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A proud hometown plans a parade
With no room in the jail, offenders wait their turn
By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
By Joel Aschbrenner
The city of Bend, athletic coaches and other volunteers are planning a parade for Olympic gold medalist Ashton Eaton. Organizers met Wednesday and settled on two possible dates when Eaton likely will be available: Sept. 23 and Oct. 10. People at the meeting acknowledged it’s important to hold a parade soon, while excitement about the Olympics and Eaton’s gold medal in the decathlon is still high. “I have been getting 20-some calls a week on this,” said Chuck Arnold, executive director of the Downtown Bend Business Association. Eaton is available on both dates, said Tate Metcalf, assistant track coach at Bend’s Mountain View High School and Eaton’s longtime mentor. “Ashton loves the 10th, because it’s the 10th month, the 10th day, 10 events in the decathlon,” Metcalf said. See Parade / A6
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Rob Kerr / The Bulletin Photos by Alex McDougall The Bulletin
Central Oregon has shown its exuberance and will again when Eaton comes to town for a parade. A date has yet to be set.
Inmates at the Crook County Jail sit down for lunch Wednesday. Crook County Sheriff Jim Hensley says the small facility presents a demanding job for the deputies who work there.
Housing report shows signs of weak revival By Shaila Dewan and Nelson D. Schwartz New York Times News Service
Analysts are hailing the beginnings of a recovery in the nation’s housing market. But to beleaguered homeowners, it will not feel like much of one for many months to come. The number of existing homes sold rose 2.3 percent in July from
the previous month, according to figures released Wednesday. Volume was up more than 10 percent from a year ago. For several months, economic data and accounts from real estate agents across the country have calmed fears that the overall market could take another big step down, giving prospective home-
Inside • The Congressional Budget Office warned Wednesday of dire consequences for the U.S. economy next year if lawmakers fail to act, E1
buyers some assurance that prices were stabilizing. Yet the nascent recovery is a still
Tara Palmore, a National Institutes of Health infection control specialist
‘Superbug’ defies NIH’s medical expertise The Washington Post
When a 43-year-old female lung transplant patient arrived at the National Institutes of Health’s Clinical Center in June 2011, the hospital’s infection control team was on high alert. The woman carried a “superbug” resistant to all but two antibiotics, and the NIH staff wanted to keep the dangerous bacteria
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contained. The patient was isolated in the intensive care unit. Staff members donned gowns and gloves before entering her room. Her nurses cared for no other patients. When she was discharged in July to return to New York, the NIH thought these measures had worked. There were no signs that the bug — known as Klebsiella pneu-
moniae — had spread. But a few weeks later, the hospital staff was “horrified,” said Tara Palmore, an NIH infection control specialist, when a second patient tested positive for the bacteria. A third and fourth soon followed. Those three patients eventually died as the bacteria grew impervious to every known antibiotic — even new
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experimental drugs. The outbreak, not made public until now, was a minor disaster for the NIH, as its experts fought for months to control a superbug that was killing patients. Over six months — and despite building literal and figurative walls to stop it — the bacteria hopped to 17 patients, 11 of whom died. See Outbreak / A5
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NEW YORK — Attorney David Nevin spent 191⁄2 years fighting to save the life of Richard Leavitt, who was convicted of murdering a woman in Blackfoot, Idaho. On June 11, the Supreme Court rejected a final plea from Nevin and another lawyer, clearing the way for Leavitt’s execution the next day. Nevin, at last, gave up. “They did everything they could,” Leavitt’s mother, Mar-
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a convalescent one, with the pace of activity uneven and far below the levels reached before the bubble burst. In fact, Wednesday’s report from the National Association of Realtors showed that average sales price actually dipped slightly from June to July. See Housing / A6
KSM’s lawyer known for taking tough cases
“I would say we controlled the outbreak, but...we’re not out of the woods yet.”
By Brian Vastag
Last week 76 criminals in Crook County were waiting to serve their time. Many had committed misdemeanors, but some were convicted of felonies like theft, drug distribution and even assault, said Sheriff Jim Hensley. But without room in Inside the county • A full jail to acDeschutes commodate County them, Crook jail means County ofsavings on fenders are food costs, on the outC1 side waiting to get in. Residents have asked Hensley why so many offenders end up back on the street, so this month the sheriff is barnstorming the county, holding town hall meetings in Prineville and four unincorporated communities to explain the lack of jail space. The sheriff said he is not advocating for a new jail and has no plans to propose a bond measure to build one. But a new jail is needed, he said, and county residents should know why. The county jail in Prineville holds 16 inmates and the county rents 16 additional beds at the Jefferson County jail. But 32 beds often are not enough to house all Crook County inmates, Hensley said. See Jail / A6
Sunny and nice High 76, Low 36 Page C6
jorie, said in a phone interview. “They kept fighting.” Nevin will soon rise in a military courtroom in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to defend a man the U.S. government seeks to execute for a far more infamous crime. Nevin represents Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, accused mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the deadliest terrorist strike on U.S. soil during which 2,976 people were killed. See Lawyer / A5
TOP NEWS SYRIA: War spreads to Lebanon, A3 CONVENTIONS: Still relevant? A4
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
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Know this man? Library of Congress didn’t By Michael E. Ruane The Washington Post
He is a wild-haired young man with an intense look, two pistols in his belt and what looks like a short musket in his hands. His face is familiar and has been reprinted in books and used in a famous documentary about the Civil War. But for decades, to most people his elegant portrait — recently donated to the Library of Congress — was just one of hundreds of photographs of unidentified soldiers from the generation of the 1860s. Last month, through a chance meeting at a Civil War memorabilia show, the old photograph was identified as that of Confederate soldier Stephen Pollard of Carroll County, Ga., who fought in and survived the war. And it turned out that the identity had been known in Georgia but apparently not far beyond. The photograph depicts a man about 20, clean-shaven except for a slight moustache. He is wearing a striking, light-colored outer shirt with dark trim on the cuffs and collar, a light inner shirt and a natty, string tie. He has on an unusual belt with twin buckles and two fat revolvers wedged in the belt’s waistband. He is holding a longbarrel, muzzle-loading 1855 pistol with a musketlike stock.
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Breast pumps don’t decrease quantity of milk By C. Claiborne Ray New York Times News Service
Does a woman who is Q. pumping breast milk and bottle-feeding it to a baby make as much milk as someone who is breast-feeding? “A woman can make as much milk pumping as she does breast-feeding directly,” said Dr. Susan Bostwick, chief of general academic pediatrics at the Komansky Center for Children’s Health at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/ Weill Cornell Medical Center. “The body makes as much milk as it is told to based on the stimulation to the nipple, either from a baby or from the pump,” Bostwick said. “How often and how long the nipple is stimulated determines the amount of milk made by sending a signal to the brain that the milk is being taken from the breast.” The brain, in turn, sends a signal in the form of increased hormones back to the breast, telling it to make more milk. This is why a woman can breast-feed twins or triplets. On occasion, Bostwick said, the suction from the pump can cause more stimulation than a nursing baby, leading to the production of even more milk than with actual nursing. There is an emotional component in nursing, but Bostwick said she did not know of any scientific studies that show its relationship to how much milk is produced. “In other parts of the world and other times in history,” she said, “the traditional nursemaid was hired to breast-feed someone else’s child, and while a bond may grow, it was a job.”
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Courtesy of Library of Congress
This photo of Confederate soldier Stephen Pollard was recently identified by a relative. The photo is a Civil War classic that has been reprinted in books and used in a famous documentary about the war.
His image is a Civil War classic and is well known among collectors and historians. “He was even in Episode One of Ken Burns’s series on the Civil War,” said Tom Liljenquist, the McLean, Va., collector who bought the photograph about two years ago and donated it, along with hundreds of others, to the Library
of Congress in 2010. “They actually used him for about 10 seconds on-air.” But “no identity was ever associated with him — none,” he said. At least in the broader historical community. “When I bought it, it was unidentified.” However, the picture had been identified in Georgia. Liljenquist said that when he
attended a collectors’ show there last month, he met Steve and Patricia Mullinax, noted Civil War collectors from Villa Rica, Ga. Liljenquist told them about the collection of Civil War photographs he donated to the library, which can be viewed on the library’s website. Later, as “Trish” Mullinax was browsing the website, she spotted the photo of Pollard and was amazed to see it listed as unidentified. She knew the photo as that of her great-great-grandfather, who had been identified in a book by a local historian. She has a copy of the book. “I was confused because ‘the library entry’ said unidentified,” she said in a telephone interview Tuesday. She said she called Liljenquist. “I ... said, ‘Tom, I can identify one of your images for you.’ I think he was more shocked than I was.” The book, “Remembering Georgia’s Confederates,” by David Wiggins, credits the Fayette County, Ga., Historical Society for the information about Pollard. Pollard served in a cavalry and an infantry unit. Mullinax said he raised eight children and lived until 1899. Pollard is one of only a handful of soldiers to be identified from the hundreds of portraits Liljenquist gave the Library of Congress.
Nearly half of U.S. doctors ‘burned out’ as workloads rise By Shannon Pettypiece
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About 1 in 2 doctors are burned out, showing signs of emotional exhaustion and little interest in work as patient loads increase, U.S. researchers found. Doctors working in emergency, family and internal medicine were the most likely to feel drained, according to the study released Tuesday in the Archives of Internal Medicine. Researchers said burnout also was tied to long hours, with 37 percent of physicians working more than 60 hours a week. The number of doctors reporting feeling burned out is surprising and troubling, said Tait Shanafelt, a professor of medicine at the Mayo Clinic and lead study
author. He said the trend may cause physicians to quit or reduce their workload just as demand for doctors is increasing with the aging population. The issue may get worse as 32 million Americans are expected to get health insurance by 2014 under a new U.S. law, increasing the number of people seeking medical care, he said. “Right at a time when we are trying to provide care to people who are uninsured and projecting workforce shortages we are seeing this burnout rate creep in, which may cause physicians to reduce workloads and consider early retirement,” Shanafelt said. He added that burnout has also been linked to medical errors and worse patient care in
previous studies. The study found that 46 percent of doctors show at least one sign of being worn out. Shanafelt said the burnout was about 10 percent higher than in the population as a whole. Unlike with other professions, more education isn’t linked to a lower risk of feeling drained among doctors. Researchers collected responses from 7,288 doctors across all practice areas to measure levels of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization and sense of professional accomplishment. The data was compared with surveys of the general population. There was no increased rate of depression or suicide among doctors compared with the general population, a sign that the burnout is specific to the work environment, Shanafelt said.
For Republicans, a tinge of workout envy fitter — running mate. Romney said Wednesday COLUMBUS, Ohio that, after years of arm-and— Mitt Romney is a man of leg swooshing elliptical mosteady and immutable hab- notony — he occasionally hops its. He drinks Cherry on a treadmill, too — he Coke Zero. He eats TIDBITS is willing to experiment peanut butter and with Ryan’s favored exhoney sandwiches. ercise routine, a sweatAnd he works out on an el- inducing and muscle-confusliptical machine. ing regimen known as P90X, Day, after day, after day. which involves weights, rubBut as the bromance be- ber bands and scary-sounding tween Romney and his Re- exertions like “Ab Ripper X.” publican vice-presidential “I might have him show choice, Rep. Paul Ryan of me how to do it someday,” he Wisconsin, blossoms, even told the hosts of CBS’ “This his most treasured rituals Morning” during an interview, are open to tinkering at the confessing, “I have never tried hands of his younger — and that.”
By Michael Barbaro
New York Times News Service
In what seemed like a case of workout envy, Romney observed, “That workout of his, he’s in pretty good shape.” When the interview wrapped up, Romney headed to — where else? — the gym of a hotel in downtown Columbus. True to tradition, he jumped on a Star Trac elliptical machine and swooshed back-and-forth for 45 minutes.
FREE BOX SPRING
It’s Thursday, Aug. 23, the 236th day of 2012. There are 130 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS • Mitt Romney will unveil an energy plan that he says will allow North America to be energy independent by 2020 and decrease costs to consumers by increasing domestic production. • Tropical Storm Isaac is expected to be upgraded to hurricane status. Forecasters say it is likely to approach Hispaniola, the island shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic, either late tonight or early Friday. • The Little League World Series continues at Williamsport, Pa.
IN HISTORY Highlights: In 1305, Scottish rebel leader Sir William Wallace was executed by the English for treason. In 1775, Britain’s King George III proclaimed the American colonies to be in a state of “open and avowed rebellion.” In 1914, Japan declared war against Germany in World War I. In 1939, Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union agreed to a non-aggression treaty, the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, in Moscow. In 1944, Romanian prime minister Ion Antonescu was dismissed by King Michael, paving the way for Romania to abandon the Axis in favor of the Allies. In 1973, a bank robbery-turned-hostagetaking began in Stockholm, Sweden; the four hostages ended up empathizing with their captors, a psychological condition now referred to as “Stockholm Syndrome.” Ten years ago: North Korean leader Kim Jong Il made his second visit to Russia in a year, meeting with President Vladimir Putin outside Vladivostok. Five years ago: A report by top U.S. spy analysts concluded the Iraqi government was strained by rampant violence, deep sectarian differences among its political parties and stymied leadership. One year ago: A pair of judges in New York put an end to the sensational sexual assault case against Dominique Strauss-Kahn, setting him free after prosecutors questioned the credibility of the hotel housekeeper who’d accused the French diplomat. A magnitude 5.8 earthquake centered near Mineral, Va., the strongest on the East Coast since 1944, caused cracks in the Washington Monument and damaged Washington National Cathedral.
BIRTHDAYS Actress Vera Miles is 82. Political satirist Mark Russell is 80. Actress Barbara Eden is 78. Pro Football Hall of Famer Sonny Jurgensen is 78. Actor Richard Sanders is 72. Ballet dancer Patricia McBride is 70. Former Surgeon General Antonia Novello is 68. Pro Football Hall of Famer Rayfield Wright is 67. Country singer Rex Allen Jr. is 65. Singer Linda Thompson is 65. Actress Shelley Long is 63. Actorsinger Rick Springfield is 63. Country singer-musician Woody Paul (Riders in the Sky) is 63. Queen Noor of Jordan is 61. Actor-producer Mark Hudson is 61. MLB AllStar pitcher Mike Boddicker is 55. Rock musician Dean DeLeo (Army of Anyone; Stone Temple Pilots) is 51. Tejano singer Emilio Navaira is 50. Country musician Ira Dean (Trick Pony) is 43. Actor Jay Mohr is 42. — From wire reports
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Syrian war spurs unrest, paralysis in Lebanon By Zeina Karam The Associated Press
BEIRUT — The Syrian civil war has spilled over into Lebanon, bringing with it sectarian street clashes, mob violence and general government paralysis in Beirut. But it was the dramatic arrest earlier this month of a former Lebanese government minister and prominent supporter of Syria’s embattled president that has suggested the conflict may be causing Lebanon to slip further away from Damascus’ long domination. The bloodshed in Syria has drawn Lebanon deeper into the unrest — a troubling sign for a country that has gone
through its own 15-year civil war and has an explosive sectarian mix as well as deep divisions between pro- and anti-Syrian factions, many of which are armed. The chaos could give Sunni Muslim fighters in northern Lebanon more leeway to establish supply lines to the rebels inside Syria in their battle to oust President Bashar Assad. Tensions and intermittent fighting in the northern Lebanon city of Tripoli continued Wednesday following two days of clashes between proand anti-Assad groups that killed at least six people and wounded more than 70.
Seventeen times bigger than Lebanon and four times more populous, Syria has long had powerful allies here, including the Iran-backed militant Hezbollah group that now dominates the government. For much of the past 30 years, Lebanese have lived under Syrian military and political domination. That grip began to slip in 2005, when former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri was assassinated in Beirut. Widely accused of involvement— something it has always denied — Syria was forced to withdraw its troops. But the killings of anti-Syrian figures continued and opponents of Assad’s regime say he has
maintained his influence through allies who now control the government. All this made the Aug. 9 arrest of former Information Minister Michel Samaha all the more shocking. Samaha, one of Syria’s most loyal allies in Lebanon who has long acted as an unofficial media adviser to Assad, was plucked from his bed at dawn by special police forces who burst into his summer mountain home. Within hours, various leaks began emerging that Samaha had confessed to having personally transported explosives in his car from Syria to Lebanon with the purpose of killing Lebanese personali-
ties at the behest of Syria. Two days later, a military court indicted Samaha, along with Syrian Brig. Gen. Ali Mamlouk, of plotting to carry out terrorist attacks inside Lebanon. Mamlouk, who was appointed last month by Assad to head Syria’s National Security Bureau, was indicted in absentia on charges he furnished the explosives to Samaha. According to a senior Lebanese police official, Samaha confessed after he was confronted with audio and video footage taken by a double agent using a camera-equipped pen. The official spoke on condition of anonymity in line with government regulations.
Costs of wildfires straining budgets in some states By Nicholas K. Geranios and Jeff Barnard The Associated Press
MANTON, Calif. — A huge wildfire in California is just the latest destructive blaze to stretch resources across the West during a fire season that has been one of the worst in years. The fires have left some states with thin budgets to scramble to get people, planes, bulldozers and other tools on fire lines to beat back the flames. And that’s with about a third of the annual wildfire season remaining. According to the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho, the nation as of Wednesday had seen 42,927 wildfires this year, which burned just over 7 million acres. While the number of fires is down from the 10-year average of 54,209 as of Wednesday, the acreage was well above the average of 5.4 million acres, said Don Smurthwaite, a NIFC spokesman. “The fires are bigger,” Smurthwaite said. In Colorado Springs, Colo., this summer, about 350 homes
were burned in the most destructive wildfire in state history. Another fire in northern Colorado just before it scorched 257 homes. The costs have mounted, not just in the damage to houses and other buildings. In Utah, for example, officials have spent $50 million as of mid-August to fight more than 1,000 wildfires, far surpassing the $3 million a year the Legislature budgeted for fighting wildfires. The state’s share is estimated at $16 million, said Roger Lewis of the Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands. He said lawmakers will need to figure out how to come up with $13 million. That’s the largest-ever supplemental appropriation request needed for firefighting in the state, agency spokesman Jason Curry said. He said, “It’s obviously been a big year.” Washington state fire officials project that they will spend about $19.8 million on emergency fire suppression activities in the current fiscal year that ends next June. That is expected to far surpass the $11.2 million the agen-
Fort Hood suspect’s trial on hold over whiskers By Angela K. Brown The Associated Press
FORT HOOD, Texas — For the past two months, the military judge presiding over the high-profile case of the Army psychiatrist charged in the deadly 2009 Fort Hood shooting rampage has said he wanted to avoid disruptions in court. So after Maj. Nidal Hasan showed up for a June pretrial hearing wearing a beard, a violation of Army regulations, Col. Gregory Gross banned him from the courtroom until he shaves. Now Hasan’s facial hair has become a bigger disruption than anyone might have foreseen. All hearings and the murder trial, set to start next week, were put on hold Wednesday while an appeals court considers Hasan’s objections to being forcibly shaved. The delay is frustrating for many involved in the case, although some victims’ relatives say they have grown accustomed to waiting for the trial to start. It’s been almost three years since the shooting rampage left 13 dead and more than two dozen wounded on the Texas Army post. “I stopped holding my breath a long time ago as far as expecting to get any closure regarding the trial,” said Leila Hunt Willingham, whose brother Jason Dean “J.D.” Hunt was among those killed Nov. 5, 2009. Gross has not allowed Hasan to stay in the courtroom, saying the beard is a disruption. However, in late July Gross said he wanted Hasan in the room during the
court-martial to prevent a possible appeal on the issue if he is convicted. He said Hasan would be forcibly shaved before the trial if he didn’t shave the beard himself. Hasan, an American-born Muslim, won’t shave because the beard is an expression of his faith, defense attorneys have said. Hasan also has had a premonition that his death is imminent, his attorneys said. “He does not wish to die without a beard as he believes not having a beard is a sin,” one of Hasan’s attorneys wrote in his appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces. Hasan faces the death penalty or life in prison without parole if convicted. No military death-row inmates have been executed since 1961. Prosecutors have said Hasan grew the beard so trial witnesses would have a hard time identifying him. They have said they doubt religion is his motive, noting he was clean-shaven at the time of the shootings. Gross told defense attorneys at a June hearing that he disagreed with their argument that Hasan’s beard didn’t take away from the dignity of the proceedings. “This is a choice that Major Hasan is making,” Gross said at a June hearing. At the start of Wednesday’s hearing, Gross once again found Hasan in contempt of court and fined him $1,000 for disobeying orders to shave. Hasan then was taken to a nearby room to watch the proceedings on a closed-circuit television.
Rich Pedroncelli / The Associated Press
A garden tractor burned by the Ponderosa Fire sits near a fire-gutted home near Manton, Calif., Wednesday. The Ponderosa Fire, which started Saturday, has destroyed dozens of structures and burned more than 24,000 acres. It is at 50 percent containment.
cy was allotted for such work, meaning the Department of Natural Resources will have to ask the Legislature for supplemental funds. Not all Western states are seeing their budgets busted because of fires. In Oregon, the state estimated it had spent $3.4 million through last Saturday to fight wildfires, with more than two months of the season left. Last year, it spent $6.6 million. In Montana, forest manag-
ers told Gov. Brian Schweitzer that long-term forecasts call for fire conditions through the end of September, which is longer than normal. Schweitzer said the state has already burned through cash reserves set aside for such natural disasters, but that plenty of money is available from surplus general funds. In California, state fire spokesman Daniel Berlant said Wednesday that while crews were getting a handle on
many of the fires in the northern part of the state, more lightning strikes in Southern California could trigger a new round of blazes. “There’s no reprieve just yet,” Berlant said. Firefighters in northern California on Wednesday made progress in containing a huge wildfire that has burned dozens of homes and scorched about 38 square miles. It was 50 percent contained Wednesday morning.
Lawyers for Penn State’s ex-president rip handling of sex-abuse scandal The Philadelphia Inquirer PHILADELPHIA — Lawyers representing former Penn State University President Graham Spanier blasted the school’s own investigation into its handling of the Jerry Sandusky scandal on Wednesday, calling it everything from “pure sophistry” to “nothing short of absurd.” The probe — commissioned by the university’s board of trustees and led by former FBI
director Louis Freeh — misstated facts, ignored certain evidence and threw several top Penn State officials in the line of fire to justify a conclusion reached long before the investigation began, said attorney Timothy Lewis. “It is now apparent that Judge Freeh was not an independent investigator, but a self-anointed accuser, who in his zeal to protect victims of wrongdoing from a monster,
recklessly and without justification created victims of his own,” Lewis said. The former university president’s attorneys also said they had no indication their client was the target of an ongoing state grand jury investigation. Sources close to the probe have said grand jurors have increasingly turned their attention to Spanier’s role in Sandusky’s crimes in recent months.
West Nile outbreak triple usual caseload, says CDC By Mike Stobbe The Associated Press
ATLANTA — U.S. health officials reported Wednesday three times the usual number of West Nile cases for this time of year and one expert called it “one of the largest” outbreaks since the virus appeared in this country in 1999. So far, 1,118 illnesses have been reported, about half of them in Texas, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In an average year, fewer than 300 cases are reported by mid-August. There have also been 41 deaths this year. “We’re in the midst of one of the largest West Nile outbreaks ever seen in the United States,” said Dr. Lyle Petersen, a CDC official. Never before have so many illnesses been reported this early, said Petersen, who oversees the CDC’s mosquito-borne illness programs. Most infections are usually reported in August and September, so it’s too early to say how bad this year will end up, CDC officials said. They think the mild winter, early spring and very hot summer have fostered breeding of mosquitoes that pick up the virus from birds they bite and then spread it to people. West Nile virus was first reported in the U.S. in 1999 in New York, and gradually spread across the country over the years. It peaked in 2002 and 2003, when severe illnesses reached nearly 3,000 and deaths surpassed 260. Last year was mild with fewer than 700 cases. Only about one in five infected people get sick. One in 150 infected people will develop severe symptoms including neck stiffness, disorientation, coma and paralysis. In recent years, cases have been scattered across the country. Hot spots are usually in southeast Louisiana, central and southern California, and areas around Dallas, Houston, Chicago and Phoenix. Those areas seem to have a combination of factors that include the right kinds of virus-carrying mosquitoes and birds, along with large numbers of people who can be infected, health officials say.
Online www.cdc.gov/ncidod/ dvbid/westnile/index .htm
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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
Akin admits Ryan asked him to quit Rumors of war within By Steve Kraske The Kansas City Star
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Embattled Senate candidate Todd Akin confirmed reports Wednesday that GOP vice presidential candidate Rep. Paul Ryan asked him to leave Missouri’s Senate race. The call reportedly came earlier this week before Akin announced his decision to continue his bid. On NBC’s “Today” Show Wednesday morning, Akin said he told Ryan he would look at the matter seriously, then make a decision.
“It’s not about me,” Akin said. “It’s about trying to do the right thing and standing on Akin principle.” He told Matt Lauer that he’s staying in the race because “I believe that America is at a crisis point right now, and it’s extremely important that the voters have a choice of someone who is completely opposite of Claire McCaskill,” the Democratic incumbent he’ll fact in November. Akin said he doesn’t feel
alone in his candidacy because he said voters stood with him on Aug. 7 when he won a tough primary over businessman John Brunner and former state treasurer Sarah Steelman. “That was a decision made by the citizens of our state and not politicians,” Akin said. The six-term congressman repeated his statement that no rape is legitimate and that “it’s a heinous crime.” He said he was misinformed about a rape victim’s ability to ward off pregnancy — the
comment on a St. Louis TV station Sunday that got him in so much hot water. “The fact of the matter is I think that anybody doing a lot of public speaking can make a mistake. They knew I wasn’t perfect.” Akin said he does not believe that a lot of women lie to gain access to an abortion. “This is not about me,” Akin said of his campaign. “It’s not about my ego. But it is about the voters of the state of Missouri. They’ve chosen me because of the principles I stand on.”
Despite predictability, political conventions are still a big deal By Mark Z. Barabak Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — When Democrats and Republicans gather for their national nominating conventions, starspangled in silly hats and their donkey and elephant jewelry, some may see it as a colossal waste of time and money. Decades have passed since the last time convention delegates actually decided a presidential nominating fight. The selection of a running mate, which used to be a big part of the drama, now occurs well ahead of the opening gavel. Given the lack of suspense, the major TV networks, which once competed with blanket coverage, have cut back to a scant one hour of prime-time programming each night. Politicians in both parties have made a point of saying they would skip the events. Despite all that, however, the conventions are more than a lavish self-indulgence — funded to the tune of $36 million in taxpayer dollars — for the nominees, or a chance for thousands of party faithful to revel in the subtropical heat and humidity of Tampa, Fla., (for the Republicans, starting Monday) and Charlotte, N.C. (for the Democrats, beginning Labor Day).
A national stage Utterly predictable as they may be, the conventions still draw huge TV audiences, many tuning into an abundance of cable networks that have taken up the slack in broadcast coverage. More people watched thenSen. Barack Obama’s convention speech four years ago than the finale of “American Idol,” the Academy Awards or the Olympics opening ceremony in Beijing. A week later, about 39 million people tuned in for Sen. John McCain’s acceptance address, topping Obama by about 500,000 viewers for the biggest television audience in convention history. Like the Olympics, which draw tens of millions of viewers who otherwise care little about track and field or the 200-meter butterfly, the conventions are event TV, attracting people who usually pay scant attention to politics. Apart from the fall debates — when the candidates will be forced to share a stage not just with their rivals but also with people asking them questions — no political event will likely
draw as large an audience between now and November. “It’s four days for the parties to get out their message more or less unfiltered,” said Russ Schriefer, chief convention strategist for Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney. As such, it is a prime sales opportunity. Granted, Schriefer and others said, the country is deeply polarized. Many viewers will tune in simply to cheer the good guys (their side) and jeer the bad.
Triumph and disaster But there are still plenty of undecided, or at least persuadable, voters who will watch the conventions and, especially, the candidates’ acceptance speeches as a way to start choosing. Ronald Reagan in 1980, Bill Clinton in 1992 and Al Gore in 2000 got big lifts out of their conventions, long after the drama and most spontaneity had been banished. Clinton, who entered his convention facing serious doubts about his personal character and political viability, recast his image almost overnight, thanks in no small part to his team of Hollywood producers. Most candidates, though, have been happy to walk away with modest, and short-lived, bumps in the polls. That is because modern conventions have become, to a large degree, carefully scripted, meticulously choreographed attempts to minimize risk. The list of things that can go wrong is a long one that includes internal dissension (a hapless President Jimmy Carter was caught onstage at the close of his 1980 convention chasing his Democratic primary opponent, Massachusetts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, in a vain attempt at a conciliatory handshake), an off-putting tone (insurgent Patrick J. Buchanan and others greatly undermined President George H.W. Bush’s re-election bid with their strident speeches at the Republican 1992 convention), or the ultimate in convention disasters, rioting and blood in the streets (Chicago, Democrats, 1968).
Perilous moments The selection of a running mate can be especially perilous. Thomas Eagleton was bounced from the 1972 Democratic ticket after reports surfaced of his electroshock
Scott Iskowitz / The Associated Press
Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus, left, and convention CEO William Harris unveil the stage and podium for the 2012 Republican National Convention at the Tampa Bay Times Forum in Tampa, Fla.
treatment for depression, and Republican Dan Quayle never fully recovered from his disastrous debut as Bush’s surprise pick in 1988. That was the last time a presidential candidate announced his vice presidential choice at the convention, which had replaced the old way of letting delegates make the selection. If it makes for less than edge-of-the-seat excitement, the campaigns have become skilled at injecting just a smidgen of drama (a gallant appearance by the dying Sen. Kennedy at his final convention in 2008, the boffo debut of Sarah Palin the following week) to keep people watching. “Of course they’re scripted,” said Democratic strategist Bob Shrum, who has attended virtually every party convention since 1960, and helped stage a few. “But they can still have their powerful moments.” As much as the conventions
are geared to those watching at home — think of a four-day political reality show — they are important for party-building and unity. By bringing loyalists under a single roof, the parties can organize and energize their troops for the final push, which, given the Democrats’ late convention, will leave scarcely two months to campaign before Nov. 6. Conventions also give the parties a chance to showcase up-and-coming talent. It was, after all, a widely praised 2004 keynote address that launched Obama on his path four years later to the White House. Conventions obviously matter a good deal less than when “they were actual deliberative bodies deciding the nomination,” said David Axelrod, the president’s chief political strategist. “But there are still people out there watching. Nobody knows that better than us.”
Father blames stress for son’s threat against Obama By Mike Carter The Seattle Times
SEATTLE — The father of a Washington state man charged with threatening to kill President Barack Obama and assaulting a federal agent and a police officer with a loaded shotgun said his son was “stressed out” over the economy and his inability to find work despite having a master’s degree and spending nearly five years in the Navy. “I think he blamed the president for it,” said Cecil Bryson, whose 31-year-old son, Anton Caluori, of Federal Way, was charged Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Seattle. However, Bryson, contacted at his home in Trinity, N.C., said he had a hard time
believing that Caluori would ever really hurt the president. He said his son’s arrest on Tuesday, in which he allegedly raised a pump-action shotgun toward a Secret Service agent and a police officer and had to be wrestled to the ground, “is completely out of character.” “He has no means or any way to harm the president,” Bryson said Wednesday. “He just feels really badly that he can’t move on. It just shows how totally stressed he must be.” Bryson said his son also was having a difficult time paying back student loans. Caluori was arrested at the Federal Way apartment he shares with his mother. Police found two assault-style rifles,
a shotgun, two handguns and hundreds of rounds of ammunition for each in the house, according to charges. Federal prosecutors allege Caluori came to the attention of federal agents after he sent a profanity-laced email to the FBI stating, “I will kill the president!!!!!” The email included Caluori’s address and rambling warnings that “dieing (sic) Isn’t frightening ... it’s peaceful you ... will see ...” and threats of a “Cop killing spree ... just over the hill.” When Secret Service Special Agent Bryan Molnar and Federal Way police Officer Andy Hensing showed up at Caluori’s apartment, according to the complaint, Caluori opened the door draped in a bandoleer
“filled with 12-gauge shotgun shells around his torso,” according to the charges. A large black knife was attached to the bandoleer, and prosecutors said Caluori had a handgun strapped to his ankle. Both officers ordered him to show his hands, but instead he reached behind his back and pulled out a pump shotgun with a pistol grip and pointed it at the officers. Hensing grabbed the barrel of the shotgun, and Molnar grabbed Caluori, and they subdued and handcuffed him. Making a threat against the president is punishable by up to five years in prison. Assault of a federal agent is punishable by up to 20 years in prison.
Mexican drug gang raise fear of new violence
By Tim Johnson McClatchy Newspapers
MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s largest crime group, Los Zetas, appears to be splintering into two rival factions locked in occasional open warfare with each other, experts say. The factions are tussling for control of the central states of Zacatecas and San Luis Potosi and are battling each other in parts of the Yucatan Peninsula. What sparked the rift is unclear, but signs of the apparent split have come in public banners left at crime scenes, replete with accusations of betrayal and treason between factions led by the two top leaders, Heriberto Lazcano and Miguel Angel Trevino. “We’re looking at a turning point for them,” said Samuel Logan, a security analyst who’s the co-author of a book on the Zetas that was released earlier this year. “We’re at the beginning of the public stage of the split, but it’s been developing for a while.” A fracturing of Los Zetas could force a violent realignment of Mexico’s drug-trafficking gangs and probably would create challenges for President-elect Enrique Pena Nieto, who promised to bring down soaring homicides after his inauguration Dec. 1. One of the latest signs of turmoil came Aug. 9, when authorities found a Mercedes-Benz truck bearing 14 bodies on the outskirts of the city of San Luis Potosi, a mining and industrial hub that’s the capital of the state of the same name. Afterward, state Attorney General Miguel Garcia Covarrubias said a man who’d feigned death and survived the massacre told authorities that groups of Zetas were battling each other. “It seems this is a dispute within Los Zetas, a rivalry among themselves,” Garcia Covarrubias told Mexico City’s W Radio network. The members of Los Zetas, a band formed by military deserters, worked as enforcers for the Gulf Cartel in northeast Mexico until a violent schism in 2010. Since then, the Zetas have branched beyond drug trafficking to extortion, human smuggling, kidnapping and piracy of goods. Known for extreme brutality, the group is thought to be active in at least half of Mexico’s 31 states and Mexico City, as well as throughout Central America. “The Zetas have expanded rapidly in recent
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years, and they might have hit a wall,” said Alejandro Hope, a former official in the national intelligence agency CISEN. He cautioned that reports of a rift within the Zetas could be part of a government “psy ops” campaign to inject paranoia into the gang. As to the extent of a split, “we don’t really know yet.” Initial reports of a rift emerged in early June, then surged with the arrest June 12 of Trevino’s brother, Jose, at a horse-breeding ranch in Oklahoma, inflaming mistrust and questions that someone within the gang had led U.S. agents to the ranch. “It might have launched a chain reaction of suspicions within Los Zetas,” Hope said. In early August, cloth banners appeared along highways in the states of Veracruz, Coahuila and Tamaulipas denying that a Zetas split had occurred. But within days, new signs of infighting emerged in the states of Campeche, Tabasco and Quintana Roo, all in Mexico’s southeast. On Aug. 9, security agents arrested Jorge Luis Martinez Rodriguez, known as “El Taz,” in Campeche, linked to one faction of Los Zetas. The next day, police in Quintana Roo arrested an alleged midlevel henchman of Trevino’s, and said another Zetas faction had ratted him out. Other crime groups are taking note — and sides — in the dispute. The Knights Templar, a longtime enemy of Los Zetas with a strong presence in Michoacan state, hung banners across the state Friday belittling Trevino as a “terrorist” and a “military objective” of their group. Heavy violence linked to Los Zetas has sprung up in central Mexico, leading President Felipe Calderon last week to order the deployment of some 15,000 additional federal police and soldiers to the states of Michoacan, Nuevo Leon, Guanajuato, Zacatecas, San Luis Potosi, Coahuila and Tamaulipas. Analysts said a splintering of Los Zetas could lead to an uptick in violence as lower-level gangsters sought to snatch turf, smuggling corridors and crime activity. “When organized-crime groups divide, these divisions are often very violent,” said Jorge Chabat, a security expert at the Center for Research and Teaching in Economics, a Mexico City research center.
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THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Lawyer Continued from A1 Six days of legal arguments were scheduled to begin today, including discussion of the defendant’s treatment in custody, but were postponed by the military due because of the approaching Tropical Storm Isaac. The trial of Mohammed and four other detainees won’t start before next year. Nevin, 63, has undertaken a task that Morris Davis, chief prosecutor for the military commission at Guantanamo Bay from 2005 to 2007, likens to John Adams’ defense of British soldiers after the Boston Massacre in 1770 and Army lawyer Kenneth Royall’s unsuccessful defense of Nazi saboteurs caught on Long Island, New York, during World War II. Like the Nuremberg cases beginning in 1945, the eventual trial will be watched worldwide. “You have people questioning your patriotism or your commitment to the country because you’re defending the enemies of your country,” said Davis, who teaches at Howard University School of Law in Washington. “But if our system is going to work, we need people who are going to take on the unpopular cases and fight them hard. History looks back favorably.” Prosecutors say Mohammed confessed in 2007 to plotting the hijackings that slammed jets into the World Trade Center in New York, the Pentagon in Washington and a field in Shanksville, Pa. Nevin and lawyers for the other detainees have alleged that their clients were tortured by U.S intelligence agents after being captured. The goal may be to win rulings excluding from the trial statements the detainees made after their capture, or at least to win leniency at a sentencing, said Denny LeBoeuf, a death-penalty lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union who has consulted with the defense attorneys. Debra Burlingame, whose brother Charles piloted the hijacked American Airlines flight that crashed into the Pentagon, said it would be wrong for Nevin to press this argument too far and shift the focus to whether Mohammed and other detainees were tortured. “I would expect the lawyers to make the government prove their case,” Burlingame said in a phone interview. “But to try and turn the case into, somehow, about the Constitution of the U.S. government, foreign policy, national security policy, I think that’s really unfortunate. It’s not what’s supposed to happen in court.” For Nevin, the son of a reporter-turned-author whose first novel chronicled the opening of the Oregon Trail, the Mohammed case is the biggest challenge in a career spent defending white separatists, a toxic polluter and
Outbreak Continued from A1 Six of those deaths were attributed to the superbug, NIH staff reported Wednesday in the journal Science Translational Medicine. The outbreak provides a case study of the dangers of the latest wave of hospitalbred bacteria and the extreme measures hospitals must adopt to stem the rising superbug tide. The research hospital now tests every patient transferring in from another facility for superbugs, tests every ICU patient twice a week and screens every patient in the 234-bed facility monthly for antibiotic-resistant bacteria. “This was our introduction to antibiotic-resistant Klebsiella,” Palmore said. “We absolutely knew what it was, and we hoped we would never see it.”
Nationwide struggle Nationwide, about 6 percent of hospitals are battling outbreaks of the class of superbugs known as carbapenem-resistant bacteria, which includes the NIH Klebsiella, said Alexander Kallen of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. These bacteria usually live harmlessly in our intestinal tracts. But in patients with immune systems weakened by, say, antirejection transplant drugs or cancer chemotherapy, the bacteria can turn dangerous, gaining resistance to the most powerful antibiotics and seeping into the blood. That’s what
other modern-day outlaws of the American West. His firm, Nevin, Benjamin, McKay & Bartlett, is based in Boise, Idaho. “To be a criminal-defense lawyer, you have to really have two attributes,” said Klaus Wiebe, the former public defender in Ada County, Idaho, for whom Nevin once worked. “You really have to be for the underdog. The power of the government is so extreme that your client is always the underdog. And you also have to be willing to get your ass kicked fairly regularly and not give up.” Wiebe said Nevin possesses both qualities and one more: “He thinks the government overreaches and cannot be trusted.”
‘I always defend’ Nevin, who declined to comment for this story, summed up his mission at a 2009 talk at Brigham Young University. After acknowledging a gracious introduction — the moderator cited his past honors, his work as a past president of the Idaho Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, and his scholarship on legal issues — Nevin spelled out his obligation as a lawyer. “I always defend,” he said. Nevin has defended Mohammed since 2008, when he was recruited by the John Adams Project, a joint effort of the ACLU and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers that has represented some Guantanamo Bay detainees. Joshua Dratel, a New York lawyer who approached Nevin and his partner on behalf of the group, said Nevin’s brief hesitance concerned the time commitment and logistical issues of defending a client in Cuba — and not the notoriety of Mohammed. “That wasn’t a particular concern,” said Dratel, who has also defended terrorism cases and consulted with Nevin during a 2004 terrorism case that Nevin defended in Idaho. Gray-haired, bespectacled and lanky, with the physique of the cyclist and runner he is, Nevin comes to Mohammed’s case after a series of legal victories. Nevin’s most acclaimed win came in 1993 when he persuaded a federal jury to acquit Kevin Harris, one of two men accused of killing a U.S. marshal during a shootout at Ruby Ridge, Idaho. In 2004, Nevin urged jurors to resist the impulse “to strike out at people who are not like us” and to acquit Sami Omar al-Hussayen, a Saudi student studying in Idaho, of charges that he recruited terrorists on websites he ran. Jurors did, after Nevin argued there was no evidence al-Hussayen endorsed terrorism. “He will come in early, he will stay late,” said Terry Derden, a former prosecutor who supervised the al-Hussayen case for the government. “He just never gives up.”
happened at NIH. The CDC detected this bacteria in 2000. “Since then, we’ve seen it spread across the country,” Kallen said, to 41 states. Early in the NIH outbreak, hospital staff turned to advanced genetic technology to show that the outbreak had originated with the New York patient. By reading the DNA of the bacteria, the NIH scientists saw that the bugs from patients No. 2 and 3 were so closely related — differing at just one or two genetic letters out of 6 million — they must have come from the first patient, although from two places on her body. “We eventually learned that they were all connected,” said Palmore of the 17 patients.
Strict new measures That finding meant the hospital had a big problem, said Julie Segre, a researcher at the National Human Genome Research Institute who led the effort to read the bacteria’s DNA: The infection control measures for the first patient hadn’t worked. After learning this, the Palmore-led staff quickly rolled out strict new measures in late August. It built a wall in the ICU and moved the Klebsiellapositive patients into a new, six-bed unit. Blood pressure cuffs and other reusable gear was tossed after one use. The hospital even hired monitors to ensure doctors and nurses were donning gowns, gloves and masks and scrubbing their hands after
Approaching storm postpones court hearings GUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba — A U.S. military judge canceled six days of hearings scheduled to begin Thursday in a case against Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four other accused terrorists as a tropical storm approached Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where the legal arguments were to be heard. The hearing hasn’t yet been rescheduled. Citing “a concern for the safety and welfare of all personnel,” Army Col. James Pohl canceled the hearing for Mohammed, the accused mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, and four others. The hearing was scheduled for this week and early next week. The U.S. National Hurricane Center’s tracking map shows Tropical Storm Isaac crossing Haiti as a hurricane on Friday and striking Cuba before arriving at the Florida coast below Cape Coral on Aug. 27. The hearing was to focus on 25 legal motions by the defense and the prosecution. Among the issues was whether the defense may summon Jose Rodriguez, an ex-Central Intelligence Agency of-
A native of Shreveport, La., Nevin was raised an only child by parents who paid reverence to civil rights and were distrustful of the established order, wrote Jess Walter, author of “Every Knee Shall Bow: The Truth and Tragedy of Ruby Ridge and the Randy Weaver Family.”
Choosing law school Nevin attended colleges in Connecticut and Iowa before graduating in 1974 with an English literature degree from Colorado State University. He spent a year working road construction and teaching English in Germany, briefly considering a career as a heavy-equipment operator. Instead, Nevin chose the University of Idaho law school. For inspiration, he and classmate Breck Seiniger drove to class listening to taped summations of civil rights lawyer Tony Serra, who had defended Black Panther leader Huey Newton. He stood apart in other ways, too. A class photo of the lawyers-to-be, most in suits, showed Nevin “with hippiehair, sitting Buddha-style on the law school steps,” according to a 2008 profile in the Advocate, an Idaho bar association magazine. “David was a great law student,” Seiniger said in a phone interview. “Not a hippie, but someone with a cultural point of view, a person who questioned everything.” Nevin graduated cum laude in 1978. He taught law for a year in Ohio and took a clerkship on the Idaho Supreme Court. As a public defender, his clients included a so-called naturopathic physician convicted of involuntary manslaughter when his patient died after tap water enemas, according to court records. The man wasn’t a licensed doctor. Nevin lost the appeal. Nevin also defended Lacey Sivak after he was convicted of murder during a gas station robbery in the first of at least eight death-penalty cases he
examining the patients. If monitors fell asleep or otherwise shirked, Palmore fired them and found new ones. At one point, nine monitors were on duty. “It was an enormous effort on a daily basis,” Palmore said. Staff members took throat and rectal swabs from every ICU patient to sweep for the bug. When the bacteria were found in two patients outside the ICU, the sweep was broadened to every patient in the hospital. They swabbed equipment, sinks, toilets and furniture. They hired a contractor to fumigate patient rooms with vaporized hydrogen peroxide — a potent disinfectant. Still, they found Klebsiella on a ventilator that had been bleached. They found it in a sink drain in a patient’s room. And they kept finding it in patients. “Every single time a new patient, a new case came to light, it felt like a failure,” Palmore said. “It felt like a string of failures.”
A measure of success But by January, the strict measures had finally paid off. No new cases have occurred since, Palmore said, although two Klebsiella-positive patients remain at the hospital. “I would say we controlled the outbreak, but we’re in constant danger of transmission from patients still here,” she said. “We’re not out of the woods yet.” NIH staff treated the pa-
ficial, to testify about detainee interrogations while in CIA custody. The detainees say Rodriguez’s testimony will establish that torture took place. The military denies the relevance of Rodriguez’s potential testimony. The judge was also to hear a challenge by the American Civil Liberties Union and 14 media organizations, including Bloomberg News, to a military rule that they say bars trial observers from hearing detainee accounts of their treatment in custody or other comments they’ve made. The government seeks to withhold classified secrets about its “sources, methods and activities,” military lawyers said in court papers. Defense lawyers, journalists and representatives of non-governmental organizations including Human Rights Watch were on hand to watch the proceedings. They will be evacuated from the island. The five detainees, who were last in court on May 5 for their arraignment, will remain in secure facilities in Guantanamo Bay.
has handled on appeal or at trial, according to his firm’s website. Sivak, convicted at a trial, hasn’t been executed. Nevin is no longer involved in the case. “Ten people may look at evidence and be meticulous,” said Celeste Miller, a former federal prosecutor. “But Nevin will likely come up with a theory or argument that others didn’t think of.”
Ruby Ridge The Ruby Ridge shootout followed an attempt by federal marshals to arrest separatist Randy Weaver on weapons charges at his remote Idaho cabin. In an ensuing gun battle, Weaver’s son and a U.S. marshal were killed. Weaver’s wife was killed by FBI sharpshooters in a standoff that lasted 11 days. Harris fired the shot that killed the marshal. Gerry Spence, a Wyoming lawyer who wore his 10-gallon hat to court each day, defended Weaver, while Nevin agreed to a judge’s request that he represent Harris. The two complemented each other, with Spence framing the case as a government coverup of a botched raid and Nevin boring in on inconsistencies in the government’s evidence. The central issue was who fired first. Jurors acquitted Harris entirely and Weaver of all but one count; both won payouts later with civil claims against the government. “He sees the pieces of the puzzle that I overlook. I see the big picture,” Spence said in a phone interview. “He is extraordinarily intelligent.” The same year, Nevin and another Idaho lawyer, Andrew Parnes, took on the appeal of Leavitt, who had been convicted at a 1985 state trial of murdering the Blackfoot, Idaho, woman and cutting out her genitals. The lawyers attacked the trial judge’s handling of the case and argued in court filings that Leavitt was denied a fair trial in a small town where there was “incredible pressure” to convict, Parnes
tients who survived with colistin, a decades-old antibiotic that fell out of favor after it became apparent it can severely damage the kidneys. But as the superbug spread, it became resistant even to colistin. So the staff tried experimental antibiotics. None of those worked, either. Six patients eventually died from Klebsiella infections that spread to their blood. “This is the moment that my professors talked about when we would run out of antibiotics,” said Palmore, recalling lectures two decades ago warning of a new era of nasty superbugs. To slow the spread of these infections, hospitals and longterm care facilities such as nursing homes must be evervigilant, Kallen said. Although most hospitals can’t afford the extreme measures the NIH implemented, the CDC encourages hospitals to adhere to the basics, such as constant hand-scrubbing and isolation of infected patients. Later this year, the CDC is launching a program in 10 cities, including Baltimore, to watch for hospital-borne outbreaks of Klebsiella and related superbugs. Surveillance is key to stemming hospital-borne outbreaks, Kallen said, especially in light of the lack of new superdrug-fighting drugs in the pharmaceutical industry’s pipeline. Said Kallen: “We’re talking in the range of a decade before we have new antibiotics that might be able to help.”
— David Glovin, Bloomberg News
said. Their efforts lasted until Leavitt was executed. Inside the courtroom, Nevin is almost professorial in manner, said Detroit lawyer Geoffrey Fieger, whom Nevin successfully defended at a 2008 trial on federal charges of making illegal campaign contributions. Recruited to the case by Spence, Nevin showed a mastery of facts and exacting cross-examinations of government witnesses that served as the counterweight to Spence’s theatrics, Fieger said. “Gerry is a more all-consuming, larger-than-life trial attorney,” Fieger said. Nevin “dissects people without them realizing they’ve been dissected. He’s a velvet shiv.” Yet Nevin also has sharp elbows. Miller, the ex-prosecutor, did battle with him at the 1999 trial of Allan Elias, who was convicted of illegally disposing hazardous waste in one of the largest federal environmental crimes prosecutions. Elias was sentenced to prison for 17 years. Nevin would arrive early and seek to assert control over the courtroom by claiming the table closest to the jury, which is traditionally reserved for the prosecutors. “That is unique to David in my years of prosecuting,” said Miller, now a partner
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at Boise’s McDevitt & Miller. Nevin shows more humility outside court. In Boise, he has participated in public readings of “A Christmas Carol,” owned a stake in a popular downtown bar, and joined friends for a 300mile bicycle trip. He is married and has two grown children. Restraint will not be part of Mohammed’s defense. At a May 6 press conference at Guantanamo Bay after his client and the other defendants were arraigned before the judge, Nevin at first stood near the back of the room as other lawyers took the podium to answer reporters’ questions. Only as the questioning intensified did Nevin come forward to voice his alarm over military rules that bar the lawyers from discussing with their clients whether they were tortured after capture. “We are forbidden from talking to our clients about very important matters,” Nevin said. “Now the government wants to kill Mr. Mohammed. They want to extinguish the last eyewitness so he can never talk about his torture. They want the political cover so he’ll be convicted and executed.” Nevin hasn’t elaborated further on defense strategy because, he told reporters in May, government rules forbid him from disclosing information the military deems classified. At a 2008 court appearance, Mohammed said he wanted to plead guilty and be martyred, saying, “I do not trust the Americans.” Other defendants joined in the request, which Mohammed called his “earnest desire.” While Mohammed made no such comments in May, Mohammed may be the “attorney’s nightmare as far as being a difficult client to manage,” Davis said. “Defending on the facts is going to be impossible,” Davis said. “So you have to attack the process.”
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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
Parade
Jail
Continued from A1 Organizers favored Sept. 23, a Sunday, so more people would be able to attend and more volunteers will be available. Metcalf said he would double-check with Eaton and his mother, Roz Eaton, to make sure they are available for a Sept. 23 parade. “Ashton is so overwhelmed with stuff right now,” so his visit to Bend will be brief, Metcalf said. Central Oregon has many residents who have competed in the Olympics at one time or another and the parade should include them, too, said Bend volunteer coordinator Cheryl Howard. Following the parade, organizers hope to have Eaton address the crowd. Eaton is a 2006 graduate of Mountain View High School in Bend. Dave Hood, director of athletics and track coach at Mountain View, said the Mountain View marching band and Summit High School jazz band could perform in the parade. Hood said he hopes to have Eaton speak to Mountain View High School students at an as-
Continued from A1 Last week, 11 people were arrested and released from the jail because of lack of space — including one arrested for assault and three arrested for DUII, according to jail logs. A formula that takes into account inmates’ charges, prior convictions, employment and other factors determines who stays and who is released. Last year, a woman suspected of trafficking drugs in Prineville was arrested for possession of several ounces of methamphetamine and an illegal firearm. She was booked and released because she did not meet the requirements to hold her under the formula, Hensley said. Some of those released, Hensley said, commit new crimes. Others skip court dates. “There’s no incentive for them to appear in court if they keep getting arrested on warrants but just get released from the jail,” he said. The small brick jail was converted from a fire station in 1968. It has four cells with four bunks each and holds only men. Women are shuttled to the Jefferson County jail in Madras. Under state standards, the 770-square-foot jail is too small to hold 16 inmates, but because of its age, its capacity was grandfathered into law, Hensley said. In a small exercise room and a dining area, inmates can watch cable TV, play cards and pick from a stack of books. Inmate Tony Kinsey, 45, of Prineville, has been shuttled to Jefferson County before to serve time. He prefers the Crook County jail, where he knows fellow inmates and his family can visit. “It’s kind of a privilege to stay over here,” he said Wednesday. Crook County needs a jail with 40 to 50 beds, but the community can’t afford it, Hensley said. Craig Brookhart, of the Crook County Patriots, said the local tea party group has not taken a position on the jail issue, but raising taxes isn’t an option. The county should cut spending else-
Jed Jacobsohn / New York Times News Service
Ashton Eaton celebrates after winning the gold medal in the men’s decathlon Aug. 9 at the 2012 Summer Olympic Games in London.
sembly later this fall. “This community feels connected to him and we need to do something that lets the community honor him and put their finger on him and say, ‘That’s our guy,’ ” Hood said. Organizers also hope to have the Bend Police Department color guard and the Bend Fire Pipes & Drums par-
ticipate in the parade, and possibly include some members of the military. La Pine is also looking for ways to celebrate Eaton’s accomplishments. Eaton attended La Pine Elementary School and his grandparents still live there. The La Pine City Council was scheduled to discuss Wednesday night whether to
rename a portion of U.S. Highway 97 within the city limits in Eaton’s honor. City Manager Steve Hasson said people in the city are tremendously proud of Eaton. “It’s a wonderful way to show respect for a favorite son,” Hasson said.
es for many homebuilders. On Wednesday, Toll BrothContinued from A1 ers reported a sharp rebound This seeming contradiction in profits, lifting its stock — increasing demand but ane- 3.8 percent. mic growth in home values — A number of factors have could represent a new normal helped nudge prices higher, in the housing market, experts including shrinking inventory said. — particularly on the more Real estate agents across affordable end of the market. the country cited the weak job There is about a six-month market, stagnant wages and supply of homes, according tight lending standards as con- to the Realtors’ group, down tinuing restraints from more than on prices, despite nine months last pent-up demand “Inventory summer. and mortgage is lower and In California, rates near record the supply of housconstruction lows. es has become so Even relatively is incredibly slim that agents optimistic observ- depressed. protested a bulk ers like Michelle of 500 foreBut it’s bumpy. sale Meyer, an econoclosed houses by mist with Bank We could see Fannie Mae, the of America Mer- prices weaken mortgage giant, rill Lynch, foresaying there was slightly in the saw only gradual no need to sell the improvements in fourth quarter homes at a dishome values. She of 2012 count to investors expected home when there were and the first prices to rise 2 retail buyers willpercent annually quarter of ing to buy them. in 2012 and 2013, 2013.” (Most of the propwith momentum erties would not — Michelle Meyer, have been sold ingradually increaseconomist, dividually because ing later in the deBank of America they were occucade. At that rate, Merrill Lynch pied by renters.) the average home price would reConcerns that a gain its 2006 peak flood of distressed in 2022. properties will “Inventory is lower and soon hit the market were also construction is incredibly de- receding. pressed,” she said. “But it’s Banks have been taking bumpy. We could see prices more aggressive measures weaken slightly in the fourth to avert foreclosures, which quarter of 2012 and the first have been declining for alquarter of 2013.” most two years, according to Joe Abbruzzese, a retired RealtyTrac. farmer from upstate New York, was in southwest Flori- Short sales increasing Short sales, the practice of da this week bargain hunting for a second home. “I wanted allowing homeowners to sell to get down here before the their property for less than snowbirds arrive,” he said. they owe before the home He was looking at five or six reaches the auction block, are properties in the low- to mid- on the rise. Some banks have $100,000s before he left New recently introduced “deed for York, but by the time he ar- lease” initiatives to convert rived in Florida only one was delinquent owners into renters instead of evicting them. left. Sales of distressed properAbbruzzese said that while prices had increased ties, which act as a drag on in recent months, he was bet- prices, represented 24 percent ting that they would rise still of all activity, down from 29 more after the presidential percent a year ago. “The broad opinion is that election restored some certainty to the country’s po- housing is definitely improvlitical course. “I think people ing and on the upswing,” said are really scared right now; David Blitzer, the chairman of they’re not spending the the index committee for S&P’s Dow Jones Indices, which promoney,” he said. duces the Case-Shiller Home Underwater mortgages Price Index. “And that is a posWhile new buyers might itive factor for the economy as take comfort in the fact that well.” deep declines in home values In some areas, real estate seem to have passed, more brokers were skeptical that than 11 million current hom- any improvement would be eowners owe more on their sustained. mortgages than their homes Michael Parra, a real esare worth. In July, home sales tate agent in Las Vegas, said were running at an annual investors who had been fupace of 4.47 million, an im- eling the market with cash provement over a year ago, purchases were starting to but well below the high of get cold feet, fearing values 7.25 million reached in Sep- would not appreciate further tember 2005. as long as incomes lag and New-home sales also were jobs are scarce. picking up, lifting share pric“You’re going to have a cat-
fish market,” Parra said. “You know, catfish stay on the bottom and they occasionally jump up to the surface.”
which hit a low in March 2012. Prices there have risen 1.1 percent since then. Case-Shiller is still showing a slight decline in average prices over the past year, but analysts will be closely watching the June data, due out next week, for signs of a turnaround. Barbara Gargiulo, a real estate broker in northern New Jersey, said market conditions in her area varied widely. Montclair, she said, has only a two-month supply of houses on the market — far less than some of its neighbors. Still, she said, a house that sold last year for $620,000 sold again this year for $650,000, above its list price. “I think we’ll have some small little peaks, small little valleys, but in general we’ll see an upward curve over the next few years,” she said.
Housing
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate Every Saturday In
No national market Economists like to caution that there is no such thing as a national real estate market. Results vary widely from place to place, and some of the biggest increases in prices have come in parts of the country hit the hardest when the housing boom turned to bust. Home prices in Phoenix fell 55.9 percent from June 2006 through September 2011, when they bottomed, according to the Case-Shiller index. Since then, they have risen 8.8 percent. And in San Francisco, which had a 46.1 percent decline, prices have recovered 10.6 percent from the low in March 2009. More typical is Chicago,
— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
where to fund jail operations, he said. But Brookhart said something needs to be done and he applauded the sheriff’s efforts to inform the public. “If we’re turning out 700 or 800 people a year that should be locked up, those people are having an impact on the quality of life here,” he said. In 1999, Crook County residents narrowly voted down a bond measure to build a new jail. At about the same time, Jefferson County voters approved a construction bond for a 160-bed facility. Jefferson County had faced many of the same problems Crook County faces today, said Jefferson County Sheriff Jim Adkins. Hundreds of convicts waited to serve their sentences and many skipped their court dates. Adkins said he thinks Crook County will eventually have to propose a bond measure to build a new jail. “In Jefferson County if someone commits a crime, it’s guaranteed they will got to jail,” he said. “It’s a much better deterrent.” Many ask why Crook County doesn’t close its jail and rent more beds from Jefferson County, Hensley said. It costs Crook County about $137 per bed per day to run its jail, while Jefferson County charges only $62.98 per bed per day. Closing the jail isn’t an option, Hensley said. The county must staff the jail to oversee inmates that return for court dates and medical exams. His 10 patrol deputies would spend much of their time shuttling inmates to Madras, he said. For now, Hensley said, the solution is maintaining the jail and possibly renting more beds from Jefferson County. This year the county budget committee allocated $15,000 to the sheriff to rent five extra Jefferson County jail beds five days a month. Hensley started using those beds Monday to house inmates with outstanding sentences. Come Friday, they will be shuttled back to Prineville and released until a jail bed opens up again. — Reporter: 541-633-2184, jaschbrenner@bendbulletin.com
OUTING
TV & Movies, B2 Calendar, B3 Dear Abby, B3
B
Horoscope, B3 Comics, B4-5 Puzzles, B5
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
www.bendbulletin.com/outing
TRAIL UPDATE Follow the rules on busy trails Area trails are looking good, and according to Deschutes National Forest trail specialists Chris Sabo, that means crowds. “If folks are looking for a very heartfelt wilderness experience, they will not find it in that extreme-use area this time a year,” Sabo said. “South Sister can see upwards of 300 people on the summit on a weekend day this time of year. It’s like a trail freeway going up and down that.” Because trails are crowded, and likely to continue to be bustling through Labor Day, Sabo urges hikers to follow regulations. Obtain a wilderness pass, use leave-no-trace practices, obey campfire bans and do not camp outside of designated sites when in lake basins. Particularly high-use areas include Broken Top, South Sister, Green Lakes and Moraine Lake. Sabo suggests seeking out lower-use areas, such as the Three Sisters Wilderness, at this time. While many trails are in high demand this time of year, there are some areas experiencing closures due to fire and trail maintenance. Some sections of the Pacific Crest Trail are closed due to fire, including areas around Windigo Pass, Maiden Lake, Bobby Lake, Charlton Lake and various connecting points. These conditions and closures can change from day to day, however, so hikers are advised to check for updates at www .inciweb.org.
See Trails / B6
SPOTLIGHT Tour spotlights backyard farms More than 15 backyard farms and gardens will be open for viewing Saturday and Sunday during the Bend Backyard Farm Tour. The tour takes place from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. each day. Participants can view properties ranging from large-scale farming operations to small-scale gardens on a self-guided tour. Some farms are open only one day of the tour. All gardens feature food-producing plants, and many also have greenhouses and garden covers. Some landowners have bees, chickens or other animals, as well. Farm owners will be on hand to answer questions. The event is put on by Celebrate the Season, a local business that builds chicken coops and other farm structures; and NeighborImpact. Proceeds benefit the food bank. Tour booklets cost $10 (one booklet per car) and are available in Bend at Celebrate the Season, Bits & Pieces Custom Framing, Backporch Coffee Roasters on Newport Avenue, and Country Feed & Pet Supply. They’re also at Earth’s Art Tumalo Garden Market. Contact: cts@ bendbroadband.com, sandyk@neighbor impact.org or 541-2442536 (541-CHICKEN). — From staff reports
• Pine Mountain Observatory brings the heavens closer By Mac McLean The Bulletin
I
have a confession to make: My wife, Meryl Ibis, and I are total science nerds. When we found out there was a university-owned research observatory — the University of Oregon’s Pine Mountain Observatory — that was open to the public and less than an hour away from town, we jumped at the chance to make a trip out there. What sweetened the deal even more were the clear skies, cool temperatures and the Perseid meteor shower.
