68/0.00 . . . 93/72/t . . .95/74/t Chattanooga. . . . .95/72/0.00 . . . 92/73/t . . .91/72/t Cheyenne . . . . . . .84/61/0.00 . . . 87/62/s . . 93/61/s Chicago. . . . . . . . .99/79/0.00 . . . 90/74/t . 84/72/pc Cincinnati . . . . . . .97/72/0.00 . . . 94/74/t . . .92/68/t Cleveland . . . . . . .98/76/0.00 . . . 90/71/t . . .84/65/t Colorado Springs .88/61/0.00 . . . 88/62/t . 91/64/pc Columbia, MO . .100/73/0.03 103/76/pc . 100/76/t Columbia, SC . . . .94/72/0.00 . . . 94/74/t . . .95/75/t Columbus, GA. . . .95/74/0.05 . . . 92/72/t . . .91/72/t Columbus, OH. . . .98/75/0.00 . . . 94/73/t . . .90/65/t Concord, NH. . . . .95/64/0.37 . .87/58/pc . . 82/54/s Corpus Christi. . . .90/79/0.00 . . . 87/80/t . . .88/81/t Dallas Ft Worth. . .98/77/0.00 . .97/77/pc . 97/75/pc Dayton . . . . . . . . .99/76/0.00 . . . 95/73/t . . .91/66/t Denver. . . . . . . . . .91/59/0.01 . . . 90/63/t . 94/64/pc Des Moines. . . . .100/77/0.00 . . . 98/75/t . 95/72/pc Detroit. . . . . . . . .102/76/0.00 . . . 86/70/t . . .80/68/t Duluth. . . . . . . . . .74/64/0.01 . .77/59/pc . 75/62/pc El Paso. . . . . . . . . .98/76/0.00 . . . 98/79/t . 93/79/pc Fairbanks. . . . . . . .62/49/0.00 . . .73/52/c . 63/50/sh Fargo. . . . . . . . . . .80/66/0.06 . . . 85/67/t . 92/73/pc Flagstaff . . . . . . . .76/50/0.00 . .83/49/pc . 84/51/pc
Yesterday WednesdayThursday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Grand Rapids . . . .99/78/0.00 . .86/65/pc . 85/65/pc Green Bay. . . . . . .91/69/0.87 . .84/63/pc . 82/60/pc Greensboro. . . . . .95/70/0.00 . . . 94/71/t . . .93/70/t Harrisburg. . . . . . .98/69/0.00 . . . 95/73/t . 88/68/pc Hartford, CT . . . . .95/71/0.00 . . . 92/68/t . 88/63/pc Helena. . . . . . . . . .86/55/0.03 . . . 89/58/s . . 87/58/s Honolulu. . . . . . . .86/74/0.00 . . . 86/74/s . . 88/72/s Houston . . . . . . . .92/74/0.00 . .93/77/pc . 92/76/pc Huntsville . . . . . . .95/73/0.00 . . . 94/73/t . . .91/73/t Indianapolis . . . .101/77/0.00 . . . 98/76/t . . .94/70/t Jackson, MS . . . . .94/75/0.00 . . . 93/75/t . . .93/74/t Jacksonville. . . . . .90/73/0.00 . . . 94/77/t . . .94/76/t Juneau. . . . . . . . . .61/50/0.00 . . .65/50/c . 65/51/sh Kansas City. . . . .100/74/0.00 102/79/pc . 104/80/s Lansing . . . . . . . . .99/77/0.00 . . . 84/64/t . . 83/62/s Las Vegas . . . . . . .98/75/0.00 . . . 98/78/s 101/82/pc Lexington . . . . . . .94/74/0.00 . . . 93/74/t . . .88/71/t Lincoln. . . . . . . . .100/71/0.00 . .99/74/pc . 99/76/pc Little Rock. . . . . . .99/74/0.00 . .97/76/pc . 97/76/pc Los Angeles. . . . . .72/63/0.00 . . .70/62/c . 70/65/pc Louisville. . . . . . . .97/77/0.00 . . . 95/77/t . . .92/73/t Madison, WI . . . .100/80/0.00 . .88/68/pc . 86/62/pc Memphis. . . . . . . .96/78/0.00 . . . 96/76/t . . .94/77/t Miami . . . . . . . . . .92/74/0.53 . .91/80/pc . . 92/82/s Milwaukee . . . . .100/75/0.00 . .80/69/pc . 81/67/pc Minneapolis . . . . .94/79/0.00 . . . 85/73/t . 88/69/pc Nashville. . . . . . . .95/72/0.00 . . . 96/75/t . . .91/74/t New Orleans. . . . .95/76/0.00 . . . 92/80/t . . .90/78/t New York . . . . . . .96/74/0.00 . . . 94/74/t . 86/69/pc Newark, NJ . . . . .100/74/0.00 . . . 96/75/t . . .88/69/t Norfolk, VA . . . . . .94/75/0.00 . .96/78/pc . . .95/77/t Oklahoma City . . .99/71/0.00 100/75/pc . 100/74/s Omaha . . . . . . . . .99/77/0.00 . .98/73/pc . 97/75/pc Orlando. . . . . . . . .86/73/0.00 . . . 95/78/t . . .96/78/t Palm Springs. . . .101/66/0.00 102/78/pc 106/80/pc Peoria . . . . . . . . . .98/75/0.00 . . . 96/72/t . . .92/70/t Philadelphia . . . . .98/75/0.00 . . . 97/77/t . . .91/71/t Phoenix. . . . . . . .103/82/0.00 103/85/pc 105/86/pc Pittsburgh . . . . . . .97/67/0.00 . . . 90/69/t . . .86/63/t Portland, ME. . . . .85/69/0.01 . .85/61/pc . . 80/55/s Providence . . . . . .95/73/0.00 . . . 92/70/t . 86/62/pc Raleigh . . . . . . . . .98/71/0.00 . .97/73/pc . . .95/72/t
Yesterday WednesdayThursday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Rapid City . . . . . . .88/66/0.00 . . . 93/72/s 100/72/pc Reno . . . . . . . . . . .87/58/0.00 . . . 84/60/s . 86/61/pc Richmond . . . . . . .97/72/0.00 . .99/76/pc . . .96/75/t Rochester, NY . . . .97/74/0.00 . . . 83/64/t . . 77/61/s Sacramento. . . . . .73/58/0.00 . .82/56/pc . 88/60/pc St. Louis. . . . . . . .103/81/0.00 103/80/pc 101/78/pc Salt Lake City . . . .92/65/0.00 . . . 91/69/s . . 93/72/s San Antonio . . . . .90/77/0.00 . .95/75/pc . 96/75/pc San Diego . . . . . . .72/64/0.00 . . .72/65/c . 72/64/pc San Francisco . . . .70/57/0.00 . . .67/54/c . 68/54/pc San Jose . . . . . . . .76/59/0.00 . .72/55/pc . 76/57/pc Santa Fe . . . . . . . .87/54/0.00 . .85/62/pc . 82/62/pc
Yesterday WednesdayThursday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Savannah . . . . . . .89/75/0.00 . . . 93/74/t . . .93/75/t Seattle. . . . . . . . . .70/61/0.00 . .74/57/pc . 75/56/pc Sioux Falls. . . . . .101/73/0.00 . . . 93/72/t . 94/73/pc Spokane . . . . . . . .83/62/0.57 . . . 85/59/t . 81/57/sh Springfield, MO . .97/71/0.00 . .99/73/pc . 98/74/pc Tampa. . . . . . . . . .85/75/0.35 . . . 92/76/t . 92/76/pc Tucson. . . . . . . . . .96/73/0.00 . .99/75/pc 101/79/pc Tulsa . . . . . . . . . .100/79/0.00 101/77/pc . 102/78/s Washington, DC 100/77/0.00 . . . 98/78/t . . .94/73/t Wichita . . . . . . . .103/76/0.00 102/76/pc . 104/75/s Yakima . . . . . . . . .94/61/0.03 . .92/60/pc . 83/60/pc Yuma. . . . . . . . . .103/78/0.00 103/80/pc 107/81/pc
INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam. . . . . .66/59/0.00 . . .67/60/c . 64/54/sh Athens. . . . . . . . . .87/78/0.00 . . . 94/75/s . . 86/71/s Auckland. . . . . . . .59/52/0.00 . . . 59/51/s . . 59/50/s Baghdad . . . . . . .117/88/0.00 . .118/83/s . 119/84/s Bangkok . . . . . . . .95/77/0.00 . . . 96/75/t . . .90/81/t Beijing. . . . . . . . . .90/75/0.00 . .88/69/pc . 90/73/pc Beirut . . . . . . . . . .88/81/0.00 . . . 93/81/s . . 93/82/s Berlin. . . . . . . . . . .70/55/0.00 . .69/59/sh . 68/54/sh Bogota . . . . . . . . .66/48/0.00 . .64/49/sh . 64/51/sh Budapest. . . . . . . .73/52/0.00 . .76/57/pc . 85/64/pc Buenos Aires. . . . .57/25/0.00 . .61/40/pc . 62/41/pc Cabo San Lucas . .90/82/0.00 . .89/76/pc . 90/77/pc Cairo . . . . . . . . . . .99/79/0.00 . .104/80/s . 103/79/s Calgary . . . . . . . . .73/59/0.00 . .82/56/pc . 86/63/pc Cancun . . . . . . . . .86/75/0.00 . . . 88/77/t . . .88/78/t Dublin . . . . . . . . . .73/57/0.00 . . . 64/52/r . 59/53/sh Edinburgh. . . . . . .63/45/0.00 . .62/51/sh . 57/46/sh Geneva . . . . . . . . .81/50/0.00 . . . 88/64/s . . .77/61/t Harare. . . . . . . . . .66/43/0.00 . . . 60/33/s . . 63/38/s Hong Kong . . . . . .91/84/0.00 . . .89/80/c . . .89/83/t Istanbul. . . . . . . . .86/77/0.00 . . . 86/74/s . . 84/75/s Jerusalem . . . . . .101/77/0.00 . . . 99/77/s . . 96/73/s Johannesburg. . . .64/36/0.00 . . . 61/39/s . . 63/40/s Lima . . . . . . . . . . .72/66/0.00 . . . 73/66/s . . 73/65/s Lisbon . . . . . . . . .102/72/0.00 . . . 94/66/s . . 83/64/s London . . . . . . . . .73/57/0.00 . .69/54/sh . 65/52/sh Madrid . . . . . . . . .99/68/0.00 . .100/70/s . 100/63/s Manila. . . . . . . . . .88/79/0.00 . . . 89/78/t . . .87/78/t
Mecca . . . . . . . . .115/91/0.00 108/90/pc . 106/88/s Mexico City. . . . . .72/57/0.35 . . . 72/59/t . . .71/58/t Montreal. . . . . . . .84/66/0.00 . .77/55/pc . 77/53/pc Moscow . . . . . . . .70/54/0.00 . . . 69/51/t . 65/50/sh Nairobi . . . . . . . . .73/59/0.00 . .68/54/sh . 68/53/sh Nassau . . . . . . . . .90/79/0.00 . .92/78/pc . 92/79/pc New Delhi. . . . . .100/82/0.00 105/87/pc 103/86/pc Osaka . . . . . . . . . .93/79/0.00 . .88/77/pc . . .87/75/t Oslo. . . . . . . . . . . .66/46/0.00 . .66/49/pc . 65/51/sh Ottawa . . . . . . . . .91/70/0.00 . .80/53/pc . 79/52/pc Paris. . . . . . . . . . . .77/63/0.00 . .80/58/pc . 66/55/sh Rio de Janeiro. . . .77/66/0.00 . .70/60/sh . 70/57/pc Rome. . . . . . . . . . .84/68/0.00 . . . 91/68/s . . 90/69/s Santiago . . . . . . . .77/34/0.00 . .69/51/pc . 68/47/pc Sao Paulo . . . . . . .64/52/0.00 . .61/52/sh . 62/48/pc Sapporo . . . . . . not available . .81/59/pc . 75/57/pc Seoul. . . . . . . . . . .86/68/0.00 . . . 82/73/t . . .85/73/t Shanghai. . . . . . . .81/77/0.00 . . . 87/78/t . . .88/80/t Singapore . . . . . . .86/77/0.00 . . . 86/79/t . . .87/79/t Stockholm. . . . . . .64/46/0.00 . .67/52/sh . 68/54/sh Sydney. . . . . . . . . .70/46/0.00 . .64/48/pc . 61/44/pc Taipei. . . . . . . . . . .93/79/0.00 . . .93/81/c . 93/80/pc Tel Aviv . . . . . . . . .95/77/0.00 . . . 98/78/s . . 96/77/s Tokyo. . . . . . . . . . .90/79/0.00 . . . 87/75/t . . .86/73/t Toronto . . . . . . . . .97/79/0.00 . .80/59/pc . 77/55/pc Vancouver. . . . . . .77/61/0.00 . .73/59/pc . 70/57/pc Vienna. . . . . . . . . .72/50/0.00 . .77/61/sh . 81/61/pc Warsaw. . . . . . . . .63/52/0.00 . . .66/53/c . 72/57/sh
I n N o r t h w est dam project, fish are back in the water By Kim Murphy The Los Angeles Times
PORT ANGELES, Wash. — When it comes to disappearing species and humanity’s harmful imprints on nature, hardly anybody expects anything to go right. People move in, engineers build, wildlife dies: It’s an old story. Perhaps that’s why two biologists wading through a tributary of the Elwha River on Washington’s Olympic Peninsula not long ago were chortling and grabbing for their cellphones. The cause for celebration: a gray speckled trout hovering powerfully in the fast-running stream. The 35-inch fish was probably the first wild steelhead to find its way up the middle reaches of the river in 100 years. As fish stories go, the fleeting sight of a trout in a river wouldn’t usually be huge, but this one marks a crucial chapter in the efforts to reclaim the Elwha from the fatal effects of two hydropower dams. For the better part of a century, the dams cut off salmon and steelhead from 90 miles of pristine river, much of it in Olympic National Park. In September, as part of the largest river-restoration project ever undertaken, the 108foot Elwha Dam was blasted down. Engineers since then have been chipping away at the even bigger Glines Canyon dam about eight miles upstream. The hope is that the $325 million project will restore the legendary fish runs that once saw 100-pound Chinook salmon fighting their way up the majestic river. No one expected it would be easy. This spring, scientists with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the Lower Elwha Klallam tribe began transporting coho salmon and wild steelhead up past where Elwha Dam once stood, hoping to rekindle the genetic memories of the fish and inspire them to recolonize the river. But the fish were thinking faster than they were. Biologists John McMillan of NOAA’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center and Raymond Moses, a Nez Perce working for the local Lower Elwha Klallam tribe, were
checking one day in June on the steelhead they had tagged and planted in a pristine tributary above the old dam. In that tributary, known as Little River, they saw several of the fish they had transported with hopes the fish would spawn. And then they saw something else. It was a male steelhead, about 5 pounds bigger than any of the 60 fish they had tagged and planted. It bore nothing to suggest it was anything but a wild fish that had, of its own accord, discovered new territory. “Ray and I instantly realized he had no floy tag, no radio tag, and we knew from its size it was obviously something that had made its way on its own past the dam,” McMillan said last week. “We were pretty excited. I’m looking at John — it was like, ‘I don’t remember tagging or handling a fish like that,’” Moses said. “We both got on the phone — ” McMillan recounted. “ — and called everybody,” Moses finished. Two weeks later, the two scientists found a “redd,” or nest of eggs, planted by a steelhead in yet another tributary above Elwha Dam, this one known as Indian Creek. “That was another piece of evidence that a female had gotten by the dam on its own,” McMillan said. Two weeks ago, McMillan and Moses encountered a male and female on Little River, spawning at the mouth of the tributary. That male, too, was untagged. The two scientists have also transported 600 coho salmon above the Elwha Dam site. About half of them swam back to more familiar terrain downriver, but at least 100 of them laid eggs upstream. The fact that all the steelhead reintroduced to the new habitat were wild is important to conservation groups that have filed a lawsuit opposing attempts to use fish spawned in hatcheries to help recolonize the river. The practice is controversial, with many scientists believing that hatchery fish are genetically much weaker — more susceptible to disease — and likely to impart those weaknesses to wild fish.
“It basically is making them less fit. It’s turning wolves into poodles,” said Kurt Beardslee of the Wild Fish Conservancy, one of the plaintiff groups. The groups won an interim agreement under which, for this year at least, no non-native hatchery steelhead were released into the river. McMillan and Moses expressed no opinion on the hatchery debate, but said the success of the wild fish recovery so far suggests a bigger truth: Some of the heaviest blows inflicted on nature may not be permanent. From an overlook above the Elwha Dam site, the river can now be seen scouring a new channel through millions of pounds of backed-up sediment — only last year, the bottom of a lake behind the dam. “It’s amazing to think that just
a year later, you have fish going through there,” McMillan said. “If we just open up habitat and let them do what they’ve been doing for 10,000 years, that river will recover,” Beardslee said. Several carloads of tourists were recently peering at the remnants of the once-imposing edifice, and Sharon PetkoBunney, of Cincinnati, began peppering McMillan with questions. What were the dams for? (They provided electricity for several mills in nearby Port Angeles.) Why weren’t they needed anymore? (Most of the mills are closed.) How did McMillan know the fish would come back? (On the day of the dam-breaching ceremony, salmon were milling around its base, looking for a way
Kim Murphy / Los Angeles Times
This huge repository of sediment was once the bottom of Lake Aldwell, the reservoir that formed behind Elwha Dam before it was demolished last fall.
upstream.) Petko-Bunney nodded and walked back toward her car. “They say 100 species are go-
ing to benefit from bringing these fish back,” she said in parting. “I’m glad I’m one of them.”
SPORTS
Scoreboard, D2 Cycling, D2 MLB, D3
D
Olympics, D4 Tee to Green, D4-D6
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
www.bendbulletin.com/sports
WCL BASEBALL
TEE TO GREEN
GOLF: BRITISH OPEN
Grand slam leads Elks over Knights
Adapting to the new marshal law
Aging well, Lefty still learning new tricks
CYCLING
Frank Schleck of Luxembourg waits for the start of the 11th stage of the Tour de France last week.
Cyclist fails drug test at Tour RadioShack-Nissan pulls Frank Schleck, the third-place finisher at last years Tour de France, for testing positive for the diuretic Xipamide, D2
By Zack Hall The Bulletin
Bill Romaine knew that the third, fourth and fifth holes can stack up with golfers on busy days at Crooked River Ranch. With two drivable par 4s, the stretch essentially plays as three par-3 holes. So last weekend Romaine, who has been a marshal at Crooked River Ranch for 11 years, decided to play eight golfers from each of the three tees. The idea was to help speed up play. “What that does is clear the carts out, and actually for some reason or another, the play seems to spread out more,” Romaine says. “And everything opens up after (No.) 6 anyway.” It was a savvy move by a veteran golf course marshal. And he sees such things as his job. “I’m not a policeman and I don’t want to be a policeman,” says Romaine, a 72-year-old retiree. “My job is to get people to have a really good experience here and enjoy themselves, and respect the course while they are playing it.” See Marshal / D4
JIM LITKE LYTHAM ST. ANNES, England — e is one of those guys people have in mind when they say “so-and-so leads a charmed existence.” Phil Mickelson might have argued that point not too long ago, at least where the British Open was involved. But no more. As if Mickelson needed reminding, he crested a hill in the 17th fairway Tuesday at Royal Lytham to find his tee shot wasn’t nearly as disastrous as he had imagined. See Lefty / D5
H
Alex McDougall / The Bulletin
Inside
Dale Toten chats with members of Quail Run Golf Course during his rounds as a golf marshal for the public course. The La Pine resident does the job in exchange for free golf.
• A map with the complete layout of all 18 holes at Royal Lytham & St. Annes Golf Club, D5
CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC
NBA
Golden standard
Knicks pass, Lin heading to Rockets
• Olympian Kristin Armstrong in leader’s jersey at Cascade as she prepares for London By Mark Morical The Bulletin
Just two weeks from the London Olympics, Kristin Armstrong is looking like she is ready to win another gold medal. Armstrong, who races for Exergy Twenty12, won the pro women’s Tetherow Prologue of the 33rd Bend Memorial Clinic Cascade Cycling Classic Tuesday night, finishing the 2.8-mile individual time trial in 5 minutes, 24 seconds. It was Armstrong’s first race back since suffering a broken collarbone in a crash during the prologue of the Exergy Tour in her hometown of Boise, Idaho, on May 24. Armstrong, who won the gold medal in the time trial at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and is America’s best hope for a cycling gold medal in London, admitted she had some anxiety going into the Cascade Prologue, a short loop on streets through Tetherow Golf Club west of Bend. See Standard / D4
CCC at a glance A look at what’s happening in the Cascade Cycling Classic, a five-stage cycling race held in Central Oregon:
Stage 1: McKenzie Pass Road Race 22
Maxwell and Big Springs Sno-parks
Start
By Chris Duncan
Santiam Pass 20
The Associated Press
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TUESDAY The CCC kicked off with the Tetherow Prologue, a 2.8-mile loop time trial on roads through Tetherow Golf Club west of Bend.
y.
— Bulletin staff report
• Volunteers can now work at courses in exchange for free rounds of golf
McK enzi e Ri ver H w
Led by Zane Yanzick’s grand slam home run in the fifth inning, the Bend Elks pulled away for an 8-5 West Coast League victory over the Corvallis Knights at Vince Genna Stadium on Tuesday night. The Elks (18-16) held a 3-0 lead over their West Division rivals before Yanzick’s shot over the left field wall gave Bend a 7-0 lead over the Knights (21-16). Corvallis rallied in the top of the sixth inning with five runs, but Bend scored one more in the bottom of the sixth for the final margin. Will Sparks paced the Elks at the plate with a three for four performance, while Jordan Copeland went three for three with a double. Steven Halcomb was two for two with a home run. Bend had 11 hits on the night. The Knights, with seven hits as a team, were led by Caleb Whalen and Greg Mahle, each with two hits. Whalen also had a double. Starter Daniel Chavez got the win for Bend on the mound, throwing five innings and giving up just one hit. Jordan Spencer picked up the save. Bend hits the road for a five-game trip starting in Corvallis tonight, where the Elks will battle the Knights two more times before heading to Bellingham for a threegame series beginning Friday.
TODAY Stage 1 for the pro men and women is the McKenzie Pass Road Race, a 74-mile stage that finishes at Three Creek Sno-park south of Sisters. The race features two prominent climbs — one up McKenzie Pass, and the finishing climb up Three Creeks Road. (See map, right.)
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D e e Wright Observatory
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Stage 1 elevation 5,000 ft. 4,000 ft. 3,000 ft. 2,000 ft. 0
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Greg Cross / The Bulletin
Tour de France at a Glance PAU, France — A brief look at today’s 16th stage of the 99th Tour de France. Stage: Tuesday was a rest day. Yellow jersey: Briton Bradley Wiggins maintains the race lead ahead of Sky teammate Christopher Froome, who is 2 minutes, 5 seconds behind. Italian climber Vincenzo Nibali is third. Horner watch: Bend’s Chris Horner, competing for RadioShack-Nissan, is currently in 15th place, 12:41 off the lead. Today’s 16th stage: The 16th stage is the first of two days in the Pyrenees from Pau to Bagneres-de-Luchon, a 197 kilometers (122.4mile) trip through the high mountains. For a related story, see D2. — Bulletin staff report
Rob Kerr / The Bulletin
Cascade Cycling Classic pro women’s prologue winner Kristin Armstrong gets out of her saddle as she ascends Skyline Ranch Road near Tetherow Golf Club near Bend Tuesday evening.
HOUSTON — Jeremy Lin is leaving New York and taking Linsanity to Houston. The New York Knicks announced Tuesday night that they will not match the Houston Rockets’ three-year, $25 million offer for Lin, a restricted free-agent. New York Lin officially had until 8:59 PDT to decide whether to re-sign Lin, who became an international phenomenon in the media glare of the Big Apple. Rockets general manager Daryl Morey celebrated the acquisition on Twitter: “Welcome to Houston (at)JLin7. We plan to hang on this time. You will love (hash)RedNation.” Houston had Lin in training camp in December and Morey regretted waiving him. The Rockets liked what they saw in the undrafted point guard, but had to let Lin go because they had Kyle Lowry and Goran Dragic on the roster. The Rockets made it tough for the Knicks to keep Lin, though, by backloading their offer sheet with a $15 million salary in the third season. If the Knicks agreed to that deal, they would have faced a hefty luxury tax in 2014-15 because of other big contracts on their books — between $30-40 million. The New York Times initially reported the Knicks’ decision earlier in the day. One sports consultant said the adjustment to the offer sheet was a stroke of genius by Morey. “The Rockets deserve a lot of credit for the way they’ve gone about this,” said Marc Ganis, president of Chicagobased SportsCorp. “It was extremely intelligent — with an assassin’s touch.” The Knicks, though, gave Lin his first real shot, picking him up after the Rockets waived him.
D2
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
O A TELEVISION Today
Thursday
CYCLING 3:30 a.m.: Tour de France, Stage 16, NBC Sports Network. BASEBALL Noon: MLB, Philadelphia Phillies at Los Angeles Dodgers or Pittsburgh Pirates at Colorado Rockies, MLB Network. 4 p.m.: MLB, New York Mets at Washington Nationals, ESPN. 5 p.m.: MLB, Seattle Mariners at Kansas City Royals, Root Sports. SOCCER 1 p.m.: MLS, Portland Timbers at Club Deportive Chivas USA, Root Sports. 6:30 p.m.: MLS, Seattle Sounders FC at Chelsea, ESPN2. 8 p.m.: MLS, FC Dallas at San Jose Earthquakes, NBC Sports Network.
CYCLING 4:30 a.m.: Tour de France, Stage 17, NBC Sports Network. GOLF 2 a.m.: British Open, first round, ESPN. Noon: PGA Tour, True South Classic, first round, Golf Channel. 4 p.m.: British Open, first round (same-day tape), ESPN. BASKETBALL 11 a.m.: United States vs. Great Britain, ESPN2. BASEBALL 11 a.m.: MLB, Seattle Mariners at Kansas City Royals, Root Sports. 4 p.m.: MLB, Chicago White Sox at Boston Red Sox, MLB Network.
Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations.
S B Baseball • Crook County juniors eliminated: Crook County’s Little League Junior Division team finished the year 1-1 at this year’s state tournament in Salem, falling just short of the 2012 state semifinals. Crook County defeated St. Helens 12-2 on Saturday before falling to Parrish Little League of Salem 8-5 on Sunday. • Bend North 10-11 ousted at state: Medford National belted four home runs Tuesday en route to a 14-2 victory over Bend North, a decision that knocked the District 5 champions out of the double-elimination Oregon Little League 10-11 All-Stars state tournament at the Field of Dreams in Hermiston. Bend North took a 1-0 lead in the first inning on a double by Connor Duggan and a run-scoring single by Payton Davis. But it was all Medford from there as Bend North finished the nine-team tourney with a record of 1-2. • Win keeps Bend North 9-10 in the hunt: After taking a 4-0 lead in the first inning, Bend North rolled to an 8-4 victory in pool play Tuesday at the Oregon Little League 9-10 All-Stars state tournament in Lake Oswego. The win was the first in three tournament games for the District 5 champions, who take a 1-2 record into their final pool-play game today at 4:30 p.m. against Murrayhill (Beaverton). A win today at Westlake Park could put Bend North in the semifinals of the nine-team tournament. • Report: Pete Rose reality show in works: Pete Rose is on deck for his own reality television show. Entertainment Weekly reports that TLC is working on a show following Rose and his wife, model Kiana Kim. The 71-year-old Rose is banned from baseball for betting on games when he was the manager for the Cincinnati Reds. The ban has left him ineligible to be inducted into the Hall of Fame.
Softball • Bend South/South Central wins finale: District 5 champion Bend South/South Central missed the semifinals but won its last game in pool play Tuesday at the Oregon Little League 9-10 All-Stars state tournament in Enterprise, taking an 8-4 decision over South Salem/Sprague. Isabelle Spitler and Kaitlyn Lapham shared the pitching duties and joined Jessie Wiest among the leading hitters
for Bend South/South Central, which closed its run in the eightteam tournament with a record of 1-2.
Football • No decision yet on charges against Marshawn Lynch: Seattle Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch was seen weaving from lane to lane on Interstate 880 in Oakland, Calif., on Saturday morning, leading to his arrest for investigation of DUI. An incident report released by the California Highway Patrol on Tuesday described Lynch driving a Ford Econoline van and having two near collisions with two other vehicles driving in adjacent lanes. Authorities say Lynch was pulled over around 3:20 a.m. PDT Saturday and showed signs of intoxication. After multiple field sobriety tests, Lynch was arrested and booked into jail, where he was cited and later released. • NFL opposes expedited hearing for Vilma: The NFL has opposed Jonathan Vilma’s request for an expedited hearing as he attempts to delay or overturn his season-long suspension. Tuesday’s motion filed in U.S. District Court in Louisiana claims that the New Orleans Saints linebacker did not “exhaust the dispute resolution procedures” in the collective bargaining agreement. Vilma was suspended by Commissioner Roger Goodell for his role in the team’s bounty program and has since sought a restraining order. • Police: Cowboys WR Bryant’s mom reported assault: Police say Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Dez Bryant was arrested because his mother complained that he had assaulted her over the weekend. Bryant surrendered Monday afternoon to police in DeSoto, a suburb south of Dallas.
Basketball • Mayo tweets that he’s signing with Mavericks: Free agent shooting guard O.J. Mayo says he has reached a deal with the Dallas Mavericks. Mayo posted a note on his Twitter account late Monday night that he “will be signing” with Dallas. Though there were no immediate details of the deal or announcement from the team, Mavericks owner Mark Cuban sent out his own tweet that read, “Welcome to the family OJ. We are fired up!!” — From staff and wire reports
SCOREBOARD rington, a-Manuel Trappel. 6:43 a.m.-1:31 a.m. — Luke Donald, Phil Mickelson, Geoff Ogilvy. 6:54 a.m.-1:42 a.m. — Steve Stricker, Toru Taniguchi, Anders Hansen. 7:05 a.m.-1:53 a.m. — Peter Hanson, Retief Goosen, Robert Allenby. 7:16 a.m.-1:04 a.m. — Jim Furyk, Koumei Oda, Fredrik Jacobson. 7:27 a.m.-2:15 a.m. — Marc Leishman, Brandt Snedeker, Alexander Noren. 7:38 a.m.-2:26 a.m. — Andres Romero, Jbe Kruger, Richie Ramsay. 7:49 a.m.-2:37 a.m. — Ted Potter Jr., Ian Keenan, Andrew Georgiou. 8 a.m.-2:48 a.m. — Troy Kelly, Morten Orum Madsen, Anirban Lahiri. 8:11 a.m.-2:59 a.m. — Prayad Marksaeng, Justin Hicks, Ashley Hall.
IN THE BLEACHERS
CYCLING Local Cascade Cycling Classic In Bend Tuesday’s Tetherow Prologue Results (Top 25) ——— Men 1, Chad Haga, Optum, 5:02. 2, Francisco Mancebo, Competitive Cyclist Racing Team, 5:04. 3, Robert Sweeting, Kenda/5hour Energy, 5:05. 4, Ian McKissick, 5:07. 5, Luis Romero Amaran, Jamis Sutter Home, 5:07. 6, Serghei Tvetcov, Team Exergy, 5:07. 7, Andy Jacques-Maynes, Kenda/5hour Energy, 5:08. 8, Devan Dunn, CashCall Mortgage, 5:08. 9, Eric Young, BISSELL Pro Cycling, 5:09. 10, Ben Jacques-Maynes, BISSELL Pro Cycling, 5:09. 11, Tom Zirbel, Optum, 5:10. 12, Gregory Craddock, Rontrager LIVESTRONG, 5:10. 13, Roman Kilun, Kenda/5hour Energy, 5:10. 14, Carter Jones, BISSELL Pro Cycling, 5:10. 15, Tyler Wren, Jamis Sutter Home, 5:10. 16, Morgan Schmitt, Team Exergy, 5:10. 17, Jeremy Vennell, BISSELL Pro Cycling, 5:11. 18, Phil Mooney, Jamis Sutter Home, 5:11. 19, Phil Gaimon, Kenda/5hour Energy, 5:11. 20, Chris Baldwin, BISSELL Pro Cycling, 5:11. 21, Taylor Shelden, CompetitiveCyclistRacing Team, 5:12. 22, Frank Pipp, BISSELL Pro Cycling, 5:12. 23, Travis McCabe, Landis/Trek, 5:12. 24, Nate English, Kenda/5hour Energy, 5:13. 25, Shawn Milne, Kenda/5hour Energy, 5:13. Women 1, Kristin Armstrong, Exergy Twenty12, 5:24. 2, Alison Powers, NOW and Novartis for MS, 5:31. 3, Jacquelyn Crowell, Exergy Twenty12, 5:36. 4, Anne Samplonius, NOW and Novartis for MS, 5:38. 5, Jade Wilcoxson, Optum, 5:38. 6, Carmen Small, Optum, 5:39. 7, Megan Guarnier, Team TIBCO, 5:42. 8, Anna Barensfeld, Optum, 5:43. 9, Janel Holcomb, Optum, 5:44. 10, Kristin McGrath, Exergy Twenty12, 5:44. 11, Lex Albrecht, Optum, 5:46. 12, Robin Farina, NOW and Novartis for MS, 5:48. 13, Amanda Miller, Team TIBCO, 5:49. 14, Heather Logan-Sprenger, Exergy Twenty12, 5:53. 15, Meredith Miller, Team TIBCO, 5:54. 16, Andrea Dvorak, Exergy Twenty12, 5:54. 17, Olivia Dillon, NOW and Novartis for MS, 5:56. 18, Devon Gorry, NOW and Novartis for MS, 5:57. 19, Kathryn Donovan, FCS, 5:57. 20, Tayler Wiles, Exergy Twenty12, 5:57. 21, Lauren Hall, Team TIBCO, 5:58. 22, Emma Grant, Optum, 5:59. 23, Lindsay Myers, Team TIBCO, 5:59. 24, Jessica Cutler, Primal, 5:59. 25, Anna Sanders, FCS, 6:00.
BASEBALL WCL WEST COAST LEAGUE ——— League standings East Division W Wenatchee AppleSox 25 Bellingham Bells 22 Kelowna Falcons 20 Walla Walla Sweets 14 West Division W Corvallis Knights 21 Bend Elks 18 Cowlitz Black Bears 16 Klamath Falls Gems 16 Kitsap BlueJackets 10 Tuesday’s Games Bend 8, Corvallis 5 Bellingham 9, Kelowna 0 Klamath Falls 4, Kitsap 3 Cowlitz 2, Walla Walla 1 Today’s Games Bellingham at Kelowna, 6:35 p.m. Bend at Corvallis, 6:40 p.m. Kitsap at Klamath Falls, 7:05 p.m. Cowlitz at Walla Walla, 7:05 p.m.
L 11 13 16 21 L 16 16 19 19 31
Tuesday’s summary
Elks 8, Knights 5 Corvallis 000 005 000 — 5 7 3 Bend 120 041 00X — 8 11 6 Rodriguez, Dittrick (2), Jackson (5), Starr (5) and Lund. Chavez, Keene (6), McAlister (6), Snyder (6), Peterson (8), Spencer (9) and Guinn. 2B — Corvallis: Whalen; Bend: Copeland. HR — Bend: Yanzick, Halcomb.
