Bulletin 29 05 2013ohio937

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 75g

WEDNESDAY May29,2013

88 88

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OUTDOORS• D1

SPORTS• C1

bendbulletin.com

TODAY'S READERBOARD Microdes in thehome

— It's one of the world's last

unexplored ecosystems, but

STORY IN BUSINESS • C6

now scientists are making discoveries about the great

indoors.A3

LEGISLATURE

Mountain dike guide

Forest jobs legislation advances

— Trails open early in the new

Wanoga complex.D1 Tadle'ts —A new report has

• The Old Mill Casting Course — the first of its kind in the world — is open again.

them outselling PCs by 2015.

c6 Spider silk —AJapanese

By Lauren Dake

company is the first in the

The Bulletin

world to mass-produce the

SALEM — State lawmakers approved a measure Tuesday that aims to ensure Oregonians aren't bypassed in favor of foreign labor by employers with federal contracts looking to hire forest workers. In 2010, a series of articles in The Bulletin revealed that millions of dollars in federal stimulus funds went to hiring foreign labor to work Oregon forestry jobs under the H-2B visa. The

"dream fiber."A3

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Terror figure —Documents shine new light on Moktar

Belmoktar, an enigma inAfrica.A4

program allows companies

ln national news —Seven

to import workers if they are unable to find U.S. citizens. But an investigation revealed that a handful of Oregon companiesmade little or no effort to recruit in Oregon before looking elsewhere. It came at a time when the state was facing record unemployment. Because it's a federal program, the state only has so much it can do. SeeJobs/A5

people are charged in what prosecutors say may bethe biggest money-laundering scheme in U.S. history.A2

And a WedexclusiveAstudyofborder entryfees sparks opposition in states that

pull business from Canada. benddulletin.com/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Health care challenges on Alaska's vast frontier

Ryan Brennectte /The Bulletin

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ye Krueger practices his roll cast during a

Deschutes

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Bend Casting Club meet-up at the 12th hole

trimming staff levels

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of the newly improved Old Mill Casting Course on Tuesday.

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Think of it as a 12-hole golf course, where

By Shelby R. King The Bulletin

each hole represents a different fishing situation, By Kirk Johnson New York Times News Service

making you display new casting techniques as you

BETHEL, Alaska — Americans in some rural places fret at how far away

complete the course. That's according to Visit Bend,

big-city medical help might

be in an emergency, or at the long drivesthey areforced to makeforprenatalcare,or stitches, or chemotherapy. Dr. Ellen Hodges only wishes it could be so easy. She oversees health care for a population of 28,000, mostly Alaska Natives, here in the state's far west end, spread out over an area the size of Oregon that has almost no roads. People can travel by boat or snow machine at certain times of the year, but not right now: the Kuskokwim River, which wends through Bethel to the Bering Sea, is choked with unstable melting ice in late May, magnifying the isolation that defines everything in what may be the United States' emptiest corner. "If you have a road, you're not remote," Hodges said. The complex machinery of health care is being reimagined everywhere in the nation through the combined prism of new regulations and shifting economics, even on the continent's frosted fringe. The Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Corp., where Hodges is chief of staff, is scrambling this spring to install a new electronic medical records system. SeeAlaska /A5

es Schwad Amphitheater

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the tourism agency that maintains that the Bend

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course remains the only casting course in North

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America. The casting course starts across the river from

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Red Robin, and it gets more difficult as you go. The course is open daily from dawn to dusk and is

Columbia St.

free to the public.

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Read more in Outdoors briefing, Page Dl.

Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

Several Deschutes County departments will see staffing reductions in fiscal year 2014, while a few will see staffing levels increase. Overall, the county plans to reduce full-time equivalent employee positions from 818.65 to 809.05 between fiscal year 2013 and 2014, for a net loss of 9.6 full-time equivalent positions, according to budget documents. The county's total proposed budgetforfiscalyear 2014 — July 2013 to June 2014 — is $287.1 million, a 0.9 percent decrease from fiscal year 2013. Although the county plans reductions ln staff, only two employees will lose their jobs. SeeDeschutes/A4

Bulletproof maven pitches backpacksfor U.S. kids By Juan Forero The Washington Post

BOGOTA, ColombiaMiguel Caballero's business, making bulletproof clothing for the fashion-conscious, has grown over the years as presidents to police chiefs to oil sheiks from as far away as Qatar have become loyal

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly cloudy High 58, Low 36

customers. Dubbed "the Armani of bulletproof clothing," the Bogotabased company that bears his name sells trench coats, sweaters, leather jackets and blazers, along with more standard fare, bulletproof vests. But now Caballero, ever on the lookout fornew customers,is zeroing

in on an untapped market: American schoolchildren. With his new line, MC Kids, Caballero offers backpacks and jackets for kids, including some in girlie pink and stamped with fluttering fairies, that are also outfitted with bulletproof plating to stop the slugs from an Uzi. Caballero,

46, said that in his 20 years of business, there had never been a demand in Colombia for bulletproof children's clothing. But the United States is a different market: a country where there are about as ballero pointed out, and where mass shootings have simply

prompted some to stock up on weapons and seek other forms of protection. "The rest of the countries in the world try to disarm, but in the United States they say, 'Let's protect ourselves,'" he said. "So in that light, that's a business opportunity." SeeBulletproof/A5

The Bulletin

+ .4 We userecycled newsprint

many firearms as people, Ca-

INDEX Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope D6 Outdoors Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 Sports Classified E1 - 8 D ear Abby D6 Ob i tuaries B5 TV/Movies

D I-6 C1-4 D6

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 110,No. 149, 32 pages, 5 sections

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88 267 02329


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TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013

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OUR ADDRESS Street

c ar e in on i n e mone -aun erin case

Chill8 I'SIBtiOIIS — U.S. national security adviser Tom Donilon

By Tom Hays

Syria COnfliCt —Russia on Tuesdayharshly criticized Europe's

and Raphael Satter The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Calling it

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1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 P.O.Box 6020 Bend, OR97708

perhaps the biggest moneyl aundering scheme i n U . S . history, federal prosecutors

charged seven people Tuesday with running what amounted to an online, underworld bank that handled $6 billion for drug dealers, child pornographers, identity thieves and other criminals around the globe. The case was aimed at Liberty Reserve, a currency transfer and payment processing company based in Costa Rica that authorities say allowed customers to move money anonymously from one account to another via the Internet with almost no questions asked. U.S. officials said the enter-

prisewas staggering in scope: smuoo Aw. DcsuuesRe

ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool...........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ..................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa.........................541-383-0337

Over roughly seven years, Liberty Reserve processed 55 million illicit transactions worldwide for 1 million users, including 200,000 in the U.S. The network "became the bank of choice for the criminal

underworld," U.S. A t torney Preet Bharara said in announcing the unsealing of an indictment against the defendants, including L i berty R e venue founder Arthur Budovsky, an American who renounced his U.S. citizenship after deciding to set up in Costa Rica. Liberty Reserve allowed users toopen accounts using fictitious names, including "Russian Hacker" and "Hacker Account." An undercover investigator was able to register using the name "Joe Bogus" and the address"123 Fake Main Street" in "Completely Made Up City, New York," and then conduct transactions he recorded as "ATM skimming network" and "for the cocaine." "The coin of the realm was anonymity," Bharara said. "It was the opposite of a knowyour-customer policy." The network charged a 1 percent fee on transactions through middlemen known asexchangers, who converted real currency into virtual funds and then back into cash.

In the indictment, prosecutors called the network "one of the principal means by which cyber criminals around the world distribute, store and launderproceeds of their illegal activity ... including credit card fraud, identity theft, investment fraud, computer hacking, child pornography and narcotics trafficking." Bharara said it was possibly "the largest international money laundering case ever brought by the United States." Budovsky and another defendant, identified as Azzeddine el Amine, were arrested Friday at a M a d rid airport while trying to return to Costa Rica, according to a Spanish court official, who spoke on condition of a nonymity because court policy forbids him from speaking on the record. They were ordered jailed while they await a hearing on extradition to the U.S. Two other men, including Liberty Reserve co-founder Vladimir Kats, were arrested last week in New York City.

to help opposition fighters defend a strategic Syrian town. The

European Union decision is coupled with Russia's renewedpledgeto supply Syrian President BasharAssad's regime with advanced missiles. Israel, meanwhile, threatened to strike such air defense missiles systems if delivered to Syria.

LOndan attaCk —One of two suspects shot by police following the slaying of a British soldier in London last week has been released

from the hospital and taken to apolice station for questioning, police said Tuesday.Therelease cameas new details emerged about links between the other main suspect and a radical Islamic cleric in Kenya

who had beensanctioned by the United States for being part of a terrorist network.

TrayvOII Martin Shaating —Attorneys won't be able to mention Trayvon Martin's drug use, suspension from school and past fighting during opening statements at the trial of a former neighborhood

watch volunteer who fatally shot the teen, ajudge ruled Tuesday. However, Circuit Judge Debra Nelson left open the possibility that the defense could try again later during the trial if it could show rel-

evance. Obama in JerSey —President Barack ObamaandNewJersey Gov. Chris Christie promoted theJersey Shore's summer tourism economy Tuesday while praising the federal government's role in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy, reprising their beach-buddy routine

in a display of mutual assistance with potential political dividends. Despite a steady drizzle, the Democratic presidentand the Republican governor tried their hand at arcade football and the president declared

TRAIN DERAILMENT, BLAST NEAR BALTIMORE

HBFVBrd SmBIIS —Theundergraduate deanat Harvard will step down thi s summer, she and the university announced on Tuesday, months after she came under fire for her handling of a search of some

AL

junior faculty members' email accounts. Evelynn Hammonds, the first

s

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woman and the first African-American to be dean of Harvard College, will leave that post on July 1 after five years, but she will remain on the

faculty, the university said in astatement posted online.

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BidelI adrOad —Vice President Joe Biden left Trinidad andTobago on Tuesdayafter what heand leaders of the mostly English-speaking 15-member Caribbean Community and the Dominican Republic called

TALK TO AN EDITOR r

"frank" discussions on issues of mutual interests. "It was completely open, completely frank andcompletely straightforward — evenwhere

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we disagreed," Biden said before heading to Brazil, where he will

spend three daysdiscussing energy matters and improved U.S. relations with the SouthAmerican power.

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HOnduran gang truCe —Honduras' two biggest and most dangerous street gangs declared anunprecedented truce Tuesday,

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offering peace in the world's most violent country in exchange for rehabilitation and jobs. A spokesman for the Mara Salvatrucha, iden-

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tified only as Marco, said the gangwill commit to zero violence and zero crime in the streets as a first-step show of good faith. He spoke to reporters from a prison cell in San Pedro Sula, the Central Ameri-

' 5~

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Gen. FanChanglong, avice chairman of the commission overseeing China's armed forces.

tating storm bore down on its famed boardwalks and seaside towns.

Business Tim Doran..........541-383-0360 City Desk Joseph Ditzler.....541-363-0367 CommunityLife, Health Julie Johnson.....................541-383-0308 EditorialsRichard Coe......541-383-0353 GO! Magazine Ben Salmon........................541-383-0377 Home, All Ages AlandraJohnson................541-617-7860 News EditorJan Jordan....541-383-0315 PhotosDeanGuernsey......541-383-0366 SperlsBill Bigelow.............541-383-0359 State projects Lily Raff McCaulou ............541-410-9207

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tribute to greater mutual confidence and understanding," Donilon told

eral said he's "very disappointed" weaponswon't comefast enough

Traci Donaca ......................

The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories are accurate. If you know ofan error in a story, call us at 541-383-0356.

military activities such aspeacekeeping, disaster relief and anti-piracy operations offer opportunities to boost cooperation and "con-

that the state's popular shorewas backseven months after the devas-

Advertising Jay Brandt..........................541-383-0370 CirculationandOperations Keith Foutz .........................54f -385-5605 FinanceHolly West...........541-383-0321 HumanResources

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day of a visit to Beijing to set the stage for a summit next month between President Barack Obama and China's Xi Jinping. Nontraditional

decision to allow the arming of Syrian rebels, saying it undercuts international efforts to negotiate an end to the civil war, and a rebel gen-

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Street address.......226N.W.Sixth St. Redmond, OR97756 Mailing address....P.O.Box766 Redmond, OR97756 Phone.................................541-504-2336 Fax .....................................54f-546-3203

pushed for stronger military relations with China onTuesday, the final

can country's northern business capital and one of theworld's most violent cities.

Gr88k pOlitiCS —Theissue of howto deal with a surge in racist

PatnckSemansky/The Assoaated Press

A fire burns at the site of a freight train derailment Tuesday in White Marsh, Md., where fire officials say

officials did not order an evacuation. The truck driver was taken to the hospital in serious condition and two

violence in Greece opened a rift within the country's fragile governing coalition on Tuesday, when its two junior parties said they would push

the train crashed into a trash truck, causing anexplo-

workers aboard the train weren't hurt, fire officials

sion that rattled homes at least a half-mile away and collapsed nearby buildings, setting them on fire. The train went off the tracks at about 2 p.m. Hazmat teams were on the scene, but Baltimore County Fire Chief John Hohman said at a news

sald. Even an hour after the blast, the thick plume of

ahead with ananti-racism bill over the objections of the conservative senior party. Greecehasseen a rising number of attacks on nonGreeks in recent years, asthecountry's economic woes havetaken

black smoke drifted across the Baltimore city line and

hold.

conference that no toxic inhalants were burning and

— From wire reports

covered the eastern part of the city. The face of one warehouse near the train tracks blew off. — The Associated Press

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawn Tuesday night are:

g4g2@@2~yo The estimated jackpot is now $23 million.

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By Robert Barnes

his fellow conservatives. He said that Congress was speW ASHINGTON — A d i - cific in writing the one-year vided Supreme Court ruled limitation into the AntiterrorTuesday that a prisoner who ism and Effective Death Penpresents credible evidence of alty Act of 1996, and that the his innocence can overcome court's exception was "a flaa proceduralbarrier that he grant breach of the separation waited too long to go to court. of powers." "One would have thought Federal law dictates that a state prisoner has one year it too obvious to mention that from the time he is convicted this court is duty bound to ento petition federal courts to force AEDPA, not amend it," say his conviction violated his wrote Scalia, who was joined constitutional rights — for inby Chief Justice John Roberts stance, that he was deprived of and Justices Clarence Thomas effective counsel. and Samuel Alito. But Justice Anthony KenGinsburg wrote that evinedy joined with the court's dence of innocence is a "gateway" through which a prisonliberal wing in ruling 5 to 4 thatbarring someone who has er may overcome procedural a credible claim of innocence bars to the filing of habeas pefrom filing a habeas petition titions. But she and the majorwould be a m i scarriage of ity made it clear that it may not justice. provide much of a clearing for Justice Ruth Bader Gins- the man who brought the case burg, who wrote for the ma- to the court. jority, stressed that such inFloyd Perkins, of Michigan, stances would be rare. "The was sentenced to life in prison miscarriage of justice excep- in 1993 for the gruesome murtion, we underscore, applies to der of his friend Rodney Hena severelyconfined category: derson. Testimony s howed cases in which new evidence that Perkins had told someone shows it is more likely than not else that he intended to kill that no reasonable juror would Henderson and later apolohave convicted" the petitioner, gized for the murder. But at his she wrote. trial, Perkins blamed the killBesides Kennedy, Ginsburg ing on a third man who was was joined by Justices Ste- with them. phen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor Without new evidence, Perand Elena Kagan. kins had only a year under the J ustice A n t o ni n Sc a l i a law to make a federal claim wrote a blistering dissent for that his attorney had inadThe Washington Post

equately assisted him. Perkins gathered three affidavits over the years — from his sister, a friend and a dry-cleaning clerk — that he said helped show his innocence. But he did not file his petition until five years after obtaining the third of those statements.

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day

It'sW ednesday,May29,the 149th day of 2013. There are 216 days left in the year.

RESEARCH HAPPENINGS

in

BOStOn dambingS —First Lady Michelle Obamameets with victims of the marathon bombings she met last month.

FranCe —The country's first legal gay marriage takes place. China —Chairman Mao Zedong's RedFlagsedans go on sale to the public, entering into competition with Audi, BMW and Mercedes-Benz.

HISTORY Highlight:In 1913, the ballet

"Le Sacre du printemps" (The Rite of Spring), with music by Igor Stravinsky and choreography by Vaslav Nijinsky, had

its chaotic world premiere in Paris. The D.H. Lawrence novel

"Sons and Lovers" was first publishedby Duckworth & Co. of London, albeit in an expur-

gated version. In1765, Patrick Henry denounced the Stamp Act before

Virginia's House of Burgesses. In1790, Rhode Island became the 13th original colony to ratify the United States Constitution. In1848, Wisconsin became the 30th state of the union. In1912, the ballet "L'Apresmidi d'un Faune" (The After-

noon of a Faun), with music by Claude Debussy, premiered in Paris with Vaslav Nijinsky dancing the title role. In1917, the 35th president of the United States, John F. Kennedy, was born in Brookline,

Mass.

In1932, World War I veterans

began arriving in Washington to demand cashbonuses they weren't scheduled to receive until 1945. In 1943, Norman Rockwell's portrait of "Rosie the Riveter"

appeared on thecover of The Saturday Evening Post. In 1953, Mount Everest was

conquered asEdmund Hillary of New ZealandandTensing Norgay of Nepal becamethe first climbers to reach the summit.

In1961,a couple in Paynesville, W.Va., became the first

recipients of food stamps under a pilot program created by President John F. Kennedy.

In1973, Tom Bradleywas elected the first black mayor of

Los Angeles, defeating incumbent Sam Yorty. In1985, 39 people were killed at the European Cup Final in Brussels, Belgium, when riot-

ing broke out and awall separating British and Italian soccer

fans collapsed. In1987, a jury in Los Angeles acquitted "Twilight Zone"

movie director John Landis and four associates of involuntary manslaughter in the

movie-set deaths of actor Vic Morrow and two child actors, 7-year-old Myca Dinh Le and

6-year-old ReneeShin-Yi Chen, who were killed by a fall-

ing helicopter. Ten yearsago:President George W. Bush,inawideranging interview with reporters at the White House, repeat-

ed his defense of the U.S.-led war in lraq and hinted that relations with France remained

scarred over its opposition to the war.

Five years age:In a crushing blow to Texas' massive seizure of children from a

polygamist sect's ranch, the state Supreme Court ruled that child welfare officials had

overstepped their authority and that the children should go back to their parents.

One year age:Mitt Romney clinched the Republican presidential nomination with a win in the Texas primary.

BIRTHDAYS CBS NewsCorrespondent Bob Simon is 72. Singer LaToya Jackson is 57. Actress Annette

Bening is 55. Singer Melissa Etheridge is 52. Cartoonist

Aaron McGruder ("The Boondocks") is 39. Singer Melanie Brown (Spice Girls) is 38. — From wire reports

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Ecologists are increasingly interested in the great wildlife diversity indoors, where they've found that buildings contain identifiable microbial signatures

The Yomiuri Shimbuh

Fibers made of artificial spider silk are created by implanting altered spider genes into microorganisms that can mass-produce silk efficiently.

of their human inhabitants. By Peter Andrey Smith

BREAKTHROUGH

New York Times News Service

BOULDER, Colo. — On a sunny Wednesday, with a faint haze hanging over the Rockies, Noah Fierer eyed the field site from the back of his colleague's Ford Explorer. Two blocks east of a strip mall in Longmont, one of the world's lastunderexplored ecosystems had come into view: a sandstone-colored ranch h o use,

Firm weaves a way to artificial spider silk The Yomiuri Shimbun TOKYO — A company in Y amagata Prefecture h a s become the first in the world to successfully m ass-produce artificial spider silk, a "dream fiber" that could be used in everything from clothing to aircraft. Created b y i m p l anting altered spider genes into microorganisms that can massproduce silk efficiently, the light, strong an d f l exible material was unveiled to the media as a stylish dress in Tokyo last week. Spiber Inc. President Kazuhide Sekiyama founded the Tsuruoka-based company with two friends six years ago when he was a graduate student at Keio University

code-named Q. A pair of dogs barked in the backyard. Fierer, 39, a microbiologist at the University of Colorado Boulder and self-described "natural historian of cooties," walked across the front lawn and into the house, joining a team of researchers inside. One swabbed surfaces with s terile cotton s w abs. 0 t h ers logged the findings from two humming air samplers: clothing fibers, dog hair, skin flakes, particulate matter and microbial life. Ecologists like Fierer have begun peering into an intimate, overlooked world that barely existed 100,000 years ago: the great indoors. They want to know what lives in our homes with us and how w e "colonize" spaces with other species — viruses, bacteria, microbes. Homes, they've found, contain identifiable ecological signatures of their human inhabitants. Even dogs exert a significant influence on the tiny lifeforms living on our pillows and television screens. Once ecologists have more thoroughly identified indoor species, they hope to come up with strategies to scientifically manage homes, by eliminating harmful taxa and fostering species beneficial to our health. But the first step is simply to take a census of what's already living with us, said Fierer; only then can scientists start making senseof their effects."We need to know what's out there first. If you don't know that, you're wandering blind in the wilderness." Here's an undeniable fact: We are an indoor species.We spend closeto 90 percent ofour lives in drywalled caves. Yet traditionally, ecologists ventured outdoors to observe nature's biodiversity, in the Amazon jungles, the hot springs of Yellowstone or the subglacial lakes of Antarctica. ("When you train as an ecologist, you imagine y ourself t r o mping around in the forest," Fierer said. "You don't imagine yourself swabbing a toilet seat.") But as humdrum as a home might first appear, it is a veritable w onderland. E cology does not stop at the front door; a home to you is also home to an incredible array of wildlife. Besides th e c h a r ismatic fauna commonly o b served in North A m erican homes — dogs, cats, the occasional freshwater fish — ants and roaches, crickets and carpet bugs, mites and millions upon millions of microbes, including hundreds of multicellular species and thousands of unicellular species, also thrive in them. The "built environment" doubles as a complex ecosystem thatevolves under the selective pressure of its inhabitants, their behavior and the building materials. As microbial ecologists swab DNA from our homes,they're creating an atlas of life much as 19th-century naturalists like Alfred Russel Wallace once logged flora and fauna on the Malay Archipelago. Take an average kitchen. In a study published in February in the journal Environmental Microbiology, Fierer's lab

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North Carolina State University via New York Times NewsService

A bacterium on the inner door frame is among the samples gathered for The Wild Life of Our Home project. Ecologists are increasingly interested in the great wildlife diversity indoors, where they've found that buildings contain identifiable microbial signatures of their human inhabitants. examined 82 surfacesin four Boulder kitchens. Predictable patterns emerged. Bacterial s pecies associated with h u man skin, like Staphylococcaceae or Corynebacteriaceae, predominated. Evidence of soil showed up on the floor, and species associated with raw produce (Enterobacteria-

"convective plume" of about 37 million bacteria per minute that disperse throughout the home and can survive for extended periods.

Formula for the perfect road trip!

ceae, for example) appeared on countertops. Microbes common in moist areas — in-

cluding sphingomonads, some strains infamous for their ability to survive in the most toxic sites — splashed in a kind of jungle above the faucet. If a kitchen represents a temperate forest, few of its plants would be poison ivy. Most of the inhabitants are relatively benign. In any event, eradicating them is neither possible nor desirable. Fierer wants to make visible this intrinsic, if unseen, aspect of everyday life. "For a lot of the general public, they don't care what's in soil," he said. "People care more about what's on their pillowcase." (Spoiler alert: The microbes living on your pillowcase are not all t hat d i f ferent from those living on your toilet seat. Both surfacescome in regular contact with exposed skin.) Fierer has teamed up with Rob Dunn, a biologist at North Carolina State University, to sample the m icrobial w i ldlife in 1,400 homes across the United States. The projectknown as The Wild Life of Our Home — relies on volunteers who swab pillowcases, cutting boards and doorjambs, then send samples in for analysis. (Full disclosure: I am a volunteer participant in the study, sending in swabs from my home.) Dunn hopes that the project will begin to unravel the consequences of moving from caves to creating environments around us in a haphazard way. "For the entire history of humanity, we h ave created environments around us, in our daily lives, in a very unintentional way. The control that we've exertedispredominantly one in which we kill the ones that might be bad," Dunn said. "That's saved a lot of lives. It's also favored this whole suite of species that we know very, very little about." So little is known of what's in the home that a small sample can reveal something new. In their first study of 40 homes around Raleigh-Durham, N.C., p ublished last week i n t h e journal PLos One, they found that humans rapidly "infect" the spaces in which they live. We leave bacteria by touching surfaceswith our exposed skin, and at room temperature, a healthy human kicks up a

with the aim of developing a "dream fiber." "When we started the research, we were told our plan was crazy," Sekiyama said. "But we're on the verge of putting the fiber into practical use." Sekiyama, 30, plans to c omplete a factory in N o vember that ca n p r oduce 220 pounds of spider silk a month. With further refinements, the silk is expected to be as strong as carbon fiber and as elastic as rubber. The company plans to advance research into potential applications as a fiber for vehicles, aircraft and medical materials such as artificial blood vessels.

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013

IN FOCUS:TERRORISM IN AFRICA

ocumen sin a a

er on

By Rukmini Caiiimachi

equacy: Trading the weightiest case (Canadian diplomats!!) for the mostmeager price (700,000

The Associated Press

DAKAR, Senegal — After years of trying to discipline him, the leaders of al-Qaida's North African

euros)!!"

branch sent one final letter to their most difficult employee. In page after scathing page, they described

Roots of defection

how he didn't answer his phone when they called, failed to turn in his expense reports, ignored

any company, the Shura leaders accuse Belmoktar of not being able to get along with his peers. They charge that he recently went to Libya without permission from the chapter, which had assigned the "Libya dossier" to a rival commander called Abou Zeid. And they complain that the last unit they sent Belmoktar for backup in the Sahara spent a full three years trying to contact him be-

Sounding like managers in

meetings and refused time and again to carry out orders. Most of all, they claimed he had failed to carry out a single spectacular operation, despite theresources athis disposaL The employee, international terrorist Moktar B elmoktar, r e sponded the way talented employees with bruised e gos have i n Belmoktar c o r p o r a t i o n s the world over: He quit and formed his own competing group. And within months, he carried out two lethal operations that killed 101 people in all: one of the largest hostage-takings in history at a BP-operated gas plant in Algeria in January, and simultaneous bombings at a military base and a French uranium mine in Nigerjustlastweek. The al-Qaida letter, found by The AssociatedPress inside a building formerly occupied by their fighters in Mali, is an intimate window into the ascent of an extremely ambitious terrorist leader, who split off from regionalcommand because he wanted to be directly in touch with al-Qaida central. It's a glimpse into both the inner workings of a highly structured terrorist organization that requires its commanders to file monthly expense reports, and the internal dissent that led to his rise. And it foreshadows a terrorism landscape where charismatic jihadists can carry out attacks directly in al-Qaida's name, regardless of whether they are under its command. Rudolph Atallah, the former head of counterterrorism for Africa at the Pentagon and one of three experts who authenticated the 10-page letter dated Oct. 3, said it helps explain what happened in Algeria and Niger, both attacks that Belmoktar claimed credit for on jihadist forums. "He's sending a m essage directly north to hi s former bosses in Algeria saying, 'I'm a jihadi. I deserve to be separate from you.' And he's also

Deschutes Continued from A1 The remaining reductions will come from leaving positions vacant or by reducing hours. Two employees were laid off in the Public Health Department, though one was picked up by Behavioral Health, according to County Administrator Tom Anderson. One employee was also laid off from the Road Department. "While staffing will generally remain flat in most departments,there were some p osition reductions i n t h e Road Department, Assessor's Office, Public Health, Sheriff's Office and the Juvenile Justice Department," Anderson said. "Positions were added in Behavioral Health and FTE hours were added in Code Enforcement andVeterans Services." The Deschutes County Budget Committee concluded budget discussionsThursday for the proposed 2013-14 budget. The next step in the budget approval process willoccur at 10 a.m. June 24 when the commission considersbudget approval during it s r egular scheduled p u blic b u s iness meeting. Though service levels in county d epartments a r en't expected to change, several departments are undergoing changes, Anderson said. The Juvenile Justice Department is losing 4.8 full-time equivalent positions, continuing a trend that began in 2009 and has brought a 25 percent reduction in staffing levels to the department. "The primary r eason for the staffing reductions in that department is because they closed a pod," Anderson said. "The reduced capacity in the detention center meansthey do not need as many employees." The Children and Families Commission is being restruc-

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The Associated Press file photo

Nigerian soldiers walk near debris last week after suicide bombers blew themselves up inside a miiitary barracks in Agadez, northern Niger, one of a pair of attacks in Niger carried out the same day and claimed by Moktar Beimoktar. T he letter, signed by t h e g roup's 14-member S h u ra Council, or governingbody, describes its relationship with Belmoktar as "a bleeding wound," and criticizes his proposal to resign and start his own group. "Yourletter... containedsome amount of backbiting, namecalling and s neering," they Checkeredhistory write. "We refrained from wadBorn in northern Algeria, the ing into this battle in the past out 40-something Belmoktar, who of a hope that the crooked could is known in Pentagon circles be straightened by the easiest by his initials MBM, traveled to and softest means.... But the Afghanistan at the age of 19, ac- wound continuedto bleed, and cording to his online biography. in fact increasingly bled, until He claims he lost an eye in battle your last letter arrived, endand trained in al-Qaida's camps, ing any hope of stanching the forging ties that would allow wound and healing it." him two decades later to split off They go onto compare their from its regional chapter. group to a towering mountain Over the years, there have beforeragingstorms andpoundbeen numerousreportsof Bel- ing waves, and say Belmoktar's moktar being sidelined or ex- plan "threatens to fragment the pelledby al-Qaidainthe Islamic being of the organization and Maghreb.The letter recovered tear it apart limb by limb." in Timbuktu, one of thousands They then begin enumeratof pages of internal documents ing their complaints against in Arabic found by the AP ear- Belmoktar in 30 successive bullier this year, shows he stayed let points. "Abu Abbas is not willing to loyal to al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, until last follow anyone," they add, reyear, and traces the history of ferring to him by his nom de their difficult relationship. guerre, Khaled Abu A bbas.

"He is only willing to be followed and obeyed." First and foremost, they quibble over the amount of money raised by the 2008 kidnapping of Canadian diplomat Robert Fowler, the h i ghest-ranking United Nations official in Niger, and his colleague. Belmoktar's men held both for four months, and in a book he later published, Fowler said he did not know if a ransom was paid. The letter says they referred the case to al-Qaida central to force concessions inthe U.S.-led war in Afghanistan, a plan stymied when Belmoktar struck his own deal for 700,000 euros (about $900,000) for both men. That's far below the $3 million per hostage that European governments were normally paying, according to global intelligence unit Stratfor. "Rather than walking alongside us in the plan we outlined, he managed the case as he liked," they write indignantly. "Here we must ask, who handled this important abduction poorly?...D oesitcomefromthe unilateral behavior along the lines of our brother Abu Abbas, which produced a blatant inad-

tured as well, Anderson said. In fiscal year 2013, the department had seven full-time equivalent employees. In fiscal year 2014, that number will drop to 5.5. "The Commission on Children and Families is going a way, as we know it," A n derson said. "The five-anda -half remaining staff w i l l be absorbed into the Health Department." The biggest gain in staffing levels came in the Behavioral Health D epartment, w h ich will get nine more full-time equivalent employees in 2014 than it had in 2013. "This change reflects an overall emphasis on mental health inthe state andthrough-

remain darkdue to the completion of the GIS remapping project. The Sheriff's Office will allow 1.5 full-time equivalent positions to stay dark as welL

sending a message to al-Qaida, saying, 'See, those bozos in the north are i ncompetent. You can talk to me directly.' And in these attacks, he drew a lot of attention to himself," says Atallah, who recently testified before Congress on Belmoktar's tactics.

out the nation," Anderson said. "The added employees will be paid for with state revenue and Oregon Health Plan funds." The Assessor's Office will allow a Geographic Information Systems analyst position to

The letter reveals the rifts not only between Belmoktar and his superiors, but also the distance between the local chapter and al-Qaida central. The local leaders were infuriated that Belmoktar was essentially going over their heads, saying that even AQIM has had few interactions with the mother brand in Pakistan and Afghanistan, a regionthey referto by the ancient name of Khorasan. Belmoktar's defection was a long time in the making, and dates back to his time as a commander of A lgeria's Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat, or GSPC. When the Iraq war started in 2003, his ambition created friction between

younger Algerian fighters like himself, who wanted to join the global jihad, and an older generation whose only goal was to create an Islamic state in Algeria, accordingto Islamic scholar M athieu Guidere,a professor at the University of Toulouse. The younger faction won, but Belmoktar felt slighted because his contemporary, Abdelmalek Droukdel, was named emir of the GSPC, instead of him. Soon after, the group petitioned to join al-Qaida. The terror network announced a "blessed union" on the anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks in 2006. Both Belmoktar and Drouk-

8 I'ISB

del wrote "candidacy letters" to bin Laden asking to be emir, according to Guidere's book onthe subject. Again, Droukdel won. Frustrated, Belmoktar drifted farther south. He set up in the ungoverned dunes of neighboring Mali, took a M a lian wife and tapped into the smuggling routes that crisscrossed the Sahara, amassing arms and fiercely loyal fighters who called themselves"The Masked Brigade." His fighters killed more than a dozen soldiers at a military garrison in Mauritania in 2005 and gunned down four French tourists there in 2007. On multiple occasions Belmoktar was declared dead, including most recently in March. T he sharpest blow in t h e council's letter may have been the accusation that, despite this history of terrorism, Belmoktar and his unit had not pulled off any attack worthy of mention in the Sahara. "Any observer of the armed a ctions (carried out) in t h e Sahara will clearly notice the failure of The Masked Brigade to carryout spectacular operations, despite the region's vast possibilities — there are plenty of mujahedeen, fundingis available, weapons are widespread and strategic targets are within reach," the letter says. "Your brigade did not achieve a single spectacular operation targeting the crusader alliance." In December, just weeks after receiving the letter, Belmoktardeclared in a recorded message that he was leaving the alQaida chapter to form his own group. He baptized it, "Those Who Sign in Blood." W ith that n ame, h e a n nounced his global ambition. "Those Who Sign in Blood"was also the name of an Algerian extremist unit that hijacked an Air France flight leaving Algiers in 1994. Though their goal to fly the plane into the Eiffel Tower in Paris was thwarted, the unit foreshadowed the terrorist vision that led to the fall of the twin towers in New York.

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Bulletproof

ysna*

k.

Photos by Jim Wilson / New York Times News Serwce

Medical workers move a patient flown in from a village — accessible only by snowmobile or air at this time of year — for treatment at the Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Corp.'s regional medical center in Bethel, at Alaska's far west end. A population of 28,000 lives in the region, an area the size of Oregon, with almost no roads end only one hospital.

Alaska Continued from A1 That is a hallmark of the federalhealth care overhaul, compounded here bythe fact that computers run by generators in far-flung villages are subject to brownouts and fuel shortages. Cost controls are also the way of the medical frontier no matter where you look. In other places, such constraints may be driven by insurance companies; here, by sequester-driven budget cuts to the federal Indian Health Service. The agency is the 50-bed hospital's main support in treating the tribes and villagers who have lived for thousands of yearsin the boggy crescent of lowlands where the Yukon and Kuskokwim rivers carve their paths to the sea. The 56 tribes in the region voted in the mid-1990s to bundle their health care money from the federalgovernment to finance the hospital. Grants supplement the work. But the one thingthat shapes every caredecision,from the routine to th e c atastrophic, is the map. Triage in medical decisions, logistics and money is all filtered through an equation of time and distance on a vast and mostly untracked land. Is air transport justified for medical reasons? Too slow to make a difference? Too dangerous in bad weather to attempt'? What should a health worker on the ground — in most villages a local resident trained by the hospital — be told to do, or not do? "There are judgment calls that you never have to make in the lower 48," said Dr. David Bielak, 31, a family medicine practitioner who started coming here last fall in temporary stints from his home near San Jose, Calif. And many of t hose decisions, often based ontelephone descriptions from a v illager, can be weighty. None of the more than four dozen communities served by the hospital have a doctor in residence. "It's the middle of the night, and you get a call from a clinic way up in the middle of nowhere where something very, very strange has happened," Bielak said. "A lot of it is dark: a lot of alcoholism, suicidal ideation, a lot of abuse." A lack of running water and sewer systems in many villages in turn compounds the

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Health aides from remote Alaskan villages, where there may be only one medically trained person, participate during a training session at the regional medical center in Bethel. struggle to make, or keep, people well in a place long marked by poverty and isolation. Take a glimpse, for example, into Alexandria Tikiun's world: At age 25, with four children at home to care for, she is a c ommunity health aide, the closest thing to an M.D. in her village, Atmautluak, population about 400. The aide system itself is uniquely Alaskan. It was developed in the 1950s, during an outbreak of tuberculosis, when the first health aides were trained to dispense medicine. Now, in sessions here at the hospital, Tikiun and 150 other aides, mostly women, learn medical skills t hat i n clude trauma response, pregnancy testing and vaccination, all based on a book that they call their bible, which walks them through a kind of algorithm of step-by-step questions leading to treatment protocols. On tougher cases, Tikiun consults by telephone with a doctor in Bethel. For medical checkups, she can use a telemedicine machine that allows, say,a child's ear-exam results to be sent electronically from the village clinic to a specialistin Anchorage or elsewhere. X-rays are read by radiologists in Ohio. But life in the Alaskan bush, with all its attendant risks and mayhem, is never far away. Tikiun said she once spent two hours on the floor of a pickup truck, ministering to an accident victim with multiple fractures and lacerations asher driver raced down the frozen Kuskokwim River ice road, bound for Bethel's nine-bed emergency room. T he added stress of t h e work, said a nother v i llage aide, Randall Gamball, is social. In a tiny village, every pa-

tient is without exception also an acquaintance or a relative. "It's really tough to work on someone you know," Gamball said. The hospital's flight paramedics, meanwhile, have to be ready with unpredictable medical emergencies and a sometimes radically ferocious climate at the same time. Whiteout conditions and temperatures 40 degrees below zero are not uncommon in winter. Mark Stevens, a paramedic originally from Eastern Washington, described one particularly memorable rescue: His team — two paramedics and a pilot — landed their propeller plane on a village airstrip, but then freezing fog closed in, coating everything with thick, heavy ice. It took three hours of frantic scraping — two crew members at the plane, the other with the patient — before they could head back. Every flight must be a consensus, Stevens said, and any member of the three-person team can veto the plan if conditions seem unsafe. "It's three to go, one to say no," he said. Doctors and nurses are also mostly from the lower 48, doing stints here of a week or a month. Sometimes, being thrown together in an isolated place has unexpected benefits. Dena Gray and Gary Holmes, both registered nurses — he's from A l abama; she's from Oklahoma — met at the hospital. In April, they flew to Las Vegas and married. Others fall in love with the patients, or th e t u ndra, or some combination. Hodges, 38, came to Bethel on a twoyear contract, vowing to leave at the first possible opportunity. That was 10 years ago.

ly where the work is available. Technically, th e c o mpanies Continued from A1 were following the law but exRequires the state But Rep. Gene Whisnant, Rploiting the loopholes. employment department Sunriver, said House Bill 3315 Thebill, Witt said, "addresses to report to the U.S. Labor will help raise the alarm level some of the unscrupulous tacDepartmenta suspicion to prevent abuses within the tics of a few labor brokers who that an employer with a program. The measure passed used every tactic imaginable to federal contract to maintain unanimously and now heads avoid their legal obligation to forests isn't complying to the Senate. hire local employment" to work with federal requirements Whisnant said he's been on forest restoration projects. for temporary employment working w i t h t h e O r e gon Federally, Sen. Jeff Merkley, certification. Employment Department on D-Ore., has once again introStatus:Passed the House the legislation for a couple of duced legislation to tighten the unanimously; now goesto years. It would ensure that if restrictions. the Senate. the state employment departUnder his proposed legislament is suspiciousthe program tion, companies would have is being violated, it notifies the to make an extensive effort to sue," Booker said. U.S. Department of Labor. hire American workers before One of the big issues was reFor his part, Booker said, the they could apply for an H-2B cruitment — mainly, the con- state will work more diligently visa. tractors weren't trying very to be aware of what jobs are They would also need to hard to notify the local labor available and that locals are make a more concerted effort force. being notified. to recruit locally and show "They are required to conRep. Brad Witt, D - Clats- they have posted local radio tact the Oregon Employment kanie, who co-sponsored the and Internet ads, as well as Department and l i s t t h o se legislation with Whisnant, said teaming up with local state jobs, and in some cases they those hiring the labor would workforce agencies. A spokesdon't," said Jim Booker, the place advertisements in far- woman for Merkley's office federal p r o gram m a n ager offplaces,such as in Arizona, said he is hoping the legislawith the Oregon Employment for an opening in Oregon. The tion could be part of a larger Department. companies are only required immigration package. "The point of this legislation to advertise in states where the — Reporter: 541-554-1162, is to bring attention to the is- jobs originated, not necessarildake@bendbulletin.com

HouseBill 3315

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Continued from A1 About 300 of the children's rucksacks, retailing for just under $300, have been sold in metropolitan Denver by Caballero's U.S. distributor, Elite Sterling S ecurity, said t h e U . S . company's founder, A .J. Zabadne. Elite Sterling is now trying to interest school districts in that area — where memories of the Columbine school shooting and the massacre at the Aurora movie theater are freshto buy Caballero's brightred safety v ests. Those would be bought in bulk and stored in classrooms until "a ballistics emergency," as Caballero puts it. "We're pushing this for classrooms — a sortof tactical vest," Zabadne said by phone f rom D e nver, noting that some schools have shown interest but no orders have been placed. "And we're hoping t h at some schools will realize the utility of having this item in a classroom in case something goes wrong." Other companies have also begun to sell similar items, including Massachusetts-based Bullet Blocker and acompany in SaltLake City, Amendment II. Some parents and educators, though, were flabbergasted when they heard of plans to outfit kindergarteners with the kind of armor plating used by police officersand soldiers. "I said, 'What?'" said Hector Sanchez, principal of the Cesar A. Batalla Elementary School in Bridgeport,Conn., 22 miles from Newtown, where a g u nman killed 20 first-graders in their classrooms in December. "This is the state of affairs when we get to the point that we would have to buy bulletproof clothing. It's scary," said Sanchez, who said a national system of background checks on gun buyers would have been "a common sense" response to the shootings at Sandy Hook ElementarySchool. Josh Horwitz, e x ecutive director of the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence in Washington, said it's a "a complete indictment for our gun policy that we'd put b ulletproof c l othing on our children instead of stopping the bullets in the first place." Here in Colombia, Caballero said he is not exploiting a tragic situation but rather offering a partial solution. He said that in the week

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Clothing maker Miguel Caballero, known as "the Armani of bulletproof clothing," holds two of his company's new products for American schoolchildren, a bulletproof backpack and vest. after the shootings at Sandy Hook, he received emails from 40 people in the United States asking for help protecting their children. "We're not in the war business," said Caballero. "We're in the business of defense, and in that sense we propose solutions." Caballero's modern 48,000s quare-foot factory o n t h e western outskirts of Bogota has gotten a reputation for producingunusualproducts. More than 300 employees produce bulletproof i n flatable vests, riot shields and the standard vests used by the bodyguards of political figures — hot-selling products that have helped Caballero record $20 million in sales last year, up fr om $2 million a decade ago. But the company's fame has come f ro m p r o ducing garments that don't look like armor. There are T-shirts that can stop a 9 mm round, a bullet-resistant blanket and tuxedos for those worried about an attack at the midnight ball. Tailor-made products, like the bullet-resistant kimonobought from Caballero by Hollywood action movie figure Steven Seagal, can cost thousands of dollars. Leaders across the region, including the late Venezuelan populist Hugo Chavez, have worn Caballero's outfits. Caballero, a theatrical whirl of energy, likes to display the effectiveness of the material used in his clothing, a proprietary weave lighter than that used in the Kevlar vests made by Dupont. So on Saturday, with a .38-caliber revolver in hand, he fired a shot into the bulletproof leather jacket he had a foreign reporter wear for a demonstration.

HIGH DESERT BANK • •

I II

t. • •

.

"Didn't hurt at all, did it?" Caballero said a moment after pulling the trigger in front of his workers, who had stopped sewing in order to cover their ears. Still, Caballero had to ac-

knowledge the challenges of shielding pint-size schoolchildren from whizzing bullets. When it came to the children's line, Caballero had to make the decision of going with anti-bullet plates that could stop slugs from, say, a Glock semiautomatic handgun, but not a B u shmaster .223 rifle, the weapon Adam Lanza used on his victims at

Sandy Hook. The bulletproof shield needed to deflect a round from a powerful rifle would be too heavy in children's accessories. And Caballero also said he believed lighter rounds are most often used in killings in the United States. "Only in t h e e x ceptional cases will you see the rifle, the AK-47 or something like that, being used," he said of school shootings. Caballero's marketing director, G i ovanni C o r dero, added that the company tries to react to trends but can never be surewhat the future holds. "Tomorrow you can outfit a school with bulletproof vests, and then they'll come with a bazooka," Cordero said. "We can only guide ourselves by what's seen most often in the streets, and the risks you see are handguns, Uzis, m i niUzis, revolvers."

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013

BRIEFING

Mushroomhunter is foundsafe A Bend mushroom hunter who was reported lost Monday

evening west of La Pine was found safe in an RV

Tuesday morning. Rudy Herman, 67, was reported lost by Verlyn Denk, 72, of Bend, after the two went mushroom hunting in the wilderness Monday

near Round Mountain. The two split up for

aboutan hour andwere supposedtomeetupat a set location. However,

Herman never showed. Denkattempted to search for Herman with-

out success, and called 911 around 10:50 p.m. Deschutes County Sheriff's Office Search

O w w w.bendbulletin.com/local

en wi c ar eor anizers or oiceove imea even By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

The city of Bend plans to begin charging local event organizers for police overtime when off-duty officers are called in to work at sporting events and other community functions. The fees are part of a new Bend Police policy to recover more of the cost of public services. Police overtime cost the city roughly $580,000 in 2012, according to city data. The city will charge its actual costs, and in a draft document the city estimated it would cost $17 per hour of regular

pay to provide a reserve officer, $64 per hour of overtime for a community service officer, $86 per hour of overtime for apolice officer and $88 per hour of overtime for a traffic officer. The new fees will cost organizers of the Cascade Cycling Classic at least $4,000, said Molly Cogswell-Kelley. Cogswell-Kelley is the events director for Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, or MBSEF, a nonprofit that supports student athletes who compete in alpine and crosscountry skiing, snowboarding

and cycling. The Cascade Cy-

cling Classic is held between July 16 and July 21 and is a fundraiser for MBSEF, and this is its 34th year. The event costs roughly $200,000 and raises $30,000 to $40,000 for the nonprofit, Cogswell-Kelley said. "We have increased local sponsorship to try to recoup some of the cost that the city will be charging us,"

Cogswell-Kelley said. "And this year we're a little more prepared because we've had a year to know about it and we have a rough estimate of what that will be." Bend Police spokesman Lt.

Chris Carney said the city was going to charge MBSEF for police services last year, but waived the fees after the nonprofit said it learned of the fees too late to budget for them. City Manager Eric King said the city will only charge event organizers for the overtime incurred to bring officersin on their days off. When regular shift officers have time available to work at the events, the city will not charge organizers. "We typically use volunteers for crowd control but we wouldn't charge for that," King said. See Events/B5

and Rescuevolunteers

i in intosummer rea

with him.

Denk and Herman were camping in an

Call a reporter: Bend ...................541-617-7829 Redmond ...........541-548-2186 Sisters ................541-548-2186 La Pine...............541-383-0367 Sunriver.............541-383-0367 Deschutes.........541-383-0376 Crook.................541-383-0367 Jefferson...........541-383-0367 State projects....541-410-9207 Salem .................541-554-1162 D.C.....................202-662-7456 Business ...........541-383-0360 Education..........541-383-0367 Health..................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety........541-383-0387 Projects.............. 541-617-7831

Submissions: • Letters and opinions:

• Civic Calendar notices:

RV on the west side of

Email event information to news@bendbulletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" in the subject, and include acontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

the Wickiup Reservoir prior to hunting for mushrooms. A sheriff's

deputy took Denkback tothe RVaround 6a.m., where they discovered

• School news andnotes:

Herman safe andin

Email news items and notices of general interest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcements of teens' academic achievements to youth© bendbulletin.com.Email college notes, military graduations andreunion info to bulletin@bendbulletin. com. Contact: 541-383-0358

good condition inside the RV.

Herman hadbecome disoriented in the woods and had decided to walk back to the RV. At some point, he fell in the Deschutes River, and

arrived at the RVaround 5:30 a.m. cold and tired, but without injury.

• Obituaries, Death Notices:

The Sheriff's Office

Details on the Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits© bendbulletin.com

advises those going into the wilderness to carry

adequate supplies with them, including a cell-

• Community events:

phone, water andwarm clothing in case of an emergency.

Email event information to communitylife©bend bulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www .bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Details: The calendar appears inside this section. Contact: 541-383-0351

— From staff reports

STATE NEWS

• Births, engagements,

Portland Ryan Brennecke r The Bulletin

Albany

Austin Antrican, 18, of Salem, slides down the year-round tubing hill at Sunriver Homeowners Coos Bay

Aquatic 8 Recreation Center on Tuesday. Antrican was spending the afternoon enjoying the sunshine • Portland:Man who disrupted a flight says

The Bulletin

Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact 541-383-0358, bulletinObendbulletin.com

were dispatched to the

area. Hermanwas reported not to havefood, water or a cellphone

Have astoryidea or submission? Contactus!

marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: Details: The Milestones page publishesSundayin Community Life. Contact: 541-383-0358

with his classmates during their graduation party.

he's bipolar andwasn't

taking his medication.

• Albany:Teenaccused in bomb plot appears in court.

• Coos Bay: Environmental groups are appealing a dredging permit for the Port of Coos Bay.

Well shot!

REDMOND

reader photos

Utility billing shifts from tenants to owners By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin

Stories on B3

Senate passes pesticide dill Oregon's Senate passed a bill Tuesday that aims to minimize pesti-

cide use onstate-owned property, sending it to Gov. John Kitzhaber's

desk for signature. House Bill 3364 re-

quires "integrated pest management" for state programs such asinvasive weedcontrol and on public property from forests to universities to

roadsides. The Senate's 24-6 vote, with six Republicans dissenting, is a significant victory for

Despite warnings that its decision would adversely impact real estate investment and livability in Redmond, the City Council on Tuesday unanimously approved a motion to allow the city's utility billing department to transition from billing tenants of rental homes to making residence owners responsible for the bills. The exception to the new practice, which will take effect June 1, is for commercial

rentals. The changes will be phased in, as rentals change tenants. An increasing number of water shut-offs and accounts in default prompted the request from city staff. Throughout the process, the City Council heard from several landlords who did not support the change. At the direction of the council, a focus group of rental owners, property management company representatives and city staff — along

with two council members — was brought together for a meeting to find a solution acceptable to everyone, but the meeting ended without compromise. "I've heard a lot of suggestions on how to decrease the delinquent accounts but none of them addressour staffing issue," Councilor Joe Centanni said. Interim City Manager Sharon Harris told the council that two new employees would be needed if no changes were adopted.

"Our role as a municipality is to be stewards of the taxpayer's dollar," Councilor Camden King said. "Right now we have those who pay their bills on time paying for those who don't and it can

only get worse (if changes aren't made)." Several property managers attended the meeting, testifying that the city didn't give enough time before making its decision, and that many property owners were opposed to the change. SeeUtilities/B2

• We want to seeyour best waterfall photos for

another special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work at wwtLbendbuffetin

.com/waterfaffsand we'll pick the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

News of Record, B2

Heading back toGermanyfor a year

Beyond Toxics inEugene, which drove the bill. It

By Megan Kehoe

passed theHouseearlier

The Bulletin

and Kitzhaber's office said he would sign it,

Alexander Bartels considers himself an average American high school student. He strives for good grades. He plays in a band. He likes science, and spends his free time playing soccer. But starting in August, Alexander won't be just an average American high

adding to asuccessful 2009 bill that required IPM for schools. State agencies will

OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS

unify efforts andmeasure results under anew

Educational news and

interagency committee headed by Oregon State

University's PaulJepson. — From wire reports

activities, and local kids and their achievements. • School Notes and submission info,B2

school student. He'll be an American high school student studying in his home country of Germany. "I'm just a normal high school kid," Alexander said. "I think my application might have stood out because of my knowledge of the language and because I have so much passion for the country." Alexander was recently awarded the prestigious

Congress-Bundestag Youth Exchange Scholarship, a full-ride exchange scholarship that sends about 50 high school students across the U.S. to Germany for a year. Students in the program spend the year living with host families and attending German high schools, where they act as cultural ambassadors. SeeBartels/B2

Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

Summit High School student Alexander Bartels has been selected for the Congress-Bundestag Youth Exchange Scholarship and will spend next year studying in Germany. The scholarship pays for the entire trip.