“There will probably be dozens of people in sleeping bags hanging out here in the middle of the night looking at the stars,” said Kent Fairfield, an observatory volunteer who showed us around the facility right before one of its busiest nights. Located about eight miles down a dirt road from the old Millican store on U.S. Highway 20 east of Bend, the Pine Mountain Observatory complex consists of three telescopes that gaze out at the stars from a 6,300-foot-high ridge in the Oregon Badlands. See Outing / B6
20
Bend 97
Chi na Hat Rd.
Pine Mountain Observatory Horse Ridge
18
Old Millican Store 20
Deschutes National Forest
2017
Pine Mountain 6,405 ft. Greg Cross / The Bulletin
Photo by Mac McLean / The Bulletin
This 24-inch-aperture reflecting telescope at the Pine Mountain Observatory is open to the public. It gives visitors a chance to gaze at the stars and other celestial bodies.
‘Summer Triangle’ lights up August’s night sky By Bill Logan For The Bulletin
SKY WATCH
In June, I wrote about the Great Summer Arc. If you follow the handle of the Big Dipper southwest, you will see the bright star Arcturus. Then, farther southwest near the horizon, you will see the star Spica. The Great Summer Arc is still there, but is farther west now. The bright star in the west-southwest, just above Spica, is Saturn. It will set at 10:05 p.m. tonight. Mars, just to the left of Saturn, will set at 10 p.m. Jupiter will rise in the east
at 12:12 a.m. and Venus will rise at 2:35 a.m. In addition to the Great Summer Arc, the Summer Triangle is a wonderful sight and consists of three very bright stars: Vega, Deneb and Altair. The best way to see the summer triangle is to simply sit back in a chaise lounge chair in the backyard and look straight up after dark. Vega is located directly overhead in the constellation Lyra. In fact, it will be one of the first stars you’ll see as the sky darkens around 9 p.m. in Central Oregon. It is the
fifth-brightest star in the heavens and is only 25 light years distant. Deneb is the tail of the constellation Cygnus, the Swan. In fact, the Arabic word for “tail” is Deneb. It is located northeast of Vega and is the 19th-brightest star. Deneb is a bluewhite giant with a mass 20 times greater than our sun. The distance remains a mystery, but is believed to be about 3,200 light years. Altair, in the constellation Aquila, is the 12th-brightest star. It is 1.8 times the mass of our sun, and 11 times brighter at almost 17 light
years distance. Altair is southeast of Vega and completes the triangle. Central Oregon and many other locations around the world will also be treated to two full moons this month. The first one was on Aug. 1; the second will be on Aug. 31. When there are two full moons in one month, the second is called a blue moon. Bill Logan is an expert solar observer and a volunteer amateur astronomer with University of Oregon’s Pine Mountain Observatory. He lives in Bend. Contact: blogan0821@gmail.com
B2
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
TV & M
Mining for gold ‘Under the Ice’ business of diving through a grave-sized hole in the ice into 28-degree water. By David Wiegand The Lazy Gator gang is at the San Francisco Chronicle opposite end of the readiness It may only seem as though spectrum. These guys have all every time Thom Beers creates worked in other mining crews, a new reality series, he strikes but have scraped up virtually gold. As for the three half-fro- every penny of their own money zen crews on his latto form a new crew. don’t even est creation for the TV SPOTLIGHT They Discovery Chanhave a chain saw nel, pay dirt is more to chop through the elusive — a lot more elusive. ice and have to use other meth“Brutal,� Shawn Pomrenke ods. What these guys don’t have intones, Ishmael-like, at the top in fancy equipment, they make of “Bering Sea Gold: Under the up for in grit and drive. Ice.� “Brutal is the life of a miner. We’ve also met the third crew Gold don’t care about the ice. If before. Zeke Tenhoff of the gold don’t care, neither do I.� Clark was working and living As the show’s title indicates, with Emily Riedel in the original “Under the Ice� is a spin-off of series, while her dad, Steve, was Beers’ other show about min- part of the Wild Ranger crew. ing for gold in the waters off But the intensity of mining, on Alaska. The original “BSG,� top of always being together, launched last year, focuses on put a strain on Zeke and Emily’s the summer gold rush in the relationship, and Emily bolted, Bering Sea as mining crews feeling burned out. Now she’s take advantage of the warmer back, but so is her dad, working weather to dredge as much gold with the Clark team this time. as they can find from the floor Zeke thinks it’ll be good to have of the sea before winter sets in Steve around because Emily can and the Bering freezes over. fight with her father instead of That is challenging enough, bickering with him. but when it comes to undersea Unlike a lot of reality shows, mining off Nome in the dead of “Under the Ice� is convincingly winter, the tough get going, but frightening. Even the smallest the tougher take on the even equipment failure can mean more treacherous challenge the difference between life to go for the gold beneath a 4- and death, and as a viewer, foot-thick layer of ice. you feel it. Imagine descending With Beers narrating, we through a small opening in the meet three crews who may ice into below-freezing water share the same shiny goal, but with limited visibility. Grantbring different skills, equipment ed, there are obviously other and temperament to the search. people down there with the The Shamrock is run by diver filming the whole thing, Shawn Pomrenke, whom we but it’s a testament to how well know from the original “BSG� “Under Sea Ice� is produced, as the son of Steve Pomrenke, filmed and edited that viewers owner of the Christine Rose won’t think about that. Instead, mining vessel. The Shamrock they’ll be focused on what it crew has the best equipment would be like to be swimming money can buy, but that’s no around in what could easily beguarantee against the deadly come your watery tomb.
L M T
FOR THURSDAY, AUG. 23
Norman, a youngster who can see and hear dead people, is the hero of the stop-motion animation “ParaNorman.�
BEND Regal Pilot Butte 6
“Bering Sea Gold: Under the Ice� 9 p.m. Friday, Discovery
2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend, 541-382-6347
BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD (PG-13) 12:45, 3:45, 6:30 THE BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG-13) Noon, 2:45, 6 THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15 MOONRISE KINGDOM (PG-13) 1:15, 4, 7:15 NEIL YOUNG JOURNEYS (PG) 1, 3:30, 7 RUBY SPARKS (R) 12:30, 3, 6:45
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
THE ODD LIFE OF TIMOTHY GREEN (PG) 12:20, 3:15, 6:15, 9:05 PARANORMAN 3-D (PG) 1:20, 7 PARANORMAN (PG) 3:40, 9:20 SPARKLE (PG-13) 1:15, 4:20, 7:05, 9:50 TED (R) 1:40, 4:45, 7:35, 10:10 TOTAL RECALL (PG-13) 1:30, 4:35, 7:25, 10:15
McMenamins Old St. Francis School 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562
REDMOND Redmond Cinemas
MADRAS
1535 S.W. Odem Medo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777
THAT’S MY BOY (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.
Madras Cinema 5
THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 THE EXPENDABLES 2 (R) 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 THE ODD LIFE OF TIMOTHY GREEN (PG) 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 PARANORMAN (PG) 2, 4:15, 6:30, 8:45
SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN (PG-13) 6
1101 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505
THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 3:40, 6:30 THE CAMPAIGN (R) 2:35, 4:45, 7 THE EXPENDABLES 2 (R) 2:30, 4:55, 7:20 HIT AND RUN (R) 2:25, 4:40, 6:50 PARANORMAN 3-D (PG) 2:45, 5, 7:10
SISTERS Sisters Movie House
PRINEVILLE Pine Theater
720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800
214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014
THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 7
Tin Pan Theater
THE CAMPAIGN (R) 7:30
869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271
MOONRISE KINGDOM (PG-13) 5 PARANORMAN (PG) 5, 7:15
YOUR SISTER’S SISTER (R) 8 KUMARÉ: THE TRUE STORY OF A FALSE PROPHET (no MPAA rating) 3
7:30 AM - 5:30 PM MON-FRI 8 AM - 3 PM SAT.
TO ROME WITH LOVE (R) 5 TOTAL RECALL (PG-13) 7
THE BOURNE LEGACY (UPSTAIRS — PG-13) 6 MAGIC MIKE (R) 7 TED (R) 4 Pine Theater’s upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
for appointments call 541-382-4900
541-382-4171 541-548-7707 2121 NE Division Bend
• Open-captioned showtimes are bold. • There may be an additional fee for 3-D movies. • IMAX films are $15.50 for adults and $13 for children (ages 3 to 11) and seniors (ages 60 and older). • Movie times are subject to change after press time.
Focus Features The Associated Press
680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 541-382-6347
BRAVE (PG) 12:55, 3:35, 6:10, 9:10 THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 12:05, 12:45, 3:10, 4:05, 6:20, 7:10, 9:30, 10:10 THE CAMPAIGN (R) 12:40, 2, 3:45, 5, 6:30, 7:15, 9:40, 10:30 THE EXPENDABLES 2 (R) 12:25, 1:50, 3:25, 4:55, 6:50, 7:50, 9:25, 10:25 THE DARK KNIGHT RISES IMAX (PG-13) 12:30, 4:15, 7:55 THE DARK KNIGHT RISES (PG13) Noon, 4, 7:45 HIT AND RUN (R) 1:40, 4:45, 7:35, 10:05 HOPE SPRINGS (PG-13) 1:05, 3:55, 6:40, 9:15
EDITOR’S NOTES:
641 NW Fir Redmond
www.denfeldpaints.com
L TV L
THURSDAY PRIME TIME 8/23/12
*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
5:30
KATU News News News KEZI 9 News The Simpsons Electric Comp. NewsChannel 8 Meet, Browns Chef John Besh
World News Nightly News Evening News World News The Simpsons Fetch! With Ruff Nightly News Meet, Browns Sara’s
6:00
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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 Travelscope Business Rpt. NewsChannel 8 News King of Queens King of Queens Time Goes By My Family
7:00
7:30
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Jeopardy! ‘G’ Wheel Fortune Wipeout (N) ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Jeopardy! ‘G’ Wheel Fortune The Office ‘PG’ Parks/Recreat How I Met 30 Rock ‘PG’ Big Bang Two/Half Men Entertainment The Insider (N) Wipeout (N) ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Big Bang Big Bang Raising Hope New Girl ’ ‘14’ PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Ă… Oregon Art Beat Outdoor Idaho Live at 7 (N) Inside Edition The Office ‘PG’ Parks/Recreat Seinfeld ‘PG’ Seinfeld ‘PG’ Oh Sit! (N) ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Rediscovering Alexander Hamilton ’ ‘PG’ Ă… (DVS)
9:00
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Wipeout Family Matters (N) ‘PG’ Saving Hope (N) ’ ‘14’ Big Brother (N) ’ Ă… Wipeout Family Matters (N) ‘PG’ Glee Props ’ ‘14’ Ă… Doc Martin Haemophobia ’ ‘PG’ Saving Hope (N) ’ ‘14’ The Next Baltimore (N) ‘PG’ Ă… World News Tavis Smiley (N)
10:00
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Rookie Blue The Rules ‘14’ Ă… Rock Center With Brian Williams Person of Interest ’ ‘14’ Ă… Rookie Blue The Rules ‘14’ Ă… News TMZ (N) ’ ‘PG’ Oregon Lens Rock Center With Brian Williams CW Fall First ’Til Death ‘PG’ Charlie Rose (N) ’ ‘PG’ 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’ River of Renewal ’ ‘G’ Ă… NewsChannel 8 Jay Leno ’Til Death ‘PG’ That ’70s Show PBS NewsHour ’ Ă…
BASIC CABLE CHANNELS
The First 48 Torn; Gun Crazy ‘14’ The First 48 ‘14’ Ă… The First 48 Missing Ă… The First 48 ‘14’ Ă… The First 48 Night Shift; Mobbed (11:01) The First 48 Ultimate Price *A&E 130 28 18 32 The First 48 ‘14’ Ă… CSI: Miami Calleigh finds a woman CSI: Miami Grand Prix A gas man CSI: Miami Big Brother Horatio must ››› “The Truman Showâ€? (1998) Jim Carrey, Laura Linney, Noah Emmerich. (10:15) ›› “The Cable Guyâ€? (1996) Jim Carrey, Matthew Broderick. Premiere. *AMC 102 40 39 shot to death. ‘14’ Ă… dies during a race. ’ ‘14’ Ă… find his brother’s killer. ‘14’ Premiere. Cameras broadcast an unwitting man’s life. Ă… A cable television technician invades an architect’s life. Swamp Wars ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Swamp Wars ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Gator Boys Alligator Face-Off ‘PG’ Gator Boys ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Off the Hook Off the Hook Gator Boys Alligator Face-Off ‘PG’ *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Rattlesnake Republic ‘14’ Ă… Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ (6:45) The Real Housewives of New Jersey Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ New Jersey Social (N) Housewives/NJ BRAVO 137 44 Yes, Dear ‘PG’ Yes, Dear ‘PG’ Yes, Dear ‘G’ Reba ‘PG’ Ă… Reba ‘PG’ Ă… Reba ‘PG’ Ă… Reba ‘PG’ Ă… Working Class Working Class Working Class Working Class Terry Fator Live From Las Vegas CMT 190 32 42 53 Yes, Dear ‘G’ Crime Inc. Corporate espionage. CNBC Titans Mad Money Crime Inc. Corporate espionage. American Greed Raffaello Follieri My Pillow Ninja Kitchen CNBC 51 36 40 52 Crime Inc. Grand Theft Auto 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… (6:02) Tosh.0 Colbert Report Daily Show (7:44) Chappelle’s Show ‘14’ Chappelle Show South Park ‘MA’ South Park ‘MA’ South Park ‘MA’ (10:28) Tosh.0 Daily Show Colbert Report COM 135 53 135 47 (4:58) Futurama Always Sunny Dept./Trans. City Edition Talk of the Town Local issues. Desert Cooking Oregon Joy of Fishing Journal 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 Shake It Up! ‘G’ Good-Charlie Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb “Phineas and Ferb: The Movieâ€? Gravity Falls ’ My Babysitter Jessie ‘G’ Ă… Shake It Up! ‘G’ Good-Charlie *DIS 87 43 14 39 Jessie ‘G’ Ă… Auction Kings Auction Kings Auction Kings Auction Kings Auction Kings Auction Kings Auction Kings Auction Kings Auction Kings Saw Dogs ‘PG’ Saw Dogs ‘PG’ Auction Kings Auction Kings *DISC 156 21 16 37 Auction Kings Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians E! News (N) The Soup ‘14’ Jonas ›› “She’s Out of My Leagueâ€? (2010) Jay Baruchel, Alice Eve. Chelsea Lately E! News *E! 136 25 SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… ESPN 21 23 22 23 NFL Preseason Football Arizona Cardinals at Tennessee Titans From LP Field in Nashville, Tenn. (N) Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) Ă… ATP Tennis U.S. Open Series: Winston-Salem Open, Quarterfinal (N) NFL Live (N) (Live) Ă… Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) Ă… ESPN2 22 24 21 24 Little League Baseball World Series: Petaluma (Calif.) vs. Team TBA Friday Night Lights ‘14’ Ă… Friday Night Lights ‘14’ Ă… Tennis U.S. Open final, from Sept. 11, 2005. Ă… Tennis U.S. Open third round, from Sept. 3, 2006. Ă… ESPNC 23 25 123 25 White Shadow Psyched Out 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. ESPNFC Press H-Lite Ex. ESPNN 24 63 124 203 SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… Reba ‘PG’ Ă… Melissa & Joey ›› “The Pacifierâ€? (2005, Comedy) Vin Diesel, Lauren Graham. ›› “Last Holidayâ€? (2006, Comedy) Queen Latifah, GĂŠrard Depardieu, LL Cool J. The 700 Club ‘PG’ Ă… FAM 67 29 19 41 Reba ‘PG’ Ă… Hannity (N) On Record, Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Ă… Hannity On Record, Greta Van Susteren The Five FNC 54 61 36 50 The O’Reilly Factor (N) Ă… Paula’s Cooking Chopped Marrowly We Roll Along Chopped The Big Scoop ‘G’ Chopped Chewing the Caul Fat Chopped Cake Walk Extreme Chef (N) The Great Food Truck Race *FOOD 177 62 98 44 Best Dishes “You Don’t Messâ€? How I Met How I Met Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Anger Anger (10:01) Wilfred (10:31) Louie (N) Totally Biased (11:31) Louie FX 131 You Live in What? ‘G’ Ă… Hunters Int’l House Hunters Property Brothers ‘G’ Ă… You Live in What? ‘G’ Ă… House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l HGTV 176 49 33 43 Extreme Homes ‘G’ Ă… Great Lake Warriors ‘14’ Ă… Great Lake Warriors ‘14’ Ă… Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Counting Cars Counting Cars (11:02) Great Lake Warriors ‘14’ *HIST 155 42 41 36 Great Lake Warriors ‘14’ Ă… Project Runway ‘PG’ Ă… Project Runway ‘PG’ Ă… Project Runway ‘PG’ Ă… Project Runway Fix My Friend (N) ‘PG’ Ă… Project Runway Fix My Friend ‘PG’ Ă… LIFE 138 39 20 31 Project Runway ‘PG’ Ă… The Rachel Maddow Show (N) The Last Word The Ed Show The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word Hardball With Chris Matthews MSNBC 56 59 128 51 The Ed Show (N) (6:04) Awkward. (6:39) Awkward. (7:14) Awkward. ’ ‘14’ (7:49) Awkward. Snooki Snooki Snooki Snooki Awkward. ‘14’ Inbetweeners Snooki MTV 192 22 38 57 (4:54) Teen Mom ’ ‘PG’ Ă… SpongeBob You Gotta See Victorious ‘G’ Figure It Out ‘Y’ Splatalot (N) ‘G’ Victorious ‘G’ Victorious ‘G’ My Wife & Kids My Wife & Kids George Lopez George Lopez Friends ’ ‘14’ (11:33) Friends NICK 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob Main Street Main Street Main Street Main Street Main Street 48 Hours: Hard Evidence ’ ‘14’ 48 Hours: Hard Evidence ’ ‘PG’ 48 Hours: Hard Evidence ’ ‘14’ 48 Hours: Hard Evidence ’ ‘14’ OWN 161 103 31 103 Main Street Bull Riding CBR Hobbs UFA UFC Unleashed ‘PG’ UFC Insider Seahawks The Dan Patrick Show ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Planet X Square Billiards Mosconi Cup Jail ‘14’ Ă… Jail ‘14’ Ă… Jail ‘14’ Ă… Jail ‘14’ Ă… Jail ‘14’ Ă… iMPACT Wrestling (N) ’ ‘14’ Ă… ›› “Doomâ€? (2005, Science Fiction) The Rock, Karl Urban. ’ SPIKE 132 31 34 46 Jail ‘14’ Ă… ›› “Outlanderâ€? (2008, Action) James Caviezel, Ron Perlman, Sophia Myles. Ă… ››› “The Fifth Elementâ€? (1997, Science Fiction) Bruce Willis, Gary Oldman. Blade Runner SYFY 133 35 133 45 (4:30) › “Battle of Los Angelesâ€? (2011) ‘14’ Ă… Behind Scenes Joel Osteen Joseph Prince Hillsong TV Praise the Lord (Live). Ă… Live-Holy Land The Evidence Bible Prophecy Creflo Dollar Praise the Lord TBN Classics TBN 205 60 130 King of Queens King of Queens Seinfeld ‘PG’ Seinfeld ‘PG’ Family Guy ‘14’ Family Guy ‘14’ Big Bang Big Bang Sullivan & Son Big Bang Conan ‘14’ Ă… *TBS 16 27 11 28 Friends ’ ‘PG’ Friends ’ ‘14’ ››› “Cover Girlâ€? (1944, Musical Comedy) Rita Hayworth, Gene Kelly. Chorus ›››› “An American in Parisâ€? (1951) Gene Kelly. A GI stays in Paris to paint ›››› “Singin’ in the Rainâ€? (1952) Gene Kelly, Debbie Reynolds. A silent-film ››› “Inherit the Windâ€? (1960) SpenTCM 101 44 101 29 girl wins contest, leaves boyfriend for Broadway. Ă… and falls in love with a young woman. Ă… (DVS) star falls in love with a Hollywood newcomer. Ă… (DVS) cer Tracy, Fredric March. Here Comes Here Comes Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Four Weddings (N) ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Four Weddings (N) ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Four Weddings ’ ‘PG’ Ă… *TLC 178 34 32 34 Say Yes: Bride Say Yes: Bride Toddlers & Tiaras ’ ‘PG’ Ă… The Mentalist Red Handed ‘14’ The Mentalist Seeing Red ’ ‘14’ The Mentalist ’ ‘14’ Ă… The Mentalist Red Gold ’ ‘14’ The Mentalist Red Queen ’ ‘14’ CSI: NY Smooth Criminal ’ ‘14’ *TNT 17 26 15 27 The Mentalist Aingavite Baa ‘14’ Johnny Test ’ Regular Show Regular Show Total Drama Adventure Time Adventure Time Annoying Regular Show King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy ‘14’ Family Guy ‘14’ *TOON 84 Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ Best Sandwich Best Sandwich Trip Flip Rome Trip Flip ‘PG’ Waterparks Waterparks Coaster Wars Coaster Wars *TRAV 179 51 45 42 Bourdain: No Reservations M*A*S*H ‘PG’ (6:32) M*A*S*H (7:05) M*A*S*H (7:43) M*A*S*H Souvenirs ‘PG’ (8:21) M*A*S*H Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens TVLND 65 47 29 35 Bonanza The Hanging Posse ‘G’ NCIS Obsession ’ ‘PG’ Ă… NCIS Borderland ’ ‘14’ Ă… NCIS Cracked ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Burn Notice (N) ‘PG’ Ă… (10:01) Suits High Noon (N) ‘PG’ (11:03) Covert Affairs ‘PG’ USA 15 30 23 30 NCIS In the Zone ’ ‘14’ Ă… Behind the Music Notorious B.I.G. ’ ‘14’ Ă… Behind the Music Nas Nas. ‘14’ ››› “New Jack Cityâ€? (1991) Wesley Snipes, Ice-T. ’ Ă… Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ ‘14’ VH1 191 48 37 54 Hollywood Exes Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ ‘14’ PREMIUM CABLE CHANNELS
(6:05) ›› “Kindergarten Copâ€? 1990 Arnold Schwarzenegger. Ă… ››› “Air Force Oneâ€? 1997, Suspense Harrison Ford. ’ ‘R’ Ă… (10:10) ›› “Timecopâ€? 1994 Jean-Claude Van Damme. ’ ‘R’ Ă… ENCR 106 401 306 401 (4:35) › “Bulletproofâ€? 1996 ‘R’ FXM Presents ›› “Invincibleâ€? 2006, Biography Mark Wahlberg. ‘PG’ Ă… FXM Presents ›› “Radioâ€? 2003, Drama Cuba Gooding Jr., Ed Harris. ‘PG’ Ă… FMC 104 204 104 120 ›› “Invincibleâ€? 2006, Biography Mark Wahlberg. ‘PG’ Ă… UFC Tonight UFC Insider Best of PRIDE Fighting UFC Unleashed UFC Unleashed The Ultimate Fighter Brazil UFC Tonight UFC Insider Best Damn Hooter’s Dream Girl FUEL 34 Golf Central (N) 19th Hole (N) LPGA Tour Golf GOLF 28 301 27 301 LPGA Tour Golf PGA Tour Golf The Barclays, First Round From Bethpage State Park in Farmingdale, N.Y. Little House on the Prairie ‘G’ Little House on the Prairie ‘PG’ Little House on the Prairie ‘G’ Little House on the Prairie ‘G’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ HALL 66 33 175 33 The Waltons The Lost Sheep ‘G’ (3:00) ›››› “Titanicâ€? 1997 Leonardo (6:15) ›› “Happy Feet Twoâ€? 2011 Voices of Elijah Wood. Animated. The son ››› “Game Changeâ€? 2012 Julianne Moore, Ed Harris. Gov. Sarah Palin The Newsroom The staff stages a True Blood Sunset Bill slips into reliHBO 425 501 425 501 DiCaprio. ‘PG-13’ Ă… of a tap-dancing penguin is afraid to dance. ‘PG’ Ă… becomes Sen. John McCain’s running mate in 2008. ’ Ă… mock debate. ’ ‘MA’ Ă… gious fervor. ’ ‘MA’ Ă… ›› “The Beachâ€? 2000, Drama Leonardo DiCaprio, Tilda Swinton. ‘R’ ›› “From Dusk Till Dawnâ€? 1996, Horror Harvey Keitel. ‘R’ (9:45) ›› “The Beachâ€? 2000, Drama Leonardo DiCaprio, Tilda Swinton. ‘R’ IFC 105 105 (4:30) ›› “Antitrustâ€? 2001, Suspense Ryan Phillippe, (6:20) › “The Hauntingâ€? 1999 Liam Neeson. Four people (8:15) ›› “Horrible Bossesâ€? 2011, Comedy Jason Bateman. Three oppressed ›› “The Whole Nine Yardsâ€? 2000, Comedy Bruce Willis, Co-Ed ConfidenMAX 400 508 508 Rachael Leigh Cook. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… stay in a reputedly haunted house. ‘PG-13’ workers plot against their employers. ’ ‘NR’ Ă… Matthew Perry. ’ ‘R’ Ă… tial 3 American Colony: Hutterites American Colony: Hutterites Taboo Weird Weddings ‘14’ Taboo Weird Weddings ‘14’ American Colony: Hutterites American Colony: Hutterites Alaska State Troopers ‘14’ NGC 157 157 Odd Parents Odd Parents Robot, Monster Planet Sheen Huntik: Secrets Odd Parents SpongeBob SpongeBob Fanboy-Chum Fanboy-Chum Planet Sheen T.U.F.F. Puppy NTOON 89 115 189 115 Huntik: Secrets Odd Parents In Pursuit With Realtree RealTree’s Bow Madness Ult. Adventures The Season Wild Outdoors Bushman Show Hunt Masters Wild Outdoors Steve’s Outdoor Sasquatch Fear No Evil OUTD 37 307 43 307 Hunt (4:45) ›› “Unraveledâ€? 2011, Docu- (6:15) ›› “Powderâ€? 1995, Drama Mary Steenburgen. An albino outcast pos- (8:15) “All Good Thingsâ€? 2010, Mystery Ryan Gosling. The wife of a New York The Real L Word Dream Come True Polyamory: Mar- The Real L Word SHO 500 500 mentary ’ ‘NR’ Ă… sesses amazing mental powers. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… real estate scion suddenly goes missing. ’ ‘R’ Ă… (N) ‘MA’ ried & Dating ‘MA’ Wrecked ‘14’ Wrecked ‘PG’ Hard Parts Hard Parts Car Warriors Le Mans ‘14’ Wrecked ‘14’ Wrecked ‘PG’ Hard Parts Hard Parts Unique Whips ‘14’ SPEED 35 303 125 303 Car Warriors Le Mans ‘14’ (6:10) ›› “The Recruitâ€? 2003, Suspense Al Pacino. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… (8:15) › “The Smurfsâ€? 2011, Comedy Hank Azaria. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… (10:05) ››› “Shanghai Knightsâ€? 2003 Jackie Chan. ‘PG-13’ Ă… STARZ 300 408 300 408 (4:15) ›› “Connie and Carlaâ€? ›› “My Life’s in “Outside the Lawâ€? 2010, Historical Drama Jamel Debbouze, Roschdy Zem, Sami Bouajila. Algeri- ››› “Brokeback Mountainâ€? 2005, Romance Heath Ledger. Two cowboys (10:15) ›› “Highlander: The Final Dimensionâ€? 1994, Fantasy Christopher TMC 525 525 Turnaroundâ€? ans struggle for independence from France. ‘R’ Ă… maintain a secret romance over many years. ’ ‘R’ Ă… Lambert, Mario Van Peebles, Deborah Unger. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… Caught Looking (N) ‘PG’ Caught Looking ‘PG’ Cycling Caught Looking ‘PG’ Poker After Dark Darts Round One NBCSN 27 58 30 209 Olympic Hall of Fame Braxton Family Values (N) L.A. Hair Divas Divided Braxton Family Values Braxton Family Values Ghost Whisperer ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Mary Mary Proposed Hit ‘PG’ *WE 143 41 174 118 Braxton Family Values
THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
A & A
New boyfriend’s old life is still uncomfortably close Dear Abby: I started dating my boyfriend a month ago. On our third date he informed me that he was previously married. It lasted two years and he has been divorced for almost a year. It didn’t bother me, so I let it go. He introduced me to his two roommates — one of them is female. After spending a day with them, I noticed he had an odd relationship with her. When I asked him about it later, he said she’s his ex-wife. They live together and share basically everything, including groceries and a laptop. He can’t seem to understand why I’m disturbed by this. He says the decision to divorce was mutual and that they have both been seeing other people for a while. I adore him and hate to end a fantastic relationship because I’m jealous. I have no life experience to prepare me to handle this sort of situation, so I don’t know what to do. Help! — Taken Aback in Pittsburgh Dear Taken Aback: Sometimes when a person doesn’t know what to do, the best thing to do is — nothing. Your relationship is very new. Stay calm and see how it develops. If you both decide to take it to the next level, the living arrangements may change to something you’re more comfortable with. Dear Abby: My 70-something-year-old mother is being remarried soon. I’m happy she has found love again after my father’s passing. Several of her friends are throwing her a lingerie shower to celebrate. Abby, I am uncomfortable attending this party. I asked that she exclude me from the list, but yesterday I received an invitation. Hooray! She has a new life which involves new love. I just don’t
DEAR ABBY want to think of my mother in that role. Am I wrong to not want to attend? — They Grow Up So Fast DEAR T.G.U.S.F.: You’re not wrong. While most of us are aware that we did not arrive via virgin birth, few of us want to dwell on the reality of our parents as sexual beings. Because you have already told your mother how you feel, simply respond to the invitation by saying you are unable to attend. Dear Abby: I often read letters in your column you refer to as “Pennies From Heaven.� I have something I’d like to share with you. I believe that I have received such gifts from my older brother, Shane, who passed away as an infant. I found one the other day that can’t be explained away as anything but a penny from heaven. As I was about to leave for my morning commute to work, I went out to the garage where I keep my bike, helmet and biking gloves. As I pulled my glove on, I found — you guessed it! — a penny was lodged in the little finger. I never keep money where these gloves are, so I can only guess that Shane put it there for me. — Loved Little Sister in Indiana Dear Loved Little Sister: The penny may indeed have been a token of your angel brother’s affection. Keep it for luck while you’re on the road, and pedal on with confidence knowing you’re being lovingly watched over from above. — Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Horoscope: Happy Birthday for Thursday, Aug. 23, 2012 By Jacqueline Bigar This year you will become far more assertive than in years past. Often, a misunderstanding develops out of nowhere, or people distance themselves. Others simply might be responding to your attitude. Accept responsibility for this, and others might change their perception of you. If you are single, you will want to meet a like-minded person. This possibility becomes more of a reality in spring 2013. If you are attached, the two of you seem to have a natural pace. You understand each other well. Dote on this person. SCORPIO can hold you back. 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) HHHH How you focus your energy will change substantially. You suddenly will concentrate on joint financial matters and agreements. You might find that a partner can be very difficult. The good news is that this, too, will pass. The bad news is that you will have to put up with it in the meantime. Tonight: A discussion does not need to turn into a fight. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Your popularity seems to soar. Do not question the moment; simply enjoy it. You also discover that someone is on your case, whether you feel this is fair or not. Remember, there always are alternatives. You will be able to move a difficult situation in the right direction. Tonight: Who, where and what? GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH Your ability to do research and find answers emerges, perhaps by necessity. Confusion seems to surround a key question. You might very well decide to find your own solutions. Others who know your abilities will be more relaxed, too. Tonight: Take a walk by water, or choose some other stressbuster. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHHH You have a big imagination. Often, that can be a positive thing, and other times this gift can be a double-edged sword. Use your ingenuity to figure out how to handle a financial matter. Make sure you are not walking through quicksand before you act. Tonight: Let the fun begin. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH Stress has a way of building if you are not careful, especially if there is a misunderstanding between you and someone else. Stay centered by paying attention to your general
feelings toward that person. If you can, avoid letting a difficult situation become even more difficult. Tonight: Express your fieriness. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You might be more out of sorts than you realize. Could you be misinterpreting others’ words? Don’t read too much into what is being said. Remain caring, and initiate a conversation to clear out a problem later today. Tonight: Talks over dinner. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHHH Keep expressing your feelings, but do not be surprised if you get an odd reaction midway. Be generous when dealing with this person. Your compassion will come back tenfold. Schedule time to do some shopping ASAP. Tonight: Buy that special item. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHHH You are in your element. You could be confused by a boss or older friend. This person not only is confusing you, but also him- or herself, the more he or she talks. Be diplomatic. Tonight: Whatever you do, choose a physical activity. You need to let off steam. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH Know when to pull back. You might feel as if you must do something, but in reality you do not know what that is. You will figure it out if you can stay centered. A caring gesture toward a loved one at a distance draws an exciting response. Tonight: Take some much-needed time. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You know what you want, and you know that you have no interest in stopping. You will be more centered than you have been in a while. A meeting proves to be most instrumental in helping you focus on a long-term goal. Tonight: Where the crowds are. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH Note how much pressure builds to get you to do certain things in a particular way. Explain why you do what you do. The more you are pushed, the more you push back. That trait cannot help you in the long run. Tonight: Try to be more reasonable. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHHH You want more information, and you are determined to get it. An initial attempt at being direct might not work, and actually could backfire. Detach from the immediate problem; the answers will appear. Tonight: Let your mind wander to good music. Š 2012 by King Features Syndicate
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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 TREEHOUSE PUPPETS IN THE PARK: With a performance of “Cory Coyote Holds an Election!�; followed by a coordinated activity; free; 11 a.m.-noon; Compass Park, 2500 N.W. Crossing Drive, Bend; 541-389-7275 or www .bendparksandrec.org. SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK: Featuring a performance of “Romeo & Juliet� by Cat Call Productions; $20-$75; 6 p.m., doors open 5 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; 541-323-0964 or www .bendticket.com. READERS SHOWCASE: Central Oregon Writers Guild members read from their works; free; 6:30-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, Redmond; www.central oregonwritersguild.com. ACORN PROJECT: The Bellingham, Wash.-based jamrock band performs, with The Dream Symphony; $5; 8:30 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend. TWANGSHIFTERS: The Portlandbased rock band performs; free; 9 p.m.; Maverick’s Country Bar and Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886.
FRIDAY ART IN THE HIGH DESERT: Juried fine arts and crafts festival showcases art from more than 100 professional artists; free; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; banks of the Deschutes River, across the footbridge from the Old Mill District, Bend; 541-3226272 or www.artinthehigh desert.com. “THE BREMERTON MUSICIANS�: Sunriver Stars Community Theater presents the story about four animals who flee their owners to become musicians; proceeds benefit FAST Camp; $5-$10, $3 seniors and ages 11 and younger; 2 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; dramama@comcast.net or www.sunriverstars.com. BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 2-6 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@ gmail.com or http://bend farmersmarket.com. SISTERS FARMERS MARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenue and Ash Street; www.sistersfarmersmarket.com. AIRSHOW OF THE CASCADES: Event includes a display of classic cars and aircraft, an aerobatics show, a kids area, aircraft rides and more; $8, free ages 12 and younger and veterans; 4-10 p.m.; Madras Airport, 2028 N.W. Airport Way; 541-475-6947 or www .cascadeairshow.com. SUNRIVER FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 4-7 p.m.; Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; www.sunriverchamber.com. ROD AND CUSTOM CAR SHOW: A display of vintage vehicles, with food, music and more; registration requested; proceeds benefit the inn; $15 suggested donation for participants and guests; 5-8 p.m.; Bethlehem Inn, 3705 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-322-8768, kim@ bethleheminn.org or www .bethleheminn.org. MUNCH & MOVIES: An outdoor screening of “School of Rock�; with food vendors and live music; free; 6 p.m., movie begins at dusk; Compass Park, 2500 N.W. Crossing Drive, Bend; 541-389-0995 or www .northwestcrossing.com. SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK: Featuring a performance of “Romeo & Juliet� by Cat Call Productions; $20-$75; 6 p.m., doors open 5 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; 541323-0964 or www.bendticket.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Jarold Ramsey reads from his book “Thinking Like a Canyon�; free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. ZZ TOP: The classic rock band performs, with Nashville Pussy; $42 or $79 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. RARE MONK: The indie rock band performs, with Necktie Killer; $5; 8:30 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; www.liquidclub.net. CARRIE NATION & THE SPEAKEASY: The Wichita, Kan.based Americana band performs,
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ZZ Top will rock Bend’s Les Schwab Amphitheater stage Friday. Gates open at 5 p.m. The Whistle Pigs; $7 in advance, $8 at the door; 9 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541728-0879 or www.bendticket.com.
SATURDAY AIRSHOW OF THE CASCADES: Event includes a display of classic cars and aircraft, an aerobatics show, a kids area, aircraft rides and more; $8, free ages 12 and younger and veterans; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Madras Airport, 2028 N.W. Airport Way; 541-475-6947 or www.cascadeairshow.com. PRINEVILLE FARMERS MARKET: Free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 503739-0643 or prineville farmersmarket@gmail.com. TUFF BUTTS POKER RUN: Ride more than 300 miles, beginning and ending at the VFW; with poker, live music and dinner; proceeds benefit local veterans; $15 per poker hand; 8:30 a.m., 8 a.m. registration; VFW Hall, 1836 S.W. Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-280-5161 or www .ovma-hde.com. MADRAS SATURDAY MARKET: Free admission; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, B and Seventh streets; 541-489-3239 or madrassatmkt@ gmail.com. ART IN THE HIGH DESERT: Juried fine arts and crafts festival showcases art from more than 100 professional artists; free; 10 a.m.6 p.m.; banks of the Deschutes River, across the footbridge from the Old Mill District, Bend; 541-322-6272 or www.artinthehighdesert.com. BACKYARD FARM TOUR: Tour backyard farms and gardens throughout Bend and speak with owners; proceeds benefit NeighborImpact; $10 for map book; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; 541-244-2536 or www.neighborimpact.org/backyard farmtour. CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts from local artisans; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Bend Public Library, 600 N.W. Wall St.; 541-420-9015 or www .centraloregonsaturdaymarket.com. GARDEN PARTY: With garden tours, garden presentations and more; free; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Hollinshead Community Garden, Hollinshead Park, 1235 N.E. 12th St., Bend; 541-548-6088. MONOGRAM MURAL EVENT: Help create a mural made of lines and shapes in signatures; free; 10 a.m.noon; Tumalo Art Co., 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, #407, Bend; 541-385-9144 or www.tumaloart co.com. NORTHWEST CROSSING FARMERS MARKET: Free; 10 a.m.2 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives, Bend; 541-382-1662, valerie@brooksresources.com or www.nwxfarmersmarket.com. TERREBONNE CRUZ IN: A display of more than 200 classic cars, hot rods and motorcycles; with music and more; free; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Terrebonne; 541-548-2603. SUMMER CARNIVAL: With games, face painting, sand art, food and prizes; free admission; 11 a.m.3 p.m.; St. Thomas Academy, 1720 N.W. 19th St., Redmond; 541-548-3785 or www.redmond academy.com. “THE BREMERTON MUSICIANS�: Sunriver Stars Community Theater presents the story about four animals who flee their owners to become musicians; proceeds benefit FAST Camp; $5-$10, $3 seniors and ages 11 and younger; 2 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; dramama@comcast.net or www.sunriverstars.com. “FRESH — NEW THINKING ABOUT WHAT WE’RE EATING�: A screening of the documentary film, with a reception; free; 4:30 p.m.; Sunlight Solar, 50 S.E. Scott St., Building 13, Bend; 541-322-1910.
VFW DINNER: A dinner of Asian food; $8; 5 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK: Featuring a performance of “Romeo & Juliet� by Cat Call Productions; $20-$75; 6 p.m., doors open 5 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; 541-323-0964 or www.bendticket.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Les Joslin talks about his book “Uncle Sam’s Cabins�; with a slide show; free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. “THE BREMERTON MUSICIANS�: Sunriver Stars Community Theater presents the story about four animals who flee their owners to become musicians; proceeds benefit FAST Camp; $5-$10, $3 seniors and ages 11 and younger; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; dramama@comcast.net or www.sunriverstars.com. HOT AUGUST NITES: Featuring a dinner, parking lot dance and a cruise in; proceeds benefit the Diabetes Research Center; $13.50 in advance, $15 at the door, $5 for dance only; 7 p.m., 8 p.m. dance; Eagles Lodge & Club, 235 N.E. Fourth St., Prineville; 541-447-7659. NIGHTSOUNDS — WOODSTOCK EDITION: A night of music from Woodstock, with cast members from “The Tempest� providing trivia; $5 in advance, $6 at the door; 7-10 p.m.; Innovation Theatre Works, 1155 S.W. Division St., Bend; 541-504-6721, brad@innovationtw .org or www.innovationtw.org. SHOW US YOUR SPOKES: Featuring a performance by The Autonomics and Cadence; proceeds benefit Commute Options; $5; 7 p.m.; Parrilla Grill, 635 N.W. 14th St., Bend; 541-617-9600. “PARANORMAN�: A screening of the PG-rated 2012 film; with an introduction of characters and puppets from the film by fabrication lead Morgan Hay; $8.75, $7 students, $6.50 kids and seniors; 7:15 p.m.; Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court; 541-549-8833. CARRIE CUNNINGHAM: The Portland-based country act performs; free; 9 p.m.; Maverick’s Country Bar and Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886.
SUNDAY ART IN THE HIGH DESERT: Juried fine arts and crafts festival showcases art from more than 100 professional artists; free; 10 a.m.4 p.m.; banks of the Deschutes River, across the footbridge from the Old Mill District, Bend; 541-322-6272 or www.artinthehighdesert.com. BACKYARD FARM TOUR: Tour backyard farms and gardens throughout Bend and speak with owners; proceeds benefit NeighborImpact; $10 for map book; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; 541-244-2536 or www.neighborimpact.org/ backyardfarmtour. INK & METAL: A bike and tattoo show; with live music, tattoo artists and more; $5; 11 a.m.-10 p.m.; Maverick’s Country Bar and Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541325-1886 or www.j.mp/inkmetal. FIDDLERS JAM: Listen or dance at the Oregon Old Time Fiddlers Jam; donations accepted; 1-3:30 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1836 S.W. Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-647-4789. “THE BREMERTON MUSICIANS�: Sunriver Stars Community Theater presents the story about four animals who flee their owners to become musicians; proceeds benefit FAST Camp; $5-$10, $3 seniors and ages 11 and younger; 2 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; dramama@comcast.net or www.sunriverstars.com. RUM REBELLION: The Portlandbased folk punk band performs,
with Wild Eye Revolvers, Smog Rott and Bastard Cat; $5; 7 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989.
TUESDAY REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 2-6:30 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue; 541-550-0066 or redmondfarmersmarket1@hotmail .com. TUESDAY FARMERS MARKET AT EAGLE CREST: Free admission; 2-6 p.m.; Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-633-9637 or info@sustainable flame.com. BROOKSWOOD PLAZA FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.; Brookswood Meadow Plaza, 19530 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541-323-3370 or farmersmarket@ brookswoodmeadowplaza.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Randall Shelton talks about his book, “Life on Earth: The Game�; free; 6:30-8 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-548-5922. HISTORY PUB: Darrell Jabin talks about “History of Amusement Parks in Oregon�; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com.
WEDNESDAY 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. PICKIN’ AND PADDLIN’ MUSIC SERIES: Includes boat demonstrations in the Deschutes River and music by bluegrass act Eight Dollar Mountain; proceeds benefit Bend Paddle Trail Alliance; free; 4-7 p.m. demonstrations, 7-10 p.m. music; Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; 541-317-9407. MUSIC IN THE CANYON: Jazz Under the Stars performs jazz music; free; 5:30-8 p.m.; American Legion Community Park, 850 S.W. Rimrock Way, Redmond; www .musicinthecanyon.com. END OF SUMMER CRUZ: Event features classic cars, live music by the Taelour Project and a barbecue; proceeds benefit the High Desert A’s COCC automotive scholarship fund; free admission; 6-8 p.m., barbecue begins at 5:30 p.m.; Jake’s Diner, 2210 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-419-6021. PICNIC IN THE PARK: Featuring an Americana performance by The Sugar Beets; free; 6-8 p.m.; Pioneer Park, 450 N.E. Third St., Prineville; 541-447-6909. COMEDY BENEFIT: Featuring a performance by Jim Mortenson; proceeds benefit nursing students traveling to the Dharamsala Medical Mission; $6 in advance, $8 at the door; 7:30 p.m.; Timbers North, 3315 S. U.S. Highway 97, Redmond; 541-678-2115 or nursingstudentmission@gmail.com. TARTUFI: The San Francisco-based rock band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.reverbnation.com/venue/ thehornedhand.
THURSDAY Aug. 30 TREEHOUSE PUPPETS IN THE PARK: With a performance of “Afraid of the Dark -- Whose Eyes Are Out There Anyway?�; followed by a coordinated activity; free; 11 a.m.-noon; Columbia Park, 264 S.W. Columbia St., Bend; 541-389-7275 or www.bendparksandrec.org.
B4
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
TUNDRA
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
HEART OF THE CITY
SALLY FORTH
FRAZZ
ROSE IS ROSE
STONE SOUP
LUANN
M OTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM
DILBERT
DOONESBURY
PICKLES
ADAM
WIZARD OF ID
B.C.
SHOE
GARFIELD
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
PEANUTS
MARY WORTH
THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
BIZARRO
B5
DENNIS THE MENACE
SUDOKU Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.
SOLUTION TO YESTERDAY’S SUDOKU
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB
GET FUZZY
NON SEQUITUR
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five games weekly at www.bendbridge.org.
CANDORVILLE
SAFE HAVENS
LOS ANGELES TIMES DAILY CROSSWORD
SIX CHIX
ZITS
HERMAN
B6
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
C D
Datebook is a weekly calendar of regularly scheduled nonprofit events and meetings. Listings are free but must be updated monthly to continue to publish. 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. Contact: 541-383-0351.
ORGANIZATIONS
TODAY BINGO: 6 p.m.; Elks Lodge, Bend; 541-382-1371. COMMUNICATORS PLUS TOASTMASTERS: 6:30-7:45 p.m.; IHOP, Bend; 541-593-1656 or 541-480-0222. THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.
FRIDAY BEND KNIT-UP: $2; 10 a.m.-noon;
Rosie Bareis Community Campus, Bend; 541-728-0050. BINGO: 6 p.m.; American Legion Post #44, Redmond; 541-548-5688. THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.
SATURDAY No events listed.
MONDAY THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-5 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. SWEET ADELINES: 6:30 p.m.; Redmond Senior Center; 541-447-4756.
An amateur astronomer sets up his personal telescope in front of one of the Pine Mountain Observatory’s three telescopes.
TUESDAY BELLA ACAPPELLA HARMONY: 6 p.m.; Bend Senior Center; 541-388-5038. BINGO: 6 p.m.; Eagles Lodge & Club, Prineville; 541-447-7659.
WEDNESDAY BEND CHAMBER TOASTMASTERS: Noon-1 p.m.; The Environmental Center, Bend; 541-610-2308. BEND KNITUP: 5:30-8 p.m.; Barnes & Noble Booksellers, Bend; 541-728-0050. BEND SUNRISE LIONS CLUB: 7 a.m.; Jake’s Diner, Bend; 541-286-5466. BINGO: 6 p.m.; American Legion Post #44, Redmond; 541-548-5688.
HIGHNOONERS TOASTMASTER CLUB: Noon-1 p.m.; New Hope Church, Classroom D, Bend; 541390-5373 or 541-317-5052.
THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Pinochle;
Getting there: From Bend, head east on U.S. Highway 20 for about 26 miles until you reach the old Millican Store. Turn right at a gravel road that runs behind this store and drive another eight miles until you reach the observatory. Hours: Pine Mountain Observatory is open to the public on Friday and Saturday
The Big Dipper hovers over the Pine Mountain Observatory’s 24-inch-aperture reflecting telescope at night.
The night sky Every 120 years, the SwiftTuttle Comet runs an elliptical course that takes it close enough to the sun that its icy surface starts to sweat and leaves behind pieces of ice, rock and cosmic dust in its wake.
trailhead. Beyond that the road is still closed until trees can be removed. Enjoy your time in the woods this week, care for your surroundings, and take Sabo’s request to heart: “Please help us preserve the wilderness quality. It helps make everybody’s stay a little more pleasant if everybody follows those requirements.” — Reporter: 541-383-0351, bhostbjor@bendbulletin.com
KIWANIS CLUB OF REDMOND: Noon-1 p.m.; Juniper Golf and Country Club, Redmond; 541-5485935 or www.redmondkiwanis.org. PRIME TIME TOASTMASTERS: 12:05-1 p.m.; Home Federal Bank, Prineville; 541-416-6549. REDMOND AREA TOASTMASTERS: Noon-1 p.m.; Ray’s Food Place, Redmond; 541-410-1758. WEDNESDAY MORNING BIRDERS: 7 a.m.; Nancy P’s Baking Co., Bend; www.ecaudubon.org or jmeredit@ bendnet.com.
Photos by Mac McLean / The Bulletin
If you go
reach speeds of 100 mph on a given day. This also means the observatory’s grounds can get very cold, very quickly when the sun sets. “Telescope domes are never heated,” Fairfield said, explaining we would have no shelter from the cold temperatures during our stay. He then told us we had picked a great weekend to visit because of the Perseids.
12:45-4 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.
The ridge just above Pine Mountain Observatory gives visitors a great view of the Oregon Badlands and the three telescopes.
The observatory
Continued from B1 Restoration projects on the Metolius River above Wizard Falls Hatchery will also close down sections of trail while crews replace bridges. The closure will remain in place through Friday. There is good news, however, for those hoping to hike on Broken Top. Forest Road 370, leading up from Todd Lake, is now open to the Broken Top
GAME DAY: 11:45 a.m.; Bend’s Community Center; 541-323-3344.
HIGH DESERT RUG HOOKERS: 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Bend Senior Center; 541-382-5337.
Continued from B1 It’s open to the public on Friday and Saturday nights during the summer, while groups of up to 20 people can schedule a private tour on other nights.
Trails
CRIBBAGE CLUB: 6 p.m.; Bend’s Community Center; 541-317-9022.
THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Canasta; 9:45 a.m.-2 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.
Outing
When we arrived about 8 p.m., Fairfield was waiting for us on the front porch of the office used by the observatory’s two paid staff members. The gift shop is to the left of the building, while its main parking lot and a U.S. Forest Service-maintained campground are located below it. Fairfield said the observatory has been operational since 1968, when the university built its 24-inch-aperture reflecting telescope. This telescope is open to the public. Visitors, who sometimes stand in a line that stretches out the door, can use its eyepiece to gaze at interesting objects the telescope operator has located in the sky. The observatory’s two other telescopes — boasting apertures of 14 inches and 32 inches — are used solely for research and send their digital signals directly to the university’s physics department via a T-1 line. The observatory also lets amateur astronomers set up their personal telescopes — many taller than their owners — in the courtyard near the facility’s three major telescopes. A few of these folks were setting up their devices, which they let people peer through once it got dark, when Meryl and I continued our way up the hill to the ridge’s crest so we could watch the sunset over the Badlands. Fairfield reminded us of an important detail visitors should keep in mind: Because of its elevation, the ridge’s crest is often hit with high winds that can
LA PINE CHAMBER TOASTMASTERS: 8-9 a.m.; Gordy’s Truck Stop, La Pine; 541-536-9771.
SCOTTISH COUNTRY DANCE: 7-9 p.m.; Sons of Norway Hall, Bend; 541-549-7311 or 541-848-7523.
SUNDAY BINGO: 12:30 p.m.; American Legion Post #44, Redmond; 541-548-5688. THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: 12:455 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.
CLASSICS BOOK CLUB: 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, Brooks Room; 541-312-1046 or kevinb@deschuteslibrary.org.
The Earth passes through this field of cosmic debris each year in mid-August — a magical time when that comet debris gets caught in the planet’s gravitational pull, enters its atmosphere and burns up in a bright light that streaks across the sky. Watching a meteor shower like the Perseids — it’s called the Perseids because the closest constellation to the shower’s apparent source in the night sky is Perseus — is definitely a treat, especially when you’re in a location where there’s very little light pollution and the sky
is perfectly clear. But it’s even better when you’re surrounded by dozens of other people who uniformly cheer when they see a meteor streak across the sky or stand in line so they can check out whatever ring-shaped galaxy or star cluster an amateur astronomer has found with a telescope. Just make sure every flashlight or other light-emitting device you own is covered with special red cellophane handed out at the observatory’s gift shop and at the end of its nightly program. This plastic protects people’s eyes from being hurt once they’ve adjusted to the dark; a failure to use it can result in you getting scolded by the same group of people who “ooo” and “aww” every time they see a shooting star. Don’t forget to bring some warm clothing and a thermos of hot chocolate or coffee as well because the last thing you want while gazing up at the night sky is to be distracted by a certain chill you may have avoided had you packed accordingly. Finally, don’t forget that even though the Perseid meteor shower has come and gone, the night sky has thousands of objects — stars, gal-
nights between Memorial Day and the end of September. Programs start at dark. Groups of up to 20 people can schedule a private visit and tour of the facility on other nights of the week. Cost: Suggested donation of $5 Contact: 541-382-8331, pmo-sun.uoregon.edu
axies, etc. — worth looking at on a cloudless night.
At the end of our trip, I realized that hundreds, if not thousands, of people across the world are looking at these objects each night, trying to figure out why they do what they do. These people, some of whom may be on the other end of the T-1 line that leaves the observatory, are coming up with theories that seek to answer astronomical questions. They are testing their theories by spending more time looking at the sky. Isn’t science cool? — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com
The COCC Community Learning Fall Schedule will hit your mailbox this week.
YOU’LL FIND INSPIRATION ON EVERY PAGE.
*
A dynamic mix of classes to inspire you year-round.
*Excludes Prior Sales
COMMUNITY LEARNING Registration opens Monday, Aug. 27 www.cocc.edu\continuinged 541.383.7270
LOCALNEWS
News of Record, C2 Editorials, C4
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
LOCAL BRIEFING Man in police struggle dies A Bend man died this week, eight days after a confrontation with police outside the St. Charles Bend emergency room. Jerry J. Nichols, 64, died Monday, said Deschutes County Deputy District Attorney Steve Gunnels. The office is reviewing an investigation of Nichols’ altercation with Bend police as well as what caused his death. Employees at the hospital called 911 about 7 p.m. Aug. 12 to report that a patient was assaulting emergency room workers, Bend police said. Police identified Nichols as the patient. An officer tried to subdue Nichols using a Taser, but when that failed slapped him, police said. Nichols was then admitted to St. Charles in critical condition before his death. Gunnels said he is waiting on an autopsy report from the Oregon state medical examiner. The report should be out in two weeks to a month.
www.bendbulletin.com/local
Full jail means cheaper meals By Erik Hidle The Bulletin
On Page A1
There’s at least one silver lining to a full jail. Deschutes County jail officials told county commissioners Wednesday that they expect to save about $32,000 on a new, three-year food and commissary contract. Commissioner Tammy Baney asked how that was possible. “We have been saving money because the (inmate) population has been up, as you are aware, and the more people in jail the less the cost of every individual meal,” said jail Lt. Brook Van der Zwiep. Interim County Administrator Erik Kropp simply said, “Good news, bad news.” That put grins on a few commissioners’ faces and prompted approval of a new contract with Aramark, which has pro-
• Crook County’s jail faces overcrowding.
Pete Erickson / The Bulletin
Dinner is served on trays Wednesday at the Deschutes County jail in Bend. The county expects to save $32,000 dollars on a three-year food contract.
vided food and commissary services at the jail. The annual contract payment to Aramark is estimated
at $383,633. That number is based on a new, sliding-scale payment system, which varies based on inmate population.
Van der Zwiep said the savings come from the benefit of buying in bulk and from the new payment method. “Because of the sliding scale, the price per meal is reduced,” Van der Zwiep said. “That results in savings. The sheriff’s office is continuing to be fiscally responsible, as well. Using inmate labor (to prepare meals) — along with those reduced meal costs and careful management — does it, too.” It’s an odd situation for the county as officials have spent most of the year fretting over the available space at the jail. See Jail / C2
Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. For the latest information, visit www.nwccweb .us/information/ firemap.aspx. Bend
Madras Bend
Baker City Burns
1 MILES
3 0
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50
Lakeview
5
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1. Ice Cave Fire • Acres: 120 • Containment: 85% • Cause: Human 2. Waterfalls 2 Fire • Acres: 8,100 • Containment: 5% • Cause: Lightning 3. Butte Fire • Acres: 142 • Containment: 80% • Cause: Under investigation 4. Buckhead Complex • Acres: 292 • Containment: 75% • Cause: Lightning 5. Barry Point Fire • Acres: 93,231 • Containment: 65% • Cause: Lightning 6. Holloway Fire • Acres: 461,047 • Containment: 97% • Cause: Lightning
STATE NEWS • Portland • Eugene • Medford
• Portland: Victims of sex abuse sue Boys & Girls Club. • Eugene: Cameroonian sues his government from jail cell in Africa. • Medford: Oregon scientists’ work delayed by wildfires. Stories on C3
Alex McDougall / The Bulletin
Michael Franti joined riders on the inaugural Dream Ride through Riverfront Park in Bend. Riders were encouraged to write their dreams on streamers and attach them to their bikes. The founder of the event, Jenna Lindbo, hopes the positive momentum of taking the dreams for a ride will bring them that much closer to reality.
Fallen willow poses challenge for remover, property owners By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin
When the massive willow tree on Northwest Riverfront Street crashed into the Deschutes River on Tuesday afternoon, it put a lot of people in a tough situation. “We’re going to have to use some ingenuity and problemsolving skills to figure it out,” Wade Fagen, a tree specialist with Fagen Tree Service and Wood Chips, said. “The tree is in the most impossible spot I’ve ever found a tree in.” The tree, until its roots gave way, stood on the east bank of the Deschutes. Now it blocks half the river and is proving a challenge to even seasoned tree removal professionals. With the diameter of the trunk measuring about 4 feet, and the fence gate it must go through only 36 inches wide, Fagen is having to find a way to make the impossible possible. Even if the tree could fit through the gate, the crane that would be needed to lift the tree over nearby houses would be too heavy for the driveway concrete. “The size of crane that we’d need would probably crush the driveway,” Fagen said. At this point, Fagen said,
Russell files for a seat on Bend City Council By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
Rob Kerr / The Bulletin
Floaters drift around a fallen willow tree on the Deschutes River on Tuesday afternoon just upriver from the Galveston Street bridge.
the most feasible option would be to cut the tree into pieces that can be floated downstream under the Galveston Avenue bridge. Crews would then use a crane stationed on the bridge to lift the pieces out of the water. This would most likely close a traffic lane, Fagen said. He is working with homeowners and city officials to secure the job, and schedule a time for it. Fagen said his crews will try to work at night or in the early morning to avoid creating traffic con-
gestion on the bridge. Fagen said the removal project will cost less than $10,000. The owners of the property where the tree stood on Riverfront Street will most likely end up footing the bill, he said. The tree stood on a line between two properties. “It’s going to be a very huge, tricky job,” said Pam Stevenson, one of the property owners. “It’s an unusual situation. You have this enormous tree sitting in a high-use area of the river.” See Willow / C2
CRIME NEWS Sex offender search ongoing The Crook County Sheriff’s Office is searching for a convicted sex offender who violated his parole. Charles Ray Teter, 59, of Prineville, absconded from supervision from the Crook County Corrections Office. He was convicted of sodomy and assault, and was released from prison in 2010. Teter is described as 6 feet tall and weighing 180 pounds. He drives a gray 1991 Oldsmobile Cutlass with Oregon license plate SLE 157. He has a history of using controlled substances, and can be violent when under the influence. Anyone with information about Teter is asked to call police.
Three arrested in meth bust
TAKE YOUR DREAMS FOR A RIDE
FIRE UPDATE
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Obituaries, C5 Weather, C6
Former Bend planning commissioner and civic volunteer Sally Russell, 54, filed Tuesday to run for a seat on the Bend City Council this fall. Russell, who prefers Sally but whose legal name is Sarah Bishop Russell, is running for the position held by Councilor Kathie Eckman. Russell Eckman is seeking re-election, and already faces challenger Ronald “Rondo” Boozell. Russell said she has long considered running for council but was waiting until her two daughters were older. Friends suggested she enter the race this year, and Russell’s daughters told her “you should go for it,” Russell said. In Russell’s view, the most important decisions facing the City Council relate to multimillion-dollar water and sewer projects under consideration. See Russell / C2
Three Bend residents were arrested last week after detectives found more than $13,000 of methamphetamine in their possession, the Central Oregon Drug Enforcement Team said. Jessica Smith, 23, and James Babcock, 38, were arrested on suspicion of the possession, delivery and manufacture of methamphetamine. Babcock was also arrested on suspicion of tampering with evidence. Brian Fee, 46, was arrested on suspicion of the possession and delivery of methamphetamine. Detectives stopped a car driven by Smith at Northeast Olney Avenue and Northeast Fifth Street as part of a short-term narcotics investigation into Smith. Once the car stopped, the passenger, identified as Fee, ran from the car and allegedly attempted to get rid of a container containing 1.5 ounces of methamphetamine. Both Smith and Fee were arrested. A search warrant was later executed at a residence on North Highway 97 on Aug. 16. Police found 10.5 ounces of methamphetamine, two firearms, marijuana and psilocybin mushrooms along with other evidence of the sales and distribution of methamphetamine at the residence. Babcock was arrested at the scene. — From staff reports
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The Bulletin Call a reporter: Bend ................ 541-617-7829 Redmond ........ 541-977-7185 Sisters............. 541-977-7185 La Pine ........... 541-383-0348 Sunriver ......... 541-383-0348 Deschutes ...... 541-617-7837 Crook ..............541-633-2184 Jefferson ........541-633-2184 Salem ..............541-554-1162 D.C. .................202-662-7456 Business ........ 541-383-0360 Education ....... 541-977-7185 Public lands .....541-617-7812 Public safety.....541-383-0387 Projects .......... 541-617-7831
Submissions: • Letters and opinions: Mail: My Nickel’s Worth or In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Details on the Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-3830358, bulletin@bendbulletin. com
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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
Russell Continued from C1 “What motivated me to become involved is those two really large issues,� Russell said. Russell did not criticize specific decisions by the City Council, but said “there’s a lot of room for some creative rethinking and revisiting of these issues.� Russell served approximately a decade on the Bend Planning Commission, through 2001, according to her candidate filing and city records. Recently, she served on the Galveston Revitalization Task Force, which looked at ways to improve the corridor on Bend’s west side for businesses and residents. Russell had a career in event management and marketing before focusing on volunteering and caring for her family. She worked for the The Pennbrook Co., a real estate developer, and held various jobs for Broken Top Limited Partnership, including handling marketing for the developer of the gated community in southwest Bend. Russell said she ran the Cascade Cycling Classic at one point, and became executive director of the now-defunct Cascade Festival of Music in 2001. Russell remained director until the fall of 2004. “I’ve got a solid business background,� Russell said. “I’ve got a history of being engaged in various ways in the city and the community.� Each candidate must gather 150 signatures to qualify for the ballot, have the Deschutes County clerk verify the signatures and return them to City Recorder Robyn Christie before Tuesday.