TENNIS Professional Mercury Insurance Open Tuesday At La Costa Resort and Spa Carlsbad, Calif. Purse: $740,000 (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round Marina Erakovic, New Zealand, def. Anne Keothavong, Britain, 6-4, 6-0. Melinda Czink, Hungary, def. Sesil Karatantcheva, Kazakhstan, 6-2, 4-6, 7-5. Vania King, United States, def. Chang Kai-Chen, Taiwan, 6-1, 6-4. Heather Watson, Britain, def. Eleni Daniilidou, Greece, 6-3, 6-3. Christina McHale (5), United States, def. Jarmila Gajdosova, Australia, 7-6 (5), 7-5. Chan Yung-Jan, Taiwan, def. Yanina Wickmayer (7), Belgium, 7-6 (6) retired. Atlanta Championships Tuesday At The Atlanta Athletic Club Norcross, Ga. Purse: $546,900 (WT250) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round Go Soeda (8), Japan, def. Xavier Malisse, Belgium, 4-6, 7-5, 6-4. Michael Russell, United States, def. Alex Kuznetsov, United States, 2-6, 6-4, 7-6 (4). Matthew Ebden, Australia, def. Sergei Bubka, Ukraine, 5-7, 6-1, 6-1. bet-at-home Open Tuesday At Rothenbaum Sport GmbH Hamburg, Germany Purse: $1.24 million (WT500) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Florian Mayer (7), Germany, def. Horacio Zeballos, Argentina, 7-6 (7), 7-5. Jeremy Chardy, France, def. Albert Montanes, Spain, 6-4, 6-2. Juan Monaco (3), Argentina, def. Cedrik-Marcel
DEALS Transactions
Stebe, Germany, 6-4, 3-6, 7-5. Lukas Rosol, Czech Republic, def. Viktor Troicki (8), Serbia, 5-7, 6-3, 6-4. Albert Ramos, Spain, def. Pablo Andujar, Spain, 6-1, 6-4. Tommy Haas, Germany, def. Martin Klizan, Slovakia, 6-2, 6-1. Julian Reister, Germany, def. Fernando Verdasco (5), Spain, 6-2, 6-3. Marin Cilic (4), Croatia, def. Flavio Cipolla, Italy, 6-3, 6-4. Philipp Kohlschreiber (6), Germany, def. Bjorn Phau, Germany, 4-6, 6-2, 6-3. Fabio Fognini, Italy, def. Marsel Ilhan, Turkey, 75, 6-2. Nicolas Almagro (1), Spain, def. Tobias Kamke, Germany, 6-4, 6-1. Swedish Open Tuesday At Bastad Tennis Stadiun Bastad, Sweden Purse: $220,000 (Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Anabel Medina Garrigues (3), Spain, def. Laura Robson, Britain, 6-4, 7-6 (4). Mariana Duque-Marino, Colombia, def. Sandra Roma, Sweden, 7-5, 6-1. Silvia Soler-Espinosa, Spain, def. Anna Tatishvili, Georgia, 4-6, 6-3, 6-0. Arantxa Rus, Netherlands, def. Rebecca Petersson, Sweden, 6-1, 6-2. Klara Zakopalova (6), Czech Republic, def. Annika Beck, Germany, 2-6, 6-3, 6-4. Kateryna Bondarenko, Ukraine, def. Carina Witthoeft, Germany, 6-2, 7-6 (5). Julia Goerges (2), Germany, def. Barbora Zahlavova Strycova, Czech Republic, 6-2, 6-2. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (5), Russia, def. Patricia Mayr-Achleitner, Austria, 6-2, 6-2. Tsvetana Pironkova, Bulgaria, def. Lucie Hradecka, Czech Republic, 6-2, 7-5. Shahar Peer, Israel, def. Lourdes Dominguez Lino, Spain, 6-4, 2-0 retired Polona Hercog, Slovenia, def. Alexandra Panova, Russia, 7-5, 7-5. Sofia Arvidsson, Sweden, def. Roberta Vinci (4), Italy, 6-4, 7-5. Suisse Open Gstaad Tuesday At Roy Emerson Arena Gstaad, Switzerland Purse: $502,300 (WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Jan Hajek, Czech Republic, def. Edouard RogerVasselin, France, 4-1 retired. Lukasz Kubot, Poland, def. Ivan Dodig, Croatia, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4. Feliciano Lopez (5), Spain, def. Adrian Ungur, Romania, 2-6, 6-4, 7-6 (7). Dustin Brown, Germany, def. Sergiy Stakhovsky, Ukraine, 3-6, 6-4, 7-6 (8). Thomaz Bellucci, Brazil, def. Blaz Kavcic, Slovenia, 6-1, 6-1. Ernests Gulbis, Latvia, def. Filippo Volandri, Italy, 7-6 (2), 4-6, 6-3. Grigor Dimitrov, Bulgaria, def. Julien Benneteau (6), France, 3-6, 6-4, 6-1.
BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN’S NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT ——— Olympic break, play continues Aug. 16
SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT ——— Today’s Games Chicago at New York, 10 a.m. Portland at Chivas USA, 1 p.m. Colorado at Toronto FC, 4 p.m. New England at Montreal, 5 p.m. Sporting Kansas City at Houston, 5:30 p.m. Los Angeles at Vancouver, 7 p.m. FC Dallas at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games Philadelphia at New York, 11:30 a.m. D.C. United at Columbus, 4:30 p.m. New England at Sporting Kansas City, 5:30 p.m. Montreal at Houston, 5:30 p.m.
Portland at FC Dallas, 6 p.m. Chivas USA at Los Angeles, 7 p.m. Colorado at Real Salt Lake, 7 p.m. Sunday’s Game San Jose at Vancouver, 4 p.m.
GOLF PGA Tour British Open Tee Times At Royal Lytham & St. Annes Lytham St. Annes, England Purse: 5 million pounds ($7.75 million) Yardage: 7,060 yards; Par: 70 All times PDT (a-amateur) Wednesday night, Thursday-Friday 10:19 p.m.-3:20 a.m. — Barry Lane, James Driscoll. 10:30 p.m.-3:31 a.m. — Richard Finch, Garth Mulroy. 10:41 p.m.-3:42 a.m. — Matthew Baldwin, Adilson Da Silva, Tadahiro Takayama. 10:52 p.m.-3:53 a.m. — Rafael Echenique, Kodai Ichihara, John Huh. 11:03 p.m.-4:04 a.m. — Sandy Lyle, Todd Hamilton, Mark Calcavecchia. 11:14 p.m.-4:15 a.m. — Alejandro Canizares, Jeev Milkha Singh, Greg Chalmers. 11:25 p.m.-4:26 a.m. — John Daly, Chad Campbell, Michael Hoey. 11:36 p.m.-4:37 a.m. — Thongchai Jaidee, Justin Leonard, Simon Khan. 11:47 p.m.-4:48 a.m. — David Duval, Raphael Jacquelin, Miguel Angel Jimenez. 11:58 p.m.-4:59 a.m. — Stephen Ames, Robert Rock, Kyle Stanley. 12:09 a.m.-5:10 a.m. — Stewart Cink, Rafael CabreraBello, Johnson Wagner. 12:20 a.m.-5:21 a.m. — Jamie Donaldson, Bill Haas, Y.E. Yang. 12:31 a.m.-5:32 a.m. — Davis Love III, Tim Clark, Paul Lawrie. 12:42 a.m.-5:43 a.m. — Adam Scott, a-Alan Dunbar, Matt Kuchar. 12:58 a.m.-5:59 a.m. — Vijay Singh, Nick Watney, Ian Poulter. 1:09 a.m.-6:10 a.m. — Darren Clarke, Ernie Els, Zach Johnson. 1:20 a.m.-6:21 a.m. — Lee Westwood, Yoshinori Fujimoto, Bubba Watson. 1:31 a.m.-6:32 a.m. — Dustin Johnson, Graeme McDowell, Hiroyuki Fujita. 1:42 a.m.-6:43 a.m. — Tiger Woods, Justin Rose, Sergio Garcia. 1:53 a.m.-6:54 a.m. — Ryo Ishikawa, Martin Kaymer, Tom Watson. 2:04 a.m.-7:05 a.m. — Thomas Bjorn, Aaron Baddeley, Charl Schwartzel. 2:15 a.m.-7:16 a.m. — Jason Dufner, Martin Laird, Kevin Na. 2:26 a.m.-7:27 a.m. — James Morrison, Daniel Chopra, Joost Luiten. 2:37 a.m.-7:38 a.m. — Thorbjorn Olesen, Troy Matteson, Thomas Aiken. 2:48 a.m.-7:49 a.m. — Brad Kennedy, Mardan Mamat, Steven Tiley. 2:59 a.m.-8 a.m. — Warren Bennett, Aaron Townsend, Grant Veenstra. 3:10 a.m.-8:11 a.m. — Dale Whitnell, Sam Walker, Elliot Saltman. 3:31 a.m.-10:19 a.m. — Bob Estes, Steven O’Hara, Brendan Jones. 3:42 a.m.-10:30 a.m. — Juvic Pagunsan, Scott Pinckney, Nicholas Cullen. 3:53 a.m.-10:41 a.m. — Steven Alker, Lee Slattery, Russ Cochran. 4:04 a.m.-10:52 a.m. — Tom Lehman, Pablo Larrazabal, Greg Owen. 4:15 a.m.-11:03 a.m. — Marcel Siem, George Coetzee, Chez Reavie. 4:26 a.m.-11:14 a.m. — Marcus Fraser, Lucas Glover, Gregory Havret. 4:37 a.m.-11:25 a.m. — Charles Howell III, Paul Broadhurst, Richard Sterne. 4:48 a.m.-11:36 p.m. — Carl Pettersson, K.T. Kim, Gary Woodland. 4:59 a.m.-11:47 p.m. — Ben Curtis, Paul Casey, Trevor Immelman. 5:10 a.m.-11:58 p.m. — Robert Karlsson, Mark Wilson, Branden Grace. 5:21 a.m.-12:09 a.m. — Harris English, Simon Dyson, Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano 5:32 a.m.-12:20 a.m. — Angel Cabrera, K.J. Choi, Ross Fisher. 5:43 a.m.-12:31 a.m. — Jonathan Byrd, Sang-moon Bae, Alvaro Quiros. 5:59 a.m.-12:42 a.m. — Nicolas Colsaerts, Hunter Mahan, John Senden. 6:10 a.m.-12:58 a.m. — Bo Van Pelt, Francesco Molinari, Toshinori Muto. 6:21 a.m.-1:09 a.m. — Rory McIlroy, Louis Oosthuizen, Keegan Bradley. 6:32 a.m.-1:20 a.m. — Rickie Fowler, Padraig Har-
BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Placed 2B Robert Andino on the 15-day DL, retroactive to July 16. Recalled LHP Zach Britton from Norfolk (IL). Selected the contract of RHP Brad Bergesen from Norfolk. Optioned RHP Miguel Socolovich to Norfolk. Transferred INF Nick Johnson to the 60-day DL. CHICAGO WHITE SOX—Placed RHP Gavin Floyd on the 15-day DL, retroactive to July 8. reinstated RHP Philip Humber from the 15-day DL. KANSAS CITY ROYALS—Designated LHP Jonathan Sanchez for assignment. Recalled LHP Ryan Verdugo and RHP Vin Mazzaro from Omaha (PCL). Optioned OF Jason Bourgeois to Omaha. LOS ANGELES ANGELS—Recalled RHP Garrett Richards from Salt Lake (PCL). Optioned 3B Andrew Romine to Salt Lake. MINNESOTA TWINS—Placed RHP Matt Capps on the 15-day DL. NEW YORK YANKEES—Designated OF Darnell McDonald for assignment. Activated LHP CC Sabathia from the 15-day DL. OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Reinstated OF Collin Cowgill from the 15-day DL, and optioned him to Sacramento (PCL). SEATTLE MARINERS—Recalled RHP Blake Beaven from Tacoma (PCL). Optioned RHP Steve Delabar to Tacoma. TAMPA BAY RAYS—Reinstated OF Matt Joyce from the 15-day DL. Optioned INF Will Rhymes to Durham (IL). TEXAS RANGERS—Activated RHP Alexi Ogando from the 15-day DL. Placed C Yorvit Torrealba on the paternity leave list. TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Placed OF Jose Bautista on the 15-day DL. Selected the contract of OF Anthony Gose from Las Vegas (PCL). National League CINCINNATI REDS—Placed 1B Joey Votto on the 15-day DL, retroactive to July 16. Recalled RHP Todd Redmond from Louisville (IL). COLORADO ROCKIES—Selected the contract of OF Andrew Brown from Colorado Springs (PCL). Recalled INF DJ LeMahieu from Colorado Springs. Placed INF Jonathan Herrera and INF Chris Nelson on the 15-day DL, retroactive to July 16. Transferred RHP Juan Nicasio from the 15-day to the 60-day DL. LOS ANGELES DODGERS—Placed RHP Chad Billingsley on the 15-day DL, retroactive to July 8. Recalled RHP Stephen Fife from Albuquerque (PCL). NEW YORK METS—Reinstated OF Jason Bay from the 15-day DL. Designated INF Omar Quintanilla for assignment. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association BROOKLYN NETS—Agreed to terms with F Kris Humphries on a two-year contract. WASHINGTON WIZARDS—Waived F Andray Blatche. FOOTBALL National Football League CHICAGO BEARS—Released RB Alvester Alexander. Agreed to terms with RB Lorenzo Booker on a one-year contract. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS—Waived PK Brandon Coutu. PITTSBURGH STEELERS—Re-signed OT Max Starks to a one-year contract. HOCKEY National Hockey League ANAHEIM DUCKS—Signed G Marco Cousineau to a one-year contract. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Named Jamie Kompon assistant coach. FLORIDA PANTHERS—Agreed to terms with C James Wright on a two-year contract and with D Mike Caruso and G Brian Foster on one-year contracts. LOS ANGELES KINGS—Signed D Thomas Hickey, F Stefan Legein, F David Meckler and D Jake Muzzin to one-year contracts. NASHVILLE PREDATORS—Signed G Jeremy Smith to a one-year, two-way contract. NEW JERSEY DEVILS—Named Scott Stevens and Matt Shaw assistant coaches. NEW YORK ISLANDERS—Agreed to terms with F Jason Clark on a three-year, entry-level contract. COLLEGE EMORY & HENRY—Named Andrea Kendall women’s assistant basketball coach. FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON—Announced the retirement of women’s fencing coach Roger Cummings. LAMAR—Named Sherron Wilkerson men’s assistant basketball coach. MOUNT SAINT VINCENT—Named Kevin Clifford assistant director of athletics, women’s basketball coach and men’s and women’s cross country coach. NEW JERSEY CITY—Named Ray Vance men’s and women’s volleyball coach. PENN STATE—Named Brian Hoerst and Ann Plunkett athletic communications assistants. ST. ANDREWS—Announced the resignation of cross country coach Mike Coggins. SANTA CLARA—Named Aaron Mansfield assistant volleyball coach. TEXAS TECH—Named Joe Hughes director of baseball operations. WRIGHT STATE—Named Keith Freeman women’s assistant basketball coach. YALE—Named Danielle Korman women’s assistant swimming and diving 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 689 189 2,697 1,303 The Dalles 895 164 1,756 920 John Day 874 161 854 434 McNary 1,017 110 370 160 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 231,814 17,814 36,405 15,306 The Dalles 176,567 15,008 16,360 7,521 John Day 158,340 14,806 10,568 5,244 McNary 153,424 8,357 10,448 4,143
Schleck positive doping test jolts Tour de France By Jamey Keaten The Associated Press
PAU, France — The RadioShack Nissan Trek team pulled Frank Schleck, one of the biggest names in pro cycling, out the Tour de France on Tuesday after he failed a doping test, threatening to overshadow Bradley Wiggins’ bid to win the three-week race in Paris this weekend. The 32-year-old rider from Luxembourg, who was third in last year’s Tour, left a police station in Pau where he had discussed the case with authorities after cycling’s governing body announced the positive test. The International Cycling Union,
or UCI, said Schleck had tested positive for banned diuretic Xipamide in an anti-doping test conducted by a French anti-doping lab on a sample taken from him on July 14. It marked the second doping scandal to hit this Tour, and was another reminder of the doping cloud that has damaged the image of cycling and its biggest event for years. Schleck, the RadioShack leader, had been in 12th place overall — 9 minutes, 45 seconds behind leader Wiggins — going into the second and latter rest day on Tuesday. The revelation was likely to add stress on the crash-and sickness-depleted pack, just as they were gearing up for two grueling days in the
CYCLING: TOUR DE FRANCE Pyrenees starting today. Wiggins, who is aiming to become Britain’s first Tour champion, leads fellow Briton and Sky teammate Christopher Froome by 2:05 and Vincenzo Nibali of Italy by 2:23. Defending champion Cadel Evans of Australia is fourth, 3:19 behind. Competitors in the 99th Tour had plenty of time to ponder the tricky 16th and 17th stages on the rest day, with the Pyrenees visible on the horizon from the medieval, palm treelined city of Pau. Today’s stage runs through the socalled “Circle of Death” along four
brutal climbs — none more daunting than the 7,000-foot Tourmalet. On Thursday, the last summit finishes atop the 5,300-foot Peyragudes. Wiggins is talking a big game in his bid to become Britain’s first Tour de France champion. He says Wednesday’s stage “isn’t any more difficult than any other stage we’ve done up to this stage, really.” Wiggins said the Tourmalet was nothing special. “It goes uphill like all the others, doesn’t it?” he said. The four renowned passes the riders will climb Wednesday are the Peyresourde, Aubisque, Aspin and Tourmalet, the highest point on this year’s Tour. The pack on Thurs-
day must ascend the Col de Mente and Port de Bales before scaling Peyragudes. “Generally, the Pyrenees are a bit harder than the Alps,” said U.S. cyclist Tejay van Garderen. “The roads are a bit rougher. They’re just a bit more taxing.” But the more immediate question for the whole pack was how it would surmount cycling’s latest positive test for doping — this time at the heart of a well-known cycling family and one of its big-name teams. The RadioShack team said in a statement that it had decided to withdraw Schleck from the race, and said that the diuretic is not present in any medicine used by the team.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
D3
MA JOR L E AGUE BASEBA LL STANDINGS, SCORES AND SCHEDULES
AL Boxscores Mariners 9, Royals 6 Seattle Ackley 2b I.Suzuki rf C.Wells lf J.Montero dh Smoak 1b Seager 3b Olivo c M.Saunders cf Ryan ss Totals
AB 5 5 5 4 3 4 5 5 4 40
R 1 1 1 2 1 0 1 1 1 9
H 2 1 1 3 1 1 2 2 1 14
BI 1 0 0 2 2 2 0 2 0 9
BB 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 4
American League SO 0 1 3 0 1 0 2 2 2 11
Avg. .236 .259 .267 .253 .201 .241 .200 .257 .188
Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Gordon lf 4 1 2 1 0 1 .287 A.Escobar ss 4 1 1 1 0 1 .311 Hosmer 1b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .225 Butler dh 4 0 1 1 0 1 .294 Moustakas 3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .268 Francoeur rf 3 1 1 0 0 0 .253 S.Perez c 4 1 1 0 0 1 .364 Getz 2b 4 0 0 1 0 0 .288 J.Dyson cf 2 1 1 0 0 0 .249 a-L.Cain ph-cf 1 1 1 2 0 0 .300 Totals 34 6 9 6 0 6 Seattle 330 030 000 — 9 14 0 Kansas City 003 000 300 — 6 9 0 a-homered for J.Dyson in the 7th. LOB—Seattle 9, Kansas City 2. 2B—J.Montero (14), Seager (22), M.Saunders (22), Ryan (12), Hosmer (15), S.Perez (5). 3B—Ackley (2), A.Gordon (3), J.Dyson (4). HR—Smoak (13), off Verdugo; M.Saunders (9), off Mazzaro; L.Cain (1), off Kelley. SB—A.Escobar (14). DP—Seattle 2. Seattle IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Beavan W, 4-6 6 7 5 5 0 3 94 6.06 Furbush 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 2.17 Kelley 0 1 1 1 0 0 6 3.62 Luetge H, 5 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 24 1.46 Wilhelmsen S, 8-10 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 2.33 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Verdugo L, 0-1 1 2-3 8 6 6 2 2 55 32.40 Mazzaro 2 1-3 4 3 3 1 2 49 6.12 Collins 2 2 0 0 1 2 34 3.35 K.Herrera 1 0 0 0 0 2 16 2.91 Crow 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 3.69 G.Holland 1 0 0 0 0 2 11 3.55 T—3:09. A—15,769 (37,903).
Twins 6, Orioles 4 Baltimore AB Markakis rf 4 Hardy ss 4 Thome dh 2 Ad.Jones cf 5 Wieters c 3 Mar.Reynolds 1b 4 C.Davis lf 3 Betemit 3b 4 Flaherty 2b 3 a-St.Tolleson ph-2b 1 Totals 33
R 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4
H 3 1 0 1 2 0 0 2 0 0 9
BI 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
BB 1 1 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 7
SO 0 0 2 1 0 1 3 1 2 1 11
Avg. .275 .217 .243 .292 .258 .209 .260 .259 .202 .203
Minnesota AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Span cf 3 1 2 0 2 1 .286 Revere rf 5 0 1 1 0 0 .316 Mauer c 4 0 3 1 1 0 .333 Willingham lf 3 1 1 0 2 1 .272 Morneau 1b 3 1 0 0 2 0 .254 Plouffe 3b 4 1 1 0 1 0 .257 Doumit dh 5 1 2 2 0 0 .290 Dozier ss 5 0 1 1 0 0 .245 J.Carroll 2b 4 1 2 1 0 1 .240 Totals 36 6 13 6 8 3 Baltimore 100 030 000 — 4 9 1 Minnesota 000 130 20x — 6 13 1 a-struck out for Flaherty in the 8th. E—Hardy (5), Deduno (1). LOB—Baltimore 9, Minnesota 14. 2B—Mauer (19), Willingham (22), J.Carroll (11). HR—Ad.Jones (21), off Deduno. DP—Baltimore 1; Minnesota 3. Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Britton 4 6 4 4 6 1 100 9.00 Ayala L, 2-3 2 2-3 5 2 2 1 2 46 2.98 Strop 1 1-3 2 0 0 1 0 29 1.54 Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Deduno 4 1-3 6 4 3 5 5 99 5.59 Gray 1 1 0 0 0 1 11 4.58 T.Robertson 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 15 4.70 Al.Burnett W, 3-2 1 1 0 0 0 0 7 2.78 Perkins H, 11 1 1 0 0 0 3 14 2.95 Burton S, 3-4 1 0 0 0 1 1 13 2.41 T—3:43. A—32,202 (39,500).
New York Tampa Bay Baltimore Boston Toronto
W 56 47 46 46 45
L 34 44 44 45 46
Chicago Detroit Cleveland Kansas City Minnesota
W 50 47 46 38 38
L 40 44 44 51 52
Texas Los Angeles Oakland Seattle
W 55 50 46 39
L 35 41 44 53
East Division Pct GB WCGB .622 — — .516 9½ — .511 10 ½ .505 10½ 1 .495 11½ 2 Central Division Pct GB WCGB .556 — — .516 3½ — .511 4 ½ .427 11½ 8 .422 12 8½ West Division Pct GB WCGB .611 — — .549 5½ — .511 9 ½ .424 17 8½
Tuesday’s Games L.A. Angels 13, Detroit 0 N.Y. Yankees 6, Toronto 1 Chicago White Sox 7, Boston 5 Tampa Bay 4, Cleveland 2 Minnesota 6, Baltimore 4 Seattle 9, Kansas City 6 Texas 6, Oakland 1
National League
L10 8-2 4-6 3-7 4-6 4-6
Str Home Away W-2 29-17 27-17 W-1 26-22 21-22 L-3 23-22 23-22 L-1 23-25 23-20 L-2 25-20 20-26
L10 7-3 8-2 5-5 2-8 3-7
Str Home Away W-1 24-22 26-18 L-1 23-21 24-23 L-1 24-21 22-23 L-3 15-27 23-24 W-2 19-28 19-24
L10 5-5 5-5 8-2 4-6
Str Home Away W-2 29-16 26-19 W-1 25-18 25-23 L-1 24-21 22-23 W-2 17-27 22-26
Today’s Games Toronto (R.Romero 8-5) at N.Y. Yankees (Kuroda 8-7), 10:05 a.m. Texas (Lewis 6-6) at Oakland (Blackley 2-2), 12:35 p.m. L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 9-5) at Detroit (Fister 3-6), 4:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (P.Hernandez 0-0) at Boston (Doubront 9-4), 4:10 p.m. Cleveland (Masterson 6-8) at Tampa Bay (Hellickson 4-6), 4:10 p.m. Baltimore (Tom.Hunter 3-4) at Minnesota (Liriano 3-8), 5:10 p.m. Seattle (Millwood 3-7) at Kansas City (B.Chen 7-8), 5:10 p.m.
AB 3 5 4 5 4 3 4 3 3 34
R 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 6
H 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 9
BI 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 1 1 6
BB 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 4
SO 0 1 3 0 0 1 0 1 0 6
Avg. .276 .291 .300 .325 .273 .263 .279 .227 .338
Oakland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. J.Weeks 2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .223 S.Smith lf 4 0 1 0 0 2 .251 Reddick cf 3 1 1 1 1 1 .269 Cespedes dh 4 0 2 0 0 2 .287 Moss rf 3 0 1 0 0 1 .258 Carter 1b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .310 K.Suzuki c 4 0 0 0 0 1 .213 Inge 3b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .195 Pennington ss 3 0 0 0 0 1 .201 Totals 31 1 5 1 2 9 Texas 001 300 011 — 6 9 0 Oakland 000 000 100 — 1 5 1 E—B.Colon (3). LOB—Texas 7, Oakland 7. 2B—N.Cruz (24), Cespedes (13). HR—Beltre (17), off B.Colon; Hamilton (28), off Norberto; Reddick (21), off Oswalt. DP—Texas 1; Oakland 1. Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Oswalt W, 3-1 6 1-3 3 1 1 0 6 103 5.22 R.Ross 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 0.95 Ogando H, 9 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 12 2.04 Mi.Adams 1 1 0 0 1 2 18 2.93 Scheppers 1 0 0 0 0 1 17 7.43 Oakland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA B.Colon L, 6-8 7 8 4 4 1 5 97 3.88 Norberto 1 1 1 1 1 0 16 3.34 J.Miller 1 0 1 1 2 1 19 2.05 T—2:41. A—15,115 (35,067).
White Sox 7, Red Sox 5 Chicago De Aza cf Youkilis 3b A.Dunn dh Konerko 1b Rios rf Pierzynski c Viciedo lf Al.Ramirez ss Beckham 2b Totals
AB 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 36
R 0 2 1 0 0 0 1 2 1 7
H 2 1 1 2 2 0 1 2 0 11
BI 2 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 7
BB 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 3
SO 2 1 2 0 0 2 1 0 1 9
Avg. .278 .260 .212 .320 .319 .291 .258 .266 .237
Boston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Ellsbury cf 5 1 2 0 0 0 .265 C.Crawford lf 4 2 3 1 0 0 .571 Nava dh 3 0 0 0 0 1 .261 Ad.Gonzalez 1b 4 0 2 1 0 0 .291 Middlebrooks 3b 4 1 1 1 0 1 .293 Saltalamacchia c 3 0 0 0 0 1 .229 a-Shoppach ph-c 1 1 1 2 0 0 .271 Sweeney rf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .274 b-C.Ross ph-rf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .262 Aviles ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .263 Ciriaco 2b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .419 c-Punto ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .210 Totals 36 5 9 5 0 6 Chicago 210 301 000 — 7 11 1 Boston 200 000 030 — 5 9 0 a-homered for Saltalamacchia in the 8th. b-popped out for Sweeney in the 8th. c-grounded out for Ciriaco in the 9th. E—Rios (4). LOB—Chicago 5, Boston 5. 2B—De Aza (18), Konerko (16), Viciedo (9), Al.Ramirez (14). HR—Youkilis (8), off Lester; Shoppach (5), off Thornton. SB—A.Dunn (1), Rios (14), Al.Ramirez (12), Ellsbury (1), C.Crawford 3 (3). DP—Boston 1. Chicago Humber W, 4-4 Omogrosso Thornton Reed S, 15-17 Boston
IP 6 1 1 1 IP
H 6 0 3 0 H
R 2 0 3 0 R
ER BB SO NP ERA 2 0 3 104 5.77 0 0 1 13 4.50 3 0 1 22 3.43 0 0 1 15 3.97 ER BB SO NP ERA
W 52 49 46 44 41
L 36 40 44 46 51
Cincinnati Pittsburgh St. Louis Milwaukee Chicago Houston
W 51 50 47 43 36 34
L 39 40 44 47 53 57
San Francisco Los Angeles Arizona San Diego Colorado
W 50 48 43 37 35
L 40 44 47 55 55
East Division Pct GB WCGB .591 — — .551 3½ — .511 7 3½ .489 9 5½ .446 13 9½ Central Division Pct GB WCGB .567 — — .556 1 — .516 4½ 3 .478 8 6½ .404 14½ 13 .374 17½ 16 West Division Pct GB WCGB .556 — — .522 3 2½ .478 7 6½ .402 14 13½ .389 15 14½
Tuesday’s Games Washington 5, N.Y. Mets 4, 10 innings Cincinnati 4, Arizona 0 San Francisco 9, Atlanta 0 Miami 9, Chicago Cubs 5 Milwaukee 3, St. Louis 2 Pittsburgh 6, Colorado 2 San Diego 8, Houston 2 Philadelphia 3, L.A. Dodgers 2
L10 6-4 8-2 3-7 6-4 5-5
Str Home Away W-1 25-16 27-20 L-1 23-23 26-17 L-5 26-20 20-24 W-2 24-24 20-22 W-4 17-27 24-24
L10 7-3 6-4 5-5 5-5 6-4 2-8
Str Home Away W-1 27-17 24-22 W-1 29-14 21-26 L-1 23-20 24-24 W-1 25-23 18-24 L-1 22-21 14-32 L-1 24-21 10-36
L10 5-5 3-7 4-6 5-5 4-6
Str Home Away W-4 29-16 21-24 L-4 28-20 20-24 L-1 23-21 20-26 W-1 18-28 19-27 L-1 20-28 15-27
Today’s Games St. Louis (Wainwright 7-9) at Milwaukee (Thornburg 0-0), 11:10 a.m. Philadelphia (Cl.Lee 1-6) at L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 7-5), 12:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Ja.McDonald 9-3) at Colorado (Guthrie 3-9), 12:10 p.m. Houston (W.Rodriguez 7-7) at San Diego (Richard 6-10), 12:35 p.m. N.Y. Mets (C.Young 2-3) at Washington (Zimmermann 6-6), 4:05 p.m. Arizona (I.Kennedy 6-8) at Cincinnati (Latos 7-2), 4:10 p.m. San Francisco (Vogelsong 7-4) at Atlanta (Minor 5-6), 4:10 p.m. Miami (Jo.Johnson 5-6) at Chicago Cubs (Samardzija 6-8), 5:05 p.m.
American League roundup
National League roundup
• Angels 13, Tigers 0: DETROIT — Mike Trout had another four-hit game for Los Angeles, including a 430-foot homer that was part of an early power show in the Angels’ 13-0 rout of Detroit. Trout, Mark Trumbo and Albert Pujols all homered off Jacob Turner in the first two innings, and Alberto Callaspo and Kendrys Morales went deep later in the game. It was the fourth four-hit game of Trout’s spectacular rookie season. • White Sox 7, Red Sox 5: BOSTON — Kevin Youkilis hit his first homer at Fenway Park as a visitor, driving a three-run shot over the Green Monster to lead Chicago to its eighth win in 11 games. • Yankees 6, Blue Jays 1: NEW YORK — CC Sabathia carried a shutout into the seventh inning during his sparkling return from the disabled list and New York got an early three-run homer from Andruw Jones to move a season-best 22 games over .500 and the best record in the majors. • Rangers 6, Athletics 1: OAKLAND, Calif. — Roy Oswalt baffled Oakland’s hitters to beat the Athletics for the first time, and Josh Hamilton and Adrian Beltre each hit solo home runs as Texas snapped the A’s four-game winning streak. • Rays 4, Indians 2: ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Carlos Pena and Luke Scott gave Tampa Bay an early lead and Matt Moore won despite control issues. • Mariners 9, Royals 6: KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Justin Smoak and Michael Saunders hit two-run homers, Jesus Montero went three for four and drove in two runs and Seattle got at least one hit from every starter. • Twins 6, Orioles 4: MINNEAPOLIS — Joe Mauer had three hits and an RBI and Minnesota got 4 2⁄3 innings of scoreless relief from its bullpen. Mauer had two singles, a double and a walk to improve his batting average to .333, second in the AL behind the Angels’ Mike Trout.
• Nationals 5, Mets 4: WASHINGTON — Pedro Beato threw a wild pitch with the bases loaded in the 10th inning that allowed the winning run to score, and Washington rallied after blowing a late lead. • Reds 4, Diamondbacks 0: CINCINNATI — Johnny Cueto showed no signs of being bothered by a finger blister during six shutout innings, and Ryan Ludwick hit a three-run homer that sent Cincinnati to its first victory without Joey Votto. • Giants 9, Braves 0: ATLANTA — Georgia native Buster Posey drove in five runs with three hits and Barry Zito combined with two relievers on a five-hitter for San Francisco. • Marlins 9, Cubs 5: CHICAGO — Carlos Lee hit a grand slam and Miami beat the Cubs to give Ozzie Guillen a win in his first game back in Chicago. • Brewers 3, Cardinals 2: MILWAUKEE — Francisco Rodriguez picked up a save on his first night as Milwaukee’s new closer, Rickie Weeks hit a mammoth home run and Randy Wolf won his first game since April 30. • Pirates 6, Rockies 2: DENVER — Erik Bedard pitched effectively into the seventh inning for his first win in more than a month, Andrew McCutchen homered, and Pittsburgh became the fifth team with at least 50 wins. • Phillies 3, Dodgers 2: LOS ANGELES — Roy Halladay pitched five effective innings in his first start off the disabled list, Hunter Pence hit a go-ahead, two-out single in the eighth inning and Philadelphia beat Los Angeles. • Padres 8, Astros 2: Ross Ohlendorf pitched six innings, Yonder Alonso hit a two-run homer and had three RBIs to help San Diego beat Houston. Alexi Amarista and Cameron Maybin had three hits for the Padres.
Rangers 6, Athletics 1 Texas Kinsler 2b Andrus ss Hamilton lf Beltre 3b Mi.Young 1b N.Cruz rf Dav.Murphy dh Napoli c Gentry cf Totals
Washington Atlanta New York Miami Philadelphia
Lester L, 5-7 4 7 6 6 3 4 91 4.80 Tazawa 4 4 1 1 0 4 50 0.84 F.Morales 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 3.10 T—3:06. A—37,771 (37,495).
Rays 4, Indians 2 Cleveland Choo rf A.Cabrera ss Kipnis 2b Brantley cf Jo.Lopez 3b C.Santana dh Duncan lf Kotchman 1b Marson c a-Hafner ph Totals
AB 4 4 3 2 3 2 4 3 2 1 28
R 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2
H 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 4
BI 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2
BB 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 5
SO 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 2 0 7
Avg. .296 .274 .276 .300 .254 .221 .228 .236 .287 .226
Tampa Bay AB R H BI BB SO Avg. B.Upton cf 4 1 2 0 0 0 .247 C.Pena 1b 4 1 1 2 0 0 .198 Zobrist 2b 3 1 0 0 1 0 .250 Joyce rf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .273 Keppinger 3b 4 0 2 0 0 0 .317 Scott dh 4 0 1 1 0 0 .206 De.Jennings lf 3 1 0 0 0 0 .232 Lobaton c 3 0 1 1 0 0 .216 E.Johnson ss 2 0 0 0 0 1 .265 Totals 31 4 7 4 1 3 Cleveland 000 110 000 — 2 4 1 Tampa Bay 300 001 00x — 4 7 0 a-flied out for Marson in the 9th. E—Kotchman (4). LOB—Cleveland 7, Tampa Bay 5. 3B—Scott (1). HR—C.Pena (14), off Tomlin. SB—De.Jennings (16). DP—Cleveland 1; Tampa Bay 2. Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP Tomlin L, 5-6 5 2-3 7 4 4 1 1 88 Sipp 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 14 Accardo 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO NP M.Moore W, 6-6 5 3 2 2 5 3 90 W.Davis H, 6 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 12 Jo.Peralta H, 20 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2 20 Badenhop H, 5 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 6 Rodney S, 27-28 1 1 0 0 0 0 11 T—2:44. A—15,712 (34,078).
ERA 5.51 5.40 3.42 ERA 4.39 2.89 4.42 3.29 0.86
Angels 13, Tigers 0 Los Angeles Trout cf-lf Tor.Hunter rf Bourjos cf Pujols 1b Calhoun rf Trumbo lf-1b K.Morales dh Callaspo 3b H.Kendrick 2b Aybar ss M.Izturis ss Bo.Wilson c Totals
AB 6 4 1 4 1 5 4 5 5 4 1 4 44
R 3 2 0 3 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 1 13
H 4 1 1 3 0 2 2 1 3 0 0 1 18
BI 2 0 1 2 0 3 2 3 0 0 0 0 13
BB 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 4
SO 2 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 8
Avg. .355 .276 .243 .278 .231 .311 .284 .248 .278 .263 .229 .203
Detroit AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Jackson cf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .319 Raburn lf 2 0 0 0 0 1 .169 Berry lf-cf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .292 Mi.Cabrera 3b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .327 Worth 3b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .190 Fielder 1b 1 0 0 0 1 0 .303 1-D.Kelly pr-1b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .184 D.Young dh 4 0 1 0 0 0 .274 Boesch rf 2 0 0 0 2 0 .248 Jh.Peralta ss 4 0 1 0 0 0 .266 Avila c 3 0 1 0 1 0 .245 R.Santiago 2b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .218 Totals 30 0 4 0 6 3 Los Angeles 430 004 011 — 13 18 0 Detroit 000 000 000 — 0 4 0 1-ran for Fielder in the 6th. LOB—Los Angeles 8, Detroit 10. 2B—Bourjos (7), Trumbo (16), Bo.Wilson (3). HR—Trumbo (26), off Ja.Turner; Trout (13), off Ja.Turner; Pujols (16), off
Ja.Turner; Callaspo (7), off Below; K.Morales (9), off D.Downs. DP—Los Angeles 1; Detroit 2. Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Richards W, 3-1 7 3 0 0 4 2 100 3.53 D.Carpenter 2 1 0 0 2 1 24 3.71 Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Ja.Turner L, 0-1 2 6 7 7 2 1 52 10.29 Below 3 1-3 8 4 4 2 2 61 3.27 Villarreal 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 20 1.47 D.Downs 2 3 2 2 0 3 45 2.45 T—3:09. A—33,950 (41,255).
