Bulletin Daily Paper 09/02/12

Page 1

SUNDAY September 2, 2012

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

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bendbulletin.com ELECTION 2012

The next president’s stamp on real estate The Washington Post Four years after the housing bubble burst, there’s much unfinished business regarding the restoration of the nation’s real estate market for the next president to tackle, experts across the political spectrum say. There’s no denying that the next president’s economic and employment policies will be a key driver of the health of real estate for the next four years, not to mention the price of a mortgage. His policies will influence whether you can afford to buy a house or the amount of profit or loss you can expect from selling your house. “The next president … is going to have a couple of big housing issues to address,” said Barry Zigas, housing policy director at the Consumer Federation of America. For starters, “Will consumers have access to mortgages at affordable rates?” President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney have hinted at the steps they’d take — though neither campaign has outlined a comprehensive proposal for recovery of the housing market and private mortgage lending. See Real estate / A6

BACK TO SCHOOL

AREA LEGISLATORS

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Fresh leaders at local schools • Every new school year brings new students. That’s true for school administrators, too. Schools throughout Central Oregon are starting the year with new principals. Some have risen through the ranks locally, while others have relocated to the region. There are shifts across districts within the region, too. Shay Mikalson left his su-

perintendent post at the Redmond School District for an administrator job at BendLa Pine Schools. The school board named Mike McIntosh, the district’s director of operations, to serve as superintendent for this transitional school year.

The Sisters School District hired Tim Roth as its athletics programs manager, a new position for the district. Roth is tasked with helping Sisters schools coordinate athletic fundraising efforts. —Ben Botkin, The Bulletin

BEND-LA PINE SCHOOLS Years in Years in ed. education

New job

Last job

Education

Shay Mikalson, 36

Executive director of curriculum and instructional technology

Superintendent, Administrative licensure, George Fox University, August 12 Redmond School District 2006-June 2007, and Lewis & Clark College, 2009present; master’s in teaching, secondary education, Whitworth College, July 2001; B.S. in zoology, University of Washington, August 1998 (magna cum laude)

Matt Montgomery, 47

Principal, La Pine High School

Teacher, coach and dean of students, Hillsboro School District

B.S. in education, University of Oregon, 1990; master’s in education administration, Concordia University, 2010

Kimberly Camren, 48

Principal, R.E. Jewell Elementary

Principal of R.E. Bennett Elementary, Chehalis School District, Wash.

B.A. in elementary education, with special education 20 endorsement from Central Washington University in Ellensburg; M.Ed. in educational leadership with principal certification from City University in Seattle and administrator professional certification from Seattle Pacific University

Dan Wolnick, 47

Principal, Juniper Elementary School

Assistant principal, Cascade Middle School

B.A. in environmental science, University of California, Santa Barbara, 1990; California teaching credential, California State University, Northridge-Ventura Campus, 1998; M.A./A.L. educational leadership and administrative licensure, University of Oregon, 2008

14

Rochelle Williams, 39

Principal, Rosland Elementary

Student services coordinator at La Pine and Rosland Elementary schools

B.S. in psychology, Oregon State University, 1995; master’s in teacher education, Eastern Oregon University, 1997; and administration license, Lewis & Clark College, 2009

15

Alice DeWittie, 55

Principal, Summit High School

Assistant principal, Reynolds High School, Troutdale

Ed.D, George Fox University, 2006; M.A., University of Portland, 1998; BME, Arizona State University, 1978

15

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What’s on the wish list locally? By Lauren Dake The Bulletin

SALEM — For Central Oregon’s representatives, the No. 1 priority for the upcoming legislative session is easy: ensuring that Oregon State University-Cascades receives the funding it needs to become a four-year IN university. Rep. Jason Con- SALEM ger, R-Bend, is the point man on the issue, and his Central Oregon colleagues in the House have pledged to be by his side. The university needs $16 million in bond funding from the state. In addition to drafting legislation to lock down OSU-Cascades funding, lawmakers are working to meet a deadline next month to provide ideas that could become law. OSU-Cascades isn’t the only education-related issue Conger aims to tackle. He’s vocal about his belief that the health of the state Public Employees Retirement System is tied to the well-being of public schools. “Certainly PERS is a high priority,” he said. “Frankly, I don’t see how we can balance the budget without taking up PERS reform, and I intend to introduce several reform bills.” See Salem / A8

REDMOND SCHOOL DISTRICT

Trial offers a crash course in the Amish By Erik Eckholm New York Times News Service

CLEVELAND — When Nancy Mullet entered a federal courtroom here Thursday to testify in the hate-crimes trial of her father-in-law, Samuel Mullet Sr., and followers of his renegade sect, the jury knew at a glance which side she favored in this wrenching clash among Amish. She was not wearing the small white scarf, tied behind the head to reveal the ears, that was adopted last year by Mullet’s group and adorned his six female co-defendants and a dozen other women from his settlement who watched the proceedings from the gallery. Instead, she wore the white cap with a chin tie that is preferred by most of the region’s conservative Amish orders. Seemingly small distinctions in clothing are filled with religious meaning. See Amish / A7

SUNDAY

We use recycled newsprint

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Michael McIntosh, 49

Superintendent, Redmond School District

Director of operations, Redmond School District

Master’s in school administration, Eastern Oregon State College, 1997; bachelor’s in elementary education, Eastern Oregon State College, 1988; associate’s in forestry, Central Oregon Community College, 1983

24

Lee Loving, 41

Principal, Ridgeview High School

Principal, Redmond High C.A.L (Continuing Administrator License Certification School, 2011-12; assistant Program), Lewis & Clark College, 2012; M.S. in educational principal, Seaside High leadership, Portland State University, 2003 School, 2003-11

15

Nicole Principal, MacTavish, 41 Redmond High School

Assistant director of secondary inclusive education for Kent School District, Wash.

Ed.D from Seattle University; Master of Education, University of Washington; B.A. in both English and communication, University of Washington; Principal Certification Program, Western Washington University

15

Justin Nicklous, 40

Dean of students at Sisters Middle School, and half-time math teacher

B.S. in elementary education, Western Oregon State College, 1995; Master of Education with Initial Administrator License, Lewis & Clark College, 2011

18

Chemistry teacher and head swim coach, Astoria High School

B.S. in biology, Willamette University, 1995; master’s in teaching, University of Portland, 1999

14

B.A. in history, Eastern Washington University, 1973; M.A. in educational administration, Central Washington University, 1982

39

Principal, Tumalo Community School

Disability is the first thing judged at the Paralympics By Sarah Lyall New York Times News Service

SISTERS SCHOOL DISTRICT Tim Roth, 39

Athletic programs manager

JEFFERSON COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT Gary Carlton, 62

Principal, Madras Primary School

Director of alternative programs for the district

CROOK COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT David Robinson, 52

Principal, Ochoco Elementary School

Student supervisor, elementary school in Beaverton School District

B.S., School of Physical Education, University of Oregon, 1986; M.A. in teaching, Pacific University, 2000; administrative licensure, Portland State University, 2007

21

Mona Boyd

Director of special education

Special education teacher, Crook County School District

B.A. in social science, California State University, Sacramento; M.A. in educational administration, Lewis & Clark College; endorsements in social science, language arts, special education, administration

20

No photo available

Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper

Vol. 109, No. 246, 46 pages, 7 sections

INDEX Business Books Classified

G1-6 F4-5 E1-6

Community C1-8 Crosswords C7, E2 Local News B1-6

Milestones Obituaries Opinion

TODAY’S WEATHER C6 B5 F1-6

Oregon News B3 Sports D1-6 TV & Movies C2

Sunny High 77, Low 37 Page B6

LONDON — Anthony Dawson, who has cerebral palsy and little muscle function on his right side, rode for South Africa in the first round of the equestrian dressage competition at the Paralympics on Thursday, guiding his horse through an intricately choreographed series of movements. Last summer he had to perform an altogether different set of exercises in front of a medical professional, a way of determining what for many is the most crucial and potentially fraught aspect of the Paralympics: the disability category in which he would compete. There are five grades for Paralympic equestrians, ranging from 1A, for the most severely disabled riders, to IV, for the least impaired. Dawson, 17, was put in Grade II, the group to which he has been assigned in every evaluation he has gone through. See Paralympics / A5

TOP NEWS NATO: Afghan training on hold, A3 ELECTION: The state of the race, A4


THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

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f it’s a Sunday, it means Chick-fil-A stores all across America are closed. Patrons wait till Monday to get their spicy chicken sandwiches; for others recently, stopping by was a vote against gay marriage or for free speech, or both. Most know the story by now: The company president voices his support for the “biblical definition of the family unit�; protests and calls for a boycott ensue; a Chick-fil-A Appreciation Day brings in record profits. But how does a business make money after being attacked? The answer lies in the partisanship of fast-food consumers. Using more than 200,000 interviews of American adults conducted each year by Scarborough Research, analysts will search for clues on what TV shows voters of all stripes watch, what cars they buy, and so on. The results show the partisan differences in consumer purchasing behavior. And when it comes to fast food, all Americans love their chicken; they just eat at different restaurants.

On Page F1 • A broader examination of the partisan divide: What do each parties’ supporters actually believe? A recent comprehensive survey has the answers, and they may surprise you.

All Bulletin payments are accepted at the drop box at City Hall. Check payments may be converted to an electronic funds transfer. The Bulletin, USPS #552-520, is published daily by Western Communications Inc., 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702. Periodicals postage paid at Bend, OR. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Bulletin circulation department, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. The Bulletin retains ownership and copyright protection of all staff-prepared news copy, advertising copy and news or ad illustrations. They may not be reproduced without explicit prior approval.

Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

POWERBALL

The numbers drawn Saturday night are:

8 11 21 44 49 22 The estimated jackpot is now $90 million.

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Saturday night are:

1 10 23 30 34 38 The estimated jackpot is now $5.4 million.

High-turnout Democratic voters

High-turnout Republican voters Bob Evans Panera Bread

Whole Foods Market (Shopped past 7 days)

Boston Market

White Castle

Logan’s Roadhouse Applebee’s

Arby’s

Hardee’s Wendy’s

Chick-fil-A Chili’s

Dairy Queen

Denny’s

McDonald's KFC

Popeyes

Macaroni Grill LongHorn Steakhouse Outback Steakhouse

Subway

Dunkin’ Donuts T.G.I. Friday’s

Cracker Barrel

Ruby Tuesday

Olive Garden P.F. Chang’s Red Lobster Cheesecake Factory IHOP

Burger King

Sonic

Pizza Hut

Taco Bell Hooters

Little Caesars

Jack in the Box Church’s Chicken

Domino’s Pizza

Low-turnout Democratic voters Skews Democratic

Low-turnout Republican voters

Republican index minus Democrat index

4PVSDFT 4DBSCPSPVHI 3FTFBSDI EBUB BOBMZTJT CZ 5SBDFZ 3PCJOTPO /BUJPOBM .FEJB

Skews Republican

ÂĽ .D$MBUDIZ 5SJCVOF /FXT 4FSWJDF

‘Ale to the Chief’: White House releases its beer recipes By Matthew Daly The Associated Press

Beer lovers, the secret is out: The White House has made public the recipe for two homemade beers. White House Honey Brown Ale, believed to be the first beer brewed on the White House grounds, includes light malt extract, amber crystal malt, honey, gypsum, yeast and corn sugar. (According to the White House blog: “George Washington brewed beer and distilled whiskey at Mount Vernon and Thomas Jefferson made wine.... Although we do know there was some drinking during prohibition....�) White House press secretary Jay Carney announced the beer recipe Saturday on Twitter, linking to a blog post — titled “Ale to the Chief� — that included a video on the brewing process.

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OTHER SERVICES

Each bubble in this chart represents an American chain restaurant (in one case, a store). The relative bubble sizes are based on the percentage of American adults surveyed by Scarborough Research who reported patronizing a particular outlet in the previous 30 days. About 42 percent of respondents, for example, reported going to McDonald’s, and just 2 percent to Hooters. About 11 percent said they’d eaten at Chick-fil-A. The bubbles were placed on the chart according to what those surveyed reported to be their political leanings and their likelihood of voting. Thus, a chain with a clientele that is both heavily Republican and likely to vote would be placed in the upper right, whereas a chain whose clientele skewed both Democratic and unlikely to vote would end up on the lower left. So what can we glean? Chick-fil-A’s customers are among the most Republican in the country, but they’re less likely to vote than Cracker Barrel diners. Well-to-do urban Democrats are buying takeout and groceries at Whole Foods, and they vote. Socioeconomic status, urbanism and regional geography shape the partisanship and voting behavior of restaurant customers. High-turnout voters of both parties are more likely to be found at sit-down chains, where they can afford the higher tabs. See what else you notice:

— Los Angeles Times

The blog included recipes for both the honey ale and a honey porter, both of which are brewed at the White House. The ale recipe is at right. To get the other, and to see the video, go to http://tinyurl.com/97tucgz. Obama and his team frequently talk about the president’s fondness for beer, and Obama has been photographed many times downing one. Obama even held a “beer summit� in 2009 in an attempt to defuse a tense racial controversy that he waded into. Obama has been talking about the White House brew for weeks, but he had refused to disclose details of how it’s made, despite an online petition and repeated questions from reporters. (The White House was careful to say the president paid for the materials used in the beer-making himself.)

White House Honey Brown Ale 2 (3.3 lb) cans light malt extract 1 lb light dried malt extract 12 oz crushed amber crystal malt 8 oz Bisquit Malt 1 lb honey

11â „2 oz Kent Goldings Hop Pellets 11â „2 oz Fuggles Hop pellets 2 tsp gypsum 1 pkg Windsor dry ale yeast 3 â „4 C corn sugar for priming

In a 12-quart pot, steep the grains in a hop bag in 11â „2 gallons of sterile water at 155 degrees for half an hour. Remove the grains. Add the 2 cans of the malt extract and the dried extract and bring to a boil. For the first flavoring, add the 11â „2 -ounce Kent Goldings and 2 teaspoons of gypsum. Boil for 45 minutes. For the second flavoring, add the 1â „2 -ounce Fuggles hop pellets at the last minute of the boil. Add the honey and boil for 5 more minutes. Add 2 gallons chilled sterile water into the primary fermenter and add the hot wort into it. Top with more water to total 5 gallons. There is no need to strain. Pitch yeast when wort temperature is between 70 and 80 degrees. Fill airlock halfway with water. Ferment at 68-72 degrees for about seven days. Rack to a secondary fermenter after five days and ferment for 14 more days. To bottle, dissolve the corn sugar into 2 pints of boiling water for 15 minutes. Pour the mixture into an empty bottling bucket. Siphon the beer from the fermenter over it. Distribute priming sugar evenly. Siphon into bottles and cap. Let sit for 2 to 3 weeks at 75 degrees.

TODAY It’s Sunday, Sept. 2, the 246th day of 2012. There are 120 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS • Human rights activists plan two rallies in Washington, D.C.: one, in front of the White House, condemning the violence in Syria; the other nearby to highlight a humanitarian crisis in Tibet. • Venezuela holds a nationwide voting drill to test procedures ahead of the presidential election in October, when the embattled and ailing Hugo Chavez will seek to extend almost 14 years in power. • As many as 50,000 people are expected to attend the second and final day of the Made In America outdoor music festival in Philadelphia.

IN HISTORY Highlights: In 1945, Japan formally surrendered in ceremonies aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay, ending World War II. In 1666, the Great Fire of London broke out. In 1935, a Labor Day hurricane slammed into the Florida Keys, claiming more than 400 lives. In 1969, in what some regard as the birth of the Internet, two connected computers at the University of California, Los Angeles, passed test data through a 15-foot cable. Ten years ago: Negotiators at the World Summit in South Africa agreed on a plan geared to help the globe’s poorest people while reversing environmental declines. Five years ago: The ranking U.S. envoy said North Korea had agreed to account for and disable its atomic programs by the end of the year; the head of the North Korean delegation said his country’s willingness to cooperate was clear, but he did not cite any dates. One year ago: In a dramatic reversal, President Barack Obama scrubbed a proposed clean-air regulation aimed at reducing smog.

BIRTHDAYS Dancer-actress Marge Champion is 93. Jazz musician Horace Silver is 84. Singer Jimmy Clanton is 72. Singer Joe Simon is 69. Pro and College Football Hall of Famer Terry Bradshaw is 64. Basketball Hall of Famer Nate Archibald is 64. Actor Mark Harmon is 61. Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., is 61. Actor Keanu Reeves is 48. Actress Salma Hayek is 46. Actor Michael Lombardi is 38. — From wire reports

NEWS Q&A

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Where Americans eat and how they vote: Follow the bubbles

High turnout

GENERAL INFORMATION

In politics, you are where you eat

Voter turnout index

541-385-5800 Phone hours: 5:30 a.m.- 5 p.m. Mon.-Fri., 6:30 a.m.-noon Sat.-Sun.

DRAWN OUT

Low turnout

STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?

Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, names in the news — things you need to know to start your day.

The National Weather Q: Service has solicited bids for supplying the service with a total of 46,000 cartridges with hollow point bullets. Why would they need these? — Bob Sullivan, Canton, Ga. The ammunition’s destination was a clerical error, and the bullets were ordered for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries Office of Law Enforcement, not the National Weather Service. “Ammunition is standard issue for many law enforcement agencies,� an NOAA spokesman said.

A:

Does the coaching Q: staff of Olympic winners get any medals or other recognition? — George Fox, Roswell, Ga. Olympic coaches are not given Olympic medals, but U.S. medal winners can honor their coaches by awarding them with the Order of Ikkos medal. The Ikkos medal, named for the first Olympic coach in recorded history, has been awarded at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the 2010 Vancouver Olympics and this summer’s games in London.

A:

Do you have a question about nation or world news? Submit it to Cox News Service editors in Atlanta at q&a@ajc.com. Include name, phone and city.

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REALTOR


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

A3

T S Isaac, losing its punch, brings drought relief to the Midwest

The Associated Press file photos

Maj. Gen. David Quantock salutes Army Sgt. Timothy John Conrad, who was killed in Afghanistan, at his funeral in Roanoke, Va., in March. The 22-year-old was one of two U.S. military police officers killed by an Afghan soldier amid anti-American sentiment over the burning of Qurans at a U.S. military base.

NATO halts training for Afghan recruits By Greg Jaffe The Washington Post

KABUL, Afghanistan — The senior commander for Special Operations forces in Afghanistan has suspended training for all new Afghan recruits until the more than 27,000 Afghan troops working with his command can be revetted for ties to the insurgency. The move comes as NATO officials struggle to stem the tide of attacks on NATO forces by their Afghan colleagues. The attacks, which have killed 45 troops this year, have forced NATO officials to acknowledge a painful truth: Many of the incidents might have been prevented if existing security measures had been applied correctly. But numerous military guidelines were not followed — by Afghans or Americans — because of concerns that they might slow the growth of the Afghan army and police, according to NATO officials. Special Operations officials said that the current process for vetting recruits is effective but that a lack of follow-up has allowed Afghan troops who fell under the sway of the insurgency or grew disillusioned with the Afghan government to remain in the force. “We have a very good vetting process,” a senior Special Operations official said. “What we learned is that you just can’t take it for granted. We probably should have had a mechanism to follow up with recruits from the beginning.” In other instances, the vetting process for Afghan soldiers and police was never properly implemented, and NATO officials say they knew it. But they looked the other way, worried that extensive background checks could hinder the recruitment process. Also

Afghan security forces march during their graduation ceremony in Kabul, Afghanistan, in 2011. Nearly 30,000 Afghan troops are being revetted for ties to the insurgency as officials struggle to stem the tide of attacks on Western forces by their Afghan colleagues and to heal NATO-Afghan relations.

ignored were requirements that Afghans display proper credentials while on base. “Everyone admits there was a lot of international pressure to grow these forces, and the vetting of these individuals was cast aside as an inhibitor,” said a U.S. official who, like other officials, spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly about the issue. The move last week by the Special Operations Command to suspend the training of new recruits followed the Aug. 17 shooting of two American Special Forces members by a new Afghan Local Police recruit at a small outpost in western Afghanistan. The local police initiative places Special Forces teams in remote villages where they work with Afghan elders and government officials to help villagers defend themselves against insurgent attacks and intimidation. U.S. officials have touted the program,

which numbers about 16,000 Afghans, as a critical way to spread security and the influence of the Afghan government to remote areas of the country where the Taliban have found haven. But the program, which is slated to double in size to about 30,000 Afghans, also carries risks for U.S. troops. “We’re living with the Afghans,” said a second senior Special Operations official. “We can’t afford to take any chances with vetting.” Since the program began in 2010, there have been three instances of Afghan Local Police recruits turning their guns on their American counterparts. On Saturday, Taliban suicide bombers staged what appeared to be a carefully coordinated attack southwest of Kabul that killed at least a dozen Afghans and wounded 58 more just outside the same U.S. military outpost where a similar attack one year ago wounded scores of U.S. soldiers.

Rebels appear to target air bases Los Angeles Times

BEIRUT — Thwarted by aerial attacks, Syrian rebels appear to have begun systemically targeting government air bases and aircraft, while trying to capture antiaircraft missiles that can shoot down helicopters and fighter jets. An opposition group reported Saturday that insurgents had captured an air defense base in eastern Syria, close to the Iraqi border, and that battles were raging near a military airport in the area. News reports cited opposition sources as saying that some antiaircraft missiles were seized. It was at least the third time in the last week that rebels reportedly targeted government air installations. The others were near the northern cities of Aleppo and Idlib, close to the Turkish border. If true, the operations would appear to demonstrate an elevated degree of coordination among various rebel brigades, which often operate autonomously. The attacks seem to be directed at bases from which

Related • Dust Bowl survivor sees parallels to the Dirty ’30s in the drought, A6

ing parts of Mississippi and Louisiana with flooding. In Mississippi, where two deaths have been attributed to Isaac, recovery efforts were under way Saturday even though some areas were still dealing with flooding and power outages. In Louisiana, the number without power was down from more than 900,000. However, in heavily populated Jefferson Parish near New Orleans, parish President John Young said Entergy Corp. was too slow in restoring electricity. “As we transition to the recovery phase of this disaster, our priority is to identify damages and begin the process of requesting federal assistance for local governments and residents who have been affected by this disaster,” said Robert Latham, executive director of the Mississippi

Emergency Management Agency, in a statement. In Louisiana, more than 3,000 evacuees remained in shelters across the state, though some had begun returning home. In a Saturday news conference, New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu said that, although New Orleans had escaped the worst effects of the storm, the majority of the city still does not have power. “Like everyone else, my patience is wearing thin,” he said. “This is more than an inconvenience; it continues to be dangerous for everybody.” Recovery efforts in the city are under way and hundreds of workers have been sent out to clean up trees and debris, Landrieu said. Meanwhile, the National Weather Service said two tornadoes touched down in rural areas of north-central Illinois and at least two touched down in rural southeast Missouri. There were no reports of damage in Illinois, and Missouri officials said some power lines caught on fire.

ICE official resigns amid misconduct claims

SYRIA

By Patrick J. McDonnell and Rima Marrouch

Bulletin wire reports Isaac lost most of its destructive steam by Saturday — with the Gulf Coast still recovering from its battering earlier last week — but the storm managed to carry a small amount of needed rain to drought-stricken parts of the Midwest. “This by no means will be a drought-buster,” said Chris Vaccaro, a National Weather Service spokesman. “But we’ll take whatever rain we can get.” Up to 3 inches of rain was expected in the Mississippi and Ohio valleys — though some parts of Illinois and Indiana could get more, Vaccaro said. Residents of the Gulf Coast, meanwhile, were trying to cope with damage inflicted by the slow-moving storm. Then a hurricane, Isaac made landfall Tuesday, the day before the seventh anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. It then proceeded to pummel the region for several days, largely sparing New Orleans but devastating southern, low-ly-

aircraft take off to strike opposition-held territory. “When you can’t hit the airplanes when they are flying, you will make sure they can’t take off,” said a rebel representative in Idlib province who goes by the nickname Abu Bashir. “There are not enough antiaircraft weapons and missiles, so targeting air bases … is a natural choice.” The government of President Bashar Assad rarely deployed fighter jets and helicopter gunships in the early days of the conflict, now in its 18th month. The military initially relied heavily on tanks, artillery and ground troops. But as insurgent forces grew in strength and attacks became more audacious, the government has unleashed its considerable air assets. Rebels complain bitterly about a lack of surface-to-air missiles that could help neutralize military aircraft. There have been repeated reports that the opposition has received some supplies of such weapons, either provided by overseas suppliers, captured from government stocks or

purchased on the black market. But there has been no indication of widespread deployment of shoulder-fired surfaceto-air missiles in Syria. Still, in the last week, the opposition has reported downing several aircraft, including a helicopter that was seen in a video Monday falling to the ground in flames in Damascus. On Thursday, another opposition video posted on the Web appeared to show a downed fighter jet in Idlib province, complete with a pilot apparently parachuting from the aircraft. The authenticity of the videos could not be corroborated. On Saturday, the new U.N. envoy to Syria issued a warning to the government. “I call on parties inside Syria to halt the fighting. Undoubtedly, this call is primarily directed to the government,” the envoy, Lakhdar Brahimi of Algeria, said in New York. “The need for change is urgent and necessary.” Also Saturday, the government and rebels accused each other of a new round of extrajudicial executions. Such charges have become an almost daily feature of the conflict.

The Associated Press WASHINGTON — A senior Obama political appointee and longtime aide to Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano resigned Saturday amid allegations of inappropriate sexual behavior lodged by at least three Immigration and Customs

Enforcement employees. Suzanne Barr, chief of staff to ICE Director John Morton, said in her resignation letter that the allegations against her are “unfounded.” But she said she was stepping down to end distractions within the agency. Barr is accused of sexually inappropriate behavior

toward employees. In one complaint, Barr is accused of telling a male subordinate he was “sexy” and asking a personal question about his anatomy during an office party. Homeland Security’s office of professional responsibility and inspector general are investigating the allegations.


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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

#FUXFFO DPOWFOUJPOT UIF TUBUF PG UIF QSFTJEFOUJBM SBDF Starting Tuesday, a parade of high-profile speakers will stand on a stage in Charlotte, N.C., to vouch for President Barack Obama at the Democratic National Convention, which starts less than a week after Republicans gathered in Tampa, Fla., to nominate Mitt Romney as their party’s presidential candidate. The race is a dead heat; Republicans are hoping for a weekend of good news, while Democrats say that, with their convention second, Obama can emerge with momentum on his side. With the race for the White House in its final stretch, an estimate of how each state is leaning:

In a fact-check age, campaigns are playing loose with the truth tisements repeating widely debunked claims — have raised In his very first television new questions about whether advertisement last year, Mitt the political culture still holds Romney highlighted the na- any penalty for falsehood. tion’s dire unemployment criBrooks Jackson, the direcsis, its record number of home tor of FactCheck.org, a project foreclosures and the rising of the Annenberg Public Polnational debt, and showed icy Center of the University footage of President Barack of Pennsylvania, said that at Obama delivering this arrest- various points this year both ing remark: “If we sides have blithely keep talking about ANALYSIS gone on repeating the economy, we’re statements that were going to lose.� found false. There was one problem: “They don’t care,� he said, The quotation was taken so “because it gets votes.� The wildly out of context that increasingly disaggregated it turned Obama’s actual media ecosystem, the diminmeaning upside-down. The ished trust in traditional news truncated clip came from a organizations and the rise of speech Obama gave in 2008 social media had made it eastalking about his opponent, ier than ever to inject quesSen. John McCain of Arizo- tionable assertions directly na. The full quotation? “Sena- into the media bloodstream tor McCain’s campaign actu- — and to rebut them. ally said, and I quote, ‘If we But while there is arguably keep talking about the econo- more fact-checking now than my, we’re going to lose.’ � ever — and, thanks to the PolitiFact.com, the Pulitzer Web, more ways to indepenPrize-winning fact-checking dently check what candidates website, rated the advertise- and campaigns say — verdicts ment “Pants on Fire,� its most that a campaign has crossed deceptive rating possible, but the line are often drowned out it achieved what the Romney by dissent from its supporters, campaign had hoped: People who take it upon themselves started talking about the to check the checkers. sluggish economy and how Brendan Nyhan, an asObama’s campaign promises sistant professor of governhad fallen short. And it set the ment at Dartmouth College, tone for the campaign that fol- said nonpartisan fact-checklowed, which has often seemed ing groups now compete dismissive of fact-checkers. with ideologically motivated “We’re not going let our groups from both sides that campaign be dictated by fact- consider their work to be checkers,� Neil Newhouse, checking facts as well. (The a Romney pollster, said last political campaigns also call week during a breakfast some of their own news rediscussion at the Republi- leases “fact-checks.�) can National Convention in “The term ‘fact check’ can Tampa. He said fact-check- easily be devalued, as people ers brought their own sets of throw it onto any sort of an thoughts and beliefs to their opinion that they have,� Nywork, and that the campaign han said. “The other problem stands behind its ads. is that the partisans who pay Every four years there are attention to politics are being lies in campaigns, and at times conditioned to disregard the a blurry line between accept- fact-checkers when their own able political argument and side gets criticized.� outright sophistry. But recent The cycle was on display events — from the mislead- at the Republican convening statements in convention tion when Romney’s running speeches to television adver- mate, Rep. Paul Ryan of WisBy Michael Cooper

Tossup

Solid or leaning Democratic

Solid or leaning Republican

95 270 electoral votes needed to win

237 electoral votes

206 electoral votes

New Hampshire 4 Wisconsin 10 Iowa 6

Nevada 6

Ohio 18

Colorado 9

Virginia 13

Florida 29

The most significant tossup states: As expected, they are Ohio and Florida. If Romney does not win at least one of these states, there is no way for him to win based on the current leanings of the states. FLA.

OHIO

VA.

WIS.

COLO.

IOWA

• If Romney loses Florida, he must win every other tossup state. • Ohio is a different matter. If he loses the Buckeye State, there are 11 combinations of swing states that he could win to become president, and one combination that would result in an electoral tie.

NEV.

Romney wins:

N.H.

Swing states

Electoral votes

7

272

5

270

5

273

5

271

5

273

6

270

6

273

6

274

6

277

6

277

6

279

7

283

5

269 TIE

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/FX :PSL 5JNFT /FXT 4FSWJDF

Romney offers an ambitious agenda, but much could hinge on the Senate By Maeve Reston Los Angeles Times

TAMPA, Fla. — As he has campaigned for president, Mitt Romney has made one thing clear: In his first term he would try to dramatically shrink the size of government to wean Americans from what he views as too much reliance on the federal government for basic services such as health care and food stamps. Romney’s chances of success would depend on cooperation from Congress, but he has outlined an ambitious set of goals, even for his first day in office. Powerless to actually “repeal and replace� President Barack Obama’s health care law on his own, Romney has said he would issue a firstday executive order directing federal officials to try to shift authority over some aspects of the program to the states. He would order agencies to begin eliminating Obama-era regulations “that unduly burden the economy or job creation� — a broad, if vague, directive. He has said he would order the Treasury Department to immediately label China a “currency manipulator.� And he has outlined a plan to revamp the process for issuing drilling permits for domestic oil and gas exploration, with the goal of giving greater flexibility to states. Though his options will hinge on which party controls the Senate, the former Massachusetts governor has also pledged to introduce several bills on his first day: slashing the corporate income tax rate to 25 percent; cutting non-security spending by 5 percent;

giving states authority over federal job retraining programs; and directing the Department of the Interior to survey U.S. energy reserves with the goal of opening new areas for domestic exploration. Romney has also embraced many of the concepts of the budget plan of his running mate, House Budget Chairman Paul Ryan, who wants to impose across-the-board tax cuts while slashing spending on federal programs that help the poor and the elderly. But Romney has declined to talk about key details that could be politically perilous — such as transforming the Medicare system by offering future seniors the option of vouchers to purchase their health insurance. Romney advisers have not said how big the federal vouchers would be — and how they would adjust that level of support to keep up with the rapidly increasing costs of health care. They argue that those sorts of details should be hammered out in consultation with Congress next year. But critics say that alone could mean a difference of hundreds of dollars, if not several thousand dollars, in the annual budgets of American seniors — and that, more broadly, Romney’s budget plan doesn’t add up. As much as the details, though, the heart of the debate over the next couple months will be Obama’s and Romney’s differing visions of the role that government plays in the daily lives of Americans. Obama argues that the vision Romney has sketched would favor the rich with tax cuts while shredding the social safety net.

For his part, Romney argues that Americans have become too dependent on government to solve their problems. “The strength and power and goodness of America has always been based on the strength and power and goodness of our communities, our families, our faiths,� Romney said in his speech at the Republican National Convention last week. Romney’s advisers say Obama’s failure to clearly outline his plans for the second term suggests that Americans would see little change in the economy over the next four years under his leadership. Romney policy adviser Jonathan Burks noted that the Republican nominee had set specific economic benchmarks to reach by the end of his first term as a result of his tax cuts and investment incentives: 12 million new jobs and an economy that is growing by about 4 percent a year. In addition to lowering the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 25 percent, Romney would extend all of the Bushera tax cuts and eliminate the estate tax. So far neither Romney nor his running mate has explained how they would pay for those changes. Of course, presidential candidates often find their desires thwarted by the checks and balances of Washington. Just as a Republican House has blunted Obama’s wishes, so too could a Democratic Senate block the proposals of a President Romney. And policies that have burrowed into the bureaucracy can prove either difficult to fully extract — or may have grown politically popular with time.

New York Times News Service

consin, made a number of questionable or misleading claims in his speech. Even before he stopped speaking, some of his claims were being questioned on Twitter. The truth-twisting has not been limited to Republicans. Democrats gleefully repeated an out-of-context quote that made it sound as if Romney enjoys firing people. An outside group supporting Obama ran an advertisement giving the unfair impression that Romney was responsible for the death of the wife of a steelworker who lost his job and his health insurance when Romney’s old company, Bain Capital, closed down the plant where he worked. And the Obama campaign ran a commercial falsely suggesting that Romney opposes abortion even in cases of rape or incest; he says he supports such exceptions. Confidence in the old arbiters, the mainstream media, has fallen precipitously in recent decades: The percentage of Americans who trust newspapers, television and radio to report the news accurately and fairly fell to 43 percent in 2010, down from 72 percent in 1976, according to the Gallup Poll. Nyhan’s research has shown the difficulties in trying to set the record straight through news accounts. Bill Adair, the editor of PolitiFact.com, a project of The Tampa Bay Times, has seen his site come under fire from the left and the right in recent years, but said that this may prove to be the year of the fact-checker. “I think there has always been a calculation by political campaigns to forge ahead with a falsehood if they think it will score the points they want to score,� said Adair, who noted that campaigns still care enough about the truth to spend time explaining their positions and statements to his reporters. “What’s different this time is there is more fact-checking than ever.�


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

A fiery Obama embarks on path to his convention By Julie Pace The Associated Press

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Don’t expect President Barack Obama to try to reinvent himself this week at the Democratic Party’s national convention. Instead, he and a slew of his defenders will seek to persuade voters to stick with the president they know rather than gamble on someone new, a challenging task given that most Americans say the country is heading in the wrong direction. “This Thursday, I will offer you what I believe is a better path forward, a path that grows this economy, creates more jobs and strengthens the middle class,” Obama said Saturday in Des Moines, Iowa, previewing his pitch. “And the good news is, you get to choose which path we take.” Obama lampooned the justcompleted Republican National Convention as better-suited to an era of black-and-white TV and “ trickle-down, you’re on your own” economics Saturday, and declared that Mitt Romney “did not offer a single new idea” to fix the economy. “There was a lot of talk about hard truths and bold choices, but no one actually told you what they were,” Obama said in Iowa, chuckling, as he set out on a three-day tour of battleground states in the run-up to his own convention. Later, Obama said, the Republican gathering was so rooted in the past, there should have been a rabbit-ears antenna on the convention hall. Yet even the site of Obama’s convention, Charlotte, N.C., served as an unwelcome reminder to the Democrats of an economy so weak that it threatens his chances for re-election. The president carried North Carolina in 2008, but the state’s unemployment rate is pegged at 9.6 percent, well higher than the nation’s 8.3 percent and tied with next-door South Carolina for fifth from the bottom. While Democratic loyalists will fill the stadium where Obama accepts the nomination Thursday night, the president’s target audience is the small sliver of undecided voters in battleground states who will be critical to the outcome of what polls show is a tight race with two months to go. (See map on facing page.) His campaign also will try to revive some of its insurgent, grass-roots appeal from 2008 by using technology to let people participate in the convention. That effort also will help Obama’s team collect more data on voters. Starting Tuesday, speakers will stand on a blue-carpeted stage in the Time Warner Cable Arena to endorse Obama’s economic agenda, which his team says is focused on the middle class: ending tax cuts for the rich and reducing the debt, while spending more on education, energy and infrastructure. Several voters — called “American Heroes” by Obama’s team — also will speak at and appear in videos at the convention, putting a human face on Obama’s program. Democrats hope that by holding their convention second, Obama can emerge with momentum on his side.

AT THE CONVENTION The Bulletin’s Washington, D.C., reporter is following Oregon’s delegation on the ground at the national conventions. Look for this logo in the paper for our coverage of the Democratic National Convention this week, plus see additional and archived material online at bendbulletin.com/conventions. Watch for our tweets from the DNC in Charlotte, N.C., on Twitter: @thebulletin

Obama will close the convention Thursday night with a speech in an outdoor football stadium, just as the Democratic nominee did in 2008. Mindful of the comparisons to four years ago, Obama’s campaign is scrambling to ensure that the 74,000-seat stadium is filled to capacity. The largest crowd Obama has drawn during the 2012 campaign is about 14,000 people, far less than the jaw-dropping crowds he attracted in the 2008 campaign. As in 2008, the campaign will use the large gathering to register voters and recruit new volunteers through text messaging and Twitter. Aides say Obama won’t ignore the economic woes that have defined his four years in the White House. But they say he plans to focus largely on the future, and why he believes his policies will succeed in a second term. Obama isn’t expected to outline any new policy proposals. Instead, he plans to make the case for continuing what he has started. And he is expected to double down on agenda items, like immigration and tax reforms, that gained little traction during his four years in office. “When the convention is over, folks with be left with a clear road map of where he thinks America needs to go,” said Stephanie Cutter, Obama’s deputy campaign manager. “And it will be clear what his focus will be in an Obama second term.” Working against Obama: the nation’s 8.3 percent unemployment rate, sluggish economic growth and fears the economy could slip back into a recession. There’s also a general malaise. The latest Associated Press-GfK poll showed 60 percent of registered voters say the country is heading in the wrong direction. The convention opens Tuesday with first lady Michelle Obama, whose popularity far surpasses her husband’s, as a featured speaker. San Antonio, Texas, Mayor Julian Castro also is slated for that night. He will be the first Hispanic to deliver the Democratic convention’s keynote address. Their roles on the convention’s opening night are part of Democrats’ efforts to shore up support among women and Hispanics, two crucial voting blocs where Obama holds an advantage over Romney. Former President Bill Clinton, who is emerging as one of the campaign’s most effective surrogates, will headline the convention Wednesday and formally nominate Obama.

Case closed, but legal trouble isn’t over for Arizona sheriff The Associated Press PHOENIX — The federal abuse-of-power investigation into America’s self-proclaimed toughest sheriff may have been closed without criminal charges, but Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s legal troubles are far from over. A civil case brought by a small group of Latinos who accuse Arpaio’s office of systematically racially profiling is awaiting a verdict from an Arizona-based federal judge. The U.S. Department of Justice has also sued the sheriff for alleged constitutional violations including racial profil-

ing, retaliating against Arpaio critics, punishing Latino jail inmates with limited English skills for speaking Spanish and failing to adequately investigate a large number of sex-crimes cases. No trial date in that case has been set. The Justice Department announced late Friday it would not pursue criminal charges against the sheriff or his office, or against former Maricopa County top prosecutor Andrew Thomas and a top Thomas aide, Lisa Aubuchon, for abuse of power. Thomas and Aubuchon have been disbarred by the state Supreme Court.

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Paralympics Continued from A1 He is confident that he belongs there, although some of his competitors clearly are not: So far in his brief career, Dawson said, he has been the subject of eight official complaints about his classification. “They were saying that I’m too able for Grade II,” he explained. “But Grade II is by far the most diverse grade, and that’s where I’ve always been placed.” He added dryly: “I have really gotten to know the classifiers.” The Paralympics that opened Wednesday in London are no less competitive than the Olympics held here earlier this summer. The Paralympics are the largest ever, with 4,200 athletes competing in 20 sports. Some are in wheelchairs, some are wholly or partially blind, some have three, two, one or no limbs, some have dwarfism, some have intellectual deficits, some have complex coordination and muscle-control problems, and some have multisymptom conditions like multiple sclerosis. The classifiers, as they are called, must ensure that athletes compete against others of similar ability — an exercise in physical examination and assessment that exists nowhere else in sports. “Its not always as simple as if you’re just dealing with amputations, for example — one arm, one leg,” said Christine Meaden, chief classifier for the International Paralympic Equestrian Committee. “We have people with coordination problems, paralysis, amputations and visual impairments — and people who have a mixture of types of disabilities.”

‘Minimal disability’ Paralympians have to be assessed by international classifiers before arriving at the games. But, said Peter van der Vliet, the International Paralympic Committee’s chief medical classifier, some 245 athletes here have been deemed borderline — hovering between one grade and another — and have been reassessed at the games. Forty have been moved to different classifications, and eight athletes (in track and field, swimming and judo) have been ruled ineligible and sent home because, he said, they did not meet “the minimal disability criterion.” The classification process is multifaceted and different for each sport. Riders in international equestrian events are observed riding in competition. They also have to undergo face-to-face medical

Emilio Morenatti / The Associated Press

Spain’s Xabi Torres jumps next to his prosthetic legs as he leaves the swimming pool after training Friday before the Paralympics competition. Swimmers with physical impairments are divided into 10 classes for races.

“I have no function or feeling from the belly button down, and now I’m competing against people who are, say, missing just one arm or have leg amputations below the knee. I think there’s a significant difference.” — Mallory Weggemann, an American swimmer

evaluations from two international classifiers, involving a range of movements that tests for strength, coordination and flexibility. The exercises can be as straightforward as touching a finger and thumb together, moving the shoulder or placing a heel in set spots on the ground. The system is meant to focus on the athletes’ physical abilities and on the limitations their disabilities impose, not on their riding prowess. But it can anger competitors who believe that they are being forced to compete against people who are less disabled than they are. “People will say, ‘You shouldn’t be in Grade 1A — you ride so well,’ ” said Donna Ponessa, a rider on the U.S. team. She has multiple sclerosis and is paralyzed from the chest down. She uses a wheelchair and a ventilator, except when she rides. “But I’ve given up a year and a half of my life for the Olympics,” she said — time spent entirely riding, exercising at the gym or working. Riders with fluctuating conditions like multiple sclerosis are frequently re-evaluated, and athletes unhappy with their classifications can appeal. “It’s a fundamental right that if an athlete believes a wrong decision is taken, he has a right to protest,” van der Vliet said. Swimming has 10 classifications for athletes with different physical impairments, plus three more for visual

impairments and one for athletes with intellectual deficits. For that reason it is particularly prone to challenges, and swimmers say they sometimes suspect that athletes have not been classified correctly. Three weeks before she was set to compete in the London Paralympics, Mallory Weggemann, a U.S. swimmer who is paralyzed from the waist down, learned that officials from the International Paralympic Committee had questions about her level of ability. Weggemann has always swum at the S7 level, against athletes who, for instance, might have double leg amputations or paralysis down one side of their bodies. But after a physical evaluation by two examiners four days ago, she was moved to level S8, a class in which the athletes are less disabled. “I have no function or feeling from the belly button down, and now I’m competing against people who are, say, missing just one arm or have leg amputations below the knee,” Weggemann said. “I think there’s a significant difference in functional ability between myself and the new competitors.”

Gaming the system It works both ways, and athletes say they have all heard of instances of people trying to game the system. “I think I’m in the right class, but always there are some

people who — how do you say this? — lie a little more than others and pretend to be worse than they are,” said Amaya Alonso, a Spanish swimmer who competed Thursday in the women’s 400-meter freestyle S12 class, for swimmers with visual impairments. One competitor, who did not want to be identified talking about cheating, said: “You hear people say, ‘Well, I know what it takes to be a I or a II.’ Everybody is in search of that win, present company included, and I’m told that some people are less than scrupulous.” Asked if the system was vulnerable to abuse, van der Vliet said: “I can counter that one with a question: Can I eliminate doping from the games?” (The answer is no.) The most notorious example of Paralympic classification manipulation took place at the 2000 games in Sydney. The Spanish men’s intellectual disability basketball team was stripped of its gold medal after it emerged that many of its members were not intellectually disabled at all. After that, mentally disabled athletes were barred from the Paralympics while officials revised the classification process. They are back again this year. The athletes say they sympathize with the difficulties faced by the classifiers, who are forced to determine how to sort people who have several hundred different types and degrees of disability. “No system is perfect,” Dale Dedrick, a U.S. para-equestrian who has systemic lupus and competes at Level II, said in an email. “Before I would wish to challenge someone else’s disability, however, I would consider carefully the old adage of walking a mile in their shoes.”


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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

Real estate Continued from A1 Obama would build on his programs already under way for foreclosure relief, expanded refinancing and loan modifications, while continuing to implement new housing finance rules and consumer protections under the Dodd-Frank Act. He also supports proposed legislation that would make it easier to refinance. “The administration has put forward a plan to help more responsible borrowers refinance their mortgages — saving hundreds of dollars per month — while taking concrete steps to help families stay in their homes, revitalize the communities hardest hit by the housing crisis, and reform the mortgage lending market to better protect both consumers and taxpayers,” Obama campaign spokesman Adam Fetcher said in an email. Romney, on the other hand, would repeal DoddFrank and replace it with streamlined regulations that make it easier for the private sector — especially smaller financial institutions — to re-enter the mortgage market. He hasn’t outlined what those new regulations would be. “We have to have regulation, but we need it modern and up-to-date,” he said at an Aug. 13 appearance in St. Augustine, Fla.

What to watch Whether you already own property or hope to buy in the future, the next president’s housing policies will affect you. Zigas and other experts suggested keeping an eye on the following areas: The mortgage market: At the depth of the recession in 2008, a federal conservator took over housing giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to avoid a real estate meltdown. Some form of federal guarantee has backed more than 90 percent of the U.S. home mortgages originated since then. The next president will have to decide how much of the housing market will continue to be subsidized by the federal government, and through what structure. “No one is going to propose to keep Fannie and Freddie in their current form,” said Sarah Rosen Wartell, a housing expert and president of the Urban Institute. The decision will have a huge influence on the housing market and the price of real estate, both for the lower end of the market that competes with affordable rental housing and the higher end that has lagged, partly because of lower limits for the size of mortgages that can be purchased and resold by Fannie and Freddie. The Obama administration last year outlined three possible ways to replace the role Fannie and Freddie play in the mortgage market, but did not choose one. Since then, the administration has changed rules and limits to continue to pare away at the two housing firms. On Aug. 17, the government announced a renegotiated conservatorship agreement for Fannie and Freddie that puts them on track to shrink faster than anticipated, about four years ahead of schedule. Romney also would wind down the housing giants’ portfolio, counting on private investors to replace the government backing. But neither candidate has proposed an alternative model. Obama supports a continued federal tax deduction for mortgage interest, although his fiscal 2013 budget would limit the mortgage deduction for taxpayers making more than $250,000. Romney, meanwhile, chose Paul Ryan as his running mate, someone who has expressed support for eliminating tax breaks such as the mortgage deduction in favor of a simpler tax code and lower rates overall. Foreclosures: On top of this is the question of foreclosure relief. With one-quarter of American homeowners owing more on their mortgages than the property is worth, we’re hardly out of the woods, said Guy Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance,

Hints on their next steps Three key areas where President Barack Obama and Republican nominee Mitt Romney differ on housing policy:

OBAMA

ROMNEY

1. Supports the DoddFrank overhaul of financial regulations, including stricter rules for mortgage professionals and a new consumer agency combating fraud and abuse. 2. Proposed giving money to local authorities in hard-hit communities for partnering with the private sector on rehabilitating foreclosures and raising property values. 3. Wants Congress to expand refinancing opportunities to underwater homeowners whose mortgages aren’t held by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.

1. Views Dodd-Frank as overly bureaucratic and would replace it with regulations aimed at encouraging private investment in mortgages.

a mortgage industry research and publishing firm. “The bottom line is a lot of people are facing foreclosure because they can’t afford their mortgage, and unless you want to give them a free mortgage you can’t resolve that,” Cecala said. Both Obama and Romney support the government selling some of the 200,000 foreclosedupon homes owned by Fannie, Freddie and the Federal Housing Administration and converting them to rental housing. The Obama administration announced this year it will begin pilot sales of these homes. “Let’s get them out of the government’s hands and put them back in the hands of the public,” Romney said in his St. Augustine speech. His campaign says converting vacant, foreclosed homes into healthy rental properties will boost home prices. Every 5 percent increase in home values means about 2 million fewer underwater properties, cutting the number of potential foreclosures as well. Romney has also expressed support for the idea — promoted by former House Speaker Newt Gingrich in the Republican primary debates — of more aggressively exploring foreclosure alternatives such as short sales, deed-in-lieu transactions and shared appreciation. The administration’s mortgage modification program has helped more than 5 million homeowners modify loans and stave off foreclosure, while the refinancing program has assisted more than 1.3 million people between April 2009 and May 2012, according to government reports. Obama also proposed providing $15 billion to local communities to partner with the private sector in buying and rehabilitating foreclosed houses and expanding refinancing to homeowners whose mortgages are not held by government-backed entities. Both measures would require legislative approval. “We’ve got historically low interest rates now, and the housing market is beginning to tick back up but it’s still not at all where it needs to be,” Obama said at an Aug. 20 news briefing. “We’re going to be pushing Congress to see if they can pass a refinancing bill that puts $3,000 into the pockets of the average family who hasn’t yet refinanced their mortgage.” Down payments: As the federal government has worked to right the housing market and reduce the amount of bad debt, down payments have steadily increased. Some of the rise results from financial institutions tightening their standards. But the government also sets required down payments in many cases. The next administration will decide whether to continue increasing the amount of money needed to buy a home or whether it’s time to loosen the standards to encourage a rebound in residential real estate. At a time when mortgage rates are at all-time lows and housing prices are reasonable, many households that could benefit the most can’t get credit or can’t afford down payments, Zigas said. “What you’re seeing is a continuation of the credit crunch that emerged in 2009,” Cecala said. “Mortgage credit, in particular, is very tight and tough to come by.” In Romney’s view, credit is scarce because lenders are unsure how they’ll be affected by the new mortgage and housing finance rules being implemented under the mammoth Dodd-Frank Act. A second Obama administration or Romney would take over “with the market adjusting to these new rules,” Zigas said. “There are some who say

2. Sees big government as the problem that is holding back a housing recovery, not the solution.

3. Says the current credit crunch is a result of uncertainty around the slow implementation of the Dodd-Frank regulations. — The Washington Post

it’s going to lead to a contraction in mortgage credit. I don’t believe that.” In the end, so many other parties are involved in crafting mortgage-market policy and implementing it that differences between Obama and Romney would be muted. Not only are other administration officials and lawmakers involved, but also think tanks, academic researchers, consumer advocates and representatives of all corners of the financial sector. “The starting positions of President Romney or Obama are likely to be different, but the legislative process will lend itself to compromise,” Wartell said. Consumer protections: One of the Obama administration’s signature actions has been the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the first financial regulator charged with protecting consumers from fraud, abuse and misrepresentation of mortgages and other financial products. Many Republicans have sharply criticized the CFPB and its power. “Romney has staked out that he’s opposed to the regulation, he wants to reduce it and roll back Dodd-Frank and limit the CFPB’s authority,” Cecala said. While it’s unlikely that a Romney administration would eliminate the new agency, it would certainly take a very different approach to regulating consumer finance and how much leverage Wall Street enjoys. “There’s a stark difference in rhetoric around the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. But I think it is unrealistic regardless of administration to unwind the bureau,” Wartell said. “Much more likely under Romney would be structural changes, less autonomy, less independence.” The bureau implements rules about which mortgages would be eligible for government backing and standards for mortgage industry professionals. Its officials also have power to take enforcement action against companies they contend are violating consumer rights. For instance, the agency gave advice to state attorneys general in the national mortgage servicer settlement and is continuing to probe the mortgage insurance business, among others. “Our focus is on reforming the mortgage market system in a way that’s going to, over the long term, provide more stability and continued access to mortgage finance for middle-class families, but is also going to get serious about addressing the dramatic failures,” said Brian Deese, deputy director of the National Economic Council. “For a borrower, it means we’re no longer going to have an industry where you can get tricked into loans you can’t afford.” Repairing the economy: Ultimately, the future of the housing market is inextricably tied to the economy. The more that people have well-paying jobs and can afford larger homes, the better the real estate market will fare. In a healthy economy, the market would be more able to absorb the homes that are currently underwater and not for sale, and thus are exerting a drag on the economy, Zigas said. Moreover, the path the next administration sets for addressing federal budget deficits and the national debt will determine how much money will be available for affordable housing, foreclosure prevention and homeownership initiatives. “In the context of not being able to help working Americans, I think the next administration is going to have to come to terms with what is an equitable housing policy — how to use those resources,” Zigas said.

Alan Bjerga / Bloomberg News

Conditions faced by farmers during this summer’s drought pale in comparison to the Dust Bowl era of the 1930s, says 85-year-old Missouri farmer Tony Klott. “You have a lot better chance now than you did back then,” he said.

A Dust Bowl survivor sees parallels to heat, not hardship By Alan Bjerga

Klott grew up on a family farm in Missouri. He is among a dwindling number who experienced the “Dirty ’30s.”

Bloomberg News

HERMANN, Mo. — Tony Klott remembers pouring water in front of his shoeless feet as a boy so the cracked Dust Bowl ground wouldn’t burn his soles. His children and grandchildren now live in climate-controlled comfort within an hour’s drive of the Missouri farm where he grew up. Klott, 85 and retired, said the difficulties of living through the drought of 2012 pale in comparison to those of the “Dirty ’30s.” Last month surpassed July 1936, the depths of the Dust Bowl, as the hottest month on record in the lower 48 states. The Department of Agriculture has declared almost 1,700 counties — about 56 percent of all U.S. counties — as natural-disaster areas caused by a drought that has seared millions of acres of pasture and cropland from Nebraska to Texas. Prices of wheat and corn have risen so much that ranchers have slaughtered cattle to avoid the cost of feeding them. Klott is among a dwindling number of farmers who experienced the dust storms and poverty of the Dirty ’30s immortalized in “The Grapes of Wrath,” when Plains topsoil blackened skies in New York and red snow fell in New England. “You have a lot better chance now than you did back then,” Klott said in an interview on the Hermann, Mo., farm where he grew up. One reason is the federal government: A safety net of subsidies and crop insurance means his family doesn’t face the struggles of his childhood, when failed crops meant going hungry or abandoning farms. Better land management has kept the skies free of the dust storms that defined the era. U.S. farmers have been transformed from subsistence growers to global suppliers. Tall and serious, with an accent that hints at the German he spoke as a child, Klott remembers exact dates of weather disasters, as well as the routes he served in 21 years as a mail carrier, supplementing his farm income. “It rained mud” in the 1930s around his childhood home, Klott said in an interview in his current house, near Bowling Green, Mo. His son now farms the surrounding fields of parched soybeans and corn. “Some days it would be as clear as this, but you could hardly see the sun. The sky would just be full of dust.” The third-eldest of seven children, in a family struggling to feed itself on 160 acres of woods, pasture and crops outside Hermann, Klott was 7 years old in 1934, in an area where farming had changed little from the 19th century. The Klotts spoke German at home. English, like shoes, was only for school. His mother baked six loaves of bread daily. Sunday dinner featured meat from squirrels they hunted. Electricity and indoor plumbing were for city folk, and education stopped before high school. Dust Bowl farmers “were doing their work under conditions none of us can quite imagine,” said Pamela Riney-Kehrberg, chairwoman of the history department at Iowa State University in Ames. “Farm women would get up at 2 or 3 in the morning because that was the only time they could

Courtesy Anthony Klott

churn butter” in cooler air, she said. “To understand what was going on in the ’30s, you have to add a whole other layer of despair and discomfort.” The U.S. itself was a much poorer, less-educated, more agricultural nation. About a fifth of the labor force worked in farming, compared with less than a 50th today, according to Census data. This year’s dryness resembles the 1930s in heat and rainfall patterns, said Jason Rosencrans, a meteorologist with the federal Climate Prediction Center. In July, drought covered 57.2 percent of the contiguous 48 states, according to the Palmer Drought Index. In July 1934, the figure was 79.9 percent. Despite meager rainfall, crop revenues this year will exceed pre-drought estimates as soaring prices offset lower yields, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said, forecasting record farm profits of $122.2 billion. Today’s crop growers also have access to taxpayer-subsidized insurance to help recoup lost sales, a program that may pay out $20 billion this year. Mule-drawn plows have

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given way to computerequipped tractors. Today Klott can escape the heat in the central air conditioning he added to his house in 1995. “The physical stuff was tougher for them. Now the strain is more mental,” said Joe, one of three of Tony’s five children who still farm. None of his adult grandchildren do. The current drought is a reminder that farming, then and today, includes risks, and no guarantee of success, he said. People who work hard, who help one another, will make it through. “Hang in there,” he says, and he smiles.

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

A7

THALIDOMIDE

Would cutting out ethanol Maker of morning-sickness drug lower corn prices? Maybe

apologizes to victims,50 years on By John F. Burns New York Times News Service

LONDON — Decades of campaigning by victims of thalidomide, a morning sickness drug, have taken a new turn, with the first apology in 50 years to the victims and their families by the drug’s German manufacturer — and an incensed rejection of the apology as too little and too late from many of those it was intended to placate. Although thalidomide was never approved for use by pregnant women in the U.S., some victims are American. The apology was issued Friday by Harald Stock, chief executive of the Grunenthal Group, a family-owned pharmaceutical company that marketed the drug in the 1950s and early 1960s. It was withdrawn in 1961 after it was linked to birth defects, including shortened arms and legs, and in some cases no limbs at

all, that campaigners say affected 10,000 babies around the world, mostly in Australia, Canada, Europe and Japan. The apology came in a speech Stock delivered in the Rhineland town of Stolberg, the company’s base, at the unveiling of a thalidomide memorial, a bronze statue of a limbless child. Addressing the victims and their families, particularly their mothers, he said the company wished to “apologize for the fact that we have not found the way to you from person to person for almost 50 years. Instead, we have been silent, and we are very sorry for that.” According to an English translation of his remarks that appeared on Grunenthal’s website, he added, “We ask that you regard our long silence as a sign of the shock that your fate caused in us.” Berrisford Boothe is among the victims who called for a

public apology. Boothe, 51, an associate professor of art at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pa., described himself in a phone interview as one of 26 known U.S. thalidomide victims. He said he had been born with severe disabilities in both hands and one arm, and described his life as a “long and isolated journey” as a child growing up in Jamaica and later the U.S. Now, he said, Grunenthal, shaken from a half-century of denial by a class-action lawsuit in Australia, had made “some kind of statement that they are emotionally connected to our suffering. They’ve had 50 years to make billions of dollars while we struggled and our parents committed suicide.” Stock said the company had carried out all the tests on thalidomide before it was marketed that were possible given the scientific knowledge available in the 1950s.

Michael F. McElroy / New York Times News Service

Groups of Amish outside the hate-crimes trial under way in Cleveland show examples of women’s head coverings, such as stringed caps.

Amish Continued from A1 As Nancy Mullet walked to the witness chair, she passed a cluster of women wearing the same kind of cap, who had come in support of victims of the peculiar beard-cutting attacks by Samuel Mullet’s followers that roiled eastern Ohio last fall. Jury members and spectators alike received a crash course in Amish culture from testimony during the first week of the trial. They had heard a prior witness snap at an unwary lawyer who referred imprecisely to a hair covering, telling him, “It’s a cap, not a bonnet.” To many outside his clique, Mullet’s decision to have the women switch from caps to what others disparaged as “skimpy scarves” was one more sign that he was isolating his flock and leading them into sin. Adopting different headgear was hardly Mullet’s most serious transgression in the years leading up to last fall’s violence. According to Amish critics, Mullet created a cult with decidedly un-Amish traits, including sexual favors for the bishop (himself), unheard-of methods of discipline, such as forcing miscreants to ponder their sins in a chicken coop, and festering anger at those who quit his church. For the Amish, the minute practices of daily life, from hair coverings to choice of buggy wheels, are intertwined with their fundamentalist Christian beliefs. The 16 defendants could be tried for simple assault without going into the fine points of what those on both sides call the Amish way. But to prove the far more serious hate-crime charges brought here by the U.S. attorney, Steven Dettelbach, prosecutors must show that religious differences drove the attacks. Groups from Mullet’s 18-family settlement near Bergholz, Ohio, are accused of forcibly shearing the beards and hair of perceived enemies. So prosecutors have stressed the religious aspects of Mullet’s bitter feuds with critics and those who dared flee his settlement, and whom he accused of doing the devil’s work. They have heard Amish describe how profoundly their selfworth is tied to their uncut

beards — Mullet’s is a foot long — and hair. One of the forcibly shorn men, his wife said, sat through dinners holding his napkin over his chin. To counter the hate-crime charges, defense lawyers have tried to focus instead on the personal grudges and family disputes that affected the choice of victims. Between the symbol-laden appearance of many in the courtroom and statements that, coming from the reticent Amish, can only be called startling, the trial has presented a spectacle. Mullet’s wife, Martha, sat impassively as she heard her daughter-in-law describe being repeatedly forced into sex with Mullet, only to have him call her a whore when she finally refused. Two of Mullet’s brothers and two of his sisters in the gallery — in caps, not scarves — barely concealed their disgust as defense lawyers described his odd practices as true Amish. Most of the witnesses speak Pennsylvania Dutch at home, and some apologized as they groped for the right English word. Conservative Amish end schooling at the eighth grade and do not watch television. The girls are taught to cook, sew, raise children and obey their husbands. The Bergholz women in the courtroom, who have led particularly isolated lives, watched raptly as two female prosecutors managed the government’s case and as a federal marshal with pink handcuffs on her belt stood by. (All the court-appointed defense lawyers are men.) Because it was so central to Mullet’s disputes, the jurors got a quick education in the Amish tradition of shunning, or excommunicating individuals who defiantly stray from the path. “It’s a last resort” and “a heartbreaking thing to do,” testified Andy Hershberger, who was attacked along with his 76-year-old father, Raymond, in October by some of Samuel Mullet’s sons, wielding razor-sharp horse shears for clipping horse manes. Shunnings should occur only after months of discussion and a near-unanimous vote of the congregation, Hershberger said. Normally, other Amish groups respect the decision and tell the offender he must make amends with his

original church. Attackers told the elder Hershberger that he became a target because he had joined other Amish leaders in rejecting Mullet’s use of shunning decrees against people who quit his settlement. Some 300 bishops from three states gathered in 2006 in Ulysses, Pa., to discuss the issue. They appointed a committee, including Hershberger, that made the rare decision not to honor Mullet’s decrees. It was a stinging rebuke that Mullet never forgave. The story of Bergholz is filled with contradictions. An adult daughter of Barbara and Martin Miller told the court how she and five brothers went to live with Mullet’s group because it offered a more conservative, biblical Amish life. Compelled to testify for the prosecution, that daughter, Nancy Burkholder, also said the children had deeply resented their father’s constant criticism. Yet those children cast their lot with a leader whose teachings are far from orthodox, and who is known for vindictive rages. The women of Bergholz, according to testimony, became angry a year or two back at their husbands, accusing them of ogling “English” women, as non-Amish are called, while shopping. The unrest reached the point where, under Mullet’s supervision, several men had to spend days in chicken coops and consent to beard-shearing to help them renew their faith. Yet some of these same women, according to testimony that went unchallenged by the defense, accepted Mullet’s intimate sexual “counseling” and urged others to give in to his ministrations. The Amish are nothing if not private, and the airing of family rifts and church battles has, for many, been little short of a cataclysm. Barbara Miller, who is Mullet’s sister, had to listen as her daughter exclaimed to the world she was a bad parent; then she had to describe how her children and their spouses came one night to cut her husband’s beard and her own waist-length hair, and how they called their parents “godless” and collected the shorn locks in a paper bag to present to Mullet. “It’s the worst thing I’ve ever done,” Miller said of her own painful testimony.

By Sean Cockerham McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — This summer’s brutal weather is the backdrop for a renewed battle between fuel and food interests: The meat industry and several governors want less of the nation’s corn going to make ethanol, but it’s questionable whether the pullback would really help lower corn prices skyrocketing because of the worst drought in 50 years. Rising corn prices are driving up the cost of livestock feed, and the renewable fuel standard is causing “severe economic harm” to pork and poultry farmers in North Carolina, according to Gov. Beverly Perdue. Gov. Rick Perry of Texas argued that ethanol is hurting cattle ranchers and driving up grocery prices. They and several other governors from meat-producing states have petitioned the Environmental Protection Agency to suspend its requirement for refineries to blend 13 billion gallons of ethanol into the gasoline that’s used across the country. The EPA says it’s considering the request from the governors and looking for public comment, but that “does not indicate any predisposition to a specific decision.” Analysts say the Obama administration’s decision is complicated by the fact gasoline prices would be higher without the ethanol being added into the nation’s fuel supply. “You have two competing interests. You have very high corn prices and you have very high gasoline prices,” said John Kilduff, a founding partner at New York hedge fund Again Capital, which focuses on energy. About 40 percent of the nation’s corn crop is set aside for ethanol production this year, although about a third of that corn going into ethanol plants actually comes out as a byproduct that is converted into nutritious livestock feed. There are wealthy and politically powerful interests on both sides of the ethanol fight. The meat and oil industries have been campaign contributors to governors calling for a suspension of the ethanol requirement. Livestock owners want cheaper corn to feed their animals and the American Petroleum Institute, the oil industry’s major trade group, has tried to stop in court an upcoming gasoline blend with 15 percent ethanol instead of up

New York Times News Service file photo

Across a wide stretch of Midwestern farms, sweltering temperatures and a dearth of rain are threatening what was expected to be the nation’s largest corn crop in generations.

“You have two competing interests. You have very high corn prices and you have very high gasoline prices.” — John Kilduff, a hedge fund partner

to 10 percent. They’re at odds with the influential agribusiness lobby representing companies such as Archer Daniels Midland that produce ethanol. It’s more a regional than partisan split among the politicians wading into the argument. While Purdue, a Democrat, and Perry, a Republican, want the requirement suspended, the governor of Iowa, Republican Terry Branstad, has defended an ethanol industry that produced some $15 billion worth of fuel in 41 plants in his state last year. This summer’s drought has renewed a decades-long battle, with corn prices reaching record highs and the head of the United Nation’s food and agriculture organization joining the call for a yearlong suspension of the ethanol requirement. But suspending the mandate for ethanol use could have a smaller impact on the price of corn than people seem to believe and potentially would have no impact at all, according to University of Illinois agricultural economists Scott Irwin and Darrell Goode. “The EPA does not necessarily have the ability to substantially ease the plight of

livestock producers in 20122013 at the stroke of a pen,” they concluded in an August analysis. That is consistent with recent studies from Iowa State University and Purdue University. “Psychologically you might see a decline in corn prices, but as a practical matter the country will still use the same amount of ethanol we had planned to use this year anyway,” said oil industry consultant Andy Lipow, head of Lipow Oil Associates in Houston. A third of the gasoline in the country still would need to have ethanol regardless because of other federal, state and local clean air rules, particularly in the big cities of the East and West coasts. Elsewhere in the nation, refiners often produce gasoline with an octane rating of 84 and then rely on ethanol to boost it up to the regular 87 octane sold at the pump, Lipow said. That isn’t likely to stop right away, he said. Ethanol is also cheaper than gasoline, and the savings is passed on to consumers at the gas pump, Lipow and other energy analysts said in interviews. “The ethanol is so engrained in the system. So it’s not entirely clear that the refiners would want to stop adding it,” said Kilduff of Again Capital, who figured gasoline would cost about 15 cents more a gallon if ethanol were not blended into it. Rutilated Quartz, Sterling & 22k Gold

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A8

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

Inquiry on tax strategy adds to scrutiny of finance firms New York Times News Service The New York attorney general is investigating whether some of the nation’s biggest private equity firms have abused a tax strategy in order to slice hundreds of millions of dollars from their tax bills, according to executives with direct knowledge of the inquiry. Attorney General Eric Schneiderman has in recent weeks subpoenaed more than a dozen firms seeking documents that would reveal whether they converted certain management fees collected from their investors into fund investments, which are taxed at a far lower rate than ordinary income. Among the firms to receive subpoenas are Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., TPG Capital, Sun Capital Partners, Apollo Global Management, Silver Lake Partners and Bain Capital (which was founded by Mitt Romney, the Republican nominee for president). Representatives for the firms declined to comment on the inquiry. Some executives at the firms said they feared that Schneiderman, a first-term Democrat with ties to the Obama administration, was seeking to embarrass the industry because of Romney’s roots at Bain. Others suggested that the subpoenas, which were issued by the attorney general’s Taxpayer Protection Bureau, might be part of an effort to recover more revenue for New York under state tax law. The

Salem Continued from A1 Conger believes capping the cost-of-living adjustments in the PERS system could free up close to an estimated $500 million per budget cycle. Another idea is to cap benefits at 100 percent of salary, so retirees could not collect more in retirement from PERS than they earned while employed. He would also like to prohibit legislators from joining PERS and prevent judges from hearing cases related to the retirement system. Rep. Gene Whisnant, RSunriver, also plans to take aim at PERS-related issues. He wants the PERS website to clearly state its unfunded liability. He is also redrafting a bill that would ensure that state employees who are convicted of felonies and serve prison time don’t receive benefits while incarcerated. For Rep. Mike McLane, RPowell Butte, who grew up in Condon and spent summers harvesting alfalfa and changing irrigation pipes, his focus this session has gravitated toward natural resources. Last session, he pushed for legislation that would permit the diversion and storage of winter flows from the Columbia River, largely for irrigation purposes. He’s tweaking the language in that bill and plans to resurrect it this session. He is also working on legislation that would mandate a statewide examination of the water supply. “We have water supply demands, and they are growing, and we don’t have a comprehensive plan to increase water supplies,” McLane said. Rep. John Huffman, R-The Dalles, will take up a topic from sessions past. A Sistersarea family that has been trying to build a destination resort on its property has teamed up with Huffman to work for state and local land use law exemptions. In the past, the bill struggled to gain traction with those worried about granting exemptions to state land use laws for one family. Huffman said the Heritage Guest Ranch bill, formerly called the Cyrus Heritage Farm development bill, would not only apply to the Cyrus family property but others, too. He said specifics have yet to be determined, but when the idea was floated in the past, it included up to 495 single-family homes and a wide range of recreational facilities, from RV spaces to equestrian facilities. Huffman is also working on a bill that could address privacy issues when it comes to drones. He wants to ensure that drones can’t fly over private property and use any information gathered without first receiving a warrant. He believes legislation is a pre-emptive strike and that, without it, privacy issues will be on the horizon. — Reporter: 541-554-1162, ldake@bendbulletin.com

attorney general’s office does not have the power to enforce federal tax laws. A spokesman for Schneiderman declined to comment. The tax strategy used by Bain and other firms to convert management fees — the compensation normally taxed

as ordinary income — into capital gains is known as a “management fee waiver.” The strategy is widely used within the industry: 40 percent of the 35 buyout firms based in the U.S. surveyed in 2009 by Dow Jones said their partners used at least some of the firm’s fees

to make investments in their funds. But some prominent firms avoid the practice. The strategy — which is viewed as perfectly legal by some tax experts, aggressive by others and potentially illegal by some — came to light last month when hundreds

of pages of Bain’s internal financial documents were made available online. The financial statements show that at least $1 billion in accumulated fees that otherwise would have been taxed as ordinary income for Bain executives had been converted into invest-

ments producing capital gains, which are subject to a federal tax of 15 percent, versus a top rate of 35 percent for ordinary income. That means the Bain partners saved more than $200 million in federal income taxes and more than $20 million in Medicare taxes.


LOCALNEWS

Reader photo, B2 West news, B4

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

LOCAL BRIEFING Police say man brandished gun A Klamath County man was arrested early Saturday on charges of attempted murder after he allegedly pointed a gun at two men outside a La Pine bar. John Kyle Gilpin, 64, was arrested at the La Pine Inn shortly after 1:30 a.m. and lodged at the Deschutes County jail. He is being held on suspicion of attempted murder, unlawful use of a weapon, three counts each of recklessly endangering another and menacing, and driving under the influence of intoxicants. The Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office said Gilpin had been involved in a dispute at the bar around 1 a.m. He left the bar and returned about half an hour later carrying a rifle. Gilpin pointed the rifle at the heads of two men who were trying to talk him into putting it away. A bar patron subdued and disarmed Gilpin, and deputies arrived to take him in to custody.

www.bendbulletin.com/local

Public Pool levy would cut jail funds comment sought on landfill gas plan MADRAS

By Joel Aschbrenner The Bulletin

Because of an Oregon law that caps property taxes, the approval of a levy to fund Madras’ public pool would mean less revenue for the Jefferson County Jail and other local taxing entities. Madras area voters will decide in November on a fiveyear levy for additional operating funds for the Madras Aquatic Center. Aquatic center supporters say the levy is an investment in the community, and is critical to keeping the pool open year-round and funding

athletic leagues. Opponents say the pool is a luxury, and additional funding for the aquatic center shouldn’t come at the expense of the jail. Any new tax levy on Jefferson County’s books would result in less revenue for existing tax levies and districts due to a process called compression, said county Assessor Jean McCloskey. Property taxes are limited to $10 per $1,000 in real market value for local government and $5 per $1,000 for schools. To stay within those

limits, tax rates are proportionally reduced. Revenue is cut for levies first, then, if needed, for taxing districts. Last year 30 percent of the properties in Jefferson County were in compression, including 78 percent of those in Madras, McCloskey said. The aquatic center’s taxing district is the same as the Jefferson County School District, encompassing Madras and the town’s outlying areas, where properties are more likely to be in compression, she said. See Madras / B2

Madras Aquatic Center 26

97

Ashwood Rd.

MADRAS

By Erik Hidle The Bulletin 26 MILES

97 0

1/2

Scott Steussy / The Bulletin

— From staff reports

CLOSURES All city, county, state and federal offices will be closed for Labor Day. Libraries in Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties will be closed. Banks will be closed. Schools, including school district offices and Central Oregon Community College, will be closed. Post offices will be closed, and mail will not be delivered or picked up. Juniper Swim & Fitness Center in Bend will be open from noon to 5 p.m. Most liquor stores will be open.

FIRE UPDATE Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. For the latest information, visit www.nwccweb .us/information/ firemap.aspx. Bend

1

2

Baker City Burns

Madras Bend

3

MILES

4 0

50

Lakeview 1. Waterfalls 2 Fire • Acres: 12,265 • Containment: 75% • Cause: Lightning 2. Hay Creek Fire • Acres: 1,016 • Containment: 95% • Cause: Human 3. Parish Cabin Fire • Acres: 5,793 • Containment: 10% • Cause: Under investigation 4. Danner Loop 2 Fire • Acres: 20,461 • Containment: 95% • Cause: Under investigation 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 F2. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin@bendbulletin.com

B

Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

Photos by Joe Kline / The Bulletin

Susan Rife, of Bend, from right, her daughter Emma Stevenson, and Nancy Heck, of Terrebonne, stomp grapes Saturday inside a container in which they will be fermented and made into wine, at Maragas Winery in Culver. Both Rife and Heck said the activity was on their respective bucket lists.

An old-fashioned crush at Central Oregon winery By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

CULVER — In recent years, Nancy Heck has knocked several items off her to-do list — going skydiving, visiting the top of the Empire State Building, and attending a taping of the “Today Show.” On Saturday, she checked off one more, crushing grapes into juice with her bare feet at the Maragas Winery Grape Stomp. “I’ve wanted to do it ever since I watched ‘I Love Lucy,’ ” Heck said. Owner Doug Maragas has invited the public to stomp grapes at his vineyard and winery between Redmond and Madras every fall for each of the past three years, an event he describes as a celebration of the harvest. In truth, the grapes grown

Unlike mechanized crushers, human feet won’t split the tiny seeds inside the grapes, winery owner Doug Maragas said, which introduces bitter tannins into the final product.

at the Maragas vineyard won’t be fully ripe for another month, he said, but the slightly underripe fruit is an integral part of Beat Red, the wine that begins with each

year’s Grape Stomp. Crushing the fruit the old-fashioned way is more practical than it might appear, Maragas said. The mechanized crusher the win-

ery uses won’t run properly with only a small quantity of grapes — small being a relative term. A batch of Beat Red uses a full ton of grapes — making the foot method a reasonable alternative. And unlike mechanized crushers, human feet won’t split the tiny seeds inside the grapes, Maragas said, which introduces bitter tannins into the final product. More than anything, the event is a fun day, Maragas said, especially for the dozens of kids who get to take a turn stomping away inside giant plastic bins of grapes. “I made sure I sifted all of the bugs out,” Maragas announced to a group of kids that stopped briefly to look down at their wet feet. “Except for a few!” See Crush / B2

Before Deschutes County taps its garbage dump for natural gas, it plans to talk with the landfill’s neighbors and explain why the project won’t sully the air and water in the area. The county has discussed the potential landfill gas-to-energy project for more than a year, but at a county workshop meeting last week, commissioners asked Timm Schimke, department of solid waste director, to meet with the public. “We could go to the board and present a contract right now,” said interim county administrator Erik Kropp. “But there really needs to be more public dialogue and public input. And we want to make that meaningful input. So we will provide a forum to help educate the public on the plan.” Commissioners said they’ve received one complaint about the project. David Poboisk, a resident near the landfill, is concerned about groundwater and air pollution. Schimke said he doubts the project will affect either, as the dump is below federal emission levels and checks its groundwater frequently. “We want everyone including neighbors, environmentalists and anyone who just wants to know what we’re doing to come talk with us,” Schimke said. “Signing that contract will be a big step, and you don’t want to stop after you commit, so we want everyone to know what is going on.” The contract would be between the county and Waste to Energy Group LLC. The company plans to inject steam into the landfill to increase the decomposition rate of waste and boost methane gas production. The company would then collect the gas and tap into a Pacific Gas Transmission pipeline that runs across the landfill property. The county expects it will collect around $250,000 each year from the company’s efforts. Schimke said that is about 10 percent of the company’s expected net income, which he believes is a fair rate. Public meetings are expected to be held later this month. A final proposal for the contract will likely go before the County commissioners in December. — Reporter: 541-617-7837; ehidle@bendbulletin.com

Drillers find water to delight of Oregonians in 1912 Compiled by Don Hoiness from archived copies of The Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.

100 YEARS AGO For the week ending Sept. 1, 1912

Well drillers strike water The most important single achievement in the history of the southeast homestead country was accomplished

YESTERDAY last week when a permanent water supply was obtained by well diggers at Hampton. The new well is 167 feet deep, and has from 20 to 40 feet of water, with every indication of an inexhaustible supply. As a result of the “strike”, which proves that water is obtainable with little difficulty throughout the free-land territory, a renewed interest in

getting these last untaken acres from the government is manifested, and what promises to be a considerable land rush is under way. There is, of course, jubilation among the homesteaders already on claims, and it is understood that the well drilling company is “swamped” with orders from settlers who want wells sunk on their property. Hampton, where the new well is, is about 70 miles southeast of Bend. The well

is on the Bend-Burns road. It has been dug at the expense of the county. The County Court recently having agreed to devote $1,000 if necessary, to securing a well there, not only for its benefits to the settlers and to ascertain the cost of obtaining a permanent supply, but also to serve as a watering point for the heavy freight traffic between Bend and Burns. J.E. Sawhill, of the Central Oregon Development League, the Bend Com-

mercial Club, and many local merchants and others had much to do with having the well drilled, it, however, being the direct outcome of the progressiveness of the Hampton country settlers and the wise action of the County Court. A.T. Shaver is at the head of the well drilling outfit. Water was struck at 167 feet, and now stands 24 feet deep. The total expense of the experiment has been but $332.50. See Yesterday / B2


B2

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

Well shot! READER PHOTOS Can you work a camera, capture a great picture and 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 in the paper and online. 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.

Madras Continued from B1 Sheriff Jim Adkins said he opposes the pool levy because it would increase compression and reduce revenue for a jail levy. Depending on how much revenue the jail levy loses, he would have to cut staff and reduce jail capacity, he said. “I think having the pool is spectacular for the community, but is it a necessity? No, I don’t think it is,” he said. “Putting people in jail when they do something wrong is a necessity.” Last year, seven tax levies in the county lost out on revenue due to compression, McCloskey said. The jail levy brought in $1.2 million, about $215,000 less than expected due to compression, she said. McCloskey said she did not know how much revenue from the jail levy would be reduced if the pool levy passes, because compression would have to be figured for each individual property. “I have no crystal ball to look into,” she said. The aquatic center has Madras’ only public pools and serves as the town’s recreation department, organizing youth and adult sports leagues. Without the levy,

PARTING SHOT Tim Lyden, of Bend, captured this photo of a weather vane with his Canon 7-D with a 24-105mm lens at 105mm, 1/80 sec., f/13.0, ISO 200, and daylight white balance. “I snapped this photo from home when it appeared that the rooster on the adorned weather vane seems to take a shot out of the setting sun in one of our recent smoke-filled skies,” he wrote.

For The Bulletin’s full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials.

Continued from B1 “Ewwww!” the kids say, resuming stomping moments after registering their displeasure. Foot-stomped wine, even when foot-stomped by a crowd of hundreds, is no less sanitary than any other wine a winery might produce, Maragas said.

Yesterday Continued from B1 The well drilling cost $250, wood and water 56.50 and board 26. The well remains the property of the county. Just how it will be managed is as yet undecided, but probably someone will be in charge and water will be sold to settlers and freighters for just enough to cover actual operating expenses. A gasoline or other engine probably will be employed for the pumping. The new well will be a boon of tremendous worth to Hampton and all the homestead territory, as it permanently solves any water difficulties which existed. It probably also means that hereafter far more attention will be paid to acquiring tracts under the desert land laws.

75 YEARS AGO For the week ending Sept. 1, 1937

Mashed potatoes served in cones for pictures Three sacks of Deschutes netted gem potatoes cooked in a huge kettle over an outdoor fire and kneaded into a fluffy white mass formed the background for a Universal News film made here today by Carlton Groat. Seventeen girls assisted in serving the delicious mashed potatoes, coated with butter, to Pilot Butte Inn patrons and others who formed a line past the great heap of potatoes. The buttered potatoes were served in ice cream cones. By tomorrow morning, this news picture will be on its way by airmail to New York and will be released by the Universal News to theaters in all parts of the country. Tomorrow, another picture will be filmed amid the rock gardens of the Pilot Butte Inn, depicting a ceremonial in connection with the crowning of a queen for the opening of Central Oregon’s deer season. In this picture, girls bearing antlers will pay homage to the deer queen. However, before the picture can be made, more deer horns will be needed and a call for antlers has been issued. Bend residents having fine sets of antlers they can spare for an hour or so have been asked to attach their names to the horns

Senate

Stompers rinse their feet in a mix of water and sulfur, and once the grapes have been reduced to a thin slurry, more sulfur is added. The fruit is then cooled before yeast is added to begin the fermentation process, he said, and the combination of sulfur, cooling and the alcohol produced during fermentation kills off any bacteria or other undesirable things that may have

and bring them to the Pilot Butte Inn this evening or early tomorrow morning. All Bend residents contributing antlers for the making of the deer picture will be welcome to view the filming of the scene on the rear lawn of the Pilot Butte Inn. Work of making the deer queen picture will start about 8:30 o’clock tomorrow morning. Since coming to Bend more than two months ago, Groat has found the Deschutes country such a fine field for news movie work that he has filmed more than 20 pictures here. These pictures have gone to all parts of the United States. Assisting in the making of the potato picture today were Helen Mirich, June Olson, Helen Wetle, Betty Jean DeArmond, Bonnie Van Matre , Martha Gassner, Rosemary Cashman, Ione Ring, Doris Van Tassel, Lorraine Ring, Nadine Paddon, Barbara Fuller, Dorothy Jane McReynolds, Geraldine Sexton, Collona Spangler, Melba Smith, Hallie Dudrey, and Margaret Harland.

Stalin’s purge conducted in greatest secrecy During Josef Stalin’s historic struggle with Leon Trotsky 10 years ago the workers of Leningrad presented him with a steel broom. The broom was a symbol of the necessity of “cleansing” the communist party. Today Dictator Stalin is using it with a vengeance. The purge which he began in the Soviet Union three months ago has extended from generals of the red army to dramatists and writers; from chiefs of industry to directors of theaters and even the directors of amusement parks. Information about the true extent of the current “blood purge” is hard to get, but available compilations indicate that about 500 persons have been executed by firing squads. Tens of thousands have been arrested, exiled or dismissed from their posts.

50 YEARS AGO For the week ending Sept. 1, 1962

Bend pioneer Ovid Riley dies at age 87 A pioneer of Central Oregon, Ovid William Brockett Riley,

been introduced during the stomping. Outside the grape-stomping tent, a crowd of a few hundred spent the day picnicking and sampling wine on the grounds of the vineyard. Enjoying a glass of wine outside in the sun, Heck said the experience was almost everything she’d hoped for since seeing Lucille Ball do it on television years ago.

87, who came to the Deschutes country in 1893 at the age of 18 to file on a homestead, died early this morning at St. Charles Memorial Hospital. He was the dean of Bend pioneers. A native of Ohio, Mr. Riley was born July 27, 1875 and came west with his parents from Kansas when Prineville was Central Oregon’s only town and the present location of Bend was a stopping place on the Deschutes known as Farewell Bend. Mr. Riley on reaching the age of 21, filed on a homestead on the river a short distance to the north of Bend of the present. His mother, the late Elsie Riley, came to Bend in 1901. The family home was in an old log cabin on the river, at the homestead. Elsie Riley was one of the early-day operators of the pioneer Pilot Butte Inn, stopping place for stockmen and freighters. She took over the management of the Inn in 1904, when a livery stable was operated in connection with the hotel. North-south traffic moved past the old stopping place, with the dust from wagon wheels spreading over the building as long as freight teams plodded past. Ovid Riley was married in 1917 to Miss Alice Ward, by whom he is survived. Her sister is Mrs. Everett Hughes of this city. Miss Ward and Ovid Riley first met when she was a member of a party on a vacation trip to Crane Prairie, when Mr. Riley operated cattle from the Cow Camp. In 1921, Mr. Riley moved from his ranch to Bend, to join the Shevlin-Hixon staff. He remained with the company until the mill closed in 1950. In his younger days, Mr. Riley was a well known horseman of the area. Mr. Riley was a member of the Deschutes Pioneers’ Association.

25 YEARS AGO For the week ending Sept. 1, 1987

‘Fat guys race’ a snacking success The first ever “Short Fat Guys Road Race” drew an extra wide assortment of 40 competitors Saturday including a horse and came off without a

“The only thing that could have made it better would be if we were picking up the grapes and throwing them at each other,” she said, another nod to how the grape-stomping episode of the TV show played out. “That would have been a lot of fun, but we didn’t get to that part.” — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com

hitch, as most cheated like they were supposed to. “There was no winner, or loser, for that matter. But it was a smashing success,” said Bob Ward, publicity agent for the Crooked River Ranch resort. “You’d look at the profile of that starting line — it was scary,” he said. Every finisher who made it slightly more than a mile downhill to the finish line at the Sandbagger Saloon got a free beer and a Twinkie. Some of the rotund runners — make that walkers — took no chances, bringing beer and snacks of their own, in case hunger pangs struck. Several television crews and reporters were on hand for the race, inspired by a similar semi-athletic event at a tavern in Skaneateles, N.Y. near Syracuse. Anxious contestants butted bellies at the starting line. “The final rules said, ‘Make good moves. Cheat vigorously. Down with diet. Up with short and fat!’ ” Ward said. There was only one rule that couldn’t be broken: Race participants had to have a waist measurement at last 4 ½ inches larger than their pants inseam measure. Anyone under 7 feet was considered “short.” “Everybody had the same number: 102. That way it didn’t cost so much to print them,” said Ward. Stan Stevenson, public works director for Redmond, was “far and away the largest” competitor at 460 pounds and a 66-inch waist, he said. “Everybody made the first hundred yards or so on foot, except the guy with the horse,” he said. With cheating actively encouraged one scofflaw took a shortcut to the eighth tee of the adjacent golf course, where he hitched a ride to the finish line in a golf cart. “One guy used a skateboard, another a bicycle and several had golf carts,” Ward said. Contestants gathered at the “shortstop line” 50 yards from the actual finish for an en masse jaunt to the saloon — to the sound of a bugle charge. Everyone’s time for the 1.1 mile race was 27 minutes 33 seconds, Ward said. “Nobody was really hurrying,” he said. “We hope to make it a little slower next year.”

— Reporter: 541-633-2184, jaschbrenner@bendbulletin.com

P O LEGISLATURE

Crush

the aquatic center would have to close down for several months a year, Manager Bobby DeRoest has said. In 2004, voters approved a permanent levy of 25 cents per $1,000 in assessed property value to build and operate the aquatic center. November’s levy would tack on 40 cents per $1,000. The levy is needed to fund repairs at the aquatic center and to maintain athletic leagues, said Lonnie Henderson, co-chair of the Back the MAC political action committee. Adult softball, youth soccer and other leagues are currently funded by a declining grant. While the jail levy is a concern for some, funding the pool and sports leagues is important to keep kids involved, said Henderson, whose son competes in water polo and swimming at the aquatic center. “We want to keep them out of jail by keeping them involved,” he said. The pools and sports leagues, Henderson added, are also critical to promoting healthier lifestyles. Jefferson County was the least healthy of 33 Oregon counties ranked in the 2012 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation survey.