B2

THE BULLETIN•W EDNESDAY, MAY 29, 20'I3

E VENT

AL E N D A R

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at wtvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

STUDENTREADINGS:Featuring performance poetry, monologues and music; free; 7 p.m.; The Nature of Words, 224 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-647-2233, infoO thenatureofwords.org or www. thenatureofwords.org. "FIRST: TH ESTORY OF TH ELONDON 2012 OLYMPICGAMES":Aspecial showing of the sports documentary following 12 first-time athletes ontheir journeyto the Olympic Games;$12.50; 7:30 p.m.; RegalOldMill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. "THE Z00 STORY":A one-act play by Edward Albee about a chance encounter between a transient and a book publisher in New York City's Central Park; $10; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881, Derek@volcanictheatrepub.com or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. GRAND ROYALE:A Beastie Boys tribute; $7 plus fees in advance, $10

at the door; 9:30 p.m., doors open by Edward Albee about a chance at8:30p.m.;Liquid Lounge,70 N.W . encounter between a transient Newport Ave., Bend; www.p44p.biz. and a book publisher in New York City's Central Park; $10; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. FRIDAY Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881, Derek@volcanictheatrepub.com or LATINOPROGRAM SCHOLARSHIP www.volcanictheatrepub.com. FUNDRAISER:Featuring small plate tastings, beer samplings, a silent AOUADEER: The L.A. acoustic band auction, dance performances and performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned music; proceeds benefit the Central Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Oregon Community College's Latino Bend; 541-728-0879. scholarship fund; $30; 6-9 p.m.; THE MELODRAMATICS:Reggae North Rim Lodge, 1500 N.W. Wild music, with Necktie Killer, Vital Rye Circle, Bend; 541-318-3726. Rhythmand 2nd Hand Soldiers; THE BENDFILMBASH:Learn about $7; 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. the upcoming BendFilm Festival; Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408with live music, raffle, gourmet 4329 or www.randompresents.com. bites and drinks; proceeds benefit ECLECTICAPPROACH: The Seattle Bendfilm; $50; 6-10 p.m.; Cascade based rock band performs; $5; 10 Culinary Institute, 2555 N.W. p.m., door open 9:30 p.m.; Astro Campus Village Way, Bend; 541Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 388-3378 or www.bendfilm.org. 541-388-0116. CASCADE CHORALE:The group performs doo-wop, spirituals SATURDAY and classic jazz; free; 7 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth DOG AGILITY EVENT:Bend Agility St., Bend; www.cascadechorale.org. Action Dogs is hosting a dog "THE Z00 STORY":A one-act play trial from beginners to advanced;

free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-408-7065 or cdmann@bendbroadband.com. MADRASSATURDAYMARKET: Freeadmission;9a.m.-2 p.m .; Sahalee Park, B andSeventh streets; 541-489-4239. WALK FOR LIFE: A two mile walk; proceeds benefit the Pregnancy Resource Centers of Central Oregon; free; 9 a.m.-11 a.m., 8:30 a.m. registration; Riverbend Park, Southwest Columbia Street and Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-385-5334 or www.prcco.org. PRINEVILLEHOTSHOT MEMORIAL RUN:Featuring a 5k run, 5k walk, 10ktrail run and a1k children's fun run; benefits wild land firefighters and memorial monuments; $25, $10 for children's 1k; 9:30 a.m., 10:45 a.m. for children's1k; Ochoco Creek Park, 450 N.E. Elm St. BASH:Featuring best"summers outfit" contest, rolling competitions, food, beer, live glass blowing, games and prizes; 18+ event; free;

Other news

have a $6.4million beginning

NEWS OF RECORD

TODAY

THURSDAY

"BRIDGINGCULTURES: MUSLIM JOURNEYS":Amy Harper presents "A Quiet Revolution: The Veil's Resurgence from the Middle East to America"; Oregon Room, Barber Library; free; noon-1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. CollegeWay, Bend; 541-383-7295. THE IMPORTANCE OFBEING UNORIGINAL INTHEARTS: Bill Cravis demonstrates that artistic creation is an original act; free; 4:30-5:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. CollegeWay, Bend; 541-330-4357. "THERE ISNOTHING OUT HERE":A screening of the concert film of new music discoveries and the energy of live music, followed by filmmaker Q-and-A; $6; 8:30 p.m.; Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend; 541-241-2271.

Utilities

In other business Tuesday, fund balanceand the adopted Continued from B1 the council voted unanimously budget expects to dip into that Property ma n ager E r i c a to adopt its 2013-14budget. by approximately $678,000 to Morris stated that one reason The $16.8 million general meet expenditures, an amount Redmond is so attractive to in- fundbudget isa decrease from on par with the reserves budvestors and renters is because last year's $18.9 million budget, getedto be spent in 2012-13. of its re asonable costs and yet anincrease in expenditures Medical premiums are exthat the utility billing change outside the city's control, such pected to rise 15percent, a fiswould have seriously negative as rising employee retirement cal impact of about $255,000. consequencesin both areas. contributions and medical pre- And contributions to the Public City code already states that miums, was anticipated. EmployeesRetirement System property owners are responTo prepare the budget, city will rise between21 and 58 persible for all city-provided util- staffassumed zero growth in cent, depending on the tenure itycharges,but over the years propertytax revenue, as well of the employee, with a fiscal Redmond has made changes as no staffing or salary in - impact of $315,000. to its practice. City staff cited creases —although some emThe city plans to continue $460,000 in uncollected util- ployee union contracts have its trend in re cent years of ity debt as reason for the lat- negotiations coming this year. meeting the majority of t he est change, as well as the de- The city estimates that more debtservice for Juniper Golf mands on staff time. than 80 percent of homes in Course, about $303,000 comAn o ptional de p osit i n - Redmond are valued below pared to last year's $434,000. stituted last y ea r w i l l be assessed levels. — Reporter: 541-548-2186, discontinued. The 2013-14 budget w i l l I pugmi re@bendbufleti n.com

SCHOOL NOTES

REUNIONS Bend High School class of1973 will hold a reunion Aug. 9-10; 5:30 p.m. Aug 9; Crux Fermentation Project, 50 S.W. Division St., Bend; free; 5:30 p.m. Aug.10; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Dr.; $35, $40after June1; registration required; contact Jennifer Stenkamp, 541-5480711, Facebook page "Bend High School Class of1973" or https:I/ reunionmanager.net/reunion registration.php?class id=1425458 r eunion=BEND+SENIOR+HIGH+SCHO OL8 class of=1973. Redmond UnionHigh School class of1938will hold a reunion June18; Noon; Juniper Golf Club, 1938 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; free; spouses, escorts, wheelchairs and walkers welcome; RSVPby June 1 with number of guests; contact Everett Endicott, 541-548-4062 or jigger©bendbroadband.com.

COLLEGE NOTES Kayla Walsh, who is entering her sophomore year at Otterbein University in Westerville, Ohio, has received a place on aFulbright Summer lnstitute to the United Kingdom and will be studying at Shakespeare's Globe Theatre this summer. Walsh is a 2012 graduate of Mountain View High School.

MILITARY NOTES Air Force AirmanJustin Short

Bartels

has graduated from basic military training at Joint Base SanAntonioLackland in SanAntonio. He is a 2012 graduate of Bend High School and the son of Jason and Sherry Short, both of Bend. Air Force Airman Justin Phelanhas Short graduated from basic military training at Joint Base SanAntonioLackland in San 1 Antonio. He is a 2011 graduate of Mountain View High School and the son of Kristi Phelan, of Bend.

TEEN FEATS Summit High School student Alexander Bartelswas awarded a Congress-Bundestag Youth Exchange Scholarship. He will be a youth ambassador, live with his host family and attend high school in Germany for the 2013-14 academic year. The La Plne High School Business Hawkshad 17 of its members place in the top10 at the Oregon Future Business Leaders of America State Business Leadership Conference. Freshman Gage Yeager, junior Niico Haddad, junior Kati Newcomb and senior Ashlee Horn qualified for nationals that will be held in Anaheim, Calif., June 27-30.

Hovv tosubmit Teen feats:Kids recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Please submit a photo.) Contact: 541-383-0358,

youth©bendbulletin.com Mail:P.O. Box 6020,Bend, OR 97708

Otherschoolnotes: College announcements, military graduations or

training completions, reunion announcements. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin@bendbulletin.com

Story ideas School drlefs:Items and announcements of general interest. Contact: 541-633-2161, news@bendbulletin.com

Student profiles:Know

Unauthorized use —Avehicle was reported stolen and anarrest made at 10:34 a.m. May 22, in the 61100 block of Concho Street. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at11:00 a.m. May22, in the 2500 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:22 a.m. May 23, in the1200 blockof Northeast Eighth Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 7:55 p.m. May 23, in the area of Southwest Bond Street and Southwest lndustrial Way.

POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:52p.m.May 23,inthe300block of Southeast LogsdenStreet. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:32a.m. May24,inthe62900 block of Marsh Orchid Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 1:13 p.m. May 24, in the 63000 block of ShermanRoad. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 5:35 p.m. May 24, in the1500 block of Northwest Wall Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 12:52 p.m. May25, in the area of Northeast SewardAvenue and Northeast Sixth Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at7:57 p.m. May18, in the 900 block of Southwest SimpsonAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:04p.m.Ma y23,inthe20100 block of Stonegate Drive. DUII —Brady Charles Tyson, 26, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:09 p.m. May24, in the area of Northeast Sixth Street and Northeast DekalbAvenue. DUII —Jason Ronald Dunn, 32, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:26 a.m. May 25, in the area of Northeast Greenwood Avenueand Northeast Fourth Street. Burglary —A burglary and theft were reported and arrests madeat 4:46a.m.May25,inthe400 block of Southeast Third Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:08a.m. May26, intheblockof 21300 Oakview Drive. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at11:05 a.m. May 20, in the 600 block of Southeast Glenwood Drive.

REDMOND POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief, a burglary and a theft were reported and anarrest madeat1:25 p.m.May 20,inthe 2400 block of Northwest Canyon Drive. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:13 p.m. May20, in the3000 block of Southwest Obsidian Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:38 p.m. May 20, in the 400 block of Southwest Fifth Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 7:54 p.m. May 20, in the 1600 block of Southwest Obsidian Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported and an arrest madeat1:19 a.m. May 21, in the 2300 block of Southwest 23rd Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:22 a.m. May 21, in the 2400 block of Northwest12th Street. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 8:44a.m. May21, in the 2500 block of Southeast JesseButler Circle. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at11:52 a.m. May21, in the area of Northwest12th Street and Northwest CedarAvenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at12:36 p.m. May 21, in the area of Northwest12th Street and Northwest Dogwood Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at1:33 p.m. May 21, in the600 block of Northeast Quince Avenue.

OA'uo>ou%v & HEARING AID CUNIc

10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Puff Puff Pass, 525 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-7069984 or www.bendpuffpass.com. CELEBRATE DIRT DAY!:Features informational booths, vendors, hay rides, petting zoo, play corral, seed planting and dirt; cafe will be open or bring a lunch; proceeds benefit Central Oregon Locavore's Fram Kids Program and Waldorf School of Bend; $14 for children, $6 adults; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 N.E. Smith Rock Way,Terrebonne; 541-548-1432 or www.ddranch.net. CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY 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. CRESCENDO BENDO:Featuring the soundsofCascadeSchoolofM usic students; public cancome and go at will; free, donations accepted;10 a.m.-10 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.cascadeschoolofmusic.org.

Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:17 p.m. May 21, in the1400 block of Southwest Juniper Avenue. DUII —Gregory WemmerPeed, 54, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:03 p.m. May21, in the area of Southwest 35th Street and Southwest Highland Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at12:09 a.m. May22, in the area of Northwest 35th Street and Northwest Maple Avenue. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen and anarrest made at 9:04a.m.May 22,inthe2700 blockof Southwest13th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at10:45 a.m. May22,inthe800blockofWest Antler Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at12:47 p.m. May 22, in the area of Southwest 22nd Street and Southwest Reindeer Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at1:09 p.m. May 22, in the 700 block of Southwest Deschutes Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:03 p.m. May22, inthe700blockof Southwest Deschutes Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at 3:09 p.m. May22, in the 300 block of Northwest OakTree Lane. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 5:11 p.m.May22, in the area of U.S. Highway 97and Southwest EvergreenAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:24 a.m. May 23, in the1200 block of Southwest Highland Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at6:20a.m. May23, in the area of U.S.Highway 97and Southwest Highland Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 9:36 a.m. May23, in the 1500 block of South U.S.Highway97.

Continued next page

lES SCHNIB

BiSlllRi VAEIIi PRONISE

wwwcentraloregonaudiologycom Bend• Redmond• P-ville • Burns 541.647.2884

ofa kid with acompelling

~

I

i

'

I

story? Contact: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbulletin.com

Alexander has played the clarinet for the pastthree years, Continued from B1 and was part of the Summit Age:16,a sophomore at But unlike most American High Winds Ensemble team Summit High School students in the program, Althat won the state high school Favorite Book:The "Lord exander's already got a head band competition this year for of the Rings" trilogy start: He's fluent in German. the third year in a row. AlexanThough Alexander has called Favorite TV Show:"The der said while he's sad he won't Office" Bend his home for most of his be ableto play in the band next life, he was born just outside Favorite Movie:"Reservoir year, the instrument will most of Frankfurt and moved to the Dogs" certainly have a place in his United States with his family luggagew hen he takesoff or f Favorite Band:The Beatles when he was 2years old. Germany in August. "The clarinet's coming with Alexander plans to attend me," Alexander said, smiling. college in Germany, and said he seesnext year's trip as a test soccer. Alexander is an avid While spending a year away run. He's excited to discover viewer of the Bundesliga, the from the comforts of h ome more about his heritage during national soccer league in Ger- might seem daunting for some the year. many, and roots for Hannover. 16-year-olds, Alexander said "He has this insatiable intel"I grew up watching VHS only good things can come out lectual curiosity," said Patrick tapes of the games," Alexan- of his trip. "I think it doestake a level of Kilty, Alexander's Advanced der said. "I've always loved Placement European History soccer." courage to go, but I don't see it teacher."He couldn't have choWhen Alexander isn't enas something to be afraid of," sen a better way of satisfying grossed in soccer, he can be Alexander said. "I don't seeany that by going and immersing found studying or playing the negatives to it. Only positives." "He will be an amazing amhimself in another culture." clarinet. He maintains a 3.9 Alexander has yet to betold unweighted GPA and takes AP bassador for American youth," which city he'll be living in, but classes. His favorite subject is Kilty said. "I think he'll set a he's looking forward to living science, and he takes triple the very high standard in people's with a German family, getting normal science class require- eyes there for what American to know the country's educa- ments, something he hopes to teens are like." tion system, and perhaps most continue while he's attending — Reporter: 541-383-0354

AlexanderBartels

of all, playing and watching high schoolin Germany.

g•

•)

I

mkehoeC<bendbulletin.com

P

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

No pleain om plot arraignment

AROUND THE STATE COOS Bay gaS terminal —Environmental groups are appealing the state approval of a dredging permit for the Port of Coos Bay,

where a Canadiancompanywants to develop a $7 billion terminal The Associated Press An Oregon teenager acc used of p lotting t o b o m b his high school has been arraigned but didn't enter a plea. Seventeen-year-old G r a nt Acord appeared Tuesday in a video feed from a juvenile detention center where he was sent last week. H is bail w a s s e t a t $ 2 million.

Acord, 17, wa s a r r ested Thursday night after police got a tip that he was making a bomb to blow up West

A lbany

H igh

School, about 75 m iles south of Portland. Acord On Saturday, B enton County District A t torney John Haroldson said

Acord will be charged as an adult with attempted aggravated murder. A cord's mother says h e struggles with a form of obsessive-compulsive disorder. H aroldson said over t h e weekend that the alleged plot

to export natural gas from the Rockies to Asia. The appeal was filed Tuesday with the Oregon Court of Appeals in Salem. Janette Brim-

bombs in a secretcompartment under the floorboards of Acord's bedroom, along with written plans, checklists and a diagram of the school. The Associated Press normally doesn't name minors accused of crimes but is doing so in this case because of the seriousness of the allegations and because Acord is being charged as an adult.

was "forged and inspired" by the 1999 massacre at Columbine High School in Colorado. He said investigators found six

mer, an attorney for the environmental law firm Earthjustice, said the Oregon Department of State Lands deliberately turned away from its obligation to fully examine the effects of such a large dredging project

on water, fish and wildlife. The JordanCoveEnergy Project is being developed byVeresen Inc. of Calgary, which hopes to havefederal approval within a year. The Department of State Lands did not imme-

diately answer a request for comment on theappeal. LBlldlllg geul' mulfullC'tlull —A fire department spokesman says a private jet carrying five people landedsafely at a suburban Portland airport despite a problem with the plane's front landing gear. Hillsboro Fire and Rescue spokesman Storm Smith says the pilot

made several low-altitude passesTuesdayafternoon so experts at the

Man who disrupted flight says he's bipolar By Steven Dubois The Associated Press

PORTLAND An Alaska Airlines passenger accused of trying to open an emergency exit during a flight from Anchorage to Portland told investigators he has been diagnosed as bipolar a n d Her r era had not been taking his medicine. Alexander Michael Herrera's statement was included in a criminal complaint released Tuesday, just before he made his first court appearance on a charge of attempted destruction of an aircraft. The charge carries a maximum sentence of 20

years in prison. Herrera, 23, of Rio Rico, Ariz., did not enter a plea. His a r r a i gnment was scheduled for June 26. Herrera told Port of Portland police officers after M onday's arrest that h e was ill, possibly schizop hrenic, an d h a d b e e n hearing voices for four days. He said it had been more than a year since he took his medication for bipolar disorder. His comments to police mesh with a n i n t erview his father gave to a Tucson, Ariz., t elevision s t ation Monday in which he said his son was bipolar and didn't take his medicine. The younger H e rrera told police he remembered boarding the flight, but did not remember a nything that happened in the air.

From previous page Burglary —A burglary was reported at10:37 a.m. May 23, in the 700 block of Northwest Ninth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at1:44 p.m. May 23, in the 2800 block of Southwest 32nd Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:43 p.m. May 23, in the2400 block of Southwest 25th Street. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 5:48 p.m. May23, in the 300 block of Northwest OakTree Lane. Duu — JamesLeroyThomas, 43, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:30 p.m. May 23, in the area of Southeast Sisters AvenueandSoutheast Veterans Way. Theft — A theft was reported andan arrest made at11:14 a.m. May24, in the 900 block of Southwest Veterans Way. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at11:15 a.m. May24, in the area of Southwest 27th Street and Southwest Highland Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:20 a.m. May 24, in the 200 block of Northwest 28th Street. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at12:27 p.m. May24, in the 1700 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 1:15p.m. May24, in the 900 block of Southwest Veterans Way. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at3:08 p.m. May 24, in the 300 block of Northwest OakTree Lane. Duu — John ThomasThompson, 27, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:12 a.m. May25, in the areaof Southwest Fifth Street and Southwest Black Butte Boulevard. Theft —Atheft was reported at11:27 a.m. May 25, in the1800 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Duu —Rudolph Hlista Jr., 80, was

Pot gardens'useof rat poison looked at inspotted owl deaths ByJeff Barnard

arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:26 p.m. May 26, in the 2000 block of Northwest Elm Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported at1:08 p.m. May 26, in the1600 block of Northwest TeakAvenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 2:01 p.m. May26, in the 900 block of Southwest Veterans Way Theft —A theft was reported at 4:24 p.m. May 26, in the 3800 block of Southwest 21st Street. DUII —Lawrence Jay Duttle, 62, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 5:40 p.m. May26, intheareaof NorthU.S. Highway 97and Northwest Maple Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:47 p.m. May 26, in the1500 block of South U.S. Highway97. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:59 p.m. May 26, in the1600 block of Southwest 25th Street.

OREGON STATE POLICE Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at12:24p.m.May24,in thearea of U.S. Highway 20near milepost 93. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at2:04 p.m.May24, inthearea of state Highway 31near milepost131. DUII —AaronFredrick Glenn,22, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at10:13 p.m. May 24, intheareaof U.S.Highway 97 near milepost173. DUII —Christopher Dallas New,39, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at12:59a.m. May 25, in theareaof U.S.Highway 97 and RevereAvenuein Bend. Vehiclecrash—Anaccident was reported at216a.m. May25, in theareaof U.S. Highway 97 nearmilepost182. DUII —Michael LayneKaestner, 48, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at12:43 a.m. May 26, inthe areaof DayRoadand Fir Lane in LaPine. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was

more than half of an estimated 8,000 pounds of fuel. Smith says the pilot maintained control of the Lear jet when he did land.

Bear attaCk ill Klamath COunty —Oregon state troopers say a Klamath County man shot and killed a 350-pound bear that tried to attack his dogs and then turned toward him. The State Police said the

man, who wasnot identified, called to report he shot the bear shortly after letting the dogs out Tuesday morning. Sgt. Randy Hand said the

man heard barking and aroar, so he grabbed a rifle and stepped to the door — to seethe bearturn his way aggressively. Hefired twice.

The Associated Press

GRANTS PASS — In the West Coast marijuana-growing region known as the Emerald Triangle, scientists want to know whether the rat poison spread around illegal pot plantations is killing northern spotted owls, a threatened species. But because it is so rare to find a spotted owl dead in the forest, they will be looking at an invasive cousin owl from the East that has been pushing spotted owls out of their territory since the 1990s. Mourad Gabriel, a doctoral candidate at the University of California at Davis Veterinary Genetics Laboratory, said Tuesday theyare testing 84 barred owls from Northern California killed in the course of research on whether removing them allows spotted owls to reclaim lost territories. Those owls were collected primarily by the California Academy of Sciences and Green Diamond Resource Company, which grows redwood for timber. Among the first roughly 10 barred owls tested, about half have been positive for the poison. Two spotted owls found dead in Mendocino County in California also tested positive for the poisons, Gabriel said. The research is funded primarily by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Eric Forsman, a U.S. Forest Service wildlife biologist and a leading expert on spotted owls, said he did not think the rat poisons would be a significant factor for spotted owls in northern Oregon and Washington, where their primary prey is the flying squirrel and there aren't as many illegal pot plantations on federal lands. Loss of old growth forest habitat and the invasion of the barred owl remain the primary threat to the

Hillsboro Airport could see that the nose gear seemed to be deployed at an odd angle. The pilot also delayed his landing attempt to burn off

t I

r

The bear ran off, and its body was found a hundred yards from the house. State biologists examined the bear. Then it was given to the

Klamath Tribes for dispersal to tribal members. Troopers said state law allows lethal force in such circumstances without a permit. Bady faund at reCyClillg Center —Police saythe bodyof a newborn infant has been found in a north Portland recycling center. Detective Kristina Coffey said in a statement that the body was found Tuesday

morning amongrecycling items at EFIRecycling. Coffey saysthe Oregon state medical examiner has determined the body is that of a fullterm, or nearly full-term, baby girl with the umbilical cord still attached.

The causeandmanner of death are pending further investigation. — From wire reports The Associated Press file photo

A northern spotted owl flies after a mouse offered by a biologist in the Deschutes National Forest near Camp Sherman in 2003. Scientists think a rat poison used in illegal marijuana-growing operations may be responsible for spotted owl deaths. birds, whose numbers continue to decline. The rat poison could be s ignificant, however, in t h e southern part of their rangeNorthern California and southwestern Oregon — where they feed primarily on dusky-footed wood rats and pot plantations are abundant, Forsman said. Spotted owls in Southern Oregon and Northern California have been declining at the rate of 5to 15 percent a year from 1990 to 2008, Fish and Wildlife said. Scientists have already established that common household rat poisons spread around illegal pot gardens to keep rats from eating the plants have been poisoning fishers, a large cousin of the weasel that is being considered for protection bythe Endangered Species Act. One of the threats to the fishers being analyzed is the poison at the pot gardens, which are common on federal and tribal lands in Northern California and Southern Oregon, the prime pot-growing region known as the Emerald Triangle.

reported at5:12p.m.May26, in thearea of state Highway 31near milepost 31.

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Gabriel said researchers hoped to expand the testing of dead owls once Fish and Wildlife Service approves a program to experimentally remove barred owls from spotted owl territories on federal and tribal lands.

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PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT DUII —KCBall, 27,was arrested on suspicion of driving underthe influence of intoxicants at12:34 a.m.May25,in the area ofNorthwest MadrasHighway. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at7d7a.m. May 25, in theareaof Southeast Fourth Street. Unlawfulentry —Avehicle was reported enteredand items stolen at 8:57 a.m. May25, intheareaof Northeast Third Street. Burglary — Aburglary was reported at1:58 p.m.May26,in theareaof Northwest CainsRoad. DUII —Scott M. Pierce, 31,wasarrested on suspicion ofdriving underthe influence ofintoxicants at 6:55 p.m. May 26, in theareaof Northeast LoperAvenue. Burglary — Aburglary with an estimated loss of $5,000was reported at11:06 p.m. May26, inthe areaof Northeast Black BearStreet.

REDMOND FIRE RUNS May21 8 —Medical aid calls. Wednesday 5 — Medicalaidcalls. Thursday 9 —Medical aid calls. Friday 10:53 p.m. — Smokeodor reported, 8000 N. U.S.Highway97. 5 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 1:16 p.m.—Authorized controlled burning, 5660S.W.Impala Lane. 5 — Medical aidcalls. Sunday 10:42 p.m. —Unauthorized burning, 3331 S.W.Metolius MeadowCourt. 11 —Medical aidcalls.

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TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

oise or inance Is iase in avor 0 usinesses

AN INDEPENDENTNEWBPAPER

BETSYMccooL Gottoott BLnrtt

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WELCOME WAGON! JU5T WANTED TO 5AY HELLO AND A5K IF I CAN BORROW $600...

he city of Bend's noise ordinance is up for approval at tonight's City Council meeting. It's new and imtt Q. Q-~+~+

proved, but it's still not good enough. The council needs to tweak it again so that homeowners can't be fined without the police using a decibel meter. Homeowners deserve the same protection under the law as businesses. The council's changes to the ordinance are designed to do three important things: refine it's clarity; reduce the fine for the first offense in a yearfrom $750 to $250; and require that decibel meters be used before fining a business. There was some discussion among councilors at a recent council meeting suggesting that the council should take another look at the ordinance, perhaps in a few months. City Manager Eric King pointed out that the ordinance — no matter how it is amended or refashioned — is not going to stop all problems with noise. And he's right. Dogs will still bark long after an owner should stop them. A p a rty/celebration/ band is still going to go on too long and too loud. No noise ordinance is going to silence noise problems. It gives the city and the police a tool to tame them. But this isn't a case of trying to

worried at times if the city staffis doing enough to ensure the city is "business friendly." Don't forget to make it "homeowner friendly," too. tune an ordinary ordinance into doing something extraordinary. This is a case of an ordinance designed with an inherent bias in favor of businesses and against homeowners. Why would the city only require that a decibel meter be used before fining businesses and not require the same thing for homes'? Councilors and city staff have provided no respectable answer. That should make councilors more than momentarily uncomfortable. That should make councilors change the ordinance. Councilors have been worried at times if the city staff is doing enough to ensure the city is "business friendly." Don't forget to make it "homeowner friendly," too.

Library is right to have areas for teens andkids ibraries are many different things to many different people. They offer services to patrons from infancy through old age, and in doing so they must keep the needs of everyone in mind. That can create hard feelings, as Deschutes Public Library officials learned last summer when a patron charged that the library had discriminated against him because of his age. He had been reading in an areasetaside forteenage users, because it had the most comfortable chairs. He was asked to find somewhere else to sit. The state Bureau of Labor and Industry investigated and found that no discrimination had occurred. Meanwhile, Library Director Todd Dunkelberg did not ignore the complaint. New, more comfortable furniture was purchased for other seating areas in the library. In the end, it's difficult to see what else the library could do. Its mission is to provide library services for the residents of Deschutes County, no matter their age. Teens are no doubt more likely to use

L

LL LL LL .~

Councilors have been

those services if they can gather with others of their own age without a bunch of silence-loving adults there, as well. We've all been to a restaurant or movie theater where a crying baby or group of young patrons enjoying themselves more noisily than we might like has made the experience uncomfortable. We can remember,too, our own teenage years, when the adults we knew disliked our clothes, our chattiness, our laughter. There's also a question of safety, though that may be a larger concern in the children's library. While library employees are not baby sitters, they are aware of who is in what space, as they should be. It's the recognition that the needs of teens and adults are not identical that led library staff to create an area for teens. And it's the recognition that some furniture was uncomfortable that led to the choices made when it was replaced. In both cases, library staff were simply working to make a diverse population of patrons happy.

Oregonians need to rethink attitudes on timber industry By Becky, Kathy andJody Jones s third-generation Oregonians and a longtime timber family, we three sisters feel a deep sympathy as well as an intense frustration at the announcement of Rough 8 Ready's closure in Cave Junction. This never should have happened. It didn't need to. And contrary to w hat some in Oregon's urban areas may think, Oregon's forests will be no better off as a result of this closure. Our great state holds the most prolific f orests i n t h e c o u ntry; some 30 million acres of forests carpetOregon. These are predominantly second-growth trees.More than 11 million acres, including 4.5 million acres of old growth, are already in untouchable reserves and set-asides. Yet the radical activists' propa-

IN MY VIEW

bon and produce clean air. They would be more resistant to fire and

provide good jobs.

We were raisedto be responsible and industrious by parents who believed in self-sufficiency and an honest day's work. Likewise, Oregon has been a state that provides needed goods to our society, builds strongcommunities,and preserves its livability for all. However, in recent years, much of that practicality and good common sense has been trampled by those who are least connected to the land. They have loudly promoted the fallacy that old-growth timber is p ar t o f o u r i n d ustry. N othing could b e f u r t her f r o m the truth. Old growth by definition is 250 years and older. In the case of Seneca, our milling equipment won't even handle logs that massive. ganda — too long unchallenged At Seneca, as with all pr ivate — has finally taken the ultimate timber holders, we've been practictoll: Oregon is broke. And good ing sustainable yield forest manbusinesses and people are being agement for more than 20 years, u nnecessarily penalized. I n t h e which means that more treesare case of Rough & Ready, 85 fami- always growing than ar e being lies have been thrown into des- harvested. In fact, we plant two to peration. They were good at their six trees for every one that we harvest. Seneca's private timberlands jobs, and their jobs were good for Oregon. have 80 percentmore timber than Rough 8 Ready's closure is an when we bought them. unjustified t r avesty, devastating If public timberlands were manon so many levels — not only to aged as well as private lands, all hardworking families — but to the of Oregon's forests would continue health of the forests themselves. into perpetuity as the most beautiOregonians must reclaim the use ful, productive forests in the world, of thisvast, renewable resource. full of clear running streams and Keeping it locked up is a shameful wildlife. They would b e f o rests waste of our greatest bounty. with younger trees that grab car-

In contrast, federal and state forests — unmanaged due to the hands-off edicts of radical activists — are riddled with bug kill and fodder for fire. Retired forest service managers tell us candidly that Oregon's public forests are a tinder box, and could explode into the most violent and destructive fires this state has ever seen. Continuing to lock up our public forest lands is absurd! Our hearts go out to Rough 8z Ready's co-owners JenniferPhillippi and Link Strauss, and especially their m any u n necessarily unemployed workers, as well as the community of Cave Junction. As women with an abiding love for ourforests and a deep respect for nature, every mill closure is a blow to us. Here at Seneca, we vow to fight for our state, and the right of Oregonians to utilize our state's wealth and renewable resources to create prosperity and products integral to our lives. We call on all Oregonians — especially those in urban settings who may think their values are d ifferent f r o m "timber people" — to take a closer look at us and what we're doing. We invite you to join us as true keepers of the Oregon spirit and our state's livability for this generation and those to come. — Bechy, Kathy and Jody Jones represent the Seneca Family of Companiesin Eugene.

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Mr. President, save us from a terrifying enemy: Xbox One By John Kass Chicago Tribune

hough he's vowed to cut back on those drone attacks of his, President Barack Obama needs to launch the mother of drone attacks: against Xbox One. It must be destroyed soon, before it's too late. Americans are fools for shiny technology, andthe Xbox One from Microsoft is the coolest, shiniest TV entertainment system in the history of man. The console, which could cost upward of $350, is being advertised as the perfect thing for watching live Tv, movies and streaming video and playing video games. But there's one thing. It spies on

T

you.

"That's what really freaks me out," said my colleague, Old School. "It'll be spying on me, in the dark, when I'm sitting there." That's why Xbox One must die. All the glitzy stuff aside, the danger of Xbox One is that in the hands of an evil genius — or an IRS agent — it

could be a spy system. Why'? It has a camera and a microphone. The camera will look at you when you entera room, recognize your face and greet you. The microphone will pick up your voice, if you dare speak your thoughts out loud in your own home and transmit it into voice recognition software. Oh, and you can't turn the microphone off. The high-powered processor is triggered by keywords. It will learn your video preferencesand offer you movies and other entertainment choices based on those preferences. To recap: It watches you, it greets you, it knows you. It listens to you, it never stops listening. It anticipates your needs. And Americans will invite it into their homes. They'll love it. They'll play with it, perhaps even design coversand other modified accessories for its cold black skin. It will become part of our households. Just another black box you can't do without.

You don't have to be an expert in The Chicago Way to see the possibilities of this demonic object. Knowledge is power. The pursuit of power is the provinceofruthlesspeople.Need Isay more? Naturally, Microsoft insists that it won't watch you if you don't want it to watch you. "If you want privacy, we'll give you modes that ensure your privacy," Jeff Henshaw, a Microsoft grand poobah, said this week. "If" you want privacy? "Modes'?" Suchpassivelanguagehas longbeen the moist, shadowy ground where the cobra waits for the mouse. "It's not the case where you'll be able to remove the camera altogether," Henshaw admitted. "But you'll be able to put the system in modes where you can be completely secure about the fact that the camera is off and can't see n

yOu.

Isn't that the kind of thing that techies always say'? And then they laugh. Mirthlessly. This is the part of the movie where

the scientist shows you the cute little dinosaur babies. "This adorable miniature Velociraptor will never grow and never attack its human masters. You can be completely secure," says the kind scientist. And you know what happens to him. This week, the fancy game console w as revealed to much fanfare over the Internet. Gamers and people who just have to have the latest technology in their homes (to make the rest of us feel stu-

pid) were squealing with delight and glee. It has superior technology making video gaming even more addictive than that of older models. It also has a Blu-ray player, the better to show extreme detail. And serious video game players are expected to love all the features. "It's supposed to be great for gamers,n said a young bearded fellow with hipster glasses and skinny mustardcolored pants. "But what I don't like about the Xbox One is that I'll have to

buy all new games." Games? As a dignified journalist and talk show host with immense gravitas on all matters, I don't know doodly squat about video games. And this ignorance makes me extremely vulnerable to snipers on the Turbine map in Yemen. But this really isn't about games. This is about a concept Americans have forgotten. We used to call it freedom. What if I told you that years ago, a man named George would write a book about a futuristic society with cameras everywhere.In the land of Oceania, the news media edited out offensive phrases that would trouble the citizens. The government could follow you everywhere on the street with cameras (George didn't think of the IPhone). Cameras even watched the people in their own homes. And microphones picked up everything. Who'd ever write a book like that'? — John Kass is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune.


WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

BS

WEST NEWS

BITUARIES

A u i n w in s e FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH NOTICES Bruce A. Malpass, of Yuma, AZ (formerly of Central Oregon)

Janet I. Scott, of Baker City, OR (formerly of Bend)

Dec. 28, 1925 - Dec. 18, 2012 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, (541)382-5592;

Jan. 31, 1930 - Dec. 26, 2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Gardens, 541-382-5592,

Services: 11:00 AM, Saturday, June 1, 2013; Graveside Memorial Service with Military Honors will be held at Deschutes Memorial Gardens.

Services: Janet's wishes were to be cremated and a Memorial Service will be held Saturday, June 1, 2013 at 1pm at the Old historic St. Francis Catholic Church, 587 Lava Rd., Bend, OR with a celebration of life reception to follow at the Farewell Bend Park Pavilion, located on the SW side of Reed Market Rd. Contributions may be made

www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com

www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com

George Henry Stothers, of Roseville, CA (former La Pine resident) Nov. 28, 1927 - May 18, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A memorial service in Roseville, CA will take place at a later date.

to:

Family Kitchen at Trinity Lutheran, 469 NW Wall Street Bend, OR 97701.

Charolette Louise Ayers, of La Pine Oct. 13, 1920 - May 22, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services planned at this time.

Dell Allen Walling, of Redmond June 3, 1950 - May 26, 2013 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our online guestbook www.redmondmemorial.com Services: No services will be held at this time.

Nancy C. Flick (Carr), of Bend Oct. 3, 1930 - May 22, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services are planned at this time. Contributions may be made

Donald Earl Hottman, of Prineville May12, 1935- May 26, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A service will be held at a later date.

to:

Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701, www.partnersbend.org or Humane Society of Central Oregon, 61170 SE 27th Street, Bend, Oregon 97702, www.hsco.org.

Melvin "Mel" Warfield, of La Pine Dec. 19, 1931 - May 9, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private ceremony will be held at a later date.

Linda S. Williams March 5, 1945 - May 21, 2013

L inda Su e W i ll i a m s p assed a w a y T ues d a y , May 21 , 2 013 o f c a n c er. National Rifle Association S he w a s 6 8 ye a r s o l d . www.nra.org Linda was born i n S cottsb luff, Nebraska, March 5 , 1 945, to Wi l li s Fr ank a n d Rose Edna (Dinnel) December 31, 1947-May 23, 2013 T arr. S h e Raymond L. W i l l i ams of married T errebonne p assed a w a y Thomas of natural causes May 23, Williams 2 013. He was 65. He w a s October b orn in R e dmond, OR o n 31, 1 9 6 5, D ec. 3 1 , and was a 1947, and homew as o n e Linda Williams maker. of 12 She loved brothers to travel, garden, crochet s a nd si s - and quilt, but she loved her ters. He is family most of all. survived L inda is survived by h er by h i s husband, Tom Williams of wife, La Pine, OR; her son, Jeff GeorW illiams of Ow at o n n a , Raymond g ian n a MN; dau g h t er , Kat h y Williams Wtlhams; S tanley of N e w b erg, O R ; children, b rother, J o h n T ar r of B rad, B r i an , B l a in e W i l - Turner, OR; and 5 g r a ndl iams, and Br andi M o r r i s; c hildren. S h e w as p r e and brothers, Glen and Ham ceded in death by her son, Williams. His love was his M ichael D a l e W i l l i a m s ; g randchildren, Devr o n , b rother, Frank T a r r ; a n d Kayla, Ralyn, C h ristopher, sister, Colleen Claybaugh. Dylan, Levt, Makenzie, AsA celebration of L i n d a 's pen, and Rylee. life will b e h el d I : 00 p.m. A celebration of h i s l i f e Tuesday, June 4, 2 013 at will be held 1:00 p.m., SatSpringfield Memorial Garurday, June I, 2013, at the dens, 7305 Main Street, Terrebonne Grange. Springfield, OR 97478. Contributions may be made to:

Raymond L. Williams

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 maybesubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday 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

Errichetti,

N.J. mayor convicted in corruption By Bruce Weber New Yorlz Times News Service

Angelo Errichetti, a former two-term mayor of Camden, N.J., whose career as a state Democratic p o wer b r o k er ended in t h e e a rl y 1 9 80s when he wa s ensnared in the congressional corruption scandal known as A bscam and served nearly three years in prison, died on May 16 at home in Ventnor, N.J. He was 84. His death was confirmed by his daughter, Michele. A native of Camden, Errichetti (pronounced err-ihKEH-tee) took office in 1973, two yearsafterrace riots had torn apart the city. He was credited with easing racial tensions and hailed as a tireless advocate for his beleaguered hometown, a o ncethriving manufacturing center whose long decline he was unable to stop. "When I was running the city, we had no money, and I was putting out fires from riots," he said to a reporter from Th e C o u rier-Post of Cherry Hill, N.J., in 2003. Errichetti was hugely popular, endearing himself to the city's low-income population in particular by refusing to raise taxes. For his second term he was re-elected with more than 80 percent of the vote. After his death, the current mayor, Dana Redd, ordered that flags at city buildings be flown at half-staff in his honor. Errichetti, who wa s a l so a state senator from 1976 to 1981 — he served in b o th jobs simultaneously — was among the most influential politicians in southern New Jersey. It was his wielding of that influence that led to his downfall. The scandal grew from an FBI investigation into political corruption beginning in 1978, when agents posing as wealthy Arabs and their r epresentatives s o ught t o greasethe palms of public officials. Errichetti was caught on hidden cameras serving as an intermediary between the undercover agents and a Pennsylvania congressman, Michael Myers, and visiting the Long Island office of a bogus company, Abdul Enterprises Ltd., to pick up money. (Abscam is a contraction of "Abdul" and "scam.") The sting operation lasted two years and led to the conviction of 19 men, including Myers, four other congressmen a n d S e n . Ha r r i son Williams Jr. of New Jersey, whom Errichetti had introduced to the agents. Errichetti was sentenced to six years in prison on bribery and conspiracy charges and served 32 months. "I can only blame myself for the tremendous ego I developed, the kind of ego that gets a politician into trouble," he said after his release in March 1986. Errichetti's wife, the former Dolores Mills, died in 2005. In addition to his daughter, he is survived by a s i ster, Dolores DiLorenzo, and two grandchildren. After his release from prison, Errichetti worked as a consultant in real estate and other businesses. A movie inspired by Abscam, "American Hustle," w it h B r a dley Cooper and Jennifer L awrence, is scheduled to open this year. A character a lot like Errichetti is played by Jeremy Renner.

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: John Bierwirth, 89: Led the Grumman Corp., one of the nation's largest aircraft makers, through challenging times in the 1970s and '80s. Died Sunday in Freeport, N.Y.

Marshall Lytle, 79: A spirited bass player whose work was heard on one of rock 'n' roll's seminal r e cordings, "Rock Around the Clock" by Bill Haley and His Comets. Died Saturday in New Port Richey, Fla. Morris Renek, 88: A c r iti-

s

cally admired New York novelist who wrote comic tales about historical criminals and modern urban life but never achieved t h e co m m ercial success many thought he deserved. Died May 10. — From wire reports

The Associated Press SANTA BARBARA, Calif. — Firefighters took advantage of a lull in winds on Tues-

day to gain ground against a forest fire i n m o untains u eo u northwest of Santa Barbara, Calif., as some crews were diverted to a second fire that ia broke out nearby and jumped two highways. tl I The Santa Barbara County b laze erupted Monday i n Los Padres National Forest, r carving its way through 3.2 square miles of dry chapar;i. ral, oak and pine. Firefighters had it 65 percent contained by sunset Tuesday, despite 't Q'9' feared wind gusts of up to 40 mph, fire spokesman Manuel s Madrigal said. More than 600 firefighters, supported by a dozen aircraft, were on the lines about 10 'r4. wu 4 / miles northwest of downtown "f ( Santa Barbara. At the fire's height, thou> rs, ..u sands of campers and day visitors scrambled out of the forest on the Memorial Day holiday. The fire also prompted the evacuation of about 50 homes, mainly cabins and vacation rentals, but residents were allowed to return home Tuesday night. Nick Ut/ rhe Associated Press The fire,which remained Firefighters work to extinguish a fire along a hillside in the Los under investigation, burned Padres National Forest near Santa Barbara, Calif., on Monday. two vehicles and a U.S. Forest .

'~

.

Service garage. Winds were calm through midday, and the blaze was moving east along the Santa Ynez Mountains northwest of Santa Barbara. Crews were worried, however, thata w ind change could push the fire south toward the scenic coastal city, county fire Capt. David Sadecki said. "There's a lot of dry vegetation in its path," Sadecki said. "It's still spring — it's not even summer — and it's burning like it's August or September." The fire was burning near Paradise Road, which meanders along the north side of the Santa Ynez Mountains. Santa Barbara and neighbor-

ing communities sit on the other side of the coastal range, which rises quickly from near the Pacific shoreline to peaks topping 3,000 feet. Later Tuesday, a second wildfire broke out in the nearby wine country hills of Santa Ynez at about 3:30 p.m. It quickly grew to 170 acres, jumping Highway 154 and 246, but dozens of firefighters and two water-dropping helicopters stopped its forward movement, Sadecki said. The Sheriff's Department sent out an evacuation warn-

ing to roughly 2,000 people living in the city that is home to many horse ranches and vineyards.

Despite its bucolic setting, the area 100 miles northwest of Los Angeles has seen terrible wildfires, including a 1990 blaze that destroyed 641 structures, most of them homes. The summer of 2007 was marred by a gigantic fire that erupted on July 4 and burned for months. A new blaze flared just before noon Tuesday near the Magic Mountain theme park and Interstate 5 north of Los Angeles. It quickly consumed 55 acres of brush, but was 80 percent contained and expected to be surrounded after hundreds of Los Angeles County firefighters responded with air support.

Are great whitesharksendangered? By Louis Sahagun

the environmental g r oups Oceana, Shark S t e wards It's a mystery of the sea: and the Center for Biological How many great white sharks Diversity filed petitions callare prowling near California's ing for endangered species surf lines? protection. Some scientists say the popThe groups were reacting ulation is large and healthy. to the first — and only — cenOthers say it is alarmingly sus of great whites ever atsmall. No one has ever known tempted. Conducted by UC for certain, but the question Davis and Stanford Universihas become crucial thisyear. ty researchers and published State and federal authorities in the journal Biology Letters are weighing a request to clas- in 2011, the census estimated sify the fish scientists know that only 219 adult and subas Carcharodon carcharias adult great whites lived off the as an endangered species Central California coast, and worth preserving at all costs, perhaps again that many in a step that could, among other the entire northeastern Pacifthings, wipe out what's left of ic Ocean, including Southern a gill net fishing industry that California. inadvertently snares g reat Other shark experts claim whites. the actual population is sev"This is a tough one — we eral times larger, a legacy of are keenly aware that the state and federal laws curbing scientific community is polar- pollution, banning near-shore ized on this issue," said Adri- gill netting, protecting sharks anna Shea, deputy chief of the and halting the slaughter of California Department of Fish marine mammals they prey and Game Commission. on. Great white sharks are The authors of the census apex p r edators, m e aning study declined to comment they feed at the top of the food on the merits of the petitions. chain and are naturally low in However, one of the them, abundance. Sal Jorgensen, who is now a Few creatures possess the research scientist at the Monf earsome mystique of t h e terey Bay Aquarium in Monwhite shark, which can reach terey, said, "I don't think there 21 feet, weigh 3 1/2 tons and is an imminent threat. hunts near surf lines shared The money being spent by surfers, scuba divers and by the government to evaluswimmers. ate this issue would be betThe National Marine Fish- ter spent trying to evaluate eries Service and the state this question: Is the number Department of Fish and Wild- of white sharks r ising or lifehave been researching the falling'?" health of the great white popThe census was conducted ulation since last year, when from 2006 to 2008 on sharks

that gather around Tomales Point, near Bodega Bay, and the Farallon Islands off the San Francisco coast from late July until late January. The researchers assumed the population is closed during the study period, meaning no sharks leave or join the group, and that it returns to the area in precise annual homecomings, making reliable census estimates possible. The researchers lured great whites close to their boat by slowly pulling a f ake seal. They identified 131 individual sharks by the distinctive patterns of nicks, notches and scars on the trailing edge of their dorsal fins and then used mathematical models to calculate the likely population. T he lead authors of t h e study, Taylor Chapple, a doctoral student at U C D a vis when the work was done, and Barbara Block, a professor in marine sciences at Stanford's Hopkins Marine Station in Pacific Grove, acknowledged that the estimate of 219 was lower than t hey e x pected for the C entral C alifornia portion. "It's a lot easier counting elephants and lions," Block said, referring to animal counts in Tanzania's Serengeti region. "But we're not off the mark by 2,000 sharks." State and federal regulators, who are expected to make their decision on endangered species status this year, have conducted research and held hearings to analyze the accuracy of the census.

Events

it as affordable for us as possible," Cogswell-Kelley said of the Bend Police. MBSEF will not likely have to pay for police overtime during the next U.S. Bank Pole Pedal Paddle, because organizers changed the route to eliminate detours, Cogswell-Kelley said.

Los Angeles Times

vices, and others providethem for free. In the past, MBSEF Continued from B1 paid for police officers to stay MBSEF brings in police of- in hotels but this year, Cogficersfrom other areas of the swell-Kelley said people who state, because there are not own second homes in Bend ofenough local motorcycle of- fered to lodge the officers durficers to meet the foundation's ing the event. The savings will needs forthe six-day event. help off setBend police fees. "They've been great, and I Some of these police departments charge for their ser- know they're trying to keep

— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com


B6

THE BULLETIN•W EDNESDAY, MAY 29, 20'I3

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EUGENE — Dry weather this spring has kept some Oregon sailboat enthusiasts out of the water. The sailing season began a month late at the reservoir Fern Ridge Lake west of Eugene, and the annual Memorial Day Regatta attracted about 40 boats, fewer than usual, the Eugene Register-Guardreported. Even spotty rain over the Memorial Day weekend didn't change things much. Rainfall

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Sunrise today...... 5:27 a.m. MOOn phaSeS SunsettodaY.... 8 39 P.m, Last New F i r st Full Sunrise tomorrpw 5 26 a m Sunset tomorrow... 8:40 p.m. Moonrise today...12:00 a.m. Mppnsettpday10.38am May31JuneBJune16 June 23

TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....6:32 a.m.....10:24 p.m. Venus......6:27 a.m.....10:01 p.m. Mars.......4:55 a.m...... 7:47 p.m. Jupiter......6:25 a.m...... 945 p.m. Satum......5:29 p m...... 4:11 a.m. Uranus.....2:58 a.m...... 3:33 p.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 63/37 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Record high........ 92 m 1983 Month to date.......... 0.1 7" Record low......... 24 in 1950 Average month todate... 0.79" Average high.............. 68 Year to date............ 2.74" Average low .............. 39 Average year to date..... 4.92" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m29.88 Record 24 hours ...0.61 in1990 *Melted liquid equivalent

FIRE INDEX

OREGON CITIES

WATER REPORT

Yesterday Wednesday Thursday Bend,westoiHwy97.....Low Sisters..............................Low The following was compiled by the Central Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend,eastoiHwy.97......Low La Pine...............................Low Qregpn watermaster and irrigation districts as

City Precipitationvajuesare24-hpur totals through4 p.m.