Yankees 6, Blue Jays 1 Toronto R.Davis lf Rasmus cf Lawrie 3b Encarnacion 1b Lind dh Y.Escobar ss B.Francisco rf a-Gose ph-rf K.Johnson 2b c-Arencibia ph Mathis c Totals
AB 4 3 3 4 4 2 2 2 3 1 3 31
R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
H 1 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 1 7
BI 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
BB 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2
SO 0 3 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 7
Avg. .249 .247 .280 .298 .237 .247 .240 .500 .240 .232 .250
New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Jeter ss 4 1 2 1 0 1 .308 Granderson cf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .251 Teixeira 1b 3 0 1 0 1 1 .251 Al.Rodriguez dh 4 0 0 1 0 0 .270 Cano 2b 4 1 1 0 0 0 .320 Swisher rf 2 1 0 0 2 1 .258 An.Jones lf 3 1 1 3 0 1 .239 b-Wise ph-lf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .255 J.Nix 3b 4 1 3 0 0 1 .240 C.Stewart c 4 1 1 1 0 0 .258 Totals 33 6 10 6 3 6 Toronto 000 000 010 — 1 7 1 New York 030 000 30x — 6 10 0 a-grounded out for B.Francisco in the 7th. bpopped out for An.Jones in the 8th. c-lined into a double play for K.Johnson in the 9th. E—R.Davis (6). LOB—Toronto 7, New York 6. 2B—R.Davis (9), Encarnacion 2 (18), Mathis (6), Jeter (18), Teixeira (21), J.Nix (5), C.Stewart (4). HR—An.Jones (12), off Cecil. SB—R.Davis (24). DP—New York 1. Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cecil L, 2-2 6 6 3 3 2 5 108 6.34 S.Dyson 1-3 4 3 3 1 0 15 40.50 Loup 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 7 6.00 Cordero 1 0 0 0 0 1 13 5.77 New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Sabathia W, 10-3 6 4 0 0 1 6 87 3.27 Eppley H, 8 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 1 2.42 Logan H, 12 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 7 3.62 Qualls 1 1-3 2 1 1 1 1 30 6.75 Rapada 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 2.55 Soriano S, 24-25 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 5 1.46 T—3:08. A—44,975 (50,291).
NL Boxscores Reds 4, Diamondbacks 0 Arizona Drew ss Bloomquist 3b A.Hill 2b M.Montero c J.Upton rf Goldschmidt 1b C.Young cf G.Parra lf Bauer p Collmenter p b-Blum ph Breslow p Zagurski p c-R.Roberts ph Totals
AB 4 5 4 4 4 4 3 3 1 0 1 0 0 1 34
R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
H 0 2 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 8
BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BB 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4
SO 2 1 1 0 0 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 9
Avg. .213 .296 .300 .271 .274 .296 .205 .270 .000 .000 .143 .000 --.243
Cincinnati AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Stubbs cf 3 1 1 0 1 1 .218 Cozart ss 2 1 1 0 1 0 .243 B.Phillips 2b 3 1 0 0 1 2 .288 Ludwick lf 3 1 1 3 1 1 .236 Rolen 3b 2 0 1 0 2 0 .203 Frazier 1b 4 0 0 0 0 4 .272 Heisey rf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .276 Hanigan c 3 0 1 0 0 0 .276 Cueto p 2 0 0 0 0 0 .105 a-Leake ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .333 Arredondo p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --LeCure p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Marshall p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Chapman p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 27 4 5 3 6 11 Arizona 000 000 000 — 0 8 2 Cincinnati 103 000 00x — 4 5 1 a-struck out for Cueto in the 6th. b-singled for Collmenter in the 7th. c-singled for Zagurski in the 9th. E—Drew (3), Bauer (2), Rolen (5). LOB—Arizona 12, Cincinnati 6. 2B—C.Young (11), Hanigan (8). HR—Ludwick (14), off Bauer. SB—Stubbs (18), Cozart (3). DP—Arizona 1. Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Bauer L, 1-2 3 1 4 3 5 4 73 6.06 Collmenter 3 2 0 0 1 5 50 3.90 Breslow 1 1 0 0 0 1 24 2.79 Zagurski 1 1 0 0 0 1 9 4.70 Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cueto W, 11-5 6 4 0 0 4 3 106 2.28 Arredondo 1 1 0 0 0 1 19 2.13 LeCure 1 1 0 0 0 2 14 3.62 Marshall 2-3 2 0 0 0 2 21 2.86 Chapman S, 14-18 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 4 1.69 T—3:26. A—19,142 (42,319).
Nationals 5, Mets 4 (10 innings) New York AB Tejada ss 5 R.Cedeno 2b 3 Thole c 2 D.Wright 3b 5 Hairston rf 4 Bay lf 3 e-Valdespin ph-lf 1 I.Davis 1b 4 An.Torres cf 4 Nickeas c 2 a-Dan.Murphy ph-2b2 Niese p 2 b-Ju.Turner ph 1 R.Ramirez p 0 Edgin p 0 Parnell p 0 f-Nieuwenhuis ph 0 Byrdak p 0 Beato p 0 Totals 38
R 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4
H 1 0 2 2 1 0 1 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11
BI 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4
BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
SO 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 7
Avg. .324 .258 .276 .346 .251 .179 .269 .205 .224 .168 .293 .222 .286 ------.262 -----
Washington AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Lombardozzi 2b-lf 4 0 1 1 0 1 .267 Harper cf 5 0 2 1 0 0 .275 Zimmerman 3b 4 1 0 0 1 2 .254 Morse rf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .290 1-Desmond pr-ss 0 1 0 0 1 0 .287 LaRoche 1b 5 0 1 0 0 1 .257 T.Moore lf-rf 4 1 1 1 0 1 .308 Espinosa ss-2b 4 0 2 1 0 1 .240 Flores c 4 0 0 0 0 2 .229 Mattheus p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Detwiler p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .050 S.Burnett p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Bernadina ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .246 d-DeRosa ph 0 1 0 0 1 0 .122 Clippard p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Mic.Gonzalez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --J.Solano c 1 1 1 0 0 0 .314 Totals 37 5 9 4 3 10 New York 000 000 003 1 — 4 11 0 Washington 000 010 011 2 — 5 9 0 Two outs when winning run scored. a-doubled for Nickeas in the 8th. b-struck out for Niese in the 8th. c-was announced for S.Burnett in the 8th. d-walked for Bernadina in the 8th. e-homered for
Bay in the 9th. f-sacrificed for Parnell in the 10th. 1-ran for Morse in the 9th. LOB—New York 5, Washington 7. 2B—Thole (8), D.Wright (29), Dan.Murphy (25), Lombardozzi (12). 3B—Harper (5). HR—Valdespin (5), off Clippard; T.Moore (5), off Niese. SB—DeRosa (1). DP—Washington 2.
Asencio 2 1 1 1 2 1 32 3.07 Maine 1 1 0 0 1 0 17 5.87 T—3:06. A—34,397 (41,009).
New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Niese 7 3 1 1 0 8 89 3.58 R.Ramirez 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 9 3.53 Edgin 1-3 1 1 1 1 0 14 10.13 Parnell BS, 5-7 1 3 1 1 0 2 22 3.19 Byrdak L, 2-1, 2-2 2-3 2 2 2 2 0 17 4.44 Beato 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 4.50 Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Detwiler 7 5 0 0 0 4 86 3.15 S.Burnett H, 18 1 1 0 0 0 1 12 1.87 Clippard BS, 2-16 1 3 3 3 0 2 27 2.45 Mic.Gonzalez 2-3 2 1 1 0 0 12 2.51 Mattheus W, 3-1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 5 1.69 T—3:13. A—26,342 (41,487).
Pittsburgh Presley lf Sutton rf G.Hernandez rf A.McCutchen cf McGehee 1b Walker 2b P.Alvarez 3b McKenry c Barmes ss Bedard p J.Hughes p b-G.Jones ph Resop p J.Cruz p Hanrahan p Totals
Giants 9, Braves 0 San Francisco G.Blanco rf-lf Theriot 2b Me.Cabrera lf Kontos p Hensley p Posey 1b-c Sandoval 3b Pagan cf H.Sanchez c 1-Belt pr-1b B.Crawford ss Zito p Schierholtz rf Totals
AB 3 4 5 0 0 5 5 5 2 3 4 2 0 38
R 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 9
H 1 1 2 0 0 3 0 2 1 0 2 1 0 13
BI 1 1 1 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 9
BB 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 4
SO 1 1 2 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 9
Avg. .253 .274 .353 --.000 .302 .300 .287 .281 .246 .237 .103 .252
Atlanta AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Bourn cf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .307 Prado lf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .317 Heyward rf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .272 C.Jones 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .312 C.Martinez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Pastornicky 2b 1 0 1 0 0 0 .252 F.Freeman 1b 2 0 1 0 1 0 .276 McCann c 4 0 1 0 0 0 .240 Uggla 2b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .221 Durbin p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Janish ss 3 0 1 0 0 0 .167 Jurrjens p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .083 Avilan p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 J.Francisco 3b 1 0 0 0 0 1 .215 Totals 31 0 5 0 1 7 San Francisco 101 610 000 — 9 13 0 Atlanta 000 000 000 — 0 5 0 1-ran for H.Sanchez in the 4th. LOB—San Francisco 8, Atlanta 6. 2B—Me.Cabrera (19), Posey 2 (18), F.Freeman (20), Janish (1). SB— G.Blanco (16), Belt (6). DP—San Francisco 1. San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Zito W, 8-6 7 3 0 0 1 4 106 3.75 Kontos 1 1 0 0 0 2 21 2.40 Hensley 1 1 0 0 0 1 15 3.55 Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Jurrjens L, 3-3 3 1-3 8 8 8 3 1 73 6.20 Avilan 3 2-3 5 1 1 0 5 67 2.25 C.Martinez 1 0 0 0 1 2 20 4.15 Durbin 1 0 0 0 0 1 7 3.63 T—3:00. A—29,623 (49,586).
Brewers 3, Cardinals 2 St. Louis Furcal ss Craig 1b Holliday lf Jay cf Beltran cf-rf Freese 3b Y.Molina c M.Carpenter rf-lf Greene 2b d-Schumaker ph J.Kelly p a-Berkman ph Browning p Salas p e-Descalso ph Totals
AB 3 4 0 3 3 4 4 4 2 1 2 1 0 0 1 32
R 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
H 1 2 0 1 0 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10
BI 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
BB 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
SO 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 1 2 1 0 0 0 9
Avg. .275 .301 .317 .297 .290 .298 .313 .284 .221 .320 .091 .292 --.000 .225
Milwaukee AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Aoki rf-lf 3 1 1 0 1 0 .293 C.Gomez cf 3 1 1 0 1 0 .240 Braun lf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .309 Veras p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Ishikawa ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .232 M.Parra p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Fr.Rodriguez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Ar.Ramirez 3b 4 0 2 1 0 0 .271 Hart 1b 4 0 1 1 0 1 .263 R.Weeks 2b 4 1 1 1 0 1 .200 Kottaras c 2 0 0 0 0 0 .220 b-M.Maldonado ph-c2 0 0 0 0 1 .279 C.Izturis ss 3 0 2 0 0 0 .226 Wolf p 2 0 0 0 0 0 .107 Morgan rf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .227 Totals 32 3 8 3 2 5 St. Louis 002 000 000 — 2 10 2 Milwaukee 101 100 00x — 3 8 0 a-struck out for J.Kelly in the 7th. b-grounded out for Kottaras in the 7th. c-grounded out for Veras in the 7th. d-struck out for Greene in the 9th. e-popped out for Salas in the 9th. E—Furcal (9), J.Kelly (1). LOB—St. Louis 7, Milwaukee 7. 2B—Jay (6), Freese (15). HR—R.Weeks (9), off J.Kelly. DP—St. Louis 1; Milwaukee 3. St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA J.Kelly L, 1-2 6 6 3 2 1 4 84 2.75 Browning 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 13 2.70 Salas 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 1 29 4.68 Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Wolf W, 3-6 6 2-3 8 2 2 1 6 103 5.60 Veras H, 9 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 10 4.46 M.Parra H, 5 1 0 0 0 0 2 15 4.10 Rodriguez S, 2-6 1 2 0 0 0 1 19 3.59 T—3:04. A—30,491 (41,900).
Marlins 9, Cubs 5 Miami AB R H Reyes ss 4 1 1 Gaudin p 0 0 0 Choate p 0 0 0 H.Bell p 0 0 0 Bonifacio cf 5 1 1 Ca.Lee 1b 4 2 2 Ruggiano rf 4 0 0 H.Ramirez 3b 4 2 2 Kearns lf 5 1 1 Cousins lf 0 0 0 Infante 2b 5 1 3 J.Buck c 5 0 1 A.Sanchez p 3 1 1 b-D.Solano ph-ss 0 0 0 Totals 39 9 12
BI 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 1 1 0 3 0 0 0 9
BB 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 5
SO 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 2 0 8
Avg. .264 .000 ----.267 .287 .368 .249 .259 .178 .284 .179 .107 .300
Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. DeJesus cf 4 0 2 0 1 1 .267 S.Castro ss 5 0 2 0 0 1 .285 Rizzo 1b 5 0 2 0 0 0 .359 A.Soriano lf 5 0 0 0 0 1 .271 LaHair rf 5 0 1 0 0 3 .280 Soto c 4 2 1 0 1 1 .191 Barney 2b 2 0 0 0 0 0 .262 Dolis p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --a-Mather ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .231 Asencio p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Clevenger ph-3b 1 1 1 0 0 0 .268 Valbuena 3b-2b 4 1 2 2 0 0 .237 T.Wood p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .263 Je.Baker 2b 2 1 2 2 1 0 .278 Maine p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Totals 39 5 13 4 3 8 Miami 000 350 100 — 9 12 1 Chicago 000 011 030 — 5 13 1 a-reached on error for Dolis in the 6th. b-walked for A.Sanchez in the 8th. c-singled for Asencio in the 8th. E—H.Ramirez (8), LaHair (5). LOB—Miami 8, Chicago 10. 2B—H.Ramirez (18), DeJesus (16), Soto (5), Valbuena (8). HR—Infante (8), off T.Wood; Ca.Lee (6), off T.Wood; H.Ramirez (14), off Asencio; Je.Baker (4), off A.Sanchez. DP—Miami 2. Miami A.Sanchez W, 5-6 Gaudin Choate H.Bell Chicago T.Wood L, 4-4 Dolis
IP 7 0 1 1 IP 4 2-3 1 1-3
H 9 3 1 0 H 8 2
R 2 3 0 0 R 8 0
ER BB SO NP ERA 1 2 7 105 3.95 3 1 0 16 5.31 0 0 1 12 2.19 0 0 0 15 6.21 ER BB SO NP ERA 8 2 6 93 3.92 0 0 1 23 6.43
Pirates 6, Rockies 2 AB 5 4 0 4 5 3 5 3 3 2 0 1 0 0 0 35
R 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 6
H 1 1 0 2 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9
BI 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
BB 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
SO 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 5
Avg. .241 .273 .091 .374 .249 .302 .223 .255 .204 .077 .000 .265 .000 -----
Colorado AB R H BI BB SO Avg. E.Young rf 5 0 0 0 0 2 .261 Scutaro 2b 5 1 2 0 0 0 .275 Fowler cf 3 0 2 0 2 0 .304 C.Gonzalez lf 3 0 2 0 2 0 .334 Cuddyer 1b 3 0 0 0 2 0 .258 Pacheco 3b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .299 d-Colvin ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .294 W.Rosario c 3 1 0 0 1 0 .255 Rutledge ss 4 0 1 1 0 1 .250 Friedrich p 2 0 1 0 0 1 .095 Mat.Reynolds p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Ottavino p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 a-A.Brown ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Ekstrom p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Giambi ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .244 C.Torres p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Totals 35 2 9 1 7 5 Pittsburgh 000 140 010 — 6 9 1 Colorado 001 100 000 — 2 9 1 a-flied out for Ottavino in the 7th. b-grounded out for J.Hughes in the 8th. c-grounded out for Ekstrom in the 8th. d-struck out for Pacheco in the 9th. E—Presley (2), C.Torres (1). LOB—Pittsburgh 9, Colorado 13. 2B—McKenry (8). 3B—Rutledge (1). HR—A.McCutchen (22), off Friedrich. DP—Pittsburgh 2; Colorado 1. Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP Bedard W, 5-10 6 2-3 8 2 1 4 4 94 J.Hughes H, 7 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 6 Resop 1 1 0 0 0 0 13 J.Cruz 2-3 0 0 0 2 0 20 Hanrahan S, 25-28 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 9 Colorado IP H R ER BB SO NP Friedrich L, 5-7 4 2-3 6 5 5 3 2 83 Mat.Reynolds 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 7 Ottavino 2 0 0 0 1 1 26 Ekstrom 1 2 1 1 0 1 17 C.Torres 1 0 0 0 1 0 18 T—3:22. A—42,574 (50,398).
ERA 4.55 2.06 3.20 2.61 2.29 ERA 5.85 3.32 4.78 3.00 2.61
Padres 8, Astros 2 Houston Altuve 2b Ma.Gonzalez ss S.Moore 1b J.D.Martinez lf Bogusevic rf C.Johnson 3b Schafer cf Corporan c Lyles p b-Bixler ph Abad p Del Rosario p R.Cruz p Totals
AB 4 4 4 4 3 4 4 3 2 1 0 0 0 33
R 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
H 0 3 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 6
BI 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2
BB 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
SO 0 0 2 1 2 2 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 12
Avg. .294 .309 .245 .239 .219 .264 .230 .000 .118 .219 -------
San Diego AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Amarista ss-lf-2b 5 0 3 1 0 0 .302 Forsythe 2b-3b 5 1 1 0 0 1 .299 Headley 3b 4 2 1 1 0 1 .266 Gregerson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Kotsay lf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .288 Thatcher p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --d-Denorfia ph-lf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .288 Grandal c 4 1 2 1 0 1 .288 Alonso 1b 3 2 2 3 1 1 .266 Venable rf 2 1 0 0 2 0 .245 Maybin cf 4 1 3 2 0 0 .221 Ohlendorf p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .000 a-Guzman ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .235 Brach p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Ev.Cabrera ph-ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 .228 Totals 35 8 13 8 3 5 Houston 011 000 000 — 2 6 1 San Diego 020 021 30x — 8 13 2 a-grounded out for Ohlendorf in the 6th. b-struck out for Lyles in the 7th. c-was hit by a pitch for Brach in the 7th. d-grounded into a double play for Thatcher in the 8th. E—Bogusevic (2), Ohlendorf (1), Headley (7). LOB—Houston 5, San Diego 8. 2B—Ma.Gonzalez (5), J.D.Martinez (11), Headley (21), Alonso (21), Maybin (10). HR—Alonso (4), off Lyles. SB—Ma.Gonzalez (2), Schafer (23). DP—Houston 2; San Diego 1. Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lyles L, 2-6 6 11 5 5 2 3 118 5.29 Abad 2-3 2 3 3 1 1 19 4.50 Del Rosario 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 3 6.75 R.Cruz 1 0 0 0 0 1 7 5.93 San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Ohlendorf W, 3-0 6 6 2 1 1 6 91 5.87 Brach H, 3 1 0 0 0 0 2 12 4.05 Thatcher 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 2.55 Gregerson 1 0 0 0 0 3 12 3.32 T—2:38. A—20,944 (42,691).
Phillies 3, Dodgers 2 Philadelphia AB Rollins ss 4 Victorino cf 3 Utley 2b 3 Howard 1b 1 1-Mayberry pr-1b-lf 0 Ruiz c 3 Pence rf 3 Pierre lf 4 Papelbon p 0 Polanco 3b 4 Halladay p 1 Schwimer p 0 Horst p 0 a-Pridie ph 1 K.Kendrick p 0 Bastardo p 0 b-Wigginton ph-1b 1 Totals 28
R 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
H 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
BI 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
BB 0 0 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4
SO 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
Avg. .262 .249 .224 .143 .233 .349 .279 .315 --.260 .222 ----.375 .063 --.243
Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Abreu lf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .253 Lindblom p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Belisario p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Hairston Jr. ss 1 0 0 0 0 0 .297 M.Ellis 2b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .270 Kemp cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .355 Ethier rf 3 1 1 0 1 2 .297 A.Kennedy 3b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .241 Loney 1b 4 0 1 1 0 0 .247 L.Cruz ss 3 0 1 1 0 1 .229 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-J.Rivera ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .255 A.Ellis c 3 0 1 0 0 1 .277 Fife p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Gwynn Jr. lf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .239 Totals 33 2 7 2 1 9 Philadelphia 100 000 020 — 3 5 1 Los Angeles 020 000 000 — 2 7 0 a-flied out for Horst in the 7th. b-flied out for Bastardo in the 9th. c-struck out for Jansen in the 9th. 1-ran for Howard in the 8th. E—Halladay (2). LOB—Philadelphia 6, Los Angeles 5. 2B—Rollins (22), A.Kennedy (7). RBIs—Utley (7), Pence 2 (55), Loney (25), L.Cruz (5). S—Victorino, Halladay. DP—Philadelphia 2. Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP Halladay 5 5 2 2 0 6 80 Schwimer 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 Horst 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 7 K.Kendrick W, 3-8 1 2-3 2 0 0 0 1 22 Bastardo H, 17 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 6 Papelbon S, 21-23 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP Fife 6 4 1 1 3 1 90 Lindblom H, 14 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 Belisario L, 3-1 H, 132-3 0 2 2 1 0 23 Jansen BS, 5-21 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 13 T—2:52. A—53,498 (56,000).
ERA 3.96 4.64 0.00 4.71 5.10 3.00 ERA 1.50 3.16 2.18 2.11
D4
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
GOLF NOTEBOOK
Cascade Cycling Classic pro men’s prologue runner-up Francisco Mancebo, last year’s overall winner, shifts gears as he competes along Skyline Ranch Road near Tetherow Golf Club near Bend Tuesday evening.
Westwood won’t worry about trees at British Open By Tim Dahlberg The Associated Press
Rob Kerr / The Bulletin
Standard Continued from D1 “You think you’re only going to crash in a group, but I crashed by myself,” Armstrong said of the Exergy Tour. “And so, I needed to get this one prologue out of the way. I took the corners very conservatively, because in two weeks time, I have one of the biggest races of my life, and so I didn’t want to take the risks. That means I had to push it harder in the flats and on the climbs.” Alison Powers of NOW and Novartis for MS finished second in 5:31, and Jacquelyn Crowell, Armstrong’s teammate, was third in 5:36. Riders raced one at a time in 30-second intervals before a small crowd, as forboding gray clouds stayed south of the course and the streets remained dry. Despite being conservative in the corners, Armstrong said she is not holding back during the rest of the CCC, her last race before the Olympics. She is scheduled to compete in the Olympic road race on July 29 and the time trial
on Aug. 1. “When I race, I race my bike, and it’s hard for me to taper off,” Armstrong said. “ I’m not holding back — it’s race time. We’re here to win, and we have the team to do it.” Armstrong, 38, won the overall title at the CCC in 2008 just weeks before winning the gold medal in Beijing. She won three stages of the Cascade that year, and claimed the overall victory by an impressive six-minute margin. The mother of a 2-year-old believes she can win Olympic gold once again. “I want to show that you can’t let age stop you, as long as you have the drive and the competitive blood,” Armstrong said. “Boise, Idaho, and Bend, Oregon, are prime examples of great cities where fitness is part of the culture. I’ll tell you right now, I take a look left and right in Bend, and there are some fit 40year-olds, and 50-plus. No one here is going to let age stop them, so I think there’s a lot of supporters in my arena.” In the pro men’s prologue, Chad Haga of Optum claimed
the victory in 5:02. Francisco Mancebo of Competitive Cyclist was second in 5:04, and Robert Sweeting of Kenda finished third in 5:05. The victory was Haga’s first as a professional. “It’s a great course,” said Haga, 23. “I raced it a few years ago as part of the nationals course, so I knew it and was excited for it. “It’s been a stressful year for me so far. Since March, I’ve either been sick, injured or fatigued. I’m finally healthy again.” The Cascade Cycling Classic, which runs through Sunday, continues today with the pro men’s and women’s McKenzie Pass Road Race, a 74-mile stage that finishes at Three Creek Sno-park south of Sisters. The race features two prominent climbs, the first up switchbacking state Highway 242 to the top of McKenzie Pass, and the finishing climb up Three Creeks Road. Armstrong and Haga will wear the yellow leader’s jersey in today’s race. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com.
Handball and field hockey among America’s struggles By Lisa Dillman Los Angeles Times
He was the face of the Los Angeles Police Department, and forever frozen in a where-were-you moment, grimly stepping up in front of a media throng on that June afternoon in 1994. That’s when LAPD Cmdr. David Gascon braced himself and announced that O.J. Simpson was a fugitive and that the department was “very unhappy” with the activities surrounding Simpson’s failure to surrender. He pledged that the LAPD would find Simpson, and by nightfall, Simpson was taken into custody, which, of course, is the shorthand version of one of the wilder days in Los Angeles. And so, who better than a career veteran of the LAPD to try to bring order and stability to a long-struggling sports governing body ... in this particular case, USA Team Handball? First, a question with a question. “What in the world is the former second-in-command of the LAPD doing running a national governing body?” said Gascon, who is doing it on an unpaid, interim basis. “It’s because of the sport and because of all the issues around team handball and failings of team handball. We’re all of the mind-set that we need to figure out a way to get this sport at a level that is competitive, first, in the Western Hemisphere and then the rest of the world.” Really, if you can survive the white-hot glare of the Simpson case and less-celebrated ones and 32 years in one of the country’s largest police departments . . . Gascon’s daughter, Sarah, who has been a USA National Team Handball player and played professionally in Poland, helpfully finished the thought to describe her father. “After that, you can do anything,” she said. This is the time when the haves and the have-nots of the Olympic movement in this country come into a sharper focus. It happens every four years. That’s when the public and the mainstream media,
OLYMPICS at some point, come to the realization (or simply remember) that the United States won’t be competing in every single sport this summer in London. For instance, in handball, the men and women did not qualify. The synchronized swimming team did not make it, but the duo of Mary Killman and Mariya Koroleva, who took silver in the Pan American Games last year, will be competing in London. Although the women’s field hockey team will be competing in London, there was a great deal of attention when the men’s team pulled out of an Olympic qualifying event in February. The reasoning behind that decision had several components, said Steven Locke, the executive director of USA Field Hockey. “It was really based upon injuries that we were experiencing with the existing men’s team that played in Guadalajara at the Pan Am Games, and with the number of retirements,” he said. “We just really felt that if we went over there, what purpose would it really serve. We were probably just going to get slaughtered. As a result, we wanted to look at our resources and devote them toward development. I think that’s probably a wise decision.” Vastly differing circumstances led to the absence in London of another far more high-profile team. The under-23 men’s soccer team failed to qualify when it stumbled in CONCACAF qualifying, losing to Canada and giving up a lead to El Salvador in injury time and finishing tied. It will only be the second time in the past eight Olympics that the U.S. men soccer team did not make it. Absences have been the norm, not the exception, for team handball. The last appearance for the men’s and women’s team was the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, by virtue of an automatic spot. That year, the men won twice and finished ninth of 12 teams, and the women were win-
less and finished eighth in an eight-team field. Last year, the program was hit with a 20 percent reduction in funding from the U.S. Olympic Committee. Before that, there were continuing factional and financial issues, and in 2006, the sport’s governing body was decertified by the USOC. Bankruptcy was a potential and more recent option but was avoided. Jordan Fithian, who has been playing handball professionally in Germany, has one stock answer and another deeper explanation when he is asked why he won’t be in London. “Those that I can tell are only interested in a short, quick answer, I give the blunt honest truth: We weren’t good enough,” he said in email from Italy. “Those that are actually interested in the answer I tell them that although we have a core group of guys talented enough to qualify i.e. beat Argentina, Brazil, etc., but we don’t have the funding or support to be able to train together enough to be as good as a team.” Fithian’s primary high school and college sport was basketball and he once played against Blake Griffin’s older brother Taylor, who went to Oklahoma. Fithian, who is 6 foot 6, was Mr. Basketball in Kansas and played at Binghamton University. His wife, Jen, who also plays handball professionally in Germany, was a Division I basketball player and introduced him to handball. “I don’t know what he is doing now, but he would be perfect for handball,” Fithian said of Taylor Griffin. “The one thing the U.S. has no shortage of is prime-time athletes who don’t go pro after college. After the last Olympics, Carmelo Anthony said that if the U.S. basketball team played handball for four years, they could compete in and win in the next Olympics. “I agree, imagine LeBron (James) and (Derrick) Rose and others like him playing handball. It wouldn’t take long, with proper coaching and funding, to get those guys competing at a level needed to earn a trip to the Olympics.”
LYTHAM ST. ANNES, England — Lee Westwood might have won that elusive first major had he not hit a tee shot into a tree on the fifth hole in the final round of the U.S. Open at Olympic Club last month. The ball disappeared, and with it so did Westwood’s chances of getting off the list of best players never to win a major. “You make your own luck a lot of times, but that was an unfortunate time for that to happen,” Westwood said. “It’s happened only three times in my career; once there when I was only one shot off the lead going into the last two holes in Dubai, and once in a playoff in the Malaysian Open. It’s picked its times to happen. Westwood shouldn’t have to worry about the trees at Royal Lytham & St. Annes. There aren’t any of significance on the links course. What he and other players will have to worry about is sand — and lots of it. There are 206 bunkers scattered around the course, or an average of more than 11 a hole. Many of them are in the fairways, making precision driving a necessity to contend in this British Open. Not only do the fairways have lots of bunkers, they are spread out in the driving area. That should make players hit their drivers more often because the early bunkers on holes don’t let them layup with much confidence. Westwood said the bunkers and the rough deepened by a wet summer should more than make up for lack of trees. “I think that’s part of the game of golf,” he said. “There should be penalties for hitting it off line.” Meeting Mandela Tiger Woods strayed some Tuesday from golf, talking about meeting Nelson Man-
Marshal Continued from D1 Romaine does this each week during the summer. And now he does it for no pay, though that has not always been the case. In an era of government in which far more high-profile issues abound, it’s no wonder that Oregon HB 3030 passed last year without much notice. The bill — which was signed into law in June 2011 and went into effect in January after near-unanimous support in the Oregon Legislature — exempts courses from the state’s minimum-wage standards when hiring volunteer marshals. Instead of a wage, the volunteers can receive free golf. Few, if any, make a living by being a marshal, most of whom are paid minimum wage and expected to work just a few hours each week. Marshals tend to be retirees who happen to love golf, many in the golf industry agree. The new law has allowed some Central Oregon golf courses to get more marshals on the course and speed up play, all while improving the bottom line, says Pat Huffer, head professional at Crooked River Ranch. “We’re trying to cover those fringe hours that we weren’t able to do so before due to budget constraints,” Huffer says. Besides directing on-course traffic, marshals help golfers track down lost golf balls, act as starters and generally improve customer service, says Todd Sickles, head professional at Quail Run Golf Club in La Pine. Sickles expects his marshals to work only one full shift a week. In return, he or she can play unlimited golf, all season. With a smaller hit to the balance sheet the La Pine course now has marshals patrolling the links seven days a week when before it could cover only three or four of the busiest days, Sickles says. And his golfers are happier, he says. “Having a marshal out there asking if everything is OK,
dela in South Africa not long after Woods burst on the golf scene in a big way. Woods was asked by a South African journalist about the meeting on the eve of Mandela’s 94th birthday. “It was incredible meeting him for the first time in ’98. I got invited to his home,” Woods said. “As we walk in there and I look at my dad and I said, ‘Hey, pops, do you feel that? It feels different in here.’ He said, ‘Yeah, I feel the same way.’ ” Woods said he and his late father, Earl, were looking at pictures on the wall and Mandela was over in a corner. At the time Mandela was president of South Africa. “He was over there just meditating in the corner, and it was just a different feeling in the room,” Woods said. “He has such a presence and aura about him unlike anyone I’ve ever met. He’s meant so much to so many people around the world, not just in South Africa.” Stewart who? Stewart Cink had a memorable British Open three years ago, when he beat Tom Watson in a playoff to win his first major championship. Apparently it was not that memorable to a guard Tuesday manning one of the gates near the player’s parking lot. The guard stopped Cink from entering, asking him for his badge. Cink told him he left it in the locker room, but that didn’t work, either. Finally, after several minutes of explaining just who he is, the guard finally let Cink and his caddie through. It could have been worse. The great Bobby Jones was making his second appearance in the Open at Royal Lytham & St. Annes in 1926, and was two shots off the lead going to the final day. It was the first year the Open charged admission, and when Jones left his player’s badge in
his hotel room, the man at the gate refused to let him in. Jones ended up digging in his pocket for seven shillings to get on the course. He went on to stage a late rally and win the tournament by two shots. Weatherwise The talk around most of England in recent months has been about the weather and the rain that never seems to stop. It’s been no different at the British Open on the northwest coast of England, where conditions have been miserable the past few days. There’s been so much rain that some puddles have formed on the course and have had to be roped off, and rain was heavy again on Tuesday. The good news — echoed by worried organizers at the Olympics in London — is that things are supposed to get better. Weather forecasters, in fact, call for the rain to go away by the first round on Thursday and for the Open to be mostly dry, if not sunny. For those who like their Open to be contested in some inclement conditions, don’t fret too much. The forecast is still for the wind to blow 20 to 30 mph for most of the tournament. Phil’s Padres Phil Mickelson has his mind on two sports as he attempts to win his first British Open. Mickelson is part of a group that includes former Dodgers owner Peter O’Malley that is negotiating to buy the San Diego Padres. Mickelson would be a minority owner in the company, should the deal go forward. Mickelson, who attempted in 2003 to earn a one-day contract with the Detroit Tigers by pitching batting practice to the minor league Toledo Mud Hens, said he would not be involved in day-to-day operations should the deal go through. “I’m just kind of a silent partner,” Mickelson said.
even when (play) is slow, is WAY better than nobody trying to make it better,” Sickles adds. The results have been quantifiable at Aspen Lakes, where marshals can play for free and bring three guests in return for two shifts a week, says Josh McKinley, head pro at the Sisters course. Aspen Lakes grew its staff of marshals from eight to 14, including one who is a supervisor paid to run the marshals program. Now, says McKinley, Aspen Lakes has at least one marshal on the course most of the day during the peak golf season, and one per nine holes through the busiest times (usually midday) of each day. That has helped drop the average time for an 18-hole round on the busiest days from four hours, 45 minutes to 4:15, McKinley says. “I’ve gotten no complaints (this season) about pace of play or marshals,” McKinley says. “And I’ve had probably two to three people a week coming in just to compliment us and tell us that the marshals were great.” Not every golf course has switched to volunteers. Widgi Creek Golf Club in Bend, for one, decided in the offseason to stick with the status quo. The course pays a veteran group of four marshals, one of whom works five days a week, and gives them golf privileges, says head pro Dan Ostrin. Though his marshals are retirees, Ostrin thought he may lose them if he switched to a volunteer model. Plus, he says, having a dozen or more volunteers working one or two shifts a week — in addition to
trying to wedge more unpaid golfers onto the tee sheet — is more difficult to manage. “It’s worked OK for us so far, so we decided not to change it,” says Ostrin, adding that being a marshal is a more difficult job than most know. “I’m lucky that I’ve had the same guys, both in the pro shop and marshaling, working for me for a long time. And that reliability is nice.” Ostrin does see merit in both ways of running a marshals program. Romaine, for one, actually prefers his volunteer marshal status at Crooked River Ranch. Such an arrangement tends to bring in marshals who love the game, he says. And with just a few shifts each week at minimum wage, it was not like the money amounted to much. Besides, Romaine points out, as a volunteer he does not have to worry about emptying garbage cans, mopping a floor, or performing any other menial task not directly related to being a marshal. “I’m doing it for the love of the game and nothing else,” says Romaine. “That is what it’s all about.” — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@ bendbulletin.com.
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WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
D5
1 4 1 s t B R I T I S H O P E N • J U LY 1 9 - 2 2
Par 3 Yards 205 The only course in the British Open rotation that opens with a par 3. The difficulty is gauging the wind because the tee box is enclosed by trees and the green is exposed. Seven bunkers form a horseshoe of protection around a relatively flat putting surface.