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 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

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

B3

O N Retirees in rural areas likely Ashland considers to find shortage of doctors a homeless camp By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press

GRANTS PASS — Nina Musselman had no trouble finding a family doctor when she retired to rural Oregon nine years ago to be closer to her children. But then that doctor moved away, leaving her to search for another who would take Medicare. After a year of going from doctor to doctor, she finally found one who stuck. As record numbers of baby boomers go into retirement, many are thinking about moving from the places they needed to live to make a living, and going someplace warmer, quieter or prettier. If they choose small towns like Grants Pass, 250 miles south of Portland, they could well have a hard time finding a family doctor willing to take Medicare, even supplemental plans, rather than private insurance. “It’s a sad situation for seniors,” she said. There are several reasons boomers, the 78 million Americans born between 1946 and 1964, could face difficulties finding a doctor if they retire to small towns over the next 20 years. First, many primary care doctors prefer to live and work in urban areas because of greater cultural opportunities, better schools and job opportunities for spouses. Also, Medicare pays rural doctors less per procedure than urban physicians because their operating costs are supposedly less. That makes rural doctors less likely to accept Medicare patients. With cuts to Medicare reimbursement for doctors targeted under the federal health care overhaul, the shortage is likely to get even worse, said Mark Pauly, professor of health care management at the University of Pennsylvania. That is, unless increasing reimbursements for nurse practitioners and physicians’ assistants encourages those providers to take up the slack, Pauly said. If the Medicare cuts go through, “the doctors are saying: “We’re out of here,’” Pauly said. “The least they are saying is: ‘We’ll treat Medicare patients like we treat Medicaid patients,’ which is mostly not.” Still, there is some good news, depending on where you live. Pauly said the Affordable Care Act “puts a lot of emphasis on wellness programs and primary care. Nurses, especially nurse practitioners, are intended to play a major role there.” In Oregon, Washington and 14 other states, nurses and nurse practitioners “can operate independently of doctors, writing prescriptions, ordering tests, and even running clinics,” Pauly said.

Jeff Barnard / The Associated Press

Dr. Bruce Stowell examines patient Robert Busch at his office in Grants Pass. Stowell is among many doctors in rural areas who have capped the numbers of Medicare patients they take due to low reimbursement levels. A nationwide shortage of primary care physicians willing to set up practice in rural areas is making the problem worse.

“We used to get a steady stream of high-quality (résumés) from U.S.-trained and U.S.-born physicians. Over the last year, that stream has declined into a trickle. Very few (doctors) are choosing to go into primary care.” — Dr. Bruce Stowell, Grants Pass clinic

Nationwide, the 22.5 percent of primary care doctors who practice in rural areas roughly matches the 24 percent of Medicare patients living there, said Dr. Roland Goertz, chairman of the American Academy of Family Physicians board. A survey of academy members nationwide shows 83 percent take new Medicare patients. But there is an overall shortage of primary care physicians that still makes it hard for retirees to find a family doctor. The real problem, he said, is that the health care system “has not supported a robust, adequate primary care workforce for over 30 years.” According to the American Association of Medical Colleges, rural areas need about 20,000 primary care doctors to make up for the shortages, but only about 16,500 medical doctors and 3,500 doctors of osteopathy graduate yearly. “We are always trying to recruit doctors. We are barely

keeping even,” said Lyle Jackson, the medical director at the Mid-Rogue Independent Physician Association, a cooperative of doctors in Josephine County, where Musselman lives. Taking part in the Medicare Advantage program, which pays a higher rate to doctors than standard Medicare, helps, but is still not enough, said Jackson, a former family physician. A 2009 survey of doctors in the Oregon Medical Association showed concern over Medicare reimbursement rates topping the list of 23 issues, with 79 percent rating it as very important, said Joy Conklin, an official at the association. The survey showed 19.1 percent of Oregon doctors had closed their practices to Medicare, and 28.1 percent had restricted the numbers of Medicare patients. That really becomes evident in Josephine County, which attracted retirees after the timber industry collapsed.

Low taxes, cheap housing, wineries, a symphony and low traffic put it in top 10 lists for retirement communities. The 2010 census puts the number of people older than 65 at 23 percent, compared to 14 percent for the state. But the website County Health Rankings & Roadmaps, which gathers a wide range of health care data nationwide, shows 933 patients for every primary care physician in the county, nearly 50 percent higher than the national 631-to-one rate. At the Grants Pass Clinic, Dr. Bruce Stowell said they are no longer taking new Medicare patients. Medicare pays about 45 percent of what commercial insurance pays. As it is, their proportion of Medicare patients is double that of a similar Portland practice. “We used to get a steady stream of high-quality (résumés) from U.S.-trained and U.S.-born physicians,” he said. “Over the last year, that stream has declined into a trickle. Very few (doctors) are choosing to go into primary care.” Schools are turning out more nurse practitioners and physician assistants. How well they fill the doctor gap will depend largely on how much independence states give them to practice, said Tay Kopanos, director of health care policy for state affairs at the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners. Meanwhile, overall demand for primary care will be increasing as more people can afford it under the Affordable Care Act, said Joanne Spetz, a health care policy professor at the University of California, San Francisco. Dr. Atul Grover, chief of public policy for the American Association of Medical Colleges, said the nation is facing a tough time recruiting for primary care as well as other specialties that treat Medicare patients, such as oncologists. When he decided to become a primary care doctor in the 1990s, it was because of a widespread belief that health maintenance organizations were going to be hiring all the doctors. He said they wanted primary care doctors to emphasize wellness and prevention. Now, many graduates are moving into specialties that do procedures, such as surgery, because Medicare pays more for them than plain-old office visits. Also, the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 capped the number of residencies paid by Medicare, so there is no quick way to increase the numbers of doctors in general, let alone in rural areas, he said. “An entire year’s worth of doctor production is needed to deal with the (rural-area) shortage just today,” he said.

similar to Portland’s

The Associated Press ASHLAND — Three representatives from Portland’s Dignity Village homeless encampment plan to visit Ashland later this month to discuss whether a similar setup would benefit the Southern Oregon city. The Dignity Village representatives will have discussions with the community and City Council, the Ashland Daily Tidings reported Saturday. Organizers in Ashland have raised $360 to fund the visit. “We have people in Ashland who believe this should be thought about and discussed,” said Sangye Tendzin, a member of the Ashland Citizens for the Homeless Coalition. “If Portland has a model that works, then we can scale it here.” Dignity Village was founded in 2000 when eight homeless men and women decided to pitch tents on public land, saying they had nowhere else to go. It quickly evolved into a self-regulating, cityrecognized “campground,” and was given a patch of land near Portland International Airport. Dignity Village offers its 60 occupants showers, a kitchen

area, Internet access and emergency transportation. The village, which harbors tarp-tents, straw-bale bungalows, teepees, wooden shacks and pitched tents, costs about $3,000 a month to maintain, its website states, which it finds through donations. Children are not allowed to live in the village, and members must abide by rules against violence, drugs, stealing and disruptive behavior. Tendzin visited the encampment in July and provided a report to Ashland’s Homelessness Steering Committee — a panel that makes recommendations to the City Council on how to address homeless issues. Councilwoman Carol Voisin said a Dignity Villagetype arrangement could benefit Ashland, but only if the local homeless community is willing to make it work. Tendzin believes there are enough “self-determined,” homeless people in Ashland to support a place like Dignity Village, but he acknowledges there will be opposition, too. “The community has to want an encampment for this to work,” he said. “These discussions will be a good opportunity for understanding.”

State probes campaign of Klamath County sheriff The Associated Press KLAMATH FALLS — State election officials have started a criminal investigation into the campaign of Klamath County Sheriff Tim Evinger, who decided to run as a write-in candidate after skipping the May primaries. The investigation stems from an Aug. 16 complaint, the Herald and News of Klamath Falls reported Saturday. State investigators, however, have declined to say who filed the complaint or discuss many details. Alana Cox, an election compliance specialist with

the state, said the investigation will take into account a law that prohibits anyone from using incentives or threats to sway how or whether someone votes or registers to run for office.

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Medford schools to enter mediation MEDFORD — The state will provide a mediator to help stalled talks between the Medford School District and its classified employees. The sides have been discussing a contract since April, and the Mail Tribune newspaper reports that medical insurance is the main sticking point. The district wants the classified employees to pay 16 percent of their insurance premiums, with the district covering the remaining 84 percent. The union says that’s unfair because teachers and administrators only pay 7 percent of their premiums. Classified employees include office workers and janitors, among other positions. The district says about 28 percent of classified employees work full-time for 10 months, earning about $28,400 a year, not including benefits. Another 18 percent are full-

time employees who work yearround, earning about $34,500 a year.

Marion County workers to strike SALEM — County employees in Marion County have voted to go on strike, though they have yet to hit the picket lines. The Marion County Employee Association says the county’s contract offer includes no cost of living adjustment or other concessions to the union. County spokeswoman Jolene Kelley told the Statesman Journal newspaper that the union must give the county an official 10-day notice before going on strike, and it has yet to do so. The union is an affiliate of SEIU Local 503. It has been negotiating its 2012-14 contract since Dec. 15. In a press release, union Vice President Sara Fillion said the strike was supported by about two-thirds of the union members who voted.

Hynix sues Eugene over power outage EUGENE — Four years after closing its Eugene plant, Hynix Semiconductor has filed a $1.1 million lawsuit against the Eugene Water & Electric Board. The company and two insurers claim vibrations from a drill used by utility workers triggered a brief power outage in 2007 that damaged manufacturing equipment and semiconductor wafers. The suit was filed Aug. 20 and became public Friday in Lane County Circuit Court. EWEB spokesman Joe Harwood told The Register-Guard newspaper the utility will not publicly discuss pending litigation. The plant employed as many as 1,000 people before closing in 2008. The company cited a weak market for its chips and an industry shift to more advanced processes. — From staff reports

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

T W Dog trained to track scat helps scientists study orcas By Kirk Johnson New York Times News Service

OFF THE COAST OF SAN JUAN ISLAND, Wash. — A dog named Tucker with a thumping tail and a mysterious past as a stray on the streets of Seattle has become an unexpected star in the realm of canine-assisted science. He is the world’s only working dog, marine biologists say, able to find and track the scent of orca scat, or feces, in open ocean water — up to a mile away, in the smallest of specks. Through dint of hard work and obsession with an orange ball on a rope, which he gets to play with as a reward after a successful search on the water, Tucker is an ace in finding something that most people, and perhaps most dogs, would just as soon avoid. And it is not easy. Scat can sink or disperse in 30 minutes or less. But it is crucial in monitoring the health of the whales here, an endangered group that is probably among the most studied animal populations in the world. Most of the 85 or so orcas, or killer whales, that frequent the San Juans, about two hours northwest of Seattle, have been genotyped and tracked for decades, down to their birth years and number of offspring. And none of this could happen as easily as it does without Tucker and his wet, black nose — or the new tricks that he taught the scientists. “Sometimes he’d just turn around and sit down and stare at me, waiting for me to figure it out,” said Deborah Giles, who is completing a Ph.D. on how orcas here are affected by the thousands of whale watchers and scores of commercial whale-watch vessels that cluster around the animals. “He’s very subtle,” said Giles, sitting behind the wheel of the research vessel Moja as Tucker, an 8-year-old black Lab mix, paced at the prow on a recent afternoon. One thing to get out of the way quickly: Orca scat really does not smell that bad. Perhaps because the animals eat mostly Chinook salmon — the tastiest kind, many human seafood lovers agree — the scent is more fish than foul. But unlike, say, a narcotics-sniffing dog that can lead its human around by a leash, the research boat itself is, in effect, Tucker’s legs when he has picked up the aroma. He cannot physically go where the sample is to be found, but must somehow signal where

By Rick Orlov Los Angeles Daily News

Matthew Ryan Williams / The New York Times

Elizabeth Seely, dog trainer at Conservation Canines, holds Tucker as he sniffs for whale scat near San Juan Island, Wash. Tucker is the world’s only working dog able to find and track the scent of orca scat, or feces, in open ocean water, marine biologists say, which is crucial in monitoring the health of endangered orca whales.

he wants the boat to go, with the feces somewhere out there on the water. Like a Delphic oracle whose every nuanced expression must be interpreted by acolytes — Tucker might lean to one side of the boat, then another, then suddenly sink back onto his green mat with his head between his paws, the scent lost — his nose for scat leads on, and all must follow. “The slightest twitch of his ear is important,” said Elizabeth Seely, a trainer who has worked with Tucker for four years at a nonprofit group called the Conservation Canines, which specializes in dog-assisted research on behalf of endangered species. She stood at his side on a recent scat-search session, signaling to Giles behind the wheel with tiny finger motions — a bit to the right, a bit more to the left, circle back — that Tucker was suggesting by his posture and level of attention. Out on these waters, though, it seems that every creature is learning new tricks. Salmon have taken to hiding under commercial whale-watch boats when they are being hunted by the orcas. The boats, in turn, are filled with people — upward of 500,000 during the peak season from May to October — who have paid to see whales and who in many cases, boat operators and scientists say, return home wanting somehow to help the animals. Whale-loving visitors in turn reinforce

a local economic engine that hinges more and more on having whales to see. The whales are becoming, in a strange way, more in sync with the rhythms of their human watchers — resting less during daylight and more at night than they used to in the 1980s or ’90s. As part of her dissertation at the University of California, Davis, Giles is examining reduced prey availability and increased vessel presence as potential causes. For Tucker, though, it mostly comes down to his ball toy, which he plays with in exuberant, wild abandon, tossing it into the air and staging crouched bouts of tug of war with Seely. When a fecal sample is found, the researchers carry it toward him and then substitute the ball at the last second, reinforcing the connection between work and reward. Another scat dog in training, a flat-coated retriever named Sadie, was donated to the program by an owner who could not deal with her ball fixation. In frustration, the owner put Sadie’s ball on top of the fridge. Eight hours or so later, she returned and found Sadie still sitting there, staring up at the object of her desires. “When the owner told me that story, my immediate response was, ‘We’ll take her,’ ” said Samuel K. Wasser, the director of the Center for Conservation Biology at the University of Washington and the director of the orca scat re-

search project. The research, financed by Washington Sea Grant of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, is raising new questions about how to protect the orcas. Wasser said that when he started the project four years ago, he thought boat activity would be a crucial element of whale stress, reflected through stress hormones in their scat. But it turned out, he said, that food supply was more important, with fewer salmon — because of overfishing by humans or habitat degradation or both — emerging as a main stress variable. Knowing to focus on fish supply, he said, means knowing where to focus public policy efforts on the animals’ behalf. Through the scat, biologists can tell, for example, which whale pods spend the winter off the coast of Southern California, because their feces can contain higher trace elements of DDT, the pesticide that was banned in 1972. The poison still echoes through the decades in the fish the whales eat before returning north. Other orca groups have concentrations of dioxins or PCBs traced to industrial activity around Seattle. But for all his hundreds of hours on boats, Tucker will not get wet. He hates to swim, Seely said. She is not sure why. A trauma from puppyhood, she supposes. It is one thing about which he cannot communicate.

Homeowners knock Shell cleanup of oil residue By Sandy Mazza (Torrance) Daily Breeze

LOS ANGELES — Considering what was discovered this week in front of Sonia Cienfuegos’ Carson home in the Los Angeles area, she might not let her children play in the yard anymore. The finding is the latest glaring reminder of the environmental disaster lurking just a few feet below ground at the 50-acre Carousel tract housing development near where Lomita and Avalon boulevards cross. On Thursday, environmental investigators examined the problem inside a crib-size hole dug by utility workers in the pavement outside the Cienfuegos home. A few feet below the asphalt, a black, shiny, rubbery substance gurgled from dime-size holes into the pit. Investigators held detectors with gloved hands around the hole and sampled it carefully. “Oh, my God, how terrible,” Cienfuegos said. “I just wanna leave.” The discovery of an oillike contaminant under the Carousel tract isn’t new, but this is the first time investigators have witnessed it moving through the ground in globs. Oily sludge is so profoundly mixed with the soil below the

Advocates fight to keep L.A.’s pot shops open

Carousel tract’s 285 homes that a swift wind there commonly holds the stinging scent of petroleum. The contamination has been there since a Shell Oil Co. tank farm was closed in the 1960s. A clean-up effort has been in the works for the past three years, but cleaning has yet to begin. Shell spokesman Alan Caldwell said the company has not yet determined what the substance found this week is. “It is a tarry-like substance, and it appears to be very small in quantity,” Caldwell said. “They’ve sent it off to the laboratory to be sampled. We’re trying to assess if it’s from the oil reservoirs or from grading and site development.” Bob Bowcock, founder of Integrated Resource Management Inc., was contracted to do soil testing for the law firm representing residents in a suit alleging cancer, strokes and other health problems resulting from the soil contamination. Bowcock said the movement of the oil-like substance seen in the pit this week shows that the situation underground is volatile because of all the hazardous chemicals. A flame could cause an explosion if enough methane pools into one area underground, he said.

“You’ve got bioventing (testing) going on there and a hole here — we don’t know where the methane is migrating,” Bowcock said. “The migration is unknown, and that’s why they’ve got to stop leaving these people in their homes.” The agency overseeing the clean-up process — the Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board — has ordered Shell to clean up the soil, rather than pay residents for their homes and flatten the site. The water board has ordered extensive testing inside and outside homes, and to 10 feet below ground, and has not yet found a risk to human health. Recently, the board announced that a panel of experts had been contracted to oversee several agencies involved in cleanup plans. Shell operated an oil tank farm on the site from the 1920s to the 1960s. The tanks were demolished after a boy fell into one and died while playing with a friend. A few years later, the Carousel tract housing development was approved there — even though the oil tank remnants and oil waste were only shabbily covered by a few feet of top soil, according to investigators. The contamination was

rediscovered by oil company workers several years ago, and the cleanup ensued. It has moved slowly, and a pilot test program on several homes has yet to begin. In the meantime, residents have erected lawn signs proclaiming their unhappiness with Shell’s decision to clean the soil while they live there. Cienfuegos said she and her husband wanted to expand their two-bedroom home to four bedrooms because they have three children. But the contamination made that impossible. “When I bought my house, this was the house I was planning to grow my family in,” she said. “Then this happened. They suggested not to let the kids outside, but my son loves to play basketball. And I can’t move out because my house has no value now.” Shell will test several cleaning strategies at a handful of homes in the neighborhood. Cleaning could be done by digging narrow, deep holes and removing debris with backhoes, or by digging one huge hole that gets progressively smaller with depth. Once Shell officials determine the best cleaning method, they will submit a final work plan to the water board for approval.

LOS ANGELES — Medical marijuana advocates said Wednesday they have collected 50,000 signatures on petitions in an effort to overturn the city of Los Angeles’ ban on pot dispensaries that takes effect next month. If the signatures are validated after they are formally submitted, it will put the city’s ban — scheduled to take effect Thursday — on hold until the March 5 municipal election. Don Duncan, California director of Americans for Safe Access, urged the City Council to repeal its own ordinance and return to negotiating with medical marijuana advocates. “Very soon, the city will be faced with having to rescind its ordinance or put the decision before Los Angeles voters,” Duncan said. “Because of the ban’s questionable future, the city ought to reconsider its tough stance on enforcing the ban.” Councilman Jose Huizar, who wrote the citywide ban on the dispensaries, said he remained undeterred by the threat of the referendum. “We still plan to move forward with the idea that dispensaries do not have a right to exist,” Huizar said. “If there is a stay on the ordinance, we will have no law in the city allowing the dispensaries and we will enforce state and federal laws on marijuana.” There also has been an ongoing dispute between the state and federal authorities on the issue. California voters approved medical marijuana under Proposition 215, but national authorities say marijuana remains outlawed under federal law. Huizar said the city has tried to work with the med-

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“We passed a measure that we thought worked, and we were hit with 70 lawsuits. It strikes me this is more about profit than getting marijuana to people who need it.” — Jose Huizar, L.A. city councilman

ical marijuana community without success. “We passed a measure that we thought worked, and we were hit with 70 lawsuits,” Huizar said. “It strikes me this is more about profit than getting marijuana to people who need it.” Huizar called his proposal a gentle ban in that it allowed patients and caregivers to grow marijuana on their own without punishment. Kris Hermes, spokesman for Americans for Safe Access, said the number of signatures and the ease with which they were gathered should send a message to City Hall. They only needed 28,000 signatures to qualify for the ballot. “The patients and advocates have come forward and said the ban is unacceptable and should be reconsidered,” Hermes said, adding the city chose to avoid considering ordinances from other cities that would have been acceptable. Assistant City Clerk Holly Wolcott said the city will randomly sample the signatures to determine if the referendum qualifies for the ballot. It would be placed on the regularly scheduled March ballot to avoid additional costs.

for appointments call 541-382-4900


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

OREGON NEWS

O D N

B5

FEATURED OBITUARY

Edna L. Fortner, of Bend Aug. 23, 1931 - Aug. 26, 2012 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend (541) 318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will be held Oct. 20, 2012, at 2:00 p.m., at the First United Methodist Church in Bend. Contributions may be made to:

American Red Cross, 2680 NE Twin Knolls Dr., Bend, OR 97701 or to Salvation Army, 755 NE 2nd Street, Bend, OR 97701.

Jerry Wallace Martin, of Bend Mar. 2, 1940 - Aug. 27, 2012 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend (541) 318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Private family services will be held.

Mark D. Kitzman , of Bend Feb. 16, 1957- Aug. 26, 2012 Services: A memorial service will be held Wednesday, Sept. 5 at 1:30 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran Church, 750 West Keady Court, Roseburg, OR. A celebration of life will be held Friday, Sept. 21 at 1 p.m. at Aspen Hall, 18920 Shevlin Park Road, Bend, OR. RSVP: kitzman16@gmail.com

Mary Q. Nelson, of Bend June 13, 1917 - Aug. 26, 2012 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend (541) 318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Services will be held in Detroit, Michigan. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care, 2075 N.E. Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701.

Karen M. Selfors Pickett Feb. 13, 1945 - Aug. 24, 2012 Karen M. (Selfors) Pickett died peacefully on August 24, 2012, in Canyonville, OR, after an extended illness. Karen was born in Bend, OR, February 13, 1945, to Einar and Aggie Selfors. She attended Bend schools through her graduation from Bend High School in 1963. She then attended Southern Oregon College and completed her teaching degree in 1967, and completed her masters in education in 1980. Her first teaching job was in Oakland, OR, and then Sutherlin, OR. Her final and most favorite days as a teacher were at Days Creek Elementary School in Days Creek, OR. She started there in 1978 and remained until her retirement in 1999. Even after retirement she was still actively involved in the Days Creek school community. Karen enjoyed traveling and spending time with friends, playing cards, and seeing her “kids� after they had left Days Creek. In June 1977, Karen married Ed Pickett in Reno, NV. They remained married until his sudden death in November, 2003. Karen is survived by her daughter, Tina Folkerts, Portland; grandchildren, Megan Huggins and Matt Yarbrough of Canyonville; and a sister, Judi Price, and a nephew, Eric Price, of Crooked River Ranch, OR. Karen had two very close and dear friends, Sherry Walker of Canyonville and Sue Swenson of Oakridge who also survive. She was preceded in death by her husband and her parents. Her friends and family want to thank the staff of Mercy Hospice for their support, compassion, and concern, and especially to her nurse, Deb. She was Karen’s angel. Mountain View Funeral Home of Myrtle Creek is in charge of arrangements. A memorial service was held on Friday, August 31, in Myrtle Creek, Oregon. Memorial contributions may be made to Dollars for Scholars in Days Creek; the Days Creek Booster Club, PO Box 10, Days Creek, OR.

Vince Bucci / The Associated Press

Legendary songwriters Burt Bacharach, left, and Hal David stand with singer Dionne Warwick at the “Love, Sweet Love� musical tribute to David on his 90th birthday in October 2011 in Los Angeles. David, who along with partner Bacharach penned dozens of top 40 hits for a variety of recording artists in the 1960s and beyond, died Saturday in Los Angeles.

Andy Cripe / The Corvallis Gazette-Times

Dan Crall, left, talks with Jonathan Carroll after giving him a small whisk broom recently at the Farmers Market in Corvallis. Crall has become concerned about the amount of glass on the sides of Corvallis streets and has been encouraging cyclists to carry the brooms to clean up the glass.

Hal David was Corvallis cyclist on crusade hit songwriter to sweep up broken glass By Joce DeWitt

By Bob Thomas and Christopher Weber The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Hal David, the stylish, heartfelt lyricist who teamed with Burt Bacharach on dozens of timeless songs for movies, television and a variety of recording artists in the 1960s and beyond, has died. He was 91. David died of complications from a stroke Saturday morning at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, according to his wife, Eunice David. He had suffered a major stroke in March and was stricken again Tuesday, she said. “Even at the end, Hal always had a song in his head,� Eunice David said. “He was always writing notes, or asking me to take a note down, so he wouldn’t forget a lyric.� Bacharach and David were among the most successful teams in modern history, with top 40 hits including “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head,� “Close to You� and “That’s What Friends Are For.� Although most associated with Dionne Warwick, their music was recorded by many of the top acts of their time, from the Beatles and Barbra Streisand to Frank Sinatra and Aretha Franklin. They won an Oscar for “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on My Head� (from the movie “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid�) and Grammys and Tonys for the songs from the hit Broadway musical “Promises, Promises.� David joined the board of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers in 1974 and served as president 1980 to 1986. He was head of the Songwriters Hall of Fame from 2001 to 2011, and was Chairman Emeritus at his death. “As a lyric writer, Hal was simple, concise and poetic —

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

conveying volumes of meaning in the fewest possible words and always in service to the music,� ASCAP’s current president, the songwriter Paul Williams, said in a statement. “It is no wonder that so many of his lyrics have become part of our everyday vocabulary and his songs ... the backdrop of our lives.� In May, Bacharach and David received the Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song during a White House tribute concert attended by President Barack Obama. Bacharach, 83, thanked Obama, saying the award for his life’s work topped even the Oscars and Grammys he won for individual projects. David could not attend because he was recovering from a stroke. Eunice David accepted on his behalf. “It was thrilling,� she said. “Even though he wasn’t there, Hal said it was the highest honor he had ever received.� More than 55 years after their first songs hit the airwaves, Obama said “these guys have still got it.� He noted their music is still being recorded by such artists as Alicia Keys and John Legend. “Above all, they stayed true to themselves,� Obama said. “And with an unmistakable authenticity, they captured the emotions of our daily lives — the good times, the bad times, and everything in between.� David and Bacharach met when both worked in the Brill Building, New York’s legendary Tin Pan Alley song factory where writers cranked out songs and attempted to sell them to music publishers. They scored their first big hit with “Magic Moments,� a millionselling record for Perry Como. In a 1999 interview, David explained his success as a lyricist this way: “Try and tell a narrative. The songs should be like a little film, told in three or four minutes. Try to say things as simply as possible, which is probably the most difficult thing to do.� The writer, who lived in New York, often flew to Los Angeles, where he and Bacharach would hole up for a few weeks of intense songwriting. Sometimes they conferred by longdistance telephone; “I Say a Little Prayer� was written that way.

Corvallis Gazette-Times

CORVALLIS — An advocate for Corvallis’ bike community found a way to alleviate the issue of broken glass debris that many cyclists say litter the city’s bike lanes. Dan Crall, owner and operator of Corvallis Pedicab and a bicycle commuter, made a $140 personal investment in mini plastic brooms and dust pans on Aug. 1 and gave them to cyclists to use when they notice glass in their paths of travel. “It’s a pretty small price to pay for what an effect this could have,� Crall said. “It’s something I see so often, and I know there is an immediate solution to it. I wanted to make it happen.� The idea was conceived around 2006 when Crall began to notice glass near where he lived along Highway 99. He eventually decided to take a push broom on walks and began to clean it up. “This is one of those things where I feel like it has been a big enough problem, and I have enough financial resources as a business person to put into this,� he said. “This is a town of people who care, and I really wanted to tap into that by doing this.� The mini yellow brooms

“It’s been pretty positive,� Crall said of the general reaction. “Most cyclists I approached, I assumed before approaching them that they would probably care enough to participate.� He stressed, however, that his goal is not to obligate every individual who rides a bike to stop and clean up glass. “I want people to feel inspired and (take) responsibility and just do what needs to be done.� Several recipients thanked Crall for taking initiative. Corvallis resident David Eckert was one of a couple individuals who paid Crall for a broom and pan at the Saturday market. Eckert, who lives near the university, said that glass is a definite problem, specifically on Van Buren Avenue between Kings Boulevard and Arnold Avenue. “My transportation is nearly 100 percent bike,� Eckert said. “When you go down certain streets, (they’re) almost consistently filled with glass.� Crall said riding a bicycle instead of driving a car has made him more aware of litter problems in the city. “Being on a bike, you feel your town more,� he said. “We need to make this city as bikefriendly as possible.�

Anthrax hits Klamath cattle herd By Steven DuBois The Associated Press

PORTLAND — Anthrax has been confirmed as the cause of death in a Klamath County steer and is suspected in the deaths of two others from the same herd, state officials said Friday. Outbreaks of naturally occurring anthrax do occur in the West, but this is Oregon’s first anthrax case involving an animal in more than five decades, said Brad Leamaster, a state veterinarian. Animals generally get the disease by ingesting or inhaling spores that can survive in soil for decades. The weather plays a factor, with outbreaks more common in droughts

D E

Deaths of note from around the world: Alexander Saxton, 93: Novelist, union activist and prominent historian on race in America who established the first Asian-American studies program at the University of California, Los Angeles, where he was a professor.

and dustpans, which Crall bought for four dollars each from Robnett’s Hardware, are small enough for cyclists to carry in bike baskets. Each dustpan handle has a small rope loop so they can hang on bike handlebars. “Small slivers are the problem,� he said, because cyclists are less likely to see small pieces of glass before they ride over them. “Oftentime when you find the culprit of a flat tire, it’s a mere sliver of glass that’s small enough to pull out with tweezers. A detailed spot sweep should take care of that.� Because some messes he sees are too big for a little broom, he bought 40 stickers at SP&B Reprographics printed with the phone number for Corvallis Public Works as part of his investment and placed them on the back of every dustpan. “I honestly just want cyclists to know that’s who they can contact in case of larger messes,� Crall said. The Corvallis Farmers Market on Saturday provided Crall an opportunity to test the significance of his idea. He found it well-received by other cyclists after a box of 25 mini brooms and pans he took to the market was empty within 20 minutes.

Died Aug. 20 at his home in Lone Pine, Calif. Peter Shelton, 67: Awardwinning architect known for his luxurious interior designs of homes and corporate showcases like the headquarters for Polo Ralph Lauren. Died Aug. 26 at his home in Manhattan. — From wire reports

Nicole Pomeroy, a beautiful in spirit and form sixteen year old, tragically drowned July 29, leaving her mother and relatives here in Bend. Her grandmother, Suzy Mitchell now of Arroyo Grande, CA, who was a hairdresser many years in Bend, also suffers greatly this loss of Nicole. Michael S. Foster, Suzy’s son and father of Nicole, lost his leg at a Bend building supply in 1998, passed in 2010. Christopher and Maykayla Foster of Missouri, too, deeply grieve the loss of their beloved big sister. Thank you to all who have expressed their sympathy, prayers and love for our precious Nicole.

and floods. Anthrax can be treated with antibiotics if caught quickly. If not, it has the potential to kill many animals in a short period of time. The disease killed more than 100 animals on ranches in Colorado and Texas in the first weeks of August, according to news reports. A 2001 outbreak in Texas wiped out more than 1,600 animals, including antelope, cows, deer, horses, llamas and sheep. The Oregon steer with anthrax died Aug. 22 at a ranch near Fort Klamath. Autopsies were not performed on the other dead cattle. The state Department of Agriculture said the outbreak has been isolated to one herd,

and the surviving cattle will be vaccinated and monitored. The agency quarantined the ranch, and the animals were buried 10 feet underground. Agriculture Department spokesman Bruce Pokarney said ranchers vaccinated their livestock against anthrax in past decades, but might have become less vigilant because the disease has been dormant for so long. “This may change all that again,� he said. The outbreak does not pose a public health risk, said Dr. Paul Cieslak of the Oregon Health Authority. People who handle infected animals have a slight chance of getting anthrax through scratches in the skin.


THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

B6

W E AT H ER FOR EC A ST Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2012.

TODAY, SEPTEMBER 2

MONDAY

Today: Lots of sunshine, still a little below average.

HIGH

77

HIGH LOW

37 WEST Mostly sunny, except for early coastal clouds.

Astoria 66/52

Seaside

60/53

Cannon Beach 62/51

Hillsboro Portland 74/55 77/47

Tillamook 69/48

Salem

62/47

80/51

82/49

Maupin

78/43

Corvallis Yachats 64/52

Eugene

Florence

78/45

69/50

76/37

79/47

Coos Bay

75/35

Oakridge

Cottage Grove

Crescent

Roseburg

63/51

Silver Lake

74/32

Port Orford 67/54

Gold Beach

88/51

65/53

89/46

77/36

81/43

Jordan Valley 81/46

Frenchglen 86/49

Yesterday’s state extremes

Rome

• 87°

86/45

Ontario

84/48

82/48

Klamath Falls 82/41

Ashland

66/52

85/50

Juntura

Burns Riley

78/37

Chiloquin

89/53

Brookings

86/52

Vale 88/52

Paisley

Medford

Ontario

80/44

82/43

82/42

Grants Pass

EAST Mostly sunny and warm.

81/41

Unity

Christmas Valley

Chemult

82/50

74/35

CENTRAL Mostly sunny.

Nyssa

Hampton

Fort Rock 77/36

74/33

69/28

Bandon

Baker City John Day

Brothers 76/34

La Pine 76/34

Crescent Lake

67/51

77/37

79/38

75/44

Spray 87/43

Prineville 76/39 Sisters Redmond Paulina 72/35 77/37 79/38 Sunriver Bend

76/38

Union

Granite

74/35

77/35

Joseph

Mitchell 78/40

80/41

Camp Sherman

79/48

Enterprise

Meacham 80/41

76/44

Madras

75/35

La Grande

Condon

Warm Springs

Wallowa

72/34

79/47

83/49

81/42

80/48

84/45

Ruggs

Willowdale

Albany

Newport

Pendleton

86/51

80/46

78/49

62/47

Hermiston 83/45

Arlington

Wasco

Sandy

Government Camp 66/44

78/48

84/48

The Biggs Dalles 82/50

79/51

McMinnville

Lincoln City

Umatilla

Hood River

84/53

• 28°

Fields

Lakeview

McDermitt

86/53

82/48

Meacham

88/44

-30s

-20s

Yesterday’s extremes (in the 48 contiguous states):

-10s

0s

Vancouver 68/55

10s

20s

Calgary 70/48

30s

Saskatoon 68/54

40s

50s

Winnipeg 90/52

60s

70s

80s

90s

100s 110s

Quebec 73/52

Halifax 72/57 Portland To ronto Portland 70/55 81/72 74/55 St. Paul Green Bay • 110° Boston 87/70 80/61 Boise Death Valley, Calif. 73/62 Buffalo Rapid City Detroit 82/49 82/63 New York 88/57 81/68 • 28° 80/69 Des Moines Cheyenne Philadelphia Columbus Meacham, Ore. 88/70 Chicago 84/55 80/71 84/71 82/71 Omaha San Francisco • 3.85” Salt Lake Washington, D. C. 91/70 70/54 City Bloomington, Ill. 83/72 Las Denver 84/62 Kansas City Vegas Louisville 91/60 90/71 St. Louis 98/79 83/72 Charlotte 83/73 90/70 Albuquerque Los Angeles Oklahoma City Nashville Little Rock 93/67 74/67 101/73 88/73 95/76 Phoenix Atlanta 106/85 Honolulu 90/73 Birmingham 87/74 Dallas Tijuana 89/74 100/79 84/66 New Orleans 90/77 Orlando Houston 92/70 Chihuahua 94/79 93/65 Miami 89/77 Monterrey La Paz 97/74 92/79 Mazatlan Anchorage 88/77 56/51 Juneau 50/47 Bismarck 88/53

Thunder Bay 77/61

FRONTS

OREGON NEWS

Site of cherished Dallas sawmill is sold for a steal By Michael Rose Statesman Journal

DALLAS, Ore. — The industrial heart of Dallas sold this week for bargain basement prices to several buyers, including one who specializes in liquidating factories. Weyerhaeuser Co.’s closed sawmill and seven other associated properties in Dallas totaling 154 acres sold for about $2.1 million at a Tuesday auction, said company spokesman Greg Miller. For some Polk County residents, the auction seemed like the death knell for a once vibrant part of the local economy. The mill opened in 1906 as the flagship operation of Willamette Industries. “I’m afraid that part of the history of Dallas, and Polk County, is probably gone forever,” said Polk County Commissioner Mike Ainsworth, who once worked at the mill. “It was what Dallas was all about.” “I can’t imagine there would be a viable sawmill in the future,” said Dallas Mayor Brian Dalton. Weyerhaeuser closed the mill three years ago. The mayor said the town would “be proactive” and assist the new owners of the property as much as possible. Before Weyerhaeuser decided to auction its Dallas property, the land, buildings, and sawmill equipment had been listed for sale at $11.3 million. Its tax-assessed value is about $15 million. The owners of Northwest Demolition and Dismantling bought the 66-acre sawmill site, company officials confirmed. The winning bid for the sawmill property was about $1.4 million. Dismantling the Dallas mill and selling its components to domestic or overseas mills is a distinct possibility. Northwest Demolition, however, hasn’t ruled anything out. “The options are A to Z

Staying mild and nice.

HIGH LOW

82 47

A very pleasant day with lots of sunshine.

HIGH LOW

83 48

82 47

BEND ALMANAC

PLANET WATCH

TEMPERATURE

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury . . . .5:54 a.m. . . . . . 7:31 p.m. Venus . . . . . .2:45 a.m. . . . . . 5:28 p.m. Mars. . . . . .11:25 a.m. . . . . . 9:35 p.m. Jupiter. . . . .11:30 p.m. . . . . . 2:41 p.m. Saturn. . . . .10:22 a.m. . . . . . 9:24 p.m. Uranus . . . . .8:27 p.m. . . . . . 8:54 a.m.

Yesterday’s weather through 4 p.m. in Bend High/Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75/41 24 hours ending 4 p.m.*. . 0.00” Record high . . . . . . . . 93 in 1968 Month to date . . . . . . . . . . 0.00” Record low. . . . . . . . . 25 in 1973 Average month to date. . . 0.02” Average high . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 Year to date . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.61” Average low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Average year to date. . . . . 6.78” Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.30.06 Record 24 hours . . .0.47 in 1983 *Melted liquid equivalent

Sunrise today . . . . . . 6:30 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . 7:38 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . . 6:31 a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . . 7:37 p.m. Moonrise today . . . . 8:20 p.m. Moonset today . . . . 8:52 a.m.

Moon phases Last

New

First

Full

Sept. 8 Sept. 15 Sept. 22 Sept. 29

OREGON CITIES

FIRE INDEX

Yesterday Sunday Monday 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.......High

Astoria . . . . . . . .66/50/0.00 Baker City . . . . . .76/45/0.00 Brookings . . . . . .62/48/0.00 Burns. . . . . . . . . .81/46/0.00 Eugene . . . . . . . .79/43/0.00 Klamath Falls . . .78/41/0.00 Lakeview. . . . . . .79/36/0.00 La Pine . . . . . . . .78/33/0.00 Medford . . . . . . .86/50/0.00 Newport . . . . . . .63/43/0.00 North Bend . . . . . .66/48/NA Ontario . . . . . . . .87/64/0.00 Pendleton . . . . . .77/51/0.00 Portland . . . . . . .75/50/0.00 Prineville . . . . . . .74/35/0.00 Redmond. . . . . . .78/36/0.00 Roseburg. . . . . . .82/48/0.00 Salem . . . . . . . . .77/45/0.00 Sisters . . . . . . . . .78/36/0.00 The Dalles . . . . . .82/57/0.00

Mod. = Moderate; Ext. = Extreme

. . . .66/52/pc . . . . .67/50/pc . . . . .81/41/s . . . . . .83/42/s . . . . .66/52/s . . . . . .63/51/s . . . . .84/42/s . . . . . .85/43/s . . . . .78/45/s . . . . . .81/45/s . . . . .82/41/s . . . . . .83/43/s . . . . .82/48/s . . . . . .85/49/s . . . . .76/34/s . . . . . .82/33/s . . . . .89/53/s . . . . . .91/55/s . . . .62/47/pc . . . . .64/47/pc . . . . .65/52/s . . . . .65/50/pc . . . . .86/52/s . . . . . .88/55/s . . . . .84/45/s . . . . . .85/49/s . . . .74/55/pc . . . . .76/53/pc . . . . .76/39/s . . . . . .86/45/s . . . . .81/38/s . . . . . .83/44/s . . . . .82/50/s . . . . . .85/51/s . . . .78/49/pc . . . . . .81/48/s . . . . .77/37/s . . . . . .82/37/s . . . . .82/49/s . . . . . .83/56/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 . . . . . . . . . . . . 35,253 . . . . . . 55,000 Wickiup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116,757 . . . . . 200,000 Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . 70,763 . . . . . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir . . . . . . . . 22,609 . . . . . . 47,000 Prineville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102,286 . . . . . 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 . . . . . . . 428 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup . . . . . . . . . . 1,410 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . 70 LOW MEDIUM HIGH V.HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . 163 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls . . . . . . . . . 1,878 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . NA Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . 224 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. . . . . . . . . . 15.1 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne . . . . . . . . . . . 109 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

Seattle 72/53

Billings 85/49

THURSDAY

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

80 41

FORECAST: STATE

WEDNESDAY More sunshine with near-average temperatures.

A few high clouds in the afternoon, a nice Labor Day.

Tonight: Clear and confortable conditions overnight.

LOW

TUESDAY

“I’m afraid that part of the history of Dallas, and Polk County, is probably gone forever. It was what Dallas was all about.” — Mike Ainsworth, Polk County Commissioner and former mill employee

right now. We’re getting so many calls,” said Brian Smith, president of the Tigard-based company. “We will talk to anybody and everybody and try to come up with a plan — and it could happen quickly,” said Richard Wayper, the company’s vice president of marketing. Returning the mill site to an industrial user would be the best use for the property, he said, and also the most profitable. Nick Harville of the Strategic Economic Development Corp. said the economic development agency previously had worked with a client interested in buying a portion of the property for a new sawmill operation. Weyerhaeuser rejected the client’s offer, he said. Dallas officials who attended the auction said several other groups purchased the remaining parcels, which included industrial tracts and the mill’s log yard, land with frontage on Ash Creek, and two commercial lots. In 2010, another industrial site in Dallas sold for a lowerthan-valued price. The former Tyco circuit board factory, tax assessed at about $3.3 million, sold for just $250,000 to an investor’s group, according to title company documents.

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX . . . . . .99/76/0.00 . .97/74/pc . 98/74/pc Akron . . . . . . . . . .86/70/0.32 . . . 80/68/t . . .82/69/t Albany. . . . . . . . . .84/68/0.00 . .79/59/pc . . 79/66/c Albuquerque. . . . .93/68/0.00 . .93/67/pc . 91/67/pc Anchorage . . . . . .54/48/0.19 . . . 56/51/r . 59/50/sh Atlanta . . . . . . . . .91/74/0.00 . . . 90/73/t . . .89/73/t Atlantic City . . . . .93/72/0.00 . . . 81/70/t . . .80/71/t Austin . . . . . . . . . .98/76/0.00 . .98/73/pc . 98/73/pc Baltimore . . . . . . .92/73/0.26 . . . 83/71/t . . .81/69/t Billings . . . . . . . . .89/64/0.00 . . . 85/49/s . . 87/51/s Birmingham . . . . .87/75/0.12 . . . 89/74/t . . .88/73/t Bismarck. . . . . . .100/66/0.00 . .88/53/pc . . 88/55/s Boise . . . . . . . . . . .85/61/0.00 . . . 82/49/s . . 86/50/s Boston. . . . . . . . . .79/66/0.00 . .73/62/pc . 74/65/pc Bridgeport, CT. . . .85/73/0.00 . .75/66/pc . . 78/66/c Buffalo . . . . . . . . .88/65/0.00 . . . 82/63/s . . 82/68/c Burlington, VT. . . .79/62/0.00 . .77/52/pc . . 79/65/c Caribou, ME . . . . .69/47/0.00 . .71/45/pc . 74/57/pc Charleston, SC . . .93/74/0.00 . .90/75/pc . 89/74/pc Charlotte. . . . . . . .94/71/0.64 . . . 90/70/t . . .88/71/t Chattanooga. . . . .87/72/0.05 . . . 90/72/t . . .89/73/t Cheyenne . . . . . . .89/56/0.00 . .84/55/pc . 85/54/pc Chicago. . . . . . . . .75/71/0.00 . .82/71/sh . 84/70/pc Cincinnati . . . . . . .89/71/0.00 . . . 81/72/t . . .82/71/t Cleveland . . . . . . .83/72/0.00 . . .81/69/c . . .84/70/t Colorado Springs .90/53/0.00 . .85/57/pc . 83/56/pc Columbia, MO . . .79/71/0.13 . .84/69/pc . . 89/72/s Columbia, SC . . . .96/73/0.00 . .93/71/pc . 91/72/pc Columbus, GA. . . .95/73/0.00 . .93/73/pc . 91/74/pc Columbus, OH. . . .86/75/0.04 . .80/71/sh . . .80/71/t Concord, NH. . . . .80/59/0.00 . .75/52/pc . 79/62/pc Corpus Christi. . .100/80/0.00 . .98/78/pc . 98/78/pc Dallas Ft Worth. . .99/78/0.00 100/79/pc 101/77/pc Dayton . . . . . . . . .86/74/0.26 . . . 80/71/t . . .81/70/t Denver. . . . . . . . . .95/64/0.00 . .91/60/pc . 90/60/pc Des Moines. . . . . .83/73/0.00 . .88/70/pc . 90/70/pc Detroit. . . . . . . . . .84/70/0.00 . .81/68/pc . . .83/70/t Duluth. . . . . . . . . .79/50/0.00 . .82/63/pc . 82/58/pc El Paso. . . . . . . . . .95/69/0.00 . .95/71/pc . 97/73/pc Fairbanks. . . . . . . .54/49/0.00 . .63/43/sh . 63/42/pc Fargo. . . . . . . . . . .88/61/0.00 . . . 87/56/t . . 88/58/s Flagstaff . . . . . . . .73/52/0.02 . . . 77/52/t . . .78/52/t

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Grand Rapids . . . .82/64/0.00 . .83/65/pc . 85/67/pc Green Bay. . . . . . .78/54/0.00 . . . 80/61/s . 84/64/pc Greensboro. . . . . .91/74/0.00 . . . 87/70/t . . .85/69/t Harrisburg. . . . . . .88/72/0.00 . . . 81/68/t . . .79/69/t Hartford, CT . . . . .88/69/0.00 . .77/62/pc . . 78/65/c Helena. . . . . . . . . .81/57/0.00 . . . 80/46/s . . 82/48/s Honolulu. . . . . . . .87/76/0.00 . . . 87/74/s . . 88/74/s Houston . . . . . . . .91/78/0.23 . .94/79/pc . 95/78/pc Huntsville . . . . . . .88/73/0.01 . . . 88/73/t . . .85/71/t Indianapolis . . . . .82/75/0.38 . . . 79/71/t . . .82/71/t Jackson, MS . . . . .90/76/0.25 . .93/75/pc . 93/73/pc Jacksonville. . . . . .91/73/0.00 . .92/71/pc . 90/72/pc Juneau. . . . . . . . . .54/49/0.00 . . . 50/47/r . . .51/50/r Kansas City. . . . . .82/71/0.59 . .90/71/pc . 94/75/pc Lansing . . . . . . . . .82/62/0.00 . .82/64/pc . 85/66/pc Las Vegas . . . . . . .99/79/0.00 . .98/79/pc 100/80/pc Lexington . . . . . . .90/74/0.00 . . . 85/71/t . . .82/72/t Lincoln. . . . . . . . . .95/63/0.00 . .93/68/pc . . .92/68/t Little Rock. . . . . . .94/75/0.10 . .95/76/pc . 97/76/pc Los Angeles. . . . . .78/65/0.00 . .74/67/pc . 72/67/pc Louisville. . . . . . . .88/73/0.96 . . . 83/72/t . . .84/74/t Madison, WI . . . . .77/66/0.00 . .84/63/pc . 86/65/pc Memphis. . . . . . . .94/79/0.00 . . . 93/76/t . 94/76/pc Miami . . . . . . . . . .91/81/0.00 . .89/77/pc . 89/77/pc Milwaukee . . . . . .74/68/0.00 . .78/68/pc . 80/68/pc Minneapolis . . . . .86/65/0.00 . .87/70/pc . 86/64/pc Nashville. . . . . . . .91/76/0.00 . . . 88/73/t . . .85/73/t New Orleans. . . . .90/79/0.00 . .90/77/pc . 91/77/pc New York . . . . . . .91/77/0.00 . . .80/69/c . . 80/69/c Newark, NJ . . . . . .92/73/0.00 . . .80/69/c . . .81/68/t Norfolk, VA . . . . . .91/75/0.00 . . . 87/74/t . . .86/72/t Oklahoma City . .101/71/0.00 101/73/pc . 102/74/s Omaha . . . . . . . . .92/67/0.00 . .91/70/pc . . .90/68/t Orlando. . . . . . . . .92/76/0.00 . .92/70/pc . 91/73/pc Palm Springs. . . .106/76/0.00 107/81/pc 107/82/pc Peoria . . . . . . . . . .82/73/1.81 . .81/70/sh . 85/69/pc Philadelphia . . . . .91/73/0.00 . . . 84/71/t . . .82/71/t Phoenix. . . . . . . .105/88/0.00 106/85/pc 107/85/pc Pittsburgh . . . . . . .87/72/0.06 . . . 80/67/t . . .84/70/t Portland, ME. . . . .75/64/0.00 . . . 70/55/t . 71/62/pc Providence . . . . . .82/70/0.00 . .73/61/pc . 76/64/pc Raleigh . . . . . . . . .92/73/0.00 . . . 89/72/t . . .88/71/t

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Rapid City . . . . . .101/67/0.12 . .88/57/pc . . 88/55/s Reno . . . . . . . . . . .85/49/0.00 . . . 88/55/s . . 89/55/s Richmond . . . . . . .91/73/0.00 . . . 87/73/t . . .86/71/t Rochester, NY . . . .82/59/0.00 . . . 80/60/s . . 81/69/c Sacramento. . . . . .81/54/0.00 . . . 89/59/s . . 95/58/s St. Louis. . . . . . . . .82/74/0.53 . . . 83/73/t . 87/71/pc Salt Lake City . . . .81/62/0.29 . .84/62/pc . 87/66/pc San Antonio . . . . .98/79/0.00 . .98/76/pc . 98/76/pc San Diego . . . . . . .83/68/0.00 . .81/70/pc . 80/69/pc San Francisco . . . .68/56/0.00 . . . 70/55/s . . 70/55/s San Jose . . . . . . . .74/57/0.00 . . . 82/58/s . . 82/59/s Santa Fe . . . . . . . .90/57/0.00 . .84/60/pc . 84/60/pc

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Savannah . . . . . . .94/73/0.00 . .91/73/pc . 90/74/pc Seattle. . . . . . . . . .71/51/0.00 . .72/53/pc . 74/55/pc Sioux Falls. . . . . . .91/62/0.00 . . . 95/65/s . 88/64/pc Spokane . . . . . . . .75/49/0.00 . . . 74/47/s . . 76/50/s Springfield, MO . .72/68/0.77 . .88/69/pc . . 93/71/s Tampa. . . . . . . . . .94/78/0.00 . .91/75/pc . 91/76/pc Tucson. . . . . . . . .101/75/0.00 100/77/pc 100/77/pc Tulsa . . . . . . . . . . .99/77/0.00 100/75/pc 101/76/pc Washington, DC . .95/76/0.00 . . . 83/72/t . . .82/72/t Wichita . . . . . . . . .96/68/0.00 . .99/72/pc 100/74/pc Yakima . . . . . . . . .81/44/0.00 . .81/48/pc . . 84/52/s Yuma. . . . . . . . . .105/84/0.00 103/81/pc 104/83/pc

INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam. . . . . .66/52/0.00 . . .68/58/c . 70/56/pc Athens. . . . . . . . . .84/77/0.00 . .89/69/pc . . 83/69/s Auckland. . . . . . . .59/46/0.00 . . . 58/48/r . 58/45/sh Baghdad . . . . . . .104/77/0.00 . .108/86/s . 107/86/s Bangkok . . . . . . . .91/79/0.00 . .84/78/sh . 88/79/sh Beijing. . . . . . . . . .86/73/0.00 . .75/64/sh . 80/64/pc Beirut . . . . . . . . . .86/79/0.00 . . . 87/79/s . . 90/82/s Berlin. . . . . . . . . . .68/52/0.00 . .70/54/pc . 73/56/pc Bogota . . . . . . . . .63/43/0.00 . .65/49/pc . 65/49/sh Budapest. . . . . . . .81/64/0.00 . .88/62/pc . 89/64/pc Buenos Aires. . . . .75/50/0.00 . .70/44/pc . . 59/51/c Cabo San Lucas . .90/77/0.00 . . . 89/76/t . . .88/77/t Cairo . . . . . . . . . . .91/73/0.00 . . . 95/72/s . . 95/73/s Calgary . . . . . . . . .64/48/0.00 . .70/48/pc . 63/43/sh Cancun . . . . . . . . .88/79/0.00 . .88/78/pc . . .87/77/t Dublin . . . . . . . . . .68/55/0.00 . . .66/54/c . . 71/59/c Edinburgh. . . . . . .66/57/0.00 . . .59/53/c . . 69/59/c Geneva . . . . . . . . .59/50/0.00 . .71/51/sh . 69/55/sh Harare. . . . . . . . . .84/57/0.00 . . . 80/50/s . . 80/50/s Hong Kong . . . . . .91/79/0.00 . .89/78/sh . 87/81/sh Istanbul. . . . . . . . .82/68/0.00 . .82/71/pc . 81/71/pc Jerusalem . . . . . . .86/67/0.00 . . . 85/67/s . . 90/71/s Johannesburg. . . .73/41/0.00 . . . 68/51/s . . 71/51/s Lima . . . . . . . . . . .64/59/0.00 . . . 68/60/s . . 68/60/s Lisbon . . . . . . . . . .91/70/0.00 . . . 93/71/s . . 91/71/s London . . . . . . . . .72/55/0.00 . .69/53/sh . 73/59/pc Madrid . . . . . . . . .82/52/0.00 . . . 83/56/s . . 82/52/s Manila. . . . . . . . . .91/75/0.00 . .85/79/sh . 80/80/sh

Mecca . . . . . . . . .108/86/0.00 . .106/85/s . 106/85/s Mexico City. . . . . .70/59/0.00 . . . 76/59/t . . .76/55/t Montreal. . . . . . . .75/61/0.00 . . . 76/54/s . 79/64/pc Moscow . . . . . . . .57/43/0.00 . .51/48/sh . 66/54/pc Nairobi . . . . . . . . .79/57/0.00 . .76/59/pc . 77/53/pc Nassau . . . . . . . . .88/79/0.00 . . . 89/77/t . 86/77/pc New Delhi. . . . . . .93/82/0.00 . .97/82/sh . . .98/82/t Osaka . . . . . . . . . .90/73/0.00 . . . 88/77/t . 85/76/pc Oslo. . . . . . . . . . . .66/43/0.00 . .68/48/sh . 67/48/pc Ottawa . . . . . . . . .77/59/0.00 . . .79/54/c . 79/63/sh Paris. . . . . . . . . . . .70/43/0.00 . . .71/57/c . 76/61/pc Rio de Janeiro. . . .79/63/0.00 . .80/66/pc . 80/65/pc Rome. . . . . . . . . . .75/63/0.00 . .81/67/sh . 74/62/sh Santiago . . . . . . . .81/43/0.00 . . . 70/46/s . 67/43/pc Sao Paulo . . . . . . .84/55/0.00 . .81/63/pc . 77/62/pc Sapporo . . . . . . not available . .78/67/pc . 81/71/sh Seoul. . . . . . . . . . .82/72/0.00 . .84/71/sh . 81/61/sh Shanghai. . . . . . . .88/77/0.00 . .85/71/pc . . .86/72/t Singapore . . . . . . .90/81/0.00 . .88/78/sh . 87/79/sh Stockholm. . . . . . .61/54/0.00 . . .64/53/c . 66/51/sh Sydney. . . . . . . . . .59/41/0.00 . . . 66/50/s . . 73/54/s Taipei. . . . . . . . . . .91/77/0.00 . . . 90/78/s . 88/79/pc Tel Aviv . . . . . . . . .88/75/0.00 . . . 89/76/s . . 91/76/s Tokyo. . . . . . . . . . .86/75/0.00 . . . 87/74/t . . .88/75/t Toronto . . . . . . . . .81/63/0.00 . . . 81/72/s . 80/68/sh Vancouver. . . . . . .72/50/0.00 . . .68/55/c . 68/52/pc Vienna. . . . . . . . . .61/55/0.00 . .80/59/pc . 83/60/pc Warsaw. . . . . . . . .66/59/0.00 . .74/55/pc . . 73/52/c


COMMUNITYLIFE

C

TV & Movies, C2 Calendar, C3 Horoscope, C3 Milestones, C6 Puzzles, C7

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

www.bendbulletin.com/community

A taste of Oregon Drina Daisy

• 16 places to eat beyond Portland and Central Oregon

Baked Alaska

Astoria

Astoria

Stonehedge Gardens

Executive chef-owner Christopher Holen

Newman’s at 988

Hood River

Cannon Beach

Pendleton

The Dalles Portland

The Bay House

Joel Palmer House

Lincoln City

Dayton

La Grande

Co-owner Kina Allen White tosses dough.

Salem

Thistle McMinnville

Nick’s Italian Cafe

Paizano’s Pizza Baker City

Madras

McMinnville

Restaurant Beck Depoe Bay

Sybaris

Owner-chef Justin Wills

By John Gottberg Anderson For the Bulletin

Albany Chef-owner Matt Bennett

The Waterfront Depot

MarchĂŠ

Florence

Eugene

Medford

Talent

Bend

Beppe & Gianni’s Trattoria Eugene

Chef-owner Stephanie Pearl Kimmel

New Sammy’s Cowboy Bistro

Ontario

The Peerless Restaurant Ashland

France meets China in this Sybaris dinner entrÊe: Peking Muscovy duck à l’orange on duck-and vegetable fried rice. The restaurant’s menu changes monthly, as chef Matt Bennett builds his recipes around products available locally and seasonally.

M

y favorite Oregon restaurant is located a stone’s throw from the Willamette River and across the Burns

street from a carousel museum.

Sybaris, in the historic downtown blocks of Albany, has found success in what some might consider an unlikely spot. It isn’t near a major population center — Salem is a half hour’s drive to the north — and it’s a meandering drive off Interstate 5. But the work of Chef Matt Bennett and his wife, Janel, who jointly own the restaurant, has not gone unrecognized. For each of the past two years, Bennett has been nominated for the “Best Chef Northwest� Lakeview award by the James Beard Foundation. The restaurant is set in a century-old industrial building, its ground floor once a bodyand-fender shop. The ceiling is high, the tables set sufficiently far apart that conversations don’t intermingle. The mood is gracious, with a side-wall fireplace; paintings by local artists are tastefully hung so as not to divert attention from the artful presentations of cuisine. I recall my first visit to Sybaris. I had a feast to please almost any hedonist. From the opening salvo — chilled, smoked goose breast served with chili-spiced candied kumquats — to an Asian-influenced cabbage-and-wild mushroom roll, finishing with a main course of sturgeon picatta on parsley linguine, Matt Bennett

John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin

NORTHWEST TRAVEL Next week: Coeur d’Alene Resort never missed a beat as chef. I had no room for dessert, save a cappuccino. My subsequent visits have been equally sybaritic, as the menu changes monthly. Bennett knows what products he can buy fresh locally, and he builds his recipes around those, often scouring ancient cookbooks: The sturgeon picatta recipe, for instance, was preBolshevik Russian, he said. When he was invited to cook at the James Beard House in New York City, he prepared a Kalapuya tribute dinner, honoring the native peoples of the mid-Willamette Valley. The menu featured salmon, quail and elk — along with camas root, fiddlehead ferns, wild mint, nettles, crab apples, Oregon grapes, acorns, wild onions and huckleberries. Sybaris is only one of many fine restaurants in Oregon that are beyond the boundaries of the Portland metropolis, nationally perceived to be the center of the Northwest’s culinary universe. Following is a list of places where I like to eat when I’m traveling away from Central Oregon but outside of greater Portland. See Restaurants / C4

PAID ADVERTISEMENT

Musical will get its world premiere in Bend By David Jasper The Bulletin

This fall, Cascades Theatrical Company will present the world premiere of “It’s Only Money,� a new musical that’s been more than 25 years in the making. Auditions for the production, which is being directed by Lilli Ann Linford-Foreman, will be held Wednesday at Central Oregon Community College in Bend (see “If you go�). Linford-Foreman calls the musical a fun, timely story “about shenanigans on Wall Street.� “It’s got a good love story in it, plenty of betrayal and underhanded dealings, all held together by a mysterious narrator,� she says. Back in the 1980s, songwriter and musician David Forrest was working for Ci-

Songwriter David Forrest, left, and Lilli Ann Linford-Foreman are behind “It’s Only Money,� a new musical that will open in November in Bend.

If you go What: Auditions for “It’s Only Money� When: 7 p.m. Wednesday Where: Pence 28, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend Cost: Free; come prepared with a song Contact: 541-389-0803

Submitted photo

tibank in New York City, the setting of the musical, when he conceived the storyline for a musical about love and legal wrongdoing on Wall Street. He was about six songs into the project when he met writer Lee Charles Kelley, who began collaborating on the book and lyrics with Kelley for what would become “It’s Only Money.� About a year later, the

first draft was complete. “My entertainment attorney in New York sent us to see a couple who invested in Broadway shows,� says Forrest, who moved to Bend in 2005. “So one day I hauled my keyboards and other instruments up to this penthouse apartment, and we started doing effectively a mini ‘backer’s audition,’ � in

which songs from a potential show are performed for potential financial investors in a production. After the fifth song, “They said, ‘Stop. This is great. You guys have no idea what you’ve got here,’ � Forrest says. What they needed was for Forrest and Kelley to get a staged reading on video. See Musical / C8

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C2

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

TV & M Branagh injects humanity into ‘Wallander III’ on PBS swagger about him. He has this open-wound quality, and he takes all of these crimes personally. He has a sense of quiet but intense moral outBy Katherine Tulich rage. He’s appalled and surSpecial to The Washington Post prised when people commit In the first episode of the these terrible acts of cruelty, new Wallander series, Ken- and he has an empathy for neth Branagh made sure he the victim that is almost danwrote the word “smile� on his gerous to him.� script. “I figured it was the In the opening episode of one opportunity in three films Wallander III, “An Event in that I get to do it, so I better re- Autumn,� based on Mankell’s member how to little-known TV SPOTLIGHT short story “The move my muscles upwards,� the Grave,� it seems actor says with the taciturn ina laugh as he mugs a spector has found strained smile. peace and contentFor anyone familiar ment with a new rewith the Swedish noir lationship and a new detective from Henhouse by the sea. That ning Mankell’s moody Branagh is, until his dog digs and contemplative up the remains of a crime thrillers, the central human jaw in the back yard, character Kurt Wallander and he becomes obsessed does very little smiling. A with solving the mystery, solitary figure with a dogged risking not only his relationand singular determina- ship but putting his partner tion, the seemingly perenni- recklessly in danger. “It’s an ally depressed small-town interesting turn,� Branagh cop solves grisly crimes in says. “There is no forgiva grimly beautiful Swedish ing him for it, and in a way countryside. Through nine it informs the following two books, he has become a be- films, ‘The Dogs of Riga’ and loved figure, and while there ‘Before the Frost.’ The queshave been Swedish film and tion is, if you do something TV interpretations of Man- like that, in a catastrophic kell’s books, it’s British actor misjudgment that causes Branagh who has memora- such tragic consequences for bly imprinted the character someone else, do you deserve worldwide through a limited happiness after that?� television series, the third of “I think he has done some which premiers Sept. 9 as of the best acting he has ever part of Masterpiece Mystery done in this Wallander,� says on PBS stations. Rebecca Eaton, executive “There is great affection producer of PBS Masterpiece towards the character,� says Series, who also helps proBranagh as he sips a cup of duce Wallander. “Kurt goes hot English breakfast tea on through a big change. It’s a a balcony overlooking the dark emotional journey, but pool at the Beverly Hilton because it’s Kenneth who is so Hotel in Los Angeles after accessible as a warm, smart a long day of interviews. man, you want to stay with “There is no machismo him as he goes through it.�

L M T FOR SUNDAY, SEPT. 2

PREMIUM RUSH (PG-13) 12:55, 3:15, 6:50, 9:45

BEND

TED (R) 10

“ M a s terpiece Mystery: Wallander III� Sept. 9, 16 and 23, 9 p.m., PBS

TOTAL RECALL (PG-13) 9:35

Regal Pilot Butte 6

McMenamins Old St. Francis School

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) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15 THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) Noon, 2:50, 5:45 CELESTE AND JESSE FOREVER (R) 1, 3:30, 6 FAREWELL, MY QUEEN (R) 4 MOONRISE KINGDOM (PG-13) 1:15, 7 ROBOT AND FRANK (PG-13) 12:30, 3, 6:45

THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN (PG13) 6 MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE’S MOST WANTED (PG) Noon, 3 MAGIC MIKE (R) 9:10 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.

2016: OBAMA’S AMERICA (PG) 12:05, 3, 6, 9 THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 12:15, 3:25, 6:30, 9:30 BRAVE (PG) 1:45, 4:45, 7:25 THE CAMPAIGN (R) 2, 5, 8, 10:20 THE DARK KNIGHT RISES IMAX (PG-13) 12:30, 4:15, 7:55 THE DARK KNIGHT RISES (PG-13) 12:20, 4:05, 7:45 THE EXPENDABLES 2 (R) 1:30, 4:25, 7:15, 9:50 HIT AND RUN (R) 1:35, 4:35, 7:35, 10:15 HOPE SPRINGS (PG-13) 1:10, 3:45, 6:35, 9:05 LAWLESS (R) 12:10, 3:30, 6:25, 9:15 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG-13) 12:35, 4, 7:50 THE ODD LIFE OF TIMOTHY GREEN (PG) 12:45, 3:40, 6:15, 9:10 THE OOGIELOVES IN THE BIG BALLOON ADVENTURE (G) 12:25, 3:05, 6:05 PARANORMAN 3-D (PG) 1:20, 7:05 PARANORMAN (PG) 3:50, 9:25 THE POSSESSION (PG-13) 1:55, 4:55, 7:40, 10:10

• 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.

SISTERS 720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800

BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD (PG-13) 3, 5 THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 7 LAWLESS (R) 2:30, 5, 7:30 MOONRISE KINGDOM (PG-13) 3 PARANORMAN (PG) 5, 7:15 PREMIUM RUSH (PG-13) 3:15, 5:30, 7:30

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

Tin Pan Theater

MADRAS

FIRST POSITION (no MPAA rating) 6

680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 541-382-6347

EDITOR’S NOTES:

Sisters Movie House

700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562

869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

LAWLESS (R) 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 THE ODD LIFE OF TIMOTHY GREEN (PG) 11:15 a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15

THE WELL DIGGER’S DAUGHTER (no MPAA rating) 3:30 YOUR SISTER’S SISTER (R) 8

REDMOND Redmond Cinemas 1535 S.W. Odem Medo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777

THE CAMPAIGN (R) 11:15 a.m., 1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15 THE EXPENDABLES 2 (R) Noon, 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9

Madras Cinema 5 1101 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505

THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 12:50, 3:40, 6:30, 9:25 BRAVE (PG) 12:20, 2:25 THE CAMPAIGN (R) 7, 9:10 THE EXPENDABLES 2 (R) 12:15, 2:30, 4:55, 7:20, 9:35 HIT AND RUN (R) 4:40, 6:50, 9 THE OOGIELOVES IN THE BIG BALLOON ADVENTURE (G) 1:05, 3:05, 5:05 PARANORMAN 3-D (PG) 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:10, 9:20

Food, Home & Garden In

AT HOME Every Tuesday

THE CAMPAIGN (UPSTAIRS — R) 3, 6 LAWLESS (R) 1, 4, 7 Pine Theater’s upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.

Lola

Lola was raised in a caring and loving foster home with her 4 siblings. She was adopted out as a young kitten and sadly has come back to us as a stray. Lola is very affectionate and loves to be carried on your shoulder. She is very gentle and loves to play. Lola needs a forever loving family that will care for her for the rest of her precious life. If you think this could be with you then come by the shelter and adopt this great girl today!

HUMANE SOCIETY OF CENTRAL OREGON/SPCA 61170 S.E. 27th St. BEND (541) 382-3537

Sponsored by Cascade Mortgage - Tim Maher

L TV L SUNDAY PRIME TIME 9/2/12

*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 World News Grey’s Anatomy ’ ‘14’ Ă… Paid Program Evening News Entertainment Tonight (N) Ă… Medicare-Social Security Moyers & Company ’ ‘G’ Ă… NewsChannel 8 at 5PM (N) Ă… (4:00) ›› “Liberty Stands Stillâ€? Cook’s Country Test Kitchen

6:00

6:30

KATU News at 6 (N) ’ Ă… News Nightly News The Unit Stress ’ ‘PG’ Ă… KEZI 9 News World News Bones Titan on the Tracks ’ ‘14’ Oregon Art Beat Outdoor Idaho Nightly News NBC Primetime King of Queens CW Fall First Doc Martin Old Dogs ‘PG’ Ă…

7:00

7:30

ABC Fall Preview Special Dateline NBC (N) ’ ‘PG’ Ă… 60 Minutes ’ Ă… ABC Fall Preview Special American Dad Cleveland Show Antiques Roadshow ‘G’ Ă… Dateline NBC (N) ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Heartland Quarantine ’ ‘PG’ The Klamath Basin: Restoration

8:00

8:30

9:00

9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

Once Upon a Time 7:15 A.M. ‘PG’ TV’s Most Dynamic Duos: Presented by The Paley Center for Media KATU News (11:35) Cars.TV America’s Got Talent Twelve acts perform. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… America’s Got Talent ‘PG’ Ă… News Love-Raymond (8:01) Big Brother (N) ’ Ă… The Good Wife ’ ‘14’ Ă… The Mentalist ’ ‘14’ Ă… News Cold Case ‘14’ Once Upon a Time 7:15 A.M. ‘PG’ TV’s Most Dynamic Duos: Presented by The Paley Center for Media KEZI 9 News The Insider ’ The Simpsons The Simpsons Family Guy ‘14’ Family Guy ‘14’ News Two/Half Men Big Bang Big Bang Royal Memories: Prince Charles Masterpiece Mystery! ’ ‘PG’ Ă… (DVS) Will Ferrell: The Mark Twain Prize ’ ‘14’ Ă… America’s Got Talent Twelve acts perform. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… America’s Got Talent ‘PG’ Ă… NewsChannel 8 Sports Sunday ›› “Flashdanceâ€? (1983, Drama) Jennifer Beals, Michael Nouri. Ă… Meet, Browns Meet, Browns Troubadour, TX The Dark Side ’ Outdoor Idaho Way of Tea Moyers & Company ’ ‘G’ Ă… Pioneers in Aviation: The Race Amelia Earhart’s Last Flight

BASIC CABLE CHANNELS

Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars *A&E 130 28 18 32 Longmire ‘14’ Ă… (4:00) ››› “Tombstoneâ€? (1993, Western) Kurt Russell, Val Kilmer. Doc Hol- Into the West Wheel to the Stars Jacob and Nathan Wheeler. (Part 1 of 6) Hell on Wheels Scabs Cullen has to Breaking Bad Gliding Over All Walt (11:05) Small (11:35) Breaking *AMC 102 40 39 liday joins Wyatt Earp for the OK Corral showdown. Ă… ‘14’ diffuse a threat. (N) ‘14’ Ă… takes care of loose ends. (N) Town Security Bad Ă… Off the Hook Off the Hook Off the Hook Off the Hook Off the Hook Mermaids: The Body Found ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Mermaids: The Body Found ‘PG’ *ANPL 68 50 26 38 (4:00) River Monsters: Unhooked Off the Hook Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ What Happens Housewives/NJ BRAVO 137 44 › “Delta Farceâ€? (2007) Larry the Cable Guy. Premiere. ’ Ă… (8:45) Ron White: They Call Me Tater Salad ’ ‘14’ › “Delta Farceâ€? (2007) Larry the Cable Guy, Bill Engvall. ’ Ă… CMT 190 32 42 53 (4:00) ›› “Police Academyâ€? (1984) ’ Ă… Pill Poppers American Greed: The Fugitives Crime Inc. Hollywood Robbery Ultimate Factories John Deere ‘G’ American Greed: The Fugitives LitlGiant Paid Program CNBC 54 36 40 52 Diamond Rush Ripping- Rich CNN Newsroom (N) Teddy: In His Own Words ’ ‘PG’ Ă… CNN Newsroom Teddy: In His Own Words ‘PG’ CNN 55 38 35 48 Teddy: In His Own Words ’ ‘PG’ Ă… (5:49) ›› “Dumb & Dumberâ€? (1994, Comedy) Jim Carrey, Jeff Daniels. Ă… Tosh.0 ‘14’ (9:02) Tosh.0 (9:33) Tosh.0 (10:05) Tosh.0 (10:37) Tosh.0 (11:09) Tosh.0 Futurama ‘14’ COM 135 53 135 47 (3:43) › “Half Bakedâ€? (1998) (4:30) City Club of Central Oregon Talk of the Town Local issues. Desert Cooking: Central Oregon Style Journal Get Outdoors Visions of NW The Yoga Show The Yoga Show Talk of the Town Local issues. COTV 11 Prime Minister Road to the White House Q&A Prime Minister Road to the White House Washington This Week CSPAN 61 20 12 11 Q & A Code 9 ’ ‘G’ A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ Code 9 ’ ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Ă… Jessie ‘G’ Ă… Jessie ‘G’ Ă… My Babysitter My Babysitter Austin & Ally ’ Austin & Ally ’ *DIS 87 43 14 39 Good-Charlie Survivorman Ten Days ‘PG’ Ă… Survivorman Ten Days ‘PG’ Ă… Survivorman Ten Days (N) ‘PG’ One Car Too Far Mountain ‘PG’ Yukon Men Hunt or Starve ‘PG’ One Car Too Far Mountain ‘PG’ *DISC 156 21 16 37 Survivorman Arctic Tundra ‘PG’ Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Jonas Jonas Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Jonas Keeping Up With the Kardashians Jonas *E! 136 25 SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter ESPN 21 23 22 23 (4:30) NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup: AdvoCare 500 From Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Ga. (N) (Live) SportsCenter QB Camp QB Camp NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup: AdvoCare 500 (N) ESPN2 22 24 21 24 MLB Baseball Chicago White Sox at Detroit Tigers From Comerica Park in Detroit. (N) (Live) ››› “Harvard Beats Yale 29-29â€? (2008, Documentary) Ă… Boxing Ă… Boxing Ă… Boxing Taped 3/22/67. Ă… Boxing Ă… ESPNC 23 25 123 25 ››› “Harvard Beats Yale 29-29â€? (2008, Documentary) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. ESPNN 24 63 124 203 SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… ›››› “Toy Storyâ€? (1995) Voices of Tom Hanks, Tim Allen. ›››› “Toy Story 2â€? (1999) Voices of Tom Hanks, Tim Allen. ›››› “Toy Story 2â€? (1999) Voices of Tom Hanks, Tim Allen. FAM 67 29 19 41 (3:30) ›› “The Gooniesâ€? (1985) Fox News Sunday FOX Report (N) Huckabee Fox News Sunday FOX Report Fox News Sunday FNC 57 61 36 50 Huckabee (N) Diners, Drive Diners, Drive The Great Food Truck Race ‘G’ Cupcake Wars (N) The Great Food Truck Race ‘G’ Iron Chef America (N) Restaurant Stakeout *FOOD 177 62 98 44 Extreme Chef Desert Survival (4:30) ›› “Ghost Riderâ€? (2007, Action) Nicolas Cage, Eva Mendes. ››› “Iron Manâ€? (2008) Robert Downey Jr., Terrence Howard. A billionaire dons an armored suit to fight criminals. ››› “Iron Manâ€? (2008) Robert Downey Jr. FX 131 Selling LA ‘G’ House Hunters Hunters Int’l Extreme Homes ‘G’ Ă… Buying and Selling ‘G’ Ă… Property Brothers ‘G’ Ă… All American Handyman (N) ‘G’ Holmes Inspection ’ ‘G’ Ă… HGTV 176 49 33 43 Selling LA ‘G’ Mountain Men ‘PG’ Ă… Mountain Men ‘PG’ Ă… Mountain Men ‘PG’ Ă… Mountain Men ‘PG’ Ă… Mountain Men ‘PG’ Ă… (11:02) Shark Wranglers (N) ‘14’ *HIST 155 42 41 36 Mountain Men Lost ‘PG’ Ă… “An Officer and a Murdererâ€? (2012, Docudrama) Gary Cole. ‘14’ Ă… › “Drew Peterson: Untouchableâ€? (2012) Rob Lowe. ‘14’ Ă… “An Officer and a Murdererâ€? ‘14’ LIFE 138 39 20 31 “Murder on the 13th Floorâ€? (2012) Sean Patrick Thomas. Ă… Trafficked: Slavery in America Sex Slaves: Motor City Lockup: Raw Pushing the Limits Lockup: Raw The Flip Side Lockup: Raw Meet the Press ‘G’ Ă… MSNBC 59 59 128 51 Caught on Camera Very Bad Day (7:49) The Hills (8:24) The Hills Awkward. ‘14’ Awkward. ‘14’ One Direction Inbetweeners Comedy Central Ridiculousness MTV 192 22 38 57 (4:54) The Hills (5:29) The Hills (6:04) The Hills (6:39) The Hills (7:14) The Hills ’ ‘PG’ Victorious ‘G’ SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob “Ragsâ€? (2012, Musical) Max Schneider, Keke Palmer. ’ ‘G’ Ă… Yes, Dear ‘PG’ Yes, Dear ‘PG’ Friends ’ ‘PG’ (11:33) Friends NICK 82 46 24 40 Victorious ‘G’ Our America With Lisa Ling ‘PG’ Our America With Lisa Ling ‘14’ Our America With Lisa Ling ‘14’ Oprah’s Lifeclass (N) ’ Lovetown, USA (N) ’ ‘PG’ Our America With Lisa Ling ‘14’ OWN 161 103 31 103 Our America With Lisa Ling ‘14’ MLS Soccer Seattle Sounders FC at FC Dallas (N) MLB Baseball Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim at Seattle Mariners From Safeco Field in Seattle. ROOT 20 45 28* 26 (4:30) College Football Southern Methodist at Baylor (N) ‘PG’ (5:39) Bar Rescue Chumps ’ ‘PG’ (6:46) Bar Rescue Bar Fight ‘PG’ (7:52) Bar Rescue ’ ‘PG’ Bar Rescue Tiki Curse ’ ‘PG’ (10:08) Bar Rescue Mystique or Murder? ’ ‘PG’ Bar Rescue ’ SPIKE 132 31 34 46 Bar Rescue ’ › “Land of the Lostâ€? (2009, Comedy) Will Ferrell, Anna Friel. ››› “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspianâ€? (2008, Fantasy) Georgie Henley, Skandar Keynes. › “Land of the Lostâ€? (2009) SYFY 133 35 133 45 (3:30) ›› “Predator 2â€? (1990) Joel Osteen Kerry Shook BelieverVoice Creflo Dollar ››› “King of Kingsâ€? (1961) Jeffrey Hunter, Robert Ryan. Orson Welles narrates the story of Jesus. Secrets of Bible Secrets The Case for Faith TBN 205 60 130 (5:45) ›› “The Heartbreak Kidâ€? (2007, Comedy) Ben Stiller, Michelle Monaghan. Ă… ›› “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobbyâ€? (2006) Ă… (10:05) ›› “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobbyâ€? (2006) *TBS 16 27 11 28 Harold-Kumar ›› “Hands of a Strangerâ€? (1962, Horror) Paul Lukather, (6:45) ››› “The Beast With Five Fingersâ€? (1946, Horror) Robert Alda. A mur- ››› “Mad Loveâ€? (1935) Peter Lorre, (9:45) “The Hands of Orlacâ€? (1924) Conrad Veidt, Fritz Kortner. Silent. A (11:45) “Spirits of TCM 101 44 101 29 Joan Harvey, James Stapleton. Premiere. dered pianist’s severed hand returns for revenge. Ă… Frances Drake. Ă… pianist receives the transplanted hands of a murderer. the Deadâ€? Hoarding: Buried Alive ‘PG’ Ă… Hoarding: Buried Alive ‘14’ Ă… Hoarding: Buried Alive ‘PG’ Ă… Hoarding: Buried Alive (N) ‘PG’ Hoarding: Buried Alive ‘PG’ Ă… Hoarding: Buried Alive ‘PG’ Ă… *TLC 178 34 32 34 Hoarding: Buried Alive ‘PG’ Ă… ››› “Ocean’s Elevenâ€? (2001) George Clooney, Matt Damon. Ă… (DVS) Leverage (N) ‘PG’ Ă… Leverage ‘PG’ Ă… ›› “Men in Black IIâ€? (2002) *TNT 17 26 15 27 (4:00) ›› “Sherlock Holmesâ€? (2009) Ă… (DVS) Cloudy-Mtballs ›› “Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thiefâ€? (2010) Logan Lerman. Dragons: Riders of Berk ‘PG’ Venture Bros. King of the Hill King of the Hill Family Guy ‘14’ Family Guy ‘14’ Black Dynamite *TOON 84 Man v Food Man v Food Man v Food Tailgate Paradise ‘G’ Ă… Hamburger Paradise ‘G’ Ă… *TRAV 179 51 45 42 Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ Burger Land (N) Burger Land ‘G’ Man v Food (5:34) M*A*S*H (6:09) M*A*S*H (6:43) M*A*S*H: 30th Anniversary Reunion Special ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens TVLND 65 47 29 35 M*A*S*H ‘PG’ Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU White Collar ‘PG’ Ă… USA 15 30 23 30 Law & Order: SVU Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ‘14’ Big Ang ’ ‘14’ Big Ang ’ ‘14’ Big Ang (N) ‘14’ Single Ladies Finally ’ ‘14’ Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ‘14’ Big Ang ’ ‘14’ VH1 191 48 37 54 (4:30) › “Honey 2â€? (2011) Katerina Graham, Randy Wayne. ’ PREMIUM CABLE CHANNELS ››› “True Liesâ€? 1994, Action Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jamie Lee Curtis. ‘R’ Ă… ›› “When a Stranger Callsâ€? 2006 Camilla Belle. ENCR 106 401 306 401 ››› “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towersâ€? 2002, Fantasy Elijah Wood, Liv Tyler. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… ›› “Monsters vs. Aliensâ€? 2009 Voices of Reese Witherspoon. ‘PG’ ››› “Horton Hears a Who!â€? 2008 ‘G’ Ă… FXM Presents › “10 Things I Hate About Youâ€? 1999 Heath Ledger. ‘PG-13’ Ă… FMC 104 204 104 120 (4:00) ›› “Monsters vs. Aliensâ€? The Ultimate Fighter Brazil The Ultimate Fighter Brazil The Ultimate Fighter Brazil ‘14’ UFC Reloaded UFC 147: Silva vs. Franklin II Highlights of UFC 147 in Brazil. (N) The Ultimate Fighter Brazil FUEL 34 PGA Tour Golf Deutsche Bank Championship, Third Round From the TPC Boston in Norton, Mass. Golf Central (N) (Live) GOLF 28 301 27 301 PGA Tour Golf “How to Fall in Loveâ€? (2012) Eric Mabius, Brooke D’Orsay. ‘G’ Ă… “Meet My Momâ€? (2010) Lori Loughlin, Johnny Messner. ‘PG’ Ă… Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ HALL 66 33 175 33 › “Uncorkedâ€? (2010) Julie Benz, JoBeth Williams. ‘PG’ Ă… (5:15) ›› “Hopâ€? 2011 Voices of James Marsden. Live action/animated. The ›› “Unknownâ€? 2011, Suspense Liam Neeson, Diane Kruger. An accident ›› “Fast Fiveâ€? 2011, Action Vin Diesel, Paul Walker. Dom Toretto and com- (11:15) ›› “A Very Harold & Kumar HBO 425 501 425 501 Easter Bunny’s reluctant heir hides out in Los Angeles. victim finds a man using his identity. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… pany ramp up the action in Brazil. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… 3D Christmasâ€? 2011 ‘R’ ›› “Ramboâ€? 2008 Sylvester Stallone. ‘NR’ (6:45) ››› “Training Dayâ€? 2001, Crime Drama Denzel Washington, Ethan Hawke. ‘R’ (9:15) ›› “Ramboâ€? 2008, Action Sylvester Stallone. ‘NR’ ››› “Training Dayâ€? 2001 ‘R’ IFC 105 105 (5:15) ››› “X-Men 2â€? 2003, Fantasy Patrick Stewart, Hugh Jackman, Ian McKellen. A right-wing ››› “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkabanâ€? 2004, Fantasy Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint. Strike Back A wounded Othmani (10:50) ››› “Forrest Gumpâ€? 1994 MAX 400 508 508 militarist pursues the mutants. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… The young wizard confronts the fugitive Sirius Black. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… holes up in Algeria. ’ ‘MA’ Ă… Tom Hanks. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… Doomsday Preppers ‘14’ Doomsday Preppers ‘14’ Taboo U.S. of Alcohol (N) ‘14’ Taboo U.S. of Alcohol ‘14’ Doomsday Preppers ‘14’ Doomsday Preppers ‘14’ Doomsday Preppers ‘14’ NGC 157 157 Planet Sheen Planet Sheen Planet Sheen Planet Sheen Planet Sheen Robot, Monster SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Fanboy-Chum Fanboy-Chum Invader ZIM ’ Invader ZIM ’ NTOON 89 115 189 115 Planet Sheen Realtree Road Truth Hunting Bushman Show Bone Collector Craig Morgan Red Arrow Hunt Adventure Realtree Road Live 2 Hunt Wildgame Ntn Ult. Adventures The Season OUTD 37 307 43 307 Hunt Adventure Wildgame Ntn (4:20) ›› “Real Steelâ€? 2011 Hugh Jackman. A boxing Web Therapy ’ Weeds Saplings ’ Episodes ’ Dexter Get Gellar Dexter gets help. Homeland Crossfire Brody relives his Weeds Threshold Web Therapy (N) Weeds Threshold Web Therapy ’ SHO 500 500 promoter and his son build a robot fighter. ‘14’ Ă… ‘MA’ Ă… ‘MA’ Ă… captivity. ’ ‘14’ Ă… (N) ’ ‘MA’ ‘MA’ Ă… ‘14’ Ă… ’ ‘MA’ Ă… ‘14’ Ă… Hot Rod TV ‘14’ Gearz ‘14’ My Classic Car Car Crazy ‘G’ Victory NASCAR Victory Lane (N) Formula One Racing Belgian Grand Prix From Spa Francorchamps, Belgium. SPEED 35 303 125 303 Wind Tunnel With Dave Despain Boss Through and Through ‘MA’ Boss Ablution ’ ‘MA’ Ă… ››› “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearlâ€? 2003 Johnny Depp. Boss ’ ‘MA’ STARZ 300 408 300 408 (5:05) ››› “The Thomas Crown Affairâ€? 1999 Pierce Brosnan. ‘R’ (4:35) ›› “The Switchâ€? 2010, Romance-Comedy Jennifer (6:20) ›› “The Jonesesâ€? 2009, Comedy-Drama David ››› “The Rockâ€? 1996, Action Sean Connery, Nicolas Cage, Ed Harris. Alcatraz Island terrorists ›› “Fasterâ€? 2010, Action Dwayne Johnson, Billy Bob TMC 525 525 Aniston, Jason Bateman. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… Duchovny, Demi Moore. ’ ‘R’ Ă… threaten to gas San Francisco. ’ ‘R’ Thornton, Oliver Jackson-Cohen. ’ ‘R’ Ă… MLS Soccer Club Deportivo Chivas USA at San Jose Earthquakes (N) (Live) MLS 36 ‘PG’ ››› “Rocky IIIâ€? (1982, Drama) Sylvester Stallone, Mr. T. Poker After Dark NBCSN 27 58 30 209 Caught Looking ‘G’ Bridezillas Remy & Blanca ‘14’ Bridezillas Jennifer & Blanca ‘14’ Bridezillas Tasha & Remy ‘14’ Bridezillas Remy & Blanca ‘14’ Bridezillas Jennifer & Blanca ‘14’ Girl Meets Gown ‘PG’ *WE 143 41 174 118 Bridezillas Tasha & Remy ‘14’


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

A & A

Mother put off by anger of her newly sober fiance Dear Abby: My fiance and I have dated for almost three years. We plan to be married a year from now. We were close friends for 12 years prior to dating. Abby, over the last two years, he has developed a bad drinking problem and lost 12 jobs in the last year alone. To his credit, he has been sober for a month now and has accepted a new job. Although I’m happy that he has a new job, I’m also concerned because he will be working in a bar. I am bringing my daughter into this marriage and am worried that he will revert to drinking, which wouldn’t be a good environment for my daughter. When I discussed it with him, he became irate and said I had insulted his job and was calling him a loser. Then he accused me of using him to support myself and my daughter. He said my “true colors� came through when I encouraged him to stay sober. I am deeply hurt. I don’t understand why he would say such a thing. We had discussed this before, and he didn’t react this way. The last thing I would ever do is marry someone for money. I have always planned to keep my job after we marry. He is barely speaking to me now, and I don’t understand his anger. Please help. — Depressed and Abandoned in Texas Dear Depressed: Your fiance’s attempt to turn the tables on you, along with his excessive drinking and inability to hold a job, are indications that he has an out-of-control alcohol problem. It is typical for addicts to be defensive and attempt to put anyone who confronts them in a corner. Do not accept the guilt trip. It is admirable that he has been sober for a month, but his job in an establishment where alcohol is the prime product is an almost sure road to selfdefeat. If someone is serious

The way you react could change this year, as surprises become commonplace. What is a given is that you can expect the unexpected. To some people, this could be nervewracking, but to others, the variety is a source of excitement. If you are single, take your time getting to know the apple of your eye; there could be surprises along the way. If you are attached, you learn that you cannot control anyone’s responses except your own, and sometimes not even those. Work with change, as that dynamic can add much to your relationship. ARIES fires you up. 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 You wake up on the right side of the bed this morning. Unfortunately, everyone around you wakes up on the wrong side. Don’t worry; you’ll handle a control game or power play with ease. Tonight: Go for original. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH Read between the lines when speaking to someone. This person isn’t saying what is really going on with him or her. You might not like what you hear. Do not take any statements personally, as everything could change in the near future. Tonight: Get some extra sleep. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH You could have a tussle with a partner or close friend. Truth be told, you really won’t be too upset about the outcome. You demonstrate the Gemini quality of flexibility and simply put your energy somewhere else. Perhaps you join your friends. Tonight: Tomorrow is Monday. Live it up! CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Take a stand, and observe what is happening behind the scenes. You might want to organize a gettogether or handle an important matter. Because you want to, you will do the planning. This you make quite clear. Tonight: Could be late. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Something you least expected becomes a possibility. Do not hold yourself back, and be willing to experiment with breaking out of your normal Sunday routine. Take a step back if you find yourself putting everything you must do between you and your adventure. Tonight: Stop

C C Please email event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event� at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

TODAY DEAR ABBY about surviving such an addiction, the person doesn’t place him- or herself in temptation’s way. Encourage your fiance to reinforce his attempt at sobriety by attending AA meetings. (It is listed in the phone book and online.) Then do your part by attending Al-Anon meetings. Meanwhile, put your wedding plans on hold until you’re absolutely sure he won’t be detrimental to your daughter’s — and your — future. Dear Abby: We have a cabin on a lake in New England. It is next door to some of our relatives. We’ve made friends with neighbors on the other side and would like to invite them over for dinner. Our relatives are also friendly with the neighbors. If we invite them for dinner, must we invite the relatives too? — Judy on “Golden Pond� Dear Judy: Technically, you don’t have to. However, if you have mostly socialized as a “threesome,� feelings may be hurt if you suddenly change what has become customary. Dear Abby: My wife and I are avid readers who sometimes find that we have too many books. Our solution is to donate our excess books to the local USO. We set up a donation box in our church’s foyer, and once a month we carry the donated books to one of our city’s two USO centers. Service members are encouraged to take them with them as they travel. We have found that there’s always room on the bookshelves at the USO. — Tom in San Antonio Dear Tom: Thank you for a terrific suggestion. I’m sure many readers will appreciate it — and so will the recipients. — Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Horoscope: Happy Birthday for Sunday, Sept. 2, 2012 By Jacqueline Bigar

C3

making excuses. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You might need to be more forthright with a child or fiesty friend. He or she could throw a tantrum, no matter what you do. This person needs to let you know when he or she is not happy. A partner clearly might not agree with you. Tonight: Stay close to home. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You might want to lighten up a bit. A friend or loved one appears to be full of energy and vigor. This person also might blurt out words you would prefer not to hear. Do yourself a favor, and do not let this trigger a reaction. Let the moment go. Tonight: Listen to a suggestion. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH Sometimes you have too much energy for your own good, and you need to find a constructive outlet. A sibling or neighbor wants his or her way. It might be much easier just to give in. You do not always need to be the leader. Tonight: Less romping and an earlier bedtime. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Be impulsive and go with the moment. You might surprise yourself by how wild you could get. Do not let money stop you from really enjoying yourself. You are full of get-up-and-go. Let your softer side emerge. Tonight: You wild thing. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH If you don’t need to go far from home, don’t. Your sense of humor comes out when a family member acts up in an unusual manner and encourages you to laugh. Sometimes you take yourself too seriously. Tonight: Meet friends at a favorite dinner spot. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH You understand why someone close makes you crankier than you would like. Use that information with kindness and forethought. Be aware of the many judgments you make, and try to stay more neutral. Tonight: Visit with a family member. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHHH Often, you are not as conscious of your behavior and motives as you’d like. You could save yourself — and others — a lot of aggravation if you would take some time to better understand your reasoning. A friend could be testy. Tonight: Treat yourself. Š 2012 by King Features Syndicate

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. HANDY ANDY MAGIC MAN: The magician performs magic for children and creates balloon animals; included in the price of admission donations, $2 for balloons; 10 a.m., 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m.; Petersen Rock Gardens, 7930 S.W. 77th St., Redmond; 541-382-5574. DIXIELAND PARTY BAND AND FRIENDS: Musicians from the Northwest and California perform; refreshments available; donations accepted; 11 a.m.-8 p.m.; La Pine Moose Lodge, 52510 Drafter Road; 541-5480679. LABOR AND LUMBER: Featuring turn-of-the-century woodworking, cross-cut sawing and cabin building; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. SUNRIVER SUNFEST WINE FESTIVAL: Featuring wines from more than 50 wineries, art vendors, live music, food and more; free admission, signature glass required for tastings; 11 a.m.-6 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-385-7988 or www.sunriversunfest.com. NOTABLES SWING BAND: The big band plays swing, blues, Latin, rock ‘n’ roll and waltzes; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-639-7734 or www. notablesswingband.com. DOG SWIM: Play fetch with your dog, then give him/her a bath; $10; 4-6 p.m.; Cascade Swim Center, 465 S.W. Rimrock Way, Redmond; 541-548-7275 or www.raprd.org. LIVE AT THE RANCH: Featuring a performance by Americana band nelo; $15, $10 ages 6-12; 4 p.m.; Lakeside Lawn at Black Butte Ranch, 12934 Hawks Beard, Sisters; 888-234-5956 or www.blackbutteranch.com/ concerts.