Well shot! READER PHOTOS Can you work a camera, and capture a great picture? And can you tell us a bit about it? Email your color or black and white photos to readerphotos@bendbulletin.com and we’ll pick the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
SHARING A TOY Hilary Kenyon of Bend captured this shot of her “grand-dogs ... both Labs who love to jump into ponds, rivers, any water to retrieve whatever is thrown in for them!� with her Olympus 760 camera at Devils Lake.
— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
Willow Continued from C1 Stevenson spent much of Wednesday talking to tree specialists, city officials, insurance companies and Bend Park & Recreation District officials. She said her biggest concern is the danger the fallen tree poses to river floaters and rafters. On hot, sunny summer days, Stevenson has counted as many as 500 floaters an hour drifting by in the stretch of river that is now partially blocked. “Most people in rafts would have enough common sense to stay away from the tree,� Fagen said. “But all it takes is one person who can cause problems for everyone else.� Stevenson said her insurance company informed her Wednesday that it would cover only $500 of her share of the removal costs. “We’re trying to figure out now how to pay for it,� Stevenson said. “We hope to get some help with it.� Marybeth Stewart, the owner of the neighboring property that the tree stood on, is in the same situation. After a meeting with city officials and Fagen late Wednesday afternoon, she said she is unsure when the tree will be removed. She wants to get several quotes from tree removal specialists, and is hoping the city will chip in for at least some of the costs. The tree graced the banks of the Deschutes for about 50 years. Its fall was caused by rot, which took hold after the tree was scarred at some point, Fagen said. Stevenson is holding a memorial service at 7 p.m. today by the tree, in which community members can honor the fallen giant and take cuttings of it. “Everyone loved the tree, and it loved everyone back,� Stevenson said. “It had a wonderful life.� — Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbulletin.com
P O For The Bulletin’s full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials.
CONGRESS U.S. Senate
Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore.: 107 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 107 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-330-9142 U.S. House of Representatives
Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River 2182 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov/ Bend office: 1051 N.W. Bond St., Suite 400 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452
LEGISLATURE
Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett@state. or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ whitsett House
Rep. Jason Conger, R-District 54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-477 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger@state. or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger Rep. John Huffman, R-District 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. N.E., H-476 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman@state. or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ huffman Rep. Mike McLane, R-District 55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-385 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane@state. or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-District 53 (portion of Deschutes County) 900 Court St. N.E., H-471 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant@state. or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ whisnant
DESCHUTES COUNTY
Senate
Sen. Ted Ferrioli, R-District 30 (includes Jefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-323 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli Sen. Chris Telfer, R-District 27 (includes portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-423 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.christelfer@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/telfer Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District 28 (includes Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-303 Salem, OR 97301
1300 N.W. Wall St. Bend, OR 97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone: 541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692 County Commission
Tammy Baney, R-Bend Phone: 541-388-6567 Email: Tammy_Baney@ co.deschutes.or.us Alan Unger, D-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email: Alan_Unger@ co.deschutes.or.us Tony DeBone, R-La Pine Phone: 541-388-6568 Email: Tony_DeBone@ co.deschutes.or.us
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. Prineville Police Department
Theft — A theft was reported and
two arrests made at 8:40 a.m. Aug. 21, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 12:53 p.m. Aug. 21, in the area of Northwest Deer Street. Burglary — A burglary and theft were reported at 3:30 p.m. Aug. 21, in the area of Southeast Sixth Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 10:23 p.m. Aug. 21, in the area of Southeast Knowledge
Street. Oregon State Police
Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 6:06 p.m. Aug. 21, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 and Northwest Lower Bridge Way in Terrebonne.
BEND FIRE RUNS Tuesday 25 — Medical aid calls.
Jail Continued from C1 The jail’s 228 beds have been full for months. In June, the county agreed to rent 10 beds from the Jefferson County jail for one year. That situation is universally viewed as bad by staff and commissioners, and plans are under way to sell bonds to finance a new, 144-bed jail addition. But until the new wing is complete, the reduction in food costs can be viewed as a bit of good news. Corrections Capt. Mike Espinoza said food, along with other services such as medical and laundry, are among the most critical services the jail provides. “It’s a huge part of what we do,� Espinoza said. “We pay very close attention to the budget for (services), and when we contract out we try to create a long-term relationship with our partners. Not just for the lowest cost, but also making sure they believe in our mission here.� The jail makes more than 900 meals each day for its staff, inmates, work crews
“Very few inmates complain about the meals here. And most inmates you see come in, leave in better physical condition and with better health.� — Brook Van der Zwiep, Deschutes County jail lieutenant
and the staff and inmates at the county juvenile detention facility. Aramark provides a few cooks and a kitchen manager, but inmates do most of the work. Espinoza said meals can vary each day; ethnic and medical variety are required. But for the most part, the jail follows simple nutritional guidelines to keep its diners happy. And it’s doing it at a relatively low cost. Under the contract, adult inmate meals cost between $1.14 and $1.40 to prepare. Work crew members get a bit more in their sack lunches, bringing the cost of those meals to $1.62. Juvenile meals cost $2.06 each. Juveniles also get a 61-cent snack. Staff meals come in at $2 per meal, which cost a bit more as they introduce higher nutritional
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value and more variety. What do those meals look like? A cold breakfast can include cereal and milk, maybe some coffee cake with peanut butter, and usually an orange or a hard-boiled egg. Dinner on Wednesday night was a goodsized portion of pasta with meat sauce, some vegetables and a dinner roll. “Very few inmates complain about the meals here,� Van der Zwiep said. “And most inmates you see come in, leave in better physical condition and with better health.� — Reporter: 541-617-7837 ehidle@bendbulletin.com
THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
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O N Inmate fights Cameroon with suit filed in Oregon By Karen McCowan The Register-Guard
EUGENE — It’s not clear whether Yves Michel Fotso has ever even been to Eugene. But that hasn’t stopped the jailed citizen of the West African country of Cameroon from filing a $10 million federal lawsuit here, accusing his government of false imprisonment and torture. Fotso, the former general manager of Cameroon Airlines, is being tried in a Cameroon criminal court on embezzlement charges. The government alleges that he conspired with two other former Cameroon officials to embezzle $31 million that the African nation paid a defunct Medford aircraft brokerage firm in 2001 as a “trust deposit” for purchase or lease of three jets. Cameroon prosecutors allege that the money ended up in a Swiss bank account registered to Fotso. He has denied the allegations. Eugene attorney Kelly Beckley, who filed the lawsuit on Fotso’s behalf, declined to discuss it, saying he doesn’t want to jeopardize his client’s fate in the criminal matter. But the Medford company’s 2004 bankruptcy proceeding took place at the Eugene federal courthouse and underlies Fotso’s false imprisonment claim. His lawsuit says Cameroon was among the parties that received partial payment of their claims against the company, GIA International Ltd., in an August 2006 settlement of the bankruptcy case. In exchange for its $858,163 payment, Cameroon signed a release of liability to other parties in the case — including Cameroon Airlines. That release prohibited the country, located in west-central Africa, from making any claim or initiating any action “in any manner” against Cameroon
Airlines or its agents and employees, including Fotso, his U.S. complaint alleges. The complaint names the Republic of Cameroon, its 30-year president, Paul Biya, and several judicial and military officials, as defendants. It charges that Cameroon “breached its duty” under the release agreement when it initiated criminal actions against Fotso in December 2010. Cameroon has accused him and others of fraudulently diverting $31 million that the country paid GIA upfront for the purchase of a new Boeing business jet for Biya, and the lease of a Boeing 747 and a Boeing 767. The Medford firm, which was not registered to do business in Oregon, became insolvent soon after. Fotso’s suit cites federal law asserting U.S. jurisdiction over foreign states in actions “based upon a commercial activity carried on in the United States by the foreign state or upon an act performed in the United States in connection with the commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere.” The lawsuit alleges that Fotso was arrested and imprisoned at the Yaounde Central Prison-Kondengui, where he was held in a small windowless cell without access to natural or artificial light or fresh air for more than 12 hours each day. In May of this year, he was taken from that prison for transfer to another lock-up in Cameroon’s state department. En route, he was “beaten, kicked, shocked with electricity, and otherwise subjected to physical and emotional torture by hooded lock-up soldiers,” his lawsuit alleged. It also charges that Fotso has been denied pen and paper or reading materials. It says he has only occasionally been allowed to see a lawyer,
and those visits were monitored by the government. Fotso’s lawsuit says the United States has jurisdiction over those alleged human rights violations under the Alien Tort Claim Act, which proclaims the U.S. courts a forum for redress when state-sponsored actions anywhere violate human rights recognized under international law. The suit also cites a federal law giving U.S. courts jurisdiction over statesponsored torture abroad. Cameroon officials did not respond to a request for comment made through its government website. Beckley said Fotso’s civil claim was referred to him by a fellow attorney who practices in the District of Oregon federal bankruptcy court. Beckley, who has been in private practice locally for 33 years, has some unique professional experience that explains why. “I have some international law experience,” said Beckley, referencing his five years of active duty and 25 years of reserve duty with the U.S. Air Force. “I retired in 2004 as a reserve colonel in the Air Force JAG (the service branch’s military justice and military law corps). My last assignment was almost six years as the senior reserve judge advocate at the U.S. European Command Headquarters.” That work included some participation in the International Criminal Tribunal for the former country of Yugoslavia, investigating allegations of human rights abuses and torture in the region. According to a World Bank report, Cameroon may have used the Medford broker and paid cash upfront to hide the aircraft purchases from the bank, which had restricted the country’s spending of loaned funds under its Highly Indebted Poor Country Initiative.
Andreas Fuhrmann / The Associated Press
Richard “Bo” Bolton, a timber feller from Burney, Calif., cuts down trees burned in the Reading Fire along Highway 89 in Lassen Volcanic National Park last week. Scientists with the Klamath Network were forced to evacuate the park because of the fire.
Northern California wildfire disrupts Oregon scientists’ study of ecosystem The Associated Press MEDFORD — One of the forest fires burning in Northern California has hampered the efforts of environmental scientists from Oregon who are studying an ecosystem. The Mail Tribune reports scientists with the Klamath Network were forced to leave Lassen Volcanic National Park when fire burned a 43-square-mile area of the park. The group is one of 32 networks developed to help complete the National Park Service’s National Inventory and Monitoring Program. The agency said the program is a key part of its strategy to preserve park natural resources “unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.” The Klamath Network had planned to measure trees
and take an inventory of the park’s vegetation in hopes of using the information to gauge the overall health of the park and help in future fire suppression. The lightning-sparked Reading fire shut down its work. It started July 23 and wasn’t fully contained until Wednesday morning. “We might get back into the park by the end of the summer, but now all we can do is wait and see what happens with the fire weather,” said Daniel Sarr, lead ecologist with the Klamath Network. The agency had two crews of three people in the park when the fire ignited. One of them was Katie Bergbauer, a recent Southern Oregon University graduate in environmental science. She said the monitoring
Umatilla National Forest Suit claims Boys & Girls Club failed to vet gets new headquarters volunteer who sexually abused children
The Associated Press PORTLAND — Two Portland-area girls allege in civil lawsuits filed Wednesday that the Boys & Girls Club of Portland Metropolitan Area failed to protect them from a volunteer who the girls say sexually abused one of them in 2010 and the other in 2011. The suits allege the club didn’t report the volunteer to police after they learned he had abused one of the girls and failed to conduct background checks or otherwise screen volunteers. The volunteer is not named in the suit because he was a minor at the time of the alleged assaults. The girls’ attorney, Hollis McMilan, said in a news release that the volunteer pleaded guilty to sex abuse charges. He was not incarcerated, said Steve Crew, another attorney in the suit, but he did undergo rehabilitation.
The volunteer was 15 in 2010. The lawsuit alleges that the club knew the volunteer was a threat after a 2010 assault in Forest Grove and claimed to ban him, but still allowed him to re-register with a Hillsboro club in 2011, where they allege he abused two more girls, only one of whom sued. The girls are now 7 and 11. The lawsuits seek $2.5 million for each girl. The third victim could not be located and did not sue. The Associated Press does not usually identify victims of sexual assault. The Boys & Girls Club of Portland Metropolitan Area said it would not comment until it learns more about the allegations. “We will cooperate fully with the judicial process,” said Melissa Froman, Director of Resource Development, in a statement on Wednesday
afternoon. “We want to assure parents of our ongoing commitment to the safety of their children and invite them to visit our operations at any time.” The Portland filing is one of several cases involving Boys & Girls Clubs Crew said the Washington County District Attorney’s Office declined to prosecute the 2010 assault alleged by the younger girl at a Forest Grove elementary school Boys & Girls Club, but the club told the parents of the victim that they would ban the volunteer. When two more victims in Hillsboro came forward in 2011, Crew said the district attorney’s office prosecuted all three cases. A representative of the Washington County District Attorney’s Office’s juvenile division declined to comment immediately before investigating the matter further.
Agency calls for fines to clean Oakridge air The Associated Press OAKRIDGE — The agency that enforces federal air laws in Lane County has tried to persuade Oakridge residents to help clean their notoriously sooty winter air. Now it wants punishment. The Lane Regional Air Protection Agency has proposed that the city start fining residents who operate smoky woodstoves or fireplaces. The city approved an ordinance five years ago that allows it to levy such penalties, but not one resident has been fined since its passage, The Register-Guard reported. Instead, city police have given warnings or friendly reminders.
The agency said that must change if the city is to comply with a federal mandate to clear the air by December 2014. The city “will have to look at citations for people who are just not following the rules and who are violating over and over again,” agency spokeswoman Sally Markos said. The city surrounded by the Willamette National Forest is located in a deep valley where many residents use woodstoves for heat. The agency has provided hundreds of thousands of dollars in aid, helping 279 households swap old, polluting stoves for new, cleaner-burn-
ing ones, or for non-woodburning heat. It has also distributed information about the dangers of woodstove particulate emissions and how to properly dry wood and burn clean fires. The city air has improved, but it’s still 13 percent above federal limits on particulate pollution. It’s not clear how many old, polluting woodstoves are still in use in Oakridge. The city has about 3,200 residents in about 1,340 households. The agency proposes that the money collected from fines be used to help pay for more stove replacements. It also seeks to train city police on how to enforce the ordinance.
The Associated Press PENDLETON — The headquarters of the Umatilla National Forest has finished its move to a new 15,400-square-foot location on the Umatilla Indian Reservation. The East Oregonian newspaper reports that roughly 60 permanent employees will work in the space, and there is additional room for those who might be working in the area on a temporary basis. The previous headquarters in Pendleton was just
over 22,000-square-feet and at one point in the early 1990s housed 120 employees. The agency decided to move after Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation won the bid for the new lease agreement. The owner of the previous building decided against bidding for a new contract.
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crews were able to perform several studies before the fire started, but there is much more work to do. The plan was to take an inventory of the vegetation and fuel in several randomly selected plots and then return in three years to see if there were any changes in the area. “We go in and take an inventory of every single plant in the plot and we identify and take measurements of every tree,” Bergbauer said. The crews also wanted to note all invasive species in the plots and report their findings to the U.S. National Park Service. But the smoke from the wildfire eventually made it impossible to continue. “It was like having smoke from a campfire blowing in your face,” she said.
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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
E Animal shelter in Redmond needs revenue solution
T
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he Redmond Humane Society has an impressive record in sheltering animals and finding them homes. It needs to match that success with a sound financial plan.
The organization is $700,000 in debt in the form of a loan from Deschutes County. The shelter submitted a budget to the county earlier this year indicating it would operate in the black. But this week the shelter said it is looking at losing $30,000 to $35,000 this fiscal year. We are not sure what options the shelter is considering. Redmond Humane Society President Don Wayne told Bulletin reporter Erik Hidle on Monday he didn’t have details in front of him nor time to speak until later in the week. We reached him Tuesday and he declined an opportunity to speak on the record. The shelter’s financial situation reached a crisis in 2008. The county lent it $1.5 million to save it from closing. The shelter has indeed been successful in paying off about half that loan. And of all the dogs and cats that came through its doors last year, it managed to find homes for 98 percent of the dogs and 96 percent of the cats. That’s a much better record than the national average in the country. The Humane Society of the United States estimates that about half of the dogs and cats that enter shelters are euthanized. The Redmond shelter has tried
some inventive financial solutions. It has an RV storage park on some of its land. It has a thrift store. It launched a spay and neuter clinic to reduce some of its costs. The shelter said in August 2010 it was hoping to soon be operating in the black. This February, there were signs of continuing trouble. Former Deschutes County Commissioner Mike Daly resigned from the board, concerned about the shelter’s spending. The organization had continued to operate at a loss. When the shelter asked the county for a $60,000 line of credit earlier this year, interim County Administrator Eric Kropp turned it down. He granted only $35,000. The county doesn’t want the shelter to close. It needs to provide the service of animal control, which it does through the Redmond shelter and the one in Bend. It wants its loan paid off. It is also understandably reluctant to grant credit to an organization in such debt and operating in the red. The Redmond shelter needs to develop donors or other options to bring in revenue to sustain itself, or it needs to make cuts to ensure it survives. Otherwise, it is jeopardizing its obligations to taxpayers and its ability to help any animals.
ACT results shine light on weak schooling
I
n Oregon, 38 percent of the high school class of 2012 took the ACT college and career readiness exam. Of those, only 29 percent passed all four benchmarks. Take a look at those numbers again: Only 29 percent of 38 percent are ready for college or career. And who are the 38 percent who take the test? In some districts, such as Bend-La Pine, everybody takes the test. But elsewhere it’s optional, and more likely to be the students who are thinking about going to college. In other words, it’s likely to be the stronger students. Nationwide, 52 percent took the test and only 25 percent of those met all benchmarks. The numbers are even more disturbing for students from Oregon’s subgroups who took the test: Only 7 percent of blacks passed all four benchmarks, 11 percent of Hispanics and 13 percent of Native Americans, while among whites the number was 34 percent and for Asians it was 37 percent. In recent years, Oregon has made several moves to increase the demands of high school education, but obviously it hasn’t been enough. As Oregon’s Acting Deputy Superintendent Rob Saxton told The
Oregonian, the new ACT results “show us, honestly, we need to increase the rigor throughout the school system .... You can’t refute these results — we have some work to do.� Meanwhile Oregon is in the early stages of a major revamp of its educational system under Gov. John Kitzhaber’s 40/40/20 plan. The goal is that by 2025, 40 percent of Oregonians will have a bachelor’s degree or more, 40 percent will have an associate’s degree or career certificate, and 20 percent will have a high school diploma. The worry is that by rewarding schools for granting degrees, the state risks taking the focus off the education behind the degree. Indeed, as we’ve noted before, there’s little attention to academics in the first achievement compacts, a prime tool for implementing the governor’s plan. The ACT results suggest that Oregon’s problem is not in the awarding of degrees, but in the standards behind those degrees. Clearly, far too many of the state’s students leave high school without the preparation they need for college or career. That’s where the focus needs to be.
My Nickel’s Worth A word for voters to consider
Growth vs. conservation Build Deschutes Forest is a dilemma welcome center
Voter, succinct and compelling, place this in your lexicon. Ineptocracy: A system of government where the least capable to lead are elected by the least capable of producing and where the members of society least likely to sustain themselves or succeed are rewarded with goods and services paid for by the confiscated wealth of a diminishing number of producers. Carroll Asbell Prineville
The Bulletin printed an editorial titled “Don’t let conservation stop growth� on July 23, 2012. The editorial focused on the potential conflict between the governor’s proposed energy plan (which stresses conservation) and the electrical needs of three potential data centers near Prineville: conservation vs. growth. I see this as a small example of the dilemma the world faces: growth vs. conservation. If growth means the continued expansion of the human population, that means we must continue to consume the Earth’s resources to meet the needs of our expanding population. Many “advanced� human cultures have done this before, and many have overgrown and overconsumed their natural resource base, and collapsed. Examples of such cultures include the ancient Mayans, the Athenians in Greece, and the Philistines in what is now Palestine. If conservation means using less of the Earth’s resources, that’s good for the immediate future; but over time, if the human population continues to grow, the demand for the resources will still exceed the capacity of the Earth to supply those resources. Can the human population “conserve� itself to a stable, self-sustaining number? Time will tell, but Kenneth R. Weiss’ 4-part series on population growth, printed in The Bulletin on Aug. 1-4, makes it sound difficult. Are we as a community willing to talk about this dilemma? Paul MacMillan Bend
How to grow the economy Do Obama and the Democrats not read the papers? Please send them a copy of The Bulletin’s Aug. 14 business section titled “Oil, gas boom brings scarcity of workers in small towns.� The article speaks to the employment (not unemployment) problem in the oil and gas industries. It talks about good jobs, high-paying jobs that go begging. Not solar, not wind, but oil and gas. Job Creation 101. How do we grow the economy, increase tax revenue, reduce the deficit, pay off the national debt, achieve energy independence, and create good-paying jobs? Gee, I don’t know, maybe we could open up ANWR, the continental shelf, the Gulf. Maybe we could build shipping depots for coal exports to China in Oregon and Washington, build the XL Pipeline and, oh yeah, build some nuclear power plants. Above all, it would be done not with tax money, but with private dollars. Jim McCaffery Bend
I initiated the “new welcome center planned by the Deschutes National Forest along the Cascade Lakes Highwayâ€? that The Bulletin’s Aug. 15 editorial said “deserves a no.â€? I did so in 2004, toward the end of my service in the U.S. Forest Service, when key personnel were told the new forest headquarters would be at the Bend Pine Nursery site where it opened last year. The Forest Service, my case went, should be available to serve forest visitors and users in a location convenient to them and their needs — not remote from them and their needs on the northeast side of Bend. The site near the intersection of the Cascade Lakes National Scenic Byway and Forest Road 41, where the welcome center is scheduled to be built next year, at the junction of the roads that provide access to the most-visited parts of the forest, is ideal for that purpose. Anyone who has served the public on this forest as long as I have — on the trails, operating the Green Lakes Trailhead Information Station from 1992 to 2005 and the Historic Elk Lake Guard Station from 2002 through 2011 — knows the need for good visitor information services. The Federal Highway Administration money The Bulletin would “just not spendâ€? is going to be spent anyway, so why not here to serve a real purpose? I notice The Bulletin didn’t balk at the similar sum “to pave a path from Bend to ‌ the new welcome centerâ€? it announced Aug. 12. Les Joslin Bend
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Don’t give in to Democratic Party’s politics of fear By Paul deWitt With the selection of Paul Ryan as his running mate, Mitt Romney has presented a clear choice to voters in the upcoming election. Instead of opting for a “safe� (non-controversial) choice, Romney picked someone who is guaranteed not only to excite Republicans and conservatives but also the Democrat and liberal opposition, who are viscerally opposed to the kinds of bold cost-cutting measures proposed by Ryan in his capacity as chairman of the House Budget Committee. No sooner had Romney announced his selection of Ryan than the Obama campaign machine rolled out its first attack ad on Ryan, who is no stranger to such attacks. A Democratic ad in 2011 after Ryan presented his budget showed a Ryan look-alike throwing an elderly woman off a cliff. Nothing surprising there — the Democrats
IN MY VIEW have a first-rate opposition research effort and are much better at that kind of politics than Republicans. Witness the suggestion by a Democratic super PAC closely aligned with the Obama campaign that Romney was responsible for the death of the wife of a worker at a steel plant closed down two years after Romney left Bain Capital. Equally reprehensible was the scurrilous charge by Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid that Romney had not paid taxes for 10 years. Neither the president nor any of his minions denounced the attacks even though both were totally discredited by objective observers and even some Democrats. Truth and the facts have no relevance for Obama and Democrats. Demagoguery, innuendo and character assassination are the ingredients of
the Obama campaign’s attacks on its opponents. Unfortunately, such negative advertising, while a turnoff for many voters, has proven to be effective, which is why both sides use it. Romney and Ryan recognize that the current fiscal path of the country is unsustainable. With nearly $100 trillion in unfunded out-year obligations and a $16 trillion debt that has grown by $5 trillion under Obama, the Republican ticket offers a prescription for reining in government spending. Ryan has spoken frequently and eloquently about the dangerous course of government spending and the inability of the country to support the out-year obligations of Social Security and Medicare/ Medicaid. Ryan recently joined with Oregon Democrat Sen. Ron Wyden in a carefully crafted and reasonable approach to ensuring the continued viability of Medicare.
The election will turn on whether Romney and Ryan can persuade enough voters to recognize the fiscal crisis facing the country and the need to make cuts to government programs to avoid the inevitable consequences of excessive spending: higher debt, growing inflation, a loss of confidence in the American economy by countries like China that currently underwrite our spending through purchases of government bonds, and an eventual drastic cutback in government services as the Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security accounts run dry. To avoid such consequences will require acknowledgment by voters that these entitlement programs need to be scaled back so that something will be left for future recipients. In the past the Democrats have succeeded in scaring seniors into believing that Republican policies would
reduce or even eliminate their Social Security and Medicare payments. Entitlement programs have long been known as the third rail of politics: You don’t touch them. We can no longer ignore or put off the impending crisis with these programs. To do so, as Obama and the Democrats have done, is to invite a fiscal crisis that will make previous economic downturns like the Great Depression mere bumps in the road. It won’t matter to Obama; he will be out of office when this happens. His only goal is to win re-election. It will be left to a successor to pick up the pieces. In the meantime, it serves Democratic interests to perpetuate and expand the entitlement society, as those who are dependent on government handouts are more likely to vote for the party that promises to continue them unabated. — Paul deWitt lives in Bend.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
OREGON NEWS
O D N Eileen David Hazel C. Gregson, of Redmond April 6, 1922 - Aug. 19, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471, www.niswonger-reynolds.com
Services: A funeral service will be held Friday, Aug., 24, 2012 at 1:00 PM in the Niswonger-Reynolds Chapel. Private interment will be in Tulocay Cemetery in Napa, CA. Contributions may be made to:
Missionary Baptist Programs c/o First Missionary Baptist Church, 21129 Reed Mkt. Rd., Bend, OR 97702.
James Irwin Haugen, of Redmond Sept. 21, 1924 - Aug. 17, 2012 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel, 541-548-3219, www.redmondmemorial.com
Services: A private burial was held August 21, 2012, at Redmond Memorial Cemetery. A celebration of Jim’s life will be held Monday, August 27, 2012, at 11:00 a.m., at the Zion Lutheran Church in Redmond. Contributions may be made to:
Your favorite charity in Jim’s name.
Patrick Harry Busick, of Bend Sept. 1, 1955 - July 14, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471, www.niswonger-reynolds.com
Services: 7:00 PM Thursday, August 30, 2012 at the Fellowship Bible Church, 61215 Brosterhous Road, Bend, OR 97702. Contributions may be made to:
Name and phone # or address of charity only.
Wayne Powell Aug. 11, 1943 - Aug. 20, 2012 A celebration of Wayne’s life will take place on Saturday, August 25, at 11:00 a.m., at the Sisters High School Auditorium, in Sisters, Oregon. Reception to follow. Sound and clear of mind, Wayne passed peacefully away while walking in beauty and wonder here upon a highland path among the Sisters mountains wilderness. After 69 years, he is survived by his wife, Terry; children, Iris, Marken, and Jason; siblings, Phyllis and Warren; grandchildren, Romy, Baden, and Cedric; as well as the hundreds and hundreds of children and athletes’ lives he touched during his privileged and honorable career as a teacher and coach. Wayne was deeply touched and inspired by each and every one of these relationships. An incredible person, Wayne’s outside the classroom joys were many: He loved his family and friends, the outdoors, hiking, music, reading. He was an amazing cook and home brewer. In the last few years, he enjoyed playing softball on several senior softball teams. He travelled the world in his youth. Wayne was an avid reader and learner whose intellect enriched every person fortunate enough to meet him. Any donations please send to the Sisters High School Track & Field Program. Please add the memo line “In memory of Wayne Powell�. Redmond Memorial is in charge of the arrangements.
April 6, 1922 - Aug. 19, 2012
Eileen David, fondly known as "Gramma" to family, friends and strangers alike, passed peacefully of natural causes surrounded by family on August 18, 2012, at her home in Bend, OR. Born in Spokane, WA, on March 23, 1926, she later moved to Burlington, WA, Eileen David where she raised her family and owned/operated the Peppermint Playhouse Preschool for many years until retiring. Gramma loved gardening, cooking, baking and had a tremendous love for children. She was also known for her independent, sometimes outspoken personality, bringing a smile to all. She is survived by her daughter, Susan Kizzire of Mount Vernon; and her children and grandchildren; her grandsons, Jason Johnson of Bend, OR, Rodney Johnson of Burlington, WA; and her sister, Hazel Ellsworth of Spokane, WA. She is predeceased by husbands, John David and Emmett Anderson; and her daughter, Judy (David) Johnson. Baird Funeral Home is in charge of the arrangements. Services will be held in Burlington, WA on Aug. 28, 2012. Special thanks to Partners In Care Hospice.
Hazel C. Gregson, 90, of Redmond, passed away Sunday, August 19, 2012. She was born April 6, 1922, in Cooter, MO, to Roy and Nancy (Stowe) Lamb. Hazel grew up and attended school in Steele, MO. She married Lou Gregson Jan. 10, 1944, in Blytheville , AR. Hazel Gregson During WWII, Hazel worked for the war effort while Lou was in the service. The couple lived many years in Napa, CA, and after Lou's retirement, they moved to Bend in 1972. Hazel was very active in the Missionary Baptist Church in Bend. She enjoyed caring for her family which included knitting, crocheting, weaving and sewing. In more recent years, she
Sept. 21, 1924 - Aug. 17, 2012 James Irwin Haugen passed away August 17, 2012, in Redmond, OR. James was born Sept. 21, 1924, to Ella and Peder Haugen, NorwegianAmericans. Jim grew up in Garden Grove, CA, and at 17 was drafted into Patton's 3rd Army Artillery Unit in France. James Haugen After WWII, he returned to So. California, and graduated from high school. Jim went to work for Pacific Electric, and then Southern Pacific Railroad, ending his career of 40 years in Eugene, OR. Jim retired in Redmond, where he has lived the last 20 years. Jim attended Zion Lutheran Church in Redmond and was a loyal member, and made many friends there. Jim is survived by his loving wife of 42 years, Fern Shuhart; and daughters, Lynne (John) Besbekos, Joyce (Derek) Arita; granddaughters, Lauren and Jillian Gomez; nieces, Kathy (Ray) Lilleby and Christine Ulberg. He was preceded in death by his first wife, Irene Leivan; sister, Blanche (Howard) Ulberg; nephew, Cy Ulberg. A private burial was held August 21, 2012, at Redmond Memorial Cemetery. A celebration of Jim's life will be held Monday, August 27, 2012, at 11:00 a.m., at the Zion Lutheran Church in Redmond. In lieu of flowers, contributions to your favorite charity in Jim’s name, is appreciated. Redmond Memorial Chapel is in charge of arrangements. Please sign our guest book at www.redmondmemorial.com
D E
Deaths of note from around the world: Harry Elam, 90: First black chief justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, capping a 37-year career as a lawyer and judge. Died Thursday in a Massachusetts hospital of heart failure. Nina Bawden, 87: British author of children’s literature, known for “The Peppermint Pig� and “Carrie’s War,� in which she drew upon her experience as a wartime evacuee from London during World War II. Died Wednesday at
Hazel C. Gregson
March 23, 1926 - Aug. 18, 2012
James Irwin Haugen
her home in London. Samuel Lindenbaum, 77: New York lawyer who specalized in zoning law who did as much as his high-powered clients to remake the skyline of Manhattan; his clients inclueded Donald Trump, among others. Died Friday at his home in East Hampton, N.Y. Scott McKenzie, 73: Singer known for counter-culture ballad “San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair).� Died Saturday at his home in Los Angeles. — From wire reports
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loved spending time with her grand- and greatgrandchildren. Hazel was preceded in death by her husband, Lou, in 2001, as well as two daughters, two sisters and three brothers. She is survived by her daughter and son-in-law, Sandra and Leon Forney; a sister, Laverne Harper of Madras; three grandchildren, nine great-grandchildren and four great-great-grandchildren. A funeral service will be held Friday, August 24, 2012, at 1:00 p.m. in the Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Chapel, Bend. Private interment will be in Tulocay Cemetery in Napa, CA. The family suggests memorial contributions to the Missionary Baptist Church, 21129 Reed Market Rd., Bend, OR 97702. Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds. com
FEATURED OBITUARY
Former Prime Minister of Malta Dom Mintoff speaks at a press conference in 1972 in London. The government says Mintoff, who was in power when the island nation became a republic, died Monday. He was 96.
Mintoff helped win Malta’s autonomy By Robert D. Mcfadden New York Times News Service
Dom Mintoff, a fiery postwar socialist leader of Malta who closed NATO bases, evicted British interests, courted China and Libya and even banned The Times of London to chart an independent course for his tiny Mediterranean island nation, died Monday. He was 96. His death was announced by the Maltese government, The Times of Malta reported. Mintoff was secretive, unpredictable and, to enemies, a ruthless tyrant. But to admirers, he was the father of modern Malta, a charismatic Labor Party fixture for 35 years who was prime minister from 1955 to 1958, when Malta had limited self-rule as a British colony, and from 1971 to 1984, when his vision of a nonaligned, self-sufficient republic was realized. In an often-conquered land used as a strategic military garrison by the Phoenicians, Greeks, Romans, Arabs, Normans, Knights of St. John, Napoleon Bonaparte and, since 1814, the British, Mintoff fiercely sought an end to Malta’s exploitation by foreign powers, a revival of national dignity and economic and diplomatic ties with nations that could underwrite Maltese neutrality. Malta, a rocky archipelago 60 miles south of Sicily, the size of Queens, has little arable land and few natural resources. Mintoff, an architect and civil engineer, helped rebuild
Malta after devastating bombing by Axis powers in World War II. He rose to prominence as a socialist legislator in the late 1940s and led his party to power in 1955, battling against the conservative Nationalist Party and feuding with its allies in the Roman Catholic Church. In three years as prime minister, he sought to integrate Malta into Britain, with a status like Northern Ireland’s — having a legislature of its own but electing members to Parliament in Westminster and gaining access to British economic aid, military defense and other benefits. When England refused, Mintoff resigned as prime minister and began advocating full independence for Malta. In 1964, after intense Nationalist Party negotiations with London, Malta gained independence under a constitution that initially retained Queen Elizabeth II as head of state; a resident governor-general exercised executive authority on her behalf. In addition, British influence remained pervasive in Malta’s seaports, banking, communications, military services, law-enforcement and government agencies. Upset by the terms, Mintoff boycotted the independence ceremonies and campaigned for years to oust the British, even banning The Times of London as “hostile� to the nation.
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines: Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and noon Saturday. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.
Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail: Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
Water fluoridation opponents start getting signatures for ballot measure The Associated Press PORTLAND — Opponents of a plan to add fluoride to Portland’s water supply are not waiting for the City Council to pass the proposal. The group Oregon Citizens for Safe Drinking Water says it will ask voters in 2014 to ban fluoride from a water supply that serves about 900,000 residents in Portland, Gresham, Tigard and Tualatin. Opponents must collect about 30,000 signatures from Portland voters to put the issue on the ballot. “Based on the public outcry on this issue, I have no doubt that we will be able to collect enough signatures,� Kimberly Kaminski, the group’s executive director, told The Oregonian ahead of a Wednesday press conference to announce the initiative campaign. According to language in Kaminski’s proposal, which has not been submitted to the city, the initiative would prohibit Portland from adding “any chemical or other substance ... that is a byproduct of any industrial or manufacturing process,� other than those that make water drinkable. The initiative comes less than a week after a majority of the City Council announced its support for fluoridation. Elected officials have already received more than 2,000 phone calls and emails from supporters and opponents. A public hearing has been scheduled for Sept. 6. The Council vote is six days later. Portland is the secondlargest city in the country without fluoride in its wa-
“Based on the public outcry on this issue, I have no doubt that we will be able to collect enough signatures.� — Kimberly Kaminski, executive director, Oregon Citizens for Safe Drinking Water
ter, behind San Jose, Calif., according to the American Dental Association. The water district serving San Jose has voted to begin fluoridation, but money to do so hasn’t been raised. Many in Portland and the state at large have long opposed public fluoridation, saying it’s unsafe and violates an individual’s right to consent to medication. While 73 percent of the U.S. population drinks water treated with fluoride, the rate is less than 25 percent in Oregon. Portland voters have three times rejected fluoridation, most recently in 1980. Mayor Sam Adams and two city commissioners have said they will support fluoridation, ensuring a majority on the five-member council. Adams and Commissioner Randy Leonard say Oregon children have twice the rate of untreated tooth decay as those in Washington state, and the difference is that kids in Washington generally drink fluoridated water. The Portland Water Bureau has estimated capital expenses for fluoridation at about $5 million.
Kitzhaber orders flags lowered in soldier’s honor The Associated Press SALEM — Gov. John Kitzhaber has ordered flags lowered to half-staff on Saturday in honor of an Oregon soldier killed in Afghanistan. In a statement Wednesday, Kitzhaber calls Private First Class Andrew Keller of Tigard “a proud Oregonian and a dedicated solider.� The governor says Keller’s death is tragic but his legacy will
not be forgotten, and Kitzhaber asks Oregonians to pause Saturday to recognize Keller’s sacrifice. The 22-year-old soldier died Aug. 15 when enemy forces attacked his unit. He was based at Caserma Ederle, an Army post in Vicenza, Italy. Kitzhaber’s order applies to flags at public institutions from sunup to sundown on Saturday.
JOSEPH LEE TAYLOR July 2, 1923 - August 5, 2012 Joseph “Joe� L. Taylor was born in Belle Plain, IA, on July 2, 1923. His father, James Spurgeon Taylor, mother, Lillian Gloe Taylor and sister, Gloe Taylor Herbert have all predeceased him. The family lived for many years in Gladbrook, IA. Surviving family members are Leona M. Taylor, wife, Redmond, OR; Pamela Kimble, daughter, Calabash, NC; Linda Bleeker, step-daughter, Corvallis, OR; Janis Wright, step-daughter, Seattle, WA; four grandchildren, four great-grandchildren and two great-great-grandchildren. Joe attended and graduated from Gladbrook High School, and entered Iowa State University, Ames, IA, in 1940. He played freshman baseball and basketball and was sworn in to Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity in 1942. Early in 1942, Joe enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Force Cadets. He trained in Texas and graduated into B-24 bombers as pilot; organized a crew and flew a B-24 out of Mitchell Field, NY, via Goose Bay, Labrador to Prestwick, Scotland, landing without fuel in Northern Ireland. Joe completed 32 missions over Europe as a member of the U.S. Army 8th Air Force, flying out of Northern England, and attaining the rank of Captain. He and his crew were shot-up on an oil bombing raid at Hamburg, Germany and crash landed at a British air base North of Brussels, Belgium. All crew members survived. Joe attended the University of California at Los Angeles in 1949, and graduated with a B.S. degree. After graduation, he entered the field of Public Health in Oregon and was Director of Health Education and Executive Officer to the Director, Oregon State Board of Health. In 1955, he received his Masters Degree in Public Health Administration with honors from the University of California, Berkeley, and was sworn into Honorary Delta Omega Fraternity. In 1965, he went on the staff at the University of California, Berkeley, and later became a real estate broker in Berkeley. In 1985, Joe and his wife moved to Orcas Island, WA, and while there became “Mr. & Mrs.� Commodore of Orcas Island Yacht Club. Health problems brought them to West Linn, OR in 1992, where they joined the Tualatin Golf & Country Club. In 2002, they moved to Redmond, OR, where they enjoyed golf and sunny weather. Arrangements: River View Cemetery, Portland, OR., (503)246-6488. Services: Friday, Sept. 21, 2012, at 2:00 p.m. at Willamette National Cemetery, Portland, OR. (503)273-5250. In lieu of flowers, please feel free to donate in Joe’s name to Wounded Warrior Project, 4899 Belfort Road, Suite 300, Jacksonville, FL 32256
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 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, AUGUST 23
FRIDAY
Today: Sunny and nice, still below average.
HIGH
Tonight: Clear and chilly through the night with lows near freezing.
LOW
76
36
FORECAST: STATE Astoria 63/55
Seaside
61/56
Cannon Beach 60/54
Hillsboro Portland 72/54 71/48
Tillamook 64/49
Salem
61/47
75/51
79/48
Maupin
82/51
Corvallis Yachats
74/43
Prineville 76/47 Sisters Redmond Paulina 72/43 75/43 79/46 Sunriver Bend
64/50
Eugene
Florence
76/47
68/52
76/45
75/46
Coos Bay
75/43
Oakridge
Cottage Grove
Crescent
Roseburg
63/50
Silver Lake
74/40
Port Orford 67/51
Gold Beach
92/57
Juntura 93/49
77/44
84/41
Jordan Valley 85/47
Frenchglen 91/49
Yesterday’s state extremes
Rome
• 92°
93/50
Medford
85/45
83/44
Klamath Falls 84/42
Ashland
65/52
Vale
EAST Mostly sunny and Ontario pleasant condi94/60 tions.
96/58
Burns Riley
78/45
Chiloquin
85/52
Brookings
82/46
80/45
Paisley
Medford
63/54
84/41
Unity
84/35
Grants Pass 83/48
74/43
CENTRAL Mostly sunny and pleasant conditions.
Baker City John Day
Christmas Valley
Chemult
79/51
75/38
WEST Partly to mostly cloudy north and sunny to partly cloudy south.
Nyssa
Hampton
Fort Rock 77/44
74/41
69/36
Bandon
80/43
Brothers 76/42
La Pine 76/42
Crescent Lake
64/50
76/36
79/39
Union
Mitchell 78/48
80/49
Camp Sherman
75/49
77/37
Joseph
Granite Spray 83/42
Enterprise
Meacham 82/43
73/45
Madras
73/38
La Grande
Condon
Warm Springs
Wallowa
72/33
76/47
78/47
81/50
76/48
85/48
Ruggs
Willowdale
Albany
Newport
Pendleton
81/53
74/47
75/49
61/48
Hermiston 83/49
Arlington
Wasco
Sandy
Government Camp 60/45
73/48
82/51
The Biggs Dalles 74/50
71/51
McMinnville
Lincoln City
Umatilla
Hood River
80/48
• 36°
Fields
Lakeview
McDermitt
92/53
84/46
Meacham
92/47
-30s
-20s
Yesterday’s extremes (in the 48 contiguous states):
• 104° Yuma, Ariz.
• 36° Meacham, Ore.
• 1.76” Lumberton, N.C.
Honolulu 88/73
-10s
0s
Vancouver 67/53 Calgary 71/48 Seattle 67/53
10s
20s
MONDAY
A few extra clouds, warming up a little.
HIGH LOW
75 38
A very nice end to the weekend, more sunshine, warm.
HIGH LOW
82 44
83 48
HIGH LOW
A few late evening and overnight showers and thunderstorms.
84 46
BEND ALMANAC
PLANET WATCH
TEMPERATURE
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury . . . .4:56 a.m. . . . . . 7:20 p.m. Venus . . . . . .2:36 a.m. . . . . . 5:27 p.m. Mars. . . . . .11:30 a.m. . . . . . 9:59 p.m. Jupiter. . . . .12:09 a.m. . . . . . 3:15 p.m. Saturn. . . . .10:57 a.m. . . . . 10:01 p.m. Uranus . . . . .9:07 p.m. . . . . . 9:35 a.m.
Yesterday’s weather through 4 p.m. in Bend 24 hours ending 4 p.m.*. . 0.00” High/Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81/46 Month to date . . . . . . . . . . 0.04” Record high . . . . . . . . 94 in 1939 Average month to date. . . 0.33” Record low. . . . . . . . . 31 in 1962 Year to date . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.61” Average high . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 Average year to date. . . . . 6.61” Average low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.29.98 Record 24 hours . . .0.38 in 1978 *Melted liquid equivalent
Sunrise today . . . . . . 6:19 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . 7:56 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . . 6:20 a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . . 7:54 p.m. Moonrise today . . . . 1:29 p.m. Moonset today . . . 11:11 p.m.
Moon phases First
Full
Last
New
Aug. 24 Aug. 31 Sept. 8 Sept. 15
OREGON CITIES
FIRE INDEX
Yesterday Thursday Friday 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......Ext. Bend, east of Hwy. 97.....High Redmond/Madras ......Mod.
Astoria . . . . . . . .68/53/0.00 Baker City . . . . . .82/42/0.00 Brookings . . . . . .67/51/0.00 Burns. . . . . . . . . .87/47/0.00 Eugene . . . . . . . .81/50/0.00 Klamath Falls . . .84/45/0.00 Lakeview. . . . . . .84/46/0.00 La Pine . . . . . . . .85/39/0.00 Medford . . . . . . .92/57/0.00 Newport . . . . . . .66/48/0.00 North Bend . . . . .70/50/0.00 Ontario . . . . . . . .91/65/0.00 Pendleton . . . . . .82/52/0.00 Portland . . . . . . .75/54/0.00 Prineville . . . . . . .70/42/0.00 Redmond. . . . . . .83/43/0.00 Roseburg. . . . . . .85/55/0.00 Salem . . . . . . . . .78/51/0.00 Sisters . . . . . . . . .85/42/0.00 The Dalles . . . . . .83/60/0.00
Mod. = Moderate; Ext. = Extreme
. . . . .63/55/c . . . . .65/54/pc . . . . .84/41/s . . . . . .77/40/s . . . . .65/52/s . . . . .66/53/pc . . . . .87/42/s . . . . . .82/46/s . . . . .76/47/s . . . . . .80/49/s . . . . .84/42/s . . . . . .83/43/s . . . . .84/46/s . . . . . .82/46/s . . . . .76/42/s . . . . . .76/37/s . . . . .85/52/s . . . . . .87/54/s . . . .61/48/pc . . . . .62/49/pc . . . . .64/51/s . . . . .62/49/pc . . . . .94/60/s . . . . . .85/52/s . . . . .85/48/s . . . . . .81/48/s . . . .72/54/pc . . . . .76/55/pc . . . . .76/47/s . . . . . .77/42/s . . . . .79/37/s . . . . . .79/42/s . . . .79/51/pc . . . . . .77/50/s . . . .75/49/pc . . . . . .78/52/s . . . . .75/43/s . . . . . .76/39/s . . . . .79/48/s . . . . . .81/57/s
PRECIPITATION
WATER REPORT Sisters ..............................High La Pine................................Ext. Prineville...........................Ext.
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 . . . . . . . . . . . . 35,670 . . . . . . 55,000 Wickiup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124,630 . . . . . 200,000 Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . 72,074 . . . . . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir . . . . . . . . 24,624 . . . . . . 47,000 Prineville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107,189 . . . . . 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 . . . . . . . 434 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup . . . . . . . . . . 1,750 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake . . . . . . . 136 LOW MEDIUM HIGH V.HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79.7 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls . . . . . . . . . 2,139 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . . 1 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . 226 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. . . . . . . . . . 16.5 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne . . . . . . . . . . . 79.7 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 LOW MEDIUM HIGH or go to www.wrd.state.or.us
To report a wildfire, call 911
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 6
POLLEN COUNT
TRAVELERS’ FORECAST NATIONAL 30s
Saskatoon 81/59
40s
Winnipeg 88/61
50s
60s
Thunder Bay 72/56
70s
80s
90s
100s 110s
Quebec 77/55
Halifax 80/61 Portland Portland Billings 82/59 To ronto 72/54 St. Paul Green Bay 91/57 83/62 Boston Boise 85/68 84/66 86/66 Rapid City 88/52 Buffalo Detroit 91/66 82/58 New York 82/66 88/67 Cheyenne Des Moines 84/55 Philadelphia Columbus Chicago 92/67 86/59 87/67 86/70 Omaha San Francisco Salt Lake Washington, D. C. 90/66 62/54 City 87/68 Las Denver Louisville 88/70 Kansas City Vegas 88/61 92/67 92/72 St. Louis 95/78 Charlotte 96/67 84/63 Albuquerque Oklahoma City Nashville Little Rock 82/64 94/70 91/63 93/66 Los Angeles Phoenix Atlanta 73/65 97/83 87/68 Birmingham Dallas Tijuana 91/66 94/75 76/63 New Orleans 90/73 Orlando Houston 90/71 Chihuahua 92/78 91/68 Miami 90/80 Monterrey La Paz 93/71 94/77 Mazatlan 88/74 Anchorage 56/48 Juneau 58/49 Bismarck 90/59
FRONTS
Another sunny day with temperatures staying near average.
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
HIGH LOW
SATURDAY
Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX . . . . . .87/66/0.00 . .90/74/pc . . .92/72/t Akron . . . . . . . . . .81/54/0.00 . .83/59/pc . . 85/62/s Albany. . . . . . . . . .83/53/0.00 . .86/59/pc . 88/60/pc Albuquerque. . . . .78/69/0.00 . . . 82/64/t . . .82/65/t Anchorage . . . . . .65/48/0.00 . . . 56/48/r . . .60/50/r Atlanta . . . . . . . . .88/68/0.00 . .87/68/pc . 87/70/pc Atlantic City . . . . .81/60/0.00 . .85/66/pc . . 85/71/s Austin . . . . . . . . . .91/70/0.00 . .94/72/pc . 94/74/pc Baltimore . . . . . . .84/61/0.00 . .86/67/pc . . 86/66/s Billings . . . . . . . . .89/64/0.00 . . . 91/57/s . 88/53/pc Birmingham . . . . .88/61/0.00 . .91/66/pc . 91/67/pc Bismarck. . . . . . . .86/53/0.00 . . . 90/59/s . 94/60/pc Boise . . . . . . . . . . .90/60/0.00 . . . 88/52/s . . 81/45/s Boston. . . . . . . . . .78/66/0.00 . .86/66/pc . . 83/65/s Bridgeport, CT. . . .82/65/0.00 . .84/65/pc . . 83/66/s Buffalo . . . . . . . . .79/57/0.00 . .82/58/pc . . 82/62/s Burlington, VT. . . .83/52/0.00 . .83/59/pc . 83/60/pc Caribou, ME . . . . .75/49/0.01 . . . 74/54/t . . 75/50/s Charleston, SC . . .87/71/0.10 . . . 84/70/t . . .86/70/t Charlotte. . . . . . . .84/65/0.00 . .84/63/pc . 86/63/pc Chattanooga. . . . .88/61/0.00 . . . 90/62/s . 91/63/pc Cheyenne . . . . . . .88/56/0.00 . .84/55/pc . 85/57/pc Chicago. . . . . . . . .85/54/0.00 . .86/70/pc . 89/72/pc Cincinnati . . . . . . .85/55/0.00 . . . 87/60/s . . 90/63/s Cleveland . . . . . . .82/54/0.00 . .80/63/pc . . 83/67/s Colorado Springs .87/57/0.00 . . . 82/56/t . 81/55/pc Columbia, MO . . .99/60/0.00 . . . 94/67/s . 91/70/pc Columbia, SC . . . .86/72/0.08 . .83/66/pc . 87/66/pc Columbus, GA. . . .89/71/0.00 . .90/68/pc . 89/69/pc Columbus, OH. . . .85/56/0.00 . . . 86/59/s . . 87/63/s Concord, NH. . . . .82/50/0.00 . .86/54/pc . . 86/56/s Corpus Christi. . . .97/78/0.00 . . . 92/76/t . . .93/77/t Dallas Ft Worth. . .90/65/0.00 . .94/75/pc . . .91/76/t Dayton . . . . . . . . .84/55/0.00 . . . 85/60/s . 88/63/pc Denver. . . . . . . . . .93/63/0.00 . . . 88/61/t . 87/60/pc Des Moines. . . . . .97/62/0.00 . .92/67/pc . 88/68/pc Detroit. . . . . . . . . .83/57/0.00 . . . 82/66/s . . 85/70/s Duluth. . . . . . . . . .84/60/0.00 . . . 72/64/t . 74/63/pc El Paso. . . . . . . . . .97/76/0.00 . . . 94/73/t . . .94/72/t Fairbanks. . . . . . . .68/37/0.00 . .70/45/pc . . 66/48/c Fargo. . . . . . . . . . .89/59/0.00 . . . 88/63/t . . .91/68/t Flagstaff . . . . . . . .73/52/0.41 . . . 70/54/t . 72/53/pc
Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Grand Rapids . . . .81/52/0.00 . . . 85/66/s . . 88/66/c Green Bay. . . . . . .80/51/0.00 . .84/66/pc . . .85/67/t Greensboro. . . . . .81/65/0.45 . .83/63/pc . . 86/63/s Harrisburg. . . . . . .83/75/0.00 . .85/60/pc . 87/62/pc Hartford, CT . . . . .83/59/0.00 . .88/60/pc . . 86/61/s Helena. . . . . . . . . .86/54/0.00 . . . 88/53/s . . 75/47/s Honolulu. . . . . . . .88/74/0.00 . . . 88/73/s . . 88/74/s Houston . . . . . . . .91/75/0.01 . . . 92/78/t . . .90/76/t Huntsville . . . . . . .87/59/0.00 . . . 90/63/s . 91/64/pc Indianapolis . . . . .85/59/0.00 . . . 89/62/s . . 90/67/s Jackson, MS . . . . .89/61/0.00 . . . 92/66/s . 92/71/pc Jacksonville. . . . . .83/70/0.00 . . . 87/68/t . . .88/70/t Juneau. . . . . . . . . .54/52/0.35 . . . 58/49/r . . .59/48/r Kansas City. . . . . .97/63/0.00 . . . 92/72/s . 89/70/pc Lansing . . . . . . . . .81/52/0.00 . . . 86/65/s . . 87/64/c Las Vegas . . . . . . .83/69/1.65 . . . 95/78/t . . 96/80/s Lexington . . . . . . .83/52/0.00 . . . 89/61/s . . 90/65/s Lincoln. . . . . . . . . .93/58/0.00 . .90/66/pc . 90/68/pc Little Rock. . . . . . .92/63/0.00 . . . 93/66/s . 94/70/pc Los Angeles. . . . . .78/70/0.00 . . . 73/65/s . . 71/65/s Louisville. . . . . . . .87/60/0.00 . . . 92/67/s . . 94/68/s Madison, WI . . . . .85/53/0.00 . .88/64/pc . 89/66/pc Memphis. . . . . . . .96/65/0.00 . . . 92/68/s . . 95/71/s Miami . . . . . . . . . .91/77/0.00 . .90/80/pc . 89/81/pc Milwaukee . . . . . .81/58/0.00 . .85/68/pc . 88/69/pc Minneapolis . . . . .79/58/0.04 . . . 85/68/t . 89/68/pc Nashville. . . . . . . .90/59/0.00 . . . 91/63/s . . 91/66/s New Orleans. . . . .87/75/0.00 . . . 90/73/t . . .89/74/t New York . . . . . . .82/68/0.00 . .88/67/pc . . 87/69/s Newark, NJ . . . . . .84/68/0.00 . .88/64/pc . . 88/67/s Norfolk, VA . . . . . .80/69/0.00 . .87/70/pc . 86/68/pc Oklahoma City . . .89/65/0.00 . .94/70/pc . . .85/72/t Omaha . . . . . . . . .94/64/0.00 . .90/66/pc . 91/67/pc Orlando. . . . . . . . .89/72/0.02 . . . 90/71/t . 90/74/pc Palm Springs. . . . .99/79/0.10 . .98/77/pc . 101/77/s Peoria . . . . . . . . . .88/55/0.00 . . . 92/67/s . 90/68/pc Philadelphia . . . . .86/67/0.00 . .87/67/pc . . 90/68/s Phoenix. . . . . . . . .91/76/0.09 . .97/83/pc . 99/82/pc Pittsburgh . . . . . . .79/52/0.00 . .83/58/pc . . 84/60/s Portland, ME. . . . .78/56/0.00 . .82/59/pc . . 82/56/s Providence . . . . . .82/60/0.00 . .86/63/pc . . 85/64/s Raleigh . . . . . . . . .81/69/0.13 . .86/66/pc . 88/64/pc
Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Rapid City . . . . . . .93/55/0.00 . . . 91/66/s . . 90/62/s Reno . . . . . . . . . . .92/62/0.00 . . . 92/58/s . . 91/57/s Richmond . . . . . . .85/64/0.00 . .87/66/pc . 88/65/pc Rochester, NY . . . .80/54/0.00 . .84/58/pc . 85/61/pc Sacramento. . . . . .91/57/0.00 . . . 93/60/s . . 93/59/s St. Louis. . . . . . . . .94/64/0.00 . . . 96/67/s . . 95/70/s Salt Lake City . . . .89/53/0.00 . .88/70/pc . . 90/65/s San Antonio . . . . .93/72/0.00 . .95/76/pc . 94/76/pc San Diego . . . . . . .74/69/0.00 . . . 74/67/s . . 73/67/s San Francisco . . . .68/54/0.00 . . . 68/55/s . . 68/55/s San Jose . . . . . . . .74/57/0.00 . . . 77/57/s . . 76/56/s Santa Fe . . . . . . . .81/59/0.00 . .76/56/pc . 77/57/pc
Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Savannah . . . . . . 83/71/trace . . . 85/69/t . . .87/71/t Seattle. . . . . . . . . .72/56/0.00 . .67/53/pc . 68/53/pc Sioux Falls. . . . . . .95/66/0.01 . . . 88/67/t . . 91/67/s Spokane . . . . . . . .75/51/0.00 . . . 78/49/s . . 72/48/s Springfield, MO . .93/58/0.00 . . . 92/65/s . 90/69/pc Tampa. . . . . . . . . .87/73/0.66 . . . 90/76/t . 93/76/pc Tucson. . . . . . . . . .88/71/0.30 . .92/74/pc . 94/71/pc Tulsa . . . . . . . . . . .94/66/0.00 . . . 94/72/s . . .89/71/t Washington, DC . .86/68/0.35 . .87/68/pc . . 87/66/s Wichita . . . . . . . . .93/62/0.00 . .91/69/pc . . .84/69/t Yakima . . . . . . . . .83/49/0.00 . . . 84/48/s . . 81/53/s Yuma. . . . . . . . . .104/84/0.00 . .97/81/pc . . 97/79/s
INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam. . . . . .68/63/0.00 . .68/52/pc . 69/59/sh Athens. . . . . . . . . .93/75/0.00 . .101/78/s . . 95/76/s Auckland. . . . . . . .61/48/0.00 . .59/49/pc . 60/52/pc Baghdad . . . . . . .106/77/0.00 . .109/79/s . 110/78/s Bangkok . . . . . . . .93/81/0.00 . . . 92/79/t . . .91/79/t Beijing. . . . . . . . . .82/55/0.00 . . . 86/66/s . . 88/69/s Beirut . . . . . . . . . .90/81/0.00 . . . 90/81/s . . 91/81/s Berlin. . . . . . . . . . .77/61/0.00 . .73/54/pc . 71/57/sh Bogota . . . . . . . . .64/52/0.00 . .68/49/sh . 65/51/sh Budapest. . . . . . . .97/63/0.00 . .89/66/pc . . 93/65/s Buenos Aires. . . . .73/52/0.00 . .69/42/pc . 53/40/sh Cabo San Lucas . .91/77/0.00 . .92/78/pc . 92/79/pc Cairo . . . . . . . . . . .95/75/0.00 . . . 94/73/s . . 96/73/s Calgary . . . . . . . . .77/55/0.00 . .71/48/pc . 58/44/sh Cancun . . . . . . . . .88/81/0.00 . . . 88/79/t . . .88/78/t Dublin . . . . . . . . . .66/55/0.00 . .63/53/sh . 60/55/sh Edinburgh. . . . . . .66/54/0.00 . . .65/52/c . 63/52/sh Geneva . . . . . . . . .93/66/0.00 . . . 86/64/t . . .85/65/t Harare. . . . . . . . . .86/55/0.00 . . . 81/48/s . . 80/49/s Hong Kong . . . . . .84/81/0.00 . . . 87/79/t . . .88/81/t Istanbul. . . . . . . . .93/72/0.00 . . . 92/72/s . . 86/74/s Jerusalem . . . . . not available . . . 89/69/s . . 92/71/s Johannesburg. . . .77/57/0.00 . .79/54/pc . 80/54/pc Lima . . . . . . . . . . .64/61/0.00 . .66/60/pc . 66/61/pc Lisbon . . . . . . . . . .82/64/0.00 . . . 78/61/s . . 76/67/s London . . . . . . . . .73/55/0.00 . . .68/54/c . 67/59/sh Madrid . . . . . . . .100/68/0.00 . . . 95/67/s . . 90/63/s Manila. . . . . . . . . .86/77/0.00 . . . 80/76/t . . .84/77/t
Mecca . . . . . . . . .106/88/0.00 105/85/pc 108/88/pc Mexico City. . . . . .68/57/0.00 . . . 67/56/t . . .69/53/t Montreal. . . . . . . .79/64/0.00 . .79/58/pc . 81/59/pc Moscow . . . . . . . .68/43/0.00 . .65/50/sh . . 62/53/c Nairobi . . . . . . . . .81/48/0.00 . .78/55/pc . 78/56/pc Nassau . . . . . . . . .90/82/0.00 . . . 90/81/t . . .90/80/t New Delhi. . . . . . .90/79/0.00 . . . 85/78/t . . .86/78/t Osaka . . . . . . . . . .95/81/0.00 . . . 90/77/t . . .90/76/t Oslo. . . . . . . . . . . .61/54/0.00 . .64/51/sh . . 66/51/c Ottawa . . . . . . . . .79/54/0.00 . .78/59/pc . 80/61/pc Paris. . . . . . . . . . . .75/59/0.00 . .77/60/pc . 78/60/sh Rio de Janeiro. . . .86/66/0.00 . .81/64/pc . 80/62/pc Rome. . . . . . . . . . .88/70/0.00 . . . 92/69/s . . 93/70/s Santiago . . . . . . . .52/41/0.00 . .46/36/sh . . 54/47/s Sao Paulo . . . . . . .81/63/0.00 . . . 77/60/s . . 77/59/s Sapporo . . . . . . . .73/72/0.00 . .83/68/sh . 79/67/sh Seoul. . . . . . . . . . .75/68/0.00 . . . 81/73/t . . .86/74/t Shanghai. . . . . . . .81/75/0.00 . . . 87/79/t . . .89/77/t Singapore . . . . . . .86/77/0.00 . . . 88/79/t . . .89/80/t Stockholm. . . . . . .66/55/0.00 . .65/54/sh . 67/54/sh Sydney. . . . . . . . . .77/52/0.00 . .74/51/sh . 64/46/pc Taipei. . . . . . . . . . .91/79/0.00 . . . 88/77/t . . .88/77/t Tel Aviv . . . . . . . . .91/75/0.00 . . . 90/77/s . . 92/77/s Tokyo. . . . . . . . . . .90/81/0.00 . .90/76/pc . 89/74/pc Toronto . . . . . . . . .81/57/0.00 . . . 83/62/s . 84/62/pc Vancouver. . . . . . .70/55/0.00 . .67/53/pc . . 65/52/s Vienna. . . . . . . . . .93/63/0.00 . . . 84/64/t . 89/67/pc Warsaw. . . . . . . . .82/63/0.00 . .74/54/pc . 80/59/sh
SPORTS
Scoreboard, D2 NFL, D3 Motor sports, D3 Cycling, D3
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
JUNIOR GOLF
D
MLB, D3, D4 Golf, D5 Hunting & Fishing, D6
www.bendbulletin.com/sports
GOLF: PGA TOUR
GOLF FedEx Cup
Washingtonians lead in Sunriver SUNRIVER — Three Washington golfers have set the pace through two rounds in the boys and girls divisions of the Sunriver Junior Open. Frank Garber, a high school junior-to-be from Kirkland, Wash., shot an even-par 71 Wednesday at Sunriver Resort’s Woodlands course to lead at 4 under. Cole Madey, of West Linn, is in second place in the boys division and trails Garber by two strokes. Jordan Ferreira, a senior-to-be from Bellevue, Wash., and Marianne Li, a high school sophomore from University Place, Wash., are tied with the lead in the girls division at 2 under. Reedsport’s Monica Vaughn, the 2010 Oregon Amateur champion, is in a three-way tie for third place, two strokes behind Ferreira and Li. The 54-hole Sunriver Junior Open concludes with today’s final round. The American Junior Golf Association tournament has a field of 108 boys and 35 girls, all ages 12 to 18, from 12 U.S. states and Canada. For full results, see Scoreboard, D2.
The PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup playoffs begin today with The Barclays; here are the top five players in the standings (with rank and points; full standings, D5): 1. Tiger Woods 2,269 2. Jason Dufner 2,110 3. Rory McIlroy 2,092 4. Zach Johnson 2,019 5. Bubba Watson 1,777
Bend’s Kearney wins Northwest Open • The local golfer finishes off a wire-to-wire victory at the PGA of America major sectional tournament a major tournament in the PGA of America’s Pacific Northwest WALLA WALLA, Wash. Section. — Brandon Kearney’s five-hour “I’m just really excited,” said drive home Wednesday got a bit Kearney by phone moments afsweeter. Kearney ter securing the win. “I’ve been Kearney — a 33-year-old astrying to win trophies, and I’ve sistant pro at Bend Golf and been close. This is the first tourCountry Club — shot a 2-under-par 70 nament I haven’t lost all year.” in Wednesday’s final round to finish Battling tucked pins, a stiff breeze the tournament at 12 under and com- and firm and fast conditions that had plete a wire-to-wire win at the North- the course playing “four or five strokes west Open Invitational at Wine Valley harder than any other day,” Kearney Golf Club. played steady golf all afternoon. Only Two days after shooting a first-round two in the remaining field of 75 golfers 63, then fending off a late challenge in the 54-hole event managed to shoot by Washington pro Darren Black, 69. See Kearney / D5 Kearney notched his first-ever win in By Zack Hall The Bulletin
McIlroy
Suspension of Cabrera may bring tainted batting title
Elks drop last game of season
By Benjamin Hoffman New York Times News Service
Gary Lewis / For The Bulletin
Autumn action
NCAA expands Kentucky probe
A’s Colon suspended 50 games OAKLAND, Calif. — Make it two 50-game suspensions in exactly one week — both starters for contending teams from the Bay Area, both for testosterone. Former Cy Young Award winner Bartolo Colon of the Oakland Athletics was suspended for 50 games Wednesday after a positive test, joining San Francisco Giants outfielder Melky Cabrera on the suspended list for the rest of the regular season. Colon Major League Baseball made the announcement of Colon’s penalty a week after All-Star game MVP Cabrera received his 50-game suspension Oakland, which hasn’t made the playoffs since 2006, ended Wednesday in the second American League wild-card position. The 39-year-old Colon is 10-9 with a 3.43 ERA in 24 starts this season, his first with the A’s, and has a 171-122 record in 15 big league seasons.
• The summer seasons in Oregon sharpen sportsmen for fall hunts
T
hey can decimate a farmer’s crops and chew through irrigation controls and disable vehicles when they gnaw the wires. They weaken dams and dig holes that can be dangerous to cattle and horses. They compete with sheep for summer feed and if numbers are allowed to grow out of balance, the squirrels become a threat to human health. On the east side of the state, we shoot sage rats in the spring, but summer and early fall offer the best opportunities to hunt gray diggers, the bushy-tailed ground squirrels found in farmland west of the Cascades.
GARY LEWIS A squirrel peered out from a hole bored in the side of the rocky hill. Ten-year-old Emmett Stevens grasped the shooting sticks with his left hand and eased in behind the rifle. In the cross hairs, he found the squirrel in the old 2X scope, eased back the hammer and squeezed. The squirrel tumbled out and Emmett sprang forward to lay his hands on his first trophy. When I rescued the rifle from
—From wire reports
the second-hand rack at a little gun store outside of Roseburg in southwestern Oregon, I brought it home and looked up the serial number. Date of manufacture was 1946 and the 2-power scope, its glass clouded with age, looked to be of the same vintage. At the lever and around the hammer, the bluing was worn. On the walnut stock, it bore the marks of honest wear. This was not the least expensive rimfire rifle available in the 1940s. Someone had saved some money to buy this one and had taken good care of it. See Autumn / D6
— The Associated Press
NFL
49ers’ Smith, Harbaugh back on same page
CORRECTION A score from the Northwest Cup roller hockey tournament staged in Bend this past weekend was stated incorrectly in The Bulletin’s sports scoreboard section on Monday. The score of the A final game was Wildfire 4, Heavily Favored 3. The Bulletin regrets the error.
In a breakout season in which his name has been discussed for Most Valuable Player of the National League, the Pittsburgh Pirates’ Andrew McCutchen also has a chance to help baseball avoid a potential public relations nightmare by reaching one number: .3457. That is the batting average McCutchen, who is currently hitting .349, needs to finish at or above to prevent Melky Cabrera from winning the league’s batting title. Cabrera, the San Francisco Giants outfielder who had been having his best year, is serving a 50-game suspension for the use of performance-enhancing drugs. When Cabrera’s suspension was announced Aug. 15, many noted that Cabrera had 501 plate appearances this season, one short of the threshold to qualify for the batting title. But that did not account for Major League Baseball’s Rule 10.22(a), which allows for hitless at-bats to be added to a player’s record to allow him to qualify. See Batting / D5
On a small game hunt near Roseburg, 10-year-old Emmett Stevens uses the shooting sticks to steady the lever-action 22.
MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
LEXINGTON, Ky. — The NCAA hasn’t closed the book on prized Kentucky recruit Nerlens Noel’s eligibility just yet. Sports Illustrated reported Wednesday that two investigators from the NCAA traveled to Noel’s former high school in New Hampshire earlier this month to meet with officials there about Noel’s past, along with Kentucky compliance director Sandy Bell. Noels is the No. 1 recruit in the country, according to ESPN.com’s ESPN100. He is also one of the favorites to be the No. 1 pick in the 2013 NBA draft. A person with knowledge of the inquiry told Sports Illustrated: “The NCAA’s questions focused on the cast of characters that surrounded Noel’s recruitment and how Noel paid for his unofficial visits.”
The Associated Press
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
HUNTING & FISHING
BASEBALL
— From wire reports
By Doug Ferguson
FARMINGDALE, N.Y. — The message from Jack Nicklaus still resonates with Tiger Woods. They were chatting during a practice round at the Presidents Cup nine years ago in South Africa when the topic turned to the various rivals Nicklaus faced over a 25-year stretch of winning majors. Nicklaus told him that day, “Just make sure you’re always part of the conversation.” Woods was reminded of that chat Wednesday at The Barclays, when he stood in the back of the room as PGA champion Rory McIlroy finished up his interview. McIlroy is his latest rival. See Rivalry / D5
— Bulletin staff report
The Bend Elks lost their final game of the season, a 6-4 defeat to the Thurston County Senators on Wednesday night at Bend’s Vince Genna Stadium. Parker Guinn went four for four for the Elks in the game, a nonleague contest. Bend, an amateur collegiate baseball team, wrapped up its West Coast League schedule on Aug. 9.
A rivalry taking root between Woods, McIlroy
• After offseason drama, quarterback and coach appear to be buddies again By Cam Inman Contra Costa Times
Paul Sakuma / The Associated Press
San Francisco 49ers head coach Jim Harbaugh and quarterback Alex Smith stand on the sidelines before a preseason game earlier this month.
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Alex Smith braces for what’s become a comical pregame ritual. Coach Jim Harbaugh smashes his fists down onto Smith’s shoulder pads. Then Harbaugh slaps the sides of Smith’s helmet. This routine seemed in doubt five months ago, when
the 49ers evaluated free agent Peyton Manning and appeared to jeopardize Smith’s bond with Harbaugh. That love triangle, if you will, comes together Sunday when the 49ers visit Manning and the Denver Broncos in each team’s third exhibition. The 49ers’ perceived courting of Manning has become an afterthought. The Harbaugh-Smith dynamic remains vibrant, as evident from their pregame ritual at Saturday’s exhibition in Houston, plus other on-field exchanges featuring good-buddy smiles. See 49ers / D5
D2
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
O A TELEVISION
SCOREBOARD
Today SOCCER 3 a.m.: UEFA, teams TBA (same-day tape), Root Sports. GOLF 6:30 a.m.: European Tour, Johnnie Walker Championship, first round, Golf Channel 11 a.m.: PGA Tour, The Barclays, first round, Golf Channel. 3:30 p.m.: LPGA Tour, Canadian Women’s Open, first round, Golf Channel. TENNIS 10 a.m.: WTA, New Haven Open, quarterfinal, ESPN2. Noon: ATP, Winston-Salem Open, quarterfinal, ESPN2. MOTOR SPORTS 12:30 p.m.: NASCAR, Nationwide Series, Food City 250, qualifying, Speed. BASEBALL 1 p.m.: Little League World Series, teams TBA, ESPN. 4 p.m.: MLB, Los Angeles Angels at Boston Red Sox or Oakland Athletics at Tampa Bay Rays, MLB Network. 5 p.m.: Little League World Series, teams TBA, ESPN2. CYCLING 1 p.m.: USA Pro Challenge, stage 4, NBC Sports Network. FOOTBALL 5 p.m.: NFL, preseason, Arizona Cardinals at Tennessee Titans, ESPN.
Friday GOLF 6:30 a.m.: European Tour, Johnnie Walker Championship, second round, Golf Channel 11 a.m.: PGA Tour, The Barclays, second round, Golf Channel. 3:30 p.m.: Champions Tour, Boeing Classic, first round, Golf Channel. 10:30 p.m.: LPGA Tour, Canadian Women’s Open (same-day tape), second round, Golf Channel. TENNIS 10 a.m.: WTA, New Haven Open, semifinal, ESPN2. Noon: ATP, Winston-Salem Open, semifinal, ESPN2. 4 p.m.: WTA, New Haven Open, semifinal, ESPN2. CYCLING 1 p.m.: USA Pro Challenge, stage 5, NBC Sports Network. SOCCER 1 p.m.: English Premier League, Manchester City vs. Southampton (taped), Root Sports. 4:30 p.m.: Major League Soccer, Real Salt Lake at Philadelphia Union, NBC Sports Network. 4:30 p.m.: Women’s college, Stanford at Penn State, Big Ten Network. 5 p.m.: Men’s college, Gonzaga at Washington, Pac12 Network. 7 p.m.: Men’s college, New Mexico at UCLA, Pac-12 Network. MOTOR SPORTS 2 p.m.: NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Irwin Tools Night Race, qualifying, ESPN2. 4:30 p.m.: NASCAR, Nationwide Series, Food City 250, ESPN. BASEBALL 4 p.m.: MLB, St. Louis Cardinals at Cincinnati Reds or Los Angeles Angels at Detroit Tigers, MLB Network. 5 p.m.: MLB, Seattle Mariners at Chicago White Sox, Root Sports. FOOTBALL 5 p.m.: NFL, preseason, Chicago Bears at New York Giants, CBS. 5 p.m.: NFL, preseason, Seattle Seahawks at Kansas City Chiefs, Fox. 6 p.m.: High school, Good Counsel (Md.) vs. Bishop Gorman (Nev.), ESPN2. Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations.
PREPS
MLS
Calendar ——— To submit information to the Prep Calendar, email The Bulletin at sports@bendbulletin.com ——— Bend High football Daily doubles: Aug. 20-30 at Bend High; Varsity/ JV from 9 to 11:30 a.m. and 5 to 7:30 p.m. Freshmen from 8 to 10:30 a.m. and 4 to 6:30 p.m. Note: Paperwork is available at the Bend High’s athletics office. Paperwork and fees are not necessary to check out equipment but must have been completed before practice started Aug. 20. Mountain View football Daily doubles: Aug. 20-24; varsity/JV 9 to 11:30 a.m. and 3 to 5:30 p.m.; freshmen 8 to 10:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Paperwork: Will be available for final clearance in the Mountain View High athletics office. All paperwork and physicals must have been on file before Aug. 20. Summit football Daily doubles: Aug. 20-24, varsity/JV 8 to 11 a.m. and 4 to 6 p.m.; freshmen 9 to 11 a.m. and 4 to 5:30 p.m. Paperwork: Available at the Summit High athletics office. Summit girls soccer Tryouts: Aug. 20-24, 8-9:30 a.m. and 5-7 p.m. at Summit High. Players must fill out appropriate paperwork prior to Monday morning; paperwork is available in the athletics office at Summit. For more information, go to http://www.road9sports.com/team/ SummitGirlsSoccer/. Ridgeview boys soccer All incoming Ridgeview and Redmond Proficiency Academy students living within the Ridgeview boundary are welcome to attend all of the following events. For more information, go to ridgeviewsoccer.com. Ravens daily-double tryouts: Aug. 20-24 at Ridgeview High; check-in Aug. 20, 9-10 a.m., in TV production lab inside school. Sessions run 10 to 11:45 a.m. and 6:30 to 8:15 p.m. each day. Players should bring shinguards and running shoes. Cascade Middle School football Contact camp: At Summit Stadium for incoming seventh-graders and eighth-graders; Aug. 20-23, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Cost $80 for two-week camp. Contact Summit High head coach Joe Padilla at joe.padilla@ bend.k12.0r.us or call 541-610-9866 to sign up or for more information.
GOLF AJGA AMERICAN JUNIOR GOLF ASSOCIATION Sunriver Junior Open Second Round Wednesday At Sunriver Resort, Meadows 54-hole Stroke Play Boys Division Yardage: 7,012; Par: 72 Frank Garber, Kirkland, Wash. 67-71—138 Cole Madey, West Linn 74-66—140 Nicholas Scrymgeour, Alberta 68-72—140 Colton Yates, Scottsdale, Ariz. 69-72—141 Geoff Fry, Calgary, Alberta 69-72—141 Peter kyo won Koo, Chandler, Ariz. 71-70—141 Bryan Gagnon, Culver City, Calif. 72-69—141 Tailin Song, Rancho Santa Fe, Calif. 70-71—141 Tyler Saunders, Gold Canyon, Ariz. 71-70—141 Riley Elmes, Lake Oswego 73-69—142 Johnny Hyun, Irvine, Calif. 70-72—142 Donald Qiu, Surrey, B.C. 72-70—142 Jeffrey Marcum, West Richland, Wash. 71-71—142 Cole Bradford, Plano, Texas 70-73—143 Brian Moon, Mukilteo, Wash. 73-71—144 Michael Decker, Pebble Beach, Calif. 73-71—144 Tony Ko, Langley, B.C. 70-74—144 Scott Munger, Danville, Calif. 69-75—144 Brandon Tsujimoto, Pomona, Calif. 72-72—144 Chris Parkinson, Danville, Calif. 69-75—144 Justin Kim, Fullerton, Calif. 73-71—144 Hayden Shieh, Fremont, Calif. 70-74—144 Max Alcorn, Poway, Calif. 70-74—144 Perry Cohen, La Jolla, Calif. 74-70—144 Stephen Griggs, Carmichael, Calif. 70-74—144 Johnathan Nicholson, Newbury Park, Calif. 70-74—144 Ryan Wallen, Blaine, Wash. 72-73—145 Jin Ho Chung, Cerritos, Calif. 69-76—145 Shohei Yamawaki, Encinitas, Calif. 71-74—145 Danny Ochoa, San Diego 72-73—145 Conner Kumpula, Albany 69-77—146 Ling Kun Kong, Arcadia, Calif. 75-71—146 Chase Pearcy, Bryan, Texas 72-74—146 Jordan Lu, Vancouver, B.C. 73-73—146 George Cunningham, Tucson, Ariz. 73-73—146 Garrett Foss, Redmond, Wash. 69-78—147 Trevor Warner, Portland 71-76—147 Joshua Suh, La Canada, Calif. 72-75—147 Tanner Comes, Spokane, Wash. 74-73—147 Eric Ansett, Spokane, Wash. 76-71—147 Aaron Strockis, San Diego 71-76—147 Connor Chesky, Saint Helena, Calif. 72-75—147 Joe Harvie, Orting, Wash. 74-73—147 J.D. Kiesewetter, Katy, Texas 72-75—147 Kevin Murphy, Rogue River 71-76—147 Ryan Gronlund, Pleasanton, Calif. 69-78—147 Lawrence Tu, Irvine, Calif. 76-71—147 John Sams, Coushatta, La. 71-77—148 Spencer Weiss, Sammamish, Wash. 69-79—148 Brett Manke, Lakewood, Wash. 74-74—148 Chase Wheatley, Corona del Mar, Calif. 72-76—148 Anthony Cecere, Palos Verdes, Calif. 76-72—148 Connor Blick, Danville, Calif. 74-74—148
Atlanta Chicago New York Washington
SOCCER
IN THE BLEACHERS
MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT ——— Eastern Conference W L T Pts GF Sporting Kansas City 14 7 4 46 31 New York 13 7 5 44 43 Houston 11 6 8 41 37 Chicago 12 8 5 41 32 D.C. 12 8 4 40 41 Montreal 11 13 3 36 39 Columbus 9 8 6 33 25 Philadelphia 7 12 3 24 24 New England 6 13 5 23 27 Toronto FC 5 15 5 20 28 Western Conference W L T Pts GF San Jose 14 6 5 47 48 Real Salt Lake 13 10 3 42 37 Seattle 11 6 7 40 34 Los Angeles 11 11 4 37 44 Vancouver 10 9 7 37 28 FC Dallas 8 11 8 32 33 Chivas USA 7 9 6 27 15 Colorado 8 15 2 26 32 Portland 5 13 6 21 24 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. ——— Wednesday’s Games D.C. United 4, Chicago 2 Columbus 2, Toronto FC 1 Friday’s Game Real Salt Lake at Philadelphia, 4:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games D.C. United at Montreal, 1:30 p.m. New England at Columbus, 4:30 p.m. Toronto FC at Houston, 5:30 p.m. Colorado at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. Vancouver at Portland, 7:30 p.m. Seattle FC at Chivas USA, 7:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games FC Dallas at Los Angeles, 4 p.m. New York at Sporting Kansas City, 6 p.m
Kyle Cornett, Mill Creek, Wash. 75-74—149 Samuel Kim, Irvine, Calif. 76-73—149 Ben Wanichek, Eugene 79-71—150 William Pollock, Eugene 74-76—150 Roman Aragon, Mission Viejo, Calif. 76-74—150 Zachary Smith, Pleasanton, Calif. 76-74—150 Brian Mogg, Sammamish, Wash. 76-74—150 Louis Kim, Brea, Calif. 71-79—150 Ben Davis, Las Vegas 70-80—150 Dylan Mitchell, Breckenridge, Colo. 70-80—150 David Magee, Rancho Santa Fe, Calif. 74-76—150 James Frahm, Laguna Niguel, Calif. 76-75—151 Michael Schaloum, Sammamish, Wash. 76-75—151 Tim Graham, Portland 78-73—151 Caleb Choi, Fremont, Calif. 74-77—151 Austen Sandoval, Sacramento, Calif. 72-79—151 Zack Bailey, Walnut Creek, Calif. 73-78—151 Camron Chugg, Wichita, Kan. 76-76—152 Kenden Slattery, Henderson, Nev. 71-81—152 Adam Bilski, Plymouth, Minn. 73-79—152 Jarred Jeter, College Station, Texas 73-79—152 Carter Irwin, Dove Canyon, Calif. 74-79—153 Joshua Ralph, Reno, Nev. 72-81—153 Alec Spencer, San Diego 75-78—153 Matthew DePalma, San Clemente, Calif. 78-75—153 Nolan Cull, Lake Tapps, Wash. 76-77—153 Eddie Abellar, Vancouver, Wash. 78-76—154 Kyle Bowser, Danville, Calif. 77-77—154 Aaron Whalen, Ephrata, Wash. 74-80—154 Charlie Cameron, El Dorado Hills, Calif. 75-79—154 Sam Richardson, Pleasanton, Calif. 77-77—154 Patrick Fracisco, Pleasanton, Calif. 76-78—154 David Buoymaster, San Francisco 78-77—155 Sean Foley, The Woodlands, Texas 78-77—155 Will Sharp, Sammamish, Wash. 80-75—155 Patrick Sato, Bellevue, Wash. 81-76—157 Ryan Hunt, Pitt Meadows, B.C. 80-77—157 Jung Woong Choi, Chatsworth, Calif. 77-80—157 Nick Huff, Vancouver, Wash. 79-78—157 Andy Liu, Bellevue, Wash. 77-80—157 Joshua Keplinger, El Dorado Hills, Calif. 78-79—157 Evan McLeod, Pebble Beach, Calif. 77-80—157 Derek Ackerman, Half Moon Bay, Calif. 80-79—159 David Ganz, Portland 80-79—159 Taylor Bolm, Scottsdale, Ariz. 81-78—159 Alec Charles, Gig Harbor, Wash. 82-78—160 Nicholas Engelhardt, Los Angeles 83-78—161 Daniel Rhee, La Canada, Calif. 84-77—161 Sathya Peri, Lakewood, Calif. 82-80—162 Jackson Cain, The Woodlands, Texas 78-85—163 Colin Wang, Vancouver, B.C. 81-83—164 Gregory Gildea, Vashon, Wash. 82-82—164 Graysen Huff, Eagle, Idaho 83-81—164 Howard Lee, Port Coquitlam, B.C. 79-86—165 Kyle John, Monterey, Calif. 87-87—174 Girls Division Girls Yardage: 6,190; Par: 71 Marianne Li, Bellevue, Wash. 72-68—140 Jordan Ferreira, University Place, Wash. 70-70—140 Sophia Chen, Thousand Oaks, Calif. 70-72—142 Monica Chen, Fremont, Calif. 68-74—142 Monica Vaughn, Reedsport 70-72—142 Annie Yang, Delta, B.C. 73-71—144 Megan Kim, Redondo Beach, Calif. 75-69—144 Jiayu Kong, Arcadia, Calif. 75-70—145 Alix Kong, West Vancouver, B.C. 71-74—145 Muni He, Pitt Meadows, B.C. 73-74—147 Raegan Bremer, Anaheim Hills, Calif. 71-76—147 Andrea Unson, Murrieta, Calif. 73-75—148 Alivia Brown, Gig Harbor, Wash. 74-74—148
Alexandra Wong, San Francisco 76-73—149 Kathy Hyunchae Lim, Langley, B.C. 78-72—150 Hana Bradshaw, San Diego 76-74—150 Maggie Neece, Colleyville, Texas 77-74—151 Andrea Wong, San Francisco 80-72—152 Kimberly Liu, Pleasanton, Calif. 79-74—153 Jamie Huo, Kent, Wash. 75-79—154 Sarah Archuleta, West Linn 77-78—155 Rachel Shi, Vancouver, B.C. 77-78—155 Sierra Kersten, Spokane, Wash. 81-76—157 Natalie Mu, Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif. 81-76—157 Lydia Kim, Spokane, Wash. 79-79—158 Sachi Hamada, Fullerton, Calif. 79-79—158 Hannah Swanson, Forest Grove 82-78—160 Brenna Murphy, Corvallis 76-84—160 Ashley Fitzgibbons, Sammamish, Wash. 83-78—161 Jessica Goldstein, Orinda, Calif. 82-85—167 Hanna Yi, Federal Way, Wash. 83-86—169 Laura Gay, Millcreek, Wash. 90-82—172 Julie Lym, Vancouver, B.C. 84-89—173 Catherine Warner, Kennewick, Wash. 88-89—177 Kiley Ballew, Las Vegas WD
FOOTBALL NFL NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE Preseason Glance All Times PDT ——— Today’s Games Green Bay at Cincinnati, 4 p.m. Jacksonville at Baltimore, 4:30 p.m. Arizona at Tennessee, 5 p.m. Friday’s Games New England at Tampa Bay, 4:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Cleveland, 4:30 p.m. Atlanta at Miami, 4:30 p.m. San Diego at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Seattle at Kansas City, 5 p.m. Chicago at N.Y. Giants, 5 p.m. Saturday’s Games Indianapolis at Washington, 1 p.m. Detroit at Oakland, 4 p.m. Pittsburgh at Buffalo, 4 p.m. Houston at New Orleans, 5 p.m. St. Louis at Dallas, 5 p.m. Sunday’s Games San Francisco at Denver, 1 p.m. Carolina at N.Y. Jets, 5 p.m.
BASEBALL Youth Little League World Series At South Williamsport, Pa. All Times PDT Double Elimination ——— Wednesday Tokyo 4, Aguadulce, Panama 1 Goodlettsville, Tenn. 4, San Antonio 3 Today Game 25 — Nuevo Laredo, Mexico vs. Aguadulce, Panama, 1 p.m. Game 26 — Petaluma, Calif. vs. San Antonio, 5 p.m.
GA 22 36 29 30 32 44 25 28 31 45 GA 32 32 24 40 33 35 26 36 42
TENNIS Professional New Haven Open Wednesday At The Connecticut Tennis Center at Yale New Haven, Conn. Purse: $637,000 (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Second Round Dominika Cibulkova (6), Slovakia, def. Andrea Petkovic, Germany, 6-4, 6-1. Lucie Safarova (8), Czech Republic, def. Zheng Jie, China, 6-4, 6-0. Caroline Wozniacki (3), Denmark, def. Sofia Arvidsson, Sweden, 7-6 (4), 6-2. Petra Kvitova (2), Czech Republic, def. Nicole Gibbs, United States, 6-2, 6-4. Texas Open Wednesday At Hilton DFW Lakes Executive Conference Center Grapevine, Texas Purse: $220,000 (Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Quarterfinals Casey Dellacqua, Australia, def. Aleksandra Wozniak, Canada, 6-4, 6-4. Roberta Vinci (3), Italy, def. Chanelle Scheepers (7), South Africa, 7-6 (1), 6-2. Jelena Jankovic (2), Serbia, def. Sorana Cirstea (8), Romania, 6-2, 6-1. Winston-Salem Open Wednesday At The Wake Forest Tennis Center Winston-Salem, N.C. Purse: $625,000 (WT250) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Third Round Sam Querrey (7), United States, def. Feliciano Lopez (9), Spain, 6-3, 6-4. Steve Darcis, Belgium, def. Andy Roddick (5), United States, 7-6 (6), 7-6 (3). Alexandr Dolgopolov (4), Ukraine, def. David Nalbandian (14), Argentina, 6-3, 6-4. Tomas Berdych (2), Czech Republic, def. Jarkko Nieminen (16), Finland, 6-3, 6-2. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (1), France, def. Sergiy Stakhovsky, Ukraine, 7-6 (1), 6-4. David Goffin, Belgium, def. Lukasz Kubot, Poland, 6-3, 1-6, 7-6 (5). Marcel Granollers (6), Spain, def. Ernests Gulbis, Latvia, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2. John Isner (3), United States, def. Jurgen Melzer (13), Austria, 6-4, 6-3.
BASKETBALL WNBA
Connecticut Indiana
All Times PDT ——— Eastern Conference W L 17 5 12 8
Pct .773 .600
GB — 4
11 11 8 13 8 13 5 17 Western Conference W L x-Minnesota 18 4 San Antonio 16 5 Los Angeles 17 6 Seattle 10 12 Phoenix 4 17 Tulsa 3 18 x-clinched playoff spot ——— Wednesday’s Game Atlanta 82, Chicago 71 Today’s Games New York at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Indiana at Seattle, 7 p.m. San Antonio at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m.
.500 .381 .381 .227
6 8½ 8½ 12
Pct GB .818 — .762 1½ .739 1½ .455 8 .190 13½ .143 14½
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL COMMISSIONER’S OFFICE—Suspended Oakland RHP Bartolo Colon 50 games for a violation of the Major League Baseball’s Joint Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. American League LOS ANGELES ANGELS—Placed OF Peter Bourjos on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Garrett Richards from Salt Lake City (PCL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Agreed to terms with C Jason Jaramillo on a minor league contract. TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Placed SS Yunel Escobar on the paternity list. Recalled RHP Chad Beck from Las Vegas (PCL). National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Optioned RHP Sam Demel to Reno (PCL). Selected the contract of LHP Tyler Skaggs from Reno. Recalled OF A.J. Pollock from Reno. COLORADO ROCKIES—Reinstated OF Carlos Gonzalez from the bereavement list. Optioned RHP Guillermo Moscoso to Colorado Springs (PCL). Assigned LHP Dan Merklinger to Colorado Springs. HOUSTON ASTROS—Selected the contract of RHP Hector Ambriz from Oklahoma City (PCL). Designated RHP Armando Galarraga for assignment. MIAMI MARLINS—Assigned SS Gil Velazquez outright to New Orleans (PCL). Recalled RHP Jacob Turner from New Orleans. MILWAUKEE BREWERS—Released LHP Randy Wolf. Recalled INF Jeff Bianchi from Nashville (PCL). NEW YORK METS—Placed LHP Johan Santana on the 15-day DL, retroactive to Aug. 18. SAN DIEGO PADRES—Selected the contract of LHP Andrew Werner from Tucson (PCL). Optioned RHP Brad Boxberger to Tucson. Designated OF Jeremy Heredia for assignment. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association BOSTON CELTICS—Re-signed F Jeff Green. DALLAS MAVERICKS—Announced the retirement of F Eduardo Najera, who was named coach of Texas (NBADL). FOOTBALL National Football League BUFFALO BILLS—Placed CB Cris Hill and S Josh Nesbitt on the waived-injured list. CAROLINA PANTHERS—Waived C Scott Mruczkowski. DETROIT LIONS—Waived DT Michael Cosgrove from the reserve/injured list. MIAMI DOLPHINS—Announced the retirement of G Eric Steinbach. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS—Designated offensive line coach Aaron Kromer as interim head coach for the first six regular-season games, while assistant head coach Joe Vitt serves his suspension in connection with the NFL’s bounty investigation. ST. LOUIS RAMS—Signed DE Vernon Gholston. TENNESSEE TITANS—Waived DT Shaun Smith. HOCKEY National Hockey League EDMONTON OILERS—Agreed to terms with F Taylor Hall on a seven-year contract extension. MOTORSPORTS NASCAR—Fined Paul Menard’s crew chief, Slugger Labbe, $100,000 and suspended him, car chief Craig Smokstad and crew member Grant Hutchens until Oct. 3 for illegal modifications found on the Chevrolet last weekend at Michigan. Docked Menard and car owner Richard Childress 25 points. COLLEGE NORTH CAROLINA CENTRAL—Named Donald Thomas men’s assistant basketball coach. RHODE ISLAND COLLEGE—Named Kara Williamson women’s basketball coach.
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Tuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 815 314 1,710 546 The Dalles 901 216 726 281 McNary 408 68 767 290 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Tuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 254,701 23,734 154,195 61,419 The Dalles 195,913 20,139 95,519 41,670 John Day 173,567 18,562 59,907 27,484 McNary 171,832 10,687 52,930 21,441
S B Football • More new uniforms for Ducks: The Oregon Ducks are at it again. The No. 5 Ducks, already known for an array of flashy Nikedesigned uniforms, added to the collection on Wednesday with a “fully integrated uniform system,” according to the Beaverton-based shoemaker. The most noticeable feature of the new uniforms is a pronounced wing design on the shoulders — a nod to Oregon’s duck mascot — and large numbers. But what sets the uniforms apart, according to Nike, is use of a new mesh material which the company touts as lightweight and breathable. The new jerseys will come in green, yellow, black and white. • Cal holds mock game at renovated stadium: California’s renovated Memorial Stadium has passed its first test, and now the Golden Bears are ready to see it filled up on game day. Coach Jeff Tedford said Wednesday that a mock game the previous night went off with only a few glitches. The Bears practiced running onto the field for pregame introductions, they had test runs for the lights, clock and public address system and even had the band on hand. Tedford said there were a few issues with the play clock but nothing that should stop the $321 million seismic retrofit and renovation from being ready for the opener against Nevada on Sept. 1. • Ex-Penn State president disputes sex abuse report: Ousted Penn State President Graham
Spanier and his lawyers attacked the university-backed report on the Jerry Sandusky sex abuse scandal on Wednesday, calling it a “blundering and indefensible indictment” as they fired a pre-emptive strike while waiting to hear if he’ll be charged in the case. Lawyer Timothy Lewis called Louis Freeh, the former FBI director and federal judge behind the report, a “biased investigator” who piled speculation on top of innuendo to accuse Spanier in a cover-up of early abuse complaints. • Kromer will be Saints’ interim coach: The New Orleans Saints designated offensive line coach Aaron Kromer as the interim head coach for the first six regular-season games, when assistant head coach Joe Vitt will have to serve his suspension in connection with the NFL’s bounty investigation. Vitt has been overseeing head coaching duties since Sean Payton’s full season suspension began in mid-April, but the Saints held off until Wednesday on a decision concerning who would become the figurehead of the coaching staff when Vitt has to step aside in Week 1.
Tennis • Azarenka, Federer seeded No. 1 for U.S. Open: Top-ranked Victoria Azarenka will be seeded No. 1 at the U.S. Open, with 2006 champion Maria Sharapova at No. 3, and three-time winner Serena Williams at No. 4. The U.S. Tennis Association announced the seedings Wednesday, strictly fol-
lowing this week’s WTA rankings. Azarenka, who won the Australian Open in January, is followed by No. 2 Agnieszka Radwanska, the runner-up to Williams at Wimbledon last month. The USTA said Tuesday that Roger Federer is seeded No. 1 among the men. The draw is today. Play begins Monday.
Baseball • Strasburg could miss final few starts: Washington Nationals manager Davey Johnson says Stephen Strasburg could miss his final two or three turns in the rotation during the regular season. In his first full season following elbow ligament replacement surgery, Strasburg is 15-5 with a 2.85 ERA and a National League-leading 183 strikeouts. The 24-year-old righthander has thrown 145 1⁄3 innings, and the Nationals are thought to have given him a limit of 160-180. “I think it came out that with the off days, we’d need another starter for I think two starts,” Johnson said after talking with general manager Mike Rizzo. “I think two starts, might have been three.” • Mets’ Santana expected to be shut down: New York Mets pitcher Johan Santana is headed to the disabled list and not expected to pitch again this season. General manager Sandy Alderson said Wednesday that the left-hander was going on the 15-day DL with inflammation in his lower back. Doctors are not recommending surgery. Santana has had an upand-down season in his return
from shoulder surgery that kept him out more than a year. He threw the team’s first no-hitter June 1 but is 3-7 with an 8.27 ERA since throwing a career-high 134 pitches in that game. • Cardinals’ Westbrook gets new deal: The St. Louis Cardinals solidified their rotation for next season by agreeing to a $9.75 million, one-year contract with Jake Westbrook that includes a mutual option for 2014. Adam Wainwright and Jaime Garcia also are expected to be back next year, but Chris Carpenter is coming off surgery to relieve nerve compression in his shoulder and Kyle Lohse is eligible for free agency.
Cycling • Degenkolb wins Vuelta stage: John Degenkolb sprinted to his second stage victory at the Spanish Vuelta Wednesday, while Joaquin Rodriguez maintained his overall lead after the fifth leg. The Argos-Shimano cyclist burst over the finish ahead of Daniele Bennati of Italy and fellow German rider Gianni Meersman to cap a 104mile journey that took 4 hours, 10 minutes, 37 seconds. Rodriguez holds a 1-second advantage over Tour de France runner-up Christopher Froome of Sky and a 5-second lead over Alberto Contador of SaxoBank. Rabobank’s Dutch pair Bauke Mollema and Robert Gesink were another 9 seconds behind Rodriguez, who considers today’s mountain-top stage finish at Jaca an opportunity to strengthen his lead.
Hockey • NHL labor talks canceled: NHL collective bargaining talks were canceled Wednesday after top executives from the league and players’ union held an impromptu morning meeting to discuss the status of the negotiations. NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman and deputy commissioner Bill Daly spent about two hours with players’ association executive director Donald Fehr and his brother Steve Fehr, the union’s No. 2 man. The current agreement is set to expire Sept. 15, when the NHL says it will lock out the players if a new deal hasn’t been reached. Formal talks between the two sides were slated to resume Wednesday afternoon, but they have now been postponed until this morning.
Soccer • U.S. World Cup qualifiers on new network: Add U.S. road World Cup qualifiers to the soccer games many American television viewers may not be able to see. The new beIN Sport network said Wednesday it had acquired rights to U.S. road qualifiers this year and next, along with all other qualifiers in the North and Central American and Caribbean region for the 2014 tournament, except for matches involving Mexico. The network, launched last week by the Al-Jazeera Sport Media Network, is available to only about 7 percent of U.S. television households. — From wire reports
THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
MOTOR SPORTS: NASCAR
NFL
BASEBALL COMMENTARY
Please, Rocket, just go away — for good this time
Colts’ Luck looking to eliminate mistakes
By Paul Newberry The Associated Press
W
By Michael Marot The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — When most people look at Andrew Luck’s first two preseason performances, they see a steady, young quarterback ready to emerge as the new face of the Indianapolis Colts. Luck sees the mistakes. As the glowing reviews pour in from around the NFL, the hand-picked successor to Peyton Manning is convinced he can — and must — continue to improve before the Colts open the season Sept. 9 at Chicago. “I wish it was by this practice,” Luck joked Wednesday. “But I’d better be ready by Week 1. I owe it to the rest of the guys on this team who have been busting their butts to be ready by Week 1.” Luck’s teammates say they have no doubt that the new franchise quarterback will be ready when the games start counting. They see a player progressing faster than anyone anticipated — and he’s got those so-called intangibles. Kicker Adam Vinatieri, a former teammate of Drew Bledsoe, Tom Brady and Peyton Manning, calls Luck “polished.” Center Samson Satele, who played with Jason Campbell, Carson Palmer and JaMarcus Russell among others, likes Luck’s confidence. Coach Chuck Pagano appreciates Luck’s ability to avoid distractions, a key to Luck’s preseason success. The 22-year-old from Stanford has already had to contend with the hype of playing his first NFL game at home against another No. 1 draft pick (Sam Bradford), his first prime-time game on national television against the Steelers’ vaunted defense and now this week’s ballyhooed matchup with No. 2 overall pick Robert Griffin III and Washington. None of it has thrown Luck off of his game. “He’s pretty focused and Andrew came to us that way,” said Pagano, the former Baltimore secondary coach who gave then-rookie Joe Flacco all kinds of different looks to get prepared in 2008. “He (Luck) doesn’t let outside distractions get in his way. He’s just really a mature kid who knows how to handle things.” That was never more evident than during Sunday’s 26-24 loss in Pittsburgh. After Ike Taylor turned Luck’s first interception into a Steelers touchdown, the two-time Heisman Trophy runner-up responded with a methodical 10-play, 80-yard touchdown drive. After the second pick, a pass that rookie receiver T.Y. Hilton never caught cleanly and flipped into the air, Luck took the Colts right down the field again and slid in for a 1-yard touchdown to tie the score at 14 — a slide Luck later acknowledged was not his best. By halftime, Luck had rallied the Colts from a 14-0 deficit to a 17-14 lead. Nobody understands better than the Colts that it’s only the preseason. But for a guy who had every pass charted at training camp, few expected the transition to move from college to the NFL to go this smoothly. “He doesn’t play like a rookie,” Vinatieri said. “He’s very polished guy for a young guy. He can make all the throws, and he processes things real fast. To do that this early in his career is really fun to see.” Through two games, Luck is 26 of 41 with a league-high 363 yards, two TDs and the two picks. His quarterback rating of 87.8 is No. 6 in the league, fourth among all rookie quarterbacks and No. 1 among the four selected in the first round of April’s draft.
D3
Brian Czobat / Autostock via The Associated Press
Brad Keselowski and Greg Biffle pace the final restart during the Pure Michigan 400 auto race at Michigan International Speedway on Sunday in Brooklyn, Mich. Keselowski finished second in the race, his second straight runner-up finish.
Keselowski eyes first title bid as Chase nears By Noah Trister The Associated Press
BROOKLYN, Mich. — Brad Keselowski is talking the talk of a title contender. The 28-year-old Keselowski probably won’t need a wild card to reach the Chase for the Sprint Cup this year. He’s near the top of the standings after back-to-back second-place finishes at Watkins Glen and Michigan. Perhaps more important, he’s starting to show some impressive consistency. “We’re in a great position as a team as the Chase is about to start here to make some noise,” Keselowski said. “I’m just feeling lucky to be there — but then, of course, we obviously want to win. I can taste the legitimacy of being a championship contender.” Keselowski made it to the Chase last year as a wild card, but now he’s solidly in fifth place with three races remaining in the Cup’s regular season. Not only does Keselowski have three wins in 2012 — tied for the most on the circuit — but he also has seven straight top-10 finishes, five of which were in the top five. Next up is Bristol, where Keselowski won earlier this season. Keselowski finished fifth in the Cup standings last year, a 20-spot jump from 2010. This year began poorly, with a late accident in the Daytona 500. Earlier in that race, he caused a bit of a stir when he posted on Twitter during a red-flag stoppage. Afterward, NASCAR said it was OK for Keselowski to keep his cellphone in his car during events, and that all drivers were encouraged to use social media. Before long, Keselowski was earning attention for his driving again, with wins at Bristol and Talladega. A victory at Kentucky started his current streak of top-10s. Last weekend, he led at his home state’s track before being passed by Jimmie Johnson with about 10 laps to go. Johnson’s engine later faltered, and Keselowski finished second behind Greg Biffle. “My team has done an excellent job over the last few weeks of hitting their marks, executing on all fronts, no mistakes, solid cars,” Keselowski said. “I’m very proud of that.” Before the race, Keselowski had said he felt he was at least tied for first in the standings, even though the point totals said otherwise. His reasoning was that when the Chase starts, drivers receive bonus points for regular-season wins, and the point totals don’t really matter. In that sense, it was a disappointment to fall just short of what could have been a series-leading
The Associated Press
Brad Keselowski, right, talks with Martin Truex Jr., left, during Saturday’s practice session.
fourth victory. “Those bonus points mean a lot for the Chase, where consistent, solid-place finishes without risking a bad day are extremely important,” Keselowski said. “You’ll probably be happier with second in the Chase than what you would be here.” Keselowski rubbed some drivers the wrong way earlier in his career with his aggression, and after he spent time in development with Hendrick Motorsports, he signed with Penske in the fall of 2009 when a Cup ride with HMS didn’t materialize. After last weekend’s race, when he was passed by Johnson of Hendrick but still finished ahead of him, Keselowski was asked if there was any extra satisfaction to be competing race-for-race with HMS. “It’s a terrible way to live your life where you live it looking back at missed opportunities. I’m trying to live it where I look forward at the great opportunity that I have now,” Keselowski said. “I guess the thought enters your mind that it was never meant to be and this was what was meant to be. That makes me feel very fortunate there was some higher calling in a way. “It’s hard to always reflect on that, especially when you’re struggling. But I’m not struggling now, so it’s easy to say.” Make no mistake, even when he tries to take the high road, Keselowski relishes competition. After Sunday’s race, he spent a decent amount of time talking about Johnson’s No. 48 car, portraying himself as a bit of an underdog. Then he began looking ahead. “Although they might have the most speed, we’re not giving up,” Keselowski said. “We’re going to keep ’em honest through this Chase.”
CYCLING
Vande Velde takes lead in Colorado • Bend’s Horner ninth in overall standings The Associated Press ASPEN, Colo. — Tom Danielson won the third stage of the USA Pro Challenge on Wednesday, and GarminSharp teammate Christian Vande Velde took the overall lead in the event’s longest leg. Danielson, from Boulder, Colo., claimed his first stage win since 2009, completing the 130.6-mile road race from Gunnison in 5 hours, 2 minutes, 6 seconds. The stage featured two climbs with elevations over 12,000 feet. “With two kilometers left, I didn’t think I was going to win,” said Danielson, who finished eighth in his debut in the Tour de France in 2011 but crashed out of the event this year. “But my wife says, ‘Never look back. Never look back.’ It works. To all of you aspiring cyclists out there, never look back.” Vande Velde, from Lemont, Ill., finished ninth in the stage and moved into the lead based on a third-level tiebreaker, the
Chris Council / Aspen Daily News
Tom Danielson, of Boulder Colo., with Garmin-Sharp-Barracuda, turns around to look at the peloton as he crosses the finish line Wednesday afternoon in Aspen, Colo., winning the third stage of the USA Pro Cycling Challenge.
lowest placing of the tied riders in the third stage. Vande Velde and Tejay van Garderen, the BMC rider from Tacoma, Wash., are tied in overall time and points awarded to riders in each stage. Bend’s Chris Horner, of RadioShack Nissan Trek, sits in ninth place, 12 seconds behind Vande Velde. “Nothing really has changed,” said the 36-year-
old Vande Velde, a 15-year pro who has finished as high as fourth in the Tour de France. “We have the same time, He’s virtually in the race lead, too. But how will we approach the day tomorrow? I don’t know. We’ll have to talk about that.” The seven-day race continues today with a 97.2-mile stage from Aspen to Beaver Creek.
ell, he’s back. Just when we thought we were rid of the Rocket, he turns up again. In the Atlantic League, of all places. At age 50. Roger Clemens just won’t go away; he’s just fast enough to escape our repeated swats, a survivor above all else. Age didn’t stop him from repeatedly retiring and coming back over and over again, a Brett Favre in pinstripes. Ugly allegations of doping and infidelity failed to slow Clemens down. He even spanked the feds, walking out of the courtroom a free man after being acquitted on all charges that he lied to Congress when he denied ever using performance-enhancing substances. It was the biggest win of his career. It should have been enough. But, no. On Saturday night, Clemens will start for an independent minor league team in suburban Houston known as the Sugar Land Skeeters, almost five years after he last pitched in the big leagues and with a date on his birth certificate that qualifies him to be a full member of AARP. If this was anyone else, we’d dismiss it as nothing more than a ludicrous stunt. But this is the Rocket, a man whose competitive fire — fueled with a healthy dose of narcissism — leads us to believe anything is possible. “If I get through Saturday,” he said, “we’ll see where we go from there.” We hope it leads to going away. There’s nothing feel-good about this comeback story. We’ve seen it so many times, it’s coming across like another tired sequel in the “Twilight Saga.” Nine long years ago, Clemens first announced his retirement while pitching for the New York Yankees. He was toasted at stadiums around baseball, soaked up all the cheers, even received a standing ovation from the opponent when he left the field for what everyone thought was the final time in the World Series. Turns out, he was just getting warmed up. Clemens came out of retirement a few months later, but his motives seemed genuine. He had a chance to pitch in his adopted hometown of Houston, alongside close friend Andy Pettitte. We cheered. Then, the following year, Clemens put off retirement again and asked for a whopping $22 million in arbitration. Hmmm. After one of the best seasons of his career, he finally seemed ready to put away his cleats. Uhh, no. Another comeback, this time for a prorated season with the Astros and another hefty paycheck. But wait, there’s more. Showing he had absolutely no scruples, Clemens turned up in the owner’s box at Yankee Stadium and signed on for one more partial season in New York. All along the way, he played the diva role better than Mariah Carey, demanding and getting all sorts of special perks. When his supposed team went on the road, he got to stay at home if it wasn’t his turn to pitch. Other players grumbled, realizing Clemens was all in, but only for himself. We may have marveled at his age-defying skills, but he always seemed like the last guy you’d want to invite over for dinner — surly and detached. A fraud who once complained about having to carry his own bags. An egomaniac whose kids all have names beginning with the letter K, as in strikeout. What happened over the past five years forever doused the Rocket’s sizzle for many of us. He had a starring role in the Mitchell Report, the investigation of steroid use in baseball. He went before
Cynically, we wonder if Clemens has other motives for going back to the mound. He’s eligible for the Hall of Fame ballot this winter, but there are surely plenty of voters unwilling to put a check beside his name, innocent verdict or not. If he’s turned down once, it might be easier to keep voting him down, as is the case with Mark McGwire. Congress to vehemently deny ever being involved in that sort of chicanery, though it sure seemed to explain how he was just as overpowering — if not more so — in his 40s as he had been in his 20s. Unrelated, there were also allegations of a long-term affair with troubled country singer Mindy McCready that began when she was in her teens, further sullying a player who always portrayed himself as a family man. In fairness to Clemens, marital infidelity is hardly unique and he never tested positive for performance enhancers. His main accuser was about as credible as Pee Wee Herman starring in “The Sopranos,” which is surely why the jury delivered its verdict — not guilty, on all counts. That’s also why, in keeping with the American tradition of jurisprudence, we must refrain from lumping Clemens in with all the other admitted dopers from one of baseball’s darkest eras. (And, just in case you were wondering, the Atlantic League has the same drug-testing procedures and penalties as the affiliated minor leagues, according to Joe Klein, the executive director.) That said, we have no desire to see Clemens don another big league uniform, which is surely what this is all about. He tries to downplay this latest comeback as nothing more than a one-off, a chance to bring a little cheer to his Houston-area fans, but we’re not fooled. There will surely be big league scouts in the stands Saturday night, eager to see if the Rocket has anything left in that right arm. Even if it’s just enough to pitch an inning or two at a time, there would likely be a contending team with contract in hand, ready to feed his ego and sign him up for a playoff run. “If you’re going to go and play, the one thing on his mind is trying to get back to the major leagues,” said Tony DeFrancesco, interim manager of the Houston Astros. Clemens repeatedly shrugged off that sort of talk. “I’m nowhere near where I need to be to compete the way I want,” he insisted. “We just want to have some fun.” Cynically, we wonder if Clemens has other motives for going back to the mound. He’s eligible for the Hall of Fame ballot this winter, but there are surely plenty of voters unwilling to put a check beside his name, innocent verdict or not. If he’s turned down once, it might be easier to keep voting him down, as is the case with Mark McGwire. But, if Clemens makes it back to the big leagues, the five-year window for Cooperstown eligibility starts over. Maybe some of the hard feelings will have softened by 2017 or 2018, especially if Clemens has tacked on one more comeback, the most improbable one of all, to his resume. It’s all too much to take. Please, Roger, go away. This time for good. — Paul Newberry is a national writer for The Associated Press. Write to him at pnewberry@ ap.org or www.twitter. com/pnewberry1963.
D4
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
M AJ O R LEAGUE B ASEBALL STANDINGS, SCORES AND SCHEDULES
AL Boxscores Mariners 3, Indians 1 Cleveland Kipnis 2b As.Cabrera ss Choo rf C.Santana dh Brantley cf Kotchman 1b a-Lillibridge ph-1b Carrera lf Hannahan 3b Marson c Totals
AB 5 4 3 4 3 2 1 3 4 3 32
R 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
H 1 0 2 1 1 2 0 0 1 0 8
BI 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1
BB 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 6
American League SO 2 0 1 2 1 0 1 0 1 1 9
Avg. .257 .279 .286 .241 .292 .238 .188 .321 .220 .231
Seattle AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Ackley 2b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .229 M.Saunders cf 4 1 1 1 0 0 .246 Seager 3b 4 1 2 0 0 0 .249 Jaso dh 2 1 1 0 2 0 .289 J.Montero c 3 0 0 0 1 2 .259 Thames rf 4 0 1 2 0 3 .256 Smoak 1b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .189 T.Robinson lf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .219 Ryan ss 2 0 0 0 1 0 .200 Totals 29 3 5 3 5 5 Cleveland 000 001 000 — 1 8 1 Seattle 100 000 02x — 3 5 0 a-struck out for Kotchman in the 8th. E—Kipnis (5). LOB—Cleveland 10, Seattle 7. 2B—Seager (25), Thames (12). HR—M.Saunders (14), off McAllister. SB—Choo 2 (15), C.Santana (3). DP—Seattle 3. Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP McAllister 6 3 1 1 3 4 98 J.Smith 1 0 0 0 1 0 16 Pestano L, 3-1 1 2 2 2 1 1 25 Seattle IP H R ER BB SO NP Iwakuma 5 2-3 6 1 1 3 5 90 O.Perez BS, 2-2 1 1 0 0 1 2 24 C.Capps 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 12 Furbush 0 0 0 0 1 0 5 Pryor W, 3-0 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 8 Wilhelmsen S, 19 1 0 0 0 1 1 18 Furbush pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. T—3:02. A—18,578 (47,860).
ERA 3.50 3.42 1.83 ERA 3.64 1.83 3.86 2.03 2.08 2.37
Athletics 5, Twins 1 Minnesota Revere cf A.Casilla 2b Mauer 1b Willingham lf Doumit dh M.Carson rf Plouffe 3b Butera c Florimon ss Totals
AB 4 4 3 4 3 4 4 3 3 32
R 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1
H 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 3
BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1
BB 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
SO 0 1 1 2 1 0 1 1 1 8
Avg. .312 .209 .316 .260 .290 .438 .236 .212 .333
Oakland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Crisp cf 3 3 3 2 1 0 .257 Drew ss 2 0 0 0 2 0 .000 Reddick rf 3 0 1 1 1 0 .249 Cespedes lf 3 0 1 2 1 1 .303 Carter 1b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .263 S.Smith dh 4 0 0 0 0 0 .239 Donaldson 3b 4 1 2 0 0 0 .226 Kottaras c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .174 Pennington 2b 3 1 1 0 0 2 .199 Totals 30 5 8 5 5 4 Minnesota 010 000 000 — 1 3 1 Oakland 102 100 10x — 5 8 4 E—Florimon (2), Crisp (3), Drew (1), Reddick (4), Donaldson (7). LOB—Minnesota 6, Oakland 6. 2B—M.Carson (1), Crisp (15), Donaldson (10), Pennington (15). HR—Crisp (8), off T.Robertson. SB—Crisp (28). DP—Minnesota 1. Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hendriks L, 0-6 5 6 4 4 3 2 97 7.06 Al.Burnett 1 0 0 0 0 0 16 3.05 T.Robertson 2-3 1 1 1 2 1 17 7.04 Fien 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 8 1.31 Perkins 1 1 0 0 0 0 13 2.87 Oakland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Milone W, 10-9 8 2 1 1 1 5 102 3.87 R.Cook 1 1 0 0 0 3 19 2.58 T—2:35. A—16,657 (35,067).
Rays 5, Royals 3 Kansas City L.Cain cf A.Escobar ss A.Gordon lf Butler dh S.Perez c Moustakas 3b Francoeur rf Hosmer 1b Giavotella 2b Totals
AB 4 4 4 4 4 3 4 3 3 33
R 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 3
H 0 2 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 6
BI 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 3
BB 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
SO 1 0 1 1 0 0 2 1 1 7
Avg. .255 .304 .289 .303 .297 .251 .240 .236 .207
Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Mendoza L, 7-9 4 1-3 5 2 2 4 0 81 4.26 L.Coleman 1 1-3 1 1 1 2 0 26 3.96 Collins 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 3 3.17 K.Herrera 1 2 1 1 0 0 16 2.53 Crow 1 1 1 1 0 1 19 3.60 Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Shields W, 12-7 7 2-3 5 3 3 1 7 106 4.01 McGee 0 1 0 0 0 0 4 2.37 Farnsworth H, 5 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 3.38 Rodney S, 39-41 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 0.77 McGee pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. T—2:54. A—11,892 (34,078).
Rangers 12, Orioles 3 AB 4 4 4 0 3 1 3 4 4 3 2 32
R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 3
H 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 6
BI 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 2
SO 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 6
W 72 69 67 59 56
L 52 55 57 65 67
Chicago Detroit Kansas City Cleveland Minnesota
W 68 66 55 54 51
L 55 57 68 70 72
Texas Oakland Los Angeles Seattle
W 72 67 64 61
L 51 56 60 64
Wednesday’s Games Tampa Bay 5, Kansas City 3 Oakland 5, Minnesota 1 Seattle 3, Cleveland 1 Detroit 3, Toronto 2 L.A. Angels 7, Boston 3 Texas 12, Baltimore 3 Chicago White Sox 2, N.Y. Yankees 1
Avg. .295 .226 .291 --.238 .086 .220 .161 .254 .261 .218
Texas AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Kinsler 2b 5 0 2 0 0 0 .266 Andrus ss 5 0 0 0 0 0 .296 Hamilton cf 3 2 1 0 1 1 .285 Olt rf 0 0 0 0 1 0 .222 Beltre 3b 5 3 3 5 0 0 .307 N.Cruz rf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .268 Gentry cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .310 Mi.Young dh 4 2 2 0 0 0 .271 Dav.Murphy lf 3 2 3 1 1 0 .315 Soto c 3 1 1 1 1 1 .236 Moreland 1b 3 1 1 5 0 1 .289 Totals 35 12 14 12 4 4 Baltimore 001 020 000 — 3 6 0 Texas 010 910 10x — 12 14 0 LOB—Baltimore 4, Texas 4. 2B—Ford (3), Kinsler (35), Dav.Murphy (24), Soto (2). 3B—Markakis (3). HR—Beltre 2 (21), off Tom.Hunter 2; Moreland (13), off Tom.Hunter; Beltre (22), off Gregg. DP—Baltimore 2; Texas 1. Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Tom.Hunter L, 4-8 3 8 8 8 2 0 72 5.95 Gregg 1 1 2 2 1 1 19 4.35 J.Romero 1 2 1 1 0 1 18 6.75 Lindstrom 1 0 0 0 0 1 8 2.23 S.Johnson 1 2 1 1 0 1 23 3.27 Ayala 1 1 0 0 1 0 14 2.87 Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA D.Holland W, 8-6 7 5 3 3 2 5 106 4.92 M.Lowe 1 1 0 0 0 1 14 2.06 Ogando 1 0 0 0 0 0 13 2.82 Tom.Hunter pitched to 8 batters in the 4th.
National League
L10 5-5 7-3 6-4 3-7 3-7
Str Home Away L-3 39-24 33-28 W-1 34-28 35-27 L-1 32-29 35-28 L-3 29-36 30-29 L-4 31-30 25-37
L10 6-4 5-5 6-4 1-9 2-8
Str Home Away W-3 35-26 33-29 W-2 36-25 30-32 L-1 26-33 29-35 L-8 30-29 24-41 L-2 24-37 27-35
L10 5-5 6-4 4-6 9-1
Str Home Away W-1 38-23 34-28 W-2 39-27 28-29 W-2 33-29 31-31 W-8 33-30 28-34
Today’s Games Toronto (Happ 2-1) at Detroit (Verlander 12-7), 10:05 a.m. L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 9-9) at Boston (F.Morales 3-4), 4:10 p.m. Oakland (T.Ross 2-8) at Tampa Bay (Cobb 7-8), 4:10 p.m. Minnesota (Diamond 10-5) at Texas (Oswalt 4-2), 5:05 p.m.
Washington Atlanta New York Philadelphia Miami
W 77 71 57 57 57
L 47 53 67 67 69
Cincinnati St. Louis Pittsburgh Milwaukee Chicago Houston
W 76 67 67 57 47 39
L 49 56 57 66 76 85
San Francisco Los Angeles Arizona San Diego Colorado
W 69 67 64 56 49
L 55 58 61 70 73
East Division Pct GB WCGB .621 — — .573 6 — .460 20 10½ .460 20 10½ .452 21 11½ Central Division Pct GB WCGB .608 — — .545 8 — .540 8½ ½ .463 18 10 .382 28 20 .315 36½ 28½ West Division Pct GB WCGB .556 — — .536 2½ 1 .512 5½ 4 .444 14 12½ .402 19 17½
Wednesday’s Games Milwaukee 3, Chicago Cubs 2 Arizona 3, Miami 2, 1st game San Diego 4, Pittsburgh 2 Atlanta 5, Washington 1 Cincinnati 3, Philadelphia 2 Colorado 5, N.Y. Mets 2 St. Louis 4, Houston 2 Arizona 3, Miami 0, 2nd game San Francisco 8, L.A. Dodgers 4
L10 6-4 5-5 3-7 5-5 5-5
Str Home Away L-1 36-24 41-23 W-1 36-29 35-24 L-4 28-33 29-34 L-2 27-35 30-32 L-2 29-31 28-38
L10 7-3 6-4 3-7 5-5 3-7 2-8
Str Home Away W-2 41-22 35-27 W-2 39-26 28-30 L-3 37-23 30-34 W-3 38-28 19-38 L-4 30-28 17-48 L-6 27-35 12-50
L10 7-3 5-5 6-4 5-5 8-2
Str Home Away W-3 35-26 34-29 L-3 33-28 34-30 W-2 33-28 31-33 W-4 31-32 25-38 W-4 26-39 23-34
Today’s Games Colorado (Chatwood 3-3) at N.Y. Mets (McHugh 0-0), 10:10 a.m. Houston (Keuchel 1-5) at St. Louis (Westbrook 12-9), 10:45 a.m. Cincinnati (Cueto 16-6) at Philadelphia (Hamels 14-6), 4:05 p.m. Atlanta (Hanson 12-5) at San Francisco (Zito 9-8), 7:15 p.m.
American League roundup
National League roundup
• Rangers 12, Orioles 3: A R LI N G TO N , Texa s — A dr ia n B eltre hit three home runs, including two in a nine-run fourth inning, and had five RBIs for Texas in a victory over Baltimore. Beltre hit his first homer leading off the second against former teammate Tommy Hunter. He connected again off Hunter for a two-run shot with none out in the fourth. He then hit another two-run drive with two outs while facing Kevin Gregg. Mitch Moreland hit his first grand slam in the fourth, when the Rangers sent 12 batters to the plate. • A’s 5, Twins 1: OAKLAND, Calif. — Coco Crisp homered, hit an RBI double and scored three runs, and Oakland beat Minnesota for its second straight winning series. Yoenis Cespedes hit a go-ahead tworun single in the third inning that held up for Tommy Milone (10-9). • Mariners 3, Indians 1: SEATTLE — Eric Thames hit a tiebreaking, two-run double with two outs in the eighth inning, and the Mariners beat Cleveland for their eighth straight win. Seattle completed a threegame sweep and is on its longest winning streak since taking eight in a row from June 23 to July 1, 2007. • Rays 5, Royals 3: ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — James Shields took a three-hitter into the eighth inning, leading Tampa Bay over Kansas City for the Rays’ 16th win in 21 games. • White Sox 2, Yankees 1: CHICAGO — Chris Sale struck out 13 in 7 2⁄3 stellar innings for his 15th victory, Alex Rios hit a go-ahead homer and the White Sox beat the Yankees to complete a three-game sweep. • Tigers 3, Blue Jays 2: DETROIT — Anibal Sanchez pitched effectively into the seventh inning, and Detroit held on to beat Toronto. Sanchez (2-3), acquired from Miami in a five-player deal last month, allowed one earned run and five hits in 6 2⁄3 innings. • Angels 7, Red Sox 3: BOSTON — Jered Weaver rebounded from a terrible start by pitching seven solid innings, and the Angels beat the fading Red Sox. Howie Kendrick hit a solo homer and Torii Hunter had a two-run single for the Angels.