1
The Open
Par 3 Yards 154
2
The British Open, golf’s oldest championship, will be played at Royal Lytham & St. Annes for the 11th time. While the property is small by Open standards, Lytham is renowned for its 206 bunkers that litter fairways and surround the greens. As always, the winner on Sunday will be introduced as “The Champion Golfer of the Year.” 7
Seven bunkers along both sides of the fairway make this a tough tee shot, and the hole, the longest hole of closing stretch, plays into a prevailing wind. The green is 34 yards deep and slopes at the back, with three bunkers around it.
18 3
16
5
17
4
Par 5 Yards 670
6 14
15
Par 4 Yards 481
13 12
This hole plays 43 yards longer than in 2001, bringing into play three pot bunkers to the right of the fairway. They now require a carry of some 265 yards, and depending on the wind, some will have to thread their shots to the left of them. The green slopes from left to right.
The Royal Lytham & St. Annes Golf Club
8
Total length: 7,086 yards Total par: 70
11
A short par, though it can be troublesome. The tee shot is blind. The left side of the fairway allows for the best angle. Or players can follow the route of Seve Ballesteros in 1979, who drove into an overflow parking lot and still managed a birdie on his way to his first Open title.
9
10
Par 4 Yards 478 The tee shot must avoid two bunkers down the left side, though not to the point that the shot drifts too far right toward trees and out-of-bounds along the entire right side. The approach is to a slightly raised green.
Par 4 Yards 492
Par 3 Yards 163
This hole features a sharp dogleg left, with deep rough and a bunker at the elbow of the dogleg. Four cross bunkers stretch across the fairway well short of the green, and five bunkers guard the green. The second shot has to carry a sharp left-to-right slope in front of the putting surface.
Par 4 Yards 392
Par 3 Yards 198
The shortest hole demands the greatest degree of accuracy. The only gap in the circle of bunkers that surround the green are in the back, and that leads down a slop to an out-of-bounds fence. The green slopes from back left to front right. Par is difficult for anyone missing the green.
A new tee makes this hole 35 yards longer than in 2001, though it still can be reached in two in reasonable conditions. The fairway bends slightly to the right between a nest of bunkers. The green is offset in a hollow in the dunes, with a particularly dangerous bunker at the front left.
Par 3 Yards 219 The longest of the par 3s requires a straight shot with a middle iron, depending on the wind, to avoid bunkers on either side of the entry way to the green. What makes this hole difficult is a large area of dead ground short of the green that makes the hole play longer than it seems.
Par 4 Yards 416 This hole has an out-of-bounds to the right. It's an elevated tee, and most players will use an iron to avoid the deep bunker on the left. That leaves a short iron to an elevated green set beyond a row of three bunkers, though there is 40 yards of ground between the bunkers and the green.
The landing area is tighter than usual between a range of bunkers on the left and bushes to the right. The best tee shot is to the right, which opens up a green well-bunkered on both sides. This is where Bobby Jones made a remarkable recovery from the left rough when he won in 1926. And it is where Darren Clarke made double bogey from the bunkers to end his challenge in 2001.
Par 4 Yards 355
Par 5 Yards 592
Generally played into the wind, this hole turns back toward the clubhouse with a sharp bend to left. It requires a tee shot down the right side to give a clear view of the green. Anything too far left leaves virtually a blind shot to the green. Seven bunkers are littered along the driving zone, with five more protecting the green.
Par 4 Yards 453
The last par 3 on the course, and perhaps the most difficult because there is out-of-bounds close to the right edge of the green, which is raised and slightly angled. There were only 28 birdies on this hole in 2001, and 35 birdies in 1996. Last time, Pierre Fulke took an 8 in the final round.
Thus begins a tough closing stretch of six par 4s. This is a gentle start, and perhaps the best chance at birdie, though it has some bite. There are 15 bunkers from tee to green. Some big hitters might try to reach the green depending on the conditions.
Par 4 Yards 387 From the far end of the course starts the journey back to the clubhouse. This will be an iron off the tee down the left side to set up a classic pitch-and-run into a severely uphill green with bunkers to the left and right. Any approach too long will leave a tricky recovery.
Par 5 Yards 598 A new tee has added 56 yards, making it difficult to carry two pot bunkers at the elbow of this slight dogleg to the left. The rough can be thick if the shot goes left of those bunkers. Jim Furyk took a 10 on this hole in 2001. The slightly elevated green is exposed to the prevailing wind.
Par 4 Yards 413 Two lines of bunkers cut diagonally across the fairway up to 300 yards from the tee. The ideal tee shot moves slightly to the right half of the fairway beyond the final bunker, allowing for a good view of the green that is positioned between seven bunkers.
Par 4 Yards 444 The tee shot should avoid bunkers and sand hills on the right to provide the best angle to the green. Out-of-bounds to the right comes into play on the approach, and contours in the fairway can move the ball in that direction. David Duval made par from the right rough, a key hole in his 2001 win.
British Open at The Royal Lytham & St Annes YEAR
YEAR
YEAR
1926 1952 1958 1963
1969
1996 2001
AP
Source: British Open
Lefty Continued from D1 Sure, it was only a practice round, but considering how much money was being wagered by the lefty and playing partners Rickie Fowler, Dustin Johnson and Nick Watney, a break that good was likely to pay dividends. That was confirmed once Mickelson’s caddie, trailing by several strides, located the boss’ ball. “That’s what I’m talkin’ about!” Jim “Bones” Mackay howled. It had come to rest inches from the right edge of the last of seven deep bunkers lining the left side of the fairway. If Mickelson had been a righthander, he would have had to step into the sand, dig in his cleats and hit the approach from a lie with the ball some two feet above his own. Instead, he quickly set up on the starboard side of the ball and sent an 8-iron zooming to within a dozen feet of the flag. The value of that routine par at 17 became clear some 20 minutes later, when Mickelson and Fowler strolled off the 18th green with fatter wallets, wider grins and — wouldn’t you know it? — moments ahead of yet another downpour. There was a time when Mickelson found very little to like about playing on this side of the pond. Having grown up in San Diego, he wasn’t crazy about the weather. As a player
1974 1979 1988
Tim Hales / The Associated Press
Rickie Fowler, left, and Phil Mickelson, center, gesture during a practice round at Royal Lytham & St. Annes golf club ahead of the British Open Golf Championship in Lytham St. Annes, England Tuesday.
whose strengths are flighting the ball with different trajectories and delicate spins, he seemed unsettled by the unyielding turf and the need to play the ball along the ground. That much was apparent from his track record at the Open, easily his worst among the game’s four majors. “Aside from the success you had last year, how would you describe
how your attitude toward this championship has changed?” Mickelson was asked. He considered the question a moment. “It’s evolved favorably, I think. It took me a while to be able to understand what it meant to get the ball on the ground. ... It didn’t really click until six, eight years ago. “Now,” he added, “when it gets re-
ally bad weather, my misses in crosswinds are not as bad as they used to be, because it’s on the ground and out of the wind a lot quicker. And that’s made me really enjoy and appreciate playing links golf and playing in the elements.” Last week, Mickelson even cut short a family vacation to play in the Scottish Open, where he finished tied for 16th. “He’s finally getting the whole badweather thing,” said Butch Harmon, Mickelson’s swing coach. “He likes to bomb the ball, take risks and, until the last couple years, he was stubborn about changing. “But the second last year at (Royal) St. George’s reinforced some of the work we’d been doing and now, the worse the conditions, the more conservative his game gets. If Phil is going to win one of these,” Harmon added, “it will be because he’s playing them a lot differently from the way he used to.” Mickelson’s play on links courses is hardly the only thing that’s changed during his career. He won a PGA Tour event as a 21-year-old amateur, but another 13 years passed before Mickelson won his first major. There’s no way to know how many more he might have won had Tiger Woods not come along to dominate what should have been Mickelson’s prime. And yet, you could argue he’s aged more grace-
fully than his grandest rival and last year, according to Forbes magazine, even put more money in the bank. He’s also part of a group bidding to buy his hometown baseball team, and not just because he loves throwing the ball around and perhaps has designs on becoming the Padres’ batting-practice pitcher. “There were a number of reasons. But I really like the people I’m involved with,” Mickelson said. “And I think they’re just as competitive as I am.” The quick smile and swashbuckling style have been tempered by his recent battle with psoriatic arthritis, as well as those of his wife and mother against breast cancer. That competitive edge, though, hasn’t been dulled. “It’s important as a player to be able to keep your mind on the task at hand when you’re on the golf course and not let it waver,” he said. “Certainly for a couple of years it was difficult to do. But right now, you know, everybody is doing great. I mean, my wife and mom are doing terrific. They’re just really in a good spot. My health has been really good. ... “I feel like there’s no reason,” he said, “that I shouldn’t be able to play some of my best golf.” Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke@ap.org and follow him at Twitter.com/JimLitke.
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THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletin welcomes contributions to its weekly local golf results listings and events calendar. Clearly legible items should be faxed to the sports department, 541-385-0831, emailed to sports@bendbulletin.com, or mailed to P.O. Box 6020; Bend, OR 97708.
Club Results AWBREY GLEN Women’s Member-Member, July 12-13 Team Stroke Play Overall Net Champions — Julie Smith/Andie Edmonds, 120. First Flight — Gross: 1, Rosie Cook/Diane Robinson, 137. Net: 1, Dianne Browning/Joanne Michael, 126. 2, Carol Lee/Barb LaBissoniere, 129. 3, Shannon Morton/Roxie Mills, 129. Second Flight — Gross: 1, Molly Mount/Norman Barnes, 174. Net: 1, Carmen West/Ardene Fullerton, 125. 2, Dee Anderson/Claudia Arthur, 131. 3, Sally Batchelder/Sonya McLaughlin, 133. Third Flight — Gross: 1, Pat Gibford/Patti Moss, 189. Net: 1, Chris Larson/Roberta Dyer, 131. 2, Donna Frazier/ Deb Warren, 133. 3, Annie Goldner/Linda Stump, 135. KPs — First Flight: Thursday, Dianne Browning; Friday: Carol Lee. Second Flight: Thursday: Julie Smith; Friday: Sally Batchelder. Third Flight: Thursday: Roberta Dyer; Friday: Chris Larson. Saturday Men’s Game, July 14 Partner’s Net Better Ball 1, John Maniscalco/Jim Lee, 58. 2, Bill Macri/Ed Hagstrom, 64. Gross Skins — Dave Morton/Jeff Keller, 3. John Maniscalco/Jim Lee, 1. BEND GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB Ladies Golf Association, July 11 Stroke Play 18-Hole Division — Gross: 1, Robin Prouty, 85. Net: 1, Cindi Eielson, 75. 2, Jeannie Adkisson, 77. Nine-Hole Division — Gross: 1, Berta Cleveland, 50. Net: 1, Linda Beccio, 39.5. Ladies Member-Member Tournament, July 11, 15 Best Ball, Eclectic Overall — Gross: 1, Sue Keeney/Gretchen Byrd, 67. Net: 1, Joy Strickland/Nancy Eldredge, 56. First Flight — Gross: 1, Kandy Lamson/Donna Keller, 72. 2, Barbara Walley/Jane Goodwin, 75. Net: 1, Kay Case/ Nancy Hakala, 58. 2, Jane Lussier/Suzanne Kelso, 61. Second Flight — Gross: 1, Judie Bell-Putas/Nan Cooley, 79. 2, Jody Chapman/Sandy Small, 86. Net: 1, Mari Tank/Kay Miller, 59. 2, Mary Ellen Marlatt/Pat Putnam, 59. KPs — Gretchen Byrd, No. 3; Pat Putnam, No. 11. Alan Winchester Cup, July 12, 14 Best Ball/Chapman Overall — Gross: 1, Franz Miller/Chuck Wehrle, 145. Net: Dave Kremers/Ron Estes, 128.2. First Flight — Gross: 1 (tie), Scott Holmberg/Tom Oller, 145; Kevin Rueter/Brian Mikkelborg, 145. Net: 1, Garry Mode/Josh Rodriguez, 129.4. 2, Jim Keller/Jim Rodgers, 132.2. Second Flight — Gross: 1, Dave Thayer/Ron Weaver, 153. 2, Barry Tank/Mac Ryder, 156. Net: 1, Bill Boos/Dave MacKenzie, 134.8. 2, Tom Archey/Larry Patterson, 135.4. Third Flight — Gross: 1, Tom Archey/Larry Patterson, 135.4. 2 (tie), Jay Bennett/Jeff Markham, 162; Brian Wilber/ Rob Moore, 162. Net: 1, Bob Thye/Brian Case, 128.8. 2, Steve Stewart/Tim La Roche, 130.8. White Tee Flight — Gross: 1, Gene Powell/Roger Tallakson, 148. 2, Mike Groat/Barry Cole, 152. Net: 1, Jack Sealock/Phil Lamb, 128.4. 2, Wade Hampton/Dave Lamson, 132. KPs — First Flight: Jeff Ward, No. 6; Second Flight: Tom Dunderdale, No. 16; Third Flight: Bob Brubaker, No. 3; White Tee Flight: Gene Powell, No. 11. CROOKED RIVER RANCH Central Oregon Golf Tour, July 12 Stroke Play Gross: 1, Tony Battistella, 68. 2, Verl Steppe, 70. 3, Mark Crose, 72. 4, Jim Orr, 73. Net: 1, Matt Pinkterton, 61. 2, Norm Orio, 66. 3 (tie), Chris O’Conner, 68; Taylor Story, 68. DESERT PEAKS Wednesday Ladies Club, July 11 Net Even Holes 1, Vicki Moore, 35. 2, Juanita Hawkins, 36. 3, Teresa Lindgren, 37.5. KPs — Juanita Hawkins. Wednesday Twilight League, July 11 Blind Draw Gross: 1, Ed McDaniel/Rich Vigil, 76. 2, Kyle Devine/ Johnathan Sharp, 83. 3 (tie), Tyler Hague/Taylor Lark, 84; Brian Ringering/Shane Henning, 84. Net: 1 (tie), Trimble Cannon/Lowell Patterson, 70; Gary Burtis/Chuck McGraw, 70. 3, Shane Bush/Mike McKay, 73. KPs — (0-7 handicaps): Johnathan Sharp. (8 and over handicaps): Shane Bush. LDs — (0-7 handicaps): Sid Towell. Thursday Men’s Club, July 12 Blind Draw Gross: 1, Ken Southwick/Don Gish, 168. 2, Val Paterson/ Bruce Stecher, 184. Net: 1, Gerry Ellis/Don Henderson, 134. 2, Dick Pliska/Dean Ditmore, 148. KP — Dave Henderson. LD — Bruce Strecher. Friday Night Couples, July 13 Chapman 1, Dean Ditmore/Juanita Hawkins, 28.4. 2, Ed McDaniel/ Carol McDaniel, 34.1. 3, Scott Ditmore/Vicki Moore, 34.2. Sunday Group Play, July 15 Stroke Play Gross: 1, Brian Ringering, 71. 2, Ed McDaniel, 72. 3, Gary Hopson, 74. 4, Fred Blackman, 75. Net: 1, Russ Scholl, 63. 2 (tie), Gary Burtis, 65; Jim Manion, 65. 4 (tie), Frank Reece, 70; Gerry Ellis, 70. KP — Gary Hopson. LD — Brian Ringering. Team Standings — Brunoe Logging, 8-8. Good Old Boys, 11-5. Bel Air Funeral Home, 10-6. The Good, Bad & Ugly, 12-4. Try Two Farms, 4-12. Oregon Embroidery, 8-8. Keith Manufacturing, 12-4. Schmidt House, 4-12. Identity Zone, 6-10. Earnest Electric, 5-11. Team George, 8-0. EAGLE CREST Women’s Golf Group, July 10 at Ridge Two Net Best Balls Blue Flight — 1, Deb Coulter/Janice Jackson/Kellie Harper/Lynne Henze, 112. 2, Debbie Hehn/Ardene Fullerton/
Sandra Martin/Donna Jones, 118. 3, Shannon Morton/Sally Martin/Rae Schlappi/Karan Andrews, 121. Yellow Flight — 1, Kathleen Mooberry/Betty Stearns/ Lee Miller/Kathy Koon, 115. 2, Nancy Hakala/Janet Owens/ June Overberg/Joan Sheets, 121. 3, Dianne Rogers/Jackie Yake/Norma McPherren/Raydene Heitzhausen, 122. Green Flight — 1, Veron Rygh/Shari Noldge/Julie Glender/Joan Mathews, 115. 2, Sue Marx/Linda Wakefield/ Dolly Mealey/Lori Black, 118. 3, Janet King/Lesley Hummel/ Deborah Cox/Adrienne Nickel, 122. KPs — Blue Flight: Debbie Hehn. Yellow Flight: Jackie Yake. Green Flight: Joan Mathews. Accuracy — Yellow Fligth: Mona Benetti. Yellow Flight: Marcia Wood. Green Flight: Verna Bedient. Men’s Club, July 10 at Crooked River Ranch One Net Best Ball A Flight — 1, Dennis O’Donnell/Mike Narzisi, 57. 2, Bill Olson/Jim Kelly, 59. 3, Steve Peccia/Tim Swope, 61. 4, Bill Hurst/Dennis Flinn, 62. 5 (tie), Jerry Coday/Roger Palmer, 63; Mark Osborn/Peter O’Reilly, 63. B Flight — 1, Dan Myers/Rich Sackerson, 63. 2 (tie), Dave Rygh/Ken Wellman, 64; Bill McCullough/Jerry Decoto, 64; Don Greenman/Steve Gould, 64. 5 (tie), Alan Falco/Joe Kosanovic, 68; Gary Sowles/Phil Chappron, 68; Melvin Nunn/Michael Mooberry, 68. THE GREENS AT REDMOND Men’s Club, July 12 Net Stroke Play A Flight — Nine Holes: 1, Ed Miller, 37. 18 Holes: 1, Mike Frier, 53. 2 (tie), Marv Bibler, 57; Norm Olson 57. 4 (tie), Marv Bibler 57; Norm Olson 57. 5, Steve Adamski, 59. B Flight — Nine Holes: 1, Phil Weimer, 29.5. 18 Holes: 1, Bill Armstrong, 50. 2, Dennis Gillett, 54. 3, Don Offield, 58. 4 (tie), Ron Minnice, 60; Ron Jondahl, 60. KPs — Phil Weimar, No. 1; Darwin Thies, No. 4; Dan Morris, No. 13; Mike Frier, No. 17. Golfer of the Week — Flight A: Mike Frier. Flight B: Bill Armstrong. KAH-NEE-TA Central Oregon Junior Golf Association, July 16 Stroke Play Boys’ 16 and up — 1, Mason Rodby, 75. 2, Riley Goldstein, 80. 3, Ben Moore, 82. 4, Nathan Pajutee, 86. 5, Carter McGowan, 87. 6, Keegan Spring, 88. 7, Tyler Berg, 89. 8, Brenon Thornton, 90. 9, Sam Heinly, 97. 10, Chris Spreadborough, 99. Varsity Girls — 1, Sarah Heinly, 85. 2, Megan Mitchell, 91. 3, Alyssa Kerry, 94. 4, Chelsea Shank, 100. 5, Maddy Mode, 114. 6, Haley Nichols, 125. 7, Megan Lau, 128. 8, Caitlin Dalton, 132. Boys’ 14-15 — 1, Mason Krieger, 89. 2, Riley Roslund, 93. 3, Connor MacMillan, 96. 4, Nolan Killgore, 100. 5 (tie), Brad Smith, 102; Elisha Delgado, 102. 7, Kyle Daines, 110. 8, Nathan Rodmaker, 112. 9, Griffin Parr, 116. Boys 12-13 — 1, Max McGee, 88. 2, Mark Olsen, 96. 3 (tie), Leeson Handley, 101; Hugh Davio, 101. 5, Zach Parsons, 103. 6, Koal Robson, 105. 7, Tucker Duggan, 108. 8, Dawson Magidson, 117. 9, Timothy Stovall, 118. Boys Novice — 1, Ryan Parsons, 50. 2, Cooper Roslund, 52. 3, Cole Sprando, 57. 4, Nathan Lovejoy, 58. 5, Nolan DeMoisy, 61. 6, Teddy Charlton, 62. 7, Cooper Brown, 63. 8 (tie), Will Farrens, 64; Chase Kristiansen, 64. 10, Jake Nitsos, 66. Girls Nine Holes — 1, Ascha Kelleher, 53. 2, Faith Story, 58. 3, Raelyn Lambert, 66. 4, Lily Remlinger, 68. Boys 9-11 — 1, Willian Fleck (Card), 44. 2, Kyle Reed, 44. 3, Charlie Davio, 47. 4, Clay Cranston, 48. 5, Matthew Seals, 49. 6, Sam Renner, 50. 7, Hayden Klein, 54. 8, Hunter Holmes, 56. 9 (tie), Donnie Bagley Jr., 57; Kyle Lindikoff, 57. Boys 9-11 Short Course — 1, Lucas Hughes, 42. 2, Parker Krovisky, 45. 3, Jake Seals, 48. 4, Bode Ross, 51. 5, Noah Brown, 52. 6 (tie), Charlie Hobin, 53; Gage DeCamp, 53; Peter Davio, 53. 9, Ellison Oden, 57. 10, Wyatt Neet, 58. Girls 9-11 Short Course — 1, Summer Ross, 56. 2, Talya Magidson, 65. 3, Macy Goehring, 67. 4, Jane Nyman, 69. MEADOW LAKES Ladies of the Lake, July 12 True or False Gross: 1, Deanna Alacano, 47. 2, Lee Miller, 48. Net: 1, Edna Redhead, 32.5. 2, Barb Schmitke, 34. 3 (tie), Kathy Koon, 34.5; Gloria Schmitke, 34.5. Men’s Association, July 14 Two Man Scramble Gross: 1, Dewey Springer/Patrick Andrade, 64. 2, Jim Montgomery/Jeff Storm 65. 3, Dustin Conklin/Mike Chappell, 66. Net: 1 (tie), John McCulloch/Larry Conklin, 60; Len Sullivan/Len Sullivan, 60. 3, Rick Fosburg/Steve Spangler, 61. Skins — Gross: Les Bryan/Britton Coffer, 1. Net: JW Miller/Ron Edgerly, 1. Dennis Willings/Bob Davis, 1. Les Bryan/Britton Coffer, No. 1. Len Sullivan/Len Sullivan, 1. John McCulloch/Larry Conklin, 1. KPs — A Flight: Jeff Storm, No. 4; Jake Shinkle, No. 8; Les Bryan, No. 13; Caleb Henry, No. 17. B Flight: Rick Fosburg, No. 4; Ron Edgerly, No. 8; John McCulloch, No. 13; Larry Conklin, No. 17. Couples Golf and Grub, July 15 Scramble 1 (tie), Jim Richards/Don Bedient/Richard Koon/Danny Boyd/Gene Taylor, 33; Linda Richards/Verna Bedient/Kathy Koon/Mary Boyd/Sharon Taylor, 33. KPs — Men: Danny Boyd, No. 8. Women: Linda Richards, No. 8. RIVER’S EDGE Tuesday Men’s Club, July 10 Stroke Play Gross: 1, Craig Shurtleff, 77. 2, John Appel, 84. 3, Gary Mack, 85. 4, Dave Fiedler, 86. 5 (tie), Derek Hampton, 87; Wayne Johnson, 87. 7, Roger Bean, 88. 8 (tie), Keith Hillard, 89; Mike Reuter, 89. 10 (tie), Don Braunton, 91; Kyle Jensen, 91. Net: 1, John Appel, 64. 2, Craig Shurtleff, 65. 3, Gary Mack, 69. 4, Roger Bean, 71. 5 (tie), Wayne Johnson, 72; Guy Inglis, 72; Jack Tibbetts, 72. 8 (tie), Doug King, 73; Frank Spernak, 73. 10 (tie), Dave Fiedler, 74; Bob Deane, 74; Taylor Story, 74. KPs — John Bihary, No. 4; Dave Fiedler, No. 16. SUNRIVER RESORT Men’s Golf Club, July 11 at Woodlands Stableford First Flight — 1, M. Calhoun / G. Carpenter / B. Holmes / C. Spaulding, 145. 2, S. Brown/R. Hill/ T. Swezey / C. Meeuwsen, 142. Second Flight — 1, M. Sullivan / D. Larson / C.
Hutchins / W. Thomas, 150. 2, G. Brooks / H. Potts / J. Woischke / G. Capps, 148. Individual Stroke Play — Gross: 1, Mike Calhoun, 72. Net: 1, Mike Sullivan, 62. KPs — Clair Spauding, Nos. 5, 7; Dan Weybright, No. 12; Mike Calhoun, No. 17. WIDGI CREEK Thursday Men’s League, July 12 Nine-Hole Stroke Play 1, Ed McKeon, 32.5. 2 (tie), Jon Davis, 33; Larry Kimmel, 33. 4, Craig Johannesen, 33.5. 5 (tie), Bob Brydges, 34.5; Jim Bradbury Jr., 34.5; Craig Everett, 34.5. Skins — Ed McKeon, 2. Ty Baxter, 2. Team Results — Dukes of Hosel def. Rivals, 5-0. SixPac def. The Nomads, 5-1. The Lip-Outs def. Flippin’ Birdies, 5-1. Younger than Most def. Footwedge, 5-1. On the Rocks def. Circus Act, 6-(-2).
Hole-In-One Report July 11 JUNIPER Carolyn Thurston, Bend No. 13. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 yards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8-iron July 13 MEADOW LAKES Gene Peles, Bend No. 4. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 180 yards . . . . . . 22-degree hybrid July 15 EAGLE CREST CHALLENGE Ken Walters, Bend No. 5. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130 yards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6-iron July 15 JUNIPER Pam Garney, Redmond No. 13. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 yards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9-iron July 15 PRONGHORN FAZIO Jack Tebbs, Bend No. 8. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128 yards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8-iron July 16 EAGLE CREST RIDGE Mike Finn, Redmond No. 6. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126 yards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8-iron
Calendar The Bulletin welcomes contributions to its weekly local golf events calendar. Items should be mailed to P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; faxed to the sports department at 541-385-0831; or emailed to sports@bendbulletin.com. ——— CLINICS OR CLASSES Wednesdays — Golf clinic for senior golfers at Missing Link Family Golf Center in Redmond. Golf instructor Kenneth Johnson will introduce golfers to fundaments of golf swings. Classes held from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Cost is $15. For more information or to register, call 541-923-3426. Thursdays — Ladies golf clinic at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond. Students will be introduced to the fundamentals of golf by Stuart Allison, Juniper’s director of instruction. Clinic begins at 8:30 a.m. on July 26, Aug. 9, Aug. 23, Sept. 6, and Sept. 20. Cost is $20 per class and each is open to the public. For more information or to register: call 480-540-3015 or email pro@stuartallisongolf.com. July 30-Aug. 3 — Oregon State University’s Junior Golf Camp in Corvallis is for boys and girls ages 12 through 18. Camp attendees will recieve instruction by Oregon State women’s golf coach Risë Alexander and assistant coach Kailin Downs, a former professional golfer and Mountain View High School standout. Cost is $995, and includes instruction, room, board, t-shirt, green fees and practice ball expenses). Cost is $845 for golfers who do not need room and board. For more information or to register, visit www.oregonstategolfcamp.com. Aug. 6-8 — Adult coed golf lessons at Lost Tracks Golf Club in Bend offered by the Bend Park & Recreation District. Sessions are 5:30 to 7 p.m. and are taught by PGA professional Bob Garza. Each session includes oncourse instruction and a maximum student/teacher ratio of 8-to-1. Equipment will be provided for those students without their own. Cost is $55 for residents of the Bend Park & Recreation District, $74 for others. To register, call 541-389-7275 or visit www.bendparksandrec.org. Aug. 6-8 — Youth golf lessons for children ages 8 to 14 at Lost Tracks Golf Club in Bend offered by the Bend Park & Recreation District. Sessions are 9 a.m. to noon and are taught by PGA professional Bob Garza and his staff. Each session includes on-course instruction, lesson on golf etiquette, and a maximum student/teacher ratio of 8-to-1. Equipment will be provided for those students without their own. Cost is $55 for residents of the Bend Park & Recreation District, $74 for others. To register, call 541-389-7275 or visit www.bendparksandrec.org. ——— TOURNAMENTS July 19 — Couples Nine-Hole Golf Outing at Aspen Lakes Golf Course. Golf begins with 4:30 p.m. shotgun start and three-course dinner at Brand 33 Restaurant begins at 7 p.m. Cost is $90 per couple and includes golf and dinner. For more information or to register, call the Aspen Lakes pro shop at 541-549-4653. July 19 — Central Oregon Golf Tour tournament at Black Butte Ranch’s Big Meadow course. The Central Oregon Golf Tour is a competitive golf series held at golf courses throughout Central Oregon. Gross and net competitions open to all amateur golfers of all abilities. Prize pool awarded weekly, and membership not required. For more information or to register: 541-633-7652, 541-3185155, or www.centraloregongolftour.com. July 19-20 — Diamond in the Rough Ladies Invitational at Crooked River Ranch is a 36-hole tournament for two-person teams. Thursday’s round is a best ball followed by a Friday Chapman. Open to any golfer with an official USGA handicap. For more information or to register, call Crooked River Ranch at 541-923-6343, or visit www. crookedriveranch.com. July 20 — Rimrock Trails fundraising golf tournament at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville. Fourperson scramble begins with 8 a.m. shotgun. Cost is $320 per team and includes golf, cart and dinner. For more information or to register, call the Meadow Lakes
pro shop at 541-447-7113. July 23 — Central Oregon Junior Golf Association tournament at Tokatee Golf Club in Blue River. Tee times begin at 11 a.m. For more information, call Woodie Thomas at 541-598-4653, email cojga@hotmail.com, or visit www.cojga.com. July 23-24 — Oregon Chapter of the PGA pro-am tournament. Format for both days is a net Stableford. This two-day event is held at Sunriver Resort’s Crosswater Club and Tetherow Golf Club in Bend. Cost for amateurs is $200 per golfer. Contact: Amy Kerle, 800-574-0503 or www.pnwpga.com. July 23-34 — Central Oregon Junior at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond is an Oregon Golf Association junior tournament. For more information or to register, call the OGA at 866-981-4653 or visit www.oga.org. July 24 — Central Oregon Junior Golf Association’s looper tournament at Awbrey Glen Golf Club’s Loop Course in Bend. Event is for 6- to 8-year-olds. Golf begins at 4 p.m. Cost is $15 to register for three events, plus an $8 per-event fee. For more information, call Woodie Thomas at 541-598-4653, email cojga@hotmail.com, or visit www.cojga.com. July 25 — The Rude Rudy Golf Tournament at Awbrey Glen Golf Club in Bend benefits the Hunger Prevention Coalition of Central Oregon. Individual stroke-play event for men and women competing based on handicap index. Entry fee of $150 includes a luncheon and a barbecue dinner. Contact: Marie Gibson, 541-385-9227. July 29 — United Way Golf Classic at Sunriver Resort’s Crosswater Club. Scramble begins with a noon shotgun start. Cost is $175 per player or $700 per foursome and includes golf, cart, lunch, and awards barbecue. Sponsorships also available. Proceeds benefit the Deschutes County United Way. For more information or to register, call the Crosswater clubhouse at 541-5931145 or visit www.sunriver-resort.com. July 30 — Central Oregon Junior Golf Association tournament at River’s Edge Golf Course in Bend. Tee times begin at 8 a.m. For more information, call Woodie Thomas at 541-598-4653, email cojga@hotmail.com, or visit www.cojga.com. July 30 — U.S. Amateur sectional qualifying tournament at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond. Event is open to any amateur male player with a handicap index of 2.4 or lower. Top finishers qualify for the 111th U.S. Amateur Championship to be held Aug. 13-19 at Cherry Hills Country Club in Cherry Hills Village, Colo. Download a registration form at www.usga.org and click on the “championships” link. Aug. 3-5 — Kah-Nee-Ta Ladies Invitational at KahNee-Ta High Desert Resort & Casino near Warm Springs. Two-person 54-hole tournament begins with first-round scramble, second-round best ball, and final-round Chapman. Optional practice round also available. Maximum handicap is 36 and team members must have handicaps within 12 strokes of each other. Cost is $250 per team and includes golf, range balls, and banquet. Discounted rates at Kah-Nee-Ta Spa Wanapine are also available. For more information or to register, visit www.kahneeta.com or call 541-553-4971. Aug. 4 — Phil Wick Memorial Tournament at Prineville Golf Club. For more information, contact Prineville GC at 541-480-3566. Aug. 6 — Central Oregon Seniors Golf Organization event at Valley Golf Course in Burns. The format is individual gross and net best ball, as well as team best ball. Cash prizes awarded at each event. Tournament series is open to men’s club members at host sites, and participants must have an Oregon Golf Association handicap. Cost is $150 for the season plus a $5 per-event fee. For more information, call Ron Meisner at 541-548-3307. Aug. 6 — Central Oregon Junior Golf Association tournament at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville. Tee times begin at 8 a.m. For more information, call Woodie Thomas at 541-598-4653, email cojga@hotmail.com, or visit www.cojga.com. Aug. 8-9 — Senior Master’s Invitational at Kah-NeeTa High Desert Resort & Casino on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation is presented by the Oregon Chapter of the PGA. The 36-hole tournament features a team best ball format and individual 36-hole stroke play competition for professionals and amateurs. Golfers must turn at least 50 years old in 2012. For more information, call 541-553-4971 or visit www.orpga.com. Aug. 11 — Fundraising golf tournament for the Prineville chapter of the Elks USA at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville. Individual stroke play tournament begins with 11 a.m. shotgun. For more information or to register, call the Meadow Lakes pro shop at 541-4477113. Aug. 11-12 — Juniper Man-Gal is a 36-hole tournament for two-person coed teams at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond. For more information or to register, contact 541-548-3121 or www.playjuniper.com. Aug. 12 — Oregon Golf Association Tour senior series tournament at River’s Edge Golf Course in Bend. Tee times begin at 1 p.m. OGA Tour senior events are open to any golfer age 50 and older with a USGA handicap. Cost for this event is $79 for OGA members and $99 for nonmembers. Deadline to enter is Aug. 5. For more information or to register, visit www.oga.org or call the OGA at 503-981-4653. Aug. 12 — Central Oregon Junior Golf Association Tournament of Champions at Sunriver Woodlands course. Tee times begin at 10 a.m. For more information, call Woodie Thomas at 541-598-4653, email cojga@hotmail. com or visit www.cojga.com. Aug. 13 — Oregon Golf Association Tour senior series tournament at Broken Top Club in Bend. Tee times begin at 9 a.m. OGA Tour senior events are open to any golfer age 50 and older with a USGA handicap. Cost for this event is $79 for OGA members and $99 for nonmembers. Deadline to enter is Aug. 6. For more information or to register, visit www.oga.org or call the OGA at 503981-4653. Aug. 16 — Quail Run Women’s Golf Association’s Women’s Invitational at Quail Run Golf Course in La Pine. Four-woman scramble to benefit the La Pine High School girls golf team. Cost is $55 and includes food, contests, and prizes. For more information or to register, email doodleaiken@gmail.com. Aug. 16 — Central Oregon Golf Tour tournament at Sunriver Resort’s Meadows course. The Central Oregon Golf Tour is a competitive golf series held at golf courses throughout Central Oregon. Gross and net competitions open to all amateur golfers of all abilities. Prize pool awarded weekly, and membership not required. For more information or to register: 541-633-7652, 541-318-5155, or www.centraloregongolftour.com.
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G W R oyal & Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews BRITISH OPEN Site: Lytham, England. Schedule: Thursday-Sunday. Course: Royal Lytham and St. Annes Golf Club (7,086 yards, par 70). Purse: $7.82 million. Winner’s share: $1.41 million. Television: ESPN (ThursdayFriday, 2 a.m.-3 p.m.; Saturday, 4 a.m.-11:30 a.m.; Sunday, 3 a.m.10:30 a.m.), ESPN2 (Saturday, 1-4 a.m.) and ABC (Saturday-Sunday, noon-3 p.m.). Last year: Northern Ireland’s Darren Clarke won his first major title, finishing at 5 under at Royal St. George’s for a three-stroke victory over Phil Mickelson and Dustin Johnson. Clarke shot 6868-69-70. Last week: Zach Johnson won the John Deere Classic in Silvis, Ill., for his second PGA Tour victory of the year, beating Troy Matteson with a birdie on the second hole of a playoff. Johnson hit a 193-yard bunker shot to a foot to set up the winning birdie. ... India’s Jeev Milkha Singh won the Scottish Open to earn a British Open spot, beating Italy’s Francesco Molinari with a birdie on the first hole of a playoff. Notes: Tiger Woods, the winner at St. Andrews in 2000 and 2005 and Royal Liverpool in 2006, won the last of his 14 major titles in the 2008 U.S. Open at Torrey
Pines. He has a PGA Tour-high three victories this year to push his career total to 74. ... The tournament is the third major of the year. Bubba Watson won the Masters, and Webb Simpson took the U.S. Open. ... The event was last played at Lytham in 2001. David Duval won by three strokes that year. ... The club opened in 1866 and hosted its first Open in 1926, won by Bobby Jones. ... The course opens with a par 3 and closes with six par 4s. ... The tournament will be played at Muirfield next year, and the 2014 event is set for Royal Liverpool. ... The Canadian Open is next week at Hamilton Golf and Country Club. The European Tour will be in Austria next week for the Lyoness Open.