Redmond/Madras........Low Prineville..........................Low a service to irrigators and sportsmen. Astoria ........59/50/0.08....58/49/sh.....59/49/sh Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Baker City......62/44/0.07....61/37/sh.....61/36/pc To report a wildfire, call 911 Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 44,841...... 55,000 Brookings......60/52/0.22....56/48/sh.....63/48/pc Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 153,407..... 200,000 llurns..........63/42/0.36....61/32/sh.....64/33/pc Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 77,665.... . . 91,700 Eugene.........65/52/NA....60/46/sh.....65/45/pc Ochoco Reservoir 2 7 960 47 0 0 0 jtjamath Falls .. 64/42/015 .6 0/33/sh.....64/34/pc The higher the JJV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 137,968..... 153,777 Lakeview.......63/39/0.00 ...62/37/sh.....65/38/pc R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec La Pine.........62/41INA....55/32/sh.....64/30/pc the need for eye and skin protection. Index is Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 422 Medford.......74/52/0.07....65/47/sh.....70/45/pc for ar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,100 Newport.......57/50/0.05....54/47/sh.....56/46/sh Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 61 MEDIUM HIGH North Bend......63/52/NA....57/50/sh.....60/48/pc Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 218 Ontario........67/51/0.29.....69/47/c.....71/47/pc 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 129 Pendleton......68/50/0.09....68/46/sh.....72/44/pc Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 1,752 Portland .......65/52/0.01 ....61/50/sh.....63/50/sh Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res.. ... . . . . . 43 Prineville....... 62/45/0.16....62/35/sh.....67/36/pc Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 224 Redmond.......66/44/0.02....60/33/sh.....65/36/pc Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 13.2 Roseburg.......71/54/0.01 ....61/48/sh.....67/47/pc Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 218 Salem ....... 65/52/0 03 .60/48/sh ...64/47/sh Sisters.........69/41/0.00....55/34/sh.....64/35/pc Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 LOYD~ M EDIUM The Dages......69/50/0.20....66/50/sh.....70/46/pc or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 1

* +*

: oy xoohoh

F l urries Snow

Ice

YesterdayWednesdayfhursday YesterdayWednesdayfhursday YesterdayWednesdayThursday YesterdayWednesdayfhursday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lolw City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX......83/72/0.00...85/71/t. 92/71/pc Grandijapids....76/53/1.35...81/66/t. 85/68/pc RapidCity.......75/44/000...68/50/t...66/48/t Savannah.......83/63/000..85/69/pc.86/67/pc Akron..........83/54/0.15... 84/64/t. 88/67/pc Green Bay.......58/51/0.08..77/63/pc...80/66/t Reno...........71/51/0.02..73/46/pc.. 79/49/s Seattle..........63/53/0.01 ..60/49/sh. 62/50/sh Albany..........71/40/0.00... 79/65/t. 88/66/pc Greensboro......84/62/0.00... 86/64/s .. 87/65/s Richmond.......88/60/000 ..90/66/pc .. 91/66/s Sioux Falls.......73/55/006... 77/63/t...76/57/t Albuquerque.....85/52/000... 83/56/s .. 85/58/s Harusburg.......66/56/0 37 ..89/64/pc. 89/66/pc Rochester, NY....64/50/0.25... 84/66/t. 88/68/pc Spokane........61/48/0.11 .. 64/46/sh. 64/45/sh Anchorage......71/42/0.00..66/47/pc.59/44/pc Hartford,CT.....73/46/0.00...83/62/t. 89/63/pc Sacramento......80/57/0.05..82/56/pc.. 86/59/s Springfield, MO..83/70/0.04..84/67/pc...79/67/t Atlanta.........85/65/0.00 ..84/66/pc. 86/68/pc Helena..........60/49/0.19...63/43/t. 60/41/sh St.Louis.........86/70/005..88/71/pc...85/71/t Tampa..........91/71/000... 89/73/t. 90/73/pc Atlantic City.....66/52/025 ..77/63/pc .. 78/65/s Honolulu........82/70/0 07... 89/75/s. 89/75/pc Salt Lake City....66/54/038 ..70/47/pc. 71/46/pc Tucson..........95/64/000...95/66/s .. 97/67/s Austin..........90/73/000... 87/72/t.90/73/pc Houston ........90/75/000..88/75/pc. 90/74/pc SaoAntonio.....90/75/0.00... 88/73/t. 90/74/pc Tulsa...........82/75/0.00... 83/70/t...83/71/t Baltimore .......77/58/015..90/66/pc.. 92/67/s Huntsville.......89/65/000..87/68/pc.87/68/pcSaoDiego.......71/61/0.00...71/62/s.. 71/62/s Washington,DC..84/63/1.34..90/70/pc.. 92/71/s Billiogs.........70/47/000...61/49/t.63/45/sh Indianapolis.....82/62/0.00..87/66/pc. 85/6ipc SaoFrancisco....65/56/0.00..65/51lpc.. 68/52/s Wichita.........84/72/0.00...80/67/t...82/67/t Birmingham .. 87/63/000 ..87/71/pc. 89/71/pc Jackson,MS.... 87/65/000. 87/69/pc 88/71/t SaoJose........71/59/000..71/52/pc.. 75/53/s Yakima ........ 72/48/trace 68/45/sh. 71/43/pc Bismarck........76/50/000... 72/58/t...71/54/t Jacksonvile......83/61/000..85/69/pc. 85/70/pc SantaFe........81/40/0.00 ..76/46/pc.. 78/49/s Yuma...........97/67/0.00... 96/68/s .. 97/68/s Boise...........65/50/031 ..67/44/sh. 67/42/pc Juneau..........73/46/0.00 ..65/48/sh. 60/47/sh INTERNATIONAL Boston..........64/51/0.00... 68/62/t. 85/67/pc Kansas City..... 80/72/trace..83/69/pc...79/66/t Bodgeport,CT....63/50/0.22...75/61/t. 82/64/pc Lansing.........73/52/1.57...82/66/t. 86/69/pc Amsterdam......70/48/000 ..70/47/sh60/50/sh Mecca.........113/82/000 113/84ls. 109/86/s Buffalo.........65/53/0.65... 81/65/t. 83/67/pc LasVegas.......93/70/0.00... 91/71/s .. 95/72/s Athens..........77/53/000... 84/63/5.. 84/67/s Mexico City .....79/54/000... 78/55/t. 77/56/pc Burlington, VT....74/40/0.00... 72/63/t. 85/67/pc Lexington.......86/68/0.00... 86/66/s .. 87/66/s Auckland........52/43/000..60/52/sh.61/51/pc Montreal........73/46/000..73/61/sh.81/70/pc Caribou,ME.....68/33/000 ..64/52/sh. 73/60/sh Lincoln..........82/59/000... 82/66/t...77/63/t Baghdad........98/75/0.00 ..100/79/s. 102/85/s Moscow........66/59/0.07 .. 72/50/sh. 74/60/pc Charleston, SC...84/64/000 ..85/67/pc. 85/66/pc Little Rock.......87/69/0.00 ..87/70/pc...84/70/t Bangkok........99/84/000 ..94/80/sh. 94/81/sh Nairobi.........75/59/000 74/58/pc...73/57/t .. Charlotte........84/63/000...85/63/s.. 86/63/s LosAngeles......74/62/000...73/61/s .. 72/62/s Beiyng..........75/64/005..86/67/pc.. 88/70/s Nassau.........79/72/109...84/76/t...80/77/t Chattauooga.....87/65/000...88/63/s.. 89/65/s Louisville........87/73/000...88/69/s. 88/68/pc Beirut..........79/70/000... 83/77/s. 93/67/pc New Dejhi......l08/88/000 ..113/88/s. 113/88/s Cheyenne.......76/42/000 ..63/46/pc. 67/41/pc MadisonWl.....73/St/1.00... 80/66/t...81/66/t Berlin...........63/50/000 ..75/48/sh. 69/58/sh Osaka..........75/68/007 ..73/61Ish.77/63/pc Chicago.........76/56/037... 85/68/t. 85/69/t Memphis....... 88/71/000. 89/72/pc 87/72/pc Bogota .........64/52/005... 66/50/t...68/52/t Oslo............70/50/031 ..63/53/sh. 69/56/sh Cincinnati.......82/66/0.00 ..87/65/pc. 87/66/pc Miami..........82/75/0.13...84/75/t...87/76/t Budapest........70/46/000 ..83/62/pc. 69/53/sh Ottawa.........73/36/000 ..75/59/sh. 81/68/pc Cleveland.......83/55/0.24... 84/66/t. 87/68/pc Milwaukee......75/48/0.98... 77/63/t...80/64/t BuenosAires.....63/55/2 08 ..61/44/sh. 63/51/pc Paris............59/48/037..63/50/sh. 60/50/sh Colorado Spnngs.79/49/000..71/46/pc. 72/44/pc Minneapolis.....61/54/0.06... 78/66/t...77/62/t CaboSanLucas ..93/6IO00...88/66/s .. 90/64/s Rio deJaneiro....84/68/000... 82/70/c. 80/69/sh Columbia,MO...78/67/003 ..86/69/pc...80/68/t Nashville........88/63/0 00..89/67/pc. 89/68/pc Cairp...........97/70/000..107/77/s. 100/67/s Rome...........75/55/000..69/60/sh. 64/53/sh Columbia,SC....86/64/0.00..89/66/pc.. 88/63/s New Orleans.....86/72/0.00...86/73/t...86/73/t Calgary.........63/46/0.00... 57/48/t. 61/46/sh Santiago........57/48/1.99... 56/56/s.64/53/pc Columbus, GA....89/68/000 ..88/68/pc. 88/69/pc New York.......68/56/052... 86/69/t. 93/70/pc Cancun.........82/73/000... 83/79/t...87/79/t Sao Paulo.......64/57/000..72/64/sh. 70/61/sh Columbus OH....86/64/000 ..86/65/pc.. 88/67/s Newark Nl......69/54/0 52... 87/68/t. 93/69/pc Dublin..........57/43/000 ..64/45/pc.67/47/pc Sapporo ........64/64/000 .. 61/51/sh...60/51/r Concord,NH.....74/35/0.00... 73/60/t .. 89/63/s Norfolk, VA......84/63/0.00... 87/66/s.. 88/66/s Edinburgh.......55/43/000... 64/47/c .. 66/50/s Seoul...........70/63/000 69/63/sh. .. 79/56/pc CorpusChristi....92/80/000..87/79/pc.. 93/78/s OklahomaCity...79/73/000...79/67/t.. 83/70/c Geneva.........64/45/0.23 ..53/40/sh. 55/46lsh Shanghai........86/70/0.00 ..88/66/sh. 78/64/sh Dallas Ft Wprth...85/72/000...87/74/t. 89/75/pc Omaha.........82/60/0 00... 81/66/t...76/63/t Harare..........77/41/000... 73/48/s ..74/50/s Singapore.......90/79/000 .. 91/80/sh. 91/79/sh Dayton .........82/69/000..85/66/pc.. 85/67/s Orlando.........88/68/0 00..89/72/pc. 88/72/pc Hong Kong......90/82/002 .. 84/79/sh.. 84/77/c Stockholm.......72/50/000 ..64/54/sh. 64/50/sh Denver....... 84/47/000 ..73/49/pc.73/46/pc PalmSprings.....91/69/0.00..102/69/s. 102/71/s Istanbul.........75/61/000 ..89/66/pc.. 79/68/s Sydney..........68/55/000 ..66/55/pc. 69/51/pc DesMoines......82/64/0.40... 82/66/t...79/65/t Peoria ..........77/64/0.26... 85/67/t...82/68/t lerusalem.......82/62/000... 92/76/s. 93/62/pc Taipei...........95/81/000 ..87/77/pc.87/78/pc Detroit..........81/52/029... 85/68/t. 87/69/pc Philadelphia.....66/58/014..88/70/pc.9U70/pc Johannesburg....71/55/000...66/47/s .. 67/45/s Tel Aviv.........84/68/000... 96/77/s. 98/68/pc Duluth..........64/46/000 ..65/52/pc...62/57/t Phoeuix.........98/70/000... 97/73/s .. 99/75/s Lima...........68/59/000 ..73/62/pc. 73/62/pc Tokyo...........77/68/000 ..70/66/sh. 70/61/sh El Paso..........95/69/0.00...93/70/s ..94/70/s Pittsburgh.......80/54/0.35 ..86/65/pc.. 88/65/s Lisbon..........64/52/000 66/50/c 69/52/s Toronto.........57/52/011 77/63/sh 84/66/s Fairbanks........82/49/000...80/49/s .. 82/53/s Portland,ME.....69/41/0.00... 62/56/t .. 84/62/s London.........54/48/089..59/53/sh..61/49/c Vancouver.......57/52/060..59/54/sh.63/52/sh Fargo...........75/57/0.00...80/63/t...78/58/t Prpvidence......71/46/0.00... 73/61/t. 88/64/pc Madrid .........68/54/000..68/42/sh.. 69/46/s Vienna..........68/48/000... 76/52/s. 63/48/sh Flagstaff........70/34/0.00... 70/41/s .. 74/43/s Raleigh.........85/64/0.00... 87/65/s .. 89/66/s Manila..........97/79/003..92/82/pc. 92/78/sh Warsaw.........54/50/022..79/57/sh. 76/56/sh

ee ssomesai oatsouto reservoir

s rin The Associated Press

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

PLANET WATCH

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

xxxx«B 9 "j/x Saskatoon

(in the 48 contiguous states):

• 100'

HIGH LOW

74 44

Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds,h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstprms,sf-soowflurries, snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace

o www m 59/54oxxxx

HIGH LOW

69 40

g%g

Bend

X X XX 6xzxx

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

Yesterday extremes

HIGH LOW

64 38

IPOLLEN COUNT

• 74' Medford

X x x x x x v x x x t x 'x z l x v Y ' x mx

56/48

Yesterday's state extremes

x X X X X 'x'68/36 x

XX 6P /Zp

xxxcxxc x x x t a kexxcc c x x x ~x x x x x x x x x 64/36 pprturfpyhxxxCCCCx X QmxxxN 'x X X X X X X ' 53/45 rants Pas i i x Paisjey,xxxx x x x x x x x x x x x x M 64/ • Beach iii Meclfol'dii hjjoquj( i i i 55/sp x5 %165/47 xxxxxx% )

• Brookings

HIGH LOW

BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST:5TATE

x . i i i i ca m pvrs/36i, i i i i t i i

Mostly sunny.

likely

HIGH

58 I

Mostly sunny.

Partly to mostly sunny.

example, can't easily get in because trucks can't get to a deep enough point to release terrible, probably not as bad as the one we had the boat. in 2001, but it's going to be a tough water year." Fern Ridge is fed by the Long — Erik Petersen, Willamette Valley operations project manager, Tom River, which flows from U.S. Army Corps of Engineers the Coast Range. It gets little snowmelt, in contrast to reservoirs fed by the higher Cascade Range to the east. so far this year in the area is Sailors have to help one The Willamette Valley has less than 8 inches, compared to another get their boats into 13 reservoirs in the system, the norm of 23 inches. The lake the water. Some f ixed-keel and the U.S. Army Corps Of is about 4 feet below its "full boats that must be b acked Engineers manages them as a pool" level. into the water on a trailer, for whole, with recreation deemed

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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2

Tennis, C3

NHL, C2 MLB, C3

NBA, C4

Golf, C4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013

NBA

Sale of Kingsto group approved The NBABoard of Governors unanimously approved the saleof the Sacramento Kings on Tuesday to agroup led by TIBCO Software

chairman Vivek Ranadlve.

The leaguesaid in a statement that the "transaction is expected to close shortly."

After owners blocked the relocation of the franchise to Seattle earlier this month, the Maloof family

reached an agreement to sell a 65 percent controlling interestin the Kings to Ranadive's

group at a total franchise valuation of $535 million. Ranadive, who will have to sell his minority stake in the Golden State Warriors,

PREP BASEBALL: STATE PLAYOFFS

ant ers'season en s in a eart rea er By Grant Lucas The Bulletin

L AKE OSWEG O Redmond High coach Marc Horner took a deep breath, trying to pinpoint a description for the just-completed Class 5A baseball state semifinal contest on Tuesday. He settled on "phenomenal." In a game that tied for the most innings played in the postseason since 5A was created in 2007, the Panthers pushed Sherwood to the brink before the Bowmen scored the winning run on a basesloaded hit batter to defeat Redmond 5-4 in 11 innings at Lake Oswego High School. The contest was moved to

Lake Oswego's artificial-surfaceballpark because recent rain had made conditions unplayable at Sherwood High. "There's no other word but phenomenal," Horner said afterward. "Memorable. I'll never forget this game. In whatever 800,000 games that I've coached, I remember 10 of them very vividly, and this is at the top of the list for me." Redmond senior J.D. Abbas pitched 10 innings, allowed five hits, threw 162 pitches and drove in the game-tying run in the top of the seventh

inning— a performance that earned his coach's admiration. See Panthers/C4

Matthew Aimonetti / For The Bulletin

The Redmond baseball team reacts to a disappointing 5-4 loss to Sherwood in11 innings in the Class 5A semifinalson Tuesday atLake Oswego High School.

Strea, season over or

becomes the NBA's first lndian-born majority owner.

The Sacramento group also includes 24 Hour Fitness founder

Mark Mastrov, former Facebook senior executive Chris Kellyand the

Jacobs family that owns communications giant

- E'gy

Qualcomm. Moments after the league announced the sale was approved, Ranadive thanked

' OLitaws

owners in a tweet and wrote that it was an

honor and a privilege

tg

"to be part of such an

• Sisters' 24-game win streak comesto a close at theClass 4A state semifinals as Henleywins 2-1

V

amazing community." He also updated his Twitter profile to show that he is the owner of

the Kings. The vote, which had

been expected since owners blocked the move to Seattle on May 15, officially ended an

emotional saga that had dragged onsince January.

— The Associated Press Photos by Matthew Aimonetti / For The Bulletin

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Bend High players celebrate after Jonah Koski (6) and Dalton Hurd, obscured, score on a triple by Duke DeGaetano in the first inning of Tuesday's game in Wilsonville. The Lava Bears went on to win 9-2 and will face Sherwood in Saturday's championship game.

Sadan calls for 9 games inSEG DESTIN, Fla.— Ala-

bama coach NickSaban has a strong — and seemingly solitary — stance on the South-

eastern Conference potentially moving to

a nine-game league schedule. Saban said Tuesday he would like to see the SEC expand from eight to nine games, an

opinion that surely will draw debate and dis-

sent during the league's annual spring meetings this week.

Saban was theonly SEC coach to publicly

• Bend High is headed to the Class 5A state title gameafter beating Wilsonville

Bend pitcher Duke DeGaetano throws a pitch during Tuesday's game against Wilsonville. DeGaetano struck out seven batters in a 9-2 victory by the Lava Bears.

By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

WILSONVILLE — Intensely focused all afternoon, Duke DeGaetano let out all of his emotion with one primal scream the instant Sami Godlove's final throw from shortstop found Jonah Koski's first-

call for increasing the

base glove and Bend High

number of league games, the biggest topic being discussed during

clinched its berth into the Class 5A baseball state

championship game. DeGaetano, the Lava Bears' senior ace, pitched another gem Tuesday, striking out seven in a 9-2 complete-game victory over Wilsonville in the 5A semifinal round to earn Bend a showdown with Sherwood for the championship Saturday at Volcanoes Stadium in Keizer at I:30 p.m. See Bears /C4

Bulletin staff report KLAMATH FALLS — It all started out so well for the Sisters Outlaws. Leadoff hitter Nicky Blumm ripped a double to the fence in right-center field to open the game, then Justin Harrer delivered a single that scored Blumm, and just two batters into the contest the Outlaws led 1-0. It didn't last. Henley scored an unearned run in the fourth inning and added the go-ahead run in the fifth on a two-out hit, and the Hornets got past Sisters 2-1 in a Class 4A state semifinal baseball game Tuesday at Henley High School. For the Outlaws, the loss ended a school-record 24game winning streak and, worse still, denied them a berth in Saturday's championship contest. Instead, Henley (24-5) advances and will face Newport in the 4A final at Volcanoes Stadium in Keizer.

Sisters (26-3), which has never won a state baseball title, was looking to reach the

championship game for the first time since 2002. See Outlaws /C4

daylong meetings held in the resort town. SEC

presidents and chancel-

NBA PLAYOFFS

lors could vote on the

issue Friday.

"I'm absolutely in the minority, no question about it," Saban said.

"But everybody has

After long drought, Duncan focused on another title

their reasons."

Having won three

By Teresa M. Walker

of the past four Bowl

The Associated Press

Championship Series national title games,

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Tim Duncan is so close to his first NBA championship in six long years that the Spurs star isn't worried about the little issue ofbeing rusty once the finals actually start. "My sole focus is trying to get this done, trying to get another championship," Duncan said. "I don't care records; I don't care age. I don't care any of that stuff. I just want to do what I have to do to try to win a championship." San Antonio ended its sixyear drought between NBA Finals by finishing a sweep of

Sabanadmitshe should be against changing the

model. "If you look at it through a straw and how it affects you ... then you're not going to be for it," he said. "I shouldn't be for it. We'd have a better chance

to be successful if we don't do it, but I think it's best for the game and fortheleague.l'm

trying to look at it from 1,000 feet." — The Associated Press

Inside • Indiana ties the Eastern Conference finals with Miami,C4 the Memphis Grizzlies 93-86 on Monday night for its fifth Western Conference title. The first sweep in a conference final since the Nets beat Detroit in 2003 also earned the Spurs a nine-day break before Game I of the finals on June 6. Duncan said the benefit will be the Spurs should be completely healthy with their legs underneath them. "We're going to be a little rusty starting the first game — it's just how it is," Duncan said. "We're going to try to fig-

ure out how to practice, how to stay sharp. But bottom line, we're going to be a little rusty. Hopefully, we can shake that

off real quick and get right back to our rhythm." All the Spurs worked hard to be just four wins away from adding a title to those won in 1999, 2003, 2005 and 2007. Duncan was the MVP of the first three of those finals, but he's now 37 and wrapping up his 16th season. Tony Parker said he has been doing his best to get Duncan back to this point for what might be the 6-foot-11 forward's final chance at a

championship. See Duncan /C4

q) «/ 'I

SW~~zz gi ~

&i

Danny Johnston/The Associated Press

San Antonio's Tim Duncan (21) drives to the basket as Memphis' Marc Gasol (33) defends during Monday's Western Conference finals. The Spurs will have significant time off before facing either Miami or Indiana in the NBA Finals starting June 6.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY TENNIS

Time TV/Radio

French Open,second round French Open,second round French Open,second round

2 a.m. 6 a.m.

ES P N2 ES P N2

7 a.m.

T e nnis

SOCCER

International, Germanyvs. Ecuador

11:25a.m. ESPN2 5 p.m. ES P N2

International, United States vs. Belgium HOCKEY NHL, playoffs, Detroit at Chicago BASEBALL MLB, Seattle at San Diego

5 p.m.

N B C SN

7 p.m.

Roo t

COREBOARD ON DECK Saturday Baseball: Class 5Astate championship, Bendvs. Sherwood in Keizer, 1:30p.m.

PREP SPORTS Baseball Tuesday's results OSAASemifinals Class 5A At WilsonviHeHigh School

TENNIS

Time T V /Radio 2 a.m. ES P N2 6 a.m. ES P N2

French Open,second round French Open,second round French Open,second round

7 a.m.

T e nnis

GOLF

European Tour,Nordea Masters

6 a.m. Golf 1 1:30 a.m. G o lf

PGA Tour, Memorial Tournament SOFTBALL

College, World Series, Nebraskavs. Washington 9 a.m. ES P N2 College, World Series, Tennesseevs. Florida 11:30a.m. ESPN2 College, World Series, Arizona State vs. Texas College, World Series, Michigan vs. Oklahoma BASEBALL MLB, Seattle at San Diego

4 p.m. 6 p.m.

ES P N2 ES P N2

12:30 p.m. Root

MLB, NewYork Mets at NewYork Yankeesor Boston at Philadelphia BASKETBALL

4 p.m.

MLB

NBA, playoffs, Indiana at Miami

5 :30 p.m.

TNT

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by Nor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF TRACK AND FIELD Former OSU coach Wag-

This is his first head coaching

job. He takesover ateam that went 27-55 last season.

ASI' EIISS —Berny Wagner, head coach of the OregonState

Hawks namenewcoach

University track and field and

— The Atlanta Hawks have

cross-country teams from1965

named longtime Spurs assistant Mike Budenholzer as head coach. General manager OSU news release,WagnerdeDanny Ferry called on his past veloped 25 All-America athletes experience with the Spurs to in12 different events at Oregon select Budenholzer onTuesday State. Among the Beaver stars to replace Larry Drew ascoach. during Wagner's years in Corval- Drew's contract expires in June lis was Dick Fosbury, the1968 following three seasonsas Olympic gold-medal winner in coach. Budenholzer spent the the high jump. past17 seasons as anassistant to1975, died Monday in Corvallis at age 88. According to an

with the Spurs, including the

BASEBALL Linfield wins national title —Chris Haddeland threw a complete game and Linfield scored four runs in the fourth

past sixyears as the top assistant for coach GreggPopovich. The Hawks say Budenholzer will

continue serving as theSpurs' top assistant until the conclusion of the NBA Finals.

inning enroute to a4-1 victory over Southern Maine in

FOOTBALL

the championship game of the NCAA Division III Finals Tuesday 2014 NFL draft in May evening at Fox Cities Stadium in Appleton, Wis. Linfield captured

its third national champion-

— The NFL draft is moving to

May next year. The leagueofficially announced Tuesday that

ship in baseball — but first in the NCAA era — adding to NAIA titles in 1966 and 1971.

the 2014 edition will be held May 8-10 at Radio City Music

Haddeland allowed one run on

conflict in April at the venue. The NFL has yet to decide on

eight hits with three walks and five strikeouts en route to his school-record15th pitching vic-

tory of the season. Aperfectly executed squeezebunt from

Kyle Chamberlain highlighted a four-run fourth inning that

Hall because of a scheduling dates for drafts in 2015 and beyond. Radio City is hosting an Easter show next year that conflicts with the NFL's typical window for the draft.

proved to be thedeciding play in the final game of the tournament. Linfield improved to 42-8

for the season.

COLLEGE Colorado ADresigning — Colorado athletic director

Mike Bohn is resigning effective June 3. Chancellor Philip DiSte-

College

Softball OSAAState Championships Class 6A Semifinals

BASEBALL

BASKETBALL

Baseball Bend Elks Memorial DayTournament May 25-27

basketball, helping us to join the

Pac-12 Conference, and in taking important steps to upgrade

College

athletic facilities at CU-Boulder. We wish him well." — From wire reports

NCAADivision I Baseball Regionals AH Times PDT Double Elimination Blacksburg, Va.

to a former player after one of

for the resignation weren't disclosed. "Mike Bohn led CUBoulder athletics in a time of great transition and change," DiStefano said in a written state-

the worst seasons in franchise history, officially hiring Jeff Hornacek as their new coach

Tuesday. Hornacekspent the first six of his14 seasons asan NBA player with Phoenix. Mul-

withTuesday' sannouncement that he would be the club's16th

head coach. The50-year-old Hornacek hadbeenanassistant with the Utah Jazz since 2011.

ment. "We aregrateful to him for his vision, passion andcomrevitalizing men's andwomen's

p.m.

Game6— Game3 winnervs. Game4 winner,6:30 p.m. Saturday, June1 Game7—Game1 loser vs. Game2 loser, 9a.m. Game 8 —Gam e 3 loser vs. Game4 loser, 11:30

a.m.

Game9—Game5 loservs. Game7winner,4p m. Game10 —Gam e6 oservs. Game8winner,6:30

p.m.

Sunday,June 3 Game11 —Game 5winner vs. Gam e9 winner, 10

a.m. Game12— Game 6 winner vs. Game10winner, 12:30 p.m.

x-Game13— Game 11winner vs. Gam e 11 loser, 4 p.m. x-Game14— Game 12winner vs. Game12 loser, 6:30 p.m. NOTE:If onlyonegameis necessary, it wil beplayed at 4 p.m. ChampionshipSeries

(Best-of-3)

Monday,June4: TeamsTBD,5 p.m. Tuesday,June5: TeamsTBD,5 p.m. x-Wednesday, June6. TeamsTBD,5 p.m.

Local

and the Suns made it official

Bohn's resignation. Reasons

AH Times PDT

Double Elimination x-if necessary Thursday, May30 Game 1— Nebraska (45-14) vs. Washington(4315), 9 a.m. Game 2 Tennessee(49-10) vs. Florida (57-7), 11:30 a.m. Game3 —Arizona State(50-10) vs.Texas(49-8), 4 p.m. game 4— Michigan(50-11) vs.Dklahoma(52-4), 6:30 p.m. Friday, May31 Game 5 —Gam e I winner vs. Game2 winner, 4

mitment, and for his key role in

COaCh —TheSunsturned

NCAADivision I World Series At ASAHall of FameStadium OklahomaCity

Tuesday's results North Medtord 2, Lincoin 0 Glencoe 5, Roseburg 2 Championship final Saturday at OSU Softball Complex, CorvaHis Glencoe vs. NorthMedford,1 p.m. Class 5A Semifinals Tuesday's results Hermiston 5, Churchill 4 Sandy3,West Albany I Championship final Saturday at OSU Softball Complex, CorvaHis Hermistonvs. Sandy, 4pm. Class 4A Semifinals Tuesday's results McLoughlin 6,Gladstone0 Banks1,Newport 0 Championship final Saturday at OSU Softball Complex, CorvaHis Banks vs.McLoughlin,10a.m. Class 3A Semifinals Tuesday's results Dayton1,SantiamChristian 0 Rainier 6,BianchetCatholic 3 Championship final Friday at OSUSoftball Complex, CorvaHis Rainiervs.Dayton,4 p.m Class 2A/1A Semifinals Tuesday's results Union/Cove 11, Perrydale 0 Yoncaila6,Glendale5 Championship final Friday at OSUSoftball Complex, CorvaHis Yoncaiiavs.Union/Cove,I p.m.

tiple reports over the weekend had Hornacek getting the job,

fano said Tuesday in a written statement that he had accepted

Cole2-30-04,Anthony0-00-00, Miller0-00-00. Totals 30-77 24-2792. INDIANA(99) George4-10 4-512, West5-11 4-614, Hibbert 10 16 3-4 23, Hill 4-13 9-1019, Stephenson9 15 1-2 20,T.Hansbrough 0-03-43, Augustin 0-0 0-00, Young2-3 2-26,Mahinmi1-2 0-02.Totals35-70 26-33 99. Miami 22 25 23 22 — 92 Indiana 26 22 29 22 — 99

WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION

AH TimesPDT

310 100 4 — 9 10 0 000 110 0 — 2 3 3

ChampionshipResults 9's NoLeadOff —Federal Way(Wash.) Knights12, MercerIsland(Wash.) Thunder10 10's NoLeadOff—Dirt Dawgs(Yakima, Wash.) 13, Gig Harbor(Wash.) StingraysBlack7 10's Lead Off—Mercer Island (Wash.) Thunder9, The Bat Company(West Linn) 3 11's NoLeadOff —Sandy11U Black 7, MercerIsland (Wash.)Thunder0 11's Lead Off—Westhills Vipers(Bremerton, Wash.) 17, CentralOregonCrush(Bend)9 12's NoLeadOff — Lakers(Lake Oswego) 3, BeavertonBulldogs0 12's Lead Off Dirt Dawgs (Yakima,Wash.) 8 Mercer Isand(Wash.) Thunder7 13's — DirtDawgs(Yakima, Wash.) 13,IdahoCubs (Boise)3 14's — FederalWay(Wash.) Knights 11, CenturyLink(Roseburg)4 15-16U —BariowBruins (Gresham)10, West Hils Vipers(Bremerton, Wash.) 2

BASKETBALL Suns hire Hornacekas

8), 3 p.m.

Raleigh, N.C. Game1 —Wiliam8, Mary(37-22) vs.Mississippi (37-22), 11a.m. 2—Binghamton (30-23) atN.C.State(44-14), DeGaetanoandWaters; Gelfand, Howe(5) and Game 4 p.m. Pollman. W —DeGaetano. L—Geltand. 28 Bend: Columbia, S.C. Hurd, Miller, KoskiWi ; lsonvilie: Cerdan.38 Bend Game1— Liberty (34-27)vs. Clemson(39-20), 10 DeGaetano,Mrler. a.m. Game 2 —Saint Lours(41-19) atSouthCarolina Class 5A (39-18), 4p.m. At LakeOswegoHighSchool Louisville, Ky. (11 innings) Game1 —OklahomaState (39-17) vs. Miami(36Redmond 01 0110 100 00 — 4 13 I 23), 11a.m. Sherwood 0 2 0 002 000 01 — 5 5 1 Game2— Bowling Green(24-29) at Louisville (46Abbas,Thomas(11) andPayne; Moore, Baltour 12),3 p.m. (7) and Urbach.W—Balfour.L—Thomas. 2B—SherTallahassee, Fla. wood:Balfour. Game1—Troy(40-18) vs.Alabama(34-26), 9a.m. Game 2 — Sa v annahState (33-21) at Florida State Class 4A (44-15), 2p.m. At Henley HighSchool Bloomington, Ind. Sisters 1 00 000 0 — 1 6 1 Game1 —Fiorida(29-28) vs.Austin Peay(45-13), Henley 000 110 x — 2 4 I 10 a.m. Morgan,Weems (6) andCalarco, Morgan(6); Hil- Game2— Valparaiso (31-26) at Indiana(43-14), 4 yard andHoward. W—Hilyard. L—Morgan.28—Sisp.m. ters: Bumm;Henley:Hilyard. Nashville, Tenn. Game1—llinois (34-18)vs.Georgia Tech (34-25), OSAAState Championships 11 a.m Class 6A Game 2—ETSU(36-22) atVanderbilt (51-9), 4p.m. Semifinals StarkviHe, Miss. Tuesday's results Game1 — Mercer (43-16) vs.SouthAlabama (42Clackamas 5, Southridge 4 18), noon Sheldon11,Roseburg3 Game 2 Central Arkansas (39-20) at Mississippi Championship final State(43-17), 5p m Saturday at VolcanoesStadium, Keizer Baton Rouge, La. Clackamas vs. Sheldon, 5 p.m. Game 1 —JacksonState (34-20) at LSU(52-9), Class 5A noon Semifinals Game 2 SamHoustonState(37 20)vs LouisianaTuesday's results Lafayette(41-18), 5p.m. Bend 9,Wilsonvrlle 2 Manhattan, Kan. Sherwood 5, Redmond4 Game1 —Wichita State(39-26) at KansasState(41Championship final 17), noon Saturday at VolcanoesStadium, Keizer Game 2 Bryant (44-161) vs.Arkansas(37-20), Bend vsSherwood,130pm 5 p.m. Class 4A Eugene Semifinals Game1— SanFrancisco (34-22)vs. Rice(41-17), Tuesday's results 2 p.m. Henley2, Sisters1 Game 2 South DakotaState (3522) at Oregon Newport15,KlamathUnion1 (45-14), 6p.m. Championship final CorvaHis Saturday at VolcanoesStadium, Keizer Game1— UCSantaBarbara(34-23) vs.TexasA8M Henleyvs.Newport,10 a.m. (32-27),noon Class 3A Game 2 UTSA (35-23)at OregonState (4510), Semifinals 5 p.m. Tuesday's results FuHerton, Calif. PleasantHil 5,Glide2 Game1—NewMexico (37-20) vs.ArizonaState(35Horizon Christian (Tualatin) 6 Bandon/Pacific 3 20-1), 4p.m. Championship final Game 2 Columbia(27-19) at CalStateFullerton Friday at VolcanoesStadium, Keizer (48-8), 8p.m. HorizonChristian (Tualatin)vs. PleasantHil,5 p.m. Los Angeles Class 2A/1A Game1 —SanDiego (35-23) vs. CalPoly (39-17), Semifinals 2 p.m. Tuesday's results Game 2 San Diego State (31-29) atUCLA(39-17), Umpqua Valey Christian 7,CountryChristian0 6 p.m. GrantUnion14,Stanfield/Echo5 Championship final Friday at VolcanoesStadium, Keizer SOFTBALL GrantUnionvs. UmpquaValley Christian,1:30 p.m. Bend Wilsonville

THURSDAY

Friday, May31 Game1 Coastal Carolina(37-21) vs. Oklahom a (40-19), 10a.m. Game2— Uconn(40-19) atVirginia Tech(38-20), 2.30 p.m. Charlottesville, Va. Game1 Army(29-21)atVirginia(47-10),10am. Game 2—Elon(32-28)vs. UNCWrlmington (37-21), 3 p.m. Chapel Hill, N.C. Game1 —Tow son (29-28) vs. FioridaAtlantic (3920), 10a.m. Game2— Canisius (42-15) at North Carolina(52-

NBA NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION AH TimesPDT CONFERENCE FINALS

(Best-of-7) (x-if necessary)

EASTERNCONFERENCE

Miami 2 Indiana 2 Wednesday, May22:Mrami103, Indiana102,OT Friday,May24: Indiana97, Miami93 Sunday,May26: Miami114, Indiana96 Tuesd ay,May28:Indiana99,Miami92 Thursday,May30:IndianaatMiami, 5:30pm. Saturday,June1: MiamiatIndiana, 5:30p.m. x-Monday ,June3:IndianaatMiami,5:30p.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE San Antonio 4, Memphis0 Sunday,May19:SanAntonio105, Memphis 83 Tuesday,May21: SanAntonio 93, Memphis 89, OT Saturday,May25: SanAntonio104, Memphis 93,OT Monday, May27:SanAntonio93,Memphis86

Tuesday'sSummary

Pacers 99, Heat92 MIAMI (92) James8-18 4-624, Hasiem3-5 0-0 6, Bosh1-6 4-47, Chalmers6-148-820, Wade5-156-616, Alien 4-131-1 11,Andersen0-00-0 0, Battrer 1-31-2 4,

Eastern Conference Atlanta Chicago Connecticut Indiana Washington NewYork

0

Pct GB 1.000 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 1.000 1 .000 1

W

L

1

0

0

2

W I 1

1 1 1

L 0

Kristina MladenovicFrance, , def. LaurenDavis, UnitedStates,6-0, 7-5 MarinaErakovic,NewZealand,def. ElenaBaltacha, Britain,6-3,6-0. DominikaCibuikova(16), Slovakia, def LesiaTsurenko,Ukraine,6-1,6-4. FrenchOpenShowCourt Schedules Today At Stade RolandGarros Paris Play begins onall courts at 2 a.m. PDT Court Philippe Chatrier ElenaVesnina,Russia, vs.Victoria Azarenka(3), Belarus Jo-WiifriedTsonga(6), France,vs. JarkkoNieminen, Finland GaelMonfils,France,vs. Ernests Gulbis, Latvia SerenaWiliams (1), UnitedStates, vs.CarolineGarcia, France Court SuzanneLenglen PetraKvitova(7), CzechRepublic, vs.AravaneRezai,

NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesPDT

France BenoitPaire(24), France,vs. MarcosBaghdatis, Cyprus, comp.ofsusp.match Milos Raonic (14), Canada,vs. Michael Llodra, France SomdevDevvarman, India, vs. RogerFederer(2), Switzerland MathildeJohansson,France,vs. AnaIvanovic (14), Serbia Courl No. 1 AgnieszkaRadwanska (4), Poland,vs. Mallory Burdette,UnitedStates Nicolas Mahut, France,vs. JankoTipsarevic (8), Serbia Julie nBenneteau,France,vs.TobiasKamke,Germany Yulia Putintseva,Kazakhstan,vs. SaraErrani (5), Italy Court 2 AlbertMontanes,Spain, vs. David Ferrer (4), Spain Jana Cepelova,Slovakia,vs. AngelirfueKerber(8), Germany Giiles Simon(15), France,vs. PabloCuevas, Uruguay Zuzana Kucova,Siovakia,vs.VirginieRazzano,France

CONFERENCESEMIFINALS

SOCCER

Western Conference

Los Angeles Minnesota Phoenix SanAntonro Seattle Tulsa

0 0 0 0

0 1 I 1

Pct GB 1.000 000 '/2 .000 1 .000 I .000 1 .000 1'/~

Tuesday's Games No games scheduled Today's Games No games scheduled

HOCKEY NHL

(Best-of-7) (x-if necessary)

EASTERNCONFERENCE Pittsburgh 4, Ottawa1 TuesdayMay14: Pittsburgh4, Ottawa1 Friday,May17:Prttsburgh4, Ottawa3 Sunday, May19:Ottawa2, Pittsburgh1,20T Wednesday,May22: Pittsburgh 7, Ottawa3 Friday,May24 Pittsburgh6, Ottawa2 Boston 4, N.Y.Rangers1 ThursdayMay16:Boston3, N.Y.Rangers2, OT

Sunday, May19: Boston5, N.Y.Rangers2 TuesdayMay21: Boston2, N.Y.Rangers I Thursday,May23: N.Y.Rangers4, Boston3, OT Saturday,May25 Boston3 N.Y.Rangers1 WESTERN CONFERENCE Detroit 3, Chicago 3 Wednesday, May15. Chicago4, Detroit1

Saturday, May18: Detroit 4,Chicago1 Monday,May20: Detroit 3, Chicago1 ThursdayMay23: Detroit 2, Chicago0 Saturday, May25: Chicago4, Detroit1 Monday,May27: Chicago4, Detroit 3 Today,May29: Detroit at Chicago,5p.m. Los Angeles 4, SanJose 3 TuesdayMay14:LosAngeles2, SanJose0 Thursday,May16: LosAngeles 4, SanJose3 Saturday,May18: SanJose2, LosAngeles1, OT TuesdayMay21:SanJose2, LosAngeles1 ThursdayMay23: LosAngeles 3, SanJose0 Sunday, May26: SanJose2, LosAngeles1 Tuesday,May28. LosAngeles2, SanJose1 CONFERENCE FINALS

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)

EASTERNCONFERENCE Saturday, June1: BostonatPittsburgh, 5 p.m. Monday,June3: Bostonat Pittsburgh, 5 p.m. Wednesday, June5. Pittsburgh atBoston,5 p.m. Friday,June7: Pittsburghat Boston, 5p.m. x-Sunday, June9: Bostonat Pittsburgh, 5 p.m. x-Tuesday, June11: PittsburghatBoston,TBD x-Wednesday, June12: BostonatPittsburgh, TBD WESTERN CONFERENCE TBD

TENNIS Professional FrenchOpen Tuesday At StadeRolandGarros Paris Purse: $28.4 million (GrandSlam) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Men First Round GrigorDimitrov(26), Bulgaria, def AlejandroFala, Colombia,6-4,1-0, retired. Victor Hanescu,Romania, def. Bernard Tomic, Austraiia, 7-5,7-6(8), 2-1, retired. Tommy Haas(12), Germany, def.GuilaumeRufin, France,7-6(4), 6-1,6-3. LucasPouile, France,def.Alex Kuznetsov, United States,6-1,7-6 (2), 6-2. Jack Sock,UnitedStates, det. GuiliermoGarciaLopez,Spain,6-2, 6-2,7-5. DmitryTursunov,Russia, def.AiexandrDolgopoiov (22), I)krarne, 7-6 (7),6-4, 7-6(7). FedericoDelbonis, Argentina, def. Julian Reister, Germany, 6-7(2), 6-1,6-0, 6-4i Mikhail Youzhny (29), Russia,def. PabloAndujar, Sparn,4-6, 6-4,6-2, 6-3. Nikolay Davydenko,Russia, def. Florent Serra, France,6-3, 6-4,7-5.

Yen-hsunLu,Taiwan,def. SimoneBoleli, Italy, 6-

4, 6-4, 2-1,retired.

DenisIstomin,Uzbekistan, det.FlorianMayer(28), Germany, 4-6,6-3, 7-5,retired. Philipp Kohlschreiber (I6), Germany,def. Jiri Vesely,CzechRepublic, 7-6(3), 1-6,7-5, 6-2. NovakDjokovic (1), Serbia,def. David Goffin,Beigium,7-6(5), 6-4, 7-5. Guido Pella,Argentina,def. IvanDodig, Croatia, 4-6, 6-4,6-3,2-6, 12-10. StanislasWawrinka (9), Switzerland,def. Thiemo de Bakker,Netherlands, 7-5,6-3,6-7 (I), 7-5. FernandoVerdasco, Spain, def. Marc Gicquel, France,6-2, 6-3,6-1. BenortPaire(24), France, eadsMarcosBaghdatis, Cyprus,3-6, 7-6(1), 4-3, susp.,darkness. Lukasz Kubot, Poland, leadsMaximeTeixeira, France,6-4, 5-7,3-1,susp.,darkness HoracioZeballos, Argentina,leadsVasekPospisi, Canada, 7-6(9),6-4, 6-7(4),1-4,susp.,darkness.

MLS MAJOR LEAGUESOCCER AH Times PDT

Eastern Conference

W NewYork 7 Montreal 7 S porting KansasCity 6 4 Houston 6 Philadelphia 5 Columbus 4 NewEngland 4 Chicago 2 TorontoFC 1 D.C. 1

L T P t sGF GA 4 4 25 22 17 2 2 23 20 14 4 2 2 17 11 4 3 21 18 13 5 3 18 18 23 4 4 16 15 12 4 4 16 10 9 7 2 8 7 17 7 4 7 11 18 9 2 5 6 22

WesternConference

W L T P t sGF GA FC Dallas 8 2 3 27 21 15 Portland 5 1 7 22 22 14 RealSaltl.ake 6 5 3 21 18 15 Los Angeles 6 4 2 20 21 10 Colorado 5 4 4 19 13 10 Seattle 4 4 3 15 14 13 SanJose 3 5 6 15 13 20 Vancouver 3 4 4 13 14 16 ChivasLISA 3 7 2 11 13 24 NOTE: Threepoints tor victory, onepoint for tie.

Saturday's Games PhiladelphiaatTorontoFC,3p.m. VancouveratNewYork, 4 p.m. Houston at Columbus,4:30 p.m. Montrealat SportingKansasCity,5:30 p.m.

Fc DallasatColorado,6 p.m. SanJoseatRealSaltLake,6:30p.m. Seattle FC at ChivasUSA,7:30p.m.

Sunday'sGames

LosAngelesatNew England,1:30 p.m. D.C. United at Chicago,2p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

American League

BOSTONREDSOX—Activated LHP Franklin Moralesfromthe15-dayDL. OptionedRHPAlfredo Acevesto Pawtucket (IL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Activated RHP Joba Chamberlainfromthe 15-dayDL.Designated LHP DavidHutfforassignment.

National League

PITTSBURGHPIRATES— Placed RHP Jose Contreras onthe15-day DL.Recalled RHPBryan Morris from Indianapolis(IL). SAN DIEGOPADRES Rei nstated C Yasmani Grandalfromtherestricted list. OptionedCJohnBaker to Tucson(PCL). Designated INFEdinsonRincon for assignment. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA —Announced the NBABoard of Governors unanimouslyapprovedthesaleot theKingsto aSacramentoownership groupledbyVivek Ranadive. ATLANTAHAWKS— Named Mike Budenholzer coach. PHOENIX SUNS—NamedJetf Hornacekcoach. FOOTBALL National Football League DETROILI TONS—Signed DERobert MaciandDE SpencerNealy. ReleasedDTMichael BrooksandWR ChastinWest. Named Jef Backuspart-time coaching intern. GREENBAY PACKERS— SignedS David Fulton. MIAMI DOLP HINS—Signed WR Courtney Gardner.WaivedWRTerrell Sinkfield. NEW ENGLANDPATRI OTS Signed WR Josh BoyceandDLMichael Buchanan. SEATTLESEAHAWKS Waived-injured TE AnthonyMccoy.SignedOTJakeBscherer. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague COLUMBUSBLUE JACKETS— Srgned G Anton Forsberg to athree-year,entry-level contract. COLLEGE COLOR ADO—Announced the resignation ot athletic directorMikeBohn, effective June3.

FISH COUNT

Upstream daily movementof adult chinook,jack Women chinook, steelheadandwild steelheadat selected First Round Sam Stosur (9), Australia, def. Kimiko Date- ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedon Sunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Krumm,Japan,6-0,6-2. 342 31 11 MarianaDuque-Marino, Colombia, def.Kristyna Bonneville 86 9 T he Dal i es 998 31 7 8 1 Plis kova CzechRepublic,6-2,6-0. -1 325 4 Yaroslava Shvedova(27), Kazakhstan, def. Coco John Day 47 9 McNary 7 3 4 385 5 1 Vandewe he, g UnitedStates, 6-0, 3-6,6-2. Upstream year-to-date movement otadult chinook, JelenaJankovic(18), Serbia,def. Daniela Hanj a ckchinook, steel h ead and w i l d steei h ead at se l e ct e d tuchovaSlovakia 64 76(7) ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday MarionBartoli(13), France,def. OlgaGovortsova, Beiarus,7-6(8), 4-6, 7-5. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsflhd Alize Cornet(31),France,def.MariaJoaoKoehler, B onneville 79,127 32,423 3,207 8 6 7 Portugal,7-5, 6-2. T he Dales 63,039 30,177 80 7 34 7 Silvia Soler-Espinosa,Spain, def. Irina-Cam elia J ohn Day 50,407 26,357 92 1 47 5 Begu,Romania, 6-3,6-2. M cNary 42,727 18,542 1,421 6 9 6

Kings advance in playoffs after 2-1 victory over Sharks By Greg Beacham

NHL PLAYOFFS

The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Justin Williams figures he getshis knack forGame 7 heroics from the same source asthe Los Angeles Kings' resilience throughout their grinding seven-game victory over the San Jose Sharks. Williams thinks the Kings all drew their inspiration from that Stanley Cup championship banner hanging over the Staples Center ice, and it carried them through to the Western Conference finals. "It comes from the hunger of winning one and having that drive for another one," Williams said. "You don't want anyone else to raise

the Cup but you." Williams scored two goals in the second period, and the Kings advanced with a 2-1 victory over San Jose on Tuesday night. Jonathan Quick made 25 saves as the defending champs finished off this agonizingly even series with their 14th consecutive home victory over the past two months, including seven straight in the postseason. Not much separated the teams in this thrilling all-California series, but the Kings cited last season'strophy for their poise and persistence in another nail-biting clincher.

"I certainly enjoy pressure situations," said Williams, whose goals were 2:57 apart. "I know everyone in this dressing room does. We pride ourselves on being a team that, push comes to shove, we're going to get it done. We've been through it before, and we know we can do it." Williams scored on a power-play tap-in and a one-timer, putting the Kings on top to stay. The veteran wing came in with an eight-game goalscoring drought, but the two-time Stanley Cup winner has scored nine points in his four career appearances in a Game 7. The Kings will face Chicago or Detroit when

they attempt to reach the Stanley Cup finals for the third time. The Blackhawks will host the Red Wings in Game 7 tonight. The home team won all seven games in the series, as did the team that scored first. The fifth-seeded Kings barely rode their homeice advantage to victory in their first potential elimination game in the past two years.

"They were as good as us," Los Angeles

coach Darryl Sutter said. "We just scored." Quick and his teammates barely held off the Sharks in a frantic third period. Quick showed off his Conn Smythe Trophy form yet again, finishing the seven-game series by allowing just 10 goals.


WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

TENNIS

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings AU TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB 32 21 .604 30 21 588 1 28 24 538 3'/z 27 24 .529 4 22 30 .423 9'/t

Boston

NewYork

Baltimore TampaBay Toronto

Central Division W L

Detroit Cleveland

29 21 27 24 24 25 21 28 21 28 West Division W L 32 20 30 23 23 29 22 30 15 37

Chicago Kansas City Minnesota Texas Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Houston

Pct GB .580 529 2'/z 490 41/2 .429 7'/t .429 7 1/t

Pct GB .615 .566 2'/t .442 9

.423 10 .288 17

Tuesday'sGames Atlanta 7,Toronto6,10 innings Colorado 2, Houston I Washington 9, Baltimore3 Pittsburgh1,Detroit 0, 11innings Cincinnati 8 Cleveland 2 Tampa Bay7, Miami6 N.Y.Mets2, N.Y.Yankees1 Philadelphia 3, Boston1 Minnesota 6, Milwaukee5,14innings St.Louis 4,KansasCity 1 Chicago Cubsat Chicago, ppd.,rain Oakland 6,SanFrancisco3 L.A. Dodgers 3,L.A. Angels0 SanDiego6,Seattle 1 Today's Games ChicagoWhite Sox(Joh.Danks0-0) at ChicagoCubs (Feldman 4-4),11:20 a.m. Boston(Lackey3-4) at Philadelphia(K.Kendrick 4-3), 4:05 p.m. Cincinnati(Arroyo5-4) at Cleveland(Masterson7-3), 4:05 p.m. Detroit (Ani.Sanchez 5-4) at Pittsburgh (A.J.Bumet 3-5), 4:05 p.m. N.Y.Mets(Hefner 0-5) atN.Y.Yankees(D.Phelps 3-2), 4:05 p.m. Washington(Zimmermann8-2) at Baltimore(TiIman 4-2), 4:05p.m. Tampa Bay(Ro.Hernandez2-5) at Miami(Koehler02), 4:10p.m. Toronto(Rogers1-2) at Atlanta(Medlen1-5), 4.10 p.m. Arizona(Mccarthy2-3) atTexas(Grimm4-3), 5:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Estrada 4-2) at Minnesota(Deduno0-1), 5:10 p.m. KansasCity (Mendoza1-2) at St. Louis(Lynn7-1), 5:15 p.m. Houston(Bedard0-2) at Colorado(Chatwood3-0), 5:40 p.m. L.A. Dodgers(Capuano 1-3) at L.A.Angels(Weaver 0-1), 7:05p.m. Seattle (J.Saunders3-5) at SanDiego (Stults 4-4), 7:10 p.m. Oakland(Milone4-5) at SanFrancisco (Lincecum34), 7:15p.m. Thursday'sGames ArizonaatTexas,11:05 am. Chicago WhiteSoxat ChicagoCubs,11:20a m. Seattle atSanDiego,12:40 p.m. Oakland atSanFrancisco,12:45 p.m. Bostonat Philadelphia, 4:05p.m. Cincinnati atCleveland,4:05 p.m. Detroit atPittsburgh,4:05p.m. N.Y. MetsatN.Y Yankees,4:05p.m. Washington at Baltimore,4:05p.m. Tampa BayatMiami, 4:10p.m. TorontoatAtlanta, 4:10p.m. Milwaukee atMinnesota, 5:10p.m. KansasCity atSt. Louis, 5:15p.m. Houston at Colorado,5:40p.m. LA. DodgersatL.A Angels,7:05p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE

East Division

W L Atlanta 31 20 Washington 27 25 Philadelphia 25 27 NewYork 20 29 Miami 13 39 Central Division W L St. Louis 34 17 Cincinnati 33 19 Pittsburgh 32 20 Chicago 20 30 Milwaukee 19 31

West Division

Arizona Colorado

SanFrancisco San Diego Los Angeles

W 30 28 28 23 22

L 22 24 24 28 28

Farquhar 2 0 0 0 0 Thatcherpitchedto1batter in the8th. WP — Maurer 2. T—2:37. A—11,911(47,476).