• Diamondbacks 3-3, Marlins 2-0: PHOENIX — Rookie Wade Miley pitched eight innings to earn his 14th victory, and Arizona beat Miami 3-0 to complete a sweep of the first home doubleheader in Diamondbacks history. Fellow left-hander Tyler Skaggs (1-0) made his major league debut in the opener, allowing two runs and three hits over 6 2⁄3 innings in a 3-2 victory. • Brewers 3, Cubs 2: MILWAUKEE — Ryan Braun hit his NL-leading 34th homer and Yovani Gallardo pitched seven strong innings as Milwaukee completed a three-game sweep of Chicago. • Braves 5 Nationals 1: WASHINGTON — Kris Medlen pitched seven shutout innings in his latest winning performance and Martin Prado’s two-run double proved decisive to help Atlanta end a fourgame losing streak and top Washington. • Reds 3. Phillies 2: PHILADELPHIA — Bronson Arroyo allowed three hits in eight-plus innings, and Jay Bruce homered to lead Cincinnati past Philadelphia. Arroyo (10-7), who gave up both runs while striking out four and walking none, retired the first 14 batters. • Rockies 5, Mets 2: NEW YORK — Wilin Rosario hit a tiebreaking homer in the seventh inning, and Colorado won its seventh straight at Citi Field. • Cardinals 4, Astros 2: ST. LOUIS — Kyle Lohse pitched seven innings of three-hit ball to earn his seventh consecutive win for St. Louis, beating Houston. • Padres 4, Pirates 2: SAN DIEGO — Andrew Werner allowed two runs over six-plus innings in his major league debut and Carlos Quentin drove in three runs for San Diego against Pittsburgh. • Giants 8, Dodgers 4: LOS ANGELES — Matt Cain pitched seven strong innings and Joaquin Arias homered and drove in a career-high five runs as San Francisco completed its first three-game sweep of Los Angeles at Dodger Stadium in five years. The Giants arrived in Los Angeles trailing the Dodgers by a half-game and they leave with their largest lead in a month.
T—2:37. A—40,714 (48,194).
Tampa Bay AB R H BI BB SO Avg. De.Jennings lf 4 0 0 0 1 0 .247 B.Upton cf 5 1 2 0 0 1 .247 Joyce rf 4 1 1 0 1 0 .262 Longoria dh 3 0 1 0 0 0 .293 1-Fuld pr-dh 0 1 0 0 0 0 .320 Zobrist ss 2 0 1 1 1 0 .261 Keppinger 3b 4 0 2 1 0 0 .319 C.Pena 1b 2 1 0 0 2 0 .193 R.Roberts 2b 3 0 1 1 1 0 .214 Lobaton c 3 1 1 1 0 0 .236 Totals 30 5 9 4 6 1 Kansas City 010 000 020 — 3 6 2 Tampa Bay 002 001 11x — 5 9 0 1-ran for Longoria in the 7th. E—A.Escobar (14), L.Cain (3). LOB—Kansas City 4, Tampa Bay 10. 2B—S.Perez (11), Zobrist (31), R.Roberts (5). 3B—A.Escobar (6). HR—Lobaton (2), off Crow. SB—A.Escobar (25), B.Upton (24). DP—Kansas City 1.
Baltimore Markakis rf Hardy ss Ad.Jones cf Ayala p Wieters c Teagarden c Mar.Reynolds 1b Ford dh-lf McLouth lf-cf Machado 3b Andino 2b Totals
New York Tampa Bay Baltimore Boston Toronto
East Division Pct GB WCGB .581 — — .556 3 — .540 5 ½ .476 13 8½ .455 15½ 11 Central Division Pct GB WCGB .553 — — .537 2 1 .447 13 12 .435 14½ 13½ .415 17 16 West Division Pct GB WCGB .585 — — .545 5 — .516 8½ 3½ .488 12 7
White Sox 2, Yankees 1 New York Jeter ss Swisher rf Cano 2b Teixeira 1b An.Jones dh a-Er.Chavez ph Granderson cf R.Martin c McGehee 3b I.Suzuki lf Totals
AB 4 4 4 4 2 1 3 3 3 3 31
R 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
H 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4
BI 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
BB 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1
SO 0 2 2 2 1 0 2 1 2 3 15
Avg. .324 .268 .304 .260 .212 .294 .240 .194 .186 .269
Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Wise cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .297 Youkilis 3b 1 0 0 1 1 1 .240 A.Dunn 1b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .205 Konerko dh 3 0 1 0 1 0 .315 1-Jor.Danks pr-dh 0 0 0 0 0 0 .265 Rios rf 4 1 2 1 0 0 .301 Pierzynski c 3 0 0 0 0 0 .296 Viciedo lf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .252 Al.Ramirez ss 3 0 1 0 0 1 .261 Beckham 2b 3 1 1 0 0 0 .230 Totals 28 2 6 2 2 5 New York 000 001 000 — 1 4 0 Chicago 001 001 00x — 2 6 0 1-ran for Konerko in the 8th. LOB—New York 4, Chicago 6. 2B—Cano (33), Teixeira (26), Beckham (20). HR—Jeter (13), off Sale; Rios (20), off P.Hughes. DP—New York 1. New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA P.Hughes L, 12-11 7 5 2 2 2 5 98 4.15 D.Robertson 1 1 0 0 0 0 15 2.40 Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Sale W, 15-4 7 2-3 3 1 1 1 13 109 2.65 Myers H, 5 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 3 2.93 A.Reed S, 23-26 1 1 0 0 0 2 16 3.65 T—2:27. A—26,319 (40,615).
Angels 7, Red Sox 3 Los Angeles Trout cf Tor.Hunter rf Pujols 1b V.Wells lf K.Morales dh Trumbo lf-1b H.Kendrick 2b M.Izturis 3b Aybar ss Iannetta c Totals
AB 4 5 2 3 5 4 4 4 4 4 39
R 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 2 2 0 7
H 1 1 2 0 0 1 2 3 2 3 15
BI 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 6
BB 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
SO 1 1 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 1 7
Avg. .343 .295 .283 .218 .277 .286 .285 .255 .278 .223
Boston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Podsednik lf 5 0 3 0 0 1 .370 Ellsbury cf 5 0 1 0 0 0 .249 Pedroia 2b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .276 Ad.Gonzalez 1b 5 0 0 0 0 1 .301 C.Ross rf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .272 Saltalamacchia c 4 1 1 0 0 2 .229 Lavarnway dh 3 1 1 1 1 0 .147 Aviles ss 3 0 1 1 1 0 .253 Ciriaco 3b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .328 a-Nava ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .250 Totals 37 3 10 2 2 8 Los Angeles 002 203 000 — 7 15 1 Boston 000 200 010 — 3 10 0 a-struck out for Ciriaco in the 9th. E—Tor.Hunter (3). LOB—Los Angeles 6, Boston 10. 2B—Pujols (34), H.Kendrick (20), C.Ross (26), Lavarnway (2), Aviles (26). 3B—Iannetta (1). HR—H.Kendrick (7), off Buchholz. SB—Tor.Hunter (7), Podsednik (7), Pedroia 2 (11). DP—Los Angeles 1; Boston 1. Los Angeles Weaver W, 16-3 Hawkins
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA 7 7 2 2 1 5 102 2.74 2-3 2 1 0 1 1 25 3.72
Jepsen H, 10 1 1 0 0 0 2 18 Frieri 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 8 Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP Buchholz L, 11-4 5 1-3 12 7 7 1 3 82 Tazawa 2 2-3 3 0 0 0 3 46 Melancon 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 T—3:14. A—37,373 (37,495).
3.71 1.86 ERA 4.47 1.44 6.89
Tigers 3, Blue Jays 2 Toronto R.Davis lf Rasmus cf Encarnacion dh Cooper 1b a-Mathis ph-c Sierra rf 1-Gose pr-rf Torrealba c-1b K.Johnson 2b McCoy 3b Hechavarria ss c-Vizquel ph Totals
AB 3 4 3 2 2 4 0 3 4 4 2 1 32
R 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2
H 0 0 1 1 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 7
BI 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2
BB 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3
SO 0 3 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 8
Avg. .253 .235 .291 .300 .217 .347 .192 .238 .227 .214 .156 .217
Detroit AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Jackson cf 4 1 0 0 0 2 .310 Infante 2b 3 1 1 0 0 1 .289 Mi.Cabrera 3b 2 0 0 0 2 0 .326 Fielder 1b 3 0 1 1 1 0 .310 Jh.Peralta ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .256 D.Young dh 4 1 1 0 0 1 .268 Dirks lf-rf 2 0 1 0 1 0 .333 Je.Baker rf 2 0 1 1 0 0 .200 b-Berry ph-lf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .272 Avila c 2 0 0 0 1 1 .250 Totals 27 3 5 2 5 7 Toronto 000 001 100 — 2 7 1 Detroit 000 111 00x — 3 5 3 a-fouled out for Cooper in the 6th. b-struck out for Je.Baker in the 7th. c-singled for Hechavarria in the 9th. 1-ran for Sierra in the 8th. E—Hechavarria (2), A.Sanchez (1), Dirks 2 (3). LOB—Toronto 7, Detroit 6. 2B—Sierra (2). 3B—Infante (4). SB—R.Davis (39), McCoy (1). DP—Toronto 2. Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Laffey L, 3-5 6 5 3 2 3 2 90 4.56 Delabar 1 0 0 0 1 3 21 3.75 Janssen 1 0 0 0 1 2 16 2.22 Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA A.Sanchez W, 2-3 6 2-3 5 2 1 2 6 101 6.33 Villarreal H, 8 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 2.27 Benoit H, 25 1 1 0 0 1 2 21 3.25 Valverde S, 25-29 1 1 0 0 0 0 13 3.48 Laffey pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. T—2:47. A—37,225 (41,255).
NL Boxscores Cardinals 4, Astros 2 Houston Altuve 2b Ma.Gonzalez ss Wallace 1b B.Francisco lf S.Moore 3b Pearce rf B.Barnes cf W.Wright p Fe.Rodriguez p C.Snyder c 1-Maxwell pr J.Castro c B.Norris p Bogusevic cf Totals
AB 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 0 0 2 0 0 2 1 31
R 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2
H 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3
BI 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2
BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1
SO 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 5
Avg. .302 .234 .283 .236 .232 .276 .167 .000 --.185 .236 .253 .128 .212
St. Louis Jay cf M.Carpenter 3b Holliday lf Beltran rf
AB 4 4 4 3
R 1 0 1 0
H 2 0 2 1
BI 1 0 0 0
BB 0 0 0 1
SO 0 0 0 0
Avg. .313 .302 .302 .278
Craig 1b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .308 Y.Molina c 3 0 1 1 1 0 .321 Descalso 2b 4 0 1 1 0 0 .227 Furcal ss 3 1 1 0 0 1 .267 Lohse p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .082 a-S.Robinson ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .259 Boggs p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Motte p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 31 4 9 3 2 2 Houston 101 000 000 — 2 3 0 St. Louis 010 020 01x — 4 9 1 a-grounded out for Lohse in the 7th. 1-ran for C.Snyder in the 8th. E—Furcal (14). LOB—Houston 3, St. Louis 6. 2B—Altuve (31), Holliday (29), Beltran (23), Descalso (8). HR—Wallace (6), off Lohse; C.Snyder (7), off Lohse. SB—Jay (14). Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP B.Norris L, 5-11 6 7 3 3 1 1 94 W.Wright 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 10 Fe.Rodriguez 2-3 2 1 1 1 1 15 St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP Lohse W, 13-2 7 3 2 2 0 3 87 Boggs H, 24 1 0 0 0 1 1 12 Motte S, 29-34 1 0 0 0 0 1 8 T—2:32. A—35,198 (43,975).
ERA 5.19 3.23 5.65 ERA 2.61 2.05 2.68
Rockies 5, Mets 2 Colorado Blackmon rf J.Herrera ss Fowler cf 1-Pacheco pr-1b C.Gonzalez lf W.Rosario c Colvin 1b-cf Nelson 3b LeMahieu 2b Francis p C.Torres p Mat.Reynolds p W.Harris p c-Rutledge ph 2-White pr R.Betancourt p Totals
AB 5 4 2 2 4 3 4 3 3 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 32
R 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
H 0 1 1 1 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 8
BI 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 5
BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
SO 1 3 0 0 2 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 10
Avg. .105 .250 .307 .306 .317 .248 .295 .265 .279 .045 .333 .000 --.333 .143 ---
New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Tejada ss 4 1 1 0 0 0 .309 Edgin p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --F.Francisco p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --e-Ju.Turner ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .273 R.Cedeno 2b-ss 5 0 1 0 0 0 .281 D.Wright 3b 2 0 0 0 2 0 .318 Hairston rf-lf 3 1 1 1 0 0 .277 I.Davis 1b 3 0 1 1 1 1 .221 Bay lf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .148 b-Valdespin ph-rf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .244 An.Torres cf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .228 Shoppach c 3 0 0 0 0 1 .200 d-Baxter ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .304 Harvey p 2 0 2 0 0 0 .455 R.Ramirez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --R.Carson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --a-Dan.Murphy ph-2b2 0 0 0 0 1 .287 Totals 33 2 8 2 4 7 Colorado 000 100 202 — 5 8 0 New York 100 000 010 — 2 8 1 a-grounded out for R.Carson in the 7th. b-struck out for Bay in the 8th. c-doubled for W.Harris in the 9th. d-singled for Shoppach in the 9th. e-walked for F.Francisco in the 9th. 1-ran for Fowler in the 4th. 2-ran for Rutledge in the 9th. E—Shoppach (1). LOB—Colorado 5, New York 9. 2B—Colvin (18), Rutledge (11), Tejada (21), Hairston (22). HR—W.Rosario (20), off R.Ramirez. SB—Colvin (7). DP—New York 1. Colorado Francis C.Torres W, 2-1 Mat.Reynolds
IP 5 2 2-3 0
H 5 1 1
R 1 1 0
ER BB SO NP 1 2 4 82 1 1 1 30 0 0 0 2
ERA 5.79 4.28 4.29
W.Harris H, 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 5 4.76 R.Betancourt S, 25-30 1 1 0 0 1 1 25 2.53 New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Harvey 6 3 1 1 2 9 102 2.75 R.Ramirez L, 2-3 2-3 2 2 2 0 0 20 4.38 R.Carson 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 5 7.36 Edgin 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 4.86 F.Francisco 1 3 2 2 0 0 13 6.42 Mat.Reynolds pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. T—3:15. A—22,204 (41,922).
Reds 3, Phillies 2 Cincinnati Cozart ss Stubbs cf B.Phillips 2b Ludwick lf Bruce rf Rolen 3b Frazier 1b Hanigan c Arroyo p Chapman p Totals
AB 5 5 5 4 4 3 3 3 3 0 35
R 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 3
H 2 1 1 2 2 0 1 2 0 0 11
BI 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3
BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 2
SO 0 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 5
Avg. .253 .230 .289 .270 .260 .245 .294 .293 .146 ---
Philadelphia AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Rollins ss 4 0 0 0 0 0 .238 Pierre lf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .304 c-Wigginton ph 1 0 1 1 0 0 .234 1-M.Martinez pr 0 0 0 0 0 0 .153 Utley 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .247 Howard 1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .248 Mayberry cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .234 D.Brown rf 3 1 2 1 0 0 .282 Polanco 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .258 Schneider c 3 0 0 0 0 0 .227 Worley p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .083 a-L.Nix ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .247 Lindblom p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Valdes p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Frandsen ph 1 1 1 0 0 0 .358 Totals 31 2 4 2 0 4 Cincinnati 000 020 010 — 3 11 1 Philadelphia 000 010 001 — 2 4 1 a-flied out for Worley in the 6th. b-singled for Valdes in the 9th. c-singled for Pierre in the 9th. 1-ran for Wigginton in the 9th. E—Rolen (9), Rollins (10). LOB—Cincinnati 9, Philadelphia 2. 2B—D.Brown (6). 3B—Bruce (3). HR—Bruce (26), off Lindblom; D.Brown (1), off Arroyo. R DP—Cincinnati; Philadelphia 2. Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO NP Arroyo W, 10-7 8 3 2 2 0 4 86 Chapman S, 31-35 1 1 0 0 0 0 20 Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP Worley L, 6-9 6 8 2 2 2 3 99 Lindblom 2 2 1 1 0 1 20 Valdes 1 1 0 0 0 1 20 Arroyo pitched to 1 batter in the 9th. T—2:37. A—41,794 (43,651).
ERA 3.87 1.31 ERA 4.06 3.72 3.25
Padres 4, Pirates 2 Pittsburgh Tabata lf Walker 2b A.McCutchen cf G.Jones rf G.Sanchez 1b P.Alvarez 3b McKenry c Barmes ss Ja.McDonald p J.Hughes p a-Snider ph Resop p Totals
AB 4 4 4 3 4 2 3 3 1 0 1 0 29
R 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
H 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4
BI 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
BB 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 4
SO 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 4
Avg. .234 .286 .349 .287 .217 .236 .249 .223 .156 .000 .306 .000
San Diego AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Ev.Cabrera ss 3 1 1 0 1 0 .245 Venable rf 3 2 1 0 1 1 .257 Headley 3b 2 1 0 0 2 0 .274 Quentin lf 4 0 2 3 0 0 .266 Kotsay 1b 3 0 0 1 0 0 .266 Layne p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Forsythe 2b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .262 Maybin cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .230 Jo.Baker c 2 0 0 0 1 1 .241 Werner p 3 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Brach p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Gregerson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Alonso 1b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .270 Totals 27 4 5 4 6 3 Pittsburgh 000 100 100 — 2 4 1 San Diego 300 010 00x — 4 5 0 a-lined out for J.Hughes in the 7th. E—Walker (8). LOB—Pittsburgh 4, San Diego 6. 2B—G.Jones (22), Venable (21), Quentin (16). HR—G.Sanchez (4), off Werner. SB—Ev.Cabrera 2 (24), Forsythe (5), Maybin (23). DP—Pittsburgh 1; San Diego 1. Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP McDonald L, 11-6 5 5 4 4 5 2 92 J.Hughes 1 0 0 0 1 0 14 Resop 2 0 0 0 0 1 16 San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP Werner W, 1-0 6 4 2 2 4 2 82 Brach H, 8 1 0 0 0 0 1 9 Gregerson H, 22 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 Layne S, 1-1 1 0 0 0 0 1 11 Werner pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. T—2:28. A—20,311 (42,691).
ERA 3.73 2.47 3.73 ERA 3.00 3.81 2.37 0.00
Brewers 3, Cubs 2 Chicago DeJesus lf Valbuena 3b S.Castro ss Rizzo 1b LaHair rf Clevenger c 1-Mather pr B.Jackson cf Barney 2b T.Wood p b-Vitters ph Russell p Camp p Totals
AB 3 4 3 4 4 3 0 4 3 2 1 0 0 31
R 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
H 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
BI 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
BB 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
SO 0 1 2 2 2 1 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 13
Avg. .270 .226 .275 .289 .254 .224 .208 .164 .262 .206 .119 .000 ---
Milwaukee AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Aoki rf 4 1 1 0 0 0 .281 R.Weeks 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .215 Braun lf 4 2 3 2 0 0 .308 Ar.Ramirez 3b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .286 Hart 1b 3 0 2 1 0 0 .270 M.Maldonado c 3 0 0 0 0 1 .283 C.Gomez cf 2 0 0 0 1 1 .254 Ransom ss 2 0 1 0 0 1 .206 Gallardo p 2 0 0 0 0 0 .148 a-Lucroy ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .325 Henderson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Axford p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Totals 29 3 7 3 1 6 Chicago 100 000 100 — 2 5 0 Milwaukee 200 001 00x — 3 7 1 a-flied out for Gallardo in the 7th. b-grounded out for T.Wood in the 8th. 1-ran for Clevenger in the 9th. E—Ransom (5). LOB—Chicago 5, Milwaukee 4. 2B—Aoki (21), Braun (23), Hart 2 (29). 3B—Braun (3). HR—DeJesus (6), off Gallardo; LaHair (15), off Gallardo; Braun (34), off T.Wood. SB—C.Gomez (24). DP—Milwaukee 2. Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA T.Wood L, 4-10 7 6 3 3 1 6 99 4.76 Russell 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 3.62 Camp 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 12 3.71 Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Gallardo W, 13-8 7 4 2 2 2 9 108 3.62 Henderson H, 2 1 0 0 0 1 1 22 3.97 Axford S, 20-28 1 1 0 0 0 3 21 5.08 T—2:42. A—30,743 (41,900).
Braves 5, Nationals 1 Atlanta Prado lf-2b Re.Johnson cf-lf Heyward rf C.Jones 3b F.Freeman 1b D.Ross c Pastornicky 2b Bourn cf Janish ss Medlen p O’Flaherty p b-Uggla ph Kimbrel p Totals
AB 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 1 4 2 0 1 0 34
R 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 5
H 2 1 2 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 9
BI 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4
BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
SO 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 8
Avg. .298 .303 .279 .310 .269 .264 .252 .289 .211 .118 --.207 ---
Washington Werth rf Harper cf Zimmerman 3b Morse lf
AB 4 4 4 3
R 0 1 0 0
H 1 1 2 1
BI 0 0 0 1
BB 0 0 0 1
SO 0 1 0 1
Avg. .315 .247 .285 .286
1-Bernadina pr-lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .298 LaRoche 1b 3 0 1 0 1 1 .263 Desmond ss 4 0 1 0 0 1 .282 Espinosa 2b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .251 K.Suzuki c 4 0 0 0 0 1 .191 Detwiler p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .061 Stammen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 a-Lombardozzi ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .287 Gorzelanny p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .400 c-Tracy ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .283 Totals 34 1 9 1 2 10 Atlanta 000 020 003 — 5 9 2 Washington 000 000 010 — 1 9 3 a-singled for Stammen in the 7th. b-struck out for O’Flaherty in the 9th. c-struck out for Gorzelanny in the 9th. 1-ran for Morse in the 8th. E—D.Ross (2), Re.Johnson (2), Werth (2), K.Suzuki (2), Zimmerman (10). LOB—Atlanta 4, Washington 8. 2B—Prado 2 (36), F.Freeman (29), Werth (13). SB—Bourn (34). DP—Atlanta 2; Washington 2. Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Medlen W, 5-1 7 7 0 0 1 7 103 1.86 O’Flaherty H, 20 1 2 1 0 1 0 13 2.22 Kimbrel 1 0 0 0 0 3 12 1.17 Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Detwiler L, 7-6 5 1-3 7 2 2 1 4 78 3.25 Stammen 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 19 2.40 Gorzelanny 2 2 3 1 0 3 29 3.20 T—2:51. A—29,111 (41,487).
Diamondbacks 3, Marlins 2 (First Game) Miami G.Hernandez cf b-Dobbs ph-lf D.Solano 2b Reyes ss Ca.Lee 1b Stanton rf Ruggiano lf-cf J.Buck c Do.Murphy 3b Ja.Turner p a-Kearns ph Zambrano p Totals
AB 3 1 3 3 4 3 3 4 3 2 1 0 30
R 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2
H 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 5
BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2
BB 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 5
SO 2 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 8
Avg. .167 .302 .284 .286 .284 .289 .332 .199 .192 .000 .248 .176
Arizona AB R H BI BB SO Avg. G.Parra rf 4 2 2 0 0 0 .276 A.Hill 2b 3 1 2 3 0 0 .302 Kubel lf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .273 Goldschmidt 1b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .293 M.Montero c 3 0 1 0 0 1 .285 C.Young cf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .221 R.Wheeler 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .217 Elmore ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 .200 Skaggs p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Ziegler p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .333 D.Hernandez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.000 c-C.Johnson ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .272 Putz p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 28 3 5 3 0 5 Miami 020 000 000 — 2 5 0 Arizona 201 000 00x — 3 5 0 a-singled for Ja.Turner in the 7th. b-struck out for G.Hernandez in the 7th. c-grounded out for D.Hernandez in the 8th. LOB—Miami 6, Arizona 1. HR—Ruggiano (12), off Skaggs; A.Hill (18), off Ja.Turner. SB—G.Parra (13). DP—Arizona 1. Miami IP H R ER BB SO NP Ja.Turner L, 0-1 6 4 3 3 0 5 80 Zambrano 2 1 0 0 0 0 28 Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP Skaggs W, 1-0 6 2-3 3 2 2 5 4 99 Ziegler H, 9 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 9 D.Hernandez H, 19 1 0 0 0 0 2 9 Putz S, 25-28 1 1 0 0 0 1 15 T—2:20. A—17,239 (48,633).
ERA 4.50 4.22 ERA 2.70 2.31 2.33 3.02
Diamondbacks 3, Marlins 0 (Second Game) Miami G.Hernandez cf b-Petersen ph D.Solano 2b c-Dobbs ph Reyes ss Ca.Lee 1b Kearns rf Ruggiano lf Brantly c Do.Murphy 3b LeBlanc p a-Stanton ph M.Dunn p Webb p Totals
AB 3 1 3 1 4 4 3 2 3 3 2 1 0 0 30
R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
H 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 5
BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
SO 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 5
Avg. .160 .203 .285 .305 .287 .281 .242 .328 .118 .198 .125 .289 .000 .000
Arizona AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Pollock lf 3 1 1 0 1 1 .250 G.Parra rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .272 A.Hill 2b 3 1 1 0 1 0 .302 Goldschmidt 1b 4 1 2 1 0 1 .295 C.Young cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .221 C.Johnson 3b 3 0 1 1 0 1 .273 Nieves c 3 0 1 0 0 1 .302 Jo.McDonald ss 2 0 0 0 1 0 .243 Miley p 3 0 0 0 0 0 .220 Putz p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 29 3 7 2 3 5 Miami 000 000 000 — 0 5 0 Arizona 100 200 00x — 3 7 0 a-struck out for LeBlanc in the 8th. b-lined out for G.Hernandez in the 9th. c-doubled for D.Solano in the 9th. LOB—Miami 4, Arizona 5. 2B—Dobbs (7), Goldschmidt (36).SB—A.Hill (11). DP—Arizona 1. Miami IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA LeBlanc L, 2-3 7 5 3 2 3 4 102 2.51 M.Dunn 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 6 3.50 Webb 2-3 2 0 0 0 0 16 4.50 Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Miley W, 14-8 8 4 0 0 1 5 116 2.80 Putz S, 26-29 1 1 0 0 0 0 8 2.95 T—2:27. A—20,027 (48,633).
Giants 8, Dodgers 4 San Francisco Pagan cf Scutaro 2b Sandoval 3b B.Crawford ss Pence rf Arias ss-3b H.Sanchez c Belt 1b Christian lf M.Cain p Hensley p Affeldt p S.Casilla p Totals
AB 4 5 2 2 3 4 4 3 3 4 0 0 0 34
R 3 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8
H 2 2 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8
BI 0 0 2 0 0 5 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 8
BB 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 4
SO 0 1 1 0 2 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 7
Avg. .289 .285 .298 .245 .258 .280 .261 .261 .125 .167 .000 .000 .000
Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Victorino lf 5 0 1 0 0 2 .258 M.Ellis 2b 5 1 2 0 0 1 .260 Kemp cf 5 1 1 1 0 2 .331 Ethier rf 4 2 2 0 0 0 .278 H.Ramirez ss 4 0 1 1 0 2 .261 Loney 1b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .254 J.Wright p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 a-Uribe ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .182 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --L.Cruz 3b 4 0 2 2 0 0 .294 A.Ellis c 4 0 2 0 0 0 .277 Capuano p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .093 Sh.Tolleson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --R.De La Rosa p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --J.Rivera 1b 2 0 0 0 0 0 .237 Totals 37 4 12 4 1 8 San Francisco 300 003 200 — 8 8 0 Los Angeles 000 001 030 — 4 12 0 a-walked for J.Wright in the 8th. LOB—San Francisco 4, Los Angeles 8. 2B—Pagan (26), Scutaro (22), Arias 2 (10), M.Ellis 2 (13), Kemp (16), Ethier (30), A.Ellis (15). HR—Arias (3), off Capuano. (27). SB—Pagan (20). DP—San Francisco 1. San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA M.Cain W, 13-5 7 7 1 1 0 5 101 2.83 Hensley 0 2 2 2 0 0 6 3.68 Affeldt 1-3 1 1 1 1 1 14 3.02 S.Casilla 1 2-3 2 0 0 0 2 20 3.09 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Capuano L, 11-9 5 6 6 6 0 2 71 3.38 Sh.Tolleson 1 1 0 0 2 3 23 3.00 R.De La Rosa 2-3 0 2 2 2 0 20 27.00 J.Wright 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 15 3.91 Jansen 1 0 0 0 0 1 16 1.93 Capuano pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. Hensley pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. T—3:07. A—40,173 (56,000).
THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
49ers Continued from D1 Wasn’t this supposed to be awkward? Was it, at first, when Smith officially returned to Harbaugh’s nest with a three-year, $24 million deal on March 21? “No awkwardness,” Smith replied Wednesday. “Anyone who’s been around Coach Harbaugh realizes the great thing about him is he tells you what he’s thinking, good or bad. “He’s going to give you his honest opinion. You appreciate that, as someone who’s been a long time and played around coaches. You appreciate a guy telling you the truth.” The Harbaugh-Manning-Smith triangle took shape when Harbaugh took a clandestine trip March 13 to North Carolina and watched Manning throw passes. A wild week ensued, ending with Manning joining the Broncos and Smith re-signing with the 49ers. Harbaugh always has stated he kept Smith abreast of the 49ers’ spring fling with Manning. Smith has not publicly disputed that and even said he would have “relished” the chance to compete for his job against Manning. Just to be clear on the 49ers’ interest level in Manning, Harbaugh brought it up again May 30: “There’s a perception out there, and it’s an erroneous perception, that we were flirting with Peyton Manning,” Harbaugh said. “I keep hearing it over and over. It’s silly and it’s untrue. It’s phony. Even the perception that we were pursuing. We were evaluating.” Harbaugh then reiterated his endorsement that Smith is “our quarterback” and that the 49ers always intended to re-sign their 2005 top overall draft pick. Inside the locker room, there weren’t concerns about Smith’s psyche upon his return. “Alex has been through more than that here,” said cornerback Carlos Rogers, whose locker neighbors Smith’s. “I didn’t think that would faze him. ... Coach Harbaugh always said Alex is his guy. We wouldn’t have gone where we did last year without Alex.” Before Smith helped guide the 49ers to a 13-3 regular season and a NFC Championship game berth, his career started rough, and his first career start came against none other than Manning. Smith went nine of 23 for 74 yards with four interceptions and no touchdowns in that 28-3 loss to Manning’s Indianapolis Colts on Oct. 9, 2005. Smith still recalls Manning’s postgame pep talk: “He said, ‘If you want to feel good about yourself, go watch my start against the Patriots my rookie year.’ I guess it was bad.” Seven years later, Smith is getting called an “expert” in the 49ers’ scheme, as Harbaugh labeled him last week. Such lofty praise isn’t new. Harbaugh called Smith an elite, Pro Bowl-worthy quarterback last season. Offensive coordinator Greg Roman chimed in Wednesday on Smith’s increased understanding of the 49ers’ progressions: “He is super smart, savant-like at times and has great ideas. I suppose it’s like when you’re married the first couple months, you’re kind of still getting to know where the toothpaste goes and whatnot.” While Smith appreciates such compliments, he also admires how Harbaugh will be unsolicited in doling out praise to other teammates. “To have a coach that’s not going to publicly throw you under the bus or anything like that but comes out and supports you?” Smith said. “There’s a lot of things that go in practice and in games that people don’t see and/or get credit for.” Back in 1998, the NFL saw Manning enter the NFL and take a Colts job that had belonged to Harbaugh, who was traded to Baltimore before that April’s draft. This year, Manning didn’t take Smith’s job. Instead, Smith and Harbaugh are forging ahead without any signs of discord in arguably the 49ers’ most vital relationship.
Batting Continued from D1 It is a rule that has rarely been invoked and is mostly known for securing Tony Gwynn’s seventh batting title in 1996, when he had only 498 plate appearances. For every plate appearance a player falls short of qualification, a zero for one can be added to his statistics until the appearances threshold is reached. In Cabrera’s case, just one at-bat would qualify him for the title (presuming the Giants play 162 games, because qualification is based on achieving 3.1 plate appearances per team game). Adding that at-bat would lower his average to .3456 from .3464. (The third-place batter, Cabrera’s
Tiger Woods signs autographs after playing in the pro-am at the The Barclays golf tournament at Bethpage State Park in Farmingdale, N.Y., Wednesday Henny Ray Abrams / The Associated Press
Rivalry Continued from D1 It’s the first time Woods has faced a serious challenger who was younger than him. “I always wanted to be part of that conversation,” Woods said after his pro-am round at Bethpage Black. “That’s the neat thing about what Jack had done. He crossed generations, and when you’re a part of that conversation for the better part of 25 years, that’s saying something. I was kind of hoping when I started off my career I’d be part of that conversation for that length of time.” McIlroy, coming off an eightshot win at Kiawah Island for his second major, considers it a compliment that he would be mentioned alongside Woods, and he is respectful of everything Woods has accomplished in 17 incomparable years on the PGA Tour. But the 23-year-old from Northern Ireland can have a little fun. Woods and McIlroy will be playing together the opening two rounds of The Barclays because the tour groups players based on their FedEx Cup standings during the playoffs. Woods is No. 1 for the fourth time in the six-year history of this series, while McIlroy is No. 3. Zach Johnson will be along for the ride. McIlroy was asked if he looked forward to playing with Woods, and how much he would love to face him next month in Sunday singles in the Ryder Cup at Medinah. “It really focuses you from the get-go, a pairing like that,” he said. “I feel every time I’ve played with Tiger, he’s sort of brought the best out of me. I really feel focused and obviously want to play well. I’m looking forward to it. I really enjoy his company. I know we’ll have a good time out there.” About that point, he noticed Woods had come into the room and was waiting by the back door. “I’m keeping him waiting here,” McIlroy said. “So I’ll stop talking about him.” Not so fast. About that singles match at the Ryder Cup everyone would
Kearney Continued from D1 Still, Kearney was nursing a one-stroke lead with three holes to play. But he saved his best golf for last. He birdied the par-4 17th hole and the par-5 18th hole to put the tournament away. “I finished strong, and that’s always a nice feeling,” Kearney said. “It was a grind out there, and everybody was battling. And it got real close. “I just kept trying to give myself chances, and luckily I got a couple to go and the last few holes. That really helped bringing it into the house.” Recovering from a wrist injury that all but wiped out his 2011 season, Kearney has practiced sparingly this season.
PGA Tour FedEx Cup standings The top 125 players in the PGA Tour’s postseason; the top 100 after The Barclays will move on to the next event (with points accumulated this season): 1. Tiger Woods 2. Jason Dufner 3. Rory McIlroy 4. Zach Johnson 5. Bubba Watson 6. Hunter Mahan 7. Carl Pettersson 8. Keegan Bradley 9. Matt Kuchar 10. Steve Stricker 11. Ernie Els 12. Justin Rose 13. Webb Simpson 14. Phil Mickelson 15. Scott Piercy 16. Luke Donald 17. Jim Furyk 18. Rickie Fowler 19. Brandt Snedeker 20. Johnson Wagner 21. Bill Haas 22. Kyle Stanley 23. Bo Van Pelt 24. Robert Garrigus 25. John Huh 26. Dustin Johnson 27. Graeme McDowell 28. Marc Leishman 29. Ben Curtis 30. Mark Wilson 31. Martin Laird 32. Adam Scott 33. Sergio Garcia 34. Louis Oosthuizen 35. Bud Cauley 36. Charlie Wi 37. John Senden 38. Kevin Na 39. Ben Crane 40. Seung-Yul Noh 41. Brendon de Jonge 42. Ken Duke
2,269 2,110 2,092 2,019 1,777 1,739 1,691 1,670 1,600 1,456 1,447 1,426 1,424 1,373 1,304 1,294 1,284 1,246 1,194 1,181 1,181 1,177 1,175 1,155 1,123 1,097 1,037 1,003 997 986 976 966 935 928 902 901 867 866 849 827 815 776
43. Jimmy Walker 44. Ryan Palmer 45. Spencer Levin 46. John Rollins 47. Jonathan Byrd 48. Brian Davis 49. Nick Watney 50. D.A. Points 51. Lee Westwood 52. J.J. Henry 53. Matt Every 54. Tim Clark 55. Ian Poulter 56. Cameron Tringale 57. Vijay Singh 58. Jeff Overton 59. Charles Howell III 60. Troy Matteson 61. Ted Potter, Jr. 62. Padraig Harrington 63. Sean O’Hair 64. Ryan Moore 65. Aaron Baddeley 66. Michael Thompson 67. Charley Hoffman 68. Geoff Ogilvy 69. David Toms 70. Kevin Stadler 71. Sang-Moon Bae 72. Pat Perez 73. Rory Sabbatini 74. William McGirt 75. Blake Adams 76. George McNeill 77. K.J. Choi 78. Greg Chalmers 79. Dicky Pride 80. Chris Kirk 81. John Merrick 82. J.B. Holmes 83. Daniel Summerhays 84. Greg Owen
763 745 735 732 732 728 726 714 713 713 711 707 698 689 669 667 666 662 647 646 644 635 635 634 628 624 623 620 604 603 602 602 599 599 597 589 586 574 572 568 567 556
85. Martin Flores 86. Scott Stallings 87. Harris English 88. John Mallinger 89. Will Claxton 90. Charl Schwartzel 91. Chad Campbell 92. Tom Gillis 93. Andres Romero 94. Josh Teater 95. Fredrik Jacobson 96. Bryce Molder 97. Brian Harman 98. Ricky Barnes 99. Chris Stroud 100. Roberto Castro 101. Jonas Blixt 102. Tommy Gainey 103. Bob Estes 104. Kevin Chappell 105. Davis Love III 106. Graham DeLaet 107. Jeff Maggert 108. David Hearn 109. Kevin Streelman 110. Brian Gay 111. Gary Christian 112. Robert Allenby 113. Jason Day 114. Trevor Immelman 115. James Driscoll 116. Rod Pampling 117. Henrik Stenson 118. Troy Kelly 119. Billy Mayfair 120. Colt Knost 121. Harrison Frazar 122. Jerry Kelly 123. Boo Weekley 124. Heath Slocum 125. Jason Bohn
556 554 549 543 530 519 517 511 506 506 500 495 493 489 484 477 470 464 458 447 443 441 433 432 424 424 422 417 417 411 408 398 394 394 393 390 387 385 365 365 363
love to see? “Yeah, I’d love to go out there,” McIlroy said. “I’d love Tiger to go out first and kick his (behind).” Woods joined in the spontaneous laughter. McIlroy finished up his interview a few minutes later, and as he moved away from the table, he waited by the door until Woods walked by and they slapped hands. If a rivalry blossoms, all indications are it will be a friendly one. There was a tense moment two years ago, when Woods’ game was at its lowest level and McIlroy was quoted as saying he would love to face Woods in the Ryder Cup unless his game rapidly improved. Woods was coming off the highest score of his professional career. It was reminiscent of when Stephen Ames poked fun of Woods’ accuracy before they faced each other in the first round of the Match Play Championship. Woods won, 9 and 8. This was different. Woods’
initial reaction to the comment was, “At least Rory said, ‘Unless my game improves.’” They didn’t play each other that week in Wales. Now, the anticipation is building for the first round today at Bethpage Black, where Woods won the U.S. Open in 2002 and tied for sixth when it last came to Long Island during a rainy week in 2009. The Black doesn’t need to have a U.S. Open to be a tough test. The greens are not as firm. The rough is not as dense, though it still should be avoided. Woods and McIlroy in the same group has taken focus away from the start of these playoffs. The top 100 in the standings advance to the second round at the Deutsche Bank Championship, and then the top 70 move on to the BMW Championship. The top 30 reach the FedEx Cup finale at the Tour Championship, and the winner gets $10 million, the richest payoff in golf.
But feeling better, he spent last week practicing “more than in the last two years,” Kearney said. That showed with a firstround 63 that tied the course record and helped him build a five-stroke advantage. “When you have a five-stroke lead, you feel like you have a target on your head the whole way through,” said Kearney, who entered Wednesday’s round with a two-stroke lead over two golfers. “It almost puts a little bit more pressure on you carrying that around, than it does feeling like you’re behind.” Kearney and his wife, Jodi, are expecting the birth of their first child in October. So for Kearney, the win could not come soon enough. “It’s nice to get the win under
your belt before the last big one of the year,” Kearney said. Jeff Fought, director of golf at Black Butte Ranch, finished at 2 over and in a tie for 40th place. But this was Kearney’s week; he will cash a $7,000 check for the win. Though it is his first major win in the section, it has not been for a lack of contention. Kearney has finished in the top five of the Northwest Open the past three years, including a playoff loss in the 2009 tournament. And that made this week all the more sweet for Kearney. “I’ve been close, but I just haven’t got it done,” Kearney said. “I was really able to get over that hump this week. So that was nice.”
teammate Buster Posey, is far behind the two leaders.) Many have called for an exception in Cabrera’s case to prevent him from winning the batting title regardless of how McCutchen finishes, but Major League Baseball confirmed that in Cabrera’s case, 10.22(a) applies and his batting average would stand as recorded, regardless of the suspension. Cabrera, who was named the MVP of the All-Star Game last month, would have been ineligible to play in that game if the suspension had come barely a month earlier. An addition to the collective bargaining agreement last year prevents players from participating in the All-Star Game if they have been suspended at any point be-
fore the game, including the previous offseason. But the penalties regarding suspensions end there and do not currently include any provisions that erase recorded statistics. There is plenty of precedent on baseball’s side for preserving Cabrera’s statistics. For a sport that has had its share of scandals since its origins, it has never expunged a players’ records or taken away their titles because of a suspension. Most famously, Pete Rose, baseball’s career hits leader, admitted to gambling on games he participated in, a violation of MLB’s Rule 21(d), which carries a mandated lifetime ban. To this day, Rose is credited with all of his 4,256 hits. The 1910 American League batting race, which was tainted by conspira-
— Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com
D5
G O LF
Augusta National rarely bends, even for a president • The addition of female members shows course’s slow rate of change By Bill Pennington New York Times News Service
Custom and ritual have ruled Augusta National Golf Club for 80 years, and chief among those traditions has been an iron-willed chairman with almost complete authority, an obsessive desire for secrecy and eccentric determination to be different. The most powerful forces on earth have not been able to dissuade Augusta National’s leadership at times. In 1956, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, a club member, rose to address a meeting of Augusta National’s board of governors. Eisenhower insisted that the club cut down a 65-foot loblolly pine tree on the left of the 17th hole that he found particularly vexing to his game. As the well-known story goes, Clifford Roberts, the longtime club chairman, stood up and declared Eisenhower out of order. “Meeting adjourned,” Roberts announced and left the room. The tree is still alongside the 17th hole. It is not the only thing that has remained the same at Augusta National. Discreet, prudent and exceedingly wary selfrule has always been the operating principle at the club, where the core members are not Georgians, but outsiders. Of the roughly 300 members, only about 25 are from Augusta. And the majority of those out-of-state members visit the place only three to five times a year. The two new members announced Monday are outsiders, too, in more ways than one. Condoleezza Rice, the former Secretary of State who is now a professor at Stanford, and Darla Moore, a South Carolina-based financier, became the first women to join Augusta National. For a renowned golf club, Augusta National is unlike most any other. It has few of the usual trappings of a country club, with neither a pool nor tennis courts and only a handful of social gatherings annually. It closes each year for five months beginning in May. Inside Augusta National’s 365 acres, everything is punctiliously groomed, with nothing out of place. Plants are grouped by number and measured twice a year. The hundreds of trees are assessed not just for their health but for how their limbs might spread and affect play. There is a vast, subterranean ventilation system for the grass, which, unlike a lawn or a ball field, is always mowed in exactly the same direction. The meticulousness extends to the interior of the club building as well, where every picture is hung on two hooks so no picture is askew. During the Masters, cellophane sandwich wrappings sold to spectators — persistently called patrons by the club — are green so they will blend into the grass if dropped. The members are called greencoats locally, alluding to the green sport jacket awarded to winners of the Masters. That is because members also wear the green coats, but never outside the club. Taking a green jacket off the club’s grounds is forbidden by internal doctrine. Expulsion from the club would be the penalty if someone did. Bobby Jones, a worldwide golfing legend and Atlanta resident, founded the club in 1932, but his friend Roberts, a Wall Street financier, raised the money to build the club. He then ran it as his fief. Roberts’ impact was most felt on the Masters tournament since he alone approved and rejected the television broadcasters, barring some not just for what they did or did not say but also for personal peccadilloes like their choices in ties, shoes or hairstyles. Roberts dictated the camera locations for the holes and decided which holes could be shown and when. Almost everyone found Roberts unbearably autocratic, but his Masters became the most prized and watched tournament in golf. From the beginning, Roberts actively recruited corporate chiefs as members. But these men of power were not given power to run the club. That remained Roberts’ job, and when he died in 1977 by committing suicide on the club grounds, the club charter was rewritten to put an executive committee in charge of most Augusta National business. But a quorum of only three members is necessary to establish policy in many cases. Members were told repeatedly to exercise circumspection and discretion. When one member, Thomas H. Wyman, a former chief executive at CBS and a 25-year Augusta National member, resigned because the club would not admit a female member during the Martha Burk-led campaign of 2002, the club barely acknowledged it. It was not much different when Eisenhower boldly took the floor. He was ignored.
cy, may be relevant. In that season’s final two games, Jack O’Connor, the player-manager of the St. Louis Browns, conspired to help Nap Lajoie of the Cleveland Naps get the hits necessary to surpass Ty Cobb for the batting title. Lajoie went eight for nine in the two games, bunting repeatedly to third base, where the fielder was purposely playing deep; but Lajoie was ruled safe by error in one at-bat, giving Cobb the title, .385 to .384. O’Connor and Harry Howell, a Browns coach, were barred from baseball for life for their parts in the conspiracy. Whether Lajoie was involved or not, his batting average remained intact. In 1981, when it was discovered
that one of Cobb’s games during the 1910 season had been recorded twice, giving him an extra two hits in three at-bats, his average was lowered to .383, seemingly giving Lajoie the title retroactively. But regardless of the evidence, Bowie Kuhn, then baseball’s commissioner, refused to strip Cobb of the title. This time, there is no plan for such interference from the commissioner’s office. Baseball purists unable to stomach the thought of Cabrera’s being recognized as the National League’s top hitter seemingly have no options in terms of punishing Cabrera beyond the 50-game suspension. All that is left for them to do is root for McCutchen.
D6
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
H U N T I NG & F ISH I NG
H & F C
FISHING REPORT
Angling good throughout Central Oregon and beyond
Please email Hunting & Fishing event information to sports@ bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event� on our website at bendbulletin.com. Items are published on a spaceavailability basis, and should be submitted at least 10 days before the event.
FISHING
Here is the weekly fishing report for selected areas in and around Central Oregon, provided by fisheries biologists for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife: ANTELOPE FLAT RESERVOIR: No recent reports, but we expect fishing to be slower with the warm weather. Boat anglers will most likely be more successful than bank anglers. BIG LAVA LAKE: No recent reports, but fishing should be good. ODFW is currently removing invasive tui chubs from Lava Lake. The chub removal program is designed to reduce competition with game species and increase the size of trout. CLEAR LAKE RESERVOIR: Water levels in the reservoir will be dropping as irrigation demand increases. Trout fishing should remain good, as long as the reservoir permits good access. CRANE PRAIRIE RESERVOIR: High temperatures will likely push trout into the old river channels. CRESCENT LAKE: Kokanee fishing has been good. CROOKED RIVER BELOW BOWMAN DAM: Fishing for trout has been good. DAVIS LAKE: Water is much higher than normal and all boat ramps are accessible. Please note this is a fly-fishing only lake. Please check your synopsis for the regulations for this water body. DESCHUTES RIVER (Mouth to the Pelton Regulating Dam): Summer steelhead fishing in the lower 25 miles of the Deschutes is good and should only get better as August progresses. Anglers are also reminded that the river opened Aug. 1 to the harvest of fall chinook. DESCHUTES RIVER (Lake Billy Chinook to Bend): No recent reports, but there should be good fishing for rainbow and brown trout. Rainbow trout average 10 to 16 inches, while brown trout up to 26 inches are available. Anglers will find better access downstream of Lower Bridge. HOSMER LAKE: Open to fishing and annual population sampling indicates that Atlantic salmon and brook trout populations are healthy. Fishing on Hosmer is restricted to fly fishing with barbless hooks. LAKE BILLY CHINOOK: Fishing for smallmouth bass should be great right now. Fishing for kokanee has slowed a bit, but anglers are still catching good numbers of fish. Kokanee are averaging about 10 to 11 inches long. METOLIUS RIVER: Trout fishing has been good. Insect hatches should offer lots of opportunities for good dry-fly fishing. NORTH TWIN: No recent reports but earlier angler reports indicated better than average fishing. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: No recent reports. With the warm water temperature, the best fishing will be for bass, crappie and bullhead. Trout may still be caught but it will be more difficult than in the spring and fall. PINE HOLLOW RESERVOIR: Warm water temperatures may hinder success. Successful anglers will fish early morning in the cooler portions of the reservoir. PRINEVILLE RESERVOIR: Fishing for bass, crappie and bullhead catfish should be good. Anglers are reporting more bass and larger smallmouth bass than in recent years. Anglers have reported catching larger trout than in recent years. PRINEVILLE YOUTH FISHING POND: Anglers should target bass since the water is too warm for trout. It is unlikely that any trout exist in the pond now. SOUTH TWIN LAKE: Fishing is good. The lake was treated last fall to remove bullhead catfish and stickleback and has been restocked with catchable and trophy fish. WICKIUP RESERVOIR: Fishing is good, with opportunities for large kokanee.
Gary Lewis / For The Bulletin
John Warren, of Westfir, traces fresh black bear prints on a hunt in the Willamette River drainage.
Autumn Continued from D1 Now, the rifle was back in the field on a ranch outside of Roseburg. It would be hard to guess how many bushytails it accounted for in the past 66 years, but you can bet that few youngsters were as enthusiastic as young Emmett when he brought his first one to hand. One of the best ways to sharpen up for fall seasons is with a summer hunt for ground squirrels, black bear or coyotes. Aug. 1 marked the opener of the general bear season and the year’s second case of poison oak. In the summer, a bear makes its living on new growth and newborn deer and elk, but as the berries ripen the bears turn to a diet of huckleberries, blackberries and other fruits. In late August and early September bears will be concentrated in the berry fields, where the living is easy. For a coyote hunt, August, September and October offer good calling opportunities, as these desert dogs have not been hunted much over the past few months. Coyotes that have feasted on antelope and deer fawns and elk calves can be tempted with an electronic fawn distress call or a mouth call employed with a decoy. For those who didn’t draw controlled deer or elk tags east of the Cascades, there are options. A hunter can still buy over-the-counter tags for Western Oregon deer and general Cascade elk rifle hunts.
For the bird hunter, Sept. 1 marks the beginning of dove season and the kickoff of grouse season statewide. West of the Cascades, Sept. 1 is the opener for California quail and mountain quail hunts. For youngsters ages 9 through 13 who are wishing to hunt for the first time, details for the Mentored Youth Hunter Program can be found in the 2012 Oregon Big Game Regulations. Hunter education classes can be found online at https:// or.outdoorcentral.us/or/License/Classes. Now is the time to practice. Shoot offhand, from improvised rests, from sitting, kneeling and prone positions. Shoot at close range and out to 300 yards and beyond. The Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association (COSSA) will host its annual Hunter’s Sight-In Workshop on Aug. 25 and 26 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day. Range officers will provide assistance to adjust scope or iron sights. Targets, shooting benches, a covered firing line and doughnuts are provided. There is a $7 fee per gun for nonmembers, $2 for members. Bring eye and ear protection. To find the COSSA facility, travel east from Bend on U.S. Highway 20 toward Burns. The COSSA Shooting Park is located half a mile past milepost 24 on the north side of the highway. — Gary Lewis is the host of Adventure Journal and author of “John Nosler — Going Ballistic,� “Black Bear Hunting,� “Hunting Oregon� and other titles. Contact Lewis at www.GaryLewisOutdoors.com.
Bloom’s Para Ant, courtesy Orvis at the Old Mill.
FREE FLY-FISHING LESSONS: Through the end of September, the Orvis Company retail store in Bend will offer free lessons every Tuesday, Thursday and MOST Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon; RSVP’s are necessary; contact the Bend Orvis store at 541-312-8200 to register; www.orvis.com/bend. CENTRAL OREGON BASS CLUB: Meets on the first Tuesday of each month at Abby’s Pizza in Redmond; 7 to 9 p.m.; new members welcome; www.cobc.us. DESCHUTES CHAPTER OF TROUT UNLIMITED: Meets on the first Monday of each month at the ONDA offices in Bend; meeting starts at 6:45 p.m. for members to meet and greet, and discuss what the chapter is up to; 541-306-4509; communications@deschutestu. org; www.deschutestu.org. BEND CASTING CLUB: The Bend Casting Club is a group of local fly anglers from around Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month, from 6 to 8 p.m., at the Orvis Casting Course in Bend’s Old Mill District; 541-306-4509 or bendcastingclub@gmail.com. THE SUNRIVER ANGLERS CLUB: Meets on the third Thursday of each month (except July and August) at 7 p.m. at the Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center (SHARC); contact www. sunriveranglers.org. THE CENTRAL OREGON FLYFISHERS CLUB: Meets on the third Wednesday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Road; contact: www.coflyfishers.org.
HUNTING LEARN THE ART OF TRACKING ANIMALS: Guided walks and workshops with a certified professional tracker; learn to identify and interpret tracks, sign and scat of the animals in Central Oregon; two or more walks per month all year; $35; ongoing, 8 a.m. to noon; 541-633-7045; dave@wildernesstracking.com; wildernesstracking.com. THE BEND CHAPTER OF THE OREGON HUNTERS ASSOCIATION: Meets the second Wednesday of each month at 7 p.m. at the King Buffet at the north end of the Wagner Mall, across from Robberson Ford in Bend; contact: ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OF THE OREGON HUNTERS ASSOCIATION: Meets the first Tuesday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Prineville
Fire Hall, 405 N. Belknap St.; contact: 447-5029. THE REDMOND CHAPTER OF THE OREGON HUNTERS ASSOCIATION: Meets the third Tuesday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Redmond VFW Hall.
SHOOTING COSSA KIDS: The Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association’s NRA Youth Marksmanship Program is every third Saturday of the month from 10 a.m. to noon at the COSSA Range; the range is east of Bend off U.S. Highway 20 at milepost 24; contact Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. BEND TRAP CLUB: Trap shooting, five-stand and skeet shooting are all open Thursdays and Sundays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m; located east of Bend off U.S. Highway 20 at milepost 30; contact Bill Grafton at 541-383-1428 or visit www. bendtrapclub.com. CENTRAL OREGON SPORTING CLAYS AND HUNTING PRESERVE: 13-station, 100-target course and 5-stand open Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to dusk, and Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 11 a.m. to dusk (closed Wednesday); located at 9020 South Highway 97, Redmond; www.birdandclay.com or 541-383-0001. REDMOND ROD & GUN CLUB: Archery, pistol, and rifle are Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Saturdays, and Sundays from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; skeet is Tuesdays and Sundays from 10 a.m. to about 2 p.m.; sporting clays is the first and third Saturdays of each month from 10 a.m. to about 2 p.m.; trap is Wednesdays from 10 a.m. to about 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. to closing, and Sundays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; non-members are welcome; check www.rrandgc.com for events and closures; Hunter SightIn Days, Saturdays and Sundays from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. (afternoon only on Sept. 22); for questions or directions, www.rrandgc.com or call Gary at 541-504-1513. PINE MOUNTAIN POSSE: Cowboy action shooting club that shoots at the Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range on U.S. Highway 20 at milepost 24; second Sunday of each month; 541-3188199 or www.pinemountainposse. com. HORSE RIDGE PISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns at the Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range on U.S. Highway 20 at milepost 24; first and third Sunday of each month at 10 a.m.; 541-408-7027 or www.hrp-sass. com.
FLY-TYING CORNER Figure there are up to 10 quadrillion ants alive in the world today. Trout are going to eat them, anytime between May and October. And one ant pattern is not good enough. Don’t fish the high lakes without a selection of ant patterns in your terrestrial box. Bloom’s Para Ant is easy to tie and alights softly on the water with a profile that suggests easy protein. Use a long, light leader and dress the fly with floatant. If the fly sinks, keep fishing and watch for the swirl. Tie this pattern with brown thread on a No. 10-14 dry-fly hook. Build the body with burnt orange dubbing. Tie in an underwing of yellow Antron then tie a wingpost of pink Antron. Tie a head of burnt orange. Finish with a brown hackle wrapped parachute style.
Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin
—Gary Lewis
Clam season draws great expectations in Pacific Northwest • Razor clam populations are up again in Washington after a slow season in 2011-’12 By Mark Yuasa The Seattle Times
SEATTLE — The coastal razor clam seasons are just around the corner, and expectations are high heading into fall and should remain that way well into spring. “The razor clam populations are up overall, and on some beaches they’re up considerably,� said Dan Ayres, the head Fish and Wildlife coastal shellfish manager for the state of Washington. “The good news is we’ll see a lot more digging opportunities on all the beaches (except for Kalaloch) than we’ve seen in a long time. “The only downside is a lot of the clams are new to the fishery, and are on the small size, but we’ll still have some bigger clams mixed in. The smaller clams will grow rather quickly, and it’ll be a
stupendous season in winter and spring.� That is a much brighter picture compared with when the 2011-12 season began, and state Fish and Wildlife shellfish managers were skeptical the season would make it to this past spring. The reason behind that skepticism was a major decline in clams at a few locations, particularly at Copalis Beach. However, bad winter weather meant smaller crowds at beaches and fewer clams harvested, which resulted in some beaches staying open for clams until May. A total of 195,000 digger trips were made last season with about 2.6 million harvested for an average of 13.2 clams per person (the first 15 clams dug regardless of size or condition is a daily limit). That compares to the 2010-
11 season, when 244,500 digger trips were made with 3.2 million dug for a 13.1 average. The harvest levels this past season at Twin Harbors, like Copalis, were lower than in the past few years. Long Beach saw a standard season. Mocrocks, however, produced almost 100,000 more clams dug than the previous 10-year average. Past spawning success at Mocrocks has led to an increased level of recruit-sized clams, and the current population is just above the five-year average for both adult and juvenile clams. Early stock assessments at Long Beach showed a strong abundance of young clams. Marine toxin levels for razor clams have remained low on all beaches except for a high level of Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning (PSP) at Mukkaw Bay near Neah Bay. “It is not indicative to anywhere else on the coast, and hopefully just an isolated event,� said Ayres. “The level
was over 500 (parts per million) and the action level is 80. The last time we had such an event where all the beaches were closed was back in 2002. “We should have final word on seasons by the end of September or early October. There are a couple of good low tide series at end of October. They occur late in the evening, so we’ll be doing some digging in the dark.� State Fish and Wildlife plans to have its coastal razor clam assessment up for public review on its website (http:// wdfw.wa.gov/) by the second
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week of September. No public meetings are planned; comments can be sent via email. “Since we’ve got the extra clams available, that will give us a lot more latitude to probably announce the digs (for winter and spring) all at once,� Ayres said.
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Stock listings, E2-3 Calendar, E4 Permits, E4
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
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IN BRIEF ‘Conflict mineral’ rule OK’d by SEC The Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday voted 32 to adopt a controversial rule requiring new disclosures by public companies regarding their use of “conflict minerals,” mined in violent Central African nations, that are essential to the manufacture of high-tech devices and other products. The rules, advocated by human rights groups, were mandated by Congress in the 2010 financial reform law. Lawmakers wanted to reduce the use of key minerals — gold, tin, tungsten and tantalum — as a source of financing for armies battling in Congo and neighboring countries. Companies will have until May 31, 2014, to make their first filings about whether the minerals they use are “conflict free” — meaning they did not finance or benefit armed groups.
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Moskovitz sheds Facebook shares Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz shed 450,000 shares of Facebook in the past few days for proceeds of about $9 million — a tiny chunk of his total stake. Moskovitz was Mark Zuckerberg’s Harvard roommate when they founded Facebook in 2004. He disclosed in a regulatory filing late Tuesday that he sold the shares on Friday, Monday and Tuesday in blocks of 150,000. Moskovitz, 28, left Facebook in 2008 and started Asana, whose software helps manage projects. He did not sell any stock in Facebook’s IPO. He still owns more than 133 million shares. — From wire reports
Growth sectors Change in the number of selected businesses in Oregon, 2000 to 2010 ’00 Dentist offices Amusement parks Fast-food restaurants
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• New study also shows diminished hopes for mid-tier Americans By Hope Yen The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The middle class is receiving less of America’s total income, declining to its smallest share in decades as median wages stagnate in the economic doldrums and wealth concentrates at the top. A study released Wednesday by the Pew Research Center highlights diminished hopes, too, for the roughly 50 percent of adults
defined as middle class, with household incomes ranging from $39,000 to $118,000. The report describes this mid-tier group as suffering its “worst decade in modern history,” having fallen backward in income for the first time since the end of World War II. Three years after the recession technically ended, middle-class Americans are still feeling the economic pinch, with most saying they
have been forced to reduce spending in the past year. And fewer now believe that hard work will allow them to get ahead in life. Families are now more likely to say their children’s economic future will be the same or worse than their own. In all, 85 percent of middle class Americans say it is more difficult now than a decade ago to maintain their standard of living. Some 62 percent say a lot of the blame
lies with Congress. A slight majority say a lot lies with banks and other financial institutions. Just 8 percent blame the middle class itself. “The job market is changing, our living standards are falling in the middle, and middle-income parents are now afraid that their children will be worse off than they are,” says Timothy Smeeding, a University of Wisconsin-Madison economics professor who specializes in income inequality. See Middle class / E3
Alex McDougall / The Bulletin
Shara Howard and Larissa Pless eat sandwiches at the new Mother’s Juice Café location off U.S. Highway 20 in Bend. Mother’s is one of eight Bend restaurants to add a new location.
Bend restaurants are branching out • 8 eateries have decided to open new locations in different parts of the city By Jordan Novet The Bulletin
The dining sector in Bend has hit a growth spurt, with eight restaurants adding locations this year or planning to do so in the coming months. Restaurant operators cite a variety reasons, including newly available financing, low rent and job creation. But the most popular one is to get new business from people who tend to focus on specific geographic areas. “You feel like there are people that mostly stay in their area or frequent some areas more than others,” said Chris Martin, who opened a Togo’s Eateries Inc. sandwich shop
Pete Erickson / The Bulletin file photo
Brother Jon’s opened its Alehouse in downtown Bend earlier this year.
near U.S. Highway 20 and Dean Swift Road in east Bend in February and plans to open a second one in the Cascade Village Shopping Center on the city’s north end, following the closure of a Quiznos sandwich shop.