PGA Tour TRUE SOUTH CLASSIC Site: Madison, Miss. Schedule: Thursday-Sunday. Course: Annandale Golf Club
(7,202 yards, par 72). Purse: $3 million. Winner’s share: $540,000. Television: Golf Channel (Thursday-Sunday, noon-3 p.m.). Last year: Chris Kirk won his first PGA Tour title, beating Tom Pernice Jr. and George McNeill by a stroke. Last week: Zach Johnson won the John Deere Classic in Silvis, Ill., for his second victory of the year, beating Troy Matteson with a birdie on the second hole of a playoff. Johnson hit a 193-yard bunker shot to a foot to set up the winning birdie. Notes: Kirk is in the field along with fellow past champions Will MacKenzie (2008), D.J. Trahan (2006), Heath Slocum (2005), Cameron Beckman (2001) and Steve Lowery (2000). ... Jack Nicklaus designed the Annandale course. ... In 2009, the tournament was canceled because of unplayable conditions on the rain-soaked
course. ... The Canadian Open is next week at Hamilton Golf and Country Club in Ancaster, Ontario. ——— All Times PDT
All Day, Any Day! Call for tee time or book online @ Golfquailrun.com
(541) 536-1303 or (800) 895-GOLF
B U S IN E S S
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Stock listings, E2-3 Calendar, E4 Bankruptcies, E4
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
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IN BRIEF Unemployment rises in Oregon Oregon’s unemployment rate increased slightly in June, according to an Oregon Employment Department report issued Tuesday. The state’s seasonally adjusted jobless rate was 8.5 percent in June, up from 8.4 percent in May. A reduction of 1,200 government jobs between May and June drove much of the increase. Overall, the state had a net increase of 1,700 jobs in the onemonth span. According to the report, the state added 1,700 trade and transportation jobs, and 900 manufacturing jobs, from May to June. This time last year, Oregon’s unemployment rate was 9.6 percent. The state has added 15,900 nonfarm jobs over the last 12 months, Employment Department data shows. The unemployment rate has held between 8.4 percent and 8.8 percent since January.
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Revision proposed for paved bike path By Rachael Rees The Bulletin
The Deschutes National Forest has released a new proposal for a paved bike path connecting Sunriver to the Lava Lands Visitor Center, and is seeking public comment until the end of the month. Cycling has emerged as a major component of area tourism. Bend has hosted eight national cycling competitions in the past four years, and the region has four state-designated scenic bikeways offering routes covering 140 miles. Starting at Sunriver, the proposed 10-foot-wide, nearly 6-mile path would take bicycle riders and pedestrians to
Benham Falls and then continue along the lava flow until reaching the visitor center near Lava Butte, according to the proposal. Planning for the path started in 2009, and in April 2010, it was approved. But during the design phase, the U.S. Forest Service decided additional environmental assessment was needed, Amy Tinderholt, recreation, lands and special uses team leader for the Deschutes National Forest, wrote in an email. “We identified that some design and trail route modifications would allow for retention of more trees,” she wrote. See Path / E3
Proposed Sunriver to Lava Lands paved path To Bend, 8 miles
Benham Falls
97
L AVA FLOWS
Deschutes River
Bike path
Production increased in June U.S. industrial production increased in June, Federal Reserve data showed, led by gains among automobile and machinery makers that signal manufacturing is boosting economic growth. Output at factories, mines and utilities rose 0.4 percent last month. — Staff and wire reports
Inflation flat in June U.S. consumer prices were unchanged last month, as weak economic growth has limited the ability of companies to raise prices. June No 0.5% change
New national forest trail meets Sunriver’s bike paths
9702
Sunriver 4001
Cottonwood Rd.
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Source: Deschutes National Forest
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Greg Cross / The Bulletin
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Andy Tullis / The Bulletin
Learning lessons half a world away • Students and instructors from universities in Kazakhstan learn about leadership and innovation in Central Oregon The Bulletin
wenty-two students and instructors from universities in Kazakhstan have been visiting Central Oregon businesses and meeting local leaders to learn about leadership and innovation. On Tuesday, they toured drug-technology developer Bend Research’s manufacturing and research facilities and the nonprofit Healing Reins Therapeutic Riding Center southeast of Bend. The previous day, they stopped by the American Licorice headquarters in NorthWest Crossing and met with San-
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Bernanke offers no hint of new actions New York Times News Service
Lava Lands Visitor Center
Omar Alyahya, center, supply chain manager at Bend Research, explains elements of the manufacturing process while giving a tour of a company facility Tuesday to students and instructors from universities in Kazakhstan.
By Jordan Novet
SILVER
By Binyamin Appelbaum
Bend hotel gets new brand Bend’s Ameritel Inn in the Old Mill District has been renamed as the Hilton Garden Inn Bend, according to a news release. Ameritel, based in Boise, Idaho, will continue to operate the hotel, but as a franchise of the Hilton Garden Inn brand, one of several brands owned by Hilton Worldwide. Upgrades include fullservice breakfast and new beds and televisions in all 96 rooms. The Ameritel Inn opened in 2005.
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dy Green, CEO of the Bend informationtechnology company n-Link, and Bob Newhart, a tourism and outdoor leadership instructor at Oregon State University-Cascades Campus. The delegation’s four-day visit to Bend, wrapping up Thursday, is part of a two-year leadership-development program run by Co-Serve International, a Portland nonprofit organization. The Deschutes Economic Alliance has helped organize the site visits and activities. The students and teachers have been learning about what Co-Serve calls servant leadership, which is “about serving
and empowering others to help them reach their potential,” according to the nonprofit’s website. “How do you lead by serving, rather than commanding all the time?” said Marshall Christensen, one of Co-Serve’s leadership team members, summing up the focus of the two-year program. While touring Bend Research, several students voiced an interest in bringing back to Kazakhstan, which borders China and Russia, the values or characteristics evident at the companies they visited in Bend. “I was shocked and surprised when I (went) to the (American Licorice) restroom,” said Balzat Smagulova, a student at the Kazakh-American Free University in Ust-Kamenogorsk, Kazakhstan. See Students / E3
WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, said Tuesday that the Fed was seeking greater clarity about the health of the recovery as it weighs the need for a new round of economic stimulus. In testimony before the Senate Banking Committee, Bernanke also strongly defended the Fed’s actions after it learned of problems in 2008 with the London interbank offered rate, or Libor. And he renewed his warnings that congressional inaction on fiscal policy threatens to upend the recovery and tip the economy into recession. Repeating a formula he first articulated earlier this summer, Bernanke told the committee that the Fed’s decision about additional economic stimulus would turn on its judgment about the likely pace of job growth in coming months. The crucial issue, he said, is “whether or not there is in fact a sustained recovery going on in the labor market or are we stuck in the mud.” Bernanke also added a new wrinkle, saying the central bank “would certainly want to react against any increase in deflation risk.” With the rate of unemployment stalled above 8 percent, and some measures of inflation expectations falling, Bernanke’s remarks were read by some analysts as pointing toward probable action in the coming months. But Bernanke avoided commitments, saying that Fed officials were continuing to review the data and to consider their options. He also noted that the Fed could take steps other than asset purchases, like extending its prediction that it will keep short-term rates near zero until late 2014. “We are looking for ways to address the weakness in the economy should more actually be needed,” Bernanke told the committee. See Bernanke / E3
Carolyn Kaster / The Associated Press
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke gives testimony during a semiannual report to the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.
Seasonally adjusted monthly changes
J J A S O N D J F M AM J 2 0 11 2012 Source: Labor Department AP
New jobs go mostly to men By Don Lee
Correction In a story headlined “City eyes growth boundary change,” which appeared Tuesday, July 17, on Page E1, the status of the land swap between the state of Oregon and PremierWest Bank was incorrect. While both have agreed to swap 80-acre adjoining parcels, the exchange has not been officially completed. The Bulletin regrets the error.
Tribune Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — Even as women have moved up the economic ladder and outpaced men in earnings growth in the past decade, they are lagging behind in a crucial area — getting new jobs. Since the recession ended in June 2009, men have landed 80 percent of the 2.6 million net jobs created, including 61 percent in the past year. One reason: Male-dominated manufacturing, which experienced sharp layoffs during the recession, has rebounded in recent years,
AT WORK while government, where women hold the majority of jobs, has continued to be hit hard. But there’s something else at work. Men are grabbing a bigger share of jobs in areas, such as retail sales, that typically have been the province of women, federal data show. That’s not necessarily good news for women or men. The work that mainly has gone to women often pays less and offers skimpier benefits and less opportunity for advancement
than the jobs men previously held. Paul Cordova and Betty Mowery, a married San Francisco couple in their 40s, found that out in short order. Three days after Cordova lost his job managing facilities at a San Francisco law firm in April 2009, Mowery was laid off as a customer service representative at an air freight company. Cordova got a new job working as a clerk in a grocery store, but, at $9 an hour, it paid much less than his previous job. See Jobs / E3
Women and new jobs Since the economic recovery began three years ago, men have accounted for 80 percent of the net new jobs. Recently, women have picked up a bigger share, but still lag men in employment gains.
NET CHANGE IN JOBS FROM JUNE 2009 TO JUNE 2012 Total Construction Manufacturing Retail trade Financial activities Education and health care Leisure and hospitality Professional and business services Government
Women
Men
+512,000 –92,000 –89,000 –142,000 –14,000 +725,000 +246,000 +517,000 –396,000
+2.07 million –406,000 +326,000 +391,000 +102,000 +389,000 +263,000 +933,000 –231,000
NOTE: Figures are for selected industries and will not add up to total jobs Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics © 2012 McClatchy-Tribune News Service
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THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
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A-B-C-D AAR 0.30 ABB Ltd 0.71 ABM 0.58 ACE Ltd 1.78 ACI Wwde AES Corp AFLAC 1.32 AGCO AGL Res 1.84 AK Steel 0.20 AMC Net AOL ASML Hld 0.59 AT&T Inc 1.76 ATP O&G AU Optron 0.14 AVG Tch n Aarons 0.06 Aastrom AbtLab 2.04 AberFitc 0.70 AbdAsPac 0.42 Abiomed Abraxas AcaciaTc AcadiaPh AcadiaRlt 0.72 Accenture 1.35 AccoBrds AccretivH Accuray Accuride Achillion AcmePkt AcordaTh ActivePw h ActivsBliz 0.18 Actuant 0.04 Acuity 0.52 Acxiom AdobeSy Adtran 0.36 AdvAuto 0.24 AdvEnId AMD AdvSemi 0.11 Adventrx AdvActBear AecomTch AegeanMP 0.04 Aegon 0.13 AerCap Aeropostl AEterna gh Aetna 0.70 AffilMgrs Affymax Affymetrix Agilent 0.40 Agnico g 0.80 Agrium g 1.00 AirLease AirProd 2.56 Aircastle 0.60 Airgas 1.60 AkamaiT Akorn AlaskAir s AlaskCom 0.20 Albemarle 0.80 AlcatelLuc Alcoa 0.12 Alere AlxB Inc n AlexcoR g Alexion Alexza rs AlignTech Alkermes AllegTch 0.72 Allergan 0.20 AlliData AlliBInco 0.48 AlliBern 0.98 AlliantEgy 1.80 AlliantTch 0.80 AlldNevG AllisonT n 0.24 AllosThera AllotComm AllscriptH Allstate 0.88 AllyFn pfB 2.13 AlnylamP AlonUSA 0.16 AlphaNRs AlpGPPrp 0.60 AlpTotDiv 0.66 AlpsDvDog AlpAlerMLP 1.00 AlteraCp lf 0.32 AlterraCap 0.56 Altria 1.64 Alumina 0.24 AmBev 1.15 AmTrstFin 0.40 Amarin Amazon Amdocs Amedisys Ameren 1.60 Amerigrp AMovilL 0.28 AmAxle AmCampus 1.35 ACapAgy 5.00 AmCapLtd ACapMtg n 3.60 AEagleOut 0.44 AEP 1.88 AEqInvLf 0.12 AmExp 0.80 AFnclGrp 0.70 AGreet 0.60 AmIntlGrp ARltyCT n 0.70 AmSupr AmTower 0.88 AVangrd 0.10 AmWtrWks 1.00 Ameriprise 1.40 AmeriBrgn 0.52 AmCasino 0.50 Ametek s 0.24 Amgen 1.44 AmkorTch Amphenol 0.42 AmpioPhm Amylin Amyris Anadarko 0.36 AnalogDev 1.20 Ancestry AngiesL n AnglogldA 0.49 ABInBev 1.57 Anixter 4.50 Ann Inc Annaly 2.27 Annaly pfC 1.91 Ansys AntaresP AntheraPh Anworth 0.83 Aon plc 0.63 A123 Sys Apache 0.68 AptInv 0.72 ApolloGrp ApolloInv 0.80 ApolloRM n 3.00 Apple Inc 10.60 ApldMatl 0.36 AMCC Approach ApricusBio Aptargrp 0.88 AquaAm 0.66 ArQule ArcelorMit 0.75 ArchCap ArchC pfC 1.69 ArchCoal 0.12 ArchDan 0.70 ArcosDor 0.24 ArcticCat ArenaPhm AresCap 1.48 AriadP Ariba Inc ArkBest 0.12 ArmHld 0.16 ArmourRsd 1.20 ArmstrWld 8.55 ArrayBio Arris ArrowEl ArtioGInv 0.08 ArubaNet AsburyA AscenaRt s AscentSol h AshfordHT 0.44 Ashland 0.90 AsiaInfoL AspenIns 0.68 AspenTech AsscdBanc 0.20 AsdEstat 0.72 Assurant 0.84 AssuredG 0.36 AstexPhm AstoriaF 0.16 AstraZen 2.80 athenahlth AtlPwr g 1.15 AtlasEngy 1.00 AtlasPpln 2.24 Atmel ATMOS 1.38 AtwoodOcn AuRico g Aurizon g AuthenTec AutoNatn Autodesk Autoliv 1.88 AutoData 1.58 AutoZone Auxilium AvagoTch 0.60 AvalnRare AvalonBay 3.88 AvanirPhm AVEO Ph AveryD 1.08 AvisBudg Avnet Avon 0.92
12.67 16.41 18.67 72.00 44.97 12.67 43.61 42.35 39.33 5.39 42.56 27.93 51.50 35.82 3.29 3.58 11.93 29.09 1.98 66.46 35.40 7.75 24.15 2.78 39.32 1.61 23.80 58.30 9.53 10.79 6.43 5.20 6.68 16.40 25.54 .76 12.08 26.43 59.45 16.00 30.65 21.40 72.10 11.42 4.87 3.97 .68 24.11 16.68 5.87 4.55 11.99 19.69 .45 38.66 109.62 17.07 4.50 37.34 36.86 92.57 18.76 80.28 12.39 83.06 30.23 16.20 37.23 2.31 57.23 1.11 8.28 19.06 34.00 4.09 98.97 3.58 30.89 17.49 31.16 89.95 131.11 8.49 12.56 46.86 45.70 27.53 16.75 1.74 22.54 9.79 34.01 23.35 18.64 9.99 6.83 6.48 4.32 25.87 16.53 30.69 23.88 35.81 2.72 36.65 30.00 14.86 216.93 29.88 12.97 33.80 90.01 27.51 10.02 47.09 35.29 9.88 24.73 20.49 41.91 11.46 58.68 37.76 13.48 32.29 11.06 4.39 73.03 27.68 35.60 51.26 39.79 17.34 33.33 78.76 4.72 51.36 3.20 30.81 3.29 71.82 36.57 27.33 14.93 32.17 77.28 51.62 26.07 17.16 26.15 56.19 5.26 1.60 6.85 47.68 .76 85.93 28.27 31.01 8.01 19.98 606.94 10.39 4.71 27.57 3.13 49.82 26.64 6.15 15.06 39.71 27.23 5.84 27.25 13.39 36.27 11.05 16.60 17.81 44.49 11.45 21.70 7.42 46.69 3.78 13.89 31.02 3.19 12.47 26.58 18.42 1.16 7.95 69.40 10.85 29.73 22.74 13.29 14.82 34.62 12.08 2.23 10.08 46.33 79.16 13.64 32.34 33.86 6.05 36.84 41.72 6.62 4.47 5.00 40.93 31.93 54.45 56.04 380.89 26.88 33.04 1.46 151.00 3.26 13.45 28.59 15.39 29.71 16.45
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C 9.42 6.76 3.26 19.40 6.43 41.78 1.95 42.40 78.07 3.60 33.84 63.12 73.07 45.62 32.33 1.17 14.45 13.84 25.00 19.24 22.30 107.43 37.09 14.86 49.36 2.37 22.24 42.30 55.73 12.69 398.91 5.17 71.84 58.76 3.96 13.48 42.97 57.34 3.95 37.72 24.14 38.00 25.69 16.23 28.09 27.38 86.19 18.25 76.58 50.14 48.69 .60 13.97 57.95 5.25 1.07 45.43 73.32 16.62 56.43 24.20 77.69 26.96 3.74 15.62 58.18 10.91 62.56 .65 27.29 105.16 21.53 23.15 18.11 25.70 32.33 31.79 31.99 40.08 12.83 19.37 27.72 41.20 40.11 14.47 76.01 2.81 23.45 8.77 16.43 5.53 34.39 24.71 89.24 64.37 3.91 15.99 56.28 30.80 16.14 63.41 17.03 29.18 71.53 14.94 76.55 67.59 17.09 75.90 29.81 23.95 21.16 114.81 20.45 27.78 2.57 5.13 12.34 22.99 30.23 13.00 13.68 96.06 8.30 24.98 7.93 48.03 17.10 32.22 52.90 63.73 122.50 20.96 3.21 13.21 27.45 24.33 17.70 3.16 23.24 8.34 10.39 14.14 14.03 17.01 60.26 34.09 13.62 12.16 41.51 57.88 86.53 5.21 122.17 103.26 .53 59.25 11.66 64.29 .64 2.79 6.33 14.99 19.09 11.50 18.64 55.23 60.60 18.28 11.88 50.83 51.29 16.40 8.91 99.57 28.59 13.30 46.87 75.94 .23 1.84 19.60 12.12 27.00 10.80 26.78 11.33 14.82 6.43 1.35 4.56 36.44 5.59 31.25 24.85 13.99 12.55 47.23 5.08 58.13 1.35 12.90 105.17 19.00 63.24 9.95 7.25 6.88 8.57 48.19 35.27 4.45 11.80 80.31 16.61 62.14 48.78 49.87 75.85 91.67 17.88 49.86 21.75 20.97 24.34 56.23 8.75 10.97 10.25 21.50 14.76
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2.00 80.99 13.39 54.03 76.36 42.30 0.40 35.69 50.64 46.30 2.62 2.00 28.90 0.60 49.35 0.29 31.39 35.50 8.62 55.06 80.95 53.30 2.11 54.23 3.00 32.18 1.80 76.06 0.36 32.23 1.04 13.26 1.47 0.60 24.47 1.26 51.58 1.28 30.25 1.36 43.64 2.76 19.31 44.32 70.27 0.12 2.17 1.72 48.35 0.60 27.95 3.06 66.34 0.68 14.81 1.52 71.48 0.60 34.47 1.16 2.70 17.69 4.17 1.16 10.14
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2.85 0.68 0.88 3.06 0.40 0.88 0.20 0.40 2.08 1.04 1.52 0.76 1.25 0.76 1.12 1.01 0.98 1.17 1.33 0.20 0.80 1.60 1.30 0.40 2.04 0.18 0.38 1.60
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WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Path
Jobs
Public comment period
Continued from E1 “Some roads that were not closed under previous decisions in the area needed to be closed to public motorized access for public safety.” Because of the assessment, construction on the project was delayed and changes were made, resulting in a new proposal released June 29. Some of the changes include closing roads to motor vehicles and adding a restroom, informational kiosks, trail turnouts and a parking area at the Sunriver end, and minimizing tree removal, according to the letter. Tinderholt said the Forest Service and Oregon De-
Students Continued from E1 “There was a lot of body lotion, hand cream and hair spray, and combs, brushes, toothpaste and toothbrushes. … It means that they take care of the employees. … In our country, we can only see toilet paper.” Smagulova would like to help the employees at a company she wants to start someday. She believes that caring for employees will lead companies to success, she said.
Bernanke Continued from E1 Bernanke’s cautious testimony underscored the Fed’s reluctance to ride once again to the aid of the economy. The central bank has intervened repeatedly when the economy appears at risk of sliding back into recession, and Bernanke’s testimony Tuesday included his standard promise to maintain that vigilance. But the Fed has not acted with similar urgency to reduce the high rate of unemployment when growth is merely lackluster. The members of the committee seemed little interested in these questions of monetary policy, however, instead preferring to question Bernanke about revelations that banks had manipulated Libor, a benchmark rate used in determining the value of a wide range of financial assets. As Patrick Toomey, R-Pa., said to Bernanke, “I just wanted to touch briefly on
partment of Transportation have secured a $1.87 million Federal Highway Administration grant for design and construction. “We will complete the design for the project,” she said, “and upon a new decision, be ready to construct next year.” The Forest Service is ac-
cepting comments about the proposal until July 30, Tinderholt said. After the first phase ends, Tinderholt said forest officials will complete the environmental analysis and release a draft for public comment.
Didar Atalykova, a university graduate in the CoServe program from Almaty, Kazakhstan, said she was inspired by Newhart’s remarks on the importance of innovation. Newhart told the group that creativity declines as people age, Atalykova said. That’s why Atalykova wants to hold competitions to encourage elementary schools students to be as creative as possible, so that they can continue to be creative as they get older. “I want everyone to make innovations,” she said. “It can
be new methods of teaching or organizing stuff that can (make) things more efficient.” Executives didn’t accept cellphone calls while speaking to students, which Anya Volf, a Co-Serve staffer from Kazakhstan, interpreted as a sign of respect for the visitors. They pointed to signs on walls that show off mission statements and emphasized taking safety precautions. “(Companies) actually work to fulfill their mission statements here,” Volf said.
— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
— Reporter: 541-633-2117, jnovet@bendbulletin.com
monetary policy before moving on to the Libor scandal.” In response to questions from members of both parties, Bernanke said the Fed has responded properly when it learned of problems with Libor by notifying British regulators, who oversee the index, and by offering suggestions for improvements. Bernanke also renewed his frequent warnings that current fiscal policy is endangering economic growth. He said planned cuts in federal spending at the end of the year could push the economy back into recession, while the projected long-term growth of spending is an “unsustainable path.” “The most effective way that Congress could help to support the economy right now,” Bernanke said in his prepared testimony, “would be to work to address the nation’s fiscal challenges in a way that takes into account both the need for long-run sustainability and the
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 ... 1.40 .88 1.10f ... .28 .53f .22 .90f .20 .46 ... ... .67 ... .80
16 17 ... 41 13 ... 10 19 27 15 14 7 ... 11 8 21 6 ... 21 14 11
YTD Last Chg %Chg 37.23 27.39 7.92 21.94 73.11 5.61 47.23 52.25 96.06 8.40 18.51 18.87 10.44 25.38 7.96 21.96 3.61 11.51 22.94 14.86 29.66
-.03 +.08 +.11 +.45 +.14 +.06 +.50 +.05 +.91 +.02 +.18 +.06 -.13 +.25 +.11 +.04 +.06 +.19 +.16 +.16 +.22
-.8 +6.4 +42.4 +9.9 -.3 +28.1 +.1 +12.2 +15.3 +39.5 -26.2 -26.7 +.4 +4.7 +3.5 -9.3 -39.2 +42.6 +6.9 +9.6 +14.3
Metal NY HSBC Bank US NY Merc Gold NY Merc Silver
Price (troy oz.) $1586.00 $1589.10 $27.292
In recent months, women have picked up a bigger share of the new jobs than they had before, but it’s uncertain whether that trend will continue. And they have a long way to go to cut down the gender disparity in finding new jobs — a gap that has drawn notice in this presidential election year. This spring, GOP candidate Mitt Romney’s campaign blamed the hardships for women on President Barack Obama’s policies, although analysts pointed out Romney’s claims ignored the fact that men took their lumps earlier in the recession. Unemployment peaked in late 2009 for men and a full year later for women. The gender gap has raised concerns about possible discrimination in hiring. If the trend persists, it could set back gains made by women in the
Some employers said they are seeing more male applicants for jobs in industries such as retail — a trend that Dov Charney, chief executive of American Apparel Inc., welcomes. “Gender stereotypes still exist; many men don’t want to work on the retail floor,” said Charney, whose Los Angeles apparel maker operates 140 stores in the U.S. But he sees change. “More and more men are interested in fashion because gender definitions are changing,” he said, “because the world is saying it’s OK.” For many men, though, alternative careers aren’t so much a choice as an act of desperation. “They really need the work; they can’t afford to be choosy,” said Harry Holzer, a labor expert at Georgetown University and the Urban Institute. Three years ago, John Moser lost his $50,000-a-year job as a development and marketing
Div PE
NikeB Nordstrm NwstNG OfficeMax Paccar PlanarSy PlumCrk PrecCastpt Safeway Schnitzer Sherwin StancrpFn Starbucks TriQuint Umpqua US Bancrp WashFed WellsFargo WstCstBcp Weyerhsr
1.44 1.08 1.78 ... .80 ... 1.68 .12 .70f .75f 1.56 .89f .68 ... .36f .78 .32 .88 ... .60
YTD Last Chg %Chg
20 92.76 -.26 -3.7 16 52.48 +.70 +5.6 20 47.57 +.69 -.8 15 4.57 -.02 +.7 11 36.58 -.12 -2.4 ... 1.62 -.01 -15.2 36 41.20 +.44 +12.7 20 164.24 +1.50 -.3 10 16.19 +.28 -23.1 13 29.96 +.40 -29.1 29 128.72 +1.49 +44.2 11 33.00 -4.09 -10.2 31 53.73 +.83 +16.8 22 5.00 -.06 +2.7 18 13.81 +.16 +11.5 13 32.95 +.17 +21.8 13 16.06 +.19 +14.8 11 34.12 +.10 +23.8 12 19.99 +.27 +28.1 36 23.48 -.17 +25.8
Prime rate
Pvs Day
Time period
Percent
$1591.00 $1591.20 $27.297
Last Previous day A week ago
3.25 3.25 3.25
NYSE
Most Active ($1 or more) Name
Vol (00)
S&P500ETF BkofAm SprintNex NokiaCp SPDR Fncl
1241979 136.36 +.93 1217118 7.92 +.11 957867 3.65 +.19 683705 1.69 -.11 587592 14.76 +.08
Last Chg
Gainers ($2 or more) Name
Last
Chg %Chg
Edenor McMoRn ProtoLab n ForestOil s KeyEngy
2.66 +.36 +15.7 13.14 +1.45 +12.4 37.73 +3.62 +10.6 6.73 +.64 +10.5 7.49 +.65 +9.5
Losers ($2 or more)
Amex
Most Active ($1 or more) Name CheniereEn NwGold g NovaGld g IsoRay Rentech
Vol (00)
Last Chg
223218 13.84 -.85 31916 9.67 +.22 28188 5.86 +.08 23615 1.05 -.18 17783 2.12 ...
Gainers ($2 or more)
Name
Vol (00)
Intel SiriusXM HumGen PwShs QQQ MicronT
Last Chg
572225 25.38 +.25 486030 2.09 +.01 400799 14.21 +.02 377769 63.53 +.33 351669 5.77 -.23
Gainers ($2 or more) Name
Last
TelInstEl MeetMe Lannett CCA Inds Medgen wt
3.75 2.26 5.06 4.51 8.00
+.45 +13.6 +.20 +9.7 +.31 +6.5 +.22 +5.1 +.37 +4.8
CSR plc n DigitalGen FuelTech NobltyH lf Andatee
17.78 +4.22 +31.1 11.80 +2.19 +22.8 5.39 +.82 +17.9 6.32 +.87 +16.0 2.01 +.22 +12.3
Losers ($2 or more) Name
Last
NwOriEd s AuRico g JustEngy g StancrpFn Youku
14.62 6.62 10.23 33.00 16.03
-7.64 -.92 -1.27 -4.09 -1.98
-34.3 -12.2 -11.0 -11.0 -11.0
SL Ind CheniereEn MtnPDia g Ellomay Richmnt g
15.60 -1.00 13.84 -.85 4.57 -.28 5.20 -.27 3.50 -.17
2,037 987 134 3,158 249 43
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows
Diary Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows
Nasdaq
Most Active ($1 or more)
Chg %Chg
Chg %Chg
Chg %Chg
Losers ($2 or more)
Chg %Chg
Whether women can land more new jobs depends to a large extent on the strength of the public sector. Not only are women more likely to hold public sector jobs, but they also are more likely to work in fields — such as teaching and clerical work — that have been disproportionately cut in the past three years, said Betsey Stevenson, an economist at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School. “It may be that among the hundreds of thousands of female teachers and other women who lost their jobs, some may be giving up the idea of working — at least for now,” Stevenson said. Andrea Fogelman, a 26year-old single mother of a 10month-old boy, was laid off in June from her job as a kindergarten teacher in Reading, Pa. She makes ends meet with unemployment benefits and has moved back in with her parents. She has applied for other teaching positions in the area. Kim Duelley, 51, who had been a second-grade teacher for three years, also lost her teaching job in Reading in June. Having previously worked for 20 years as a police officer in Orlando, Fla., Duelley knows what it’s like to break the gender barrier. But at her age, she’s worried about the tough economy. “Outside of education, I’m not sure how I would do,” she said. “I’m scared to go out in the job market because I don’t know what I’m going to be facing.”
Indexes
Last
Last
The public sector
Call 541-389-9690
Name
Name
specialist. Since then, Moser, who lives near Allentown, Pa., and has a master’s degree in public relations, has held retail jobs selling club memberships, working part-time for a museum and, more recently, making sales calls for a lighting distributor. “I decided to do what I had to do to keep the family going forward,” Moser said, noting he has a daughter in college.
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Shifting perceptions
Market recap
Name
Precious metals
A long way to go
fragility of the recovery.” Republicans pressed Bernanke to forswear action, warning that new measures would eventually lead to higher inflation and suggesting that the Fed’s policies are allowing Congress to delay a reckoning with the federal debt. Bernanke, who is scheduled to testify today before the House Financial Services Committee, as part of his twice-a-year report to Congress on the state of monetary policy, rejected both arguments. Of standing still to put pressure on Congress, Bernanke said dryly, “I don’t think that’s my responsibility.”
Northwest stocks Name
Continued from E1 Mowery couldn’t find any job and finally stopped looking. She went back to college this year to retrain for a career in mental health. “It’s a huge step down,” Mowery said of their family income, which was close to $100,000 before the start of the recession at the end of 2007. The retail trade demonstrates how much things have changed in recent years. Three years ago, women made up a majority of the payrolls in the retail trade, just as they have throughout most of the last three decades for which data are available. But since the sector hit bottom in December 2009, men have landed more than 440,000 retail jobs while women have lost 49,500 positions. Men now account for 51 percent of the 14.75 million retail jobs in the country. Similarly, the male share of payrolls has inched higher in financial services such as banking and real estate, health care and education, and leisure and hospitality businesses, although women still outnumber men in each sector. “During this recovery, men have looked for alternative careers and jobs in other sectors,” said Adriana Kugler, the Labor Department’s chief economist.
The Deschutes National Forest will be taking comments about the proposed bike and pedestrian path until July 30. Comments can be made: • By email to comments-pacificnorthwest-deschutes-bendftrock@fs.fed.us, with “Sunriver to LLVC Path” in the subject line • By phone at 541-383-4012.
workplace, experts said. “It’s hard to know (whether) some employers place a priority on men going back to work,” said Joan Entmacher, vice president for family economic security at the National Women’s Law Center. Of particular concern, she said: Opportunities for women in higher-paying fields such as manufacturing are shrinking. Since December 2009, manufacturing has added nearly 500,000 net new jobs, but the head count for women at factories has stagnated. Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, said men may have an edge because they tend to have a longer work history. But he also suspects some employers will “take a male applicant more seriously even (when a man and woman are) equally qualified.” Gender discrimination in hiring is hard to prove. In fiscal 2011, more men than women filed complaints of unfair hiring based on gender with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. It’s the first time that has happened in at least a decade, possibly reflecting the increased entry by men into women-dominated workplaces.