4

the top of the11th. Former Tigers

reliever Jason Grilli pitched the bottom half for his 21st save in 21 tries, striking out Torii Hunter, Miguel Cabrera and Prince Fielder

Dodgers 3, Angels 0 LOS ANGELES — Hyun-Jin Ryu pitched a two-hitter for his first complete game in the major leagues, Luis Cruz hit his first

in succession.

homeroftheseasonandtheLos Angeles Dodgers beat the Los

Angeles Angel sinthesecond game of the FreewaySeries. Ryu (6-2) struck out sevenand walked none. The left-hander from South Korea retired19 consecutive

batters during one stretch. His six victories lead all rookie pitchers in the majors, while his 71 /s

innings pitched leadall rookies this season. Los Angeles(A) Los Angeles (N) ab r hbi ab r hbi

A ybarss 4 0 0 0 Crwfrdlt 4 0 0 0 T routct 4 0 0 0 M.Ellis2b 3 0 I 0 Puiols1b 3 0 0 0 AdGnzl1b 4 0 0 0 T rumorf 3 0 0 0 Ethierrf 4 0 1 0 H Kndrc2b 3 0 1 0 Kempcf 2 1 1 0 Call asp3b 3 0 0 0 Schmkrcf 0 0 0 0 l annett c 3 0 1 0 A.Ellis c 3 0 1 1 S hucklf 3 0 0 0 Uribe3b 3 1 1 0 Blantonp 2 0 0 0 Lcruzss 3 1 1 2 DDLRsp 0 0 0 0 Ryup 30 I 0 BHarrs ph 1 0 0 0 T otals 2 9 0 2 0 Totals 2 93 7 3

.519 41/t .481 61/t

.408 10 .250 I Br/t

Pct GB .667 .635 fr/t .615 2 1/t .400 I 3'/t .380 f 41/t

Pct GB .577 538 2 538 2 451 6'/~

440 7

Tuesday'sGames Atlanta 7,Toronto6,10 innings Colorado 2, Houston1 Washington 9, Baltimore3 Pittsburgh1,Detroit 0,11innings Cincinnati 8,Cleveland2 Tampa Bay7, Miami6 N.Y.Mets2, N.YYankees1 Philadelphia 3, Boston1 Minnesota 6, Milwaukee5,14 innings St.Louis 4,KansasCity 1 Chicago Cubsat Chicago, ppd.,rain Oakland 6, SanFrancisco 3 L.A. Dodgers 3,L.A.Angels0 San Diego 6,Seattle 1

BlantonL,1 8 D.DeLaRosa 1

7

RyuW,6-2

9

Los Angeles(N)

HBP—byBlanton(Kemp).

7 3 3 0 0 0 0 I

5 0

2 0 0 0

7

Athletics 6, Giants 3 OAKLAND, Calif. — Derek Norris hit a two-run homer in the second, Jarrod Parker pitched

seven strong innings andOakland beat San Francisco for its fifth straight victory. Adam Rosales

homered in the eighth for the A's to snap a zero-for-24 funk since

he connected against KansasCity on May17. Nate Freiman hit an RBI single and Jed Lowrie and Seth Smith each drew bases-

loaded walks asOakland (30-23) won for the10th time in11 games to move sevengamesabove.500 for the first time since April19.

Hunter Pence homered in the ninth and hit an RBI single in the first to give Mike Kickham a lead before he took the mound for his San Francisco Oakland ab r hbi ab r hbi G Blanccf 4 0 0 0 Crispcf 5 0 I 0 Scutarodh 4 2 2 0 CYoungrf 4 1 0 0 Sandovl3b 3 0 0 0 CespdsIf 5 1 1 0 Posey c 4 0 0 1 Dnldsn 3b 3 1 2 0 P encerf 4 I 2 2 Lowrie2b 3 I 2 I

Belt1b 4 0 1 0 Freimn1b 2 0 1 1 AnTrrslf 4 0 0 0 Mossph-1b 2 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 3 0 1 0 DNorrsc 3 1 1 2 Noonan2b 3 0 0 0 Montzdh 0 0 0 0 S.Smithph-dh2 0 0 I Rosales ss 4 1 1 1 Totals 3 3 3 6 3 Totals 3 36 9 6

S an Francisco 100 001 001 — 3 Oakland 022 010 01x — 6 E—C.Young (2). DP—Oakland 1. LOB—San Francisco 4, Oakland 9. 2B —Scutaro (12), Belt (10), Cespe des (7), Donaldson (18). HR —Pence(8), DNorris(2),Rosales (3) San Francisco I P H R ER BB SD 4 0 0 2 0

3 0 1 2 I

ParkerW,3-6 7 5 2 2 1 CookH,7 1 0 0 0 0 Balfour 1 1 1 1 0 T—3;02. A—35,067(35,067).

4 0 2

J.Lopez Gaudin Miiares Oakland

2 1 - 3 44 1-3 0 0 1-3 0 0 3 2 1 2 3 1

4 0 0 1 1

Mets 2, Yankees1

Padres 6, Mariners1

NEW YORK — David Wright and Lucas Duda hit RBI singles off Mariano Rivera in the ninth inning, and the Mets rallied past the

SEATTLE — Edinson Volquez pitched into the eighth inning and

honoring him at Citi Field. Matt

Jedd Gyorko andAlexi Amarista each homered, asSan Diegobeat

up in an entertaining pitchers' duel that went to the ninth with

the Yankeesleading 1-0 on Lyle Overbay's run-scoring single. But

Diego for two more gamesas the

allthree batters to face Rivera (01) got hits, handing him the first

"natural rivals" conclude their

season series. Gyorko hit a two-

blown save of his farewell season

run shot in the fourth inning off Seattle starter Brandon Maurer,

in 19 chances.

his sixth homer of the season. Amarista followed with a solo shot an inning later and the Padres

knocked out Maurer (2-7) with three runs in the sixth as theywon for just the second time in the past

seven games.Seattle's bats got very little done against Volquez (4-5) and its lineup lost its most potent punch after right fielder

Michael Morse had to leavethe game in the fifth inning.

San Diego Seattle ab r hbi ab r hbi Evcarrss 3 0 0 0 Enchvzlt-rf 4 0 0 0 Amarst cf 3 1 1 1 Seager 3b 4 0 1 0 Denorfiph-rf 2 0 0 0 Ibanezdh 3 0 0 0 Headly3b 5 0 1 0 KMorls1b 4 0 1 0 Q uentindh 4 1 2 0 Morserf 1 1 1 0 Alonso1b 4 I 1 0 Baylf

2000

Grandl c 4 1 1 0 MSndrscf 1 0 1 0 Gyorko2b 3 2 1 2 Frnkln2b 4 0 0 0 K otsaylf 4 0 1 2 Sucrec 3 0 0 1 B lankslf 0 0 0 0 Ryanss 3 0 0 0 Venalerf-cf 4 0 I 0 T otals 3 6 6 9 5 Totals

Yankees to beat baseball's career saves leader only hours after Harvey and Hiroki Kuroda locked

Seattle. The teams split the brief two-game set in Seattle but will be right back at it today in San

New York(A) New York (N) ab r hbi ab r hbi Gardnrcf 4 1 2 0 RTeiadss 4 0 0 0 Cano2b 4 0 I 0 DnMrp2b 4 1 2 0 VWellslf 4 0 1 0 DWrght3b Overay1b 4 0 1 1 Dudalf DAdms3b 4 0 0 0 Byrdrf ISuzukirf 4 0 1 0 Ankielcf Brigncss 4 0 I 0 Buckc CStwrtc 3 0 0 0 I.Davis1b

412 1 402 1 3000 3010 300 0 300 0 Kuroda p 2 0 0 0 Harveyp 2 0 0 0 Hafnerph 1 0 0 0 Vldspnph 1 0 0 0 DRrtsnp 0 0 0 0 Ricep 000 0 Riverap 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 4 1 7 1 Totals 3 127 2 NewYork(A) ggg 001 000 — 1 New York(N) 00 0 0 00 002 — 2

No outswhenwinning runscored. E—Cano (2), Gardner(1), Byrd(1), R.Teiada (8). LOB —NewYork (A) 6, NewYork (N) 5. 28 — Dan. Murphy(16). CS—I.Suzuki (2). New York(A) I P H R ER BBSD Kuroda 7 4 0 0 0 7 D.RobertsonH,10 I 0 0 0 0 1 RiveraL,0-1BS,1-19 0 3 2 1 0 0 New York(N) Harvey 8 6 1 1 0 10 RiceW,3-3 I I 0 0 0 Riverapitchedto3 baters inthe9th. PB — C.Stewart. T 2:54. A 31,877(41,922).

I

2 91 4 1

7 2 - 3 41 1 3 0 0 0 0 I 11-3 0 0 0 1

5 0 0

52- 3 9 6 5 1 I 1-3 0 0 0 I

2 0

Pittsburgh past Detroit. The game was scoreless until Walker — the brother-in-law of Tigers center

fielder Don Kelly — homeredoff

WebbBS,1-1 2-3 1 1 1 1 0 Da.Jennings M.DunnL,1-1BS,1-2 12-3 5 2 Qualls 0 I 0

1 1 0 0

0 0

0 0

0

5 1-3 7 5 J.Wright 1 2-3 1 0 1 2 1 Jo.Peralta RodneyW,2-2 1 0 0 Qualls pitched to1 batter inthe9th. WP — Jo.Peralta. T—3:25. A—13,876(34,078).

5 0 1 0

3 1 0 1

TampaBay Hellickson

2

1 0 0 0

Phillies 3, Red Sox1 BOSTON — Cliff Lee pitched eight innings of four-hit ball and

Jonathan Papelbonearnedhis first save at FenwayPark as aRedSox opponent, leading Philadelphia

pastBoston.MichaelYoungand Domonic Brown homered for the Phillies, and Erik Kratz singled in the tiebreaking run in the seventh

inning to snap Boston's four-game

E R BB SD winning streak. 0 1 2 0 0 2 Philadelphia Boston 0 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Grilli S,21-21 I 0 0 0 0 3 Reverecf 5 0 2 0 Ellsurycf 4 1 1 0 Detroit Myong3b 5 1 1 1 JGoms I 4 0 0 0 Porcello 8 3 0 0 1 11 Rollinsss 3 0 0 0 Pedroia2b 4 0 I I Benoit I I 0 0 0 2 Howard1b 4 0 1 0 D.Ortizdh 4 0 0 0 OrtegaL,0-2 2 2 1 1 1 1 DYongdh 4 0 1 0 Napoli1b 3 0 0 0 T 3:11 (Raindelay:1:13) A 33,473 (41,255). D Brwnlf 4 1 1 1 Navarf 30 10 Mayrryrf 4 1 1 0 D.Rossc 2 0 0 0 G alvis2b 2 0 0 0 Drewss 3 0 0 0 Nationals 9, Orioles 3 Kratzc 3 0 2 1 lglesias3b 3 0 I 0 T otals 3 4 3 9 3 Totals 3 01 4 1 WASHINGTON — Adam LaRoche P hiladelphia 1 0 0 0 0 0 101 — 3

Tyler Moore andRogerBernadina connected off Orioles rookie Kevin Gausman (0-2). LaRocheadded

Baltimore Washington ab r hbi ab r hbi

McLothlf 3 0 I 0 Spancf 40I I Machd3b 3 0 1 0 Lmrdzz2b 4 1 1 0 Markksrf 4 0 0 0 Zmrmn3b 4 1 2 0 A.Jonescf 4 0 0 0 LaRoch1b 3 3 2 4 C.Davis1b 4 2 2 1 Dsmndss 4 1 1 0 Wietersc 4 0 1 1 TMoorelf 4 1 1 2 H ardyss 4 I 3 I Bemdnrf 4 I 2 2 YNavrr2b 3 0 0 0 KSuzukc 4 1 3 0 P attonp 0 0 0 0 Kamsp 1 0 0 0 V alenciph 1 0 0 0 Dukep 0 0 0 0 Gasmnp 1 0 0 0 Koernsph 1 0 0 0 P earceph 1 0 0 0 Storenp 0 0 0 0 McFrlnp 0 0 0 0 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 Acasillph-2b1 0 0 0 JSolanoph 1 0 0 0 A bad p 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 3 3 8 3 Totals 3 49 139 B altimore 018 2 0 8 Dgg — 3 Washington 3 0 8 4 0 8 8 2x — 9 DP — Baltimore 2, Washington 2. LOB—Baltimore

Flormnss 4 0 1 0 YBtncr1b 5 0 0 0 D imndp 2 0 0 0 Fiersp 0000 Fienp 0 0 0 0 Gallardph 1 0 0 0 Parmelph 1 0 0 0 Badnhpp 0 0 0 0 R oenckp 0 0 0 0 Figarop 1 0 0 0 Burtonp 0 0 0 0 AGnzlzph 1 0 0 0 Colaellph 1 0 0 0 McGnzlp 0 0 0 0 P erkinsp 0 0 0 0 Axfordp 0 0 0 0 Swarzkp 0 0 0 0 LSchfrph 0 0 0 0 C Hrmnph 0 0 0 0 Kintzlrp 0 0 0 0 Presslyp 0 0 0 0 D.Handp 0 0 0 0 EEscor ph 0 0 0 1 Bianchi ph 0 1 0 0 Dunsngp 0 0 0 0 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 Maldnd1b 2 0 0 0 Totals 4 6 6 8 6 Totals 5 45 135 Minnesota 820 200 018 Dgg 81 — 6 Milwaukee 000 310 001 Dgg 00 — 6 E—ArRamirez(4). DP—Minnesota 1, Milwaukee 1. LOB —Minnesota7, Milwaukee10. 28—Hicks(5), Ar.Ramirez(7), Lucroy(3). 38—Braun(2). HR—Willingham(9), Doumit (4), Hicks (5). SB C.Gomez (10). CS —Dozier (4). S—Florimon, C.Herrmann. SF Morneau,E.Escobar. Minnesota IP H R E R BB SD Diamond 42-3 8 4 4 0 2 Fien 113 0 0 0 0 2 Roenicke 1 1 0 0 1 0 BurtonH,12 1 1 0 0 0 2 PerkinsBS,2-12 1 2 1 1 1 1 Swarzak 2 0 0 0 0 0 PresslyW2-0 2 0 0 0 0 3 DuensingS,1-2 1 1 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee Figaro 5 4 4 4 1 4 Mic.Gonzale z 1 0 0 0 0 I Axiord 1 1 0 0 0 2 Kintzler I 1 I I 2 I D.Hand 1 0 0 0 0 0 Fr.Rodriguez 1 1 0 0 0 I Fiers 3 0 0 0 2 4 BadenhopL,0-2 1 1 1 I 0 I HBP —byPerkins (Bianchi). T—4'43.A—24,415 (41,900).

Cardinals 4, Royals 1

Boston 100 000 Dgg — 1 DP — Boston 1. LOB —Philadelphia 8, Boston3. KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Carlos HR — M.Young (2), D.Brown(11). SB—Revere (9), Beltran hit a two-run homer Ellsbury(16). S—Galvis, D.Ross. Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SD against his former team, rookie 8 4 LeeW,62 PapelbonS,10-10 1 0 Boston DempsterL,2-6 7 6 Breslow 1 0 Tazawa 1 3 T—2'30 A—33,463(37,499).

1 1 0

8

0 0 0

I

2 2 3 0 0 0 1 1 0

4 2 2

Tyler Lyons madeanother dazzling start and St. Louis beat Kansas City for the Royals'10th consecutive home defeat.The only two hits that Lyons (2-0)

allowed over seveninnings were

Rockies 2, Astros1

to Billy Butler — a two-out RBI double in the first inning and a bloop single in the seventh.

HOUSTON — Michael Cuddyer had three hits, including an RBI

single in the ninth inning that gave Colorado a win over Houston. Troy Tulowitzki doubled off Houston

closer Jose Veras (0-4) to start the ninth and advanced to third on a wild pitch. Cuddyer followed with his single, which sailed just out

of reach of leaping third baseman Matt Dominguez. Colorado

Houston ab r hbi ab r hbi Fowlercf 2 1 0 0 BBarnscf 4 0 0 0 Arenad 3b 4 0 1 0 Altuve 2b 3 0 0 0 C Gnzlzlf 4 0 1 0 Corprnc 3 I 1 0

KansasCity ab r hbi ab r hbi Mcrpnt2b-3b3 2 2 1 AGordnlf 3 1 0 0 Beltranrt 4 1 2 2 AEscorss 4 0 0 0 H ollidydh 4 1 2 1 L.caincf 4 0 0 0 C raiglf 3 0 1 0 Butlerdh 3 0 2 1 MAdms1b 4 0 0 0 Hosmer1b 3 0 0 0 Freese3b 4 0 1 0 MTeiad3b 3 0 0 0 K ozmass 0 0 0 0 Francrrf 2 0 0 0 Jaycf 4 0 0 0 Loughph-rf 1 0 0 0 T.cruzc 3 0 0 0 AMoorec 2 0 0 0 Descalsss-2b3 0 0 0 Kottarsph-c I 0 0 0 EJhnsn 2b 3 0 0 0 T otals 3 2 4 8 4 Totals 2 91 2 1 St. Louis 200 002 Dgg — 4 K ansas City 1 0 0 0 0 0 Dgg — 1 DP—KansasCity 3. LOB—St. Louis 3, Kansas City 2. 2B —Butler (9). HR —MCarpenter (4), Beltran St. Louis

5, Washington3. 28—Wieters (13), Span(9), Desmond(15). HR —C.Davis(17), Hardy(10), LaRoche2 (10), TMoore (2), Bemadina(1) SB—McLouth (16) T lwtzk ss 4 1 2 1 JMrtnzIf 4 0 2 0 (11), Holliday (7). SB—M.carpenter (1). S—Karns. St. Louis IP H R E R BB SD Baltimore IP H R E R BB SD Cuddyrrf 4 0 3 1 Carter1b 4 0 0 1 L yons W, 2 -0 7 2 1 1 I 5 GausmanL,0-2 4 8 7 7 1 0 Helton1b 3 0 0 0 C.Penadh 3 0 0 0 RosenthalH,15 1 0 0 0 0 2 McFarland 2 I 0 0 0 0 WRosrdh 4 0 1 0 Paredsrf 2 0 0 0 MuiicaS,16-16 I 0 0 0 0 I Patton 2 4 2 2 0 1 Torrealc 3 0 0 0 Dmngz3b 3 0 0 0 Kansas Ci t y LeMahi2b 4 0 0 0 Rcedenss 3 0 2 0 Washington E .Santana L,3-5 7 1 -3 7 4 4 2 5 2 91 5 1 41-3 5 3 3 2 3 T otals 3 2 2 8 2 Totals Kams 12-3 1 0 0 0 0 1 00 000 001 — 2 Coleman DukeW,1-1 12-3 0 0 0 0 0 Colorado T—2:07.A—27,833 (37,903). 000 100 Dgg — 1 Storen 1 1 0 0 0 1 Houston DP — Colorado 2, Houston 3. LOB—Colorado Clippard I 2 0 0 0 0 —Tulowitzki (13), Cuddyer(12), Abad 1 0 0 0 0 1 7, Houston 5. 28 Leaders J.Martinez(10). SB—Cuddyer (4). CS—Altuve(3), T—2:44(Raindelay:1:21). A—35,664(41,418). C.Pena(1). ThroughTuesday's Games IP H R E R BB SD AMERICANLEAGUE Colorado BATTING —Micabrera, Detroit, .373; CDavis, Reds 8, Indians 2 J.DeLaRosa 7 5 I I 2 4

CINCINNATI — Xavier Paul

singled home apair of runs in the first inning, and Cincinnati

completed a two-gamehome

BelisleW,2-2 1 0 0 0 0 R.BetancourtS,11-12 1 0 0 0 0

ras.

more games. Thelndians lead the

Braves 7, Blue Jays6 (10 innings)

all-time series 42-41.

0 2

Houston 7 6 1 1 3 3 Lyies WWright 1 0 0 0 0 2 VerasL,0-4 I 2 1 I I I HBP—byJ.De LaRosa(Altuve, Corporan).WP—Ve-

sweep of Cleveland. The intrastate rivals head to Cleveland for two

T 3'05 A 11,974 (42,060).

Baltimore, 344; JhPeralta Detroit, .339; Machado,

Baltimore,.335;AGordon, KansasCity,.333; Pedroia, Boston,.332;Loney,TampaBay,.331. RUNS —Micabrera, Detroit, 42, Trout, LosAngeles, 41;AJones,Baltimore, 39; CDavis, Baltimore, 37;Pedroia,Boston,37;Longoria,Tampa Bay,36; Machado,Baltimore, 35 RBI — Micabrera, Detroit, 57; CDavis,Baltimore, 47; Encarnacion, Toronto,44; Fielder,Detroit,42; MarReynolds,Cleveland,40; Napoli, Boston,39; Trout, Los Angeles,37. HITS — Micabrera, Detroit, 76; Machado, Balti-

more, 76;AJones,Baltimore,70; AGordon,Kansas City, 68; Pedroia,Boston,68; Markakis, Baltimore, Cleveland Cincinnati 65;Donaldson,Oakland,63;Longoria,TampaBay63; TORONTO — Brian McCann hit ab r bbi ab r bbi Trout,LosAngeles,63. B ourncf 4 0 2 1 Choocf 3 1 2 0 two home runs, including a solo DOUBLES —Machado, Baltimore, 23; Napoli, Kipnis 2b 4 0 0 0 Cozart ss 5 1 3 1 Boston, 19;CDavis,Baltimore, 18; Donaldson,Oakshot in the10th inning that lifted A carerss 5 0 0 0 Votto1b 4 1 2 I land, 18,AJones, Baltimore,17; Mauer,Minnesota, Swisher1b 4 1 1 0 Phillips2b 4 2 2 0 Atlanta past Toronto. McCann 17; Acabrera,Cleveland,16; Longoria,TampaBay, C Santnc 4 0 1 0 Brucerf 5 0 1 1 16; Morales,Seattle,16; Seager,Seatle,16. and rookie Evan Gattis hit backMrRynl3b 3 0 0 0 Paullt 4I 32 TRIPLES —Trout, LosAngeles,6; Ellsbury, BosB rantlylf 4 0 1 1 Simonp 1 0 0 0 to-back homers off Ramon Ortiz ton, 4; Gardner,NewYork, 4; LMartin, Texas,4; AnS tubbsrf 4 1 1 0 Mesorcc 5 1 2 0 in the sixth, giving the Braves a drus,Texas,3; Drew, Boston, 3; 22tied at2. McAlstp 2 0 0 0 Hannhn3b 5 I 2 I HOMERUNS —CDavis, Baltimore,17; MicabreR .Hillp 0 0 0 0 Latos p 3 0 0 0 6-5 lead. The Blue Jays tied it on ra, Detroit,14; Encarnacion,Toronto,14; Cano,New A llenp 0 0 0 0 MParrp 0 0 0 0 J.P. Arencibia's RBI double in the York, 13;Arencibia,Toronto,12; Bautista Toronto,12; Raburnph 0 0 0 0 Lecurep 0 0 0 0 Ncruz,Texas,12;ADunn,Chicago,12; MarReynolds, seventh. Shawp 0 0 0 0 DRonsn ph-If 1 0 1 1 Cleve and,I2. SBarnsp 0 0 0 0 STOLEN BASES—Ell sbury,Boston,16,McLouth, Atlanta Toronto Albersp 0 0 0 0 Baltimore, 16;Andrus,Texas, 13;Trout, l.osAngeles, ab r hbi ab r hbi Aviles ph 1 0 1 0 12; Crisp, Oakland,10,AEscobar, KansasCity, 10; Totals 3 5 2 7 2 Totals 4 08 187 JSchafrcf 5 2 2 1 Mecarrdh 5 0 1 0 Kipnis, Cleveland,10. ss 5 1 3 0 Bautist rf 4 3 2 1 C leveland 000 0 1 0 810 — 2 Smmns PITCHING —MMoore,Tampa Bay,8-0; Scherzer, Heywrdrf 4 0 0 0 Encrnc1b 5 1 1 I C incinnati 308 g g g 4 1x — 8 7-0; Buchholz,Boston,7-0; Darvish,Texas, E—C.Santana(3). LOB —Cleveland10, Cincinnati F Frmn1b 5 1 3 1 Arenciic 5 1 3 1 Detroit, 7-2; HammelBal , timore,7-2; Masterson,Cleveland, 12. 28 —Choo (12), Cozart (11), Bruce(17), Hanna- Gattisc 4 1 1 1 DeRosa3b 3 1 1 2 7-3; 5 tiedat6. M ccnndh 5 2 2 2 Lindph 0 0 0 0 han (1). SB —Stubbs(6), Votto (2). STRIKEDUTS —Darvish, Texas, 105; Verlander, Cleveland IP H R E R BB SD Uggla2b 4 0 0 0 Kawskpr 0 0 0 0 Detroit, 82;FHernandez, Seattle, 81; Scherzer,Detroit, McAllister L,4-4 5 1 -3 10 3 3 1 6 JFrncs3b 3 0 I 0 CIRsmsct 5 0 I I 81; AniSanchez, Detroi t, 80; Masterson, Cleveland, RHill 0 0 0 0 I 0 CJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 Mlztursss 4 0 1 0 76,Buchholz,Boston,73;Shields,KansasCity,73. Allen 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 R.Pena3b 1 0 0 0 Boniiac2b 4 0 0 0 SAVES —Rivera, NewYork,18; ARee d, Chicago, 40 2 0 Shaw 1-3 5 4 4 0 1 R JhnsnIf 5 0 0 0 GoseIf 3 96 126 17, Nathan,Texas,16; JiJohnson, Baltimore,15; BalS.Bames 2-3 I 0 0 0 0 Totals 4 2 7 125 Totals four, Oakl a nd, 11; Wi he l m sen, Se a t l e , 11; Frieri, Los 310 082 Dgg 1 — 7 Albers 1 2 1 1 0 3 Atlanta Angeles,10;Janssen,Toronto, 10;Perkins, MinneToronto 400 180 100 0 — 6 Cincinnati E—Simmons (2), Enca rnacion(1), Bautista(3). sota,10. LatosW,5-0 61-3 5 1 1 4 7 Atlanta 2, Toronto 1. LOB—Atlanta 8, ToM.ParraH,2 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 DP — NATIONALLEAGUE —J.Schafer (2), Simmons(9), Bautista LecureH,B 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 ronto 8. 28 BATTING —Segura, Milwaukee, .365; Votto, Simon 2 2 1 0 0 2 (11), Encarnacion(8), Arencibia2(11), DeRosa (5). HR — J.Schafer (2), Ga tis (12), Mccann2 (6), Bau- Cincinnati, .354;YMolina, St. Louis, .346; AdGonR.Hill pitchedto1 batter inthe6th. zalez,LosAngeles,.329; Tulowitzki, Colorado,.327; —Kawasaki (7). CS—Col.Rasmus (1). HBP —by McAllister (Philips), by S.Bames(Choo). tista (12). SB Scutaro,SanFrancisco,.327; CGomez, Milwaukee, S—Bonifacio. WP —McAlister, S.Barnes.PB—Mesoraco. Atlanta IP H R E R BB SD .326. T—3:28.A—28,812(42,319). RUNS —Votto, Cincinnati, 43; CGon zalez, ColoMaholm 6 10 5 5 1 3 VarvaroBS,2-2 1 - 3 2 1 I I 0 rado,42;Mcarpenter,St. Louis,41; Choo,Cincinnati, 40; JUpton,Atlanta, 37; SMarte,Pittsburgh, 36; HolRays 7, Marlins 6 12-3 0 0 0 1 I Avilan GearrinW2-1 1 0 0 0 0 0 liday, StLouis,35;Mccutchen,Pittsburgh,35. RBI — Phillips, Cincinnati, 43, Goldschmidt, Kimbrel S,16-19 1 0 0 0 1 1 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Arizona,40;Tulowitzki, Colorado,40;AdGonzalez, Toronto Desmond Jennings drove in Los Angeles,37; Craig, St. Louis, 36;Rizzo,ChiMorrow 2 4 4 2 0 2 R.Ortiz 3 5 2 2 1 1 cago,35;Braun,Milwaukee,34; Sandoval, San the winning run with a two-out Loup 1 0 0 0 0 1 Francisco,34. single in the bottom of the ninth HITS — Segura, Milwaukee, 72; Votto, Cincinnati, Cecil 2 1 0 0 1 4 inning, lifting TampaBayto a win Delabar 1 1 0 0 1 1 69; Scutaro,SanFrancisco, 64; YMolina, St. Louis, ozalez, Colorado,61; WeberL,0-1 1 1 I I 0 1 63; GParra,Arizona,62; CGn over Miami. TheRays cameback Goldschmidt,Arizona,60;SMarte, Pittsburgh, 60. R.Ortizpitchedto 3baters inthe6th. DOUBLES —Bruce, Cincinnati, 17; Mcarpenter, from an early 4-0 deficit and won WP —Delabar. T—3.18. A—45,224(49,282). St. Louis,16;DanMurphy,NewYork,16; Pollock,Aritheir third in a row. Miami lost its zona,16,Rizzo,Chicago,16; Desm ond, Washington, seventh straight game. GParra,Arizona, 15; Pence,SanFrancisco, 15; Twins 6, Brewers 5 (14 innings) 15; Rollins, Philadelphia,15. TRIPLES —Hechavarria, Miami, 5; Segura,MilMiami TampaBay waukee, 5;Ecabrera,SanDiego, 4; DWright,New ab r hbi ab r hbi MILWAUKEE — Pinch-hitter York, 4; Coghl an,Miami, 3;CGomez, Milwaukee, 3; Pierre dh 5 0 0 0 Zobrist 2b-rf 4 0 1 0 Eduardo Escobar hit a sacrifice SMarte,Pittsburgh,3; Span,Washington, 3; EYoung, P olanc3b 5 1 2 0 Joycerf 3 0 1 1 fly with one out in the 14th inning, Colorado,3. Dietrch 2b 4 1 1 1 RRortsph-2b 1 0 0 0 HOMERUNS—JUpton, Atlanta, 14;CGonzalez, Ozunarf 3 3 2 0 KJhnsnIf 5 1 2 I lifting Minnesota to a victory over Colorado, 13;Gattis, Atlanta, 12;Goldschmidt, AriCoghlnlf 4 I 2 3 Longori3b 5 0 I 0 Milwaukee. JeanSegurawent6zona, 12;Harper,Washington, 12;Beltran, St. Louis, Ruggin cf 4 0 1 1 Loney 1b 5 0 0 0 11; DBrown,Philadelphia,11; Buck,NewYork,11. D obbs1b 4 0 2 1 Scottdh 5 2 3 0 for-7 — all singles — to raise his STOLENBASE S—Ecabrera, SanDiego, 19; Hchvrrss 4 0 0 0 DJnngscf 4 2 3 1 batting average to an NL-leading M athisc 4 0 0 0 Loatonc 3 1 2 2 Mccutchen,Pittsburgh,14, Segura,Milwaukee,14; SRdrgz ph 1 0 0 0 .366, but Milwaukee lost for the SMarte,Pittsburgh, 13;Pierre, Miami, 13;DWright, J Molinc 0 0 0 0 York,11; CGomez,Milwaukee,10. fourth straight time and 20th in 25 New YEscor ss 4 1 3 2 PITCHING —Corbin, Arizona,8-0; Zimmermann, games. Totals 3 7 6 106 Totals 4 0 7 167 Washington,8-2;Lynn,St. Louis,7-1; Wainwright,St. Miami 0 13 001 810 — 6 Louis, 7-3; 7tiedat6. T ampa Bay 0 0 2 1 0 2 811 — 7 Minnesota Milwaukee STRIKEDUTS —AJBurnett, Pittsburgh, 85; HarTwooutswhenwinning runscored vey, New York, 84; Samardziia, Chicago,80; Kershaw, ab r hbi ab r hbi DP — Miami 1. LOB —Miami 5, TampaBay 10. Carro 3b 70 10 Los Angeles, 77;Wainwright, St. Louis,74; Strasburg, I 7 0 0 0 A okirf 28 — Ozuna(8), K.Johnson(6), Scott (2), De.Jennings Dozier2b 5 1 3 0 Segurass 7 2 6 1 Washington,71;Bumgarner, San Francisco, 69. SAVES —Grilli, Pittsburgh,21; Muiica, St. Louis, (12), Lobaton(5), YEscobar(10). 38 Dietrich (1), Mauerc 5 0 0 0 B raunlf 7 1 2 I Coghlan(3). HR —Coghlan (1). SB—Ruggiano (7). WlnghIf 5 1 1 1 ArRmr3b 5 1 1 2 16, Kimbrel,Atlanta,16,RSoriano,Washington, 14; SF — Joyce. Mornea1b 4 1 0 1 CGomzcf 6 0 1 0 Romo,SanFrancisco, 13;Chapman,Cincinnati, 13; Miami IP H R E R BB SD Doumit rf 6 1 1 2 Lucroy c 6 0 1 1 Street, SanDiego, 11; RBe tancourt, Colorado,11; 51-3 8 4 4 0 4 Hickscf Slowey 6 2 2 1 Weeks2b 6 0 1 0 League,LosAngeles,11. -

S an Diego 080 2 1 3 000 — 6 Pirates1, Tigers 0 (11 innings) Seattle 0 10 000 000 — 1 E—Franklin (I). LOB—San Diego6, Seattle 7. DETROIT — Neil Walker ended 28 — Headley (9), M.Saunders(5). HR —Amarista(4), a lengthy pitching duel with a Gyorko(6). S—Ev.cabrera. SF—Sucre. SanDiego IP H R E R BB SD home run in the11th inning, lifting VolquezW,4-5 Thatcher Thayer Seattle MaurerL,2-7 Furbush

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Michel Spingler/The Associated Press

Novak Djokovic reacts as he wins the second set while playing David Goffin during their first-round match at the French Open on Tuesday in Paris.

Djokovic starts French bid with victory By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press

PARIS — Novak Djokovic spent the better part of a rainy Tuesday at the French O pen w o ndering w h e n — and even whether — he

would wind up playing his f irst-round match at t h e only Grand Slam tournament he has yet to win. Unlike Wimbledon and the Australian Open, Roland Garros does not have a roof at any court. Unlike the U.S. Open, though, at least there is a definitive timeline to build one. D jokovic is th ri l l e d about t ha t f o r t hcoming addition in Paris, even if it won't come until 2018. He also can't wait for them to install artificial lights at the French Open, which

is supposed to happen sooner. Both of those imp rovements would h a v e contributed t o a more stress-free evening for the man ranked and seeded No. 1, who slipped and slid his way along the red clay to a 7-6 (5), 6-4, 7-5 victory over David Goffin in the first round. "It was a difficult day, because we have been waiting for hours and hours. I think I warmed up five or six times today," Djokovic said. "In these conditions ... you need to adjust your game and tactics,because it's quite d i fferent t h an comparing to th e c ondit ions when it's dr y a n d sunny." Even though his match against th e 5 8 th-ranked Goffin, a Belgian who was one of the revelations at Roland Garros a year ago, was the second to be played on Court Philippe Chatrier, they did not begin until after6:30 p.m. They finished as light was fading shortly before 9 p.m. local time. "It wa s a l o n g d a y," Djokovic said. At least he got to play. Because o f sho w ers that began in the morning, there was a delay of more than 2 t/z hours at the start. Then, after only l t/a hours of action, arrived another stop of more than an hour. All told, only 26 of 40 scheduled singles matches were completed, three were

suspended in progress, and organizers wound up postponing 11 others entirely. A mong t h e w in n e r s Tuesday were 2010 French Open runner-up and 2011 U.S. Open champion Sam Stosur, who beat 42-yearold Kimiko Date-Krumm of Japan 6-0, 6-2. A ustralian Ber n a r d Tomic stopped because of a torn right hamstring while trailing Victor Hanescu 75, 7-6 (8), 2-1. Three other men retired dur


C4

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013

Outlaws

NBA PLAYOFFS

Pacers et even wit Heata er - 2victo By Michael Marot The Associated Press

I NDIANAPOLIS — T h e Indiana Pacers played desperate Tuesday night. They relentlessly attacked the basket, continually won the battle fo r l o ose b alls, dominated the glass and, yes, turned the tables on Miami

yet again. Roy Hibbert finished with 23 points and 12 rebounds, Lance Stephenson added 20 points,and the Pacers closed the game on a 16-6 run to pull away from the defending NBA champs for a 99-92 victory. Just like that, the Eastern Conference finals are tied at 2 and the pressure has swung back to Miami. "We're nevergoing to give up. We're relentless," Hibbert said after another big game. "All those guys in there, they believe we can win. No matter what all the analysts or whoever says anything, they count us out, those guys in the locker room were ready to play and we went out and played our hearts out." H ibbert w il l g e t n o a r gument from c oach Frank Vogel, who c hallenged his team to bring it or go down

swinging.

Indiana scored with punch after punch. The Pacers revved up the crowd with an opening 11-

w

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0 run, got the Heat in foul trouble and answered every challenge Miami posed in a physical game that had bod-

ies flying, tempers flaring and LeBron James stunned after fouling out of a p l ayoff game for only the second time in his career. Indiana believed this was the only way it could get back into the best-of-seven series after giving home-court advantage back to Miami two nights earlier. The players promised to treat Game 4 as if they were playing a d e cisive seventh game, and it showed.

An angry Paul George uncharacteristically s m a cked the floor after being called for a foul in the third quarter, leading to a technical foul on Vogel that seemed to get Indiana refocused. The defense continually contested shots by James and his high-scoring teammates. The four-time MVP finished with 24 points but was only 8 of 18 from the field. And Indiana reverted to its more typical style, holding a 49-30 rebounding advantage and outscoring Miami 50-32 in the paint. "That's what the series is about, who can get to who and do it for longer periods of time. They kept us out of the paint," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. "We'll just have to do it better."

Matthew Aimonetti / For The Bulletin

Ballboy Connor Horner hugs Redmond's Cam Peters after he scores a tying run for the Panthers during Tuesday's game at Lake Oswego.

Panthers Continued from C1 "Hands down," Horner said, "the gutsiest performance I've seen by a pitcher." The Intermountain Conferencechampion Panthers (21-7) took a 1-0 lead in the top of the second inning, but Sherwood (24-6) answered with two runs in the bottom of the second. Redmond tallied a single run in both the fourth and the fifth innings, but, once again, the Bowmen responded with two runs in the bottom of the sixth to grab a 4-3 lead. In the top of the seventh, with a runner on second base and one out,

Abbas poked a run-scoring single up the middle. Back on the mound in the bottom of the inning, he shut out Sherwood toforce extra frames. "I've never seen such a gutty effort from our pitcher," senior Redmond shortstop Brayden Bordges said. "We've been around J.D.for eight years. He always throws complete games, but for him to go 10 innings like that, that's a gutty performance." A fter scoreless innings i n t h e eighth, ninth and 10th, the Bowmen brought the semifinal contest to a close. Redmond reliever Daniel Thomas hit the leadoff batter with a pitch,

and after second baseman Trevor Hindman robbed a potential gamewinning hit w it h a l e aping grab, Thomas issued back-to-back walks to fill the bases. Then the Panthers' fifth hit batter of the game forced the go-ahead run across, ending the longest 5A state playoff game since 2009. "Sometimes, the better team just doesn't win," Horner said. "I've said that before, and that's absolutely no disrespect to Sherwood, but they had a better game today.... I feel we just have the best team in the state. In a one-and-done playoff system, it's tough to take sometimes." Bordges went 3-for-6 at the plate with two runs scored to pace the Panthers,who recorded 13hitson the day. Josh Peplin went 2-for-5 and Charles Payne was 2-for-4, but Redmond's pitchers walked nine Bowmen to go with the five hit batters, setting up a Bend High-Sherwood 5A state final on Saturday. "Everyone gave it their all," said Bordges, one of 12 seniors on the Panthers'roster."I'm sure everyone's going to think they could have done more, but everyone gave it 100 percent this game. That's all you can ask for."

Bears

Michael Conroy/The Associated Press

Indiana Pacers fans react after Lance Stephenson, sitting, made a shot against the Miami Heat as time expired in the third quarter of Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals on Tuesday in Indianapolis.

Duncan Continued from C1 He promised Duncan they would return after blowing a 2-0 lead in the conference finals a year ago to Oklahoma City, and speculation is picking up on whether this might be Duncan's final season in the NBA. "I think everybody on the team, we really wanted to do it for him," Parker said. The Spurs now wait for Miami or Indiana to come out of the East after they swept two of their three opponents in the West. The Spurs took advantage of a three-day break in the conference finals to come into Memphis and beat a team that had lost only once on its home floorsince Feb. 8. They could use some time off between games after a physical series with the Grizzlies. The Spurs helped clamp down on Zach Randolph and Marc Gasol with Duncan, Tiago Splitter, Matt Bonner and Boris Diaw all taking turns pushing the Grizzlies away from their favorite spots on the floor in disrupting their

to drive repeatedly to the basket and pick apart Memphis on the pick-and-rolL Trying to keep that rhythm and stay in shape over the next week will not be fun, Bonner said. But this is where all the experience Duncan, Ginobili and Parker have with Spurs coach Gregg Popovich will come into

play.

"I can't say we've all been there before, but our t h r ee leaders have been in the finals multiple times, and they're going to lead the way," Bonner sa>d. That they have. The Spurs won the NBA title each of their previous four trips to the finals, and their win over Memphis improved them to 11-1 in closeoutgames since the 2007 p ostseason. Nobody i n t h e NBA has been to the playoffs more than San Antonio's current 16-year streak, and only the Detroit Red Wings in the NHL have had more consecutive postseason berths (22). Duncan and Popovich have been together for all of those 16 years, the longest in the NBA. Nobody currently in the league has won more games high-low game. than Duncan, Ginobili and It worked quite well — the Parker, and their 458 wins Spurs outscored M e mphis have them fifth all-time in the in the paint in the final three league as a trio. Popovich said he's proud of games. Randolph, who averaged at least 18 points in the these players and how hard first two playoff series, av- they've worked all year with eraged only 11 against San newcomers such as K awhi Antonio. Leonard and Danny Green "I know our bigs, they have blending well with his vetera lot of bruises," Parker said. ans. He said these Spurs are a "So it's going to be great to testament to sticking together. "If you stay the course and rest. I know Timmy and Manu (Ginobili), they're going to love you've got leaders who are the rest, and we're going to quality character people, you regenerate and get ready for follow them as long as you can," Popovich said. "I've been whoever we're going to play." It won't be easy to remain in hanging on Timmy's coattails the rhythm that the Spurs used for a long time."

Continued from C1 Playing on their home artificial surface, the Wildcats (17-13 overall) managed just three hits off DeGaetano, who allowed only five baserunners — three hits, a walk and a hit batter — all game. The win was DeGaetano's second complete-game victory in the playoffs. Last Wednesday he went the distance in a 7-2 decision over Pendleton. "We're lucky to have a kid like that on our side," beamed Bend coach Bret Bailey, whose team has won 10 of its past 11 contests. "He's such a competitor in everything he does.... Whether it's football or baseball, he plays the game with such emotion." The Lava Bears (20-8), who lost to Wilson in the state semifinal round a year ago, jumped on Wildcat starter

— Reporter:541-383-0307; glucas@bendbulletin.com.

Continued from C1 "No doubt, that was obviously the goal," said Outlaws coach Steve Hodges. "But we played a lot of good baseball.... We were just one run short today." A two-out infield throwing error — the Outlaws' only defensive miscue of the game — allowed Henley to tie the game in the bottom of the fourth inning. In the fifth, after the Hornets put two runners on base with a hit batter and a walk against Sisters starting pitcher Joey Morgan, Drew Seater hit a twoout single through the left side to drive home what proved to be the decisive run. The Outlaws, champions of the Sky-Em League, managed to load the bases with one out in the top of the sixth. But Henley pitcher Jesse Hilyard struck out the next two batters — he had seven strikeouts for the game — to snuff out the rally. "We just didn't hit the baseball with runners on base," Hodges lamented. "That was a big factor in the game." Sisters, which finished with six hits to Henley's four, left eight runners on base. Eli Boettner had two hits to lead the Outlaws. Dealing with defeat for just the third time this season and for the first time since a March 21 setback during a spring-break tournament in A r i zona, Hodges put his team's 2013 campaign in perspective. "We're26-3,"he said."It's very rewarding to put that kind of season together."

Steven Silton/Klamath Falls Herald and News

Henley's Devree Delarosa (2) tags Sisters runner Justin Harrer out as Harrer tries to advance to second base during Tuesday's Class 4A state semifinal game in Klamath Falls.

Clay Gelfand early, scoring three runs in the top of the first inning. Dalton Hurd knocked in Godlove with an RBI double off the base of the wall in left-center field to make the score 1-0, and DeGaetano drilled a two-run triple down the rightfield line two batters later to give Bend a 3-0 lead. Gelfand, who reportedly has hit 90 miles per hour on the radar gun, threw 37 pitches in the first inning and was gone after the fourth. "We always have an approach at the plate," said Koski, a sentiment echoed by DeGaetano and Bailey."We want to hit the fastball and we want to hit strikes." The Bears totaled 10 hits against Gelfand, who has committed to NCAA Division-I St. Mary's College, and reliever Ryan Howe; half of those hits went for extra bases. Koski was 2-for-3 with a double, two runs scored and two RBIs,

and Nathan Miller had his best game of the postseason, going 3-for-4 with a double, a triple, one run scored and one RBI out of the No. 8 spot in the lineup to give the Bears some pop at the bottom of their batting order. With the Lava Bears leading 5-2 after six innings, Koski sparked a four-run seventh for Bend with a two-run double down the left-field line. Miller added an RBI with his third hit of the game several batters later, and the Bears went into the bottom of the seventh up 9-2. DeGaetano closed out the game just like he started it, setting the Wildcats down in order to put Bend in the state championship game for the third time in school history. "I'm just so proud to be part of this team," DeGaetano said. "This is the closestgroup I've ever been a partof." — Reporter:541-383-0305; beastes@bendbulletin.com.

Davies might allow name onHall ballot GOLF NOTEBOOK

By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

DUBLIN, Ohio — The only thing keeping Laura Davies out of the World Golf Hall of Fame isher stubborn desire to make it on merit. Now the 49-year-old star from England is starting to reconsider. D avies wants to get i n through the L PGA Tour's strict criteria of 27 points accumulatedprimarilythrough wins and majors. She has been stuckon 25 points since her last LPGA Tour win in 2001 in R ochester. Those numbers ar e m i s leading, however. She has played a limited LPGA Tour schedule because Davies has supported the Ladies European Tour for nearly t h ree decades, winning 45 times in the 307 events she has played. She is eligible to be placed on the International ballot of the World Golf Hall of Fame, but has instructed officials to leave her name off. "Maybe it's time to buckle and say, 'Yeah.' Obviously, I've always wanted to be in, but I wanted it to be my way," Davies said in the Bahamas. "I've read articles where people have said it's nuts that I'm not in. But that's being mean to the World Golf Hall of Fame. People should know it's been m e t h at's been saying no. I've always had the dream of getting in

the LPGA Hall of Fame by

playing my way in." The feeling is that Davies would have had well over the 27 points needed to qualify through the LPGA standards if she had stuck primarily to an LPGA schedule because she gave up about 10 tournaments a year for 20 years during the height of her pow-

erful game. "She did that to support her tour, and you can't fault her for that," Juli Inkster said. "I just think she represents women's golf as an icon. Laura is worldwide golf. She's a slam dunk for the Hall of Fame for what she's done for

If Davies were to allow her name to go on the International ballot, she likely would easily clear the 65 p ercent threshold. Whatever she decides, Davies won't be giving up on golf anytime soon. "I don't think I'll ever retire," she said. "I'll just keep going. I'm enjoying it. I love it. There's nothing I'd rather do."

U.S. Open qualifying Matteo Manassero and Boo Weekley qualified for the U.S. Open by winning on separate tours. Manassero earned an e xemption by w i n n ing t h e BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth, while Weekley's win at Colonial moved him into the top 60 in the world. That m eans 7 8 p l a yers

"open" of the major championships. Seventeen players already made it through section qualifying in Europe (12

players) and Japan (5 players). That leaves 61 spots still available. Still be to be determined is how many spots will be dispersed in sectional qualifiers across the United States on Monday. The USGA will have to leave a couple of spots avail-

able for players (if any) who move into the top 60 by the week of the U.S. Open. On the

bubble are Jimmy Walker (No. 62) and Byron Nelson winner Sang-moon Bae (No. 65), along with Charles Howell III

(No. 68).

One player who qualified and will not be at Merion on pean golf. There's no reason June 13-16 is David Lynn of England. He is exempt as beshe shouldn't be in." T old that D a v ies w a s are exempt from qualifying, ing top 60 in the world, but has thinking a b ou t a l l o wing the highest number to earn told the USGA he will not be her name to be on the Inter- exemptions since 8 0 p l ay- playing because of a vacation national ballot, LPGA Tour ers in 2006. That i ncludes he already booked. Commissioner Mike Whan 2010, when the 7 8 p l ayers who didn't have to qualify insaid, "It couldn't be early enough." cluded Tom Watson and Vijay Davies would still h ave Singh, who were given speto allow her name to be on cial invitations. the ballot — the last woman Even with h al f t h e f i eld elected that way was Ayako qualifying, it's still the most d O kamoto of Japan in t h e class of 2005. She received Mountain Medical 52 percent of the vote, elected because of the loophole Immediate Care that takes one player with at 541-388-7799 least 50 percent of the vote if 1302 NE 3rd SPBend no one gets the minimum 65 www.mtmedltr.com percent. P

golf, women's golf and Euro-

7".

$ t=.-4


C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com/business. Alsoseearecapin Sunday's Businesssection.