The north side is a “destination shopping area,” and Togo’s wants to capitalize on the resulting traffic, Martin said. Beside Togo’s, Dairy Queen is looking north, too, with plans to open on Northeast Third Street and Empire
Boulevard. Baldy’s Barbeque, Mother’s Juice Café and Croutons are all opening up restaurant locations on Bend’s east side. La Rosa is venturing into southwest Bend. And Brother Jon’s and Hola! have decided to head downtown. “I think there is a trend,” said Scott Wicklund, principal broker of The Wicklund Group, a Bend commercial real estate company. “It’s just got to be the right location and the right price, so that they can get the return on investment.” The former home of both Decoy Bar and Grill and Bond Street Grill on Northwest Bond Street and Northwest Greenwood Avenue downtown, for example, has gotten plenty of tenant improvement in recent years, which made the property more attractive for the Brother Jon’s Alehouse, Wicklund said. See Restaurants / E3
cliff’ would bring on a recession By Don Lee Tribune Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — The Congressional Budget Office issued new dire projections for the U.S. economy on Wednesday, warning that if lawmakers failed to act, the large-scale fiscal tightening set to occur next year will push the nation into a deeper downturn than previously thought and cause the unemployment rate to jump back up to about 9 percent. The nonpartisan CBO, in its semi-annual budget outlook, forecast that the economy would shrink 0.5 percent next year if lawmakers failed to avert the so-called fiscal cliff and allowed expiring tax cuts, mandatory spending reductions and other policy changes to take effect in January. Previously, the agency projected that economic output would contract in the first half of next year, probably sending the nation into recession, but still manage to grow 0.5 percent for the year. The new outlook says the unemployment rate would rise to 9.1 percent by the end of 2013, up from 8.2 percent forecast for the fourth quarter of this year. The latest actual jobless figure was 8.3 percent in July. On the other hand, with higher taxes, broad federal spending cuts as well as the end of the payroll tax holiday, the nation’s budget picture would look significantly better next year. If Congress did nothing, the CBO said, the deficit will fall to $641 billion in fiscal 2013, which begins Oct. 1. That would be down substantially from a deficit of $1.1 trillion now seen for the current fiscal year. The nation’s deficit has exceeded $1 trillion for four straight years, and the accumulated federal debt held by the public this year will reach 73 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product, or the total value of the goods and services produced, according to the CBO. That’s the highest level since 1950, the office said, and about double the debt-to-GDP ratio at the end of 2007 before the deep recession. Predictably, the updated budget and economic outlook added fuel to the election-year battle over government policies on spending and taxes. President Barack Obama and many congressional Democrats want to let the tax cuts enacted under President George W. Bush expire for wealthier Americans to bring down deficits, while Republicans want to keep all tax rates low, saying increased taxes for high-income households would hurt the economy.
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Some boomers to their mortgage: ‘Til death do us part’ By Donna Gehrke-White Sun Sentinel
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Zoos & botanical gardens
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Middle class share of income shrinks CBO: ‘Fiscal
Fed hints it may take new action Federal Reserve officials signaled Wednesday that they may be ready to launch a new bond buying program when they next meet in September. The goal would be to try to lower long-term interest rates to encourage more borrowing and spending. Minutes of the July 31-Aug. 1 policy meeting released Wednesday don’t explicitly say what action the Fed would most likely take. But they hint that the central bank is preparing to begin more bond buying.
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Source: U.S. Census Bureau Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — More baby boomers are retiring while still paying mortgages — and some expect to make house payments into their 90s, mortgage brokers and financial planners say. It’s part of a trend: Many current and future retirees are opting not to follow the
traditional golden rule of paying off their home before their last day at work so they will PERSONAL have less in FINANCE expenses retirement. “It’s a very hot topic,” said Howard Dvorkin, founder of the Fort Lauderdale-based Consolidated Credit Counseling
Services, which is now seeing more seniors grappling with large debt loads, including mortgages. In the past two decades, seniors have increasingly retired while still making house payments, Dvorkin said. Seniors usually are the ones who own their homes outright, because they have had more time to pay off
mortgages. But some mortgage-paying retirees are well-off and want to keep their money in better-paying investments, financial planners say. In fact, financial planner Anderson Wozny, whose firm has offices in Boca Raton, Fla., and Miami, recommends retiree clients keep making their monthly
payments. “A mortgage is a valuable tool,” he said, allowing retirees to keep cash on hand to pay for home repairs and other emergencies. Many homeowners have gotten into trouble after plowing their savings into paying off their homes, he added. “Then they don’t have money,” he said. See Mortgages / E4
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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
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A-B-C-D AAR 0.30 ABB Ltd 0.71 ABM 0.58 ACE Ltd 1.92 ACI Wwde AES Corp 0.16 AFLAC 1.32 AG MtgeIT 2.80 AGCO AGIC Cv 1.08 AGL Res 1.84 AK Steel AMC Net AOL ASML Hld 0.59 AT&T Inc 1.76 vjATP O&G AU Optron AVG Tch n AVX Cp 0.30 Aarons 0.06 Aastrom AbtLab 2.04 AberFitc 0.70 AbdAsPac 0.42 Abiomed Abraxas AcaciaTc AcadiaHl n AcadiaPh AcadiaRlt 0.72 Accenture 1.35 AccoBrds AccretivH Accuray Achillion AcmePkt AcordaTh ActiveNet ActivsBliz 0.18 Actuant 0.04 Acxiom AdobeSy Adtran 0.36 AdvAuto 0.24 AdvEnId AMD AdvSemi 0.11 AdventSoft Adventrx AdvActBear AdvisBd s AecomTch Aegon 0.25 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 AirTrnsp Aircastle 0.60 Airgas 1.60 AkamaiT Akorn AlaskAir s AlaskCom 0.20 Albemarle 0.80 AlcatelLuc Alcoa 0.12 Alere AlexREE 2.04 AlexcoR g Alexion Alexza rs AlignTech Alkermes AllegTch 0.72 Allergan 0.20 AlliData AlliancOne AlliBInco 0.48 AlliBern 0.85 AlliantEgy 1.80 AlldNevG AllisonT n 0.24 AllosThera AllotComm AllscriptH Allstate 0.88 AlmadnM g AlnylamP AlonUSA 0.16 AlphaNRs AlpGlbDD 0.72 AlpGPPrp 0.60 AlpTotDiv 0.66 AlpAlerMLP 1.00 AlteraCp lf 0.40 AlterraCap 0.64 Altisrce n Altria 1.64 AmBev 1.15 Amarin Amazon Amdocs Amedisys Ameren 1.60 Amerigrp AFTxE 0.50 AMovilL 0.28 AmAxle AmCampus 1.35 ACapAgy 5.00 AmCapLtd ACapMtg 3.60 AEagleOut 0.44 AEP 1.88 AEqInvLf 0.12 AmExp 0.80 AFnclGrp 0.70 AmIntlGrp AmPubEd ARltyCT n 0.70 AmSupr AmTower 0.88 AmWtrWks 1.00 Amerigon Ameriprise 1.40 AmeriBrgn 0.52 AmCasino 0.50 Ametek s 0.24 Amgen 1.44 AmicusTh AmkorTch Amphenol 0.42 Anadarko 0.36 AnalogDev 1.20 Ancestry Andrsons 0.60 AngiesL n AnglogldA 0.61 ABInBev 1.57 Anixter 4.50 Ann Inc Annaly 2.27 Annies n Ansys AntaresP AntheraPh Anworth 0.83 Aon plc 0.63 A123 Sys Apache 0.68 AptInv 0.80 ApolloGM 1.65 ApolloGrp ApolloInv 0.80 ApolloRM 3.00 Apple Inc 10.60 ApldMatl 0.36 AMCC Approach Aptargrp 0.88 AquaAm 0.70 ArcelorMit 0.75 ArchCap ArchCoal 0.12 ArchDan 0.70 ArcosDor 0.24 ArenaPhm AresCap h 1.52 AriadP Ariba Inc ArkBest 0.12 ArmHld 0.18 ArmourRsd 1.20 ArrayBio Arris ArrowEl ArubaNet AsburyA AscenaRt s AscentSolr AshfordHT 0.44 Ashland 0.90 AsiaInfoL AspenIns 0.68 AspenTech AssistLiv AsscdBanc 0.20 AsdEstat 0.72 Assurant 0.84 AssuredG 0.36 AstexPhm AstoriaF 0.16 AstraZen 2.85 athenahlth AtlPwr g 1.15 AtlasPpln 2.24 Atmel ATMOS 1.38 AtwoodOcn AuRico g Aurizon g AuthenTec AutoNatn Autodesk Autoliv 2.00 AutoData 1.58 AutoZone Auxilium AvagoTch 0.60 AvalnRare AvalonBay 3.88 AvanirPhm AVEO Ph AveryD 1.08 AvidTch AvisBudg Avnet Avon 0.92 AXIS Cap 0.96
13.85 -.22 17.74 -.05 20.30 -.17 74.30 +.17 44.25 -.37 11.67 +.06 46.09 -.42 23.37 -.11 43.17 -.43 9.03 -.09 39.65 -.14 5.92 +.06 39.40 -.23 32.38 -.08 58.86 +.36 36.56 -.03 .33 +.00 3.20 +.13 10.35 -.08 10.51 -.10 30.00 +.05 1.57 -.01 65.54 +.24 36.55 -.21 7.93 -.02 21.36 +.04 2.00 24.56 -.05 18.89 -.46 1.77 24.38 +.09 61.55 +.57 7.05 -.02 10.55 -.01 6.35 -.12 6.67 +.06 17.21 +.06 23.26 +.03 11.30 -.11 11.80 -.10 28.39 -.31 16.65 -.37 33.84 +.09 22.88 -.24 72.20 +.20 13.17 -.11 4.01 -.06 3.68 -.06 23.58 -.06 .69 -.04 21.30 -.01 41.29 +.21 19.14 -.29 5.34 +.09 12.80 -.04 13.05 +.39 .47 +.01 39.57 -.33 118.09 +.27 17.08 +.29 3.62 -.05 37.46 +.33 47.25 +.63 100.83 +1.94 21.29 +.07 85.00 +.56 4.78 11.87 -.21 84.14 +.97 37.96 +.53 12.85 +.01 34.47 -.35 2.15 -.02 57.95 -.91 1.21 +.02 8.87 +.05 18.54 +.01 73.80 -.03 3.67 -.09 104.23 +2.58 4.00 -.03 33.78 -.29 17.93 -.29 33.00 -.35 85.43 -1.14 136.86 +.82 2.88 -.08 8.45 +.03 12.81 -.13 45.34 -.26 30.48 +.50 19.41 +.30 1.78 +.01 27.58 -.14 10.78 -.11 38.34 +.09 2.43 +.13 17.85 -.09 13.16 +.35 7.12 +.22 5.73 -.07 6.85 -.05 4.38 -.01 16.28 -.04 35.72 -.17 23.43 -.18 84.95 -.16 33.92 -.50 37.19 +.31 11.80 243.10 +3.65 32.36 -.07 14.34 33.48 -.02 90.06 +.07 5.79 -.03 25.32 -.40 11.26 +.01 46.01 +.33 33.97 -.11 11.19 +.02 24.13 -.18 22.13 +1.30 42.61 -.04 11.70 -.05 56.82 +.22 37.57 -.25 33.55 -.58 34.45 +.17 11.40 +.05 4.03 -.02 69.87 -.30 37.32 +.08 11.84 -.46 54.82 -.05 37.92 +.36 17.28 -.08 34.35 -.12 83.87 +.76 4.96 -.06 4.87 -.27 60.96 -.98 69.93 +.38 39.70 -.64 30.24 -.50 39.70 -.20 9.70 -.05 34.76 +.39 81.57 -.09 61.06 -.15 34.85 -.29 17.08 +.12 37.06 -.59 67.51 +.30 3.95 +.02 .85 6.63 +.04 52.72 +.09 .38 -.02 88.70 +.31 26.65 +.30 13.84 +.35 27.95 -.78 7.98 +.10 20.04 -.02 668.87 +12.81 11.78 5.37 +.20 28.94 -.15 50.84 +.47 24.93 -.04 15.98 +.04 39.96 +.11 7.30 +.08 26.27 -.05 13.86 -.10 8.67 +.60 17.04 +.01 19.99 +.73 44.50 -.03 10.31 -.08 27.62 -.07 7.24 -.03 5.63 -.06 13.63 -.07 36.82 -.98 16.78 -.56 26.24 -.39 19.47 +.40 1.79 +.13 8.28 +.01 74.05 +.80 12.19 +.06 28.85 -.07 23.79 +.14 8.20 +.72 13.06 -.19 15.36 +.14 34.55 -.08 13.92 -.08 2.73 -.04 9.88 46.88 -.07 88.54 +.63 14.25 +.07 34.48 -1.02 5.99 -.24 35.63 -.30 45.82 +.05 7.00 +.17 4.22 +.04 8.07 +.01 39.87 +.20 35.49 +.89 61.11 +.21 58.08 -.09 365.50 +1.32 23.28 +.42 36.49 +.11 1.97 +.10 143.30 +1.75 2.94 -.02 9.44 -.25 31.61 -.28 9.09 +.08 15.96 -.28 32.25 -.91 15.93 -.12 33.98 -.14
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THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Restaurants Continued from E1 The right vacancy can trigger a deal, at least in the case of Mother’s, which swooped in to buy the equipment and move in to a location on Dean Swift near Highway 20 when TuckMo Subs & Sandwiches closed in June. “Things are tighter now than they were in ’06, ’07,” said Michael Sackin, the general manager of Mother’s, which has been on Northwest Galveston Avenue for 14 years. “You’ve got be a lot more frugal, and that’s the bottom line. The more money I can save on the purchase, the more money I can put in, (and) the more likely we’ll be successful.” For some restaurateurs, a good deal on paper might not be best for the long run,
Middle class Continued from E1 He said that many middleincome families have taken a big hit in the past decade as health care costs increase, midwage jobs disappear due to automation and outsourcing, and college tuition mounts for those seeking to build credentials to get better work. In the meantime, more-affluent families have fared better in net worth because they are less dependent than lower-income groups on home property values, which remain shriveled after the housing bust. Wealthier Americans are more likely to be invested in the stock market, which as a whole has been quicker to recover from the downturn. “These are the disaffected middle class who work hard and play by the rules of society, but increasingly see their situation declining by forces beyond their control,” Smeeding said in an interview. “No matter who is president, the climb back up for the middle class and the recovery will be slow and often painful.” The Pew study is just the latest indicator of a long-term trend of widening U.S. income inequality. The Census Bureau reported last year that income
though. Bart Butler signed a lease for a second Croutons location in a former gym at the corner of Northeast Sixth Street and Greenwood Avenue in Bend, instead of a vacant downtown Bend restaurant space that would have cost 40 to 45 percent less, he said. “I’d rather spend some more money and get what I want and where I want,” said Butler, who intends to start improvements soon, following two years of brisk business at Croutons’ single location on Southwest Century Drive. Both Butler and Sackin aim to provide new options for employees of St. Charles Medical Center, the region’s biggest employer. For Carole DeRose, who owns the Mexican restaurant La Rosa, it’s not just about the potential for new business or
the appeal of the right property. With financing becoming available recently, DeRose wants to give her employees new opportunities, to reward them for their dedication and hard work. A manager and a chef from the main location in Bend’s NorthWest Crossing will take on more responsibility once the second La Rosa opens in October at the Brookswood Meadow Plaza shopping center in southwest Bend. And by hiring more than 20 employees for the new location, DeRose said she wants to give back to the city where La Rosa has found success. DeRose said she selected the south side for the company’s second location because she wants to be in a convenient residential area. While it’s possible expansion could lead restaurants to
become overextended — Bend has had its share of restaurant closures, including those with multiple locations and different eateries owned by the same proprietor — DeRose and Sackin said they’ve done their due diligence. “I truly believe that we’re going to be successful over there, or I wouldn’t have gone for it,” Sackin said. If the east-side Mother’s thrives, the company could move to expand further, perhaps with a location on the south side, Sackin said. And Togo’s wants to set up shop in west Bend, Martin said. As for Croutons, whose east Bend location could open by January, Butler said, “I think two in Bend is enough, at least for me. I think three would be overdoing it.”
fell for the wealthiest — down 1.2 percent to $180,810 for the top 5 percent of households. But the bottom fifth of households — those making $20,000 or less — saw incomes decline 4 percent. The new study reviewed 2010 data from the Census Bureau and Federal Reserve, defining “middle class” as the tier of adults whose household income falls between twothirds and double the national median income, or $39,418 to $118,255 in 2010 for a family of three. By this definition, “middle class” makes up about 51 percent of U.S. adults, down from 61 percent in 1971. In 1970, the share of U.S. income that went to the middle class was 62 percent, while wealthier Americans received just 29 percent. But by 2010, the middle class garnered 45 percent of the nation’s income, tying a low first reached in 2006, compared to 46 percent for upper-income Americans. Since 2000, the median income for America’s middle class has fallen from $72,956 to $69,487. Among the findings: • Who’s to blame: Of the selfdescribed middle-class Americans who say it is more difficult now than it was a decade ago to maintain a standard of
living, 62 percent say “a lot” of the blame lies with Congress. About 54 percent say the same about banks and financial institutions, while 47 percent say large corporations, 44 percent point to the Bush administration, 39 percent cite foreign competition and 34 percent find fault with the Obama administration. About 8 percent say the middle class itself deserves a lot of the blame. • Feeling pinched: About 62 percent of middle-class Americans say they were forced to reduce household spending in the past year, compared to 53 percent who said so in 2008. Separately, roughly 42 percent of middle-class adults say their household’s financial situation is worse now than before the recession began, compared to 32 percent who reported they are now better off and 23 percent who said their finances are unchanged. Of those who said they were worse off now, about 51 percent said it will take at least five years to recover, including 8 percent who said they will never recover. •Diminished hopes: About 63 percent of the general public — including 67 percent of the middle class — agree that most people who want to get ahead can make it if they’re willing to work hard, down from 74
percent of the public who believed so in 1999. As for their children’s future, 43 percent in the middle class say their children’s standard of living will be better than their own, compared to 47 percent who say it will be worse (26 percent) or the same (21 percent). In 2008, 51 percent said their children’s future would be better, compared to 19 percent who said worse and 21 percent who said it would be the same. • Picking a president: About 52 percent of self-described middle-class adults say President Barack Obama’s policies in a second term would help the middle class, while 39 percent say they would not help. In contrast, about 42 percent say that electing Republican challenger Mitt Romney would help the middle class, while 40 percent said it would not help. People who identify as middle class are more likely to lean Democratic (50 percent) than Republican (39 percent). •Declining wealth: Median net worth for the middle class fell 28 percent over the last decade, from $129,000 in 2001 to $93,000, wiping out two decades of gains. Among upper-income families, net worth edged higher from $569,000 to $574,000. Lower-income families saw net worth fall 45 percent to $10,000.
— Reporter: 541-633-2117, jnovet@bendbulletin.com
E3
T-Mobile brings back unlimited data plan By Peter Svensson The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Unlimited wireless data is back. After sliding off the menu of cellphone plans, data plans with no caps are making a comeback at smaller wireless companies trying to compete with AT&T and Verizon. T-Mobile USA, the nation’s fourth-largest cellphone company, said Wednesday that it will start selling an unlimited-data plan again on Sept. 5, after stopping sales of such plans early last year. A day earlier, No. 5 carrier MetroPCS cut the price of its unlimited-data plan as a promotion for a limited time. The moves by T-Mobile USA and MetroPCS, neither of which sells the iPhone, come as their three larger rivals are thought to be gearing up to begin selling the iPhone 5 in a month or so. No. 3 carrier Sprint Nextel Corp. already has an unlimited-data plan and credits that with helping it attract customers for its smartphones. AT&T, the nation’s secondlargest carrier, stopped signing up customers for unlimited data plans two years ago, while No. 1 Verizon Wireless stopped last year. Both have shifted toward lifting all limits on calls and texting, but limiting data usage. From a network management perspective, that makes sense, as calls and texts use very little network capacity, while video downloads and other data use can clog the network and slow the service for everyone. The iPhone and the data use it encouraged initially caused big problems for AT&T in New York and San Francisco. Sprint’s network is showing signs of con-
gestion in some tests. Limited-data plans pose problems for customers, however. It’s easier to figure out how many minutes of calling you need in a month than it is to figure out how many gigabytes you’ll use. T-Mobile is launching the plan because it’s what customers want, said Kevin McLaughlin, vice president of marketing at the Bellevue, Wash., company. He said the company is confident it can keep its network “fast and dependable” even with unlimited-data users on it. T-Mobile’s unlimited plan will cost $30 per month when added to a regular calling and texting plan and $20 when added to a cheaper “Value” plan offered to customers who bring their own phones. MetroPCS Communications Inc.’s unlimited plan will cost $55 per month during the promotion period, down from $70, and will include unlimited texting and calls. T-Mobile had been calling all its data plans “unlimited,” but once a customer hits a certain level of usage in a month, it would slow down speeds drastically. AT&T manages remaining subscribers on unlimited plans the same way. Under T-Mobile’s new unlimited plans, all data would be at maximum speed. T-Mobile’s new plan will cost $5 less than a regular data plan with 5 gigabytes of full-speed data. The advantage of the limited plan is that subscribers can turn their phones into “mobile hotspots,” linking tablets and computers to the Internet through the phone. That’s not allowed under the unlimited plan.
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Northwest stocks Name
Div PE
YTD Last Chg %Chg
AlaskAir s Avista BkofAm BarrettB Boeing CascdeBcp CascdeCp ColSprtw Costco CraftBrew FLIR Sys HewlettP HmFedID Intel Keycorp Kroger Lattice LaPac MDU Res MentorGr Microsoft
... 1.16 .04 .44 1.76 ... 1.40 .88 1.10 ... .28 .53 .24f .90f .20 .46 ... ... .67 ... .80
34.47 25.73 8.22 24.91 72.80 5.17 50.62 50.86 95.53 7.67 20.13 19.20 10.06 25.73 8.34 21.96 3.84 13.27 22.02 15.90 30.54
12 16 9 35 13 ... 10 17 27 51 14 7 ... 11 8 21 9 ... 19 15 15
-.35 -.15 +.03 +.04 -.47 +.28 +.15 -.17 +.24 +.02 -.41 -.73 -.15 -.38 +.01 -.05 -.08 +.15 -.27 -.28 -.26
-8.2 -.1 +47.8 +24.8 -.7 +18.0 +7.3 +9.3 +14.7 +27.4 -19.7 -25.5 -3.3 +6.1 +8.5 -9.3 -35.4 +64.4 +2.6 +17.3 +17.6
Name
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 .08 .80 ... 1.68 .12 .70f .75 1.56 .89f .68 ... .36f .78 .32 .88 ... .60
Precious metals Metal NY HSBC Bank US NY Merc Gold NY Merc Silver
Price (troy oz.) $1654.00 $1637.40 $29.549
Market recap YTD Last Chg %Chg
20 95.77 -.08 -.6 18 57.72 +1.10 +16.1 21 49.04 -.24 +2.3 12 5.46 -.04 +20.3 12 40.52 -.65 +8.1 ... 1.38 +.12 -27.7 37 40.61 -.02 +11.1 19 163.50 -1.15 -.8 9 15.97 -.02 -24.1 13 30.39 -.05 -28.1 28 139.37 +1.57 +56.1 10 30.20 -.41 -17.8 27 48.12 +.03 +4.6 ... 5.87 +.04 +20.5 15 12.50 -.09 +.9 12 32.90 -.13 +21.6 13 16.13 +.11 +15.3 11 34.18 -.20 +24.0 12 20.43 -.08 +31.0 38 24.52 +.28 +31.3
Prime rate
Pvs Day
Time period
Percent
$1637.00 $1639.90 $29.421
Last Previous day A week ago
3.25 3.25 3.25
NYSE
Most Active ($1 or more) Name
Vol (00)
BkofAm S&P500ETF SprintNex Bar iPVix SPDR Fncl
1376592 8.22 +.03 1144669 141.82 +.06 803499 4.88 -.20 469839 11.60 +.10 457435 15.20 -.02
Last Chg
Gainers ($2 or more) Name
Last
SunriseSen Qihoo360 WmsSon CastleAM Brookdale
14.26 24.58 42.68 13.03 22.08
Chg %Chg +5.33 +3.48 +4.45 +1.34 +2.17
+59.7 +16.5 +11.6 +11.5 +10.9
Losers ($2 or more) Name
Last
Chg %Chg
Express Ferrellgs iP SXR1K HugotnR SunTr wtB
15.03 -1.87 -11.1 19.35 -2.41 -11.1 13.68 -1.64 -10.7 6.35 -.65 -9.3 2.73 -.28 -9.3
Amex
Most Active ($1 or more) Name
Vol (00)
CheniereEn Vringo NovaGld g NwGold g ParaG&S
Gainers ($2 or more) Name
Last
Chg %Chg
NovaCpp n 2.49 +.62 +33.2 Medgen wt 4.60 +.30 +7.0 SDgo pfA 28.55 +1.80 +6.7 iShUKSC bt 28.08 +1.67 +6.3 Richmnt g 4.35 +.25 +6.1
Losers ($2 or more)
Nasdaq
Most Active ($1 or more) Name
Vol (00)
Dell Inc Facebook n Cisco PwShs QQQ Zynga n
Last Chg 11.68 19.44 19.22 68.43 3.26
-.66 +.28 +.06 +.28 +.29
Gainers ($2 or more) Name
Last
KeyTrn TxCapB wt AnchBcWA TecumsehB Celgene rt
9.94 +1.94 +24.3 30.08 +4.57 +17.9 12.51 +1.66 +15.3 5.94 +.66 +12.5 2.58 +.29 +12.4
Chg %Chg
Losers ($2 or more)
Last
Chg %Chg
Name
Last
Aerosonic MGTCap rs HMG GigOptics ImmunoCll
3.43 4.61 5.75 2.32 2.30
-.22 -.29 -.35 -.13 -.13
-6.0 -5.9 -5.7 -5.3 -5.3
GlobTcAdv UltraClean Intersectns KewnSc BeasleyB
7.36 -.89 -10.8 6.00 -.70 -10.4 11.53 -1.25 -9.8 11.51 -1.24 -9.7 5.16 -.55 -9.6
190 234 43 467 4 4
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows
Diary 1,183 1,827 115 3,125 63 19
642656 482589 433738 412648 381702
Name
Diary Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows
Last Chg
57001 14.78 +.54 31280 3.72 -.03 31276 4.67 +.05 30885 11.08 +.13 17154 2.50 +.02
Indexes
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows
Chg %Chg
Diary 911 1,534 137 2,582 37 34
52-Week High Low
Name
13,338.66 10,404.49 5,390.11 3,950.66 499.82 411.54 8,327.67 6,414.89 2,498.89 1,941.99 3,134.17 2,298.89 1,426.68 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
13,172.76 5,168.67 475.13 8,074.23 2,411.79 3,073.67 1,413.49 14,736.82 812.56
-30.82 -25.48 -.80 -8.45 -16.98 +6.41 +.32 -1.55 -2.80
-.23 -.49 -.17 -.10 -.70 +.21 +.02 -.01 -.34
+7.82 +2.97 +2.25 +7.99 +5.86 +17.98 +12.40 +11.73 +9.67
+16.36 +16.72 +10.17 +11.01 +7.28 +24.56 +20.03 +19.06 +17.33
World markets
Currencies
Here is how key international stock markets performed Wednesday. Market Close % Change
Key currency exchange rates Wednesday compared with late Tuesday 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
332.08 2,369.35 3,461.65 5,774.20 7,017.75 19,887.78 40,027.17 15,161.18 3,658.38 9,131.74 1,935.19 3,049.47 4,403.26 5,985.09
-1.14 -.82 -1.47 -1.42 -1.01 -1.06 -.17 -1.10 -.80 -.28 -.41 -.53 -.17 -.65
t t t t t t t t t t t t t t
1.0512 1.5869 1.0093 .002064 .1574 1.2530 .1289 .012749 .076298 .0315 .000886 .1509 1.0432 .0334
1.0480 1.5779 1.0112 .002067 .1573 1.2467 .1289 .012618 .076036 .0315 .000884 .1501 1.0380 .0334
Selected mutual funds YTD Name NAV Chg %Ret Amer Century Inv: EqInc 7.89 -0.01 +9.8 GrowthI 28.02 +0.04 +14.0 Ultra 26.16 +0.07 +14.1 American Funds A: AmcpA p 21.04 +0.01 +12.2 AMutlA p 28.30 -0.01 +10.7 BalA p 19.99 +0.01 +10.9 BondA p 12.88 +0.05 +4.4 CapIBA p 52.76 -0.06 +9.2 CapWGA p 35.46 -0.08 +12.2 CapWA p 21.28 +0.10 +5.3 EupacA p 38.74 -0.06 +10.2 FdInvA p 39.45 -0.02 +12.2 GovtA p 14.57 +0.04 +1.8 GwthA p 32.98 +0.04 +14.8 HI TrA p 11.08 +0.01 +8.9 IncoA p 17.83 +8.4 IntBdA p 13.75 +0.03 +2.1 ICAA p 30.49 -0.04 +13.6 NEcoA p 27.61 -0.02 +16.1 N PerA p 29.75 +13.7 NwWrldA 50.87 -0.02 +10.3 SmCpA p 37.78 +13.9 TxExA p 13.03 +0.02 +6.5 WshA p 31.07 -0.03 +10.6 Artisan Funds: Intl 23.00 -0.11 +16.0 IntlVal r 28.08 -0.15 +11.9 MidCap 38.25 +0.19 +16.2 MidCapVal 20.96 -0.13 +6.4 Baron Funds: Growth 56.66 -0.13 +11.1 Bernstein Fds: IntDur 14.13 +0.05 +3.8 DivMu 14.83 +2.0 BlackRock A: EqtyDiv 19.71 -0.03 +9.6 GlAlA r 19.26 +0.03 +6.8 BlackRock B&C: GlAlC t 17.92 +0.03 +6.2 BlackRock Instl:
EquityDv 19.75 -0.03 GlbAlloc r 19.35 +0.03 Cohen & Steers: RltyShrs 68.90 +0.07 Columbia Class A: TxEA p 14.20 +0.02 Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 30.47 -0.04 AcornIntZ 38.43 +0.06 LgCapGr 13.39 +0.05 Credit Suisse Comm: ComRet t 8.42 +0.02 DFA Funds: IntlCorEq 9.85 +0.01 USCorEq1 12.04 -0.01 USCorEq2 11.83 -0.02 Davis Funds A: NYVen A 35.74 -0.01 Davis Funds Y: NYVenY 36.16 -0.02 Delaware Invest A: Diver Inc p 9.39 +0.03 Dimensional Fds: EmMCrEq 18.61 EmMktV 27.73 +0.03 IntSmVa 14.64 LargeCo 11.18 USLgVa 21.68 -0.03 US Small 22.72 -0.10 US SmVa 26.04 -0.16 IntlSmCo 14.79 +0.01 Fixd 10.35 IntVa 15.36 +0.02 Glb5FxInc 11.26 +0.02 2YGlFxd 10.13 Dodge&Cox: Balanced 75.63 -0.15 Income 13.80 +0.04 IntlStk 31.97 -0.06 Stock 116.97 -0.38 DoubleLine Funds: TRBd I 11.36 +0.02 TRBd N p 11.35 +0.02 Dreyfus:
+9.7 +6.9 +14.5 +6.8 +11.9 +12.6 +11.4 +2.9 +8.4 +12.6 +12.4 +10.0 +10.2 +5.0 +8.7 +7.4 +9.3 +13.9 +14.2 +11.2 +12.8 +8.4 +0.8 +6.4 +3.6 +0.8 +13.6 +5.8 +9.3 +16.3 NA NA
Aprec 44.83 Eaton Vance I: FltgRt 9.03 GblMacAbR 9.85 +0.01 FMI Funds: LgCap p 17.15 -0.02 FPA Funds: NewInco 10.65 FPACres 28.44 -0.06 Fairholme 29.85 -0.26 Federated Instl: TotRetBd 11.54 +0.05 StrValDvIS 5.10 -0.01 Fidelity Advisor A: NwInsgh p 22.54 +0.10 StrInA 12.58 +0.03 Fidelity Advisor I: NwInsgtI 22.85 +0.10 Fidelity Freedom: FF2010 14.13 +0.03 FF2010K 12.94 +0.02 FF2015 11.81 +0.02 FF2015K 13.01 +0.02 FF2020 14.29 +0.02 FF2020K 13.42 +0.02 FF2025 11.90 +0.02 FF2025K 13.56 +0.01 FF2030 14.17 +0.02 FF2030K 13.71 +0.02 FF2035 11.73 +0.01 FF2035K 13.79 +0.01 FF2040 8.18 FF2040K 13.83 +0.01 Fidelity Invest: AllSectEq 12.82 +0.01 AMgr50 16.16 +0.03 AMgr20 r 13.27 +0.03 Balanc 19.96 +0.04 BalancedK 19.96 +0.04 BlueChGr 49.50 +0.16 CapAp 29.29 +0.05 CpInc r 9.26 Contra 77.35 +0.33 ContraK 77.35 +0.33
+11.5 +5.5 +2.8 +12.5 +1.5 +7.1 +28.9 +4.7 +7.4 +14.3 +6.8 +14.5 +8.2 +8.2 +8.4 +8.5 +9.2 +9.3 +10.4 +10.4 +10.6 +10.8 +11.4 +11.5 +11.3 +11.6 +14.2 +8.5 +5.2 +10.7 +10.8 +16.7 +19.0 +10.8 +14.7 +14.7
DisEq 24.34 -0.05 DivIntl 28.27 -0.09 DivrsIntK r 28.26 -0.08 DivGth 29.67 Eq Inc 46.17 -0.06 EQII 19.36 -0.03 Fidel 35.41 +0.07 FltRateHi r 9.88 GNMA 11.96 +0.03 GovtInc 10.90 +0.05 GroCo 96.64 +0.43 GroInc 20.77 GrowthCoK96.64 +0.44 HighInc r 9.18 +0.01 IntBd 11.08 +0.03 IntmMu 10.61 +0.01 IntlDisc 30.82 -0.05 InvGrBd 11.98 +0.05 InvGB 7.94 +0.04 LgCapVal 11.12 -0.02 LowP r 40.51 -0.03 LowPriK r 40.51 -0.03 Magelln 72.53 +0.20 MidCap 29.37 +0.09 MuniInc 13.45 +0.01 NwMkt r 17.34 +0.04 OTC 61.13 +0.30 100Index 10.18 +0.01 Puritn 19.50 +0.05 PuritanK 19.50 +0.05 SAllSecEqF12.84 +0.01 SCmdtyStrt 9.29 +0.04 SCmdtyStrF 9.32 +0.04 SrsIntGrw 11.34 -0.03 SrsIntVal 8.89 -0.01 SrInvGrdF 11.99 +0.06 STBF 8.57 StratInc 11.26 +0.02 TotalBd 11.23 +0.04 USBI 11.97 +0.05 Value 72.43 -0.19 Fidelity Spartan: 500IdxInv 50.23 +0.02 500Idx I 50.23 +0.01
+13.2 +10.8 +10.9 +14.7 +13.3 +12.5 +14.4 +4.6 +2.7 +2.2 +19.5 +14.9 +19.6 +10.3 +3.5 +3.4 +11.6 +4.2 +4.6 +10.4 +13.4 +13.5 +15.4 +12.4 +5.6 +13.2 +11.8 +15.4 +11.2 +11.4 +14.3 +3.7 +3.9 +12.2 +10.0 +4.3 +1.7 +6.9 +4.8 +3.2 +14.1 +14.0 +14.0
Fidelity Spart Adv: ExMktAd r 39.31 -0.07 +12.1 500IdxAdv 50.23 +0.01 +14.0 TotMktAd r 40.92 +13.6 USBond I 11.97 +0.05 +3.3 First Eagle: GlblA 48.88 -0.04 +8.3 OverseasA 21.92 -0.03 +7.7 Forum Funds: AbsStrI r 11.24 +1.7 Frank/Temp Frnk A: FedTFA p 12.66 +0.02 +6.7 GrwthA p 49.48 +0.02 +10.8 HYTFA p 10.84 +0.01 +8.5 IncomA p 2.21 +9.8 RisDvA p 37.14 -0.03 +6.7 StratInc p 10.58 +0.01 +8.0 USGovA p 6.89 +0.02 +1.7 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: GlbBdAdv 13.14 -0.02 +9.8 IncmeAd 2.19 +10.0 Frank/Temp Frnk C: IncomC t 2.23 +9.4 Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: SharesA 22.10 -0.08 +11.6 Frank/Temp Temp A: GlBd A p 13.18 -0.02 +9.5 GrwthA p 18.19 -0.10 +11.7 WorldA p 15.24 -0.08 +10.9 Frank/Temp Tmp B&C: GlBdC p 13.21 -0.01 +9.3 GE Elfun S&S: US Eqty 44.22 +0.03 +14.1 GMO Trust III: Quality 23.60 -0.04 +13.2 GMO Trust IV: IntlIntrVl 19.72 +5.5 GMO Trust VI: EmgMkts r 10.98 +0.02 +6.5 Quality 23.61 -0.04 +13.2 Goldman Sachs Inst: HiYield 7.25 +10.2 MidCapV 37.89 -0.08 +12.9 Harbor Funds:
Bond 12.83 +0.05 CapApInst 42.11 +0.15 IntlInv t 57.47 -0.03 Intl r 58.11 -0.03 Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 31.86 -0.08 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 41.35 -0.07 Hussman Funds: StrGrowth 10.99 IVA Funds: Wldwide I r15.97 -0.01 Invesco Funds A: Chart p 17.67 +0.01 CmstkA 17.06 -0.03 EqIncA 9.06 +0.01 GrIncA p 20.54 -0.01 HYMuA 10.01 +0.01 Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 24.12 -0.03 AssetStA p 24.94 -0.03 AssetStrI r 25.18 -0.03 JPMorgan A Class: CoreBd A 12.07 +0.04 JPMorgan R Cl: CoreBond 12.08 +0.05 JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBd 12.07 +0.05 HighYld 8.04 ShtDurBd 11.01 +0.01 USLCCrPls 22.72 +0.02 Janus T Shrs: PrkMCVal T21.69 John Hancock Cl 1: LSBalanc 13.30 +0.02 LSGrwth 13.18 +0.01 Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 18.85 Longleaf Partners: Partners 30.17 -0.04 Loomis Sayles: LSBondI 14.80 +0.03 StrInc C x 15.09 -0.03 LSBondR 14.74 +0.03
+6.6 +14.1 +10.5 +10.8 +10.5 +11.2 -11.6 +4.0 +10.1 +13.0 +9.9 +11.3 +10.5 +11.5 +12.0 +12.2 +3.6 +4.0 +3.8 +9.6 +1.3 +15.1 +7.4 +9.7 +10.7 +12.2 +13.2 +9.4 +7.3 +9.2
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+4.3 +8.3 +16.7 +10.7 +8.8 +12.7 +13.8 +17.4 +27.2 +9.5 +15.6 +3.7 +7.6 +10.2 +10.3 +14.0 +11.6 +2.1 +14.5 +4.2 +10.2 +9.1 +9.9 +10.7 +11.4 +12.0 +12.3 +12.4 +2.2 +13.8 +10.0 +7.1 +13.1 +15.0 +12.2 +7.5 +5.1 +13.5
S&P Sel 22.30 +0.01 Scout Funds: Intl 30.78 -0.08 Sequoia 159.63 -0.15 TCW Funds: TotRetBdI 10.12 +0.02 Templeton Instit: ForEqS 18.26 -0.14 Thornburg Fds: IntValA p 25.84 -0.14 IncBuildC p18.70 -0.08 IntValue I 26.43 -0.14 Tweedy Browne: GblValue 24.42 -0.19 Vanguard Admiral: BalAdml 23.61 +0.04 CAITAdm 11.64 +0.01 CpOpAdl 75.93 -0.02 EMAdmr r 34.20 -0.05 Energy 113.63 +0.09 EqInAdm n 50.31 -0.08 ExtdAdm 44.14 -0.09 500Adml 130.71 +0.04 GNMA Ad 11.06 +0.04 GrwAdm 36.77 +0.07 HlthCr 60.04 +0.12 HiYldCp 5.98 +0.01 InfProAd 28.84 +0.24 ITBdAdml 12.08 +0.08 ITsryAdml 11.77 +0.06 IntGrAdm 57.53 -0.08 ITAdml 14.30 +0.01 ITGrAdm 10.34 +0.05 LtdTrAd 11.17 LTGrAdml 10.86 +0.13 LT Adml 11.71 +0.02 MCpAdml 99.13 -0.09 MuHYAdm 11.17 +0.01 PrmCap r 71.32 -0.01 ReitAdm r 93.84 -0.02 STsyAdml 10.78 +0.01 STBdAdml 10.65 +0.01 ShtTrAd 15.93 STIGrAd 10.82 +0.02
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-0.08 +12.0 +0.05 +3.3 +13.6 +0.14 +7.9 +0.07 +9.4 -0.04 +14.5 -0.13 +13.1
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Wndsr 14.47 -0.01 WndsII 28.82 -0.07 Vanguard Idx Fds: ExtMkt I 108.95 -0.21 MidCpIstPl108.01 -0.10 TotIntAdm r23.72 TotIntlInst r94.86 -0.02 TotIntlIP r 94.88 -0.02 500 130.69 +0.04 MidCap 21.83 -0.02 TotBnd 11.15 +0.05 TotlIntl 14.18 TotStk 35.23 Vanguard Instl Fds: BalInst 23.61 +0.03 DevMkInst 9.19 ExtIn 44.14 -0.09 GrwthIst 36.77 +0.08 InfProInst 11.75 +0.10 InstIdx 129.87 +0.04 InsPl 129.88 +0.04 InsTStPlus 31.90 MidCpIst 21.90 -0.02 STIGrInst 10.82 +0.02 SCInst 37.40 -0.08 TBIst 11.15 +0.05 TSInst 35.25 ValueIst 22.49 -0.04 Vanguard Signal: 500Sgl 107.97 +0.03 MidCpIdx 31.28 -0.03 STBdIdx 10.65 +0.01 TotBdSgl 11.15 +0.05 TotStkSgl 34.01 -0.01 Western Asset: CorePlus I 11.56 +0.03
+14.4 +13.1 +12.2 +11.2 +8.6 +8.6 +8.6 +13.9 +11.1 +3.2 +8.6 +13.6 +9.5 +9.1 +12.2 +16.4 +4.6 +14.0 +14.0 +13.7 +11.2 +3.3 +12.0 +3.3 +13.7 +11.3 +14.0 +11.2 +1.4 +3.3 +13.6 +6.2
E4
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 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.
Mortgages
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TODAY BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL DESCHUTES BUSINESS NETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Starts at 7 a.m.; visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541-610-9125. GETTING THE MOST OUT OF SCHWAB.COM: Free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-3181794. 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 COFFEE CLATTER: Redmond Chamber of Commerce meeting; free; 8:30-9:30 a.m.; City of Redmond Public Works Training Room, 243 East Antler Avenue. 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.
MONDAY 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.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com. FORECLOSURE PREVENTION CLASS: Learn about NeighborImpact’s Housing Center tools and services which can assist individuals struggling to pay their mortgages; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; NeighborImpact, 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; 541-318-7506, ext. 309, karenb@neighborimpact.org or www.homeownershipcenter.org.
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. 31 COFFEE CLATTER: Redmond Chamber of Commerce meeting; free; 8:30-9:30 a.m.; U.S. Cellular, 355 N.W. Oak Tree Lane, Redmond; 541-526-5945. EDWARD JONES COFFEE CLUB: Current market and economic update including current rates; free; 9 a.m.; Ponderosa Coffee House, 61292 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 105, Bend; 541-617-8861. CENTRAL OREGON REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT CLUB: Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile@windermere.com. FREE TAX FRIDAY: Free tax return reviews; schedule an appointment at 541-385-9666 or www.myzoomtax .com; free; 2-4 p.m.; Zoom Tax, 963 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite 100, Bend; 541-385-9666.
BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL DESCHUTES BUSINESS NETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Starts at 7 a.m.; visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541-610-9125. BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WILDFIRE
MONDAY Sept. 10
TUESDAY
BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL HIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Starts at 7:15 a.m.; visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-420-7377. OPEN COMPUTER LAB: Free; 34:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-3837290. SMALL BUSINESS COUNSELING: No appointment necessary; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-383-7290.
WEDNESDAY Sept. 5 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.
Sept. 11 BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL HIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Starts at 7:15 a.m.; visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-420-7377. KNOW DIGITAL DOWNLOADS: Free; 2-3:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-383-7290. OPEN COMPUTER LAB: Free; 23:30 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-3837290. OPEN COMPUTER LAB: Free; 34:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-3837290. SMALL BUSINESS COUNSELING: No appointment necessary; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-383-7290.
keep paying on the mortgage to avoid credit card debt. Adam, a baby boomer, also has refinanced to help give her extra cash as she helps pay for her two children’s college expenses and other expenses. “There may be times where it makes sense� to keep paying on a mortgage into retirement, acknowledged Deerfield Beach, Fla., financial planner Blair Shein who usually urges his clients to pay off home loans before retiring. Still, Plantation, Fla., financial planner Ben Tobias is sticking with his advice to pay off a home before leaving work. If retirees are having financial difficulties, they should apply for a reverse mortgage, he recommended. Some can get a reverse mortgage even if they owe on their home. Generally, a reverse mortgage allows people to stay in their homes while getting cash out, he said. “One of the golden rules is not to have a mortgage in retirement,� Tobias added. “You don’t want to be in a situation where your home can be taken away. “You want peace of mind.�
Welcome to the Team Greg Langhaim “A true Bendite. Attended Mt. View High school. Been selling luxury property for 6.5 years in the greater Salt Lake City area. Recently transitioned my family to Bend. Loving it!� Greg Langhaim, Broker O: 541.383.7600 ext 176 C: 801-706-3230 glanghaim@gmail.com
650 SW Bond Street, Suite 100, Bend, OR
WEDNESDAY Sept. 6
Aug. 30
HOMEBUYING CLASS: Registration required; free; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; NeighborImpact, 20310 Empire Ave., Suite A110, Bend; 541-3187506, ext. 309.
Sept. 4
BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL HIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Starts at 7:15 a.m.; visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-420-7377. BUSINESS SUCCESS PROGRAM: “What 2 Say & How 2 Say It: Using Social Media & the Legal Ramifications�; registration required; $25 for Bend Chamber of Commerce members, $45 for nonmembers; 11 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org. OPEN COMPUTER LAB: Practice computer skills and learn about e-readers; free; 3 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. HOW TO SCREEN TENANTS: $10 COROA members or $15 nonmembers before Aug. 24, $15 members or $20 members after; 68 p.m.; Central Oregon Association of Realtors, 2112 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-480-9191.
THURSDAY
Sept. 8
TUESDAY
THURSDAY
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.
SATURDAY
KNOW DIGITAL BOOKS: Free; 10:30 a.m.-noon; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-383-7290.
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
383-7290. 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. KNOW COMPUTERS FOR BEGINNERS: Free; 3-4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-383-7290.
Continued from E4 Boca Raton financial planner Mari Adam said a mortgage can work out for some retirees, including those with large government or corporate pensions who need a tax break to ease some of their federal taxes. Other boomers are opting to refinance to snag historically low interest rates that in some cases are lower than last year’s 3.6 percent inflation rate. Some clients feel “now is the time; they may never see an opportunity like this again,� said South Florida financial planner Frank Armstrong. Inflation and mortgage tax deductions can end up cutting the interest rate to near zero, he added. One Canadian emptynester held out on buying an oceanfront condo in South Palm Beach until he was able to get a mortgage with a low rate, said Adam Cohn, a Boca Raton senior mortgage banker. He didn’t want to spend his cash on his new vacation home, Cohn said. Stuart Kaplan, 64, is trying to get a new 30-year loan on his Sunrise, Fla., home. He would like to cut almost in half his current interest of 6.625 percent. But his current lender and others Kaplan has contacted say he has to wait until he has two years of federal tax forms showing he has been paid as a contract worker. Kaplan only has one year: He signed a contract to work for a company after he lost a job. “It stinks,� Kaplan said. “I have high credit scores — I’ve paid my bills even when I was out of work for a year.� Still, Kaplan is resigned to waiting about five months for a second tax return if he has to — he just doesn’t want to miss out on the low rates. Most economists think the low rates will be around
for at least a year more as the Federal Reserve has vowed to keep rates low to help energize the sluggish national economic rebound. Some boomers feel they have no choice but to refinance as they lost jobs during the Great Recession. Refinancing helps keeps them from having to dip into retirement savings. Karen Sutliffe went on Social Security early after she lost her job and couldn’t find a new one. Now she’s trying to refinance her Oakland Park, Fla., home, which is worth less than the mortgage. Lower monthly payments would keep her from furthering dipping into retirement savings, she said. Getting a reverse mortgage isn’t an option, Sutliffe added, because she and her husband owe about $50,000 more than the home’s value. “People become concerned about cash flow,� said William Stronge, an economics professor emeritus at Florida Atlantic University who has about six years more to pay on his mortgage. It makes better economic sense, Stronge said, to
BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL DESCHUTES BUSINESS NETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Starts at 7 a.m.; visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541-610-9125. GETTING THE MOST OUT OF SCHWAB.COM: Free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-3181794. OPEN COMPUTER LAB: Free; 23:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-3837290. 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. BE A TAX PREPARER: Registration required. Sept. 6 through Nov. 15; $389; 6-10 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or http://noncredit .cocc.edu.
Sept. 12 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. OVERCOME THE FEAR OF PUBLIC SPEAKING: Reservations encouraged; free; 7:30 a.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.bendchamber.org. UPGRADE YOUR SALES TEAM IN 2012: Dennis Hungerford, President of Sandler Training Oregon, presents; registration required; free; 8:30-11 a.m.; Phoenix Inn Suites Bend, 300 N.W. Franklin Ave.; 541-382-4316 or www.hcc.sandler.com. KNOW DIGITAL BOOKS: Free; 9:3011 a.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-383-7290. ARE YOU READY TO BE IN BUSINESS?: Registration required; $15; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Madras Campus, 1170 E. Ashwood Road, Madras; 541-383-7290.
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
Sept. 13
Sept. 7
BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL DESCHUTES BUSINESS NETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLY MEETING: Starts at 7 a.m.; visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541-610-9125. OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS ANNUAL CELEBRATION: An evening of networking with associates from the Bend business community. Member of the Year and Facilitator of the Year for 2012 will be recognized. Free required annual meeting prior to the main event; $15 includes one drink; 5:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m.; The Point at Shevlin Corporate Park, 929 S.W. Simpson Ave., Bend.
COFFEE CLATTER: Redmond Chamber of Commerce meeting; free; 8:30-9:30 a.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond. 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.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com. KNOW DIGITAL BOOKS: Free; 10:30 a.m.-noon; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541-
/ PER MO. 36 MO. Lease. MSRP $36,265. Sale Price $33,995. $3,403 Due at signing. On Approved Credit. No Security Deposit. 10,000 Miles/year. Residual Amount $20,246.40. Excludes tax, title, & MV fees. VIN: 117007
/ PER MO. 84 MO. Purchase. MSRP $42,410. $2,500 Due at signing. 2.49% On Approved Credit. Excludes tax, title, & MV fees. VIN: 2366435
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PERMITS City of Bend
Melvin L. McDougal, 61526 Baptist, $249,837 Floyd C. Antonsen, 3231 N.E. Spring Creek, $170,249 Deschutes Properties LLC, 929 S.W. Simpson, $180,000 Hasenoehrl Custom Homes Inc., 2846 N.W. Lakemont, $306,464
Greg Welch Construction Inc., 2332 N.W. Frazer, $202,063 Brice Murri, 21032 S.E. Avery, $262,056 City of Redmond
Wolfbuild LLC, 1641 N.W. Larch Tree Court, $164,980 Oregon Joy LLC, 310 S.W. 33rd Drive, $256,558 Pape Properties Inc., 352 N.E. Hemlock Ave., $575,000
Deschutes County
Vladimir Malyakin, 56394 Fireglass Loop, Bend, $427,356.84 Daniel D. and Terri Beebe, 2440 Linnet Lane, Redmond, $240,976.12 Jack Snow, 60640 Gosney Road, Bend, $121,869.60 Deschutes River Winds 5 LLC, 16265 Bear Lane, Bend, $133,392.58
SMOLICH VOLVO 1865 North East Highway 20 | Bend, OR | (541) 389-1177 www.smolichvolvo.com
Expires 8/31/12
HEALTH
Health Events, F2 People, F2 Money, F2
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
www.bendbulletin.com/health
FITNESS
Her ACL • Because of body build and hormones, women are a perfect storm for anterior cruciate ligament injuries
Good hip control and knee mechanics, lower risk of ACL injury. A deep squat with knees shoulder width apart.
How lifestyle affects the way genes function • Bend scientist crafting lessons on epigenetics for area students By Anne Aurand The Bulletin
When landing from a jump
Deep squat
F
Nutrition, F3 Medicine, F4-5 Fitness, F6
Poor hip control, over-use of knee muscles and ligaments, higher risk for ACL injury. A stiffer landing with less bend in the knees and more inward collapsing of the knees.
Knees collapse together
Knees apart
Certain environmental factors, including food, can influence and change how a person’s genes function, scientists say. These sorts of modifications to how a person’s DNA is expressed can carry forward to future generations. This is called epigenetics. “(Through diet) people NUTRITION have the ability to influence disease patterns and the likelihood of obesity and chronic disease,” said Jackie Shannon, a nutritional scientist with the Center for Research on Occupational and Environmental Toxicology and associate professor with Oregon Health & Science University. Shannon, who is based at St. Charles Bend, recently received a grant from the Bob and Charlee Moore Nutrition and Wellness Institute with which she’s to design a program to teach this concept to middle school students. Shannon recognizes the challenges in this. “It’s hard to get middle schoolers to care about future generations,” she said. “But it’s important in the scientific field, and it needs to be introduced in the schools. We need to figure out how to talk to them about epigenetics. How do we make it fun and accessible?” See Epigenetics / F3
Source: Oregon State University-Cascades Exercise and Sport Science
Valgus angle
Pronation
During cutting or landing moments, women more often have an inward collapsing of the Valgus knees, called a angle knee valgus angle, which puts added stress on the ACL
Pronation is when the foot flattens and the ankle angles inward. Pronation can increase risk of ACL injuries.
Intercondylar notch Notch Condyle Condyle
Women have proportionally smaller intercondylar notches. The relative narrowness leaves less space for the ACL and PCL to move and operate
Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin
Jackie Shannon, a nutritional scientist with the Center for Research on Occupational and Environmental Toxicology and associate professor with Oregon Health & Science University, is tasked with teaching middle schoolers about epigentics, the study of about how certain environmental factors, including food, can influence how a person’s genes function.
Pronation Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin
Source: Hewett et al., 2005
By Anne Aurand The Bulletin
I
n late March, Jenny Anderson was playing indoor soccer with a women’s team when the ball went bobbing by, triggering her instinct to get to it first. As she sprinted for the ball, her right foot planted and stuck to the turf while her hips and the rest of her body turned left. “I thought in a split second, ‘This is not right. This is a not a good position for my body to be in.’ But there was nothing I could do about it. I was already there in the moment. Competitiveness took over,” she said. “I heard a pop. I felt the most excruciating pain.” She had ruptured her anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), a major knee ligament that stabilizes the joint and connects the upper and
lower leg bones. Anderson’s ACL was torn all the way through. At age 40, after decades of playing soccer and other sports, Anderson, the director of fitness operations at the Athletic Club of Bend, had seen plenty of people tear their ACLs. Until that moment, she thought she had escaped the statistics. There are an estimated 80,000 ACL repairs in the United States annually. ACL injuries are four to eight times more likely in women than men doing similar sports, said Christine Pollard, an associate professor and program leader for the Exercise and Sports Science program at Oregon State University-Cascades Campus. Most ACL tears are noncontact injuries, meaning nothing rammed into the knee, but rather, the injury resulted from twisting or landing. Those tears often happen when a
player is “cutting,” or changing directions quickly — prevalent in soccer, hockey and lacrosse. They also happen on the landing of a jump — after heading a ball in soccer, rebounding in basketball, striking in volleyball. The most common age for noncontact ACL injuries in females is between 14 and 19, Pollard said, but clearly, as in Anderson’s case, it can happen to older women, too. Physical tests and X-rays can determine the extent of an ACL injury. Many tears require reconstructive surgery, although in some cases, a tear can be healed through muscle strengthening programs. Experts say that tearing an ACL will increase the likelihood of subsequent knee problems and accelerate the onset of osteoarthritis. See ACL / F6
Lots of radiation, and nobody keeping track By Jane E. Brody New York Times News Service
Radiation, like alcohol, is a double-edged sword. It has indisputable medical advantages: Radiation can reveal hidden problems, from broken bones and lung lesions to heart defects and tumors. And it can be used to treat and sometimes cure certain cancers. But it also has a potentially serious medical downside: the abil-
ity to damage DNA and, 10 to 20 years later, to cause cancer. CT scans alone, which deliver 100 to 500 times the MEDICINE radiation associated with an ordinary X-ray and now provide three-fourths of Americans’ radiation exposure, are believed to account for 1.5 percent of all cancers that occur in the United States. Recognition of this hazard
and alarm over recent increases in radiological imaging have prompted numerous experts, including some radiologists, to call for more careful consideration before ordering tests that involve radiation. “All imaging has increased, but CTs account for the bulk of it,” said Dr. Rebecca Smith-Bindman, a specialist in radiology and biomedical imaging at the University of California, San Fran-
cisco. “There’s clearly widespread overuse. More than 10 percent of patients each year are receiving very high radiation exposures.” The trick to using medical radiation appropriately, experts say, is to balance the potential risks against known benefits. But despite the astronomical rise in recent years in the use of radiation to obtain medical images, this balancing act is too often ignored. See Radiation / F4
Mass. health law may bode well for federal law By Steve LeBlanc The Associated Press
BOSTON — Massachusetts has the nation’s highest rate of residents with health insurance. Visits to emergency rooms are beginning to ease. More residents are getting cancer screenings and more women are making MONEY prenatal doctors’ visits. Still, one of the biggest challenges for the state lies ahead: reining in spiraling costs. Six years after Gov. Mitt Romney signed the nation’s most ambitious health care law — one that would lay the groundwork for his presidential opponent’s national version — supporters say the Massachusetts law holds promise for the long-term success of Barack Obama’s plan. Like the federal law it inspired, the Massachusetts law has multiple goals, among them expanding the number of insured residents, reducing emergency room visits, penalizing those who can afford coverage but opt to remain uninsured, and requiring employers to offer coverage or pay a fine. Supporters of the Massachusetts experiment are quick to point out its successes. An additional 400,000 individuals have gained insurance since 2006, meaning about 98 percent of residents have coverage. A recent study by the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation found that between 2006 and 2010, the use of emergency rooms for non-emergency reasons fell nearly 4 percent. That was a key goal of the law, since using emergency rooms for routine care is far more expensive than visiting a doctor. See Law / F2
HEALTH HIGHLIGHTS MONEY: Health care law is poised to lower spending, F2
NUTRITION: Iced tea could make kidney stones worse, F3
MEDICINE: Breast-feeding rates are on the rise, F4
FITNESS: Learn the proper posture for a casual walk, F6
F2
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
H E Editor’s note: Ongoing support groups now appear online only. See www.bendbulletin. com/supportgroups. To submit an entry for either list, see instructions below.
CLASSES BACK TO SCHOOL SHOT CLINICS: Bring immunization records and have your child immunized for school; $15.19 without insurance; 2-6 p.m.; Monday at La Pine School Based Health Center, 51605 Coach Road; Tuesday at Lynch School Based Health Center, 1314 S.W. Kalama Ave., Redmond; Wednesday at Ensworth School Based Health Center, 2150 N.E. Daggett Lane, Bend; Aug. 30 at Sisters School Based Health
Center, 1701 McKinney Butte Road; 541-322-7400. COMMUNITY ACUPUNCTURE: Ongoing acupuncture sessions; $25; 5:30-7 p.m. Wednesdays; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 N.W. Louisiana Ave., Bend; 541-330-0334. SCLERODERMA EDUCATION CONFERENCE: Featuring speaker Dr. Daniel Furst; registration required by Sept. 1; free; 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Sept. 15; Bend Memorial Clinic, 1501 N.E. Medical Center Drive, Bend; mzrayann@msn.com. TOXIC WORLD PRESENTATION: Webinar presents the dangers of toxins in our environment; free; 9:30-11:30 a.m. Saturday; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 N.W. Louisiana Ave., Bend; 541-330-0334.
How to submit Health Events: Email event information to healthevents@ bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event” at www.bend bulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must be updated monthly and will appear at www.bendbulletin.com/healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. People: Email information about local people involved in health issues to healthevents@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.
M VITAL STATS
Lowering spending The health reform law known as the Affordable Care Act would require all individuals to purchase insurance or face a tax penalty starting in 2014. Advocates of the mandate believe that having more widespread insurance coverage could lower health spending by treating individuals with chronic conditions before their illness spirals into a major health event. A recent survey suggests that might be the case. Among individuals age 45 to 64 with two or more chronic conditions, more than one in five individuals put off getting medical care or filling a prescription due to cost. Among individuals over age 65 — who are predominately insured through Medicare — the rate fell to about one in 15. Source: CDC Center for Health Statistics
Did not get or delayed medical care in past year due to cost
23.4%
6.9%
Age 45-64
Age 65+
Did not get prescription drugs in past year due to cost
21.5%
6.3% Age 45-64
Age 65+
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
60% of employers expect cost increase from health care law More than 60 percent of employers in a new survey anticipate some increase in their health benefit costs due to the federal Affordable Care Act. The survey of 1,203 employers by the Mercer consulting firm found that 20 percent of those businesses expect an increase of 5 percent or more. The firm said employers in retail and hospitality, which often have large numbers of part-time and lower-paid workers, will be among those most affected when the health care law takes full effect in 2014. Employers will be required to extend coverage to all employees working 30 hours or more per week or face possible penalties, according to Mercer. “Extending coverage to more employees will be a significant new expense for these employers,” said Tracy Watts, Mercer’s U.S. health care reform leader, “especially because other provisions (of the law) regulate how much an employer can require
employees to contribute to the cost and how good the coverage must be.” Overall, 6 percent of employers surveyed said they were likely to stop providing health benefits after government-run insurance exchanges open in 2014. That rose to 9 percent among retail and hospitality employers. “While there are a number of potentially valuable costcontainment elements of the Affordable Care Act, the reality is unless something more is done there will still be upward pressure on health care costs,” said Bill Kramer, executive director for national health policy at the Pacific Business Group on Health, a nonprofit coalition that includes large employers such as Boeing Co. and Walt Disney Co. Kramer said “the unfinished business of health reform is cost containment.” — Chad Terhune, Los Angeles Times
P Dr. Logan Clausen has joined the staff of Central Oregon Pediatric Associates. Clausen is a graduate of the University of Colorado at Boulder and Oregon Health & Science University. She Clausen completed her residency at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Dr. Laurie D’Avignon has joined Bend Memorial Clinic’s east-side clinic infectious disease and hospitalists departments. D’Avignon is a former employee of Wilford Hall Medical Center, Brooke
Army Medical Center, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences and University of Texas Health Science Center, and she served as the director of the Infectious D’Avignon Diseases and Global Health Security Program at the Defense Institute for Medical Operations. She is a graduate of the University of Arizona College of Medicine, and she completed a fellowship at the National Institutes of Health and a residency at the David Grant Medical Center.