MONDAY LABOR AND LUMBER: Featuring turn-of-the-century woodworking, cross-cut sawing and cabin building; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org.

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. BROOKSWOOD PLAZA FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.; Brookswood Meadow Plaza, 19530 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541-3233370 or farmersmarket@ brookswoodmeadowplaza.com. “THE LAST MOUNTAIN�: A screening of the documentary about environmental impacts of coal mining in West Virginia; free; 6:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Tom Martin talks about his book “Big Water Little Boats�; free; 7 p.m.; Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; 541-317-9407.

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. MUSIC ON THE GREEN: Featuring traditional Hawaiian dancing by the Hokulea Dancers; vendors available; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; Sam Johnson Park, Southwest 15th Street, Redmond; 541-923-5191 or http://visitredmondoregon.com.

THURSDAY TONY SMILEY: The Portlandbased looping rocker performs;

Spokesman file photo

Cascade Swim Center in Redmond will host a dog swim from 4 to 6 p.m. today. Cost is $10. free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com.

FRIDAY GARDEN WORK PARTY: Help complete the reclaimed fence around the Kansas Ave. Learning Garden; free; 9 a.m.-noon; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-385-6908. RUN TO THE CASCADES MOTORCYCLE RALLY: The rally includes live music, jousting, charity poker, classic cars, a tattoo expo and more; a portion of proceeds benefit local charities; $15 day pass, $25 for weekend; 11 a.m.-11 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711 or www. runtothecascades.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:// bendfarmersmarket.com. SISTERS FARMERS MARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenue and Ash Street; www. sistersfarmersmarket.com. FIRST FRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and food in downtown Bend and the Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. SISTERS FOLK FESTIVAL: Threeday folk music festival including performances by James McMurtry, Mary Gauthier, Gregory Alan Isakov and more; SOLD OUT; 5:30 p.m.-1 a.m.; downtown Sisters; 541-5494979, info@sistersfolkfestival.org or www.sistersfolkfestival.org. YOGIS UNITE!: With yoga classes, social activities and dance performances; $25 for two days; 5:30-8:30 p.m.; Juniper Swim & Fitness Center, 800 N.E. Sixth St., Bend; information@yogisunitebend. com or www.yogisunitebend.com. MUNCH & MOVIES: An outdoor screening of “Hugo�; 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. SYNRGY: The Ashland-based reggae band performs; free; 6-9 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House, 1044 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-9242. “GREGORIAN, GOSPEL AND GERSHWIN�: Mark Oglesby presents an organ concert; donations accepted; 7 p.m.; St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church & School, 2450 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-382-3631. RED ROCK SQUARE DANCE: Spectators and dancers welcome; $5, free for spectators; 7-10 p.m.; Redmond Grange, 707 S.W. Kalama Ave.; 541-923-8804. “RICHARD III�: Thoroughly Modern Productions and Stage Right Productions present Shakespeare’s play about the controversial English king; with a champagne reception; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-3129626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheater.com. SCREEN ON THE GREEN: Juggling performance followed by a screening of the PG-rated film “How to Train Your Dragon�; free; 7:30 p.m., 8 p.m. movie; Sahalee Park, B and Seventh streets, Madras; 541475-3351 or www.jcld.org. BLACK BEAST REVIVAL: The rock band performs, with Strive Roots; $5; 8:30 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend.

SATURDAY HIGH DESERT SWAP MEET & CAR SHOW: A sale of antiques and a car show; proceeds benefit local and regional charities; free admission; 7 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-4467 or bramsey@bendbroadband.com.

RUN TO THE CASCADES MOTORCYCLE RALLY: The rally includes live music, jousting, charity poker, classic cars, a tattoo expo and more; a portion of proceeds benefit local charities; $15 day pass, $25 for weekend; 8 a.m.-7 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711 or www. runtothecascades.com. PRINEVILLE FARMERS MARKET: Free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 503-739-0643 or prinevillefarmersmarket@gmail. com. GARDEN WORK PARTY: Help complete the reclaimed fence around the Kansas Ave. Learning Garden; free; 9 a.m.-noon; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-385-6908. SPORTSMAN JAMBOREE COLLECTIBLE SHOW: A show of guns, knives, coins and collectibles; food available; $5, $4 with a trade gun, free ages 12 and younger with an adult; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; La Pine Event Center, 16405 First St.; 541536-6237. YOGIS UNITE!: An outdoor yoga event with classes, exhibitors, a raffle and more; registration requested; $25 for two days; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; information@ yogisunitebend.com or www. yogisunitebend.com. NORTHWEST CROSSING FARMERS MARKET: Free; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives, Bend; 541-3821662, valerie@brooksresources. com or www.nwxfarmersmarket. com. A DAY TO REMEMBER: Featuring a fire truck parade, booths, axthrowing contests, demonstrations, races and more; proceeds benefit a scholarship fund for the children of fallen firefighters; free admission; 11 a.m.-6 p.m.; Big Al’s Firehouse Grill, state Highway 126 and Williams Road, Powell Butte; 541-548-1488. SISTERS FOLK FESTIVAL: Threeday folk music festival including performances by James McMurtry, Mary Gauthier, Gregory Alan Isakov and more; SOLD OUT; 11-12:30 a.m.; downtown Sisters; 541-5494979, info@sistersfolkfestival.org or www.sistersfolkfestival.org. VFW DINNER: A 9/11 barbecue, with a poker run; free; 1-7 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. LA GUITARRA IN MEXICO: A lecture tracing the history of the guitar and its different transformations in Mexico; free; 3 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032, lizg@ deschuteslibrary.org or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. “RICHARD III�: Thoroughly Modern Productions and Stage Right Productions present Shakespeare’s play about the controversial English king; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-3129626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheater.com. JASON & THE PUNKNECKS: The Nashville, Tenn.-based country punk band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.reverbnation.com/venue/ thehornedhand. THE HOONS: The indie rock band performs, with Dead Remedy; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www. silvermoonbrewing.com.

SUNDAY Sept. 9 SPORTSMAN JAMBOREE COLLECTIBLE SHOW: A show of guns, knives, coins and collectibles; food available; $5, $4 with a trade gun, free ages 12 and younger with an adult; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; La Pine Event Center, 16405 First St.; 541536-6237. SISTERS FOLK FESTIVAL:

Three-day folk music festival including performances by James McMurtry, Mary Gauthier, Gregory Alan Isakov and more; SOLD OUT; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; downtown Sisters; 541-549-4979, info@ sistersfolkfestival.org or www. sistersfolkfestival.org. ANNUAL GREAT DRAKE PARK DUCK RACE: Event includes live music, food, activity booths and duck races; proceeds from duck sales benefit local charities; free admission; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; www.theduckrace.com. 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. LA GUITARRA IN MEXICO: A lecture tracing the history of the guitar and its different transformations in Mexico; free; 2 p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1032, lizg@ deschuteslibrary.org or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. SECOND SUNDAY: Carl Adamshick reads from a selection of his works; followed by an open mic; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. “RICHARD III�: Thoroughly Modern Productions and Stage Right Productions present Shakespeare’s play about the controversial English king; $18, $15 students and seniors; 3 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheater.com.

MONDAY Sept. 10 “CAMP AMACHE — AN AMERICAN STORY�: Gordon Nagai talks about his family’s experiences in a Japanese internment camp in Colorado and Japanese volunteers who served in the army; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-4663. CITY FAIRE: The Seattle-based rock band performs; free; 7:3010:30 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116, theastrolounge@theastrolounge. com or www.theastrolounge.com.

TUESDAY Sept. 11 REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 2-6:30 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue; 541-550-0066 or redmondfarmersmarket1@hotmail. 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. HUEY LEWIS AND THE NEWS: The ’80s rockers perform; $39 or $78 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. “LIFE WITH AN INDIAN PRINCE�: A screening of the documentary about traditional falconry practices of the Indian Rajput Princes; free; 7 p.m., doors open 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. “WILD VERSUS WALL�: A screening of the film about how the Mexican border wall affects desert animals and life; followed by a discussion; free; 7 p.m., 6:30 p.m. reception; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-389-0785. BROTHERS GOW: The San Diegobased funk-rock band performs; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www. silvermoonbrewing.com.


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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

Restaurants Continued from C1

Willamette Valley I confess to some bias; I think that Bend ranks second to Portland in this state in the quality of its restaurants. But you won’t go wrong in Eugene, Ashland or the Yamhill County wine country between McMinnville and Newberg. Marché heads the short list of my faves in Eugene. A 15year fixture on the ground floor of the Fifth Street Public Market, Marché (French for “market”) was the brainchild of Stephanie Pearl Kimmel, who like Bennett has received a Beard nomination for the region’s best chef. After training in Paris, Kimmel returned to Eugene — where she had done her undergraduate work at the University of Oregon — to establish the Excelsior Cafe just off campus in 1972. There she was an early pioneer of Oregon’s farm-to-table movement. She sold the Excelsior in 1993 but after four years in travel and “foodie” television, found herself longing for a return to the kitchen. At the end of 1997, Marché was born. A recent dinner was highlighted by a nested butter-lettuce salad with a soft-boiled egg, and a braised lamb shoulder with roasted fennel. And I’ve returned for breakfast and lunch, as well. For Italian, I’m partial to Beppe & Gianni’s. Beppe is Beppe Macchi, a native of Sicily. Gianni is chef John Barofsky. Their restaurant occupies a lovely, century-old house in a residential neighborhood near the southeast corner of the Oregon campus. It is everything an Italian restaurant should be, with a gracious host, attentive service and authentic Sicilian cuisine. I’ve dined here twice, and I plan to return again and again — arriving for an early dinner, as folks are already lining up for tables by 5:30 p.m. My favorite meal was tagliatelle with pork and lamb in a savory red sauce, followed by a house-made tiramisu dessert.

The wine country When I visit McMinnville, I find myself choosing between an old favorite and a new one. The old favorite is another Italian restaurant, Nick’s Italian Cafe. Nick Peirano opened his restaurant in the heart of downtown 35 years ago, and the same formula worked then as works now — five-course prix-fixe dinners featuring his grandmother’s pesto minestrone soup and a deep selection of Oregon wines. (A la carte meals are also available.) Nick has now passed the kitchen to his daughter, Carmen Peirano, and her husband and co-chef, Eric Ferguson. And the couple has extended their reach to an Italian-style salumeria, or butchery, called Fino in Fondo. There can be no fresher meat, which is exactly what I want when Nick’s chefs are roasting Carlton Farms pork according to the menu of the day. Thistle lost any degree of anonymity when it won the “Oregon restaurant of the year” designation in 2011 from Portland’s Oregonian newspaper. But this tiny, holein-the-wall cafe — it seats just 20 at tables and another six at the counter — is just enough off the beaten track that it can remain a bit of a secret. French-Canadian chef Eric Béchard, who does all of the cooking while his fiancee, Emily Howard, waits the tables, acknowledges that his daily-changing menu doesn’t appeal to every patron. Rabbit liver parfait with pickled cherries, and beef tartare with capers and shallots, are

Photo courtesy Restaurant Beck

A master of subtlety, Restaurant Beck owner-chef Justin Wills serves a short menu of dishes that blend Northwest, Pacific Rim and Mediterranean flavors. He prepares hamachi sashimi in several different ways, here with salmon roe as a prime ingredient.

Where to eat • Baked Alaska. No. 1 12th St., Astoria; 503-325-7414, www.bakedak.com. Lunch and dinner every day. Entrees $18 to $28. • The Bay House. 5911 S.W. U.S. Highway 101, Lincoln City; 541-996-3222, www. thebayhouse.org Dinner Wednesday to Sunday. Entrees $26 to $39. • Beppe & Gianni’s Trattoria. 1646 E. 19th Ave., Eugene; 541-683-6661, www. beppeandgiannis.net. Dinner every day. Entrees $14 to $24. • Drina Daisy. 915 Commercial St., Astoria; 503-338-2912, www.drinadaisy.com. Lunch and dinner Wednesday to Sunday. Entrees $15 to $25 • Joel Palmer House. 600 Ferry St., Dayton; 503-8642995, www.joelpalmerhouse. com. Dinner Tuesday to Saturday. Entrees $21 to $43. • Marché. 296 E. Fifth Ave., Eugene; 541-342-3612, www. marcherestaurant.com. Three meals every day. Entrees $22 to $28. • Newman’s at 988. 988 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach; 503-436-1151, www. newmansat988.com. Dinner every day through Oct. 15, then Tuesday to Sunday. Entrees $19 to $32. • New Sammy’s Cowboy Bistro. 2210 S. Pacific Highway, Talent; 541-5352779; no website. Lunch and dinner Wednesday to Sunday. Three-course dinner menu $40 to $50.

not everyone’s cup of tea. But I have had few meals more satisfying than Béchard’s sweet-potato soup followed by black cod with cassoulet-style tarbais beans and arugula. There are a half-dozen fine restaurants in nearby Newberg and Dundee, from Tina’s to the Painted Lady. But of all the fine wine-country restaurants, my No. 1 choice is the Joel Palmer House in Dayton. Why? Because I love mushrooms. Father-and-son chefs Jack and Chris Czarnecki are nationally famous for their extensive use of wild mushrooms and truffles, which they prepare in a lovingly restored, 1857 National Historic Register home in a quiet village eight miles east of McMinnville. At a recent dinner, I enjoyed porcini mushroom risotto with white truffle oil; trumpet-like white chanterelles in an earthy cream sauce; and pork tenderloin topped with black chanterelles and served with sauteed onions, apples and cherries. Even dessert was fungi: candy-cap mushrooms boiled with sugar and water to maple-syrup consistency, then served with ice cream.

• Nick’s Italian Cafe. 521 N.E. Third St., McMinnville; 503-434-4471, www. nicksitaliancafe.com. Lunch and dinner Tuesday to Sunday. Entrees $14 to $26. • Paizano’s Pizza. 2940 Tenth St., Baker City; 541-524-1000, www.paizanospizza.com. Lunch and dinner every day. Pizzas $8 to $33. • The Peerless Restaurant. 265 Fourth St., Ashland; 541-488-6067, www. peerlessrestaurant.com. Dinner only. Entrees $20 to $32 • Restaurant Beck. Whale Cove Inn, 2345 S.W. U.S. Highway 101, Depoe Bay; 541-765-3220, www. restaurantbeck.com. Dinner every night. Entrees $28 to $31. • Stonehedge Gardens. 3405 Cascade Ave., Hood River; 541-3886-3940, www. stonehedgegardens.com. Dinner Tuesday to Sunday. Entrees $13 to $27. • Sybaris. 442 First Ave., Albany; 541-928-8157, www. sybarisbistro.com. Dinner Tuesday to Saturday. Entrees $16 to $29. • Thistle. 228 N.E. Evans St., McMinnville; 503-472-9623, www.thistlerestaurant.com. Dinner Tuesday to Saturday. Entrees $21 to $29. • The Waterfront Depot. 1252 Bay St., Florence; 541-902-9100, www. thewaterfrontdepot.com. Dinner every night. Entrees $7 to $15.

of my personal favorites. At Baked Alaska in Astoria, chef Christopher Holen takes full advantage of its location atop pilings above the Columbia River. A specialty is fresh seafood straight from local fishermen. Holen dusts yellowfin tuna with locally ground coffee before searing it rare; he flambés halibut in Applejack brandy and serves it on a bed of Fuji apples; he roasts Columbia salmon skinon and presents it on a bed of quinoa with sauteed fennel, cauliflower and heirloom tomatoes. In 11 years atop the pier, Baked Alaska has become an Astoria tradition. Holen and his wife and partner, Jennifer, have expanded to include a full-service lounge and even a kitchenware store that opens into the restaurant. Nearby, Drina Daisy may be Oregon’s only Bosnian restaurant. I know of no other that bridges the gap between Greek and Italian. Chef

Fordinka Kanlic fled war-torn Sarajevo in 1999; today, she does all the cooking as her husband, Ken Bendickson, offers from-the-heart service in this small downtown cafe. I recommend rotisserie-turned lamb with a stuffed paprika and, for dessert, baklava dripping with honey. In Cannon Beach, Newman’s at 988 sets the standard. Chef John Newman, previously executive chef at the Stephanie Inn, established this intimate restaurant in 2006 in a small yellow house on the south side of town. He specializes in southern French and northern Italian cuisine. I recommend the prix-fixe menu, which changes nightly and may include the delectable lobster-and-hazelnut ravioli — probably the best ravioli I’ve eaten anywhere. Newman has recently added Fishes Sushi and Japanese Cuisine in downtown Cannon Beach, but I don’t think it meets the standard of his Cannon Beach original.

Central coast The Bay House in Lincoln City has been a fixture since 1978 on a tidal lagoon at the south end of Lincoln City. It’s had its ups and downs over the years, but they’ve all been “ups” since young chef Sean McCart took the kitchen reins three years ago. He handed off earlier this year to Kevin Ryan, and the transition has been seamless. On my last visit, I sat in the dining room for pan-fried soft-shell crab, presented with a blood-orange, hazelnut and frisee salad. Together with a plate of ahi tartare, it was all I required for a superb dinner. Sometimes I prefer the spacious lounge, where I sip wine and order from a menu of small plates, including Manila clams with Andouille sausage and short ribs with parsnip puree. I am thoroughly in love with Restaurant Beck, nestled within Depoe Bay’s intimate Whale Cove Inn. No other Oregon coast restaurant combines such outstanding food with such an amazing view: This bluff-top boutique hotel overlooks a remote cove inhabited by harbor seals — a panoramic view to which diners with window seats are treated. Owner-chef Justin Wills and his wife, Stormee, established the restaurant in 2009 and named it for their son, Becker. It didn’t take long for Wills, an Iowa native who graduated from the Culinary Institute of America in New York, to stake his claim to culinary fame, as this year he was a finalist the “Best Chef Northwest” award. Wills serves a short menu — typically three starters and five entrees — of dishes that blend Northwest, Pacific Rim and Mediterranean flavors. He is a master of subtlety, encouraging a variety of flavors without allowing any of them to overpower a meal. I recommend the tasting menu; and if available, go for the hamachi sashimi with mango gelee, basil leaves and Szechuan peppercorns. Florence’s Waterfront Depot is a quaint bistro in a 1913 train station (moved from Mapleton in 1972) that extends into the Siuslaw River on a Bay Street pier. The ambience blends rusticity with

elegance, and the prices are amazing: Not one entree on the menu, which is scrawled upon a blackboard hanging on the east wall, is priced over $15 — including crabencrusted halibut ($12) and lamb osso buco ($13). A sister restaurant, the 1285 Restobar, has recently opened to rave reviews for its pizza.

Around the state Surprisingly, perhaps, there is not a great wealth of good restaurants in the Medford-Ashland area. None gets more raves than the quirky New Sammy’s Cowboy Bistro, on the old highway connecting the two cities. Named for their young son’s giddy-up proclivities when they opened the rambling hacienda 23 years ago — Sam is now grown, moved away and not particularly interested in either cowboys or the restaurant business, his mother said — New Sammy’s is the passion of Charlene and Vernon Rollins. Charlene does the cooking, Vernon selects the exquisite wines, and diners come from miles around for both. Their own organic garden and fruit trees provide about one-third of their inventory during summer. It’s been a while since I’ve dined here, but remember that I enjoyed everything presented to me — notably a duck confit and kale salad. It was a perfect combination. If you’re in Ashland for the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, I can think of no place better to dine than The Peerless. Located about seven blocks from Bard Central in Ashland’s historic Railroad District, The Peerless boasts a pleasant garden dining area between its main dining room and a circa-1900 boarding house, now refurbished as a six-room bed-and-breakfast hotel. The chefs here, Stefan Peña and Sam Jackson, are Bend natives who cut their culinary teeth at such restaurants as Zydeco and the Blacksmith. My last meal here — a roasted red-and-golden beet salad with poppy-seed goat-cheese cake, plus a rib-eye steak with fava bean succotash and a port-wine fig reduction — was

a great indication of how they are able to combine creativity and flavor in a single meal. In the Columbia Gorge area, my internal radar always guides me to Hood River’s romantic Stonehedge Gardens, where owners Mike and Shawna Caldwell hold forth in a late-19th-century home nestled in a private woodland. Shawna’s recipes focus on Northwest cuisine with Pacific Rim and Mediterranean influences; her crab cakes may be the best around, and many locals visit just for the flaming creme brulee bread pudding dessert. Mike Caldwell, a Hood River native, is a genial host with plenty of experience for the job. Before buying the estate in 2000, he was the maitre d’ at the historic Columbia Gorge Hotel. And the man knows how to tell a story: His mystery novel, “Varietal Tendencies,” is based in part on his experiences as cellar master at Hood River’s highly regarded Flerchinger Vineyards. Finally, in northeastern Oregon where the best dining is often of the steak-andpotatoes variety, there is one outpost of outstanding Italian-style cuisine. Paizano’s Pizza, in Baker City, presents pizza and stuffed stromboli of the type usually only seen in much larger cities. Owners Kina Allen and Stephen White, who pulled up stakes in Bend and relocated to the eastern part of the state, have succeeded in pleasing all appetites with huge salads along with their pizzas. And I, for one, am delighted to have a lone outpost where I can find no others. — Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletin.com.

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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Old Russia emerges in the Golden Ring B y Celestine Bohlen New York Times News Service

We knew that driving a rental car in Russia wouldn’t be easy even before we arrived at the poorly marked Europcar counter at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo International Airport where they deal, on average, with only 14 customers a week. There, it took a nice young man 40 minutes to check our reservation, make photocopies of our documents and test two GPS systems. The first was broken; the second, which he deemed OK, stopped working even as we pulled out of the parking garage. Then we ran smack into the real problem: Russian roads, made worse by Russian drivers. On that first afternoon, heading away from Moscow, we got a taste of both. Clogged intersections; clusters of potholes or “hens’ nests,” as Claire de Laboulaye, my French traveling companion, called them; giant trucks on narrow roads; big-bellied Russian trafficpolice officers trolling for offenders, bringing the flow of traffic to a crawl. A road trip around Russia’s Golden Ring — a circuit of about 10 ancient towns northeast of Moscow, each with its own set of glittering oniondomed churches and medieval fortresses — was going to be a challenge, even for us. Both Claire and I were well prepared by our years of Russian travel, which for each of us began in childhood, and picked up again in the 1980s, under the auspices of the Soviet-era Intourist travel agency, with its KGB-trained guides, grim hotels and empty restaurants serving awful food. Those days, happily, are gone. In the past 20 years another, more accommodating Russia has emerged, beyond the slick tourist hubs of Moscow and St. Petersburg. In the Golden Ring towns — several of them, anyway — this means decent, occasionally even charming hotels, functional phones and Wi-Fi, better restaurants and innumerable churches and monasteries lovingly rescued from Sovietera neglect. All of this was enough to lure us into a rented Nissan Tiida for six days of adventure, without a functioning GPS, just a Lonely Planet guidebook and a Russian atlas, which, maddeningly, displayed our route over several pages, sometimes with bits missing. Even in Soviet times, the Golden Ring was a draw for tourists, starting with the magnificent walled monastery in Sergiyev Posad, about 43 miles from Moscow, dominated by bright blue and gold cupolas. From there, the other towns are spaced out about a half day’s drive from each

Photos by James Hill / The New York Times

A woman takes a photograph of the kremlin — the citadel of a Russian city — in Rostov Veliky, Russia, July 14. A road trip through Russia’s Golden Ring, a circuit of ancient towns northeast of Moscow, reveals old monasteries, churches and colorful cupolas. Wall-to-ceiling Frescoes line the inside of the Church of Elijah the Prophet in Yaroslavl, Russia, July 15. Russia’s Golden Ring is a region known for its bewildering number of churches, convents and monasteries.

other, as the ring stretches up toward the Volga River. Some stops — Yaroslavl, Kostroma and Vladimir — are proper (if small) cities, with populations from 300,000 to 650,000. We decided to make only fleeting stops in these and to concentrate on smaller towns — Pereslavl-Zalessky, Rostov Veliky, Plyos and Suzdal — all of which have kept something of their pre-Soviet character. With the exception of Plyos, a pleasant provincial river town, all are steeped in Russian history, linked to towering figures like Alexander Nevsky, Ivan the Terrible, Peter the Great and Nicholas II, the last czar.

Geraniums are visible in the windows of an izba in Rostov Veliky, Russia.

It’s a region known for its bewildering number of churches, convents and monasteries. After St. Sergius founded his monastery at Sergiyev Posad around 1340, other hermit monks followed his example and headed north, seeking salvation in nature, building an astonishing 150 monasteries in just 100 years. Backed by the power of the Moscovite princes, this extraordinary missionary movement was to become a key force in the unification of Russia. This legacy was destroyed or abandoned during Soviet rule, but in the past 20 years that devastation has been reversed as the Russian Orthodox Church and individual believers undertake a countrywide restoration All of this lay ahead of us as we set off from the airport on a summer afternoon, driving through the dust and smog of exurban Moscow. After a night spent at a private dacha, not far from the glories of Sergiyev Posad, we headed north. Pereslavl-Zalessky, a hilly town of 42,000 people whose main road sweeps past a half-dozen monasteries, has a grand past that dates from the 12th century, when it was established by Prince Yuri

Locally produced fruits and vegetables are offered for sale outside a house in a village in between Yaroslavl and Kostroma, Russia.

Dolgoruky, best known as the founder of Moscow. It is a pretty town, intersected by a tree-lined river where fishermen stake out their favorite spots. Some of the 19th-century two-story town houses have been restored, with coats of pink, green and yellow paint. If you avert your gaze from an ugly new shopping center, you can imagine a scene from a novel about provincial prerevolutionary Russia. Virtually all of the Orthodox Christian monasteries in Pereslavl are in various states of renovation. One, the Goritsky, which looks like something

from a Russian fairy tale, is the home of the local museum, which was closed. We stopped at two others, which are once again functioning as convents. At the 14th-century Fyodorovsky Monastery, we followed a group of black-clad nuns, one on her cellphone, walking briskly toward the main church. There we had our first encounter with a fa-

miliar Russian facial expression: the scowl that melts into a smile. We had approached the nun behind the candle counter and asked for the name of the church. “And you,” she snarled, “who are you?” We explained that we were tourists interested in the wonderful restoration, and her face instantly lighted up. Suddenly Sister Natalya was eager to tell stories. This kind of encounter happened again and again. Russians like to tell stories; whether they are true or not is unimportant. Then we headed off to Rostov Veliky, justly famous for its gorgeous skyline of manycolored cupolas rising above Lake Nero. The Rostov Kremlin, with its white stone walls and covered walkway from which you can look out across the lake, or inward to a pretty garden with a pond, has been restored, in particular its three chapels with orange-tinted frescoes. On our way to Yaroslavl the next day, we made an impromptu detour to the starkly impressive Borisoglebsky monastery, built in the 16th century, with its massive walls and towers. The grounds inside were unkempt, full of lilac bushes in full bloom, and quiet, except for the sound of a single bell ringing at midday. In Suzdal, our last stop, the tourism industry is operating at full tilt. Where there were once only horse-drawn carriages, there are now also bright pink buggies, shaped like pumpkins and pulled by ponies. The trading arcade (a row of businesses sheltered by an arcade), a standard feature of old Russian towns, is full of restaurants, crowded with tourists in the high season, both Russian and foreign. The next day, when we finally dropped the car off in Moscow, at a Europcar agency hidden away on a back street in a bank building, we checked our speedometer: As it turned out, we had gone more than 800 miles

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

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Milestones guidelines and forms are available at The Bulletin, or send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to: Milestones, The Bulletin, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. To ensure timely publication, The Bulletin requests that notice forms and photos be submitted within one month of the celebration.

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A

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Samantha Koch and Christopher Klecker.

Koch — Klecker Samantha Koch and Christopher Klecker, both of Redmond, plan to marry June 22, 2013, at Pioneer Park in Bend. The future bride is the daughter of Laura De Block, of Bend. She is a 2010 graduate of Bend High School. She works as a cashier at Kohls

Kelsey Johnson and Roger Nonella.

Johnson — Nonella Kelsey Johnson and Roger Nonella were married Aug. 11 at Johnson Ranch in Redmond with a reception following. The bride is the daughter of Del and Lori Johnson, of Redmond. She is a 2005 graduate of Alpha Omega Academy and a 2009 graduate of California Polytechnic State University, where she studied animal science. She is a farm manager at West Texas A&M University and a Ph.D. candi-

date in equine nutrition. The groom is the son of Tom and Darla Nonella, of Klamath Falls. He is a 2005 graduate of Henley High School and a 2009 graduate of California Polytechnic State University, where he studied agricultural business. He works as a Professional Rodeo Cowboy Association (PRCA) tie-down roper. The couple honeymooned with a cruise to Alaska. They will settle in Canyon, Texas, and then in Redmond.

Keith and Joan (Elrod) Iselin.

Iselin Keith and Joan (Elrod) Iselin, of Sunriver, celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary Aug. 31 with a dinner celebration at the Sunriver Lodge with their children and grandchildren. They also plan to celebrate with an RV trip in the fall. The couple were married with a candlelit ceremony Aug. 31, 1962, at First Congregational Church in Ontario, Calif. They have two

children, Todd (and Jessica), of Oregon City, and Suzanne, of Bend; and four grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs. Iselin sold real estate together in Maui for seven years and then worked together at Sunriver Realty for 12 years until their retirement in 2009. They were avid tennis players for 30 years. They currently enjoy traveling in their motor home and hiking. They have lived in Central Oregon for 17 years.

Kyle Skidgel and Stanley Suenaga.

Steven and Gail (Sands) Merydith.

Skidgel — Suenaga

Merydith

Kyle Skidgel and Stanley Suenaga were married Aug. 16 at Sawyer Park in Bend. A reception will follow at their home next summer. The bride is the daughter of Sherri Skidgel, of Redmond, and the late David Skidgel. She is a 1988 graduate of Redmond High School and a 1998 graduate of Oregon State UniversityCascades Campus where she studied liberal sciences, and a 2012 graduate of Oregon State University-Cascades Campus, where she earned a master of

arts degree in eaching. She is currently an English teacher at Mountain View High School. The groom is the son of Keizo and Jane Suenaga, of Los Angeles. He is a 1977 graduate of University High School in Los Angeles and a 1984 graduate of California State University, Dominguez Hills, where he studied business administration. He is the general manager of public safety for the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. The couple will honeymoon in the San Juan Islands. They will settle in Redmond

Steven and Gail (Sands) Merydith, of Bend, celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary with a party hosted by their children and an Alaskan cruise. The couple were married Sept. 2, 1972, at United Methodist Ebbert Memorial Church in Springfield. They have three children, Scott (and Jenny), of Redmond, Chris, of Bend, and Kim, of Portland; and three grandchildren. Mr. Merydith works as a

repairman for High Desert Appliance in Bend. He is a car enthusiast and was a member of the Chevy Club in Central Oregon. He is currently restoring his dad’s Studebaker. Mrs. Merydith is the office manager for the Pediatric Heart Center at St. Charles Bend. She enjoys reading and they both love spending time with their children and grandchildren. They have been members of Eastmont Church for more than 25 years. They have lived in Central Oregon for 33 years.

What’s in a name? Trends come and go By Tracy Grant The Washington Post

William Shakespeare, that really famous writer of stories including “Romeo and Juliet,� didn’t think that names should matter very much. He had Juliet say: “What’s in a name? That which we call a rose “By any other name would smell as sweet.� But many of us would disagree with old Shakespeare on how much a name matters. For example, do you like being one of four Andrews in your class? Or do you tease the girl named Amelia by calling her Amelia Bedelia, after the character in the books? The government keeps track

of baby names, noting which ones are popular when. (A record of every birth, complete with the child’s name, gets filed with the government.) A new website called Findmypast .com looked at the records and made a fascinating discovery: The most popular girl names change a whole lot more than the most popular boy names. Look at the lists below. They show the five most popular girl and boy names in 1940 and where those names rank today. 1940 Top Girl Names (followed by their 2011 rank) 1. Mary, 112 2. Barbara, 774 3. Patricia, 667

4. Judith, 883 5. Betty, not in the top 1,000 1940 Top Boy Names (followed by their 2011 rank) 1. James, 17 2. Robert, 61 3. John, 27 4. William, 3 (this name actually moved up in rank!) 5. Richard, 127 We could be wrong, but we’re guessing that more of you have a James, William or Robert in your classroom than have a Judith, Barbara or Betty. What are the names you’re most likely to be calling classmates this year? Here are the most popular names for babies born in 2002, who will be turning 10 this year. Is your

name here? Most popular names 2002 Girls Emily Madison Hannah Emma Alexis Boys Jacob Michael Joshua Matthew Ethan So what does it all mean? Not much. Kids have to live with the names their parents give them. And it’s easy for Shakespeare to say names don’t matter. “William� is still pretty popular.

in Bend. The future groom is the son of Ken and Maureen Klecker, of Bend. He is a 2006 graduate of Mountain View High School and a 2011 graduate of Central Oregon Community College, where he studied criminal justice. He works as a security guard for Security Pros Inc. in Redmond.

B Delivered at St. Charles Bend Rodney and Danielle Hines, a boy, Austin Joseph Hines, 6 pounds, 11 ounces, Aug. 11. Daniel and Jill Johnson, a boy, Silas Paul Johnson, 9 pounds, 3 ounces, Aug. 10. Juan Vega and Charnelle Danzuka, a boy, Carlos Marquel Vega, 4 pounds, 7 ounces, Aug. 8. David Hall and Wendy Weinthrob, a boy, Ryder Isaiah Hall, 6 pounds, 3 ounces, July 1.) Nicholas and Brooke Foster, a girl, Bailey Quinn Foster, 6 pounds, 7 ounces, Aug. 12. Eric and Christina Hamaker, a girl, Madison Claire Hamaker, 7 pounds, 6 ounces, Aug. 11. Nain and Megan Munoz, a girl, Ella Janel Munoz, 6 pounds, 6 ounces, Aug. 15. Matthew and Christina Vogel, a boy, Bryce Matthew Vogel, 7 pounds, 1 ounce, Aug. 17. Eric and Allie Sorrenson, a girl, Anna Joan Sorrenson, 7 pounds, 1 ounce, Aug. 17. Robert and Jennifer VanCamp, a boy, Oliver Robert VanCamp, 6 pounds, 5 ounces, Aug. 13. Cory Fields and Stephanie Johnson, a girl, Emma Lorraine Fields, 5 pounds, 9 ounces, Aug. 10. Neal and Lindsey Richards, a boy, Thomas George Richards, 8 pounds, 4 ounces, Aug. 17.

Dusten and Allison Anderson, a boy, Levi Joseph Anderson, 7 pounds, 15 ounces, Aug. 3.

Delivered at St. Charles Redmond Randy and Krista Howell, a boy, Mason Lawrence Howell, 8 pounds, 9 ounces, Aug. 10. Ethan and Taylor Adams, a girl, Delaney Rae Adams, 8 pounds, 15 ounces, Aug. 14. Christopher and Ashley Major, a girl, Bristol Leigh Major, 6 pounds, 7 ounces, Aug. 14. Scott and Heather Satterlee, a boy, Cole Mason Satterlee, 7 pounds, 12 ounces, Aug. 23. ) Jerred and Correy Ashcraft, a girl, Rachel Maylee Ashcraft, 7 pounds, 11 ounces, Aug. 24. Cyrus and Kelly Cravens, a boy, Caleb Joseph Cravens, 8 pounds, 2 ounces, Aug. 25. Kevin Struck and Tia Schlichting, a boy, Trenton Allen Royce Struck, 7 pounds, 8 ounces, Aug. 27. Wally Wise and Katy Stewart, a girl, Lexi Lynn Wise, 7 pounds, 11 ounces, Aug. 11.

Delivered at Motherwise Community Birth Center Trevor and Bethany Lawson, a girl, Adeline Lawson, 7 pounds, 10 ounces, July 7. Michael and Elizabeth Griffin, a girl, Leota Grace Griffin, 7 pounds, 13 ounces, July 29.

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

V S

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SUDOKU

Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.

Volunteer Search is compiled by the Department of Human Services Volunteer Services, 1300 N.W. Wall St., Suite 103, Bend 97701. It is usually published in The Bulletin the first Sunday of the month. Changes, additions or deletions should be sent to the above address, or email Lin. H.Gardner@state.or.us or call 541-693-8988. DESCHUTES RIVER WOODS NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION: www.drwna.org or Barbara at info@ drwna.org or 541-382-0561. DISABLED AMERICAN VETERANS (DAV): Don Lang, 541-647-1002. EAST CASCADES AUDUBON SOCIETY: www.ecaudubon.org or 541-241-2190. THE ENVIRONMENTAL CENTER: 541-385-6908. EQUINE OUTREACH HORSE RESCUE OF BEND: www.equineoutreach.com or Cathi at catz66@gmail.com. FAMILY KITCHEN: Cindy Tidball, cindyt@bendcable.com or 541-610-6511. FAMILY RESOURCE CENTER: 541-389-5468. FOSTER GRANDPARENTS PROGRAM: Steve Guzanskis, 541-678-5483. FRIENDS OF THE BEND LIBRARIES: www.fobl.org or Meredith Shadrach at 541-617-7047. FRIENDS WITH FLOWERS OF OREGON: www. friendswithflowersoforegon.com or 541-480-8700. GIRL SCOUTS: 541-389-8146. GIRLS ON THE RUN OF DESCHUTES COUNTY: www. deschutescountygotr.org or info@ deschutescountygotr.org. GRANDMA’S HOUSE: 541-383-3515. HABITAT RESTORE: Di Crocker, 541-312-6709. HEALING REINS THERAPEUTIC RIDING CENTER: Darcy Justice, 541-382-9410. HEALTHY BEGINNINGS: www.myhb. org or 541-383-6357. HIGH DESERT CHAMBER MUSIC: Isabelle Senger, www. highdesertchambermusic.com, info@highdesertchambermusic.com or 541-306-3988. HIGH DESERT INTERCULTURAL FESTIVAL: Barb, bonitodia@msn. com or 541-447-0732. HIGH DESERT MUSEUM: 541-382-4754. HIGH DESERT SPECIAL OLYMPICS: 541-749-6517. HIGH DESERT TEENS VOLUNTEER PROGRAM: www. highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4757. HOSPICE OF REDMONDSISTERS: www.redmondhospice. org or Volunteer Coordinator at 541-548-7483. HUMAN DIGNITY COALITION: 541-385-3320. HUMANE SOCIETY OF CENTRAL OREGON: Jen, jennifer@hsco.org or 541-382-3537. HUMANE SOCIETY OF CENTRAL OREGON THRIFT STORE: Liz, 541-388-3448. HUMANE SOCIETY OF THE OCHOCOS: 541-447-7178. HUMANE SOCIETY OF REDMOND: volunteer@redmondhumane.org or 541-923-0882. HUNGER PREVENTION COALITION: Marie, info@ hungerpreventioncoalition.org or 541-385-9227. IEP PARTNERS: Carmelle Campbell at the Oregon Parent Training and Information Center, 888-505-2673. JEFFERSON COUNTY CRIME VICTIMS’ ASSISTANCE PROGRAM: Tina Farrester, 541-475-4452, ext. 4108. JEFFERSON COUNTY VOLUNTEER SERVICES: Therese Helton, 541475-6131, ext. 208. JUNIPER GROUP SIERRA CLUB: 541-389-9115. JUNIPER SWIM & FITNESS CENTER: Kim, 541-706-6127. KIDS CENTER: Rachel Kane, 541383-5958, ext. 274. LA PINE COMMUNITY KITCHEN: 541-536-1312. LA PINE HIGH SCHOOL: Jeff Bockert, jeff.bockert@bend.k12. or.us or 541-355-8501. LA PINE PUBLIC LIBRARY: Cindylu, 541-317-1097. LA PINE RURAL FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT: Volunteer Coordinator, 541-536-2935. LA PINE SENIOR ACTIVITY CENTER: Pat Potter, 541-536-6237. LA PINE YOUTH DIVERSION SERVICES: Mary, 541-536-5002. LATINO COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION: Brad, volunteer@ latca.org or 541-382-4366. LONG-TERM CARE OMBUDSMAN PROGRAM: Nancy Allen, 541-312-2488. MEADOWLARK MANOR: Peggy Kastberg, 541-382-7025. MOUNTAINSTAR FAMILY RELIEF NURSERY: 541-322-6820. MOUNTAIN VIEW HOSPITAL: JoDee Tittle, 541-475-3882, ext. 5097. MOUNTAIN VIEW HOSPITAL HOSPICE: 541-460-4030 or Tori Schultz, tschultz@mvhd.org or 541475-3882, ext. 5327. NATIONAL ALLIANCE ON MENTAL

Editor’s note: The organizations listed below are seeking volunteers for a variety of tasks. For additional information on the types of help they need, see a more detailed listing at www.bendbulletin .com/volunteer. ILLNESS — CENTRAL OREGON: Eileen White, namicentraloregon@ gmail.com. THE NATURE OF WORDS: www.thenatureofwords.org or 541-330-4381. NEAT REPEAT THRIFT SHOP: Peg, 541-447-6429. NEIGHBORIMPACT: chrisq@ neighborimpact.org or 541-5482380, ext. 106. NEWBERRY HABITAT FOR HUMANITY: 541-593-5005. NEWBERRY HOSPICE: 541-536-7399. OPPORTUNITY FOUNDATION THRIFT STORE OF BEND: 541-389-0129. OPPORTUNITY FOUNDATION THRIFT STORE OF REDMOND: 541-548-5288. OREGON ADAPTIVE SPORTS: www. oregonadaptivesports.org or Kendall Cook at 541-848-9390. OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY EXTENSION SERVICE: 541548-6088, 541-447-6228 or 541-475-3808. OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY MASTER GARDENER VOLUNTEER PROGRAM: http://extension. oregonstate.edu/deschutes or 541-548-6088. PARTNERS IN CARE: www. partnersbend.org or Sarah Peterson at 541-382-5882. PEACE BRIDGES, INC., BEND: www. abridgetopeace.org or John C. Schwechten at 541-383-2646. PEACE CENTER OF CENTRAL OREGON: www.pcoco.org or 541-923-6677. PFLAG CENTRAL OREGON: www.pflagcentraloregon.org or 541-317-2334. PILOT BUTTE REHABILITATION CENTER: 541-382-5531. PRINEVILLE SOROPTIMIST SENIOR CENTER: Melody, 541-447-6844. READ TOGETHER: 541-388-7746. REDMOND FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY: 541-312-1060. REDMOND HABITAT FOR HUMANITY: Scott or Warren, 541-548-1406. REDMOND HABITAT RESTORE: Roy, 541-548-1406. REDMOND HIGH SCHOOL: 541-923-4807. REDMOND INTERCULTURAL EXCHANGE (R.I.C.E.): Barb, bonitodia@msn.com or 541-447-0732. REDMOND LEARNING CENTER: Zach Sartin, 541-923-4854. REDMOND YOUNG LIFE: 541-923-8530. RELAY FOR LIFE: Stefan Myers, 541-504-4920. RONALD MCDONALD HOUSE: Mardi, 541-318-4950. SACRED ART OF LIVING CENTER: 541-383-4179. ST. CHARLES IN BEND AND ST. CHARLES IN REDMOND: 541-706-6354. ST. VINCENT DE PAUL SOCIAL SERVICES: 541-389-6643. ST. VINCENT DE PAUL — LA PINE: 541-536-1956. ST. VINCENT DE PAUL — REDMOND: 541-923-5264. ST. VINCENT DE PAUL SOCIAL SERVICES: 541-389-6643. SAVING GRACE: 541-382-9227 or 541-504-2550. SCHOOL-TO-CAREER PARTNERSHIP: Kent Child, 541-322-3261. SISTERS HABITAT FOR HUMANITY: 541-549-1193. SMART (START MAKING A READER TODAY): www.getsmartoregon.org or 541-355-5600. SOROPTIMIST INTERNATIONAL OF BEND: www.sibend.org, president@ sibend.org or 541-728-0820. SUNRIVER AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE: 541-593-8149. SUNRIVER NATURE CENTER & OBSERVATORY: Susan, 541-593-4442. TOUCHMARK AT MT. BACHELOR VILLAGE: 541-383-1414 TOWER THEATRE FOUNDATION: 541-317-0700. TRILLIUM FAMILY SERVICES: 503-205-0194. TUMALO LANGLAUF CLUB: Tom Carroll, 541-385-7981. UNITED WAY OF DESCHUTES COUNTY: www.liveunitedco.org or 541-389-6507.

SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C8

JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C8

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five games weekly at www.bendbridge.org.

106.7 KPOV, BEND’S COMMUNITY RADIO STATION: info@kpov.org or 541-322-0863. AARP: www.aarp.org/money/ taxaide or 888-687-2277. ABILITREE (PREVIOUSLY CENTRAL OREGON RESOURCES FOR INDEPENDENT LIVING): 541-617-5878. ALYCE HATCH CENTER: Andy Kizans, 541-383-1980. AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY: Charlie Johnson, 541-434-3114. AMERICAN RED CROSS: 541-749-4111. AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL: Philip Randall, 541-388-1793. ART COMMITTEE OF THE REDMOND FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY: Linda Barker, 541-312-1064. ARTS CENTRAL STATION: 541-617-1317. ASPEN RIDGE ALZHEIMER’S ASSISTED LIVING AND RETIREMENT COMMUNITY: 541-385-8500. ASSISTANCE LEAGUE OF BEND: 541-389-2075. BEND AREA HABITAT FOR HUMANITY: 541-385-5387. BEND LIBRARIES FRIENDS: www. fobl.org or 541-617-7047. BEND PARK & RECREATION DISTRICT: Kim, 541-706-6127. BEND’S COMMUNITY CENTER: Taffy, 541-312-2069. BEND SENIOR CENTER: Kim, 541-706-6127. BEND SPAY & NEUTER PROJECT: 541-617-1010. BETHLEHEM INN: www. bethleheminn.org or 541-322-8768. BIG BROTHERS BIG SISTERS OF CENTRAL OREGON: 541-3126047 (Bend), 541-447-3851, ext. 333 (Prineville) or 541-325-5603 (Madras). BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA: Paul Abbott, paulabbott@scouting.org or 541-382-4647. BOYS & GIRLS CLUBS OF CENTRAL OREGON: www.bgcco.org, info@ bgcco.org or 541-617-2877. CAMP FIRE USA CENTRAL OREGON: campfire@bendcable.com or 541-382-4682. CASCADES THEATRICAL COMPANY: 541-389-0803. CASCADE VIEW NURSING AND ALZHEIMER’S CARE CENTER: 541-382-7161. CAT RESCUE, ADOPTION & FOSTER TEAM (CRAFT): www.craftcats.org, 541-389-8420 or 541-598-5488. CENTRAL OREGON COUNCIL ON AGING (COCOA) AND MEALS ON WHEELS: www.councilonaging.org or 541-678-5483. CENTRAL OREGON LOCAVORE: www.centraloregonlocavore.com or Niki at info@centraloregonlocavore. com or 541-633-0674. CENTRAL OREGON SYMPHONY ASSOCIATION: Julie, 541-383-7779. CENTRAL OREGON VETERANS OUTREACH: covo.org@gmail.com or 541-383-2793. CHILDREN’S VISION FOUNDATION: Julie Bibler, 541-330-3907. CHIMPS, INC.: www.chimps-inc.org or 541-385-3372. CIRCLE OF FRIENDS: Beth, beth@ acircleoffriendsoregon.com or 541-588-6445. THE CITIZEN REVIEW BOARD (CRB): crb.volunteer.resources@ojd.state. or.us or 888-530-8999. CITY OF BEND: Cheryl Howard, choward@ci.bend.or.us or 541-388-5505. COURT APPOINTED SPECIAL ADVOCATE (CASA): www. casaofcentraloregon.org or 541-389-1618. DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES/VOLUNTEER SERVICES: Lin Gardner, 541-693-8988. DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES/VOLUNTEER SERVICES CROOK COUNTY: Valerie Dean, 541447-3851, ext. 427. DESCHUTES LAND TRUST: www.deschuteslandtrust.org or 541-330-0017. DESCHUTES COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT: Tuesday Johnson, Tuesday_Johnson@co.deschutes. or.us or 541-322-7425. DESCHUTES COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE — CENTRAL OREGON PARTNERSHIPS FOR YOUTH: www.deschutes.org/copy, COPY@ deschutes.org or 541-388-6651. DESCHUTES COUNTY VICTIMS’ ASSISTANCE PROGRAM: Diane Stecher, 541-317-3186 or 541-388-6525. DES CHUTES HISTORICAL MUSEUM: 541-389-1813, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST: Jean Nelson-Dean, 541-383-5576. DESCHUTES PUBLIC LIBRARY SYSTEM: 541-312-1032. DESCHUTES RIVER CONSERVANCY: marisa@deschutesriver.org or 541.382.4077 x25.

LOS ANGELES TIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD

CROSSWORD SOLUTION IS ON C8


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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

Musical Continued from C1 Time passed, during which Forrest moved to Vermont, where he met actor Susan Marie Snyder, a cast member of the old TV soap opera “Santa Barbara.” She was familiar with Forrest’s music and had heard he’d written a musical. With her help, a staged reading (an on-stage reading with minimal production, costumes, etc.) of the third draft of “It’s Only Money” was held at a small Vermont theater in 1996. The evening of the event, a snowstorm deposited 3 feet of snow. “I’m thinking, ‘Nobody’s going to come.’ Well, apparently, buzz around town had gotten pretty strong,” Forrest says. “They were turning people away.” Forrest played keyboards during the reading, for which he and the principals had only a short amount of time to rehearse. However, old scenery from the theater’s prop room, including a small Empire State Building, lent the reading a New York ambiance, and all of the cast had thought to wear clothing appropriate to their character. “Somehow, all this came together the right way,” Forrest says. The crowd gave the musical a standing ovation, and Forrest asked a friend to get copies made of the tape of the show. From there, things began to go less well. After he received his copy of the videotape, Forrest popped it in a VCR only to discover it cut off at the beginning of the second act. “I’m going, ‘Are you kidding me?’ ” Forrest says. When he called his writing partner about the setback, Kelley had worse news for him: The only electronic copy of their script was lost when Kelley’s computer crashed. “Remember, this is 1996,” notes Forrest. Kelley had saved a back-up on floppy disc, but that was lost when Kelley’s dog, Freddy, knocked over a vase, damaging the floppy. What of the scripts used for the reading? According to Forrest, in those days, “it cost $35, $40 to reproduce the scripts, so (the theater) said they owned them.” “I go, ‘OK, this is a sign from the universe or something,’ ” says Forrest, who later moved to San Diego and, in 2005, to Bend. Two years ago this month, he attended a wedding in Central Park, where he met up with his old Vermont friend, who, unbeknownst to Forrest, had made an extra videotaped copy of “It’s Only Money” back in 1996.

Or as Forrest puts it, “He snaked a copy for himself.” At the wedding, “He pulls out of his knapsack this DVD,” which turned out to be a copy of the staged reading of “It’s Only Money.” “I say, ‘Wow, that’s incredible! But what’s the difference? It stops at the beginning of the second act.’ ” “He goes, ‘No, David, the guy who did the digital transfer was able to get the whole thing off.’ ” Still there were no existing copies of the script, and “the music is all in my head,” Forrest says. When he told his old partner, Kelley, about the find, Kelley was reluctant to begin transcribing the whole thing from the DVD. It turned out they wouldn’t have to. Forrest’s buddy wasn’t the only one to boost something from the 1996 reading: Forrest later learned that a box he’d left behind at his sister’s New York home during his West Coast move contained a copy of the script from the Vermont theater. “I must have kept one as a memento,” Forrest says. When he took it to a local printer in Bend, he was charged just $14 for a scanned Microsoft Word copy. “It’s Only Money” was back in business. He sent it to Kelley, and the two began working on another draft — again. Not long after all this, Forrest attended a CTC production of “Oliver!” at Greenwood Playhouse in early 2011. “The production values were incredible,” he says. Six weeks later, he worked up the nerve to approach Lana Shane, the theater’s operations manager, and asked if she had 15 minutes to hear his story. By the end of it, she asked to see the script and DVD. He was hoping for a two-night run during the 2011-2012 season — performances that, yes, he would have filmed — and would love to see it directed by Linford-Foreman. Instead, CTC’s play selection committee wanted to do a three-week run for this upcoming 2012-2013 season. Forrest would have to wait just a little longer, but he’d have the director he wanted, not to mention a full cast and staging. Though the script being used for the November production is his and Kelley’s fifth draft, the songs are the same ones the two wrote so many years ago. Among them are a reggae song, uptempo tunes and ballads. “I started this thing over 25 years ago,” Forrest says, laughing. “For some reason, it’s come back.” — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com

SOLUTION TO TODAY’S SUDOKU

ANSWER TO TODAY’S JUMBLE

SUDOKU IS ON C7

JUMBLE IS ON C7

ANSWER TO TODAY’S LAT CROSSWORD

CROSSWORD IS ON C7

Get A Taste For Food, Home & Garden Every Tuesday In AT HOME

Tips to safely nosh around the world By Carol Pucci The Seattle Times

I’ve sipped Ayran, a frothy yogurt drink made with water and salt, in the tent of a Kurdish nomad in Turkey; sampled grasshoppers seasoned with chili powder and lime in Mexico; and eaten kimchee stored in a pot buried in the backyard of a homestay house in Korea. Only once in many years of traveling have I become sick enough from food to take the medicine I always carry with me. That was in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, where I ate at a Western-style private club that served an Italian-style pasta and chicken. For me, eating is part of the fun and adventure of traveling. Some of my most memo-

rable travel experiences have to do with getting to know people over food and drink. To stay healthy, I follow advice provided by the travel nurses at Group Health Cooperative in Seattle, add a few of my own do’s and don’ts, then dive in and eat like a local. I stick to bottled water, even in hotels that supply filtered water. “You don’t know what the filtration system is like,” says Group Health travel nurse Michelle Duffy York. She recommends extra precautions such as carrying a portable sterilizer to plunge into the plastic bottles that might not have been properly sealed. • I’m a street-food fan (if you are, too, you might want to take a look at Lonely Planet’s

new book, “The World’s Best Street Food”), but play it safe by sticking to sweets such as the unusual treats I found in the Muslim quarter of Xian, China. “Eight Treasures” was a memorable pudding, a 20-cent disc of sticky rice flavored with dates, sugar, sesame and nuts, cooked in a tiny wooden box, then removed intact and served on a stick. • Don’t assume that familiar, Western-style foods are safer than the local fare. My Cambodia experience is an example. • Become a temporary vegetarian. Undercooked or unrefrigerated meat and chicken attract bacteria. I opted for the “veg” side of the menu while traveling for three weeks in India and never became ill.

• I follow Group Health’s advice to take two PeptoBismol tablets (generics are fine, too) shortly before each meal. The active ingredient, bismuth subsalicylate, coats the insides, explains Group Health’s York, preventing bacteria from sticking to the intestine and spreading. Pepto-Bismol tablets aren’t for everyone. Travelers who can’t tolerate aspirin should avoid them, as should those taking certain medicines, pregnant women and children under 12, says York. Check with your doctor, then if you get the OK, practice reaching into your pocket, unwrapping the tablets with one hand and popping them into your mouth without anyone seeing.


SPORTS

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Scoreboard, D2 MLB, D4 College football, D3, D5 Prep sports, D6 Tennis, D3 Golf, D6

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

www.bendbulletin.com/sports

RUNNING

PREP GIRLS CROSS-COUNTRY SEASON PREVIEW

Hundreds run in Sunriver event

Experience should make Lava Bears contenders

SUNRIVER — Fiveand 10-kilometer races were staged Saturday on the first day of the 2012 Sunriver Marathon for a Cause. The second annual event, a series of races staged over two days to benefit breast cancer prevention and awareness, concludes today at Sunriver Resort with the marathon and half marathon races. A Bend runner, Jason Townsend, placed first overall in Saturday’s 5K. His time was 18 minutes, 24.0 seconds. The first female finisher was Maddie Hearn, of Lake Oswego, whose time of 22:33.9 was 14th overall in a field of 258 finishers. In the 10K, Portland’s Terry Gentry was the overall winner among 122 finishers with a time of 39:51.1. The women’s winner was Emily Dimick, of Albany, who was 10th overall in 46:49.7. Today’s races both start at the Sunriver Resort main lodge. The marathon, a Boston marathon qualifier, is set to start at 7 a.m.; the half marathon starts at 7:30 a.m. Race proceeds will benefit the Oregon and Southwest Washington affiliate of Susan G. Komen for the Cure. For more information, visit www.sunrivermarathon.com. Results of Saturday’s races are listed in Scoreboard, D2.

By Elise Gross The Bulletin

Inside

After finishing second at last year’s Class 5A girls cross-country state meet, Bend High is in position to steal the spotlight this fall. The Lava Bears return five of seven state qualifiers — four of whom are fourth-year runners. Last season, Summit and Bend finished 1-2 at both the Class 5A Special District 1

• A breakdown of all the area high school girls cross-country teams competing in the 2012 season, D6

championship meet. At state, the Storm earned a near-perfect score of 16, while Bend totaled 101 points. With Summit returning only two state qualifiers, the Lava Bears have a chance to close the gap.

“They’re all back,” says Bend High coach Lisa Nye, who has returned to her post as the Bears’ head coach after a year abroad teaching in Hungary. “All the girls have had three years of experience … it’s fun to see years of work culminate in a strong senior year.” Jenna Mattox, who finished ninth at last year’s state meet, is expected to lead the Lava Bears. See Contenders / D6

Alex McDougall / The Bulletin

Bend’s returning state cross-country qualifiers, from left, McKenzie Bell, Makeila Lundy, Sarah Perkins, Melissa Hubler, Jenna Mattox and Hannah Anderson. After placing second at state last year, the team’s goal is to beat Summit and win the state championship.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Ducks roll in opener • No. 5 Oregon starts the season 1-0 with a win over Arkansas State By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press

— Bulletin staff report

COLLEGE FOOTBALL Pac-12 1 USC Hawaii

49 10

5 Oregon Arkansas State

57 34

Arizona Toledo

24 17

Washington San Diego State

21 12

Nevada California

31 24

Colorado State Colorado

22 17

• The Ducks dominate early in the first half en route to a convincing 57-34 victory

Top 25 2 Alabama 8 Michigan

Don Ryan / The Associated Press

Oregon running back De’Anthony Thomas outruns a score of Arkansas State defenders on his way to a touchdown during the first half of Saturday night’s game in Eugene.

41 14

3 LSU North Texas

41 14

4 Oklahoma UTEP

24 7

6 Georgia Buffalo

45 23

7 Florida State Murray State

69 3

10 Arkansas Jacksonville State

49 24

11 West Virginia Marshall

69 34

12 Wisconsin Northern Iowa

26 21

14 Clemson Auburn

26 19

15 Texas Wyoming

37 17

17 Nebraska Southern Miss

49 20

18 Ohio State Miami (Ohio)

56 10

19 Oklahoma State Savannah State

84 0

22 Kansas State Missouri State

51 9

23 Florida Bowling Green

27 14

EUGENE — risha Helms didn’t watch a minute of Oregon’s 57-34 football blowout over Arkansas State, but even she could tell this game was ugly. “Wow, I’ve heard the foghorn go off a lot already,” Helms, who worked crowd control inside the hallways of the press box at Autzen Stadium on Saturday night, said early in the first quarter after the Ducks had gone up 29-0. “Not good.” No, it wasn’t good for the visiting Red Wolves. Oregon dominated the reigning Sun

T

BEAU EASTES Belt Conference champions from the start, compiling 605 yards of total offense — 417 of which came in the first half — on a staggering 96 plays in what was both teams’ 2012 season opener. Arkansas State, playing its first game under new head coach Gus Malzahn, the former Auburn offensive coordina-

Offenses have been taking to the air like never before By Judy Battista New York Times News Service

• Top 25 roundup, D3, Pac-12 roundup, D5

tor, trailed 50-3 midway through the second quarter before making the final score somewhat respectable, recording 24 second-half points against Oregon backups in front of a handful of fans who stayed past 11 p.m. to watch the entire game. Duck redshirt freshman quarterback Marcus Mariota shined in his first start, passing for 200 yards and three touchdowns on 18 of 22 passing in a little more than a quarter and a half of action before the subs came in. See Ducks / D5

EUGENE — Marcus Mariota showed no signs of stage fright in his debut for the Oregon Ducks. The redshirt freshman quarterback made his first start in a real college football game Saturday night, passing for 200 yards and three touchdowns in No. 5 Oregon’s 57-34 season-opening victory over Arkansas State. De’Anthony Thomas caught two passes for touchdowns and ran for another while collecting 119 yards in total offense as the Ducks built a 50-10 lead by halftime. Kenjon Barner, taking over as starter after the departure of running back LaMichael James, ran for 66 yards and two Oregon scores. The Ducks sat most of their starters after the break. The loss spoiled coach Gus Malzahn’s first game as coach of the Red Wolves, who went 10-3 last season and won the Sun Belt Conference title. Arkansas State senior quarterback Ryan Aplin passed for 304 yards and three touchdowns, including a 72-yard scoring pass to Julian Jones just before halftime. Mariota replaced Darron Thomas, who decided to leave Oregon with a year of eligibility left. Mariota was on the practice squad last season and was something of a mystery because Oregon closes practices, but he beat out Bryan Bennett for the starter’s job in fall camp. See Oregon / D5

New England’s Tom Brady was among three quarterbacks who threw for more than 5,000 yards last season. Bill Kostroun / The Associated Press

The New York Giants had finished the first practice of training camp this summer when coach Tom Coughlin, in a moment that might have seemed to come out of the mid-1970s, announced his hopes for the new season. “We definitely have got to rush the ball better,” he said. “The balance factor has always been something we’ve been able to count on. We’ve got to get back to that.” It was a rudimentary bit of coaching philosophy that raised one question: Why?

NFL The Giants were the perfect champions for the 2011 season: the team with the lowest-ranked running game in the NFL won the Super Bowl after a season in which the run was subjugated more than ever. Three quarterbacks — Matthew Stafford, Drew Brees and Tom Brady — each passed for more than 5,000 yards last season. Before that, there had been only two 5,000yard passing seasons in league history. Four of the top six individual singleseason passing marks — including one by Eli Manning — were set in 2011. Perhaps more telling, according to statistics kept by Pro-Football-Reference.com, teams averaged 229.7 yards passing a game last season, the most in league history and an 8-yard jump

over the previous high, set in 2010. Teams averaged 34 passing attempts a game, the second most. In contrast, teams averaged 27.3 rushing attempts — tied for the second fewest since at least 1932, as far back as the website’s statistics go. With five teams preparing to start rookie quarterbacks in Week 1 — an NFL season has never started with more than two rookie starting quarterbacks — the tilt toward the pass seems to be more acute than ever. It is no secret why. “It’s very difficult, it’s not impossible, but it’s highly, highly unlikely that you’re going to find someone win a world championship without the guy at that position,” said John Elway, the Denver Broncos’ executive vice president for football operations. See Offenses / D5


D2

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

SCOREBOARD RUNNING Local Sunriver Marathon for a Cause Saturday Results (Times in hours, minutes, seconds) 5K 1, Jason Townsend, Bend, 18:24.0. 2, Justin Bell, Seattle, 19:00.5. 3, Michael Gillard, Tualatin, 19:23.6. 4, Carson Cohn, Portland, 19:40.3. 5, Tanner Hockley, Gresham, 19:46.6. 6, Stephen Fatland, Condon, 20:16.2. 7, Phil Lantz, Oregon City, 20:19.5. 8, Ron Hockley, Gresham, 20:19.9. 9, Nate Pedersen, Bend, 20:43.2. 10, Mark Hough, Brush Prairie, Wash., 21:28.6. 11, Alexander Hockley, Gresham, 22:07.6. 12, Gary Daniels, West Linn, 22:12.5. 13, Gus Hearn, Lake Oswego, 22:33.8. 14, Maddie Hearn, Lake Oswego, 22:33.9. 15, Jon Ballew, Vancouver, 22:55.8. 16, Randy Olanco, Bend, 23:56.5. 17, Jim Lekas, Portland, 24:37.6. 18, Matthew Dimick, Albany, 24:41.8. 19, Ernie Stepp, Las Vegas, 24:55.0. 20, Julianne Schutfort, Corvallis, 25:24.2. 21, Angie Sharp, Boise, Idaho, 25:34.9. 22, Erik Fisher, Richland, Wash., 25:35.4. 23, Jennifer Stepp, Las Vegas, 25:37.0. 24, Jordan Linn, Happy Valley, 25:41.6. 25, Angela Bukhom, Corvallis, 25:44.3. 26, Jim Martin, Eugene, 25:57.3. 27, Rich Mithoff, Bend, 25:58.2. 28, Carl Welander, Bend, 26:01.4. 29, Deedee Estes, Grants Pass, 26:10.8. 30, Sean Baartmans, Portland, 26:19.3. 31, Gavin Summers, Portland, 26:35.6. 32, Lindsay Hofer, Portland, 26:36.2. 33, Michelle Morris, Oregon City, 26:38.1. 34, Tyler Smith, Lake Oswego, 26:42.7. 35, Leyton Richards, Lake Oswego, 26:54.5. 36, David Presland, Bend, 27:00.4. 37, Trina Willardson, Portland, 27:09.1. 38, Savoury Jacobson, Redmond, 27:13.9. 39, Lee B. Croft, Phoenix, 27:16.7. 40, Ryan Abbott, Bend, 27:26.5. 41, Steve Hull, Vancouver, 27:33.4. 42, Karen Thornton, Brownsville, 27:39.9. 43, Jennifer Welander, Bend, 27:44.4. 44, Jeremy Buller, Bend, 28:06.0. 45, Abigail Herriges, The Dalles, 28:12.8. 46, Josephine Abbott, Bend, 28:13.0. 47, Avery Dillon, Portland, 28:34.5. 48, Jessica Dupont, Corvallis, 28:34.7. 49, Lauren Richards, Lake Oswego, 28:38.9. 50, Andrew Dryden, Dexter, 28:45.9. 51, Dave Gillard, Tualatin, 28:51.1. 52, Brandy Anderson, Bend, 29:07.1. 53, Mary Dimaggio, 29:08.3. 54, Michelle Moss, West Linn, 29:10.5. 55, Kelli Johnston, West Linn, 29:10.5. 56, Erin O’Sullivan, Corvallis, 29:18.4. 57, Rayna Bevando, Bend, 29:35.0. 58, Daniel McGreevy, Simi Valley, Calif., 29:35.0. 59, Marjorie McGreevy, Sunriver, 29:35.9. 60, Kevin Cozad, Sunriver, 29:36.0. 61, Russell Black, Renton, Wash., 29:42.5. 62, Elizabeth Homer, Seattle, 29:44.0. 63, Heidi Lammers, Vancouver, 29:49.6. 64, Latoya Fick, Portland, 29:56.7. 65, Tanner Hough, Brush Prairie, Wash., 29:56.8. 66, Stacee Wells, Bend, 29:59.2. 67, Ryan Schas, Bend, 29:59.2. 68, Issac Ballew, Vancouver, 30:02.2. 69, Christen Skaugen, Portland, 30:06.9. 70, Macy Ballew, Vancouver, 30:14.1. 71, Jim Sander, Kirkland, Wash., 30:15.2. 72, Claire Sander, Kirkland, Wash., 30:15.5. 73, Dani Miller, Sunriver, 30:19.4. 74, Paul Abbott, Bend, 30:34.4. 75, Sara Martell, Brush Prairie, Wash., 30:35.1. 76, Billy Macy, Sherwood, 30:36.2. 77, Monty Norris, Lebanon, 30:36.3. 78, Erin Walsh, Beaverton, 30:36.4. 79, Scott Timmons, Vancouver, 30:39.9. 80, Reed Dinger, Lake Oswego, 30:40.4. 81, Marcus Monnie, Beaverton, 30:44.4. 82, Raymond Baartmans, Portland, 30:51.1. 83, Julie Schlendorf, 30:53.5. 84, Linda Stecker, Camas, Wash., 30:56.4. 85, Suzanne Hocklay, Gresham, 31:05.4. 86, Ginette Gallagher, 31:09.8. 87, Len Edholm, West Linn, 31:17.1. 88, Amanda Gillette, Bend, 31:21.0. 89, Heather Marti, Rochester, Wash., 31:21.1. 90, Sean Daugherty, Beaverton, 31:24.9. 91, Holly Lekas, Portland, 31:39.5. 92, Gail Mithoff, Bend, 31:43.9. 93, Cambria Jacobson, Redmond, 31:47.8. 94, Olivia Kovac, Lake Oswego, 31:56.3. 95, Sally Kelly, Nehalem, 31:56.8. 96, Angelina Bishman, Sunriver, 32:04.8. 97, Rachel Arnold, Gresham, 32:10.1. 98, Randall Iverson, Sunriver, 32:14.1. 99, Kaitlin Brouillard, Redmond, 32:14.3. 100, Angela Buller, Bend, 32:21.7. 101, Melinda Dillon, Portland, 32:26.0. 102, Robert Stevenson, Corvallis, 32:31.1. 103, Margaret Imel, Diamond, 32:32.6. 104, Jake Hull, Vancouver, 32:34.0. 105, Phillip Black, Renton, Wash., 32:35.1. 106, Helena Berber, Lake Oswego, 32:36.8. 107, Randy Rothweiler, Salem, 32:38.6. 108, Jennifer Tullius, 32:45.2. 109, Jay Corenlius, Portland, 32:48.3. 110, Lorelle Shearer, Seattle, 33:00.7. 111, Steve Reagin, Burien, Wash., 33:14.8. 112, Andrew Hay, Portland, 33:22.7. 113, Vick Taylor-Roskopf, Vancouver, 33:23.5. 114, Sandra Black, 33:29.3. 115, Jason Gealon, Bend, 33:36.2. 116, Jolinda Smith, Eugene, 33:42.1. 117, Shawn Hathaway, Corvallis, 33:53.0. 118, Amy Koebke Williams, Portland, 33:56.8. 119, Jack Schlendorf, 33:58.5. 120, Leeann Moyer, Portland, 33:59.8. 121, Izaak Smith, Hillsboro, 34:01.1. 122, Amy Smith, Hillsboro, 34:01.3. 123, Nicholas Braun, Portland, 34:11.4. 124, Wendi Braun, Portland, 34:11.8. 125, Constance Fehlman, La Pine, 34:14.1. 126, Douglas Strachan, Bend, 34:26.2. 127, Carolyn Embry, Powell Butte, 34:29.0. 128, Ronald King, Ridgefield, Wash., 34:38.9. 129, Sherry Wells, Powell Butte, 34:41.2. 130, Nikki Brouillard, Redmond 34:45.8. 131, Rebecca Brouillard, Redmond, 34:45.9. 132, Cathy Avilez, Lebanon, 34:49.3. 133, John Kleeman, Klamath Falls, 34:58.3. 134, Penny Reagin, Burien, Wash., 35:06.6. 135, Daniel Harper, Coburg, 35:07.9. 136, Noah Gonzalez, Ontario, 35:10.2. 137, Anna Mae Williams, Keizer, 35:26.7. 138, Lydia Newton, Philomath, 35:27.1. 139, Lizz Schulz, Beaverton, 35:40.4. 140, Jill Guevara, Ladera Ranch, Calif., 35:48.9. 141, Michael Guevara, Ladrea Ranch, Calif., 35:49.7. 142, Jayde Brumitt, Bend, 35:57.2. 143, Ave Williams-Tortor, Portland, 35:57.6. 144, Kona Lewis, Newport, 35:59.7. 145, Jeff Moyer, Portland, 36:20.6. 146, Meagan Iverson, Ashland, 36:29.3. 147, Vienna Jacobson, Redmond, 36:34.9. 148, Katherine Rink, Birmingham, 36:54.1. 149, Erin Batchelor, Milwaukie, 37:00.3. 150, Kari Hay, Portland, 37:30.1. 151, Amiee Harr, Wilsonville, 37:50.6. 152, Eric Schumacher, Camas, Wash., 38:00.0. 153, Laurie Schumacher, Camas, Wash., 38:00.1. 154, Jon Holdaway, Odenton, Md., 38:09.9. 155, Whitney Fahlman, Salem, 38:12.9. 156, Carrie Lewis, Newport, 38:15.0. 157, Heather Dayle Ayers, Shady Cove, 38:25.7. 158, Deb Coulter, Sunriver, 38:31.7. 159, Rowan Daugherty, Beaverton, 38:32.4. 160, Alison Daugherty, Beaverton, 38:32.7. 161, Keith Prince, Seattle, 38:33.9. 162, Robert Kavanaugh, Bend, 38:47.0. 163, Amanda Roberson, Medford, 38:54.7. 164, James Lewis, Newport, 39:02.5. 165, Lisa Jacobson, Redmond, 39:05.6. 166, Lily Calltas, Bend, 39:07.4. 167, Dan Bolthouse, Beaverton, 39:14.2. 168, Carlee Bolthouse, Beaverton, 39:14.3. 169, Gordon Hughes, Sunriver, 39:22.9. 170, Leianne Stinton, Sherwood, 39:26.0. 171, Peyton Miller, Bend, 39:34.1. 172, Rachel Miller, Bend, 39:34.3. 173, Ken Corenlius, Portland, 39:37.7. 174, Kayla Moss, West Linn, 39:56.2. 175, George Johnston, Sherwood, 40:04.7. 176, Suzy Carton, Portland, 40:49.4. 177, Bruce Koch, 40:53.1. 178, Kelsey Card, La Pine, 41:03.7. 179, Jenna Sumner, La Pine, 41:04.0. 180, Adrianna Dryden, Dexter, 41:10.9. 181, Alice Wavers, La Pine, 41:24.1. 182, Marianne Fialer, Bend, 41:42.0. 183, Shari Reed, Lake Oswego, 41:44.7. 184, Jodi Wilkins, Aloha, 41:45.0. 185, Samantha Rothweiler, Salem, 41:48.7. 186, Jennifer Franchuk, Bend, 42:49.0. 187, Reagan Hough, Brush Prairie, Wash., 42:56.8. 188, Bryce Baker, Portland, 43:03.3. 189, Chloe Miller, Bend, 43:04.8. 190, Jennifer Hough, Brush Prairie, Wash., 43:05.0. 191, Devon Downeysmith, Portland, 43:05.1. 192, Katherine Anderson, Issaquah, Wash., 43:18.9. 193, Kristen Anderson, 43:19.3. 194, Tina Anderson, Issaquah, Wash., 43:19.6. 195, Maddy Lamken, Bend, 43:27.2. 196, Megan Merydith, Redmond, 43:27.2. 197, Marney Dragoo, Lake Oswego, 43:27.4. 198, Robert Scholes, Portland, 43:54.4. 199, Carson Rotter, Portland, 43:54.5. 200, Debra Chase, Camas, Wash., 44:12.3. 201, Kyle Bottoms, Prineville, 44:12.4. 202, Jeremy Bottoms, Prineville, 44:12.5. 203, Kathryn Bottoms, Prineville, 44:12.7. 204, Mira Baartmans, Portland, 44:59.5. 205, Sharon Baartmans, Portland, 45:02.1. 206, Juliette Holdaway, Odenton, 45:20.7. 207, Tim Perry, Portland, 45:21.8. 208, Tess Perry, Portland, 45:21.8. 209, Rudy Svanlennak, Sunriver, 45:23.3. 210, Reams Lynn, Corvallis, 46:10.0. 211, Katie Wilson, Portland, 46:22.2. 212, Andrea Pinedo, Portland, 46:22.4. 213, James Kakes, Sunriver, 46:46.2. 214, Linda Kakes, Sunriver, 46:58.3. 215, Jessica Sayers, Sunriver, 46:59.3. 216, Ginger Hall, Port Orchard, Wash., 47:09.4. 217, Kimberly Hull, Vancouver, Wash., 47:26.4. 218, Riley Hull, Vancouver, Wash., 47:26.4. 219, Wally Cozad, Sunriver, 47:27.0. 220, Sydney Bevando, Bend, 48:34.5. 221, Joyce McGreevy, Evanston, Ill., 48:35.6. 222, Andrew Shrock, Simi Valley, Calif., 48:36.3. 223, Zoe Krichko, Klamath Falls, 49:04.5. 224, Kris Krichko, Bend, 49:16.1. 225, Amanda Shrock, Simi Valley, Calif., 49:19.5. 226, Carrie Monnie, Beaverton, 49:55.5. 227, Joanne Wehunt, Beaverton, 49:55.6. 228, Carrie Lecompte, South Park Village, Wash., 50:45.1. 229, David Reynolds, Sunriver, 51:12.5. 230, Janet Reynolds, Sunriver, 51:12.6.

231, Rowa Hurst-McCreedy, Portland, 51:26.0. 232, Alexa Blaskowsky, Portland, 51:26.1. 233, Linda Blaskowsky, Portland, 51:48.1. 234, Mary Perry, Portland, 51:48.2. 235, Sandy Young, Sunriver, 53:03.1. 236, Christine Hamilton, Sunriver, 53:03.4. 237, Ramona Bieber, Bend, 55:28.7. 238, Tara Bieber, Bend, 55:29.8. 239, Larry Tullius, Gresham, 56:32.1. 240, Susan Tullius, Gresham, 56:32.3. 241, Jenika Taylor, Vancouver, Wash., 57:29.3. 242, Heather Borowinski, Bend, 57:42.7. 243, Georgia Borowinski, Bend, 57:43.3. 244, Mark Roskopf, Vanvouver, Wash., 58:05.0. 245, Jill Celestskye, Shady Cove, 58:43.5. 246, Kar Spurlock, Bend, 1:02:42.8. 247, Peggy Strand, Vancouver, Wash., 1:02:42.9. 248, Lyn Lawson, Bend, 1:02:43.2. 249, Nan Muktoyuk, Portland, 1:02:43.3. 250, Carolyn Price, South Park Village, Wash., 1:03:37.7. 251, Debra Tierney, Roseville, Calif., 1:03:56.3. 252, Gayle Christmas, Klamath Falls, 1:03:59.5. 253, Lea Mathieu, Ione, 1:09:43.2. 254, Deb Hale, Seattle, 1:09:45.9. 255, Mary Lockman, Seattle, 1:09:46.6. 256, Jammie Allen, Ione, 1:09:46.4. 257, Kimberly Watwood, Bend, 1:10:48.9. 258, Steven Franchuk, Bend, 1:14:03.1. 10K 1, Terry Gentry, Portland, 39:51.1. 2, David Stackhouse, Honolulu, 40:49.5. 3, Lee Randall, Bend, 41:01.1. 4, Matthew Rasmussen, Keizer, 43:33.2. 5, Roger White, Bend, 43:57.3. 6, Marcus Eschelbach, Bend, 45:56.9. 7, Griffin Koerner, Portland, 46:23.1. 8, John T. Sterling, Bend, 46:39.2. 9, Jared Taylor, Vancouver, Wash., 46:47.1. 10, Emily Dimick, Albany, 46:49.7. 11, Josh Miller, Hillsboro, 46:54.7. 12, Aaron Cooper, Portland, 47:06.0. 13, Katie Cave, Eugene, 48:14.6. 14, Lance Eves, Molalla, 48:15.3. 15, Grant Summers, Portland, 48:15.9. 16, Ethan Miles, Portland, 48:49.8. 17, Levi Miles, 48:50.1. 18, Mark Grand, Bend, 48:51.4. 19, Jeff Hearn, Lake Oswego, 49:03.7. 20, Scott Wills, Happy Valley, 49:13.7. 21, Carolyn Courtwright, Bend, 50:27.4. 22, Marel Pease, Kirkland, Wash., 50:33.0. 23, Jen Jenninger, Seattle, 51:01.9. 24, Lance Tullius, Vancouver, Wash., 51:30.3. 25, Peter Snyder, Eugene, 51:37.5. 26, Karen Jearn, Lake Oswego, 52:08.4. 27, Dan Einters, Salem, 52:49.4. 28, Traci Rink, Birmingham, Ala., 52:53.4. 29, Celeste King, Ridgfield, Wash., 52:58.0. 30, Johnny Horner, Lebanon, 53:01.2. 31, Shane Geunes, Hillsboro, 53:06.4. 32, Larry Bailey, Bend, 53:10.9. 33, Hannah Fatland, Condon, 53:32.4. 34, Erin Christ, West Linn, 53:35.2. 35, Amy Pattison, Tualatin, 53:37.5. 36, Mike Conrad, Happy Valley, 53:51.1. 37, Beth Stubbs, Richland, Wash., 53:58.1. 38, Rick Dimaggio, Portland, 54:14.1. 39, Denise Kai, Happy Valley, 54:18.3. 40, Carson Bowler, Portland, 54:28.6. 41, Unknown, 54:48.4. 42, Trevor McCreery, Bend, 55:23.9. 43, Kellie Dezort, Puyallup, Wash., 55:32.3. 44, Patty Glick, Seattle, 55:43.9. 45, Garrett Galvan, Bend, 56:02.7. 46, Brett Hartlaub, Vancouver, Wash., 57:22.2. 47, George Wood, Medford, 57:26.9. 48, Jaden Rotter, Portland, 58:39.5. 49, Laura Benjamin, Portland, 59:03.7. 50, Tricia Rotter, Portland, 59:06.0. 51, Cody Jamilton, Redmond, 59:15.9. 52, Keonna Vercruysse, Redmond, 59:29.2. 53, Devin Adams, Redmond, 59:34.5. 54, Michael Dryden, Dexter, 59:43.8. 55, Jeanine Eschelbach, Bend, 1:00:03.5. 56, Christopher Homery, Monticello, 1:00:20.8. 57, Catherine Miller, La Grande, 1:00:36.3. 58, Jamie Chartier, Roseburg, 1:00:48.7. 59, Justin Finestone, Bend, 1:00:51.1. 60, Jaina Hamilton, Redmond, 1:00:58.0. 61, Bernice Scheidler, Redmond, 1:00:58.1. 62, Linda Jensen, Portland, 1:01:01.1. 63, Sandi Erba, Woodland, Wash., 1:01:06.3. 64, Mary Spanks, Portland, 1:01:08.9. 65, Maryann Martin, Sunriver, 1:01:14.5. 66, Unknown, 1:01:45.0. 67, Kate Chavez, Portland, 1:01:55.3. 68, Janelle Schmid, Redmond, 1:02:05.2. 69, Adeline Braun, Portland, 1:02:21.2. 70, Marcy Anderson, Bend, 1:02:37.6. 71, Adam Braun, Portland, 1:02:38.2. 72, Tony Courtwright, Bend, 1:03:08.7. 73, Jody Stottjodys, Redmond, 1:03:13.2. 74, Allison Brady, Portland, 1:03:22.9. 75, Cori Miller, Hillsboro, 1:03:32.5. 76, Jenniffer Smith, Bend, 1:03:353.2. 77, Jeremy Anderson, Bend, 1:04:25.2. 78, Christoph Baldridge, Salem, 1:04:25.2. 79, Thomas Anderson, Issaquah, Wash., 1:04:26.8. 80, Unknown, 1:04:58.4. 81, Natalie Miles, Portland, 1:05:42.8. 82, Jill Markwardt, Portland, 1:05:45.9. 83, Jolley Cassell, Monticello, 1:05:46.8. 84, Joshua Scheidler, Redmond, 1:05:48.9. 85, Kristin Ostendorf, Bend, 1:06:14.9. 86, Jennifer Matthiesen, Dundee, 1:06:52.0. 87, Deb Howes, Bend, 1:07:24.1. 88, Ellen Vorster, Hood River, 1:07:41.8. 89, Patty Kellar, Corvallis, 1:07:47.2. 90, Andy Anderson, Bend, 1:07:48.4. 91, Paula Taylor, Dundee, 1:10:35.6. 92, Max Regier, Portland, 1:10:46.7. 93, Tara Baldridge, Salem, 1:11:24.6. 94, Alexander McGranahan, Walnut Creek, Calif., 1:11:47.2. 95, Jean McGranahan, Walnut Creek, Calif., 1:11:47.7. 96, Jennifer Merydith, Redmond, 1:12:08.5. 97, Cameron Marijosius, Bend, 1:12:19.6. 98, Susan Franck, Astoria, 1:13:47.9. 99, Daniel Johnston, Portland, 1:15:07.7. 100, Erin Martin, Bend, 1:15:21.7. 101, Lauren Bardenett, Hood River, 1:16:24.1. 102, Laurie Puntney, Grants Pass, 1:16:54.5. 103, Kayla Wilhelm, Bend, 1:16:54.6. 104, Sandy Austin, Redmond, 1:18:02.8. 105, Sherry Cady, Redmond, 1:18:03.7. 106, Windi Hunting, Hood River, 1:18:33.3. 107, Cera Lamken, Bend, 1:23:08.8. 108, Jan Wood, Medford, 1:26:24.6. 109, Sarla Rice-Smith, Bend, 1:27:10.9. 110, Laurie Jarvis, Redmond, 1:27:11.0. 111, Ryan Stephen, Tigard, 1:31:39.4. 112, Francis Patterson, Sunriver, 1:35:20.6. 113, Teri Jendro, Sunriver, 1:35:20.6. 114, Kathy Bailey, Redmond, 1:35:56.4. 115, Amy Stephen, Tigard, 1:39:25.3. 116, Cindy Stone, Portland, 1:42:38.3. 117, Marie Joover, Gresham, 1:42:38.4. 118, Kathryn Leathers, Fairview, 1:42:38.4. 119, Shawn Watkins, Gresham, 1:42:38.6. 120, Gloria Wilson, Redmond, 1:47:50.4. 121, Sheri Philpott, Terrebonne, 1:47:51.3. 122, Tracy Downing, Terrebonne, 1:47:53.1.