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013

+

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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 15521.49 15307.33 15409.39 +106.29 6482.47 6382.37 6397.77 +2.07 500.54 490.56 492.42 -6.79 9571.27 9468.92 9494.17 +51.94 3514.80 3475.39 3488.89 t29.75 1674.21 1652.63 1660.06 +10.46 1207.64 1191.30 1196.80 +8.73 17660.24 17392.84 17514.87 +122.03 984.25 1005.42 997.35 +13.07

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21

Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co

ALK 3216 ~ 6800 56 19 -2 44 -42 w w A VA 22.78 ~ 29.26 2 7. 2 9 -.15 -0.5 V V BAC 6 . 85 13.73 13 .35 + . 1 1 +0.8 L L Dividend: $0.72 Div. Yield: 1.0% BBSI 19 22 — 0 62.82 59 . 46 + 1.01 +1.7 L L BA 66. 8 2 100.58 100.11 + . 11 + 0.1 L L Source: FactSet CascadeBancorp CACB 4.23 7.18 5 .7 8 -.21 -3.5 V V Columbia Bnkg COLB 16.18 — 0 22.21 21 .86 + . 1 0 +0.5 L L Columbia Sporlswear COLM 46.50 61.95 59 .10 -.15 -0.3 V L Eye on new home loans CostcoWholesale COST 85 08 — 0 11 4 72114 83 + 44 +0 4 L L The Mortgage Bankers Association Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5 62 ~ 8 92 7 55 -.05 -07 w L 4yreports its latest weekly survey of FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 27.16 24 .67 + . 52 +2.2 L L home mortgage applications today. Hewlett Packard HPQ 11,35 — 0 24,95 24 .65 + . 44 +1 ,8 L L While mortgage interest rates Home Federal Bncp ID H OME 8.74 ~ 1 4.0 0 11.86 -.02 -0.2 w w Intel Corp INTC 19.23 ~ 27.75 24.08 +.16 +0.7 L L have been rising in recent weeks, K EY 6 . 80 11.00 10 .74 +.08 +0.8 L L they remain near historic lows. Still, Keycorp Kroger Co KR 209 8 — 0 35.44 34 .54 + 31 +0 9 L L banks have been receiving fewer Lattice Semi LSCC 3.17 5.71 5 .0 6 + 10 +2 0 L L requests for home loans. The L PX 8 . 46 22.55 18 .97 +.38 +2.0 L L mortgage bankers' survey reported LA Pacific MDU Resources MDU 19.59 27.14 26 .07 +.38 $.1.5 L L a 7 percent jump in residential MENT 13.21 — o 18.69 18 .65 +.19 +1.0 L L mortgage applications for the week Mentor Graphics MSFT 26.26 — 0 35.27 35.02 +.75 $.2.2 ended May 3, but that was followed Microsoft Corp Nike Inc 8 NKE 42.55 ~ 66.07 63.28 +.49 +0.8 V by two weekly declines. Nordstrom Inc JWN 46.27 ~ 61.81 59.96 +.09 +0.2 L MBA's Weekly Mortgage Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.01 ~ 50 80 43.56 21 -0.5 W W OfficeMax Inc OMX 4. 10 ~ 14.92 12.99 +.28 +2.2 L L Applications Survey PaccarInc PCAR 35,21 — 0 55,05 53.97 +.62 +1.2 L L Seasonallyadjusted change Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 2.36 1 .7 6 -.02 -1.3 7.0 Plum Creek PCL 35.43 54.62 50 .76 -1.07 -2.1 V V 4.8% Prec Castparts PCP 150.53 — 0 215.46 212.91 +2.18 +1.0 L Safeway Inc SWY 14.73 28.42 23 .39 + . 21 +0.9 1.8 Schnitzer Steel SCHN 22.78 33.03 26 .77 + . 5 0 +1.9 0.2 Sherwin Wms SHW 122,79 — 0 194.56 191.90 +2.70 +1.4 L L Stancorp Fncl SFG 28.74 — 0 45.16 44 .26 + 77 $.18 L L StarbucksCp SBUX 43,04 — 0 64.93 64 .26 +.90 +1.4 L L Triquint Semi TQNT 4.30 — 0 6.80 6 .8 7 +.13 +1.9 L L UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11,17 — 0 14.02 13 .83 +.24 +1.7 L L US Bancorp USB 28.58 35.90 35 .54 +.13 +0.4 L L -7.3 WashingtonFedl WAFD 14.30 18.25 17 .49 + 08 +05 L L Ap 11 May Wells Fargo &Co WFC 29.80 — 0 41.10 40 . 52 + . 2 8 +0 .7 L L ~ Weyerhaeuser WY 1 8,70 — 0 33,24 31 .80 + . 06 +0,2 L L 26 2 9 16 12 17 based on past 12 months' results

w +304

+73 3 1 3 95 1 3

V L L L

+ 13. 2 +1 2 .3 3 9 9 2 0 1. 2 2 +15.0 +86 . 0119254 31 0 . 0 4 + 56.1 +1 9 6.8 4 1 33 0.52 +32.8 +42 .7 5 4 94 1 9 1. 9 4 V -7.7 +2 1.5 9 39 w +21. 9 +2 2 .5 2 0 1 1 7 0. 4 0 L +10.8 +2 3 .6 63 19 0.88 L + 16 3 +45 0 2 6 52 2 6 1 . 24f L +16 5 -79 22 w +10.5 +14 .8 1 7 51 1 6 0 . 36f L + 73,0 +13 ,6 18930 dd 0 ,58f w -4.6 +37.2 21 cc 0. 2 4a L +16.8 -3.2 30182 12 0 .90 L + 27.6 +44 .1 9 7 80 1 2 0 . 22f L + 32 7 +57 1 2 1 5 9 1 2 0 6 0 w +26 8 +9 3 631 dd V -1.8 +9 3.0 2186 26 L +22.7 +17 . 6 78 8 C C 0. 6 9 L +9 6 +21 7 21 9 6 2 0 0 1 8 +31.1 +20.9 46577 18 0. 9 2 L +22 6 +1 8 3 3 8 50 2 5 0 8 4 L +12 . 1 +2 0 .9 1 060 1 7 1. 2 0 W -1.4 - 1.6 18 4 2 1 1 . 82 L +33.1 +1 58.4 1740 2 0 . 0 8a L + 19.4 +42 .7 8 5 0 1 9 0 . 80a +23.1 - 2.5 10 0 d d V +14. 4 +4 4 .6 1 119 3 6 1 . 76f L + 12 4 +2 5 3 49 9 2 2 0 1 2 w +29.3 +26.8 3812 9 0 . 8 0f -11.7 + 0 .9 1 83 4 1 0.7 5 L +24. 8 +5 2 .4 6 4 1 2 9 2. 0 0 L +20 7 $.25 9 139 13 0 93 f L +19.8 +17 .2 3 6 58 3 3 0. 8 4 L +42.2 +27 . 2 4 3 88 d d L +17.3 +7.1 443 15 0. 6 0f L +11.3 +16 .3 8 4 70 1 2 0. 7 8 W +3 7 +5 7 268 13 0 36 f L +18.5 +29 . 6 20618 11 1 . 20f L + 14, 3 +6 2 ,9 5 290 35 0 ,80f

Source: FactSet Dividend Footnotes: 3 Extra - dividends were paid, ttut are not included. tt - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. 6 - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was mcreased bymost recent dividend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. I - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dwuend was omitted or deferred k - Declared cr pad th>$year, a cumulative issue with dividends m arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. 7 - Declared or paid in precedmg t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, apprcx>matecash value cn ex-distrittution date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is 6 closed-end fund - no PiE ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last t2 months

Movado update? Movado Group's latest quarterly earnings should provide insight into its efforts to retool its Coach watch brand. Movado, which reports financial results for the February-April period today, took steps in the previous quarter to reposition the Coach brand which is mostly known for handbags, as a provider of fashion watches. That's a segment of the market that Movado expects will grow.

Netflix takes a hit

52-WEEK RANGE

$53 ~

Price-earnings ratio (Etased on past12 months' results):739 1 0-YR *: 34%

Total return this year: 131% 3-YR*: 24% 5 - Y R*: 47% AP N

I)

9

~

~

249

M a rket value: $12.0 billion

*annualized

Total returns through May 28

Source: FactSet

4

FundFocus

SelectedMutualFunds

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S&P500ETF 1282207 BkofAm 1192535 iShJapn 576363 FordM 566994 SiriusXM 542898 Facebook 494306 iShEMkts 489842 Microsoft 465773 GenElec 461915 SPDR Fncl 458196

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PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 22.81 +.07 +12.3 +23.2 t14.7 + 69 A A A 1 2.75 -.07 -0.7 +2.5 +5.0 + 40 D D E 57.18+.02 +9.3 +19.8 +13.1 t 35 A A C 41.61+.19 +12.3 +30.6 +14.2 + 22 8 8 C 44.32+.20 +7 . 5 +27.1 +10.7 + 07 D C A 4 7.26 +.32 +16.2 +30.9 +16.6 + 42 8 B D 39. 5 8 +.30 +15.2 +29.8 +15.5 + 42 A C D 19 .89+. 04 +11.1 +22.2 +14.5 + 63 A A A 34.96+.17 +16.4 +28.5 +15.4 + 50 C C C 35.19 +.20 +12.6 +29.4 +15.2 + 44 8 B A 36.51 +.18 +17.6 +28.8 +18.3 + 59 D A B 13.84 -.04 + 0 .6 + 5 . 1 + 5 .8 +6.8 8 B 8 38.63 +.09 + 11.5 +37.9 +12.4 +1.0 A A A

144.82+1.05 $-19.3 + 39.1 $-17.4 $4.7 A A C

88.68 +.63 +15.4 +23.4 +16.8 +5.8 C B 8 GrowCo 108.9 1 +.77 + 16.8 +24.6 +18.8 +7.5 8 A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G C3 LowPriStk d 45 . 87+.30 + 16.1 +31.7 +17.5 +8.1 8 B A Omthera 9 1 3.51 +6 . 7 4 +99 . 6 Fidelity Spartan 50 0ldxAdvtg 58 . 98 +.37+17.4 +28.8 +17.5 +5.9 C A 8 PhrmAth 2 .03 +.43 +26 . 9 «C NoahHldgs 1 4.62 +2 . 6 3 +2 1 . 9 23 FrankTemp-Frankliln ncomeA m 2. 37 ... +8.4 +20.6 +12.7 +6.1 A A 8 Sinovac h 3 .99 +.68 +20 . 5 «C FrankTemp-Templet on GIBondAdv13.46 ... +2. 5 + 16.3 +8.2+9.9 A A Caplease 8 .55 +1. 4 5 +20 . 4 A 4o OceanBio 2 .92 +.47 +19 . 2 RisDivA m 19.9 7 +.14 +15.1 +25.7 +15.9 +4.6 D C C Morningstar OwnershipZone™ Oppenheimer Hydrognc 1 2.00 +1 . 7 9 +1 7 . 5 RisDivB m 18.0 7 +.13 + 14.7 +24.5 +14.8 +3.6 E D D BiP GCrb 4 .66 +.66 +16 . 5 O e Fund target represents weighted RisDivC m 17.9 8 +.12 + 14.7 +24.8 +15.0 +3.8 E D D TeslaMot 1 10.33 $ .13.25 +1 3 .7 average of stock holdings SmMidValA m 38.58 +.29 + 19.0 +31.5 +13.1 +1.8 C E E MidPenn 1 1.28 +1 . 2 5 +1 2 . 5 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings SmMidValB m 32.47 +.25 +18.6 +30.5 +12.2 +1.0 D E E Losers CATEGORY Large Blend PIMCO TotRetA m 11.1 0 - .08 -0.3 + 4 .8 + 5.9 +7.2 8 8 A NAME LAST CHG %CHG MORNINGSTAR T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 38.88 +.17 +17.3 + 31.9 +16.1 +5.9 C C 8 R ATING™ *** * * GrowStk 4 3.28 +.33 +14.6 +22.2 +17.3 +6.5 C A 8 -1.70 -20.7 ChinaHGS 6.50 Flanign 10.35 -2.02 -16.3 ASSETS $4,845 million HealthSci 50.98 +.71 +23.7 +39.0 +28.5 +16.3 8 A A EnerNOC -2.83 -15.9 15.01 EXP RATIO 0.94% Vanguard 500Adml 153.45 +.92 $-17.4 +28.8 +17.5 +6.0 C A 8 RealGSolar 3.38 -.63 -15.7 500lnv 153.43 +.92 +17.3 +28.6 +17.4 +5.8 C A 8 MANAGER Benjamin Allen -.62 -14.9 Aurizon g 3.55 CapOp 42.00 +.38 +24.9 +43.2 +17.0 +6.9 A 8 A SINCE 2012-05-01 Eqlnc 28.33 +.14 +18.0 +29.9 +20.0 +7.8 D A A RETURNS 3-MD +8.8 Foreign Markets GNMAAdml 10.63 -.08 -1.6 -0.5 +3.8 +5.3 D 8 A YTD +17.8 STGradeAd 10.78 -.02 +0.5 +3.3 +3.3 +4.0 8 8 8 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +30.4 StratgcEq 25.80 +.21 +20.3 +35.1 +19.3 +6.4 8 A C Paris e55.40 +1.39 4,050.56 3-YR ANNL +16.6 Tgtet2025 14.86 +.02 t9.3 +20.2 t12.3 $4.7 C 8 A London 6,762.01 +107.67 +1.62 5-YR-ANNL +8.7 TotBdAdml 18.87 -.07 -0.9 tf.4 +4.5 +5.5 E D D Frankfurt +97.57 +1.16 8,480.87 Totlntl 15.80 +.04 t5.7 +27.2 +10.0 -1.5 D D C Hong Kong 22,924.25 +238.20 +1.05 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico TotStlAdm 41.69 +.28 +17.5 +29.2 +17.6 +6.4 8 A A 40,764.04 t619.39 + 1.54 Procter& Gamble Co 4.4 Milan 17,519.79 +360.64 +2.10 TotStldx 41.67 +.27 t17.4 +29.0 +17.4 +6.3 C A A PepsiCo Inc 4.18 Tokyo 14,311.98 +169.33 +1.20 USGro 24.30 +.13 t14.3 +24.1 +16.5 +5.9 C 8 8 4.11 Stockholm 1,244.04 +12.36 +1.00 Teleflex Inc. Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs 1$paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption Sydney -13.70 -.28 Applied Materials, Inc. 4.03 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 4,950.60 Zurich 8,221.22 + 58.17 + . 7 1 W aste Management Inc 3.63 redemption fee. Source: Morn1ngstar. 23

'. 8 6

RO -.0057

1.2876+

StoryStocks A rally that brought the stock market to record highs came back to life after consumer confidence reached a five-year high and U.S. home prices rose the most in seven years. As stock prices rose, investors sold bonds, sending interest rates higher. The Dow Jones industrial average rose more than 100 points to close at another record Tuesday, bouncing back from a loss the week before. The Standard & Poor's 500 index also gained. The S&P is on track for its seventh straight monthly gain, the longest winning streak since 2009. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note jumped to its highest level since April 2012. Markets were closed Monday for Memorial Day. TIF Close:$79.22L3.01 or 3.9% The high-endjewelry company known for its blue boxes, reported a 3 percent rise in first-quarter net income on higher sales. $80 75

Valeant Pharma.

VRX Close:$91.80L7.33 or 8.7% The Canadian drugmaker said that it will pay $8.7 billion to buy Bausch+ Lomb, the pnvately held maker of contact lenses. $100 80

70

M

A

M

M

52-week range $49.72~

A

M

52-week range $81.25

$42.47 ~

$96.25

Vol.: 4.0m(2.5x avg.) P E: 24 .4 Vol.:11.5m (6.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$10.07 b Yiel d : 1 .7% Mkt. Cap:$27.89 b KORS Close:$61.98%1.89 or 3.1% In a note to clients, a Citi analyst said that watches from the clothing and accessories company are selling well in stores. $65 60 50

PE: 29.3 Yield: ...

FirstEnergy FE Close:$39.86 V-2.76 or -6.5% A Credit Suisse analyst stripped the utility of its "Outperform" rating, saying that a glut of energy is pushing down prices. $50 45 40

55

M

M A 52-week range

M A 52-week range

$35.56~

$65.10

P E: .. . Yield: ...

Vol.:12.5m (4.0x avg.) PE: 25.2 Mkt. Cap:$16.67 b Yiel d : 5. 5%

LPS

Dole Food DOLE Close: $10.41 V-0.65 or -5.9% The fruit and vegetable company is suspending its share repurchase plans and plans to use its cash to update its shipping fleet instead.

Lender Processing

Close:$33.49 %0.60 or 1.8% Fidelity National Financial agreed to buy the technology company that services the mortgage industry for about $2.82 billion. $35

$38.26 ~

M

Vol.:7.3m (1.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$12.38 b

$51.14

$12

30 25

10

M

A

M

M

$21.14~

A

M

52-week range

52-week range $34.14

$8.39 ~

$15.19

Vol.:11.8m (9.8x avg.) PE: 3 3.8 Vol.:2.1m (2.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.84 b Yiel d : 1 .2% Mkt. Cap:$932.09 m

P E: .. . Yield : ...

Canadian Solar

CSIQ Tesla Motors TSLA Close:$9.39 %0.78 or 9.0% Close:$110.33 Xt 3.25 or 13.7% The solarcompany posted a much Shares of the electric car maker hit narrower first-quarter loss than a an all-time high after last week's year ago and its solar module shipstock-and-note offering that raised ments were better than expected. nearly $1 billion. $10 $150 100 50

M A 52-week range

$1.95~ Vol.:13.5m (9.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$410.1 m

M

$18.65 P E: .. Yield: ..

M A 52-week range

$25.52 Vol.:19.5m (3.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$12.75 b

M

$110.75 P E: . . . Yield: ... AP

SOURCE: Sungard

Netflix is the best Qpmpany many viewers, not to InterestRates performing stock in the $ nti~ght mention critics, wanting. It's unlikely the lackluster Standard & Poor's 500 index this year, but the stock fell 6 reception for its latest attempt at percent Tuesday. original programming will sway Netf l ix, which has altered the Following the hit, "House of Cards," its first foray into original h o me entertainment landscape. programming, Netflix released all Net f lix has already snared 29.2 The yield on the 10-year Trea15 episodes of "Arrested million U.S. subscribers. To put sury note jumped Development" over the weekend, that into context, Comcast, the the cult hit dumped by Fox after l e a ding cable company, has only to 2.17 percent seven years. 21.9 million subscribers. Netflix is Tuesday. Yields The re-emergence of the spending $200 million annually to affect interest rates on consumdysfunctional Bluth family left fina n ce original programming. er loans.

Tuesday's close:$214.19

Netflix (NFLXj

CRUDEOIL $95.01 +

3p

Michael Kors

52-WK RANGE oCLOSE Y TD 1Y R VO L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

NAME

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$22.18

Tiffany

12,800

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Dow Jones industrials . C lose: 15,409.39

13,600

$61.39 60

-

15,080 .

1,680

$70

+

$1,379.10

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Close: 1,660.06

Fix on footwear

GOLD

' )6

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill

. 0 4 .04 . 0 8 .07 .12 .10

... L + 0 . 01 -

The price of oil rose Tuesday following five straight losses. Soybean futures

rose on speculation that wet weather in the Midwest will delay planting. Gold and silver

fell. Copper rose.

Foreign Exchange The dollar rose against other currencies, especially the Japanese yen and Swiss franc, following a jump in U.S. consumer confidence and another sharp increase in U.S interest rates.

h5N4 QG

-

+0. 02 L L

2-year T-note . 31 .25 +0 . 06 L L 5-year T-note 1 .0 2 . 8 9 + 0 .13 L L 10-year T-note 2.17 2.01 + 0.16 L L 30-year T-bond 3.32 3.17 +0.15 L L

BONDS

W W V L L L L

.08 .13 .18 .29 .76 1.74 2.85

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO

Barclays Long T-Bdldx 3.00 2.88 +0.12 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.21 4.17 +0.04 Barclays USAggregate 1.95 1.97 -0.02 PRIME FED Barclay s US High Yield 5.43 5.40 +0.03 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 3.94 3.97 -0.03 YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.24 1.16 +0.08 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2 .78 2.79 -0.01 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

Commodities

W

L L L L L L L L -

L 2.55 L 4.40 L 2.06 W 7 .84

L

L

3.76

L L L L

L L

1.00 3 42 .

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Oil (bbl) 95.01 94.15 + 0.91 + 3 . 5 Ethanol (gal) 2.63 2.60 +20.2 Heating Oil (gal) 2.91 2.86 +1.74 -4.6 Natural Gas (mm btu) 4.17 4.24 -1.49 + 24.6 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.85 2.84 + 0.49 + 1 . 5 FUELS

METALS

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)

CLOSE PVS. 1379.10 1386.80 22.18 22.48 1461.80 1451.90 3.31 3.29 756.80 726.05

%CH. %YTD -0.56 -17.7 -1.34 -26.5 -5.0 +0.68 -9.1 +0.61 + 4.24 + 7 . 7

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -7.0 1.21 1.21 +0.15 1.26 1.27 -0.63 -12.1 6.67 6.57 +1.41 -4.6 Corn (bu) Cotton (Ib) 0.81 0.81 - 0.09 + 8 . 4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 287.40 297.40 -3.36 -23.1 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.49 1.47 +1.02 +28.2 Soybeans (bu) 15.09 14.76 + 2.24 + 6 . 4 Wheat(bu) 6.94 6.98 -0.54 -10.8 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5066 —.0038 —.25% 1.5681 Canadian Dollar 1.03 8 5 + .0050 +.48% 1 .0240 USD per Euro 1.2876 —.0057 —.44% 1.2539 Japanese Yen 102.08 +1.00 + .98% 7 9 . 46 Mexican Peso 12.5 898 + .1139 +.90% 13.9444 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.7053 —.0085 —.23% 3.8615 Norwegian Krone 5.8828 +.0384 +.65% 6.0066 South African Rand 9.7692 +.1686 +1.73% 8.3475 6.7017 +.0578 +.86% 7.1609 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9731 +.0094 +.97% .9584 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0375 -.0002 -.02% 1.0156 Chinese Yuan 6.1262 +.0001 +.00% 6 .3463 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7638 +.0001 +.00% 7 .7629 Indian Rupee 56.135 +.562 +1.00% 55.185 Singapore Dollar 1.2693 +.0081 +.64% 1 .2776 South Korean Won 1131.10 t8.47 t . 75% 1179.47 Taiwan Dollar 30.01 t.f3 t.43% 29.62


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013

BRIEFING

Nike cutting ties to Livestrong Nike, which helped build Lance Armstrong's

Livestrong cancer charity into a global brand and introduced its familiar yellow wristband, is cutting ties with the foundation in the latest fallout from the former

cyclist's doping scandal. The moveends a relationship that began

in 2004 and helped the foundation raise more than $100 million, mak-

Bulletin wire reports Home prices increased the most in seven years, jumping nearly 11 percent in March, according to data released Tuesday, as buyers continued to compete for a limited supply of homes and the spring buying season kicked off. Prices rose in all 20 cities tracked by the Standard and Poor's Case-Shiller index. Phoenix, San Francisco and

Las Vegas led the pack, with home pricesrising more than 20 percent in each city compared with a year ago. Several cities — Charlotte, N.C.; Los Angeles; Portland; Seattle; and Tampa, Fla.— had their largest month-over-month gains in more than seven years. Nationally, home prices in the first quarter are back to their 2003 levels but remain below their peak levels from

2006,according tothe report. Market conditions were "balanced" a decade ago, and returning to those price levels means the housing market has largely returned to a good place, said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors. Rising prices are a mixed blessing, he said. They build wealth for homeowners and lift those who owe more than

their homes are worth out of negative equity, but discourage new buyers, he said. "The only people who are not smiling are the buyers," he said. The latest figures reflect a housing market that is still grappling with low inventory even as buyers crowd in to make the most of low mortgage rates. New home sales in April increased 29 percent

compared with a year ago, while sales of existing homes rose nearly 10 percent, according to data released last week. Housing starts fell 16.5 percent from a month ago, but building permits were up. New construction is still far below the level it needs to be to alleviate the pressure of high prices, Yun said. Overall, housing remains a strong spot in the economic recovery.

ing the charity's bracelet an international symbol

for cancer survivors. Nike said Tuesday

Regulators investigate banks' debt collection

it will stop making its

Livestrong line of apparel after the 2013 holiday season. It had

already dropped its personal sponsorship of Armstrong in the immediate aftermath of the

doping allegations.

Confidence jumps among consumers Consumer confidence

wPi.

surged this month to its highest level in more than

five years asoptimism

By Danielle Douglas

"

The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Federal regulators are widening a probe into whether the nation's biggest banks used flawed documents and incomplete records to collect on delinquent credit card debts, according to four people familiar with the investigation. The scope of the inquiry is unclear, but those familiar with it say the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is

increased about the state

of the economyandits prospects forthe rest of theyear, according toa closely watched private

barometer released Tuesday.TheConference Board's ConsumerConfidence Indexjumped to 76.2 in May from the pre-

vious month's upwardly revised reading of69.

expanding an ongoing probe

— From wire reports Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR THURSDAY • QuickBooksSeminar Series:Class by Accurate Accounting 8 Consulting; registration required by May 28; $97; 9 a.m.-'I p.m.; Prudential Northwest Properties, 377 S.W. Century Drive, Suite102, Bend;541-610-6268, joyofquickbooks©gmail.com or www.accurateaccountingconsulting.com. • Green Drinks: Networking; sponsored by Brew Doctor Kombucha; free; 5-7 p.m.; Repeat Performance Sports, 345 S.W. Century Dr., Bend; 54 I-6 I7-0022. • BloggingforBusiness and Beyond:Help your website's SEO,build credibility, drive traffic to your site, connectyou with customers; class continues on Thursdaysthrough June 6; registration required; $59; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. FRIDAY • SAGEAwards Gala: Dinner, music andawards; registration required; $75 per person, 8750 for a table of10; 6 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W.Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-382-3221 or www. bendchamber.org. JUNE3 • IOS AppDevelopment II, Advanced Skills: Asecond class, diving deeperinto Xcodeand Objective-Cto createmorecomplex apps; prerequisite: iOSApp I class required orsomeexperience with Xcodeand ObjectiveC; registration required; class continuesJune5and June10; $89; 6-9 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College —CrookCounty Open Campus,510 S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 54 I-383-7270. JUNE4 MTA Database Administration Fundamentals: Introductory knowledge and skills including relational databasesand concepts, core database concepts, security requirements andmore; prep forthe Microsoft 98-364 certification exam; registration required; class continues Tuesdays and Thursdays through June 27; $149 includes textbook and testfee; 4-6 p.m. COCC — Crook County OpenCampus, 510 S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 54 I-383-7270.

For the complete calendar, pickup Sunday's i3ulietin or visit ttendbulletin.comlbizoal

Tiger Tugs owner Steve Hill, left, and employee Andrew Waltosz lower the electronics box into a tug they were building at Cutting Edge Design in Bend on Tuesday.

By Rachael Rees The Bulletin

Helicopter owners around the world are using Bendmade Tiger Tugs — black and orange helicopter tugs that look similar to a motorized scissor lift — to transport their aircraft from hangars to launch pads, all using a wireless remote control. Steve Hill, owner of Cutting Edge Design — the Bend company that designs and builds Tiger Tugs — is no stranger to the aircraftindustry.Before he started making helicopter tugs in 2009, Hill owned and later sold JETporter, a Bend company that designed and built electric-powered aircraft

tugs. But Tiger Tugs are different. Airplanes have wheels, while helicopters have skids, he said. And unlike JETporter's airplane tugs, designed to lift the nose of airplanes and push and pull the vehicles around, Tiger Tugs come underneath

the helicopter, and lift it all the way off the ground so it can be moved. From start to finish, Hill said, it takes about three weeks to build a Tiger Tug. The company currently sells three different models: Model 5.0, designed to move 5,000-pound helicopters; M odel 8.0, designed for 8,000 pound helicopters; and Model 8.0 B, which is made for 8,000-pound helicopters that need to be picked up differently than other helicopters. He's also working on two

more designs: one for larger, 12,000-pound helicopters and another for small, lightweight helicopters. He has potential clients for both models and hopes to have prototypes built by the end of the year. The design and the majority of the construction occurs in the Cutting Edge Design workshop on Southeast Bridgeford Boulevard. But Hill uses local vendors

throughout the process, including Swift Steel in Redmond, Blue Moon Designs in Bend and Bend-based Commercial Powder Coating, which decorates the tugs with their signature black-and-orange tiger stripes. "You get this out in the sunshine and our tugs just sparkle like jewelry," Hill said, referring to the bright orange powder coating. But, he noted, customerscan also customize the colors to match their tugs to their helicopters. Hill said he has about 25 customers ranging from the Army National Guard and air ambulance companies to corporate customers, helicopter tour companies and private individuals. Hill sold 14 Tiger Tugs last year and already surpassed that amount at the beginning of this month. "Each year we've gone, we've more than doubled our business," he said.

About 35 percent ofhis business is international sales. "Were getting people from all over the world that want these things," he said pointing to a map with tacks on it in his office. "We've got them in Alaska, up through Canada. We've got them in Sweden ...Finland and Germany. We just shipped one to Russia. We're working on some more in Australia." He said the most challenging part of his business is keeping the costs down — building it at a price range that people still want to buy it. He said the price ranges from low tomid-$20,000s, depending on the modeL "We want to get up to where we can do maybe 40 to 50 tugs a year with maybe three to four people," he said. "If we can do that and we can all have fun, then mission accomplished." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com

Tablets expected to outsell PCsby 2015 By Benjamin Pimentel MarhetWatch

SAN FRANCISCO — Just three years after hitting the market, tablets are now poised to outsell personal computers.

Tablet shipments are on track to surpass notebooks and other portable PCs this year, according to an IDC report released Tuesday. By 2015, tablets will be outsell-

ing desktops and portable

PCs combined, the report sald. "This is a pretty significant shift," IDC analyst Ryan Reith told MarketWatch. "This is happening fast." The report underscored

both the rapid growth of media tablets, which were introduced in 2010 when Apple Inc. rolled out the first iPad. It also highlighted the steady decline of the PC market.

that began in 2011 with allegations that JPMorgan Chase was using error-filled documents in lawsuits against debtors. The regulatory agency is examining the process several banks use to verify consumers'outstanding debt before taking legal action, say people who were not authorized to speak about an ongoing investigation. An OCC spokesman declined to comment. The concerns about credit card debt collection echo the wave of shoddy foreclosures that hit after the housing market collapsed. In those cases, as homeowners defaulted on their loans in droves, mortgage servicers were accused offalsify-

ing records and "robo-signing" hundreds of documents without actually reviewing them. Similarly, banks have filed hundreds of thousands of lawsuits against delinquent credit card holders in thewake ofthe financial crisis. Consumer attorneys began noting a number of collection cases built on shoddy records. Authorities in California, for instance, say JPMorgan flooded the courts with lawsuits against credit cold holders based on flimsy evidence that cardholders were in default, according to a lawsuit filed earlier this month by the state's attorney general. The complaint says the bank signed off on hundreds of legal documents "without any knowledge of the facts alleged in the document and without regard to the truth and accuracyofthose facts." Regulators began examining the debt collection practices of JPMorgan in 2011 after a former bank employee, Linda Almonte, said nearly 23,000 delinquent accounts were riddled with inaccuracies, according to people with knowledge of the probe. Almonte, who sued JPMorgan for wrongful termination, claimed she was firedafterwarning her supervisors about the records. Officials at JPMorgan declined to comment on the whistleblower lawsuit or the OCC probe.

BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed May 20 • Brent W.Woolsey, 808 Mapleleaf Court, Redmond Filed May 21 • Matthew D. Bade,P.O. Box 712, Bend

Filed May 22 • Robert L. Bowles II, 12608 S.E. Bridge Road, Prineville • Patricia L. Tobin, 635 S. Main No. 2, Prineville • Lawrence J. Lopez,61040 S. QueensNo.43, Bend

• Lupe Tenorio-Ruiz, 200 N.E. Eighth St., Madras Filed May 23 • Juan M. Toribio, 2769 S.W. Peridot Ave., Redmond • Steven H. Wells, 61133 Benham Road,Bend

• Jonathan D. Walker, 61206 Larkspur Loop, Bend • Donavon J. Kribs, 23040 Alphalpha Market Road, Bend • Paul L. Jacobson, 59919 Hopi Road, Bend

Filed on May 24 • Jason L. Vinton Sr.,1850 S.E. Moorwood Court, Bend • Terrence P.O'Neil, 20818 S.E King HezekiahWay, Bend Chapter 13

Filed May 20 • Misty R. Duncan, 2921 N.E. Nikki Court No. 2, Bend • Kathy Erickson, 4114S.E. Umatilla Loop, Prineville • Laura M. Moore,20615 WildGooseLane,Bend

• Ervin L. Nichols, 61060 Kings LaneNo.123, Bend Filed May 23 • Dominic R. Desaro, 20266 Ellie Lane, Bend Filed May 24 • Joseph E. Utt,P.O.Box 3643, La Pine


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Sky Watch, D4 THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013

O www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors

MOUNTAIN BIKE TRAIL GUIDE

SNOW REPORT For snow conditions at Oregon ski resorts,

seeB6

BRIEFING

Bend casting course reopens The Old Mill Casting

Course in Bendreopened last week. The course, which begins on the lawn

across the Deschutes River from RedRobin and winds around both banks of the waterway,

has been redesigned and restructured over the past few months.

The course provides a way to practice and learn new casting skills. When established in

Wanoga trails ridable early

Wildflowers line a section of the Kiwa Butte Trail in the Wanoga trail network southwest of Bend.

u•

• COTA in need of volunteersto complete a crucial section of singletrack Editor's note: Mountain Bike Trail Guide, by Bulletinsports and outdoors writer Mark Morical, features various trails in Central Oregon and beyond. The trail guide appears in Outdoors on alternating Wednesdays through the riding season.

An unseasonably warm s pring means many area trails are snowMARK free and ridable earlier than usual + MORICAL~ this year — much earlier. Trails in the new Wanoga complex, southwest of Bend, are mostly free ofice and snow and are offering caught us off-guard a little because we supreme mountain biking. have to plan things way in advance." Members of the CentralOregon Trail One vital event is the COTA Spring Alliance, who spend countless hours Fling, a trail work party set for Satbuilding and maintaining mountain urday, June 15 (www.cotamtb.com). biking trails, have been hard at work Starr and other dedicated COTA volconstructing the trails at Wanoga. unteers hope to get a significant por"It's pretty much a whole month tion of Tyler's Traverse — a new trail earlier," COTA chairman Woody Starr in the Wanoga system — completed said last week, referring to when the that day. trails became ridable. "That kind of SeeBiking/D3

Mark Morlcal The Bulletin «

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2009, it was the first

casting course in the world, and remains the only course in North

America, according to Kevney Dugan ofVisit Bend.

"The casting course was set up so that each 'hole' correlates to fishing conditions in differ-

ent places throughout

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the world," Dugan said. "The variation of holes

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everything from salt-

water to spey casting techniques andbeyond — actually forces participants to learn new casting skills to com-

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plete the course." There are three levels

of difficulty for each of the12 holes (beginner, intermediate and ad-

vancedi, and an instructional brochure provides

guidance. Anglers can test out rods from the

new Confluence Fly Shop in the Old Mill District. The Old Mill Casting

Course is free andopen to the public. Contact: www.theoldmill.com.

Free fishing this weekend

h

Photos by David Jasperi The Bulletin

Interesting rock formations, pillars and cliffs can be seen along the Deschutes River, below Steelhead Falls.

The Oregon Depart-

• New trailhead near Crooked River RanchaccessesSteelhead Falls

ment of Fish and Wild-

life is gearing up for Free Fishing Weekend this

Saturday andSunday. On those two days, the ODFW will waive

By David Jasper

all fees associated with

arty Wilson is a lucky guy. A retiree and resident of Crooked River Ranch — a community northwest of Terrebonne with miles of public lands surrounding it — Wilson not only has stunning views of the Cascades, he also lives directly across from the trailhead for Sand Ridge Trail. At the time he built his house in 2002, "this trailhead was not here," he said a couple of Fridays ago, when I visited Crooked River Ranch for a hike instigated by Wilson. One of the reasons he and his wife, Sarah Leigh Wilson, bought the property where they live is because the piece of land that serves as home to the trailhead is community property. "We knew that, and knew the BLM property was right there," he said, referring to the easily accessed BLM land around the Deschutes River, which lies in the canyon below his home. In other words, Wilson, an avid hiker, along with his wife rightly figured they'd have access right from their front door to some great trails, including what he's taken to calling Sand Ridge Trail. About two years ago, the Crooked River Ranch Club and Maintenance Association made it all official, installing the trailhead, which has room enough for several vehicles and has seen a school bus or two in its time. SeeOuting /D2

The Bulletin

recreational fishing,

clamming and crabbing throughout the state. Free fishing activities

set from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday in Central Oregon include akids' fishing event at Caldera

Springs in Sunriver. This year, the weekend will coincide with

the Oregon Parks Department's "All Camping

Day" on Saturday, when admission to all state parks will be free. Contact: www.dfw.

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state.or.us. — From staff reports

TRAIL UPDATE WARMER WEATHERAHEAD Conditions throughout Central Oregon will

improve as theweek

HUNTING 8E FISHING

progresses with temperatures in the low 70s

by Friday. Trails will see

Big river rainbows inRedding

increased use with the hotter temperatures.

POLE GREEK AREA UPDATE A limited roads restriction orderreplacedthe

closureareaorderwithin the PoleCreekFire burn

area. Usersarerequiredto stayon designatedtrailsas treecleanup andmaintenance will continue into the

summer.Formoreinformation, visit wwwfs.usda.

gov/news/central oregon/news-events. Gary Lewis/ For The Bulletin

SeeTrail update/D2

A double! Two rainbow trout from the Sacramento River.

ave Jacobs fired up the Mercury and Hank Mautz shoved the boat away from the dock. With the big motor at idle, we let the current push us downstream toward the Sundial Bridge. It was early, but cowboys were already stirring for the rodeo for later in the day. With all the activity in the parks and the streets, we hoped to rope some rainbows early without a lot of competi-

GARY LEWIS tion on the water. A lot of anglers roll through Redding, Calif., on their way to chase salmon and steelhead in the north or striped bass in the south, but there is a good reason to stop. Sam Pyke and I stayed at the Best Western

Hilltop on a Friday night then rolled out of our beds at 4:30 in the morning to stumble down the stairs with fishing rods and cameras. This is good trout water in the tailwater below the Shasta and Keswick dams. I first fished with Dave and Hank several years ago on a day the trout averaged 16 to 17 inches. Dave saidthe fish were bigger now. SeeLewis/D5


D2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013

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Can you work a camera, and capture a great picture? And can you tell us a bit about it? Submit your color or black-and-white outdoors photos at bendbulletin.comlwellshot and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. All entries will appear online, and every week we'll run a stellar local photo in this section. Once a month, we'll publish a whole photo page on a specific topic. This month, the topic is WATERFALLS.

sr .,f.

Submission requirements: Include in your caption as much detail as possible — who, what, when, where, why; any special technique used — as wellas yourname, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

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Photos by David Jasper/The Bulletin

Mona Steinberg catches up to Marty Wilson, both of Crooked River Ranch, heading upstream along the Deschutes River below Steelhead Falls.

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Outing Continued from D1 Nevertheless, the trail is "seldom done," as Wilson wrote in an email to The Bulletin. Most people heading to Steelhead Falls for a summer swim take a more direct half-mile trail. For those interested in the scenic route, here's how Wilson described Sand R i dge Trail in an early email. "The trail first goes to a magnificent overlook above the river about a mile below the falls and with the (Three) Sisters and o t her C ascade mountains in the view. The trail then proceeds across the top of the mesa before it drops down to the river after passing some dramatic rock pillars. (Steelhead) falls is then about a half-mile upstream. After returning that half-mile, the trail remains at river level for most of a mile, passing below the first overlook. Another halfmile or so brings the trail up to a lower mesa and then up an old two track and a trail that leads back to the trail head." W ilson's neighbor M o n a Steinberg joined us on the loop hike. She moved to Crooked River Ranch in the 1990s, and in addition to hiking has covered a lot of the area trails by horseback. Both she and Wilson are members of FANs, or Friends and Neighbors of Deschutes Canyon Area. "Our mission, basically, is conservation and restoration," Wilson said. The FANs website (www. fansofdeschutes.org) elaborates: The group works toward stewardship and restoration of the wild canyons around Crooked River Ranch, and fosters communication among federal and state land management agencies and surrounding communities. FANs holds events including hikes, nature talks and weed pulls. Less than 10 minutes into our hike, we reached the scenic viewpoint, which affords a view of the river below and, theoretically, the Cascades in the distance. Unfortunately, the mountains were pretty socked in on the overcast day we hiked. Along the way to the falls, we talked as we took in the views. I learned a little more about Wilson and Steinberg, and life on the ranch, its creation in the early 1970s and eventual rezoning. The one-, two- and five-acre plots. The growing number of families joining the retirees and others who live here. The million-dollar mansions replacing e a r lier m a n u factured homes. About a half-hour into the hike, we passed a large pillar that Wilson says folks occasionally climb. We think we saw an eagle's nest tucked high atop a small ledge on its side, but none of us had brought binoculars. Plant life here includes a lot of Central Oregon staples: juniper, sage, rabbitbrush, a ponderosa or two. There was an early Indian presence in the area, as evidenced by a shell midden we pass. One of my favorite moments during the hike wa s w hen Wilson pointed out the song of a canyon wren. Wilson said his and his wife's philosophy is this: "When we hear that, we know we're somewhere we should be." Another way of measuring that we were somewhere we should be is by the 123 photos I snapped. I'm nobody's pro photographer, but at any given time, in any direction I looked, there were Cascade views, flowers, rock forma-

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Steinberg and Wilson, members of Friends and Neighbors of Deschutes Canyon Area, stand near the trailhead of Sand Ridge Trail.

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Steelhead —: FallS

GOOSE ON THE LOOSE Conrad Weiler, of Camp Sherman, took this image of a goose with a Fuji Finepix JX, from his kayak on Clear Lake.

River

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Chinook Dr. Lower Bridge

Terrebonne Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

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Getting there: From U.S. Highway 97, turn west onto Lower Bridge Road north

of Terrebonne. Turn right at the sign for Crooked River Ranch on Northwest 43rd

Street. Within several miles you will arrive on Crooked River Ranch. As you enter

the ranch, you will come to a "Welcome to Crooked River Ranch" sign on the

right hand side. Stay on this main road an additional 1.3 miles and turn left

on Mustang Road.Stay on this main paved road

around several corners and it becomes ShadRoad. At Canary Road, turn left. At the stop sign turn right

onto Sand RidgeRoad. Trailhead is directly across the street from 8370 Sand

Ridge Road. Difficulty: Moderate

Cost: Free Contact: www. fansofdeschutes.org

None of us were fans of the spray paint marring some portions of cliff below the falls. Really, no one cares that you were there in 2007. In all, we hiked just about three hours, spending about 10 minutes to take in the grandeur of Steelhead Falls and hear just enough stories about its merits as a swimming hole and its beauty in winter to make mental plans of at least two return trips. Later in the hike, once we tions, snags, etc. begging to be were well into the return loop, photographed. we stopped for a 20-minute-or-

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If you go

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the blooming flowers at Deschutes canyon at Crooked River Ranch.

Trail update

vehicles June16, according to the

Continued from D1

tation. Until then, only bicyclists

Oregon Department of Transporand pedestrians are allowed.

SNOWMOBILINGDONE Snowmobiling in Dutchman sno-park area is no longer beper-

— JakeWilliky, The Bulletin

mitted due to bare ground. Heavy

snow melt created theearlier than normal closure. MGKENZIE PASS McKenzie PassHighway (state

541-382-6223

• •

OHNSON

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Highway 242) will open to motor

so lunch break. That was along the portion of the hike heading farther downstream, below and past the trailhead. Signage along there is lacking, and there were areas we had to scramble over some rocks and wade through underbrush to stay on that section of t r a il . H i gher up, the trail branched into various "social t r a i ls," a s W i lson c a ll s t h e m . He and Steinberg knew them well, but it would be easy fornewcomers to get disoriented. All that said, this latter portion of the loop is probably best avoided by hikers visiting here for the first time. Unless hiking with someone who knows the area or equipped with G PS, hikers new to t h e area would probably do best going out-and-back to the falls — still a respectable two-hour hike, at least at our stop-and-smell-therabbitbrush-flowers pace. Another option: On Satu rday, Wilson w il l l e ad people on a four-mile loop hike on Sand Ridge Trail and along the Deschutes River. Alas, it's restricted to the first 15 people who sign

TV.APPLIANCE

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up. Hurry up and call Wilson at 541-504-5852. The occasion is National Trails Day, he said. Whether you get to the Deschutes Canyon or head somewhere else, Saturday is a good reminder, and a great excuse, to go take a hike. — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendburletin.com

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Photos by Mark Moncal /The Bulletrn

Views from a ridgeline are a highlight of the Kiwa Butte Trail on the Wanoga trail system southwest of Bend.

Wanoga

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Continued from D1

DIRECTIONS From Bend,drive15 miles southwest along Century Drive toWanoga

Anybody who enjoys Central Oregon singletrack is encouraged to attend and help expand th e s t ate-of-the-art trail system. T yler's Traverse will r u n from Kiwa Butte eastward to Benham Falls along the Deschutes River Trail. "There's a few places that

people have been riding (on Tyler's Traverse)," Starr said. "It's really hard to find. There's no signs." For now, if cyclists want to enjoy th e n ewest t r ails i n Wanoga, they ca n r i d e the Kiwa Butte and DinahM oe-Humm t r a i l s . L as t year, Iremember having to wait until almost late June for those trails t o b ecome snow-free. But this spring, all trails in the sprawling Deschutes National Forest west of Bend are accessible early. The Kiwa Butte and DinahMoe-Humm trails, located at about 5,500 feet in elevation, account for about 8 miles of s ingletrack a c cessible v i a Wanoga an d E d i son s n oparks. These trails were not completed until fall 2010. A week and a half ago I made the 15-mile drive from Bend to Wanoga Sno-park to ride Kiwa Butte and part of Dinah-Moe-Humm. The easiest way to find the K iwa Butte Trail is t o r i d e the Tiddlywinks Trail f r om Wanoga for about 3 miles to the connection with the Kiwa Butte Trail. Signs now marks b oth th e K i w a B u tt e a n d

Kiwa Butte andDinaii-Moe-Hummtrails Sno-park. Start out on the Tiddlywinks Trail, which connects to the Kiwa Butte Trail after about 3 miles (right turn onto singletrack).

The Kiwa ButteTrail connects to Dinah-Moe-Hummat afour-way WANDSATRAILHEAD r~ • A MILES

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LENGTH

FEATURES

Kiwa Butte Trail is about 3 miles and Dinah-Moe-Humm is about 5 miles.

Outstanding

RATING Aerobically

Cascade peakviews,

moderate and technically

varied terrain, technical trail

moderate.

features and passing lanes.

intersection after another 3 miles (another right turn onto singletrack). Dinah-Moe-Humm runs for 5 miles to Edison Butte Sno-park.

DINAH:MOE-HUMM TRAIL 'I I

EDISDN THAILHEAD , 6.6 MILES

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To-INt. Sachelor ', A new signpost marks the junction of the Kiwa Butte and Dinah-Moe-Humm trails.

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Dinah-Moe-Humm trails. The Kiwa Butte Trail starts off with a few boulders to ride over and then cuts along the west side of the butte. Green alpine meadows line the trail to the east, while views of snowcapped South Sister and Broken Top to the west can be found through gaps in the towering pine trees. W hile the naming of t h e K iwa B utte T r ai l i s s e l f explanatory, the naming of the Dinah-Moe-Humm Trail isn't. The trail gets its name from the title of a song by Frank Zappa, a popular rock musician in the 1960s and '70s. The Kiwa Butte Trail connects to Dinah-Moe-Humm at Forest Service Road 4133. Near this intersection is also the west end of Tyler's Traverse. I took a r i g h t o nt o t h e singletrack and began a gradual climb over a few technical rock sections on Dinah-MoeHumm. I rode for about a mile

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Greg Cross/The Bulletin

before turning around and heading back the way I had come. Riding the Kiwa Butte Trail back toward Wanoga Snopark was quite a thrill, as I cruised over some fast, rolling u p -and-down s e ctions and some boulders that were incorporated thoughtfully into the design of the trail. I turned back onto Tiddlywinks and rode my way back

downhill t o t h e s n o -park, completing a ride of about 12 miles. The existing trails at Wanoga are a blast, but many more miles of singletrack are in the works. Once Tyler's Traverse is completed, mountain bikers can ride a loop that includes the Steve Larsen, Tyler's Traverse, Kiwa Butte and Tiddlywinks trails. The more volunteers COTA

has working out in the woods — including at next month's Spring Fling — the sooner that becomes a reality.

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WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066 Adjustable Beds

— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbullefin.com

mplements NIXf TRESS

HOME INTERIORS

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70 SW Century Dr. Surte145 Bend, OR 97702

541-330-5084

t'541 322 7337

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The (Spofeane, Wash.) Spolzesman-Review

In 1993, an immigrant fresh from Thailand enrolled at North Idaho College and studied two courses that changed his life. "First I had to learn English

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onsavin sa e rouse By Rich Landers

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miles and visiting 14 states. Good outdoor p h otographers would sleep on nails to claim Paothong's grouse project culls. "It all started during two

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first story

A SHOWCASE OF THE FINEST HOMES IN CENTRAL OREGON

JULY 20, 21, 22 4 2T, 28, 29 FRIDAYS. NQQN — 4PM, SATURDATS &SUNDAYS. I0 AM — 4 PM

Al PublishingDate:

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years of photographing prai-

rie chickens where I live," he said in a telephone interview as a second language," Nopfrom his home in Missouri. HI "Then I padol Paothong said. was getting up and heading to learned wildlife photography the field at 4 a.m. every morncould be a career." ing in spring before I went Today he uses his a rseto work. My wife said I was nal of lenses and talent to putting so much time into it, I raise awareness for vanishshould do a book. N ing American w i ldlife and I hope this book will be a habitats. Some c r itics s ay window for people to glimpse Paothong recently published Photoscourtesy Noppadol Paothong the life and beauty of these perhaps the single-most im- Wildlife photographer Noppadol extraordinary species — the pressive collection of photos Paothong has won national birds that I have come to care documenting North American acclaim for his work since takso much about," he said. prairie grouse. ing his first photography class One of t h e l e k -forming Initially Paothong was inat North Idaho College in the grouse, the heath hen of New terested in graphic design, but 1990s. England, has been extinct changed gears while taking a since the 1930s. wildlife photography course With fewer than 60 birds left taught by Tim Christie. The At 39, Paothong recently at the refuge and just eight on Coeur d'Alene communica- anchored his spot on the top the private land, the Attwater's tions instructor became a role tier of wildlife photographers prairie chicken in Texas is one model. Paothong was fascinat- in terms of s k i lls, tenacity of North America's most ened that Christie could combine and purpose with the publica- dangered species. his camera skills and love for tion of "Save the Last Dance: The Gunnison sage grouse hunting, fishing and nature A Story of North American o f Colorado i s r a r e a n d to publish images in the top Grassland Grouse." hard to observe, much less outdoor magaW ith text b y J o el photograph. zines i n the LAST Vance, the stunning And nearly all th e other country. photography i n th e prairie g r o use, i n c l uding P ao t h o n g 204-page book c ap- the greater and lesser praiE'2j'=, was still a stutures the lifecycles and rie chickens, are in decline. (I dent at NIC in struggles of all seven Ranchers and biologists in the 1997 when he once-bountiful North West are working together to began winning American grassland stave offfederal Endangered NOEN DOL PAOTHQNG photography g rouse species, i n Species protections on sage awards and sold cluding the sharptail grouse and sharptails that his first photo. A and greater sage grouse found could inflict restrictions on Thai magazineboughtan image in Idaho, Montana, Oregon private landowners. of a bald eagle he snapped dur- and Washington as well as Paothong and his images ing 40 days ofbitter-cold visits to one speciesthat's already fad- from "Save the Last Dance" Lake Coeur d'Alene with mar- ed into extinction. recently were featured in a ginal camera gear during the Photos focus on their frag- five-page spread in National annual winter eagle gathering. ile habitat as well as on the Wildlife M agazine's March He finished a j ournalism spellbinding spring displays issue. The Washington Post is p rogram an d p o l ished h i s as males gather on breeding publishing his work, National skills as a newspaper photog- grounds to strut and dance Geographic is looking into rapher until 2006, when he their way to social dominance his story and a World Wildlife landed his dream job with the for mating. Fund crew filmed him in acMissouri Department of ConP aothong p ersevered 1 1 tion with prairie grouse. s ervation, celebrated for i t s years to capture the full range Topping it all off, on April award-winning publications. of images, logging 8 0,000 12, he became a U.S. citizen.

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T OUR OF HOM E S ™ YOUROFFICIALGUIDETOTHECOBA SELF-GUI DEDTOURFEATURINGTHE FINEST HOMESBUILTINTHEPASTYEAR One of the most popular events in Central Oregon is the COBA Tour Of Homes™. More than 35 homes were featured last year as part of the tour. This "Official Guide" provides details about each home, the builders and contractors involved, and a full-color tour map. Distributed to all Bulletin subscribers and at tour homes, the guide is a great reference companion throughout the year for home improvement ideas.