Fathers can affect baby’s health at birth, study says By Kerstin Nordstrom McClatchy Newspapers
RALEIGH, N.C. — It has long been known that the behavior and environment of the mother during pregnancy can affect a newborn’s health. But new research suggests that a father’s behavior is important, too. Scientists at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill have found that different parental occupations may bring increased risk of birth defects. For example, photographers seem to have a greater risk of having a child with eye defects. The children of landscapers have a greater risk for gastrointestinal defects. Yet Tania Desrosiers, an epidemiologist at University of North Carolina’s Gillings School of Global Public Health and the lead author of the study, cautioned that the heightened risks are still
small. “Dads shouldn’t worry or change jobs,” she said. Birth defects are rare conditions. For example, only 1 in about 700 births results in a baby with a heart defect. Still, birth defects are the leading cause of infant mortality, and those who live with defects struggle. The causes of about 70 percent of birth defects are still unknown. The university scientists looked at more than 60 different jobs and 60 different defects, using data from 10,000 pregnancies with defects (not all pregnancies made it to term) and 4,000 live births without defects. The paper was published in Occupational and Environmental Medicine. Although the study establishes a correlation between jobs and defects, it does not establish the cause.
Law Continued from F1 State health officials also point to what they say are increases in mammograms, colon cancer screenings and prenatal care visits and a 150,000-person reduction in the number of smokers after the state expanded coverage for smoking cessation programs. “Since Gov. Romney signed health care reform here in Massachusetts, more private companies are offering health care to their employees, fewer people are getting primary care in an expensive emergency room setting, and hundreds of thousands of our friends and neighbors have access to care,” said Gov. Deval Patrick, a Democrat and co-chairman of Obama’s re-election committee. Another reason the law remains popular may be that so many Massachusetts residents receive insurance through work and have been largely untouched by its penalties. The Blue Cross Blue Shield study found 68 percent of non-elderly adults received coverage through their employers in 2010, up from about 64 percent in 2006. The study also found no evidence to support one fear lawmakers had when they approved the law — that employers or workers might drop coverage because of the availability of public coverage. Another indication of the law’s acceptance in Massachusetts is the reduction in the number of those assessed a tax penalty for failing to have insurance despite being able to afford it. In 2010, 44,000 Massachusetts tax filers were assessed the penalty under the “individual mandate.” That’s a drop from the
67,000 people required to pay the penalty in 2007, the first year it was assessed. In 2010, the highest penalty was $93 a month, or $1,116 a year. In 2012, the highest penalty increased to $105 a month, or $1,260 a year. Massachusetts is the only state with an individual mandate, although the Supreme Court recently upheld the constitutionality of a similar mandate in the federal law. Despite the penalty, most polls place support for the initiative at more than 60 percent, about double the approval rate for the federal health care law. Supporters say there’s a lesson there too. The more people begin to understand the benefits of the federal law, they say, the more support for the federal law should increase. “The first lesson is that you can meet the goals we set out in Massachusetts, you can cover the majority of the uninsured and fix the broken market” for health care, said Jonathan Gruber, who helped craft both the state law and the federal law as an adviser to Romney and Obama. “And you can do so with broad public support,” Gruber said. “Based on what we’ve seen in Massachusetts, people like this.” Getting more people insured doesn’t necessarily improve their access to care, however. A survey last year by the Massachusetts Medical Society found long waits for appointments with primary care
doctors: an average of 48 days for an internist and 36 days for a physician of family medicine. More than half of primary care doctors were no longer taking new patients, a slight increase from the previous year. At the same time, since the law was approved in 2006, Massachusetts residents are more likely to have a place they usually go when they are sick or need advice (up 4.7 percent), more likely to have had a preventive care visit (up 5.9 percent), more likely to have had multiple doctor visits (up 5 percent) and more likely to have had a dental visit (up 5 percent), the Blue Cross Blue Shield report found. The charge that the law has been a “budget-buster” in Massachusetts has also been challenged. A recent study by the business-backed Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation found that during the five full fiscal years since it was implemented, the law has cost the state an additional $91 million
a year after federal reimbursements — well within initial projections. But Massachusetts still struggles to slow the spiraling cost of health care for residents. This year both the Massachusetts House and Senate have approved bills aimed at trimming projected health care costs in the state by $150 billion to $160 billion over the next 15 years. A committee is hoping to iron out the differences between the two bills before the end of the formal session July 31.
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THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
F3
N Beyond carrots: Food for your eyes Use bananas By Carolyn O’Neil The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Thinkstock
Iced tea increases kidney stone risk A Loyola University Medical Center urologist is warning those at risk for kidney stones to watch their intake of iced tea, a summertime favorite. Iced tea contains high concentrations of oxalate, one of the key chemicals that lead to the formation of kidney stones, according to Dr. John Milner, assistant professor at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine. Kidney stones — small crystals that form from minerals and salt normally found in urine, the kidneys or ureters — are usually small enough to pass painlessly from the body. But stones sometimes grow large enough to become lodged in the ureters, which can be painful. They are a common disorder of the urinary tract that affects about 10 percent of the population in the United States. Men are four times more likely to develop kidney stones than women, and the risk rises dramatically after age 40. Postmenopausal women with low estrogen levels and women who have had their ovaries removed also are at increased risk. Dehydration combined with increased iced tea consumption raises the risk of kidney stones, said Milner. To quench thirst and properly hydrate, water is the best choice, Milner said. Real lemonade (not powdered) is another good option. “Lemons are high in citrates, which inhibit the growth of kidney stones,” Milner said. Hot tea also contains oxalate, but is not generally consumed in the same quantities, Milner said. Other foods that contain high concentrations of oxalates include spinach, chocolate, rhubarb and nuts. Those at risk should reduce salt, eat meat sparingly, drink several glasses of water a day and eat foods that provide adequate amounts of calcium, which reduces the amount of oxalate the body absorbs. — Anne Aurand, The Bulletin
Foods are more appealing when they look beautiful, and nothing’s prettier than a late summer tomato. But we should be eating for our eyes, too. Nutrition researchers are gazing into our eyes to illuminate the link between nutrition and eye health. Their important diet discoveries go beyond eating carrots to see better in the dark. Carrots still rank high on the eyesight-saving menu, but other heroes, perhaps even more important, are emerging from the farm. Scientists have set their sights on green leafy and deep orange or yellow vegetables such as spinach, kale, zucchini, corn, tomatoes, carrots, collard greens and turnip greens because they contain two natural carotenoid plant pigments called lutein and zeaxanthin. They are both potent anti-oxidants thought to protect the eyes against damaging light waves and free radicals that may cause cataracts, glaucoma, diabetic retinopathy and age-related macular degeneration. A 2011 study in the British Journal
Epigenetics Continued from F1 In coming months, she’ll work with local teachers about lesson plans, and she will engage other colleagues who can design educational, interactive video games that can speak to the middle school set. The goal is to introduce middle schoolers to the language, so they know the word “epigenetics,” and they understand the concept that “the DNA you’re born with isn’t the end-all,” said Shannon.
Fetal programing One example of how diet can modify the expression of a person’s genes is known as “fetal programming,” Shannon explained. This has been studied a great deal, she said. If a woman eats a diet that is high in fat but low in nutrients before, during and after her baby is born, it may result in an epigenetic change to the mother’s and the baby’s DNA. That change is called “methylation.” In this case, it would affect the genes involved with regulating food intake and body weight, thus promoting obesity in the child, Shannon said. “The expression of genes and whether they are turned on or off can impact what, how much and when we make different proteins. Some of these proteins regulate our appetite or impact how efficiently we metabolize nutrients,” Shannon said.
of Nutrition reports that lutein may reduce risk of cataracts by up to 40 percent and a 2007 study in the Archives of Ophthalmology found that lutein may cut risk of AMD by 35 percent. Lutein is also found in eggs, especially the yolk. Recipe note: Because lutein is a fat-soluble nutrient, absorption is increased when consumed with a little oil. So it’s good to know that olive oil drizzled on summer’s fresh salads is good for your taste buds and your eyes. Other powerful anti-oxidant nutrients associated with maintaining overall eye health are zinc, vitamins C and E and beta-carotene. The two leading causes of visual loss and blindness are cataracts and AMD, affecting more than 20 million Americans. Lutein is important for the development of an infant’s eyesight (attention moms-to-be) and maintaining children’s vision health. Happily, many of the foods rich in nutrients good for our eyes are delicious additions to any meal and are beautiful to look at, too. How about those tomatoes?
That child may then grow up consuming a high-fat, poor-nutrient diet, due to inadequately functioning genes that control regulation of food intake. And, then, those changes could carry on, potentially resulting in early obesity and increased risk of heart disease and diabetes three generations down. The hope is that by improving the diet, a mother could break this cycle, Shannon said. For example, if the secondgeneration mother consumed a healthy low-fat diet during pregnancy, the genes that had been methylated could be demethylated, restoring the appropriate functioning of genes involved in food intake and body weight in the third-generation infant.
Let’s Get Healthy program This concept of epigenetics could be taught in social studies or science classes, Shannon said. She is in the process of developing a new, interactive exhibit that travels to science festivals and health fairs at schools. Epigenetics will be the newest module in the “Let’s Get Healthy” interactive research and education program Shannon started in 2007. Existing Let’s Get Healthy modules — which may include classroom lessons, interactive exhibits and pre- and post-exhibit evaluations — cover topics such as diet, body composition, physical activity, cancer prevention and more. Teachers typically discuss
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
as a base for an ice cream alternative By Casey Seidenberg
Your sight’s savers
Special to The Washington Post
Lutein/zeaxanthin: kale, collard greens, spinach, turnip greens, broccoli, avocados, zucchini, peas, corn, Brussels sprouts, tangerines, dark leafy salad greens; also eggs Beta-carotene: carrots, mangoes, sweet potato, greens, spinach, tomatoes, broccoli, cantaloupe, kale, apricots Vitamin C: papayas, citrus fruit, strawberries, tomatoes, mangoes, green peppers, berries Vitamin E: almonds, wheat germ, wholegrain breads, avocados, greens Zinc: oysters, lobster, beef, poultry, pork, lentils, whole-grain bread Source: USDA nutrient database
the topics in a classroom before students experience the exhibit. Exhibits typically include some sort of interactive game. In an exhibit about skin cancer exhibit, for example, a “Mario-style” video game helps reiterate the lesson, Shannon said. Children become the Mario character, carrying sunscreen-shooting guns. The characters try to avoid harmful rays from the sun. They search out tanning-booth zombies and hit them with their sunscreen shooter. (After three hits, the zombies turn into happy, healthy people again.) When the shooter runs low, the character must find fruits and vegetables, antioxidants that reload the sunscreen shooter.
Some sort of video game will likely illustrate the epigenetics lesson in the exhibit. Shannon speculated about potential ideas such as a “drop the marble” game concept, with grandma at the top and grandchild at the bottom and a lot of risk factors, such as high-fat foods, in between, which can change the end result of the child’s health. Children who engage in the Let’s Get Healthy exhibits answer questions about what they know and what they do in their own lives. Their anonymous input is collected and used as research for school projects, community and workplace wellness policy decisions and other research organizations. — Reporter: 541-383-0304, aaurand@bendbulletin.com
I love to take my boys out for ice cream. My friends are shocked that I embrace such a processed, sugary food, but I relish witnessing my sons’ sweet, stained smiles in between licks. An ice cream cone on a hot summer day brings me back to my childhood, when pleasures were mostly sensory and entirely simple. In my complicated adult life, I appreciate those simple pleasures. But a serving of vanilla ice cream contains about half the calcium of the same size serving of whole milk, and is higher in fat and calories, so I limit our outings. Because my boys delight in the whole ice cream experience, including the anticipation, we often make our own version. This way they enjoy it without the health hazards. I know, I know, you don’t have time to make your own dinner, let alone your own ice cream. Just try it. It takes very little time, and kids of all ages will get a kick out of the process. The trick is a sliced and frozen banana. Slice a bunch, freeze on parchment paper, and store for when the urge for ice cream hits. To prepare, whip a handful of the frozen banana pieces in a blender until creamy. Right here, you have the equivalent of soft serve without the plastic-like aftertaste or the chemicals. Then blend in other foods such as strawberries or pieces of dark chocolate to flavor. It is that simple!
Thank You! for the 2012 Sports Physicals Thank you to the medical community and over 100 local volunteers who made it possible for 344 6th through 12th grade students to obtain their free pre-play sports physicals. The Center Foundation believes that all kids benefit from participation in intramurals and sports and we strive to make sure kids do so… safely. Our appreciation to the medical professionals who donated their time and skills: Dr. Ross Keys, Adventure Chiropractic
Thom Dernbach, PA, The Center
Kathy Lein, CPNP, Bend Memorial Clinic
Dr. James Hall, The Center
Dr. Charlotte Lin, Bend Memorial Clinic
Dr. Scott Jacobson, The Center
Dr. Jim McCauley, Bend Memorial Clinic
Kevin Kolcun, PA, The Center
Dr. Lauren O’Sullivan
Gary Lachenmyer, PA, The Center
Dr. David Kelly, High Lakes Health Care
Dr. Lilly Soma, The Center
Dr. Nancy Brennan, St. Charles Health System
Nathan Lynch, PA, The Center
Dr. Matthew Clausen, St. Charles Health System
Dr. Jay Moore, The Center
Dr. Susan Decker, St. Charles Health System
Dr. James Nelson, The Center
Dr. Dara Gaskin, St. Charles Health System
Dr. Blake Nonweiler, The Center
Dr. Chris Graham, St. Charles Health System
Mark Spencer, PA, The Center
Dr. Tim Hanlon, St. Charles Health System
Trebor Struble, PA, The Center
Dr. Allen Hilles, St. Charles Health System
Scott Tyler, PA, The Center
Dr. Anita Kolisch, St. Charles Health System
Dr. Viviane Ugalde, The Center
Dr. Robert Ross, St. Charles Health System
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Dr. Michael Coe, The Center Sponsors:
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F4
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
M Scientists create birth control pill for men (well, male mice)
VITAL STATS
Forgoing formula Breast-feeding initiation in the U.S. increased from 74.6 percent in 2008 to 76.9 percent in 2009, the single largest year over year increase in the past decade. Oregon exceeds the national average for U.S. breast-feeding rates. Oregon
100%
88.9% 76.9%
80%
68.1% 56.6%
60%
48.7%
47.2%
36%
40%
25.5% 20%
26.3% 16.3%
0
Breast-feeding Exclusive Ever at 12 months breast-feeding breast-fed Exclusive at 6 months Breast-feeding breast-feeding at 6 months at 3 months Source: CDC Breastfeeding Report Card
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
Radiation Continued from F1 The consequences include unnecessary medical costs and risks to the future health of patients. Both doctors and patients have a responsibility to better understand the benefits and risks and to consider them carefully before doctors order and patients undergo a radiation-based procedure. Patients may be surprised to learn that some of the newest uses of radiological imaging, including CT scans of coronary arteries to look for calcium buildup, have not yet been tested in scientifically designed clinical trials, and thus their true benefits are at best a guess. Experts have estimated that widespread use of coronary artery scans, which deliver 600 times the radiation of a chest X-ray, could result in 42 additional cases of cancer for every 100,000 men who have the procedure, and 62 cases for every 100,000 women who do. For every 1,000 people undergoing a cardiac CT scan, the radiation adds one extra case of cancer to the 420 that would normally occur. This risk may seem inconsequential, but not to someone who gets a cancer that could have been prevented. Complicating the matter is the enormous variation — sometimes tenfold or more — in the amounts of radiation to which patients are exposed from the same procedure at different institutions, or even at the same institution at different times.
Keeping track of exposure Although the cancer-causing effects of radiation are cumulative, no one keeps track of how much radiation patients have already been exposed to when a new imaging exam is ordered. Even when patients are asked about earlier exams, the goal is nearly always to compare new findings with old ones, not to estimate the risks of additional radiation. As Dr. Michael Lauer of the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute wrote in The New England Journal of Medicine three years ago, “The issue of radiation exposure is unlikely to come up because each procedure is considered in isolation, the risks posed by each procedure are low and seemingly unmeasurable, and any radiation-induced cancer won’t appear for years and cannot easily be linked to past imaging procedures.” After an extensive review of the environmental causes and risk factors for breast cancer, the Institute of Medicine reported last year that sufficient evidence of risk was found only for combined hormone therapy used by postmenopausal women and exposure to ionizing radiation, at doses much higher than those received during a mammogram. Everyone is exposed to a certain amount of background radiation — about three millisieverts a year from cosmic rays, radon gas and the earth’s radioactive elements. By 1980, according to The Harvard Health Letter, various introduced sources, like medical tests, nuclear power plants, nuclear fallout, television sets,
Yvetta Fedorova / New York Times News Service
computer monitors, smoke detectors and airport security scanners, added another 0.5 millisieverts per year. Now, however, the amount of radiation used medically rivals that of the background radiation, adding three millisieverts each year to the average person’s exposure. (A mammogram involves 0.7 millisieverts, a dose that is doubled with a 3-D mammogram.) There are many reasons for this increase. Doctors in private practice who have bought imaging equipment tend to use it liberally to recoup the expense. The same goes for hospitals just a few miles apart that needlessly duplicate certain equipment so they can boast of having the latest and greatest capacity to detect disease. Doctors ordering tests suffer no adverse effects, and patients feel they are getting the most that modern medicine can offer. Lauer wrote in a commentary about cardiac tests, “Most physicians who order imaging tests experience no consequences for incurring costs for procedures of unproven value. On the contrary, they or their colleagues are paid for their services, and their patients don’t complain because the costs are covered by third parties. Patients are pleased to receive thorough evaluations that involve the best cutting-
Ever wonder why there’s no birth control pill for men? For starters, it’s a math problem: To stop a woman from getting pregnant, all you have to do is block a single egg each month. But a man produces millions of sperm each day — about 1,000 every time his heart beats. Blocking them all is a much bigger task. This helps explain why no one has come up with a reversible form of birth control for men since the condom was introduced centuries ago. (The first unambiguous description of the prophylactic’s use appears in a 1564 writing called “De Morbo Gallico,” which describes a syphilis outbreak in Europe that began in France in the 1490s.) But a new option may now be on the horizon. A study published in Friday’s edition of the journal Cell describes an experimental drug that, when taken daily by male mice, reduced their sperm count so much that the animals were rendered effectively infertile. When the drug was stopped, sperm counts and quality were restored and the mice were able to sire healthy offspring. The drug is a small molecule that the researchers have dubbed JQ1. Due to its
small size, it is able to cross the blood-testis barrier and reach the cells where sperm are produced. Once in place, JQ1 appears to bind with a protein called BRDT, disrupting its normal function and ultimately preventing sperm cells from maturing. A 2007 study found that messing with the BRDT protein in mice caused the animals to become sterile. Another study from 2010 showed that JQ1 and other small molecules could target proteins like BRDT. So an international team of researchers led by Dr. Martin Matzuk of Baylor College of Medicine in Houston put it all together and confirmed that JQ1 reduced sperm production. When seven male mice were given a daily dose of 50 milligrams of JQ1 per kilogram of body weight, only four of them were able to sire offspring, and the litters were smaller than usual. When the daily dose was doubled, none of these four mice were able to reproduce at all. By comparison, seven control mice which were not on the drug sired more than twice as many litters of pups, and the litters were normal-sized. All of this was accomplished without af-
fecting the animals’ hormone levels or sex drive — essential conditions for any birth control pill that human males would be willing to take (and that drug companies would be willing to develop). Within three months of stopping treatment, all seven of the experimental mice were able to sire offspring. The babies whose fathers were treated with JQ1 had “normal size, activity, and behavior as offspring born from controls,” according to the Cell report. Of course, mice are not people, and it’s not yet certain that this approach will work in humans. But Matzuk and his colleagues are optimistic that it will because the BRDT proteins in mice and men are very similar. “We envision that our discoveries can be completely translated to men, providing a novel and efficacious strategy for a male contraceptive,” they concluded. In a commentary that accompanies the study, Dr. William Bremner of the University of Washington in Seattle shares their optimism. He called JQ1 “an exciting new approach to male contraception.” — Karen Kaplan, Los Angeles Times
edge technologies.”
TOO MUCH INFORMATION?
Beyond financial motives
Questions abound about dense breasts, mammograms
According to a new study, the rise in medical imaging clearly goes beyond financial motives. Smith-Bindman and her colleagues reported in June in The Journal of the American Medical Association that a dramatic rise in imaging rates from 1996 to 2010, including a tripling of CT scans, occurred in six large prepaid health systems where the financial incentive ought to have encouraged fewer, not more, tests. The increased testing doubled the proportion of patients who received high or very high radiation exposures. By 2010, the researchers reported, 20 CT scans were performed for every 100 adult patients; for every 100 patients ages 65 to 75, about 35 CT scans were done. And among the 10 to 20 percent of children in the study who underwent a single CT scan of the head, radiation doses were in the range previously shown to triple the risk of later developing brain cancer or leukemia. Smith-Bindman urged patients to participate in the decision to undergo medical imaging. She said, “Patients should ask, ‘What is this test for? Do I need it? Why? Do I need it now?’” Legislation can help curtail, or at least monitor, radiation doses, she said, citing a California law that took effect in July requiring that the dose used for CT scans be recorded in every patient’s medical record and that inadvertent overdoses be reported to the state immediately. If such recording were to become a national mandate, electronic medical records could help doctors and patients keep track of radiation exposures and provide further incentive to avoid unnecessary imaging.
By Lauran Neergaard The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — More women are getting the word that they may have breasts too dense for mammograms to give a good picture. What’s not so clear is what to make of that information. New York this summer became the fourth state to require that women be told if they have dense breasts when they get the results of a mammogram. That’s because women whose breast tissue is very dense have a greater risk of developing breast cancer than women whose breasts contain more fatty tissue. Plus, it can be harder for mammograms to spot a possible tumor. Monday, scientists reported a bit of good news about yet another question: Do denser breasts also signal a worse chance of survival? A National Cancer Institute study tracked more than 9,000 breast cancer patients and concluded those with very dense breasts were no more likely to die than similar patients whose breasts weren’t as dense. “It’s definitely reassuring,” said NCI lead researcher Dr. Gretchen Gierach, who reported the results in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Yes, tumors might be found later in the most dense breasts, but once diagnosed they apparently weren’t more aggressive or harder to treat, explained co-author Dr. Karla Kerlikowske of the University of California, San Francisco, who has long
studied breast density. “That risk factor doesn’t affect her ability to respond to treatment, and treatment is good,” Kerlikowske said. In fact, researchers were surprised to find an increased risk of death only in certain women with the least dense breasts — those who also were obese or had large tumors. Perhaps it has to do with increased hormones that accompany obesity, Gierach speculated, stressing that the finding needs further study. Whatever the explanation, the research illustrates just how much more there is to learn about breast density’s complex role in cancer. “There’s a large proportion of women who have dense breasts, but most of those people don’t get breast cancer,” Kerlikowske cautioned. Mammograms can show if your breasts are made up mostly of dense tissue — milkproducing and connective tissue — or of fatty tissue. Fatty tissue appears dark on the X-ray. Dense tissue appears white. So do potentially cancerous spots, meaning they can blend in. Density tends to decrease with age. Half of women younger than 50 and a third older than 50 are estimated to have dense breasts. It’s not clear how many know it since mammogram providers give that information to doctors, not directly to women. The new state laws were spurred by cancer survivors outraged that they weren’t told their dense breasts might
have masked the earliest signs of tumors on supposedly clean mammograms. Connecticut, Texas, Virginia and New York have passed laws requiring that mammogram providers notify women if they have dense breasts when they mail out the exam’s results. Similar legislation has been introduced in other states and Congress; an advocacy group is keeping track at www.are youdense.org. The consumer conundrum: What do women do next? Other exams, such as ultrasounds or MRIs, sometimes detect tumors that mammograms miss — but there’s no data showing that the expensive extra testing saves lives, one reason some doctors’ groups have lobbied against some of the laws. Cost aside, those extra tests also tend to trigger more false alarms, leading to needless biopsies. Another big concern: There’s no standard way to measure breast density — it’s a judgment call that can vary from radiologist to radiologist, and from one year’s mammogram to the next, said Dr. Otis Brawley of the American Cancer Society. “We’re making policy in a gray area where the experts and doctors don’t know what it means,” said a frustrated Brawley. To help women make sense of the debate, the American College of Radiology this month developed a brochure for mammography centers to distribute: http://tinyurl .com/cpuvpwe.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
M EDICI N E
F5
Haunted by voices: Living with schizophrenia By James A. Fussell The Kansas City Star
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — “Kill yourself! You’re worthless! Why are you still here?” The voices in Denise Baynham’s head are ceaseless and demanding. For three decades the 54year-old Kansas City, Kan., woman has struggled with schizophrenia. The chronic mental illness twists how people think, feel and interact. It can spawn paranoia, delusions and auditory hallucinations. In extreme cases it can drive people to kill others, or themselves. Sometimes the voices urge Baynham to wrench the wheel and drive off the road. “Do it!” they urge. “Do it now!” Resisting wears her out. Baynham, who is on medication, is the assistant director of SIDE Inc, a peer-run organization that serves the mentally ill in Wyandotte County, Kan. Recently she was elected president of the Kansas Consumer Advisory Council for Adult Mental Health. Still, she must remind herself daily that she is a worthwhile person. She’d like others to think that, too — although she knows not everyone will. Schizophrenia has always been easier to fear than to understand. Recent publicity hasn’t helped. The disease reportedly afflicted both accused Colorado movie-theater gunman James Holmes and Arizona shooter Jared Lee Loughner. That’s no reason to stereotype, Baynham said. “The first thing (the media) jumped at was ‘Could this have been someone with a mental illness who had schizophrenia?’ ” she said. “I just feel they think we all could go out and do something like this. That doesn’t describe the kind of person I am.”
A shocking change Schizophrenia affects everyone differently. Angela Hardee of Olathe, Kan., who asked to go by her maiden name for this article to protect her family, experienced schizophrenia’s darker side with her son. Now 25 and in jail, he lost himself in a world of violence and paranoid delusions when he was just a teen. It was a shocking turnaround from his happy childhood. Highly gifted and sensitive, he scored in the 99th percentile on national tests, wrote poetry for his grandparents and played complex pieces by Rachmaninov on the piano. “He was a delightful kid,” she said. “Very sweet and caring.” But by his 16th birthday everything changed. He screamed, broke things and flew into rages. Diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder, which includes elements of bipolar disorder, he began to hear voices telling him he was an Egyptian pharaoh or a Roman soldier. “People were plotting to ‘get him,’ and he would get mad at
Jill Toyoshiba / Kansas City Star
Denise Baynham, left, has struggled with schizophrenia for most of her adult life; she hears voices that tell her to harm or kill herself.
me because I supposedly knew who they were and wasn’t telling him,” Hardee said. “And (he thought) there was someone who had invaded my body, and I wasn’t really his mother.” Drugs and alcohol just made things worse. Each day brought a new bizarre behavior. He’d put his shirt over his head and tell his mother not to look at him because her eyes were like daggers. He began to reek after he stopped taking showers, fearing that fluoride and chlorine in the tap water would scar his skin. Hardee, a therapist with a master’s degree in psychology, was powerless against his creeping psychosis. A psychiatrist prescribed antipsychotic medication. The pills caused him to gain weight and lose his libido. Hardee began finding them under cushions, in potted plants, on top of the armoire. She called local mental health centers, but they were powerless to make him come in for help, or compel him to take his medication. And because he was so smart, he hid his symptoms well. Hardee knew he needed to be institutionalized. There was no room. “There’s a waiting list at the (Kansas) state hospital in Osawatomie,” she said. “There’s just so many people with psychiatric problems, and they keep cutting the budgets. I feel like no longer is there a safety net for these people.” As a result, she said, many severely mentally ill people are left in the care of burned-out family members who are, at best, illequipped to help them, and, at worst, unable to control the delusions. “When somebody (with schizophrenia) goes on a shooting spree, everybody says these are evil people,” she said. “They’re not evil people. They’re sick people, and they need help.” When it came to her son, there was only a little to go
around. In the last several years Hardee called police to her house more than 40 times. He couldn’t stay in her home. And he refused to comply with any treatment plan. Seeing no other option, Hardee kicked her son out of the house and changed the locks. Instead of going to a mental health center, he chose to be homeless and live on the street. Today her son is safe, but only because he’s behind bars. Police in Gardner cobbled together minor charges and sent him to jail, where he’s held in a special section for the mentally ill. But soon, Hardee knows, he will be out, and the problems will start again. She worries what might happen. He’s threatened suicide multiple times and threatened to kill people. She’s called crisis lines more times than she can count. “I think they got tired of me,” she said. “They said, ‘Does he have a plan?’ He had to have a plan. So it just went in circles.” Hardee, who answers the information line for the Kansas chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, is not surprised by the mass shootings in the news. She worries there will be more if states don’t spend enough money to care for people with serious mental illnesses.
million — or 12.4 percent — from state mental health centers. Missouri cut $21.2 million, or 6.8 percent of its mental health budget. But the true cuts are even deeper, said Sita Diehl, the organization’s national director of state policy and advocacy: “That figure does not include cuts to Medicaid, by far the largest funder of mental health services.” The result? “We do not have the capacity to treat individuals who are mentally ill in our community mental health system,” Cagan said. “We’ve eviscerated it over the last several years, and we’ve closed so many hospital beds over the last several decades it has left very few options other than the ER, the street, jail or prison.” In its last “Grading the States” report in 2009 the National Alliance on Mental Illness in Arlington, Va., gave Kansas a “D” for its mental health services. Missouri got a “C.” The Health Care Foundation of Kansas City said states have a choice: Pay a little now, or a lot later. “If people with mental illnesses don’t get the help they need in a timely fashion, that increases the chance of lots of things going wrong,” Cagan said.
Diminishing resources
‘It can happen to anyone’
Rick Cagan, executive director of the Kansas chapter of the alliance, in Topeka, said the incidence of violence involving such people is small. However, he thinks Hardee is correct to be concerned about a possible increase. Desperate to cut costs, recession-weary states have slashed spending for mental health care by more than $1.8 billion since 2009, according to a report from National Alliance on Mental Illness in Arlington, Va. In the last four years, the alliance said, Kansas cut $14.3
Hardee is beyond frustrated. “When I hear about budget cuts in state mental health it
Lead exposure is dangerous even at low levels, study says By Timothy B. Wheeler The Baltimore Sun
BALTIMORE — Despite dramatic progress in reducing Americans’ exposure to lead over the past 25 years, a growing body of research finds that children and adults still face health risks from even very low levels of the toxic metal in their blood. A recent government study, prepared with help of researchers from Johns Hopkins’ Bloomberg School of Public Health, tallies the wideranging damage low-level lead exposure can do, beyond the well-documented effects of reducing youngsters’ IQ and undermining their ability to learn and control their behavior. Hearing and even the onset of puberty may be affected in children, while in adults, kidneys and blood pressure may be harmed. “There does not appear to be a really safe level of lead exposure,” said Andrew Rooney, a senior health scientist with the National Toxicology Program who coordinated the review
of existing research. “The best course of action,” he added, “is to eliminate all lead exposure from our environment.” Mounting evidence that children can experience learning and behavior problems from low-level lead exposure prompted the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in June to cut in half the level of lead in young children’s blood at which health authorities are urged to intervene. For more than 20 years, the “level of concern” in young children had been 10 micrograms of lead per deciliter of blood. Declaring there is no safety threshold for the metal, the CDC set a new “reference level” of 5 micrograms per deciliter. In Maryland, that change is expected to multiply the number of youngsters deemed in need of help, even after the state experienced a 98 percent reduction in childhood lead poisoning cases. But the federal study found scientific evidence of other harmful health effects, be-
sides those related to learning and behavior, at those low levels. Children were found to be at greater risk of delayed puberty, reduced growth and hearing deficit when the lead levels in their bloodstream were at or below 10 micrograms per deciliter. The study also found adults had increased blood pressure and greater risk of hypertension at similar lead levels. But at even lower levels — 5 micrograms per deciliter or less — the study found evidence of reduced kidney function in adults, as well as reduced fetal growth and lower birth weights in pregnant women. Rooney said the National Toxicology Program launched its review at the request of the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, which was concerned about lead’s reproductive effects on pregnant workers. The current workplace exposure limit for lead is 50 micrograms per cubic meter in the air.
hurts,” she said. “Because if these people had a son like mine they wouldn’t do it. If they knew how much family members are suffering they might be more compassionate. But I have a feeling they don’t want to know. They want to blame the victim. The reason is, if they can blame that person it protects them. You know this will never happen to my family. But that’s not true. Mental illness is an equal opportunity disease. It can happen to anyone.” Just ask Denise Baynham, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia in her early 20s. “I just don’t know what I’ve done wrong,” she said. “I don’t know why it has invaded me — my mind, and my thoughts, and how I feel about myself.” Baynham is a survivor. But there have been times with the voices when she broke down and thought “Maybe they’re right?” During a weak moment she took a knife and slit the inside of her forearm, from the wrist to the elbow. While it drew blood, it wasn’t life-threatening. Her actions didn’t satisfy the voices. “Because I didn’t die they were angry,” she said. “You didn’t finish,” they said. “You didn’t finish!” She didn’t want to finish.
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Deep down she knew she was a good person. “I try to be,” she said. “I do things for people just because, and I believe in God with all my heart.” During this interview, asked to repeat what the voices were saying, Baynham furrowed her brow and said they were concerned. “They’re saying ‘Why are you doing this?’” she said. “‘Why are you doing this? Why are you doing this?’” Baynham has worked hard to live with a difficult condition. Her two grown children have no trace of the disease. She’s proud of how far she’s come. “Mental illness is nothing to be ashamed of,” she said. “Once you get over the stigma within yourself you can overcome the stigma from others. I don’t want to be judged by my diagnosis. I want to be looked at for what’s in my heart.” Want to know what’s in her heart? Just listen to her favorite hymn, which she sings to keep the voices at bay. “When peace like a river attended my way “When sorrows like sea billows roll “Whatever my lot, Thou has taught me to say “It is well, it is well with my soul.”
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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012
F SAFE MOVEMENTS In a weekly four-part series, physical therapist Lisa Ann McCall offers examples and tips about how to use our bodies safely in our daily lives.
Swimming, already a popular activity, has taken on new interest as a result of the Olympics. As a low-impact exercise, it’s ideal for seniors, pregnant women or those recovering from injury, says Dr. Stuart Elkowitz of Somers Orthopaedic Surgery and Sports Medicine Group in New York. Still, there are injuries. “Most swimming injuries are to the shoulder, followed by the knee and neck,” he says. “By following straightforward tips, most of these injuries can be avoided.”
Part three of four: walking with ease Striking with the heel and pulling the body forward can create pain in the knees, spine and neck. It impedes a person’s balance to have the hips jutting out forward. It’s better to lean forward into the walk, to push off with the foot and leg behind the body, and to glide across the floor. Lift the chest slightly and don’t hold in the belly. Improper
Source: Lisa Ann McCall, physical therapist, former yoga teacher and author of The McCall Body Balance Method. McCall studied body Proper movements in agrarian cultures, where people’s daily lives include a lot of manual labor but their joints and bodies don’t break down as much as people from Western cultures. — Anne Aurand, The Bulletin
ACL Continued from F1
Risk factors for females Why women have such higher rates of this injury is a topic of much research and is something Pollard has been studying for more than 10 years. Pollard said most ALC tears likely occur from a perfect storm of risks. “It’s a combination of factors,” Pollard said. “For every person it may be different.” Hormonal: Some studies have suggested that females experience cyclical changes in knee joint laxity that correspond with their menstrual cycles. There are estrogen receptor sites in the ALC, Pollard explained. Clinical studies have tested women’s blood and joint laxity and found that when estrogen goes up, joint laxity increased. When estrogen is higher — around ovulation — a woman’s joints may be more lax. “My personal take is that there’s a lot of hype around it, because it’s an obvious difference between the sexes,” Pollard said. However, recently, there is some consensus that there may be a link, she said. Structural: Structural differences between men and women are more likely to be legitimate risk factors, Pollard said. First, the notch. Evidence shows that the shape of a woman’s intercondylar notch — the depression between the round ends of the bottom of the femur, at the knee joint — is associated with higher risks of ACL tears. The notch is proportionately narrower in females than in males, generally speaking. That matters because the notch is where both anterior cruciate and posterior cruciate ligaments attach to the joint. The relative narrowness leaves less space for the ACL to move and to operate, Pollard said. Combined with other factors, this is probably a significant contributor to ACL tears. But, she said, “We don’t emphasize this a lot because, what are we going to do about it?” Another structural risk factor that Pollard considers legitimate is pronation of the feet. When a foot pronates, the foot flattens and the ankle leans inward, rotating the lower leg and therefore changing normal knee movements. Numerous studies have looked at the static — standing still — foot positioning of females who have torn their ACLs and compared them to equal numbers of females who have not had the injury. Those who pronated had higher rates of ACL injuries. But before someone tries to correct pronation with orthodics in their shoes, they need to identify the source of the problem, Pollard said. Pronation could be driven by hip muscular imbalances or weaknesses that could be corrected through certain kinds of muscular training, Pollard said.
Swimming injuries can be avoided
K neeB ound To see more about KneeBound, visit www.youtube.com/ watch?v=mA4SI6xuxGo
Two other structural theories to explain women’s risk for ACL injuries — a wider pelvic width and the Q-angle — have not been supported in recent research and Pollard said she does not believe they are legitimate risk factors for ACL tears. The Q-angle is angle between the femur (upper leg bone) and the tibia (lower leg bone). It does play into a different kind of knee problem known as patellofemoral pain (under the knee cap), but not ACL tears, Pollard said. Biomechanical and neuromuscular: These factors refer to the position of the knee at the moment of torque and force. Using 3-D motion analysis laboratories that model how people move, researchers have found that females tend to move differently than males, especially in the hips and knees. Females are more likely to allow some degree of inward collapsing at the knees — think knock knees — called a knee valgus angle. This inward-collapsing move forces ligaments such as the ACL to stabilize the knee during cutting and landing moments, because there aren’t great muscles on the sides of the knees to stabilize the joint, Pollard said. The valgus angle in movements such as cutting, and the tendency to land from a jump more stiffly, with less bend in the knees, typically originate in the hips, Pollard said. The gluteal muscles control the movement of the femur. Underusing the hip musculature could stem from a muscle weakness or poorly developed muscle-use patterns, Pollard said. “This is something we can make a difference with,” she said. “That’s why we’re thrilled with it.”
Prevention There’s not much a female can do about her hormones or her bone structure. But studies have shown that certain neuromuscular training programs can retrain women to move their bodies in ways that reduce the risk of ACL injuries. Preventing the injury in the first place will save a player from pain, time lost in recovery and expenses associated with surgery. It might also protect a person from osteoarthritis, a painful condition in which the cartilage in the knee deteriorates, causing stiffness and limiting movements. ACL tears predispose people to accelerated osteoarthritis, according to many experts, including Dr. Sharon Kolasinski, a professor of medicine at the Cooper Medical School at Rowan University and the head of the rheumatology division at Cooper University Hospital in New Jersey. “The
Arts & Entertainment Every Friday
Q : A : don’t advise using aids like Q :IYou swim paddles? say they should not be overused A :because they put additional strain
Are these injuries age-discriminatory? No. A weekend warrior, youth and the old can all be victims.
majority of people who experience ACL tears, even when surgically repaired, will have osteoarthritis within 10 to 15 years.” That would be particularly devastating for teenagers tearing their ACLs. National programs have been developed to try to prevent the injuries from happening in the first place. They seem to be effective. The November 2011 issue of Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, one of the Journal of the American Medical association journals, said that integrating a coachled neuromuscular warm-up prior to sports practice appeared to reduce the risk of lower extremity injuries in female high school soccer and basketball athletes. Neuromuscular training in this study included progressive strengthening, balance, agility and plyometric — fast, explosive exercises such as jumping — exercises. It also included an educational component to promote safe jumping and landing techniques designed to help avoid strain on the ACL. A local program, spearheaded by an orthopedic surgeon from Desert Orthopedics and a physical therapist from Rebound Physical Therapy, aims to do the same thing. KneeBound is offered to local schools and sports groups for free, but charges small fees for supplemental educational DVDs, said Tyson Langeliers, an athletic trainer with the program. Many local coaches are interested in the program, especially for women’s soccer, volleyball and basketball teams in public schools. KneeBound has also worked with organizations such as Mount Bachelor Sports Education Foundation and Rush Soccer, he said. KneeBound leaders teach coaches and players how to practice a variety of exercises — running around cones, jumping back and forth on one leg — that focus on building core, hip and leg strength to improve muscle imbalances, said Langeliers. Exercises are done with the underlying training objective of good alignment: the hip balanced over the knee, which is stacked over the shoe laces, Langeliers said. Drills are meant to retrain neuromuscular memory — how to develop safer landing strategies and how to cut and move safely. It’s a 20-minute warm-up program that can be done before team practice or independently, a couple of times a week. “It’s focused on trying to prevent knee injuries for males and females,” Langeliers said. “Because of higher risk factors for females we’ve geared it for female athletes, but the exercises are great for both. “It’s teaching good form, having good habits that will help prevent these noncontact injuries.” — Reporter: 541-383-0304, aaurand@bendbulletin.com
on the shoulder. So do kickboards used with outstretched arms because they can put the shoulders in a weak position. And what about knees? Q :This is associated with the frog A : kick. Warming up and stretching before an aggressive swim session is important, as well as exercises for the hamstrings and legs.
Can you tell me about your comQ :They’re monsense tips for water safety? simple: A : • Don’t swim alone. • Don’t swim when you are tired. • Perform core strengthening and cross-training exercises before you swim. • Warm up and stretch before swimming; cool down and stretch after swimming. • Don’t run in the pool area. • Don’t dive in shallow water.
And neck injuries? Q :These They seem like commonsense are usually caused by Q : directions. A : incorrect technique. The neck is Swimming is a very healthful very mobile and you must be careful not A :activity that uses most of the to overuse it and create muscle strain. muscles in the body. Avoid overdoing That means don’t over-rotate when you lift your head to inhale. Rotate the body more so the head remains aligned with the body.
it and use good technique, and you can enjoy swimming for a lifetime. — By Jane Glenn Haas, The Orange County Register
Insurer to mall shoppers: Park far away By Jackie Crosby Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
MINNEAPOLIS — So you always thought the best parking spot was in the front row? Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota wants you to move back. Way back. The state’s largest health insurer is taking over a handful of outlier parking spaces at shopping malls across Minnesota this month to encourage people to sneak in a few extra footsteps on the way inside. The idea is to remind shoppers that small behavior changes can have a big health impact, particularly amid an epidemic of obesity that cuts short lives and weighs down the health care system with added costs. “If you talk to anybody who at one point was inactive, you find they started making one little change — they took the steps up one flight at work instead of the elevator or they started carrying in their groceries one bag at a time,” said
Dr. Marc Manley, chief prevention officer at Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota. “Pretty soon they were doing a lot more physical activity.” For the campaign, Eagan, Minn.-based Blue Cross is spraying remote parking spaces with a message of action: “Today is the day we burn calories by parking here.” The promotion is part of the organization’s “do” campaign, which began in 2005 as a workplace effort to get Blue Cross members to take the stairs. The promotion has endured and expanded into a broader effort focused on community health, Manley said. About 61 percent of Minnesotans are overweight or obese and 66 percent have sedentary jobs, according to Blue Cross. Experts recommend 30 minutes of daily exercise, which can be broken into five- or 10-minute chunks. Barbara Loken, a University of Minnesota marketing professor and expert in con-
sumer psychology, said tactics such as what Blue Cross is trying can be effective. “The use of color and simple explanations help people trigger certain thoughts that, ‘Yes, this is relevant. This is important to me in my life,’” she said. “Even if they don’t actually use the space, it increases awareness that the number of steps you take going into the mall is important for your physical health.” While Blue Cross will get some branding mileage out of the parking lot campaign, it’s another example of how the message is changing for insurers who see promoting a healthy lifestyle as good for business. “We no longer think of marketing as just applying to commercial products and services,” said Loken, who has studied how mass media campaigns change health behaviors. “Now there’s the marketing of social ideas,” she said.
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012 G1
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Want to Buy or Rent Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.I buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006 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. Wanted: Single-car covered parking, Bend area. 541-678-2195 205
Items for Free Hot tub, needs work, FREE if you haul away. 541-382-3076 208
Pets & Supplies The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to fraud. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.
Barn/shop cats FREE, some tame, some not. We deliver! Fixed, shots, etc. 389-8420
Bloodhound, female, almost 2 yrs, unaltered, AKC reg., $400, Brady, 541-848-9953.
Boston Terrier puppies. 5 males, 2 females. Hand raised, dewclaws removed, 1st shots. Males $500, Females $600. 541-536-3741/541815-5651
Boxer puppies, AKC reg, 1st shots, very social $700. 541-325-3376
Buddha needs a furever home! Playful 8-yr old boy LOVES people & kids! Call Jefferson Co. Kennels (541-475-6889) or visit Buddha's Facebook page (Wanted: A Home for Buddha the Pit Bull) to learn more about adopting Buddha. Chihuahua female black & white 5 mo. old, $45, to good home, 541-598-4528. Chihuahuas 1 male, 1 female, 8 wks, black, $175 ea.541-279-5859 Doxie AKC mini pups, all colors inc wheaton &dapl, $375-425. 541-508-4558 www.bendweenies.com DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines, $12 or 2 weeks, $20! Ad must include price of single item of $500 or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809
www.bendbulletin.com
Free Heeler/German Shorthair to good home - male, excellent shape, all shots, my health forces rehome, 541-593-0206
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Pets & Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Misc. Items
Lost & Found
Livestock & Equipment
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
GIANT yard sale to Moving--Must sell: benefit rescued aniOak hutch $350; mals! Every Sat/Sun FREE Maple Table & 6 in Aug, 10-4. NonPreparedness chairs $100; profit, no-kill, all volClass Grandfather Clock unteer, all proceeds At Oregon’s $900; Antique Oak for vet bills. Tax ded. Largest 3-Day Secretary $500; En8950 Hwy 97, RedGun & Knife Show glish Oak bookcase mond, 2 mi. N of TuAugust 24-25-26 malo Rd overpass. w/glass doors $100; at Portland 788-4170, 389-8420. Wurlitzer spinet piExpo Center www.craftcats.org ano & bench $350; Featuring a Special 50+ salt dip (dishes) Golden Retriever Pup, 4 Show & Sale of collection - $250. mo. male, exc. dispoPreparedness & 541-350-2650 sition, parent certified, Survival Products $500, 541-420-1562 details at www.ColPatio Canopy, 10’x10’, lectorsWest.com Jack Russell puppies, Deluxe, $100, 382-2036 Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, purebred, born 7/2, $350 or 503-706-6993. Sun 10-4. Adm. $9 ea. 541-420-0739 Kittens/cats avail. thru The Bulletin GUN SHOW rescue group. Tame, r ecommends extra Sept. 1 & 2 shots, altered, ID chip, caution when purDeschutes Fairgrounds more. Sat/Sun 1-5, chasing products or Buy! Sell! Trade! other days by appt. services from out of 65480 78th Bend, SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 the area. Sending 541-389-8420; visit $8 Admission, cash, checks, or www.craftcats.org for 12 & under free. credit information photos & more. OREGON TRAIL GUN may be subjected to SHOWS 541-347-2120 FRAUD. For more Lab Pups AKC, black & yellow, Master information about an Howa 1500 308 cal., Hunter sired, perforadvertiser, you may $525; Howa 1500 7 mance pedigree, OFA call the Oregon mm mag, $475; Win cert hips & elbows, State Attorney Mod 120 20 ga. Call 541-771-2330 General’s Office pump, $250; Win Mod www.kinnamanretrievers.com Consumer Protec140, 20 ga. auto, tion hotline at Labradoodles - Mini & $300;Rem Wingmas1-877-877-9392. med size, several colors ter 870, 12 ga., 30” 541-504-2662 Full, $350; Win 97 12 www.alpen-ridge.com ga., very nice, $450; Yorkie-Chihuahua male Taurus Model 856, puppy, black & gold. .38 Special, 2”, NIB, 211 $100 CASH! $350; Taurus 605, Children’s Items 541-546-7909 .357 mag, 2”, NIB, $395; all very good or MALTESE STUD High Chair, baby, all NIB, 541-617-6328. service, wood, dark brown, $40. 541-280-9092. 541-923-9603 Hunters Sight-in Workshop: Aug.25-26, 9-4 Papillon tiny male pup. 212 at the Cossa Range. 9 wks Ready for lovAntiques & $7/gun non-members, ing home. Many ref$2 for members. erences $295. Call Collectibles Bring eye & ear pro541-350-1684 tection.Coffee/donuts Antique Safe, Pitbull Purebred Pups, provided. E. on Hwy fawns & tans, $200- great condition, $1800. 20 toward Burns, ½ 949-939-5690 (Bend) $275, 541-280-8720 mi past MP 24. Info, Antiques wanted: tools, call 541-389-1272 furniture, fishing, Find exactly what UTAH + OR CCW: Ormarbles, old signs, you are looking for in the egon & Utah Contoys, costume jewelry. CLASSIFIEDS cealed License Class. Call 541-389-1578 Sat. Aug 25, 9:30 am, Franciscan Pit Bull, spayed female, Dishes, Madras Range. Utah Hacienda Gold, 50+ 1½ yrs. Shots, chipped, $65, OR+UT - $100. pieces, incl. plates, loving, free to good Incl photo for Utah, cups & saucers, home. 541-388-0232 Call Paul Sumner creamers, coffee pot, 541-475-7277 for prePOODLE (TOY) PUPS milk pitcher, gravy reg, email, map, info Well-socialized & lovboats, covered butter able. 541-475-3889 247 dishes, divided bowls, mugs, salt & pepper, Queensland Heelers Sporting Goods platters,bowls & much standard & mini,$150 & - Misc. more! Exc. cond., up. 541-280-1537 http:// rightwayranch.wordpress.com $350, 541-617-5051 4 new life vests, 2 youth, Schnoodles,Great w/kids, 2 adult, $25 all. non-shed, shots, $350 541-504-3833 males, $450 females. Snow Boots, Altimate Pup kit 541-410-7701 Black Hawk, new Visit our HUGE THANKS to Dr. Peggy $130, 541-280-3493 home decor Griffin, Critter Care a consignment store. Van, for the caring & Snowmobile boots, AlNew items expert guidance she timate Escape II, arrive daily! provides to Cat Res$115. 541-280-3493 930 SE Textron, cue, Adoption & Foster Bend 541-318-1501 253 Team with the forgotwww.redeuxbend.com ten & abused cats & TV, Stereo & Video kittens in this area. www.craftcats.org The Bulletin reserves DVD/CD AM/FM HT, the right to publish all Samsung Red TOC sys Yorkie AKC pup, male, ads from The Bulletin $200 541-280-3493 teddy face, playful,health newspaper onto The guarantee,house trained Bulletin Internet web- Speakers, Creative 6.1 $550. 541-316-0005. Megaworks 650 700w site. $150 541-280-3493 Yorkie male puppy, 6 mos, shots, vet check, 255 $600. 541-792-0375 Computers Check out the Yorkie Puppies, ready classiieds online now, 1 little male left! THE BULLETIN re$500, 541-536-3108 www.bendbulletin.com quires computer adUpdated daily vertisers with multiple 210 ad schedules or those Furniture & Appliances 245 selling multiple sysGolf Equipment tems/ software, to disclose the name of the A1 Washers&Dryers Easy Go Golf Carts 08 business or the term $150 ea. Full war& 07, 36V, $2100/ea. "dealer" in their ads. ranty. Free Del. Also 541-280-3848. wanted, used W/D’s Private party advertis541-280-7355 ers are defined as 246 those who sell one Guns, Hunting computer. Coffee table, Walnut, & Fishing drop leaf, 52”long, 38” 257 wide, $75, 382-5127 1953 Winchester Model Musical Instruments 12 Field Gun, 30” bbl, full choke, 95-98% cond, Baby Grand Piano in excellent condition, $500 firm. 541-382-8723 $1000. 541-382-3076 .257 and .30-.378 Weatherby’s, MarkV 258 Couch, Chair, 2 Otwith Leopolds. Travel/Tickets tomans, $275 Cash 541-771-6768. Only,Excellent conBend local pays CASH!! DUCK TICKETS (4), dition, Great for for Guns, Knives & great seats, $125 & small apartment or Ammo. 541-526-0617 up. 541-573-1100. home. Rarely used and the cushions CASH!! 260 are firm. Contact: For Guns, Ammo & Misc. Items (541)388-4324 Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900. 22’ alum. semi-truck trlr, DESK 4-drawer, solid Colt M-4 tactical .22 rifle best used for storage, wood. $50. Twin size NIB with 30 rnd clip & $500. 541-447-4405 Captains bed, solid ammo. $350 OBO. wood, with hutch and Buying Diamonds 541-771-9902. 3 drawers, $175. Twin /Gold for Cash size girls decorative, Saxon’s Fine Jewelers DO YOU HAVE white headboard, 541-389-6655 SOMETHING TO w/hardware, $25. SELL BUYING 541-548-9358 FOR $500 OR Lionel/American Flyer LESS? Desk, Rolltop, dark oak, trains, accessories. Non-commercial 43”x33”x20” Deep, 4 541-408-2191. advertisers may drawer, brass pulls, BUYING & SELLING place an ad $250, 541-382-0483 All gold jewelry, silver with our Fridge- Magic Chef 18.5 and gold coins, bars, "QUICK CASH cu.ft. upright frost-free rounds, wedding sets, SPECIAL" fridge/freezer. Origiclass rings, sterling sil1 week 3 lines $12 nal owner. $150. ver, coin collect, vinor 541-330-0744 tage watches, dental 2 weeks $20! gold. Bill Fleming, Ad must GENERATE SOME ex541-382-9419. include price of citement in your single item of $500 neighborhood! Plan a Poulan Pro riding lawn or less, or multiple garage sale and don't mower 42” 18½ hp items whose total forget to advertise in good shape. $600 does not exceed classified! OBO. 541-389-9268 $500. 541-385-5809. Stowmaster 5000 holdLoveseat & Sofa, Misup tow bar, $125. Brake Call Classifieds at sion style, green, Buddy RV tow car brak541-385-5809 good cond. $250. www.bendbulletin.com ing system, SOLD 541-548-3610 541-504-5362
Electronics: Wanted- paying cash Found 7/15, S. End of Bend, for Hi-fi audio & stuErin, 541-639-4063. dio equip. McIntosh, JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, Heathkit, San- Found Hiking Poles, popular Cascade Mtn. sui, Carver, NAD, etc. trail, 8/21, call to ID, 1977 14' Blake Trailer, Call 541-261-1808 541-647-1958. refurbished by 261 Frenchglen BlackFound male Chocosmiths, a Classy ClasMedical Equipment late Lab in Redsic. Great design for mond, To claim call multiple uses. OverNew Miracle Ear hear541-604-1808. head tack box (bunking aids. Top of the house) with side and line Miracle Ear 5100 Found: RX Glasses Lens, easy pickup bed acon Canal behind AlRIC (receiver in cacess; manger with left bertsons in Redmond, nal). Purchased Nov., side access, windows 8/20, 541-516-8225 2011 w/3-year warand head divider. Toyo ranty. Used minimally. Found sports jersey, radial tires & spare; Were purchased for brand new, on Bend new floor with mats; $6588; asking 1/2 Parkway 8/17. Call to center partition panel; price,$3294 obo, cash identify 541-382-6890 bed liner coated in key only. 541-280-2347 areas, 6.5 K torsion Found: Watch, 8/18, in axles with electric 263 Old Mill area, call to brakes, and new paint, Tools ID, 541-419-7706. $7500 OBO! Call John at 541-589-0777. LOST black & white Rockwell 10” contraclop-eared male rabbit, tors saw, model 10. in Tanglewood $200. 541-389-2600 358 (SE) neighborhood. Scaffolding: Safeway Farmers Column 541-224-1200. light-weight, 3 sections high, all attachments & 4 LOST Border Collie/ 80 lineal ft. of welded Aussie typical mark- pipe horse corral, 4planks incl. $3200 new; sell $950. 541-419-9233. ings docked tail. rail, 2” pipe with 3” missing one canine, 7 posts & 2 feeders. 265 yrs intact male Eagle $300 541-410-3218 Building Materials Crest area, missing collar and tags. Re383 Bend Habitat ward! 541-460-0177 Produce & Food RESTORE Building Supply Resale Lost Cat: Romaine Village Area, around THOMAS ORCHARDS Quality at LOW 7/14, white female, Kimberly, OR U-Pick & PRICES w/1 black ear & black Ready Picked: Free740 NE 1st tail, 1 blue eye, 1 stone canning peaches 541-312-6709 green eye, $100 ReSunbright; Loring Elberta, Open to the public. ward, 541-317-9299 Nectarines, Santa Rosa or 503-724-5858. Flooring, Supreme Plums. U-Pick only - by Fri. 8/17, Suncrest Bamboo $200 per100 Lost diamond earring Peaches. Ready Picked sq/ft 541-280-3493 Sat. 8/4, Costco area. Only-Gravenstien Apples Sisters Habitat ReStore Reward! 541-526-5651 BRING CONTAINERS Building Supply Resale Lost in Culver “Athena” Open 7 days/wk 8am-6 Quality items. 2-yr-old female Choc. pm only 541-934-2870. LOW PRICES! Visit us on Facebook Lab 541-325-1315. 150 N. Fir. for updates Also we are 541-549-1621 Lost small leopard at Bend Farmer’s Mkt at Open to the public. purse in Redmond off Drake Park & St. Charles Lake Rd. Personal 266 contents. Would apHeating & Stoves preciate its return. 541-318-4746. Employment NOTICE TO REMEMBER: If you ADVERTISER have lost an animal, Since September 29, don't forget to check 1991, advertising for The Humane Society used woodstoves has in Bend 541-382-3537 been limited to modRedmond, els which have been 541-923-0882 certified by the OrPrineville, egon Department of 421 541-447-7178; Environmental QualSchools & Training OR Craft Cats, ity (DEQ) and the fed541-389-8420. eral Environmental Oregon Medical TrainProtection Agency ing PCS Phlebotomy (EPA) as having met classes begin August smoke emission stanFarm 27. Registration now dards. A certified open: www.oregonMarket medicaltraining.com woodstove may be 541-343-3100 identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached TRUCK SCHOOL to the stove. The Bulwww.IITR.net letin will not knowRedmond Campus ingly accept advertisStudent Loans/Job ing for the sale of Waiting Toll Free 308 uncertified 1-888-387-9252 Farm Equipment woodstoves. & Machinery 476
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Fuel & Wood
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4’ x 4’ x 8’ • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species and cost per cord to better serve our customers.
WE BUY FIREWOOD LOGS Juniper, Pine, Tamarack, 500+ cords. 503-519-5918 269
Gardening Supplies & Equipment For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800 To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 or email
classified@bendbulletin.com
SUPER TOP SOIL
www.hersheysoilandbark.com
Screened, soil & compost mixed, no rocks/clods. High humus level, exc. for flower beds, lawns, gardens, straight screened top soil. Bark. Clean fill. Deliver/you haul. 541-548-3949. 270
Brush Hog 72”, good cond., $600. 541-548-3818 or 541-480-8009. BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area’s most comprehensive listing of classiied advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classiieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
CAUTION READERS: Ads published in "Employment Opportunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for positions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independent job opportunity, please investigate thoroughly.
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Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never proWheat Straw: Certified & vide personal inforBedding Straw & Garden mation to any source Straw;Compost.546-6171 you may not have researched and deemed Wheat straw, small 50-lb to be reputable. Use bales, in the stack, 75¢ extreme caution when each. 541-546-9821 responding to ANY online employment Looking for your ad from out-of-state. Hay, Grain & Feed
next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws: Oregon Bureau of Labor & Industry, Civil Rights Division, 971-673-0764 If you have any questions, concerns or comments, contact: Classified Department The Bulletin 541-385-5809
Pacific Northwest, Family Owned Wholesale distribution company seeking experienced manager in Redmond, OR. Must have demonstrated supervisory and branch operation skills. Knowledge of underground waterworks products preferred. Generous compensation and benefit package. To apply send resume to dianej@hdfowler.com. No phone calls please.
Dental - Small rural clinic in Wheeler county seeking an EFTA certified dental asst. to work part time. Pay commensurate w/exp. Deadline Sept. 15. Send resume & request application to Asher Comm. Health Center Attn: Jim P.O. Box 307 Fossil, OR. 97830 Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com
DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW?
Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day!
541-385-5809. VIEW the Classifieds at:
www.bendbulletin.com
NURSE Aspens Assisted Living Community is now seeking a talented Registered Nurse to join our team in Hines, OR. Our RN Health Service Coordinator position provides a flexible working environment with opportunities for advancement. In this role, our RN assumes primary responsibility for healthcare supervision and works with the community director to supervise and train personal care staff and coordinate ancillary services. Must have current RN license; prefer 1 year in-home health or geriatric nursing. Rehab and restorative experience & nurse delegation helpful. Position requires 20-30 hours per week. Wages are very competitive; benefits available. Relocation fees negotiable. Please email resume to aspenstwo@centurytel.net
or fax to 541.573.2224. Additionalinformation about the position can be directed to Ryan Dupuy at 541.573.2222. Remember.... Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulletin' s web site will be able to click through automatically to your site. Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
FIND YOUR FUTURE Field Service Hoffmeyer Co. is HOME IN THE BULLETIN seeking an energetic Your future is just a page person for long-term employment, Will as- away. Whether you’re looking sist with conveyor for a hat or a place to hang it, The Bulletin Classiied is belting installs, shipyour best source. ping, receiving, customer service. Job reEvery day thousands of quires flexible work buyers and sellers of goods schedule including and services do business in nights & weekends; these pages. They know some overnight travel. you can’t beat The Bulletin No experience reClassiied Section for quired; will train. ODL selection and convenience REQUIRED. $9-$12/ - every item is just a phone hr. Application necescall away. sary. Please apply in The Classiied Section is person: 20575 Painteasy to use. Every item ers Ct., Bend, OR. is categorized and every Heavy Truck Diesel cartegory is indexed on the section’s front page. Mechanic. 2 Yrs experience with own tools. Whether you are looking for Full time with benefits. a home or need a service, Busy shop in Grants your future is in the pages of Pass. Submit resume The Bulletin Classiied. to sales@pacifictruckandtrailer.com or call Bobby 541-471-4450.