GOLF Local Club Results AWBREY GLEN Men’s Sweeps, Aug. 22 Partner’s Better Ball First Flight — 1, John Maniscalco/John Seaton, 61. 2, Jeff Keller/Dave Morton, 65. Second Flight — 1, Dennis Sienko/Rusty Ertle, 66. 2, Bob Stark/Bob Scott, 67. Third Flight — 1, Larry Haas/Gary Hill, 63. 2, Paul Lumpkin/Bud Fincham, 65. Nine Hole Women’s Sweeps, Aug. 23 Shamble 1, Maryann Freedman/Darlene Warner/Alicia Mehlis/blind draw, 27. 2, Rosie Long/Sally Filliman/Patty Stark/Anne Goldner, 28. Women’s Sweeps, Aug. 30 Cha Cha Cha 1, Shannon Morton/Molly Mount/Norma Barnes/ Anne Goldner, 114. 2, Theresa Kavanaugh/Louann Thomas/Moe Bleyer/Carol White, 117. BEND GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB Men’s Daily Game, Aug. 9 Best Nine Scores on the Card First Flight (0-9 handicaps) — Gross: 1 (tie), Carl Ryan, 29; Chuck Wehrle. Net: 1 (tie), Woody Kinsey, 27; Brian Mikkelborg, 27. 3, Kevin Rueter, 27.5. 4, Tom Archey, 28.5. Second Flight (10-15) — Gross: 1, Mac Ryder, 29. 2 (tie), Jim Rodgers, 33; Brian Case, 33. Net: 1, Craig Smith, 25.5. 2, Terry Rennie, 26.5. 3 (tie), Bob Caine, 27; Roger Demaris, 27; Richard Gagne, 27; Ron Takuyama, 27. Third Flight (16 and over handicaps) — 1, Ed Williams, 22.5. 2 (tie), Gary Christensen, 24; Sid Smith, 24. Richard Morehead, 26.5. Men’s Deschutes’ Cup, Aug. 21 Bend vs. Awbrey Glen Team Match Play Team — 1, Bend Golf and Country Club, 18.5. 2, Awbrey Glen, 11.5. Individual matches — Tom Riley/Mike Binns (Bend) def. Bob Johnson/Larry Hinkle (Awbrey), 2-1. Mac Ryder/Greg Vernon (Bend) def. Ken Waskon/Ed Hagstrom (Awbrey) 3-0. Jon Drake/Brad Patrick (Bend) tie Bill Macri/Lon Ulmer (Awbrey) 1.5-1.5. Jerry Mattioda/Craig Smith (Bend) tie Bert Larson/Joe Oberto (Awbrey) 1.5-1.5. Brett Evert/Bob Roach (Bend) tie John Maniscalco/Bill Long (Awbrey) 1.5-1.5. Tom Carrico/Greg Walsh (Awbrey) def. Bill Degree/Kevin Rueter (Bend) 2.5-.5. Pat McClain/Jim Keller (Bend) def. Bob Browning/Ken Renner (Awbrey ) 2-1. Mike Smolich/Spencer Sanvitale (Bendt) def. Eric Loberg/ Jim Bowlin (Awbrey) 2.5-.5. Jeff Wilson/Tim Cecil (Bend) tie Nick Vaughn/Hiram Becker (Awbrey) 1.51.5. Charlie Rice/Matthew Silvey (Bend) def. Ron Seals/Don Miller (Awbrey) 2.5-.5. Ladies’ Golf Association, Aug. 22 Stroke Play Championship Flight — Gross: 1, Sue Keeney, 79. 2, Connie Newport, 82. 3, Gretchen Byrd, 86. Net: 1, Kandy Lamson, 70. 2, Donna Keller, 71. 3, Judie Bell Putas, 75. A Flight — Gross: 1, Shirleen Chambers, 87. 2, Teddie Allison, 92. Net: 1, Jeannie Adkisson, 72. 2, Cindi Eielson, 73. B Flight — Gross: 1, Elaine Dehart, 91. 2, Jody

Chapman, 94. Net: 1, Joan Thye, 67. 2, Linda Bjorvik, 71. C Flight — Gross: 1, Mary Ellen Marlatt, 98. Net: 1, Nancy Eldredge, 70. D Flight — Gross: 1, Charlotte Rodgers, 105. Net: 1, Ann Moore, 71. Nine Hole Flight Fewest Putts — 1, Linda Beccio, 14. 2 (tie), Carolyn Olsen, 16; Sally Mann, 16. BLACK BUTTE RANCH Men’s Club, Aug. 22 Best Ball 1, Keith Kaneko/Jeff Reents/Rob Ball/Les Stevens, 115. 2, Marv Hoff/Jerry Kvanvig/Tom Hedford/blind draw, 119. 3, Bob Hausman/Bruce Gibbs/Tim Shuler/ blind draw, 120. BRASADA Sunriver Resort Men’s Club, Aug. 22 Net Best Ball 1, Greg Cotton/Robert Hill/Randy Egertson/blind draw, 115. 2, Dan Weybright/Charlie Wellnitz/Tom Ellis/Don Wright, 119. 3, Grant Seegraves/Bill Boston/ Clair Spaulding/Russ Porter, 119. Individual — Gross: Don Olson, 75. Net: Charlie Wellnitz, 63. Skins — Gross: Dan Weybright 2. Gene Carpenter 2. Charlie Wellnitz. Net: Charlie Wellnitz 2. Virgil Martin. Paul Grieco. KPs — Robert Hill, No. 12; Jim Robertson, No. 17. BROKEN TOP OSU Cascades Scramble, Aug. 20 Net Scramble 1 (tie), Chris Telfer/Angela Jacobson/Sue Decker/ Andrea Holley, 57; Tomi Doolen/Anne Miller/Linda Sather/Carmen West, 57; Kitten Aspell/Barbara Jermane/Peggy Cushman/Paula Day, 57. 4 (tie), Marla Hacker/Donna Glasgow/Donna Koch/Sylvia Moseley, 58; Kate Hlishak/Rochelle Schueler/Susan Anderson/ Lori Elkins, 58. 6 (tie), Pat Gray/Sharon Henderson/ Laurel Bonnell/Margi Lillegard, 59; Dede Gilchrist/ Nancy Crosslin/Pam Caine/Carol Brothers, 59; Nancy Hackbarth/Robin Bankofier/Pam Williams, 59. 9, Terry Markham/Julie Bennett/Robin Schueler/Sue Wesson, 60. 10, Becky Johnson/Patricia Moss/Kathy Degree/ Barbara Schenck, 61. 11 (tie), Kay Case/Kristina Evans/Deborah Cox/Nancy Eldredge, 63; Pamela HulseAndrews/Susie Stevens/Kristiee Chick/Janeanne Upp, 63. 13, Patti Carlson/Margi Robberson/Carmen Cutting/Janie Teater, 64. Ladies 18 Hole Play, Aug. 23 Stableford 1, Judith Bornholdt/blind draw/Norma Dubois/Sue Flanagan-Gibson, 137. 2, Barbara Jermane/Paula Day/Sandy Dougharty/Patty Bevans, 132. 3, Dianne Newberry/Nancy Jean Coe/Judy Cochran/Pam Williams, 131. 4, Linda Phillips/Brenda O’Shea/blind draw/Gwen Friesen, 128. 5, Jody Epperson-Hikes/ Julie Seneker/Linda Watson/Margi Lillegard, 127. 6, Mary Erbe/Michele Harmount/Ann Brown/Carol Brothers, 125. 7, Kitten Aspell/Phyllis Marr/Jeanne Raudman/Bellva Abraham, 121. Men’s Gathering, Aug. 22 Stroke Play Silver Flight — 1 (tie), James Smith/Edward Perkins/Tom Strange/Sid Garon, 126; Joe Tillman/ Jon Tompkins/Craig Brown/David Machamer, 126. 3, Larry Dougharty/David Light/Charley Coe/Charles Gardner, 141. Green Flight — 1 (tie), Stephen Dandurand/Ken McCumber/James Wolfe/Lamar Blair, 126; Robert Newberry/Don Smith/Kip Gladder/Maro Paz, 126. 3, John Aspell/Dirk Zeller/Terry Harrington/Terry Cochran, 128. 4, Ray Grimm/Bob Abraham/Hollings Renton/Stephen Harrison, 132. 5, Bob Pearson/Al Chaffee/Brian Crosby/Jim Curran, 135. Men’s Gathering, Aug. 29 Stroke Play Green Flight — Gross: 1, Ray Grimm, 67. 2 (tie), Dan Ordiorne, 68; Mark Vukanovich, 68. Net: 1, Gardner Williams, 58. 2, Craig Moore, 59. Silver Flight — Gross: 1, Ed Perkins, 71. 2, Tom Strange, 75. Net: 1, Charley Coe, 56. 2, Mike Marr, 59. Ladies 18 Hole Play, Aug. 30 Two Net Best Ball 1, Lucy Stack/Melissa Strange/Michele Harmount/ Pam Williams, 136. 2, Ann Brown/Linda Phillips/Carole Frazier/Norma Dubois, 137. Putts — 1, Gail Johnson, 29. 2 (tie), June Knowles, 30; Jeanne Raudman, 30. 4, Michele Harmount, 31. DESERT PEAKS Senior Women’s Golf Association, Aug. 20 Stroke Play A Flight — Gross: 1, Debbie Hehn, 84. 2, Jan Sanburg, 85. 3, Kathleen Mooberry, 91, 4, Patty Scott, 98. Net: 1 (tie), Kay Kludtm, 72; Marie Olds, 72, 3, Joan Springer-Wellman, 78. B Flight — Gross: 1, Karen Wintermyre, 91. 2, Bonnie Gaston, 94. 3, Sally Martin, 95. 4, Chris Fitzgibbons, 99. Net: 1, Jackie Yake, 67. 2, Teddie Crippen, 72. 3, Hilary Kenyon, 74. 4, Beattie Stabeck, 80. C Flight — Gross: 1, Susan Osborn, 95. 2, Penny Piazza, 102. 3, Lois Nothrup, 104. 4, Joan Mathews, 105. Net: 1 (tie), Pat Tacy, 71; Charleen Hurst, 71. 3, Lola Soloman, 75. D Flight — Gross: 1, Cathy Hunter, 102. 2 (tie), Juanice Schram, 106; Karyn Gorman, 106. 4, Gen Clements, 117. Net: 1, Jeanne Holloway, 69. 2, Betty Cook, 73. 3, Marge Newell, 80. 4, Lynne Henze, 83. KPs — B Flight: Jackie Yake. C Flight: Cathy Hunter. D Flight: Lynne Henze. Accurate Drive — A Flight: Joan Springer-Wellman. B Flight: Teddy Crippin. C Flight: Joan Mathews. D Flight: Marge Newell. EAGLE CREST Men’s Club, Aug. 22 at Challenge Course Shamble, Best Ball 1, Jim Kelly/Jerry Coday/Pat Kenny/Don Greenman, 88. 2, Hank McCauley/Peter O’Reilly/Hank Cavender, 91. 3 (tie), Bob Mowlds/Tom Johnson/David Rygh/Peter Brown, 93; Mike Narzisi/Chuck Smith/Ken Walters/Ray Benetti, 93; Jim Whitehurst/Tom Joyce/ Bill Carey/blind draw, 93. 6, Ron Wolfe/David Drake/ Ted Moore/Don Sheets, 94. Women’s Club Championship, Aug. 21 & 28 at Ridge and Resort courses Stroke Play Club Champions — Gross: Kat Widmer, 162. Net: Veron Rygh, 131. A Flight — Gross: 1, Debbie Hehn, 165. 2, Dianne Rogers, 182. Net: 1, Martie King, 138. 2, Mona Benetti, 146. B Flight — Gross: 1, Pat Murrill, 191. 2, Janice Jackson, 198. Net: 1 (tie), Marcia Wood, 145; Carol Hallock, 145. C Flight — Gross: 1, Teddie Crippen, 195. 2, Susan Osborn, 202. Net: 1, Sandy Austin, 138. 2, Carole Flinn, 143. D Flight — Gross: 1, Nancy Dolby, 198. 2, Joan Mathews, 212. Net: 1, Elaine Blyler, 144. 2, Pat Perkins, 149. THE GREENS AT REDMOND Ladies of the Greens, Aug. 21 Three Blind Mice A Flight — 1, Marilyn Feis, 19. 2, Sharon Rosengarth, 19.5. 3, Dee Baker, 20.5. 4, Carole Wolfe, 20.5. B Flight — 1, Norma Carter, 18. 2, Linda Kanable, 19. 3, Doris Babb, 23. 4, Ruth Backup, 23. C Flight — 1, Betty Hall, 20. 2, Judi Vanderpool, 22. 3, Lois Houlberg, 22. 4, Karlene Grove, 22. D Flight — 1, Anita Epstein, 19.5. 2, Dorothy Fuller, 20.5. 3, Jan Rogerson, 20.5. Lou Boyd, 21. Fewest Putts — Margaret Pickett, 12. Golfer of the Week — Jan Rogerson. Ladies of the Greens, Aug. 28 Orange Ball 1, Linda Kanable/Diane Miyauchi/Sharon Rosengart, 27.5. 2, Margaret Pickett/Laura Pickney/Jane Schroeder, 31.3. 3, Lynne Ekman/Pat Elliott/Karlene Grove, 32. 4, Dagmar Haussler/Marilyn Marold/Bev Tout/Sarah Winner, 32.5. Fewest Putts — Margaret Pickett, 11. Golfer of the Week — Linda Kanable. JUNIPER Men’s Club, Aug. 23 Two Low Net 1, Elton Gregory/Alan Stewart/Jim Flaherty/Wayne Castle, 113. 2, Jim Cooper/Don Garney/Joan Hodecker/Don Doyle, 117. 3, Dave King/Allen Hare/Jim Goad/Bill Robinson, 118. 4 (tie), Jake Yake/Kip Gerke/ Tom Dehart/Bob Babcock, 125. KPs — John Severson, No. 3; Kip Gerke, No. 8; John Severson, No 13; John McDaniel, No. 16. Ladies Visitation, Aug. 29 1-2-3 Rat Race Waltz Gross: 1, Deb Aikin/Janet Gordon/Shar Wanichek/ Marge Newell, 180. 2, Sue Adams/Roxie Oglesby/ Cherry Spurlock/Vivian Taylor, 181. 3, Debbie Kerr/Celia Tacy/Judy Rowan/Shar Wanichek, 183. 4, Kandy Lamson/Teddie Crippen/Donna Loringer/Doris Thompson, 186. Net: Susie Dougan/Karen Wintermyre/Elaine Lyler/Ginny Gibson, 130. 2 (tie), Sandy Cameron/Neoma Woischke/Debbie Cooper/Juanita Hawkins, 132; Shan Wattenburger/Rae Schlappi/Julie

Glender/Gwen Duran, 132. Jean Gregerson/Mary Ann Doyle/Lahonda Elmblade/Pat Majchrowski, 134. KPs — Maria Langworthy, No. 3; Nancy Breitenstein, No. 8; Candice Spencer, No. 13; Nancy Cotton, No. 16. Accurate Drives (No. 18) — 0-20 handicaps: Susan Dougan. 21-27: Carol Ann Still. 28-35: Shar Wanichek. 36 and higher: Ledlie Szaraniec. MEADOW LAKES Men’s Association, Aug. 22 Best Ball Gross: 1, Jeff Brown/Rob Dudley, 32. 2 (tie), Jake Shinkle/Zach Lampert, 34; Jeff Storm/Todd Goodew, 34. Net: 1, Paul Adams/Zach Lampert, 28. 2, Dwain Storm/Shawn Lampert, 30. 3 (tie), Hank Simmons/ Jordie Simmons, 31; Les Bryan/Johnnie Jones, 31; Britton Coffer/Dewey Springer, 31. KPs — A Flight: Jake Shinkle, No. 4; Dwain Storm, No. 8. B Flight: Mike Ball, No. 4; John Novak, No. 8. Ladies of the Lakes, Aug. 23, 24 & 30 Match Play A Flight — 1, Verna Bedient. 2, Lee Miller. 3, Norma McPherren. 4, Karen Peterson. B Flight — 1, Kathy Koon. 2, Barb Schmitke. 3, Donna Jones. 4, Candice Spencer. Men’s League, Aug. 29 Black Black Gross: 1, Jeff Brown, 36. 2, Patrick Andrade, 38. 3, Rob Dudley, 39. Net: 1, Steve Reynolds, 34. 2 (tie), Dave Barnhouse, 36; Larry Conklin, 36; JW Miller, 36. 5 (tie), Steve Spangler, 37; John Mitchell, 37; Grant Kemp, 37. KPs — A Flight: Les Bryan, No. 13; Rob Dudley, No. 17. B Flight: Jordie Simmons, No. 13; Larry Conklin, No. 17. QUAIL RUN Men’s Club, Aug. 22 Scramble 1, Earl Allen/John Gould/Bill Quinn/Dick Johnson, 66. 2, Don Banducci/Gaylen Bridge/Sonny Bachman/ Frank Deluca, 68. KPs — Al Wakefield, No. 2; Josh Day, No. 10. Women’s Club, Aug. 23 Low Gross, Two Low Net A Flight — Gross: Linda Bennett, 96. Net: 1, Darlene Toten, 71. 2, Anne Perce, 73. B Flight — Gross: Donna Brown, 107. Net: 1, Linda Bauman, 68. 2, Lahonda Elmblade, 78. Men’s Club, Aug. 29 Stroke Play First Flight — Gross: Dick Beeson, 80. Net: 1, Matt Koski, 70. 2 (tie), Dennis Haniford, 71; Jim Ulrey, 71. Second Flight — Gross: Tim Jenning, 97. Net: 1, Doug Anderson, 68. 2, Bill Quinn, 71. KPs — Jim Ulrey, No. 8; Galen Bridge, No. 14. RIVER’S EDGE Men’s Club, Aug. 14 Best Ball Gross: 1 (tie), Mike Reuter/Dave Fiedler, 79; Keith Hillard/Derek Hampton, 79. 3, Chuck Geschke/Mike Hoffman, 80. 4 (tie), Gary Mack/Jack Tibbetts, 81; Craig Shurtleff/Doug King, 81. 6, Bob Deane/Don Braunton, 84. 7 (tie), Guy Inglis/Bob Rhodes, 86; Dick Carroll/Taylor Story, 86; Roger Bean/Dave Bryson, 86. 10 (tie), Steve Langenberg/Randy Olson, 87; Frank Spernak/Wayne Johnson, 87. Net: 1, Jim Wilcox/Keith Wood, 62. 2 (tie), Geschke/Hoffman, 63; Inglis/Rhodes, 63; Carroll/Story, 63. 5 (tie), G. Mack/ Tibbetts, 66; Shurtleff/King, 66. 7 (tie), Reuter/Fiedler, 67; Deane/Braunton, 67; Andy Mack/Craig Boatman, 67; Bean/Bryson, 67. 11 (tie), Bob Coffey/Bob Drake, 68; Langenberg/Olson, 68. 13, Al Derenzis/Ralph McQuillin, 69. 14 (tie), Hillard/Hampton, 70; Spernak/ Johnson, 70. 16 (tie), Stan Brock/Dave Hughes, 72; Don Welker/Maury Pruitt, 72. KPs — Gary Mack, No. 4; Taylor Story, No 16. Men’s Club, Aug. 21 Stroke Play Gross: 1, Keith Hillard, 79. 2, Ron Rupprecht, 85. 3 (tie), Gary Mack; 86; Tim Voth, 86. 5 (tie), Chuck Geschke, 87; John Alkire, 87; Taylor Story, 87. 8, Dave Fiedler, 88. 9, Mike Reuter, 90. 10, Steve Langenberg, 91. Net: 1, Story, 63. 2, Voth, 67. 3, Stan Brock, 68. 4, Hillard, 70. 5, Rupprecht, 72. 6 (tie), G. Mack, 73; Dick Carroll, 73. 8 (tie), Reuter, 74; Bob Deane, 74; Jim Wilcox, 74. KPs — Bob Deane, Nos. 14, 16. Men’s Club, Aug. 28 Chapman Gross: 1 (tie), Steve Langenberg/Stan Brock, 88; Bob Deane/Dave Bryson, 88. 3 (tie), Mike Reuter/ Frank Spernak, 89; Bob Drake/Sam Kirkaldie, 89; Randy Olson/Dick Carroll, 89. 6, Bob Rhodes/David Black, 91. 7, Dieter Haussler/Keith Wood, 97. Net: 1, Deane/ Bryson, 67. 2, Langenberg/Brock, 67.5. 3 (tie), Olson/ Carroll, 68.5; Drake/Kirkaldie, 68.5; Reuter/Spernak, 68.5. 6, Rhodes/Black, 70. 7, Haussler/Wood, 73. KPs — Bob Rhodes, No. 7; Keith Wood, No. 14. WIDGI CREEK Women’s Club Championship, Aug. 15, 22 Stroke Play Club Champion — Melinda Bailey, 175. A Flight — Gross: 1, Jan Sandburg, 177. 2, Sherry Deetz, 185. Net: 1, Chris Fitzgibbons, 146. 2, Diane Franzi, 149. B Flight — Gross: 1, Phyllis Pengelly, 191. 2, Hilary Kenyon, 201. Net: 1, Denise Waddell, 147. 2, Janet Campbell, 153. C Flight — Gross: 1, Donna Baker, 189. 2, Mindy Cicinelli, 204. Net: 1, Diane Struve, 140. 2, Sue Gordon, 146. Men’s Club Championship Standings, Aug. 22 Stroke Play Open Division A Flight — 1, Ed Carson, 73. 2, Bob Brydges, 75. 3, Greg Watt, 79. B Flight — 1, John Deetz, 72. 2, Bill Burley, 76. 3, Dave Black, 83. 4, Fran Ostlund, 84. 5, John Cosgrave, 88. 6, Jim Bradbury, 93. Senior Division A Flight — 1, John Deetz, 72. 2, Ed Carson, 73. 3, Dave Black, 83. 4, Fran Ostlund, 84. 5, Jerry Olsen, 88. B Flight — 1 (tie), John Cosgrave, 88; Rick Hanson, 88. 3, Daryl Hjeresen, 91. 4, Rick Friscia, 94. 5, Ken Schofield, 98. 6, Mike Carroll, 100. 7, John Masterton, 104. 8, Ray Horgen, 111. Super Senior Division A Flight — 1 (tie), Gary Hoagland, 84; Ron Stassens, 84. 3, Don Kramer, 86. 4, Pat Kallal, 92. 5, Bob Brooks, 94. 6, Gary Grimm, 99. 7, Stosh Thompson, 102. B Flight — 1, Dave Madrigal, 84. 2, Lloyd Vordenberg, 89. 3, Larry Strunk, 95. 4 (tie), Russell Struve, 97; Chuck Stoughton, 97. 6, Peter Gulick, 98.

Hole-In-One Report Aug. 17 AWBREY GLEN Michael Mount, Bend No. 8. . . . . . . . . . . . .185 yards . . . . . . . . . .3-hybrid Aug. 22 BEND GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB Mary Ellen Marlatt, Bend No. 10. . . . . . . . . . . .140 yards . . . . . . . . . . 3-wood Aug. 22 JUNIPER Mike Stanton, Bend No. 13. . . . . . . . . . . .114 yards . . . . . . . sand wedge Aug. 22 EAGLE CREST CHALLENGE Jerry Coday, Redmond No. 7. . . . . . . . . . . . .140 yards . . . . . . . . . . . 8-iron Aug. 30 EAGLE CREST RIDGE Rick Read, Redmond No. 6. . . . . . . . . . . . .126 yards . . . . . . . . . . . 8-iron

Professional PGA Tour Deutsche Bank Championship Saturday At TPC Boston Norton, Mass. Purse: $8 million Yardage: 7,216; Par 71 Second Round Rory McIlroy 65-65—130 Louis Oosthuizen 66-65—131 Ryan Moore 64-68—132 Tiger Woods 64-68—132 Seung-Yul Noh 62-71—133 Jason Dufner 67-66—133 Chris Kirk 63-70—133 Charl Schwartzel 68-65—133 D.A. Points 68-65—133 Bryce Molder 65-69—134 Charley Hoffman 67-67—134 John Senden 66-69—135 Dustin Johnson 67-68—135 Jeff Overton 64-71—135 David Hearn 67-69—136 Phil Mickelson 68-68—136 Greg Chalmers 69-68—137

Ted Potter, Jr. Tom Gillis Ernie Els Robert Garrigus Ian Poulter Steve Stricker Adam Scott Kevin Stadler Troy Matteson Luke Donald Lee Westwood Brandt Snedeker Webb Simpson Matt Every Jonas Blixt Kyle Stanley Hunter Mahan Bob Estes Bo Van Pelt John Merrick Pat Perez J.B. Holmes Jim Furyk Zach Johnson George McNeill Sang-Moon Bae Daniel Summerhays Geoff Ogilvy William McGirt Carl Pettersson Bud Cauley Johnson Wagner Nick Watney Dicky Pride Jason Day Scott Piercy Tommy Gainey J.J. Henry Josh Teater Vijay Singh Aaron Baddeley Blake Adams Brendon de Jonge Marc Leishman Rickie Fowler Bill Haas Martin Flores Harris English Scott Stallings Jonathan Byrd Mark Wilson Brian Harman Matt Kuchar Keegan Bradley John Huh Roberto Castro Kevin Na Padraig Harrington Jimmy Walker Graeme McDowell Sean O’Hair Failed to qualify John Rollins Ryan Palmer Tim Clark Ricky Barnes Ben Crane Charlie Wi Justin Rose Rory Sabbatini K.J. Choi Charles Howell III Martin Laird Ken Duke Graham DeLaet Bubba Watson Greg Owen Brian Davis Michael Thompson Cameron Tringale Ben Curtis

69-68—137 69-69—138 69-69—138 71-67—138 67-71—138 69-69—138 69-69—138 68-71—139 72-67—139 67-72—139 68-71—139 69-70—139 69-70—139 71-68—139 67-72—139 70-70—140 68-72—140 71-69—140 69-71—140 68-72—140 69-72—141 72-69—141 69-72—141 70-71—141 71-70—141 69-72—141 71-70—141 72-69—141 69-72—141 71-70—141 68-73—141 70-71—141 72-69—141 69-72—141 68-73—141 72-70—142 72-70—142 69-73—142 71-71—142 73-69—142 68-74—142 69-73—142 70-73—143 72-71—143 71-72—143 71-72—143 72-71—143 70-73—143 70-73—143 72-72—144 74-70—144 71-73—144 70-74—144 71-73—144 71-73—144 72-72—144 69-75—144 70-74—144 73-71—144 74-70—144 70-74—144 69-76—145 71-74—145 71-74—145 71-74—145 74-71—145 71-74—145 75-70—145 71-75—146 70-76—146 71-76—147 72-75—147 72-75—147 72-75—147 75-72—147 69-78—147 75-73—148 74-75—149 73-79—152 79-74—153

TENNIS Professional U.S. Open Saturday At The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center New York Purse: $25.5 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Third Round Nicolas Almagro (11), Spain, def. Jack Sock, United States, 7-6 (3), 6-7 (4), 7-6 (2), 6-1. Marin Cilic (12), Croatia, def. Kei Nishikori (17), Japan, 6-3, 6-4, 6-7 (3), 6-3. Martin Klizan, Slovakia, def. Jeremy Chardy (32), France, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4. Roger Federer (1), Switzerland, def. Fernando Verdasco (25), Spain, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. Andy Murray (3), Britain, def. Feliciano Lopez (30), Spain, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (5), 4-6, 7-6 (4). Milos Raonic (15), Canada, def. James Blake, United States, 6-3, 6-0, 7-6 (3). Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Republic, def. Sam Querrey (27), United States, 6-7 (6), 6-4, 6-3, 6-2. Mardy Fish (23), United States, def. Gilles Simon (16), France, 6-1, 5-7, 7-6 (5), 6-3. Women Third Round Roberta Vinci (20), Italy, def. Dominika Cibulkova (13), Slovakia, 6-2, 7-5. Agnieszka Radwanska (2), Poland, def. Jelena Jankovic (30), Serbia, 6-3, 7-5. Serena Williams (4), United States, def. Ekaterina Makarova, Russia, 6-4, 6-0. Tsvetana Pironkova, Bulgaria, def. Silvia Soler-Espinosa, Spain, 6-1, 6-7 (3), 6-3. Andrea Hlavackova, Czech Republic, def. Maria Kirilenko (14), Russia, 5-7, 6-4, 6-4. Angelique Kerber (6), Germany, def. Olga Govortsova, Belarus, 6-1, 6-2. Sara Errani (10), Italy, def. Olga Puchkova, Russia, 6-1, 6-1. Ana Ivanovic (12), Serbia, def. Sloane Stephens, United States, 6-7 (4), 6-4, 6-2.

SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT ——— Eastern Conference W L T Pts GF GA Sporting Kansas City 15 7 5 50 34 24 New York 13 7 7 46 46 39 Houston 11 6 9 42 38 30 Columbus 12 8 6 42 33 30 D.C. 12 10 5 41 43 38 Chicago 12 8 5 41 32 30 Montreal 12 14 3 39 43 46 Philadelphia 7 13 5 26 25 30 New England 6 14 7 25 33 38 Toronto FC 5 16 6 21 30 48 Western Conference W L T Pts GF GA San Jose 15 6 5 50 52 33 Real Salt Lake 14 10 4 46 38 32 Seattle 12 6 7 43 40 26 Los Angeles 13 11 4 43 48 40 Vancouver 10 11 7 37 29 37 FC Dallas 8 12 8 32 33 37 Chivas USA 7 10 7 28 20 35 Portland 7 13 6 27 27 43 Colorado 8 17 2 26 33 41 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. ——— Saturday’s Games Columbus 2, Montreal 1 New England 0, Philadelphia 0, tie Sporting Kansas City 2, Toronto FC 1 Real Salt Lake 1, D.C. United 0 Los Angeles 2, Vancouver 0 Today’s Games Seattle FC at FC Dallas, 4 p.m. Houston at Chicago, 4 p.m. Chivas USA at San Jose, 6 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Columbus at New England, 5 p.m. Portland at Colorado, 6 p.m. Thursday’s Games Real Salt Lake at Houston, 5:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 8 Chivas USA at Seattle FC, 1 p.m.

FOOTBALL NFL NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE All Times PDT ——— Wednesday’s Game Dallas at New York Giants, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 9 Indianapolis at Chicago, 10 a.m. Atlanta at Kansas City, 10 a.m.

Philadelphia at Cleveland, 10 a.m. Washington at New Orleans, 10 a.m. St. Louis at Detroit, 10 a.m. New England at Tennessee, 10 a.m. Jacksonville at Minnesota, 10 a.m. Buffalo at New York Jets, 10 a.m. Miami at Houston, 10 a.m. Seattle at Arizona, 1:25 p.m. San Francisco at Green Bay, 1:25 p.m. Carolina at Tampa Bay, 1:25 p.m. Pittsburgh at Denver, 5:20 p.m. Monday, Sept. 10 Cincinnati at Baltimore, 4 p.m. San Diego at Oakland, 7:15 p.m.

Betting line NFL (Home teams in Caps) Wednesday GIANTS 4 4 Cowboys Sunday, Sept. 9 BEARS 9.5 9.5 Colts Eagles 8 8 BROWNS JETS 3 3 Bills SAINTS 9.5 9.5 Redskins Patriots 6.5 6.5 TITANS VIKINGS 4.5 4.5 Jaguars TEXANS 10.5 10.5 Dolphins LIONS 8.5 8.5 Rams Falcons 2 2 CHIEFS PACKERS 5.5 5.5 49ers Panthers 2.5 2.5 BUCCANEERS Seahawks 2 2.5 CARDINALS BRONCOS 1 1 Steelers Monday, Sept. 10 RAVENS 6 6 Bengals Chargers 1.5 1.5 RAIDERS COLLEGE (Home teams in Caps) Today LOUISVILLE 14.5 13 BAYLOR 11 9 Monday VA TECH 7.5 7

Kentucky Smu Ga Tech

BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN’S NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT ——— Eastern Conference W L Pct x-Connecticut 19 6 .760 Indiana 17 8 .680 Atlanta 13 13 .500 New York 10 16 .385 Chicago 9 16 .360 Washington 5 21 .192 Western Conference W L Pct x-Minnesota 21 4 .840 x-Los Angeles 19 7 .731 x-San Antonio 17 9 .654 Seattle 11 14 .440 Phoenix 6 19 .240 Tulsa 6 20 .231 x-clinched playoff spot ——— Saturday’s Games New York 79, Washington 73 Indiana 81, Chicago 64 Phoenix 94, San Antonio 90 Today’s Games Connecticut at Atlanta, noon Los Angeles at Chicago, 3 p.m.

GB — 2 6½ 9½ 10 14½ GB — 2½ 4½ 10 15 15½

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup AdvoCare 500 Lineup After Friday qualifying; race today At Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Lap length: 1.54 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 186.121 mph. 2. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 185.648. 3. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 185.493. 4. (17) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 185.319. 5. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 185.307. 6. (55) Mark Martin, Toyota, 185.232. 7. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 185.22. 8. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 185.139. 9. (20) Joey Logano, Toyota, 185.084. 10. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 185.053. 11. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 184.997. 12. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 184.929. 13. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 184.874. 14. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 184.738. 15. (22) Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge, 184.609. 16. (51) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 184.566. 17. (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 184.48. 18. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 184.425. 19. (13) Casey Mears, Ford, 184.082. 20. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 184.07. 21. (2) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 184.058. 22. (36) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 183.747. 23. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 183.673. 24. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 183.643. 25. (47) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 183.509. 26. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 183.412. 27. (78) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 183.388. 28. (56) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 183.37. 29. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 183.364. 30. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 183.333. 31. (30) David Stremme, Toyota, 183.037. 32. (21) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 182.886. 33. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 182.759. 34. (49) Jason Leffler, Toyota, 182.675. 35. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 182.627. 36. (95) Scott Speed, Ford, 182.549. 37. (87) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 182.38. 38. (91) Reed Sorenson, Toyota, 182.189. 39. (23) Scott Riggs, Chevrolet, 182.141. 40. (83) Landon Cassill, Toyota, Owner Points. 41. (93) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, Owner Points. 42. (32) T.J. Bell, Ford, Owner Points. 43. (37) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, 182.069. Failed to Qualify 44. (98) Michael McDowell, Ford, 181.776. 45. (26) Josh Wise, Ford, 181.39. 46. (33) Stephen Leicht, Chevrolet, 181.283. 47. (19) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 180.651.

IndyCar Grand Prix of Baltimore Lineup After Saturday qualifying; race today At Baltimore Street Circuit Baltimore, Md. Lap length: 2.04 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (12) Will Power, Dallara-Chevrolet, 94.184. 2. (14) Mike Conway, Dallara-Honda, 93.494. 3. (9) Scott Dixon, Dallara-Honda, 93.433. 4. (7) Sebastien Bourdais, Dallara-Chevrolet, 93.139. 5. (10) Dario Franchitti, Dallara-Honda, 93.033. 6. (27) James Hinchcliffe, Dallara-Chevrolet, 92.599. 7. (83) Charlie Kimball, Dallara-Honda, 92.57. 8. (11) Tony Kanaan, Dallara-Chevrolet, 92.17. 9. (18) Justin Wilson, Dallara-Honda, 91.393. 10. (67) Bruno Junqueira, Dallara-Honda, 91.363. 11. (20) Ed Carpenter, Dallara-Chevrolet, 91.233. 12. (77) Simon Pagenaud, Dallara-Honda. 13. (28) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Dallara-Chevrolet, 89.877. 14. (2) Ryan Briscoe, Dallara-Chevrolet, 93.095. 15. (98) Alex Tagliani, Dallara-Honda, 89.272. 16. (3) Helio Castroneves, Dallara-Chevrolet, 93.017. 17. (8) Rubens Barrichello, Dallara-Chevrolet, 88.712. 18. (22) Oriol Servia, Dallara-Chevrolet, 92.568. 19. (15) Takuma Sato, Dallara-Honda, 86.871. 20. (26) Marco Andretti, Dallara-Chevrolet. 21. (78) Simona de Silvestro, Dallara-Lotus, 84.198. 22. (19) James Jakes, Dallara-Honda, 92.32. 23. (38) Graham Rahal, Dallara-Honda. 24. (5) E.J. Viso, Dallara-Chevrolet, 91.957. 25. (4) J.R. Hildebrand, Dallara-Chevrolet.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Friday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 12,390 2,292 2,036 639 The Dalles 5,238 1,227 2,412 623 John Day 3,431 1,146 1,243 781 McNary 1,784 342 663 244 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Friday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 310,633 35,224 173,260 67,473 The Dalles 220,508 26,341 108,729 46,005 John Day 187,692 22,864 66,194 29,888 McNary 180,663 12,332 58,864 23,744


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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COLLEGE FOOTBALL ROUNDUP

TENNIS: U.S. OPEN

TELEVISION

S. Williams, Federer ease into 4th round

Today GOLF 4 a.m.: European Tour, European Masters, final round, Golf Channel. 10 a.m.: PGA Tour, Deutsche Bank Championship, third round, Golf Channel. Noon: PGA Tour, Deutsche Bank Championship, third round, NBC. 4 p.m.: Web.com Tour, Mylan Classic, final round, Golf Channel. TENNIS 8 a.m.: U.S. Open, men’s and women’s fourth round, CBS. 4 p.m.: U.S. Open, men’s and women’s fourth round, Tennis Channel. MOTOR SPORTS 8 a.m.: NHRA, Mac Tools, U.S. Nationals qualifying, ESPN2. 11 a.m.: IndyCar, Baltimore Grand Prix, NBC Sports Network. 4:30 p.m.: NASCAR, Sprint Cup, AdvoCare 500, ESPN. FOOTBALL 9 a.m.: College, Alabama State at Bethune-Cookman, ESPN. 11 a.m.: High School, teams TBA, ESPN2. 12:30 p.m.: College, Kentucky at Louisville, ESPN. 4:30 p.m.: College, Southern Methodist at Baylor, Root Sports. BASEBALL 10 a.m.: MLB, Baltimore Orioles at New York Yankees, TBS. 1 p.m.: MLB, Los Angeles Angels at Seattle Mariners, Root Sports. 5 p.m.: MLB, Chicago White Sox at Detroit Tigers, ESPN2. SOCCER Noon: Women’s college, San Francisco at California, Pac-12 Network. 6 p.m.: MLS, Club Deportive Chivas USA at San Jose Earthquakes, NBC Sports Network. 7 p.m.: MLS, Seattle Sounders FC at FC Dallas (same-day tape), Root Sports.

Monday TENNIS 8 a.m.: U.S. Open, men’s and women’s fourth round, CBS. 4 p.m.: U.S. Open, round of 16, ESPN2. FOOTBALL 10 a.m.: CFL, Toronto Argonauts at Hamilton TigerCats, NBC Sports Network. 1 p.m.: High school, Daphne (Ala.) vs. Spanish Fort (Ala.), ESPN. 1:30 p.m.: CFL, Edmonton Eskimos at Calgary Stampeders, NBC Sports Network. 5 p.m.: College, Georgia Tech at Virginia Tech, ESPN. GOLF 10:30 a.m.: PGA Tour, Deutsche Bank Championship, final round, NBC. BASEBALL 10 a.m.: MLB, New York Yankees at Tampa Bay Rays or Baltimore Orioles at Toronto Blue Jays, MLB Network. 1 p.m.: MLB, Boston Red Sox at Seattle Mariners, Root Sports. 4 or 5 p.m.: MLB, San Diego Padres at Los Angeles Dodgers (5 p.m.) or Minnesota Twins at Chicago White Sox (4 p.m.), MLB Network.

By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press

LM Otero / The Associated Press

Alabama wide receiver DeAndrew White (2) runs into the end zone to score a touchdown during the first half against Michigan at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, Saturday.

No. 2 ’Bama rolls No. 8 Michigan By The Associated Press ARLINGTON, Texas — Dee Milliner and that Alabama defense showed they can still dominate. Even after sending three starting defenders from last year’s national championship team to the NFL as first-round draft picks, the secondranked Crimson Tide threw around eighth-ranked Michigan while pounding Denard Robinson in a season-opening 41-14 victory Saturday night. C.J. Mosley returned an interception 16 yards for a touchdown for the Tide. AJ McCarron, no longer with third overall draft pick Trent Richardson to hand the ball off to, threw two touchdowns as Alabama won its 11th consecutive season opener. Also on Saturday: No. 3 LSU. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 North Texas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 BATON ROUGE, La. — Kenny Hilliard rushed for 141 yards and two touchdowns, and LSU opened its season with an easy victory. While the heavily favored Tigers were never threatened, their performance did not always thrill a Death Valley crowd that eagerly anticipated the debut of Zach Mettenberger as starting quarterback. Mettenberger, who was briefly sidelined by a vicious sack, was 19 of 26 for 192 yards, an interception and a touchdown. No. 4 Oklahoma . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 UTEP. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 EL PASO, Texas — Landry Jones threw two touchdown passes and Damien Williams ran 65 yards for another score in the fourth quarter, helping No. 4 Oklahoma slog out a 24-7 win over Texas-El Paso. Oklahoma labored in its opener, unable to generate much of a running game or get anything downfield. No. 6 Georgia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Buffalo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 ATHENS, Ga. — Freshman Todd Gurley ran for three touchdowns, Aaron Murray threw three scoring passes and Georgia overcame a sloppy first half. Gurley didn’t start but may have emerged as the Bulldogs’ future at tailback with his eight carries for 100 yards, including scoring runs of 10 and 55 yards. He added a 100-yard kickoff return for a touchdown in the first quarter. No. 7 Florida State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 Murray State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Lonnie Pryor, James Wilder Jr., and Debrale Smiley combined for seven rushing touchdowns to lead Florida State. Pryor ran for three TDs, and Smiley and Wilder added two apiece. Wilder finished with 106 yards rushing. Florida State scored on their first touch of the new season on Rashad

Greene’s 47-yard punt return just 89 seconds into the game. EJ Manuel passed for 188 yards and a touchdown before retiring midway in the third quarter. No. 10 Arkansas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Jacksonville State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Tyler Wilson set the school record for yards passing in a season opener, finishing 19 of 27 passing for 367 yards and three touchdowns for Arkansas. Two of Wilson’s touchdowns went to tight end Chris Gragg, who finished with seven catches for 110 yards as the Razorbacks (1-0) won their first game under coach John L. Smith. No. 11 West Virginia. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 Marshall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — Geno Smith threw for 323 yards and four touchdowns to lead the Mountaineers past Marshall. In the final scheduled game between the state’s only Bowl Subdivision teams, it marked West Virginia’s highestscoring season opener in school history. Smith kept the momentum going from his six-TD performance from the Orange Bowl. The senior completed 32 of 36 passes and set a school record for career completions before sitting out most of the fourth quarter. No. 12 Wisconsin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Northern Iowa. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 MADISON, Wis. — Montee Ball rushed for 120 yards and a touchdown, and Wisconsin needed a big defensive play to survive a fourthquarter scare. Wisconsin’s defense didn’t allow Northern Iowa past the 50-yard line until the 4:27 mark in the third quarter — but then the Badgers nearly melted down. Leading 26-7 in the fourth quarter, Wisconsin allowed Northern Iowa quarterback Sawyer Kollmorgen to throw a pair of long touchdowns to David Johnson, cutting the lead to five. No. 14 Clemson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Auburn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 ATLANTA — Andre Ellington rushed for 231 yards, DeAndre Hopkins set a school record with 13 receptions and Clemson opened the season with a victory. Playing before a 50-50 crowd at the Georgia Dome — basically halfway between the two campuses — Clemson shook off any hangover from last season’s embarrassing 70-33 loss to West Virginia in the Orange Bowl and showed plenty of offense against Auburn even without star receiver Sammy Watkins, who was suspended for the first two games after an offseason drug arrest. No. 15 Texas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Wyoming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17

BASEBALL 5 p.m.: MLB, Chicago White Sox at Detroit Tigers, KICE-AM 940.

Monday BASEBALL 10 a.m.: MLB, New York Yankees at Tampa Bay Rays, KICE-AM 940. 4 p.m.: MLB, Minnesota Twins at Chicago White Sox, KICEAM 940. Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations.

AUSTIN, Texas — Joe Bergeron and Malcolm Brown both rushed for more than 100 yards and combined for three touchdowns to lead Texas. Texas quarterback David Ash, who won the starting job over Case McCoy in training camp, was an efficient 20-of-27 passing for 156 yards and a touchdown to Jaxon Shipley. Bergeron had 110 yards and scored Texas’ first touchdown on a 1-yard run in first quarter. He put the game away with a 17-yard TD in the fourth. Brown ran for 105 yards for Texas (1-0). No. 17 Nebraska . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Southern Miss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 LINCOLN, Neb. — Taylor Martinez threw for a career-high 354 yards and matched his best with five touchdown passes to lead Nebraska. The Huskers won their nation-leading 27th straight opener. Nebraska played the last three quarters without Rex Burkhead. The 1,300-yard rusher last season went out with a sprained ligament in his left knee after opening the scoring with a career-long 57-yard run. No. 18 Ohio State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Miami (Ohio) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 COLUMBUS, Ohio — Braxton Miller threw for two scores, including Devin Smith’s highlight-reel, one-handed catch, for the Buckeyes. The slow-starting Miller, who stutter-stepped for a 65-yard score just 17 seconds into the second half, finished 14 of 24 passing for 207 yards. No. 19 Oklahoma State . . . . . . . . . . . 84 Savannah State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 STILLWATER, Okla. — Freshman Wes Lunt completed all 11 of his passes in a brief first outing as the new starting quarterback for Oklahoma State. The defending Big 12 champions drove for touchdowns on their first five possessions to take a 35-0 lead late in the first quarter, and then used the rest of the game as a scrimmage for their reserves. No. 22 Kansas State . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Missouri State. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 MANHATTAN, Kan. — Collin Klein threw for 169 yards and two touchdowns, John Hubert ran 95 yards for a fourth-quarter score and Kansas State pulled away late to beat Missouri State. No. 23 Florida . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Bowling Green . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Mike Gillislee had a career-high 148 yards rushing and two touchdowns, helping Florida beat Bowling Green. The performance was far from perfect for the Gators, who struggled part of the game on offense and failed to generate much pressure on defense. Still, it was enough for Florida to win its 23rd consecutive opener.

NEW YORK — Serena Williams does not enjoy viewing videos of her losses. Not one bit. She used to engage in that sort of film work, Williams said, but “it was so painful; it was like stabbing myself.” So even though Williams knew her thirdround opponent at the U.S. Open would be the same woman she lost to at the Australian Open, preparing by studying a replay of that January defeat simply was out of the question. Did not seem to matter at all. After splitting Saturday’s first eight games against 42nd-ranked Ekaterina Makarova of Russia, the fourth-seeded Williams got into high gear and breezed to a 6-4, 6-0 victory, reeling off the last eight games in a row. “Definitely was motivated. Knowing that I lost; could definitely happen again. Did not want that to happen,” said Williams, who hit 13 aces to raise her tour-leading total this season to 408. “I really hate watching matches that I lose, unless I’m punishing myself,” added the 14time Grand Slam champion. “I didn’t punish myself.” She hasn’t been losing much lately. Since the only first-round Grand Slam exit of her career, against 111th-ranked Virginie Razzano at the French Open on May 29, Williams is 22-1 in singles, including the title at Wimbledon and gold medal at the London Olympics. That sort of excellence sure saves money for clothes: Williams said she threw out all of the dresses she brought to Paris to wear during matches there. No such problems so far in New York, where Williams has dropped only 12 games entering her fourth-round match against 82nd-round Andrea Hlavackova of Czech Republic. Hlavackova, the 2011 French Open doubles champion, bawled on court after her 5-7, 6-4, 6-4 win over 14th-seeded Maria Kirilenko, whose boyfriend, Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin, was in New York to cheer for her. The woman Williams beat in the Wimbledon final, second-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska, dealt with the 90-degree heat and former No. 1 Jelena Jankovic with equal aplomb during a 6-3, 7-5 victory. “I was melting there,” Radwanska said. “I survived the match.” She wasn’t the only one who felt that way. Olympic champion Andy Murray, still seeking his first Grand Slam title after four losses in finals, eked out a 7-6 (5), 7-6 (5), 4-6, 7-6 (4) victory over No. 30 Feliciano Lopez, who led in each of the three tiebreakers before faltering. “Could have gone either way,” Murray acknowledged. “It was very hot and humid in the middle part of the match. I was struggling a bit with that.” The man he beat for the gold at the Summer Games, and lost to in the Wimbledon title match, Roger Federer, is also Murray’s potential semifinal opponent in New York. Federer, as is often the case, barely was bothered Saturday while dismissing No. 25 Fernando Verdasco 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. Five of Federer’s record 17 Grand Slam titles came at Flushing Meadows, and he’s sure looking capable of adding to those numbers.

Kathy Willens / The Associated Press

Roger Federer serves to Fernando Verdasco in the third round of play at the 2012 U.S. Open, Saturday, in New York.

S B

RADIO Today

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Football • Seattle surprisingly releases TE Winslow: Kellen Winslow was acquired by the Seattle Seahawks in the hopes that along with Zach Miller the duo could become a formidable set of tight ends who could add another element to the Seahawks offense. Those plans drastically changed on Saturday when Winslow was released by the team, keeping true to the Seahawks’ past form of tinkering with their roster even after all training camp cuts are made. A team spokesman confirmed Winslow’s release shortly after it was first reported by ESPN.com. Winslow was scheduled to make $3.3 million in base salary in 2012, following his trade from Tampa

Bay to Seattle in May. Seattle moved quickly to fill Winslow’s spot by agreeing to terms with former Cleveland tight end Evan Moore, who was released by the Browns on Friday.

Soccer • Wambach delivers win as Sundhage says farewell: Abby Wambach kicked off the U.S. women’s soccer team’s victory tour — and Pia Sundhage’s final stretch as American coach — by scoring twice in a 8-0 exhibition victory over Costa Rica on Saturday in Rochester, N.Y. The U.S. team’s first game since winning the gold medal at the Olympics last month was a homecoming for Wambach. And her return was

overshadowed by Sundhage, who announced hours before the game that she is stepping down and returning to her native Sweden. In five seasons, Sundhage led the Americans to consecutive gold medals and their first World Cup final in 12 years.

Motor sports • Stenhouse Jr. races to 4th Nationwide win: Ricky Stenhouse Jr. used a late push from runner-up Brad Keselowski to pass Kevin Harvick and win the Nationwide race at Atlanta Motor Speedway. After a restart with three laps to go, Harvick lost the lead on the final lap as his car got loose coming out of Turn 2 and, Stenhouse, who was bumped by

Keselowski on the front straightaway, went ahead for good in Turn 3. Stenhouse, the defending series champion, raced to his fourth Nationwide victory of the season, and moved within 12 points of leader Elliott Sadler. • Massey wins NHRA Traxxas Nitro Shootout: Top Fuel driver Spencer Massey led Top Fuel qualifying in the U.S. Nationals and won the $100,000 NHRA Traxxas Nitro Shootout at Lucas Oil Raceway at Indianapolis. Massey had a pass of 3.762 seconds at 324.51 mph during the third qualifying session of the weekend, which doubled as the second round of the Nitro Shootout. • Power captures pole in Grand Prix of Baltimore: Australian Will Power captured the pole

in the Grand Prix of Baltimore, a feat that earned him another point in his bid to clinch his first IZOD IndyCar Series championship this weekend. Power holds a 37-point lead over Ryan Hunter-Reay, who’s in second place entering today’s race. Power, the defending champion in Baltimore, can wrap up the points title if he’s ahead by 54 after today. • Button takes pole position for Belgian GP: British driver Jenson Button will start today’s Belgian Grand Prix in pole position after finishing fastest in Saturday’s qualifying. Button, who won the season’s opening GP in Australia, overcame balance problems in his McLaren to grab his first pole of the season. — From wire reports


D4

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL STANDINGS, SCORES AND SCHEDULES

AL Boxscores Angels 5, Mariners 2 Los Angeles Trout cf Tor.Hunter rf Pujols dh K.Morales 1b Trumbo lf 2-V.Wells pr-lf H.Kendrick 2b Aybar ss Callaspo 3b Iannetta c Totals

AB 5 4 5 4 4 0 3 3 4 4 36

R 1 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 5

H 2 3 1 0 1 0 1 2 0 0 10

BI 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 4

BB 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 4

American League SO 1 0 0 1 2 0 1 1 1 0 7

Avg. .336 .308 .288 .273 .278 .223 .291 .278 .246 .245

Seattle AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Ackley 2b 3 1 0 0 1 3 .230 Gutierrez cf 4 0 1 1 0 0 .286 Seager 3b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .249 Jaso c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .272 J.Montero dh 3 0 1 0 0 1 .257 1-C.Peguero pr-dh 1 0 0 0 0 1 .143 Thames rf 3 0 0 0 0 3 .236 Smoak 1b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .190 T.Robinson lf 2 1 1 1 1 0 .245 Ryan ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 .199 Totals 31 2 5 2 2 8 Los Angeles 100 000 040 — 5 10 0 Seattle 002 000 000 — 2 5 1 1-ran for J.Montero in the 7th. 2-ran for Trumbo in the 8th. E—Seager (10). LOB—Los Angeles 8, Seattle 5. 2B—Pujols (36), H.Kendrick (24), Gutierrez (4), Smoak (9). HR—T.Robinson (2), off E.Santana. SB—Tor.Hunter (8). Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA E.Santana W, 8-11 7 4 2 2 2 5 101 5.32 Jepsen H, 12 1 1 0 0 0 1 16 3.23 Frieri S, 17-19 1 0 0 0 0 2 13 2.11 Seattle IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hernandez L, 13-6 7 1-3 9 5 4 2 7 119 2.51 Pryor 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 20 2.57 Wilhelmsen 1 0 0 0 1 0 20 2.56 T—3:03. A—22,910 (47,860).

Athletics 7, Red Sox 1 Boston Ellsbury cf Pedroia 2b Podsednik lf C.Ross rf Loney 1b Saltalamacchia c Aviles ss Lavarnway dh Ciriaco 3b Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 31

R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1

H 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 4

BI 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

SO 0 1 2 1 1 1 0 1 0 7

Avg. .267 .284 .344 .275 .333 .231 .258 .194 .327

Oakland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Crisp cf 4 1 3 1 1 1 .260 J.Gomes dh 3 1 1 0 0 1 .253 a-S.Smith ph-dh 1 0 0 0 1 1 .243 Reddick rf 4 0 0 0 1 2 .260 Cespedes lf 5 1 1 1 0 2 .300 Carter 1b 3 2 1 1 1 0 .275 Inge 3b 2 1 1 2 0 1 .218 Pennington 2b 2 1 2 0 0 0 .209 D.Norris c 4 0 2 2 0 2 .205 Hicks ss 3 0 0 0 1 2 .175 Rosales 2b-3b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .229 Totals 35 7 11 7 5 14 Boston 000 001 000 — 1 4 2 Oakland 104 010 10x — 7 11 0 E—Ciriaco (4), Aceves (1). LOB—Boston 3, Oakland 9. 2B—Crisp (20), J.Gomes (8), Inge (14). HR—Crisp (10), off Doubront; Carter (13), off Bard. SB—Crisp (30), Cespedes 2 (14), Pennington (14). Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP Doubront L, 10-7 3 6 5 5 2 6 77 Aceves 3 3 1 1 2 3 63 Bard 1 2 1 1 0 2 20 R.Hill 2-3 0 0 0 1 2 14 A.Bailey 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 5 Oakland IP H R ER BB SO NP Griffin W, 4-0 7 3 1 1 0 5 91 Neshek 2 1 0 0 0 2 26 T—2:56. A—20,315 (35,067).

ERA 5.03 4.73 5.37 2.51 1.59 ERA 2.26 0.87

Yankees 4, Orioles 3 Baltimore Markakis rf Hardy ss McLouth lf Ad.Jones cf Wieters c C.Davis dh Mar.Reynolds 1b Quintanilla 2b a-Andino ph-2b c-Betemit ph Machado 3b Totals

AB 2 3 3 3 3 3 2 1 1 1 4 26

R 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3

H 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 4

BI 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2

BB 2 1 1 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 8

SO 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 6

Avg. .296 .231 .241 .284 .239 .255 .223 .250 .223 .264 .257

New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Jeter ss 3 0 0 1 1 1 .318 Swisher 1b-rf-1b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .272 Cano 2b 4 1 1 1 0 0 .304 An.Jones rf-lf-rf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .203 Granderson cf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .235 Pearce 1b 2 1 1 0 0 1 .244 b-Ibanez ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .235 Dickerson lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 --R.Martin c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .196 J.Nix 3b 1 1 0 0 2 1 .254 E.Nunez dh 3 1 1 1 0 0 .296 I.Suzuki lf-cf 2 0 0 0 1 0 .266 Totals 29 4 4 3 4 4 Baltimore 110 100 000 — 3 4 1 New York 000 100 30x — 4 4 2 a-popped out for Quintanilla in the 7th. b-flied out for Pearce in the 8th. c-struck out for Andino in the 9th. E—Hardy (6), J.Nix (4), Phelps (3). LOB—Baltimore 6, New York 5. HR—Wieters (18), off Phelps; Cano (28), off W.Chen. Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA W.Chen L, 12-8 6 2-3 4 4 3 2 4 101 3.79 Strop BS, 5-8 0 0 0 0 2 0 18 1.86 Matusz 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 6 5.30 O’Day 1 0 0 0 0 0 14 2.35 New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Phelps 4 2-3 3 3 3 6 3 98 3.13 Eppley 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 3.47 Logan W, 6-2 2 1 0 0 2 1 27 3.72 D.Robertson H, 22 1 0 0 0 0 0 11 2.14 Soriano S, 35-38 1 0 0 0 0 2 14 1.98 T—3:02. A—46,122 (50,291).

Tigers 5, White Sox 1 Chicago Wise cf Youkilis 3b Pierzynski c Konerko 1b Rios rf D.Johnson dh 1-O.Hudson pr-dh Viciedo lf Al.Ramirez ss Beckham 2b Totals

AB 3 4 4 4 4 3 1 4 3 3 33

R 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

H 2 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 6

BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1

BB 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

SO 1 2 1 3 1 0 0 1 0 1 10

Avg. .272 .237 .285 .309 .297 .333 .189 .255 .270 .230

Detroit AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Jackson cf 4 2 2 0 1 1 .306 Boesch dh 4 1 1 1 1 3 .246 Mi.Cabrera 3b 4 0 3 2 1 0 .332 Fielder 1b 3 0 0 0 2 0 .312 D.Young lf 4 2 2 1 0 0 .275 D.Kelly lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .175 Jh.Peralta ss 3 0 0 0 1 1 .254 Avila c 3 0 0 0 1 1 .244 A.Garcia rf 3 0 1 1 1 1 .333 Infante 2b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .264 Totals 32 5 9 5 8 7 Chicago 000 000 001 — 1 6 0 Detroit 002 010 11x — 5 9 0 1-ran for D.Johnson in the 7th. LOB—Chicago 6, Detroit 11. 2B—Konerko (19), Viciedo (13). 3B—O.Hudson (3), A.Jackson (10), Boesch (2), D.Young (1). HR—D.Young (16), off Crain. SB—Wise 2 (14). Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Liriano L, 5-11 4 4 3 3 7 5 100 5.11 Omogrosso 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 3 4.05 Septimo 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 6 5.79 N.Jones 1 2 0 0 0 1 14 3.00 Veal 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 1.17 Crain 1 1 1 1 1 0 21 2.97 A.Reed 1-3 2 1 1 0 1 21 4.27 Heath 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 0.00 Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Scherzer W, 15-6 8 4 0 0 1 9 113 3.93 Valverde 1 2 1 1 0 1 19 3.56 T—3:17. A—40,059 (41,255).

New York Baltimore Tampa Bay Boston Toronto

W 76 73 72 62 60

L 56 59 61 72 72

Chicago Detroit Kansas City Cleveland Minnesota

W 72 71 59 56 55

L 60 61 73 77 78

Texas Oakland Los Angeles Seattle

W 78 75 71 64

L 54 57 62 70

East Division Pct GB WCGB .576 — — .553 3 — .541 4½ 1½ .463 15 12 .455 16 13 Central Division Pct GB WCGB .545 — — .538 1 2 .447 13 14 .421 16½ 17½ .414 17½ 18½ West Division Pct GB WCGB .591 — — .568 3 — .534 7½ 2½ .478 15 10

Saturday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 4, Baltimore 3 Tampa Bay 5, Toronto 4 L.A. Angels 5, Seattle 2 Minnesota 3, Kansas City 1, 1st game Detroit 5, Chicago White Sox 1 Cleveland 4, Texas 3 Minnesota 8, Kansas City 7, 2nd game Oakland 7, Boston 1

National League

L10 4-6 7-3 4-6 3-7 4-6

Str Home Away W-1 41-27 35-29 L-1 37-30 36-29 W-1 35-30 37-31 L-5 32-38 30-34 L-1 33-31 27-41

L10 5-5 6-4 4-6 2-8 4-6

Str Home Away L-3 38-26 34-34 W-2 41-26 30-35 L-2 29-35 30-38 W-1 32-36 24-41 W-2 25-40 30-38

L10 7-3 9-1 8-2 4-6

Str Home Away L-1 43-25 35-29 W-8 41-27 34-30 W-5 36-29 35-33 L-2 33-32 31-38

Today’s Games Baltimore (Tillman 7-2) at N.Y. Yankees (P.Hughes 13-11), 10:05 a.m. Texas (D.Holland 9-6) at Cleveland (McAllister 5-5), 10:05 a.m. Tampa Bay (Price 16-5) at Toronto (R.Romero 8-12), 10:07 a.m. Minnesota (Vasquez 0-0) at Kansas City (Mendoza 7-9), 11:10 a.m. Boston (Matsuzaka 1-3) at Oakland (Bre.Anderson 2-0), 1:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (Weaver 16-3) at Seattle (Iwakuma 5-3), 1:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Sale 15-5) at Detroit (Verlander 12-7), 5:05 p.m.

Washington Atlanta Philadelphia New York Miami

W 80 74 64 63 59

L 52 59 69 70 74

Cincinnati St. Louis Pittsburgh Milwaukee Chicago Houston

W 81 72 70 64 51 41

L 53 61 62 68 81 92

San Francisco Los Angeles Arizona San Diego Colorado

W 75 71 66 62 54

L 58 63 68 72 77

East Division Pct GB WCGB .606 — — .556 6½ — .481 16½ 8 .474 17½ 9 .444 21½ 13 Central Division Pct GB WCGB .604 — — .541 8½ — .530 10 1½ .485 16 7½ .386 29 20½ .308 39½ 31 West Division Pct GB WCGB .564 — — .530 4½ 1½ .493 9½ 6½ .463 13½ 10½ .412 20 17

Saturday’s Games San Francisco 5, Chicago Cubs 2 Philadelphia 5, Atlanta 1 St. Louis 10, Washington 9 Houston 2, Cincinnati 1 N.Y. Mets 5, Miami 3 Milwaukee 3, Pittsburgh 2 Colorado 9, San Diego 1 L.A. Dodgers 2, Arizona 1

L10 4-6 4-6 7-3 6-4 3-7

Str Home Away L-1 38-25 42-27 L-3 36-31 38-28 W-3 32-37 32-32 W-2 30-35 33-35 L-3 30-34 29-40

L10 6-4 5-5 3-7 8-2 4-6 2-8

Str Home Away L-1 42-24 39-29 W-1 40-26 32-35 L-2 40-26 30-36 W-2 40-28 24-40 L-1 34-33 17-48 W-1 28-39 13-53

L10 7-3 4-6 3-7 8-2 6-4

Str Home Away W-1 37-28 38-30 W-1 36-31 35-32 L-1 33-34 33-34 L-1 33-33 29-39 W-1 29-41 25-36

Today’s Games N.Y. Mets (C.Young 3-7) at Miami (Buehrle 12-11), 10:10 a.m. St. Louis (Westbrook 13-10) at Washington (Strasburg 15-6), 10:35 a.m. Cincinnati (Arroyo 11-7) at Houston (B.Norris 5-11), 11:05 a.m. Pittsburgh (Ja.McDonald 12-6) at Milwaukee (Gallardo 14-8), 11:10 a.m. San Francisco (M.Cain 13-5) at Chicago Cubs (T.Wood 4-11), 11:20 a.m. San Diego (C.Kelly 1-0) at Colorado (Francis 5-4), 12:10 p.m. Arizona (Miley 14-9) at L.A. Dodgers (Capuano 11-10), 1:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Hamels 14-6) at Atlanta (Maholm 11-9), 2:05 p.m.

American League roundup

National League roundup

• Yankees 4, Orioles 3: NEW YORK — Shortstop J.J. Hardy’s bases-loaded error let New York complete a seventh-inning comeback and the Yankees stung Baltimore to restore their AL East lead to three games. • Angels 5, Mariners 2: SEATTLE — Mark Trumbo hit a two-run single in the eighth inning that helped hand Felix Hernandez his first loss in nearly threemonths, and Los Angeles beat Seattle. Hernandez (13-6) lost for the first time since June 12. He entered this outing 9-0 with a 1.40 ERA over his previous 14 starts, including a perfect game. • Rays 5, Blue Jays 4: TORONTO — Matt Joyce homered and had three RBIs, Ryan Roberts also connected and Tampa Bay beat Toronto. • Athletics 7, Red Sox 1: OAKLAND, Calif. — Coco Crisp hit a leadoff home run and finished a triple shy of the cycle to back A.J. Griffin’s gem, and Oakland beat Boston for its season-high eighth straight win. • Twins 3-8, Royals 1-7: KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Joe Mauer hit a grand slam and Chris Parmelee added a three-run shot and Minnesota outlasted Kansas City to complete a sweep of a doubleheader. • Tigers 5, White Sox 1: DETROIT — Max Scherzer allowed four hits in eight scoreless innings, and Detroit pulled within a game of first place with a victory over Chicago. Detroit has taken the first two games of this series from the AL Central-leading White Sox and will send Justin Verlander to the mound today to try for a sweep. • Indians 4, Rangers 3: CLEVELAND — Jeanmar Gomez and three Cleveland relievers combined to beat Texas, and the Indians snapped a six-game losing streak. Gomez worked 5 2⁄3 innings. Joe Smith, Esmil Rogers and Vinnie Pestano finished. Pestano allowed two hits over 1 1⁄3 innings for his first save.

• Cardinals 10, Nationals 9: WASHINGTON — David Freese homered, drove in three runs and had a go-ahead single in the ninth inning as St. Louis ended a four-game skid with a wild win over Washington. • Giants 5, Cubs 2: CHICAGO — Tim Lincecum pitched four-hit ball into the seventh inning and Xavier Nady had a three-run double in his first game of the season, helping NL West-leading San Francisco beat Chicago. • Phillies 5, Braves 1: ATLANTA — Cliff Lee took advantage of some rare run support, throwing seven scoreless innings to lead Philadelphia past slumping Atlanta. • Brewers 3, Pirates 2: MILWAUKEE — Corey Hart homered to lead off the ninth inning and lift Milwaukee to a win over Pittsburgh. • Mets 5, Marlins 3: MIAMI — Kelly Shoppach hit a go-ahead two-run single with two outs in the ninth inning that cleared the bases when center fielder Justin Ruggiano misplayed the ball, lifting New York to a victory over Miami. • Astros 2, Reds 1: HOUSTON — Cincinnati second baseman Wilson Valdez’s error on a routine grounder by Jose Altuve with two outs in the ninth inning lifted Houston to a win over the Reds. • Rockies 9, Padres 1: DENVER — Jhoulys Chacin pitched seven strong innings, Dexter Fowler hit his first career grand slam, and Colorado beat San Diego. • Dodgers 2, Diamondbacks 1: LOS ANGELES — Josh Beckett pitched 6 2⁄3 strong innings for his first victory since being traded to the Dodgers and Andre Ethier hit a tie-breaking home run in the sixth inning to help Los Angeles beat Arizona, snapping an eight-game skid against their NL West rival.

Indians 4, Rangers 3 Texas Kinsler 2b Andrus dh Hamilton cf Beltre 3b N.Cruz rf Mi.Young ss Dav.Murphy lf Soto c Moreland 1b Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 3 4 3 4 3 33

R 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 3

H 0 1 0 3 1 0 2 1 0 8

BI 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 3

BB 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 2

SO 0 0 2 1 1 1 0 1 1 7

Avg. .266 .298 .290 .319 .262 .266 .317 .232 .289

Cleveland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Choo rf 3 1 2 0 1 0 .281 Kipnis 2b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .253 C.Santana c 4 1 1 2 0 1 .245 Brantley cf 4 1 1 0 0 0 .284 Canzler dh 4 0 2 0 0 1 .500 Kotchman 1b 3 0 0 1 0 0 .233 Hannahan 3b 3 0 0 1 0 1 .223 Donald ss 3 0 0 0 0 1 .200 As.Cabrera ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 .270 Carrera lf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .293 Totals 31 4 7 4 1 7 Texas 001 011 000 — 3 8 0 Cleveland 400 000 00x — 4 7 0 LOB—Texas 6, Cleveland 4. 2B—Beltre (30), Kipnis (17). HR—Dav.Murphy (12), off J.Gomez; Beltre (26), off J.Gomez. SB—Choo (16). Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP Feldman L, 6-11 6 6 4 4 1 5 99 Ogando 1 1 0 0 0 2 18 Uehara 1 0 0 0 0 0 15 Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP J.Gomez W, 5-7 5 2-3 4 3 3 2 5 81 J.Smith H, 16 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 17 E.Rogers H, 2 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 8 Pestano S, 1-3 1 1-3 2 0 0 0 1 30 T—2:38. A—17,218 (43,429).

ERA 5.01 2.77 2.49 ERA 5.08 3.13 2.40 2.03

Twins 3, Royals 1 (First Game) Minnesota Mastroianni cf-rf J.Carroll 2b Willingham dh Morneau 1b Doumit c Parmelee rf Revere cf Plouffe 3b M.Carson lf Florimon ss Totals

AB 4 4 3 2 4 4 0 4 4 4 33

R 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3

H 1 3 0 1 1 2 0 1 0 1 10

BI 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 3

BB 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

SO 1 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 1 0 6

Avg. .271 .253 .260 .275 .284 .215 .303 .240 .320 .255

Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. L.Cain cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .253 A.Escobar ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .299 A.Gordon lf 3 0 1 0 1 0 .298 Butler dh 4 0 1 0 0 0 .306 Moustakas 3b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .251 B.Pena c 4 0 1 0 0 0 .246 Francoeur rf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .232 Hosmer 1b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .241 Giavotella 2b 3 0 1 1 0 0 .223 Totals 33 1 7 1 1 4 Minnesota 100 020 000 — 3 10 0 Kansas City 000 000 100 — 1 7 0 LOB—Minnesota 8, Kansas City 7. 2B—Morneau (26), Parmelee (6). SB—J.Carroll (7), Willingham (3). Minnesota IP H R De Vries W, 4-5 6 2-3 7 1 Al.Burnett H, 9 1-3 0 0 Burton H, 15 1 0 0 Perkins S, 9-12 1 0 0 Kansas City IP H R W.Smith L, 4-7 6 9 3 Mazzaro 3 1 0 T—2:31. A—0 (37,903).

ER BB SO NP 1 0 3 94 0 0 0 6 0 1 0 14 0 0 1 12 ER BB SO NP 3 2 4 92 0 1 2 37

ERA 4.41 2.85 2.13 2.67 ERA 5.45 5.60

Twins 8, Royals 7 (Second Game) Minnesota Revere cf

AB R H BI BB SO Avg. 4 2 1 0 1 0 .302

A.Casilla 2b Mauer 1b Morneau dh Willingham lf M.Carson lf Parmelee rf 1-Mastroianni pr-rf Plouffe 3b Butera c Florimon ss Totals

5 3 4 3 0 3 0 4 3 4 33

1 2 0 0 1 1 1 4 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 2 0 0 1 8 9 7 5 5

.215 .312 .275 .260 .320 .218 .271 .237 .207 .275

Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Lough rf 5 2 2 0 0 0 .400 A.Escobar ss 5 1 0 0 0 0 .296 A.Gordon lf 5 0 2 1 0 2 .299 Butler dh 4 3 3 1 1 0 .310 S.Perez c 5 1 4 1 0 0 .309 2-J.Dyson pr 0 0 0 0 0 0 .270 Moustakas 3b 5 0 2 2 0 2 .252 L.Cain cf 4 0 0 0 1 2 .247 Hosmer 1b 4 0 1 2 0 1 .241 T.Abreu 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .286 Totals 41 7 14 7 2 8 Minnesota 440 000 000 — 8 9 1 Kansas City 201 200 200 — 7 14 0 1-ran for Parmelee in the 8th. 2-ran for S.Perez in the 9th. E—Plouffe (14). LOB—Minnesota 3, Kansas City 9. 2B—Florimon (4), Butler (21), Moustakas (29). HR—Parmelee (3), off Hochevar; Mauer (9), off Hochevar. Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP Hendriks 3 2-3 10 5 3 0 5 79 Swarzak W, 3-4 2 2-3 1 2 2 1 2 35 T.Robertson H, 4 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 Fien H, 5 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 12 Waldrop H, 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 21 Perkins S, 10-13 1 1 0 0 0 1 12 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP Hochevar L, 7-13 1 2-3 6 8 8 4 3 63 Teaford 5 1-3 3 0 0 0 0 56 K.Herrera 2 0 0 0 1 2 28 T—3:07. A—23,189 (37,903).

ERA 6.11 4.68 6.00 1.11 2.70 2.62 ERA 5.34 4.30 2.42

Rays 5, Blue Jays 4 Tampa Bay De.Jennings lf B.Upton cf Zobrist ss Longoria dh Joyce rf Keppinger 3b C.Pena 1b R.Roberts 2b Lobaton c a-B.Francisco ph J.Molina c Totals

AB 5 4 3 2 4 4 4 4 2 1 0 33

R 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 5

H 1 2 1 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 8

BI 0 0 1 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 5

BB 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 4

SO 1 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 2 0 0 7

Avg. .249 .249 .266 .281 .256 .331 .188 .221 .227 .235 .204

Toronto AB R H BI BB SO Avg. R.Davis lf 4 1 1 0 1 1 .246 Rasmus cf 3 1 1 0 2 1 .228 Encarnacion 1b 3 1 1 2 1 0 .288 Lind dh 4 0 1 2 0 0 .234 1-McCoy pr-dh 0 0 0 0 0 0 .174 Torrealba c 3 0 1 0 1 1 .244 K.Johnson 2b 3 0 0 0 1 3 .225 Sierra rf 4 0 0 0 0 3 .272 Vizquel 3b 3 0 1 0 1 0 .223 Hechavarria ss 3 1 1 0 0 0 .211 Totals 30 4 7 4 7 9 Tampa Bay 004 000 010 — 5 8 0 Toronto 000 200 020 — 4 7 0 a-fouled out for Lobaton in the 9th. 1-ran for Lind in the 8th. LOB—Tampa Bay 5, Toronto 7. 2B—B.Upton (23), Zobrist (34), Joyce (15), Hechavarria (3). HR—R.Roberts (3), off H.Alvarez; Joyce (15), off Lincoln; Encarnacion (36), off Howell. SB—B.Upton (26), R.Davis (40). DP—Tampa Bay 1; Toronto 2. Tampa Bay Niemann Howell W.Davis W, 2-0 McGee H, 14 Jo.Peralta H, 32

IP 3 1-3 1-3 2 1-3 1 1-3

H 1 2 0 0 3

R 0 2 0 0 2

ER BB SO NP 0 0 4 45 2 2 0 22 0 2 0 33 0 0 2 12 2 1 1 23

ERA 3.08 2.89 2.33 2.06 3.76

Rodney S, 40-42 1 2-3 1 0 0 2 2 28 Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP H.Alvarez L, 7-12 5 5 4 4 4 2 86 Loup 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 3 25 Lincoln 1 1-3 2 1 1 0 2 19 Lyon 1 0 0 0 0 0 9 T—3:14. A—20,478 (49,260).

0.73 ERA 5.04 1.99 4.86 2.20

NL Boxscores Cardinals 10, Nationals 9 St. Louis Jay cf M.Carpenter 1b Holliday lf Craig rf Y.Molina c Freese 3b Schumaker 2b b-S.Robinson ph Kozma ss Descalso ss-2b Lohse p Rzepczynski p Salas p Mujica p c-Beltran ph Boggs p Motte p Totals

AB 4 5 4 5 5 5 3 0 1 3 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 39

R 2 1 1 1 1 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10

H 3 2 1 3 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 14

BI 0 3 2 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 10

BB 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

SO 1 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 7

Avg. .316 .309 .304 .313 .322 .300 .297 .260 .000 .219 .093 --.000 --.268 -----

Washington AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Werth rf 5 1 1 0 0 2 .313 E.Perez cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Harper cf-rf 4 2 2 0 1 1 .256 Zimmerman 3b 5 1 2 1 0 0 .284 LaRoche 1b 5 2 2 3 0 0 .260 Morse lf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .287 Desmond ss 4 1 0 0 0 1 .283 Espinosa 2b 4 1 1 1 0 0 .248 Storen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --K.Suzuki c 3 0 1 1 0 0 .227 d-Tracy ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .273 Flores c 0 0 0 0 0 0 .224 Zimmermann p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .188 Stammen p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 a-Bernadina ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .306 Mattheus p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 S.Burnett p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Lombardozzi 2b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .280 Totals 39 9 10 6 1 6 St. Louis 022 400 011 — 10 14 2 Washington 420 003 000 — 9 10 0 a-flied out for Stammen in the 6th. b-walked for Schumaker in the 8th. c-singled for Mujica in the 8th. d-flied out for K.Suzuki in the 8th. E—Holliday (3), Descalso (10). LOB—St. Louis 7, Washington 4. 2B—M.Carpenter (19), Freese (22), Werth (15), Harper (19). HR—Freese (18), off Zimmermann; Holliday (25), off Zimmermann; LaRoche (24), off Lohse; Espinosa (15), off Lohse. SB—Craig (2), Freese (3). St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP Lohse 5 2-3 9 8 5 0 4 92 Rzepczynski 0 0 1 1 1 0 5 Salas BS, 2-2 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 9 Mujica 1 0 0 0 0 1 7 Boggs W, 3-1 1 0 0 0 0 0 11 Motte S, 32-37 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP Zimmermann 3 2-3 8 8 8 1 3 93 Stammen 2 1-3 1 0 0 0 3 28 Mattheus H, 12 1 1 0 0 0 0 12 S.Burnett BS, 2-4 2-3 2 1 1 1 0 20 Storen L, 1-1 1 1-3 2 1 1 0 1 23 T—3:29. A—34,004 (41,487).

AB 4 4 4 0 4 0 1 3 3

R 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1

H 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 1

BI 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

BB 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0

SO 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 2

3 1 4 3 0 0 0 34

0 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 5 8 5 4 6

.162 .236 .241 .103 .000 --.266

Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. DeJesus rf 3 1 1 2 1 0 .269 Valbuena 3b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .228 d-Vitters ph-3b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .085 Rizzo 1b 4 0 2 0 0 1 .291 A.Soriano lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .259 S.Castro ss 4 0 0 0 0 0 .275 W.Castillo c 2 0 1 0 1 1 .271 B.Jackson cf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .200 Barney 2b 2 1 0 0 1 1 .253 Germano p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .091 a-Campana ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .258 Bowden p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Beliveau p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Cardenas ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .234 c-Mather ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .212 Corpas p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Totals 28 2 5 2 3 9 San Francisco 410 000 000 — 5 8 0 Chicago 002 000 000 — 2 5 0 a-struck out for Germano in the 5th. b-was announced for Beliveau in the 8th. c-singled for Cardenas in the 8th. d-grounded into a double play for Valbuena in the 8th. e-grounded into a fielder’s choice for Ja.Lopez in the 9th. LOB—San Francisco 8, Chicago 3. 2B—Pence (24), Nady (4), B.Crawford (21), Rizzo (9). 3B—Pagan (10). HR—DeJesus (7), off Lincecum. San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lincecum W, 8-14 6 1-3 4 2 2 3 7 111 5.21 Mijares H, 3 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 6 4.82 Mota H, 5 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 6 4.97 Ja.Lopez H, 15 1 1 0 0 0 0 4 2.23 Romo S, 9-10 1 0 0 0 0 0 14 1.94 Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Germano L, 2-5 5 6 5 5 2 2 93 6.30 Bowden 2 2-3 1 0 0 0 3 42 4.50 Beliveau 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 5 3.00 Corpas 1 1 0 0 2 1 19 4.06 T—3:09. A—32,477 (41,009).

Phillies 5, Braves 1 Philadelphia Rollins ss Pierre lf a-Wigginton ph Schierholtz rf Utley 2b Howard 1b Mayberry cf L.Nix rf-lf Frandsen 3b Kratz c Cl.Lee p c-D.Brown ph Rosenberg p Bastardo p Totals

AB 5 3 1 1 5 2 5 4 4 4 2 1 0 0 37

R 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 5

H 3 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 10

BI 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 5

BB 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4

SO 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 4

Avg. .246 .300 .236 .245 .247 .244 .249 .255 .353 .289 .189 .253 -----

Atlanta AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Prado lf 4 1 1 1 0 1 .297 Re.Johnson cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .299 Heyward rf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .271 C.Jones 3b 4 0 2 0 0 1 .304 F.Freeman 1b 3 0 2 0 1 1 .273 McCann c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .228 Uggla 2b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .208 Janish ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .200 T.Hudson p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .222 Avilan p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .333 b-Je.Baker ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .267 Moylan p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Batista p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Totals 34 1 7 1 1 9 Philadelphia 101 012 000 — 5 10 1 Atlanta 000 000 010 — 1 7 0 a-grounded into a fielder’s choice for Pierre in the 6th. b-struck out for Avilan in the 7th. c-grounded out for Cl.Lee in the 8th. E—Bastardo (1). LOB—Philadelphia 9, Atlanta 7. 2B—Utley (9). HR—Rollins (16), off T.Hudson; Prado (9), off Rosenberg. SB—Rollins (25). Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cl.Lee W, 4-7 7 5 0 0 1 5 93 3.52 Rosenberg 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 8 13.09 Bastardo 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 4 31 4.81 Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA T.Hudson L, 13-5 5 9 5 5 3 3 99 3.76 Avilan 2 0 0 0 0 0 16 2.28 Moylan 1 0 0 0 0 0 9 0.00 Batista 1 1 0 0 1 1 15 4.81 T—3:04. A—44,749 (49,586).

Mets 5, Marlins 3 New York Tejada ss Dan.Murphy 2b D.Wright 3b I.Davis 1b Duda lf 2-Bay pr-lf Baxter rf An.Torres cf Thole c 1-R.Cedeno pr Shoppach c Hefner p Acosta p a-Ju.Turner ph R.Ramirez p b-Hairston ph F.Francisco p Totals

AB 4 4 3 3 4 0 4 3 3 0 1 2 0 1 0 1 0 33

R 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5

H 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 7

BI 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

BB 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

SO 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 6

Avg. .295 .285 .317 .223 .239 .152 .277 .223 .237 .287 .346 .063 --.275 --.273 ---

Miami AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Petersen lf 4 0 1 1 0 1 .199 Ruggiano cf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .324 Reyes ss 3 2 1 0 1 0 .282 Ca.Lee 1b 4 0 3 1 0 0 .279 Stanton rf 4 0 1 1 0 2 .290 Dobbs 3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .301 D.Solano 2b 4 1 1 0 0 0 .291 J.Buck c 4 0 0 0 0 2 .197 Jo.Johnson p 3 0 0 0 0 3 .089 Cishek p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 H.Bell p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 33 3 7 3 2 8 New York 000 010 004 — 5 7 0 Miami 001 001 010 — 3 7 1 a-grounded into a double play for Acosta in the 8th. b-struck out for R.Ramirez in the 9th. 1-ran for Thole in the 8th. 2-ran for Duda in the 9th. E—Ruggiano (3). LOB—New York 4, Miami 5. 2B—Baxter (13), Petersen (4). SB—Reyes (30). DP—New York 1; Miami 1. New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hefner 6 6 2 2 1 4 92 4.52 Acosta 1 0 0 0 0 3 16 8.00 R.Ramirez W, 3-3 1 1 1 1 1 0 18 4.31 Francisco S, 23-26 1 0 0 0 0 1 15 5.79 Miami IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Jo.Johnson 8 3 1 1 2 4 105 3.86 Cishek L, 4-2, 4-152-3 4 4 3 1 1 29 2.50 H.Bell 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 5 5.88 T—2:43. A—26,402 (37,442).

Brewers 3, Pirates 2

ERA 2.81 4.68 3.75 3.21 1.90 2.83 ERA 3.01 2.47 2.39 2.16 3.86

Pittsburgh Presley lf Snider rf A.McCutchen cf G.Jones 1b P.Alvarez 3b J.Harrison 2b Barajas c 1-Mercer pr-ss Barmes ss c-McKenry ph-c A.J.Burnett p J.Hughes p a-Holt ph Grilli p d-G.Sanchez ph Hanrahan p Totals

AB 4 3 4 4 4 4 4 0 3 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 32

R 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2

H 1 0 2 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6

BI 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

BB 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 4

SO 3 2 1 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 13

Avg. .238 .278 .346 .281 .252 .245 .200 .204 .219 .258 .059 .000 ----.215 ---

Avg. .290 .283 .281 --.330 --.283 .263 .263

Milwaukee Morgan rf Axford p R.Weeks 2b Braun lf Ar.Ramirez 3b Hart 1b Lucroy c C.Gomez cf Segura ss Estrada p

AB 4 0 4 2 4 3 3 2 3 1

R 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0

H 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0

BI 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0

BB 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 1

SO 2 0 1 2 1 1 1 0 1 1

Avg. .241 .000 .222 .309 .293 .276 .326 .257 .200 .100

Giants 5, Cubs 2 San Francisco Pagan cf Scutaro 2b Sandoval 3b Romo p Posey 1b Ja.Lopez p e-Arias ph-3b Pence rf H.Sanchez c

Nady lf G.Blanco lf B.Crawford ss Lincecum p Mijares p Mota p Belt 1b Totals

Henderson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Aoki ph-rf 1 0 1 0 0 0 .285 Totals 27 3 4 2 5 10 Pittsburgh 010 000 010 — 2 6 1 Milwaukee 001 000 101 — 3 4 1 No outs when winning run scored. a-walked for J.Hughes in the 8th. b-singled for Henderson in the 8th. c-walked for Barmes in the 9th. d-walked for Grilli in the 9th. 1-ran for Barajas in the 9th. E—Barajas (3), Lucroy (5). LOB—Pittsburgh 8, Milwaukee 5. 2B—Presley (10), A.McCutchen (25), C.Gomez (16). HR—P.Alvarez (27), off Estrada; Hart (26), off Hanrahan. SB—A.McCutchen (16), R.Weeks (10), Braun (22), C.Gomez 2 (30). Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA A.J.Burnett 6 2-3 2 2 2 4 9 102 3.63 J.Hughes 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 1 2.77 Grilli 1 1 0 0 1 1 20 2.16 Hanrahan L, 4-1 0 1 1 1 0 0 2 2.49 Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Estrada 7 4 1 1 1 10 104 3.85 Henderson, 2-5 1 1 1 1 1 2 18 3.45 Axford W, 5-7 1 1 0 0 2 1 26 5.07 T—3:02. A—32,060 (41,900).