Wednesday, July 17

DESCHUTES COUNTY FAIR 8 RODEO FINDTHECOMPLETEWEEKOF EVENTSINTHISCOLORFUL, ACTION-P ACKEDGUIDE. The Deschutes County Fair Guide celebrates the people and history behind the success of this annual, multi-day event by offering a comprehensive publication that features a schedule of events, listing of entertainers and feature articles. You won't miss a beat at the fair with this guide in hand.

s 6'rs OI INDI

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PubliShing Date: Wednesday, July 24 (The DeschutesCounty FairPremium Book publishes on Wednesday, June 5.)


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TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013

U TDOORS BIRDING DEAN HALEWOODPECKER FESTIVAL:Participants have a choice of attending12 different guided field trips in search of11 different species of woodpeckers and more than 200 other types of birds that have made the forests and burn areasof Central Oregon abirding hot spot; East CascadesAudubon Society sponsors the festival; full-daytrips are $30 while half-day trips are $20; June13-16; Sisters; register at www. ecaudubon.org. BIRDWATCHING FOR YOUTH: Club for ages12 to18 and supporting adults; bring binoculars to seethe spring migration of warblers; 3-5 p.m today; Sawyer Park, Bend; ajbusine ss@bendbroadband.com or 541-385-1799.

CYCLING COTA SPRINGFLING:Central Oregon Trail Alliance is looking for volunteers for the 13th annual Spring Fling work party; this community effort will focus on expanding the new trail network near Wanoga Sno-park; COTA will supply tools, direction and refreshments; after party at location TBD; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; June 15; meet at WebCyclery, 550 S.W. Industrial Way, Bend; www.cotamtb.com.

EQUESTRIAN MULE TRAININGCLINIC: Brad Cameron Mulemanship Clinic will teach the basic techniques of low-stress cattle handling with your mule; horses are welcome, too; Friday-June 2; Weston Equine Services, 68810 Holmes Road, Sisters; Kathryn Godsiff at kgodsiff©gmail.com or 541-350-3085.

FISHING CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB:

A L E NDAR

Meets on the first Tuesday of each month; new members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; www.cobc.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; meets on the first Mondayofeach month, 6:45 p.m .; ONDA offi ces,Bend;541-306-4509, communications©deschutestu.org, www.deschutestu.org. BEND CASTINGCLUB:Agroup of fly anglers from around Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month; 6-8 p.m.; location TBA; 541306-4509orbendcastingclub@ gmail.com. THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB: Meets on the third Thursday of each month; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center; www.sunriveranglers.org. THE CENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB: Meets on the third Wednesday of each month; 7 p.m.; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org.

Email events at least 10days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event"at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.

SKY WATCH

Saturn, with 53 rnoons, is a fascinating planet 95 percent nitrogen with traces of methane.

By Bill Logan

While the Earth's atmosphereextends about 60 km (37 miles) into space, Titan's extends

For The Bulletin

Saturn bears amarkedaffinity with its closer cousin Jupiter, but its fantastic ring system outranks Jupiter in splendor. The

Qy

atmosphere structure resembles Jupiter. Belts run parallel to the equator, driven by rapid rotation. Saturn's day is only10 hours, 14 minutes and it takes more than 29 Earth

years to makeone complete orbit around the sun.

Saturn, the sixth planet from the sun, is home to a vast array of intriguing and unique worlds. From the liquid methane surface

of Titan to crater-riddled Phoebe,eachof Saturn's moons tells another piece of the

story surrounding the Saturn system. To date, 53 moons havebeendiscovered orbiting the gas giant. Titan, the sixth-largest moon, is so large that it affects the orbits of other nearby moons. At 5,150 km (3,200 miles) across, it

nearly 600 km, 10 times that of the Earth's

)

atmosphere. The rings of Saturn are currently tipped

17 degrees andwill increase to 28 degrees in 2017. Although thin, the rings arevery wide; the three main rings (called A, B, and

Courtesy NASA

C) are visible in a modest telescope or steady binoculars and extend outward from 44,000

While cruising around Saturn in early October 2004, the robotic spacecraft Cassini captured a series of images that have been composed into this large global natural color view of Saturn and its rings.

miles to almost 87,000 miles from Saturn's center. Saturn will be the star of the heavens

all summer. Youcansee it in the southeast every night about 20 degrees (two fists held

at arm's length) abovethe horizon shortly is the second-largest moon in the solar system. Titan hides its surface with a thick ni-

trogen-rich atmosphere. Titan's atmosphere is similar to the Earth's atmosphere of long ago, before biology took hold on our home planet. Titan's atmosphere is approximately

after sunset, transiting to the southwest during the night. — Bill Loganisanexpertsolarobserverand volunteer amateur astronomer with the Vniversity of Oregon's Pine Mountain Observatory. He livesin Bend. Contact: blogan0821@gmail.com

HUNTING LEARN THE ART OFTRACKING ANIMALS:Guided walks and workshops with a certified professional tracker to learn how to identify and interpret tracks, signs and scat of the animals in Central Oregon; two or more walks per month all year; $35; 8 a.m. to noon; 541-633-7045; dave@wildernesstracking.com, wildernesstracking.com. THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: Meets thesecond Wednesday of each month; 7 p.m.; King Buffet, Bend; ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: Meets the first Tuesday of each

month; 7 p.m.; Prineville Fire Hall; 54 I-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTER OF THEOREGON HUNTERS ASSOCIATION:Meets the third Tuesdayofeach month; 7 p.m .; Redmond VFW Hall.

MISCELLANEOUS BEND OHAYOUTH 8IFAMILY OUTDOOR DAY: Outdoorevents and displays, including wilderness survival, archery, sporting clays, camping essentials and lunch; registration required by June 10; 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.; June 15; Central Oregon Sporting Clays, 9020 S. Highway 97, Redmond; 541-3887337 or www.ohabend.webs.com.

PADDLING KAYAKINGCLASSES:W eekly classes and open pool; $3; 4-6 p.m. Sundays; equipment provided to those who preregister, first-come, first-served; Cascade Swim Center, Redmond; 541-548-7275, www. I'apl'd.ol'g.

SHOOTING BEND BOWMEN INDOORARCHERY LEAGUE:Traditional league; Wednesday evenings; Lenny at 541-480-6743; indoor 3-D league Thursday; 7 p.m.; Bruce at 541-4101380 or Del at 541-389-7234. BEND TRAPCLUB:Trap shooting,

five-stand and skeet shooting; 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Thursdays and Sundays; milepost30,U.S.Highway 20, Bend; Bill Grafton at 541-3831428 or www.bendtrapclub.com. CENTRAL OREGONSPORTING CLAYSANDHUNTING PRESERVE: 13-station,100-target course and five-stand; 10 a.m. to dusk Saturday and Sunday, 11 a.m. to dusk Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday; 9020 S. U.S. Highway 97, Redmond; www.birdandclay.com or 541-383-0001. REDMOND ROD &GUN CLUB: Archery, pistol, rifle, skeet, sporting clays and trap; club is open to the community and offers many training programs; three

miles east of Redmond on the north side of state Highway126; www.rrandgc.com. PINEMOUNTAIN POSSE: Cowboy action shooting club; second Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-8199, www.pinemountainposse.com. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541408-7027 or www.hrp-sass.com.

De-skunk yourdog Managers extendColumbi achinookseason By Rich Landers (Spohane, Wash.) Spolzesman-Review

Any hunting dog with gift for finding birds also has a nose for trouble. That's why I'm always prepared for the day my bird dog sniffs the business end of a skunk. I've packed home dogs with broken legs, wounds f r om barbed-wire and snouts full of porcupine quills. Traumatic? Yes. Toxic? No. A dog that returns to the hunting rig after rolling in a steaming cow pie or wallowing in putrid roadkiil is reiatively pleasant compared to a cur that's taken a full-bore load of skunk musk at close range. German shorthairs, B rittanies and E n glish setters — every breed that's joined my kennel has sooner or later been anointed with the foulest of common scents. This is the rare moment a dog is not man's best friend, especially if you're 100 miles from home and driving a Subaru. Bathing the fuming mutt in a lake won't do any good, and I don't advise strapping it to the vehicle roof rack. You're going to stew in the rankness together if you're not prepared. Growing up in Montana, my family never questioned the traditional cure of bathing a skunk-sprayed dog in tomato j uice. Indeed, it w o rk ed eventually. As I remember, the odor always subsided within a week. Two decades ago I used that method for the last time, but it wasn't in the wilds while chasing pheasants. This time a skunk blasted my Brittany, Radar, with no warning as I let him out behind our house. My wife drove to the store and brought back a few quarts of tomato juice as I donned coveralls. Per tradition, I siathered Radar in the red juice, snapped on a leash and took him for a walk upwind from my least favorite neighbor while t he natural acids tried to do some

that incident was among the most productivein my career. Calls came in with all sorts of remedies, including vinegar solutions and commercial products that have some merit. But the life-changing advice came from Eastern Washington University chemistry professor Jeff Corkiil, who mailed a clipping from a c hemical trade publication in which a group of u nheralded chemists gave the world one of the greatest gifts — a cheap, effective treatment for a skunk-

sprayed dog. The de-skunking recipe is simple: One quart of hydrogen peroxide, 1/4 cup baking soda, 1 teaspoon liquid dish soap. Mix ingredients as needed — not in advance — when a skunk renders your dog unfit for human cohabitation. Apply to the dog liberally, using a washcloth around the face to keep the solution out of the eyes. Let it work a few minutes and rinse thoroughly. In my wealth of experience, the odor will be neutralized and the peroxide does not change the color of the dog's coat. Some people prefer to bathe the dog again with a pet shampoo for good measure. From experience, I realized the key would be to have these i ngredients on h and a t a l l times, at home and in my rig for any trip involving the dog. This evolved into a Skunk Disaster Kit I've given as gifts to hunting buddies. T he de-skunking ki t i n cludes a small r ectangular Tupperware-type c o ntainer just big enough to hold two quart bottles of hydrogen peroxide, two plastic zipper bags with measured amounts of baking soda, a small plastic bottle with dish soap, a washcloth, a small drying towel and a couple pairs of latex

gloves.

I received numerous testimonials on the recipe after republishing it. The best came after I took a m idnight call magic. from a friend who'd gone fishEverything was going rea- ing inMontana and ended up sonably well until one of the in dire straits. n eighbors came out of h e r He and his daughter was house. camping with his wife's brand " What h a p pened?" s h e new SUV. But their golden squealed. retriever ignored a s k unk's "Skunk got him," I said. warning flag 300 miles from Turns out the odor hadn't hit Spokane. I gave them the her yet, but she thought Radar recipe. Two days later I found was coated with blood from a a thank-you card on my doorskunk attack. step as well as a bo t tle of And Radar still stunk when fine red wine — with a nice I rinsed him off. bouquet untainted by t h eir The column I wrote about adventure.

The Associated Press CLACKAMAS — Sport fishermen will get an additionai three weeks to get out and catch a chinook salmon o n t h e Co l u m bia River below Bonneville Dam under a season extension approved Mon-

day by fishery manage rs f r o m O r e go n a n d Washington. During a joint state hearing fish and wildlife officials from the two states decided to reopen the spring c hinook season o n t h e lower Columbia through June 15. The extended s p r ing s eason takes p l ace f o r three weeks immediately prior to the summer chin ook season, w h ich i s scheduled on t h e l o w er C olumbia from J une 16 through June 30. " We're pleased to b e able to provide five weeks of uninterrupted chinook salmon fishing," said Steve Williams, deputy administrator of O D FW's f i sh division. The joint state action is based on revised estimates of salmon returns and harvest data that showed an additional 1,357 u p river

spring chinook salmon are

available for sport fishermen to harvest in the lower Columbia, based on management guidelines established earlier in the year. The revised forecast shows an expected return of 107,500 upriver s p r i n g chi n o ok, which is down from the preseason estimate of 141,400 chinook. "We have fewer fish than expected at the beginning of the year but the harvest was also lower than anticipated so we have some extra fish to catch," said John North, ODFW's Ocean Salmon and Columbia R i ve r P r o g r am manager. T he season opens f r om Tongue Point up to the deadline at Bonneville Dam with

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Lewis

FISHING REPORT For the water report, turn eachday to the weather page, today on B6 Here is the weekly fishing report for selected areas in and around Central Oregon, provided by fisheries biologists for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife:

Continued from D1 Some people are j u st plain fishy. That w o uld describe Dave and Hank. Dave has guided in Northern California for the last nine years. Hank, a retired guide, is his mentor. With this much f i shing mojo, we couldn't help but have a

FLY-TYING CORNER Small's Green Nymph, tied by Pete Ouelette.

CENTRAL ZONE ANTELOPE FLATRESERVOIR: The reservoir has been very turbid, which has negatively impacted the fishing. Anglers trolling hardware seem to be having the m ost success.Recentsampling suggests most of the trout average around12-inches long with a good number of trout around 20-inches long available. The reservoir also received a load of catchable-sized trout this week. BEND PINENURSERYPOND:The pondhasbeen stocked and fishing Is good. BIG LAVALAKE:The lake is accessible and fishing has been good. CLEAR LAKE RESERVOIR: Clear Lake has been stocked and should be a great opportunity for spring trout fishing. Anglers are most successful early in the spring while the reservoir is full of water. CRANE PRAIRIERESERVOIR: Anglers are catching large kokanee, brook and rainbow trout. The resort owner reports some of the best fishing he has seen in manyyears, particularly for brook trout. Anglers are reporting success with flies, lures and bait. CRESCENTLAKE:Opportunities for rainbow and brown trout are good. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMAN DAM:Fishing for10-16-inch rainbow trout has been good. The trout may be spawning now, so anglers are reminded to be careful if wading so as to not trample the redds. DAVIS LAKE: Anglers are catching trout near the mouth of Odell Creek. DESCHUTESRIVER(LAKEBILLY CHINOOK TOBEND): Flows are typical for irrigation season, approximately150 cfs above Lower Bridge and 400-500 downstream. Rainbow trout average 10 to 16 inches, while brown trout up to 26 inches are available. Anglers will find better access downstream of Lower Bridge. Remains open year round; however, gear is restricted to artificial flies and lures only. EAST LAKE:Is currently accessible. Opportunities for rainbow and brown trout as well as kokanee are good.

good day.

Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin

From out of Africa, this nondescript soft-hackle fly is a trout fly that can work anywhere trout eat little green bugs with wings. The body,

throw an upstream mend, then let the fly swing. At the end of the arc, strip in the line, step

downstream andcast again. Tie Small's GreenNymph

dressed in insect green, and

with olive thread on a No. 10 long-shank straight-eye hook. representative of a caddis pupa For the sparse tail, tie in three or a damselfly. strands of partridge. Wrap a On the river, fish Small's tapered olive-green wool body Green Nymph with a wet-fly and rib with oval gold tinsel. swing. For greater depth, use Finish with a natural reddisha10-foot sink tip or a sinking brown soft hackle. line. Cast across the current, — Gary Lewis, For TheBulletin the swept-back collar could be

FALL RIVER:The river above the falls is open all year; the river below thefalls opened May 25. Fishing is restricted to fly-fishing only with barbless hooks. HAYSTACK RESERVOIR: Fishing has been good for large trout and kokanee. LAKE BILLY CHINOOK:Fishing for smallmouth bass should start picking up with the warmer weather. A tribal angling permit is required in the Metolius Arm. Please check the special regulations for this area. Anglers are reminded there are small numbers of spring chinook and summer steelhead in Lake Billy Chinook as part of the reintroduction effort. Please release these fish unharmed. METOLIUS RIVER:Trout fishing has been good. Insect hatches should offer lots of opportunities for good, dry-fly fishing. Angling for post-spawning bull trout should be excellent. Large streamer flies fished in the deeper pools and slots are the best bet. NORTH TWIN:Fishing is good. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCO DAM: Fishing for trout has been good for trout averaging 8 to 10 inches. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Fishing for trout has been good. Anglers are

reporting trout up to18-inches long. Recent sampling indicated there is a good number of trout averaging 12to14-inches long available. ODELL LAKE: Anglers are reporting large catches of kokanee. Anglers targeting lake trout are also having success. Early season provides the best opportunity for lake trout. PAULINA LAKE: Currently accessible. Water temperature is cool but kokanee and rainbow trout angling is fair and should improve. PRINEVILLERESERVOIR:Fishing has been good and the trout that have been caught were large. Bass and crappie fishing have been picking up in the east end of the reservoir. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Shevlin Pond is fishing well. SOUTH TWIN LAKE:Fishing continues to be excellent. WALTONLAKE:The lake was stocked with a load of catchable and larger-sized trout. There are also some holdover fish up to 20-inches long available. WICKIUP RESERVOIR:Fish are scattered, but anglers are reporting catches of 18-20 kokanee aswell as a few large brown trout.

Dave handed me a rod rigged with pencil lead and a barbless Glo-Bug on a 30inch leader. Hank offered me a tray of tiny steelhead egg baits cured in Pautzke's Borax O'Fire mix. I secured the eggs beneath the egg loop and waited to make my first cast. D ownstream from t h e Sundial, we let our baits bounce through the shallow water as Dave watched our rod tips and kept our lines tight with the kicker motor. Bounce, bounce, bounce. After a few bumps on the bottom, th e r o d l o aded with an energy transmitted through the graphite. I lifted the tip and a trout peeled away off the gravel bar and out into the main channel. When the fish was near the boat, Hank slipped the net beneath the 18-inch wild rainbow. Downstream, we worked bank to b ank, bouncing our baits through the current seams. Wherethe river widened, Dave and Hank p ointed toward the site of the old concrete plant. Here the builders of the Shasta Dam grabbed the g ravel that was used in the construction project. We saw the old concrete footings that supported a huge conveyor belt that moved the material up to the dam site. There was a time when this section of river and its banks were poisoned by copper mining. There was a time when tons and tons of gravel were harvested from the riverbed. But now the wild trout find a home in the cool water beneath the dam, right in the heart of this California city. W hen H a n k ho o k ed his first fish — a trout of

Gary Lewis/ For The Bulletin

Gary Lewis and Dave Jacobs admire a rainbow trout, one of two taken simultaneously while sidedrifting with spinning gear on the Sacramento River. about 16 inches — he told me to keep my Glo-Bug in the water. Seconds later, I was tied to another rainbow. That was the first of three doubles. On the second double, we brought the fish close enough together that when Dave plunged for them with the net, he brought up both fish in a single scoop. Beneath the Highway 44 bridge, we tried for a triple, but Dave's trout threw the hook. There is a knackto drift fishing. The fish drops back as the Glo-Bug approaches, then it commits, opens its mouth and expels water out of its gills. When the fish feels the hook, it tries to shake the bait out of its mouth. If we sense the bite at all, often that head-shake is our first clue. Hank, who was one of the pioneers of this technique we call sidedrifting, showed me

how he uses his trigger finger to get a better sense of the bite. Instead of placing his finger on the rod, he indexes the line right off the spool, his index fingerready to sense the pulse of that first mouthing of the bait. Past stocking efforts get the credit for this tailwater fishery, but there wasn't a single

fish we landed that was raised in a h atchery. These were wild, well-fed rainbows, brilliant in color, each a rare jewel unto itself. Some were covered with spots, while others showed a cutthroat influence. A few were flecked with gold and copper. The biggest of the day was a hook-jawed male I guessed at about five pounds. At the end of the morning, we walked through the abandoned concrete plant in the park at Turtle Bay. East of Redding, we sashayed the streets of Old Shasta, where we found examples of the art and a few of the guns of old California on display in what was the old courthouse and jail. A glimpse back in time. As we headed south on the interstate, I threw one last look back at the Sacramento. There are wilder places to catch wild rainbow, but to me, this big riverranks among the West's best places to catch great trout in the heart of a city. — Gary Lewis is the host of "Adventure Journal" and author of "John Nosler — Going Ballistic," "Fishing Central Oregon," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Lewis at www. GaryLewisoutdoors.com.

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series i swor era ains wor er TV SPOTLIGHT "Does Someone Have ToGo?" 9 p.m. Thursday, Fox

By Jon Caramanica New York Times News Service

Perhaps the least expected and appreciated gift of reality television is its capacity for redemption.Sure, people go on TV to get their hearts broken or to fight over meaningless things, but for every villain, there are many more heroes. And if individuals can be lionized by reality television, then why not companies'? In this way, "Does Someone Have to Go?" which has its premiere Thursday on Fox, is a boon. A reality show set at various small companies, it's part docuseries, part gauche game show. At each office, the bosses cede authority to the workers, who decide whether to punish their colleagues with pay cuts, demotions or firings. It bears repeating: This is a show in which people might lose their jobs. For companies, this is a victory, reinforcing the idea that what's wrong with the American workplace is the workers. The problemsdiscussed aren't about the structure of the company, or the state of its chosen industry and market, or the economy as awhole. Employees are the enemy here, bolstering the fanciful and gener-

8 p.m. on E3, "The American Baking Competition" —Hosted by Jeff Foxworthy with help from judges Marcela Valladolid and Paul Hollywood this new series features skilled American amateurs competing in baking challenges with one ultimately being crowned the winner.

age is done to the company for choosing to unearth all its buried tensions in such a public arena. This is reality television's "Lord of the Flies"or "The Hunger Games" or "The Running Man." On next week's episode, people will be shown pleading for their jobs — their jobs. The preview clips alone are heartrending and barely ethical. It is impossible not to be invested in the outcome, and not to feel that the people whose livelihoods are on the line are pawns not just of their Courtesy Fox com bosses but also of the show's Employees of Velocity Merchant Services in Downers Grove, III., producers and the network, all are given the power to make some tough decisions at the company. of whom face far less severe stakes. Depending on t h e s hortand long-term outcomes, this ally wrong idea that one bad tions dream, an hourlong ad show may be remembered as apple spoils the lot. for c o r porate r e sponsibil- dredge up unacknowledged one of the signature reality-TV ity — g reat employees are tensions around race and age. intrusions into the more saSecond, the show p aints b osses as b enevolent a n d rewarded, slackers are dealt In next week's episode, the cred areas of private life: think of "Kid Nation," "Who Wants open-eared, willing to let the with ethically and firmly, and fallout comes. (There are six wisdom of the masses guide the integrity of the company episodes in all, covering three to Marry a Multi-Millionaire" their decision making. The remains intact. companies.) and the never-aired "Welcome truth is more sinister, though: But "Undercover B o ss" T he stakes, as t hey a r e to the Neighborhood." Bosses are merely activating works from th e to p d own. presented,are dramatic. For T he vote i s u n k i nd, o f lower-level staffers to do the Looking at a company from signing up to be on this show, course: No amount of wishing dirty work for them. the bottom up is invariably a employees — who were not re- one could change the circumAs a tool of corporate promessier proposition. quired to participate, accord- stances of one's employment paganda, it's m o r e s u btle The first two episodes of ing to press materials; Fox de- can compare to th e actual than, say, "Undercover Boss" "Does Someone Have to Go?" clined to say if those who did power of holding someone's fion CBS, which paints chief focus on Velocity Merchant were compensated — run the nancial fate in your hand. Veexecutives as forward-thinkServices, a seller of credit- risk of conflict, humiliation locity's workers appear to take ing emperors who willingly card processing systems with and, possibly, unemployment. the task seriously, but it can't hide their true identities to about 70 employees based in ( Presumably, t h ese w o r k - be taken seriously enough. see what life in their compa- Downers Grove, Ill. A b out places are not unionized.) And Whatever the outcome, it will nies' trenches is really like. 20 people at the company that's to say nothing of what- be awful. A n d e n trancing. That show is a public rela- are on the show, including ever long-term internal dam- Shield your eyes.

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the founder, Dema Barakat, and her husband, Danoush Khairkhah, who is the chief executive. Complicating the situation is that Velocity is a familyrun business. The company employs no fewer than four people related to Dema Barakat, including th e g o ssipy Tina, a c ousin, and K o ut, Dema Barakat's mother, who is perceived as a highly paid underperformer, resented by the staff. Thursday's premiere episode is the first of two parts — tensions are revealed, arguments are started and the employees vote on whom they think should be up for termination. The squabbles are petty, ill-informed and sometimes personal, and seemingly

onuse teenre rets avin sex Dear Abby:I'm a 14-year-old girl who recently had sex with my boyfriend. It was the first time for both of us. A week-and-a-half later, we

had a big fight. Another problem is I am having a lot of feelings for his best friend, and he has feelings for DEAR me, too. I don't want ABBY to tell my boyfriend because I love him a nd don't want t o lose him. I also don't want to ruin his friendship with the other guy. My boyfriend wants to have sex again, but I don't. I wish I could take it back. What can I do? — Lost and Confused Dear Lost And Confused:Because you had sex once does not mean you are compelled to do it again. Feeling as you do about the best friend is a strong sign that as much as you care for your boyfriend, you are not in love with him. If you are being pressured to have sex, it's important for YOUR sake that you tell your boyfriend you feel it h appened too soon, you're sorry you did it, and you have decided to wait until you are

older to start again. It would be an intelligent move for you because your affections appear to be all over the map right now. I am also concerned because you didn't mention whether you both used birth c o ntrol. It's a sign of maturity when couples plan ahead and take precautions to avoid an unwanted pregnancy.

(And yes, a girl CAN get pregnant the first time.) In fact, there's a word for teens who have sex on the spur of the moment and don't use birth control: It's PARENTS. Dear Abby:My friend is a compulsive talker. "Chatty Cathy" draws detailed descriptions of people I don't know and don't care about and lingers over past and current tribulations. I tolerate her behavior because she's a kind person, but she is oblivious to how much she dominates a conversation. It's like something compels her to fill every silence with monologue. Her personal and work relationships suffer because of it. It's hard for her to hold a job, and she often becomes upset over this co-work-

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013:This year you display a very positive attitude in most areas of your life; however, youalso become toofocused onyour work or health, which eliminates some spontaneity. If Stars showthe kind you are single, of dayyou'll have yo ur desirability ** * * * Dynamicand openness to ** * * P ositive di f ferent lifestyles ** * Average makes relating ** So-so easier. If you are * Difficult attached, the two of you opt to go on a special trip together. AQUARIUS provokes interesting reactions.

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueune Bigar

CANCER (June21-July22) ** * Allow greater give-and-take with a child or loved one. You might need to follow through on what needs to happen. Listen to your inner voice regarding a friend at a distance. It is easy to forget this person, as he or she isn't a part of your daily life. Tonight: Go to a movie or concert.

LEO (July23-Aug. 22)

** * Someone will jump in and take control before you even can say "yes" or ARIES (MARCH21-APRIL 19j "no." You have two choices; you either ** * * Z e ro in on whatyou want, and can beannoyed,oryou candecidejustto others will pitch in and help. This sense of sit back and relax. A domestic matter or hospitality and camaraderie makes your real-estate issue remains complicated. day.You mightwonderhow you could Tonight: Think through a decision. create an atmosphere like this long term. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) Assume that it will exist as long as you ** * A ct as if there were no tomorrow want it to. Tonight: Whatever you want. as far as work or a project is concerned, TAURUS (APRIL20-MAY 20) and you could be delighted by the results. You might want to repeat this kind of ** * Others will wait for your instructions. How often does that happen? intensity again. Return calls later in the day when you can chat and catch up on Seize the moment and run with it. You news. Tonight: In the thick of things. could be shocked byeverything that comes up. Letyour ethics and strong senseof LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) ** * * You might want to listen to a responsibility guide you. Others will like what they see.Tonight: In the limelight. loved one carefully, as there could be nuggets of truth to be heard. A serious GEMINI (May 21-June20) conversation about your funds needs ** * * You may want to step back to happen. Do not hesitate to say "no," and be an observer. What you see by especially when it comes to taking risks. not participating on such an active level Seek feedback from others. Tonight: Fun might surprise you. You will use this and games. knowledgein manyways.A conversation with a person whom you feel is stuck will SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21) enlighten you. Tonight: Easy works. ** Your seriousness speaks for itself

er's or that family member's behavior. It is always the other person's failure, yet she is always in the center of the commotion. She has had a tough life, partly of her own making. If I try to send subtle cues of uninterest, she doesn't pick up on them and keeps talking and talking. I feel sorry for her. Is there anything I can do to help her, without seeming critical? — Exhausted Listener in Hawaii Dear Exhausted: Not knowing your friend, I can only guess what drives her to t alk c ompulsively. Some people do it because they feel the need to prove to others how smart they are. Others do it out of nervousness or insecurity because they are uncomfortable with silence — even if it is a momentary pause in conversation. Because her behavior has had a negative impact on her employability, the next time she mentions problems at work, it would be a kindness to suggest to her that, because it's happening repeatedly, she discuss it with a psychologist. That's not hurtful; it's helpful. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069

when dealing with a security issue. Others clearly getyour message. Still, you might need to resolve a situation that appears to be a standoff. Try to initiate a conversation using a lighter tone. The response likely will be a good one. Tonight: At home.

8:30 p.m. on H R), "Family Tools" — When Tony (J.K. Simmons) gets back into the dating game after a long absence, Jack (Kyle Bornheimer) makes a disturbing discovery about his dad's new girlfriend. Mason (Johnny Pemberton) asks Darren (Edi Gathegi) for help when Aunt Terry (Leah Remini) won't let him drive. 8:30 p.m. on FAM,"Bady Daddy" —The likablecomedyabouta 20-something ma n whose carefree life gets turned on its head with the arrival of an infant daughter he never knew he had returns for Season 2. Jean-Luc Bilodeau stars as Ben, who needs the help of his friends and his mom (Melissa Peterman) to make sure hecan handle impromptu fatherhood. 9 p.m. on fj, "NOVA" — The new episode "Manhunt — Boston Bombers" takes viewers through the pursuit of the two key suspects in last month's deadly Boston Marathon bombing. It focuses on the role modern technology played in the manhunt, including which high-tech innovations worked and whichdidn't,andexamines the implications for the future of crime solving. 10 p.m. on H g), "Two Truths and a Lie" —Cynthia McFadden and Bill Weir are the anchors of this new "Nightline" spinoff that focuses on consumer issues. Correspondents including Dan Abrams, Gio Benitez, Juju Chang and Amy Robach use their investigative skills — sometimes going undercover — to advise viewers on how to get the most for their money and avoid making expensive mistakes.

MOVIE TIMESTOOAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times aresubject to changeafter press time. I

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347

• 42(PG-13) 1 h35a.m., 2:35, 6 • THE CROODS (PG) 1:20, 4:30 • EPIC(PG) 11:40 a.m., 2:30, 6:15, 9:15 • EPIC 3-D(PG) 11:55 a.m., 2:45, 6:25, 9:30 • FAST 5 FURIOUS 6 (PG-13) Noon, 12:55, 3:20, 4:20, 6:30, 7: IO, 7:50, 9:45, 10:15 • THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:50, 6:05, 9:20 • THEGREAT GATSBY3-0 (PG-13)9:IO • THEHANGOVERPARTIII(R)I2:15, I2:45, I:15,3,3:30, 4:15, 6:45, 7: l5, 7:45, 9:25, 9:50, 10:20 • IRONMAN 3 (PG-13)I2:25,3:25,3: 40,4:05,6: 55,9:55, 10:10, 10:25 • OBLIVION (PG-13) 3:50, 7:35, IO:30 • PAIN 5 GAIN(R) l2:40 • STARTREK INTO DARKNESS IMAX3-D (PG-l3)12 30, 4, 7, 10:05 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) 12:05, 1:05, 3:10, 6:35, 7:25, 9:40 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS3-D (PG-13) 12:20, 6:50 • Accessibility devicesareavailable forsome movies. t

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10 p.m. on USA,"Psych" — Anthony Michael Hall guest stars in the season finale as an eccentric police consultant who's brought into the police department to interview Shawn, Gus, Juliet and Lassiter (James Roday, Dule Hill, Maggie Lawson, Timothy Omundson). And by "interview" we mean "bother," as they're working on a very difficult case, and he's getting in the way. The fact that he doesn't believe in psychics doesn't help matters. ©Zap2rt

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• AT ANYPRICE(R) l2:45, 3:45, 6:45 • DISCONNECT (R) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 • THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) Noon, 3, 6 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 1, 4, 7 • THE ICEMAN (R) 1:15, 4:15, 7 • MUD(PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15

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** * * You have a unique way of saying things that opens up possibilities in others' minds. You might be surprised at the feedback you get. You could want to take someone's suggestion and work with that person. Do not hesitate to askfor what you need. Tonight: Chat over dinner.

• THERE ISNOTHINGOUTHERE(no MPAArating) 8:30 • TO THEWONDER(R) 6

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CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * You might need to push someone whom you admire. Getting your point across could be exhausting, but know that it's important. There always is a solution. Perhaps you need to let go so that the other party can see the outcome of how he or she is proceeding. Tonight: Your treat.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fed.18) ** * * * E njoy all of the activity that is going on around you. People are taking their cues from you. A boss demands your attention. You won't be able to lighten this person up, so don't even try. Remember thatyou are a role modelin some form. Tonight: Be a star in your own universe.

PISCES (Fed. 19-March20) ** * Be wary of someone who continues to close the door on you instead of opening it. You could be taken aback by this person's actions. Learn to expect this behavior, and you will be much happier as a result. Tonight: Get plenty of R and R — you are going to need it soon! ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 54 I -548-8777 • FAST & FURIOUS 8 (PG-13) 3:30, 6:15, 9 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 4:15, 6:30, 8:45 • IRON MAN 3(PG-13) 4, 6:45, 9:30 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) 3:30, 6:30, 9:30

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• EPIC (PG)6 • THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) 6 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 6:45 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) 6:15 Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • EPIC (PG)6:50 • EPIC 3-D(PG) 4:30 • FAST & FURIOUS 8 (PG-13) 3:45, 6:40 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 4:35, 7:10 • IRON MAN 3(PG-13) 3:40, 6:30 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) 4 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS3-D (PG-13) 7 •

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

• EPIC (PG)6:15 • STARTREK INTO DARKNESS (UPSTAIRS — PG-13)6:30 • Theupstairs screening room has limitedaccessibility.

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ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • W EDNESDAY, MAY 29, 20'I3

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cantact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

: Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

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Furniture & Appliances

Antiques & Collectibles

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Northwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Northeast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses and Equipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce andFood

Pets 8 Supplies

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DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial

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Misc. Items

Heating & Stoves

Time-Life "American Wilderness" 26-book set, $125. 541-312-8606

Time-Life "The Seafarers" 22-book complete set, $100. 541-312-8606 Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi audio & studio equip. Mclntosh, J BL, Marantz, D y naco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808

Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an

Fidelis Arms CAR-15 interesting Manner. Write M-4 5.56 w/mag. New Musical Instruments $1050. 541-633-7017 Floor Harp 3 6 - string from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the f ully l e vered o n e facts into benefits. Show GUN SHOW owner plus v arious the reader how the item will June 1st & 2nd, 2013 Deschutes Fairgrounds books, tuner & stool. help them in someway. Buy! Sell! Trade! $1,450. 541-306-6253 This SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 advertising tip $8 Admission, Piano, Kawai ES1 brought to you by 12 & under free!

BOXER AKC puppies, German Wir e haired Antiques & $200. 541-647-8931 reat litter, 1st shots, Pointer puppy born Collectibles AR-15 30 rnd mags, 700. 541-325-3376 5/6/2013. E x c ellent NTHMG USGI upland/waterfowl mil-spec $17 ea. 10 Bull Terrier, 1 yr neutered h unting dog s a n d avail. 541-241-0532 male, free to good, cat- wonderful c o m panfree home. 541-420-5602 ions. AKC registered Bend local pays CASH!! OREGON TRAIL GUN digital piano, with for all firearms & male, $450 Call/Text stand, built-in amp SHOWS, 541-347-2120 Chihuahua pup female ammo. 541-526-0617 (541) 331-1004 View I Want to Buy or Rent or 541-404-1 890 & speakers, $700. born 4/4 $200 obo. photos: germanwire541-504-441 6 CASH!! 541-497-3666 Beautiful handhaired. blogspot.com Ruger American rifle, Cash for quality For Guns, Ammo & carved coffee table new in b ox , $ 3 75. used Furniture. a n Reloading Supplies. Dog kennels (2) Ig de- KITTY, sweet 2 yr. old, (44n x 19'/g x 17'/g ) 541-771-5648 Need to get an 541-420-5640. 541-408-6900. luxe Vari-kennel, clean, pure white, needs a and 2 matching endn home. Spayed, very ad in ASAP? tables (shown) 24gA Wanted: $Cash paid for $40 ea. 541-504-5982 Lookat: loving. R e ferences. x 15 n x 24 t/4". Built in Call a Pro You can place it vintage costume jewI ndoor o n ly. $ 2 0 . Taiwan between elry. Top dollar paid for Donate deposit bottles/ 541-480-4882. Whether you need a BendhomeS .Com online at: Gold/Silver.l buy by the cans to local all vol1940-1950, all glass fence fixed,hedges Estate, Honest Artist unteer, non-profit res- Lab mix female 1 yr. covered, in excelfOr COm Plete LiStingSOf www.bendbulletin.com Elizabeth,541-633-7006 cue, to h e l p w / cat FREE to good home lent condition. trimmed or a house spay/neuter vet bills. only. 541-420-5602, Joe. AreaRealEstatefor Sale 541-385-5809 $1900. built, you'll find WANTED: Tobacco Cans for Cats trailer is 541-382-6731 pipes - Briars and professional help in at Bend PETCO (near a+ + kQe ka smoking accessories. Q Applebee's) thru 6/18. The Bulletin's "Call a Fair prices paid. Check out the Pomeranian/long haired D onate Mon-Fri a t Call 541-390-7029 Service Professional" Smith Sign, 1515 NE Chihuahua puppies, classifieds online between 10 am-3 pm. Directory 2nd; or at CRAFT in $180 cash.541-678-7599 iNww.bendbulletin.com Tumalo anytime. Pomeranian 541-385-5809 male Updated daily 541-389-8420. For wolf sable, 10 Items for Free more info/map, visit puppy, w eeks. sweet a n d www.craftcats.org wonderful personality. FREE wooden pallets, $350. 541-480-3160 great for camping/fire282 280 wood, behind bldg 63120 DO YOU HAVE POODLE Pups, Toy. Estate Sales Sales Northwest Bend Nels Anderson Rd, Bend. SOMETHING TO Also, PQMAPQQSSELL So cute! 541-475-3889 Moving-In Sale! Fri-Sat, FOR $500 OR Estate, Garage angd 9-2, 2039 NW PerspecQueensland Heelers I Pe ts 8 Supplies LESS? Standard & Mini, $150 l Collectible Sale - Fri. tive Dr. Shelving, upright In The Bulletin's print and Non-commercial 5-31 thru Sun. 6-2, freezer, tools, TV stand, & up. 541-280-1537 advertisers may online Classifieds. The Bulletin recomwww.rightwayranch.wor I Bam to 4pm. 20375 china,household & misc. place an ad with Pine Vista Dr. 2nd mends extra caution dpress.com oui' when purc h asi driveway on right, off USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! "QUICK CASH Scottish Terrier p uping products or serKnott. CASH ONLY. SPECIAL" Door-to-door selling with pies, AKC, born 4/2. raigslist-Garage vices from out of the 1 week 3 lines 12 shots & wormed, parfast results! It's the easiest area. Sending cash, ~ g k ka! ents on site, Ready checks, or credit inEstate Sale! Electronics, way in the world to sell. Ad must include now! 541-317-5624. f ormation may b e furniture, sporting goods, price of single item The Bulletin Classified subjected to fraud. Veterans! Seni o rs! clothes, tools, books, of $500 or less, or 541-385-5809 For more i nformamusic, art 8 more. Adopt a n ice commultiple items tion about an adverpanion cat from TuIII Fri 5/31-Sat. 6/1, 10am284 whose total does tiser, you may call m alo r e scue, f e e 4pm, 6326 SW Shad, not exceed $500. Sales Southwest Bend the O r egon State waived! Tame, fixed, Crooked River Ranch. FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck Attorney General's shots, ID chip, tested, Call Classifieds at 282 can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, and Office Co n s umer more! Info, photos: 541-385-5809 Sales Northwest Bend All School Garage Protection hotline at www.craftcats.org. a tough VB engine will get the job www.bendbulletin.com Sale, Sat. June 1st, 1-877-877-9392. 541-389-8420. Like us done on the ranch! GARAGE SALE. SAT. B am-1pm. S e v en on Facebook,too! Scho o l , ONLY. 8 - 4 . NW P eaks English Springer Span- Yorkie AKC pups, big Add Crossing. Multi-family. 19660 SW M o uniels, AKC, Tri-colored, eyes, short-nosed, health Downsizing. I n d oor taineer Way. Clothtravel to Sisters guar. Taking deposits, furniture, Adopt a nice cat from Will and outdoor furniture, ing, 6/7 will deliver M$450 ready 6/28. 541-777-7743 household g o ods, Tumalo sa n ctuary, F$500. 509-244-6080 gas BBQ, art work, For an additional kitchen, electronics, PetSmart, or Petco! lighting, ant i ques, s15 per week* Fixed, shots, ID chip, household items, new sporting goods, toys, Furniture & Appliances de c o ratested, more! Sanc- FRENCH Bulldog queen Simm o ns bedding, '40 for 4 weeks * tions and art. Contuary open Sat/Sun Beautyrest mattress/ puppies 2 boys,2 1 -5, other days by b ox s p ring. M a ny tact: Tracy Jenson A1 Washers&Dryers ("Special private partyratesappiy to merchandise @ 541-382-7755. appt. 6 5480 7 8 t h, girls,12 weeks,1st items new or in ex$150 ea. Full warand automotive categories.) Bend. Photos, map at l shots, wormed, crate cellent condition. No ranty. Free Del. Also trained, $750, www.craftcats.org. 286 wanted, used W/D's early birds. 2456 NW 541-389-8420, or like 541-280-7355 Sacagawea Ln. Sales Northeast Bend us on Facebook. 503-382-7948 Family Garage/ Adult b arn/shop/workBed, impeccable cond, People Look for Information Multi ing cats, fixed, shots, Estate Sale, Fri., 8-H3; Ashley memory foam To place your ad, visit www.bendbulletin.com About Products and S at. 9-1. 1 866 N E some friendly, some German Shepherds AKC King mattress & spring or call 385-5809 Services Every Daythrough not. No fee & free de- www.sherman-ranch.us set, purchased Oct 2011, Moonglow Ct. Cash The Bulletin Classiffeds only. No Earlies. livery. 541-389-8420 541-281-6829 $700 obo. 541-504-1908

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541-382-9419.

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chasing products or • or less, or multiple • Comp u ters services from out of I 200 rnds . 380 a uto, items whose total y the area. Sending y $100. 500 rnds 40 S&W, does not exceed T HE B U LLETIN r e • c ash, c h ecks, o r • $250. 200 rnds of 38spl, $500. quires computer adi credit i n f o rmation $140. 541-647-8931 vertisers with multiple may be subjected to .223/5.56 AMMO RemCall Classifieds at ad schedules orthose 541-385-5809 i FRAUD. For more selling multiple sysington UMC 55GR 16 www.bendbulletin.com information about an g boxes of 20-320 rnds tems/ software, to disadvertiser, you may I $220 541-241-0532 close the name of the I call t h e Ore g onI or the term Factory new 300 rds.308 business ' State Attor ney ' 50 rds 308 Win, loaded to $300. "dealer" in their ads. 350 rnds 45acp, i General's O f f i c e M1A specs, 150-168 gr, $200. 541-647-8931 Private party advertisConsumer P rotec- • BTSP $50. 541-410-8704 ers are defined as t ion ho t l in e at I Call The Bulletin At Factory new 700 rnds those who sell one .223/.556 ammo, $500. computer. i 1-877-877-9392. 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com 750 rnds 9mm, $300. 1 800 rn d s 2 2 L R,

9

Brinkman 4-burner BBQ/ Ruger Rancher Mini 14, side burner, exc. cond. excellent cond, includes $75. 503-577-1367 leather sling 8 Deerfield Buying Diamonds scope, (2) 30-rnd clips, /Gold for Cash $1000. 541-526-1973 Saxon's Fine Jewelers Savage Model 110E cal. 541-389-6655 30-06 w/Burnell 9x scope BUYING & m i litary a djustable sling, $380 obo. Call Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-593-7438 before 5pm 541-408-2191. Wanted: Collector BUYING & SE L LING seeks high quality All gold jewelry, silver fishing items. and gold coins, bars, Call 541-678-5753, or rounds, wedding sets, 503-351-2746 class rings, sterling silW inchester Model 9 4 ver, coin collect, vin30-30 pre-64, $500. tage watches, dental 541-279-9538. gold. Bill Fl e ming,

DON'TMISSTHIS

Sofa 8 chair, matching FREE Treadmill! Norset. makes into queen dicTrak Solaris, you hide-a-bed, exc. cond. disassemble & haul. $100. 541-475-2872 541-383-3041

l The Bulleting

0

• B en d

,

The Bulletin

208

A v e .

210

GENERATE SOME excitement i n you r The Bulletin reserves neighborhood! Plan a the right to publish all 264-Snow RemovalEquipment garage sale and don't ads from The Bulletin forget to advertise in newspaper onto The 265 - Building Materials classified! 266- Heating and Stoves Bulletin Internet web541-385-5809. site. 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers Oven / Range, Maytag, 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment hardly used, smooth gerang Central Oregnn trnre l903 top, paid over $1000; 270 - Lost and Found 242 sell $500 (we switched GARAGESALES to gas). 541-316-1775 Exercise Equipment •

ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212 - Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - MedicalEquipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

+.

The Bulletin Building Materials

NOTICE TO

ADVERTISER

Since September 29, 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been c ertified by the O r egon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental Protection A g e n cy (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A cer t ified w oodstove may b e identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will not k n owingly accept advertisi ng for the s ale o f uncertified woodstoves. Fuel & Wood

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud,

The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8'

• Receipts should include name,

phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.

The Bulletin

gerrrng Central Oregon trnte 1903

La Pine Habitat RESTORE AH Year Dependable Building Supply Resale Firewood: Seasoned Lodgepole, Split, Del. Quality at LOW PRICES Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 52684 Hwy 97 for $335. Cash, Check or Credit Card OK. 541-536-3234 541-420-3484. Open to the public.

I i

i

286

Sales Northeast Bend

** FREE ** Garage Sale Klt Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT

IN CLUDES:

• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!" PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at

1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

The Bulletin

Sales Redmond Area I GARAGE SALE! Friday 5 /31, Sat. 6 / 1 9 - 5 . 2318 NW Canyon Dr., Redmond

Moving sale F I NAL! Lots of Xmas, furn., 8, access Sat J une 1 8 12 79 9 W i dgeon

Rd. (Eagle Crest) MOVING SALE Fri. & Sat. 9-5. Ladies golf clubs, dining t able,

g randfather cl o c k , complete twin bed set, paintings, out d oor furn, clothes, yarn. misc.2625 SW 37th. Opens Bam Thurs 5/30, 5/31, 6/1, & 6/2. Bicycle, cattle watering tank 8 a little bit of e verything! 3940 NE Zamia Ave,

Powell Butte Neighborhood Sale! Household, Sales Southeast Bend sport, horse, baby, gardening, clothing items, S/S fridge w/water & ice, travel trailer. Fri-Sat 9-4gas range, couch, tables, Take Williams off 126 at golf clubs, boat rack, c ountry store, left o n small chain saw, & lots of Cornett Lp, follow signs. t reasures. Fri 8 S a t , 7am-2pm. 21050 Wilder- Quilter S a le! Lots of fabric and misc. items. ness Way,off27th. 288

S at., 8-4. 2820 S W

Highland, Redmond.

Find exactly what Sale! M i scellayou are looking for in the Yard neous householdit ems, Sat. 6/1, 9am-3pm, 3130 CLASSIFIEDS Reindeer Ct, Redmond.


E2 WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 325

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

Hay, Grain & Feed

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5500 pm Fri •

Tuesday•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mona Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon Tuess

1st quality grass hay, Irg 3'x3'x8' bales, approx 750lbs ea. $240/ton, barn stored. Patterson Ranch, Sisters, 541-549-3831 Wanted: Irrigated farm ground, under pivot irriqation, i n C e n tral

476

OR. 541-419-2713

Employment Opportunities

Just too many collectibles?

Place a photoin your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

"UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500in total merchandise

7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days..................................

(call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

*Must state prices in ad

C®X

The Bulletin bendbulletin.com

is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 270

Gardening Supplies 8 Equipment

I

BarkTurfsoil.com •

Lost 8 Found

54X-389-9663

Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

REMEMBER: If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society

Found: Woman'sfleece jacket, dropped from baby bike trailer in Drake Park. 541-383-3483.

PROMPT D E LIVERY

Lo s t & Found

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

in Bend 541-382-3537

Redmond,

LOST dog on Commercial St., Madras. Small red, deaf, old. Reward. 541-475-3889, 541-280-3629, or

'10 - 3 lines, 7 days '16 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)

gg

00

Prineville,

Nubian dairy goats, milkers, wethers, doe kids & OR Craft Cats, buck kids. 541-923-7116 541-389-8420. 541-325- 6212 Replacement-quality 541-385-5800 AC WD45 tractor w/wide purebred y e arling Lost kitty Sydney, black 8 To place an ad, call front, power lift 8 steer- Angus heifers, Final white long-hair, white spot • 541-385-5809 A u c tion Sales • ing; needs head gasket. Answer and Danny on chin, microchipped, at or email Boy bloodlines. Good $1450. 541-410-3425 1000 Trails o n 5 / 10. Unclaimed Storage classified 0 bendbulletin.com disposition. Raised in Reward! 541-923-6948 Auction long-established herd. Peoples Warehouse $1000 ea. Del. avail. Ser ng CentalOregonsnce l903 Lost: my mother's sil1425 S. 6th St. 541-480-8096 Madras v er V i c torian e n Klamath Falls, OR. gagement ring with 358 PromptDelivery June 1st at 10:00 am small diamond. ReRock, Sand & Gravel Farmers Column No preview, cash only ward. 541-317-1188. Multiple Colors, Sizes Fresh strawberries! Instant Landscaping Co. Lost women's wristwatch, Picked daily 7 days 10X20 STORAGE 541-389-9663 week. Open Mon. BUILDINGS early May, g old/silver Need to get an ad b and, looks l ike i t ' s Sat., 9-7, Sun. 10-6 for protecting hay, SUPER TOP SOIL braided. Se n t imental in ASAP? Wholesale avail. Adfirewood, livestock www.hershe soilandbark.com value. 503-774-6876 vance orders. etc. $1496 Installed. Screened, soil & comWe pick or U-Pick 541-617-1133. post m i x ed , no Need help fixing stuff? Fax it to 541-322-7253 K Family Farm CCB ¹173684. rocks/clods. High hu- Call A Service Professional 33427 Seven Mile kfjbuildersOykwc.net mus level, exc. f or find the help you need. The Bulletin Classifieds Lane SE, Albany, OR. flower beds, lawns, www.bendbulletin.com Where can you find a 541-286-2164. gardens, straight helping hand? s creened to p s o i l. From contractors to Bark. Clean fill. Deliver/you haul. yard care, it's all here 541-548-3949. in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Tiller -Troy-Built Pony L.. 6 HP rear tine r u n s Professional" Directory great, $250.

For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at

541-447-7178;

Farm Equipment • 8 Machinery

The Bulletin

-

$1000

Reward

Lost10 lb. Dog

541-633-7017

"Chester"

c

Chihuahua/Terrier Mix White w/dark brown markings & Snaggle Tooth. ESCAPEDfrom Kindred Spirit Pet Care between Bend & Redmond on May 7th. (He might still have a collar on from Kindred Spirit)

FOUND Cell phone at H illside do g pa r k , 541-389-9205.

Found white envelope on Deschutes River T rail, 5/24. C al l t o identify, 541-410-9118

II

476

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

The Bulletin

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

r

TELEFUNDRAISING

1-503-378-4320

For Equal Opportunity L aws: Oregon B u reau of Labor & Industry, C i vil Rights Division, 971-673-0764

If you have any questions, concerns or comments, contact: Classified Department The Bulletin 541-385-5809

The Bulletin DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW? Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day! 541-385-5809. VIEW the Classifieds at: www.bendbulletin.com

I Recommends extra

caution when pur- I products or I I chasing services from out of I I the area. SendingI c ash, c hecks, o r

I credit i n f o rmationI I may be subjected to

FRAUD. I more informaI For tion about an adver- I I tiser, you may call I the Oregon State I Attorney General'sI Co n s umerI I Office Protection hotline at I

I 1-877-877-9392.