E3
Name
Last
Chg %Chg
-6.0 -5.8 -5.8 -4.9 -4.6
DTS Inc 21Vianet MattrssF n Manntch rs TudouH n
18.28 9.37 25.96 5.90 24.34
-6.14 -1.82 -3.81 -.79 -3.10
227 205 41 473 16 6
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows
Diary
-25.1 -16.3 -12.8 -11.8 -11.3
Diary 1,373 1,106 112 2,591 96 70
52-Week High Low
Name
13,338.66 10,404.49 5,487.74 3,950.66 486.39 381.99 8,423.05 6,414.89 2,498.89 1,941.99 3,134.17 2,298.89 1,422.38 1,074.77 14,951.57 11,208.42 847.92 601.71
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
12,805.54 5,111.90 485.55 7,794.77 2,385.54 2,910.04 1,363.67 14,278.26 799.45
+78.33 -38.20 +1.09 +51.75 +9.48 +13.10 +10.03 +97.42 +2.79
+.62 -.74 +.23 +.67 +.40 +.45 +.74 +.69 +.35
+4.81 +1.84 +4.49 +4.25 +4.71 +11.70 +8.43 +8.25 +7.90
+1.73 -4.41 +12.42 -5.57 -.07 +2.95 +2.78 +1.22 -4.21
World markets
Currencies
Here is how key international stock markets performed Tuesday. Market Close % Change
Key currency exchange rates Tuesday compared with late Monday 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
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
315.30 2,229.85 3,176.97 5,629.09 6,577.64 19,455.33 41,273.50 13,536.73 3,468.86 8,755.00 1,821.96 3,014.80 4,175.32 5,745.61
-.22 +.16 -.09 -.59 +.18 +1.75 +.89 -.94 +.04 +.35 +.23 +.54 +.78 +.20
t s t t s s s t s s s s s s
1.0316 1.5647 .9875 .002043 .1569 1.2289 .1289 .012643 .076026 .0308 .000874 .1436 1.0230 .0334
1.0254 1.5630 .9856 .002040 .1567 1.2278 .1289 .012687 .075619 .0308 .000872 .1420 1.0223 .0333
Selected mutual funds YTD Name NAV Chg %Ret Amer Century Inv: EqInc 7.68 +0.04 +6.8 GrowthI 26.90 +0.15 +9.5 Ultra 24.80 +0.13 +8.2 American Funds A: AmcpA p 20.30 +0.14 +8.3 AMutlA p 27.45 +0.21 +7.4 BalA p 19.49 +0.08 +8.1 BondA p 12.90 -0.01 +4.3 CapIBA p 51.71 +0.12 +7.0 CapWGA p 33.85 +0.14 +7.1 CapWA p 21.13 +0.02 +4.5 EupacA p 36.67 +0.06 +4.3 FdInvA p 37.80 +0.25 +7.5 GovtA p 14.61 -0.01 +2.0 GwthA p 31.43 +0.19 +9.4 HI TrA p 10.97 +7.0 IncoA p 17.49 +0.07 +6.4 IntBdA p 13.77 -0.01 +2.1 ICAA p 29.17 +0.19 +8.6 NEcoA p 26.65 +0.08 +12.1 N PerA p 28.23 +0.07 +7.9 NwWrldA 48.85 +0.17 +5.9 SmCpA p 36.80 +0.09 +10.9 TxExA p 13.02 +0.01 +6.1 WshA p 30.26 +0.19 +7.7 Artisan Funds: Intl 21.78 +0.18 +9.8 IntlVal r 26.32 +0.17 +4.9 MidCap 35.84 -0.05 +8.8 MidCapVal 20.02 +0.15 +1.6 Baron Funds: Growth 55.53 +0.27 +8.9 Bernstein Fds: IntDur 14.15 -0.02 +3.6 DivMu 14.89 +2.1 BlackRock A: EqtyDiv 19.38 +0.13 +7.3 GlAlA r 18.84 +0.08 +3.7 BlackRock B&C: GlAlC t 17.48 +0.07 +3.2 BlackRock Instl:
EquityDv 19.43 +0.13 GlbAlloc r 18.95 +0.08 Cohen & Steers: RltyShrs 69.86 +0.64 Columbia Class A: TxEA p 14.21 +0.01 Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 29.46 +0.15 AcornIntZ 37.10 +0.06 LgCapGr 12.45 +0.06 Credit Suisse Comm: ComRet t 8.15 -0.02 DFA Funds: IntlCorEq 9.26 +0.02 USCorEq1 11.58 +0.08 USCorEq2 11.38 +0.08 Davis Funds A: NYVen A 34.87 +0.27 Davis Funds Y: NYVenY 35.28 +0.29 Delaware Invest A: Diver Inc p 9.44 Dimensional Fds: EmMCrEq 17.94 +0.16 EmMktV 26.74 +0.25 IntSmVa 13.74 LargeCo 10.76 +0.08 USLgVa 20.65 +0.22 US Small 22.17 +0.07 US SmVa 25.12 +0.09 IntlSmCo 14.03 +0.02 Fixd 10.34 IntVa 14.33 +0.06 Glb5FxInc 11.24 2YGlFxd 10.12 Dodge&Cox: Balanced 72.12 +0.52 Income 13.74 IntlStk 29.83 +0.07 Stock 110.11 +1.06 DoubleLine Funds: TRBd I 11.28 TRBd N p 11.27 Dreyfus:
+7.4 +3.9 +16.1 +6.4 +8.2 +8.7 +3.6 -0.4 +1.9 +8.3 +8.2 +7.3 +7.5 +5.2 +4.7 +3.6 +2.6 +9.6 +8.8 +8.5 +8.8 +2.9 +0.7 -0.7 +3.5 +0.7 +8.3 +5.3 +2.0 +9.5 NA NA
Aprec 43.17 +0.23 Eaton Vance A: LgCpVal 18.52 +0.13 Eaton Vance I: FltgRt 9.00 GblMacAbR 9.81 +0.02 LgCapVal 18.57 +0.14 FMI Funds: LgCap p 16.63 +0.13 FPA Funds: NewInco 10.62 -0.01 FPACres 27.54 +0.15 Fairholme 28.64 +0.32 Federated Instl: TotRetBd 11.54 StrValDvIS 5.11 +0.02 Fidelity Advisor A: NwInsgh p 21.81 +0.12 StrInA 12.49 +0.01 Fidelity Advisor I: NwInsgtI 22.11 +0.12 Fidelity Freedom: FF2010 13.82 +0.03 FF2010K 12.65 +0.02 FF2015 11.54 +0.02 FF2015K 12.71 +0.03 FF2020 13.92 +0.03 FF2020K 13.07 +0.03 FF2025 11.53 +0.03 FF2025K 13.14 +0.04 FF2030 13.71 +0.04 FF2030K 13.26 +0.04 FF2035 11.30 +0.04 FF2035K 13.28 +0.05 FF2040 7.88 +0.03 FF2040K 13.31 +0.05 Fidelity Invest: AllSectEq 12.33 +0.09 AMgr50 15.82 +0.03 AMgr20 r 13.18 Balanc 19.43 +0.08 BalancedK 19.43 +0.08 BlueChGr 46.55 +0.16 CapAp 28.55 +0.15
+7.4 +8.9 +4.6 +2.0 +9.1 +9.0 +1.2 +3.7 +23.7 +4.3 +7.3 +10.6 +5.7 +10.8 +5.8 +5.8 +5.9 +6.0 +6.4 +6.4 +6.9 +7.0 +7.0 +7.2 +7.3 +7.4 +7.3 +7.4 +9.8 +6.2 +4.4 +7.7 +7.8 +9.7 +16.0
CpInc r 9.11 Contra 74.87 ContraK 74.86 DisEq 23.31 DivIntl 26.86 DivrsIntK r 26.84 DivGth 28.17 Eq Inc 44.62 EQII 18.85 Fidel 34.72 FltRateHi r 9.83 GNMA 11.97 GovtInc 10.94 GroCo 90.49 GroInc 19.98 GrowthCoK90.47 HighInc r 9.04 IntBd 11.09 IntmMu 10.64 IntlDisc 29.21 InvGrBd 12.01 InvGB 7.95 LgCapVal 10.78 LowP r 38.49 LowPriK r 38.48 Magelln 69.41 MidCap 28.46 MuniInc 13.48 NwMkt r 17.20 OTC 56.45 100Index 9.78 Puritn 19.03 PuritanK 19.02 SAllSecEqF12.34 SCmdtyStrt 8.98 SCmdtyStrF 9.01 SrsIntGrw 10.79 SrsIntVal 8.40 SrInvGrdF 12.01 STBF 8.56 StratInc 11.18 TotalBd 11.24 USBI 12.01 Value 68.84
+0.01 +0.42 +0.42 +0.16 +0.06 +0.06 +0.16 +0.28 +0.12 +0.22 -0.01 -0.02 +0.34 +0.13 +0.34
+0.08 -0.01 -0.01 +0.09 +0.19 +0.19 +0.34 +0.15 +0.01 +0.04 -0.04 +0.07 +0.05 +0.05 +0.09 -0.01 -0.01 +0.02 +0.01 -0.01 +0.01 -0.01 -0.01 +0.32
+8.4 +11.0 +11.1 +8.4 +5.3 +5.3 +8.9 +9.5 +9.6 +11.5 +3.7 +2.5 +2.4 +11.9 +10.6 +12.0 +8.0 +3.4 +3.4 +5.8 +4.2 +4.5 +7.1 +7.7 +7.8 +10.4 +9.0 +5.5 +11.8 +3.2 +10.9 +8.5 +8.6 +9.9 +0.2 +0.4 +6.7 +4.0 +4.2 +1.4 +5.8 +4.6 +3.4 +8.5
Fidelity Spartan: 500IdxInv 48.34 +0.36 +9.7 500Idx I 48.34 +0.36 +9.7 Fidelity Spart Adv: ExMktAd r 38.23 +0.19 +9.1 500IdxAdv 48.34 +0.36 +9.7 TotMktAd r 39.46 +0.28 +9.6 USBond I 12.01 -0.01 +3.4 First Eagle: GlblA 47.10 +0.16 +4.4 OverseasA 21.07 +0.06 +3.5 Forum Funds: AbsStrI r 11.26 +1.9 Frank/Temp Frnk A: FedTFA p 12.66 +0.01 +6.3 GrwthA p 47.63 +0.26 +6.7 HYTFA p 10.84 +8.0 IncomA p 2.16 +0.01 +6.8 RisDvA p 36.31 +0.23 +4.3 StratInc p 10.48 +0.02 +6.5 USGovA p 6.90 -0.01 +1.6 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: GlbBdAdv 12.93 +0.06 +7.6 IncmeAd 2.15 +0.01 +7.4 Frank/Temp Frnk C: IncomC t 2.18 +0.01 +6.4 Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: SharesA 21.31 +0.16 +7.6 Frank/Temp Temp A: GlBd A p 12.97 +0.06 +7.4 GrwthA p 16.97 +0.08 +4.2 WorldA p 14.22 +0.06 +3.5 Frank/Temp Tmp B&C: GlBdC p 13.00 +0.07 +7.2 GE Elfun S&S: US Eqty 42.11 +0.28 +8.7 GMO Trust III: Quality 22.85 +0.13 +9.6 GMO Trust IV: IntlIntrVl 18.54 +0.05 -0.8 GMO Trust VI: EmgMkts r 10.57 +0.12 +2.5 Quality 22.86 +0.13 +9.6 Goldman Sachs Inst:
HiYield 7.17 MidCapV 36.08 +0.25 Harbor Funds: Bond 12.79 CapApInst 40.35 +0.10 IntlInv t 54.70 +0.33 Intl r 55.29 +0.33 Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 30.82 +0.15 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 39.84 +0.25 Hussman Funds: StrGrowth 11.43 -0.02 IVA Funds: Wldwide I r15.47 +0.05 Invesco Funds A: Chart p 16.77 +0.12 CmstkA 16.37 +0.15 EqIncA 8.82 +0.06 GrIncA p 19.83 +0.17 HYMuA 9.98 Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 22.71 +0.10 AssetStA p 23.47 +0.11 AssetStrI r 23.69 +0.10 JPMorgan A Class: CoreBd A 12.10 -0.01 JPMorgan R Cl: CoreBond 12.10 -0.01 JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBd 12.09 -0.01 HighYld 7.93 +0.01 ShtDurBd 11.00 USLCCrPls 21.44 +0.15 Janus T Shrs: PrkMCVal T20.91 +0.13 John Hancock Cl 1: LSBalanc 12.96 +0.05 LSGrwth 12.76 +0.07 Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 18.12 +0.14 Longleaf Partners: Partners 28.71 +0.17 Loomis Sayles:
+8.2 +7.5 NA +9.3 +5.2 +5.4 +6.9 +7.1 -8.0 +0.7 +4.5 +8.4 +6.9 +7.5 +9.5 +5.0 +5.4 +5.5 +3.6 +3.9 +3.8 +7.5 +1.1 +8.6 +3.6 NA NA +7.9 +7.7
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Perm Port Funds: Permannt 46.93 +0.09 Pioneer Funds A: PionFdA p 40.02 +0.28 Price Funds: BlChip 43.08 +0.25 CapApp 22.14 +0.08 EmMktS 29.69 +0.24 EqInc 24.80 +0.21 EqIndex 36.75 +0.27 Growth 35.78 +0.16 HlthSci 41.56 +0.38 HiYield 6.73 InstlCpG 17.61 +0.10 IntlBond 9.81 +0.01 Intl G&I 11.79 +0.06 IntlStk 12.82 +0.08 MidCap 55.92 +0.25 MCapVal 23.15 +0.15 N Asia 15.06 +0.04 New Era 40.17 +0.46 N Horiz 34.48 +0.02 N Inc 9.89 -0.01 OverS SF 7.62 +0.04 R2010 15.96 +0.05 R2015 12.36 +0.05 R2020 17.05 +0.08 R2025 12.44 +0.06 R2030 17.81 +0.09 R2035 12.57 +0.07 R2040 17.87 +0.11 ShtBd 4.85 SmCpStk 34.46 +0.11 SmCapVal 37.33 +0.08 SpecIn 12.74 +0.02 Value 24.40 +0.24 Putnam Funds A: GrInA p 13.53 +0.10 Royce Funds: PennMuI r 11.09 +0.03 PremierI r 18.66 +0.04 Schwab Funds: 1000Inv r 38.64 +0.28 S&P Sel 21.46 +0.15
+1.8 +4.2 +11.5 +7.4 +4.1 +8.7 +9.5 +12.4 +27.5 +7.7 +9.2 +2.0 +2.3 +4.3 +6.0 +8.2 +8.3 -4.5 +11.1 +4.0 +4.1 +6.3 +6.7 +7.2 +7.4 +7.7 +7.8 +7.8 +2.0 +10.3 +8.3 +5.8 +8.3 +7.3 +3.1 +0.8 +9.2 +9.7
Scout Funds: Intl 29.14 +0.16 Sequoia 155.43 +1.30 TCW Funds: TotRetBdI 9.98 +0.01 Templeton Instit: ForEqS 16.99 +0.01 Thornburg Fds: IntValA p 24.66 +0.07 IncBuildC p18.31 +0.08 IntValue I 25.21 +0.08 Tweedy Browne: GblValue 23.62 -0.01 Vanguard Admiral: BalAdml 23.10 +0.09 CAITAdm 11.66 CpOpAdl 71.90 +0.28 EMAdmr r 32.89 +0.35 Energy 106.99 +1.10 EqInAdm n 48.82 +0.35 ExtdAdm 42.80 +0.21 500Adml 125.78 +0.92 GNMA Ad 11.08 -0.01 GrwAdm 34.92 +0.20 HlthCr 60.22 +0.66 HiYldCp 5.92 InfProAd 29.04 -0.08 ITBdAdml 12.13 -0.01 ITsryAdml 11.83 -0.02 IntGrAdm 53.96 +0.24 ITAdml 14.32 ITGrAdm 10.32 -0.01 LtdTrAd 11.18 LTGrAdml 10.97 -0.04 LT Adml 11.72 MCpAdml 95.16 +0.75 MuHYAdm 11.17 PrmCap r 68.14 +0.52 ReitAdm r 95.73 +0.94 STsyAdml 10.78 -0.01 STBdAdml 10.66 ShtTrAd 15.93 STIGrAd 10.79 SmCAdm 36.49 +0.13
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TtlBAdml 11.19 TStkAdm 33.96 WellslAdm 58.20 WelltnAdm 57.10 Windsor 46.44 WdsrIIAd 49.57 Vanguard Fds: CapOpp 31.12 DivdGro 16.30 Energy 56.98 EqInc 23.29 Explr 75.58 GNMA 11.08 HYCorp 5.92 HlthCre 142.71 InflaPro 14.79 IntlGr 16.96 IntlVal 27.36 ITIGrade 10.32 LifeCon 16.88 LifeGro 22.36 LifeMod 20.13 LTIGrade 10.97 Morg 19.06 MuInt 14.32 PrmcpCor 14.16 Prmcp r 65.66 SelValu r 19.73 STAR 19.76 STIGrade 10.79 StratEq 19.93 TgtRetInc 12.00 TgRe2010 23.69 TgtRe2015 13.02 TgRe2020 23.03 TgtRe2025 13.06 TgRe2030 22.33 TgtRe2035 13.39 TgtRe2040 21.96 TgtRe2045 13.79 USGro 19.85 Wellsly 24.02 Welltn 33.06 Wndsr 13.77
-0.01 +0.23 +0.12 +0.25 +0.35 +0.34
+3.4 +9.5 +6.5 +7.0 +8.9 +9.6
+0.12 +0.13 +0.59 +0.16 +0.32 -0.01
+5.5 +6.9 -3.4 +7.9 +5.8 +1.9 +7.8 +11.0 +5.3 +3.7 +2.7 +6.0 +5.1 +6.8 +6.0 +9.7 +9.1 +3.8 +5.0 +6.3 +6.1 +6.4 +2.7 +8.7 +4.9 +5.6 +5.9 +6.2 +6.4 +6.7 +7.0 +7.1 +7.1 +10.0 +6.5 +7.0 +8.8
+1.57 -0.04 +0.08 +0.10 -0.01 +0.03 +0.12 +0.08 -0.04 +0.09 +0.11 +0.51 +0.13 +0.06 +0.15 +0.01 +0.05 +0.04 +0.09 +0.05 +0.11 +0.08 +0.13 +0.08 +0.10 +0.05 +0.14 +0.11
WndsII 27.93 +0.19 Vanguard Idx Fds: ExtMkt I 105.63 +0.51 MidCpIstPl103.68 +0.81 TotIntAdm r22.48 +0.12 TotIntlInst r89.92 +0.50 TotIntlIP r 89.95 +0.51 500 125.78 +0.93 MidCap 20.96 +0.17 SmCap 36.45 +0.13 TotBnd 11.19 -0.01 TotlIntl 13.44 +0.08 TotStk 33.95 +0.23 Vanguard Instl Fds: BalInst 23.10 +0.09 DevMkInst 8.68 +0.04 ExtIn 42.80 +0.21 GrwthIst 34.92 +0.21 InfProInst 11.83 -0.03 InstIdx 124.98 +0.92 InsPl 124.98 +0.92 InsTStPlus 30.74 +0.21 MidCpIst 21.02 +0.16 SCInst 36.49 +0.13 TBIst 11.19 -0.01 TSInst 33.97 +0.24 ValueIst 21.92 +0.19 Vanguard Signal: 500Sgl 103.90 +0.77 MidCpIdx 30.03 +0.24 STBdIdx 10.66 TotBdSgl 11.19 -0.01 TotStkSgl 32.78 +0.23 Western Asset: CorePlus I 11.56 -0.01
+9.6 +8.8 +6.8 +2.9 +3.0 +3.0 +9.6 +6.7 +9.2 +3.3 +2.9 +9.5 +7.1 +3.1 +8.8 +10.5 +5.3 +9.7 +9.7 +9.6 +6.8 +9.3 +3.4 +9.6 +8.5 +9.7 +6.8 +1.4 +3.4 +9.5 +5.9
E4
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012
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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.
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TODAY BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL BEND CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541749-0789. MAC HELP: Free, friendly, technical advice for your Mac, iPad or iPhone; 10 a.m.-noon; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541388-1133.
A special Business After Hours at The Oregon High Desert Classics, Central Oregon’s largest and longest-running horse shows, registration required; 5 p.m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-389-1409 or www.bendchamber.org. QUICKBOOKS PRO INTERMEDIATE: $59; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; to register, go to http://noncredit.cocc .edu or call 541-383-7270.
THURSDAY THURSDAY
July 26
BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL DESCHUTES BUSINESS NETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541610-9125. TOWN HALL FORUM: City forecast breakfast, registration required; 7:30 a.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-3828436 or www.bendchamber.org. INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT FOR AN UNPREDICTABLE WORLD: Free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1794. BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-480-1765. HOW TO SELECT THE RIGHT FRANCHISE: Registration required; free; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu.
BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL DESCHUTES BUSINESS NETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541610-9125. RENEWABLE ENERGY AND NATURAL BUILDING CLASSES: Professional-level workshops on solar hot water and solar electric components, as well as a handson natural building workshop as part of the Solwest Fair; free with paid fair admission; Grant County Fairgrounds, 411 N.W. Bridge St., John Day; 541-575-1900. ETFS EXPLAINED: Free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541318-1794. BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-480-1765.
FRIDAY EXCEL 2010 INTERMEDIATE: Registration required; class continues July 27; $59; 9 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, Redmond; 541-3837270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. CENTRAL OREGON REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT CLUB: Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile@windermere.com. LEADER LUNCH: Lunch with Bend Chamber leadership for members; reservations required; cost of lunch; noon; Awbrey Glen Golf Club, 2500 N.W. Awbrey Glen Drive, Bend; 541382-3221. 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. CAI-CORC SOCIAL: Featuring a presentation by Project Wildfire and Deschutes County on ways to prepare and protect communities from wildfires; free; 5:30 p.m.; Looney Bean Roasting Co., 961 N.W. Brooks St.; 541-323-6418.
MONDAY FORECLOSURE PREVENTION CLASS: Learn about NeighborImpact’s Housing Center tools and services that 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. 309, karenb@neighborimpact.org or www.homeownershipcenter.org. QUICKBOOKS PRO INTERMEDIATE: $59; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; to register, go to http://noncredit.cocc .edu or call 541-383-7270.
TUESDAY 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. EMAIL TIPS AND TRICKS: Learn to manage your email from set-up to attaching photos and documents, opening and saving files to creating folders. For ages 50 and older; $52 to $70; 10 a.m.-noon; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133. ETHICS AND LEADERSHIP IN THE 21ST CENTURY: City forecast breakfast, registration required; $25 for Chamber members and $45 for nonmembers; 11 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-7437 or www .bendchamber.org.
WEDNESDAY July 25 BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL BEND CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541749-0789. J BAR J BUSINESS AFTER HOURS:
FRIDAY July 27 RENEWABLE ENERGY AND NATURAL BUILDING CLASSES: Professional-level workshops on solar hot water and solar electric components, as well as a handson natural building workshop as part of the Solwest Fair; free with paid fair admission; Grant County Fairgrounds, 411 N.W. Bridge St., John Day; 541-575-1900. 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. OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMIT TRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com. 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 July 28 RENEWABLE ENERGY AND NATURAL BUILDING CLASSES: Professional-level workshops on solar hot water and solar electric components, as well as a handson natural building workshop as part of the Solwest Fair; free with paid fair admission; Grant County Fairgrounds, 411 N.W. Bridge St., John Day; 541-575-1900. LEADERS WITHOUT LIMITS INC.: Total Asset Protection Workshop with President/CEO David McCauley presenting; $299; register by June 30th and save $100; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 877-652-1868 or www .leaderswithoutlimits.biz.
SUNDAY July 29 RENEWABLE ENERGY AND NATURAL BUILDING CLASSES: Professional-level workshops on solar hot water and solar electric components, as well as a handson natural building workshop as part of the Solwest Fair; free with paid fair admission; Grant County Fairgrounds, 411 N.W. Bridge St., John Day; 541-575-1900.
your photo files; bring your camera and USB cable to class; for ages 50 and older; $52 to $70; 10 a.m.noon; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-3881133.
WEDNESDAY Aug. 1 BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL BEND CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541749-0789.
THURSDAY Aug. 2 BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL DESCHUTES BUSINESS NETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541610-9125. GETTING THE MOST OUT OF SCHWAB.COM: Free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1794. BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-480-1765.
FRIDAY Aug. 3 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.
TUESDAY Aug. 7 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. ORGANIZING WITH OUTLOOK FOR BUSY PEOPLE: Learn to integrate all components of Outlook 2007 via a webinar; registration required; $65; 8:30-10 a.m.; 503-260-8714 or info@simplifynw.com. PHOTO MANAGEMENT TIPS AND TRICKS: Explore how to download digital photos from your camera and send them as email attachments, and learn to manage your photo files; bring your camera and USB cable to class; for ages 50 and older; $52 to $70; 10 a.m.noon; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-3881133.
WEDNESDAY Aug. 8 BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL BEND CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541749-0789. ORGANIZING WITH OUTLOOK FOR BUSY PEOPLE: Learn to integrate all components of Outlook 2010 via a webinar; registration required; $65; 8:30-10 a.m.; 503-260-8714 or info@simplifynw.com. SUSTAINABILITY BUSINESS GROUP: Jay Coalsonn, the Executive Director of the Zero Waste Alliance, talks about engaging the community to create a zero-waste economy; free; 9-10 a.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-385-6908, ext. 11 or sweetpea@envirocenter.org. BANKS AND OTHER FINANCIAL SERVICES: Registration required; free; 5:30 p.m.; NeighborImpact, 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; 541318-7506, ext. 309.
July 31 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. PHOTO MANAGEMENT TIPS AND TRICKS: Explore how to download digital photos from your camera and send them as email attachments, and learn to manage
By Quentin Hardy New York Times News Service
SAN FRANCISCO — Intel is struggling amid the world’s pain. Sales of its semiconductors, which power personal computers and computer servers, were just slightly higher in the second quarter than the year before, the company reported in its earnings Tuesday. This was due to both slow economic growth in important markets, and a wrenching transition to new kinds of computing that rely less on personal computers and more on mobile devices. Intel warned that growth would be slower than previously expected in the third quarter. “As we enter the third quarter, our growth will be slower than we anticipated due to a more challenging macroeconomic environment,� Paul Otellini, Intel’s chief executive, said in a news release accompanying the earnings. Intel reported that its net income in the second quarter rose 3 percent to $2.8 billion, or 54 cents a share, from this time last year. The company said revenue climbed 5 percent to $13.5 billion. Intel appeared to have sacrificed some of its gross profit margin for the
Check out our classifieds to find the service professional you need!
By James Kanter New York Times News Service
BRUSSELS — The European Commission said Tuesday that it was beginning new antitrust proceedings against Microsoft, saying the company had failed to live up to a 3-year-old agreement to give users of its Windows software better access to competitors’ Internet browsers. Microsoft immediately apologized, citing technical problems it had learned about
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higher revenues. Gross margins were 63.4 percent, compared with 64 percent a year earlier. Still, the net income was above the expectations of Wall Street analysts, and accordingly the stock rose slightly in after-hours trading. Analysts had expected 52 cents a share and revenue of $13.56 billion, according to a survey of analysts by Thomson Reuters. Intel, based in Santa Clara, Calif., is the world’s leading supplier of semiconductors, a business dependent on consumer demand for personal computers and corporate need for PCs and computer servers. Slow economic
growth has crimped demand in both of those markets. “Intel is relying heavily on emerging markets for their growth, and right now those markets aren’t looking so good,� said Douglas Freedman, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets. In addition, business and consumers are finding alternatives to PCs in smartphones and tablets, where Intel either has no presence or supplies lower-margin chips. Intel has fought back by investing in ultrabooks, a kind of lightweight laptop computer. Large-scale sales of these laptops began a few months ago and have so far been modest.
only recently. “We deeply regret that this error occurred, and we apologize for it,� the company said in a statement. But the software giant could nonetheless face a substantial fine for breaching the European Union’s antitrust rules. “If the infringements are confirmed, there will be sanctions,� said Joaquin Almunia, the European Commission official in charge of antitrust enforcement.
In announcing the action Tuesday, Almunia said Microsoft committed a serious breach of EU antitrust rules by not complying with commitments the company made in 2009 as part of the settlement. The sanctions, he added, could be particularly severe because, if confirmed, this would be the first time a company had defied an antitrust settlement offered by the commission.
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BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed July 10
John Roger Post Jr., P.O. Box 975, Prineville. Jefferey Scott Schluter, 19541 Sugar Mill Loop, Bend. Richard Gerard Anderson, 2180 S.E. Melrose Drive, Prineville. Filed July 11
Moira L. Rounds, 1520 N.E. Sixth St., Bend. Michael Curtis Tennow, P.O. Box 1962, La Pine. Kevin Nicholas Coatney, 295 S.W. 25th St., Redmond. Filed July 12
Evan Paul Braude, 22188 Neff Road, Bend. Gregg E. Miller, 20202 Powers Road, Bend. Keith Ryan Defoe, 19915 Mahogany St., Bend. Filed July 13
Maria Esther Andrade, 1106 S.W. 29th St., Redmond. Davis Carl Trammel, P.O. Box 330, La Pine. William Charles Hiatt, 2967 N.E. Lotno Drive, Bend.
Langston Clarke
Kevin L. Desjardins, P.O. Box 1244, Prineville. Filed July 16
Gary Michael Pomeroy, 464 S.E. Cleveland Ave., Bend. Michael James Bailey, 629 N.E. Shirley Court, Bend. Ethan Allen Paul Dunn, 1657 S.E. Virginia Road, Bend.
Joe Wood, 8450 N.E. First St., Terrebonne. Shelly Paige Santos, 16028 Amber Lane, La Pine. Travis Joe Lowell, P.O. Box 307, Crescent.
Chapter 13 Filed July 12
Local Service. Local Knowledge. 541-848-4444 1000 SW Disk Dr. • Bend www.highdesertbank.com
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Lost Your Marbles? Find them at the
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Deschutes County Fair Sunday, August 5 12:00 - 1:00 pm In The Bulletin
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Charles Krupa / The Associated Press
Intel, the world’s largest chipmaker, said Tuesday that the weak global economy is slowing its growth.
Microsoft faces new scrutiny in Europe
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TUESDAY
Intel warns of slower growth despite a rise in net income
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See a full list of contests in the Deschutes County Fair Guide, publishing in The Bulletin on Wednesday, July 25
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012 F1
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Pets & Supplies
Crafts & Hobbies
Tools
Maltese, AKC female $1000, male, $900non-shedding/hypo-all ergenic 541-233-3534 www.maiasminisupremes.com
Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jew- Maltese-Poodle puppies, elry. Top dollar paid for cream & rust, no shedGold/Silver.I buy by the ding. Males $250; feEstate, Honest Artist males, $300, cash. Elizabeth,541-633-7006 541-546-7909 WANTED: Portable Maltese Toy AKC (1), Oxygen Concentrator. Champ bloodlines, 1.75 6L or more, lb, $800. 541-420-1577 541-420-6780 Mini Pin-Poo, 2.5 yr. old, female, $100 incl. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! bed, food, toys, likes cats & kids, not used Door-to-door selling with to living w/children, fast results! It’s the easiest 503-490-1632 way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classiied
541-385-5809 WANTED: RAZORS, Double or singleedged, straight razors, shaving brushes, mugs & scuttles, strops, shaving accessories & memorabilia. Fair prices paid. Call 541-390-7029 between 10 am-3 pm.
Minx/Scottish Fold Kittens, very friendly, 8wks, $75 $200. 541-241-4914
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Poodle pups, toy, for SALE. Also Rescued Poodle Adults for Horse Manure, large adoption, to loving loads, perfect for garhomes. 541-475-3889 dening, will load, FREE. 541-390-6570. Pugs, AKC,fawn healthy beauties, $800 & 208 $900, 541-536-9495. Pets & Supplies Queensland Heelers standard & mini,$150 & The Bulletin recomup. 541-280-1537 http:// mends extra caution rightwayranch.wordpress.com when purchas- Shih Tzu male puppy, 5 ing products or ser- mos, pet home only, vices from out of the gold & white, $475. area. Sending cash, Photos at checks, or credit in- www.oregonshihtzu.com formation may be 541-788-0090 subjected to fraud. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at Springer Spaniel Pups ready 8/20,Champion 1-877-877-9392. lines, Now taking dep, $400 541-604-6232 Items for Free
American Pit Bull puppies, 2 males, 9 wks, $250 ea. 541-639-2727
Australian Shepherds Reg. minis born 5/12/12. Champ lines & health clearances. True structure & temperament. 2 left! $800 each. 541-639-6263
Weimaraner Pups, 5 males, 2 females, parents exc. disposition & temperament, will make loyal family pets or hunting dogs. $350, 541-562-5970, please leave msg. Yorkie Puppies, ready now, 2 male,1 female, $600, 541-536-3108 Yorkie Pups, AKC, potty trained, health guarantee, small,1 boy, 1 girl $750+, 541-316-0005.
(Valley Bulldog) puppies,
CKC Reg’d, brindles & fawns, 1st shots. $700. 541-325-3376 Cats & kittens available thru rescue group. Tame, altered, shots, ID chip, more. Visit Sat/Sun 1-5 PM, other days by appt. 65480 78th St., Bend. 541-389-8420, website: www.craftcats.org for photos & info.
Cavachon Pups! Calm, very friendly, loving,smart & get along great w/kids! female $895, male $695, 541-323-1069
Chesapeake AKC pups, shots,good hips,$500$600, 541-259-4739. Chihuahua Sheltie cross, 5½ mos, black & tan. 1 male, $200; 1 female, $225. Shots & wormed. 541-410-8907
Dachshund puppies! 8 wks, shorthair males $250; females $300; parents on site. 1st shots, and wormed. (541) 508-2167 Dachshund purebred mini female, 2 yrs, to approved home only, $200. 541-633-5654 Hound, 10-week old male pup, great bloodlines, well mannered, $150. Call 541-447-1323 Lab AKC puppies, 2 females, 1 light yellow, 1 almost white, parents on site, ready 7/31. $450. 541-233-3337 Lab pups, AKC, 5 left; 8 wks old. Master hunter sired. 541-447-7972 Labradoodles - Mini & med size, several colors 541-504-2662 www.alpen-ridge.com
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Dry Lodgepole: $175 cord rounds; $210 cord split.1½ Cord Minimum 37 yrs service to Cent. Ore. 541-350-2859 Raft, heavy duty rubber, kit with seats, pump, Dry seasoned Tamarack life jacket, oars, elecred fir, $165/cord rnds; tric troll motor. $275. $185/cord split. 503-933-0814 Call 541-977-4500 or 541-416-3677 255 Computers 269 Sporting Goods - Misc.
THE BULLETIN re- Gardening Supplies & Equipment quires computer advertisers with multiple Prompt Delivery ad schedules or those A1 Washers&Dryers selling multiple sys- Rock, Sand & Gravel $150 ea. Full wartems/ software, to dis- Multiple Colors, Sizes ranty. Free Del. Also close the name of the Instant Landscaping Co. wanted, used W/D’s 541-389-9663 business or the term 541-280-7355 "dealer" in their ads. SUPER TOP SOIL Private party advertis- www.hersheysoilandbark.com Armoire cabinet, blond ers are defined as Screened, soil & comwood, for up to 42” those who sell one post mixed, no TV, $250. Curio, walcomputer. rocks/clods. High hunut & glass, 2-door, mus level, exc. for 260 $150. 541-420-9964 flower beds, lawns, Misc. Items gardens, straight BUNK BED with matscreened top soil. tresses, wood, good Buying Diamonds Bark. Clean fill. Decond. $100 OBO. /Gold for Cash liver/you haul. Call 541-815-1764. 541-548-3949. Saxon’s Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655 GENERATE SOME exWhere can you ind a citement in your BUYING neighborhood! Plan a helping hand? Lionel/American Flyer garage sale and don't From contractors to trains, accessories. forget to advertise in 541-408-2191. yard care, it’s all here classified! BUYING & SELLING 541-385-5809. in The Bulletin’s All gold jewelry, silver “Call A Service Mattress & Frame, King and gold coins, bars, size, $200, rounds, wedding sets, Professional” Directory 541-475-3697. class rings, sterling sil270 ver, coin collect, vinRange, Tappan 30” electage watches, dental Lost & Found tric, exc cond $100. gold. Bill Fleming, Roper washer $50. Hot541-382-9419. FOUND: Basset Hound, point dryer $50. $150/all Tetherow Crossing, 3. 541-389-2989 Original wildlife painting, near Helmholtz, Reddeer, elk, lake, clouds, mond, 541-923-1065 blue sky, very nice, Recliners (2), Flex$50. 541-923-0619 steel, faux leather in Found Car Key, Honda, cream, mid size 7/9, Redmond, near POOL TABLE, awesome very good cond. Reindeer Ranch, USA made, heavy slate, $300 541-504-5982 alder wood, 3½’x 7’, 541-923-7607. perfect for family, comFOUND: Colorful halter Sofa exc. cond $275; 3 plete w/accys, $2795. top,“Volume 1 Juniors”, 541-389-2530 or bar stools, padded Call Redmond, on Canal 503-260-7637 seats, light wood, $35 near Fred Meyers, ea. 541-350-9959 Wanted- paying cash 7/10, 541-923-6908 for Hi-fi audio & stu212 Found commercial dio equip. McIntosh, landscape tool NE Antiques & JBL, Marantz, DyBend 7/5. Call Richnaco, Heathkit, SanCollectibles ard 541-771-7125. sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808 Antiques wanted: tools, LOST Arabian horse furn., fishing, marbles, full tack still on, 7/14 261 old sports gear, radios, 8 a.m. at Corral Flat Medical Equipment early stereo gear. in the Ochocos. Call Call 541-389-1578 541-848-1842 or WANTED: Portable 541-385-1084 Archie Comic Books Oxygen Concentrator. from the ‘70s, about 6L or more, Lost Jack Russell Terrier, 50. Best offer. all white w/brown ears, 541-420-6780 541-388-7512 male, turquoise collar 262 “Toby” Widgi Creek GC Revere 8mm Silent area, 7/13. Generous Commercial/Ofice Movie Projector, exc. cond, sell or trade, Equipment & Fixtures reward. 1-503-560-6885 541-410-2995, LaPine Lost: Mens’ Gold Chain Ice Cream case, 16 tub, & Silver Star, Bend, Snow Village, Depart2008, w/all access., 7/14, 541-598-5850. ment 56 Collection, must sell! $2000 obo. houses, accessories, REMEMBER: If you Moffit convection call 925-550-1515 have lost an animal, oven, $1000 obo. Terry 541-408-6869 don't forget to check The Bulletin reserves The Humane Society the right to publish all 263 in Bend 541-382-3537 ads from The Bulletin Redmond, Tools newspaper onto The 541-923-0882 Bulletin Internet webPrineville, Generator, Generac site. 541-447-7178; 6250, independent cirOR Craft Cats, cuit, wheel kit cover, 541-389-8420. $375. 503-933-0814 210
Furniture & Appliances
Boxer/English Bulldog
Baby Lock Esante ESE TABLE SAW DEAL! sewing machine, with Delta 10” Biesemeyer, embroidery module. In- 70” fence, 4’ table ext, cludes Sew Steady Incra Miter 1000, $775. portable sewing table, Call 541-389-2530 or several presser feet, 503-260-7637 walking foot, bobbins, 265 embroidery cards, + other accessories. Building Materials $700. 541-330-4323 MADRAS Habitat 245 RESTORE Golf Equipment Building Supply Resale Quality at Golf balls, excellent & LOW PRICES clean, 100 for $10. 84 SW K St. 541-383-2155 541-475-9722 Open to the public. Golf cart Club Car, full top, windshield, $1175. 266 503-933-0814 Heating & Stoves Motorized Golf Caddy, MGI, Attn: Golf WalkNOTICE TO ers, 6 yrs., exc. cond., ADVERTISER $350, 541-923-0445. Since September 29, 1991, advertising for 246 used woodstoves has Guns, Hunting been limited to mod& Fishing els which have been certified by the Oregon Department of AMMO: .308 50 rds Environmental Qual180 gr; 50 rds 150 ity (DEQ) and the fedgr, 200 rds .357 Mag eral Environmental 158gr $45 ea, 100 Protection Agency rds 9mm 115 gr $25, (EPA) as having met all in plastic boxes. smoke emission stan541-604-5115 dards. A certified woodstove may be identified by its certifiBerreta AL391 20ga cation label, which is 28" barrel like new permanently attached cond hard case & to the stove. The Bulextras $950 letin will not know541-388-4230 ingly accept advertising for the sale of CASH!! uncertified For Guns, Ammo & woodstoves. Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900. 267 Fuel & Wood HANDGUN SAFETY CLASS for concealed license. NRA, Police WHEN BUYING Firearms Instructor, Mike Kidwell. Wed. FIREWOOD... July 25th, 6:30-10:30 To avoid fraud, pm. Call Kevin CentThe Bulletin wise, for reservations recommends pay$40. 541-548-4422 ment for Firewood New in box, New Enonly upon delivery gland 12ga Model SB1, and inspection. SOLD. Muzzle loader • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 209 rifle, 12ga 50 cal, 4’ x 4’ x 8’ $200 obo. Call for de- • Receipts should tails, 541-401-1307 include name, phone, price and Snake Avoidance kind of wood purTraining - Teach your chased. dog to avoid poisonous snakes. • Firewood ads MUST include spe541-410-2667 cies and cost per Wanted: Collector cord to better serve seeks high quality our customers. fishing items. Call 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746
Farm Market
300 325
Hay, Grain & Feed Clean Timothy Grass Hay, by the ton, $220. Call 541-408-6662 after 4:00 p.m. Premium Orchard Grass, big bales, $100/bale, 541-419-2713.