Astros 2, Reds 1 Cincinnati Cozart ss Stubbs cf B.Phillips 2b W.Valdez 2b Ludwick lf Bruce rf Frazier 1b Rolen 3b Hanigan c H.Bailey p Marshall p Totals

AB 4 4 4 0 3 3 4 3 4 3 0 32

R 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

H 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 7

BI 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

BB 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 2

SO 1 1 2 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 8

Avg. .247 .221 .298 .201 .276 .257 .293 .251 .289 .123 ---

Houston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Paredes rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .188 X.Cedeno p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 W.Lopez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Greene ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .223 Wallace 1b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .281 Maxwell cf-rf 4 1 1 1 0 2 .234 F.Martinez lf 2 0 1 0 0 1 .191 c-M.Downs ph 1 1 1 0 0 0 .213 Dominguez 3b 3 0 0 0 1 2 .316 S.Moore 2b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .227 1-Schafer pr-cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .216 d-B.Barnes ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .180 C.Snyder c 2 0 0 0 0 1 .191 a-Altuve ph-2b 2 0 0 0 0 0 .293 Harrell p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .176 Ambriz p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-J.Castro ph-c 0 0 0 0 1 0 .263 Totals 31 2 4 1 2 10 Cincinnati 100 000 000 — 1 7 1 Houston 000 100 001 — 2 4 0 Two outs when winning run scored. a-flied out for C.Snyder in the 8th. b-walked for Ambriz in the 8th. c-doubled for F.Martinez in the 9th. d-was hit by a pitch for Schafer in the 9th. 1-ran for S.Moore in the 8th. E—W.Valdez (3). LOB—Cincinnati 7, Houston 7. 2B—Bruce (32), Rolen (16), M.Downs (4). HR— Maxwell (13), off H.Bailey. Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA H.Bailey 8 3 1 1 1 9 107 4.09 Marshall L, 4-5 2-3 1 1 0 1 1 20 3.02 Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Harrell 7 7 1 1 1 3 115 3.81 Ambriz 1 0 0 0 0 2 10 3.38 X.Cedeno 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 5 4.37 W.Lopez W, 6-3 2-3 0 0 0 1 2 19 2.38 T—2:57. A—18,316 (40,981).

Dodgers 2, Diamondbacks 1 Arizona G.Parra lf A.Hill 2b J.Upton rf Goldschmidt 1b M.Montero c C.Young cf R.Wheeler 3b Jo.McDonald ss Skaggs p Albers p a-Kubel ph Lindstrom p Shaw p Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 2 2 0 1 0 0 33

R 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

H 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 7

BI 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1

SO 1 1 1 2 2 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 11

Avg. .275 .297 .273 .282 .279 .223 .210 .237 .000 --.263 -----

Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. M.Ellis 2b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .260 Victorino lf 3 0 1 0 1 0 .258 Ad.Gonzalez 1b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .182 Kemp cf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .331 H.Ramirez ss 2 1 1 1 1 1 .255 Ethier rf 3 1 2 1 0 0 .292 L.Cruz 3b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .295 A.Ellis c 3 0 0 0 0 0 .279 Beckett p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .000 Choate p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-A.Kennedy ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .264 J.Wright p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 League p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 29 2 6 2 2 8 Arizona 001 000 000 — 1 7 1 Los Angeles 010 001 00x — 2 6 0 a-grounded out for Albers in the 7th. b-struck out for Choate in the 7th. E—M.Montero (8). LOB—Arizona 6, Los Angeles 5. 2B—C.Young (22). HR—J.Upton (12), off Beckett; H.Ramirez (23), off Skaggs; Ethier (15), off Albers. SB—Victorino (32). Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Skaggs 5 5 1 1 1 3 91 2.60 Albers L, 0-1 1 1 1 1 0 3 19 3.75 Lindstrom 1 0 0 0 0 2 12 9.00 Shaw 1 0 0 0 1 0 15 4.10 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Beckett W, 1-1 6 2-3 6 1 1 1 9 102 2.92 Choate H, 19 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 5 2.73 J.Wright H, 6 1 0 0 0 0 0 20 3.95 League S, 1-1 1 1 0 0 0 2 15 4.50 T—3:03. A—35,992 (56,000).

Rockies 9, Padres 1 San Diego Ev.Cabrera ss Venable rf Headley 3b Quentin lf Grandal c Alonso 1b Maybin cf Amarista 2b Volquez p Vincent p a-Guzman ph Burns p Thatcher p Mikolas p Totals

AB 4 3 3 4 4 4 4 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 31

R 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

H 0 1 1 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6

BI 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

BB 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

SO 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 6

Avg. .232 .261 .277 .263 .274 .274 .236 .251 .082 .000 .253 .000 --.000

Colorado AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Fowler cf 5 1 1 4 0 2 .306 Rutledge ss 5 1 3 0 0 1 .353 C.Gonzalez lf 5 1 2 0 0 0 .310 W.Rosario c 3 1 1 1 1 1 .256 Colvin rf 4 2 2 3 0 1 .294 Pacheco 1b 3 1 2 0 1 0 .309 Nelson 3b 4 0 1 1 0 0 .275 LeMahieu 2b 3 1 0 0 1 1 .283 Chacin p 3 0 0 0 0 2 .231 Belisle p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 b-Giambi ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .250 1-Chatwood pr 0 1 0 0 0 0 .143 C.Torres p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .400 Totals 36 9 13 9 3 8 San Diego 000 001 000 — 1 6 1 Colorado 110 030 04x — 9 13 0 a-struck out for Vincent in the 7th. b-singled for Belisle in the 8th. 1-ran for Giambi in the 8th. E—Ev.Cabrera (10). LOB—San Diego 6, Colorado 6. 2B—C.Gonzalez (26), Colvin (20), Pacheco (24). HR—Venable (9), off Chacin; Colvin (16), off Volquez; Fowler (13), off Mikolas. San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP Volquez L, 9-10 4 2-3 9 5 5 3 5 87 Vincent 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 15 Burns 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 9 Thatcher 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 4 Mikolas 1 3 4 3 0 0 13 Colorado IP H R ER BB SO NP Chacin W, 2-4 7 5 1 1 2 4 74 Belisle 1 1 0 0 1 0 19 C.Torres 1 0 0 0 0 2 17 T—2:30. A—30,152 (50,398).

ERA 4.27 2.63 3.12 3.38 3.96 ERA 4.85 3.16 4.15


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

Nevada spoils Cal’s party with victory The Associated Press BERKELEY, Calif. — Cody Fajardo, Stefphon Jefferson and the Nevada Wolf Pack spoiled California’s stadium reopening party. Jefferson ran for 145 yards and scored his third touchdown with 36 seconds remaining Saturday as Nevada beat California 31-24 in the first game in 21 months at Memorial Stadium. “Good teams find a way to try and overcome adversity,” Nevada coach Chris Ault said. “I’m not saying we’re a good team at this particular time, but we did overcome some adversity. Fajardo completed 25 of 32 passes for 230 yards and added 97 yards rushing and a touchdown for the Wolf Pack (1-0), who put a damper on what was supposed to be a celebratory day for the Golden Bears. Fajardo engineered the winning drive by throw a 14-yard pass to Zach Sudfeld on third-and-4 from the Cal 38 and a 19-yarder to Brandon Wimberly

that set up Jefferson’s winning score. “It was dreamlike,” Fajardo said. “You can only think about having the ball with two minutes left and driving down and scoring. You can only dream of that, and it became a reality for us.” It was especially sweet for Wimberly, who missed all of last season recovering from a bullet wound to his stomach. “It’s a long road. This is game one,” he said. “A year ago, there was no way I was going to play a football game.” Quarterback Zach Maynard returned after being benched for the first three series as punishment for missing a tutoring session earlier this summer to throw for 247 yards and two touchdowns for Cal (0-1). But he also lost a fumble deep in Nevada territory in the fourth quarter as the Bears lost at home to Nevada for the second time in 25 tries and first since 1903.

“I told everybody to keep their heads up,” Maynard said. “Everybody is pretty down. We worked so hard to get this far. To come home and get a loss is pretty tough.” Also on Saturday: No. 1 USC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Hawaii. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 LOS ANGELES — Marqise Lee caught a 75-yard touchdown pass on the first play from scrimmage and returned a kickoff 100 yards for a score, and Southern California rolled to a victory over Hawaii. Matt Barkley kicked off his Heisman Trophy campaign with 377 yards passing and four touchdowns, and Lee caught 10 passes for 197 yards for the Trojans (1-0). Colorado State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Colorado . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 DENVER — Jim McElwain became the first Colorado State coach to win his debut in 42 years when the Rams rallied past their arch rival for a win over the Colorado Buffaloes. Garret

Grayson completed 14 of 21 passes for 173 yards and two touchdowns and Jared Roberts kicked two fourth-quarter field goals after the Rams had fallen behind 17-16 in the fourth quarter. Washington. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 San Diego State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 SEATTLE — Safety Will Shamburger returned a fumble 44 yards for a touchdown in the third quarter, Keith Price threw for 222 yards and a TD to Kasen Williams, and Washington raced to an early lead then held on for a win over San Diego State. Arizona. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Toledo. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 TUCSON, Ariz. — Matt Scott scrambled and threw a 10-yard touchdown pass to Terrence Miller in overtime to give Arizona a victory over Toledo in Rich Rodriguez’s coaching debut in the desert. Arizona’s John Bonano missed a 25-yard field goal as regulation ended after failing on a 24-yard attempt earlier in the game.

Ducks

COLLEGE FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD

Continued from D1 Mariota, who had not seen live game competition since his senior year of high school at Saint Louis School in Honolulu, Hawaii, looked like a natural in Chip Kelly’s spread-option offense as he guided Oregon to a 50-10 halftime lead after leading the reigning Rose Bowl champions to touchdown drives on their first seven possessions. “He’s got good command of our offense,” Kelly said about Mariota. “To see how he performed today is what we hoped and wished for, but you don’t know until he gets out there. … He’s a laid-back dude, but he can make plays.” As expected, Oregon had little trouble with the second-best team in last year’s GoDaddy.com bowl game. De’Anthony Thomas posted 119 yards of offense and three touchdowns on seven touches — three rushes for 64 yards and one TD and four catches for 55 yards receiving and two scores — all in the first half. Kenjon Barner, in his first game as the Ducks’ featured back, ran for 66 yards and two touchdowns on just nine carries. Backup quarterback Bryan Bennett, who entered the game in the second quarter, passed for 108 yards and a touchdown. And third-string running back Byron Marshall had 64 yards rushing and a score on a team-high 24 carries.

PAC-12

South Conf. Overall 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-1 Saturday’s Games Nevada 31, California 24 Colorado State 22, Colorado 17 USC 49, Hawaii 10 Arizona 24, Toledo 17 (OT) Washington 21, San Diego State 12 Oregon 57, Arkansas State 34 Nicholls State at Oregon State, ppd., hurricane Friday’s Game Utah at Utah State, 5 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 8 Southern Utah at California, noon Sacramento State at Colorado, noon Eastern Washington at Washington State, noon USC at Syracuse, 12:30 p.m. Wisconsin at Oregon State, 1 p.m. Fresno State at Oregon, 3:30 p.m. Washington at LSU, 4 p.m. Nebraska at UCLA, 4:30 p.m. Illinois at Arizona State, 7:30 p.m. Oklahoma State at Arizona, 7:30 p.m.

Arizona Arizona State UCLA USC Utah Colorado

Don Ryan / The Associated Press

Oregon Receiver Josh Huff, middle, celebrates his touchdown with teammates Daryle Hawkins, left, and Keanon Lowe during the first half of Saturday night’s game in Eugene.

“A lot of guys got a lot of reps,” Kelly said. “When you have a game like this, your young kids can learn. You have to make a few mistakes to learn and grow. … A lot of the kids that played in the second half, we know they’re going to have key roles for us.” While the postgame stats are fun to digest — 14 different Oregon players caught a pass Saturday night — they could go to even more absurd heights in the next two weeks against Fresno State (4-9 in 2011) and Tennessee Tech, an FCS school which has arguably the fifth-best football team in the Volunteer State. The $950,000 question

Continued from D1 The native Hawaiian had shown promise in the Ducks’ spring game with a touchdown pass and two scoring runs — including one touchdown rush of 82 yards. Mariota is the first freshman to start at quarterback in an opener for Oregon since Danny O’Neil in 1991. He completed 18 of 22 passes. The Ducks scored on their first drive of the game with Barner’s 4-yard dash, then added the two-point conversion to make it 8-0. Barner, a senior, was James’ backup for the past two seasons. James, the school’s career leading rusher, left Oregon early for the NFL draft and was a second-round pick by the San Francisco 49ers. Mariota connected with De’Anthony Thomas with a 12-yard touchdown pass to make it 15-0.

Continued from D1 Elway signaled his philosophy by wooing Peyton Manning to Denver and dumping Tim Tebow, who led a runcentered offense into the playoffs last season. “Everything cycles in the NFL, and what that next cycle is, who knows,” Elway said. “Unless there are rules changes, I don’t see people backing down. Because of the rules and the attitude, the running game is a little less important.” That is exacerbated by the booming popularity of the spread offense in college and high school, positioning the talent pool in the next generation to be pass-intensive, too. When the former quarterback Rich Gannon was in high school in the early 1980s, he was lucky if he threw the ball 25 times a game, he said. Now, when he watches a high school game, offenses are operating in spread formations, with the quarterback in the shotgun.

Conf. Overall 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-1

Stanford Oregon Washington Oregon State California Washington State

Oregon

Offenses

SCORES

All Times PDT ——— North

(the amount Arkansas State received for being thrashed on national television) for the Ducks is: Do any of these games help prepare them for Pac-12 play? Does beating up on a team that plays in the same league as South Alabama as opposed to the boys in Tuscaloosa help ready Oregon for a Nov. 3 showdown with Southern California that could have not only conference championship but national title implications? “This was a good day overall for us,” Kelly said. “We have a lot to work on, but we’re moving in the right direction.” — Reporter beastes@ bendbulletin.com.

Thomas made a splash last season when he set an Oregon freshman record with 18 touchdowns, rushing for seven, nine on receptions, and two on kickoff returns. Before the first quarter was over, John Huff pulled down a 4-yard touchdown pass from Mariota and Barner added a 17-yard scoring run to make it 29-0. Brian Davis kicked a 43-yard field goal for the Red Wolves early in the second quarter. Thomas scored again on a 33-yard run to make it 43-3, and there was still 10:45 left in the half. True freshman Byron Marshall added a 3-yard touchdown run for the Ducks. Aplin passed to Jones, who ran down the right side to close the gap a bit with 3:20 left in the half, before Davis opened the third quarter with a 29-yard field goal. Aplin added a 6-yard touchdown pass to Josh Jarboe before the end of the quarter to make it 50-20.

If a scout tries to unearth a fullback in college, he comes up empty because fullbacks are not used in college football anymore. Offensive linemen are steeped in pass protection from an early age, but some need remedial work in run blocking when they arrive in the NFL. That merely reinforces the shift that NFL teams have made. Still, this offseason saw a flurry of big-money contracts for running backs. The Bears’ Matt Forte and the Houston Texans’ Arian Foster received new deals, following Adrian Peterson’s blockbuster contract from Minnesota last year. Forte and Foster are skilled receivers out of the backfield, too. But Maurice Jones-Drew wants a new contract in Jacksonville, and ownership there has so far refused. That is perhaps because last season, in which Jones-Drew ran for 1,606 yards and the Jaguars had the sixth-ranked defense in the league, the Jaguars won just five games, underscoring the importance of having a

good quarterback. As a result, the running game seems likely to become a small part of the offense for every team that does not have a player like Peterson, or that does not have a defense as good as the San Francisco 49ers did last season. The 49ers rushed more often than they threw last season, unusual for a championshipcaliber team today. They were second in points allowed and first in rushing yardage. Their passing offense ranked 16th in yardage. But quarterback Alex Smith avoided mistakes, throwing only five interceptions. For the 49ers, the run was the fulcrum of their offense. Most other Super Bowl contenders, though, use it as a complement, to use up the clock late in games when they have a lead, to convert on third-and-short, to avoid turnovers in bad weather and to score touchdowns in goal-line situations, when the action is so compressed that throwing is riskier. The most

TOP 25 Saturday No. 1 Southern Cal (1-0) beat Hawaii 49-10. Next: vs. Syracuse at East Rutherford, N.J., Saturday. No. 2 Alabama (1-0) beat No. 8 Michigan 41-14. Next: vs. Western Kentucky, Saturday. No. 3 LSU (1-0) beat North Texas 41-14. Next: vs. Washington, Saturday. No. 4 Oklahoma (1-0) beat UTEP 24-7. Next: vs. Florida A&M, Saturday. No. 5 Oregon (1-0) beat Arkansas State 57-34. Next: vs. Fresno State, Saturday. No. 6 Georgia (1-0) beat Buffalo 45-23. Next: at Missouri, Saturday. No. 7 Florida State (1-0) beat Murray State 69-3. Next: vs. Savannah State, Saturday. No. 8 Michigan (0-1) lost to No. 2 Alabama 41-14. Next: vs. Air Force, Saturday. No. 9 South Carolina (1-0) beat Vanderbilt 17-13, Thursday. Next: East Carolina, Saturday. No. 10 Arkansas (1-0) beat Jacksonville State 49-24. Next: vs. Louisiana-Monroe, Saturday. No. 11 West Virginia (1-0) beat Marshall 69-34. Next: vs. James Madison at Landover, Md., Sept. 15. No. 12 Wisconsin (1-0) beat Northern Iowa 26-21. Next: at Oregon State, Saturday. No. 13 Michigan State (1-0) beat No. 24 Boise State 17-13, Friday. Next: at Central Michigan, Saturday. No. 14 Clemson (1-0) beat Auburn 26-19. Next: vs. Ball State, Saturday. No. 15 Texas (1-0) beat Wyoming 37-17. Next: vs. New Mexico, Saturday. No. 16 Virginia Tech (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Georgia Tech, Monday. No. 17 Nebraska (1-0) beat Southern Miss 49-20. Next: at UCLA, Saturday. No. 18 Ohio State (1-0) beat Miami (Ohio) 56-10. Next: vs. UCF, Saturday. No. 19 Oklahoma State (1-0) beat Savannah State 840. Next: at Arizona, Saturday. No. 20 TCU (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Grambling, Saturday. No. 21 Stanford (1-0) beat San Jose State 20-17, Friday. Next: vs. Duke, Saturday. No. 22 Kansas State (1-0) beat Missouri State 51-9. Next: vs. Miami, Saturday. No. 23 Florida (1-0) beat Bowling Green 27-14. Next: at Texas A&M, Saturday. No. 24 Boise State (0-1) lost to No. 13 Michigan State 17-13, Friday. Next: vs. Miami (Ohio), Sept. 15. No. 25 Louisville (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Kentucky, Sunday.

important function of the running game for most teams has become to set up play-action fakes. But for the handful of teams that do not have a dominant quarterback — like the 49ers and the New York Jets — the run has become the stopgap option. “If you don’t have Peyton Manning or somebody who is a reasonably good passer, it’s very difficult not to turn the ball over,” said the Colts’ former president Bill Polian, who is now an ESPN analyst. “You come to the conclusion,

Saturday’s Games EAST Albany (NY) 40, Colgate 23 Lehigh 27, Monmouth (NJ) 17 Marist 35, Bryant 10 Miami 41, Boston College 32 Northwestern 42, Syracuse 41 Notre Dame 50, Navy 10 Ohio 24, Penn St. 14 Stony Brook 49, CCSU 17 West Virginia 69, Marshall 34 Youngstown St. 31, Pittsburgh 17 SOUTH Alabama 41, Michigan 14 Alabama A&M 7, Tuskegee 6 Alcorn St. 22, Grambling St. 21 Clemson 26, Auburn 19 Coastal Carolina 29, NC A&T 13 Concordia-Selma 20, MVSU 19 Delaware St. 17, VMI 10 Duke 46, FIU 26 East Carolina 35, Appalachian St. 13 Florida 27, Bowling Green 14 Florida St. 69, Murray St. 3 Georgetown 35, Davidson 14 Georgia 45, Buffalo 23 Georgia Southern 58, Jacksonville 0 Howard 30, Morehouse 29 James Madison 55, St. Francis (Pa.) 7 LSU 41, North Texas 14 Louisiana-Lafayette 40, Lamar 0 Maryland 7, William & Mary 6 Mississippi 49, Cent. Arkansas 27 Mississippi St. 56, Jackson St. 9 Morgan St. 30, Sacred Heart 27, 4OT NC Central 54, Fayetteville St. 31 Norfolk St. 24, Virginia St. 0 North Carolina 62, Elon 0 Old Dominion 57, Duquesne 23 Presbyterian 45, Brevard 10 Rutgers 24, Tulane 12 Samford 24, Furman 21 South Florida 34, Chattanooga 13 Tennessee St. 17, Florida A&M 14 The Citadel 49, Charleston Southern 14 Troy 39, UAB 29 UT-Martin 20, Memphis 17 UTSA 33, South Alabama 31 Virginia 43, Richmond 19 W. Kentucky 49, Austin Peay 10 Wake Forest 20, Liberty 17 Wofford 34, Gardner-Webb 7 MIDWEST Illinois 24, W. Michigan 7 Illinois St. 56, Dayton 14 Indiana 24, Indiana St. 17 Iowa 18, N. Illinois 17 Iowa St. 38, Tulsa 23 Kansas 31, S. Dakota St. 17 Kansas St. 51, Missouri St. 9 Missouri 62, SE Louisiana 10 N. Dakota St. 52, Robert Morris 0 Nebraska 49, Southern Miss. 20 Ohio St. 56, Miami (Ohio) 10 Purdue 48, E. Kentucky 6 Wisconsin 26, N. Iowa 21 SOUTHWEST Ark.-Pine Bluff 17, Langston 14 Arkansas 49, Jacksonville St. 24 Oklahoma 24, UTEP 7 Oklahoma St. 84, Savannah St. 0 Texas 37, Wyoming 17 Texas Southern 44, Prairie View 41 Texas St. 30, Houston 13 Texas Tech 44, Northwestern St. 6 FAR WEST Air Force 49, Idaho St. 21 Arizona 24, Toledo 17, OT Cal Poly 41, San Diego 14 Colorado St. 22, Colorado 17 Fresno St. 37, Weber St. 10 Montana 35, South Dakota 24 Nevada 31, California 24 New Mexico 66, Southern U. 21 Oregon 57, Arkansas St. 34 Portland St. 38, Carroll (Mont.) 20 Southern Cal 49, Hawaii 10 Washington 21, San Diego St. 12

if I have a choice between a mediocre passing game or a running game that pounds away, I’ll take the running game anytime. I don’t believe you can win that way in the playoffs. But you can win in the regular season that way, which is essentially what the Jets are doing.”

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PAC-12 FOOTBALL ROUNDUP

D5


D6

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

Prep girls cross-country at a glance A look at the Central Oregon high school girls cross-country teams competing this fall: CLASS 5A BEND Head coach: Lisa Nye (second season) 2011 finish: Second at Special District 1 Conference meet, second at Class 5A state meet Returning state qualifiers: Jenna Mattox, sr.; Melissa Hubler, sr.; Makeila Lundy, sr.; McKenzie Bell, sr.; Hannah Anderson, soph. First meet: Jere Breese Memorial Ranch Stampede in Prineville, Sept. 8 District meet: Class 5A Special District 1 Championships in Bend, Oct. 26

REDMOND Head coach: Scott Brown (sixth season) 2011 finish: Second at Class 6A Central Valley Conference meet, 12th at Class 6A state meet Returning state qualifiers: Tefna Mitchell-Hoegh, sr.; Samantha Scholz, sr.; Kiersten Ochsner, jr.; Richee Stevens, sr. First meet: Jere Breese Memorial Ranch Stampede in Prineville, Sept. 8 District meet: Class 5A Special District 1 Championships in Bend, Oct. 26

MOUNTAIN VIEW Head coach: Don Stearns (10th season, fourth of second tenure) 2011 finish: Fourth at Special District 1 Conference meet Key returners: Tia Hatton, soph.; Mikayla Cant, sr. First meet: Jere Breese Memorial Ranch Stampede in Prineville, Sept. 8 District meet: Class 5A Special District 1 Championships in Bend, Oct. 26

SUMMIT Head coach: Carol McLatchie (first year) 2011 finish: First at Special District 1 Conference meet, first at Class 5A state meet Returning state qualifiers: Piper McDonald, soph.; Tess Nelson, sr. First meet: Jere Breese Memorial Ranch Stampede in Prineville, Sept. 8 District meet: Class 5A Special District 1 Championships in Bend, Oct. 26

CLASS 4A CROOK COUNTY Head coach: Tracy Smith (15th season) 2011 finish: First at Class 4A Greater Oregon League Championships, ninth at Class 4A state meet Returning state qualifiers: Carly Hibbs, sr.; Natalie Stenbeck, sr.; Charsie Brewer, soph.; Kelsee Martin, jr.; Halie Jones, sr. First meet: Competed Friday at XC Summit and Night Race in Wilsonville District meet: Class 4A Greater Oregon League Championships at La Grande High School, Oct. 27 LA PINE Head coach: Brian Earls (seventh season) 2011 finish: Did not field a complete team Key returners: Tysha Hulse, soph., Chloe Sazama, jr.; McKenna Boen, soph. First meet: Jere Breese Memorial Ranch Stampede in Prineville, Sept. 8 District meet: Class 4A SkyEm Championships at Lane Community College in Eugene, Oct. 25 MADRAS Head coach: Donnie Alire (sixth season) 2011 finish: Incomplete team Key returners: None First meet: Darrell Deedon Cascade Invitational in Turner, Sept. 6 District meet: Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference Championships at McIver Park in Estacada, Oct. 24

RIDGEVIEW Head coach: John Albrecht (first season) 2011 finish: First-year program Key returners: Dakota Steen, jr. First meet: Jere Breese Memorial Ranch Stampede in Prineville, Sept. 8 District meet: Class 4A Greater Oregon League Championships at La Grande High School, Oct. 27

SISTERS Head coach: Charlie Kanzig (18th season) 2011 finish: First at Sky-Em League district meet, third at Class 4A state meet Returning state qualifiers: Zoe Falk, jr.; Madison Boettner, soph.; Aria Blumm, soph.; Emily Ford, soph. First meet: Jere Breese Memorial Ranch Stampede in Prineville, Sept. 8 District meet: Class 4A SkyEm Championships at Lane Community College in Eugene, Oct. 25

Contenders Continued from D1 Other returning state qualifiers for Bend are Melissa Hubler, Makeila Lundy, McKenzie Bell and Hannah Anderson. Sophie Andrews and Kelcey Canfield should help bolster the team, according to Nye. Nye says her team hopes to “meet or exceed” its goals from last season and is looking to place in the top two at the district meet in order to gain a state berth. “Our focus is to have a great district meet,” Nye says. The Storm, who won their fourth consecutive state title last year, will pose a challenge despite the loss of several key runners, including last year’s individual state champion, Megan Fristoe. “Our toughest state competition is in the district as well,” says Nye, referring to Summit. Other top runners the Storm lost to graduation include Sara Fristoe (Megan’s twin sister), Ashley Maton and Kira Kelley. “It will be a challenge winning state,” says first-year Summit head coach Carol McLatchie. “A lot of (the girls) are quite young.” McLatchie, who has served three years as an assistant track coach for Summit’s distance squad, was appointed as the school’s new crosscountry head coach this summer. She replaces Dave Clark, who served as head cross-country coach at Summit since the school opened in 2011 but whose coaching contract was not renewed for 2012. School officials have not commented on why Clark — who continues to teach math at Summit — was not kept as coach. Sophomore Piper McDonald should lead the Storm in 2012. McDonald placed third at the 2011 state meet as a freshman and is expected to be a top contender for this year’s state title. The Storm will also rely on senior Tess Nelson, who finished 14th at state last year. Other key returners include Madison Walker and Mary Hadley Schoderbek. Mountain View, which finished third at the district meet last year, returns three varsity runners. Sophomore Tia Hatton and senior Mikayla Cant will lead the pack. Kiersten Hatton “will be in the hunt for the (team’s) top seven,” according to Mountain View coach Don Stearns. Freshmen Sage Hassell and Madison Leapaldt will help solidify the varsity squad, Stearns adds. The Cougars are hoping to “sneak into the second spot for state,” says Stearns who refers to his team as inexperienced and young. The Class 5A Intermountain Conference has expanded this year to include Redmond. Redmond High, formerly a Class 6A school, has a lower enrollment this year with the opening across town of Ridgeview. “Our team is about the same size, but we suffered a blow,”

PREP SPORTS ROUNDUP

Culver volleyball takes title at Warrenton Tournament Bulletin staff report WARRENTON — One way to make a coach happy is to begin the season in nearly flawless fashion. At the eight-team Warrenton Tournament on Saturday, Culver’s volleyball squad made its coach happy indeed. After compiling a 6-1 record in pool play, the Bulldogs defeated Central Linn in the semifinals and then beat Warrenton to claim the championship. Behind six kills apiece from Shealene Little and Cassie Sulton, along with three Little aces and 12 assists by Jahnie Cleveland, Culver swept Warrenton 25-19, 25-19 in the title match. “We started off a little shaky,” Culver coach Randi Viggiano said. “We just wanted to improve and get better each game. We did just that.” Culver opens up Class 2A Tri-River Conference play on Tuesday, when the Bulldogs take on Regis at home. In other Saturday action:

GIRLS SOCCER Summit. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Sandy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 Freshman Taryn Poole paced the Storm in their season opener with three goals, while junior Hadlie Plummer picked up one goal and four assists in a Class 5A nonconference contest at Summit. The Storm (1-0) return to action Tuesday, when they host reigning Class 5A state champion Sherwood. BOYS SOCCER Sandy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Crook County . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 PRINEVILLE — Crook County kicked off its season against the Pioneers, who, after racking up seven goals against Redmond on Friday, recorded six goals to put the Cowboys away. Crook County (0-1) plays host to Sisters on Tuesday. Late Friday results: CROSS-COUNTRY WILSONVILLE — Crook County got its first taste of competition at the Night Meet at Wilsonville High School.

Senior Carly Hibbs and freshman Irene Morales posted the fasted times for the Cowgirls, with Hibbs covering the 3,000meter course in 13 minutes, 12 seconds, for the 41st spot in the senior class division. Morales’ time of 13:14 earned her the 25th place in the freshman division. Junior Grayson Munn paced the Cowboys in both time and place, finishing in 9:38 for fourth in the junior class. Junior Luis Rivera crossed the finish in 10:07 and 21st place in his division. Crook County returns to action next Saturday at the Jere Breese Memorial Ranch Stampede in Prineville. BOYS SOCCER Sandy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Redmond. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 REDMOND — The Panthers fell behind early to the Pioneers in a nonconference season opener, as Redmond trailed 3-0 at halftime before the Pioneers added four goals in the second half to seal the win. Redmond (0-1) plays at home Thursday against Madras.

says Redmond coach Scott Brown, who lost two state qualifiers from last season to Ridgeview. Senior Tefna MitchellHoegh will lead the Panthers this fall, according to Brown. Richee Stevens, Samantha Scholz and Kiersten Ochsner also return for Redmond after competing in last year’s 6A state meet. Newcomer Kylee Johnson, a senior, should round out the varsity squad, says Brown. Ridgeview coach John Albrecht notes that his varsity team will be a mix of veteran runners and newcomers. “It’s a good turnout, considering we don’t have any seniors and it’s a new school,” Albrecht says. Junior Dakota Steen, a transfer from Redmond High, should set the pace for the Ravens, who will compete for berths at state at the Greater Oregon League district championships. Sisters finished third at the 4A state meet last season — just six points behind team champion Scappoose. This year, the Outlaws are poised to place in the top three or better at state, according to coach Charlie Kanzig. “When you’re that close the year before, you want to see if you can move up,” Kanzig says. The Outlaws return three out of the team’s top four varsity runners from last year: Zoe Falk. Madison Boettner, Aria Blumm and Emily Ford. Crook County hopes to finish in the top six at state this season and improve upon its ninth-place finish at the 4A state meet in 2011. Seniors Carly Hibbs and Natalie Stenbeck will lead the team, according to Cowgirls coach Tracy Smith. Charsie Brewer, Kelsee Martin and Halie Jones expect to round out the squad. La Pine, which competes in the Sky-Em League with Sisters, returns three varsity runners: Tysha Hulse, Chloe Sazama and McKenna Boen. The Hawks did not field a full team last year, but hope to have a complete squad in 2012. At Madras, which fielded an incomplete team last season, the early turnout has been light. As of Saturday, the lone runner on the team is sophomore Nicole Andy, who did not run last season. Reporter: 541-383-0351, egross@bendbulletin.com.

Stew Milne / The Associated Press

Rory McIlroy hits his tee shot on the third hole during the second round of the Deutsche Bank Championship at TPC Boston in Norton, Mass., Saturday.

McIlroy shoots 65 to take lead The Associated Press NORTON, Mass. — Rory McIlroy and Tiger Woods played together in the opening two rounds of the season in Abu Dhabi. They were together again for the opening two rounds at Bethpage Black for the start of the FedEx Cup playoffs. The idea is to get them together with a trophy on the line. Both took a step in that direction Saturday in the Deutsche Bank Championship. McIlroy went from one extreme to another on par 5s just 30 minutes apart — a 4-iron into 10 feet for eagle on No. 18, a 5-wood in the water for bogey on No. 2 — but steadied himself for another 6-under 65. Woods, playing in the afternoon, had three birdies on the opening six holes until he could no longer get a putt to drop. He made birdie putts of 30 feet and 15 feet late in the round to salvage a 68, which left him only two shots behind. In between was Louis Oosthuizen, the former British Open champion with one of the purest swings in golf. Oosthuizen had four 2s on his card of 65, and goes into the third round just one shot behind and in the final group with McIlroy. “Everything seemed to work pretty well out there,” McIlroy said. “I felt like I drove the ball a bit better today and hit more fairways, which gave me some

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GOLF ROUNDUP more opportunities to make birdies. And I was putting well enough to take a few of those. Yeah, pleased with where I am and looking forward to the weekend.” The weekend is half over, as this FedEx Cup playoff event is known for its Labor Day finish. There remains plenty of work to be done, especially with nine players separated by only three shots going into the weekend. Ryan Moore had a 68, playing the front nine in 1 over, and joined Woods at 10-under 132. Also on Saturday: Ramsay up one in Switzerland CR A NS -SU R-SI ER R E , Switzerland — Scotland’s Richie Ramsay thrived in the cold and wet Swiss Alps, shooting a 7-under 64 for a one-stroke lead after the third round of the European Masters. Ramsay had an 11-under total. Scotland’s Scot Paul Lawrie (67) and England’s Danny Willett (68) were tied for second. Lawrie won the Johnnie Walker Championship last week at Gleneagles for his second European Tour victory of the year.


THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 E1

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Wanted! Pellet stove 541-382-4144 Aussies,Mini/Toy's AKC all colors parents on site 1st shots,wormed 541-598-5314/788-7799

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People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Day through The Bulletin Classifieds Australian Shepherd Mix Pups, 1 week old, reserve now, 4 left, $100, 541-815-9257 Barn/shop cats FREE, some tame, some not. We deliver! Fixed, shots, etc. 389-8420 Black Lab AKC fixed male 4 yrs old, great with kids & pets. $150 re-homing fee. 541-678-3724.

Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Saturday 10:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

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DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines, $12 or 2 weeks, $20! Ad must include price of single item of $500 or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809

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THANKS to Mike & the team at M.C. Smith Sign Co. for their ongoing suport of Cat Rescue, Adoption & Foster Team, with great signs/banners & for accepting cans/ bottles on site for ongoing fundraising. You rock! Purrs to you! www.craftcats.org Yorkie AKC Male,Champ lines, potty trained, healthy,all shots, health guarantee $595, 541-233-3534 210

Furniture & Appliances A1 Washers&Dryers

$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D’s 541-280-7355

Kittens/cats avail. thru rescue group. Tame, shots, altered, ID chip, Check out the more. Sat/Sun 1-5, other days by appt. classiieds online 65480 78th Bend, www.bendbulletin.com 541-389-8420; visit Updated daily www.craftcats.org for photos & more. Armoire, dark oak $99; Rattan bookcase $45; Lab Pups AKC, black rattan coffee table & yellow, Master $35; wine cart $35. Hunter sired, perfor541-593-7307 mance pedigree, OFA cert hips & elbows, Call 541-771-2330 www.kinnamanretrievers.com

Labradoodles - Mini & med size, several colors 541-504-2662 www.alpen-ridge.com

Couch and Love Seat for Sale!!

The Bulletin r ecommends 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.

Mtn. Bike, Jamiz Full Suspension new tires, & just tuned up, exc. cond., $500 OBO, 541-410-6242. 242

Exercise Equipment

HAY & FEED

BEND’S NEWEST WESTSIDE NEIGHBORHOOD Newport Landing. New construction in the heart of Bend. Pahlisch Homes, 8 floor plans, fabulous results. Newport Landing. 1800 NW Element Over 18 sold! Enjoy our Directions: Newport Ave. to model this weekend & College Way, left on Rockwood. tour our new community. Cool beverages and snacks.

Listed by:

S AT U R D AY & S U N D AY

KAREN MALANGA Broker, CSP, CDPE

541-390-3326

STUNNING VIEW SAT, SUN & MON 11:00 - 4:00

SAT. & SUN. NOON - 4PM

$255,000 to $355,000

Remington 721, 300 H&H $750. Ruger 77 Sept. 1 & 2 Hawkeye 25-06, new, Deschutes Fairgrounds $525. 541-548-4774 Buy! Sell! Trade! SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 US made 38 S.W., 5 $8 Admission, shot, antique made 12 & under free. 1800s, ammo and OREGON TRAIL GUN holster, $210. SHOWS 541-347-2120 209-985-7015

GUN SHOW

Bowflex Xtreme like new, assembly re- Howa 30-06, $300; Italian coach gun 20 ga., quired, you haul, $300 + 7 boxes ammo; $400. 541-383-3041. five game winches, never lift an animal in 245 your pickup again! At Golf Equipment my cost $220 each; 8’ Leer canopy, missGolf clubs, with bag and ing rear door, $250 cart. $100. Call 541-480-1536 541-279-1930. HUNTERS in Silvies 212 Taylor Made Rocket Hunt Unit. Cabin in Balls Irons, 4-Pitching Antiques & the pines with runwedge, $435, leave ning water and Collectibles msg at 541-480-1014 amenities, green yard. Or, looking for a private 1950 Okeefe Merritt gas 246 place to set up your stove, restored. Guns, Hunting camp trailers? Mul$4500. 541-382-3728 tiple night discounts. & Fishing Antiques wanted: tools, Call (541) 589-1130 furniture, fishing, View at Bend local pays CASH!! marbles, old signs, www.elkridgecabin.com for Guns, Knives & toys, costume jewelry. Ammo. 541-526-0617 Call 541-389-1578 Kimber 1911 Ultra Carry 9mm. $650. Beretta 686 white onyx, Call 503-320-3008 30” 12 ga,O/U shotgun w/chokes, $1550. Call La Pine Sportsman Ralph, 541-255-3242. Jamboree Gun-Knife Visit our HUGE Archery-Coin Browning BDA .380 Cal home decor Collectible Show! semi auto. 13 round consignment store. (Sponsored by La Pine capacity. Excellent New items Senior Activity Ctr & condition. Wood arrive daily! grips. $499 cash La Pine Park & Rec Dist) 930 SE Textron, Exhibits, Antique & only. 541-749-8449 Bend 541-318-1501 Modern Firearms - Trade,

Yorkie-Maltese pups, 1 Oversized & coffee www.redeuxbend.com Browning Midas Comwhite female, $300, 1 color. 5 years old & Boston Terrier pups, white male, $250, 1 black pound Bow, many exgood cond!! $400, Call The Bulletin At very social, 2 females & gold male, $250, Cash, tras, soft case, new Kelly, 541-318-0663 left, hand raised, dew 541-385-5809 arrows, hunt ready, 541-546-7909 claws removed, 1st exc. cond., $250, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail shots, $600 ea.. Maltese Toy AKC, champ Futon/couch, 6” mat541-410-6242. At: www.bendbulletin.com tress, $70. Exc. cond. 541-815-2216 or lines, extra small, 541-233-6520 541-815-5651 541-420-1577 The Bulletin reserves CASH!! the right to publish all For Guns, Ammo & PEOPLE giving pets GENERATE SOME exads from The Bulletin Reloading Supplies. citement in your away are advised to 541-408-6900. newspaper onto The neighborhood! Plan a be selective about the Bulletin Internet webgarage sale and don't new owners. For the site. forget to advertise in DO YOU HAVE protection of the aniclassified! SOMETHING TO mal, a personal visit to Boxer puppies, AKC reg, 541-385-5809. SELL the animal's new 1st shots, very social FOR $500 OR home is recomNEED TO CANCEL $700. 541-325-3376 215 LESS? mended. YOUR AD? Coins & Stamps Non-commercial Chihuahua pups, Apple The Bulletin advertisers may Head, tan, 1 male, 1 Classifieds has an Private collector buying place an ad female, 7 wks, $150 "After Hours" Line postage stamp alwith our ea. 541-420-4825 POODLE (TOY) PUPS Call 541-383-2371 bums & collections, "QUICK CASH Well-socialized & lov24 hrs. to cancel Chihuahua, teacups (2), world-wide and U.S. SPECIAL" able. 541-475-3889 your ad! 573-286-4343 (local, shots & dewormed, 1 week 3 lines $12 cell #) $250 ea,541-977-0035 Queensland Heelers or Good classiied ads tell standard & mini,$150 & 2 weeks $20! the essential facts in an 240 Chocolate lab pups, 5 up. 541-280-1537 http:// Ad must interesting Manner. Write weeks, shots & rightwayranch.wordpress.com Crafts & Hobbies include price of from the readers view - not wormed, 541-389-2283 single item of $500 the seller’s. Convert the Crafters Wanted or less, or multiple Find exactly what Dog Food & Supplies facts into beneits. Show Open Jury items whose total “Taste of the Wild” you are looking for in the the reader how the item will Sat., Sept. 8, 9:30 a.m. does not exceed Assorted Flavors - $38 CLASSIFIEDS help them in some way. Highland Baptist $500. Quarry Ave Church, Redmond. Tina 541-447-1640 or Schnauzer Miniature Call Classifieds at www.snowflakeboutique.org male puppy. Family 541-385-5809 541-923-2400 www.bendbulletin.com raised, vaccinations & 241 4626 SW Quarry Ave., groomed. $350. Redmond Bicycles & 541-771-1830. www.quarryfeed.com EAA Elite Witness Match Accessories Table, solid oak pedpistol, .45 ACP, twoDoxie AKC mini pups, all Schnoodles,Great w/kids, estal, w/ 4 upholtone, adj. sights,10-rnd non-shed, shots, $350 colors inc wheaton &dapl, stered chairs on roll- Bike trailer, Bob Yack, mag, case, & ammo. males, $450 females. $375-425. 541-508-4558 never used, $280 firm, ers. $350 OBO. $400. 541-977-3173 Pup kit 541-410-7701 www.bendweenies.com 541-617-9260. 541-647-1333

This Weekend’s

9 7 7 0 2

Designed to enjoy the flowing floor plan and views from the minute you walk into the inviting entry. Amazing workmanship and attention to every detail including Pella Windows, Knotty Alder cabinets, 8 ft. solid doors and 60733 Golf Village Loop. Hickory distressed floors. Gourmet kitchen includes a $875,000 16 ft. Mombasa granite island.

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Swap, Sell or Buy! Sat 9/8, 9-5; Sun 9/9, 9-3 LaPine Parks&Rec Bldg (corner 1st & Morson) Adults $5 ($4 w/trade gun) Children 12 & under free! Call Andi, 541-536-6237

Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items. Call 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746 Weatherby 7mm Mags (2), 1 left hand, 1 right hand,scope,slink, case, exc. new cond., $1095 each 541-593-8294. Weatherby Orion 12 ga. O/U $875. Ithaca 20 ga. O/U $575. Continental Arms .410 $150 541-306-0346. Win Model 70 Lightweight, RMEF Sponsor Rifle, 30.06 cal., Nikon 3-9 Variable scope, bore sighted, but never fired, $700, incl. 1 box premium shells, 541-410-6242 Yugoslavian SKS Rifle, Rare, $650 OBO, John, 541-771-9902. 248

Health & Beauty Items Over 30 Million Women Suffer From Hair Loss! Do you? If So We Have a Solution! CALL KERANIQUE TO FIND OUT MORE 877-475-2521. (PNDC) 255

Computers THE BULLETIN requires computer advertisers with multiple LEARN TO SHOOT ad schedules or those LIKE THE COPS selling multiple sysplus UTAH Permit tems/ software, to disclass. $99. Sisters, close the name of the 1 p.m., Sun. Sept. 9. business or the term Call 817-789-5395 "dealer" in their ads. www.reacttrainingPrivate party advertissystems.com ers are defined as those who sell one Model 70 Pre 64, 300 computer. Winchester mag., original, in great condition. 260 Savage model 99E carMisc. Items bine, 243 cal., very good condition. 541-610-8535 22’ alum. semi-truck trlr, New AR15 carbine, SS best used for storage, barrel, flat top, rings, $500. 541-447-4405 collapsible stock, mag & ammo. $800 OBO. Baskets (about 40), many sizes, $1-$4 541-977-3173 ea., 541-383-4231. OREGON’S LARGEST Buying Diamonds GUN & KNIFE SHOW Sept. 8 & 9 /Gold for Cash Sat. 9-6 • Sun. 9-4 Saxon’s Fine Jewelers ADM: $9 541-389-6655 Portland Expo Center I-5 Exit 306B BUYING For Info: 503-363-9564 Lionel/American Flyer www.wesknodelguntrains, accessories. shows.com 541-408-2191.

SPECTACULAR VIEW HOME OPEN HOUSE SAT. & SUN 10-3 Spectacular 4,362 ± sq. ft. view home on the Westside of Bend overlooking Tetherow a n d B r o k e n To p Golf Courses, and Cascade Mtn. Range. 3 bedroom, 3.5 baths. 3 - c a r g a r a g e . To o many amenities to list. FSBO

19426 Cartmill Drive, Bend Directions: Follow the signs. Century Dr. to E. Campbell, go straight on Kemple, turn right on Cartmill. First on the Hill area.

$925,000

This home is being offered as For Sale by Owner, but we welcome Brokers also.

Brokers

Contact CASEY JONES @ 541-419-9766

541-306-1557

or KIM JONES @ 541-419-1243


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Fuel & Wood

BUYING & SELLING GET FREE OF CREDIT All gold jewelry, silver CARD DEBT NOW! and gold coins, bars, Cut payments by up rounds, wedding sets, to half. Stop creditors class rings, sterling silfrom calling. ver, coin collect, vin866-775-9621. tage watches, dental (PNDC) gold. Bill Fleming, 541-382-9419. MANTIS Deluxe Tiller. COWGIRL CASH NEW! FastStart enWe pay cash for boots, gine. Ships FREE. buckles, jewelry & One-Year Moneymore! 924 Brooks St. Back Guarantee when 541-678-5162 you buy DIRECT. Call www.getcowgirlcash.com for the DVD and FREE Good Soil GENERATE SOME book! 877-357-5647. EXCITEMENT (PNDC) IN YOUR NEIGBORHOOD. Plan a garage sale and PATIO SET don't forget to adver5 piece, new, $55. tise in classified! 541-389-4030 541-385-5809.

Stained Glass, 4.5’x ATTENTION DIABET4.5’, beautiful ocean ICS with Medicare. scenery with tropical Get a FREE talking fish. $800. meter and diabetic 541-233-6520. testing supplies at NO COST, plus FREE TURN THE PAGE home delivery! Best of all, this meter elimiFor More Ads nates painful finger The Bulletin pricking! Call 888-739-7199. The Bulletin Offers (PNDC) Free Private Party Ads • 3 lines - 3 days • Private Party Only • Total of items adver- Golden Power Wheelchair, like new, bright tised must equal $200 red, exc. cond., used or Less only 3 mo, orig. • Limit 1 ad per month $3500, sacrifice at • 3-ad limit for same $2000, 541-848-7755 item advertised within or 541-948-7518. or 3 months dorene@quailbend.com Call 541-385-5809 Fax 541-385-5802

Lift Recliner Chair, w/ attached remote control, taupe color, exc. cond., used 1 yr., $1000 new, now $400,541-848-7755 or 541-948-7518. or dorene@quailbend.com Medical Alert for Seniors - 24/7 monitoring. FREE Equipment. FREE Shipping. Nationwide Service. $29.95/Month CALL Medical Guardian Today 888-842-0760. (PNDC) 263

Tools Chainsaw, McCulloch, 610 Pro, 20” blade, $90. 541-408-4528 Honda 3000 Generator, 2010, low hrs., $2200 541-749-8060. Power Washer, Husky, new, 1800 PSI, $89. 541-317-2890.

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Estate Sales

Estate Multi-Family Sale Sat. & Sun. 8-5,

64745 Old BendRedmond Hwy. Household items, bdrm set, tools & farm equipment, antiques, and collectibles. Proceeds go toward medical expenses.

Look What I Found! You'll find a little bit of everything in The Bulletin's daily garage and yard sale section. From clothes to collectibles, from housewares to hardware, classified is always the first stop for cost-conscious consumers. And if you're planning your own garage or yard sale, look to the classifieds to bring in the buyers. You won't find a better place for bargains! Call Classifieds: 541-385-5809 or email classified@bendbulletin.com

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classiieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates!

541-385-5809 282

Sales Northwest Bend Asian art, pottery, fabric, knick-knacks; Kitchen, dining, Pic frames; garden pots; electronic cables, tools, camping, sports, much more. College Way to Saginaw to 2137 NW Cascade View, Sat-Sun 9-2, Early Birds $$. smalley.c.j@gmail.com

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Pressure Washer, 1300 psi, Cambell Hausfield, $50, 541-749-8060

Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend Shopsmith Mk V-510 w/11” band saw, 12” sanding disk,drill chuck, 63265 Silvis Rd. off Moving Sale!Sat-Mon more accessories, Butler Mkt Rd. across Garage Sale 20950 8am-3pm 1338 NW Vail Run Ct. Sunday $800, 541-317-9040. from Equine OutLexington Ave, Baby Only 9 a.m. -1 p.m. reach, follow horse265 girl clothes infant- 4T, shoe-shape driveway crib, toys, leather Building Materials to back of house to Moving Sale Fri & Sat sofa & love seat, BOB garage. Sat. 8:30-4, 8/31 & 9/1, Mini stroller, women's Sun. 8:30-1. Vintage Fridge, coffee tables, 350’ rough cedar 2x6 clothes size 6-10, items, mens stuff, used decking and 30’ 2 barstools, nice dehouseware, lamps etc boys clothing, sz 8-16; 4x7x10 fir timbers cor items, outdoor books, action figures, $300, you haul. swing, Marquis hot284 electronics, kitchen, 541-593-7686 tub, woodstove. glassware, computer, Sales Southwest Bend 541-961-5830 60586 Bend Habitat tools, too much to list. Ridge Hts at Knott Rd RESTORE Smoke-free home. Downsizing to full time Building Supply Resale RVing, Bring cash, Multi-family sale. Lots of Quality at LOW take it away. Quality, items! 59865 CheyPRICES HH F R E E HH clean household enne Rd in DRW. 740 NE 1st items. Queen size G a r a g e S a l e K i t Sat-Sun 9-4 only. No 541-312-6709 bdrm suite, includes: Place an ad in The early birds. Open to the public. dresser, headboard Bulletin for your ga/footboard, tall Shop & Yard Sale! 266 rage sale and redresser, dresser with Sept 1-2-3, 9-5. ceive a Garage Sale Heating & Stoves 61445 Ward Rd. Lumber, mirror and two night Kit FREE! tools, & garden equip. stands (dark wood). NOTICE TO Maple dining room KIT IN C L U D E S: ADVERTISER 290 table, chairs & hutch, • 4 Garage Sale Signs Since September 29, contemporary sofa • $2.00 Off Coupon To Sales Redmond Area 1991, advertising for Use Toward Your and loveseat, leather used woodstoves has Next Ad recliner, many other Moving Sale! Pickup, robeen limited to modhousehold items, & • 10 Tips For “Garage totiller, ATV, brand new els which have been Sale Success!” snowblower. Sat. & hot tub, tools, shotgun, certified by the OrSun, 9/1 & 9/2, 8am antiques, lots of Ducks egon Department of 2pm. 19951 Quail Unlimited prints & dePICK UP YOUR Environmental QualPine Lp., off Brook- GARAGE SALE KIT at coys. Sat-Sun, Sept 1-2, ity (DEQ) and the fedswood. 9-4, 10100 Crooked 1777 SW Chandler eral Environmental River Dr, #10, (Smith Ave., Bend, OR 97702 286 Protection Agency Rock Mobile Estates) (EPA) as having met Sales Northeast Bend smoke emission stan292 dards. A certified “45 Years of Collecting” Sales Other Areas woodstove may be Moving Sale - House identified by its certifiFull!! Vintage, col288 cation label, which is lectibles, Bend history, Sales Southeast Bend Crescent Yard Sale: Sat-Mon, 8-?,206 Ward permanently attached fishing, boating, campSt. Tools, tv’s, beds, to the stove. The Buling, glassware, paintEstate Sale: Sat., Sun. lots of great items! letin will not knowings, photos, cameras, 10-4, & Mon. 10-?, ingly accept advertishuge tool collection, fur20991 SE Greenmont Giant farm yard sale niture, ‘50s sectional, ing for the sale of Dr., king size bed, 25 Fri-Sat, 8-12, Mon. all women’s clothes, ‘98 uncertified cu.ft. side/side fridge, day! 5470 Gerke Rd. Ford Taurus (low miles), woodstoves. washer/dryer, satellite 7 miles north of car parts new/used, garradio system, classic Wanted! Prineville. Tools, moden -- fabulous prices! Pellet stove Jeep Sportruck & tors, lapidary, 1965 8-4 Sat-Sun, 9/1-2, 1104 541-382-4144 NE Revere Ave, Bend Mercury, lots more! much, much more! Sales Northwest Bend

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.

Dry Juniper Firewood $225 per cord, split. 1/2 cords available. Immediate delivery! 541-408-6193 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

Prompt Delivery Rock, Sand & Gravel Multiple Colors, Sizes Instant Landscaping Co.

541-389-9663 Riding Lawn Mowers (2), Craftsman LT1000, 16 HP, 42” cut, bag & trailer, $800; Older Murray, 18 HP, 46” cut, $350, 541-548-4029. 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.

Advertise with a full-color photo in The Bulletin Classifieds and online.

Easy, flexible, and affordable ad packages are also available on our Web site. To place your Bulletin ad with a photo, visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on “Place an ad” and follow these easy steps: 1. Choose a category, choose a

classification, and then select your ad package. 2. Write your ad and upload your

digital photo.

3. Create your account with any

major credit card.

All ads appear in both print and online Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print and online.

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Lost & Found FOUND hearing aid on Brianne Place, Bend. Call to ID, 707-849-2901. Found Set of Keys, attached to pink slipper, 8/29, on Baker Rd, 541-317-9326 Found Siamese cat friendly female, corner of 21st. and Timber, Redmond. if unclaimed free to good home. 541-604-0063.

To place your photo ad, visit us online at www.bendbulletin.com or call with questions 541-385-5809

www.bendbulletin.com


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

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 E3

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Banking

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

SOCIAL SERVICES Hospitality Front desk positions Join one of the largest child education netpart time and full time. works in Oregon preApply in person at paring children for Sugarloaf Mountain school. We are lookMotel, 62980 No. Hwy ing for an 97, Bend, Oregon.

ERSEA Supervisor Say “goodbuy” to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classiieds

541-385-5809 Medical/ OR Nurse

Caregiver – All Shifts avail. Apply in person. Interviews this week. 1099 NE Watt Way, Bend.

CAREGIVERS At Home Care Group is hiring! If you want a career that makes a real difference, apply online at

PUZZLE IS ON PAGE E2 270

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Lost & Found

Horses & Equipment

Found: Sunglasses on lawn outside PacSun in lawn, during the ZZ Top Concert. Call to identify, 541-382-4530.

Mini ponies, mares and studs, $250 and up. 541-923-3530.

Injured bicycle found tied to a tree. Old Bend-Redmond Hwy and 93rd St., Call to ID 541-312-8955 Lost: 42nd Mason Ring, Jim Hignett engraved inside band. Lost at Walmart in Bend. REWARD! 541-382-7473.

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock... ...don’t let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin’s “Call A Service Professional” Directory today! 345

Lost: 8/29, Blue Surf-Tec stand up paddle board, Livestock & Equipment corner of Columbia & Shevlin Hixon Dr., 541-610-4086

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Schools & Training AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Train for hands on Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 1-877-804-5293. (PNDC) ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 866-688-7078 www.CenturaOnline.c om (PNDC)

Lost: Black purse, in Redmond on 8/27. Owner is almost blind, left behind while 1977 14' Blake Trailer, refurbished by shopping. Please help Frenchglen Blackfind. 541-548-3590. smiths, a Classy Classic. Great design for Lost Siamese cat near multiple uses. OverCOCC. She’s a Seal head tack box (bunkPoint with blue eyes house) with side and and white feet. $100 easy pickup bed acreward if found call. Just too many cess; manger with left 541-306-3078. collectibles? side access, windows and head divider. Toyo REMEMBER: If you radial tires & spare; have lost an animal, Sell them in new floor with mats; don't forget to check The Bulletin Classiieds center partition panel; The Humane Society bed liner coated in key in Bend 541-382-3537 areas, 6.5 K torsion Redmond, 541-385-5809 axles with electric 541-923-0882 brakes, and new paint, Prineville, TRUCK SCHOOL $7500 OBO! Call 541-447-7178; www.IITR.net John at 541-589-0777. OR Craft Cats, Redmond Campus 541-389-8420. Student Loans/Job Garage Sales Waiting Toll Free 1-888-387-9252

Farm Market

Garage Sales Garage Sales

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Find them in The Bulletin Classiieds

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541-385-5809

Farm Equipment & Machinery

358

Farmers Column Wanted Used Farm Equipment & Machin- 80 lineal ft. of welded ery. Looking to buy, or pipe horse corral, 4consign of good used rail, 2” pipe with 3” quality equipment. posts & 2 feeders. Deschutes Valley $300 541-410-3218 Equipment 541-548-8385 CAUTION READERS: 325

Hay, Grain & Feed 3A Livestock Supplies •Panels •Gates •Feeders Now galvanized! •6-Rail 12’ panels, $101 •6-Rail 16’ panels, $117 Custom sizes available 541-475-1255

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

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Employment Opportunities

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Employment Opportunities

Loans & Mortgages

Business Opportunities

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

Ever Consider a Re- Extreme Value Adververse Mortgage? At tising! 30 Daily newsleast 62 years old? papers $525/25-word Stay in your home & classified, 3-days. increase cash flow! Reach 3 million PaSafe & Effective! Call cific Northwesterners. Now for your FREE For more information DVD! Call Now call (916) 288-6019 or 888-785-5938. email: (PNDC) elizabeth@cnpa.com for the Pacific NorthLOCAL MONEY:We buy west Daily Connecsecured trust deeds & tion. (PNDC) note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13. Need to get an ad

500

APPLICATIONS.

Automotive Technician Needed. Must have 5 yrs. min. exp. Must have own tools. Automatic transmission rebuilding, welding and diesel experience a plus. Must have clean driving record & pass a drug test. Send resume to email darrylhenrysautorepair@yahoo.c om or fax a copy to (541) 388-2800.

Data Center Network Technicians 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.

H Supplement Your Income H

Operate Your Own Business

FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF

Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor

& Call Today & We are looking for independent contractors to service home delivery routes in:

H Prineville, Sunriver/La Pine H Must be available 7 days a week, early morning hours.

Must have reliable, insured vehicle. Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 during business hours apply via email at online@bendbulletin.com

Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

HOMES

JOBS

Experienced couple avail. for housesitting Oct. 1. 541-410-4794

Ads published in "Employment Opportunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for positions that require a fee or upfront investment Need help ixing stuff? must be stated. With Call A Service Professional any independent job ind the help you need. opportunity, please www.bendbulletin.com investigate thoroughly. Independent Contractor

Exc. Orchard Grass Hay, no rain, barn stored, small bales, $225 per ton, Use extra caution when 541-548-0731. applying for jobs onPremium 1st cutting Orline and never prochard Grass hay, shed vide personal inforstored, 70-lb bales, mation to any source $225/ton. Call Ten Barr you may not have reRanch, 541-389-1165 searched and deemed to be reputable. Use Wheat Straw: Certified & extreme caution when Bedding Straw & Garden responding to ANY Straw;Compost.546-6171 online employment ad from out-of-state.

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

454

Looking for Employment

FINANCE AND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities

573 in ASAP? FIND IT! Business Opportunities BUY IT! Must be 18 or over with Newspaper carrier sub Fax it to 541-322-7253 reliable transportation. SELL IT! WARNING The Bulletin Adult motor route, P-T, Background check & recommends that you The Bulletin Classiieds a.m,. 4 hrs/$60/day, The Bulletin Classiieds drug test required. investigate every potential 4 more! ODL, Phone: 541-312-0051 phase of investment rel. car. 541-385-0120. The Bulletin opportunities, espeRecommends extra Remember.... SECURITY cially those from SOCIAL Caregivers caution when purAdd your web adDISABILITY BENFinance out-of-state or offered - Experienced chasing products or dress to your ad and EFITS. WIN or Pay by a person doing Part time & 24 hrs & Business services from out of Nothing! Start Your readers on The business out of a locaregivers. Home Inarea. Sending Application In Under Bulletin' s web site the cal motel or hotel. Instead Senior Care is cash, checks, or 60 Seconds. Call Towill be able to click vestment offerings currently seeking credit information day! Contact Disabilthrough automatically must be registered Caregivers to provide may be subjected to ity Group, Inc. Lito your site. with the Oregon Dein-home care to our FRAUD. censed Attorneys & partment of Finance. seniors. Candidates For more informaBBB Accredited. Call Take care of We suggest you conmust be able to lift, tion about an adver888-782-4075. sult your attorney or transfer, provide peryour investments tiser, you may call 528 (PNDC) call CONSUMER sonal care & assist in the Oregon State with the help from Loans & Mortgages HOTLINE, various home duties. Attorney General’s 1-503-378-4320, The Bulletin’s Alzheimer / Dementia/ The Bulletin’s Office Consumer BANK TURNED YOU 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. ALS experience a “Call A Service Protection hotline at “Call A Service DOWN? Private party needed. Must have 1-877-877-9392. will loan on real es- A Classified ad is an Professional” Directory ability to pass back- Professional” Directory is all about meeting tate equity. Credit, no EASY WAY TO ground checks & have your needs. problem, good equity REACH over 3 million valid DL & insurance. Resort Housekeeping is all you need. Call Pacific NorthwesternThe Pines at Sunriver, Training provided. Call Call on one of the now. Oregon Land ers. $525/25-word What are you call 541-593-2160. 541-330-6400, or fax professionals today! Mortgage 388-4200. classified ad in 30 resume to: Sales -Exp. Professionlooking for? daily newspapers for 541-330-7362. als - Great opportunity 3-days. Call the PaYou’ll ind it in Advertise your car! in the logistics industry. cific Northwest Daily Looking for your Add A Picture! Good commission The Bulletin Classiieds Reach thousands of readers! Connection (916) next employee? DO YOU NEED structure,unlimited po288-6019 or email Place a Bulletin help Call 541-385-5809 A GREAT tential. Bend based co. wanted ad today and elizabeth@cnpa.com The Bulletin Classifieds EMPLOYEE E-mail: jobs@gotfr8.biz reach over 60,000 541-385-5809 for more info (PNDC) RIGHT NOW? readers each week. Call The Bulletin Security Advertise VACATION Your classified ad See our website for our Office Specialist 2/OS2 before 11 a.m. and SPECIALS to 3 milwill also appear on available Security poget an ad in to publion Pacific Northbendbulletin.com sitions, along with the Oregon State University - Cascades, Bend has lish the next day! westerners! 30 daily which currently rea part time (.45 FTE) employment opportunity. 42 reasons to join our 541-385-5809. newspapers, six ceives over 1.5 milteam! VIEW the states. 25-word claslion page views www.securityprosbend.com The ideal applicant functions as member of the Classifieds at: sified $525 for a 3-day every month at TCE (Teacher and Counselor Education) and www.bendbulletin.com ad. Call (916) no extra cost. HDFS (Human Development & Family Sci288-6019 or visit Bulletin Classifieds ence) programs and duties include setting up www.pnna.com/advert Get Results! Call licensure files, tracking of syllabi for graduate Sales Are you a highly ising_pndc.cfm for the 385-5809 or place programs, working with confidential records competitive sales Pacific Northwest your ad on-line at and tracking library reserves for each program. person who likes to Daily Connection. bendbulletin.com win? (PNDC) Employee will do some driving to disseminate If you are having a materials around community during marketing successful career selling IPBX business season. Preferred qualifications include a telephone systems and you are looking for a demonstrated commitment to promoting and position that can provide you a long term enhancing diversity. D ESCHUTES COUNTY competitive advantage WE HAVE IT FOR YOU. We are one of the fastest growing providers of To review complete position description and hosted and on-site IPBX solutions in the CAREER OPPORTUNITIES apply on-line, go to http://oregonstate.edu/jobs Northwest and we are heavily committed to and use posting number 0009629. The closBEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II – Older our success. If you are tired of competing with ing date is 9/11/12. OSU is an AA/EOE. the same products and your only advantage is Adult Behavioral Health Specialist (2012-00029) the lowest price, we have the solutions! We – Behavioral Health Division. Full-time position offer a competitive base salary, commissions General $4,057 - $5,553 per month for a 172.67 hour and an excellent benefits package. To view Central Oregon work month. DEADLINE DATE EXTENDED, position requirements and to apply, visit us Community College online at www.uidchr.com. OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH WEEKLY REVIEW OF www.athomecaregroup.com

Employment

Full-Time, 4-10 hr. shifts, Mon.-Fri. Applicant must have scrub and circulating experience. Job offers excellent benefit package. Interested persons should email their resume to jobs@bendsurgery.com Open until filled.

at our Madras center to recruit eligible families into our Head Start programs. Fulltime year-round position w/excellent benefits. $19.32 and up, depending on exper. Bilingual Spanish/ English required. Please visit our website www.ocdc.net for job description & requirements and to apply online. Or mail resume to: Oregon Child Development Coalition Attn: Human Resources, 659 NE “A” St., Madras, OR 97741 Equal Opportunity Employer

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454 - Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions

E S I D N A H C R E

Food ce & u les d o r ge Sa •P a s r e a i l le • G Supp nts or Sa f Pets & s tr ume m s n e I t I l s• usica puter s•M t e Com k r Ma Farm

has openings listed below. Go to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Metolius Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383-7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer. Campus Public Safety Officer (Part Time) Provide patrol services on campus to ensure the safety and security of staff, students, and the public. $12.38-$14.74/hr. 35hr/wk. Closes Sept. 6. Research Specialist Perform a broad range of functions related to information management, and support of Institutional Effective office daily operations. Assists in gathering, preparing and disseminating College information and serves as primary support for the College’s survey efforts. Assoc Degree + 2yr. exp. req. $2,665-$3,172/mo. Closes Sept. 9. Latino College Preparation Program Coordinator (Part Time) Serve as program coordinator to establish the goals and objectives of the program; recruit and advise students interested in participating in the program; and teach college courses for high school students enrolled in the program. Masters with 2yrs exp. or equiv. $19.32-$23.00 30hr/wk. Open Until Filled. _________________________________________

BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SUPERVISOR - Child & Family Programs (previously BH Specialist III, title change only) (2012-00023) – Behavioral Health Division. Full-time position $4,851 - $6,517 per month for a 172.67 hour work month. DEADLINE DATE EXTENDED, OPEN UNTIL FILLED. CLINICAL PROGRAM SUPERVISOR – School Based Health Centers (2012-00043) – Public Health Division. Full-time position $5,075 - $6,818 per month for a 172.67 hour work month. DEADLINE: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. OPERATIONS MANAGER 911 (2012-00050) – 911 Service District. Full-time position $6,211 $8,343 per month for a 173.33 hour work month. DEADLINE: SUNDAY, 09/09/12. PATIENT ACCOUNT SPECIALIST I (2012-00052) – Behavioral Health Division. Full-time position $2,657 - $3,636 per month for a 172.67 hour work month. DEADLINE: SUNDAY, 09/02/12. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER (201200024) – Behavioral Health Division. Full-time position $6,303 - $8,626 per month for a 172.67 hour work month. DEADLINE: OPEN UNTIL FILLED.

Adult Basic Skills Part time Instructor for Mathematics Provide basic skill instruction to adults in basic math through elementary algebra in the context of job skills development and preparation for college. Start Fall Term.

PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE II – Nurse Family Partnership (2012-00053) – Public Health Division. Full-time position $4,240 - $5,802 per month for a 172.67 hour work month. DEADLINE: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON 09/10/12.

Adult Basic Skills, Part time Instructor Deer Ridge Correctional Facility (Temporary) Provide basic skill instruction to adults in reading, writing, computing, listening, and speaking in the context of personal and career development. Start Fall Term.

TELECOMMUNICATIONS SUPERVISOR (201200048) – 911 Service District. Full-time position $4,937 - $6,632 per month for a 173.33 hour work month. DEADLINE: SUNDAY, 09/09/12.

Adjunct Instructor of Computer & Information Systems Provide instruction in Computer and Information Systems courses such as Introduction to Computers, Computer Concepts, Software Applications, Programming, and Operating Systems. Start Fall Term Part-Time Instructors NEW! Physics, Sociology, French COCC is always looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our web site for instructor needs. All positions pay $500 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.

Where Buyers and Sellers Meet.

TO APPLY ONLINE FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS, PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT www.deschutes.org/jobs Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541) 388-6553. Deschutes County provides reasonable accommodations for persons with disabilities. This material will be furnished in alternative format if needed. For hearing impaired, please call TTY/TDD 711. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

Thousands of ads daily in print and online

To place your ad visit www.bendbulletin.com or call 541-385-5809


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

E4 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

Rentals RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - Roommate Wanted 616 - Want To Rent 627 - Vacation Rentals & Exchanges 630 - Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos & Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SW Bend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for Rent General 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652 - Houses for Rent NW Bend 654 - Houses for Rent SE Bend 656 - Houses for Rent SW Bend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

682 - Farms, Ranches and Acreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 - Condos & Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745 - Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest Bend Homes 748 - Northeast Bend Homes 749 - Southeast Bend Homes 750 - Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756 - Jefferson County Homes 757 - Crook County Homes 762 - Homes with Acreage 763 - Recreational Homes and Property 764 - Farms and Ranches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land

Call 541-385-5809 to promote your service • Advertise for 28 days starting at $140 (This special package is not available on our website)

Building/Contracting NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who contracts for construction work to be licensed with the Construction Contractors Board (CCB). An active license means the contractor is bonded and insured. Verify the contractor’s CCB license through the CCB Consumer Website www.hirealicensedcontractor. com

or call 503-378-4621. The Bulletin recommends checking with the CCB prior to contracting with anyone. Some other trades also require additional licenses and certifications. Debris Removal

Home Improvement

Landscaping/Yard Care

Kelly Kerfoot Construction

28 yrs experience in Central Oregon! Quality & Honesty From carpentry & handyman jobs, to expert wall covering installations/removal. • Senior Discounts • Licensed, Bonded, Insured • CCB#47120

541-389-1413 or 541-410-2422 Call a Pro Whether you need a fence ixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you’ll ind professional help in The Bulletin’s “Call a Service Professional” Directory

541-385-5809 Landscaping/Yard Care NOTICE: OREGON Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise to perform Landscape Construction which includes: planting, decks, fences, arbors, water-features, and installation, repair of Need to get an irrigation systems to be licensed with the ad in ASAP? Landscape ContracYou can place it tors Board. This online at: 4-digit number is to be included in all adverwww.bendbulletin.com tisements which indicate the business has 541-385-5809 a bond, insurance and workers compensation for their employHandyman ees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before contracting with the business. Persons doing landscape maintenance do not require a LCB license.

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Door-to-door selling with fast results! It’s the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classiied

541-385-5809

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

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

600

648

744

762

773

860

Houses for Rent General

Open Houses

Homes with Acreage

Acreages

Motorcycles & Accessories

Roommate Wanted

Rented your property? The Bulletin Classifieds has an "After Hours" Line. Call 541-383-2371 24 hours to cancel your ad!

Roommate wanted, male or female, call Jennifer, 541-876-5106 La Pine

Houses for Rent NE Bend

605

650

630

Powell Butte 6 acres, Honda Valkyrie 2001, $7000; Kawasaki 360 views, great horse KLR650 2008, $4500; property, 10223 HousKawasaki Ninja 250 ton Lake Rd. $99,900. 2007, $2500, all in exc. 541-350-4684 cond., 541-388-1699.

Open Sat. & Sun. 10-3 19426 Cartmill Dr., Bend • $925,000.

Spectacular 4,362 +/sq.ft. view home on the Westside of Bend overlooking Tetherow and Broken Top Golf Courses, Cascade mtn range, 3 bdrm/3.5 bath, 3 car garage. Too many amenities to list. FSBO Directions: Follow the signs. Century Dr. to E. Campbell, go straight on Kemple, turn right on Cartmill. First on the Hill area. Casey & Kim Jones, 541-419-9766 541-419-1243

4 Bdrm 2.5 bath, 1700 sq Rooms for Rent ft, appls, fenced yd, on culdesac. No smoking. Mt. Bachelor Motel has Pets? 2400 NE Jeni Jo near hospital. rooms, starting $150/ Ct., week or $35/nt. Incl $1050. 503-680-9590 guest laundry, cable & When buying a home, WiFi. 541-382-6365 83% of Central Oregonians turn to Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro & fridge. Utils & linens. New Call 541-385-5809 to owners.$145-$165/wk place your 541-382-1885 OPEN SAT & SUN 12-3, Real Estate ad. 60849 Yellow Leaf 634 3,229 sq.ft., 4 bdrm Looking for your next Apt./Multiplex NE Bend suites, huge bonus/ employee? media room, lovely Place a Bulletin help 55+ Senior Housing finishes. $392,000. wanted ad today and cascadiapropertymgmt Brookswood South, .com 541-388-1239. reach over 60,000 just past Elk Meadow 2 bdrm, 2 bath readers each week. School turn left on starting at $875. Your classified ad Poplar, take first right. will also appear on MLS #201206555 CHECK OUT THIS bendbulletin.com, Jeanne Turner, Broker, HOT DEAL! currently receiving 541-420-4600 $299 1st month’s rent! * over 1.5 million page 2 bdrm, 1 bath views, every month $530 & 540 at no extra cost. Carports & A/C incl! Bulletin Classifieds Fox Hollow Apts. Get Results! 745 (541) 383-3152 Call 541-385-5809 or Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co Homes for Sale place your ad on-line *Upstairs only with lease* at 4270 sq ft, 6 bdrm, 6 ba, bendbulletin.com Call for Specials! 4-car, corner, .83 acre Limited numbers avail. mtn view, by owner. 1, 2 & 3 bdrms 654 $590,000 541-390-0886 w/d hookups, Houses for Rent See: bloomkey.com/8779 patios or decks. SE Bend Mountain Glen BANK OWNED HOMES! FREE List w/Pics! 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by RENT OWN, $850/mo, www.BendRepos.com 3 bdrm, 2 bath, fresh bend and beyond real estate Norris & Stevens, Inc. 20967 yeoman, bend or paint, new carpet, nice, easy qualify, 636 NOTICE: $34,900, $2000 down, Apt./Multiplex NW Bend All real estate adverCall 541-548-5511 tised here in is subCollege Way townhomes 656 ject to the Federal cascadiaproperFair Housing Act, Houses for Rent tymgmt.com which makes it illegal SW Bend 541-388-1239. 2 bdrm to advertise any prefat $1050 month. erence, limitation or Clean 3 (could be 4) discrimination based Fully furnished loft Apt bdrm, 1 yr. lease req., on race, color, relion Wall Street in nearly 1 ac., $1200 gion, sex, handicap, Bend, with parking. All mo. 541-390-4213 or familial status or nautilities paid. Call 818-324-5984. tional origin, or inten541-389-2389 for appt tion to make any such 658 preferences, limitaSmall studio downtown Houses for Rent tions or discrimination. area, all util. pd. $550, Redmond $525 dep. No pets/ We will not knowingly smoking. 541-330accept any advertis9769 or 541-480-7870 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath ing for real estate home on 1.3 acres which is in violation of 642 in Redmond, $895 this law. All persons are hereby informed Apt./Multiplex Redmond mo. 541-548-2408 that all dwellings advertised are available 659 Duplex 3 bdrm, 2 bath, on an equal opportu1260 sq.ft., 1 story, gaHouses for Rent nity basis. The Bullerage w/opener, fenced Sunriver tin Classified yard, RV/Boat parking, fridge, dishwasher, mi746 cro, walk-in laundry, VILLAGE PROPERTIES W/S/G paid, front gard- Sunriver, Three Rivers, Northwest Bend Homes La Pine. Great ner paid, $775+dep., Selection. Prices range 541-604-0338 A BEAUTIFUL NW $425 - $2000/mo. CROSSING HOME View our full 648 4 bdrm, 3 bath home inventory online at w/ great room, masHouses for Village-Properties.com ter suite, loft family Rent General 1-866-931-1061 area. OPEN Sat. &

Sun 1-4, 2361 NW PUBLISHER'S 693 Lemhi Pass Dr, NOTICE Ofice/Retail Space $499,000, All real estate adver541-550-0333. for Rent tising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act Office space, high visibility on Highland Ave. which makes it illegal in Redmond. $425 to advertise "any mo., incl. W/S/G, call preference, limitation 541-419-1917. or discrimination based on race, color, FSBO 3 bdrm, 2 bath w/ religion, sex, handicharm, 1 story, dbl. gaReal Estate cap, familial status, rage, heat pump & C/A, ¼ acre. Serious marital status or naFor Sale buyers only! $193,900. tional origin, or an in541-410-8636 tention to make any such preference, 750 limitation or discrimiRedmond Homes nation." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 Looking for your next 744 living with parents or employee? Open Houses legal custodians, Place a Bulletin help pregnant women, and wanted ad today and people securing cusreach over 60,000 Open 12-3 tody of children under readers each week. 19157 Chiloquin 18. This newspaper Your classified ad Dr. will not knowingly acwill also appear on Shevlin Pines cept any advertising bendbulletin.com First Time Shown for real estate which is which currently reShelley Griffin, in violation of the law. ceives over Broker Our readers are 1.5 million page 541-280-3804 hereby informed that views every month all dwellings adverat no extra cost. tised in this newspaBulletin Classifieds per are available on Get Results! an equal opportunity Call 385-5809 or basis. To complain of place your ad on-line discrimination call at HUD toll-free at bendbulletin.com 1-800-877-0246. The toll free telephone number for the hear755 ing impaired is Sunriver/La Pine Homes 1-800-927-9275. Painting/Wall Covering Ranch-style 3 bdrm, 2 Crooked River Ranch, Open 12-3 bath, open floorplan, 1350 sq.ft. ranch home, 19777 Chicory DRRH area, ½ ac., 2 bdrm., 2 bath, dbl. Ave. adjoining ½ ac. view garage, cement patio, Price Reduced lot can be purchased mtn. views, no smokon Large Home separately. ing, 1 small pet neg., 509-585-9050. Suzanne Iselin, $795, 541-548-4225. Broker

Attn: Outdoor Enthusiasts (with all the toys) & Gourmet Cooks: We’ve found your new home! This ready-to-move-into spacious home has attached dbl garage & shop + many updates. Vaulted wood ceilings, gourmet kitchen with 2 cooktops, mega cabinets & counter space galore! Lots of big windows & window seats to enjoy nature. Huge 28x32 shop with addtional 28x32 covered RV parking! Guest/studio, deck & hot tub, all on 4.76 acre parcel. $269,900. Call Karol Aldrich, Broker, today! 541-771-1144 Windemere Central Oregon Real Estate 771

Lots

Consider Building.

We Have Residential Lots and Acreage In and Out of Town Call The Garner Group

*** CHECK YOUR AD

Black Chameleon.

$17,000

Call Don @

541-410-3823

New 3 bed homes start at $34,160 delivered and set up J&M Homes 541-548-5511 www.JandMHomes.com In mfd. section.

865

ATVs

Premier senior park, clubhouse & pool, 3/2+, garage with workshop, kitchen appliances +. Honda TRX300 EX 2005 $49,900. 541-977-7238 sport quad w/Rev, runs & rides great, new pipe & paddles incl. $1700 obo. 541-647-8931

Boats & RV’s

Yamaha Grizzly 700 FI 2009, 543 mi, 2WD/ 4WD, black w/EPS, fuel injection, independent rear suspension winch w/handle controls & remote, ps, auto, large racks, exc. 860 cond., $7850, Motorcycles & Accessories 541-322-0215

800

Use classified to sell those items you no longer need. Call 541-385-5809

Two 1/2 acre lots in DRRH, south of Sunriver: one with well, buildable. Call for info. 509-585-9050 773

FACTORY SPECIAL

New Home, 3 bdrm,1026 sq.ft., $46,900 finished on your site,541.548.5511 www.JandMHomes.com

Softail Deluxe

2010, 805 miles,

CRAMPED FOR CASH?

541-383-4360

Acreages

775

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

Yamaha Kodiak 400, 2005 4x4, 2500 lb winch, gun rack & alum loading ramp, only 542 miles, Harley Davidson Soft- show room cond, $4800. Tail Deluxe 2007, 541-280-9401 white/cobalt, w/passenger kit, Vance & 870 Hines muffler system Boats & Accessories & kit, 1045 mi., exc. cond, $19,999, 541-389-9188. 17’ 1984 Chris Craft - Scorpion, 140 HP Harley Heritage inboard/outboard, 2 Softail, 2003 depth finders, troll$5,000+ in extras, ing motor, full cover, $2000 paint job, EZ - Load trailer, 30K mi. 1 owner, $3500 OBO. For more information 541-382-3728. please call 541-385-8090 or 209-605-5537 17’ Seaswirl 1988 open bow, rebuilt HD FAT BOY Chevy V6 engine, 1996 new upholstery, Completely rebuilt/ $4500 or best offer. customized, low 707-688-4523 miles. Accepting offers. 541-548-4807

Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes instructions over the phone are misunderstood and an error can occur in your ad. If this happens to your HD Screaming Eagle ad, please contact us Electra Glide 2005, the first day your ad 103” motor, two tone appears and we will candy teal, new tires, be happy to fix it as 23K miles, CD player, soon as we can. hydraulic clutch, ex- 18.5’ ‘05 Reinell 185, V-6 Volvo Penta, 270HP, Deadlines are: Weekcellent condition. low hrs., must see, days 11:00 noon for Highest offer takes it. $17,500, 541-330-3939 next day, Sat. 11:00 541-480-8080. a.m. for Sunday and 18.5’ Bayliner 185 Honda C70 Motorbike Monday. 2008. 3.0L, open bow, 1980, Classic, excep541-385-5809 slim deck, custom tional cond., 2000 mi., Thank you! cover & trailer, exc. new tires & tune-up, The Bulletin Classified cond., 30-35 total hrs., $900 firm, *** incl. 4 life vests, 541-617-9260. Ochoco Nat’l Forest ropes, anchor, stereo, Honda Elite 80 2001, 2 acres. Homesite, depth finder, $12,000, 1400 mi., absolutely hunting camp, or? 541-729-9860. like new., comes w/ Creek frontage. Apcarrying rack for 2” 19.5’ Bayliner Discovprox. 14 miles NE of receiver, ideal for use ery 2008,Merc cruiser Prineville, Oregon. w/motorhome, $995, 135 HP motor, open $99,900. Make offer! 541-546-6920 bow, full canopy, alForrest H. Smith, ways garage stored, Broker, ReMax Honda Trail 110, great used 5 times, $16,500 OutWest Realty LLC, cond, 3000 mi., $1300 541-977-3120. 541-420-9108 OBO, 541-447-5807

700

personals Meet singles right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 877-955-5505. (PNDC)

541-350-8617

762

Homes with Acreage 1592 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 bath, site-built, 2 car garage, 24x36 shop w/10’ ceilings & 220V power, all on 1.22 treed acre lot in CRR. $195,000. http://bend.craigslist.org/ reo/3069581828.html Call 541-633- 9613

www.bendbulletin.com

541-385-5809

SOUTHWEST BEND

CENTRAL OREGON HOMES Better than new, stunning master on the main plan in desirable River Canyon Estates! This 2452 SF master on the main home sits on a corner lot and features 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, loft, bonus and formal dining room. Lots of builder upgrades and tons of custom touches. A true must see!

Rhianna Kunkler, Broker 541-306-0939


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

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 E5

870

880

882

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Fifth Wheels

20.5’ 2004 Bayliner 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow, exc. cond., very fast w/very low hours, lots of extras incl. tower, Bimini & custom trailer, $19,500. 541-389-1413

Itasca Sun Cruiser 1997, 460 Ford, Class A, 26K mi., 37’, living room slide, new awnings, new fridge, 8 new tires, 2 A/C, 6.5 Onan Gen., new batteries, tow pkg., rear towing TV, 2 tv’s, new hydraulic jack springs, tandem axel, $15,000, 541-385-1782

Autos & Transportation

900 ALFA 30' RL 2007, front-view bedroom, granite, leather recliners, 4x20 slide, HDTV, micro/conv, central vac, $31,000 909-229-2921

908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Jayco Greyhawk 2004, 31’ Class C, 20.5’ Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530 Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please see Class 875. 541-385-5809

GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.

Life vests, old-fashioned orange, $10 ea. OBO 541-419-6408.

Used out-drive parts - Mercury OMC rebuilt marine motors: 151 $1595; 3.0 $1895; 4.3 (1993), $1995. 541-389-0435 875

Watercraft 2007 SeaDoo 2004 Waverunner, excellent condition, LOW hours. Double trailer, lots of extras.

$10,000 541-719-8444 Ads published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorized personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870. 541-385-5809

Eddyline carbonlite Sky 10 Kayak and roller roof rack, like new. $895 OBO. 541-420-3277.

Sea Kayaks - His & Hers, Eddyline Wind Dancers,17’, fiberglass boats, all equip incl., paddles, personal flotation devices,dry bags, spray skirts,roof rack w/ towers & cradles -- Just add water, $1250/boat Firm. 541-504-8557. 880

Motorhomes

Allegro 2002, 2 slides, 22K mi, workhorse chassis, 8.1 Chev engine, like new, $41,900 obo. 541-420-9346

Country Coach Intrigue 2002, 40' Tag axle. 400hp Cummins Diesel. two slide-outs. 41,000 miles, new tires & batteries. Most options. $95,000 OBO 541-678-5712

Econoline RV 1989, fully loaded, exc. cond, 35K orig. mi., $22,750. Call 541-546-6133. CAN’T BEAT THIS! Look before you buy, below market value! Size & mileage DOES matter! Class A 32’ Hurricane by Four Winds, 2007. 12,500 mi, all amenities, Ford V10, lthr, cherry, slides, like new! New low price, $54,900. 541-548-5216 Gulfstream Scenic Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, Cummins 330 hp diesel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 in. kitchen slide out, new tires,under cover, hwy. miles only,4 door fridge/freezer icemaker, W/D combo, Interbath tub & shower, 50 amp propane gen & more! $55,000. 541-948-2310

Hunter’s Delight! Package deal! 1988 Winnebago Super Chief, 38K miles, great shape; 1988 Bronco II 4x4 to tow, 130K mostly towed miles, nice rig! $15,000 both. 541-382-3964, leave msg.

6800 mi., hyd. jacks, new tires, slide out, exc. cond, $49,900, 541-480-8648

Immaculate!

Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by Carriage, 4 slideouts, inverter, satellite sys, fireplace, 2 flat screen TVs. $60,000. 541-480-3923

1/3 interest in Columbia 400, located at Sunriver. $138,500. Call 541-647-3718 1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, located KBDN. $55,000. 541-419-9510

Executive Hangar

932

933

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Chrysler 300 Coupe 1967, 440 engine, auto. trans, ps, air, frame on rebuild, repainted original blue, Ford Super Duty F-250 original blue interior, 2001, 4X4, very good original hub caps, exc. shape, V10 eng, $8500 chrome, asking $9000 OBO. 541-815-9939 or make offer. 541-385-9350.