LTl ie Bulletin

I

J

8 DEHEcs@

The Bulletin

Qrj Ij

Advertising Account Executive The Bulletin is looking for a professional and driven Sales and Marketing person to help our customers grow their businesses with an expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of m edia sales experience is preferable, but we will train the right candidate. The p o sition in c ludes a com p etitive compensation package including benefits, and rewards an aggressive, customer focused salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Email your resume, cover letter and salary history to: Jay Brandt Advertising Director jbrandt@bendbulletin.com OI'

drop off your resume in person at 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Or mail to PO Box6020, Bend, OR 97708; No phone inquiries please.

528

Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recom-

mends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392. BANK TURNED YOU

DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200.

EOE / Drug Free Workplace

Housekeeper 8 HouseWeb Developer keeping staff. Full time Apply in person at Sugarloaf Mountain Motel Are you a technical star who can also commufront desk, 62980 N nicate effectively with non-technical execuMONEY:We buy tives and employees? Would you like to work LOCAL Highway 97, in Bend. secured trustdeeds & hard, play hard in beautiful Bend, OR, the recnote,some hard money Housekeeping reation capital of the state? Then we'd like to loans. Call Pat Kellev Seasonal Housekeep- talk to you. 541-382-3099 ext.13. e rs N eeded. M u st work weekends and Our busy media company that publishes nuholidays. M i n imum merous web and mobile sites seeks an experiwage while training enced developer who is also a forward thinker, then to p iece rate. creative problem solver, excellent communiMust have r e liable cator, and self-motivated professional. We are transportation, ODL, redesigning all of our websites within the next current Ins, over 18 couple of years and want you in on the ground years of age. Please floor. call Car o l I 541-749-1296; Fluencywith PHP, HTML5, CSS3, jQuery and Village Properties JavaScript is a must. Experience integrating You know what Sunriver third-party solutions and social media applicathey say about tions required. Desired experience includes: Parts Clerk "one man's trash". Seeking experienced XML/JSON, MySQL, Joomla, Java, responP/T Parts Clerk for RV sive web design, Rails, WordPress. Top-notch There's a whole pile company. Competitive skills with user interface and graphic design an pay. W eekends re- added plus. of "treasure" here! quired. Please send Background in the media industry desired but For Sale, Lowline Resume' to not required. This is a full-time position with Angus and Dexter's bcrvhireO mail.com benefits. If you've got what it takes, e-mail a Heifers. (pregnant or or apply in person at with calf) NO steers 63500 N Hwy 97, Bend. cover letter, resume, and portfolio/work sample links a n d/o r re p ository ( GitHub) t o available except for Remember.... resume © wescompapers.com. cow/calf pairs. Thousands ofadsdaily A dd your web a d in print andonline. Grass fed/raised. dress to your ad and This posting is also on the web at www.bendReasonable prices. readers on The bulletin.com Must sell as Bulletin' s web site I am retiring. s' • . will be able to click EOE/Drug Free Workplace Leo 541-306-0357 through automatically Wanted: Irrigated farm to your site. ground, under pivot ir- RESTAURANT rigation, i n C e n tralDomino's Pizza, Bend OR. 541-419-2713 hiring for Ass't Mgr. $9Want to b u y A l falfa,$12/hr. Apply: 235 SE grass and grain hay, Y ew Lane. (Job I D bae) standing, in C entral ¹986736 W o rkSource Call54I385 5809tcpramoteyourservrce Advertisefor 28daysstarting at 'lt0Irtsstecoltaianewiestableonoawe Oregon; 541-388-6070) Ore. 541-419-2713

Where buyers meet sellers

Clas'sifjeds

Lo s t & Found

Found a furniture item on Brookswood Ave. in Bend on Sat. 5/25. To cl a im , ema i l coveredinmud23O gm ail.com

We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at

FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities

Employment Opportunities

Tele-funding for •Meals On Wheels, •Defeat Diabetes Foundation, opportunity, p l e ase •Veterans (OPVA). investigate thoroughly. Seniors and all others welcome. Use extra caution when applying for jobs onMon-Thur. 5-9 p.m line and never pro$8.95/hour. vide personal information to any source you may not have re- Call 541-382-8672 searched and deemed to be reputable. Use FIND IT) extreme caution when BUY IT! r esponding to A N Y online e m p loyment SELL IT! ad from out-of-state. The Bulletin Classifieds

345

Livestock & Equipment

541-923-0882

Can be found on these pages:

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

Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. CAUTION READERS: Sell them in published in "EmFr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. The Bulletin Classifieds Ads ployment Opportunit ies" i n c lude e m ployee and Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • 541-385-5809 i ndependent po s i to b u y A l falfa, tions. Ads for posiSaturday • • • •. . . . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri.Want grass and grain hay, tions that require a fee standing, in C entral or upfront investment must be stated. With • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Ore. 541-419-2713 Sunday. • • • • any independent job

a

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fg,tF~>JIP) JI,J j Jlq tJjjJ~ jg

• He is our disabled daughter's Service Dog and is microchipped. PLEASE HELP BRING CHESTER HOME!!! 831-241-6458 • 831-241-481 7 831-277-3918 • 619-871-7279

Building/Contracting

your web source for STATEWIDE classifieds

30BSI REAL ESTAT E I CLASSIFIEDS edS.oregOn.Com u iS a neW SuppOrtedby OregOn neWSpaperS, "CLaSSifi WebSite dediCated to bringing CLaSSified LiStingS frOm arOund the StateOf OregOn tOgether on One eaSy-tO-uSe WebSite.

From jobsto homes and investment properties,you'Llfi nd the fastest n

grOWing CLaSSifiedS SeCtiOn iS "ClaSSifiedS.Oregon.COm

gROWQE THEENT[RE ( <classifieds. sTATE OF0REG0N Ore Oi

.Com

Handyman

Landscaping/Yard Care j

NOTICE: Oregon state I DO THAT! Nelson law req u ires any- Home/Rental repairs Landscaping & one who co n t ractsSmall jobs to remodels Maintenance for construction work Honest, guaranteed Serving Central to be licensed with the work. CCB¹151573 Oregon Since 2003 C onstruction Co n - Dennis 541-317-9768 Residental/Commercial tractors Board (CCB). A n active lice n se ERIC REEVE HANDY Sprinkler means the contractor SERVICES. Home 8 Activation/Repair i s bonded an d i n - Commercial Repairs, Back Flow Testing Carpentry-Painting, s ured. Ver if y t h e Pressure-washing, contractor's CCB Maintenance Honey Do's. On-time • Thatch & Aerate c ense through t h e promise. Senior CCB Cons u mer • Spring Clean up Discount. Work guar- •Weekly Mowing Website www.hirealicensedcontractoc anteed. 541-389-3361 & Edging com or 541-771-4463 •Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly or call 503-378-4621. Bonded 8 Insured Maintenance The Bulletin recomCCB¹181595 •Bark, Rock, Etc. mends checking with the CCB prior to con- Just bought a new boat? Landsca in ~ tracting with anyone. Sell your old one in the •Landscape classifieds! Ask about our Some other t rades Construction also req u ire addi- Super Seller rates! •Water Feature 541-385-5809 tional licenses a nd Installation/Maint. certifications. •Pavers Landscaping/Yard Care •Renovations Concrete Construction •Irrigations Installation N OTICE: OREGON Landscape ContracSenior Discounts JJ 8 B Construction, tors Law (ORS 671) Bonded & Insured quality concrete work. r equires a l l bu s i 541-815-4458 Over 30 Years Exp. nesses that advertise LCB¹8759 Sidewalks; RV pads; to p e r form L a n dDriveways; Color 8, SPRING CLEAN-UP! nstruction Aeration/Dethatching Stamp wor k a v a il. scape C o incl u des:Weekly/one-time service Also Hardwood floor- which lanting, deck s , avail. Bonded, insured. ing a t aff o rdable p fences, arbors, Free Estimates! prices. 541-279-3183 w ater-features, a n d COLLINS Lawn Maint CCB¹190612 installation, repair of Ca/i 541-480-9714 irrigation systems to • D ebris Removal ALLEN REINSCH be licensed with the Yard maintenance & Landscape ContracJUNK BE GONE t ors B o a rd . Th i s clean-up, thatching, I Haul Away FREE 4-digit number is to be plugging 8 much more! Call 541-536-1 294 For Salvage. Also included in all adverCleanups 8 Cleanouts tisements which indi- Maverick Landscaping Mel, 541-389-8107 cate the business has Mowing, weedeating,yd a bond, insurance and detail., chain saw work, workers c ompensa- bobcat excv., etc! LCB Get your tion for their employ- ¹8671 541-923-4324 business ees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 Painting/Wall Coveringj or use our website: a RO W I N G www.lcb.state.or.us to WESTERN PAINTING check license status CO. Richard Hayman, with an ad in before co n t racting a semi-retired paintThe Bulletin's with t h e bu s iness. ing contractor of 45 "Call A Service Persons doing land- years. S m al l J obs scape m aintenance Welcome. Interior & Professional" do not require a LCB Exterior. c c b ¹ 5184. Directory license. 541-388-6910



E4 WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DAILY BRI DG E C LU B

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

NEw YORK TIMES CROSSwORD wiII shor tz

w ednesda y,May29,2013

ACROSS

The right stuff

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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services

"I took a dim view when I bid only six hearts," Unlucky Louie told me. "If my partner had held the queen of diamonds instead of the queen of clubs, seven hearts would be a good contract." In apenny game, Louie went down at six. He took the ace of clubs, drew trumps, and led the K-A and a third diamond, hoping for a 3-3 break. West took the jack and led another club. Louie ruffed East's king but eventually lost a spade finesse with dummy's jack. "You did well to stop low," I told Louie gravely.

spade and he bids two diamonds. What do you say? ANSWER: To be able to go back and pass one heart might be nice. The storm warnings of a misfit are up. Though you may have a playable contractsomewhere, you can't aff ord to look for it and risk a disaster. Pass. When the hands fit poorly and you have no compensating high-card strength, stop bidding. South dealer Both sides vulnerable

NORTH 4sAJ4 9 Q854 0 A65 2 4Q5

RUFF-SLUFF Louie's small slam was cold with a loser-on-loser play (my topic this week). After he draws trumps, he Mes the top diamonds, then leads dummy's queen of clubs. When East's king covers,Louie discards his last diamond, and East must lead a spade from his queen or concede a ruff-sluff. If the diamonds split 3-3, Louie could still set up a n e xtra diamond trick. As to the bidding, never base decisions on the assumption that your partner will have just the right cards. He won't.

WEST 475 963

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4 J 109 4 3

SOUTH 4K82 9 AK J 1092 0 K43 4A South I s2 3 4

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DAILY QUESTION

EAST 4 Q 109 6 3 Q7 C 108 4K876 2

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East Pass Pass

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Youhold: 4sQ 109 6 3 Q 7 Opening lead — 4 J 10 8 4 K 8 7 6 2. Your partner opens one heart, you respond one (C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, lnc.

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

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Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY MAY 29 2013 E5

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

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870

875

Motorcycles & Accessories

Boats & Accessories

Watercraft

watercrafts.

Road King Classic

2000 22K mi, 1550

stage II EFI, SEI2 cam, new heads/Ig valves, Revtech (2) 2000 A rctic C at digital fuel optimizer, Z L580's EFI with n e w Samson true dual covers, electric start w/ headers, Hooker reverse, low miles, both mufflers, HD tourexcellent; with new 2009 Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, ing seat/handlebars, backrests, lots of drive off/on w/double tilt, extras, excellent lots of accys. Selling due cond.. $9200 obo to m edical r e asons. Call for more info $6000 all. 541-536-8130 541-788-3004 Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, short track, variable exhaust valves, electric s tart, r e verse, manuals, rec o rds, new spare belt, cover, heated hand g rips, nice, fast, $999. Call Snowmobiles

Tom, 541-385-7932, • Yamaha 750 1999

Mountain Max, $1400.

• 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, $1000.

• Zieman 4-place trailer, SOLD! All in good condition. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.

Victory TC 2002, runs great many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $ 6500 OBO F o r m ore i nfo. c a l l 54 I -647-4232 865

860

634

750

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Redmond Homes

Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks.

00~0~ 630

Rooms for Rent

Looking for your next

emp/oyee?

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000

MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541 -383-931 3

Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

Room for rent, Redmond, very nice location, $500 + small utility/month. 541-279-9538.

Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro 8 fridge. Utils 8 l i nens. New owners. $145-$165/wk 541-382-1885

X'ID~

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

ATVs

Motorcycles & Accessories Suzuki Ei er 2004

Quadrunner ATV, automatic, new tires, 2215 miles, covered dog carrier platform, nylon dust cover, set of 4 snow chains. $2899. 2002 Harley Davidson Contact Larry at Heritage Softail - Fl, em971-678-3196 or erald green 8 black, lots nortonjack@comcast.net of chrome 8 extras, 9K mi, perfect cond. $9995. Call 503-999-7356 (cell) BMW K1200 GT, 2007,

crystal gray m etallic, less than 20K mi, perfect cond, large 43 liter tour box, new Michelin P3 tires, factory battery charger/maintainer. $14,500. 541-550-6809

881

Travel Trailers •

Ads published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorized personal

oQ00

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

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 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

Q

860

Yamaha Banshee 2001 custom built 350 motor race-ready, lots of extras $4999/obo 541-647-8931 870

Harley Davidson SoftTail De l uxe 2 0 0 7 , Boats & Accessories 634 745 white/cobalt, w / pasApt./Multiplex NE Bend senger kit, Vance & Homes for Sale Find It in Hines muffler system ** **No Application Fee 8 kit, 1045 mi., exc. 14' 1982 Valco River 6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, The Bulletin Classifieds! 2 bdrm, 1 bath, c ond, $16,9 9 9, Sled, 70 h.p., Fish4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, 541-385-5809 $530 8 $540 w/lease. view. By owner, ideal for 541-389-9188. Finder. Older boat but Carports included! extended family. Harley Davidson Sports- price includes trailer, 773 $590,000. 541-390-0886 ter, 2001, 1200cc, 9,257 3 wheels and tires. All FOX HOLLOW APTS. Acreages $1 5 00 ! Cal l m iles, $ 5 7 50 . Ca l l f or (541) 383-3152 NOTICE 541-416-8811 Michael, 541-310-9057 Cascade Rental All real estate adverManagement. Co. tised here in is sub- CHECK YOUR AD 15' older Seaswirl, Harley Davidson XL 2210 NE Holliday,3bdrm, ject to t h e F e deral Please check your ad 35HP motor, cover, 1200 2007, Sports2 bath, new carpet, gas F air H o using A c t , on the first day it runs ter Low. Like new, d epth f inder, a s heat, fireplace, quiet; no which makes it illegal to make sure it is cor- only 2800 mi., major sorted live v e sts, smoking. $800 mo; to advertise any pref- rect. Sometimes in- upgrades and addiOBO. $1400. 541-317-0867 erence, limitation or s tructions over t h e tions. Helmets and 541-548-7645 or discrimination based phone are misunder- Jackets PUBLISHER'S i n c luded. 541-408-3811. on race, color, relistood and an e rror NOTICE sex, handicap, can occurin your ad. $6500.503-508-2367 All real estate adver- gion, familial status or natising in this newspa- tional origin, or inten- If this happens to your Just bought a new boat? 15' older Seaswirl, ad, please contact us Sell your old one in the 35HP motor, cover, per is subject to the tion to make any such F air H o using A c t preferences, l i mita- the first day your ad classifieds! Ask about our d epth f inder, a s sorted live v e sts, Super Seller rates! which makes it illegal tions or discrimination. appears and we will 541-385-5809 $1400. OBO. to a d v ertise "any We will not knowingly be happy to fix it as 541-548-7645 or preference, limitation accept any advertis- s oon a s w e can . Harley Heritage 541-408-3811. or disc r imination ing for r eal e state Deadlines are: WeekSoftail, 2003 based on race, color, which is in violation of days 11:00 noon for $5,000+ in extras, religion, sex, handi- this law. All persons next day, Sat. 11:00 $2000 paint job, cap, familial status, are hereby informed a.m. for Sunday and 30K mi. 1 owner, Monday. marital status or naFor more information all dwellings ad541 -385-5809 tional origin, or an in- that please call vertised are available 16' Thank you! O ld T o w n tention to make any 541-385-8090 an equal opportu- The Bulletin Classified Camper C a n oe, such pre f e rence, on or 209-605-5537 nity basis. The Bulleexc. cond, $ 900. limitation or discrimi- tin Classified nation." Familial sta541-312-8740 tus includes children 775 Say "goodbuy" under the age of 18 Manufactured/ Want to impress the living with parents or to that unused Mobile Homes legal cus t o dians, relatives? Remodel item by placing it in pregnant women, and your home with the Limited 103 2011, people securing cus- The Bulletin Classifieds FACTORY SPECIAL Harley many extras, stage 1 8 air help of a professional New Home, 3 bdrm, tody of children under cushion seat. 18,123 mi, $46,500 finished from The Bulletin's 18. This newspaper $20,990. 541-306-0289 on your site. "Call A Service will not knowingly ac5 41 -385-580 9 J and M Homes cept any advertising Professional" Directory 541-548-5511 for real estate which is 746 in violation of the law. 17.5' Glastron 2002, O ur r e a ders ar e Northwest Bend Homes The Bulletin is your hereby informed that Chevy eng., Volvo all dwellings adver- Beautiful NW cottage, E mploy m e n t outdrive, open bow, HD Fat Boy 1996 tised in this newspa- c lose to C OCC & stereo, sink/live well, Completely customized shops Master bdrm w/ per are available on Marketplace w/glastron tr a i ler, Must see and hear to an equal opportunity large walk-in closet. incl. b oa t c o v e r, appreciate. 2012 basis. To complain of Upstairs perfect for Like new, $ 8 500. Call Award Winner. family room, 2nd bdrm discrimination cal l 541-447-4876 $17,000 obo. or office. Large attic 5 41- 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 HUD t o l l -free at 541-548-4807 for storage or easy 1-800-877-0246. The toll f re e t e l ephone conversion to l i ving HD Screaming Eagle to advertise. number for the hear- space. Oversized gaElectra Glide 2005, ing im p aired is rage w/ space for your 103" motor, two tone car, skis & k a y ak. www.bendbulletin.com 1-800-927-9275. candy teal, new tires, Comes with all appli. 23K miles, CD player, Advertise your car! i ncluding W/D. A p hydraulic clutch, ex- 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 Add A Picture! pointments on weekVolvo Penta, 270HP, cellent condition. Reach thousands oi readers! ends only. $218,000 Serving Central Oregon since 19IB low hrs., must see, Call 541-385-5809 Highest offer takes it. John 503-804-4681. The Bulletin Ctassifieds 541-480-8080. $15,000, 541-330-3939

The Bulletin

Trav el T railers RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...

For

" boats" please s e e 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L Class 870. Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 ~541-385-5809 hp Bowrider w/depth finder, radio/ CD player, rod holders, full canvas, EZ Loader trailer, exclnt cond, $11,500. 707-484-3518 (Bend) Motorhomes •

Fleetwood 10' Tent Travel Trailer, 2004 1 queen bed, 1 regular bed + dining area bed; gas stovetop, 2.5 cu. ft. refrigerator, portable toilet, awning/grass mat, BBQ, receiver for bike carrier. Original owner, m otivated t o se l l ! $5500. 541-389-2426

The Bulletin

18.7' Sea Ray Monaco, 1984, 185hp, V6 MerBlue Ox Tow Bar Cruiser, full canvas, life $400. vests, bumpers, water 619-733-8472 skis, swim float, extra prop 8 more. EZ Loader Fleetwood 31' T i o ga trailer, never in saltwater, Class C 1997, 25.000 always garaged, very mi. V-10, Onan 4000 clean, all maint. records. g enerator 275 h r s . No leaks. Excellent $5500. 541-389-7329 tires. $25.000

You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

541-548-5254

4on'] LaS]! Streamliner 30' 1963, good condition, com p lete, ready to go. $2000. 541-306-0383

541-447-3425

Fleetwood 31' Wildern ess Gl 1 9 99 , 1 2 ' 'iI slide, 2 4 ' aw n ing, queen bed, FSC, outside shower E-Z lift 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, Warrior Toy s tabilizer hitch l i k e Weekend inboard motor, g r eat L-. Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, new, been stored. cond, well maintained, Fleetwood D i s covery fuel station, exc cond. $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 40' 2003, diesel mo- $1 0,950. 707-688-4253 sleeps 8, black/gray i nterior, u se d 3X , torhome w/all $19,999 firm. options-3 slide outs, 541-389-9188 satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, 1 8' Seaswirl 1984 etc. 3 2 ,000 m i l es. open bow, V6, en Wintered in h e ated Looking for your gine 8 outdrive re shop. $89,900 O.B.O. next employee? built, extras, $2495 541-447-8664 Place a Bulletin help Jayco Eagle 541-546-6920 wanted ad today and 26.6 ft long, 2000 reach over 60,000 readers each week. Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, Your classified ad awning, Eaz-Lift will also appear on stabilizer bars, heat bendbulletin.com 8 air, queen which currently reJayco Seneca 34', 2007. walk-around bed, ceives over 1.5 mil19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O 28K miles, 2 slides, Du- very good condition, lion page views evramax diesel, 1 owner, $10,000 obo. new upholstery, new elec excellent cond, $84,995; ery month at no tronics, winch, much more 541-595-2003 extra cost. Bulletin Trade? 541-546-6920 $9500. 541-306-0280 Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 The Bulletin's or place your ad "Call A Service on-line at Professional" Directory 20.5' 2004 Bayliner bendbulletin.com is all about meeting 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow, your needs. Check out the exc. cond with very classifieds online Keystone Sprinter Call on one of the low hours, lots of 31', 2008 www.bendbuffefin.com extras incl. tower, professionals today! King size walkUpdated daily Bimini & custom around bed, electric trailer, $17,950. awning, (4) 6-volt 541-389-1413 batteries, plus many Fifth Wheels more extras, never smoked in, first owners, $19,900.

eeI

WOW!

©©© 20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530

21' Bluewater Mirage

MUST SELL.

NATIONAL DOLPHIN

37' 1997, loaded! Corian surfaces, wood floors (kitchen), 2-dr fridge, convection microwave, Vizio TV & roof satellite, walk-in shower, new queen bed. White l e ather hide-a-bed & chair, all r ecords, no pets or smoking. $28,450. Call 541-771-4800

Worth $8315Will sacrifice for $4,900 for quick sell. To see video, go to: www.u2pro.com/95 Rexhall Aerbus 1998 30' 541-815-9981 loaded, orig. owner, garaged, no smoke/ 21' Crownline 215 hp in/outboard e n g i ne pets, exc. cond. 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin $15,000. 541-388-0773.

sleeps 2/3 p eople, portable toilet, exc. cond. Asking $8,000. OBO. 541-388-8339 Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fish-

ing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please see Class 875. 541-385-5809

The Bulletin

Call 541-410-5415 Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by Carriage, 4 slides, inverter, satellite sys, fireplace, 2 flat screen TVs. $54,950 Orbit 21'2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual

batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CON-

DITION. All accessories are included. $1 7,500 OBO. 541-382-9441

RV

CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work... You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

541-480-3923

MONTANA 3585 2008,

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000. 541-420-3250

Find exactly what 29 7LK Hi t c h you are looking for in the NuWa Hiker 20 07, All seaCLASSIFIEDS sons, 3 s l ides, 32' perfect for snow birds, P ioneer 23 ' 19 0 F Q l eft k i t chen, re a r 2006, EZ Lift, $9750. lounge, extras, must 541-548-1096 see. $28,000 Pnneville 541-447-5502 days 8 541-447-1641 eves.

if'ii/ qdk

SerVIng Central OIegan SinCe 1903

People Look for Information Prowler 2009 Extreme About Products and E dition. Model 2 7 0 Services Every Daythrough ilgrim 27', 2007 5 t h RL, 2 slides, oppos- Pw heel 1 s l ide A C The BulletinClassifieds ing in living area, ent. TV,full awning, excelcenter, sep. bedroom, The Bulletin Classifieds lent shape, $23,900. 2 new e x tra t i res, 541-350-8629 hitch, bars, sway bar included. P r o-Pack, 541-385-5809 anti-theft. Good cond, RV 'til CONSIGNMENTS c lean. Req . WANTED 4/20/15. $19, 9 00. Southwind 35.5' Triton We Do The Work ... 541-390-1122 2008,V10, 2 slides, Du You Keep The Cash! skslraOmsn.com pont UV coat, 7500 mi On-site credit Bought new at approval team, $132,913; Tick, Tock Beautiful h o u seboat asking $91,000. web site presence. $85,000. 541-390-4693 We Take Trade-Ins! Call 503-982-4745 Tick, Tock... www.centraloregon Free Advertising. houseboat.com BIG COUNTRY RV ...don't let time get l • • -~ Bend: 541-330-2495 GENERATE SOME exaway. Hire a Redmond: citement in your neig541-548-5254 professional out borhood. Plan a ga.I rage sale and don't of The Bulletin's Suncruiser34' forget to advertise in Winnebaqo TURN THE PAGE "Call A Service 2004, only 34K, loaded, classified! 385-5809. too much to list, ext'd For More Ads Professional" warr. thru 2014, $54,900 The Bulletin Dennis, 541-589-3243 Directory today! SerI mg Central Oregan SinCe 1903

What are you looking for? You'll find it in

The Bulletin

Where Buyersand SellersMeet egoies oee~ spor~u . tho~orho P>oK~P~ ) s S,pV'~ ' y d e s . P,oa g o) 0 ~o 0®o>~ <4<aAers pg',, qrave I/Ifff l h~

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The Bulletin

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

O.


E6 WEDNESDAY, IVIAY 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN • s

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

v

Antique & Classic Autos

4

935

975

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Toyota Venza 2012 XLE AWD wagon PROJECT CARS:Chevy $30, 9 8 8 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & ¹ 031994 Chevy Coupe 1950 BOATS &RVs AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION rolling chassis's $1750 908 - Aircraft, Parts andService 805 - Misc. Items ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Oregon 916Trucks and Heavy Equipment 850 - Snowmobiles complete car, $ 1949; ANtnSoNrce Corvette Convertible — BKCadillac Series 61 1950, 860 - MotorcyclesAndAccessories 925 - Utility Trailers 541-598-3750 2 004, 6 spe e d . • 2 dr. hard top, complete aaaoregonautosource.com L e g al Notices 927 - Automotive Trades 865 - ATVs Spiral Gray Metallic w /spare f r on t cl i p ., 929 - Automotive Wanted with tan leather inte870 - Boats & Accessories $3950, 541-382-7391 LEGAL NOTICE 940 931 Automotive Parts, Service rior. On l y 1 , 2 00 CIRCUIT COURT OF 875 - Watercraft Vans miles on new Michand Accessories O REGO N FO R 880 - Motorhomes elin run f lat t ires, 932- Antique andClassic Autos C OUNTY. DEU T Ford 1-ton extended van, Corsa exhaust. Lots 881 - Travel Trailers S CHE BAN K N A 933 - Pickups 1995, 460 engine, set-up of extras. Only 25k 882 - Fifth Wheels T IONAL TRUST 935- Sport Utility Vehicles f or co n tractor wi t h miles. $28 , 5 00. COMPANY, 885 - Canopies andCampers AS shelves & bins, fold-down (541) 410-2870. 940 - Vans T RUSTEE FOR 890- RVsfor Rent T-BIRD 1988 S p ort ladder rack, tow hitch, 975 - Automobiles A MERICAN H O M E coupe, 34,400 orig. 180K miles, new tranny & M ORTGAG E AS932 mi., A/C, PW, PL, new brakes; needs catalytic SETS TRUST 2007-5, converter & new windtires/brakes/hoses/ 0 Antique & MORTGAGE-BACKE belts & exhausts. Tan shield. $2200. Classic Autos 541-220-7808 D PASS-THROUGH w/tan interior. CERTIFICATES SEImmaculate! $4,995. Ford Aerostar 1994 2007-5, RIES Days 541-322-4843, Eddie Bauer Edition Plaintiff, v. TROY M. Eves 541-383- 5043 CORVETTE COUPE Fully Loaded, WILLIAMS; A ND Glasstop 2010 Mint Condition! PERSONS OR PAR1921 Model T Grand Sport -4 LT I Runs Excellent! TIES UNK N OWN Delivery Truck loaded, clear bra CLAIMING ANY $3000. hood 8 fenders. Restored 8 Runs 908 Ford Galaxie 500 1 963, 541-350-1201 RIGHT, TITLE LIEN New Michelin Super $9000. 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, Aircraft, Parts O R I N TEREST IN Sports, G.S. floor 541-389-8963 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & THE PRO P E RTY & Service mats, 17,000 miles, radio (orig),541-419-4989 VW BUG 1972 rebuilt DESCRIBED IN THE Crystal red. eng, new paint, tires, 1952 Ford Customline Ford Mustang Coupe COMPLAINT HEREIN $45,000. Coupe, project car, flat- 1966, original owner, chrome whls, 30 mpg, IN, Defendant(s). NO. 503-358-1164. head V-8, 3 spd extra V8, automatic, great $3800. 541-233-7272 1 3CV0023. SUM AFR parts, & materials, $2000 —g MONS BY PUBLICAarrer ' shape, $9000 OBO. Lumina Van 1 9 95, sgll lg obo. 541-410-7473 TION. TO:TROY M. 530-515-8199 X LNT c o nd., w e l l W ILLIAMS; A ND cared for. $2000 obo. Chevrolet Cameo PERSONS OR PAR1/3 interest in Columbia 541-382-9835. Ford Ranchero Pickup, 1957, TIES UNK N O WN 400, $150,000 located 1979 © Sunriver. H o urly disassembled, frame CLAIMING ANY BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS with 351 Cleveland powder coated, new rental rate (based upon VW Convertible 1977, Search the area's most Ford Taurus Wagon 2004, RIGHT, TITLE LIEN modified engine. approval) $775. Also: front sheet metal, cab new tires & brakes, re- comprehensive listing of 120K miles, loaded, in O R I NTEREST I N Body is in S21 hangar avail. for restored. $9995 firm. PRO P E RTY built engine, newer paint, classified advertising... nice s hape, $ 4 200. THE Call for more info, excellent condition, sale, o r le a s e @ DESCRIBED IN THE $9500. 541-388-5591 real estate to automotive, 541-815-9939 541-306-9958 (cell) $2500 obo. $15/day or $325/mo. COMPLAINT HEREIN merchandise to sporting 541-420-4677 541-948-2963 IN. INTHE NAME OF goods. Bulletin Classifieds THE STATE OF ORPickups appear every day in the EGON: Y o u are print or on line. h ereby required t o Call 541-385-5809 appear and d efend www.bendbulletin.com against th e a l legations contained in the Nissan Sentra 2012 Chevy C-20 Pickup Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 Complaint filed 1 /3 interest i n w e llservmg ce rial oregonsnce a03 Full warranty, 35mpg, 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; engine, power everya gainst you i n t h e equipped IFR Beech Bo520 per tank, all power. thing, new paint, 54K Chevy 2500 HD 2003 above entitled pro975 $13,500. 541-788-0427 nanza A36, new 10-550/ auto 4-spd, 396, model /all options, orig. original m i les, runs 4 WD w o r k tru c k , ceeding within thirty prop, located KBDN. CST Automobiles owner, $19,950, great, excellent condi- 140,000 miles, $7000 $65,000. 541-419-9510 (30) days from the 541-923-6049 tion in 8 out. Asking obo. 541-408-4994. Porsche Carrera 911 date of service of this Buick LeSabre Cus- 2003 convertible with $8,500. 541-480-3179 Summons upon you. Chevy 1955 PROJECT tom 2004, rare 75k, hardtop. 50K miles, If you fail to appear car. 2 door wgn, 350 G MC Sierra S L T new factory Porsche $6000, worth way and defend this matsmall block w/Weiand 2006 - 1500 Crew motor 6 mos ago with more. leather, ter within thirty (30) dual quad tunnel ram Cab 4x4, Z71, exc. 18 mo factory warheated seats, nice days from the date of with 450 Holleys. T-10 cond., 82 k m i les, ranty remaining. wheels. Good tires, publication specified 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, $19,900. $37,500. 30 mpg, white. herein along with the 1/5th interest in 1973 Weld Prostar wheels, 541-322-6928 541-408-0763 Convinced? Call Bob r equired filing f e e , extra rolling chassis + Ford Thunderbird Cessna 150 LLC 541-318-9999 Deutsche Bank Na150hp conversion, low extras. $6500 for all. 1955, new white soft 541-389-7669. tional Trust Company, time on air frame and top, tonneau cover Buick Century Limited Toyota Camrysr as Trustee for Ameriengine, hangared in Call The Bulletin At and upholstery. New 2000, r un s g r e at, 1984, SOLD; can Home Mortgage Bend. Excellent perchrome. B e a utiful I nternational Fla t beautiful car. $3400. 541-385-5809 Assets Trust 2007-5, 1985 SOLD; formance & affordCar. $25,0 0 0 . 541-312-3085 Bed Pickup 1963, 1 Mortgage-Backed Place Your Ad Or E-Mail able flying! $6,500. 1986 parts car 541-548-1422 ton dually, 4 s pd. Pass-Through Certifi541-382-6752 At: www.bendbulletin.com only one left! $500 trans., great MPG, Buick LeSabre 1996. cates Series 2007-5 Call for details, could be exc. wood Good condition, will apply to the Court 541-548-6592 hauler, runs great, 121,000 miles. f or th e r e l ief d e new brakes, $1950. Non-smoker manded in the Com541-41 9-5480. $2200 OBO. plaint. The first date 541-954-5193. of publication is May Looking for your 8, 2013. NOTICE TO next employee? Chevy Wagon 1957, GMC 1966, too many DEFENDANTS: T itan 4 x 4 2 0 0 7 , Place a Bulletin help Buick Lucerne CXS 1974 Bellanca extras to list, reduced to 4-dr., complete, R EAD THESE P A Off-Road, beautiful wanted ad today and 2006 sedan, V8, 1730A $7,000 OBO / trades. $7500 obo. Serious buyPERS CAREFULLY! inside and out, mereach over 60,000 Northstar 4.6L eners only. 541-536-0123 Please call You must "appear" in tallic black/charcoal readers each week. gine, silver, black 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 541-389-6998 this case or the other leather, loaded, 69k Your classified ad leather, new $36,000; 180 mph, excellent TURN THE PAGE side will win automatiwill also appear on mi., $19,995 obo. Chrysler 300 C o upe 92K miles, 18" wheels condition, always c ally. T o "appear" For More Ads 541-410-6183. bendbulletin.com & much more, best 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, hangared, 1 owner you must file with the which currently reauto. trans, ps, air, The Bulletin offer over $7900. for 35 years. $60K. court a legal paper ceives over 1.5 milBob, 541-318-9999 frame on rebuild, recalled a "motion" or 935 lion page views painted original blue, "answer." The "moIn Madras, every month at original blue interior, Sport Utility Vehicles tion" or "answer" must no extra cost. Bullecall 541-475-6302 original hub caps, exc. be given to the court tin Classifieds chrome, asking $9000 Ford Explorer 4x4, 2002, clerk or administrator Chevy Malibu 2009 Get Results! Call or make offer. clean, has tow pkg, low Executive Hangar w ithin t h irty d a y s 43k miles, loaded, 385-5809 or place miles. 760-413-9546 541-385-9350 at Bend Airport (KBDN) a long with t h e r e studs on rims/ your ad on-line at 60' wide x 50' deep, GMC Vi fon 1971, Only q uired filing fee. I t Look at: Asking $12,900. bendbulletin.com $19,700! Original low w/55' wide x 17' high bi541-610-6834. must be i n p r o per Bendhomes.com mile, exceptional, 3rd fold dr. Natural gas heat, form and have proof owner. 951-699-7171 offc, bathroom. Adjacent for Complete Listings of o f service o n t h e to Frontage Rd; great The Buiietin recoml Area Real Estate for Sale plaintiff's attorney or, visibility for aviation busimends extra caution t if the plaintiff does not ness. Financing availwhen p u r chasing ~ have a n at t o rney, able. 541-948-2126 or FAST66 Ranchero! f products or services proof of service on the email 1jetjockiIq.com I from out of the area. $7500 invested, plaintiff. IF YOU Chrysler Sebring 2004 f S ending c ash , sell for $4500! HAVE ANY Q UES84k, beautiful dark gray/ checks, or credit inCall 541.382.9835 Mercedes 450SL, 1977, TIONS, YOU brown, tan leather int., formation may be I 113K, 2nd owner, gaS HOULD SEE A N r aged, b o t h top s . Lexus LX470 2003, $5995 541-350-5373 J subject to FRAUD. A TTORNEY IMMEloaded, 4WD, 119K For more i nforma$10,900. 541-389-7596 DIATELY. If you need mi., galactic grey w/ ) tion about an adverhelp in finding an atg rey leather, V 8 , tiser, you may call One Half Interest in torney, you may call removable 3rd row f the Oregon State I RV-9A for SALE the O regon S t ate seat, 2 0 " c u stom Attorney General's s Bar's Lawyer Referral 2005 Vans RV-9A, FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, wheels, Mark Office C o n sumer 0-320, Dynon, GPS, S ervice a t (503) door panels w/flowers Levinson audio upf Protection hotline at 684-3763 or toll-free ICOM's, KT-76C, 8 hummingbirds, grade, all s e rvice "My Little Red Corvette" 1-877-877-9392. Oxygen. Flies great, in Oregon at (800) white soft top & hard Plymouth B a r racuda records, daily driver. Coupe,1996,350, no damage history. 452-7636. The object top. Just reduced to 1966, original car! 300 $21,500. auto, 26-34 mpg, 132K, 300 plus Hours tach, of the said action and Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 $3,750. 541-317-9319 hp, 360 V8, center$12,500/offer. 541-41 0-2062 kept in Redmond C the relief sought to be or 541-647-8483 lines, 541-593-2597 541-923-1781 Hangar.Reduced to o btained therein i s 835K, OBOr fully set forth in said Dick Hansen, complaint, a n d is 541-923-2318 briefly stated as foldkhansen@bendlows: Foreclosure of a broadband.com or Deed of T rust/MortTod, 541-350-6462 gage. Grantors: TROY M . WILLIAMS; A N D PERSONS OR PARPiper A rcher 1 9 8 0, based in Madras, alTIES UNK N OWN CLAIMING ANY ways hangared since new. New annual, auto RIGHT, TITLE LIEN O R I N TEREST IN pilot, IFR, one piece windshield. Fastest ArTHE PRO P E RTY DESCRIBED IN THE cher around. 1750 total t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. COMPLAINT HEREIN 541-475-6947, ask for IN. Property address: Rob Berg. 1698 NW Davenport Ave., B e nd , OR 97701. P u b lication: The B en d B u lletin. Trucks 8 DATED this 13th day Littie Red Corvette" Heavy Equipment of February, 2013. Craig Peterson, OSB ¹120365, Zac h ary Bryant, OSB ¹113409, Bra n don p,,l Smith, OSB ¹124584, Robinson Tait, P.S., 2o04 Corvette Nlonaco DynastY Attorneys for Plaintiff. Diamond Reo Dump Convertible Truck 1 974, 12 -14 gppg ~LOADED! solid yard box, runs good, Coupe, 350, auto Features includ e 4-dr $6900, 541-548-6812 with 132miles gets counters, FINO YOURFUTURE •

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F reightliner

FL 6 0 midsize hauler, must see to appreciate. $19,000 1995,

OBO. 503-298-9817

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Hyster H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, $3500,call 541-749-0724

sur face micro, frid g, e, convection m' buiit-in washer/drye, ramic tile floor, TU,DUD, sateiiite dish, air leveling, storage pass- -through tray, an d aking size bed - Allfor only $149,000 541-000-000

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Ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months (whichever comes first!)

26-24 mpg Add lots more description and interesting facts for ok "ow much "" a girlcould have in a sweet carlike fhjsi

$12,5OO 541-ppp ppp

Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold italics headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, read by over 76,000 subscribers. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace — DELIVERED to over

31,000 non-subscriber households • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads - 15,000 distribution throughout Central and Eastern Oregon Peterbilt 35 9 p o table water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp

pump, 4-3" h o ses, camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. 541-820-3724

* A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party merchandise ads only, excludes pets, real estate, rentals, and garage sale categories.

HOME INTHE BULLETIN

Your future isjust apage away.Whetheryou're looking for a hat ora placeIohangit, The BulletinClassifiedis your bestsource. Every daythousandsof buyersandsellersof goods and servicesdo businessin these pages.Theyknow you can'beat t TheBulletin ClassifiedSectionfor selectionandconvenience - every item is just aphone call away. The ClassifiedSectionis easy touse.Everyitem is categorizedandevery cartegory isindexedonthe section's frontpage. Whetheryouarelooking for ahomeor needaservice, your future is inthepagesol The BulletinClassified.

The Bulletin serving ontrai oregon rinre a03

1000

Legal Notices • LEGAL NOTICE

IN

THE

CIR C U IT

COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Wells Fargo, N.A., its successors i n i n t erest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v . Un k n own H eirs o f C h ri s A . Johnson; Heidi Johnson; Oregon Department of H uman Services; and Occupants of the Premises, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 1 0 C V0306MA. N OTICE OF S A L E U NDER WRIT O F EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that I will on June 18, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction t o t h e h ighest bidder, f o r

Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE

IN TH E

C I R CUIT

C OURT OF T H E STATE O F OREGON FOR DESCHUTES COUNTY Juvenile Dep a rtment. In the Matter of KEEONY GORD ON P AU L

E IL-

ERS, A Child. Case

No. 739284. P etition No. 13JV0017. PUBLISHED SUM-

MONS. TO:Latosha L ynn Hanson. I N THE NAME OF THE STATE O F OREGON: A p e t ition has been filed asking the court to terminate your parent al r ights t o t h e above-named child for the purpose of placing the child for adoption. YOU ARE RE Q UIRED TO PERSONALLY APPEAR BEFORE the Desc h u tes

C ounty C ourt a t 1 100 N W Bo n d , B end, Oreg o n 97701, on the 2nd day of July, 2013 at 8:30 a.m. to admit or deny the allegaOF T IM B E RLINE tions of the petition SUBDIVISION, CITY and to p e rsonally

cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 1646 NE Heavenly Drive, Bend, Oregon, 97701 and further described as, LOT 15 OF

BEN D ,

RE-

C ORDED JUNE 2 , 1993, IN CABINET C, P AGE 7 78 , DE S CHUTES C O UNTY, EXOREGON. CEPTING T H E R EFROM A P ORTION O F SAID L O T 1 5 WHICH IS DESCRIBED AS F O LLOWS: BEGINNING

appear at any subsequent c o u rt-ordered hear i n g.

Y OU M US T A P PEAR P E R SONA LLY IN THE C OURTROOM O N THE DATE AND AT THE TIME LISTED A BOVE. A N A T TORNEY MAY NOT ATTEND THE A T THE N E C O R - HEARING IN YOUR P LACE. THE R E NER OF SAID LOT 15; THENCE SOUTH FORE, YOU MUST 07' 18' 47 " W EST, APPEAR EVEN IF 40.61 FEET; YOUR ATTORNEY THENCE SOUTH 05' ALSO A P P EARS. 11' 41" EAST, 25.05 This summons is F EET; THEN C E published pursuant N ORTH 02' 32 ' 4 8 " to the order of the circuit court judge of EAST, 65.29 F E ET TO THE POINT OF the a b ove-entitled B EGINNING. S a i d court, dated May 10, sale is made under a 2013. The order directs that this sumWrit of Execution in Foreclosure i s s ued mons be published once each week for out o f t h e C i r cuit Court of the State of three c o nsecutive making Oregon for the County weeks, of Deschutes, dated three publications in April 29, 2013, to me all, in a p ublished directed in the newspaper of genabove-entitled action eral circulation in wherein Wells Fargo, Deschutes County. N.A., its successors in Date of first publicainterest and/ or astion: May 29, 2013. signs as plaintiff/s, re- Date of last publicacovered Co r rected tion: June 12, 2013. NOTICE: REA D General Judgment of Foreclosure Against: THESE P A P ERS (1) Unknown Heirs of CAREFULLY: IF Chris A. Johnson (2) YOU DO NOT APHeidi Kaberline A/K/A PEAR PE R SONHeidi Johnson (3) ALLY BEFORE THE DO Barbara J Johnson (4) COURT O R Vickie L. Johnson (5) NOT APPEAR AT SUBS E Michael Johnson (6) A NY David E. Johnson (7) QUENT C O U RTJohn L. Johnson (8) ORDERED HEAROregon Department of ING, the court may

Human Services (9) Occupants o f the Premises and Money Award Against In Rem the Real Property Loc ated at 1 64 6 N E Heavenly Drive, Bend, Oregon 97701, rendered on February 6, 2 013, a gainst U n known Heirs of Chris A. J o hnson, H e idi Kaberline a/k/a Heidi Johnson, Barbara J. Johnson, Barrett E. J ohnson, Vickie L . Johnson, Mic h ael J ohnson, David E . Johnson, J oh n L. Johnson, Oregon Department of H uman Services, and Occupants of the Premises as defendant/s. BEFORE BIDDING AT THE SALE, A PRO-

SPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY I N V ESTIGATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of t h e j ud g ment

proceed in your absence without furt her n o tice an d TERMINATE YOUR PARENTAL RIGHTS t o t he above-named child either O N THE DATE SPECIFIED I N T H I S SUM M ONS O R O N A F UTURE DAT E , and may make such o rders an d t a k e such action as aut horized b y la w . RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS (1)YOU HAVE A RIGHT TO BE REPRES ENTED B Y A N ATTORNEY IN T HIS MATTER. I f

you ar e c u rrently represented by an attorney, CONT ACT YOUR A T TORNEY IMMEDIATELY UPON

RECEIVING THIS NOTICE. Your previous attorney may creditor; (b)Land use not be representing laws and regulations you in this matter. IF YOU C ANNOT applicable t o the property; (c)ApAFFORD TO HIRE proved uses for the AN ATTORNEY and property; (d) Limits on you meet the state's f arming o r for e s t financial guidelines, practices on the prop- you are entitled to have an a t t orney erty; (e) Rights of neighboring property appointed for you at state expense. TO owners; and (f) Environmental laws and REQUEST APOF regulations that affect POINTMENT the property. Pub- AN ATTORNEY TO REPRESENT YOU lished in Bend Bulletin. Date of First and A T S T AT E EX YOU Successive Publica- PENSE, tions: May 15, 2013; MUST IMM E DIATELY C O NTACT May 22, 2013; May 29, 2013. Date of Last the Deschutes Juvenile D epartment P ublication: June 5 , 2013. Attorney: a t 6 3 3 6 0 Br i t t a Michael T h ornicroft, Street B l dg . 1, OSB ¹981104, RCO Bend, OR 9 7 701, Legal, P.C., 511 SW phone number (541) 10th Ave., Ste. 400, 317-3115, between the hours of 8 :00 Portland, OR 97205, 503-977-7840. Condi- a.m. and 5:00 p.m. tions of Sale: Poten- for further informatial bidders must ar- tion. IF YOU WISH rive 15 minutes prior T O HIR E AN A T to the auction to allow TORNEY, p l e ase the Deschutes County retain one as soon Sheriff's Office to rea s possible a n d view bidder's funds. have the a ttorney Only U.S. c urrency present at the above and/or cashier's hearing. If you need checks made payable help finding an atto Deschutes County torney, you may call Sheriff's Office will be the Oregon State accepted. P a yment Bar's Lawyer Refermust be made in full ral Service at (503) 684-3763 or toll free immediately upon the c lose of t h e s a l e. in Oregon at (800) LARRY B L A NTON, 4 52-7636. IF Y O U Deschutes C o u nty A RE REPRE Sheriff. Blair S ENTED B Y A N Barkhurst, Field ATTORNEY, IT IS Technician. Date: May YOUR RESPONSI14, 2013. BILITY TO M A INTAIN CON T ACT W ITH YOUR A T TORNEY AND TO The Bulletin KEEP YOUR ATTo Subscribe call TORNEY ADVISED 541-385-5800 or go to OF YOUR www.bendbulletin.com WHEREABOUTS.


THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY MAY 29 2013 E7

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

1000

I

L e gal Notices (2)lf you contest the

petition, the c o urt w ill s c h edule a hearing on the alle-

gations of the petition and order you to appear personally and may schedule other hearings related to the petition and order you

to appear person-

ally. I F YOU ARE ORDERED TO APPEAR, YOU MUST APPEAR PERS ONALLY IN T H E C OURTROOM , UNLESS THE COURT HAS GRANTED YOU AN EXCEPTION IN ADVANCE UNDER ORS 419B.918 TO APPEAR BY O THER ME A N S I NCLUDING, B U T NOT LIMITED TO, T ELEPHONIC O R O THER ELEC TRONIC M E ANS. AN ATTO R N EY MAY NOT ATTEND

THE HEARING(S) IN YOUR PLACE.

PETITIONER'S ATTORNEY: Elizabeth A. Jarvis, Assistant Atto r ney

General, Department o f Ju s tice, 1162 Court Street NE, Salem, OR 97301-4096, Phone: (503) 934-4400.ISSUED this 23rd day of May, 2013. Issued by: Elizabeth A.H Jarvis ¹111132, Assistant A t torney General.

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin

Classifieds

541-385-5809 LEGAL NOTICE IN THE C I RCUIT C OURT O F T H E S TATE O F OR EGON FOR DESCHUTES COUNTY Juvenile De p a rtment. In the Matter of NAVEEN ROSE L EE E I LERS, A C hild. C as e N o . 739282. Petition No. 1 3JV0016.

PUB -

LISHED SUMMONS. TO:Latosha L ynn Hanson. IN THE NAME OF THE S TATE O F OR EGON: A p e t ition has been filed asking the court to terminate your parent al rights t o th e above-named child for the purpose of placing the child for adoption. YOU ARE R E Q UIRED TO P ERSONALLY APPEAR BEFORE the Desc h utes C ounty C ourt a t 1 100 N W Bo n d , B end, Oreg o n 97701, on the 2nd day of July, 2013 at 8:30 a.m. to admit or deny the allegations of the petition and to p e rsonally appear at any subsequent c o u rt-ordered hear i ng. Y OU MUST A P PEAR PE R SONALLY IN THE C OURTROO M O N THE DATE AND AT THE TIME LISTED A BOVE. A N A T TORNEY MAY NOT ATTEND THE HEARING IN YOUR PLACE. TH E R EFORE, YOU MUST APPEAR EVEN IF YOUR ATTORNEY

ALSO A P PEARS. T his summons i s published pursuant to the order of the circuit court judge of the a b ove-entitled court, dated May 10, 2013. The order directs that this summons be published once each week for three c o nsecutive weeks, making three publications in all, in a p ublished newspaper of general circulation in Deschutes County. Date of first publication: May 29, 2013. Date of last publication: June 12, 2013. N OTICE: REA D THESE P A P E RS CAREFULLY. IF YOU DO NOT APPEAR P E R SONALLY BEFORE THE COURT O R DO NOT APPEAR AT

A NY SUBSE QUENT C O U RTORDERED HEARING, the court may proceed in your absence without furt her n o t ice an d TERMINATE YOUR PARENTAL RIGHTS t o the

above-named child either O N THE DATE SPECIFIED I N T H I S S UM M ONS OR O N A F UTURE

DAT E ,

and may make such o rders an d ta k e such action as aut horized b y la w . RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS (1)YOU HAVE A RIGHT TO BE REPRESENTED B Y AN ATTORNEY IN

Legal Notices T HIS MATTER.

• If

you ar e c u rrently represented by an attorney, CONT ACT YOUR A T TORNEY IMMEDIATELY UPO N R ECEIVING T H I S NOTICE. Your previous attorney may not be representing you in this matter. IF YOU C ANNOT AFFORD TO HIRE AN ATTORNEY and you meet the state's financial guidelines, you are entitled to have an a t t orney appointed for you at state expense. TO REQUEST A PPOINTMENT OF AN ATTORNEY TO REPRESENT YOU A T S T AT E EX PENSE, YO U M UST IMME D I ATELY C ONTACT

the Deschutes Juvenile D epartment a t 6 3 3 6 0 Br i t t a Street B l dg . 1, Bend, OR 9 7 701, phone number (541) 317-3115, between the hours of 8 :00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. for further information. IF YOU WISH TO HIR E AN ATTORNEY, p l e ase retain one as soon a s p ossible a n d have the a ttorney present at the above hearing. If you need help finding an attorney, you may call the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Service at (503) 684-3763 or toll free in Oregon at (800) 4 52-7636. IF Y O U A RE REPRE SENTED B Y AN A TTORNEY, IT I S YOUR RESPONSIBILITY TO M A I NTAIN CON T ACT W ITH YOUR A T TORNEY AND TO K EEP YOUR A T TORNEY ADVISED OF YOUR WHEREABOUTS.