Manufacturing Plant Electrician
Warm Springs Composite Products is looking for an individual to help a growing innovative light manufacturing plant. Basic Duties: Assist in troubleshooting and repairs of plant equipment. Install, repair and maintain all electrical and electronic equipment. Able to read and revise electrical schematics, Must be able to perform both electrical and mechanical preventive maintenance requirements and report, PLC experience. Minimum Skills: A minimum of 5 years in the industrial maintenance field with a valid Oregon State Electricians License in Manufacturing. A strong mechanical aptitude with the ability to perform light welding and fabrication duties. Successful applicant shall supply the normal hand tools required for both electrical and mechanical maintenance. Benefits: Full Family Medical, Vision, Dental, Life, Disability, Salary Incentives, Company Bonuses, Pension and 401K w/Company Matching and Above Pay Rate Scale. Please remit resume to: Warm Springs Composite Products PO Box 906, Warm Springs, OR 97761 Phone: 541-553-1143, Fax: 541-553-1145 Attn: Mac Coombs, mcoombs@wscp.com Delivery
$upplement Your Income Now taking bids for an Independent Contract Hauler to deliver bundles of newspapers from Bend to Springfield, Oregon on a weekly basis. Must have own vehicle with license and insurance and the capability to haul up to 2000 lbs. Candidates must be able to lift up to 50 lbs. Selected candidate will be independently contracted. To apply or for more info contact James Baisinger at jbaisinger@bendbulletin.com
Data Center Network Technicians
Banking
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Horses & Equipment
(2) Great trail horses, 7 yrs old & 9 yrs old $1500 both. 541-548-5470. FOUND 8/21 Prescription sunglasses at Pine Nursery Park. Pretty QH mare 17 yrs old, great trail, go thru 541-410-4596 water, needs light riding. Anyone can FOUND: Bicycle, Wall ride. Free to a good St. area. Call to idenhome. 541-549-0985 tify 541-388-3645. Lost & Found
Employment Opportunities
Branch Manager –
We are excited to announce an available position in Bend, Oregon. Branch Supervisor Salary Range: $ 29,000 - $40,000 EOE. For more details, please apply online: www.sofcu.com
Facebook is hiring! We’re seeking a highly motivated Data Center Network Technician to help us build a world-class facility at our Prineville, Oregon location. The ideal candidate will have 3+ years’ experience in data center network deployment, strong troubleshooting skills, a solid understanding of Layer 2 and Layer 3 network switching/routing, and experience in configuring and supporting Cisco, Juniper, and F5 devices. For more information please visit our careers page https://www.facebook.com/career or email ristine@fb.com.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
G2 THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
Edited by Will Shortz
PLACE AN AD
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Noon Sat. Tuesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Noon Mon. Wednesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Tues. Thursday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Wed. Friday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate . . . . . . . . . . . .11:00 am Fri. Saturday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3:00 Fri. Sunday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Sat. Starting at 3 lines
Place a photo in your private party ad for only $15.00 per week.
*UNDER $500 in total merchandise
OVER $500 in total merchandise
7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days ................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days .................................................. $18.50 7 days .................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days.................................. $20.00
(call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. SATURDAY by telephone 10:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
*Must state prices in ad
is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
PLEASE NOTE: Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday. 476
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Employment Opportunities
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Estate Sales
Sales Northeast Bend
Sales Southeast Bend
Sales Redmond Area
Sales Other Areas
Downsizing sale: Aug. 24 & 25, 7am-3pm Sporting goods, bikes, rolling racks, fishing, boating, camping, canopy enclosures, French dbl. doors/ frame, garden/yard tools, framed art, teacher organizers, storage, kids electric riders, misc. electronics, lots more. 8338 Copley Rd., Powell Butte. ESTATE SALE! misc., furniture, household items, 61580 SE Baptist Way 8/24-25, 8/31-9/1, 10-4 282
HH FREE HH Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES: • 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For “Garage Sale Success!”
PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at
1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702
Sales Northwest Bend
HESTATE SALEH Beautiful Awbrey Butte home; 5 pc. leather sectional & loveseat, recliner, several beautiful area rugs, oak sideboard, oak roll top desk & file cabinets, oak bookcases, 2 wooden dining sets, bar stools, 2 king beds, full bed, dressers & night stands, lamps, small tables, books knick-knacks & décor, kitchen, glassware & china, collectibles, jewelry, refrigerator, garage shelves, holiday décor, patio set, bird baths, garage items & more! Fri. - Sat. 9- 4; crowd control numbers Fri. at 8 a.m. Take Mt. Washington to Summit to Farewell to 1153 NW Redfield Circle. For pics & more info go to www.atticestatesandappraisals.com Attic Estates & Appraisals 541-350-6822 Fri.-Sat. 8-3, 1630 NW 11th St, antiques, designer clothes, books, art, children’s, decor. Sat. 8-2. Kids’ toys & clothes, books, household, kitchenware & lots more! 685 NW Powell Butte Lp, off Awbrey Rd. 284
Sales Southwest Bend Garage Sale, Sat, 8-? 19764 Chicory Ave. Furniture, medical equip, women’s & kids clothing, toys, dryer, & more! 286
Sales Northeast Bend “$2 Moving Sale” Sat 9-2, 2537 NE Lavender Way, household, figurines,most items $2
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classiieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates!
541-385-5809 Fri. & Sat. 8 to 2, 63610 Hunter Circle, (corner of Cooley & Hunter Circ.) Antique table and 4 chairs, sewing machine and cabinet, table saw, John Deere snowblower, Sears 6HP yard vacuum leaf sweeper, brass fireplace screen, coffee table, lamps, folding chairs, misc. home decor items. Garage Sale: Sat. 10-5, Sun. 10-3, 22865 Sage Ct. in Cimarron City off McGrath Rd. Lots of general household, some tools, tables, & benches. Garage Sale: Sat. 9-?, Tools, knives, moving blankets, lots of yarn, misc., 3205 Bain St., off 27th & Jill. Large Estate & Downsizing Sale, 1837 NE Lytle. Watch for green signs on Revere between 3rd & RR tracks. Fri-Sat, 24th-25th 9-4; Sun 26th, 9-2, half-price. Check craigslist! Moving - Downsizing Sale. 62760 Dixon Loop - 5 mi. E. of Hospital off Stenkamp. 9-4. Sat., 8/25. Household/Barn items, trail tack and more. 541-771-8155 Super Moving Sale August 25th 8am - 2pm 1119 NE 9th; household, outdoor gear, furniture, camping ~ High quality! 288
Downsizing Sale, Fri. Sales Southeast Bend Only, 8-2, 60875 SW Garrison (River Rim 61584 SE Fargo Ln. Neighborhood Yard off Brookswood). Lopi Sale. 7am-3pm. Furgas fireplace, Portniture, decor, TV, meirion, Noritake patio chairs, printer, China/full set, MK, golf clubs, clothes, formal dresses, misc. kitchen stuff & misc. gardening/household.
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The Bulletin Recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to FRAUD. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.
Finance & Business
Rentals
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Loans & Mortgages
Roommate Wanted
Estate Sale - Fri & Sat. Awesome Garage Sale! 3rd Annual Stampin' Up WARNING Fri-Sat, 8/24-25, 9-3. & Garage Sale!! 8:30-4, Huge amount The Bulletin recomFri/Sat 9-4:00 of antiques, vintage, & Collectibles - antiques, mends you use cau1209 SW 34th Place, 66500 Ponderosa Loop collectibles, china, tion when you proRedmond. Sisters, off Gist Rd. stemware, silver, linvide personal ens, tins, tools, books, Fri. – Sat. Aug 24-25: Huge Hoarders Clean information to compaartwork, suitcases, 868 NW Negus Place, Out Sale, Fri-Sat 9-5, no nies offering loans or crystal, Avon, & misc. earlybirds. Antiques & Redmond; 8-4. credit, especially housewares. Oak ofcollectibles. 13900 NE Antiques, collectibles those asking for adfice desk, baby items, Ochoco Hwy near end of furn., freezer, misc. vance loan fees or indoor & outdoor furOchoco Res., Prineville. companies from out of niture, misc. com- HUGE YARD SALE! state. If you have Multi Family Sale: FurFRI & SAT 9-4, AT puter items, yard art. concerns or quesniture, household and 735 NW JACKPINE 61479 Barley Corn tions, we suggest you all kinds of hobby AVE., REDMOND Ln., Nottingham consult your attorney supplies, Fri. & Sat. Looking for your next Square, off SE 15th. HUGE yard sale to or call CONSUMER 9-6, 56749 Solar Dr., employee? No early sales! HOTLINE, benefit animal rescue Sunriver Area. Place a Bulletin help 1-877-877-9392. group. 8950 Hwy 97, Everything AND the wanted ad today and One Day Only Moving 2 mi N of Tumalo Rd kitchen sink! Clothing, reach over 60,000 Sale: Sat. 8/25, 10-3, Need help ixing stuff? sporting equip, home overpass. Each Sat/ readers each week. Furniture, name brand Must be able to work Call A Service Professional decor. Friday 8-2; SatSun in August, 10-4. Your classified ad clothes for entire famurday, 8-12 noon. ind the help you need. Furniture, toys, sportweekends and have a will also appear on ily, outdoor items, 21173 Charity Lane. ing goods, art, more! www.bendbulletin.com passion for the RV bendbulletin.com tools, something for business. Please apwhich currently Garage Sale: Fri.- Sun., Moving Sale: Fri. & Sat. everyone, no junk. LOCAL MONEY:We buy ply in person, or drop receives over 1.5 9-5, Antiques, artist 9-4, 4095 SW Ben 8956 SW Yahooskin secured trust deeds & resume off at: million page views materials, new Schwinn Hogan Dr, furniture, Dr., Powell Butte. note,some hard money Big Country RV, Inc. every month at adult trike, music cd’s, washer/dryer, dishes loans. Call Pat Kelley 3500 N. Hwy 97 Sisters Timber Creek no extra cost. scrapbooking materi541-382-3099 ext.13. Bend, OR 97701 Community Sale, Sat. Bulletin Classifieds als, new dishes for 8, Sunriver Moving Sale: Fri. & Sat. 8/24 & 25, or email a resume to 8/25, 8-3, get map at Get Results! decorating decor, Reverse Mortgages 9-3, Tools, household, bcrvhire@gmail.com 1061 E Timber Pine Dr. Call 385-5809 glassware & much by local expert Mike furniture,& clothes, or place more! No earlies, cash LeRoux NMLS57716 NOTICE 17822 Old Wood Rd. Call to learn more. your ad on-line at only. 60908 Crested RV Technician Remember to remove off Century Dr. bendbulletin.com 541-350-7839 Butte Ln. in Mtn. Big Country RV, Cenyour Garage Sale signs Security1 Lending Pines, off Parrell. tral Oregon's largest Yard Sale: Sat. 8/25, (nails, staples, etc.) NMLS98161 RV dealership is 8:30-4,No early sales. Multi Family Garage after your Sale event seeking an experiLots of fabric - all Sale - Aug. 25th 8 am Call a Pro is over! THANKS! enced RV Tech, top Get your kinds, patterns, craft to 3 pm and 26th 8 From The Bulletin Whether you need a dollar & benefits. items, books, tables, am to noon. All probusiness and your local utility Great working envifence ixed, hedges chairs, housewares, ceeds to benefit the companies. ronment. baskets,holiday items, Bend High Lacrosse trimmed or a house bcrvhire@gmail.com old leather suitcases, Program Location is GROW built, you’ll ind golf shoes & more 61108 Hilmer Creek Skidder and Cat opprofessional help in 1849 SW Canyon Dr. Dr. Bend www.bendbulletin.com with an ad in erators, log truck drivThe Bulletin’s “Call a The Bulletin’s ers: Immediate openMulti-family Sale: Evelyn Burley ings, excellent pay Service Professional” “Call A Service Fri-Sat. 24th & 25th and hours. Work in Directory 9am to 3pm both Professional” Rod Burley Northern CA. Call 541-385-5809 days. 21635 Hurst Directory 530-816-0656 50858 Fawn Loop, La Pine Lane, off Ward Rd. Fri. & Sat.. • August 24 & 25 • 9 to 5 ONLY! NO crowd control numbers!!! Independent Contractor Sat. Only Garage Sale: (Take Hwy 97 South from Baker Rd. overpass 9-4, Free coffee while and go 29 miles to the sale. South of La Pine you shop! Furniture, tent, 1½ miles turn west (right) on Masten Rd. “cammo” hunting across from HWY 31 and follow to Fawn Loop) clothes,secure mailbox, some collectibles, lots 33' Ideal Alfa 5th wheel, 2001 with three slide outs - beautiful; Two riding Craftsman yard tractors, general household misc one has snow blower and other accessories; 21034 Woodhaven Ave Joiner/Planer; Drill press; Wood Lathe; Radial Sat. & Sun. 9-5 at Arm Saw; Table saw; Router and table; Com60648 Barlow Trail, pound chop saw; Adjustable speed scroll saw; off Chisholm. AsFour older snowmobiles; Snowmobile trailer; sorted merchandise! Fireplug; Compressor; Lots of hand tools; FishFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF ing Poles and gear; Work bench; Refrigerator Yard Sale - Sat. & Sun. with bottom freezer; Kenmore 2006 front load 9-4, 61188 Loy Ln., washer and dryer; Like-new trash compactor; household goods, furOak table with eight chairs and four leaves; Oak niture, tools, bike, dry dinette set; Three large wardrobe cabinets; Pawasher, boat, sporttio table; Octagon wood picnic table with ing goods,much more! benches; Three recliners; Loveseat; Queen size hide-a-bed; Two queen size beds and frames; 290 dressers; nightstands; DVDs and VCRs; two Sales Redmond Area TVs and two TV cabinets; Men's boots and We are looking for independent contractors to shoes--size 14; Large men's clothing; Inversion service home delivery routes in: 1694 NW Teakwood Ln. table; Upright freezer; Lamps; Costume jewelry; Fri-Sat., 9-3. Houselinens; hundreds of Christmas items, very nice; hold, clothing elecOther holiday items; Pictures and lots of small tronics. CASH ONLY! picture frames; Kitchenware; pots and pans; electrical appliances; Yard and garden tools and 2-FAMILIES: Hunting/ decor items; Glass front bookcase/display cabifishing gear: waders, Must be available 7 days a week, early morning hours. net; Two smaller rockers-one ottoman; Trampotent, knives. lots of line; computer desk; Yard windmill; Ladies books. Area rugs. Must have reliable, insured vehicle. Sheffield bike; Three kids bikes; One cord fireCraft supplies: fabric, wood; Metal scrap; Combo step/extension ladsewing machine. Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 der; Lots of glass and ceramic figurines and household goods, during business hours small collectibles. Yard and garden tools; lamps. Stadium chairs, Cleaning items; Vacuum; brooms; more! See apply via email at online@bendbulletin.com car stereo, ferret cage you at the sale!!! & supplies, swing set & more! See craigslist. Handled by... 8-4 Sat. 5060 NW Deedy's Estate Sales Co. Kingwood off NW 541-419-4742 days • 541-382-5950 eves Helmholtz. www.deedysestatesales.com
ING
ESTATE SALE MOVING SALE
H Supplement Your Income H
Operate Your Own Business
Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor
& Call Today &
H Prineville, Sunriver/La Pine H
Share cozy mobile home in Terrebonne, $275 + utilities. 1-503-679-7496 630
Rooms for Rent Mt. Bachelor Motel has rooms, starting $150/ week or $35/nt. Incl guest laundry, cable & WiFi. 541-382-6365
The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro & fridge. Utils & linens. New owners.$145-$165/wk 541-382-1885 Good classiied ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view - not the seller’s. Convert the facts into beneits. Show the reader how the item will help them in some way.
631
Condo/Townhomes for Rent Mt. Bachelor Village Condo, beautiful 2 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 decks, BBQ, wifi, garage, & all amenities of resort incl. tennis, pool, hot tub, nature trails, near Old Mill $1350/mo, security/ damage deps. req. No Pets. 541-948-1886 or crismercer@yahoo.com 634
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
CHECK OUT THIS HOT DEAL!
$299 1st month’s rent! * 2 bdrm, 1 bath $530 & 540 Carports & A/C incl! Fox Hollow Apts. (541) 383-3152
Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co *Upstairs only with lease*
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
Small studio downtown area, all util. pd. $550, $525 dep. No pets/ smoking. 541-3309769 or 541-480-7870 638
Apt./Multiplex SE Bend A sharp, clean 2Bdrm, 1½ bath apt, NEW CARPETS, neutral colors, great storage, private patio, no pets/ smkg. $555 incl w/s/g. Call 541-633-0663
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809 648
Houses for Rent General
Real Estate For Sale
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012 G3 745
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Homes for Sale
Acreages
Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
NOTICE:
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Aircraft, Parts & Service
PUBLISHER'S All real estate adver- CHECK YOUR AD NOTICE tised here in is sub- Please check your ad on the first day it runs All real estate adverject to the Federal to make sure it is cortising in this newspaFair Housing Act, rect. Sometimes inper is subject to the which makes it illegal structions over the Fair Housing Act to advertise any prefphone are misunderwhich makes it illegal erence, limitation or 726 stood and an error to advertise "any Timeshares for Sale discrimination based can occur in your ad. preference, limitation on race, color, reliIf this happens to your or discrimination Great location - Desgion, sex, handicap, ad, please contact us based on race, color, familial status or nachutes River views! the first day your ad religion, sex, handitional origin, or intenNicely appointed, appears and we will cap, familial status, tion to make any such turn-key fully-furbe happy to fix it as marital status or napreferences, limitanished, 2 bdrm, 2 soon as we can. tional origin, or an intions or discrimination. bath, 1/10th TimeDeadlines are: Weektention to make any We will not knowingly share/fractional. Endays 11:00 noon for such preference, accept any advertisjoy the serenity of the next day, Sat. 11:00 limitation or discrimiing for real estate flowing river below, a.m. for Sunday and nation." Familial stawhich is in violation of blue sky above & all Monday. tus includes children this law. All persons the beauty Central 541-385-5809 under the age of 18 are hereby informed Oregon and Eagle Thank you! living with parents or that all dwellings adCrest Resort have to legal custodians, vertised are available The Bulletin Classified offer. $10,500 *** pregnant women, and on an equal opportuMLS#201203509, people securing cusnity basis. The Bulle- Powell Butte 6 acres, John L. Scott Real tody of children under tin Classified Estate 541-548-1712 360 views, great horse 18. This newspaper property, 10223 HousSW Bend will not knowingly acton Lake Rd. $99,900. 738 Deschutes Landing cept any advertising 541-350-4684 Riverfront Townhomes for real estate which is Multiplexes for Sale Starting in the low 775 in violation of the law. $400,000s 5665 Our readers are FSBO: 4-Plex, Manufactured/ Pahlisch Homes sq.ft., Built 1996, 1471 hereby informed that Mobile Homes NE Tuscon Way, all The Hasson all dwellings adverrented, $399,000 Company Realtors. tised in this newspaFACTORY SPECIAL 541-480-8080. Edie Delay, Broker per are available on New Home, 3 bdrm,1026 541-420-2950, an equal opportunity sq.ft., $46,900 finished 745 Julie Burgoni, Broker basis. To complain of on your site,541.548.5511 541-306-8927 discrimination call Homes for Sale www.JandMHomes.com HUD toll-free at Nice 3 bdrm 2 bath mnfd 1-800-877-0246. The 960 Need to get an $190,000 on 3.5 ac of leased prop toll free telephone On-top-of-the hill. One ad in ASAP? in Crooked River. Asknumber for the hearof our best view locaYou can place it ing $32,000, + take over ing impaired is tions, quality Creekpmts. 541-413-1903 1-800-927-9275. online at: side Townhome that includes use of all www.bendbulletin.com 650 Eagle Crest Ridge Houses for Rent amenities. A great Boats & RV’s 541-385-5809 buy, location and NE Bend priced to move. 2 bed750 room, 2 bath, 1419 4 Bdrm 2.5 bath, 1700 sq sq.ft. ft, appls, fenced yd, on Redmond Homes Eagle Crest culdesac. No smoking. Properties™ Pets? 2400 NE Jeni Jo 1/4 Mi. Deschutes River Ct., near hospital. 866-722-3370 frontage. Custom $1050. 503-680-9590 single level 3 bdrm, 3 860 4 Bedroom, 2.5 bath, bath, 3962 sq.ft., 1963 sq. ft. home lo- 12.72 Looking for your next acre gated Motorcycles & Accessories cated in the heart of employee? community, private Kanetsu Prineville. This lovely Place a Bulletin help setting. $997,000. Aerostich electric vest, new, traditional style home wanted ad today and MLS #201205961. $200. 541-280-3493 has a low mainte- Pam Lester, Principal reach over 60,000 nance yard, solid readers each week. Broker, Century 21 Harley Davidson Softwood cabinetry Your classified ad Gold Country Realty, Tail Deluxe 2007, throughout, as well as will also appear on Inc. 541-504-1338 white/cobalt, w/pasa tile entry, and lamibendbulletin.com, senger kit, Vance & nate wood floors. currently receiving Hines muffler system Master on the main Looking for your next over 1.5 million page & kit, 1045 mi., exc. employee? floor and a bonus views, every month cond, $19,999, room over the garage. Place a Bulletin help at no extra cost. 541-389-9188. Wiring for AC unit is wanted ad today and Bulletin Classifieds reach over 60,000 Harley Heritage already there, short Get Results! readers each week. Softail, 2003 distance to movies, Call 541-385-5809 or Your classified ad $5,000+ in extras, restaurants, and place your ad on-line will also appear on $2000 paint job, shopping. MLS at bendbulletin.com 30K mi. 1 owner, #201108663 bendbulletin.com which currently reFor more information $159,950. please call ceives over Team Clark 658 541-385-8090 1.5 million page Century 21, or 209-605-5537 Houses for Rent views every month Gold Country Realty at no extra cost. Redmond 541-548-2131 FIND IT! Bulletin Classifieds BUY IT! Get Results! NW Redmond - Nice 3 4270 sq ft, 6 bdrm, 6 ba, SELL IT! Call 385-5809 or Bdrm, 2 bath home on 4-car, corner, .83 acre place your ad on-line The Bulletin Classiieds mtn view, by owner. HUGE lot, dbl garage, at landscaped, fenced, $590,000 541-390-0886 bendbulletin.com underground sprin- See: bloomkey.com/8779 HD FAT BOY klers, nice neighbor1996 BANK OWNED HOMES! hood, taking applica762 Completely rebuilt/ FREE List w/Pics! tions, $850/mo + dep., customized, low www.BendRepos.com Homes with Acreage 541-419-1917. miles. Accepting ofbend and beyond real estate fers. 541-548-4807 20967 yeoman, bend or 687 1592 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 bath, site-built, 2 car Commercial for BUNGALOW ON THE garage, 24x36 shop HD Heritage Classic Rent/Lease WESTSIDE! w/10’ ceilings & 220V 2003, 100 yr. Anniv. Cute with endless pos- power, all on 1.22 treed model. 10,905 Miles, Warehouse - Industrial sibilities to re-design acre lot in CRR. new tires, battery, unit for rent. 5600 $195,000. or plenty of room to loaded w/ custom exsq.ft., $2250/month, add additional square http://bend.craigslist.org/ tras, exhaust & near Bend High. reo/3069581828.html footage on this large chrome. Hard/soft 541-389-8794. Call 541-633- 9613 double lot. Sturdy bags & much more. construction of a by$11,995, People Look for Information gone era with all the 541-306-6505 or About Products and Garage Sales quirky charm you just 503-819-8100. Services Every Day through don’t find in modern Garage Sales Honda Elite 80 2001, The Bulletin Classifieds homes today. 1400 mi., absolutely $219,900 Garage Sales 693 like new., comes w/ MLS#201204713 carrying rack for 2” Ofice/Retail Space Rhonda Garrison & Find them receiver, ideal for use Chris Sperry Princifor Rent in w/motorhome, $995, pal Broker & Broker 541-546-6920 541-279-1768 & The Bulletin Office space, high vis541-550-4922 ibility on Highland Ave. Nelson-Riggs TRI-1000 Classii eds John L. Scott Real in Redmond. $425 Triple tank bag, $150. Estate, Bend mo., incl. W/S/G, call 541-280-3493 541-385-5809 www.JohnLScott.com/Bend 541-419-1917.
700
800
18.5’ Bayliner 185 Open Road 37' 2004 2008. 3.0L, open bow, 3 slides, W/D hookup, slim deck, custom large LR w/rear winHunter’s Delight! Packcover & trailer, exc. dow. Desk area. age deal! 1988 Wincond., 30-35 total hrs., Asking $19,750 OBO nebago Super Chief, incl. 4 life vests, Call (541) 280-7879 38K miles, great Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 ropes, anchor, stereo, visit rvt.com shape; 1988 Bronco II 29’, weatherized, like depth finder, $12,000, ad#104243920 4x4 to tow, 130K new, furnished & 541-729-9860. for pics mostly towed miles, ready to go, incl WineAdvertise your car! nice rig! $15,000 both. gard Satellite dish, Add A Picture! 541-382-3964, leave $26,995. 541-420-9964 Reach thousands of readers! msg. Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds Itasca Sun Cruiser 1997, 460 Ford, Class A, 26K mi., 37’, living Viking Tent trailer Pilgrim 27’, 2007 5th 2008, clean, self room slide, new awwheel, 1 slide, AC, contained, sleeps 5, nings, new fridge, 8 TV,full awning, excel20.5’ 2004 Bayliner easy to tow, great new tires, 2 A/C, 6.5 lent shape, $23,900. 205 Run About, 220 cond. Was $6500; Onan Gen., new bat541-350-8629 HP, V8, open bow, now $5300, obo. teries, tow pkg., rear exc. cond., very fast 541-383-7150. towing TV, 2 tv’s, new w/very low hours, hydraulic jack springs, lots of extras incl. tandem axel, $15,000, tower, Bimini & 541-385-1782 custom trailer, $19,500. Pilgrim Open Road 541-389-1413 2005, 36’, 3 slides, Jayco Greyhawk Weekend Warrior Toy w/d hookup, upHauler 28’ 2007,Gen, 2004, 31’ Class C, grades, $24,440. fuel station, exc cond. 6800 mi., hyd. jacks, 541-312-4466 sleeps 8, black/gray new tires, slide out, interior, used 3X, exc. cond, $49,900, 20.5’ Seaswirl Spy$24,999. 541-480-8648 der 1989 H.O. 302, 541-389-9188 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for Lazy Daze 26’ 2004, 882 life $11,900 OBO. 14K mi., $42,000. Fifth Wheels 541-379-3530 619-733-8472. Regal Prowler AX6 Extreme Edition 38’ ‘05, Ads published in the 4 slides,2 fireplaces, all "Boats" classification maple cabs, king bed/ bdrm separated w/slide include: Speed, fishglass dr,loaded,always ing, drift, canoe, garaged,lived in only 3 house and sail boats. mo,brand new $54,000, For all other types of ALFA 30' RL 2007, still like new, $28,500, watercraft, please see front-view bedroom, Beaver Coach Marquis will deliver,see rvt.com, Class 875. granite, leather re40’ 1987. New cover, ad#4957646 for pics. 541-385-5809 cliners, 4x20 slide, new paint (2004), new Cory, 541-580-7334 HDTV, micro/conv, inverter (2007). Onan central vac, $31,000 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, 909-229-2921 SPRINTER 36’ 2005, parked covered $35,000 $10,500 obo. Two GENERATE SOME ex- obo. 541-419-9859 or slides, sleeps 5, citement in your neig- 541-280-2014 Alfa Ideal 2001, 31’, 3 queen air mattress, borhood. Plan a gaslides, island kitchen, small sgl. bed, couch rage sale and don't AC/heat pump, genfolds out. 1.5 baths, forget to advertise in erator, satellite sys541-382-0865, classified! 385-5809. tem, 2 flatscreen TVs, leave message! hitch & awning incl. $16,000. (Dodge 3500 1 ton also available) Monaco Dynasty 2004, loaded, 3 slides, die- 541-388-1529;408-4877 Used out-drive sel, Reduced - now parts - Mercury $129,900, 541-923OMC rebuilt maTaurus 27.5’ 1988 8572 or 541-749-0037 rine motors: 151 Everything works, $1595; 3.0 $1895; $1750/partial trade for 4.3 (1993), $1995. car. 541-460-9127 541-389-0435 Alpha “See Ya” 30’ 1996, 2 slides, A/C, 885 heat pump, exc. cond. 875 Canopies & Campers solid oak cabs, day & National Sea Breeze Watercraft night shades, Corian, 2004 M-1341 35’, gas, tile, hardwood. $9750 Arctic Fox Silver Edition 2 power slides, upOBO/trade for small 1140, 2005. 5 hrs on 2007 SeaDoo graded queen matgen; air, slideout, dry trailer, 541-923-3417 2004 Waverunner, tress, hyd. leveling bath, like new, loaded! excellent condition, system, rear camera $16,900. Also 2004 LOW hours. Double & monitor, only 6k mi. Dodge Ram 3500 quad trailer, lots of extras. Reduced to $41,300! cab dually 4x4, 11,800 $10,000 541-480-0617 mi, SuperHitch, $26,950. 541-719-8444 OR both for $39,850. RV CONSIGNMENTS Call 541-382-6708 WANTED Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 Ads published in "Wa- We Do The Work, You by Carriage, 4 slidetercraft" include: KayKeep The Cash, outs, inverter, satelaks, rafts and motorOn-Site Credit lite sys, fireplace, 2 ized personal Approval Team, flat screen TVs. watercrafts. For Web Site Presence, $60,000. "boats" please see We Take Trade-Ins. 541-480-3923 Class 870. Lance 945 1995, 11’3”, Free Advertising. all appl., solar panel, 541-385-5809 BIG COUNTRY RV new battery, exc. cond., Bend 541-330-2495 $5995, 541-977-3181 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Immaculate!
Coleman Canoe, Ram X-15, good condition, $300, 541-306-8160.
Kayak, Eddyline Sandpiper, 12’, like new, $975, 541-420-3277.
ONLY 1 OWNERSHIP SHARE LEFT! Economical flying in your own Cessna 172/180 HP for only $10,000! Based at BDN. Call Gabe at Professional Air! 541-388-0019 916
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
Diamond Reo Dump Truck 1974, 12-14 yard box, runs good, $7900, 541-548-6812
Econoline trailer 16-Ton 29’ Bed, w/fold up ramps, elec. brakes, Pintlehitch, $4900, 541-548-6812
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
Peterbilt 359 potable water truck, 1990, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4-3" hoses, camlocks, $25,000. 541-820-3724 925
Utility Trailers
Big Tex Landscaping/ ATV Trailer, dual axle flatbed, 7’x16’, 7000 lb. GVW, all steel, $1400. 541-382-4115, or 541-280-7024. Utility Trailer, 10’x5’x5’ high, enclosed, ramp on back, 3000 lb., $500, 541-604-1519. 931
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories
Palomino Pop-up Camper 1996, $2800, call after 5 pm, 541-279-7562. Chains, 245/75-16 truck Fleetwood Wilderness tire chains, new, $75 36’, 2005, 4 slides, 541-280-3493 rear bdrm, fireplace, Autos & AC, W/D hkup beauChains, Laclede auto Southwind 35.5’ Triton, tiful unit! $30,500. snows #1934, new, Transportation 2008,V10, 2 slides, Du541-815-2380 $20. 541-280-3493 pont UV coat, 7500 mi. Bought new at Chains, Les Schwab, $132,913; #1938, new, $20 asking $94,900. 541-280-3493 Call 541-923-2774
900
881
Travel Trailers
Komfort 25’ 2006, 1 slide, AC, TV, awning. NEW: tires, converter, batteries. Hardly used. $19,500. 541-923-2595
908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Check out OCANs online at classifieds.oregon.com!
Sea Kayaks - His & Fleetwood 28’ Pioneer Hers, Eddyline Wind 2003, 13’ slide, sleeps Dancers,17’, fiberglass 6, walk-around bed with boats, all equip incl., new mattress; power paddles, personal flo- hitch, very clean tation devices,dry bags, $11,500. Please call Softail Deluxe 1/3 interest in Columspray skirts,roof rack w/ 541-548-4284. Montana 3400RL 2008, 4 bia 400, located at 2010, 805 miles, towers & cradles -- Just slides, no smokers or Sunriver. $138,500. Black Chameleon. add water, $1250/boat pets, limited usage, Call 541-647-3718 Firm. 541-504-8557. $17,000 5500 watt Onan gen, Call Don @ solar panel, fireplace, 1/3 interest in well880 dual A/C, central vac, 541-410-3823 equipped IFR Beech Call 541-385-5809 to promote your service • Advertise for 28 days starting at $140 (This special package is not available on our website) Motorhomes elect. awning w/sunBonanza A36, loscreen arctic pkg, rear cated KBDN. $55,000. Funfinder189 2008,slide, receiver, alum wheels, 2 V-Strom front fender 541-419-9510 A/C, awning, furnace,self TVs, Xtender, $25 many extras. contained, queen, sleeps $35,500. 541-416-8087 541-280-3493 Building/Contracting Home Improvement Landscaping/Yard Care Executive Hangar 5, $11,500,541-610-5702 at Bend Airport V-Strom replacement NOTICE: Oregon state Kelly Kerfoot Const. Nelson Landscape (KBDN) halogen headlights, law requires any- 28 yrs exp in Central OR! Maintenance 60’ wide x 50’ deep, $20. 541-280-3493 Allegro 2002, 2 slides, one who contracts Quality & honesty, from w/55’ wide x 17’ high Serving 22K mi, workhorse for construction work carpentry & handyman V-Strom steel-braid bi-fold door. Natural Central Oregon to be licensed with the jobs, to expert wall covbrake lines, Fr & rear, chassis, 8.1 Chev engas heat, office, bathResidential gine, like new, $41,900 Construction Con- ering install / removal. $140. 541-280-3493 room. Parking for 6 MONTANA 3585 2008, & Commercial obo. 541-420-9346 tractors Board (CCB). Sr. discounts CCB#47120 cars. Adjacent to exc. cond., 3 slides, Springdale 29’ 2007, 865 •Sprinkler Repair An active license Licensed/bonded/insured Frontage Rd; great king bed, lrg LR, Arcslide,Bunkhouse style, •Sprinkler means the contractor 541-389-1413 / 410-2422 ATVs visibility for aviation tic insulation, all opsleeps 7-8, excellent Installation is bonded and inbus. 1jetjock@q.com tions $37,500. condition, $16,900, •Back Flow Testing sured. Verify the 541-948-2126 541-420-3250 541-390-2504 contractor’s CCB li- USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! •Fire Prevention, cense through the Lot Clearing CCB Consumer Door-to-door selling with • Summer Clean up Country Coach Intrigue Website regon •Weekly Mowing 2002, 40' Tag axle. YOUR AD WILL RECEIVE CLOSE TO 2,000,000 www.hirealicensedcontractor. fast results! It’s the easiest •Bi-Monthly & Monthly 400hp Cummins Diesified las com EXPOSURES FOR ONLY $250! Honda TRX300 EX 2005 sel. Two slide-outs. Maintenance way in the world to sell. or call 503-378-4621. sport quad w/Rev, runs ing rtis dve Oregon Classified Advertising Network is a service of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association. 41,000 miles. Most •Flower Bed Clean Up The Bulletin recom& rides great, new pipe & options. $110,000 •Bark, Rock, Etc. mends checking with paddles incl. $1700 obo. etwork Week of August 20, 2012 The Bulletin Classiied OBO 541-678-5712 •Senior Discounts the CCB prior to con541-647-8931 541-385-5809 tracting with anyone. Bonded & Insured Yamaha Grizzly 700 FI Some other trades 541-815-4458 2009, 543 mi, 2WD/ also require addiLCB#8759 4WD, black w/EPS, tional licenses and Landscaping/Yard Care fuel injection, indepen541-385-5809 Call The Yard Doctor certifications. dent rear suspension for yard maintenance, NOTICE: OREGON winch w/handle conthatching, sod, sprintrols & remote, ps, Econoline RV 1989, Landscape Contrackler blowouts, water fully loaded, exc. cond, auto, large racks, exc. tors Law (ORS 671) Debris Removal features, more! 35K orig. mi., $23,500, cond., $7850, requires all busiDIVORCE $135. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, Allen 541-536-1294 call 541-546-6133. 541-322-0215 nesses that advertise JUNK BE GONE LCB 5012 support, property and bills division. No court appearances. Divorced to perform LandI Haul Away FREE in 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772-5295. www.paralegalalternatives.com, scape Construction Aeration/Fall Clean-up CAN’T BEAT THIS! For Salvage. Also BOOK NOW! which includes: Look before you divorce@usa.com. Cleanups & Cleanouts planting, decks, Weekly / one-time service buy, below market Mel, 541-389-8107 avail. Bonded, insured, value! Size & milefences, arbors, free estimates! age DOES matter! water-features, and COLLINS Lawn Maint. Class A 32’ Hurriinstallation, repair of Yamaha Kodiak 400, Call 541-480-9714 Handyman cane by Four Winds, irrigation systems to 2005 4x4, 2500 lb winch, 50% OFF oceanfront condos! 2br/2ba was $700K, now $399,000. 2007. 12,500 mi, all be licensed with the Maverick Landscaping gun rack & alum loading Acquired from bank. 1 hr Vancouver, 2 hrs Seattle. Berkshire Direct, amenities, Ford V10, ERIC REEVE HANDY Mowing, weedeating, Landscape Contracramp, only 542 miles, lthr, cherry, slides, SERVICES. Home & yard detailing, chain tors Board. This 1-888-99-Marin x5418. show room cond, $4800. like new! New low saw work & more! Commercial Repairs, 541-280-9401 4-digit number is to be price, $54,900. Carpentry-Painting, included in all adver- LCB#8671 541-923-4324 541-548-5216 870 Pressure-washing, tisements which indi- Holmes Landscape Maint Honey Do's. On-time cate the business has Boats & Accessories • Clean-up • Aerate promise. Senior DRIVERS: CHOOSE your home time: weekly, 7/on-7/off, 14/on-7/off, full a bond, insurance and • De-thatch • Free Est. Gulfstream Scenic Discount. Work guarworkers compensa- • Weekly / Bi-wkly Svc. Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, or part-time. $0.01 increase per mile after 6 months. Requires 3 months 17’ 1984 Chris Craft anteed. 541-389-3361 tion for their employ- call Josh 541-610-6011 Cummins 330 hp die- Scorpion, 140 HP recent experience. 800-414-9569, www.driveknight.com. or 541-771-4463 ees. For your protecsel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 inboard/outboard, 2 Bonded & Insured tion call 503-378-5909 Painting/Wall Covering in. kitchen slide out, depth finders, trollTIME FOR CHANGE? Haney Truck Line is seeking top-quality, CCB#181595 or use our website: new tires,under cover, ing motor, full cover, www.lcb.state.or.us to WESTERN PAINTING hwy. miles only,4 door professional truck drivers. Positions available now. CDL-A, hazmat, EZ Load trailer, CO. Richard Hayman, check license status fridge/freezer icedoubles required. Call now, 1-888-414-4467, www.GoHaney.com. $3500 OBO. I DO THAT! a semi-retired paintbefore contracting maker, W/D combo, 541-382-3728. Home/Rental repairs ing contractor of 45 with the business. Interbath tub & DRIVERS: INEXPERIENCED/experienced, unbeatable career Small jobs to remodels years. Small Jobs Persons doing landshower, 50 amp proopportunities. Trainee, company driver, lease operator, lease trainers. Honest, guaranteed Welcome. Interior & 17’ Boston Whaler, scape maintenance pane gen & more! work. CCB#151573 Exterior. ccb#5184. do not require a LCB $55,000. with trailer, $6500, 877-369-7104, www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.com. 619-733-8472. 541-388-6910 license. 541-948-2310 Dennis 541-317-9768
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Help Wanted: Drivers
THE BETTER WAY TO BUY A CAR! ’05 Nissan Xterra Auto, 4x4 #648291 ............. $11,495
’10 Chevy Cobalt #110478A .......... $12,995
’10 Toyota Corolla LE #318632 ............. $13,977
’11 Hyundai Accent GLS Automatic #619037 ............. $13,995
’10 Ford Focus
#293446.............. $14,995
’11 Suzuki SX-4 33 MPG! #302264 ............. $14,995
’11 Mitsubishi Galant 4-Dr, Only 28K Miles #023061 ............. $14,995
’10 Mazda 6 Automatic, Loaded #M05673A ......... $15,995
’11 VW Jetta Sedan #347612 ............. $16,200
’12 Nissan Versa Automatic, 5-Door HB, Fuel Saver #358909A .......... $16,556
’10 Honda Civic LX Sedan 4 Dr, Automatic
#527652 ............. $16,722
’10 Dodge Avenger R/T Sedan 37K Miles, Loaded! #177898 ............. $17,495
’10 Chrysler Town & Country Quad Seating #232518 ............. $17,995
’11 Chrysler 200 Sedan Touring #553592 ............. $17,995
’11 Subaru Impreza AWD #511600A .......... $18,477
’09 Toyota Matrix AWD Only 28K Miles #009276A .......... $19,985
’09 Subaru Legacy Sedan H4 Special Edition #235780 ............. $19,995
’11 Ford Escape Limited AWD #C13535 ............ $24,250
’12 Ford Mustang 2 Door Coupe, V6, Low Miles! #211087 ............. $25,956
’07 Toyota F-J Cruiser Auto, Loaded, Only 44K Miles! #085835 ............. $26,995 Through 8/29/12 All vehicles subject to prior sale, does not include tax, license or title and registration processing fee of $100. Vin#’s posted at dealership. See Hertz Car Sales of Bend for details. Dealer #4821
541-647-2822 535 NE Savannah Dr, Bend HertzBend.com
G4 THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
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Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories
Antique & Classic Autos
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Sport Utility Vehicles
Vans
Automobiles
Automobiles
Honda Accord 1981 parts car, $250. 541-447-4405
Chrysler 300 Coupe 1967, 440 engine, auto. trans, ps, air, frame on rebuild, repainted original blue, original blue interior, original hub caps, exc. chrome, asking $9000 or make offer. 541-385-9350.
Pickup bed protector, Ford/Mazda, new $70 541-280-3493. Sliding glass window,for Toyota pickup, new, $150 541-280-3493 Tire chains, Laclede truck, 2219cam-new $75. 541-280-3493 Tires, Winterforce 195/ 75-14 snow tires New $200 541-280-3493 932
Antique & Classic Autos
Chrysler SD 4-Door 1930, CDS Royal Standard, 8-cylinder, body is good, needs some restoration, runs, taking bids, 541-383-3888, 541-815-3318
1964 Ford Pickup, original owner, 6-cyl, 4-spd, 135,000 miles, all original, excellent cond., $10,200. 541-548-3089 FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, door panels w/flowers & hummingbirds, white soft top & hard top. Just reduced to $3,750. 541-317-9319 Chev Corvair Monza conor 541-647-8483 vertible,1964, new top & tranny, runs great, exlnt cruising car! $5500 obo. 541-420-5205
Ford Galaxie 500 1963, 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & radio (orig),541-419-4989
1969 Chevrolet Pickup, Ford Mustang Coupe 1 owner, all original, 1966, original owner, looks like new, seeing is V8, automatic, great believing! $26,000 obo. shape, $9000 OBO. 541-923-6049 530-515-8199 Chevy 1954, 5 window, 350 V-8, auto/ps, Ford Ranchero needs minor me1979 chanical work, extewith 351 Cleveland rior good, new paint; modified engine. needs some gauges, Body is in gun metal grey, $6100 excellent condition, obo. 503-504-2764, $2500 obo. CRR. 541-420-4677
Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $15,000 OBO, trades, please call 541-420-5453.
Ford T-Bird 1966 390 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original miles,runs great, excellent cond in & out Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179
Ford F250 XLT ‘95, 4WD Suburban REDUCED! Ford auto, long bed, 3/4 ton, Chevy 2500 1995, 120K, 1978 truck, $1100 8600 GVW, white,178K auto, 4WD, pw/ps, mi, AC, pw, pdl, Sirius, obo. V8 4 spd, runs CD, alloy wheels, tow pkg., bedliner, bed good, new battery, extra set tires, roof rail caps, rear slide spark plugs, rebuilt cargo box, A/C, exc. Porsche Cayenne 2004, window, new tires, racarb. Ex U-Haul, cond., $3299, 86k, immac, dealer diator, water pump, 541-548-7171 GMC ½ ton 1971, Only 541-325-2408 hoses, brakes, more, maint’d, loaded, now $19,700! Original low $5200, 541-322-0215 $17000. 503-459-1580 mile, exceptional, 3rd 975 owner. 951-699-7171 Ford Lariat XL 4x4 2005 Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 4x4. 120K mi, Power Like new, low miles. Automobiles seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd Lots of extras. Tow row seating, extra pkg. 541-419-6552 Buick LeSabre Limtires, CD, privacy tintited 1997 111,000 Toyota 4Runner Mercury Monterrey ing, upgraded rims. miles, blue, new tires, Find It in 1965, Exc. All original, Fantastic cond. $7995 4WD 1986, auto, brakes and air, $2900 4-dr. sedan, in stor- The Bulletin Classifieds! Contact Timm at 2 dr., $1200, firm. Others available, age last 15 yrs., 390 541-408-2393 for info 541-385-5809 like a 1996 Regal with 541-923-7384 High Compression or to view vehicle. 86,000 miles, only engine, new tires & li$3500. Call Bob cense, reduced to 541-318-9999. Chevy Trailblazer $2850, 541-410-3425. 2005, gold, LS 4X4, 6 cyl., auto, A/C, pdl, Cadillac Seville STS new tires, keyless 2003 - just finished entry, 66K mi., exc. $4900 engine work Ford Ranger 1999, 4x4, cond. $8950. Toyota 4-Runner 4x4 Ltd, by Certified GM me71K, X-cab, XLT, 541-598-5111 2006, Salsa Red pearl, chanic. Has everyauto, 4.0L, $7900 49,990 miles, exlnt cond, thing but navigation. OBO. 541-388-0232 professionally detailed, Plymouth Barracuda Too many bells and $24,599. 541-390-7649 1966, original car! 300 Ford Ranger XLT whistles to list. I hp, 360 V8, centerbought a new one. 1998 X-cab Just bought a new boat? Ford Excursion lines, (Original 273 $6900 firm. 2.5L 4-cyl engine, Sell your old one in the 2005, 4WD, diesel, eng & wheels incl.) 541-420-1283 5-spd standard trans, classii eds! Ask about our exc. cond., $19,900, 541-593-2597 long bed, newer moSuper Seller rates! call 541-923-0231. tor & paint, new clutch 541-385-5809 Chryser LeBaron 1990 933 & tires, excellent conconvertible, 5 spd, dition, clean, $4500. Toyota F-J Crusier Pickups new paint, top, tires Call 541-447-6552 GMC Denali 2003 2007, loaded, 44K mi. and rims. $1800. loaded with options. VIN #085836 541-416-9566 Chevy 1 ton 1968, Exc. cond., snow $26,995 dual tires, 11’ flattires and rims inFord Mustang convertbed, 327 engine, cluded. 130k hwy ible! 2004. Summer 58k miles, $1000. miles. $12,000. Fun for only $13,977 541-548-4774 541-647-2822 541-419-4890. #240083 HertzBend.com Ford Super Duty F-250 DLR4821 2001, 4X4, very good shape, V10 eng, $8800 940 OBO. 541-815-9939 Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4, Vans 541-598-3750 1995, extended cab, aaaoregonautosource.com long box, grill guard, running boards, bed Chevy Astro rails & canopy, 178K GMC ½-ton Pickup, Jeep Willys 1947,custom, Cargo Van 2001, Ford Thunderbird 1988, small block Chevy, PS, 3.8 V-6, 35K actual mi., miles, $4800 obo. 1972, LWB, 350hi pw, pdl, great cond., OD,mags+ trailer.Swap new hoses, belts, tires, 208-301-3321 (Bend) motor, mechanically business car, well for backhoe.No am calls battery, pb, ps, cruise, A-1, interior great; maint, regular oil A/C, CD, exc. cond. in please. 541-389-6990 Chevy Silverado 1998, body needs some changes, $4500, & out, 2nd owner, black and silver, pro TLC. $3131 OBO. please call maint. records, must lifted, loaded, new 33” Call 541-382-9441 541-633-5149 see & drive! tires, aluminum slot Reduced! Now $3500, wheels, tow pkg., drop obo. 541-330-0733 hitch, diamond plate NISSAN QUEST tool box, $12,000, or 1996, 3-seat mini Honda Civic LX 2010 possible trade for newer Jeep Wrangler 1999, TJ van, extra nice in and International Flat 4 Dr. auto. #527652 Tacoma. 541-460-9127 Sahara Ed., 4.0L, exc. out $3,400. Sold my Bed Pickup 1963, 1 $16,722 tires, body & paint. Windstar, need anton dually, 4 spd. Dodge 1500 2001, 4x4 69,700+ mi, hardtop + other van! trans., great MPG, sport, red, loaded, new full buckskin soft & 541-318-9999, ask could be exc. wood rollbar, AND 2011 bikini tops, Warn winch, for Bob. Ask about hauler, runs great, 541-647-2822 Moped Trike used 3 motorhome tow pkg, free trip to D.C. for new brakes, $1950. HertzBend.com months, street legal. stinger, alum wheels, WWII vets. 541-419-5480. DLR4821 call 541-433-2384 $12,300. 541-617-9176
Hyundai Accent 2008, 32MPG! $7900 obo Hatchback, 47,800 mi., A/C, one 0wner, Clean, 5 Spd Manual. 541-550-9935
PORSCHE 914 1974, Roller (no engine), lowered, full roll cage, 5-pt harnesses, racing seats, 911 dash & instruments, decent shape, very cool! $1699. 541-678-3249 Subaru Legacy 2009, H4 Special Edition. VIN #235780
$19,995
Mazda Miata ‘08 Touring, 9400 miles, excellent cond, all records, Carfax, $18,900 obo. 541-788-1234
Mercedes E320 2004, 71K miles, silver/silver, exc. cond, below Blue Book, $12,900 Call 541-788-4229 Mitsubishi 3000 GT 1999, auto., pearl white, very low mi. $9500. 541-788-8218. Nissan Stanza 1987, 4-dr., a few dings, reliable transportation, $950, 541-419-9233
Where buyers meet sellers Thousands of ads daily in print and online. To place your ad, visit www.bendbulletin.com or call 541-385-5809
541-647-2822 HertzBend.com DLR4821
Toyota Camry’s 1984, $1200 OBO, 1985 $1400 OBO, 1986 parts car, $500; call for details, 541-548-6592 Toyota Matrix 2009, AWD, 28K mi. VIN#09276A
$19,985
541-647-2822 HertzBend.com DLR4821 Where can you ind a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it’s all here in The Bulletin’s “Call A Service Professional” Directory
Toyota Matrix AWD XR 2006,great mpg, non-smoker. $11,900 541-420-2385
Volvo 740 ‘87, 4-cyl,auto 86k on eng.,exc. maint. $2895, 541-301-1185. www.youtu.be/yc0n6zVIbAc
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LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE FOR CIVIL FORFEITURE TO ALL POTENTIAL CLAIMANTS AND TO ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS READ THIS CAREFULLY
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE FOR CIVIL FORFEITURE TO ALL POTENTIAL CLAIMANTS AND TO ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS READ THIS CAREFULLY
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE FOR CIVIL FORFEITURE TO ALL POTENTIAL CLAIMANTS AND TO ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS READ THIS CAREFULLY
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE FOR CIVIL FORFEITURE TO ALL POTENTIAL CLAIMANTS AND TO ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS READ THIS CAREFULLY
If you have any interest in the seized property described below, you must claim that interest or you will automatically lose that interest. If you do not file a claim for the property, the property may be forfeited even if you are not convicted of any crime. To claim an interest, you must file a written claim with the forfeiture counsel named below, The written claim must be signed by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, and state: (a) Your true name; (b) The address at which you will accept future mailings from the court and forfeiture counsel; and (3) A statement that you have an interest in the seized property. Your deadline for filing the claim document with forfeiture counsel named below is 21 days from the last day of publication of this notice. Where to file a claim and for more information: Daina Vitolins, Crook County District Attorney Office, 300 NE Third Street, Prineville, OR 97754. Notice of reasons for Forfeiture: The property described below was seized for forfeiture because it: (1) Constitutes the proceeds of the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violates, the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution, or possession of controlled substances (ORS Chapter475); and/or (2) Was used or intended for use in committing or facilitating the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violate the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution or possession of controlled substances (ORS Chapter 475). IN THE MATTER OF: U.S. Currency in the amount of $4,978.00, Case 12-115757 seized 6/13/2012 from Gavin Fraser.
If you have any interest in the seized property described below, you must claim that interest or you will automatically lose that interest. If you do not file a claim for the property, the property may be forfeited even if you are not convicted of any crime. To claim an interest, you must file a written claim with the forfeiture counsel named below, The written claim must be signed by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, and state: (a) Your true name; (b) The address at which you will accept future mailings from the court and forfeiture counsel; and (3) A statement that you have an interest in the seized property. Your deadline for filing the claim document with forfeiture counsel named below is 21 days from the last day of publication of this notice. Where to file a claim and for more information: Daina Vitolins, Crook County District Attorney Office, 300 NE Third Street, Prineville, OR 97754. Notice of reasons for Forfeiture: The property described below was seized for forfeiture because it: (1) Constitutes the proceeds of the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violates, the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution, or possession of controlled substances (ORS Chapter475); and/or (2) Was used or intended for use in committing or facilitating the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violate the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution or possession of controlled substances (ORS Chapter 475). IN THE MATTER OF: U.S. Currency in the amount of $4,960.00 Case 12-0692, seized 06/08/2012 from Clay Jamison and Amber Treat.
If you have any interest in the seized property described below, you must claim that interest or you will automatically lose that interest. If you do not file a claim for the property, the property may be forfeited even if you are not convicted of any crime. To claim an interest, you must file a written claim with the forfeiture counsel named below, The written claim must be signed by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, and state: (a) Your true name; (b) The address at which you will accept future mailings from the court and forfeiture counsel; and (3) A statement that you have an interest in the seized property. Your deadline for filing the claim document with forfeiture counsel named below is 21 days from the last day of publication of this notice. Where to file a claim and for more information: Daina Vitolins, Crook County District Attorneys Office, 300 N.E. Third Street, Prineville, OR 97754. Notice of reasons for Forfeiture: The property described below was seized for forfeiture because it: (1) Constitutes the proceeds of the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violates, the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution, or possession of controlled substances (ORS Chapter 475); and/or (2) Was used or intended for use in committing or facilitating the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violate the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution or possession of controlled substances (ORS Chapter 475).
If you have any interest in the seized property described below, you must claim that interest or you will automatically lose that interest. If you do not file a claim for the property, the property may be forfeited even if you are not convicted of any crime. To claim an interest, you must file a written claim with the forfeiture counsel named below, The written claim must be signed by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, and state: (a) Your true name; (b) The address at which you will accept future mailings from the court and forfeiture counsel; and (3) A statement that you have an interest in the seized property. Your deadline for filing the claim document with forfeiture counsel named below is 21 days from the last day of publication of this notice. Where to file a claim and for more information: Daina Vitolins, Crook County District Attorney Office, 300 NE Third Street, Prineville, OR 97754. Notice of reasons for Forfeiture: The property described below was seized for forfeiture because it: (1) Constitutes the proceeds of the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violates, the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution, or possession of controlled substances (ORS Chapter475); and/or (2) Was used or intended for use in
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IN THE MATTER OF: $6,917.00 in US Currency, Case #080677 seized 04/18/2008 from Jeffery Shetler;
committing or facilitating the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violate the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution or possession of controlled substances (ORS Chapter 475). IN THE MATTER OF: One 2009 Dodge Challenger, OLN 583EBG, VIN 2B3LJ74WX9H63305 2, Case 12-04-1596 seized 04/18/2012 from Casey Roberti. LEGAL NOTICE On August 25, 2012, at 10:00 am at 257 SE 2nd St., Alliance Storage, LLC will handle the disposition of the entire contents of Unit #233, 5x10, Emil Kelly; #278, 5x10, Tina Delgado; #282, 5x10, Jodie Savage; #326, 10x10, Trisha Thompson; #250, 5x5, Susan Steves; #565, 12x20, Donna Alexander to satisfy said lien of the above named. LEGAL NOTICE SUMMONS: James R. O'Bryant, Trustee of the James R. O'Bryant Living Trust dated February 25, 2010 v. Richard Crow and Unknown Heirs of Coy Clinton Crow, Deschutes County Case No. 12CV0708, To: Unknown Heirs of Coy Clinton Crow, Defendants. YOU ARE HEREBY REQUIRED to appear and defend the complaint filed against you in the above entitled cause within thirty (30) days from the date of service of this summons upon you, and in case of your failure to do so, for want thereof, plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint. NOTICE TO THE DEFENDANT: READ THIS SUMMONS CAREFULLY: The Plaintiff has filed a lawsuit against De-
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Legal Notices g fendants, in which the complaint seeks action on a promissory note for $286,137.50, foreclosure of a trust deed, plus attorney fees and court costs. The property being foreclosed is described in the records of Deschutes County as Parcel 1, PARTITION PLAT NO. 2006-11, Deschutes County, Oregon. You must appear in this case or the other side will win automatically. To appear you must file with the court a legal document called a motion or answer. The motion or answer must be given to the court clerk or administrator within thirty (30) days of the date of first publication specified herein (the date of first publication of the Summons is/was August 2, 2012) along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof of service on the plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have an attorney, proof of service on the plaintiff. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Service online at www.oregonstatebar.org or by calling (503) 684-3763 (in the Portland metropolitan area) or toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. Andrew J. Bean, OSB #992185, attorney for plaintiff, P.O. Box 667 - 130 First Ave. W., Albany, Oregon 97321, P: (541) 926-2255; F: (541) 967-6579; E: abean@wtlegal.com
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE The Trustee under the terms of the Trust Deed described herein, at the direction of the Beneficiary, hereby elects to sell the property described in the Trust Deed to satisfy the obligations secured thereby. Pursuant to ORS 86.745, the following information is provided: 1.PARTIES: Grantor: MARY JEAN MCLAUGHLIN. Trustee:FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY OF OREGON. Successor Trustee:NANCY K. CARY. Beneficiary:WORLD SAVINGS BANK, FSB. 2.DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY: The real property is described as follows: Lot 11, Block 2, TILLICUM VILLAGE, Deschutes County, Oregon. 3.RECORDING. The Trust Deed was recorded as follows: Date Recorded: April 20, 2007. Recording No.: 2007-22704 Official Records of Deschutes County, Oregon. 4. DEFAULT. The Grantor or any other person obligated on the Trust Deed and Promissory Note secured thereby is in default and the Beneficiary seeks to foreclose the Trust Deed for failure to pay: Monthly payments in the amount of $1,353.73 each, due the first of each month, for the months of March 2012 through May 2012; plus late charges and advances; plus any unpaid real property taxes or liens, plus interest. 5.AMOUNT DUE. The amount due on the Note which is secured by the Trust Deed referred to herein is: Principal balance in the amount of $262,229.12; plus interest at an adjustable rate pursuant to the terms of the Promissory Note from February 1, 2012; plus late charges of $592.27; plus advances and foreclosure attorney fees and costs. 6.SALE OF PROPERTY. The Trustee hereby states that the property will be sold to satisfy the obligations secured by the Trust Deed. A Trustee's Notice of Default and Election to Sell Under Terms of Trust Deed has been recorded in the Official Records of Deschutes County, Oregon. 7.TIME OF SALE. Date:October 18, 2012. Time:11:00 a.m. Place:Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond Street, Bend, Oregon. 8.RIGHT TO REINSTATE. Any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time that is not later than five days before the Trustee conducts the sale, to have this foreclosure 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, by curing any other default that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Trust Deed and by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, together with the trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amount provided in ORS 86.753. You may reach the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Service at 503-684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at 800-452-7636 or you may visit its website at: www.osbar.org. Legal assistance may be available if you have a low income and meet federal poverty guidelines. For more information and a directory of legal aid programs, go to http://www.oregonlawhelp.org. Any questions regarding this matter should be directed to Lisa Summers, Paralegal, (541) 686-0344 (TS #17368.30960). DATED: May 29, 2012. /s/ Nancy K. Cary. Nancy K. Cary, Successor Trustee. Hershner Hunter, LLP, P.O. Box 1475, Eugene, OR 97440. 1000
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE The Trustee under the terms of the Trust Deed described herein, at the direction of the Beneficiary, hereby elects to sell the property described in the Trust Deed to satisfy the obligations secured thereby. Pursuant to ORS 86.745, the following information is provided: 1.PARTIES: Grantor: ALAN M. MCFEE AND HEIDI K. MCFEE. Trustee:FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY OF OREGON. Successor Trustee: NANCY K. CARY. Beneficiary:WORLD SAVINGS BANK, FSB. 2.DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY: The real property is described as follows: Parcel 1 of Partition Plat No. 1996-17, being located in the Northwest Quarter of the Northeast Quarter (NW1/4NE1/4) of Section Twenty-three (23), Township Sixteen (16) South, Range Twelve (12), East of the Willamette Meridian, Deschutes County, Oregon. 3.RECORDING. The Trust Deed was recorded as follows: Date Recorded: May 24, 2006. Recording No. 2006-35829 Official Records of Deschutes County, Oregon. 4.DEFAULT. The Grantor or any other person obligated on the Trust Deed and Promissory Note secured thereby is in default and the Beneficiary seeks to foreclose the Trust Deed for failure to pay: Monthly payments in the amount of $2,813.63 each, due the fifteenth of each month, for the months of May 2010 through May 2012; plus late charges and advances; plus any unpaid real property taxes or liens, plus interest. 5.AMOUNT DUE. The amount due on the Note which is secured by the Trust Deed referred to herein is: Principal balance in the amount of $444,622.62; plus interest at An adjustable rate pursuant to the terms of the Promissory Note from April 15, 2010; plus late charges of $1,328.70; plus advances and foreclosure attorney fees and costs. 6.SALE OF PROPERTY. The Trustee hereby states that the property will be sold to satisfy the obligations secured by the Trust Deed. A Trustee's Notice of Default and Election to Sell Under Terms of Trust Deed has been recorded in the Official Records of Deschutes County, Oregon. 7.TIME OF SALE. Date:October 18, 2012. Time: 11:00 a.m. Place:Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond Street, Bend, Oregon. 8.RIGHT TO REINSTATE. Any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time that is not later than five days before the Trustee conducts the sale, to have this foreclosure 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, by curing any other default that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Trust Deed and by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, together with the trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amount provided in ORS 86.753. You may reach the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Service at 503-684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at 800-452-7636 or you may visit its website at: www.osbar.org. Legal assistance may be available if you have a low income and meet federal poverty guidelines. For more information and a directory of legal aid programs, go to http://www.oregonlawhelp.org. Any questions regarding this matter should be directed to Lisa Summers, Paralegal, (541) 686-0344 (TS #17368.30898). DATED: May 24, 2012. /s/ Nancy K. Cary. Nancy K. Cary, Successor Trustee. Hershner Hunter, LLP, P.O. Box 1475, Eugene, OR 97440.