Find Classifieds at
www.bendbulletin.com
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
Homes for Sale
Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.
Bend home on 5 acres w/Cascade views, $375,000 Ad #2492 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com
BUS MECHANIC Crook County School District
has an immediate opening for a fulltime bus mechanic. $16.74 min per hour DOE. For complete job description and application packet go to
www.crookcounty.k12.or.us
or call 541-447-5099. Position closes 4 p.m., July 23, 2012.
Want to buy Alfalfa standing, in Central Caregiver needed for Ore. 541-419-2713 AFH, 24-hr shift, weekWheat Straw: Certified & ends. Must be exp’d & Bedding Straw & Garden pass criminal bkgrnd Straw;Compost.546-6171 check. 541-382-1284 Caregiver Needed: 345 Must have 3 yrs. exp. Livestock & Equipment Call Christina 541-279-9492 to apply. Just too many collectibles?
PC Technician Salary- Up to $40k DOE Installs, maintains, analyzes, troubleshoots, and repairs computer systems, hardware and computer peripherals. • Associates technical degree and 1-3 yrs experience in the field. • Certifications such as CompTia A+, Microsoft Certified Professional, MCITP. • Experience with Microsoft software including operating systems and the suite of Microsoft products. • Experience with Active Directory, Active Sync and Antivirus software such as McAfee Email resumes to jay.martin@adeccona.com
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale 636
Apt./Multiplex NW Bend Fully furnished loft Apt
on Wall Street in Bend, with parking. All utilities paid. Call 541-389-2389 for appt 638
Apt./Multiplex SE Bend A sharp, clean 2Bdrm, 1½ bath apt, NEW CARPETS, neutral colors, great storage, private patio, no pets/ smkg. $535 incl w/s/g. Call 541-633-0663
101 ILLINOIS RIVER RD., SELMA The gateway to Illinois River Canyon. Last privately owned parcel of the Historic Deer Creek Ranch. Gold mine, Ranch house, 169 acres, spectacular land w/gravity fed pure water source off Squaw Creek. Suitable for grapes! Full of history. John Wayne’s horse, Handsome Boy, is buried here. Property offers extreme privacy, trees/meadows. Fenced/cross fenced, borders BLM. $1,500,000. MLS #201203318 Karen Malanga, Broker The Hasson Company 541-390-3326
Powersports Tech 1977 14' Blake Trailer, Sell them in 650 needed in Bend. 4270 sq ft, 6 bdrm, 6 ba, refurbished by The Bulletin Classiieds Houses for Rent Dealership exp. 4-car, corner, .83 acre Frenchglen Blackpreferred, drug free mtn view, by owner. NE Bend smiths, a Classy Claswork environment. $590,000 541-390-0886 sic. Great design for 541-385-5809 See: bloomkey.com/8779 Ken 541-647-5157 multiple uses. Over3 bdrm, 2½ bath, 2-car head tack box (bunk- Caregiver garage, 1670 sq.ft. – Night Sales house) with side and W/d, WSG incl. in rent. 4 Bedroom, 3.5 bath, Shifts avail. Apply in Telephone prospecting 3734 sq. ft., .32 acre easy pickup bed ac$1195, $400 cleaning person. Interviews this position for important corner lot Beautiful cess; manger with left fee, $400 sec., No week. 1099 NE Watt professional services. lodge-style home side access, windows pets. 442 NE EmerWay, Bend. Income potential w/hand crafted timber and head divider. Toyo son. 541-410-8615. $50,000. (average intrusses inside & out. radial tires & spare; come 30k-35k) op- Clean 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath, Hardwood, Slab grannew floor with mats; portunity for adon large shady lot, all ite, Travertine, Heated center partition panel; vancement. Base & appl. furnished, no Floors, Main level bed liner coated in key Roger Langeliers Commission, Health smoking, lawn maint, areas, 6.5 K torsion master and oversized Construction and Dental Benefits. incl. $975+$700 secuaxles with electric has openings for expe4+ car garage. Asbrakes, and new paint, Will train the right perrity dep., 541-420-1118 tonishing HOME ... a rienced Concrete $10,500. Call John at son. Fax resume to: or 541-419-6760 must see! $750,000 Finishers & Laborers. 541-589-0777. 541-848-6408. Tina Roberts, Broker, Veterans are encourLuxury Home, 2450 541-419-9022 aged to apply. Mostly sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2.5 TOTAL Property School Psychologist Goats for sale, 1 Nupublic wage work with bath, office, 3 car gaResources, school bian buck, 1 Boer full benefit package. Half-time rage, mtn views., avail 541-330-0588 buck. 541-923-7116 psych, OR license RLC is an Equal Op7/20. 2641 NE Jill Ct. required. $18,500 portunity Employer $1750/mo. + dep. BANK OWNED HOMES! 358 $29,700, partial and drug-free com541-420-3557. FREE List w/Pics! Farmers Column benefits. Send appl, pany. Call www.BendRepos.com resume & cover let541-948-0829 or 654 bend and beyond real estate Want to buy Alfalfa ter to Lake Co. ESD 541-948-0315 for in20967 yeoman, bend or Houses for Rent standing, in Central 357 N. L St., Laketerview & application. SE Bend Ore. 541-419-2713 747 view OR 97630 or Food Service: Evening dgoss@lakeesd.k12.or.us Southwest Bend Homes Cook. Full-time; Also Check out the 2 Bdrm., 2 bath, garage, Wait Person, part-time. classiieds online fenced yard,deck, W/D, ONE STORY, RIVER Exp. Required! Apply all appl., 1 pet OK, bewww.bendbulletin.com RIM. Owner Financafter 1 p.m. Mon-Fri., Finance hind Senior Center, Updated daily ing. 2000 sq. ft. 3/2 + Roszak’s Fish House. $850 mo, 1st+last,$200 & Business den. $307,000. 541-382-3173. dep., avail. 8/1, 383 541-322-7309 541-382-5746. Food Service - Line Produce & Food Cook. Experienced 749 658 Only. Apply in person THOMAS ORCHARDS Southeast Bend Homes Houses for Rent at Big Island Kona Mix Kimberly, OR U-Pick: in the Old Mill. Redmond Dark Sweet & Rainier BADGER FOREST AfCherries, Apricots, early MANAGEMENT fordable excellence in 528 Clean 2 Bdrm + den, 2 semi-cling peaches, SE Bend, starting in The Madras Aquatic bath, dbl garage, Ready Picked: Dark the mid-$100’s. PahlCenter District (“MAC”) Loans & Mortgages $900/mo. 9199 SW Sweet Cherries, Apricots, is seeking a full-time isch Homes offered LOCAL MONEY:We buy early semi cling peaches Operations Manager Panarama, CRR. No by The Hasson Comsecured trust deeds & BRING CONTAINERS smkg. 541-504-8545 pany Realtors. ConThe ideal candidate note,some hard money Open 7 days/wk 8-6 pm must have a minimum of tact Rhianna, loans. Call Pat Kelley 659 only 541-934-2870. Visit 3-5 years experience in 855-385-6762 541-382-3099 ext.13. us on Facebook for up- management, Houses for Rent budget dates Also we are at the oversight 756 experience, Call The Bulletin At Sunriver Bend Farmer’s Market at excellent communicaJefferson County Homes 541-385-5809 Drake Park & St. Charles tion skills and a profes3 Bdrm, 2 bath, home in sional bearing. The Op- Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Sunriver, Dbl. garage, NEW TOWNHOME erations Manager is At: www.bendbulletin.com W/S incl., $850/mo+ Very clean, new conexpected to work in a dep,no smoking, avail. struction in Madras. Employment team atmosphere with 8/1, 503-651-1142. Well built, dbl. garage the MAC Aquatics Manwith landscaped front ager and staff, as well Rentals 662 yard and fenced as represent the MAC backyard. Don’t miss Houses for Rent District professionally. this one! $75,000 The candidate should Sisters MLS#201201561 have the ability to DD Realty Group LLC multi-task, while staying 2700 Sq.ft. House, de866-346-7868 organized and focused. 421 sirable neighborhood, 4 Candidate should have bdrm., 3 bath, 2 car gaSchools & Training 764 demonstrative sucrage, pets OK. $1800/ 605 cessful grant awards, Farms & Ranches mo. 541-390-1833 TRUCK SCHOOL Roommate Wanted implementation and rewww.IITR.net porting. Additional du35-Acre irrigated farm Redmond Campus ties include: Customer Share cozy mobile home close to Prineville, Real Estate Student Loans/Job service, marketing, fa- in Terrebonne, $300 + presently in hay, cattle Waiting Toll Free cilities and front desk utilities. 1-503-679-7496 & onions. Price reFor Sale management. Candi1-888-438-2235 duced to $298,000! 630 date reports directly to 541-410-3425. the Board of Directors. Rooms for Rent DO YOU NEED Benefit package inWANTED: Ranch, will A GREAT cluded. Submit letter of Mt. Bachelor Motel has work trade for finEMPLOYEE intent and application ished, Mt./Columbia rooms, starting $150/ RIGHT NOW? with resume by July 27, River View, gated, week or $35/nt. Incl Call The Bulletin 738 2012 to: residential developguest laundry, cable & before 11 a.m. and Madras Aquatic Center ment in the Columbia Multiplexes for Sale WiFi. 541-382-6365 get an ad in to pubAttn: Board of Directors River Gorge, 1195 SE Kemper Way lish the next day! 509-767-1539. Studios & Kitchenettes Newer duplex in quiet Madras, OR 97741 Furnished room, TV w/ 541-385-5809. neighborhood, Application can be found 773 cable, micro & fridge. VIEW the $240,000. Ad #2362 at www.macaquatic.com Utils & linens. New Classifieds at: Acreages TEAM Birtola Garmyn / information / job listowners.$145-$165/wk Prudential High Desert www.bendbulletin.com ings 541-382-1885 Realty 541-312-9449 Powell Butte 6 acres, 360 views, great horse www.BendOregon 634 Customer Service Representative. Immediproperty, 10223 HousRealEstate.com ate opening in the Circulation Dept. for an enApt./Multiplex NE Bend ton Lake Rd. $99,900. try level Customer Service Rep. Looking for 740 541-350-4684 someone to assist our subscribers and delivCHECK OUT THIS Condo/Townhomes ery carriers with subscription transactions, acHOT DEAL! for Sale count questions and delivery concerns. Es$299 1st month’s rent! * sential: positive attitude, strong service/team 2 bdrm, 1 bath Boats & RV’s Westside Terrace cotorientation, and problem solving skills. Must $530 & 540 tage, 2 bdrm,1.5 bath, have accurate typing, phone skills and comCarports & A/C incl! 1100 approx sq.ft.,den/ puter entry experience. Most work is done via Fox Hollow Apts. office, gas fireplace, 9 telephone so strong communication skills and (541) 383-3152 yrs. old, townhouse the ability to multi-task in a fast-paced envi- Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co $195,000541-680-9699 *Upstairs only with lease* ronment is a must. Work shift hours are Monday Through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Occasional weekends and holidays are required. Electrician General Journeyman 850 Please send resume to PO Box 6020, Bend Warm Springs Composite Products is looking Snowmobiles OR 97708, attn: for an individual to help a growing innovative Circulation Office Manager or e-mail light manufacturing plant. Polaris 2003, 4 cycle, ahusted@bendbulletin.com Basic Duties: Assist in troubleshooting and fuel inj, elec start, reE.O.E./Drug Free workplace. repairs of plant equipment. Install, repair and verse, 2-up seat, maintain all electrical and electronic equipcover, 4900 mi, $2500 ment. Able to read and revise electrical scheobo. 541-280-0514 ACCOUNT MANAGER matics, Must be able to perform both electriJob Summary 860 cal and mechanical preventive maintenance Generates sales revenue by prospecting and requirements and report, PLC experience. adding new program commercial customers, Motorcycles & Accessories as well as cross selling and upselling current Minimum Skills: A minimum of 5 years in the commercial customers. Harley Davidson Softindustrial maintenance field with a valid OrEssential Job Duties Tail Deluxe 2007, egon State Electricians License in Manufac• Compiles lists of prospective customers for white/cobalt, w/pasturing. A strong mechanical aptitude with the use as sales leads based on cold calling and senger kit, Vance & ability to perform light welding and fabrication other sources. Hines muffler system duties. Successful applicant shall supply the • Develops sales programs and strategies. & kit, 1045 mi., exc. normal hand tools required for both electrical • Promotes customer retention and provides cond, $19,999, and mechanical maintenance. superior service by calling on accounts di541-389-9188. Benefits: Full Family Medical, Vision, Dental, rectly. Life, Disability, Salary Incentives, Company Harley Heritage • Quotes prices, prepares sales contracts & Bonuses, Pension and 401K w/Company Softail, 2003 obtains required approval for orders obtained. Matching and Above Pay Rate Scale. $5,000+ in extras, • Maintains current and accurate records on all Please remit resume to: $2000 paint job, accounts. Warm Springs Composite Products 30K mi. 1 owner, • Maintains proper sales reports. PO Box 906, Warm Springs, OR 97761 For more information Previous experience in cleaning and sanitation Phone: 541-553-1143, Fax: 541-553-1145 please call chemical is req. Please send resumes to 541-385-8090 Attn: Mac Coombs, mcoombs@wscp.com rpage@swisherhygiene.com or 209-605-5537
Concrete Construction
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
F2 WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD
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Motorhomes
Fifth Wheels
Edited by Will Shortz Jayco Greyhawk 2004, 31’ Class C,
6800 mi., hyd. jacks, new tires, slide out, exc. cond, $49,900, 541-480-8648
Find It in The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-385-5809
Monaco Dynasty 2004, loaded, 3 slides, diesel, Reduced - now $129,900, 541-9238572 or 541-749-0037
Alpha “See Ya” 30’ 1996, 2 slides, A/C, heat pump, exc. cond. solid oak cabs day & night shades, Corian, tile, hardwood. $9750 OBO/trade for small trailer, 541-923-3417
Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by Carriage, 4 slideouts, inverter, satellite sys, fireplace, 2 flat screen TVs. $60,000. 541-480-3923
National Sea Breeze 2004 M-1341 35’, gas, Fleetwood Wilderness 2 power slides, up36’, 2005, 4 slides, graded queen matrear bdrm, fireplace, tress, hyd. leveling AC, W/D hkup beausystem, rear camera tiful unit! $30,500. & monitor, only 6k mi. 541-815-2380 A steal at $43,000! 541-480-0617 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work, You Keep The Cash, On-Site Credit Approval Team, Web Site Presence, We Take Trade-Ins. Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend 541-330-2495
Montana 3400RL 2008, 4 slides, no smokers or pets, limited usage, 5500 watt Onan gen, solar panel, fireplace, dual A/C, central vac, elect. awning w/sunRedmond: 541-548-5254 screen arctic pkg, rear receiver, alum wheels, 2 TVs, many extras. $35,500. 541-416-8087
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Motorcycles & Accessories
Boats & Accessories
Boats & Accessories
Watercraft
Motorhomes
HD FAT BOY 1996
Completely rebuilt/ customized, low miles. Accepting offers. 541-548-4807
Kayak, Eddyline Sandpiper, 12’, like new, $975, 541-420-3277.
19-ft Mastercraft Pro12’ Sea King Boat/ Star 190 inboard, Trailer, $750, 1987, 290hp, V8, 822 541-385-6202. HD Heritage Classic hrs, great cond, lots of 2003, 100 yr. Anniv. Take care of extras, $10,000 obo. model. 10,905 Miles, 541-231-8709 your investments new tires, battery, loaded w/ custom exwith the help from tras, exhaust & The Bulletin’s 12’ Smoker Craft, chrome. Hard/soft 5hp motor, located in “Call A Service bags & much more. Sunriver. Now $775 $11,995, Professional” Directory obo. 503-319-5745. 541-306-6505 or 19’ Glass Ply, Merc 503-819-8100. cruiser, depth finder, trolling motor, trailer, Moped, gas-free, street 14’ Classic P-14 Seaswirl, 20HP $3000, 541-389-1086 legal, never used, motor, Bimini Top, or 541-419-8034. $775. 503-933-0814 new seats, Eagle fish finder, trailer, Need help ixing stuff? ready to go, $1600, Sea Kayaks - His & Call A Service Professional 541-923-2957. Hers, Eddyline Wind ind the help you need. 20.5’ 2004 Bayliner Dancers,17’, fiberglass www.bendbulletin.com 205 Run About, 220 boats, all equip incl., HP, V8, open bow, paddles, personal floexc. cond., very fast 865 tation devices,dry bags, w/very low hours, spray skirts,roof rack w/ ATVs lots of extras incl. 17’ Seaswirl, towers & cradles -- Just tower, Bimini & add water, $1250/boat 175HP in/ outboard, ATV tilt trailer w/ramp, custom trailer, Firm. 541-504-8557. open bow, new up14’x4” overall; bed 10’x $19,500. holster, $2900, 54”, full size rims & tires, 880 541-389-1413 541-389-9684. $550. 541-633-7856 Motorhomes Gokart, 110 CC, 3 spd forward + reverse, good Coachmen cond., $675, call 541-306-9138 Freelander, 2011 20.5’ Seaswirl Spy27’, queen bed, 1 der 1989 H.O. 302, slide, HDTV, DVD, 285 hrs., exc. cond., 4000w generator, di18.5’ ‘05 Reinell 185, V-6 stored indoors for nette, couch, 450 Volvo Penta, 270HP, life $11,900 OBO. Ford V10, 28K miles, low hrs., must see, 541-379-3530 like new, $48,000. $17,500, 541-330-3939 541-923-9754 1988 373V Polaris Predator 500 19.5’ Ranger Bass Boat, sport quad 2004. Runs Used out-drive Mercury 115 Motor, & rides great. $2800/ parts - Mercury Ranger trailer, trolling obo. 541-647-8931 OMC rebuilt maelec. motor, fish finder rine motors: 151 & sonor, 2 live wells & Yamaha Grizzly 700 FI $1595; 3.0 $1895; all accessories, new 2009, 543 mi, 2WD/ 4.3 (1993), $1995. batteries & tires, great 4WD, black w/EPS, Country Coach Intrigue 541-389-0435 cond., $6500. fuel injection, indepen2002, 40' Tag axle. 541-923-6555. dent rear suspension 400hp Cummins Diewinch w/handle conFIND IT! The Bulletin sel. Two slide-outs. trols & remote, ps, BUY IT! To Subscribe call auto, large racks, exc. 41,000 miles. Most SELL IT! cond., $7850, 541-385-5800 or go to options. $110,000 541-322-0215 OBO 541-678-5712 The Bulletin Classii eds www.bendbulletin.com
CAN’T BEAT THIS! Look before you buy, below market value ! Size & mileage DOES matter, Class A 32’ Hurricane by Four Winds, 2007. 12,500 mi, all amenities, Ford V10, lthr, cherry, slides, like new! New low price, $54,900. 541-548-5216 Gulfstream Scenic Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, Cummins 330 hp diesel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 in. kitchen slide out, new tires,under cover, hwy. miles only,4 door fridge/freezer icemaker, W/D combo, Interbath tub & shower, 50 amp propane gen & more! $55,000. 541-948-2310
Southwind 35.5’ Triton, 2008,V10, 2 slides, Dupont UV coat, 7500 mi. Avg NADA ret.114,343; asking $99,000. Call 541-923-2774 Winnebago Itasca Class C 1999, 31,135 orig. miles, great condition, Queen rear bed, two TVs, microwave, autosteps, sleeps 5, outside shower, exterior TV plug & radio, generator, $14,900. 760-702-6254
Winnebago Outlook 32’ 2008, Ford V10 engine, Wineguard sat, TV, surround sound stereo + more. Reduced to $49,000. 541-526-1622 or 541-728-6793
Montana 34’ 2003, 2 slides, exc. cond. throughout, arctic winter pkg., new 10-ply tires, W/D ready, $18,000, 541-390-6531
MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, lrg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $37,500. 541-420-3250 Open Road 37' 2004 3 slides, W/D hookup, large LR w/rear window. Desk area. Asking $19,750 OBO Call (541) 280-7879 visit rvt.com ad#104243920 for pics
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Aircraft, Parts & Service
GMC ½ ton 1971, Only $19,700! Original low ONLY 2 OWNERSHIP mile, exceptional, 3rd SHARES LEFT! owner. 951-699-7171 Economical flying in your own Cessna 172/180 HP for only $10,000! Based at Mercury Monterrey BDN. Call Gabe at 1965, Exc. All original, Professional Air! 4-dr. sedan, in stor541-388-0019 age last 15 yrs., 390 High Compression 916 engine, new tires & liTrucks & cense, reduced to Heavy Equipment $2850, 541-410-3425.
Freightliner 2000, 24’ van box, 8.3L 210 HP eng. in good cond. $9000, 541-749-0724.
Hyster H25E, runs
well, 2982 Hours, $3500, call 541-749-0724
INT. Dump 1982, w/arborhood, 6k on rebuilt 392, truck refurbished, has 330 gal. water tank w/pump & hose. Everything works, Reduced - now $5000 OBO. 541-977-8988
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Cardinal 33’ 2007, year round living, 8’ closet, 2 slides, 2 TVs, surround sound, $22,800. In Prineville, 509-521-0369
Fleetwood 28’ Pioneer 2003, 13’ slide, sleeps Reach thousands of readers! 6, walk-around bed with new mattress; power Call 541-385-5809 very clean The Bulletin Classifieds hitch, $11,500. Please call 541-548-4284. Itasca Sun Cruiser 1997, 460 Ford, Class A, 26K mi., 37’, living SPRINGDALE 2005 27’, has eating area room slide, new awslide, A/C and heat, nings, new fridge, 8 new tires, all connew tires, 2 A/C, 6.5 tents included, bedOnan Gen., new batding towels, cooking teries, tow pkg., rear and eating utensils. towing TV, 2 tv’s, new hydraulic jack springs, Great for vacation, tandem axel, $15,000, fishing, hunting or 541-385-1782 living! $15,500 541-408-3811 Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
Pilgrim 27’, 2007 5th wheel, 1 slide, AC, Peterbilt 359 potable TV,full awning, excelwater truck, 1990, lent shape, $23,900. 3200 gal. tank, 5hp 541-350-8629 pump, 4-3" hoses, camlocks, $25,000. 541-820-3724 Say “goodbuy” 925 to that unused Utility Trailers item by placing it in The Bulletin Classiieds
541-385-5809 SPRINTER 36’ 5th wheel, 2005, dual slides, queen bed air mattress, fold out couch. $10,500 obo. 541-382-0865, leave message!
Big Tex Landscaping/ ATV Trailer, dual axle flatbed, 7’x16’, 7000 lb. GVW, all steel, $1400. 541-382-4115, or 541-280-7024. Canopy, Full Size Gem Top Workman, ladder rack, $200, 325-6416 931
Taurus 27.5’ 1988
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories
Everything works, $1750/partial trade for car. 541-460-9127
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Fundraiser Sales Fundraiser Sales
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Sales Northeast Bend
Sales Northeast Bend
Sales Redmond Area
Three Sisters Lions Moving Sale! Household, HH FREE HH Club 3rd Annual Yard barn, shop, tack, pet Sale, July 21-22, Sat items & much more! Garage Sale Kit 9-5; Sun. 9-3, west end 20315 Birdsong Lane, Place an ad in The of Main Ave in Sisters. off Tumalo & Swalley Bulletin for your gaFor further info, call Rds., Fri-Sat, 8-3. rage sale and reHelen, 541-595-6967 ceive a Garage Sale Moving Sale: Sat. 7/21, 282 Kit FREE! 9-3 ONLY, 520 NW Sales Northwest Bend Divot Dr., in River’s KIT INCLUDES: Edge. • 4 Garage Sale Signs Awbrey Butte - Huge • $2.00 Off Coupon To Sale! 3 families (2 Moving Sale, Sat. Only Use Toward Your Moving) 2965 NW Ho8-4. 2942 NW Wild Next Ad rizon, Fri.-Sat., 7:30-5. Meadow Dr. Furniture/ • 10 Tips For “Garage incl. french antiques, Sale Success!” BALLOONS OVER rugs, lamps, houseBEND - Baubles and hold items and more. Bygones in Baskets PICK UP YOUR Below. Sat. only 7-4, GARAGE SALE KIT at 2146 NW Torrey Quality Garage Sale: 1777 SW Chandler Sat 7/21, 9-2 Only, Pines Dr. Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Household, sports, Estate Cabin Sale! garden, etc, no early Vintage cookstove in exc birds, 3174 NW Faircond., beds, bedding, way Heights Dr.. dressers, wheelbarrows, lots of misc. Fri. only Garage Sale: Fri & Sat, 284 8-3, 16342 Skyline Rd 8-3, 1000’s of Marbles Sales Southwest Bend (Skyline Rd to Mill, turn & Cracker Jack Colright, follow signs). lectibles, tools, anGarage Sale, Fri-Sat 9-3, tiques, other houseFriday only, 7/20, 8-2, 60991 Amethyst St. hold items, great sale, Clothes, furniture, Furniture, baby clothes, 1661 NE Northview Dr toys, & BAKE SALE! tools, lots of misc! 1054 NW Stannium. HUGE SHOP SALE Sat Giant Moving Sale: 286 7/21 8AM-3PM, Guns, Furniture, jewelry, Sales Northeast Bend Fisher Price, Anhousehold & garden tiques, Whizzer gas decor; many vintage Estate Sale: Thur.-Sat., bicycle, over 300 die items, toys, lots more! cast cars, Coke cool9-4, 1776 NE 8th St, Sat 7/21, 9-4, 64706 ers, old toys, gas Coins, antiques, vinCook Ave., Tumalo. pumps,household, tage toys, buffet, tools 21684 Boulder Moving/Garage Sale, hutches, dining table Ct. Boonesborough Sat. Only 8-5, 2487 & chairs, dresser, subdivision. NW Crossing Dr. New shelves, Elvis, Betty Chair and Ottoman, Boop, Mickey Mouse, Wicker chair, mens Cabbage Patch, Just bought a new boat? and womens clothing, records, dolls, books, Sell your old one in the crystal, china set, Christmas items, classiieds! Ask about our bedding, towels, stormany vintage items & Super Seller rates! age cabinets, patio much more. House furniture, much more. also for sale! 541-385-5809
Springdale 29’ 2007, slide,Bunkhouse style, sleeps 7-8, excellent condition, $16,900, 541-390-2504
FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, door panels w/flowers & hummingbirds, white soft top & hard top, Reduced! $5,500. 541-317-9319 or 541-647-8483
1/3 interest in Columbia 400, located at Sunriver. $138,500. Call 541-647-3718 Ford Galaxie 500 1963, 1/3 interest in well- 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & equipped IFR Beech radio (orig),541-419-4989 Bonanza A36, located KBDN. $55,000. Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, 541-419-9510 V8, automatic, great Executive Hangar shape, $9000 OBO. at Bend Airport 530-515-8199 (KBDN) 60’ wide x 50’ deep, Ford Mustang GT w/55’ wide x 17’ high Convertible - 1987 bi-fold door. Natural V8, 5-spd, leather, gas heat, office, bathCD player, maroon room. Parking for 6 paint, excellent cond, cars. Adjacent to low miles, $7500. Frontage Rd; great Call 541-504-4981 visibility for aviation bus. 1jetjock@q.com 541-948-2126
Travel Trailers
Hunter’s Delight! Package deal! 1988 Winnebago Super Chief, 38K miles, great shape; 1988 Bronco II 4x4 to tow, 130K mostly towed miles, nice rig! $15,000 both. 541-382-3964, leave msg.
Antique & Classic Autos
Plymouth Barracuda 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, centerlines, (Original 273 eng & wheels incl.) 541-593-2597 933
Pickups
Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4, 1995, extended cab, long box, grill guard, running boards, bed rails & canopy, 178K miles, $4800 obo. 208-301-3321 (Bend) Chevy Silverado 1998, black and silver, pro lifted, loaded, new 33” tires, aluminum slot wheels, tow pkg., drop hitch, diamond plate tool box, $12,000, or possible trade for newer Tacoma. 541-460-9127 Dodge 1500 2001, 4x4 sport, red, loaded, rollbar, AND 2011 Moped Trike used 3 months, street legal. call 541-433-2384
Ford F250 2011 Super Duty Lariat Edition QUIET diesel, low mileage with 5th wheel hitch, toolbox and tonneau cover. Available for showing in Bend. $46,000 OBO (317) 966-2189. Ford F250 XLT ‘95, 4WD auto, long bed, 3/4 ton, 8600 GVW, white,178K mi, AC, pw, pdl, Sirius, tow pkg., bedliner, bed rail caps, rear slide window, new tires, radiator, water pump, hoses, brakes, more, $5200, 541-322-0215
4 nice 20” EMR wheels, 5-hole 5.5 with center Ford F-350 XLT 2003, 4X4, 6L diesel, 6-spd caps & bolts. $350 manual, Super Cab, obo. 541-508-1420 short box, 12K Warn Jeep wheels (4) & stud winch, custom bumper tires, upgraded alumi& canopy, running num wheels, 255/55Rboards, 2 sets tires, 17MS, $375. wheels & chains, many Call 541-389-2530 or extras, perfect, ONLY 503-260-7637 Wilderness Advantage 29,800 miles, $27,500 OBO, 541-504-8316. 31’, 2004. 2 slides, 2 Michelin X-Ice mounted TVs, micro, solar sys, tires (4) 195-60/R14, Ford Ranger XLT $17,950. (Also avail: RadialX, $275. 1998 X-cab 2003 Ford F250 Diesel 541-382-3487 2.5L 4-cyl engine, X-cab.) 541-385-5077 Tires, (4), P25/70R15, 5-spd standard trans, 80% tread, off Chrysler long bed, newer mo885 Van, $100, 923-3631 tor & paint, new clutch Canopies & Campers & tires, excellent conWe Buy Junk dition, clean, $4500. Cars & Trucks! Call 541-447-6552 Cash paid for junk vehicles, batteries & Arctic Fox Model 860 catalytic converters. 2003 truck camper, 37 Serving all of C.O.! hrs on generator, solar Call 541-408-1090 panel, air, Magic fan, 932 slide-out. Like new, $12,500. 541-548-3818 Ford Super Duty F-250 Antique & or 541-480-9069 2001, 4X4, very good Classic Autos shape, V10 engine, $9800, 541-815-9939
MEGA SALE! Camping, Gigantor Yard Sale: farm & NASCAR stuff, Thur., Fri., Sat., 9-4, 12’ enclosed cargo 1170 NW 21st Pl., trailer, 1937 Coca Cola collectibles, jewelry, cooler, Chevy utility Wii games, movies, truck, baby items, school tools, albums, CD’s, Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 supplies, Weedeaters, drum parts, furniture, 29’, weatherized, like tools, XL women’s clean, organized and new, furnished & clothes. See craigslist! priced low! ready to go, incl WineFri-Sat, 8-3, 63141 Don gard Satellite dish, Jr. Lane. Huge Moving Sale: Fri. $26,995. 541-420-9964 1-5, Sat., 9-4, Hunting MOVING SALE! Furni& Fishing Stuff, TV’s, Terry travel trailer 23’ ture, office desks, sports motorcycle, bikes, art, 1974, good shape, gear, lawn equipment, household misc, 3725 big screen TV, I-mac self contained. $3000. SW Volcano Ave (Cascomputer,stainless BBQ, 541-279-3700. cade View Estates). all kinds of other goodies. All must go! 7/21292 7/22, 9-5. 62806 Baskin Ct.; 541-390-2464 Sales Other Areas Viking Tent trailer 2008, clean, self 288 Huge Garage Sale!15855 contained, sleep 5, Sales Southeast Bend Sparks Dr, LaPine Sat & easy to tow, great Lance #1030, 2003, very Sun, 7/21-22, 8am-5pm. cond. $6500. Community Yard Sale: Grandpa’s 50 yrs menice, fits ¾-ton longbed. Chevy Wagon 1957, 541-383-7150. Fri. & Sat. 8-3, Suntree chanics tools; grandma’s 4-dr., complete, Elec jacks, AC, dry bath, Village, 1001 SE 15th, $15,000 OBO, trades, no gen/slides. $10,500 all small appls & gobs of lots of great stuff,some- misc household items! obo. 541-883-3355 please call thing for everyone! 541-420-5453. Lance 11.6 camper Mdl Garage Sale July 21 People Look for Information 1130, 1999. Ext’d cab, Chrysler 300 Coupe About Products and 8AM-12PM., Broster1967, 440 engine, fully self-contained. hous at Karch (707) Services Every Day through Weekend Warrior Toy auto. trans, ps, air, Incl catalytic heater, 738-1381 The Bulletin Classifieds Hauler 28’ 2007,Gen, frame on rebuild, reTV/VCR combo. Very fuel station, exc cond. painted original blue, well taken care of, 290 Moving/Garage Sale! sleeps 8, black/gray original blue interior, clean. Hauls easily, Sales Redmond Area Sat only, 7/21, 8-4, interior, used 3X, original hub caps, exc. very comfortable. 18025 2nd Ave., off Hwy $24,999. chrome, asking $9000 $6999. 541-382-1344 20 between Sisters & 2 Households - 1 Huge 541-389-9188 or make offer. Tumalo. Lots of stuff! Sale: Fri. & Sat. 9-3, 541-385-9350. Lance-Legend 990 882 927 NW Redwood 11’3" 1998, w/ext-cab, Pl., lots of great stuff! Three Sisters Lions exc. cond., generator, Fifth Wheels Club 3rd Annual Yard solar-cell, large refrig, Garage Sale: Fri. & Sale, July 21-22, Sat AC, micro., magic fan, Chrysler SD 4-Door Sat., 8-2, 1728 NW 9-5; Sun. 9-3, west end Alfa Ideal 2001, 31’, 3 bathroom shower, slides, island kitchen, Kingwood, Antiques, of Main Ave in Sisters. 1930, CDS Royal removable carpet, AC/heat pump, genfishing stuff, clothes, For further info, call Standard, 8-cylinder, custom windows, outerator, satellite syswood craft stuff, more. Helen, 541-595-6967 body is good, needs door shower/awning tem, 2 flatscreen TVs, some restoration, set-up for winterizing, Yard Sale 576 NW hitch & awning incl. TURN THE PAGE runs, taking bids, elec. jacks, CD/steGlass Dr. Madras Fri $16,000. (Dodge 3500 541-383-3888, For More Ads reo/4’ stinger. $7500. & Sat 8-5 Raising 1 ton also available) 541-815-3318 The Bulletin Bend, 541.279.0458 funds for oxygen unit 541-388-1529;408-4877
GMC ½-ton Pickup, 1972, LWB, 350hi motor, mechanically A-1, interior great; body needs some TLC. $4000 OBO. Call 541-382-9441
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. REDUCED! Ford 1978 truck, $1800 obo. V8 4 spd, runs good, new battery, spark plugs, rebuilt carb. Ex U-Haul,
541-548-7171
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012 F3
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Sport Utility Vehicles
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
BMW 525i 2004,
CHEVY SUBURBAN LT 2005, low miles., good tires, new brakes, moonroof Reduced to $15,750 541-389-5016.
Nissan Murano SL-AWD 2004, 75k, all-weather tires, tow pkg, gold metallic, beige leather int., moonroof, $14,990. 541-317-5693
Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 4x4. 120K mi, Power seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd row seating, extra tires, CD, privacy tinting, upgraded rims. Fantastic cond. $7995 Contact Timm at Porsche Cayenne 2004, 86k, immac, dealer 541-408-2393 for info maint’d, loaded, now or to view vehicle. $17000. 503-459-1580 Chevy Trailblazer 2005, gold, LS 4X4, 6 cyl., auto, A/C, pdl, new tires, keyless entry, 66K mi., exc. cond. $9,399. 541-598-5111
Ford Excursion 2005, 4WD, diesel, exc. cond., $19,900, call 541-923-0231.