(2)lf you contest the petition, the c o urt w ill s c h edule a hearing on the allegations of the petition and order you to appear personally and may schedule other hearings related to the petition and order you to appear personally. I F YOU ARE

ORDERED TO APPEAR, YOU MUST APPEAR PERS ONALLY IN T H E C OURTROOM , UNLESS T HE COURT HAS GRANTED YOU AN EXCEPTION IN ADVANCE UNDER ORS 419B.918 TO APPEAR BY O THER MEA N S I NCLUDING, B U T NOT LIMITED TO, T ELEPHONIC O R OTHER ELECTRONIC M E ANS. AN ATT O R NEY MAY NOT ATTEND

THE H EARING(S) IN YOUR PLACE. PETITIONER'S ATTORNEY: Eliza-

beth A. Jarvis, Assistant Atto r ney General, Department o f Ju s t ice, 1162 Court Street NE, Salem, OR 97301-4096, Phone: (503) 934-4400. ISSUED this 23rd day of May, 2013. Issued by: Elizabeth A Jarvis ¹ 111 1 32, Assistant Attorney General. LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CIR C UIT COURT O F T HE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Wells Fargo Bank, NA, its

successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaint iff/s, v. K r istina A . Johnson; H y p erion Capital Group; Junip er Gl e n Nor t h Homeowners' Association; and O c cupants of the Premises, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 11CV0805. NOTICE OF SALE UND ER WRIT OF E X ECUTION - REAL P ROP ERTY. Notice is

hereby given that I will on June 25, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r cas h ier's check, the real property commonly known as 2901 SW Indian Circle, Redmond, Oregon 97756, and further described as, Lot 59 of J uniper Glen North, City of R edmond, Des c hutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure i s s ued out o f t h e C i r cuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated April 18, 2013, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein Wells Fargo Bank, NA, its successors in interest and/or assigns as plaintiff/s, recovered Stipulated Limited Judgment of Foreclosure and S hortening o f Re d emption Peri o d

L e g al Notices •

Legal Notices •

Against Defendant: 1) Kristina A. J ohnson o n May 1 7 , 2 0 1 2, a gainst Kristina A . Johnson as d e fend ant/s. BEFO R E BIDDING A T TH E SALE, A PROSPEC-

Hooper, Englund & Weil LLP, 2150 Congress Center, 1001 S.W. Fifth A v enue, P ortland, Ore g o n

GATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of t h e jud g ment creditor; (b) Land use laws and regulations applicable t o the property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d)Limits on f arming o r for e st practices on the property; (e) Rights of neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property. Published in Bend Bulletin. Date of First and Successive Publications: May 22, 2013; May 29, 2013; June 5, 2 013. Date o f L a st Publication: June 12, 2013. Attorney: Michael T h ornicroft,

the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon the c lose of t h e s a l e .

97204-1016, 503-226-0500. Condi-

tions of Sale: Poten-

TIVE BIDDER tial bidders must arSHOULD INDEPENrive 15 minutes prior DENTLY I N V ESTI- to the auction to allow

LARRY

B L A NTON,

Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff. Blair Barkhurst, Field Technician. Date: May 14, 2013. LEGAL NOTICE IN

THE

CIR C U IT

COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest OSB ¹981104, RCO and/or assigns, PlainLegal, P.C., 511 SW tiff/s, v . An i t a R. 10th Avenue, Suite Henderson; and Oc4 00, P o rtland, O R of the Pre97205, (503) cupants mises, Defendant/s. 977-7840. Conditions No.: 11CV0782. of Sale: Po t e ntial Case OTICE OF S A L E bidders must arrive 15 N U NDER WRIT O F minutes prior to the EXECUTION - REAL auction to allow the Notice is Deschutes C o u nty PROPERTY. hereby given that I will Sheriff's Office to reon June 18, 2013 at view bidder's funds. AM in the main Only U.S. c urrency 10:00 obby of t h e D e s and/or cashier's lchutes checks made payable Sheriff's Office,County to Deschutes County W. Highway 20,63333 Bend, Sheriff's Office will be Oregon, sell, at public accepted. P a yment o ral auction t o t h e must be made in full bidder, f o r immediately upon the h ighest or ca s hier's c lose of t h e s a l e . cash LARRY B L A NTON, check, the real property commonly Deschutes C o u nty as 3 20 4 N oknown rtheast Sheriff. Anthony RaSpring Creek Place, guine, Civil TechniBend, Oregon 97701, cian. Date: May 21, and further described 2013. as, Lot Six (6), Madison Park, recorded LEGAL NOTICE 4, 2008, in IN T H E CI R CUIT January Cabinet H, Page 616, COURT O F THE Deschutes o u nty, STATE OF OREGON Oregon. SaidCsale is DESCHUTES under a Writ of COUNTY. Vanderbilt made in ForecloM ortgage An d Fi - Execution issued out of the nance, Inc., as attor- sure C ircuit Court of t h e ney-in-fact and serState of Oregon for vicer for The Bank of the County of DesNew York Mellon, a chutes, dated May 1, national banking asto me directed sociation, Plaintiff/s, v. 2013, the above-entitled Charles Ben Malkson; in wherein Wells Joyce A . M a l kson; action Bank, N.A., its Ford Motor C r edit Fargo successor in interest C ompany; State o f nd/or assigns a s Oregon; Ray K lein, a recovered I nc.; C a pital O n e plaintiff/s, Stipulated G e n eral Bank; Cascade Credit Judgment of ForecloConsulting, Inc.; and sure and Shortening State of Oregon, Deof Redemption Period partment of Revenue, Against Defendant: 1) D efendant/s. C a s e Anita Hen d erson, No.: 12CV1175. NOrendered on May 1, TICE OF SALE UN2012, against Anita R. DER WRIT OF EXas defenECUTION - REAL Henderson d ant/s. BEFO R E PROPERTY. Notice is AT THE hereby given that I will BIDDING SALE, A PROSPECon June 13, 2013 at BIDDER 10:00 AM in the main TIVE INDEPENl obby of t h e D e s - SHOULD IN V E STIchutes County DENTLY GATE: (a)The priority Sheriff's Office, 63333 of the lien or interest W. Highway 20, Bend, of t h e jud g ment Oregon, sell, at public creditor; (b)Land use o ral auction t o t h e laws and regulations h ighest bidder, f o r applicable t o the cash o r ca s hier's (c)Apcheck, the real prop- property; uses for the erty commonly known proved as 506 SE Black Butte property; (d) Limits on f arming or for e s t Blvd, Redmond, Orpractices on the propegon 97756, and fur(e) Rights of ther described as, Lot erty; neighboring property eight (8) block six (6) owners; and (f)Enviof C a sper M o bile ronmental laws and Acres, City of Redthat affect mond, Des c hutes regulations p roperty. P u bCounty, Oregon. Said the lished in Bend Bullesale is made under a tin. Date of First and Writ of Execution isSuccessive Publicasued out of the Cirtions: May 15, 2013; cuit Court of the State 22, 2013; May o f Oregon for t h e May 2013. Date of Last County of Deschutes, 29, P ublication: June 5 , dated April 24, 2013, 2013. Att or n e y: to me directed in the Michael T h ornicroft, above-entitled action RCO wherein V a n derbilt OSB ¹981104, P.C., 511 SW M ortgage An d Fi - Legal, 10th Ave., Ste. 400, nance, Inc., as attorPortland, OR 97205, ney-in-fact and serCondivicer for The Bank Of 503-977-7840. tions of Sale: PotenNew York Mellon, a tial bidders must arnational banking as15 minutes prior sociation as plaintiff/s, rive the auction to allow recovered G e n eral to the Deschutes County Judgment For Deed Office to reOf Trust Foreclosure Sheriff's bidder's funds. on March 6, 2 0 13, view Only U.S. c urrency against Charles Ben cashier's M alkson, Joyce A . and/or made payable Malkson, Ford Motor checks to Deschutes County Credit Com p any, Office will be State of Oregon, Ray Sheriff's P a yment Klein, Inc., C a pital accepted. be made in full One Bank, Cascade must upon the Credit Con s ulting, immediately close of t h e s a l e. Inc., and State of Or- LARRY B L A NTON, egon, Department of Co u n ty Revenue as d e fen- Deschutes Blair d ant/s. BEFO R E Sheriff. Barkhurst, Field BIDDING A T THE Date: May SALE, A PROSPEC- Technician. 14, 2013. TIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENLEGAL NOTICE

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r cas h ier's check, the real property commonly known as 1989 N o rtheast Veronica Lane, Bend, Oregon 97701, and further described as, Lot Four (4), in Block Six (6), T a marack Park East Phase V, R ecorded June 2 2 , 1989, in Cabinet C, Page 323, Deschutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure i s s ued out o f t h e Ci r c uit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated April 16, 2013, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein Wells Fargo Bank, N. A . as plaintiff/s, recovered Stipulated G e n eral Judgment of Foreclosure and Shortening of Redemption Period Against Defendants: 1) Rheanna Magee 2) Jeremy Magee, rendered on March 12, 2013, against Rheanna Magee and J eremy Magee a s defendant/s. BE-

cupants of the Premises; an d M o ney A ward Against t h e R eal Property L o cated at 2453 Northwest Hosmer L ake Drive, Bend, Oregon 97701 rendered on February 26, 2 0 13, against Jeffrey Coffey, Lori Coffey, Skyliner Summit at Broken Top Homeowners' Association, Village at Skyliner Su m mi t at Broke[n] Top Homeowner A s s ociation, MERS as Nominee for H omecomings a n d Occupants o f the Premises as defend ant/s. B EFO R E BIDDING A T TH E SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY I N V ESTI-

L e g al Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

terest in the Property ronmental laws and described i n the regulations that affect Complaint her e i n, the p roperty. P u bD efendant/s. C a s e lished in Bend BulleNo.: 12CV0722. NOtin. Date of First and TICE OF SALE UNSuccessive PublicaDER WRIT OF EXtions: May 22, 2013; ECUTION REAL May 29, 2013; June 5, PROPERTY. Notice is 2013. Date of L a st hereby given that I will Publication: June 12, on June 25, 2013 at 2013. Attorney:Craig 10:00 AM in the main Peterson, OSB l obby of t h e D e s - ¹120365, R o binson chutes County Tait, P.S., 710 SecSheriff's Office, 63333 ond Avenue, S uite W. Highway 20, Bend, 7 10, S e attle, W A Oregon, sell, at public 98104, 206-676-9640. o ral auction t o t h e Conditions of S a le: h ighest bidder, f o r Potential bidders must cash o r ca s h ier's arrive 15 minutes prior check, the real prop- to the auction to allow erty commonly known the Deschutes County as 2792 N o rthwest Sheriff's Office to reF airway Heig h t s view bidder's funds. Drive, Bend, Oregon Only U.S. c urrency 97701, an d f u r ther and/or cashier's described as, Lot Nine checks made payable to Deschutes County (9), River's Edge Village, Phase V, Des- Sheriff's Office will be chutes County, Oraccepted. P a yment e gon. Said sale i s must be made in full made under a Writ of immediately upon the Execution in Foreclo- close of t h e s a l e. sure issued out of the LARRY B L A NTON, C ircuit Court of t h e Deschutes C o u nty State of Oregon for Sheriff. Blair Barkhurst, Field the County of Deschutes, dated April 16, Technician. Date: May 2013, to me directed 21, 2013. in the above-entitled action wherein HSBC BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Bank USA, N.A., as Search the area's most Trustee on behalf of comprehensive listing of Ace Securities Corp. classified advertising... Home Equity Loan real estate to automotive, Trust and for the reg- merchandise to sporting i stered h o lders o f Bulletin Classifieds ACE Securities Corp. goods. Home Equity Loan appear every day in the print or on line. Trust, Series 2005Call 541-385-5809 HE6, Asset Backed Pass-Through Certifi- www.bendbulletin.com cates as plaintiff/s, rec overed Gene r a l Sen mg Ce rval Ovegon since1903 Judgment Determining Amount Owed and NOTICE F oreclosure; M o n - LEGAL T H E CIR C U IT etary Judgm e nt IN COURT O F THE Against Defendant ¹1 OF OREGON Diana Novotny; Gen- STATE DESCHUTES eral Judgment Against COUNTY. Wells Defendant ¹2 L a r ry Fargo Bank, N.A., its Fudenna, Defendant successors in interest ¹3 M ortgage ElecPlaintronic Reg i stration and/orv.assigns, Amanda E. Systems, Inc., Defen- tiff/s, Jones; an d O c c udant ¹ 4 Col u mbia River Bank DBA CRB pants of the Premises, C ase Mortgage Team, De- D efendant/s. 12CV0799. NOfendant ¹5 Persons or No.: OF SALE UNParties Unk n o wn TICE WRIT OF EXClaiming Any Right, DER - REAL Title, Lien or Interest ECUTION PROPERTY. Notice is In The Property Dehereby given that I will scribed In The ComJune 25, 2013 at plaint Herein on Feb- on AM in the main r uary 2 6, 2013 , 10:00 obby of t h e D e s a gainst Diana N o - lchutes votny; Larry Fudenna; Sheriff's Office,County Mortgage Electronic W. Highway 20,63333 Bend, Registration Systems, Oregon, sell, at public Inc 4 Columbia River o ral auction to t h e Bank DBA CRB Mort- h ighest bidder, f o r gage Team; and Per- cash o r cas h ier's sons or Parties Unthe real propknown claiming any check, erty commonly known right, title, lien or in2 0 02 4 B a d ger terest in the Property as Bend, Oregon described i n the Road, 97702-2570, and furComplaint herein as described as, Lot defendant/s. BE- ther Four (4), High Desert FORE BIDDING AT Village, City of Bend, THE SALE, A PRODeschutes C o unty, SPECTIVE B IDDER Oregon. Said sale is SHOULD INDEPEN- made under a Writ of DENTLY IN V E STIin ForecloGATE: (a)The priority Execution sure issued out of the of the lien or interest C ircuit Court of t he o State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated April 18, 2013, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. as plaintiff/s, recovered Stipulated G e n eral Judgment of Foreclosure and Shortening

GATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of t h e jud g ment creditor; (b) Land use laws and regulations applicable t o the property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d)Limits on f arming o r for e st practices on the property; (e) Rights of neighboring property FORE BIDDING AT owners; and (f) EnviTHE SALE, A PROronmental laws and SPECTIVE B IDDER regulations that affect SHOULD INDEPEN- the property. PubDENTLY IN V E STI- lished in Bend BulleGATE: (a)The priority tin. Date of First and of the lien or interest Successive Publicaof t h e j ud g ment tions: May 15, 2013; creditor; (b) Land use May 22, 2013; May laws and regulations 29, 2013. Date of Last applicable t o the P ublication: June 5 , property; (c)Ap2013. Attorney: Michael T h ornicroft, proved uses for the The Bulletin property; (d) Limits on OSB ¹981104, RCO f arming o r for e s t Legal, PC, 511 SW practices on the prop- 10th Avenue, Suite erty; (e) Rights of 4 00, P o rtland, O R neighboring property 97205, (503) 977-7840. Conditions owners; and (f)Environmental laws and of Sale: Po t e ntial regulations that affect bidders must arrive 15 the p roperty. P u bminutes prior to the lished in Bend Bulle- auction to allow the tin. Date of First and Deschutes C o u nty Successive Publica- Sheriff's Office to retions: May 8, 2 0 1 3 ; view bidder's funds. May 15, 2013; May Only U.S. c urrency 22, 2013. Date of Last and/or cashier's Publication: May 29, checks made payable LEGAL NOTICE 2013. At tor n ey: to Deschutes County IN T H E CIR C U IT Michael T h ornicroft, Sheriff's Office will be COURT O F THE OSB ¹981104, RCO accepted. P a yment STATE OF OREGON Legal, P.C., 511 SW must be made in full DESCHUTES 10th Ave., Ste. 400, immediately upon the COUNTY. Wells Portland, OR 97205, c lose of t h e s a l e. Fargo Bank, N.A., its 503-977-7840. CondiLARRY B L A NTON, successors in interest tions of Sale: Poten- Deschutes C o u nty and/or assigns, Plaintial bidders must ar- Sheriff. Anthony Ratiff/s, v. Norman K. rive 15 minutes prior guine, Civil TechniD oubledee; A s p e n to the auction to allow cian. Date: May 14, Creek Manufactured the Deschutes County 2013. Home Su b d ivision Sheriff's Office to reLEGAL NOTICE Homeowner's Assoview bidder's funds. CI R CUIT ciation; an d O c c uOnly U.S. c urrency IN T H E THE pants of the Premises, and/or cashier's COURT O F D efendant/s. C a s e checks made payable STATE OF OREGON No.: 12CV1078. NOto Deschutes County DESCHUTES HSBC TICE OF SALE UNSheriff's Office will be COUNTY. Bank USA, N.A., as DER WRIT OF EXaccepted. P a yment ECUTION - REAL must be made in full trustee on behalf of PROPERTY. Notice is immediately upon the Ace Securities Corp. hereby given that I will close of t h e s a l e. Home Equity L oan on June 27, 2013 at LARRY B L A NTON, T rust an d f o r t h e 10:00 AM in the main Deschutes Co u n ty Registered Holders of l obby of t h e D e s Sheriff. Blair Ace Securities Corp. Home Equity L oan chutes County Barkhurst, Field Trust, Series Sheriff's Office, 63333 Technician. Date: May 2 005-HE6, Asse t W. Highway 20, Bend, 7, 2013. Backed Pass-Through Oregon, sell, at public Certificates, Plaintiff/s, o ral auction t o t h e LEGAL NOTICE N o votny; h ighest bidder, f o r IN T H E CIR C UIT v. D i ana cash o r ca s hier's COURT O F THE Larry Fudenna; Mortcheck, the real propSTATE OF OREGON gage Electronic Registration Sys t ems, erty commonly known DESCHUTES Inc.; Columbia River as 2550 S o uthwest COUNTY. GMAC Bank DBA CRB MortYarrow Creek Drive, M ortgage, LLC, i t s Redmond, O r e gon successors in interest gage Team; and Per97756, an d f u r ther and/or assigns, Plain- sons or Parties Undescribed as, Lot 64 tiff/s, v. Lori Coffey; known claiming any o f A s p e n Cr e e k Jeffrey Coffey; Mort- right, title, lien or ingage Electronic Reg1000 istration Systems, Inc. solely as nominee for Legal Notices • L e g al Notices Legal Notices • L egal N o tices H omecoming, L L C , (F/K/A Homecomings NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING Financial N e t work, FORM LB-1 Inc.); Skyliner SumA publ<c mseting ofthe ChyofLe Pinewllbe held on June 5, 2013 st600 pm at La Pine Cky Hall, 163456th Street. Ls Pme. OR The purposeofthis meeting <sto mit at B r oken Top chscussthe budget for the fiscal yaer beginning July c 2013es approved by ths oty of La prne Budget commNes A summaryof the budget is presented below A copy Homeowners' Assoofthe budget may teinspected orobtanedst City Hell betwaen the hoursof9.0D amand 500 pm This budgetisforsnnuel penod The budgetwss prepared on s basrs of ICCOuning that is the sameeS uaed in the preceChng year ciation; Village at Skyliner Summit at Broken Top Homeowner Tefe hone 54u536-1432 Em a i l kmulenex ala- ineorus Contact Ken Mulenex.Ma or A ssociation; Mar k SUMMARY-RESOURCES FINANCIAL Miller; Kath e rine Approved Budget TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS Actual Amounl Adopled Budgel Miller; and Occupants 2D11-12 This Year2012-13 NextYear 2013-14 1,894,738 4,438,297 of the Premises, DeBeg<nning Fund Balance/Net Workin Cepital 533.328 Fees. Licenses, Permits, Fines, Assessments 8 Olher Serece Charges 425,835 1,495,950 1.416,150 fendant/s. Case No.: •1,000 10<,OOO 71,000 Federal. StatesndAll Other Grants. Gihs. Allocat<ons and Donetions 12CV0266. NOTICE Revsnua from Bonds and Other Debl 3,360,017 OF S AL E U N D ER Interfund Transferst Intamal Ssnnce Reimbursements 88,790 162,465 46.00O 16,603 • 51,435 56,192 Other Resources Exce I Currsnt Yesr P ro T a x e s WRIT O F E X ECU- Alt 216,749 216,445 Current Year Pro T a x es Estimated lo be Received 224,530 TION - REAL PROPERTY. N o t ic e is

hereby given that I will on June 13, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction t o t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s h ier's check, the real property commonly known as 2453 N o rthwest Hosmer Lake Drive, Bend, Oregon 97701, and further described as, Lot Seventy-Eight (78), Skyliner Summit at Broken Top-Phase I, Deschutes County, Oregon. Said sale is DENTLY IN V E STI- IN T H E CIR C U IT made under a Writ of GATE: (a)The priority COURT O F THE Execution in Forecloof the lien or interest STATE OF OREGON sure issued out of the of t h e jud g ment DESCHUTES C ircuit Court of t h e creditor; (b) Land use COUNTY. Wells State of Oregon for laws and regulations Fargo Bank, N.A., its the County of Desapplicable t o the successors in interest chutes, dated April 25, property; (c)Apand/or assigns, Plain- 2013, to me directed tiff/s, v. Rheanna Ma- in the above-entitled proved uses for the property; (d)Limits on gee; Jeremy Magee; action wherein GMAC f arming o r for e s t and Occupants of the M ortgage, LLC, i t s practices on the prop- Premises, successors in interest of D efendant/s. C a s e a nd/or assigns a s erty; (e) Rights neighboring property No.: 12CV1159. NO- plaintiff/s, r ecovered owners; and (f)EnviTICE OF SALE UNon General Judgment ronmental laws and DER WRIT OF EXof Foreclosure regulations that affect ECUTION REAL Against: 1) J e f frey the p roperty. P u bPROPERTY. Notice is Coffey 2) Lori Coffey lished in Bend Bulle- hereby given that I will 3) Skyliner Summit at tin. Date of First and on June 6, 2013 at Broken Top Successive Publica- 10:00 AM in the main Homeowner's Assotions: May 15, 2013; l obby of t h e D e s - ciation 4) Village at chutes County S kyliner Summit a t May 22, 2013; May 29, 2013. Date of Last Sheriff's Office, 63333 Broke[n] Top HomeP ublication: June 5 , W. Highway 20, Bend, owner Association 5) 2013. Attorney: John Oregon, sell, at public MERS as nominee for Weil, OSB ¹803967, o ral auction t o t h e Homecomings 6) Oc-

1,330,086

Total Reaources

FINANCIAL SUMMARY -REQUIREMENTS BY OBJECT CLASSIFICATION 164,858 316,809

Personnel Services Metenels and Sennces Cs italOutla Debt SaMce Interfund Trsnsfers Contin enass S a l Pe menls Una rO nated Endrn BalenCe end RessrvedforFuture Ex nditure Total Re uirements

202,680

58,230 587,509 1,330,086

4,32S.335

9,60I,101

684.45O 1,103,610 901,497 427,346 148,365 625,000

491,732 1,077,D77 2,816,514 237,711 3.4C6,017 447,547 26O,503 867,000 9,604,101

50.750 384,317 4,32S,335

FINANCIAL SUMMARY -REQUIREMENTS AND FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT EMPLOYEES FTE BY ORGANIZATIONAL UNIT OR PROGRAM ' Namt of Orgenizat<onalUnit or Program FTE for that unit or p ram 915,264 875,652 832,079 CltJ ssMc88 1 86 FTE 2 90 1 86 3,535,512 Water utility services 1,671,750 2 52 FTE 2 52 1,219 05O 4,593.010 SCW8f Utlllv SIIMC85 2 52 2 52 FTE 81,690 72,500 118,500 Tounsm I Economic Development 0 00 000 0 00 FTE 333x32 486,383 525,000 Public Works 0 10 010 010 FTE FTE

FTE Non-Departmental l Non-Pngram FTE Total Raquirements Total FTE

1,330,086 3

9,604,101 7

4,325,335 7

STATEMENTOF CHANGES IN ACTIVITIESsnd SOURCES OF FINANCING The City added four funds to their budget forfiscal year ending June 30, 2014 The Water and Sewer Reserve Funds were established to set aside funds for future infrastmcture maintenence snd improvements The reserve fundswerefinenced wth transfers from the Water and Sewer funds The Waler Debt SeMce Reserve Fund was sstablshed tocomplywilh USDAloanrequirements Thefundwasfinanced vnth a transferfrom the WaterFund Finally, theCity look overoiN.ralonsofthecemelap and established the Cemetary fund

PROPERTY TAX LEVIES

Permanent Rate Ee

rate l<mit \ 98

r $1.00O

Rate or Amount Im sed 229,697

Rateor Amount Im sed R

at e or Amount A roved

238.907

Le For General Obli ation Bonds

LONG TERM DEBT

Generel Obli ation Bonds Other Bonds Other Bonovnn s Total

STATEMENT OF INDEBTEDNESS Estimated Dsbt Outstandhng on Jul 1 $3.019,783

Estimated Dwt Authonzed, But Not lncurred on Jul

233,995


E8 WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

1000

I

Leg a l Notices

Legal Notices

Manufactured Home S ubdivision, City o f Redmond, Deschutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure i s s ued out o f t h e C i r cuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated May 3, 2013, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors i n i n t erest a nd/or assigns a s plaintiff/s, recovered General Judgment of Foreclosure Against: Norman K. (1) Doubledee; and Money Award Against Norman K. D oubledee, rendered on April 4, 2013, against Norman K. Doubledee as defendant/s. BEFORE BIDDING AT THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER

neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property. Published in Bend Bulletin. Date of First and Successive Publications: May 8, 2 0 1 3; May 15, 2013; May 22, 2013. Date of Last Publication: May 29, 2013. Attorney: Michael T h ornicroft,

property; (c)Ap-

7, 2013.

OSB ¹981104, RCO

Legal, P.C., 511 SW 10th Ave., Ste. 400, Portland, OR 97205,

503-977-7840. Condi-

tions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a yment SHOULD INDEPENmust be made in full DENTLY I N V ESTI- immediately upon the GATE: (a)The priority c lose of t h e s a l e . of the lien or interest LARRY B L A NTON, of t h e jud g ment Deschutes C o u nty creditor; (b)Land use Sheriff. Blair laws and regulations Barkhurst, Field applicable t o the Technician. Date: May proved uses for the property; (d)Limits on f arming o r for e st

practices on the propof erty; (e) Rights neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the p roperty. P u blished in Bend Bulletin. Date of First and Successive Publications: May 29, 2013; June 5, 2013; June 12, 2013. Date of Last Publication: June 19, 2013. Att or n e y: Michael T h ornicroft, OSB ¹981104, RCO Legal, P.C., 511 SW 10th Ave., Ste 4 00, Portland, OR 97205, (503) 977-7840. Cond itions of Sale: P o tential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to re-

Get your

business

Legal Notices

tions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon the close of t h e s a l e. LARRY

B L A NTON,

Deschutes Co u n ty Sheriff. Anthony Raguine, Civil Technician. Date: May 28, 2013.

LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R CUIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as trustee for Ixis Real Estate Capital Trust 2006HE-1 Mortgage Pass Through Certificates, Series 20 0 6 -HE-1, Plaintiff/s, v. Kelly R. Young; USAA FSB; Internal Revenue Service; and Persons or Parties unknown claiming any r i ght, title, lien or interest in t he P r operty d e scribed in the Complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Case N o . : 12CV0411. N OTICE

GROWING With an ad in The Bulletin's

"Call A Service Professional" Directory

LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CIR C UIT COURT O F T HE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Wells Fargo Bank, NA, its successors in interest view bidder's funds. and/or assigns, PlainOnly U.S. c urrency tiff/s, v. Gregory S. and/or cashier's Cofer and Sarah L. checks made payable Cofer; Midland Fundto Deschutes County ing, LLC; Lindsay K. Sheriff's Office will be Wostmann; and Ocaccepted. P a yment cupants of the Premust be made in full mises, Defendant/s. immediately upon the Case No.: 11CV0804. close of t h e s a l e. N OTICE O F S A L E LARRY B L A NTON, U NDER WRIT O F Deschutes Co u n ty EXECUTION - REAL Sheriff. Anthony Ra- PROPERTY. Notice is guine, Civil Techni- hereby given that I will cian. Date: May 28, on June 27, 2013 at 2013. 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s LEGAL NOTICE chutes County IN T H E CI R CUIT Sheriff's Office, 63333 COURT O F THE W. Highway 20, Bend, STATE OF OREGON Oregon, sell, at public DESCHUTES o ral auction t o t h e COUNTY. Well s h ighest bidder, f o r Fargo Bank, N.A., its cash o r ca s h ier's successors in interest check, the real propand/or assigns, Plain- erty commonly known tiff/s, v. Keith A. Kelly as 1304 N o rtheast AKA Keith Allen Kelly; H ollinshead Dr i v e , Occupants o f the Bend, Oregon 97701, P remises; and t h e and further described Real Property located as, Lot Thirteen (13) at 21310 P ecoraro in Block Six (6), of Loop, Bend, Oregon Meadowview Estates 97701, D efendant/s. Second Addition, City Case No.: 12CV0889. of Bend, Deschutes N OTICE O F S A L E County, Oregon. Said U NDER WRIT O F sale is made under a EXECUTION - REAL Writ of Execution in P ROP ERTY. Notice is Foreclosure i s sued hereby given that I will out o f t h e C i r cuit on June 6, 2013 at Court of the State of 10:00 AM in the main Oregon for the County l obby of t h e D e s- of Deschutes, dated chutes County May 3, 2013, to me diSheriff's Office, 63333 rected in the W. Highway 20, Bend, above-entitled action Oregon, sell, at public wherein Wells Fargo o ral auction to t h e Bank, NA as h ighest bidder, f o r plaintiff/s, r ecovered cash o r cas h ier's General Judgment of check, the real prop- Foreclosure Against: erty commonly known (1) Gregory S. Cofer as 21310 Pecoraro (2) Sarah L. Williver Loop, Bend, Oregon FKA Sarah L. Cofer 97701, and f u rther (3) Midland Funding, d escribed as , Lo t LLC (4) Lindsay K. Seventeen, Promise Wostmann (5) OccuLane, Desc h utes pants of the Premises: C ounty, Oreg o n. and Money A ward A .P.N.: 171226 B A A gainst T h e Re a l 04600. Said sale is Property Located at made under a Writ of 1304 Northeast HolExecution in Foreclo- linshead Drive, Bend, sure issued out of the Oregon 97701, renC ircuit Court of t h e dered on January 3, State of Oregon for 2013, against G rethe County of Desgory S. Cofer, Sarah chutes, dated April 18, L. Williver fka Sarah 2013, to me directed L. C o fer, M i d land in the above-entitled Funding, LLC, Lindaction wherein Wells say K . W o stmann, Fargo Bank, N.A. as and Occupants of the plaintiff/s, recovered Premises as d efenGeneral Judgment of d ant/s. BEFO R E Foreclosure Against: BIDDING A T THE (1) Keith A. Kelly AKA SALE, A PROSPECKeith Allen Kelly (2) TIVE BIDDER The Real Property lo- SHOULD INDEPENcated at 21310 Peco- DENTLY I N V ESTIraro Loop, Bend, Or- GATE: (a)The priority e gon 9 7 701; a n d of the lien or interest Money Award Against of t h e j ud g ment The Real Property at creditor; (b) Land use 21310 Pecoraro Loop, laws and regulations Bend, Oregon 97701, applicable t o the rendered on February property; (c)Ap1, 2013, against Keith proved uses for the A. Kelly ak a K e ith property; (d)Limits on Allen Kelly, and the f arming o r for e s t Real Property located practices on the propat 21310 P ecoraro erty; (e) Rights of Loop, Bend, Oregon neighboring property 97701 as defendant/s. owners; and (f)EnviBEFORE B I DDING ronmental laws and A T TH E S A LE, A regulations that affect PROSPECTIVE BIDthe property. PubDER SHOULD INDE- lished in Bend BullePENDENTLY INVES- tin. Date of First and TIGATE: (a)The Successive Publications: May 29, 2013; priority of the lien or interest of the judg- June 5, 2013; June ment creditor; (b) Land 12, 2013. Date of Last use laws and regula- Publication: June 19, tions applicable to the 2013. Attorney: property; (c)ApMichael T h ornicroft, OSB ¹981104, RCO proved uses for the property; (d)Limits on Legal, P.C., 511 SW f arming o r for e st 10th Ave., Ste. 400, practices on the prop- Portland, OR 97205, of 503-977-7840. Condierty; (e) Rights

OF SALE U N DER WRIT O F E X E CUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o t ic e is hereby given that I will on June 25, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 83333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r

cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as

1 6 0 9 NE

8 th

Street, Bend, Oregon 97701, an d f u r ther d escribed as , T h e South 100.87 feet of L ots Six ( 6 ) a n d Seven (7), Block Thirty-Two (32), Wiestoria, Deschutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure i s s ued out o f t h e C i r cuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated April 16, 2013, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein Deu t sche Bank National Trust Company, as trustee for Ixis Real Estate Capital Trust 2 006HE-1 Mortgage Pass Through Certificates, Series 2006-HE-1 as plaintiff/s, recovered [Judgment - Specific name of judgment] on F ebruary 7 , 20 1 3 , against K e l l y R. Young; USAA FSB; Internal Revenue Service; and Persons or Parties unknown claiming any r i ght, title, lien or interest in t he P r o perty d e scribed in the Complaint herein as defendant/s. B E FORE BIDDING A T TH E SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY I N V ESTI-

GATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of t h e jud g ment creditor; (b) Land use laws and regulations applicable t o the property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d)Limits on f arming o r for e st practices on the propof erty; (e) Rights neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the p roperty. P u blished in Bend Bulletin. Date of First and Successive Publications: May 22, 2013; May 29, 2013; June 5, 2013. Date of L a st Publication: June 12, 2013. Attorney:Craig Peterson, OSB ¹120365, R o binson Tait, P.S., 710 Second Avenue, S uite 7 10, S e attle, W A 98104, 206-676-9640. Conditions of S a l e: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a y ment must be made in full immediately upon the close of t h e s a l e. LARRY B L A NTON, Deschutes Co u n ty Sheriff. Blair Barkhurst, Field Technician. Date: May 21, 2013. LEGAL NOTICE

IN T H E CI R CUIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Well s Fargo Bank, NA, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Deanna Silsbee; Newport H i lls Homeowners Association, Inc.; and Occupants of the Premises, D efendant/s.

Legal Notices •

1000

1000

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Leg a l Notices

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H e i r s of chutes Case No.: 11CV0901. known County Sheriff's Office to re- benefits to, or other- June 30, 2014 and N OTICE O F S A L E Howard C. T h omp- Sheriff's Office, 83333 view bidder's funds. wise disc r iminate Supplemental Budget U NDER WRIT O F son, Lee Doral ThW. Highway 20, Bend, Only U.S. c urrency against any person on for 2012-2013 as apEXECUTION - REAL ompson, Oregon De- Oregon, sell, at public and/or cashier's the ground of race, proved by the Central PROPERTY. Notice is partment of H uman o ral auction to t h e checks made payable color, national origin, Oregon Intergovernhereby given that I will Services, and Occuh ighest bidder, f o r to Deschutes County age, sex, religion or mental Council Budon June 20, 2013 at pants of the Premises cash o r cas h ier's Sheriff's Office will be disability in admission g et Committee. A 10:00 AM in the main as defendant/s. BEcheck, the real prop- accepted. P a yment to, participation in, re- copy of the budget l obby of t h e D e s - FORE BIDDING AT erty commonly known must be made in full ceipt of the services may be inspected or chutes County THE SALE, A PRO- as 54770 Wolf Street, immediately upon the and benefits of any of obtained on or after Sheriff's Office, 63333 SPECTIVE B IDDER Bend, Oregon 97707, c lose of t h e s a l e . its programs and ac- June 6, 2013 at our W. Highway 20, Bend, SHOULD INDEPEN- and further described LARRY B L A NTON, tivities or in employ- Administrative Office Oregon, sell, at public DENTLY IN V E STI- as, Lot ( 9) , B lock Deschutes C o u nty ment therein, whether l ocated at 33 4 N E o ral auction t o t h e GATE: (a)The priority One-Hundred e i g h- Sheriff. Blair carried out by OCDC Hawthorne Ave, h ighest bidder, f o r of the lien or interest teen ( 118), D e s Barkhurst, Field directly or through a B end, Oregon b e cash o r ca s h ier's of t h e j ud g ment chutes River Recre- Technician. Date: May C ontractor o r an y tween the hours of check, the real prop- creditor; (b) Land use ation Homesites Unit 14, 2013. other entity with whom 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 erty commonly known laws and regulations 8, Part III, Deschutes OCDC arranges to p.m. This is a public as 1234 N o rthwest applicable t o the County, Oregon. Said Garage Sales carry out its programs meeting. Any person 18th Street, B e nd, property; (c)Apsale is made under a and activities. m ay a p pear a n d Oregon 97701, and proved uses for the Writ of Execution in Garage Sales present arguments for LEGAL NOTICE further described as, property; (d)Limits on Foreclosure i s s ued or against any item in NOTICE OF BUDGET Lot 83 of Forest Hills f arming o r for e s t out o f t h e Ci r c uit Garage Sales the budget document. COMMITTEE Phase I, D eschutes practices on the prop- Court of the State of MEETING LEGAL NOTICE County, Oregon. Said erty; (e) Rights of Oregon for the County Find them Council of Governments sale is made under a neighboring property of Deschutes, dated NOTICE OF in Writ of Execution in owners; and (f)EnviApril 29, 2013, to me DISSOLUTION A public meeting of Foreclosure i s sued ronmental laws and directed in the TO UNKNOWN The Bulletin the Budget CommitCREDITORS out o f t h e C i r cuit regulations that affect above-entitled action tee of the Central OrClassifieds Court of the State of the p roperty. P u bwherein GMAC MortINDU S egon Int e rgovern- L APINE Oregon for the County lished in Bend Bulle- gage, LLC, its sucTRIAL GROUP, INC., 541-385-5809 m ental Coun c i l, of Deschutes, dated tin. Date of First and cessors i n i n t erest Deschutes C o unty, an Oregon nonprofit April 24, 2013, to me Successive Publica- a nd/or assigns a s public benefit corpoState of Oregon to LEGAL NOTICE directed in the tions: May 29, 2013; plaintiff/s, r ecovered ration (the "Corporadiscuss the budget for tion"), Invitation to Bid was dissolved above-entitled action June 5, 2013; June General Judgment of the fiscal year July 1, on April Exterior Painting wherein Wells Fargo 12, 2013. Date of Last Foreclosure Against: 30 , 2 0 13. 2013 to June 30, 2014 Bank, NA, its succes- Publication: June 19, (1) Kevin Griffin (2) The Oregon Child De- and This notice is being Sup p lemental sors in interest and/or 2013. At tor n ey: Sherry G riffin (3) velopment Coalition is B udget for 2 0 12 published in a c corassigns as plaintiff/s, Michael T h ornicroft, C ach LLC C/ 0 R A s eeking bids to r e - 2013 will be held in dance w i t h ORS paint the exterior of its recovered G e n eral OSB ¹981104, RCO The Corp o ration t he P u blic W o r ks 65.644. The CorporaJudgment of Foreclo- Legal, P.C., 511 SW Company (4) Daniel Head Start Preschool Training Room, 243 E tion requests that perin Madras, Oregon. sure A g ainst: 1) 10th Ave., Ste. 400, N. Gordon, P.C.; and sons w i t h cl a i ms ap p r oximately Antler Ave, Redmond, against the CorporaD eanna Silsbee 2 ) Portland, OR 97205, Money Award Against The Oregon. The meet- tion present them in Occupants o f the 503-977-7840. Condi- K evin G r iffin A n d 16,000 square f o ot building is sided with ing will take place on accordance with this Premises; and Money tions of Sale: Poten- Sherry Griffin, r en8th day of June A ward Against t h e tial bidders must ar- dered on February 27, a combination of Har- the 2 013 at 3 : 3 0 p . m . notice. A claim must R eal P roperty L o - rive 15 minutes prior 2013, against Kevin diePlank and Hardiinclude the following The purpose of this cated at 1234 North- to the auction to allow Griffin, Sherry Griffin, ePanel with wood trim meeting is to receive information: (a)the a nd accents. Fu l l west 1 8 t h St r eet, the Deschutes County Cach LLC and Daniel n ame, mailing a d project de s c ription and to approve the dress, and telephone Bend, Oregon Sheriff's Office to reN. Gordon, P.C. as budget document. and specifications will 97701-0000 on Febview bidder's funds. defendant/s. BEnumber of the claimb e available a t a r uary 2 7, 2013 , Only U.S. c urrency FORE BIDDING AT (b)the name or pre-bid meeting to be This is a public meet- ant; against Deanna Sils- and/or cashier's THE SALE, A PROtitle of the individual ing where delibera- whom held at the site on bee and Occupants of checks made payable SPECTIVE B IDDER the C orporation of t h e B u dget the Premises as de- to Deschutes County SHOULD INDEPEN- May 29 at 10:00 am, Committee will t ake tion m a y con t act or by contacting Rod fendant/s. B E FORE Sheriff's Office will be DENTLY IN V E STIabout the claim and, if at place. A n y p erson d ifferent f ro m th e BIDDING A T THE accepted. P a yment GATE: (a)The priority Walker m ay appear at t h e 9 71-224-1073. B i d s SALE, A PROSPEC- must be made in full of the lien or interest meeting and discuss telephone number of TIVE BIDDER immediately upon the of t h e jud g ment are due by 5:00 pm, the proposed pro- the claimant, the teleSHOULD INDEPENclose of t h e s a l e. creditor; (b)Land use June 5, 2013. Work phone number of such grams with the BudDENTLY IN V E STI- LARRY B L A NTON, laws and regulations must be c ompleted individual; (c)the facts et Committee. A supporting GATE: (a)The priority Deschutes Co u n ty applicable t o the between June 29 and g the claim; copy of th e b udget July 7, 2013. of the lien or interest Sheriff. Blair property; (c)Apand (d)any other inmay be inspected or The Oregon Child Deof t h e jud g ment Barkhurst, Field proved uses for the obtained on or after f ormation that m a y creditor; (b)Land use Technician. Date: May property; (d)Limits on velopment Coalition is June 6, 2013 at 334 assist the C orporaa f ederally f unded laws and regulations 28, 2013. f arming o r for e s t tion in evaluating the NE Hawthorne Ave, applicable t o the practices on the prop- not-for-profit corpora- Bend, Oregon during claim. The claim must LEGAL NOTICE tion and Davis Bacon property; (c)Apof erty; (e) Rights regular busi n ess be sent to: LaPine Inproved uses for the IN T H E CIR C UIT neighboring property Prevailing Wage rates hours. dustrial Group, Inc., THE owners; and (f)Enviapply to this project. property; (d) Limits on COURT O F Attn: Darwin Thurston, STATE OF OREGON Other contract terms LEGAL NOTICE f arming o r for e s t ronmental laws and 2070 NW Pinot Court, DESCHUTES and conditions w ill practices on the propregulations that affect Notice of Budget Bend, Oregon 97701. COUNTY. GMAC apply and information Hearing erty; (e) Rights of the property. PubA claim against the M ortgage, LLC, i t s will be provided at the neighboring property lished in Bend BulleCouncil of Governments C orporation will b e pre-bid meeting. This successors in interest tin. Date of First and owners; and (f)Envibarred unless a proand/or assigns, Plain- Successive Publica- meeting is not man- A public meeting of ronmental laws and ceeding to enforce the regulations that affect tiff/s, v. Kevin Griffin; tions: May 15, 2013; datory but it is highly the Central Oregon claim is commenced Sherry Griffin; Cach r ecommended t h a t the p roperty. P u bMay 22, 2013; May Intergovernmental within five years after Council (COIC), Des- the publication of this lished in Bend Bulle- LLC; Daniel N. Gor- 29, 2013. Date of Last potential bidders atdon, P.C.; and Occutend. tin. Date of First and P ublication: June 5 , chutes County, State notice. Successive Publica- pants of P r emises, 2013. Attorney: Project and Pre-Bid of Oregon will be held D efendant/s. C a s e Location:659 NE 'A' tions: May 22, 2013; Michael T h ornicroft, on June 6, 2013 at Street, Madras, OR Take care of 5:30 p.m. in the PubMay 29, 2013; June 5, No.: 12CV0619. NOOSB ¹981104, RCO For questions contact lic Works T r aining your investments 2013. Date of L a st TICE OF SALE UNLegal, P.C., 511 SW DER WRIT OF EXRod Walker, Room, 243 E Antler Publication: June 12, 10th Ave., Ste. 400, - REAL with the help from or 2013. Att or n e y: ECUTION Portland, OR 97205. 9 71-224-1073, Ave, Redmond, OrPROPERTY. Notice is Charles Michael T h ornicroft, Conditions of S a l e: 971-224-1071. White, egon. The purpose of The Bulletin's hereby given that I will Potential bidders must OSB ¹981104, RCO this meeting is to dis"Call A Service on June 18, 2013 at NON-DISCRIMINAarrive 15 minutes prior cuss and adopt the Legal, PC, 511 SW 10:00 AM in the main to the auction to allow TION: OCDC d o es 10th Avenue, Suite budget for the fiscal Professional" Directory 4 00, P o rtland, O R l obby of t h e D e s - the Deschutes County not e xclude, d e ny year July 1, 2013 to 97205, (503) 1000 1000 1000 977-7840. Conditions Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices of Sale: Pot e ntial bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING FORM LB-1 auction to allow the Deschutes Co u n ty public meeting of the Bend Metro Park and Recreation District will be held on June 4, 2013 at 7:00 pm at the Riverbend Community Room, District Office, 799 Sheriff's Office to reSW Columbia Street, Bend, Oregon 97702. The purpose of this meeting ls to discuss the budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2013 as approved by the view bidder's funds. Bend Metro Park and Recreation District Budget CommiNee A summary of the budget ls presented below A copy of the budget may be inspected or obtained at Only U.S. c urrency ths Distrct Office, 799 SW Columbia Street, Bend, Oregon, 97702, between the hours of 8:00 a.m, and 5 00 p.m. This budget is for an annual budget period. This and/or cashier's budget was prepared on a modified accrual basis of accounting and that is the same as used the preceding year. checks made payable to Deschutes County Email. lindse bend arksand rec.or Tele hone: 541-389-7275 Contact: Llndse Lombard Sheriff's Office will be FINANCIAL SUMMARY RESOURCES accepted. P a y ment Actual Amount Adopted Budget Approved Budget TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS must be made in full 2011-12 This Year 2012-13 Next Year 201 3-14 immediately upon the 8 932 140 43 113 892 9 323 384 close of t h e s a l e. Be >nnln Fund Balance/Net Workln Ca <tal 6 493 990 8 219 801 6 002 977 LARRY B L A NTON, Fees, Licenses, perm>ts, Fines, Assessments & Other Serv<ce Char es 392 100 1 457 285 Federal, State and All Other Grants, Gifts, Allocations and Donations 159 624 Deschutes Co u n ty 0 0 0 Sheriff. Anthony RaRevenue from Bonds and Other Debt 4 735 207 6 432 243 6 100 221 guine, Civil TechniInterrund Transfers / Internal Service Reimbursements 124 800 367 450 cian. Date: May 21, Ali Other Resources Exce t Current Year Pro ert Taxes 131 098 2013.

Current Year Pro er Taxes Estimated to be Recewed

o

11,958,162

11,950,000

LEGAL NOTICE FINANCIAL SUMMARY -REQUIREMENTS BY OBJECT CLASSIFICATION IN T H E CI R CUIT Personnel Services 9 461 698 8 711 318 COURT O F THE 4 469 450 3 930 020 Matenals and Services STATE OF OREGON 4 184 344 9 387 133 Ca ital Outla DESCHUTES 540 000 541 883 Debt Service COUNTY. JPMorgan 4 600 207 6 081767 Interfund Transfers Chase Bank, National 0 2 025 000 Contin encies Association, its suc0 0 ecial pa ments cessors i n i n t erest suna 2,144,749 0 ro riated Endin Balanceand Reserved for Future Ex enditure and/or assigns, Plain32,628,237 o a equ<remen s 23,449,332 tiff/s, v . Un k n own Heirs of Howard C. FINANCIAL SUMMARY -REQUIREMENTS AND FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT EMPLOYEES FTE BY ORGANIZATIONAL UNITOR Thompson; Lee Doral Name of Organizational Unit or Program Thompson; O r egon FTEforthatunitor ro ram 9 312 222 D epartment of H u 7 791 354 Administration & Finance DLrtartment a15 8.50 man Services; and FTE Occupants o f the 893 389 582 473 Strate ic Plannina & Desian Deoartment 4.00 Premises, 7.42 FTa D efendant/s. C a s e Park Services Deoartment 3 988 258 4 889 736 44.15 48.50 No.: 0 9 C V1371AB. FTE N OTICE O F S A L E 478 260 591 635 Communlt Relations Deoartment D 476 U NDER WRIT O F 449 FTE EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is

hereby given that I will on June 27, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction t o t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s h ier's check, the real property commonly known as 16901 Indigo Lane, Bend, Oregon 97707, and further described as, The W est h a lf (w1/2) of Lot 10, Block 2, Sun Country Estates, Desc h utes County, Oregon. Said

sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure i s s ued out o f t h e Ci r c uit Court of the State of

14,525,000

e s ources

Recreation Services Deoartment FTE Facillt & Park Rentals Department 8 FTE

S stem Develooment D Charaes fL Proaram IL FTE

Faclllt Reserve Proaram a FTE E ui ment Reserye Proaram Q FTE Bond Caoital Proiects Proqram FTE General Obliaation Bond Debt Seryice Proaram FTE

Total Re uirements Total FTE

5 896 931 99.20 129 769 1.70 756 968 0.00 3 408 526 0.00 105 877 0.00 0 0 00 0 0 00 23,449,332 165.11

6 506 215 102 60 490 021 1 85 5 098 823 0 00 4 536 363 O.00 620 749 0.00 0 0.00 0 0 00

32,628,237 170.21

10 728 202 4 689 250 27 365 097 2 540 000 5 752 243 2 025 000 0 21,015,879 74,115,671 PROGRAM *

11 247 039 10 18 768 052 6 63

5 366 789 56.88 637 772 5.1B 6 707,224 100.08 565 498 3.25 7 564 152 0.00 8 096 139 0.00 548 250

0.00 30 609 756 0.00 2 005 000 0 00 74,115,671 182.20

STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN ACTIVITIES and SOURCES OF FINANCING *

Property tax revenues have increased because of the new GOBond levy, and a projected 3% growth ln assessed value. System Development Charges revenues are projected to mcrease 97% due to housing construction growth. Beginning fund balance is significantly higher because of the bond proceeds that wdl be received ln June, but largely not spent until future fiscal years. The bond proceeds, SDC revenues, and partnership contributions will fund a signtricant increase in capital outlay in this coming fiscal year - providing the community with new park lands and amenities. Personnel costs are up over 13% due to higher health insurance and PERS costs, and additional staffing (a total of 12 FTE - 4 full-time and 8 part-time FTEI to respond to the increase m project work, recreation services, and new park maintenance. The reserved for future expenditure amounts are higher due to th

Oregon for the County PROPERTY TAX LEVIES of Deschutes, dated Rate or Amount lm osed Rate or Amount Im sed Rate or Amount A roved May 3, 2013, to me $1.461 $1.461 $1.461 Permanent Rate Le ra t e limit 1.461 er $1,000 directed in the $0 above-entitled action Local 0 tlon Le $0 $0 $1,852,892 wherein J P M organ Levy For General Obligation Bonds $0 $0 Chase Bank, National STATEMENT OF INDE8TEDNESS Association, its sucEstimated Debt outstanding Estimated Debt Authorized, But LONG TERM DEBT cessors i n i n t erest on Jul 1 Not Incurred on Jul 1 a nd/or assigns a s $29,000,000 $0 General Obli ation Bonds plaintiff/s, recovered $0 $0 Corrected G e n eral Other Bonds $4,965,000 $0 Judgment of ForecloOther Borrowin s $33,965,000 $0 s ure o n J u n e 1 4 , Total 2 011, a g ainst U n -


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