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

GMC ½-ton Pickup, 1972, LWB, 350hi motor, mechanically A-1, interior great; body needs some TLC. $3131 OBO. Call 541-382-9441

International Flat Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 spd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.

at Bend Airport Beaver Coach Marquis FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, (KBDN) 40’ 1987. New cover, door panels w/flowers 60’ wide x 50’ deep, new paint (2004), new & hummingbirds, w/55’ wide x 17’ high inverter (2007). Onan white soft top & hard bi-fold door. Natural 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, Fleetwood Wilderness top. Just reduced to 935 gas heat, office, bath36’, 2005, 4 slides, parked covered $35,000 $3,750. 541-317-9319 room. Parking for 6 rear bdrm, fireplace, obo. 541-419-9859 or Sport Utility Vehicles or 541-647-8483 cars. Adjacent to 541-280-2014 AC, W/D hkup beauFrontage Rd; great tiful unit! $30,500. Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 visibility for aviation 541-815-2380 4x4. 120K mi, Power bus. 1jetjock@q.com seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd 541-948-2126 row seating, extra tires, CD, privacy tinting, upgraded rims. Ford Galaxie 500 1963, Fantastic cond. $7995 Monaco Dynasty 2004, 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, Contact Timm at loaded, 3 slides, die- Komfort 25’ 2006, 1 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & 541-408-2393 for info sel, Reduced - now slide, AC, TV, awning. radio (orig),541-419-4989 or to view vehicle. $119,000, 541-923- NEW: tires, converter, 8572 or 541-749-0037 batteries. Hardly used. ONLY 1 OWNERSHIP Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, Ford Escape 2006, $19,500. 541-923-2595 SHARE LEFT! Limited edition, 57K V8, automatic, great Economical flying in mi, $10,950 OBO, call shape, $9000 OBO. your own Cessna Rod at 541-647-1650. 530-515-8199 172/180 HP for only $10,000! Based at Ford Ranchero BDN. Call Gabe at National Sea Breeze 1979 Professional Air! 2004 M-1341 35’, gas, Montana 3400RL 2008, 4 541-388-0019 with 351 Cleveland Ford Excursion 2 power slides, upslides, no smokers or modified engine. 2005, 4WD, diesel, graded queen mat916 pets, limited usage, Body is in exc. cond., $19,900, tress, hyd. leveling 5500 watt Onan gen, excellent condition, Trucks & call 541-923-0231. system, rear camera solar panel, fireplace, $2500 obo. Heavy Equipment & monitor, only 6k mi. dual A/C, central vac, 541-420-4677 Reduced to $41,300! elect. awning w/sun541-480-0617 GMC Denali 2003 screen arctic pkg, rear receiver, alum wheels, 2 loaded with options. Ford T-Bird 1966 TVs, many extras. Exc. cond., snow Want to impress the 390 engine, power $35,500. 541-416-8087 tires and rims ineverything, new relatives? Remodel cluded. 130k hwy paint, 54K original your home with the miles. $12,000. miles, runs great, Diamond Reo Dump help of a professional 541-419-4890. excellent cond. in & Truck 1974, 12-14 from The Bulletin’s out. Asking $8,500. yard box, runs good, “Call A Service 541-480-3179 $7900, 541-548-6812 Professional” Directory MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides, RV CONSIGNMENTS king bed, lrg LR, ArcWANTED tic insulation, all opWe Do The Work, You tions $37,500. Jeep Willys 1947,custom, Keep The Cash, 541-420-3250 small block Chevy, PS, On-Site Credit Econoline trailer GMC ½ ton 1971, Only OD,mags+ trailer.Swap Approval Team, 16-Ton 29’ Bed, $19,700! Original low for backhoe.No am calls Web Site Presence, w/fold up ramps, elec. mile, exceptional, 3rd please. 541-389-6990 We Take Trade-Ins. brakes, Pintlehitch, owner. 951-699-7171 Free Advertising. $4900, 541-548-6812 BIG COUNTRY RV Bend 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254 Pilgrim 27’, 2007 5th Mercury Monterrey wheel, 1 slide, AC, 1965, Exc. All original, TV,full awning, excel4-dr. sedan, in stor- Jeep Wrangler 1999, TJ lent shape, $23,900. age last 15 yrs., 390 Sahara Ed., 4.0L, exc. 541-350-8629 Peterbilt 359 potable High Compression tires, body & paint. water truck, 1990, engine, new tires & li69,700+ mi, hardtop + 3200 gal. tank, 5hp new full buckskin soft & cense, reduced to Southwind 35.5’ Triton, pump, 4-3" hoses, $2850, 541-410-3425. bikini tops, Warn winch, 2008,V10, 2 slides, Ducamlocks, $25,000. motorhome tow pkg, pont UV coat, 7500 mi. 541-820-3724 stinger, alum wheels, Bought new at $12,300. 541-617-9176 $132,913; 925 Pilgrim Open Road asking $94,900. 2005, 36’, 3 slides, Utility Trailers Call 541-923-2774 w/d hookup, upgrades, $24,440. 541-312-4466 Plymouth Barracuda 1966, original car! 300 Big Tex Landscaphp, 360 V8, centering/ ATV Trailer, lines, (Original 273 Porsche Cayenne 2004, 86k, immac, dealer dual axle flatbed, eng & wheels incl.) maint’d, loaded, now 7’x16’, 7000 lb. Winnebago Class C 27’ 541-593-2597 $17000. 503-459-1580 GVW, all steel, 1992, Ford 460 V8,64K 933 $1400. mi., good cond., $7000 Regal Prowler AX6 Ex541-382-4115, or OBO 541-678-5575 Pickups treme Edition 38’ ‘05, 541-280-7024. 4 slides,2 fireplaces, all 881 *** maple cabs, king bed/ Travel Trailers CHECK YOUR AD bdrm separated w/slide 931 Toyota 4Runner Please check your ad glass dr,loaded,always Automotive Parts, 4WD 1986, auto, garaged,lived in only 3 on the first day it runs 2 dr., $1200, mo,brand new $54,000, Service & Accessories to make sure it is corstill like new, $28,500, rect. Sometimes in541-923-7384 Fleetwood 28’ Pioneer will deliver,see rvt.com, Honda Accord 1981 structions over the 2003, 13’ slide, sleeps ad#4957646 for pics. parts car, $250. phone are mis6, walk-around bed with Cory, 541-580-7334 541-447-4405 understood and an error new mattress; power can occur in your ad. hitch, very clean Roadranger 27’ 1993, Set of 4 Enkei alloy If this happens to your $11,500. Please call A/C, awning, sleeps 6, wheels, silver & black, ad, please contact us 541-548-4284. exc. cond., used little, w/studded snow tires. the first day your ad $4,495 OBO. fits Audi bolt pattern. ROUA Digorgio 1971 appears and we will Toyota 4-Runner 4x4 Ltd, 541-389-8963 $250. 541-408-5350 fridge, heater, propane be happy to fix it 2006, Salsa Red pearl, & elec. lights, awning, as soon as we can. 49,990 miles, exlnt cond, 2 spares, extra insu- SPRINTER 36’ 2005, Wheels (4), new, 20x7.5, Deadlines are: Week- professionally detailed, GM,chrome, aluminum, lation for late season $10,500 obo. Two days 12:00 noon for $24,599. 541-390-7649 6x132 $125, 390-8386 hunting/cold weather slides, sleeps 5, next day, Sat. 11:00 camping, well maint, queen air mattress, 940 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 932 very roomy, sleeps 5, small sgl. bed, couch 12:00 for Monday. If Vans great for hunting, Antique & folds out. 1.5 baths, we can assist you, $3200, 541-410-6561 541-382-0865, Classic Autos please call us: leave message! Chevy Astro 541-385-5809 29th Annual Oregon The Bulletin Classified Cargo Van 2001, High Desert Swap *** pw, pdl, great cond., Meet & Car Show business car, well maint, regular oil Saturday, September Chevy 1 ton 1968, changes, $4500, 8th. Starts 7 a.m. – dual tires, 11’ flatplease call Vendors 6:30 a.m. Springdale 29’ 2007, bed, 327 engine, Taurus 27.5’ 1988 541-633-5149 The Deschutes slide,Bunkhouse style, 58k miles, $1000. Everything works, County Fairgrounds sleeps 7-8, excellent 541-548-4774 $1750/partial trade for and Expo Center, condition, $16,900, car. 541-460-9127 Redmond Oregon. NISSAN QUEST 541-390-2504 1996, 3-seat mini Free admission to van, extra nice in and the public. Special 885 out $3,400. Sold my antique section in- Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4, Canopies & Campers Windstar, need an1995, extended cab, doors with many other van! long box, grill guard, dealers from the Pa541-318-9999, ask running boards, bed cific Northwest. No for Bob. Ask about rails & canopy, 178K Dogs Please. Contact Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 free trip to D.C. for miles, $4800 obo. Butch Ramsey for info WWII vets. 29’, weatherized, like 208-301-3321 (Bend) & reservations new, furnished & phone: (541)548-4467 Dodge 1500 2001, 4x4 ready to go, incl Wineonline: 975 945 1995, 11’3”, sport, red, loaded, gard Satellite dish, Lance bramsey@bendbroadband.com all appl., solar panel, rollbar, AND 2011 Automobiles $26,995. 541-420-9964 new battery, exc. cond., Moped Trike used 3 $5995, 541-977-3181 months, street legal. call 541-433-2384 FIND YOUR FUTURE Ford F250 XLT ‘95, 4WD HOME IN THE BULLETIN auto, long bed, 3/4 ton, 8600 GVW, white,178K Weekend Warrior Toy Chev Corvair Monza conYour future is just a page mi, AC, pw, pdl, Sirius, Hauler 28’ 2007,Gen, away. Whether you’re looking vertible,1964, new top & tow pkg., bedliner, bed 2004 Corvette Confuel station, exc cond. for a hat or a place to hang it, tranny, runs great, exlnt rail caps, rear slide sleeps 8, black/gray cruising car! $5500 obo. vertible. 6 speed. The Bulletin Classiied is window, new tires, rainterior, used 3X, 541-420-5205 Spiral Gray Metallic your best source. diator, water pump, $24,999. with tan leather intehoses, brakes, more, Every day thousands of 541-389-9188 rior. Only 1,200 $5200, 541-322-0215 buyers and sellers of goods miles on new Michand services do business in elin run flat tires, Looking for your these pages. They know Corsa exhaust. Lots next employee? you can’t beat The Bulletin of extras. Only 25k Place a Bulletin help Classiied Section for miles. $28,950. wanted ad today and ‘69 Chevy C-20 Pickup, selection and convenience (541) 410-2870. reach over 60,000 all orig.Tubro 44; auto - every item is just a phone readers each week. 4-spd,396, model CST call away. Your classified ad w/all options, orig. owner, Ford Ranger 1999, 4x4, Buick LeSabre Lim71K, X-cab, XLT, will also appear on The Classiied Section is $24,000, 541-923-6049 ited 1997 111,000 auto, 4.0L, $7900 bendbulletin.com easy to use. Every item miles, blue, new tires, OBO. 541-388-0232 which currently reis categorized and every brakes and air, $2900 ceives over 1.5 milcartegory is indexed on the firm. Others available, Ford Ranger XLT lion page views evsection’s front page. like a 1996 Regal with 1998 X-cab ery month at no 86,000 miles, only Whether you are looking for 2.5L 4-cyl engine, $3500. Call Bob extra cost. Bulletin a home or need a service, 5-spd standard trans, 541-318-9999. Classifieds Get Reyour future is in the pages of Chevy Wagon 1957, long bed, newer mosults! Call 385-5809 The Bulletin Classii ed. 4-dr., complete, tor & paint, new clutch Cadillac CTS Sedan or place your ad $15,000 OBO, trades, 2007, 29K, auto, exc. & tires, excellent conon-line at please call cond, loaded, $19,000. dition, clean, $4500. bendbulletin.com Call 541-447-6552 541-420-5453. 541-549-8828

BOATS & RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890 - RV’s for Rent

AUTOS & TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

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Cadillac El Dorado Acura TL sedan 2009 1994, Total cream $23,995 puff, body, paint, trunk #006313 as showroom, blue leather, $1700 wheels w/snow tires although car has not been wet in 8 years. On trip to 541-598-3750 Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., $5400, 541-593-4016. aaaoregonautosource.com

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250K miles, everyday driver. Moved to Marshall Islands; need to sell. Best offer over $2000. ALSO:, 1997 Camry coming soon, with 100K miles. 541-318-9999

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Toyota Camry’s 1984, $1200 OBO, 1985 $1400 OBO, 1986 parts car, $500; call for details, 541-548-6592

Need to sell a VOLVO S40 2006 Vehicle? *** Call The Bulletin AWD, 66k miles, CHECK YOUR AD and place an ad to$11,500 Please check your ad day! or best offer! on the first day it runs Ask about our 541-678-3913 to make sure it is cor"Wheel Deal"! rect. Sometimes infor private party WHEN YOU SEE THIS structions over the advertisers phone are misunderstood and an error can occur in your ad. 541-385-5809 If this happens to your On a classified ad ad, please contact us go to the first day your ad www.bendbulletin.com appears and we will to view additional be happy to fix it as photos of the item. soon as we can. Deadlines are: WeekLooking for your days 12:00 noon for next employee? next day, Sat. 11:00 Nissan Altima 3.5SR Place a Bulletin help 2012, 13,200 mi., exc. a.m. for Sunday; Sat. wanted ad today and cond., 6-cyl., 270HP, 12:00 for Monday. If reach over 60,000 8-way power driver we can assist you, readers each week. seat, 60/40 rear seat, please call us: Your classified ad leather steering wheel 541-385-5809 will also appear on with audio controls, The Bulletin Classified bendbulletin.com AM/FM/CD/AUX with which currently reBose speakers, A/C, Chrysler 300 C SRT8 ceives over 1.5 mil2006, exc. cond., Bluetooth, USB, back lion page views 43,800 mi.,, loaded, up camera, heated every month at no DVD, $25,000, front seats, power no extra cost. Bulle541-977-4921. moonroof & more. In tin Classifieds Bend, below Blue Get Results! Call Book at $24,000, Find It in 385-5809 or place (317) 966-2189 The Bulletin Classifieds! your ad on-line at Just bought a new boat? 541-385-5809 bendbulletin.com Sell your old one in the Ford Taurus 1998, low classiieds! Ask about our People Look for Information Super Seller rates! miles, very clean, with About Products and 541-385-5809 additional snow tires, Services Every Day through $2990. 503-869-4444 PORSCHE 914 1974, The Bulletin Classifieds Roller (no engine), Ford Thunderbird 1988, lowered, full roll cage, 3.8 V-6, 35K actual mi., 5-pt harnesses, rac- The Bulletin recomnew hoses, belts, tires, mends extra caution battery, pb, ps, cruise, ing seats, 911 dash & when purchasing A/C, CD, exc. cond. in instruments, decent products or services & out, 2nd owner, shape, very cool! from out of the area. maint. records, must $1699. 541-678-3249 see & drive! New Sending cash, Price! - Now $2500, checks, or credit inobo. 541-330-0733 formation may be subject to FRAUD. For more information about an advertiser, you may call Porsche Carrera 1999 the Oregon State black metallic, 46k Attorney General’s careful mi, beautiful, Office Consumer Hyundai Accent 2008, upgrades, Tiptronic. Protection hotline at 32MPG! $7900 obo $20,000. 541-593-2394 1-877-877-9392. Hatchback, 47,800 mi., A/C, one 0wner, Clean, 5 Spd Manual. 541-550-9935

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E6 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

PUBLIC NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

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LEGAL NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE STATE OF OREGON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF DESCHUTES. FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. SUZANNE BOATMAN; RICHARD BOATMAN; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; and Occupants of the Premises, Defendants. Case No. 11CV0971. SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION. TO THE DEFENDANTS: Suzanne Boatman. In the name of the State of Oregon, you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above-entitled Court and cause on or before the expiration of 30 days from the date of the first publication of this summons. The date of first publication in this matter is August 26, 2012. If you fail timely to appear and answer, Plaintiff will apply to the above-entitled court for the relief prayed for in its complaint. This is a judicial foreclosure of a deed of trust in which the Plaintiff requests that the Plaintiff be allowed to foreclose your interest in the following described real property: LOT THIRTY FOUR (34) OF DESCHUTES RIVER TRACT, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 19920 Juniper Lane, Bend, Oregon 97701. NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS: READ THESE PAPERS CAREFULLY! A lawsuit has been started against you in the above-entitled court by Federal National Mortgage Association, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff. Plaintiff's claims are stated in the written complaint, a copy of which was filed with the above-entitled Court. You must "appear" in

this case or the other side will win automatically. To "appear" you must file with the court a legal paper called a "motion" or "answer." The "motion" or "answer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication specified herein 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 any 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. This summons is issued pursuant to ORCP 7. ROUTH CRABTREE OLSEN, P.C. By Tony Kullen, OSB # 090218, Attorneys for Plaintiff, 621 SW Alder St., Suite 800, Portland, OR 97205, (503) 459-0140; Fax (425) 623-1862, tkullen@rcolegal.com

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LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE CITY OF BEND CITY COUNCIL PROJECT NUMBER: PZ 12-210 APPLICANT: Francis Hansen & Martin LLP NATURE OF THE APPLICATION: Right of way vacation for NE Vail Avenue between NE 3rd and 4th Streets. APPLICABLE CRITERIA: Bend Code Chapter 3.80; Right of Way Vacation; Oregon Revised Statutes, ORS 271.080-271.230 available in City Hall or at the Community Development Department portion of the City's website. DATE, TIME, PLACE AND LOCATION OF THE HEARING: Wednesday, September 19, 2012 at 7:00 PM in the City of Bend Council Chambers, 710 NW Wall Street, Bend. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: The application, all documents and evidence submitted by or on behalf of the applicant and the application criteria are available for inspection at City Hall at no cost and will be provided at a reasonable cost. Seven days prior to the hearing a copy of the staff report will be similarly available. CONTACT PERSON: Amy Barry at (541)693-2114, abarry@ci.bend.or.us. Send written testimony to the City of Bend, City Council c/o CDD, 710 NW Wall St. 97702, or attend the meeting and state your views. The hearing will be conducted in accordance with BDC Section 4.1.800. Any party is entitled to a hearing or record continuance. Failure of an issue to be raised at the hearing, in person or by letter, or failure to provide statements or evidence sufficient to afford the decision maker an opportunity to respond precludes appeal to the Land Use Board of Appeals on that issue.

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PUBLIC NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE File No. 7345.26011 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Dennis G. Hicks and Marilyn H. Hicks, husband and wife, as grantor, to First American title Insurance Company of Oregon, as trustee, in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. solely as nominee for American Mortgage Network, Inc., DBA American Mortgage Network of Oregon, as beneficiary, dated 08/23/07, recorded 09/05/07, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County, Oregon, as 2007-48678 and subsequently assigned to Federal National Mortgage Association ("FNMA") by Assignment, covering the following described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Lot Three(3), Stonebrook Phase III, City of Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon.

PUBLIC NOTICE The Bend Park & Recreation District Board of Directors will meet Tuesday, September 4, 2012, in a work session at 5:30 p.m. at the district office, 799 SW Columbia, Bend, Oregon. The board will receive a report on recreation program development and delivery process. Following the work session the board will meet in executive session pursuant to ORS 192.660(2)(h) for the

purpose of consulting with legal counsel regarding current litigation of litigation likely to be filed. The board will meet in a regular business meeting. The September 4, 2012, board report is posted on the district’s website, www.bendparksandrec.org. For more information call 541-389-7275.

File No. 7037.92878 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Charles E. Ermisch and Karen A. Ermisch, Husband & Wife, as grantor, to Amerititle, as trustee, in favor of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as beneficiary, dated 10/04/06, recorded 10/12/06, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County, Oregon, as 2006-68288 and subsequently assigned to by Assignment recorded as , covering the following described real property situated in said county and state, to wit:

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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: GEORGE A. MANESS. 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 Two (2) in Block One (1) of FRONTIER WEST, Deschutes County, Oregon. 3.RECORDING. The Trust Deed was recorded as follows: Date Recorded: January 13, 2004. Recording No.: 2004-01517 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 $638.67 each, due the fifteenth of each month, for the months of November 2009 through June 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 $152,142.61; plus interest at an adjustable rate pursuant to the terms of the Promissory Note from October 15, 2009; plus late charges of $651.49; 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:November 1, 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 #17368.30455). DATED: June 19, 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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PUBLIC NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

Lot Fifteen (15), in Block Four (4), of Nottingham Square, Deschutes County, Oregon. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 20763 George Court Bend, OR 97702 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly payments of $1,488.40 beginning 01/01/11; plus late charges of $0.00 each month beginning 01/16/11; plus prior accrued late charges of $118.12; plus advances of ($343.78); together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $209,999.97 with interest thereon at the rate of 6.75 percent per annum beginning 12/01/10; plus late charges of $0.00 each month beginning 01/16/11 until paid; plus prior accrued late charges of $118.12; plus advances of ($343.78); together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on November 9, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. For further information, please contact: Heather L. Smith Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 Ermisch, Charles E. and Karen A. (TS# 7037.92878) 1002.222218-File No.

File No. 7021.12306 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Publication Dates: Aug. 12, 19, 26 and September 2, 2012 1002.222218 Larry W Thompson, and Lynne K Thompson, husband and wife, as grantor, to Amerititle, as trustee, in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. solely as nominee for America's Wholesale Lender, its successors and assigns, as beneficiary, dated 01/25/07, recorded 01/31/07, in the mortgage records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon, as PUBLIC NOTICE 2007-06442 and subsequently assigned to Bank of America, N.A. succesTRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE sor by merger to BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP fka Countrywide Home Loans Servicing LP, successor by merger to America's Wholesale Lender File No. 7023.101676 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Jenny L Brown, A Single Person, as grantor, to Fidelity National Title Inby Assignment recorded, covering the following described real property surance Company, as trustee, in favor of Select Lending Services, LLC, situated in said county and state, to wit: as beneficiary, dated 03/17/08, recorded 03/24/08, in the mortgage records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon, as 2008-12998 and subseUnit 9 of Tennis Village Townhouses, Stage II, quently assigned to Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. SBM to Wells Fargo Home in the County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, together with an Mortgage, Inc. by Assignment recorded as 2008-48882, covering the folundivided interest in and to the common elements appertaining to said lowing described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: unit as set forth in Declaration of Unit Ownership, recorded April 27, 1977, in Book 249, Page 334, Deed Records, and amended by instrument Lot 16 of Westside Pines, Phase 1, City of Bend, recorded May 3, 1977, in Book 249, Page 656, Deed Records in the Deschutes County, Oregon Office of the County Clerk of Deschutes County, Oregon.

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 3329 Northeast Stonebrook Loop Bend, OR 97701

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 57009 Meadow Road aka 57033 Tennis Village Lane Sunriver, OR 97707

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 2429 Northwest Monterey Pines Drive Bend, OR 97701

Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly payments of $2,240.24 beginning 11/01/11; plus late charges of $112.01 each month beginning 11/15/12; plus prior accrued late charges of ($112.01); plus advances of $829.82; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $398,262.11 with interest thereon at the rate of 6.75 percent per annum beginning 10/01/11; plus late charges of $112.01 each month beginning 11/15/12 until paid; plus prior accrued late charges of ($112.01); plus advances of $829.82; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on November 16, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com.

Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly payments of $1,558.83 beginning 06/01/11; plus late charges of $70.00 each month beginning 06/16/11; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $0.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $280,000.00 with interest thereon at the rate of 6 percent per annum beginning 05/01/11; plus late charges of $70.00 each month beginning 06/16/11 until paid; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $0.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on November 13, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com.

Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly payments of $1,662.05 beginning 03/01/12; plus late charges of $66.79 each month beginning 03/16/12; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $30.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $284,967.99 with interest thereon at the rate of 5.625 percent per annum beginning 02/01/12; plus late charges of $66.79 each month beginning 03/16/12 until paid; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $30.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on November 13, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com.

For further information, please contact: Nanci Lambert Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 Hicks, Dennis and Marilyn (TS# 7345.26011) 1002.222344-File No.

For further information, please contact: Winston Khan Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 Thompson, Larry W. and Lynne K. (TS# 7021.12306) 1002.222115-File No.

For further information, please contact: Kathy Taggart Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 BROWN, JENNY L. (TS# 7023.101676) 1002.222334-File No.

Publication Dates: Aug. 19, 26, September 2 and 9, 2012 1002.222344

Publication Dates: Aug. 12, 19, 26 and September 2, 2012 1002.222115

Publication Dates: Aug. 12, 19, 26 and September 2, 2012 1002.222334


OPINION&BOOKS

F

Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3 Books, F4-5

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

www.bendbulletin.com/opinion

ANALYSIS

JOHN COSTA

Attack our problems directly

O

ne national political convention down. One to go. And two months to Election Day. It is tempting to be cynical about American politics. Heaven knows, the politicians sure can provide enough reasons. But stripped of the ads, the sound bites, the attack dogs and the fringe debating points, the central issues are critical to our future. And the decisions we make when we cast our ballots will define our future and that of our children and grandchildren. I confess that I have always been fascinated by American politics, starting with an intense interest in political history. American leaders have been attacking each other since our founding, and often in terms and tone that would put a blush on the faces of today’s most rabid bloggers. That said, the issues they insulted each other over were critical to our nation. The difference, it seems to me, is that it is harder today to sift through the distractions to the key concerns. And yet, we have to. There is too much at stake. We will read, watch and listen to a lot over the next eight weeks, but it will all fade to irrelevance if we cannot define and ask the most important questions and insist on direct answers from office seekers. At any level: national, state or local. For instance, as reported in The Bulletin, there are 12 candidates for four positions on the Bend city council. As an editorial in today’s Bulletin states, there hasn’t been this much interest in city elections in years, and all for a spot that earns the winners $200 a month for four years and lifetime of aggravation. More importantly, as the editorial observes today, there are critical issues. The editorial asks, “Do your views match with theirs on Juniper Ridge, support for the bus system, electing the mayor, supporting the Oregon State University-Cascades branch expansion, plans for the north end of the parkway, cutbacks envisioned by the new police chief, tax breaks for new businesses, other infrastructure projects? There are similar lists of key questions for state and national candidates as well. And we better get answers. We live in an unsettled world and while there are small signs of improvement, our economy is not very good at all, and our debt is out of control. On Friday, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke confirmed this view and suggested that more public stimulus of some kind is needed, an approach reportedly being resisted as repetitive and ineffective by other members of the Federal Reserve How many times over the last several national administrations have you heard the terms energy independence, entitlement reform, national debt crisis and a balanced budget? Back in this neck of the woods, how often have you heard that Oregon has a structural financial imbalance between its commitments and its resources? I heard it most powerfully at the start of the economic downturn. Not this one; the one a decade ago and from John Kitzhaber during his first go-round as governor. Last week, Bulletin Salem reporter Lauren Dake wrote that the Oregon Public Employees Retirement System will require an average 45 percent increase from public employers to support the pension requirements of workers. As Dake reported, just the Redmond school district would need to cough up another $2.3 million out of its operating funds for employees, which is the equivalent of 30 teachers or 13 school days. It’s $4.7 million in Bend-La Pine. How often have you heard the term PERS reform, and in the same breadth that the median income of non-public employees continues to decline? At some point, I keep dreaming, we’ll actually address these seemingly never-ending issues. So, why not start now. — John Costa is editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcosta@bendbulletin.com

The partisan divide By Dan Balz and Jon Cohen • The Washington Post gulf between Republicans and Democrats has never

WASHINGTON — American politics has long been defined as red vs. blue, and everything

been wider. Partisan polarization now presents a

about the 2012 election speaks to the chasm that

potentially insurmountable barrier to governing for

separates the two parties. But a major study recently

whoever wins the White House in November.

Inside • Who are the independent voters? F6 • One-word reactions to the political parties, F6

But the study — based on a poll of more than

highlighted how those divisions are only a part of the

3,000 randomly selected adults — also illuminates

dynamic shaping the political landscape.

in striking new ways another reality about the

The study, conducted by The Washington Post and

contours of politics.

the Kaiser Family Foundation, underscores that the

See Partisan / F5

4VSWFZ PG QBSUJTBOT A sampling of questions posed to those polled. The answers are charted below. Government

Values

Economy

• Overall, satisfied with the political system • Want smaller government with fewer services • Government controls too much of daily life

• Organized religious groups should stay out of politics • We should adjust our morals and values to changing times • Gay marriage should be legal

• We don’t give everyone an equal chance in this country • Support raising taxes on incomes of $250,000 or more • Most people who don’t get ahead have only themselves to blame

DEMOCRATS God and government Dems

GOD AND DIY DEMS GOVERNMENT

13% 34%

AGNOSTIC LEFT

24% 29%

URBAN LIBERALS

The issues 4FF GVMM RVFTUJPOT BCPWF

34%

Mostly non-white, highly religious and live in the South. They are more economically distressed and see a role for larger government. They divide closely on gay marriage and abortion, oppose cuts to entitlements and support increased spending to create jobs.

Overall satisfaction Wants smaller gov’t Gov’t controls too much

Urban liberals 29%

Agnostic left

Mostly white, wealthier and secular, they have expansive views of the role of government and social issues. They support tax increases on the rich, cutting military spending, have favorable views of health care reform and support gun control.

Younger, socially liberal and secular. They believe in economic individualism. Most agree that people should take responsibility for their own lives and that failure to get ahead is mostly the individual’s fault. They are similar to urban liberals on social issues.

53%

No religion in politics Adjust our morals Legalize gay marriage

60 59

48

86

93 92

22

44

92

78 15

71

94

96

21

3

3

— Marvin Scurry, Virginia Beach, Va.

75

79

91

“The point is fairness; we need to all be on same page. ’Cause God created all men equal, rich man, poor man.�

66

81

94

5

23 29

66

78

60

40

80

86 59

Will vote for Obama Will vote for Romney

39%

39

11

36

No equal chances Yes to raising taxes Not getting ahead

Mostly white, lower income and education with a high proportion in rural areas. These “do it yourself� Democrats are the smallest of the groups. They are the only one to prefer smaller government, are opposed to gay marriage and split on abortion.

36

9 54

DIY Democrats 13%

48%

43%

32

24%

“It’s the party of economic justice. They’re not always for giving (the wealthy) tax break after tax break. They’re concerned about the country as a whole.�

“I’m not particularly fond of the Democrats’ economic policies, but their social ones are the reasons I identify as a Democrat and not a Republican.�

“I don’t think that a bigger government is the answer. I think (it is) being more selective about who gets the benefits.�

— Richard Tindall, Maugansville, Md.

— Blaine Slack, Lake City, Fla.

— Patsy Lawler, Frisco, Texas

REPUBLICANS TEA PARTY

PRO-GOVERNMENT WINDOW SHOPPERS

12% 28% 22%

OLD SCHOOL

17% 21% VALUES

Tea party Republicans 28%

Old-school Republicans 22% Religious values voters 21%

Window shoppers

Most conservative of GOP groups. Almost all in this group are married and white. They have a uniform desire for a smaller government with less business regulation. They think gay marriage and abortion should be illegal. They say the GOP leadership is taking the party in the right direction.

More male, white, educated and wealthy with moderate views on social issues but conservative views on fiscal issues. They are the least religious of Republican groups. They oppose raising taxes on the rich and are fearful of increases to the budget deficit.

More female, focused on religious heritage and conservative on social and fiscal issues. They take a more moderate view on issues of equality. Though they pritorize the role of religion in public life, they are not as religious on a personal level as tea party Republicans.

Young Republicans with more progressive views. More female, less white and less religious than other groups. A majority prefer a larger government with more services, see regulation of business as necessary and want government to improve the standard of living.

12%

16%

Overall satisfaction 9% Wants smaller gov’t Gov’t controls too much

98

82

95

Will vote for Obama 1 Will vote for Romney

90

“I'm a believer that the government can help people, but they’ve got to help themselves first.�

16 11

61

56

66 96

6

23

70 76

49

67

65

6

98

86 63

45 44

27% 62

20 11

9

Working class, highly religious and conservative on social issues. Open to the idea of a larger government. The smallest Republican group with lower income and less educated, they want to see an active government improve the standard of living.

50

15

53

Pro-government 12%

42

75

36

— Dorie Johnstone, California

80

89

No religion in politics 13 Adjust our morals 6 Legalize gay marriage 6 No equal chances 2 23 Yes to raising taxes Not getting ahead

42%

96

97

17%

27

37

9

92

92

58

“I feel like the government spends too much money, that the federal government needs to be less involved in my life.�

“We look at our coins and it says ‘In God we trust.’ I think there was a lot less separation when our government was formed.�

“It doesn’t bother me at all that we help people that need the help more than people who can do it themselves.�

“If someone has a job, the government should help them. I’m not paying for the guy that’s laying on the couch and drinking beer all day.�

— Michael Donham, Fair Lawn, N.J.

— Donna Frame, American Fork, Utah

— Al Thelen, Lakewood, Colo.

— Joseph Bush, Langhorne, Pa.

How the groups were identified: 5IJT SFQPSU TPSUT 3FQVCMJDBOT JOUP GJWF HSPVQT BOE %FNPDSBUT JOUP GPVS CBTFE PO BO BOBMZTJT PG TVSWFZ SFTQPOEFOUTh BOTXFST UP RVFTUJPOT PO TJY TVCKFDU

83

5IF 8BTIJOHUPO 1PTU

BSFBT 8F BTTFTTFE FBDI SFTQPOEFOU T BUUJUVEFT UPXBSE MJNJUFE HPWFSONFOU NPSBM SFMBUJWJTN FRVBMJUZ SFMJHJPO JO QVCMJD MJGF FDPOPNJD JOEJWJEVBMJTN BOE TPDJBM JTTVFT 5IFTF TJY DBUFHPSJFT PG RVFTUJPOT XFSF VTFE JO B TUBUJTUJDBM QSPDFEVSF DBMMFE DMVTUFS BOBMZTJT UP JEFOUJGZ UIF HSPVQT PG QBSUJTBOT *OEJWJEVBMT XIP HBWF TJNJMBS BOTXFST XFSF HSPVQFE UPHFUIFS

BOOKS INSIDE RIDPATH: A thriller set in the cold of Iceland, F4

AYN RAND: Political ideas, books back in spotlight, F4

ST. XENIA: History, religion and fiction combine, F4

TROPPER: Novel is a darkly funny look at death, F5


F2

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

E Local candidates’ varied views give voters a choice

Y

The Bulletin

AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

B M C G B J C R C

Chairwoman Publisher Editor-in-Chief Editor of Editorials

ou do have a choice. It’s a gift from 12 Bend residents who want your vote for a position on City Council.

All 12 are seeking the opportunity to represent you for the

next two years, and they hold a variety of views on the subjects facing the city. That diversity of opinion means you can express yours with your vote. Do you think the city should re-examine its Bridge Creek water project or move ahead with it? Do you think officials have done a reasonable job of controlling the rising cost of city services? How about concerns that the city is too weighted in favor of development or favors the west side over the east side? Each of those issues has been cited by candidates announcing their campaigns. And there’s more to explore: Do your views match with theirs on Juniper Ridge, support for the bus system, electing the mayor, supporting the Oregon State University-Cascades branch expansion, plans for the north end of the parkway, cutbacks envisioned by the new police chief, tax breaks for new businesses, other infrastructure projects? There are four citywide positions up for election in November. For seat 1, incumbent Tom Greene is not seeking re-election because he is running for a Deschutes County Commission seat. Vying to replace him are Barb Campbell, Victor Chudowsky and Wade Fagen. For seat 2, Mayor Jeff Eager

All you have to do is a little reading and maybe attend a candidate forum or two to determine which candidates best represent your thoughts. won’t run again, and seeking his seat are Charles Baer, Ed Barbeau, Doug Knight and Ed McCoy. For seat 3, incumbent Kathie Eckman is opposed by Ronald Boozell and Sally Russell. For seat 4, incumbent Jim Clinton faces challenger Mike Roberts. There hasn’t been this much interest in Bend City Council in years. In 2010, six candidates sought 3 positions; in 2008, there were nine candidates for four positions; and in 2006, five candidates for three positions. All 12 this year are offering to work countless hours for the extremely limited pay of about $200 per month. All you have to do is a little reading and maybe attend a candidate forum or two to determine which candidates best represent your thoughts.

Revenue forecast holds message for Legislature

T

he state revenue forecast released last week included a piece of short-term good news overwhelmed by a pessimistic outlook for the next two years. The forecast prompted Sen. Frank Morse, R-Albany, to ask: “What do we have left in the bag of tricks to jolt this economy,� according to a report in The Oregonian. It’s an understandable expression of frustration as the state’s economy continues to struggle, and it’s a critical question for the Legislature as it works toward its next session in early 2013. The quarterly revenue forecast is a projection of state revenues issued every three months. State economist Mark McMullen told legislators that short-term revenues are up, giving state government an extra $190 million for this fiscal year. He also said the housing picture has improved, and growth — though slow — continues. However, his outlook for the

next two years was more pessimistic, foreseeing uncertainty causing weak results. Here’s a thought in response to Morse’s question: Do nothing. Do nothing that further constrains the natural energy of the marketplace. Do nothing that adds regulations. Do nothing that hampers job-creating business expansion. But also, do something that cuts the cost of the state Public Employees Retirement System. Do something to pare down the miles of red tape that strangle innovation and development. Do something that cuts the fees and requirements that slow progress. And for the sake of the future, impose sunset provisions so that laws and the resulting regulations disappear unless studied and determined to be effective. We live in an age when the pendulum has swung way too far toward command by bureaucracy; legislators can help move us back toward a more reasonable center.

My Nickel’s Worth Out-of-context quotes In his Aug. 22 In My View piece (“Private sector is engine that drives economy, job creation�), Kenney Griffiths presents some reasonable counterpoints to another opinion piece by Richard Belzer. It does, however, present a rather utopian view of corporate America: The system is mostly self-policing. It’s a little like saying that we don’t need the Oregon State Police or Deschutes County sheriff patrolling the highway between Bend and Sisters because the road is clearly marked with 55 mph signs, so everyone will naturally go no faster than 55. The main exception I take to his opinion piece, however, was his blatant non-contextual presentation of President Obama’s “you didn’t build that� quote. Conservatives have attempted to make much hay out of this quote, which in its entirety, actually is talking about the infrastructure that has allowed businesses to thrive. He was talking about roads, bridges, public services, the research and development that led to the Internet, not the businesses themselves. Unless you are a road construction business, you, in fact, did not build that. Conservatives got all bent out of shape when liberals took Mitt Romney’s “I like firing people� quote out of context; they should at least apply the same standards to their use of quotes. Keith Feilzer Bend

Support Jason Conger Jason Conger has done an outstanding job of representing our District 54 (Bend). To briefly summarize:

In the area of job growth, he has spearheaded and passed legislation that expands Oregon’s enterprise zone program. In the area of higher education, he has championed and passed legislation to provide bond funding for the purchase of OSU-Cascades Campus’ new graduate facility in Bend, which is a key step towards establishing a four-year university. In the area of business, he supported legislation that reduced tax burdens on small businesses and families. He helped balance a projected $3-billion budget deficit, while refusing to raise taxes on struggling Oregon families. He passed legislation that will help local governments and businesses come into compliance with strict new environmental laws imposed by the federal government, and dramatically reduced the cost for Oregon businesses. In the area of education, he supported legislation to allow parents to enroll their children in the school district of their choice. He also supported providing more funding to schools to supplement the 2011-13 K-12 budget. Vote for Jason Conger, state representative, District 54. Richard Morehead Bend

Solutions for jail space This is a reply to the article, “With no room in the jail, offenders wait their turn.� The Aug. 23 article on the lack of room in the Crook County jail suggests that building a new jail is the solution. This is a reactionary solution rather than a proactive solution.

What about proactive solutions that decrease the need for jails: sentencing reform, policy that encourages the successful reintegration of inmates into communities and improves access to education, jobs and housing? The U.S. incarceration rate is the highest in the world (738 per 100,000 people annually), approached by a distant second, Russia. The Oregon prison population is growing rapidly at a rate of 7.9 percent annually. Mass incarceration causes hardships on individuals, families and communities. We need to re-examine our penal policies and their consequences. We need efforts that focus on both the number of people we incarcerate and the resultant social impacts to the rapidly growing numbers of formerly incarcerated individuals, their families and their communities as a result of their “ex-felon� status. Individuals leave prison or jail with few assets, weak social networks, limited or no housing and employment and a lack of knowledge of available services. A criminal record upon release hinders their employability and earning capacity. The criminal justice system and re-entry services focus on the short-term needs of those transitioning from jail to communities. They don’t address their long-term needs and the needs of communities that facilitate the successful reintegration of those individuals. This would reduce recidivism rates and the need for jails, and keep communities safer. Let’s think outside of the jail box. Dawn Hanson Madras

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In My View policy

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Government has its purpose and its good points, too By Lynette Sheffield he role of government is an important question to debate. It is easy to imagine the private sector as being more efficient than a bureaucratic IN MY entity. But it isn’t always. Before deciding if something should be moved from the public sector to the private, we should remember why the government got involved in the first place. It is because the private sector failed to do so. There are times when it is more efficient and equitable for something to be run by the public. Not everything is meant to be profitable. The Hoover Dam and All American Canal were government projects. But we all benefit from this use of water for hydroelectricity and agricultural purposes.

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If it had been a good business idea, a business would have done it. If it had been left to each individual to acquire land rights and water access, it would not have worked as fairly or VIEW as well. But because of the actions of the public as a whole, individual businesses profited. Public education is not profitable. But because all children are guaranteed an education, we all benefit. Each dollar spent on education is returned multiple times through increased productivity. Today’s kids solve tomorrow’s problems. Money spent on learning is never wasted. It is truly the best investment possible. Hiring the fire department to only put out your house fire is irrational. If your house is surrounded by destroyed properties, it will decrease in value.

And if you’re in trouble, wouldn’t you rather call a police officer than a CEO? Sometimes, for reasons of efficiency and equality, it makes more sense to use the public sector. Through the years, various calls have been made to privatize certain government functions. Cut through the red tape, deregulate and let the market decide. This action usually only benefits the few at the expense of the many. Case in point: bank deregulation. Back in the 1980s we had two main avenues of protecting our retirement income: pensions and interest-bearing bank accounts. The Dow Jones industrial average was approximately 759. Then, things were changed to let the individual have direct contact with the money markets. Pensions

were replaced with 401(k)s that promised to let the individual benefit from Wall Street. Today, it is not unusual for 401(k)s to have lost 50-70 percent of their value. Yet, the Dow is currently over 13,000. In the 1980s, passbook accounts and CDs yielded 5-12 percent return. Through the magic of compound interest, that little bit you put aside each month grew to a nice nest egg. These were decided to be passĂŠ. The banks offered “money marketâ€? accounts that were supposedly tied to, well, money markets. But these days, you are lucky to get a one percent return from bank accounts even though the Dow is over 13,000. “Privatizationâ€? is code for Wall Street. When someone advocates privatizing a government-run function, it benefits Wall Street.

You can’t buy stock in a government-run entity, such as the U.S. Postal Service, but you can in UPS or FedEx, both of which operate on roads that were publicly paid for. There was a time when the government was not involved in as many things. It was not a good time. Because we were a civilized society, we refused to accept that outcome. We could not stand by while others fell through the safety net. We also found that working together can result in more fair and efficient solutions. As a result, our grandparents sacrificed so that we could have electricity, roads, clean water, safe medicines and basic education for all. Now it is time for us to pay it forward. — Lynette Sheffield lives in Bend.


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

C The humpty-dumpty Middle East T

he United States is backing off from the Middle East — and the Middle East from the United States. America is in the midst of the greatest domestic gas and oil revolution since the early 20th century. If even guarded predictions about new North American reserves are accurate, over the next decade the entire continent may become energy-independent, without much need of petroleum imports from the Middle East. America’s diminishing reliance on the Persian Gulf coincides with mounting Chinese dependency on Middle Eastern oil and gas. So as the Persian Gulf becomes less important to us, it grows even more critical to the oil-hungry, cash-laden — and opportunistic — Chinese. After two wars in the Middle East, Americans are as tired of our forces being sent over there as Middle Easterners are of having us there. The usual Arab complaint against the United States during the Cold War was that it supported anti-communist authoritarians in the oil-rich Gulf and ignored democratic reform. After the 1991 Gulf War, the next charge was that America fought Saddam Hussein only to free an oil-rich, pro-American monarchy in Kuwait, without any interest in helping reformists in either Kuwait or Iraq.

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON After the Gulf War of 2003, there was widespread new anger about the use of American arms to forcefeed democracy down the throat of Iraq. Finally, during the 2011 Arab Spring, the Arab world charged that the United States was too tardy in offering political support for insurgents in Egypt and Tunisia, and again late in “leading from behind” in helping European nations remove Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi. Now the Arab world is hectoring America to help overthrow Bashar al-Assad in Syria. Let’s get this all straight. America has been damned for its Machiavellian shenanigans in supporting authoritarian governments; for its naive idealism in using force to implant democracies; for its ambivalence in not using force to protect democratic protestors; and for its recent isolationism in ignoring ongoing Arab violence. Why, then, bother? There are other growing fault lines. The old conventional wisdom was that Sunni Muslims shared Israeli fears of a Persian bomb on the horizon. The new conventional wisdom is that the Arab masses that are propelling the Muslim Brother-

hood into power in Egypt prefer the idea of a nuked Israel to the danger of a nuclear Iran. The subtext of Middle Eastern anti-Americanism is that the region, if given a chance, will embrace its own brand of freedom But that does not appear to be happening in Egypt or Libya. And for now, democracy does not seem to be the common glue that holds together various Syrians fighting to overthrow the odious Assad dictatorship. Newly elected Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood attended college and later taught classes in California. Apparently Morsi once came here to enjoy American freedom and for his family to be protected by our tolerance and security. Is that why he is crushing liberal opponents and the Egyptian media — to ensure that they never enjoy the protections and opportunities that were offered to him while a guest in the United States? Note that anti-Americanism was often attributed to the unique unpopularity of Texan George W. Bush, who invaded two Middle Eastern countries, tried to foster democracies, and institutionalized a number of tough antiterrorism security policies. In turn, Barack Obama was supposed to be the antidote — a Muslim family on his father’s side, his middle name Hussein, early schooling in Muslim In-

donesia, a number of pro-Islamic speeches and interviews, apologies abroad, and a postracial personal story. Yet recent polls show that Obama is even less popular in the Middle East than was Bush. Staggering U.S. debt also explains the impending divorce. With $5 trillion in new American borrowing in just the last four years, and talk of slashing $1 trillion from the defense budget over the next 10 years, America’s options abroad may be narrowing. President Obama also envisions a more multilateral world in which former American responsibilities in the Middle East are outsourced to collective interests like the United Nations, the European Union and the Arab League. Perhaps soon the problem will be that we simply will not have enough power to use it for much of anything — and would have to ask the U.N. for permission if we did. Usually nothing good comes from American isolationism, especially given our key support for a vulnerable democratic Israel. But for a variety of reasons, good and bad, our humpty-dumpty policy of Middle East engagement is now shattered. And no one knows how to — or whether we even should — put it together again. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.

Poverty is what plagues our schools By Daniel Akst Newsday

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re American schools the best in the world? The answer is a resounding maybe — which is good news indeed for this back-toschool season. Beating up on public education is practically our national sport. I often do it myself. But overlooked in the ongoing assault is strong evidence that U.S. schools actually are worldbeaters — except for the problem of poverty. When it comes to reading, in fact, our schools may well be the best in the world. As Stanford University education professor Linda DarlingHammond points out, U.S. 15-year olds in schools with fewer than 10 percent of kids eligible for free or cutrate lunch “score first in the world in reading, outperforming even the famously excellent Finns.” This 10 percent threshold is significant because, in highachieving countries such as Finland, few schools have more poor kids than that. In other words, if you look at American schools that compare socioeconomically, we’re doing great. But wait, it gets better. U.S. schools where fewer than 25 percent are impoverished (by the same lunch measure) beat all 34 of the relatively affluent countries studied except South Korea and Finland. U.S. schools where 25 to 50 percent of students were poor still beat most

other countries. These results are from the 2009 Programme for International Student Assessment, a widely followed effort to compare educational outcomes. PISA scores inspire a good deal of hand-wringing in this country — overall, we were 14th in reading — but I suspect we’ve been taking away the wrong message by not adjusting for poverty. That’s odd, because most people know there’s a connection between poor families and poor school performance. The link is reflected in various sources, including the SAT, the

National Assessment of Educational Progress, and the Trends in International Math and Science Study. So the connection, which exists in most countries, is clear. But somehow the implications haven’t been, and now that school is again upon us, it’s worth thinking this through. If American kids who aren’t poor are doing so well, maybe our problem isn’t bad teachers or inadequate school spending or indifferent parents or screen-besotted children. Maybe the problem is simply poverty — and the shameful fact that we have so much more of it than any

comparable country. How much child poverty are we living with? A study this year by UNICEF found a U.S. child poverty rate of 23.1 percent — way beyond any other economically advanced nation except Romania. In Spain, which is in a depression, the figure was 17.1 percent. In Canada it was 13.3. In Finland, 5.3. If poverty is the problem, families in middle-class school districts needn’t worry much about their kids’ schools. But they should be worried about the society in which they live, for even if we have hearts of stone, we do not have heads made of the same material. Economic growth — to say nothing of a healthy democracy — depends on an educated citizenry, and we cannot afford to let a large segment of the populace embark on adulthood seriously underschooled. Some education reformers, such as Diane Ravitch, understand poverty’s effects on our schools. Geoffrey Canada has launched the Harlem Children’s Zone Project to provide poor children with a comprehensive set of programs addressing both poverty and education. It’s an effort well worth watching. If the problem with education in this country really is poverty, it will not be easy to fix. Yet that is no reason for kidding ourselves about what’s actually wrong. — Daniel Akst is a columnist for Newsday.

Social Security’s woes are worse than you think By Ramesh Ponnuru Bloomberg News

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hile the Romney and Obama camps have made increasingly bitter accusations about each other’s plans for Medicare, a bipartisan consensus on entitlements has emerged in the past few years. Too bad that consensus is wrong. On both left and right, the politicians and the experts are saying the United States needs to fix Medicare — and have made fixing Social Security an afterthought. President Barack Obama has signed changes to Medicare into law, but has done nothing about Social Security. For two years in a row, Republicans in Congress have supported budgets that rein in the growth of Medicare spending but leave Social Security alone. Expect to hear a lot more about Medicare than Social Security at the Republican convention this week. The main reason Medicare is getting more attention is that in the long run, it has much higher costs than Social Security. That’s why it’s often described, accurately, as the driver of America’s long-term debt problem. The Social Security gap looks small, though, only in relation to Medicare. On any other scale, it’s pretty big. The 1983 deal to fix Social Security is often held up as a model of bipartisan achievement,

with the implication that it just needs to be replicated to fill the gap: No big deal. Charles Blahous, a Social Security trustee and the author of a recent book on the program, points out that this model is actually pretty discouraging. In 1983, the financing gap over the next 75 years amounted to 1.8 percent of payroll. Blahous estimates that the gap today, measured using the same standards as in 1983, is 3.5 percent: almost double what it was then. And every year that passes without action, that number gets bigger. Do we think today’s politicians are prepared to solve twice as large a problem as their predecessors did? Right now, we spend more money on Social Security than on Medicare, and that will remain the case for a while. The programs’ trustees project that by 2035 Social Security will consume 6.4 percent of the economy and Medicare 5.7 percent. The Medicare projection may be optimistic about recent attempts to impose cost controls, but we shouldn’t expect Medicare to become vastly larger than Social Security in the next two decades. After that point, Social Security costs start going down as demographics play out while Medicare becomes a vastly larger problem. But our finances will be in what’s technically called a world of hurt before Social Security costs peak.

Under current projections by the Congressional Budget Office, by 2025 public debt will have reached 106 percent of gross domestic product. By 2035, it will have reached 181 percent. What would happen after that point is an academic question: We can’t allow ourselves to get there. We need to fix both programs. If anything, it’s Social Security that ought to be saved first because it’s the more urgent near-term problem. Some of the steps we can take to make the program solvent, moreover, would improve Medicare’s finances, too. Raising the retirement age, for example, would encourage people to work longer and thus pay more taxes into both programs. Perhaps even more important, we have a better sense of how to restrain the growth of Social Security than of Medicare. One promising option is to reduce the growth of Social Security benefit levels, especially for high earners. The program could be reformed so that high earners who retire in 2040 receive the same benefit level that high earners who retire in 2020 will — with an adjustment for inflation, but nothing more. Under the program as it stands now, those future retirees will get a bigger benefit. Benefit levels for people in the middle of the income spectrum,

meanwhile, could be set so that they more than keep up with inflation but don’t rise as much as currently scheduled. It’s easy to attack this sort of proposal. In the past, opponents have said, for example, that it would be a draconian 40 percent cut in benefits for high earners. That’s true, when the proposal is compared with the benefit levels that the law has scheduled but hasn’t figured out how to pay for. Compared with today’s benefit levels, though, it’s not a cut at all. Democrats will prefer to raise taxes, especially on high earners, to let benefits grow faster. The drawback to this approach is that higher payroll taxes, the CBO has found, discourage people from working and saving. We would be taking a hit to economic growth for a purpose — boosting benefit levels for relatively well-off seniors — that shouldn’t be a high social priority. It seems perverse to raise taxes on high earners to finance higher benefits for them. Just to have that argument over taxes and benefit levels would be progress. One way or the other, we need to get Social Security’s finances in order, instead of acting as though there’s no problem to be solved. — Ramesh Ponnuru is a Bloomberg View columnist and a senior editor at National Review.

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THOMAS FRIEDMAN

Egyptian president’s wrong turn

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find it very disturbing that one of the first trips by Egypt’s newly elected president, Mohammed Morsi, will be to attend the Nonaligned Movement’s summit meeting in Tehran this week. Excuse me, President Morsi, but there is only one reason the Iranian regime wants to hold the meeting in Tehran and have heads of state like you attend, and that is to signal to Iran’s people that the world approves of their country’s clerical leadership and therefore they should never, ever, ever again think about launching a democracy movement — the exact same kind of democracy movement that brought you, Mr. Morsi, to power in Egypt. In 2009, this Iranian regime literally killed the Green Revolution. It gunned down hundreds and jailed thousands of Iranians who wanted the one thing that Egyptians got: to have their votes counted honestly and the results respected. Morsi, who was brought to power by a courageous democracy revolution that neither he nor his Muslim Brotherhood party started — but who benefited from the free and fair election that followed — is lending his legitimacy to an Iranian regime that brutally crushed just such a movement in Tehran. This does not augur well for Morsi’s presidency. In fact, he should be ashamed of himself. “The Iranian regime has offered Morsi a sanitized tour of its nuclear facilities” noted Karim Sadjadpour, the Iran expert at the Carnegie Endowment. “As a former political prisoner in Mubarak’s Egypt, Morsi should also request a visit to Tehran’s notorious Evin prison. It will remind him of his own past and offer him a glimpse of Iran’s future.” Egyptian officials say Morsi is only stopping in Tehran for a few hours to hand over the presidency of the Nonaligned Movement to Iran from Egypt. Really? He could have done that by mail. It would have sent a powerful democratic message. By the way, what is the Nonaligned Movement anymore? “Nonaligned against what and between whom?” asked Michael Mandelbaum, a foreign policy specialist at Johns Hopkins. The Nonaligned Movement was conceived at the Bandung summit in 1955, but there was a logic to it then. The world was divided between Western democratic capitalists and Eastern Communists, and developing states like Egypt, Yugoslavia and Indonesia declared themselves “nonaligned” with these two blocs. But “there is no Communist bloc today,” Mandelbaum said. “The main division in the world is between democratic and undemocratic countries.” This has nothing to do with Israel or Iran’s nukes. If Morsi wants to maintain a cold peace with Israel, that is his business. As for Morsi himself, I’d like to see him succeed in turning Egypt around. It would be a huge boost to democracy in the Arab world. But what Egypt needs most will not be found in Tehran. Morsi’s first big trip shouldn’t have been to just China and Iran. It should have been all across Europe and Asia to reassure investors and tourists that Egypt is open for business again. If Morsi needs a primer on the democracy movement in Iran (whose Islamic regime broke relations with Egypt in 1979 to protest the peace treaty with Israel) he can read the one offered by Stanford’s Iran expert, Abbas Milani, on the U.S. Institute of Peace website: “The Green Movement reached its height when up to 3 million peaceful demonstrators turned out on Tehran streets to protest official claims that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had won the 2009 presidential election in a landslide. Their simple slogan was: ‘Where is my vote?’ … Over the next six months, the Green Movement evolved from a mass group of angry voters to a nationwide force demanding the democratic rights originally sought in the 1979 revolution, rights that were hijacked by radical clerics.” By early 2010, the regime had quashed all public opposition. That is the regime that Morsi will be helping to sanitize. One at least hopes he read the letter sent to him by an Iranian democracy group, Green Messengers of Hope, urging Morsi to remind his Iranian hosts “of the fates of the leaders who kept turning their backs on the votes of their people, and to urge them to govern their country relying on the support of the Iranian people rather than military forces.” Morsi might want to even remind himself of that. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.


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BOOKS THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

Ridpath thriller set in Iceland

www.bendbulletin.com/books

Novel transforms a religious figure into a real woman

THE REVENGE OF AYN RAND

“Far North” by Michael Ridpath (St. Martin’s Minotaur, 384 pgs., $25.99)

“The Mirrored World” by Debra Dean (Harper, 256 pgs., $25.99)

By Mary Ann Gwinn The Seattle Times

British crime writer Michael Ridpath has entered a crowded field with his new novel, “Far North,” — that of thrillers based in Northern countries, featuring ice, intrigue and violence. While the Swedenbased “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo” set this trend on fire, R i d p a t h ’s terrain is Iceland, an insular country recently devastated by the collapse of the world economy. “Far North” takes up where Ridpath’s first Icelandic novel, “Where the Shadows Lie,” left off. In 2011’s “Shadows,” Ridpath introduced Magnus Jonson, a Boston police detective working with the Reykjavík police department. Magnus was loaned to that force after, as a witness in a policecorruption scandal, he was targeted for execution. This made it expedient for him to get out of Beantown. Magnus was born and raised in Iceland, but at age 12 his father moved Magnus and most of the family to the United States for some not very well-explained reasons. This background enables Ridpath to interweave two stories — that of Magnus’ family’s history and a contemporary mystery involving Iceland’s financial downfall. Magnus’ position as an insider-outsider makes him an astute observer of Icelanders, a proud, independent and eccentric people whose lives play out against the bleak but spectacular Icelandic landscape. Iceland purists may point out that they have their own best-selling thriller writer, Arnaldur Indridason, author of “Jar City” and other brooding mysteries. Testdrive them both — this ancient land has a lot of secrets to be discovered.

B - Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for week ending Aug. 25. Hardcover fiction 1. “Gone Girl” by Gillian Flynn (Crown) 2. “The Inn at Rose Harbor” by Debbie Macomber (Ballantine) 3. “Odd Apocalypse” by Dean R. Koontz (Bantam) 4. “Friends Forever” by Danielle Steel (Delacorte) 5. “Where We Belong” by Emily Giffin. (St. Martin’s) 6. “Wards of Faerie” by Terry Brooks (Del Rey Books) 7. “Black List: A Thriller” by Brad Thor (Atria) 8. “I, Michael Bennett” by James Patterson / Michael Ledwidge (Little, Brown) 9. “The Kingmaker’s Daughter” by Philippa Gregory (Touchstone Books) 10. “The Fallen Angel” by Daniel Silva (Harper) Hardcover nonfiction 1. “Paterno” by Joe Posnanski (Simon & Schuster) 2. “Obama’s America” by Dinesh D’Souza (Regnery Publishing) 3. “Shadowbosses” by Mallory Factor (Center Street) 4. “The Amateur” by Edward Klein (Regnery Publishing) 5. “Wild” by Cheryl Strayed (Knopf) 6. “Killing Lincoln” by Bill O’Reilly (Henry Holt) 7. “Wheat Belly” by William Davis (Rodale Press) 8. “Fool Me Twice” by Aaron Klein (WND Books) 9. “Dearie: The Remarkable Life of Julia Child” by Bob Spitz (Knopf) 10. “Double Cross” by Ben Macintyre (Crown) — McClatchy-Tribune News Service

By Amy Driscoll The Miami Herald

The Associated Press file photo

Ayn Rand, pictured in 1962, was a Russian-born American novelist who died in 1982. Her writings include “Atlas Shrugged” and “The Fountainhead.”

Author’s popularity surges in GOP sphere By Tirdad Derakhshani The Philadelphia Inquirer

Ayn Rand, the novelist and philosophical thinker whose books have for decades been ignored by literature and philosophy departments, had her revenge when Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney named sometime Randian Paul Ryan as his vice presidential pick. “The reason I got involved in public service, by and large, if I had to credit one thinker, one person, it would be Ayn Rand,” the Wisconsin congressman told the Randian Atlas Society in 2005. The attention has generated a swell of posthumous popularity for Rand that has boosted sales of her books “Atlas Shrugged” and “The Fountainhead,” which jumped 20 percent on Amazon.com in one recently, according to Bloomberg News Service. Ryan is the latest in a string of (usually conservative) politicians, pundits, and entrepreneurs who have acknowledged a debt to Rand, including economist and former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, Texas congressman and one-time White House hopeful Ron Paul, Comcast-Spectacor chairman Ed Snider, Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales, and Craigslist mastermind Craig Newman. What’s more, two of Rand’s central tenets put her at center stage in the presidential election: She defended a form of individualism so radical that it’s rarely seen in mainstream politics, and she believed America could thrive only with an unregulated free-market economy. As Ryan put it in his 2005 speech: “The fight we are in here, make no mistake about it, is a fight of individualism vs. collectivism.” (Ryan, a Roman Catholic, has since distanced himself from Rand, a radical atheist.)

Individual rights What makes Rand so attractive to the right? “She’s for free markets and for free minds,” said William Thomas, programs director at the Atlas Society. “She’s for freedom of speech … and she is for economic freedom: deregulation, no taxes, and a free market.” Rand biographer Anne C. Heller said the Russian-born Rand, who fled the Soviet Union in 1925, had a lifelong aversion to collectivism and extolled the idea of the self-made individual. “Her idea of individuals is a beautiful idea. It’s the best of Ayn Rand. It’s about individual rights,” said Heller, author of “Ayn Rand and the World She Made.” “The heroes in her novels, as well as her own persona, was that of the rebellious outsider, and Americans love that. We’ve always loved Huck Finn and Holden Caulfield.” What makes Rand’s heroes unique — Howard Roark in “The Fountainhead” and John Galt in Rand’s magnum opus, “Atlas Shrugged” — is that un-

like Mark Twain’s or J.D. Salinger’s characters, they spend very little time worrying about the common good. “Rand describes another kind of American myth: the self-made person who owed nothing to anyone,” said Heller, a New York-based magazine writer and editor. “You know, it’s the frontier myth, of the men and women who make their own way and didn’t have to answer to others.” Heller said it was a potent myth, but not perhaps very realistic. “I think Ayn Rand was writing about an America that already had died when she was writing.”

Choosing for herself Rand took this idea to its logical extreme, said Stanford University historian Jennifer Burns. For Rand, to be an individual entails being responsible for every aspect of one’s life. “She came from a Jewish family, but she was an atheist who said her Jewish heritage wasn’t important to her because she didn’t choose it,” said Burns, author of the 2009 biography “Goddess of the Market: Ayn Rand and the American Right.” “It was the same thing with her family: She left them because they weren’t people she chose.” Thomas said Rand was a deeply ethical thinker in the tradition of Immanuel Kant, who outlined seven major virtues, including integrity, honesty, and justice. Rand said “treat others as they deserve,” Thomas said. Conservatives seem drawn to Rand, Heller said, because she developed a moral defense of laissez-faire capitalism. “Before Rand, the defense of capitalism … was always practical,” said Heller. Rand, she said, believed that the greater good could be served only if we allow people with vision and talent to achieve their goals. That we should divert funds not to the poor, but to help foster that talent. “She believed that the rich became rich because they were the productive ones, those who built big enterprises or came up with great ideas,” said Heller. “They were the ones who were pushing civilization forward.” Heller said Rand opposed any form of regulation that might slow down progress, or any form of incentives or tax breaks that might allow one company to succeed over another.

What about the rest of us — the non-gifted, the people who didn’t become captains of industry? “Those of us who are virtuous are doing our best to contribute our part and take what we earn and no more,” said Heller. “The marketplace and not government was the best arbiter of values.” Burns said Rand believed liberals exaggerated the economic oppression wrought by the preNew Deal robber barons. The novelist held that economic exploitation would be corrected in a truly free marketplace where workers, no less than consumers, would have the choice of voting against a company by leaving.

The flip side Temple University political scientist Joseph Schwartz, a decided anti-Randian, is dubious. “Sure, some people can pull themselves by their bootstraps, but many people don’t even have bootstraps,” said Schwartz, whose books include “The Future of Democratic Equality: Reconstructing Social Solidarity in a Fragmented United States.” “What is attractive to conservative elites about Rand is that she gives them permission to gut social welfare, including popular programs like Medicare and Social Security.” Schwartz said that the 18thcentury philosopher Adam Smith, who is cited as a hero by most free-market advocates, worried that without limitations, the market would become inhumane and that the market could not be allowed to define all human values. “Adam Smith said that even a competitive capitalist economy must be based on nonmarket values of empathy, caring, and selflessness. How else are we to raise our children? “Even rugged individuals would not prosper if they don’t have a decent legal system and public school system,” he said. Ironically, Rand would deplore many conservatives today because they support corporate tax breaks and offer tax incentives to attract new businesses. She’d see it as a form of socialism, said Schwartz. Rand would fault Ryan for his religious beliefs and antiabortion stance, Burns said. “‘This is a dangerous person,’ she’d say, because he is mixing religion and politics.”

Was St. Xenia of Russia divine — or just plain mad? Xenia, the beloved saint who lived in the 18th century, gave up all her possessions after her husband died so she could dedicate herself to helping the poor. Her decision to live in the slums of St. Petersburg so horrified her family — she was born into nobility — that they attempted to have her declared incompetent. And as her actions increasingly drew attention to the poor, the royal court of Catherine the Great began to view her as a threat. In her new historical novel, “The Mirrored World,” Miami author Debra Dean breathes life into the distant figure of Xenia, turning her from a dusty religious icon into a flesh-and-blood woman who channeled the greatest pain of her young life — the loss of her husband, a singer in the empress’ Imperial Choir — into a mission from God. Dean doesn’t attempt to diagnose Xenia’s behavior. Instead, she tells the story as an observer, through the eyes of Xenia’s younger cousin, Dasha, whose life is shaped by her deep friendship with the woman who became a famous soothsayer and healer. But Russia itself is perhaps the strongest character in the book, a frosty seductress of swirling snow and mean hovels, velvety furs and glowing embers, crossdressing costume balls, an ice palace, even an Italian castrati. Xenia’s early life is marked by a terrible fire in 1736 that consumes an entire district of St. Petersburg, sending the girl and her family to live with Dasha’s family. But even then, Xenia is clearly different. When the girls hear wolves howling in the distance, Dasha shivers with the fear that the wolves are coming to eat them. To Xenia, though, the howls are a beautiful, mournful song: “Listen, she is singing of how lonesome she is … There, her mate is answering. It must be a very beautiful sound to her.” The scene sets the tone for what’s to come, a story played in a minor key, of love, loss, broken hearts and longing. Even when Xenia meets and marries her soul mate, Andrei, the book sounds a melancholy

note, with Dasha noting that “I am conscious that I have violated a tradition of storytelling: a wedding shall signal the happy close to a tale.” But Xenia and Dasha’s lives have only begun. Xenia, happy in marriage but disheartened by the requirements of life at court, begins to long for a baby. Dasha worries no man will marry her. Both of their lives will be marred by tragedy, but each will eventually find her way to peace and even happiness. Dean, author of the critically acclaimed “The Madonnas of Leningrad” and the short story collection “Confessions of a Falling Woman,” writes with an internal focus and a wistful grace that suit the subject and the time period. In her skilled hands, history comes alive. You can almost hear the sleigh bells tinkle and the sled’s runners squeaking through the snow as the minarets and domes of St. Petersburg appear on the horizon. But even though the setting is romantic, the writing is far from sentimental. Dean’s portrayal of the cutthroat court life is fascinating — the casual cruelty of the powerful, the glittering excesses, the intricate rules for proper behavior. A fabulous mask of fanned-out peacock feathers, with two holes cut to allow the lady’s eyes to peer through, is dismissed by the ladies of the court as lacking because it doesn’t have gold-tipped feathers. When the court travels with the empress to visit a nearby lake, the miles-long procession carries all of the empress’ furniture and thousands of her dresses. In another disturbing scene, Dasha and Xenia visit the ice palace, a replica of a real palace carved for the empress’ amusement. The empress used the palace to stage an elaborate marriage production, forcing a jester to marry a hunched old woman and then spend the night on an ice bed, stripped of clothes. When the two women enter the bedroom, they spot a tuft of ragged hair frozen to the ice pillow, bloody at the roots where a bit of scalp remained. In The Mirrored World, Dean takes the bare framework of an extraordinary life and weaves an absorbing and intimate story of devotion around it. Though the world she creates is harsh and cold at times, it is the warmth at its center — the power of love — that stays with you in the end.

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Author’s latest is darkly funny “One Last Thing Before I Go” by Jonathan Tropper (Dutton, 352 pgs., $26.95) By Hannah Samp son The Miami Herald

Drew Silver is one of modern literature’s more pathetic losers. And that’s before he discovers an aortic dissection is about to kill him. The good news for Silver — which is what everyone, even his daughter, calls him — is that surgery can save his life. There’s a bit of bad news, and part of it is that the procedure would be performed by Silver’s ex-wife’s fiance. The other is that Silver, who is 44, doesn’t want the surgery. The sad-sack hero of Jonathan Tropper’s affecting, darkly funny new novel has already given up when the novel opens. Plagued by tinnitus, regret and ennui, he’s spent the last seven years and four months of his life in a state of numb inaction after a divorce from Denise (his fault) and the alienation of his daughter Casey (also his fault). Once upon a time, he was a big deal: the drummer and co-songwriter in a onehit wonder band, The Bent Daisies, that broke up when the front man decided to go solo. His leftover claims to that fame are occasional recognition and the residual checks from the song that made it big: “… (H)e was blinded by the flare of fleeting, accidental stardom, and when it was over, he never stopped seeing spots.” These days, Silver gets gigs as a drummer at weddings. Denise is about to get remarried, and Casey, 18, heading for Princeton and valedictorian of her class, has just told Silver that she’s pregnant. But Silver, after the ministroke that reveals his condition, realizes he hasn’t felt so alive in years. His wife begins to recognize the man she once loved, and his daughter seems to want him around. He sets goals: Be a better father, a better man, fall in love, then die. He spends the bulk of the novel thinking of the things he wishes he’d said or done — or could still do — and accidentally saying those things out loud in front of the relevant people. Secrets are revealed, often to the service of plot development, and unkind truths are told. Despite the many new ways Silver discovers to disappoint and bewilder his extended family, Tropper convincingly portrays him as sympathetic and even likable. His relationship with Casey is complicated: She’s been wounded by her father’s absence, and she’s not afraid to hurt him back. But she’s also willing to love him and eager to let him be the dad she needs. To the author’s credit, Denise is not a wench; her husband-tobe is altogether decent, and Silver’s father, a rabbi, and mother are wise and lovely. Silver has no one but himself to blame for his dysfunction — and he does. During a trip to the beach with his daughter: “It would have been so easy, he thinks, to do things like this; take her on drives, to the beach, to a movie. Anything. It’s not like he was busy traveling the world. He was right here, and nowhere to be found.” Despite his family’s pleading, Silver doesn’t want to try to save himself because he can’t imagine going back to his former life. He’s a frustrating man. But Tropper has created a character so hapless and endearing and a story so compelling that the reader can’t help but take the journey with Silver — no matter where it leads.

Partisan Continued from F1 Like families, the parties coalesce to repel threats from outside — typified this summer by the scorched-earth tactics of the campaigns of President Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney. But both parties also are fractious coalitions of people who may converge on some core issues but whose world views, economic situations and attitudes on policy are far from uniform. These disparate and everevolving coalitions present challenges for both Obama and Romney. They are why Romney struggled through much of the Republican nominating contest to win over key parts of his party and only united the GOP coalition by picking Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., as his vice presidential running mate. It is why Obama has faced dissonance and disappointment over the way he has governed from some elements of the Democratic Party, particularly many liberals who nonetheless back him strongly for re-election. The two major parties are now on full display, with the Republicans’ national convention just ended, and the Democrats’ just beginning. Both parties are trying to project an image of unity as they draw distinctions with their opponents. But Romney’s selection of Ryan is a reminder that the parties recognize that success in November depends in part on keeping their coalitions together and energized. The survey examined the breadth and diversity of the electorate to explore the changing shape of a Republican coalition that has become more Southern in its base and more conservative in its views, and yet encompasses which significant disagreements remain over whether confrontation or cooperation with the Democrats is the preferred path for governing. The study looks, too, at a Democratic Party that, while women make up a clear majority of supporters and grassroots activists have a large voice, is a coalition of groups with divergent views on government regulation of the economy, the size of government, the role of religion in public life and such hotbutton social issues as abortion and same-sex marriage. Here, we focus on those Americans who, when asked, say they identify with either the Republican or Democratic Party. In parallel, we use the survey data to explore the views of the growing number of people who decline to pledge allegiance to either party — those Americans who call themselves independent, a fast-growing part of the electorate (see Page F6).

Polarization In some ways, political parties matter less than they once did, but party identification is one of the most reliable indicators of how someone will vote on Election Day. The PostKaiser study breaks down the two parties into nine groups of voters: five groups who call themselves Republicans and four who call themselves Democrats. Examined in this way, the fissures within the Republican and Democratic coalitions are more sharply etched. One can see elements of the Republican Party of a generation ago in Republicans who are economically conservative but socially moderate. One can also see the new Republican Party in those Americans who strongly identify with the tea party movement or are evangelical Christians who came to prominence in the party over the past two decades. There is even a group of Republicans who see a role for bigger government. The Democratic coalition includes a large share of liberal, affluent and mostly secular white voters but also a loyal cadre of African Americans and Latinos who are more religious and more conservative on social issues. The gap between them on social issues remains wide, but they are generally united in advocating a significant role for government. The survey speaks to the two realities of political life — each party bound together in opposition to the other at the same time both continue to squabble internally. This article will first look at the divisions between the parties, which are reflected daily in the presidential campaign debate and which have defined the battles between the president and congressional Republicans during Obama’s first term. Then it will describe

Nikki Kahn / The Washington Post

Supporters recite the Pledge of Allegiance as they await the arrival of President Barack Obama for a campaign event in Denver, Colo. Voters in the Democratic Party are part of fractious coalitions that sometimes have little uniformity.

the internal tensions of each of those parties. Partisan polarization once was considered an affliction only of elected officials and political elites. Now it has gone mainstream. Citizens’ ties to their political parties are stronger than ever, and passions on issues are intensely felt.

Deep divisions Fourteen years ago, The Washington Post, along with the Kaiser Family Foundation and Harvard University, asked people to assess the strength of their allegiance to the parties. At that time, 41 percent of Republicans and 45 percent of Democrats said they considered themselves “strong” partisans. In the new Post-Kaiser survey, those numbers have shot up to 65 and 62 percent, respectively. Over this time period, the gap between Democrats and Republicans has widened, particularly when it comes to attitudes about the federal government. A clear majority of Republicans now score highly on a series of questions about limited government. That was not the case in 1998. Also unlike in 1998, a majority of Democrats in the new survey cluster on the other end of the scale. One set of answers is particularly revealing: The number of Republicans who feel strongly that the government controls too much of daily life jumped 24 percentage points since the 1998 survey, to 63 percent. The number of Democrats strongly disagreeing with the assertion doubled. The debates during Obama’s presidency over health care, economic stimulus and financial regulatory reform underscore how far apart the parties stand on economic issues and on attitudes about government’s role. For example, more than twice as many Democrats as Republicans say regulation of business is necessary to protect the public interest. Most Republicans say regulation does more harm than good. The two parties are miles apart on whether it is better to have smaller government with fewer services or bigger government with more services. Republicans overwhelmingly say people should take care of themselves; Democrats overwhelmingly say government should do everything possible to improve living standards. Republicans see deficit reduction as more important than spending money in an effort to create jobs. Democrats believe the opposite. Divisions over religious and social issues are equally stark. As a whole, the two parties are mirror images of each other on whether organized religious groups should stay out of politics or stand up for their beliefs in the political arena. They are similarly at odds over whether there should be a high wall of separation between church and state and whether government should more actively protect religious heritage. Both parties contain deeply observant people as well as many who seldom go to church or synagogue or mosque. But in general, a higher percentage of Republicans, by far, are frequent churchgoers. One of the fastest-growing segments of the Democratic Party in recent years has been nonbelievers or infrequent churchgoers. Big majorities in both parties see tolerance of other’s lifestyles as important, but Republicans and Democrats take opposite positions on whether changing mores should affect personal convictions. A majority of Democrats agree with the proposition that as the world changes, people should adjust their morals and values. An even bigger majority of Republicans disagree with that statement, with most saying so strongly. Far more Republicans than Democrats say Americans in general are too tolerant of behavior that once was con-

sidered wrong or immoral. On abortion and gay marriage, the divide between the parties is wide. Twice as many Democrats as Republicans say abortion should be legal in all or most cases. The margin between the parties is similarly gaping when it comes to samesex marriage. Recent shootings in Colorado and Wisconsin have sparked renewed discussion about gun laws. Over the past two decades, overall support for new restrictions has declined, to the point that today barely more than half of those surveyed favored stricter laws. Republicans overwhelmingly oppose tougher restrictions. Democrats overwhelmingly favor tougher laws.

Areas of consensus On some issues, partisan divisions have blocked action in Congress, but the Post-Kaiser study shows that rank-and-file Republicans and Democrats are less divided. Take immigration, for example. Almost half of Republicans and three-quarters of Democrats say they favor a policy that would allow illegal immigrants to apply for legal status. And six in 10 Republicans, along with almost nine in 10 Democrats, say the government should regulate the release of greenhouse gases from power plants, cars and factories to reduce global warming. There is also consensus on two international issues. Few in each party say the United States should play the leading role in the world. More say this country should play a major but not leading role, and around a quarter in each party would prefer the United States to play a minor role. This is an example of an area where Romney, who prefaced his overseas trip with a speech in which he said it is essential for the United States to play the lead role, is out of step with rank-and-file Republicans. On the trade-off between fighting terrorism and protecting civil liberties, big majorities in both parties say the government is doing enough to protect the liberties of individual citizens. Five years ago, the country was evenly divided on that question, with Democrats far more worried about civil liberties. Another key area where Republicans and Democrats see the world the same way, though from totally different perspectives, is a shared sense of being at risk of losing what they have. Almost identical percentages — around six in 10 in each party — say groups and people who hold values similar to theirs are losing influence in American life. Given that, is there any wonder the presidential campaign is being fought as if it were a lifeand-death struggle politically? What does it mean to be a Republican in 2012? Republicans are conservative, opposed to big government, overwhelmingly white and spread through all regions, although with a heavy concentration in the South. At least that’s the case on the surface. Fault lines lie beneath, revealed in primary election battles between tea party conservatives and more establishment politicians and tensions that pit economic conservatives against religious and social conservatives.

Republican factions The Post-Kaiser analysis reveals five distinct types of Republicans. Four are familiar elements of the GOP coalition: “tea party Republicans,” “oldschool Republicans,” “religious values voters” and “pro-government Republicans.” The fifth, a group we label “window shoppers,” are self-identified Republicans who in many respects seem out of place in an increasingly conservative party. (This article labels these groups as such, in quotations.)

There are demographic differences among the groups. The party is about evenly split between men and women, but women make up a solid majority of “values voters,” while men make up about six in 10 “old-school” Republicans. Republican identifiers are overwhelmingly white, but two groups — “pro-government” conservatives and “window shoppers” — include significant numbers of nonwhites. “Window shoppers,” the category that is least likely to agree with other groups within the party on many issues, are by far the youngest group: four in 10 are under age 30. “Old-school” Republicans generally have higher incomes and more formal education. More than two-thirds of those in the “pro-government” group have annual household incomes of less than $50,000 and do not have college degrees. Big majorities of the “progovernment,” “tea party” and “values” groups attend religious services weekly; few “window shoppers” and “old-school” Republicans go to church that regularly. There also are stark differences when it comes to attitudes about the role religion should play in public life. Underlying demographic and behavioral differences lead to conflicting attitudes and values on many issues. “Pro-government” and “old-school” Republicans are less inclined to say GOP leaders are taking the party in the right direction, while the “tea party” and “values” groups are much more satisfied. Most Republican groups favor confrontation over cooperation and compromise, but “old-school” Republicans and “window shoppers” tend to favor negotiation with the Democrats. Almost all “tea party” and “old-school” Republicans say people should take care of themselves and not look to government for help, a sentiment that drops sharply among “progovernment” conservatives. On Medicare, an issue central to the presidential campaign, the Republican coalition is divided. The survey asked everyone whether they preferred changing Medicare to a premium-support program for younger workers, in which people would have the option to purchase their own health-care plans after retiring, an idea Ryan has outlined and Romney has embraced. Or, they were asked, would they prefer to keep the government health program largely as it is? “Tea party” movement Republicans were the only one of the five GOP groups in which a majority favored the premiumsupport approach advocated by Ryan. About 4 in 10 “oldschool” Republicans said they supported such a change. But more than 60 percent of those in each of the other groups said they opposed the idea. “Old-school” Republicans, in the past called country-club Republicans, tend to be out of step with others in the party on a variety of social issues. The GOP is now a collection of shifting internal coalitions. For the next three months, they will join together in a united effort to defeat Obama, capture

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the Senate and enlarge their majority in the House. But if Romney is in the White House come January, he will be faced with harnessing a party that in a variety of ways will be pulling in different directions, substantively and stylistically.

Democrat factions Obama’s election-year announcements on gay marriage and a naturalization policy for undocumented immigrants seemed to play to a Democratic base, one that is largely supportive of his moves. Democrats certainly differ from Republicans on the issues, at least broadly. But Democrats too are divided — less starkly than Republicans, but divided still, and particularly so on gay marriage. Fully 85 percent of those we call “urban liberals” — one of the biggest of the Democratic groups — say they feel strongly that gay marriage should be legal, but that drops to 26 percent among “God and government” Democrats, the largest group, and just 13 percent among the smallest cadre, the do-it-yourself, or “DIY,” Democrats. Religion, social issues and the size and scope of government are the main pivots dividing the Democratic coalition, but demographic differences also contribute to the fissures. “Urban liberals” — the most traditionally liberal of the groups — are nearly threequarters white and by far the most educated and highest income earners among Democrats. The “God and government” contingent is two-thirds nonwhite and far more apt than two of the five Republican groups to go to religious services at least once a week. “Urban liberals” and the “agnostic left,” another group of people who seldom go to church, overwhelmingly say there should be a high degree of separation between church and state, while sizable majorities of the other two groups of Democrats say the government should take special steps to protect America’s religious heritage. About a third of “DIY Democrats” advocate a larger federal government offering more in services, a position backed by most of those in other groups, peaking at 85 percent among “urban liberals.” “DIY Democrats” are by far the least likely of any of the four groups to support new spending at the cost of deficit reduction. But they also represent only about 1 in 8 Democrats — only about a third of the size of the “God and government” group. Obama has been able to stitch together a unique coalition, still reliant on a nonwhite base but reaching into some segments of voters previously resistant to Democratic presidential candidates. But the near uniformity in Democrats’ intentions to support his bid for re-election belies deep disagreements that are likely to color the remainder of his presidency, whether he has five months or another four years in office.


F6

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

THE PARTISAN DIVIDE

In a word ...

Independents favor more cooperation in politics

One-word reactions to the political parties and independents

By Jon Cohen and Dan Balz The Washington Post

guishable from Democrats, and three in 10 are indistinguishable from Republicans, at least when it comes to their voting patterns. Those who are both genuinely independent and active participants in the political process constitute only a sliver of the overall electorate — around 5 percent, according to the new survey. And among that group, just one in three say they are firmly settled in their choice between Obama and Romney. Still, even this small share of votes could prove decisive in a campaign that has been tightly fought in its initial months. But given the fact that such voters are few in number, the two campaigns are spending more time mobilizing party loyalists than on persuading the undecided. Some of those loyalists, however, call themselves independents.

President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney are waging one of the most partisan campaigns in recent memory, energizing their bases with heated rhetoric and harsh tactics. But among political independents, some of the most prized voters in the electorate, speaking more softly about the other side may be a key to winning their support. Independents make up about a third of all voters. They constitute about half of those who are uncommitted in their choice for president. And they are one of the most mischaracterized groups in the electorate. Independent voters are not a monolithic bloc. Nor are many of them truly independent in their voting patterns, according to a new study by The Washington Post and the Kaiser Family Foundation. Nearly two-thirds of Americans who In disguise The Post-Kaiser survey describe themselves as independents act very much like identifies four distinct groups partisan Republicans or parti- of people who identify as political independents. About a san Democrats. Still, one clear factor that third of all independents share separates them from Demo- the bulk of their political opincrats and Republicans is a ions with Democrats, regularnear-uniform call for greater ly vote Democratic and overcross-party cooperation. whelmingly back Obama’s re-election bid. Seven in 10 inA similarly large dependents say share sides with they favor com- “I don’t know the GOP on most promise between what the truth issues, sharing the parties rather similar values, than confronta- is or what the attitudes about tion, according to lies are. If I had government and the survey. Just my choice, I’d voting patterns. as many say they Most support are dissatisfied vote them all Romney. with the country’s out and put a About 1 in 4 political system. new Congress adults who call Much of the themselves intime, the Obama in there that’s dependents are and Romney going to work more or less decampaigns seem and not spend tached from the tone-deaf to that political process. sentiment; the their whole time Most are not regharshness and on the rhetoric.” istered to vote, negativity of — Voula Manukas, with few saying the race seem of Raleigh, N.C. they plan to enroll designed to mobefore Election bilize partisans Day. These tend on both sides. At other times, the candidates to be younger and heavily Hisseem keenly attuned to some panic, and have much less edvoters who want leaders will- ucation and far lower incomes ing to cooperate with their than others who describe themselves as independents. opponents. That leaves about one in Obama regularly talks about his desire to find bipartisan eight who are “deliberators” consensus, even if he has not — quintessential swing voters. delivered on his 2008 pledge Most say they’ve always conto change politics in Washing- sidered themselves to be inton. Romney, his Republican dependent, and fully half say challenger, said in introducing they’ve voted for Democrats Rep. Paul Ryan as his running and Republicans about equalmate that the Wisconsin con- ly in presidential elections. In gressman has regularly tried fact, as a group they divided to work with Democrats, even almost down the middle in though Ryan is perhaps best 2008 between Obama and known as the author of a GOP the Republican nominee, Sen. budget plan sharply criticized John McCain of Arizona. Look at almost any poll by Democrats. — including Post and Kaiser The holy grail Family Foundation surveys Independents are often de- — and the views of indepenscribed as the holy grail of dents typically fall close to the American politics. They are results for the overall populathe heavily courted voters tion. That reinforces the imcommonly thought to hover portance of understanding somewhere in the center of where independents sit, but it the ideological spectrum and also conveys an impression whose attitudinal swings can that they are all middle-of-themake the difference between road voters. What this misses celebration and dejection on is that on many issues, large election night. numbers of independents have As a group, independents attitudes that are largely indishave been a volatile segment tinguishable from one side or in recent elections: going for the other. Republican House candidates Overwhelming majorities of in 2010 by a record 19-percent- “disguised Republicans” say age-point margin, after break- they trust the GOP over the ing for Democrats by 18 points Democrats on the economy, when they won the House of health care, the budget, taxRepresentatives in 2006. In the es, social issues and foreign five congressional elections policy. Most of these indepenbefore that, neither party had dents would prefer abortion a clear edge among these vot- to be illegal in all or most cirers. Obama won independents cumstances, and they oppose by eight percentage points in same-sex marriage. They say 2008, according to the network the policies of the Democratic exit poll. Party hurt their families’ ecoThis November, indepen- nomic interests. About eight dents again could play a de- in 10 say they plan to vote for cisive role. They make up Romney in November, with 49 percent of those who are most saying they “definitely” undecided or say they could back him. change their minds. “I agree with about 80 percent In some states, the numbers of the Republicans, and about of independents or nonaffili- 80 percent I disagree with the ated voters are growing faster Democrats,” said Hugh Fleet, an than are Democrats or Repub- independent who plans to suplicans. In many polls, those port Romney despite seeing him who call themselves indepen- as too liberal. “Neither party is dents outnumber Republicans 100 percent pro-family. It’s just or Democrats. the Republican Party is more But many are neither so.” centrist nor moderate. And At the other end of the many don’t really swing back spectrum, more than eight in and forth from one party to 10 “disguised Democrats” say the next with any regular- they plan to vote for Obama. ity. About a third are indistin- Like self-identified Demo-

crats, they favor a path to legal status for illegal immigrants, give Obama’s health care plan a strong show of support, want to see gun laws strengthened and say they would prefer to see more spending by Washington to create jobs rather than worrying about increasing the federal budget deficit. And they say Republican policies hurt their economic interests.

True independents For some Americans, the term “independent” is merely confirmation that they’ve tuned out of the political process. Among this bloc of “detached” independents, seven in 10 are not registered to vote, and nearly nine in 10 say they did not vote in 2008. Just 16 percent say they are “very interested” in this year’s contest. “Washington is just a bunch of liars and thieves, and I’m just kind of sick of them,” said Scott O., who would not provide his last name for publication. He said he did not vote in 2008 and has no plans to register this year. More of these independents favor Obama than Romney, but they lean toward the Republicans on the biggest issue of the day: On the economy, “detached” independents side with the GOP over the Democrats by a 17-point margin. At the same time, they lean progressive on abortion and same-sex marriage. The classic independents — whom we call “deliberators” — are not uniformly middleof-the-road in their views on issues. But they share a deep dislike for the way the political system is operating: Fully 91 percent are dissatisfied with the political system, and 75 percent trust neither Democrats nor Republicans when it comes to representing their opinions on the economy. They overwhelmingly say

DEMOCRATS

INDEPENDENTS

Liberal 45

Independent 36

Q: If you had to use one single word to describe your impression of ... what would that one word be?

Good 41

Undecided 34

Good 27

Good 32

Great 21

Hopeful 15 Smart 31

Disappointment 17

Okay 17

Okay 15

Confused 13 Suck 12 Bad 10

Better 12 Confused 12

Crazy 10

Uninformed 14

Great 10

No 10

Indecisive 13 Important 10

NEGATIVE WORDS

Bad 14

Disappointing 12

Confused 16 Trying 14

Source: This Washington Post-Kaiser Family Foundation poll was conducted by telephone Aug. 9-12, 2012, among a random national sample of 1,002 adults, including users of both conventional and cellular phones. Sampling, data collection and tabulation by PSRAI of Princeton, NJ.