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Vans
Chevy Astro Cargo Van 2001,
pw, pdl, great cond., business car, well maint, regular oil changes, $4500, please call 541-633-5149
New body style, Steptronic auto., cold-weather package, premium package, heated seats, extra nice. $14,995. 503-635-9494. People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Day through The Bulletin Classifieds Buicks Galore! No junk! LeSabres, LaCrosse & Lucernes priced $5000-$8500 for serious buyers only. All are ‘03’s and newer. 541-318-9999. Ask about Free Trip to Washington, D.C. for WWII Veterans. Ford Thunderbird 1988, 3.8 V-6, 35K actual mi., new hoses, belts, tires, battery, pb, ps, cruise, A/C, CD, exc. cond. in & out, 2nd owner, maint. records, must see & drive! $4500, 541-330-0733
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classiieds! Ask about our Mercedes E320 2004, Super Seller rates! GMC Denali 2002, 1 71K miles, silver/silver, owner, 110,600 mi., 541-385-5809 exc. cond, below Blue fully loaded, all service Book, $14,700 Call records, exc., $12,750, Honda Odyssey 2000, 541-788-4229 1 owner, 135K mi., 541-593-2398. new catalytic con- Mitsubishi 3000 GT verter, snow tires, 1999, auto., pearl GMC Denali 2003 battery, brakes & white, very low mi. loaded with options. windshield, maint. $9500. 541-788-8218. Exc. cond., snow records, garaged, tires and rims in$6500, SE Bend, PORSCHE 914 1974, cluded. 130k hwy 541-508-8784. Roller (no engine), miles. $12,000. lowered, full roll cage, Honda Odyssey 2006 541-419-4890. 5-pt harnesses, racEX-L, 2nd owner; 84K ing seats, 911 dash & miles; Very good instruments, decent cond.; leather, heated shape, very cool! seats; 6-CD player; $1699. 541-678-3249 $14,900 OBO; Dean at 541-678-2881 Jeep Cherokee 1990, 4WD, 3 sets rims & tires, exlnt set snow tires, great 1st car! $1800. 541-633-5149
Jeep Cherokee Sport 4x4, 2000, exc cond, 150K, new tires, studs, tow hitch, $5500 obo. 541-788-0117
Jeep Willys 1947,custom, small block Chevy, PS, OD,mags+ trailer.Swap for backhoe.No am calls please. 541-389-6990
NISSAN QUEST 1996, 3-seat mini van, extra nice in and out $3,900. Sold my Windstar, need another van! 541-318-9999, ask for Bob. Ask about free trip to D.C. for WWII vets.
Toyota Camry 1999 4-dr sedan, below normal miles, great cond, well maintained. $4900 obo. Call 541-923-0231 or 541-923-2582
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Legal Notices
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tative in care of the undersigned at: Warren John West, Attorney at Law, 160 NW Irving, Bend, OR 97701 within four months after the date of first publication of this notice, as stated below, or such claims may be barred. All persons whose rights may be affected by the proceedings in this estate may obtain additional information from the records of the Court, the personal representative or the attorney for the personal representative. Dated and first published July 4, 2012. Warren John West, 160 NW Irving, Bend, OR 97701.
LEGAL NOTICE EXHIBIT C CERTIFIED MAIL RETURN RECEIPT REQUESTED BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON NOTICE OF ROAD VACATION HEARING
the Court, the perLEGAL NOTICE sonal representative Estate of Delores Mable or the attorney for the Ann Smith personal representaNotice to Interested tive. Persons Case No.12-PB-0023 Date of first publication: July 18, 2012. In the Circuit Court of Kristin Larson, the State of Oregon OSB #023639 for the County of DesHansen & Larson, LLC chutes. In the Matter of the Attorney for Personal Representative, Estate of Delores Lyle Smith Mable Ann Smith, de5 NW Minnesota Ave., ceased. Suite 220 Notice is hereby given Bend, OR 97701 that Lyle and Dewayne Smith have been LEGAL NOTICE appointed as the perEstate of Dustin sonal representatives Douglas Weber. of the above estate. Notice to Interested All persons having Persons. Case No. claims against the 12PB0059. In the estate are required to Court of the State of present them to the Oregon for the undersigned personal County of Desrepresentative in the chutes. In the Matcare of the underter of the Estate of signed attorney at: 5 Dustin Douglas NW Minnesota, Suite Weber, Deceased. 220, Bend, Oregon Notice is hereby 97701 within four given that Jon Earl months after the date Weber and Lorriene of first publication of Jean Davis have this notice, as stated been appointed as below, or such claims the personal repremay be barred. sentatives of the All persons whose above estate. All rights may be afpersons having fected by the proclaims against this ceedings in this esestate are required tate may obtain to present them to additional information the undersigned from the records of personal represen-
GROWIN
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with an ad in The Bulletin’s “Call A Service Professional” Directory
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LEGAL NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Phyllis P. Thebo and Occupants of the Premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 11CV1004
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Volvo 740 ‘87, 4-cyl,auto Audi Quattro 2004 A6 86k on eng.,exc. maint. AWD, 73k mi., $11,900 $2895, 541-301-1185. obo. 541-318-1009 www.youtu.be/yc0n6zVIbAc
Notice is hereby given that I will on August 2, 2012 at 11:00 AM in the main lobby of the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the following real property, known as 130 Southeast 15th Street, Bend, Oregon 97702, to wit,
VW JETTA 2005 $11,977 #640524
541-598-3750
aaaoregonautosource.com
LOT 1, BLOCK 1, RAMSAY ESTATES, NO. 2, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated June 19, 2012, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns as plaintiff/s, recovered General Judgment of Foreclosure on April 27, 2012, against Phyllis P. Thebo and Occupants of the Premises as defendant/s. BEFORE BIDDING AT THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY INVESTIGATE:
$
Call 541-385-5809 to promote your service • Advertise for 28 days starting at 140 (This special package is not available on our website)
Building/Contracting NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who contracts for construction work to be licensed with the Construction Contractors Board (CCB). An active license means the contractor is bonded and insured. Verify the contractor’s CCB license through the CCB Consumer Website
Home Improvement Kelly Kerfoot Const.
Nelson Landscape Maintenance Quality & honesty, from Serving 28 yrs exp in Central OR!
carpentry & handyman jobs, to expert wall covering install / removal.
Sr. discounts CCB#47120 Licensed/bonded/insured 541-389-1413 / 410-2422
Landscaping/Yard Care
www.hirealicensedcontractor. com
or call 503-378-4621. The Bulletin recommends checking with the CCB prior to contracting with anyone. Some other trades also require additional licenses and certifications. Computer/Cabling Install QB Digital Living •Computer Networking •Phone/Data/TV Jacks •Whole House Audio •Flat Screen TV & Installation 541-280-6771 www.qbdigitalliving.com CCB#127370 Elect Lic#9-206C
Debris Removal
JUNK BE GONE
I Haul Away FREE
For Salvage. Also Cleanups & Cleanouts Mel, 541-389-8107 Electrical Services
Landscaping/Yard Care
More Than Service Peace Of Mind
•Weekly Mowing •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Maintenance •Flower Bed Clean Up •Bark, Rock, Etc. •Senior Discounts
Fire Protection
LCB#8759
Protect your home with defensible space
Call The Yard Doctor for yard maintenance, thatching, sod, sprinkler blowouts, water features, more! Allen 541-536-1294 LCB 5012
Landscape Maintenance
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and Fuel Reduction •All Grass •Low Limbs •Brush and Debris
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Quality Builders Electric Commercial WESTERN PAINTING • Remodels & Residential CO. Richard Hayman, • Home Improvement Free Estimates a semi-retired paint• Lighting Upgrades Senior Discounts ing contractor of 45 • Hot Tub Hook-ups 541-390-1466 years. Small Jobs 541-389-0621 Same Day Response Welcome. Interior & www.qbelectric.net NOTICE: OREGON Exterior. ccb#5184. CCB#127370 Elect Landscape Contrac541-388-6910 Lic#9-206C tors Law (ORS 671) requires all busiHandyman FIND YOUR FUTURE nesses that advertise to perform Land- HOME IN THE BULLETIN ERIC REEVE HANDY scape Construction SERVICES. Home & Your future is just a page which includes: away. Whether you’re looking Commercial Repairs, planting, decks, Carpentry-Painting, for a hat or a place to hang it, fences, arbors, Pressure-washing, The Bulletin Classiied is water-features, and Honey Do's. On-time your best source. installation, repair of promise. Senior Every day thousands of irrigation systems to Discount. Work guarbe licensed with the buyers and sellers of goods anteed. 541-389-3361 Landscape Contrac- and services do business in or 541-771-4463 these pages. They know tors Board. This Bonded & Insured 4-digit number is to be you can’t beat The Bulletin CCB#181595 Classiied Section for included in all adverI DO THAT! tisements which indi- selection and convenience Home/Rental repairs cate the business has - every item is just a phone Small jobs to remodels call away. a bond, insurance and Honest, guaranteed workers compensaThe Classiied Section is work. CCB#151573 tion for their employeasy to use. Every item Dennis 541-317-9768 ees. For your protecis categorized and every tion call 503-378-5909 Mendoza Contracting cartegory is indexed on the or use our website: Home Inspection Repairs section’s front page. Decks, Pressure Wash, www.lcb.state.or.us to Stain/paint interior/ext. check license status Whether you are looking for a home or need a service, 541-548-5226 CCB80653 before contracting with the business. your future is in the pages of The Bulletin Classiied. Find exactly what Persons doing landscape maintenance you are looking for in the do not require a LCB CLASSIFIEDS license.
LARRY BLANTON Deschutes County Sheriff Lisa Griggs, Civil Technician Date: June 28, 2012 1000
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LEGAL NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY Suntrust Mortgage, Inc., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. The unknown heirs of Monty K. Fisher; Marilyn K. Paustian; Matthew K. Fisher; Oregon Department of Human Services; and Occupants of the Premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 10CV0674MA NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that I will on August 9, 2012 at 11:00 AM in the main lobby of the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the following real property, known as 16738 Casper Drive, Bend, Oregon 97707, to wit, Lot 4 in Block 10 of Oregon Water Wonderland, Unit 1, Deschutes County, Oregon Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated June 22, 2012, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein Suntrust Mortgage, Inc. as plaintiff/s, recovered General Judgment of Foreclosure on January 23, 2012, against The Unknown Heirs of Monty K. Fisher, Marilyn K. Paustian, Matthew K. Fisher, Oregon Department of Human Services, and Occupants of the Premises as defendant/s. BEFORE BIDDING AT THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY INVESTIGATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of the judgment creditor; (b)Land use laws and regulations applicable to the property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d)Limits on farming or forest practices on the property; (e)Rights of neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property. Published in Bend Bulletin Date of First and Successive Publications:July 11, 2012; July 18, 2012; July 25, 2012 Date of Last Publication: August 1, 2012 Attorney:Tony Kullen, OSB #090218 Routh Crabtree Olsen, PC 621 SW Alder Street, Suite 800 Portland, OR 97205-3623 (503) 977-7840 Conditions of Sale:Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale.
Anthony Raguine, Civil Technician Date: July 5, 2012
Anthony DeBone, Chair NOTE: A utility easement will PUBLISHED: not be reserved on vacated public road Bulletin - July 18, 2012 & July 28, 2012 right-of-way parcels unless there is physi- POSTED: July 18, 2012 cal evidence of an MAILED: July 8, 2012 existing utility on the parcel, or a utility Need to get an company provides ad in ASAP? evidence of an existing facility, or there is You can place it a specific request online at: from a utility company to retain an www.bendbulletin.com easement for a planned future facility. 541-385-5809 1000
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LEGAL NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY Wells Fargo Bank, NA, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Dawn G. Stuart; and Occupants of the Premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 11CV0734 NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY
Lot 6 in Block 103 of Bend Park First Addition, Deschutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated June 25, 2012, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein Wells Fargo Bank, NA as plaintiff/s, recovered Stipulated General Judgment of Foreclosure and Shortening of Redemption Period Against Defendant on May 1, 2012, against Dawn G. Stuart as defendant/s. BEFORE BIDDING AT THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY INVESTIGATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of the judgment creditor; (b)Land use laws and regulations applicable to the property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d)Limits on farming or forest practices on the property; (e)Rights of neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property. LARRY BLANTON Deschutes County Sheriff Anthony Raguine, Civil Technician Date: July 5, 2012 Published in Bend Bulletin Date of First and Successive Publications:July 11, 2012; July 18, 2012; July 25, 2012 Date of Last Publication: August 1, 2012 Attorney:Sean C. Currie, OSB #08297 Routh Crabtree Olsen, PC 621 SW Alder Street, Suite 800 Portland, OR 97205-3623 (503) 977-7840
Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale.
LARRY BLANTON Deschutes County Sheriff
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON
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Attorney: Sean C. Currie, OSB #08297 Routh Crabtree Olsen, P.C. 621 SW Alder St., Ste 800 Portland, OR 97205 (503) 459-0116
Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458
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(a)The priority of the lien or interest of the judgment creditor; (b)Land use laws and regulations applicable to the property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d)Limits on farming or forest practices on the property; (e)Rights of neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property.
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NOTICE TO MORT-
In response to a petition by landowners, Deschutes County initiated the vacation of a portion of the 1911 H.B. Ford Road, located in T.21S, R.20E. and T.22S., R.20E Deschutes County by vacated.
y
Persons interested in obtaining more detailed information or a map of the proposed vacation may contact the Deschutes County Road Department, 61150 S.E. 27th Street, Bend, Oregon, (541) 322-7148.
Notice is hereby given that I will on August 9, 2012 at 11:15 AM in the main lobby of the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the following real property, known as 1306 Northeast 8th Street, Bend, Oregon 97701, to wit,
NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY
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NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS WILL HOLD A PUBLIC HEARING ON AUGUST 8, 2012, AT 10:00 A.M. IN THE DESCHUTES COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONER'S HEARING ROOM, DESCHUTES SERVICES CENTER, 1300 NW WALL, BEND, OREGON 97701, ON THE PROPOSED ROAD VACATION PROCEEDING DESCRIBED BELOW. ALL INTERESTED PERSONS MAY APPEAR AND BE HEARD.
GAGEE, LIENHOLDER, VENDOR OR SELLER: ORS CHAPTER 215 REQUIRES THAT IF YOU RECEIVE THIS NOTICE, IT MUST PROMPTLY BE FORWARDED TO THE PURCHASER.
Conditions of Sale:Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. 1000
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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Reference is made to that certain Deed of Trust "Deed of Trust" made by James M. Bennett and Erin L. Bennett as Grantor(s), to AmeriTitle, as Trustee, in favor of Columbia River Bank, as Beneficiary, dated January 28, 2005, recorded February 7, 2005, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County, Oregon, as Instrument No. 2005-7507, and last modified by instrument recorded on May 12, 2008 as Instrument No. 2008-20690, and covering the following described real property situated in the above-mentioned county and state, to wit: Lot 3, Block 19, AWBREY BUTTE HOMESITE, PHASE FIFTEEN, Deschutes County, OR. Property tax account No. 17 11 25 A0 05800. Real property or its address is commonly known as 2799 NW Horizon, Bend, OR 97701, the "Real Property". The undersigned hereby disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the above-described street address or other common designation. The undersigned as successor trustee hereby certifies that no assignments of the trust deed by the Trustee or by the Beneficiary and no appointments of a successor trustee have been made except as recorded in the mortgage records of the county or counties in which the above-described Real Property is situated together with appointing Erich M. Paetsch as the current successor trustee; further, that no action has been instituted to recover the debt, or any part thereof, now remaining secured by the Deed of Trust, or, if such action has been instituted, such action has been dismissed except as permitted by ORS 86.735(4). The Real Property will be sold to satisfy the Promissory Note identified below secured by the Deed of Trust and a Notice of Default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default(s) for which the foreclosure is made is/are the following: Loan No. 81013. Failure to pay the full loan balance as of the date of maturity on April 18, 2011. By reason of the(se) default(s), the current Beneficiary has and does hereby declare all sums owing on the Promissory Note secured by the Deed of Trust immediately due and payable, those sums being the following, to wit: Principle Balance: $171,872.42. Accrued Interest: $41,564.87. Late Charges: $412.73. Fees and Costs: $4,694.50. Total: $218,544.52* *Total does not include accrued interest at the rate of $84.76 per diem after March 28, 2012, additional late charges, expenditures, or trustee fees, and attorney fees and costs. A total payoff amount as of a specific date is available upon written request to the successor trustee. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned successor trustee will on Thursday, September 27, 2012, at the hour of 2:00 o'clock p.m. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the front entrance of Deschutes County Courthouse, 1100 NW Bond Street, Bend, Oregon 97701, State of Oregon, which is the hour, date and place last set for the sale, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the Real Property which the Grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by Grantor of the Deed of Trust, together with any interest which the Grantor or Grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the Deed of Trust, to satisfy the foregoing Promissory Note secured by the Deed of Trust and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the successor trustee. The successor trustee intends to foreclose upon the Real Property described above. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time not later than five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the Deed of Trust reinstated by paying the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with costs, trustee's fees and attorney fees and costs, and by curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default, that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the Promissory Note or Deed of Trust. In construing this Notice of Sale, the singular includes the plural, the word "Grantor" includes any successor in interest to the Grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the Deed of Trust, and the words "Trustee" and "Beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The mailing address for the successor trustee, as referenced herein, is as follows: Erich M. Paetsch, P.O. Box 470, Salem, OR 97308-0470, Trustee's Telephone Number: 503-399-1070. Dated: May 22, 2012. /s/ Erich M. Paetsch. Erich M. Paetsch, Successor Trustee. State of Oregon, County of Marion ss. I, the undersigned, certify that I am the attorney or one of the attorneys for the above named Successor Trustee and that the foregoing is a complete and exact copy of the original Trustee's Notice of Sale. /s/ Erich M. Paetsch, Attorney for said Trustee.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
F4 WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2012 • THE BULLETIN %
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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 1220009859 T.S. No.: 12-01357-5 Reference is made to that certain Deed of Trust dated as of December 1, 2005 made by, PHILLIP FINCH AND CHERYL FINCH, HUSBAND AND WIFE, as the original grantor, to WESTERN TITLE CO., as the original trustee, in favor of NEW CENTURY MORTGAGE CORPORATION, A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION, as the original beneficiary, recorded on December 7, 2005, as Instrument No. 2005-83876 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 Securitized Asset Backed Receivables LLC TRUST 2006-NC1, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-NC1, (the "Beneficiary"). APN: 139921 LOT 2, BLOCK 1, TALL PINES, FIRST ADDITION, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 53379 BIG TIMBER DRIVE, LA PINE, 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: $4,486.04 as of June 21, 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 $130,816.32 together with interest thereon at the rate of 7.45000% per annum from February 1, 2012 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 October 31, 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, 11000 Olson Drive Ste 101, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670 916-636-0114 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: July 2, 2012, 2012 FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, Trustee Megan Curtis, Authorized Signature A-4267640 07/18/2012, 07/25/2012, 08/01/2012, 08/08/2012 1000
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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT THE AMOUNT OF YOUR INDEBTEDNESS TO THE BENEFICIARY, THEIR SUCCESSORS IN INTEREST AND/OR ASSIGNEES AS RECITED BELOW, AS OF THE DATE OF THIS NOTICE/LETTER, IS $124,559.39. INTEREST FEES AND COSTS WILL CONTINUE TO-ACCRUE AFTER THE DATE OF THIS NOTICE/ LETTER. UNLESS YOU DISPUTE THE VALIDITY OF THE DEBT OR ANY PORTION THEREOF WITHIN 30 DAYS AFTER RECEIVING NOTICE OF THIS DOCUMENT, THIS OFFICE WILL ASSUME THE DEBT TO BE VALID. IF YOU NOTIFY THIS OFFICE IN WRITING WITHIN THE 30-DAY PERIOD THAT THE DEBT OR ANY PORTION THEREOF IS DISPUTED, VERIFICATION OF THE DEBT WILL BE OBTAINED AND WILL BE MAILED TO YOU. UPON WRITTEN REQUEST WITHIN 30 DAYS, THE NAME AND ADDRESS OF THE ORIGINAL CREDITOR, IF DIFFERENT FROM THE CURRENT CREDITOR, WILL BE PROVIDED. NOTICE: WE ARE A DEBT COLLECTOR. THIS COMMUNICATION IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR PURPOSES OF DEBT COLLECTION. Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Sandra L. Tchida, a single person, as grantor, to U.S. Bank Trust Company, National Association, as trustee, in favor of U.S. Bank National Association ND, as beneficiary, dated November 2, 2004, recorded November 8, 2004, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County, Oregon, as Recording Number 2004-66775, covering the following described real property situated in said county and state, to-wit: Lot 53, Deschutes River Tract, Deschutes County, Oregon. Together with that certain 27x56, 1987 Goldenwest manufactured home bearing VIN No. CE6394, and more fully described in that certain Title Elimination document filed with the Recorder of Deschutes County, Oregon on June 21, 1999 under Recording No. Vol. 1999, Page 30685. Both the beneficiary and the trustee, David A. Weibel, will sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statues 86.753(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor’s failure to pay the following sums: 1. Monthly Payments: Delinquent Monthly Payments Due from 4/8/2011 through 5/8/2012: Total Payments: $10,435.88. Total Late Charges $484.51. Lender’s Other Fees $111.00. THE SUM OWING ON THE OBLIGATION SECURED BY THE TRUST DEED: $11,031.39. 2. Delinquent Real Property Taxes, if any. By reason of said default, the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: Unpaid balance is $122,059.39 as of May 25, 2012. In addition there are attorney's fees and foreclosure costs which as of the date of this notice are estimated to be $2,500.00. Interest, late charges and advances for the protection and preservation of the property may accrue after the date of this notice. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee, David A. Weibel, on October 3, 2012 at the hour of 11:00 am, in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the front entrance of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, 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 grantor of the said trust deed together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's 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 ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time that is not later than five days before the date last set for the sale to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), paying all advances authorized under the trust deed, including all costs and expenses incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, and by curing any other default complained of therein 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's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word “grantor” includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words “trustee” and “beneficiary” include their respective successors in interest, if any. DATED: June 1, 2012. David A. Weibel, Trustee. For Information Call: Bishop, White, Marshall & Weibel, P.S., 720 Olive Way, Suite 1301, Seattle, WA 98101, (206) 622-7527.
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LEGAL NOTICE Oregon Notice of Sale Note Well: The bold print words and phrases herein are defined on Identifying Data attached hereto. The persons and things to which those words and phrases apply to herein are also stated on Identifying Data attached hereto. Only Identifying Data is attached to the copy hereof that is published. (1) Not a Payment Demand. This is not a demand that any person make any payment on The Debt or an assertion that any person has personal liability on The Debt. (2) Defaults. The Defaults have occurred on The Debt. (3) Election to Sell. Because of The Defaults, The Foreclosing Party has elected to sell and intends to sell or cause to be sold The Collateral at a public foreclosure sale for cash in U.S. currency. The Collateral may be subject to other liens and encumbrances that may not be extinguished by the Foreclosure Sale. Before bidding, it is your legal duty to research the status of title. (4) Foreclosure Sale. The foreclosure sale shall be held: Date: August 30 , 2012. Time: 1:00 P.M. Place: Main Entrance of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 Bond Street, Bend, OR 97701. (5) Cure Right, Payoff Right. You may have a right to pay The Defaults (i.e., a Cure Right under ORS 86.753) or payoff all amounts owed on the Debt (i.e. Payoff Right) if paid before the foreclosure sale. The Trustee will provide those cure and payoff amounts to you if you request them. A Cure or Payoff will nullify this Notice and its Foreclosure Sale. No Cure or Payoff in the next 30 days will cause additional costs (recording, transmitting, publication, etc.) to be incurred, cause publication of The Defaults and advertise the Collateral's Foreclosure Sale. (6) Redemption Right/Redemption Period. Redemption, i.e., the right to pay the successful bid at the foreclosure sale for a period of time after the sale, is not permitted, except when there is an IRS lien, IRS may redeem during the 120 days after the Foreclosure Sale. (7) Court Right. This foreclosure will not involve any judge or court. You have a right to ask a court to be involved in this foreclosure by filing a lawsuit asking for a court's involvement. OR31-1, Philip M. Kleinsmith, Attorney for Foreclosing Party and/or Present Trustee, Atty. Reg. No. #3931, 6035 Erin Park Dr., #203, Colorado Springs, CO 80918, Phone: 1-800-842-8417, Fax: 1-719-593-2193, E-mail: klein@kleinsmithlaw.com. THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. State of Colorado) County of El Paso) On June 2 ,2012, before me personally appeared Philip M. Kleinsmith as said attorney and/or trustee, personally known to me. Under oath and penalty of perjury, he stated that this Notice and its attachments are true to the best of his knowledge. The Foreclosing Party: has actual or construction possession of The Debt, and; he has authority to exercise the power of sale in The Lien pursuant to the Foreclosing Party's instructions. Witness my hand and official seal. My commission expires: 09/09/2012. Name and Address of Notary: LeeAnn Finnell, 6035 Erin Park Dr., # 203, Colorado Springs,CO 80918. Mailing Note: This Notice with Identifying Data and Notice to Residential Tenants attached: (a)The original was mailed, certified mail, return receipt requested, for recording; (b)Copies were mailed, regular and certified mail, return receipt requested, to each Interested Party at each of their addresses on Schedule 3. (c)When the IRS and/or an Oregon government agency is/are Interested Parties on Identifying Data, its/their copy was mailed with, in addition, with a copy of its/their recorded lien. (d)Copies were mailed to be served and/or posted. (e)A copy was mailed for publication with only Identifying Data attached. Dated: June 2, 2012. Jessica Chidester, Signature of Mailer. OR31-2 Identifying Data of Debt, the Mortgage and the Property. The Debt: Present Mortgagee (name & address): Green Planet Servicing, LLC. Date of Debt: 5/2/2007. Original Principal Balance:171,000.00. Present Principal Balance: $ 160,103.37. Daily Interest: $26.31. Estimated Attorneys Fees: $675.00. The Present Value of the Property is Other Estimated Costs: $1,800.00. Unknown Estimated Total Due: $162,578.37. The Mortgage: (Mortgage, Deed of Trust, or Trust Indenture and/or Security Agreement/Financing Statement Being Foreclosed Per Real Estate Records of County Where Property is Located or other records where Collateral Instrument filed): Date of Mortgage and/or Security Agreement/Financing Statement: 5/2/2007. Date Recorded and/or Filed: 5/9/2007. Recording Data: 2007-26611. Original Trustee (name & address) or N/A First American Title Company, 395 SW Bluff Drive, Ste 100. Bend, OR 97701. Original Mortgagee(s), Beneficiary(ies) or Secured Party(ies) (name & address): Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. acting solely as Nominee for Freedom Mortgage Corporation DBA Freedom Home Mortgage Corporation, PO Box 2026, Flint, MI 48501. Present Trustee (name, address & phone) or N/A: Philip M. Kleinsmith, 6035 Erin Park Drive, Suite 203, Colorado Springs, CO 80918. Present Mortgagee: See above. Maker(s), Assumer(s), Guarantor(s) (name(s) & address(es)): Michelle Baker and Michael Baker, 52836 Wayside Loop, Lapine, OR 97739. Mortgagor(s)/Grantor(s) name(s) & (name(s) & address(es)): Michelle Baker and Michael Baker, 52836 Wayside Loop, Lapine, OR 97739 . Present Owner(s) of The Property address(es)): Michelle Baker and Michael Baker, 52836 Wayside Loop, Lapine, OR 97739. The Property: (Mortgaged Property or Trust Property or Property): Assessor's Tax Parcel #: 140711. Common Description: 52836 Wayside Loop, Lapine, OR 97739. Legal Description: Lot 18, Block 9, FOREST VIEW, Deschutes County, Oregon. Mobile or Manufactured Home or Other Collateral: Common Description: Unknown. Legal Description: Unknown.
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE: AS THE RESULT OF AN ORDER ENTERED IN A BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDING, JOHN B. WARD, III, MAY NOT BE PERSONALLY LIABLE FOR THE UNPAID BALANCE OF THE BELOW REFERENCED LOAN. HOWEVER, THE BENEFICIARY RETAINS A DEED OF TRUST DESCRIBED BELOW WHICH IS SUBJECT TO FORECLOSURE IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF OREGON. AS OF THE DATE OF THIS NOTICE/LETTER, THE BALANCE TO PAY OFF THE DEED OF TRUST IS $441,721.74. INTEREST FEES AND COSTS WILL CONTINUE TO ACCRUE AFTER THE DATE OF THIS NOTICE/LETTER. UNLESS YOU DISPUTE THE VALIDITY OF THE DEBT OR ANY PORTION THEREOF WITHIN 30 DAYS AFTER RECEIVING NOTICE OF THIS DOCUMENT, THIS OFFICE IN WRITING WITHIN THE 30-DAY PERIOD THAT THE DEBT OR ANY PORTION THEREOF IS DISPUTED, VERIFICATION OF THE DEBT WILL BE OBTAINED AND WILL BE MAILED TO YOU. UPON WRITTEN REQUEST WITHIN 30 DAYS, THE NAME AND ADDRESS OF THE ORIGINAL CREDITOR, IF DIFFERENT FROM THE CURRENT CREDITOR, WILL BE PROVIDED. NOTICE: IF YOU ARE NOT PERSONALLY LIABLE TO PAY THIS OBLIGATION BY REASON OF A BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDING, THEN THIS NOTICE IS NOT AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT BUT IS INTENDED ONLY TO RELAY INFORMATION REGARDING YOUR DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE: IF YOU ARE PERSONALLY LIABLE TO PAY THIS OBLIGATION, WE WISH TO INFORM YOU THAT WE ARE A DEBT COLLECTOR, ANY INFORMATION YOU PROVIDE TO US WILL BE USED FOR THE PURPOSES OF FORECLOSING THE DEED OF TRUST MENTIONED BELOW. Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by John B. Ward III, an Unmarried Man, as grantor, to First American Title Insurance Company, as trustee, in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for Chevy Chase Bank, F.S.B. and it successors and assigns, as beneficiary, dated November 10, 2006, recorded November 14, 2006, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County, Oregon, as Recording Number 2006-75419. Said Deed of Trust was assigned on April 6, 2012 to Capital One, N.A. by an instrument recorded under Auditor’s File No. 2012-17958 on May 11, 2012, covering the following described real property situated in said county and state, to-wit: Lot 1, Block 1, Junipine, Deschutes County, Oregon. Both the beneficiary and the trustee, David A. Weibel, will sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statues 86.753(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor’s failure to pay the following sums: 1. Monthly Payments: Delinquent Monthly Payments Due from 11/1/2011 through 5/1/2012: Total Payments: $16,440.06. Accrued Late Charges: $627.50. Lender’s Recoverable Balance $390.43. THE SUM OWING ON THE OBLIGATION SECURED BY THE TRUST DEED: $17,457.99. 2. Delinquent Real Property Taxes, if any. By reason of said default, the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: Unpaid balance is $439,221.74 as of May 15, 2012. In addition there are attorney's fees and foreclosure costs which as of the date of this notice are estimated to be $2,500.00. Interest, late charges and advances for the protection and preservation of the property may accrue after the date of this notice. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee, David A. Weibel, on September 26, 2012 at the hour of 11:00 am, in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the front entrance of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, 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 grantor of the said trust deed together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's 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 ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time that is not later than five days before the date last set for the sale to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), paying all advances authorized under the trust deed, including all costs and expenses incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, and by curing any other default complained of therein 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's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word “grantor” includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words “trustee” and “beneficiary” include their respective successors in interest, if any. DATED: May 17, 2012. David A. Weibel, Trustee. For Information Call: Bishop, White, Marshall & Weibel, P.S., 720 Olive Way, Suite 1301, Seattle, WA 98101, (206) 622-7527.
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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Reference is made to a certain trust deed ("Trust Deed") made, executed and delivered by Jeffery W. Rank and Carol L. Rank, as tenants by the entirety as to an undivided 81.48% interest and Diamond Built Homes, LLC, an Oregon limited liability company, as to an undivided 18.52% interest, as grantor, to AMERITITLE, as trustee, in favor of Columbia River Bank, as beneficiary, dated September 9, 2008, and recorded on September 17, 2008, as Recording No. 2008-38127, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County, Oregon. The beneficial interest under the trust deed was assigned to Columbia State Bank by instrument recorded on August 26, 2010 as Recording No. 2010-33493. The Trust Deed covers the following described real property ("Property") situated in said county and state, to-wit: See attached Exhibit A. There are defaults by the grantor or other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the Trust Deed, with respect to provisions therein which authorize sale in the event of default of such provision; the defaults for which foreclosure is made are: 1.Grantor's failure to pay real property taxes when due; 2. Grantor's commencement of a proceeding affecting the Property in the Deschutes County Circuit Court, State of Oregon, Case No. 10CV0464ST; 3.Grantor's failure to avoid having junior liens recorded against the Property; and 4.Grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: arrearage in the sum of $2,559,591.66 as of May 9, 2012, plus additional payments, property expenditures, taxes, liens, assessments, insurance, late fees, attorney's and trustee's fees and costs, and interest due at the time of reinstatement or sale. The full amount of the Note balance became due and payable on September 8, 2009. By reason of said defaults, the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligations secured by said Trust Deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: Payoff in the sum of $2,559,591.66 as of May 9, 2012, plus taxes, liens, assessments, property expenditures, insurance, accruing interest, late fees, attorney's and trustee's fees and costs incurred by beneficiary or its assigns. The full amount of the Note balance became due and payable on September 8, 2009. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on September 27, 2012, at the hour of 11:00 a.m., in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: West Front Entrance of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond, Bend, Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the above-described Property, which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the said Trust Deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the Trust Deed, to satisfy the 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 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 the 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 sum 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's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Trust Deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. THIS COMMUNICATION IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. UNLESS YOU NOTIFY US WITHIN 30 DAYS AFTER RECEIVING THIS NOTICE THAT YOU DISPUTE THE VALIDITY OF THE DEBT, OR ANY PORTION OF IT, WE WILL ASSUME THE DEBT IS VALID. IF YOU NOTIFY US, IN WRITING, WITHIN 30 DAYS AFTER RECEIPT OF THIS NOTICE THAT YOU DO DISPUTE THE DEBT OR ANY PORTION OF IT, WE WILL PROVIDE VERIFICATION BY MAILING YOU A COPY OF THE RECORDS. IF YOU SO REQUEST, IN WRITING, WITHIN 30 DAYS AFTER RECEIPT OF THIS NOTICE, WE WILL PROVIDE YOU WITH THE NAME AND ADDRESS OF THE ORIGINAL CREDITOR IF DIFFERENT FROM THE CURRENT CREDITOR. DATED: May 14, 2012. Valerie A. Tomasi, Successor Trustee, Farleigh Wada Witt, 121 SW Morrison, Suite 600, Portland, OR 97204, Phone: 503-228-6044; fax: 503-228-1741. EXHIBIT A - Legal Description: The Northwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter (NW1/4 NW1/4) of Section Eight (8), Township Fifteen (15) South, Range Thirteen (13) East of the Willamette Meridian, Deschutes County, Oregon. EXCEPTING THEREFROM a tract described as follows: Commencing at the North Quarter corner of Section 8, which is the initial point; thence Westerly along the North line of said Section 8, a distance of 1317.6 feet to the West 1/16th corner in the North line of said Section 8; thence Southerly, a distance of 20 feet to a point in the South line of the county market road, which point is the POINT OF BEGINNING; thence Westerly along the South line of said market road, a distance of 582.0 feet to a point in the South line of said market road; thence Southerly, a distance of 524.0 feet; thence Easterly, a distance of 582.0 feet to a point in the East line of said NW1/4 NW1/4 of Section 8; thence Northerly along said East line of said NW1/4 NW1/4 of Section 8, a distance of 524.0 feet to the POINT OF BEGINNING.
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-12-501873-SH Reference is made to that certain deed made by DAVID A SKATVOLD, UNMARRIED, as Grantor to AND WESTERN TITLE & ESCROW COMPANY, as trustee, in favor of JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A., as Beneficiary, dated 11/18/2005, recorded 11/28/2005, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book / reel / volume number fee / file / instrument / microfile / reception number 2005-81467, , covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 112264 LOT 2, BLOCK 2, WOODSIDE RANCH PHASE I, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 20586 PINE VISTA DR, 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 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 $1,912.57 Monthly Late Charge $95.63 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 $291,314.33 together with interest thereon at the rate of 6.0000 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 11/8/2012 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: 6/26/12 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as trustee Signature By: Timothy Donlon, 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-4264904 07/11/2012, 07/18/2012, 07/25/2012, 08/01/2012