Fair 16

Fair 18

+

Orange circles to the left are negative words; green circles to the right are positive words. Gray circles are neutral.

Conservative 55

Greedy 17

Words most commonly mentioned: (Among all adults; numbers represent word counts, not percentages)

KEY:

REPUBLICANS

Okay 10

POSITIVE WORDS

Socialist 10

The Washington Post GOP and Democratic leaders are taking their parties in the wrong direction, and most see each party’s policies as hurting their families’ economic interests. When politicians and commentators talk about Americans who hate Washington, these true independents embody that view. “I don’t know what the truth is or what the lies are,” said Voula Manukas of Raleigh, N.C. “If I had my choice, I’d vote them all out and put a new Congress in there that’s going to work and not spend their whole time on the rhetoric.” Overall, nearly half of them say they are moderate politically, and about a third say so about their views on social issues. On fiscal matters, almost half of them describe themselves as conservative, while close to four in 10 say they are

moderate. The rest, just one in 10, call themselves fiscal liberals. The economic leanings of these independents make them appealing targets for the Romney campaign. A majority say they prefer holding the line on spending to avoid making the deficit larger, rather than spending more to create jobs. But on social issues, from abortion to same-sex marriage, their views are more in line with Obama’s positions. Economic issues are dominant in the campaign, but Obama’s team has been running ads aimed at appealing to women based on Romney’s positions on social issues. Those ads appear designed to mobilize Democratic-leaning female voters and attract the support of independent women who favor abortion rights or same-sex marriage.

“Deliberators” favor smaller government and think that government controls too much of our daily lives. And nearly six in 10 say they prefer to keep the Medicare program the way it is, rather than move to a plan favored by Romney and Ryan in which the government would give people money to help them purchase health insurance — an opinion shared by most “disguised” Democrats. Putting all four groups together, a slim majority of independents oppose such a shift in the Medicare program, but most also give a higher priority to deficit reduction than new spending, and more than six in 10 would prefer a smaller federal government. These broad views set the challenges for Obama and Romney when it comes to appealing to anyone other than overt partisans.


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Decimated but

undaunted • Central Oregon’s aviation sector surviving after loss of Cessna, Great Recession

Funding nonprofits with lotto? • Oregon lawmaker questions Deschutes’ use of lottery funds By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

Deschutes County spent nearly half of the $510,732 in economic development funds it received from the Oregon lottery on emergency food, clothing and Inside shelter, mental health treatment • Lottery’s for the poor and other services, impact on according to an Association of OrCentral egon Counties report. Oregon, The county also gave $20,000 G3 in economic development funds it received in the 2009-11 biennium to the Upper Deschutes Watershed Council, a habitat restoration nonprofit. Some lottery funds also went to Economic Development for Central Oregon, the Central Oregon Visitors Association, the Sunriver Area Chamber of Commerce and a host of other agencies. See Lottery / G3

By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

pic Air was filing bankruptcy this time three years ago. Today, the Bend kit-plane manufacturer — which has new ownership and a different name, Epic Aircraft — has 50 employees, with plans to add 30 more this year. A Russian company that purchased Epic in March brought muchneeded capital to the Bend business, which had once pledged to employ 4,000 before lawsuits and layoffs threatened to shutter its doors for good. As far as Epic CEO Doug King is concerned, those troubled times are ancient history. He’d rather talk about plans to get the Epic LT plane certified with the Federal Aviation Administration. “Our aircraft sales have picked up. We bought the building that we’re in,” King said. “We’re busy, and that’s really good. And it will continue to be that way.” Other companies in the region’s aviation industry have been less fortunate. The sector took a body blow with Cessna’s departure from Bend in 2009. A handful of other companies that call the Bend Municipal Airport home have weathered serious hits to their bottom lines. Slow sales at Windward Performance, a glider manufacturer, have owner Greg Cole unsure of its future. That has more to do with the Great Recession’s lasting affects than Cessna’s departure. When the aviation business was booming in the mid-2000s, Windward was rolling out one of its SparrowHawk gliders a month. It’s a much different story today. “We haven’t sold one of those planes for, probably, it could be three-and-a-half or four years,” Cole said. “I’ve always been pretty positive about things, but I’m not so positive now. Things are slow. If it’s still slow in another two years, what does that mean?” See Aviation / G3

E

Turn off your phone, find a little serenity By Jenna Wortham New York Times News Service

One recent sweltering afternoon, a friend and I trekked to a new public pool, armed with books, sunglasses and icy drinks, planning to beat the heat with a swim. But upon our arrival, we had an unwelcome surprise: No cellphones were allowed in the pool area. See Break / G5 Illustration by Ron Barrett New York Times News Service

Strategy for a short sale bail By Ann Cameron Siegal Special to The Washington Post

Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

Employees at Epic Aircraft assemble a wing Tuesday in the factory at Bend Municipal Airport. The company has added employees this year, but local aircraft manufacturing employment continues to lag since Cessna left Bend three years ago.

By early July, instead of celebrating their 34th wedding anniversary, Joseph and Mary Damiani were dealing with hyper stress and a headache-producing pile of paperwork. That’s about all they had to show for eight months of struggling to sell their underwater four-bedroom Colonial in Locust Grove, Va. And that’s after they agreed on a sales price with a prospective buyer. The good news is that the potential purchaser has been extraordinarily patient. “This house exceeded my expectations,” said Tom Depew, 31, who is single and lives in McLean, Va. “Nothing is pushing me against the wall, so I can wait it out.” See Short sale / G2 PAID ADVERTISEMENT

Creating hardware prototypes gets easier • Silicon Valley, once software central, is hub of innovative gadgets By Nick Bilton and John Markoff New York Times News Service

PALO ALTO, Calif. — In recent years, Silicon Valley seems to have forgotten about silicon. It’s been about dotcoms, Web advertising, social networking and apps for smartphones. But there are signs here that hardware is becoming the new software. It is an expansion of a trend that began a few years ago with the Flip videophone, a sleeper hit, and has recently accelerated with Nest, the smart thermostat; Lytro, a camera that refocuses a photo after it

is taken; and the Pebble smartwatch, a wristwatch that can interact with a smartphone. Although the hardware is not manufactured in Silicon Valley, it is being conceived, designed, prototyped and financed here, usually by small startups. What has changed? Each of those steps is speeding up, which cuts the costs and lowers the risks of developing new things. It’s not that software is any less important in Silicon Valley. One reason for the rise of hardware is that it is now so tightly integrated with software. Apple has taught a generation of product designers that an electronic device isn’t much without specially designed software that makes it a joy to use. See Hardware / G5

Jawbone via New York Times News Service

The design and components of the Big Jambox by Jawbone, a hardware startup that makes Bluetooth speaker systems and headsets. The cost of building computer-based gadgets is falling so sharply that it has touched off a wave of innovation that is beginning to eclipse the software-fueled world that came to dominate the Silicon Valley during the late 1990s.


G2

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 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.

N R DEEDS Deschutes County

William B. Boos Jr., Kendra L. Boos, Danielle E. Nye, Peter F. King, Thomas F. Wimberly III, Julianne S. Wimberly, Mark Stamler, Nora V. Takla, Robert S. Smith and MJP Special LLC to Cascades Academy of Central Oregon Inc., Township 17, Range 12, Section 6, $846,728 Mary Lou Delaney trustee for Mary Lou Delaney Trust and David Delaney to James G. Gregory and Angela M. Carmen, RiverRim P.U.D., Phase 9, Lot 282, $380,000 W. Daniel and Martha J. Klingler to Michael T. and Heather Drakulich, trustees for Michael T. and Heather Drakulich Revocable Trust, Elkhorn Estates, Phase 5, Lot 60, $242,600 David and Michelle Van Handel to Raul R. Acosta, Duncan Heights First Addition, Lot 6, Partition Plat 2003-26, Parcel 2, $295,000 Bank of New York Mellon fka Bank of New York to Ryan and Andrea Timm, Rivers Edge Village, Phase 6, Lots 52 and 53, $470,000 Hayden Homes LLC to Jen Ry LLC, Aspen Rim, Lot 45, $203,690 Louis J. and Pauline E. Polaski, trustees for Louis J. Polaski and Pauline E. Polaski 1981 Trust, to Christina M. Bottle, Pilot Butte Park, Phases 1 and 6, Lot 17, $333,500

Short sale Continued from G1 The holdout: the Damianis’ two lenders, which the couple says have been putting them through a grinder as they seek a short sale that would allow Depew to buy the property for $100,000 less than what they owe on it. The Damianis are hoping the lenders will view the deal as beneficial to their institutions by helping the couple avoid joining the many underwater owners who have walked away from their properties. “Get ready to bare your soul,� Joseph Damiani said as a warning to other underwater sellers considering short sales. Without question, experts say, short sales are the most complicated real estate transactions a homeowner can face — and the most prone to failure. The failure rate for short sales locally is 49.4 percent, compared with 17.9 percent for foreclosures and 13.1 percent for traditional sales. By going through a short sale, though, sellers can avoid having to come up with thousands of dollars at the closing to make up the difference between what they owe the lender and what a buyer would be willing to pay. Central to being approved for a short sale is the seller’s “hardship statement� filed with the lender proving an inability to repay the loan. The loss of a job, death of the family breadwinner, military deployment, divorce, job relocation or illness and its resulting medical bills would be among legitimate reasons.

The price negotiations Once that hurdle is crossed and permission is given to proceed with the short sale, an intricate web of negotiation begins. The seller must find a buyer, agree on a price, then wait and wait some more for the lender, which can either accept the buyer’s offer, reject it or counter it. The process can be even more cumbersome when more than one lender is involved. When a job transfer brought the Damianis to Virginia from North Carolina seven years ago, they bought a four-bedroom, two-bathroom Colonial for $389,000. Built in 2005, the house, located in Lake of the Woods — a water-oriented community 17 miles west of Fredericksburg — is in pristine condition and one block from the community’s golf course. Unfortunately, like many buyers then, they purchased near the height of the market. Joseph Damiani’s job transfer to Atlanta three years ago prompted the couple’s need to sell. By the end of 2011, the home was listed for $289,000. When traditional marketing efforts failed, the Damianis said they thought the short sale process would help head

Ron C. Hecht, trustee for Ron C. Hecht Living Trust, and Gayle A. Hecht trustee for Gayle A. Hecht Living Trust, to Michael and Judith C. Medeck, Willow Creek at Mountain High, Lot 45, $275,000 Marlene E. Lawrence, trustee for Marlene E. Lawrence Family Trust, to Ernest R. Ray Jr. and Judith A. Delahunt-Ray, Broken Top, Phase 3A, Lot 296, $650,000 U.S. Bank N.A. and Bank of America N.A. to Jon and Kim O’Shaughnessy, Township 20, Range 10, Section 24, $545,000 Melvyn D. and Joyce H. Balcom to Donald E. and Marcia A. Klippenes, Boones Borough Number 2, Lot 11, Block 3, $440,000 Robert S. May to Joshua Lau, Arrowhead, Phases 1-4, Lot 77, $154,000 Jeffrey E. and Debora A. Surma to Greg T. and Lee A. Hellesto, River Canyon Estates, Lot 5, $389,000 Donald E., Marianne R. and Gordon C. Hale, trustees for Hale Family Trust, to David J. and Marilyn J. Stowers, Mountain Village East 3, Lot 5, Block 17, $242,000 MK2J Enterprises LLC and Triten LLC to Morris Garage LLC, Frontage Park, Lot 10, $870,000 Karen A. Cook to Judith A. and John W. Barton, trustees for Judith A. Barton Revocable Trust, Canal

off looming financial difficulties so they could avoid falling behind on their mortgage payments. “We were trying to do the right thing,� he said. They qualified for a jobtransfer hardship with their first trust lender. But the second trust lender would not talk to them until their payments were in arrears for at least two months, a path that would potentially ruin their stellar credit rating. “Most lenders require you to be delinquent before they will start the short sale process,� said Sara Rodriguez, a lawyer who negotiates short sale transactions between lenders and sellers. Brian Gormley, the founder of Cornerstone Properties, said: “It’s difficult for banks to know who is being sincere� with their hardship statements. “Honest people are hurt by those gaming the system.� That means that those being responsible, by flagging a potential problem a few months before a projected default, get lumped in with the “strategic default� crowd — those who can afford to make payments but walk away because their homes are underwater. When the Damianis received an offer of $285,000 from Depew in October 2011, they didn’t know their short sale journey was just beginning.

Who owns the loan? Once upon a time, you originated a mortgage with your local bank. That bank provided the money for your loan as the investor. It also was the servicer — collecting your payments and paying your insurance and taxes out of escrow. It rarely works that way anymore. The originator, investor and servicer are often different entities. Mortgages are bundled and sold multiple times. Servicers (where you send your payments) may have hundreds of investors. “People don’t realize that while you can be dealing with Bank of America or Wells Fargo to negotiate the short sale, they might only be the servicer and not the owner of the loan,� Rodriguez said. “The owner of the loan — the investor — is the one that makes the ultimate decision.� That explains why various short sales with one bank can have different outcomes. She noted that most lenders don’t provide their guidelines in writing, which is why it’s so frustrating. “There is no common sense in the short sale process,� she said. “Mortgage insurance, homeowner associations or a second lien make the process more difficult,� Gormley said, because each has additional approval rights. The Damianis’ loans have been sold several times to investors the couple has not chosen. Their first trust is held

View, Phases 2 and 3, Lot 31, $187,600 Lee R. Pitner, trustee for Lee R. Pitner PC Retirement Plan, to Chester R. Duncan and Brigitte C. Cross, Quail Pine Estates, Phase 6, Lot 54, $208,000 Gerardo T. Riquelme to Brown W. Cannon III and Abigail B. Cannon, River Park Estates, Lot 7, $1,050,000 Oregon Joy LLC to Hayden Homes LLC, Antler Ridge, Phase 2, Lots 31, 37, 48 and 69, $272,000 Georg’Ann B. Fletcher, trustee for Georg’Ann B. Fletcher Revocable Trust, to David W. Bahler, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase 19, Lot 13, Block 13, $170,000 Daina B. Williams to Shayne F. Burton, Wallace Acres, Lot 3, Block 2, $330,000 ML Bend U.S.A. Limited Partnership to Pahlisch Homes Inc., McCall Landing, Phase 1, Lots 37-39 and 44-47, $201,600 Steven R. and Jennifer M. Curley to Cody D. and Darcy J. Deardorff, Second Addition Whispering Pines Estates, Lot 32, Block 25, $249,900 Thomas and Joyce Kendall to Richard W. and Jeanne M. Gregory, trustee for Gregory Living Trust, Ridge at Eagle Crest 47, Lot 43, $157,000 Jeremiah D. and Renee M. Wilson to Jason and Nikki Arnold, Awbrey

Village, Phase 3, Lot 85, $338,500 Northwest Trustee Services Inc. to Federal National Mortgage Association, Wiestoria, Lot 12, Block 19, $426,333.06 Samuel M. Houston to Ben J. Pfaff, Paulina View Estates, Lot 2, Block 2, $165,000 John F. and Julia M. Klein to William B. and Lisa A. Morris, trustee for Morris Living Trust, Forest Hills, Phase 3, Lot 53, $409,000 Mark S. and Renee A. Satterlee to Kevin and Pamela M. Harrington, Mountain Village East 4, Lot 13, Block 27, $245,000 Deborah L. Bourke to Stephen F. and Sandra R. Hanus, trustee for Hanus Family 2006 Trust, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase 16, Lot 19, Block 14, $460,000 Fannie Mae aka Federal National Mortgage Association to Richard J. Kuhn, Deschutes River Crossing, Phases 3 and 4, Lot 111, $192,000 William R. and Bonnie L. Mountjoy to Eloise J. Elliott, Glacier View First Addition, Lot 1, Block 2, $370,000 Hayden Homes LLC to Sanderson P. and Candice L. Johnson, trustees for Sandy and Candy Johnson Trust, Aspen Rim, Lot 18, $266,660 Dennis R. and Virginia L. Staines

“Most lenders require you to be delinquent before they will start the short-sale process.� — Sara Rodriguez, a lawyer who negotiates short-sale transactions between lenders and sellers

by an investor rated “F� by the Better Business Bureau. The second trust has no BBB accreditation. Each has its own requirements and time lines. The lack of communication and coordination between the two has led to major delays and the need to resubmit paperwork. Morgan Knull, a real estate agent with Re/Max Gateway, said, “Have a conversation with your lender� before trying the short sale route. It’s often in the bank’s interest to help homeowners stay in their homes. Owners should make sure they’ve exhausted all options for loan-modification programs, he said.

The cost A short sale is not the solution to all of homeowners’ economic problems. For example, the loss that a lender absorbs — the deficiency — is not always forgiven. Mary Ann Weaver, the negotiator now working with the Damianis, noted that lenders sometimes require an unsecured promissory note on a lesser amount, spread out 15 years or longer. Some require a cash payment toward the deficiency. Some retain the right to pursue the deficiency in the future. And, unlike with foreclosures, the short sale seller is responsible for all maintenance and expenses on the property until it’s sold. Other expenses, such as delinquent homeowner-association fees, tax liens, title searches and closing costs may not be covered by a lender, but must be cleared before closing. Also, short sales may have tax consequences. Although the Mortgage Debt Relief Act of 2007 generally does not count the debt forgiven on a primary residence as income for the seller, this program is slated to expire Dec. 31. For homeowners, trying to keep up with all the paperwork and constant follow-up required and ensuring that often recalcitrant lenders are doing their part can be a fulltime job. That’s why many real estate agents are turning to short sale negotiators — people who are well-versed in the terminology, laws and quirks of the process. “Short sales get into a lot of lawyerly language and fiduciary duties above and beyond the expertise of the average real estate agent,� said Mary Wharton, an agent with Long and Foster. “A specialist can help structure a contract that will be most acceptable to a particular lender.� Efficient, frequent communication between your agent

and the lending institution or institutions is vital in the short sale process. Missing documents or looming deadlines, if not addressed quickly, can halt — and possibly derail — all proceedings. To find the best agent for your circumstances, Gormley, of Cornerstone Properties, suggests interviewing several and asking pointed questions, such as: How much experience do you have with my bank? How many short sales have you done? (Short sale specialists can be found at agentlocator .bankofamerica.com. Many of these agents work with short sales beyond those handled by Bank of America.) Keep in mind that real estate agents and negotiators do not make money from short sales, no matter how long the negotiations have been going on, until the deal closes. Their commissions are usually part of the negotiated price the lender approves.

The snags Short sales can hit a snag or come undone at any turn. Whether you are a buyer or a seller, prepare to dig deep into your well of patience.

to Jerome E. Colonna and Linda L. Bonotto, Wyndemere, Phase 6, Lot 12, Block 1, $625,000 Jack W. and Linda B. Seelhorst trustees for Seelhorst Revocable Inter-Vivos Trust to Steven W. and Susan K. Thompson, Jefferson Meadow Condominium, Unit 14, $202,000 Sandra Holycross-Daily and William W. Daily, trustees for Sandra Holycross-Daily Living Trust, to Robert S. and Margo J. Pipher, Mountain Village East III, Lot 4, Block 17, $290,000 Bruce Livingstone to Renae M. Livingstone, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 12, Lot 577, $457, 600 Nationstar Mortgage LLC to Natalie Fairbanks, Greyhawk, Lot 6, $285,000 Bridges at Shadow Glen LLC to Pahlisch Homes Inc., Bridges at Shadow Glen, Phase 1, Lots 75, 76, and 78, $220,000 Federal National Mortgage Association to Rodney D. Brown and Sheila G. Drake, Oregon Water Wonderland, Unit 2, Lot 33, Block 21, $204,900 John L. and Gayle Montgomery to David T. and Danielle L. Veneski, Ridge at Eagle Crest 8, Lot 31, $195,000 Sheryl Lee White, who acquired title as Sheryl L. White, to Marylea

M. Brooks and Shawn R. Brooks, Glacier View, First Addition, Lot 27, Block 2, $282,000

“Maybe one out of 25 short sales gets approved in two weeks,� said Rodriguez. Others can take three months, six months or longer. One hang-up may revolve around the appraisal. The appraised value needs to be commensurate with what the buyer offers to pay, Gormley said. But sometimes a lender uses a “broker price opinion� (BPO) — which may be a “desk appraisal� by a real estate agent who hasn’t visited the property. The resulting “market value� defined could be way out of kilter with the current economic climate or the condition of the property. Rodriguez said she was recently issued one BPO based on property values two years ago. “They’re not consistent in placing value,� she said. Moreover, the sellers have to worry about the buyer potentially getting cold feet or being drawn away by a better offer, forcing them to restart the process. Depew, the prospective buyer, was not required to put up any earnest money and had a clause inserted in his contract stating that after 45 days, he needed to give only three days’ notice to walk away without penalty. “Don’t put forth any of your own money until all time limits have been met,� said Depew, who suggests that buyers continue to look at other properties while waiting. “Bail if something else comes along.�

Why not just foreclose?

Brent E. Keys to Darren L. and Lisa M. Pleasance trustees for Pleasance Living Trust, Parks at Broken Top, Phase 4, Lot 132, $406,000 Simplicity Homes LLC to Jamel J. Amara and Jennifer A. Chabriel, Shady Pines, Lot 8, $193,150 K-3 Inc. to Lance L. and Jennifer A. Davis, Brookside, Lot 7, Block 2, $165,000 Ross S. and Anne C. Sutton, trustees for AR Sutton Family Trust, to Carol A. Osgood, Westerly Subdivision, Lot 28, $169,750 Crook County

Tommy and Kathleen Stockton to Lazy J’s Livestock LLC, Township 14, Range 15, Section 11, $240,000 Lynwood R. Lundquist, who acquired title as Lynnwood R. Lundquist, and Barbara A. Lundquist, trustees for the Lynnwood and Barbara Lundquist Trust, to Sunny Dene Ranch LLC, Partition Plat 2008-11, Parcel 1, $820,000

So why shouldn’t you save the headaches and go the foreclosure route instead? The applause for short sales over foreclosures comes from three groups: Your neighbors favor short sales because they seem to have a less negative impact on the community. Lenders are glad someone else has to maintain and sell the property. And sellers’ credit ratings take less of a hit. If the deficiency is waived, the credit report will say something like, “loan paid off for less than owed.� It’s still a hit, but not as bad as a foreclosure. Short sales are one of those “heartbreak things� for the seller, said Wharton, the Long and Foster agent, but for a buyer, “if you can put up with the stress, sometimes you can get a very good deal.� On Aug. 7, the Damianis learned that their short sale journey was finally over. The sale and Depew’s VA loan were approved, the inspection is done and settlement is scheduled for early September. Depew is delighted. “So the patience and perseverance paid off in the end after all,� he said. “Absolutely perfect and I couldn’t ask for a better home.�

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

Lottery Continued from G1 The use of Oregon lottery funds earmarked for economic develop by the state’s 36 counties has been coming under increased scrutiny, with one state lawmaker saying that using the funds on social programs hurts economic growth in the state. But local leaders said Central Oregon nonprofits that provide food and shelter for at-risk families, help abused children in the legal system and maintain Central Oregon rivers could lose access to thousands of dollars in needed grants under such a proposal. State Rep. Patrick Sheehan, R-Clackamas, wants a hearing and possible legislation to prevent those funds from being funneled to social welfare programs, after he found numerous counties using lottery funds on programs that don’t create any jobs. Sheehan also co-sponsored House Bill 3188 in the 2011 legislative session. The bill requires each county to file a report describing how it spent the state lottery funds. Oregon counties receive 2.5 percent of all video lottery proceeds every two years, with each county receiving a set amount and the rest allotted based on how much is spent on video lottery games in each county. Those funds have been given to counties since 1984. State law gives no explanation on how that money is to be spent, other than saying it should be used “for economic development activities,” according to Oregon Revised Statutes.. Deschutes County received 510,732 in the 2009-11 biennium. Of that, $245,000 was given “to local nonprofits for providing services in specific areas of need that include providing emergency food, clothing and shelter, protecting abused or neglected individuals, health and mental health treatment for those lacking resources or juvenile crime prevention programs,” according to the Association of Oregon Counties report. Deschutes County wasn’t

Aviation Continued from G1

Few are buying Cole is a victim of economic forces he can’t control. National spending on durable goods — big ticket items like planes, cars and furniture, designed to last three years or longer — have risen slightly in recent months, according to U.S. Commerce Department data. But that has just partly corrected the 20 percent hit to durable goods sales between December 2008 and July 2009, prior Commerce Department reports show. With a $116,000 price tag, the SparrowHawk is certainly big-ticket. Occasional sales of other models, like the DuckHawk and GosHawk, have kept Windward in business as SparrowHawk sales have lagged. Companies like Windward and X-Air LS, which operates out of the Bend Airport, have lost sales as customers postpone their orders. It’s been several years since one of X-Air’s light sport aircraft sold, X-Air co-director Michael Lemaire wrote in an email. “Commercially, we cannot say we’ve been doing well since we haven’t been selling anything,” said Lemaire, who also owns Bend-based Stratos Aircraft, which has been developing a very light personal jet. “We hope that will soon change, with the (economic) crisis hopefully coming to an end.” It’s not just the plane builders that are struggling. Companies like Snowline Manufacturing stake their livelihoods on the health of Bend’s aviation industry. The company spent much of its history welding plane wings and bodies, installing heating and ventilation systems, as well as pressurization controllers and electric wiring. Seventy percent of Snowline’s business was with Cessna, owner Mike Snow said. When Cessna left, Snow had to lay off about three-quarters of his workforce. Once employing 30, he’s down to about

Lottery’s impact on Central Oregon The state of Oregon distributes 2.5 percent of all video lottery funds to counties for economic development programs. A state lawmaker has taken issue with counties use of the funds for social programs. Following is a list of agencies Central Oregon counties granted lottery funds to in the two-year period that ended in June 2011 and the broad categories in which the funds were used.

DESCHUTES COUNTY Amount of lottery money received: $510,732 • Community Grant Program, $245,732, provides emergency food, clothing or shelter; protecting abused or neglected individuals; health and mental health treatment for the poor, or juvenile crime prevention programs.

• Discretionary Grant Program, $60,000, provides grants for nonprofits to raise funds for emergency equipment supporting fundraising efforts and to enable matching funds. Grants range from $300 to $5,000, reviewed and awarded on a monthly basis by the Deschutes County Commissioners. Each commissioner is allocated $20,000 per year to dispense. There were 45 recipients in 2009-11.

• Service Partner Grant Program, $205,000, funds specific services at nonprofits that perform services dictated by law. Funds cover services Deschutes County would otherwise be required to provide. The county identified 11 organizations in 200911. The County provides $119,350 to this fund in addition to lottery money. Organizations include: Economic Development for Central Oregon; Central Oregon Visitors Association; Sunriver Area Chamber of Commerce; Central Oregon Council on Aging; Central Oregon Intergovernmental Council; Court Appointed Special Advocates; Humane Society of Central Oregon; Upper Deschutes Watershed Council.

alone. Multnomah County funded a variety of social programs with its share of money, nearly $3.5 million, according to the report, produced by the association of counties. Those programs, while important, don’t do enough to directly benefit the local economy, so funds set for that purpose shouldn’t be spent on them, Sheehan said. “So much (of the lottery funds across the state) are being spent on things that really aren’t economic development, and it’s really difficult to defend that,” Sheehan said. The funds “have sort of become a slush fund for counties to plug holes and gaps in their budgets. That’s just not what the money is for.” County commissioners across Central Oregon said

they see the need for lottery funds to go directly toward economic development — especially in counties where unemployment has held in double digits since October 2008. But their opinions differ slightly as to whether their use of funds are job creation material, or more of a stopgap measure to prop up programs short on money. The $245,000 for emergency and welfare programs are services Deschutes County is required by law to support, Commissioner Tammy Baney said. The need is even greater amid the tough economic climate that has seen more Deschutes County residents fall beneath federal poverty lines, she said. About 27 percent of Des-

seven today. “It’s obviously a huge drop from where we were,” he said. “Cessna pulled everything back with the downturn in the economy.” Focused almost exclusively on plane parts for much of the company’s existence, he’s branched out in recent years, making construction equipment and bike parts. A look at state employment figures shows how far employment levels for plane and other vehicle manufacturing has dropped in Deschutes County. In 2006, the county had a monthly average of 1,178 transportation manufacturing jobs — building parts for planes, boats, cars and trains, according to Oregon Employment Department data. The recession gutted jobs in those industries. Just 183 workers were employed in the same fields in 2010, an 84 percent drop in just four years. There are still big players in the local market, like Epic, Redmond-based kit-plane maker Lancair, Leading Edge Aviation, which offers helicopter flight training, avionics installation and other services, and high-altitude oxygen supply company Mountain High Equipment and Supply. But the decline in aviation jobs isn’t lost on the region’s economic development advocates. “I look at it as one of our biggest losses in this recession,” said Roger Lee, executive director of Economic Development for Central Oregon. “There’s just less demand. We had so much of the industry, not just here but across the country, go away.”

Bend airport, U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., touted the region as an ideal location for such a site, one that could create jobs and income for local residents. The push to bring an unmanned vehicle industry to Bend seems to be gaining momentum, although other areas of the state also want to create hubs for UAV-related businesses. Central Oregon Community College has been in talks for a year about expanding its aviation program to include certification for unmanned vehicle operation. COCC has been talking with EDCO about its role in maintaining the region’s status as an aviation hub, said Karin Hilgersom, vice president for instruction at the school. EDCO’s executive director said the economic impact to the area could be huge, if Central Oregon business and education leaders work together to build a talent pool for the design and flight of these unmanned vehicles. “When you start to think about what is being flown today, and what might be out there in 10 or 15 years, how many things will be flown with unmanned aircraft?” Lee said, adding that unmanned vehicles could be used in firefighting and search and rescue, as well as for the military. “It’s definitely something we need to spend some time and effort on — on diversifying our aerospace industry,” he said. But just how much job creation can come here from a fledgling unmanned industry isn’t known. At this point, conversations are centered more on what could be. Snow of Snowline Manufacturing is thinking about now. He doesn’t have much choice but to keep his doors open and hope an improving economy brings more orders. “We’re waiting things out,” Snow said. “I’ve been in this business for more than 40 years. We’ve ridden lots of ups and downs. We’ll be here when manufacturing comes back.”

Hoping for UAVs While Bend’s aviation companies are waiting for orders to pick up, local and state officials are targeting new opportunities. The Federal Aviation Administration is expected in December to pick six locations across the country as launch sites to test unmanned aerial vehicles, the type used increasingly in recent years by the U.S. Department of Defense in military operations. At a May stop at the

CROOK COUNTY Amount of lottery money

— Reporter: 541-617-7820, eglucklich@bendbulletin.com

received: $115,024 Programs funded: Crook County Chamber of Commerce; Western Fireworks Display; Economic Development for Central Oregon; Crook County Kids Club; Crook County Kids Center; Court Appointed Special Advocates; Partnership to End Poverty; Crook County Community Health Improvement Partnership; Crook County Fairgrounds.

JEFFERSON COUNTY Amount of lottery money received: $88,620 Programs funded: Jefferson County Fairgrounds; Jefferson County park fund; Economic Development for Central Oregon.

Source: “Oregon County Expenditures of State Lottery Funds,” from the Association of Oregon Counties

chutes County households bring in less than $25,000 a year, according to U.S. Census data. That makes social programs like food and shelter assistance a means of helping county residents get back on their feet, Baney said. “I think it comes down to one’s definition of what it means to create economic development,” she said. “For us it would be significant to our nonprofit network if these dollars went away. But I do think it’s important to look county by county and see how these dollars are being spent. I would welcome anyone to look at how we’re spending our share.” Several of the programs Deschutes County spent lot-

tery funds on likely had little to do with economic development, Commissioner Tony DeBone said. He’s brought the issue up several times in commissioner’s meetings. Money from the lottery fund can’t be spent without approval from two of the three commissioners. But DeBone acknowledged that the economic climate left a big hole in the county’s support network for struggling families. “I do kind of have a hard time with the concept of (economic development) funds for emergency food and shelter,” DeBone said. “But that’s where the need was this year. Still, I don’t think we want our philosophy to be promoting free food. We want to

help people get jobs, and start careers.” Crook County received about $115,000 in lottery funds, and used them on services ranging from upkeep at the county fairgrounds, to bolstering services at Crook County Kids Club, an afterschool and non-school-day childrens’ community center that operates out of Cecil Sly Elementary School in Prineville. In choosing to fund Kids Club, Crook County administrators did debate whether that met the state’s requirement for economic development, Commissioner Ken Fahlgren said. But the county did see funding for the center as filling a need. “These are places we feel support families. Those families need the support for their children, and better places for them to be taken care of while (parents) go to work,” Fahlgren said. “As (economic) times get better, programs like that will have ways to raise funds. But dollars are tight right now, so we saw that as a way to support the local economy.” All of the programs that Deschutes County granted funds to impact the economy to varying degrees, Commissioner Alan Unger said. Some of them, like the Upper Deschutes Watershed Council, have a less apparent impact than Economic Development for Central Oregon or county business loan programs. But the share of lottery funds for the Watershed Council, about $20,000, is small compared with EDCO’s share. The money for the watershed council, Court Appointed Special Advocates and other social programs helps them maintain workforce levels and fund their own efforts. “We do focus on economic development” with the lottery funds, Unger said. “But we also see the need to strengthen our community partners, like CASA, and those kinds of things that help families.” —Reporter: 541-617-7820 eglucklich@bendbulletin.com

2012 BRASADA CANYONS

AMATEUR GOLF TOURNAMENT PRESENTED BY:

THE KIWANIS CLUB OF PRINEVILLE & BRASADA RANCH DATE:

Monday, September 10, 2012

TIME:

9:00 am shotgun

FIELD: FORMAT:

The first 128 players who register Four person scramble

WHAT ELSE:

Prizes, awards and BBQ following the tournament catered by Brasada Ranch

COST:

$125 per person, includes 18 holes of golf, practice balls, a shared power cart and BBQ

MAKE YOUR RESERVATION NOW:

G3

First come first serve, so make your reservations now. Call Brasada Canyons at 541-526-6380.

For more information about Kiwanis please call Wayne Looney, Prineville Kiwanis at (541) 416-9380 or email Wayne at pwlooney@clearwire.net. THE PRINEVILLE KIWANIS DIRECTS 100 PERCENT OF ALL FUNDS RAISED TO PHILANTHROPIC PROGRAMS.


THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

G4

Mutual funds m

%

%

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

Name

AQR Funds:

MidCapValI

DivArb I n 11.08 +.01 NA NA MgdFutSt I n 9.57 -.05 NA NS AcadEm n 17.34 -.27 -5.0 +25.4

Calamos Funds:

Alger Funds A: SpectraN

13.89 -.03 +16.4 +56.2

Alger Funds I: CapApprI SmCapGrI

22.94 -.03 +15.9 +47.8 28.32 +.09 +14.4 +49.6

AllianceBernstein : IntDurInstl

16.36 +.07 +5.7 +26.6

AllianceBern A: GloblBdA r 8.61 GroIncA p 3.90 HighIncoA p 9.21 LgCapGrA p 28.69

+.02 -.01 +.01 +.02

+5.8 +19.0 +12.8 +18.1

+25.8 +46.5 +51.3 +48.0

AllianceBern Adv: HiIncm Adv

9.23 +.02 +13.1 +53.1 9.32 +.02 +12.0 +48.0

Allianz Admin MMS: NFJSmCpVl t 29.05 +.09 +6.5 +48.8

Allianz Fds Instl: NFJDivVal SmCpVl n

12.63 +.03 +16.8 +44.7 30.58 +.10 +6.8 +49.9

Allianz Funds A: NFJDivVal t SmCpV A

12.53 +.03 +16.4 +43.2 29.07 +.09 +6.4 +48.2

Alpine Funds: TaxOptInco x 10.05 ... +1.2 +4.5 AmanaGrth n 26.69 -.11 +13.6 +40.5 AmanaInco n 33.57 -.07 +11.0 +33.3

Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapInst SmCapInst

21.11 -.08 +18.0 +38.7 20.71 +.04 +14.0 +46.1

Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv

20.00 -.08 +17.5 +37.1

Ameri Century 1st: Growth

28.27 -.01 +16.0 +49.8

Amer Century Adv: EqtyIncA p HeritageA p

7.87 -.01 +15.1 +36.4 21.83 -.03 +10.8 +56.0

Amer Century Inst: EqInc

7.88 -.01 +15.6 +38.3

Amer Century Inv: AllCapGr CAIntTF DivBond n DivBond EqGroInv n EqInco GNMAI GovtBd GrowthI HeritageI IncGro InfAdjBond IntTF IntTF n IntlGroI MdCapVal NT DivrBd n SelectI Ultra n ValueInv Vista

30.89 11.96 11.30 11.30 24.18 7.87 11.28 11.65 28.00 22.52 27.22 13.34 11.72 11.72 10.50 12.76 11.21 44.27 26.06 6.19 17.46

-.03 +.02 +.06 +.06 -.06 -.02 +.03 +.05 -.01 -.03 -.05 +.09 +.02 +.02 -.03 -.01 +.05 -.04 -.07 -.02 -.01

+14.0 +8.1 +7.0 +6.7 +18.7 +15.3 +3.7 +4.3 +15.8 +11.1 +17.7 +8.3 +7.0 +7.2 +0.8 +14.5 +7.0 +16.1 +13.7 +16.4 +9.9

+55.5 +20.7 +21.8 +21.0 +47.9 +37.5 +18.0 +17.0 +48.9 +57.2 +42.9 +30.8 +19.1 +19.8 +21.3 +46.6 +21.5 +49.3 +52.6 +36.9 +43.2

+13.6 +16.0 +13.6 +6.4 +10.4 +8.2 +2.7 +1.1 +13.3 +7.8 +4.5 +13.1 +10.6 +14.8 +12.3 +2.9 +2.0 +15.8 +5.0 +11.7 +9.5 +0.1 +0.9 +5.8 +10.7 +11.7 +16.4

+40.4 +42.5 +39.2 +23.5 +30.5 +21.6 +19.3 +12.5 +38.9 NS +16.9 +34.7 +42.1 +34.8 +40.1 +12.6 +18.0 +34.8 +17.1 +35.1 +31.1 +22.7 +4.5 +36.9 +24.3 +29.1 +47.7

American Funds A: AmcapFA p AmMutlA p BalA p BondFdA p CapInBldA p CapWGrA p CapWldA p EupacA p FundInvA p GlblBalA GovtA p GwthFdA p HI TrstA p HiIncMuniA IncoFdA p IntBdA p IntlGrIncA p InvCoAA p LtdTEBdA p NwEconA p NewPerA p NewWorldA STBFA p SmCpWA p TaxExA p TxExCAA p WshMutA p

20.88 28.11 19.96 12.94 52.65 35.20 21.37 38.30 39.29 26.06 14.63 32.80 11.10 15.18 17.83 13.79 29.09 30.24 16.35 27.48 29.63 50.41 10.10 37.74 13.08 17.54 30.95

-.10 -.16 -.01 +.06 -.06 -.20 +.08 -.29 -.09 -.04 +.06 -.12 +.02 +.03 ... +.04 -.08 -.19 +.02 -.10 -.06 -.31 +.01 +.03 +.02 +.04 -.10

American Funds B: BalanB p CapInBldB p CapWGrB t GrowthB t IncomeB p

19.89 52.65 34.99 31.69 17.69

... -.07 -.20 -.12 -.01

+12.8 +9.6 +7.4 +12.3 +11.5

+36.2 +27.5 +18.9 +31.7 +36.9

Arbitrage Funds: Arbitrage I n 13.08 -.05 NA ArbitrageR p 12.83 -.05 NA

NA NA

Ariel Investments: Apprec Ariel n

42.93 ... +9.3 +45.2 47.04 +.06 +10.7 +42.7

Artio Global Funds: GlbHiInco tx GlbHiIncI rx IntlEqI r IntlEqA IntlEqII I r TotRet I x

10.16 9.71 23.61 23.03 10.13 13.99

-.04 -.04 -.14 -.14 -.06 +.03

+9.6 +35.6 +9.9 +36.6 -11.5 -7.0 -11.7 -7.7 -8.4 -4.2 +7.2 +26.0

-.12 -.13 -.02 -.02 +.08 +.09 -.01 -.08

+8.6 +8.9 +9.8 +10.0 +12.8 +13.2 +10.8 +2.7

Artisan Funds: Intl IntlInstl IntlValu r IntlValInstl MidCap MidCapInstl MidCapVal SmCapVal

22.79 22.94 27.99 28.06 38.38 39.82 20.86 15.09

+23.9 +24.8 +33.0 +33.7 +68.9 +70.3 +43.4 +28.2

Aston Funds: FairMidCpN M&CGroN

32.87 +.01 +15.7 +56.7 25.70 -.03 +16.3 +39.2

BBH Funds: BdMktN x CoreSelN

10.39 -.01 NA NA 17.12 -.05 +19.0 +53.3

BNY Mellon Funds: BondFund x EmgMkts IntmBdFd x LrgCapStk x MidCapMltSt NatlIntMuni NtlShTrmMu

13.71 9.19 13.26 9.17 11.65 13.98 13.01

+.04 -.17 +.03 -.03 +.01 +.03 ...

+6.0 NA +4.2 +13.7 +5.7 +7.2 +1.3

+19.0 NA +14.1 +39.3 +40.5 +19.3 +6.0

Baird Funds: AggBdInst x CoreBdInst x IntMuBdInst x ShtTBdInst x

11.03 +.02 +8.2 +27.8 11.24 +.03 +8.2 +31.2 12.03 ... +4.5 +15.8 9.74 ... +3.4 +12.2

Baron Fds Instl: Growth SmallCap

57.21 +.39 +12.0 +55.4 25.79 +.07 +10.5 +54.0

Baron Funds: Asset n Growth SmallCap

50.60 +.10 +7.7 +45.4 56.73 +.39 +11.8 +54.1 25.58 +.07 +10.2 +52.8

Bernstein Fds: IntDur Ca Mu DivMun NYMun TxMgdIntl IntlPort EmgMkts

14.22 14.88 14.88 14.63 13.01 12.92 25.54

+.07 +.03 +.02 +.01 -.10 -.11 -.35

+5.6 +4.8 +4.4 +4.4 -6.1 -6.4 -9.8

+26.0 +16.1 +14.7 +14.4 -3.9 -4.0 +11.5

Berwyn Funds: Income

13.24 +.01 +6.2 +26.2

BlackRock A: BasValA p CapAppr p EqtyDivid GlbAlA r HlthSciOpp HiYdInvA InflProBdA NatMuniA TotRetA

26.38 23.46 19.61 19.18 32.25 7.88 12.04 11.10 11.69

-.14 ... -.08 -.05 +.11 +.02 +.07 +.03 +.05

+12.0 +10.5 +14.3 +2.3 +15.5 +13.6 +7.7 +12.7 +8.5

+30.9 +37.1 +42.9 +20.3 +42.3 +53.6 +29.1 +28.6 +26.1

BlackRock B&C: EquityDivC GlobAlC t

19.18 -.08 +13.4 +39.8 17.84 -.06 +1.6 +17.6

BlackRock Fds Blrk: CapAppr p

24.43

... +10.9 +38.6

BlackRock Instl: InflProtBd US Opps BasValI CoreBond EquityDiv GlbAlloc r CapAppr p HiYldBond NatlMuni S&P500

12.18 35.99 26.58 9.75 19.66 19.27 24.38 7.88 11.09 17.40

+.07 -.05 -.14 +.05 -.08 -.05 -.01 +.02 +.02 -.05

+8.0 +6.7 +12.3 +7.1 +14.6 +2.6 +10.8 +13.9 +12.9 +17.7

+30.3 +34.4 +32.1 +23.1 +44.1 +21.3 NS +55.1 +29.3 +45.5

BlackRock R: GlblAlloc r

18.53 -.06 +1.9 +19.0

Brandywine Fds: Brandywine

24.25 -.02 +0.8 +20.5

Brown Advisory Fds: GroEqInst 14.53 -.02 +14.4 +64.7 BrownSmCoIns 47.88 -.05 +7.6 +53.9

Buffalo Funds: SmallCap

28.64 +.16 +20.2 +33.1

CGM Funds: FocusFd n Realty n

26.07 -.26 -7.5 -2.8 29.65 +.02 +12.7 +66.5

CRM Funds:

T M

F

E

N

F

m

Causeway Intl: 12.10 -.05 +6.1 67.16 ... +8.9

InsltRlty n RltyShrs n

44.89 +.23 +17.2 69.32 +.36 +17.2

Columbia Class A: Acorn t AcornIntlA t BldModAgg p DivEqInc A DivrBd DiviIncoA DivOpptyA FocusEqA t HiYldBond LgCapGrA t LgCorQA p MidCpValA PBModA p SelLgCpGr t StrtIncA x TxExA p SelComm A

29.38 38.25 10.88 10.33 5.23 14.85 8.66 22.75 2.89 26.69 6.53 14.04 11.12 13.21 6.34 14.26 44.94

+.08 -.01 -.01 -.05 +.02 -.03 -.04 +.05 ... +.06 -.01 -.03 ... -.04 ... +.03 -.35

+10.3 -0.7 +8.8 +11.5 +7.9 +18.4 +15.4 +12.2 +14.3 +19.5 +20.2 +13.0 +8.5 +4.3 +10.0 +11.4 +14.1

Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z AcornIntl Z AcornUSA Bond DiviIncomeZ IntmBdZ n IntmTEBd n LgCapGr LgCapIdxZ MarsGrPrZ MidCapGr Z MidCpIdxZ MdCpVal p STIncoZ STMunZ SmlCapIdxZ n SmCapVal SCValuIIZ ValRestr n CRAQlInv npx

30.48 38.36 30.42 9.69 14.86 9.57 11.01 13.36 27.42 22.73 27.23 11.67 14.06 9.98 10.56 17.58 43.01 14.45 48.58 11.28

+.09 -.01 +.10 +.05 -.04 +.04 +.02 -.04 -.08 +.02 -.03 +.03 -.03 +.01 ... +.08 +.01 ... -.17 +.03

+10.7 -0.4 +11.9 +7.3 +18.7 +7.9 +7.3 +4.7 +17.8 +12.6 +6.3 +12.6 +13.3 +2.2 +1.5 +16.7 +7.3 +12.5 +5.7 +5.0

w

NS F m

+5.2 +7.5 +7.5 +7.6 +7.3 +7.7 +8.0 +7.7 +8.1 +8.6 +8.2 +8.7 +8.7 +8.8 +8.7 +8.3 +8.8 +8.8 +8.9 +8.8 +9.1 +8.8 +8.9 +5.3 +5.2

+21.1 +28.6 +28.9 +29.2 +29.0 +29.5 +31.4 +31.4 +31.7 +32.3 +32.5 +32.7 +32.6 +33.1 +32.1 +32.7 +32.8 +32.5 +33.1 +32.7 +33.2 +32.3 +32.9 +20.8 +20.7

+14.4 +8.4 +9.0 +6.2 +11.9 +12.1 +14.1 +14.4 +14.3 +10.2 -5.4 +20.3 +20.5 +10.1 +10.0 -9.9 +14.8 +15.0 +6.0 +14.4 +14.7 +1.1 +1.2 +17.8

+42.2 +31.6 +34.0 +23.2 +37.8 +38.3 +54.8 +55.9 +55.7 +24.8 +22.8 +56.3 +57.1 +46.4 +48.7 +12.6 +51.6 +52.2 +32.9 +28.8 +29.6 +12.5 +13.0 +49.7

IntlIndxInv TotMkIdxF r TotMktIndInv USBond I

31.91 40.78 40.77 12.03

-.26 -.07 -.07 +.06

+0.1 +7.7 +17.1 NS +17.1 +47.8 +5.9 NS

Fidelity Spart Adv: ExtMktAdv r 500IdxAdv 500Index I IntlAdv r IntlIdx Inst TotlMktAdv r USBond I

39.28 50.01 50.02 31.93 31.94 40.77 12.03

+.10 -.14 -.14 -.26 -.26 -.08 +.06

+13.2 +17.9 +18.0 +0.2 NS +17.1 +5.8

+54.0 +46.5 NS +7.9 NS +48.0 NS

-.45 -.23 -.20 -.05

+5.7 0.0 -21.6 +11.9

+34.7 +26.5 +33.7 +38.8

First Eagle:

Harbor Funds: Bond CpAppInv p CapAppInst n HiYBdInst r IntlInv t IntlAdmin p Intl nr

12.91 41.43 42.07 11.14 56.54 56.73 57.18

+.06 +.02 +.03 +.03 -.58 -.57 -.58

+7.2 +12.5 +12.9 +12.0 +2.1 +2.3 +2.5

+23.0 +44.5 +46.1 +38.5 +20.7 +21.2 +22.1

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

OverseasT r PerkMCVal T ResearchT n ShTmBdT Twenty T

29.92 21.62 31.57 3.10 61.67

John Hancock A: BondA p LgCpEqA StrIncA p

First Investors A GroIncA p

Hartford Fds C:

Keeley Funds:

CapAppC t FltRateC tx

SmCpValA p LSV ValEq n

48.38 21.68 27.55 18.03

16.35 -.01 +18.6 +46.7

Forum Funds: AbsolStratI r

11.26

...

+3.3 +13.0

Frank/Temp Frnk A: AdjUS px AZ TFA px BalInv p CAHYBd px CalInsA px CalTFrA p EqIncA p FedInterm px FedTxFrA p FlexCapGrA FlRtDA px FL TFA px FoundFAl p GoldPrM A GrowthA p HY TFA px HiIncoA IncoSerA p InsTFA px MichTFA px MO TFA px NJTFA px NY TFA p NC TFA px OhioITFA px ORTFA px PA TFA px RisDivA p SMCpGrA StratInc px TotlRtnA px USGovA p UtilitiesA p

8.91 11.48 41.19 10.52 12.94 7.51 17.83 12.54 12.73 48.55 9.05 12.01 10.74 31.15 49.21 10.90 2.04 2.20 12.59 12.35 12.76 12.66 12.17 12.96 13.12 12.61 10.94 36.95 36.37 10.55 10.47 6.91 13.93

+.02 +.02 -.10 +.02 +.03 +.01 -.10 +.03 +.03 -.05 ... +.02 -.02 -.64 -.14 +.03 ... ... +.02 +.01 +.01 +.02 +.02 +.01 +.02 +.02 +.01 -.09 +.08 -.03 +.04 +.01 -.08

+2.1 +10.9 +8.5 +17.2 +12.0 +13.2 +13.0 +8.3 +11.2 +9.6 +8.7 +9.5 NA -31.8 +13.1 +13.6 +13.4 +12.0 +9.9 +7.5 +10.0 +9.7 +8.8 +10.0 +9.2 +9.6 +10.2 +12.6 +8.4 +8.1 +7.0 +3.3 +14.9

+5.9 +23.3 +30.6 +43.4 +26.4 +28.8 +41.5 +22.5 +25.2 +39.5 +19.5 +22.1 NA +20.6 +44.2 +34.2 +43.7 +39.7 +22.3 +18.1 +23.3 +22.0 +20.0 +22.6 +19.3 +22.7 +23.5 +45.3 +50.6 +30.4 +28.1 +16.4 +47.2

31.64 9.76 20.56 14.67 8.86 20.10

-.11 -.01 -.07 -.05 +.01 -.07

+6.5 +10.0 +15.0 +19.3 +10.7 +13.6

+16.7 +26.3 +36.2 +46.3 +27.3 +43.0

16.21 +.05 +9.5 +36.9 27.24 -.13 +14.4 +30.8 6.64 ... +7.2 +35.0

CapAppA p Chks&Bal p DivGthA p EqtyInc t FltRateA px MidCapA p

GlobalA OverseasA SoGenGold p US ValuA t

27.94 -.10 +5.7 +14.2 8.85 +.01 +9.9 +24.5

-14.4 +29.9 +45.1 +9.5 +29.1

QualGrowth I 28.91 -.20 +13.1 +40.4 QualityGrthJ 28.89 -.20 +12.8 +39.1

EmgMkts r IntlEqty

Hartford Fds A:

-19.1 +8.0 +11.9 +2.8 +18.1

Jensen Funds:

Harding Loevner: 46.45 -.68 -0.6 +27.3 14.67 -.09 +2.7 +30.7

-.63 +.01 -.03 ... -.06

John Hancock Cl 1: LSAggress LSBalance LS Conserv LSGrowth LS Moder

12.42 13.28 13.39 13.13 13.18

-.03 -.01 +.03 -.03 +.01

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

Munder Funds A:

PIMCO Funds A:

MdCpCGr t

AllAstAuth t All Asset p CommodRR p HiYldA LowDurA RealRetA p ShortTrmA p TotRtA

30.91 -.02 +11.3 +54.6

Munder Funds Y: MdCpCGrY n 31.67 -.02 +11.6 +55.8

Mutual Series: BeaconZ EuropZ GblDiscovA GlbDiscC GlbDiscZ QuestZ SharesZ

13.04 20.58 29.57 29.22 29.98 17.78 22.24

-.03 -.11 -.15 -.15 -.15 ... -.03

+32.8 +33.2 +29.7 +33.1 +32.9

25.99 +.07 +11.3 +43.1 14.66 +.01 +16.9 +34.8

Nationwide Serv: IDModAgg

9.46 -.02 NA

Laudus Funds:

DivGthI n

IntFxInInst r 11.96 +.04 -1.7 +15.5 IntlMsterS r 18.23 -.04 +1.9 +31.1 USLgCapGr r 14.37 -.04 +13.6 +56.5

Lazard Instl:

Neuberger&Berm Tr:

EmgMktI

Genesis n

CapAppY n CapAppI n DivGrowthY n FltRateI x TotRetBdY nx

34.45 31.69 20.87 8.87 11.29

-.12 -.11 -.07 +.01 +.04

+6.9 +6.7 +15.5 +11.1 +8.0

+18.2 +17.6 +38.0 +28.4 +24.4

Hartford HLS IA : CapApp Div&Grwth GrwthOpp Balanced Stock IntlOpp MidCap SmallCo TotalRetBd

41.10 21.29 28.81 21.06 45.04 11.51 27.22 19.29 11.81

-.12 -.07 +.08 -.01 -.21 -.07 -.09 +.08 +.05

+8.1 +15.7 +15.9 +14.4 +18.6 +1.8 +14.1 +11.3 +8.0

+27.8 +38.5 +48.0 +36.3 +44.2 +16.7 +44.8 +52.5 +25.2

18.59 -.18 -1.6 +28.5

Nicholas n

Legg Mason A:

Northern Funds: -.05 -.62 -.06 -.05 +.01 +.03

CapApprec p 40.70 -.13 +7.8 +26.9

Legg Mason I: CBAggGrI t

6.80 +.01 +8.7 +19.2 17.13 +.03 +12.2 +24.5 40.84 -.17 +13.7 +19.7 136.44 -.66 +18.9 +61.6

ValueInv 40.75 -.18 +2.4 +38.9 ValPlusInv p 29.34 -.06 +7.2 +44.0

Litman Gregory Fds:

Henderson Glbl Fds:

Longleaf Partners:

19.56 -.25 -1.6

+2.7

Hotchkis & Wiley: MidCpVal

26.62 +.09 +27.5 +58.4

Intl I

13.36 -.10 -3.9 +10.0

Partners Intl n SmCap

29.40 -.55 +7.7 +41.8 12.73 -.17 -6.6 -0.2 28.93 -.25 +13.3 +63.9

Hussman Funds:

Loomis Sayles:

StrTotRet r StrGrowth ICM SmlCo

GlbBdR t LSBondI LSGlblBdI StrInc C LSBondR

12.44 +.01 +0.4 +15.0 11.10 +.06 -11.6 -13.1 28.43 +.16 +13.5 +41.4

ING Funds Cl A: GlbR E p

17.27 -.04 +9.6 +38.7

+44.4 +59.7 +41.7 +27.8 +21.4 +26.6

Legg Mason C:

Hartford HLS IB:

IntlOppA p

+18.8 +18.4 +19.3 +12.2 +9.4 +12.9

16.93 14.77 17.09 15.12 14.71

+.08 +.05 +.08 +.06 +.05

+2.0 +7.9 +2.3 +5.6 +7.6

+22.0 +40.6 +23.1 +35.6 +39.4

BondIdx EmgMEqIdx FixIn n GlbREIdx r HiYFxInc n IntTaxEx n IntlEqIdx r MMEmMkt r MMGlbRE r MMIntlEq r ShIntTaxFr SmlCapVal n StockIdx n TxExpt n

+.03 +.03 -.03 -.03 +.01 -.14

+8.1 +8.5 +6.3 +6.5 +12.7 +6.5

+50.0 +51.7 +49.4 +50.3 +46.7 +23.5

50.47 -.04 +6.2 +49.1

Nicholas Group:

EmgMktOp p 18.99 -.19 -2.0 +27.2

WAIntTMuC WAMgMuC CMValTr p

Heartland Fds:

11.70 11.74 34.65 48.71 9.38 26.46

Lazard Open: CBEqBldrA 14.62 CBAggGr p 127.38 CBAppr p 15.69 CBFdAllCV A 13.86 WAIntTmMu 6.79 WAMgMuA p 17.12

NA

Neuberger&Berm Fds:

Hartford Fds I: 20.50 -.07 +15.3 +37.3

+32.2 +14.5 +24.2 +21.6 +25.4 +27.2 +33.5

IntIdx I n 6.68 -.06 -0.2 +7.2 NwBdIdxI n 11.91 +.05 +5.6 +19.9 S&P500Instl n 11.76 -.03 +17.8 +45.9

EqIncA EqIncInst Genesis n GenesInstl HiIncBdInst LgCapV Inv n

Hartford Fds Y:

+14.0 +9.2 +10.9 +10.1 +11.2 +12.0 +14.6

Nationwide Instl: +8.4 +9.3 +8.9 +9.1 +9.4

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

46.80 +.13 +14.0 +51.6 11.12 10.81 10.80 8.69 7.37 10.94 9.59 17.25 17.95 8.86 10.67 16.16 17.51 11.26

+.05 -.20 +.06 -.03 +.01 +.03 -.08 -.40 -.06 -.09 ... +.04 -.04 +.04

+5.7 NA NA +9.9 +12.7 +7.4 -0.1 NA NA NA +1.6 NA +17.8 +10.1

+19.8 NA NA +41.3 +41.8 +17.7 +6.6 NA NA NA +6.9 NA +45.9 +22.3

10.94 12.35 6.88 9.45 10.60 12.48 9.87 11.50

AllAstAut t AllAssetC t LwDurC nt RealRetC p TotRtC t

10.81 12.19 10.60 12.48 11.50

+.03 +.02 +.04 +.08 +.06

+7.6 +6.6 +3.8 +8.7 +7.4

+26.8 +29.4 +12.3 +31.7 +21.6

+.07 +.04 +.08 +.06

-6.6 +4.1 +9.2 +8.3

+42.5 +13.7 +33.8 +24.9

+.01 +.04 +.07 -.06 +.04 +.08 +.06

+7.7 +8.9 -6.3 -0.6 +4.3 +9.6 +8.5

+34.1 +31.3 +44.3 +33.8 +14.3 +35.0 +25.6

PIMCO Funds D: CommodRR p LowDurat p RealRtn p TotlRtn p

6.90 10.60 12.48 11.50

PIMCO Funds P: AllAsset AstAllAuthP CommdtyRR EmgLocalP LowDurP RealRtnP TotRtnP

12.46 11.01 7.01 10.62 10.60 12.48 11.50

Parnassus Funds: EqtyInco n

29.20 -.04 +17.1 +42.9

Pax World: Balanced

23.12 -.07 +6.9 +25.8

Paydenfunds:

CommRet t

Permanent

48.33 +.09 -1.4 +37.7

Pioneer Funds A: FundamVal HighYldA p PionFdA p StratIncA p ValueA p

18.62 10.12 41.48 11.13 11.85

Nuveen Cl I:

FundamVal GlbHiYld StratIncY p

DivValueI

Price Funds Adv:

... +.02 -.08 +.03 -.05

+9.5 +10.2 +9.4 +8.7 +13.3

+23.7 +45.1 +32.0 +32.0 +25.9

41.64 -.07 +9.9 +33.5 10.89 +.02 +7.9 +29.3

Pioneer Fds Y:

BlChipGr n EqtyInc n

18.70 ... +9.9 +25.2 9.73 ... +7.8 +45.5 11.13 +.03 +9.0 +33.2 44.84 -.01 +17.0 +54.3 25.52 -.10 +16.2 +37.4

+6.4 -2.8 +15.7 +15.5

+27.5 +8.9 +47.8 +46.6

35.35 35.22 4.85 9.49 8.91

+.20 -.01 +.01 +.01 +.01

+8.9 +16.0 +13.5 +11.1 +4.0

+31.4 +34.2 +44.6 +23.6 +17.3

Rainier Inv Mgt: SmMCapOr SmMCpInst

35.00 36.00

HighYldI IntmBondI InvGrTEBI n LgCpValEqI MdCValEqI SmCpValI TotRetBd I

9.85 10.64 12.78 13.60 10.86 13.23 11.08

LowPrSkSvc r PennMuI rn PremierI nr SpeclEqInv r TotRetI r ValPlusSvc

14.39 11.50 19.29 21.80 13.54 13.23

EmerMkts GlobEq IntlDevMkt RESec StratBd USCoreEq US DefEq

17.01 8.59 28.59 37.98 11.42 29.87 32.78

EmgMkt SP500 n

+13.9 +8.1 +7.2 -0.7 +16.3

+34.8 +23.3 +23.3 +10.8 +37.6

DoubleLine Funds: CoreFxdInc I TRBd I TRBd N p

11.39 +.03 NA 11.38 +.01 NA 11.37 +.01 NA

NS NS NS

Dreyfus: Aprec BasicS&P BondMktInv p CalAMTMuZ Dreyfus DreyMid r Drey500In t IntmTIncA Interm nr IntlStkI MunBd r NY Tax nr OppMCVal A SmlCpStk r DreihsAcInc

44.45 28.87 11.14 15.46 9.67 28.79 38.89 14.09 14.29 13.55 11.90 15.59 29.47 21.91 10.42

-.23 -.08 +.06 +.03 -.02 +.05 -.11 +.07 +.03 -.13 +.02 +.02 -.06 +.10 ...

+15.1 +17.8 +5.4 +11.2 +14.9 +12.1 +17.4 +6.4 +6.9 +3.0 +9.7 +9.0 +13.4 +16.6 +2.8

+51.2 +46.1 +19.0 +23.5 +40.0 +52.6 +44.7 +28.0 +19.8 +22.2 +22.1 +21.3 +47.6 +55.7 +9.9

Dupree Mutual: KYTF EVPTxMEmI

8.09 +.02 +8.1 +19.0 44.66 -.58 -4.7 +24.4

Eaton Vance A: GblMacAbR p 9.86 FloatRate 9.35 IncBosA 5.88 LgCpVal 19.12 NatlMunInc 10.10 Strat Income Cl A8.08

-.01 +.01 ... -.04 -.01 ...

+1.0 +9.1 +12.0 +15.0 +16.4 +4.6

+10.0 +24.9 +45.3 +28.8 +28.9 +21.1

Eaton Vance C: NatlMunInc

10.10 -.01 +15.5 +26.0

Eaton Vance I: AtlCapSMID FltgRt GblMacAbR IncBost LgCapVal ParStEmMkt EdgwdGInst n

17.46 9.04 9.85 5.88 19.18 13.71 13.36

-.02 +.01 -.01 ... -.04 -.19 +.01

+16.3 +9.3 +1.3 +12.3 +15.4 -5.3 +16.5

+57.1 +25.8 +11.0 +46.3 +29.9 +20.3 +39.3

FMI Funds: CommonStk LargeCap p

25.29 -.09 +14.0 +41.4 17.10 -.07 +15.4 +39.4

FPA Funds: Capit NewInco n FPACres n Fairholme

43.53 -.18 +7.5 +51.6 10.66 ... +1.9 +7.7 28.39 +.01 +10.0 +34.1 30.11 -.31 +12.0 +19.9

Federated A: KaufmA p 5.26 ... +7.3 +26.3 MuniUltshA 10.05 ... NA NA StrValDiv px 5.08 -.02 +14.9 +52.0 TtlRtBd p 11.59 +.05 +6.5 +21.3

Federated Funds: MidCapI Svc 22.23 +.05 +12.2 +52.8 TtlRtnBdSvc 11.59 +.05 +6.7 +22.2 HighYldBd r KaufmanR MunULA p TotRetBond UltShortBd StaValDivIS x

10.06 5.26 10.05 11.59 9.22 5.09

+.01 -.01 ... +.05 ... -.03

9.91 12.53 12.59 35.76 17.61 22.52 21.69 12.63

+.01 ... -.01 +.11 +.01 +.01 +.10 +.04

EqGrI n FltRateI n GroIncI LgCapI n MidCpII I n NewInsightI SmallCapI StrInI

66.23 9.89 19.75 21.06 17.90 22.83 22.92 12.78

-.05 +.01 -.03 -.02 +.02 +.01 +.11 +.04

Intl MidCap r

Pick up a copy at these locations:

+32.7 +45.0 +54.4 +20.3 NA +50.4 +37.1 +46.1 +42.3

-.20 -.04 -.02 -.14 -.10 -.06 +.09 +.04 -.05

+17.5 +17.0 +15.2 +0.2 +17.0 +17.9 +13.6 +5.5 +17.2

+38.4 +41.5 +41.1 +8.1 +46.3 +46.4 +52.5 +19.2 +48.3

30.51 -.12 +3.2 +20.5 13.56 +.06 +5.6 +58.9 43.09 -.12 +10.7 +31.3 43.03 -.12 +10.4 +30.0

Sentinel Group: ComStk A p 34.29 -.11 +15.0 +41.0 SmCoA p 7.75 +.01 +7.7 +48.9 Sequoia n 158.87 -.98 +15.5 +51.0

The Bulletin • Chambers of Commerce Central Oregon Visitor s Association Oregon Border Kiosks • Bend Visitor and Convention Bureau • Deschutes County Expo Center • Other Points of Interest

Sit Funds: US Gov n

11.37 +.03 +1.8 +11.7

Sound Shore: SoundShore n 32.75 -.20 +13.8 +26.3

St FarmAssoc: Balan n Gwth n

56.13 -.09 +8.0 +25.0 55.14 -.36 +11.2 +31.8

Sun Capital Adv: GSShDurItl 10.30 +.01 +1.7 +5.9 IbbotsBalSv p 12.43 ... +6.9 +26.5 IbbotsModSv p12.21 +.01 +6.9 +24.4 SmCapVal n

21.02 +.06 +10.1 +46.2

TCW Funds: EmMktInc x TotlRetBdI

IN COOPERATION WITH

9.09 -.04 NA 10.14 +.01 NA

NA NA

TCW Funds N: TotRtBdN p

10.47

...

NA

NA

TFS Funds:

ALSO PUBLISHED ONLINE AT

MktNeutral r

www.bendbu et n.com

DivGrowK DivGth n Emerg Asia r EmrgMkt n EqutInc n EQII n EqIncK Export n FidelFd FltRateHi r FocHiInco r FourInOne n GNMA n GovtInc n GroCo n GroInc GrowCoF GrowthCoK GrStrat nr HighInc rn Indepndnce n InProBnd IntBd n IntGov IntmMuni n IntlDisc n InvGrBd n InvGB n LargeCap n LgCapVal n LatAm n LevCoStock LowPr rn LowPriStkK r Magellan n MagellanK MA Muni n MegaCpStk n MidCap n MidCapK r MuniInc n NewMkt nr NewMill n NY Mun n OTC OTC K 100Index Ovrsea n Puritan PuritanK RealEInc r RealEst n SrAllSecEqF SCmdtyStrt n SCmdtyStrF n SrsEmrgMkt SrEmgMktF SrsIntGrw SerIntlGrF SrsIntSmCp SrsIntVal SerIntlValF SrsInvGrdF ShtIntMu n STBondF STBF n SmCapDisc n SmCpGrth r SmCapOpp SmallCapS nr SmCapValu r StkSlcACap n StkSelSmCap StratDivInc StratInc n TaxFreeB r TotalBond n Trend n USBdIdxF USBI n Utility n Value n Wrldwde n

29.54 29.53 26.82 21.08 45.98 19.33 45.97 23.47 35.34 9.89 9.33 28.64 11.99 10.95 96.17 20.69 96.17 96.16 20.09 9.20 24.70 13.43 11.13 11.09 10.65 30.69 12.05 7.98 19.71 11.07 47.78 29.44 40.23 40.23 72.49 72.44 12.73 11.58 29.42 29.41 13.51 17.41 32.24 13.68 61.19 61.63 10.13 30.12 19.53 19.53 11.48 32.32 12.79 9.26 9.29 15.40 15.45 11.29 11.32 11.89 8.80 8.82 12.05 10.87 8.58 8.59 22.15 16.63 11.29 17.62 15.36 27.74 19.61 12.20 11.31 11.67 11.29 77.76 12.03 12.04 18.55 72.17 19.29

-.07 -.06 -.44 -.31 -.10 -.03 -.10 -.02 -.03 +.01 +.01 -.07 +.03 +.05 -.44 -.03 -.45 -.44 +.01 +.02 -.04 +.08 +.05 +.04 +.02 +.05 +.06 +.04 -.02 -.02 -1.05 +.09 -.03 -.03 +.05 +.05 +.02 -.03 +.11 +.10 +.02 +.04 +.03 +.02 -.02 -.01 -.04 -.01 +.03 +.04 +.06 +.25 -.02 +.04 +.04 -.24 -.24 -.03 -.03 +.05 -.03 -.03 +.06 ... +.01 +.02 +.04 +.06 +.05 +.08 ... -.02 +.10 ... +.04 +.03 +.05 ... +.06 +.06 -.12 +.08 +.01

+8.2 +8.3 +8.5 +15.8 +3.4 +13.9 -0.6 +7.4

+18.5 +33.1 +33.3 +46.5 +38.1 Fidelity Selects: +48.3 Biotech n 108.27 +.31 +25.3 ConStaple 80.46 -.07 +31.2 Electr n 47.01 -.51 Energy n 50.84 -.22 +45.0 EngSvc n 67.58 -.72 +28.3 Gold rn 38.37 -.25 Health n 138.90 +.30 +59.8 Materials 68.37 -.13 +19.4 MedEqSys n 27.63 +.12 +44.7 NatRes rn 31.75 -.19 +46.4 Softwr n 86.63 +.33 +39.2 Tech n 103.29 +.01 +49.4 Fidelity Spartan: +26.4 ExtMktIndInv 39.27 +.10 +32.1 500IdxInv n 50.01 -.14 500Idx I 50.02 -.14 +57.3 IntlIdx Inst 31.94 -.26

61.82 -.05 +15.3

+8.3 +8.6 +13.0 +6.8 NA +16.0 +15.4 +17.8 +16.8

TARGET:

+48.2 +26.0 NA +23.3 +8.9 +52.9

Fidelity Advisor T: EqGrT p

“109 Ways to Discover Central Oregon” wi not just te readers about what this region has to offer; it wi show them how to fu y experience Centra Oregon, ensuring their visit to the area is as unique as it is unforgettab e.

+14.9 +7.3 NA +7.1 +2.4 +14.9

+15.9 +8.4 +19.6 +18.6 +3.7 +14.2 -0.3 +7.7

+.05 -.04 +.01 +.02 -.06 -.01 -.03 -.11 +.01

18.71 14.48 10.47 15.71 39.98 22.21 21.04 9.76 25.60

AmerShsD AmShsS p

-.38 -.07 +.05 -.37 -.90

+5.3 +25.0

18.71 -.29 -8.6 +18.8 23.18 -.07 +18.0 +46.2

Selected Funds:

75.15 8.59 13.86 31.37 115.85

+23.1 +23.6 +6.4 +55.2 +29.6 +36.5 +43.6

...

11.57 11.78 7.52 11.81 7.93 25.05 17.50 38.80 13.55

Diver Inc p LtdTrmDvrA

Balanced n GblStock IncomeFd Intl Stk Stock

-5.7 +3.1 -0.5 +11.2 +7.4 +14.3 +15.0

22.06 +.09 -12.4 -18.1

Delaware Invest A:

Dodge&Cox:

-.25 -.04 -.18 -.11 +.05 -.08 -.09

10.53

Scout Funds:

34.08 -.12 +9.4 +26.4 35.90 -.12 +10.5 +30.4

+23.5 +13.2 +67.2 +7.5 +46.3 +13.4 +5.6 +11.2 +46.7 +50.5 +45.1 +43.4 +44.0 +52.4 +45.8 +54.5 +48.9 +18.9 +32.6 +33.1 +24.5 +2.8 +10.2 +21.5 +41.9 +0.8 +1.4 +35.3 +15.7 +9.3 +49.1 +0.7 +44.5 +47.2 +3.9 +90.4

+30.9 +40.7 +43.0 +44.9 +42.5 +30.5

Schwab Funds:

Davis Funds Y:

-7.2 -11.0 +14.7 -3.9 +17.8 +2.8 +0.8 -4.3 +15.3 +14.4 +13.9 +16.3 +16.5 +14.4 +13.4 +14.2 +14.2 -4.4 +7.9 -7.6 -5.4 +0.7 +1.9 +6.0 +8.2 -4.2 -3.9 +8.6 +3.6 -0.5 +14.3 -3.8 +16.5 +16.9 +0.8 +19.7

-8.0 +7.0 +3.6 +16.8 +9.5 +6.6

SSgA Funds:

35.48 -.12 +10.2 +29.4

-.33 -.56 +.04 -.13 -.04 +.03 ... -.09 -.01 +.09 +.01 -.04 -.03 +.06 +.03 +.10 +.10 -.09 -.06 -.22 -.45 ... +.03 +.10 +.01 -.16 -.15 +.10 +.04 -.15 +.05 -.14 -.01 -.04 +.01 +.17

-.10 ... -.08 +.02 +.06 -.03

11.28 +.05 +7.5 +29.8

NYVen C

EmMkCrEq n 18.22 EmgMktVal 27.04 GlbRESec n 9.25 IntSmVa n 14.39 LargeCo 11.13 STExtQual n 10.96 STMuniBd n 10.31 TAWexUSCr n 8.20 TAUSCorEq2 9.59 TM USSm 24.49 USVectrEq n 11.34 USLgVa n 21.59 USLgVa3 n 16.53 US Micro n 14.56 US TgdVal 16.87 US Small n 22.71 US SmVal 25.97 IntlSmCo n 14.61 GlbEqInst 13.34 EmgMktSCp n 19.37 EmgMkt n 25.01 Fixd n 10.35 ST Govt n 10.91 IntGvFxIn n 13.23 IntlREst 5.33 IntVa n 15.06 IntVa3 n 14.08 InflProSecs 12.82 Glb5FxInc 11.32 LrgCapInt n 17.72 TM USTgtV 22.25 TM IntlValue 12.39 TMMktwdeV 16.19 TMUSEq 15.10 2YGlFxd n 10.14 DFARlEst n 26.83

+40.8 +15.5 +20.6 +40.0 +48.7 +47.5 +22.5

10.62 -.01 +6.0 +27.7

Davis Funds C:

Dimensional Fds:

+11.0 +4.0 +7.7 +15.4 +14.1 +6.9 +7.1

Russell Funds S:

CoreFxInA n EmMktDbt n HiYld n IntMuniA IntlEqA n LgCGroA n LgCValA n S&P500E n TaxMgdLC n

Davis Funds A:

LongShortI n 17.83 -.11 +9.0 +17.1

+.01 +.04 +.03 -.07 ... -.02 +.06

Royce Funds:

CoreEqty x DivEqtySel FunUSLInst r IntlSS r 1000Inv r S&P Sel n SmCapSel TotBond TSM Sel r

Diamond Hill Fds:

... +12.4 +51.4 ... +12.7 +52.5

SEI Portfolios:

CoreEqtyS 17.66 +.01 +11.3 +38.8 GNMA S 15.55 +.03 +4.0 +17.5 HiYldTx n 12.99 +.01 +14.4 +31.4 MgdMuni S 9.50 +.01 +11.3 +24.3 ShtDurPlusS 9.32 +.01 +3.5 +10.8

9.46 +.05 +7.2 +29.3 8.98 +.01 +2.5 +12.7

NA +28.1 +32.8 +34.7 +32.3 +30.9 +43.5 +41.1 +43.4 +23.2 +25.8 +38.1 NA +23.9

CoreEqVIP 37.88 -.15 +13.1 +26.3 RSNatRes np 35.63 -.29 -3.6 +40.3 RSPartners 31.91 +.12 +9.2 +39.6

MgdFutStr n

DWS Invest S:

NYVenY

NA +12.2 +6.3 +17.3 +12.5 +14.1 +12.3 +17.6 +13.7 +9.8 +10.9 +14.4 NA +6.8

Rydex Investor:

160.22 -.45 +17.8 +46.2

NYVen A

... +.02 -.01 +.01 -.04 -.06 +.02 -.03 -.23 +.01 +.01 +.02 +.06 -.20

RS Funds:

BalStrat

DWS Invest Instl: Eqty500IL

13.15 8.32 7.62 16.55 13.01 14.04 7.75 14.26 54.31 8.97 9.06 12.66 13.71 21.68

Russell LfePts C:

DWS Invest A: DSmCaVal EqtyDivdA HiIncA MgdMuni p StrGovSecA

AAGthA p CATxA p DvrInA p EqInA p GeoBalA x GrInA p HiYdA p InvA p MultiCpGr NYTxA p TxExA p TFHYA USGvA p VoyA p

BalStrat p

13.84 -.04 +15.5 +44.2 -.02 -.08 -.02 -.01

21.48 +.01 +12.9 +46.8 32.80 -.08 +16.1 +58.7 22.16 +.05 +9.5 +47.5

Russell LfePts A:

DFA Funds: 13.12 9.69 11.99 11.79

+45.8 +57.3 +21.5 +14.7 +46.4 +32.3 +33.1 +55.2

Putnam Funds A:

StratBd

Cullen Funds: Glb6040Ins IntlCoreEq n USCoreEq1 n USCoreEq2 n

+12.4 +15.8 -14.7 +4.5 +9.4 +7.9 +4.4 +13.4

Russell Instl I:

8.41 +.03 -12.0 +16.8

HiDivEqI nrx

+.01 -.08 -.41 +.03 +.05 +.07 ... -.02

HiInc x 7.23 -.02 +13.1 +38.7 RidgeWorth Funds: GScUltShBdI 10.18 +.01 +1.8 +5.5 Perm Port Funds:

Nuveen Cl C:

IntmDurMuBd 9.36 +.02 +7.3 +19.9

5.59 31.58 44.41 11.57 21.17 14.63 15.98 11.67

GrowthZ MidCapGrZ SmallCoZ

PioneerFdY StratIncC t

14.53 -.04 +16.6 +44.9

HiYldA p MidCpGrA NatResA STCorpBdA SmallCoA p TotRetBdA 2020FocA UtilityA

Prudential Fds Z&I:

9.45 +.02 +12.5 +44.1

PIMCO Funds C:

Pioneer Funds C:

Nuveen Cl R:

+29.6 +32.3 +42.6 +43.6 +13.4 +33.7 +5.2 +24.4

HiYldAd np

HYldMuBd p 16.88 +.05 +21.2 +48.7 AAMuB p 11.63 +.02 +14.2 +34.5 LtdMBA p 11.25 +.01 +3.8 +13.6 16.86 +.05 +20.5 +46.3

+8.5 +7.4 -6.6 +12.4 +4.1 +9.2 +2.3 +8.2

PIMCO Funds Admin:

Nuveen Cl A:

HYMunBd t

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

Prudential Fds A: +.03 +.01 +.07 +.02 +.04 +.08 +.01 +.06

Credit Suisse Comm:

Fidelity Advisor I:

NE D NN F

+70.6 +47.1 +24.5 +31.2

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

CoreFxInco x 8.87 +.01 +7.6 +26.3 LgGrw 16.39 ... +15.7 +48.7 LgVal n 9.44 -.01 +12.5 +38.5

NwInsghts tn 21.24 ... +13.0 StratIncC nt 12.60 +.04 +6.6

B F

+19.7 +13.6 -0.8 +7.4

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

CG Cap Mkt Fds:

Fidelity Advisor C: m

NA

Inco px 16.45 +.07 +5.7 ShDurIncA tx 16.34 +.02 +3.9 SocEqA p 37.48 -.02 +9.0

FltRateA r FF2030A p FF2040A p LevCoStA p MidCpIIA p NwInsghts p SmallCapA p StrInA

P

R

Calvert Invest:

Institutnl nr Clipper

GrOppT 41.70 -.12 NwInsghts p 22.18 ... +28.3 SmlCapT p 20.81 +.09 12.62 +.04 +30.6 StrInT +33.5 Fidelity Freedom: +34.5 FF2000 n 12.44 +.02 +40.1 FF2010 n 14.13 +.02 +37.0 FF2010K 12.94 +.01 +41.1 FF2015 n 11.81 +.01 +19.5 FF2015A 11.96 +.02 +18.6 FF2015K 13.01 +.02 FF2020 n 14.28 +.01 12.44 +.01 +20.8 FF2020A 13.41 +.01 +11.7 FF2020K +40.5 FF2025 n 11.88 +.01 FF2025A 11.97 +.01 13.54 +.01 +20.5 FF2025K 14.14 ... +38.6 FF2030 n FF2030K 13.68 +.01 11.69 -.01 +83.3 FF2035 n 11.79 -.01 +82.1 FF2035A FF2035K 13.74 -.01 8.16 ... +50.0 FF2040 n FF2040K 13.78 -.01 +30.4 9.65 -.01 +33.0 FF2045 n 13.92 -.01 +33.4 FF2045K 9.50 -.01 +24.5 FF2050 n 13.93 -.02 +44.9 FF2050K 11.74 +.02 +53.0 FreeIncK +42.7 IncomeFd n 11.73 +.02 +43.7 Fidelity Invest: 12.77 -.03 +48.9 AllSectEq 16.17 +.02 +52.1 AMgr50 n +44.2 AMgr70 nr 17.03 -.01 +31.5 AMgr20 nr 13.31 +.04 19.96 +.02 +50.1 Balanc +32.8 BalancedK 19.96 +.02 +26.5 BlueChipGr 49.36 -.07 +39.9 BluChpGrF n 49.50 -.07 BluChpGrK 49.45 -.07 12.88 +.02 +51.5 CA Mun n 52.59 -.18 +31.8 Canada n 29.17 -.02 +51.3 CapApp n CapApprK 29.23 -.01 +22.3 +45.9 CapDevelO 11.71 -.01 9.28 +.02 +27.2 CapInco nr +20.1 ChinaReg r 26.02 -.60 77.28 ... +51.2 Contra n 77.29 +.01 +46.0 ContraK 24.29 -.01 +47.7 CnvSec 24.28 +.03 +56.4 DisEq n 24.28 +.04 +54.2 DiscEqF 28.06 -.11 +45.3 DiverIntl n +9.4 DiversIntK r 28.04 -.11 16.92 -.02 +5.6 DivStkO n +55.9 +34.1 +44.4 +34.6 +16.3

+9.5 +33.5 +2.3 +5.0 +5.8 +6.1 +4.5 +3.7 +4.8 +7.7 +7.4

Fidelity Advisor A:

S

n

-.08 -.08 -.08 -.08 -.13 -.13 -.15 ... ...

Federated Instl:

Footnotes

n

...

10.96 32.82 32.72 31.99 51.12 45.70 56.12 12.61 12.73

Cohen & Steers:

AllianceBern C: HighIncoC p

29.41

GlbGr&IncI Gr&IncC t Grth&IncA p Grwth&IncoI GrowthA p GrowthC t Growth I MktNeutI r MktNeutA p

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

+12.5 +12.3 -5.2 -11.5 +15.7 +17.4 +15.9 +13.6 +13.0 +8.5 +12.3 +11.1 +4.4 +4.7 +18.0 +19.6 +18.2 +18.2 +3.1 +13.8 +6.8 +8.0 +4.9 +2.6 +6.3 +0.9 +6.9 +7.1 +18.6 +11.4 -11.6 +15.9 +13.3 +13.4 +10.1 +10.2 +9.2 +20.8 +11.7 +11.8 +9.7 +15.1 +13.7 +8.2 +12.4 +12.6 +20.5 +3.4 +12.3 +12.5 +17.3 +21.3 +14.7 -11.8 -11.6 -5.8 -5.6 +6.3 +6.5 +5.1 0.0 +0.2 +6.9 +2.5 +1.9 +1.9 +17.9 +11.9 +11.6 +7.9 +15.6 +14.2 +11.7 +16.1 +7.7 +10.1 +7.5 +15.3 +5.9 +5.8 +14.7 +14.7 +6.6

+42.5 +41.7 +24.3 +14.8 +33.0 +32.9 +33.7 +37.0 +37.1 +19.4 +39.9 +33.3 +20.5 +16.8 +64.4 +43.9 +65.4 +65.2 +38.3 +45.8 +41.9 +31.1 +22.4 +13.1 +17.4 +13.2 +24.6 +27.4 +46.3 +23.8 +21.1 +46.6 +48.4 +49.0 +25.7 +26.2 +22.3 +47.4 +50.6 +51.3 +23.6 +46.5 +50.7 +20.8 +55.1 +55.8 +44.9 +5.1 +38.3 +38.8 +56.2 +96.3 +43.2 NS NS +22.5 +23.3 NS NS NS NS NS +24.8 +9.7 +10.1 +9.9 +60.9 +52.2 +57.9 +28.8 +44.2 +41.6 +51.1 +49.7 +32.1 +23.7 +27.7 +59.1 NS +20.4 +56.2 +42.0 +32.6

Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv:

+46.5 +16.8 +8.0 -0.6 -7.8 -26.4 +20.5 +8.2 +4.7 -5.9 +22.7 +16.3

+77.5 +53.0 +28.7 +36.9 +33.9 +20.1 +62.2 +52.3 +32.1 +33.6 +72.7 +64.9

GatewayA

+13.2 +53.8 +17.9 +46.4 +18.0 NS NS NS

FdTF Adv GlbBdAdv n GrAdv t HiIncAdv p HY TF Adv x IncomeAdv RisingDiv r TGlbTRAdv TtlRtAdv x USGovAdv p

12.74 13.08 49.30 2.05 10.93 2.18 36.95 13.16 10.49 6.93

+.03 -.07 -.14 +.01 +.02 -.01 -.08 -.05 +.04 +.01

+25.6 +28.0 +45.3 +44.2 +34.6 +39.9 +46.4 +34.8 +29.1 +16.9

Frank/Temp Frnk C: CalTFC t FdTxFC t FoundFAl p HY TFC tx IncomeC t NY TFC t RisDvC t StratIncC px USGovC t

7.50 12.72 10.58 11.06 2.22 12.16 36.32 10.54 6.87

+.02 +.03 -.03 +.03 ... +.02 -.09 -.04 +.02

+12.6 +10.6 NA +12.9 +11.3 +8.2 +11.8 +7.6 +2.8

+26.7 +23.2 NA +32.0 +37.9 +18.1 +42.1 +28.9 +14.8

Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: BeaconA SharesA

12.94 -.03 +13.7 +31.1 22.04 -.03 +14.3 +32.3

Frank/Temp Mtl C: SharesC t

21.76 -.03 +13.5 +29.6

Frank/Temp Temp A: DevMktA p ForeignA p GlBondA p GrowthA p WorldA p

21.66 6.26 13.12 18.04 15.06

-.38 -.01 -.07 -.03 -.07

-7.4 -1.9 +1.5 +8.2 +8.2

+20.6 +7.4 +27.1 +22.4 +24.4

Frank/Temp Tmp Adv: FlexCpGr FrgnAv GrthAv

49.54 -.05 +9.8 +40.6 6.20 ... -1.5 +8.3 18.06 -.02 +8.5 +23.4

Frank/Temp Tmp B&C: GlBdC p

13.14 -.07 +1.1 +25.4

Franklin Mutual Ser: QuestA

17.61

... +11.7 +26.1

Franklin Templ: TgtModA p

14.34 -.03 NA

NA

GE Elfun S&S: S&S Income n TaxEx Trusts n US Eqty n

12.09 12.35 48.24 44.14

+.05 +.02 +.07 -.08

+7.5 +9.8 +21.6 +15.7

+26.7 +23.0 +49.3 +33.8

GE Instl Funds: IntlEq n

10.26 -.06 -0.6

+3.2

GE Investments: TRFd1 TRFd3 p

17.10 -.02 +8.7 +23.9 17.03 -.02 +8.4 +23.0

GMO Trust: USTreas x

25.00

...

0.0

+0.3

GMO Trust II: EmergMkt r

10.80 -.18 -8.9 +21.6 22.13 10.83 19.44 23.51

-.21 -.18 -.12 -.05

+7.5 -8.9 -2.2 +19.6

+8.7 +21.8 +2.2 +48.0

GMO Trust IV: EmgCnDt EmerMkt IntlCoreEq IntlGrEq IntlIntrVal Quality

10.07 10.75 26.52 22.86 19.42 23.53

+.02 -.18 -.17 -.08 -.12 -.05

NA -8.8 -0.6 +4.8 -2.2 +19.6

NA +22.0 +9.5 +26.6 +2.4 +48.3

GMO Trust VI: EmgMkts r FlexEqVI IntlCoreEq Quality StrFixInco USCoreEq

10.76 16.69 26.50 23.52 16.66 13.78

-.18 -.54 -.16 -.05 +.14 -.02

-8.8 -6.5 -0.6 +19.7 NA +19.9

+22.3 -14.6 +9.6 +48.5 NA +48.3

Gabelli Funds: Asset EqInc px SmCapG n Util A px Util C tx

51.99 22.03 34.68 5.67 4.90

-.07 -.06 -.03 -.10 -.09

+10.6 +11.2 +9.8 +6.1 +5.4

+49.4 +41.4 +43.6 +35.3 +32.2

Gateway Funds: 27.43 -.01 +8.1 +17.4

Goldman Sachs A: GrthOppsA 23.88 +.08 +19.2 +52.0 MidCapVA p 37.43 ... +12.6 +45.1

Goldman Sachs Inst: CoreFxc GrthOppt HiYield HYMuni n MidCapVal SD Gov ShrtDurTF n SmCapVal

10.69 25.59 7.26 9.30 37.77 10.29 10.66 45.36

+.06 +.08 +.01 +.03 ... ... ... +.24

+6.9 +19.7 +13.3 +15.1 +13.0 +1.0 +2.6 +17.0

+26.4 +53.8 +43.3 +39.6 +46.8 +5.4 +9.1 +56.8

GuideStone Funds: BalAllo GS4 GrEqGS4 IntlEqGS4

15.67 ... +1.7 +27.2 15.85 -.05 +1.0 +23.9 15.69 -.05 +0.3 +21.1 15.87 -.05 +1.3 +24.7

Invesco Fds Instl: IntlGrow

27.81 -.16 +3.9 +28.5

12.74 +.01 +8.7 +30.8 21.53 -.02 +16.1 +53.1 11.94 -.12 -2.7 +10.1

StrIncA ValueY n

15.04 +.06 +6.4 +38.8 20.28 -.06 +17.4 +33.1

InvGrBdA p InvGrBdC p InvGrBdY LSFxdInc

12.59 12.49 12.60 14.54

Lord Abbett A:

DivrsDiv p

FloatRt p IntrTaxFr ShDurTxFr AffiliatdA p FundlEq BalanStratA x BondDebA p DevGthA p IncomeA HYMunBd p ShDurIncoA p MidCapA p RsSmCpA TaxFrA p CapStruct p

13.21 +.03 +17.0 +38.5

Invesco Funds A: BalRiskA Chart p CmstkA Constl p DevMkt p DivrsDiv p EqtyIncA GlbCoreEq p GrIncA p HiYld p HYMuA IntlGrow MidCpCEq p MidCGth p MuniInA RealEst p SmCpValA t TF IntA p

12.92 17.60 16.91 23.67 31.30 13.21 9.05 11.98 20.48 4.30 10.05 27.41 22.16 27.10 13.90 26.38 17.55 11.85

+.03 -.06 -.07 -.12 -.23 +.02 ... -.09 -.03 ... +.01 -.16 -.03 -.05 +.02 +.18 +.11 +.01

+9.9 +9.8 +14.9 +6.1 +1.1 +16.8 +12.7 +0.2 +15.3 +14.1 +15.6 +3.5 +3.5 +6.6 +11.4 +18.8 +18.3 +6.2

+41.5 +30.0 +38.7 +28.1 +38.0 +38.3 +31.3 +7.1 +33.9 +45.0 +39.1 +27.0 +23.9 +42.0 +27.9 +75.1 +46.7 +18.7

Invesco Funds C: BalRiskC EqIncC HYMuC

12.64 +.02 +9.0 +38.2 8.91 ... +11.8 +28.4 10.03 +.01 +14.8 +36.1

9.29 10.95 15.95 11.58 12.90 10.55 7.98 21.95 2.99 11.88 4.62 16.96 31.55 11.46 12.44

Ivy Funds: AssetSC t AssetStrA p AssetStrY p AssetStrI r GlNatRsA p HiIncC t HighIncoA p HiIncI r LtdTrmA p

23.81 24.62 24.67 24.87 16.25 8.44 8.44 8.44 11.25

-.15 -.16 -.15 -.15 -.28 +.01 +.01 +.01 +.04

+0.1 +0.8 +0.9 +1.1 -16.3 +14.7 +15.5 +15.8 +2.7

+19.7 +22.3 +22.4 +23.2 +4.0 +45.5 +48.5 +49.8 +10.2

+5.9 +12.5 +9.1 +7.4 +11.0 +12.3 +14.6 +19.7

+21.5 +42.9 +26.8 +23.0 +31.3 +33.3 +67.1 +57.3

JPMorgan A Class: Core Bond A x HighYld px Inv Bal p InvCon px InvGr&InA p InvGrwth p LgCpGrA p MdCpVal p

12.12 7.99 12.88 11.68 13.59 14.39 24.19 26.76

+.03 -.02 ... -.02 -.01 -.02 -.05 +.03

JPMorgan C Class: JP Morgan Instl: IntTxFrIn nx 11.37 ... +5.4 +15.3 MidCapVal n 27.24 +.03 +20.3 +59.6

JPMorgan R Cl: CoreBond nx DiscEqty HighYld rx MtgBacked x ShtDurBond x

12.12 18.29 8.02 11.63 11.02

+.03 -.05 -.02 ... +.01

+6.3 +19.4 +12.8 +5.9 +1.9

+22.9 +48.7 +44.3 +24.7 +8.3

JPMorgan Select: MdCpValu SmCap USEquity n USREstate n

26.99 40.22 11.22 18.42

+.03 +.05 -.03 +.07 +.03 +.01 -.28 -.04 -.09 +.04 -.02 ... -.13 -.02 -.06 +.03 +.01 +.01 -.02 -.01 -.07

IntlDiverA MITA MIGA BondA EmGrA GvScA GrAllA IntNwDA IntlValA ModAllA MuHiA t ResBondA RschA ReschIntA TotRA x UtilA x ValueA

4.62 +.01 +6.1 +18.7 33.52 +.09 +11.0 +44.1 13.25 21.32 17.42 14.16 47.50 10.58 14.73 22.39 26.16 14.25 8.21 11.05 27.96 14.25 14.96 17.93 24.90

-.09 -.07 -.05 +.07 -.02 +.04 -.01 +.03 -.14 +.01 +.02 +.05 -.05 -.14 -.03 -.08 -.09

ResrchBdI n ReInT ValueI

11.06 +.06 +7.4 +27.2 14.71 -.14 -0.8 +15.3 25.02 -.09 +16.4 +35.7

MFS Funds Instl: IntlEqty n

17.47 -.15 +3.2 +22.2

MainStay Funds A: HiYldBdA x LgCpGrA p

6.03 -.02 +12.6 +40.5 7.70 -.01 +11.9 +45.3

MainStay Funds I: EpochGlb r MnStMAP I ICAP SelEq S&P500Idx

16.13 34.31 37.02 32.86

-.04 -.11 -.11 -.09

Growth n

80.87 -.10 +21.0 +46.7

+6.1 +7.7 -2.9 +18.2 +17.8 +5.6 +12.7 +5.3 -0.3 +17.6 +14.8 +13.6 +5.7 +1.6 +4.3 +4.6 +16.5

+22.2 +28.0 +22.3 +56.9 +45.9 +23.0 +43.9 +15.0 +5.8 +44.8 +68.0 +52.0 +24.2 +7.5 +14.8 +15.4 +40.1

Manning&Napier Fds:

PimcoBond n Yacktman p YacktFocus Bond nx

11.05 18.83 20.28 27.37

+.05 -.03 -.03 +.04

+7.6 +12.0 +11.5 +7.8

+24.2 +47.4 +46.9 +34.0

ProBConS n 13.54 +.04 +7.1 +23.8 WorldOppA n 7.29 -.05 -1.3 +10.3

Marsico Funds: Focus p

19.54 +.05 +12.0 +42.3

Matthews Asian: AsiaDivInv r AsianG&IInv China Inv PacTigerInv MergerFd n

13.71 17.16 21.27 22.04 15.98

-.01 -.01 -.41 -.08 +.04

+2.0 +5.3 -12.4 -2.1 +4.6

+39.7 +35.0 +11.6 +38.5 +10.4

Meridian Funds: Growth

45.22 +.21 +13.5 +64.0

Metro West Fds: HiYldBdM p LowDurBd TotRetBd TotalRetBondI MontagGr I

10.25 8.70 10.90 10.90 25.85

+.01 ... +.02 +.03 -.02

Morgan Stanley A: FocusGroA

37.31 -.04 +18.2 +29.0

Janus T Shrs:

+42.2 +36.4 +35.7 +45.3

Mairs & Power:

Forty

26.77 10.99 33.76 9.11 31.47

+10.3 +13.9 +14.8 +17.7

Managers Funds:

21.51 +.04 +7.8 +30.5

+21.8 +37.7 +48.6 +34.9 +49.2 +15.4 +38.5 +42.3 +23.2 +35.5 +37.1 +26.5 +43.4 +14.4 +28.2 +45.5 +34.7

MFS Funds I:

Janus S Shrs: BalancedT n FlexBondT Grw&IncT n HiYldT r Janus T

+2.0 +15.4 +15.0 +10.1 +15.1 +3.9 +9.3 +5.9 +6.9 +8.7 +15.6 +7.2 +16.3 -1.0 +10.5 +9.4 +16.2

+58.5 +56.6 +42.5 +86.8

James Adv Fds: BalGldnRbw

+22.3 +22.2 +9.3 +25.1 +34.3 NA +40.0 +72.2 +34.0 +33.4 +18.0 +44.8 +42.8 +32.4 +37.8

+20.0 +17.4 +17.1 +16.8

JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBond nx 12.11 CorePlusBd nx 8.50 EmMkEqSl 21.45 EqtyInc x 10.29 EqIndx 32.05 GovBond x 11.72 HighYld x 8.02 IntmdTFBd nx 11.38 IntlValSel 11.86 IntrdAmer 26.05 LgCapGr 24.16 MkExpIdx n 10.72 MtgBckdSl nx 11.63 ShtDurBdSel x 11.02 TxAwRRet nx 10.42 TxAwRRetI nx 10.44 USLCCrPls n 22.62

+10.7 +7.9 +2.4 +12.8 +8.5 NA +11.4 +12.4 +9.4 +14.3 +5.9 +8.4 +10.7 +15.1 +13.0

Lord Abbett I: MFS Funds A:

13.00 +.03 +10.1 +42.5

+.01 +.03 +.01 -.03 -.07 -.02 +.01 +.15 +.01 +.03 ... -.04 +.08 +.03 -.02

7.97 +.01 +11.6 +40.9 10.95 +.03 +8.0 +22.5 4.62 +.01 +6.0 +18.3

SummitP p BalRiskY

+32.7 +29.8 +33.6 +40.5

Lord Abbett F:

Invesco Funds P: 12.89 -.03 +13.5 +37.2

+7.0 +6.2 +7.3 +9.2

BdDbC p 8.00 +.01 +10.6 +37.3 ShDurIncoC t 4.65 ... +5.2 +15.4

ShtDurInc p SmCapVal

Invesco Funds Y:

+.07 +.07 +.07 +.05

Lord Abbett C:

BondDeb IntrTaxFr ShtDurInco

NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA +16.6 +40.3

36.20 -.27 -3.0 +52.1

MorganStanley Inst: +.04 +.05 -.01 ... -.04

+12.2 +8.1 +16.3 +11.8 +13.9

+29.8 +25.9 +34.6 +43.1 +36.4

EmMktI n IntlEqI n MCapGrI n MCapGrP p SmlCoGrI n

23.49 13.52 34.24 32.98 14.08

-.27 -.11 -.23 -.22 +.02

HYMuniBd LtdTermR

16.88 +.06 +21.4 +49.6 11.19 +.01 +4.0 +14.2

Nuveen Cl Y:

Loomis Sayles Inv:

Invesco Fds Invest:

CoreBond pnx 12.18 +.04 +5.2 +19.2

GMO Trust III: CHIE EmgMk r IntlIntrVal Quality

Intl I r WorldwideA t WorldwideC t Worldwide I r

TIAA-CREF Funds:

and Centra Oregon Area Chambers of Commerce

IVA Funds: +11.3 +1.8 +13.4 +14.1 +13.7 +12.3 +12.9 +3.7 +7.2 +3.4

-4.0 +5.9 -6.3 -6.5 +7.1

+22.4 +15.2 +46.1 +45.1 +45.8

RealEst

21.96 +.14 +20.2 +92.0

Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r GlobalI r Intl I r IntlSmCp r Oakmark Select

28.61 21.35 18.24 12.70 47.98 31.86

-.10 -.30 -.12 -.05 -.19 -.01

+7.9 +4.2 +6.4 -0.6 +19.5 +16.3

+26.2 +18.1 +20.1 +22.4 +46.8 +46.3

7.34 14.39 9.52 12.31 9.62

-.01 -.05 -.09 +.03 +.02

+3.9 +4.6 +1.0 +3.9 -9.2

+26.8 +35.3 +13.5 +13.2 +14.6

+.02 +.02 +.01 +.02 -.04 +.01 -.24 +.49 -.01 -.04 -.16 +.01 -.02 +.01 +.03 ... +.01 +.11 +.02 -.03 ... +.05 ... +.01 -.07

+22.8 +17.6 +5.9 +20.2 +13.6 +9.7 -0.9 +17.1 +12.0 +13.9 +4.9 NA -1.0 +7.1 -29.3 +0.6 -1.0 +2.7 +9.6 +19.2 +18.4 +15.9 +13.5 +9.1 0.0

+46.8 +39.4 +28.6 +45.6 +36.8 +35.4 +35.5 +75.5 +32.2 +43.3 +26.9 NA +30.4 +36.3 +39.3 +18.8 +19.5 +27.5 +23.4 +42.9 +40.1 +47.8 +38.3 +32.7 +22.7

Oppenheimer A: AMTFrMuA x AMTFrNY x ActiveAllA CAMuniA px CapAppA p CapIncA p DevMktA p DiscFd p Equity A EqIncA p GlobalA p GblAllocA GlblOppA GblStrIncoA Gold p IntlBdA px IntlDivA IntGrow p LtdTrmMu x MnStFdA MainStrOpA p MnStSCpA p RisingDivA SenFltRtA x S&MdCpVlA

7.22 12.22 9.68 8.76 48.38 9.17 32.25 63.87 9.44 25.04 59.00 14.40 28.91 4.27 32.85 6.46 11.13 28.47 15.10 36.69 14.07 22.29 17.18 8.23 30.16

Oppenheimer B: RisingDivB 15.52 -.01 +12.4 +34.5 S&MdCpVlB 25.51 -.06 -0.9 +19.7

Oppenheimer C&M: DevMktC t GblStrIncoC IntlBondC x LtdTmMuC tx RisingDivC p SenFltRtC x

30.87 4.26 6.44 15.03 15.46 8.24

-.23 ... +.01 +.01 -.01 +.01

-1.6 +6.3 -0.1 +8.7 +12.6 +8.6

+32.7 +32.9 +16.4 +20.5 +35.1 +30.9

LtdNYA px 3.40 ... +8.2 LtdNYC tx 3.38 ... +7.5 RoNtMuC tx 7.48 ... +16.7 RoMu A px 16.98 +.02 +16.1 RoMu C px 16.95 +.02 +15.1 RcNtlMuA x 7.50 ... +17.6

+21.2 +18.2 +42.0 +38.4 +34.9 +45.2

Oppenheimer Roch:

Oppenheimer Y: CapApprecY DevMktY IntlBdY x IntlGrowY RisingDivY ValueY

50.67 31.94 6.46 28.36 17.58 22.82

-.04 -.23 +.01 +.11 -.01 -.04

+14.1 -0.5 +0.9 +3.1 +13.8 +10.2

+38.5 +36.8 +19.8 +29.3 +39.5 +27.9

Optimum Fds Instl: Fixed Inc

10.04 +.05 +7.0 +31.5

Osterweis Funds: OsterweisFd n 28.32 -.01 +12.2 +31.0 StratIncome 11.65 +.01 +7.8 +28.3

PACE Funds P: LgGrEqtyP LgVEqtyP

20.34 +.01 +15.0 +47.0 17.75 -.09 +13.8 +33.1

PIMCO Admin PIMS: RelRetAd p ShtTmAd p TotRetAd n

12.48 +.08 +9.4 +34.4 9.87 +.01 +2.3 +5.4 11.50 +.06 +8.3 +25.0

PIMCO Instl PIMS: AllAssetAut r AllAsset CommodRR DiverInco EmgMktCur EmMktsBd FltgInc r FrgnBdUnd r FrgnBd n HiYld n InvGradeCp LowDur n ModDur n RERRStg r RealRetInstl ShortT StksPlus TotRet n TR II n TRIII n

11.02 12.47 7.02 12.10 10.28 12.18 8.73 11.30 11.11 9.45 11.17 10.60 11.10 5.62 12.48 9.87 8.83 11.50 11.07 10.13

+.03 +.02 +.07 +.04 -.02 +.03 -.01 +.06 ... +.02 +.07 +.04 +.05 +.09 +.08 +.01 -.02 +.06 +.04 +.05

36.85 6.79 56.79 17.43 18.28 18.37 37.57 10.56

-.03 +.01 -.15 -.04 -.05 -.07 +.17 +.02

+17.2 +12.6 +11.5 +9.9 +10.5 +10.7 +14.2 +10.5

+54.3 +42.5 +54.7 +35.5 +37.6 +37.9 +48.5 +22.7

Price Funds R Cl: Ret2020R p Ret2030R n

17.28 -.04 +9.6 +34.5 18.15 -.06 +10.2 +36.6

Price Funds:

Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp GlbSMdCap LgCapStrat MuniBond pn RealReturn

Growth pn HiYld n MidCapGro n R2020A p R2030Adv np R2040A pn SmCpValA n TF Income pn

+9.0 +31.8 +7.9 +34.5 -6.3 +44.5 +11.7 +42.5 -4.5 +11.8 +12.0 +43.7 +7.3 +21.4 +3.7 +33.2 +10.2 +29.7 +12.8 +45.1 +12.9 +39.5 +4.4 +14.6 +6.7 +24.2 +33.1 +172.6 +9.7 +35.4 +2.5 +6.2 +20.7 +59.0 +8.6 +25.9 +7.9 +22.9 +8.2 +25.6

Balance n 20.57 BlueChipG n 45.00 CapApr n 22.87 DivGro n 25.82 EmMktB n 13.87 EmMktS n 30.45 EqInc n 25.58 EqIdx n 38.02 GNM n 10.15 Growth n 37.28 GwthIn n 22.10 HlthSci n 42.03 HiYld n 6.81 InstlCpGr n 18.53 InstHiYld n 9.60 InstlFltRt n 10.12 MCEqGr n 29.67 IntlBd n 9.99 IntlDis n 42.68 IntlGr&Inc n 12.16 IntStk n 13.35 LatAm n 38.91 MdTxFr n 11.09 MediaTl n 56.38 MidCap n 58.00 MCapVal n 24.35 NewAm n 34.99 N Asia n 15.41 NewEra n 42.18 NwHrzn n 35.59 NewInco nx 9.93 OverSea SF n 7.94 PSBal n 20.34 PSGrow n 24.70 PSInco n 16.94 RealAssets r 10.79 RealEst n 21.27 R2005 n 12.08 R2010 n 16.34 R2015 12.69 Retire2020 n 17.55 R2025 12.84 R2030 n 18.42 R2035 n 13.02 R2040 n 18.51 R2045 n 12.33 Ret Income nx 13.75 SciTch n 26.89 ST Bd nx 4.86 SmCapStk n 35.43 SmCapVal n 37.86 SpecGr 18.89 SpecIn nx 12.88 SumMuInt n 11.95 TxFree n 10.55 TxFrHY n 11.77 TxFrSI n 5.71 R2050 n 10.33 VA TF n 12.31 Value n 25.39

-.03 -.01 +.05 -.06 +.02 -.45 -.10 -.11 +.02 -.02 -.04 +.16 +.02 -.04 +.03 +.01 -.08 +.04 +.05 -.15 -.13 -.67 +.02 -.13 -.15 +.01 -.04 -.13 -.37 -.02 +.05 -.09 -.03 -.08 ... -.09 +.07 ... -.02 -.02 -.04 -.03 -.06 -.04 -.07 -.04 ... -.49 +.01 -.01 +.17 -.09 +.04 +.02 +.02 +.02 ... -.04 +.03 -.03

15.33 +.01 +7.1 +15.1

+10.7 +17.3 +15.6 +17.0 +11.3 -5.4 +16.5 +17.7 +4.1 +17.5 +14.6 +33.4 +12.9 +15.5 +12.4 +9.7 +12.2 -0.9 +2.6 -0.7 +1.0 -13.4 +10.0 +16.9 +11.8 +14.0 +11.8 +1.3 -8.2 +20.3 +6.6 +1.8 +10.3 +11.3 +8.7 -5.0 +19.4 +8.5 +9.1 +9.6 +10.1 +10.3 +10.8 +10.8 +10.9 +11.0 +7.6 +2.9 +2.3 +18.1 +14.6 +11.6 +8.6 +6.9 +10.9 +15.4 +3.0 +10.9 +9.4 +16.0

+34.0 +55.4 +41.0 +42.8 +42.8 +23.9 +38.4 +45.5 +18.4 +55.4 +39.6 +83.2 +43.7 +52.2 +43.2 +24.4 +58.3 +14.1 +30.5 +10.8 +22.6 +13.9 +23.6 +83.0 +55.8 +40.9 +45.8 +40.1 +20.4 +84.9 +21.9 +16.2 +35.7 +38.8 +30.4 NS +91.5 +30.2 +32.5 +34.7 +36.5 +37.5 +38.6 +39.1 +39.0 +39.0 +26.6 +38.0 +8.8 +68.1 +49.6 +40.3 +28.5 +18.8 +23.9 +36.6 +10.8 +38.9 +22.0 +39.0

BdIdxInst BondInst EnLCGInst r EnLCVInst r EqIdxInst Gr&IncInst HighYldInst InfLkdBdInst IntlEqIInst IntlEqInst LgCGrInst LgCVl Inst MdCGrIInst MdCVlRet RealSecInst S&P500IInst

11.04 10.91 9.79 8.48 10.75 10.41 10.19 12.46 15.13 8.40 11.71 13.72 12.93 18.20 18.30 15.94

+.05 +.05 -.03 -.02 -.01 -.02 +.02 +.08 -.13 +.01 -.01 -.05 -.04 -.04 -.05 -.05

TGlbTRA

13.14 -.05 +3.4 +33.8

Templeton Instit: ForEqS

18.16 -.01 +1.5

IntlValInst r REValInst r ValueInst

15.39 -.12 -2.1 +9.8 25.17 -.01 +15.6 +40.2 46.51 -.73 +2.1 +19.1

Thompson Plumb: Bond

11.77 +.04 +6.4 +23.4

Thornburg Fds C: IntValuC t

23.83 -.31 -1.4 +11.4

Thornburg Fds: IntlValA p IncBuildA t IncBuildC p IntlValue I LtdMunA p LtdTIncA LtdTmIncI LtTMuniI ValueI

25.40 18.63 18.63 25.98 14.66 13.64 13.64 14.66 30.93

-.34 -.02 -.02 -.34 +.01 +.05 +.05 +.01 -.14

-0.7 +8.1 +7.4 -0.3 +4.0 +5.7 +6.0 +4.4 -1.2

+13.8 +33.8 +31.1 +15.2 +15.0 +20.7 +22.0 +16.1 +7.2

23.35 -.21 NA 11.90 +.02 NA

NA NA

Thrivent Fds A: LgCapStock MuniBd

Tocqueville Fds: Delafield Gold t

29.50 -.01 +12.1 +43.4 67.33 +.08 -23.9 +58.2

Touchstone Family: SandsCpGY n 12.54 SandsCapGrI 17.42 SelGrowth 12.30

... +20.3 +82.3 ... +20.7 +84.9 ... +20.1 +81.1

Transamerica A: AsAlModGr p 12.22 -.01 +7.5 +27.9

Transamerica C: AsAlModGr t 12.15 -.02 +6.8 +25.4

TA IDEX C: AsAlMod t

12.08 +.01 +6.5 +25.1

Tweedy Browne: GblValue

+.05 -.09 +.01 +.02 -.13 -.01 -.02 -.01 -.01 -.03 +.01 +.01 -.01 -.02 -.03 -.03 ... -.03 ... -.02 +.02 +.03 -.01 -.02

+7.6 +0.3 +12.7 +13.2 -1.4 +16.8 +15.4 +15.1 +13.7 +17.7 +18.8 +8.8 +10.2 +10.4 +10.6 +10.6 +15.8 +6.9 +13.6 +12.0 +17.4 +12.7 +10.2 +11.1

+32.4 +18.1 +41.1 +46.8 +6.8 +46.0 +57.7 +34.6 +43.1 +46.0 +41.6 +35.3 +36.5 +37.2 +36.9 +36.8 +64.0 +48.6 +48.8 +49.3 +73.0 +45.2 +33.9 +36.2

+.02 -.27 -.06 +.02 +.02 +.02 -.29 -1.27 +.02 +.61 +.02 +.02 ... +.02 +.02 +.11 +.10 +.08 -.14 -.18 +.06 -.06 -.06 +.20 ... -.19 -.07 -.10 +.15

+10.2 +11.7 +14.5 +11.5 +9.7 +8.9 +12.9 -2.6 +8.7 +20.0 +0.8 +1.9 +1.0 +1.6 +3.7 +14.6 NS NS +17.1 +17.9 +5.8 +17.2 +15.8 +13.4 +13.6 +16.5 +18.5 -0.1 +16.8

+23.2 +54.1 +49.7 +27.2 +20.9 +20.9 +39.0 +8.1 +21.4 +90.1 +6.2 +10.0 +4.4 +8.4 +13.8 +54.3 NS NS +46.9 +46.2 +20.7 +48.1 +38.5 +38.3 +35.3 +38.6 +41.0 +7.6 +56.5

-.02 +.02 -.04 -.06 -.07 -.08 -.56 -.07 +.17 +.03 -.07 -.05 +.01 -.05 -.04 +.11 -.03 -.25 -.20 +.06 +.08 +.03 -.05 +.05 ... +.15 +.26 ... +.03 -.02 +.02 +.03 ... +.02 ... +.02 -.30 -.05 -.28 ... ... +.02 +.02 +.02 +.01 +.03 +.03 ... -.01 -.02 -.05 -.04 -.07 -.07 -.05 +.01 +.04 +.08 ... -.06 -.04

+15.7 +8.3 +13.0 +8.0 +15.0 +16.7 -0.7 +19.9 +11.9 +3.9 +6.2 +18.3 +14.1 +19.8 +13.5 +8.4 -4.5 -1.1 +0.1 +8.8 +4.5 +8.0 +10.0 +6.8 +9.1 +19.1 +19.4 +14.9 +8.7 +14.3 +11.4 +7.5 +2.2 +10.1 +1.0 +9.1 -35.8 +11.8 +12.7 +13.9 +10.5 +3.6 +1.5 +0.7 +14.7 +8.0 +8.8 +9.2 +9.6 +9.8 +10.2 +10.5 +10.5 +10.6 +10.6 +11.8 +15.2 +13.3 +13.5 +16.3 +18.4

+45.0 +21.1 +31.4 +34.0 +44.6 +47.6 +28.7 +52.6 +51.9 +19.4 +27.4 +47.4 +44.6 +49.8 +43.1 +31.9 +14.5 +18.7 +5.3 +31.3 +21.1 +26.9 +33.7 +23.3 +31.2 +45.4 +45.3 +58.0 +20.2 +49.0 +26.9 +19.4 +8.8 +22.9 +4.2 +20.8 +3.6 +40.1 +38.6 +46.1 +32.0 +13.5 +8.0 +5.9 +55.5 +27.8 +31.3 +31.9 +32.8 +33.8 +34.7 +35.5 +35.5 +35.5 +35.4 +32.6 +42.4 +38.1 +35.0 +38.2 +40.6

+0.3 -6.1 +13.3 -2.0 +11.7 NS +14.7 -2.3 -2.2 -2.2 -2.3 +17.8 +12.6 +0.1 -6.3 +13.1 +18.7 +8.1 +18.9 +11.5 +19.8 +14.5 +14.3 +14.6 +1.8 +5.7 -2.3 +17.0 +15.6

NS NS NS NS NS NS NS NS NS NS NS +46.1 +37.5 +8.0 +20.4 +53.0 +55.4 +30.0 +46.5 +53.4 +89.2 +53.6 +61.7 +45.8 +9.6 +20.3 +10.1 +47.6 +37.9

+12.8 +0.2 -6.1 +13.3 -2.0 +18.9 +8.5 +18.0 +18.0 +17.2 +17.2 +19.1 +11.7 +20.0 NS +3.7 +14.6 +14.5 +5.9 +17.1 +15.8

+38.2 NS +21.2 +53.8 +11.7 +56.2 +32.4 +46.6 +46.7 +48.2 +48.3 +47.1 +54.2 +90.2 NS +14.0 +54.4 +62.5 +20.9 +48.1 +38.6

+12.7 +13.3 +18.0 +18.9 +8.2 +11.7 +20.1 +1.9 +14.6 +5.8 +17.1 +15.8

+38.1 +53.7 +46.6 +56.1 +30.4 +54.1 +90.1 +10.0 +54.3 +20.7 +48.1 +38.4

Vanguard Fds: DivrEq n 22.60 CAIT n 11.69 CapOpp n 32.84 Convt n 12.78 DivAppInv n 23.55 DividendGro 16.62 Energy 59.47 EqInc n 23.93 Explorer n 78.11 GNMA n 11.10 GlobEq n 17.64 GroInc n 30.01 HYCorp n 5.98 HiDvdYld n 19.60 HlthCare n 142.87 InflaPro n 14.84 IntlExplr n 13.82 IntlGr 17.69 IntlVal n 28.53 ITI Grade 10.40 ITTsry n 11.85 LIFECon n 17.18 LIFEGro n 23.02 LIFEInc n 14.74 LIFEMod n 20.60 LTInGrade n 11.04 LTTsry n 13.81 MidCapGro 21.11 MATaxEx 10.93 Morgan n 19.92 MuHY n 11.22 MuInt n 14.36 MuLtd n 11.18 MuLong n 11.76 MuShrt n 15.93 OHLTTxE n 12.68 PrecMtlsMin r 15.26 PrmCpCore rn 14.83 Prmcp r 68.35 SelValu r 20.38 STAR n 20.31 STIGrade 10.84 STFed n 10.89 STTsry n 10.80 StratEq n 20.71 TgtRetInc 12.17 TgtRet2010 24.12 TgtRet2015 13.31 TgtRet2020 23.60 TgtRet2025 13.41 TgRet2030 22.98 TgtRet2035 13.81 TgtRe2040 22.67 TgtRet2050 n 22.57 TgtRe2045 n 14.23 TxMBal n 22.08 USGro n 20.79 Wellsly n 24.44 Welltn n 33.80 Wndsr n 14.31 WndsII n 28.72

Vanguard Idx Fds: DevMkInPl nr 94.38 EmMkInPl nr 84.61 ExtMkt I n 108.84 FTAllWIPl nr 88.08 MidCpIstPl n 107.34 STBdInstPls 10.67 SmCapInPl n 107.89 TotIntAdm nr 23.35 TotIntlInst nr 93.41 TotIntlIP nr 93.43 TotIntSig nr 28.01 500 n 130.12 Balanced n 23.61 DevMkt n 9.13 EMkt n 25.43 Extend n 44.05 Growth n 36.64 ITBond n 12.18 LTBond n 14.77 MidCap 21.69 REIT r 22.15 SmCap n 37.32 SmlCpGrow 24.15 SmlCapVal 16.73 STBond n 10.67 TotBond n 11.21 TotlIntl n 13.96 TotStk n 35.10 Value n 22.38

-.83 -1.65 +.26 -.93 -.29 +.02 +.33 -.25 -.97 -.97 -.29 -.37 +.03 -.08 -.49 +.10 -.07 +.10 +.23 -.06 +.14 +.11 +.08 +.04 +.02 +.06 -.14 -.06 -.07

Vanguard Instl Fds: BalInst n 23.62 DevMktInst n 9.06 EmMktInst n 25.44 ExtIn n 44.10 FTAllWldI r 83.16 GrowthInstl 36.64 InfProtInst n 11.87 InstIdx n 129.31 InsPl n 129.32 InstTStIdx n 31.78 InstTStPlus 31.79 LTBdInst n 14.77 MidCapInstl n 21.76 REITInst r 14.63 STBondIdx n 10.67 STIGrInst 10.84 SmCpIn n 37.37 SmlCapGrI n 24.21 TBIst n 11.21 TSInst n 35.12 ValueInstl n 22.39

+.03 -.08 -.49 +.11 -.88 -.07 +.08 -.36 -.36 -.06 -.05 +.23 -.06 +.09 +.02 +.02 +.11 +.08 +.06 -.06 -.06

Vanguard Signal: BalancSgl n ExtMktSgl n 500Sgl n GroSig n ITBdSig n MidCapIdx n REITSig r STBdIdx n SmCapSig n TotalBdSgl n TotStkSgnl n ValueSig n

23.36 37.89 107.50 33.93 12.18 31.09 25.24 10.67 33.67 11.21 33.89 23.29

+.02 +.09 -.30 -.07 +.10 -.08 +.16 +.02 +.10 +.06 -.06 -.07

Vantagepoint Fds: AggrOpp n 10.24 -.07 +8.7 +32.1 DivrStrat 10.33 +.01 +3.2 +9.8 EqtyInc n 9.08 -.06 +12.2 +36.7 Growth n 9.45 ... +14.2 +39.4 Grow&Inc n 10.74 -.03 +16.1 +43.2 M M

m

V V

A

M

V mM

WM B WM B W

M &R

A

m

USAA Group: CornstStr n Grwth n Gr&Inc n HYldInco nx IncStk n Income nx IntTerBd n Intl n PrecMM S&P Idx n S&P Rewrd ShtTBnd n TxEIT n TxELT n TxESh n

22.60 16.26 15.98 8.52 13.52 13.45 10.85 23.61 27.95 21.13 21.13 9.25 13.68 13.87 10.85

-.02 -.05 -.04 -.02 -.02 +.02 +.05 -.25 -.16 -.06 -.06 +.02 +.02 +.02 +.01

+4.5 +15.5 +13.1 +12.0 +16.1 +6.6 +9.2 +2.9 -29.5 +17.7 +17.8 +3.6 +8.6 +12.6 +2.9

+29.7 +44.4 +39.2 +49.9 +41.6 +26.0 +39.1 +20.0 +26.6 +45.7 +46.2 +13.1 +23.9 +28.6 +11.5

VALIC : MidCapIdx StockIndex

20.79 +.04 +12.4 +53.8 26.42 -.08 +17.6 +45.3

W m

W m

W

A

A

W

A

A

W

A

C

W

A

Van Eck Funds: Vanguard Admiral:

11.04 9.52 7.75 11.14 10.36 8.66 10.18 11.58 8.93 9.96 10.64 11.97 12.43 12.25 12.40 11.87 15.00 10.98 13.91 10.31 11.53 9.98 13.56 14.54

LT Adml n 11.76 MCpAdml n 98.51 MorgAdm 61.80 MuHYAdml n 11.22 NJLTAd n 12.35 NYLTAd m 11.78 PrmCap r 70.95 PacifAdml 62.14 PALTAdm n 11.71 REITAdml r 94.55 STsryAdml 10.80 STBdAdml n 10.67 ShtTrmAdm 15.93 STFedAdm 10.89 STIGrAdm 10.84 SmlCapAdml n 37.37 SmCapGrth 30.23 SmCapVal 30.02 TxMCap r 70.61 TxMGrInc r 63.28 TtlBdAdml n 11.21 TotStkAdm n 35.12 ValueAdml n 22.39 WellslAdm n 59.21 WelltnAdm n 58.38 WindsorAdm n 48.29 WdsrIIAdm 50.97 TaxMngdIntl rn 10.49 TaxMgdSC r 30.28

24.40 -.06 +11.5 +38.3

AggGrwth r Growth r Stock r BdMtgInstl DivIntlInst HighYldA p HiYld In Intl I Inst LgCGr2In LgLGI In LgCV1 In LgGrIn LgCpIndxI LgCValIn LT2010In LfTm2020In LT2030In LT2040In LfTm2050I MidCpBldA MidCGIII In MidCV1 In PreSecs In x SGI In SmCV2 In SAMBalA SAMGrA p

+9.3

Third Avenue Fds:

GlHardA

Principal Inv:

NS +22.3 +54.2 +36.8 +47.2 +44.5 +44.4 +31.6 +7.9 +14.7 +47.3 +33.2 +40.5 +43.6 +44.6 +46.3

Templeton Class A:

Primecap Odyssey : 19.16 -.02 +21.6 +64.5 17.00 +.02 +15.8 +43.2 15.63 -.02 +12.4 +40.3

+5.6 +7.5 +16.4 +15.8 +17.1 +18.8 +13.8 +8.1 +0.3 -1.2 +16.2 +16.7 +17.2 +13.7 +14.0 +17.9

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt

42.94 -.31 -13.1 +22.9

BalAdml n 23.62 CAITAdm n 11.69 CALTAdm 11.93 CpOpAdl n 75.86 DevMktsAd 26.27 EM Adm nr 33.43 Energy n 111.67 EqIncAdml 50.16 EuropAdml 56.09 ExplAdml 72.74 ExntdAdm n 44.10 FTAllWxUS 26.23 500Adml n 130.15 GNMA Adm n 11.10 GroIncAdm 49.00 GrwthAdml n 36.65 HlthCare n 60.30 HiYldCp n 5.98 InflProAd n 29.15 ITBondAdml 12.18 ITsryAdml n 11.85 IntlGrAdml 56.30 ITAdml n 14.36 ITCoAdmrl 10.40 LtdTrmAdm 11.18 LTGrAdml 11.04 LTsryAdml 13.81

+.03 +.02 +.03 -.11 -.23 -.65 -1.07 -.15 -.14 +.16 +.11 -.28 -.36 +.03 -.08 -.06 -.01 +.01 +.21 +.10 +.08 -.81 +.03 +.06 ... +.15 +.26

+12.8 +8.4 +11.1 +13.0 NS -6.2 -0.6 +20.0 +1.9 +12.1 +13.3 NS +18.0 +4.0 +18.4 +18.9 +13.6 +14.2 +8.5 +8.2 +4.6 -1.0 +7.6 +8.9 +2.2 +19.2 +19.5

+38.1 +21.4 +24.6 +31.7 NS +20.9 +28.9 +53.0 +8.6 +52.7 +53.7 NS +46.6 +19.8 +47.9 +56.1 +43.3 +45.0 +32.3 +30.4 +21.5 +19.1 +19.7 +31.8 +9.0 +45.9 +45.7

M M

W

A

M

W

A m

W M

W W

A

W

mB

W

N


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

Hardware Continued from G1 Instead, any designer now has the ability to quickly experiment with new product designs using low-cost 3-D printers. These printers can churn out objects to make prototypes quickly — a fork, wall hooks, mugs, a luggage clasp — by printing thousands of layers of wafer-thin slices of plastics, ceramics or other materials. Products can be made quickly in contract assembly plants overseas, usually in China. All of this has given designers and engineers a fast-forward button advancing this technological flip-flop. “Something that once took three months to make now takes less than a month,” explained Andre Yousefi, cofounder of Lime Lab, a product development firm based in San Francisco that works with startups to create hardware products. “With 3-D printers, you can now create almost disposable prototypes,” he said. “You queue it up at night, pick it up in the morning and can throw it away by 11 a.m.” The rapidly falling cost of building computer-based gadgets has touched off a wave of innovation that is starting to eclipse the software-driven world that came to dominate the Valley in the dot-com boom of the late 1990s. “If we look hard over the last 10 or 15 years, people don’t realize how different the world is now compared to 1996,” said Sean O’Sullivan, a venture capitalist who splits his time between the United States, Ireland and China. “Products like the iPhone have driven down the cost of components. You can now easily make connected devices that transform lives in the way we have only been able to do with software before.”

Hand-over-fist ideas To prove his point, O’Sullivan recently took teams from nine small startup companies to Shenzhen, China, for 111 days in which each group

G5

A prototype of the Shaka wind meter for sailboard and kite surfers. Jarek Jiepera via New York Times News Service

Noah Berger / New York Times News Service

From left, Lime Lab co-founder Andre Yousefi, product development engineer Steve Janssens, and program manager Phil Stob, in San Francisco.

developed and began manufacturing new products. He calls his investment firm, based in San Francisco, Haxlr8r (pronounced hak-CEL-erator), and in June the first group of fast-to-market hardware products was unveiled. The companies included Shaka, which makes a simple device for measuring wind for sailboard and kite surfers, and Kindara, maker of an iPhone accessory to help women determine when they are ovulating. (The system automatically generates a text message to the husband at the appropriate time.) There is also Bilibot, a project to build an inexpensive opensource robot. The shift away from the Valley’s obsession with dotcom services and Web-based social networks is a return to the region’s roots. The Valley began as a center for electronics hardware design in the late 1930s, when Bill Hewlett and David Packard built an audio oscillator that Walt Disney used in the production of the movie “Fantasia.” At the start of the 1970s, the label Silicon Valley was coined because of the proliferation of semiconductor companies. In the mid1970s, a group of computer hardware hobbyists started the Homebrew Computer Club here, which gave rise to several dozen startups, including Apple Computer. Today, some of the most successful hardware startups

in Silicon Valley have been formed from the diaspora of former Apple employees who want to try their hand at companies that pair hardware and software — which is an integral part of Apple’s DNA. Tony Fadell, a former Apple executive who led the design teams on the iPod and iPhone, recently started a company called Nest, which makes a beautifully designed smart thermometer for the home. It is one of the hit home electronics products of the year. Hugo Fiennes, the Apple hardware manager for the first four iPhones, started a company called Electric Imp, which plans to connect everyday objects, like wall outlets and household appliances, to the Internet. And Andy Rubin, who now heads Google’s Android phone business, worked as an Apple engineer before leaving to help create a series of startups, the most recent of which was acquired by Google in 2005. The Android software, tightly integrated into smartphones, has come to rival that of Apple’s iPhone. Hosain Rahman, CEO of Jawbone, a hardware startup that makes slick Bluetooth speaker systems and headsets, said Apple’s influence on design set a standard for who could enter the hardware startup world. “The bar for great hardware experiences has been

set so high by our friends in Cupertino,” he said, referring to Apple’s home. “They’ve raised the overall goodness of hardware. “You can come up with a new concept or idea and you can really efficiently figure out if it’s a viable product,” Rahman said. “Now you can test a lot of ideas for a lot less capital and intensity.” But, he warned, “the scaling and supply chain, marketing and distribution is still quite hard.” Yet even distribution has been simplified by technology. Online marketplaces like Etsy, Amazon and Google’s Marketplace allow people to set up shop on any street corner of the Web and begin hawking their latest hardware ideas.

Getting funding Because of the excitement around hardware, startups in New York and Silicon Valley are now vying for venture capital investments. Electric Imp recently closed an $8 million financing round from big-name venture firms. LittleBits, a New York company, just signed a deal for $3.65 million in financing to start mass-producing its tiny tech toys. Yousefi’s company, Lime Lab, was acquired this year by PCH International, headquartered in Cork, Ireland. PCH is a manufacturer that works with startups and

technology companies in Silicon Valley to build hardware products that just a decade ago would have cost millions of dollars and years to realize. Liam Casey, founder and chief executive of PCH International, said the ease of making hardware prototypes had contributed to the rise of a new genre of financing with Kickstarter, a website that has raised impressive sums for a number of hardware startups. Entrepreneurs pitch their idea on the site and ask for donations — often promising the product, or at least a promotional T-shirt, for the cash. “The money has always been the barrier for hardware,” Casey said, “and by showing the amount of interest from consumers, startups can now create a space that makes VCs feel comfortable investing in their hardware project.” Ouya, an open-source game console for the television built using Google Android, just raised more than $8 million through Kickstarter. Pebble, the smartwatch that connects to iPhone and Android smartphones, raised more than $10 million after asking for just $100,000. The collapsing cost of hardware can be seen in its revival of a hobbyist ethos in the socalled Maker subculture. That ethos is thriving on the easy availability of low-cost computers and sensors. One of the best examples of

that movement is a full-blown $25 computer system the size of a credit card. Designed by a small team led by Eben Upton, a chip designer at Broadcom, the computer is known as Raspberry Pi, and the Valley’s hobbyists and startup fans have seized on it as a breakthrough in innovation. So far, 100,000 computers have been sold, and the Raspberry Pi Foundation is making 4,000 daily — enough to reach almost 1.5 million dreamers in a year. When Raspberry Pi is almost as cheap as a raspberry pie, the impact on future hardware development will be profound. “People are using this as a catalyst to get new designs to the market more quickly,” said Kevin Yapp, chief of marketing and strategy for Element 14, an international online community for engineers backing the project. Stewart Brand said that information like software “wants to be free,” said O’Sullivan, the venture capitalist. “Now hardware is almost as cheap as software.”

Saturdays, June 30 - Sept. 22 | 10am-2pm NorthWest Crossing Neighborhood Center

Break Continued from G1 The ban threw me into a tailspin. I lingered by the locker where I had stashed my phone, wondering what messages, photos and updates I might already be missing. After walking to the side of the pool and reluctantly stretching out on a towel by the water, my hands ached for my phone. I longed to upload details and pictures of my leisurely afternoon, and to skim through my various social networks to see how other friends were spending the weekend. Mostly, however, I wanted to make sure that there wasn’t some barbecue or summer music festival that we should be heading to instead. Eventually, the anxiety passed. I started to see my lack of a digital connection as a reprieve. Lounging in the sun and chatting with a friend without the intrusion of texts and alerts into our lives felt positively luxurious. That night, I even switched off my phone while mingling at a house party, content to be in one place for the evening and not distracted by any indecision about whether another party posted online looked better. My revelation — relearning the beauty of living in the mo-

ment, devoid of any digital link — may seem silly to people who are less attached to their devices. But for many people, smartphones and social networks have become lifelines — appendages that they are rarely without. As such, they can sway our moods, decisions and feelings. One side effect of living an always-on digital life is the tension, along with the thrill, that can arise from being able to peep into people’s worlds at any moment and comparing their lives with yours. This tension may be inevitable at times, but it’s not inescapable. It’s possible to move beyond the angst that social media can provoke — and to be glad that we’ve done so.

JOMO vs. FOMO Anil Dash, a blogger and partner at Activate, a media and technology consulting firm, called this phenomenon the “Joy of Missing Out,” or JOMO, in a recent blog post. “There can be, and should be, a blissful, serene enjoyment in knowing, and celebrating, that there are folks out there having the time of their life at something that you might have loved to, but are simply skipping,” he wrote. JOMO is the counterpoint to FOMO, or the “fear of miss-

ing out,” a term popularized last year by Caterina Fake, an entrepreneur and one of the founders of Flickr, the photosharing website. “Social media has made us even more aware of the things we are missing out on,” she wrote in a blog post. “You’re home alone, but watching your friends’ status updates tell of a great party happening somewhere.” It may be that many people are in a kind of adolescence with social media and technology, still adjusting to the role that their new devices play in their lives. One day, the relationship may be less fraught. The influence that technology can wield over our lives may lessen with time — as we grow accustomed to our devices and as the people who use them mature. In Dash’s case, the birth of his son, Malcolm, an adorable toddler who knows how to moonwalk, curbed his appetite for a hyperactive social life. Joshua Gross, a developer living in Brooklyn, says he thinks that as a modern society, we are “overcommunicated.” There is simply too much information flowing across our devices at any moment, he said in a blog post. “There’s no rhythm to the way we get information right now,” he said. “You never

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

33.55 25.40 7.99 25.34 71.40 5.22 49.07 52.29 97.87 7.95 19.80 16.88 10.62 24.83 8.43 22.28 3.89 13.42 21.55 16.53 30.82

12 16 9 35 13 ... 10 18 27 53 14 6 ... 11 9 22 9 ... 19 14 15

... -.05 +.08 +.16 +.58 +.20 -.09 +.63 -.72 +.13 +.08 +.10 +.06 +.56 +.03 +.08 -.03 +.13 -.06 +.11 +.50

-10.6 -1.4 +43.7 +27.0 -2.7 +19.2 +4.0 +12.3 +17.5 +32.1 -21.0 -34.5 +2.1 +2.4 +9.6 -8.0 -34.5 +66.3 +.4 +21.9 +18.7

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 .70 .75 1.56 .89f .68 ... .36f .78 .32 .88 ... .60

NY HSBC Bank US NY Merc Gold NY Merc Silver

Price (troy oz.) $1688.00 $1684.60 $31.370

www.nwxfarmersmarket.com

Market recap YTD Last Chg %Chg

21 97.36 -.39 +1.0 18 57.83 +.30 +16.3 21 49.17 -.10 +2.6 13 5.81 +.03 +28.0 12 39.91 +.53 +6.5 ... 1.30 -.03 -31.9 38 40.93 +.23 +12.0 18 161.08 -.18 -2.3 9 15.65 ... -25.6 12 27.62 +.34 -34.7 29 143.08 +1.08 +60.3 10 31.22 +.38 -15.0 28 49.61 -.10 +7.8 ... 5.56 +.09 +14.2 15 12.64 +.04 +2.0 12 33.41 +.12 +23.5 13 16.10 -.13 +15.1 11 34.03 +.16 +23.5 12 19.92 -.14 +27.7 38 24.91 +.04 +33.4

Precious metals Metal

know when you’re going to get a buzz. If we develop a rhythm to the way we get information, we’ll know what we’re getting and when.” Gross is among those working on solutions to the problem by creating services — including an application allowing users to save content from around the Web — that help stanch the flow of data that is streaming in at any moment. Heavy users of social media can also adopt coping mechanisms — similar to training oneself to eat healthily — said Wilhelm Hofmann, an assistant professor who studies behavioral science at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. “It’s a problem of self-control,” he said. For those of us who don’t have a cute tot to help distract us from the siren call of social media, as Dash does, Hofmann recommends setting up a kind of screen diet, building in a period each day to go screenless, either by going for a run and leaving your phone at home, or by stashing it in a drawer during dinner or while hanging out with friends. “Ask yourself: How important is this, really? How happy does it actually make you?” he said. “Harness that feeling of pride when you do resist and stick to it.”

NYSE

Most Active ($1 or more) Name

Vol (00)

S&P500ETF BkofAm SPDR Fncl Bar iPVix iShEMkts

1335108 868104 497975 458380 407995

Last Chg 141.16 7.99 15.16 11.51 39.28

+.67 +.08 +.11 -.41 +.37

Gainers ($2 or more) Name

Last

Chg %Chg

CS VS3xSlv 32.47 +4.02 +14.1 Esterline 59.80 +6.86 +13.0 DirDGldBll 12.90 +1.42 +12.4 ThomCrk g 2.82 +.31 +12.4 ZaleCp 5.52 +.49 +9.7

Losers ($2 or more)

Amex

$1655.00 $1653.50 $30.367

Nasdaq

Most Active ($1 or more)

Most Active ($1 or more)

Name

Name

NwGold g CheniereEn Vringo NovaGld g GoldStr g

Vol (00)

Last Chg

34418 11.06 +.53 32360 14.76 +.23 27340 3.15 -.02 25223 4.65 +.29 20922 1.41 +.12

Gainers ($2 or more) Name

Last

ImpacMtg GoldenMin Timmins g SilvrCrst g EurasnM g

6.75 +1.49 +28.3 5.35 +.55 +11.5 2.52 +.26 +11.5 2.80 +.28 +11.1 2.21 +.20 +10.0

Chg %Chg

Losers ($2 or more)

Facebook n SiriusXM Intel Cisco PwShs QQQ

Vol (00) 553939 424452 415270 375793 352888

Last Chg 18.06 2.53 24.83 19.08 68.16

-1.03 -.01 +.56 +.18 +.45

Gainers ($2 or more) Name

Last

Chg %Chg

EmmisCm 2.50 +.49 +24.4 SabaSftw lf 9.40 +1.42 +17.8 ZionO&G 2.86 +.39 +15.8 SeanrgyM h 2.00 +.25 +14.3 Splunk n 34.40 +3.90 +12.8

Losers ($2 or more)

Name

Last

Chg %Chg

Name

Last

Chg %Chg

Name

Last

CSVS3xInSlv DirDGldBr DigDMda n PrUSSilv rs iP SESPX

26.70 34.87 2.07 48.85 14.85

-4.04 -13.1 -5.03 -12.6 -.24 -10.4 -4.90 -9.1 -1.12 -7.0

Arrhythm IncOpR Barnwell DocuSec Compx

2.20 2.24 3.07 3.66 12.35

-.27 -10.9 -.25 -10.0 -.23 -7.0 -.27 -6.9 -.85 -6.4

Gordmans JTH Hldg n Zumiez RoyalBcPA MgmtNetw

17.58 -3.09 -14.9 9.05 -1.45 -13.8 29.19 -3.03 -9.4 2.14 -.19 -8.2 2.15 -.19 -8.1

Diary Pvs Day

Indexes

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

Diary 2,067 885 148 3,100 143 17

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

Chg %Chg

Diary 289 130 34 453 6 3

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

1,538 917 134 2,589 60 21

52-Week High Low 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

Name 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

13,090.84 5,007.49 468.21 8,014.93 2,416.52 3,066.96 1,406.58 14,680.90 812.09

+90.13 +14.46 -.24 +48.69 +11.19 +18.25 +7.10 +73.92 +3.45

+.69 +.29 -.05 +.61 +.47 +.60 +.51 +.51 +.43

+7.15 -.24 +.76 +7.19 +6.07 +17.73 +11.85 +11.30 +9.61

+16.46 +12.65 +9.72 +10.54 +6.17 +23.65 +19.81 +18.87 +18.84

World markets

Currencies

Here is how key international stock markets performed yesterday. Market Close % Change

Key currency exchange rates Friday compared with late Thursday 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

329.28 2,345.69 3,413.07 5,711.48 6,970.79 19,482.57 39,420.31 15,100.48 3,666.68 8,839.91 1,905.12 3,025.46 4,339.02 5,903.73

+.53 +.78 +1.00 -.14 +1.09 -.36 -1.17 +2.16 +1.02 -1.60 -.07 +.45 -.03 +.19

s s s t s t t s s t t s t s

1.0323 1.5881 1.0147 .002080 .1575 1.2577 .1289 .012766 .075810 .0310 .000883 .1511 1.0473 .0334

1.0301 1.5787 1.0076 .002081 .1574 1.2507 .1289 .012718 .074878 .0309 .000883 .1496 1.0414 .0334


G6

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

S D

Affordable, but not cheap • The Chevrolet Spark is an example of the old adage, ‘Good things come in small packages’

By Brad Bergholdt McClatchy-Tribune News Service

How useful are the unQ : der-$100 scanners you see at the auto supply store?

By Warren Brown Special to The Washington Post

NEW YORK — It was a tough day in the city. The George Washington Bridge was a congestive horror show thanks to a noontime construction project and a motorcycle accident. The city’s streets were equally bollixed in response to a presidential motorcade winding through town. I was grateful for the car I was driving, R E V IE W the 2013 Chevrolet Spark 2LT mini-hatchback, which has finally been brought to the United States by General Motors. The front-wheel-drive Spark has been a mainstay of urban motorists worldwide for five years now. Previously sold as the Matiz, it is a product of GM-Daewoo in South Korea. At this writing, some 600,000 Spark/Matiz models have been sold globally — the Philippines, Europe, South America. The car is being brought to the United States in the wake of the demise of another GM-Daewoo automobile, the largely unheralded Chevrolet Aveo. But here’s betting that the Spark will be a success. Here’s why: “Downsizing” is no longer a dirty word in America. For many of us, it is a matter of necessity, especially among young people still struggling to find a safe place in a wobbly national economy. The Spark is affordable, starting at $12,245 for the base model and rising to $13,745 for the Spark 1LT with Bluetooth connectivity

They make it sound like you can fix anything with them. — Gene Hammond The tools Gene is referring to are OBD-II scan tools and code readers. A scan tool connects to the vehicle’s data link connector and allows a look at information received and provided by the engine control computer. A code reader displays only alphanumeric diagnostic trouble codes and possibly a code description for engine or emission problems. Cars built since 1996 (1997 for light trucks) are required to communicate in a standardized format for emission-related information, but not other vehicle systems. The OBD-II data list is very helpful but brief compared to the much more comprehensive list of engine and vehicle parameters available on a professional-grade scan tool. An inexpensive OBD-II scanner is a great tool for determining the cause of an illuminated check engine light but has limitations when it comes to fixing the problem. After obtaining a trouble code, one typically goes to the manufacturer’s flow chart for that code, using the scan tool and in many cases a digital multimeter or other diagnostic tools to track down the specific fault. If the scan tool is capable of displaying a wide range of sensor readings, or can command component functions, it can reduce the time spent with the other tools. I think an OBD-II scanner is an excellent addition to a do-it-yourselfer toolbox. The ability to quickly, inexpensively determine the general

A:

GM via The Washington Post

The 2013 Chevrolet Spark, which has been a mainstay of urban motorists worldwide for five years, has finally been brought to the United States.

2013 Chevrolet Spark Base price: $12,245 to $15,045 As tested: $15,045 Type: Front-engine, frontwheel-drive mini-car with four side doors and a rear hatch Engine: 16-valve, 1.2-liter in-line four-cylinder engine with variable valve timing (85 horsepower, 82 footpounds of torque) linked to a standard five-speed manual transmission. A five-speed automatic is optional. Mileage: 22 mpg city, 38 mpg highway

or $15,045 for the top-of-theline Spark 2LT. Affordable, in this case, does not mean cheaply assembled, poorly designed or unsafe. The Spark — 14 inches shorter than the subcompact Chevrolet Sonic and nearly four inches shorter than the Fiat 500 — is a well-constructed piece, tiny on the outside but big enough to accommodate four adults who can enter the car through its

four side doors. There are 10 air bags, including front-passenger knee bolsters, to enhance the chances of escaping a crash with minor injuries. And in the event that an accident occurs, the Spark comes with a standard sixmonth subscription to GM’s OnStar emergency communications system to help get rescue personnel to you quickly. You’ll have to buy, or have access to, an iPhone with this car. At least, after driving it for a while, you’ll probably want an iPhone. The Spark’s infotainment and operational systems, including door locks, music and navigation, are all designed to be integrated with and operated through your iPhone. Here’s hoping that GM will see the common sense of that design, especially for navigation, and start putting it in all the company’s cars and trucks. There is nothing more disconcerting than climbing behind the wheel of an expensive automobile that has a fixed onboard navigation system that is already obsolete. That won’t happen with iPhone navigation systems, which are constantly being updated.

Indian automaker finds success with British brands By Vikas Bajaj New York Times News Service

MUMBAI, India — This summer, Jaguar Land Rover cranked up production to 24 hours at its plant near Liverpool, England, adding 1,000 jobs to help meet demand for its hot-selling and acclaimed Range Rover Evoque. Now, the company is readying the release of its much-anticipated Jaguar F-Type roadster. Four years after being bought by an Indian company, the well-known but somewhat faded British brands are regaining some of their lost luster, racking up big sales from Shanghai to London. The success has stunned analysts and investors, many of whom had said that Tata Motors, the Indian auto company, was making an expensive mistake when it acquired Jaguar Land Rover from Ford Motor for $2.3 billion in June 2008. At the time, Ford was raising money to ensure its own survival, and it sold the brands for several billion dollars less than it had paid to acquire them years earlier. Analysts say Tata has done what few companies from emerging markets have been able to do — turn around and successfully run a troubled Western company. Tata Motors appears to have succeeded in large part because it did not seek to run Jaguar Land Rover from Tata headquarters here. Instead, it has left day-to-day management in the hands of executives in England. It also benefited from projects started under Ford ownership, including the Evoque, which has won fans, including the exacting hosts of the BBC show “Top Gear” and

Inexpensive scanner is a good addition to your DIY toolbox

Prashanth Vishwanathan / New York Times News Service

A prospective customer looks at a Range Rover Evoque at the AMP Motors showroom in Gurgaon, India, late last month.

the Chinese nouveau riche. In its last fiscal year, which ended in March, Jaguar Land Rover posted a 27 percent jump in retail sales, to 306,000 vehicles, and became the primary driver of growth and profit for Tata Motors. The Indian car and truck business of Tata has stagnated in the same time because of a slowing domestic economy and a weak product lineup that includes about a dozen passenger cars. Analysts said that barring a global economic recession, they expected Jaguar Land Rover to continue to do well because it was about to release several new models, including a redesigned version of its flagship Range Rover. “I think people were a bit skeptical and snobbish and maybe had some old colonial hangover,” Tim Urquhart, a senior analyst at IHS Automotive in London, said about the initial doubts about the acquisition. But he added, “If you look at Land Rover and Jaguar now, they probably have the strongest product line in their

recent history if not ever.” Tata’s takeover of Jaguar Land Rover did not always look promising. The financial crisis hit soon after the deal closed, and demand for luxury cars tumbled in Europe and North America — its two biggest markets. Struggling with a $3 billion debt it took on to pay for the deal, Tata Motors was forced to put more money into the company after it failed to secure financial aid from the British government. Analysts and competitors credit the turnaround to Tata’s financial reserves, which helped it weather tough times, and its wisdom in granting autonomy to managers in England. “The acquisition has worked because the investment has been carefully targeted and effective,” Phil Popham, global operations director for Jaguar Land Rover, said in a written response to questions. “Our growth is supported by a disciplined financial plan involving tight cost controls and targeted investments.”

I have left driving impressions for last this week for the simple reason that you don’t buy a Spark to drive fast. You get it to maneuver through crowded city streetss — and stay away from gasoline pumps. Let’s be real. The Spark, as presented here in 2LT format, has a 1.2-liter in-line four-cylinder engine that produces 85 horsepower and 82 footpounds of torque. It is not the least bit speedy. It is agile. The Spark is a narrow, lightweight car (2,269 pounds). It can scoot through the most congested traffic, quickly occupying spaces ignored by or unusable for larger vehicles. It is fast enough to get out of its own way and avoid other calamities in an urban setting. On a highway, such as the Palisades Parkway heading north toward my oldest daughter’s home in Cornwall, N.Y., the Spark is a right-lane car. Keep it out of the left lane, which is meant for faster and passing vehicles. Before revving it up to highway speeds, select some nice music played at reasonably high volume. You’ll need it. The little car is a virtual noise box at 70 mph.

cause of a “check engine” light can provide peace of mind and allow budgeting of time and money for needed repairs. A cylinder misfire code needs to be fixed right away, before it torches the catalytic converter, while an EVAP leakage code could be tolerated until the end of the month, or sometimes fixed with a firm twist of the gas cap. Other useful features of an inexpensive scan tool are code-erasing and checking to see if emissions monitors are ready for a smog test. One should resist the temptation to throw parts at the car based only on the existence of a certain trouble code. The actual cause may lie elsewhere in that circuit.

Readers to the rescue Alan and Dale provided some great feedback on a recent column about the tire pressure monitoring system, or TPMS. Both said to not forget the spare tire as a possible cause of a troublesome TPMS warning light. I didn’t mention this because Bob’s Toyota employed an indirect system — no tire sensors — but it’s certainly helpful information for vehicle owners that do have sensors in all five wheels. Richard, an ASE-certified master technician, offered help with the Cadillac air conditioning problem, saying that a fan/cooling problem could be the cause of poor low-speed air conditioning performance. This is absolutely true. At low speed, there isn’t enough air passing through the evaporator to transfer heat from the system without help from the fan or fans. — Bergholdt teaches automotive technology. Email questions to under-the-hood@earthlink.net.

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet 1000’s Of Ads Every Day


S U N D AY, A SEPTEMBER 2, 2012

President and Mrs. Obama photographed in the White House Map Room on August 10

OBAMAS ON THE EVE OF THE DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION, THE FIRST COUPLE REFLECT ON THEIR FIRST TERM, THEIR FAMILY, AND THEIR HOPES FOR THE FUTURE ©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


PARADE

IF MY BROTHER AND I WANTED MONEY IN OUR POCKETS, WE HAD TO GET JOBS—MY FIRST WAS AT 15, AT BURGER KING.”

A: The decision making WALTER SCOTT ASKS …

The Property Brothers Real estate agent Drew Scott (right) and his contractor twin brother, Jonathan, 34, gained fame with their HGTV series Property Brothers. Their new show on the same network, Buying and Selling, airs Wednesdays at 9 p.m. ET. How close were the two of you growing up?

Jonathan: Very! He sat on my head in the womb. Have you always wanted to work together? Drew: We actually started our first business together at the age of 7. We made decorative hangers and ended up selling thousands. You help others find their dream homes. What do you like best about your own houses?

Drew: The walk-in closet. I have a lot of clothes, so Jonathan makes fun of me. Jonathan: My outdoor living space, because I have two dogs. My yard’s nicer than Drew’s! Send questions to Walter Scott at personality@ parade.com or to P.O. Box 5001, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10163-5001.

The twins give homebuying tips at Parade.com /property

P Steve Harvey

Q: Is Steve Harvey retiring from stand-up comedy? —W. Pey, Calif.

A: Yes; the 55-year-old

funnyman’s last performance was Aug. 2 in Las Vegas. “I’m going to miss it,” he says, “but I’ve gotta make room for other things.” On Sept. 4, Harvey, who also hosts Family Feud, will premiere his daytime talk show, Steve Harvey (check local listings). “It’s going to have a sense of humor and a male point of view, but from a guy ys chamm who’s always men’s pioned women’s causes,” he says. Q: How were e the contestants for Dancing With h the Stars: All-Stars ars r chosen? tlake, Calif. —Ladan, Westlake, P Kirstie stie Alley

came down to pure talent and fan appeal. “This is our version of The Avengers—they were the superheroes of their seasons,” says executive producer Conrad Green. The show returns Sept. 24 on ABC and will feature Kirstie Alley, Drew Lachey, Apolo Ohno, and Emmitt Smith, among others. Who do you think will take home the mirror ball trophy this season? Vote at Parade.com/allstars. Q: I love the video for Gotye’s “Somebody That I Used to Know.” What’s the significance of the painting that the singers blend into? —B. C., Lake Forest, Ill.

A: It’s b based on a work

created in the 1980s by G Gotye’s artist father, Frank de Backer, re and represents a coup upll relationcouple’s sh hip. Once O ship. the w ma (singer wo woman Kiimb br ends Kimbra)

—Queen Latifah on her work ethic. What was your first job? Tell us at Facebook.com/parademag.

the romance, the paint disappears from her body. Gotye is up for two MTV Video Music Awards (Sept. 6, 8 p.m. ET); check out the many viral versions of this video at Parade.com/gotye. P Gotye and Kimbra

PHOTOS, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: LEIGH VOGEL/GETTY IMAGES; ADAM TAYLOR/ABC VIA GETTY IMAGES; COURTESY OF HGTV. ILLUSTRATION: PABLO LOBATO

Walter Scott’s

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


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©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


COMA A remake that makes sense! Robin Cook’s best seller about a hospital with a fishy rate of problem surgeries was adapted into a fine film in 1978, but 30-plus years of medical advances render this miniseries (A&E, Sept. 3 and 4, 9 p.m. ET) a cut above. Lauren Ambrose and Ellen Burstyn (left, as the coma patients’ creepy caretaker) costar.

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SHOW SH HOW OF SUP SUPPORT SUPPORT Forr the 47th straight sttraight aight year, year Labor Day Da weekend wee ekend playss host to the Muscular Dystrophy Dys strophy Ass Association’s sociation’s fund-raiser. Airing Airi ing g from 8 to t 11 ET tonight, MDA Show of Strength Streng is a new, music-driven special featuring everyone from Tim McGraw to Will.I.Am— not to mention the inspiring stories of kids (and adults) who need your help. < Will.I.Am with MDA Los Angeles Goodwill Ambassador Lucas Cook, age 6

PEYTON’S (NEW) PLACE The elder Manning brother’s relocation to Denver (and comeback after neck surgery) is among the intriguing story lines as the NFL season kicks n off o this week. Can the legendary QB reclaim past glory? Will the man he replaced, über-underdog Tim Tebow, thrive with the New York Jets? Can the New Orleans Saints survive a scandal that cost them their coach? Stay tuned.

PHOTOS, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: CLASSIC MEDIA; BOB MAHONEY; AIBHE O’DONNELL/GETTY IMAGES; DANIEL HURST/GETTY IMAGES; TESY OF MDA SHOW OF STRENGTH; ISTOCKPHOTO; STEVE WISBAUER/GETTY IMAGES EVGENIY IVANOU/GETTY IMAGES; COURTESY

On Sept. 21, the striped wanderer Waldo celebrates 25 years of straining eyes. Your kids can start searching anew with Where’s Waldo?: The 25th Anniversary Edition, with more puzzles and a Where’s Waldo? poster no one has to squint to see. (Bonus: See if they can find Waldo hiding out here!)

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4 • September 2, 2012

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©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


CON VER A W I T S AT H ION

The

OBAMAS With the Democratic convention this week, President and Mrs. Obama take questions from readers and address the challenges of his first term in office B Y LY N N S H E R R A N D M A G G I E M U R P H Y C OV E R A ND O P E NI NG P H O T O GR A P HS BY B E N BA K E R

Y

ou hear him before you see him. after a hearty hello to the men

and women working on the ground floor of the White House, President Barack Obama bounds into the Map Room with a warm smile and an open hand. Soon the president’s eyes fall on a shimmering but empty silver tea set that has been placed on the coffee table by photographer Ben Baker. “Tea? What about chips and salsa?” With the tea service sent to the sidelines, the president settles down next to his wife, Michelle, whose gift for easy elegance is reinforced by her Tracey Ross top and J. Crew skirt. On this day before Gov. Mitt Romney would announce Rep. Paul Ryan as his running mate, the first couple alternately kid and cuddle for pictures. But befitting a room where decisions about World War II were once made, they quickly strike a more serious pose during an interview conducted by PARADE editor in chief Maggie Murphy and contributor Lynn Sherr. As they address questions from our readers about the economy, the political stalemate in D.C., and their family life, the couple hold hands, nod in support of each other’s answers, and make a case for their first four years in office and what they hope to accomplish next.

6 • September 2, 2012

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


EYE TO EYE

PHOTO CREDITS WILL GO HERE AS SHOWN

“He’s working so hard and doing it at great personal sacrifice, but he’s still managing to be the father and husband he was before,” says Michelle Obama about the president.

Month 00, 2012 • 00

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PRESIDENT OBAMA: We’ve gone through the worst

financial crisis since the Great Depression, and even though the steps we took averted another depression, it’s important for us to stay focused on how we grow the economy over the long term. We have a great opportunity to rebuild our roads, our schools, and that could boost the economy generally. What I want to do is make sure we don’t raise taxes on people making $250,000 a year or less [but] reduce our deficit by asking people like us, Michelle and me— who can afford it—to [do] a little bit more. Health care is one of my proudest achievements, and hopefully, for families who are looking for more work, once we get health care fully implemented, they won’t have to fear that they’re going to lose their home if they get sick.

views that have so dominated Washington. So how are you going to talk to Republicans differently if you are reelected? PO: Republican voters, if you ask them about my particular policy positions, often agree with me. So there’s a difference between Republicans in Washington and Republican and Republican-leaning voters around the country. I think that after this election, we’ll be in a position to once again reach out to Republicans and say that the American people have rendered a judgment, and the positions we’re taking are well within what used to be considered bipartisan centrist approaches.

Some Democrats and crossover Republicans say they’re disappointed in your first term and won’t vote for you again. How do you get them back?

You said recently that the mistake of your first few years was thinking the job was just about getting the policy right—that, in fact, you have to tell a story. At the end of the Democratic convention, if you can do it in one sentence, what’s the story people should understand? PO: As hard as the last decade’s been for a lot of middle-class families, we’ve got all the tools we need to succeed. We’ve got the best workers in the world, the best entrepreneurs in the world, the best colleges and universities in the world, we’ve got incredible diversity, and we’re a young nation. What’s preventing us from taking advantage of it is our politics. What we need right now is an end to the uncompromising

With Let’s Move!, our goal is to end the problem of childhood obesity in a generation. And while we’ve seen some very profound cultural shifts, we still have communities that don’t have access to affordable and healthy foods; we still need to find a way to impact the nature of food in grocery stores, in terms of sugar, fat, and salt; we need to keep educating families about how to structure a life that is healthy in a society where TV is rampant and communities don’t have enough resources in terms of sports and activities. When it comes to military families, we’ve only begun to scratch the surface. Many of these young people will have only known a life in the armed forces, so they’re going to need communities to be ready to embrace them and the challenges they’re going to enter society with, whether it’s posttraumatic stress disorder, or depression, or how to transition to another career.

MICHELLE OBAMA:

Are there any new issues you’re going to take up?

PO: Every step we take is designed to strengthen

the middle class. For folks who’ve been laid off, one of our big focuses is giving them the opportunity to retrain for jobs that exist right now, which is why we’ve really pushed to make financing for college more accessible for young people but also mid-career folks. All these pieces are helping to strengthen the economy.

Mrs. Obama, I want to turn to you and your accomplishments as first lady—supporting military families and your health initiatives aimed at America’s children. Many PARADE readers asked, what do you hope to accomplish in your second term?

Women’s health issues. How do we strengthen families and make them healthier— an issue not just in America but around the world.

MO: FA M I LY VA LU E S

With daughters Sasha, 11 (front), and Malia, 14, in Chicago on June 15, 2012.

Are you saying there’ll be a difference in how you approach Republicans, or their attitude will be different if you get reelected? PO: My

approach has been pretty consistent from the start; I’ve often proposed ways to solve our problems that used to be embraced by Republicans. There’s no better example than the health care bill, which was designed originally by the now Republican standardbearer and is working pretty well in Massachusetts. The Recovery Act that helped us avoid a depression, a third of it was tax cuts. My hope is that the Republican Party, post election, steps back and says, “Now that we’re not so worried about beating the president, maybe we should spend a little time focusing on solving the problems.”

This year, there is once again a conversation about the “superwoman.” Can women have it all? Is that even the right question? MO: I

think that question limits us as women. I work with a lot of young women—we have interns coming in and out, and this is always one of the first questions they ask—and the thing I try to remind them is that we have fought so hard for choice and options with our lives, and we’re just getting to that point where we’re willing to embrace all the different facets of womanhood. I know that when I came out of college, what I wanted and what I thought I wanted were very different things. Then I get married and have a career and, lo and behold, now I’ve got kids. And how you feel about motherhood when your children are small and when they’re teenagers, that’s going to change.

PHOTO: PAUL BEATY/AP IMAGES

Mr. President, let’s begin with a question from PARADE reader Joanne D. of Riverside, N.J. She writes: “My husband and I are both laid off without insurance. We support you 100 percent. What can you say to keep us going? I’m getting a little desperate.” PARADE:

8 • September 2, 2012

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


I want to keep young women from thinking that there is one right answer. That answer is going to change every year, every five years. The two young women in your life went to camp this summer. How did you find the empty nest? MO: What

he said this morning is that life is less sparkly and twinkly with them not around. PO: It’s true. Our girls are quite expressive, and there’s nothing I enjoy more than just sitting around the dinner table with them and listening to all their ideas. I’ve got this incredible luxury, ’cause I live above the store. So every night at 6:30, I can come up and have dinner with them and get their perspective on what’s happening at school and in their social lives but also on— MO: On the world. How often do you go back to work afterwards? PO: Well, I always work afterwards. The ques-

tion is, do I use my upstairs office or do I have to come back down to work? Let’s get back to the campaign for just a minute. We spoke with Governor Romney and he talked about the way in which you, Mr. President, are making our country “far more

like Europe, with a larger, more dominant, more intrusive government. …” How do you react to being characterized as somebody with foreign ideas? PO: When you look at the policies I’ve promoted, they used to be considered bipartisan, mainstream ideas. What’s changed is not me. What’s changed is where the Republican Party’s gone. In fact, a lot of the things I’ve done are things that Mr. Romney, when he was governor of Massachusetts, seemed to promote. … What’s absolutely true is that we’ve had to take some emergency steps, like saving the auto industry, that weren’t free, that weren’t popular, but were the right thing to do.

If you were female, we would ask, “How has being female affected your ability to govern?” So, how has being black affected your ability to govern? PO: I’m sure it makes me more determined in assuring that everybody’s getting a fair shot—in the same way that being a father of two daughters makes me want to make sure that every woman is getting equal pay

for equal work, ’cause I don’t want my daughters treated differently than somebody else’s sons. By virtue of being African-American, I’m attuned to how throughout this country’s history there have been times when folks have been locked out of opportunity, and because of the hard work of people of all races, slowly those doors opened to more and more people. Equal opportunity doesn’t just happen on its own; it happens because we’re vigilant about it. But part of this is not just because we’re African-American—it’s also because Michelle and I were born into pretty modest means. And so I think about my single mom and what it was like to go to school and work at the same time. And I think about Michelle’s dad, who had a disability and was working every day and didn’t have a lot of money to spare. But somehow our parents or grandparents were able to give us these opportunities partly because they lived in a society that said that was important. And as president, I want to affirm that that’s important and reject the idea that if we just reward those at the top,

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Legal Notice

If You Bought a TV, Monitor or Notebook Computer That Contained an LCD Flat Panel Screen File a Claim Now to Get Money from Settlements Totaling Almost $1.1 Billion. This is the second notice in this case. Settlements have now been reached with AU Optronics, LG Display and Toshiba (“New Settlements”). The Court previously approved Settlements with seven other Defendants. Members of the Statewide Damages Classes can file a claim now to get a payment from all Settlements (see below). What are the lawsuits about? The lawsuits claim that the Defendants conspired to fix, raise, maintain or stabilize prices of thin film transistor liquid crystal display (“TFTLCD” or “LCD”) Flat Panels, resulting in overcharges to consumers who bought TVs, monitors or notebook computers containing Flat Panels. The Defendants deny Plaintiffs’ allegations or that consumers paid any overcharge. The Court has not decided who is right. Who is included in the lawsuits? This case has recovered money for consumers in 24 states and the District of Columbia and governmental entities in eight states, and nationwide injunctive relief to stop the Defendants’ alleged behavior. Statewide Damages Classes: Generally, include any person or business that indirectly purchased a TFT-LCD Flat Panel, which had been incorporated in a TV, monitor or notebook computer, from any of the Defendants or Quanta Display Inc., from January 1, 1999 to December 31, 2006, for their own use and not for resale, while residing in the 24 states or the District of Columbia. “Indirectly” means that you purchased the product containing the LCD Flat Panel from someone other than the manufacturer of the LCD Flat Panel. The purchase must have been made in the same state where the person or business resided. Businesses in Rhode Island and Missouri and indirect purchasers who also had direct purchases (previously not included) may now participate in all 10 Settlements. The 24 states are: AZ, AR, CA, FL, HI, IA, KS, ME, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, NV, NM, NY, NC, ND, RI, SD, TN, VT, WV and WI. See specific class definitions at www.LCDclass.com. Nationwide Class: Includes any person or business that indirectly purchased in the United States, a TFT-LCD Flat Panel, which had been incorporated in a TV, monitor or notebook computer, from any of the Defendants or Quanta Display Inc., between January 1, 1999 and February 13, 2012, for their own use and not for resale, and resided in the United States on February 13, 2012. Attorneys General Actions: The Attorneys General of AR, CA, FL, MI, MO, NY, WV and WI are participating in these Settlements to resolve related claims arising from the same allegations as asserted in the class actions: (1) on behalf of state residents under state law and the doctrine of parens patriae, which allows a state to bring a lawsuit on behalf of its citizens, and/or for governmental entities; and (2) for civil penalties.

For More Information:

What do the Settlements provide? Three New Settlements totaling $543,500,000 are being presented to the Court for approval. In addition, AU Optronics and LG Display are making payments to resolve claims for civil penalties brought by the Attorneys General. To the extent AU Optronics, LG Display and Toshiba continue to manufacture LCD Flat Panels, they have agreed not to engage in conduct that is at issue in these lawsuits and/or will establish (or maintain) a program to educate their employees about complying with the law. The combined Settlement Fund (totaling $1,082,055,647) will be used to pay individual and business consumers in the 24 states and DC. A portion of the Settlement Fund will be distributed to governmental entities in the eight states with Attorneys General Actions. Payments will be based on the number of valid claims filed as well as on the number/type of LCD Flat Panel products you purchased. It is expected that a minimum payment of $25 will be made to all Class Members who submit a valid claim. It is possible that any money remaining after claims are paid will be distributed to charities, governmental entities or other beneficiaries approved by the Court. More details are provided in the Settlement Agreements and other documents available at www.LCDclass.com, or by calling the toll-free number below. The cost to administer the Settlements, attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses, and awards to the Class Representatives will come out of the Settlement Fund. Plaintiffs’ counsel will request attorneys’ fees not to exceed onethird of the Settlement Fund, plus reimbursement of costs and expenses. How can I get a payment? You must submit a Claim Form to get a payment. You can submit a claim online or by mail. The deadline to submit a claim is December 6, 2012. Claim Forms are available at the website or by calling 1-855-225-1886. What are my rights? The Court will hold a hearing on November 29, 2012 to consider whether to approve the New Settlements. If you stay in the Classes, you may object to the New Settlements, plan of distribution, attorneys’ fees and costs, and awards to Class Representatives by October 9, 2012. You or your own lawyer may appear and speak at the hearing at your own expense. With the exception noted below, the first notice gave you an opportunity to exclude yourself. If you did not exclude yourself, you have given up your right to sue the Defendants on your own for the claims in this case. Only individuals and businesses that indirectly purchased an LCD Flat Panel: (1) while residing in Arkansas; (2) while residing in Missouri or Rhode Island that was not primarily for household or personal use; or (3) that had a direct purchase in addition to an indirect purchase, have until October 9, 2012 to exclude themselves from the litigation involving AU Optronics, LG Display and Toshiba. If you reside outside of the 24 states and the District of Columbia you keep any right you may have to sue the Defendants for monetary relief.

1-855-225-1886

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The Obamas | from page 9 Read whether Mrs. Obama would run for office and find previous stories about the first family at Parade.com/obama

that somehow that’s going to work for everybody—’cause that hasn’t been how America got built. One last reader question. Robyne H. of Maryland writes, “From all appearances you have a wonderful marriage. Can you share one occasion when you were absolutely furious, Mrs. Obama, with your husband? And Mr. President, how did you make it up to her?”

Make The World A Better Place For A Child. Right Here, Right Now.

PO: The problem is that she’s got so many examples, that may take …

Oh, pick one! MO: This

last three and a half years, it’s been hard to be really furious at him, because he’s working so hard and doing it at great personal sacrifice, but he’s still managing to be the father and husband he was before. So I have a harder time taking [issue with] his little foibles, whether it’s leaving his shoes out or not.

Are they still there? MO: You know, we have people [here] who pick them up. [Otherwise] they’d still be there. PO: My pants would still be hanging on the top of the door. MO: But little things, like, I’m waiting for him today for 30 minutes, ’cause I’m always waiting for him. He comes down and he’s, “All right, let’s go!” And it’s like, “Oh, so now you’re in a rush?” PO: She’s more punctual than I am. I’m going to help her out— MO: What, you remember something I was really furious about? PO: Well, I think the hardest time in our marriage was when our kids were really young. And that’s probably not unusual when you’ve got a working— MO: —two working— PO: —two working parents. Because no matter how enlightened men like to think they are when it comes to child rearing and balancing work, I think it falls a little harder on women. MO: And the emotions are different. My emotions about my role as a mother are a lot more—not to say that he doesn’t want to be the best father, but he’s much more laid back about it and I’m much harder on myself, like many mothers. PO: My general view was, if the girls went out and their hair didn’t look great, I was [chuckles], “Well, we’re busy right now.” MO: Or they didn’t do anything all summer … PO: Send them outside, let them run around. MO: Or did they get tutoring? And he’s like, “They’re smart enough. They’re fine.” That’s him. That’s absolutely him. PO: As the girls get older and more independent, that relieved some of your stress. MO: And then you see, actually, they turned out okay. PO: They turned out okay. They’re a little more resilient. MO: And they feel loved, and they love us.

September 2, 2012 • 11

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1

Bring 2 quarts water to a boil. Add 6 tea bags and turn off heat; let steep 20 minutes. Remove bags. Add 1 (12-oz) can thawed frozen lemonade concentrate, sugar to taste, and 10 ice cubes. Chill. Garnish with lemon wedges or mint sprigs.

ut the labor *Without You can hunt down most of the ingredients redients for these easy apps at your local farmers’ market. And if your beach h day’s running behind, trim im prep time with premade made fillings.

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ado Bar Avocado

adish Dippers Radish Cutt 12 large trimmed dishes into ¼-inch-thick radishes unds. Sprinkle with rounds. tand for 10 minutes. sea salt and let sstand er towel and top with Blot with a paper our favorite dip. Arrange a teaspoon of your on a platter and sprinkle with parsley.

Stuffed Cukes

Salad Boats Arrange large leaves of Belgian endive on a platter and fill each with egg salad. Sprinkle with capers and chopped fresh dill.

3

In The Kitchen SCAN THIS CODE TO WATCH DASH CHEF JON ASHTON SHOW YOU AN EASY WAY TO PEEL A TOMATO.

Raspberry Lemonade

Puree 2 cups fresh raspberries in a food processor. Press through a sieve; discard seeds. Prepare 2 (12-oz) cans frozen lemonade concentrate. Stir puree into lemonade. Chill. Garnish with fresh raspberries.

PHOTOS: ISTOCKPHOTO

Core ripe tomatoes, cut away e of the interior, and some nutes, cut side down, to leave for 15 minutes, drain. Arrange on a platter, cut side up, wls of fillings like chicken, and set out bowls rimp salads, plus egg, rice, or shrimp garnishes like croutons and bacon bits.

Slice unpeeled seedless cucumbers into 1-inch-wide chunks. Use a melon baller to hollow out, taking care not to cut all the way through. Salt lightly and set aside for 10 minutes. Blot dry with a paper towel, fill with white bean dip, and sprinkle with a little paprika.

Green Tea Limeade

Steep 4 green tea bags in 2 cups boiling water for 10 minutes. Remove bags; let tea cool slightly. Prepare 2 (12-oz) cans frozen limeade concentrate. Stir tea into limeade and chill. Garnish with lime wedges.

fed Tomatoes Stuffed

ve pits from halved Remove vocados. Arrange on a ripe avocados. platterr and drizzle with uice to keep from a little lemon juice turning brown. Serve with bowls of sour cream, sautéed black beans, opped tomatoes, corn salad, chopped or grain salad. Set out chopped fresh arnish. cilantro as a garnish.

Big-Batch Lemonade Iced Tea

12 • September 2, 2012

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FIRST AND TEN COMMANDMENTS A new book by Curtis Eichelberger examines how NFL players reconcile their deep faith with on-field violence

T

PHOTO: EZRA SHAW/GETTY IMAGES

im Tebow may grab the most headlines, but a growing number of football players (from Matt Hasselbeck to Aaron Rodgers) now openly profess their deep religious belief. In his new book, Men of Sunday: How Faith Guides the Players, Coaches & Wives of the NFL (Thomas Nelson, Inc.), Curtis Eichelberger shares their stories while examining the role religion plays in America’s most popular sport. In this excerpt, he writes of how former Chicago Bears middle linebacker Mike Singletary tried to answer the question he and other devout players often ask themselves: How can men who crack each others’ skulls claim to turn the other cheek?

It was 40 degrees, with a stiff wind blowing off Lake Michigan, when the Tampa Bay Buccaneers kicked off to the Chicago Bears at Soldier Field on Nov. 19, 1989. The Bucs were 3-7 and suffering like most years in the ’80s, while the Bears, 6-4 and just four seasons removed from a Super Bowl win, were on the precipice of a six-game losing streak that would send them toward the bottom of their divi-

sion. As the game neared the end of the opening quarter, Tampa Bay had the ball 1st and 10 on its own 32-yard line when Bucs quarterback Vinny Testaverde dropped back to pass. Running back Sylvester Stamps, a sixthyear player out of Jackson State, ran a short pattern across the middle and had turned back to make eye contact with Testaverde when—he never saw it coming. Bears middle linebacker Mike Singletary, a ferocious hitter, had spotted the receiver out of the corner of his eye and was running toward him at a dead sprint when Stamps turned to spot the ball. The collision was brutal, turning Stamps into a crumpled, motionless mass. “His eyes rolled back into his head,” Singletary recalls. “His tongue fell out of his mouth. He didn’t move.” Singletary was scared. He’d watched hundreds of opponents return to the huddle glassy-eyed, unable to recall their name. But

this was different. He was afraid and still play the game he loved? he’d done real damage. “I was thinking, Lord, I love You The linebacker took a knee so much, and I’m out here hurting and began praying. “No one people, and I don’t want to do knew what to say,” Singletary that. Am I wrong in what I’m says. “It looked bad. And I doing? Is this sending the wrong thought to myself, What am I message? I was really wrestling doing? Something is wrong with over whether I wanted to this. I waited and watched until continue playing the game.” it looked like he was going to be In the end, he decided it was okay, and then I refocused on his responsibility to God to play my job. We never spoke.” as hard as he could and make Having spent the best of the years sending talents the Lord players back to the had given him. SINGLETARY huddle babbling “What it came DECIDED IT i n c o h e r e n t l y, down to,” he WAS HIS RESPONSIBILITY Singletary found says, “is that this TO GOD TO himself at a crossis my gift. I PLAY AS HARD roads: Could he didn’t want to AS HE COULD. be the Christian hurt anybody. he aspired to be I was playing the game as hard as I could to honor the Lord. I always said, Lord, every play I’m going to give You everything I fee have. From the bottom of my feet head all the way to the top of my head, I every tackle, every block. If the ball was thrown a hundred yards away, I was going to run as hard as I could run to abou get there. I thought about ’ one thing, and that ’s giving God what Jesu Jesus Christ gave for me on the cross—ever ything. That’s how I was going to play. And I was aat peace with that.”

Tim Tebow strikes a prayerful pose while playing for the Broncos last season. September 2, 2012 • 15

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


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